Newspaper Page Text
MM FILES
PETITION TO Mil
GOASTLINERy.
company Charged With Misstating
Taxation Matters and Dodging
State Laws.
OUSTER JUDGMENT ASKED
Failure to Pay Full Franchise Tax'
for Three Years Alleged
in Bill.
(iNTGOMERY, Nov. I.—A peti
■n was filed in the Montgomery Cir
>ilt Court to-day by Daniel W. Troy
pi R. B. Evins, special counsel for
e State of Alabama, asking that
e Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Com
pany be cited to appear and show
why it should not be excluded by a
judgment of ouster from this court
from further exercising said fran
hlses and from further doing busi
es within the State of Alabama."
It is alleged that the company has
failed to comply with the State laws
snd has misstated matters with ref
-rence to its taxation.
At divers times said corporation
timed to be a domestic corpo
.tlon and at divers other times has
■Dimed to be a foreign corporation,"
avers the petition. “Neither as a
lomestlc nor as a foreign corpora
■lon has said corporation paid the
roper amount of franchise tax due
from it for either of the years 1911.
1912 or 1913.”
It is claimed that the railroad has
:.-i lined to pay the tax on foreign
■orporatlons, but has In other re
spects exercised the functions of a
' reign corporation.
Judge Pearson will set the case for
:ii when he returns to Montgomery.
'Balanced Rock’ in
Scales of Justice
Suit Brought to Decide Ownership
cf Scenic Attractions in
Garden of Gods.
VER, Nov. 1. —The question of
" <-v. ns the "Balanced Rock" and
•■mbeat Rock” in the Garden of
Gods at Manitou was submitted
iso before the Court of Appeals
The city of Manitou and Curtis
•locrcke, a resident of Manitou, both
tint the two scenic rocks. The
■art is asked to decide whether the
ks are situated In the public high
way.
Goercke’s claim Is based on the fact
hat the land where the rocks and
other famed scenic attractions of the
gardens are located was left to him
by his father, now dead.
COUNCIL BLUFFsTfIRST TO
DEDICATE LINCOLN ROAD
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA, Nov. 1.
The Lincoln highway was dedicated
nere with a monster conflagration, the
□lowing of whistles and the sending of
a congratulatory telegram to the Na
ional Association. The celebration
followed a banquet. Council Bluffs
is the first city to dedicate the high
way.
Hooray! For Me,
I Can Eat!
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets Bring Joy
to the Starving Dyspeptics
Who Cannot Safely Eat.
To seat one’s self at a festive hoard
a heavily laden table and not he
Hole to eat is positive sorrow to most
dyspeptics and stomach sufferers, and
likewise pain.
F ■■■ ? f •:: -•:
i’W< '
"i Walk to My Meals and Eat All I i
■*n*. Then a Stuart’s Dyspepsia
Tablet Makes Good For Me.”
• n \ou! system is robbed of its 1
1 tivi luici >. ii ;heii cor
ition. a little candy-like stu
i’>HH*psia Tablet gives to them
: r - s they lack and you thereby
H "ig< <iiv< apparatus and allay
Hin n, pain, gas and stomach trou-
:r * 'irh as used in a Stuart’s tah
n< of nature’s greatest aids: and
'His is <<ti;hjn»d with the other
Honis you simply bring happiness
■ '•ry -<,ut nerve of the stom
,v r. intestines, pancreas and oth
"•gans.
'"igisted foods will not aid nature
insists on manufacturing the
- jumps. Besides this the bow< Is
c'larse and heavy foods in order
1 , bowel pack which is vitally
•/dial to health
ar l* 8 i Dyspepsia Tablets mix with
hi the iioma< h have ate!
i<» stop gas formation, sour stom
' *‘< ay. ( i<-, tlvn as the food passes
the lower dig.-stive tract (the in
les) it takes the Stuart's digestive
wttli h, and there is wher the I
work is done.
, ■ nutritive value of food and tai .
Separated from the waste mat
•ind Is assimilated and distributed '
inc proper parts of t e boriv The <
’« enriched and the liver stored
die qualities the system needs
W our . n<»w and buy a
s Dyspepsia Tablets, price
'inn then eat what von will; hut
_* a tablet afterwards. Then will
' n you the beginning of the end
fears ' " tr ’ mach troubles and food
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I Button, Button, Who Pays the Income Tax? I
I’
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8 wfrHl ' g
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■■ UL'■ X /ATlaiO * 2
Wrm mA ri I
tinfeSMW
' * *_< ackm a» Q
Teacher Describes
Death of Former Self
Asserts Transmigration Idea Just
Dawned on Her—Creates Spir
itualistic Grandmother.
SOUTH NORWALK. CONN.. Nov.
I.—Airs. S. S. Raymond, a school
teacher of New Canaan, has aston
ished her friends with declarations
and graphic tales of several previous
existences, thereby proving, she says,
the truth of the transmigration of
souls.
In one ease she recites the details
of her death, when as a child of 4 she
plunged down the cellar stairs of her
home in Rowayton. In another In
stance she visited her parents in a
prior existence, and they recognized
and loved her.
Mrs. Raymond states that she never
got any Ideas on transmigration from
friends or books. It simply dawned
on her. She now remembers that her
grandmother communed with spirits,
and thinks she must have Inherited
the peculiar faculty of mental retro
spection from her.
Relative of Speaker
In Postmaster Race
Mrs. Pitzer. Who Wants Colorado
Springs Office, Also Kin of
Burleson.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Nov. I.
Mrs. Annie Hamilton Pitzer, sister
in-law of Champ Clark, and a dis
tant relative of Postmaster General
Burleson, has announced her candi
dacy for the position of postmaster of
this city, A dozen or more candi
dates have filed their claims with Con
gressman Seldomridge.
Mrs. Pitzer was a delegate to the
State Democratic convention three
years ago and wa.s a delegate from
Colorado to the Democratic national
convention at Baltimore last year.
Spend Honeymoon of
3 Months in Box Cars
Police Nab Couple for Trespassing.
Live Four Days on 'Cheese
and Kisses.'
HAMMOND, IND.. Nov. I.—-After
spending a three months' honeymoon
j in box cars, Thomas Gross and his
I comely bride from Cincinnati were
| arrested for trespassing on the Erie
' Railway near Marlon. The couple,
I nestling in a straw pile to keep warm,
I were found by police in a box car.
; Gross declared he had eloped with
the girl because her brother objected
to the marriage and had just enough
I money to get the marriage license at
I Jeffersonville. The couple said they
had lived four days on cheese and
kisses.
(Father-Elect Calls
Police to Aid Stork
I
Inability to Find Doctor’s Phone I
Number Didn’t Bother Resource
ful Thomas O’Connor.
NEW YORK. Nov. 1.- Thomas
O'Connor. No. 267 One Hundred and
forty-fourth street, to-day demon
strated a new w ty of summoning a
doctor in a hurry, lie didn't know
just where to lind a doctor’s number
in the telephone directory, so he call
ed police headquarter.- and, giving his
address, said: 'Just found na.v wife
hanging. Send an amhiilanpe quick."
Detectives and doctors found Mrs
O'Connor in bed. The doctor was
really needed. The baby was born
live minutes after the ambulance ar
rived.
TIFT CORN AND CANNING
CONTESTS NOVEMBER 15
TIFTON. No>. 1 The Tift Coun'v
(Boys' Corn Club contest, wlirfli was
to have been held Thursday, has been
l,,stponed until Siluri v November
15. when the Corn Club and Girls'
f inning Club contests will be he'd
joint!' A list of v.-ry handsom
prizes has been ottered by local m r
chiints ind tin banks for both tty
boj s and the girls.
HEARST'S fit.AlM I AJinnilAA. .MLAAIA. Ito. SIMM!, AUVJEIMUIbrt J, ISI3.
Bankers in Dark
On Income Tax Act
Maddox Declares It Will Be Months
Before Working of Law Is
Understood.
Robert F. Maddox, chairman of the
clearing house committee of Atlanta,
Saturday ventured the opinion that it
would be months before the new in
come tax law was thoroughly under
stood about the country.
He made the remark after the
clearing house committee had been
at much pains, with the advice and
aid of numerous lawyers, to formu
late and issue circular-letters of In
formation. which were sent out to
correspondent banks In Georgia,
Florida. Alabama and other Southern
States.
WINS $1 BY 3-YEAR SUIT.
OLATAH. KANS., Nov. I.—After
being In litigation three years, the case
of U,G. Mason against Eugene Bauman
was brought to an end here when a jury
awarded Mason the sum of JI.
The direct route so iood 'SC'”"
A _ I CZ WILKES-BAKKE \ Pied
cioTnes | /. e m ° nt
Morton C. Stout Go's rt X XX 5“
system- 0 $ Tfl
' WwHEtLING JL -JrwItK.NCTON W
; The best custom tailoring at $5 to $lO less H n . jnn.~ r H Nr>J X ?V r- f*
s than Atlanta men have been paying for the j ****^^^L—— v. BAL-TlfcjPßy./ Vs \ 1
same high quality. Not only made to meas ./ | \\A
ure, but as you like in every detail, ' \/ Wr<£*
with the STYLE that only the best f V Atlanta,
tailors can give. Our reputation A) I XX.C_ 1 Wash)n „.
of 25 years of good HUNTINGTON 100 / tn, Is
stands back of ev- J STYLES '
ery suit. The fit, the style, ( X / RICnH /I* ton, Dei.,
satisfaction are absolutely \ J Aft wheeling,
\ > LYNCHBURG JB 8m M Hunting-
GUARANTEED. Only ALL X
WOOL goods in stock. Chester,
15 establishments m E?
400 styles—to S4O Vw yp
You can get anything you /, NORTH ft Harrisburg,
want and have it made jy / Every piece of goods stock TESTED
in ann ctnio Z and COLD-WATER SHRUNK
up in any style x*,
you like. c
.. Coats made so
—" " J I they NEVER C I T I T Q
V * LOSE THEIR S l) U I I U
WE HAVE X Fverv Garment \ SHA pE f
BROUGHT / \ \ ( That “Look Like $lO More.” A
the best / \ GUARANTEED to Fit X , llundred sl , es tbat a „ lhe plck ot
, to GEORGIA X \ and YOU are the Judge \—-7 the A ,„„ ica ; ,„ arket No ' elties
SOUTH seldom shown at less than $25 to S3O. <
TwXt LANTA \ / This is our specialty. We have set a new I
™ X, Carolina /J standard in S2O Tailor Made Clothes, distinctly
122 PEACHTREE STREET 'V Superior to any ever before offered in Atlanta
X for the monev.
(Next to Piedmont Hotel) \ KZ e i rA . fl>nn run
, j buperb Overcoats SZO.OC)
CTEORGIA f a-jv 1
■ !■ II ! -I— ...I, n i 11. 111 HI— MWIMMMtf.,.
FALLS FROM JAIL BUNK
AND BREAKS HIS FACE
WAYCROSS, Nov. I.—Dreaming
j someone was trying to get him, Rich
ard Brown, a negro, held in the coun
ty jail here on a charge of murder,
fell from his bunk to the cement
floor of the cell, smashing his nose
‘ and receiving severe bruises about
, the eyes.
f - ."■.gSL'SHXA,
FOR KODAK OWNERS
GIVEN AWAY
1,000 5x7 Enlargements
$55 in Cash Coupons
> Sriven away. Wirte or see
Shelley Ivey,
The College “Co-Op"
r 119 Peachtree Street
1 Candler Bldg.
T
GATES' DEATH
HID 10 DRUG;
INOUMED
Pressure of Public Opinion at
Cody, Wyo., May Force
Coroner’s Probe.
CODY. WYO., Nov. I.—Pressure of
I public opinion, as the result of pcr-
Istent rumors that an overdose of
fine drug administered as medicine
aused the death of Charles G. Gates,
nay force a belaied Coroner’s in
luest into his death.
The rumors which are calling forth
■ mands for official investigation
f Gates’ death have had their incep
ion with persons who were present
n the case of the Irma Hotel Monday i
•vening when Gates suffered the col
apse which resulted in dtath the next
day.
The witnesses declare that Gates
lad not been drinking heavily, but
hat just after taking a glass of wine
le suddenly stopped speaking. 1
lutched at his left side and collapsed. |
?'riends standing near by sprang to j
dm, and his attending physician, who
iccompanied the party from New
York. sent hurriedly for a local phy
sician. Meantime Gates’ own physi
cian is said to have administered .<
drug in hope of reviving the young
millionaire.
Gates then was carried to his pri
vate car and was given every possi
ble attention. His death was de
clared due to natural causes, and a
public demand for an inquest into the ,
death was overruled.
In some quarters the demand for an ,
inquest Is partial)larly strong, as evl- ;
denced by’ the following paragraph I
from The Park County Enterprise, I
published b - ’’ Dick Lakaye:
“The fact that every effort was :
made to prevent a Coroner’s inques*. i
which efforts eventually were suc
cessful, and other such things really
make a very strong case that if Mr.
Gates had not been tampered with i
in fart, given an overdose of some I
drug—he would now be alive.”
i Owners and Operators of the
> MEW YORK & AMERICAN A i
DENTAL OFFICE
! > 23 1-2 & 321-2 Peachtree St. C >
Over Bonita Thaatar ’■
' n W °Ul<l bp difficult to find more ,
conscientious and efficient dent- <
-teStoll lets anywhere. They are thor- JfNj;
ough with their work and easy
''- ‘th their patients. WNw*'
Dr WJ. Harper. No STUDENTS. All work done P. E. Coleman.
by men of experience. They
advertise that you may know where to get good dental work at rea
sonable prices Thev solicit the most difficult cases and guarantee all I
work. Good set of teeth, $5.00. Crowns, $4.00. Bridge work, SI.OO per
tooth. All other work at lowest possible price for best work.
Hours- 8 to 6:30. Ladv attendant. Phone Ivy 1817.
_J
Borden Hunts Seal *
With Movie Camera :
Millionaire Returns From Three- [ "
Month Arctic Trip on
SIOO,OOO Yacht. ' I
VANCOUVER, Nov. 1. After a h
three months' cruise in the Arctic •
seas, taking motion pictures of the ;
seal herd on the Pribyloff Islands .
and hunting the big game in the ;
I Land of the Midnight Sun, John Bor
den and his party on the SIOO,OOO ;
yacht Adventuress are at Victoria on :
the return trip.
Members of the party say the ex- '
peditlon was highly successful and
tell thrilling stories of harpooning
whales, shooting walrus, reindeer and
lighting polar bears.
WATERWORKS, SEWERS AND
CITY HALL FOR LITHONIA
LITHONIA Nov. I.—The Mayor
and Town Council have closed a con
tract with the J. B. McCrary Com
pany. of Atlanta, to put in an up-to
date waterworks system and sanitary
sewerage and have just purchased a
lot upon which will be erected a
granite City Hall.
Hotell Wmecoff i
Table d'Hote Dinner SI.OO
Served from 12 Noon to 8 P. M.
Blue Point Oysters on Half Shell
or
Canape Moscovite
Cream of Lettuce aux Crouton
Consomme Milauaise ,
Filet of Pompano. Saute. Colbert
Chicken Cutlet, Jardinere
Roast Tenderloin of Beef. Lard
ed. Sauce Madeira
■
■■
Mixed Salad
’ Vanilla Ice Cream
Assorted Cakes
Roquefort Cheese
. Saratoga Flakes |
Demi Tasse
Other Ad in Society Section, Page
t M. RICH & BROS. CO. 1
: ;
w w
, W «
f* OSi fij J rQ i n ! y.' Il B *
| $5 & $6 All-Wool Sweaters !
3 Upward of 150 fine ■
sample sweaters for Vk "
women occupy one Asia ■
'’’R table. Not a «
sweater in the lot is worth under $3.50«
mid $4; most of them are regularly $5 and •
$6.00. :
Sample sweaters, hence a big choice of •
styles. Variously white, red, blue, brown J
ln solid colors and striped sweaters in J
various colors. Plain and Norfolk styles. •
Choio®’ $2.98. ;
■ywK'* 'wbs* Men’s Sweaters d* 1 QQ ;
MM Values to $3 j
i One big table of men's sweaters in light and J
feutghl jSyif dark colors. Many different styles. Choice ■
2» SI.9S.
•s M° re of Those Boys’ Waists at-
■ 5 Chambrays O E Khakis
> Percales Cheviot
! Ginghams Madras ;
The biggest value and the finest assortment of boys’]
tv aists we ve ever assembled. Solid color and neat striped!
waists in tub-proof fabrics. Perfectly made and finished!
with neat turnover soft attached collar and deep side pock-]
et. Pearl buttons. All sizes from 6to 14. ]
. *
■= 49c 49c sl ’ 9B
Shapes:
j 49c j
: sl.9BUntrimmedHatsat49c;
I
Identical hats have been selling freely else-'
’5 where at $1.95. Made of high-grade soft body!
5 felts in bright finish. Large and medium shapes; black,!
|solid colors and two-tone effects. 10 or 12 different models.!
i $3.98 Velvet & Plush Hats $1.98
|‘ j Untrimmed hats of splendid quality velvets and plushes. I
j'» Large assortment of shapes in black, brown and navy.
■
Sale of Mill Lengths
Ej These mill lengths of sto 10 and 10 to 20 yards answer i
’ Ej your purpose just as well as if you bought from the full'
piece. Perfect in every way. Save as follows:
|: J cheviots 9c—neat shirting stripes, etc.
i 19c serpentine crepes IS^o —Oriental and floral patterns. !
percales Bc—shirting and dress patterns.
10c outing flannel 7c—pink or blue stripes.
12%c outing flannel 9c—heavy white grade.
15c cambric 9c—a 36-inch white cambric.
(g 15c pillow casings 9c—45 inches, free from dressing.
(=5 silkoline and cretonnes 9c—neat patterns.
:• 75c All-Linen Damask, 55c
■ ——■ ■
Jb A firm, flaxful damask, with a crisp, leathery feel. Full!
;■ bleached, in floral, spot and conventional patterns. Five ]
designs, 64 inches wide. ;
: j $1.75 Napkins, $1.39 $1 Napkins, 89c
■ • Full bleached all-linen 18- A splendid quality mercer. ]
Za . • , • ... , x ized damask napkins. Full!
£ meh napkins. Moral, spot bleached, 18-ineh, 4 pat-j
and spray patterns. terns. ]
> 39c Heavy Table Damask, 19c
An extraordinary value. Think of a 58-inch damask, fast ]
colors and tub proof, for 19c. Blue and white checker- ]
-* board patterns overlaid with neat spray designs. !
I
Wanted Dress Goods at :
Danish cloths |Mi ]
Half-wool serges A
Honeycomb checks >
(E The Danish cloths and serges are half-wool, appearing in <
• J leading colors, black and white. The Honeycomb checks are ■
m in the popular black and white combinations, 36 inches.
IKn’g 28c Apron Ginghams ;
-5 Full 9-4 bleached sheeting in With cotton sky high, C_ t
'Z a firm heavy grade, free from it is' unusual to get ;
;S any flaws. The unbleached tub-proof apron ginghams in ]
'5 sheeting in the same grade is the standard size cheeks, «
-5 25c. blues and browns at sc. £
. • ■>
Notion Sale at 1c
11* Card collar supporters Two darning cotton a
“ 3 packages hair pins ] Stocking egg darner «
" Dozen button molds Paper steel pins r
! ■ Skein embroidered cotton Crochet baby bibs a
» «
B ankets & Bedding :
• no. for $1.25 comforts— RQp for sheet blankets— i
• ZjOC heavy weight, fig- grey with colered ■
• urod cover, single bed size, borders, 68x72-in. ■
J 46x78-in. <C 1 QQ for robe blankets ;
; t51.98 J" “S’;:
; * silkoline cover- bath robes, couch covers, etc., !
’ ed, filled with fluffy white 60x74-ln. •
’■» cotton. 72x84-in. QQ for plaid blank- "
?q_ for 50c blankets— ets — neat pigjdg •
» «J</V ~( , tiO u er ib blankets; in many designs. Wool nap. S
» white with colored border. Size 70x80-in. *
On sale only in Economy Basement,
3A