Newspaper Page Text
4
ATLANTA, GA
Delegates here to attend the twelfth
annual convention of the National As
sociation of Stationers and Manufac
turers, Wednesday were winding up
their business affairs and planning to
close their convention with a round of
social activities.
Wednesday's business session was
devoted mainly to committee reports
which were submitted at a meeting
at the Ansley, Emmett Hay Naylor,
secretary of the Writing Paper Man
ufacturers’ Association, made the ad
dress of the day on “New Basis of
Prices To Be Made by Paper Manu
facturers.”
The election and intasllation of new
officers will take place during the aft
ernoon session. At the time the con
vention committee, of which Ivan 1.
Allen is president, will make a report
on the 1917 meeting. This will be
held at Chicago, it was decled Tues
day afternoon.
Final affairs of the convention will
take place Wednesday evening when
a banquet and dance will be held at
the Capital City Club. An informal
dance, at which there were geveral
hundred visitors and Atlanta people,
was held in the ball room of the Hotel
Ansley Tuesday evening
RECRUITS STILL ENTERING.
ALBANY, Oct. 11.—Willlam H. Stro
ther, of Moultrie, enlisted here yester
day for the Georgla National Guard, was
the geventeenth recruit obtained by the
local recruiting office. He was the fifth
enrolled this weelk.
Rubber
%
Guaranteed
Miller Hercules House
hold Rubber Gloves, all
...
Miller Reliable Rubber
Gloves, all sizes. . .75¢
Wearever Gloves, by
Faultless Rubber Co.,
M. ......010
11 Stores to
Serve You
\\ o LS4
iREME
Our terms are the most
liberal in Atlanta.
Just Take Your Pick
Of the beautiful ocoats,
suits or dresses that are
waiting for you here.
Then have your purchase
charged.
Bring the men folks,
too. Fine values in suits
for men—new hats, too.
Pay SI.OO a Week
ASKIN & MARINE
W. A. DAY, Mgr.
‘ 78 Whitehall
Wilton Jellico
Coal
$5.00 Per Ton
The Jellico Coal Co,
84-A Peachtree St.
Phones Ivy 1685 ;
Atlanta 3668,
; Eberhard Faber
{ Eludes Interview
' On_ Golf Course
EBERHARD FABER.
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e % % ¢ £ Vit 1
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Bt v s
B T AR 5 e e S
“Go hunt up Eberhard Faber, the
pencil man, and ask him why he
doesn’t invent a pencil that will ring a
bell when it gets lost on my desk,”
sald the city editor. “He's at the
Pledmont with the stationers’ con
vention.”
One of his friends sald Mr. Faber
was out.
“You'll find him out at the Brook
haven golf course, somewhere be
tween the seventh and eleventh holes,
1 should say,” he suggested. “But if
he could invent that bell attachment
vou're talking about he wouldn't
waste it on a lead pencil, He'd put it
on golf balls.”
So there went the interview., But
we've got the picture and it's a shame
to waste it, so here goes:
The subject of this sketch is not the
original Eberhard Faber, but his son.
The first Eberhard started a pencil
factory in Brooklyn years ago, when
penclls were a novelty. He made good
pencils and good money, His son
succeeded him, made better pencils
and more money, Today he is said to
be worth $20,000,000, all made from
nickel and dime pencils, rubber eras
ers and bands and similar office equip
ment. The only trouble on his mind
is finding enough cedar to make pen
‘nlla from. Now he is swapping wire
fences for old cedar rails. If he'd try
‘The Georgian's exchange column, he
‘'would get enough rails to build ‘a
fence from hére to Brooklyn, which
would make enough penvils to figure
all the experts’ dope on the possibili
ty of that suburb’'s copping this sea
son’s pennant,
|— ~ g
__Guy Bomar, chauffeur for R ¥,
‘White, of No. 270 Gordon street, Wed
nesday was under bond of S2OO for as
sault and battery and had been fined
§sso for reckless driving, as the result of
the wreck of Monday in which his ma
chine rammed a car being driven by
:dur:. Joseph Hlill, No. 186 Highland ave-
It was testified that after Bomar
crashed into the Hill car he pushed one
of the woman occupants to the ground,
causing painful injuries.
Jake Abel Dealing
'Em Off the Arm Now |
m Ull the Arm owl
Jake Abel, the Chattanooga lad,
whose padded mitts have slashed many
a furlous round at the old Casino rink
Wednesday was seen dealing ’‘em off
the arm behind the marble slab of Rdin
do!lph Rose.
“I am in charge of the hmtormnk-‘
and-pretzel department,” chirped Jake.
The popular fighter wore a diamond
as big as one of Chef Rudolph's deviled |
crabs, (10 cents on Fridays).—Not advt,
Trofessional photrgranhora from
Georgia, Alabama and other nearby
States were in Atlanta Wednesday to
attend the Eastman demonstrations, a
free school of methods which opened at
Cable Hall Tuesday for a session of
three days,
- Morning, afternoon and nieht sessions
are being held. Experts in various lines
inr photography are Aemonstrating new
phases of all linec of thelr work, and
are schooling those in attendance in the
most modern methods of photography.
The Feast of Tabernacles will be ob
served at the Jewish Temple, Pryor and
Richardson streets, by services Wed
nesday night at 8 o'clock and Thursday
morning at 10 o'clock.
Dr. David Marx will conduct the ser
vices,
I - ———————————— I S —————— - S —————— . —
- por - |
Just This: Sl B\
These Prices w |
And All Other Work in Proportion: ~(YYY Y -
| Guaranteed $ 3 “ZZ-K Gold $275
| Set of Teeth Crowns -
SHORT TIME ONLY
{DR. E. G. GRIFFIN'’S
: GATE CITY DENTAL ROOMS
S w. Alabamra;St. (O aie=®) Phone Main 1708
| Chesley R. Perry, of Chicago, who
lonce agreed to act as temporary sec
'l‘l‘lal'_\ of the International Rotary
Clubs for a period of 60 days and who
‘).;m never managed to get away from
{the job although six years hu\‘e‘
| elapsed, was at the Pledmont I[ut(‘]‘
| Wednesday arranging for the time in|
11917 when the world Rotarians will
| take the city . 1
j Mr. Perry was In the tow of such
{active Atlanta Rotarlans as L. D.
[Hu-ks. local president; Victor H.
| Kriegshaber, Albert 8. Adams, former
f.um'rvt:nvry_ Earle H. Cone and nthnrs.‘
| They were making hotel arrange
| ments, plans for headquarters and the
| various entertainments for the inter
| national convention here.
| “We are going to have a wonderful
| meet In Atlanta,” said Mr. Perry,
“and, belleve me, these Atlanta Ro
| tarians are capable of the job they are
lf:xr'ing, We'll have people here from
all over the United States, England,
ilrs-ln.m], Cuba and Honolulu, and it's
{ quite possible that the Atlanta con
;\'enrlnn will =ee the first Rotary rep
| resentaitves from the Orient.”
| Mr. Perry, who has been executive
;M‘v'rvl:nj\‘ since the international was
| organized at Chicago in 1910, is head
| of the real working forces of the big
| organization. He is also editor of
The Rotarian, official publication of
the International, and has other du
in«s that make his a man-size job.
| “When the international started in
| 1910 there were only twelve clubs,
witn a membership of about 1,500,” he
explained. “Now we have 270 clubs
with a membership of probably 30,000.
! “When they found they could get
'nobody else to take the job as secre
¢ary in 1910, they made me agree to
fill in temporarily. 1 was to be re
lieved within 60 days. Since that time
they have continued to make me sec- |
retary eagh year, and the job has
grown until I have had to quit my
business and devote all my time to
the work. ‘
“The secretary’s original office force
six years ago numbered one, being
myself. Now we have an extensive
office suite with a working force of
' seventeen members."”
| Mr. Perry reports that organizers
from San Francifsco and Buffalo are
now in the Orient to promote new
Rotary Clubs. Clubs were being or
' ganized in Berlin and Paris at the
time of the war declarations and were
necessarily abandoned for the present,
- The local Rotarians held a lunch
eon Tuesday noon at the Piedmont in
honor of Mr. Perry, to which all visit
ing Rotarians attending the station
ers’ convention were invited.
. A number of the prominent mem
bers of the association were seated
at the tables, including L. E. Water
'man. of New York: John J. Wood, of
i(‘Yuvelnnd; D. W. Cotterel, of Harris
;hurg. Pa.; R. E. Ewing, of Birming
| ham; D. P. Sikes, of Roanoke, Va.,
land F. H. McChesney, of Syracuse,
| R
. .
Mrs. Whiffen Praises ‘
Miss Hanson's Work
Mrs. Thomas Whiffen, the dear old
lady who tops the Forsyth bill this
week, thinks there’'s no actress quite llke‘
Gladys Hanson, of Atlanta. And being
in Miss Hanson's own home town, she
took occasion Wednesday to say a word
about the younger actress. 1
“There’'s nothing in the way of stage
success which will not some dnf' be
hers,”” sald Mrs. Whiffen. ‘I played
with her and Kyrle Bellew in ‘Builders
of Bridges' and we were great friends.
I have watched many an actress in my
50 years of stage life, watched them
struggle and fail. Miss Hanson has ev
ery element that makes success—tal
ent, beauty, culture, brains and high
ideals."”
Gladys Hanson, in private life Mrs.
Charles Emerson Cook, is the daughter
of P. H, Snook, of Atlanta.
Christians to Meet
The Christlan Church of the west
ern district of Georgia will meet with
the Harmony Grove congregation Oc
tober 17-18. All congregations in the
)dlstrim are urged to have delegates
present at the convention.
Harmony Grove is about two and
a half miles from Union City and can
be reached by the Fairburn car line,
the Atlanta and West Point and the
A, B, & A. Rallroads.
Delegates will be met at Union City
and carried to the church.
's Benefi
St. Mark's Benefit
| At Criterion Theater
The Criterfon Theater was being op
erated Wednesday for the benefit of the
home mission fund of Circle No, 1 St
Mark's Church, with Mrs. Ward Wight
{as chairman of the day.
i Douglas Falrbanks was being shown
in the Triangle feature, “Flirting With
Fate,” and a Keystone comedy was also
|runnlng.
Baby Tosses SIO,OOO
l aby Tosses $lO,
InJewels From Auto
| (By International News Service.)
EDGEWATER, N. J., Oct. 11.—A bag
containing $19Q,000 worth of jewels tossed
from an automobile by Frank A, Ber
)tho‘.d's baby son, was found an hour
later by a policeman.
« amef D
URpEicHiREE
Wit - DupLey- GLAS S
WHY I'D LIKE MY
VACATION IN OCTOBER
IME, 8 a. m. Place, the office.
| Scene, colynmist trying to
chase an idea from his in
nermost system to the typewriter
keys. Enter the Fan, saying:
“Well, 1 knew they’d cop one.
Can't tell me!”
Silence, all too brief.
“Whatcher think about that Dau
bert boy—what? Some class, eh?”
Gee, I almost had the word I
wanted then. Let's see, now——
“Well, they landed on Mays,
didn't they? 1 always said they'd
find that guy. What d’ye think
about today?”
More silence. But it doesn't
last.
“l say, whatcher think about
today? Betcher they even it up—
whatcher say?”
I'm forced to wake up.
“What the—— are you yap
ping about?” I ask.
“Why, the game. Where you
been at?”
“What game?”
A look of scornful pity.
“The world series, you boob.
Whatcher think I'm talkin’ about?
The firemen’s checker tourna
ment ?”
“When was 1t? Who played it?
Did he play it in the movies or
on a horn? And how the s BBN
1 get through with this —— col
yum if you keep sticking around
and making noises in my ear?”
“Aw, can that stuff. You ought
er write a page of that junk with
both eyes shut and your hands
tied. Tl'll go talk to Fuzzy. He's
a llve one.”
How can a man fill a colyum
with that kind of chatter going
on? Not a line written yet!
P. B—Oh, I don’t know! Here's
half the job done,
Prisoner before a New York
Judge complained he couldn’t find
a job, so the judge went out and
found two for him in ten minutes.
Now the editors are pointing the
moral that jobs are easy to find
if one tries. /
But, remember, it's not every
Sa— |
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a Keen Appetite,
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Most women lose their appetites,
get sour stomach, water brash, heart
burn, gas, rumblings, bad breath,
coated tongue and tired all over after
cooking their own meals. A Stuart's
Dyspepsia Tablet after each meal
will overcome these troubles.
If you enjoy preparing a luncheon
or an attractive dinner, but the odor
of cooking palls on you, take one of
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets after your
next meal and you will find at once
a remarkable improvement.
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are for
sale at all druggists at 50c a box.
Send coupon below today and we
will at once send you by mail a
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of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets.
INOEEE L iviviiviarir i it
BREOIE o i it it inadsinibrions
ALY o isv i bate
= @
Georgia Railway & Power Co.
ATLANTA, OCT. 5, 1916
S2OO REWARD
will be paid for evidence resulting in the arrest and conviction, or
judgment for contempt of the order of injunction of Fulton Supe
rior Court, of any person who makes to any wife, mother or other
female member of the family of any employee, any threat of per
sonal violence toward such employee or any member of his fam
ily, for the purpose of intimidating him from the proper dis
charge of his duty. : - :
will be paid for evidence resulting in the arrest and conviction, or
judgment for contempt of the order of injunction of Fulton Supe
rior Court, of any person who commits any personal violence
upon any employee of this company for the purpose of intimi
dating him from the proper discharge of his duty, or who injures
or unlawfully interferes with the cars, tracks, poles, wires or
other property of this company.
will be paid for evidence resulting in the arrest and conviction,
or judgment for contempt of theorder of injunction of Fulton Su
perior Court, of any person who makes any threat of personal
violence toward any employee of this company for the purpose
of intimidating him from the proper discharge of his duty.
Georgia Railway & Power Co.
APPROVED: By W. H. GLENN,
P.S. ARKWRIGHT, President Vice President & Operating Mgr.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
man who has a judge to do the
hunting.
THAT KENTUCKY BLOOD!
A lineal descendant of the bet
ting man in Mark Twain's Jump
ing Frog story was distovered to
day in the person of Ed Dan
forth, of Lexington, suh, racing
writer and expert tipster.
Mr. Danforth, waiting fer the
races to start at the fair, and
having nothing else on hand but
work, bit into a chinquapin, form
which appeared five fat and ener
getic worms. Mr. Danforth did
not waste them. He drew a six
inch circle on a piece of paper,
put the five worms in the cen
ter, and invited bets upon which
would crawl out of the circle first.
In the course of an hour he had
absorbed all the loose change in
the editorial department.
The office boy, experimenting
with the tired racers, discovered
that all but one had been lightly
touched with the mucilage brush.
That one, needless to say, was
Mr. Danforth’s entry.
. -
Fined for Selling
Fake Circus Tickets
The circusg hangers-on left an addi
tional 350 in Atlanta Tuesday when
Frank, a negro worker, was fined that
amount for slim-slamming by selling
worthless admission tickets,
Several young boys were fleeced by
the scheme.
et
g T
s 557 Y
U;fl;mr\\vfif%s\
ARG wfi(@/&.
LR T K&“/'
U et
Capital, Surplus
and Profits:
$1,950,000
It isn’t the size of your account—it’s
the man back of it in whom this bank is
most interested. As the man builds, his
account grows, and we are always glad to
assist in the constructive process.
Don’t hesitate 1o come to us because
your account is small. Many of the lead
ing accounts in Atlanta began in a small
way. We will welcome yours and ass e
you that same courteous and cordial treat
ment we are in the habit of giving our
customers.
Come in and talk to us about it.
Police Seehi
Mysteri
The county police Wednesday sought
the solution to a series of mysterious
and terrific explosions which in the last‘
two nights have occurred ‘‘somewhere
'nearby” and were plainly heard in At-fl
lanta. .
And the whole city is wishing the po
lice success, for the city’s curiosity has
been aroused.
Despite the police hunt and system
atic inquiry over the county, however,
not the slightest clew has been found
that would tend to reveal the location
of the big blasts or to disclose their
purpose. Two of these explosions were
heard Monday night and two on Tues
day night. Apparently, the blagts were
set off at some point northwest of the
city, according to the police. One of
the explosions was so'close as to rattle
some windows in houses in the northern
part of the city, it was reported Wed
nesday.
Anxious citizens all over the county
have kept the telephone wires hot into
both the police station and the county
police headauarters in the courthouse
with inquiries. But the police gave no
information, for they had no informa
tion to give. They are as greatly mys
tified as the inquiring citizens.
The county police sugge‘ted that these
blasts may be connected with the theft
Sunday night of about sixty sticks of
dynamite from the magazine of the
North View Cemetery, near the Chatta
hoochee River.
The police have been keeping a close
Third
National
Bank
Kpi T G
;/ AR N\ N 7 3‘/“ b\ \
L] " g . | N \
At et i 1S S =i
SRrII S
!i:l \Mfil“\_“' \\S\&fiffifll
U“J, e f‘;‘_"!/
lookout for the missing explosive, but so
far have obtained no trace of it.
Desk Sergeant Carroll Wednesday ad
vanced the further theory that possibly
a German submarine may be operating
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({3 W E 93
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October 18. Thereafter price will be $1.65. ‘
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Cut out the coupon---bring it to us today! i
“Wear-Ever” Coupon
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provided you present the coupon in person at store on or before
Wednesday, October 18,
T i o is o e s s s b e
I e
IS sbt bt e T i A TN s i i soo
HIGHTOWER HARDWARE CO.,
100 Whitehall Street.
y ays , ; A
T ———— ————— R A
brxng < 4 £ i
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Happy Days Y &
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R R e S eee eB 0 aiagic s e
R N NS i o T e B el T
1 '
A “Hunch” for the City Salesman
A city salesman can double the radius of his field, se:
twice as many people in half the time, and sell more goods
in one day than he formerly sold in two, through picking
up & bargain in a good used car. That is a good investment
Used roadsters and runabouts are advertised every day
in the ‘‘ Automobiles and Supplies’’ classification in the
Want Ad columns of The Georgian-American, at price
’:hat puts possession of them within easy reach.
The ‘‘Automobiles and Supplies’’ classified column of
‘this paper is a recognized ‘‘ clearing house’’ for used cars
If you want to buy or sell a used ecar, the Want Al
columns of this paper present the opportunity. Writ
an ad and leave it with
Telephones \ ,
. P ™ The Georgian-Americ
Main <IOO V ; i
A tla t m - P > Atlanta’s Want Ad Direc
2y ; Read for Profit-Use for R
. ( - e e eeeemm—"
————, v 3) —
————
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-W'EDNESIELY, OCTOBER 11. 1914
N
in the Chattahoochee River Chi
George Mathieson, however didn't o
tach any weight to this theo é ”
said he had received no r.,;,:,,.'_;hrs?l
loss of any craft. - ol