Newspaper Page Text
4
ATLANTA, GA
A gain of $50,000 in a single year
to the farmers of a county in Missis
sippi through the wiping out of the
cattle tick was told of Thursday by
Dr. J. A. Barger, inspector in charge
in Mississippi, addressing more than
100 tic K xperts in conference here.
The actual monetary benefit was
determined by tests conducted by the
tarmers of the county. The increases
were through the better physical con
dition of the cattle after the tick had
been eradicated and in the admission
to the free market of the cattle.
In another county, where the local
authorities questioned the financial
benefit of the work, Dr. Barger sald,
investigation proved the price of land
‘had risen, when the tick quarantine
was raised, desplite the fact the land
was infested by the boll weevwll.
Convinced of the value of eradica
tion campaigning, the Legislature of
Mississipp! has passed a State-wide
law providing for it. As results 4,500
additional dipping vats will be put in
commission in March and 760,000 cat
tle dipped twice a month In the arsen.
ical eolution that destroys the tick.
A wedge it being driven through
Mississipp!, after the plan of military
oung‘l'nl. and when the Gulf s
reached the tick forces in the South
will he divided. How this work is
boln(vuocnmpnnhed wae described by
Dr, .A. Clemons, a Mississipp! In
lroctor. The wedge will serve to sim-
P ltdy total destruction of the tick, he
sald, |
Practical advics as to the prapara
tion of newspaper articles dealing
with the tick was given the experts
by George . Wharton, chief of the
office of information of the Depart
ment of Agriculture and formerly of
The New York Globe. |
“Newspaper men are human. If
you can not give them certain points
they are seeking to know about soms
story, treat them ecourteously, I)nn’t‘
attempt to pull the wool over them or
act cavalierly,” was a part of the ad
vice he offered.
He went into the various phases of
newspaper writing and defined what
is news.
.
Holy T.and Film to
Be Shown at Church
Moving pictures made in the Holy
Ilnm-‘ ang depleting the life of Christ
will be shown at 8 o'clock Sunday night |
it the Central Congregational Chureh
A 8 a part of this church's .d"(‘.tlnn.‘
pleture program for the vear,
The first of the serlea was shown at
the church last Bunday and was oon
#ldered of great educational and relig
fous worth
S
Bad tmamfi 3 s,
As imexpensive Home-Made Rewm
edy—Gives Surest, Quickost
Rellet,
" Any one who tries this pleasant tast-
F, E:lnhmede cough syrup will gquick-
Understand why it Is used In more
omes in the Uniteq States and Canada
itmn any other cough remedy. The WAy
&mn hold of an obstinate cough, giv
immediate relef, will make you re
rt that dvou never tried it before. It
& truly dependable cough remedy that
should be' kept handy In every home, to
use At the first sign of a cough during
the -u‘m o‘r’ ?u time. o o
Any dr st can su you w |
onneg er“"onox (b «m’ worth). Pour
this Into a pint bottle and All the botfio
with plain granulated sugar syrup. The
tw&m is about B 4 cents and you have
- pint ‘of :ho most effective remedy
you ever
The enifit. hnh,lnlof you ‘rt from
this nt _eou lvu: will really
B"fi’.‘ you. It promptly heals the in
“:\mmmhnnu :Mt u&. the nm‘m
"o, e annoyin
throat Mnoutn rnlnn. y.n’
L e Drenchitar Pooran Ov:, Spla.
u oopin
nfil ul"fi“m'lu Asthima. e
nex s a N.Mr concentrated com
po&nd of Norvlu ne extract, combined
wi g:e::ol ‘ln h‘f:‘n:oue ‘t:e world
over heal on the mem
branes. »
To avold &I-mlntn\nt. ask for 1%
:::e‘:n o‘( n;t '"lh ;u:{ .:Ir:etlono.
u‘,u e re
sntee of muto satisfaction or m':n‘oy
promptly refundeq goes with this prep-
Aration. The Pinex Co., Fort Wayne,
Ind.—-Advertisement.
3 *ui n - h —
——
The comfort and securencss of the —-~ >
s | expectant mother is essential to the =2, %
: == ] welfare of the future chfld. In exer.”, "7,
= Jj cising caution be gulded by the experi. //7/
. ence of hundreds who have found in /7//
v “Mother's Friend” a way to eliminate se- //"N,I
vere suffering and insure your own rapid /
q recovery. It is easlly applied and its Infuehee over
Ml o] the effected ligaments 1 soothing and benefieial. Get
o et it at any druggist. Send for the free book on Mother
I M bood. Address
‘ The Bradfield Regulator Ce.,
. 209 Lamar Bidg., Atlanta, Ga.
To attract the atten
tion of thousands of
buyers and renters—
To focus their facul
ties on your Rooms,
ApartrnentkHouses—-
nothing in Atlanta is
auite as effective as
eorgian-American
Wants Ads.
The Georgian-American
Atlanta’s Want Ad Directory
Read for Profit — Use for Results
Every Boy in Last Half
Century Feels Pang in
Buffalo Bill’s Passing
By O. B, KEELER.
This was the “flash:’
“Buffalo Bill {s dead!”
A “flash” is acute news. It is
entitled to “break” all other news
on the wire. In our shop a fat
man named Tom Pinson always
yells “Flash!” when the break
comes, and then follows with the
hews. At 1:06 o'clock Wednes
day afternoon the “flash” was:
“Buffalo Bill ig dead!”
We knew the old boy was il
We knew he was dytng. We knew
he was going to die soon. You
know how Kipling plctures the
newspaner shop walting for some
body to die, half across the
world; and how used newspaper
men get to {t, and how bored. It's
all true. We didn't know if we
wanted Buffalo Bill to hang on
much longer in his last fight, or
pass comfortably and quietly. We
knew he was going to die, and I
reckon we thought we weren't
bothering much about It
But the “flagh” was a flash,
really and truly. And It hurt.
1 don’t know how the others felt
about if. Men don't talk a great
deal about such things., But that
flash about Buffalo 811 l hurt me
in & way I hadn't been hurt In a
long time. Not a worse hurt,
But a different kind of hurt. The
kind of hurt a boy feels. Just
then I was 10 years old—Jjust for
& moment.
I wonder how many men will
feel the same kind of quick, stun
ning, bewlldering and altogeth
er hopeless hurt when they ses
the gendllnu, “Buffalo Bill Is
Dead.” Some way, I think most
of them will,
Buffalo Bill was a boyhood 1401,
you know,
“Yellow Back™ Hero.
The wire carries all the stuff
about the life and times, and the
blazing career, of Colonel Willlam
F. Cody. 1 will read it, with a
good deal of attention. I don't
know a whols let about the old
scout’s real history, after all, I
didn’t hother with such things, as
a kid. 1 reckon I got my ideas,
such as they were, from paper
booklets with loud pictures on the
covers and nones Inside, and from
the gossip of other boys, perfect
1y unreliable, but spirited and full
of the o!4 klck.
We all worshiped Buffalo Rill.
There was a time when (after
reading a certaln book ecalled
“Heroes of the Plains,” I was di
vided in my allegiance. T debated
If Wild Bil Hickock wasn't as
great a hero. He had a fight with
fifteen soldiers, I remember. Heo
killed a majority of them; & large
majority: and was shot In eight
een or nineteen more or less vital
spots, and also oearved a good
deal;: and he crawled away to a
ditch and lay there a very long
time. I forget how long, but it
was an Impressive time. And the
diteh Idea was eapecially tre
mendous. I thought if I ever got
shot to pleces and these frag
ments further subdivided with
bowie knives, I surely would craw!
away to a ditch and e in it
But not long after reading this
glowing account of Wild Bill--it
may have been In the same book
~~1 came across the following an
eodote of Buffalo Bill, and my idol
Agnin was supreme on his ped
estal,
This was the anecdote:
Buffalo Bill's fame as a revolver
shot was proverblal, and one time
a fellow put up a job on him. He
’ot & revolver and had the barrel
wisted out of line o it wouldn't
shoot straight. And he bragged
about what a fine revolver it was
and got Buffalo Bill to come to his
house and try it
Old Scout Made Good.
The fellow sald they would
have a rooster for dinner, and Buf
w Bl might try the fine revol
on it, znd shoot its head off,
&8 be wan In the habit of doing.
Tho trustful scout fired at the
doomed roster. He m:xeod. He
fired again. And missed. [ sup
pose he sald something then.
After which he fired again. And
missed. The fellow snickered.
Buffalo Blil's llps were set In a
straight line, 0 he couldn't very
well say anything else. He fired
three more times in rapid suo
ceaslon, but the wretohed fowl de
clined to bite the dust.
With one splendid oath, which
can not appear in this paper of
the home, the great scout took
that traitorous revolver by the
muzzle, whirled it around his
head, threw it at the rooster—and
broke its neck,
Then he refused to eat dinner
with the fellow,
Of course, after this there was
nothing to it but Buffalo Bill for
me. And ID’Artagnan, and Bus-
Bey, and the Sleur de Marsac, and
even old Decimus SBaxon, one and
all, with a host of other idols,
failed utterly to dlsplace Buffalo
Bill from his niche, the foremost
in my little private Hall of Fame,
Why, at the World's Fair in
Chicago—l was 10; no, 11 years
old that fall--] saw many won
derful thinge. And things are |
more wonderful to a boy of 11
than to a boy of any other age, I
I think. I saw ships and whales
and Arabs and cannon and the |
Ferris wheel and a heer garden
and a Britlsh regiment and the
Btreets. of Cairo. And other
things, all very wonderful.
And 1 saw Buffalo Bill's Wid
West,
A Boy's Proudest Boast.
And 1 saw Buffalo Bill HIM
SELFP,
Oh, I've seen him since; many
times. In the Wild West and out,
But I was 11 years old then.
And all the way back to Mari
etta, Ga., on the train, after see-
Ing ®0 many wonders in the
Dream City-—~what do vou sup
pose 1 was thinking, over and
over and over?
Of course, it was of something
I would tell the boys when I got
home. That's what a kid loves
most to do, {f you remember—to
boast about something to his
mates. And this was what 1 was
going to tell them, first of all:
“l 1 saw Buffalo Bill!”
Somechow I felt exactly like that
11-year-old kid would have felt
~I know It—for just a second,
when the flash came: .
“Buffalo Bill is dead!”
Buffalo Bill Qutlives
.
Nation, Says London
(By International News Sorvioe'l.)
LLONDON, Jan. 11.—The Dalily Tel
egraph, in commenting today upon
the adventurous career of the late
Willlam F. Cody (Buffalo Bill), took
oceasion to point out the mistaken
fdea that most Englishmen hold
about the United States. It says, in
part:
“The Wild West exists no more. It
has been swallowed up ln the United
States of which we talk so glibly, but
of which not one Englishman In A
thousand has any conception. The
States form, In fact, not a nation, but
a group of nations, each one molded
by a separate and distinet experience.
Buffalo Bill was an American first
and last, and all through his life, but
the America of his day has already
passed.”
Body of Cot. Cod
yT Lie i Cy itol
Lo Lie in Capito
(B International News Service.)
DENVER, Jan. 11.—The body of
Col. Willlam F. Cody (Buffalo BIll),
will e In state at the Capitol here
for four hours Sunday and then be
placed In a vault with appropriate
lservlcu. Burial will not take Jflu‘e
until next anring, when the body of
one of America's most pleturesque
characters will be placed in a tomb
hewn from the rock at the top of
Lookout Mountaln, near here. Already
plans are being made for a suitable
mnnumu\lt.
In actordance with the wishes of
the veteran scout and plainsman, all
the mocleties to which he belonged
will have a part in his funeral serv
ices which will be conducted by the
Denver Lodge of Hiks.
.e A —— —
Wilson Forced to
Notice ‘Sentinels’
(.X International News Service.) I
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.--The
woman suffrage “silent sentinels” who
are picketing the White House to
day succeeded in forcing President
Wilson to look at the banners they
carry. I
They were not on duty early enough
to see the President and Mrs, Wilkon |
leave for their morning's golfing. but
when the White House car flashed
by them upon its return they stood
At military attention and the Presi
dent was seen to smilé. About the
same time the usual police guards
at all gates to the executive mansion
were doubled,
e ettt |
With Peace Planned
(By International News Service.)
LONDON, Jan. 11— An internation.
Al conference of neutrals may be held
simultanecusly with the peace par
ley at the end of the war, A Stock.
{ holm dispateh, printed in the Morn
ling Post today, says that Norway,
| Sweden and Denmark have sent notes
to Holland, Spain and Switserland
suggesting A conference to discuss
| the rights of peutral powers when the
war ends
The United States was not men.
tloned in the telegram, dut It is
taken as a foregone conelusion in
most eireles that America will be
represented In the neutral conference
if not in the actual peace parley,
Russians Deeply Dent
Prince Leopold's Line
PETROGRAD. Jan. 11.-<Despite
strong counter attacks by the Qer.
mans, the Russians continug to make
headway In thelr offensive along the
northern end of the western front.
The fighting s veing carried out
over stretches of frosen swamp land.
along the Dvina River and in some
| places ip snow drifts six to ten feet
| deep,
| Prines Leopold's line has been deep
ly dented west of Riga, where the
’{unsn'w have advanced between one
and two miles. Powerful blows are
being struck by the Russians toward
the German base of Mitau and it 1
possible that this s the Immediate
objective of the Russian commander,
THE ATLANTA GUGEUKGILAN
!
(By International News Service.)
LONDON, Jan. 11.—~The German
allles on the western end of the
Macedonian front are being rein-
Iforc««d, says a dispatch today from
Serbian headquarters.
Conslderable significance s at
tached to this news. The troops have
levmently been transported from the
'Roumanian theater of war and they
‘have been placed opposite Thessaly.
Ilt has been reported for some time
that the Teutonic allles would open
a drive on the western end of the
Macedonian line and that this might
prove the signal for Greece's en
trance into the war. It was for that
reason that the Allles demanded the
removal of the Greek troops from
Thessaly.
Among the reinforcementa is a
Bulgarian regiment that has been
operating in Dobrudja, it is salid,
and an Austro-Hungarian regiment
that has been used in.Wallachia by
Von Mackensen,
The German allies are preparing
for an active campaign in the Bal«
kang and the dewloyments of the
last few days indicate that this
theater of war is soon to see gigantic
enterprises under way. According to
reliable reports the Entente Powers
agreed at the Rome council to make
a drive against the Austro-German-
Bulgar-Turk armies in Macedonia in
an effort to break through and cut
off communication between the Cen
tral Powers and Turkey.
Plan to Crush Turkey.
AMSTERDAM, Jan. 11.—~Dis
patches from Berlin today quote
leading German military experts as
predicting a big Allled drive in the
Balkans and against Turkey. These
critics hold the opinlon that the En
tente Powers have come to regard
Turkey as the weakest of the Ger
man allles and that a oconcentrated
effort ig to be made to erush her,
' . .
Russians Widening |
Line ensive
ines of Off
(By International News Service.)
BERLIN (by wircless via Sayville),
Jan. 11.-—~The Russian offensive along
the northern end of the eastern front
is still in full swing. The War Oflice
announced today that the Russians
delivered both day and night attacks
at several polints between Riga and
Smorgenjs, after strong artillery
preparation. All were repulsed.
The official report indicates that
the Russians are widening the Une
over which they are carrying out
their offonsive.
The capture of important Russo-
Roumanian positions, along with
more than 800 prisoners and six ma
chine guns, was reported in the offi
clal statement on Roumanian opera
tions. In the mountainous region of
Moldavia the Austro-Germans carried
several points of support. North of
the Deitoz road the Teuton =zallies
stormed fortified mountains, captur
ing them in hand-to-hand fighting.
Russo-Roumanian counter attacks
elsewhere on the front were repulsed.
Successful patrol engagements
were carried out by German and Rul
garian forces on the Struma river
front in Macedon!a.
The repulse of British attacks north
and south of Ypres, in West Flan
ders, was reported It was admit
ted that a German trench section near
Beaumont has bene lost to the Allles.
There has been violent fighting with
artillery and mines near Ypres, Wy
tischaete, on the Ancre and Somme
Rivers and on bhoth sides of the
Meuse (Verdun front).
I Two British captive balloons were
‘lhol down,
|
Conference Called
. .
~ War Turning Point
(By International News Service.)
LONDON, Jan. 11.—The Allled
Council of War in Rome is called the
“turning point” by the London Times
today. In an editorial commenting
‘upon the conference, The Times says:
“The conference just concluded in
'Rome may well prove one of the turn
ing points in the war. More than one
vital declsion was reached. The road
to victory, though it may be long, is
now running straight to the appoint.
ed end,
“The British delegates regard the
conference as the most satisfactory of
I!ha series of allled war councils, It
marked an advange in converting the
theory of a common front into a
reality.”
War and Victory Only
Aims of Russ Premier
;..,,Zr'"'"""""" News Service.)
'TROGRAD, Jan. 11.—The po
ltieal crisis of the last two months
has taken a new turn with the resig
nation of Alex Trepoft fror the pre
miership and of Count Ignatieff, Min.
Ister of Publie Instruction. and the
Appointment of a new Premier,
The tide has shifted and is running
strongly Inthe reverse direction. Prince
'uouulnr. who succeeded Trepoff, ia a
| member of the extreme conservative
Eroup, who alwavs manifested the
strongest reactionary principles, and
A 8 & member of the imperial coun
cil has always shown little sympathy
Sam & Ed—Ed Gets It By Geo. Williams
Ras -1 '
- . ON SaLw Nlll
—y & > ."9
~ U AN
o - (PA
._ 't .)— h"d J
AR | o A =
for the progressive tendencies of the
new regime.
The significance of this latest
change in the ministry can best be
judged by the following sentiments
expressed by Prince Golitzine in an
interview after his appointment:
“I have not yet had time to formu
late a program, but my watchword
will be ‘Everything for war, every
thing for victory.’
’ “Being occupied with this aim, we
can not think of reforms in the in
‘terior. After victory we can begin
the reorganization of our internal
life.”
The new Premier said he was a
firm believer in the responsibility of
ministers only to the will of the Em
peror and that in this principle the
Government must be united. He as
serted:
- “This, however, does not exclude
the executive chambers from taking
an interest in the affairs of govern-
Iment. There is no reason to belleve
‘that the work of these chambers will
be postponed beyond the date already
}set for reconvening.
The Georgia Rallroad Commission
‘Thursday assigned the petitions of
Ithe Georgia carriers for a revision of
Idemumlo rates for a hearing on
February 13.
The graduated scale for demurrage
charges was put into effect on inter
state commerce January 1 by order
of the Interstate Commerce Commis
sion. It allows charges of $1 for the
first day, $2 for the second, $3 for the
third and $5 for each succeeding day
cars are held beyond the limit. The
scale replaced the $1 flat rate.
The carriers asked the Georgla
Commission to adopt this scale on in
trastate traffic. The commiesion took
the position that it was an experi
ment, being effective only until May 1,
and because of other matters pending
could not be taken up before that
time,
The continuance granted in the in
trastate freight rate case gave the'
commission an opportunity to take up
the demurrage petition. At the same
time the petition of Swift & Co., of
Atlanta, for the same scale will be
taken up. The commission also will
consider making the demurrage scale
reciprocal as to the raillroads, under
all reciprocal demurrage rules of the
commission.
Williams' Dispute
Over Fine Settled
Judge Ben Hill, in the Criminal Court,
ThursdA{ settled a dls&xte between for.
mer Bolieitor Eb T. illiams and his
former assistant, Marcus P. McWhorter,
s to the disposition of a $760 fine paid
into the Solicitor's office, by directing
that the Rercs-nulo of the fine due the
Su'perku- Jourt Clerk and the Sheriff be
pald. He ordered the former Sollcitor
to ?A}' these fees out of any surplus
funds that might have accrued during
his term as Solicitor, and that, if there
were no such funds, that the sum be
paid by McWhorter out of the $750 fine.
The full amount of this fine, it was
shown, had been apj\lled to & debt owed
by Mr. Williams to Judge Hamilton Mc.
‘{'hnrur, as had Dbeen agread by the
former Solicitor,
. .
British Take 1,600
§ly International News Service.)
LONDON, Jan. 11.—The British
have renewed thelr attacks against
the Turks east of the Suez Canal and
the War OfMice announced today the
capture of a strong Turkish position
near El Arish, along with 1,600 pris
oners. The Turks lost 600 men In
killead and wounded, the official re
port adds,
Six lines of Turkish trenches and
three redoubts were stormed by the
British,
The village of Shalal was captured
by the British and destroyed.
e —————————————————
ADVERTISEMENT.
- . |
Washing Won't Rid
|
’ The only sure way to met rid of
dandruff is to dissolve 1t: then you
Idfl-trny it entirely. To do this, get
about four ounces of ordinary liquid
arvon; apply it at night when retir
ing: use enough to moisten the scalp
and rub it in gently with the finger
tips.
Do this tonight, and by morning
most, If not ull, of your dandruft will
Le gone, and three or four more ap
plieations will completely dissolve and
entirely destroy every single sign and
trace of it, no matter how much dan
druff you may have,
You will find, tgo, that all fohing
and digging of the scalp will stop at
once, and vour halr will ba fufty, lus.
lu~mu. glosey, sllky and soft. and look
and feel a hundred times better
I You can get liguld arvon at any
drug store. It is inexpensive and
never falls to do the work.—Adver.
tisement.»
’ (By International News Service.)
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 11.—The|
first arrest in the murder case of
Grace Roberts, dashing model, myste-l
riously murdered in her luxurious
apartments December 29, is expectedl
today. A second and more {mportant
arrest will follow closely upon the
arrest of a material witness, accord
ing to the Coroner's office. Detectives
from the Coroner’s office have worked
independently of the police depart
ment and have gathered much evi
dence but refuse to disclose their the
ories as to the crime because ‘“the
time is not yet ripe.”
Meanwhile, Captain of Detectives
Tate has announced he has more
evidence to sustain his theory that
Grace Roberts was killed by Bernard |
W. Lewis, Pittsburger, who killed
himself when about to be urrested.l
District Attorney Rotan says his the-I
ory that wounds on Lewis’ hands
were caused by Grace Roberts’ teeth
has been substantiated by excuses
made by Lewis for wounds to the
Misses Kyle, with whom he spent
much time while in Philadelphia. ‘
T |
: I
Saw Man Flee; Sure I
He Was Not Lewis
(By International News Service.)
CLEVELAND, Jan. 11.—That the
man saw leaving a window of the
Wilton Apartment; In Phila_delphla‘
on the night of December 29 was not
Bernard 'W. Lewis, the Pittsburger,
who committed suicide when about
to be arrested in connection with the
murder of Grace Roberts, was the
positive statement today of B. a.
Brown, a traveling salesman, of this
city.
In a voluntary statement Brown
said he and a friend saw a man leav
ing the Wilton Apartments about
10:30 p. m, on the night of Decem
ber 29. The body of the murdered
model was found in the apartments
the next morning. After examining
& photograph and getting his deserip
tion from a close friend who came
here from Pittsburg to investigate his
story, Brown declared the man he saw
was not Lewis.
Vienna I Indignant
Over the Expulsion
(By International News Service.)
VI;}NNA, Jan. 11.—Indignation was
expressed here today over the expul
sion of Prelate Knight von Gerlach, a
private chamberlain to Pope Benedict,
‘from Italy. Mgr. Gerlach is an Aus.
trian by birth, and his name was men
tloned in connection with an Itallan
plot which resulted in the destruction
of two Itallan battleships. Mgr. Ger.-
lach went to Lugano, Switzerland,
from Rome, but it is understood he
Is coming to Vienna.
A dispatch from Rome stated that
more than 40 persons had been ar
rested in connection with the conspir
ary to destroy battleships. Among
the prisoners, it was stated, was Sig
nor Ambrogettl, who claimed to be
financial agent of Mgr. Gerlach.
et ee——————
Nobody Can Tell When You
Darken Gray, Faded Hair
With Sage Tea.
Grandmother kept her halr beauti.
fully darkened, glossy and atiractive
with a brew of Sage Tea and Sul.
phur. Whenever her hair took on
that dull, faded or streaked appear
ance, this simple mixture was ap
plied with wonderful effect. By ask.
ing at any drug store for “Wyeth's
Sage and Sulphur Compound.” you
will get a large bottle of this old.
itime recipe, improved by the addi
tion of other Ingredients, all ready
to use, for about 50 cents This
simple mixture can be depended
upon to restore natural color and
beauty to the hailr
A well-known downtown adruggist
says overybody uses Wyeth's Sage
and Sulphur Compound now because
it darkens so naturally and evenly
that nobody can tell it has been ADe
plied—it's so easy to use, too You
simply dJampen a comb or soft brush
and draw It through your halr, tak.
Ing one wtrand at a time. By morn.
ing the gray hair disappears; after
another application or two, it Is re.
stored to its natural color and looks
gloasy, soft and beautiful, This
preparation is a delightful toflet
requisite. It 18 not Intended for the
cure, mitigation or prevention of
I disense
s 9
Dr, Wright Talks on
g Satan’
rogram of Satan
Rev. Frank H. Wright's sermon on
“The Program of Satan,” Wednesday
evening, at North Avenue Presbyte
rian Church, attracted a large crowd.
Interest in these meetings seems to
be growing rapidly.
Mr. Wright's talk at the noon
meeting Wednesday dwelt upon the
difference in the prayer of the Phari
sec and the Publican, and was one
of the best he has yet delivered. At
both services both he and Mr. Young
sang delightfully.
His subject Friday night is “The
Program of God,” and is looked for
ward to with much interest. .
€ Our exclusive connections with the
largest envelope mills warrant the |
statement that we can serve your
envelope requirements satisfactorily. |
(| Sales to our Atlanta customers aver- |
age about one million envelopes month
ly. When you see our samples and I
prices you will understand why we do
such a large envelope business.
¢ Business men who appreciate sery
ice and quality should phone or write
us, and our Mr. J. B. Richards, Jr., an
envelope expert, will call.
Webb & Vary Co.
Envelope Specialists, Printers
Engravers, Loose-Leaf Makers
381, W. Alabama St. Both Phones.
i e T ‘7‘?;“'—"‘ *——‘*"\\ [{
= =" -j.r;;r?:;
¥y b
L AR
Why Not
Start A Bank Account? |}
A SAVINGS ACCOUNT
where many of your dollars that
I could be reseued from thought
| less aml needless exnenditnre
‘ may be deposited and set to
I ' work earning interest for you! ;
Make The Start At Once At This Bank
i} Georgia Savings Bank & Trust Co,
i i
A ———————————————————————————— e ————
P
r g
j( A
B Al
AR
Kk ()
i\
II \
P&H.P
—Whet cfees Ghis stopd s g
/l/e//, M the /ast InShsr's
7€ meors“locgh e everything/
C:“ : lan has qoMe Jo
me ::;3 ok the eanth* jo
Fet geother-For vyou- the ,
worlds’ best hormer. g #reres
3 o/l page E'o/ V€ for you erery 22
The Geo rQ ian.
“Quict, Bill, the CGrymye Rage ~
THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1917
SNOW IN SOUTH CAROLINA,
CHESTER, 8. C. Jan. 11.—Thiy
section is in the grip of the first rea)
snowstorm of the season. The ground
is frozen.
m
\
Allen’'s Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powder to ba
shaken into the shoes and sprinkled into the foot
bath. It relieves painful, swollen, smarting feet and
takes the stinz out of corns and bumions. Nothin,
gives such quick and permanent relief for s\\‘r‘nflngk
callous, tired, aching feet us Allen's Foot-kase nh;
standard remedy for 28 years. Sold by druggists
e;zerywlw;yfi l‘.’.&-. J‘Alway;nlkl‘si it to break in new
shoes. al_package FREE. Add len §
Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y. T M,
ettt e
“— N——
Wil Be Revealed Next Week.
Anaemic, Bloodless, Thin Peo
ple Watch for it.