Newspaper Page Text
6
rifi:——. o— e A eeße eo e e
Lealing Atlantans representing many
§ Industries pledged their ardent support
to the Salvation Army's financial cam
paign at a get-together meeting held
5 &t the Chamber of Commerce Tuesday
§ &fternoon. The drive is to last from
§May 19 to May 26 and Atlanta's quota
L I 8 §IOO,OOO 1
‘, Samuel C. Dobbs, president of the
Chamber of Commerce, stated the or- |
Bxanizax.m would be with the Salvation
S Army heart and soul in the campaign,
innd would do everything possible to |
Sald. He paid a tribule to the work done
by the Salvation Army overseas amll
asserted that the soldier is nearer the |
heart of the genegal public than anyone
plge these daps, ¥He added |
“We have t newspapers in this
eity, and in spitg of the fact that | am
continually fighteg with them, | want
810 say this: that the three papers JYA"
the greatest three papers in this coun
S Lry to go the lmit for worthy causes. |
P s
§ dney aimost turn over their pages and
glf the necessity demands it, will print
# from cover to cover the appeal of an
organization whigh is raising funds for
A worthy cause.'
G. E. Watts stated that he has seen
she work of the Salvation Army under
30 flage and there is nothing too good
for the organization. He predicted that
# the South will line up solidly behind the
, campaign
David W. Webb told of a tribute to
t the Salvation Army paid by his 17 year
2 oold brother, who was wounded in the
S battle of Chateau Thierry Every letter
¢ received from the boy told of the great
wWork of the Salvation Army overseas
Brigadier A. W. Crawford announced
the campaign would mark the end of
% the tambourine girls, as the money re
L celved will broaden the fleld of work
" and give more time for relief uplift en
" deavors,
Other speakers wers Harry Her
mance, W. G. Bryan, A. O. Blalock, D
¥ M:("atrhm',r;’. ¥. Pomeroy, Miss
Rheba Crawford, V., Y Clark, L. D.
Wade and L, A f‘rwvflfir
(Guaranteed
£7 to 12 values, being Factory
Seconds from a line of famous
shoes, _,/
Patent, Black Kid, Mat
Kid, Brown Kid, White
Kid and Tan Calf. On
special sale, for—
s 1.95
\\’:
,’ e, B\ SO Both French and Military
% A heels. Pumps, Oxfords
and Colonials. All sizes
in the lot. We have YOUR
gize in a beautiful styl.e
(The White Canvas on sale for $3.95.)
Downstairs Shoe Department.
T 7
¢/
F /7 £/
D)) [,
/L ciße,
£/ ~ SHOR DEPARTMEN /
02-54-56 Whitehall Street.
Calomel Loses You a Day’s Work!
Take Dodson's Liver Tone Instead
Read my guarantee! If bilious, constipated or head
achy you need not take nasty, sickening, danger
ous calomel to get straightened up.
. Every druggist in town-—your drug
g and everybody's druggist—has
§ hoticed a great falling off in the sale
©of calomel. They all give the same
" reason. Dodson's Liver Tone is tak
% its place.
§ “Calome! is dangerous and people
know it. while Dodson's Liver Tone 1s
¥ perfectly safe and gives better re
i gults, ' said a prominent loeal drug
£ gist. Dodson’s Liver Tone is per
%"7, onally guaranteed by every druggist
iwho sells it. Get a large bottle
sand if it fails to give easy re
% Hel in every case of liver sluggish
A Horse, ora Cow or a Wagon for
§a]e? Use the quickest means at
vour command—a Want Ad in the
“Horses, Cattle, Vehicles” eolumn of
The Georgian and American. It isthe
short-cut to satisfactory stock sales of
every kind.
The Georgian and American
Atlanta’s Want Ad Directory
Read for Profit—Use for Results
THE ATLANTA GRORGIAN, @3 & A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes © o & ' WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23,.1919,
| |
i
City detectives believe they took a
Jong step toward solving the mystery
of the disappearance of thousands of
dollgrs’ worth of freight from rail
road cars in Atlanta yvards when they
raided a house at No. 70 Markham
street Wednesday morning In the
house they found more than SI,OOO
worth of loot Three negroes have
been arrested on suspicion,
The property recovered incinde two
trunks filled with handsome gowns
and three sultcases of silk dresses,
opera cloaks and other wearing ap
parel of great value. Some of it has
| been identified as having been smlvn‘
from the Georgia Raflroad. |
The negroes arrested were Hnwurd}
Willis, who lives at the house raided; |
Matting McCarding, of No. 52 IMvmi
strect, and Leroy Smith, of No, 49|
Davis street Detective Sergeant
Waggoner and Lieutenant Ralph Ben
nett, of the Provost Guards, conduct
ed the raid.
v * .
Combine Memorial Day
.
And Loan Drive Program
DUBILIN, April 23e-A combination
Memorial Day program and Victory
Loan rally will be held at Dublin on|
Saturday, April 26, on the High School|
campus In addition to these, a l‘;l[:-'
tured German tank is to reach here ear
lv in the morning and parade the
streets in the interest of the loan drive
J. G. Patton, Jr, formerly a lieuten
ant In the army etationed at Camp
Wheeler for several months, will make
the Memorial Day address, the U, D, C
h:n’lnl already made their plans for the
annnal exercises before the Viotory
Loan drive was arranged for here
nass and constipation, you have only
to ask tor your money back.
Dodson's Liver Tone is a pleasant
tasting, purely vegetable' remedy,
harmless to both children and adults.
Take a spoonful at night and wake
up feeling fine: no billousness, sick
neadache, acid stomach or constipated
Lowels. It doesn't gripe of cause in«
convenience all the next day like vio.
lent calomel. Take a dose of calomel
today and tomorrow you will feel
weak, sick and nauseated. Don't lose
A day's work! Take Dodson's Liver
Tone instead and feel fine, full of
vigor and ambition —Advertisement.
Thursday Afternoon’s Opera
e Soevpe g ek e o / |
Opera in four acts.
By Friedrich Don Flotow.
THE CHARACTERS.
Lady Henrietta, maid of honor, so
prano,
Nancy, her friend, contralto.
Sir Tristan, a courtier, basso.
Plunkett, wealthy farmer, basso.
lionel, his foster-brother, tenor.
Sheriff, basso.
Sérvants, farmers, hunters and
pages.
‘¢ ARTHA,” by Friedrich von
M Flotow, was another fa
vorile of our grandfathers,
and the only work which survived
its composer. It has been sung by
great artists and by amateurs in the
world’s capitals and in town halls.
Its airs are played on every hand pr
gan, and its overture may be heard
In any movie theater. }
The opera gives almost equal op
portunity to four leading singers—
soprano, tenor, mezzo-soprano and
baritone—and, indeed, the four are
singing together almost entirely
through the second act. No other
work so abounds in melodious quanet‘
numbers, and there are sr’: and
duets fairly treading upon on noth
er's heels. The chorus, too, 18 used to
excellent effect.
“Martha” presents the rather odd
combination of being composed by a
German, sung in Italian, its charac
ters linglish, and its audience Ameri
can. It is one of the few operas, by
the way, which have been sung in
KEnglish with complete success.
The scene opens in the boudoir of
Lady Henrietta, afterward Martha
(soprano). She s growing weq’ry
of a dull court life, and her mald,
Nancy (mezzo), guesses that love is
the missing requisite. They sing the
duet, “Ah, Those Tears,” and BSir
Tristan (buffo-basso), Henrietta's
cousin and a gay old dog, enters. The
two women tease him unmercifully.
Behind the scemes Is heard the cho
rus of servant maids on their way to
the Richmond Fair, and Henrietta in
sists on dressing as a peasant and
joining them. Naney joyfully agrees,
and even old Tristan is persuaded to
don a farmer’'s garb and acoompanyl
them.
The second scene shows the falr,
where every year the farmers come
to choose their servants. The law
requires that one who has accepted
a cash payment is bound for a year,
The scene is a gay one, with a cho
rus of farmers and servants and mar
ket folk.
Lionel (tenor) and Plynkett (bari
tone), two young farmers In search
of housemaids, enter. Lionel is an
orphan and Plunkett's foster-broth
er. On his deathbed Lionel's father
had given Plunkett a ring, which,
when trouble should appear, must be
given to the Queen. The two sing
the duet, frequently used in religious
music, “Lost, Proscribed, a Friend
less Pilgrim,” descriptive of Lionel's
istory and his discontent with his
present lot. The Sheriff begins the
auction of servants, and the farmers
bid them in. There are swinging
choruses here for men's and women’s
voices, and the scene is a brilliantly
picturesqne one.
Lady Henrietta, Nancy and Sir
Tristan, in their servants’ attire, now
enter and ln:&mabout them curiously.
The two ers take Immediate
fancy to them. Tristan is frightened
away by a swarm of girls who insist
that he hire to them, and the mas
querading pair take advantage of his
absence to open a flirtation with the
young farmers. Plunkett timidly
opens negotiations for their services,
and before they realize the extent of
their prank they have accepted .the
earnest money and are bound for the
yvear. The act ends in a quartet and
chorus, and as the curtain descends
Lionel and Plunkett lift their ndew
servifts Into a farm cart and drive
away with them. :
The second act Introduces but the
four principals, who have a surpris
ing series of quartets. It is the in
terior of the farwmhouse, and the
brothers are trying hard to explain
to their frightened maid servants
their new and unaccustomed dutlen.‘
The opening number is the gquartet,
“This Is Your Future Dwelling," end-‘
ing in a remarkably beautiful passage, ‘
‘Lady Henrietta says her name is
Martha, and Nancy chooses “Betsy”
for her masquerade. There is an
other quartet, “I Am Surprised, As
tounded,” in which the masters ex
press their astonishment at their
servants’ unwillingness to work, and
then the lesson in spinning is begun.
‘This introduces the famous “Spin
ning Wheel” quartet, in which the
musie closely imitates in rhythm the
sound of the whirringsWheel. It is
an air that sticks, in one's memory.
Nancy, rebellious,” upsets her wheel
and runs away, leaving Lionel and
Martha,
It is here that the most famous
aria of the opera is heard. Lionel
asks Martha to sing for him. She
takes from her bosom a flower a.ndi
‘slnn “The Last Rose of Summer.”
This gem of the opera is not Fidtow's,
but an old Irish air, to which words
were set by the poet, Tom Moore. The
Italian words in the opera follow
rather closely the poem of the Irish
bard. When this aria has closed
K‘SVUTNERN PHUTO MATERIAL C 9.
SEVENTY-TWO NORTH BRUAD
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~ b
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Kills Pain
Nanecy and Plunkett return and the |
“CGoodnight” quartet is sung. The
two girls prepare to retire, when Sir
Tristan appears at the window. They
slip away with him and return to
their castle,
The third act épens upon a park
in the forest. The Queen is hunting,
and the young farmers have come to
watch the hunt. Plunkett sings the
stirring dflnklr}f song in prise of
English ale. he stageful of vil
lagers join in the chg?m. and Nancy
and her companions;ln hunting cos
tume, enter, Nancy signs her aria,
“My Heart Knows Not,” and Plunk
ett, recognizing her, reproaches her
for running away. He ia about to
seize her when the hunting girls sur
round her, and the scene is inter
rupted by the entrance of Lionel,
half mad from grief. He sings a bit
of Martha's air, and then begins the
tenor number which is sung on every
concert stage, “Like a Dream.,” or as
it is better known, “Ah, So Fair; Ah,
So_ Bright”
Bir Tristan and Henrietta enter,
and Lionel, recognizing his lost love,
accosts her. She eruelly pretend: not
to know him, and there follow a 4 de
nunciation by Plunkett and a pa
thetie air by Lionel. The latter draws
the ring from his finger and asks
that it be given to the Queen, whose
approach is announced by trumpets.
The scene ends in a magnificent
finale, a bit of concerted music which
has few rivals.
The fourth act reveals the fafin
house again, with Plunkett singing
his fine aria, “Oh, My Unhappy
Lionel.” This scene and its aria fre
quently are omitted or the action
transferred to the closing scene. In
this it is disecovered that lLionel is
really the Earl of Derby. He still is
brooding over his lost love, and Lady
Henrietta, relenting, causes to be re
constructed the scene at the Rich
mond Fair, The farmers and servants
are reassembled, and Henrietta and
Nancy, once more in their servants’
garb appear. Lionel is led in by the
faithful Plunkett, and when he sees
his Martha in the familiar ecostume,
his mind becomes clear again, and
they are clasped in each other's arms.
Nancy, of course, has accepted Plunk
ett hefore this, and it is to be pre
sumed that they all live together for
lever after,
Stomach ills
permanently disappear after drinking
the celebrated Shivar Mineral Water.
Positively giaranuw.d by money-back
offer. Tastes fine; costs a trifle. De
livered anywhere by our Atlanta
Agents, Coursey & Munn Drug Stors,
Marietta and Broad Sts. Phone them.
— Advertisement.
Cuticura Stops ,t?{‘
Itching and Y D
Saves the Hair 7 |
iy o, gt B 4 T 5
Druggist Says Ladies Are Using
Recipe of Sage Tea and
Sulphur.
Hair that loses its color and luster,
or when it fades, turns gray, dull
and lifeless, is caused by a lack of
sulphur in the hair. Our grandmoth
er made up a mixture of Sage Tea
and Sulphur to keep her locks dark
and beautiful, and thousands of
women and men who value that
even color, that beautiful, dark shade
of hair which is so attractive, use
only this old-time recipe.
Nowadays we get this famous
mixture improved by the addition of
other ingredients by asking at any
drug store for a bottle of “Wyeth's
Sage and Sulphur Compound,”
which darkens the hair so natural=
ly, so evenly, that nobody can pos
sibly tell it has been applied. You
Just dampen a sponge or soft brish
with it and draw this through your
hair, taking one small strand at a
time. By morning the gray hair
disappears; but what delights the
ladies with Wyeth's Sage and Sul
phur Compound is that, hesides
beautifully darkening the hair after
a few applications, it also brings
hack the gloss and luster and gives
it an appearance of abundance.—
Advertisement.
- v
e ' '
Medicinai Virtues Retained and
Improved — Unpleasant -and
Dangerous Qualities Removed.
New Variety, Called Calotabs,
Is Great Favorite With Physi
cians and Druggists.
The latest triumph of modern pharma
cy is the new nausealess calomel known
to the drug trade as “Calotabs.” Calo
mel, the most generally useful of all
m:-«{lcinn thus enters upon a wider
fleld of popularity-—purified and refined
from those objectionable qualities which
have heretofore limited its use.
In biliousness, constipation, headache,
and indigestion, and in a great variety
of liver, stomach and kiiney troubles
calomel was the only successful remedy
but its use was often neglected on ac
count of its sickening qualities, Now it
is the easiest and most pleasant of all
medicines to take. One Calotab on the
tongue at bedtime, with a swallow of
water, that's all. No salts, no griping,
no nausea, no danger of salivation, A
‘'good night's sleox and the next morning
you are feeling fine, with a clean liver
and a big appetitie. Eat what you
please.
Calotabs are sold in original, sealed
packages, #rh-a thirty-five cents. Your
druggist offers to refund the price as a
gnammea that you will be thoroush'y
elighted with Calotabs~—Adv.
(By International News Service,)
'~ PARIS, April 23.—The French Govern
‘ment has appealed to Italy to furnish
1,000,000 workmen, mostly laborers, to
asgist in rebuilding Northern France, it
was learned Wdays Italy replied that
she was disposed to grant the request,
but at the same time desired assur
ances that France would not object to
the building of Italian chools for the
children in the workmen's families. The
French Government has not yet con
sented and the negotiations have been
temporarily suspended,
In the meantoime Italy is preparing
for a gigantic immigration movement,
which is weicomed at Rome, as it will
ease the economic gituation and lighten
the burden on the labor market. Nat
urally the Italian Government is gnx
iously watching any tendency to revise
the immigration laws in the United
DLALes.
But regardless of any action that may
be taken by the American Congress it
is believed there will be enough work
in the devastated regions of Furope to
care for all of the Italians who wish
to leave home France and Belgium
could take care of 2,000,000, it s
thought
Sa far 700,000 Italian troops have been
demobilized and there are still 3,000,000
with the eolors. A large number will be
retained in the service until land and
sea transportation facilities get better,
80 as to assist the immeigration move
ment, |
e Sl |
STOLE ONLY “LEFT” SHORES
DAYTON, OHIO, April 26--Police will
have Llttie trouble in tracking the thief
who robbed the truck of Henry oKhn here
and took §IOO worth of sample shoes. They
were all for the left food,
If You O d Exclusi
Patent \ the Cotton Gi
you would be one of the richest men in America, for when Eli Whitney invented
the gin he revolutionized the Cotton industry.
You would have started at the beginning—and the men who have made the
largest profits in nearly all industries are those who started at the beginning.
There is seldom an opportunity for the investor of moderate means after
a business has grown large and profitable. The men who put their bg'a,ins and
energy into building it up are not likely to share with a newcomer. It is too late
for him to enter.
We are offering the public now an opportunity to become partners in a
young industry, though not-an untried one. Itshould grow and prosper as long
as cotton is raised in the South., : :
The Lanham Cotton Cultivator Company is marketing a machine which
will do the work of eight to ten men in the cotton field. It is a practical cotton
chopper-cultivator, which “bars off,” chops out the cotton, “dirts up,” cleans out
the middle of the rows—all in one operation. It is simple and practical. It has
proved its worth through actual work in the field. It is not an experiment. It
is also a complete all-the-year-round cultivator for cotton or any other crops.
Labor, growing scarcer and higher in price every year, is the great expense
in cotton-raising. There is less profit in 30-cent cotton today than in 10-cent
cotton years ago. The farmer will eagerly welcome a machine which will save
labor, and the Lanham cotton chopper cultivator saves it in an enormous pro
portion.
Five thousand of these machines are now being built for us by the Murray
Company, noted manufacturers of cotton gin and oil machinery. They will be
sold this year. We expect to sell 25,000 next year, and three times that num
ber the following year. The South needs 400,000 of them.
We want to build our own manufacturing plant, to make our own machines.
This will require capital. We must buy our materials in large quantities to
obtain the lowest prices. This will require still more capital.
The investor is now offered the common stock of the Lanham Cotton Culti
vator Company at an attractive price. There is no preferred stock. All share
holders are on an equal footing.
We promise no huge profits at the start. We do not expect to make you or
ourselves rich overnight. We do not invite speculation in this stock. It is not
- a get-rich-quick scheme. ; A
But we know that our machine is practical. We know there is a tremen
dous demand for such a machine, and we know that we can sell it at a reasona
ble price and make a good profit. We confidently believe that the man who in
vests in it now will realize a handsome return, which will increase each year as
the machine becomes better known and in greater demand.
The Lanham Cotton Cultivator Company
Empire Building.
CALVIN TICHENOR,
President.
H. W. BROWN,
Vice President H. G. Hastings Co.
EDWIN C. CATTS,
First Lieutenant of Engineers
Increase Production Div. U. 8. Army.
' |
|
F |
W. T. Waters, of Atlanta, has bm',ni
appointed by Governor Dorsey to repre- |
sent Georgia before the [United States
Shipping Board Thursday morning, |
when a delegation from the Southeast- |
ern Maritime Association appears be
fore that organization a king an allot- |
ment of fourteen mcrshant ships to
southeastern ports, |
Of 300 ships allotted by the Govern- |
ment, Southeastern ports have received
| ouly four, according to reports. The |
Maritime Association is being fostered
by four States—-Georgia, Florida, South
and North Caroline—and efforts are be- !
ing made now in behalf of the ports
of Savannah, Brunswick, Charleston,
Jacksonville and Wilmington. |
Senator Fletcher and Governor Bick- |
ett, of North Carolina, will be present
|:'. the conference Thursday. Governor
Dorsey was invited to attend, but He
E\x;m forced to decline on account of nis
activities with the special tax commis
sion. |
o |
|
Southland Steamer Co. |
Ordered to Make Return
i The Southland Steamshfp Company at
| Savannah, has been ordered by W. A
| Wright, State Comptroller General, to
'make a corporation tax return within
twenty days or the property will be as- |
sessed for taxation. Judge S. B. Ad-[
ams, representing the company, is re- |
ported to have raised objections to mak- |
ing his return to State authorities, |
claiming that he has the right to make
his reports direct to the Tax Collector |
of Chatham County, and that he pre- |
fers to take that course,. !
Last year the return of the eompany |
was $400,000, and this year it is be
‘ieved that the total wili run over this
figure,
Phone Ivy 5511.
DIRECTORS:
Look for the Name
L. C. Adler
If you see that in a hat you
needn't look any further, for you're
hoMing the passport to fashionable
hatdom right in your hand.
Sennit straws
Ty —fine split
[ Bt braids — leg
—~ 98 horns and
\\‘\N panamas.
W ‘% The season's
newest in
novelty braids
and trim
mings.
= 113 Peachtree St.
OFFICERS:
H. W. BROWN,
Vice President.
ST. ELMO MASSENGALE,
President Massengale Ad‘vert-ising Agency.
JOHN W. STEWART,
Atlanta,
CALVIN TICHENOR,
President.
Atlanta, Ga.
W. J. WARD,
Segretary and Treasurer,