Newspaper Page Text
; Georgian’s Boys and Girls
1 ' Something new every week day for
boys and girls to do. Entertaining and
} useful.
e
Mrs. Gertrude Green
¢ Is Called by Death
L Mrs. Gertrude Greem, wife of Lu
elus C. Green, Atlanta real estute
dealer, diec Tuesday morning at her
Qome, 36 Ponce de Leon avenue, Fu
nyral services will be held Wednes
day’ morning at 10 o'clock at the
Chwrch of the Sacred' Heart, the Rev. |
t "~ InQuwur Men’s Department
' Men’s High Sh
\ Specially Priced
\ : l
New Arrivals
Two Dandy:Styles in
Men’s Sh
En ) ocs
. 4%
} \l. AT $9.00
N AND
$950
T HESE are shown in Dark Tan English
Bals, which for style, quality and
price, are simply incomparable and afford a
splendid money-saving opportunity for vou if
vou are in need of a good substantial and styl
ish pair of shoes—priced at nine and nine-fifty
the pair while they last.
Mail Orders Filled Promptly.
Iy N
[fe LR A RN BAL
FRED &S TEWART CO. BB Wi TYNALL
Have your
feet examined
by our foot
expert. No
charge for
examinations,
Men’s Department, 8 Alabama Street
Do You
Know
a
Girl
Like
This?
She should be sixteen years of age or over,
of good health, quick mind, pleasant voice
and of an even disposition.
If she is ambitious and wishes to secure
permanent work, in pleasant surroundings,
where she can learn a profession in which
there is rapid promotion, send her to see Miss
Prince, 25 Auburn avenue.
Such a girl will be paid sl2 per week while
learning telephone operating and her pay will
increase at frequent intervals. Then her
progress will be limited only by her ability
and her ambition.
J. D. ANDREWS, Dist. Mgr.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
Father Peter McOscar officating.
ißurial will follow in Oakland Ceme
iltery, with Barclay and Brandon in
icharge of the arrangements.
Besides her husbanpd, Mrs. Green
18 survived by two sisters, Mrs. B.
O'Connor and Mrs, J, J. Lynch, both
«of Atlanta; four brothers, M. V. Ma
honey, of Dublin, Ga.; B, C, J. P.
| and John Mahoney, of Atlanta.
We employ
the “Wizard”
system of foot
correction.
Have you foot
troubles ?
wowsor AT EANTAGE-GEORGIAN = . o
l NEWNAN, Feb, 10,—At a meeting
of the Coweta division of the Ameri
can Cotton Association, called by L.
P. Brandenburg, temporary chair
man, a permanent organization was
perfected and the following officers
were elected: L. W, Keith, chairman;
R. D. Cole, vice chairman, and George
Wynn, secretary-treasurer. Delegates
to the American Cotton Association,
which meets at Montgomery, Ala.
March 9, were chosen as follows: R.
D. Cole, G, W. Byram, J. W. Bowers,
W. H. Dyer, H. C. Glover, P. R. Fry
and L. W. Keith.
An executive committee was
chosen by the naming of one leading
citizen from each of the fourteen
militia districts of the county, and
this committee has named the follow -
ing as an advisory committee: O
(lover, B. L, Redwine, C. 8. Colley
and P. R. Fry.
One of the important subjects dis
cussed was the building of bonded
warehouses and it was decided to
raise a minimum of SIOO,OOO, in shares
of SSO each, and the following com
mittee was appointed to arrange the
campaign: George W. Wynn, R, D.
Cole and B, M. Drake.
san €
Lew Cody, in ‘Beloved
» . .
Cheater, at Criterion
A beautiful girl who does not believe in
kissing. Two men, Then the girl is
kigsed in the dark, and she finds that
kissing is not so bad, after all; but—who
i 8 the man? That is the unusual theme
of “The Beloved Cheater,”" the big feature
photoplay in which Lew Cody s being
starred this week at the Criterion.
The real romance of the girl’s life com
mences when she is kissed, and she dis
covers it was not her fiance who did the
kissing. Of course, she finds the man
' only to lose him, for the “Beloved Cheat
er'’ refuses to let her sacrifice her happi
pess by marrying & man of his type,
In this picture the leading character is
taken by a screen mnotable who, hereto
fore, has played the role of villain in a
number of productions, “The Beloved
Cheater” ‘IB rather unusual in theme, and
is doubly interesting for that reason. Lew
Cody does splendid work and is surrounded
by an unusually capable company. The
entire production is on a most lavish
scale,
Other features this week are the Fox
News, a Mutt and Jeff comedy, the Cri
terion Orchestra, Dave Love, conductor,
and the pipe organ, Ben J. Potter, concert
organist, i
$750 Reward Offered
For Slayer of Moore
Rewards of $750 will be paid by the
State and De Kalb County for arrest,
with evidence to convict, of the slayer
of Grady Moore, the mute farmer who
was killed near Cedar Grove church
several days ago. .
Governor Dorsey offered a reward
of SSOO Monday for the State and
County Commissioner 1. T. Y. Nash
has offered a reward of $250 on be
halt of De Kalb County.
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' OMEHOW, on a day like this (1
S fs 1:18 p. m. on Tuesday) one
geis a down-hearted and gen
erally disgusted attitude toward llte!
in general and Georgia weather in
particular., It starts running through
one's subconscious mind a slow and
melancholy air, its cadence fitted to
the drip of the drizzly rain. on the
window sills, but with the staccato
melody of the telegraph instruments
running through it as a thread. And
one wonders why the dusky but melo
dious Professor Handy = of Memphis
didn’t start his series of plaintive and
weird compositions with the “Rainy
Day Blues” instead of reflecting the
melancholy of the cornfield hand with
the melon season over and the pos
sum season still waitning upon the
first frost. Perhaps it was because
the weather in Memphis was better—
but that is impossible. There is no
chill quite so penetrating as that
which blows off a big river, its
waters swollen by the melted ice ot
the upland streams. It may be that
Professor Handy knew of a panacea
for a rainy winter day. 1 recall a
decoction the bald headed dispenser
at Doc Hottum’s place used to mix. It
was called a Mamie Taylor, and it
would make one oblivious to sun,
snow, rain, debts or unrequited af
fection. But the dispenser and his
balm have gone to the land of de
parted spirits. I read Mike's obituary
in the Commercial Appeal two years
ago; and the headlines in all the pa
pers from Puget Sound to Panasofkee
called attention to the demise of his
favorite prescription. ,
Ah, well, what is there to do withl
a rainy day but put up with it and
hope for the best tomorrow? But you
do not really hope, if the Rainy Day
Blues, like an influenza germ, is run
‘ning through your system. You know
that things will be worse tomorrow;
that if it does not rain it will turn |
colder, with a north wind that chills
the house and keeps you bus)ly{
shoveling black nuggets into the
crimson throat of the black ogre who
lives down cellar. A week ago, on
osne sunny afternoon, we took stock
of our supply of lamp carbon crystals
and felt assured it would last until
April 1. Today we know that it will
do well to last through February, and
we feel bitter resentment at the cal
endar printers’ running in an extra
February 20 has been established on
the ‘calendars of Atlanta public
school children as another red let
ter day, when boys and girls will
lemer a nation wide essay contest in
'which the prizes include three free
trips to Washington and numerous
other awards,
The contest is to be conducted by
the army recruiting station here,
which has stipulated as the essay
subjeot: “What are the benefits of an
enlistment in the United States
army ?”
Colk B 8. Wright, Col. B. M,
Bailey, and Capt. C. H. Munson of
\
the Georgia division of the recruit
ing service, have expressed the hope
that Atlanta .and Georgia school
children be numbered among the
prize winners, |
.
There is no age limit. Essays will
be written in the classrooms in'
every school in the country Feb
ruary 20. Notes may be used if de
sired. No essay can be of more than
400 words. Essays must be written
on one side of the paper, and pen
or pencil can be used. The essays
will be judged strictly on a basis
of originality, expression and sin-i
cerity.
Each school will be the judge of |
its own product. The principal Ofl
each school will appoint a board or‘
three judges to select one essay as
the entry from his school. He will‘
then forward the entry not later Feb
ruary 27 to the army recruiting sta
tion nearest his school.
The district recruiting officer will
appoint a board of three judges to
pass on the essays submitted by the;
schools of his district. One will be
selected as the best and will be for
warded to Washiu .on as the dis
trict's entry.
From the entries of the fifty-six
districts Secretary Baker and Gen
erals Pershing and March will select
three national winners. These win
ners may be boys or girls, of any
color, of any age.
Atlanta firms are expected to offer
prizes fOr winners in the local con
tests, following the lead of the Ki
wanis Club in giving the contest its
| support. The contest has the co
operation of both Governor Dorsey
;;tnd M. L. Brittain, State superinten
dent of education
| The three boys or girls who, win
'the trip to Washington will arrive
ilhere May 6, and all expenses from
| their homes to the national capital
| and back, together with those of their
lpm'oms or guardians, will be borne
|by the government, This includes
!v\'(\ry expense while in Washington.
l.\‘ecrflary Baker will present the three
medals,
Alabama Pardon Board
Holds Monthly Session
(By International News Service.)
MONTGOMERY, Ala, Feb, 10—
The Alabama Pardon Board met in
its regular monthly session in the
office of the secretary of State here
Tuesday morning.
Quité a number of petitioners for
clemency presented themselves be
fore the board.
BRYANT TAXICABS
CALL . VYB2
Eryant Tixi so.rwc;' Is the Bei?
day before Spring. If L.eap Year must
Thave an extra day, why not have it
in midsummer, in the vacation sea
son, where we could use it to some
advantage? And yet we prate about
i Twentieth Century efficiency!
Not for hundreds and hundreds of
vears has the slightest move beeen
made toward changing that extra day
into the summer time. We are too
prone to follow in the footsteps of
our ancestors. Old Alex W. Coper
nicus or Julius H. Caesar or whoever
it was who prepared the copy for the
calendar had a rent note due on
{ March 1 and his wife had just pur
chased a dancinz frock, and he had to
do something and do it quick, so he
stuck in that Leap Year day and
’sta]led the landlord long enough to
g 0 out and touch a friend. Four years
Ilater, I suppose, he got up against it
|again and once more called upon the
| little Leap Year joker, and then it
|became a habit and then a tradition
land then it became a constitutional
amendment, I suppose.
But moping o'e: tne ,om*ti'ty of
Leap Year hasn't done anything to
’ward improving the weather. We
could put up with conditions better,
maybe, if it were not for two or three
immigrants from Southern California
who gather about my desk and read
the papers from home and recite the
alleged fact that the total rainfall in
L.os Angeles in twelve months has
been five and three-tenths inches, or
some such figure, and that theyi
never owned an overcoat out there
except for aeroplaning and such
winter sports. They make me won
|der why they left there, but when I
Isuggest that the sheriff might know,
they become peeved and switch the
subject to the eight million miles of
concrete highways on the Pacific
coast as compared to the Georgia
'weather man’s daily report, which de
'clares another strip of the Dixie
!Highway is “impassible.”
} Oh, well, Congress hasn't adopted
an amendment prohibiting sleep,
‘mough it probably will when it gets
round to it, and then they’'ll have to
quit making speeches in public and
circulating the Congressional Record.
I've succeeded in getting to the end
of another column without going out
into the weather after facts to adorn
it, and I think I'll go home and take
a nap.
\
A geries of lectures on “Christian
Stewardship” will be delivered in
Atlanta by Dr. Harvey Reeves Calk
ins of New York, under the auspices
of Epiphany Episcopal Church. They
will begin February 15 and continue
tl rough February 18.
Doctor Calkins is to speak ot
morning and evening services Sun
day and in the evening at 8 o'clock
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesdoy.
Arrangements also are being made
for him to speak in a downtown hall
at the noon hour on the three week
cay”’
Doctor Calkius is prominent a: a
lecturer and an author. He lived for
ten vears amiast the religious, po
litical and philosophical moverrents
of India, returning to this coun‘rv in
1912 to become editorial directer of
the centenary movement of the Merk
odist Church.
He is author of “Man and Liis
Money,” “The Story of Mary Christo
pher,” %nd ‘“The Centenary at Old
First.,” 2
Although a worker in the Metho
dist Church, he has been called to
Atlanta to lecture under the direction
of the Episcopal Church, which fact
is presented by Atlanta church work
ers as emphasizing the broad views
now held toward denominational
matters,
-
For Thirty Years
that old reliable herb remedy, Dr.
Burkhart's Vegetable Compound—a
30 day treatment—all druggists, 2jec,
has proven a God-send to suffers of
Liver, Kidney and Stomach Troubles,
Rheumatism, Constipation and Ca
tarnch—and to prove to the 10,000,000
sufferers from these dread maladies
the merits of his great compound,
send a postal to Dr., Burkhart, 621
Main St., Cincinnati, 0., and he will
send you the treatment—pay for same
after you are cured. 30 days treat
ment, 26c. All druggists—Adv,
And Body. Skin Swollen
Andßed. CuticuraHeals.
‘“When baby was two weeks old
he had something like heat on hia
. face and little white blis-
TN ters broke out. The erup
-5 tion spread over his body
[ o | and limbs. The skin be
& / cameswollen and red and
\\ his clothing seemed to
‘ irritate. He became very
cross, could not sleep.
‘“‘He went on until he was three
months old. Then I began to use
Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and I
used one cake of Soap and one box of
Ointment when he was healed.”
(Signed) Mrs. ]. Neafus, Guston, Ky.
Try to prevent further trouble by
using Cuticura for all toilet purposes.
l Sample Eneh Free l‘ Mall Address: "Cuticurs
| Raburatories, Dept N, n, Mass."' Soid every
i . e Omtmer* 2 and 80e. Taievm '
| M Calinrs Seas shavas without mae.
TEACHERS GIVEN RAISE.
FITZGERALD, Feb, 10.-—~The Board
of Education has increased tha sal
Never again will there be a milk famine
use POWDERED MILK
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AN S
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T
i MILK
s |
| Il oy
KLIM Powdered Milk
has been tested and approved by Good
Hou-ekeepinfi Bureau of Foods, Sani
tation and Health, Dr. Harvey W.
Wiley, Director.
What Georgia
People Think
of Klim.
““Very much pleased
in every way with
Khm.':
Mrs.W.W.Starr Jr.,
650 Ponce de Leon
Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
*Tt gives me pleasure to
recommend Klim Powdered
Whole Milk. It is entirely
satisfactory for cvery pur
pose for which fresh milk is
used. Economical, convenient
and altogether satisfactory.”
(Signed) C. J. Kamrex
Atlanta, Ga.
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L BISCUITS— ed with a .
il CALUMET Shess-—taßpee Wilha
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*“f@% Makes Mos You save v‘g;enyzu use it. }}i
when yol sed with, B Vel
o v e lutely ou save Wik it is w o |
5% ’ because it is figoin the }’w o mater"dsduct of the 57 o
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b v its leaven e and sanitary B |
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sl B Absoluwcertm?lsual —et ] Aut 01 Drive away
o e i o |
por | B more than thwith U | TWJ}E'Y Sfiares. Raduce
b % ising force, w you bake- esil L
f{% nsoderate pn{‘fi\mr AL bak’{,“ficsous and w B |
e| B m most delic | A
B pay for %Aa%cidedw g 7 some ekinga
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e : the most econ b s hLoal |
”'% Mok of leaveners. 6' il fii Al B e 3“*"7;{'%"';."’7" 7 7
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20 ,‘é"fvf,,.‘»’BE A e uy Calum : ounces.
‘%’:’-%;’?" b % ot 12
s«»@:’* - heny ' 16—n
R o Ib%r w .nt ‘t- bl T.. eB s
Remen "d if youwa
full pound,
Seeing Atlanta With McGill
Every Sunday Cartoonist Ray McGill
conducts a sightseeing trip in the columns™
of The Sunday American.
aries of the loca I teachers, although
each is under contract. The board
ing houses of the city made a re
No longer do you need to worry about your milk sup
ply. Since powdered milk has been discovered, all your
milk problems are at an end. Now you need not fret
about deliveries—you need not wonder if the milk will
be sweet when you are ready to use it. You have no fear
of a milk famine. ,
The progress of modern food science has developed
Spell it backwards . \ FEas )
K v rd}(l
I ! N B
g o
BRAND
POWDERED MILK
Klim is made of rich, pure pas
teurized milk witii the water re
moved. It is not cooked. Nothing is
changed—nothing added.
Klim is Milk with all the neces
sary food materials in it
Restore Klim to liquid form by
simply adding water to it. s+Again
you have rich, sweet, wholesome milk
—as fresh as the day it was pow
dered—unchanged in character or
flavor. :
The quality of Klim is uniform in
all seasons, 1 all places. Time does
VISIT THE KLIM SHOP
33 PEACHTREE ARCADE
MRS. W. J. McDANIEL, Manager.
There is a 2 Klim demonstration now being
given at the Klim Shop. A visit there is
worth money to you. For Klim Brand
Powdered Whole Milk costs but 18%ic a
quart (when restored to liquid form)—a big
saving right there——when you compare this
price with the present price of liquid whole
milk. A visit to the Klim Shop will save
you future worry about your milk supply.
Go to_the Klim Shop, T(g-DAY and know
why Klim is ecomomical, convenient, and
cent increase in board to the teach
ers, which was thus met by the Board
of Education.
not, count with Klim until it is res
stored to liguid form. Just as long
as Klim is is powdered form, it re
quires no ice to keep it. Make up the
amount you need as you need it,
Then none is left to sour or to be
thrown away.
Ask your own physician about
Klim.
Klim comes in two forms: Klim
Brand Powdered Whole Milk (Full
Cream) and Klim Brand Powdered
Skimmed Milk. :
Try a Klim Shake at your favorite
Soda Fountain.
dependable in- quality and supply. Drink &
free sample of Klim distributed =zt the
Klim Shop and see for yourself how dchi
cious Klim really is. [Leave your order for
a regular supply of Klim. 'lyakc- a package
home with ,ou to prove its value in daily
use.
Klim is ‘packed in 2%-pound packages,
This size of Klim Brand Powdered Whole
Milk makes 10 quarts of liquid whole milk
and cests $1.85 a package.
Merrell-Soule Company