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CEOMMTED
AT ’FRISCO'S FAIR
Despite Statutes. Effort Will Be
Made to Appropriate SIOO.-
000 To Be Represented.
Shall Hie state nf Georgia appro
priate Sion.(inn or more to send a groat
exhibit to the Panama-Pax ific Interna
tional exposition at San b'rancisco in
1915 and show the world what Geor
gia Is doing?
In spite of the fact that the constitu
tion of the commonwealth makes no
provision for such a direct appropria
tion. state and local officials are taking
such a tremendous interest in the prop
osition that the Chamber of Commerce
has already authorized the appoint
ment of a committee to. confer with
jfhe governor and other -tate leaders to
I ascertain if some way can not be
found to send on to the coast one of
the most progressive exhibitions of
Georgia's progress In commerce, edu
cation, manufacture and the arts that
has ever been gathered together.
Fair Booster Appeals to Georgia.
Colvin B. Brown, chief of the do
mestic exploitation department of the
Panama exposition, is now in Atlanta
In consultation with Governor Brown,
President Moore, of the Chamber of
< '.ominei ce, and many other leaders All
of them have responded cordially to
his Invitation to Georgia to join th'
27 states that have already made ap
propriatl ms for participation in the
great fair. Mr. Brown has pointed out
to them that Georgia, as the foremost
etate in the South, will be given what
ever space she cares for in the expo
sition buildings, free of charge, and
that there is an insistent demand from
nil parts of the country that this com
monwealth appear before the great In
ternational assembly to give the world
a graphic demonstration of her won
derful development in trade, commerce
agriculture and in education, and par
ticularly that she send an exhibit that
will show conclusively her wonderful
triumph in the sociological problem,
with especial regard to racial regula
-1 ion
Georgia Men Favor Plan,
T" litis invitation the governor and
other leaders have replied that they
are enthusiastically in sympathy with
the plan, and they undoubtedly will
use their best offices to secure the ap
propriation from the legislature. Me
BroAn says that for Jl<'().ttofi lite state
ran be well represented at San I'ran
cisto. though the state- that have so
far copied have averaged an appro
priation of about y.’uii.'iou c.u |). while
Xe*w York b ids a :1> tfiui niui.
Babies
Every woman's heart responds to
the charm and sweetness of a baby's
voice, because nature intended her for
motherhood. But even the loving
nature of a mother shrinks from the
ordeal because such a time is usually
a period of suffering and danger.
Women who use Mother’s Friend are
saved much discomfort and suffering,
and their systems, being thoroughly
prepared by this great remedy, are
In a healthy condition to meet the
time with the least possible suffering
and danger. Mother's Friend is
recommended only for the relief and
comfort of expectant mothers; It is in
no sense a remedy for various ills,
but its many years of success, and
the thousands of endorsements re.
reived from women who have used it
are a guarantee of the benefit to be
derived from its use. This remedy
does not accomplish wonders but sim
ply assists nature to perfect its work.
Mother's Friend allays nausea, pre
vents caking of .- .
the breasts, and
motherhood. Mother’s Friend 'i sol*
at drug store— 7 T.t« for our
hook for expectant Ath v- i.
MADFIU." lEuSv -•* ; »1’
S»1O
ATLANTA TO PENSACOLA
AND RETURN vis
The WEST POINT ROUTE
Tickets on sale every Thursday up to
and Including August 22. 1912. Return
limit ten days.
Sleeping cars, dining errs conches
Call at Ticket Offices: Fourth Nations
Bank Bldg, and Terminal Station.
Lucas’ Stain
For Woodwork
GEORGIA PAINT & GLASS CO .
35-37 Luckie Street.
Branch Store. 54 N Broad Street
1 1 »
Make State and County
tax returns now Time will
soon be up.
T. M. ARMISTEAD.
Tax Receiver.
HAD TETTER FORTEN YEARS;
TWO BOXES TETTERINE CURED
Mr. Lew Wren, of Chicago, writes us
that he had suffered for ten years nub
tetter, many doctors In nearly every state
1n the Union havthg failed to cure him.
A druggist reconiniendt I Tetterlne to
him and he bough,t a box It gave him
relief, and the second box effected a com
plete cure. Tetteiine at all druggists or
by mail for uOc Hunt iba Shuptriae Com
pany, bataruian. Ga. •••
Up and Down
| Peachtree
Bill Blevins Takes
Wart Off'n His Chin.
i Mr. Blevins leaned against the gran
ite post just outalde the Kimball and
rubbed a spot on his chin which was
covered by an expanse of courtplaster.
Occasionally his eye would rove toward
the Decatur street corner, whence came
the hoarse cries of the itinerant ven
ders of corn salve, safety razors and
six-pictures -of- yourself- while -you
, wait who infest the locality. Mr. Blev
ins was evidently sore.
"What's the matter. Bill?” inquired
a friend Been having your picture
made and mad because it looks like
, you ?" .
' i-.'ot edzaekly." returned Mr. Blev
‘ ins. "Teller done played me a low
down trick.
1 "This feller, he didn't say much. I
' been tryln' to be soshable with him all
this week. He'd listen a while and then
git up and move off Plum' discour
agin'.
"Yestlddy, this feller he buys a box o'
salve off’n that peddler up at the cor-
I ner— no, he ain't there now. Es he was,
he’d be a-lickin' me or me him, tight
now. But he garnishes this salve o'
his'n to take off warts.
"This feller I'm tellin’ about had a
; wart big as a pigeon egg, right on his
finger, and 1 seen him spread that ped
-1 filer's salve on it. Then he wropped a
' rag roun' his hand and lit out.
"This mawnin’ I seen him, an’ I sez:
'Did hit take off your wart?' and he
sez, kinder short, Hit shore did.’
"You seen that wart on my chin.
Well, I buys me a box and spreads hit
on. Hit warn't more’n five minutes till ■
I was yelling fire and bloody murder.
Hit nigh-about burnt me alive.
"I goes back to this feller, an' I sez.
'Did that stuff burn you much?’
" Hit durn nigh eat up my whole
blamed hand,' lie sez.
" Then why in the name of kingdom
come didn't you say so?' I sez. 'Look
here at this chin.'
"'You didn't ax me.' says this feller.
But I'll be dad-burned es I don't gll 1
even with him 'tween now and nex' !
week or my name ain't Blevins. Got a ■
plug o' chewin’ about your clo’e?"
Street, Gamins Play
Ball in Death Trap.
A baseball game right in the jaw- o
1 ueath -almost furnishes tense enter
tainment for loiterers on the viaduct I
bridge nearly every day in the week ]
To the regulation stunts of future T;> |
Cobbs are added features that keep j
' goodly crowd of spectators gasping, j
and that ate not warranted to sooth' .
weak heart.
The youngsters play on the track;- <•. ■
the Western and Atlantic, with engim 1
I drilling all about them and shifting
i trains interfering with home run hits
hn the midst of an exciting g<xne it's
I nothing unusual to see one of the tag
i amuffins scamper In front of a huge
I locomotive and scoop the ball almost
» from under the cow-catcher. That
l none of them is maimed for life Is a
> constant marvel to the scores who ap
. i plaud their daring as well as their
'I -kill with the horsehide. More than
l one train window has been broken by a
I batted ball, but a little thing like that
•: never worries these enthusiastic future
1 greats Not infrequently when the ball
. has c'asbed through the glass one of
' the youthful players will swing on the
I train and coolly ask the conductor for
i "that ball." And he usually gi ts it. for
; trainmen arc great fans. In fact. 11,.
II men about the .card arc among th j
; I most enthusiastic spectators, which ai-
counts for the games not hating bi r,
I -topped long ago
SEVEN-STORY HOTEL FOR
ROME TO COST $250,000
RcME. GA . June 12. Another step
toward the erection «»f a $250,000 hotel
here was taken when the Broad Street
Hotel Company tiled a petition for a
charter.
Local men with money are interested
l in the project and Eastern capital will
I used in Its completion It is planned
io rre< t a seven-story structure at Fifth
| avenue and Broad street. The old Choice
J rouse, well known to the veteran travel'
: ing men, will be torn down to make way
for the modern building
DR. J. S. SNEAD. HOSPITAL
HEAD. IS SUED BY WIFE
Di J S Snead. "21 Whitehall street,
I manager of the Victor sanitarium, trxiai
, was made defendant in a suit for abac
i lute divorce
I Mrs Snead says while she was serious
ly 111 recently in her husband s hospital
he ordered her removed to the charity
| ward of the Tabernacle infirmary, telling
1 i her that he needed her room
' They were married tn 1902
Each age of our lives has its iovs.
Did people should be happy, and thev
• will be if Chamberlain's Tablets are
taken to strengthen the digestion and
keep the Is regular These tablets
| arc mi'd and gentle In their action anti
. spc-i.illy suitable for people of middle
age and older. Tor sale by all dealers
A THOUGHT
i Befor. your vacation trip See that
. you have a Kodak in your grip. What
I you see is yours with the Kodak. The
r I picture record of your trip will never
grow old. ,Ino L Moore X- Sons have
I j the one you want. 4? North Broad
SEABOARD
ANNOUNCES LOW
■ ROUND TRIP RATES TO
, BALTIMORE
$21.35 from Atlanta. Rates quoted
from other stations on applica
, tion. Make sleeper reservations
now. City Ticket Office, 88
Peachtree Street. Tickets sold
i'June 20 to 24.
1 A'.VAW • ...A‘.y’'■ 'I ligiiiw isiiiu
WsSws
INSPECTED TODAY
- - -
Officials Determining in What
Structures Laws Are Being
Violated.
Th** inspection of Atlanta s fir? traps,
which Fire Chief Cummings says are im
periling the lives of 10.000 working girls,
is in full swing today. Chief Cummings
and Building Inspector Hayes are in
charge of the inspection. Several build
ings have already been examined.
The two officials say r they will make a
thorough inspection of the downtown dis
trict, including all o/ the factory lofts
and other mercantile buildings in which |
girls toil, and in this way ascertain the* :
structures in which the fire ordinances
are being violated. Notices will then he |
served on the owners*of all such build - ;
ings to comply with the law. 'Those re
fusing to obey the notice within a spec
ified time will be haled into police court
and vigorously prosecuted,
Many Without Sprinklers.
Many of the downtown lofts and stores
are without automatic sprinklers, as re
quired by law, and th»* chief and building
inspector are determined that these
sprinklers shall be installed at the earli
est possible moment
“There are so many tire traps in At
lanta that it will be a big job to get
them all properly equipped, but never
theless this must be done and that with
out delay,” said Chief Cummings today.
“The situation is serious and must be
remedied the law must be enforced. The
lives <>f our thousands of working girls
must be protected.”
Colorado
Send the Children, and
hCatch Them Grow
The cities are merciless, hard and ugly—’never meant 1
for nurseries. It is the little ones’ misfortune that you can
not turn them out in the sweet fields and under clean skies '
three seasons of the year. But now that school is over, and
the stifling, dusty days and parboiled nights have come, you
arorf give them a chance. They’re growing, they need
ozone and romping room. Send them to Colorado and
see them blossom into strength. You’ll be surprised how
little it costs.
Any way of going to Colorado is a good way, because it gets
you to Colorado. But the best road is the Rock Island and
the superb trains of the
Rock Island Lines
supply the things you’ll expect to find and some comforting
details of perfect service you’ll not expect.
Through Sleeping Cars From the Southeast
with drawing-rooms and big Eierths are operated in connec
tion with the Frisco Lines.
The Colorado Flyer- -every morning from St. Louis—and othei .
fast daily trains from St. Louis, Kansas .City, Memphis, Chicago, Omahs
and St, Joseph for Colorado, Yellowstone Park and the Pacific Coast.
Our free booklets Under the Turquoise Sky" and " Little Journeys in Colorado"
point the way to summer happiness.
H. H, Hunt, District Passenger Agent
]mwJmUS| 1® P r y° r Street Atlanta, Ga.
Phone: Main 661
CIHli! riRC! I)' you hi'sii’ thi'i ultwm, soul
i our /louse /s on i'irv, you ui'e upt to /><> so e.ve/re</
thut, et-e/i thousrh you htive the time, you will
out null lettve behind, to Z>e bui'ited up,
yttl'Ji W i Ch, vulutdtie piii>et> tind jewels. Put
t hem into one of one SA I ! HTY I) li POSI T IfO.KCS
in our fire and burfrlstr-proof vnults. .1 privnte
box will eost you only Stf.tM), or up, per yettr.
4 per cent on S.-iv/nos Deposits
7.7 X . . "! ■ ■ ' '■ . 1 . ' ' .* — . 1 J - .-j 1
' "" 111,1 1 ■ I
$9,000.00 TO BE SPENT ON
ILLUMINATION FOR BIG
GAS CONVENTION HERE
Preparations are already being made
here to make the annual convention
of the National Commercial Gas asso
ciation, tolie’held at the Auditorium-
Armory December 2 to 7, the biggest
thing of its kind ever attempted.
It is estimated that fully 2,000 gas
men and gas appliance manufacturers
will be in the city for the Atlanta
show. Headquarters for the conven
tion has already been arranged at the
Georgian Terrace. J. C. Rushin. chair
man of the convention committee, is in
the city completing preliminary plans.
The big event of the convention is to
be tile gas show at the Auditorium.
The hail will be decorated at a cost of
SH,OOO and ga.» fixtures for the purpose
of lighting will he installed at a cost of
$9,000. It ia planned to run an all gas
"White Way” around the Auditorium,
calculated to outdazzle electric white
ways.
The Liver is the
Road to Health
If the liver ii right the whole (ystem u right.
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS will
gently awaken your
eiuggish, clogged
up liver and cure CARTERS
constipation, VPITTLE
upset lIVER
ach, in- | PILLS.
active ■■■■■
bowels,
loss of appetite, sick headache and dizziness.
Purely vegetable. You need them
Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price.
The GENUINE must bear signature
L '
MACON SOCIETY GIRL
MAKES REMARKABLE
RECORD IN COLLEGE
MACON, GA.. June 12.—When Miss I
Mary Louise Callaway, daughter of Mrs.
Duncan Brown, and a debutante in |
Macon society, received her diploma al
Mount DeSales college here today she
completed a remarkable scholastic rec
ord. In six years she did not miss a
single day, and'captured first honor in
each class, besides taking every other
honor possible for one student to win.
Bishop B. J. Keiley. of Savannah, pre
sented her with the diploma and
medals.
———■■■■ggMgWWMMMllggMM
Jk Remember, Auction, Tues- Jk
day, June 18, 3:30, Lots and
Houses, Bedford Place and
Eighth street.
21=2 Walton St. PLATS AT OFFICE-Atlanta, fia.
Democratic National
- -
Convention
I BALTIMORE, MD.
Southern Railway
PREMIER CARRIER OF TJ-1E SOUTH JI
OFFICIAL ROUTE
Special train will be run as a section of No. 38, the “New York, Atlanta
and New Orleans Limited,” leaving Atlanta 11:01 a. m., Sunday, June 23.
I Round Trip Rates From Points Named Below:
Atlanta $21.35 Newnan $23.40
Macon . 23.70 LaGrange 24.35
Dalton . 21.35 Americus 25.70
Rome 21.35 Albany 26.70
Athens 20.15 Elberton . . . 19.15
Proportionately low rates from all other points. Tickets will be sold
r June 20 to 24. with final limit to reach original starting point before mid
night of July 3, 1912.
h w . 7 . S
For sleeping car accommodations mi the “Democratic Special Train” ■
or further information, write James Freeman. Division Passenger Agent.
No. 1 Peachtree street, Atlanta, Ga., or
HOLLINS N. RANDOLPH, CRAWFORD WHEATLEY, SAMUEL C. DUNLAP,
Atlanta. Ga. Americus, Ga. Gainesville, Ga.
TRANSPORTATION C O M M I T F F E
H. F. CARY, G. P. A, JNO. L. MEEK. A. G. P A„
Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga.
PRESENTED TJC
CA ATLAS WITH MAPS
FOR MODEKt 3 50 \ AND
this charts
ONLY A HEADINGS .
CLIPPED FROM THE ’;->N :•) g ?
FIRST PAGE LIKE THIS jv<j y: '
I Atlanta Georc wh =? is * s
a 0: By a«
I Just to show part of heading with date) • '•’?
and the expense fee to defray the neces. -J .;?• ''.’'AeßS4gi
sary items of the cost of handling, '.v'. :.'lg3E£.‘:‘. '• ' wjwyX'A' 1 ’A*,
packing, shipping, checking, account- '.'.‘UBS;t ■•'•''wSfiS''’''’".' t’l
To get your Atlo.s. just present the six ’<
headings of consecutive dates CJ - S
Ot this office with the expense VV Udj K :■ •
fep ’ f a-: : A-gwr-:*;
BY MAIL. 15 CENTS EXTRA FOR POST IGE ''
i ; -p. I
Ills Stand ard Allas 2-- •: I
should be in every fam- ss-j y.’sF? £. ?
ily where there are chihb'iui i?.' -z pg' •• j
of school ago. ’1 is file one p
book that contains the es- NyfVyy?:-'i-:
sentTal features of a dozen <£ ?? £I-
b< <>ks. in smdi concise form :• ’
that one may get the desired a "j
information at a glance. It’> ■'<
the handv Atlas for every
,lav ” se '
GET IT TODAY EDUCED ILLUSTRATION—ActuaI Size 8 3-4x7 Inches ' I
■ 11111 ■ llll
Shoted IfaftAetT
or FOUNTAINS. HOTELS. OR ELSEWHERE
Get the
Original and Genuine
HORLICK’S
MALTED MILK
ate Jnutahcnd
The Food Drink for All Ages
RICH MILK, MALT GRAIN EXTRACT, IN POWDER
Not in any Milk Trust
w Insist on “HORLICK’S”
Take a package home
’ ”
« AWNINGS
AND TENTS
Made to Order.
We use best ma
terial and work
manship.
| —r*~'tPrices Reasonable
ATLANTA TENT & AWNING CO.
39 1-2 Luckie St. Phone Ivy 5667.
MWR-’A Bibiea Fro. DR B M. WOOLI.KT.
24-N Victor Sanitarium. At lajita ± _Ga ; _
HOTELS AND RESORTS.
ATLANTIC CITY.-N. »
atlantic"city's largest
and LEADING ALL-THE-YEAR
hotels.
HOTEL RUDOLF
On ocean front; close to all attractions;
ranacitv 1.000. The locatlon.’large rooms
and open surroundings have established
this as the most comfortable hotel for the
lumm’er Ail baths supplied with sea and
fresh water: running water In guest
rooms; spacious promenade verandas
overlook the famous boardwalk.
tra, high-class restaurant. American and
European plans.
A. S. RUKEYSER, Manager.
JOEL HILLMAN, President.