Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 06, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2
2
FRAME M ACT
TO BAR WAGONS
SPILLING OIOT
Rains Make Streets in Wake of
Contractors’ Leaky Carts
Sea of Mud.
On account of the terrible condition
of many streets where wagons hav,
spilled dirt. Councilman Orville H.iil
announced today that he would Intro
duce a new dirt ordinance at the next
meeting of council making the spilling
of dirt on the streets punishable by a
line, a stockade sentence or both, m
the discretion of the recorde .
John Jentzi n. sanitary chief, said to
day that council's rec. at act in iepeal
ing the dirt ordinance had tied hb
hands and removed virtual!} all re
strictions from the contractors who
own the wagons which spill the dirt.
With the recent tains the streets
around all the big excavation work. a. •
inches deep in mud. They neatly are
impassible on foot. They are avoided
by automobiles and other vehicles.
From an observation no one could tell
whether sonic of Atlanta's best paved
streets were anything but dirt roads.
Sanitary Department Handicapped.
The sanitary department is so short
of men and wagons that it is alisolutely
unable to cope with the situation. Th
closing of the old crematory has in
creased the work of the department
The main thoroughfares of the city at •
not kept clean, without the additional
work of taking up the dirt spilled by
contractors.
The anti-dirt ordinance was repeal* il
as m result of the work of Aiderman
James W. Maddox, tj. is an excava
tion contractor and has a number of
the biggest jobs in the center of th*>
city. There were big holes in the bodies
of his wagons and bls drivers were
careless. Much ditt was spilled. The
alderman was called before the recorder
time after time and fined for violating
the ordinance.
Members of council did not realize
the seriousness of the alderman’s en
deavors until within the last few days,
when the rains had made sticky mud
out of all the dirt he had spilled and
the city departments began to be flood
ed with complaints. Then they recalled
the circumstances of the repealing of
the dirt ordinance.
Maddox Gives Them Laugh.
It was just before the climax of the
fight to tear down the old crematory.
The figitt in the aldermanic board was
close. Aiderman Maddox's position was
uncertain. The Woodward element ex
pected his support. Then the dirt ordi
nance wae repealed
Aiderman Maddox laughed at that
meeting of council about three weeks
ago and remarked to a group that Re
corder Broyles and all the rest "could
crack their whip," but that he could
spill as much dirt on the streets as he
cared to now. He then voted to tear
down the old crematory.
So the contractors have proceeded to
spill tons of dirt on many well paved
streets. Then the rains came and the
jieople were exasperated.
It generally was predicted today that 1
Councilman Hall's new ordinance wilt I
be adopted at the next meeting of eoun- I
Oil, a week from Mondaj
AMERICAN SCHOOLS
PREFERRED IN CHINA
CHICAGO, Dec. 6. —"A better practi
cal education can be obtained In the
United States than in any other coun
try, and most of our young men will be
sent here for their educations.” said H.
C. Tsang, of Hongkong, China. He
came to Chicago from San Francisco
accompanied by seven young China
men, four of whom will enter Harvard
university and the others the Massa
chusetts Institute of Technology.
NEGRO PAYS PENALTY
WITH LIFE FOR ASSAULT
PRINCESS ANNE, MU. Dec. 6. -
Wesley Miles, negro, convicted of as
saulting 15-year-old Margaret Philliixs.
daughter of former Sheriff William C.
Phillips, of Somerset county, paid the
penally on tho gallows for the crime
today.
RELINQUISHES $70,000,000
TO WED AN AMERICAN
STEGER. 11.1... Dec. 6.—Frank Paul
VonAschfort, a count by birth, who
w ill wed i'ora Kauffman, pretty daugh
ter of a shop keeper lure, says he for
feited s7o,oo<t,oo(t becausi he refused to
wed an English noblewoman
CROP ASSOCIATION FORMED.
YVAYCROSS, GA.. Dee. 6. James
Cowart, former president of the Ware
County Farmers union, has been elected
president of the newly organized Ware
County Crop Improvement association.
George W. Deen is vice president; C.
Fort Andrews, secretary, and M. L.
Bunn, treasurer. The agricultural ad
viser is Dr. J. E. W. Smith.
HARLEM VETERAN DEAD.
HARLEM, GA, Dee. 6—James
Brown, aged 67 years, died at his home
in Harlem after a brief Illness. He was
a Confederate veteran. H> liav>s sev
eral sons ami other relatives to mourn
his death. The body was carried to
Grovetown today and Interred in th<
cemetery at that place.
TO IMPROVE SAVANNAH HARBOR.
SAVANNAH. GA. Det. I, Wotk on
the uppet harbor will probably not be
gin before the first of January The
contract with the Home Dredging Com
pany bus been signed, however, and
io \\ . sliington Th, .job
iP b. mipkbd in bout ten
■*
THE POLITICAL GOBBLE-UN
Copyright, 1912. by International Newsservice.
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L j MHr® -- M-fe
'’i °' s 7 7 u ...
*fa L fe’
Onc't they was a little boy wouldn't say his pray'rs,
An' when he went to bed at night, away up stairs,
His mammy heered him holler, an' his daddy heerd
him bawl;
An' when they turn’t the kivers down he wasn't
there at all!
An' they seeked him in the rafter-room, an' cubby
hole, an' press,
An’ seeked him up the chimbly-fiue, an' ever’-
where, I guess;
But all they ever found was thist his pants an’
roundabout!
An' the gobble - uns’ll git you
Es you
Don't
Watch
Out!
W.PEACHTREE TO
ASK NEW MM
Taxpayers Want That Thor
oughfare Made a Boulevard
Rivaling Peachtree.
West Peachtree residents will meet
at the Piedmont hotel tonight at 8
o'clock to urge that the city makeythat
street a second Peachtree, a real boule
vard out the north side, and thus re
lieve the congestion on the more fre
quently used street. The West Peach
tree Improvement association, led by
Judge Spencer Atkinson, will insist that
the thoroughfare be regraded and re
paved as the only solution of the north
side traffic problem.
The property owners want the first
appropriation of the 1913 council to be
devoted to paving West Peachtree.
They point out that a $,’.,000 appropria
tion was surrendered this year in or
der to aid the regrading of Peachtree
near the junction, and that it is firm
West Peachtree got something for its
taxes.
"West Peachtree is a straight street,
the most logical avenue north and
south, and only needs regrading and
a smooth pavement to be the most
beautiful boulevard in Atlanta.” said
Judge Atkinson today. "We have no
doubt that council will recognize Its
claim to Improvements."
STUDENT HAZER CUT
BY VICTIM: IS DYING
SPRINGFIELD, MO.. Dec. 6. Byron
Crane, sixteen years old, lies at th<
point of death in Burg Deaconess hos
pital here as a result of tin hazing of
Charles Copeland at the Scarritt Mor
risville Methodist college at Morrisville.
Both are students. Copeland is under
arrest. Students hazed Copeland and
he is said to have warned them he
would "get even” after the students
had had their fun. Crane, who was ac
cused of being one of the leaders, was
cut across tin abdomen with a knife.
Physicians say be can riot recover.
PICTURE SHOW OWNED
BY WOMEN IS CLOSED
MORRIS. ILL.. Dec. «. Miss Ethel
Keene and Mis. H. W. Harper, society
leaders of Joliet. Hl., opened a new
f lo.taai moving picture house and were
i oinp. led to close It fifteen minutes
j I, 1 bi < .use li. > fulled to comply with
■ tty ordinatti t.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AXD NEWS. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 6, 1912.
*| ARMY ORDERS ■ |
WASHING'I’i »N, Dec. 6.—Army or-
I tiers;
I First Lieutenant A. J. Davis. Fifth
infantry, transferred to Twenty-fourth
| infantry at Manila. P. I.
j First Lieutenant Charles I’. Hollings.
I worth. First field artillery, transferred
i to Third field artillery .
i First Lieutenant Vaughan \V. t'oop-
I er, from Twelfth to Eighth cavalry in
Philippines.
BILLY SUNDAY HURLS MAN
FROM WOMEN’S MEETING
PITTSBURG. Dec. 6.—While deliver
ing a sermon to women, Billy Sunday.
I the evangelist, asked the men to leave
I the congregation. A physician refused.
I and the athletic minister propelled the
! unwelcome guest through a side exit
into a muddy alley, then returned and
, finished his sermon.
COLD. BEGS BANDITS FOR
i COVERING. GETS GARTERS
CHIt'AGO. Dee. 6. —When Joseph
Rozzkowskl pleaded with two high
waymen. who had taken all his clothes
and money, that he would freeze with
out some covering, one of the bandits
! handed back his gai ters.
DIES OF BROKEN HEART
WHERE WIFE TOOK LIFE
CHICAGO. Dec. 6 An inquest w.ts
ordered in the ease of Louis Larson,
w ho was found dead on the floor of his
room 'it 2326 Grand avenue. He had
been missing four days. The police de
clare he had been dead three or four
days. Three months ago Larson's wife
committed suicide by inhaling gas in
the room in which Larson was found
■ dead. Larson received SSOO as a bene
fit, accordinc to N. A. Anderson, of
‘2444 West North avenue, his brother
in-law. Anderson said Larson probably
died of r broken heart.
COURT OF APPEALS OF GEORGIA.
Argued and Submitted.
■William Jackson vs. State, from Mor
gan.
Ed Williams vs. State, from Morgan.
Lige Franklin vs. State, from Wilkes.
N. P. Moss vs. 1. W. Myers, from
Tifi.
H. M. Atkinson et al., receivers, vs
S. A. Taylor, from Tift.
Nunez Gin and Warehouse Company
vs. M s. Z. O. Moore, from Emanuel.
W K Johnston, sheriff, for use, etc.,
vs. L. L. Pinkston, from Stewart.
.1 \. Wilson vs. McDougald Brothers
& Co., from Bulloch
B. Peterson vs. Henry Harper, from
i Irwin.
John T. Rowland vs W. Jay Bell,
from Fulton
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Com
pany vs. w Mcßae, from Lowndes.
Nettie Edvvatds vs. J. 1. Roberts,
from Thomas
.1 C. Whit, vs c 1„ Claxton, from
Tolf.ti
\\ I.mam et . . vs 1. D And. S”ti
vl al, from I'iiltoi'
An’ little Orphant Annie says, when the blaze is
blue,
An' the lampwick splutters, an' the wind goes
woo-oo!
An’ you hear the crickets quit, an' the moon is gray,
An’ the lightnin’ bugs in dew is all squenched
away
You better mind yer parents, and yer teachers fond
and dear,
Ain' cherish them 'at loves you, an’ dry the or
phant's tear;
An’ he’p the pore an’ needy ones 'at clusters all
about,
Er the gobble-uns’ll git you
Es you
Don't
Watch
Out!
—James Whitcomb Riley.
MING OUMI,
iBOT SLAYS CHUM
Re-enacting Wild West Motion
Picture. Lad Fatally Shoots
His Little Friend.
From a bullet, fired accidentally by
his playmate, Eimonte Herndon, seven
year-old son of C. M. Herndon, is dead
. at his father's home at Carey Station,
on the River car line, today, and
Frankie Wilson, his chum, who pulled
the trigger of "the gun he didn't know
was loaded,” is inconsolable.
Playing as sheriff and outlaw In em
ulation of a motion picture both had
seen. Frankie tan into his mother’s
home yesterday and got down his fa
ther's title, a ,22-caliber single-shot as
-1 fair.
One Sheriff, Othe • Outlaw.
”1 will be the sheriff.” he shouted,
running into the yard. "You be the
outlaw. El."
Five-year-old Evelyn Grady and
Clifford Herndon. Elmote's younger
brother, made up the audience for the
i little drama.
Eimonte Herndon as the outlaw re
, treated behind the fence while Frankie
flourished the gun and dared him into
the open.
“Come on. El," he said, "it won’t
shoot.”
Shot Through Head.
Thus reas.-ured. Eimonte made a sud
’ den sortie from his barricade. With a
cry. the Wilson lad. standing twenty
feet away from him. pulled the trigger.
There was surptising report and El
. monte dropped instantly. A little stream
of blood ttickled front a round hole in
his forehead.
Unconscious, the boy was taken to
the Grady hospital, where he died
within an hour without recovering his
t senses.
While the funeral arrangements have
not been completed, the services will be
• held at his father's house tomorrow.
BREATH-SMELLING TEST
SURPRISE TO TRAINMEN
t
DUPi>. ILL.. Dec. 6. —Officers of the
■ St Lottis. Iron Mountain and Southern
road have Inaugurated a new surprise
test. The superintendent, trainmaster
, an<l general yardmaster appeared sud
denly in the yards and ordered it
breath-stnelling test for all employees.
! Titos' W'o hao been drinking intoxi
>flng liquor wv" ordered oft dutv
I KIDDIES TO HFAR
I OF UNCLEREMUS
| Birthday of Noted Author Will
Re Observed in Atlanta
Schools Monday.
Continued from Page One.
house behind the trees, for their fathers
used to take them into Gordon street and
they'd stop at the walk.
"There's the old .wooden letter box on
the tree,” their fathers would say. “A
wren built a nest in it once, and Mr.
Harris asked the postman to put his mail
somewhere else and not disturb the bird
mother. That's why they call the place
'The Sign of the Wren’s Nest.'
"And there's Uncle Remus, himself,
there at the edge of his porch in the sun
shine. Don't ever forget you've seen him,
dearie. It will be something worth re
membering when you’ve grown up. He
is the man who loves children so much
that he wrote whole books—oh, so many
books—just to make them happy. And
the children from all over the world
have laughed and gone to sleep smiling
because their mothers read to them of
Brer Rabbit and Brer Fox from the sto
ries Uncle Remus had written."
Old Home Will Be There Always.
But the littlest children, still in the
kindergarten and the primer grades, were
born too late to see Uncle Remus. He
went to sleep one day a few years ago,
alter he had told all the stories he knew,
and he never waked up again. But he
left behind him whole dozens and dozens
of stories which never will go to sleep as
long as there are little boys and little
girls who listen to them and believe that
Brer Rabbit did really and truly' hit the
Tar Baby "kersmaek" and was thrown
in the brier patch afterward.
And the old house up the terraced lawn
will be there always, to show Atlanta
children and those who come traveling
from far-away places, how the children
who had grown up with Uncle Remus,
from the very first little boy story to the
very last, loved the man who had made
them laugh so many, many years.
Some of the other homes in West End
are being torn down and ugly stores are
going up in tbeir places, but never, never,
as long as children keep on being born,
will any' one dare to tear down the house
where Brer Possutn and Ol' Sis Cow and
Brer Wolf skipped out of Uncle Remus’
ink bottle and down his pen to the paper
and turned into stories for children to en
joy.
Gathering "Wren's Nest” Fund.
Atlanta women who used to be little
girls and now have little girls of their
own have saved up a lot of money and
bought "The Sign of the Wren's Nest,”
its trees and its flowers, and the house
and everything, and they are going to give
it to the boys and girls of all the world,
to keep and look at and sometimes play
in. when there are parties on Mr. Har
ris’ birthday.
And Mrs. Harris has given them the
very same table and ink bottle and all
the pens which helped to make the queer
little people who will dance on the lawn
next Monday just as they have danced in
the dreams of children.
The women haven't saved all the money
they need to buy the home, but they ex
pect to have it soon. They need only
■ I about $5,000 more, and children and
grown-ups are sending a little more
every day. The Louisville school chil
dren sent SIOO a few days ago, and
the Children of the Confederacy sent
J $lO. Charles Winship, the little son of
I George Winship, gave $25 the other day
to help buy the home for the children,
and others are helping, too.
Next Monday His Birthday.
And next Monday, on the birthday, all
the schools in Atlanta and lots of other
places, will stop work for a little while.
The teachers will ring their little bells,
1 and then the children will put up their
grammars and their arithmetics, and the
teachers will read them stories about
Uncle Remus and the queer little animal
people he told them about.
And the little folks will hear of the
women w r ho plan to buy the home under
the trees, and they'll go home and tell
y their parents, and soon there will be
money enough to pay for everything.
For the parents will remember how
d much Uncle Remus did to make them
j and their children happy, and they’ll
send as much as they can spare to Mrs.
11 A. McD. Wilson or Mrs. Thomas Stevens,
d to help buy "Wren's Nest,” and keep it
v for the children of all the world to en
joy forever and a day.
- N.Y. DELEGATION WILL
l] FIGHT MONTICELLO PLAN
s
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6.—The New
- York Democratic delegation In’ the
house has decided to oppose the reso
lution authorizing congress to buy Mon-
L ticello. the home of Thomas Jefferson,
e
PIKE TRIPLES FARM VALUE.
. ANNISTON, ALA., Dec. 6.—An 18-
11 acre farm situated on the recently
r built Jacksonville turnpike, six miles
e from this city, has just sold for $13,000.
Heretofore it was valued at S2O per
acre. It has increased to $72 per acre.
MOST SICKNESS COMES
FROM WEAK, INACTIVE KIDNEYS
Recent Reports Show Hundreds
Suffer Wtih Kidney Troubles
and Don't Know It.
There are scores of nervous, tired,
run-down people throughout the city,
suffering with pains in the back and
sides, dizzy spells, vv eaknesses of the
bladder (frequently causing annoyance
at night), who fail to realize the se
riousness of their troubles until such
conditions as chronic rheumatism,
bladder troubles, dropsy, diabetes or
even Bright's disease result.
All this is due to weak, inactive kid
neys. The kidneys are the filterers of
the blood, and no one can be well and
healthy unless the kidneys work prop
erly. It Is even more important than
that the bowels move regularly
If you suffer with such symptoms,
don't neglect yourself anothei day and
run the risk of serious complications.
Seem- an oiiginal package of tin- new
discover), Uroxune. which costs but a
HIGH WIND AND SNOW
IMPERIL LIVES OF 50
ON WRECKED VESSEL
DULUTH. MINN.. Dev. 6.—Terrific
winds, the highest in many years, and
blinding snow today put the 50 souls on
the wrecked steamer Easton in peril of
death
All efforts to take off the passengers
and crew were abandoned during the
night as the wind increased in fury.
Ttte steamer is on the rocks of Iro
quois reef. 30 miles west of Port Ar
thur, exposed to the full sweep of the
gale. Before the ship was cut off from
sight by the snow, a wireless report
came that the vessel was holding to
gether, but that her stern was tilted out
of the water.
The wireless operator reported that a
number of sailors, trying to man the
lifeboats, had been swept overboard
This was denied at the office of the
Booth line by Local Manager Louis T.
Hogstad.
GEORGIA GRAVE DUG
FOR MAN WHO STILL
LIVES IN COLORADO
MONTGOMERY. ALA., Dee. 6.—Al
though news was sent out that Sam
Lewis was dead, and a grave was dug
at the family burial ground in Fort
Gaines, Ga., for his body, Lewis still
lives and is in vigorous health, accord
ing to a dispatch from Dothan, Ala.
Early in October the news of the
death was received in Dothan by his
mother and his sister, Mrs. George Les
lie. By direction of Mrs. Leslie, a
grave was dug in Fort Gaines.
The fact is that Lewis has been seen
in Denver since his reported death. His
grave still is open and unoccupied.
BLIZZARD SWEEPING'
NORTHWEST STATES
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN., Dec. 6.—A
heavy snowstorm, accompanied by a
high wind, has been sweeping over the
Northwest for the last eighteen hours,
according to dispatches received here.
Canada, Montana, the Dakotas and
Minnesota are now in the snow region.
Trains in all states were reported sev
eral hours late because of the drifting
snow.
THIS BURGLAR TRIPS UP
ON PAIR OF SUSPENDERS
CHICAGO, Dec. 6.—A burglar who
got tangled up in a pair of suspenders
caused excitement in the household of
Gustave Struckure, al 814 West Huron
street early today. Struckure fired
several shots at the robber, who leaped
through a kitchen window and escaped.
He carried away a pocketbook con
taining $9, which he found in the trous
ers to which the suspenders were at
tached.
WAN TS gTr L’S’w ED DI N G
TO POOR MAN ANNULLED
BEVERLY. N. J., Dec. 6. —Because
she married Charles E. Roberts, a poor
machinist, the parents of Miss Albertine
Bidwell, society bud. have asked for an
annulment of the ceremony.
SAFE RETO ENDS
CATARRH MISERIES
Gives Instant Relief, Cures and
Prevents Catarrh and
Cold in the Head.
The quickest, best and safest way
to cure catarrh or a cold in the head
is by using a remedy that will "touch
the spot” and do its work quickly with
out leaving any bad effects. Ely’s
Cream Balm, which is applied to the
nostrils or rubbed on the throat or
chest, gets right at the root of the trou
ble and instantly relieves even the worst
case of catarrh or cold. A few min
utes after applied you can feel a loos
ening up in the head, the pain and
soreness are gone, the sense of taste,
smell and hearing come back, and you
feel like a different person.
Ely’s Cream Bahn cleanses, heals and
strengthens the inflamed membranes,
takes away that stuffed up feeling and
dull pain in the head, relieves the throat
, soreness and stops the nasty discharge
which is the cause of the disgusting
hawking, spitting, blowing of the nose,
and foul breath. Hay fever victims
who are made miserable by fits of
sneezing, . coughing and wheezing get
instant and permanent relief by the
use of this simple remedy.
Don't suffer another minute. Ely’s
Cream Balm will relieve you imme
diately, and a 50-cent bottle will more
than likely wotk a complete cure All
druggists sell it. (Advt.i
trifle, and commence its use at once.
When you have taken a few doses, you
will be surprised how differently you
will feel.
Croxone cures the worst cases of
kidney, bladder trouble and rheuma
tism, because it removes the cause.
Fills, tablets and other remedies mere
ly give temporary relief at the best.
Croxone cleans out the kidneys and
makes them filter out all the poisonous
waste matter and uric acid that lodge in
the joints and muscles, causing rheu
matism: soothes and heals the blad
der and quickly effects a permanent,
positive, lasting cure.
You will find ('roxone different from
all other remedies. There is nothing
else on earth like It. It matters not
how old you are or how long you have
suffered, it is so prepared that it is
practically impossible to take it into the
human system without results.
You can secure an original package
of Uroxone from any first-class drug
gist, such as Jacobs’ Pharmacy, who
will personally return the purchase
price if it fails to give the desired re
sul’s the very first time you use it.
‘ Advt.)
ANCIENT MLS
WILL fIEJEVIVEO
Music Festival Chorus to Give
Free Concert of Mediaeval
Music December 29.
The old Christmas carols t; u „
sounded through merry Englund in '
thirteenth and fourteenth eentuii
to be revived in Atlanta this holiday
season by the Atlanta Music F< ■ j
association.
A free concert is to be given at ' t
Auditorium-Armory Sunday afte.ife
December 29, to which all At ,m ?
young and old, will be invited, t, o
music festival chorus will sing
words and tunes that old Dan Chafe
knew.
I “God Rest You Merrle Genth ■
probably the most famous carol evL
written, will be sung to th< lift
century music, without a single note
changed. The "Coventry" carol, ,1a;.
ing from the thirteentli century. wihL
on the program, as will "Good King
Wenceslas,” fourteenth century I'rui. '
and others of the same period.
“Good King Wenceslas” is a i an
tion of the medieval original of "Tern
pus Adest Floridum.” The quaint
words of these carols are known to all
students of the poetry of that
but the music will be new to ail ears
in Atlanta. It is said to be as simp.
and picturesquely beautiful as the
words.
The music festival chorus is now en
gaged in rehearsing these uarols. M-<- .
ings are being held every Monday night
at Cable hall. The membership include!
some of the finest singers in Atlanta
The association is aiming to increase
the chorus eventually to 400, and a free
season ticket to the opera in tho spring
will be given to all members who join
now and remain actively in the
ization. Dr. Percy J. Starnes, citv or
ganist, is director of the choir.
FLOWERS and FLORAL DESIGNS
ATLANTA FLORAL CO
Both Phones Number 4. 41 Peachtree.
< Advertisement. 1
A Physician’s Faith in
Eckman’s Alterative
A Valuable Remedy for Throat and Lungs
"Have used Eckman's Alterative in sev
eral cases of tubercular glands of the
neck, with excellent results every time.
In one case it cost me SSO, for the girl was
put on it only until she could arrange to
be operated, and in a short time an oper
ation was not needed. I suppose your rec
ords are just as fine as of old. You know
rny faith In it."
(Original of this physician's letter on file.)
Eckman’s Alterative is effective in other
forms. Read what Mrs. Garvin says:
Idaho Falls, Idaho.
"Gentlemen: I have’gained 22 pounds
since last February and my baby is in
perfect health. I have been waiting since
she was born to see how I would get
along. I am now doing all my work, have
been ever since sh<? was four weN;s old
amt lam steadily gaining. I do not evug
or raise anything at all. I believe my lung
trouble is cured.”
(Swornaffidav.it) MRS. M. H. GARVIN
Note —Mrs. Garvin has seven children.
Eckman's Alterative is effective In bron
chitis. asthm.i. hay fever, throat and lung
troubles and in upbuilding the system
Does not contain poisons, opiai'.s '>r hab
it-forming drugs. For sale by all Jacobs'
drug stores and other leading druggists
Ask for booklet telling of recoveries, a-y
write to Eckman Laboratory. Philadel
phia, Pa., for additional evidence. i.Ydvt 1
ATLANTA
Last Time Tonight
HENRIETTA GROSMAN j
‘THE REAL THING"
A Tremendous Hit. I
Prices 25c. 50c, 75c, 51, *l5O. {■.•oo |
ATLANTA THEATER
4 NIGHTS 0 Matinees
Dec. 11-12-13-M and Sat.
Klaw & Erlanger Present
The Trail ,
Lonesome Pine'
WITH
Charlotte
Walker
Nights 25c, .”oc, 75c, $1 and 11 50
Matinees, 25c, 50c. 75c and *l
- SALE SATURDAY 9 A. N
iftPANn TOD * y i ; L°
VHUDtI’tLLE Tonight
Mclntyre & Heath irsyouf
fault
Dolly Connelly &. Percy
Wenrlch, Ota Cygl. /pyol/M/SS
Corelli & Gillette. Jolla
Nash TH,S
Hl XT WEEK WINONA WINTER SHO, ‘ _
1 FORSYTH BUNTIKg’
Here’s a Play You’ll Like
LITTLE EMMA BUNTING
And the Forsyth Players n
'‘LOVERS LANE”
NEXT WEEK "THE THREE OF 1
NIGHTS a.IS I VRIC MVS
MATS. ZAO fehLWcek
HAPPYHOOLICANi
ALL NEW—THIRTY-FIVE GI R
Next Week—"MADAME SHERRY
LYRIC NEXT WEET!
Matinees Tuesday. Thursday
Saturday.
The World's Greatest Musical c
MADAME SHERRY
original New York I’ivdii'
Star Past and Beauty C