Newspaper Page Text
WEDS DIRECTOR
Percy Lynwood Mingles With
Atlanta’s Bonton. Then Mar
ries Birmingham Beauty.
Let's hope none of the Atlanta girls
KSi who ffanced in the Klrmess with eharm.
Ing Percy Lynwood, director, chorus
r* master and terpsichorean tutor, will
E? feel hint because he danced with them
st Sil and then went elsewhere to wed.
■ But that’s what he did. Birmingham
f. was chosen over Atlanta and Miss
Qut-enle Neely was the bride.
Percy Lynwood, which was his bill*
board name came to Atlanta early this
year to put on the Kirtners, with the
help of Professoi Agostini and as tnanv
t. society girls as hr could enlist in the
- name of charity, which covers a mul
titude of schemes He danced with the
bonton, the cream de la creme and also
the upper crust of Atlanta society,
taught BO girls how to wear short
skirts without feeling like all the world
had a telescope pointed at them, and
achieved a tremendous success, artis
tically and financially. Then he moved
on to Birmingham and Nashville ’
It was in the Birmingham Kirmess
that Lynwood met his qtn-en It was
Miss Neely who was chosen to dance
the Merry Widow with Lynwood, it
was she who landed all the “heavy”
parts in the amateur production, and
It was she who was especially engaged
to go on to Nashville for the Klrmes®
there. Mr. Lynwood declaring that it
couldn't possibly succeed without her.
After the Nashville performances. Mr.
Lynwood went back to Birmingham
and the two were married.
Now Mrs Lynwood Is helping her
husband put on the Kirmess at Knox
ville. Tenn
Banish Bunions,
Corns, Callouses!
••■IWfiO ” Brings iNtaot Belief!
7
Ffc iVywA ®vS» j I
vn i I
Get arise—get Ringo! Stop "Ouch" ing wh*t.
people wa’k on your feet- 4nn t h>ve a < rn or
bunion tn stand oil! ’Thm't nacsuMary. Make a
h-e-line fur the drugstore this very minute
ask the man tor Bh|o. Take P home-put it OA
—My "Bingo"-pains take eHnts immediately!
The Bingo war's the lateti way—the safest,
eas e»t, Quickest wav. Touch » drop er two to
a r6en—bingo' -it begins te shrink and shrivel,
Fntire corn looser*, comes out—caat included
•—without hitch or hindrance—without a»d of
irni’fe. gimlet nr cuss werd*. Blemwed relief!
ffCew aha on tout smalket sheea- ge your way
geiaieingt
AH drvagWta Imw Btngw -wr wit’ get It. OtMewne,
>♦•»«< rhe nr <*« tn r>»«Af*«*r Fharwac*' O . ! I N
X'MrWera St.. ( hiear*. IU-. *>m! fM it dh*et. pr»p« <!
That Fit
Style in men s and young men s
Oxfords without properly fitting counts
for nothing, as style can not he appreci
ated at the expense of one s comfort.
Our Summer Oxfords combine
both style and correctness of Fit and
afford the greatest pleasure to th t
wearer.
Patent. Gun Metal and Russia
Calf, button or lace. Black or Tan,
stylish and perfectly fitting at $3.50.
$4.00. $5.00 and $6.00.
White Buckskins at $5.
Canvas at $2.50 and $3.50.
Tennis styles, high or low. both
black and white.
Hosiery in new shades to adorn the
ankle and carry out the effect of shoes
or trousers. 25c to $1.50.
Eiseman Bros.
11-15-15-17 Whitehall Street
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ~~
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
The entrance of Solicitor General
Waller Wise in the race for congress
in the Sixth district, for which now
sits the Hon. Charles Laf-'ayette Bart
lett. unquestionably means a hard fight
Mr Wise Is one of the ablest prose
cuting officers in Georgia—-a lawyer of
marked ability and aggressiveness. Be
sides. he is universally popular, and
numbers his friends practically by his
acquaintance. He Is a good speaker, is
exceptionally well Informed on matters
generally, and is agreed to be full
grown congressional size.
In seeking to defeat Judge Bartlett,
Mr Wise has embarked upon a strenu
ous undertaking The judge is one of
the veterans, not only of the Georgia
delegation, but of the congress itself.
He was first elected In 1894, to the
Fiftv-foqrth congress, and has been
continuously elected ever since, some
times with and sometimes without op
position. In addition to this national
service, he was twice a member of the
Georgia legislature and twice a state
senator.
Few men In Georgia know the game
better than Judge Bartlett And few
play it more skillfully.
He is a member of the powerful com
mittee on appropriations in the na
tional house of representatives, and
stands high in the councils of the Dem
ocratic party.
A fight between Bartlett and Wise is
sure to be spectacular—and specula
tive until the last vote is counted.
The patient and long-suffering
Republican elephant doubtless feels
like referring both Mr. Taft and
Mr. Roosevelt lo the motto of the
state of Kentucky, as it appears on
the great seal, for their prayerful
consideration.
Savannah, held by many to be one of
the most "conservative” of cities—and
It is one of the most progressive—is to
have a bill providing for n commissio/i
form of government introduced in the
legislature this summer, in which the
initiative, the referendum and the re
call will be expressly Included.
There was a great deal of discussion
indulged in at the various meetings of
the aldermanlc committee having the
matter of the commission bill In charge
and the matters of the Initiative, the
referendum and the recall were by no
means unanimously popular. In a final
show down, nevertheless, the demand
for these innovations was clearly seen
to be very heavy, and they will be
parts of the new law
As yet, although several cities have
talked commission form of government
at one time and another, not one of
them has adopted it. The forthcoming
Savannah experiment, therefore, un
doubtedly will be watched with great
Interest throughout the entire slate.
“Nym” McCullough will not re
sign his national bank directorship,
merely in order to be a presiden
tial elector. Most anybody can be a
presidential elector —but a bank di
rector? That’s different!
The Hon. Joe Hill Hall may be a
prophet not without honor save in his
own country—although he probably
isn’t—but his campaign Is attracting
considerable atterition outside of Geor
gia, anyway.
The Montgomery Advertiser quotes
at length from one of Mr., Hall’s re
cent speeches, in which he says, among
other things—and this The Advertiser
emphasizes acutely—" Georgia has no
funds with which to pay appropriations
made by the legislature, and these ap
propriations are made without regard
to the revenues of the state with which
to pay them!”
The Advertiser warmly commends
Mr. Hall’s utterance to the earnest and
sincere consideration of prospective
Alabama candidates for the governor
ship.
The last time Mr. Taft and Colo
nel RonseVelt rode from the white
house to the capital together it was
sleeting and snowing to beat the
band. If they make the trip to
gether again next year It likely will
be even more chilly.
They gotta quit kickin' Griffins Ex
periment Station aroun'—at least. The
Griffin News says It means fight fwlth
a capital "F") If they don't.
Some impertinent and misguided
ones have been talking of moving the
Georgia Experiment Station—The News
always spells It with capitals, and that
seems safest—to Athens.
They're forever talking of moving It
somewhere or other—and that’s what
Griffinites are complaining and holler
ing about.
The News says:
Never will Griffin and Spalding
county submit to such an outrage
ous piece of Injustice without first
fighting for their rights to the very
last ditch—as they say In the bel
ligerent superlative—find not only
will the fight cover the question at
issue, but it will be carried into all
other fields that are antagonistic or
unfriendly, it might as well be
stated here and now that the State
College of Agriculture—that mighty
gourmand of public interest and
public money—had better let well
enough alone. It surely can not
fall to see that it behooves it to
refrain from stepping down here to
Griffin for the purpose of commit
ting highway robbery and Involv
ing the state in an act of arrant
error and utter perfidy. That ex
cellent but somewhat arrogant
coterie of state college exploita
tion experts are "monkeying with a
buzz saw,” If they but know it,
when they gratuitously start this
agitation to take away from Grif
fin what is hers by right of her well
earned victory In competitive bid
ding, and by the further right of a
solemn contract with the state.
Guess that will hold the anti-Griffin
Ites for a while!
I will not run," says Mr. Justice
Hughes At least, not until some
body asks him, anyway!
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
T E. FITZGERALD
in the passing awav of Ned Fitz
gerald, Atlanta has lost another typical
Southern gentleman. Born in Paris,
Venn.: descended from a long line of
lawyers, judges, statesmen, he was a
fitting representative of the aristocracy
of the Old South. He admired honor
courtesy and bravery in men. and beau- I
tv, gentleness and • modeatv among
women.
in his early manhood he married
Miss Kate Newman, one of Georgia's
most popular young girls, in whose
veins flows some of the bluest blood
of Kentucky and Virginia. To her and
their only son, Mr. Newman Fitz
gerald, a worthy son of a worthy fa
ther, my heart goes out in sympathy
and sorrow,
For 25 years I had known Ned Fitz
gerald and had never known him to do
an ignoble thing. Generous, to his
hurt often, no one ever went away
empty handed who sought his aid. It
Is not surprising, then, that he num
bered his friends by the hundreds ami
that, they ar enow tn deep grief for his
that they are now in deep grief for his
is his gain, and we that are worthv
will meet him again in that Better
Land. Though taken away in middle
life, he has left an impress for good.
In fact, to have knowp and loved Ned
Fitzgerald is to strengthen our own
love for goodness: to increase pyr con
fidence in human nature: to grow more
gentle and pitiful toward Weakness and
erro r.
Godd-bye, dear, hoble Fitz, for a lit
tle while. When the call comes tp us
who are left behind may we be already
lb answer It A FRIEND.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
All Odd Fellows who have the principles 1
of the order at heart are requested to meet
at Odd Fellows.hall, corner Alabama and
|lroad streets. Sunday afternoon, lune 23.
at 3 o'clock, to pay the last sad rites to
our deceased brothers who have left our
jurisdiction atgl joined the Grand Lodge
on High during the last year.
The following named brothers will act
for their jrapectlye lodges In calling the
list of the deceased brothers and making
Short addresses
Central, No. 3*. Hon. John M Slaton
Barnes No. 55. P. G. Gordon Mitchell,
Capftkl. No. 6(1. P G. M. Jpp. A, Ilyncfs
Schiller. No. 71. P. G M Alex Bittle:
Atlanta. No. 14. F. G. Jlomer Asltlej
Fulton. No 32. Rev S. C. Williams,
f'ledmont. No 190. P. G. Aldine Chambers
Hemphill. No 3*3. P. G. Dr. Biggers.
West End. No. 299. I*. G. Earl King
For the deceased visitors. Hon. lames I.
Mavson. of Barnes lodge. No. 55
CHAHLES KIMBALL. Sec
H C HALL. Chairman..
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
June 20 to 24.
.. « .
Beaver Board
Georgia Mint & glass co.
35-37 Luckie St.
Wholesale and Retail.
FISHT UN W
NUISANCE BEGUN
The smoke nuisance commission just
named by Mayor Courtland S. Winn
will meet for organization this week
and begin its investigation of Atlanta’s
smoke problem. It will also choose a
smoke and gas inspector, whose duty it
shall be to see that city gas is up to
the standard, and that no engines or
furnaces in Atlanta are emitting black
smoke for a longer period than the few
minutes allowed by law.
Mayor Winn's nominations for this
commission were confirmed by the
council. They were Wilmer J.. Moore.
ChrlS Essig, Richard M. Harwell, J. N.
Renfroe, Robert L. Corley. Oscar Elsas
and Charles W. Bernhardt. They will
serve for two years.
Atlanta's near-beer zone will be even
moie restricted after December 1, this
year, the sale of neat-beer being for
bidden in Ivy street between Decatur
street and Edgewood avenue. West
Hunter street between Whitehall street
and Madison avenue, and Madison ave
nue between Alabama/ and Mitchell
streets. It is probable the zone wheih
extends out Marietta street to North
avenue will be drawn in to forbid the
sale farther out than Jones avenue.
The report of the police committee,
recommending the changes above, met
heated opposition from several mem
bers who insisted that Madison avenue
saloon keepers had virtually been prom
ised immunity from further disturbance
if they would move to Madison avenue
from other sections. Councilman Greer,
Aiderman Johnson, Aiderman McClel
land and Aiderman Spratllng espoused
the cause of the near-beer dealers, urg
ing that the report be sent back to the
police committee, but it was adopted
by 19 to 7 and ’he saloons must go
next year
Clearance Salel
jof Linen Suits Starts j
| TOMORR O W ?
Ke* ve just finished invoicing our stock of i \ s
Linen Suits and find entirely too many on
1 hand. RADICAL REDUCTIONS have been I
ffl . * n la
i made in order to effect a QUICK clear- y
ance. Beautiful new Norfolks and jTLa
jaunty plain-tailored styles are here if
in the fashionable HOMESPUN
€ CRASHES, DUMFERLINE and J
i Ramie Linens. The prices areac -
tually less than the cost to manu- \ 'V
facture. Please do not confuse this
lA sale with the ordinary run of cheap, C/
inferior suits bought especially for *
/ sale purposes, but remember that <
every suit is of fine quality, high I V |lw
grade linen, made by high-priced J »■ K
man tailors in our own factory.
: Uj == _ Hrk /
/ Linen r 512.5(l and $15,011 ftp 2
< Suits at .W Linen Suits,lll f
|L—.... ... W ! gj nH K
14 Novelty Linen Sults; dark mixtures: Strictly tailored Ramie Linen Suits in Aw 1 ’ ' Ulf \\ /
, -trictly tailored: all slzcs; ®K 95 light blue. Copenhagen. pink, oyster IT U i
ml were $1.;50 w hiu. natural, tan; were 412,50 and //jl y! " llfjfl jl 1 tRk
: j |511,75 Linen Suits al $8.45| W 1-J | I I
v : jgft wftiW’ •; n I H
-jPiv Live finely tailored Suits, itt a ~ I 1 ' f// J
splendid shade of champagne, i|Kp I H f
' V-$8.95 ■ H
$7.50 Linen tt 1 fit >
m | surCnZ: w VVhite L
Lightweight, natural Linen Suits, Norfolk Ratine _ '
with trimmed collar and t-Uffs. Very Suits Were $12.50, Now I
4 w!.w. xZ;- $4.95 thl J s u £i C ft e ve Suits t 0 “$9.95 .
1 . ■ y t~— ~ _=_=□
S’ I'omespun Crash Nor= $8.95 Linen Suits Now $25 Linen Snits. Now y
folk Suits, Strictly $12.50
TailnrpJ Very beautiful copies of /
I aiioreo imported models, Just 3 /
/ Our regular Sls CQ Q n Jaunty N o folk Linen Suits suits only, 2 of oyster ,
“• Suit, now «PO.” v in oyster white *nd natui - white, sizes 34 and 36, 1 of ffl
I t >ur’regular $12.50 i; “! n X al were $8 9‘> HE Copenhagen, size 36; were If
fl Sult now . JU.Vn now.. . . 825. this $ | 2.50
<j SOUTHERN<BuiTs<Sx:iIiTCO. ?
“Atlanta’s Exclusive Women’s Apparel House,’’ 43-45 Whitehall St.
READ FOR PROFIT—USE FOR RESULTS- GEORGIAN WANT ADS.
mmwH's
BUSINESS PIVOT
George Byrne, expert on commercial
conditions and writer of many articles on
Southern Industry, who is in Atlanta, de
clared today this city offers more In an
industrial way than any he has visited.
"Atlanta is easily the busiest city of
the South, it is the business center,’’ de
clared Mr. Byrne.
"It Is going to be a much greater city,
though, for each year is going to add to
its growth. And progress will ceme be
cause there is such a wide variety of in
dustrial concerns located here. Already
Atlanta has more factories than any city
its size in the t'nited States, and nearly
every branch of commercialism is repre
sented."
Mr. Byrne ctwne to Atlanta to write a
review of its progress for The Manufac
turers' Record, one of the largest com
mercial magazines. of the country.
He was In consultation with Secretary
Cooper, of the Chamber of Commerce, and
was escorted over the city by that offi
cial. He will remain in Atlanta several
Jays, to prepare his article, which will
appear In the magazine within the next
few weeks.
A TEXAS WONDER.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney and
'.ladder troubles, removing „-ravet. cures
diabetes, weak and lame backs, rheuma
tism. and all irregularities of the kidneys
and bladder In both >nen and women
Regulates b'adder troubles in children
If not sold by your druggist, will be s.nt
by mail on receipt of SI.OO. One small
bottle is two months treatment and sel
dom fails to perfect a cure. Send for tee
tin-.onlals from this and other states. Dr
E. W. Hall. 2926 Olive-St . St. Louis. Mo
Sold bv drussrists
I You Need I
not suffer from the |
effects of a weak stom-
■ aoh, lazy liver or g
" clogged bowels when
_ there’s an easy way to «
get rid of such troubles "
quickly—by taking
II HOSTETTER’S '
■ STOMACH BITTERS ’[
Try it and just no- fl
tice its toning and
strengthening effect g
H on the entire digestive
■ system. Your foo d ■
will be properly di- ■
gested and assimilated
and you’ll feel better |
all over. Commence
Right Away
!■■■■■ an a ai ■■■■!
SWEET POTATO PLANTS ’
of our famous Nancy Hall variety
at $1.75 per thousand, or $2.00 ex
press prepaid. Prompt shipment,
good count and safe arrival guar
anteed.
BEAR’S HEAD FARM.
Pine Castle, Fla.
wBBipSBy
Wednes
day and
Thursday
We Will
Give One
1-4 Pound
Package of
Ridgway’s
Tea FREE
With Every
No. 10 Pail
of
Snowdrift
At
$1.15
To further popularize ,
the already popular j
Ridgway’s Teas we
make the above special
offer for Wednesday
and Thursday.
Ridgway’s Teas I
the very finest import- ;
ed. Order a pound and, ;
after trying it, if you
are not satisfied that it ■
is better than any other j
tea you ever used, re- i;
turn the balance anti we
will refund full pur
chase price.
Following are the ’
blends.
Capital Household Tea:
14 pound 15 C
1-2 pound 28c
1 pound 50c
Five o’clock Blend:
1-4 pound 18c
1-2 pound 35c
1 pound 70c
Her Majesty’s Blend:
1-4 pound 25c
1-2 pound 5Qc
1 pound si.oo
Al) blends come in
sealed tins just as j
packet! in the hill gar
dens of India and Cey- i
lon where the tea jg
grown. Atty of these
blends makes delicious
tea for icing or to drink
hot.
Rogers’
35 PURE FOOD
Stores