Newspaper Page Text
Where Where
Quality Prices
Is Are
Highest Lowest
Finest Olive Oil
Re L'mberta Brand Olive Oil is made from the first
pressing of perfect queen olives, sealed where grown: No
finer olive is on the market.
Full Pint 40c
Quart 79c
Half Gallon $1.50
Gallon $3.00
Regal Brand Regal Brand
Corn Starch Apple Jelly
Regal Brand Corn Starch is Regal Brand A Ip Jellv ig
the verv finest, made, as many > .. ~ , ,
users testify. Full pound ’ nade from finest a PP les and
package, only best granulated sugar;
Per Glass 10 c
(3 glasses for 25c)
Following Bargains for
Friday and Saturday
Finest Georgia 'i ellow ’l ams; ' Lea & Perrin's Original Wor
two days, j cestershire Sauce:
24c Peck 22c Bottle
I
Palmo California Peaches
Palmo Braud Peaches are the very finest packed in Cal
ifornia—select lemon clings packed in heavy sugar syrup.
Delicious as a breakfast fruit or for desserts. Large size
I tins, usually sold at 25e; for two days,
17c Per Tin
I
A New Marmalade and
Fine Honey
Here’s a new and delicious I Absolutely pure Strained
treat —Amber Brand Orange |
Marmalade. Try it. I Honey at these prices:
One-pound ja re , X .3. pinl jar 10c
25c , Pint j ar 25c
Half-pound jars, ~ __ . ,
1 rancv Honey in the comb:
15c
i per section 20c
These Are Specials
Sweet Maiden Toilet Soap, Famous Tanglefoot Sticky
regular 5c cakes at ... „
3 Cakes for 10c h '- v 1 a P er at following spe-
Sapolio, per cake 7c ( .jal prices:
Regal Brand Toilet Paper:
Small rolls 4c 25 double sheets 25c
Large rolls 7c n , ~ . .
L. W. R. Brand Crepe Toilet 9 double sheets
Paper; regular price 10c; at. 4 double sheets 5c
only 7c
(4 for 25c) Daisy Fly Killer, each. . 12c
Blue Ribbon Eggs
Bine Ribbon Eggs are the finest, large, selected eggs;
shipped to us by fast express every morning. Packed one
dozen in carton —every egg guaranteed.
30c Per Dozen
ROGERS’
36 PURE FOOD STORES
■IIIK ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.THURSDA Y, SEPTEMBER 5, 1912.
BANKERS DONATE:
TDAIDGORNSHOW
I
Memberships of Boys Clubs
Grow and Exposition Will Be
Larger This Year.
Membership in the various boys corn !
I clubs over the state is far more than
I double what it was last year, and the
' corn show which Is to be held this fall
lln the Auditorium-Armory will be pro-
I portionately larger.
Already the seven banks comprising the
i Atlanta Clearing House have subscribed
j $650 to the show. This was done at the
I solicitation of W. L. Peel, president of
' the American National bank, who took
i the matter up with the banks at the re-
I quest of Secretary W. G. Cooper, of the
I Chamber of Commerce, who is on his va
; cation.
Colonel Peel received the subscriptions
I promptly, and with them came enthusias
-1 tic letters from officials of the banks,
j stating the pleasure they felt on learning
I that the corn show is again to be held.
I A list of subscriptions by the banks is
as follows:
American National bank SIOO, Atlanta
National bank SIOO. Lowry National bank
j SIOO, Fourth National bank SIOO. Third
i National bank SIOO, Fulton National bank
SSO. Central Bank and Trust Corporation
SIOO.
BAPTIST WOMEN CONVENE.
DALTON, GA., Sept. s.—Scores of del
egates from the churches of the Middle
Cherokee Baptist association are gathered
here today for the opening of the con
ference of the Woman’s Missionary union
of the association, which will be in ses
sion through Friday at the First Baptist
church.
STOMACH MISERY
I JUST VANISHES
II
No Indigestion, Gas or Sour-
E ness after taking “Pape’s
Diapepsin.”
I If what you just ate is souring on
| your stomach or lies like a lump of
Head, refusing to digest, or you belch
1 gas and eructate sour, undigested food,
or have a feeling of dizziness, heart
burn. fullness, nausoa, bad taste in
| mouth and stomach headache —this is
| indigestion.
A full case of Pape’s Diapepsin costs
| 1 only fifty cents and will thoroughly
I cure your out-of-order stomach, and
leave sufficient about the house in case
some one else in the family may suf
fer from stomach trouble or indigestion.
Ask your pharmacist to show you
the formula plainly printed on these
fifty-cent cases, then you will under
stand why dyspeptic trouble of all kinds
must go. and why they usually re
lieve sour, out-of-order stomachs or
indigestion in five minutes. Diapepsin
is harmless and tastes like candy,
though each dose contains power suffi
cient to digest and prepare for assim-
I ilation into the blood all the food you
| eat; besides, it makes you go to the
(table with a healthy appetite; but
' what will please you most is that you
I will feel that ydur stomach and in
j testines are clean and fresh, and you
i will not need to resort to laxatives or
■ liver pills for biliousness or constipa-
I tion.
j This city wifi have many Diapepsin
i cranks, as some people will call them,
I but you will be cranky about this
| splendid stomach preparation, too. if
j you ever try a little for indigestion or
i gastritis or any other stomach misery.
| Get some now. this minute, and for-
I ever rid yourself of stomach trouble
Hand indigestion.
OPTICAL WORK OF THE
. HIGHEST CLASS
Is what Dr. Hines. Hie Opto
metrist. gives in every case. He
examines the eyes ami fits glasses
in such away that they relieve
j the trouble, remove all strain
I from the nerves ami muscles, give
I perftet sight and make life worth
I living.
He does all this without para
lyzing the eyes with poisonous
’ drops and drugs. Have your
eyes examined by scientific meth
ods and get pleasure, comfort and
relief out of your glasses at once.
Examination Free.
' The "Dixie” finger top eye
glasses, the invention of Dr.
Hines, will stay on any nose;
can not slipvir fall off.
HINES OPTICAL COMPANY
91 Peachtree St.
8 etween Montgomery and Alcazar Theaters
i WILTON JELLICO
COAL
$4.75 Per Ton
' SEPTEMBER DELIVERY
The Jellico Coal Co.
82 Peachtree Street
Both Phones 3668
GEO. W. PERKINS TELLS
WHY HE BELIEVES IN
PROGRESSIVE PARTY
By GEORGE W. PERKINS.
NEW YORK, Sept. s.—Mr. Hearst
very kindly offered space in all of his
newspapers for the presentation of ar-
pwj
Am ?
* ■ 1>: ■II
■ - -■ J-
B T* J
guments in favor
of the Progressive
party. My sug
gestion, as one
deeply interested
In the principles
for which the
party stands, was
that Mr. William
Allen White
should, if possi
ble, be persuaded
to write the arti
cles for the Hearst
evening newspa
pers.
Unfortunate I y,
Mr. White felt
that his duty and
his bf*St field of
work were in the
country which has for years been the
scene of his activity, and that he could
not undertake the additional labor the
writing of frequent articles would in
volve.
Therefore, at the request of the
Hearst management, I have agreed to
undertake to present from time to time
some of the arguments and the facts
which I sincerely believe must inevita
bly lead to the adoption by the people
of the principles for which the Pro
gressive party stands.
I do not pretend to any special art
of writing. That is scarcely expected
in a man who has devoted his life to
business and business construction; but
if it be true that "to convince othe.rs
it is only necessa*- for you yourself to
be convinced,” I know- that my sincere
belief in the Progressive cause and my
earnest conviction that its furtherance
can be best secured by the election of
Roosevelt and Johnson at this time
will lend the power of conviction even
to an inexperienced writer.
Properly Founded.
The Progressive party—new, vigor
ous, built upon public protest and in
telligent public planning—with leaders
of vast experience and integrity of pur
pose—begins life with the three great
essentials —the three great forces nec
essary to every popular movement.
These three great forces are;
THE PRINCIPLES.
THE LEADERS.
THE FOLLOWING.
The principles of the party are clear
ly expressed in its platform adopted at
the Chicago convention on the 7th of
last month, and are further set forth in
the great speeches delivered at that
convention by Theodore Roosevelt, Al
bert J. Beveridge and others, and in
the pledges made by Messrs. Roosevelt
and Johnson before the convention in
accepting their respective nominations.
All express the ambitions, the aspira
tions, the protests and the earnest pur
poses of the thinking American people
of today. These principles back of the
Progressive party express the needs
and the wishes of the American people
and, as they are discussed between now
and November, are bound to find such
a substantial following as to bring
about their indorsement at the polls.
Like First Liberty Party.
The Progressive pqi ty, because of
the principles for which it stands and
the character of its leaders, has a most
enthusiastic, earnest and intelligent
following, very like that which built
up the first great Progressive party of
liberty, protest and progress that took
this country from the control of Eng
land and gave it to the control of the
people living in the United States. It
was the patriotic following of Wash
ington—those who were called the
revolutionists of their day—that gave
to the people of America the control
of their own nation and their own gov
ernment.
Os late years, gradually but surely,
power has slipped away from the peo
ple, and the time has come to bring
that power back to the people once
more.
One hundred and thirty-five years
ago on our Atlantic coast our people
declared in substance that, through the
progress and evolution of the human
race, they had reached a point where
they no longer needed, nor was it any
longer for their best spiritual and ma
terial welfare, to be ruled by a king.
Forefathers Took the Step.
It is almost impossible for us in
this day and generation to realize the
magnitude of the decision thus reached
by our forefathers, the colossal nature
of the progressive step those men took,
the complete overturning of the then
existing method of government, the
revolutionary character of their act,
the enormous responsibility—at least
in the eyes of the people of that time—
that was assumed in the name of the
people.
In these one hundred and thirty-five
years we have spent millions upon mil
lions of dollars in the United States for
the broadest and best educational sys
tem known to the world.
What has been the use of all this
What We Never Forget
according to science, are the things as
sociated with our early home life, such
as Bueklen’s Arnica Salve, that mother
or grandmother used to cure our burns,
boils, scalds, sores, skin eruptions, cuts,
sprains or bruises. Forty years of
cures prove its merit. Unrivaled for
piles, corns or cold sores. Only 25 cents
at all druggists. •••
“seaboard"
ANNOUNCES ROUND I
TRIP RATE TO
WASHINGTON.
Tickets to be sold Sept. Bth and 9th.
limit 16th. May be extended to Oct.
7th. From Atlanta, $19.35, ithene;
$18.15; Cedartown, $20.05; Elberton,
$17.15; Lawrenceville, $19.30, Rock
mart, $19.35; Winder. $lB 80.
EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO
Call Mam 118*
expenditure of one hundred and thirty
five years of time and millions of dol
lars If it has not prepared our people
to take on even further responsibilities
in the matter of self-government?
It seems lather inconsistent for the
very men who have been giving such
vast sums of money for the purpose of
educating the people to protest now
that the people can not be trusted to
properly use, in the matter of self
government. the very education that
these men have helped to provide.
The boy is father to the man. You
can not spend millions of dollars ed
o atine the boy without having millions
of questtons to answer from the man.
J.M.HIGH CQMBWL
BARGAIN SALE
REMNANTS
"of ginghams
SUITABLE FOR CHILDREN’S
School Clothes
If 7 c
We will place on sale tomorrow morning several
hundred yards regular 10c and 12 l-2c Ginghams in
lengths of 2 to 10 yards, good styles and patterns, suit
able for boys’ waists and girls’ dresses, etc. All at one
price, as long as they last, 7c yard.
Come Early-Sale Begins at 8 o’Clock
Big Bargain in White Goods
and Silk Mulls
25 c Materials Reduced to 15 cyd
Tomorrow we 11 place on special center counter a
lot of white goods, dotted Swisses, plain and figured
lawns, formerly selling for 25c yard; also about fifty
pieces flaxon in plain and figured pat
terns. 1 his goods is selling now in all 1
stores at 25c yard All at one price for I « B
choice, per yard
SILK PETTICOATS
——■ -
New Fall Styles—sl.9B
Tomorrow we offer on our popular second floor a
shipment of new Silk Petticoats in all the leading fall
shades and black; latest, newest
fall models. As long as these ft w.
J. M. High Combnx
Chronic Ulcers Mean Bad Blood
If outside influences were responsible for chronic ulcers then exter
nal applications and simple cleanliness would be a curative
But tile trouble b alway. i„ the blood whirl, h.„ beeX "helnhH a °d
diseased and keeps the sore open by continually discharging So it the
impurities and infectious matter with which the circulation U fill?/
Salves, washes, lotious etc may cause the place to
(sSs)
e c C ■ ... yiironic ulcer. In addition to purifying the blood
S. S. S. enriches this vital fluid and in every way assists nature Tn over
coming the bad effects of a chronic ulcer. Book on Seres and Ulcers Ind
any metbea! adv.ee tree THE SWIFT sncmc CQ
out me blood is not made purer by such treatment
and soon the old inflammation and discharge will
return and the sore be as bad or worse than before
Nor will removing the place by surgical operation
> insure a cure; the cause still remains in the blood
| and the sore is bound to return. S. S. S. heals old
sores by going down into the blood and removing
the impurities and germs which are responsible for
the place. S. S. S. thoroughly purifies the circula
tion and in this way destroys the source of every
5