Newspaper Page Text
2
BETTING FAVORS
CHAMBERS AND
WOODWAHD
Heavy Odds Laid Against the
Other Candidates—lo.ooo
Ballots Expected.
Bott ini; was even today on cither Al
dine Chambers or .lames <; Woodward
to lead the mayoralty primary tomor
row. Odds were offered against Steve
R Johnston and Dr. George Brown.
A number of bets have been placed
at odds of one to two that Woodward
would tret the nomination on the first
primary. The odds are greater against
Chambers and very heavy against
Johnston and Brown on this proposi
tion.
While the betting slightly favored
Woodward today, chances <>n him ate
not considered so good as they were a
Week ago
It is generally considered by all the
wise political prognosticators that
♦ here will be a second primary between
Chambers and Woodward.
All Candidates Expect Victory.
All four of the candidates, however,
are very optimistic
Os a registration of more than 13.000.
indications are that a Vote of about
10,000 will be cast tomorrow. There
seems little doubt that It will take
fully 5,000 votes to nominate a man for
mayor.
A full list of the candidates fol
lows:
For Mayor—Dr. George Brown, Al
dine Chambers. Steve R. Johnston and
James G. Woodward.
Eor Chief of Const rm lion —R. M.
Clayton and Charles S. Robert
For City Clerk—Walter ('. Taylor.
For Comptroller—J. H. Goldsmith.
For Tax Collector—E. E. Williams.
For City Attorney—James L. Mayson.
For Building Inspector-Ed R. Hayes.
For City Marshal - James M. Fuller.
For City Treasurer—Thomas J. Pee
ples.
For City Warden Thomas Evans and
S. B LaSalle.
For city Electrician- R. C. Turner
and Fred Miles.
Councilmanic Candidates.
For council:
First Ward- For aiderman. J. H
Harwell: for council. Samuel Wardlaw.
Second Ward For council, Thomas
Lynch.
Third Ward For council, Carl N.
Guess, A S. Hadhn and Samuel Shep
ard.
Fourth Waul For council, Claude I.
Ashley.
Fifth Ward For aldeintut. .1. W
Maddox lot < ounvil. .1. I>. Sisson and J.
W PoWe
Sixth W ard For council, George H.
Boj nton.
Seventh Warn For i ouncil. .1 11. An
drew s and A. 11 < ‘ol. ord.
Eighth Ward For council. W. G.
Humphrey and Joseph Nutting.
Ninth W ard For council .1. I’. W all
and W. It. White.
Tenth Ward For alderman. I. N.
Ragsdale; for council, A. W. Calloway,
J. T. Kimbrough and D. J Lie
Where Polls Will Be Located.
The polling places w ill be:
First Ward 34 Madison awnur-
Second Ward -90 South Pryor street.
Third W;trd—s Fraser street
Fourth Ward 3X4 Edgewood avenue
Fifth Ward—744 Marietta street
Sixth Ward—(A) Peaehtie. and El
lis streets; (Bi 5 Tabernacle plan-.
Seventh Ward —(At 11 Gordon street;
(B) Lucile and Gordon streets.
Eighth Ward (A) Tenth ami Peach
tree streets. (Bl 199 Hemphill avenue.
Ninth Ward (A) Edgewood avenue
and Krogg street. <H> Flatshoals ave
nue and Walnut street.
Teuth Ward —(A > Tucker A- Me.Vtur
ra> s store, iB) stew ait avenue and
Pierce street.
Capitol View To Vote.
A voting place also will be provided
in Capitol \ lew* the newly annexed
section. It was impossible to consoli
date the registration list of this sec
tlon with the regular city registration
list in time for the primary
Th- general state election also 1-
held tomorrow Besides the election of
all state and county officials who were
nominated in the recent primaries, sev
eral constitutional amendments are to
be submitted to the people.
The most Important of, them is the
abolishment of justice courts in a ||
Georgia cities of more than 20,000, with,
the exception of Savannah, and the es.
tabllshment of eit) courts to do the
functions of the Justice , ourts
QUITMAN NEWSPAPER MEN
BUY HERALD AT WAYCROSS
QUITMAN. GA. Oct 1 -John T.
Burs and Norwood B. Rhoades, own
ets .'.nd publishers of The Qultmar
Scmi- W eek 1) Advertiser. have pur
chas d Tin Waycross Daily ul d Week,
ly Herald, and the. first «u< under
the new ownership.appears toils.). Th,
Herald will be under the edltotrial and
business managemi nt < f Mr. Rhoades,
whip Mr. Durst will conduct Th,- Ad
vertiser. It Is announced that there I
will be many improvements in Th, Ad.
vertlser. new equipment having recent
ly her n ordered, and it is also |nt< nd, d
to make Th,- IL raid a better paper.
SUPT. BRITTAIN TO SPEAK.
LEXINGTON, GA.. Oct I—on Fri
day, October IS the pupils and teach
ers of nine schools of Oglethorpe coun
ty will be addressed here b) State '
SeHool Superintendent M. L. Brittain.
The address will be given at a school
rally, the second of a series of edu
cational meetings recently inaugurated
In the count) b\ School commissioner
M. S. Weaver.
1 AT 9, HAS CIRCLED GLOBE |!
2 TIMES, CROSSED SEA 24
* f • / \ \
\. \
mmhm vOHIHMBWrHfek
I ' -
M' Ls
UWK ■ d HL\
; UK maSj 7-
■f®* W.- tsSB /
tt s? •’'’rap? we 1/
Miss lsl;i Tudor, who is the most trnveh tl youngster on the face
ol the glob, . She has crossed the ocean 24 times and has been
around the world twice. Isla. the daughter of the I‘hiropeau mana
; ger tor Bostock, the animal dealer and exhibitor, is just !) years old.
SEARCHINGSIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
With tomorrow’- el< ction passes for- I
ever in its legal aspect the present
j John M. Slaton-John N. Holder legis-
k
MM
HR. iwi
JKMT-S ft Brys.’-tN
laturi
To.lay Slaton is
pus.. : of tie
si n.iti . d" jure and
de faeto tomoi
row he will bi
guvei aor-elei t.
It Gov e i no:
Bl ow n desire d,
after today, to mil
the legislature in
exttaordinnr) ses
sion. he wo.ild cal
the 1 e g I s I a t ore
elected tomorrow,
and it would be
neiessary. before
p r o i eeil 1 ng li
business, that i'
organize itsi It.
The in> o m i n g
bgisl.itui <• will be noticeable lot- the
new faces .mil the new names it will
bl ini; to the public's attention and
particularly will it be noticeable for
the old familiar faces that will be miss
ing.
rii.-t ami forimost. Joe Hill II til will
not be there- ami a legislature without
Joe Hill Hall will be prettj much Ilk
champagne without -pintle. He Is the
dean of the house that dies today. \d
mittedl' he has been a tine Influence
on the floor and in the committee rooms
He ht's been'a brake mt mueh unde
sirable legislation, and a safety vatv<
that has more than one proved bis
right t<> be listed an extremely fortu
nate circumstance incident to house
proceedings.
Joe Hill Hall hud a tr\ at some
thing higher, and didn't get it. but.
after all. it is doubtful whethei there
could be anv honor more enviable than
to be or to have been the best beloved
man in an entire legislature
John Holder, the sneaker, for ten
years a seemingly neces iri attach
ment to each and ever) legislature,
passes into the ranks of pi .\ ai< citizens
today. The house will seem might)
queer without Holder on the job some
where either as speaker or leadei on
the floor. ,
Then. too. Hoonet Alexandei and
"Old Man” Wilson and Byron Bowe:
and Mack Johnson and Tippins of Ap
pling ami Rufe Rake: and "Bill” Jmte
these will not be memoirs of the new
house.
Joint M. Slaton has been promoted to
th' governorship, and probably never
again will be a member of tin general
assembly. ,
Wheth r hr will continue his annua!
barbecue is probb uiatica the incmn-
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY’. OCTOBER 1, 1912
I itix legislature doubtless is hoping he
will.
lie has been a member of the leg
islature continuously since 1896.
Amid all the’melancholy of the not
to-come - back, however, it is in a
m.tisuie consoling to know that John
T. Hi ifi ulllet ami t'hatlh Northen will
be in their old jobs again.
Legislatures may come ami legisla
tures may go, but these two go on for
ever!
Says Tile Athens Herald:
Joe Brown announces that he
sure will make the race for the
( lilted States senate against Hoke
Smit h.
Tius is highly important if true. So
fur. however, no newspap -: man in At
lanta h. s bel li able to hear the gov
ernor ‘'announce” an) such thing as
I'he Heial.i credits to him. although,
of course it frequently hanpens that
one has to go away from home to get
the real news.
A lot of diplomatic quizzing of the
exeeiitivi lias been indulged in by en
terprising minions of the press around
and about the eapitol, but when the
spit It moves him the governor can re
solve himself into the finest side-step
per ever!
Mil) be he Is going to be a candidate
against Senator Smith, and maybe he
Isn t. 1 hat s all the Atlanta reporter
know.
I'he Savannah News approaches the
subject from another angle, and most I
likely from the right angle, at that,
when it says:
If Governoi Brown has no idea of
being a candidate for the United
States senate, the frequent state- |
ment of his political opponents that
he is going to get into the race
may final) result in his doing so.
1 "lorn I Roosevelt's "The Winning of
the West” made him lots of friends
out beyond the Mississippi | and it Is |
lai eels .i narrative of personal expe
riences. at that.
Maybe he will write "Bumping the
Bumps Through Dixie." by and by. and
that ma\ be another bell ringer.
Any wax. as lie himself says, he is
"having a fair to middling warm time
as h goes along and while he knows
he is largely in "the enemy's eoun
tr\." still, in the main, he seems to
lealiz.e that he is mighty welcome, even
if he does accumulate a few electoral
Votes as he Kill S.
His is a most picturesque and engag
ing personality, whatever else one may
six ot think of him. and everybody
hopes hi; tout of the South about con
cluded, will be by no means his last.
ROLL MOOSE DUE
FOR GfflLL TOOM
Progressive Party Treasurer
and “Boss” Flinn Called by
Clapp Probe Committee.
WASHINGTON. Oct. 1. —The senate
committee investigating campaign,
funds and expenditures plunged intoian
investigation of the financial receipts
and disbursements of the Bull Mobse
party today. Anticipating important
testimony from E. fl. Hooker, national
treasurer of the Progressive party, and
William Flinn, of Pittsbutg, jColonei
Roosevelt’s Pennsylvania lieutenant, a
throng gathered early in the room of
the committee presided ov, r by Sena
| tor Clapp, himself a prominent Bull
1 Moose adherent.
Treasurer Hooker was the first Wit
' ness called when the committee was
called to order at 10:28 o'clock.
Senator Pomerene. of Ohio, the mili
tant Democrat of the committee, spent
some time in preparing questions to
lire at the third party men today. Sen
ator Jones, of Washington, the other
Progressive tnumber of the committee,
will not reach Washington until Fri
day. on w hich day Colonel Roosevelt is
scheduled to be on the stand.
Already applications are pouring in
for seats in the committee room on
Thursday, when J. Pierpont Mbrgan
will be on the stand. No tickets are
being issued, however, ahd a strict pol
icy of "first come, first served’’ will be
ndherr d to.
Moose Treasurer on Stand.
Senator Clapp first questioned the
witness.
Q. Had you any connection with Mr.
Rooscv -It in h.'.s pt , -eon vent ion in the
present year? : ■
A. I had an informal connection with
the preliminary campaign. *l'here was
Tto treasu er and I acted personally in
that capacity to some extent. '
Q. When did you begin that ar
rangement?
A. 1 was made treasurer of the New
York county Roosevelt committee in
the latter part of February and con
tinued in that capacity for some weeks.
That work finished, 1 took on some of
the other work.
Q Have you records of the receipts
and expenditures in Kings county, New
York, while you were treasurer of the
county committee?
A. I have all amounts in full as my
report was filed with the secretary of
state in Albany.
Record of All Receipts:
Q. Do J understand that those are
records of all receipts and expenditures
during the primary campaign? ‘
A. Yes, in New York. The secretary
of state said this was the most com
plete report ever given.
Q. Prior to the Republican conven
tion at Chicago in June, was there a
state organization in New York?
A. No, there was a strong organiza
tion in the city, however.
y. Was there any official who acted
for the state.’?
A. I served for the state as well as
the city.
Mr. Hooker was sure that no other
contributions than those contained in
his detailed report could be found in
illation to the Bull Moose patty.
"Amos Pinchvt," he said,".spent sll,-
OOtl around New York city during the
campaign."
His statement of receipts and ex
penditures showed that the Bull Moose
part) in New York state received $59,-
12G.35, of which $52,606.52 was spent,
leaving a balance of $6,519.83.
S. C. Moosers to
Organize Friday
t’OLI'MBIA. S. C., Oct. 1— The
Hull Moose of South Carolina will meet
in this city next Friday to organize
tlie Progressive party in this state; to
.-■elect an electoral ticket and to decide
whether or not a state ticket will be.
placed before the voters in the general
election in November in opposition to
the Democratic ticket.
B. Sherwood Dunn, of Aiken, is act
ing as organizer of the new party and |
he will preside over the meeting Fri
da). He is national committeeman of
the Progressive party from this state
and a friend of the colonel. He went
to New York recently and conferred
with Roosevelt. Chairman Joseph M.
Dixon and other leaders.
The personnel of the part) in this
state. It is said, will be entirely white
men. The Jerome hotel in this city
w ill be the headquarters during the or
ganization period.
Donate Cotton
To Aid Wilson
M ACON, MISS.. Oct. t-.~ Emmet Ca
vett. a meber of the legislature of Mis- '
sissippi. has started a cotton campaign 1
fund in this state for the Wilson and
Marshall eamiMiign.
Mr Cavett have a bale of cotton
weighing 499 pounds and says that he
1 will have most of the big cotton growers |
in Mississippi donate a bale of cotton,
to be sold in behalf of the national
Democratic fund
PRIVATE PHYSICIAN”
TO POPE PIUS IS DEAD
Rit.ME. Get. 1 —Dr Guiseppe Petaici. !
private physician to Pope Pius, died
toda). He was appointed to his post to I
succeed the late Dr Lapponi on De
cember 19.
Dr. Petai 11 was a physician of the
t Imposing
presence and a noted dianostieian.
Dr. Petaeci’s consulting colleague at
the Vatican was D;-. Ettoti Ma.chiafa
va who will probably be appointed as
first ph) sielan to the pope.
" ' t
HEARST ASKS T, R, TO I
MAKE PUBLIC ALL HIS
OILCORRESPONDENCE
(From The New York Sun.)
PARIS. Oct. I.—ln reply to a
question by The Sun's correspi nd
ent, William R. Hearst dictated the
following statement;
The Standard Oil investigation,
about to begin before the senate of
the United States, should be of
great value if thorough and impar
tial and made with an earnest and
honest desire to secure the fullest
facts, and not merely in the hope of
protecting some individuals and
discrediting others.
The personnel of the committee
would seem td be sufficier-i guaran
tee of, a'proper and eogiplete in
vestigation which . )yilj reveal the
evil methods of those privileged
interests which seek'to exercise un
due influence upon certain of our
public men in America.
As for Mr. RAosevelt. no one
would place him in the same’cate
gory with the Penroses or Sib
leys and the Archbolds. Mr. Roose
velt is an honorable man and it is
impossible to Imagine him involved
in tiny squalid scandal.
The only question in regard to
Mr. Roosevelt Is to what extent he
invited and secured the support of
those powerful criminal corpora
tions which he has always publicly
pretended to oppose. In discu-s
--ing this question and in the Stand
ard Oil letters, Mr. Roosevelt should
adhere a little more closelv to the
point involved.
Evades the Question,
Mr. Roosevelt says in the pa
pers that if Mr. Sibley or any other
congressman desired to bring any
frietlds to meet him he was always
w illiitg to meet them. That is an
evasion of the question. The facts
as related are that Mr. Roosevelt
urged Mr. Sibley to bring Mr.
Archbold to the white, house to
luncheon, and Mr. Archbold sent a
telegram to Mr. Sibley, declining to
come. It is not a question of Air.
Archbold’s having desired to see
Mr. . Roosevelt, but of Mr. Roose
velUs having desired to see Mr.
Archbold.
Mit Roosevelt then goes on to
say in the papets that he met Mr.
Morgan and he met Mr. Harriman
and he met Mr. Rockefeller, and
that sometimes he discussed the
baseball situation and sometimes
the labor conditions and at one
time the white slave traffic. All
this again has nothing to do with
the point.
The question discussed by Mr.
Roosevelt as related by Mr. Sibley
in his confidential letter was the
attitude to the Standard Oil t.'om
pat|yj It was not the attitude of
, Standard Oil Company on’the
ftasebgfi situation, nor .vet the at
titude of the Standard Oil (’ompauv
on the labor situation, nor yet the
attitude of the Standard Oil Com
pany on the white slave traffic, but
the attitude of the Standard oil
Company on the political situation
as it affected Mr. Roosevelt.
Truth Will Come Out.
That this was exactly the subject
of discussion will bi- brought out
later in greater detail, and, in the
meantime, if the subject is to be
discussed at all by Mr. Roosevelt, it
should be discussed with relation
to the points at issue and with
some consideration for the intelli
gence and information of the read
ing public.
Mr. Roosevelt says that if 1 will
tell him exactly what letters I have
he hiniself will make them public.
If Mr. Roosevelt wishes to make
any letters public, why does he
limit the publication to the letters
that 1 possess? Why not give the
public the benefit of all the letters
he possesses on this interesting
subject?
It is ridiculous tn say that he
can’t find this or that letter. He
can find quickly enough the let
ters he desired t ) make public, and
had no difficult) in discovering the
letters he had carefully written to
‘‘BEALLV OOFS" Pill STOMACHS IN ’
ORDER AT DNCE-PfiPE’S OIAPEPSIN
Time it! In just five minutes there will be no Indiges
tion, Sourness, Heartburn. Gas or Dyspepsia.
Do some foods you eat hit back —-
taste good, but work badly; ferment
into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,
sour, gassy stomach'.’ Now. Mr. or Mrs.
Dvspeptlc, jot this down: Pape’s Dia
pepsin digests everything, leaving noth
ing to sour and upset you. No differ
ence how badly your stomach is die >r
dered. you get happy relief in five min
utes. but what pleases you most is that
it strengthens and r -gulates your stom
ach so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear.
Most remedies give you relief sotn- -
times —they are slow, but not sure. Dia-
I [baking powder
JGMYW
is not a cheaply concocted bread preparation that simply
raises the dough;- it is a scientifically compounded Bak
ing Powder of recognized food value as well as the
greatest leavening quality.
Sold by all good Grocers. Insist 0:1 having it.
Mr. Bliss with regard to the re
jection of Standard Oil contribu
tions.
I note, furthermore, in the news
papers that Senator Penrose a few
days ago expressed the timid hope
that if I had any further letters
reflecting upon him I would hasten
to publish them. I imagine that
Senator Penrose really hopes that I
won’t, but he knows that I will.
At any rate, Senator Penrose’s
invitation expresses a singularly
insatiable appetite for exposure. He
has already been disclosed as con
nected with the questionable finan
cial transaction involving his public
life of the Standard Oil Company,
revealing to Mr. Archbold secrets
<if legislation which affected Stand
ard <til interests.
Penrose Exposed.
He has already been exposed as
the trusted agent of the Standard
Oil Company in the United States
senate, a lit successor to the dis
creditable Quay. He has been ex
posed as the venal boss of a cor
rupt political machine employed
and financed by the Standard Oil
and allied institutions.
He and Quay and Foraker have
been show n tjo be the intimate and
reliable public friends to whom/Mr.
Archhold appealed for assistance
in securing the appointment of
complaisant judge*. He has been
shown, while a senator and while
a leader in Pennsylvania politics,
to have been the recipient of a
$25,000 campaign contribution from
a criminal corporation seeking po
litical favo¥s and judicial immuni
ty.
Finally, he has been exposed as a
falsifier in an unworttiy attempt
to unload the consequences of his
own iniquity upon the self-con
fessedly pure and innocent Mr.
Roosevelt.
It seems to me that this ought to
be enough exposure to satisfy Sen- '
ator Penrose, and I can not see how
the senator can hope to receive any
further exposure and retain his lib
erty. He had better be less urgent
in his invitations. Furthermore,
Senator Penrose has no right so
wholly to monopolize the unfavor
able attention of the country.
There are other inculpated gentle
men clamoring for attention, and
they must get it both from the
senatorial investigating committee
and from me.
WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST.
READ THIS.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney and
Madder troubles, removing gravel, cure*
diabetes, weak and lame backs, rheuma
tism, and all Irregularities of the kidneys
and bladder In both men and women.
Regulates oladder troubles In children.
If not sold by your druggist, will be Bant
by mail on receipt of SI.OO. One small
bottle is two months’ treatment and sel
dom fails to perfect a cure. Send for tea
timonials from this and other states. Dr.
E W Hull, 2928 Ollvo-st.. St. Louie. Ma
sold by druggists. (Advt.)
A Fighting
Cock
‘‘ l feel like a fighting cock ”
is the expression of the man
with an active liver —he
tackles his work with vim—
he is successful—nine times
out of ten you will find he
takes
Tutt’s Pills
which have been used by a
million people with satisfac
tory result. At your drug
gist’s—sugar coated or plain.
pepsin is quick, positive and puts your
stomach in a healthy condition so the
misery won't come back.
You feel different as soon as Diapep
sin comes in contact with the stomach
distress just vanishes—your stomach
gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no
eructations of undigested food, vour
head clears and you feel fine.
Put an end to stomach trouble by
-retting a large tifty-eent case of Pape’s
Diapepsin from any drug store. You
realize in five minutes how needless it
is to suff- r from indigestion, dyspepsia
or any stomach disorder. (Advt.)
FORCES UNO
Foram
Battle Royal in Prospect When
New York Democratic Con
vention Assembles Today.
SYRACUSE, N. Y., Oct. I.—When
the delegates began filing into t.,,
arena convention hall shortly before
the Democratic convention went ini',
session today the political barometer
indicated that one of the bitterest po
litical fights in the history of the Em
pire state would be waged if Charles
Francis Murphy, Tammany leader, at
tempted. by virtue of the majority of
delegates which he conti ols, to whip
the convention into accepting as nomi
ness whomever he might choose.
As the result of all night sessions the
many anti-Tammany and progressive
factions in the state had joined hanus
under the leadership of Congressman
William Sulzer for the purpose of knif
ing the Tammany crowd and when they
entered the convention hall they car
ried chips on their shoulders and
chanted their battle cry, “Down with
Murphy, Dix and Tammany.”
Murphy Men Busy.
Murphy held conferences far into the
night with his leaders and after only
a few hours’ sleep had breakfast served
in his room and sent hurry calls to his
lieutenants. Just whom the Tammany
chieftain will back for the governor
ship was the big question of debate
among the leaders and delegates out
side the Tammany fold.
On all sides in the progressive and
anti-Tammany camps was heard “Mur
phy has abandoned Dix,” but just prior
to the convention one of Murphy’s lieu
tenants made this statement: “Murphy
sticks to Dix."
Tammany braves, 1,500 strong, ar
rived last night. About 500 anti-Tam
manyites from New York arrived last
night, while the smaller cities in the
' state augmented the total with about
1,500 more.
Terrible itching
on LIMBS
With Blotches. Could not Rest Day
or Night. Solid, Raised Up Mass.
Scratched Until Bled, Entirely
Cured of Torment by Cuticura
Soap and Ointment,
Glen WlW<m! Va.— “Mve years ago X
was in a terrible state of suffering with
blotches on my limbs, of the most Intense
stinging and itching that
could very well be de
scribed. I could not rest
day or night; the itching
was so severe that 11
waked me oat of steep.
I could never get * full
night's rest. I bad to
scratch to allay the tsfr
rible itching and I actually
/ 1
scrubbed the very flesh so severely tta* In
a short time the affected places were so
sore I could scarcely walk with any earn
or comfort. The places were a eoMd rated
up mass. I would scratch the parte until
they would bleed and get sore. I trtsd
home remedies but got no good; the itching
just kept on getting worse. I used seme
salve which simply was no good at aB.
"I happened to see the Outfcnra Soap
and Ointment advertisement and wrote fbs
a free sample. Almost like magic I Com
menced getting relief. I bought a 80c. boa
of Cntlcura Ointment and some Catleura
Soap and I was entirely cured from I
torment that would be hard to describe."
(Signed) W. P. Wood, Mar. 9. 1913.
Cuticura Soap (25c.) and Cuticura Otat»
ment (50c.) are sold throughout the world.
Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p.
book on skin and scalp troubles. Address
post-card “Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston."
WTender-facod men should use Cuticurf
Boap Shaving Stick. 25c. Sample free.
ATLANTA THEATER
TONIGHT 8:15
Wed. Matinee and Night.
Werber & Luescher Present
THE ROSE MAID
Nights, 50c to $2; Matinee, 25c to 31.50
SEATS SELLING FOR
Al BUI A WHERE DO 9
ALMA YOU LIVE >
WITH GRACE DREW.
Thurs Frl.. Sat. Mat and Night
Nights. 25c to $1.50; Mat., 25c to SI.OO
r ni\n Matinee Today 2:30
UtV*r>U TONIGHT AT 8:30
Jos. Hart Presents Play
“An Opening Night”
25 People In Cast—-3 Complete Scenes
77 PLAY ‘‘ZIM ZAM” ??
Maurice Freeman & Co., Sadie Jansel,
Phil Staats, Golden & Hughes,
ALVIN &. KENNEY.
forsyth“~ '''THEATER e,t l
Mon.-Tues.-Wed. All Next Week.
MAT r LITTLE EMMA
NAT C ' BUNTING
GOODWIN In the 4-Act Play,
Motion Pictures, MORALS of
OLIVER TWIST MARCUS
I vnm THIS WEEK
] Y Kill Matinees. Tugs.. Thurs. I
L I IHU and Saturday
THE LITTLE
TENDERFOOT
A Heart-Gripping Story of the West
A Magnificent Scenic Production
A Splendid Cast of Players.