Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 14, 1913, Image 38

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r 10 h HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN' NTT A N'T A. HA SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1913. VI r or, -i mow reviews @ V LUKIN MARKHAM i> 4rranged fur Th* S tuduy Amrri- run hp /,’. L. Th-unituu. *•’» \rai*1 nf thr Atlanta Athlrtu and Hunt fake Ctthafrp Club* MONDAY. BREAKFAST. Peeled I nked Apple r «t ToafttDs and ( ream Countiy Smoiiu. e»i St« .ik and Onions Fried Potato PaW Hot nattered Pincui i veorfdH Cane Syrup. Coffee or T«-. DIN N HR Pot an Fen Young Onion Lamb Stew with Dumplings Boiled Potatoes Mashed Yams Georgia Egg Bread Baked Hem Salad Banana Short Cake Iced Ten SCPT’KR. Chicken Livers with Mushroomn Potatoes an Oratln Hot Rolls Coffee. RECIPES. BAKED BEAN SALAD—Chop one onion and one green pepper fine and mix in one can baked beans, salt and pepper and little vinegar Mold in small cup, and turn on lettuce leaf and cover with mayon naise. BANANA SHORT CAKK Make thin sheet cake and cut Into half. Slice bananas and sugar and put on one piece of the cake. Put whipped cream over and put the other piece of cake on top. Cover tin top with whipped cream and cut into squares. TUESDAY. BREAKFAST Niagara Crapes Triscuit and Cream Itn-iikfasl Bacon and Eggs Ib.t Grits Wheat Cakes Coffee or Tea DINNER. Mock Turtle Chow Hi-w German Pot Roast, Potato Pancakes New Potatoes String Beans Corn Muffins Macaroni Tomato Sauce Sweet Potato Pudding Buttermilk SUPPER. Sweet hi ids, Clmflng Dish c.dd Aspurnirtis Buttered T• >ast Iced T •». RECIPES. GERMAN POT ROAST, POTATO PANCAKES -Take one large piece of lean beef and put in pot. and cover with vinegar, and add salt and pepper, aplci-s and bay loaf. Let stand overnight Put in roast pan and braise for one hour. Re move anil put In pot, and boil until tender. Thicken sauce and season highly with pepper. POTATO PANCAKES Grot* live large raw potatoes and add one chopped onion, salt, pepper, u lit - : tie Hour and baking powder. Thin to a batter with milk, and ft > into cakes like corn fritters. Serve around the pot roast. WEDNESDAY. BREAKFAST. Strived prunes Oat Meal Broiled Lamb Chops on Toast German Fried Potatoes Hot Roll.* « .itTeo or Tea DINNER < oumry Vegetable* Radishes Bteweu t'hicken • Yrealc Creamed Potatoes Egg Plant Egg Bread B.-kod Stuffed Green Pepper Lemon - ,i; tard Pie Mill; SUPPER < ..Ul R.m.-i Beef Sliced Tomatoes H >t Waffles .Maple Hyrup i ’often RECIPE. BAKED STUFFED GREEN PEP PER One slid raw ham fried, small piece of cold roast beef. ->ne pepper, one stalk celery and two hard boiled egg 1 - run through meat chopper and reason with salt, pep per and two tablespoons melted butt t. Mix we’l and rill peppers and bake in a quick oven. i ’ountr\ < >kr a STEW or four THURSDAY. BREAKFAST. Bananas Corn Flakes Fried Ham Red Gra Hot Grits Griddle Fakes Preserves Coffee or Tea. DINNER Puree ot Lentil* < ‘ucumbei Old Cushioned Beet Ste v ■ Boiled Potatoes Hutterc Georgia Hoecake Green Peppei Salad Rice Fimtaid Pudding Buttermilk SUPPER • ’hicken Hash on 'l ows Lye Hominy Tomatoes < ‘offer RECIPE. O LD-FASHIONED H EK1* Cut into squares thre> pounds of lean beef and put into pot with onions, carrots, turnips and potatoei Season and cover "itli water. Fook until tender and add one , (n ( >f tomatoes. Thicken and serve in covered dish with chopped parsley over FRIDAY BREAK I AST. Dorn Meal Porridge Sliced Figs Boiled Sait Mackerel Egg Sauce Potatoes Hot Waffles * ’offer or Tea DINNER i tyster Gumlx» India Relish Fried Red Snapper Steak X* w Potatoes Butter Be ans t ’ornbruad Sardines Vinin grettes Green Apple Pie and Cream Iced Teu SUPPER. Ft*, sh Shrimp Saute Block Fried Potatoes Hot Rolls • ’offer or T« i RECIPE. FRICSII SHRIMP SAl'TE.—Bread shrimp the same as oysters and fry ill butter a light bi 'own. Serve 01 toiist and garnish with parelev and quartered lemon. SATURDAY. BREAKFAST. Pineapple Grape-Nut* P.'.ast Beef Hash Browned Hot Grits Biscuit (’offer or T< a DINNER. Tomato Bouillon Sour Pick!*-* Ham Hock and Furnfl* id Peas New Potatoes Raked Yams Coi n Pone < mii'ii and t'ucumber Salad Dread Pudding Farmers' Style Buttermilk SUPPER. Chip Brel With Egg' Sliced Tomatoes Ton st Coffer or Trn RECIPE. < HIU BEEF WITH ID U ; Take half can of chin beef and chop line and mix in w ith six or eight well-beat en eggs Scramble and serve on buttered. (flu. Platt a P the poHftiblllty For w• all knov t ci St, suntay. BRi ; V KF \ST Graoc* Fruit < 'err.11 I'v.t'lri Yea! Steak with Mushroom?* Hot Grits Fried Yams Hot Walfl. s P.lai kberrN lain Coffee or Tea DINNER. Strained Chicken Broth ''elpr\ Sw eet Mixed Pickle Stuffed Olive* Fried Soring Chicken, Fountrv S»vlc Dreamed Potatoes Steamed Rice English Pc: - Sugared Yams Mullins Asparagus and l.' tuo r Salad. Egg T U rs: mg Cantaloupe* a la Mode Cream Cheese 1 't■»11 s with Jelly Toawied S*«UInc»* Small Coffee SFPPER. Cold Fried F. hiken Fold Voce; a bles Salad Coffee or Tea RECIPE. CANTALOUPE A LA MODE—Fill the renter of cantaloupe with ice cream and put a spoon of whipped cream on top and garnish with red maraschino cherry. Up and Doing. ^ThomajT*DPer In Jill, collection "f and < opportunity'' •!< Fo.», underscores f persona! success, that however abun dant the meani no one accomplishes anything In any line without a de termined getting about it. I Mi. Tapper (after the fashion of Samuel Smiles, beloved of my youth) brings a host of witnesses, folk who front common I if < • and keenest pri vation vaulted upon opportunity and rode in triumph through the winning gate. Boy- and girfs in school, and young folk at work, will be heart ened by this gospel. The Book of Evelyn. Oivan a boautlfu! woman with a vole, and no tarn iJar&man t, a widow with youth on tier siilo, an Old triantl and a houidlna hoimo onaomble, and we have the H,*t for "The Hook of ICvelyn, l.y Oeraldtne Bonner (The Bohbs Merrill Co., *1.25). The jaiaa* saor of the voice haa been taken In hand by a rouah diamond railed Matter*, and after a Iona aes Mon of years la thrown over by him an entirely Imklna in that human dynamic emotion that muat. he hack of every singer to supplement tech- nh|Ue and mere notea—if she hopes to reach the first rank. John Masters t nines forw ard like a man and telle Lizzie Harris that to la through, und Lizzie tells the nar rator the widow—of her relations with Mantel'S and the widow tells the reader. Now the question when the old friend semis on the verse ot fiilllntt in love with the singer is whethei sh>* (th. widow I shall tell him. She do.-id.-s not to and thereby show - her rimm! sense, for later she marries him herself and Llssle se cures t.-mperano-lit anil Is ravvil o' 1 t as the "real thing.” It', .,u vet y personal—hut some- hot it iloea druK Kvelyn eould have nitttlt 0 short story out of her long one and told as much just as well and II,,. lend, r would littv. thought o I in of lo r elTort. Resiilrs. the idea i- us i,111 us Jonah, and ils twentieth century clothes don’t disguise it. The Lons; Way. In "The Long Way," by Mary Im- Iny Taylor (T.lttle. Brown & Co.. $1 25), the suit hot* ha* laid d P 101 that is full of possibilities. The he mine, Eva Astry. is the wife of a rich man who has ton many 'harms f,,r her own Rood, She becomes en- lo,ittletl In an ulTati with « friend of |or husband's and. in despair and r mile- a dean breast of her ondu’et to he sister. Rachel Levon. > .,i iir-’.s h*r to m irry B©llnav®fl, * < other man in tin* case. To avid exposure Rachel make-- the K.i. ritlce, although she l* in l0 , v " with an army captain in the rar I I-I Naturalh he is astounded when lie returns to liml tiia bride-to-be apixuently lost to him. Mr- Asti'.' finally admits her w timgdoitiff to Iter husband and Bellhav-n Is leiimvnl from the scene The novel i eliaraeterized by many strung situations and by engaging dialogue. We leave it to the reader to ,iy w hether ! lie •uithm ~ ■ rperip- tlon of Washington society life rings quite true. Tlic Caverns of Dawn. Unlucky i* the man who rests his hope.*- on politb’.il promise—and, ap parently, he ha. always been as un lucky as in* is to-day. Not ill of those unfortunate ones have the temerity "t* the knowledge. - hi -■ tnds, as does Mr., .las..n Jump in "The Cavern* of Diwn," by Tames Paxton Voorhees j t The Ra1d< iK.ugh Voorhees Co., J . i ■ . it • did hat u army of oullnws we would have! The authot* served as private sec- letatv to his father. Senator Voor- ind of his Insight into Wash ington life ho makes excellent uso in the present book. “Ths Cavern* of Dawn” attsmpl , to lay hare political trickery, hut it | I does more than this. It ftirnishc* a readable clesei iptlon <*i conditions and people in the Indiana ot forty j \oair ago in n style somewhat Diek- » ns» sque. The story opens .n the Capital with the vain effort of Jason Jump to ob tain Justice. It details his despair and his adoption of a life of crime. The plot l» so woven with charac- NATIONAL CONSERVATION EXPOSITION Sept. 1st to Nov. 1st Knoxville, Tenn. Only 5J/2 Hours’ Ride VERY LOW RATES NO CHANGE OF CARS Ciiy Ticket Office, 4 Peachtree Street Union Passenger Station • r* that we ghall ro: attempt to give i here. Hut Mr. Voorhees has brought out with a good deal of originality the characteristics of country folks who seem to be known to all of u* H s *tyle 1* not the style of to day, und liis «tory runs to more than five hundred pages. He gives hi-* book its title from the caverns of the H ©I State, and describes with a .sincere touch the regions about Lost River. There is a feeling that lie is aim ing to produce something called "great." "The C’av©rns Of Dawn" is not a great book, hut It presents in ie.t! colors the scene,'- it port)ays, and it has n homely philosophy that Is very real. (>rra!nl> it ought to appeal to all gentlemen from Indiana, There i« a lot of bona fide sunlight in "The Caverns of Dawn.” Of Use to Architects. The Year Book of the New York Society of Architects has Just been is-uod. It embodies a careful col lection and collation of the various laws, ordinances, regulations and re quirements of use to the architect. The book I* bound in black leather, flexible covers, with gilt edges, and contains 306 pages. Among the in teresting new* matter is a complete list of architects of New York .State, the description of the city depart ments, u checking list for specifica tion writing and the building code reparagraphed. subdivided and printed on pink paper so as to be readily founcU \ price of $r> ha* been put upon the book by the society because of the demand from others than archi tect.*, to whom the book Is given free. ’Labrador.” The recent denarture of the Gren fell boat for Labrador adds to the in • t- est in Dr. Wilfred Grenfell’s splen did volume, "Labrador” (The MacMil lan Company, $2.50). With Dr. Grenfell's work no one in tin reading world is unfamiliar. His high purpose and splendid results havt won for him the admiration of all men. To must of u» that country— strangely hidden in fog and cold, though in the latitude of England is forbidding in the extreme. Modestly I>r. Grenfell says in his foreword to a book copiously Illus trated and of more than 300 pages: Having selected for myself a role *a lift that < onipels me to pass most of mv days along the coast of Labrador, I have corhe to love the rugged fast- neisHOB of my adopted country, and to lament the amount of almost Stygian darkness that Ilea Mill over it and Its resources. "With regard to the future of this vast area, nearly half n million square miles, 1 am myself an ontlmist. True it is, that the ~reat tide of humanity flowing ever westward has tor th:* most part passed it by, leaving it lone and frigid in its polar waters. But the hand of man has grappled with 1 arder problems than ihi* ‘re sents.’’ Su\Mr. Grenfell, quoting the nat- ui a list Packard; "The Labrador Peninsula Ls h -s known than the in- th< Of Si beria." And yet he goes on to say in his own account. "It is the land of charm the Paradise of geologists.’* 'flic chapters on reindeer and dogs ate most enlightening. The experi ment of introducing reindeer as b« ;ists of bui'den and as a remunera tive industry was broached after the Sin t cssful breeding of these animals in Alaska. Fo far it has been most encouraging. Unlike the Labrador dog, the Lab rador wolf has never been knowft to attack a man "Our ilogg," says the writ' r. "taking the scene of a caribu trail, even when in harness, will for get all discipline, and will almost tear a Komatik and dirver to pieces in their eagerness to give chase. I have known of a team that thus ran away an l some of them- never came back.” "There can be no question that the dogs love to be driven. They go per fectly wild with excitement when in ha rness. "During my years in Labrador they have killed two children and a man and ■ aten another.” We can not go Into the many chap ters dealing with the fisheries, the ocean mammals*, the birds, the flora and onservation and exploration. All Dr Grenfell’s efforts have been di- rectccl toward improving the condi tion of the people He makes the point that no attention is paid to their wants by the Government, but he hopes that In time the country will come Intc *ts own. If you are interested in a great and noble movement, read this book. By H. EFFA WEBSTER Little Thank You. A little book entitled "Little Thank You. by Mr.* T P. O'Connor, comes to us from the presses of C!. P. Put nam's Sons, a welcome prose poem :inet :i story at that. Likewise, it car ries a rhythm of human loyalty en vironed with the traditional echo, “A little child shall lead them." As the story i una. a man and maid wed down in Kentucky. A child is horn to them. Soon the young father dies. The widowed young mother goes ,i, New York with the little lad. at tended by faithful "Old Mammy." It Is necessary tor the little mother to earn money, and she does this hy reading manuscripts for a publisher .md writing short stories to sell. She meets a young mar -love at Ural sight. “Old Mammy" identitled the parent.igo of the young man through happenings of the past down in the old K, ntucky home. This young man. "Billy ." is closely connected, through these events. y\ith "the fam ily." "Billy" certainly lores ' Mum- Bey." the mother ot "Little Thank Y'ou." But stormy times sweep over the courtship, R-'tdlv. If "Little Tlmtik You hadn't been right on the job. It isn't like y "Mtimsey" and "Billy" would have hit off the wedding. "Little Thank You" gets right into the wooing business; in fact, he's in it the proposal of marriage. "Little Thank You." has his part in the "en gagement,'' a teal stand-patter lit the game. This Is a syveet and wholesome piece or notion, a little gem of a real good kind. An Anonymous Author. li isn’t clear to any grown person, gifted with normally stun reasoning faculties, how any woman deprived of husband and little son can rate the keenest poignanev of her grief as the lack of ' soniethinn to do" provided s|:. i,;,*. ihmneinl resources ’<>r the ; F t , Nation of human suffe.inv Th, aaoiiyifcoi.' author of :■ Hub: book entitled. "The Woman With Empty Hands*” portrays herself an having been bereft, through death, of a loving husband. The surcease of this bitter grief wan the necessity of giving all thought and loving care to her little son. who succumbed to a lingering illness, leaving the mother desolate and terribly lonesome be- ! cause she has nothing more to do for beloved ones. The situation is grievous and tragic j for any woman, and attended with ' anguishing vagueness when she need not work for self-support. Still, there are so many paths that she may tread in the accomplishment of benefit for "a common good," so many purposes and fields open for women, that she need not suffer on account of "empty hands” if she will listen to her normal reasoning facul ties. It’s ail right and creditable, if she prefers the work, that she should find j her panacea by joining the "Votes for • Women” cause. But we fail to see i why she should trail resentment j against men into her efforts for "the ; common good." Especially is this re sentment a peculiar pulse of her work, -ince she bad a loving husband. The allev iation of suffering and for lornness is never fully accomplished when it is soiled with resentment or harmful force. Published by Dodd. Mead & Co. Dedicated to Mrs. Punklmrst and her daughters. ’•Udara.” The potent fascination of the Orient inspires scores of writers of fiction t" build their romances out of the | fabric provided by the traditions of I these peoples, the mystic rites of the ■ trange worship <»f stranger gods, giv- ! ing . glamour to the entirety of the ! literal > fabrications* \rthur J Westertnayi has traveled extensively over the Orient. He has ) lived with th< peoph and studied their natures and modes of life. He bus gathered historic data, with a 1 .. -:?d?c f jusw tnr and personal; ti« ot this generation of the inhab itants that date their past in antique epochs. All those educational a.ssetfl he uses .ii novels centered in the Far Ea:<t. His hitest book of this class comes to market from the presses of the G. VV Dillingham Company, and is en titled “Udara." This is the story of i Hindu prince who sacrifices hi- leritage of a throne for the love of a hristian girl. So the throne goes to iis cousin, Panka. Punka launches a career of crime nd dissipation. He incidentally lures the Christian girl beloved by Udara nto captivity, and he means to oub- ugate her as his slave. But she es capes and disappears. Warfare and rebellion ensue among the subjects of the hated Panka. There tre fierce adventures, garni- ttired with revenges, despairs and heroic "sacrifices. At last the beautiful Christian gl. 1 appears on the scene. Presto! Udara comes into his glory as king of a kingdom. ‘‘Two Shall Be Born.” Frequently a loftily unreasonable, bad-tempered and Insanely jealous man or woman makes an awful mud dle of a true love situation. Then en sue pathos, tragedy, resentment. This kind of confusion is the peg on which to hang an adventurous- plot in Theo dore Goodrich Roberts latest book novel. “Two Hhall Be Bom," Cassell & Do., publishers. David Wee ley goes into spasms of jealousy and temper because he fan cies- ids fiancee is failing in love *ith a rich Englishman. Captain Joice. Dorothy makes an effort to set David straight on their pledged mutual ado ration. David scorns reconciliation on the spot. No more ('an Dorothy hu miliate herself through offering ex planations. David flee* into the wil derness of Canada. Being r»ch. he can play a wide game in adventures. He’s a leader In thrill ing situations But he pays the price of his cruel treatment of Dorothy. Ho rises above the spasms of temper through doing good for others. He buys 20,000 acre* of wilderness. Then he becomes so lonesome for Dorothy that he decides to go to New York to set- whnt she’s up to. But Dor othy arrives on the Canadian scene, and through wildest adventures. Never m.nd in this brief space of presentation how it happens. But Dorothy come,* into the conviction that sue wants to live in the big wilder ness where, with David, sne can be he.pful to "struggling men and wom en.” ‘ Lives of the Players.” William Winter, tne veteran and beloved dramatic critic, is writing a aeries ol‘ books under the caption, "Lives of tne Flayers.” For half a century Winur has been intimate witn players, meir personalities and work. He is identified with all things that pertain to the highest merits of the dramatic stage. For years and years lie has oeen a seen ahaiyst of i hi\s, classical and popular, in ethical qualities. i lie first oi the series, “Tyrone Power," is issued by Moffat. Yard &: Co. With thift presen it ion of Tyrone Power o.s a great playef of the neat last and a playei ready for greater display of genius, Mr. Winter unites intimate history of placers who have been associated with Power. Winter ueprecates me degeneracy of the Arnei ican stage, out predicts a reaction and a return of the classical p'ays. He predict* that Power is to be reckoned with as one of tne force- lui pla>ers who will be conspicuous in tile splendid reaction, in the return to the legitimate splendors of "acting.” A Fool and His Money.” A i-ool ami His Money," hy Goorgu liarr Mct-utcheon, author ot "Grau- aiark," "The Hollow of Her Hand" etc. is one of the new fall books 1 l>odd-Mead a Co., The storv again brings to the front a ensile "gray, ancient and lofty," this time on the Danube. A young American, termed a fool by his uncle, because he is an author und 1ms Inherited money, takes a liking to the castle and purchases It. "And !o!” to quote the publishers’ advance notice, "among the innumerable odds and ends of medieval lumber ot which he has become the possessor, he discov ers dungeons, hints ot burled treas ure, whispers of mystery, an odd fam ily of stout retainers, and finally— locked up In an isolated lower, with padlocked door and a secret entrance —a beautiful countess. Austrian by marriage, hut American by birth." The American in the last chapter meets the countess and the romance has a happy ending. Publishers’ Notes. Dodd, Mead Co., following the general ttend, announce for fall pub lications fewer titles, but their list Includes books from some of the most prominent authors, both in this coun try and abroad. There are 51 titles announced to date, headed hy the usual yearly contribution from that most popular of American authors. George Barr McCutcheon, the story of "A Fool and His Money." In the firm's list are noveltzations of two of last season’s dramatic successes 1 , "Peg o' My Heart” end “Years of Discre tion.’ Other novels announced are- “The Taste of Apples." by Jennette Lee, the author of "Uncle William and Mr. Achilles:" "The Destroyer,'' a tale of International politics and intrigue, by Burton EL S-tevenson: "The Honor of the House," a tale of medieval Italy, by Mrs. Hugh Frazer, and "The Hon or of the Clintons," by Archibald Marshall, who is called the modern Anthony Trollope. Harper & Bros, announce the publication of "The Argyle Case," a novelizatlon by Arthur Horn blow of the play; "The Desired Woman," a new novel l>> Will N. Harben. and ■Joe. the Book Farmer," by Garrard Harris, a book for younger readers. They arc putting to press for re printing "The Iron Trail," hy Rex Beach; When the Sleeper Awakes," by H. tl Wells; "Vesty of the Basins," bi, Sarah r McL. Greene, and “The Standard of Pronunciation In Kng- lish " bv Thomas R. Lounsbury. Messrs Duffleld & Co.'s list of fa! Action Is headed by Marguerite Bry ant’s new novel, "The Master Pas sion." Other novels by English au thors are "Circe's Daughter." by Priscilla Craven; "A .''esallianoc." Katherine Tynan; "A Runaway Ring.” by Mrs Henry Dudenay: Margery I-'yiton.' bv Lady Ridley ; "The Sphinx in tile Labyrinth." by Maude Amies- ley; “Molly Beamish," by H. DeVere Stacpoole. G P. Putnam'.- Sons publish t.ns week “Joyous Gat'd," by Arthur Chris topher Henson. "New England and New Franc." bj James Dougins, and "Threads of Gold " bv Myrtle Reed W. T. Call Brooklyn, publishes a small book called "Midge, Problems." embodying the Ideas 111 positions- o! " . . _ pieces li. . in PeiftJmoie Contest r aV y 1 / APPLICATION BLANK Pedalmobile Department of the Hearst’s Sunday American and Atlanta Georgian. 20 East Alabama St.. Atlanta. Ga. I am interested in your free Pedal mobile offer and am determined to win one if my application is accepted. Please send blanks and full partiou-ars. Name * Street City ■Recommended br “Gee, ain’t it a peach! Cou ldn’t 1 speed some if 1 had one of them! How many are you going to give away, Mister?” These are some of the remarks to be heard around The Georgian Office where the big red “Georgian Flyer” is on exhibition—the one just like The Hearst’s Sunday American and Atlanta Georgian will give to each boy and girl who secures forty new subscrip tions to the paper before October 1. There are many earnest workers and the subscriptions are coming fast. It would only he a wild guess now to say who will win the first fifteen ears and receive the Charter Membership Certificates to the Atlanta Pedalmobile Racing Club. These Cer tificates will entitle the holder to compete in any or all races and events to be held in the near future. Pedalmobile Clubs are to be foimd in many of the large cities, having been promoted hy some of the largest, and best newspapers in the country. This sort of sport may be new in At lanta, but in many particulars the Pedalmobile races are to the children what the Auto races are to the grown-ups. In fact, they are handled a good deal on the same order and are interesting to the parents as well as the children. These little machines are not to be confined to pleasure alone, hut can be put to good use in many different ways. In some cities carrier hoys who have won Pedalmobiles may be seen distributing their papers in them. All these cars are well-made and serviceable and will surely gladden the heart of any boy or girl who is fortunate enough to win one. These cars are now on exhibition in the window of O. G Polk Dry Goods Store, 29 South Gordon Street; South Pryor Ice Cream Parlor, 353 South Pryor Street, and Imperial Tire and Tube Company, 349 Peachtree Street. While attending the Odd- and-Ends Sale at Polk’s Dry Goods Company, be sure to notice the “Georgian Flyer” in the window. OUTSIDE WORKERS. A number of boys and girls outside of the city of Atlanta have sent in their application blanks and are now working earn estly to obtain one of the handsome little cars. The Pedalmobile tnan will be glad to send subscription blanks to more honest hust lers who would like to own a Pedalmobile. Just fill out the application blank below and full particu lars will he mailed you at once. L