Newspaper Page Text
8A
MISSOURIWILL
ELECTASEMTDH
BYPOPULABVOTE
Direct Primaries Plan Will Be
Given Try-out for First Time in ,
State Next Year,
MANY WILL OPPOSE STONE
St. Louis Home Rule, Police and
Excise Laws To Be Decided
by Direct Ballot.
JHJFFERBON CITY, MO., Sept. 20 j
—That the election next year win be
the liveliest held In Missouri for some
time la the prediction of politicians
A United States Senator is to suc
ceed William Joel Stone, sixteen Con
gressmen, a State Huperintendent of
Public Schools, one Judge of the Su
preme Court, eighteen State Senators,
all the members of the lower house
of the Genera] Assembly and numer
ous county officers will be elected.
Interest will bo further augmented
by the fact that the people will ballot
upon the ratification of the St Louie
home rule, police and excise laws, the
county unit and the so-called “full
crew law.” affecting railroads and
their employees
In addition there ar* several impor
tant proposed amendments to the
State constitution, among these being
the proposition to levy a tax of lo
cents on the MOO valuation for the
benefit of the public roads and an
amendment pulling the teeth of the
initiative and referendum.
Many Seek Nomination.
Missouri will try out next fall the
election of a United States Senator
by direct vote. The voters for the first
time get a direct whack at the can
didate for United States Senator, and
the man receiving the highest num
ber of votes will be declared the win
ner.
The candidates for United States
Senator will seek their nominations
in the State primary’, which is held
the first Tuesday in August, 1914
This will mean an Interesting and
lively primary election, according to
politicians.
It was nt first thought here that the
General Assembly would have to be
convened In extra session to amend
the State primary law to provide for
the nomination of Senatorial candi
dates. But Governor Major, after an
examination of the law, believes that
candidates for the United States Sen
ate can be legally nominated under
it. and Attorney General Barker con
curs in this view. Heretofore United
States Senatorial candidates have
been nominated nt a Senatorial pri
mary held In conjunction with the
regular election.
Stone to Have Fight.
Unless Senator William Joel Stone
performs some sort of a miracle he
will have opposition for the Demo
cratic nomination, the leaders nt Jef
ferson City declare. That th* opposi
tion to Stone is not confined to the
Statehouse crowd Is apparent by
Che expression# dropped by visiting
Democratic politicians.
Even the friends of Stone concede
that he Is facing one of the hardest j
fights of political career. The op- '
position to Stone has so far not cen
tered upon a candidate. To get a
man who can trim the “gum-shoe
statesman," the opposition concedes,
will not be an easy task.
Ask This Man to Read
Your Life
His Wonderful Power to Read
Human Lives at any distance
amazee all who write to him.
“V
Thousand* of peo
p.e in *ll waJka of"
life b<ve benefited
by hi« Advice He
tells yau what you
are capable of. how.
vou car. be auccaM ♦
ful. who are your’
frl-nda and enemiea
and what are the
g«>d and bad po
rt ode In your Ufa
Hit disscriptlon as
to PAST. PRE?
ENT AND FU
TURE EVKNTBI
will astonish and
help you. ALL HE
WANTS IS your
name « written by|
▼ourself), age and[
tex to ruide him
In his work MON-
ET NOT NECESSARY Mention the [
name of this paper and get a Trial <
Raadtns FREE
Herr Paul etahmann. an «xpe- ■
rienced Astrologer, of Ober Nlew- (
sad era. Germany, saya.
‘‘The horoscope which !*rofe«»-?r (
Roxroy worked out for ma It Quite sc- <
oording to the truth It la a very [
clever and onnaotenrious Plata of ( I
work As an aetroioger myself I ;
carefully examined his planetary cal- ■
eulauons and indications, and proved (
that h‘»s work tn every detail Is per <
feet, and that ha Is up-to-date In hit j j
solanm* ” ( 1
Baronets Blanquet one of the meet <
talented ladies of Paria »vw
“I thank you for my Complete I4fa (
Reading which Is really of extraordi- <
nary accuracy I had already con- )
suited several astrologers but never (
[ before have I been answered with so
much truth, w received such complete j
' satisfaction With sincere pleasure I (
will recommend rov and make your <
marvelous science known to my )
friends and acquaintances.
If you want to take advantage of )
this special offer and obtajn a review ;
of your life, sin ply send your full j
name, address the date, month, year j
and place of your birth <all r’.early i
written), fate whether Mr.. Mrs. or
Miss, and also copy the following [
verse In your own handwriting
“Yow advice la useful.
Eo thousands say,
I wish success and happiness
Will you show me t)»c way?” (
I If yon wish you may Ineloee 10c }
: (ataaipe o* your own country) to pay (
postage and clerical work Send vour j
letter to ROXROY, Dept. U43-E. No. ’
24 Groote Markt, The Hague. Hol- (
land Do not Inclose co’ns in your \
letter Postage on letters to Holland ;
i cents.
Mrs. McCarthy to Greet U. D. C.
+•+ +•+ -?•+ •?•+ ■}■•+
| Atlanta Woman Gets Honor
•
.Convention Meets in Moultrie
Mrs. Williams McCarthy, president of Atlanta Chapter TJ.
' 1 D. C.. who will welcome Georgia 1 laughters at the Moultrie con
i vention.
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(’hapter to Elect Delegates to Meeting at Next
Session —Many Will Attend.
Mrs. Williams McCarthy, president
'of the Atlanta Chapter, United
Daughters of the Confederacy. ha>
been invited by the State president
Mrs. Walter D. launar, of Macon, to
make the address of welcome at the
big State convention of Daughters of
the Confederacy, which meets al
j Moultrie the first of October and con
tinues through the third of the month
j This is a distinction for the Atlanta
chapter and a high compliment to
I Mrs. McCarthy, who Is one of the
! moat enthusiastic and cha- ming
I ptesidents in the organii.ation
The Atlanta chapter is the only
t <.ha pt er in the city, and was founded
in 1895 by Mrs Helen Plane, who
holds the office of honorary president
Officers of the Atlanta chapter are
Mrs. Williams McCarthy, president,
Mrs. J. R. Mobley, first vice president;
Mr*. William T. Williams, second vic*
president; Mrs W. S. Coleman, re
cording secretary ; Mrs. James Be
dell, corresponding secretary; Mrs
I 1 aurie S. Weddell, treasurer; Mrs
Dalton Mitchell, registrar: Mrs. Ow
ens Johnston, auditor; Mrs. Lollie
I Belle Wylie, historian. Miss Elisa
• teth Hanna is director of the Julia
! Jackson Chapter. Children oftheCon-
Ifederacs. and of the Junior Chapter,
I Children of the Confederacy.
The convention will be attended by
MKnKHaraßaHßßHsnsQßnai
Kidneys Baffle Doctors |
If you are troubled with backache, dixd- S|
new*. hinc Jcir.t.s. or other syntp- ■
tome of kidney disease, or If In past genera Is
Hous any vs your forefathers have had 1.11 K
ncy trouble, you should lose no time in test H
Ing what ■
Warner's Safe Kidney
and Liver Remedy 5
the wnr’d’s great-st remedy for the kidneys. 9
liver, bladder ar. i b ood will do for you It H
will help you from the very first .lose Put ■
up in two sises. and svld by all druggists, 50e B
and 11.00 B
Mr Edwin J»enlke. 1121 Elm St , Peek* B
kill. N. Y , writes 1 was sick a lotu: time B
with kidney trouble The doctor t-ea’ed no , B
atr- finally gate me up as ii . urabh- O.h B
day m> wife brought borne a bottle of War B
tier s Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy, and B
I e<.mm«i.eed u-lng !t I c?n not s;>eak too B
1 Ighly of your medicine it ha S <i O ue so much B
fur roe. 1 am sen.Ung you this because IB '
:htnk it my duty a* a man ■ teil my story '. B !
others so they may t»e helped also "
lEoch I Kidney and Liver Remedy fl
for a 2—Rheumatic Remedy
purpose 3—Diabetes Remedy
4—Asthma Remedy ’ !
Sold 5 Nervine
by all , _.. /Constipation \ fl
Druggists b—Kilis < Biliousness ’ B
Write for a free sample giving §?■
if . nutnbt r of reinedy nt sir. i to B
Warner's Safe Remedies Co.
Dept 435 Rochester. N V B
’ flflßflflßfliHßflßOflflflßflflßflßflflfll *
hundreds of Daughters of the Cofifed
clary from all parts of Georgia, and
the meeting will be characterized by
many interesting features,
State officers of the United Daugh
ters «>f the Confederacy are Mrs.
Walter D. Lamar, president; Mrs.
Anna Caroline Penning, first vice
president; Mrs. Herbert M Franklin,
second vl< e president; Mrs. J. M
Thomas, third vice president; Mrs. E
l\ Overstreet, recording secretary;
Mrs Duncan Brown, corresponding
secretary. Miss Mattie Sheilby, treas
urer; Mrs. Howard McCall, registrar;
Miss Mildred Rutherford, historian,
and Miss Jessie I Cobb, auditor.
The Moultrie-McNeil Chapter, at
Moultrie, will entertain the delegates
and will give several brilliant recep
tions and teas for their guests. Offi
c< rs of the Moultrie-McNeil Chap
ter are Mrs. W. C. \ ereen, president,
and Mrs. J. A. Heard, corresponding
secretary.
There are nearly 120 chapters in
the organization, and each chapter
will be represented by one or more
delegates.
Atlanta delegates will be elected a*
the next meeting.
Prefers Postoffice
To Governor's Chair
Recently Appointed Postmaster
Writes Card Telling How He
Likes His Job.
LENTER, MO.. Sept. 20.—H. S.
Carroll, appointed postmaster at Lent
ner, has issued a "card of thanks."
It reads'
"The honor and remuneration of
this position is not very great, but
feel we owe a debt of gratitude
for what you did in our behalf. We
expect to do all we can to be an
honor to the office and as accommo
dating and pleasant a postmaster as
it is possible to be. With the same
sort of assistance we had we are con
.ident we could have been elected
Governor of the State, but being post
i master at Lentner suits us better.”
MUSHROOMS ARE GROWN
IN ABANDONED DRIFT MINE
SHAMOKIN, PA.. Sept. 20—The
growing of mushrooms in abandoned
I drift workings has been made a sue- .
cess at Big Mountain, and the Indus- >
try promises to assume impressive I
proportions. The growers find a ready
; sale for their product, and the damp I
i atmosphere of the mines is said to I
i improve the quality as well as pro-
I mote rapid growth. |
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1913.
■'NOTED ATHLETE
■| WILL SOON JOIN
THE MINISTHY
Fred C. Thomson Has Been Fill
ing Presbyterian Pulpit Near
Los Angeles, Cal.
IX) F ANGELES, Sept. 20. Fred C.
Thompson, former all-round national
amateur champion and the world’s
premier athlete, will be ordained to
the Presbyterian ministry this month,
when he will assume the pastorate of
the Hope Presbyterian Church in
Eagle Rock Valley, a suburb of this
city. He is already occupying the
pulpit of that church on Sunday, hav
ing been a licensed minister for aome
months.
Thompson is one of the youngest
preachers in the denomination. He
was an undergraduate at Occidental
College when only 16 and graduated
before he was 20 years of age. He
is only 23 now. and has since taken
his degree at Princeton Seminary
“Athletics are neither a vocation nor
an avocation with me,” he declares.
“Sport fhr sport’s sake I ran not but
regard as belitting. I have never
followed it in that spirit. In fact, I
can not really say that I have ever
followed athletics at all. What I have
done has only b**n for exercise, and
I look upon it as followed for any
other purpose as aimless.’’
Patient Flees as He
Wakes Under Knife
Scores Knockout on Doctor and
Makes Hurried Exit Through
Hospital Window.
I
CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—There was a
i fight at Thirty-ninth street and Em
! erald avenue, and when John Murphy,
, who says he was nn innocent by
stander, recovered consciousness, he
! was upon an operating table in the
I Emergency Hospital with a fine col
i lection of glittering knives In sight,
land Dr. William Borelli, with up
i rolled sle» ves, all ready to use them.
| “Whoop! Stop! Help!” yelled
i Murphy, as he jumped from the op
erating table.
With one little gesture Murphy,
whose nose was broken from the ear
ly disturbance, banged Dr. Borelli
upon the nose, scoring a knockout,
i With another gesture of adieu, he
leaped through a window and ran
away, without regard to his injuries
Coney for Capital
Now Being Planned
Mrs. Taft’s Park for Rich May Be
Converted Into Municipal
Playground.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—Potomac
Park, which Mrs./ William H. Taft,
wife of the former President, was
instrumental in procuring as a play
ground for the little brothers of the
rich, may be a municipal Coney
Island for the people of Washington
Up to now the Speedway, as It is
popularly called, has been the Rotten
Row of the National Capital with
band concerts and polo fields chief
attractions. Now It is proposed to
have an eighteen-hole golf course, 25
or 30 baseball diamonds, a number of
tennis courts, an athletic field and a
stadium seating 40.000 persons, a tea
garden and a lagoon as chief attrac
tions of the people’s park.
Creditor Attaches
Meteor for Debt
Scientist Examines Celestial Visitor
and Declares It Mass of
Worthless Slag.
PROVIDENCE. Sept. 20—An effort
to attach a meteor in settlement of a
debt has gone for naught. Professor
Charles W. Brown, of the department
of geology of Brown University, ex
amined the so-called meteor, which
recently fell into the Tiverton River
and which was hauled out by A. L.
Carr, a Tiverton fisherman. He acted
on behalf of a creditor of Carr’s.
Professor Brown pronounced it a
worthless piece of slag, such as might
be picked up in many places and
substituted for the “meteor” with
out any one’s knowing the difference.
The creditor gave up his proposed
attachment.
Quits Job to Escape
Father-in-Law’s Ire
Employee of City Water Department
Elopes With Bobs' Daughter,
and Keeps Going.
LACROSSE, WIS.. Sept. 20.—Wil
liam Groothoss. who came kere from
Portage a few months agl. had a
good job yesterday and no famllv
cares. Now he has a wife and no job.
Groothoss. who was foreman of
construction on the new city water
plant, did not dare to return to face
his irate father-in-law, who happene i
also to be his employer. FTed Schnell,
president of the Board of Public
Works, after he had eloped to Wi
nona and married Schnell's daughter,
so he took his bride and left for lowa
to seek other employment.
40-YEAR-OLD ROMANCE
RESULTS IN MARRIAGE
COQUILLE, OREG., Sept. 20.—A
romance, begun more than 40 years
ago. has resulted in the marriage of
Newton Livingstone, of Deer Creek.
Douglas County, and Mrs. Carrie Her
' mann. of the Coquille Valley. Nearly
a half century ago the couple were
I sweethearts and were engaged to he
I married, but were separated by a
quarrel. Both afterward married and
• raised families, and as the years went
. by Livingstone’s and Mrs
I Hermann lost her hup and. |
Tries to Make Flour
Os Wild Marsb Rice
Manufacturer It Conducting Experi
ment In Popple River District
es Minnesota.
CHICAGO, Sept. 20—F. L. Vanos,
the “wild rice king," has undertaken
an experiment in the Popple River
district of Minnesota, which possesses
curious interest, but which probably
will not become anything Important
—that Is. the manufacture of flour
from wild rice.
This plant Is common 1n the marshy
country, and the product had been
used to some extent as food, taking
the place of such edibles as oatmeal
or any other porridge, but it is diffi
cult to obtain tn satisfactory’ quanti
ties, and hunters who desire to seed
marshes with it have not always been
able to get enough of it for that
purpose.
Moreover, Mr. Vance is likely to
meet with stout protest from the
hunters, for this wiW rice is a favor
ite food with mallard and other
ducks.
Landlady Seizes
Infant for Rent Bill
Mrt. Meeker Tells a Heartrending
Tale of Babe Being Torn From
Her for Debt.
CINCINNATI, Sept. 20.—A heart
rending tale describing how her babe
l ad been torn from her breast by Mrs
Margaret Wilson, landlady, to be heli
as hostage until she could pay her
rent In the apartment in which she,
her child and sick husband lived,
was told to the police by Mrs. Walter
Meeker and resulted In a hasty visit
to the home of Mrs. Wilson by Miss
Emma Utz, probation officer.
Mrs. Wilson admitted that she took
the child in lieu of rent, but said that
she thought the child could have a
better home with her.
The probation officer placed the In
fant In the Children's Home and Mrs
Wilson was given a severe lecture by
the police, although no charge of any
Kind was preferred against her.
In Danger of Hunger,
Girl Turns Driver
Young Woman on Strike Asks for
and Gets Position on De
livery Wagon,
CINCINNATI, Sept. 20. —Desper-
ate because she was unable to secure
enough food -to appease her hunger.
Miss Alice Reed, one of the laundry
workers who went out on strike sev
eral days ago, applied for a job as
driver of a wagon with a prominent
business house here. At first the
proprietor thought that she was Jok
ing, but when she convinced him that
she was in earnest and needed »vork
that badly, he gave her the job.
“Aren’t you afraid to handle a horse
and w agon in the busy downtown dis
trict?” she wan asked
“I should say not.” she laughed;
“because I was raised on a farm and
played around horses all my child
hood. In fact, I think that I will keep
this job all the time, as it pays twme
us much as my job in the laundry.”
Wall Paper Cracked
By Long Dry Period
Timid People In Section in Fear
of Cyclone When Decora
tions Fall.
SPRINGFIELD, MO., Sept. 20.
Widespread alarm, resulting from a
report that in many homes of Spring
field the wall paper was dropping
from the ceilings, causes excited in
quiries at the Weather Bureau to
day.
Fear that some unusual weather
phenomena were at work and that an
earthquake or cyclone might be at
hand caused many timid persons to
seek an explanation.
The weather forecaster explained
that the loosening of the paper was
due to lack of humidity in the at
mosphere. The relative humidity was
14 per cent, the lowest ever recorded
here, according to the Government
statistics.
Smokeless Age Is
Predict ed.by Engineer
Scottish Expert Declares Modern
Invention Will Soon Do
Away With Soot.
PITTSBURG. Sept. 20.—A smoke
less age, in which the puffing locomo
tive, factory stack and house chimney
will be absent, was predicted by W. B.
Smith, an eminent engineer of Glas
gow, Scotland, speaking to the eighth
annual convention of the Internation
al Association for the Prevention of
Smoke, which opened a four days
meeting here this morning.
Mr. Smith declared he is convinced
that modern inventions and experi
ments will lead to a smokeless age.
Delegates from all over the United
States and from England and Scot
land heard him and applauded their
approval of the prophecy. «
FRECKLE-FACE
? Sun and Wind Brin® Out Ugly Spots. J
How to Remove Coolly.
' Here's a chance. Miso Freckle-Face, j
to try o remedy for freckles with the }
guarantee of a reliable dealer that it <
will not cost you a penny unless it J
removes the freckles; while if It does <
give you a clear complexion the ex- <
pense is trifling
Simply get an ounce of ethine — <
double strength—from Jacobs' Ph ar- <
macy and a few applications should J
show you how easy It is to rid your- <
self of the homely freckles and get <
a beautiful complexion. Rarely Is [
more than one ounce needed for the '
worst case. <
Be sure to ask the druggist for the i
double strength othlne, as this is the <
prescription sold under guarantee of <
money back if it fails to remove (
freckles.
WASHINGTON’S
POPULATION IS
SEEKING-IDLE
Nonconformists of Capital Are
Growing Tired of Being Con
trolled by Congress.
By SIDNEY ESPEY,
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—Opce!
more an effort is being made by the
District of Columbians to stand from i
under the disadvantages which accrue
to the system of government which
rules them—the system which has
won for the Capital of the United I
States the fascinating sobriquet of
"Washington—the kept city."
The plaything of the nation, Wash- |
ington lives up to that sobriquet. A !
city of flashing Joyousness, always
dressed as though for a festival in
the choicest garb the world has to
offer, exploited for Its singular at
tractiveness and made the subject of
the adulation of people *rom afar off.
the city for all this exterior aspect of
levity yet knows the secret heart of
the nation and is the familiar of the
inner soul of the center of the na
tional life.
For this splendid municipality,
which delights to swish and rustle
Its skirts In the faces of the more
workaday cities of the nation, lives
like the lilies of the field. Not on
the sweat of its brow does It earn Its
bread, but by the kindly favor of
Congress, of the United ! tates as a
whole.
It lives, moves and has Its being
almost solely at the nod and beck of
that Congress, for "Congress shall
have power to exercise exclusive leg
islation in all cases whatsoever over
such District,” says that sublimated
oracle, the Constitution of the United
States. The District of Columbia and
Washington have been bought and
paid for.
Seek Changed Order.
Now, there are certain non-con
formists in Washington, certain Puri
tanical persons who long have agi
tated a changed order. They desire
ardently that Washington be treed
from her "slavery.” For, you see, tn
exchange for the purple and fine lin
en, the sparkline- Jewels ai.d the rich
goid which Congress lavishes up >n
its cherished one, the city has given
up its civic honor, as tome say,
To divorce metaphor, why then, bs
cause Congress appropriates money
for half of the upkeep and general
improvement and garniture of the
National Capital, the citizens have
given up their right to vote, or rather
have had it taken away from them.
The District of Columbians are a dis
franchised people, and It is Congress
which presides, Delphic, over the des
tinies of the Capital.
It is an exotic existence for a city,
care-free of the trials and embar
rassments that vex a city which
must pay its own way.
But to return to these stern-visaged
Puritans who frown upon such prac
tices. Lord Macaulay was pleased t<>
say In his time of the Puritans thit
while assuming 'hemselves the mien ■
of rulers of the earth, equals of every j
man, they blithely set their feet upon J
the neck of a king. Wherefore, it Is !
to be gathered that these Washington I
Puritans are of much the same strino. i
Want Franchise Right.
Declining to abet those who favor I
the continued attitude of cringing
which Washington must necessarily j
affect in its relations to Congress, !
these strait-laced ones are arguing'
mightily for the restoration of their :
franchise In order that they may have i
a voice not only In the ordering of i
their own affairs, but also in the 1
larger ones of the nation.
It is perhaps les majeste to so
address Congress. Congress, being
Democratic, does not openly take that
attitude. Some members of the great
council however, pointing to the vast
expenditure of money made on Wash
ington's behalf, cry out Ingratitude.
FATHER WOULD HAVE GIRLS
WED IN THE PHILIPPINES
JEFFERSON CITY, MO., Sept. 20.
Getchiniock, a native of Villers Vl
compte. France, has written Governor
Major to ascertain whether there is
any demand in the Philippine Island.-
for good-looking girls of marriageable
age. He says if ther* are he would j
like to take his two daughters there ]
and marry them off. Both are pretty. I
he says, skilled in domestic arts, but
“without fortune.”
OBTDOOR LIFE
SUGGESTS
'y i
(UHCURASaP
AND OINTMENT
As indispensable for sunburn,
prickly heat, itchings, irritations,
chafings, redness, roughness and
bites and stings of insects. Baths
with the Cuticura Soap and gen
tle anointings with Cuticura
Ointment are most effective,
agreeable and economical. j
Cuticura Soap and Ointment gold ttiroufhout the
world liberal sample of each mailed tree, with
32-p book. Address “Cutlrura.” Dept. 3G, BoFt<m.
•X~xten who shave and shampoo with Cutrcura
Soap will find it best for skin aad scalp.
15c COTTON
ga— ■aaMgMeaMaasMßS
Great Big Crop Gives
Georgia the Right to
Have Prosperity
Georgia’s Greatest Event
This Year Will Be
the Coming
STATE FAIR
Oct. 21-31
Greatest “Midway”
Ever Beheld
FOOR BIG BRASS BANOS
$6,000 in Cash Purses and Premiums for the
finest trotting races ever held in Georgia.
$15,000 in Cash Premiums for exhibitors.
There will be more AGRICULTURAL EX
HIBITS than were ever at the State Fair be
fore. Each County is trying to outdo the oth
er, and the exhibits will be a regular exposi
tion of agricultural resources.
The LIVE STOCK SHOW will be the best
ever held in the State of Georgia. The finest
lot of Beef and Dairy Cattle in the World will
be on display.
There will be plenty of fun on the “MID
WAY,” for some of the best shows in the busi
ness have been secured for this great event.
There will be the very best of the profession
on the “MIDWAY” and each and every show
will be Clean and Moral.
The Greatest Concert Band in America
has been engaged for the State Fair. If you
have not heard “SARACINA’S BAND” you
have missed a treat. This band has starred all
over the country and played to “Standing
Room Only” houses. There will also be four
other bands on the “MIDWAY.”
The Manufacturers’ Building will be com
plete with many fine exhibits of Manufac
tured goods. Some of the displays will cost
hundreds of dollars. This part of the State
Fair should not be neglected. Show the Boys
and Girls of Georgia what we make.
Take a vacation and come to the STATE
FAIR.
Barnum & Bailey Circus Day
Friday, October 24
Georgia State Fair
■" *" 11 IIWMMBMm WMHB
Auspices Georgia Agricultural Society
October 21-31
[l3 MACONS