Newspaper Page Text
'MOVIE' OF BRYAN LECTURE, SHOWING THE GREAT MONEYMAKER AT HIS WOR
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Here, in five illuminating scenes, is a performance in which the Secretary of State for the United States is the leading figure. Observe the crowds at the tent door buying ice cream cones and pink lemonade. Once inside, the show begins with the Tyrolean
yodelers, followed by the gypsy violinist. At last the famous Commoner appears for $250 a performance, phis a percentage). The last scene shows him adding to his meager $12,000 income.
MH. BRYAN ISN'T
GULLED; JUST
'WINGING'
Secretary Declares He’s Not a
Circus Actor, Yodler or ‘Artist.’
Scores Critics.
PHOENIXVILLE. PA., Sept. !«. I
Secretary of State William Jennings
Bryan, .speaking in his most serious
vein, denies that he is a montebank,
a vaudevillian, a peanut Secretary of
State or that he has made a travesty
on diplomacy ps has been alleged edi
torially by m|ny leading newspapers
of the United States as well as in ,
England and vn the continent.
The Secretary of State had no de
sire to talk for publication about
the »riti isms’ that have been heaped
upon him. hut he has talked to per
sons* he has met on the Chautauqua
circuit and has* complained bitterly
of the 'falsie light in which he has !
been pla< ed. ' it was in verification'
of these Mtatements. apparently made
in confidence, that he consented to
talk.
Secretary Bryan said that he is a
much maligned individual. He takes
the stand that he is “an added at
traction” on the Chautauqua circuit
and objects "Tenuously to being con
sidered or pictured as an acrobat, a
Swiss yodler or a member of a vaude
ville team.
Not a Circus Man.
lie objects strong!* to being pic
tured on a stage between two per
fectly capable members of the the
atrical profession.
The fa f that he and his Chautau
qua leetiA*es had been the target for
leading# and critical editorials in
many |f the leading newspapers of
the lX’ tp d States did not appear to
worry the Secretary a great deal, al
though he acknowledged that he is
not overfond of reading continually
about that $250 he gets for each
Chautauqua lecture.
The editorial attacks by the news
papers of England and the continent
have bothered the Secretary more
than he is willing to acknowledge. He
dislikes to read that he ig making a
travesty out of diplomacy and that
his conduct causes laughter from the
foreign diplomats*.
“What right have they to declare I
am making a travesty of diplomacy?”
he asked in a petulant manner “They
do not know the real facts. They do
not stop to investigate and they cer-.
tainly should make an investigation
before making wild statements. The
s atements that 1 am neglecting my
duties at Washington so that I may
continue this lecture tour are abso
lutely untrue.
Hates To See “SSO“ in Type.
“The statements that the Mexican
situation and the Japanese situation
have reached acute stages and require
by constant presence in Washington
likewise are untrue. The foreign
new spapors must get their ideas from
the column" of the newspapers of the
United States.”
Throughout his talk the Secretary
of Stat® «howed very plainly that th**
numerals “250” with a dollar sign
before them had the same effect upon
him as a rod flag han upon a bull. He
acknowledged that he does not like
to taJk to newspaper mon about his
Chautauqua trips "because he sea
a wrong interpretation will be placed
upon anything he may say in the sam»
manner as a wrong interpretation ha®
been placed upon the lecture tour
itself.”
Neither did the Secretary of State
give any intimation that lie had any
intention of giving up the lecture tour
and the consequent loss of revenue.
Reno's Passenger
Traffic Cut One-Half
uMAHA. Sept. 16.—Passenger serv
ice to and fmm Reno. Nev has fallen
wlm- >' one-halt sine® the reformed
t. \<.r < laws went nt<» effect, a cord- j
im • • figures of th. railway lines ’
< i • r-u<»b \'r-x ir’a. *
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■■■■Mill II
.idib tas
OF THE
o:ycr
JACK BARY.MORE is brimfull ot
J tones about Sammy <'olt, the four- |
j year-old son of Ethel Barrymore. :
some of which may, perhaps, be taken I
with a grain of fult, according to f
Jack Sammy, who inherits the true I
theatrical instinct, was saying his •
prayers the other night and ,ad got- j
I ten 90 far "Now I lay me down to i
sleep.” when he "topped and turning
to his mother, said:
"Mother. I think we ought to
bang® that line.”
“Sammy," said h;» mother in horror.
"Why?"
“Because I heard another boy
, -Tasking that >ame line the other
day. and the first thing you know
everybody will be using it.”
• • •
A EADY patron of a moving picture
‘ * theater complained to iman- i
agement that an intoxicated man. sit - |
ting dirp' tly In front of
upon making remarks and otherwise j
made it disagreeable for her
The manager hastened to the spat i
occupied by the disturber
“You're drunk, aren’t you?’ ’ he !
j asked.
The man rolled over in his seat ami I
I with a grunt that could n« heard i
several rows away, fairly shouted:
“Dr-runk? W-e-1-1. I sh-shoull
s(h)ay I am d-dr-r-unk! You don’t '
sfhiuppose I'd be in here If I w-was
si(h)ober. d’you?”
• • •
“I SUPPOSE acting is largeix a mat.
* ter of nspiration. isn't it?”
gushingly inquired a young woman
as the fat comedian wiped the beads
of perspiration from his tired fore
head.
"Largely so." he responded, "al
though perspiration is also entitled :
to bo regarded as well.”
• • •
CHE was on her first .one-night stand
tour. /.lighting from the train,
sh® accosted the first native of the
village she met.
"Will you direct me to the best
hotel in town?" she sweetly inquired
The native shifted the cud of to
bacco which he was protecting.
I can tell you,” he replied,
“but I’d rather not."
"But why?”
“Because after 1 tell you and you
go there.” was his reply, "you'll think
I am a liar."
• ♦ *
“DIJT they are close friends.
D they not?” inquired the friend
of the actress in discussing some mu
tual acquaintancees.
“Well, they are friends, nut I don't
know how clone. I don't think either
has tried to borrow yet," was the
reply.
State University
Opens 112th Session
ATHENS. Sept. 16.—The Univer
sity of Georgia will formally begin
its 112th session to-morrow, when
opening exercises will be held in the
chapel.
Every train that has arrived in
Athens for the past week has brought
additional students’. It is expected
that fully L’.O will register.
I CABLE
|| NEWS
Important Events From All
Over the Old World Told in a
i Few Short Linas.
Fatal Ship Collision.
MASS! L T IS, H< ILLA ND, S<
A passenger was drowned when the |
British ship Mavis --ollided with the;
Gorman ship Co mar off this port to- i
dav. The Mavis was sunk.
Irish Rail Strike Spreads.
LIVERPOOL, Sopt. m The strike i
of Irish railroaders spread to England 1
to-day and 500 men employed in end I
about Liverpool went out. The Iris?, j
strike leaders are trying to spread I
the walk-out over the entire British
Isles.
Serbs Force The»r Religion.
SALONIKI, Sept. 16 —A delegation
of Macedonians arrived h#-ie to-dav
and protested to the Greek authori
ties that Servian soldiers, who are
ravaging the country, are compelling
natives to join the Servian Church.
7 Cie in Chimney Collapse.
WORKINGTON. ENGLAND. Sept
; 6 s • ■ •
I arui a dozen were ;n.i'.i red in the . »,| ;
li.-i:?se of a 200-tout chimney here to- |
iv O WWm '
'i WT 1
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THREE SKETCHES
ENLIMILJT
THE FORSYTH
Problem Playette. Character Turn
, and Miniature Opera Hold
Interest of Audience.
By TARLETON COLLIER.
Pretentious indeed the week’s bill
at tile Eorsyth becomes, with three
one-act sketches that are rather ex
acting In thMr <: mands on the au
dience and the j avers. If they were
not so well done th#* result would be
lamentable. As it is. however, played
in each instant e by ai lists. they win
applause.
There is variety enough in the
three. One is a tinv opera, with a
book nnd lyrlvs and music all its own,
and with right pleasant voices to in-
I terpret it all: another the ambitious
I dramati offering of Mme. Beeson
Lind Charles Dodsworth: the third a
i pure < omedy. in who i true German
types revel in the opportunity which
I is presented tn manufacture laughs.
Os them all the audience seemed to
like best the third, a comedy sketch
written by Rupert Hughes. And those
who have seen his “Excuse Me" and
who have r#ad his stories know that
he is mister of the popular farce. In
his “How Hoffmeister Did It,” the
sketch at th® Forsyth, he puts a lot
| of character in his lines
Character Drawing True.
He draws the picture of a German-
American family, the older folks fat.
tautological and true to type, the
daughter and her lover naive and
simple Bernard A Reinold is a true
Deutscher. and Katherine de Barry, in
spite of her name, a convincing frau.
In "The Woman Who Knew." Mme.
Beeson and Charles Dodsvxorth re
veal themselves as clever actors,
showing the struggle of wits between
a shrewd lawyer and an adventuress
who seeks happiness at the expense
of another woman.
The other sketch is "The Singing
Countess,’ billed as an opera-bouffe
in one act Miss Ida Brooks Hunt,
the principal figure in this singing
act, lakes advantage of her opportu
nity to please the audience by sing
ing the "My Hero” song that won for
her lasting recognition on the stage.
Her supporting company—George
Poultney. Henry Vincent and Miss Al
i-'e Hutching!—meets the demands of
the score
Quartet Takes Well.
A number of considerable excel
lence is that of the Big City Four
the male quartet. There are singers
a-plenty in the world, to be heard at
every movie-house And yet it seems
that, after all. these things are the
best, so tar as *■ howgo#»rs are con
cerned. particular \ when singers
( n present such harmonj as did the
Big City Four in their adaptation of
"The Rosary." This was a worthy
; feature.
, The .Marvelous Grahams are four
1 wel : -developed g ? m unsts. th® mo.ct
I remarkable ami pleasing of whom are
1 two small boys. Martin Kennedy is a
j black-far#- ocmedian whose dancing
won a hand.
The hill - loses with a squad of
dancers who supplement the singing
land dan-Ing act of Ward and Davis.
The ballet dances well, and the two
I principals are captivating
Miss Williams Scores
Triumph at Lyric.
\ pag« out of the -of life is
; off* r-<1 for reading in the play. "A
i Man’s Gam®.” at th® Lyric Theater
I this \<• k. Th® ork of Miss Estna
i Williams alone woul#l mak“ th® per
formance notable even if it u®r# not
I th® convincing "for;.- tha* it is.
< Rut the story is ov-rlookrd. th®
1 plav is forgotten, in the work of Miss
Williams.
• n the play she is an abandoned,
dissolute woman, who returns after
fifteen years of depraved life, con-
Chicago
CHOICE OF ROUTES
AND' GOOD SERVICE IF I
TETE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS
-- s -
M \ ‘
1
4 IS
I scienceless, bruitsh. to the husband '
whom she had deserted.
Fifteen years before he was poor
and her luxury-loving soul sickener;
of th® lif- of povertv. She left him,
and left also their little girl.
The man goes out into the West. (
and b» < ornes rich and oolith ally -
powerful. His girl is carefully nur- |
tured back East by a good woman
Then the woman and the girl come]
out to sc® the father.
Then the “Game” Begins.
Th® man. fighting for the love of
his daughter and of the woman who [
reared her, is confronted suddenly by
the drunken woman who is still his '
wife. There is th® basis of the play, i
The "man's game" is the fight a man ;
must make for the happiness of th®
woman he loves.
Estha Williams makes the most of
her opport uniti<*s. Somehow she
catches well th< psychology of the :
role she plays, and the result is a |
startling realism. Miss Williams will |
long be known for h®r work with the .
character <»f Nance Mayo.
Her supporting company supple
ments well her work. Edwin Walter,
as her husband, depicts the typ® of
the successful American business i
man and politician in the rougher,
balder i.dacrs away from the big cen- ;
ters of < uituie. He is no stage West
ern- r us slouch fiat and bouts, but a i
virile person.
Real West Depicted.
Harry L Dunkinson makes a good
; Sheriff and political boss of the same
Western setting. Again there is no
hint of the sombrero and the lass.,
-•f the popular imagination, but a .
very real presenation of the West
erner.
The play has something of the lone
->f a melodrama, without the grating
-ssence of unrealitx and too-great ;
h»ro’«m. As to t#*«-hnical construc-
' '.ion it n»ay he a little c rude, if you ,
• loot <-loselv to the mathematical ac- ‘
< uracies of technique. But all that
is nv» rlooked or not observed at all,
i® the general impression that here
Is a play out of life, and a play with
real characters and real emotions to
be drawn.
"A Man’s Game" wil> be at the
Lyric all the w eek, w tth <fhatinees
Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday.
Movies Add Interest
To Thaw’s Adventures.
Atlanta is attaining much mure of
a personal interest in the enthralling
affairs of Harry Kendall Thaw since
the pictures from Sherbrooke first
were shown at the Grand Theater
Monday. There in the movies th®
noted fugitive sits and smiles and
frowns and looks bored. just as
everybody imagined he would. It is
i a very real Harry Thaw that At
lanta people are seeing at the Grand,
and they go from the theater to their
newspapers with a new interest.
In the pictures Thaw is seen in his
<•••11. reading, or writing, or idling,
and altogether looking not in the
hast like the lunatic that the New
York State authorities are try.ng to
make him out. In fact, he seems to
be a Hither human person.
Moving pictures, such as the Thaw
series at the Grand this week, fulfill
the serious function of the celluloid
films, giving to actual events a hu
man interest that makes them ap
pealing and instructive.
Convict Road Work
To Be Systematized
\ction looking to the systematizing
of the work of convicts on the pub
lic roads probably will be taken by
the Siate Prison Commission at its
next meeting
It is understood the commission
has had under consideration the ad
visability of appointing Stat® road
supervisors to work in conjunction
with th#- counties in efforts to build
up a State-wide system of good!
roads.
New Naval Stores
Concern Organized
SAVANNAH. Sept. 16—A new’ na-
I val stores company, to have $560,000
I capital, and be known as th® Stand
ard Naval Stores Company, is being (
organized her#, it was learned to-day. ■
It is being formed «>y I. F. <”. Myer«. |
C. j. DeLnach and J. E. Driscoll, all j
former offl®®rs of th® defunct Amerl- I
can Naval S®tnr®*» <’ompan'
. ——
PARROT USES PHONE.
WASHINGTON Sept 16. A par |
rot owned b; Miss B. Morrison, of |
Wilmington, Del . heid a flve-minute
conversation w ith his former mis-1
tress here uVer the long distance tel- i
ephone.
ACUTE FIMCIAL
CRISIS FUCIILG
GBITIES
Subscriptions Overdue, Trustees
Are Forced to Indorse Notes.
Work May Be Halted.
Th® failure of a number of sub
scribers to the Associated <’ha cities
to pay their amounts confronts that
institution with a situation that is
acute The trustees have had to per
sonally indorse notes for running ex
penses during the past two months
and Tuesday the institution was j
without funds and liable to have to i
cease its operations unless more mon |
ey can b® secured
The Associated Charities based its |
budget on the amount of money
pledged by popular subscription the •
first of the year. While Atlanta re
sponded liberally, most of the 1
amounts were small and the tota •
was subscribed by a large number of
•citizens. Os these small amounts $3.
000 is now overdue
Officials of th® organization ar**
very much worried over the condi
lion. They feel that th® public does
not feel sufficient sympathy with the
work because of the quiet manner in
which it is carried on.
The point they stress is that while
much Immediate relief Is given th®
main work of the institution is t®
give permanent aid. putting people or.
their feet in an unostentatious way
and making norma) members of so
ciety out of mendicants.
Robber Band Sought
For Theft of Electric
Police are searching for an electric
automobile, belonging to John S
Owens, the capitalist, of 37 West
Eleventh street, w’hich was stolen
from in front of his residence lat®
Monday.
The number of the car is 2477. It ■
is thought that it was taken by mem
bers of the gang of automobile thieves
that has been operating in Atlanta
for several weeks
Judge Holds Phone
Is an Aide of Vice
ASHEVILLE, X <•. Sept. IS -In I
his charge to the Grand Jury h®r®
Judge Frank Carter said that ti»
telephone t#*nds to make g r’s bed
"Boy s and girls say things to ea 'h
other over the phone that they wou 1
not say if they had to »p#-bk face < •!
face,' declared Judge Carter
■ Atlanta Conservatory of Music
MORTIMER WILSON, General Director
Tx>eatl<vn In the Heart of Atlanta. 1913-14 Session
Ptachtrge and Br+ad Straits Open* September 2d
Complete Miuic Courses From the Kindergarten Games to the
Concert Stage
Pis no. Orga’'. Ywire. Harp. Orches’rsl Instruments, Analysis.
Ear Training History. Harmony Cotiposition. <*®ndu®f!ng School Orches
fra arc c*horua In works Ensemble «'lbs«pr in ail departments
with recttaJa Diplomas aid Certificates of dependability
Prospectus mailed on application
Atlanta Conservatory, Atlanta, Ga.
1
Night School at Georgia Tech
Will Open September 17. Enrollment and
Registration September 15 to 19 Inclusive
AGE LIMIT NOW 14 YEARS AND UP.
Courses in Architecture, ftjechanical Drawing, Electrical |
Engineering, Woodwork, Carpentry and Joinery, Foundry I
Practice, Machine Shop, Mechanical Engineering, Mathemat
f ics, Chemistry, English.
This Night School is a regular department of Ga. Tech.
Contingent Fee $5 Per Term. TUITION I REE
For further information write J. N. G. Nesbit.
I ■—«MT» T MUR. ‘ UM 1— J
n sl i 1
I -- 4W
i Augusta Must Use
Savannah River or
Lose Appropriation
AUGUSTA, Sept. 16. —Chairman T
S. Gray, of the Savannah River Traf
fic Committee, and fifty Augusta busi
ness men are visiting the wholesale 1
merchants, cotton exporters and < ot
ton mill men for the purpose of get
ting 100,000 tons of freight guaran
teed each year for the next two years
for the Savannah River.
By virtue of her position, being on
a navigable river. Augusta has bet
ter freight rates than has Atlanta, <
Macon, Columbia or any other inte
rior city in this section However, the
people have not supported the rivet
steamers as they should have, and •
Colonel D C. Kingman, of the Cnlted
States Corps of Engineers in charge
of the Savannah River, has stated
that this city must get busy at once
or lose the appropriations which the
! Government makes annually to keep
i the channel open. '
Teu County Exhibits
At Georgia State Fair
MACON, Sept 16 There will be
agricultural exhibits by ten counties '
al tiie Georgia State Fair, in addition
i
to more than 300 individual displays (
by Georgia farmers
Never before have so many conn
ties shown at the fair Th® latest en <
try Is Twiggs, made by Wilson Rob- ■
bit, of Danville Th® other counties
are Bibb. Houston. Cobb. Irwin.
Worth, Bartow, Bullock, Hancock and ,
’ ’amden
- -
100 Matriculate at
Wesleyan College
MACON, Sept IS. — Roth Mercer!
and Wesleyan Colleges will open I
Wednesday’ morning, each with rec-t ■
ord-breaking attendance.
Alre;uly young women have ma
i triculated at Wesleyan, and more !
. than that number of young men have |
enrolled at Mercer. The membership t
in the law class at the latter institu- I
tion this y ear is particularly large. •
Fruit Shipped Safely
3.150 Miles by Post
————— I <
WASHINGTON. Sept. 16—A new *
-?cord for perishable fruit transpor-h
tation under the parcel post law is ,
reported to the Postoffice Department
Iby E. 1 Lembke.
Lembke says he received a basket
lof apples safe and sound from Van- -
I couver, B. C.. a distance of 3,150 miles.
SALVATION ARMY MEET.
MACON. Sept. 16. All of the offi
• cers of th® Salvation Army in the
Southern States will meet in Macon
in a general division convention on
■ November 9-11.
imimin pH'.iiinji - 1
I BOx Y 1 1
I I n > I
JOS
I - - -■ ■ .Tt
•
2,0D0 LODGE MEN
TO HOLD SESSION
Odd Fellows of Seventeenth Dis
trict Ready for Rousing Con
vention at Savannah.
. SUMMERVILLE. GA.. Sept. I«.
Preparations are complete for the
convention of the Seventeenth Di
vision. 1. O. O. F.. which opens h®re
for a two-day session September IR.
Comprising 43 lodges from the
counties of Dade, Walker, Chattooga,
Floyd, Folk and Paulding, in North
west Georgia, it is expected that
nearly 2.000 members will attend
D. W. Herndon, division D. G. M..
will open the meeting at 10 o'clock
Thursday morning. Features of the
day will include the grand ensemble
at the courthouse for public exercises
at which W. L Farrow, marshal of
the day, and Judge John P. Davis,
I’. G. M., will act as masters of cere
monies. on this occasion the Rev.
J. Ft. Walker, division chaplain, of
Rockmart, will pronounce th® invo
cation. after which the Rev’. J. S. L.
Sappington, of th® First Methodist
Church, will deliver the wolcome ad
dress. This will be responded to by
Harry F. Joyner, of Rockmart. Oth
er addresses will be made by W. R. ’
Sloan. deputy grand master, of i
| Gainesville, and T. M. Hoynes, grand I
master, of Savannah.
Thursday’ night the second degree
contest, open to all lodges, will be
I held, after which there will be ad
dresses by grand lodge officers.
Routine business will occupy’ Fri
day morning T. II Robertson, grand
secretary, of Gainesville, will deliver
an address.
Included on th® committee of ar
rangements for th® convention are
l<’. P. Neal, chairman: S. <’. Martin,
1.1 H. Sewell, W. L. Farrow and E.
I H. Smith.
Preacher-Banker
In Race for Senate
1 C<»LT’MB(’F. Sept. \ft#*r having
declined to become a candidat#* for State
Senator, to represent Rusell and Ma
con Counties in Alabama, announcing
! that he preferred to serve his congre-
I gallon as pastor tn serving the people
as Senator, Rev W J Price. < ashler
lof the Phenix-Girard Bank, of Girard,
i has finally decided to become a candi-
I date
In addition tn being pastor of North ‘
Girard Methodist <’hurch, Mr Price is'
one of th® most prominent bankers in 1
this section.
THE SOUTHERN UNI
VERSITY OF MUSIC
Makes a specialty of instruction for
BEGINNERS, guaranteeing progress’.
Teachers of highest quality in the
South Examinations by the directors
st regular intervals. Adv.
□DOR-O-NO
is necessary in fall and winter
to every dainty woman to every
woman whose clothes are being
ruined by perspiration stains
to every woman who suffers from excessive
perspiration and the embarrassment it causei.
At reception, dance or theatre,
\ ODOR-O-NO
|A THE AMTI-DRESS SHIELD TOILET WATER
iw® Keeps the armpits fresh, dry and-
W® natural. Prevents exeerrztTperspiration
IffSa and its odor. Easily applied.
f Aliolutely harmless and guaranteed
Buy a bottle today and
’* Throw your drea» ahield* away
• « *• "' r ca ‘ Jeiwrtnient stores and drug
store?. If ' >,r dealer hasn’t it. send his
;'y : a.i-,1 25c and we will parcel post you a
full size bottle.
* TU22 0.’.0 ; C '0 CO., Dspt. A, Cincinnati,O.
“-■ i ■
|F?| WODOROHO CQ I
yt "’I CJHCiHHAD 0 I
■Uli USA I
N >
nffr-
Im,
BIKEBS' OFFI»
PMISES miiL
F. E. Farnsworth Says Gate City
Has Excellent Chance of Land
ing 1914 Convention.
Fred E. Farnsworth, secretary of
the American Bankers’ Association,
•luring an inspection of Atlanta’s ho
tel facilities Tuesday declared e this
city was fully capable of entertaining
th® 1914 convention of the associa
tion
Mr Farnsworth was given a din
ner at Hotel Ansley Monday night by
rhe convention committee of the Ho
tel Men’s Association. Mr. Farns
worth was optimistic over the prob
ability of Atlanta getting the conven
tion. Tuesday Fred Hauser, secra
tar. of the Chamber of Commerce
Convention Bureau, continued to con
duct him through a personal exafiu
nation of the hotels.
Mr. Farnsworth said there would
be 3,000 bankers attending the con- '
vention. He already’ has been guar- '
anteed 1.791 rooms, and the hotel men
have promised to make the number
2.000.
Atlantic City is the only other city
! that has announced to make ay -J
| fight for the 1914 meeting y I
bankers assemble in the’r eeat 1
vention in Boston. Mildnl. I
IT QUENCHES THIRSI I
n poet, I
Hertford ! Aeld I
Te*x< ■‘.nful I*. gla.u of w«Ur. j
far more delfclnua and roYrrshing th J
ffHH'*** I
*W nri’- ■
Atlanta Theater ■
Tuesday Night Sept. IS 3
Commencement Exercises
Southern College of Pharmac®
eau mm music no imterfstimg
Admisson Free. Public Inviti . ™
~ t|
FORSYTH ya-ql|
IDA BROOKE HUNT C I
BERNARD REINHOLD < I '
MME. BESSON CO.
BIG CITY FOUR. J j
METROPOLITAN DANCE* J
Novelty Grahams— .1 J
Mahoney and TrtjJ
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