Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 05, 1912, FINAL, Page 6, Image 6

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6 ELDERLY FOLKS! CALOMEL. SALTS AND CATHARTICS AREN'T FOR YOU Harmless, gentle “Syrup of Figs” is best to cleanse your stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels of sour bile, decaying food, gases and clogged up waste. You oi<i people Syrup o' Figs is f < pci ticularij for y i who don’t | exercise ;.s much as you need to. who I !ikt the <-.isy chair You whose steps a.v slow ami whose mu- les are 1* s • .astic. You must realize that your liver and ten j .itds of bowels have also become less active. Don’t regard Sy tup Figs as I physic. It stimulates th, iv. . an I i bowels just as ■ xrrclse vtoti’d do ii you ! .took enough of H. I: is not 1 i:-;> like I salts or .-atha. th Tin h-ip v hi, h ®y up of Fig- my • ' a Ic pel ii ; and weak, sluggish bow. s .« harmless, natural ami gentle When eyes grow dim. you help-them Do the -am. w ith ’.our iivt . and hou r's when age makes them less active. The:e is nothing mote important. Cos tive. Cogged-up bowels mean that de laying. f, ’ meriting food is clogged their the port.- or duets in thes, Stewart’s Under-Price Basement SCHOOL SHOES Girls’ Boys’ Patent Leather, Gun Box Calf, Blucher and Metal and Vici Button Scout Shoes. SI7FS SIZES 8 1-2 to 11 -514511 to 1-- 51.65 11 1-2 to 2 -$1.65 1 1-2 to 51-2 $1.95 2 1-2 to 5 - 51.95 6to 8 - - $2.45 &Tema/d\ 25 WHITEHALL ST. I FRED S. SY WART CO. Ihider-Ps ice Basement . 1 t |j The Security I1 j i Offered by our Safe Deposit -Ipd. __J. 4 ‘J Vaults ‘l ' |J We give to patrons the 'EDIB ■ advantages of new and _i aJ modern* vaults rein- forced and Barricaded with Yale Deposit Locks. The Yale system of locking is known around the world as rhe most sturdy, the most impregnable. ’ “j’.t i I'D.; tedbx »special guard met hanism and a set of Entrust} x.i \ .iiiia. I-«> to u , —they will be from tire as well a* theft. ATLANTA TRUST CO.. Hen v HiHyer , President. Capital. SSCO 00C.C3 THE REPORT "The f inance Committee pays close attention to the In vetiimenF ol the Company's funds, and it should be heartily commended for a t esolution it has adopted for its guidance. Il is pros ided by this resolution that no member of the Com mittee shall, either dircctls'or indirectly, borrow any of the Com|>any s funds, nor shall any member, directly or indi rectly, receive or take any commission for loans made, or upon securities purchased for the Company.” lie also ‘ I lie < ompany s minutes are well kept, and set out in detail the action of the Directors and various Committees.” And in his final comment he further <lates: "The offi cers of the Company must be complimented for their admin istration, which is Without reproach, and for the earnest ’desire they have ever displayed to conserve the interests of x the policyholders.” JOHN F. ROCHE, of New York City. April, 1912 'Io the Insurance Dept, of Ala. It is with panlouable Pride The Southern States Life Insurance Company presents the above report from the well knoiyii Xeiv Y ork actuary. 1 his report confirms those s.’hich hiive been made by other actiuirial investi gators tvlio have preceded. The investigation was thor ough and the report speaks for itself. General Agents wanted for unfilled territory. Local Agents t-unted m all territories. The Southern States Lite Insurance Co. ATLANTA, "• s - acLEOD ' Supervisor of Agents ‘ tor State of Georgia WILMER L. MOORE. Pre». It 'v fe.-t of trowels suck t'hia decay ling waste and poisons into the blood. Y u triil i.eve got feeling ight until ’his Is <o reeled bit do it gently. Don't have a bowel wash-day. don’t us,- a bowel irrftan . For yottr sake, -as,- us* >nly gentle, effective Syrup ■ f Fig. Then you are not drugging y ourself, so: Syrup of Figs i- composed lof only luscious tigs. senna and aro- I mattes w hich can not injure. v teaspoonful tonight will gently, but I thoroughly, move on and out of you: I system by morning a.I the sour bile, poisonous fermenting food and clogged up waste ma te without gripe, nausea 01 weakness. Ry: get th,- genuine. \sk your drug g;-: so the full name. Svrttp of Figs and Elixir of Senna.” Refuse, with contempt, any other Fig Syrup unless it bea.s the name—prepared by the f'alifo;n.e Fig S> up f’ompany Read the labe' JHE A 1 LA\7A GEOKGI AN ANDNE WS. TH L KISI )A Y . JSE r 1 EAI 15 EK o. IHI z. DENTISTS TO AID SCHOOL POPILS Society Offers to Examine and Keep in Repair Teeth of the Children. Atlanta will lake one more step to ward physical improvement of school children when the fall term opens next Monday, in inaugurating a department of dentistry in conectlon with the sys tem o' medical examination. The At lanta Society of Dentists has offered to provide two complete outfits and the services of skilled dentists to examine the teeth of all pupils and perform such work as may be necessary to insur, healthfu; conditions. The off -r was njade by the society to the Chamber of Commerce committee on medical examination in public schools, of which Victor H, Kieigsnaber is chaliman. and transmitted by that committee to the board of education It undoubtedly' wrtr be accented. The first examination of the pupils’ i teeth will be made late in September and early in October. Another will be made in January, when the effects of I the work already done w ill be shown. The three days normal school, which l has been In progress. l closed today, ant. teachers gatheed at the Boys’ High i school building to receive final in- Istructions from the superintendent. En | trance examinations for pupils above the first grade will be held tomorrow. Tiie schools will be opened Monday morning, to continue nin» months.. The | attendance will pass all -records WOMAN WORKS IN FIELDS AND HARVESTS OWN CROPS LEEt’HBI RG. PA.. Sept. Assist :■ d only by her fourtt en-year-old son, (Alls. Annie Patton, widow of John Patton, of Boggs township, is complet ing the harvesting of crops almost en tirely by,her own efforts. In the spring I-he plowed her fields and did he: farm | work, including the cultivating, sow ing. cutting and reaping, and has.crops which compare favorably with- those tuu by 4 She has harvested 214 bushels of wheat, more than 4UO bushels of oats, corn and potatoes and smaller vege | tables. Site worked in the fields from | early morning until late at night, be sides attending to her household du ties. Site -ays she found the work not lover-fatiguing and is in excellent health as a result of hei outdoor ex I ercise. j AT THE THEATERS ATLANTA THEATER OPENS WITH GOOD SHOW TOMORROW The offering at the Atlanta theater to morrow and Saturday will be “The Hal Ran Princess,” and will no doubt prove I one of the real musical treats of the sea son. "The Balkan’Princess” is an Eng lish importation, having had one year’s run at the Prince of Wales and Gaiety theaters in London, from which source prior to Its New York production its ■ harm was first scented through the witchery of its coaxing melodies The presenting company numbers about sev enty-five. and aside from Its musical cjiarm "The Balkan Princess'.’ Is salitl to be gaily caparisoned and to Contain suf flcient comedy for a half dozen ordi nary musical shows. There is o’nlv one company presenting the piece, therefore most of the original members will be seen here, including Julia Gifford. Harry Lew ellyn. Adelaide Harland, Wallace Beery, Vera Rossmore. N. E. llano. Dorothy Fi lls. Harry Lyons. William .Meyer, George Poultney. Fred Harnden and Lew Birch. I’he Balkanese chorus is said to include some stunning beauties, notwithstanding that they were selected principally for their voices The advance sale is now open. LYRIC AUDIENCES ENJOY TOMMY VAN’S MINSTRELS I’he extremely warm weather does not seem to affect the size of the audiences which have been packing the Lyric all week to witness a performance of van’s minstrels Van himself is one of the best burnt cork artists on the American stage, and In is ably assisted by Joe Coffman. Honey Harris and Howard Martyn, the latter one of Hie cleverest dancers seen here for some time The vaudeville features which go to make up Hie second part are up to date and pleas ing. making this part of the entertain ment well worth while. Van’s minstrels will be the attraction at the Lyric for the remainder of the week, with mati nees today and Saturday * The Men Who Succeed as heads of large enterprises are men of great energy. Success, today, de mands health. To all Is to fail. It’s utter folly for a man to endure a weak, run-down, half-alive condition when Electric Bitters will pul him tight on I his feet In short order. "Four bottles | did me more real good than any other i medicine I ever took." writes Chas. B. i Allen, Sylvania. Ga. "After years of I suffering with rheumatism, liver trou i ble. stomach disorders and deranged j Kidneys. I am again, thanks to Electric I Bitters, sound and well." Try them. I Only 50 cents at all druggists. »»* THE LUNATIC’ DRAWS BIG CROWDS DAILY TO THE BONITA THEATER I’iiose who miss seeing "The l.una . i ■ ’ al The Bonita this week will miss ■me of the best musical comedies of the , -season. Happy Gibbs and the Be::ntv choiu- and Mies Elizabeth Anderson, who Is singing “Dear Old Moonlight.” I>tr<- winning much applause. This is a show that every lover of high-class musical comedy should see. Beautiful new motion pictures are shown between every performance, and It l, admission is within the reach of I adults. 10c. children. 5c •»• SEPTEMBER DELIGHTFUL MONTH AT WRIGHTSVILLE. Seaboard’s $lO Ten-Day Tickets will ■ he on sale first three Thursday in Scp ; ’.ember. Through sleepers daily. ROUND TRIP RATES TO WASHINGTON. D. C., SEABOARD , Will s,-. tickets Sept Sth and 9th. . limit Ifilit, and max be extended to I Oct. 7th Rate fom Atlanta. $1?.:. I \thens fix 15; Cedartown, $20.05; E • 1 berton. $171.’.; Lawrenceville. $19.30; Rockmart, $19.35: Winder, $19.K0 J. H, EWING HID HIS DI OFFICE Realty Expert Now in Business for Himself Has Made Many Big Deals. The new real estate offices of J. H Ewing, until recently an associate of Edwin P. Ansley, president of the Ans. 1 ley Real Estate Company, are open to day at 116 Candler building. He left the Ansley company yesterday to es tablish a business of his own. Mr. Ewing is recognized as one of Atlanta s most thoroughly informed men in regard to real estate values. I-or fourteen years he was city tax as sessor, and in that office he had his first raining in realty values. Over three I years ago he entered the Ansley offices i as manager of the sales department. Iti this position he < losed some df | the most important deal? in real estate I that have been made in the last few) years. Some of his larger transactions | I are. Some of Deals He Made. Lot at North Forsyth and Luckie .streets, for the Realty Trust Company ! Ho High Richardson for $325,000. Property at Decatur and Courtland, j to Albert Steiner and others for SIOO,- 000. Property at Decatur and Piedmont, for the Alahoney estate, sold for SBO,-. 000. For Mrs. S. E. Cabaniss, the Sco tia apartments, sold for $130,000 and later resold for $150,000. To Mr#,’Morris Blandon, 100 feet on North Forsyth street for $175,000. This I was sold for the Realty Trust Com- I pany. A large number of other transac tions. involving from $20,000 to $40,- 000, also have been made through Mr. Ewing. Tlje property was located at various places near the business cen ter of the city, on Carnegie way. Har ris, Spring. Luckie. Peachtree and oth er streets. BREAKING OUT ITCHED AND BURNED ■ • On Wrists and Hands. Ears Red and Swollen. Terrible Itching. Heel Would Crack. Could Not Sleep, Cuticura Soap and Oint ment Cured all Troubles. —> Bellton. Ga.—" Some time ago my feet and ears were frost, bitten, which troubled me very much every winter. My ears would turn red and swell, with terrible itching and my heel would crack. I had a severe scalp trouble and also a breaking out on my wrists and hands which would itch and bum until 1 could not sleep of niglPs. There was an eruption on my scalp with dandruff. I had to keep my hair clipped close to keep down the irritation and itching. I tried several remedies and cream and two i reatments of remedies which did me no good. Then I used Cuti cura Soap and Ointment and lam now cured of all my troubles." (Signed) J. S. Echols. Mar. 12, 1912. BABY CURED OF SKIN TROUBLE Decaturville, Tenn. “My baby's head broke out in little blisters when he waa about two weeks old. They burst and t hen just scabbed over with a soft spongy crust and raw under it. He cried and could not sleep. There dldn t anything do him any good until I got the Cuticura Soap and Ointment. In about three weeks after I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment they cured him.'' {Signed) Mrs. Anna Goodman, .lan. 31, 1912 Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold throughout the world. Liberal sample of each mailed free with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura. Dept.T, Boston." men should use Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick. 25c. Sample free. Boys Are Just Awful on Shoes Why not try some that are Made-in-At lanta ? Plenty of’ comfort in the upper, and double service in the sole. Gillv and I \ Cobb lasts. ’ CRAIG’S 1115 iPIUBk 93 Peachtree St. Dollar a pair saved in the wear. GEORGIAN WANT ADS FILL ALL WANTS. BOTH PHONES aOOO. BOY WALKS ON WATER; HEIR TO GREAT RICHES USES CURIOUS SHOES NEWPORT, R. I . Sept. s.—Those in I the vicinity’of Brentans Cove, this citj. ) had a surprise when John Nicholas | Brown, the son of Mrs. John H Brown -and heir to many millions, walked out on the water with a pair of canoe-like shoes While at first he had a little difficulty n navigating, the boy soon became ae |<ustomed to the new footgear and was (able to move along with considerable speed. In al), he covered about a mile and had a lot of fun at the same time. The curious shoes were made by the boy’s uncle. D. Le Roy Dresser,' an J while they are not an original idea of Mr. Dresser, they have one feature of his own. that of having several paddle arrangements hinged on the bottom, which enable the walker to push against the water. The shoes, which a e about eight feet long and six inches wide, are built of a light framework, covered with canvas, and have a com partment in the center for tile feet. Master Brown was assisted by his ; uncle and by his tutor, E. Hoffman, who accompanied hitn in a skiff, keep j tng close by in case of an accident ENGLISH SUFFRAGETTES ATTACKED; 1 HURT BADLY WREXHAM. WALES, Sept. s.—One woman v.aS seriously injured and sev eral others were hurt today when a crowd of suffragettes who had inter rupted , Chancellor David Lloyd- George’s speech at the National Eistedd fod were ejected from the hall. The crowd outside attacked the women and the latter were handled roughly before being rescued by the pofice. Chamberlin=Johiisonlhißosc Co. ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS All Is Ready Now in the Suit Department There is a bustle and stir and an air of “busy-ness” in our big, roomy second floor. It tells of the new season’s dresses, suits and coats, of startling styles and charming colors. For the new season is here and with its arrival our prepara tions are complete. To delay now can effect no good. The style marks for fall are clearly defined. What we show we show with authority. No guesswork; doubts are dispelled. We know now, and so will you after a visit to our second floor. Take, for instance--- Tpha AVhat is it about them that you like at once? Is 1 lIC it the richness of the materials, the heavy cords and - . stripes and rough weaves, in shades of taupe, brown, blue SUItS an d black and white? Is it the distinguished looking cutaway, or the jaunty adaptations of the Norfolk, or is it the new collars that turn away from the neck and show a little vest effect? It may be any of these, for they all justly claim the approval of Paris. There is much to be seen and much to be admired in suits this year! , And you may see and admire them right here and now. Will you? p Perhaps one of your most pleasing surprises will 1 llv be the new woolen dresses—for they are essentially NEW and trim and smart. Eponge is one of the ma- IfPSSCS terials ’ an d heavy welt diagonals—much lighter in i/i we jgh t t | lan j n looks—and two-toned whipcords. Many are belted. One very smart dress is an out-and-out Nor folk, surprising as this may seem for a one-piece dress. It has all of the plaits of the Norfolk; the belt is of suede. Then the collars this season take in dresses far and away from those of other seasons. This is the dug-out effect, variously and charmingly worked out. And the silk dresses. Perhaps we should have said the charmeuse dresses—for that is what they are, in taupe and amber and soft French blues that have been oddly named this season. Their skirts are usually plain, or with a draping that falls very low and is often caught at the side. The sleeves, simula ting those of the days of Robespierre, are long and slashed at the cuffs and finished with frillings and with a tiny piping, usu ally of contrasting shade. TLp 1 l le thermometer may argue it is too soon to I liC speak of them—but the style demands some notice. p It is a forty-five inch—a three-quarter length—-coat that is usually of boucle or double-faced materials, vvuu or of uncut velour. In the back the lines are very straight; in front it is cutaway. Its edges are braided; it has patch pockets. Its collar will button close about the neck or roll back, showing a vest. This in greys and browns and black and white mixtures. ChamberlinJohnsoivDußose Company ) POLICE GM TDASSAILWIILDD NEV TORE, Sept. 5. —Disclosures .made today following a midnight meet ing between District Attorney Whit man and Thomas D. Thatcher, attor ney so: Police Captain Cornelius G. Hayes, who was demoted from the rank of inspector, indicate that tiiere will be sensational developments to morrow at the trial of Hayes on the charge of making a false statement to Commissioner Waldo. Hayes purpose in seeking the district attorney, it was said today, was to pro pose a bargain through which no steps toward the indictment of the forme’ Inspector should be taken while Hayes wages a relentless war upon Commis sioner \\ aldo, beginning tomorrow at the trial at police headquarters. Hayes is said to have told the district attor ney that if he takes x the stand tomorrow at his trial he' will make disclosures which will cause Commissioner Waldo to retire from the police department within 24 hours. Feaiing that sudden action bj the grand jury might upset his plans in his war against Waldo and smarting un der the disgrace of having been singled out from all the police inspectors for demotion just at a time when the pity was filled with reports of colossal grafting operations by men higher up in tlie police department. Hayes, ac companied by his lawyer, sought Mr. Whitman in the hope of getting some assurance that if an indictment were found against him it would be with held until after his trial at headquar ters. In this he did not. succeed. In addition to attacking Commis sioner Waldo in his statement to Mr. Whitman. Hayes is said to have as sailed First Deputy Police Commission er Douglas Mackay and W. E. Shee han. Commissioner Waldo’s secretary. ENGLISH MOTORBOAT IS WINNER IN FINAL RACE Hl N I INGTOX. N. Y., Sept. s.—The I Harmsworth cup In the motorboat tro phy wi!’ return to England, in the third contest of the present boat seri< between English and American motor s boats, the Maple Leaf IV, an Eitglis boat, won yesterday, giving the Briti ?ll . ers two victories out of three. Baby Re. liance 111. an American boat, was see ’ end. ,\’o others finished. Conditions -were ideal. WHY NOT GET A GUARANTEE 5 Every Article of Merit that is Sola r These Days in Guaranteed—No Guarantee Often Means Poor Quality. i There is very little excuse for un person to claim that he has been "stung” on a purchase. Fifty years the buyer had to look out. but todav t i is unusual to find a merchant who wi,, not return the money for any article that has proved unsatisfactory. An excellent example of this kind of tail- dealing is shown by the cleaned guarantee that all Atlanta druggist* give on Dodson’s Liver Tone. These people tell us that any perso who pays 50c. for a bottle of Dodson < Liver Tone and does not find it a gen tle and most pleasant liver tonic, harm less, but a sure reliever of constipation and a perfect substitute for calome can get his money back just as quick they can get it out of the monev dra. er. Dodson's Liver Tone has practically taken the place of calomel. It is ab solutely harmless, sure In its action ai 1 ■ausps no restrictipn of habit or d. : No wonder tile drug people are glad guarantee it, while ether remedies i-i<u imitate, the’ claims of .Dodson’s Lit.r Tone are riot guarantee! at all.