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RUSHIN WINS SENATORSHIP.
VIENNA, «;A.. Nov hi *’■ st. ••
senatorial j’ vnar> • ; I>. .>l\ mty.
Choose a successor lu J I’ rd.
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MODEL
i GOTHAM ? '
v «- J Twenty years is a long test of
You Jmow that Regals ats character, whether in man or shoe,
look as a gentleman’s <sf Take n ° le ,hat aft ; r ,wen T ? cars °*
shoe should look— I*l «ye-fesf for style, of scrape
snoe snouiu iook and-twist-test for wear, of /fff
That they are well- I tender-toe-test for com- It* J
built of pood \ fort, *h ere are more
materials. \ )V4? \ Regal Shoe feet 1
You have in- ■-■ y n \ than ever before, n
tended for a ; f K\ You should VVd A
long time to TJf fl> /\\ _• D « !„• 1 ; \\
■ r. , J/7' i / \\ give Re gals a | , 'A
giveßegalsa // V, . ~ ,1/0’ A
trial •// © z I chance ‘ Here s I J—* )X
’ . . feSg, ! / II the ASTOR L/7 a i /Vt
.. Then begin ■ ' U . . /y.'zs.’ .• vi
now with this L-Ns. .' MODEL. It has jf-j, &j J
GOTHAM /' the Hites and AjV/ J
MODEL. / / jß|/ B’yl* that will
make the most zMC: ,
f perfectly cut
N-w ' / g trousers look
/S- n .. even better. /’z /r
H Moderate heel J if
f Tok Jy and toe, roomy H
/ and comfortable JB
I “ n win Kivethe $4.00
wear on< ' Rati 1 .- Z \O\ *
faction that have / , r ..
“ T‘
•ole; alto Tua
Black Smooth King Calf Hutton.
Blucher, stout sole, or Rus (£4
sia Calf Plain Lace Shoe
R.ECALS PFGAI
X Regal Shoe Store Z| fa
=1 L. J. wing, Prop., <7 r’ Regal Shoe Store al
6 Whitehall St. | I
k I L. J. WING, Prop.,
6 Whitehall St.
r.~:" I-.— Jj f
1 —— ■
STERLING PAINT
HIS PROTECTION
When your house is painted with STER
LING PAINT you need not worry about
Ram, Hail, Snow, Sleet, Frost, Sun or De
cay. It resists them all.
Our Salesmen are prepared to talk paint
A?i° a n n e ta 329 n 1115 for an Y Purpose.
1 - —'
'im m mi t—nMniM—t ■i .iiibu
DINING ROOM FURNITURE I
FOR THANKSGIVING DAY I
Your (lining room will i»e the attractive
part of your home on Thanksgiving Day, ami
perhaps you w ill want to brighten it up with 1
a complete outfit.'or maybe you w ill need onlv ?
a Buffet, t’hina l losct. Seiw ing Table. Dining
Table or (’hairs.
We are showing a beautiful line of these in
Mahogany. Early English and Golden Oak.
You will appreciate the designs and prices
we have to offer.
MARTIN & KNOTT FURNITURE CO.
Successors to
H. A. MARTIN FURNITURE CO.,
135 Whitehall Street.
High’s Boys’ Department
“Saving Opportunities”
FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY
No. 1
100 Boys’ Wool D. B. Suits for $5.85
These Suits are m w and fresh, with style and durability.
Choice of material- and colors unlimited, sized from fi to 18.
(Second Floor)
No. 2
125 Reefer Coats for small boys, sized from 2to 9, at. $3.75
These Coats are all wool, full cut. excellently made, ami you
can choose from Bine Serges, Red Cashmeres, Covert Cloth,
pretty mixtures and Shepherd Plaids.
No. 3
750 Guod Madras Blouse Waists. 35c; 3 for SI.OO. |
cently deceased, Mathew E. Rushin, a
prominent "tinier and husliirs.* nuui < :
this <■' wa- -;i< •ssfid. defeating Dr.
W P. XVii'ts. ..f Hju ni\ .ID-, and \\. V.
<>f \ • i nn
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, laiz.
GOOD ROADS EXPERTS
■' TO UR FUL TON CO UN TY;
SPLIT ON U. S. AID PLAN
The same hundred good roads boost-
•th who went squarely on record yes
i teniaj afternoon as opposed to motor
j speeding on country highways went
touring the roads of F ulton county to- I
i day, and the route laid out lor the t'.vo
-1 hour spin indicates that speed laws
1 were to be called off for the day and
the motorcycle cops told to go chase
, each other. The visitors left the Pied-,
mont hotel at 10 o'clock, went out oast j
I Hapeville, in by another route, through
tile city and out Peachtree road, and :
expect to wind up at the Driving club,
for luncheon. More than a dozen of the (
: best highways in the coutity were on
| tile itinerary.
The good roads woikers are among
I the livest wires that have come to At
lanta in several seasons. They are en
i thusiasts, and more than that, they are
! experts. They know the technical side
of road building, and their conventions
have got beyond the “now all let's get
together and holler" stage of the game.
They are telling each other things, and
they seem as interested in listening as
in talking, something rare at conven
tions.
Charles P. Light, of Wes. Virginia,
field secretary of the American Asso
ciation for Highway Improvement, is
considered one of the active good roads
workers of the country. He is the apos
tle of the log drag, and believes that
dragging a road frequently and well is
the solution of about 99 per cent of
highway troubles. And he preaches the
gospel of the drag every where he goes.
“Get Grade and Bridges."
“If you have limited money and want
to build a road, spend the money on
grading it,” he said today. “The grade
is the only really permanent thing
about a road. Get that right. Bridges
are next. Build a strong steel bridge
and y,ui won’t have to do it over. Then
surface your road If you have any
money left—but grades and bridges are
• the main thing.
“Every man thinks he is a road ex
pert, just as every man believes he
could run a newspaper better than the
editor or beat the landlord running a
, hotel. Every farmer thinks he knows
all abbut building a road. Every tnan
can not be a* road expert, but most of
them can be educated. We need expert
knowledge'; the very best engineers, if
we would have well built and perma
nent roads.
“But tell the readers of The Georgian
who want good roads and are willing
to work and pay for them that the log
drag is the best investment in the
world. They can keep up a road for
from $5 to S2O a mile per year with a
drag. Don't try to drag twenty-inile
stretches. Have a drag for every two
or three miles of road, light enough for
two mules to pul], and drag the road
I after the rains. isn't any way
| to say exactly when. It is like pop
I ping the question to your
I one must act according to the sur-
I rounding circumstances.” • (
U. S. Aid May Hurt Projects.
s Mr. Light advanced the, theory that
I government aid for the national high-
I ways might be a bad thing if unwisely
I handled.
I "I’m afraid you folks are going to
I give us too much money,” he said, ad-
I dressing Congressman John L. Bur-
I nett, of Alabama. “No; I'm not sar-
I castle. I mean it. I'm afraid congress
I i will give' us more x than we can use
I: wisely. There is apt to be a great
| waste if the government’s funds are
I not carefully looked after. We waste
I $40,000,000 a year on roads now —-just
throw it away on makeshift roads and
repairs and unnecessary expenditures.”
Charles C. Gilbert, assistant secre
tary of the Nashville Board of Trade,
Is a veteran good roads worker. He
was on the first automobile which
crossed the East Tennessee mountains,
and struck roads that had not been
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ECZEMA SUFFERERS
I Read what 1. S. (Hidden, Tampa, Fla.,
says. It proves that
Tetterine Cures Eczema
For seven years I had eczema on my
ankle. I tried many remedies and nu
merous doctors. I tried Tetterine and
after eight weeks am entirely free
from the terrible eczema.
Tetterine will do as much for others.
It cures ecieuia. ’otter, erysipelas and
other skin troubles ’.’ cures to stay
cured. (Set it today Tetterine
50c at druggists or by mall.
SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA.
(Advt.) 1
1 VJj B Opinni. Whitley •nd Drug trrafrd
0k X| Bat 'hniror at Sanitarium. Book on subject i
pH B *1 WOOLLEY. H-N. Victor
I SbmKmi Sam a. turn. Stlanta. Georgia.
worked in 40 years. He also is doubt
ful of the wisdom of national aid.
“I’m afraid that if tlie states learn
the govemm.-nt is going to help, they
will ‘lay down' and wait for Uncle Sam
j to do it. all." lie said.
| Most of the delegates are in favor of
government support, however. The
pending bill by Congressman William
Schlev Howard received a great deal of
•omm iidation in the convention. It
provides that the states shall pay as
I much money for road work as the gov
i ernment, a system of equal division be
j Ing laid out, and this will prevent any
| state’s waiting idly for Uncle Sam to
; do it all.
Congressman Burne.tt Speaks.
Neither Senator Jonathan Bourne nor
any of the four governors on the pro
gram showed up for the convention
Congressman Burnett, of Alabama, de
livered an address last night on Fed-*
oral aid for roads, stressing the point
that the money devoted to army and
navy would be much better expended op
roads. Dr. S. W. MeCallie, state geolo
gist, gavb an illustrated lecture on
Georgia and Carolina road work.
Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt, of North Car
olina, president of the association, out
lined today the biggest highway project
the association has undertaken the
building es the "Crest of the Blue Ridge
highway.” a wonderful road from Vir
ginia clear down to Atlanta, along the
erest of the mountains, passing through
Rabun Gap and Tallulah Falls. This
road, when completed, will be one of
the most magnificent scenic routes fit
the country.
Mffl, CONSTIPATED, BILIOUS,
THE DELICIOUS "SIRUP OF FIGS"
-
Removes the scum from the tongue, sweetens a sour, j
gassy, bilious stomach; cleanses your liver and 30 |
feet of bowels without gripe or nausea.
If headachy, bilious, dizzy, tongue
coated, stomach sour and full of gas,
you belch undigested food and feel
sick and miserable, It means that your
liver is choked with sour bile and jtour
thirty feet of bowels are clogged with
effete waste matter not properly car
. ried off. Constipation is worse than
most folks believe. It means that this
waste matter in the thirty feet of bow
els decays into poisons, gases and acids
and that these poisons are then sucked
into the blood through the very ducts
which should suck only nourishment
to sustain the body.
Most people dread physic. They think
of castor oil, salts and cathartic pills.
They shrink from the after effects —so
• they postpone the dose until they get
, sick; then they do this liver and bowel
, cleansing in a heroic way—they have
I™ A N N O UNCEM ENT ®®BMB
■■ ——
TAKE TIME BY I
THE FORELOCK I
B Is your plumbing in ■
condition to withstand
g a freeze? Better have I
it examined and re
paired now and save
time and money later
We employ experts and our
charges are very reasonable
CALL ON OR TELEPHONE
I Stewart & Hunt I
I 53 E. Hunter Street I
I EXPERT PLUMBERS I
Phone S. Bell M. 521 Atlanta Phone 1103
|| YOUR CHILDREN |
I \
I Start your children right. Give them a Bank Account
in this Bank and encourage them to save systemati
cally. Saving and thrift are important items in
the education of a child.
•‘As a Twig is Bent, So the Tree Inclines.”
s '
The saving habit once formed in a child's life is a J
permanent basis for character. It leads to inde
pendence and financial success. Four per cent in
terest paid; SI.OO starts the account.
; WE FURNISH METAL SAVINGS BANKS i
Georgia Savings Bank & Trust Co. i
Open Saturdays from 4 to o in addition to morning hours
iL ... J 1
MINERS, DESPERATE,
COLLECT IN HILLS TO
PREPARE FOR BATTLE
■ -■——•
CHARLESTON. W. VA., Nov. 21.
I Entire villages are being deserted by
Ito striking coal miners and their fam
' files in the district now under martial
law and the men are taking to the hills
and preparing to fight. Anarchy ex
ists at many points and conditions are
so ominous that the authorities are to
day conferring on the advisability of
calling on the Federal government for.
United States soldiers to restore condi
tions to normal there for once and all.
Major James I. Pratt said today the j
situation is worse now than at any
time since the troubles first began ear
lier in the year. The soldiers slept on
thei.- guns last night. It is believed the
miners, who are assembling on the hill,
sides, are being marshaled for an at
tack. They are desperate and bloody
civil war is imminent.
LOCK ON JAIL DOOR
GOES WRONG; HOLDS
PRISONER IN CELL
DALTON; GA.. Nov. 21. —John Stocks,
a boy sentenced to fifteen days on the
city chaingang, stands a good chance of
serving his sentence without doing a
lick of work.
Stocks is locked in a, cell In the
county jail, and all efforts to get the
door unlocked have proved unavailing.
The cell is equipped with a combination
lock. While Blocks was in his cell,
Paul McCamy slammed the door and
turned the combination’s knob. Fully
a dozen men have worked on the com
bination, but the lock holds fast. The
officers are in a quandary.
a bowel washday. That Is all wrong.
If you will take a teaspoonful of deli
cious Syrup of Figs tonight, you will
never realize you have taken anything
until morning, when all the poisonous
•natter, sour bile and clogged-up waste
will be moved on and out of your sys
tem, thoroughly but gently—no griping
—no nausea—no weakness. Taking
Syrup of Figs is a real pleasure. Don’t
think you are drugging yourself; it is
composed entirely of luscious figs, sen
na and aromatics, and constant use
can not cause injury.
Ask your druggist for "Syrup of
Figs and Elixir of Senna,” and look
for the name, California Fig Syrup
Company, on the label. This is the
genuine—old reliable. Any other Fig
Syrup offered as good should be re
fused with contempt. Don’t be im
posed upon. (Advt.)
j——, ,
W he , re . ’* Pays
Qualities t o
Are /M 1 ° “ uy
Highest For Cash
Wh ere And
Are Bu y at
Lowest Rogers’
Friday and Saturday
Specials at Rogers’
Combination Offer
7 Cakes of Octagon Soap -
and I p
2 pkgs. Octagon Soap Powder
Not more than one lot to a buyer
New Raisins, Nuts, Etc.
Finest Qualities; Lowest Prices
Royal Scarlet Extra Fancy Seed- Purity Brand Dates; 15c value,
ed Raisins; new crop; full pound per package iq c
packagel2c New Mixed Nuts, Including Pe-
IGold Standard Seeded Raisins; cans, Almonds, English Walnuts,
full pound packagel2c Filberts and Brazils, per
Royal Scarlet Extra Large Re- pound
cleaned Currants; full pound Brazil Nuts, medium size,
packagelsc pound ,,l2c
Sunflower Brand Cleaned Cur- Brazil Nuts, extra large,
rants, per package..loo pound ,<>l4o
Royal Scarlet Malaga Cluster English Walnuts, large,
Raisins, pound3so pound g(k
pound 4 Cluster Ralslns ‘ New Black Walnuts, per bushel,
a-1..,., ‘ f
LTa.™, Mo „i-•• •• •• ■
Orange or Lemon Peel. Shelled Almonds, pound .. ~800
pound Shelled Pecans, pound9oc
Glace Cherries and Pineapple, Shelled English Walnuts,
pound soo p0und.....60c
Another Big Lot Fine Florida
of Fine Grape-Fruit
A PP‘ es Large, 6c
21c eck Small, 4c I
Seasonable Specials
Honker Brand Cape Cod Cran- Atmore’s Plum Pudding No
berries, best quality; g tins> 63c; No , ”
qualt tins, 23c; individual |
Pure Georgia Cane Syrup from tins I VC
±^ beSt in the Nonesuch Mince Meat; enough
state, gallon WC for two pies in
Largfc stalks of fine, ripe Sugar Package, for IVC
Cane; per , Atmore's Celebrated Mince Meat,
stalk OQ In No. 2 tins;
K? S“"“‘ '’"TI ® c
4o pound P .... 15c j
Quart Jars of New Lot of
Queen Olives Danish Cabbage
29c eac h J q pound I
Regular 50c Value Sound Hard Heads
New Palate Ticklers
New Codfish Middles, 1E«- New n r.-..,
per P° und "SO bulk, per "* 5C
New Fat Mackerel; good 1/Y-. Xew Sauer Kraut, in 1
size, each IUG No. 3 tins IVC
Brooks’ Tomato Catsup,
New Fat Mackerel; new; large bottle fcOG
small; three for IVO Urooks chn .. Sam . M . la)ge ()ut
New Dill Pickles, specially priced smah 15C
— (
Zatek c i .
□unshine
Chocolate Icing .
Cakes and Crackers
Zatek. the new chocolate 1c- v
ing.(ready for use), is as good New and complete line of
for puddings, gelatine, cup famous Sunshine Cakes am!
custard, etc., as it is for icing Crackers. Special demonstra
cakps. Every one who ha«
tried it is delighted. ‘ on at our ‘ 2 Whitehall str, . t
store Priday and Saturdav.
1-2 pound 15c
ROGERS’
36 PURE FOOD STORES j
Phone Connections At All Stores
■ Order From Nearest Store
W—»i II || W iail 111 IWI || I 111 |||| 111 j ili.J, 1.,