Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 05, 1912, HOME, Page 3, Image 3

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STUDENTS eject SUFFRAGETTES; 500DINRIOT Women Break Up Meeting at Glasgow University During Irish Secretary’s Speech. \ .. AS , ;i >\v Dec. 5.—A riot was pre- StT: b. a suffragette attack upon a uno students of the Uni » ,«uow which was being versit * ° * >,x \ugustine Birrell, secre f,. | !ind. here today. " T _ was the most violent in ites have ever figured in d many of the women were from the hall. Secretary fiirrell began . n began shouting “Votes i, and the speaker could not I I . women refused to leave T. 1,., rite speaker, who is an old , .gain to continue, but his ', f n .wned beneath the screams of the women. V1 g ( b the outbreak, the stu- • • red the women, who an- e , ... tlicir threats with taunts. In rnmime the police had been .■r moni but before they reached the . ... .-i.mm: had broken out. Students Eoized tlir women and carried them ’ .king and fighting to the exits. ( , nf . ~r the women managed to gain ,piatf'cm ind tried to attack Sec p . but she was dragged to •he door. others of the women added to the pandemonium by tearing up benches ank hurling chairs through the air, ni anwiiib k.oping up their battle cry o f "Votes fur women." By tin lime the police arrived and , ~.t r ,..| the hall the interior was a ..p.-k, A number of the women were PRICE COMMITTEE OF GUTTER AND EGG BOARD IS ABOLISHED i Hit'AGO. Dec. s.—The quotation ( Hiiiitr of the Chicago butter and , li.mr.l was abolished today at the so s'ssion of that body. Here ;■ no mlicial prices will be given out, ■ valm - will be established between buyer and seller. It hit.- been reported many times that the (jiitf'd States government was soon to instituti proceedings against the C rag" butter and egg board as being ‘ imbination In restraint of trade. AVirtb". or not this had anything to do with today - action was a matter the members of the board were disinclined to discuss. ownerstourge’haste IN W. PEACHTREE WORK \ meeting of the owners of property abutting on West Peachtree street will i’ li'ki in the assembly room of the Piedmont hotel at 8 o’clock Friday night to press upon the city council the importance of proceeding at as •arlv ;i. date as possible with the proj <"'"■] improvement of West Peachtree street. AH persons interested in the im- "'"nient have been asked to be pres- Tin executive committee call is in Spencer R. Atkinson, chair man. Rid Your Face Os All Pimples Skin Cleared in a Few Days by Stuart s Calcium Wafers, the Famous Blood Purifier. . 1 '-"b "S. blotches, skin eruptions of kin-ls. are simply the impurities in t.ie blood coming to the surface. All external treatment in the world t '' l,n . : lio a Particle of good unless you ! 1 lx the blood. And there’s nothing humiliating as a face that’s all ” k ' n nut" and spotted. Wh ’ i/T” 1 s a -'orious Change to Be Rid of P| mplcs. You Just Feel Fine. 1 alcium Wafers will clear "bstinate complexion, because -h’ into the blood and remove "f the trouble. The blood is “t all impurities and foreign ' and these are quickly ellmi >n the system. You’ll notice a ' hange in a few days—you Ai, '. kno " yourself in a week. ' s • alcium Wafers are ab lrtnlew to any one. Th dr "e just what a physician ... e 'ln most cases of skin erup blooil. These w .if.-i s are .' ■' Jncentrated form, which ''" ' n ict Quickly and thor- B‘-' Stuart's Calcium Wafers 're at r,o cents a box. Be 'K m today and then look at i, i• V ' e niirror in a few daVs, “"■ M awful pimples, black bolls, liver spots, rash, ec , 11 lnu ddy complexion rap- , hl ' ’ 1 “ and your face denied h •*! of a tiower. (Afi»i.) Boy of the 60’s Admits ‘Younguns’ Have Him Bested ‘OLD FOLKS’ AT CORN SHOW a **'**v , a.. • ' 'd 7 V”*'Sfc Ross Thomas. Tryon. Ga., on Davy Jones, Summer- K 0 ville. Ga. on right comparing M vaSJp’’ A. samples of their corn crops. // 1 \ // v W\ U / ** • \ IIpA J i Bi 9 - U ' r ’ > ' Jf ■wBMBMwrW ’ wMBw \\\ . wlUsaßMßlOow • K WOMANFIRESON NIGHT PROWLER Shoots Through Door, Routing Stranger Who Demanded Admittance to Home. t There is a neat little bullet hole through the front door of Mrs. W. H. Haldeman’s residence, 318 East Geor gia avenue, today, and the bullet may be in the anatomy of a man who called there last night and insisted on coming in. Mrs. Haldeman backed up her re fusal to admit him by taking a shot through the oak with her pistol. Mrs. Haldeman, whose husband is a traveling man and away from home most of the time, was alone in her house at an early hour when she heard a knock at the front door. When she went down a man outside said he had a message for her. “Slip it under the door,” said Mrs. Haldeman. “I’ve got to see you In person,” said the voice. “You can't,” said Mrs. Haldeman. The man insisted, but finally went away. Half an hour later there was another knock. Aggin Mrs. Haldeman went to the door and again the same voice de manded admittance. Mrs. Haldeman, annoyed at losing sleep, went back to her room, took her revolver from a dresser drawer, returned to the hall and fired through the door. “Oh. I.ordy! I'm killed.” yelled the voice. There was a clatter of feet down the steps and then silence. When Call Officers Anderson and Evans . reached the scene there was no trace of the jnan who wanted to get in. TY COBB’S FATHER-IN-LAW TO BE COUNTY OFFICIAL AUGUSTA, GA.. Dec. s.—On January 1 F. B. Pope and L. A. Berckmans. members of the board of county com missioners, will retire from office and their successors, chosen at the pri mary last August, will be inducted into office. R. O. Lombard and A. J. Twiggs will be the new members. Mr. Lom bard is very wealthy and Is the father in-law of Ty Cobb. At a meeting of the county commis sion held this week, the board decided not to’ take up the recent recommen dation of the grand jury that $200,000 of bonds for road Improvement be floated. POSTAL CLERK, SHORT IN HIS ACCOUNTS, ARRESTED CHATTANOOGA, TENN., Dec. 5. The chief postoftice inspector’s head quarters here announced today the ar rest of Clyde E. Smith, stamp clerk of the postoffice at Gadsden. Ala. Smith was checked up yesterday aft ernoon and found short in his accounts. He will be tried at an early date before the United States commissioner at Gadsden. He Is well connected in tin Alabama city. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1912 Uncle George and Aunt Martha ‘‘Take In” Everything at the Capitol. "Uncle George” Harvey, 73 years old. but still hale and hearty, gazed proudly at his youngest grandson's exhibit at the big corn show in the capltol ro tunda. He let his eye wander medita tively over the long expanse of tables laden with gleaming corn, while Aunt Martha tasfed judiciously of grand daughter’s delicious preserves. “It wasn’t that way in the days befo’ th’ wafl.” commented Uncle George, as he patted his grandson on his shoul der. “I ain’t uster talking to news paper reporters, but I’ll tell you how it was in them days. They ain’t many of the old fellows left an' I ’spect it'll be sorter good for th’ youngsters to learn why it wuz th’ old folks didn't uster git a hundred bushels to th’ acre. “I’m from Greene county—that’s down near middle Georgia—an' it’s th’ best farmin’ land in th’ state. My boy here raised a hundred an’ twenty-sevefi bushels this year on a acre. I remem ber once at a fair we had when 1 was a young man—that was befo’ the war—l had some bottom lan’ an' I raised 53 bushels, an’ that was some raisin’ in them days, yo’ bet. Fattening 100 Hogs on Three Acres. “I bet I did somethin' once, though, thet ain’t none of these young uns got me beat on. They can talk about their 200 bushels an' all that, but ain’t none of 'em evej fattened 100 hogs on three acres of corn. It was in '7O, seems to me, an' the whole country was overrun with shif’less niggers and carpet-bag gers livin’ off'n what they could steal. “When I got back from th’ army I didn’t have nothin’ left but fo' pigs an' ’bout 500 acres of land. My house had done been burnt down. But 1 built me a shack out’n pine logs and me an’ Martha, got married. In fo’ years I’d done raised 100 hogs and meat was selling higlier'n it is now. I took siejc in th' early summer an’ all our corn but three acres growed up in grass. Martha, she worked them three acres, And we got 'bout a hund'ed bushels off n 'em 1 got well just befo' harvest time an' managed to gel them pigs together —they'd been in th' canebrakes all sum mer. “Well, when I got 'em up to th' house and put 'em in a little pasture out by th' woodyard they wuzn’t no ways peart. Seem'd like that cane-eatin' hadn't done 'em no good. But th' gov 'nient wuzn't botherin' us none in them days, so me an’ a jigger what knew how fixed us up a little still, all but th’ worm, an’ brewed some sweet mash. Them pigs Jus' thrived on that mash, an’ in 'bout two weeks I’d done sold th’ bunch fo' $3,000—-drove ’em to Macon 'en had a hard time glttin’ ’em there. Ever since then we’ve had plen ty at my house. The young-uns can’t do that nowadays." Old People Interested. For a moment he paused and medita tively figured a fertilizer company's ad vertisement. A smile spread over his face as he pointed to the analyzed in gredients and then to the literature sent out by the state department of agriculure. “That's wtt'Ue the young-uns have got it on us," he said. “We didn't have LITTLETON’S MEN TO PROTESTIOTE Leaders for Defeated Mayor alty Candidate in Augusta Claim Unfair Count. AUGUSTA, GA.. Dec. s.—The Little ton leaders will file a protest, alleging that the city election of yesterday was not conducted properly, and they -will ask for a recount. They allege they can show that the election was not fairly and squarely won. On the fact of the returns, L. C. Hayne defeated Dr. J. R. Littleton for mayor by 79 majority. John N. Ewing. The funeral of Joh'n N. Ewing, who died yesterday morning, will be held this aft ernoon at 1:30 o'clock at the Woodward Avenue Baptist church. Interment in Westview. nothin' to go on but what our pa’s told us, an what we learned by experience. Nowadays they've got men ready to teach them all they is to know an' then th’ state watches over them an’ tells ’em what they need to make the lan' right—and they certainly make it right.\ Tl|e show seemed somewhat domi nated by old people, and here and there could be seen aged women peering curiously at the fancy canning exhibits demonstrating the ability of some bright girl of fifteen or sixteen. Ap parently there was a trace of envy in their remarks, for the exhibits surely were wonderful, but occasionally an exclamation of genuine delight would rise from some group as the amber beauty of great preserved peaches would catch their eyes or the beaming redness of rich apple jelly brought water to their mouths. Many of them preferred the exhibits of corn, scorning the work of their own sex. and though they were very wary of strangers and loath to talk before them, an occasional tale of some won derful yield in the olden days would reach the bystander's ears. 25,000 Ears of Corn Shown. The corn show presents the greatest exposition of the work of boys and girls ever* seen in the South. Twenty-five thousand ears of corn, all raised by Georgia boys, most of them under six teen years of age. are on exhibition, while canned goods of every descrip tion have been sent in by hundreds of girls, members of the girls canning clubs all over the state. Good wives for hard-working fann ers these girls will make, if their can ning exploits are any indication of their housekeeping ability. Canned beans, cucumbers, corn, pumpkin, squash, beets, peas, tomatoes, peaches and many other like products have been sent by the girls, who show that their knowl edge of supplying the inner man is just as'great as is the boys' in supplying the country with grain. All kinds of jellies and preserves cause hundreds of country-bred but city-living people to cast longing eyes, but all in vain, for the girls are so proud of their exhibits that many of them absolutely refuse to sell. IT GOST MILLION! TO ELECT'NILSON Nearly 90,000 Contributions Received, Most of Which Were Under SIOO Each. WASHINGTON, Dec. s.—The Dem <>cratic national commit’ee filed a statement of its expenditures in the presidential campaign with the clerk of the house late yesterday, showing total expenditures of $1,159,446, with a bal ance on hand November 30 of $24,958. There were 89,954 individual contribu tors. The largest individual contribu tors were Herman Ridder and Cleve land Dodge, of New York, and Charles R. Crane, of Chicago. Crane gave $40,000. Dodge $35,000, and Ridder, as treasurer of funds, col lected $30,073, All of the gifts, except 1.625, were in amounts of less than SIOO. Bryan Donated SI,OOO. William J. Bryan gave SI,OOO. as did David R. ITancis; former secretary of the interior; Mayor John F. Fitzgerakj, of Boston; Senators Newlands, of NeA vada. and O’Gorman, of New York. Senator Watson, of West Virginia, con tributed $7,500, and Governor Foss, of Massachusetts; former Senator William Clark, of Montana, and Roger Sullivan, of Chicago, gave $5,000 each. George F. Baer, president of the Philadelphia and Reading railroad, gave $1,000; B. F. Yoakum. New York, $2,500, and for mer Mayor J, D. Phelan, of San Fran cisco. $2,000. John Barton Payne, of Chicago, put $15,000 into the committee chests; Judge J. W. Gerard, New York, $13,- 000; Jacob H. Schiff and B. M. Baruch, of New York, $12,500 each. i'he SIO,OOO contributors were Charles S. Guggenheimer, Samuel Untermeyer, James Speyer, Jacob Ruppert, Henry Goldman, Henry Morgenthau, all of New York; F. C. Penfield. Cincinnati; Thomas D. Jones. David B. Jones. B. M. Winston, all of Chicago, and Hugh C. Wallace, Tacoma, Wash. Spreckles Gave $5,000. W. R. Craig, New York, gave $9,000; W. R. Rust. Tacoma, $7.00; G. F. S. Peabody, of Chicago, $6,450, ami J. C. C. Mayo, of Kentucky, and W. C. Beer, of Yonkers N. Y„ $6,000 each. The $5,000 contributors were Rolla Wells, St. Louis; F. B. Lynch. St. Paul; W. A. Gaston and 11. P. Nawn, Bos ton; J. M. Camden. Versailles. Ky.; Charles Smith. Menasha. Wis.. and'C. A. Spreckles. S. Harris, E. A. S. White, John DeSaules, Nathan Straus and John D. Ryan,Alli of New York. Representatives J. Scully, New Jersey: 'Ralph Pulitzer, New York; Joseph E. Willard. Richmond; former Lieutenant Governor and Corporation Commissioner of Virginia Charles W. McAlpine, of New York, and J. J. Star row, of Boston, gave $2,000 each, R. H. Vansant, Kentucky, $1,500; Walter A. Milstead. Manila, $1,400. TECH PUPILS TO HEAR INTERPRETATION OF KIPLING IN COSTUME The Georgia School of Technolog)' is to have the second entertainment in the se ries of three allowed the student body each term at 8 o'clock when Henry J. Hadfield is to give a costumed interpre tation of Rudyard Kipling. The program for the Tech entertain ment will be what Mr. Hadfield has called his Anglo-Indian Cycle A, with Tommy Atkins, the native of India, the Britisher in India as the basis. The reading is to be held in the audi torium of the Y. M. C. A. building. In order to encourage the students to at tend this and similar entertainments every man who attends the entertain ment will be excused from reciting the next day, and to further encourage them the admission has been placed at 10 cents. This admission applies also to the public, who are generally invited. EASTERN DIVISION OF SUNDAY SCHOOL WORKERS IN SESSION The first session of the eastern division meeting of the Atlanta Sunday school workers will be held this afternoon at Ininan Park Methodist church. W. E. Newill is president of this division. Besides the local speakers, Mrs. S. P Moore, of Birmingham, and D. \V. Sims, general secretary of the Georgia Sunday School association, twill be on the pro gram. This meeting is the third of the series of division Sunday school meetings to be held in Atlanta. The fourth and last meeting will be held early in Januarx SLAYER BRAZZELL IS SANE. SAY ALIENISTS Dr. .1. W. Mobley. Dr. N P. Walker and Dr. E. M. Green, of Milledgeville, ap pointed as a board of alienists to pass upon the sanity of .1. E. Hrazzell. of Rich mond county, condemned to death on February 3. today reported to the execu tive office in Atlanta that they had con sidered the case and found Brazzell is not Insane. The report will be appealed to the prison commission, it is thought, but with little hope that it will be change<Lin any wise there fnless the governor interferes. Braz zell will hang, in all probability, at the j time set. three’crematedTn TRYING TO BREAK JAIL CROWLEY, LA., Dec. 5 Three men were cremated in an attempted jail de livery here yesterday. They were William Collier, Los Angeles; Carter Grace, St. Louis; Wilson Everett, Chi cago. The men were serving time for Intoxication. VETERAN’S WIFE DIES. ANNISTON, ALA., Dee. s.—The bod) of Mis. Allen, wife of Major/joint 11. Allen, of Confederate fame, was bulled this afternoon in Edgemont eometeiy.i She had be n sick many months. I Up and Down Peachtree A Rubber Coat aiid Warm Weather—A Tragedy. He told the proprietor of the big cloth- | Ing store in lower Peachtree, where he I carried his woes, fresh and j>alpitating from room No. 13 in one of the nearby | big hotels, that Atlanta certainly seemed to care less for heat in cold weather and more for heat in warm weather than any town he ever visited. And then he went on to explain: "I was in Chattanooga a few weeks I ago, and while there I purchased a real nifty rubberized raincoat. 1 ain not a cheap tnan. and when I went forth to get one of those coats I got a good one — paid $25 for it, as a matter of fact. “Well, when I retired last night, it was so warm I had to let up ail the windows and throw half the cover off the bed; and before I turned in I threw my new coat over the steam radiator, not thinking there would be any steam turned on, of course: and perhaps not really thinking any harm could come to my coat anyway. "When 1 awoke this morning—well, say! The steam had been turned on all right, and that coat of mine was distributed all over the place. In nice little rubber rivu lets! “It didn’t smell any too good, and I hope it didn't ruin the earpet. But If it did I shall not distress myself about It. Served the hotel right for turning on the steam, and the thermometer up about 70. "Oh. yes. I might have gathered up that coat by the spoonful, and maybe it might have been molded back into shape, but I guess I'll buy another coat—not another rubberized coat, thank you. Think a plain old woolen thing, like mother used to make, will do me this time." CANAL CONFERENCE VISITORS TO SEE BIG WATERWAY IN FILMS Government klnemacolor pictures of the Panama canal, which thus far have been seen only by President Taft and his cabinet, will be brought to Atlanta next Tuesday by Admiral C. M. Ches ter, U. S. N., to be exhibited at the Panama Canal confeoence, which is to be held here under Chamber of Com merce auspices. Admiral Chester will lecture 'to the conference. Among those who will attend the gathering will be eight or more minis ters to the I’nited States from Central and South American republics, some score of railroad and steamship com pan) presidents and vice presidents, 65 representatives of leading commercial bodies, and fifteen or twenty prominent cotton mill men from Georgia and sur rounding states. The foreign trade committee of the Chamber of Commerce. St. Elmo Mas sengale, chairman, has arranged for an elaborate dinner Tuesday night to en tertain the visitors at the Piedmont Driving club. About 200 covers will be spread. Senators Hoke Smith and Ellhu Root are coming, if the Arcfibaid trial per mits, and Senator Fletcher, of Florida, has announced his intention of being present. no usFto try for SURVEYOR OF PORT JOB; “HAINT NONE” Something like 37 Atlanta patriots who are anxious and waiting to be call ed to serve their country will be dis appointed when they read this. The 37 loyal original Wilson men have for several weeks had their eye on a choice job in the customs house, one which carries with it liberal emol ument and a modicum of work. Each of the 37 is an applicant for the office of surveyor of customs in the port of Atlanta. And today, a would-be office holder searching through the national direc tory for a job within his reach discov ered that there won’t be any surveyor of customs after July 1 next. The of fice was abolished by the last congress. In a spasm of economy, and perhaps unwitting that the next year of spoils would belong to the Democracy, the Democratic house wiped out all the jobs of surveyor in the “ports" not on the seacoast. So ft seems probable that Marcellus O. Markham, the incumbent, will serve out the remainder of the period ending July 1. His commission will not ex pire for two years yet, and it is hardly likely the Democrats will remove him between March 4 and July 1. MASONS OF ALABAMA DEDICATE ORPHANAGE MONTGOMERY. ALA.. Dec. s.—ln the presence of more than 1,000 grand lodge delegates, scores *f Masonic dig nitaries and hundreds of interested spectators the Alabama Masonic Wid ows and Orphans home was dedicated yesterda) afternoon. The home is sit uated three miles from Montgomery. A total of about SIOO,OOO is repre sented In the home, and Masons today pointed with pride to the fact that not one cent is owed on the institution. It will be opened January 1. Although it has a capacity of 60 inmates, it will start off with about 35, according to Grand Master Daniel A. Greene, of Birmingham, ' NUTS BAIT FOR VOTES IN SCHOOL ELECTION PARKERSBI’RG, W. VA„ Dec. 5. “Two bushels of walnuts and two bags of peanuts" were items included in the expense account of B. J. Johnson, de feated candidate for the.board of edu cation in Tygarts district filed today. GERMAN DIPLOMATIC CORPS BARS U.S. WOMEN BERLIN. Dec. 5 -Chanceller Von Vethmann-Hollwegg made a ruling to day that the ititi) of Ameriean-born | wives in tin- German diplomatic emps • from now on is forbidden. PLAN 5200,DD8 I. W. G. J. HOME Old Quarters Paid For, Organi zation Begins Move for Central Building. f A new and well-appointed Young Women’s Christian association home in the center of the city, to cost from $200,000 to $250,000, is planned today by the leading workers in the organization, following the final payment' Tuesday on the present home at 19-21 West Baker street. For some time the home authorities have been paying monthly installments to Judge John T. Pendleton on West Baker street property. The price was $12,500, and now that the members hold the deeds, they contemplate disposing of the old home and putting the money, together with other sums, into a mag nificent new building. The proposed building will contain a. case and rest rooms, gymnasium, indi vidual lockers, reading rooms, laundry, chapel, swimming pool and everything needed for tired working girls. Present Quarters Taxed. It will be three or four stories, of most modern architecture, and will ac commodate from 200 to 300 young women. The present home on Baker street is a. two-story residence of about fifteen rooms, which are taxed beyond their capacity. Matron Nelson has had t<> turn away as many as 40 girls in a week, since she can keep in comfort only 25 or 30. The girls now at the home are In most cases, secretaries and stenogra phers. They eat breakfast and supper at the home and lunch at the Y. W. C. A. rooms tn the Steiner-Emery build ing, at the Peachtree viaduct. They pay $3.50 a. week for room and board, and table privileges are given through tickets which are punched rft each meal. The maximum lunch charge is 20 cents, and the girls, many of them far from home, find the Y. W. C. A. a great money-saver. Sunday dinner is had at the West Baker street home. Sub-Hom«s Proposed. It may not be necessary to sell the present home. The plan is to run three or four sub-homes in different sections of the city, in conjunction with the central home. In this central station there also will be a liberal reservation for rooms, which will be used mostly by transients and girls who find it neces sary to get down to work earlier than those living farther out. Prominently mentioned in the move ment for the new home and the trib utary homes are Mrs. James Jackson, president of the Y. W. C. A.; Mrs. W. E. Mansfield, general secretary, and Miss Daisy Eckert, general secretary. Gains 30 Lbs. In 30 Days 50c Package of Remarkable Floah Builder, Protone, Sent Free to Provo What It Will Do. IA THE OF* START SECOND MONTH Protsae Will Make You Nice and Flump Protone Will Make You Nice and Plump. It 18 astonishing to see the effects pro duced by the new flesh-Increaser, Pro tone. To put on real, solid, healthy flesh, at the rate of a pound a day, Is not at all remarkable with this new wonder Protone induces nutrition, increases cell-growth, makes perfect the assimila tion of food, strengthens nerves, inoreaaes blood corpuscles, builds up. safely and quickly, muscles and solid healthy flesh, and rounds out the figure Ear women who never appear stylish in anything because </f thinness, Protone is a. revelation. The regular SI.OO siae of Proton® i» for sale by all druggists, or will be mailed di rect. upon receipt of price, by The Pro tone Co. 4850 Protone Bldg. CetroH, Mich. It costs you nothing to prove the re markable effects of Protone. It is non injurious to the most delicate system. The Protone Company will send you on receipt of yonr name and address a free 50c package of Protone. with full instruc tions. to prove that it does the work; also their book on "Why You Are Thin.’’ free of charge, giving facts which will prob ably astonish you. Send coupon below to day with your name and address. Free Protone Coupon It will cose you nothing to prove the remarkable effects of this treatment. The Protone Company will send to any one a free 50c package of Pro tone. if they will fill out this coupon and inclose 10c in stamps or silver to help cover postage. They will also send with it full instructions and their book on "Why You Are Thin." THE PROTONE COMPANY, 4850 Protone Bldg. Detroit. Mich. Name Street . City State The regular SI 00 size of Protons is for sale In Atlanta b.' Coursey A Munn. 38 Marietta street; Elkin Drtig Company. Peachtree street. Jacobs Pharmacy. 4 Marietta street telght stores.! No free packages from druggist*.— (advt.)* 3