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THURSDAY. OCTOBER 26.
NEARLY $20,000 OFFERED IN
FRIZES AT SAVANNAH RACES
Savannah Automobile Club'Gives $12,500 In Gold to the Win
ners While Various Manufacturers Make Splendid Offers.
Savannah, Ga.— With $19,950 in cash
eady hung- up as prize money for
[he winners of the automobile races
in Savannah on Nov. 27 and SO, and
with the large majority of the tire
(*>ncerns and accessory manufactur
rs not yet heard from, it appears that
>t only will the races set up records
for the annihilation of distance, but
will as well place new figures on prize
money carried away by winning driv
ers.
Yesterday the amounts were added
!o by offers from the Bosch Magneto
Company of $1,550 for the winners
who are equipped with Bosch Mag
netos, and by the Findelsen & Kropf
Manufacturing Company, makers of
!he Bayfield Carbureter, of $2,500.
with the previous offer of the
•temy Electric Company of $4,250 to
ihose winning with Remy Magnetos
ind the offer of- the Savannah Auto
mobile Club of $12,500 in gold to the
winners of the events, make the total,
which will be greatly swelled when
Ihe other offers come in.
The letter of the Findelsen & Kropf
Manufacturing Company is for the
winner of the Grand Prize race, $1,000;
the winner of the Vanderbilt, $500:
lecond man in the Vanderbilt, $200;
winner of the Savannah Challenge
Trophy, $250, and winner of the Tiede
man Cup Race, $250.
The offer of the Bosch Magneto
Company is SSOO, 200 and SIOO respec--
lively for first, second and third place
In the Grand Prize; $200,50 and 50 for
first, second and third in the Vander
bilt; SIOO, 50 and 50 for the Tiede
nan Trophy, and the same for the
Savannah Challenge Trophy.
All these prizes are offered with the
9roviso that Ihe winners must be
(quipped with the product of the com
pany offering the prize. The gold
prizes offered by the Savannah Auto
mobile Club are without restriction to
to to the winners.
Nordylte & Marmon Company of
Indianapolis will have two cars in the
HIT TO EXCLUDE
FAMILY TBOOBLES
Technical Arguments Take Up
Day In Han3on Will Case.
Want Depositions Omitted.
Atlanta, Ga.—Arguing on technical
Joints for more than two hours yes
ierday morning, Alex Kins, Sr., one of
he attorneys for the executors of the
1. F. Hanson estate, tried to convince
lu Jjbourt that the main part of the
ivkience contained in tltfe Caveats to
he will is irrelevant, and should,
herefore, not be allowed to enter into
he case at all, urging especially that
U 1 references to the Hanson's mari
e! troubles be stricken from the case.
He argued that Mrs. Fannie Hanson
iVhite and Mrs. Estelle C. Hanson,
vho are contesting the will, have not
lubstantiated their charges of fraud
tnd misrepresentation on the part of
Urs. Annie Garrett, and that, there
bre, there is no basis upon which the
pill may be contested.
This argument was not concluded
►efore adjournment hour > and Judge
Pendleton was unable to rule for or
igainst the demurrer.
The reading of the will brought out
he fact that it was made in 1908,
rtdle the codicil relative to the The
tsophist colony was attached in 1910.
In this codicil the major stated that
10 part of the $50,000 conditionally
est to Mrs. Fannie Hanson White was
k) be paid out during her life time,
tnd that her children were not to have
iny part of it until they reached the
ige of 25 years, unless they renounced
!he Theosophist religion and removed
bon Point Loma. Mrs. White is not
o receive any of the principal In any
ivent, though she is to receive an an
luaJ income, hut if the children re
lounce Theosophy they are to receive
ine-third of the principal when 21
fears old; a second third when 26
fears old, and the remainder when 30
fears old. «
It is in protest of these conditions
tnd because the bulk of the major’s
lortune was willed to Anna Garrett
ind her children that the other daugh
ter and the wife of the major's son,
(Valter F. Hanson, seek to break; the
(Fill.
MIDNIGHT IN THE OZARK 3
tnd yet sleepless Hiram Scranton, of
Jlay City, 111., coughed and coughed.
3e was in the mountains on the ad
tice of five doctors, who said he had
■onsumption, but found no help in
:be climate, and started home. Hear
ns of Dr. King’s New Discovery, be
iegan to use it. “I believe it saved
ny life,'’ he writes, “for it made a
lew man of me, so that I can now
lo good work again.” For all lung
liseases, coughs, colds, la grippe,
isthma, croup, whooping cough, hay
fever, hemorrhages, hoarseness or
juinsv, its the best known remedy.
Price 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottle
free. Guaranteed by all druggists.
NEWS OF EMORY
»* _____
Social News and Personal Items of
Interest.
Oxford, Ga. —Bishop A. W, Wilson,
it the Southern Methodist church, ad
dressed the student body of Emory
Monday in the auditorium of the new
Mian Memorial Chapel. Bishop Wil
lon made the trip from Atlanta to
Oxford in company with Mr. Asa
Candler in the largo touring car of Mr.
Candler. Bishop Wilson will remain
in Georgia until the annual confer
tnce of the North Georgia Conference
seventh Vanderbilt Cup Race, at Sa
vannah, on Nov. 27. The two cars
will be Marmon "Thirty Sixes," prac
tically the same as the regular produc
tion of the Indianapolis factory with
the exception of a larger motor.
One of the Marmonp will be driven
by "Boh" Burman, "Speed King.” and
holder of many world's records, and
the other will have as Its pilot Joe
Dawson, runner-up in the famous
race last year. Lap for lap, Daw
sm made the fastest time to which
any car has ever been driven in a
Vanderbilt race, averaging 67.44 miles
per hour for the distance, but a delay
of several minutes caused by his car
striking a spectator in the eighteenth
lap lost him the contest by the mar
gin of 25 seconds.
Dawson figures thrft both he and
his team-mate, Burman, can surpass
his time of last year and that the 17
laps or 289 miles will be run at an
average of better than 70 miles per
hour.
In the Savannah Challenge race.
231-300 class, to be run on the same
day, there will be two Marmon "Thir
ty-Two" cars entered. Cyrus
Patschke, the famous 24-hour driver,
who acted as relief pilot for Ray Har
roun in the victorious Marmon during
the International Sweepstakes 500-mile
race at Indianapolis on May 30th, will
be one of the pilots, and Joe Nikrent,
who has won many races at the Pa
cific coast, will he at the wheel of
the other Marmon.
These two Marmon “Thirty-Twos"
finished within two minutes of each
other in winning the Jacob Jepson
Perpetual Challenge Trophy at Santa
Monica, Cal., on Oct. 14th, at the same
time breaking all road records for its
class.
Dawson, tn one of the Marmons,
won the Savannah Challenge Trophy
race last year, covering the 276. S miles
at 63 miles an hour without a stop,
making the longest non-stop race on
record.
convenes in Augusta in November.
Mrs. Mary Harris Armor, noted
temperance speaker, addressed an au
dience of Newton county citizens
Tuesday night, in Covington. Two
hundred of the Emory boys walked to
Covington tn a body to hear her speak
and cheered her time and again as
she made a telling joint or spoke of
Ever notice kow muck kcser food
w ken well served and daintily garmskea? MU
jjlf Pabst WM
llglf 5 Blueßibboni sj|fJ
pppl|||.: %S The Beer of Quality ', ,
jj & jtlM 1S a °Tean, fully aged keer. It gives a keen
raP 'll a PP etlte or wkolesome food. In its S %u
DON’T JOIN
THE KETTLE BRIGADE
—————— - 1 " '■ ■' '!"■■■ ■■■ 1 "■ - 1 i ■ ... , I t;rjnrTT-rrrrracr-; r-r-r— I —a
And Carry Water In a Kettle When You
Want to Bathe
A Gas Water Heater
Eliminates This Inconvenience and Does Not
Spill the Water
IT IS WORTH INVESTIGATING
Let Us Tell You More About It
GAS LIGHT COMPANY
Lffl LIS, BILIOUSNESS, HLUCffi,
CIiITEO TONGUEOR* BAD STOICS
You men and women who somehow can't get feeling right—who have
an almost daily headache, coated tongue, foul taste and foul breath, dizzi
ness, can’t sleep, are nervous and upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, disor
dered stomach, or have backache and feci all worn out.
Are you keeping clean inside witii Cascarets—or merely forcing a pass
ageway every few days with salts, cathartic pills or castor oil? Tills is
important.
Cascarets immediately cleanse ana regulate the stomach, remove the
sour undigested and fdementing food and foul gases;- take the excess bile
from the liver and carry off the decomposed waste, matter and poison from
the intestines and bowels.
A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box
keep your entire family feeling good for
■ I months. Don't forget the children—their little
i ns *des need a pood, gentle cleansing, too.
mure stwui.uya inku
f&wißre cctiß-natit are «
the college. Mrs. Armor is the wife
of an Emory man and the mother of
two of her later graduates.
The football season opened Monday
with two games. The seniors and
juniors played a 0-0 tie game and the
freshmen beat the sophomores, 5 to 0.
Donald Starr, freshman left half, had
the honor of scoring the first touch
down of the season on a wide end run.
The Emory Y. M. C. A. has ar
ranged to conduct a lyceum course
during the winter months this year.
Three attractions have already been
booked by T. M. Lee, president of the
association, and ho promises the stu
dents the best service that has ever
been offered at Emory.
The boys from Alabama who are at
tending Emory organized themselves
into an Alabama Club Friday night at
the residence of Dr. W. F. Melton.
Harry E. McNeal and O. Q. Melton,
both seniors, were elected president
and vice president.
Dr. J. E. Robbins, of Trinity church,
Atlanta, will address the students Fri
day night in a meeting for men only.
His lecture will be under the auspJces
of the local Y. M. C. A.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA. GA
Mrs. Leila Dillard, state vice presi-
of the Ga. W. C. T. U., left this
morning for Milwaukee, where she will
attend the national convention of the
union. Mrs. Dillard was accompanied
by Robert Strickland, a junior In
Emory, who will contest for a medal
in the oratorical contest
A committee has been appointed by
the student body consisting of Jim
Reeves and R. A. Henderson, to try
to arrange some scheme to raise pion
ey to buy instruments for the proposed
Emory band. There are enough musi
cians in college to organize a good
band and the only thing in the way at
present is the lack of funds.
Vernon Styles, of the Atlanta Geor
gian, an alumnus of the college spent
Sunday tn Oxford. He was accom
panied by ttvo other alumni, Ed Green
and Palmer Blackburn, both of At
lanta.
A. K. Cooper, a graduate of the col
lege with the class of 'lO, spent the
week-end in Oxford as the guest of
friends.
Lee Trammell, Jr., a member of the
present freshman class, spent the
week-end at his home in Madison.
MAKE YOURSELF A PRESENT
OP THIS $4.00 VOLUME Of
WEBSTER'S-DICTIONARY
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NEW WORDS
Which have been incorporated
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day, as it were. For Instance:
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duced an a result of recent aero-,
nautical activity- also such new
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allied to the Giraffe, and brought
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graph, Hkjulllhrator, Ferrobronse,
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Beautiful illustrations in Color
45 lustrations in Monotone
Magnlflee.it full-page colored
pja'«3« representing, among many
other valuable and Instructive
subjects*.
54 Leading Breed* of Thorough
bred Dogs.
10 of the leading Breeds of
Cattle.
8 Principal Breech* of Pure Bred
Fowls In natural colors.
24 Subjects reprting splen
did SpeHments of Fruits and
their Blossoms.
14 Bpeclmena of Precious Gems.
30 HpecUnens Mankind, of differ
ent races' clothes in drew* pe
culiar to their country.
W Types of Aeroplanes.
23 Different types of Birds.
32 Leading Paris Fashions since
the year 1500 to present time.
BLACK AND WHITE TEXT ILLUSTRATIONS SUITABLE TO A
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Table of Contents
Abbreviation of the parts of
Speech.
Origin, Composition and Deri
vation of the XGnjflUih Language.
Principles of (Inumn&r.
Simplified Spelling.
Key to Pronun elation.
Dictionary of tho EngHnh
Language.
Synonyms end Antonyms.
Christian Names of Men.
Christian Niunsi of Women.
Foreign Words, t Phrases, Pro*
verbs, Quotations, oto.
Facts About the Earth.
Declaration of Independence.
Constitution of tho United
States of America.
Metric System of Weights and
Measures.
Value of Foreign Coins in Uni
ted States Money.
Time Difference. ,
Weather Forecast*.
Presidents of the United Slatec.
Language of the Flowers.
Streets, Names, Origin and
Lanjaiage of Cams.
Meaning.
Dictionary of Commercial and
tbegal Terms.
Familiar Allusions.
Famous Characters In Poetry
and prose.
1 >«clslve Battle*.
The 1910 Census.
11,000 BYNONYMB AND
ANTONYMS ..Jl
143 Flags of Nations of the
World.
12 Principal Breeds of Horses.
Making and Testing of Armour
Plates. L.itcst Types of Auto
rnobll'B. The Panama Canal.
Reinforced Concrete Building
Construction. Modern Fire Ap
paratus, Modern American Pas
senger and Freight Locomotives.
The Lumbering Industry. Latost
Model of Newspaper Printing
preMH. Modern Methods of Tun
nel Construction.
15 STATISTICAL CHARTS
Representing products of the
United Stales and World, Agri
cultural, Coal, Cotton, QoM, 811-
ver, Iron, Hteel, Money, Oats,
Coffee, Sugar, Tea, Wheat, Wool
and many others.