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TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
psies assist
IS PURE Ml
Agriculture Commissioner Shows
Dairymen Unhealthy Samples
From Their Own Wagons.
SCHOOLS GET DOWN TO REAL WORK;
SIX BUILDINGS ARE CROWDED BADLY
“SCHOOL DAYS.”
Commissioner of Agriculture J. D.
Price, inaugurator of the campaign
againwt impure milk products, . has
unearthed a rtartling condition of af
fairs among the dairies of Fulton
County, according to information re
ceived at the State Department.
Officials working under the direc-
tion of the State Commissioner de
clared Tuesday that tubercular cows,
open wells, filthy cow stables and
other almost indescribable sanitary
conditions had been found to exist |
throughout Fulton County. Each vio- i
latlon is .sufficient for an indictment!
and either a sentence or a heavy fine,
under the -State pure food and drugs
act of 1910.
Although bad conditions have been
discovered, the work of the State offi-
cials thus far has been purely educa
tional. Since the campaign for pure
milk was inaugurated about ten days
ago more than 100 dairymen, princi
pally of Fulton County, have been
summoned to appear before Commis
sioner Price, following an inspection
of their premises by the State in
spectors. In each case the dairyman
has been told of the existing condi
tions at his farm, has been shown the
actual bacteria which exist in sam
ples taken from hifc dairy and has re
ceived, in addition, a warning to clean
up immediately in lieu of being in
dicted for a violation of the law.
Without exception, the dairymen
have promised Mr. Price to be .good.
A second inspection by the State offi
cials will determine Whether they
have carried out their promises.
Dr. Kenneth Atkins, bacteriologist
under Mr. Price, has issued an in
formal warning to mothers and con
sumers of milk in general to purchase
only pasteurized milk, in view of the |
present bad conditions.
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Pacific Liners to Be
Manned by Japanese
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 9.—R. As-
ano. son of the president of the Toyo
Risen Kaisha Japanese Steamship
Lines, arrived here on the company’s
Miner, Chyo Maru,' to take charge of
the company’s affairs in the United
States.
j- The change is in line with recently
inaugurated policies of the company.
Which now is placing'Us vessels un
der the command -of all-Japanese
$rews.
Get Rid of
Mosquitoes
o
esides the
u n sightly
swelling a n d*’
the pain, there i
Is REAL DAN-:
GER in mos-j
qulto bites. Not
a few, but a;
great many j
dangerous dis-!
eases result;
from mosquito
bites—malaria, j
WUtaaiECl typhoid, etc. |
Jacobs’ Mosquito Lotion
Banishes Mosquitoes
It is harmless to the skin and does
jot injure fine fabrics: neither
freasy. nor sticky. Its odor is jjun-
{ent, not disagreeable, hut it instant
ly drives away mosquitoes, flies,
piats and other insects. Use it.
I5c, 25c, 50c.
All Jacobs’ Stores
CHARLES LYNCH
IIITO, OUTIIIIIIIG READERS GO FREE
POLICE. SHIES LIFE TO KIND
With Knife in Chest, Stabbing
Victim Reached Hospital Just
in Time, Surgeons Say.
Qrady Nunnally, 22 years old, was
In a serious condition at Grady Hos
pital Tuesday, suffering from a deep
cut In -the breast inflicted by James
Conklin.
The cutting took place at midnight
near the corner of Uitchell and For
syth streets, and Nunnally probabl“
owes his life to C. C. Allen, who
rushed him to the hospital in an au
tomobile.
Allen made a record run, and trav
eled at such speed that a general
police alarm was turned In. He
passed police headquarters at a speei
of 70 miles an hour, and several mo
torcycle policemen started.in pursuit.
The knife wan still in Nunnally’?
breast when he reached the hosplta'.
The surgeons said that had he been
a minute of two later in arriving
there he would have died. He is
expected to recover.
Allen is the autolst who was at
tacked by highwaymen Saturday
night while going along Garnett
street.
Coupon in This Issue Gives Ticket
to Wonderful Colored Pic
tures at Grand.
Home of Washington
In Wreckers' Hands
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—Wash
ington Inn., formerly the home of
George Washington, was doomed by
the District Commissioners to-day to
make room for the new 30-acre park
between the Capitol and Union Sta
tion.
Do Turkey Trot and
Live Long,Says Sousa
PITTSBURG, PA.. Sept 9—John
Philip Sousa, whose band opened an
engagement at the exposition here to
day, declared his belief that the tur
key trot was conducive to longevity.
He admitted that he did not himself
indulge in any kind of a dance.
Klnemarolor, on© of the great suc
cesses of untiring thought and Inven
tive genius, is being shown at the
Grand this week. Kinemacolor Is a
colored motion picture, & step In ad •
vance which meant years of hard
work, the expenditure of many thou
sands of dollars, the combined genius
of many men. before It was per
fected.
But at last the inventor found the
way to reproduce natural colors on
the screen, to show every tint of na
ture Just as it appears in life. He did
it because he wouldn’t give up,
wouldn’t take other men’s word that
the tiling was Impossible.
Every Atlantan, child or grown-up,
should see the Kinemacolor exhibition
and appreciate the possibilities of
hard work, scientific knowledge and
the never-give-up spirit. To insure
everyone an opportunity, The Geor
gian publishes to-day on its first want
ad page a coupon which will entitle
the bearer to a ticket to-night. Just
cut out the coupon and present It at
the box office.
“Developer of Efficient Executives"
Train for Efficient Managers
The demand for $10,000
men la greater than the sup
ply. Why? Because they are
paid far thinking out plans
that can be executed. The
thinking man gets away from
ruts. You can grow if you
kill your indecision. Start
now to build a wheel of prac
tical thought too big to stay
in ruts. Climb for the plane of
efficient managers. There’s
more elbow room. Get busi
ness knowledge and training
—the kind that makes deci
sion possible. The kind you
can cash. You have the de
sire. We give you the train
ing.
Take our rollrgiate courses In Commerce, Accounts, Finance and
Commercial Law. Class hours don’t conflict with your work or
pleasure. Number of students limited. Your future life and hap
piness may be in the balance. Decide right. Enroll note. Work be
gins September 15th.
Evening School of Commerce
Georgia School of Technology
J65 W. North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Ivy 4775* Free booklet on request
Classes 6s 15 to 8t(5
LUCILLE HO LLINGSWORTH.
Former Atlanta Authoress, Prepar
ing Divorce Plea, Charges He
Smoked 60 Cigarettes Daily.
Weak, Nervous and
Diseased Men
Permanently Cured
pR. HUGHES is an
experienced specialist.
Dr. Hughes success
fully treats and per
manently^ cures Pre
mature w e a k n ess,
od Poison, Kidney, Bladder, Pros-
c and Contracted Diseases and ail
onTc ar.d Private Diseases curM In
few days. Varicocele, Hydrocele
Icture, Piles and Fistula. T am
Inst high and extortionate fees
rged by some nhysj elans and spe-
ists You will- find my charges
y reasonable and no more than you
able to pay for skillful treatment.
iault me’in person or by letter and
•n the truth about your condition,
perhaps save much time, suffer-
and expense. I am a regular
duate. and licensed, long estab-
ed ami reliable.
or 30 d^ys my fee will be lust one-
f what other specialists charge, or
ekly or Monthly Payments Ac
ted.
OR BLOOD POISON I use the
•velous GERMAN REMEDY, “606”
■914.” and such improve! remedies
d for the cure of this disease. No
rntion from work,
or Weak Men, Lymph Compound,
ibfned with my direct treatment,
toring the vital forces to the fullest
Tee
i Chronic Diseases my patients are
ed in less time, quickly, and 1 use
latest improved methods. Consul-
Ion and advice Free. Call or write,
DR HUGHES.
Opposite Third National Bank,
161/2 N. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
lours: 9 a. m. to 7 p. m.; Sunday*,
'■ DELAWARE' OHIO," Sept. 9.—Lil
lian., BeJIJ3pgue, well-known author
ess, of Atlanta, announced to-day
that’charges of extreme cruelty and
gross neglect on the part of her hus
band, Arthur Hoyt Bogue, a Chicago
promoter, would form th© basis of
divorce proceedings.
Mrs. Bogue’s petition alleges she
has for some time paid $200 a month
rent and maintained an apartment
in Chicago and that she has always
supported her husband. She further
charges that he smoked as many as
60 cigarettes a day.
One of the peculiarities of her hus
band. the petition avers, is that he is
addicted to the use of strong coffee
At 6 each morning, she says, he
makes his beverage by filling a cup
full of a certain brand of coffee. When
he travels, the coffee is carried by
him in a thermos bottle. Certain ir
religious tendencies also are alleged.
The Bogues were married in Chi
cago May 9. 19(u after a three-
months’.acquaintanceship. They sep
arated in April, 1912.
Prior to her marriage, Mrs. Bogue
did work on several New York news
papers and also wrote several novels.
Among her best-known works are,
“Why Men Remain Bachelors.” “From
a Girl’s Point of View,” and “The Un
derside of Things.”
Leprosy Cure Found;
It's Origin in Doubt
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9—-Dr. Vic
tor G. Heiser, of the Public Health
Service- in the leper colony in the
Philippine Islands, reports an ap
parent cure for leprosy. Two patients
showing distinct signs of leprosy have
been discharged as cured.
The phys'eian is uncertain as to
which of two remedies effected the
cures—a vaccine treatment or chaul-
murga ofl taken internally and also
injected hypodermically.
Don’t Bat the Bats;
O.K.’d by Uncle Sam
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—“Never
bat a bat. for he's battling for hu
manity,” is not the title or refrain of
a popular song, but in effect, the title
of a warning issued to-day by the
experts of the Department of Agri
culture.
“Bats are a benefit," the statement
declares, 'as they destroy mosquiotes
and a number of other insects that
harm crops and. orchards.
Scores of Pupils, Failing to Start
Monday, Register Now, Add
ing to Congestion.
The first flurry of school’s reopen
ing over, Atlanta’s thousands of
school children settled down to hard
work Tuesday. Practically all of the
teachers in the city began the regu
lar routine, textbooks having been
designated and lessons assigned the
day before.
By Wednesday the classes in all of
the buildings are expected to be run
ning as smoothly as in the middle
of the school year. All preparations
were made to enter into the work
with as little delay as possible.
Every scholar was furnished with a
list of the books he or she would re
quire and was instructed to pur
chase them at the earliest possible
moment. It was announced that the
pupils would be held as strictly ac
countable for failures in recitations
Tuesday as they will be later in the
year.
Scores of new students, who fail
ed for one reason or another to ap
pear Monday, applied for tickets of
admission from Superintendent Sla
ton Tuesday forenoon. The increase
in the number of pupils in the
schools of the city has resulted in
considerable congestion in several of
the buildings. No effort will be made
to solve the problem for the first
three days of school, as it might in
many cases be necessary o do the
work all over owing to later addi
tions.
A meeting of the principals will be
called Wednesday afternoon, how
ever, and the matter will be taken
up. Some of the children in the
crowded buildings will be trans
ferred to nearby districts where there
is no congestion. Superintendent
Slaton probably will make a recom
mendation for additional new schools
in his next annual report to the
Board of Education.
Among the schools which were
badly crowded on the first day were
the Peeples’ Pryor, Georgia Avenue,
Inman Park, Edgewood and Highland
Avenue. The large attendance of the
first two days indicated that the to
tal enrollment for the year easily
will reach the 26,000 mark.
Price Approves Moving Picture
Crusade in Fight on Cotton
Boll Pest.
The dreaded boll weevil has bobbed
up in Bainbridge, Decatur County.
Georgia, according to information re
ceived by the State Agricultural De
partment. The report has not been
confirmed nor has it been reported to
State Entomologist I^ee Worsham.
Commissioner Price Monday morn
ing placed bis stamp of approval on
the plan to have moving pictures of
the boll weevil exhibited throughout
Georgia as an aid in the fight against
the plague. Although plans along this
line are not completed, it is probable
the Georgia Agricultural and Ento
mological Departments will inaugu
rate such a campaign soon.
According to announcement Mon
day. State Entomologist Lee Worsham
will be one of the speakers at the
National Conservation Exposition in
Knoxville next Saturday. He return
ed from South Georgia Monday morn
ing.
FOR INDIGESTION
Taka Horaford’s Acid Phosphate
Half a teaspoonful In vater before meals will
be found a grateful relief from ‘llstress after
eating. A dr.
$2.00 TO CHATTANOO
GA AND RETURN
W. and A. Railroad will sell j i
round trip tickets from Atlanta to j
Chattanooga and return for train >
leaving Atlanta at 8:36 a. m. j
Thursday, September 11, 1913, j
good returning not later than J
train arriving Atlanta 7:35 p. m. j
Saturday, September 13, 1913.
C. E. HARMAN,
General Passenger Agent ?
NATIONAL SURGICAL
INSTITUTE
For tkr Treatment of
DEFORMITIES
Established 1874
• Give the deform
ed children a
chance.
Send ns their
names, we can
help them.
This Institute Treats Club Feet
Diseases of the Spine, Hip Joints
Paralysis, etc. Send for illustrated
catalog.
72 South Pryor Street, Atlanta, Ga.
BIRMINGHAM, ALA.
$2.50 ROUND TRIP.
Special train will leave |
Terminal Station 8:00 a. m., j
Thursday, September 11th.
Return any time until Sat-!
urday midnight.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
KODAKS
*T*a Bast F
l**§
RmAibaq
Film* and cota-
p!«te stork amateur supplies.
„ ire for out-of-f'”vij 'oefeinera.
Send for Catalog and Price Lie*.
A. K. HAWKES CO. *88# «
14 Whitehall 81, Atlanta. Ga.
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
Agents for Stand
ard Patterns
New Suits With Beauty of Color
and Line Will Make a Tempting
Show Here To-morrow
Beauty of color—the warm, lovely dahlia
shade, the seal brown, mahogany, elephant
gray and bottle green which suit the keen air
and gay foliage of autumn.
Beauty of line—Coats with long, slim look
ing backs and the slight fullness arranged to
accentuate that same slimness.'
Skirts hanging in immensely picturesque
folds over the hips and apparently clinging
round the foot, though the clinginess may be
more apparent than real, for the skirts permit
freedom enough for any pedestrian.
Russia Has Taken Hand in
Fall Fashions
You can see it plainly in the rich, heavy
pile fabrics, the many fur collars and the vol
uminous drapings, all noticeable in this col
lection of elegant suits which we have to show
. you Wednesday.
Take for Example Beautiful Wooltex Suits
An elegant three-piece suit of broadcloth or matelasse,
the bodice of one-piece dress formed of chiffon, net and
shadow lace; the color a two-toned blue and black, and
priced at $55.
A superb two-piece suit of bayadere corded broadcloth
in a soft, rich plum shade, is priced at $65.
A beautiful two-piece suit of matelasse, of the fashion
able mahogany shade, has collar of American fox fur; very
elegant; priced at $60.
A particularly striking two-piece suit of checked velour,
in Mandarin shade, has civet cat collar. Price $65.
A two-piece suit of imported matelasse in bottle green,
has exquisite waistcoat of tapestry tussah; the same suit
also in black. Price $50.
A very smart and dressy two-piece suit in black, has
beautiful coat of matelasse, collar and cuffs of skunk; the
draped skirt is of charmeuse—all black; the coat lined
with dainty pompadour silk. Price $65.
A very dressy and distinguished three-piece suit is
shown in royal blue moire silk, at $75.
At $40 is shown a very fashionable two-piece snit of
wide wale Bedford Cord, blue or brown and trimmed with
novelty buttons.
At $35 a very smart suit of wool eponge—a mixture
of mahogany and bronze; cutaway coat of long graceful
lines, lined with copper-colored Satin.
at $25.00
Pure Wool Fabrics
The origin of the word “Wooltex” traces back
to the day when the makers of Wooltex coats and
suits announced that they would produce only
coats and suits made of pure wool fabrics—a pol
icy that has been maintained without deviation.
When you buy a Wooltex coat or suit you
know that the cloth is the only kind of cloth
worthy of a high grade garment.
You know that it is a pure wool cloth.
Every coat, suit or skirt we sell, which has
the Wooltex label, is guaranteed by the makers
to give two full seasons’ satisfactory service.
To this we add, of course, our own guarantee
of satisfaction, which is always given with every
purchase made iu this store.
New and Excellent Suits
For as Little as $15.00
A suit that was made to sell for more—you will see at a
glance. A suit of beautiful lines with the popular, long,
cut-away coat and pretty, button-trimmed skirt. But what
is more pleasing still is the quality of material and good
ness of tailoring. Choice of two materials: Good heavy
serge in navy or black, or “Gun Club” tweeds in stylish
mixtures; coats lined with Skinners satin. One of the best
suits we have ever offered at this price. $15.00.