Newspaper Page Text
2
SIDO.OOO PLEDGE
FDR OGLETHORPE
Carolinan Heads Trustees of
Proposed College All Dixie
Asked to Aid.-
Oglethorpe univeisity the great -
stltution <>f th< p*esi,y to.*:-r. church.;
which it is proposed to build at Stiver •
Lake. n»ar Atlanta within a few yea:- |
was converted from a vision into a
certainty at a banquet at the Piedmont
hotel last flight, when more than SIOO.-
000 fn rifts was announced. Directo r
were e ected and t ans begun fol a tiv<
work for the unit* -Ity. which will be
a!I-Southern in so pt
Those pr< «en' represented the H-«t
100 g fts f ' " >r more each - Mos
of the donation- inn t> $2,000, while |
one person whose name wa- within* d
has promised $2.-100 and perhaps .
000 to the fund Secretary Thornwe 1
Jacobs announced that an institution
with an endowment of $650,0'10 already!
has taken up the question of amalga- !
nation with the new Oglethorpe 1' *
was decided to extend the scope of the
university to the who e South and si'
’eon states will be askid to co-operate
n its building
Georg- W Watts. <-f Durham. N <’.;
a well known philanthropist, was eleet
d president of the board of trustees
Senator Hoke Smith was named vice
president C E Graham, of Greenville
S C. second H K McHaarg Siam
ford. Conn., third, and L <’. Mandevi •*.
‘'‘arrollton. Ga , fourth vice president
fohn K Ottley was made treasurer of
’he board and Rec Thorn wed .Jacobs
sec. re tart
Site For College Donated
The executive committee Is compos
of President Watt- Hoke Smith John
K Ottley. Frank M Inman Wilm, 1.
Moore. .1 K Orr. Dr Hugh K Walkc.
Edgar Watkins E G Jones. W Wool- *
White, Roy Thornwell Jacobs, t'.-pta * i
James tv English. Dr K G Math-s-.-n ‘
E. J Spratling James R Gray Hugh
Richardson J T tml-cson, tla i-tt.i ,
and J tt Hammond. Griffin
Secretary Jacobs, .th * p>-*sid-d. ,*.
nounced that 55 ac sos land on Pea
tree roa i running b , *k to s I .. .
had been made a gift io t - uniy <*i si* y |
by the Silver Lake Pa k ' o np.in ~
Wil iam Owens p ■■*■:-lent, and <’ II
Ashford P petti.i tight to th u-<* <•
the lake 1 = gua i,i n ' To .i- .. • them
•elves of this e ft t ~* im o: potato,
must begin .*• tua' tlm. I.v 'I *
1. 1913, ami ext-nd utiu within 1 ■ - '
first yea .
The movement to found a new insti* i
tution of lea nitty w hit It snail -a:.,. j
out the Ide:; - and peri-*t m . : . min* * j
H)l<! in ■ of <t 1 i i>_: #ll,«* j'#- in.x
siiy, long defunc: hn« h» hi *r. n
t h uj»ia si h rs-up, ort ir i.iai . v. < I kn«»' i;
I' ♦•sbyi iarr in i; t;< jt , <»\
assured that a univ»-i siiy. long !!•»■<!<
by Atlanta, wi 1 b. built in ;- f, *, y. tl . i
JAIL TUNNEL IS FOUND:
IT WAS DUG 75 YEARS AGO
BOSTON. S* nt. IS \ mi ..i*
tunnel lust di.-, ov< >,* | :I ~* ti
In Court Squat, is thought to l*.,y.
been made b; n isoners attempting o 1
escape front jail c, s of th ■ •-quart, *i ■
of a century ago in the- d comt house,
recently demolished, to mak, w n so ,i
City hall annex Workmen removing
the last stones of the foundation of the 1
eourt house found th- entrance to the
tunnel, six feet below the street level.
The hole was three feet square and
1«d from that part of the court house
which in former years had been used
for (jells There was nothing tn show
that the tunnel had ever been walled
up. which strengthened the belief that
it had been made secretly by prisoneis
COUPLE WED ON DARE:
WOULDN'T BE PESTERED
ST. LOUIS, Sept 18—Charles J i
Cannon and Mrs. Lulu May Howard i
had not thought of being married when <
they went to Belleville The purpose ;
of their visit was to attend the St.
Clair County fair, anti to visit Fred l
VonKeuren and hi- wife. But Mr.-. <
Nellie Hare and Adolph H Tegen. who ’
accompanied them, pestered and dared
them info having the ceremony per
formed.
That was the story Gannon and his
bride told to Justice I’nderwood after
he had married them They said they
had been engaged, but had not planned
to be married until late in the fall.
SOLDIERS SEE BIBLICAL
SUBJECTS IN “MOVIES”
Moving pictures an playing their
parr in religious instruction of the sol
diers at Fort McPherson. Every Sun
day evening Ch.tp.ain Durrant directs
a "movie," in which th,* action is ba.-,d I
on ’ • - subjt * - wit I • |
companiment s.
A series of ftee » ntertainimmts s be
ing giv n at the post under tn direc
tion of the chaplain. The post gymna
s urn ■- etowde* every Tu. - ..,y )It d
Thursday evening.
ENLISTED MEN AT POST
GIVE DANCE FRIDAY NIGHT
KnlisUtl met. <tf the Seventeenth :<i,
nier.’ at Fort Mcl'iierht n will hiv«» a
‘iar.cc in ti,. | tnhGS m n. xt I m- i
oa\ trght uuh tne full r>ginu'niul band j
t’i p!si\ t.f ILe miiM Hi \!la t i«»’i s n ■« \ i»»»
lain i TTHT * wlitl will It ill the .fl
i he Atlanta Georgian-~Premium Coupon
Th • coupon a be oceonted at m.r Premium Parlor, 70 East Alabama «t_,
*■ part a payment tor any of toe beautiful premium q da d eployed there.
S<’o Prt-nifun Parlor Announcement on Another Page
Hundreds Hear Health Expert Lecture at Auditorium
AGAIN URGES CITY CLEAN-UP
Dr. Oscar Dowling and Educa
tional Train Leave Atlanta
for the East.
It - m\ p kin ii ttv to utge the eiti- r :
|thi,i,:gh which I pa.-s to clean up. That;
i is ■■vi c I s iid Atlanta needed a < : *.*-n
--ing I .are never seen a city that di,'|
not i.--d the mop and the broom at
the hose I know Atlanta does." yyg..
Dr. Osen: D-s ing's parting shot ti
the <;*:-■ t'ity wh- n It-* I'ft for Wasn
ruton wi*h his eriu-ationa! .tealth trait*
I 'eally wanted to tarty in your city ,
especially to talk t the people nn in-
t
MH / V : , . JaO .1-
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ISr ..* \*~ mwml. fife
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f \. 71
v \ ihmhhh
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Mm; J',. 5
- Wu" ’tlt
Hint iiin.laiitj i <. ino .isized 11.
i: « - which w ill huvc th** h..in - t ;.•
Aumiu; iuni last night I w; n:. •; ♦ •
talk to more Atlantans on th sir
j< i i “
lust ns he uses motion pictures t
(ipinonstratn the points of his hu-tu.- •
so the health expert Irlieves strong.?
in the eone-.n te method of illustration
His educational train, he asserts, is a
health sermon mote glVwing and eom
pieh'msible than any eve: put into
wot ds
Shows Necessity of Good Ao*.
Nothing. continued l>* Dowling.)
has impressed upon people the neie,-
sity of fresh air for babies as much ns
nix little electrical model illustrating
the principle of ventilation. I have ex
plained the principle to hundreds and
ti n understood, but every one gets the
meaning of the model The whole prin
ciple of ventilation is acquired at a
glance.
"That is what I havi tiled to do with
the train To place the main features
of public health work before everybody
in a simple but forcible manner."
Tiie train, which left Atlanta today
for Washington will be parked for a
day In Spartanburg. Greensbot > and
Lynchburg, where Dr. How ling will
speak. The train is expected to be the
featur. of the International Congress
of Hygiene, scheduled for Washington
September 23 to 28
Dr. Dowling denied today that he ex
pected to resign as head of the Louis
iana stat, hoard of health because if
the clash with Dr Sidney D Per ter,
the hookworm expert He declared the
contest was simply 'one of authority.
|> I’ort.'l, lie .iss.-:le<i. refused to fol
low the directions of the board and was
suspended
Hundreds Hear Lecture.
The e .s nothing '.--ft for liun to do
but to resign." said Dt. Dowling.
Hundreds of Atlantans went to the
A ditorium last night to heat the lec
tor. Members of the Fulton County
Meubiil asso. iation. a- whose belt, st ’
Dr Lowing came to Atlanta, l ad given
'tiis a pp.a :nme publicity ami Atlantans
' tied out : mass.-
Tile la'Ulsmna stat, educalionitl train I
I w.i. p>. •■ .1 ill the W< si era .1 ml V- - !
inti' y os yeste day at noon am! !
th'otigs of peopl. visited it during th. J
i..' ei mam .. ml e. v . veiling 111 I>• I
Dow In : s pa t > v. ei .■ 11. : K .. B I
I Ad.c ns .1 m.okw < m • Xpert . Di May -, I
New a- state board inspectoi
I M - \gnes al o is t ■ ry «• R .bet t sop
.it.. M.ss ,\ Butt'
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWSJ. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER IR, 191‘.
/ jM» wB
// B ‘
( '»■ j
r Jr 1
" K * jlflr ’ '
I L r y IT i ’
’*' - ihiv liiitf. president of the Louisiana state board of
lieaiib. who was in Atlanta y **sday with his health train,
warning a negro boy not to carry mill; through the streets in
an open bucket.
Up and Do ton Peachtree
Never Enter Your
Home By the Window.
Walter Taylor, the city clerk, told
an interesting story today of a hap
pening during his newspaper tis--.
He was standing at the Aragon hotel
corner one night talking to a policeman-
An excited man rushed up to them.
"Burglars arc breaking into the Car
rollton apartment on Carnegie way," he.
cried. “Conic quick."
Mr. Pay lor and the policeman both
had pistols and hurried to the scene.
I he man pointed out an open win
dow. The policeman went in first and
Walter Taylor followed. As they en
tered th. dark room they could hear
heaxy bleaching. Tile policeman st ruck
a match.
Hold lip you: hands" Mr Taylor
and thi poll. emar. shouted in unison
as they covered two young men.
Shoot ’em! Shoot em!" cried the ex
-1 .ted stranger who had stayed on th.
outside.
"We arc no: going to shoot." said .\Jr.
Taylor.* quietly.
"Reassu.ed that lie was me going to
he shot, one of the young men wailed
from Ihe depths of his lungs:
' l’-n-1-l-e B-i-l-l-y!"
I’ncle Billy came charging in from
I an adjoining room clad in a night shirt 1
, Throw up youi hands!" commanded
I Wa..er Taylor as lie covered i’nclt
! Billy .And Cm-e Billy obey ed.
H» had recovered his composure in
;a fi-w minutes, however, and then he
I began to 'age But lie st.ll held his
i hands above his head.
A\ list does tills outrag. imati " he
demanded.
explanations tevealed that the two
’voting men supposed to be burglars
jw.-e > omit V nephew a <.f CnCe Billy.
'The. had t.e. n out seeing the city and
Il ad imbibed .1 Utt!, too much near
: b< ci so they . ntereil the house by a
i| w indow to keep Hom waking I’m■< I
1 hey were afraid that they might be I
. t.iken for hu g 1 s so on,. ~f then I
.■> at. In dw ■ th. other on'm w! th. !
IM ■" ’ •* v. hl<d i
■h» 1 ... ■■ • h.i<. !»«■<-i. 1 t 4 .irnivd b> ]
This One Would Have
Been Soft for Shcrlocko.
Atlanta has one great bugaboo, ac
cording loathe police. It is a simple,
old-time, pm eh-c!!mbing burglary. And it
lias not taken a Sherlock ' Holmes to prove
teat all s not burglary that seems to be.
tine tecent case is a very striking il
lustration.
Itemson King, a well known young law
yer. was out calling the ether night. As
the hour grew late members of lhe party
began to tell spoony stories.
"This Is not much fun for me," joked
Mr. King, as lie started home. "My
folks are all away and I am staying in
the house alone."
The next day he told a story of an
unpleas int coincidence When he en
tered li s home .-n Peachtree street he
was surprised to find that the lights
were on upstairs. He was certain he
heard a noise like some one walking.
Then the lights went out.
1 oitvinced that there was a burglar in
lhe hoi.se, he rushed across the street to
telephone the police, for he was unarmed.
Tw'.i polaemen . ame Hy ing on motor
c.cles More surprising than evet. the
lights were on when the officers and Mr.
King entered the house But there was
no burglar to be f.mi-d. \n investiga
tion revealed an open window in the sun
parlor and otn of the -ooms upstairs was
s. mewhut disarranged.
The neighbor who heard the story
next .lay solved the mystery He said
Hie Georgia Railway and Power Com
pany was to blame for it all. They al
lowed the lights to g>> out on one cir
cuit for about ten minutes that night. He
said it was easy to tind an open window
and a .lisariange.l room in any J’eachtiee
home on any night.
M r V\ S Gui:st..us. a farmer living
m-ai Fleming. Pa . says he lias used
Chamberlain's Colle. Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy in his family for font -
.’u y<. its. and that he has found it to
be an xeellent remedy, and takes
p us 10 in recommending it. For s.t e
bv all dealcts •••
l Advertisement.)
THANK YOU
j > our K"'. ■ business. If \nu arp
j not tor\ esuit*». bring
sour fr * •-> u> fur ur-nf \\ <
,\ in- t materia.. Out-of
•.own <•!..•!> Kivvn p .nnpt attPiiiion h 1
. Xi..,.), a x
tS' lv» « a . . 1..
( A<h tri isimivn: 1
T B„ IN DESERT,
URGES SUFFRAGE
Tells Arizonans They Erred in
j Not Allowing Women Privi
lege of Voting.
i WINSLOW, ARIZ , Sept. 18.—At this
[town on the arid Arizona desert Colo-
*
; nel Roosevelt today reiterated his idea
• that the suffrage ought to be given to
I the n omen of all states.
’■‘You people of Arizona ate progres
, sive and that is why you entered the
• i nion as you did. tvith a model eonsti-
I tution that other states I know of
I might do well to pattein after." saiu
the --oionel. "But titer? is one thing
you left out of your constitution—you
failed to give your yvomen, the right to
vote.
Nov., it has been tried in California,
! Washington and other states. and
whc*. ever the women have had the
right of suffrage they have voted the
right way. There is no stronger influ
ence so the solution of the industrial
problem as it ought to be worked out
than that of ihe yvomen.
"The Progiessive party is committed
to woman’s suffrage. Let me make a
prediction: Inside of a very few years
you yvill see every state in the I’nion.
or nearly every state, giving the voting
l-rivilege to its yvomen. It is bound o
come. 1 hope Arizona yvill get in th-*
fotefront of the procession and amend
its constitution before another year has
pa-sed."
Popular in Arizona.
\\ hile Roosevelt is not over-eonfiden
that he can carry off the three elee
|tora! votes of Arizona, he is assured bv
the Progressive leaders of ’the stare
that is exactly what he yvill do. The
state. normally Demo,*, atic, has a
j strong Progressive leaning and Roose-
I veil is personally popular in it.
1 want to break into the hitherto
so-id Sopth." seid Roosevelt on his
special train today. "It is time the old
line Democratic party voters woke up
I to th-* fact that y*. e are being misgov
ei ned bv the bosses. The South has a
st ong element of Progressive voters. J
-hall try get .them into line with our
j patty, brom al) titat I have been told,
wc are reasonably certain of carrying
too or three of the Southern states."
Roosevelt’s Southern itinerary take
him into New Mexico. Alabama. Mis
sissippi. Louisiana. South and North
1 iiolina, Groigia, Tennessee and Ar
kansa.-. Ho goes to X u „* Mexico to
night and starts from there to Denver,
after uhich lie turns south again.
bourne Cast Out by
G. O. P. and Moose
I SALEM. OREG.. Sept. 18.—Jonathan
■ ourne. I’nited States senator from
; ’logon, who tailed of renomination by
Nhe Republicans, was defeated for the
s- nr i Tii'p by thr- Progressives. \ K
■ <Tark, ;l Portland attorney, was nomi
jjtated for the senatorship. y number
■ t speakers denounced Bourne as not
1 true Progressive?
Eberhart Renamed
■ In Minnesota
ST. PA CL, MINN. Sept. 18.—Early
i etui ns from the state-wide primary
yesterday Uoday indicate that Governor
I Eberhart has been renominated, and
that United States Senator Knute Nel
•<ut has been indorsed lor re-election.
Returns are coming in slowly. The polls
did not close until 9 o’clock at night.
NO FLIES IN BOHEMIA.
DECLARES U. S.CONSUL
W ASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—There are
no flies to speak of on the Bohemians,
according to an official report turned
in to the department of commerce and
labor by the I’nited States consul. J. 1.
Brittain, stationed at Prague, Austria.
\ New Yorker wrote asking about the
t market for fly paper in Bohemia. The
consul replied:
’ It is not possible to » ork up an ex-
I tensive trade in Bohemia, as there ate
not .-ufficient flies to exte minate. In
most of the dining roomy perhaps,
! there are very few flies. Here screen
doors ate unknown. There are no flies'
in Bohemia, because everything is made I
of brick, ston- nr concrete, and the!
streets are cleaned several times a
• day."
~, I
I ~ I
Goes Further—Costs Less
The best that can be made. Retails for less than other
so-called “best” Baking Powders—hence ECONOMY,
if nothing more, should induce you to use it. A little
goes a long ways and every bit counts.
Sold by all good Grocers. Insist on having it.
mtu> noanei sawsjrs. nwxuwwm.wmvvnutau*■> Hv cwspmxaj
I Or y G Gl*lf fl Gate City
I ZfL Xt,R * 3,r,T P n $ Dental Rooms
CkCZ yfiX. Souths Largest, Bert
? <4?w .. Equipped Dental Rooms
Set Tee!lt ■ ■ $5.00
Deliveretl Day Ordei ’ed.
22-K Gold Crown. .. $3.00
Perfectßrid2e Work • • 15400
Phone 1708. Lady Attendant
j Over Brown & Allen s Drug Store—24 12 Whitehall
■ ■■OTM»«M^^WM W^..-T - Irw|||||m |,J l
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS !
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN. «
In the office of tne Georgia cominis
| sloner of agriculture in the state capi
| tol hangs a picture of on- of the most
luxuriant, syveep-
JAME<S a
|in g. impressive
land alfalfaesque
! set of whiskers
- that ever adorned
a human being. 1
Behind the
w hiskers, a man— I
very much of a I
man, for the mat- I
ter of that —is
very cleverly con
cealed—almost.
The whiskers
are the ultima j
Thule of dignity, j
They imj-ress vis
itors mightily and ’
lingeringly.
One rarely sees
such yv hlsk e r s
nowadays, nor were they seen at all in
the good old "Pop" days—for the w his
kers in question flourished in the late
-O's, and they belonged to Augustus
Octavius Bacon, now I’nited States
senator from Georgia!
M hen Senator Bacon was coming
regularly to the legislature from Bibb,
he brought those yvhiskers yvith him
every year. No session of the legisla
ture in the 80’s yvoulct have been con
sidered a finished product minus Ba
con and his familiar facial adornment.
The reason why Senator Bacon’s pic
ture. whiskers and all. hangs In the de
partment of agriculture in Georgia is a
very pretty story, for the senator never
was a commissioner of agriculture, an
oil inspector, and anything like that.
*\ hen he was speaker of the house—
and he was speaker five terms, of tyvo
years each—the question of establish
ing a department of agriculture came
before the house, and there was much
opposition to it.
I he speaker favored it. however, and
threw all the powerful influence hethen
wielded in the house to its establish
ment.
V\ hen the matter came to a vote, the
roll call showed a tie. and Bacon, being
speaker, voted tn favor of the hill, thus
breaking the tie anti making the de
partment of agriculture a living thing!
So great was the appreciation of the
friends of the measure that Bacon’s
pictur, was given the first and most
conspicuous place of honor in the new
agricultural department, and th re it
has remained ever since.
On the fourth of next March. Senator
Bacon will begin his fourth term in the
senate of the I’nited States. No other
man in Georgia ever was honored by t
fourth election to the senate, succes
sive or otherwise. Indeed, there have
b-en feu instances in which mor,* titan
two letnts yvere awarded.
With the passing of "I’ncle Shelby"
t'ullom, of Illinois. Bacon will be al
most. if not quite, the dean of the
senate.
Says The Albany Hera'-I:
Governor Brow n is no law y er.
but that lie has a legal mind not
without considerable, admirable
training has been repeatedly dem-
I onstrated.
The Herald is mi-taken in its pri
mary statement, and the same mistake/
has been made by others.
Governor Brown is a lawyer—wa
regularly admitted to practice years
ago. and could take up the law as a
profession after the end of his term in
the governorship, if he so d- sired. He
never has engaged actively in the prac
tice of law, however.
Gordon Lee will be unopposed for
congress. Not even the Bull Moosers.
said at one time to be contemplating
the idea of tunning somebody against
Lee. will protest his unanimous election
for a fifth term.
’W. McClure, of Atlanta, head ano
front of one wing of the Roosevelt
party in Georgia, was in Rome the dav
Mr. Lee was renominated, and had a
chat with the congressman. Ho told
Mi. Lee that the Progressive Republi
cans in Georgia w ould n >t oppose him.
"I heard down in Atlanta.” said Mc-
Clure. "thdt v.e likely couldn’t heat
you. anyway!"
Mr. Mc’lure. however, expects to
give the Woodrow Wilson electors a l-lg
run for their money in Georgia.
Colonel Dan Fogarty, dressed ail in
I white linen, after the fashion of Au
jgusta folks at this a« ( .n of th,* year.
breezed into the governor’s rp I
room this morning, and shed th f 7 I
shine of his presence around and I
most engagingly . |
"How do you manage to com- ail • I
way from Augusta and never get/' I
one speck of grime or dirt ..E /' I
of cjntijes like that, Dan-?" I
John T. Boifeuillet, who was presen '* I
"Well.’ smiled Fogarty. I
is an art. although we August*, -c* I
think we just come by it ' I
"It is accomplished by nm tryin I
that’s all. You simply do n vour r-X I
lia. step aboard the train sf t 7 I
carelessly, forget that you have „ n I
rags, take things easy, and v,*, u . vjl , I
arrive in Atlanta as spick and' sp: „, / I
if you had just stepped from a ban /. I
boX. You see. don't you, John?" I
"Yes. I—don't!" said John. wi V1 .. I
some dresser himself, mon ~v,*r I
likes to pick up sartorial Informal-,/ I
as he goes along, I
Then Fogarty went In to see th, Kov . i
ernor and in a minute or two the gov " I
ernor signaled Jesse Perry cu ’ J I
the electric fan in the exe. utive nf . I
five, as between it and Fogarty's b—l
ness the governor was afraid of ,*atch- I
ing his death of cold. I
William Schley Howard, of D<*Kalh I
congressman from the Fifth, spendi I
much of his time nowadays in Atlanta I
The gentleman from the Fifth is ven* I
sanguine of Wilson’s election, .-nd has I
the "dope" always ready ami wiih n? I
wherewith to convince the most ,-b- I
strep, rous Doubting Thomas hi the I
world. ■
"Wilson will win in a yyalk." sa-.j H
Howard today. "From everyyy her. the I
same information comes to the r.t,**. H
paign committee. He will sw ,*p/A ■
nation, carrying heretofore imprtgna'h'- I
Republican strongholds." I
Moth ess
No young woman, in the joy c!
coming motherhood, should neglect
to prepare her system for ths physi
cal ordeal she is to undergo. Ths
health of both herself and the coming
child depends largely upon the cat
she bestows upon herself during the
waiting months. Mother's J'rie-d
prepares the expectant mother's sys
tem for the coming event, and Its usa
makes her comfortable during ail the
term. It works with and for nattre,
and by gradually expanding all tis
sues, muscles and tendons, involved,
and keeping the breasts in good con
dition, brings the woman to the
in splendid physical condition. The
baby, too. is more apt to be perfect arl
strong where the mother has thus
prepared herself for nature's suprena
function. No better advice could b)
given a young expectant mother thai
that she use Mother’s Friend; it is a
medicine that has proven its value
in thousands of
cases. Mother's 'fofl.nnrLSrifc
Friend is sold at. mIIK3
drug stores.
Write for free Kit MJ
book for expect
ant mothers which contains much
valuable information, and many sug
gestions of a helpful nature.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atiuts, Ct
Men and Women
I CURE YOU TO STAY CURED
.Ji Ur. a " chronic, nervous.
x/zaWk private. blood and I
' I s,lln <Jisc* se9 1 ,15e |
j the very latest meth-|
“ ods, therefore getting I
\ desired resulte. I give
w "vr 606, the celebrated
Y ' German preparation,
J J for blood poison, with-
>\7A ollt cutting or deter.
Jr v \ tion from business. I
C L ire you O t rnak ( e )
charge. Everything ■
confidential, dime to me without de- K
lay. and let me demonstrate h n < ■
1 give you results where other Ki
physicians have failed. I cure Vari-| ■’
coc.-le. Stricture. Piles, Nerv- us Pe- K:
bility. Kidney. Bladder and prostath, K
troubles. Acute discharges an ; :n-1 K|
I'ammation and all contracted dis-1
cases. FREE consultation an. 1 evan- .Kg
inaiion. Hours, 8 a. m. to 7 pm. ■’
Sundays, 9 to 1. Hp
Dr. J. D. HUGHES, Specialist
Opposite Third National I ar.«. K'
16' „■ North Broad St., Atlant.. Ga _ ■
Nn SUPtRB KEITH WUDEVIitt ■
A.l IT Al r* Mit,nee Daily ?:3C. VtH g
6°E\'IXG OF
WILLARD SIMMS & WEEK B
CO.. JOSIE HEATHER. .. ■
CAESAR RIVOLI. Doo- More S ■
'ey & Sales.
Maxwell. Martinetti & L 6ua i arc ■
Sylvester. Klutinqs En-- , ■
tertainers. Rathe Pic- Slx Ot ' I
ti res. I ■
LYRIc T-—~l
Mats. Tues.. Thurs. and Saturday _ E
FIRST TIME HERE AT LYRIC PRICfS ■
SEVEN DAYS
THE GREATEST of ALL COVED |E ’ ■
Smiles —Laughter—Screams—'-’ ' ■
A $1.50 Snow at Popular P' es ■
1 " “ B
ALWAYS ATLANTA’S BUSIEST I
THEATER
■''ano ' I
POPULAR VAUD : VILLE- RLr.‘ J - •'‘ i
Minnie Victorson <SL Co.. He tie K
Four. Wixson Connelly.
Vynos Aldro Mitchell ' IS
Pictures. ■:»
DON'T MISS A GOOP b 1 - ■' - ■
ATLANTA TH/ V/7 ' I
TONIGHT AT H I
Coinniciicenient Exerci? I
Southerii College of /•/bit'" I
lirilliunt Minn. --IntereKt>"‘> ' B||
Ai/miaxion hren.-l uTi< I