Newspaper Page Text
6
LIBOR CHIEFS TO
MEETIMfITLANTft
* ___
I-Aborir.f men fr-u e ”«
trig Georgia will ga t.er ! ere l»e< ember
10 and 11. tn 6H<urf affaire in < • •nne<-
tion witFi the advancement < f the muse
of Southern unionist*
For the pa fit two nmniLs wveki meei
trigs have been held n Übm temple b\
a committee C(»mpw ■ f /.el gates fr«>m
each organization affiliated with the At
lanta Federation *.f Trades and practical
h all arrangements have been made
The meeting is prop*.geo to be held n
the Baptist Tabernacle auditor-iim. and
the discussions which will o<« upj the time
»
... W. of Dayton, Onio. |,:ir
ihased a bottle us Chamberlain's ‘ migi
Remedy for hie box who had . cold
snd before the bottle war all used the
hoy's cold xxa- gone Is that not bet
ter than to pa j a five dolk. r. d"' tor -
toil’- For -air bv ill dealers , (Advt.)
THE REPORT
“The Finance Committee pays close attention to the in
vestments of the Company's funds, and it should be heartily
commended for a resolution it has adopted for its guidance,
it is provided by this resolution that no member of the Com
mittee shall, either directly or indirectly, borrow any of the
Company’s funds, nor shall any member, directly or indi
rectly, receive or take any commission for loans made, or
upon securities purchased for the Company.”
He also sass: “The Company’s minutes are well kept,
and set out in detail the action of the Directors and various
Committees.”
.'nd in his final comment he further spates: “The offi
cers of the < 'otnpany must be complimented for their admin
istration, which is without reproach, and for the earnest
desire they have ever displayed to conserve the interests of
the policyholders.”
JOHN F. ROCHE, of New York City.
April, 1912 lo the Insurance Depf. of Ala.
P is with pardonable Pride The Southern States Life
Insurance Company presents the above report front the
trell known Neiv York actuary. This report confinns
those i-'liich have been made by other actuarial investi
gators who have preceded. The investigation was thor
ough and the report speaks for itself.
General Agents wanted for unfilled territory.
Local .Agents teamed in all territories.
The Southern States Lite Insurance Co.
ATLANTA.
ga.
William L. Meador, Gen. Age.
rs****"^Mitt m | Hugh N. McAfee. Gen. Aqt.
i Offices 1230 Candler Building,
Atlanta. Ga.
WILMER L. MOORE. Pre.
I
""g l ?* l ——.1 , !!■■■■■»■ I ■ inn
C a i ne s Story
4 The Woman
wPaSRSfe \T hou Gavest Me”
y>-tw •& '■
ew Letters of
Standard Oil
\ \br r 04 msHKra
KSV a_X j®Ws|l
I This masterly
/ work —“The Wo- B
/man Thou Gavest
A ■ 1 ‘Me’’ —is by the great-
■' /\ est living English author. It is ®
</ / destined to be the most notable story
of the coming year. In it a reckless father
sacrifices his young daughter to social ambitions g
His blind attempts to fill her future life with
the same sadness with which he surrounded her mother
causes her refusal to obey his stern commands. In
A Hearst’s Magazine is told her life story.
% The Plot —The Marriage Bond
I It is really a remarkable work. Its absorbing plot and
I sustained interest equal—or possibly exceed —that of the
I author’s “The Christian” and “The Eternal City ” Read
f it and enjoy a beautiful and powerful romance concerning
f a woman's rights in the marriage bond
I Standard Oil Correspondence |!
■ These letters are published in the interests of truth and for the
■ enlightenment and information of the public. They clearly involve
■ Roosevelt. Archbold. Penrose and others. You will find them all in
■ , the November Hearst’s Magazine.
W On Sale at All Newsdealers
November Number Just Out —15 cents
Hearst’s Magazine B
381 Fourth Avenue, New York City
b O* I
BOY STARTS $1,500 FIRE I
JUST TO SEE THE BLAZE
OGLETHORPE. GA., Oet. 28.—Two
I i>u>»»-.-•. 400 bushels of oats, 25 tons of
; hay. :i hex press and engine were de
ll strove.:, . ..using a loss of $1.50'1. when
a six-‘year-old negro boy aet fire to
■ the *to e houses on H. C. Bagley's
I farm on the outskirts of town, just to
j see the blaze The box applied a match
j to the hay and then .ailed his mother to
se ■ his big fire.
will be divided into the thiee days as
follows hirst day. < irgan.zatiou second
day. Education: third day, Legislation.
'IT. primary object of the meeting is
ito have ll.e prominent unionists of the
inn ,e. n Southern states exchange thews
land <■. pei :• n< es on their xvork in the dif
i f.-rent states, and in this way arrive at
■a . <>nm. basis <>n which to proceed for
the betterment of working conditions of
■the laboring people Uniform taws and
legis);.. ..11, the best plans for forwarding
organizet i<a. work and a general outline
of an educational program will be dis
cussed
■ International officers of practically ail
the unions represented in this section
I will bo present miring the convention
TJJE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWSAfONDA Y. OCIOBEJC 2«, l’H_.
J GOV. JOS. M. BROWN
GUEST OF MEMBERS
OF MILITARY STAFF
The glitter of gold and the bravery
of blue took entire possession of the
Piedmont Driving club Saturday night
when Governor Joseph M. Brown was
dined and toasted by his administra
tive and personal military staff.
Besides the hosts of the evening, a
numbei of invited guests participated,
among them being General Evans, of
the Department of the Gulf, United
Stat, s army , and his staff.
The dinner was one of genuine good
fellowship, and was as pretty a compli
m.nt as the governor's friends might
have paid him in any circumstances.
Colonel Frederic .1. Paxon, chief of
staff, presided as toastmaster.
ATLANTA TUR NV ER EIN TO
ENTERTAIN TOMORROW
' Tomorrow night at 8 o’clock the At
lanta Turn Vei. iti will give an enter
tainment and dance at 2GI-2 South
Pryor street
Professor Karl Jansen, a Swedish
lecturer, will give an address and reci
tations in German and English. A pro
j gram of vocal and instrumental solos
' lias been arranged. The athletic sec
■ ■ ion. under the leadership of Fritz
H.ims. will give an exhibition. Wede-
Ime'.ei's onhestra will furnish music.
Women who bear children and re
main healthy are those who prepare
their systems in advance of baby’s
coming. Unless the mother aids
nature in Its pre-naYal work the crisis
finds her system unequal to the de
mands made upon it, and shj is often
left with weakened health or chronic
ailments. No remedy is so truly a
help to nature as Mother's Friend,
and no expectant mother should fail
to use it. It relieves the pain and
discomfort caused by the strain on
the ligaments, makes pliant and elas
tic those fibres and muscles which
nature is expanding, prevents numb
ness of limbs, and soothes the inflam
mation of breast glands. The system
, being thus prepared by Mother’s
Friend dispels the fear that the crisis
i may not be safely met. Mother’s
Friend assures a speedy and complete
recovery for the mother, and she is
left a healthy woman to enjoy the
rearing of her
• child. Mother's A —A—
Friend Is sold at PIOiIICFS
jdrug stored.
Write for our free F yMtJglfl
j book for expect-
ant mothers which contains much
valuable information, and many Bug
, gestions of a helpful nature.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Athitn, Ga.
I
- - ■ --JL.
f AT THE THEATERS
r • "
‘ LOUISIANA LOU” IS HERE
AT THE ATLANTA TONIGHT
; Tonight brings to theatergoers of At
lanta their first opportunity in .*\tlanta
to see ftie famous musical comedy hit of
the season from the LaSalle opera house.
Chicago \ddison Burkhardt’s, Frederick ;
I >onaghey s and Ben M. Jerome’s “Ixniis- i
iana Lou. Harry Askin lias put together ’
; an admirable cast and one of those perfect
: IxiSalle choruses for the road duplication
■ of what has been the greatest of ail the
‘ I LaSalle hits to date. All the songs that
have helped to make the run of “Louis
j iana Lou ’ in Chicago notable in what has
. been a ver> dull season will be heard,
; including My Roso . f tp. Ghetto.” ”ls
t Love Be Madness,” “Louisiana Lou,” “My
I “The Tale of a .lumping Jack.”
“The Joys and the Gloonjs.” " rhe Puritan
| Prance” and "Now Am de Time!”
LOUIS MANN WILL BE HERE
AT THE ATLANTA THIS WEEK
Fresh from a run of six months in
Neu York, Louis Mann is to be seen at
the Atlanta theater Thursday and Friday,
’ October 31 and November I, in “Ele
vating a Husband,” the new dramatic
comed> by Clara Lipman and Samuel
Shipman, in which this distinguished
character actor is credited with having
scored one of the most decided successes
of ids career.
Louis Mai.n s popularity as ap actor
does not <<insist solely in his power to
make an audience laugh. He lias the
. rare gift of being able to mingle tears
i with merriment. One of the best com
ments on the performance is that ”it
makes you laugh, but it also makes you !
think Seats are now selling for the 1
engagement, including the special matinee
Eridav
“THE TRAVELING SALESMAN” IS
HERE ALL WEEK AT THE LYRIC
At the Lyric theater tonight and all
the week. “The Traveling Salesman.” a
comedy by James Forbes, author of “The
Chorus Ijidy and “The Commuters.” will
be the attraction. “The Traveling Sales
man.” while primarily a comedy of the
broadest kind, has also interwoven in the
plot a story of much dramatic interest.
The manageinent of the company prom
ises an exceptionally good production and
cast for this engagement. The part of
Bu.h Blake will be played bv Robert Lee
Allen.
FOUR FEATURE ACTS
ARE ON BIJOU BILL
The four acts that have been selected
for (he Bijou bill this week have every '
appearance of coming up with the best
that has been offered at this house since
its inauguration as the home <»f bargain
vaudeville.. The headline feature will be
i 1 an<l < or ’ line Breton, in a singing and
talking special;y. The other acts will be
llerara, an equilibrist, who will do some
ermarkable stunts on a balancing pole:
the r lbiee Bohemians, musicians, and
rianklino and Violetto, comedy acrobats.
Matinees are given daily at 3 o’clock, ex
cept on Saturday, when two matinees are
given, at and 4 The evening per
lormanees are given at 7:30 and !». Mo
tion pictures open and close each per
formance. *
SEVERAL HEADLINERS ARE ON
THE GRAND BILL THIS WEEK
The Grand commences its s<*venth week
of the season of vaudeville with matinee
today, ami there will be a daily matinee
1 and evening performance the rest of the
, week.
For i his week the bill is of more than
ordmar.v consequence. There are big fea
ture headliners and other acts that will
make a program to attract unusual atten
tion. The headliner will be Mlle. Minni
Amato, in "The Apple of Paris." a won
derful French pantomime, in which ten
people will figure. The x’at is one of the
big features that attracted great attend
ance in New York all last season.
, "Dick." the canine penman, the only
dog ever taught to write and draw with
! pen and ink, the Bison City Four, vauxle
yflle's best comedy quartet, make up the
I bill, so far as big features go. but the
| ether acts are of more than axerage im
, . portanee. Lloyd amj Whitehouse, in "Just
•| x audeville:" Ethel MacDonough. in songs:
I Sully and Hussey, in a genuine comedv. I
and ihe Kremake Brothers, in acrobatic
pastimes, make the show’complete.
i
| EMMA BUNTING APPEARS
IN "TEXAS" THIS WEEK
Little Emma Bunting and her players
twill present "Texas" at he Forsyth this
■ week, and ,a ifiultitude of theatergoers
.will set' one of the cleverest attractions
[ that lias been put on anv stage, it is said
! The play is laid in Texas and all the char
| acters are of that type that one is told
used to exist in the Lone Star Stae.
’I he£e xvill be .4 typical atmosphere of the
i great catle-raising country.
Miss Bunting has eclipsed' all her past
successes since she has been in Atlanta
this season. She is better than ever
before, and her company is the strongest
stock organization that has been "seen,
here.
The interest in tlie winter stock season
reached its height last week when the
theater was sold out completely to a ma
jority of the performances and when peo
ple were turned away from every matinee
because of no more room.
WHITFIELD PLANS RALLIES.
DALTON. GA.. Oct. 28- A big rally ■
of Demoxrats is scheduled for Sat
urday night. November 2. at the court
house here. Chairman S. B. Felker, of
the Whitfield county executive commit
tee. has issued the call. An effort will
be made to hold similar rallies in the
different militia districts of the county
Millions or nousekeeners anil exper
| chefs use SAUER'S PURE FLAVOR-
■ ING EXTRACTS. Vanilla. Lemon, -tc
' Indorsed b* Pure Food Chemists. (Advt. >
' Here ts a wnman who speaks from
I personal knowledge and long expe
' rieuxe, viz.. Mrs. P. H. Brogan, of Wil
| son. Pa., who says: "1 know front ex
t perience that Chamberlain’s Cough
1 Remedy is far superior to any other.
For croup there is nothing that excels
. it.” For sale by all dealers. (Advt.)
WE WILL MAIL yOU $1 ;
| for each set of old False Teeth sent
us. Highest price paid for old Gold,
I Silver, old Watches, Broken Jewelry
■ and Precious Stones.
Money Sent By Return Mall.
Phila. Smelting and Refining Co..
Established 20 Years.
863 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia, Pa
TO DENTISTS
We will buy your Gold Filings, Gold
Scrap and Platinum. Highest prices
paid
JELLICO LUMP
$4.50
PIEDMONT COAL CO. ;
Both Phones M. 3648
CHICHESTER S PILLS
* SOEDBHRLGGISTS EVERYWHERE
/' Ding, ding, dang N
if Or whiz, whiz, whiz, A\ \\
u Or sew, sew, sew \\ \ i \
I —all day long. I ill
Have you monotonous work?
Make minutes fly faster —make days
seem brighter make dullness dis
appear. Enjoy this digestion - aider,
this mouth - refresher, this spirit -
strengthener:
» $
A
Buy it. Try it. Enjoy it. You’ll buy this
smailest-cost, longest-last pastime again.
BUY IT BY THE BOX
-of any dealer. It costs little by
the package but Zew by the box. 104
Look for the spear The flavor lasts
/ •<JR. jk IL *.
SAFE • I HIT
SAil E OF THE
SPEEDY YEAR!
An Army of Youngsters In and Out of Atlanta Will Soon Be Gliding on the
ATLANTA GEORGIAN
MARATHON
IX /Y LL TV Tliem Wlth
You can’t buy them at the stores. The Atlanta Georgian controls the entire output oi
the factory for this territory.
MARATHON RACER DEPARTMENT
Hal f I . > TH E ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
A CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT, 20 EAST ALABAM A ■' !
Please sena me instructions telling how I may secure mu
and IGeorgian .Marathon Racers xvlthout monex.
GIRLS
Fill out ibis coupon and send it in ...,.. s Tmb?, ; "7, “T 0 v ,1i3,,1u ' .< T n' '.^".77', 1 ,
i i, vrn’c:,,, ... Lust Aluhiinia -ti'cet. )ou are eoi'dlallx Invited to cu.m
1 o<ia \ . I)() A I I)hL A) ! M an<i try thi.* new uinl pupular i’ar.