Newspaper Page Text
STRIKERS, desperate
fr om dleness, try
TO DYNAMITE TRAIN
E XIN'GT<>’. kt, July 19.—Strik
at the lie ß Run Iron Company’s
near hre attempted to blow up
r ‘ ral iroad tjin with dynamite early
* dav after lestroying a trestle, but
■ere foiled the vi S ,lance of the en *
". eer . Twokundred workmen are Idle
p . the Iron tines, having struck for a
® „ advanc The men are being driv
n W desperßion by the pitiable plight
of their familes.
SEASHCRE EXCURSION
VIA
SOUTHIRN RAILWAY,
MONDAZ, JULY 22, 1912.
$6 Jackonville; Limit 6 days
$8 Tamai Limit 8 days
$6 Brutwiok; Limit 6 days
$6 St. Imons; Limit 6 days
$6 Cumerland; Limit 6 days
ticKETSGOOD returning on
REGULAR ’RAINS WITHIN LIMIT.
Tickets t< Jacksonville and Tampa
□cod only o special trains leaving At
? 800 pm. (Pullman sleeping cars
„ and =3O p. m. (coaches only)
Tickets to irunswick, St. Simons and
Cumberlamgood only on regular trains
leaving Athta 9:30 p. m. Both phones,
Main 142. /rite James Freeman, D. P.
A Atlantafor further information.
[nTrcus]
I Jut-Price I
/
Clothing Sale I
ALL SPRING AND I
SUMMER CLOTHES I
25% Discount I
sls $11.251
$lB £ tedio $13.50 1
s2o£ ei((o $15.001
1522.50 b I
$25.00 i, $18.751
Ail $lB Priestley Mohair I
Suits Reduced to $11.90 i
All Odd Trousers I
1 25% Discount g
IS2 and $3 Straw Hats I
I Reduced to I
$1.45
| A. E, Marcus I
I Clothing Co. I
I 57 Peachtree St. |
Brittain Asks Schools Be Improved
PLEADS FOR TEACHERS
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M. L. Brittain, superintendent of the public schools of Georgia.
Superintendent Wants to Pay
Hard-Worked Tutors When
Their Salaries Are Due.
M. I* Brittain, superintendent of the
Georgia public schools, Is not asking
the legislature for more money this
year—his principal desire is to collect
what Is due his department, so that the
poorly paid, hard worked teachers may
get their salaries when they are due. In
stead of discounting their claims or
waiting until late In the spring. He
sent a vigorous letter to the legisla
ture, embodied In his annual report,
urging that some means be found to
pay the teachers promptly.
"I am not urging any one of the sev
eral bills now looking toward that end,”
said Mr. Brittain today. ‘‘Mine Is an
executive office, not a legislative one,
and it is the legislature which must find
the ways and means. I believe it will
do it.”
Mr. Brittain, since he became state
superintendent, has worked wonders In
improving the school system, especially
in the rural districts. He Is now urging
the codification of the school laws,
which have become so tangled by
amendments and changes that they
present a complex problem to one seek
ing the law In any case.
The state superintendent bears the
distinction of having visited 115 coun
ties and rendered numerous decisions
upon appeals to his authority, and not
once has he been reversed.
Would Improve Buildings.
Among the improvements In which Su
perintendent Brittain is taking especial
interest is the building of attractive and
well-designed school houses instead of the
stable-like buildings and unkempt grounds
which have served as makeshifts in so
many towns. In his foreward to a report
on "School Architecture.” Mr. Brittain
“It is almost as cheap to build an at
tractive school house as an ugly one.
Georgia, like old Greece, is a beautiful
land. This beauty is a practical asset
and should not be marred by ugly build
ings. Our boys aJid girls should not be
trained in the midst of slattern and shift
less surroundings.”
The report Is supplemented by pictures
and plans for school houses ranging from
little one-room structures for the "settle
ments” to four-room buildings for the
top-ns, with plans and specifications and
estimates of cost. Mr. Brittain obtained
the services of an experienced architect
in this work and the pamphlet has been
in great demand from school officials in
many states.
Through officers of the state board of
health he published pamphlets on
school hygiene and the care of children.
The complete report composes a well
bound book of more than 500 pages and
is a valuable document for all who are
interested in public schools and educa
tion in general.
CORSYTH
■ Mlanta'sßusiestTheater
Master Gabriel & Co.
TEMPEST and SUN
SHINE
French and Italian Opera
Co— Bixlf-y & Lerner-
Jolly & Wilil -Caron *
Farnum —Stickney Circus
GET SEATS EARLY.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1912.
The
Biggest
Millinery
Sale
Atlanta Ever Saw
Our Mr. Springer has just
shipped in from New York a
carload of Hats, consisting of
$2.00 and $3.00 Chips at
59c
SIO.OO and $12.00 Panamas at
$4.50
100 Trimmed Hats, the $5.00
values, going at
$1.85
While They Last
Our Suit Department has
received a beautiful line of
Wash Dresses, consisting of
linens, piques and ginghams;
regular $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00
values, at
$1.69
Piques, high waist and panel
back Skirts, $4.98 values, at
$1.19
I. Springer
95 WHITEHALL ST,
I rea”d f?r profit -
USE FO3 RESULTS.
GEORGIAN WANT ADS
) Today,
) Tonight SdM
Next Week
ROCK
1 and
MAUDE
t FULTON
50 LITTLE CHILDREN
FED AFTER DINNER OF
COMMERCE CHAMBER
Half a hundred little children, clam
oring at windows and doors of Taft
hall during the Chamber of Commerce
dinner last night, were given a real
treat in the way of good things to eat
and enjoyed for once the hospitality
of the commerce body.
After the several courses had been
served to the members assembled In the
hall. Assistant Secretary Robinson,
finding that many plates ready to be
served had been untouched, gathered
the little people at a side door of the
great building and turned them loose
on the surplus. Nearly 40 boys and ten
little girls graped the plates and scat
tered about the great building. Ice
cream, with two kinds of cake, follow
ed the heavier courses.
CASTOR IA
For Infanta and Children.
Thi Kind You Have Always Bought
Nervous Wrecks
A FRIEND of mine said he believes nine
men out of ten had more or less Ir- '
rltatlon of the proetatio urethra. 1 don't I
________ know but what he’e
DR, WM. M. BAIRD of head and
Brown-Randolph Bldg.couldn't ■ 1 e e p.
Atlanta, Qa. G• o d physicians
had treated them without result because
they didn’t find the cause of the trouble.
My office hours are I to 7; Sundays and
holidays 1# to 1. Mv monographs eras bf
mall la plain, sealed wrappe-.
Store Closes at One Cm. rich & bros, cod Store Closes at One
i “The Real Department Store” (_
| [GRAND JALA HALF DAY SALE |
■ Beautiful Lingerie Waists ■
' Grand assortment of elegant all- S’*
□fes '*w. dIFaL rk over lace embroidery-trim- C* ®C2
"th jk. 4w/i ! ! Mr' Lingerie Waists. Beautiful, ■
’dJfeß crisp and choice. Absolute val- I
| ues up t 0 2 ' s ® *
I SSFllw i
'w * 4 m.' A on i y ’ VPry c^°^ce rhite Ct *’ i |l
'/ id ‘ an< l ® cru Sleeveless Peplum *** B Js*
' V " Waists. Positive values $3.00. 2t*
1® Whw*\ ' ' wlfflbk ' Tomorrow morning choice «CZ
3 |
$2.50 Values s*4 00 B ;' M Td d'TT $ 1 2?
~ <_ / ■ eVx VZ collars and cuffs. Positive bar-
Tomorrow morning ■ gains, and greatly underpriced for B
—i mJHL. tomorrow’s selling onlv, at
I ,r 1! |
|g A Gorgeous Assortment of Taf f eta and Messaline f
| PETTICOATS S
On sale tomorrow morning as a good rfh j| £A Q
example of the value-giving proclivities (JS \
□J of the pre-inventory sale, we’ve more || •- «md
5b halved prices on this splendid line of pure H
□Ji silk garments. They are in positively all the sash- o Z
ionable shades and colorsand absolute values at Bi
$4. Tomorrow, for half-day selling only
| ■ —j M.RICH & BROS. CO. ■ j
MM MMMMMM
THE golf fan selects with ut
most care the particular
weapon to attack the elusive ball
with, weighs, balances, scruti
nizes. He wishes to be sure of
closing his score with the fewest Zy W/ 7 / X
“puts.” \\ \Tj
The good all-wool clothes \ \U 9 \
we have to show you here have H\ r > Isxl
been carefully selected. They \|F
will bear the closest scrutiny. /
They are made those vMiL
peerless clothes craftsmen:
Hart Schaffner & Marx and
Rogers, Peet & Co.
You can score the highest Kfly T
in style by wearing them. The Wp o (1 (
prices are moderate, $lB, S2O,
$25, S3O, $35. UrW l wA
STYLE AND COMFORT SHOES! ||A| f
i Olir Oxfords “score” for style, <Q a \u
\ nnf i combine the essentials of u
comfort and extreme serviceabil- ||jJl 1 81 y I
WWWAWk R y !! Can more be asked for in 1 | fc«2>a| »i I Tih
footwear? When we say “Net- w rW I -I
«•■■ tieton” we. include all the “good Glin I I 4 lim
about shoes. —ss —s6 —s7. I i ’At l-i
And to just mention Howard & r ' jr- 4 r|lh
Foster at $4 is to leave nothing W-_ ll !
unsaid at the price. fc t
DANIEL BROS. CO. KMriHffi
Copyngnt Hart Schaffner & Marx
right. This Is one
of the most eenel
tfve parts of the
human anatomy
more seneltlve than
the eye. I have had
hundreds of pe
t lente during the
M years I have
been specialising In
diseases ,of men,
chronic diseases
and nervous disor
ders, who were al
most nervous
wrecks from •
reflex Irr 11 a tlon
caused by the pros
tatlc urethra being
affected. Had pains
In back, neck, back
READ POR PROFIT—USE FOR RESULTS—GEORGIAN WANT ADS.
7