Newspaper Page Text
I'HURSDAY, CCTOBER 12, 1916,
|
Stationery dealers and manufactur
rs from all over America Thursday
were preparing to receive a new sen=-
sation, the memory of which pl'O!fl'i
ises to remain to cheer their declin
ing years. They were to attend their
first Georgia barbecue, with Bruns
wick stew on the side. 1t was sched
uled for the Druid Hills Golf Club
T'hursday afternoon, and for the sur
vivors a golf tournament was ar
ranged. After that the visitors would
be at liberty to catch trains for their
nomes,
Charles N. Bellman, of Toledo, was
complimented Wednesday afternoon
by being re-elected president of the
association. He is the first president
te hold two terms. W, D. Bevin, New
York, was elected first vice president;
D. H. Jonas, New York, second vice
president, and H. W. Rogers, New
York, third vice president. Harry
Prizer, Philadelphia, was re-elected
treasurer, and Mortimer W. Byers,
New York, kept his secretaryship.
Ivan E. Allen, Atlanta, was elected
auditor. Chicago was chosen for the
next convention.
A banquet was given Wednesday
evening at the Capital Clty Club, with
Ivan E. Allen, president of the At
lanta Stationers’ Club, as toastmas
ter. Addresses were delivered by ex-
Governor John M. Slaton and several
convention visitors.
The last business session was held
Wednesday afternoon.
.
Eavesdropper Gives
.
Clew to Big Robbery
By International News Servile.)
CHICAGO, Oct. 12—Trapped by the
same telephone which they are said to
have used in commiting a $1,200 robbery
n a downtown hotel, Mr., and Mrs.
Frank L. Jones are under arrest here
wnd officers today are on their way to
{ansas City to get Frank House, ar
ested there
Monday a woman telephoned the ho
tel that a clerk in the ticket office was
and a substitute would.be sent to
take his place. A few minutes later a
man, identified as Jones, appeared and
was handed a cash box containing
21,200, Apparently there was no clue
ntil a woman whose telephone is on
the same party line with the Jones' tele-
Jhone, told the police she had been
eavesdropping on the line and heard
Mrs. Jones call up the hotel
Makes Record Run on
Speci ick Wife
pecial to Sick Wis
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, Oct. 12.—Jacob M. Dick
nson. former secretary of war, early
today reached the bedside of his wife,
who 1 believed to be dving, after a rec
ord-breaking run from Memphis, in
which his special train covered 533
miles In 10 hours and 50 minutes, four
hours less than the regular running
siwa Mra Dickinson was taken il
Atlanta Now Has a Ten Million Dollar Bank
UM T ATYT S P
WD VA [ acy
SANA] TS 9 F !
"‘"'&“‘V \“§'l i 20
CARARS < lUL INA NN
Thursday and Friday.
G!ORGIAN-—"(zlunn the Huntress."
CRITERION~—BessIe Barriscal in
“Plain Jane." L
PIEDMONT—Five-reel feature; Mutt
and Jeff;" Traveiog,
STRAND—Thursday, Nance O'Neil, In
“The Iron Woman;' Friday, Cleo Madl
son, in “The Chalice of Sorrow."
VAUDETTE-—Pletro; Thursday, Lu
cile Lee Stewart, in "His Wife's Good
Name:" Friday, Edith Story, in “The
Tarantula."”
VICTORIA — Thursday, Edmund
Breese, in “The Weakness of Strength;"
F‘rlgny, Robert Warwick, in “Friday, the
13th."”
ALAMO NO. 2-Vivian Martin, in
“Her Father's Son."
ALPHA—Thursday, ‘“Peter the Haer
mit:;" “Rival Artists;" “The Raiders:"”
Friday, ‘‘The Big Brother;"” *“She Who
Last Laughs."
SAVOY—Thursday, "“Stronger Than a
Woman's Will;" “Somewhere on the
Battlefield;” Friday, ‘‘Money to Burn:"
“The White Man's Law;” *“The Bat
tered Bridegroom.”
Atlanta Camp U.C. V.
; :
‘ .
~ To Hold Memorial
Veterans of Atlanta Camp, U. C. V.,
will hold memorial services at the Cen
tral Presbyterian Church next Sunday
evening at 8 o'clock. Relatives of de
ceased mebers, the Ladies’ Memorial
Assoelation and the Daughters and Sons
‘of the Confederacy will take part,
_. Veterans of the camp who died in the
last ye:{ were: James W. Morrow,
George W. Hoillday, C. C. McGehee, Dr.
A FF McGarrity, J. T. Brown, George
Winship, Harry Krouse, Henry Jen
‘nings, Richard H. Milledge, Augustus
lh Holbrook.
i e ——————
Atlanta Law School
‘l
- Seniors Honor Long
E A. W. Long, student, Thursday be
| gan his administration as president of
the senior class of the Atlanta Law
School, with 8. B, Wallace as vice
lpreuldem. Other officers elected at the
lclass meeting Wednesday night were
| S. T. Reeves, secretary-trasurr; Roy M
ißrown, pot; C. J. Sheehan, historian:
| J. Coy Plerce, chaplain, and G. D. Rowe,
press representative.
" The seniors pledged themselves to
work for the good of the school and
its students. .
a e e—————
iFirst Football Game
- In Waycross Monday
I WAYCROSS, Oct, 12.—Next Monday
the first football game of the season will
’he played at Waycross between the
' Piedmont Institute and Second District
- Agricultural College teams. The Tifton
' boys have always made splendid records
in football, and while the Piedmont
eleven so far this season has not won,
'the boys have shown that they are game
fighters and will no doubt make the con
test here next Monday interesting. The
schedule for Piledmont has not been
' completed, but under the tenative one
'mapped out recently Waycross will have
Ilhe Thanksgiving game.
'NOTRE DAME PLAYERS OUT
| NOTRE DAME, IND.,, Oct. 12.—Cap
| tain Cofall, Bachmann, Rydzewski and
| Fitzpatrick are out of the Notre Dame
| line-up for several days with injuries.
| Coach Harper is shifting the entire line
up in order to make the substitutes fit
in where they will do the most good
against the Haskell Indians Saturday.
Commercial Atlanta has taken another
long step forward. She has now a bank
with Ten Million Dollars on deposit.
Every citizen who has an interest in the
growth of Atlanta will feel a pardonable
pride in this fact because it puts a local in
stitution on the financial map in a more
emphatic and distinguished way than ever
before.
Speaking for ourselves, we are grateful
for the confidence and co-operation which
have made possible the appended statement.
Fourth National Bank
By R. B. SMITH,
Staf#f Correspondent of International
News Service.
PIKESVILLE, KY, Oct. 13—
Charles Evans Hughes, the Republi
can presidential nominee, inxaded the |
“feud and moonshine belt” of l\’enA!
tucky today It was the task of the |
candidate to throw so much enthu
stasm into 10,000 normally nnnvn(lnx]
mountaineers that they would go to
the polls on election day. This dis
trict is very strongly Republican, but
political leaders complain that !he_\"
can rarely get the mountaineers to o |
to the trouble of voting. |
Mr. Hughes is trying to stir them |
up with “new slavery” talk ‘and allu- |
'sions to “false prosperity,” “govern
ment by haldup” and “American
rights.”
A big barbecue was held In Pikes
ville, 4,000 pounds of beef being
roasted.
The candidate’s voice is beginning
to weaken under the strain, and he
was compelled to abandon his plan
of not making rear platform talks.
There were six speeches in program
today, the last to be made at a big
Republican rally in Louisville to
night.
HOSPITAL COMMITTEE MEETS.
The woman's committee of the Geor
gia Baptist Hospital will hold its regu
lar meeting Friday at the Hospital cn
Luckie street. Business of Importance
will come up and all are urged to be
present
| ADVERTISEMENT.
A St. Louis Man Broke Himself of
Smoking Cigarettes and Chewing
by a Simple Home Remedy.
Harry Riska, a well-known resi
dent living at 2016 S. 11th St broke
himself of the cigarette habit and
chewing with a simple recipe that he
;mhmd at home. In reply to the ques
tion as to what he used, he made the
following statement: “I used a sim
ple recipe ®which I mixed at home
|and which is as follows: To 8 ozs. of
‘water add 20 grains of Muriate of
iAmmonla, a small box of Varlex
Compound and 10 grs. of Pepsin. 1
took a teasfoonful three times a
day. Any druggist can mix it for
vou at very little cost.
1 “This recipe can be taken yourself
or.given secretly to another in cof
lfee,'tea or milk, or in food, as it has
'no taste, color or smell and is per
fectly harmless.”—Advertisement.
s |
(By International News Service.)
WINNIPEG, MANITOBA, Oct, 12.—1
Christian leden, who has spent the
last three years in Northern Canada
under the patronage of the King of
Norway, for the purpose of studying
the habits, customs, folklore and lan
guage of the Eskimos, has arrived
here He brought with him a large
collection of valuable specimens for
‘the museum at Chrintiania
Most of the time he was compelled
to live on salmon, trout and the flesh
of seals, Leden said:
| “All Eskimos, wherever found,
speak the same language,” he said.
“They have a primitive form of re
ligion based upon peace, but when
;!H-(r(-n(ed they will ight. They told
me that ill-treatment led them to kill
Street and Radford, the New York
i?\x-lnrors. They said they hated Street
but liked Radford for hxgv social abil
ity It was told Street as attacked
}fluddenl_v and Radford was killed only
when he went to his eompanion’s
'ga;,\- ‘nee,
Used Resinol—Soon Entirely Cured.
Mar, 10.—“1 had itching eczema for
almost four years. My shoulders, neck,
arms and just below the knees were af
fected. It was simply a contsant Itch
ing, burning, smarting sensation. The
part below my knees was frightful. It
would itch so, and with the least
seratching become so sore I could hard
ly stand it to bend them. I could not
possibly sit down because I would nat
urally have to bend my knees, and that
T could not do. I could hardly do my
‘housework. I had tried different soaps,
ointments, salves, liniments, etc., all too
numerous to mention—all to no avail
At last I learned of Resinol Ointment
and Resinol Soap and used them accord
ing to directions. That night was the
'first time in many that I slept In psace,
‘and in a short time I was entirely
cured.” (Signed) Mrs, G. C. Sllsby, Box
130. Rockville, N. Y.
} All druggists sell Resinol Ointment
and Resinol Soap. For samples free
‘w‘rno to Dept. 5-8, Resinol, Baltimore.—
' Advertisement.
LbRNTR SAR R S e S
ISR daaadd
IR l
“ AT ALL
9 L Sy
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
Begt Shot in Georgia
JACKSONVILLE, Oct. 12.-The first
shot of the 1916 national rifle tourna
ment was fired here yesterday under the
most favorable conditions. The first
events were those of the Southern Rifle
Association, which will be followed by
contests of the national assoclation,
‘which are curtain raisers for the nation
al matches proper. |
Five events on the Southern pmgnm‘
were concluded )'ehterdag. The first
event, the rapid-fire match, was won by
First Lieutenant Walter Meyers, First
Jowa Infantry, score, 90 out of a possi-.
ble 100. Private E. E. Waters, First
Mlnlulprl Infantry, won the 600-yard
match with a score of 97 out of a pos
sible 100, while A. N. Dow, Jacksonville
Civilian Club, secured the 1,000-yard
match with a score of 91 out of a pos
‘sible 100
" The Graves skirmish match went to
Private C. A. Gould, U, 8. marine corps,
who scored 96 points. As a result of
‘the day’'s shooting, First Sergeant
Thomas l. Starnes, second u}‘uudron,
Georgla cavalry, was declared the indi
\\'hluul Hnuthsrn champion rifie shot, his
aggregate score in the rapid fire, 600 and
1,000-yard matches, being 372 out of &
| possible 300
A hl:h wind blowing across the range
‘kep! own the T'ores. The Southern
team matches will be shot today. Ad
vices have been received here that
Alaska is sending a team of civilians to
compete in the national team match.
“The Natural & Cakes, pies, pastry —the very names
Shortening’’ § tempt the appetite. And when they are
¥ _shortened with Cottolene/the natural flavor
g and healthful goodness become even more
£ tempting.
('—‘j Cottolene blends so perfectly with the
e T ] flour and other ingredients that the results
| | are most gratifying.
! W/afl 3 Your grocer will supply Cotwlsns in large of g
‘| A el i small pails. . Order it today.
oA= -a. ““Cattolene makes
P| W e
'#*r" R A
.________._._.__._.___4___._.____..__._—_________l___—
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Prestige Is Preci
restige Is "recious
e
Because the Davis & Freeman shop contains only the best and
the really “correct” and artistic, it has achieved a precious
prestige
The name on the package (in which the bride’s Gift is caretully
packed) vouches at once for your good taste and discernment.
’ F
m*xwmg* lffi;}} muuwgsfirfrusx CAANLLA D UAAAL
STATEMENT
At the Close of Business October 9, 1916
RESOURCES :
Yaoans afid DHBOOUNLE . o.v o v wins vi wimm bv v v $7,077,287.73
Overdeaßlll ... i o vvi et sile an v s ke e 4,139.58
U.S. Bonds and Premium .«« o s o osio olom o oo 763,475.00
Stocksand Bonas . . .. ~ .. Pv e v e i v 197,408.22
Fourth National Bank Building . «. « ¢ ¢ ¢« 0 ¢ ¢ ¢ o ¢ 625,000.00
Other Raal- Estate Ownoed . . .. coei v ia die simp ainis 9,252.99
Customers’ Guarantees—
Account lettersof Credit . .. cs:. Fvinis vs s vn s 4,369.10
CASH— ;
IS Vst o e e e S TR
Die from Banks . ...o...occmonie. o SISO
Due from U. B. Troasurer .5...iii.a 30,000.00— 3,893,504.10
$12,574,436.72
LIARILITIES :
Capital Stock ..«.iev vsvoo e o owa oo o $ 600,000.00
Surplus and Undivided Profits .... .. ... oo oo n 1,101,884.29
Resetvefor Interest . . o o« vin oo homs % 5 d M o Nis 13,776.22
Ciratil@Uißl o .. .o hie sWi bni o v 600,000.00
Deposilß, . i )oo svt oin migiei gN e SR RVe 10,254,407.11
Contingent Liability—
Account Letters of Credit . . .. ¢ ¢ oo o v v o v "~ 4,369.10
$12,574,436.72
\
|
\
——
(By International News Sorvice.)
SAN FRANCISCO, Oect. 12.—-A Vig
orous complaint about the way the
aviation section of the army is being
handled has just come to San Fran
cisco in a letter from Alan R. Haw
ley, president of the Aero Club of
America. Hawley describes what he
terms “a period of incredibly de
structive attitude on the part of those
in charge of upbuilding our aerial de
fense, a period during which this an
tagonistic attitude has destroyed the
work of two years.”
The conditions, he said, are “dis
gusting” and “{ncredible.”
“The evidence shows,” sald Hawley,
“that the aviation section des not
want an increase of army aviators,
does not want the National Guard to
have training in aviation and has not
carried out the plans to organize the
aerial reserve corps authorized last
July by President Wilson."
. .
Kappa Sigma Alumni
Topnviteg Fraternity
" Purther lans for inviting the na
tional Kappa Sigma Fraternity to
Atlanta next year will be made
T e
R T
e .
‘
e C asting
a Line
For the
best there is—
' is steering your
course straight to
Muse’
use s
The MUSE line is always fresh; new and smart in
MEN'’S WEAR—the dignified substantial styles, with
quality to match. g
It’s verging close to winter, and you'll be ready to
start on a new tack—get new wind in your sails. The
sure aids are—
—A Muse Suit
Everthi —A Muse Overcoal
boi o —A Muse Hat
gt Muse Sh
Muse’s use Unoes
N . Muse Shirts
“First and Neckwear
Water!””
Geo. Muse Clothlng Co.
3.6-7 Whitehall.
—ATLANTA, GA.
Thursdav evening at the monthly
luncheon of the Atlanta alumnl asso~
ciation at the Hotel Ansley.
PRESCRIDPTIONS
Your Doctor Knows
We fill them just
as he orders them
Phone
" Cone's §¥
. “%end for and 9% .
3