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TIIE ATT, A NT A OFOROTAN AND NEWS
VACCINATION CERTIFICATE IS FIRST SHERIFF.
SCHOOL ENTRANCE REQUIREMENT
Dr. J. 0. Hall, City Physician, vacreinatinf? two youngsters
so they can make their debut inlhe public schools.
Bailiff Slays Divorcee and Com
mits Suicide—Woman's Four
Children Witness Killing.
MILLEN. Sept. 4.—Officers to-day
have been unable to discover the mo
tive that caused Rufus Bryant, a Jen
kins Countv bailiff, to kill Mrs. Belle
Newton and commit suicide at the
woman’s hum**, seven milcn from Mil-
len, at 9:30 o’clock last night. Al
though the woman’s four children, the
oldest only 9 years old, witnessed the
double tragedy, they are unable to tell
what prompted it.
Mrs. Newton,* slater of John B.
Newton, chairman of the Jenkins
County Commissioners, was of a fam
ily that has long been prominent in
this section. About five years ago she
#nt a divorce from Ivey Clark, who
toon afterward went to Washington
State, where he Is now residing. She
resumed her maiden name of Newton.
According to the woman’s children,
Bryant last night came to the Newton
home, went to the kitchen, where he
drank the contents of a bottle of car
bolic acid, returned to the living room,
sat down, drew his pistol, shot Mm
Newton dead and then shot himself.
The shots were heard by L. H. Brad-
dock, a farmer, living near by, who
rushed to the house and discovered
the two bodies. He reported the trag
edy to officers in Millen.
Neighbors took charge of the four
children. They probably will be
adopted by relatives.
Americus to Have
Big Farmers' Rally
AMERICUS, Sept. 4.—All arrange
ments for the big farmers' rally that
Is to be held at the Third District
Agricultural College on Monday, Sep
tember 15, have been made. The oc
casion will be known as Alfalfa Day.
Special rates have been put on by the
railroads.
Authorities on subjects of interest
to the farmers of Sumter and the ad
joining counties have been secured as
speakers.
E
Mob Chases Fugitive
Into Another State
LOUISVILLE. KY., Sept. 4.—From
Tennessee into Kentucky a mob of 100
men chased George Hinton, a negro,
charged with attacking a young white
woman near Portland, Tenn.
He w r as arrested near Scottsville,
Ky., by Sheriff Flowers, who landed
him in jail at Bowling Green, Ky.,
after a wild drive across country to
escape the pursuers, who made their
way back to Tennessee when they
found they were outwitted.
SEE‘BILL’
Uncle Sam Has Jobs
For Two Good Cooks
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4— Uncle
Sam can’t keep his cooks any more
than the average housewife, and 8v>
he has* advertised for competent ar
tists to help feed his wards, the In
dians.
The jobs are two in number, and
are located at the White Earth, Min
nesota. Indian reservation. They pat
$420 and $540 per annum, respec
lively, it was stated to-day.
G. A. Howell Searches
For His Stolen Auto
G. Arthur Howell is still looking for
the person or persons who took "French
leave" with his Hudson 1912 runabout
In front of the Candler Building early
Monday morning.
Mr. Howell left the machine on the
Houston street side of the Candler
Building When he returned to get it
it wasn’t there. The machine is paint
ed black and has State license No.
15953.
Body of Old Train Robber Held
for Instructions From Sister
in Canada.
MILLEDQEVILLE, Sept. 4.—'The
body of “Old Bill” Miner has been
brought to the morgue of Undertaker
J. H. Moore from the State Prison
Farm, where he died. The body has
Ween embalmed and is being held,
awaiting instructions from his sister
in Canada. More ’than 1,000 people
have crowded the mor<rue to get a
glimpse of the notorious old train-
robber.
“Old Bill” often said he had money
hidden away, but he never revealed
the hiding place. He stated that he
had hidden more than $1,000 just be
fore his capture in North Georgia
near Lula in 1911.
With all his bad traits, “Old Bill”
possessed a kind heart. Last year
John Budd, living in Canada, sent htin
$50. Every prisoner who was par
doned after that asked him for a
loan. He never refused one until the
last cent was gone. He had several
names, being known as George Ander
son, George Edwards and Bill Miner.
He stated before he died that his real
name was Bill Miner.
‘Rules Strict,' Says Superinten
dent Slaton—Office Thronged
by Pupils and Pa/ents.
$3.50 Recipe Free,
For Weak Men
Send Name and Addreaa Today—
You Can Have It Free and Be
Strong and Vlgoroua.
We have In our possession a pre
scription for nervous debility, lack of
vigor weakened manhood, falling
memory and lame back, brought on
by excesses, unnatural drains, or the
follies of youth, that has cured so
many worn and nervous men right in
their own homes without any ad-
d’tlonal help or medicine—that we
think every man who wishes to re-
i gain hie manly power' and virility,
J quieklj and quietly, should have a
$ copy So we have determined to send
> a copy of the prescription free of
charge, In a plain, ordinary sealed
> envelope, to any man who will write
l us for it.
This prescription comes from a
\ physician who has made a special
> study of men, and we are convinced
? It Is the surest-acting combination
( for the cure of deficient manhood and
) vigor failure ever put together
we think we owe it to our fellow-
] men to send them a copy In confi-
> dence. so that any man anywhere
> who is weak and discouraged with
! repeated failures may stop drugging
j himself with harmful patent medi-
» clnes. aecure what we believe Is the
\ quickest acting restorative, upbuild-
| Ing SPOT-TOUCHING remedy ever
devised, and so cure himself at home
' quietly and quickly Just drop us a
Mine like this Interstate Remedy Co.,
i 4276 Luck Building. Detroit, Mich.,
and we will send you a copy of this
splendid recipe in a plain, ordinary
envelope free of charge A great
many doctors would charge IS 00 to
16 00 for merely writing out a pre
scription l>ke this—but we send It en
tirely* free.
Operated on 24th
Time in Ten Years
YUMA. MICH . Sept. 4 —Fred May.
bury. 23, was operated on to-day for
the twenty-fourth time in ten years.
His initial visit to the operating ta
ble was made when his right hand
was cut off. Maybury next lost his
left leg. Then he was stricken with
appendicitis. Next a stray shot de
stroyed his right eye, following which
necrosis developed in his left arm and
several bones were removed at dif
ferent times A part of his liver was
removed in the last operation.
Father of Slain
Youth to Prosecute
COLUMBUS. Sept. 4. ^J. T. Haw-
1 kins, father of Luther Hawkins, the
J young man who was killed by Bailiff
I R. L. Willis while attempting to arrest
' him under a warrant charging him
| with beating a 50-cent board bill, an-
I nounces that he will remain in Co
lumbus until after the preliminary
| trial of Willis, which is set for Sep-
| tember 19, in order to assist in th^
prosecution of Willis.*
Clubwoman Killed
By Nephew's Auto
ASHLAND CITY, TENN., Sept. 4.
Mrs. W. Pardue, prominent in wom
an’s club circles in Tennessee, was
| killed by an automobile driven by her
nephew. James Majors.
The machjne ran her down as she
was crossing the street.
“Vaccination is a most important
factor in protecting the health of
school children, and our rules in this*
connection are most rigid,” said Su
perintendent W. M. Slaton, of the
Atlanta public schools, Thursday. “As
a protection against smallpox it is an
absolute necessity, and should there
be laxity in enforcing the rule an epi
demic might result.
"Children are admitted to the
svhools on the issuance by a physi
cian of a certificate that the child has
been vaccinated successfully. They
also are admitted when a physician
certifies that he has vaccinated the
child three times within twelve
months without success.
“When two physicians certify that
it would endanger the life of a child
to vaccinate him, and also when it is
shown that a child already has had
smallpox, a certificate is issued ti
them by me.
'There is one thing I wish the pub
lic and the physicians to understand
thoroughly. It is that a physician
should not issue a certificate that a
child has been successfully vacci
nated by him until after the vaccina
tion has taken. There have been in
stances where children have been vac
cinated and the physician has issued
them a certificate before it is known
whether the treatment has been suc
cessful.”
Superintendent Slaton and his office
force are exceptionally busy this week
Issuing school certificates. More than
500 women and children called there
Wednesday afternoon, while Thursday
morning found a great crowd await
ing his arrival at the Boys’ High
School.
CITIZENSHIP MEET
The committee on arrangements
will meet again Tuesday night pre
liminary to the opening of the South
ern Citizenship Congress which will
be held in Atlanta September 19 to
21. The committee met Wednesday
night at Hotel Ansley and decided on
a tentative program.
For the first two days of the con
vention the meetings will be held in
the Auditorium; on the last day—
Sunday—the Baptist Tabernacle will
be used. The opening night of the
convention will be called “Governors’
Night,” because several Southern
Governors, including Governor John
M. Slaton, will speak.
LoChl members and representatives
of foreign orders of the W. C. T. U.
and other women’s clubs will assume
charge of the convention Saturday
morning. Saturday afternoon a num
ber of students of the Atlanta f^.blic
schools are scheduled for short talks.
Saturday night is called “Hobson’s
Night’’ for Captain Richmond Pear
son Hobson has accepted the invita
tion of the committee to deliver an
address.
On Sunday all pastors of Atlanta
have agreed to preach on Christian
citizenship. Sunday afternoon in the
Tabernacle Dr. Lincoln McConnell
will take for his subject “Crime and
Lawlessness.”
Collier Brothers Have Thri Ring
Experience With “Officers of
the Law” in Carolina.
Rawson and Charles Collier, the
well-known young contract agents of
the Georgia Railway and Power
Company, are baejs in Atlanta from
a canoe trip down the French Broad
River, in Western North Carolina,
telling of some thrilling adventures
and one, unaccented, that was some
what depressing.
Full of youthful glee, last week they
boarded the Southern train for Ross-
nan, N. C„ with a canoe they had
sculled many a mile over the wa
ters of East Lake, a balloon tent and
all things else necessary for a 125-
mlle Journey down the river to Ashe
ville.
Experienced oarsmen are these
young men, and wonderful thrills they
had. Down the narrow river, crystal
clear, they sped between the towering
mountains. Time and again they
paused to marvel at the wonder of
the scenery, covered as it was with
all the luxuriant growth of late sum
mer. There was something more than
the breath* of autumn in the atmos
phere. It seemed to give* new life
with each deep breath, they said, and
they wondered why people were so
foolish as to live down in the plains
of Georgia.
Snakes for Bedfellows.
That was before they landed on the
first night. The snakes they encoun
tered in the bushes on the banks were
a little disconcerting, but they quickly
overcame them and pitched their tent
over corn furrows. There, in cradles
of mother earth, they slept while the
winds moaned through the hills.
They had two days and two nights
of such ecstasy. On the third day
they sighted a second traveler. He
appeared in undue haste, but two can
travel much faster than one in a ca
noe, especially when rapids have to
be shot. So they overtook him.
The man was reluctant to answer
questions. A little suspicious of him,
they finally accepted him as an ordi
nary mountaineer, and the two boats
passed on down the strqgim together.
As they cam** to the bridge at Ashe
ville they found their suspicions were
well grounded.
A great crowd of people hailed them
from the bridge and a huge man or
dered them to stop. The Colliers
obeyed. The huge man was no less a
personage than the county Sheriff
and the crowd a retinue of deputies
sufficient to start a revolution in Mex
ico. It gradually dawned on Rawson
and Charles Collier that they were
arrested.
There was much arguing and ex
plaining. but the mountaineer Sheriff
insisted on taking them to jail. The
charge against them, they gathered,
was that they had robbed an apple
orchard up the river and fought an
old woman who tried to drive them
away. That was the story of a moun
taineer who was insisting that the
Sheriff arrest them.
It seemed that all their pleading
was in vain, when their strange trav
eling companion spoke up:
"I’m the man you want,” he said.
"These men know nothing about this
matter. I had a companion, but he
made for a railroad station and is on
his way to Atlanta by this time.
"All we did was to pick up a few
apples as we passed along the road. - ’
Money Lenders Are
Hit by Georgia Road
AUGUSTA, Sept. 4.—For many I
years it has been the practice of some .
of the employees of the Georgia Rail- j
road to lend money to other em- |
ployeos at various rates of interest.
With the advent <>f Acting General
Manager J. H. Ellis it is understood |
that this practice has been broken up. |
Under the old system of lending ^
money the person lending it received ;
a high per cent, while the official |
who paid off received a per cent for
collections made. In this way sever I
comfortable fortunes have been made
by a number of railroad employees.
Since the coming of Mr. Ellis the 1
Georgia employees have been given a
regular pay day, something which
they have not ’ ' in a number >f
years.
Don't Be
Satisfied
V *
7*
with your present at
tainments in any wor
thy line—e specially
with your financial re
sources.
Earn more, spend
less, save more.
To be satisfied with
what you are doing now
is absolutely destructive
of progress toward suc
cess.
Let this strong, de
pendable bank help you
in your efforts to get
ahead.
a
Compound
on Interest
D on Savings
United States Depository
for Postal Savings
Funds
Georgia Savings
Bank & Trust Co.
Atlanta's Oldest
Savings Bank
Grant Build i n g
EDWIN P. ANSLEY
W. FLOYD JOHNSON
ANSLEY & JOHNSON
INSURANCE
We can save you money on AUTOMOBILE LIABILITY Insur
ance. See us before you insure your car.
821 Forsyth Bldg.
ATLANTA, GA.
Phone Ivy 873
Don’t Wait until
the Last
inute -
RESINOL STOPS
SKIN TORMENTS
How This Wonderful Treatment
Ends Itching and Heals
Skin Eruption.
Brooklyn, N. Y.—"At first little
red spots were seen on my arms
and body, which I noticed were
getting larger every day. They
Itched me so much that I scratched
myself until 1 bled. There were
times when I stood up all night
and scratched. I was troubled
about three weeks, during which
time I u?*ed , which seemed
to do me no good whatever. Then,
finally, 1 thought of trying Resinol
Soap and Resinol Ointment. As
soon as l applied Resinol Ointment
1 felt much relief. After using it a
few times. I noticed the sore spots
slowly fading away, and in about
a month I was cured completely."
(Signed) Adolph Schoen, 742 Shep
herd Ave.. Nov. 1. 1912.
Resinol is not an experiment. It
is a doctor’s prescription which
was so unusually successful for
skin troubles that it has been used
by other physicians all over the
country for eighteen years. No
other treatment for the skin now
before the public can show such a
record of professional approval
Every druggist sells Resinol Oint
ment and Resinol Soap. For free
trial write to Dept. 11-R, Resinol,
Baltimore. Md.
Sh oes for Children
Parents ran never know
how near perfect onr chil
dren's shoes are until a pair
has been tried.
No other line of shoes sold
in Atlanta equals them in
merit.
The best materials and the
best workmanship combine to
f.
Shoes for Boys and Misses
We positively guarantee a
perfect tit.
Every pair that leaves our
store, if fitted by a salesper
son, must be a correct fit, or a
new pair will be given when
the matter is called to our at
tention.
produce long-wearing, perfect-fitting, stylish shoes. From $1 to $3.50.
M. Rich & Bros. Co.
' Ovinia i>
±+ yvyvvNv.
WAWM “ A Department of Famous Shoes" cVeVeYfV**sVmtL*$5
Madeline
Force
Astor
Saves her sister’s happiness in a
drama of real life—“They shall
not wreck her life as they have
wrecked mine.” The heart-throb
bing climax will be revealed in
Next
Sunday's
American
Just as all the inner secrets of At
lanta’s most exclusive circles, with
the smart doings of the fashiona
bles, will be bared by
Polly
Peachtree
Then this issue will contain, also,
several features of especial inter
est to the fair sex, including
Why Women
Cannot Help
Being
Hysterical
And a discussion by Gertrude
Hoffman, w T ith charming studies
of herself—of a novel means of
reducing fat. But the Sunday
American is not all light reading.
You can be sure of getting
All the
Latest News
From the daily activities of the
boll weevil to the midnight hap
penings in Huerta’s palace. You’d
better join the largest reading cir
cle in the South if you are not al
ready in it. Order from your
dealer or by Phone to Main 100.
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