Newspaper Page Text
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HEARSTTi SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA„ SUNDAY. AUGUST 10, 1913.
IN BIG WANT BO CONTEST
Everybody, Old and Young, Given
Equal Opportunity in Arrange
ment of Awards—Churches and
Lodges Have Splendid Chance.
Well, here’s something: worth work-
in* for!
The complete list of prizes 1n the
Want Ad Contest Inaugurated by
Hearst’s Sunday American and At
lanta Georgian, beginning with $1,000
In cash. Is announced to-day.
Prizes are offered for organizations
as well as individual contestants.
Men or women interested in their
church, lodge, chapter, social or char
itable organization or any recognized
body may name their organization as
a contestant, form teams for work
and win something worth while. The
first prize for organizations will be
One Thousand Dollars In gold.
The organization running second in
the contest will win $500 worth of fur
nlture, designed for lodge, church or
any other use, the selection to be left
to the contesting organization.
Worth Trving For.
The complete prize list offers an
opportunity for loyal lodge member 1 *
or church people to raise a fund for
their organization or secure a com
plete outfit of furniture for equipping
lodge room, church study or residence
or the home of any social organiza
tion. It is expected that a number
of organizations will enlist clubs of
enthusiastic members who will go
after that $1,000 grand prize.
The classification of prizes will give
the boys and girls an ood an oppor
tunity to win as the grown-ups,
though if a boy or girj tops the whole
list he or she will be entitled to the
automobile or trip to California Just
the same as though a grown person
had led the contestants.
See Want Ad Man.
The Want Ad Man wants to talk to
every contestant Monday. He has
engaged the fourth floor of the Foote
& Davies building, T.] dee wood avenue
and North Pryor street, for his offices,
and will be at his d^sk from 8 o’clock
in the morning to 5 o’clock in the
afternoon every day. On Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Saturdays he will re
main In his office until 8 o’clock in
Individual Prizes for
Which Entries Will Strive
INDIVIDUAL PRIZES.
To the individual in any class
leading the list of contestants will
be awarded the first grand prize, a
five-passenger touring car, fully
equipped.
To the individual in any class
returning the second largest
number of votes will be awarded
a double tour to California and re
turn, first-class transportation for
two persons.
Besides the two organization
prizes and the two grand prizes,
there will be awards for leaders
among the men, the women, the
boys and the girls. These will bej
MEN'S PRIZES.
First—One twin-cylinder motor
cycle.
Second—One single-cylinder mo
torcycle.
Third—Diamond ring.
Fourth—Gold waich and fob.
Fifth—Gold watch.
WOMEN ’S PRIZES.
First—Player piano.
Second—Piano.
Third—Diamond ring.
Fourth—Gold watch and n«ck
chain.
Fifth—Diamond lavalllere.
BOYS’ PRIZES.
First—Motorcycle.
Second—Business college schol
arship.
Third—Gold watch and chain.
Fourth—Bicycle.
Fifth—Gold watch.
GIRLS' PRIZES.
First—Piano.
Second—Business college schol
arship.
Third—Gold watch and neck
chain.
Fourth—Bicycle.
Fifth—Diamond lavalliere.
Prince Chased by Laundress
+#+
She Asks $50,000 on Love Notes
+•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +#+
He Is Gone on His Honeymoon
tho evening to meet contestants, give
them assistance, talk over details and
help them generally. He wants to
give every contestant eveiy possible
aid In the work.
$640 Average Income
Of American Farmer
Government Report Declare* There
Are Many Who Make far
Smaller Sum.
WASHINGTON, Au*r- 9.—Farming
is not the most profitable business in
the world, railroad press agents to
the contrary notwithstanding, accord
ing to a bulletin of the Department
of Agriculture.
For the first time in the history of
farming in the United States the de
partment has managed to get accu
rate data on the aubject.
It reports that the average income
of the American farmer Is *640.40 a
year. "It Is reasonable to infer," says
the department, "that at least half
of the farmers In this country have
even smaller Ineomee."
Resigns One Place;
Then Loses Other
Mayor Quits Office to Become Col
lector of Port, but Suffers
From Curtailment.
Feudist’s Daughter
Shouts at Conviction
Woman Obtains Practically All the
Evidence Produced In Court
Against Slayers.
WINCHESTER. KY, Aug. 9—The
" °rk of Mrs. Lillian Gross, daughter
of Ed Callahan, of Breathitt County,
former Sheriff and noted feud leader
vas rewarded to-day. when a jury
returned a verdict finding Andrew
Johnson. 19, guilty of having mur
dered Callahan.
The Jury fixed Johnson’s punish
ment at life imprisonment in the peni
tentiary.
When the verdict was given out.
Mrs. Gross and Mrs. Timandy Calla
han. young widow of the feudist,
ehouted for joy.
The evidence was secured almost
entirely by Mrs. Gross.
Twelve witnesses, who swore that
they saw Johnson at Jackson 12
miles from the scene of the shooting,
are under indictment for perjury.
PORT HURON, MICH., Aug 9.—
The order of Berretary McAdoo abol
ishing the office of collector of cus
toms at this port has thrown for
mer Mayor John J. Bell out into the
cold.
When Mr. Rell received his appoint
ment a few years ago he resigned as
the city’s chief executive, and Com
missioner Dixon was chosen as his
successor. Then Mr. Bell appointed
William R, Chadwick as his deputy.
Now the order from Washington
puts Mr. Chadwick in charge of the
’ >cal part. Mr. Bell finds he has re
signed himself out of one job and ap
pointed himself out of another.
Wind Saves Life of
Baby Caught by Kite
String on Toy Encircles Throat of
Child and Lifts Him
From Earth.
Steamer's Crew Deny
Sighting ‘Titanic’
Officers 8ay Wreckage They Saw
Was Sixty Miles South of
Disaster Scene.
Special Cable to The American.
SOUTH SHIELD. Aug 9.--Officers of
the steamer luicillne, which has arrived
here, deny the report that they saw the
Titanic wreck apparently resting on top
of a le<ige of rooks. What they saw
during their trip from Bordeaux to Phil
adelphia was some wreckage consisting
of a part of a mast and some gear that
was probably attached to a submerged
object. They were 60 miles south of the
scene of the Titanic disaster, although
in the same longitude. They discredit
the supposition that the Titanic rests
upon a submerged reef.
CHICAGO, Auk 9 —Except for the
t’mcly Intervention of a gu.-t of wind
Baby Allen McNaughton. If> months
old, might have been hanged bv a box
kite string until he was dead v ester-
e ifternoon •*> the presence of his
12-year-old bi-o.h.-r Monroe, and i
group of boy friends. As it was he
was hanged until he was black In the
face, and the string circled his throat
with a gash that barelv missed the I
jugular vein. Just as the kite went
up the string slackened and twin ;
about the baby's throat. The child
was lifted from the ground and w
being borne aloft when a sudden cross*
current slackened the string again i
Monroe quickly cut It. releasing the
kite and his brother at the same time j
FARMERS QUIT COTTON
TO GROW WATERMELONS
SAVANNAH, Aug 9—The biggest wa-
termelon crop on record is being moved
along the Savannah and Statesboro Rail
road. Already more than 650 cars have
been hauled. Bennett Maas, commer
cial agent for the Macon Dublin and
Savannah, reports that farmers are so !
well pleased with their melon crops that
some of them will abandon cotton-plant-
lug and go & tor melons entirely. 1
Blue Underwear Is
Hot Weather Relief
Head of U. S. Health Department
Recommends It as Means
of Keeping Cool.
WASHINGTON, Aug 9 The head of
the Public Health Department gave
out to-day instructions on "How to
Keep Cool, Happy and Healthy in Sum
mer."
What to Eat —Plenty of fruits; fresh
vegetables; as little meat as possible;
potatoes and. other starchy foods In
moderate quantities.
What to Drink Soft, nonalcoholic
cooling drinks: buttermilk and sweet
milk (the certified kind); alcoholic
drinks in greatest moderation.
What to Wear White outer clothes;
blue underwear; soft collars; straw hats;
good. old. easy shoes
Many Lives Saved
As Train Is Ditched
Forethought of Tcwcrman Averts
Crash Between Specials by Tak
ing Chance on Tragedy.
CHICAGO, Aug 9.—Scores of lives
were saved to-day when a towerman in j
Burnham. Ill., threw the Ohio River spe- I
cial on the Pennsylvania Railroad into
a derail and averted its collision with a
through Wabash train from St. Louis.
The train took the ditch at high speed.
The Pennsylvania locomotive was over
turned in the crash, but aside from
minor injuries suffered by the fireman,
no one was hurt
A moment after the Pennsylvania
train hit the derailer the Wabash train
click*-.-: :hti V t! . 4 r g- *t the track in
tersection 1 efcti than 1,000 feet away.
Miss FYePRfi, a
California *?irl,
who at a Secret
Marriage Be
came the bride
of Prince
Sultkowski, of
Austria, and
a Snapshot of •
the Prince.
Sultkowski, Who Won Rich Girl
and Had His $100,000 Debts
Paid, Is Accused.
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 9.—An angry
laundress from Vienna is In Los An
geles looking for Prince Stanislaus
Sultkowski, the noble Austrian who
came here several months ago, wooed
In his gallant way and won the beau
tiful Miss Marie Louise Freese, had
his debts of $400,000 paid by Father-
in-Law Freese, and received from the
same source an annuity of $20,000.
The laundress. Mrs. Clara Melcher.
declares that tho Prince brought her
to this country on the promise that
he would marry her
After a hasty, private marriage, the
noble Prince and his American Prin
cess disappeared.! The father-in-law
says they are "not in the country, ’
and no more.
Los Angeles society wondered at the
quiet wedding. An elaborate church
ceremony had been planned, but the
plans were abandoned at short notice.
She Asks Federal Aid.
Society was in the midst of this
wonder when entered Mrs. Melcher.
She appealed with her story to the
United States immigration inspector,
and was supported by Adolph Dan-
zieger. a lawyer. The Prince de
clared, Danzleger said, that the woman
had annoyed his family in Austria,
and to get her away from Vienna
so he could return home with his
American wife, he had written her to
come to America.
An attorney, who was first ap
proached by Mrs. Melcher and then
retained by the Prince, said he sug
gested to Mr. Freese, the Prince’s
father-in-law, a payment of five or
ten thousand dollars In settlement of
the woman’s claims, but Mrs*. Melcher.
through her lawyer, declared that she
would have $50,000 or nothing. She
has love letters which she says prove
her claims.
The Prince and his American bride
are believed to be on their way to
Austria where Stanislaus Is taking his
Princess without fear of being mo
lested by the insistent laundress.
Prince Lauds Girls Here.
The Prince is lieutenant of th«?
Second Dragoons of the army of the
Austrian empire. He came to Amer
ica in December and lost his heart to
the girls of America, whom he likened
to "the flowers of the spring." He
is a nephew of the Grand Duke of
Birlitz. His home is the Castle Ties-
ternltz. near Markburg. Austria
The following tribute to American
girls, of which the Prince delivered
himself, was widely published:
•‘They are splendid. charming,
graceful and fresh. like the flowers jf
the spring. The girls of Europe gen
erally have followed outdoor sports.
They are mostly large and strong,
often the equal of their husbands in
strength.
"My idea of a girl is found right
here in America. I have been
hospitably received and have met
many of them. Their sweetness, their
trimness and the wonderful manner
In which they wear their clothes have
•got me going,’ as you say. Their fig
ures and their style surpass* the
Europeans. Their dignity and grace
and the democracy I have found in
so many are winning, and I do not
blame Europe’s noblemen for coming
to America for their brides.”
Folly of Suffrage
Shown by Dresses,
Says Mrs. Marshall
Vice President’s Wife Believes Wom
en Can Do More Good Cor
recting Cabarets.
CHICAGO, Aug. 9.—Slashed skirts
with the silhouette gown and other
freaks of modern fashion are the worst
enemies of the newly made voters of
Illinois, and the cabaret and the tur
key trot are more in need of reform
than Chicago’s First Ward, in the opin
ion of Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall, wife
of the Vice President, who was in Chi
cago with her husband.
Mrs. Marshall declared frankly that
she was opposed to the municipal power
recently granted to the women of Illi
nois. Mrs. Marshall said:
"I have never been a suffragist. To
me the fashions of to-day ought to con
vince any one that a woman is not fit
to vote. Some women's dress is not
only extreme, it is objectionable. A
woman would do more good by cor
recting the dances In our cafes and
cabarets than in running for office.
"The women In the East are not
strongly In favor of the ballot, and none
of the Cabinet women seems to fa
vor it. with the exception, perhaps, of
the President’s daughter. Miss Jessie
Wilson."
NEWPORT TOLD THAT U. S.
NEEDS AN ARISTOCRACY
NEWPORT, Aug. 9.—William Mac-
Donald, professor of American history
at Brown University, delivering the
principal address before the Rhode Is
land Society of the Cincinnati, gave
expression to some startling new
ideas. The topic of his address was.
"An Aristocracy in a Democracy." He
said:
"There is needed an aristocracy to
lead, a government of the best men.
Not an aristocracy of vulgar wealth
or hereditary descent, but an aristoc
racy made up of sound physique, dis
ciplined, Intelligent and trained, pub
lic-spirited. of cosmopolitan taste and
unpretentious good manners."
A nna PAVLOVNA, noted
Russian dancer, who has
quarrel with her dancing part
ner on London stage.
Underwood May Be Drawn Into
Senate Race—Knox and De-
Graffenreid Mentioned.
MONTGOMERY, ALA , Aug. 9.—
The death of Senator Joseph Forney
Johnston has precipitated in Alabama
a political problem. He was seized
by the fatal attack of Illness at the
time when he was in the midst of a
fight with Congressman Richmond P.
Hobson to retain his seat in the Sen
ate, and Hobson thus is left without
opposition.
The dominant political powers In
Alabama, It is generally recognized,
are not altogether friendly to tho
Hobson Interests, and a man as pow
erful as Johnston undoubtedly will be
brought forward to oppose the hero
of the Merrlmac.
Who will It be?
Eyes Are on Underwood.
All eyes turn to Oscar Underwood
as the likely opponent of Hobson.
Here near the end of the session of
Congress, with ftis work well toward
completion, it is conceded that Under
wood can relinquish with safety his
grasp on affairs in the House and
step into the higher place in the Sen
ate. A movement already Is felt thvt
may have Its effect in bringing him
out as a candidate.
Meanwhile. Governor O’Neal must
appoint a successor to Senator John
ston to All his seat for the two years
yet remaining of his term. And, un
less by previous agreement other
wise, the appointee probably will be
a candidate for the coming term.
If Governor O’Neal appoints Col
onel John B. Knox, of Anniston, to
the place, Knox certainly will be a
candidate for the long term, his health
permitting. Knox for years has had
ambition to enter the Senate.
Twice he has been a candidate, losing
in 1907, when Johnston and Bankhead
were named pravisional Senators to
succeed Pettus and Morgan, who then
were near death, and again in 1910,
when he opposed Bankhead.
Knox a brilliant ngure.
Knox is a brilliant, eloquent, alto
gether spectacular figure. The Gov
ernor may not feel disposed tow'ard
his appointment on one ground, how
ever. One year ago occurred a va
cancy on the bench of the State Su
preme Court, and Governor O’Neal
tendered Knox the appointment. Af
ter weeks of deliberation the Annis
ton man declined it. Political gossip
at that time was heard to the effect
that the Governor was placed in an
Inconvenient position because of the
refusal, and he was forced to take
Judge E. D. DeGraffenreid from the
bench of the Court of Appeals to place
him in the Supreme Court.
DeGraffenreid is O’Neal’s closest
friend and political adviser. That he
should be in line for the Senate ap
pointment is not considered unlikely
in a number of places. In event he
Is appointed, it Is unlikely that he will
make the race for the long term, and
the Underwood shadow looms up
again.
The death of Senator Johnston, oc
curring almost simultaneously with
that of his present political ally and
personal friend, Major W. W. Screws,
editor of The Montgomery Advertiser,
is regarded in Alabama as a startling
coincidence. Major Screws was
Johnston’s firmest supporter in his
race against Hobson.
Friedmann Has to
Face New Charges
Originator of Tuberculosis Serum Is'
Accused of Unprofessional Con
duct by Assistant.
Special Cable to The American.
BERLIN, Aug. 9.—Charges of unpro
fessional conduct have been preferred
against Dr. Friedrich F. Friedmann,
originator of tuberculosis serum, and
he may have to defend his conduct be
fore a court of honor of physicians and
surgeons. Julius Benjamin, father of
Dr. Harry Benjamin, who went to the
United States with Friedmann as the
latter’s assistant, and who, as a result
of his association with the creator of
the tufitle tubercular vaccine, was left
stranded in New York City without
funds, is pressing the charges.
TYBEE’S CATHOLIC CHURCH
TOO SMALL FOR TOURISTS
SAVANNAH. Aug. 9.—Plans are be
ing considered for enlarging the Ro
man Catholic chapel at Tvbee.
This season the attendance has been
so large that men and boys have had to
stand. The summer communicants have
been most generous in their contribu
tions to the enlargement fund They
have also raised a fund for the purchase
of new vestments for the priest.
Civic Bodies and Officials to Par
ticipate in Cornerstone Laying
of Great Newspaper Plant.
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 9.—On Mon.
day at 12 o’clock will commence the
ceremony of the placing of the cor
nerstone of the new Los Angeles Ex
aminer building at Eleventh and
Broadway.
Because the spirit of California has
made this building possible, part of
this ceremony will be the raising of
the California Bea flag over the
great edifice now already partically
completed. The event will mark the
progress of a great newspaper In a
great city. Planned under the aus
pices of the Advertising Club of Los
Angeles, and representative business
men, the program for the cornerstone
laying reaches broad and comprehen
sive proportions.
Great Chorus to Si-ng.
The music of four great massed
bands will sound patriotically at the
appearance of the flag, Madame Es
ther Pal User, the famous prima donna
w'ill sing the new song of Southland
progress written for the occasion by
Miles Overholt, and a chorus of 100
trained voices will mark the laying
of the cornerstone.
From the Ups of one who has made
a great mark In America’s history
will come the final address of faith
In Los Angeles and Its people—Wil
liam Randolph Hearst.
There wflll come, too, during this
ceremony a novel procedure calcu
lated to remind the younger genera
tion of the event. A motion picture
will be taken of the event, showing
the ceremony and surrounding trong.
Immediately afteT the picture has
been taken, the film will be developed
with all haste and within a few hours
a hermetically sealed canister will be
placed in the cornerstone.
To William Randolph Hearst will
be presented by Mayor Rose the silver
trow’el of the cornerstone laying. The
opening words of the ceremony will
be spoken by the Rev. Charles Ed
ward Locke, who will be presented by
Ernest Ingold. Then James R. H.
Wagner wdll come to the platform and
present to A. W. Kinney, president of
the Chamber of Commerce on behalf
of the people of Los Angeles and the
Los Angeles Examiner, the Califor
nia Bear flag.
Mr. Hearst to Speak.
After Mr. Kinney’s reply to this, the
Rev. George Donahi*e, acting for
Bishop Conaly, will speak. The Rt.
Rev. Joseph H. Johnson, Episcopal
Bishop, of Los Angeles, will give an
address. After the speech of Mr.
Hear. 4 *, Dr. Sigmund Hecht will say
the closing word.
Before the ceremony at the new
building, an escort with Chief of Po
lice Sebastian acting as grand mar
shal. will proceed from Central Park
to the old Examiner building at Fifth
and Broadway. Here Mayor Rose,
the speakers* and Mr. Hearst will join
the party and be escorted down
Broadway to The Examiner’s new
site and the scene of the cornerstone
laying.
No Duke Available
For Edna Goodrich
London Society Much Amused by
Actress’ Announcement She Is
to Wed Peer.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Aug. 9.—Great amuse
ment has been created by a cabled
report of Edna Goodrich’s announce
ment that she is to marry an English
duke.
"It Is a pretty story,” comments
The London Daily Mirror, “but of the
26 dukes, nineteen are married and
five are widowers, the youngest being
67 years old.
“Of the remaining two, the actress
couldn’t have met them on a house
boat at Henley.”
Of course there is the Duke of
Westminster, whose penchant for
charming actresses is well known,
but he is not free to marry again,
not yet.
$6 WRIGHTSVILLE
BEACH
Round trip Saturday, August
23. Special train, sleepers and
coaches. Leave Old Depot 6 p. m.
SEABOARD.
DIVORCE DEFENDANT SAYS
HUSBAND IS NON-RESIDENT
SAVANNAH. Aug. 9 - Mrs M. A.
Perdue has filed a jurisdictional plea in
the Superior Court in the divorce suit
recently instituted against her by A.
W. Perdue. She declares Perdue is
not a resident of Georgia*and asks the
court to disnilsfi the suit. ^
■ P-R-I-N-T-O-R-I-A-L-S B
No.
Getting Acquainted With Your Own City!
Atlanta has grown so rapidly that Mr. Busyman, engrossed
in the “moil” of his own restricted environments, rarely
“glimpses” beyond the horizon of his personal sphere of ac
tivity. “HE KNOWS SHE GROWS”—but his knowledge of
the INDIVIDUALITY of her growth is entirely beyond his
“ken.” Old industries double their capacity—NEW ones
rear their walls. The BYRD PRINTING COMPANY is an
instance of BOTH OF THESE CONDITIONS. They DOU
BLED THEIR CAPACITY, and MOVED INTO A NEW ES
PECIALLY BUILT FIVE-STORY CONCRETE BUILDING;
and for absolutely MODERN equipment, and completeness
in every department, no plant in America is superior. You
should come down and
“get acquainted"—see
one of Atlanta’s best
achievements at its best.
We'll be glad to show
you over the plant It’s
very Interesting.
BYRD
Phones M. 1560-2608-2614.
Printing Ca.
46-48-50 W. Alabama.
Atlanta.
Pavlowa Strikes Her
Partner; Stops Dance
Quarrel With Novikoff on London
Stage Is Like Falling Out
With Mordkin.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Aug. 9.—Pavlowa caused
a sensation at the Palace Theater to
night by an open quarrel with her
dancing partner, Novikoff, th e inci
dent being parallel with her rupture
w r ith Mordkin last year.
While dancing Adagio, Pavlowa
suddenly hit Novikoff a smart blow
on the shoulder. Novikoff imme
diately left the stage while Pavlowa
walked off by the opposite side, the
orchestra finishing the piece to an
empty stage. Pavlowa afterward per
formed two solo dances, but Novikoff
did not appear again.
Thief Since Child;
Boasts of 500 Crimes
Boy Declares That He Is Beyond
Reformation, and Welcomes
the Gallows.
CHICAGO. Aug. 9.—Walter Novak,
20, arrested with four companions
aftter they had fatally wounded Pa
trolman Samuel W. Sowers and beat
en Patrolman Frank Walpole, ad
mitted having taken part in more
than thirty robberies in two months
and boasted of his* career.
“I was born a thief, and I’ve been
a thief ever since,” said Novak. “I
don’t v care whether I go to the gal
lows. I started when I was nine
stealing pennies. I have been put in
all kinds of institutions to reform me,
but they only made me worse. I
don’t want any member of my family
to come and see me. If they come,
I will kick them out.
“I suppose I have committed more
than 500 robberies.”
Champion Barnyard Producer
Rests Only When Commence
ment Season Arrives.
OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL.
LEGE, CORVALLIS, OREG., Aug. 9.
A college hen. which laid 99 eggs in
100 days and observed Commence-
ment Day by taking a single day’s
vacation, is a new claimant for prom
inence in the chicken world.
The newiv heralded layer is three-
quarters White Leghorn and one-
quaner Barred Plymouth Rock, de
scending from several generations cf
heavy layers bred at the Oregon Agri
cultural College experiment station.
The 99 eggs were laid during the
100 days ended June 8, as follows:
Thirty-one in March, 29 In April, 31
in May and 8 In the first 8 days in
June
Not only Is this the best record ever
secured at Oregon Agricultural Col
lege for the same length of time, but a
careful perusal of authentic records
from other stations on file fails to re
veal an equal performance.
The result of breeding as shown In
the egg production of this one hen 1*
only an isolated example of what Pro
fessor James Dryden's extensive ex
periments are proving to be possible.
Up to date the records show clearly
the beneficial effect in egg yield, and
when the year’s experiments are con
cluded in the fall some interesting
statistics will be available for the use
of poultrymen who are raising chick
ens for egg production.
Owes Her Good
Health to Duffy’s
MRS. MARY CARMODY.
"About a year ago I was down with a vpry
heavy cold and I had a bad pain under my shoul
der blades. I was under the care of different
doctors but did not Improve. I was so weak I
could hardly stand, and I could not keep any
thing on my stomach. A druggist near where I
lived advised taking a tablespoonful of Duffy's
Pure Malt Whiskey with an egg in milk before
meals, and after following his advice I found
that I could eat; I overcame my weakness, and
gradually gained in weight. I believe that Duffy's
Pure Malt Whiskey as a tonic for ruii down people
Is a great thing, and T recommend it to my many
friends in Brooklyn and New York. I can not
praise Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey too much."—
Mrs. Mary Carmody, 116 N. Elliott Ave., Brook
lyn. N. Y. .
Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey
should be In every home as a safeguard In emer
gencies requiring a stim
ulant, and ready to be
taken on journeys for the
protection it affords the
traveler.
Its regular use by the i
weak and ailing gives re- (j
markable results
health and strength
well as proper weight by'l
stimulating the stomach '
to better action, and In
consequence nourishing
the entire body.
BE SURE YOU GET DUFFY’S
The genuine Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey la sold
In SEALED BOTTLES ONLY, hy druggists, grocers
and dealers. Should our friends for any reason
be unable to secure it in their locality, we will
have It shipped to them from their nearest dealer,
express prepaid (cash to accompany order) at tha
following prices:
4 Large Bottles, $4.30
6 Large Bottles, $5.90
12 Large Bottles. $11.00
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey should be to every
home and we make the above announcement st
that you may become familiar with a source of
supply.
Remit hy express order, postofflea ordar. or cer
tified check to
The Duffy Malt Whlskay Company,
»8 White St.. Rochester. N. Y.
It would be difficult to find
;4 .*he _ .
more conscientious, efficient
and painless dentists In Geor-
jgf
gla than the gentlemen who
own and operate the
NEW YORK tm AMERICAN
1
DENTAL PARLORS
lp>
28 1-2 and 32 1-2 Peachtree Street.
Over Bonita Theater
i.,
.J|
No students. A11 experts in
their profession. Eight to twelve
years’ experience. They adver-
P. E. COLE'JAM
guarantee to fit
*
W. J. HARPER tlse tha ' you mar know where
to get the beet work at reasona
ble prleee. They ■elicit the moat difficult cases and
every case they take. If others have failed, try them. Good set of
teeth, $6. All work guaranteed. Lady attendant. Reference* Third Na
tional Bank. Phono Ivy 1817.
taammumrM
iiii
SEE THE
MOVIES
* AT THE
GRAND•
ALL SEATS 5c