Newspaper Page Text
MEXICO TO GUE
[IP WYLIE SMITH
Ambassador Wilson Telegraphs
Atlantans to Come and
Take Absconder.
4fter a year In prison In Mexico,
« e 'fving extradition successfully be-
C ~/e >f the revolution that prevailed
in the southern republic, J. Wylie
cntith 'he man who wrecked the Com.
mercial Loan and Trust Company of
j- wta by embezzling over $200,000, is
* 0 brought back here for trial within
the week.
ambassador Wilson in Mexico City
no'rified the authorities today that the
Madero government had given its con-
* to the extradition. Pinkerton de-
tectives "ill leave this city tomorrow
morning to bring Smith back from the
frontier line at Juarez, where he is now
confined. L
Trying For Year
To Get Him Back.
Ever since Smith fled the city last
June he has been pursued by United
States authorities and private detec
tive? representing the depositors in the
bank he wrecked. When he was first
arrested on the strength of an indict
ment found against him here, the Mex
ican government sent him to the prison
at Chihuahua, but they refused to rec
ognize the extradition papers that offi
cers took down there to return him for
trial, because Just about that time the
Mexican government was very much
broken up by the revolution.
Since August the man was kept there
in spite of every effort to bring about
his extradition. The authorities at
Washington were powerless; the best
that could be done waa an agreement
with the Mexican government to hold
the man in prison. Lately, since the
Madero government has gotten the re
volt under control, the case was taken
up again by Ambassador Wilson.
Mexico Finally
Agrees to Give Him Up.
Smith was removed from his first
prison to Juarez Just across the line
from El Paso. Texas, and negotiations
for the honoring of the extradition pa
pers were renewed. Ambassador Wil
son announced the Anal success of his
efforts in a telegram which reached At
lanta today. It says that the requistion
will not only be honored, but that the
Mexicans will bring Smith to the bor
der tine prepared to turn him over to
the American authorities as soon as the
legal papers are presented.
It is expected thaWSmith will be tn
Atlanta and jailed hrre awaiting trial
within two weeks.
New Cotton Scheme
Is Turned Down By
Southern Governors
Most of Them Won’t Come to
George Dole Wadley’s Congress,
Although Invited by Brown.
The Southern Cotton congress, sched
uled for Atlanta on Friday and called
by Governor Brown at the solicitation
of James Dole Wadley, representing
various Georgia cotton factors, has not
provoked enthusiasm.
Governor Brown said today that but
one governor. William H. Mann, of Vir
ginia, out of the fourteen invited had
signified his intention of attending.
Governor Brown has received answers
from eleven Southern governors, and
out of that number only Governor Mann
will be present. The states of Louisi
ana and South Carolina have not an
swered the invitations.
The governor said today that he hesi
tated ror several weeks before calling
the governors together to discuss a
scheme to hold cotton for a better price.
He told Wadley, who opportuned him to
act. that he was not sure but that such
a scheme would be in violation to the
Sherman anti-trust law.
'Aadley Informed the governor that
'his matter had been thrashed out by
attorneys and the cotton factors had
been informed that it was legitimate.
aTthTtheaters
FORSYTH BILL DRAWS
USUAL LARGE CROWDS
' ’ n * the best vaudeville entertaln-
Tr;Cr ’ that has been offered theater-
* ’ ! n summer time in /Xtlanta is at
’ ng the capacity of the busy For-
s ’' : -it all performances. The headline
are as high class as can be
■ r ' in any of the big vaudeville thea
and the features and local favor
who help to make up the program
are "f unusual worth.
Joe Coombs and Howard
urn have made their vaudeville de
uiendidly The boys have a host of
riends who are interested in them.
hey were regulars on the circuit
nit would be just as great as it is.
n'jnd Hayes and company, presenting
■•Ville’s funniest act; Isabelle D’Ar
p an d b'rank Carter, the Rutan Song
■'nd other features make a hill that
i'* ndid netertainnient.
,p r Cabriel, the creator of “Buster
and Little Nen*o." will be next
"■ lu-adliner, offering his newest suc-
Little Kick.” The is one of
rresent-day star features and will
""erful drawing card. Afrnong the
Matures will be Tempest and Sun
a real star act; Bixley and Lanier,
' er offering, and others that are in
■rsyth standard class.
r*< T v K, r Ll r S N - Y - POLITICIAN.
" > ORK. July 10,—Former State
' 'A illiarn F Mackey, of Lan
a Y._ died as the result of heat
v lilon at th» Hotel Bristol today
was 53 years old.
PRICE Os GAS TO
HEAVYUSERSCUT
Reduction Affects Only Patrons
Who Consume 10.000 or
More Cubic Feet Monthly.
The Atlanta Gas Light Company to
day announced a reduction In the price
of gas to consumers whose meters
show a monthly consumption of 10,000
or more cubic feet of gas per month.
In pocketbook terms, this will affect
those whose gas bills are $lO or more
per month.
The reduction will apply to the July
sales of gas and will show on the bills
rendered August 1. They will be ac
cording to the sliding scale which is
in effect almost universally in cities
where rates otherwise than the flat rate
exist. The monthly sliding scale, ef
fective In Atlanta July 1, Is as fol
lows:
Gross Per
1,000 Cu. Ft.
First 10,000 cubic feet sl.lO
Next 20,000 cubic feet 1.00
Next 20,000 cubic feet .90
Above 50,000 cubic feet .... .80
Discount of Ten Per Cent,
A discount of ten per cent per 1,000
cubic feet will be allowed on all bills
paid within the discount period, mak
ing the bills.
Net Per
1.000 Cu. Ft.
First 10,000 cubic feet SI.OO
Next 20.000 cubic-Teet .90
Next 20.000 cubic feet 80
Above 50,000 cubic feet .70
Officials of the company insist the
reduced scale of rates Is not the result
of the recent agitations, as the new
sliding scale was under advisement be
fore the first of these agitations was
started. It is declared to be merely a
development of the gas Industry along
broader business lines.
Up and Down
Peachtree
That’s What They’re
All Looking For.
A young woman stepped into a
Whitehall street drug store and stared
at a huge sign for about two minutes.
The sign read:
500 Wavs To Be Beautiful.
25 Cfs.
I L__
It was evidently the title of a beauty
book. The young woman, who was not
pretty, but certainly not unbeautiful,
seemed lost in mathematical thought
for several moments more. The little
finger of her right hand worked fever
ish figures In the air and there was a
stern pucker between her eyebrows.
Finally she reached in her purse and
extracted a penny. Approaching the
clerk, she gave him the copper piece
and said:
“Show me one way, please, and keep
the change.”
In the language of the day, the
clerk was flabbergasted.
They Come as Fast
As They Leave.
When is Atlanta not Atlanta?
Now —say the railroad men and mer
chants of the city. According to rh»-
representatives of several important
roads w’hich lead into the city, more
than 50 per cent of the city's perma
nent population is out of the city just
at present. The majority of these are,
of course, spending the whole or frag
mentary parts of the summer at the
various resorts stretched out along the
coasts or In the mountains or at coun
try homes. A smaller part is away on
business.
Meanwhile, however, the city’s popu
lation—the crowd on Peachtree street,
for Instance, has not decreased notice
ably. The reason is that as fast as a
native leaves the city some one steps
in from another city to take his place.
The most of these come for a few days’
shopping trip, while others come for
extended summer stays. Atlanta being
a popular resort for those w-ho are not
natives.
So it is that Atlanta is truly not her
self. but a composite of Georgia and
the South. The difference is easily no
ticed. in the shops, say the merchants.
FATHERDFROCK HILL PLAN
PREDICTS 15-CENT COTTON
AUGUSTA, GA., July 10.—John J.
Anderson, of Rock Hill. S. C., the orig
inator of the Rock Hill plan" for the
reduction of cotton acreage in the
South, while in Augusta made the pre
diction that cotton will bring 15 cents
by next October. Mr. Anderson said
that he had received reports from all
over the cotton belt and that he be
lieved a 12,000,000-bale crop to be the
best that can be made, even with ex
cellent weather conditions existing
from now- until th harvesting time. He
said that under the "Rock Hill plan"
the acreage had been curtailed this
year between 4,000.000 and 6,000.000
acres.
PREFERS BEING ATLANTA
EXILE TO PAYING A FINE
James Freeman, W'ho was before Re
corder Broyles only a few days ago, to
day offered to become an exile from At
lanta to escape a fine in police court.
Judge Broyles declined to accept the prop
osition, and imposed a fine of $15.75, or
thirty days. On his first appearance in
court. Freeman was bound over on the
charge of vagrancy, but was freed on
bond. At an early hour this morning, he
created a scene, it is said, by leaping
from a cab and attempting to escape
without paying his fare.
THE. ATLAVTA GEORGIAN AND NO r B. WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1912.
Asks Women Police to Guard Girls
PERIL IN DANCE HAI_LS
I fl ■ ■\
■ a ■
I'' ' f \\
Os W ; / • / \\
/\\
'/ t\\
few \ ; r i
.Mb f
* v > f F
W A //
Miss Margaret Laing, assistant probation officer of the .juve
nile court, who today gives to The Georgian her ideas on social
needs of the city. She is for women policemen, dance hall super
vision. and the establishment of social centers in school houses.
Miss Margaret Laing, Assist
ant Probation Officer, Pro
poses Radical Reforms.
“The dance halls are perhaps
our greatest trouble. They are
part of the 'girl problem.’ Dance
hall inspectors are needed.
“A woman policeman or two
w’ould be a great thing for At
lanta. They would find their field
principally around some of the
picture shows.
“What to do with the girls is
the greatest puzzle. We have a
county reformatory’ for bad boys,
but there is no place for the girls.
5Ve need a reformatory for girls,
and we must have it.
“Converting the school houses
into social centers would help a
great deal. Why shouldn't the
people whose taxes build them en
joy dances and games and enter
tainments in them at night? Why
should they' remain idle and dark
except for a few hours every day?"
Proposing women police for duty
around picture shows and other places
where young girls go and a super
vision of Atlanta dance halls by city
authorities, urging tHe use of public
school buildings as social ce-nters for
dances and amusements of th” neigh
borhood. and stressing the need of a
reformatory for wayward girls, Miss
Margaret Laing, assistant probation
officer of the juvenile»court. told a re
porter for The Georgian today that the
girl problem was the most difficult of
all those faced by' the new tribunal.
Miss Laing is no new-comer in the
field 'of sociological work. For several
years she was one of the skilled work
ers of the Associated Charities, and she
joined the juvenile court more than a
year ago. W. W. Tindall, chief proba
tion officer, places great dependence
upon her knowledge of human nature.
Young Girls the
Greatest Problem.
"Yes. I think this work is fine for a
woman," said Miss Laing, with a smile.
"That is. if she is the right woman. Os
course it wouldn't suit every woman
But I like 11.
"You ask what’s the great problem
before us. It is ’girls.’ Young girls
around fourteen years old. We can't
tell what to do with them when they’re
wayward. We have no reformatory,
you know, so we must turn them loose
or send them to Milledgeville--the two
extremes.
"These dance halls are causing us a
great deal of worry. No, 1 can't sav
they are conducted in a disorderly
manner. Rut the city should provide
an inspector for them and see that they
are kept straight.
"I believe a woman policeman could
do a great deal to improve matters
around the picture shows and dance
halls. She could reach girls where a
man couldn’t; eould show them their
dangers and persuade them to guard
themselves
Poorer Girls Need
More Amusement.
"1 don't say the dance hails should
be closed The girls of the poorer
classes have little enough to amuse
them now. They need more pleasure,
not to be robbed of what they have.
Oh, I wish the city itself could open a
great amusement hall, wittT dancing
and other pleasures, carefully super
vised and kept under control.
"The city will never do that, per
haps. but it could open a dozen neigh
borhood social centers in tne -school
houses. Why couldn't every’ one of
those schools in the suburbs and the
poorer districts be brightly lighted at
night and thrown open for dances
among the boys and girls, the grown
men and women of their neighborhood,
with good chaperonage by the older
persons? Don’t you think the girls
would rather dance there, with their
friends than uptown at a public dance
hall, with strangers? What chance has
the working girl to find amusement'’
She must go to the public dances and
the picture shows. There's nothing
else for her."
DON’T GET CAUGHT IF
YOU TAKE A SHOT AT
GAME OUT OF SEASON
According to the state court of ap
peals, a hunter, under the provision of
the game law of 1911, is not necessarily
a person dressed in fashionable hunt
ing garb and spending leisure time
after game..
Any person who takes a chance shot
at game is hunting and is a hunter and
if the chance shot be taken out of sea
son this huntei is guilty of a violation
of the game law.
James Robinson was hauling cotton
in a field in Worth county last summer
and, having a shotgun with him, let fly
ala covey of quail. Robinson was a
poor shot and missed the birds, but he
was fined for violating the game law
just the same. Now, the court says
that Robinson's fine must stick.
POSTOFFICE CLERK.
OUT FOR PRESIDENT,
IS SENT TO ASYLUM
LOUISVILLE, July 10.—James P.
Hawkins, of Louisville, who was arrest
ed in Washington and sent to Wash
ington asylum hospital after offering
himself as the compromise candidate
for president on the Republican ticket,
was a clerk in the Louisville postoffice
more than 22 years. He resigned a few
months ago. after announcing in the
local papers that he would be a candi
date for president on the Republican
ticket. Up to that time he had never
shown any mental vagaries. He left
Louisville last week after telling friends
that he was going East, where "sorne
iiling big would be pulled off.
CASH GROCERY COMPANY
IS IMPROVING ITS STORE
Announcement was made today’ by
W. L. Kelly, owner of the Cash Gro
cery Company, that the lease for the
property and entire building which the
company' has occupied for the past
year and a half at 118-120 Whitehall
street has been renewed. Repairs to
cost several thousand dollars are un
der way. When completed the store
will bo one of the finest equipped
establishments of its kind in the entire
South. In the meantime Mr. Keliv will
continue to keep the store open to ac
commodate his large butter and egg
trade. Fruit and such staple groceries
as coffee, tea, milk, canned goods, etc.,
■will be carried in stock.
The remodeled store will extend the
full le.ngth of the building, besides be
ing three feet wider The upper two
floors probably will be used as store
rooms.
STATE CANDIDATE
LISTS COMPLETE
Only Two Seeking Governor
ship. According to Announce
ments for Primary.
Indications are that the list of can
didates for state and national offices,
who will participate in the state-wide
primary on August 21. is complete. The
candidates who have announced are:
For Governor—John M. Slaton of At
lanta, and Joe Hill Hall, of Macon.
For United States Senator —A. O.
Bacon. Macon; H. H. Perry. Gaines
ville; S. Guyt McLendon. Atlanta. Mr.
Bacon is a candidate for re-election.
For Attorney General—Thomas S.
Felder, of Macon, and R. Jones, of
Greenville. Mr. Felder is seeking re
election.
For Commissioner of Agriculture—A.
O. Blalock, of F’ayetteville; J. D. Price,
of Farmington; J. J. Brown, of Bow
man; A. M. Deal, of Statesboro; W. L.
Peek, of Conyers.
For State School Superintendent—M,
L. -Brittain, of Atlanta, and E. H. I
Betuc. 'of Barney, Mr. Brittain is a
candidate for re-election.
Three R. R. Commission Jobs.
For Railroad Commissioners (three
to be elected) —Judge George Hillyer,
of Atlanta; J. F. Gray, of Savannah;
Paul R. Trammell, of Dalton; W. Trox
Bankston, of West Point; G. J. Shipp,
of Cordele: J. H. James, of Atlanta:
J. J. Flynt, of Griffin, and J. N. Mc-
Ghee. of Talton. Messrs. Hillyer, Gray
and Trammel! stand for re-election.
For Prison Commissioners —Judge L.
F. Patterson, of Griffin; Dr. S. W.
Johnson, of Hazlehurst; J. A. Cromar
tie, of Springfield: Hill Tuggle, of Stone
Mountain: A. N. Grovenstein. of Guy
ton and W. J. Flanders, of Johnson.
Judge Patterson is a candidate to suc
ceed himself.
For Pension Commissioner —J. W.
Lindsay, Atlanta, and W. H. Lanier,
Savannah.
Candidates for re-election and who
have no opposition are: Secretary of
State Philip Cook, Treasurer W. J.
Speer. Commissioner of Commerce and
Labor H. M. Stanley, Supreme Court
Justices Samuel C. Atkinson and War
ner Hill, and Appellate Court Judges J.
R. Pottle and Ben H. Hill.
Candidates For Congress.
For congress:
First District —Charles H. Edwards,
Savannah.
Second District —S. A. Roddenberv,
Thomasville.
Third District —Charles R. Crisp, of
Americus; Emmett Shaw’, Fort Gaines;
John Mercer. Americus. District has
no incumbent as a result of the reap
portionment bill'.
Fourth District—W. C. Adamson,
Carrollton.
Fifth District —William Schley How
ard. •
Sixth District—Charles L. Bartlett,
Macon; John R. Cooper, Macon; J. W.
Wise, Fayetteville. Mr. Barlett is a
candidate for re-election.
Seventh District —Gordon Lee, Chick
amauga.
Eighth District —Samuel J. Tribble,
Elberton.
Ninth District—Thomas M. Bell, of
Gainesville; W. A. Charters, Gaines
ville, and John N. Holder, Jefferson.
Mr. Bell is candidate for re-election.
Tenth District —Thomas W. Hard
wick, Sandersville; Horace M. Holden,
Crawfordville. Mr. Hardwick is a can
didate for re-election.
Eleventh District—T. A Parker, of
Waycross, and Randall Walker, of Val
dosta.
Twelfth District —Dudley Hughes, of
Danville,
CHICAGO INVITES CONNAUGHTS.
CHICAGO, July 10.—A party of Chi
cago business men left today for Win
nipeg to invite the Duke of Connaught
and the Princess Patricia to come to
Chicago during the fall. The invitation
Is extended in the name of the Chicago
Association of Commerce.
C. A. PITTs]
BUYS INTEREST IN
ETOWAH
Barber Shop
C. A. Pitts, who has been con
nected with the trade of Atlanta
for almost a score of years and
w’ho numbers his friends by the
thousands, buys the interest, of
Mrs. Ardery, and is now actively
connected with C. W. Underdonk
as a partner, the style of the flrm
being Underdonk A Pitts.
Having recently installed white
enameled chairs throughout,
started to buzzing the finest elec
tric fans and made various other
sanitary Improvements and
adopting as a motto for the shop,
"The Best Service and Most
Courteous Attention”—we cor.
dially Invite our friends and pa
trons and the public at large to
call and Inspect the new shop.
UNDERDONK
and PITTS
5 and 7 West Alabama Bt,
• •
• Farm
: Os U Acres to Bring •
: Profit of $46,200;
• •
• CLEVELAND, OHIO. July 10 •
• John D. Rockefeller is about to •
• sell his East Cleveland fourteen- •
• acre farm. The property has been •
• In the family,for a long time. It •
• cost the oil king nearly SSO an •
• acre in cash. He quoted a price •
• of $5,000 an acre to Van Swea- •
• ingen brothers two years ago. •
• Now he offers to sell to a group •
• of real estate men for $3,800 an •
• acre. •
•••••••••••••••••••••••a,,
DOOITNESS
REFUTES CHARGE
Job Harriman Testifies Accused
Had No Safe Where Franklin
Said He Got Money.
LOS ANGELES. July 10.—Job Har
riman, the first witness of the Darrow
defense, was expected to take the stand
for further examination when the trial
of the Chicago attorney was resumed
today. Harriman has already testified
that he had never at any time given
Darrow $4,000 in currency, as Bert
Franklin swore he did. Harriman fur
ther stated that there was no safe in
Darrow’s office, or in the adjoining
room, where Franklin said he went with
Darrow to get the money. Harriman
said the only safe in the suite was in
his office, and that the combination was
held by himself, his secretary’ and John
R. Harrington. The defense will try to
establish a strong suspicion that Har
rington unlocked the safe and gave
Franklin $4,000, which he had stowed
away there In a box which he kept in
the safe.
Mrs. Darrow is still ill and shows lit
tle improvement from the nervous col
lapse she suffered a week ago.
Judge Hutton held a conference this
morning with District Attorney Fred
ericks to consider the advisability of
securing a new custodian for the Dar
row jury. During the last few days a
number of matters have been brought
to the attention of the district attor
ney’s office that have caused consider
able apprehension concerning the at
titude of some, of the men employed to
guard the jurors. Juror Goldgln com
plained to the court that detectives
were watching him. mentioning the
possibility of the district attorney keep
ing him under surveillance.
EYES EXAMINED AND
GLASSES FITTED
1N c e nWlr®
V Tlp W
EYE GLASSES
Stubborn and complicated cases
are what we are looking for. We
especially invite al) those who have
been disappointed in glasses, fitted
and bought elsewhere. No case
too complicated for us. We test
and fit glasses for every defect of
the eye, and guarantee results, or
no pay OUR MOTTO: "WEAK
EYES MADE STRONG” the
“DIXIE” eyeglasses and “HINES”
guards (our own invention) will
fit any nose, they can not slip, tilt
or fall off. Sold by the best opti
cians throughout the world, out
oniv bv us in Atlanta.
HINES OPTICAL COMPANY
91 Peachtree St.
Bslween Monlgomcry and Alcazar Theaters
LOSS OF TEETH IS A CRIME
SS P° or T® B ** l ma Y be saved or
improved by Gold Crowns or
, .... Bridgework. My work is
guaranteed and is the BEST,
Prices: Heavy Gold Crowns,
Guaranteed
• Bridgewnrk
DR. E. G. GRIFFIN'S
24'/ 2 Whitehall St.. Over Brown 4 Allen's Drug Store.
Hours, 8 to 7; Sunday. 9 to 1. Lady Attendant.
The Only Way
to take that vacation trip in comfort is with our
Feather Weight Suit Cases. They are light, cool,
and comfortable. See? Priced during this sale
$1.75, $2.25 and $3.00
LIEBERMAN'S
The House of Guaranteed Baggage
92 Whitehall St.
fiSK NEW BOARD
FOR DEMODE
Petition Prepared for Legisla
ture Also Requests State In
stitution Be Moved.
The Georgia Association of the Deaf
has prepared its petition asking the
state legislature to move the state
school for mutes from Cave Springs to
Macon or to establish a school in smith
Georgia. The petition also asks that
the management of the school be taken
from the charge of a permanent board
and placed under one elected for four
years. The petition is signed by Mrs.
C. L. Jackson, Nate A. Gorman and I.
H. Marchman.
The fight being waged by the asso
ciation against the abolishment of the
sign system is being opposed by a num
ber of mutes.
Frank J. Merath, of Macon, in a let
ter to The Georgian, condemns sign
reading, declaring that it results in mis.
education. He took a slap at the action
taken by the recent convention of
mutes in Atlanta, declaring that it did
not represent a majority opinion. Os
the two methods, the oral and the man
ual, he prefers the oral, but believed
much better results could be accom
plished by abolishing all special institu
tions for the deaf and dumb and train,
ing them along with hearing pupils,
THE fREOUEIT USE OF
THE HUE CONDEMNED
WE MUST AGREE THAT IT If
BETTER TO SPARE A
THOUSAND GUILTY
THAN TO HANG
ONE INNO-
CENT.
In the course of a short talk last
evening the chief of the staff of United
Doctors forcibly expressed his views
on the frequent operating in diseases
of women. Among other things, he
said:
“it is not my purpose here to antag
onize my surgical brothers, but we too
often see brilliant descriptions of hair
raising operations with a wonderful
survival of the patient. It is a great
credit to the profession to have pro
duced men with such skill as to enter
one’s very vitals and remove the most
delicate brgans. Surely we can not
bestow too much praise upon men with
such marvellous accomplishments. But
did you ever stop to think that there
might be a patient now and then who,
under skilled medical directions, might
have been saved such hazardous pro
cedure and still have been cured?”
We must agree that it is far better
to spare a thousand guilty ones than to
hang one innocent one. I believe that
were we to use sound reasoning and
exercise due care, at least some of oitr
patients would escape the necessity
for an operation. Ido not mean to in
fer that ali cases can be treated with
out the surgeon, but I do mean to say
that a very large majority of spur fe
male pelvic affectionscan be so treated
as to give the most startling results to
both patient and physician. Not more
than 50 years ago all these pelvic trou
bles were treated by the family physi
cian in away that made our ancestors
famous, and they were treated with
out the use of the knife.
When we have a ease of Inflamma
tion about the heart or inflammation
of the Yungs, were we to pursue the
same course as we do with inflamma
tion of the uterus or ovaries, cut them
out, what would become of our pa
tients? Now. were we to treat our fe
male troubles as we do our lung trou
bles, there is no doubt that our hos
pitals today would be less crow'ded and
more of our women would be restored
to health.
It is just this conservative treatment
that has made the United Doctors fa
mous in our larger cities, and It will be
by curing women that have been con
demned to the knife by the fr.piily doc
tor that will make our Atjgnta office
equally famous.
Consultation and exanflnation free,
at 2 1-2 Auburn Ave., second floor. Re
member, we are giving free treatment
for one month for al! simple, uncompli
cated cases that call this week. Our
only charge is for the medicine.
3