Newspaper Page Text
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30 DAYS GIVEN TO
GBEY SMOKE UW
Harwell Would Prosecute Of
fenders Not Complying With
Measure in That Time.
The city smoke commission, (Maced
on trial by the city council and the
Chamber of Commerce, went on the
mat for its fi st real contest with the
smoke evil today.
R. M. Harwell, chairman, said that
he would force th? issue of enforcement
of the smoke law' and that the other
members of the commission would have
to reveal their real attitudes* He said,
though, that he believed that the com
mission had decided to begin a militant
campaign to abate the smoke nuisance
Mr Harwell said he would urge that
the railloads be required to comply
with the law by October 15. He also
said the commission would repeal its
action in amending the smoke ordi
nance of council and that Inspec tor Mc-
Michael would be instructed to proceed
to enforce the law against factories, of
fie buildings and the like.
Only 30 days' time will be given to
all offenders who are now physically
able to comply with the law. which is
I hat black smoke shall not be emitted
for more than twelve minutes to the
out soma stack Longer time vvi’l
be given where it is necessary.
Moore Not so Militant.
Where the offenders refuse to comply
with the Igw cases will be made in the
tecorder's court, according to Mr. Hat.
well's plan
Wilmer 1. Moot*, president of the
Chamber of Commerce and a former
member of the smoke commission, said
today that he believed the original plan
of the’ smoke commission to enlist the
i'o-ope' ation of the manufacturers
rathei than prosecute them in coutl
was the lu st plan of action, for the ti st
few months at least.
He said he thought Mayor Winn act
ed wisely in appointing Oscat Elsas,
about whose official action there has
been some criticism, a member of the
commission.
He said he realized that the commis
sion made a yiistake in its effort to
amend the smoke ordinance of council
but urged that Atlanta suspend all
judgment of the commission until its
members have had an opportunity to
reveal their real attitude.
BOOKS ATTRACTIONS FOR
GEORGIA-ALABAMA FAIR
''OLl'Mßl'B, GA.. sept. 23.-Secre
tary .1. h. Hanks, of the Georgia-Ala
bama Fair association, has returned
from Macon. Ga ami Montgomery.
Ala., where he went in the Interest of
the fair for this city November 27 to
Dec ember 7.
Mr. Batiks reports that he hooked
every cmc’ of th ( l>i s attractions at both
■ orgla and Alabama atat< fairs
and secured definite promises of several
attractions of a smaller character.
There will be a me. ting of tile stock
holders of tlte fair association tonight,
when he will report the result of his
efforts in those cities.
SOCIALISTS IN COLUMBUS
FORM DEBS-SEIDEL CLUB
COLUMBUS, GA Sept. 23 Mem
bets of the Socialist pa tv in Columbus
and Phenix City and Gitard. Ala., have
organized a Debs and Seidel club with
a membership of about 150.
National Organize) \\. c. Seigler of
Augusta, was p:es<nt and explained the
object of the organization and urged
the members of the party to vote for
the patty nominees A F. Castleberry
nominee of the party for governor of
Georgia and well known throughout
this section as a leader in the paGy,
was elected as president of the club.
Zeigler will address the voters of Phe
nix City and Girard tonight.
CLEAN OUI YOUR
KIDNEYS AND
bladder
let Rid of Backache, Pains
in Bones, Straining,
Swelling. Etc.
The kidneys and bladder need a
■timulant to expel m cumulations
of sugai and uro- a< id «hi, j, i ni > K „
ii these ~ ,n.atc o Kai .- all ,i iv hi, p
accumulations cause so much miserv
..tuart s Rueliu and Juniper Con.pound
is made f (1 just sin h a purpo.-~,> This
• an? out th? koine-■. and
’laune hke hot water cleans .>m
g/ca>e. s-tturt s Buehu and JunUxr
< ompound - unlike „ni .cm-r
rcmedt and , til es where all el-. f (
/'"'rietes is m-.-d 1,., its us- The
is tju.i kl\ lediH cd af:< ! ’akinir
Stuart ? Buch,i and .lunipe. i'ompound.
V ouldn t it b< nk e within at, ,k
or so to b.-git) to s.iy good-b\e f,,rev,-r
'He scalding, dribbling. ’Oaining or
too frequent |,a-s.--g. ~r llrlll( . tl)e
loirh'i.i and th,. b.ol of-the-hr-ad
a. bes, th. stil, lies amt pains in th
,‘l’ '• ltlil>4 .»• » h). ip >s»
Spots btlol. )h r ~5 y,.|| (( ,\ - Kil ,'
S.ugl-IGI bo«e:s swollen - .\eltds- or lit).
r * *’■*’ ’ t-iinp* unii.t’iii.il short
.m •-♦-ph'Nsi).and the
I’ai,,- Stuart's Buehu anti Juplp. i
■ -mpound for above troubles if \ou
‘i.* to mak, ,i qui< k recover) Stu
art - Buehu and Junipe- Compound
.••tisy i.jr- Ing clients and
k lower over, aidn.-v
adder - i, >]> symptoms
~ ' 3,1 • V per large bottle
d-un stores. Samples free by vrit
,l,B Stvart D'-ua Company. At'anta, Ga.
1 Ydv er- isement i
WILSON DEVELOPS INTO
REAL CAR-END SPEAKER
■HP /Wy
f• j i/n ■ W
-Ulbk \\
IwHf x \\
R F*’’ ~ Aoi c - ■■'•A' '■’ r \\
Inßki
SlpßMßr****** 5 /
Wmßs * w //
; 17 4 R HWU • Z<
■ ■ "nPI
?«»?», t«.T y, a »««»■«««» fjffjr-
Governor Woodrow Wilson shown “warming up” during
;i speech from the rear end of his train as he neared Chicago,
where he was nearly mobbed by an enthusiastic crowd of his
admirers.
Americans Lead World in Spending for Luxuries
'BURN' 8 BILLIONS A YEAR
WASHINGTON Sept. 23. Physi
cians and philanthropists composing I
the \meriean Fede ation of Sex Hy- |
giene. of which Dr (’htti'es W. Eliot,
president emeritus of Harvard, is presi
dent. have produced figures showing
that when it com s to spending, the
American citizen is Hie prize performer
of the wo. Id
In a v'lieftilly prepared list of the
things along the various "white wavs''
of th nation for which money is use.-
lesslv "blown," th- fedthation shows
that sx.Dial,Doo.DOO a year is to be prop- i
erlv classified as money "burned" for
thing that we really ought not to have.
I In- wine, women and song account
heads the list with a total of some
thing ike $5(100.000.000. and tile shop
ping list tapirs down to a paltry $1.3,-I
<»(»••.ooo spent for chewing gum. My |
ladv s hat costs the Ames it an citizen
$90,000,000 a year.
I’he purpose publishing the fig
ures is to direct thought to the sex
problem anti the white slave (raffle.
I’he federation plans to make a na
tion-wide light upon tlie white slave
traffii -a generalization by which it in
cludes all of (he sex I elationships that
are,not classed among the proper. By
the estimate of the federation, it costs
the Ameri-an publi, eve y year $3,000.-
OHO.OOii to keep the white slave traffic as
an Institution, ini hiding the hospital
i xpenses that are considered as being
collateral to the evil.
Vice on Credit.
When it is considered that tlie entire
stock of money in circulation in the
L nited States, according to tlie last re
port of the treasmv defa tmenl. is but
a trifle more than $2,500,000,000. it will
be seen that the count)) annually
spends foi what the federation terms
collective vice more than al! of the dol
lar- in public circulation, indicating as
an economic proposition that credit
plavs a pa-t in the vice of the people
NEGRO CHURCH HAS
SCHOOL AND HOME
FOR WORKING GIRLS
'l’he First Congregational church, col
ored. Rev H 11. I‘roc tor. pastor. Is add
ing to its institutional facilities •? home
fur homeless working girls.'' In this to
st It utiun the negro servant girl will re
ceive industrial and moral training Cook
ing. sewing, laundering and other domes
tie arts will bo taught. An employment I
bureau will be operated in connection I
with the home, so that well trained and
reliable servants may be secured here \
limited number can be accommodated in
the sleeping quarters • f the home. Stran
gers corning to the city for employment
will be cared for here until located in
work.
A boi.se has been purchased for the
purpose, and is now being prepared for
occupancy, and will l»e ready" about Octo
be r 1
HAS FIRST CIGAR AT 107
AND HE LIKES IT. TOO
i Ilh A(’,u Svpi. 23. William Henry
Yarbrough celebrated his l)>7th birth
<l.i. Kiiniv <■) al Danville. 11l H, is
•■■till In ami heart) . He < ume to Illi
nois and ),, Danville in 1533 ami <on
tiuv 'ied tiie first bhicksmitlt simp in the
town At t lie age of 7 • he retii -d fn .11
active w. il., but when h- rounded out a
v-ntury lie want to the blacksmith slioji
ut iiis ?on. At liis celebration he
j smoked his first vigar and appeared to
like it.
I LA GRANGE TO VOTE ON BONDS.
LA Gltt.x'Gi: GA Sept. 2R.~-On •
I 2) a special bond election will be
i Ijolrt her< 1t |s propov dtn issue SIsO..
I "0" ' r waterw <<rk - .<p\nn<) fn; ~ jea?
| plan' and JJ".(■•■ t’l.ibiic school
building;, totaling J.T I .'. I '>'i.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1912
*•••••••••••••••••••••••••
•THIS IS THE WAY WE •
: SPEND OUR money:
• GAY LIVING COSTS •
• AMERICANS EV- •
• ERY YEAR $8,000,000,000 •
• Into?.. liquors.. 2,000,000,000 •
I • Tobacco 1.200,000,000 •
• Jewelry and plate . . 800.000.000 •
I • Automobiles 500,000.000 •
• ("mtreli work at home 250.000,000 •
• Confectionery 200,000.000 •
• Soft drinks. . I 20.000.000 •
• Tea and coffee .. ~ 100,000.000 •
I • Millinery 90,000.000 •
• Patent medicines. . .. 50.000.000 •
!• ('hewing gum 13,000,000 •
• Foreign missiqn«.. .. 12,000.000 •
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
as it does in their proper business af
fairs.
The diink bill is a trifle of $2,000.-
000.000 more, with $120,000,000 a year
throw ti tn for the passengers on the
water wagon who order soft drinks. A
goodly pa t of the drink bill,'it is
charged, may be found in the item of
$90,000,000 a year that goes for patent
medicines, seeing that the patent med
icine may go without fear into sundry
prohibition communities where the law
prohibits the bare-footed " article front
raising its hydra head
In contrast with these figures the
vost of churches at home is given at
$2. >0.000,0(10 and foreign missions get
$1'2.000.000.
To meet the chief feature of the na
tional waste tlie federation proposes
that children shall be taught the entire
storv of life: that things hitherto re
served for the adult discovery be made
a part of the infant education. This,
say the leaders, is to be a fight on "the
conspfiatv of silence" by which the
youth of the land have been kept in
ignorance.
JORDAN CAREFREE IN
BOSTON DEATH CELL
ON LAST DAY OF LIFE
Boston. Sept. 23.—Chester S. Jor
dan is spending his last day of life in
the death house of the state prison at
Charlestown as calmly as if he had no
care in the world. He will die shortly
i after midnight for the murder of his
1 wife four years ago in their Somerville
1 home.
Jordan has seen his aged parents and
his two sisters for the last time. Most
of his time todav was spent in talking
and reading with G. L McNeil, the
Christian Science leader who is his
spiritual adviser,
SLAYER OF FATHER HELD
IN JAIL WITHOUT BOND
GRIFFIN. GA.. Sept. 23. Nobe
Moo'e, the voting white man who on
August 31 killed his father. Ed Moore,
at the latter's home, has been bound
ovei without bond to await the action
of the grand jury At the commitment
trial Saturdav afternoon Moore claimed
that he killed his fathe to save his
mother, slsti" and himself. He has
been in jail here since the killing. The
ptisoner is 32 years old His father
was 64.
ELKS TO GIVE CUE ANO DANCE.
L.v CHANGE, GA . Sept 23. -Septem
ber 26 is the date sei for the annual bar
becue and dance to be given by the mem
l>ers nf the LaGrange Elks '.ulge, f C.
Ferrell ? home, near Ferrell's Gardens
wdl be the scene of the barbecue in the
ia'ternoon. while the dame will be n the
I r.lks home in 'he evening Wurm «m ■
iihesua. of V ama. has been se-ured for
'll;?. asien.
(EGYPTIAN FINDS
ATLANTA 'SIOW
Young Student in Pharmacy
Complains of the Lack of
Amusements Sundays.
“This town's 100 slow for me," said
•Henry Araman. a young Frenchman who
was born in Egypt, and whose parents
sent him from Cairo to study pharmacy
In Atlanta. Araman. who is a graduate
of the Southern College of Pharmacy, is
going to take an advanced course In Phil
. adelphia before returning to take over
I his father s drug store in the land .of the
| pyramids.
"I want to come back to America to
live some day." he continued, "but. it will
have to be in some other city than At
lanta I would die if f had to live here.
It isn't so bad except on Sunday and
then when every form of amusement is
shut up tight nearly die of lonesome
ness.
"You people who were born here and
are used to it, or have friends you can
visit, may get alotig. but it's awful hard
on a stranger who has no home but a
little ballroom and who has no diversions
but those that are offered by the cheaper
forms of amusement.
‘‘Why in Cairo there are a thousand
things to do on Sunday, things that my
parents who are good Catholics, do not
think harmful, but that are prohibited by
law here "
The Young Egyptian, for that is what
he calls himself, despite his French par
entage. came to Atlanta to study pharm
acy he said because several other lads
from the Egyptian capital had been over
I here and had given Atlanta splendid rec
ommendation as a place to pursue a
course in pharmacy. He is well educated
and speaks three languages, besides the
Egyptian tongue. He is in love with the
people of the South, but not with their
customs and views in regard to Sundas'
amusement.
EXPERTS TO AID FARMERS
ALONG SOUTHERN RAILWAY
The department of farm improve
ment work recently organized by the
lines of the Southern railway system
will have three field agents in Geor
gia—George Reese, at Atlanta; B. E.
Wolff, at Macon, and T. E. Waldrup, at
Valdosta. The work in Georgia will in
clude the Georgia Southern and Flor
ida railway, the Augusta Southern
I road and the Tallulah Falls line, and
farmers on them as well as along the
various lines of the Southern railway
will have the services of this depart
ment at their disposal without charge.
The work of the field agents will be
under the direct supervision of T. O.
Plunkett, manager of the department,
with headquarters in Atlanta.
DIVORCE IS REFUSED TO
WIFE’S PLATE TARGET
NEW YORK. Sept. 23. — Herman
Feur asked for a divorce, saying hi.)
wife shied plates at him when he tried
to kiss her good-bye. Justice Maren
refused the saying it would en
courage other wives to imitate.
| DEATHS AND FUNERALS
Howard John Salt.
The funeral of Howard John Salt, the
six-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. H. T.
Salt, who died yesterday, was held to
day at the family residence. Lakewood
Heights. The interment was at West
view
Mrs. Marion Snyder.
The body of Mrs. Marion Snyder, aged
69. who died Saturdaj at a local sani
tarium, will be taken to Springfield,
Tenn., after funeral services this after
noon at Pattersons chapel. She leaves
two daughters. Mrs. Edward Hall and
Mrs. Victor Kirk, of Springfield.
Mrs. L. Chambers.
The body of Mrs. L. Chambers, aged 40.
who died yesterday at her home. 297
Cooper street, was taken todav to Dal
ton for burial. Funeral services were
held yesterday afternoon at her resi
dence.
Martha Fincher.
The funeral of Mrs. Martha Fincher,
aged 36, of Forsyth county, who died at
a local sanitarium, was held todav at
Poole's chapel. The burial was at Sardis.
She is survived by her husband. W W.
Fincher.
Mrs. Rebecca N. Swords.
The funeral of Mrs. Rebecca N. Swords
aged S 3, who died last night, will be held
at 4 o'clock this afternoon from her res
idence. 291 East Pine street. The body
will be taken tomorrow morning to Cov
ington for burial. She leaves ten chil
dren.
W. A C-"
The funeral of XV. A. Curry, who died
Saturday ai his home in Fairburn, was
belli there this afternoon. He was buried
in the local cemetery.
$2.50 TO CHATTANOOGA
AND RETURN.
The W. & A. R. R: will
sell round-trip tickets At
lanta to Chattanooga and
return for train leaving At
lanta at 8:35 a. m., Thurs
day, September 26, 1912,
good returning not later
than train arriving Atlanta
7:35 p. m., Sunday, Septem
ber 29, 1912.
C. E. HARMON,
. General Passenger Agent.
JELLICO LUMP
$4.50
i PIEDMONT GOAL GO.
Both Phones M. 3648
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
A great deal of interest is feit among
Georgians in the outcome of the sena
torial race in Tennessee.
Malc o 1 ni R.
Patterson, w h o
'Kill be the Dem
ocratic nominee,
so far as regular
ity goes, will have
i a hard row to
j travel, in order to
reach tne goal of
his ambition.
Patterson's great
object in political
life has been —for
years—the United
States senate.
In 1906 lie w as a
representative in
congress, and
agreed to leave
that more or less
| congenial wo r k
L ,-ja
JAMta B FTPVIVT
’ merely that he
! might use the governorship of Tennes
see as a stepping stone to the senate.
He never eared for the governorship.
He is a man of fine executive ability, to
be sure, but his tastes run much more
t>/legislative endeavor.
He is a man of great ability. In
point of constructive statesmanship, he
far outranks either of his two most dis
tinguished antagonists. "Bob” Taylor
and the lovable, eloquent, hot-headed
and unfortunate Carmack;
The tragedy of Patterson's career, of
course, was the death of Carmack,
f Carmack's ghost will not down now—it
is the one thing that stands between
Patterson and victory.
A Georgia congressman, who kn6ws
Patterson well, discussing the situa
tion in Tennessee, said today:
"Patterson would make Tennessee a
great senator —tai' greater than any she
has’had in years. He is full senatorial
size—he is intensely Southern in his
view of things, although he is toler
ant. He is loyal to his friends to the
point of unreason, perhaps—and still,
loyalty to one's friends is a character
istic we all admire.
"My opinion is. nevertheless, that he
will not be elected. He will go into the
tight the accredited Democratic nomi-
GIBSON CASE if
GO TO THE HAGUE
' Austrian Consul Will Carry the
Fight on Lawyer Accused as
Slayer to the Limit.
NEW YORK. Sept. 23. —The interna
tional phase of the case of Attorney
Burton W. Gibson, accused of murder
ing Countess Rosa Menschik Szabo, was
made more prominent today when Dr.
Fritz Fischerauer. the Austro-Hunga
rian vice consul general at New York,
whose activities led to the charge of
murder against Gibson, said "if it be
comes necessary we shall carry the
fight to oust Gibson as execn#>r of the
will of Countess Szabo to the United
States supreme court, and if need be,
to The Hague tribunal.
Gibson's attorneys are confident that
he will retain his position.
A woman believed to be working in
the interests of Gibson is being sought
today by the officials who caused the
lawyers arrest.
Since this mystery began each day
reveals some new death or disappear
ance in the life of the lawyer, and the
Austrian consul has time and again
run across the traces of a mysterious
woman in the case. But try as he
would, his detectives could never suc
ceed tn finding her until Mrs. Albert
Stern, of 227 East Thirty-fifth street,
came forward and told about the mys
terious visit of a woman at her apart
ment who sought information of every
description concerning Gibson and
Countess Szabo.
The Men Who Succeed
as heads of large enterprises are met.
of great energy. Success, today, de
mands health. To ail is to fait. It's
utter folly for a man to endure a weak,
run-down, half-alive condition when
Electric Bitters will put him right on
■ his feet in short order. "Four bottles
did me more real good than any other
medicine I ever took,” writes Chas. 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." Try them.
Only 50 cents at all druggists. *♦*
(Advertisement.)
Mr. M . S. Gunsalus. a farmer living
near Fleming, Pa., says he has used
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy in his family for four
teen years, arid that lie has found it to
be an excellent remedy, and takes
pleasure in recommending it. For sale
by all dealers •••
(Advertisement.)
FINEST DENTAL WORK
AT LOWEST PRICES
There is no finer dental work done
anywhere than by tile Atlanta Dental
Parlors. \et prices here are so low as
to astonish those who have been pav
ing the usual dentist's charges.
Iliis is due parti) to an immense
Volume of practice that makes possi
ble a ven small profit on eat h indi
vidual case, partly to the >■-ry tine,
modern equipment and paj tly to the
fact that this establishment wishes to
make lasting friends of its patients.
Thousands of pleased patients are
walking, talking advertisements for the
| Atlanta Dental Parlors. They would
I not sdnd their friends here if they had
1 been overcharged or had been given
inferior service.
Th* ent am •- to fibs handsomest den
’al rstablisnment in the South is at
19Peachtree street.
(Adi ertisement. 1
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
nee, but that does not mean that he will
be elected necessarily. The Republi
cans and the anti-Patterson Demo
crats will combine against him, and
that likely will overwhelm him.
“He realizes the situation, and some
of his friends —his genuine friends
think he made a great mistake in get
ting into the present fight. They ad
vised him against it. But Patterson's
heart was set upon making the race,
and lie will see it through to its finish.
"He lias a fighting chance to win—
that's all.”
Dear Sidelights;
1 read Si Slocum's card in The
Georgian and enjoyed it very much.
But. on the level, what —or where
—is Armageddon? Yours etc..
READER.
Armageddon was a great battlefield
of the kings of the ancient .world. The
height of Megiddo, in the great field of
Esdrealon, was Itrf principal vantage
ground.
Upon the field of Armageddon met
Assyrian, and Egyptian, atui Hittite,
and other nations to battle to the death.
There North Israel .and South Israel
met in deadly and fratricidal strife.
Armageddon stood pre-eminently the
bloodiest and gloomiest field of battle
of the ancient holy wars.
At Armageddon eventually—and it is
in this aspect that Mr. Roosevelt spoke
of it —are to gather the hosts of the
world against the hosts of tne true
God.
There are. to be three armies com
bined against the Lord at the final bat
tle of Armageddon—the hosts of evil
commerce, evil government and evil re
ligion.
With these three ranged on one side.
God. backed by the honorable, the just,
the good and the pure of earth is to
fight His ultimate-battle for the puri
fication of the world.
When Mr. Roosevelt sard that he
stood "at Armageddon and battled for
the Dord." lie meant that on his side
was ranged the pure in heart, and
against him were pitted all the forces
of evil in the nation.
Rather bombastic—everi sacrilegious
—perhaps? Not necessarily trie latter,
of course, but —well, it was a thorough
ly Rooseveltian utterance, anyway!
PDLiCEMMIWr
S LEW ■ f REED
Young Cabinetmaker Is Shot
to Death When He Ignores
Command to Halt.
Policeman E. H. Parham, who shot
and killed John B. Wright, a young
cabinetmaker, early yesterday morn
ing when he attempted to escape from
the rear yard of a house at 5 Johnson
street, was exonerated today by a cor
oner’s jury.
Parham and Officer A. J. Bender were
summoned by Henry Sanders, a negro,
who charged that Wright was trying to
steal his cow. As tlie policemen ar
rived on the scene Wright fled, and
ignored the policemen's command to
halt.
Parham tired three shots, the first
two in the air to frighten the fleeing
youth, and the third at the young man's
legs. The bullet, however, entered the
back directly bewath the tight shoul
der blade and penetrated the breast
Wright died two hours later in Grady
hospital. The body was removed to
Poole's undertaking establishment.
Wright was about 24 years old.
° f tl,e common ailments
that ha d working people are afflicted
witii is lame back. Apply Chamber
lain s Liniifient twice a day and mas
.'•age the parts thoroughly at each ap
plication, and you will get quick relief.
For sale by all dealers. •*»
(Advertisement.)
$2.50 TO CHATTANOOGA
• AND RETURN.
The W. & A. R. R. will
sell round-trip tickets At-i
lanta to Chattanooga and
return for train leaving At
lanta at 8:35 a. m., Thurs
day, September 26, 1912,
good returning not later
than train arriving Atlanta
7:35 p. m,, Sunday, Septem
ber 29, 1912.
C. E. HARMON,
General Passenger Agent.
I k i ■Opium. Whiskey sort Drug Heblta treated
1 Homeor at Sanitarium. Book on aobjert
I Wai DR B M - WOOLLEY, 24-N, Victor
■MBWi sanltanum, Atlanta, Georgia.
s' REAL
/ JELLiICO COAL \
I THE PROCTER COAL \
I COMPANY
\ Both Phones 5672 /
\ 359 DECATUR /
STREET //
ATLANTA SINGER
SCORES TRIOMffI
Mrs. Carthew-Yorstoun, Hearu
In Recital at the Auditorium,
Praised by Music Lovers.'
Mrs.' Carthew-Yorstoun, the
woman who won fame on th. 1
stage of Germany, scored a i
her first appearance before ar, \
audience at the Auditorium ? 4
Mis. Yorstoun. or MadamF
Boone as she is known to the on'e-w'
world, would have, proved li . .
tion as a singer of’ talent and t. / ’
ment had she sung -nothing s ’
afternoon but Isolde's "Liebest ~
Tristan and Isolde.
After preparing the wav so th ,
llant number by the rendition ’ f ■ ’
prelude to the opera. Dr. Starin'-
companied the soloist on th,'
giving remarkable color and b, ,ii ian 7 t
to the wonderful song of love an.] d, ‘ .
The soloist included in her prog v'"
a selection from Romen a „.; Iu
and an aria from Tannhauser h- •
encores were Tosti's "Good-bye
Lovely Night in June” and a Hi.,-nr.n
little French song.
Dr. Starnes gave his program ad„.
tinet Wagnerian tone, aith, ng,, hfl
played the prelude to Philemon ln
Baucis, Gounod, and a dance £ro ;n ' la
Gioconda, Ponchielll.
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The GENUINE must bear signatus
ATLANTA THEATER
TONIGHT 8:15
> Tuesday, Wednesday and Wed. M
AL G. F’ELO
GREATER MINSTRELS
< Nights 25c to sl. Matinee
' HAZEL WESTON & Co. 1 esent
More Sinned Against than Usua
A Satire on Rural Meller D r .n' ! T s
'/ Frosini —Elida Morris —3. Par re „ er .
i ters —Lavine Cimardn Trio— l •“
rens—and Ferrell Bros.
; Next OPENIN?. •!V-
IVP IT THIS WEEK
1. I n f V Matt , Tues.. Thurs
< The Romantic Triumph
THE GOOSE GIRL
’Original Cast a”d prrd irt
SALE NOW OPEN