Newspaper Page Text
■GIES, Sill HIS
EISSUES LIVE,
SHMUEL
Scientist Winner of Nobel Prize
Makes Amazing Declaration
Concerning Dissolution.
YORK, Nov. 14.—" There are
kinds of death— general death or
” til of the whole organization, and
X’mantal death or death of the tissues
and nrpinF.
S-K'h is the deliberate. scientific
.dement, so amazing to the layman,
made bv Dr. Alexis Carrel, of the
-jn.-kfM'.er institute here.
nr carrel was awarded recently
-ear's Nobel prize of $39,000 for
the most notable discoveries in medi
an* and surgery-
e word, Os- Carrel, who has buc
...JfuUy transplanted blood vessels,
and -ven kidneys from one to
Xr animals. aserrts that at the mo-
X „ man dies even- healthy organ
‘ him would continue to live if the
“ oer •■iroulatlon of blood were re
; t 0 it by transplantation to a
living' body.
••It is impost* to * lve a definition
ueneral death.” ha goes on to say.
•Everybody understands what it means.
Nevertheless, we are as ignorant about
about life- General death can oc
, u> 'suddenly, while elemental death is
a Blow process.
• < man. for instance, is scabbed
through the heart and killed. His per-
• onality has disappeared. He is dead.
■However, all the organs ana tissues
wn ; ch , ompkse the body are still living.
Man Dies, Tissues Live.
she life of every tissue and organ of
bodv c.-uld go on if a proper olrcu-
, I ere given back to them. If
•; were possible to transplant Imme
'tJ' !•> after death the tissues and or
t s wni<-’ compose the body into oth
.. lin >an organisms no elemental death
aould occur, and all the constituent
. rt-* of the body would continue to
, iv .. The man. however, would be
....■id for bis personality would have
disappeared.
In this case general death can be de
fine.! as the rupture of the contract of
association between the tissues and or
gans by failure of one of the partners—
a? heart. Therefore, general death 14
iy different from elemental death, ft
t merely the starting point of the dis
integrative phenomena which lead to
• lemental death.
"Immediately after general death
elemental death begins. It is a com
plex and slow process which progres
sively destroys the living matter. We
an not know directly whether or not a
tissue 18 living and by what chemical
tr physical peculiarities a living being
differs from its corpse.
"There is no re-agent of life.”
Life and Death Mysteries.
"Living matter, in a condition of
r.on-nianltested life, is apparently sim
ilar to non-living matter. We per
<eive life only through its manifesta
tions.
"What is the difference between a
dead seed and a seed which will pro
duce o. large tree? not know.
"We know merely that, immediately
niter general death, the tissues are stll
olive, because they' manifest life if they
we given back to their normal circu
lation. We also know that some time
after general death they die, because
•lev are not able to manifest life again,
ever, when placed tn normal physiolog
ical condition.
"Between the death of the organism
and the eimental death there is a pe
on where the tissues are progressively
invaded by cadaveric, distintegratlon.
At the beginning, the cadaveric changes
are slight, and the tissues can recover
placed back into normal condition.
Later, irreversible changes take place
and the elemental death —that is, de
struction of the living matter —occurs.
Immediately after the stopipng of
circulation all the elemnts of the
■ ascular wall are alive. If the trans-
Plantation Is performed at this mo
went, the artery lives in the body of
s host and keeps its normal constitu
tion."
QUIT locker club
if YOU’D QUIT DRINK.
RECORDER ADVISES
'" u are a drinker and want to quit
'tiKlng, first quit your locker club,
i'' tiie advice of Recorder
J
1U $* . _ it
iunter Widgeon, a. carpenter,
in police court today charged
"ing drunk, he asked Judge
' to Place him on probation and
another chance, declaring he
to quit liquor forever. The
tsk.-d him where lie obtained
1 mor that made him drunk.
locker club, your honor,” said
" ’’lg'.on.
"Urt imposed a fine of $5.75.
. ’•t ’ .vour club first, and then talk
’out putting you on probation,”
‘No man can quit drinking
long as lie belongs to one of
’’ locker clubs.”
POTATO PATCH PAYS
FOR BOY’S SCHOOLING
t .r? ! ;R- Nov. 14.—A two-acre po-
1 h on the small ranch of Ben
ir.t ' ° Wen . of Bostwick Park, a farm
v- ■ ~ lnniun ity near Montrose, Cojo.,
' p on e of Owen’s sons a year tn
' ;, -do State Agricultural college
'tiler a year in the Montrose
■tool, according to Vice Presi-
’ l: Holcomb, of the H. W. J.
R-alty Company, who has
soma three weeks' trip
~ hat st ct iui i .>f the st ate.
- from .J.’.i.hi .., un
, '"dueed this year upon
o ucros.
Weather Sharps Sidestep Frost-Bitten Heel Forecaster
MOORE NOT LONG-DISTANCE PROPHET
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f ■ ■wk jOil
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■ ■ -.’wl " ig--•"
Willis L. Moore, chief of the L. S. weather bureau, in center, and his aids, who am m convention tn Atlanta
■
Chief of United States Bureau
Shies at Venturing Guess on
Inaugural Day Skies.
Willis L. Moore, chief of the national
weather bureau, stepped from the
Washington train early today, cocked
a critical eye at the blue sky and greet
ed the reception committee.
“Ah. very nice, very nice indeed,” he
remarked. "Perhaps a trace of humid
ity, but very fair proportion of ozone.
Os course, that smoke —but smoke's not
under my department.”
Then, satisfied with the weather fur
nished for his reception by C. F. Von
Herrmann, Atlanta forecaster, he was
driven to 'the Georgian Terrace for
breakfast and a. conference with eigh
teen weather bureau officials who
came from Utah and Florida and Colo
rado and other states to discuss ways
and means of helping the farmer tell
when to get In his hay or dig a cyclone
cellar. The officials have been holding
an Informal conference for several
days and Professor Moore came down
to greet them and offer congratulations
on their making a 90 per cent success
in prognostications for the past year.
Uncle Hi Disappointed.
Just inside the corridor of the Ter
race stood Uncle Hi Suggs, who lives
out Battle Hill way and is the best and
most voluminous weather prophet in
Georgia, barring the salaried ones who
work by telegraph and barometer. Un
cle Hi has an apparatus of his own,
and scorns the scientific devices of the
official bureau. But he had come all the
way from Battle Hill, successfully ne
gotiated the storm doors without loss
of his whiskers, and was prepared to
join the council of forecasters. He was
disappointed to learn that the sessions
were executive and he couldn't get in.
“They needn’t think they’ve got any
patent on prophesyin’ the weather.” he
remarked scornfully. "I’m willin’ to
back my predictions agin’ the best they
can do any time. Didn’t l write a let
ter to the papers last spring sayin' It
would be the rainiest summer on rec
ord, and didn’t the rain fall and the
storms rage until even thing In Georgia
got mildewed with the wet?
“No, I don’t depend on no thermome
ters. All they can tell you is how hot
or how cold It is right now. and what’s
the use of knowin’ that? I’ve got a
frost-bit heel I caught with Gen’l Gor
don in '64. and every time it com
mences to swell up and blister, I know
we’re in for cold, and maybe snow. I've
got a goosebone that gives a certain
sign of rain, and whenever that falls
me my rheumatism is certain to h’ist a
warnin'. I seen a squirrel this mawnln’
layln’ up nuts in a hollow tree and a
whole passel of birds flyin’ South, and
both of them’s unfailin’ signs of a hard
winter. I’m goin' to stop by town and
lay me in a couple of tons of coal this
very day.”
Professor Moore declined to be drawn
into a guessing match with Uncle Hi,
though he east no aspersions on
the amateur forecaster’s prognostica
tions.
“Really. 1 wouldn't venture to say
whether the winter will be mild or
Io- said. “We have developed the
- . ienee until we can send out forecasts
I for u week ahead with excellent sue
[hut that Is as far as we attempt to
I iro non . I believe tiie time will come
■H it ... v.« vitu predict lei a mouth ahead
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
LOSERSffI KEHL
BWITMR
Balkan and Cuban Troubles
Make Sale of Lands of De
funct Institution Difficult.
The Balkan war has made it practi
cally impossible for the depositors in
the defunct Neal bank to receive another
dividend on their deposits in time for
Christmas purposes, according to a
statement of Judge John S. Candler,
one of the attorneys for the receivers
of the bank, today.
He said the remaining assets of the
bank were some lands in Alabama and
some lands in Cuba. The Alabama
lands are being advertised for sale, but
it is not likely that a deal will be
closed In the immediate future. Nego
tiations were well under way to dis
pose of the Cuban lands to a French
capitalist, but the Balkan war came
along, disturbing business conditions in
Europe and French capitalists who had
been interested dropped all thought of
sending funds out of Europe.
Judge Candler said that to dispose of
the lands at a public sale would be a
foolish sacrifice of valuable property.
There had been some chance of selling
the property in Cuba until the Cuban
insurrection started.
GIRL OUTDOES BOYS
AT CARPENTER WORK
ST. PAUL, MINN., Nov. 14—In the
advanced class in manual training
taught by L. A. Harmsberger at the
Central High school are many youths
with the sure hand to join and saw and
plane and hammer with the best of
cabinetmakers, but strangely enough
the star student of the class is not a
boy, but a girl. She is Lorraine Cam
eron, the seventeen-year-old daughter
of Mr. and Mrs, P. H. Cameron.
with accuracy. And while it is possi
ble that we may reach the point where
we can predict for the coming summer
or winter, I would not venture to assert
that this is probable.
“The forecasts of the weather bureau
have been correct nine times out of ten
in the past year. The department has
only recently been brought up to that
efficiency. While there are kicks from
disgruntled persons who bu
reau is always wrong and ought to be
abolished, these do not come from those
w’hose lives and property depend on
our forecasts. These have learned how
accurate the department really Is, and
understand that 90 per cent is far from
being guesswork.”
"Would you be willing to predict the
weather for Woodrow Wilson's inau
guration?" he was asked timidly.
Professor Moore looked pained. Per
haps he remembered the spring of four
years ago when the forecast was "fair”
and several regiments of troops and
thousands of others were snowbound on
their way to Washington and nearly
froze to death. But he laughed and
turned away.
"The 4tb of Man i i- m uncertain
season,” he replied. ‘T'vt got to go
now.'
Wedding Garments of
70 Years Ago Become
Aged Woman's Shroud
Body of Mrs. Betsy Patterson'
Buried in Casket She Had
Made 30 Years.
MOULTRIE. GA., Nov. 14.—Shroud
ed in her wedding trousseau of 70
years ago, and incased In a casket for
which she had the lumber sawed from
a cypress tree growing on her farm 30
years ago, the body of Mrs. Betsy Pat
terson has just been buried at Sandy
Bluff cemetery, near Nashville, m Ber
rien county.
Mrs. Patterson died at her old home
stead near Sparks, where she had re
sided continuously for 50 years. She
was nearly 90 years old, and Was well
known throughout Berrien county. Her
more intimate acquaintances reverently
called her "Aunt Betsy.”
For three score and ten years—the
allotted span of lift-—Mrs. Patterson
had carefully preserved tiie garments
she wore when a happy young bride in
her teens. It was her often expressed
wish that upon her death these gar
ments should constitute her shroud,
and relatives and friends in charge of
her funeral acceded to this desire.
BRANCH POLIGt
STATIONS URGED
“The Georgian’s editorial on 'Police
Problems’ calls attention to conditions
open to great improvement. The du
plication of ‘beats' by poltcemeh and
the various inspectors Is attracting at
tention in ail the leading cities of the
country as unsystematic and a waste of
money.
"The idea of having sub-police sta
tions in fire engine houses is practical ■
and very economical. It Is being plan - ;
ned~in some cities to have health sta- I
tlon.s in these houses as well.”
This was the statement made toda. |
by Herbert R. Sands, the municipal ex
pert of New York, who has been em
ployed by the Atlanta Chamber of Com
merce to make an Investigation of the
city government,
Candler Favors Plan.
Acting Mayor John S. Candler said
today that he was confident the idea of
having sub-police stations in a num
ber of the lire stations would be car
ried ouf in another year.
"Our police station is too far away
from the greater part of our city,” he
said. "Our new fire and police signal
system will make it a very simple mat
ter to have sub-stations in several of
the fire stations. The difficulties in po
licing our growing city demand such a
step.”
The officiate over the sanitary and
water meter inspectors, however, were
not very enthusiastic over the sugges
tion that these inspectors should do
regular iKillce duty. Thev insisted that
they have io • min-h work for tie in
?pecivr» under uiv s>reeeut syistxm.
HOMfflH
IN iffi PfflfflE
j Ten Thousand Cheer Senator
at Big Democratic Jubilee
in Central City.
MACON. GA., Nov. 14. Tiie cele
bration of the victory of the Democratic
party by the people of Macon last night
was an event unsurpassed In the an
nals of the city. A parade two miles
long preceded a jubilee rally at the city
auditorium, where speeches were made
by men of prominence in the national
Democratic tanks.
A significant feature of the celebra
tion was the reception accorded Sen
ator Hoke Smith, of Atlanta. All along
the route of the procession he was en
thusiastically hailed, and at the audi
torium lie was giv< n n tremendous ova
tion. His speech kept Ihe audience in
applause throughout.
other speakers were Senator A. o.
Bacon, of Macon; Congressman Thom
as \V. Hardwick, of Sandersville; Rep
resentative-elect Pleasant A. Stovall, of
Savannah, and Dupont Guerry, of Ma
con. Congressman Charles L. Bartlett
was called out of the city and could not
attend. More than 10,000 people com
prised the speakers’ audience, but less
than half that number were able to
hear what was said.
Parade Through City.
The parade moved from Third and
Cherry streets at 7:30 o’clock and
pa-sed through the principal business
ami residential streets. Every home on,
Georgia, avenue. College street and Or
ange street, the fashionable residence
section, was brilliantly illuminated and
decorated. Nearly all of the principal
buildings in the business section were
also illuminated. There were more
than HiO autos in the parade, many
from nearby towns; several thousand
men bearing ton hes. 50 floats and as
many other business • eludes, and the
auto machines of tin fire department.
Nearly all of tlm vehicles w n hand
somely decorated.
Fireworks, Too.
The city ordinance against the dis
•■liarge of fireworks was suspended for
tl.i- night, and for several hours the
streets echoed with the deafening deto
nations of torpedoes and glowed with
tiie glare of luridly colored candles.
The celebration of the Democratic
success at the polls by the people of
Macon was participated In by practi
cally every resident of the city who
was able to leave home for the early
part of the night. For several hours all
of the downtown streets were congest
ed and thousands were unable to obtain
admission to the auditorium.
Telegrams from Wilson and Marshall
were read to the meeting, expressing
disappointment that they were unable
to attend.
On the night of drover Cleveland's
first election Macon celebrated, but old
timers say that that occasion Is dimmed
by comparison' with the affair of last
night.
PLANNING MILITARY COMPANY.
WAYCROSS. GA., Nov. 14. Efforts
are being made here to reorganize tlm
Waycross Guards, a military organiza
tion th it. after about th ■ years of
fifo disbanded. The eitj contain -otiu
guuu material lor a military company.
Prominent Laymen on Methodist Committees
CONFERENCE NEXTWEEK
CARROLLTON. GA., Nov. 14.—Much
of the important work of the North
Georgia Methodist conference, which
! convenes here next Wednesday, will be
i transacted by the conference boards
■ and committees composed of both mln
i isters and laymen. Some of the most
i prominent ministers, business and public
officials of Georgia are on these boards.
The board of missions is headed by Dr.
J. E. Dickey, president of Emory col
lege. as president, and H. Y. McCord,
|an Atlanta wholesale merchant, as
• treasurer.
George M. Napier, past grandmaster
i of Georgia Masons, is president of the
; Sunday school board. John D. Walker,
’ of Sparta, head of the Walker chain
i of banks, and Samuel Tate, marble pro
ducer. of Tate. G.:.. arc among his as
sociates. Dr. S. P. Wiggins, pastor of
I the Eirst Methodist church, Atlanta, is
I also on this board.
Atlantans For Education.
Dr. C. <». Jones, past.or of Grace
| i hutch, Atlanta,, is chairman of the
I board of education, with Dr. S. R. Belk,
; pastor of Park Sire< t church, and Rep-
I resentative Waiter .VleElreath among
| bis associates.
Dr. J. T. Robins, pastor of Trinity
I church, and Dr. Erank Siler, former
j pastor of Wesley Memorial church, are
• on tiie Epwortli league board.
Rev. B. P. Allen heeds the board of
I church extension, with W. G. Post, a
i prominent Newnan attorney, among the
■ lay members.
Rev. J. H. Mashburn is chairman
of tiie conference relations committee,
with Judge J. W. Gober, a lay mem
ber.
I Rev. W. O. Butler, of Stockbridge, is
la leading member of the committee on
j memr irs. He is one of the best posted*
[men in the conference on its history.
11. W. Joiner is chairman of the com-
• mitsee on district conference records.
■ R. .1. Guinn, a leading Atlanta insur
ance man, is on the committee on or
phans home.
’I SHOP TALK
i D. Zakas. the baker and pieman,
j opened a downtown bread and cake
i -tore at 30 Peachtree street —Five
I Points - Thursday morning. To cele
brate the opening and to introduce his
I output to the housewives of Atlanta, he
j sold 3,0(10 lo tV ' S of bread at one
I eent each and to the first 50 customers
lie presented a loaf of pound cake.
| The factory at 251 Peachtree street lias
I been nut in eli.iige of Philip Thompson,
an I■>..'■. ■! i' -oio Boston. He is especially
great in eake baking. All the materials
| used by Mr. Zakas are purchased from
first band, and he is going to the public
with his products with the intention of
giving the best to be had in tiie baking
line.
I CROSSES U. S. TO WED
IN‘THE LITTLE CHURCH
AROUND THE CORNER’
_LOS ANGELES, CAL.. Nov. 14.—T0
fulfill a girlish ambition to be married
in the “little church around the cor
ner,'’ Miss Clare Mersch, a beautiful
and popular Los Angeles girl, has trav
eled 3.000 miles to New York, where
her marriage to D. J. Bricker, a wealthy
Los Angeles contractor, will be sol
emnized within a few days.
The bride-to-be is a member of an
old California family, and is a protege
of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Morosco. She
Is now in New Yoriv, visiting with her
sister. Miss May Mersch. Her Hance
is en route Eas . and upon his arrival
in New York the wedding ceremony will
be performed.
DAVANT PLANS TO SEEK
SAVANNAH MAYORALTY
SAVANNAH, GA, Nov. 14.—Captain
Richard J. Davant, defeated candidate
for mayor in the last election, has de
termined to make the race again, pro
vided the board of aidermen on the
ticket is satisfactory to him and to the
business men of the community. Tiie
decision of captain Davant was made
known following the result of the elec
tion, in which the commission govern
ment charter was defeated.
Captain Davant will be the anti-ad
ministration candidate. In all prob
( ability he will be opposed again by
Mayor Tiedeman, but there has been no
announcement on the part of the mayor.
WOMAN FARMER EXCELS;
MAKES RECORD IN BEEF
EATON RAPIDS, MICH, Nov. 14.
A record of raising b< ei has been estab
lished here by Miss Frances Van Bus
kirk, the ope ator and owner of the
finest fa> ni in this section. This week
she sold to a local meat firm here a
three-year-old heifer from her herd
that weighed 1,37 d pounds, and for
■vhicii she received M‘5.90, tiie highest
price eve. paid so a single head of
three-year-old be' l' stuck in Eaton
count y.
44 SOLDIERS DROWNED
WHEN BOAT IS SWAMPED
BUCHAREST, ROUMANIA, Nov. 14.
Forty-four soldiers were drowned by
the swamping of a boat on the Danube
river, near Calarashi today. Forty-nine
soldiers were in the boat, five being
saved.
Skin On Fire?
Just the mild, simple wash, the well
known D.D.D. Prescription for Eczema,
and the itch is gone.
A 50-cent bottle will prove it.
We have sold other remedies for skin
trouble, but none that we could guar
antee as we can the D.D.D. remedy.
If the first regular size SI.OO bottle
does not do exactly as we -ay. it will
not cost you a cent.
Jacob-' Pita: nuivy, O S .Marietta Si.
(Advt.j
M. M. Daviea is treasurer of the Bible
society board.
The joint board of finance—one of
the most important of the conference
—includes among its lay members John
N. Holder, speaker of the Georgia house
of representatives, and T. A. Gramling,
an Atlanta wholesale merchant.
Judge R. B. Russell, of the court of
appeals, and A. K. Hawkes, an Atlanta
merchant and philanthropist, are on the
committee on superannuate homes.
These and other boards and com
mittees will hold meetings during the
recesses between conference sessions
and will submit important reports, rec
ommendations and resolutions to ths
conference for action by that body.
Tiie business of the conference will
be very heavy, requiring about four
hours a. day in regular session for five
days and three hours in committee
work in the afternoons. There will be
30 different committees and boards In
session during conference, looking into
and providing for the interests of mis
sions, education, Sunday schools, Ep
worth leagues, church extension, me
moirs. records, orphans home, Bible
society, flananee, public worship, books
and periodicals, Sabbath observance,
church papers, temperance, examina
tions, hospital enterprises, etc.
Great Religious Force.
The North Georgia conference is one
of the great religious forces of Geor
gia and of the South. It Is the largest
of ail the Southern Methodist confer
ences, representing an actual member
ship last year of 11(1,555, together with
273 local preachers and 231 itinerant
ministers, making a grand total of 117,-
057. The additions of 1912 will ad
vance these figures to something like
120,000 Methodists in its territory.
The conference that assembles at
Carrollton will be composed of 331 itin.
erant preachers, 40 supply preachers.
44 lay delegates, 6S other preachers who
are engaged in educational and other
work and some who are retired veter
ans, making a deliberative body of 343
voters.
ARMY ORDERS
WASHINGTON, Nov. 14. —Army or
ders:
Lieutenant Colonel Tyree H. Rivers,
from Eighth to Thirteenth cavalry.
, Lieutenant Colonel George H. Sands
from Thirteenth to Seventh cavalry, a'.
Manila. -
First Lieutenant Samuel S. Crightou.
medical corps, from field hospital No. 3.
to Fort Leavenworth, Kans.
First Lieutenant Thomas C. Walker,
medical reserve corps, from Fort H. G.
Wright, New York.
Resignation of First Lieutenant
Francis B. Upham, coast artillery corps,
accepted by the president.
Captain Fred W. Herschler, Ninth
cavalry, Incapacitated for active serv
ice retired.
TOO MUCH~PLAY~MAKES
JACK A DULL BOY. HE SAYS
TOPEKA, KANS., Nov. 14.—The
school children of Kansas are up in
arms over a suggestion of Dean C. H
Johnston, of the University School of
Education, who would do away with
school vacations and have sessions six
days a week.
”1 find no other reason than an ok
tradition against holding school classes
on Saturdays," said Dean Johnston
“Neither cun 1 see any logical reason
for allowing the entire educational sys
tem of the state to He idle for threi
months in the year, with its consequent
loss in efficiency. A student or instruc
tor does not need more than a month’-
vacation in a year.”
CUTS OFF HAND RATHER
THAN LABOR IN PRISON
SOUTH BEND, IND.. Nov. 14.—Al
bert Peverett, after fourteen years in
prison on a charge of robbing a bank
has returned here, his old home, lb
is different now from tiie debonair,
self-confident young man the police
once knew. His hair is white. One
hand is gone. He looks twenty years
older. There are lines on his face that
are not from age.
He cut his hand off because he could
not make the number of overalls a da>
required by the prison authorities.
STATE OP- OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO
LUCAS, COUNTY, ss.
Frank J. Cheney, makes oath that he is
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney
& Co., doing business in the City of ’Pole
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 he cured by th
use of Hall s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this tith day of December
A. D. 1886.
* W. GLEASON,
(Seal. > . Notary Public
flail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally
and acts directly oq the blood and mu
cous surfaces o’ the. -wstem. Send for
testimonials free.
F. J. CHENEY & co., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Faiiuly Pills for constipation
GOOD DENTISTS AND
GOOD EQUIPMENT
MOANS
MORE PRACTICE AND
LOWER PRICES.
Gold Crowns 83.00
Brides Work $3.00
Set Teeth BS.OO
All work suaranteed-
ATLANTA DENTAL PARLORS
C. A. CONSTANTINE, Prop.
Cor. Peachtree naid Decatut Btt
Entratice IP’» Peachtree 5' • ■
3