Newspaper Page Text
■Ml
GREAT SOUTHERN NUMBER
THE WORLD’S WORKl
Read what it says about
Atlanta, Georgia and the I
South's Mighty Progress.'
Over 100 Over 100
Pages Pictures
Telling the wonderful
story of Southern De
velopment and South
ern Opportunity.
Get Your Copy Today. All
News Stands 25 Cents.
325£? ® “ESST* (J) 'SSS?
Doubleday Page &Ca New York.
VICTIMS OF WRECK
TIEN TO HOSPITAL
•ALL
A Unique Little
Money Saver
The beautiful little home sav
ings banks we loan to depositors
are marvels of ingenuity.
They record the amount you
put in. You can actually see your
money grow.
We loan them free to savings
depositors. One dollar starts an
account. -
Interest compounded twice a year.
Central Bank &
Trust Corporation,
Candler Building,
Branch Cor. Mitchell and Forsyth.
CHARGING ILLEGAL
SUMMER SCHOOL
FOR BOYS
at Boys’ High School Build
ing (Comer Courtland
and Gilmer Sts.)
Authorized by the Board of Education.
Opens on June 17 and continue* for
ten weeks.
Special purpose—To prepare for en
trance examination to any claea In the
High School and to make up deficien
cies In any study or studies of the High
School course. For Information and
rates apply to
W. M. GREENLEE,
7 Boulevard Place,
or R. C. LITTLE,
343 Euclid Avenue.
CORNELIA CITIZENS
TO ADVERTISE COUNTY
Special to The Georgian.
Cornelia, Go.. June 8.—Business men
and leading citizens of Cornelia and ad
jacent towns have organized a cham
ber of commerce, through which Hab
ersham's great rezourcez of toll and
climate and the continually Increasing
opportunities for commercial Invest
ment shall be brought to the attention
"t prospective home-seekers In the
South.
Special to The Georgian.
Valdosta, Ga, June 6.—The prohibi
tion campaign In this county took a
sensational turn when between seven
ty-five nnd one hundred warrants were
sworn nut by leading prohibitionists
against antl-prohlbltlonlsts whom they
charged had registered Illegally, for
the election. Most of the warrants
were against negroes, and a number of
them were arrested. It Is said that the
prohibitionists will prosecute every
man who registers Illegally. A num
ber of negroes who have taken an ac
tive interest in registering members of
tholr race have received letters warning
them to 'cave the county.
No campaign in the history of
Lowndes county has caused as much
excitement and feeling, and in no cam.
palgn before has there been as much
hard work done. The prohibitionists
have speakers in every district of the
county making addresses dally, and
last Sunday night the churches In this
city were closed in or'der that the con
gregations might attend the prohibition
rally at the Valdosta Theater.
The antl-prohlbltlonlsts have thus
far confined their efforts mainly to get
ting the voters registered, but It Is un
derstood they have a strong organiza
tion and will go into every country dls.
trlct. The registration books close next
Saturday night.
A PIANO OUT OP TUNE
18 A NUISANCE IN ANY FAMILY
Professor Walter F. Grace, the blind
tuner nnd repairer of tnnilcal Inatrumenta.
has certificates from lending musicians and
citizens of Atlanta ns to the thoroughness
of his tnethodn. Ills work will be satisfac
tory and It will moke you feel better to
give your order to a worthy nnd <on»petent
min. Professor Grace bns served hundred*
of satisfied natrons nil over Georgia. l.enve
or phone orders to John M. Miller, 3D Mari
etta street.
TYBEE
BY THE SEA VIA
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY.
Week end rate, $8.25; ticket* on sale
Saturdays, limited Tuesdays following
date of sale. Season rate, $13.15; tick
et* on snle daily, limited September
30th.
W. H. FOGO, D. P. A.. Atlanta, Ga.
Train Left Track and
Plunged Down Fifteen-
Foot Embankment.
Special to The Georgian.
Nashville, Tenn., June 6.—The list of
Injured in the Southern wreck near
Lebanon, Tenn., yesterday are:
.urs. J. U Jennings, of Lebanon, both
arms broken, skull fractured and cut
. ■ , .11 eye»; may recover.
Mrs. Barah Lawrence, Nashville, se
rra.^.y iui about the face and head,
fractured skull: dangerous.
F. S. Lawrence, Nashville, back hurt.
Mary Lawrence, Nashville, head
bruised.
J. W. Thompson, Livingston, back
and hips hurt.
A. T. Hart, Johnson City, side and
head bruised and cut.
D. C. Dalton, flagman, Nashville,
right hand cut, head bruised and cut
L. D. Patterson, Nashville, scratched.
J. R. Smith, attorney, of Watertown,
Tenn., cut on the face.
W. M. Jamison, Auburn, Ky, Inter
nally Injured.
Miss Mattie Beasley, Red Bolllnc
Springs, Tenn., bruises on limbs.
F. A. Dean, conductor, Harrlman, cut
about the head.
S. F. Brown, Nashville, shoulder and
head bruised and slightly cut.
Mattie Beasley, Red Bolling Springs,
leg sprained.
J. F. Beatty, Nashville, sever cuts
on head and arm badly mashed.
George Phillips, Hopkinsville, back
sprained.
E. N. Combs, Auburn, bruised about
the head and body; not serious.
Henderson Denton, Hopkinsville,
wrist sprained and slight cut on the
head.
K. T. McConnlco, Nashville, ankle
hurt.
Mies Sarah Vaughan, alight Injuries
on neck.
J. W. Dodd, slight injury: painful but
not dangerous.
Mrs. R. H. Maddox, broken hip; se
rlous.
Mies Amanda Cartwright, Valauston,
Texas, nervous shock, slight Injury to
left hip.
John Lawrence (child), Nashville,
broken arm.
Joseph Jones, Monterey, Tenn., In
ternal Injuries.
A. F. Braswell, Nashville, bruised
hip.
Mlsa Patty Russell, Difficult, Tenn.
Injured in back: serious.
a. L. Algood, Nashville; Mrs. B. P.
Williams, Louisville: John D. Fletcher,
Nashville, and many others were
slightly injured.
Going at a speed of between 20 and
30 miles an hour. Southern passenger
train No. 2, leaving Nashville at 10:30
o'clock, plunged off a 15-foot embank
ment at Black Branch, near Lebanon,
Tenn., shortly after 11 o'clock yester
day, Injuring flfty-eeven out of sixty
passengers.
FOR NEW ORLEANS
Special to The Georgian.
New Orleans, La., June 8.—Advices
received by Secretary Tresevant from
the Panama canal zone and from other
sections of Central and South America
evidence a degree of Interest In the
proposed World's Panama Exposition,
to be held in New Orleans in 1915 In
celebration of the completion of the
canal, hardly second to that being
shown by the people of those states
lying between the, two great mountain
ranges in the United States. The plan
in detail will not be decided upon until
after the World's Panama Canal Expo
sition conference of delegates from all
sections of the country, which le to be
held In New Orleans on June 27, 28 and
29, the call for which is now being
made by the New Orleans Progressive
Union and the Merchants' Association,
acting Jointly in behalf of the exposl
tlon committee.
THEfl, PRICE'S SUIT
DRINK A
BOTTLE
every-
l WHERE 5C
New York, June 8.—Since the elec
lion of James Henry Parker to the
presidency of tho New- York Cotton
Exehnng elt Is said that repeated over
tures have been made to Theodore H.
Price, the cotton operator, to compro
mise the suit for 32,000,000, which he
brought against President Parker's Arm
In 1904, and which Is still pending.
It is reliably stated on Beaver street
that the negotiations have been turned
clown by Mr. Price and that he will
light the suit to tho end.
Mr. Price charged that J. H. Parker
& Co., who were his brokers In the deal,
sold him without his knowledge or con-
sent and converted to their own use
more than half a million dollars which
was in their hands ns profits and mar
gins He blames their action for the
collapse of his big cotton boom.
When naked regarding the reported
offer to compromise, Mr. Price declared
that he could not discuss that matter,
as the case was still before the referee.
L,y . BRIDGE MUST
BE MADE WIDER
Following complaints registered by a
number of citizens, the county com
missioners Tuesday refused to accept
the bridge built across Greensferry av.
enue by the Louisville and Nashville
railroad, and will require the railway
company to either construct a new
bridge dr remodel the one Just fln-
** After Investigation, the commission
ers discovered that the railroad com
pany has built a bridge which Is only
about 20 feet wide, and which does not
extend the full width of the road. Th s
condition of affairs, declare the resi
dents of the neighborhood, render* fre
quent accidents probable, a* P*ltW»
who are unaccustomed to the roa<$ and
who approach the bridge at night are
T. iik.lv to drive off the embankment
“ hey ara to drive on the bridge.
Because of these conditions the com-
refused to accept the
■T-iura and will require the company
ra‘Ifulld* a bridge equal to th. width
of the roadway.
M’MULLEN WINS
RACE FOR ORDINARY
Special to The Georgian.
Hartwell, Ga., June 8.—W. B. Me
Mullan defeated T. M. Myers for ordl
nary of this county, to All the vacancy
caused by the death of Judge J. M.
Thornton.
Many Go on Excursion.
Fitzgerald, Ga., June 8.—Several hun
dred Fitzgerald people Joined the first
excursion of the season Tuesday vfa the
A., B. & A. for Brunswick. The ex
cursion train contained fifteen coaches,
nil comfortably filled with passengers.
SHOWED THE MINISTER
And Got Him in Lins.
In a minister's family in Los Ange
les where I was visiting some time ago,
the wife complained of serious Indi
gestion and dyspepsia. She admitted
that she used coffee anti said shs more
than half believed that was the trou
ble. 1 told her that I knew It was,, for
I had gone through with the experience
myself nnd had only been cured when
I left off coffee and took up Postum
Food Coffee. *
She safd she had tried the Postum,
both for herself and her husband, but
they did not like It. With her permis
sion, I made Postum next morning
myself, nnd boiled It full llfteen minutes
nfter the real boiling of the pot began.
Then when It was served, It was a rich,
deep brown color and had the true
flavor and food value that every Post
um maker knows. It Is all folly to talk
about trying to make Postum with one
or two minutes’ steeping.
"You can't get something good for
nothing. Postum must be well boiled,
and to keep It from boiling over, use
small lump of butter, perhaps twice the
size of a pea. That morning the min
ister and his wife liked Postum so well
that their whole lives were changed on
the question of diet and they abandon,
ed coffee at once and for all time.
Now after a hard day's work, they
are comforted, refreshed, arid rested by
a cup of well-made Postum for eupper.
They are both enthusiastic In Its praise.
The wife has entirely recovered from
her dyspepsia. I will not go Into the
details of my own case, except to say
that I was a desperate sufferer with
dyspepsia and discovered by leaving
oft coffee that coffee was the cause of
It. I quickly got well when I took up
Postum Food Coffee. I earnestly hope
many more coffee drinkers may get
their eyes open." Read "The Road to
Wellvllle," in pkgs. "There a Rea
son.”
EISEMAN BROS.
The Old Reliable Manufacturing Clothiers
Tub Duds For Little “Boys-e-Woysies
>>
Established
1865
w
The new ‘‘Peter
Pan” Russian, sizes
21-2 to 6 years.
HEN we say we have the largest and most select stock
of Wash Suits for Little Boys and “wee” small Chil
dren, the fact that upwards of 250 different styles are
on display in the Children’s Section, of the second floor
of the “Big Store” for your inspection, graphically
carries the force of our statement.
Not only is variety far in advance of any other
similar showing in the South, but quality, style and fin
ishing of these little garments are unusually high-class.
The leading styles carrying many varieties, are the Peter Pan—Sailor,
* and Buster Brown blouses.
The Middy, Peter Thompson, Peter Pan Russian,
Buster Brown Russian, and Sailor Collar Russian.
The fast color fabrics and white—
blue, red, and tan checks and light blue,
navy and red solid color Chambrays.
French Rep, .English
Drills, Duck—Pique,
Handkerchief and
Butcher’s Linen —
white, tan and blue
Linen, and Galatea
Cloth. Braid and or
nament trimmed and
plain.
Sizes, 2 1-2, 4, 6, 8
and 10 years of age.
Prices range from
The ever popular
Sailor Blouse, sizes
4 to 11 years.
PLAY
One of the new Sail
or Collar Russian
Suits, sizes 2 1-2 to. 6
years.
$1.00 to
$6.00
A “Russian” style
for very small chaps,
sizes 21-2 to 6 years.
TIME
Lo! Lo.' Lo! Lo! Heap much Ilf
tli* face face brave suits. He*
Indian cnatumes, with colors
feather headpiece. Made o
• Khaki." trimmed with large rei
points, cat-stitched In white; yel
low fringe on Jacket and trousers
The “Indian Suit" Is the chil
dren's hobby, and provides an ex
cuse to do extra "pow-wow"
stunts sod work off surplus en
tries of complete suit only $2.00.
SUITS
"ALL-IN-ONB”
.Ime suit Is a
ana comfortable one-picce blouse
Romper or
plav-tlms suit Is a serviceable
and i
. and khaki.
fomplete, wlfli cap to mutch, $1.
Without cap, 60 cents.
Baltimore, Md.
Washington, D. C.
Young "FANATICS" don't f.ol
dothescomplete without one of
our “Play Itall" Hults-regular
“Big League" fashion. Miidi* of
Gray Flannel, and with Hhlrt.
Pants. Bed Belt, white stitched
nnd cap make a complete uniform.
As a general, all-round play
snlt the "Play Ball" outfit la In
vincible. Complete only $1.16.
Children 9 s
(
Hats
Boys’ and Children's Tams,
in white Duck, Pique, white,
blue and tan Rep nnd Mercer
ized Chambrays to match the
wash Suits. Prices 60c to $1.
Boys’ and Children’s Straw
Hats in the ever popular
Yacht, soft roll and Sailor
shapes; made of split, Jap
•Sennet, Milan and Shansi
braids, plain and fancy braids.
Prices 60o to $2.00.
The New Flare shaped Sail
or in Milan and Shansi braids,
Blue nnd white bands. $1.00 to
$3.00.
Boys’ Golf Caps in white
Duck, brown Linen and Crash.
Price 60c. Boys’ genuine Pan
ama Hats, $3.00, $4.00 and $6.
Children’s Sailors made of
White Duck. Pique, Brown
Linen, Chambrays, black and
white chocks nnd combinations.
Price 60c to $1.00.
Eiseman
Bros.
11-13-15-17 Whitehall
ATLANTA
BALLARD BIFOCAL AND
TORIC OR CURVED
LENSES
have
gained a reputation In two rears
other firm In the entire South has
made In a half century. Not these
lenees alone gave ua the lead, but op
tical aervlce In every way not usually
found elsewhere. Ask any Atlanta
™VALTER BALLARD OPTICAL CO,
71. Peachtree Street.
Mob Destroys
Chinese Mission
Shsngbsl, Chins. Jane 8.-A mission sta
tion In Kslh Slen. a town In th* province
Kz* Cbueo, almost on the border of
Thllwt, he* been destroyed by a mob, ae-
cording to a report received her*. It '*
reported that zereral mteatonarles were
either killed or Injured.
BAILEY
are not here but the Natato-
rium is; go over and have a
swim.
the BIJOU
Tonight—Matinea Saturday.
GEORGE FAWCETT COMPANY
WILL PLAY BOYLE'S SUCCESS
“FRIENDS’*
NEXT WEEK at tha Grand
“CHARITY BALL”
eCASINO
TONIGHT—MATINEE THURSDAY.
Charley Grapewin
IN GEORGE HOBART'S PLAY
IT’S UP TO YOU, JOHN
HENRY.
Naxt Wook: "DOWN MOBILE”
Every
Amuse
ment
That Is
New
PONCE
DE
LEON
PARK
(Hand
Concerts
Twice
‘Daily
A CAR A MINU
~l!
!”j
I
PASTIME PALACE THEATER
Tho Home of Vaudovillo,
No. 77 Peachtree Street.
Matinee* 3 and 4 p. m. Night 7:30 to 11
Next Week’e Program.
LEWIS AND LE8SINGER, Eccentric
Reuben Act. TOMMY WILKS, Sweet
Voiced Singer of Sentimental Songs.
BABY ESMOND, The Phenomenal 4-
ear-old Child Actress. ELSIE
VOODS and FLORA E8MOND, Im
personations.
ATLANTA'S POULAR
PLACE OF REST.
OSSQ
Atlanta's Newest and Largest Amuse*
ment Park.
TWO CONCERT8 DAILY
By Wedemeye^s Band.
VAUDEVILLE 2:30 and 4:00 In Af*
ternoon; 7 and 0 at Night.
St Nicholas Auditorium
PONCE DE LEON PARK
SKATING DAILY
11 A, M.-1 P. M.: 3:30 P. M.-S P. M.)
8 P. M.-11 P. m;
MUSIC EVERY SESSION.