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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
THE GREATEST SALE OF THE SEASON
e
The frig Crockery and Chinaware sale went off today in great shape at
the King Hardware Co., 53 Peachtree street. Hundreds of ladies were de
lighted at the great bargains. This sale is a v bona fide closing-out sale. Every
piece of Glassware and Crockeryware will be sold. What we want is to get
the goods out regardless of price. Come in tomorrow early and take a few of
these sacrifices.
K9NG HARDWARE CO.,
53 PEACHTREE STREET.
In
DOUBLOONS
A THRILLING NOVEL OF MYSTERY.
TRAGEDY AND A STOLEN FORTUNE
By EDEN PHELLPOTTS AND ARNOLD BENNETT
(Copyright, 1906, hr Bden Phlll(Fotts and Arnold BennotL)
CHAPTER XIII—Continued. (
A Diaeovery.
Philip waited perhaps live seconds.
It became a moral and physical lmpos-
ilblllty for him to wait longer. He
fled,' ran headlong down the grand
italrcase of the Devonshire, because
Hie lift was not attending his conven
ience, and disdaining the nld of six
porters, shot Into a cab. He still held
the notes loose In hla hand.
His adventures between the stage
door of the Metropolitan Theater and
Josephine's dressing room could not
hare been adequately described In less
than live columns of the Courier. He'
had to defy the stage doorkeeper, a
nalestlc personage who had once said,
” to an undersecretary of atate
and who was reported to buy a public
house or so once a quarter out of the
tips he received from aspirants to the
hands of the queens and princesses of
the .Metropolitan's two stages. He out
distanced two commissionaires detailed
off for pursuit, lost himself, found him
self before the footlights—happily dur
ing an entr'acte—Invoking the assist
ance of the mistress of the ballet—a
kind, fat old thing whose triumphs
dated back to the Third Empire—and
Anally hod to arrange matters with a
call boy and Josephine's dresser, who
was also by a curious accident Jose
phine's aunt. Josephine, in the famous
dressing room lined with mirrors and
littered with expensive frippery, pots,
pans, bouquets, torn envelopes, boxes,
nestles, curling Irons, music, over
turned chairs and photographs, was
perfecting the work of nature.
She glanced sternly at Philip, pencil
In hand, and Indescribably glorious as
la peignoir.
"Well!" she said. "t call this
•cheek;' that's what I call It. If you
think you’re going to make peace on
Tony's behalf, old boy, you're mistaken.
“> you can go and tell him I said so."
A gas Jet hissed among the electric
lights.
1 don't care twopence for Tony. It’a
more Important than Tony—"
That's enough," she made a gest-
e "How much have you given
luntle to stop outside? Call her In.”
Philip approached close to her.
"Don't be silly, my glYl," he said
harshly. "In the first place let me tell
you I'm on the staff of the Courier,
and In the second place, have you seen
these notes before?"
He laid them before her on the
splashed, untidy dressing bench.
She was daunted. She stared vague
ly at the'notes.
"How uo i gnoyr If I’ve seen them
before?’" ahe grumbled. "I've seen
many a hundred pound note In my
time."
"You gave them to Tony at midnight
on Tuesday," he said.
“And what 1f I did?"
"They’re stolen notes," he replied,
and breathed the single sinister word
"Pollexfen.”
"If you want to know, then," said
Josephine, who was recovering her
ground. "I Just didn't give them to
Tony on Tuesday at midnight, I gave
him two notes, but they were old notes
and these are now. So there!"
"How can you prove that?"
“Mr. Sinclair can prove It.”
"Who la Mr. Sinclair?"
"Mr. Sinclair Is the assistant cash
ier. He cashed a check for me on
Tuesday afternoon, and he gave me
the notes."
"I must see Mr. Sinclair.”
"Oh. you can see Mr. Sinclair, all
right. ‘Auntie!”’ She opened the
door, and stood facing Philip, her
handa on her hips, breathing hard.
“You shall soon see Mr. Sinclair,” she
repeated, "and Mr. Talke shall see If I
nm to be Insulted In my own dressing
room like this!”
"My dear young lady,” said Philip,
•Tm not Insulting you. Tony told me
he'd had those notes from you—"
"Well, he'd no business to chatter,”
said Josephine, sharply. "He's like a
blessed magpie."
Wouldn’t you sooner have me here
than the police?” Philip smiled. "Why,
I'm doing all I can for you."
"Oh, of course," she murmured.
Then Mr. Sinclair, In one of those
amazingly perfect evening suits that
only the minor officials of fashionable
theatres seem to be able to afford, de
ferentially entered.
He confirmed Josephine's statement.
Further, he took Philip to hie office,
and showed him a memorandum of
the numbers of the notes handed by
him to Mia* Fire on Tuesday after-
Home Office, Newark, N. J.
AKERS & SKINNER,
Managers for Northern Georgia,
announce
The removal of their offices from the Second
Floor Prudential Building, to
37 N. Forsyth St., Ground Floor
Prudential Building.
ROUND TRIP
And Cheap One-way Rates
-TO-
CALIFORNIA ANDNORTHWEST
Round trip Summer Excursions from all points East to Pacific
Cosst and Northwest until September 15th, with special atopover
privileges, good returning to October 31st, 1905.
CHEAP COLONIST ONE-WAY TICKET8 TO CALIFORNIA AND
N0RTHWE8T FROM AUGUST 27th TO OCTOBER J1«t.
the splendid through service of the 80UTHERN PACIFIC from
New Orleani, or UNION PACIFIC from 8t. Louis or Chicago to
destination with Steamship Line* to Japan, China, etc.
Round trip tickets account Baptist Convention,
San Francisco and Los Angeles, on sale from
Sept. 2d to 14th, final limit October 31st.
WRITE ME FOR RATES AND INFORMATION,
J. F. VAN RENSSELAER, General-Agt.,
124 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga
J*- 0. BEAN, T. P. A.
^ ;,; 9g8SBraggaooooooouisx»ooooopOQQOBOggagSB!Z8B88gggggSg
noon; they did not correspond with
Philip's notes at all.
Philip left the theatre and passed
Tony entering. And each was think
ing so hard that neither recognised the
other. Philip walked elowly to the
Corner House. He. believed In the hon
esty of Josephine Fire, and equally, of
course, In Tony's honesty. There re
mained two explanations of the almost
Inexplicable. Oxwlch was one possi
ble explanation; but Philip could pot
conceive Oxwlch as an accomplice of
thieves and murderers. Philip himself
was the other explanation. Had some
one entered his cubicle while he slept,
and substituted two of the Pollexfen
notes for Philip's? It waa Inconceiv
able. for Philip had left his pocket-
book where John Meredith kept the
key of hla room—under the pillow—
and he was a light sleeper. Then
He made his way Into the Corner
House. He climbed the stairs and went
to his room. After turning up the
light the first thing he saw was hie
lost little black bag, lying on the bed.
He sprang to It, and opened It. The
flnger.-marked stone was Inside, with
the pajamas and other things. He ran
Into the corridor, and by chance en
countered one of the boy attendants.
“Who did my room today?"
"Me, air."
"What's the meaning of that bag
on the bed?”
'It waa under the bed,” said the
boy, made sullen by Philip's threaten
ing tone. "I thought you'd kicked It
under without knowing. So I put It on
the bed tor you to see.
CHAPTER XIV.
Dactylography.
I At dusk on the following afternoon,
which waa Sunday afternoon, Philip
was curled up In the office of Mr. Hll-
gay like a spider awaiting Ha prey.
He had woven his web and he waa
still expecting a genuine fly, though
hla patience had already exhausted It
self. Mr. Hllgay, happily for Philip's
plan of campaign, had been visible, a
broken figure, during the middle hours
of the day. Mr. Hllgay was still not
quite persuaded that he had escaped
brain fever. *,
During the earlier halt of the day
Philip had employed blmaelf In mak
ing experiments in the recording of
fingermarks, convinced as he waa,
first that he possessed In the bit of
broken sewer pipe an authentic finger
mark of Captain Pollejfen'a murderer,
and, second, that the' murderer was
still Inhabiting the house. Being of a
profoundly practical nature, In the
English manner, he did not permit hie
mind to bo too much troubled about
the history of the little black bag be
tween the moment when he lost sight
of It on the Tuesday evening and the
moment when he »aw It again on the
Saturday evening. He gnesoed that
Varcoe must have discovered It and
left It, by accident or Intentionally, In
hla bedroom on the Friday night. This
having been divined, he centered hla
Interests exclusively on the lmrrlnt.
He .did not even trouble to answer
the feverish Inquiries and demands
which from time to time during the
day he received from various members
of the editorial staff of The Courier.
Now, Philip was not an expert In
the science of fingerprints. It may be
doubted If he knew that.it hod been
christened dactylography. He certain
ly was not award, of the method of
classifying finger prints Into the four
main divisions of arches, loops, whorls
and composites. He did not dream
that arches might be simple and tent
ed, loops ulnar and radial, whorls sin
gle and doublo, and that composites
were susceptible of not lees than four
clearly dedned divisions. It may be
questioned If he had the slightest Idea
that Scotland Yard has a record of
nearly a million finger prlnla and that
the system of Indexing this vast dic
tionary of criminal biography la one
ot the wonders of the world. It Is be
yond doubt that he had not read the
learned work of the celebrated Five
Towns specialist, Henry Faulds, for
that work had not then appeared. What
he had read, on Its publication aome
ten years before, was Mark Twain's
"Pudd'n'head Wilson." In which the
Immortal and adorable author of "Life
on the Mississippi" had the charming
caprice to explain the science of dacty
lography at considerable length; and
his recollection even of that unfor
gettable romance was not by any
means free from vagueness. He ha/I
reasons for not going down to Scotland
Yard and demanding there the aid of
the supreme expert In dactylography.
Finally, the day being dominical, all
book-sellers' shops were dosed.
He had therefore to reft- eolely on
the finger mark Itself, and his common
sense or dumptlnn. After various trials
and sundry dyeings and washings of
his own fingers, he derided that the
finger mark on the fragment of pipe
was that of a right hand first finger,
not of o thumb. This fact filled him
with hope, for a reason which will
presently be seen. He further argued
that the hand of the criminal muat be
short and stumpy, with broad flat
finger tips: and. moreover that It was
not a hand lately accustomed to hard
manual work, for the natural ridges on
the skin were Indicated with extra
ordinary clearness, whereas the epi
dermis of a laborer’s hand Is either
worn to smoothness or wrinkled In ar
tificial furrows.
To establish the criminal's Identity
he had merely to obtain the Impress of
the first fingers of each man lodging
In tho Corner House. But to accom
plish such a delicate, Invidious task
without arousing suspicion was a mat
ter which would have offered dlfilcul
ties to a more Impassioned Journalist
than Philip.
He spent the chief portion of the
morning In a series of experiments
with paint and paper and varnish, left
In the corrldora by the professional
house painters who had stormed and
occupied tho house. And after several
hours ho had prepared two aets ot
slips of plain, green wall paper, one
slightly covesfed with white paint half
dried at a fire, and the other lightly
covered with varnish half dried at a
fire—the kitchen fire. Lunch was over
by the time his slips were ready.
He then, with the privity of Mr.
Hllgay, who during his brief appear
ance seemed ready to allow any ono to
do anything, removed the doorknobs
from tho Inner front door and the
obter front door of the house. Both
these doors, of course, opened Inward,
Secondly, by means of small slips ot
wood nailed to the floor near the
hinges, he fixed both doors permanently
ajar In such wise that an aperture of
three or four Inches was left between
each door and door frame. Thirdly, he
affixed a perpendicular slip of paper
covered with half-dry paint to the out
er side of the Inner door, and a slip
covered with half-dry varnish to the
outer aide of the outer door.
And he argued thus:
"Any perton leaving the house, the
handles of the doors having been'
thoughtfully removed, must Inevitably
first of all put the fingers of his right
hand on the outer side of the Inner
door and pull the door toward him in
order to go out. He may or may not
leave a good Impress of hla fingers on
the paint-covered slip of paper. But
paint will certainly adhere to his
hand. He may or may not be angry,
but he will certainly proceed, and he
will repeat bis action on the outer side
of the outer door, and will thus leave a
second set of finger marks In white
palm, on the outer door. I shall thus
nave two aets of marks for each out'
going person. As the doors open In
ward, Incoming persons will have to
push the doora Instead of pulling them,
they will thus he forced to touch the
same pieces of paper, but In the reverse
order.'
vice; and. after affixing the first two
pairs of slips, he Joined one of the boy
servants on duty In tha little office In
a slate of mind that amounted almost
to glee. His stock ot prepared slips
lay near him on the table, and the
finger-marked fragment of pipe was
put out of the reach of the boy ser
vants on the high mantelpiece. His
whole heart was In the experiment, so
much so that he utterly forgot his
promlas to Mrs. Upottery to attend the
captain's funeral, and merely snorted
at a telephone measoge from Sir An
thony to run down to the Devonshire
mansion and discuss tho situation.
He watched eagerly for some one
either to go out or come In. The whole
world of human beings seemed, how
ever, to have formed a conspiracy
neither to enter nor to leave the Comer
House. Never had the entrance hall
been ao quiet. Even the detectlvee end
the Journalists had deserted It. A num
her ot Sabbath sightseers were pared
ing to and fro In the street and gas
Ing at the house with mouths open as
if to swallow It. But there was no
othet sign of life. The boy attendant
_ w ■ Pel t
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Any lady or gentleman with $100, [
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days notice.
For particulars, address :
T EXCURSI
E
FOR JR, DELEGATES
Griffin Council Waves Flag
From National Council
For Members. ,
Special to The Georgian.
Augusta, Ga., Sept.' 12.—The thir
teenth annual grand, council meeting
of the Junior Order of United Ameri
can Mechanics convened here yester
day morning with about 100 delegates
present. The meeting was opened at
0 o’clock.
Practically all of the grand council
officers were present. The morning
session lasted until 1 o'clock, at which
time the members were taken tor
"trip up the canal" and given a barbe
cue dinner at the locks at about 4:10
o'clock. There were four boatloads of
people who went to the locks.
During the session yesterday there
was a fihg and banner presented the
Griffin Council, No. 4, for receiving the
largest number of members In their
lodge during the week of May 17. The
contest was for the entire United
States and Griffin took both prises,
one being a very fine (lag and the other
a banner. The two pieces cost (100.
The presentation of the banner and
ig was by Junior Past National C
clllor W. E. Faison, of Raleigh, He
presented the emblems for the grand
council of the United States.
Dave Bailey, former mayor of Orlf
L was present and received the flai
and banner, and thanked the gram
council for the same.
During the course of the meeting
yesterday there was a very Interesting
speech made by secretary and man
ager of the funeyal and benefit and
beneficiary degree, Stephen Collins, of
Pittsburg. Hla speed) was the main
feature of the morning session.
There was very little business looked
after yesterday and the real business
of the session will come up today. The
officers for the ensuing year were
nominated yesterday but they will not
be elected until today. The only Au-
I ustan who haa been nominated la Dr.
J. R. Littleton, for the grand repre
sentative'! place. There are a num
ber of other members who have been
nominated and It will be hard to tell
which one of the number will get the
place.
Rome will possibly get the next
grand council meeting, as there has
been a very cordial Invitation extended
the body from that city.
The barbecue at the locks yesterday
afternoon kept the delegates out of the
city the entire afternoon, as It was
nearly 9 o'clock before they returned.
The meeting will close late this af
ternoon, but a number of the delegates
will remain In the city a few days af
ter the meeting Is over.
was reading Perdval's “Paris Gossip”
In the “Referee," having finished "Mus
tard and Cress.'' Then Philip heard
some one coming down stairs, and his
heart began tg flutter os the Instant
approached for
testing (he efficacy of
the web of the spider. It was a man.
The man wore gloves.
Philip had reckoned without the re<
nowned gentility of the Corner House,
rightly
AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE
SESSION OPENS SEPT. 19.
MILLIONAIRE FIGHTS
TO WIN BACK SONi
BOY'S WIFE OPPOSES
New Haven, Conn., Sept. 12.—A
struggle In strategy with Edward Nor
ton, the millionaire tin plate king of
New York, on one side and Mrs. Jo
sephine Norton, his pretty cloak model
daughter-in-law, on the other, began
todny.
The rich man has entered suit
against the poor girl, who, after ardent
wooing, consented to become the secret
bride of Edward Kenneth Norton, his
19-year-old son, a Yale student, for the
annulment of the marriage, while the
young woman has sued him for alien
ating her husband's affections.
DIVISION ORGANIZED
IN WAYCROS8, GA.
Special to The Georgian.
Waycross, Ga., Sept. 12.—Mrs. C. F.
Conley, of Manchester, Vb„ a. G. V..
president of the O. I. A. B. of L. E.. has
organised a division In Waycross, with
sixteen members. The following officers
were elected: Mrs. H. S. Dullose,
president: Mrs. H. B. Lee, vice presi
dent; Mrs. J. W. Lyon, secretary; Mrs.
Paul McGee, treasurer; Mrs. J. M.
Smith, chaplain; Mrs. W. P. Maynard,
;ulde; Mrs. Mel. Jones, past presl-
ent; Mrs. C. M. Propat, sentinel; Mrs.
J. F. Goodroe, Mrs. R. E. Edwards, Mrs.
J. El Green, Mrs. 8. B. Parker, pillars.
Mrs. Conley was tendered a recep
tion Saturday evening at the boautlful
new home of Mr. and Mrs. DuBose.
WALTER BALLARD OP
TICAL CO.
Less than one year ago placed on the
market the new Ballard Btfocnl, giving
reading and walking vlelon In one
frame and looking like one glass. They
have proven the most successful of all
•he advertleed Invisible bifocals.
Ground In a deep toric curve, giving a
large vlaual field for reading as well as
walking. They are the moet perfect and
beautiful gloss sold. Consult us about
bifocals. We have them all. Sales
room, <1 Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
He
cursed himself for a famous
JOHN
P. O. Box 165.
HENDERSON, |
Nashville, Tenn. •
ninny as he removed the smudged slips
of paper after .the man's exit and sub
stituted fresh slips. But nevertheless
he determined to continue his experi
ment, opining that there would be, after
all, In the Corner House far from suf
ficient gloves to go round. In this as
sumption the event proved him to be
correct. The event did not, however.
Justify hla experiment. People entered;
people departed. A few wore gloves.
The ungloved majority either mado
undecipherable Unger marks, or made
good linger marks which bore not the
slightest resemblance to the finger
mark on the bit of pipe.
So dusk fell, and Philip's stock of
tper exhausted Itself In futility. He
oresaw that he might have to continue
the experiment for days.
He heard a cab stop outside the
house, and glanced Idly from the win
dow. It was a four-wheeler. Mrs.
Upottery emerged from It. She was
obviously returning from the funeral.
He sympathised with her, but her ar
rival annoyed him: he had already
wasted several slips of paper on wom
en, Including two on Mrs. Upottery. She
held an argument with the cabman,
and then she had a difficulty with her
pocket and purse, and seemed to find
an awful solemn pleasure In tiring the
patience of the cabman while she re
moved her glovee and eorted her co/ns.
As she came up the steps he hid In a
corner so that she should not glimpse
him In passing. He did not wish to be
accused Just then of not having at
tended the funeral. He was creeping
out to change the allpe after her pas
sage when a man ran quietly up the
steps and rushed In. It was John
Meredith whom Philip had not pre
viously seen that day. Why should
Philip have trembled wltlr nervous ap-
-rehenslon at the sight of Meredith?
Vhy should a strange fear have seised
him? Why should he hesitate, after
Meredith had vanished upstairs, to re
trieve and examine the slips? Why
should he have experienced the sensa
tion of a reprieve when a newspaper
boy burst In, pushing and banging both
doora, to tell a special Sunday edition
? the Record?
His hand shook as the newspaper
boy having departed, he detached the
slips and carried them Into the office.
The varnished slip from the outer door
showed nothing but three sets ot
smudges, hut tho other slip, marked
faintly In varnish on white paint, dis
played three clear sets of finger-prints
—the man's the highest; then the wom
an's; then the newspaper boy's. His
heart Jumped when he examined the
man's. He reached down the fragment
>lpe, and laid It close to the paper,
with a magnifying glass, compared
.. with the paper. The print of the
man's first linger corresponded exact
ly with the print on the stone. The
double whorl situated slightly to the
left waa Identical In each cate.
Without giving himself a moment to
think, he went out of the office to find
Meredith. And Meredith wss descend
ing the stairs again, pale and hur
ried, the frightful scar crimson on his
blanched face.
"Please come up here," Philip ad
dressed him. His throat was so parch
ed that he could scarcely articulate.
"What It the matter?" Meredith
questioned.
"I must speak to you." said Philip.
Meredith obeyed, entering the of
fice. Philip ordered the boy attendant
to leave and then carefully shut the
door. He had a strange desire to ad
vise Meredith to run away and never
be seen In England again, but ha con
quered It.
"What la It?" Meredith repeated hie
demand.
"I will
finger mark on this ifone was made t»y
the murderer of Captain Pollexfen,
and the finger-mark on Ibis paper was
made by you. They are alike. 1 hnvo
laid a trap for the murderer, and It
Is you that I have caught, Meredith.
What have you to say?"
"What?" exclaimed Meredith, etarlng
at the paper. "Which mark?"
“This one."
“Those aren't the marks of my fin
gers,” Meredith said with curious calm,
after he had comprehended the nature
of. the trap. It's the marks below that
are mine. Look at my hand." His
persuasive voice was as wondrous as
ever.
Philip seised the hand. It had fine
tapering fingers, whereas the topmost
marks were noticeably wide and clum-
TWENTY MORE BOARbtRS CAN
BE ACCOMMODATED
That the limit of the capacity for
boarding students has been so nearly
reached one week before the opening
of the session Is a strong testimony
to the popularity of Agnes Scott. Since
last session a new $00,000 dormitory
has been completed with capacity to
accommodate ninety-eight additional
boarders. And yet only twenty needed
to fill all the dormitories! Every
Southern state, several Western states
and Mexico are represented in the en
rollment. This large number of stu
dents has been entered without a sin
gle agent In the held.
Over $100,000 has been expended in
Improvements the last year.
The elegant buildings are in perfect
order, the grounds are beautiful, and
the faculty will be present next Wed
nesday to welcome the largest student
body in the history of the institution.
Apply at once to President for room,
or information. •••
SECRETARY SHAW
TO SPEAK FOR EVANS
Special to The Georgian. _
Nashville, Tenn„ Sept. 12.—Polities
galore will be the portion of the people
of the Volunteer state for the next two
months.
Hon. H. Clny Evans, Republican
candidate for governor, opened his
campaign yesterday at Lawrencebmg.
On Monday, September 17, M. R. Pat
terson, Democratic nominee for gov
ernor, will open hla campaign In Nash
ville. General Evans declined to meet
him In joint debate.
On September 14, next Thursday
night, Hon. Leslie M. Shaw, secretary
of the treasury, will speak In Nashville
at Ryman auditorium.
Senator E. W. Carmack, who was
the first to volunteer for the cause of
Democracy In this fight, will mnko a
number of speeches and In one will re
ply to Secretary Shuw.
Governor Bob Taylor and Adjutnnt
General Harvey Hannah will stump
the state together for Democracy.
Senator Frasier will also make
speeches for the Democratic ticket.
MAYOR ALLEN WILL VETO
CITY HALL ORDINANCE.
ay.
said
"That la like a woman's hand,
Philip.
Meredith Impulsively snatched the
hand away, and then sat down on a
chair and burst Into tears.
"I may as well tell you,” said Mer
edith, "1 am a woman. I am Captain
Pollexfen's daughter.”
"Glralda?"
Meredith nodded, looking up.
Continued in Tomorrow's Georgian.
Special to The Georgian.
Augusta, Ga., Sept. 12.—Mayor Al
len has not signed the recent city hall
ordinance which was passed by the city
council, and he states that he does not
Intend to sign 11. At tho proper time
he will officially file a veto of the ordi
nance passed by a majority vote of the
council.
Tho ordinance which was passed by
the body waa for tho purchase of an
option on the site, at 24,000, the same
to last until next May, and nt that tlmo
If the city desired it could purchase
tho property' by paying $10,000, mak
ing the first payment for the land.
Important Change of Sched
ule on Seaboard Air
Line Railway.
Effective Sunday, September 9th, Im
portant change of schedule will be
made on tho Seaboard Air Line. Par
ticular attention Is called to the fact
that train No. 38, which now leaves
Atlanta, 9:35 p. m„ will on and aftar
September 9th, leave Atlanta &t 8:09
p. m.. Central time.
OS
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III
THE VICTOR SANITARIUM
321*323 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga
OPIUM, WHISKY
and other drug habits
cured In four weeks.
Patients do not suffer as
they do at many institutions. Comfort of patients carefully looked af
ter. Sanitarium Is home-llke and pleasant, and not a prison, os soms
Imagine. Treatment entirely free from any harmful results. For full
particulars call or address The Victor Sanitarium, or Or. B, M. Woolley,
Lock Box 387.
"WHEN IN THE COUR8E of human events It bz icomew necessary" to
build a house, a home, a hovel, a hut. a barn, a bungalo, a factor,-, a tene
ment, a shelter, a shack, a shed or any piece requiring roofing, consult
un about
VULCANITE
It Is the logical thing to use, for reasons too
numerous to mention. People who have bought Vulcanite are buying
It when they need rooting again. There ere fact* which actually hap-
— —--•* 1 —*• It does not require expert
by the National Board of Un
cle '
B n and they speak louder than words.
tor to apply It. It la recommended by
derwriters and Southeastern Tariff Association.
“YOU CAN PUT IT ON/
See that this Seal is on
every Roll.
ATLANTA SUPPLY CO.,
SOLE STATE AGENTS FOR GEORGIA.
29-31 South Forsyth Street, Atlanta, Ga.
J. C. GREENFIELD, Pru.
C. L PEEK, Sm'j.