Newspaper Page Text
4
eras off to
NATIONAL MEET
Colonel R. J. Lowry and John K.
Ottley Have Prominent
Places on Program.
Atlanta and Georgia bankers leave
today by special train over the South
ern railway for Detroit to attend the
annual convention of the American
Rankers association. Two Atlantans
will have prominent part in the gath
ering of the financiers. Colonel Rob
ert J. Lowry, dean of the Atlanta fra
ternity. will respond to the address of
welcome at tl < opening session, and
John K. Ottlev. chairman of the clear
ing house section, will deliver the re
port of the year's work and preside
over the meetings of that division of
the convention.
The Georgians will be joined at Cin
cinnati by the bankers from Misslsslp- 1
pi and the Southwest, and will stop for ;
a day to be entertained by the Cin
cinnati members at breakfast. Another
special train will be made up there to
take the party to Detroit,
Those going from Atlanta will b<-|
Colonel and Mrs Robert .1 Jm. .y. Mr. I
and Mrs. Robert F Maddox. M andj
Mrs. John K. Ottley and Mis Ottley,
Mr. and Mis. William Hui I Hillyer, .
Dr. and Mrs. W. .1 Blalock. II <’.
Heinz, Dr. John Hurt. Haynes Mel-ad |
de.n and James H Nunnally
Others In the party 111 be Captain
Henry Blun. Savannah. II < Mi
Cutcheon O. V Lamar, Columbus;
Rufus Brown. \ S lint It Aug’iata
Mr. and Mr-. 1. I’. Hillyer, \\ I:.
Stetson, C. R. Lewi. Macon, S. ,1.
Harvey Milton. I'ia I’. limit,
Liat on ton. J E. I.umii- Miami, Ila..
Mr. and Mrs. F T 11 irdwiek and
daughter. Dalton; H L. Turner, Dal
las; R J. Sanders, Gainesville, c 11.
Shelton Brunau il ¥ and .1 V. Hoff
man. Savannah..
KILLED UNDER TRAIN.
WAYCROSS GA.. Sept 7 When In
fell between < ars on He W nyi ros. and ;
W< tern near VV’ayt • lat< yesterday
James Smith, a negro laborer, was in
stantly killed. His body was terribly
mutilated.
Alkahest Lyceum at Baptist T abernacle
Il i HK < Hit W bWrWr "W’
I He*:War I.
LMLL lUL 'lt K
F BB'l w
II -A 4® 1 \iMßk ' Amßw;. ! Bw *fIGK
IIS JBMI ™ J M
~ '
Oct. 8, Edwm R. \\ eeks Company Dec. 2. Ralph Parlette March 4, Chicago Ladies’ Orchestra
Oct. 24. Apollo Concert Company Dec. 12, International Operatic Company April 1, Germain, the Wizard
Nov. 11, Dr. Thos. B. Green Feb. 13, Dr. Newel! Dwight Hillis April 15, Rev. Fr. P. J. Mac Corry
ONE BIG MUSICAL NUMBER YET TO BE SELECTED)
10-SUPERB LYCEUM ATTRACTIONS-10
FOR THE SEASON 1912-13, BEGINNING OCTOBER Bth
Place: New Baptist Tabernacle Auditorium on Luckie Street, near Peachtree. Tickets will be on sale tor one week only, September 16 to 21 at Cable
Piano Company.
Price: Only one dollar for the entire season, with 50c or SI.OO extra for reserving the seat for the season s course
Don t forget the dates of sale, and don't fail to call early and secure your tickets before all the good seats are taken.
For information phene Mam 1238, RUSSELL BRIDGES. Manager.
Large Atlanta Audience Puts Approval Stamp on
"THE BALKAN PRINCESS”
’l'iif Atlanta theater opened last night
I with ‘The Biikun Princess,’* and <ie-
I spite the temperature, a large audi
ence sat through the play and dis
played enthusiasm to th< end. “Th-
Balkan Princess" is a musical comedy,
showing traces of ‘The Merry Widow"
and other forme!' successes. It doc
not equal the "Merry Widow,” but i
a very pleasing show.
Miss. Julia Gifford, in the leading
woman’s’ role, whs enthusiast‘ ally re
ceived. She h;i.' a lovely v -ire, heard
to' advantage in several pretty solo.-.
For encores, Miss Gifford gave some
of the old familiar airs, with <■ha l ining
grace.
Other members of the cast stand
ing out foi ability were N. E. Dar.o
as the Grand Duke Sergius and Wal
lace Beery as Hein, alias Prince Boris,
of Matalia. The play as a whole is
intrusting, though there are no excep
tional hig.i lights as to music or robes.
The east is above th< usual standard
for early season attractions
“The Balkan Princess” contains a
j large cast of chorus girls and chorus
! men, and the costumes are elaborate,
I In the p»ictitresque style of a l'iiU"p< an
count \.
Some of the members of the chorus
'A'Tp ve: V prettv. and all danced well
Pai is of the audience last night, < . -
| pec iallv those- in tin upper regions,
[were rather more enthusiastic in their
I wrong time -i«» suit th* more critical
poition of the company. A certain
amount of noise is encouraging, but
<oo much in:.\ prove annoying, even
io tin add. s. ;i hapjn ned last night.
It waJ the only thing which tended to
spoil an otherwisi thorough!' enjoy
able evening
"Th i Ball in I *rh>« • - ’ will : ] >p< ;i i »‘
the Atlanta for tv.o more j-.-rforinaiices.
a malinet this afternoon and an < \ii -
Ing pci formative.
AL. G. FIELD’S MINSTR£L<S
ARE COMING TO ATLANTA
As regular as the change of seasons
is tin Atlanta engagement of the Al. G.
I’i'dil minstrels. Thi year the dean of
minstrelsy will visit the Atlanta thea
ter three for da.vs beginning Monday,
September JWith an entii< Iv new
THE ATLANTA GhUKCUAN AAD NEW 8. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1912
program together with a serie • of nov
elties and surprises, critics along the
route declare that this year’s effort
supersedes anything the minstrel has
yet devised, and both company and en
tertainment are called the' best in the
minstrel’s career.
In the south the name of Field is a
household phrase and lie numbers as
many friends in the southern states a*
any other showman on the road. Every
year h< has visited the same t itles and
his admirers and patrons have annual
ly incr« ased until now his name and
his entertainment an both looked for
every year by theatergoers. A season
without Al. G. Field would he like a
performanc of H.imht with th-- Dant
i left out.
Besides writing hi entire perform
ance tliis year, Held ha*- found time, to
write and publish a book. Under the
title “Watch Yourself Go By" he has
penned a volume of some six hundred
pages which has been received with ex
ceptional favor by story lovers and
book reviewers alike. Reminiscences of
his lift from the cradle to the present
form the basis of the story. whib sid
llghts on the minstrel and circus de
partments ..f theatricals an Included in
a most entertaining way. The book is
on sale in Atlanta now r , anti from all
•■»\er the country the reports show that
' I’iMd’s first effort has met with appro
ba t ion.
MOTHER. IN FIT OF ANGER.
THROWS KNIFE: STABS SON
ST. Lol IS, Sept. 7. —Mrs Freihiiik
Boettcher, of mil North Twentieth
tr< i t. wa- piling- il in grief and racked
by remorse Wtilnf sday as she sat by
the bedside ol her 11 -j ear-old son,
Walter, at the Deaconess hospital and
prayed for his recovery from an injury
which she inflicted mi him in a fit of
anger Tuesday night.
When the boy disobeyed her and
■ talked back” to her Mrs. Boettchvr
threw a butcher knife
The point of the knife struck Walter
in the abdomen, causing a wound an
Inch and a half long. According to the
police report the knife penetrated the
t ermi for m aupemlix.
J GEORGIA JUDGE DIES
, FROM APOPLEXY AT
HOTEL IN ASHEVILLE
ASHEVILLE, N. Sept. 7.—The I
body of Judge Rogers L. Gamble was
; sent to his home at Louisville, Ga., to
t day. following his death at the Langton
hotel here last night from apoplexy,
with which he was stricken yesterday
, aft< rnoon.
Judg< and Mrs. Gamble arrived here
! on Thursday on a pleasure trip. Yes
terday morning they went for a long
drive, a'fter which Judge Gamble com
plained of feeling faint. He soon re
, covered, how ■ ver, aryl, after lunch at
the bote), he remarked he was feeling
unusually well. He went to his room
to take his usual afternoon nap, and
was stricken while lying on his bed.
t Efforts of two physicians were unavall
t ing and In died five hours later with.-
out regaining consciousness.
Insides his widow. Judg* Gamble is
-urvived by three children, Rogers L.
Gamble, Jr., of Jacksonville. Mrs. John
) t’omer, of Macon, ami Mrs. Dodln
Guerard, of Savannah. He was one or
the most prominent lawyers in Jeffer
son county and was judge of the Louis
-1 ville city court at the time of his
■ death.
I t
The Men Who Succeed
t as heads of large enterprises are men
~f great energy. Success, today, de
mands health. To ail is to fail. It’s
utter folly for a man to endtire a weak.'
' run-down, half-alive condition when
> Electric Bitters will put him right on
I his feet in short order. ’T’our bottles
> did me more real good than any other I
medicine I ever took.” writes ('has. B.
Allen, Sylvania. Ga. “After years of
suffering with rheumatism, liver trou
ble, stomach disorders and deranged
kidneys, I am again, thanks to Electric
Bitters, sound and well.” Trv them.
I Only 50 cents at all druggists. ***
LOW ROUND TRIP RATE
TO WASHINGTON, D. C.
i
From Atlanta, $19.35; Athens, $18.17,:
(’eda'town. $20.05; Elberton. $17.15;
Lawr. nceville, $19.30; Rockmart. $19.35; |
Winder, $1X.8I». Tickets will be sold
September Bth and 9th. SEABOARD.
EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 1130
SCHOOL BOOKS. MIL
LER’S BOOK STORE, 391
MARIETTA STREET.
dr. McConnell to talk
ON BASEBALL THEME
Ba < ball fans in the congregation T
| th. Baptist Tabernacle will appreciate
the s rvices Sunday nigh; when Dr.
Lincc.n McConnell delivers what he
calls a "lecture sermon.”
"Sitting inf the Gran stand or See
ing th. Game Through a Knothole," i
the title of the lecture, and it is san’
by the church officials to be one of
the strongest that Dr. McConnell ha.;
ever delivered.
‘I’VE GOT YOUR NUMBER’
SINGS PRETTY ADELLA
ANDERSON AT BONITA
Have you got a number : Yes! Well, I
go to The Bonita Theater. 32 Peachtree ■
street next week and see if Adella An
derson. the plump little soubrette, with
The King-Murray-Jones Musical Com
pany hasn't got it. She says she has,
and take this tip, she will get it before
you leave the theater. This song is one
of Miss Anderson’s favorites, and is
well worth the i>t i<«' of admission alone.
Morion pictures between performances,
both afternoon and evening. .
MORPHINE
Liquor and _Tdbacco Addictions Cured j
Within Ten Days by Our New
Painless Method.
Only Sanitarium in the World Giving Un
conditional Guarantee.
Our guarantee means something. Nut
one dollar need be paid until a satisfac
« a or - v e,ire bas been
I effected.
SKIJ ° control com
j ✓•'WISS&k, pleit .v the usual
withdrawal syinp-
V6 l toms. No extreme
j WCTTTC!IIMBfI h»TVousnews. aching
limbs or loss of sleep.
- Patients unable to
visit Sanitarium can
—MMtoaaaSl he treated privately
at homo. Reference: The Mayor of our
City, the President of any Bank or any
Citizen of Lebanon. Write for FYee Book
let No 2.
Address CUMBERLAND SANITARIUM
F. J. SANDERS, Mgr. LEBANON, TENN, j
■nancwMMr*’*-. _ .---
WE WILL MAIL YOU $1
for each set of old False Teeth sent
us Highest price paid for old Gold,
Silver, old Watches, Broken Jewelry
and Precious Stones.
Money Sent By Return Mail.
Phila. Smelting and Refining Co..
Established 20 Years.
863 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
TO DENTISTS
We will buy your Gold Filings, Gold
Scrap and Platinum. Highest prices
paid.
"I was cured of diarriwca by one
dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
nid Diarrhoea Remedy,” writes M. E.
Gebhardt, Oriole. Pa. There is noth
ing better. For sale by all dealers. ’**
IWWWBIjBCT Established 1858
r yy-'T- - IH lit
lumber
I /f K I
I » // H That’s it. Ln any
TF W amount, any kind, the
B , 11 K lowest prices, delivery
""hen promised. This
U• W /1 Z 4 M ( - oml >ination has made the
MIU PH( ™
Planing Mill
a success. For more than
/ Jj..jMU 50 years we have served
/ - vou an( l we are no "
ITyH prepared to give better
'M' Ft ■ | ."M'B service than ever.
I itMl SHINGLES
IWF / LATHS
IRZ || HARDWOOD
hi 1 118 Ln fact, anything in the
| \ v /lr " ill LUMBER LINE, we have
IA / <i iw if '
s | / /il \ Ih A vist to our mill and ;
Hl/ ''f /\ 1H . varf l s on Highland avenue
1 / 1 h convince you that we
B V 1 S ' iave w L* a t y° u want. at. ;
B /y 1 I P r ’ ces that can not be
0 / F n )fat ’ an( l facilities for
H f I handling big or little or-
k/ ffj 1 H decs that insure the ful-
m/ 1 I? Ailment of everv promise.
FJ // I -
7 /f I i See us before plac-
jH 1 :! /.( 1 I your order, and
\ TH n ~
7 l you W1 save time
■ I money ‘
I / /ab-'A I
■ / ®' I I AGENTS for
I/ /1 V I Texas Cement Plaster
“As Good as Any”
j Phoenix Planing Mill
OFFICE AND YARDS:
321 HIGHLAND AVENUE
NO. 3 "I£.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
1 he Lowry National Bank
! Mlitri ■ '' ! tale of Georgia, .i the close of business September 4, 1912:
RESOURCES. . LIABILITIES.
l.cai.s air di-, in'.. f,,.:!..'. ::<!< trt Capital stock paid in ... . $1,000,(100.00
Overdrafts secured and unse- Surplus fund 1,000,4*0.00
cured 2,753.73 t'ndivided profits, less ex-
inite. 1 Stairs bond:- In secure penses and taxes paid. . 223.843.97
circulation 1.000,000.00 National bank notes outstand-
l.nif'-i stales In.;'.■- to secure ing 1.000,000.00
1 nited States ,le|,osits . 300.000.n0 Due to other National banks . 120.7 95.27,
Other bonus to secure pos- Due to state and private
tai savings 15.000.00 banks and bankers 293,831 07
Premiums on I nited States Due to trust companies and
I’. nds t’.,500 1 savings banks 192,650.1"
148,21*' *'? Due to approved reserve agents 106,587.58
Banking house, furniture and Dividends unpaid 270
J»ue .r -tn Xati.ina! banks tnot check 3.492,736 8:*
r.•>. rvi- agents) . 281,896.00'1‘emand certificates of deposit. 168,169.15
Due irom stat» .in.; private (Certified checks 2,377.91
I .inks and I nkers, trust '’ashier’s checks outstanding 10,346.28
1 •• mpanies and savings United States deposits. *61.-
L’upks 183,177. <B3 870.27; postal savings
Due from approved reserve deposits, $1,069.71 62.939.9 S
-
< ‘hecks and other cash items. . 5.851.98 bursing officers 256.855 87
Exo angles for clearing house 185.001.86 i Bills pavablc, including cer-
Noti . of other National tifica'tes of deposit for
H anks 103,530 * 0 I monev borrowed 500,00000
Fractional paper currencj.
nickels and coats 2.439.09
Lawful mono reserve ir. bank.
Specie $ 50,751.50
Legal tender notes 129.000.00 209.751 .* )
Redemption fund with United
States treasurer (5% of
circulation) 50,000.00
r»u» from United States
treasurer 25.000 00
$3,131,460,05 1 Total $8,431 460 «5
STATI-l Glc'KGlA < '■ >1 NTT . FtLTON
I, HOi r> Davi, cashier of the above name., bank <*<» solemnlv swear
that the abo\. statement is tr,;» to the best of mj Knowledge aim belief
IH.’NRY W. DAVIS, Cashier.
»u.scrii eh nnc sworn tn het,,re n • this 7th bay of September. 1911.
IILNRY \. I'tTITELL, Notarv Public.
C< rr ” Attest
THt 'MAS ITii.ESTt >N,
I H XINXAIAI'.
F WOODRIFF.
SEPTEMBER DELIGHTFUL
MONTH AT WRIGHTSVILLE.
Seaboard’s $lO Ten-Day Tickets
be on sale first three Thursday in Se
tember. Through sleepers daily.