Newspaper Page Text
|e most
of this
Bl early
laching
kht. A
[it was
of tho
ompany
)ys, in Camp,
[oyous Week
Ivers and Social Pleas-
|y Cadets’ Time at
ewood Park. %
Ciliary Aca<i»m\ radeis
Jr the week at Lakewood,
riding the greater portion
[ne Iti military maneuver.-*,
bK the gayest social pen j J
Pool calendar.
one and dances at the pa
le been given every evening,
(the young ladles of Atlanta
bge Park were guests of the
Tuesday, the Washington
fy students ware entertained,
Pday, the Wood berry girls wer<
(^and Thursday and Friday, the
Ugh School and Washington
Cry students will be ente -
Pay afternoon the Governor and
laff will witness a dress parade.
(ted Bank Statues
(n Morgan’s Garden
buree of Liberty and Britannica
Taken From Drexel Building
In New York.
NEW YORK, May S.—The statues
>f liberty and Britannia, which since
878 have stood over the entrance of
he old Drexel Building at Wall and
Broad Streets, the banking home of
J. P. Morgan & Company, have been
taken down by the wrecking com
pany which is dismantling the struc
ture and sent to the house of J. P.
Morgan. 231 Madison Avenue, where
they will be placed in Mr. Morgan's
private garden.
The six granite columns whl:h
stood on each side of the entrance
will be placed in the gardens of Wil
liam Pierson Hamilton's country res
idence at Tuxedo. Mrs. Hamilton
was the late J. P. Morgan’s daugh
ter.
GUTHRIE IS NOMINATED
AS ENVOY TO JAPAN
WASHINGTON. May 8.—Five Im
portant nominattona were sent to the
Senate to-day by President Wilson.
They Included George W. Guthrie, of
Pennsylvania, to he Ambassador to
Japan; Gaylord M, Saltzgerber, of
Ohio, to be Commissioner of Pen
sions; Richard Stroback, of Wash
ington, to be register of land offices
In the interior department; James G.
Congdon. Collector of Customs for the
District of Georgetown, S. C., and
Frederick C. Peters, of South Caro
lina, for the district of Charleston,
S. C.
Ventriloquist Puts
Pawnshop in Panic
Police Turn Place Topsy-Turvy Try
ing to Locate Agonizing Cry
For Assistance.
"PJeuxt* Ime out of here; please
let me out of here. 1 have been In
here all night."
Clerks in the F. & J. pawnshop, 120
Decatur Street, frightened by a weird
voke calling from behind a piano,
sought the police post haste.
Turning things topsy-turvy In the
pawnshop, searching every nook and
corner, the police failed to make any
grewsome find. And still the voice
appealed: “Let me out of here;
please let me out."
Unable to contain himself longer,
a negro lounging against the counter
laughed loudly. He was a ventrilo
quist.
England Must Fight t
Higher Living Cost
Increase in Freight Rates Due to
Railroad Wages the
Cause.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, May 8.—The cost of liv
ing In England Is already soaring and
threatens to go higher. The flight Is
a consequence of Uie railroad compa
nies' proposed advance of freight
rates by 1 per cent, to take effect
July 1.
Manufacturers in ell Ihe Industrial
centers declare the extra expense
must be borne by the consumers. The
railroads also Intend raising the rates
of cheap vacation tickets. The up
ward trend In the direct result of the
advances in railroad employees' pay
after the great strike of 1911.
Fine Remedy for
A Backward Child
Continue It for Only a
Brief Period and the
Good Results Will
Surprise You.
A low state of the general health
is now the accepted cause of back
wardness in children. So in the case
of a backward child it is best to look
toward building up its health. It will
usually be found that the main trou
ble is in the food, in lack of assimi
lation and digestion. Hence care
should be taken in the kind of food
given to the child. This, with plenty
of air and exercise, should bring about
a change for the better.
Watch the conditions of the bow
els. to note whether the waste is be
ing passed off or not, or whether it
is being passed too freely. If either
condition prevails give a small dose
of that gentlest of all laxative-tonics,
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Thou
sands of mothers will testify to the
wonders it has wrought in the lives
of their own children, and for that
reason legions of families like those
of Mrs. J. E. Brunty, 1903 Ninth Ave..
Nashville, Tenn., are nev * without it
in the house. Mrs. Brunty writes:
“Harry had always been constipated
until I gave him Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin. I am certainly going to keep
this medicine in the house in future,
for I know it to be good.” It is pleas
ant to the taste and so perfectly safe
that it is given to infants, and yet is
equally effective for grown people. All
druggists sell it, and the price is only
fifty cents and one dollar a bottle, the
latter for families who need it regu
larly.
HARRY BRUNTY.
Syrup Pepsin has no equal as a cure
for constipation, indigestion, bilious
ness, headaches, sour stomach, gas on
the stomach, liver trouble and kindred
complaints. It has so many advan
tages that those who once use It for
ever after discard cathartics, salts,
pills and other coarse remedies, for
they are seldom advisable and should
never be given to children.
If no member of your family has
ever used Syrup Pepsin and you would
like to make a personal trial of it be
fore buying it in the regular way of a
druggist, send your address—a postal
will do—to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 417
Washington Street, Monticello, 111.,
and a free sample bottle will be mailed
you.
ison-Paxon-Stokes Co. 4
The Great Fashion Event
Visit Our Corset Department
til
Some women can wear almost any
corset; but most women actually need
the special service that Nemo Corsets
alone can give.
For this reason, “Nemo Week" has
become an event of international impor
tance. It is the time when all the newest
Nemo Corset Specialties, and the latest
Nemo inventions of the year, are shown
in full variety in principal stores
everywhere.
Come Here This Week and
See the Newest Nemo Models
“Nemo Week" is more interesting
than ever this year. We are showing
some wonderful improvements, not only
in models, but in corset-fabrics. The
new Nemo elastic fabrics—“Lastikops
Cloth" and “Lastikops Webbing"—have
actually revolutionized corset-making.
These, of course, are used only in Nemo
Corsets. They are the only elastic fabrics
in existence that don’t wear out.
Too many styles to describe in detail,
but please remember that—
We Have Nemos For Every Figure
From Very Slender to Extra Stout
The ‘ ‘Nemo Week Special" Self-Reducing Corset, No. 326, at
$3.00, is a wonderful special value. Extremely long skirt, with
the new ‘ ‘Lasticurve-Back. ’’ For sale during ‘ ‘Nemo Week" only.
Come and learn all about Nemo"'STYLE, COMFORT and
ECONOMY. All this week—in our Corset Department.
N fi