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BAIDE OF THAEE
MONTH 3 LOats
DESIRE T 0 DIE
Wife of Greek Says Poison Tasted
Bad, and She Will Not
Try It Again,
Suicide no longer has any charms
for Mrs. Chris Angelos, of No. 83
West Cain street, a bride of three
months, She declared Monday, after
she had tried to kill herself late Sun
day afternoon by a taking a swallow
from a bottle of poison, that she isn’t
going to try it again, no matter how
great the provocation.
“It doesn't feel good to swaliow
poison,” she said. “It hurts. I tried
it yesterday because I was loneiy and
had just quarreled with my husband.
1 don’t know what I drank. I want
ed to die afier we had quarreled, so
T just went looking around the house
until T found a bottle with a poison
label on it and half full of some
kind of liquid. I swallowed some of
it. I don't know what it was, but it
didn’'t taste nice.”
Mrs. 'Angelos is the wife of a Greek
restaurant keeper to whom she was
married less than three months ago.
Her first husband was also named
Chris Angelos, and was a cousin of
her present mate. He was a trooper
of the Seventeenth Infantry, and was
mysteriously killed while on duty
with the regiment along the Mexican
border.
Neighbors callel the Grady Hos
pital ambulance when they heard
Mrs. Angelos’ scream after taking the
poison, but it was found that she had
not drunk enongh seriously to hurt
her, so she was not taken to the
hospital.
King Peacemaker in
Speciai Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, July 20.—King George has
adopted the role of peacemaker in the
Irish crisis and will take part in a con
ference at Buckingham Palace to-mor
row at which all political factions will
be represeénted.
At a special meeting of the Cabinet,
Premier Asquith to-day outlined the
draft of a plank which will be consid
ered in the Buckingham Palace confer
ence.
“Ugliest Man" Won
Four Wives by §
NEW YORK, July 20.—George R.
Chapin, described by ex-wives and de
tectives as ‘‘the ugliest man in New
York,” who was arrested while peace
fully enjoying his honeymoon with wife
No. 4, did it all with his musical voice,
according to wife No, 3. She said:
‘““He sort of whispered, and he sort
of sung, always in a low, kind way
};X'u]t it got there, George's love-making
did.”
Mrs. Belmont, Jr.,
Now Chorus Girl
NEW YORK, July 20.—Mrs. Raymond
Belmont, the voung wife of the son o:
August Belmont, who recently won her
suit. for separation, with alimony of
$lOO a month, has adopted the stage aw
a profession. Under the name of Ethel
Helen Lorraine, Mrs. Belmont has been
appearing for the last two weeks at the
Winter Garden.
Their Chance to Vote
TOPEKA, KANS., July 20.—Leading
politicians of all parties In Kansas are
plainly worried over the refusal of wom
en to register so that they may vote
at the State-wide primary election Au
gust 4.
The party newspapers in twenty-five
towns are filled with pleas for the wom
en to register before July 20, when
registration closes.
. .
Maxim Gorki Is
. .
Again in Bad Health
LONDON, July 20.—Maxim Gorki's
health is so bad that he is obliged to
leave Russia and go to Davos, ‘'where
he hopes the mountain air will be ben
eficial to his lungs.
LIGHT RUNNING
e ""-tl:‘::::uo o
¢ 9
NEW HOME
The Machine of Quality. Special
prices on used machines. We
make ‘‘Needles’’—all kinds. Also
Rent and Repair Machines.
Both Phones, Service Prompt.
The dew Home Sewing Machine
Company,
No. 10 Trust Co. of Ga. Bullding
NEW DISCOVERY QUICKLY ENDS
KIDNEY AND BLADDER TROUBLES
Chronic Sufferers Find Relief
After Few Doses Are Taken.
If vou are bothered with backache—
or rheumatism, have disagreeable, an
noying bladder or urinary disorders to
contend with—or suffer with any other
of the many miseries that come from
weak kidneys, here is a guaranteed
remedy you can depend upon, no matter
what else may have failed to cure you.
It is a positiye fact that the new dis
covery, Croxone, promptly overcomes
such diseases. It is the most wonderful
remedy ever made for ridding the sys
tem of uric acid, removing the cause
and curing the troubles,
It soaks right in and cleans out the
stopped up kidneys and makes them
filter and sift out all the poisonous
waste matter from the blood. It neu
tralizes and dissolves the uric acid that
fiAM ONLY IN LOVE.
. SAYS 'INSANE’ BRIDE
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CHICAGO, Juiy 20.—"“Come on
over: I'm not dangerous. Row near
er. Really, I'm all right. I'm not mad
or crazy; I'm only in love.”
That was the statement made to a
reporter by Helen Morton Bayly, the
beautiful young society woman
whose husband, Robert Bayly, a
young Virginian, called insane al
the close of a three weeks' honcy
moon, and whose contention was up
held by the court. Mrs. Bayly made
her statement from the grounds of
the splendid estate of George Fa
byan, on the west bank of the Fox
River, between Geneva and Batavia,
11, where she has been ordered con
fined indefinitely instead of being
clapped inside the gray walls of a
madhouse.
“No, my imprisonment is not at all
irksome,” the young bride continuad,
“because, you see, I am quartered .n
a place 1 simply adore. If the ‘im
prisonment,’ as you call it, becomes
lonesome, why [ shall simply ¥
away,” and she laughed in the most
light-hearted manner.
Mother |s Prostrated.
Mrs. Bayly's mother, Mrs. Mark
Morton, is prostrated at her Lake
Forest home. The bride wrote a long
list of questions dealing with her
mental state, bhut the mother was too
moved to answer them.
Mrs. Bayly is guarded by 32 mus
cular men. They are posted at the
gates and along the expansive stone
wall that incloses the country place
of the multi-millionaire.
Helen may roam at will about the
grounds ‘with their fairyland gardeas
and fountains. She may stroll under
the massive oaks and spreading elms;
she may sit beside the Japanese lily
pond or while away the hours in the
violet grottoes. She may ramble like
a child among the fragrant rose ar
bors and admire the horticultural
beauties at the Roman baths.
She can pick blossoms of the
rarest kind. She can lounge in shady
dells and listen to babbling brooks
and the music of a medley of foun
tains. She has the run of the man
sion, with its modern luxuries, but at
the guarded gates and white walls her
world ends,
Hide Fluttering Dove.
What wonder that she has be:zn
likened to a fluttering dove in a gild
ed cage. It is a pathetic sequel to a
romantic courtship, and it all han
pened in a few short months. There
wasn't a more ardent lover nor a
happier bride, and then came discov
ery of eccentricilies and family se
crets and the tests by alienists.
The young husband who petitionad
for the inquiry claims much of h.s
wife's past life was kept from him.
And the captive bride sings of love.
After the honeymoon, Bayly had his
bride’'s mind tested. He made discov
lodges in the joints and muscles, caus-i
ing rheumatism; soothes and heals the|
delicate linings of the bladder; and puls'
the kidneys and urinary organs in a!
clean, strong, healthy condition. |
More than a few doses of Croxone '
are seldom required to relieve even the!
obstinate long standing cases, while it
cures the most annoying forms of kid-l
ney, bladder trouble and rheumatism in
a surprisingly short time. ’
You will find Croxone entirely dif
ferent from all other remedies. There,
ts nothing else on earth like it. It isj|
so prepared that it is practically im
possible to take it into the human sys
tem without results. An original pack
age costs but a trifle at any first-class
drug store. All druggists are authorized
to personally return the purchase price
if Croxone fails to give the desired re
sults the very first time: you use it.—
ADVERTISEMENT.
eries as to her mental “peculiarities”
juring their honeymoon. He was in
dignant. He hastened to her father.
He felt, say intimates, that he had
been made ‘“the goat.”
SPCCIaI CANDI Announcemcnt
“
TO_ DAY Monday, we are going to make é specialty
- e of our PEANUT BEITTLE candy. We
will make this at intervals during the day, and sell it for 17
cents a pound. This is a special price for Monday only,
and the very best that can be made. Send a box to those
who are away. They will enjoy it.
; W Tuesday, will be COCOANUT
M_Q._R_&Q—— PATTIE day. This delightful
candy has become very popular—why shouldn’t it ¥ We use
in making, it fresh cracked cocoanuts and pure cane sugar,
cooked with the milk from the nuts. Four flavors, maple, va
nilla, chocolate and strawberry, in pound boxes, for 23 cents
a pound. Tuesday only. Made fresh on day of sale.
“Watch our window for a new special each day.”’
%}3 148 Peachtree Street %Zégfia
Open Eveningu
Housekeepers shouldße Homekeepers
» e ——
In making and molding your home, Mrs.
Housekeeper, you have to give a lot of
thought to your table, and it is worth it.
Do you ask the grocer for a ‘‘box of crackers?”’ Don’t do it again, be
cause you want fresh crackers, the bqst that can be made.
i
Then ask for
Made almost in your own kitchen, right here in Atlahta. They are
always fresh, really delightful--the best crackers that you can buy.
Every grocer in Atlanta can get a nice lot of Block Crackers every
day--therefore you don’t have to use stale ones--just say “Block
Crackers,” please, and some of your housekeeping troubles areovar.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS
RUBE DICKINGON
WING BRIDE IN
ATLANTA
Noted Comedian and Miss Laura
Grant Are Married at At
lanta Club.
“Rube” Dickinson is married.
It happened just like that—with
out preliminary and so suddenly as
to leave his friends gasping.
“Rube,” more properly Walter S.
Dickinson, finished a week at the
Forsyth Theater Saturday night and
faced the prospect of an Atlanta
Sunday, with nothing to do until
Monday except catch a night train
for Birmingham.
So, with a party of friends, the
{nimitable monologist repaired to the
Atlanta Club. Among the friends was
Miss Laura Grant, of Atlanta.
The party proved congenial. A
pleasant afternoon was had by all.
“Rube” is as amusing “off” as ‘“on,”
and he was in the best of moods.
The reason developed at dusk.
“Well, this is our wedding day,” he
announced. =
Everyone thought he was joking,
but when it developed that he and
Miss Grant were in real earnest it
was decided to do the affair in style.
A license was secured from Judge
Wilkingon, and Lou Castro rounded
up Judge J. B. Ridley to perform the
ceremony, which he did at the fash
ionable hour of 8:30 o'clock.
The bride, becomingly attired in
white organdie, with a panama hat
trimmed in Roman striped silk which
‘matched her girdle, marched to Lhe
strains of Mendelssohn's wedding
march across the dance floor on the
roof garden of the club. She was met
at the bass drum by the bridegroom.
A wedding breakfast followed the
ceremony, and, after recelving the
congratulations of scores of well
wishers, the bridal party departed,
leaving the floor an inch deep in rice.
Mr. Dickinson left for Birmingham.
Mrs. Dickinson is to join him Friday,
and after a week in Jacksonville they
will go to New York by boat.
Mr. Dickimson is a natlve of Lin
coln, Nebr., and one of the best known
comedians in all vaudeville.
= He told newspaper men Sunday
‘night that he met Miss Grant last
season and had been awaiting his At
lanta engagement with impatience for
that reason,
Reptile Poison Is
Antidote for Rabies
PARIS, July 20.—Reptile poison is
suggested as a cure for hydrophobia by
Mme. Phisalix, a well-known French
scientist. Rabbits inocuiated with this
serum showed themselves immune to
injections of rabies microbes.
Princeton Professor
Secured by China
p——
PEKIN, July 20-W. F. Wuloufihb.\'.
professor of jurisprudence and po itics
at Princeton University, has been ap
gnlmad deputy legal adviser to the
hinese Government.
Dr. F. J. Goodnow, leftl adviser, re
cently accepted the presidency of Johns
Hopkins University. He will still act as
adviser.
——————— ——
146 Buildings Fired
By Britisthilitants
LONDON, July 20.—According to The
Morning Post militants, since, January
1, 1918, have set fire or attempted to sel
fire to 146 public buildings, churches,
houses or other structures, and have
ux'})loded forty-three bombs.
he material damage is estimated at
$1,920,000, excluding the damage 1o
works of art.
OBITUARY.
The body of C. M. Wilson was removed
to Poole's Chapel Monday pending
funeral arrangements. Mr. Wilson
died Sunday at a private sanitarium.
He is survived by two sisters, Mrs.
Mattie Needler, of Perry, lowa, and
Mrs. Crandall, of Burton, Towa. The
deceased was 43 years oid.
The body of A. D. Howard, aged 64,
stationary engineer, was removed
Monday to Patterson's Cha&el gnd
ing funeral arrangements. r. How
ard died Sunday night at his resi
dence, No. 21 East Linden street.
He was a 32nd degree Mason, mem
ber of Capital City Lodge, No. 61, of
Odd Fellows, the Junior Order of
American Mechanics, the Red Men,
Knights of Pythias and the Empire
Encampment. Surviving him are his
wife, one daughter, Mrs. W. H. Gill,
two brothers, three sisters and his
mother.
DON'T DEPRIVE
YOURSELF
( !
MAXWELL
§ HOUSE |
BLEND
COFFEE
Expresses the highest |
art in coffee produc- |
tion and is always |
packed in sealed tins. ||
Ask your groeer for it. i
Cheek-Neal Coffee Co., |
Rashvilie Jackseuvilie Besates
$lOO Multiplied 55,000
Times Makes What—!
Five and a Half Million Dollars!
Simple problem! But mark this well—
It is not one whit simpler than the
getting of a good portion of this sum
which represents
The Monthly Expenditure
of Georgian Readers
To put the figure very low, each
Georgian family spends on the aver
age $lOO a month for the necessities
of life. |
More than 55,000 of these families
read The Georgian every week day.
It’s apparent that The Georgian in
fluences the monthly expenditure of
more than $5,500,000 for necessities
alone.
And this takes no account of what
The Sunday American’s 100,000
families spend.
Part of at least $lBO,OOO a day in
fluenced in your direction by adver
tising in
The Atlanta Georgian
Read Daily in More Than 55,000 Homes—loo,ooo Sunday
3