Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 03, 1913, Image 176

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' « 8 E HKARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 1913. 0 r Arranged for The Sunday Amer ican by /•;. Thornton, Steward of the Atlanta Athletic Club. MONDAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Peaches* Oatmeal Porridge Salisbury Steak Lyonnuire Potatoes Wheat Takes Syrup Toffee or Tea DINNER. Olblet Soup Treole Tomato Pickle Braised Corned Beef Creamed Potatoes. Carrots In Cream Corn Bread Escarole Salad Vanilla Custard Pie Buttermilk SUPPER. Cold Torned Beef Potato Salad Graham Gems Toffee RECIPES. SALISBURY STEAK-—Mince flne two pounds of raw beef. Season with salt and pepper and break one raw egg and mix well. Make Into cakes like sausage and broil over brlwk fire. Butter well and serve on toast. GIB LET SOUP CREOLE—Cut flne one carrot, one green pepper, two onions, one pimento and half head of cabbage. Put In pot with three radons chicken stock and one can of tomatoes and season well and let boll for three hours. Have the giblets you have left boiled until tender and cut Into small cubes and add to soup. Thicken with flour or corn starch. TUESDAY. BREAKFAST Steamed Apples and Cream Puffed Rice English Mutton Chops Hot Grits Biscuit Coffee or Tea DINNER. Cream of Corn with Okra Radishes Baked Vea! Pie, Farmer's Style Baked Tame Butter Beans Muffins Quartered Tomatoes Cantaloupe Sherbet Sugar Wafers Iced Tea SUPPER Croquettes of Veal, Cream Sauce Saratoga Chips Hot Rolls Cocoa RECIPE. ENGLISH MUTTON CHOPS—Have vour butcher cut you an English chop the size for your family Broil slow and not too well done, "hen done, squeeze the Juice of hair lemon over. CROQUETTES OF VEAL CREAM S\rCE- Mince the veal you have left from the pie very flne. Ml* in one onion and one green pepper chopped fine and two raw eggs. Season and roll Into croquette* bread like oysters and fry a light brown in deep grease. Pour cream sauce in hot platter and arrange tiie croquettes so as to stand ana place spitg of parsley on top to garnish. WEDNESDAY. BREAKFAST. Cantaloupe Cracked Wheat Minced Ham Omelette Lye Hominy Toasted Rolla Coffee or Tea DINNER. Clear Beef Broth In Cup Olives Steamed Chicken with Noodles Boiled Potatoes Corn and Tomatoes Georgia Corn Pone Apple Salad Caramel Ice Cream Assorted Cake Milk SUPPER. Breast of Chicken Chafing Dish Peeled Tomatoes Toast Ieed T pa RECIPE. STEWED CHICKEN WITH NOO- DLE8. — Make stew of hen or spring ohlcken and season well with plenty of good butter and sweet cream. Let cook slowly and cook the noodles in separate pot in salt water. When tender add to the stew. Serve In covered dish and garnish with chopped parsley. THURSDAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Figs Puffed Wheat Broiled Bacon and Eggs Hot Grits Batter Cakes Coffee or Tea DINNER. Country Vegetable Sour Pickle Raked Hh(U and Yams Boiled Potatoes Fried Cabbage Hoe Cake Vegetable Salad Sago Pudding, Wine Sauce Coffee Book Reviews By Edwin Markham and H. Effa Webster By EDWIN MARKHAM Calm Yourself. SUPPER. Cold Ham and Salad Hot Rolls Preserves Iced Tea RECIPE. BAKED HAM AND YAMS.—Boil ham until about half done and put in baking pan with quartered sweet potatoes around and cook until done. Turn often and baste with the stock from pot where the ham was boiled. FRIDAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Pineapple Mush and Milk Fried Silver Perch Scrambled Eggs Waffles Coffee or Tea DINNER. Coney Island Clam Chowder Young ()nions Boiled Trout, Egg Sauce New Potatoes, Fried Okra Egg Bread Lobster Salad Green Apple Pie and Cream Coffee SUPPER Cold Salmon Mayonnaise Eggs au Gratln Graham Toast Iced Tea RECIPE. LOBSTER SALAD.—Cut one can of lobsters and one stalk of celery (not too flne), salt and pepper and one cup mayonnaise. Mix well and serve on lettuce leaf. SATURDAY. BREAKFAST. . Stewed Prunes Force and Uream Fried Salt Pork, Brown Gravy Fried Potatoes Hot Biscuit Coffee or Tea DINNER. Calf Head Francaiee India. Relish Calf Head Vinaigrette Baked oPtatoes, String Beans Corn Pone Beet and Onion Salad Poach Pie Buttermilk SUPPER Calf Brains and Eggs Hominy Cakes Cinnamon Rolls Coffee RECIPE. CALF HEAD VINAIGRETTE-—After boiling calf head for your soup stock until very tender, lay on large platter and your the following sauce over: One cup oil, one cup vinegar, one chopped onion and sour pickle and salt and pepper. Heat, but not boil. SUNDAY. BREAKFAST. Cantaloupe Cereal Broiled Sirloin Steak French Fried Potatoes Hot Grits Waffles Blackberry Jam Coffee or Tea DINNER. Green Turtle Amontillado Celery. Radishes, Olives Fried Spring Chicken, Country Style Creamed Potatoes Georgia Yams New Corn au Gratln English Peas M ufflns Head Lettuce Mayonnaise Nesselrode Tee Cream Eclairs and Cream Puffs Cheese Saltines Coffee SUPPER Cold Fried Chicken Cold Vegetables Toast Iced Tea RECIPES. NEW CORN AU GRATIN—Cut off cob and stew six ears of tender corn. When done add seasoning, piece of butter, one-half cup milk, one-half pound American cheese. Put in pan and bake a light brown. CHICKEN "TANGO" CHAFING DISH—One large fat young ben boiled very tender and left In pot with the broth to cool. One cup sweet cream, one-quarter pound good butter, one teaspoon corn starch, one-half pound grated cheese, salt, pepper two raw-egg yolks, nutmeg and two ounces im ported sherry. Remove th» white meat of the chick en by pulling from the bones (don’t carve or slice). Cut Into strips about one-half inch wide and onv inch long. Put in deep dish and pour half of the butter over after melting and grate a little nutmeg, on top and let stand while you | make the sauce In the chafing dish Put the butter you have left in the chafing dish, the corn storcty and seasoning. Stir well until the starch gets gummy, then add the sweet cream and let continue to cook until the thickness of gravy, then beat in the egg yolks, add the chicken and sherry, ami continue to stir. Turn the tire low and cover while you prepare the toas«t to serve on. Toast bread on one aide and turn over, sprinkle tlie grated cheese on after turning over and let the cheese toast. When you serve be sure the plates are warm you serve on. Place piece of toast in plate and put plenty of the chicken over and garnish with parsley. There's a little book—really a pamphlet—containing 45 pages, and over each page the title "Calm Your self.'’ which v\ ill probably do more good than a dozen novels with high purpose. "Calm Yourself” was delivered !n lecture form by George Lincoln Wal ton, M. D., at *the Harvard Medical School a feu monts ago, and it now appears (Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 50c) to set the hypochondriac on the broad highway of equanimity. Says Dr. Walton: "It was only out side pressure that prevented my choosing for a title ‘The Unfret Giz zard, and How to Achieve It.’.” Alas, how few of us possess the unfrettable gizzard? Therefore **t the lady who dreads a thunderstorm and the man who fears germs and all their relatives read "Calm Yourself’ for their better living. "The maxims that have helped mo most.” says Dr. Walton, "are these: ‘Play Ball,’ 'Get Busy,’ ‘Saw Wood.’’’ Let those with nerves Use up atid vote Dr. Walton’s doctrine sane and effective. Widecombe Fair. To the average reader "Widecombe Fair." Eden Phlllpott’s latest—per haps his last novel dealing with the rustic annals of Dartmoor—will not appeal. (Little, Brown A- Co., $1.35.) The reason is not hard to find. Mr. Phillpot, with a fine philosophy talks mightily, but his performance Is not dramatic. Out of ordinary peo ple he makes much; often they are interesting, too often they are to:> verbose. His outlook from the Dartmoor standpoint is not the widest In the world. In a word, the man who wrote "The Children of the Mist" has writ ten Dartmoor dry. He makes no bones about it, calling the attempt one "to view a village In a stroke." "Widecombe Fair" is not a novel as we think of a novel; rather It Is a kaleidoscopic set of impressions, a panoramic flood of descriptions. Of his own peculiar style and method he says: "The artist, not the critic, must de termine the relatives perspective of place and people. If 1 derm a forest or river, a wild space, a hilltop or the changing apparitions of inanimate nature as vithl as the adventures of men and women, and as much a part of the material which I handle, then to these things must be apportioned the significance I desire for them. "If I choose to make a river a pro tagonist, or lift a forest, in its un knowable attributes, into a presence more portentous than the human be ings who move within it, none has the right to deny me. "That far greater artists have not seen fit to take this course is not to condemn it; at any rate, during mv own brief journey through the thorny paths of art I have found that the ‘landscape with figures’ lies as much within my range as it does within that of the painter.” This explanation will suffice to prove that to lovers of nature rather than of action "Widecombe Fair” will offer a stimulus. The Smoky Mountains. Those of us.wno can hark back a few years remember the shock of sur prise that touched literary America when it was announced that Charles Egbert Craddock, who wrote the strange Southern stories of the Great Smoky Mountains, was not a big, strong man, but onjly a small, soft- voiced woman whose real name was Man Musfree, Miss Murfree’s last beck, “The Raid of the Guerrilla (J. B. Llpplflcott Co.. $1.25), has the same authentic touch pf life, and also the name mood and mannerisms that distinguished her earlier work. It carries the dramatic rush of uncouth primitive folk in their simple, narrow ways. It makes visi ble the wild poesy of the mountain fastnesses. When her Smoky Moun tains speak, we give ear. For Little Folks. Lady Linda Js the kind of a little girl we all like to boast about. She figures as the heroine in the book of that name bv Amy Brooks. (M. A. Donohue Company. $1.00.) The author has the double gift of being able to write well for children and to draw well for them also. She has illustrated "Lady Linda" with six full page pictures, in colors, which add to the attractiveness of an at tractive child’s story. The Walled City. No better name could he devised for a hook dealing with the insane than "The Walled City.” Have you ever thought that there are more in sane persons in public institutions than students in our colleges? This is one of the fact brought out by Ed ward H. Williams, M. D., in the above mentioned volume (Funk & WagnaIJs Co.-, $1.00). The author Is fitted by experience to speak with authority; he shows that great care is required bv the mentally unfit and points out that the country is doing its best to provide that care. According to his account, life in these institutions Is not all somberness and sadness. Our Own Country. Let those persons who talk of go ing to Europe read "Through Our Un known Southwest.” by Agnes C. Laut (McBride, Nast & Co., $2.00), and th n chances are they will change their plans and make a tour of their own country first. Speaking of the Southwest, the author says in her introduction: "There is not another section of the whole world where you can wander for days amid the houses and dead cities of the Stone Age; where you can literally shake hands with the Stone Age.” And again, "The Statist of London places the annual total spent by Americans in Europe at about three hundred millions. Of the 3,700,000 people who went to the Seat tle Exposition it is a pretty safe guess that not 100,000 Easterners out of the whole lot saw the real West. We scour the Alps for peaks that every body has climbed, though there are half a dozen Switzerlands, from Gla cier Park in the North to Cloufcrot’t. N. Mex„ which you can visit for not more than $50 for a four weeks’ holi day. "We tramp through Spain for the picturesque, oblivious of the fact that the most picturesque bit of Spain, 10,000 years older than Old Spain, is set right down in the heart of America, with turquoise mines from which the finest jewel in King Alfonso’s crown was taken. We have to *ro abroad to learn how to come home.” An Opportunity ToMakeM oney iovenrorv men mf tdrm mmd iBrentrve ability, should wnt* k> ^•7 ^ sod pnxot ofered bv leading manufacturer*. PoftMll recured or our tea returned. ‘Was* faveutor* f"ail. How (• Get Your Patent and Year hlomay,’* sod other valuable bookie* rent free to a»? addrere. RANDOLPH A CO. Patent A (torn era. 618 “F” Street, N. W„ WASHINGTON. D. O. $u* r ‘ i ;, ’f ^a. •’•vgjakfc jfjjjitfiv 86 Pages of Personal Advice Free to Any Man MY DEAR READER: In the handsomely printed little hook or private pocket compen dium for men (contain In* 8,000 words and 40 half tone photo-reproduo lions), which I publish and gladly forward by mall, free, sealed to any man anywhere In the world who Bends me the free coupon below. I have Included certain parts that contain som very Important advice 01 suggestions of a strictly. r rnonaJ nature which; believe, can not he found In any of the Prtvate Hygiene books for men that are now sold at high prlc«$ all orar the country It will thus be seen 1 have endeavored, through the medium of my free book, to give my readers absolutely free of cost really MOHF In some respects. others offer and make a largo charge for All you have to do to get this free l>ook of mine la to use the coupon below. or If In my ueighbur hood. 1 extend an InvItaUon to you to call at my offlee. Please remember that this free offer Involves atwolutely no obligation on your part, and there la nothing whatsoever for you to f ay. and nothing whatsoever for you to buy n any way. unless you should decide at some time in the future that you would like to try one of my mechanical VITALTZEK8 (described below), but that rests entirely with yourself Over a million of these little free hooka have now been sent to men who wrote for them, as 1 want you to do. and who live In quartern of the globe I publish this free hook In Eng llsh. Swedish. Danish, Finnish. German. Frenon and Pollah. but I atwavs send the Fnghsh edl lion, of course, unless otherwise Instructed Kind ly use the little coupon SANDDIf. AUTHOR. In reference to manly strength. I l>etie»« it is now more generally acknowledged than etar liefore that the manly man stands hack of all that makes for progress. development and achievement In the world, a truth which any of us can easily verify tf we look about us with Impartial eyea. As a matter of fact, the man who Is de^ billtated. unstrung and enervated can not. foi perfectly obvious reason*, expect to approach those real and masterful attainments which seeia but a natural and easy accomplishment for him whose neiwe force, brain power and manly strength are perfectly normal. Hence, while we acknowledge the debilitated, weakened man to be handicapped In every walk of life where real manhood counts, yet It would Indeed be cruel of mf to here so state the fact In publt, print were 1 not of the h<*ret opinion that there la every hope for the unmanly man to restore himself to a state of health and vigor, if he hut dear hla mind of abnormal fear, and then make s fair, square effort to redeem himself There are two specimens of humanity for which 1 have no earthly use One la the man who. though now strong and vital, yet plunges into dissipation and excess with the certain MANLY, VIGOROUS ME N RUI.K THE WORLD knowledge of his unmanly fate The other Is the man who. though knowingly debilitated and enervated, makes no effort to get away from his life of dissipation and wrong practices. As a matter of fact, there la no hope for either of three unfortunates. But for him who sc knowledges his errors, who may come to me and say, "I have paid the penalty ef my past follies but I am THROUGH with my life of ..tisrtpstion, and 1 am going to make a manly effort to restore myself." to such a man. 1 care not what his physical ooniltlou may he. 1 can say In all truthfulness. "You, ray friend, are on the right road to new strength and new mauhood." tor he really 1*. and there Is no doubt abovrt It. 1 make a little appliance that I call a VlTAl.tXlTR. which 1 designed to aid Just such men who seek manly strength I am not of fering this VTTALlWnt nere for sale, but merely suggest that you. reader, take the op portunity to learn all about what this lit Us appliance Is doing to day everywhere throughout the world, then. If In the future you want to use one yourself and will so write me, I will gladly make some liberal proposition whereby yon msv hstr one /o try The VITA* T/RJt Is fully described in one section of the free book winch uk coupon below entitles you to. The VITAI.1ZKR Is made up tg a very light form, weighing only several ounces, and you wear It an your body all ntght It generates a great, soft, pleasant FORCE which I call VIGOR, and which flows in « continuous stream Into your nerves, organs, blood ami muscles while you sleep. I am satisfied in irt own mind that l have scores to a great POWER In this little VITALIZEB which in the future will be more and more relied upon all ovar the world In the treatment of debilities and nerve weaknesses With special attachments which carry the FORCE of the VITAL12XR to any part of the body, it mg) be used by Women *s well as men for the treatment of rheumatism, kidney, liver, stomach, bladder disorders, nervousness, lack of energy, etc. Therefore, please send for the book to-day. or, if you happen to live In or near this city. 1 should be very glad to »ee you In person Office hours. 9 to 6; Sunday. 10 to 1. WHAT THE FREE BOOK TEACHES YOU The little free Illustrated hook of special private tnfo-matlon. referred to above, la meant really to be a self guide for all men throttgh the years >efore and after marriage and onward to a ripe old age It ta written in perfectly plain language, entirely free from technical terms, so that any one may easily grasp the full power of Its good advice from two or three careful readings. It attempts to point out a safe road v> new manhood or new manly strrnxrih. and as such Is dedicated to mankind generally tme part of this book fully describes my little VITAL l/.KR referred to above. Remember, as soon as the coupon below ta received 1 agree to forward to you one copy of this Illustrated booklet, absolutely free at charge and In a plain, sealed envelope, so that It will come to you privately, just as you receive any sealed mall B G. SANDEN 00.. I2«l Broadway. New York. N. Y. Dear Sire- -Please forward me your book, is advertised, free, sealed. ADDBW8 .. By H. EFFA WEBSTER The Great God Pan. There is a note of exalted feeling In THE GREAT GOD PAN. by Leon ard Btuart. (The Tudor Society, $1.) It might well be entitled a "call to thought.” The author calls It "an all-time story,” he might have added that it is* particularly a present-time story, for, while it wHl always be beautiful, it will do much real good among narrow persons who go about with the delusion* that they are lib eral. Simple as the story is—and often you are deceived by this very quality into thinking it was an easy task to write it—it represents, according to the publishers, ten years of condensa tion. So that in its* present form it is a monument to the patience as well as to the skill of Mr. Stuart. Giving to the illumination of his story much wealth of poetry, much beauty of symbolism, Mr. Stuart, above all, teaches in a convincing way a great lesson; he shows that the day of the dogma and the sect has passed, or is rapidly pushing, and that religion as an ideal glorified in what it stands for in he human soul is claiming its rightful place of su premacy. This little book, printed and bound in purple, is a work of typographical art apart from the treasure within. The House of Thane. In "The House of Thane,” by Eliza beth Dejeans (The J. B. Lippineott Company, $1.25), the public is treat ed to a novel which revolves around the almighty dollar. It takes up the life of a Western city which might as well be an Eastern city, and, in troducing a ruined oil operator, shows the futility of marryine a woman without love. John Thane has oeert caught by the manners and beauty of the lovely Berenice, and too late he finds that she is content to give him in return for his money her mere presence and nothtng more. At the announcement of his failure her first thought is for herself, and it is not until he has absented himself on the Pacific Coast in his effort to build up another fortune that she comes to him with the Information that a child is to be bom. The sequel proves that his son is not Thane’s; a divorce * wows, and Thane, who has found his ideal in an other, loses her again. The story is full of the vital prob lems that are making modem society life more and more difficult. The author has managed to produce a story that holds the attention, and one which shows great skill in hand ling situations. Stories of Mystery. The author of the famous "Leaven worth Case,” Anna Katherine Green, is known as one of our most enter taining writers of the mystery tale. In a volume with Just this keynote, called "Masterpiece of Mystery" (Dodd, Mead & Co. $1.35). s*he shows her skill with the short story. The present volume, made up of nine mysteries, will more than satisfy the most exacting reader who really wants to be thrilled. The Sojourner. There’s action enough in "The So journer” to fill half a dozen novels. Robert Dull Elder has written a book far removed from his middle name (Harper & Bros. $1.25). He takes you all over the country from college to the Went and hither and yon. He introduces you to an assortment of characters comprising the good and the bad, and he backs up his scenes with dramatic climaxes and an absorbing love thread. Well, there is not much more to ask. "The Sojourner” ought to suit the most fastidious. A C W O R T HOTEL ACWORTH, GA. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT An Ideal Summer Home. Good Lo cation; Delightful, Clean, Cool Rooms. Good Table. Pure Milk. Home-Grown Frulte and Vegeta bles. Commercial Traveler** Head quarters. LONG DISTANCE PHONE 9109. AMERICAN PLAN. MR. AND MRS. W. A. SPENCER Proprietors OCEAN VIEW HOTEL PABLO BEACH, FLA. 10-hour ride from Atlanta, 17 miles from Jacksonville, Fla. Most accessible asd best beach resort for Atlantans or Geor gians. American plan. Reasonable rates. DON’T BE A SLAVE TO YOUR KITCHEN ROASTS 91 THE “FAITHFUL FIRELESS COOKER Liberates you from kitchen slavery; saves ruinous fuel costs; cooks better meals than you have ever en joyed. The “Faithful” roasts, bakes, stews, boils or fries. To use it no experience is necessary. You follow the “Faithful” Cook Book and you realize the joy of having meals cooked in the perfect way with the perfect Fireless Cooker. Complete—Perfect The illustration shows the “Faith ful” complete—cabinet of sheet steel finished in oak, 8-quart aluminum kettle and lid, two 4-quart alumi num kettles, 2 pie racks, 3-quart pudding pan four heat radiators of best soapstone, pair of tongs for handling radiators. The “Faithful” is a necessity in your home Once cook with it and you would as soon be without it as without your kitchen. The “ aithful” represents the marvel of Fireless Cooking brought to perfection. The “Faithful” it approved by Good Housekeeping Institute. FREE!—Send Now Send now for our special trial offer of the “Faithful”—free. We want you to try the “Faithful," to realize what a wonderful thing perfect Fireless Cooking is. Clip coupon now. “Faithful” Coupon — Western Merchandise A 8upply Co., 326 W. Madison St., Chicago: Plaa** rend without obligation, rour special trial offer of th« "Faithful’' Fireless Cooker with complete descrip tion. Name Address Ex. Western Merchandise& Supply Co. 326 W«»t Madison St., Chicago, Illinois J ROYAL ARCANUM P ENNAN T For 15 Cents and the Pennant Coupon That Appears Below Regulation Size—12x30 Inches On Sale by the Following News Dealers IN ATLANTA JACKSON-WF.SSEL DRUG CO. Marietta and Broad Streets. CRUICKSHANK CIGAR CO., Peachtree and Pryor-Streets. GEORGIAN TERRACE CIGAR CO„ Georgian Terrace. HARBOUR’S SMOKE HOUSE, 41 North Pryor Street. , WEINBERG BROS. CIGAR STORE, Alabama and Pryor Streets. BROWN & ALLEN, Alabama and Whitehall Streets. HAMES DRUG CO.. 380 Whitehall Street. MEDLOCK PHARMACY, Lee and Gordon Streets. WEST END PHARMACY, Lee and Gordon Streets. JOHNSON SODA CO., 441 Whitehall Street. WHITEHALL ICE CREAM CO., 284 Whitehall Street. STEWART SODA CO., Cooper and Whitehall Streets. GREATER ATLANTA CONFECTIONERY CO., 209 Peachtree St ADAMS & WISE DRUG STORE, Peachtree and Linden Streets. TAYLOR BROS. DRUG CO„ .Peachtree and Tenth Streets. TAYLOR BROS. DRUG CO., West Peachtree and Howard Streets. CRYSTAL SODA CO., Luckie and Broad Streets. ELKIN DRUG CO., Peachtree and Marietta Streets. JACOBS’ PHARMACY. Alabama and Whitehall Streets. WALTON SODA CO., Walton Building. Out-of- Town Dealers Out-of-Town Price, 18c and the Pennant Coupon. BENNETT BROS., 1409 Newcastle Street, Brunswick, Ga. JOE N. BURNETT, 413-A King Street, Charleston, S. C. REX VINING, Dalton, Ga. ORA LYONS. Griffin, Ga. SUNDAY AMERICAN BRANCH OFFICE, 165 East Clayton Street, Athens, Ga. C. Lee Gowan. ROME BOOK STORE CO., Rome, Ga. CHEROKEE NEWS STAND, Rome, Ga. H. K. EVERETT, Calhoun, Ga. J. D. BRADFORD. Sumter, S. C. EARL A. STEWART, 451 Cherry Street, Macon, Ga. ROBT. NEWBY, Vienna, Ga. GEO. W. HORAN & SON, Dalton, Ga. If your news dealer can not supply you, write us. We send all pennants anywhere for 1 8 cents each and the Pennant Coupon. SPECIAL COUPON or THIS COUPON entitles the holder to any all Pennants at the Special Reduced Price of 15 Cents for each pennant when presented to any Atlanta news dealer or at the offices of IlCAN 20 East AJabama St. 35 Peachtree St. LIST OF PENNANTS ; Harvard Georgia Tech Masonic j Yale Ga. University Elk | Princeton Alabama Eagle j Royal Arcanum Pennsylvania Odd Fellows ; Vassar Cornell Columbia College University University ^ Three cents extra if sent by mail or redeemed by out of-town news dealers or agents This affords an unusual chance to obtain Pennants at a previously unheard-of price. 20 East Alabama St. ATLANTA IlCAN 7 Edgewood Ave.