Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 17, 1912, EXTRA 2, Page 2, Image 2
2
(ML IS KEY TO
WORLD'S W,
Stf BRITONS
British Paper Upbraids England
for “Permitting” U. S. to
“Make Profit of It.”
LX)NT>ON. Sept 17 The London Out
look devotes a large part of its spare
this week to attacks on the I’nlted States
over Panama affairs, drspite /numerous
warnings cabled from N* v York by cor
respondents of the English press that
unless British criticism Is modified Amer
ican opinion will become unanimous in its
support of the Panama act
Among The (mtlook’s articles jm one
headed, “The Apostle of Arbitration,
which Is an attack on President Taft for
his defense of the measure This article
ends
“Mr. Taft will have to climb down from
the extremely elevated position he has
assumed. Happily, the American peo- |
pie, to their great credit, have refused to i
support their president In his recent do I
Ings.”
The Outlook publishes a letter from I
Major General T Elam! Strange, in which
he says:
Key to World’s Future Commerce.
“Whoever holds the Isthmian canal of
America will hold the kc\ of the revolu
tionized commerce of the world’s future.’’
This letter refers to “the monstrous ac
tion of the I nite ! States, permitted Io
our present pusillanimous government, of
putting warships on the Great Lakes,
contrary to the treaty of 1817.”
This letter concludes, “When a treach
erous neighbor asks to bo allowed to put
a pistol to your head as a proof of amilx,
the man or nation that allows it has no 1
brains worth blowing out “
C. H. Norman also contributes a war
like letter, In which he says:
“The United States may give way un
der pressure of an armed and indignant
Europe, but the advisers of President 1
Taft will not submit unless th<\ are. sat
isfied that there is something more than
words in British protest. ’
Takes Comfort in Variila Treaty.
After editorially summarizing the views
recently expressed by Bunau Varilla, The
Outlook says:
“It appears then that if the United i
States break the Hay Pauncefote treaty 1
Ihe> also break the fundamental treatv ,
which they entered into with Panan ;■
Suppose this last treaty were brought be
fore the s’ipr. court b\ the Panama
republic Th. ourt would have to do
one of two things It might annul ih<*
Panama canal act it is against
"the I lay-Bunau Varilla treaty, which
gives the United States their title to tin
ea na I If it uphold the Panama canal act
as entitling the states to make dlscrlm
Ination <f tolls in their favor against
other nations, this would be taking a wax
their very right and title to the canal it
self under the Hay-Bunau Varilla treaty.
“Dilemma of United States.”
’’This is the dilemma in which the
I nited States are loft By the convention
of Constantinople, Included in the Hay
Pauncefote treaty, they must make equal
and just charges <>n all users of the canal
The Suez Canal I’onipany. having done
so, may divide Its profits, but the United
States is not, or should not be, a com
mercial concern The states, however,
are Haiming the right to levy tolls to
meet all charges of construction ami
maintenance and working and interest on
capital on all ships but American; they
make a profit out of the canal as well as
unfairly burden their competitors The
more honest way would be to benefit their
shippers by subsidy ami not take the
money out of the pockets of the rest of
the world ”
AT THE THEATERS
•'THE CONFESSION” A DARING
THEME DARINGLY HANDLED
"Tbe Confession, .lames Halle, k
Reid s wonderful story . t the struggle ' f
■ Catholic priest between dutx and in- I
Clinatton; between love for his brother I
and his allegiance to his oath of priest- ;
hood, plat ed an opening engagement at the
Atlanta theater last nlfcht to a rather
email but entirely attentive audience
The author has invaded the Catholic
church's confessional for his central idea,
and has woven a strong melodrama
around the idea, ami, bar ring the fact that
pome of the present cast are not eiitirelx
equal to their verx fixing roles, it. makes
an interesting and absorbing plot.
The first two acts, devoted to the devel
opment of the plot ami storv drag con
siderably, but the last two and particu
larly the third redeem an\ discomfort
previously experienced.
Briefly, Thomas Bartlett is accused of
the murder of his friend, found dead in
the storm from a shot from Bartlett's
gun The real murderer, a communicant
of the church over which Father Bartlett
brother .4 Tom. Is the priest, confesses
to the murder to the priest-brother and
seeks absolution The priest then b arns
his brother is :lr , used ot the murder, but
by his oath his Ups ar. sealed Mid be
cause of Ins regard for his .utth as priest
he would have seen 1..s brother executed
A public confession by the guiltx man
saves him from this, but It comes only at
the last moment, and bx this turn the
horror of the priest's position Is realized
bx- the audiem. and a real sigh of re
lief goes up when th.- truth at las; tt
uni phs
The real triumph of "The Confession''
is a court room acene which Is realistic
interesting and not ridiculous
author in this s. . rm has it. . d.-.l out even
unnecessary word and bit of action, and,
thanks to William ingt im as the imig.
Martin Mallox as prosecutor and i'l arl. s
Canfield as th< defet lant's attoi
three splendid actors, th. act is mad. .i
really great bit ot work
The company as a whole Is verx good I
and the play is worth seeing for its story
alone, which is a daring one, but well
worked out l.v the author
Here matinee and night todav at the
Atlanta
•■NAUGHTY MARIETTA" IS
NEXT SHOW AT ATLANTA
Oscar I lamm. rstein's tom e opera
••Naughty Marietta." with I'l renct Web
bcr. his new and «uewwful young \meri
can prim., donna, and a company of .... I
vocalist-- assembled from Mr Hammel i
steins grand opera en'-r| -Ise-, will play!
the Atlanta Frluay an.l .iSturdax Th.- I
reports from cities wherein Miss Webber i
has appeared and the general opinion of
the critics proclaim Ms- Webber an I
artist. fully eat .tide d -Ils; in mg tb
mant vocal beauties of Victor Herbert's!
nms . and of port'-ating the dlff.-t. t
• ' '.n-- ■: :b. ■ ■ .
as written by Rida Johnson Young lie
•
• lil'l'l 1 1 a well . pb-ndid pr.-d a'tiul
beats are on sail beginning ludai.
ALABAMA COTTON MOVING
Hili' XI
I ' , . -
I
‘ *•’%<•' f.i \ .lint .
■•’ M « I
13 Months Old, But She Has the Wanderlust
LULLED BY CHOO-CHOOS
Eyiy X' ■ wh'-'
W K 5,> 'B IF
mF> vl Fi
\ \.'l 9 .. I* ii
1 K/. l; zJS
■Hbt a-** ,
-OKx \ vßkv - « •>
\ \w/ = ;
MbmSbb. \ v f I fIF/k,
• \ \ • / C- F*
KRy' \ \ V
) \ V■ L J ■ i/ z '
\ y
* y
Martha Jim Arnold Is Never
Happy Except When Travel
ing- Os fio Oklahoma.
Marthi Jim Arnold is just thi’teen
months old, hut she has what the Ger
mans call wanderlust, which is the an
tithesis of homesickness, and she's got
it bad. That's why Mr. and Mrs. J. \\ .
krnold, tin' parents, are giving an imi
tation of a Cook’s tour. They never
expect to have a real home again, for
.Martha Jim just won't be happy in one
place. »
.Martha Jim and her parents are on
their way to Ardmore. Okla . today,
hoping that tile brom] expanse of the
plains will give Martini Jim enougli
breathing space to satisfy her. They
'•aine in on a trolley line, and the baby
was happy enough as long as the ear
xx as running When it stopped, she
yelled; wlien it started, she laughed.
While waiting at the station she was
made happy only bx placing her astrid
lie: father’s suit ease in plain sight of
the trains.
“Martha Jim wants to travel all th,
time," said a friend of the familx Siu
l ries to climb into everx moving van
(hat stops in her streel Sin lox e- I
Vhoo-choo trains better than her play
house She • ven kicks in her sleep, anil
every time she is out of sight two min
utes she starts an exploration of the
nelglibo hood. I reckon her folks will
have to keep on traveling if they want
to keep Martha Jim happy. She’ll be
ali over the giol>e before she's grown
up."
BURGLAR FINDS MONEY
WOMAN HIDES IN "RAT”
ST. LOUIS. Sept. 17.—Mrs. Georg'
W isdom, of B< tiboxx City, ill., learned
this morning that a "rat" was not a
good place n which to hide valuables
A burglar who visited the house in th
night h id taken ami a gold watch
she had hidden in the roll of false hair
lin Wis om home was one of four
ent< n d b> the burglar Anotl e vic
tim was Jerome Fol d, < ity marshal of
Benhe-w City. The marshal vv.-is oat
lat ■ watching for thieves that have
beitt active in ■ town rei entlv, and
5.00 G TROUT CAUGHT IN
THIRTY-FIVE MINUTES (?)
SARATOGA \\ YO Spl 17 T;..
W xou ing rvrord f<»i fish catching was
b; ken lifi'i todax Uift< • n hum •ed
ame.i.nbiiiY’ math a q ;l | t |jp anu
tWn 1 !" ir.lnuh ■ F'ive thuusand
SUSPENSE KILLS MAN
WATCHING FOR THIEVES
n • « lie vx.tteliiug R.r
w i t n d ' I ae.x 1
IHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17. 1912.
MARTHA JIM ARIIOLD.
swim
HIS DEATHCALMLY
"The Love of God Has Sus
tained Me." He Declares in
Last Statement.
lit »ST' >N, S' pt. 17 Bertram G.
Spencer, thi' Springfield youth, was
elect I oeuteil in the electric chair at the
state prison in Charlestown this morn
ing at I'-’; IS:02 tot the murder of Mar
tha 11. Blackstone, a Springfield school
teacher.
As he entei ed ttie'i'-.itit chamber and
was about tea lx to take his place in
ii"’ chair he was asked by Warden
iiiidg'- if h. had any statement to
I make. ii. stood with head erect, hands
clasped before him and with perfect
' 'i ;-oss ssiott -aid in a loud, clear
tone of voice:
"1 wish to sax to the world and to
'the pr.-ss that ills is not a display of
I nerve. I'he love of God has sustained
me. Good-night."
With the words "good-night” on his
Ills’ It to c, about, tool, hix place in
tile electric chair, was fastened with
i the straps and Ute <b at l:-dealing cur
rent was Hashed through the body.
( His last request just before he was
''ailed to bi gin the death inarch was
t hat his bodv bi cri nated and the
| ashes be interred by his mother. The
body is now at the Forest Hills crema
tory. Services an to be held this aft
ernoon.
Ashes Await Relatives.
The ash, s are to be kept at the
crematory until his mother or some
otltei member of his family come- from
Lebanon. Conn, to claim them.
Spi-ncet ot otd t!i<' death chamber
at 12:16:30. He walked with head erect
■ He v perfectly self
i t'o-ses-ed. (in one side of him was
ilnx c I’erk • .-. th< Christian Science
leader from Springfield, xx to has spent
tit' last few days with thv condemned
man in an effo't to bring Ills mind to a
I peaeoful st.it. <nt the tith'T side was
I tin- Rev He:bert W. Stebbins, the
Ip; isott eh.ii tin. But S; eticer did not
I n< I d their a--:-- m
’I-. , ct. . ,m eatigiit tile wardens
■ igi itid 1.90 ' v :s coni ', d through
th' 'dy .1 Spec I'ax.-ieians made
:xxo Th, thin r- port -
;■ '! ■ but , io< t St itn . r is d- ad."
Tl'ts report a.- made tit 12 30.
-•v< n u nutes to th< st cond aft< r
CO-ED WEDS CHINESE:
WANTED PERSONALITY
’ u<!• nt, hihl
\I \\ !• i ■ ! i. ‘t•< j !>•'
PENDLETON FREE;
GRAYS JRE HAPPY
ft
Atlantan, Convicted by Filipino
Court, Wins Liberty From
Island Prison.
.Members of the Atlanta Grays and
graduates of the old Neel Milita-y
school ate rejoicing today at the news)
that Charles JI. Pendleton, an old corn-j
rade, has been freed from Biliblzl prison I
in the Philippine Islands, and is now in
private business in Shanghai, China.
They expect to give him a hearty wel
come when he conies home next Christ
mas.
Lieutenant Pendleton, of the Philip
pine constabulary, was convicted by a
native court about eight years ago of
the murder of a Filipino, though his
friends believed the conviction a dclib
cate move to make an example of some
American for violation of the Filipino
laws. American intervention was im
possible, under the circumstances, but
wealthy Filipinos, believing Pendleton
innocent, put up a cash bond of SIO,OOO
and freed him from prison. He was out
under this bond for six years, but when
he learned his appeal had been denied
he voluntarily su: : endered and began
his fifteen-year term in Bilibid in July,
1910.
Grays Worked For Him.
It was through the efforts of the At
lanta Grays, headed by Captain Wll
'iam C. Massey, combined with the aid
I of Spanish-American war veterans and
! members of the Fifth regiment, that
(Pendleton finally was Peed. Captain
. .Masses, gave out a statement today,
authorized by the parents of Pendleton,
j that the former officer had been set
| free on July 10, this year, though for
certain reasons the news of the pardon
I had been withheld until !’■ ndleton ha 1
I 'eft the islands.
PenfMeton was offered his transpor
' tation home, but proudly lefused it, as
I it was of the lowest class,
"I have three times c-ossed the Pa
cific as an officer and a gentleman," he
said. "I will wait until I efin go homo
in the same manner.”
His friends gave him transportation
from the islands to Shanghai, where he
-ecured a good position. During his
freedom on bond Pendleton had become
an expert in railroad construction work
In San Juan Fight.
Charles M. Pendleton is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. William Pendleton, of
Atlanta. He was reared in this city
and was a graduate of the old Neel in
stitute and afterward a student at Da
vidson college. He was a sergeant in
the Atlanta Grays. Fifth regiment of
Georgia, and when the war with Spain
broke out he joined the Seventy-first
New York legiment and fought with
marked bravery at the battle of San
I Juan. After the war he became a lieu
tenant in the Twenty-ninth Volunteers
and when this regiment was disbanded
irecame first lieutenant in the Philip
pine constabulary, the mounted police
of the islands. It was Pendleton who
commando,! the detachmi nt of Philip
pine soldiers sent to the St. Louis ex
position. It was just after his return
from the exposition to the islands that
the unfortunate incident occurred. His
arrest, trial and conviction followed.
Captain .Massey requests all persons
interested in the case to leaVe their
addresses with him at his office in the
court house.
Iman candidate quits
SO THAT WOMAN CAN WIN
WINFIELI>, KANS., Sept. 17 I'. H
Guy. nominated by the Democrats at
the August fu-imary for clerk of the
district court. Iras withdrawn in favor
of his Republican opponent, .Mrs. Anna
L. Tonkinson. In Iris published letter of
withdrawal Guy says:
"1 am convinced that a majority of
' th'- Democratic voters of Cowley coun
t\' believe as I do—that there is a
higher service for the party than that
of attempting to defeat a woman for
ojficc’ situated as Mrs. Tonkinson is at
( this time and with the claim she has
upon the people.”
Mrs. Tonkinson's husband was elect
ed cle k of the court four years ago
; but died w ithin two weeks after assum
ing the duties of the office.
NAMES PALLBEARERS
IN HIS SUICIDE NOTE
ST. LOT is, Sept. 17.—Despondent
1 because of ill health, Charles Buch
mueller. 7.4 years old, cut his throat in
|an effort to end his life. He was found
Ibx neighbors and rushed to the city
| hospital, where his condition was pro
! nounced critical.
I, Bucamueller lef* •■> note and a will,
written in German. In the note he gave
the names of persons he wishes to be
pallbearers, and in the will he be
queathed a watch.
Two sons, Charles and Leo Buch
( mueller. s-rid their father had been in
I ill health for t ears. He is a widower
KILLS FATHER WHO WOULD
NOT ALLOW GIRL TO MARRY
LITTLE ROCK. ARK. Sept. 17.
j Grover Garrett shot and killed Clem
I Wi'-lxei I;.. of Jamestown, today, follow
ing Giriett's request to marry Wack
' erly's daughter.
It is said that VVackerly refused *■
' consent to the marriage, and advanced]
toward Garrett with a knife, when the
I latter fired.
Garrett lias suii eudered
DRESS SUITS UNDER BAN
TO AID POOR STUDENTS
PlT'rsßl'RC.. Sept. 17 Superintend
|ent Heeter has pl.t. <-d a bun on full
■! -x lilts at Isig - school grudU'itiont
■lncidentals" amounting to sti:, will
- «.
TAFT IS INCAPABLE OF
UNDER STA N DI NG, SAYS
SENATOR JOS. M. DIXON
By SENATOR JOSEPH M. DIXON.
Chairman of the Progressive National
Committee.
NEW YORK, Sept. 17.—We hear a
great deal in this campaign about the
“dignity," "poise" and “conservatism”
of the president. The constitution is
represented as attacked on all sides
and desperately defended by the presi
dent, with the aid of Mr. Barnes, of
New York. The people are depicted in
a frenzied attempt to undermine the
foundations of their own liberties and
the sources of their own happiness,
with nothing standing between them
and their own imperilled institutions
but the stand-patters of the old guard.
It was Doctor Samuel Johnson, the
famous lexicographer, who, disgusted
with the appeals 'made--by discredited
politicians to national pride and party
spirit in order to cover their own short
comings. once de-cribed patriotism as
the last refuge of a scoundrel.” And,
considering certain specious appeals
and shallow catch-phrasAs which are
much in circulation now, it is very easy
xo see that they are intended to deceive
the people and to pervert their judg
ment.
Ex-Governor Frank S. . Black said
once of Theodore Roosevelt:
"He is not conservative, if by con
servatism is meant waiting until it is
too late. He cares nothing for dig
nity. if by that is meant preserving a
dignified silence in the presence of fla
grant abuses.”
Many Good Bills Attacked.
And as to this constant criticism
that certain much-needed reforms are
impracticable because "unconstitution
al." Roosevelt knows, ip common with
all clear-headed men, that the cry ot
“unconstitutional" has been lifted up
to defeat almost every measure of ben
eficent legislation that has been en
acted into law. The Dolliver-Hepburn
railroad rate 'bill was opposed as un
constitutional. Probably no measure
has resulted in such far-reaching good.
It is doubtful whether the interests
that were ranged against this legisla
tion eould now be persuaded to concur
in any measure looking to its modifi
cation or repeal.
The bill for the Federal inspection of
meats was opposed as unconstitutional.
The pure food bill was opposed as un
constitutional.
In the spirit of Dr. Johnson's defini-
ADTOPSY ON GIRL IS
CAUSE OF SUIT FOR
SIOO,OOO IN DAMAGES
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 17.—An autopsy
into the death of Miss Emma Knost,
alleged to have been performed with
out consent of the dead girl’s relatives,
is the basis of a SIOII.OOO damage suit
filed in the circuit court Saturday
against Dr. Ben L. Dorsey, Dr. T. A.
Martin, and Michael J. Cullen and Pat
rick Kelly, comprising the undertaking
firm of Cullen Kelly.
The plaintiffs are Louis Knost, fa
ther of the dead gill; Louis Knost, Jr.,
and Edward Knost, her brothers, and
Ida Roseman and Bertha I\. Fink, her
sisters.
Miss Emma Knost, who was twenty
years old, died in a St. Louis hospital
February 7 last. Cullen & Kelly were
employed to take charge of the body.
The petition alleges the undertakers
permitted the surgeons to perform an
autopsy without consent of the rela
tives.
The father, brothers and sisters de
clare in their petition that "they dearly
loved Emma, and were horribly shocked
when they saw her mutilated body.”
MILL PAPE’S OIAPEPSIN REALLY
CUREMYSTOMACHTFIDUBLE? YES
If your stomach is sick, sour, gassy and upset now you
can surely get relief in five minutes.
Sour, sick, upset stomach, indigestion,
heartburn, dyspepsia; when the food
you eat ferments into gases and stub
born lumps; your head aches and you
feel sick and miserable, that's when
you realize the magic in Pape's Dia
pepsin. It makes stomach distress go
in five minutes.
If your stomach is in a continuous
revolt —If you can't get it regulated,
please, for your sake, try Diapepsin.
It’s so needless to have a bad stomach—
make your next meal a favorite food
(Advert:
GONSTim, MW, BILIOUS,
TONGUE COATED? CISCO SURE
Furred Tongue, Rai Taste. Indig-stlon, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head
.u ht s conu* from a torpid liv< : and clogged, constipated bowels which cau* 0
you stomm-h t., I>.cmie tilled with uniigested food, which sours and ferments
tike g' .li.iire In .1 swi.l barres. I hat s the first step to untold misery foul
eases, bad breath, yellow -kin, mental f.-ars, everything that is horrible am
nauseating. A ( a-earet tonight will straighten you out bv morning—a 10.
' "nt box Jrom your druggist will keep your Liver active, Rowels clean and
kon
JU- 1
10 Cents. Never gripo or sicken.
“CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.”
(Advertisement '
tion, the constitution might be truth
fully defined as the last defensive re
source of imperilled and uncovered
wrongdoing
It was wittily remarked some days
ago that the president was "a well
meaning person entirely surrounded by
inexplicable phenomena.” It does really
seem that President Taft is so satu
rated with formalism, so reverent of
precedent, so tender of change, that he
is incapable of understanding the great
democratic surge which, rising through
out the country, demands that our in
stitutions shall more clearly reflect the
enlarging popular sense of social jus
tice.
“Governor Wilson Quibbles.”
To the members of the Progressive
party this rattle about poise, dignity,
conservatism and constitutionalism
seems pitifully thin and unimportant.
So do the quibbles, evasions and plati
tudes of Governor Wilson. It is in
creasingly manifest that if Governor
Wilson has any clear conceptions of
policy he is determined to repress their
statement. His speeches seem con
structed on the theory that the func
tion of language is to conceal thought.
Running on a platform which he
himself has said does not constitute a
program, and which a leading Demo
cratic editor ha? called upon him to re
pudiate in its entirety, he has failed
thus far to state what does constitute
his policy.
Contrasted with the musty irrelevan
cies and political archaisms which con
stitute the Republican platform and the
feeble inanities thus far uttered by the
Democratic candidate, the clean-cut,
downright and outspoken declaration'
of party purpose and party faith made
by the Progressive party, both in its
national and state conventions, natural
ly are "winning the respect and confi
dence <ff the people.
“Our platform," says Roosevelt, "is
a contract to whose fulfillment and per
formance we pledge ourselves in as
binding a sense as we would to the
keeping of a private contract,”
There is no call in the Progressive
party that its candidate shall repudiate
the party platform. It is in the spirit of
candid speaking and straight dealing
that the party makes its appeal for
support, relying upon that truism of
history that the people can not be de
ceived and know whom to trust.
WOMAN LAWYER NOW
BRINGS SUIT AGAINST
HUBBY SHE EDUCATED
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 17.—Mrs. Anna
belle Anderson Arnold, 29 years old,
whose wide circle of acquaintances re
gard her as a "modern woman” because
she is a lawyer, suffragette, college lec
turer and school president, tells how
she sent Dr. M. A. Arnold, her 41-
year-old husband, to Bliss, Okla., last
December to "make a man of him” and
then filed suit for divorce.
Mrs. Arnold’s Story reveals a re
markable activity that enabled her to
graduate from a St. Louis law school
while sending her husband through
medical college.
"I met Arnold in 1906, when he came
from Kansas City to St. Louis to study
medicine," .Mrs. Arnold related. "We
went to Buffalo, N. Y., were married
and came back to St. Louis. My hus
band continued as a student at the
American Medical college for two and
one-half years at my expense.”
She says he was silly and jealous and
a drag on her. Also she says she and
Arnold are not congenial and divorce
is the only course left to her.
meal, then take a little Diapepsin.
There will not be any distress—eat
without fear. It’s because Pape's Di
pepsin "really does" regulate weak, out
of-order stomachs that gives it its
millions of sales annually.
Got a large tlfty-eenl case of Pape’s
Diapepsin from any drug store. It is
the quickest, surest stomach relief and
cure known. It acts almost like magic
—it is a scientific, harmless and de
lightful preparation which truly be
longs in every home.
isetnent. t
PHMGYCLISS
TO BE GIIMTEO
Forty Seniors of the Southern
College of Pharmacy Will
Receive Diplomas.
The commencement exercises of thp
Southern College of Pharmacy wfi:
held tomorrow evening at the Atlanta
theater, when 40 seniors will r<-.. lva
the degree of Graduate in Pharniacw
Rev. John E. White will deliver th,
commencement addres's.
The degrees will be conferred bx Ron
Thomas H. Jeffries, president M thp
board of trustees, and an attra. the
musical program will be rend-re,! hy
Card’s orchestra.
The Southern College of Pharmacy i s
one of the largest Institutions of j t L
kind in the South. Students are en
rolled from the majority of Southern
states, and two are natives of Egypt
The school has both a spring and fall
session. The next session opens Octo,
ber 1.
Following is the program:
Overture. "Faust,” Gounod; invooa.
tion, Rev. A. R. Holderby; report of
the dean. Dr. R. C. Hood; two-step
"Gaby Glide,” Hirsih; conferring of
degrees of first section, Hon Thomas
H. Jeffries; selection, "Spring Maid
Reinhardt; conferring of degrees of
second section, Hon, Thomas H Jeff,
ries; caprice. "Lessons in Flirtation,"
Englander; individual introduction of
graduates, Dr. R. IC. Hood; waltzes.
“Balkan Princess,” Rubens; address'
Rev. John E. White; valse lento'
"Charme d’Armour,” Kendall, dismis
sal, Hon. Thomas H. Jeffries; march,
"The Thundercloud.”
Following are the graduates: \y. p
Airheart, Alabama; Henry Araman.
Egypt; S. F. Barnett, Arkansas, o D.
Barron, Georgia; J. A. Borland. Ala
bama; S. K. Bridges, Mississippi; c
G. Brown, Alabama; E. L. Burdick
Florida; J. E. Butler, Georgia; \V, i
Carter, Georgia; T. C. Clements. Geor
gia; L. V. Coleman, Elor/la; A. o Diaz,
Cuba: H. L. Darsey, Georgia; L. K. Ed
wards, North Carolina; J. G. Elder,
Georgia; T. B. Fa ver. Georgia; B. s'
Flemister, Georgia; H. H. Gee, Geor
gia; Sam Goldstein, Georgia; c. E.
Hamilton, Georgia; J. L. Hawk. Geor
gia; H, G. Kennedy, Georgia Ottis
Kennedy, Georgia; V. W. Lowry, .Mis
sissippi; George Morales, Cuba; A. T.
Odom, Alabama; E. J. Pittman. North
Carolina; J. F. Redding, Georgia; W. C.
Roberts, Georgia; Richard Ros, Cuba;
Marion Smith, Georgia; V. L. Smith,
Alabama; G. H. Spearman, Georgia; L.
L. White, Georgia; J. H. Whiteman,
Georgia; T. W. Wilson, Georgia; ,Mi-s
Lena Witties, Georgia; D. D. Wood
ard, Georgia; M. C. Zemp, South Caro
lina.
IHE FIBST
■ Him W DF AGE
Easy Way to Preserve Natural
Color of the Hair and
Make It Grow.
A harmless remedy, made from com
mon garden sage, quickly restores grax’
hair to natural color. The care of the
hair, to prevent it from losing its cole'
and luster, is just as important as to
care for teeth to keep them from dis
coloring. Why spend money for cos
metics and creams to improve the com
plexion. and yet neglect your hair,
when gray hair is even more conspicu
ous and suggestive of age than wrinkle'
or a poor complexion? Os the two, it
is easier to preserve the natural color
and beauty of the hair than It I- to
have a good complexion
All that is necessary is the occasional
use of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair
Remedy, a preparation of common ga'-
den Sage and Sulphur, combined with
other valuable remedies for dry. harsh
faded hair, dandruff, itching scalp an!
falling hair. After a few applications
of this simple, harmless remedy, you:
hair will gradually be restored t > it’
natural color, in a short time the dan
druff will be removed, and your hair
will no longer come out, but will start
to grow as Nature intended it shou'l
Don't neglect your hair, for it
further than anything else to make "t
mar your good looks. You can buy this
remedy at any drug store for fifty cen's
a bottle, and your druggist will <E, Vl!
your money back if you are not satis
fied after using. Purchase a bottle to
day. You win never regret ft when '
realize the difference it will make in
your appearance.
(Advertisement.)
fiPAWD SUPERB KEITH VEUDEVILIE
Matinee Dai/y 2JO. «
OPE nTng OF SEASON.I NEXT
WILLARD SIMMS w-EK
CO.. JOSIE HEATHER,;,. "
CAESAR RIVOLI, Doo-i More S ""
ley & Sales, Ford & Against than
Maxwell. Martlnetti & Usual and
Sylvester, Klutlngs En-i
tertalners. Pathe Pic i S x o,hf
tures. | Features. _
II _
THE ATLANTA
TONIGHT
Tuesday Matinee and Night-
THE CONFESSION
A Modern, Up-To-Date Play
Nights: 25c to $1.50; Matinee. 25c to P
LYRIC
Mats Tues.. Thurs. and Saturday-,.
S E V E ND AYS
rTHE GREATEST of ALL COMEO ES
Smiles—Laughter— Screams—No
A |’.so Show at Popular Pricer