Newspaper Page Text
2
TROUBLEDVERAT
■MING; TIN
DIET TODAY
Suspected Negroes Removed
to Atlanta for Safekeeping.
Farmers Disperse.
Continued From Page One.
and care of tie prison? •- myself
hammer in•; a .-m-vbar wen
Vroujzht in! ■ • e rx i« e and the ni’’b l>e
r»n bat ten ns dour :h» jail'door
“On*- t •• ' i • fi'- was firquin-
tr -,j . * m • Then 'h ■ ,
penrod wildly int* the jail,
locks as they ..inw tn th«-m Breaking
down Rob Edward*’ coll door, the in
furiated rn» n \ anK’.d the rrlngint* n> cr*» •
intn : < ; As the mob laid j
him <v -hi id with a ledge ham
mer. fu< • ri’iC . hull. Then some]
" V Inr; r<»j•• •. hu h r ut already been ;
provld*. •• • ' i ' •<».< d '••r< ur* •
about i nr- f<r-r and he
and into the s Mowed by the
mob. he a .js 1 . : about the
town for sew.. I r .nut. • after uhb h,
the rop*‘ li'd ..b-Mit h.s nw k and'
Sheriff Reid . \ ti at several friend? j
.kept him in hie I• mt and that he h -•«<
no* ar th.- j ! xt . • a : att.u k< d
“Os course. it would have been all
the same if I had been there.’’ remarked •
the sheriff "Even th-, igli I ,1o tarry j
" «esh at : mu ■ It I would
hav«» been lik .1 stfnw In a whirlwind
against that crowd.”
Fneriff R. I ma<l< i hurry run ha. k I
to etrnrrnlng as h« was anxious to ba
on th-- --n< when -la.knr<»s <am<-
L’p and Down
Peachtree
All Btage-Dcor
Johnnies Aren t Young.
The open season for oysters, mos
quitoes ard stags- door Johnnies Is here.
” ■ ■ ' ■ ■ ters ui ■
you re dining not you can pur up screens
against the mosquito pests, but there's
no getting past the alleys next the thea
ters without stepping on the chorus
chasers who hung around waiting for
Teasie and her chums
The stage door Jolmnie spends his
money differently of recent tears. The
coin which used to go for flowers and
n«Z water is n-rw spent <-n gasoline The
■youngsters who own a ear. who.-, friends
own a car. who can dlr up the rental of
a ear. find their greatest amusement In
a joy ride nut Peachtree road after the
show with the girls who looked so good
across the footlights And this Isn't
aimed at anybody in particular, so you
needn t dodge- the auto Johnnies aren't
all youngsters, either If you are inter
ested. ask the man wh< guar Is the stag,
entrance
Now the Atlanta Girls
Have the “Society Stoop.”
"I notice the Atlanta girls I .no it, too."
said the man from Little Old N’Yofk,
watching the Peachtree parade
"Got what?" asked the Atlanta friend,
with a chip on his shoulder
"Why. the society stools' said the New
"Xorker. It s Just like the well known
Broadwa. bend."
The Atlantan .looked and sure enough
most of the girls who passed carried th-ir
heads bent forward, their bodies inclined
a bn from the waist, and their eyes
turned upward so that the white plainly
showed
don't know th.- reason, said the vis
itors "It mtiv be the hfgh heels of- It
may be the queer huts, hut you'll notice
that's the way they walk And I'm not
knocking Atlanta, either You cun sec it
any old place
Autumn Winds
Show Which Way, Etc.
The straws Panama, sennet and julep
—are scheduled for the dowivar.d-out bril
In another week or two, though the pres
ent weather makes wrn the most daring
n»-s:tate t<. ff a light 1 )( | f or a derbv or
soft Fat Whenever you see the signs in
tie windows, ”.\n> Straw Hat in the
Hous<- f- ; 49 Cents.” you know it's thm
to tignn a a fall lid. uin \\ suit perhaps
an x< i- <' an<i a few suds of ii.<» fuz/.y
kind wl. 1 t * '.Jt T1 « x must have been
in the proverb maker’s mind when he cut
loose that remark about shewing which
way the air- 1 l-l- \\s and when
Hut the derbs won t follow immediately
upon the In els • *. I•• straw if a straw
has any heel* this season The togia*r\
shop? are sh -w ng the vor\ < at« blest
thing yet. hats mao. of cloth ami all
sewed round w ■ silk If \ a are very
nrbbv. x-n max have x.'ur hat of the
same material as «xour suit Provided it
Isn’t sucl a uo;sv piuiii Hat lie hatter
can not s<iue« • w ' b ej e< k into >ne
f rvaehtre- stre-t eanm near
last week The thern'ometer stood at
14. the passing ’?r«iog was baking for
• elc< trie fans ami •< > i <• -j •«>, ami this
window t <l!aw trade It made strong
men .shmkb r as they passed.
GRIFFIN RESERVOIR COMPLETE.
GRIEFLX. GA . Sept |_* Th, hnmemm
works plant is • w -ra.-ti.'allx fwrn ied
and ready tor u‘< ihe reservoir i x - built
per rr. ’n .u
: The Atlanta Georgian—Premium Coupon
cepted at our Prem , ;m Parlor, 20 East Alabama at., J
' as part • payment for any of the be..ut<f . premium g rds displayed there. I
L r ‘ rn,un ' iar^or Announcement on Another Page j
Here’s Cheering News---Cost of Living Lower---at Zoo
BEST ONLY FOR TIGER BABE
/ / JB Mr. t.
I
i vs \\
■\V.
Jw I /
J . W/
' r S3v J- /
1 ; Y /
wHb I
TT(1? ))
i ,
Bulb the Gress zm> tiger, eating his dinner of 15 pounds of tow meat, cheaper now than
I ever, according to his keeper.
JEWSGELEBRATE
NEIWEAR TODAY
Rabbi David Marx Conducts
Observance Services at the
Temple on Pryor Street.
Dm first of the Jewish holidays. Rush
Hashanah the Jewish New Year, is
being observed rigidly by Atlantans of
the faith today. Business houses xvere
closed yesterday at sunset. The day
is bi Ing given over to religious cere
nionie: it the temple, Smith Prydr and
I Richardson st n i ts.
'l’he Rev. David Marx, rabbi of the
Atlanta t-ongi eg.rtion. conducted the
tirst services of thi Nexx Year last
night at S o'clock. At 10 o'clock this
morning the observants gathered In
the temple for worship.
The Nexx Year celebration marks the
tirst of the most sacred days in the
Hebrew calendar Yom Kippur, the
Day of Atonement, the most holy of
li-xvish holy days, falls this year on
September 21.
Strut observance of the New Yeai
censes at sunset today. Business will
be resumed tomorrow, but the ten days
intervening between the Nexx Year and
the Day of Atonement are days of con
templation and penitence.
ROBBERS LOOT CZAR’S
TREASURY OF SIO,OOO
SI PETERSBERG, Sept. 12.—A
I band of armed robbers held up the itn
.i ■ il treasury oitl. eat Mikalovaka. in
.' territory ot |*. -no-sacks, today, tired
I >pon t a otii. i.ds, wounding several of
i turn and tied with SIO,OOO loot. The
robbers booty consisted xx holly of
tn >m y
A taehment m cossaeks was sent
i m pursuit of Jh bandits
PROHIBITION WON IN
ARKANSAS. IS CLAIM
■LI 'I’Ll; FUH’K. All K.. St pt |_•
’Rev. Prank Barrett. superintendent of
\:kat - Anti s i on league. gave
om tax following statement last might:
"!b'l ■ rts slrnxx that the state-wide
, 'hibltii n . trrtt d Arkansas Tut sday
1 < 5 • -e majority The country vote
oim: strong for it. and it will win
I by several thousand."
THE ATLANTA GEOKGjAIN ANDREWS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1912.
Chef Boyd Says Fifteen-Pound
Dinner of Beef Is Cheaper
Now Than Ever.
The high cost of living isn’t affecting
Babe, the big tiger in the Grant park
zoo. Though Babe’s daily meal costs
him 90 cents, which is more than the
average business man pays for his
luncheon, it is cheaper now than at any
time in the memory of Keeper Boyd,
who is chef and steward for Hotel
Fauna.
"Babe eats a light dinner of fifteen
pounds of raw beef every day," said
the keeper. "That looks like a good
deal, but remember that Babe gets only
one meal a day. The beef, a fore-
•
That’s cheaper than at any time In tin
past two years
"Yes, it’s good beef We can’t afford
to feed the animals on bail meat."
The daily dinner of the animals at
the zoo draws a crowd of visitors. The
dinner hour is 3 o’clock, and all the kids
living near the park who are out of
school flock to the cag-s to see the ani
mals fed and hear the growls There is
a wide variety on the menu, for there
are many types of animals there. But
all the members of the ent family, of
which Babe Is the head, arc on a diet
of raw meat and nothing else.
CITY SUES BOND FIRM
AND BRICK COMPANY
FOR $1,366 SUIT COSTS
The city of Atlanta seeks to have the
| Collins Brick Company and the Fidelity
land Deposit Company of Maryland pay
$1.3*?6.53 costs tn a suit brought In 1 1"'
by Mrs. W. H. Bishop, after she fell
Into a sewer excavation at Peachtree
and Walton streets. City Attorneys
Maxson and Ellis filed the suit with s't
perior court.
I’he Collin.- Brick Company was a
contractor tor sewer work when Fixe
Points was being improved several
years ago. anil the Fidelity Deposit
Company took the bond. Mrs. Bishop
fell Into an excavation, then brought
I suit against the city charging that
i workmen had been negligent. The city
had to pay ami noyy is t vying to re
coy er the cost.
ISMAY. WHO FLED THE
TITANIC. TO RETIRE
NEW YORK. Sept. 12 It was reported
here yesterday that J. Bruce Isniav.
president of the International Mercantile
Marine, will relinquish that office at the
I enxi of the year and probably will be
1 lected chairman of the board of directors
th' yx ill be succeeded as the exeeutivi
plead of the company by I’ A S Frank
lin. vice president and head of the con
cern in tins country
Ismay, who was one of the survivors of
the Titanic disaster, is .cd to hat
-1 planned for some time to give up his ex
ecutive position.
JACK JOHNSON’S
»E fl SUICIDE
White. She Was Spurned by Her
Former Friends and Associ
ates of Negro Husband.
CHICAGO. ILL., Sept. 12.—Ettk
Johnson, wife- of John Arthur John
son. negro champion heavyweight prize
fighter of the world, tiled today in the
Provident hospital as a result of a
-elf-inflicted bullet wound.
\ white woman. former wife of Clar
ence Dury ea and a conspicuous figure In
I. mg Isia’rl society, she had been suffer
ing from i nervous attack for some tltn..
La-t night, after retiring to her room
in the apartment above her husband's
new Case DeChampion, she dismissed
her txvo negro maids. Five minutes
later heard a shot. Rushing into
tb.e room, they found the woman lying
across the bed, a revolver by her side.
Police were summoned and the woman
removed to the hospital.
A few minutes later Johnson reached
his home. He was told of the affair,
and. Jumping into one of his racing
automobiles, rushed to the hospital. He
arrived Just as his wife was laid on the
operating table, where a vain effort
was made to save her life. She died
shortly after 3 o'clock this morning.
Flo'etta Whale Eloper, Her Cousin
For several years she was the
wife of Clarence Duryea. She obtained
a divorce in Chicago in 1910 and mar
ried Johnson. She was a cousin of
■ Floretta Whaley, the girl who five
y i i: - ago eloped with Rev. .lore Conk
from Hempstead. N. Y.
Friends of the woman say that the
real cause of her nervous breakdown
was the realization that she had cut
herself off forever from old friends and
ass H-iations. She yvas treated as an
outed-t by Johnson's negro friends, who
resented his having married a woman
outside his own race.
The woman was to have left last
I sot Las V< _ is. N. M.. in the hope
that a change of climate would benefit
her lu.ilth. She broke down shortly
before train time and was unable to de
p : t. Johnson was at the station ex
| plaining thi situation to friends yvith
xx h -n she as to make the trip when
'tin woman shot herself.
Rex. John S. Morris, of St. Monica
Roman Catholic church, administered
extreme unction to the living woman.
J- hnsoti was at the bedside and xvept
pike ■ child yvhile the priest was read
| ing the service.
PLAN GIN FOR RENTZ.
BENTZ, c, y Sept 12- A number of
the bx-siness men of Rentz. Billy Bedding
tiei ',. w I'. Armstrong, Will Barron and
:iiers. art pushing the organization of
-i sir. st !■ eempanx- t pm In a new five
TO saw ginning plant in Rentz the com*
jnw season |
REBELS WARNED
NOT TO SHOOT
ACBOSSLINE
Chief Is Tol dto Keep Bullets
From Douglas. Ariz., in At
tacking Aqua Prieta.
DOUGLAS, ARIZ., Sept. 12.—Sharp
warning was sent to Gene;al Rojas, the
Mexican rebel commander, early today
that If he carries out hrs threat to at
tack Agua Prieta he must avoid im
perilling the lives of Americans m
Douglas. Agua Prietsf is just across
the line.
The warning was sent by United
States army officers and two cavalry
troops began patrolling the border lino
at dawn, while rebels moved two ma
chine guns to the east fcide of the Mex
ican town. There was little sleep here
last night in anticipation of a rebel at
tack. Genera! Rojas’ .response to the
warning stated that his attack on Agua
Prieta, if Lieutenant \ Colonel Begne.
the federal commander, did not sur
render, would be made from the east to
avoid shooting over the line.
Regne sent word here last night that
he would not •surrender! His force con
sists of 600 and two-thirds of these are
regarded as of doubtful loyalty. Rojas
Bas 1.000 men. the great majority of
them ijandits recruited from northern
towns. The federals threw up a barri
cade about the town during the night,
but this was not considered strong
enough to obstruct an attack in force.
"V ’
Southern Pacific
Train Is Burned
TUCSON, ARIZ., Sept. 12.—The
latest outrage of Mexican rebels, the
capture and burning of a Southern Pa
cific train at Aguas Africa, south of
Nogales, led railroad officials here to
declare today- that demands made on
the United States government for pro
tection for property and passengeis
will be pressed.
All except the Pullman and day
coach of the train were burned. A ne
gro porter came from the scene on a
hand car to get an engine to haul the
two cars back to American soil.
President Epes Randolph, of the
Randolph lines, which are affiliated
with the Harriman system, is compil
ing a list of the property outrages
perpetrated by insurrectos to be sub
mitted to the government. The list in
cludes the burning of bridges, distur
bance of telegraph communication and
the destruction of trackage. All of the
damage has been dolie by insurgent
and bandit gangs who profess alle
giance to General Campa, one of the
rebel leaders in Sonora.
Rebels Cost Road $3,000,000.
"The larger part of our road on Mex
ican soil has been ouj of commission
for months." said Mr Randolph today.
"Bridges have been burned faste- than
they can be repaired. • Many miles of
trackage along the 1,060 miles leading
to Topic have been blasted out with
dynamite. The total financial loss from
property destruction and depletion in
revenue will be more than $3,000,000.
"Th- Mexican geifera! governmen’
has tried to help us,%ut the situation
has got beyond it. The insurgents are
so scattered that several bands’may he
operating at once and it is impossible
for the federals to round them all up.
No sooner is one band displaced than
several others get active at another
part of the line.
‘The rebels are ndt satisfied with
destroying property; they want to add
murder to every crime?’
Twenty-five miles south of Guayama?
rebels trbd to kill all tjhe passengers on
a train by wrecking the underpining o'
a trestle so the train would plunge into
a deep ravine. They failed, owing to
the vigilance of the engineer.
IF TIRED. RESTLES. NERVOUS
Take Horsford’s Acid Phosphate
To quiet and strengthen the nerves and
induce refreshing sleep it is especial!'
recommended. •••
WE WILL MAIL YOU $1
for each set of old False Teeth serf
us Highest price paid for old Gold,
Silver, old Watches, Broken Jewelry
and Precious Stones.
Money Sent By Return Mail.
Phlla. Smelting and Refining Co.,
Established 20 Years.
863 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
TO DENTISTS
We will buy your (told Filings. Gold
Scrap and Platinum. Highest prices
paid.
GOOD ADVICE FOR
ATLANTA PEOPLE
People In Atlanta who have consti
pation. sour stomach or gas on the
stomach should use simple buckthorn
bark, glycerine, etc., as compounded in
Adler-i-ka. the new German appendi
citis remedy. A SINGLE DOSE brings
relief almost INSTANTLY becaus this
simple mixture antisepficizes the diges. 1
five organs and draws off the impuri
ties The Jacobs’ Pharmacy Company
—
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any eas» of Catarrh that cau uot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O.
We. the undersigned, have known F .1
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe 1
him perfectly honorable In all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obligations made bv his firm
WAI.KING. KINNAN A MARVIN.
Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally. 1
noting directly upon the blood and mucous I
surfaces of the system Testimonials sent
free Price 75c per bottle. Sold bv all I
druggists
Tel, Hatt's h'amlla THlt* tn, ~nnc f t ,\s * lon I
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS '
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
With the gradual increase of the
membership nf the house of represen
tatives in Georgia has come the in
evitable concen
tration .*' power i,L x
and authority in
the hands a few
leaders—general!:.- ■
the older members Wfi
in point of sepv -
* ce '
This has always / ~.Jg|g|
been the trend of
things in deliber- ■■
ative bodies, an J
it always will b--. ■[
perhaps.
The last house
adopted a new rule SK
providing that HB RHgBI
henceforth com- MMBf
mittees ’of th-
house shall con- L <_
, JAME-s » NEVIN
sist of not more
than eighteen members in any event,
and that no representative shall be a
member of more than three commit
tees.
The result of this rule will be strong
er and better committees, and closer
committee attention to legislation.
It will remove from the floor of the
house into the committee rooms more
definitely than ever the consideration
of legislation.
In the hous- 1 of representatives in
Georgia, the “open forum” of the house
soon will be quite as inconsequential,
really, as is the "open forum” of the
national house now.
A few strong men—exceptionally
strong—will be able to accomplish
something on the floor.. As a rule,
however, debate will be utterly futile in
the open.
To get anywhere at .ail in the matter
of influencing legislation, it necessarily
will be confined to the committee rooms
almost exclusively.
These things being true, it will occur
to many people that the power and di
rect influence of the speaker will he
greatly amplified and broadened by the
adoption of the. new rule with respect
to committees.
The speaker has the absolute and
arbltiary right of appointment in the
matter of house committees’ He se
lects the various chairmen and mem
bers just as he pleases—it is nobody's
business primarily but the speakers.
There is not even a pestiferous mi
nority in the Georgia house (as there is
in the national house) to "recommend'’
to the speaker certain preferred ones
for consideration!
The next speaker of the house will
appoint certain chairmen, who will
wield tremendous legislative influence,
and he will distribute relatively the
most influential and commanding com
mittee assignments ever given out.
It is not at all likely that any Georgia
speaker ever will become a "czar" of
tile house of representatives, but it cer
tainly is true that under the proposed
order of things for the future he will
be far more powerful and effective in
direct legislation than he ever has been
heretofore.
There may or may not be a meas
ure of consolation to G. Rufe
Hutchens in the fact that the;, are
“giving ’em h—l in Morgan” now
adays, anyway!
The Bull Mooses of Georgia have de
cided to quit scrapping among them
selves.
They have determined to get right
down to business from this time for
ward. in the matter of lining things up
for Colonel Roosevelt.
The colonel is coming down to look
things over in person along about the
end of the month and the erstwhile war
ring and divided Rooseveltites have de
cided that the Bull Moose household
must be in order when the Big Noise
arrives, no matter what else in this
world may happen’. •
The Moosers feel that they have a
fighting chance in Georgia, and they
have made up their minds to make a
brave showing in the November ballot
ing. They are counting heavily on the
colonel's whirlwind tour of the state—
they believe he will rallv to h:s .-itis-
Would You Pay 50c to
Be Cured of Eczema?
Yes. indeed you would. You pay one
hundred times 50c to be cured, and yet
many persons suffering for years w'ith
awful cases of eczema haw been cured
by a 50c package of Tetterine. Tetterine
can be. had at any drug store, or will be
sent on receipt of 50c sent to the Simp
trine Co.. Savannah. Ga
-THE HAIRS OF YOUR HEAD
ARE NUMBERED”
There is a great deal of truth in the
old saying.
Roots die, vitality gives out. The hair
begins to turn grey.
This is particularly unfortunate as we are
all living in an age when to LOOK young
means to fill the YOUNG and IMPORTANT
positions. Old fogies go to the background.
If you should begin to chalk down every
day of your life, the exact number of hairs
that turn grey, you would be surprised and
soon learn that “The Grey Hairs of Pre
mature Old Age” come on very quickly,
if you neglect them.
Begin to cotint, and Use
HAY'S HAIR HEALTH
$1 00 and 50c at Drug Stores or direct upon
receipt of price and dealer’s name. Send 10c for
grial bottle. Philo Hay Spec. Co.. Newark, N. J.
FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDED
ev JACOBS’ PHARMACY.
thousands of Georgians-now wan
and needing only the magnetic /
ence of the Rough Rider hero to ■
I them good and faithful Mooser/,
evermore 1
To be sure, the embattled Derm > .
laughs in its sleeve and assures -s.. *
and the world at large that the".' ’■
nothing—pos-i-tively nothing— tn ;L
Bull Moose activity in Georgia. >
where in the Georgia sky can the !>-.
mocracy see aught but rainbows t
things of that persuasion.
Still, and yet. the Bull Moosers < -
spire and plan to "show ’em a thing ■
t wo ’ ”
Anyway, If the Moosers are going >■
fight, it would seem to have be--n ■
eminently sensible thing to close inr.
right diess, and get the army into son .
sort of battle array!
An Ohio man went crazy
other day, after having read T-
Congressional Record constant
for a year. He surely could not
have had far to go!
Wilson—that's all—nf Gwinnett, the
most sunny tempered man tn the
house of tepresentattves, spends much
of his time in Atlanta nowadays.
Mr. Wilson is one of the veterans nf
the house. He has served sev,>
terms* and may serve as many mor- as
he wishes, so far as Gwinnett is ( ■>.
cerned.
A number of Wilson’s friends ar.-
urging him for an assistant’s place un
der the next commissioner of agricu -
ture. and the gentleman himself is'sa: '
not to be averse to suggestion.
Mr. Wilson is a practical farmer He
pretends to no widespread politic./
pull" or influence, hut he does think
that he could be a great help to th
next commissioner of agriculture in >h e
matter of pushing the department along
in the way it should go.
He likely will make no active effort
to get the appointment, but if it. com-L
bothering around his neighborhood
seeking whom it may devour, Wilson
admits that he would not shirk the ro •
of Barkis, in the circumstances.
It never rains but it pours. No
sooner had the proposal to divide
the state into north and south
Georgia been advanced than The
Augusta Chronicle proposes that it
be divided into east and west Geor
gia 1
Eormer Representative E. L. Smith,
of Calhoun county, who will represent
the district in the next senat-.
will be a candidate for president p;.,
tern of that body.
Smith has represented his county in
the house with entire credit to himself
and is personally a popular and likab -
sort of statesman.
H<- will make, of course, a strong
e.indidate for the position he seek-
Aml if it is given to him, he will flu t •.
assignment capably and satlsfactor
moreover.
.More sold than all other brands com-
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nrcw AC . L - B * t ' anse they flav. •
•2-ilb_• s t h heji spß .ceper
CURE FOR WEAK MEYS FREE
Relieves Urinary and Kidney
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Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kid
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if b<? nice within a week or so
'O begm to say good bye forever to t!-•
scalding, dribbling, straining, or too fr--
thJ‘ n h iL a k S ?f R 7i,"L rulne; " ,p nrrehead oY •
the back-of-the-he a <] aches: the siit-'.-
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cle weakness; spots before the exes
low skin; sluggish bowels; swollen eve'l--
nLLTT CS i e Y '' ranl l' s : un-natural shor:
v ' slee P |essness and the despor.-i-
I Kake Stuart's Buchu and Juniper Com
i pound for above troubles if vou want t
inmke a quick recovery. Stiiart’s Buch
, and Junipet ( ompound contains onlv pare
ngredients and quickly shows its now ■■
I u Pr k,f " p Y and. bladder diseases. Cures
where all else fails. All symptoms quick
h vanish. $1 per large bottle at dnq’
ores, samples free by writing Stuarl
Drug Company, Atlanta. Ga.
Riggs Disease
?? ,ur are loose and sensitive
and tnegiinis receding and bleeding, you
n ?Y e Disease, and are in danger
of losing all your teeth.
Iso Call’s Anti-Riggs. and it will give
quick ichef and a complete cure. It n
a pleasant and economical tretment
used and recommended by leading min
isters, lawyers and theatrical people whc.
appreciate the need of perfect teeth. Get
it nOc r bottle of Call's Anti-Riggs from
Jacobs Pharmacy, with their guaran-c
to refund the money if it fails to do ail
that is claimed for it. It is invaluable
n relieving sore mouth due to plat*-
pressure. Circular free. CALL’S AN H
IUGGS CO.. 23 Williams st.. Elmira. N Y
AT LANTA THEATER
SEATS NOW SELLING.
Monday and Tuesday, Matinee
Tuesday. The Piay that Startled
New York,
THE CONFESSION
Nights. 25c to $1.50; Matinee. 25c
to sl.
FORS Y T H
Daily—2:3o, 7:?5. 9:15. I
Popular Vaudeville
_THE KEITH KIND. Ml«
Roberts, Hayes & Roberts A GOOD
Three Dolce Sisters. Bo
ram A Nevaro. Goff Phil- SHOW
J lips. Cavanna & Co. |
LYRIC'
GREAT SCENIC REVIVAL OF
BARTLEY CAMPBELL’S ROMANCE.
THE WHiTE SLAVE
I Complete Scenic Production. Hear th”
Famous Jubilee Singers. Seats now o