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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
DiSffiSSers MISS BAIN TO TEACH GEORGIAN 1
EecoverTh'eirBodies READERS NEW POPULAR DANCES
Southern Surgical Association
Convention Has Important
Program for Wednesday.
Two «l»a< us*ion« of nci^ntiflr impor
tance will be held by famous authori
ties at the Wednesday session of the
Southern Surgical Asportation in con-
\ ention al tlie Georgian Terrac e.
The subjects will he "A Study of
the r’auses of Unsatisfactory Results
Following Operations on the Biliary
Tract.” b> Or. .1. M. T. Finney, of
Baltimore, who whs sought as a suc-
(essor to Woodrow Wilson as presi
dent of Princeton, and the other on a
phare of cancer, by Dr ('harles M.
Mavo. of Rochester, Minn. The latter
is one of the Mayo brothers, regarded
as the world's greatest authorities on
cancer
Dr. Finney's talk will be a treatise
on the Delicacy which should attend
certain operations, while the subject
of “Cancer” will he the most gener
ally discussed of the meeting.
The treatment of cancer requires
the cln?.est attention, and in Its va
ried forms it presents one of the
greates; obstacles for doctors to over
come.” said Dr. Mayo. “Delicate op
erations and treatment aie required,
and the Southern Surgical Associa
tion has done much to bring in con-
siant and comprehensive touch the
physicians and surgeons of the coun
try with the best diagnosis and treat
ment of the disease
“While eliminating cancer it Is nec
essary that certain important func
tions and products of the body be pre
served. In this preservation lies the
delicacy of treating cancer.”
Dr. Robert C. Bryan, of Richmond,
also a noted authority on cancer, will
.speak during the afternoon on “Can*
cer in a Boy Fifteen Years Old.”
Other speakers of the day will be
Dr. H. O. Marry, of Boston; Dr.
George W. (’rile, of Cleveland; Dr.
John G. FJark, of Philadelphia; l)r.
Francis Reder. of St. I>ouis. Dr. Ru
dolph Matas, of New Orleans, and Dr.
Joseph Ranm.hoff, of Cincinnati
Vanderbilt’s Eggs
Cost $1.66 a Dozen
NEWPORT. R I , Dee 17. Despite
the announcement that the price of eggs
will take a downward move since hens
have begun to lay, at Oakland Farm,
the residence of Alfred G. Vanderbilt,
where more than s thousand hens are
kept. It Is said six, dozen eggs are con
sidered a good day’s yield The grain
bill alone in nearly $10 a day
'Grandpa' Lawson
Sends a Noah's Ark
BOSTON. Pec. 17. Thomas W l^aw-
son has sent a "Noah's Ark” freight car
to his two youthful grandsons in Oregon,
sons of Mr and Mrs. Henry H. Mc
Call.
’the financier inclosed not only cits
and dogs for the children, but cow ■; and
hens to slock the McCall's big ranch.
Mrs. Burleson to Give
Daughters Tango Tea
WASHINGTON. Dec 17 Mrs Bur
leson. wife of tlie Postmaster General,
whose young daughters. Misses Lucy
and Sidnex . are tango « \j«erts. has la
ved Invitations for a tango tea Pe
rt m her 26.
Tlie young people of officialdom will
be among tlie guests.
Home Burns as Rat
Jumps Out of Shoe
FRANKLIN. N. J. Dec. 17 —
f rightened when a rat jumped out of
his shoe as he was about to put it on,
Soloman Cnsin upset a lamp The
fro destroyed his home
NEWCASTLE, COLO . Dec 17.—
With 2S bodies lying in the morgue
here and nin ‘ others still in the Vul-
can coal mine, the entire town of
Newcastle was in mourning to-day.
Fifteen wives were left widows and
34 children were left fatherlesiOwhen
a miner's candle set off a terrific
blast of gas dust that had accumu
lated in the mine.
Nineteen of the 37 victims of the
disaster were sons of wealthy fami
lies who had volunteered to work In
the place of striking coal miners.
The first rescue party was composed
of striking union miner* whose jobs
the dead men had taken.
Only two miners were brought out
alive. They were on an upper level
in a separate air pa ana go Mrs. Her-
beft Woods, w ife of a miner, became
a mother at almost the identical mo
ment that her husband was killed.
Big Tree Planned for
Children in Hospital
The patients in the children's ward
at Grady Hospital will he entertained
at the annual Christmas tree nest
Wednesday afternoon. Those desiring
to contribute money to the fund are,
asked to send it to Mrs (Jordon Kiser,
room 524, Georgian Terrace Hotel.
Those who wish to send tcys are re
quested to send them to the home of
Captain .f W English, No. 40 Cone
street.
The ward Is filled with little suffer
ers who look forward to the Christmas
tree
Savannahans Go to
Ask Visit of Wilson
SAVANNAH, Dec. 17. A strong
delegation of Savannahans Is n
Washington to-day to urge upon
President Wilson that lie accept an
invitation to attend the meeting of
the Drainage Congress here next
March. ^
At the same time an effort will be
made to have the Government locate
the Sixth Lighthouse District at Sa
vannah. It la now at Charleston, while
Brunswick and Jacksonville are also
trying to win it.
Wilson Decides for
U. S. Building at Fair
WASHINGTON. Dec. 17.—Presi
dent Wilson has decided o
send a special message advocating
the erection of a Government build
ing at the Panama Exposition to be
held in San Francisco in 1915. He
made hia decision known to C. C.
Moore, president of the exposition.
This clears up the last doubt that
the Government will be represented
properly at the exposition.
Albanian King to
Take Throne Jan. 15
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
F RANK F O R T-ON M AIN. GER
MANY, Dec 17 A Constantinople dls-
pat< h to The Frankfurter Zeitung to-
dav sax a that Prince William of Wicd.
who has consented to become the first
ruler of the new kingdom of Albania,
will ascend the throne January 15
Panama Canal Guns
Will Carry 11 Miles
\' iBHINGTt »v Dec IT The ord
nance bureau has finished a number of
13-inch mortars of new design for the
Panama Canal fortification which have
shown a maximum range of nunc than
elexen miles.
Black Dress Shirts
Latest at Harvard
BOSTON. Dec 17. The black silk,
accordion plaited dress shirt, an Inno
vation and a money-saver, hps ap
peared at Harvard. A black stock
goes with it.
Suffrage Club Praises Georgian
MACON, GA., Dpi*. 17. At the meeting of the Macon Woman's Suffrage-Association yes
terday afternoon. The Atlanta Georgian was heartily and unanimously commended for its stand
on equal suffrage.
The support of the cause by The Georgian and Hearst's Sunday American was declared to be
a distinct encouragement to those women of the South who are interested in the votes for women
movement. ,
Judge Bars Door to Wife's Xmas Gifts to
Suffrag eLiterature Speaker ‘Her Needs'
C&J
Miss Donna
Bain and her
dancing part
ner, Donald
Crane, giving
demonstration
of ‘ ’ The
Skating
Glide, ’ ’ which
has captivated
Society.
SAVANNAH. Dec. 17.—Since Judge
.Samuel Adams, whose daughter. Miss
Deborah Adams, is an ardent suffra
gette, published his card opposing wo
man suffrage, he has a collection of lit
erature that would do any suffrage
leader In the country proud. Every
young society woman in the city, who
is a suffragette, has sent him articles
from the j>en of the principal suffra
gette leaders.
A great many of them have been sent
bv special messenger from the homes
of Judge Adams' neighbors and it has
vexed him so that he has given his
butler instructions to receive no more.
Suffrage Discussion
Barred in Household
SAVANNAH, Deo. 17.—The opposite
views of Henry Cunningham, a distin
guished jurist, and his daughter. Miss I
Sarah Cunningham, on the suffrage i
question, have reached such a heated j
point that the subject has been for-
bidden in the home, according to a re
port in social circles here.
Tn a recent argument the elder mem
ber of the family became so heated j
that it was feared he would suffer a i
stroke of apoplexy and the subject was !
subsequently barred.
WASHINGTON. Dec. 17.—Official
Washington believes in the useful
Christmas gift. Secretary Daniels, ac
cording to Mrs. Daniels, has asked
Santa Claus for a large number of studs
and collar buttons.
Speaker Clark thinks that gift-mak
ing at Christmas has been run into the
ground. Mrs Clark declares she al
ways buys something she herself needs
and presents It to her husband.
65,000-Horsepower
Moves Chattanooga
CHATTANOOGA. Dec. 13,-Currert
from the $10,000,000 lock and dam a-
Hale's Bar. Tenn., operated all cars
upon the lines of a local traction com
pany and furnished lights for Signal
Mountain for the first time last night
Although more than 65,000 horsepower
has been available, for several weeks
operating current was not turned into
the transmission lines until last night
Forward-Looking Folks
STODDARDIZE
M ESN and WOMEN who look into the future—who
-yet SAVE nicfney-
live well
they have their apparel
and look well
STODDARDIZED!
STODDARDIZED clothes look like NEW clothes. Men's
Suits and Overcoats Dry Cleaned and Pressed for $1.
A WAGON FOR A PHONE CALL
We pay Charges (one way) on Out-of-Town Orders of $2 or more
Stoddard
126 Peachtree Street
Bel) Phone, Ivy 43
Atlanta Phone 43
Dixie’s Greatest Dry
Cleaner and Dyer
Christmas Cigars
Oppenheim’s Cigars
“For Fussy Smokers
Every man who loves a good smoke
knows Oppenheim’s Cigars. And he will
appreciate a box <d‘ them to smoke during
the holidays.
If you have a friend, a husband, or a
sweetheart, give him a box of these famous
brands of Imported Cigars.
Webster Cigars
Edens,
Belinda,
Partagas,
Punch.
Lozanos.
Hoyo de Monterey,
Romeo and Juliette,
La Escepcion,
Van Dycks,
Telephone Orders
Promptly Delivered
0PPENHEIM CIGAR COMPANY
Seven East Alabama ATLANTA
Pretty Atlanta Girl Enlists to
Write Lessons for Beginners.
Bars Turkey Trot.
Miss Donna Haiti, beautiful Atlan
ta girl who has returned to her na
tive city to teach Atlanta society
how to dance, after spending several
years in New York and Europe, will
tell the readers of The Georgian how
to dance the modern dances that have
invaded the ballrooms of the social
elect.
Beginning Thursday afternoon Miss
Bain will write for The Georgian an
article on a different dance each day,’
giving instructions hs minute as are
necessary for the beginner for danc
ing the popular dances of the day.
She will xxrito of the hesitation
wait*, the tango, the Maxixe, the one-
step. and all of the others- with the
exception of the turkey trot. She
bars that strange freak from her
repertoire, characterizing it as out
landish and a product of the slums of
San Francisco.
Miss Bain's articles will he illus
trated with poses by herself and Don
ald Crane, her dancing partner, in
the different positions of the dance.
Miss Bain’s ability to teach dancing
is unquestioned. She nas spent the
past six or eight years studying un
der the best dancing masters of
Europe and America, and has in her |
repertoire a number of beautiful clas
sical and interpretative dances as
well as the ballroom dances.
With Mr. Crane she is demonstrat
ing her dances at the Piedmont Driv
ing Club, and her classes are largely
attended by society folk, xvho wel
come the opportunity to learn the
tango and the hesitation and the oth
ers from a real mistress of the dance.
Nine Troops Enter
Scout Tournament
A big scout, tournament, the first of
its kind in the South, will be conducted
Saturday at the Motordrome by the Boy
Scouts of Atlanta. Eight local troops j
and Decatur's troop w ill participate in \
the events. A handsome silver cup. the
gift of Atlanta Council. Boy Scouts of !
America, will be the prize
Tent-pitching, first aid work, Indian
fire-making and other xvell known !
“stunts’’ of the Scouts, will be includ \
ed in the program. The events will t
begin at 3:30 p. m.
Don't Worry, and Live
Long, Advises Man,93
SOUTH ORANGE, X. J.. Dec. 17
Don't worry; then you’ll sleep well. |
If you sleep well you'll be happy and ;
live long. These are the rules for !
longevity given by Joseph Bradbury, j
BUSINESS NOTICE.
Only One “BROMO QUININE”
That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE.
Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE.
Cures a Cold in One Day, Cures Grip in
Two Days. 25c.
PER TON
Die Jeilico Coal Co.
82 PEACHTREE ST.
Atlanta Phone 3668
Bell Phone Ivy 1585
Let the Spirit of Music Pervade Your Home This
Christmas and Throughout the Years to Cornel
The MELODIGRAND PIANO or
PLAYER-PIANO Is the Answer!
In the church, it the theater, almost everywhere, music is synony
mous with Christmas, but there are many homes which will not feel the in
(luence of music this Christmas- the influence that every day in the year
makes your house worth calling a “home,” that makes the children better
men and women, that brings out the best in all of us.
We want every house to be a real home this Christmas, and will do
everything in our power to make this possible.
A Melodigrand Piano or Player- Piano will bring to you all the real
music which for centuries has been recognized as masterpieces.
THE XMAS GIFT FOR ALL—
Typewriters rented 4 mos.
$5 up. Am. Wtg. Mach. Co.
Bldg
JEWELERS * BROKERS
301 Peters
-
Money
to X, ^
Loan
Phone Main lift < )
STRICTLY PRIVATE
CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY FARES
VIA
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
TO ALL POINTS IN
ALABAMA, FLORiDA. GEORGIA, KENTUCKY,
NORTH AND SOUTH CAROLINA, TENNES
SEE, VIRGINIA. WASHINGTON, D. C.,
AND CINCINNATI, OHIO.
Tickets on sale December 17 to 25 and 31, 1913, January 1,
1914. Good to return until midnight, January 6, 1914.
ALSO TO MANY POINTS IN
Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri,
Nebraska, Oklahoma, S. Dakota, Texas, Wisconsin.
Tickets sold December 20. 21, 22, 1913. Return limit January 18.
1914. Call on any Southern Railway Agent for complete informs’
tion as to rates, routes, schedules, etc.
CITY TICKET OFFICE, 1 Peachtree St., Atlanta
$287
A MELODIGRAND
PIANO OR PLAYER-PIANO
$548
12 Rolls Music, Bench and Scarl Free With Player. A Piano or Player-Piano lor the Home
This Week’s Sale of High-Grade USED PIANOS Will
Attract Many Christmas Purchasers
$600 Everett (used])
fl*34S
$350 Kingsley (slightly
used)
$183
$650 Player Piano.
Good as new.
$385
$400 Howard (used
slightly)
$285
$400 Harris Bros,
(used)
$183
$750 Player Piano.
Good as new.
$425
OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL XMAS.
Cash—Open Book or Convenient Monthly Terms.
Cleveland-Manning Piano Co.
80 NORTH PRYOR STREET