Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 04, 1912, FINAL 2, Page 2, Image 2

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2 G. 0. P. HIT ■ IN VERMONT ELECTION Democrats Show 27 Per Cent Gain, and Progressives Get Good Vote. • • • Vermont Results • Shown at a Glance • ® Vote For Governor. « • Yesterday. 1908. » • Fletcher <Rep.) 26.200 45,598 • • Howe l Dem.) 20.100 15.952 • • Metzger (Prog.) 15,708 • • Os the stair representatives * • --'cited, 17b are Rep in? an 4b • • Demo rati it 24 Pyogresslvi • • Os t! . state senators 26 arr • • I ' . ■ • • oc-ata and Progressives • • • Continued From Page One. Ri.osevelters seem to have made neaiii a complete sweeji. . nly one .senatorial and two assembly ni.-'tricts bring al all dr.ubi ful New York Moose Harmony Vanishes SYRAI'I SE. N V Sept, I The much-vaunt ,'u hariooin with w ii< ii the Ser. York sin Bull Moose , s hoped to '■on off their con .ention he',, tomorrow 1< -o 'ed ItZe’f into a hitler stiugg tbs aft< moon bet w> ■ n the iip-stat-’ a. , ;. ;('• and lie N w York cvntin- ’•" point upon which the fn • .ions s' ii l urn t lie gul .i t i>i rll nomination, tbo.tt't, ol er Prendcvgiirt. of N-w Yo I . * • nlv ; i.'sln)*. iio b• >- I.< :sof \v i)iia tn H Hotchki of II .;; i o. ~f . onibininv to defeat thei < undid.ite The dis u untied Ni v. Viiik",r lined ili-ins >. i Up behind Timothy Woodruff of Brook-| ivn. and so bitter was ihe'r denum lo tion of what they termed the "piratical, ii tit s" of the up-state men that the; Hotchkiss contingent was forced to thei open, virtually admitting their host 11 - j its .. • • \ '• Yo , . . t| ~ •me of the ini Idents attendant iipi-n thi' ft ii tion v io- 111 • ardor < i; h .\ I>’;i tl>- factions sought tin - i| po t ot il w o ten delegate' Group- of men surroun iml yi it of as w<.e on hand, eagerly explain ing the situation an I ■ king im- . m ,nine support Ohio Progressives See T. R. Victory ' OLt’MBl'S, OHJt t Sept 4 T1 first state convention of the Progres sive party assembled here today for the purpose of plating a complete tick et in the field and adopting a platform of principles Delegates who arrived during tht forenoon w<-r<- enthut.ia ;'lv over the result of tit- constitutional amendment election, wliieli they said indicated an overwhelming victory for the Roosevelt national and state tick ets in November. Platform plans al ready discussed included a call to the voters of Ohio to aid in carrying the bannei of the dire., t prim.i y the initia tive and referendum and judicial re form into the seat of the national gov ernment by supporting the Roosevelt and Johnson ticket With no slate f > indidates drawn up and no readv-made platform in the pocket ol some leader ri-ady to be re ported to a committee, the convention today gave every promise ot te ing thor oughly democratic. Delegates -aid they w.-u- willing to indorse Republican candidates for stat office wlm clear!' align themselves f o ,- KoOSe' < It. Georgian Accused Os Illegal Voting ANDERSON S C Sept. 4 In the fraud investigation In lug • ondu- . ■ here. J. W. Biown , young George, arrested yesterday. was said by ,i local officer to have voted in the ; ima-v here, although 1 • hud been in th - only since March Brown was .. • cntly taken back to Monroe Gn so trial on the charge of deserting his wife and chili There were sevi r.i: oiaer lines of t. s tiiuony as to in. i voting tv i b.i nothing definite Ims been )>•-w • n In Spartanburg county it is . ,-g by the county chairman that ’ /.Un c. Ii gal votes were cast Pro his Double N ote in Vermont • ’HICAGO. Sept. 4 Returns s- fat Indicate that the Prohibition party has doubled its vote in Vermont," - tid Pro. hibitton National < hairman Vltgi G Hinshaw today If th. ratio of in crease show n by the almost . nj .r, returns arc maintain. ■: we w<l! in crease our vote I!'" ). . nt. If w< hold this ratio of gain over the na tion. we will poll at least uOn.obO votes in November." Mrs J. L. Bell. I lie funeral of Mrs .: 1. Bl .... yea s old. wl>o died in Past Point vesterde- a ernooi V. 11l lie held :;• Mrs < ledrg. P '■’•-■ '• s - ..Ice. > oi Wa:.|'.o.pi,,n str.-id. «t to', lock this afiernot n Mrs Well ' ..nt .: i. ret ci; . .ten surviving Mr.- Bell Bones Grafted Into Spines and Cripples Stand Erect LITTLE HUNCHBACKS CURED Dr. Fred H. Alber Utilizes- Splinters of Shins at New York Hospital. NEW YORK. Sept. I -The five - , pi< tured ,hen tl ee bo tn I I girls, tanging in ogc fi >m tire to • ight. ' w. r.. hunchbu. ks. Afflict' d wit h tuberi uiosis of tin- j K 3 ' ft- i C-. f"' '- Si jCM > \\ . If rvk.. j * Er - .> W jTI ; ‘ r wMbirlw '-*1 I ' 7 ifed* -Ikl 1 ■ 1 ' V'' I s iFwwß.Bc Aw It • ' Wit' v I & t 1 -1' £ 1 M M > I. n I ■' SW'W T ' “s. / 'Sltiir'-ifeuW t r. VMM - T I lit fe; *'• J r? —w &f w ■' - ■ 4- // ZvWff* « <M|f' - x . x Wi l ip ini '. i l ined doomt <1 to v<> i a-th Id < handicapped by tln ir ii"- n> 11 ni t y Now tltC'i live are happy Theii ..i.nks ni" not hunched From top oi crown to m>| ( of foot they tire to erect ’ ‘ is any child. Thev hate been cured by a new j mii gical op, ration performed by I>r. In d II Kibe . of No 125 West Fifty eightll street nt the Sea Breeze ho."- ' pital. Coney l.dtind. The live ar< children of the tene -1) inents and the slums whose surround* Ings helped to induce tuberculosis of th' spine, which it should be under stood, destroys the vertebrae. Some of them have been iti the hospital for fourteen months. others for a year. They will h. -.nt home. perhaps un willingly a- soon as it is certain that summer is over. Grafts Healthy Bone Splinters. Dr. Albee performed the first opera tion of Its kind at tile Sea Breeze lios -1 pital In .lum’. 1911. He removed the , diseased hone of th. spinal column. Then he took a splinter of healthy 1 hone from the patient's tibia his suin bone In ordinary language. Next th< surgeon grafted the healthy living ’I bone mt the spinal column in the place .tom which he had taken the di-eased | bone Thanks Io his skill, aided by hetletl ' ent nature, the healthv bone knitted • and grew Into the patient's spinal col ' itmn iiisl as a twig. skillfully grafted, igru' s,n o a tree branch The patient ' whs kept in bed live or six weeks I after tin operation. In that time the I healthy bone became a part of the ' spine, formed a lion; ridge and took ' ) the place of ti e "oft and fragmentary 'remains of the vertebrae that had been eaten away by tuberculosis Then the . ' patient. permitted to arise stood I*str. light His b 'k was not hunched. His spin ' column relnforced. was I strong enough to support the weight 'lattaihed to it II did not yield, it did net bend. Th. cut i was completed by sea baths, .'plenty of salt a.i and plenty of sun | light, al to bi enjoyed at the Sea Breeze !mit.il. an admirable institu . tion maintain".! by tl . New York As - I sociatior. for Improving t ie Condition of the T' ioi The tlw children who , m soon I * •-, cheeks and appt It> s well tip ir fathers will have to work ha det l Smgeons regard Dr. A.bees opera- I tion us an immense advance over the ! oldei met .i ds i' tt'tiling tub-reuloafs iof the spine with a pla*tei of Paris ' ..!■ ket or a jm ket of wire and b ather, i r This ben transplantation was adopt-I ,d mently at John Hopkins university. .Baltimore, one of the leading medical ' schools u tills country, tme advnn ' tag" it puss seed Is thus after it is .e ie. d 'iio e- fully , the deformity a.not n ■ r it is an improv en nt . too on an "| j ration which distiri g,i . a I' . o.i si surgi m* have been I .pi t for ling' ri . ently Tovorieet ■ uivc I tin- the sp m they have inserted s l ln th" spim :i thin strong metal plate. But. neeissHidy. th" metal plate can 1 t.evet I" • i.i a livlnc part of the i spinal column, as dm s the piece of s I belli Dr. .' in e employ - He D con nected v ‘tl. tl e Roosewlt I’.is j Graduate, Cornell and Bellevm hos jl't'i'.als and lias dir this giaftlrg ;>■ ) 'ration rettnte"tl linn a THE ATLANTA GEORGIAS AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. 1912. //ip' w w W* s# zs SC.H R ’ll I I" ive liitl •• chii:ir ii who were b(inch bucks. now entirely cured. Sava nn a h Moo se r Wants T. R. There SAVANNAH. GA. Sept. 4 R T Jollie. Jr. leader of tile Bull Mooose i party in this section, has written to! <’• V> Mm'lure, of Atlanta, national i om.nitteeman from Georgia for the) Progressives, asking what the pros pects are for getting Colonel Roose velt to visit Favannsth when lie ponies to Georgia the hitter part of Sep tember. As Colonel Roosevelt is scheduled to speak in Atlanta September 28, it is Jodie's Idea to have the strenuous one to come on to Savannah from that city. Jollii believes that the third termer will come if sufficient pressure can be brought lo bear He proposes to enlist tiie aid of all the powerful Bull Moosers in Georgia Woman Suffrage Loses in Ohio CINCINNATI. 0111(1, Sept 4 By z vote of approximately three to one Ohio has turned down woman's suffrage, at 1 the same time adopting ail the other 1 < onstitutlonal amendments recommended i 'by the re, ent coi stttutional convention, i according to returns received today • \mong those adopted me initiative, ref erendum, home rule for cities, license sys tem t n- saloons. Judicial reform, abolish men: of eap tal punishment, eight-hour cay on public work and a clause against j strike it Juni tns The liquor vote is I held responsible for the defeat of the) suffrage amendment The liquor interests organized to push I through the license amendment They | used the same organiiatlon agninst suf- I tragi and according to leaders in the , | tight for “y, tes for women.' this was the' * uuse of the defeat of the amendment. Full Ticket for Missouri Moose ST 1,01 IS. MO., Sept 4 Resolu tions recommending a complete con gressional ticket will be presented to ;l ■■ Prog: -<:ve state convention today. \ full state ticket also was? recom mended. Tl:o convention wa- slow tn I assembling today, as many of the del |i gates had worked .. i night tn com nii ' WOKT CAINS PLEASE WILSON I ■-Shows That Third Party's Strength Hasn't Come From Democrats,” He Says. SEAGIRT. N j.. Sept 4. -Governor 'Vilson expressed himself as delighted today over the substantial gains made by the Democrats in the Vermont elec tion. "Tiie returns are highly gratifying,'' he said. "You know when the Demo crats me 'ely held their own in Ver mont it was cm ouraging, but when they make a gain of between 20 and 30 per cent, as they did yesterday, you can he sure it means business. "It Is encouraging also to note that ! the third party ticket did not draw | any votes from the Democrats. Tiie third party strength lias evidently come 'from the Republicans." Smith Candidacy Amusing. The governor seemed to be amused over the candidacy of James Smith, Jr., for I'nited States senator from New Jersey, but confined iiis comment on the Smith candidacy to a broad grin. Win n Smith’s declaration of be lief in progressiveness was read to the governor, he actually laughed. \t hen asked to say what he and his friends purposed doing about Smith's candidacy, he said: "That situation will take care of it self." The governor will have something to say on this subject when he considers the time opportune. Smith, of course, will be vigorously opposi d. The tight against him undoubtedly w ill be led by the governor himself. A pre ent from tVilimm <'. Difteren der, a Pensacola, Fla., Jewe.er, threw the Wilspn household into an uproar when it was received this morning II was a pct alligator, ejghieen inches in length, and came in a neat little box. The box was i pened in the Wilson I living room in tiie presence of the la ) dies. When '.he alligator scrambled lout the ladies made a hasty exit from I the room. Sam Nordon teeapiurcd the reptile and ptit it ba.'-k in t e box. On the lid were these directions; "Feed on standpat Republicans chopped into small pieces." Steam Roller Rolls For Taft in N. C. <'H XRLOTTE, N. t’.. Sept 4. The [state Republican convention assembled ) for its initial se-> ti at 2 o'clock this afternoon. The state executive com mittee spent the morning working on the temporary roll call, and endeavor ing to purge this of a, but Taft dele- I gates. I' R""sevelt deli gates held a two Jhoms session and pr.i.-tkally decided to await overtures from the regular convention, otherwise an Independent convention will be iwhl. R:< hmond Pearson, of Ashe.illc, tendered ills res ignation to the Roost velt meeting as Republican national committeeman, giving as h.s reason that h-- could not support Taft, bu: th, :r. etlmc refu«ed this. Toe state . ‘t-'.rutee is "ported to be end< avoring also to purge itself of ft* ew n n ' bers ■- ho ■ tvor Taft, the situation being very criticw l BETTER STREETS;. IS GUMERS' "KEW I: , i Candidate for Mayor Pledges < Sweeping Improvements in 1 Platform Announcement. i t Councilman Aldine Chamber? gate . out a written statement today Sound- j ing the 'keynote" of his campaign to: the mayoralty. j "In rcveral of .fur city departments : there .is out of date equipment anu ■ many methods ought to be improved.” he says. "These matters have been . given careful attention by me. and I will be in position to obtain many , much needed Improvements by co-oprr- t .ition with thw city’s employees. ( Through such eo-operation much lost , mo:.on can be eliminated." lie deciare? that he is the candidate of no < liqtte or ring and that his polit .cal life is an >peyrj book. H says that haimony and co-opsr , ion is Atlanta’s greatest need at thi-: I time. ■ 'Many improvements In the depart i merit of streets’ have already be en ob tained." continues Mr. chambers, "and I cal comic ,i.i.oti for paving contracts is now assured. • 1 "Changes Are Imperative." "The paying will be protected- when aid and not cat up for the laying of pipes. The euibing w ill be protected by proper guttering. "There are many needed street ini- 1 movements in the center of the city v. hieh require immediate consideiation. changes are imperative which can be 1 made now at a small cost, and which will add millions of dollars to property values, but which, if delayed, will ne cessitate very large expenditures. "An outline and topographical map 1 of the city should be obtained at once, 1 and 1 wili use every effort to get same. 'With the plans ..now in view for < co-operation witii the county authori ties. if I am elected mayor, al! sewer 1 work will be completed within two years: suburban sections will be con nected with well paved boulevards; practically ever;.' street in the city wiil be put in a passable condition, and • very section of the city connected to the center by a well paved street. "Street improvements are our first need to facilitate the work of the other departments.” Mr. Chambers reviews the record of | accomplishments of the city officials during his two terms as Councilman from the Ninth ward. Then he points to the future and names the deflnits things which should be done, as fol lows: Urges New High Schools. F equent and accurate publicity of > i lie acts of the officials, especially with reference to financial matters. A further adjustment of the tax sys tem toward equalization of assessments. That Fulton county pays too much taxes to the state, and that a means should be adopted, by which the city , will get more taxes and the state less, i New high schools for both boys and girls and several new’grammar schools. Greater park developments, boule vards connecting’ the outlying residen . tia! sections and beautifying of all plots of ground owned by the city. The development of Lakewood park. A new stockade. The beginning of plans to supply a million people with water. 1 An enforcement of state laws in the city. Modern fire equipment. MUTINOUS CONVICTS. QUELLED BY MILITIA. | WON’T RESUME WORK; ’ JACKSON. MK’H , Sept. 4.—With state troops in every section of the , Jackson state prison. 300 convicts were ' marched to work today following the riotous scenes yesterday when the sol diers fired two volleys to crush the s mutiny. 3 The institution was quiet today. Oc ■aslonally a cat call or pounding on a cell by some boisterous inmate broke , the silence, but it only required a re - buke from a militiaman to subdue the ■ • belligerent. ' Between 50 and 100 prisoners, while held in check by the soldiers, refused to . Igo to work when the genera! order I was sounded throughout the prison. ■’' They say they will die before they will | I lift a linger to do a thing for the in- I stftution again unless Warden Simp i | son resigns. These men will be flog-i ■ ! geii. but the manner in which it will b»- I i done has not been stated by the warden I , : or the board of control. i : Soldiers with fixed bayonets are sta j tiotted in the siiops with orders to ’ i ciiarge on any inmate who refuses to . obey the prison rules. The board of 'control was determined today to use ■the severest measures possible to pre serve discipline. SISTERS OF MERCY MARK FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY fOLVMBVR. GA . Sepl. 4.—The Sis tt s of Mercy of the Church of the Holy Family in Columbus are today ’ | eelebruting tile fiftieth anniversary of I tiie establishment of the Catholic con- ; , | vent in Columbus. The celebration of,' i|the pontifical high mass, beginning at ■ I 9:30 o'clock this morning, was one of tjthe features of the day’s program. ’ | The exercises are being conducted by ’ I Bishop B njamin Keily. assisted by tiie . | Rev. Joseph D. Mitchell, of Savannah: :IR» v Father Kane, of Augusta, and I ■ I’athers McDonald. M< Key and Molly- I I ncau. of opelika. Ala. Many other! •I' eminent Catholic churchmen are ini . aticndan.c upon the celebration of the | ■ L k n iuh' Hotel Clerks Discuss Dead Beats and Kickers GLAD-HAND BOYS IN TOWN The Southeastern Greeters, otherwise known as the “Glad Hand Boys," are m Atlanta today to talk of hours and salaries, of tips and dead beats, of rooms with baths and best ways to make a man happy at $3 a day when he wanted a 12 room. The Greeters are the hotel clerks of seven Southeast ern states. There are 75 in the or ganization, but only 30 could leave their registers for the second annual convention. They bad breakfast at the Imperial hotel, with Fred Houser, general sec retary of everything in the hotel busi ness. as guide, entertainer and general “ask. me" man They held a business meeting at the Piedmont, took motors to Kimballville farm at noon,, sur rounded a barbecue th re and returned for a special matinee at the Forsjth. ’1 hey will be given a banquet at the Piedmont tonight with E. P. Dutton as the host. I h"y re a rather live and knowing bunch o.” fellows, these men behind the registers ever, if they do have away of looking at you as though wonder- Ing whe.c house you travel for and how much your expense account will stand. But there are few old-timers among ihem. I :tere wasn’t in the whole bunch one of tho-e nineteen-car.it diamonds which used to be the badge of the hotel clerk and the principal output of the plate-glass factories. Old-Time Clerk Passing. 'V. G. Poole, mam greeter of the old Blow n house, at Macon, and first presi dent of the organization, discussed travelers and hotels while waiting for the Kimballville motor cars. The old-time clerk is passing." tie said. "You don’t see so many of the eld fellows who know cveiy guest who ever came to the desk, called him by his first name and gave him the same room year after year. The personal element still Is -trong in the hotel busi ness, but travelers demand more serv ■ Ice now and less jollying. ■’The hardest man to please? Why, the fellow who hasn’t been ten miles away from home before. The old trav elers are no trouble. They’ll a«k for .what they want and if you haven’t got it they’ll take the next best. But tKe gink from Slabtown off to gee the sights raises a kick before lip’s dipped the pen in the ink. makes a holler if the wall paper is the wrong shade of pink, and causes a clerk more gray hairs than all the drummers from Bos ton to Seattle. "Sure, it’s easy to size up a man. A good clerk—and I mean a real born FLEES Will) AND IS PINCHED Mrs. Nora Medley Declares Her Father Sanctioned Beating Given Her by Spouse. “My father had me arrested because I refused to live with my husband. 1 left my husband Sunday after he beat me Saturday night. My father said my husband ought to have beat me, and said he would whip me himself if I didn’t go back.” Mrs. Nora Medley, who lives in El liott street near North avenue, today gave this explanation as to why she is held prisoner in the matron's ward at the police station. She was taken into custody last night at the home of a friend, near her own home, where I she had been.stopping since the separa tion Sunday. Mrs. Medley has two small girls, who are now in possession of their father, she says. "But I’m going to court and take them away from him," she exclaimed. "He shall not keep them. And I don't intend to live with him any more, either.” Mrs. Medley has been married four years. Her husband is Ed L. Medley. GIRL. MASQUERADING AS MAN. IS ARRESTED BY SAVANNAH POLICE SAVANNAH, GA.. Sept. 4.—Mas querading as a man, a young woman, giving her name as Leia Dean, of Cin cinnati, Ohio, has been placed under arrest here. The girl is evidently an incorrigible. She says she ran away ; j from her home in Cincinnati two years j ago. She traveled ten months with al circus, which was her only opportunity I for developing her theatrical aspira- j tions. The girl s mother then found her and sent her to an institution for way- I ward girls. She escaped from tiie home • and made her way to Columbia, S. C., ! where her behavior was such that she I was given a few hours in which to I leave town. Here she fell in with a I crowd of sailors, who fitted her out ; i with men’s clothing and turned her i loose on the streets, after she had her ! long hair cut off. STORM OVERTURNS AUTO: FOUR OCCUPANTS HURT' GENEVA. N. V.. Sept. 4.—Thousands I of dollars damage waa done by a storm of tornado-like violence which passed over this section. Apple trees were torn out by the roots, a school house was demolished, roofs wore torn from building? and telephone and telegraph lines put out of commission. An automobile was caught in thei storm and turned turtle. The fourl occupants were hurried to the city hos- I hotel clerk, not an imitation—can take a look at a man as he comes in the door, size v his roll and his disposi tion and know’ whether he wants a $1.50 on the air shafts or a suite with bath overlooking the lawn. No, it isn't his clothes. I couldn’t say just what it is. But it’s there. We don't often make mistakes. Tipping Hurts the Hotel. “Tips? Now’, why do you reporters always start the tip question? But IT tell you something you didn’t know, perhaps. The hotel men wish there wasn't any such thing as a tip. \v, pay our help, at least we do in the South, and there’s no real reason for tipping. ’Til tell you why hotel men don’t like it. Suppose you go into lunch and order a 75-cent steak and slip the w a -a quarter tip. He's likely to bring you a SI or $1.25 steak for 75 cent and the hotel loses tiie difference and you get more than you pay for. And. besides that, if a waiter or a bell bo.\ gives you more service titan you’re en titled to it means some other guest who didn’t tip gets less than is com ing’ to him and he goes away with a grouch on the hotel. "Yes, the spring crop of brides and grooms has been about up to the average—perhaps a little better. And. say, they’re the easy folk to plea:-. They never kick on anything, forth - don’t see anything but each other. I can spot them at a glance, and I a’- ways give them the best in the house and tell the bell hop-- net so bother them. The man-just-married wdi usually take the best and pay for whether lie can afford it or not. atrl you can’t blame him. Natu’-jll-, a m.. wants to make a good showing, even if ii can’t last. No. I'm not a. mar ried man but I can sympathize with them." One of the principal objects of tiie American Greeters, of which (lie Soutu. eastern association is a part, is to co operate in catching and getting rid hotel dead beats, those wel -dress, travelers who leave a t.c.il of bad checks and bum drafts behind them They swap descriptions of such gen try, send out photographs of forged signatures anti help the hotel propiic tors in improving conditions in ettrv way they can. Leslie D. Fairchild, of tiie Hotel Pat ton, Chattanooga, was elected pn-si dent, succeeding W. M. Little, of th' Hotel Dinkier, Macon. F. J. Swift, o tiie New Kimball, was elected vic president for Georgia, ('laud L. Ea.c land, of the Lanier, Macon, was re elected secretary - treasurer. j ARMY ORDERS ~ WASHINGTON. Sept. 4.—Captain J. . n Mcßride. Jr., coast artillery corps, r lieved from staff commanding officer, ai tlllery district of San Francisco. Captain John T. Geary, coast artillery corps, to staff commanding officer, artil lery district of San Francisco. Captain W. C. Rogers, Twenty-seven: ii infantry, from army school. Fort Leaven worth, Kans., to his proper station. Captain Monroe C. Keith, general staff to Sixth infantry. TWO SACRED HARP SINGING FESTIVALS BILLED THIS WEEK . Atlanta is to have two festivals of Sacred Harp singers at the same tiin-. The faction of which B. M. Roberts is president announced today that they would gather at Cherokee and Wood ward avenues Friday for a three-da'- song fest. They declare they arc the real Sa< red Harp singers, including the B. F. Whit heirs. The festival is announced as a:i interstate convention, and L. 1.. Whitt son of the man who wrote tiie song book, will be one of the singers. "I was cured of diarrhoea by on-’ dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,” writes M. E Gebhardt, Oriole, Pa. There is noth ing better. For sale by all dealers. *’* SEABOARD ANNOUNCES ROUND TRIP RATE TO WASHINGTON. I ickets to b? sold Sept. Sth and 9t '. limit 16th. May be extended to Or) I 7th. From Atlanta. $19.35; Ather . i 515.15; <\dartnwn, $20.05; ElbertnL | $17.15; Lawrenceville, $19.30: RocK imait. $19.35; Winder. SIB.BO. I - . LBilttU L!J.J. i Seats Now on Sale Season’s First Play THE MUSICAL RAINBOW The BALKAN PRINCESS ‘ —-Given By—— I The No. 1 and Only Company i IfFO's Y T~Hi I DAILY AT 2:30 7:45 AND 9:15 i VAUDEVILLE “11 IS THE SOCIETY FAD" REAL POPULAR PRICES § vdst this L. ■ WEEK Mats. Labor Day, Tues.. Thurs., Sat, GREATER MINSTRELS 40 People. Sale Now Open