Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 19, 1913, Image 11

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I HI'. -\ ! l./V.V 1 -A l',U.HUJAi\ AMI \| w r>. I l THE El OF I Members of Company Capable and Work Hard, but Vehicle Has Flat Tire. Sidelights GEORGIA POLITICS , Jamis b. nlvtn A on ■ Price on Committee ; Grand Duke on Stand ’ & To Discuss ‘Franks’' To Clear Character romumsuHHr of A gri’ill III 10 rumen j Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. 1>. Prim han been named one of tin* j LONDON. Dp . pi <'tniji<1 Duht* three Southern delegates to take up I Boris of Kusshi it-sUfied to-day ir with Congress the matter of permit- | behalf of himself in : »ie final hearing f his libel Mii ugatnBi the Frank A. ting State Departments of Agricul ture to frank through the United States mail all Stale agricultural lii- e rat ure. The delegation named by the clialr- man of the lato convnntion of Agrl- curtural Commissioners. held in Louisville. is composed of Omni. - sinners Price, of Georgia ;• Ivone. of Texan, and Peck, of Tennessee. By TARLETON COLLIER. are informed ostentatiously flie Girl of My Dreams' is the .duct of eminent composers and iiists. These gentlemen must .een content to rest on laurels -wise won- or maybe this was sh order. At any rate, it must i u that "The Girl of My Dreams.” ,mh at the Atlanta Theater -,i,iy night, is not a monumental >i ■ e \ jsical comedy, which should be :g if not brightly effervescent, irags itself along with only one .» songs receiving more than a » lukewarm encore—well. not .'an he said for its appeal, he one song that received an ex- ually warm greeting. "Dr. Tin- Tinkle." advantage was taken of nport unity of* manufacturing an The chorus was displayed in -• I’uit were uniqpie. and the mai- • cHides. were gayly arrayed for 11 would have been just as n» dress up the other ensem- ard thus to give more of a h to the whole show, r* company is not to be blamed i r laek of cordiality displayed by Thursday night audience. There ? many in the cast who deserved I brighter lines and better sit- s. Eda Von Duke, as Daphne, -.■in mental milliner, was as good ■hues ns any funny woman who , s . xploi<ed her talents in these itly. Roy Purviance, in *\'jf i i » role, lias an excellent voffce, i,l i!i - desirable savoir falre of the i The singing of Countess Olga 1 Von Mat/.feldt, in tiie heroine’s part, is good as the luster of her | une would lead you to expect. Ir- v ■;t»^ Brooks, as Count Von Schnlg- _ f: s. proved to be rather funny be- j ie final curtain fell. Neil Burns j rui Adele Boulais. the juveniles, i made good. The Girl of My Dreams" will be •he Atlanta for performances Fri- : iy and Saturday evenings, and mat inee Saturday. Secretary of State Phil Cook, ex- ofticio automobile boss of Georgia, is out one large, fat box of perfectly good cigars—not campaign stogies - because he couldn’t produce a certain automobile number to the exact lik ing of a certain automobile plutocrai. 1 3."” Said plutocrat is a genuine Geor- 1 gian, and hankered for tab No. ill. He felt that lie never would get into trouble with anybody if his car might be tagged with that mystic symbol. He informed Secretary of State Cook of this desire, and further told him that along with the request for lag 1 No. 711 w ould come a fine box of ei- j gars, with a note staling that if the writer got the lag Cook could keep | the cigars, but if he didn’t get the l tag the cigars must come hack. Investigation showed that tag No. 711 long ago went to somebody else and can not now be duplicated. So the Secretary had to pass up the ci gars. He says if he had thought of 1: he would have reserved tag No. 711 for some such emergency, as he might have known it would arise sooner ur later. Taking time by the forelock in an other direction, however. Colonel Cook has put aside tag No. 41144—and he proposes to get n box of cigars f >r that some doy. or know why! Muneoy Company, based on an arti cle describing th. plaintiff's behavior in Manchuria during the Russo-Jap anese w l Tim Grand Duke w.i- given permig- <eion to clear his < haracter, aft?r which tho court decided- that the plaintiff should la* awarded damages equal to the costa of the case. •s IM R O rv* I2H That means real dollars and cents saved to YOU. We back up every word of this advertisement, and have reduced the price on every man’s suit and overcoat in the house. j re-election to the House next year— j I although it is an open secret that he i j might go to ti e Senate unopposed, if | i*e wished 10—and will be a candi** j date to succeed himself ns Speaker. It does not seem at all ikely that BurweP will be opposed for re-ei- c- eitlier to the House or to the Speakership. He lias made a spleiv j did record thus far. is popular and is universally agreed to he an unusually J able presiding officer. It has been he custom n Geor^s i j to re-elect acceptable Speakers. Clark j Howell. John Little, John M. Slaton and others we e awarded that honor j without protest or question. Whitehall Cars to Resume Old Route Governor Slaton approves of the Jim Price variety of Georgia dinner, such as the one given recently by that gentleman at the University Club in Atlanta. "Everything at Price’s dinner was Georgia raised and Georgia bred. Tin* l menu served was rather hearty, but it was genuinely local. There were are sorts of varieties of pork—back bone, ehitterlii.i, spa reribs, sausage, Jowl, and what not. It all came from a good Georgia farm—and it was fine eating." said the Governor to-day. "I enjoy a dinner of Georgia prod ucts a little bit more than any other kind. Price’s was a fine one—and I hope he never will overlook me when framing one up!” Announceernnt was made Friday that street cars on the. Whitehall- ' Peachtree line witich were diverted from Peachtree and Whitehall be tween the Grand Opera House and tiie Junction of Forsyth and White hall during the regrading of White hall will resume their former route by way of Peachtree and Whitehall on December 22. On the same date the Cooper-Ken- nerly carA will resume their route by way of Whitehall street between Cooper and Mitchell streets, and the Irw ii.-M* Daniel cars by wav of Whitehall. Mitchell and Broad. Bunting Draws Big Houses. There will be just three more op- j c-runi; ies to see Miss Emma Bunt- :g m her splendid performance of j The Girl From Out Yonder’’’ at the L 11 . The attendance this week has •rn exceptional. As Flotsam, Misw i Bunting appears to splendid advar.t- , ge, ; nd ike charming little manner- sms t c have endeared her to every ' leatergoer in \tlanta are evident in pr impersonation of the lighthouse ; eeper's Mile daughter. Hooligan Coming to Lyric. II, ppy Hooligan", comes to the l.yri Vor a week’s stay beginning .Monday. Fun is rampant from the ■inset. The pace set is a lively and a nmi'v one and even the most eross- -r.iine-i misanthrope is sure to be unused. "A Midnight Marriage." Jewell Kelley Company s Tne i»ei vet* express” at the Bijou is prov- M • wood comedy bill, not lacking <’ fids ; ;id sensational incidents, ;m ntrmis of the house are showing ■ -if appreciation by generous ap- uim and frequent curtain calls. For PRINCIPAL HOQUIAM SCHOOL RECOVERS FROM DIABETES "a i; nearly three years ago when '•physicians attending J. J. I’enru*- m 'M-. Principal of the schools of miam, Wash., agreed that they could 1 1 nothing more for him. He was bro- • down with Diabetes and was be- '•ve<l to he incurable. Tests showed 1 •1 ont of sugar. A recent letter is as ■ •Hows: "Uoquiam. Wash.. April 6, 1913. i 1. -I Fulton Go.. Gentlemen: is a long time since 1 wrote you. 1 han* not forgotten you nor the H'ierful good Fulton's Diabetic Com- ino has done for me. I have almost inquiries about tiie Compound that ir “d me. and r am writing to ask for ' more of your literature f call Tif well, although 1 am stili taking Compound. Yours truly, "J. J. PENNEPACKER.’’ "u have Diabetes and are of mid- *ge or over do you not owe it to Murself and family to try Fulton’s M.al Compound before giving up? Ii ii: do had at Edmondson Drug Co. MU for pamphlet or write John J. n * To., San Francisco.—Advt. j South Georgia apparently has putin something of a bid to fame as Nort.i 1 Georgia’s rival in the matter of "moonshine" distilling. Deputy Collector of Internal Rew - i nue Cooley, of the Southern District I of Georgia, recently nosed out an M- j licit still about eight miles from 1 Thomasville. and promptly eonfls- | rated the outfit. Mr. Cooley found several barrels of beer and booze, an«l > everything showed that the still had j been in very recent operation. There have been reports very fro- ! quently of stills around Thomas County, especially in the lower part of it, but they have been hard to lo- | cate, as witnesses summoned always 1 fail to testify "satisfactorily,” or something or other. If they are going to manufacture it in South Georgia by the wholesale, they will have to quit calling it gen erally "mountain dew.” anyway, .is there are no mountains in South Georgia. A rather silly story—designed orig inally as a joke, perhaps—has bee 1 going the rounds of the press in ; Georgia concerning Judge Samuel R. 1 Adams, of Savannah, and some re- j cently expressed views of his in re- : to woman’s suffrage. Judge Adams gave to the press -1 few days ago a very scholarly and dignified argument against woman 1 suffrage, which attracted great at ten - 1 tion throughout the State. A few da vs later a story was sent out from Savannah to the effect that the judge had been swamped with protesting letters from all quarters, and thill "sharp division actually had arisen in i his family” because of the views ex pressed. j At first the judge looked upon the j matter as a joke, if a rather poor one. but later it became more or 1^= em barrassing. and now It seems to re quire a mild measure of polite denial. As a matter of fact, the judge ha* received only a few letters concerning his article, all of them commending i 1 Nobody has protested to him about it, although many people doubtless entertain views entirely different from those expressed by the judge. And as to division in his household— that, of course, is absurd. Judge Samuel B. Adams is one of Georgia’s most splendid men—an able lawyer, a Just judge, a student and a scholar. His fear of woman suffrage is that it might make woman lex womanly—and that is the one fear, moreover, of many people who hon estly and heartily enou~h believe oth erwise in the righteousness of the cause. Trim Christmas Tree for 5,000,000 NEW YORK, Dec. 19.—The munici- j pal Christmas tree for the ft.000,000 Ne.v Yorkers lias been set up iji Mad ison Square. Electricians have begun trimming I the tree ana beneath its twinkling j branches delegations from the city’s choral societies will sing yuletide I carols on Christmas Eve. Boy, 17, Sues Wife, 40, : He Married in Secret DES MOINES, IOWA. Dec. 19 Charles L. Bates, 17 years old, asks the District Court to annul his mar riage to Mrs. Maud Patrick. 40 year.- old. The pelition says Mrs. Patrick lured him to Chicago last July. BUSINESS NOTICE. Cold* Cause Headache and Grip. LAXATIVE BHOM’D QUININE tablets I remove cause. There is only One "BHO- MO QUININE." It has signature of E. VV. Grove on box. 25c. I WHY??? Congress lowered the TARIFF on woolens. We took advan tage of this for you and bought at the reduced price YOU get the benefit. m m#* f- % The Very Thing! ^4 KODAK The Christmas Cift that will appeal to every member of the family—will add to the joy of the Christmas day in the pleasure of picture-taking and will perpetuate that day by preserving its memories. K OI)A K S $5.00 and UP Brownie Cameras They Work j Like Kodaks I *1.00 to *12.0° GLENN PHOTO STOCK CO. EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY 0pp. Piedmont Hotel 117 Peachtree St. r§r A'' Py $1S.©0 Suit Values m $20.00 Suit Values Bn 5k t .1. Gel Your Xmas Gilts At THE MENTER CO. And Have Them Charged Buy useful gifts—This *3 your store—Come and pick out just what you want and pay the easy way, $1.00 a week. You’ll find many sensible gifts here, Raincoats for Men and Women, Fur Sets, a Coat for the Girl, a Suit or Overcoat for the Boy. Read over the suggestions below and choose now. Speaker William j! Hancock Coun . i.« in day or two. Mr. Burwell will be Burwell, Atlanta for candidate * TRAINS DAILY Special Show ing of Women’s Coals, Suits, Millinery and Furs. Smart Coats Clever Suits Fur Sets . . . $12 to $27 $12 to $30 $10 to $35 Warm Sweater: $ 2 t.o $ 5 Silk Dresses $12 to $25 Walking' Skirts . $ 4to$ 7 Girls' Coats $ 3 to $ 7 Petticoats . $ 2 to $ 5 BETWEEN MACON ATLANTA Overcoats Stylish Overcoats for men and young men. Easy to bt.y, easy to pay the Men- ter Way. $10 to $24 Leave Macon Union Station 3.00 a-m. Leave Atlanta Torminal Station i Men’s Overcoats $10 to $24 Boys’ Overcoats $4 to $10 Men s Suits $8.50 to $23 Boys' Skits $3 to $8 Mens Shoes $2.75 to $4.50 Women’s (oats lieautiful Coats from the best houses in New York. They are simply splendid. $12 to $27 MILLINERY \ Price on every trimmed Hat & in this store. $1S.G0 Sust Values Overcoat Greatly Reduced $25.00 Suit Values 3.51 4.22 7.25 1.30 3.45 5.00 5.1 8 a.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. 8.00 9.47 2.30 4.00 8.30 9.00 0.1 O 1 .45 a.m. a.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. ASK THE TICKET AGENT CITY TICKET OFFICES p03 Cherry Street 4th Nafl Bank Bldg. Macon, Ga. . Atlanta, Ga. OR AT THE STATION i EVERY BOYS' SUIT Mail Orders Promptly Filled nauOHarnnvn^MM'Mi 1V/-2 Whitehall Street Upstairs OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL CHRISTMAS Corner North Pryor and Decatur. in stock has been greatly reduced. Now's your time to outfit the bttle fellows AT A GREAT SAVING.