Newspaper Page Text
2
urn
LEAO ; BELL MO
CRISP WIN
Official Count May Be Neces
sary in Sixth and Eleventh
Congressional Districts.
Georgia appar-entlv elected three new
congressmen y<-t<rday and retained
two old ones
In the Sixth, the race between .1. Wal
ter Wise and Congressman Charles L.
Bartlett seems to be so close that it
will require a complete count to de
termine the winner, with the surface in
div ations favoring Wise.
Bartiett is dependent upon the vote
of Bibb to pull him through. Wise
comes to Macon with a big lead over
Bartlett, tnd Bartlett's vote in Bibb
does not seem to be quite sufficient to
pull him through. The plurality plan
of nominating controls in this district.
Under a county unit plan. Wise un
que<tionaly would receive the nomina
tion. H< carried Henry. .Monroe, Up
son, Fa yet t . Spalding. Butts. Clayton
and Pike whip Bartlett gets Bibb,
Crawford, Jones and Jasper. Appar
ently Wise has unseated Bartlett by
something over 2<ui votes.
In the new Third. Chalies Crisp, son
of the late speaker of the national
hous' appal- to have routed both
Emmett Shaw and .1 K. Mercer.
i'll-p carried Sumter, Turner. Schley,
le. Webster. Macon. Ben Hill and
Randolph. Sit aw won Clay. Quitman,
Dooly and Crisp, w hile Mercer won Ter
rell.
This give- Crisp Hi convention votes,
exactly half, which, with Terrell’s two
going to Mercer. elects t'tisp.
Surprise in Ninth.
The race in the Ninth was a surprise
in away. Bell was thought to have
the inside, but few predicted that the.
present congressman would be so over
whelming!) renominated, as he seems to
have been.
Apparently he has 22 votes safe and
secure already, with more to come. The
22 he has will nominate.
t'barters and Holder both seem to
have run well, but neither came any
where near Bell’s tine lead.
In the Eleventh, from which Mr.
Brantley retires, it looks as if It may
requite the official vote to tell the re
sult.
On the face of things. Parker has a
shade the better of it. and likely will
w in out, but in any event by a narrow
convention margin Indeed, the vote Is
so close in this race that a contest
may arise in the convention.
Parker's Chance Best.
If Parker wins Charlton, a remote
county not yet returned, he will be
nominated, and he has been considered
a favorite in that county. Both claim
Berrien, with the chances in favor of
Parker.
If Parker wins Berrien and Charlton
he will have 20 convention votes to
W alker's HI.
In the Tenth. Hardwick wins over
whelmingly ovet Fleming The latter
carried two counties. Warren ami Glas
cock, entirely through the Influence
there of Thomas E Watson.
“Used, but Useful”
, Articles may be “turned into money" through
the simple alchemy of THE
GEORGIAN Want Ads. j
Results Produced by Using Three-Time Ads.
Want Ad Rates 1c a Word |
Both Phones 8000
Classified Advertising Dept.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
EVERY WANT
— —You May Have
Can he satisfied, quickly, efficiently and
cheaply, if you us the W ant Ad
Pages of The Georgian.
The Georgian's Want Ad Pages
+-H- +*H- -i-H- •H-’r -1-H -
Arc 7he Rea/ “ Market Place of Atlanta. ’’
l| BOTH PHONES 8000 ||
I FULTON GOES 15
TIPSTERS HAD IT
Slaton. Dorsey, and Pendleton
Win Easily, as Was Confi
dently Predicted.
Continued From Page One.
hi- support against Judge J. R. Pottle
f6r the court of appeals, although it
was admitted that the Atlanta record-
1 e’s chances throughout the state were
slight. In Pulton he polled 5,149 to
3.638 for his opponent.
Senator Bacon got his usual heavy
vote In the capital county, though his
opponent. H. H Perry, was far from
being without strength The vote was:
Bacon, 5.970; Perry, 2,233.
Tom Felder swept the county for at
torney general, defeating Jones 6.425 to
' 2,280.
' School Superintendent Brittain had
things his own way In both city and
countiy beats. The vote was: Reck,
2,113; Brittain, 6.637. This gave Brit
tain the honor of leading the county
ticket.
Lindsey won handily for pension
commissioner The vote was: Eanler,
2,89.0; Lindsey, 5,752. Patterson had
easy sailing for prison commissioner,
his vote being 5,310 to 2,316 for John
son, and 987 for Grovensteln.
Old Railway Board
Members Get Fulton.
Ihe old saying, “as goes Fulton, so
goes the state,” received a rude Jolt In
the commissioner of agriculture con
test Blalock carried the county with a
whoop, his vote being 3,546 to 2,882 for
Brown, and 2,267 for Price.
’ Considerable Interest was shown In
the races for the three positions on the
railroad commission. In each case the
old members of the commission carried
the county as they did the state. Gray’s
vote was 5,265 to 1.113 for James. 1.331
for McGehee, and 955 for Shipp. Judge
Hillyer had a tougher fight on his
hands, but succeeded In polling 5,209 to
2.240 for McLendon and 1,302 for
Bankston. Paul Trammell led Flynt
' 5.910 to 2,761
Considering the one-sided nature of
the gubernatorial race, the total vote
of 9,057 of 15,741 registered is thought
remarkably heavy by students of poll-
• tics.
FREE DOCTORS ARE
URGED IN ENGLAND
FOR PUBLIC HEALTH
I LONDrtN, Aug. 22. Free doctors for
men. women and children is the object
of a new scheme which Professor Benjii-
1 min Moore, of the Liverpool university.
. suggests can he worked tn conjunction
I with the Insurance service, to be udmln
i istered by a board of health, under a min
f inter of public service, with cabinet rank,
assisted by expert medical advisers The
whole profession, he suggests, should be
‘ organized on the lines of other state serv
ices.
An association has been formed with
the Idea of promoting these objects, which
are supported by a large and influential
body of medical practitioners and many
public health officers
JHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 22. 1912.
NEXT 'FIRST LADY’ OF GA.
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■ JBUi\
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MRS. JOHN M. SLATON.
WE MEAN TO WRITE
PLATFORM INTO LAWS.
SAYS SENATOR DIXON
By SENATOR J. M. DIXON.
Chairman of the National Progressive
Committee.
NEW YORK. Aug 22. I welcome
this opportunity to tell the readers of
The Georgian the truth about the Pr<v
gressive party. This <• impaign is un
like any campaign in the history of the
republic, for the reason that the Pro
gressive party is unlike any other po
litical party that has taken part in a
presidential campaign.
What we are seeking to do is not only
to elect to office a man and a set of
men. but to solve by the application of
scientific principles the problems that
are behind that unrest and dissatisfac
tion with conditions which, if left alone,
will culminate in socialism, or even
anarch}.
Our platform is more th in a reaffir
mation of the commandment ’'Thou
Shalt Not Steal." Il is an assertion of
the doctrine that the people are tit to
rule, and ought to rule this country.
And it undertakes to remove from their
path the obstacles raised by law writ
ten by men who lived in a day when
our present problems did not exist, and
could not even by inspired eyes have
been foreseen.
Would Make Platform Law.
We mean to write that platform into
the statute books of this country, and
to make it the law. We mean to make
it possible for men to be humane, to
consider their fellow men. and their
fellow women without violating the
constitution of the United States. We
mean to enable honest business to pros
per by making the other kind of busi
ness not only dishonest, but illegal. We
mean to return to the government of
the founders of the country that is. a
living, practical government of the liv
ing by the living, not a government of
the living by I he dead.
It is because our purpose is so plainly
expressed in our platform that we are
meeting with a response that is almost
universal.
It is because we propose to raise la
bor. in its broadest sense, to its due
dignity and to give it just reward that
the men In the mills, and in the swea
shops, and on the farm and on Ute rail
road section are joining with us by
thousands, and will vote with us by tens
of thousands
Recognize Female Equality,
It is because we recognize that the
women who bear the men of t|ie na
tion are fully as worth} as the sons,
they rear that we have wakened the in
terest not only of the w omen, but of |
ever} broad-minded man who has
thought at all upon human equallt}.
You can read our platform from one
end to the other. Yon will find no
empty phrases In it. no dodging of an}
issue. m> attempt to catch votes from
both sides of ,i line-up hr steering m
evn-ive middle routs
In favoring ti e initiative and the ref
crendum we would give the people the
power to legislate dir tly 11 it lie. oho -
n. eessai \ t r them to do .so
Out ndvoeae} of the recall is du< to
.mt conxietion that nun sotm titm s
provt lals'j to th' p> opj. ami to out i
lief that such men should be taken out
of office and replaced by men with a
higher sense of their obligations.
Promises Child Labor Ban.
The awful horror of child labor Is a
thing on which there can be only one
opinion. Yet with every opportunity to
stop it neither the Republicans nor the
Democrats have done so. We will stop
it, and at once, if the people intrust
our party with the direction of legisla
tion.
Reduced to its simplest terms, our
platform is but paragraphed common
sense. It is scientific, but it is not com
plex. It is easily understood, easily ap
plied. And yet because it will divert il
legal gains from the pockets of a few
crooks w ho have intrenched themselves
behind archaic statutes it is denounced
by their kind as socialistic.
1 want to say just this: Sooner or
later in this present century there must
be progress, as there has been in every
century since the first group of men
established the first primitive govern
ment.
Either this progress will come stead
1} with the planks of our platform, and
bring it about, or it will come vio
lently. Dammed up public opinion, like
dammed up water, is dangerous. There
comes a time w hen tite dam will break.
Later I hope to deal more particular
ly w ith the planks of out platfor, and
more intimately with the course of the
campaign. Today 1 will content my
self by prophesying that within a very
tew weeks leaders of the two old par
lies w ill be astonished and dismayed by
deflections from their ranks to ours. For
1 know that the voters of this nation
are long suffering; but I know that they
ate tired and disgusted by promises that
are never kept, and when on election
day they find the recall in their hands
they will use it to good purpose.
NEW YORK SUICIDE
IDENTIFIED AS RICH
.MOBILE RESIDENT
NEW YORK, Aug. 22. A. \V. Rog
ers." who committed suicide early yes
terday by shooting himself in the right
temple while standing in front of a
hotel at Broadway and Thirty-sixth
str..:, was identified today as Arthur
W Yerger, it wealthy iseident of Mo
bile, Ala.
The identification was made by
Frank V, Kelley, of the Columbia and
I Knickerbocker Trust Company, who
read tile accounts of the suicide. Yer-
Igm was known l" sonally to Kelley
ami he recognized the desscription as
that of his friend.
Yerger killed himself after telling his
. om,..inion. Frances Wellington, an ac
tin -s. to beat it." as he was going to
, -hoot himst If.
Yerg< disappeared front Biloxi,
Mi ■ on \ugust I. after drawing S70I)
' a th. bank lb had been suffering
fi am melancholia Friends traced him
i" N w <> cans, thetna' to <'hi. ago, an<)
y to New York, where the trail
wa- ost. Y> rgi . left a wife and two
<’< o en in Mobile. Ho was a relative
of a toifi" 1 goy > ■ nor of Mississippi,
ITRIPLE PHOOE Os
POLICE CRIME
. ON IN N.r.
Coroner and Grand Jury Grind
ing Away. While Accused
Men Are Arraigned.
NEW YORK. Aug. 22. —A triple in
quiry into the murder of Gambler Her
man Rosenthal and the alleged alliance
between the police department and the
underworld took, place in three sepa
rate tribunals today.
The inquest into Rosenthal’s assassi
nation began at 10 o’clock in general
sessions court. Coroner Feinberg, in
whose bailiwick the crime was commit
ted. had subpenaed a long list of wit
nesses. although it was not certain
whether all would be called upon to
testify.
Police Lieutenant Charles A. Becker.
"Dago Frank" Ciroflci. William Sha
piro. Frank Muller and Jacob Reich
were ordered to appear before Judge
Mulqueen in general sessions at noon
and plead to the indictment handed
down by the grand jury Tuesday, charg
ing them with Rosenthal’s murder.
The grand jury resumed its investiga
tions with Detective William J. Burns
under subpena. Burns was slated to
go before the grand jury this afternoon
to reveal the names of police officials
whom he had trapped into accepting
corruption money.
District Attorney Whitman said he is
favorably impressed with the progess
that had been made in the case, and
now that he has offered $5,000 reward
for the capture of “Lettie Louie” and
"Gyp the Blood,” the two gun men still
at large, he looks for events to move
even faster.
New Arraignment Record.
The arraignment of five men on a
capital charge sets a new record for
this jurisdiction. Never before have so
many persons been brought to the bar
to answer the charge of participation in
one murder in New York city.
Interesting developments were ex
pected from the grand jury investiga
tion. At the district attorney’s office it
was said that careful investigation
would be made of the charge that Beck
er worked a frame-up to gain ascen
dancy over "Big Jack” Zelig, a gang
leader whose services Becker supposed
he might need. Charges against Po
licemen White and Steinert, who arc al
leged to have arrested Zelig on Beck
er’s orders, will be sifted. These two
men are accused by Zelig of planning
evidence against him. At the time Ze
lig was arrested on a charge of carry
ing concealed weapons. Although his
friends swear the gang leader was with
out a weapon at the time of his ar
rest, the policemen later produced a re
volver which they alleged they had
taken from the prisoner.
At this session of the grand jury it
will also look into allegations that a
high police inspector, still in the serv
ice, and a civilian, whose relations with
1 the police department are close, bene
fited from the tribute which the police
“system” extorted from keepers of
gambling establishments and proprie
tors of disorderly houses.
Becker’s Wealth $125,000.
Further success has crowned the ef
forts of the district attorney’s depart
ment in getting at the source and
amount of Becker’s wealth. Tt is now
: believed that as a consequence of dis
covering new bank accounts Becker’s
fortune will be shown to be at least
$125,000.
Assistant District Attorney William
A. Deford has been detailed by Mr.
1 Whitman to investigate every possible
phase of the police graft in the hear
ings which will be conducted by Jus
tice Goff in a special term of the su
preme court, beginning September 3.
One of the most sensational of the
new developments in the case is the
’ direct charge by Whitman that the po
lice are shielding "Leftie Louie" and
Harry Horowitz, alias "Gyp the Blood,”
the two gun fighters still at large.
District Attorney Whitman’s offer
of a reward of $5,000 for the arrests
of these two was made after prominent
New York citizens had agreed to sup
ply the funds, it was learned today. In
■ making the offer. Mr. Whitman stipu
i lated that members of the police de
partment could not share in it if they
made the arrests, because he believes
i | they have shielded the two fugitives.
William J. Flynn, head of the United
States secret service in New York, is
reported to be arranging to resign from
his position, so as to devote his ener
gies to aiding the aldermanic commit
tee which Is to investigate charges of
■ I grafting tn the police department.
HUNDREDS GO TO SEE
‘THE WOMAN DOCTOR’
AT BONITA THEATER
If you want to see an up-to-date.
• high-class musical comedy, with plenty
of fun, dancing, singing, good come
dians and pretty chorus girls, go to the
Bonita, 32 Peachtree street, this week
and see “The Woman Doctor." The
play is presented by the King-Murray-
. Jones Musical Comedy Company, which
is without doubt the host aggregation
of polite entertainers lhat has been
seen in Atlanta In months. This little
theater is rapidly becoming known as
the leader of all the popular priced
houses in the South. Continuous per
formances afternoons ami evenings,
with motion pictures between times.
Adult- 19c, children sc.
It was back In the olden times that they
bad to have a person go crying it out if
any one had anything to sell or wanted
to buj. or to notify the people that so and
so had lost this ano that The way was
the only ore available It s different now
Your wants can be told to an audience of
I o'er 50,(k>0 in this section through a Want
Ad in The Georgian \o matter what
your want is an ad in The Ge-igian will
till it for von Georgian Want Ads buy,
Sell, c\. ‘ aru-e. rent, . re I find lost
• ■•tleles and countie js . thet tbit <
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
The results of . yesterday’s primary
election abundantly justified the fore
casts' and predictions of The Atlanta
Georgian.
And The Georgian, by tile way, is
the only newspaper in the state that
ventured a detailed and specific pre
| diction in the governorship race.
On Tuesday, The Georgian said.
I thro tgh its corps of state corrcspond
| ents, that Slaton would carry not less
I than 131 counties, that Alexander might
get a dozen, and Hall half as many as
Alexander.
In setting forth that final forecast.
The Georgian’s correspondents went
the governor-to-be eleven counties bet
ter than his own claim—he predicted
for himself 120 counties.
The Georgian said that Alexander and
Hall together would get hardly half
| the popular vote accorded Slaton. Sla
ton seems to have run well over 50.000
ahead of his opponents combined.
Going back to the beginning, The
Georgian, some two weeks after the
collapse of the Hudson boom, used this
expression: “The governorship race
seems to have developed into a run
away for Slaton!"
That sentence was quoted from one
end of the state to the other, and by
some of The Georgian's contemporaries
was thought to be rather broad and
confident.
But it was true —-absolutely true.
From the very day of the Hudson down
fall. the race WAS a runaway for Sla
ton.
The Georgian had no other interest
in the matter than to set forth intelli
gently and fairly the honest' news of
the gubernatorial campaign as it de
veloped from time to time.
As a newspaper. The Georgian was
due that much to its constituency—the
state of Georgia as a whole, and with
out particular regard to factions or sec
tions.
in its endeavor to be fair to all and
partial to none, The Georgian was sub
jected by one of the candidates to a
sweeping indictment of unfair play and
lack of intent or desire to give all the
candidates "a square deal!”
By its conduct rather than in specific
denial The Georgian pleaded "not guil
ty” to that indictment—and the re
turns of yesterday vindicate The Geor
gian's plea sufficiently and with approx
imate conclusiveness.
The Georgian gave Mr. Alexander a
great deal of space, when Mr. Alexan
der seemed to deserve it from the
standpoint of news.
When he made his spectacular en
trance into the gubernatorial contest.
The Georgian spread the news of that
from one end of Georgia to the other.
Before that The Georgian Jaad ac
corded Mr. Alexander a large measure
Are Ever At War.
There are two things everlastingly at
war, joy and piles. But Bucklen's Ar
nica Salve will banish piles in any form
It soon subdues the itching,
inflammation or swelling. It gives com
fort. invites joy. Greatest healer of
burns, boils, ulcers, cuts, bruises, ecze
ma, scalds, pimples, skin eruptions.
Only 25 cts at all druggists.
CARE OF THE TEETH
IMPORTANT TO HEALTH
Without perfect teeth one can not
enjoy perfect health. Decayed or im
perfect teeth are not only painful and
continuously annoying, but a positive
menace to health and even life.
Do not neglect your teeth. Upon the
first sign of decay have them treated
and save suffering. Or, if the teeth are
already in bad condition, have them at
tended to at once.
The modern scientific painless meth
ods in use by the Atlanta Dental Par
lors rob dentistry of its former terrors,
and the most difficult operations are
performed quickly and without pain.
This handsome establishment is lo
cated at the corner of Peachtree and
Decatur streets, entrance at 19 1-2
Peachtree. •••
$2.50 Chattanooga and
return via Southern Rail
way, Saturday, August 24.
Tickets on sale for 3 p. m.
and 5:10 p. m. trains. Good
to return from Chattanooga
any train following date of
sale or morning trains leav
ing Chattanooga Monday,
August 26.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
SIOO Reward. SIOO
The readers of this paper will be pleased
to learn that there is at least one dreaded
disense that science has been able to cure
in all its stages, and that Is Catarrh
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the onlv positive
cure now known to the medical fraternity.
Catarrh being a constitutional disease, re
quires a constitutional treatment. I lull's
Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting di
rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system, thereby destroying the foun
dation of the disease, and giving tile patient
strength by building up the constitution
and assisting nature in doing Its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in its etna
five powers that they offer One Hundred
Dollars for any case that It falls to cure.
Send for list of testimonials.
Address
F. .1 CHENEY A- CO., Toledo, O.
Told by all druggists. 75c
■"••ke Hall's Family Pills for constipation
READ THIS.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney and
Madder troubles, removing gravel, cures
diabetes, weak and lame backs, rheuma
tism. and all Irregularities of the kidneys
and bladder In both men and women
: Regulates oladder troubles In children
j If not sold by your druggist, will be s.-nt
,by mail on receipt of $1 00. One small
1 bottle is two months treatment and sei
dom tails to perfe-t a cure. Send for t«»
timoni.-.: .’rom this and other states Dr
F W Hall, 2926 Ollve-lt.. St. Louis, k'a
bold bt uruggists
of praise for certain fights he had made
on the floor of the house for the pas
sage of pending legislation in which he
seemed sincerely and deeply interested.
When he announced for governor he
immediately became a Igilimate topic of
comment and a source of news.
The Georgian shirked nothing byway
of honest news endeavor, so far as Mr.
Alexander was concerned. It gave him,
as it was giving Mr. Slaton and Mr.
Hall, "a square deal!”
Through its various sources of infor
mation of an authentic and dependable
sort. The Georgian saw, early in Mr.
Alexander's fight, that his cause was
hopeless and its finish definitely sure.
The Georgian reflected, not unkindly,
but truthfully, that state of things.
It required its correspondents to send
in. with careful attention to accuracy,
unbiased reports of what likely would
happen in their various communities on
election day.
Their answer was. "Not less than 131
counties for Slaton."
The Georgian printed their opinions,
assembled in one straightforward news
story.
Mr. Alexander promptly characterized
that story as "bluster," and repeated
his charge of unfairness and lack of a
desire to give him a "square deal.”
That sounded a little like whining to
The Georgian, but The Georgian let it
go—the only point now is that the re
sults justify The Georgian's corre
spondents, and show that they faith
fully followed The Georgian's instruc
tions to send in truthful reports, and
that only.
Mr. Hall received a "square deal" at
The Georgian's hands —and never once
did he complain that he wasn’t getting
just that.
He stood straight up. fought in the
open, never "hollered" if the news
seemed not to come his way—indeed, he
never seemed to notice particularly that
it wasn't coming his way—and to the
last ditch he was the same brave "Old
Joe” The Macon Telegraph h is loved to
talk about.
He ran second, and not third, too. in
the final lap—thus, in away, reversing
one of The Georgian's forecasts, for The
Georgian had thought that Hall would
run third, with practically no differ
ence between Hall and Alexander in
the finish.
The successful candidates are happy
today, of course.
They are distributing their thanks
profusely everywhere.
it would seem to be up to The Geor
gian to extend its thanks to those suc
cessful ones for vindicating so nobly, so
completely, and so thoughtfully The
Georgian's forecasts and predictions.
Which, as a fitting finale to this run
ning comment, Sidelights assumes, on
behalf of The Georgian, to do.
To flavor fancy food deliciously u»«
SAUER’S PURE FLAVORING ‘ EX
TRACTS. Vanilla. Lemon, etc. Thir
teen highest awards and medals.
CARELESS ABOUT APPENDICITIS
IN ATLANTA
Many Atlanta people have stomach
or bowel trouble which is likely to turn
into appendicitis. If you have consti
pation. sour stomach or gas on the
stomach, try simple buckthorn bark,
glycerine, etc., as compounded in Adler
i-ka. the new German appendicitis rem
edy. Ihe Jacobs' Pharmacy Company
states that A SINGLE DOSE of this
simple remedy relieves bowel or stom
ach trouble almost INSTANTLY.
KIDNEY or BLADDER
Troubles, Diabetes, Etc.
Take MVART’S I<r< HU AND j| Mppß COMPOUND,
a liquid preparation thoroughly tested for
by thousands of cures, made after all
else failed. Scalding, dribbling, straining, or
tno frequent passage of urine; th»- forehead and
the ba/k-of-tln-head aches; the stitches anti
pains tn the back; the growing muscle wcak
ness; spots before the eyes; yellow skin; slug
gish bowels; swollen eyelids or ankles; leg
cramps: unnatural short breath : sleeplessness
an-1 despondency! STUART’S BUCHU AND JI M
PER cptirot m>. t„-m. action o» th. Kidn" a
and Bladder, quickly does away with the above
symptoms. W.- promise a prompt cure by tak
ing this medicine or your mon< v refunded.
■ Druggists fl. per large bottle. SAMPII FREE
by writing to Stuart Drug Co., Atlanta, Ga. j
I A Ji ■ OPhim. Whiskey and Drug Habit treat*
1 ** at Home or nt Sanitarium Book »>•
aubJect Frw. DLL B Ad. WOO LI Ji I.
24-N Victor Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga.
Our Examination
of the eyes is not what is usually
termed “testing eyes." i
Our examination, with perfect ’
equipment, is absolutely scien
tific in every particular and is
made without the use of poison
ous drops or drugs.
Our examination of the eyes
is so exact that we absolutely
guarantee all of our work. Un
less you are completely satisfied
we will cheerfully refund your
money. You will save your eyes
and your money by consulting
us first.
HINES OPTICAL COMPANY
91 Peachtree St.
Eelween Monlgomery and Alcazar Theaters