Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 20, 1913, Image 8

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TJii: ATLANTA GEORGIAN AN1) NEWS. REBELS ROUTING practical gift [N SUGGESTIONS WIN CONTEST PRIZES F By MARY LEA DAVIS Second Battle at Port Disastrous to Federal Forces—Faith in Gunboats. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georg an. MEXICO CITY. D< 20 -That Gov- <*rnment troops ere being worsted in j a second battle at Tampico is indi cated by reports received here to-day The War Department admits that the rebels have captured the outskirts of the city. Only frogmen tar> reports of the fighting have been received here, bu* these show that the rebel troops, led by General Aguilar and General Blan co, number 8,000 men, reinforce ments having been received from Victoria. The Federal* have about 5,000 men. Despite the news of reverses In the early fighting. General Rlanquct as serted this morning that the Federal gunboats would be able to prevent the rapture of the port Americans and other foreigners in the capital are becoming more anx ious daily, as the Zapata rebels con tinue their attacks on towns sur rounding Mexico <'it\ Look for Ma*&ac r e. They heljeve that n massacre will follow the fall of the city and car rying out of Zapata's threats to hang General Huerta and General Blanquet from the balcony of the National Pal ace Government officials declared xo-dav, however, that the Zapatistas would be unable to win their way to the capital. General Huerta is leaving nothing undone to preserve amicable relations with the United States. B\ Ills or ders three Americans who had been held on flimsy charges were released to-day. This action v.as taken after <’barge d'Affaires O’Shaughnessj had made a personal appeal to the Pro visional President. Replying to the request of the American offlcjaJ, General Huerta said: "You tell me these are cases of persec ution I wmn't have such practice# as long as 1 am President.'’ He then issued orders to have th» Three men sent to the American em bassy and immediately thereafter In vited O’Shaiighnessy to go automobil- ing with him. The invitation was ac cepted. Gen. Salazar’s Baby Son Held for $5,000. EL PASO, TEXAS. Dec. 20. The 5- year-old son of General Jose Salazar, the Mexican Federal leader whom General Villa threatened to "hang in t'bihuahua as a traitor," lias been kid raped and is held for $5,000 ransom The child was stolen from his moth er. who had sought refuge in the United States after the retreat of the Federal* from Chihuahua. She received a letter to-dav, say ing the boy would be tortured unless the ransom was paid at once. Senoia Salazar accuses followers of General Villa of kidnaping the boy, but the Constitutionalist Junta disclaims re sponsibility. Villa to Indemnify Outraged Foreigners. JUAREZ, Dec. 20. The following dispatch was received to-day by Gen eral Benevides, commandant of the Juarez garrison, from Chihuahua City over the ''military” telegraph: \ “General Villa has appointed a committee to investigate the amount of damages suffered by foreign resi dents since the Con»titutlonali*ts took the city and all will be Indemnified. It wai necessary to expel the Span iards because their lives were in danger.” Well, the t an end gift congest is re Ho- success- MRS L T CHRISTIAN. No. 133 I,« f Htre»-' A ' until, Gw IH> in gold MRS KDW ARD Ma* MILLAN, East Point, <Pi . $•> in gold. MRS CARL KAKHTON, No «9 R«isili i *t r< et, \ Hants <;« , $5 in gold iLKfl N< til r*Tl sti*. .i.i. k son villa, Fla, $5 in gold .1 KEY NoLDS, JR , No <>4 York avenu** Atlanta. Ga . $1^ in gold. II N. MAXKY, Box 100. Route 2, Atlanta Ga., $5 in gold joK MARTIN Bijou Theater, Greenville S. c , m gold. GORDON cyiRBETT, Lake Park. Ga $5 In gold cfl ing co gold pi IV fM mgratulats each of the forego- ont»*Htants and trust that th# will find a welcome! >, ! am delighted with the si, . . of the contest. It has been fa inaiing to me. I have tead every on e <>f the letters 'and there were hundnu upon hundreds of them and n,,t but held *<>mt interest for S .uie <»f the w riters I'm sure, did not taki themselves seriously, but I enjo.v I'd what they had to suggest Just the same I am going to print all Ihe winning If.t;« r>. but w ithout identification so that he husbands and wives men 1 i<*11«*<I m th. mi will Hot know In »d vanca w ha» thev arc* going to rereive from their life partners for Christmas In the event you have forgotten the offer I made, I repeat It: ■j,, (hr wife who writex the bent short letter telling what is the most useful (lilt for a husband, one $ 10 got dpice<. 'I hi re award* of $6 rarh will hr given the wives whose tetters are adjudged the nert best. Mho. I trill at' ai d the name pri-is to husbands who write brief tetter* outlining the most appro print' gift for a husband to give his wife, /'or the husband's tetter that is ail judged the best the writer wilt receive a $10 gold piece. Hus bands who write the three fieri best letters wilt receive, each, a $< r > gold piece. Here are the ‘ best'’ letters HE SHOULD BE HAPPY. Miss Mary Lea Davis: A most appropriate gift for n wife to give her husband would be a picture of herself nicely framed for him to keep on his desk or to take with him when he has to leave home. If she will present this to Him with her sweetest Hrnile, and endeavor to show him in every way that he lias the love and devotion of the original, he should be a happy man, especially if he Is In love with his wife, as all men should be LIFE INSURANCE. Miss Mary Lea Davis A life insurance policy appeals to me as a very appropriate ' hristmas present for a man to give ids wife, for it is not only a constant reminder of the giver, but shows forethought, and is also a source of satisfaction to the giver to know that the one best loved by hint is protected even after his death. 1 think my wife will appreciate this more than anything else I could give her. USEFUL ARTICLE. Miss Mary I^ea Davis: At present we are struggling to pay for a home and take care of three little ones that must al ways be remembered at Christ mas .so neither of us will be able to buy a present for the other. Hawkes’ Glasses. Gift glasses—from Hawkes'— gives them an extra appreciation. Wo will fit the correct lense s after Hi • holidays without extra charge A K Hawkes Co.. Opticians, 14 Whitehall. —Advt. What ordinary soaps do to the skin O RDINARY toilet soap makes your akin look wnite and clean to the naked eye hut look at it through a magnifying glass. You will find that the “free” alkali, which ordinary soap contains, has roughened, irritated and parched your skin; Bnd this may in time cause blotches, pimples, black- hearts and other akin troubles. Resinol Soap cleans, soothes and protects the skin You need a soap which not onjy cleans your akin, but also soothes, heals and protecta it—that is why you should get a cake of Resinol Soap from your druggist. This pure and delightful toilet soap contains the same medication as Resinol Ointment, the standard prescription for skin troubles. It therefore affords an antisrptic protect ton to the akin, which merely pure soap does not do. Resinol Soap keeps the skin in a clean, healthy condition and insures a clear, natural complexion. H.rr.^ Soap and Reeinel Oinlmentmrc sold k bra:!dr. • KgisU. For trial »txsof each free, i*to Dept. 16-S. Retinol, Baltimore, Mu. Do Xmas Mailing Now, Final Hint Of Postmaster This is the "Iasi call” for the post il.* of Christmas packages at the At lanta postofflce. Rolling H Jones, postmaster, doesn't mean that no more Christmas mail will be received for transmis sion. which would be a highly impo litic and even "unconstitutional” at titude to assume. "Rut if Atlanta people want to be Mil« that their packages are handled nut of the city w ith promptness and i are, they should mail them Satur- ouy." Mr. Jones aaid. "Already the railroads ate simply swamped with the Hood of packages There is mail lying tiie various depots now .that has been there 24 hours We are able to get the stuff out of this office, ail right. I never have seen a bunch of workers like these boys But tHe rail roads simply can’t ahtidle it promptly, and that's all there ia to it.” Mr. Jones added that parcels post ed as late us Monday couldn't be ex pected to reach a destination of any considerable distance before Friday or Saturday of next week. Owls Give to Poor Whom Santa Skips Over 125 poor children of the city whom Santa Claus might overlook on Christmas will receive presents from the Christmas trru ot the Owls’ Club which will be erected December 26 in the lodge-room of the club in the Thrower Building. A K l lead ing ion wants the names of many more poor children mailed him at the club so that there will be a. present for all on the tree. But I shall make my husband one of the many useful articles so much appreciated by the majority of men a laundry bag with an opening large nough for him to drop his soiled articles into in a second He will appreciate it, I knew from past experience. REAL SENTIMENT. Miss M a ry I Ate. Davis: Kightein years ago I married a farmer s rosy-cheeked daughter 1 brought her to the city to live, but sh** never sesmed to Ilk#* It here She had been used to an outdoor Ijfe. Visits to her old horn* brought the color back to tier < hecks and happiness to her heart. This Christmas I am go ing to give her a deed to a 166 a* re farm which I purchased last September and which I will stock with cows, chickens, ducks and pigeons the things I know she loves Then well all move back to the country, and I pray that ihe roses will bloom again and for all time in her dimpled cheeks! THE RING SHE WANTS. Mias Mary l«ea Davis: The wedding ring that 1 placed on my bride's Anger fifteen years ego this month Is too small for h» r now She was obliged to put If away two months ago because it was too tight for comfort. She prized the ring highly because of tiie sentiment attached to it. and, although she didn't sa\ much shout it, I know that she misses it sadly, for several* tlmesl have notic'd her looking at the ring less finger in an absent-minded way. For a Christman present T am going to give her another ring as near like It as possible, w ith the same motto engraved in side 1 know she will be pleased HER PHOTOGRAPH Aliks Mary Lea Davis I shall give my husband s dain ti!> framed picture of m\self. IVr- hsps to many Hist would seem ex travagance touched with vanity, since we have only a very mod est income. But I have saved the amount ntceganry for the gift from my allowance during the year by practicing bits of self- denial so small I can hardly re call them. My husband is blessed with an appreciative nature, so any gift 1 chose would he happi ly received But I am giving him my picture because it is the per son ij I note in a man's married life as well as hi his benedictine days that appeals to his beat nature; for. after all, the usefulness of a gift must he Judged by the heart chord it strikes. VERY PRACTICAL. Miss Mary Lea Davis: The most suitable gift a hus band can give his wife ia one that she can enjoy in after years as well as now. I think a life insur ance policy for as much as one ran carry would he the most ap prcciated of all. Then she can say, "He lived and died for those he loved.” A REMINDER Miss Mary Lea Davis: In naming my choice of a gift, I have tried io select something that would be acceptable to all men as well as being within the means of all wives. A dainty pho tograph of herself for his office, set in a frame in keeping with her own individual finances, would, to me. be the most appre ciated and tenderly sentimental gift a wife could beatow useful, too. because In moments of dis couragement and perhaps tempta tion it would be a spur to better effort and a constant reminder of her love and trust. F Girl Lost 4 Years Sought in Atlanta; Money Awaits Her A four-year search for a pretty girl centered Hatuiday In Atlanta through the receipt by Chief Beavers of a let ter from Mrs. Pat tie Moore, of No, 208 Hermitage avenue, Kinston, N. C., asking him to find her daughter, Arna. Mrs. Moore said she had received information that tiie girl had been seen in Atlanta by a former acquaint ance. but that she didn't know whether she was married or not. Mrs Moore added that lately she had come into a sum of money which she wished to give to the girl, wher ever she was Chief Beavers detailed Policeman Chandler to make a thor ough search for the girl. Verdict for $35,0*00 Damages Is Record Lawyers were discussing Saturday a verdict in the Carrollton Court which they concede to be the largest for personal damages in the history of the courts of this State, l^ew Davis, a lineman of the Georgia Railway and Power Company, whs awarded $36,000 for injuries received in tiie discharge of his duty He sued for $50,000. Davis was knocked from a pole In Carrollton when lie came in contact with an alleged uninsulated wire Leaders at Banquet Praise the Currency Measure and Pre dict Prosperous Era. Atlanf* bankers were feeling opti mistic Saturday over the passage of the currency hill by the Senate, with the 'good prospect of its adoption by the House as amended by the Sen ate Without exception, they declare the business outlook to be the bright est that America has ever known They expect Atlanta to lend a re serve bank, Favorable expressions were heard at the bankers and brokers' banquet at the Capital City Club Friday nignt. Even if the adoption of the bill served to do nothing else, the opin ion was freely expressed that dis turbed financial conditions would be settled by it, and readjustment of money affairs generally would follow The speakers were the presidents of Atlanta's banks They saw the es tablishment of regional reserve banks in the near future, with Atlanta as a favored place for one of the banks. Robert F. Maddox, vice president, and W. L. Peel, president of the Ameri can National Bank; Captain James W. English, president of the Fourth National Rank; A. P. Coles, vice pres ident of the Central Bank end Trust Corporation; Charles K. Currier, pres ident "f the Atlanta National Bank, and Frank Hawkins, president of the Third National Bank, were the local speakers A. C. Heinz, president of the Bankeis’ Cluo, was toastmaster. Prominent Visitors Present. Among tiie out-of-low n bankers were H S. Haas qf the First Na tional Bank of Philadelphia; Maxwell Bechew, of the Equitable Mortgage and Trust Company, of Baltimore. II »S. Russell, of the Fourth National Bank of New York, and C. J Hood, of the Northeastern Banking Company, of Commerce, Ga. "The currency bill as amended by the Senate is a’ good bill, and I hope to see it pass the House," said Mr. Maddox. "The success of the bill, \ f it is adopted by Congress, depends entirely upon the confidence shown In It by the national banks and their willingness to subscribe to the reserve bank. At any rate, the effect will he to settle things for a while and give the financial affairs of the country a chance for readjustment." Captain English declared there would be no doubt about Atlanta ob taining the regional bank if all of the bankers got together and pulled for it. Reserve Bank for Atlanta. "i think the sooner tho House passes the amended measure the better off we shall be,” he said. "We will then at least know where we stand, and can adjust ourselves to conditions. 1 believe that a regional reserve bunk for Atlanta will be almost a necessity, and we should not have much diffi culty in getting it if we all pull to gether." That there would be a decided set tling of disturbed financial conditions with the adoption of the hill by the House was the opinion expressed by Mr. Hawkins. "Tiie agitation which has prevailed during the agitation of the question will now he relieved, and the business men will be able to tell where they stand,’’ he declared. "I hope the measure will repuss the House quick ly and become a law.” Music Lovers Await Free Organ Concert Atlanta music lovers are awaiting eagerly the free organ concert Sun day afternoon at 3:30, at which Herr DaCortes Wolffungen will be soloist. The concert will be given at the Au ditorium-Armory, under the auspices of the Music Festival Association. Charles A Sheldon, Jr„ will be or ganist, and Miss Mildred Harrison the accompanist. "Celeste Aida" will he one of the number* Herr Wolffungen will slnt The soloist recently had charge of the Washington, D. C., grand opera chorus. SlDtUGHTS GEORGIA POLITICS Jy JAMES B. KEVIN NEAR BALLOT, Former Governor Joseph M Rrown had little faith in the substance of the State s claims to the Tallulah Falls property now held by the Geor gia Railway and Power Company, and strongly advised against the suit re cently settled in the power rompany s favor by the Supreme Court. The then Governor believed sin cerely that the State had not even the shadow of a claim to the property involved, and that the State had no substantial right to embarrass the present holders of the property by proceeding against them. When he saw, however, that a de termined effort would be made to keep alive indefinitely the fight un less it was passed upon by the courts, he r greed to the Legislative resolu tion making possible the suit, and in structed the Attorney General to go ahead The House Committee on the Judi ciary also had little faith In the State’s claim, but took the view that the matter might as well be cleared up for all time, and reported the res olution, therefore, favorably. The re sult of the suit, however, was not much of n surprise to the.State. There is no doubt whatever that this suit cost Mrs. Helen Longstreet, its inspiration, a pretty penny—it cost her her job as postmaster at Gaines ville, for one thing She made a brave. If bitter, fight, for the establishing of the view of the question she entertained, and al though she went down In defeat, she went down In no sort of dishonor. She simply had no real case as the decision of the Supreme Court abu/- dantly shows. The power company never doubted the outcome of the .suit, for it never stopped a day's work because of it, and its securities suffered little in consequence of the State’s proceeding. The death of President Thomas, of the Nashville. Chatta.nooga and S ; .. Louis Railroad, likely will cause somo delay in the work of the Georgia leg- 4 islative committee having in hand the matter of advising the General As sembly with respect to the re-leasing of the roau. The committee was working with that gentleman to an .extent, and until his successor is installed that end of the work, at least, will have to rest. Major E. C. Lewis, who is chair man of the board of directors, is acting president until April 1, when John Howe Peyton will assume the position. Mr. Peyton, however, will join the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis on January 1 as general manager. Mr. Standard Oil Archbold, of more or less political fame, "My Dear Mr Archbold,” you know', is in our midst in Georgia! He is sojourning at Chinquapin Plantation, his magnificent estate near Thomasville. Every now and then somebody sug gests the abolition of the Court of Appeals, and just as regularly the suggestion doesn't seem to get any where much. The Court of Appeals GET A KODAK FOR XMAS M U t«6 (V»»nIm |1 t* S12. Stud tar statist ta-S»> fPIClAL MfVARfi ING OFFER—4 , ,gX#T£, iisuitaS. fr#» any wm • SO* A. K HAWKES 00. looks as if it is a pretty good bet to stay put As a matter of fact, the bar of the State does not desire to see the Court of Appeals abolished, and not a par ticularly large section of the lay citi zenship is acutely interested in the j matter one way or the other. The | court seems to serve a very useful purpose in disposing of the mass of 1 relatively unimportant matter that 1 used to stack up appallingly in the Hupreme Court, and to that extent, at : least. It Is a most inexpensive luxury j to Georgia. Jt might be merged into I the Supreme Court, by increasing the j membership of the latter body from six to nine, but even at that It seems difficult for the average lawyer to see where the situation would be greatly improved. One thing appears to be certain enough, how ever: If the Court of Ap peals Is abolished, it then will be nec essary to limit the right of appeal in Georgia, or the Supreme Court can not handle Intelligently all the mat ter sun* to come before it. A great many States do limit the right of ap peal; but Georgia throws the gates wide open. You can go to a court of review 1n Georgia on any old pretext or with any old ca.ee, no matter how small. As there is only the remotest pos sibility that the Court of Appeals will be abolished, how’ever, speculation as to what might he done in the event it were wiped out is speculation only. Chairman "Bob” Davison, of the Prison Commission, is expecting to enjoy himself this Christmas to an unusual degree. "We are winding things up to-day," said the chairman, "and this office will be, to all intents and purposes, (Staled tight all next week. There have been times when the Prison Commission was worked overtime at the Christ mas season, because of . the perfect avalanche of applications for Christ mas clemency. Governor Slaton has knocked that sort of business galley west this year, however, and has made it mighty plain that this ‘Christ mas clemency’ plea doesn’t make much of a hit with him! "He is right, too, of course. There is no earthly reason why a prisoner should be extended clemency at Christmas time more than at any oth er time, if that is the best there is to be said for him. Still, if these people Insist upon applying to us, we must hear them. The Governor has given such parties a straight tip what to expect at his hands—or what not to expect, rather—and so he has eased up the pressure in this office tre mendously. "1 am going home to-night to enjoy my Christmas, and al! my associate members already have departed.” Mrs. W. T. Shepherd, of Alabama, Admits That Fight Is Well Advanced in This State. Woman First to Pay Fine for Gossiping APPLETON. WtS . Dec. 20. —A woman was the first person to be fined in Outa gamie County under the anti-gossip act. Mrs. Rosa Lehn paid a fine of $21.80 after having pleaded guilty to a gossip charge preferred by a Mrs. McDonald and Emma McDonald. That Georgia women soon w ill have the right to vote Is the belief ex pressed by Mrs. W. L. Shepherd, the attractive Montgomery matron who lent Congressman Heflin the famous expression, "It is better that a wom an control a voter than a vote," and who is an ardent anti-suffragist. "I am opposed to equal suffrage, but j I must admit that the energetic man- | ner In which Georgia women are I pushing their demands for the ballot indicates it won’t be very long until ! they receive it,” she said Saturday, j Mrs. Shepherd ia visiting friends in I Atlanta. "Notoriety is displeasing to me, and I think there has been enough writ ten about me already,” she said. "I don’t think Mr. Heflin should be crit icised for using the words which someone else had spoken. I rathef admire him for using them if he thought there was force in them. Calls Home Woman's Sphere. "T am opposed to suffrage because I believe a woman wields more influ ence under present conditions than she would by the right to vote. I think every man should discuss those questions upon which he will vote with his wife, and I believe that most men do. Women should have a voice in the affairs of the country, but un doubtedly they have a greater per suasive power now than they can hope to have otherwise. “The suffragists of Georgia, how ever, appear to me to be making won derful progress. I don’t like to admit that my State is behind in anything, but the Georgia women seem to be pushing their cause with more vigor than the Alabama women, and from what I have seen and heard here, it won't be long before they have the right to vote. "A woman’s place is in the home. No matter whether women are ever given the use of the ballot or not, they are going to find that their real power is in the influence they wield in the home. Husband Approves Her View. "A woman is a woman, after all, and her sphere has been and always will be one of influence, and by the use of the ballot I think they will cheapen it." Mr. Shepherd, who is well known throughout the South and who is at the head of a company, backed by the Montgomery Camber of Commerce, for the development of an automatic railroad switch invented by his father, greatly admires his wife’s views on suffrage. "There is not a big business which is controlled by one man,” he said. “Railroad presidents are controlled by the sentiment existing in the mass of employees and officials in their rail road systems. They arc- controlled from the interior, as it might be said "It is the same way in which the affairs of the country are controlled by the women, for by the influence from the home does a man vote. And most assuredly the women exercise a wonderful Influence in controlling the vote of their husbands, sons and brothers.” Messenger Hangs to Flying Express Car As Fire Rages Inside NEW LONDON. CONN . Dec 20 Clinging to the chains on the oufaid* of an express car on a train g<Mng [,n miles an hour, with fire mging insid# the car and no means of stopping the train or .giving warning, Express Mes se.uger BilllDgs. on the second section of the special Christmas mall and press train between New York and Boston, reached here at 4 o'clock this morning almost dead Inside the car was a big lot of Chris* mas express matter and the body of David Lonergan, of New York, which was being sent to Boston. Whan th* fire was extinguished here the outald* box and the casket were found to be considerably scorched but the body was unharmed. Many of the Christmas presents were ruined. ARE THEY WEAK OR PAINFUL 1 D* !u»#» rw Wf«aT Do yu hav* night »*eat»r Have y*u p»tn» tn chevt and «M«et yaw uK yellow end Weak Bo yaw »»H . Are yaw oanUaually bawfcln* i Do yau have paint under year i nek ■►attar? -r-s3«x*-. Regarded Symptom* af ►I Tiwibta and CONSUMPTION Thaee are lw You shmiKJ take tramrdtate Mers W pr opens* of these symptom*. The lonpar them to advance acd develop, the more <3 ard serloua your condition becomes. WE STAND READY TO PHOVE TO YOU Pennine, the German Treatment, ha* cured complete* a- and permanenUy case after case of Oooawmptton frubefctfleats). chronic Bronchitis. Catarrh of th* |Amps. Catarrh of the Bronchial Tubes and othar tuop troubles. Many sufferers who had loot all here Mid who had been given up by r*hy<<*mo» heaa been permanently cmed by Bung Oermlna. If foot lung* a/e merely weak and the disease ha* not yta manifested itself, you car. prevent It* development, you can build up your lung* and system to thafar normal strength and capacity. Long Genuine hag cured advanced Consumption, and the patients *e- maln strong and in aplenald health to-day. Let Us Send You the Proof —Proof that will Convince any Judge or Jury on Earth We will gladly gact^^ttj^proof able cures, also her w th* treatment and care of Long tag ether with cur new 40 page bnoh^to orioml^on trouble. JUST SEND YOUR NAME tuiua Garmlaa Ga. 711 Haa Block, JarakaM, MM. Every Woman is Interested nod gbonid know about tbe wonderful Marvel Douche Ask »oi*r druggist for It If be cannot sup ply the MARVEL, accept no other, but send stamp for book. C.2MSt.,N.V. =3! AYLANfA'S BUiV THEAYgft r A DC VT U 2 30 v U Il9 I 1 11 Evenings st $ 30 EDWIN STEPHENS. Assisted by Tina Mar shall. Florenae Tempggt. Car Eugsne Troupe. Nel| McKinley. Kaufman Bro$. and others. Make Reser vations Now forXmasWeek TO-NIGHT-TO-NIGHT AT 9 O’CLOCK Hearst’s American and Atlanta Georgian Free Xmas Tree Contest Closes Do Your Best Before That Hour and Get the First Tree tor Your Sunday School 1 Fountain Pens. Genuine Waterman, plain or gold and silver mounted Handsome plush gift cases A k Hawkeg (’o , 14 Whitehall street. Advt THE GEM VACUUM CLEANER A REAL XMAS GIFT Lliminatmt ths Use of Broom, Dust Pan and All tho Drudgery of Housekeeping No Cleaner doe* better work; C7 CA none gives longer service }l.3U Phone call will bring demonstrator The Ozias National Selling Corporation (>05-607 Empire Life Building Phone Ivy 8239 v^'k lyric NEXT WEEK T The Dainty B EMMA Laughing Suc- UN riNl*! ce „ of theA0e In "THE A GIRL FROM HAPPY OUT YONDER." HOOLIGAN.’» ATLANTA Ye Fascinating and Tuneful ‘IT I j The Girl Dreams Mats. 25c to $1. To-night 26c to $1.60 MON., TUES., WED., »at.n#e WednesSj, SEATS NOW SELLING A Real Musical Comedy. The Quaker Girl With VICTOR MORLEY Nights £5c to $2. Matinee 25c to $1.50 The Prizes First tree $100 With 600 boxes of candy and 600 oranges. Second tree $75 With 500 boxes of candy and 500 oranges. Third tree $50 With 400 boxes of candy and 400 oranges. Fourth tree $25 With 300 boxes of candy and 300 oranges. Specia Prizes For Scholars DOLLS BOOKS BIBLES WATCHES Roller Skates XMAS TREE DEPT. Bell 100 Phone Atlanta 8000 I 20 East Alabama St.---Open Evenings \