Newspaper Page Text
BALLARD 7 BALLARD :
Bifocals ¥y wi® Kryptoks
iet e v — A v————
September Ist, we moved into our new store—lo§ Peachtree
Street, opposite Piedmont Hotel.
Qur new fixtures have not arrived. but we are doing busi
ness as usual and your needs will be well taken care of. Our
shop is in thorough shape to take care of any amount of high
class optical prescription work.. Qur stock {s the most com
plete ever shown in the states—no need of going Hkast, you
will find everything here of merit at prices whicn will interest
you.
alter ballard Uptical Lo.
105 Peachhtree St.. Atlanta Ga.
650 STEN-BLOCH SMART CLOTHES {3
Z=i CLAPP CUSTOM SUOES ===
e KNOXHATS &l | a :
i{.\f%{:“_;:: e ———
S 111( S}nrts
Were Sold Yesterday And Today To Scores Of Ladies,
Who Were Unanimous In Declaring Our Variety The
Broadest And Most Attractive They Had Seen.
Crepe De Chine, La Jerz, Radium And Other
Handsome Silk Weaves.
Extra Good Crepes, $lO, $12.50, sls. La Jerz, $lO,
$12.50, sls. A Big Variety Of Others, $lO To $lB.
Make This Store Your Heddquarters For Beautiful
Silk Shirts As They Are A Man’s Preference.
Fine
Neckwear
Fine
Gloves
Fine
Reefers
Bags
Suit Cases
Parks = Chambers = Hardwick
Fivge;gints COMPANY 7453.911312202
e Ay e
. . e
MEN who have oy
tt . ¢ . es . 3 i
won their Spurs : ) ~
in their country’s service—they love a winner for <
they were the world’s greatest winners themselves!
They’ll revel in the rich blend of Spur Cigarettes
=that good old" tobacco taste. Nobo?y ever
(' beat that.
v “There’s Always Room At the Top.”
«
N ctles
\ !Jm% g 1 =lO garettes
g Y “ lig,'.;‘ i' 1‘ r. l’ X . —
i) [l :
st
were built for top-notch popularity,
g Blended in a new way from Ameri
. P I e \ can and Imported tobaccos, to bring
"’%l"’?_’3//:_;_:__3‘ .\‘f‘..l':“ out that good old tobacco taste.
f ,fld"“‘ Crimped, not pasted, making a
O p‘l et —— N slow-burning, easier-drawing cigarette,
%‘é—'fi:fl P"\ 4§ Satiny imported paper.
g? > =\ In a smart brown and silver pack
{/{Z‘ ES—— age, threefold, to preserve Spurs’
=== |, delicious taste and fragrance.
— ___..:“ U
. @igfli@tifis N A Spur Cigarettes are made and priced
—_— —_— ) to be the public choice and “bring
——— . bome the purse.” Tey Spur.
nNN Ml W@
20 f0r.20 cents
{) — '
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
. P\ Fine
—é-‘ ‘Handkerchiefs
- A Fine
/‘ \‘\."/‘\( .
<A\B LG Y Fine
*‘fia\ Buclkles -
~s§"§v Umbrellas
RS Canes
|
| SENATE GETS NOMINATION.
| WASHINGTON, Dec. 4—President
inlson today sent to the Senate the
| nomination of Congressman Joshua
W. Alexander of Missouri to be sec~
!retary es commerce, & |
" ‘
TGetting “Hep” to 1
| - The Geed Eats
!A Host of Dyspeptics Can Get
j Back to the Old Days of Free
| dom by the Simple Expedi
| ent of a Stuart’s Dyspep
-1 sia Tablet After Meals. |
: “Gosh! I never knew before how
igood these little pork sausages
!were,” Thus says the man who
| thought his stomach was gone for
iall time but who tried the simple ex
pedient of a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab
}lot after eating. And with this for a
| starter, he goes in for a cheese sand- |
| wich, a plece of hot mince pie, eats
{ham and eggs—in fact, he forgets his
| stomach and thinks only of the en
| ergy and good feeling that follow eat
{ing the foods that make most people
{ravenously hungry even to think of
| them. And all of this without sour‘
| risings, no gas, no belching and none
|of that drowsy _heaviness that so
| often follows indigestion. Try these
| tablets after eating. They are used
extensively wherever good eaters are
found and are on sale 4imost every
| where in the United States and Can
ada.—Adyv.
A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes
Atlanta friends of Mrs, Fiorence
Bischoff Winzenburg, wife of former
Lieut, Roy Winzenburg: o{ the 133 th
(St. Louis) Infantry, will be inter
ested in the news from St. Louis that
she has been awarded SIO,OOO actual
and SIO,OOO punitive damages by a
jury in Clayton, Mo., in he¢r suit
against the parents of her husband
for allenation of his affections.
Lieutenant Winzenburg was acci
dentally shot by a sentry at Camp
Doniphan in November, 1917, Later
he was transferred to the base hos
pital at Fort McPherson and it was
while she was living here to be near
lier husband that "Mre. Winzenburg
made a large acquaintance in Atlanta
and vicinity.
Concerning the verdict, the St
Louis Post-Dispatch says:
“The jury was out more than two
bours. After it had been out for
about an hour a dictionary was sent
for. \When this was denied a request
was made for a definition of the word
punitive, Judge Wurdeman wrote out
a definition, and more tpan an hour
later the jury made the award, in
cluding the SIO,OOO punitive damages.
‘““The case went to the jury at 2:30
,0. m., after Mrs. Winzenkarg had
testified in the cross-examination
that her wedding ring was "at the
bottom of the Mississippi River.” She
explained that she had dropped it
over the side of the boat last sum- |
mer. when it seemed that all of her
attempts at reconcifiation had failed.
“Winzenburg is still disabled. He
was carried to the courtroom, where
he testified from a cot in his parents’
behalf.
“Members of the jury said that the
letters from the parents, Robert and
Sophie Winzenburg, 25 Highland Tur-'
race, Richmond Heights. and the fact
tkat his insurance was made out to
them, had much 1o do with the ver
dict. Maj, Frank Carmack, also for- |
merly of the 138th Infantry, testified
that Lieutenant Winzenburg's wife
had tried to have him induce her
hushand, then supposed to be dying,
to sign a paper turhing over his in
surance to her, when the i3Bth was
stationed at Camp Doniphan.”. ‘
.
Third Ward Launches
Its Clean-Up Campaign
Members of the committee in
charge of clean-up work in the Third
Ward have appealed to all residents
to assist in the work during the
clean-up drive which started Thurs
day and continues for one week.
Members of the committee are Mrs
A. J. Robertson, Mrs. P. E. Willlams,
I\flrs. C. P. White and Mrs. E. E. Ruf
fin. /
Residents of the ward have been
asked to clean up their yards, wher
ever necessary, and to lend the com
mittee aid in giving the Third Ward
a good showing in clean-up work.
The clean-up campaign is being
conducted in Atlanta under the aus
pices of the Federation of Women's
Clubs. The First and Second Wards
have already completed their week's
campaig and other wards of the
city will follow in order, a week be
ing allotted for each.
.
Wood Firm to Have
’
Plant at East Point
Within a short time the construc
tion work of a new plant for the
Southern Wood Preserving Company
will begin on a tract of thirty acres
of land which they have purchased
in the northwest section of East
Point.
When this new plant is completed
the company will move to it from its
present location at Fort MePherson.
Grading work for the foundations and
for the side-tracks is about com
pleted, and they will have a network
of trackage, seven in all,
They will have their own engine, so
that they %n place cars in the d4if
ferent sectibns of their yard at any
time they desire to do so.
. o
Navy Needs Musicians,
. . .
Says Recruiting Officer
A call for musicians has been is
sued by the United States navy re
cruiting station. It has been an
nouncad that hereafter all musicians
enlisting in the navy will be traijed
at the naval operating bhase in Hamp
‘ton Roads, Va, or at the training
stations in Great Lakes, lIL, or San'
Francisco.
‘ Courses are to he standardized at
these three places ii order that a suf
ficient number of musicians may be
‘produced for the navy bands on the
varions ghips. Men desiring to enlist
for this service can secure informa
tion from the navy recruiting coffice
in the federal building. .
Varnish
arnisnes.
Cool&dtel’ int &Glass C
12 North tonyth St
s
e
““p 1
Mr. Dodson, the “Liver Tone
Man, Responsible for Change
for the Better,
Every druggist in town has noticed
a great falling off in the sale of
calomel. They all give the same
reason., Dodson’s Liver Tone is tak
ing its place
“Calome! is dangerous and people
know {t.” Dodson’s Liver Tone is
personally guaranteed by every ¢rug
gist who sells it. A large bottle
doesn’'t cost very much, but if it falls
to give easy relief in every case of
liver filh?},’lhhh"fl! and constipation,
just ask for your money back,
Dodson's Liver Tone is a pleagant
tasting, purely vegzetable remedy,
harmless to both children and adults
Take a spoonful at night and wake
up feeling fine; no billousness, siclk
headache, acid stomach or constipat
ed bowels. It doesn't gripe or cuuse
inconvenience all the next day like
violent calomel. Take a dose of cal
omel today and tomorrow you will
feel weak, sick and nauseated. Don’t
lose a day.—Adv.
° .
of Fine, Fashionable Fall Boots
'
Frankly, we need your assistance. It is a well-known fact that the warm, pleasant weather of
September and October was not favorable to the sale of Fall and Winter shoes. And we made im
mense purchases of Loots to be ready for an enormous business; to avoid loss from strikes and labor
unrest. And now come attenuated, fuel-saving days, when we must open at nine and close at four
o'clock. This is the last straw that broke the camel's back.
True, we have enjoyed a large business, the largest shoe business in Atlanta, but not sufficiently
large to reduce our stock of shoes. Therefore, we come to you with price reductions, including ‘every
pair of fine boots in the house, regardless of cost or style value. Mail orders filled carefully. Charge
purchases, as you know, payable in 1920. No restrictions or red tape; we sell and guarantee our
shoes the same as usual.
_- Two - tone combinations.
Patent leather vamp with
! ‘ I Fieldmouse, Light Grey or
gj ” i Medium Grey kid tops.
‘flf / ~’.4' Plain toe, light welt sole
{s‘} - %i‘g and covered full Louis
- ‘\. 1"~ heels. Also, with imitation
= € tip. All sizes and widths.
- ' The price is now $12.50.
Also Black kid and other
& styles for $12.50.
® Boots
That were
sl7,
$lB
and
$19.50
Now—
o Military and low heel
" walking boots. B!qck kid,
A \! | Brown or Tan calf, with
a‘g) ) ;‘ welt sole and imitation
fi?\~>_\ ) .s;’ tip. Price $9.85.
i ‘(“~ — Two-tone Military boots
A » for $9.85. '
b ‘ Very fine Black kid, Tan
\ or Brown calf Military
b 4 boots for $12.50. All
N sizes and widths.
Boots
That
Were
sl4,
sls
and
sl6
Now—
Beautiful two-tone color
ed kid button boots, with
‘ ; turn sole and covered full
u M Louis heels. Brown kid
& /‘ w 0 , ~ vamp' with Fieldmouse
f \é ;‘@‘ kid top. This style for
i) : Vi % mlerlzl s|s%sßsQ but now on
\ \ sale for $9.85.
,\.l' b Two-tone lace boots,
brown and Fieldmouse
combination, welt sole;
g for $9.85.
All’ Boots
That were
sll,
sl2 to
$13.50
are
Now—
52-54-56
Whitehall
Street “
Bench-made,
' Hand-finished.
@ The finest
shoes it is
R possible to
(Plus tax, 48¢) produce.
(Plus tax, 25c¢)
$09.85
o X gl 9%
Gt £ S & /4
_é_.f'— . N = -
= = = - e F 45
A= L 7 G Y] (75
£ & S\ <1 (L 28
&, AL S s o L S
A R T 3 CIT b ey
,W;},fl;; g e
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4,181 Y.
Beautiful all-leather kid- - H ]
skin boots, in Brown, Grey
or Fieldmouse, with turn At /,’ f
soles, imitation tip and \J’s' i &
covered full Louis heels. ‘%‘gg a )\ A
Now $14.75. Grey and ",,\';: f;
Fieldmouse kid with plain ““—& /T N
toe, light welt sole and cov- % /1 &£ -
ered full Louis heels for . =
14.75. Brown kid for <
$12.50.
DeLuxe grades of Military e
boots, varying heel heights, ‘ , ’
in Black kid, Brown and ( 4:} /éJ a
Tan Calf, staple styles, for- -@;} ~ > ‘\ ?&fi'
1 ke for 899, now. T 0 'f"
merly on sale for - Y Y 4
reduced to $12.50. We have _—4 4 i -
every size and width. Fine - 2
for business ‘women-, walk- /
ing and everyday purposes. :
Plain toe Lace boots, with
covered full Louis heels :
and light welt sole, for - 8 / :
$14.75. Brown kid vamp ¥] / ;
with Fieldmouse kid top. -.t,/f": | 7
A similar design on sale é’}#‘ N \ \
for $9.85. * \ };.
Black kid boots in all -/4 "
styles, at all prices. Every - /l‘ :
size and width over and : :
over again. Ay :
, Popular
styles in
the better
- grades;
fine foot
wear, both
turn ‘and
welt =oles.
All colors
in this
price
division.
Durable,
comfortable,
stylish.
it.-.... 1; 100!’
SHOE
Department
7