Newspaper Page Text
H
FORU.S.TRUST
THE LOW TARIFF
Copyright, IRIS, International Nown Service
k I
H
Attorney General, in Report, Re
views Department Work—633 |
White Slave Convictions.
\\ ASHINOTON Dec 9 Mu* h em
.it'* «ps laid on anti-trust pros**- (
itiori9 In the annual report of Attor-
General Jam ft* <" M Re\rioldi».
itf ftr
ust buster
/•X'fi,
:toj
iraproof
Iding During hi
ear, he my a, spe* ial agonis have in-
\ ♦•art ign ted an average of 36 anti-trust
omplainta. In many rases where tri-
esllgatlons did not lead to proaeru-
tlons, he declares, they Impelled offl
ore of big corporation* to 'curtail
'lanareroua tendencies"
Mr MoReynolds calls attention ©e
peclally to tbe conviction* under the
criminal clause* of the Sherman law
Tn the rajih Register c«r© 29 were
convicted and flnea aggregating $135.-
o()0 And jail sentence* for from nine to
twelve months imposed In the sec
ond trial of the Bath Tub caae fine*
• •f more than $60,000 were imposed
in the Cotton t’orner caae one of the
principal defendants pleaded guilty
and paid $4,000.
There are now 49 anti-trust ran©*
pending, of which 43 were Instituted
during former administrations
During the past year the work of
the department in connection with
the enforcement of the provisions of
f ho white slave traffic act has been
vigorously carried on," says the re
port. "From June 26. 1910 (the date
of the passage of the while slave traf
fic act), to September 30. 1913. there
ha\*- be* n 633 convictions under the
act, more than one-half of which were
obtained during the last twelve
months of said period."
t
* <
€
Tuesday's Temperature Slightly
Lower Than Monday’s—En
tire State Shivering.
V 1
'Vi *
STORE THIEF ARRESTED
-,i i MPH18 Det 9 The poHc® aia
holding \V ft Scott, of Knoxville, on
Marges of robbing a Memphis store
and shipping several pairs of pants
to Chattanooga Some of the etolen
property was Identified by l Angel.
Owner of the store
zyvcnHiw)
/S QO/*9
UP
0
US
INSPECTED
AND PASSED
16STABUSHKIV /
NO. 3
Winter was still on the job Tues
day morning Nor satisfied with com
ing down from Greenland’s icy moun
tains in a roaring 42-mi)e-an-hour
gale and giving Atlanta a day of
weather that was colder than the best
he could do in 1912. winter opened uf
Tuesday morning with an even * older
snap than that which boomed trade
and made the coil dealer glad Mon
day.
At 7 o'clock Tuesday morning the
mercury in the official thermometers
was a trifle lower than Monday morn
ing at the same hour, though the dif
ference wm not noticeable to the man
on the street
Unless the forecaster has read hie
sign* wrong, the cold weather will
continue throughout the day, and
mostly throughout December, al
though there are no more winds on
the weather docket like the one that
swirled and roared ground Atlanta’s
j
■
Low
V
L-i
l
0
n
l—Ui.
c\
s
Whitney .NotedBasso,
To Sing for Y.W.C.A.
1 f these necessities rise out of reach—eat cheese, says t he I Government.
A concert which is heralded as an
unusual musical irest will be given un
der the auspices of the Young Women’s
Christian Association in the assembly
room of the Hotel Ansley Tuesday
night Myron E. Whitney, Jr. the
noted basso, assisted by Miss Marguerite
Valentine, a well known FJnglish pian
ist, will give a program of rare merit.
Mr. Whitney is possessed of a deep
bass voice of unusual resonance He
is the son of the famous concert singer,
Myron W Whitney, who thrilled Amer
ica for forty-five years by his concert
singing The son has been in grand
opfra and concert work in America and
Europe for a number of years
This
Stamp
Pastors in Savannah
To Start Liquor War
New Furniture House
Soou Open for Trade
Gladstones Coming
To Visit America
on
SAVANNAH, Dec 9 —Following a
strong address hv the Rev Rockwell
P Prank, at a meeting of the Protea
tant Ministers’ Union, a crusade on
s large scale to stamp out the liquor
traffic in Savannah will be Inaugu
rated
No definite plans were announced,
nor would the ministers make any
definite statement, but they left lit
tle room for doubt that they would
actively begin a campaign that they
had every reason to believe would be
successful
The nee firm of Knott & Carmi
chael Furniture Company, No. 136
Whitehall street, will be ready for
business simultaneously with the re
opening of Whitehall street Re
building began when regrading was
begun on Whitehall street and the
entlrs building of three floors will be
occupied by them
This firm Is composed of George E.
Knott, formerly of the Knott A Awtry
Shoe Company and recently with the
Martin Knott Furniture* Company,
and Hugh Carmichael, formerly of
the Carmlchael-Talman Furniture
Company and recently with the Gold
smith Acton-Witherspoon Company.
AT PRESS DINNER
Well-Known Welkin Rings as
i Manager Harrell Shows News
paper Men ‘Regular’ Time.
•*¥(* *• «ViY« YYYYYYWWW " fY«ti * II »Yr«»« ««Y«Yi Y.Y.Y.
I. RICH & BROS. CO.
Swifts
Premium”
Oleomargarine
For Wednesday and Thursday
Real $5 High Shoes
For $2.95 the Pair
■e
«*
■*
5-
Means that a
government in
spector has seen
all of the mate
rials made, seen
them churned to
gether and knows
that the finished
product is
Clean,
Pure
Wholesome
| PATENT
1 BUTTON
' to
I B O O T S
,* Cloth or Kid Tops.
•J Plain Toe or Cap Toe.
to
•2 Welt Sole or Turn Sole.
The weather to-day is a good reminder that
you will need another pair of high shoes to fin
ish the winter with.
Whether you need them to-day, or will need
them later on, it will pay you to buy a pair at S;
this special price now. T
Swift St Company
u. a a.
The shoes on sale are not discontinued stock Si
styles, but real up-to-date $5 shoes that we 5.
guarantee in everv respect. t
5*
Plenty of sizes to start with, but earlr com-
ers get the best values. 5;
The newspaper men of Atlanta have
added a new saint to their calendar.
His name is Frank Harrell of the
Wlnecoff Hotel and he is a Patron
Saint of a very special brand.
Mr Harrell entertained at dinner
Monday night In the rathskeller of
tho Wineeoff and the newspaper men
were his guests. The dinner was ex
quisitely served, and In saying that
there Is no chanec for Mr. Harrell
ever to fade from the kindly remem
brance of the Fourth Estate, it is only
just to add that the Fourth Estate
isn't likely to grow dim In the mem
ory of Mr. Harrell.
The only thing that could possibly
rival the quality of the feast was the
appreciation of "the boys."
if you are much acquainted with
newspaper men, you know very well
ihat they are not given to demon
stration in excess If they were they
would succumb to twittering hys
terics about once every 24 hours.
On the other hand, when the time
and the occasion seem ripe for a
demonstration, an innocent bystander
might well be pardoned for turning
In a riot call.
The time and the occasion seemed
ripe in the rathskeller of the Wineeoff
Monday night. That Is to say. the lid
came off. the well-known welkin rang
again, and joy was unconflned in a
moat astounding degree. For three
light-footed hours there were brand
new stories and twice-told tales, and
yarn* that never had been spun be
fore. and songs, some of which prob
ably never will be chanted in quite
the same way again.
Tnnls Brown, possessing in addition
to the gift of after-dinner oratory a
fine and husk> physique, was elected
toastmaster when Mr. Harrell de-
* lined the job. It may he remarked
in passing that Mr. Brown’s well-
known efficiency as a referee of foot
ball games was a valuable asset.
The Wineeoff Hotel was represent
ed by Mr. Harrell. W. L*. Mitchell and
C. E. Jenkins. W. F. Wlnecoff had
planned to be present, but the burn
ing of his home, of course, put all
other affairs rn one side The news
of the fire was the only note of regret
in a most happy evening
Laden Steamer Sinks
As She Leaves Docks
The saving in price will appeal to all eco
nomical people: the shoes themselves will please
the most fastidious.
*,*.VM*. Rich & Bros. Co. WWANW
NEW YORK Dec
liner Zudla sank in
I to-day just as she
I clear for Venezuela
I flour and apples A
had slipped from the
I crash©d through the
fought seven hours
hut failed The los
$100,000*
9 —The Red D
East River early
was preparing to
with a cargo of
lieav> steel shaft
derrick tackle and
hull The seamen
to sa\e the vessel,
is estimated at
Counts Pay $400,000
To Hush Up Scandal
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
BUDAPEST. Den 9—Count Tisza,
Hungarian Premier, and Count Khuen
Heder Vary, formerly Premier. paid
S400.000 to kill a political graft scandal
which had already wrecked one minis
try
Gibbet Built Under
Court as Trial Begins
KANKAKEE. ILL.. Dec 9 A scaffold
and gallows 30 feet high was built by
unknown parties during the night be
fore the windows of the courtroom where
John Hutchens was placed on trial for
murder.
Garlic Surpasses 52 -
Tuberculosis Cures
NEW YORK, Dec. 9. —Garlic as a
our* for tuberculosis has demonstrated
its superiority over 52 other medicines
In tests made on 1,000 patients at the
Metropolitan Hospital here, according
to physicians at the institution.
Fine Plumber Who
Stole Prince's Shirt
BERLIN. Dec 9 -Karl Engelhardt, a
plumber, was fined $12 50 for stealing
a shirt belonging to Prince Sigsmund
Hohenzollerin, a second cousin of the
Kaiser The Prince changed his shirt
after dinner in Berlin and sent It to his
house by a servant. The servant was
robbed
28 Fowl Killed by
Arsenic on Grave
RIVER HEAD. N. Y. Dec 9. -After
putting arsenic in bread crumbs on his
mother's grave to kill off chickens
which w*re despoiling the grass Wal-
tei King was held responsible for the
death of 2R fowl owned by a neighbor
and was arrested
All Around
The Town
Fairfax Harrison Is
MadeG, S, & F. Head
Little Facta and Fancies About
Well-Known Atlantans
Mar. wants but little here below, and
usually if he can’t get what he wants,
he will take what he can get. A story
told by C. E. Jenkins, one of the clerks
at the new’ Wlnecoff, proves it:
‘‘It happened the other day,” said
Jenkins. “I was standing In profound
meditation behind the desk, when the
door opened and dignity's synonym
walked in. He \va> an exceedingly tall
and pompous individual, frock coated,
silk hatted, and bearing the royal stamp
MACON. Dec 9—At a meeting of
the board of directors of the Georgia
Southern and Florida Railroad to-day.
Fairfax Harrison waa elected president
of the company and was also elected a
director.
Mr. Harrison I* the newly elected
president of the Southern Railway,
which controls the Georgia Southern and
Florida.
Schumann-Heink's
Son Gets Police Job
corners Sunday night.
C. F. VonHerrmann, official weather
prognoetlcator, declared Tuesday that
while every day In December will not
he so cold as Monday and Tuesday,
the warm days will be the exception
and not the rule from now until after
Christmas Overcoats that have lain
for months in the grip of the moth
ball were very much In order Monday
and Tuesday, and will be until after
the holidays.
Reports of unusually cold weather
all over Georgia are coming in to the
office of tho weather bureau Macon
and Augusta had freezing tempera
tures Monday and Monday night, and
down at Savannah they shivered at a
temperature of 40 degrees. At va
rious points near the Florida line the
thermometers novered near the freez
ing mark, although the wind was not
so strong a s It was In Atlanta
■ * — - . V. ■ . , u IIU U( Hlli.L 1 1 • '
of PERSONAGE all over him He ra
diated dignity like a Georgian radiates
prosperity. He strutted up to the desk,
and I reached up into the uir and shook
his hand. 1 placed one hand in his * oat
lapel, a la Patrick Henry, and then lie
spoke, rumblingly
” *1 am Mr. . he added. 1 am
a traveling man. but 1 live on the out
skirts of the city. I arn in a position
to do your hotel u great ueal of good.’
‘That’s very kind of you. I’m sure,’
I said.
* ‘I understand, said Mr. ,
‘that at your opening night you gave
away very handsome souvenirs. Is that
correct ?*
” ‘That’s right,’ I said, "but I'm very
sorry to say they are all goneV
'* ’That’s too bad.' he said, ‘and l am
In a position to do you a great deal of
good. However, I understand that you
gave away souvenirs Thanksgiving, also
la that correct.’’
~ They’re all gone, too, I’m sorry to
say.’ 1 replied,
' 'Hmrnmm!' he murmured, "and 1 am
!n a position to do you a great deal of
good. Is there anything at. all that you
are—or—giving away at present?’
“I told him I couldn't think of any
thing right on the spur of the moment,
and then he spied a packet of postcards
bearing a picture of the hotel.
“ ‘Are those for general distribu
tion?’ he asked. ‘IVI like to take a
few.'
"I told him to help himself and he
took fifty all there were on the desk.
” ‘No_w," he said, 'vour stationery, that
is for general distribution also. Is it
not? I would like some of that, for T
am in a position to do your hotel a great
deal of good.’
“I toM him to help himself and he
did. He took, nII the paper and enve
lopes there were on the desk, stuffed
them into his pockets, asked me to no
tify him when we gave away any more
souvenirs, raised his hat and was
gone. ’
NEW YORK. Dec 9—Henry Schu-
mann-Heinli, son of Madaipe Schmuann-
Helnk, .singer, was appointed clerk to
the Paterson. N. .1 police court The
salary Is $1,200. Politicians sought to
oust him.
He is living at his mother’s mansion.
Policeman George Watson is th«*
proud possessor of « pair of aching
feet, a motorcycle with a punctured
tire, and an enviable reputation for
speed. He chased a supposed negro
b-rglar, who, it Is said, tried to ge :
into the home of Sydney D. Little at
No. 72h East North avenue late Mon
day afternoon, and when his motor
cycle sprang a leak he abandoned ths
machine and pursued the negro or
fool, catching him after a mile run
While Watson was catching one
negro. Policeman J. W. West w**
chasing another up and down the j,
leys and side streets of that sec
tlon of the city, catching his pre\
when the latter's wind gave out.
The negroes gave their names ai
Mose Green and Will Bozeman. Th*
will be tried In Police Court Tuesday
afternoon.
Congi
Exor
MEAT CAUSE OF
KIDNEY TROUBLE
Time It! Pape's Diapepsin Ends
All Stomach Misery in Five
Minutes.
Take Salts to Flush Kidneys if
Back Hurts or Bladder
Bothers.
Cynical persons mat declare that
there are a lot of jokes on the Atlanta
police department, hut cynics, pessi
mists and optimists are off in a bunch
with the assertion that Sergeant George
Bullard Is the prize joker of the de
partment. Bullard is a quiet, fine look
ing sort of person who keeps his month
shut and his eyes and ears open, and tie
has a lot of dry humor in him that Is
prone to break out very unexpectedly,
ft happens that Tom Bane, who Is the
turnkey on the evening watch, is al
ways doing a lot*of work back in the
cells, ai >me on the run when
ever a prisoner is brought In. For the
purpose of getting some speed to the
coming of Tom and the other turnkeys,
there Is an electric push button in the
sergeant’s office. But Sergeant Bullard
didn’t think it rang loud enough, so he
got a cracked cowbell and hung it on
a nail. Now’ when he wants Bane, lie
summons him with a ring that resounds
throughout the length and breadth of’
Decatur street, for a cracked cowbell
wielded by a practical joker can turn
loose about the wlerdest assortment of
noises there are.
Do some foods you ea; hit back—
taste good, but work badly: ferment
. into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,
sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or
Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape’s
Diapepsin digests everything. leaving
nothing to sour and upset you. There
never was anything so safely quick, so
certainly effective. No difference how
badly your stomach is disordered you
will get happy relief in five minutes,
but what pleases you most is that it
strengthens and regulates your stom
ach so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear.
Most remedies give you relief some
times—they are slow, but not sure.
"Pape’s Diapepsin” Is oulek, positive
>ur stomach in a healihy
condition so the misery won’t come
back.
You feel different as soon a* "Pape’s
Diapepsin” comes in contact with the
stomach—distress just vanishes—your
stomach gets Hw r «et, no gases, no belch
ing. no eructations of undigested food,
your head clears and you feel fin©.
Go now. make the best investment
you ever made, by getting a large
fifty-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin from
any drug store. You realize In five
minutes how needless it is to suffer
from indigestion, dyspepsia or any
stomach disorder.—Advt.
If you must have your meat ©v©rr
day. eat it, but flush your kidneys with
salts occasionally, says a noted author
ity who tells us that meat forms url*
acid which almost paralyzes the kid
neys in their efforts to expel it from
the blood. They become sluggish and
weaken, then you suffer with *. flu
misery In the kidney region, sharp pair*
in the back or sick headache, dlzifnes?
your stomach sours, tongue is coatee
and when the weather is bad you hav«
rheumatic twinges. The urine gr*
cloudy, full of sediment, the channel ^
often get sore and Irritated, obliglrs
you to seek relief two or three tTrnes
during the night.
To neutralize these Irritating acldi.
to cleanse the kidneys and flush off
the body’s urinous waste gel four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar
macy here: take a. tablespoonful in a
? iasa of water before breakfast for a
ew days and your kidneys will than
act fin© This famous salts Is mad*
from the acid of grapes and lemon
Juice, combined with lithia, and ha*
been used for generations to flush and
stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to nei;
tralize the acids In urine, so it
longer Irritates, thus ending bladder
weakness
Jad Salts is inexpensive; can not in
jure. and makes a delightful efferves
cent llthia-water drink.—Advt.
■ For Xmas Gift
WASHINGTON, Dee 9 Mrs Glad
stone and her daughter, Miss Kathleen
Gladstone, of Kings Langley, Hertford-
The punch bowl which has stood for
many years over the key rack at the
Piedmont Hotel has been replaced with
a monster sponge, which was present
ed to R. Frank Taylor, the assistant
manager, by a sea-going friend. The
sponge is almost as big as a wash-tub.
and has caused the clerks to come in
for a lot of chafing as to its purpose.
Tom Needles, one of the room clerks,
insists that it was placed there to ab
sorb some of the hot air that he says
Grady Galloway hurls at the devoted
heads of the traveling public.
Hosiery is Always Appreciated
'Holeproof Hosiery
shire. PIngland. will arrive at Washing
ton late in December to visit the mili
tary attach© of the British Embassy,
Colonel Moreton F. Gag© and Mrs. Gage
Noticed It? You're
22 Cents Richer
Eleonora Sears Is
Wooed by a Fiddler
BOSTON. Dec. 9. — Benjamin Gros-
bayn, a violinist and a Harvard grad
uate, of Roxbury, Is the latest candi
date for the hand of Eleonora Sears
society athlete
He admits he proposed to her. ami
she said she would give him an an
swer in two weeks.
WASHINGTON, Dor <). Each In
dividual In the United States is the
oretically 22 cents richer this year
than last, according- to the annual re
port of the Comptroller of the Cur
rency, issued to-day.
The. total of actual money now in
the country, Including the amount
held in reserve in the United States
Treasury, is $3,720,070,016, and if this
amount were equally divided each
man. woman and child In the United
States would have $34.56. Last year
this per capita average was $34.34
Especially so---for, when purchased hy the
box each pair is guaranteed to Wear a month.
1 ■
Prices Range From
$1.50 to $3
Per Box
600 Vaccinated in
City Lodging House
CHICAGO, Dec. 9. Six hundred men
who occupied tho Municipal Shelter
House last night’ were vaccinated to
day by the Health Department. In the
crowded "flop" Edward Waller, a la
borer, who came here from Buffalo
three days ago, was found to have
smallpox
The cold weather continued to day,
with small prospect of a rise
We also carry a varied line of Men’s House
Slippers and Leather Table Covers
Regal Sh oe Store
6 Vs/hitehall St.
IRRITABLE CHILD
if
Little Tongue is Coated,
Surely Give “California
Syrup of Figs.”
Mother! Your child isn't naturally
cross and peevish. See if tongue i'g
coated, this is a sure sign Us little
stomach, liver and bowels need a
cleansing at once.
When listless, pale, feverish, full of
cold, breath bad. throat sore, doesn’t
eat, sleep or act naturally, has stomach
ache. diarrhea, remember, a gentle liver
and bowel cleansing should always be
the first treatment given
Nothing equals "California Syrup of
Figs" for children's ills; give a teaspoon
ful. and in a few hours all the foul
waste, sour bile and fermenting food
which Is clogged in the bowels passes
out of the system, and you have a well
and playful child again All children
love this harmless, delicious "fruit lax
ative. ’ and it never fail? to effect a
good "inside” cleansing Directions for
babies, children of all ages and grown
ups are plainly on tie bottle.
Keep it handy in your home A little
given to-day saves h sick child to-mor
row but got the genuine Ask your
druggts’ for a 50-cent bottle of
fornia Svrup of Figs." then look and
see that it is made by the "California
Fig Syrup Company Counterfeits are
being sold here. Don i be foolec!—-Advt,
YOU CAN HAVE IT
RK PA IR ED
.JUST DIKE NEW
AT A VERY MODERATE COST
Tho Georgian’s Repair Directory give* all tho principal places whore
an article can be repaired, and should be preserved In every home as •
guide.
1
THE PIPE
HOSPITAL
i For all kinds of
Pipe Repairing
All Kinds of FURNACES Repaired
The Only Plaee to Get MONCRIE'
TUMLIN BROS,
50 NORTH BROAD ST.
ALL MAKES OF
TYPEWRITERS
Repaired and Re-
Bullt. Prompt ser
vice. Thorough
work. Reasonable
charge*.
American Writing
Machine Co.
Phon« Main 2526.
48 N. Pryor St.
These Ads Bring Results.
See Ad Man or Call
Main 100.
FURNACES Repaired.
Prompt Attention,
MONCRIEF FURNACE CO.
Phonee Main 288; Atlanta W77
139 South Pryor Street.
SCISSORS AND KNIVES
OF ALL KINDS
SHARPENED BY
EXPERTS'
MATTHEWS & LIVELY
21 E. Alabama St
ATLANTA,
Woulc
Disi
dru
and
STOVES
Of All Kind*
REPAIRED
THE ATLANTA
•TOVE SUPPLY Oe.
1*1 N Forwtt! at Pfcnna
ley 11*0 S-.nvo ftnppUos
•f Everv V>r*