Newspaper Page Text
2
STRIKE DR OTHER
LIRES UNLIKELY,
SMS UNION
No Attempt Made to Run Geor
gia Trains. Despite U. S. In
junction Protection.
Continued F'om Page One
nf the business <>f t' • t<*- lina ein
plnyees and the\ should n«‘t gun*
out.
Strike at Terminal
Not Sympathetic.
"Mi Wicker sham's pub >hwl state
ment that the terminal strike »»* a
sympathetic one is not in a or-.ian. e
with the facts, said Mi- S.n.-< today
•w e do not RO oil sympath.-tir strikes
"The trainmen and conductors have
not engaged in a stiike of any magni
tude in seven years, except that on
the Grand Tiunk two .rears ago We
do not want strikes when we can avoid
t hem."
Tile question as to how far the gov
ernment injunction against interfei-
< nee with mails will protect passenger
: sains is a knottv one. tl is anticipated
; nat the road w ill take advantage of
the injunction to attempt to operate!
trains bearing passengers. baggage and'
express, as well as malls It is even i
possible that a freight train might be
-•nt out with one bag of mail in tin
caboose
The injunction also covers interfei
i nee with Interstate fieight. which in-
< hide l ' practically everything I’ lias
Ireen ruled by the courts that one
package of freight' destined for a point
beyond the boundaries of the state con
stitutes an interstate movement for tire
whole train of cars bearing that pack
age. The unions have protested bit
terly against such a construction of the
law
Sheriff cW Mangum, of h'u.ton
county, received a telegram today trout
Superintendent Brand. <>f the Georgia
road, notifying him that the writ of
injunction had been issued tl. did not
seer, impressed.
Sheriff Awaits
Official Notice.
"Superintendent Brand has no juris
diction over me. said the sheriff Such
a notification amounts to nothing Be
fore I shall take cognizance of it I must
be notified bv a government official
and In an official way
"Rm there wont be any disorder in
Fulton count' as long as I'm sheriff.
Nobody expects to have any trouble."
Sheriff Mangum is a veteran railroad
tnau and a member of the trainmen's
organization He has steadily coun
selled the union men against any act
• ho lt would injure per-on o; property,
officials of the joint terminals .staled
lira the men employed to take the
places of the terminal workers were not
"Strikebreakers." but experienced rail
road men who were hired p< rmanently
They offered to take back such strik
ing enip!o.ee as they could use with
out discharging se new men.
Vice Presidon' Sines denied that ex
perienced railroaders were at work in
the terminals.
There were a few -egular railroad
men brougnt here when the strike
started." he said. 'Tin y all quit when
they found w hat they were expe,< ten
to do. Those fellow - at work in the
terminals ate raw hands Most of them
don't even know ihe signals "
Terminal Contention
Absurd, Say Leaders
M'GCS I A GA < h-. ■< Vic.. Pres
idents T A Gregg and .lame- Murdock
»f the conductors and Trainmen, re
spectively. today issued a brief state
ment in regard to the threatened gen
eral strike op all of the railroads en
tering At an a. Because of the attitude
of the Atlanta joint terminal board rel
ative to the reinstatement of to men
of the joint terminals who went on
strike with the Georgia railtoad con
ductors and trainmen, a meeting of t tq
ceneial chairmen of the Order of Kail
way Conduct rs and Brothelhood of
Railway Trainmtn of these roads has
bro n catted to meet In Atlanta todav
The statement of the labor leaders fol
low s
"These representatives of the two or
ganizations on each of the line-’ . ntei
ing Atlanta have been called together
to tor.sider the situation that has de
veloped in the Atlanta Joint Terminal,
as a result of the absurd portion taken
be she terminal offb i.i s relative 1.1 the
strike of the Georgia railroad yardmen
at Atlanta, mil. also m consider the
fact that other aids er - lending as
sistance to the Georgia road t break
the strike
The announcement that a general
>ti ke in.gilt b.- decta-ed unie-s th. At
lanta terminal board decide. to rein
state the in ti formerly working m the
lerminatr caused th. Geoigr, laiboad
strike situation to assume mo giave
proportions than had been ’ onsideirit
V|o- Piegil. H . S in,. ..1,, I-’ , , , .
..f tne 11 ' amep. «•. m \ . „•.. th.
meeting in Allan .1 today »- ii. I.- com
posed of lepie*e nla 1 <' e- , f ... ...
ductors null Tiauimen from lb- G<-«r
gia milroaii fetn..,, of G-oipia West
ern and Aiium Soiituvii
A i l.im-. Lou rvilh- and Xa-nv . ■ \
lanta and W< st I mt and At>.<u
inuignam ami A•,
$5.25 to Birmingham and
return, account Alabama
State Fair. On sale to J 2th.
Seaboard.
AMONG THE BLOND-HAIRED ESKIMOS |
Copyright, I!H2, by National News Service. <
'Z u Fpam Missouri 1 ' HO WES OUT . - — -—— y
z- * D,OH? ATK A ' E fT > i ™
L-'- G - — — butcohtelXou call-eo > Sd'__/
, -a _ ' AHO
" / A 0 / jO
;. L I
I —Ju .
( TELL This COMMITTE HOW MUCH . 777 T >
GrAnE To THE P.EPUBUCAH CAMPAIGN I }SO 000
{ Fund in i 904 ./ I ah»their, incratituoe \nas 1—
SOMETHING FEI R.CE /
AIHA7 'AiiU.TriCj _____ —‘S \
DO WHEHTMEI. AtfiWKH < (KES The RICHEST (. / T\'
l EeTTHROUCiH ) 'X ! ! rsk IN fHE j Z,- 1
v —< ' ' Z * 1 ’ s ' |uiA " E - s )
> W— ' JUM
-jx. ' can ToZZzy tZ>i —a
- V I. SOMETHING f Z> __ fl O'
' ST IM.
y''-/rm rnrm e«* f _
ft Gvfrm rn «r f f r i A
e 0 jtf-'i
• “ Richest Eskimo \mont comtki sure < -
Eskimo, before ihe -.Pilule invesitaaiiuy couiniittee. says he gave up 150.0011 whale's
iimlh to Eskimo campaign ftmO in IWI. |>ut never again! He says blond-haired candidates
with ivory tusks ungrateful.
DAY'IM CHURCHES!
‘TUBERCULOSIS
October 27 To Be Observed in
i 1
Atlanta and Other Cities of
United States. ;
interest m the effeitive observation ,
of "Tubercu lusts day." Sunday. October ;
27. lias been stirred by the Anti-Tube: -
culosls and Visiting Nuise association ,
'among the Urge majority of tne
churches and Sunday schot s of At
lanta, and In n arly every pulpit of tile ,
city there will lie either sermons upon
or references to the important work,
while in the Sundae schools short talks
will be given Instructive alike to chi. -
dren ami adults as to conduct in avoid
. Ing and preventing the spcad of the
disease
The Atlanta movement is hut a part
i of the greater campaign which is na
tional In Its scope. On O< tube: 27. ot
. approximately that date. 50.000 sermons
will tie preached all ove the country
f dialing with tuberculosis and the fig" t ;
, so- its eradication, and -is many mtrs
talks will be made to the citild’en In
s< hoo’.s atm Sunday s< !ir.i>i« coveting |
I evei y state In the i’nlon
Tuberculosis day ' was gina ly «e'
for April 2S. but owing to conflict with
"Conservation Sunday" of the Men and
Re cion forward Movement, was post
pon’d tint! • >eto 27. a lime when '
,iw tl mu only achieve the desired end
, in the disseinina' on of information.
I but w' give impetus to the sale of the
. Red <’ p's- sea s though the proceeds;
of which the lug tigc' is waged
Lending -pecia inte est to the day
governors of states will isstti pro. la -
mations approving the work and set
ting the day apait to <-a' attention to
ano impress its ".nportam c
ELBERT SUNDAY SCHOOLS
HOLD COUNTY CONVENTION
Ki .KEKT< K\ GA. •>t •« The K
> - S il. m\ Schoo . olhrnl u'i |
lA,t M hr m Hi K’l” . lull \ r*|ri ‘iH UIV 'r (
I no' i hK uftrniuon .<h 1 night ,
■
.’ ,< •k ..t S .i. ii \ S ; • « “‘t al .on
' | lit It I • Knk. - '. »H** .11. < * I .• Mr' . I
i «'i - 'I K b**i *'*ii Kh < ‘ 1
I S’a '• 'hr I ’• * >l»\ i^’ ‘m ii pKMto and >
|R Mr K |.K’o nf h-
I • 'HJFf h 'I .- a Jl*.- ’hr fl st >• »n A '.fl
I I I ’■ ’ * T- r
I’ • • ’ ' ’ ' * ' ■ • . , ' ...
•■ 5 .** 1 »!» •. - t> I if ■
-fl. . .
hr< . | J
I HE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.WEDNESDAY’. OCTOBER 9. 1912.
Up and Down
Peachtree
South Georgia Reaps
Rich Pecan Harvest.
Colonel James T. Mann, city attorney
of Albany and one if south Georgia’s
most enthusiastic boosters, was in At
lanta yesterday telling tome remark
able stories of pecan culture in south
Grot gia.
He said that the nuts actually looked
like bunches of bananas us they hung
on the trees. The Eastern demand for
them .an not be supplied. h« said, and
it is easy to get JI pi. pound Co th'
entire crop.
He said lie had seen nuts this tall
tha> would count only 30 to tne pound
and that they were alm >si as large as i
man s thumb.
bin ding to the colonel, tile old
Southern p'.an'.a iocs a e b.-mg cut up
into pecan gloves and land values a e
going higher and higne' He -a d that
one man sold his farm tiie other day
for $2'10,000 T'tc fa m of about 700
ac'i. s bad 40.t'<>< pounds of nuts on the
pecan trees.
TO BLAST A MOUNTAIN
SO TRAINS CAN ASCEND
WILLIAMSPORT. PA Oct. 9 To
tack.e the famous Tiadaghton timber
legion at a new angle, the Leetonia
railroad is t > be extended seven mties.
One of- nr features of this work :« that
the connactor. Thomas Casale. is pre
paring a blast tha r o expected to tear
aw a side of the mountain at one
hike Twenty .m n nave been a: work
drilling ho ■: for two weeks and t .. t i
be another we-x before tne explosives
have all been place.; and the charge i«
ready for rite electric spark that will
set the two tone of dynamite loose.
THREE BIG FAIR BUILDINGS
UNDER WAY AT COLUMBUS
<’< »i .(‘.MBI’S GA , <h ; M Gt. itid
3.m biok»*n th«» fl-st of <• <;*•<>. 4. -
\ hbam.i la bdiidinx* ioua>
I'evs <•! 'll*!! begun '•< k IIIHIMh lie-
Ollfl » ut th HOU \ < mt h!.»!
Il- '
Wo’tx Mil Iti • otlH- >t -h <ilr> Ai ||.
*1 d’ l »*|| ‘I. .< fr X ~M V • Ttir sh ■ V. , I ' >»•
HP X rfl.tj- Ur. fih.M-
3 I tU O IIH.ll! fl Lin • - !|jr
Jamte H C 4tp>
* H aijnl 77
.1 lim * •;» 1.1 »• I !-■ in.ii» .» <*n <♦•
nig: 4 ' »Ml O « !OI k •. HW 4
nmmili'l- of ‘ Ma lhjf» IT
•• K- X.< ft. H ‘ .* ff an J ’ A<. H .it
UH I r.»> o»».: < ■< k .
• I*, ’ • t.l . , , . #
■ mi *.» r.o« i. u *i . i » al
CATHOLICISM 111
GERMAN!W
Percentage of Population of
That Faith Increases Daily.
Jews Decreasing.
BERLIN. Oct. 9. -Protestants in
I Germany are somewhat worried over
the fait tiiat the number of Roman
Cati'oii s within the empire is growing
j much faster than that of their own.
j Official statistics just published show
t that Roman Catholics have increased
in Prussia at a greatet rate ti'.un Pro
; testants s net 1871. anil in other parts
, of the empire since ls9o. In 1900 the
> Roman 1 athoiics formed 1.6.06 per cent
i of the entire population, in 1905. the
• |.clientage had risen to 26.46. and 1910,
) to 36.69 Tm- explanation giver, is that.
> in genera . Roman t'atholic families
hav- a 'a ge- natural increase than
Pro:»star:s- and that the F'rotestajits
form a la ger proportion of the pop
ulation of large towns and of the edu-
I cater! and riche; classes where large
families <re infrequent. Besides, the
, Poles w’ > :. Roman Catholics, have
• Invariably large families, and most of
the in migrants to Germany from othe:
countries .ue adherents of the church
of Rome.
Wll n regard to the diminution in
'.to number of -’’rotosrants, it is more
. I anna, ent In Prus' a than in otim- states
,'of t o empir- In fly* years the num-
; be' " f pe”»ons entering themselves as
~w.t. out sn.v religious confession rose
i i from 17.203 to neatly 2'16,00’1 It is be
i i ileved that tais s largely due to the
I exertions of th. So. ia Democratic par
ity v oicii advises •- adherents to se
cede from tiie national church.
Sta-isi.cs jj.'t p,.i ';.'iu .t -ho. that
- • - ■ ■ . stead •• in
l.l.wisn pipiia. im of 'no G. n.-.i: em-
II pir> continu-a
URGES U. S. CONTROL OF
MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE
IXDI x\ A i'i >1 Is < > t, Tj,,. .
,I. i a gov»- 'i me n: s .a . lay «* con 111> of
.alt ~x< ..i. v. • . M. <•!.
T Kt ’.a ' 4 hi< •. • dr« i !!»■
X.« <*iha »*ut»M i’ ion fuDgr-!**
DALTON TO HAVE POWER
NA L i OX, GA <hl K •it < oiiiH
’ .*» 4 < Mil) It • tf<- (II
! * iih ti G-or«»» v. t < 1 fir.,: r..w*t
‘ oni -n* foi ftjrnUhmg ;to the
i’»h .nnt i«» d Hiring plunui
|i •■ «H’t| IV a ’ !• 1 *»' ■ 4 f1( .
1 < «Hlb- ' A ' f t • . i » I | ll’
* ',i pf i/Mtoij h# • Hhtik,
EDEO SDK VICTORY
BRINGS JOY TD
DEI ESTEHS
35.000 Wild-Eyed Fans Are on
Hand to See Second Game of
World's Series.
Continued From Page One.
contesting tribes slept. It was 3 a
m. before they hit the feathers. Both
teams came back on a special train,
which consisted of.a car for each team,
two diners and the national commis
sion’s car. The train pulled out of
Grand • ’entral station in New York at
5:53 p. m. Everything went along "im
mense" until about five miles east of
New Haven Here a freight train, run
ning fifteen miles ahead of us. jumped
the track, tore down a tower, killed the
towerman and ripped all the signa;
wires to pieces.
As a result, the engineer was forced
just barely to drag the train into New
London. East of the village where
Harvard and Yale crew races are held
the wires were O. K.. and then the go
ing was all good anti proper, but in
stead of getting into this city at lip
m., as per schedule, the train arrived
at «:25 a. m. .
Players All But
Frozen Solid
And to make matters all the worse,
the special train had not been equipped
with connecting tubes for heat. The
theimometer was down near the freez
ing mark, at least it felt that way. The
playeis were’ forced to put on iheit
overcoats and gloves, and if the entire
bunch of athletes is not stricken with
pneumonia before the day is over il
will be marvellous.
Joe Wood was the first man off the
train. He was puffing calmly at a
big briar pipe and grinned broadly at
the shout of welcome that went up.
Jake Stahl and Mrs. Stahl flipped
away while the squad of players was
the center of excitement. Jake dodged
all congratulations.
Most of the fans had expected the
Sox to come to the south station, and
s(lii were waiting foi the train there.
Harry Hooper was the only one to come
through. He got the Cheers and the
handshaking all to himself, and had to
answer a hundred greetings before the
crowd let him go.
The 300 "Royal Rooters," headed by
Mayor Fitzgerald and M. J. “Nufcet"
McGreevey, still bail a bit of life left,
j and they paraded up W ishington street
Ito Newspaper Row. where they dis-
■ perse d.
Staid Old Boston
i Goes Clean Daft.
Only those thousands of New York
fens who saw the enthusiasm man
ifested by the shouting, flag-waving
I Boston coolers at the Polo Grounds yes-
I terday’ can appreciate the red hot en
i thusiasm in the Hub today.
I The old town is just flaming with
.■baseball frenzy, the streets are simply
! lined with the crimson colors of the
winning club of yesterday, and the us
| ually staid citizens of the quiet old
| Puritanical burg are bubbling over with
f the spirit of victory and the dazzling
anticipation of a Red Sox runaway race
for the world’s pennant.
The weather man served up another
ideal day’ for baseball. The sun came
out of the East clear and brilliant to
take off the night chill that had caused
suffering to the men and boys who
. stood on an all night vigil outside the
! box office to be the first to buy tickets.
, The greatest baseball crowd in the
history of the city awaited the opening
. of the park gates.
The players were fit and ready for
the second great contest.
Three hundred fans—men and boys,
but no women—waited all night at
‘ Fenway for’ the box offices to open
Jso that they might buy "rush" seats
iat SI and 50 cents each. The crowd
I of men and boy s, shivering and drowsy.
. | thougn w rapped in heavy overcoats
.and blankets, lined the fences.
, Before 9 o'clock, when the box of
fices opened, several thousands were
lined up in front of the ticket offices.
. The fans arrived on every car stop
, ping at the baseball grounds in the
. early morning hours.
Home enthusiasts, from Mayor Fitz
gerald down, ate a unit in claiming the
Red Sox are the coming world's cham
pions.
James Tehan. a sixteen-year-old
, youth from No. 4 Field street. Rox
i bury, secured the [dace in tlie
ticket line at 9 o'clock last night. "I'm
some cold." lie said today , "but I dpn’t
mind so 'ong as I .»te the game."
The crowd was enthusiastic, but or
der!'. Police offlcera did not have any
diftieu.ty in maintaining order Many
local rooters were among the crowd,
who frequent'.' sent up cheers, for
Smoky Joe" Wood and the other he
roes nf the Boston Red Sox.
Smoky Joe" Wood is the hero of the
hour.
Enterprising vendeia of hot dogs
trilby sandwiches and steaming coffee
reaped a small : iia.si All bought
freely and ra' liously Some
snooze.' H tie ! pa. ew. 'aug
-Oligs <>• I mil.-re w Istle.l 1.. Willi,
.away tn. time before the hour of s
i rri red.
k.iiiu of loose in the waiting liirn
•weie ■ o.i t>ll 'Jies alols who hop. 4 to
■ alee tn m ' lheli p area for several
do ar- .it to make a Ittlie profit on
i tiieir ttekeie
SENATOR ROOT HAS GRIP
1 ITI< ’ V -X 5 , lie I* *1 n.l e.J sa i» •
i aho -
»•>«• 1 r< .n « < *Hhii ■* •».
1 .
SEARCHING
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
Woodtow- Wilson enthusiasts in Geor
gia today are enjoying a greater meas-
ock-ribbed. sure
enough optimism
than at any’ time
since the Balti
more convention
named Wilson and
Marshall to carry
the Democratic
standard this year
to glory or the
i grave.
Unquestionably.
Ihe prevailing
opinion among the
Dem o c t at s irt
Georgia is that
the Roosevelt
campaign has
passed its zenith,
and that the Taft
campaign is really
as hopeless as it
heretofore has seemed to be.
From every direction comes cheering
Wilson news. Roosevelt's visit to the
South, teaching its Climax in Atlanta,
is looked back upon complacently and
with no alarm by Democrats.
Rainbows bedeck the Democratic
skies from every point of view, and he
is a poor Democrat, indeed, who fails to
point with pride nowadays to every
campaign sign and symbol;
The New York situation lias straight
ened i'tself out most satisfactorily. Fo
a time things admittedly looked bad up
there. Georgians accepted the Bull
Moose nomination of Sttaus as a mus
ter stroke of political diplomacy—and
it was a fine nomination. Oscar Straus
is a wortny ex-Georgian. and his ele
vation to the chief magistracy of the
Empire State of the North would cause
no weeping or wailing or gnashing of
teeth in the Empire State of the South
—in ordinary’ circumstances, anyway.
The nomination of Fong essman Sul
zer by the Democrats of New York,
however, was a fair and square ac
ceptance of the challenge of Oscar
Straus, and by all the rules of the
game Sulzer now stands to win—anti
Democratic victory in New York is the
consummation supreme most devoutly
to be wished!
Sulzer's nomination clea ed the at
mosphere—it puts New York, so Geo: •
gia Democrats think, in th. Wilson and
Marshall column to stay put!
Taken all in all. Wilson hopes newr
before have been so high, and so ap
parently justified, in Georgia hearts, as
they are today
The initial slogan. "Win With Wil
son." seems likely to be justified abun-
, dantly.
Ixr'te bulletins from th- bedsides
of Editors Shope, of The Da.ton
Citizen, and Laps Walker, of The
I'hattanooga Timet, a e encourag
ing. and both are expected to re
. covet ‘f rom the shock of grief each
sustained when Judge 1-ite was
■ sumtnont’d to court Monday for
contempt.
It is a matter of genuine interest tn
Georgia politicians to know that Ed
ward B own is to be the manager in
i charge of lite Kimball house, under th.'
gene ai direction of the new lessee.
. Mr Brown is to be in absolute im
mediate control of the famous hotel
■ and will devote his entire time and en
i ergy to that, ami to nothing else.
The Kimball house is identified with
. Georgia politics as few things are.
Within its walls governors, senators,
. judges and minor public officials have
, been made and unmade for years.
Ther • "Bill” Atkinson was made a
I gubernatorial possibility, and "Steve
Clay was decided upon to succeed Gor
don in the United States senate, after
Speaker Crisp had been named in a
primary. only to die upon the eve of his
' formal election.
' From the Kimball house was directed
the first successful campaign for "Littie
Joe” Brown, and there it was that Jo
-1 seph -M. Terrell played his last political
Icard in his own behalf in Georgia.
i if the Kimball house walls could talk
' —but they can’t.
I Ed Brown guarantees that!
All Georgia is agog with excitement.
’ ias they say in Savannah, as "Governor’
and Legislative day" at the state lair
in Macon comes on apace.
The indications are that the occasion
is to be one of great Joy and eclat, as
they say in Athens.
‘ Restless as th-? happy day drags
nearer and noare . The Vienna News
relieves Its mind in this fashion:
We are going to the state fair at
Macon, If possible, on "Governors
day." especially to sec Colonel
Jesse Perry, colonel by enactment
of law and executive secretary to
1 Got error B’ovn. who will don so
rhe first time his new uniform with
"gold lace anti glory." He is one of
the best secretary’s (sic) that has
been in the governo; s office In a
long time.
Unless the executive is careful. It is
evident that Jesse Perry is going to
outshine ev> n the governor ar the state)
fa: on Octobe: 17 and Colonel Perry
j would not do that intentionally, of
!eoi not :or gobi no: pr ecious st- nos!
There I- giva l and ex .ruing joy in
'<’u,hbei't nowadays!
I Cuthbert ha- achieved a t- ling vi< -
, to. - 1>,,f0 >• ia, state :ai r-.■ .1 l otniilis
' -.<■ll in.l th, n-w Spapet- ..ml <iilz, ti
i f 1’ . , |li .• , ii; > aI. rig
I e<o dingly
A mnt this :...,< or n. --. st in if,
in >'uthb-i t. The |. .' !•• say*s
ThlOilgli the effur-s ,>| Mr J
Frank Turin r before the railroad
. opirtilssion. th' 1 vignt rule on
b< < r »i’u’ iheii laa been consider
»l> ,«!u .-I It i« rmw the same
< " Dhwnoii iui. |t b< !mov< «
.... ..... .hunt- t.. p...ss t! „ |
<»f i’ du< tbin h tool. -
.• *1 * >; ti ’ ‘nJ I* I** '»■*<» it mi mr i | I
ifi< < h‘ »f hi *
< »’!* h»> t« * »rp no
L 7-j||
Im 1 '
JAM3L3 »
more!
Dawson, haughty rival, smug an 4
satisfied in a freight rate on bee,- that
Cuthbert shUddered to contemplate w p
now cease from being either smug .-
satisfied. 6 r
Beer, that sometimes approved con
jurer of sweet dreams and fair illusions
now comes to Cuthbert in the same a.l ’
vantageous freight rate regalia that to.
these many moons it has visited D aw .
son regularly!
Rome has a better freight rate -»
beer than either Cuthbert o- Dawson
for that matter—but there isn't anv
beer in Rome any more! *
"'hen you have a bad cold you want
the best medicine obtainable sc, a, m
cure it with as little delay as p Ogg °
ble. Here is a druggist's opinion- -r
have sold Chamberlain’s Cough Remed.
for fifteen years,” says Enos Lollar >f
Saratoga. Ind., "and consider ; 'the
best on the market.” For sale bv a o
dea,ers ' (Adv?.,
PRESERVE YOUR PICTURES
Get a Kodak Album. Jno. L m OO L
& Sons have just the size and kind vo
want. Call and see them. 4 ’ \ OT ,
Broad street. J
Good Eaters
Are Good Fighters
Whether at Work or Play. En
durance Comes from Good
Digestion, Always Assured
by Stuart's Dyspepsia
Tablets.
Men and women must have qul. k ..vi
and good gr it to stand the .lav's I, ,
ties. A dyspeptic may get aw;r
Iris work, but is always at swo?.
points with those around him. A g..,«i
stomach and a good meal w j|
gested puts up in a good, jolly fig; .
Ing mood, the sort that mows d-- a
w ork and commands the hearty . ...
operation of our associates. The man at
the head of a business who has a go--'
stomach has behind him a good fight
ing force against competition and t
daily mixups that are bound to i.
place. In fact, a well organized busi
ness is like our digestive system
Stuart s Dy spepsia Tablets a ---on
taken into the system go right to -Ar
as assistants to the .stomach, rend,
ing it an immense amount of I: -Ip ;n
working out the very complex proccsse
of digestion, encouraging it in the p■
formanee of its functions, relieving -i
of a portion of its duties, thereby al
lowing it a temporary respite, ru'd alsn
toning up. strengthening, revitalizing I
its secretory glands, mueuous mem- I
branes, absorbing glands and nuts.l
walls in such away that the -tome I
soon recovers its lost powers of <|.gcs- I
tion. motility, assimilation and ;:lti- I
niately does its work as well a- > ver I
without outside assistance. I
These powerful little tablets .--i.tain. I
in a concentrated form, every eirmciH I
necessary to digest all forms <>f fo<n, I
'."hether meats, vegetables, . ers-a - I
eggs, fish, etc., and they act eq-;''-’. I
"'ell in an acid or an alkallm- i.? I
If your stomach i.*( aillfig. does -u .11- I
gest as quickly or as thoroughly 'i'‘ I
it should, and y.eiir entire system in ■
consequence is suffering from nialnu- I
trition and mal-assfmilation. ..on I
it to yout-elf to give the abused sfonr- I
ach assistance to help it out of in ■
present condition. I
The solution of your stomach-trouble I
problem is easy: Go to your druggist I
. at once and secure a par-kage. then ■
take one or two after each meal or ;r< I
required, then note the diffcrenet in I
, the way you feel. All druggists sr-.l I
them. Price 50 cents. ■
The ATLANTA Tonight 8:15
henry B. HARRIS PRESENTS i I
THE QUAKER G!RL
COMPANY OF 100 WITH
VICTOR MORLEY
All the Week. Mats. Wed. and Sat ■
Nights 50c to $2; Mats. 50c to $ 1.50 K
' GpND I
Keith Vaudeville
CHONG WAH CHINESE FOUR ■
HOMER LIND 4 CO—TONY ■
HUNTING & CORINNE FRANCIS ■
LYONS 4. YQSCO AND OTHERS | ■
1
|FOi?synfiz:Tx I
LITTLE EMMA BUNTING I
PRESENTING ■
The Morals of Marcus ■
LYRIC 1 iui ■ s I
_ _un</_Su<mJjy |
WM. A BRADY’S GREAT CLAsS C i ■
WAY DOWN EAST I
plav of laughter and tejrs M
splendid company a-)d yre-it x.'- r K
frets tiiat have made tl»e P'»y f-‘
i LYRICI
j Tpes. Thu’S r H
ENGAGEMENT H
1 Hie lull A’t't Hear! I
SEATS NOW r ru.'N*'