Newspaper Page Text
y* . !
4 Sixth Division To Be ;
N N
Sent Back Home Soon
WASHINGTON, May 24.--All organi- |
zations of the Sixth Division have been |
assigned to early convoy, the War l».»-‘
partment announced this afternoon. The |
Sixth I 8 composed of regular army |
troops, and up to several weeks ago wu-l
a part of the army of occupation ]
¥ Biliousness l
A :
;4% Permanently relioved withe
X, out |lcnnln{. One Pill at
MUT\ e pight will do the work
i \&Desten l
b ]
AMON R e PILLS |
LIVER A
SR : f
e —————————————
.
‘renetratin
|
0.l K.ll P ! ‘
. ‘ |
Rheumatism, Lumbago and Stiff Joints
Yield Quickly to Miller's |
Antiseptic Oil. |
. ——— ‘
Famous the continent over, Miller's
Antiseptic Oil (known as Snake Oil)|
has such t{rvu( penetrating power that
ft goes thru thickest sole leather in
three minutes, This proves that it will
get to the core of the trouble and re
move your pain from sore throat, stiff,
awollen joints, sprains, ete., In no time
at all Miller's Antiseptic Oil' (known
as Snake Oil) is sold in 30¢, 60c and
SI.OO bottles and you get your money
hack if not satisfied. To make sure
that you'll get the right article tear
this ad out and take it with you to any
» good drug store Jacob's 9 Drug Stores.—
Advertisement
Man Loses Hope
¢ “For ten years I suffered severely
from stomach trouble. The doctors
said T had cancer of the stomach and
nothing would do but an operation,
I took my last round of Mayr's Won
@gerful Remedy 2% vears ago. Since
then 1 sleep well, eat what [ want
and feel fine.” It is a simple, harm
less preparation that removes the ca
tarrhal mucus from the intestinal
tract and allays the inflammation
which causes practically all stomach
lver and intestinal ailments, includ
ing appendicitis. One dose will con
vince ar money refunded Jacobs'
Pharmacy and druggists everywhere,
—Advertisement,
e e
-~ e ———ga
To skin that once was eruptional and
unsightly Poslam brings again the glow
of health for many. And what reliel
when blemishes long tolerated are at
last disposed of! A highly concentrated
healing power qualifies Poslam for this
work. Like a pacifying balm to burn
ing, irritated surfaces. You should not
suffer—should not allow any skin dis
order to remain in evidence one day
longer without finding out just what
Poslam can do for it
Sold everywhere For free K sample
write to. Emergency Laboratories, 243
West 47th St., New York City.
Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslan
» brightens, beautifies complexions.—Ady
Many People Saved From the Grave by
Simple Treatment,
Read What BAUGHN'S PELLAGRA
Treatment Did for Mississippi
Woman. |
\
s, Ml dtrs.. Barriet Lbwe.d
of this place, writes: *“I am more than
grateful to you for your valuable
Baughn's Treatment. I am doing fi“‘\i
and can’'t say enough to your credit, T
am quite sure [ would have been in the
grave without it.”’ |
Don’t you suppose this letter made us |
w feel good to know we had saved a life?
Many such lives have been saved by
Baughn's_ Pellagra Treatment. So sure
are we that it will cure Pellagra that
we supply the treatment on the basis
of refunding the money in case the cus
tomer is not cured. Your worst enemy
is delay. Don't delay. If you suffer
with sore mouth, inflamed lips and
tongue, indigestion, nausea, diarrhoea
or constipation—the usual symptoms of
pellagra—write today, right now, 10
Anterican Compounding Co., Box 3103,
Jasper, Ala., and get Baughn's big free
booklet on pellagra.—Advertisement
SRR Rt e it
ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR!
g 1i you
fif D feel dull,
fly i 122 y -
(7254, g headed,
Sfngp iy b a o k
& - [V[ aches, and
X > %
e feel ‘‘all
\ / 1 \> sug )9
VAN / ; in,”” go to
‘ / g 4 v o u'r
ox=d V.
a 2 . neighbor
and ask her the secret of her
health. Usually she will tell
you that it was by taking a
temperance tonie and nerv
-3 3 . ) 3
ine, known as Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription, which
is sold by druggists every
where in tablet or liquid form.
Send Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N.
Y., 10c for trial package.
All women who suffer from
teminine disorders are invit
ed to write the Faculty of the
< »
Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N.
Y., for free confidential con
sultation and advice, no
-harge being made for this
high professional service. This
will enable every woman to
benefit by the advice of the
distinguished corps of physi
eians which Dr. Pierce has
gathered about him in his
widely-known and celebrated
Buffalo institution
—Advertisement.
\
Jn El HAHH|S9 JHI
Joel Chandler Harris, Jr., who has
received his discharge from the Unit
ed States army, following his service
overseas, has Joined the Johnson-
Dallis Company, of this city, and is
in charge of its promotion depart
ment,
Mr. Harris, the youngest son of one
of Atlanta’s most famous citizens,
reeds no introduction in the home of
his birth, but the announcement that
he is to be permanently located in
Atlanta and associated with one of
the South's best known and most
progressive advertising agencies will
be the source of much interest to his
scores of friends throughout this sec
tion.
Mr. Harris has been engaged in
newspaper work for the last fourteen
vears, the major portion of which has
been in the advertising department.
He began as a reporter on the old
Atlanta” News in 1905 and was after
wanrd on The Atlanta Constitution, He
went into the advertising department
of T'he Uncle Remus Magazine in 1907
and became Western advertising man
ager, with headquarters in Chicago in
1912,
In 1914 he owned and edited a
weekly newspaper in Virginia, return.
ing to Atlanta in 1916 to become auto
mobile editor and later advertising
manager of The Atlanta Georgian and
American, which position he resignea
in the fall of 1917 to enlist in the reg
ular army
He spent thirteen months in the
service, returning, in March, and was
mustered out in April of this year.
Boys, we have a real
\ o Aeroplane for you.
Ax “ N -E&t Modeled after famous
"‘ 5 \"{;fi@/ war monoplanes
R x BbG”” Called the Eagle oe-
NN, S~ S cause of its long-soaring
OO S ‘~(\\'/ flights. - The powerful mo
X SRR Y,
Qe ,§y\‘-\‘ tive power carries it right
SN TA) off the ground. Looks fine
\ \\\\\ ' sailing in the air
BN, @ Strongly built, will last
long time. Length 28 in
Wing spread 21 in. Free
for selling 20 packages Bingo Perfumed Ironing
Wax at 10e each Order today Send no money
Bingo Co., Dept. 385, Binmghamton, N. Y.
(P S
4 W MITCHELL
| Pl
'use ‘Grandma's Sage Tea and
. Sulphur Recipe and Nobody
} Will Know.
|
| The use of Sage and Sulphur for
'restoring faded, gray hair to its nat
ural color dates back to grandmoth
er's time. She used it to keep her
hair beautifully dark, glossy and at
'tractive, “Whenever her hair took
‘on that dull, faded or streaked ap-‘
lpv;nran\-u this simple mixture was
applied with wonderful effect,
l But brewing at home is mussy andl
out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking
at any drug store for a bottle of
“Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com
pound,” you will get this famous old
preparation, improved by the addi
tion of other ingredients, which can|
be depended upon to restore natural
color and beauty to the hair. ‘
| A well-known downtown, druggist
4.\;1,\’5 it darkens the hair so nul\lr;nl-i
i{lv and evenly that nobody can tell it
lhas been applied. You simply
:|lumpon a sponge or soft brush with
|ir and draw this through your hair,
[taking one strand at a time. By
morning the gray hair disappears,
luml after another application or two,
lit becomes beautifully dark and
!:]ms,\'.——q\d\'ertim-mvm.
Nothing Like Plain Bitro-Phosphate to
Put on Firm, Healthy Flesh and
to Increase Strength, Vigor
and Nerve Force.
Judging from the countless prepara
tiong and treatments which are contin
ually being advertised for the purpose
of making thin people fleshy, develop
ing arms, neck d bust, and-replacing
o ugly hol
o o E““"“ and
By -}'}l’les by
£ D 1e soft
R cur ve
. T lines ’”’l
W R ¢ f
o G - health angd
og 3p. Deauty
e WA there ' are
‘:l_‘ B % g evident I‘-,
g i 2 ¢
X 2 o) 5 % housands |
e eel
[T B o o
it eariis g 6n il
v»‘.,'ifi‘ T oy ™ 1 who|
R e S o keenly fee] |
\ A their ex- |
% Y cessive|
A Be 4 thinness. ‘
A s 4 Thin-|
Bl P P ki ness and|
2o K R -‘« € ‘u.\lld, ’
GEORGIA HAMILTON. S e
8F 6 €
nerves Our bodies need mw»l
phosphate than is contained in modern
foods Physicians claim ther is noth- |
ng that will supply this deficiency |
<o well as the organic phosphate known |
among druggists as bitr r»phuh‘phmv.i
which is inexpensive a 1 is sold by
Jacobs' Pharmacy stores i Atlanta nn«ll
most all druggists under a guarantee of
satisfaction or money back. By feeding |
the nerves direetly and by Humx,‘\t::‘
the body cells with the necessary pnhos
phoric food elements bitro-phosphat«
quickly produces a welcome transfor- |
mation in the appearance; the increase
in weight frequently being astonishing
This increase in weight also carries
| with it a general improvement in the
| health. Nervousness, sleeplessness ar {
lack of energ whirn nearly alwa)
accompany €ex essive thinness, sooo |
disappear, dull eyves become bright, an! |
pale cheeks glow with the bloom of
perfect healt! Miss Georg.. Hamiltc
who was once thin and frail, reportin
her own experience, writes “Bitrc
IPh(..»;‘hq'.- 1s brought about a magl
transformation with me I gained 1
pounds and never before felt so well
CAUT!lON—Althoeugh Bitro-Phosphat
is unsurpas 1 for relieving nervousneas
gleeplessne and gener weakness, !
should not, owing to its ren arkable fles?
growing properties, be used by anyone
who does not desire to put on flesh.—
Advertisement |
. HEARST'S SUNDY AMERICAN — A Newspaper tor People Who Think — SUNDAY, MAY 25 1919.
Twelve Southern States, from Mary
land to Texas, will be represented in
the meeting Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday in Atlanta, when much of
the part the South is to play In the
reconstruction days will be outlined.
The meeting will be the twelfth
annual convention-school of the
Southern Commercial Secretaries’ As
soclation, the members of which are
the secretaries of Chambers of Com
merce in .all of the prominent cities.
The locul Secretaries’ Association and
the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce
will be joint hosts to the convention.
More problems affecting the welfare
of the South and the activities which
must be continued and added, will be
discussed at this convention than in
any other since the end of the war,
“The last drive is over,” said Dan
Carey, president of the Secretaries
Association, “and business men must
turn their entire attention to private
enterprises. The South has shared
liberally in the war-time prosperity of
the United States, but the days of in
flation are over and conditions will be
working, gradually, toward a perma
nent peace-time basis again, The
South must be alive to these changing
conditions and must work unceasingly
to build strongly.”
All Meetings Open.
All miectings of the convention will!
be cpen to all persons Interested n|
e¢iviz affairs. Discussion of the ‘ugl
problems is invited and the secreta- |
ries ¢f the commercial bodies of the |
cities of the twelve States will pre
sent the problems of the various sec
tions of the South and solutions ul-]
ready worked out, i
The business sessions will be held |
in the assembly hall of the Atlanta |
Chamber of Commerce. |
The first activities in «-nmu-r-tiun]
with the convention will be an in- |
formal reception Sunday morning :nl
the Hotel Ansley, when delezates who
have arrived will be registered. Thv'
registration will be continued Monday |
morning in the rooms of the Chamber
of Commerce.
The convention will be called to or
der Monday meorning at 10 o'clock by
Morgan Richards, of Selma, Ala‘.’
president. The Rev. M. Ashby Jones |
wil] deliver the invocation. The pres- |
idént will deliver his annual address |
and the report of the secretary-ires- |
urer will be read. Committees will h';!
appointed. Two subjects to be dis
cussed at this meeting will be "Urfice’
Management and Methods” and “Sell
ing Your Community.” B. R. Kesgler.)
Jacksonville, Fla., W, F. Long, Aus
tin Texas; Burke Hobgood Durham, |
N. C.; N. Buckner, Asheville, N. C.; |
L.. P. Dickie, Tampa, Fla.,, and, Cole~
man Lindsay, of Oakdale, La., will
lead in these discussions. !
Welcome by Dobbs. l
- Luncheon will be served in the main |
dining room of the Hotel Ansley, at|
which a welcome will be extended to
the ccnvention by Sam C. Dobbs,
president of the Atlanta Chamber of
Commerce, and Mayor James L. Key.
A response will be made by John
Wood, of Roanoke, Va. An address
will be made by J. M, Guild, presi
dent of the National Association of |
Commercial Organization Secretaries.i
and secretary of Kansas City Cham- |
ber of Commerce. |
In the evening a smoker will be|
held in the grill room of the Hotel
Ansley, which will be called an “Eve
ning With the Past Presidents.”
The problems of the readjustment
days will be taken up in earnest on
Tuesday morning, when the following
subjects. will be discussed: Agricul
ture, commerce, transportation and
industrial.
B. L. Winchell, regional director of
the United Railroad Administration,
will address a luncheon of the secre
taries Tuesday at the Hotel Ansley.
Joseph C. Logan, director civilian re
lief, Southern division of the Ameri
can Red Cross, will speak at the aft
ernoon session. A theater party will
be given for the wives and daughters
of the visiting delegates at the Grand
in the afternoon.
Stunt Night Tuesday.
Tuesday night will be “stunt night,"‘
and the evening will be in charge of |
Dan Carey, E. A. Kimball, R, M,
}Striplln‘ J. F. Trezzarie and Fred
' Houser. The events will be staged at |
the Scutheastern Fair Grounds. One
event planned is a boat ride on the
Jake, the entire convention body be
ing on the water at one time. |
The future of the association willl
be discussed at a meeting Wednesday |
morning. Election of officers for the |
’('nsuin,f: year also will be held at this |
| time. Luncheon will be served at the.
Atlanta Builders’ Exchange and an |
‘auto ride will be taken over the mty“\
' The final meeting will be held in |
ithe Hotel Ansley dining room Wed
‘nesday night.
‘ !
Brussels To Be Seat of
\ .
Institute of Commerce
By LOUIS PIERARD. |
Exclusive Cable to the International
" News Service from The London |
Daily Express.
BRUSSELLS (Via London), May 24.--—(
This city is to be made the headquar
ters of the Inte(national Institute of
Commerce, it was learned today follow- |
ing a conference of representatives of\
the various Allied powers. ‘
* An international trade rou‘e is to he
established between Rordsaux, Venice,
Trieste, Fiume, Agram, Pucharest and
Odessa. It will not cross either Ger
many or Austria ‘
The Orient express, which formerly |
ran hetween Rerlin and Constantinople, |
will now cross Eurape by way of llaly
and Jugo-Slavia with London and l':lms;
[ want men
to introduce from
house to house a high
grade line of per
fumes, cosmetics, fla
voring ‘extracts,
spices, toilet <soap,
ete. Stead: work. Big
profits. N experience
necessar:- Cake of
soap and full particu
lars mailed free to
any address. lacas
sian Co.. Dept. 250,
Bt. Louis. Mo.
.
The Thomas Family
By Frances Cowles
(Copyright, 1919, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
& ‘
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Ay X %) T t‘L
B PO RS NS O
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(W All ol
ey AN “f‘ A
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‘ noo»'moo
Y
THOMAS
T\\'ENTY—ICH".HT of the name of
Thomas here before 1699—
Samuel Bayard. His relation to
Peter Stuyvesant—Currier notes—
Hobart came from Norfolkshire—An
tills were also English—Cowper
thwaits Weeks and Shoemaker notes.
The name of Thomas apears Very
early in the history of this country.
Nathaniel Thomas was thé first of
whom there is any record. He came
to Virginia in the ship 'Temperance
in 1621. Robert and William came
to the same State in the ship America
foyrteen years later, and another Wil
liam Thomas arrived in the same
vear, Southern branch of the fam
ily came from Wales about the mid
dle of the seventeenth century and
settled in Maryland. H e was a
Friend, and of much influence in the
colonies,
The first Thomas of whom there is
any record in New England was
named William. He came to this
country in 1630 and settled at Ply
mouth. Previous to 169, 28 members
of the Thomas family came to this
country. One, William, came in the
Mary Ann, another of the same name
was chosen assistant to Governor
Bradford in 1642. Xvan Thomas came
to Boston in 1635 as master of the
ship William and Francis. \
A cruel fate was that of Willlam
Thomas, another early settler, who,l
in 1712, essayed to embark for Amer
ica from the city of Bristol. He had
large possessions, which he convert
ed into cash. This, together with the
clothing for himself and family, he
put on board the vessel. Before the
day appointed for its sailing, Thomas
and- his family found to their con
sternation that the vessel had set sail,
but was not yvet out of sight. Pur
suit- was made in a small craft and
signals hoisted, but to no response.
The vessel was lost sight of, and the
family left destitute. They, however,
obtained credit and came to this
country, landing in Philadelphia,
where they had the “mortification”—
as it is set down in the records—of
seeing some of their goods in posses
sion and some of their wearing ap-
« ol
A Small Bottle of “Danderine
Keeps Hair Thick, Strong,
Beautiful.
i Girls! Try This. Doubles Beauty
} of Your Hair in a Few
1 Moments.
‘t S A
| . F
R 2 }
!; B 3
‘ .:‘ ::& - 3
‘i : o 0 “’;?s'
| %" 4%
|
e v
‘ ~f' i i ?-} S
; K o )
| f%, %{l’ TR
| g 3 T G
[ "4 g B
| B R RS
| g e
- 4 B
B s L
| T i Yo i ;
| &t %
o o “a )
& 5 5 "i;;:fi.!f L %
B 4 A's: 5. . e oy
| witnin ten minutes after an ap
'lvll(‘:xtinn of Danderine you can not
;find a single trace of dandruff or
falling hair and your scalp will not
'nch, but what will please you most|
\wil] be after a few weeks' use, when
you see new hair, fine and downy at
ltirst—ry(*s but really new hair—
growing all over the scalj
A little Danderine mmediately
doubles ‘the beauty of your hair, No
difference how dull, faded, brittle
and scraggy, just moisten a cloth
with Danderine and carefully draw
it through your hair, taking one
smal]l strand at a tim« The ef
fect is amazing—your hair will be
light, fluffy and wavy, and have an|
ppearance of abundance; an incom-|
parable lustre, softmess and ll\u“[
riance. |
| Get a sn bottle of Knowlton’s|
![J:mdc rine for a few cent t any
drug store r toilet « nter )'w’i‘
prove that ir hair pretty
and soft as ny—that it I een
‘nonl(rn-d or injured wreless
treatment-—1 t's al irely|
lcan have heautiful hair ar ts of it|
if you will t try a little Dander-|
Ine Adverticement |
parel upon the backs of those who
had purchased them from the dishon
est master of the vessel, They were
not able to recover anything, \
Fortune, nowever, favored William
Thomas in the country of his adop
tion, and he became a leader among
his people, He gave each of his five
sons and two daughtersa farm and a
stone house upon the occasion of their
marirages, fio also erected a stone
meeting house at his own expense
Although the congregation probably
assisted him, Mr. Thomas himself
worked in finishing the interior of
the building. He made the pulpit out
of a hollow gum tree, which was laid
on a platform. At this time “Elder
Thomas,” as he was called, for he was
often engaged in preaching, was near
ly 60 years of age. He always car
ried his gun and sword to meeting,
depositing them at the foot of the
pulpit, it being the period of the
French and Indian wars.
Like Jacob of old, Willlam Thomas
‘had the gift of foretelling his chil
drens’ fortune. Of his sons, he said
‘all but one would prove Christian
‘men, one would become a preacher,
‘and one would go astray and then
come to his end by violence—all of
which predictions the future confirm
ed years after their father's death.
The coat-of-arms of the family is
argent, a chevron, sable between three
ravens; crest with outspread wings.
Different members of the family have
dieffrent crests, lambs and lions being
favorite devices.
The derivations or modifications of
the name are many, as Thomason,
Thomson, Thompson, Thomes, Thoms,
Thompkins, Tompkins, Tompkinson,
Tomlin, Thomlins and Tominson.
. .
Thinks North Carolina
. .
Railroad Rates Fair
RALEIGH, N. C., May 24.—Assistant
Traffic Manager Cardwell, of the South«
ern Rallway, Atlanta, testifying before
Interstate Commerce Commissioner
KEastman in a hearinf on the complaint
of North Carolina points of discrimina
tions against them through lower Vir
ginia cities rates into Southeastern ter
ritory, sald the Baltimore water and
rail rates control in adjustment as be
tween Virginia cities and North Caro
lina rates and these rates make it im
gloulhle to reduce further rates from
orth Carolina. He said Virginia cities
rates became established abnormally
low under conditions over which rail
road ratemaking authorities had no con
trol, and believes North Carolina rates
the fairest that can be worked out with
out upsetting the whole rate adjust
ments, |
Portag Tire Pri
The Portage Rubber Company believes that a
generous proportion of tire users consider quality more
‘important than price. -
“We began in 1911 to build tires that should honestly serve the
interests of such buyers, and throughout the years that have followed,
that standard has never consciously been lowered. |
Portage Tires today are selling as low as they can be sold, con
sidering the quality of materials that go into them, and the painstaking,
deliberate methods prevailing in the Portage plant. Present prices
allow a fair return—no more—on capital investment. \
Facing widely-advertised price reductions ~To reduce prices while maintaining
on the part of other manufacturers, The present quality would involve ruinous
Portage Rubber Company fecls obligated financial loss. Reducing prices andcheapen
to outline its own policy clearly, in ordinary ing productionwould mean the shattering of
fairness to a nation of car owners. the very foundation stones of this business.
Neither course can be considered. Portage prices will not be cut. Portage standards
remain unchanged, that we may keep the faith with those who have stood by us.
‘ FACTO.RY BRANCH
| THE PORTAGE RUBBER CO.
270 Ivy Street, Atlanta, Ga.
MADE IN AKRON, OHIO, BY THE PORTAGE RUBBER COMPANY
Ask your dealer for Portage Daisy Tread Cord and Fabric Tires and Portage Grey Tubes
The new Jewish synagogue which
is being built at the corner of Wood
ward and Central avenues by the lit
tla colony in Atlanta known as Or-V.
Shalon, or more familiarly as tho|
Spanish Jews, is nearing completion,
and the opening services will be held |
in about three weeks, Both the State
and city officials have been extended
an invitation to be present on the
opening date, which will be announced
later,
The building, which is being erected
at a cost of $12,000, will be used by
the colony for social and religious
purposes and glso an educational
branch will be established. The con- |
gregation will number approximxnol,\'!
100 adult members aside from a large
number of children,
The story of this little colony of
Hebrews reads more like fiction than
facts. It is one of hardships and
persecution, of a seeminbly hopeless
struggle against overwhelming odds.
It dates back 450 years ago, when the
majority of Jews in Spain were driven
from that country during the Span
ish Inquisition. They fled to all parts
of the world, England, America,
Greece, Turkey, in hopes of flndmgl
homes where they might live unmo
lested.
Twelve yvears ago A. Victor, E, To
rial and 1. J. Hazan, whose forefa
thers settled 'n Turkey when they
were forced to flee from Spain, de
cided to leave Turkey and come to
this country, the “land of !remlum,"l
of which they had heard so much,’
S 0 in 1907 these three men landed in
New York and a few days later r:lmul
to Atlanta. It was then that they
began to dream of building a volony!
of Spanish Jews in Atlanta, and let
ters were sent to their friends in Tur
key telling them of the great pros
pects of America and urging them to
come to this country. At first their
efforts were fruitless and their lettars
met with little response. But they
would not be discouraged and contin
ued to urge their friends to make the
United Staets their home. It was sev
eral years before any real results had !
been accomplished, but in 1914 the
number had been increased from 3
to 30.
A systematic organization was thm\’
formed, which was incorporated as
the Or-V-Shalon Colony, and A. Ca
pouano was selected as president. At
first the meetings were held month
ly, first in one place and then another.
Later, it was decided to hold the serv
ices each Saturday, and the homes of
the members of the colony were al
ternately used as the gathering place.
As the colony grew it was realized
that homes were inadequate, and the
establishment of a synagogue was
proposed. This was taking a definite
form wehn the war interfered with
the plans. A number of the colony
volunteered and were accepted for
service.
But Immediately after the armistice
was signed the work was resumed,
and as a result when the corner stone
is laid in three weoks an apparently
hopeless ambition which three men
entertained for twelve years will be
realized. It has not been announced
who will be at the head of the syna
gogue, but this matter will be settled
at a meeting in the next few days.
GO TO DR. I. S. CLLIFF =R
For the Prettiest and Best .
’ Gold Crown and Bridge Work ' LAY |
CROWN E v
fi AND BRIDGE ik &dk
1 EXPERT .
PLATES A SPECIALTY
| ALL WORK GUARANTEED cowsyaron |
NOW AT 99, WHITEHALL ST.
Near Corner Mitchell St.
Dr. 1. S. ONIfE'S conrar Saßtons
WANTED TO RENT OR SUB-LEASE
A Store on Peachtree or Whitehall Streets. ;
By one of the best known, responsible Jewelry Houses in
the U. S., conducting a chain of stores in leading cities.
MERCHANTS, ATTENTION.
Tenants now occupying stores who have outgrown their
space or are losing money on account of dull business and
find their lease a burden or liability or who for any other
resaon wish to sublet, should give this careful considera
tion, as well as renting agents.
LOFTIS BROS. & CO.
National Jewelers. Stores in Leading Cities.
5 South Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
9A
The history of the colony of Or-V«
Shalon reveals some interesting facts
regarding the cahracter of the mem
bers. With the exception of English,
the Spanish language is principally
used, but the majority of the Inhabj
tants can converse fluently in ur
French, Italian, Greek, Turkish and
Hebrew languages. The basis of the
religion of the colony is practically
the same as other Hebrew churchés,
except that teh anclent Hebrew dialeet
is used entirely. &