Newspaper Page Text
2
MNMm
IN GEORGIA IS
66,147
Official Returns Increase Dem
ocratic Candidate's Vote in
Tuesday’s Election.
With the receipt of additional official
returns from over the state Wilson’s
majority over Roosevelt and Taft in
Georgia steadily grows
Complete official and unofficial figures
from every county in the state give
Wilson a net majority over Roosevelt
and Taft of 66.147 votes. Wilson car
ried 140 of the 146 counties, the other
•six going to Roosevelt In four coun
ties— Dawson. Fannin, Murray and Un
ion. In the mountains of North Georgia,
where Republicans are strongest- Wil
son received a plurality but not a ma
jority vote. *ln th<- other 136 he car
ried, he had substantial majorities, Ful
ton leading with more than 6.000.
Roosevelt received a plurality, but
not majority, in Pickens. The other
five he carried are Cherokee, Douglas,
Gordon, Haralson and Paulding. In
Gordon he had a bare majority of one
vote over Wilson and Taft
The showing made by Taft was very
poor. He failed to get a look-in any
where In the state.
When official returns for the entire
state are compiled it will be seen that
The eGorglan was not far wrong when
at 7:30 o’clock Tuesday Tuesday night
it estimated Wilson's majority In Geoi -
gla at 70,000. This was the first esti
mate by any newspaper on the vote In
Georgia.
The vote by counties follows:
Counties. Wilson. Roosevelt. Taft.
Appling 137
Baldwin 660 ....
Baker 200
Banks 4-’ • • • • • • •
Bartow 500 .... . • • •
Ben Hill 23k
Berrien 604 ... • •
Bibb 2.397
Brooks 613 ... • • • •
Bryan 206 .... ....
Bulloch 600
Butts 427
Burke 496 .... ... •
Calhoun 100 .... ....
Camden 217
Campbell 230 .... ....
.Carroll .. .. .... 680 .... ....
Catoosa 110 .... ....
Chatham 3.294 .... ....
Chattahoochee 126 .... ....
A Chattooga .. .. 300 .... ....
Charlton 200 .. ....
Cherokee 86 ....
Clarke 687 .... ....
Clay 300
< Tavton 327 .... ....
Clinch 200
Cobb 1.000
Coffee 600
Colquitt 100 .... ....
Columbia 426 .... ....
< 'oweta 725 .... ....
Craw ford 136 .... ....
Crisp 630
Dadi' . 350 .... .... i
•Dawson .... ....
• Decatur 1,000 .... ....
DeKalb 709 .... ....
Dodge 600' .... ....
Dooly . . 800 .... ....
Dougherty 656 ....
Douglas 23 ....
Early 467 .... ....
Echols 140
Effingham 375 .... ....
Elbert 599
Emanuel 700 .... ....
•Fannin .... ....
Fayette 277
Floyd 1,401
Forsyth 147 .... ....
Franklin 359 .... ....
Fulton 5,068
Gilmer 320 .... ....
Glascock 34 .... ....
Glynn 42 1 .... ....
Gordon 1 ....
Grady 4 no .... ....
Greene 860 .... ....
Gwinnett 200 .... ....
Habersham .. .. 145 .... ....
Hall 731
Hancock 450 .... ....
Haralson .. 298 ....
Harris 653 .... ....
Hart 179
Haard 260 .... ....
Henry 399
Houston Soo ....
Irwin 377
Jackson 200 .... ....
Jasper 624 .... ....
Jeff Davis 197
Jefferson 400 .... ....
Jenkins 250 .... ....
Johnson 300 .... ....
Jones 308
Laurens 991 .... ....
Lee 244
Liberty 14.5 .... ....
Lincoln 237 .... ....
. Lowndes 925 .... ....
Lumpkin 131 .... ....
McDuffie 151 .... ....
Mclntosh 88 .... ....
Macon 311 .... ....
Madison 600 .... ....
Marion 250 .... ....
Meriwether .. .. 600 .... ....
Miller 200 .... ....
Milton 210 .... ....
Mitchell 747 .... ....
Monroe 684
Montgomery .... 250
Morgan 500 ....
•Murray
Muscogee 1,664 .... ....
Newton 300 ....
Oconee 50 .... ....
Oglethorpe .. .. 400
Paulding 226 . . .
xPickens .... ....
Pierce 241 .... .. . I
Pike 583 ...
Polk 200 .... ....
Pulaski 1,175 .... ....
» Putnam 200
Quitman 100 ....
Rabun 196 .... ....
Randolph 625 .... ....
Richmond 1,461 .... ....
Rockdale 300 .. . ....
Schley 191
Screven 200 ....
Spalding 644
Stephens 350
Stewart 335 ....
Sumte- 960
Tattnall 300 .... ... .
Talbot 351
Taliaferro.. .... 195
Taylor 227 »... . / ’
■Avll 450
■Mrt 300
B Toombs 300
•Towns
I Turner ;oo
’ Twiggs 294
Wilson of Studious Family; His Grandfather a Judge '
NEW PRESIDEN T PASTOR SON
/ Ti & / y
■TM/I JrS y I
REV. JOSEPH R. WILSON, MRS. JAMiib G. WILSON, JUDGE JAMES G. WILSON,
President-Elect’s Father. Wilson’s Grandmother. President-Elect’s Grandfather.
ARCTIC WITH
i SEIZED BE CZAR
1 Russian Flag Hoisted Over No
Man's Land. Claimed by
Exploration Company.
LONDON. Nov. 7. -According to a re
port from Christiania, via Copenhagen,
Russia has carried out a sensational coup
by annexing part of Spitsbergen, the Arc
tic no-man’s-land of ice and coal —and
perhaps gold.
11 is alleged that an expedition headed
by M Rusanoff has hoisted the Russian
flag and annexed Hell sound In the czar’s
mime. Bell sound has since 1905 been
claimed by a British company called the
Northern Exploration Company
All round the sound ’posts have been
erected on which are fastened bronze
plates on which the claim is announced
in English, Norwegian and German, to
•his effect:
"This land is owned bi’ the Northern
Exploration Company. Claimed in 1905.”
I The claim lias been respected by the
Swedes. Norwegians and Germans, who
have enterprises in Spitzbergen, and no
attempt has been made to jump it.
If. however, the Russian expedition has
jumped it In the czar’s name an Internn
it ionsil "affair” of considerable importance
| to Scandinavian countries w ill r.rise.
Belongs to No Country.
Spitzbergen belongs to no country. It
is under no flag, but it is open to every
body to go In and peg out claims. I’ntil
recently it was accessible only in the mid
dle of the summer
But a few years ago coal was discovered
in the Spitzbergen mountains and worked
bi a Sheffield company. And later an
American company arrived upon the scene
and slaked out a claim for coal mining.
The Americans are still working their
claim, and it is understood that the Shef
field compani has disposed of Its rights
to the German mining syndicate.
.Much more romantic is the history of
the enterprise of the Northern Exploration
Company -the owners of Bell sound.
It was formed to take over a small syn
dicate. which had Its beginnings in the re
mote village of Toileshunt D’Arcy, in Es-
Here lived the Rev. M. Gardner, the
rector. Dr. Salter, and Mr. Mansfield, a
retired traveler, mining and Klondike
gold-seeker.
Find Gold In Land.
Mr. .Mansfield had heard of gold tn
Spitzbergen. and he and the clergyman
and the doctor talked it over.
Not long afterward the rector sol out
for Spitzbergen, and brought back to the
Essex village specimens of quartz, rock
and "pay" gravel.
The three friends met to inspect the
specimens. Mr. Mansfield declared that
there was gold among them, and his opin
ion was later confirmed when the speci
mens were tested in London.
The party formed a syndicate and went
to Spitzbergen and staken out their claim.
They deposited plans of their claim with
the British foreign office and later the
Northern Exploration Company was form
ed. with a capital of $475,000, many Influ
ential persons being connected with It.
•Union .... ....
Upson 300 .... ....
Walker 150
Walton .. .. .. 515 • .... ....
Ware 569 ....
Warren........ 184 .... .. ..
Washington .. .. 737 .... ....
Wayne 200
Webster 147 1
White 31 1
Wilcox 500 ....
Wilkes 580
Wilkinson 240 .... :
Worth 411 ... 1
Whitfield 218
Totals 66.781 634 .... !
•Carried by Wilson, but without a '
majority. ,
x(’al l ied by Roosevelt, but w ithout
a majority.
Wilson’s net plurality, 66.147
“Broadway Jones,” a thrilling
story of ’ ’ The Great White Way, ’ ’
based on George M. Cohan s play
now running in New York, will
begin in Friday s Georgian. It is
well worth reading.
“Broadway Jones,” a thrilling
story of ’ The Great White Way, ’ ’
based on George M. Cohan’s play
now running in New York, will
begin in Friday’s Georgian. It is
well worth reading.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS TH I KSJ >A Y. NOVEMBER 7, 1912.
L/p and Do u)n
Peachtree
P. A. Y. E. Cars Perplex
Country Bridal Pair.
The son of a judge in Zebulon. Ga.,
married a girl in his home town the
other day and came to Atlanta on his
honeymoon. The couple strolled down
town from a hotel near tile Candle:
building, made a few purchases and
decided they would ride out Peachtree
to see the residential sights.
They had never seen the "streets of
Cairo” —that is, they had never lived in
a real city and ridden on street cars,
so the "pay-as-you-entei" variety of
conveyance presented some perplexi
ties. First, the couple started to get on
byway of the front platform, until the
motorman gave them the icy stare.
Then they pushed on past the con-
I ductor at the rear until the latter offi
cial had to yank the astonished bride
groom back by the ear and make him
give up fares. Tiling" quieted down a
bit when the couple got a seat in the
middle of the car. but trouble started
again when they attempted to get off.
Instead of taking either door at the
front of the car, right or left, the bride
groom seized the brass bars in the cen
ter and began to tug away at a great
rate. He pulled toward him, pushed
from him, yanked to either side until
he was all shades of crimson in the
face. He might have been tugging
there yet had not d small boy swung
open the door at the right and let the
unhappy couple out. They caught an
early train hack to Zebulon.
Water, Water, ATI the
Time, Not a Cup to Drink.
An unseen hand was provided it san
itary drinking fountain at the Forsyth
street entlance of tile city hall. This
inscription is all that indicates the
doner:
"Donated to the thirsty people of At
lanta by two city hall officials.”
The fountain is about three feet
high and has a bowl at the top. Water
hubbies up in a constant flow from a
i’up in the center of the bowl. To drink
you lean over and sip the bubbling wa
ter. There is no need for a cup. The
surplus water flows into the bowl and
i uns out a drain pipe connected to the
bottom of the bowl.
Officials in the w ater department said
they had promised not to tell who had
given the fountain.
Washington Monument
Left As Last Resort.
There’s an Atlanta jeweler who is fond
of music, and therefore hates hand or
gans. street pianos and hurdy-gurdys
with a hate which is deep and bitter.
I his jeweler went to Washington not
long ago for an extended stay, and
Washington Is so full of hurdy-gurdys
that you can’t dodge out of the way of
a congressman without bumping a yard
of "Trovatore" out of one of these nui
sances -the hurdy gurdy, not the con
gressman. ul' course
lie Stopped in a hotel the first night
and went to bed late, as is customary
when away from home Next morning
one of those music butchers ground out
"Everybody’s Doin’ It” until the jeweler
gave up trying to sleep. He changed ho
tels that night, but next morning another
Italian was on the job. tearing the stuff
ing out of the morning atmosphere.
Next morning the Atlanta man went
room hunting, and he found what he was
looking for. It was a cheap apartment
bouse, rather dingy and greasy, but up
an alley 60 feet from the street, on the
order of Atlanta’s Bachelor’s Domain.
Mr. Atlantan paid for a room and went to
sleep. Intending to stay there until noon
before thinking of getting up.
At 6 a. tn.. he was awakened by a
sound as if ah the hurdy-gurdys in the
District of Columbia were holding a con
vention. Such a Jumble of opera and rag
time never broke out before In one place.
The Atlantan arose, madder than . ver.
and went out into the street with a club.
There wasn't a musician In sight.
"Where the devil does all that racket
come from’.” he asked the janitor, bel
ligerently.
"That music?" returned the custodian.
"It’s in the room tight opposite you
There's a fellow in there that tunes hur
dy-gurdys tor every grinder in Washing
ton.”
SOCIETY DROPS “BUNNY:”
WILL “THREAD NEEDLES”
NEW YORK. Nov 7. -Society will
drop the "Bunn\ Hug" and "Grizzly
Bear" tonight ut the Gi'etit North
<’i untri Hi’ls dub. .Members of th.
400 art to .haw a "Ni die Threading
Cunt.--” 1
WENM
LINED Oil ROCKS
Royal George, Aground in St.
Lawrence. Probably Will Be
Total Loss.
QUEBEC, Nov. 7.—Four hundred and
twenty of the 901 passengers on board
the Canadian Northern royal mail steam
er Royal George, which went ashore on
the rocks in a heavy fog last night, in the
St. Lawrence river, ten miles from this
city, w. re take.n off early today, leaving
481 on the stranded vessel.
The. Royal George, which was bound
from Bristol to Quebec, probably will be
a total loss. Wrecking steamers, ferry
boats and tugs were pressed into service
as rescue ships and stood by the Royal
George all night.
The captain of the stricken ship sent
word by wireless that the balance of the
passengers would be taken off without
delay.
Despite the roughness of the weather, a
wireless report of the accident said that
the vessel was traveling at nearly full
speed when she crashed upon the rocks.
Taft Second in
New Hampshire
CONCORD, N. H., Nov. 7. —The ques
tion of the control of the state legis
lature which next will be called upon
to elect a governor. United States sena
tor and four state senators, was still
undecided today.
Returns for president and governor
have been received from all but the
town of Claremont. These returns
showed Governor Wilson's plurality in
the state to be 1.528 and gave Felker,
the Democratic nominee for governor,
a lead <d’ 864 votes over Worcester, Re
publican.
New Hampshire w ill send two Demo
cratic congressmen to Washington, E.
Reed, c f Manchester, and Raymond B.
Stevens, of Langafi’.
With Claremont missing, the vote of
the state was for president: Wilson
34,387. Taft 32.539. Roosevelt 17,542.
For governor. Felker. Democrat. 42,-
518: Worcester, Republican. 41,654;
Churohill, Progressive, 13.920.
SKIN TROUBLE
KN TO ITCH
And Bleed. Started from Blood
Blister. Some Nights did not
Sleep Through Whole Night. Cu
ticura Coap and Ointment Cured.
616 W Grace St.. Richmond. Va.—"l had
a running sore on my leg for from three to
five years This sore started from a blood
blister It burstand blood came from It. then
it got red around, and was as large as a dollar.
It, turned white in the middle of the sore,
and then began to itch and bleed After
washing it would bleed for hours at a time.
Some nights 1 dill not sleep through the
whole night. I spent eighty dollars on the
sore and it didn’t get well. 1 used a tonic
called and It did me no good. I got
worse and fell off to eighty-nine pounds.
| Tills went on for four years. 1 tried some
of the best treatments and was told it
■ could not get w ell.
"One of my friends said I ought to try
Cutieura soap and Cuticura Ointment so
I did With the first treatment 1 began
to feel better: after I had used the Cuticura
Soap and Ointment one week I could sleep
all right. After 1 had used them one month
the sore was gone and the itching stopped,
and I have never had any trouble since.
That was five years ago.
"I had a fever and all my hair came out.
1 shampooed with a lather of Cuticura Soap
and then rubbed the Cuticura Ointment
over the scalp and my hair came bark
and now it is long and glossy." (Signed)
Mrs. John Thomas. Mar. 12. 1912.
Cuticura Soap (25c.) and CBticura Oint
| ment (50c.) areaold everywhere. A singleset
is often sufficient. Liberal sample of each
mailed tree, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
post-card "Cuticura. Dept. T. Bouton "
•e Tender-faced men slwufA use Cuticuru
• Soap Shw. lag Stick, 25c. Sample frue.
mONOTRI
15 INCREASED DE
NEW FIGURES
Safe Democratic Majority in
Senate—House Is Heavily
With Administration.
Continued From Page One.
turns received was: Roosevelt, 395,028; i
Wllshn, 364.525; Taft, 259.34 4.
Taft carried Philadelphia by 10.575
over Roosevelt, but outside that city
in the state the president tan third.
The returns for the Socialist party i
candidate have not been sent out in de- |
tail, but there is enough information to j
show that hundreds of votes that Eu
gene V. Debs was expecting went to
Roosevelt. Wilson also lost some Dem
ocrats to Roosevelt and the colonel
picked up some Prohibitionists.
Robert K. Young, for state treas
urer; A. W. Powell, for auditor gen
eral, and John M. Morin, F. E. Lewis,
A. H. Walters and A. R. Rupley, for
congressmen -at-large, are easy win
ners.
Cong. Howard Not
Surprised by Vote
William Schley Howard, congress
man from the Atlanta district, gave out
the following statement:
"I am not in the least surprised at
our overwhelming triumph at the polls
on yesterday, as I predicted from my
every stump that the voters had made
up their minds to restore the govern
ment to the people.
"I attribute the unprecedented suc
cess of Democracy to the magnificent
record of the Democratic house of rep
resentatives in educating the people
throughout the land as to exact condi
tions under Republican rule.
“I predict that President Wilson will
leave behind him a record unequaled
for achievement for the masses of the
people since the days of Thomas Jef
ferson. This is a great day for our
section, and J am so happy over the .
result that I can only say. ‘Thank God,
and God bless everybody.’ ”
Congressman Howard came home to
cast a vote for Wilson in DeKalb coun
ty. He contracted a severe cold yes
terday and is confined to his bed today,
upon orders of his, physician, but he
welcomed the reporter, and was glad of
the opportunity to add a word to the
hymn of Democratic rejoicing.
Are you in need of anvtlflng today?
Then a Want Ad In The Georgian will go
get it for you. Phone your ad to The
Georgian. Every phone is a sub-stagion
for Georgian Want Ads. Competent and
polite men to serve you.
DOCTORS AOVISF
OPERATIONS
I
Saved by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
Swarthmore, Penn. “ For fifteen
years I suffered untold agony, and for
one period of nearly
two years I had hem
orrhages and the;
doctors told me I
would have to un
dergo an operation, i
but I began taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound and am in
good health now. I
am all over the
1 Change of Life and
> —A . H
cannot praise your Vegetable Compound
too highly. Everywoman should take itat
that time. I recommend it to both old
and young for female troubles.”—Mrs.
Emily Summersgill, Swarthmore, Pa.
Baltimore, Md. —“My troubles began
with the loss of a child, and I had hem
orrhages for four months. The doctors
eaid an operation was necessary, but I
dreaded it and decided to try Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. The
medicine has made me a well woman and
I feel strong and do my own work.”—
Mrs. J. R. Picking, 1260 Sargeant St.,
Baltimore, Md.
Since we guarantee that all testimo
nials which we publish are genuine, is it
not fair to suppose that if Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound has the vir
tue to help these women it will help any ;
other woman who is suffering in a*li!:e
manner ?
If you want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (conll
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
Kernan and held in strict confidence.
1 1 miiiwi— !■»■! |
r S YOUR COMPLEXION '
CLEAR?
I
A clear complexion and
a torpid liver cannot go
hand in hand. Clear
the bile ducts gently,
but firmly, with
Tutt's Pills
At ycur druggist
sugar coated or plair. '
; Taft Back on Job :
• To Catch Up With :
• Neglected Duties •
• WASHINGTON, Nov. 7.—De- •
• layed nearly an hour by the heavy •
» tains in the Alleghenies. President •
• Tift reached Washington at 9:30 •
• a. nt. today, going immediately to •
• the white house to commence the •
a preparations for his annual ines- •
• sage to congress and to attend to •
• a number of other official duties •
o w hich he has been forced to neg- •
o lect during the past month. •
• Chief among these are the ap- •
• pointment of a successor to Dr. •
• Harvey W. Wiley, chief of the bu- •
c reau of chemistry of the depart- •
® ment of agriculture, and the nam- •
o ing of an Indian commission. •
• •
•■••••••eeoacaaaaaaaaoaaaa
SouthernWomanTries
To Commit Suicide in
Her Home in New York
NEW YORK. Nov. 7.—Mrs. Louise New
ell. wife of Edward Newell, resident man
ager for the Birmingham Rail and Lo
comotive Company, attempted suicide in
her apartment in the Palisade Court. No.
601 West One Hundred and Thirty-ninth
street.
Mrs. Newell was found In the bathroom
w ith her throat cut. her windpipe severed,
her wrist gashed and the gas jets in the
bathroom and the kitchen turned on full.
She was rushed to J. Hood Wright hos
pital. If she lives her life will have been
saved by the quick work of the surgeons
called to the apartment.
Mr. Newell said that his wdfe had been
feeling depressed for a week, but Save a
headache she had not suffered any. They
attended an organ recital yesterday, and
sl>e»appeared much better this morning
when he went to his offices in the Coffee
Exchange building.
From friends it was learned that Mrs.
Newell, who is a handsome little woman
about 30 years old, was Miss Louise Am
ory. of Chattanooga, Tenn., and was mar
ried ten years ago. The couple came to
New- York four years ago and had lived
at the present address for a year.
At the hospital it was said that there
was only the slightest chance of Mrs.
Newell's recovery. Considering the na
ture of her injuries it was said she had
shown wonderful vitality, which might
yet save her life.
134,000 Plurality
For Wilson in Ohio
CLEVELAND. OHIO. Nov. 7.—Com
plete unofficial returns for Ohio give
Wilson. 446,760; Roosevelt, 253,564;
Taft, 312,000; Debs, 46,000. In the leg
islature the senate will have 24 Dem
ocrats and 9 Republicans, and in the
house 86 Democrats and 42 Republi
cans.
STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO,
LUCAS, COUNTY, ss.
Frank .1. Cheney, makes oath that he is
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney
& Co., doing business in the City of Tole
do. County and State aforesaid, and that
said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUN
DRED DOLLARS for each and every case
of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the
use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY,
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this 6th day of December,
A. D. 1886.
A. W. GLEASON.
(Seal.) Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
and acts directly on the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system. Send for
testimonials free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation
Si
m TURKISH
j]
rMACro ° V A/
I ANY dealer
j will tell
I you that the sale
of FATIMAS has
increased faster
than that of any
other cigarette
ever put on the
market. This sen
sational growth is
the result of extra
quality put into
the cigarettes, in
stead of into a
I fancy package.
cents
"Distinctively Individual"
a,
KAISER WILHELM
MOT NIMH
Whales, Bears, and Wild Boars
Have Fallen Before the Em
peror’s Bullets.
BERLIN, Nov. 7.—Germany boast,
that its statistical office fs the m
thoroughgoing and highly
the world. It keeps an eye on things
of which easygoing commonwealths | n
other climes take no account. So no
body was surprised to read statistics
issued apropos of the kaiser’s fortieth
anniversary as a huntsman—it see ms
he has been a Jager since September
30, 1872.
Over 70,000 game of all descriptions
Including a whale, have fallen victini
to his unerring alm. There are tens of
thousands of partridges and pheasants
hundreds of wild boars and stags, a fez
grouse and several bears.
Golf Grows Popular.
The progress that golf is making i n
this country is shown by the fact that
the papers now and then take notice of
it. Indeed, there were quite surpris.
ingly detailed reports of the last golf
tournament at Baden-Baden. Thers
are now about a dozen clubs in Ger
many, those at Berlin. Hamburg and
Baden taking the lead.
A w riter in a Berlin paper has evi
dently only just fallen a victim to the
charms of the game, and he certainly
hits them off very well. "Golf," h 9
tells his fellow countrymen, "is fre
quently misunderstood. Whoever has
not played the game himself, or at least
tried to, is by no means in a position
to appreciate Its niceties. In itself it is
a pleasure, in lovely clear autumr,
weather, with a golf club in the hand,
to wander through the fields and drive
the little ball with clever blow through
the air toward the distant goal; but
the delicacies of the game only appear
when the question is how, by a spe
cially clever stroke, to rescue a ball
which seems already lost.
Football a Favorite.
"The great attraction of golf consists
chiefly in the variety of the natural and
artificial hindrances which one has to
overcome in the course of a round:
then, also, in the many-sidedness of
the strokes to be made. In any case it
is a game which should have more fol
lowers among us than it has.”
The writer then passes on to other
sports and mentions that football is of
all outdoor games that mostly played in
Germany, with hockey and its 10,004
members in 150 clubs coming In a dis
tant second.
Women’s Hair
Made Glorious
Parisian Sage Stops Falling Hah
and Dandruff.
Nothing so detracts from the attract
Iveness of woman as dull, faded, luster
less hair.
There Is no excuse for this condition
nowadays, because notice is hereby
given to the readers of The Georgian
and News that Parisian Sage, the quick
acting hair restorer, is sold with a
money back guarantee at 50 cents a
large bottle.
Since its introduction into America,
Parisian Sage has had an immense sale
and here are the reasons:
It is safe and harmless. Contains no
dye or poisonous lead.
It cures dandruff in two weeks, br
killing the dandruff germ.
It stops falling hair.
It promptly stops itching of the scalp.
It makes the hair soft and luxuriant.
It gives life and beauty to the hair
It is not sticky or greasy.
It is the daintiest perfumed hair
tonic.
It is the best, the most pleasant and
invigorating hair dressing made.
Fight shy of the druggist who often
you a substitute, he is unworthy o!
your confidence.
Made only in America bv Giroux M's
Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The girl with the
Auburn hair is on every package.
All reliable druggists. department
stores and toilet goods counters hare
Parisian Sage Hair Tonic. The girl
with the Auburn hair is on every pack
age. Sold bv dealers everywhere.
The ATLANTA
Today, Frl., Sat. Mat*. 3, Nights, 0:15.
25c, 35c., 50c.
Direct from Seven Months’ Sensational
Run at Lyceum Theater, New York
PAUL J, RAINEY’S AFRICAN HUNT
"Marvelous Motion Pictures"—New
York World.
Graphic and interesting descriptive
lectures.
SEATS SELLING TODAY.
MONDAY AND TUESDAY,
Matinee Tuesday.
Miss Nobody From Starland
With OLIVE VAIL
Nights 25c to $1.50 —Matinee 25c to
CRA N O VNOSHEVU.iI
Matte** Dal y 2,30. t*w*W* «t »:3« Wtt *
BUT LESLIE I LAURA OUUITE u>nrl ,
Til* King a! Slang ITfc* »r**dw*j Mar NtniJ
_ BCHT FITZGIBBON E
BEDFORD-WINCH ESTER - PONY BRUIT DlXlf
MHMTRONG MNNLtY-OtN BIYIR > MO
TONIGHT rnaeVTU T«-TNimS«T
1:15 r Un® I| n MUTINIES
LITTLE EMMA BUNTING
AND HER EXCELLENT PLAYERS
•‘LEAH KLESHNA"
Next Week “Merely Maty Ann"
I VDIf THIS Mat* Tuer.
L« I rxlVx WEEK. Thur*.. .>»'•
The Girl the Taxi
One Big Scream From Curt* 1 ” * e
Curtain.
Next Week, THE WINNING WIDOW