Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 13, 1913, Image 3

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I TTTP ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SBOQY SHIPPED KITH ANSLEY CHEF LOST EYE IN DUFI OVER DISH PREPARED FOR KING JUDGE POWELL Chamber Seeks to Enlist Travelers ! . Jean Peyrat, ‘•The Dueling Chef,” who rules hotel kitchen like a Martinet and swells with pride over his daiutv cookery. 1 t Rests on King’s Catafalque at Impressive Service—Son Is Overcome by Grief. T "I L "i LIVERPOOL, Sent. 13.—Funeral honors. Impressive and of unprece dented character, were paid to the i memory of the late William J. Gay- i ,inr , Mayor of New York City, here to-day, previous to the shipment of the body on the liner Lusitania for New York. The ship sailed just after noon. In Town Halt, where the body ot no man has lain since the edifice was built in 1754, the services were held, nnd every attending element conduced to the Idea of brotherhood, to the elimination of race or creed differ ences. After the services the body was es corted to the Cunard pier by detach ments of foot and mounted police. If , the dead man had been some high officer of state In the British Gov ernment, the evidences of grief could scarcely have been greater. Flags were at half-mast and buildings hous- f lng representatives of the United • States Government or United States ' enterprises were draped with black. Son Overoome by Grief. Rufus Gaynor, son of the dead American, was so overcome with grief thnt he broke down and could not accompany his father's body to the i pier 13 SEEMS LUCKY Chubby Frenchman Made Reputa tion With Great Dinner Served to Edward VII, of England. / k Throughout the night the body had rested upon the royal catafalque, i which was brought here from West minster Abbey,. In London. Picked l policemen from the Liverpool force .stood on watch. This was an espe cial honor. Upon the royal catafalque had rest ed the body of King Edward VII, and more lately that of Lord Wolsev, Fie’d Marshal of the kingdom. The great oak casket containing the body of the 'lead, as though in keeping Doctor, Expecting Pardon, Chrom icles Events of His Case—He’s Pleased With 1913 'Trend. f ; > is X ; vil h the simple character of the man it contained, norc the sole inscription- “WILLIAM J. GAYNOR. “Sept., 1913.” The catafalque rested at the foot of the grand stairway, and about it were twined the Stars and Stripes and the standard of England. Dsath Mask Is Made. It had been found necessary, before thr removal of the body, to re-em- balm if. At the same time a death mask was taken. T: funeral services in Town Hall V. er. . inducted by a local clergyman. Among those attending were the Lord’ Mayor Horace L. Washington. United Status Consul at Liverpool, and *he staff of Yhe Consulate. Mr. Wilson, an attache or the American Consulate, accompanied the body on board the Lusitania. The caskete was placed in a flow- ! er-bnnked cabin, and a watch was detailed to stand guard at the door of the death chamber. The floral tributes were many and magnificent. The Lord Mayor of Liv erpool sent a wreath four feet in diameter and composed of arum lilies draped with three bands of red, white and blue ribbon. At the bow minia ture American and British flags ware entwined. Short Service at Pier. Before the casket was carried »n hoard the tender, however, another short funeral service was read at the pier head. It was not until the last minute that Rufus Gaynor decided that funeral services should be held here at all. Mrs. Gaynor had expressed the wish that no services be held until the body reached New York. Score of cablegrams from all parts of the United States piled in upon Rufus Gaynor. Each expressed sym pathy. A clergyman whose lips moved continually in prayer led the proces sion from Town Hall. He was fol lowed by the hearse. Twelve pall bearers selected from the crew of the White Star tender Magnetic carried the casket to the bridge, where a number of lately arrived wreaths There's as much good lurk as ill in "thirteen.” Dr. VV. J. McNaughton believes. Two of Fate’s most spit ful flaps were dealt to him on the 13th, but 1913 has been his lucky year, and the week ending September 13. 1913, fipds him expecting JI-. par don before another seven days. Governor Slaton has worked' the last three nights considering the- rec-- ommendation of the Prison Commis sion that McNaughton he given a full pardon, and scaid Saturday that he expects to finish going over the testi mony Sunday. The Governor be- lieve.f reading over pardon cases is a work of mercy and fitting for the Sabbath, just as President Cleveland thought. Dr. McNaughton has prepared a chronology of his case and in the original manuscript has underscored the “thirteen*;,” Part “Thirteen" Has P! ayeH. He surrendered to the authority at Augusta, charged with the mur der of Fred Flanders. June 13. 1910. The Supreme Court of Georgia re- 19 a neW al September 13, But the year ’13 brought the turn of the tide, for it has seen Mrs. Flanders’ case nolle pressed, a re spite from the fifth da to set for the physician’s execution, and recorn- men ation for a full pardon for hitn from the Prison Commission. September 13. 1&13. finds the Gov ernor deep in the study of the caw. and preparing to call a hearing for the coming week, when Dr. Mc Naughton will learn his fate. The I. O. O. F. with its “left hand of fellowship,” is credited with bring ing Dr. McNaughton so near the door of freedom. Dr. McNaughton is past grand master of the order for the State of North Carolina. Lodge Investigated. When all hope seemed gone. Mar 3, 1912, the grand master for North Carolina took up the case with the grand master of Georgia. The I. O. O. F. investigated thoroughly and came to th» conclusion that Dr. Mc Naughton Is innocent. The state wide campaign for a pardon then began. “1 have no doubt In the world that I soon will be a free man.” said Dr. McNaughton Saturday. “Proba bly I should not jubilate so much before I am out of jail, but somehow I feel that the efforts of my friends and attorneys have met the reward they highly deserved—justice. “I do not intend to live aga4n ir South Georgia. My first desire when I am freed will be to see my two boys*. 1 shall straighten out some odds and ends of business at Swains- boro. and then choose a place to re sume practice. Tt may be in North Carolina or Augusta or Savannah. Several friends have made offers to see that I am started well again in mj r profession.” “Pape’s Diapepsin” Ends All Stomach Distress in Five Minutes—Time It! If what you just ate is souring on your stomach or lies like a lump of lead, refusing to digest, or you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and stomach headache, you can get blessed relief in five minutes. Ask your pharmacist to show' you the formula, plainly printed on these flfty-cent cases of Pape’s Diapepsin, then you will under stand why dyspeptic troubles of all kinds must go, and why they re lieve sour, out-of-order stomachs or indigestion in five minutes. “Pape’s Diapepsin” is harmless; tastes like candy, though each dose will digest and prepare for assimi lation into the blood all the food you eat; besides, it makes you go to the table with a healthy appe tite; but, Vhat will please you most, ia that you will feel that your stomach and intestines are clean and fresh, and you will not need to resort to laxatives or liver pills for biliousness or constipa tion. _ This city will have many "Pape s Diapepsin” cranks, as some people will call them, but you will be en thusiastic about this splendid stomach preparation, too, if you ever take it for indigestion, gases, heartburn, sourness* dyspepsia, or any stomach misery. GFt some now. this minute, and rid yourself of stpmach trouble and ^digestion in five minutes. U. S, Sure to Build Tvbee Military Road SAVANNAH. Sept, 13.—That the 3300,000 military mart from Savannah to Tybee woald Hr provided. for by Congress in December was assured by Congressman Charles G. Edwards, who is In Savannah to-day. Representative Edwards said that every member of the Georgia detega tion would support the appropriation which Is how before the Military Committee. When first you enter the kitchens of Hotel Ansley you think you are in an inferno of elangHng pans and jangling pots: your brain reels with the effort to understand the French words that are hurled back and forth, and your neck aches with the strain of trying to catch more than a pass ing glimpse of the flying cooks. But before you have time to col lect your thoughts and remember that when- they yell "rafe nolr,” “parfalt," and “pomme gaufette,” they are talk, ing about black coffee, Ice cream an;l -potatoes; you catch a glimpse of a ittle, short, fat man, who.se one good eye twinkles with good humor and 'those bald shining heart anil brist ling mustache, covering a perpeluallv -smiling mouth, invites confidence and friendship. ii.IE S1 ‘ S , Pn,hrn ned on a chair at a little desk—the monarch of the Kitchens. You’ve seen “The Duelling Ghef”— Jean Peyrat—nnd instinctively you smile at him and with him. Proud of His Cooking. Peyrat is an excitable little French man who rules his cooks like a mar tinet. and who views a spot of dirt In his kitchen with the disgust of an American housewife. His cook ing Li his life. He’d rather hear some one praise some of his dishes than eat one of them himself. But even breathe an opinion that ‘a Peyrat dl»h is not the best dish; that a Peyrat culinary creation is not the last word in such things -and Presto! you’ve invited to attend a funeral, with yourself ao chief mourner. It was Ptyrat’s pride in his cook- in*# lhat caused him to . fight a duel with another cook in the kitchens of the Hotel D’Angieterre. in Biarizt. France, while King Edward of Eng land sat in the dining room and wait ed patiently for the Peyrat marvels to appear. It was this duel—his last—that | gave Peyrat the name of “The Duel ling Chef," and it was also where j ho lost his right eye. hris opponent having jabbed him in the optic with a fork after Peyrat had hurled his weapon from him with hls own blade. According to Pevrat’s story, he fought the duel \vith another cook of the Hotei D’Angieterre because the latter tried to destroy a kitchen mas terpiece he had created especially for the dinner to King Edward. Made Great Dish for King. Peyrat moulded a monstfr deer and lion, with the latter representing England, crouched over the body of the deer, victorious. Around the sides of the deer nnd lion were placed the lobeter. the caviar and the other good things. As the waiters took up the master, piece to carry it into the dining ro< the jealous cook, an assistant of rat, tried to throw it to the The duel followed, in which Pey lost his eye and the other cook ceived five knife wounds in the shoul dor. "The dish 1 fix for the King.” Pey rat says, with both tongue and shoul der*’. “it was a what you cal] mas terpiece. Magnificent! Grand! Noth ing like it had ever been seen in the world. The King, he send me that word 1 exceedingly proud when I fix that dish. I make my reputation all over France. This other cook was | V. S7? Declares He Couldn’t Blame Gen tleman for Killing Policeman to Prevent Pure Girl's Arrest. Ill HITS III PROTEST DIED Chairman W. S. Ixmnsbury, chair man of the commercial travelers’ committee of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, is appointing a commltt°« of traveling men and chamber mem bers to take up the matter of closer I affiliations of the Chamber of Com merce and the local traveling men’s organizations. j _____ in the new home of the chamber m _ ,, ,. c n n . „ attractive accommodations especially ’'^ar-IVIutiny FqllOWS UiSCOVGTy of for the traveling men will be fitted j up. Jealous Aide who tried to destroy culina ry masterpiece, stabbed five times by cook in terrific battle with carving knives in kitch en of hotel in France. Recruits for Navy Break All Records WASHINGTON, Sept,. 13.—Reports to-day show that since January the Navy Department, has .succeeded in getting 2,200 recruRs, 600 of • whom were obtained within the last two months. These figures break all rec ords and are attributed to the inter est the department is taking in the sailor class of the navy. The difficulty remaining with the navy is that they have not officers enough for the vessels with sufficient complements. iu" InvestigationFollows IV- j Death by Live Wire Italian Lawmaker To Defend Charlton COMO, ITALY, Sept. 13.—Judge Paul Charlton, father of Porter Charlton* the young American ex tradited to Italy to stand trial for slaying his wife, to-day retained Si gnor Porzio, member of the Cham ber of Deputies, to defend his son In spite of efforts to rush the case, obstacles arc cropping, up which make it apparent the trial will not begin until April, .and perhaps later. Charlton has given a second ver st Qd of t!; • ■ slaying, which probably! will compel the prosecution to alter its plana ixty Days Handed Drunken Drinkard Two months ago J. F. Drinkard. in insurance agent, vent on probation t», avoid paying a fine of $f> and costs for drunkenness. He said at the time h • earned $150 a month and had several hundred dollars in the bank. H\ expressed a willingness to take 60 days in the stockade if the police ever found a drunken Drinkard on the streets. Saturday morning he got his wish. French Banks Raise S900.000.000 Loan Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. PARIS, Sept. 13.—French bankers have about completed negotiations for gigantic loans amounting to $900,- 000.000. according to The Journal to day. Thi>t paper state? that the money will go to the Turki.-h. Rou manian. Servian. Greek. Russian. Austrian and Spanish Governments. A Turko-French accord has been SAVANNAH, Sept. 13.—Following the death of Daniel Baran, foreman at the Savdnnah Brewery, who was electrocuted when he went to turn on a switch, the City Electrician to-day started a rigid investigation of wir ing in aLl manufacturing plants. __ ,,, _ Baran had only a few minutes be- jealous fellow. He liked me not, | ... . because I was not so manv years as I . } n switch off and ro- he and yet I am chef. This fellow J ce *ved no shock. When lie returned amount to nothing; he is what you j to put it on, 3,0.00.volts parsed through call'a bum. a loafer! ^is body. “I fix the grand dish. This bum ■' • come qp and say the di^h no good. I * call him a liar, a grand liar. Then this bum try to push the dish to the floor and destroy. 1 become enrage, angry. I lose control of myself. I strike this bum cook in the eye, and give what you call a black peeper! He strike back at me, but he miss me. He yell that my dish is not fit for the pigf». Fcught With Carving Knives. “Then I challenge this bum for a duel, to fight for my beloved dish which the King eat. I have served in the army of France. I can fence with great cleverness. I ask him if he want to fight with the rapier or the broadsword. He say he fight with carving knife. “Carving knife suit me. I handle carving knife with same expert I handle the rapier ? nd the broad sword. We take the position. We begin. T laugh at this bum come greatly enrage 'He 1 knife miss me. I laugh again. Ha! I also am enrage*. I thrust! I lunge! Voila! I stick him in the shoulder. I repeat; five times I stick the bum in the shoulder. I become tired with the sport; I disarm him. The bum call me pig, but I laugh, for I am victor. “Then this bum cook’ grab a fork from the table and lunge at me when I be not watching. Twice he jab rnv eye with the fork. .1 lose the eye. but he stay two, three months in hospital, and never again do he cook. He can not stand the heat of the kitchens any more. "But the dish for the King, it not be destroy. so I am glad. T take pride in the dish. The King of England thank me for the dish.” STILL THEY DON’T KNOW. PASSAIC, N. J.. Sept. 13.--Follow ing an aigunVnt over the. amount « f varnish in a barrel. Harry Slager and Louis Bienfield lighted a mati n io st ■ A. n explosion followed. Both Last Narrow Gauge In State to Go Soon When the Georgia Railroad Com mission on September 22 grants to the Gainesville Midland Railroad the right to issue $233,000 worth of bonds and $325,000 worth of short term notes, the initial step in the aboil tion of the last narrow gauge railroad in Georgia will be taken. The application for the issue ha.- been filed wijh the commission with the view of substituting standard broad gauge equipment between Bell mont and Monroe. 32 miles. Opera Star to Sing Purchaser Loses For Minimum Wage Suit Over Hotel PATERSON, N. ,7.. Sept. 13. Ma dame Sehumann-Heink is to sing at a political meeting next Tuesday night in the interest of Everett L. Colby, who is seeking the Progressive nom ination for Governor. Madame Scbumann-Heink In ten dering her services said she was strongly in favor of a minimum wage for both men and women, also mu nicipal recreation places. ■3 ( ; Si Man, 80, Drives 1,250 Miles in 46 Days WILMINGTON, DEL., Sept. 13.— Driving one horse and accompanied by a dog, George W. Grant, aged SO, arrived here from Bellaire, Ohio, hav ing completed a drive of 1,250 miles in 46 days. His children live in Wilmington. He will reside here after being absent 46 years. Charging he had been misled re garding the character of the Eureka Hotel, M. L. Rockmore, defendant in a suit on a $200 note brought by Henry Ergens, former proprietor of the hotel, lost in the court’s decision and asked for a new trial. Rockmore gave Ergens a note for $200 as part payment, but refused to pay. Grand Jury Attacks ‘Disgraceful’ Dances MEMPHIS, Sept. 13.—The retiring Grand Jury for the May term rec ommended that the Tennessee Legis lature pass a law to “wipe out the blot of shame of immoral dances.” The report declared the bunny bug. tango and turkey trot the most degrading spec tacles ever indulged in by decent people. What do you think of a wom an who forgot her wedding day, forgot her husband, forgot she was getting a divorce, their met her husband in the street and rushed up and kissed him? A very remarkable exclusive fea i ture lu The Sunday American. CHANGE Suburban Schedule Central of Georgia Railway Effective September 14. Suburban trafn No. ION will leave Atlanta 6:15 p. m. instead of 6:10 p. m. Arrive Jonesboro 7:15 p. m. Adv In an interview Saturday Judge Arthur G. Powell, late of the Court of Appeals, came vigorously to the de fense of Atlanta’s spooners and as serted that in the recent instances of police interference the officers of J the law had arrayed themselves on the side of no sense against common sense. Judge Powell made an interesting analysis of State rights and indi vidual rights, weighed with Judicial care the merits and demerits of kiss ing, and the attitude the police should take in the enforcement of laws governing morals. Said the judge: “I don’t think the present situation is so much a conflict between the rights of the State and the rights of the individual: the thing at which the community stands shocked is the de plorable lack of judgment displayed by the police in the handling “of a particular case. Must Use Common Sense. "The State is supreme, of course; without the supremacy of law and or der individual liberty Is worthless. There is nothing in any true view of individual liberty which, would pre vent the State from making hugging and kissing a Jail offense if it were necessary to the best interests of so ciety to do so. But even then those enforcing the law should use some common sense. "The practical phases of the ques tion are these; The girl with the proper sense of pride and decency Is not going to lot a man to whom she is not engaged kiss her cither in pri vate or in public. The woman who is truly bad will hardly limit her ac tivities to kissing. Between these two extremes lies a middle class, the girls who are not altogether bad but who are a little fast; and from time im memorial the boys have been chasing this class of girls and hugging an 1 kissing them in dark corners ir wher ever else opportunity presented itself. “Now, suppose a policeman finds a boy on a dark seat in the park or on the secluded portion of the Capitol grounds kissing a girl, what should he do? If the couple is engaged— well,.they are within their legal and moral rights and privileges, if thev are not making their spooning too ostentatious. If the couple is not en gaged, either the girl is fast or she i bad. If she is really had, the polio do not need to arrest her merely foT hugging and kissing. Does Not Require Disgrace. “If she Is merely fast (and this is the case most probably of all those who have been supposed), to arrest the couple and take them to jail would be an outrage, irrespective of what might or might not be the law rub- or regulations on the subject That is the way to*make bad women out of fast girls. “In any of the supposed cases, if the policeman would onlv let his presence be known, the performance would im mediately end. Vhe situation doesn't require that the girl should be dis graced absolutely. If the girl has a mother, the mother should be notified, and lam old-fashioned enough to be lieve that unless the girl is entirely too old. a good, old-fashioned spank ing with the back side of a hair brusn properly administered by the moth r would be a much more appropriate corrective than arrest and Jailing. “This thing of arresting people for trivial offenses which might be expe diently handled otherwise is what dl »- gusts us. The public should respect and feel kindly to every police offi cer, and yet so long as the spectacle of the police arresting for minor de linquencies of conduct is constantly before our eyes, we can not feel to rn] the police just as w e should. Could Condone Killing. "The police do not seem to recog nize the humiliation, the disgrace, the deep mental pain a decent man feels at being arrested; and to arrest a woman or a young girl—I couldn’t blame a gentleman who would kill a policeman to prevent it. where the arrest was not absolutely necessary, where the woman had not committed some serious offense. It is so much more intelligent for the police officer to handle minor af fairs with a word of caution, or, if the offense be graver though still slight, by giving a copy of charges, than it is for them to make an ar rest and to hustle the offender off to he station in the ‘Black Maria,’ that I can’t understand the lack of sense ome of them display. "It’s not a case of conflict between the rights of the State and the rights of the individual, it is a case of con flict between sense and no sense.” Police Spare Beauty Compromised in Raid MACON, Sept. 13.—When the po- liee raided a house on lower New street, between Onmulgee and Wal nut streets, yesterday a pretty young woman rushed out screaming: “For heaven's sake, don't tell m.v husband " She held u handkerchief over her face. The policemen stopped her, but after aseertamln* her name allowed her to depart. They decline to (rive her name, but declare she Is the wife of a prominent citizen. Mouse Shows Orange A New Hosiery Tint NEW 1 ORK, Sept. 13.—A mouse, making a tour of the Hotel Astor, walked into the main lobby to-day. Screams of scores of women attract ed the police on post a half a block away. Chairs, tables and other high pieces of furniture furnished pjaces of refuge. Men discovered that very sheer silk hosiery of orange, pink. lose and blue shades-are popular among society women. Spoiled Bread, but the Warden Quickly Placates Strikers. Comet Finder Denies It's ‘Fuzzy Pinhead' BOSTON. MASS., Sept. 13.—“Wait till my comet gets nearer to the«sun a nd it will be much brighter,” was the comment of the Rev. Joel Met calf of Winchester, well-known as tronomer. The Key. Mr. Metcalf was replying to Professor Edwin B. Frost, director of the Terkes Observatory, who called tbe Metcalp comet a “fuzzy pinhead.” Chases Dentist Two Miles for His Teeth HAMMOND, 1ND,, Sept. 13.—Dr. James Jones, a South Bend dentist, was bound over on a charge of grand larceny for stealing the gold teeth of James D. Watts, a pugilist. He left after Watts brought the teeth to him to be adjusted. Watts chased the dentist two miles, caugnt him and turned him over to an officer. Sour bread was the cause of a near-mutiny at the-Federal prison, it developed Saturday. Twenty-one men in the stone-cutting department were 1 Involved. N\ hen they sat down to eat last Thursday, they found that the 'bread j at their plates tasted peculiarly. After the meal they counseled among themselves. One had read ■ that the Government proposed to slash their food appropriation to 13 cents per capita a day. This flour bread must be the first effects of the new order. They would not stand j for It. Leave Table in Protest. They were a solemn and determine.J lot when thqy *at down to supjjcr. 1 \yitij one accord everyone reached first for his bread! Everyone" tasted it simultaneously Even "nose 1 wrin kled In pained d-isgruHt. VV'lth<th* same .unanimity overy. chajc was showed back ami the jjjen .formed in line to wait upon the powers’That be. “We won't work until wee-get good eats!" That was their ultimatum. The Powers That Be were very much sur prised'. They had nor knofrri fHrft -any thing “was the matter with .the food. They InstJtued a.n immediate inves tigation. Yeg, it was too true—the bread was very bad. The baker was called upon the car pet, He explained he had experienced bad luck, Just as* ever\ goad cook and baker sometimes wifi. The officials and the prisoners! wefe Informed that tt Would not happen ag^tin. Joy When Report (a Denied. The prisoners, greatly, mpllified, re turned to their work the next dac. They were still more pleased when they were told there was nothing-to ti»e report that their rations were to he cut. "1 have received no order to <rut the hoflt of the men's food down to 13 cents per capita,’ suki W/irdep Moy er Saturday. - "I can not imagine how the repqrt got started. So far as I know there is no such plan in pros- ; ecf “The matter of th& br,ea$l Avajs just a simple accident. But the men. hav ing read The story of the cut In cost of feeding, thought it was to ke’ep *io right along. There was no disturb ance, of course. Jhc men merely pro tested and their grievance was ad justed within ten minutek” FOOLED THE UNDERTAKERS. SAN JOSE, CAL, .Sept. 13.— M iltjht .Rtsbel of.'Tennessee, awoke hero after a ln-rtay Sleej. apparently well. Several physicians hart worked over hitn without resnlts. Baby Strangled by Rails of His Crib GAINESVILLE, FLA., Sept. 13.— While Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Wood were preparing to move from one house to another their 10-month-old boy, asleep in his crib, was left alone about fifteen minutes. When the mother returned, she found her child life less. He had awakened, attempted to reach the floor, caught his head be tween the rails and strangled. Burlesque,-G olumbia nr l* AA + nv* HA nvi dotT 7 *QA -r* VY1 LENSES Don’t bo a slave to the old style two-piece bifocal lenses. Come in and see the new Kryp- toks—the one-piece lens. They are beautiful and the master piece of lens making. Made in both rimless and frame styles. We have everything new for the glass wearer. Pi. K. HA WKES CO. OPTICIANS 14 WHITEHALL Tho Renewal a Strain. Vacation is over. Again the school bell rings at morning and at noon; again with tons of thousand* the hardest kind of work has begun, the renewal of which Is a mental and physical .strain t»> all except the most rugged. The little girl that a few days ago had roses in her cheeks, and the fir tie - boy whose lips were then ho red you would have insisted that they had been “kissed by straw berries.'' have already lost some thing of the appearance of health. Now is a time when many children should be given a tonic, which may avert much serious trouble, and we know of no other so highly to he recommended as Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which strengthens the nerves, per fects digestion and assimilation, and aids mental development by building up the whole system. RESINOL CURED BLISTERY, ITCHY HUMOR ON HANDS St. T.ouls, Mo., June 9. 1913,-j- “My wife was troubled wl.th what looked like water blisters on the bark of her hands. They itched and burned so much that she had to be rubbina them most of the time. After a. while they broke open and began running together, leaving a raw and very unsightly sore, so that she had to wenr gloves Whenever she went <M»t. "We- tried a -half < Luzon, different remedies and prescriptions, but' to no avail, until one clay I received jv sample of Ueflinol Boap*and Res- inql ointment. She got so much encouragement from 'the sample , that T bought a large Jar of Res- Inol Ointment anti a cake of Res- inol Soap. After using it aboqt three nights we discovered a great improvement. In about a week a skin began to form, and. the itch ing and burning ceased. , Af^yr using only one., jar of Resihol ointment- and, a cake .of Resinol Soap, she was entirely cured. This was six years ago, and" she has not been trrtuWled since;” (Signed) Charles Weber, 2$2£ Franklin £ve. Better proof, even than such a letter, ig to try Resinol yourself and see how quickly the trouble disappears Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap are sold by all drug gists. For free trial, write to Dept. 15-R, Refinol; Baltimore, Md. - • YPTO LENSES Agnes Scott College The Session Will Open Wednesday, September 17th, 10 o’Clock A. M. The Committee on Admission of Students will meet at the College Monday and Tuesday, 9 o’clock to 12:30, for classification of new students. All desiring to apply for admission to College urged to meet the Committee Monday or Tuesday. Dor mitories will not be open until Tuesday. NCINNATI TWO FAST TRAINS Lv. 7:12AM., 5:10 PI$.