Only one of the hundred* of Sensational offer* in highest -grade, guaranteed quality, |
staple groceries in our amazing new Price-W recking Catalog. To save all mailing 1 1
expense and to avoid all waste distribution of this remarkable catalog, we send, it j I
ONLY to new customers who send us their order for the SPECIAL “Get Acquain- I
ted” assortment listed below. Catalog packed in every shipment.
FLOUR S; ,s 9gg-SIJGARS 41°
Stop pnnneexo’-l.ttant price*for erorer- Zta«w n.untuTec
les. National necv-Uty demands that MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE hi
you buy carefully anti wa*te nothing.
Establish yourself with the great Con- We positively guarantee the weight, 3
quality and quantity of every article |S
today. Make your own selections for all listed m our catalog. If you are not E
future orders *anre or small. Sugar Ic perfectly satisfied with the goods, re- ■
rA> “ ° the '" a ” d wiU re ’ B
YOU CAN SAVE $g .68 ■ I turn evcr >' ccnt of yonr moncy ‘ _ II
AcVsi'n- i == Consumers Wholesale Grocery Co,
ted 'Order for 52.53 9 1403 to 14O9We*t Congress St. .
•0.30 5 lbw. Our Beat Granulated Dept. 508 Chicago, IH.
Send this NOW P'
.OS 1 Pkg. Geld Dust W ashing; —— —•—•” —““ ““““ *"
» t tajni, Q..k.e dku S 1 Order Blank Coupon
M 1 lb. speelal Ptire Baking | Chicago. 111.
Powder •*» ’ GortUmen-Enclowd please find $2.53, for which
AO H lb. Black Pepper2o . ple«w send your Bargain
IX. Ih riMnomiin I an< * include flYe TOUT 11©W Price-W re< JClBk JO
•J? H Jo. Cißiiamon -••••• —° ■ ror Cat *1 or It U understood that if lam not
.55 1 Rottie Pure aal Ila Ex- _ thrronrhly rteaaed with th© goods I receive I
tract, -1 • 30 I can return them and you will refut'd my money-
•— Ct .al Csrlsek
8-L2l - tsttil hies tsti:m ftidb fiXM |
• - Name ••
<£*lM F M i f y 1 Address
city *t»t»
CREWS Os FOUR CHI
BUTLESHH’S 111 MUTINY
Crews Drown Captain and Are
Captured by Soldiers After
Marines Refuse to Fire
AMSTERDAM. Oct. 10.—A mutiny 1
among the crews of four battleships of
the German fleet has occurred at Wil-I
helmshaven. One of these battleships!
was the Westfalen, whose captain was
thrown overboard and drowned. The;
crews landed. Marines refused to tire
on them, whereupon soldiers surroundeu
the sailors, who surrendered.
A mutiny is reported t« hav e occurred
on the German warship Numbers. wise. i
was at sea The nun seized th- officers* i
and proc eded in the direction cf Nor
way. with the intention of being .n- i
timed The Nurnber.z was overtaken
*,y destroyers and t
Emperor William wen to Wilhelm
shaven and ordered tl.i: our u;;t ~t
•very sever, mutineers sir t Cha:i ’
cel lor M.chaells prote~-te:i with the ,e- •
suit that only three wre shot llexwi
sentences
Frep?e in Oklahoma
MUSCOGEE. Okla.. Dc’„ !•—Th*
first freezi-ig temperature tn be report
ed in the soath this tail wr>s recorded
here early today when the temperate e
dropped to 21 degrees .~.boc* zero. tee
a quarter* of an inch thick formed in
exposed places.
A Word of Precaution.
JUST wherein lies the reason for the use of vegetable preparations for infants
J and children ?
Why are any but vegetable preparations unsafe for infants and children ?
Why are Syrups, Cordials and Drops condemned by all Physicians and
most laymen ?
Why has the Government placed a ban on all preparations containing, among
othe: poisonous drugs, Opium in its variously prepared forms and pleasing tastes,
and under its innumerable names?
These are questions that every Mother will do well to inquire about.
Any Physician will recommend the keeping of Fletcher’s Castoria in the
house for the common ailments of infants and children.
Children Cry For
• NetCoßtrnts I«>r auk! DrachM
fey -
SI Rlbiw K ISth h IF m K
jEcdßaßdßw**! as B ■ 9 jKK
■ y Thor?! vrrcr.oL.MjD
; I Letters from Prominent Druggists
i K addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
\ S. .1. Briggs & Co., of Providence, R. 1., ,ay: “We have sold Fl.tcher*.
a | Ca«toria in our three stores for the past twenty years and consider it
i.j- “ / 0r.3 cf the E>est preparations on the market. ”
| j Mansur Drug Co., of St. Paul, Minn., says: “We are not in the habit
< J of recommending proprietary medicines, but we never hesitate to say a
J? ; goml w..rd for Castoria. It is a medical success.”
g '* noei .' liegeman & Co., of New York City, N. Y., say : "We can say for your
j Ccnslipa’dOP- -Rti . Castoria that it is one of the best selling preparations in our stores.
e>z i anil js conclusive evidence that it is satisfactory to the users.”
inl~f if,c y 1 Chapman, of Montreal, Que., says: “I have sold Fletcher’s Cas-
r ” fCSU^^r -' I toria for many years and have yet to hear of one word other than praise of
Far Simile virtues. I look upon your preparation as one of the few so called
t ■ patent medicines having merit and unhesitatingly recommend it as a safe
’Hs'l Tnr Cr>-T‘.vß<'o' n ’ c,T ’ 4
newvqrk. J GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS BEARS
fife
--- -- — j Signature JI -
11 ■ 11 1,11 Os
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
TH« CfNTAUR COMPANY, NKW YORK CITY
Woman Mayor Marries;
Now What’s Her Name,
Her Official One?
kJOORHAVEN. Fla.. Oct. 10.—Since the
mayor of this peaceful little commu
nity married, the faithful constituents
are terribly confused. The matrimonial
ventures of a mayor do not. as a rule.
■ create much disturbance in municipal
1 affairs. But in the case of Moorhaven
• it's ditferent.
Moorhaven’s mayor was different
‘ from all outer mayors. She—that’s
n hat caused all tne trouble —being a
woman changed her name wnen she
married. She was elected mayor whi.e
lira. George Hurwitz. Then, her honor
• the mayor, married Captain .1. J.
U'Briea U. S. R., a former newspaper
. mar, and ex-secretary to the mayor of
. Muorhaven.
The major’s husband is now on his
way to rriuice But by marrying the
mayor of Muorhaven, O’Brien sei the
population to thinking. Here 1s the
quextiv « that Is worryins the resident
of Moo:haven: Mrs. O'Brien was elect
ed mayor of Moorhaven as Mrs Marion
; t». Horwitz, the name that appears on
her election certificate ami tne one she
has signed to all official documents
-‘•re '•'•‘•cmlng ira'-nr N' W —mßst she
«!en Mrs .1 J. O’Brien to these doc>
um»*nts «r rhe name th-it appear? on
b~- n’c-tfon certificate?
h»- as mayor, Mrs.
rie-» ••The ’oh nf being mayor
«• 3 new to m». and T Hire It. T
h--e ♦«» h"-d ert ’ust'e* for all pettv
<.**»—~c. *'p ▼ rtt town magistrate
t*»- an 1 ‘hat T««h mannrlng
•».. ''lit Ir>b •tael***
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1917.
CONSERVATION OF FOOD
MUST MEH RIG CIISIS
Governor, Realizing Country’s
Problem, Issues Proclama
tion Dealing With Remedy
Asserting that a crisis is at hand
and conservation fs the- watchword of
the hour. Governor Hugh M. Dorsey
Friday afternoon issued the following
proclamation urging food conservation;
The world today is facing the
most serious food problem in its
history, according to the best au
thorities on economics. This is due
in large measure to the great world
war which has now been in progress
since 1314. There has been a wide
spread withdrawal of labor from the
fields to meet the demands of the
battle front. A crisis is at hand.
Conservation is the watchword of
the hour.
The entrance of our own country
into the struggle of nations lays
upon us grave responsibilities and
duties. We must practice rigid
self-denial. ’ We must economize for
the country’s sake and the common
good.
Our president has called upon the
people of the United States to con
serve the food supplies of the na
tion in every way expedient or pos
sible. America Is now the world’s
granary in a most emphatic and real
sense. Out of it we must sustain
our own armies; and besides feed
ing ourselves, we must maintain the
fighting efficiency of the allies. To
this end, an immense surplus of food
is needed.
If judiciously conserved and used,
there is an abundance of food in
sight for all purposes, but the re
quirements of the situation are ur
gent. Upon every Individual an im
perative obligation Is laid. All must
help. The appeal of the hour is
made to every man, woman and
child. We must eat less. In many
instances, we must employ sub
stitute articles of food. It is es
sential to success that we conserve
wheat, meat, fats and sugar
Therefore, by virtue of the author
ity vested in me as governor of the
state of Georgia, 1, Hugh M. Dorsey,
call the attention of our people to
these facts, and ask them to Join
in a united effort to save a suffi
cient amount of these food supplies
to meet the requirements above in
dicated. In order that the people of
Georgia may be properly Informed
concerning the gravity of the sit
uation, a state-wide campaign which
will undertake to enroll the names
of all hpuseholders .will be insti
tuted October 21 and continue
through the week. I, as governor of
Georgia, appeal to the people of this
state to bear in mind the importance
of signing food pledge cards during
the week beginning October 21, and
in this way co-operate with the
United States food commission, and
comply with the wishes of our
president.
Given under my hand, and the
great seal of the state. In the city
of Atlanta, this, the LHh day of Oc
tober, in the year of our Lord 1317.
HUGH M. DORSEY. Governor.
By the Governor:
PHILIP COOK, Secretaiy of State
Wat?e Increase Announced
LOWEDU Mass., Oct. 9.—A ten per
cent wage increase for 20,000 cotton
mill operatives, effective October 16. was
announced by seven local mills today.
Other corporations here, it was said,
probably will grant a similar Increase.
28.000 EASTERN MEN
i TO REPLACE TROOPS
SENT FROM GORDON
Camps Devens, Upton, Dix,
! Mead and Lee Will Supply
; Selectmen to Take Place of
Forces Sent to the Guard
WASHINGTON, D. Oct 10. —Fur-
ther details regarding tne distribution
of troops under orders Issued yesterday
tor various camp shifts were being dis
cussed today wnen It was reported on
good authority that 28.0uu men will be
transferred from various camps In the
east to Camp Gordon, near Atlanta, Ga.
From Camp Devens B,OOJ
From Camp Upton 7,000
From Camp Dix 5,000
From Camp Mead 5,000
From Camp Lee 3,()'»<•
The movements will begin, it is under
stood, as soon as the Thirtieth and Thlr
yt-first divisions of the national guard
are able to accommodate and absorb the
white selectmen now stationed at Camp
Gordon. Five hundred colored men will
be transferred from Camp Gordon to
Camp Upton, near Brooklyn. N. Y., as
soon as accommodations for them can
be provided at Upton.
Contrary to opinion expressed here
yesterday, It 13 believed in the light of
the new orders that the Eighty-second
national army division will continue to
be the name of the organization at
Camp Gordon. Enough officers will ac
company the Camp Gordon selectmen
on their Journey to Join the national
guard to Insure order, and then it 's
understood that the officers wilt be re
turned to Camp Gordon.
How Shift of Troops
Is Viewed at Gordon
BY WARD MOREHOUSE,
ATLANTA JOURNAL BUREAU.
Camp Gordon, Ga., Oct. 10. —Shake-u>
or no shake-up. Camp Gordon was built
for 40.000 soldiers, and she will have
that number. \
Like the robins, the eastern soldiers
yearn for the south in the winter and
It will be these easterners who will fill
the yellow barracks building on this
reservation.
In a nutshell, the contemplated change
by the war department means simply
this: Every white man now at Camp
Gordon will probably be moved.
One little telegram turned the whole
trick.
Major B. F. Thompson, division ad
jutant, left Camp Gordon Wednesday
for Washington, where he goes on busi
ness with reference to the transfer of
the troops It became known Wednes
day that Major Norman R. Pease had
also gone to Washington. The nature of
his business was not disclosed.
Camp Gordon was working day and
night, toling and striving in an effort
to comfort and train and care for the
I men she had; she was making prepara-
I tions for the weeks to come and looking
I wisely into the future, and then the
; telegraph instrument begins to click
and off comes an order from the war
department, and the whole thing is shot
to pieces.
Don’t worry, Atlanta, you will have
your camp and you will have your for
ty thousand, even If they do come from
I Camp Devens, Mass., Camp Upton, N. Y.,
Camp Dix, N. J., Camp Meade. Mr., and
Camp Lee, Va.
NATIONAL GUARD NEEDS MEN.
The national guard organizations are
crying for men. If the skeleton divisions
of national guardsmen are not to be
consolidated, they must be filled up, the
gaps must be plugged, and Camp Gor
-1 don will have to do her bit. She will
I be aided by Camp Pike, at Little Rock.
, Arkansas, and Camp Jackson, at Colum
bia, S. C., in filling up the Thirtieth
land Thirty-first and Thirty-ninth na
tional guard dlvisons, but it will take
everything Camp Gordon has to bring
the Thirty-first dlvison at Mocan up to
the required strength. THERE WILL
BE NO SURPLUS TO SEND TO CAMP
JACKSON, the concentration point,
where a young •rainbow’ will be form
; ed.
Every man ai Camp Gordon will
I be directly affected y the
I b.g shut, which is not altogether unex
; pected. The easterners couldn't do muca
i training in Massachusetts during the
vinter, and the national guard division-:
had to be filled, and there you are!
There ar v now at Camp Gordon over
2<i t'O 1 ) men. including the enlisted men
from the regular army attached to dif
ferent organizations.
Alabama has contributed 1,657 select
men; Georgia has sent R. 920, and Ten
nessee, which lias lie.d the lead from
the beginning, has produced 7,212. The
war department plans won't affect the
846 men who liav e been discharged from
tl.<- camp for physical unfitness and the
t Ity-tive men who were sent home be
cause they were granted exemption after
| reaching the cantonment There are a;>-
proximatel.v 8,0(>0 men at the camp yet
to take thc'.r physical examinations, an •
these examinations are being held now.
if Camp Gordon Is to be stripped of net-
Georgians. Tennesseeans and Alabamians
the idea si to send these soldiers to
other cities in good shape, and eliminate
?1> the men who have physical disabiU
t’es.
It will be about as difficult to trans
fer the Gordonites to Macon as It wou’d
I be to send them to France, and It will
require about as much work. The
amount of paper work which w I be nec
essary Is positively almost unthinkably
and it will mean that the staff
the division adjutant, and the regiment;
adjutants will work all day and all night
from now until 'he time the shift .s
trade. ,
Transferring 20,000 men Is a JOB.
! Tne war department plan affects the
' whit,, man and the i.egro alike. It means
that when :he negroes from this sec
tion go to France they will go in one
divls.on, and the secretary of war has
directed tiiat Camp Jackson will get ttm
i South Carolina colored troops, which
' will be 5 900; Camp Gordon, the Georgia
; colored, which will be 9,000, and Cam;
I Pike, the Louisiana and Arkansas col
i .»> •<i which will be 3.800.
There will never be a greater number
j of negroes at Camp Gordon than whites, i
I This is an a--»olute certainty, and the I
'number of negroes at the camp will bej
: constantly depletea.
Yes, Bill Jones had better prepare *o|
tell his Bin khead girl and his Cham-1
blee sweetheart good-bye. The war
company at Camp Gordon was bookel
for a long run, but the management
suddenly decided to take it off the
boards, and put another attraction in
Us place. iVhiie the new show will have
a cast composed of strange and un
familiar faces, it will be just as big,'
just as good—if such Is possible—and
't will make friends easily. But At
lanta regards the Eighty-second divi
sion as her own, she regacds the nf
i ileers of this division as her officers,
and II will be with the greatest re
giei that she will see them go to other
am ns.
j vu-:np!dent with the sweeping troop
i transfer, there came the order to im
mediately put all unassigned officers
JOINT BLOW STRUCK
BT HAIG«PETAIN
ON FLANDERS FRONT
Despite Bad Weather Allies
Hit German Line Before
Enemy Is Given Time to Re
cover From Hammering
BY WTLEXAM PHILIP SIMMS.
WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES IN
THE FIELD, Oct. 6.—More than a mile
advance into the German lines was
achieved by Field Marshal Haig's sec
ond smash with tn a week, starting
early today.
This great penetration was reported at
! several places. The newest British of
fensive centered about Passchendaele. •
All the British objectives were at
! rained with complete success and In
good order.
As this dispatch Is filed headquarters
dispatches report the French and Brit
ish losses as light.
Several hundred prisoners have al
ready been counted.
NEW YORK, Oct. 9. —(By Foreign Ca
bles from European Capitals.)—Without
regard to the highly unfavorable weather
conditions prevailing and in a surpris
ingly short time after the successful
British thrust of last week the British
and French forces In Belgium have
launched another heavy attack on the
German lines.
The blow fall early today in the re
gion east and northeast of Ypres, where
Crown Prince Rupprecht’s lines had al
ready been dangerously bent back by
the previous British thrusts.
The British commander early reported
satisfactory progress on all parts of the
front of the attack which he announced
was made in conjunction ’’with our allies
on our left.”
Shortly afterward the Paris official
statement Indicated clearly that the
French forces In Flanders were those
alluded to by the British commander In
chief. The launching of an attack in
ccncert with the British was announced
and the favorable development of the
attack reported.
A considerable force of French troops
took part In the beginning of the Flan
ders drive on July 31 and In the subse
quent fighting that consolidated the
ground won by them from a point north
east of Langemarck as far nbrth as Dix
mude.
T’hls section of the front remained
comparatively quiet while the British
tc the south were renewing their drive
last month. Apparently the time Is now
considered opportune for bringing the
line to thi north more nearly on the
level with the advanced British front.
The French attack today extended as
far to the north as Houtholst forest,
about five miles toward the coast from
Bixschoote.
Speculation in Cotton
Seed Oil Is Barred on the
N. Y. Produce Exchange
NEW YORK. Oct 9. —Speculation In
cottonseed oil, both by trade and out
side interests, on the New York produce
exchange was forbidden today by the
board of managers of the exchange at
the instance of the food administration
at Washington.
This action by the food administra
tion followed advancing
prices for cotton oil, culminating yes
terday, in a jump of 175 points to 19 1-2
cents a pound, a record never before
reached. So-called hedge sellers under
certain conditions is to be permitted.
“Speculative trading in cottonseed
oil for any delivery, either by trade or
outside interest.-* is prohibited,” reads
the ruling of the managers. “Hedge sell
ing for protection against seed pur
chasers by consumers or exporters are
permissible, but such operations shall
be confined to legitimate trade interests i
only and shall be of the smallest possl- I
ble proportions consistent with the pur- ,
pose of this rule.”
Future trading us this kind will be ’
confined to current months and two
months ahead and to the closing out of
old contracts for any month. Daily fluc
tuations in price ucyoud one cent a
pound Is forbidden.
at the cantonment to work instructing
tne negro troops, as it is desired to
train them as soon as possible.
‘A lien will me troops leave Camp Gor
don? When will the easterners arrive
to take their places? These questions
will be answered only in the plans of !
Washington in regard to the wholesale!
shake-up.
While the camp is more or less up
set by the news, there will be no let-1
up in the training program, and work)
will be carried forward until the last
minute, until the time comes for the
selectmen to pack their kits, and jour
ney to Macon, Ga., or Columbus, S. C.
As the plans now stand fo,r white
divisions will represent the south, east,
middle west and far west. Camp Lewis, ■
at American Lake, Wash., Is the only,
one of the sixteen cantonments not as-1
fected by the order from the nation’s ■
capi Lil.
Camp Pike w’fll have the surplus
white troops from Camp Sherman, Chil
licothe, Ohio; Camp Custer, Battle Creek.
Mich.; Camp Grant, Rockford. Ill.; Camp
Zachary Taylor. Louisville. Ky.; Camp
Dodge, Des Moines, Iowa; Camp Fun- |
ston. Fort Riley, Kas., and Camp Travis. I
San Antonio. Texas
I Want You
FOR MY AGENT, TO SELL MY
I Croat Bishop Liniment
Don’t send Eo any ir.oaa; . I trust you. Pav when
you sell. You raaka JBifl; monny. Ao
risk. Bishop Liniment relieves and ebrea such
1 aches and pema as Klienmadfui, Neur-ilgin,
\ ; J Rprains, Rrni.-ies, Lame Muscles, Stiff Joints, 1 rested
V’-.t - Feet, Chijibtai as. Galls, Growing Pains, Contracted
’ Muscles, Lnn*3 Back,Tooihnctw. Earache, Hc-3d-
i » : acbo, Paina in Back, Side and Breast, Coughs.
1 Colds. Swcdinc?, Riungs, Foils, Insect Bites and
f \ "w* Btinrs, Chroalo b-in Dl.-.orders, Colic. Cmmps. and
’/vE?’- . > <& whatever a powerful Llnluent is needed to bring
relict from severe AcSra and Pains in MAN or
BEAST. Crest rcn«"v for the ailments of Horses,
Cattle, Uofs »»u Fowls.
K? Bl.b op l.ir.lwnt tel’s li’_“ het cakes. Aryboly ran sell It
—rv- n-r- .nd ccm men: c r tt-.e. I know YOU can sell
As anw lin# I will iafce henlr “• eo x ,oa THIS Liberal. OFtEU.
Al any IllilS I Will laau U3uu Jnvt siyyiu will tike tbn az.-nc? by sending me the Coupon
, , with name and address, and I’.i serd, by return express, 22
any medicine at n?y expense.
two FKLE (which r.re worth 11.00) tn cover express
■ ■■ ■ charges which uro about ICC.
Now, Bishop Ltatxcat AGENTS COilrOHrSi:
good or I would net dare to
put it out under arch a liberal ..
offer. You take no risk. Let me
send you the Great Bishop x.
Liniment.* Bight now sign the Port
Coupon—.all at once. ExsrereOfflcs BJ.fi.lte.
! Send Me Your Name
Get the new Style Book of Thiery Parlor Organs. It’s free and post-
Bpaid. Shows all Thiery Organs in colors. Shows you how to buy the
real “music-maker” of all organs at a saving of 325.00 to 350.00.
■ Thiery Organs are so real good that I ship them on 30 days trial anywhere! But
you i ust get one on trial and you'll decide to keep it before you've had it ten days. And you can
pay for it in little by little payments that are really so little that you 11 hardlv notice theml
Don’t have to pay cash if you don’t want to. Just send for my new Organ Book and price*—
choose the organ you want —mail the trial order blank—and I’ll do the rest I
■ 30 Days Trial
I and Test—Ship Back J|
I at My Expense If
■ You Are Not Glad ig hHS
You Sent For It ?
More than 50,000 homes are today 7 , ~'T * > ' '"'-“T 110
PS enjoying Thiery Organs, which they Ar?
purchased direct from meat a saving
S ranging from $25.00 to 650.00. .--.Mit rigBCBC-, '.- VI:
Thiery Organs are the real [
"MUSIC-MAKERS” of all organs. W
■ They have more music in them —they n) ■' jAedn ■
have more quality through and through ■
•—they are prettier and nicer in de-
sign— and they don’t cost as [much as /th - flgß
■ common organs. l|L i — M
I’ll ship any Thiery Organ / .uii n
you choose from my n-w Style 43
Book direct to you on thirty days ; /W 9
B trial —and you nsed hot hesitate Y„, ~ WM H
one moment to ship back at my ex- B W H
sense if you’re not more than glad
you ordered it. If you keep the —a' RS
a organ, you do not need to pay cash J
Unless you want to. HI
Tl.ieryOrg HI
a cost you so little, that you can di- wJMA S
vide the purchase price up iruo l-i - - ' i HSIwI >W»
small pa'-mentscnJAcie/rom nob - i : : ptsilS Psi
tvio years' time to pay tor it. nl HI
■ $2.50 a month or $5.00 every two f hOmMI ‘■■ > ’ fJnr I
months is all that's necessary. If | JBhj* ffWM tMwi fM? I* '!
you are a farmer and do not wish >,31 ?- ——9 l 1 ■'/ H ■
to pay monthly, you can arrange < •HPS Ito IH
B quarterly or semi-annual payments, rfC |H|
Os course, every Thiery Organ is rM? Bi
guaranteed against any detect in HI
■ material or workmanship just as W QB .-w MM,
loT.g as you keep it. Regardless of ' ll luL.ffi'l JSj ,
where you buy an organ or what , £. F
you pay for it. you can’t buy an
a organ anywhere on which there is
a better or stronger guarantee to protect yoa.
You don’t have to worry about the quality of a Thiery Organ because ft fs guaranteed. NoB
only that, but in dealing with me, you have no fancy prices or fancy profits to pay. You get just
■ the organ you want at the lowest price a good organ can be sold for and you get it on the easiest
kind of easy payments if you don’t want to pay cash.
No other organ of any make has so quickly jumped into power and favor anywhere fn the United
States as Thiery Organs. They are the fastest selling organs advertised and sold direct to the home today.
S My Exchange Plan fs for your benefit. Any Thiery Organ you buy now, you can exchange
any time within five years after you buy it as part payment on a beautitul Thiery Piano and
almost the full purchase price will be allowed in exchange for it.
| THIERYOLA PHONOGRAPHS ,
the real “MUSIC-MAKERS” of all Phonographs. Like Thiery Pianos and Organs, they
axe sold only direct to the home. A phonograph that plays only one or two makes of disc records
VCS u v- is only halfa phonograph. THIERYOLA Phonographs
play all makes of disc records without any extra equip
ment to buy and they play them as fine asany machine
made. They play Columbia, Victor, Pathe, Edison,
Operaphone and all other makes of disc records. They
are in beautiful cabinets of Genuine Mahogany, Wal
nut and Oak and the prices range from SIO.OO, $15.00,
$30.00 and up. Free demonstration double disc records
are included with each machine. Shipped
on ten days tnaland then —ship back
at my expense if you're not simply
delighted. Completeinformation,
beautiful color-printed catalog,
showing full line of Thieryola p.X | i ■ «lUTIj IM
Phonographs and catalog
of records mailed free to
any address.
J.B.THERY
Pra*. J. B. Thiwy C«*
MILWAUKEE
Ws. J. B. TRIERY—Pres. J. B. Thiery Co 4
Milwaukee. Wfe, Dear Sir:—Mail to me at
once post paid your beautiful new color printed
fiftß Style Book as checked below with trial order
liua blanks, with cash and charge account pricer
<o,direct to me. with testimonial letters and indorse*
meats, and full information of your buying fijao |ygt
M Bdvcrtiscd in Atlanta Semi-Wkly. JrL
| Organ (““I PhonograpS
I 1 Style Book I I Catalog
F Check with (X) nark the book too waa.
■ '
Trade Commission to
Report to Hoover on
Bread Production Cost
WASHINGTON. Oct. 9. —Cheaper bread
was brought nearer today when the fed
eral trade commission anounced com
pletion of Its bread production costs
probe for the food administration. Her
bert Hoover will receive the commis
sion’s report tomorrow. It was stated.
No flat edict fixing a price on baker’s
bread is expected from Hoover. Know
ing their cost figures, he plans to rec
ommend standard sized loaves at uni
form prices. Co-operation of bakers
will be forced, if necessary, by licens
ing regulations.
It’s All Wrong, Boy,
The Hula Hula Maids
Don’t Dance that Way
DETROIT. Oct. 9.—Americans done
do the hula dance right Those lith
some maidens garbed in straw skirts
and a smile—and a string of flowers—
who permit cabaret regulars to close
their eyes and dream of far-off Hawaii
to the tune of a ukelele are all wrong
Dr. W. H. Ketchum says so. And
Dr. Ketchum oughta know He hails
from Honolulu. He told an assembly
in the Hotel Statler that the Hawaiian
maidens do their dance as a relig.out
rite.
win m .ftjii we i’ '.v '
" v z- ' EPILEPSY «
falling sickness
To Ml «ufffrer* from Fpikpty, Falllnr ’
, * Slrknetx or Jforoono Tronb!*« will be sent ABMA- <
| ITTEI Y Fi.-FI * larco bottio o' W H - T•• ‘-|
I ment. For thirty yen”*, of »ur*rer» hare u?e<’ W. H |
I Peeko’fi Treatment with exeol.ent reoult«. G're Lx i*roesand P.O (
| U . |<. PEF.KE. 4-A. < *-*‘nr “tr e < t. .
R wi
FINE FOR
YOUR FEET
The ease and comfort
that Shield Brand Shoes
give the feet is indispu
table evidence of skill in
workmanship and quality
in material.
Besides these good features,
every Shield Brand Shoe has
so much snap and smartness
about it that it classes up with
any shoe costing twice as much.
Shield Brand Shoes are
made for men, women and chil
dren and sold by leading shoe
dealers throughout the South.
Ask your shoe man to show
you Shield Brand Shoes.
*
M. C. KISER CO.
ATI.ANTA. GA.
Manufacturers of
SHIELD BRAND SHOES
“Fit Best—Wear Longest”
1 Skfu BXB f
Made-to-Measure
. Express Prepaid $925
m ; 1 Pants cut in the latest rn
\ st Yta. Made-to-your
individual measure. Fit, work
j . manship and wear guaranteed.
A’o Extra Charge
f° r vez t°PS, no matter how
jgt.H p. -A extreme you order them.
i Ti A good lire hostler in
ft . < J every town to take
Wsrstca orders for our c.lo-
KlY’f W V’v W bratrd made-to-measure clothes.
W j’yg *ls. Swnplei of ail latest materials
Ft# £l2l We Pay Big Mcncy
t '-' t-S gHJ to our agents everywhere Turn your
w-Jf KB et>are time into cash by taking orders
V-iJ Uw for our stylish clothes. Write today
WB .IB for beautiful FREE outfit.
THE PROGRESS TAILORING CO.
D, Pt- T®2 Cirlcago, 111.
3