Newspaper Page Text
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lTUARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, C.A., SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 1913.
LONDON LIBBlIiNatton’s. , I,, ....... .,,■]> i
TRUST IS BFATEN Miss Lathrop to Impress Fact at Knoxville Show fifiE COMING iil nLiituOLICF- LIVE
BY HALL CAINE
Author Declares Boycott on Asso
ciation When Circulation of
Latest Novel Is Limited.
BOOKSTORES REAP HARVEST
Question Raised as to "Woman
Thou Gavest Me” Is Decided
by the Clp p 2i : .
Women ■who tire leading in child welfare work of the Knoxville Conservation Exposi
tion. They are standing on the steps of the building to he devoted to this feature, h rorn left
to right they are Miss Emily Coye, secretary of the Children’s Welfare Department; Miss Ellen
F. Babbitt, of the Russell, Sage Foundation, and Miss Eathrop, head of the Children’s Bureau
of the United States Department of Labor.
facial Cable to The American.
LONDON, Aug. 2.—The publication
to-day of Hall Caine’s new novel,
"The Woman Thou Gavest Me,"
which has been appearing serially In
the Hearst publication* In the United
States, hag developed an amazing
sensation in the book trade here.
In short, It is nothing more nor
Lss than the unprecedented action of
an author in boycotting all the prln
cipal libraries.
All the big booksellers, such stores ’
as Selfridge * and Harrod’s, are mak
ing special displays, devoting an en
tire window to It. On the other hand,
the chief medium of supply for books,
the lending libraries, comprising such
concerns as Mudies, the Times Book
Flub and W. H. Smith’s, who usually
order hundreds of thousands of cop
ies of a notable novel by a popular
author like Hall Caine, to-day did not
have a single copy to lend or sell.
Real Facte of the Case.
The London newspapers are full of
this latest book trade sensation. Not
one is able to give the real reason un
derlying It. These are the facts,
given exclusively by The Sunday
American:
Early In the week the Libraries As
sociation, of which the above named
firms are members, raised the ques
tion of the morality of the novel on
the ground that certain features of
the book made It unsuitable for gen
eral circulation. At the *ame time,
the association decided It would sup
ply any private demand for the book,
but would exclude It from the lend
ing libraries.
8o great was the latter demand that
they sent orders for thousands on
that score alone.
At this point the matter was
brourht to the notice of Hall Folnc by
Mr. Heinmann. his publisher.
Came Boycotts Libraries.
“This is a libel on the morality of
my book.” said the author, ‘if my
book Is rot fit for general circulation,
it Is not fit for any circulation at all.
Therefore, I will not permit my pub
lisher to deliver one copy of It to
members of the Libraries Association
until they glvo me assurances than
the book shall be put Into general cir
culation.”
Hall Caine stuck to his decision
with the result that while all the lead- j
ing booksellers did a roaring trade in *
the book to-day, the great empo
riums like Mudies and the Times Book
Club had not a single copy.
Since Monday there have been a
number of meetings of ths libraries
Association to discuss the situation. I
during which the opinions of a mini- |
ber of person* who have already read i
the book were sought.
In the meantime. Hall Caine tele
graphed to the most distinguished
clergymen of all denominations and
many eminent men throughout the
country, asking If, In their view, the
book was not suited for general cir
culation.
“The answers I got,” said the au
thor to The American, “are unani
mous. ‘Not only is It fit for publics*
tlon, but everybody ought to read It,
because it deals with one of the great
social problems.’ is the trend of th«
replies.”
Among those wore Blshons, Arch
deacons, Members of Parliament and
others of that iass.
The Libraries Association is still
holding cut. In the meantime, this
morning their subscribers clamored
for copies, and the end of It all is
that they gave Hall Caine to-night
the necessary assurance It shall be
put into general circulation.
So to-morrow the book will be in
circulation at all the libraries.
Hid Wooden Leg Till
Head of Bureau of United States Department of
Labor Outlines Her Plans.
Wife Refutes to Take Chances c
Husband’s Leaving 8tate Until
Suit Is Brought.
KNOXVILLE, Aug. 2.—If the plans
that Miss Julia C. Lathrop, head of
the Children's Bureuu of the United
States Department of Labor, has In
mind are carried out a groat work
for children in the States of the
South will come us a result of the
National Conservation Exposition.
Miss Lathrop, who is one of the coun
try’s most noted women, outlined the
plans she 1ms in mind while in Knox
ville recently.
“What more fascinating work could
there be for a woman than work for
the welfare of little children?” she
•p. ■ t n J asked? "After all, it is the little
111VOrP.fi IS hfirvfin Children—our next generation, who
XKJ TV^-4. ^ q{ ^ counlry
of ours; they will be the men and
women of to-morrow and they will be
the ones who will make the country
better than it is, or worse. 1 believe
we can not do too much for them.
Field Is Big One,
“The field of children’s work Is n
big one,” she continued, ‘it is so
large that one sometimes hesitates
and wonders where next to begin. But
whatever we do, it must be all educa
tional. Our bureau has been given
investigatory powers; that is hs far
as we can go. We can force nothing
on the people.
“The greatest problem in connec
tion with the child welfare battle we
are waging lies now not in the cities,
but In the rural districts. The work
of different institutions in the city
has been so effective that the infant
mortality rate in the cities is now'
smaller than It Is in the country dis
tricts. So in the country is our prob
lem.
“The conservation of anything, be It
the resources of the country or til'
ll ves or the health or the energies of
the people, Is something worth w’ork-
JOLIET, ILL., Aug. 2.—Mrs. Anton
Kurdlsna believes* all is fair in divorce
suits &s in love, and she hid her hus
band’s woolen leg wiien she learned
he was about to quit Illinois to pre
vent service of the prospective court
papers on him.
“Please give me my leg,” Rosa,"
pleaded Kurdlana.
“It's as much my leg as it Is yours
yet,” answered the aggrieved wife,
who decided after nineteen days that
her marriage was a mistake.
T want my leg.” insisted Kurdlana.
“Tour leg will stay locked up in the
closet till the bailiff gets here with
the papers. Then you can take it and
go," rejoined Mrs. Kurdiana.
V
Leading Atlantans to Consider! Frnm Snnkon Gardens and Aquar-
iaking Space for Display in
Conservation Exposition.
A committee representing the board
of directors of the National Conser
vation Exposition, to be held in
Knoxville, Tenn.. in .September and
October, will arrive in Atlanta Mon
day or Tuesday to confer wdth rep
resentative manufacturers and busi
ness men of Atlanta in regard to the
exposition.
It is a matter of great regret to the
directors of the exposition that At
lanta manufacturers have not inter
ested themselves as yet to the extent
of taking space for representation,
but it is altogether probable that aft
er the conference Atlanta will be
liberally represented.
The National Conservation Expo
sition means much to Atlanta and
Georgia. It will open in Knoxville
September 1, and will exhibit not only
the Ideas of conservation, but the
commercial and manufacturing re
sources of the Southeast. Many
Southern cities have engaged large
amounts of space, but Atlanta has
not as yet provided for Representa
tion.
Conservation of natural resources
of this great Appalachian and Pied
mont section, with the view to mak
ing the natural resources permanent
wealth producers, is the slogan of the
exposition. It is considered a move
ment of vital Importance.
Colonel Robert J. Lowry, president
of the Lowry National Bank, has cor
responded with the managers of the
exposition, and he and other leading
business men of Atlanta will meet the
committee from Knoxville and go
over the matter in detail.
iums of Wonderful Fish ‘The
Road to Hell’ Goes to Crater.
Topless Potatoes
Grown in the West
ing for. So I believe that the Na
tional Conservation Exposition is go
ing to be something more than an ex
position. 1 believe it is going to have
a lasting effect on the whole South.
Plans in Formative State.
“As for the plans that 1 have in mind
It is too early to talk about them
yet. They are only in the formative
stage. But these plans have to do
with the welfare of Southern chil
dren, and in the broadest sense of the
word. I am in hopes that we will be
able to work them out. If so, the
exposition would have done at least
one lasting good, If nothing more.’’
Miss Lathrop is being aided In her
work as head of the Children’s Wel
fare Exhibit of the Exposition by
Miss Emily Coye, secretary of the
Children's Welfare Department, and
Miss Ellen F. Babbitt, of the Russell
Sage Foundation.
Several new and attractive fea
tures have recently been added to the
exposition. From Fort Washakie,
away off in Wyoming, is coming to
Knoxville u most wonderful collection
of Indiiui relies and Indian handiwork.
In the Mines and Minerals Building
will be installed a splendid collection
of statuary, the work of noted sculp
tors. This statuary is designed to
show the beauties of Tennessee mar
ble, ranked by experts as marble as
good as Is found anywhere In the
world.
Iri the last few weeks plans for the
exhibits in the Woman’s and Chil
dren’s Welfare Building of the expo
sition have undergone several
changes. Now it is assured that tin-
exhibits in those buildings will rank
with those In similar buildings at va
rious national expositions, and in
many ways will surpass the exhibits
made at great fairs.
Hotel Elevator Is
New Bridal Vehicle
Two on Honeymoon Climb Stairs
Nine Times—Inquires Price
of a Ride.
CINCINNATI, Aug. 2.--They hailed
from Kensington, Ill., so they told the
clerk at the Grand Hotel, and were
on their honeymoon, as the bride
groom informed the bell hop. They
registered as Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Gleason.
"Bert” was a spender. He tipped
the bell hop who carried Ice water
to the top floor a whole half do lar.
The day was hot, very Hot and
made stair-cllmlng an irksome task.
Bert knew, for hadn't he and Mrs.
Bert tried It nine times by actual
count. It was after those hot-weath
er climbs that the call for Ice water
came. When the bell boy came along,
the bridegroom, pointing to the ele
vator, asked:
“Say, kid, what doe* it cost to ride
on that thing?”
And Kensington is only a few’ miles
from Chicago.
■ P-R-I-N-T-O-R-I-A-L-S I
No. 200
McAdoo s Millions Will Soon Be Turned
Loose in tlic South !
McAdoo's move to open the golden floodgates of his treasure
house and pour MILLION'S Into the South Is the "cue" for every
Merchant and Manu
facturer in the South
to "get busy" on
Ms Fall Advertising
plans, and let us do
the PRINTING.
BYRD
M. 1560-2608-2614.
Printing Co.
46-48-50 W. Alabama,
Atlanta.
Aged Thief Is Sent
To Whipping Post
Offender, 65 Years Old, Confessing
Theft of Three Pounds of Butter,
Is Lashed.
WILMINGTON. DEL.. Aug. 2.~
Samuel Patterman, a white man, aged
65, one of the oldest prisoners who
has ever been fastened to the whip
ping post, received five lashes at the
workhouse.
He pleaded guilty In the General
Sessions Court to the larceny of thr**
pounds of butter, and In addition to
the lashes he was sentenced to font
months in prison. By order from the
court, no saloon proprietor in the city
c an sell liquor to Patterman.
At 45 Is Graduated
With His Daughter
Missouri Professor, Having Realized
Ambition, Will Resume College
Work.
SPRINGFIELD, MO., Aug. 2.—Pro
fessor J. Turner Homer, president of
Horner Institute, at Purdy, Mo., and
his daughter. Mies Eva May, have
b* n graduated together from Drury
College, each with the degree of bach
elor of arts.
Though 45 years of age and for
many years engaged In educational
work, Professor Horner had never
held a diploma.
21 CHILDREN AtTuNERAL
OF FATHER, 54 YEARS OLD
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Aug. 2.—At the funeral
of Thomas Arthur Stack, 64 years of
age, of Purlpv Surrey. 12 of his 21
living children were present at the
grave side Mr. Stack was the father
of 29 children by two marriages.
There were 9 children of the first
marriage. Mr. Stack’s twenty-nln.h
child was born in February. At a
Christmas family reunion two years
1 ago the only table that could accom*
1 inodate the party was the billiard ta-
j bia.
Farmer Out in Kansas Plants Eyeless
Tubers and Finds New
Species in Fall.
SENECA. KANS., Aug. 2—Potatoes
without tops are being grown by J. O.
Monney, a farmer, near Oneida. Two
years ago Mr. Monney had trouble In
getting seed potatoes. Finally a
dealer offered him som# which he
said, however, he considered poor, as
they had few’ eyes. Mr. Monney
bought some of them, and picked up
those which appeared to have the best
eyes.
He planted two rows. Apparently
the potatoes were what the dealer
said; very few’ sprouts appeared.
Monney allowed the rows to run to
weeds. but whf-n he plowed the
ground in the fall, was surprised to
find that the share threw out big po
tatoes.
Struck with this peculiarity, Mr.
Monney discarded all the potatoes
which had eyes, and a year ago last
spring planted only the eyeless tubers.
When he dug into the ground last
fall he found a big crop of potatoes.
The topless potatoes are slightly
different in appearance from the reg
ular tubers, but there is no difference
in the taste. The crop averages about
the same as ^potatoes with tops, but
the big advantage to them in their
favor is that there is no danger io
them from early frosts and insect
pests.
Preacher Is Named
Warden of Prison
Minister Believes That Drink and
Laziness Are Responsible for
Practically All Crimes.
LANSING. KANS., Aur. 2—At least
four-flfti's of the prbimers In the
Kansas State Penitentiary owe the
loss of their liberty to liquor, in the
opinion of the Rev. J. D. (.lerry) Bot
kin, neniv appointed warden of the
lnstitJtiori The new warden will
keep two tninRs uppermost in his
mind during Ills supervision of the in
mates—to break up the drink habit
and to teach the men to like work.
Warden Botkin declares there are
but two answers to the question,
“What's he irv for?" Theee are, he
says, "He got drunk," or “He did not
work."
The new warden has been a minis
t er 40 years. He is a Democrat, and
was defeated for Governor of the State
by W. R. Stubbs.
Monkey Aids Artist
* In Cubist Painting
Jungle Visitor Is Pleased With Re
sult of Leap of Simians
on Canvas.
NEW YORK. Aug. 2.— Mr. and Mrs.
Pierre Tartoue arrived yesterday on
the steamer St. Paul, after spending
their honeymoon in Egypt and South
America. Mr. Tartoue, w ho is a well-
known portrait painter, was making a
picture of his wife in the jungle when
two small monkeys leaped from a
tree onto the canvas.
The result was a perfect example
of the cubist art. and Mrs. Tartoue,
who was Miss Alma Dunworth, of
New York, is keeping the canvas as a
honeymoon souvenir. She brought the
monkeys with her and wiii present
them to the zoo.
SAN FRANCISCO, AUg. 2—In a
letter written by Mark Twain shortly
before his death, to H. P. Wood, of
Honolulu, the celebrated humorist
said: “Yours is the loveliest fleet of
Islands that lies anchored in any
ocean.”
Mark Twain had spent many years
of his lift flitting from deck to deck
of that lovely fleet of islands. In his
day, it was a long and tiresome jour
ney to the Hawaiian Islands. It was
a journey made up of various “re
shipments,” as Mark Twain himself
put it.
With the Panama Canal in opera
tion, the elysium fleet of the Pacific
may be reached from the Eastern
States of America in a direct route,
shorter and easier than previously.
Hawaii is anxious to impress that
fact upon the world, and it ha* been
decided that no better opportunity
could be afforded for that impression
than the Panama-Pacific Exposition
in 1915.
An appropriation of $100,000 has
been made and is about to be in
creased very probably to $200,000, a
sum which will most likely be supple
mented by an additional side appro
priation of $60,000 or $100,000.
Freak Fish in Exhibit.
The Hawaiian exhibit will be con
tained in two main sections. The one
section w’ill be comprised of a vast
aquarium containing all the speci
mens of the remarkable kinds of fish
that color the waters of the Pacific In
the neighborhood of the Hawaiian
Inlands. Fish wdth pennants on them,
yards long; fish the shape of pine
apples-and just as prickly; fish with
eyes all over them, and fish with no
eyes at all: fish that walk on the bed
of the sea, and fish that fly over the
surface; fish that are black as ink,
and fish that are colored like coral;
fi.^h that glitter as if wdth coats of
sapphire, and fish that look like
chunks cut out of a rainbow’—all these
will be there; and, to show that the
sime waters can produce even an or
dinary-looking kind of fish, there wdll
be shoals of the famous mullet which
is declared by expert epiourt se to pro
vide the most delectable dinner dish
in the world.
From this there will be a roadway
leading to the other and larger sec
tion of the exhibit. This roadway
will be a model in miniature of the
famous “Volcano road,” which Is
known colloquially as “The road 1o
hell.”
Forn Road Into “Volcano.”
The road, cutting almost in a
straight line, seven miles long,
through the most beautiful fern for
est in the world, leads direct into the
pit of the great active volcano, Ki-
lauea. The replica of this wonder
ful road will lead from the aqua
rium into the pit of a perfect work
ing model of the giant volcano.
Kllauea, belching forth clouds of
steam, bubbling with rumbling acres
of red-hot lava, rolling and heaving
and spitting and roaring, like the
safety valve of the Pacific, which is
one of the wonders of the world.
The cast for the model of Kllauea
is now being made by one of the
cleverest experts In that kind of work
in America. It will be 50 feet in
diameter across the crater Lnd will
cost as many thousands of dollars to
build and work. This will be the
center attraction of the second sec
tion of the Hawaiian exhibit. The
remainder of this section will be taken
up with iadramas of scenes in the is
lands.
At the extreme end of the inclosure
there will be another mode! as real
istic as the one of Kllauea. This will
be of the extinct volcano, Maun.i
Loa. This is the largest crater in
the world and Is surrounded by some
of the most wonderful of scenic won
ders. It will be reproduced in all its
glory.
Marshall Called On
To Subdue Wife of
Embrvo Postmaster
i/
Women of Indiana Town Declare
Her Social Pretentions Have
Become Unbearable.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 2.—Thomas
R. Marshall, the well-known Vice
President, has been asked to arbi
trate a social war between ttie women
v,: P’onktr.wn, Ind., arising over the
nomination of a new He
received a letter to-day asking that
he halt the confirmation of the man
because his wife is putting on airs
over the fact that her husband stands
so well with the Administration.
Mr. Marshall declines to give the
real name of the town or the name of
the letter writer. But it ts some town
—the letter says so. Only last week
there was a church social there, to
provide funds for a new sidewalk
around the plate of worship, ami
$18.19 was netted easily from the sale
of ice cream and cake. There are
a first-class drug store, two grocer
ies and a hardware store. One of
the grocery stores also has a good
line of dress goods. The letter says
so. It is some town.
When the news first filtered in that
a certain man was to be named post
master, the wife of the nominee went
to the store and bought some new
clothes. Since then she has been al
most unbearable, according to the let
ter, and Heaven onlv knows what she
will be if there is a confirmation!
The women say that the wife of the
nominee is a social upstart, anyway.
Mr. Marshall is happy that some
use for a Vice President has devel
oped.
GALLED III) TO
Little Girl Reported
Captive of Gypsies
Child With Fortune Teller in Nomad
Camp Resembles Missing
Catherine Winters.
FOND DU LAC, WIS., Aug. 2.—A
band of gypsies that passed through
Fond du Lac and continued their
course westward carried as their cap
tive little Catherine Winters, daugh
ter of Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Winters,
of New Casrtle, Ind., according to
Mrs. VV. F. McGowan, of Appleton.
She was at a camp and was ap
proached by one of the fortune tellers.
Accompanying the fortune teller was,
a white child, who, according to Mrs.
McGowan, had a most striking re-
semblance to the published photo
graph of Catherine Winters.
Bank Officials Declare Launder
ing Foils Tellers’ Delicate
Tvjc’ 1 —Want It Abolished,
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.- Another
of the currency innovations inu
duccd during the regime of Franklin
MacVeagh while Secretary of the
Treasury is being fought by members
of the party now in power. This is
the w r ashed money divlsls*.
Efforts have been made to develop
opposition among bankers to “laun
dered money,” most of it based oil the
ground that the economy w’orks to tho
encouragement of counterfeiting. A
number of letters have been received
condemning the washing of money by
the Government. These letters have
been filed with the Senate by Senator
Martine of New Jersey.
Bank Head Voices Protest.
Charles McCulloch, president of the
Hamilton National Bank of Fort
Wayne, Ind., son of Hugh McCulloch,
who was Secretary of the Treasury
under President Arthur, voices -he
general sentiment expressed in those
letters. He says:
“The washing business is a strong
economical proceeding for a great
Government like ours. Tne Bank of
England never pays out a note the
second time. Certainly this Govern
ment is rich enough and should have
pride enough to keep in circiulation
fairly clean bills without resorting to
the washing process.”
Say Bank Tellers Complain.
According to bank presidents who
oppose the innovation, there is a gen
eral complaint from bank tellers
against washed money. They assert
that not only do washed notes lose a
degree of the sharpness of engraving,
but the washing process changes the
paper in a way diificult to describe,
making It similar to the paper of most
counterfeits, removing the protection
of the delicacy of touch by which most
tellers detect counterfeits.
Already the plan of Mr. MacVeagh
to change the size of the currency
notes has been vetoed by the present
There has been no
expression from the Administration as
yet on washed money.
MAYOR AND POLICE FINED
FOR PROTECTING "HOUSES”
TOPEKA, KAN., Aug. 2.—The Kan-
Has Supreme Court adjudged the Mayor,
Chief of Police and three policemen of
the city of Coffc. file in contempt of
the order of the Supreme Court prohib
iting them from protecting disorderly
houses of that city.
E. C. Rice, Mayor, and Fr°d Wan-
tenwetsch, chief of police, were fined
$500 each. J. H. Fletcher, P. A. Thack
er and T. K. Smith, the patrolmen, w r ere
each fined $100.
BRIDEGROOM USES LICENSE
PURCHASED FIVE YEARS AGO
PORT HURON, MICH., Aug. 2.—
Using a license which they obtained
five years ago, Matthew Dunbar, 25,
and Miss Mildred Haken, also 25,
were married secretly at the home of
the Rev. J. H. McLean. The license
was granted April 20, 1908. it is un
derstood that a misunderstanding de
veloped between the young man and
the mother of the girl immediately
afterw’ard, and that the wedding was
canceled.
It would be difficult to find
more conscientious, efficient
and painless dentists in Geor
gia than the gentlemen who
own and ope. ate the
NEW YORK AND AMERICAN
DENIAL PARLORS
28 1-2 and 32 1-2 Paachtraa Street,
Over Bonita Theater
No students. All experts in
their profession. E.ght to twelve
years’ experience. They adver
tise that you may know where
to get the best work at reasona
ble prices. They solicit the most difficult cases and guarantee to fit
every case they take. If others have failed, try them. Good set of
teeth, $5. All work guaranteed. Lady attendant. References Third Na
tional Bank. Phone Ivy 1817.
W. J. HARPER
P. E. COLEMAN
“OH!--OH!”
> Try “GETS* IT," the Pahfleae N«w*
| Plan Corn Cure—See Your Corns
Vanish In a Hurry.
Hurt* way up to my heart,
almost everything for
6,000 Bachelors and
Maids Must Pay Tax
Minnesota Legislature Passes Law
Which Favors Heads of Families
Against Single Persons.
MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 2.—Nearly 6,-
000 bachelors and unmarried women
In Minneapolis will pay taxes on all
their personal property this year un
less they can show the City Board of
Tax Levy that the $100 exemption,
available to heads of families is un
fair to the single ones.
The last Legislature amended the
tax law’s allowing only heads of fam
ilies to deduct $100 from valuation of
their personal possessions.
> Whew!
> I've tried
(oornal”
> Corn-sufferers, comless joy is at
) hand. “GETS-IT” te the only real
enemy any
| ’GETS-IT*’
corn ever » had.
on in 2 seconds,
Put
and
SPECIAL REDUCTIONS
For a few days you have an opportunity to
get your eyes fitted with first-class glasses at
lowest possible prices.
EYEGLASSES and SPECTACLES
>‘*W©I1, Did You Everl Come Over
' and See How Ea*y ‘GETS-IT’
Got That Corn!”
>
’away they go, shrivel, vanish. No
J more cotton-rings to make the corn
isharper and more bulgy, no more
i bandage? to stop circulation and stick
| to the stocking, no more salves to
I turn the flesh raw and make the corn
• “pull,” no mors knives or razors with
Manger of bleeding and blood poleon-
Ing
, ••GETS-IT” Is painless, stops pain.
• and 1? r.br^lutely harmless to healthy
' flesh. \V a rts and bunions disappear,
I “GETS-IT" gives immediate relief.
» "GETS-IT is sold at druggists at
•25 cents a bottle, or sent on receipt
J of price tc E Lawrere® & Co . Cni-
> cago. Sold in Atlanta by Jacobs*
Pharmacy Co., Elkin Drug Co., Cour-
sey & Munn, Gunter-Watklne Drug
Co.. E H. Cone, Inc., Tipton & Co.
i i r»o 1~< — —— — — — — —
$2.50 Glasses Now $1.00
$5.00 Glasses Now $2.50
We are thoroughly equipped to fit you with
any style of glasses you may desire.
Our oculist will give your eyes a thorough
scientific examination, and we guarantee glasses
he prescribes to give satisfaction.
L. N. HUFF OPTICAL CO.
Builders Fine Spectacles and Eyeglasses.
TWO STORES.
70 Whitehall 52 W. Mitchell