TBJE THM THE CONSTITUTION SOVTHfRPT . 13 ceata weekly. XLVL—NO. 121. ATLANTA, GA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1913^—SIXTEEN PAGES. It DUANE RELEASED Baptist Preachers of Atlanta Convene at College Park Church UNCLE SAM TURNS BY JURY BACK OF HIS M TO

Mystery Deepens' in Death Huerta Is Told the United of Young Girl Found Slain States Views His Assump- in Bedroom of Boarding tion of Dictatorship With House. Abhorrence.

PRIVATE DETECTIVES CALLED INTO CASE NO ACTS BY DICTATOR WILL BE RECOGNIZED Boarder, Arrested on Suspi- cion, WH1 Be Held in City U. S. Will Not Accept Com- Pending Further Investiga- ing Elections as Legal. tion of Crime. Foreign Governments Noti-

Thomasville, Ga,, October 14.—(Spe- fied of American Attitude. cial.)—Incomprehensible mystery still surrounds the death of Miss Dorothy Washington, October 14 —The United Haug at the Southern Home here early Monday morning and at the end of to- > States government today informed day's dillgrent work, both by local po- Provisional President Huerta that It lice officials and the coroner's Jury, looked with abhorrence aud amazement there is still no evidence to indicate upon his assumption of both executive person or persons connected with the - and legislative powers in .Mexico and murder that in view of his couifae could not W. T Dunne, arrested last night on regard as confctitutional the elections su&pieion, was icleased'this afternoon. Mi. Duane is a man about 50 years of , v~ - planned for October ^6 age, and came here from Tampa, the ,- VV>'^. ^..:^^ V-H^S- . Two Note* Strongly Phraned. first of September, working since then Two notes, one strongly phrased and for a meat market. He it was who was written by Secretary Bryan, Inquiring awakened by Mrs. Haug when she first about the safety of imprisoned mem- entered, the room and who stayed with First vsession of fifth annual convention of 'Atlanta 'Association of Baptist Churches began Monday Morning. Convention will last through Thursday. bers of the Mexican congress, and the the body while she went to search for the telephone to call a physician. other drawn in forceful language by Mr. Duane told the same story as on President Wilson lum&elf and <*aid to the original examination. He stated constitute practically the last efforts that he was awakened by a noise about of the Washington government to deal 4 o'clock. He usually gets up at 4.30 LAST NIGHT IN COTTON CASE APED •with the Huerta authorities by diplo- o'clock to go to work, and seeing that S'JLZER VERDICT DOCTOR ENDS TEST matic means unless theie is a decided It was not jet time, although he had change of spirit on the part of the of- put on his shoes and trousers, he lay back down on tile bed and dozed off FOR JULIAN HAWTHORNE IN U.S. APPEALS COURT ficials in Mexico City, were sent to this •waiting for the alarm clock. He was MAYJOELAYED Mexican president. disturbed by Mrs. Haugr. who asked for TO TRACE POISON The negotiations through John Land a match and he gave her his lamp, the Today He and Dr. Morton After Eight Years Suit Is Still had progressed to the point where the chimney of which he broke in the ex- Will Be Discharged and Will Being Fought to Recover state department accepted the indorse- citement. He says he then slipped on Unofficially Reported That "I'm the Victim of an Infam- ment of Federico Gamboa for the a shirt and went into the room. Action of Impeachment Man- Leave for New York $10,145 and Interest. La to jesterday afternoon a bloody Deadly Drug Has Been ous Scoundrel," Declares presidency, as meaning the elimination towel was found in his room, stains on agers in Asking for New of Huerta, and where it was confident^ ly hoped that a fair and fr«e election his soap and the track of a bare heel Sleeping soundly on their prison cots Discovered in Organs of Argument before the Dr. M. W. Lewis Physician on the floor leading from the door to Article of Impeachment in the federal penitentiary near At- court of appeals was concluded yes- would be held October 26. Now, how- thd washstand.m negro maid testified lanta •were Julian Hawthorne ancV Dr Mrs. Sallie Barren. ever. President Wilson has made it at the inquest today that she went into terdav in the case of Haven & Clem- of Carrollton, Ga. the room at the request of the doctor Complicates Matters. W. J. Morton at midnight last night ens, New York cotton brokers, brought clear that the "Washington government when the official clock rang out the some eight years ago • against D. W. had with the events of the last few and got a towel and that later, she end of their sentences, pronounced by Examination of the internal organs thought, returned it to the room. Mr. Albany, N. Y, October 14.—The pos- of Mrs Sallie Lou Barron was com- Gaines in the United States district "I am simply the victim of an in- days—the imprisonment of the depu- sibility of an indefinitely long delay a federal Judge of the United States court at Columbus. The New York Duane was not in the room from the court in New Tork, March 21. pleted yesterday by Dr. Edgar Ever- brokers seek $10,145, which they claim famous scoundrel, a physician, who is ties and the establishment ot a dicta- time he left in the early morning until in reaching a verdict as to the guilt or hardt and a report sent relatives of torship by Huerta, lost all hope of innocence of Governor William Sulzer As the prison doors were closed for represents their commission losses on seeking to injure me," declared Dr. after the search. the night at 6 o'clock, Hawthorne and the dead "woman, whose husband, Dr. dealings for Gaines and the Interest M. W. Lewis, aged 38, of Carrollton, seeing a constitutional election held Woman Sleuth Finds Status. loomed up at his impeachment trial to- Cary Barron, is held on a warrant day. This was suggested when coun- Morton, though knowing their time they ask during the past eight years Ga., yesterday, who was arrested anc by the Huerta regime. A woman detective who happened to charging murder on account of the sus- amounts to over $4,000. sel for the impeachment managers was up at midnight, made themselves picious circumstances surrounding the charged with immoral conduct with Foreign Goverame»t* Notified. tie in the house testified that she had asked that the court recommend to easy during the evening, following the The New York, firm. Of which, the The steps taken by the United States u,s.ed a magnifying glass and found rputine both have observed because . woman's death. Dr. Everhardt would senior member is now dead. the 26-year-old daughter of Mr. and the assembly the bringing of a new ( had found any were formally communicated to all for- what she thought to be stains of blood article of impeachment in the event the they had, during: the early days of their 1 Mrs. M. J. McCaJmon, ot Waco, Ga. eign governments. No further negotia- leading across the hall to the room that it would on July 21. •where he stayed.. She was not positive testimony of Duncan W. Peck, super- i tions were planned through diplomatic mtendent of public works, and Henry I doors were never Dr. Lewis was bound over by Re- channels and it would not be surprising about the stains belp/g blood. their commissions and L. Morgenthau, ambassador to Turkey, night unless they were opened to ad- so desired or corder Nash B,. Broyles to the crim- if John Lind, who has been waiting at Mr. Duane was this afternoon at 5:30 mit a recruit to Warden Moyer's force. ' for amounts paid out by them for him o'clock released from custody by the should be found not to be relevant to In spite of Dr Everhardt's refusal to inal division of the city court under a Vera Cruz to observe the manner in any charge contained In the present As both have done since they be- and representing his losses on the ex- which the Huecta officials carried out coroner's jur>, but will be held in the discuss the tests he has made, it Is change. The dealings in some 5,000 11,000 bond. It was charged that he city pending developments. articles. I came guests of Warden Moyer, Haw- understood that he has found poison in . their promises, should return to the Whether this testimony was relevant ) thorne and Morton were at the break- bales of cotton were lnvolved brought the girl to Atlanta and hac United States at once. Mr. Hang, father of the murdered to article 4, Which charges the gover- fast table Tuesday morning with the the dead woman's stomach. j The case is one which attracted in- occupied a room with her at a West girl, arrived in the city this mornins /terest throughout the country among Huerta's decrees proclaiming himself nor with suppression of evidence be- other prisoners, and, just as they did I Say Poison Was Found. Mitchell street hotel. According to the as In charge of the departments of in- with two friends accompanying him. fore the Frawley investigating com- police, the girl declared to them thai He is employed by the Southern rail- a month ago, they came from the I MeDonough, Ga , October 14—fSpe- terior, administration, finance and war mittee, was the subject of debate to- breakfast table to take up the same cial )—That Dr. Edgar Everhardt, the she and the physician, who is a mar- were received here today and the text way In Knoxville He Immediately took day in executive session and undecided ried man with two children living, charge of the affairs and arranged, dally life that has been theirs since Atlanta chemist, has found traces of ton constituted gambling given out at the state department. The when adjournment was taken until to- had been guilty of the actions documents were read at today's cabi- at the request of his wife and daugh- morrow morning The executive ses- Gaines could not be held charged. ter, for a funeral to be held at the the slowness of the clock. Nor did for "it. There are also a net meeting and members of the cabi- sion Tvill be continued tomoriow and either manifest In any way to his fel- ron, who died several days ago at her Want' Store, Serious Charge. home of Mr. Duren Wednesday morning on the lesult of the court's delibera- fine legal points involved. net expressed themselves as astonished at 10.-JQ. The body, it is planned now, low prisoners that he was serving his home In White House, Henry county, The parents brought the girl to At- at the audacity of General Huerta. tions will depend the question as to last day. Cheerful, helpful and kind under suspicious circumstances, and will leave on the afternoon train foi whether it will proceed to vote now or lanta Tuesday to prosecute the case They were apprised by Mr. Wilson pf were the words they exchanged with •whose mysterious death resulted in i states courts The first ver- 'in the city court and it IB now said the nature of the two communications the nearest Southern railway connec- await the actlon^of the assembly in the the arrest of her husband. Dr. Gary Un ted ' tion, the interment to take place in question of bringing the suggested new- those they were to know no more d(ct was reversed af ter an aDDeal by to be their intention to drop the case sent to General Huerta through Charge after midnight. Barron, on a warrant charging mur- incorrectness in in this court and to seek to have the O'Sbaughnessy and all voiced approval Knoxville. article of impeachment. der, was unofficially reported here to- Gaineg on a charge of The coroner's investigation this aft- There were many callers at the pen- the clalm> and ^ preaent argument grand jury indict the physician on of the vigorous representations. The Future of Case In Doubt. itentiary during the day to see the daj I represents the carrying of a second more serious charges. r>r. Lewis stated cabinet meeting was about to adjourn ernoon was conducted by Colonel T. N. Should the latter course be adopted Hopkins, who was employed by the two distinguished men who are booked If, as reported, Dr Everhardt's re- Jwrit ot error to the court of appeals. that he understood that the girl would when press dispatches announced that the future progress of the trial will be to leave Atlanta, today, but to all but port is to the effect that he found poi- • Hollins Randolph, Judge Spencer R. state. It ib stated also that a Pinker- A ins n r testify that she resisted his advances Senor Querido Moheno,'Mexican minis- a matter of speculation The ques- one there was an emphatic denial. The son of a character and In sufficient "' ° ** Parker repre- } and fought him oft, and had no such ter of foreign affairs, had characterized ton detective will arrive in the city in tion at once arises whether the neces- quantity to cause death, the fact will a short time to make a thorough and single exception, the cne visitor who relations with him as were charged. the American communications as "in- sary majority of the assembly to vote was admitted, had but a short talk be taken before the Henry county When the hotel register was exam- temperate." ^ complete investigation of the puzzling the new article could be obtained. This with the piisoners, and what was said gran-1 juty and that body will be asked mystery. question, it was suggested tonight, ined by detectives at the time of the Waiting Reply Front Huertm. by any one of the parties Is known to to retuin a true bill against Dr. Bar- arrest in July it was stated that the .llr. Burrows, of Valdosta, -who was would be likely to be affected by the the participants only It is believed, roi. for murder. Official Washington tonight waited In the house at the time, and who is fact that many assemblymen who pair were found registered as man and the formal reply being drafted however, that the visitor is a friend, Di- Iterron has m.ade the startlirg wife. Dr Lewis declared Tuesday emplco ed at the same bank at Val- voted for the present impeachment ar- possibly a relative of one of the pris- ststcmert that at the tlma he was the Huerta administration. tlosta In which the girl worked for ticles would be candidates at the com- FOUR PERSONS KILLED that he had written his own name placed under arrest he was en route O'Shaughnessy reported that he the past two weeks, was present today ing election and the probability that oners, and that he came from New but had never oven occupied the room. York to be of what aid he might after to Hiliier to exhume the body of his conveyed both communications land and made a statement He said he politics might be injected into the as- fl-st wife "He says he had heard of He declared that another physician, had been assured with respect to the cl!Innj Ailmlrern. nor be given twenty daj s' notive before "I am innocent of the charges of poi- out of me," he continued "The girl, only 130 words in length, pradtically oeing called upon to answer knowledge whatever of it. That box Into Interurban Passenger however, as far as I know, is of rep- Miss Haug was a very charming and is supposed to have contained full soning nij' wife," declares Dr. Barron. breaking off negotiations with Huerta, The specific issue placed befoie the •••'m t-atisfled that no poison will be Near Dallas, Texas. utatile character and I cannot under- which Is believed to have prompted atti active young woman ana had a court in all-day arguments, of counsel wearing apparel equipments for the stand the affair." number of admirers wherever she has use of the prisoners found, and that I'll be vinil'catei and Foreign ^Minister Moheno's description was whether the Peck-Morgenthau tes- I re.uoiec1 to my second >vile and mv Dr. Lewis stated at the police trial "Intemperate." been. /She came to Thomasville twelve timony constituted a new charge Deputy Warden Hawk denies all months airo and %vas courted bj Owen dnlmg children. I'm simply a victim Dallas, Texas, October 14.—Four that he had brought the joung wom- Administration officials hold that against the governor. Attorne> John knowledge as to the time the dis- of strange circumstances persons are killed and more than twen- an here for treatment and that twice with most of the members of the Mex- Baxter, ot Dothan Ala, who was, at B Stanchfield, for the impeachment charged men will le»>e the city, and the time working on the electric con- When seen at his home Dr. J. M. Jf. ty injured when a freight car loaded before he had brought her here and managers, brought it to a. climax by in doing &o directs all Inquiries of that Barron, father of the accused, seemed with crossties which broke from a. that each time her parents had known tract foi the Tosco hotel She has proposing an amendment to aiticle 4, nature to the prisoners themselves, not seen him for two weeks, but told crushed by the arrest of his son and train on a downgrade crashed into an of and agreed to the trips. He. reiter- specifying the names of Peck and Mor- smiling as he makes the statement, as the accusation against him. mterurban passenger car near here to- ated these statements Tuesday. 'Jiei mother the day oefore her death genthau kn addition to those of Fied- he knows neither will talk until they Weathet Prophecy that she had recently had a letter from Prepared to Fight *or Son. night. The physician has employed Attor- eriek A. Colwell, Louis A. Sarecky and have passed beyond his guardianship, The collision occurred on a 60-foot neys Emmett Blount and J W. Hum- him which was insistent that she give Melville B. Fuller as persons •whom the when it will be up to them to talk or "It is impossible for me to believe FAIR. him a definite answer. The girl, her my boy guilty of such a crime as Is trestle and practically demolished the phries to represent him m the affair. governor sought to prevent fiom testi- not. While the deputy-warden will not entire .front end of the passenger car, He declares that the affair has in- mother says, asserted that she did not ,ylng before the Frawley committee. state at what hour the prisoners -will charged to him," said Mr. Barron. "I love Air. Baxter. but without throwing it from the jured him to a certain extent, but that Peck swore that the eovernor had ask- be released he says they can leave the know he must be unjustly accused. bridge, i —Fair Wednesday and Thur»- Miss Haug has won several medals, Knowing him as I do and realizing the people of Carroll county have ex- day. ed him if called before the committee prison at any minute after It is opened The dead: pressed their friendship for him and one foi an art contest in one of the to deny under oath that he had given this morning An Impression obtains, that he Is a Barron, I couldn't think Tennessee schools; anpther for literary $500 for his campaign. Morgenthau WALTER O. SEAL, Dallas, motor- many have stated that they cannot Local Report. testified the governor had asked him in however, that the prisoners will leave otherwise. I can't conceive of a boy man. work in Knoxville while attending the of his blood and his training stoop- believe that there is any truth in the Lowest temperature 5« the penitentiary about 9 or 10 o'clock WALTER R. HULBERT, Lancaster, change. Highest temperature .74. 'high school. She later graduated with this morning and make their way to ing so low as to commit a crime and Texas. Mean temperature ' gs high honors in the University of Ten- Continued on Page Two. the Terminal, where they will be met especially take the life of his own JAMEfe SHIPPEY, Waxahachle, Caused Much Excitement. Normal temperature $4 nessee. She -wrote for the university bj. a friend from the east with their wife, the woman who bore him four Texai. In Carroll county where the physi- Rainfall (n past 24 hours, inches.. .00 annual and the college magazine. She j. CARPENTER, Waxahaehie, Texas. tickets on the Birmingham special. It pretty little children. Seriously injured: cian and, his wife and family are Deficiency sljice 1st of month, in.. 8J remained in Thomasville until six is a certainty that both Hawthorne "Feeling this way, I naturally will R. E. Ballew, Dallas, Texas. widely known the arrest caused a Deficiency since January 1, inches.4.30 months ago, when she accepted a po- The June Bug only gets in and Morton •will use every effort to fight by his side through this affair, A. P. Martin, Waco, Texas. great deal of excitement, as it did Reports from Various Station*. sition with Mr, O'Neal, In Bainbrldge, avoid recognition John Orr, Red Oak, Texas. among others who knew him over the when the window's open. fight to the very end to save him and STATIONTION'S ANDD I Temperature. I Rain and then went to Valdosta In the Citi- Both prisoners are 'n excellent con- clear the family name which before state. statState ooff 1— - i 24 I,-.. zens' bank. She had been in the latter Nobody really wants him. dition Both have added weight and never has been besmirched. I will The girl _and her parents could not WEATHERBATHER. i 7p.m. | High llnchL Place onlj two weeks. strcimh 'ince thev came to the prison. e spend every penny I hare in this WOMAN PROBATION be located for a statement Tuesday, Atlanta, clear. . . S8 74 J)0 She is said to nave possessed a pis- Nobody really wants you ... ' '"en model prisoners and world to save him, but I wish this but it was stated that they would Birmingham, clear. 66 78 .00 tol, but it is not known whether the will be missed by those with whom , rain. . . . 42 4« , .72 tiiev JlAV^ <,eived more than can well understood—should the evidence be OFFICER PROVIDED seek at the first opportunity to press Brownsville, clear. one found at her side in the pool of if you buzz like a June Bug so conclusive as to convince me that their charges against the physician 70 86 I .00 be imagined Buffalo, clear. 54 56 .00 blood was hers or another's. Her fre- about what you want to do. Hawlhorn.» and Morton were arrest- he committed this crime, then I'll before the grand Jury. Charleston, clear,. wash my hands of him. FOR POLICE STATION 64 70 .00 quent fits of melancholia, when sne ea foi %loliting the postal laws on In the meantime the physician is Chicago, clear. . . 70 76 .00 declared that she would take her own Mai eh 12, 1912, and were released un- "That may be hard to say, but I Denver, clear. . . Somebody wants you— dei bond Their tfiials took place in am and always have been a law- being held on the bond which was 56 72 .00 lite, were partly the result of her irk- iNt * lo k In March, and on March 21 abiding man and believe In uphold- Philip Weltner, secretary ot the secured for him t»y L. J. Burks when Des Moines, clear. 74 76 .00 needs you today if you can Durango, pt. cl'dy. •80 68 .00 some feeling at the position she was each was sentenced to serve one year ing the courts. The interest of so- Prison Reform association, appeared he was bound over by the recorder. Galveston, clear. , forced to take in order to earn her point to what you have done. .LnU one day in the federal peniten- ciety^ and of every one of us demand The arrest of Dr. Lewis was made 76 SO 04 tiaiy. Atlanta being designated. In that law and the" courts be upheld. before the police board last night^and Hatteras, clear. . 62 64 .00 own living and the realization that Tier introduced a resolution providing for by Detectives R, L. Waggoner and J. Havre, cloudy. . . 42 43 .00 work and natural qualifications had Don't fly in uninvited like passing sentence the federal Judge "If njy boy Is guilty and should H. Doyal and their names ana that of Jacksonville, clear. fitted her for more congenial and bril- ruled that it should begin November prove to »e the villain he is painted, the Installation of a woman probation 66 76 00 12 1912, the- day of arrest, four months I would not turn my hand and not the girl and also the name/ of L. M. Kansas City, clear 72 80 00 liant attainments a June Bug—go in through officer to look after fallen girls. Louisville, clear. The leoult of today's work has been before. The prisoners reached Atlanta one penny would be spent to save Kay, of 57 West Mitchell street, ap- 72 76 .00 a Constitution Want Ad Maich 25 and when booked bv Warden him. I would say, let the law take Mr. Weltner stressed the urgent need Memphis, cloudy. . 72' 76 .00 practically without definite accom- pear as witnesses on the papers in the Miami, cloudy. . . plishment toward the discovery of the that's the open door for the Mo\ er thev were charged up against its course. It would be hard, ot of such an officer and at the conclusion city court. 76 80 .00 perpetrator of the awful deed. A poat the time account as on November 12, course, to see the extreme penalty Mobile, pt cloudy. 72 80 mortem examination this morning snappy, happy ' man with 1912 Tnat made the terms expire Imposed and I might ask for a com- of his remarks it was voted by the Montgomery, clearj 72 80 snowed no unusual conditions and led next November. B«t the excellent con- mutation of sentence, but nothing board to approve the resolution. The Ne*v Orleans, clear 72 82 .00 to nothing further in the way of an ginger in his feet. duct of the two prisoners gave time off more." duties of the lady probation officer SYLVIA PANKHURST Work, clear. . 56 64 .00 investigation. The case is destined to which brought th,eir release a few dftys Dr. Barron was uresent twice dur-will be many and Chief Beavers stated Phoenix, clear, . .( 8P 90 .00 more than thirty days before the full ing the fatal illness of the young Mrs. Plttsburg, clears . 58 56 .00 occupy a distinctive place In the annals Telephone Main 5000 or that the police would be Instructed to PUT IN LONDON JAIL or crime In this section of Georgia. year and one day term. Barron, and he said he is satisfied she Raleigh, clear. . . 62 68 .00 Atlanta 5001. died of uremic poisoning as stated co-operate with her as much aa pos- Roswell/ pt. cloudy. 78 84 .00 b by the accused husband. sible. London, October 14.—Sylvia Pank- San Francisco, cl'r. 62 I 64 .00 To Fight Anti-Futures Laws. The woman to be installed in the hurst, who was the central figure of a St. Louis, clear. • 68 76 .00 Directors of Southern. Index fo Want fids Page 13 SAYS BARHOir THHEATE1VED new position created has not yet been fierce struggle last night between the St. Paul, cloudy. . 63 74 .00 Richmond. Va, October 14.—At the Col. 1 TO KIIiI< -WIFE A.TXD CHILDREN named, but Chief Beavers declared police and militant suffragettes in the S. Lake City, cl'dy. 48 52 .00 annual meeting of the stockholders of Milner, Ga., October 14.—(Special.)— that he had several efficient women in east end of London, was arrested to- Shreveport, clear..' 72 ./ .00, the bouthern railway here today, the What is considered by the authorities mind who are capable. It was decided spokane, cloudy. . 48 "60 .00 t(rtlo\ving were elected directors for tion here today, adopted a resolution night when about to enter the Poplar Tampa, clear. . .. 70 82 .00 iree ye r THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION to raise a fund of 510.000 with which one of the most sensational develop- that the salary of the new official y ."" ? terras: George P. Baker. to oppose hostile legislation. The ments in the Barron poison mystery would be paid by the Men and town hall to address another meeting. Toledo, pt. cloudy.| 66 72 .00 Jr'i ^ian Ise"n. Jr., Charles Lanier presidents of several state organ iza- i Religion Porwaid Movement, who The militants attempted to rescue her, Washington, ' clear.j 58 «6 .00 *" gave assurance of support and I some time ago volunteered to provide | but the police placed her in a taxlcab °' J Continued on Pag? Two. C. F. von HERRMANN. personal contributions. funds to maintain auch a department. and drove to HoUoway ••cuoa

NEWSPAPER! Two. THE cNSTi'Jk'UTKXN. ATTiAHXA, GFA^ CJCTOBEK" 23 J9I3.

lean congress in jail, a prominent the state department today, and con- Llrar nd Irtettte tb* 'K«rt", ntember of .congress who • dared • to sidered at the cabinet meeting at the Mayor Munches Peanuts' Tit old Swndiru «e«r»l tltnuti rmntni io*i& speak adversely to the administration white house. GROVE'S TASTELESS i chill TONIC. »«>«»«• th» Huerta declared suspended that pro- HECKHEB! liver to ictlon. drives M«Uru out «t tb* bloofl still mysteriously concealed the" con- WhMf Policemen Are ana bulia* up th« «>stem. For adnlb and cMl» Srens. dissolved it is Impossible for the vision of the constitution which grants. ciylllzed world to .vbelieve that the Immunity from arrest1 to members or Huerta group was capable of estab- the Mexican congress, and announces •Tried by lishing ' or maintaining constitutional that he *U1 from time to time issue WITH "RITUAL authority In the southern republic. executive decrees because of the dis- They also feel that the .Huerta offlolals solution of congress. ' . While Mayor Woodward nonchalantly. no longer are deserving: of such diplo- . Huerta'8 decree, dated October 11. munched peanuts, the trial of police, BY AIIEXPLOSION matic relations as hitherto have ex- I says in part: • officers A. L. Smith and T. D. Shaw, Despite Their Opposition At the Kiev Trial Monk of Jew- EWELI/ isted. I Tin view of the fact that the cham- charged with unmercifully, and without ish Descent Alleges Jews As yet there is no concrete evidence ' ber of deputies' and senators of the provocation, beating S. R. Pylant, atf Episcopal Deputies Vote to S that the Washington administration congress of the union have been dis- Welsh Mine Was Shattered! intends to use drastic measure. .The solved and InbaTHlltated to perform aged- car inspector, while placing the- Group -Dioceses. Torture Young Christians. FOR TODAY ONLY •wrtjlte bouse has discouraged the heads their functions, and in view of the latter under arrest some weeks ago, Soon After Nearly 1,000 of th« army and navy from taking any 1• powers which I hold In the department was held at the regular monthly meet- FIRST CAR INEIAN RIVE* st«pB that would give an alarmist im- of •gobernaeion, according to the de- Kiev, Russia. October 14.—At the pression. cree of October 10, this year, 1 have ing of the board of police commission- New York, October 14,-^One of the FLORIDA ORANGES, dcz seen nt to decree that article 1, the ers Tuesday night, and resulted in a governing bodies —th e house of depu- continuation today of the trial of Men Began Work—About Halted State* Mny A I.I Relielg. complete vindication for the accused ties— -of the Protestant Episcopal Mendel Beiliss for the alleged murder constitutional exemption from arrest of the boy, Andr.ew Yuahinshy, the Indian Elver Grape Fruit, ea. 5c Some officials said they would not and judicial action which the citizens Papyu£t "claimed that he had taken ! Church of America voted today at the 500 Were Rescued Alive. OrfiforZSc be surprised if. the failure of the which torm the twenty-sixth congress d h a e prosecution concentrated their efforts •Huerta. government to comply with a/^rdose' "Jf me d icine on^the^dl? '. triennial general convention of the on an endeavor to prove that the Jews Fresh Country £«t, doz. . 24> c constitutionalists in the north of Mex- to the case in the event' that they C e h q r r l y E lsc h rc ish descent, but was baptized when ; ico. This might carry with it a lifting are guilty of any crime or offense. mthaut Officech ^ r-r SmithIl for,wea whor .wa "Sg'&lSSs called ign 'com| "e effectiv°^c °t e» thi *£s propose^^dd legisilegista - 10 years old. He resides In the Kiev whose annals are blistering with ter- Fancy Wh.te Bacon, Ib. . . 12 uc of the embrago on arms and many In a decree under date of October 10 monastery. rible catastrophes, occurred yesterday Missouri Brand Breakfast Bacon senators think the constitutionalists by Shaw to assist In the arrest, struck i turn must receive the concurrence or The archimandrite carried two doc-through an explosion In the Universal soon would triumph if they had such Huerta declares that "until the people him without provocation. Pylant was j the house of bishops. uments relating to "ritual murders" colliery near here. Shortly after the I R«d Gravy Ham, Ib. ... resistance elect new magistrates who shall take represented by Attorney J. M. Mor- I At previous conventions the question in the eighteenth century and asked day shift of 931 men entered the mine Picnic Ham, Ib...... President Wilson and Secretary Bry- over the legislative powers, and in f nS^/^lJ^nrffJiC &iS?hls£f*'i«»as come up, only to be voted down. that they be incorporated In the rec- an explosion shattered the works. an: hitherto have opposed such a step, the belief that the government should ords of the trial. The request was re- During the day and early in the out Informal communication within the count on all the new faculties to face hat wMl PyfanTwat Slfto^SE !™ree years ago a commission was ap- fused. • . . night about 500 miners were brought SEVVELL COMMISSION CO. last two weeks with the constitution- the situation and to reestablish the The testimony of more than forty ipointed to consider it and today an al- to the surface alive. WHOLJESALE AND RETAIL alists has Indicated that the Wash- constitutional order of , things in the witnesses clearly proved that Smith flrmative 'report was presented. Christian Children Tortured. After midnight rescuing parties be- 113-115 Whiti'lmH St. ington .administration is scrutinizing shortest possible time, as is its pur- struck Pylant only after the latter had! if the canon is enacted as proposed Replying to questions, Antonomlus gan to get the fire'under control and Branch Store, 1(14 Dccntur Street. the leaders, of the constitutionalist pose, since October 26 has been set as called the officer vile names and pro- I eacn group of dioceses and missions declared he knew of Christian chil- at 2:30 o'clock this morning twenty movement to determine what are their a date for election of deputies and w^ag!^^ *fve it- own provincial council, to dren having been tortured by Jews. more men were found alive at the bot- purpo&es and whether they could es- senators, Victoriano Huerta, constitu- He said: tom of the pit. This gave hope that tablish constitutional authority in tional president ad Interim, has seen William Smith. After hearing all the I the care of which will be committed "From my childhood, my masters others may be found, but there is still Mexico. fit to decree these articles of decree: evidence, the board unanimously voted mainly subjects of missions, religious and teachers warned me not to have a probability that nearly 400 men per- n favor of a complete vindication for education and local problems. Any ished. Developments In the situation • are "Article 1. The judicial power of the relations with Jews because they tor- 1 AMUS EM NTS expected -to tollow quickly, as the re- federation shall continue in its func- the accused officers. diocese would have the privilege of re- tured Christian children." Including the bodies recovered and jection in advance 'of the election tions within the limits set by the con- Former Roundsmen Grover C. Fain, maining out of the province to which He cited several alleged cases. those killed at the pit head the known J. W. Whatley and w. H. Turner, death roll numbers 16. Doctors .with Planned for October 2Q Is likely to stitution of the republic and decree whose names appeared on the eligible it is assigned, but it is not considered "Once," he said, "a boy came to me draw out a new expression of policy of the executive of October 10 of this likely that any province would take and received baptism. Some time aft- oxygen and medicaments descended the Innay • -aturuay month, and such otfiers as shall be .1st for promotion, were made ser- erwards Jews bribed a monk Who shaft at an early hour this morning. A by the United States. geants. Roundsmen A. D. Luck, George such a step. crowd of 40,000 distracted persons sur- A I Saui day Ifiaiine* It is confidently expected here .that Issued by him. A. Maddox and J. W. Barfield were After a debate of «everal hours the helped them remove the boy. Two foreign governments generally will "Article 2. The executive power of clerical order voted 66% to*% <3 di- years later the boy was found killed." rounded the pit head all .night and an- the union conserves the powers con- given thirty days In which to prepare other 5,000 waited for news at the follow in the lead of'the United States for an examination which will place vided) to adopt the change and the Another case was that of a Jewish Cardiff station. In whatever steps are taken. Some of ferred upon him by the constitution their names on the eligible list. If lay order 67% to 9% (1 divided) in fa- boy who had also been baptized by the James K. Hackett them have explained to this country and ' assumes furthermore the depart- these men pass the examination they vor. A second section of the commis- archimandrite and lived with him at In His Latest • Success that their recognition of Huerta fol- ments of"gobernacion, finance and war will in all probability be made ser- sion'"—•• ~s repor--« t was adopte~i~"i\r~d readingrtn^oV, the monastery. "The Jews waylaid "THE GRAIIH OP DUST" lowed their interpretation of Ambas- only for the time absolutely necessary !ts "Fo' r the purposes of the provinces, him and beat him," said Autonomius,, sador Henry Lane Wilson's congratu- for the re-establishment of legislative M. Grover, who voluntarily re- dioceses and missionary districts shall "then took him away and locked him Seats on Sale Now latory speech to Huerta in ^forecasting power. signed from the Atlanta police force have synodical rights and privileges. up for the winter. The boy finally es- Nights; S5c to ?2| Mat., 25o to «1.SO. recognition by the United States. To- "In the meantime the executive five years ago after serving for a Other sections of the report are to be caped and returned to the monastery." Unhealthy Kidneys day Incidentally Henry Lane Wilson's takes upon himself the powers grant- number of years, was reinstated as a considered tomorrow. Alleged Torture by J«wn. have caused more suffering resignation as ambassador tc» Mexico ed by the constitution in the afore- mtrolman. He will go on duty at went into effect, mentioned departments and will njake Fear "American Pope." Replying to the question: "What is among men and women than any once. the attitude of Jews in general to- other disease the human system Mallnaa -ally 2:30 use of them by issuing decrees which Many of the low church delegates IB subject to. Ngh.atii:iO HUERTA DECLARES SELF shall be observed generally and which opposed the change on the ground that ward us?" He replied: FORSY1H he may deem expedient for the public it wa.. a step, in the direction of arch- "If the bowels of the earth opened If the kidneys or liver are out All This W»«k welfare. SULZER VERDICT bishops and "an American pope. The up one would discover many bones of of, order, a general run-down Therr Is DICTATOR OF MEXICO "Article • 3. The executive of the report provides for eight provinces or persons tortured to death by Jews." feeling! is the result. Ambition is hothing NINA MORRIS & CO. Washington, October 14.—Copies of unlo-n will render an account to the MAY BE DELAYED synods. In which the various dioceses Questioned still further he said lacking, indigestion and nervous- Core Herzog's Russian Stallions a proclamation by Provisional Presi- legislative powar of the Use which and. missionary districts of the church when he was a Jew he never had ness are ever present. Avoid Popular Geo. Felix and Barry Girls dent Huerta. announcing himself as he makes of the powers which he as- shall be grouped according to their heard that the Jews used Christian complications that may develop Than dictator over Mexico were received at sumes by means of this decree as soon Continued From Page One. geographical location. Each of these blood for ritual purposes. into Bright's Disease. Begin at KEITH W nsch & Poore - Carl & totty provinces would be governed by a Several workmen and officials em- once to use Vaudeville Burtey & Eurley-Burkhart&Vihite "VICTORIANiA HITERTA." council composed of two houses. At ployed in the 'Zaitev works declared Its head would be a president, and in that Beiliss was working as usual on Warcer's Safe Kidney connection with his $1,000 'contribution general the method of administration the day of the disappearance of Yu- HUERTA KEEPS SILENCE to be easy with him." would be similar to that now in force sklnsky. and Liver Remedy Appetite Ho! Ho! ABOUT AMERICAN NOTE The Proposed Amendment. for the entire body of the church as the tried and true remedy for WEEK OCT. 13 The proposed amendment further exercised-at the triennial convention. CLARK WAN*S FLORIDA kidney and liver troubles. Daly 2-4.7-9 Mexico City, October 14.—The status differed from the original in that it In the proposition for the provincial If taken in time you'll notice quo will not be changed by the lategt division, it was proposed that the TO BAR THE JAPANESE an immediate improvement, Geo. K fne's Exquisltr Plioio-Drama 'Tis a Great Joy exchange of notes between Mexico and specified that the governor attempted fourth province consist of«Gfeorgia, which will continue •with its use. the United States, according to infor- subordination of perjury, a felony, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louis- Get a bottle from your druggist The Last Days , mation given out at the Mexican for- whereas the original merely charged iana, Tennessee, Kentucky, North and Washington, October 14.—Represent- •^day. Of Pompeii Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets Are eign office late .tonight. The diplo- that he "uaed threatsxand meanaces," South Carolina dioceses and mission- ative Frank Clark, of Florida, today matic communications between Wash- ary districts, and that the seventh addressed a letter to Governor Park WONDERFUL - THRILLING - MAGNIFICENT the Best Appetite Makers ington and Mexico growing out of the a misdemeanor. province consist of dioceses and mis- Trammell, urging him to call- a spe- AT,\i I to fi£ftf?if?L 11 f aflfaj dissolution of the Mexican congress Argument of counsel centered maln- sionary districts In Missouri, Arkan- cial session of the Florida legislature 1Oc Afternoons . 25c at Night Dyspeptics and Stomach and the Imprisonment of the deputies y around the point as to whether cit- to exact a law that would prohibt sas, Texas, Kansas. Oklahoma and New Jananese and "people of like, races" Llnch 1—Kidney and lilver Sufferers Can Use. have been the subject of intense in- ing the governor foT subornation of Mexico. There were to be eijr^t prov- from owning land within the state. for a Remedy terest today. Neither the American perjury constituted a new charge. inces in all. 2—Rheumatic Remedy Appetite is very largely a series of charge d'affaires nor the Mexican for- Mr; Clark' said he - was actuated ' by purpose COLUMBIA THEATER 14 Central Ave. signals from the stomach. When one Outside the courtroom much specu- Army and Navy Chaplaiux. reports that Japanese had been acquir- 3—Diabetes Remedy eign offices has made known the tenor ing property in his state. 4—;Asthma Remedy AftomoonsTVi. IIA V fights has a rousing appetite at the sight or of that exchange. ation was indulged in as to the sig- The house of bishops in executive Sold 6—Nervine at StOO. , «***»«« 7:3(1 and 9. smell of food the stomach through its Nelson O'Shaughnessey, the charge, nificance of the proceedings. Some held session today declined to adopt two ."Japan is looking for more territory," by all connection with the mind "of man is he wrote the governor. "It is her pur- _,„ / Constipation \ I_II=-E: appearing deeply concerned, made visits that the question at issue was solely recommendations presented by a com- DrnBfrtsts*7"plll» 1. Biliousness / IN A CABARET. ,. asked whether the food seen or smell- to the foreign office and the president's one of legal technicalities and how- mission appointed three years ago to pose to colonize a large part of Mexico I.unler Sisters ed would bo welcome-. office and for several hours this after- ever decided, the fact remained that consider "the relation of the army and and It is also her purpose to locate Write for a free sample giving The Great Knetzgcr The stomach if healthy says yes and navy chaplains to the church." One within the borders of continental the number of remedy desired to noon, a'fter the meeting of the cabinet, the Peck and Morgenthau testimony, United States as many thousands and Eddie Worrel at once our mouths water and we are Foreign Minister Moheno looked hira- indisputed by contradictcTy evidence, recommendation suggested placing Warner's Safe Remedies Co. 2O—Caliarct Girls—20 hungry from desire—keenly, raven- army and navy chaplains in a sepa- hundreds of thousands of Japanese as Dent. 314 . ' ... -Rochester. N. Y. .ously hungry. If the stomach be sick 'self in his office and refused to re- was in the record. rate diocese under a bishop and the we will permit, her ultimate .purpose SO—In Cast—30. then we h.avo no appetite and are ac- ceive callers. His secretary said he Others observed that 'there was a other that the army and navy chap- being war with this country." No advance in prlcx. Smoltlng permitted. tually nauseated. was busy preparing the reply which possibility that articles 1, 3 and 6, the lains should be under the jurisdiction Mexico is to- make to the Washington 'money articles," on which the im- of a committee of three bishops, in- memorandum. Later Senor Moheno said peachment managers' case Is chiefly cluding the bishop of Washington as to the newspaper men that he had fin- Kised, might be thrown out on the chairman. ished his task, but that before making ground that they related to offenses Moi e chaplains with additional as- public the character' of the reply It committed before the governor took sistants and better equipment are must be submitted for 'further scrutiny office. In this connection there were needed in the army and navy, accord- by the ministers, who were summo-ned rumors that several of the nine court ing to the report of a special commis- to gather at the president's office in of appeals judges felt that the consti- sion which recommended that con- the evening. tutional objections against the articles gress be asked to remedy the situa- The most startling rumor which be- were well taken. tion. A special committee will be ap- came current was that the American Case May Fall Completely. charge was to be given his passports pointed to memorialize congress to and that Mexican government regarded Should these objections be upheld this end. and there being no article as the case The flrst of a series of conferences >ws the the attitude of the United Staples as such that it could no longer continue to now stands, under which the Peck- in connection with the general conven- receive a Washington representative.. Albrgenthau 'testinomy should be con- tion was held this afternoon by a joint It was also said that President Wil- sidered, there was a possibility that committee on social service, appointed son's perso'nal representative, John the case might fall completely. at the last triennial convention. Bishop Lind, now at Vera Cruz, will be asked Although the testimony of Allan A. William Lawrence, of Massachusetts, hops but s the brew Ryan .that the governor sought politi- presided. to leave. Mexico: ' • cal influence to stop the trial was The Church and Industry. Senor Moheno verbally denied that "The church and industry" -was con- there was any truth in these rumors. placed before the court for ,its consid- "My government has1 110 such inten- eration when the question was first sidered today. Bishop J. N. McCormicl;, raised yesterday by Judge Miller, no of Western Michigan, said the church tion," he said. "We have no Informa- action was suggested in regard to it must consider the field of industry from tion as to what the government of the the moral angle. "The church and la- United States intends, but so- far as my today. Walter^—"How's your appetite today, Attorney Stanchfield, in presenting bor need above all things to know each sir?" government is concerned, Mr. O'Shaugh- the amendment, offered counsel for other better," Bishop .McCormick dfe- Guest—"Bully good. Stuart's Dys- nessy may remain, and will receive the defense the chance to place the clared. "The church must be the friend pepsia Tablets make me eat like a every consideration." governor on the stand to refute the of the workingman, not only in the pul- horse." While the attaches of the embassy pit, but also in the street and in the are dumb respecting the contents crt the charges as amended, but they indicated hall. It should strive to keep the in- Appetite makes the glands of the Washington memorandum,,it is learned no intention of doing so. side of the cup clean as well as the mouth open and saliva flows very from other sources that the American Presiding Judge Oullen summed up outside." freely—hence the terra. "Mouth Water.' government has notified President the issue as follows: Bishops, clergymen and laymen of This is -the first digestive juice. It Huerta that, owing to the high-handed "The question whether under the ar- the house of bishops, and the house of has an important office to perform, as manner in which the Mexican congress ticles of impeachment as they now deputies held a joint session today to all starchy foods are partially digest- i was suppressed, no free elections were stand the conversation to which' the discuss "Religious Education." Dr ed by it because one of its ingredients, possible and that no president elected witness, Peck, testified can be con-Alexander Mann, of Boston, president ptyalin, is almost an instant'digestive under the conditions existing would be sidered as a substantiv'fe offense,, is of the house of deputies, presided. of starch. This process reduces the > acceptable to Washington. one that will have to be determined Bishop Thomas F. Gailor, of Tennessee, starch in foods to sugar. I Regarding the possible withdrawal of when you 'finally determine the merits said the church has a great battle to t The appetite causing a free flow of , recognition by Great Britain and tht> of the case. But there also is here an fight among the educated in our col- saliva aids the stomach by its ability 1 dispatch to Mexico of war ships by application to amend the articles and lege. He offered figures tending to to mix the food eaten with mouth • Germany, the foreign minister, said to- also a request here for the court to show that unbelief in religion Is in- juices which enables it to more readily I night he had no o'fficial information. He use the expression of counsel, to s,end do its work. I it back to the assembly or give' it creasing in the state universities. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets go into regarded it as extremely improbable notice. That will have to be determined Bishop David H. Greer, of New York, the mouth like food, are eaten, then that Great Britain would change her now and before we proceed further in' cited a necessity for Catholics and ! dissolved and fluidized by the saliva. policy, citing the recent, dispatch of a this case." Protestants reaching a common ground This mass then Koes into the stomach new ambassador. Sir Lionel Carden, to When court adjourned tonight it was on which they may meet to devise a and there quickly readjusts the stom- the Mexican capital, which step he con- system of religious education in the sidered would not have been taken had rumored that a motion was under de- public schools. ach juices so that in a short time food the British foreign office such Inten- bate to adopt the proposed amendment is not offensive and man's appetite and that there also was an amendment George Wharton Pepper, of Philadel- comes speedily back to him and he Is tions. to the motion itself, the nature phia, a lay delegate, asserted that hungry in a healthy, normal way. • The warships, if they came, he of without this religious training true By all means use a Stuart's Dyspep- •thought would make merely visit of which could n&t be learned. education is impossible. sia Tablet the very moment you feel a courtesy'. loss of hunger. The quick return of appetite to you will convince you FACTORY PROPERTIES ijaickly that your stomach has been AMERICAN IS KILLED SUCCESSOR IS SOUGHT out of order and that Stuart's Dyspep- PUT ON THE MARKET sia Tablets were the means of restor- BY MEXICAN REBELS TO DR. FRANCIS. PATTON ing its normally healthy condition. El Paso, Texas, October 14.—F. B. Paterson, N. J., October 14.—Today Every druggist carries Stuart's Dys- Ellis, of Cripple Creek, Colo., arrived at the first day's sale of the ten manu- Princeton, N. J., October 14.—No re- pepsia Tablets and no matter where : in Juarez today from Torreon. He facturing properties—from New Jersey port was made today by the committee you may lie you can always obtain a ' said his brother Joseph was killed by to —of the Ashley & of the Princeton Theological seminary box anywhere for HO cents. Mexicans last Tuesday while a party Bailey company, the "Paterson Proper- board of directors appointed to recom- of Americans was leaving Torreon for ties" realized $123,000, the assessed mend a man for president of the semi- the border. F. B. Ellis was shot in valuation of the same being $298,000. nary to succeed Dr. Francis L. Patton, the arm. Three others of the party The purchaser of the flrst three lots who resigned last May. The board set are missing. They are, J. M. Parsons, was Melvin G. Palliser, of 100 'Wil- the third Tuesday in January as the Wichita, Kan.; L. M. White, Butte, liams street, New York city. The day for the next meeting when the Hon., and A. T. Stevens, Sacramento, purchaser of lot four was the Sipp committee announced it would be ready CashCro.Co. Cal. Machine' company, of Paterson. For to make a report. The party was a*bout half-way be- some unexplainable reason there was Among these being considered for the 118-120 Whitehall tween Torreon and El Oro when Mex- no bid upon the Hawthorne mill al- position are Rev. W. S. McEwen and icans in uniform who claimed to be though it Is a good property, free from Rev. C. Maitland Alexander, of Pitts- COUNTRY rebels attacked the Americans. Joe encumbrance, in successful operation burg; Dr. Jj Ross Stevens and Rev. Ellis was killed at the first fire. After and pledged to absolute sale. ltd as- Alfred W. Barr, Baltimore, and Dr. C. & J. Michel Brewing Co. making a brief stand the Americans sessed valuation is $6t,EOO The four Charles R. Erdman, a professor in the fled. F. B. Ellis said he became sep- Pennsylvania mills are fo be sold on seminary. » arated from the others and he was Thursday, Friday and baturday of this tacitly admits by the warning EGGS unable to trace t,.en> after the flght- week. jns- He thinks they were overtaken by the Mexicans and killed. Tampa Sells Bonds. on their case cover reproduced Governor's Tampa, Fla., October 14.—Arrange- Cup fQlc Capt. Shroeder Dead. ments were consummated today be- Charleston, S. C., October 14.—Cap- tween the city of Tampa and the Mer- above—'that light affects the Coffee •** 2 DOCTOR ENDS TEST tain John D. C. Schroder, a member of cantile Trust and Deposit company, of the South Carolina legislature, a prom- Baltimore, whereby that concern buys TO TRACE POISON inent lawyer of Charleston, and a. lead- $1,100,000 of Tampa improvement bonds quality of beer—that the light er in military affairs of the state, died at par and accrued interest. The is- here this morning, following an oper- sue recently voted was for $1,700,000. Continued From Page One. ation Sunday for appendicitis. He was Local banks took $500.000 and an In- Bottle is insufficient protection. 38 years of age. surance company $100.000. came today in a statement by George N. Dumas, a well-known citizen of Pike county, that Dr. Cary A. Barren It is not enough to make pure now in jail in McDonough accused of Jones Cash i poisoning his wife, early in January beer -— it must be protected threatened to kill his wife and their 1 four little children. Dumas, whose wife is .a cousin of from the light. Stores the dead Mrs. Barron, said this wis confided to both him and Mrs. Duma! by Mrs. Barron early in March, lust 124 Whitehall 133 Marietta St. prior to her reconciliation with her husband. Both Mr. and Mrs. Dumas Schlitz iri Brown Bottles is pure [ will be important witnesses for the We Deliver state in the event the young physician %*****» ** **.^^ A^CW ^*f AAA^* *•«. is indicted by the rienrv countv eranri and wholesome from the brew- No. .10 Jury and placed on trial for his fife Pure tard , $ 1.29 According to Dumas, Mrs. Barron "THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS." ery to your glass. Bell Phono 2895 Main jsaid her husband had threatened this ', Big. Sumnels & Co. j slaughter of his family because she DlBtrlbutorn No. 10 complained and upbraided him for his 55 See that crown or cork 27 West Mitchell Street Snowdrift.. reported attentions to a married wom- , Atlanta, Oa. 96c an in Goggans Station, with whc-m he , isi • accused of having eloped shortly is branded "SchKtz." Family trade solicited. Out-of- 2O Ibs. aftenv-ard and lived with for three -"*- town ordera promptly filled. Write Sugar.. .. S1.OO ; weeks in south Georgia. "«ee REVISED IMPORT DUTY, for prices. ; . The . distressed wife, according to Fancy Bleached Dumas, also explained that she would not have returned to her husband after Celery, stalk.. . 5c I this elopement had it not been for the i four youngsters. One of these children Florida Oranges, .Spencer, 4 years of age, is a hopeless dozen.. .- .. .. invalid, while the baby, 2-year-old Prices for Apollinaris Water 2Oc Dorothy, was being carried in arms at 6 Thfnskinned the time. Grape-Fruit are forthwith reduced 24 Ibs. Model Mills Monogram Social Session Called. Fancy Patent . tf*Cfc/% The Atlanta Scottish association has announced a special social session Fri- 1 day night at the Burns' club. The af- Fifty Cents per Case. fair will be a Hallowe'en Jollification Fancy Verdeli Lemons 4 ^5^^ celebrated in true Scottish fashion dozen - I OC Every man has been requested to' at- tend and to bring with him a sone. a story and a recitation or reading

. . ' 7™^ -, • '-.. 'r~.. -•-.,-.• ^ '-'-•.;- ••-•-,-" ;•••>:•'.' '&&*,^;- - \- EWSPAPER •JH- THIS CONSTITUTION, ATL.AKTA, WMUNESDAV, OOTOBisIR 15, 1913. Page Three.

bankers and the public In general may be pardoned for having some mis- givings whether pojitlcs may not have a part In its management." Senator Owen and Mr. Reynolds dis- Victim of Unknown Slayer agreed as to the probable success or the proposed plan. The senator pre- dicted its unqualified success, and ex- pressed the opinion .that virtually every In Hotel at Thomasville bank In the country would Join In it. Mr. Reynolds replied by saying that he had attended a recent conference of 600 country bankers in Boston, and GOING OUT OF BUSINESS that they were united in their unwill- Hepburn Describes Currency ingness to Join the regional associa- tions proposed. In his home state, he satd, he had talked with many bank- Bill — Congressmen Tell ers, and not one of them had express- ed willingness to join the associa- THE BOTTOM OF ATLANTA'S Bankers 'Government In- tions. Government Control of B»nUn. tends to Control Banks. Mr. Bulkley said the time had come when the bankers of the country must submit to government control as the New York,! October 1-t.—Declaring railroads had done. Representative that the Owen-Glass currency bill, now Glass held that the real reason for the before congress, was "born in a caucus bankers' opposition was the fear of an equal intellectually of the men who sit on banking and currency, defended on the supionic couit bench. the administration plan. Arthur Rey- Various amendments to the bill were nolds, of Des Moines,, president o£ the suggested by Professor O M. W. .Ameitcan Bankers' association, and Sprague, of Harvard university. Jlr. Hepburn spoke for the bankers Professor 13 w. Kemmerer, of opposed to the bill. Mr. Glass was Princeton university; Alexander D. unable on account of illness to attend Noyes, of The New York Evening Post, the conference, and the speech he had and Parker Willis, of The Journal of prepared was read into the record. Commerce, also made addresses, -which Politics and the Banks. were followed by a general discussion. CLOSING OUT SALE The debate revolved largely about Toinoi low's sessions, which will end the wisdom of compelling national the conference, will be held at Colum- banks to join In the proposed system bia university. under penalty of losing their chaiters To Hurry tae Hearing*. and on the assertion that designation Washington, October 14.—If neces- of members, of the federal reserve sary, the senate banking and currency boaid by the president would open the committee will hold night sessions to •way to politic.il domination of the ht-ar all witnesses listed to discuss the banking business,. administration curienc> bill in order "I am not espcc lally fearful of polit- to clohe the heainiKs October 25. The ical control," bald Mr. Hepburn, turn- committee today revised itb list of wit- iupr .i^ide from his piepared speech to nesses., and asieed to hear H. Parker emphasiao his point. "I am not even Willis, who acted a- expel t to the especially feaiful of incompetent con- trol But inasmuch as this bill w^s house committee during consideration born In a caucus, and cradled In poli- of thf bill. National Bank Kxamlner •Starek. m chaige <(if bank examinations tics from its Inception, business men. in New York; representatives of the National Chamber of Commerce and a delegation of countrv bankers from Minnesota, in addition to witnesses al- ready scheduled. When the hearings ^ IK TRIPLE SEALED are closed the bill will be taken tip for amendment PACKAGES The committee worked late this evening getting views of countrv bankers. vftei members of the dele- gation appointed by the conference of country bankers at Boston labt week Kennesaw had been heard in criticism of pal tf> of the bill, Robert H. Tremaine, of Ithaca, N Y, and Jam.es H Perkins, of Al- bany, N Y. presented the views of Biscuit 5c the New York State Bankers' associa- tion. Thev- generally indorsed the bill, but in ged that the bankers be given The Fresh Soda Cracker repi esentation on the federal reserve boai d V & Larabeo and R. R. Moses, rep-t FRANK E. BLOCK CO., ATLANTA resenting country bankers of Kansas, corioborated generalU the views of thf countij bankeis' delegation.

MISS DOROTHY HAUG, The mystery of whose violent death early Monday morning has baffled the police of Thomasville. Any time you feel tired PIPE ORGAN COMPANY SUES NEGRO CHURCH; dg&qysTei FIRST IN 93 YEARS

Refreshing, invigorating' and delicious •W ith tho filing of a suit yesterday against the St. Paul African M. E. Suit to Foreclose Is Brought cnmonehoo, as attorneys for H. S. Miles, seci etarv and tieasurei tho oi gan companj, is for the amount were indicted for felonies 111 connec- of $1,100. this being the total price of tion with the management ot the af- nihtallmg the organ fairs, was brought >esterrla> bj the Atlanta National bank, which on March 20, 1910, sold the pioperty to the trust company. Through Us attorney, Daniel Mao- Dougald, the Atlanta National bank as- Your mental serts that the other institution owffc twelve notes of $1,000 each, now ovfi- due, and Judgment for this amount i« state has a good asked. The propertty, ^hich is located 011 The East Alabama stieet anil which vva.s deal to do with occupied bv the trust compun\ and b ^ the City Savings bank, bi ought $">5,iiOH at the tune of sale, accoiclinH to the your business efficiency; Latest figures given in the foreclosuie suit Recently the Amei ican National bank you know it. And the effect biought suit on some notes against the trust company and this case was en- Mode joined, pending the final action of the of clothes on the mental supreme couit on the natter of a re- ceiver. The present suit brought bj the Atlanta National ma ypossiblj be state is considerable. fought in the same way. It is under- stood that the Atlanta National el.1 ms that the order of superioi court pi-tr- If you pay a cheap price, Should you fancy blue, or lean to ine the affairs of the trust cumpariv ir> the hands ot a receive! does n->t shiit of/ the right to foreclose on the notes, you cant help thinking green; should you favor brown or for which the Atlanta National bank claims to hold title to tho propertv as about the clothes; consider- cling to gray, the just right shade is security. ing what cheap clothes are, shown—and you're to say which. IMMORALITY CHARGED you'd better not. If you TO WIFE IN HIS SUIT pay a big price—made-to- Declaring that his wife Mrs. Minnie For all that, it has been ruled that Bi-shop, had been ai rested on charges measure—you're likely to of immorality with one Walter Hat- ten, and that she foi felted her t-asli keep thinking about the you wear the hat of high crown, and bond rather than appeal In court, John W. Bls'hop yesterday filed suit for price; an uncomfortable the close roll brim is the accepted total divorce in superioi court. The couple were maniod March 30, mental state. accompaniment 1909, b> Rev. Dr. Holderbj, according to the petition filed by Attorney W. M Smith The date of separation is If you pay $25 for one not named. B^nds may be wide or narrow, of our suits or overcoats, Everything must go regardless of price. Five-year lease on PHI DELTA THETAS you dont have to think of and you may elect the bow to OBSERVE ALUMNI DAY building, •ffice furniture and fixtures for sale. anything but business; the appear at side or back. Atlanta alumni of the Phi Delta jTheta fiaterinty have ai rangred a tl}e- fit, style, quality are right, ater part} at the Forsyth tonight and Pianos from $5 Up; Organs $1.50 Up an informal supper at the Hotel Ans- ley following the show, in celebration and you know it; the price of "Aluinm day," which is being: ob- 1 The hat as pictured strikingly rep- served todaj by Phis all over the coun- isn't more than you ought try EASY PAYMENTS ACCEPTED The alumni will meet at S o'clock in resents the original. Come here and the lobln of the Forsyth, where those to pay. who have not % et obtained their tick- try out the effect and choose your ets ma\ do so from P. M. I'eteet, repor- But we frankly admit we need the cash for which an additional ter of the alumni association. Hart SchafFner & Marx discount will be allowed. color. Good Clothes Makers COURT OF APPEALS OF GA Railroad Fares Paid to Oul-of-Town Purchasers—Write or Gall Argned and Submitted. Joe Gadlin v. State, from Ben, Hill. Ed Carter v. State, from Lowndee. You'll cherish the hat for the grace Preston Cameron v. State, from Troup. Sold in Atlanta by Gus Brown v. state, from. Bibb (Dis- missed.) that goes with it. Gus Wilson v. State, from Randolph. "W. H. Truehart v. State, from Liownde**. Daniel Bros. Co. Postal Telegraph-Cable company v. Mayor and Council of Cordele, from Crisp. Chris Carolis v. City of Atlanta, from Fulton. W. A. Fiannigan v. State, from Ben Hill. J. B. Smith v. State, from Chatham. $3 Thomas Dawson v. State, from Bryan. Weatherholt Pian J. 3, Qulnlan v. State, from Bibb. Rosa Davis v. City of Atlanta, from Ful- Portable Grates OPEN UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK EVERY EVENING ton. Ben Peterson v. State, from Dougrherty. Joe Wimberly v. State, from Houston. Isaac Sliver v. State from Chatham. 72 N. Broad St. Phones: U|, 3161; Atlanta, 2352 Willie BUKK v. State from Morgan. Queen Mantel & Tile Co. Geo. Muse Clothing Co. Martin Wyatt v. State, from Morgan. E. W. Shirley v. State, from i Rabun. 56 W Mitchell St. I I Will Jenkins v. State, from Elbert. Arthur Bplcer v. State, from Mitchell.

NEWSPAPER! SEWSPAPERf ^^yf^^ff fi*f •1"" Page Fourv !A!PLANTA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBBB is, 1913.

rental value. He said, that the park- SAVANNAH DELEGATION tist church, and «lnglng ledVby X N. 10 o'clock, "Devotions.!," Jv L- ing of automobiles • In the crowded dls-; Landers, were preliminary to the elec- BD*^. . tricts has become a menace to the 15 o clock 'Missions in State of, property in the event of fire. . MEETS WLSOff MONDAY tlon of a moderator and of fitters for -Geor'gia," Frank J- . Fleming, cftair- the ensuing year. W. W. Galnea, a man. Committee Draws Zone. Savannah. Ga., October 14.—(Special.) Rome, Ga., October 1*. — (Special.) — BAPTISTS GATHER well-known lawyer of Atlanta and !l:06 oclock, "Georgia Baptist Hos- That the committee draw a zone President Wilson has appointed Mon- Students bet the Belfry School .lor, Boys member of the Capitol Avenue Baptist P»tal." *•• E. Barton, chairman, around the central part of the city day at 10:30 o'clock to receive the. and the Martha Berry School for GJrla , 'Veteran Ministers* have established the "Berry Sclwol church, was elected moderator by a _ H:_50 oclock. and that the regulations prohibit the. j delegation . that is to invite him to a 'bi-weekly paper. It appears H. Bell,lFund'" p- H- chairman. parking of vehicles •within the zone attend the fourth National Drainage , unanimous vote. Rev. W. was suggested by Councilman Hum- congress in Savannah next spring. J. on alternate Mondays ana Is published pastor of the North Atlanta Baptist phrey and met with approval. Randolph Anderson, president of the by the upper classes of the two insti- IN COLLEGE PARK church, was elected Vice moderator, In ordelf, to get .something tangible tltious. The work is done in the PRIMITIVE BAPTISTS senate, will represent the state on the The following officers were re-elected' for a wbrRing basis, the committee de- delegation. Governor Sla-ton being un- school printshop, which enables a nvirt- cided to write to large city in able to go. The delegation will be bre of the students to learn the print, M. M. Anderson, -clerk; G, S. Prior, MEET AT STATESBORO Regulations to Relieve Con- the" " country for copies of traffic ordi- insc trade. Fifty-Three Churches in City treasurer; A. E. Wheeler, auditor; B. P. nances and regulations. It was also headed by Mayor Davant. Robertson, superintendent. Statesboro, Ga., October 14.—(Spe- gestion Discussed at First agreed that every member of the com- Two-minute oral reports from the cial.)—With every train coming to mittee draw up a separate set of regu- and Vicinity Are Members the association Statestooro taxed to its capacity, and lations to be discussed when the com- various churches country road lined with buggies Meeting of Newly Appoint- mittee holds its next meeting on Tues- were heard. All reports Indicated early morning: until the meeting day next at 11 o'clock. of Ministers' Associa- good gains, botn as to growth and was called to order by Moderator M. ed Commission. financial condition, for the past twelve F. Stubbs, of Statesboro, people from tion. . months. every direction poured Into this little LAGRANGE CHAMBER I McComnell FrmUe* Ministers city Sunday morning to attend the as- Traffic regulations to relieve con- ' Rev. Lincoln McConnell, pastor of sociation vofi nitthes • AAJWWLowerI ^eujwu-ucCanoochece *.**~*~~~ -~=-.. -- ..*.., OPEN NIGHT AND DA Y The fifth annual convention vt the the Atlanta Baptist Tabernacle, was Primitive Baptists, and at nqon con- gestion in the business center or tne Atlanta Association.of Baptist churches the feature speaker of the morning ervative men estimated the crowd at city' are being drafted by a special sesslOTi. Taking his text from Acts ,000. . committee composed of John W: Grant, LaGrange, Ga., October 14.—(Spe convened Monday with more than 500 (grrfTaptertT4"and"i5 verses, he Elder T. E. Slices, of Ocilla, Elder chairinan. w. H. Kiser, Forrest Adair, clal.)—The LaGrango , Chamber of delegates, including 50 ministers, in an impassioned address to ministers R. H. Barwick, of Columbus, Elder 7?**," |,"'_ . ft fnloord and W G. Commerce until after the close of the attendance. The convention opened in I present, taking as his theme, "God's Marshall Thomas, of Valdosta, and Councilman A. R. Colcorfl ana w. w. Troup County fair will be open each •the large chapel of the Cox Coriserva- I Call to an Honest Man." He vividly flder S. H. Whatley. of Pavo, preached. Humphrey. The committee held its first meeting night until midnight. tory of Music at College Park. Ga., and ! depicted Paul's trip to Damascus and Preparations have been under way The office force of the chamber of will, continue Thursday. Fifty-three declared that God spoke each hour to or weeks to accommodate the crowd, in the office of Mayor Woodward every one of His earthly teachers of nd that the citizens of Statesboro and Tuesday morning. Judge John S. commerce has been getting out more churches In Atlanta and the immediate His Vord and directs them. He as- icmbers of the denomination had pre- than two or three hundred letters a vicinity are memb.ers of the associa- serted that. not only were the minis- iared to' feed a scriptural multitude Candler, who is a member from coun- day, all personally dictated, for the tion. ters to ba commendetl for the work was evidenced by the heavily laden ell, is in New York and will not take past two weeks. Week before last Henry Ford saw it first—and Devotionals conducted by Rev. J. L. that they Tiad done during the past a'ble„.„.„s erecte„.. ____d _under the trees sur- part in the deliberations until over three hundred packages of liter- year, bu-t that God wotild reward each ounding the primitive church. On each'lations are ready to be finally thresh- ature went out from the office to pros- the others followed. The f the K-lrkwood ide of the church and in front and| j t. Wilmer L. Moore, president of pective farm settlers in the county. e( ou In addition to the fair ,and the reg- At the close of the m'orritng session ear there were large tables piled with |the , chamber of commerce, and "W. H. left-hand drive was built to the ladles of the various churches in good thine-s to eat, the preparation^ secretary, were present. ular work of the cham'ber of com- attendance served a delightful lunch- which Bulloch county people are Leahy> the merce has been -taking great interest eon Ini the college dining rocrn. Fol- The Association adjourned to meet on Want Chiefs Present and doing much u-ork for the state meet American, not Euro- owlng this the association afrain ad- Friday before the second Sunday in The committee, after organizing and chamber movement; journed to the chapel, where Processor October, 1914, at Ix>tts Creek, in this electing John W. Grant as chairman, pean, traffic conditions. It's Georgia State Fair William H. Cox, president.I of the Cox ounty. Von Can Stop a Carbuncle or Boll Conservatory of Music, had the young adopted resolutions asking Chiefs W. B. After It begins to form, by using DR. PORTER'S just one reason why the Ford Cummings, of the fire department, and «VTTRKPTir HB.4I.INf; OH* 2Sc. SOe. J1.00. MACON, CA. ladies -) Moultrie, Ga., October 14,—(Special.) Completely equipped Central of Georgia little orphan children, who sang an< A case which attracted a great deal electric starter and recited. There are about 300 children of interest is that of the state against / 0. b. Toledo in the home. Mr. Hawkins and Rev J. J. Battle, charged with assault with generator Greer both made pleas for an appro- intent to murder Walter P. Brown, Railway priation of $10,000 for a building fund about the Eth of last March. to provide an additional building at the Battle is one of the wealthiest stock home. After some debate on the sub- dealers in south Georgia, in addition ject, the motion to appropriate the de to being a large farmer. Brown is sired amount was carried by a, unani- also well-known, and has lived in this mous vo'te.. The sum will be pai<. city a number of years. The trouble Coats of Arms Painted pro rata and three' years' time way between them arose over a law suit. Genealogical and Historical Renearch. decided up.cm as the time when it In a discussion of the matter, it is should all be .forthcoming. said, Battle called Brown'a liar, and Why the Price is Lower TermN reanonable. References. B. M. CARTER. The program for today follows: was promptly knocked down, and was 1784 T St., N. W.,. Washington, D. C. T. J. Buchanan will lead the singing being given a severe beating when Battle pulled his pistol and shot Brown through the left side. It was 'ERE we present a few con* Our telegraph offices (situated right m thought for some time that Brown our factory) are among the largest individual would die, and under orders from cise cold factory facts, so that Judge Thomas, Battle •was put in jail handlers of telegrams and cables in the world. without bond. The case has been on you can get a faint idea of trial all day, and a verdict will prob- We operate the largest drop forge plant 'ably not be reached before morning. H what 50,000 cars a year Battle is also under indictment for in the industry—which means that we can carrying1 concealed a pistol, and will be means, and how it makes possible mini' make parts for $3 (shop cost) for which other tried for this offense at the present term. mum economy. Read carefully. Then manufacturers must pay $9. . , draw your own conclusions. We^ have over $3,000,000.00 worth of LARGE CROP OF COTTON automatic machinery—which means that we We are the second largest con- can cut production co'-ts, on machined parts, PICKED IN TIFT COUNTY sumers of aluminum in the world—not 50%. Tifton, Ga., October 14.—(Special.)— in the automobile industry—but in the This year we have contracted for 200,000 Seventy-five per cent of the cotton crop in Tift county has been picked, accord- world. We use 18,000 pounds a day or tires, 250,000 lamps, 100,000 fenders, 200,000 ing to reports from every district In wheels, and 200,000 rims—and these are only the county made to the semi-monthly 5,400,000 pounds a year. : farmers' meeting in the Tifton Cham- some of the trimmings. ber of Commerce. Those reports also This year we will use 20,000 tons of showed the acreage for the year as Some figures 1 twenty per cent larger than last year, steel. and the yield a'bnut ten per cent better. Yes—but they show the immensity of The crop is much earlier; however, and One of our recent monthly aver* this institution. And it's immensity that makes with the exception of a few large farrhs will all be g'athered before the ages on incoming freight alone was over for economy—for maximum production results first of November. in minimum costs and you save the difference. The corn acreage is ten per cent 85 carloads a day, or a total of 5,100,000 greater but the yield is smaller owing The economical effect of such purchas- to unfavorable season. A large oat pounds of incoming daily freight. crop will be put'in. The county oat ing power is singularly evident in the 1914 club which Farmer Demonstration On outgoing freight .we never fall Overland. Agent Smith set out to organize with OTJ'LLspend many fifty members will probably be in- below 35 carloads a day and often go as In every respect here is an improved and ft creased to' 100 or more. These club larger car but the price is lower than ever.. Ya pleasant evening members prepare land, fertilize and high as 60 carloads a day. This year plant under direction of the depart- our outgoing freight will approximate The motor is larger—but theprice is lower. in your. Crossetts. The ment of agriculture. Several farmers The wheelbase is longer—but the Juice i* expressed their intention to sow burr 270,000,000 pounds. real man style of them clover and rye. lower. and their splendid com- Our incoming express matter will average The tires are larger—but the ftrice is lower.1 fort make them friends NEW DEPARTMENT OPENS ten to twelve thousand pounds a day and out- The new car has electric lights through- going is almost double that. out—even under the dash—but the price is indeed. Note the hand- AT THE JEWISH ALLIANCE some model below. We print our American catalogue in lower; ° The public speaking- department of 1,000,000 lots. In addition to that is our Ger- The body is designed with cowl dash the Jewish Educational alliance, which man, Italian, French, Spanish and Portuguese and flush U doors with concealed binges— is intended to teach young men the art of making a. forceful impression in editions which are run in 300,000 to 500,000 but the Price is lower. speaking", was organized last nig^ht under the leadership of Attorney Leon- lots. Then there are huge special editions It is magnificently finished in dark Brew- ard J. Grossman. for South Africa, Canada, Australia, India, ster green, trimmed in polished nickel and Young business men, college men and members of the Atlanta bar gath- etc, aluminum, running boards and wheels to ered at the flrst meeting. Mr. Gross- We receive over 1200 pieces of first-class match—but the price is lower. . CROSSE man was introduced by H. Joseph Hy- 1 man, superintendent of the alliance. mail matter each day * We send out over 2000 Then there are Timken bearings, a jewel- Mr. Grossman asked that one member of the students be elected as presiding pieces of first-class mail matter each day. ed Stewart speedometer—a larger steering officer. R. A. Friedson and S. D. On an average we handle .over 20,000 wheel, and deeper upholstery—but the price is Frankel were chosen, temporarily, as (resident and secretary respectively, I pieces each week. To say nothing of lower. pending tbe'election of permanent of-' "jeers next week. the fourth class matter and Parcel Post. Never before such value for sue SHOE TRADE MARK One feature of the new department It is almost customary for us to mail a price! vill eb adebate each Monday night. The $430 to $6.00 everywhere, subject for next Monday will be, "Re- solid too of catalogues and literature every No need to hesitate any longer. See die ewi» A. Crossett, Inc., Makers, North Abington. Mass. solved. That Capital Punishment •Should Be Abolished." Prizes will also day. nearest Overland dealer. • Get your Over- fte offered for public speaking con- We operate machines in our mailing de- land quick and save money. teats. There's a special Crossett partment that stamp, seal and count 250 let- Bead this advertisement again—-then last for people with arch ters a minute. draw your own conclusions. Style troubles. Ask our agents BULLOCH COUNTY FAIR / about it. OPENED ON TUESDAY Overland Southern Auto Co. Statesboro, Ga., October 14.—(Spe- cial.)—Everything 5s in readiness for the opening of the Bulloch county fair this morning, and that it will The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio eclipse anyth.ng of its kind ever seen in this section is the opinion of J. R. Miller, the maager; The race track has been completed and several days ago Mr. Miller found it necessary to erect another building to accommodate the applicants for space. Some of the finest farm prod- Electric hnd. mde. ucts ever seen in this county are now in position. tail and da*h ligbta j Br«w»t* fc^y Thursday will be Savannah day. nickel and all j 'One of the most interesting fea- Storage battery tures will be "Hurricane," the racing ostrich. Few people here have ever 35 Hor««pow«r mote* seen a bird this size—400 pounds—and 1 14-inch wbeelbaM Deeper ophoktay Successors i that it will be, of interest Is certain. Mobair (op. cortaiaa Sold Exclu- The fair promises to be even bet- Timken bearing* ter than that of last year. •ad boot sively by FREEDMAN & COHEN to Splildorf magneto Clear-vision Model RScbebler MNGSBERV SHOE CO., 34 Decatur Street MOULTRIE PACKING CO. wiadahieM carburetor Examine Our Men's Suits at $1O and $15 FORMALLY ORGANIZED Stewart •peodoaMter ThrMcqmrter Boatiaf Electric hora *!•»«» T»llc o-T tl-»e» Town Moultrie,' Ga., October 14.—(Special.) rear axle The Moultrie Packing company was Flush U doer* with organized today and officers were se- lected by the stockholders; The capi- coaoMlod bioioa tal stock'is $150,000, all paid in. Work Cowl will commence on the erection- of the Protect buildings at once, and it Is hoped that the company -will be ready for busi- Yourself ness in the next four months. The officers elected are W; C. Vereeh, president; W. H. Barber, vice, presi- Atkfor dent; R. M. Morrison, secretary and treasurer. A board of directors con- ORIGINAL sisting of fifteen were- also elected; The personnel of tho. officers Is a guar- GENUINE Tbe Food Drink for aQ Ages—Others are Imitatu antee of. the success of the undertak- ing-

lEWSPAPERI THE CONSTITtlTIOK, ATLANTA, CrA,, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913. Page Mve. CLOSES Lecture on Panama Canal IESSE IE PLANNING OFIALTH Proves an Interesting One 60-FOOT BOULEVARD An interesting, as we)l as enlight- have an ocean going ship pick up the Prominent Atlanta Woman in Wants New Roadway Along ning, lecture was delivered yesterday merchandise at a Pacific coast point afternoon and last night at the Wes- near the canal mouth and send the Her Suit Declares Husband Right of Way of Trunk ey Memorial church bv A. W. wynd- goods to foreign points at a much less Disease Germs, Sent Through ivam, a nationally known civil engi- cost than foreign vessels can hope to Beat and Choked Her. Sewer for Over Mile. neer, whose work on the Panama ca- compete with. nal has covered the better part o-f the "Another thing. The maintenance Mails, Attack Almost En- past 25 years. wf an army of 25,000 men On the canal Mr, Wyndham chose as his subject. zone will entail a taxation of millions Charging that her husband, Samuel Jesse B. Lee, councilman-elect, is The Panama Canal and Its Future. ' upon the people of the United States B. Smith, president of the'now defunct working on a. fifth ward project which tire Force of State Depart- Guarantee Trust and Banking com- he says will open a new 60-foot boule- 3ur!ons the course of his remarks he should America decTcle to maintain her pany, whose address Is given as 72S* letailed the work of digging the great free-ta-ali-American-ships policy. Piedmont avenue and who Is now un- vard over the right-of-way of the ment. litch, taking his auditors over the "The work done on the Panama caml trunk sewer from Jones avenue west Treat project in word pictures, ajded :s a sureesa. Toe/ much credit for the I der two indictments in connection with the managemen1 t of the company, had for more than a mile. )y the stereopticon slides made by idea ami its proper Inception cannot' chc.ke- . and beaten her and threatened Plans for the improvement have An outbreak of diphtheria among himself while employed in the canal >. civen to • Theodore Roosevelt, who her life, Mrs. Daisy D. Smith filed suit the employees of the state board of ;one. Is the real builder of the great water- f-r- total divorce yesterday in superior been prepared by the construction de- "The future of the canal is o-ne of way." partment. The project will not cost health resulted in the announcement great moment," said Wyndham. "The At yesterday afternoon's lecture Mr. court. by Dr. H. P. Harris, secretary of the M.I-. Smith is now out on bands of the property owners a cent. ouch-mooted question of canal tolls Wyndham talked to a large number at $1,500 and $1,000, made after he was It is estimated that the improve- board, yesterday that It would be: necr ias all but been settled—but In 'favor school children, while last night a yet indicted. The divorce suit states that larger audience greeted his appear- ment will be worth $50,000 over and ?asary to close the laboratory for a of the shipping ti-ust1 . the question of temporary and perma- above the enhanced value of the prop- few days in order that it might Vie "The idea is that if ships of Ameri- ance, composed mostly of grown peo- nent allmonv and also the custody of can trade can pass through the canal ple. Srmuel E. Smith, Jr;, their minor child, erty. thoroughly disinfected, and that those free of toll, shippers along the Ameri- Mr. Wyndham was brought to At- Years, agro the city acquired a 30- having the disease might be given an has been agreed upon. ^ foot right-of-way through the prop-. can coast can ship throush the canal lanta under the auspices of the Choc- The .Smiths were married January erty to extend the trunk sewer. The opportunity to recover. 'rom a convenient southern point. taw tribe of Red Men. 25, 1905, according to the wife's peti- sewer runs an irreg'ular course for a Dr. Harris reported the matter to tion. Mrs. Smith was known as a distance of a little over a mile. It is the city health authorities Tuesday woman of decided beauty and was popular in Atlanta society. the aim of Councilman-elect Lee to ifternoon,. anil tht-y at once dispatched She asserts that -he marriage lias have tlie property owners along the A. B. Gartrell. an Inspector, to the been one in name only for some time. route of the sewer give the city 15 ?apito[ to muke an investigation ajid Chamber of Commerce Will Her allegations contain the charge feet additional on each side of Its lo disinfect the prPinises-. Mr. Oartrell that on February 13 of this year her right-of-way and make the boulevard husband beat her with a, leather strap, 60 feet. Jaid that, while diphtheria germs had inflicting violent blows and that blue There will be practically little grad- tteen. found In the throats of a num- marks remained on her body for weeks ing to be done. Chief Jentzen, of the ber of the state department employees, Have Ally in the Travelers after the affair. sanitary department, has agreed to Adlcr'c none of them was so serious as to be That Mr. Smith choked her and pump all the clinkers from the new Collegian Clothes sailed a well-developed case of the struck her and then got a pistol and crematory on the street. This will •lilt* and Overcoat* lisease. threatened her life exactly two months furnish a solid and substantial base. $15 to *35 It would be necessary, however, as That the Atlanta Chamber of Com- pose of ascertaining whether the later, oh April 13, is another charge Possibly the street will be treated chamber of commerce might gain the thac the wife makes. She declares that with a top covering: of chert and ,«. measure of protection to the public, merce will shortly find a strong ally she had to threaten to telephone her to quarantine all of those who had n,,the Travelers' Protective association co-operation of the traveling men of binder. Seen found with the germs in their Atlanta. The matter was discussed father for protection. Councilman Lee expects to< have the tomes for a few dayn and to disinfect and that that organization may make thoroughly. It is believed that the Work started early -in February. the premises. its future home in the new Chamber of traveling men will be glad to put a Ten Affected. Commerce building, was brought out shoulder to* the wheel and boost DR. STUART MACARTHUR There were ten of the working force at a meeting of the board of directors thlnss along. The chamber of com- Negro Is Killed. »f the department who were found to of the chamber of commerce, at which merce believes that they would be of CALLED BY CINCINNATI lie afflicted with the disease; In fact, a committee from the Travelers' asso- gri-at assistance. Preston, Ga., October 14.—(Special.) ihe entire force- with the possible ex- ciation and a travelers' committee Committees were appointed to ascer- Friday night about 9 o'clock Will Seption of Dr. Harris arid Dr. L. P. from the chamber were present in the tain just what may be done In this Of interest to the citizens of Atlanta, Brown shot and killed Charlie Gordon Pattlllo. A culture maclo from their chamber quarters Tuesday afternoon. direction and report back to a future particularly to the members of the Bap- at a negro meeting" three or four miles throats did not show any disease The meeting was called for the pur- meeting,of the board of directors. tis Tabernacle, is the announcement away. Both were negroes. Brown jrorms, but a later investigation may coming from Cincinnati, to the effect made his escape and has not been cap- rloveio; p that they have contracted it, that Dr. Stuart MacArthur, one time tured up to the present time. too. pastor of the Tabernacle, and at pres- HIS is the right place for the right clothes at the A. diphtheria culture from a child's FAIR WEATHER TODAY CHAUNCEY BUTLER WAS ent the executive head of the Baptist T right price. Those Adler's Collegian Suits and throat, aunt cjarelessly through the World Alliance, has accepted a call to . nails by a country doctor, without SAYS VON HERRMANN NOT ARRESTED FRIDAY the pastorate of the First Baptist Overcoats we are showing are certainly "the class." iny precautions as to wrapping, la church of the Queen city. Blamed by Dr. Harris for the whole Dr. MacArthur, in his acceptance, Hand tailored from exclusive fabrics, they have a style (rouble. He talked indignantly Tues- Fair weather and a slightly higher Chauncey Butler, of the Southern does not promise to enter upon a pro- and character you are hound to admire. We have a ,Iay o£ th.i careless way in which doc- temperature is forecasted for Wed- Bell Telephone company, whose name longed period of service with the Cin- nesday 'by the local office of the United cinnati church, but all of.his time while Kennesaw wide enough range of models and materials to make !ors, in spite of the express warning was mentioned as one of a party of there will be devoted to pastoral duties, tt the board of health sent out In a States weather bureau. There is to be young men arrested on Frfday night, except such time as will be necessary sure of pleasing your taste. Look them ' over now, flrcular letter,'persist in mailing dead- hardly any change in the temperature, jy disease germs to his office for ex- Wa's in no way connected with the dis- In making journeys to other cities in while our stock is at its best. but it Is expected U> be somewhat orderly conduct which caused the ar- his capacity as head of the Baptist of Biscuit irninatlon without any regard to the higher than the maximum on Tuesday, the world. lafety of the public or of the office which was 73 degrees shortly after the rest. Mr. Butler knew the young men lorce of the board of health. noon hour. . whoso names appeared in The Consti- Alway* lathe Blackstock, Hale £? Morgan "It is a violation of the postal reg- By a strange coincidence, resulting tution of Sunday morning and, .accord- Virginian Railway Fined. Fresh Triple ulations of the United States," said Dr. from the effects of an area of high Ing to his statement, went to the po- Harris, "and I think it Is a crime. It pressure sweeping over this section, Lynchburg-, Va., October 14.—Judgp and Sealed 50 and 52 Marietta St. iurtalnly ought to be. I can scarcely Atlanta had a temperature eight de- lice station after the arrests, were McDowell, in the federal court, today Clean Package ;oncelv'o of more inexcusable criminal grees higher than did Thomasvllle on made in orde* to render assistance. tined the Virginian railway $200 for The Distinctive Clothiers and Furnishers feellgenco. For an intelligent mem- violating the federal safety appliances 5 Tuesday. in Atlanta the mercury The Constitution is glad to correct >ar of the medical profession to send dropped only to 56 degrees, while in act by using hnad brakes on a heavy leadly svrms through the malls tha< an error which was unintentional and laden coal train on a heavy grade in- F. E. BI«OCK CO.. ATLANTA the south Georgia town the thermom- which has caused Mr. Butler much an stead of using the air brakes, with Ivay would be almost unthinkable, If eter went down to 48 degrees. hoyance. ^ggy-aB^^ ,!hey did not do it nearly every day. which all the train was equipped Careless Doctors to Blame. "Tha life and health of the em- ployees of the board of health is con- tinually endangered in that way. In spite of my repeated instructions as lo the mailing of disease germs, they some carelessly wrapped every day Sometimes we have cultures simply Inclosed in envelopes with no further Women's Underwear Children's Underwear precautions. Blankets Outing Flannels "We are strongly tempted to refusi positively to examine uay culture tha Fine medium weight Vests and Time to change; don't let the lit- 600 Pairs gray, tan and white, soft Just the right kind to make up flld. not come properly packed an< Pants, high neck, long sleeves, would do so were it not for the fac tle ones take , cold. Children's Cotton Blankets, now for, sleeping garments, chil- that, in many cases, innocent children all sizes; would be the sufferers. It would be Union Suits, Today, pair .... $1.00 dren's skirts, house dresses, etc. too hard to risk the life of a child Today 50c Today.. an account ol the criminal negligence 50c 2,800 yards today very pretty pat- of it$ physician. 200 pairs plain Wool Blankets. "As. there would be nobody left in Women's Union Suits, white and terns, 12%c value, the office but myself and Dr. Pattillo, cream color, ankle length; all Boys' and Girls' separate Vests Also white with borders; splendid Today, yard lOc T find It necessary to close the office sizes. and Pants, for a few days. I have called on the value, at, Flannels city authorities to disinfect the prem- Today Today Soft beautiful "Eden" ises for us. as \ve have no apparatus 25c pair $3.90 for men's shirts. for that .sort of thing. I hop.e that we will be able to open up again in a very Second floor. Second floor. Main floor, rear. Yard 15c few days, as our office force Is able to get back to work." Podtofflce May Investigate. Inspector R. A. Barry, of .the post- nffioe department, said Tuesday night that while the matter had not been liroug-ht officially to his attention, he Li vest Suit and Coat Store Today in the South thought it not unlikely that a rigid Investigation would be made by the postoffice department into the im- proper shipment of disease germs We have a new standard of merchandising for women of Atlanta through the malls. Special attention will tae given to the doctor who mailed the germs which inoculated the entire 'vvorkinsr force of the board of health and the whole South—for parents in the interest of their children too— with dtljtheria. . "The postoffice has very stringent it represents the evolution of the "Store that Sells" to regulations against the improper mail- ing of packages containing disease , t?erms," said Mr.-Barry. "I can hardly to the "Store that Serves." conceive of a greater menace to the public health .than such criminal care- lessness as this. Every mail clerk who handles the mail is liable to contract Impressive Showing and Sale of diphtheria by the reckless mailing of cultures. Every man in the postoffice who handles the mail and the carriers who deliver it are in equal danger. I Today, Wednesday feel quite sure that the department, Children's and Larger Girls' when the matter is brought to its at- tention, will make, such steps as will Our Suit Buyer, fresh from the prevent the deposit in the malls of carelessly wrapped packages contain- Style Makers and Suit Builders of ing disease germs." CAUGHT BY UNCLE SAM New York, will show a New Line of Coats!! Coats!! Coats!! AFTER A LONG CHASE the Most Wonderful Tailor-Made Today (Wednesday) a sale worthy the attention Roanoke. Va., October 14.—It has High-Class Suits ever to adorn of thrifty parents who want good, substantial gar- taken Uncle Sam fourteen days to e catch the assistant postmaster of Atlanta women, ments, as well as last-minute styles and a saving to Focahontax, who is charged, with the

lEWSPAPERr NL\V sponsible, of course, and hedged by" re- THE CONSTITUTION strictions. ' V- EatabUMheil 1868. A Siory of the Moment He is right there, too. Just From Georgia MASOW. THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER He insists that the board of education The World's Mysteries Hv tFRAKK b. STAWTOSr Tfce irmmom* Prmw P««* WHO WAS THE FEMALE STRANGER? Put>&hcd Daily. Sunday. Tr£- Weekly be made independent of politics. He is right there, with as much em« Lady ot the Drear Tine-. TO SAVE EFFORT HOWELJU phasis as The Constitution can muster, In St< Paul's churchyard, at Alexandria, dropped anchor off Alexander, and there was „ I. "I thought I heard you singing as I came : c itcr ctitJ General Marta^'" THE HISTORY OF THE SCHOOLS BRIS- "Irginia, is the grave of an unknown which selit ashore a sick woman and her husband. W L. HALSTEAJD. On a couch of silver, golden lamps a- gleam, up the road." observed the low browed man. >as attracted a great deal of attention for When tha Invalid -nas carried froni the boat TLES WITH THE IGNORANT INTER- "Yes," replied the professor, "I lifted tip to a nearby tavern she was heavily veiled, . Eu«mc5.i Managci. MEDDLING OF SMALL POLITICIANS Lady of the Dream Time — dream in a dream, close to a century. On &. marble slab cov- Director*: Clark Howell, Roby F»obinson, 'Whisper what the dreams my voice In song. A bracing fall morning ering? it is the inscription "To the Memory which fact attracted considerable attention, Albert Bo-well, Jr., E. R, Black. H. W. Grady. WHO PRESENT THE ASTOUNDING say when the hlg:h ike this demands a pean of praise." >f a Female Stranger." Who was this stran- as the weather was extremely warm. The best room in thv hotel was engaged ' PARADOX OF SEEMING TO THINK stars rest ' "I guess the morning would get along rer? Also carved upon the slab is the in- 'ormation that it was erected by her dis- and tlie anxious husband hurriedly sent for THAT INDIFFERENT SUCCESS IN riull as a thought of heaven all right without such an accompaniment a physician. The physician pledged his honor in a holy breast. as you wore putting up. .You look exhausted consolate husband, and It contains this verse THEIR PRIVATE BUSINESS EQUIPS of poetry: that he would reveal nothing lie would see after your effort, and no wondei. A man or learn reKardinf? his patient. The physician THEM TO DICTATE IN THE EXQUI- * II. can't so around yodeling that way without 'How loved, how honored once, avails~thee always declared that \\r had novi»r seen the SITELY DELICATE SCIENCE OF, THE uttering nervous strain. You ought to spend not, Ailci the Lady of the Dream a little money for labor having devices, pro- t lady's face. Tie attended her' for ten suc- EDUCATION OF CHILDREN. These in- j Time murmurs, soft To whom related or by whom begot: cessive weeks, but he i.cvpr lound her un- bor. A phonograph would <3o ' all your \ heap of dust alone remains of thee.— fluences have been pernicious! It is time as streams singing- for you, and do it bettev than you veiled. No nurse w.is secured, but the hus- Tis all thou art, and all the proud should band watched by her bedside piactically day to check them. As long as they persi&t That sing the Silence ot can, and there would be no wear or tear on ." the Dark. your larynx. It's a caution how many people and night until her death. neither tlie! superintendent nor the board, ; The husband, in order that no one should both of which have done valiant service, "Love light thy dreams!" waste their energy by singing, when they -Ill effort to solve the mN stery of this might just as well ha\e phonographs to do grave has been unavailing. One theory was see the face of his wife in doatii, with his can stir a foot. „ HI. it for them, and then they could devote :hat it might contain the body of Theodosia own hands- prepared the body for burial. After he attended the burial, ordered the The Constitution believes it has served Ladj of the l>ream Time, Life is fast in their attention to something useful. Burr, who had married a man who later be- "The country is so full of labor saving ma- came Governor of South Carolina and who monument, dJotatet! the inscription and paid the Atlanta of the next generation, as well night. the bill, he disappeared. Sorrow's siiadow dims the da> and whispers chines, that a man reallv doesn't need to do was supposed to have been lost at sea while Entered at the postofflce at Atlanta as as o'£ this one. by lighting the fuse that has a lickgof hard work But most people are on a trip to visit her fat)iev, Aaron Uurr. in On the anniversary of the death of his secor>d-claf.s mall matter of the night, New York. It was never known what became beloved for a dozen successive years the hus- led up to the present explosion. The tacts Muimur what the (jicams sa.i when the shad- uld-rashioned, and thev -etuse to believe that '-et forth are V'or the fathers and mothers a machine can do an} thing as well as they of Aaron Burr's daughter, and by some it band returned to place fresh flowers upon POSTAGE RATES: ow s sigh her grave, and during these visits lie came Lo\e, lhat kissed good morning, weeps to •an do it with then hands. For >ears I was supposed that she had been captured United Stateb .ind Mexico. and taxpayers to ponder. They are also have been trying to induce Aunt Julia to in- by pirates. Was this true and that one of secretly from Washington and returned to IO to liS-pngc! paper*. Ic; 12 to 24-pnse intended for the prayerful digestion ot all vest in one of these electric washing ma- the pirates had. fallen in love with her, and that city, without stopping at the tavern paper*, Zcj 24 to :i«-j>nue paper's. 3c: 3(t to where his wife died, nor did he give any one M-paKe paper*. 5c. individuals who may aspiie to serve or who chines. Mrs. Doollttle has, one of them, and when she died at sea, put into the Potomac it's a pleasure to go to her house1 on wash- to give her a respectable burial? a chance to speak to him. desire to continue to serve Atlanta in a And the Lady of the Dream Time At the end of a dozen years he evideutlj ATLANTA, GA., October 15, 1913. day and see that machine doing its stunt like Another theory was that the "stranger" public capacity. The people have been In Life's gloom and gleam, a circus actor. Mrs. Doollttle has a rocking was Sarah Curran, the fiancee of Robert Em- died, for his visits ceased and the grave be- shown the way to correct abuses. They are Svfurmnrs through the star-worlds: chair close by the machine, and while it is met, the Irish revolutionist, and that the come' neg-lected. The columns of the monu- SUBSCRIPTION RATES. "Love be thy dream!" working- away, making the old man's shirts "affectionate husband" mentioned on the ment' toppled and remained so for a number By Mail in the United States and Mexico. not likeiy to be patient with those who of years uritll one spring morning when an tPayable Invariably in advance.) like the driven snow, she sits there reading stone was none other than llajor Sturgeon, 1 mo 6 mo. 12 mo stand in the way. Hid One Misfortune. the Police Gazette, and having the best kind of the British navy, -\\ honi that unhappy lady unknown friend of thettfaithfut husband and his deceased wife came and quietly ordered Dally and Sunday 60o ?3 25 $600 Here is a -unique exttact from a memo- of a time. When the clothes have been wash- was forced to man > after Emmet's untimely Dally 50c 2.25 4.00 rial JlOtlC< ed cnoug-h she starts up an electric wringer, death. Little credence, however, was given the grave to be put in condition, loft sonic- Sunday '..".".'.'..'.'.'.'.' ... 1-25 2.00 to eitliei of thc^e thooiie1* rut llowers upon it, and then lie, too, vanished 1 7HE GERM ON 7HE TOWEL. "If he evei luicl an\ desire foi office lie and it does its work with «i hurrah. Tri-weekly . ••• -°° never made it known to his Criends. We "There's no confusion or hard reeling All ..hat was known of the incident was into the unknown, no one ever hearing fui- By Carrier. President Woodrow Wilson has extend- know that ho declined to be a candidate for around the Doollttle hacienda on washday. that on the 33tli of JuU, 181G, a small brig-, ther of the two men nor wero abie to fathom In Atlanta 3j cent* pi-t ni'iuth or 12 cents When the old man comet, in from the wood- ich it was reported nat. on its way to the mystery as to the identity of the "Female per week. Outsiti. i>l \ilnit.i Mi cents pel ed the "war against the germ to include the fai» in New lothes and breaks the buttons off. It doesn't Fork city by 2 p. m. thj day aitei iss>ue It Tpt- presidents activitj is merely in line do anything of the kind, but even if it did, guishes it—nameplates it. Heroism is risk- Rome, the capital of Italy, and the uoiHi s. can be bad at HoUilln-j's, Newsstands. Broad- i \\itu the tendency throughout the nation to a woman ought to be compelled bs laXv to ing in order that Character may get sxipreme metropolis of broken nosed stone statues, way and Koi ty-second street i Times, building J use such a machine. It would be fai bcttot- credit. Heroism is natural Courage always corner). Thli ty-eighth *,ti-oct arid Broadway j light the spread of disease by choking up is the greatest come-back town of histOr> to buy a new outfit of rags every few weeks rcacl.\—it cannot be manufactured for the Two thousand years ago Rome was the and Twenty-ninth sti-cet and Broadway. its channels. The railroads linallj were than to have a sore-headed woman grouching occasion. Believe fully in yourself—it's the greatest city in the world. It had a mil- around the house, making everybodj uncom- cornerstone of Heroism. The Constitution rs not responsible for convinced that the public drinking cup was lion citizens, and when it got mad at a na- advance payments to out-of-town local car- a public menace. So individual cups were fortable. Heroism is not a quality belonging ex- tion a thousand miles away, that nation riers, dealers or agents "I alwa\s dread washday. There's a clusively to the great emergencies and to substituted. Officials of cities, Atlanta in- Bloomy atmosphere about the house on Mon- larg-e battles; it is a thing as sure and as full promptly retired from business and opened cluded, saw the matter in the same light, so day morning, as though somebody was billed of value and as necessary, wedged into the up under a new name and management. Rome 1 was a mai'i i^l of stone and marble, and was UN PA LA TABLE FACTS. in schools and in man * public places, we to ascejid tho scaffold with .1 fli m tread and seeming commonplace hours of every day, so glorious that those who lived elsewhere paj the penalty of hib crimes Aunt Julia as though great events transpired to bring it were called barbarians, and wero only used A square deal for practically every are seeing installed the sanitary drinking g-ets up about midnight a;jd brprms heating into the open. Against dire poverty as fountain. against great abundance of wealth, must be for lion food in the great city when tiie.\ school child, the proper equipping of the her boilers and filling Lhc house with steam were raptured. But Home got into politics. generation that is to rule the Atlanta of to- Sooner or later the public towel will and denatured profanity, and by the time I musteied Heroism to cope with each situa- the cost of living wont up, and a job lot o£ come down stairs for my bieakfast she's mad- tion. emperors, whose career.s made Harry Thaw's. morrow, both are menaced. follow the public cup. !t is, indeed, prob- der than .1 den of snakes. She pei.sists in Xo one can teach Heroism—It must T>e able that thje towel is more of a menace to look like that of a Sunday school boy, got That is the underlying .significance of rubbing and scrubbing mj old pinafores and experienced. hold of the town. The result was, Rome health than the cup. The latter utensil is things on a washboard, and she's always sal- When people single you out and in un- the statement made to The Constitution by- fell. The citizens departed, the postoffiee throughout the period of its use exposed to ing that if I would be a little more careful, just criticism or comment, place you where was closed up, the roof of the board of trade " north Oeorgia woods reported that the is wrapperjawed and out of kilter, and about 1500 A. D. Rome was running: the world iorated intervals in sufficient lengths to tbml niprht ho -was attacked by_ six wild- the time she ought to be getting a good warm Britain's Cannibals tive. once more, and it has continued to take a big permit of comfortable use. It is logical to eats, four bears and a dozen horned owls; dinner for her little orphan nephew she is (Fiom The Westminster Gazette.'* hand in history eTter since. Superintendent rilaton spoke ot the de- assume that in time this device or some- whereupon a Georgia editor says, piouslj': sitting on the floor'with her apron wrapped The pernicious influence of an unlawful Rome now has! 000,000 peopl-, which IK The grood Lord IceepA us from even being- around her head, crjing in several dialects, secret society in the protectorate of Sierra doing pretty well for a deceased town. It is ficiencies of the system, all the result of thing similar will put to rout methods still led into the temptation of removing the cork and wishing that she had never been born. rather universally in vogue. " Leone is mentioned in a dispatch from the situated on seven hills, and the Tiber, which inevitable growing paint,, and said: from the jug which that man must carry I have to undergo an ordeal of this sort every overnor which was Issued last night. For has never been improved for navigation pur- woek, just because my aunt won't listen to "THESE CONDITIONS ARE CRIMI- The incidents of the cup and the towel with him" a number of years a particular district has poses owing to the poor grade of Roman illustrate strongly a healthful national K + * * * reason on the washing machine proposition. been the principal field for the operations j, congressme"" " n whic*"'-h have 'been , elected- . -. Rom_ e NAL IN A CIVILIZED COMMUNITY." The Hawpv I-ilvlnR Time. But you ought to have more sense, profes- of an organization which goes under thhee j, Is a bustling modern town situated in, around awakening and the almost universal enlist- sor, and I hope you'll quit this thing of doing and on top of the old Rome. It has factories, They are. I. name of the "Human Leopard Society." ment in the crusade against disease. These jour smering by hand." It has not yet beeh decided whether the wholesale houses and street cars, a health YVhat are sonio ot these criminal con- phases of the campaign are really elabora- Take down the banjo ai.d the fiddle, object of the society is to satisfy the crvv- commission and a publicity bureau. It has d,itions? tions of the earlier activity which put the freorfria's got the 'possum on the griddle' in toul air, their men- act to the open garbage can, demanded the Cider s in the brown jug-, punkin's in the lieved to have the effect of increasing the hurriedly packed up and left. The Roman Uj Chnrlen V. Ilubner. tal capacity slowed down to the minimum. improvement of sewage and spoke up pie mental and physical powers of the mem- housewife hangs out her'modern wash where against the earth closet. Kf a angel come to see us he would never bers. Roman emperors once dined on nightingales' Thousands of children of various ages say goodby,— From the Booklet "Uncle Remus and the The full extent of the society's opera- tongues, and When the Roman taxlcab dnver crowded sixty into a room, WITH ONLY The war against disease and premature Xow'6 the happy livin' time in Georgia' Wren's Nest," by Myrta Lockett Avary, pub- tions, -was not brought to light until last strug-g-les for his fare the Roman Coliseum death is now entering that most effective lished by the Uncle Remus Memorial Asso- year, when the district commissioner re- where once 200,000 people yelled for blood, ONE TEACHER in charge of instruction ceived Information that from twenty to echoes back his sanguinary words. stage—the one looking toward prevention II. ciation. and discipline. thirty murders had been committed since no less than Kibe up an' pa«b j cr plate fer honej Here, In tins lovel\ wondei land 190Y Measures were taken, and 336 per- Here and there the efticiency of the Poorest folks a-countm' ot the money Of dreams and memories, A MIKE ANGelO son? were arrested. AISUBC AS1 t LIVE • teaching corps undermined because RICH Corn that fills the bill It seems, where'er I go or stand. "While it is permissible to believe," says In the hoecake an' the. 'still: He also present is, the governor, "that the action taken by ATLANTA PAYS SMALLER SALARIES THE BILLION-DOLLAR HEN. Wagons full o' Good Times goin' fit to kill the government has had the effect of THAN MANY TOWNS AND HAMLETS. The little old sinking and unpretentious Fiddler's got the tune right an' plaj'in' with I do not see him, yet I feel checking the activities of the Human That, somehow, he is nigh. Teaching is> a line art. Jubt because a American hen now gets in cue class with a will,— Leopard Society, at all events for the Now's the happy livin' time in Georgia! T dream, but sometimes dreams i eveal time being, it would be by no means pru- few ignoramuses in history have practiced our billion-dollar congress, the billion-dollar i* # 6 * O Things hidden from the eye. dent to assert that this criminal organi- it. that fact is not altered. It is a profes- cotton crop with its by-products and other Life in the Country. zation has been broken up. The blind belief The Pleasant Valley Correspondent tells Absorbed in thoughts and dreams of him bion that requires more wcrupulous training of the outputs and assets that have \vm These pleasant paths I pace of the natives in the efficacy of the medi- this one. cines' concocted by the society (especlally and greater native* adaptability than law, for America the nickname of the billion- "Uncle 1'urt Xs e measured a piece of Sudden, from out some covert dim. Upon me smiles his face' that known as 'Borfima') ; the power and "medicine and manj of the leading voca- dolUir couutr.v ol civilization. W. R. F. giound the other day by the old-fa's}iloned authority enjoyed by the possessors of these tions Teaching is «xn important calling. Priebe. ol the National Poultry, Butter and method of tying a rag on a wagon wheel Perhaps a glint of sunshine, or medicines; the fact that periodical humon driving along the boundaries and counting Egg association, is authority for the state- Only my fancy's whim. sacrifices-are considered to be necessary :n Alter the fundamentals ot the science have the revolutions of the -wheel. He first em- Yet in my heart it woke once more order to renew the efficacy of the medicines: been learned you mu«t LEARN THE FUN- ment that eggs to the value of that prodi- ployed Tobe Toppleton to do the counting-, Old memories of him. ami a tendency on the part of some natives DAMENTALS OF CHILD NATURE AND gious amount are sold annually in America. but had to discharge him and get another to cannibalism pure and simple — all these That is not to reckon the great loss by man. Tobe counted up to one hundred and These boughs which droop above my head causes will contribute to the survival of YOU MUST LEARN THE LESSON OF eight before the team ever started." Are whispering to me: this baneful organization. It has held sway * * * * * INrlNITti LOV£ FOR AND PATIENCE breakage in transit It seems as though they softly said- for many years — possibly for centuries — a:ul 'Wining for ancient statuary *• one of the Tho Hnce With Time. "We knew him, where is he"" WITH CHILDREN. That's why there is What is Georgia duirg i^ take cidvaiifagre tho task of stamping- It out will undoubtedly - ' mollt profitable occupations." one A-l teacher where there are filty A-l I. be one of great difficulty." of the possibilities of this Tjiliioi'-dollar From everv blooming bush and sprat- Rome is the world's headquarters for doctors and lawyers Teachers that meas- 9 Al\\a\s was ahead o' time—- Past which I slowly go, bird Practically nothing. Tho 'Uate has Beat It every minute; sculptors, artists and architects, aiming for ure to these requirements are worth al- A murmur comes that seems to say: Europe's Most Costly Hotel. ancient statuary is one of the city's most ideal conditions—climate, soil and crops— Took his place and made the race. "He's gone, we loved him so." most their weight in lino gold. THEY ARE For all that there was in It. I ' profitable occupations and nlmnctt riaUv tin* to support a pou'try and egg industry. Vet (Richard Marsh, In The Strand Magazine.) digger swears a" he stubs h s CAPABLE OF MOLDING THE RACE IN A wren upon her nest I see. humWe dStch it sends outside the state for eggs and for II. Trouville Is, in the season, one of the Spade on the classic brow of a marble THE, RIGHT CHANNEL. Atlanta pays She eyes me unafraid: most expensive spots in Europe. It con- which was greatly admired two poultrj. "Time," he'd say, "is old an' gra> — A sheltered place of sanctity. them, relatively, a beggarly stipend, a good He has lost his cunnin'; tains what is assuredly one of the most ex- j years ^ago Along with the cattle indus-rj and hog- Here for her brood he made pensive hotels in Europe. The individual who Rome will have a milhon ^fca,ny of them averaging the income of a 'Tain't no great shakes any day inhabitants ralbing, the farmers of Georgia should .urn To beat an old 'un runnin'!" takes his -vife and family to the Hotel des again some day, and themuuoy willn be much bet- biisky, but wholly untrained, day laborer. The mock birds sang for him their best. Roches Noires for, say a month in the high • to the hen Xo capital is required for the He know their wild-life ways.— season, and does them really Well—that is, . ter behaved than the original million, even Superintendent Slaton reveals the &eri- if they do not produce so impressive a sky* installation of a barnyard "plant" The Helli'M of the tiren*. Hark' One even now, perched on his nest gives them the best which the house has to ous crisis with regard to scholarship of Ecstatic sings his praise. dividends returned by the lien that is f^d A cai ui^g-e -which once belonged to .Lord offer—when he comes away—if he has paid teachers. He shows that t>o far the system Byron, inscribe'd with the arms of the Byron Wise was his niind, wide was his heart, his bill—has left a small fortune behind him. and pedigreed so she will lay aa egg a -Jay family, has been discovered in South Austra Both took the whole world in, The idea that an Englishman, because he Emily Bronte's Poems at Last has kept its head above water because it Is being charged a high price. Is being cheat- has a nucleus of consecrated teachers so far outweighs the small sum of first lia, and of course, the relic-hunters will be He chose the,world's best for his art— cost and upkeep to make bitk'v among the bidding for it. Who knows but Posterity Loved all—save only sin. ed is absurd. Nowadays—whatever It used to Bring Profit. around which to build. BUT THIS CAN- mav locate the battered weather-beaten au be once upon a time—an Bng-lishman In a (From The Pall Mall Gazette.) NOT GO ON INDEFINITELY. It is becom- best investments opea to th? tanner. to car o£ the most popular present day au Ah. genius is a gift divine. really smart hotel In France is looked at One can imagine the &a>donic smile with thor reposing beneath a ruined woodshed Ii Revered wherever found. askance. French people on pleasure bent which Emily Bronte might-receive the tid- ing increasingly dillicult to secure proper sight of the cattle it never had a chance ti Harris! The world knows such M as thine arc much more extravagant than we are. ings that five of her unpublished poems ha-'e teachers to fill vacancies. "Mr. Bryan is not a good farmer." says kill, and thereon read the inscription: "Pre Hence here is hallowed ground. They do not seem to care what they spend. been sold for 39 pounds. For, when the three The superintendent shows, also, that we an exchange. That's nothing against him. sented to the Author by the Grateful Readers AH but its golden rim; I remember dining once at TrouVille, when sisters, "heedless of repeated warnings uf of His Sixty-First Best Seller." a basket of nectarines was offered by the various respectable publibhcis"—as Char- must have more school buildings if we are Never saw a good chautauqua lecturer who Night comes with stars upon her breast. head waiter. They were quite nice nectar- lotte records—"committed the rash act of ^O'assign to each teacher tew enough pupils was. ' In the Oxomoblle. The world grows still and dim. ines, but that head waiter wanted twenty- printing a volume of poems," tho receipts ' to let her individualize. And it is only by In the Billville district the oxcart is now The sun has vanished from the west, five francs apiece. Five dollars for two or cannot • have totalled much more than 39 "The Oxomobile," of which a local poet 1, dreaming still, my steps retrace, three mouthfuls seemed to me too much—but pence. In the space of a year the publisher individualizing that effective results are sings: those nectarines all went! There was scarcely After the Prosperity Dance hang up the Tears, too, have dimme'd mine eyes— disposed of Just two copies. The rest ot secured in teaching. More money must be Which star, friend, is thy dwelling- place a Frenchman In the room who did not treat the edition was distributed gratis to friendb , forthcoming if the unhygienic conditions he fiddle and the bow and buckle down to "T leckon we're slow, In yonder splendid skies? himself to one. At the next table to mine or sold as Waste paper. business. was a .man, with hie wife and his daughter outlines are to be corrected and the lives But we get there, you know, —they had three apiece; $45 for dessert as of little children made safe. More money And little we rock and we reel; Called Her "Greatest Bore in We travel around— a windup to an extremely expensive dinner! Geese in Good Company. must be forthcoming if the negro schools, Oh, we cover the ground Europe." In Queen Victoria's time it was the Certainly congress should takfc to the where are being educated this important In the steady old Oxomobile. (From The Westminster Gazette.) A Woman of Few Words. graceful custom, after a company of actors element in the city's economic scheme, are scores; and how we should like to II. Lady Shelley, who, as appears from the had performed before the queen, for her pri- (From The London Chronicle.) vate secretary to send a letter of thanks to be put upon a basis of decency, not to see the Editor of the Congressional Record "We jog at our ease, necond Installment of her diary, which has c umpiring a disputed game! Never climbin' no trees, Just been published, brought away from She was a woman of few words. And next morning to the entertainers. The same speat of efficiency. N'er countin' the flight o* the time; Abbotsford th« impression that Sir Walter when she condescended to apeak she rapped form of letter was sent to all alike, and on The sum total of the superintendent's We're slow, but you bet there Scott's wife was "the greatest bore In out her -words quickly and sharply. Desir- one occasion the proprietor of a troup of We B'inrully Set there, inff to buy for her daughter the score of a performing scese which had entertained tho observations is that the health, the earning There's Uncle Joe Cannon wanting to Europe," was not alone in entertaining an popular opera, she went Into a music shop and constructive capacity of most of the An' please God, we're all feelin' prime.'" unfavorable view of her hostess in the famous royal children at a Windsor garden party, break into politics again, and Roosevelt and said to the young man behind the coun- received the following communication from Tweedslde House. In his "Journal" for May ter: children in the public schools IS ALREADY keeping as quiet as a cradle-rocked child! Be a Politician. 2, 1S37, Lord Cockburn, the Scotch Judge, Sir Henry Fonsonby, on whom the duty of THREATENED. , When Satan's g-ot you hard an' fast, an' "Mikado libretto." writing these letters fell: "Sir—I am in- dar's no glttin' way fum him in a hurry, you who loved and admired Scott, noted that he "I beg your pardon, madam," he returned. He is right. had finished reading the second volume of structed by the

INEWSPAPERif NEWSPAPER! CWNSTITOTIOW, AlJUAJ&Pl'A. UA.. OCOOTEB Iff, ISJ3. Page Seven. CLEMENTS FOR ATLANTA GOV. FOSS WILL RUN Entertaining Bill Is Offered BUT CHATTANOOGA WON AS AN INDEPENDENT HAYES HABEAS The Airtight Package Washington, OQtober 14 —(Special ) Boston Oirtobe-- 14 — Gov «> noj L,u- insures freshness Chattanooga gets the headquarters es- Sene iX Foss, o1" Massachusetts thxeo At Forsyth Theater This Week tablished In the southeast by the in-- times elected a^. n. demoont filed tBr^tate commerce commission to han- BY COURT nomination papers us an indepi.nut.nt dle the wort of physical valuation of UindicUte for ie-c}eot|on i«d«v railroads Gove'rtoi lots tomiiuon is expected An excellent bill of vaudeville, which its to Atlanta The oichaid scene The fight was originally between Judge Preston Hotly to etxciti the issue* upon which he KENNESAW causes the impiession very likely, for Louisville, Atlanta, Chattanooga and pi oposes to wage his campaign He i« offers the greatest of variety, is enter- in other lespects the acts arc dissimi- NashUlle, and ftna.ll} iiai rowed down Sensational Charges Connect-* to }imit his ictiv» canipa!BnI»£r to the taining the patrons of the Forsjth lar 3lan and girl have a pleasing to a contest between the lattei t*o ten ilavs .mmedlitely preceding the Mrs. Elizabeth Southard and theater this, iveek I stage appearance and both can sing, places. Chattanooga won because It " ing Him With Bondsmen. election in Novembei, he has fold It all depends upon what Ulnd of act1 and bqttej still, both have songs that appeared that 61 per oent of the rail- friends BISCUIT 5c >ou like as to which number >ou de- aie worth ainslng road mileage In the southeastern ter- Miss Alief M. Benton Ask 1 clare the befot, for the top notchers In The feature number of the week is a ritory lay above that city and 49 per The habeas corpus b\ tvUich liee- The Perfect Soda Cracker nearli every line are among those pres- fcketth "The Yellow Penl ' Miss Nina cent was below it. Ptlen Cured iu 6 to 14 IJnis. Discharge of Policeman ent thib week. j Morris, w ho has played with many of The southeastern territory extends dom was sougnt for Man Hajes aged Druggists refund monej tt I'A/SO OlVf- For those who believe the act that atagedom s biggest st irs does a nne from Ohio and Indiana to the canal 19, convicted In the lecorders e.om t M?!NT falls to cure Itching Blind, BletdiiiK »BANK E. BIXJCJC CO., ATLANTA makes you laugh tho longest is entitled or Preftrudl/iff Piles yjret application sivcs piece of acting in this playlet, which zone, including Porto Rico While all of charges Involving Immorality, was relief 50c John D. Wpod to first place (and there are many of tells the storv of a daring Japanese communications to Porto Rico and dismissed yesterdaj h\ Judge George these) the lauiels TV ill jfo to George plot to blow up all Uncle Sam s ships, Panama «ill be handled through New Felix and the Barry bisters Felix 18 a plot of course thwarted in the end York, these places were included }n L Rell, of the biiueiior court V f»w of police jjeiseeution have about the funniest looking man who Mist Morris plays the lole of a. United the southeastern territorj minutes later W. II. Preston, lecoider been outdo to Chi 'Miss ever wandered out on the Porsyth States seciet service agent who makes, In the commission s discussion Judge pro tern and cleilt of the recoiders stage Warieiered Is hete used advised- the Jap, who is *he brains of the Jud.son C Clementfa advocated Atlanta Alief M Benton a pretty concert sing- lv, for George doesn t seem to know fcehenie, fall in love with hei The and finally yielded to Chattanooga as court approvefl a bond offered for her PI and talented musicia i of Macon, and lust why he ib vvheie ha In ill he bketi h is filled with BUI prises, the the second best place Judge Chai les and the gul was, jeleased fiW "jistei Mis Liizabeth Southard knows is that ho citru from his home ^leatest coming last when the girl C McCord, who halls from Kentucky, Judge Preston denied hoth the sen^ who ar< asking for the ilisfhaige of next dooi to t orrow a spa.de 01 hatch- agent tells, the defeated Jap that her thoughtr Louisville would be the best sational charges that he was accus- Policeman lohn U Ti\ ood fiom the de- et ot something: of the sort and ts partnei in hib undoing is hci husband location B> a majority of one vote tomed to refusing bonds offeied by toon ab he gets his audiein e laughing, par tmrnt Oiil ind L.ott}, a duo of eccentric the commission finally selected Chat- otheis than a gang of bond shaiks, 1 t ai i ested the lattei fortune If you doii t believe it whv the footlights toi, the commission also consideied The g-iil had been placed in the ward PURE F4 on two o t isions with nothing but get a frejnt row seat and w ite h him Kurkhait and White, next to Felix the quarters offered In the varloub foi white women and under the eye foi a little bit The Barri sisters fill ind the Hariy sisters bcored in the ap- cities Chattanooga offered quarters of a matron, was the reply made t*1 iiml!»m i f SH toi i motive, and that in the tutu he isn t on the Htatfe most plaubt line One man is a Llev ei piano lunntc 01 irrest sho was taken Irom at about 47 cents a tquare foot in a the latter charge acceptablv ' plxver thf other catches tiie crowd modern ofnce building That of Nash- Judge Pieston stated that he re- STORES i* i bab> u/ifJ tallied to police station Louis Winch and Josephine Pooiej iv hilt the Intuit lay ill with the mea- with ins sinking The eonitunatiou al- ville was about 60 cents a foot, Louis- fused the bond Mond.iv night because sles will add to then friends it tvei\ per-, ways vv u s in this citj ville 87 cents and Atlanta aomewhtie he was not sure that P P Jackson formanep Ihe critic was converted! Hei/orfs ei^rht Russian stallions close around $1 * harsces \re Filed. earl Their act lemindfa ejiie at nrst of' the pt ilonn met, with i wondirful ex- and P C. Dunn whose names ap- Di if tins' which lias paid seveial VIM- hibition, showing- perfe't training peared on »t, had reallv signed the Tin tliujres v,«r fiieef with Chipf papei He also stated that he feaied B. iv i Tui sd iv lit was st t n by a ALTMAN COLLECTION Dunn as a bondbiiian and wished to EVERY DAY IS A BARGAIN DAY oi( i foi Tin < onstitution last tee if Jackson really had the property n_l t but i tu^ <1 to ni iu i st tt« iTient FOR MUSEUM OF ART which he Claimed Judge Bell dismissed the case on the AT THE 37 ROGERS STORES it i in 1>\ Mis '•.outh ud tiiat she point made h> Cltv Attoiney James 'las ionf jr i with the tiiitt stvcral LaGrange Votes Funds IMevv \oik, Oetobei 14—The Metro- L Mayson that no habeas coipus And just to place a little stronger emphasis on this fact, we limps il out \\ jon tU< \iktlust cial )—Amidst gi e it trithusi ism mil tui es the real poverty ot thf state at Mai ietta and Mills streets and '•ulliim stiiit \li>- South iril liv>»s at Mi Altman left the Metropolitan GEORGIA with i rising vote the m i tin^ ni I 1 i alont, mclustiial and commeiciil lines museum $150 000 to be devoted to (lib fined $.25 76 This wah paid accord- tO , 1 ()M|K 1 btl ( * t At times he hid his audience 1011- ing to the police and latei she was the chambci of commerc oltuis labt \ulbccl with 1 luglitei ove his short care of his collection GOLDEN Tin nomiH ut iijncseuted l>v A.t- night which had been udfiiisscd b% The Mount Sinai hospital, of thiq ar'ested on the street with a man and pungent witticisms Duunt; his and fined $50 hhe appealed this case loi r < v 1 t v\ is i 1 horn is who rleti ruled President Charles J Haden \oted discourse louiid after icund of applause citj, receives! $100001) Othei public YELLOW YAMS and sought the bond i tl i u i I V! Noi rn in in his sens- itional unanimously substantial Rn incial burst foith No speakci in rainy years bequests amoufit to $80 000 Km has so effected i LaGrange audience is ployees of the Altman store of twenty iii il 1 foif th*_ policf < ommission backing foi the Stati Chambei ot years' service receive fJ 500 each. iOJrjtfinit v \ttoinev Ihotnis will be instituted mcrce and promising --oiiii backing toi thin twentj five bundled people Altman s two secretailes receive $10- The following prices on universally used daily needs are >v Miss Benton uid h« i sistti iKunst the work and tht oiginiyatioii trom Aotins, tjecictaiy Man iK^-r ilmilte D 000 each Bostoni October 14-—Defense of Sec- ht poUr*m\n H« will be curierl be the. titizeiiB of 1 i oup made by John Banett, director ornmission it is siid on i clingt ol dress along the lin* of the iletnl vvoik and nephews $100 000 c stieets of I tdr uig> tod iv w i* the which the t»eoigii Chamber of Com The Altman art collection has been general of the Pan American union at or an unusual occurrence. You can get them today and every i** liilttti-, "Mr^. South lids ig-f a iius speech of T'Mbidint H idi n Kh i i ed mere ewill undertake valued at more than $1°) 000 009 the annual banquet of the Vejmont i> mil \\illiim II Iv Southard and also last night bttoic i npn "enative ciowd \mong the paintings aie fourteen association of Botton day at the following prices: apou ' hn^,* ol ittewipting to as- of LiUiUtitiKe eiti^tris in tti< otiiccd of T j on thili- arrivii in L, i »iai»ge at lanlt Mis southuid 1 30 Ale^ais Haden inJ MiKiiunv \veie Rembrandtb and other old masters al- 'No such secretary of state in the thambei of (uiiime'i All pi esi n most bevond price Seveial jeais ago twenty yeaia has BO closely won the 'the antiii afl 111 accoidiri^r to the exp"ct came, co hear automobiles f in nisht 1 !>!, the laoianiie it was said that "Vti Altman paid friendship of foreign diplomats in Cream of Quaker Oats Post Toasties ixsiult lolUfniui "Wood made upon floweu oratoiy on •h>1 1^1 atneay ot eliambei and tilled witn lo vl booeteia $1,000,000 for the celebrated portialts Washington " said Mi Barrett "In Sti phi n Jl f» tt ill aged man who lived At 7 o clock L pnvite iunene.ou v is of King Philip IV and qf Olivaies by his chautauqua lecturer JVTr Bryan is the fatal* Velasquez He rfave a similar bum it JJ t'u dnotit avinue ne n the home sirved at 0 illaw a> s ri.sti.ul i uit It doinij more thi-n any other secretary tt \vliKli ^^l s south ird was living at I.it tie Itenonu Abroad. was a vtrv eliborate lune iton, though for foui piotuiesj fiom the Kami col- of state has ever done to make the 8c 8c !h it timi \\ood it is alleged came to Thev weii >-adl\ dts ippointed The only a few were p "sent lection—three Rembiandts and a people realize that the state depart- Wis South nd asking her to testify in speech he dtlivere'd w is unique stait \lttr the luncheon th> gcneial recep- Ruvsdael ment belongs to them as much as does Delivered. Delivered Delivered. tour t in his b< half ling and vi i v much out it he o dino."> tion for the stati ihamlxi officials His gallerv contains two of the fin- any othei department' Tn6t id ot d< scribing ticoisrias gi aat- was, held in tht office^ ot tli' i hamber est paintings ol Tian/i Hals One of Itcut an A««'il Man. ness h< pointed out how little 11 no v n of commerce Speci il lights had been them is The Meny (Jompam, a Shredded Wheat Snowflake No. 10 Ivory Soap Tin iietitioii charges that "Wood beat the statt bad awav from home. H ithi r lun into the offices ml the r ooms were small copj ol which hangs in the Biscuit Ihe iRed m in unmernfuilj, and tha* thin descubiiit, the i i< hes of the a blaze of light Louvie He gave- $.250 000 foi Hol- Itis ^oiithaid icfus'd to te&tlfy for bein s portrait of Maigaret Wyatt lirri Inttlii trouble atose it is s ud lOc 97c 4c ihtn \Vood thiough i. \indictive "SYRUP OF FIGS" Delivered, Delivered Delivered. (pint iiiculatid a pt tition demanding' GRANDFATHER CLAUSES 'hi limoval ol Mis Soutliaid fiom thi USED OCCULT POWER Meilniont avtnui ncighboihood ARE BEING ATTACKED Old Dutch Cleanser Karo Syrup, 25c size Vanilla Wafers • 1 he petition u is tin illy aired in re- SHEWS TO INDUCE MURDER Regular 20c Ib. oiflii s i ourt ind Mis bouthaid it s «ani nmoM.il her itsidence to avoid Washington October 1 4 — Grandfa- Murfreesboio Ark October 14—F ioubl< One pai IKI iph of Mrs South tiu r cl cases in soutnein state consti G Firrell a blind and infiim spirit- 8c 19c 12 l-2c Ird s charges tontuiit, the allegation tiitiohb denving tht ni;ht to vote to ualistic medium of Glenwood, was Delicious "Fruit Laxative" Can't Delivered Delivered. Delivered. lilt Wood tint iti ned to cause her SHE "STOLE" thobe vv ho vvert ineligible to vote placed on trial here todav charged i otiblc c\ci>whtrL sht went b> ciicu ntmj, scmdilous 1 1 poi ts about Ibb6 or aie the descendants of placed on tual heie today chaiged Harm Stomach, Liver and l>unn|, Apiil this jtar "\ti b South fauch ineligible perbons maKc the fed with being an accessory thiough hls> Better-Bread Baked Beans COFFEE u d lesided at 4~1 South Morejand avc Mrs V f Small, Jr , of Ivlacon, occult demonstrations to the murder Bowels. Piedmont Hotel Brand Rogers' Good Drink er il conbtitutional iniendments vvorth- of Mrs T J 'turner s.nd Hiss Rhodie • in \\ood ilso mo'vcd into the neigh- lebs paper according to a brlct tiled 5c Loaf 3'/2c Regular 20c can Regular 25c torhood his homf adjomiiif, the South I rles Suit—Mrs \ 15 Htn- Carter, of Glenvvood The woman died n d pioptrtv Purthei i ontlict ensued todav with the s,ui>i eim couit b> Mor- after taking poison In a &uicide ftgree- 10c |-oaf 7c "Wood would not make a statement klc Also Asks Divorce Meld Store} of Boston ment with Mis Tinners husband r.vei> mother realizes afte> giving 19c Te VJJ11 be c Uli d bcfoie Chief Beavers Mi btoiej PHONE rOR WHAT YOU WANT ' II the iction he plaiib in the case Macon Ui Oc toboi 11 -(Speiial) — homa ffiandt itht r clause which re w ife and Miss Carter The state taste and it thoroughlj cleanses the Mrs Lucille 1 1-itt femall hied bUit here ciuiies sut h prisons, to be able to i ead chai ges that Pan ell induced the three tender little stomach liver and bow- tod u fir divoicc liom her husband ind vviitc In oidei to be. eligible to to enter the suicide compact so he els without griping vote but in iKes no such retiuil ements> might get possebSion of Turner's prop- When cross, nritable, feverish or WORK PROGRESSING \ T Small Ii a member of one of ot foi c liners 01 Jndlins erty breath is bad htomach sour look at the mubt piuniinent families ol Ocoi - (no language (inplovid is just ef The state's chaigc is based on a con- the tongue mothei' If coated, give e,ia fective as it it distinctly enforced i fession by Tin per in which he is said a teaspoonful of this haimless "trult This Is Beautiful F 1ST OA NEW LINE "Mrs bmall iv ln> v ab foimerlv Mi&s peculiar diso.ua! fit ition on all de to have stated that Fairell bi ought laxative and In a few hours all the Lucille Platt eloped to Atl irita two sceridants o ne^ro blave& said \lr back from the spirit wotld the spmt foul, constipated waste, sour bile and INTO BRUNSWICK ens \vith Mr iall in an auto btoiei The juiposi and effect of ot a dead son of Tui ner's, who begged undigested food passes out of the sucn amendincnts ts tint have been his father to "come over bowels and >ou have a well, playful mobile belonging t j the 1 ittcr s Kodak Weather openly avowed and theie is not an child again When Its little system f ithei Thev vvcie mairitd betoie an intelligent mm in th United fatates is full of uold throat sore has stom- liiunsvMcli Ga Oetobei 14—(bpe- who ib ignoiant of them' The magnificent golden brown of October adfls won- •i U )—Biunbvviek is piepaung- to ai oilier foj their at rest could icach the Two Women Cremated. aehe-uche diarihoea, indigestion, colic—remembei a good ' inside derfully to kodak pictures. Take your kodak and get iiir,c i biK welcome foi the foimal Atlanti toll --e Baltimoie, Oi tobei 14—Mifc Rebecca Wlitn tliev vvcio final! v loc itod bj cleaning should always be the first out in the open. Then, it will soon be time for rid in< < nto the c it} of the C;eor=i coniplt ted 1 Bdgemeie sanitaiium at Govans, a and we'll show you how to take them. Bring UB your " 1 mirri^TC iKenfot fahowjn^ the^ \i 1 1 < BY THE RAILROADS nia S^rup of Piss' handv, they know t i - * spccted th it traiiib \vill be i un subuib weie burnetl to death in a films for finishing and let us make enlargements from mil. into this cit> on regul n schedule mu i ltd ind thei w ei e released tire of unknown oiifcin, which destroy- a teaspoonful todav saves a sick child )v tlu lattei part of November \ \.t thtit tune Mis Small rcrmrkc d ^ ashmg'toii October 14—Eastern ed the interior ot the building early tomorrow Aak your drugg-ist foi a your best negatives. Ask for price list. > (lal committee tiom the board «f If thei w is any fcteaiing dom I and tenti il fieisiit vasociation r lil- toda> MifaB Heberli a nuise ncelved 50 cent bottle of Califoinia byrup of t id will be ippointed to ai i in^e i herioub bums while assisting inmates Fig's," which has diieetionfc for did It Tin wedding wafa opposed omd t di begin tiling tenb of theju- babies,, children of all ages and grown- ila d iv toi the occasion and people b in Is 11' tuifft, -with HIP interstate to escape There were eighteen pa- >m ill T.!on the liuo will be invited bv "Us ">raall s, people tients in the Institution Ul vv ere ups punted on the bottle Beware of 0 civmnit i t t mmission prop ising a flat counterfeits, bold here so don't be •o tome to BiunsvvicU imi is if ave pei t nt on all freight ableep when the (lie bioke out and /I. IT. Hawkes Co. Ihe enteiiri-, of this r iilroad into Hii.kl,- Knit. rates txccpf in some instances those there «eie man} thrilling lescues by fooled Get the genuine made bj u ibvvuk optns up a new arid heieto Mat-on i i O to^er 14—(Special J—- on coal ind giain The proposed ad the attendants 'California Fig Byrup Compan} ' t le Iijitouciied terlJtorv to the local Mib \!ti d Hmkli todai filed suit vances Immndiatel will be suspended iiMm<-s peopli ToiU hins, is it does, -itvlnst Pi \ 1 Hinkle for div-or e I" most in-'t^-ices the- i >ads themselves lu or the uchest fuming sections of ., . ,,.,,. . ^ , . hive enulcsrd sins with the- tariffs vc o ,Jfi i Hi un^vv ic K will be the naturil this being the firnl stop in bringing K oluntni 11} s ispeiidinc; the lnoieas.= i idin,, point foi thcbe people It will the -jens-ui >ini domeatu troubles • f I lnUU tht oonmiission shall bai e hart ls<> put Dnivii "Vlclntosh countv s the Hinklt decision will louis tu ic ic h thit c it> bv the water Ib made to it the Hinkle !e i oiclu I ht foi i sf i ><>iit< (t will also bi- a Jfi e it benefit home scieril vvt^ks n^ in whfth I ir o the people if tint litt;e clt.,, gmn^ Hinkle b Teed m >thoi sustained i h '17 due t ste i uship iiicl railroad broken hip n hi n <-he attempted io >nne ti in Ui|> met the i o id and I ppoi ts ^OITM» time IK h>r PTmkles piiteitd iiii. ill e\.ttmsioii vvuik ib ino Old Soldier into in aKreemer f for a division ol tin u proppitv Mrs Hlnkle taking tin mxjoi jioition of tt Ml tne pi op ei t> hud pievumsH been placed in Conquers Eczema Margaret 1VOT GIVEN SINGLE CENT her n lino by i)i Hinklo IN 20 YEARS. SAYS WIFE After Hospital and Doctors' Treatments IN A DARING WAR GAME Macon (,i Octobn 14 — (.Spet lal ) — Fail, Zemo Does the Good Work. \\ 1'ott i todav tiled in Inswei to GARRITY LOSES LIFE It Will Po It For You. ihe di\oice pi occedin-Tb instituted list Defends le k bv his vvil^ in which she chu^ec1 Newport B I OctOi. 1 I —In a ( Get a 30C Bottle Today and Prove It. .hat he had nt i t^iveii hei a ntmnv dariiit? wai ffame plavctl o\ thi Vtlm {uiln.£ the nttie tm nt% \eais, of then tic torpedo tlotilla uiieU i hi 1 vv ithor Tortured by burning. Itching eczema, llairled life mil th it she had be n conditions! last nigjit < am IU H tFltb doctors unable to cure him. this old Latest lompelletl to u 01 k to buppor t the ianulv I A Gai rity, of th* I lul lin lost his war veteran, wou another victory and con- Pottei ehaiKes that hit. wife is ,i life The dcsjti oyoi i ur uitj p< it to quered bis troubles with this remarkable 'inmg vv om in whil he ib b9 veais ot I clav with all hands c\U iti I remedy—Zemo. Bead his letter. Ig-e a.nd now that he is practicallv | Girritv was washed oveil > \ id It IB< less bhc tles,nes to get ml it liim is thought he struck his he id n ! lo that bhe can nianj iiuther man He clentalli and tnat he vvi^s unt onsc ions llle-res Mrs 1'ottet his tyone ciaEv when he struck the \vitei H \v is ands of Esau (Vir monev is unkind arid ci uel to in lined onlv L week ago ihcir childi tn toicniB- them to woik Captain \lilliam S bims coiummi i in tht< cotton mills while she spends of tho flotilla baitl toniprht th tt thi 'lu in maneuvers wire successful in briitunt^ ' exti i\agant living . before the mt n the re il e^oiidttion^ t n I fronted lit Aetu il vvaifau The probltm i which %v is to locate i hot.til<> fli t n Begins in the l the dark ind debtiov it w is woik I out fauccebsfull> ui \ iO mile kalt* with the seas awct?pin-, tlu decks ab IIIKI as, the In Kit,> inrt wabhins ove i tin See Our Window of tops of the hit^h toiecastles ThioUMh November these seas the tweat\ destrovers w 11 dtiven it twentv knots with lights t\ $5.00 Wedding Gifts tinguished life Inn s weie stretctn tl across the dttks ind officers ind nun In our north window we went ibout then duties with their hit pre-sier-voib stt ijiped iboiit them are displaj ing a bia( assort The fl ifeship Divi^ with the dtstioj inent ol attractive wedding ers Cisfain and \\ilke icpriseiited the gittb at $o 00 each euemv The scent e.f iction was be t\\ een Point Judith and u ivhe id WOMAN' s There are Sterling Sliver Sugar Baskets, Bonbon Dish "I Beljcre Zema to Be &* GrertMl DI» et>, Candlesticks, 6 Teaspoons UNDERWOOD STRIKES covery of the Age." in silk cases, b pearl handle 1 Fruit Knnes in bilk cases, REFERENCE TO WILSON E. W. Rose Medicine Co., Sheftield Sandwich Trayt>, Gi ntlemea:—m 1011 eczema appeared HOME \\ a&lungrtoii. Ottobei 1 — In in ciiti on my back and limbs. Doctors treated Lemon Sets m taseb, Silver j adei I'ndei woods itttniui t Us me In hospital and gave mo alkali bath* Deposit Pitchers, Tea Tiles debate -vesteida- v vv it i Kt us nt uiv every day but did me no good. In 19}% tt Bottles, Vases. Jam Jars and tj .>t-.i*Iln tri T^Vl ftm n *» I .1, t ll-n . l> . . „ i appeared on bead, f'ice and bonds—burn- Spoons, Sterling Silver Salt ing and Itching. I tried everything but and Pepper Sets, caset', etc got no relief and was getting worse. COMPANION Two months ago I got a bottle of Zemo; We arc heacLguarterb tor eczema has disappeared and my hands \\eddmg Gitts (all and let !>t jm to look as new bauds. I believe Zemo ut> bho\\ j oti some of the hne to he tho greatest discovery Of the age. •values we ha-ve Moro power to Zemo. John w. Persons, \Vm. McKinley Post 876, G. A. R.. Ohle»sto." ACPEATNOVEUIST'SCREATWORK The voice is Jacob's voice Our nev\ foil and winter Yeia can free yourself of this burning, The Woman's Home Companion an- THE PROBLEM OF HEREDITY Catalogue \vill be out liext 'u-hinsr, sleep destroying horror—eczema— nouiiQuB the new story by Margaret but the hands are the hands Nina Morgan, the beautiful heroine .ii"t as thla grizzled veteran did. TJn- Deland—''The Hand* of Esau," which or Margaret Deland'a new storj. lp con- %\eeU ft rite for a copj i aualed for any BWn oruptloni. boil*. begins In tho Npvember number rro«te4 by the tremendous problem of blotches and other sWw troubles. Tour Thin 1» the nrst stery that Mn. Pe- heredity In the man she loves, when New Express Rates. land has written since "The Iron »he le»rn» that the traits and tenden- Maier & Berkele, Inc eh .legist will sell you a 2Bo sealed bottle Woman," which made even a greater cies of the father are visited upon the C;o d aiul Silversmiths \\ asii icrton Oft i ( New tx of Zemo and will guarantee it. or K will lrnpres»lon than "John Ward, Preach. son l>it = >- iiUs i«rentl\ rj-esrnbed b\ the be sent direct on receipt of price by H. W, «sr/' the most discussed nove! of Ita day Had J on been in her place iwould 1-.3 U'hi cha i Stree; nttiMalf> te>mmeiee ommifcsion will Koso Medicine Co., St. Louis. Mo. In the opinion of authoritative crit- you ha\e accepted him" Had you been e eiirt t fpctlve on Detembci J msttael sold ind Kuaranteecl In Atlanta, by ics, these novels, together with "Tha m hie place would >ou have told' stabiished 18e>T i! tomo "ov\ \ it.finest for exit nsion Vnnlc IJdmondfaon Vrug Co, Couraev & Awakening of tltJena Richie" and "I>i Mrs Deland <* great storjr "The i i i o eomBsniiOB wao set uted todav Mtun riru,-, Co, E. H. Cone Drug Co, Lavender's People," e»tabl)nh Mrs De- Hands of Esau.' begins !n the Novem- but i I

W. J Hodges, 289 North Jackson H omf-Coming Meeting- , ; street, "Wednesday afternoon,' October A home-coming: meeting -will be held 5, at 3:30 -o'clock. Mrs. Hodges will by Atlanta chapter. Daughters of the >e assisted In entertaining by Mrs. American Revolution, at Cralgle house lastlngs. , All members urged to at- this afternoon at 3 o'clock, and there end. will be a program of informal enjoy- SOCIETY ment. ColUmbus day, the 12««l * Not only is the old building: Inade- were placed In the long living room, isting In the building now occupied by quate for the English Commercial and the prizes at bridge were silk em- Superintendents Launch City- the 200 pupus of the Knglish Com- classes, but is dark and insanitary, dif- broidered hose and a bridge set. mercial High school. ficult of entrance and exit, 'while the A feature of the afternoon was a Wide Movement for Jbiningf That Immediate relief be brought to children of the Crew Street school are linen shower, when many pretty and the school was the earnest plea of deprived, of the playground space they useful presents were given the bride- in Thanksgiving Services. airs. Hamilton, Douglas. . She referred should have In the old building site elect. to the fact that a lot costing 532.000 occupying the space heeded. Afternoon tea waa served in the din- had been purchased by the city for the A resolution Introduced by Mrs. ing room. The tea table was covered specific purpose of building thereon a Douglas, asking that the City federa- with a Cluny lace cloth and silver To give thanks for the signal pros- school for this Important department tldn urge immediate remedy for the bowl filled with Klllarney roses was perity of Georgia in the lace of crop of high school training. The building conditions described, was passed unani- the centerpiece. All of the details failure and famines existing In some has never been started, and the stu- mously by 'the members of the City were in pink and the ices were frozen dents., in the meantime, are miserably federation. in the shape of pink slippers. other sections of the country, all the Miss Mildred Sault served punch and Sunday schools of Atlanta will unite Miss Eugenia Ivey assisted her mother n special services on the Sunday pre- colored crepe gown and her velvet in entertaining. Mrs. Ivey wore, a ceding Thanksgiving day next month. To Miss Martha Berry. hat was trimmed with fur and para- gown of black lace, and Bliss Ivey was This was determined at the monthly The Martha: Berry' circle, of Atlanta, dise feathers. Downed in a white afternoon gown. session of the superintendents' con- have issued invitations to a reception Mrs. Condon's becoming costume The guests included Miss Sadye An- ress of Atlanta, which was held Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock, at the was in white and black silk, .with a drews, Mrs. John S. Scott, Mrs. Sid Sault. /Piedmont Driving club, in honor of touch of carrot color, and her black Mrs. John Andrews, Mrs. Marion Whit- Tuesday evening in the First Chris- Miss Martha- Berry and members- of hat was trimmed with plumes. flelcl, Mrs. Fred W.- Ivey, Miss Bertha :lan church. MATTRESS Smith of Syracuse, N. Y.; Mrs. 13. A. There will be special programs of the faculty and stndent body of the The ceremony was followed by a Davison, Miss Elizabeth Murphy of Los Martha Berry school. wedding breakfast at home, the wed- Angeles, Mrs. Norman Davison, Misses music and addresses and other exer- The occasion will give the guests ding company of forty including rel- Mert and Tommle Hancock, Miss Annie cises in practically every school of the the opportunity not only of meeting atives and a few close friends of the May Schussler, Miss Berni^e Sch/ussler, city—at least in the forty Sunday Assures you healthy, restful sleep. It is filled with a solid, this distinguished wom-an and hear- young people. They were seated at 3/llsK Mary iiacy Turner, Miss Martha schools represented by the assembled ing the story of her great work, but tables in the dining room and ad- I^awshe. Miss Thelma Ivey of Uriadllla, superintendents, who expressed unan- bat of superb felt—thoroughly cleansed Constructed in such the ,Opportunity of meeting: the teach- joining apartments, and the decora- Miss Edna Mae Ivey, Miss Florence mous Indorsement of the plan. Dr. ers of her school and some of the tions were tastefully ' carried out in Smith, Miss Annie Lou Padgett. Miss Marion Hull, Dr. Joe Urougliton, Major a scientific manner by skilled hands, that the surface remains students who have received their yellow and white. Alline Hoilingsworth of Montgomery, R. .1. Gulnn and several others arose : training 'In the school. ^ At the bride's • table the centerpiece Mrs. C. J. Anderson of Knoxvllle, Miss before the body to declare the peculiar Those receiving: Invitations to the was the bride's cake, wreathed with Eunice Cox, Mrs. Otto Field. need of such a service this fallt in smooth and elastic. reception are requested to reply to small white flowers, their foliage a view of the blessings and good for- .1060 Peaehtree street. glossy 'green. The candles had yel- tune which have fallen to the lot of low shades,, and candies and ices •were Mrs. Cantrell- Entertains. eorgia In the prosperity scramble of Compare it with the "high-priced" mattresses—you immediately white and yellow. Mrs. Walter J. Cantrell gave a pretty Buffet Luncheon. Mr. and Mrs. Wrigley went to Flor- card party yesterday at Tier home in The main address of the evening was recognize its value. Costs no more than the "lumpy" kind — Mrs. George S. Tjowrides, Sr., and ida on their wedding trip, and re- the Corinthian, ' inviting twelve ladies made by John J. Kagan, superintend- Mrs. George S- Lowndes, Jr., have Is- turning' they will keep house on Mer- to meet Mrs. C. C. Jordan, of Birming- ent of the Central Presbyterian church, sued Invitations for a luncheon rltts avenue. , ham. on the subject, "Efficiency in the Sun- Thursday, October 23, at 1:30 Golden rod and autumn foliage were day School." He pointed to the achieve- Ask your dealer for a LuxYoury Mattress, Price $15, o'clock, at home, 96 E. Fifteenth used in artistic decoration. ment of Christ's band of twelve apos- street, to meet Mrs. Hol.Iand L,owndes tles in carrying the gospel to millions and Miss .Teannette Lowndes. Berger-Klausman. „ of people in every corner of the globe, An event of interest on the 28th Club Picnic. as "the pinnacle of efficiency," and he Hirsch & Spitz Manufacturing Co. will be the marriage of Miss Mamie The D. E. P. club enjoyed a picnic appealed to the Sunday schools to take Condon-Wrlgley. last Saturday morning at Grant park. lessons -from the simple methods of Berger and Dr. M. Klausman, which Mrs. Boatenrlter chaperoned the young soul winning as practiced by these ATLANTA, GA. A beautiful wedding on an ideal In- will take place at the home of the aoostles. dian summer day was that of Miss people; who were Misses Lorine Grant, A delicious hot supper, prepared by Alice Condon and Mr, John T. Wrlg- bride's parents, Mar. and Mrs. Martin Roselle Boatenriter, Masters Ervin Til- the ladies of the First Christian church, ley, which took place at th« Sacred K. Berger, qn -Ealsl;..North .avenue* ley, Carl West and J. B. Balent. preceded the business session of the Heart church' yesterd'ay morning. Miss S'adl« Goldinian, of ' Indlahiipo- congrnss. The superintendents decided The marriage at 9 o'clock was sol- lis, will be maid of honor, and the McM'illan-Munn. that the next meeting shall be held the emnized at nuptial mass. Father bride's sister and^jbfother, Silvia 'Kli- The wedding- of Miss Katheriiie Mc- evening of November 11 at the Ansley Q-uinan the -celebrant, and music ap- nor- and Master Berger, will be at- Millan and Mr. Alto Keynolds Munn Motel, being accompanied by an exten- propriate to the occasion \va.s an ac- tendants. Rabbi ,llarx will perform will take place this morning at 10 sive supper at which all the depart- compaTiIinent. Mr. Vincent Hurley the ceremony, and afterwards supper o'clock at the First Christian church. mental and associate superintendents was at the "or^an. and 'liymris were will be served, the" wedding company Miss Pearl. Barker will be maid of of the various Sunday schools shall .sung: by -Mr. . W'illiaJti Maurer, Mr. to include only a few relatives and honor and Mr. Arthur Munn will be be the special guests of the congress, John T, McTIeman and Mr. J. C. Mc- close friends. best man. Dr. L. O. Brlcker will per- and at that time particular problems Callan. Among the out-of-to.wn guests will form the ceremony. and suggestions for the Christmas The only attendants were Miss Lo- be: Mr. and Mrs. George Silver, Chi- Mr. Munn and his bride will leave work of the schools will be discussed. retta Condon and Mr. John Sevler. cago; Mr. and Mrs. H. Burger, New- immediately for a wedding trip east. The wedding scune was an Im- York: Miss Mamie Pass, Charleston: Thev will go to housekeeping in their pressive one, the sanctuary banked Mr. l-iouis Sachiiovitz,. Summfrville, S. niMv home on South Gordon street on GERMANS TO CELEBRATE *rith palms and ferns, and the altar C.; 'MrJ~iind "Mrs. r>. Pelman. Mr. .1. their return. flowers were rosos. Felman. Bonneau, S. O.;, Mrs. \V. t>- THEIR LANDING IN U. S MONO musicians of the highest The bride, entering the church with Eleazer. Columbia, S. C.: Mr. and Mrs. her father. Mr. J. .T. Condon, was A. Paty, Bluffton, S. XT. Matinee Party. Jpvely in white satin charmeuse,' its Mrs. Thomas M. Moody and Miss The Atlanta Turn Verein hall wil artistic attainments the posses- trimming of n,oint applique. Her veil Ruth Moody will give a matinee party prove a revelation to its members was of the saine lac-e. adjusted to the Birthday Party. tcdav at the Forsyth in compliment to when they gather this evening to eel Dretty lieacl with orange blossoms, Miss Anrie .Donnelly will entertain .Mrs." John .). Ryan and Miss Clarisse ebrate German day. sion of a (Tfyickcrittcj is considered a an.ii her bouquet was a shower of Ryan, who leave next .week with Cap- "While the committee of arrange fifteen little folks at the Forsyth, Sat- tain Ryrtn for Fort Riley. ments, John Papa, Theo Cassirrer bride roses and valley lilies. urday matinee, to celebrate the birth- George Man, Otto Klinginberger, K!\%SE. general interest. For this meeting Mrs. MRARLBOOUCH-BLENHEIM HOTEL CO. crown buttons, fitted Myitli purse and mirror; German silver W. C. Splker will give one of her de- Nabs Runaway Engine COMPANY lightful readings, "The Pied Piper." • Atlanta's frames; Bags are moire lined -- black, purple, green and navy On Passenger Track Hair SOVz WHITEHALL ST. Bell Phone 1769. Athens, Ga., October 14.—(Speclal.)-r— Great Sale of Leatker Bags — Answering a police call by phone last night the chief of police, a patrolman AL. Including envelope purses, leather or moire lined, fitted witb. and a bicycle man chased a runaway engine on the Georgia railroad ana inner purse-— these include long grain, seal grain, pin grain and The Nineteenth Century History class arrested it 2 miles outside of the cor- ill meet this afternoon at S o'clock porate limits—clean beyond their Juris- Roofing Pitch, Coal Tar Morocco grain leathers in black and colors. All made of with Mrs. Vasgar Woolley. diction. There will be no complaint about their overstepping their preroga- Creosote, Road Binder genuine hair sheep leathers. ~ tives In this case, as they barely got IMMEDIATE The Atlanta chapter, Daughters of the engine steamed up and backed Into Metal Preservative Paints the American Revolution, will hold the the station yards before the night-pas- HOOAKS ^Wednesday a Special Day in Bag Department regular monthly meeting Wednesday senger train from Augusta came round •T». Sml Fimftlm •£• Culwi- Roofing Paint, Roofing Felt afternoon," October 15, at 3 o'clock. In the curve of the cut. IH TMt Cm •• •««•««." DELIVERY their chapter house. It -will be home- The engine had slipped a throttle in Mui raw *»« and Shingle Stain coming meeting, with a most attractive some way with some fire up and a ^ program. There will be a meeting of gentle grade encouraged it in its fe the executive board at 2:45 p. m., Just escape.' It forced open the switch, •c»d tar prior to the meeting. stuck to the track and came, to a" standstill only when the steam got,, A. K. HAWKES CO. KEELY'S •The Indies' Aid societv to the Rail- low and the grade grew steep the other i 14 WMtelMrtl at~ A«l«»t«. C«. Atlanta Gas Light Co. Main 4945 road T. M. C. A. -will meet with Mrs, way. - . - • -.;-.-- .-...»

JfJL lEWSFAPESr THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA. WJED30ESBAY, 0CTOBEB 15, 1913. Page Nine. ress there will not h* the slightest bc«n working lor month*. It Win a visit of three weeks In Bloomlng- Inconvenience "to": w,»tep'-(e6nsuniier.s;-" io "'roperation •"within thr.«; toii, Ind.," and LouhrvUle, Ky. " The pump will relieve the. strain, un- ready; WO l^adies in Rapt Attention der which the water department has weeks. SOCIAL ITEMS 'Mrs. Sbeppard 'W. Foster, state re- WHITEHALL REGRADING gent, P. A. R.. is in Mohtieello, where she went to attend a meeting of the At Reading of Play on "Jiistice'% B. Claude Douthit. of Memphis, will Sargeant Jasper chapter. arrive this week to visit her parents, Mr, and Mrs. M. D. Francis. Miss Thelma Ivey, of tJnadilla, Ga,, *•*. ' . / is the guest of Miss Edna Mae Ivey. One hundred Atlanta ladies, sat in ithrougrh weakness in- the face of his Mr». W. "J. Morrison and tier little rapt attention for tvio hours yesterday I first temptation commits forgery for New ': daughter have returned from Cape Cod, .airs. .George Battey and Mrs, Hugh afternoon at the Georgian Terrace and the sake of the woman he loves, and City Is Expected to Complete where they spent the summer. They Inman are at Tate Spring, and later listened to the reading of John Gals- while there is still a chance.of his re- were a' week at Hotel Plaza, New York, they go to Grove Park Inn, Asheville. worthy's remarkable play, "Justice," as trieval the inexorable wheels of jus- and they visited at Georgetown con- . *** interpreted by Rev. W. W. Memmin- tice grind him down to hopelessness This Improvement Within,a vent en route hpme. Mr. and 'Mrs. Mrs. Lalhar Rutiierfwd Lipscomb, of ger. The occasion launched the fall and, despair. The play ends tragically 1 Short Time. Value In Morrison are-residing at the Ponce de Washington, is the gruest of Mrs. Vas- course of interpretative readings under arid there were quite a number of moist ; l*on.- Their mother, Mrs. Morrison, sar Woolley. t the auspices of the educational com- eyes in the audience' when the emo- | will be at home with 'them, and Mr. mittee of the Atlanta branch of. the tional accents of the reader came to i Jueonard Morrison will remain here for Mrs. G. A. How ell, who has been ill j Drama League of America and was the close of the play. I On account o£ the work of regrad- the- winter. Mr. I«ewi8 Morrison has pronpunced by all present a splendid In tv fe„.w. word.. s o-f. introduction Mrs—i-.-. i inB Whitehall street between Mitch- Kimball for a week, is improving. returned to the Newman school In »#* success. fl M P t and New Jersey. . > - Colonel and Mrs. Robert J. Lowry While now one of the most success- D^ch ?t &B SSSS lSSg22:«« Garnett, important chants in =»3* have invited a party of 'friends to ac- ful ministers of Atlanta, being rector outlined the purpose of the course. | the routing of the street cars now 88-Note Player Mrs. Richard P. Brooks,. of/Forsyth, company them for a two days' visit to of All Saints' Episcopal church. Dr. which is "to create a taste for better \ traversing Whitehall street will 'be In- Memmjnger was himseK in former drama and to uplift the standard of the i augurated Thursday morning. The Style 9—»460 regent of the Piedmont Continental the National Conservation exposition days an actor of no small ability. Into stage." The second reading of the • - - - - Piano chapter, D.'A. It... is In the city at the at Khc-xvillc the comin*«* ' g week. the reading of the play he threw the series will be next Tuesday afternoon, changes eas decided upon by the Piedmont hotel for the meeting of the wide and expressive modulation of his alsoi^no at the r'cnrtria.noeorgiaiGeorgiani T«frn.cTerracelerrace« , whet\rnewheni iI Georgia Railwa t y an dreques Powet r companot they, chapter this afternoon. Mrs. Brocks .Miss Dixie Thomas Is ill at the rich voice, which added much to the Mrs. Spiker will interpret "Rutherford Jn response 0 the Another triumph by the W. W. Kimball Co., the world's will remain for, the Andrews-Johnson Georgia1 n hospital.»«* charm of the reading. "Justice" is a and Son." a well-known work" of the mayor and city council, are as fol- weddin.. g oran Thursday(.«.« . play of strong and gripping human in- English woman playwright, Githa lows: largest manufacturers of Player Pianos: New features of con- ' Mrs. J. A. Maudeville, of Cafrolltou, terest. It Is the story of a man who Sowerby. Cars on the Whitehall and Peach Mrs. Bert P. Tull. of Augusta, is the is being delightfully entertained in an tree line, _going north. will leave s,truction m case design at a price that challenges competition. guest of her mother. Mrs. George J. informal way as the. guest of her Whitehall street at the junction of Hanson, after a delightful visit to her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Calla- Forsyth and Whitehall, proceed all'HS This new style Player Piano is made by the world's aunt Mrs. J. M. Abra'ms In Lithonia. Forsyth to the junction of Forsyth *.»0 largest manufacturers of pianos—by the largest number of Mrs. J. W. Evans and young son have Mrs. Martha Wideman Thc'mas has Merchants of Gate City Enjoy and Peachtree in front of the Grand returned to Augusta, after spending returned from a visit to relatives in theatre, and thence as usual out skilled workmen, and marketed direct through this .Branch the summer with her father, Hon. E. A. Meriwether county. Peachtree. Cars on this line going Store, eliminating'the intermediate prpfits of the jobber,-dealer, Copelan. In Greensbt.ro. Mr. and Mrs. south -will loave Peachtree at the Evans are at J161 Greene street. "Made-in-Atlanta" Buffet Lanch\ junction of Forsyth and Peachtree, and agent, and consequently at a materiaj. saving "in price to .-» 4 * ' ' proceed along Forsyth ' to the junc- M*rs. Gordon L»ambaek and two chil- KIRKWOOD TO VOTE tion of Forsyth and Whitehall, and the buyer. Our unlimited facilities for manufacturing natur- dren, of Augusta, are the guests oif thence out Whitehall as usual. ally reduces the cost of production, which means greater Mr. and Mrs. James Palmer. FOR BONDS TODAY Over 1«0 retail grocers and butchers .fee was served. The coffee had been Cars on the McDaniel street line, *** belonging to the Atlanta Retail Gro- shipped to Atlanta green and roasted going south, will run their usual Player value for less money. This is the reason why we are Mr. John Har^isty, -who has been and Butchers' association gather- in this city. route to the corner of Broad and Probably the most important election "This little display but a prelimi- Mitchell streets, but. Instead of turn- able .to offer you such a remarkable Player Piano C>"/^/V ill with fever at the Davis-Fisher ever held in the. town of Kil-kland will ed last night in their rooms in the nary to a large dinner we hope to give sanitarium, is better. Rhodes building to partake of a "made- this fall," said Camp. "At that time ing east into Mitchell, will turn west, at such ,a remarkable price ^ •*• ^*" , »** take place today when the voters will in-Atlama" buffeiX lunch " we will serve a complete course affair, proceed 011 Mitchell to Forsyth, thence The Friday Morning- • Heading club decide on a bond Issue of $35,000, to be O. T. Camp, president of the as- using nothing on the table, from the aloiitr Forsyfh to the junction of _ 'will meet this week with Mrs. Alex used for sew.erage, paving- and other sociation, declared that the object of knives and forks down to the drinking Whitehall, and thence out Whitehall! A Standard Kimball Player action, built in a genuine Smith. improvements. the gathering was to impress local water, that is not made within the to McDaniel. Cars on this line going Kimball piano, at a price without parallel in the annals of *6tt retail growers and butchers with the confines of this city.'" north will leave Whitehall at the Miss .Bertha Smith, of Syj-arjs.. X. A thorough and comprehensive report importance of pushing home-made Amoug the eatable." shown last juii.ctlon of Whitehall and Forsyth, j . piano purchasing. A $700 value—as compared to prices asked Y., is the guest of Mrs. E. A. Davison. of how the bond,money will be ex- products as far as possible. evening that are manufactured ill this proceed along Forsyth to Mitchell, *»* i - , penOed is contained in an extract from In a -room adjoining (he associa- city were the following: I'ickles, from down Mitchell to Broad, and thence by dealers and agents. We could reduce the cost of manu- tion s quarters Camp, with the as- Mrs. H. flay Moore and little daugh- a statement issued to the citizens of smtance of his store force ,. Dixie Pickle aiid Preserving company along their usual route. facture, gloss over .the short-comings, and sell'for less money, ter, LtvuiSft, >7ave returnee] home after Kirkwood by the mayor and town hiul ar- anri Jones Brothers; crackers and Cars on the Cooper street line, run- | ranged a dainty table, the Idea of a cakes from Frank E. Block; sandwich ning south, will turn into "Whitehall i but we won't; because our reputation is involved.- We could council. FiX'e thousand dollars Is ap- picnic lunch being worked out cleverly. bread from Schlesinger-Meyer Baking portioned for a sewage disposal plant On the table were found home-made company: Saratoga chips from the Sun- at the corner of Cooper, proceed on' charge more, but we couldn't give you a Player Piano with pickles, home-made bread, home-boiled Whitehall to the Junction of White- in the eastern part of the town: $5,000 light Saratoga Chip company; salad oil hall and Forsyth, turn into Forsyth better qualities of tone, greater durability, or increased facili- to pay for school sites, and $25,000 for ham, home-made crackers and cakes from the Weston Manufacturing com- Aunt Sally's Advitze home-made salad dressing and home- pany, aud boiled ham from the White and porceed thence to * Mitchell, ties of expression. It is true that we, have more expensive street improvements. made catsup. During the evening cof- Provision company. thence along Mitchell to Broad, and Of the last amount, sums sufficient to thence to Marietta street and their instruments, but the difference comes largely, in the case. to Beauty-Seekers put them in first-class condition are usual route. Cars on this line going apportioned to the following streets: south will come from English avenue Boulex'ard drive. Clay street, Gordon as usual to the corner of Mitchell and The Kimball Player is the very embodiment of new life W. C. D. says: "My face is freckled avenue. Murray Hill av,enue, Oxford Broad, turning there into Forsyth, and happiness. It helps to entertain your, friends, and'is the year round: nothing- I try seems place, (logons. South Howard and War- thence along Forsyth to the junction to help .much, la there anything that ren streets, Warwick place and the IS DORSET Mi with Whitehall, thence on Whitehall always ready to respond,to the musical tastes of every member will really take 6Cf these horrid Kirkwood road. to Cooper, and thence along their spots?*' Have you tried the treat- usual route. of j'our family.- No home is hardly complete without a ment recommended to Minnie L.? It Is expected the city will finish Kimball Player. I've known this to remove very ob- the regradlng of \Vhitehall in about stinate freckles. HOTEL ANSLEY WAITERS BY WILLIAM 10 GMY TODAY three weeks, when the service will bo i Ellen B. asks: "What should I do WILL GIVE CAKE WALK routed again. for deep , lines under my eyes and The city and the county are plan- across my forehead?" Kuch lines, and Weil-Known Physician Is Re- The fifty waiters of Hotel Ansley Solicitor and His Assistant Will ning to rush this work through in W. W. Kimballl all wrinkles, are best obliterated by re-cord time. , You SAVE You SAVE bathing affected portions in a good are going to yrive a !>ig cake walk, fused Admission to Prison in Devote Rest of Week> to astringent and tonic lotion, wh'u-h concert iind ball at tho A'U-clitorium strengthens anil draws in the relaxed the night of tin- ::oth of October. ' Absence of Warden. WHEN f Three \vhite juclgt-H have b«en 'selei-t,- Leo M. Frank Case. NEW CENTRIFUGAL PUMP Company tissue. Hore'M a 'reliable formula: .1 . oz. powdr>rnd snxolite. one-half" pint pd ,am.l have accepted to judge l*i,e NOW BEING INSTALLED You BUY You BUY witch haxi'if: niix and use daily until cako walk. The first prize will bo a Dr. William Martin Richards, who Atlanta Branch: .entirely relieved. mammoth cake three feet high and Solicitor General Hugh A!. Dorsey is AT -< Minnie L.: Thn undue redness as handsomely decorated. Thc> second came .to Atlanta with M letter from due to arrive at 7:35 o'clock this morn- 'Work of installing the new 10,000,000 94 NORTH PRYOR STREET well as the pimples, may easily be re- priz*" will be a cane or umbrella. Tht' Robert V. IjaDow, superintendent of ing and U is said will devote the re- gallon centrifugal pump at the river moved by using ordinary mercolixed, waiters hnvc each H^loct^d 'a. Kirl federal prisoners, introducing him to pumping station began Tuesday morn- H. R. CALEF, Mgr. wax. Apply nightly like cold cream, companion from ' Atlanta's colored Warden William H. Moyer, of the At- mainder of tru: week to work in At- ing. General Manager W. Zode Smith and erase morn ings with warm water,-. "four hundred." and great prepara- lanta federal prison, requesting that lanta on the reply to the plea of L.eo M. stated that while the work is in prog- Soon you'll hn.vc' a beautifully white. tions arc IKMV 'being daily mar. Richards stated that when he ing many hours of the day to his reply. presented his letter from Superinteiifl- Whether' or not the solicitor will Ije Speaking of Tailored Suits ant LiiiDowr at the prison Tuesday he ready when the motion IE called i>y was introduced to Dr. J. Calvin Weav- Judge L. S. Roan at 10 o'clock Saturilfy j er, the prison physician, who not only morning, is ye,t unknown. In Valtlost:i would not allow the inspection which Mr. Dorsey stated that he could not say the head of the'department had recom- whether or not he would be ready. mended, but declared that ho would It is understood that he has some for Everyday Wear make absolutely no recommendations final work to carry out following his to the department for an improvement return to Atlanta and that this will of the prison's equipment in the war- occupy him for at least two days. : When a woman wishes to express her own'estimate of her value she instinctively den's absence. •Dr. IlIclinrilN* JUiNHion. Naval War Course for Daniels. .turns to clothes. They may not be her only.-form of expression, but they are an The mission of Dr. Richards, he says. Is to ascertain the percentage of pris- .Vi'\vport. R. T.. October 14.—The pos- uncommonly important one, and one wh.lch.everybody .caii recognize at a. glance. oners who ™me to the federal prisioiis siliililv that Ser-j-etury of the Navy with physical defects of the eyes, ears, Daniels will t:>ke a course of instruc- And the better she xinderstands the art of dress tlie more she appreciates the spine or any other part of the anatomy, tion at the naval war college here or are Victims ot" drug or drink habits, next summer has aroused much inter- necessity of the plain suit in her wardrobe, and the 'more exacting she is likely and have these adjusted at once so that est among officers stationed at New- I the prisoners may be relieved of any poitt. Secretary Daniels, during a visit to be as to its cut and detail work. . unnecessary suffering while serving? here last summer, praised the work of their terms, and at the expiration of the college and recently unofficial the terms may leave the prisons in word has come from Washington indi- better physical condition than when cating that the secretary may attend they entered—in other words, to make lectures here. Here are Suits of Wonderful Value to Show You tho prison's correction of moral defects ; extend likewise over' physical defects. l>r. Kichard? state's that In many in- Today at $15 to $25 si;u!ees prisoners are suffering from t some physical defect unknown, per- ! hup*, to the prison authorities or even Suits th.at are quiet and simple; the styles-"-^ score of them, are chosen with a , I to the prisoner himself and 'compelled I to do work which aggravates this de- view to suitability, and are not extreme, but show clever style touches. For fect, when, with a little expense and attention such conditions could be instance: No alarm clocks or frequent calls to dress and I ameliorated. • Dr. .Richards states that he is In this WHO CARES? LISTEN! I work by the influence of President hurry to the table when there is beckoning Wood row "Wilson. Relative to the refusal to allow him At $15—Junior Misses' Suits to make the investigation at the fed- "Tape's Diapepsin" Makes Sour, to you-^ I eral prison in Atlanta. I>r. Richards ' severely rritieizes .Superintendent L,a- Gassy Stomachs Feel Fine Sizes 13 to 19 Years % Dow, who. he says, is himself respon- sible, for tho meajarer result of his trip at Once. Stylish two-piece Coat Suits of serges or diagonals, in navy,.Copenhagen or black; some : to Atlanta' aud whose policy, he rte- ! clarcs. to bo one of miserliness BIS a are plain tailored; others have trimming of braid and buttons. substitute for economy. i '. • Time it! In five .minutes all stom- j OlnmeM LnDow. ach distress will go. No iiidlgcstion, heartburn, sourness or belching of I Said Dr. Richards: j "1 cannot blame Dr. Weaver tor not gas, acid, or eru*cta.t(ons of undigest- At $15—Suits for Women wanting me to investigate the condi- «d food, 110 dizziness, bloating, foul tions at the prison and make recom- breath or headache. metHlittions to Washington, for already Pape's Diapep.sin is noted for its Practical Suits of serg'e: long cutaway coat, plain tailored, lined with Skinner's satin; SYRUP ho is underpaid and this would mean sp«od in reg'uia ting upset stomachs. draped skirt: navy or black. much additional work for him. Dt- It is tho surest, quickest and most Weaver. Warden Hoy or ami the entire certain indigestion remedy in the force in charge at th*1 ferteriil prison whole world, and, besides, it is. harm-' It appeals to little folks and grown tips are bitterly opposed to Superintendent less. 1-iaPow, on account of the stiiitiiitr Millions of men and women now oat At $20 . alike. ALAGA for breakfast puts a policv \vliioh he pursues, thus blocking their favorite foods without fear— manv improvements which they know they know Pape's Diapepsin will save smile on the face, a glow on the cheek ' would benefit the prison. them from any stomach misery. Women's Suits that are stylish, 'yet ready for hard wear; of \vide-wale.diagonal suit- "I do not censure Warden Moycr. He Please, for your sake, get a large ing-; plain tailored coat, well cut. well lined; ball button-trimmed, draped skirt; blue or black. and a zest to the appetite. It satisfies. t .s, I believe, the greatest warden in fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin | ! th«? world: tic understands prisoners, from any drug store and put your I their needs and natures and how to stomach "right. Don't keep on being Sold in sealed tins I provide \vipoly for them better than miserable—life is too short—you are any man I have ever met in my more not here long, so make your stay Also at $20 or less broad experience in prison agreeable. Eat what you likn and di- by your grocer work. "I do, however, blame Superintendent gest H; enjoy it, without dread of re- Decidedly pleasing- Suits of good serge, in navy or black; cutaway coat, with draped LaDow. The only reason that he gave bellion in the stomach. ALABAMA-GEORGIA SYRUP CO. me the letter of introduction was be- Pape's Diapepsin belongs in your skirt. Others of mannish suiting, invisible stripe mixture; long cutaway coat; draped skirt. cause pressure was brought to bear on home, anyway.' Should one of the D MONTGOMERY. AtA. him from above and he believed that I family eat something- which don't would make some recommendations of agree with them, or in case of an at- a nature which would produce ;more tack of indigestion, dyspepsia, gas- results with a less outlay of money. tritis or stomach derangement at day- At $25 "I believe that after a conference time or during- the night, it Is handy with, Mr. Moyer, however, my position to givo the quickest, surest relief Beautiful Suits of wide-wale diagonal; brown-and-black .or blue-and-black; cutaway will be readily understood and that I known. Will be able to go ahead with this coat, velvet collar, belted back; lined with Skinner's Satin; draped skirt. work." Beautify the Complexion SUPREME COURT OF GA. IN TEN DAYS At'$25 , - : -..- • Nadinola CREAM ; After the boss hands you your salary, do ,lu ai. slight slash. The colors are Copenhagen, nav\- and-black. , for plalntlfl In error. Denny & Wrlgllt. USED AND ENDORSED worth? If, on the first of every month, contra. BY THOUSANDS (juptill v. .Macon. Stone Supply Company; you turn over a part of it, to a landlord, from Monroe: — J mitre Daniel. R. L. William- Guaranteed to jemovf son. Elmer Burnham. Charles Af. Cram, for freckles, pimples, as RENT, then you're NOT getting plaintiff In error. Persons & Persons, Hall Women's Cloth Frocks & Hall, i-mitra. spots, etc. Extremi what you COULD! Moufrhon. administrator, v. Ma.sterson: from June*— Jmlg-e J. B. Par!;. Hardeman. J cases about twenty days. Jones Park i- Johnston for plaintiff i.i cr- ; and tissues of impurities, ror. Samuel H. Sib cy. Johnson & John- i Are Ever Useful Adjuncts If, however, on the first of every month, you son, contra. i Leaves the skin clear, soft, healthy. Ricks v. Rluks: (ruin Emamid -- ) udgc | Two 50c. and $1.00. By toilet make us a small PAYMENT, jhen you get RaAvllilgs. L,. B. Lcujhtfoot. IjarSpn - &. Lax- Time was when the serge frock had: things all its own, way, but now serge di- sen. for plaintlft in error. counters cc mail. the use of the house as your HOME—and, C'audeli et at. v. Athens Savings Bank: NATIONAL TOILET COMPANY, Paris, Tear vides honors with wool crepe, Bedford,cord and eponge. And the colors in- after a certain number of payments, you will from Clarke— Judge Brand. Jolin .1. Htriclt- iantl, Blantoti FortHon. for plaintiffs in er- clude such pretty hues as the new blues, mahogany, terra cotta, greens and OWN the property. There's -no mortgage ror. T. S. Mell, contra. Judgments .Revergcfl. to assume. Murray County v. Wilcon; from Murray brown—some rich, beautiful plaids in compose dresses. These ask your atten- superior court — Judge Fife. C. N. King. W. W. Sampler, for plaintiff in error. tion Today. We have *everal handsome homes at Capitol View, inside of Hindman v. Kaper; from Floyd — Judge Maddox. M. B. Eubankss, for plaintiff in. "Baked aim ost at home penhagen, taupe or black; embroidered silk Atlanta's city limiti only an 18-mia»te streetcar ride from error. Harris & Harris, contra. Smart Russian Dresses, with blouse aud Hahvy, administrator, v. Moore, admin- collar; $20. - the postoffice. It surely co»t» nothing to investigate how you istratrix et al. : from Pauldlng — Judge Ed- peplum of beautiful wool plaid, in rich colors, can become OWNER of one of them on the easy payment wards. C. D. McGregor, A. L. Bartlett. for and skirt of plain serge, blue or brown; sev- .Pretty Serge Dresses for as little as $7.50— plan—namely, by paying u« a TRIVIAL amount down, and plaintiff in error. T. "W. Rucker. J. J. navy, terra cotta, mahogany and black, at- as tittle as *21 a: month. Phone u»~-or call at our office— Northcutt, Harris & Harris, W. E. Splnks, Kennesaw eral pretty styles to select from, at $15 contra. ' • ' I>a.visoa, administrator, et al. v. •- Sioley and $20. tractively "fashioned .arid trimmed. and we'll tel'l you! • et al., and vice versa; from Greene —Judg e Waliher. George A. Merrltt, James Davi- Distinctive Dresses of wool eponge-^- Wonderful Charnieuse or Crepe de son, for Davison et al. Noel 'P. Park, Sam- Biscuit 5c uel H. Sibley, contra; ; brown or blue,.with novelty collar of em- W, D. Beatie, 207 Equitable Bldg, Armstrong et -al. v. Boyd, administrator; \ • ". CbJne;presses, navy and black; pret- from Mclntoslv —Judg e Sheppard; Charles broidered moire sill$; black satin girdle. M. Tyson, for plaintiffs In error. William H. A Perfect

. *,-_A' iNEWSPA'FERr J*age Ten. >*. fc«rd •crlmmaite nork. y*»*errf«y •tternoon In nrrparatlcm for the Edited By game Tilth Mercer on Saturday. A •tore definite H«e OB the Jackets can be gained then. Jackets Getting Ready for DICK JEMISON

Jackets' Stock Rises Again; VANDYSTAR 300 Mercer Students Will WHIFFS Hole in Line Is Plugged Up; Attend Game With Jackets

Worry Ccaae*. TECH supporters have eease-d to Mauck to Play Left Tackle At Grant Field Saturday worry over the Tech team. They have Fast Game Is Booked: for-Ft. considered the team a good one for The stock of the Tech Yellow Jack- to play against Mereer, on Saturday. , received a long distance for their team in, the game with their some time, weak only on the left side 1 McPherspn Saturday Aft- of the line. The worry c"ver this part efs for the present football season has • but should round to In time to take telephone call Tuesday morning from old-time rivals. Professor Handle taken another rise until It is now I the trip to Florida the following Bat- Professor EdenJJeld, of Mercer univer- mailed a batch of tickets to Professor of the machine has now ceased' with rated about oar. The one hole in the urday. Edenfield last night. ernoon — Admission Will the' advent of Hugh Mauck at ,!eft machine has been effectually plugged With the Requisition of Mauok the sity, requesting reservation for 300 Keports from Maeon are to the effect tackle. Mauck's 6 feet 5 inches and 225 up. permanent lineup of the Jackets ha*? Mercer students for the football game that Mercer Is working hard particu- been just about settled, though, of Saturday between the Jackets and the larly on a defensive system with which Be Free. pounds of muscle has effectually Hugh Mauck, the giant athlete, Baptists at Grant Field. plugged up any hole .that may have whom Atlanta fans will remember as course, tlie other players on the var- they hope to succfissfuUy stop the Yel- center ot" the Fifth Regiment basket- sity squad will be kept there and used The Mercer -boys are coming to root low Jackets. , prevailed in the Jackets' line thus far ball team for the past three seasons, as subs throughout the entire sea- The Seventeenth -Infantry football this season. The big, athlete ought to has matriculated at the pchool and son. team will Jlne up against the Dahlon- he one of the. stars of the football is out for the football team. The Lineup. ega team at Fort McPherson Saturday ae'ason. • Mauck is a veritable white hope. afternoqn, in what promises to he a He weighs 225 pounds and is 6 feet 5 The flrst string lineup of the Jack- ets in subsequent games, barring In- hard-fought Battle. "Wealter at Vnndy. , inches tall, and strong as an ox. For Alabama Students Will Be a man of his build and heft he is re- juries, will probably be as follows: The game will start promptly at 3 markably 'fast and should prove a Loeb, center; Means, right guard; o'clock, ana no adinl^ion fee wilt b« OESPITK glowing: reports from tower of strength to the Jackets. left guard; Nance, right tackle; charged. Thope that desire seats will 1 Nashville that the Vanderbilt Comroo- *>IHUCK nathasi hanadu Humsomee rimLMifootbalml ex-- i , lef\~~~~t J""T-tackle» ''; .Cushma '#+" "^ n T» ot-r dorea would be strong this year. In- perience. being the star lineman of Hayes, right end; Preas, left end; Pat- Given Holiday for Georgia find them on sale at the post for 50 terviews printed in the Nashville pa- the Stpne Mountain eleven a* few ten, quarter; Cook and McDonald. cents. • If they want to stand - up to pers with Coach McOugin are to the. 1 years ago. Since then he has been halves, and Johnson, full. witness the game it will cost them ab- e-'feet that the' Commodores will be working in Atlanta. Being desirous B. and T. Montague, Fielder, Smith, Tuscaloosa. Ala., October 14.- of the privilege, and luxve chartered a solutely nothing-, as no admission tee weaker this year than last. McOugin Lucas, Heifsnider and Thomason will I to any event can bo "charged oi\ gov- •wisely sums the matter up with the of risin.g in the commercial world, be the baekfield subs, with all off AMI SIKES. cial.)—A holiday has been declared by special train, which will leave -here statement that any team that loses Mauck is taking a commercial course VanderbUt backfleld star, on whom thfl the University of Alabama faculty for in the morning, arriving in Birming- ernment ground. at Tech. them sub ends aa weil. Trawtek, Commodores will rely for their for- The Seventeenth team has been niak- JTardage and Collins from the back- Alexander, Goree, Rainey, Rivias, ward pass feature this year. the student body to attend the foot- ham shortly after noon. Every stu- ing- wonderful strides under the coach- field Is certain to be weaker at least Mauck Stops Hole. Spence, Smeed and Beard are the sub. ball game in Birmingham next Satur- dent has signified his intention of go- ing of Lieutenant Devore, but they are Jit~st. season, as players of their linemen. There are also some others r ape not developed in a season. Tho Jackets' bankneld of Patten. day with the University of Georgia. ing to the game und root for the Red having trouble arranging games McDonald, Cook and Johnson has re- who are showing promise, whose, The student body has availed Itself and White. throughout tlie south. Their prowess ceived the O. K. of .the coach. The names are not remembered at this, has preceded thorn, and the college The Strong; Point. right side of the line, with Means at writing. ' teams do not caro to. tackle them. guard; Nance at. tackle and Cushman Coach IfeUman put the Jackets to | ac

iNEWSPAPERl THE CONSTITUTION. ATLANTA, <££, WEDNESDAY, OOTOBEK 15, 1913. Page Eleven. ATLANTA MANUFACTURERS WE RECOMMEND SENTENCE OF OUR Being Known as "White Man's, ATLANTA-MADE GOODS Negro" Saves Life of De- We the undersigned members of the Atlanta Retail Grocers and Butchers Kalb County Darky. PURE FOOD PRODUCTS Association*tate pleasure in announcing that we carry a complete hne of . products which are manufactured in Atlanta. We will take pleasure m serv- Yielding to what seemed to be t'ie almost unanimous wish of the white ln* you with whatever you may desire, but added pleasure tf you purchase people of DeKalb countv, the governor j We beg to announce to the housewives of Atlanta that goods which are made in your own city. vesteiday commuted to Hfe Imprison- ment the sentence of Geoige Oliver our goods, manufactured here, will be featured by the a negro, who \\ as to have been hanged Madam, Is Your Grocer a Member of This Associ- on JTiidas. October 24, for the killing of anotb.ei negro majority of the members of the Atlanta Retail Grocers While the evidence in the case con- ation ? If Not, Why Not ? clusHeK showed murder in the flrt>t and Butchers Association every Wednesday. C. Make, degriee, the g~oiernor AIJS much im- Nickajack Milling & Grain Co piessed by the fact that the condemn- a point to specify "ATLANTA MADE/' and thus E. G. AKIN & CO. OANN & HAWKINS ed n)an was gl\en sue i a sood chai- Wholesale and Retail actor bj the \\hite people among whom Groceries and Meats GROCERIES. he lived He was known among the help to boost the best city in Dixie. 497 Peachtree St. Of the Boat Quality people of his race as a 'white man's' 390 Marietta St. and W. & A R. R. negro, and ioi that i eason was un- Ivy 4100, 4102, 4103, Bell Phons. At Right Prices. popnla: with them All the witnesses Phones: Ivy 1824 and 1814. Bell Phone, Main 4379. against him ,it the tilal weie of his Atlanta Rione 2314 own toloi and then testlmonv was GROCERIES. PROMPT DELIVERIES. mole than likcl\ to have been biased Governor's statement. | ATLANTA GROCERY CO. POPE & WARD I In a statement issued bv the «*o\ - I It's Thoroughly Good! J. A HUDSON I ernoi in connection viith the comma D.R. Wilder Mfg.Co. M'COY BROS., Prop*, tatlon of sentence, he says •taalc and Fancy Groceries ••« Staple and Fancy Groceries. 'Xo more remarkable scene 1 as oc rre»B Meats. Make all «h«oh» pay- and Fancy Groceries Phones: cuired in Geoigia than this hearing able to Atlanta Grocery Company. occasioned Between sixty and one SYRUP REFINERS ehomemt Atlanta 037. Ball, Ivy S8S0. Atlanta Phona, No. 3217. Atlanta 3048-A; Bell, West 580-1.. hundred white citizens of DeKalb Boll 48B1-J. 'ountj, headed b\ the congressman of T7« Hlcklaad Av*. Co*. Bt. Charles 498 Marietta St. ' Battle Hill. the district a member of the legisla- UNCLE Avenue. tuie, the sheriff and officers of the county and the del It of the supeiior EVERYTHING court left theli business and camt l>e- CHARLES AUSTIN I to"e me in behalf of a pooi helpless IDEAL CASH GROCERY Good to Eat. negio, Ij ing in iail undei sentence of SAM Fancy and Staple Groceries. Coal deith These iitlxtns lepresent the PURE GEORGIA bent thougi t and civilization of oui and Wood. Fresh Meats, Fish Staple and Fancy Groceries. PANELL & ABERNATHY st iti The\ l,\ed 111 the conimunlti and Oystore In Season. tvheie the < i imc uas committed and Atlanta Phone 3O. Bell Phone, Ivy Cor. Achby and Qreensferr- Avs. 278 E. Pine St. kiu u the witnesses and local condi- BREAD! CANE SYRUPS 8519, 36IS. tions Phone West 958. Bell Phones: Ivy 1055 and 1064. 'These gentlemen uige as the i < a- 07 Alexander St. son lor commutation the lack ot malice on the part of the negro and his nre- \ious good chaiactei In fact, they Made by We Are Agents for You'll Find Atlanta-Made Goods M. N. PHILLIPS suggest that his possession of the uni- Your KHGA SPRINGS MIXERAI, \VATER. Here. foim and continuous good will of the BRANDS 153 E. Linden St. white people had eained for him the Schlesinger-Meyer Grocer Buchanan-Shelton Grocery Co Ask for Today's Special Prices. enmity of manv negioes, and had col- Groceries and Meats. ored the testimom of the witnesses THE CHEAP CASH GROCER. against him all of whom were of his Baking Co. Sells 251-253 Houston St KAMPER'S race The old fathei of the dead man Bell Phone Ivy 845-J. testifies to defendants good charactei Uniform" and "Bonita' Phones: Ivy 2946, 2947- 2948, At Phone Ivy 5000 and a^ks for t lemenc\ AT LANTA It. lanta phone 3243. ICinphnnlxeH t>ood Character. ' Tne negio is a cliai fe upon the i on- J. G. RAINEY scieme and thought of the southern M. F. BOISCLAIR & SON T. J. KEY white men Among them he finds his Fancy Gi oceries best friends and ill that is demanded Staple and Fancy Groceries. Groceries and Meats 128 West Peachtree St. of him is good behatioi and a lecog- "If It's Good We Have It." nition of his position V\ ha.t a dra- Pickles Like ihe Home Folks Made Phones: matic emphasis is placed upon the Atlanta phone 3535. 88 South Gordon St. Bell, Ivy 623, Ivy 310, Ivy 1290. value of fcood chaiattei b\ this appeal CORNFIELD HAMS Bell phone, Mam 3419-J for clrmenc\ bj stern l.uv-enforcing . Pure Apple Vinegar Bell Phone, Weat 575-J. Atlanta 623. men w horn neither mones nor power The Sweetest Breakfast Delicacy 371 LUCKIC St. could influence' ' Thej sii the defendant was haid- w Diking law-abiding, pea.ce-lo\ InB Jelly Just Made for Hot Biscuits SINGLETON BROS. f Buy Cornfield T t F. M'GAHEE obedipn and the> pleaded a life of Cured in BRITTINGHAM BROS. Sood conduct as against the impulse Hams and Get Wholesale and Retail Grocery and Bnt«nrr«— Poultry, Veg- of a moment that menaces him with Sugar and Gr»wn in Georgia, Made Retail Dealers In Staple ana Staple and Fancy Groceries etables, Etc High-Grade Uoxne~ the gallows The lesson, if heeded bj the Best. From Fancy Groceries, Country Made Sauaafge. \Veinles his iclor, may produce an mflnitelv Smofred Selected Home ancf Packed in Atlanta Produce. and Fresh Meat Market. a Specialty. Prlees Right. bettei lesult than the execution of the 16II-1T1-173-175 Fetem Street. stern sentence ot the law wlthGeorgia Grown Hogs. By the Choice Western Meats. Atlanta JPhone» M3-1O1O. Bell Phon«» T*l. Bell, Ivy 4200,4201; Atlanta 1054. The piison board had declined to Phones, Bell ITT 21H»». Atlanta 2869, II. 1703-1766-1708. 61-O3 Cone St. recommend clemency in the i a«f Hickory In Finest Flavor 571 Edgewood Ave. Atlanta. and Quality. OixiePickle&PreservingCo. J. G. SHERRER TWENTY-TWO EXAMINED B- F. BYFIELD K. P. McCLUNG Sign o' Quality Manufacturer* of Staple and Fancy Groceries. TO PRACTICE MEDICINE Staple and Fancy Groceries Phones: Fancy Groceries and Meats. and Fresh Meats. I oui teen white and eight negi u as Pure Apple and Distilled Vinegar, Bell, Dec 77, Atlanta, Dec. 246. 36 Gordon St. pn ints to the pri\tlege of pieflxin,? Atlanta Phone 2807 118 College Ave. doctor to their names took the fiist Catsupi Pickles, Pepper Sauce, Bell Phone, Weet 717-L. Bell Phone, West 1300. examination srn en lij the new state White Provision Co. Decatur, Ga. board of medical examiners yesterdav Sauer Kraut, Jelly, Etc. 452 West Hunter St. The examination was held in the hall of the house of representatU es, with PACKERS "DIXIK BtRAfMD" Ui O B Walker of Bowman , of LaGiange, r>r F P rattei - son, of Cuthbert, Di O B Walker of J. M. BAILEY "The Best There la" in STROUD GROCERY CO. Bowman, Dr A L White of Flovilla, Blue Ribbon Your Grocer for our Fancy Groceries and Vegetables and Dr C M Pa\ ne, of Atlanta O5 Went. Main 28O5. cine and onlj one set of questions was Coffee \tlitnta Pbone 3<)U. 673 S. Pryor St. neceshaiv Atlanta Phone 1887. Bell Phone 699. Atlanta Phone 691. Atlanta Pbone 42O1, B5 •Went End Atlanta-Made Coffee WE DELIVER ANYTHING 266 Courtland Street. Place. ^ ANYWHERE. MANY FORMER PASTORS Is Roasted in Atlanta, COWAN-MOZELEY CO. McCORD BROS. TAPPAN & CO. TO PREACH AT ST. PAUL'S Packed in Atlanta Made Special Blends Fancy Groceries and Western Groceries, Meats, Dry Goods, DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED Meats. Notions and Shoes. GROCERIES. Re\ B T Frnser pastor of St Paul Cans and Is As Good 270 North Boulevard. 55 Highland Ave. Methodist church will formally?" re- Eureka—Atco—Square Deal Bell Pfcone. Ivy 1404. Phones—Bell, Main 809 and 1024; ce!\e into the chinch tonight at 7 !0 Coffee As Can Be Bought Bell Phone, I-ei s who applied lot admission during 458 and 460 South Pry or St. Ivy 1892. 1898, 1894. Atlanta 762. the gteat i e\ ival that closed Sunclav Atlanta Phone 482. Plans arp g-oins fom art! lor the At Any Price. dedication of the ht Paul ohuich next Sundaj rooming' when Bishop Collins R. H. COMER J. H. MERRITT H. C. TH6MPSON Denny of ViiKinia will preach Among the formei pastois who are expected Atlanta Coffee Staple and Fancy Groceries. Staple and Fancy Groceries. to be present are Rev H L Edmond- Phones-: Bell, Ivy 229; Atlanta, 2258. Country Produce a Specialty. Groceries and Fresh Meats. son, of Noivnin who will preach at the evening seivice. Rev. B O Eng- Cor. Hemphill and Weet North Ave. Phones: Bell 1O43) Atlanta B«8. Bell Phone 858 W. land of Monticello Re% S H Dimon Ask Your Groeer for It Mills Company Rrmldence- Bell W-33-J. of "Uilledereville Re\ W Uurroar, of USE COMER "GOLD CROWN" 276 Oak Street \\ indei Re\ J M Bow den of Deca- FLOUR. 101 Peters St. tui Re\ V\r W BrniRfield ot St Times chin ch, \tlanta, Rev M L. Lndtiwood of LaUewood Heights, Vt- TUCKER & McMURRY l-uit\ and RP\ J R King, of Griffin CRAWFORD BROS. MORRIS & THOMAS PURITY QUALITY Fancy Groceries and Choice West- GENERAL MERCHANDISE. STREET CARS TO RUN Kennesaw Biscuit ern Meats. Groceries, Fresh Meats, Etc. 537 Lee Street. Phones: ON IVY STREET AGAIN 819 Peachtree Street. Cor. Piedmont Ave. and Currier St. Bell, West 279-J. Atlanta 1590. Bej,.'umig Wednesdaj October 15. Block Chocolates D-NO COFFEE Bell Phones: Ivy 906, 908. wtieet cai sen Ice «ill t>f resumed on 1\\ stieet between Vubuin avenue and the junction of t\v and Peachtree H. WALD stieets The cai a of the Pine street Bell Phone, Ivy 562 N. A. MOORE and tho Piedmont a\enue lines will go FRESH, CRISP Staple and Fancy Groceries b u k on Ivv on this date and run on Unmixed Unmatched Unusual Bell Phone, Ivy 563 "Onre-Prlce Grocer " And Fresh Meats of All Kinds. thi ii foi mei loutes instead or using «i 127 fllchardson, Cor Cooper. iu.it of Peachtree street WHOLESOME Bell phone, Ivy 3409. Cxrs of the Pine street pnd the Pied- CAMP GROCERY CO. mont avenue lliiea were taken off of BOTH.PHONES: Atlanta phone 2679. jv\ atieet seveial months ago to pei- Roasted in Atlanta 194 Merrltts Ave. init the woik of the clt\ in i aislng CRACKERS 345 Peachtree St. Main 4041-J. Atlanta 193J. the grade along that thoi ouffhf are This woik is practically completed now and the Georgia Railwaj and Power C. D. WILSON company ha,s been notilied bv the city Pure Delicious Candies A. H. CHAPMAN T. F. MOORE a ithoi ities that its service ma\ be ic- umid \\ilhout interference v> ith the Staple and Fancy Groceries, "The Best There Is" In Groceries Staple and Fancy Groceries. re • .undf i OL the Rriding woiU McCord-Stewart Co. Hay, Corn and Feed Stuff. and Meats. 72 West Georgia Ave., Cor Wind- All Kinds of Garden Seeds. 325 East North Ave. sor Street. W. E. BEVERLY ELECTED Coffee Roasters Atlanta Phone 2097. Atlanta Phone 2594. Bell Phone, West 801. Phones: Ivy 394 and 385. MAYOR OF THOMASVILLE Frank E. Block Co. i liomasville, Ga October 14—(Spe- ATLANTA, GA. Atlanta Rome C. P. CANN GROCERIES AND MEATS L. W. WALLACE lal 1—W 13 Be\ erlv was last night Staple and Fancy Groceries. Stock t lectpd bv council major of Thomas- Staple and Fancy Groceries. \ ille to succeed Roscoe Luke, who. re- Keed, Ktc. H. "MOORE & co. J Three Stores— Fresh Meats. sir-ned to run for congress W 1 428 Marietta Street. 130 East Linden Street. Bell Phone, Main 327. (Trantham was elected aldeiman in Atlanta Phone 288. HeH Phone S8O-3I. place of Mi BeverU BOO Wurfoftn Street. Atlanta phone 5937-A. Bell phone, Atlanta Phone 769. \tlunin Pboac S5«. 100 W Georgia Ave. I.U tucUJe Street. Ivy 5741. Atlanta Phone 784. McDougall's Coffees WESTON MFG. CO, MOORE GROCERY CO. J. H. WALLACE ESTABLISHED IN ATLANTA IN I88S VWB. COX Staple and Fancy Groceries. Our Triple Seal Facka£« kwps Staple Groceries, Flour, Grain, Bay, 68-70 West Linden Street. them crisp and clwn Cotton Seed Products, Coal Poultry and Stock Feedr Produce, Have been recognized as the best coffee on the - amcl "Wood. Bell Phones: Ivy 887 and 888. Vegetables and Fruit. market for over a quarter of a century. Manufacturers of Phones- Bell 2714 Ivy; Atlanta «84. LOWEST PRICES FOR 583 Lee Street. TVorth Boulevard and Tenth Street. SPOT CASH. Bell, West 1391-J. Atlanta 2883. Kennesaw Our leading brands: H. F. D. 4. McDougall's Royal Blend, 1 and 3-pound cans. McDougall's Santos Blend, 1 and 4-pound cans. NORMAN GROCERY CO. H. WEINBERG it5c DONEHOO & PENDLEY McDougall's Old Plantation Blend, 1-lb. cans. Weston's Genuine Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Staple and Fancy Gro- The Fresh Sodi Cracker Durand's Famous Blended Coffee. Ask the re- North Side Grocsrs. Staple and Fancy Groceries, Feed ceries and Western Meats. Stuffs, Etc. tail grocers about our goods. Meats, Poultry, Fish, Fruit* and Phone*: PRANK B. BLOCK CO., ATLANTA Vegetables. Bell Phone, Decatur 35. Bell 3578 and 3579. Atlanta 1209. 18-20 Angler Ave. 54 Trinity Place, Decatur, Ga. 602 S. Pryor St. Phones: Ivy 1056-1057. Coal, lee and Wood. Southern Coffee*Spice Mills Mayonnaise Salad IMPORTERS, ROASTERS AND PACKERS W. A. EDMONDSON E. C. NISBET & SON The Constitution pub- DR. GAULT Dealers in Staple and Fancy Gro- A reliable specialist R. H. MeDOUSALL, PrnldMt Staple and Fancy Groceries. ceries, Freeh Meats, Stock Food, lishes moye automobile In diseases ol men. Lo- 76-78 Paters St. Atlanta, 61. Dressing Meats and Produce. „ Fruits and Vegetable*. cated In Atlanta nine Bell phone, Ivy 5988J; Atlanta Phones: advertising than any oth- years Address 32 In- phone 5628-A. * Bell, West 331-332; Atlanta 1417. er Atlanta newspaper. man Bulldlns, 22% S. Edgewood. 453 Gordon Street. Broad Street, Atlanta, Q a.

'ST-4PFRI NFWSPAPFK! wiri>NBSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913. CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, OA Page Twelve. ======COTTON FUTURES MARKET. Range In New York Cotton. KRAMER ESWE 5 1 Country Produce I JLo."~o 1 **»• w-» - v i — —-- - ft_. by Fidelity Fruit an_-_d COTTON IS U 13.0712.96-9813.19-31 (Corrected 57 South Broad Street.) .13.05 Company, U. S. Supreme Court Asked to JlS.03 1S.10(12.9iiiijiep-3 12 94112.94-95113.1'- *"" 7 12 94112.93-94 13.15-17 Vegetables. . J13.02 13.10)12.92 lOWESlfW ...* .00«|3.|5 Pass on the Will of the Car- ,."..(l2.9e-9S 13.19 3 13.24-25 PINEAPPLES, real Spanish .. 13.199113.00 1)13.00-01 Feb. 12.97-9* 13.14 13.03-05 FLORIDA ORANGES/i-ancy.' "'' rollton Man. Stch. 1~'<"itV7^ 7^ 12 91-&-J i3'.i8)'l3".23ji3.b6llS.b611».OB-Oe 13.27-28 Supply in Excess of Demand. 16 TO 20 POINTS iV79i?/.78-79i2.9«-»- Apr '. 13.30(13.20(18.20(13.20113.08-10 May. Sharp Decline in Liverpool .'.'. . 50C !l":69-71 I--''-*" Wax • Southern Pacific Showed Washington. October 14—Requeat June. i2.6flil2.68-89|l2.84-S5 ONIONS, red. bag .. July. 2:77l.l2.«2 12.66 "•'•"•'• -:::i!:«o ^ndoof the United States supreme and Crop Reports From "White • • • ' ^va" the Greatest Weakness, De- Easier Liverpool Cables and Closed steady. CABBAGE, crate, Ib '.'. "25c®90 92Vi 931,4 Allis-Chalmers 1st Bs. ctfs, bid 42 41 42^4 American Agricultural bs.. January contracts selling oft to Amer. Car and F.. 4s, bid.. of last Amor. Cotton OH . - American Tel. and Tel. cv. or 26 points below the close Amer. Ice Securities American Tobacco 6s. bid . the Amer. Linseed Amour & Co. 4%a United State Saturday and ?5.7f, per bale under 30Vi just before Amer. I/ocomotlve . 30'.4 30 Atchison gen. 4u, bid right : r>pr and Reading. o tlrne ur- high records established Arner. Smelting and do. cv. Is (1960) 1 ""while securities were that supply official Ootobtr Kit • at-ST sfaVT The-liiv-eUr^ Big Bond Issue Approved. the' publication of the Refining . . . . 02Vi do. cv. 3s 'Grain. 14.—The public Kasier do. pfd . . . 99Va Me-* Atlantic Coast I.lnr 1st 4s.- Black condition figures. Amer. Husar H<-fln..l08 107 Baltimore and Ohio 4» . U e r favorable weather lor 120v» »=5Vi!sea* ,?o^h. and^r'ffl becausp-S.Sn~e of Jn0™3?«mS"6*86*^, ion5 Nc>-a. s1 inlxeR. Kd. oatoatss » 9 Illinois Central 1st ref. 4s.. .. 91 H at 1.25@4. Delaware and Hud. .. . 151 153 * Tnterborough-Met. 4%H ••• •• •• 74M> ?ounusua- a"tl ' ^^^j^\^^-^weakness at. buenos All e&. (late ju.^ i b baBW.s. - ice cream, at 1%@6; Denver and Rio G. 17% 17% 17 14 IS Inter. Merc. Marine 4%s. bid •• . 60 The fine weather of the last tiv. cui.v» . 30 "0 . sr.Va do. pfd 13V! Japan - ,. . . 9305 .tended also to bring out decided nistlllers' Securities 1S% 13Vi Kansaa City Southern ref. "s, bid. Kansas dl Pacific .nfo»r •i>'«Vntr&«^™that SS!na;t 2fi% 27% bid . 90Vi i tivity on the selling side. In splendid four points In t Erie 27 H 42 Vi Luke Shore deb. 4s 93% i patches told of pastures mum decline of do. 1st pfd . . - 'I Vi 41 41'A Louisville and Nashv...- un. 4s. . condition with feeding demand • likely $1 BO- Rough Rider. $1.80. do. 2nd pfd ... 33 33 33 34-s S9tt. Beans—Lima. 7%c; navy S3. stock were eas- 13.H 140',i Missouri. Km. and Texas 1st 4s. 83 to be indefinitely postponed. General electric.. .140% 139% d. RBII 4 Vis. bid. wheat. A T*nk—Per crate, ?1.20. 123% 123% 66 Oats sagged with corn and 4-oz., J2.70. Great North'n pfd.,124 Missouri Paclilc 4s. bid 79% "visible sup- Telly—30-lb. palls, $1.35; Great Northern Ore do. conv. 5s, bid. . • huge enlargement of the Spaghetti—S1.90. In 3114 30% 31 31 ' 4143. bid. 63 effort at a Leather—White oak, 48c. statement. , ., meter Ctts 108 108 National Rys. of Mexico 83% ply total hindered any most part, bring to the Illinois Centra! . .10RU 10S"» N. V. Central gen. 3%s, offered.. . pooner—Grain, loo, ground. 18c. west would . 13 Ji 13 ISVi 13% 90Vi ra $6.00; Inter borough-Met 57% Weakness In coarse grain, as well n n e b do. pfd . . . 57 -a 56% 57 VI SH Slt r £i5 irfe%»'"e r" 101 10'Hi X Y V' II" and Hartford cv. as In the hog market, deprived pro- Inter Harvester .10 4^ 104% Norfolk" and Western 1st con 4s. bid.. 50 14 Vi vision dealers of all id =I%ffi«l~-SSs£ southern Tnrer-Marine pfd . . . do. cv. 4s. . . • inuod liquidation International Paper . 6% 94 m tant upturns could be forced, BV» 6% Northern Pacific 4s 67 M, through the early International Pump. . unloaded, especially lard. Snowdrift, Kansas City South'n 2 23% ". I do. 91% 9S 9S Oregon Short Line rfdg 97% Leaf, 13 basis. Treasury Statement Laclerlo Gas Penn. rv. 3V4s (19151 . Prev. LehlKh Valley loO'ft 100 1 = 1 Ait. con. 4H 94% Open. High. Low. Close. Close. Louisville and Na^n 13- Reading ften. 4s. . . . • mixed, Kegs, Southernlee Mlnn! St. P. and S'lt 6»Va ozen. St. Louis and ban 1'ran. 54 .s:, % • Souders, 90c ' do. gen. 5s. bid 77% Der. . . - .91 on a scale Mo..' Kan.' ami Toxaa 20 St Louis S'western con. May . . . Missouri Pacific "~ 72% - .1.*t Jhrown. Seaboard Air Line "»••..•-• 93V4 CORN—• National Biscuit . .120 Southern Pacinc col. 4s. bid. Dec. . . . dark brown, 4%; domino, 8% cents. National Lead . . . 44 SBVi I do. cv. 4s 90Bl,oexporU Tennessee Copper. . Wheat—Receipts 3.305.000, against cdastwlse, Texas and Pacific Atlanta Live Stock. Mining Stocks. net receipts. Union Pacific . . Ing mining: Easy ;middHne 13. Mobile do. pfd (By W H. White. Jr.. of the White Pro- nne Cananea 5.561; eroMS. ,i>6,>.i>1 , lt*' United States Realty exports coastwise, I.U. U S. Rubber . . - 61 U " U. S. Steel. . . • ~; to c Havannah-at.a.ly; middlin do. pfd . . .10.,»» pounds. 15.25 to 1 Utah Copper sfe'ers. 800 ' London Stock Market Va -Carolina Cheml- 850 pounds. tlneut. fo^iVeSSr5.749; coastwise" "VttT^ 3.187. cal ofToreisn cotton Wabash Chicago. October 14.—Casn ston-Steady ; mlddllnB 1= % ; n do. pfd .... tton-srrowlner (»93; No. 2 hard SB Western Maryland n consumed in all f^lBe, 1.2S9. Western Union states w.ls 24».87 Bonds for Investment Westtnehouse Eler bales. other states " ''n llm ...,-.- Wheeling and L. Cotton on hand SentemLer 30 in man: 70-°No'. 2 yellow 69 !i <£j>70V« • Total"sales for day_473.30u shares. " "" o n O n 11 w. • • — — - ,. included Hiub-grade municipal, ufBc'tu°ln« f:.stabll«lin,entH Oats, No. 2 white 41© 11'4: tS in j'witiB states ' France, 1 1.04 9. -.T 111 — — - - •• - 41 «,063: ' e Stocks recording smiles of 10,000 and more "Oil 7!>3 bnles cottijn n11- i>tbPr states. ® - »- » raiVread and public ser- •an'd 458.459 bciU-s I" Hye. No. 2 . ;1B 000 Barler. 65083. Amalgamated Copper Cotton n; Timothy ?S,75(., vice corperation bonds. celptH. 2.705: Bro-Vre'at-'Bmaln.2.705; " 2.500: oon- . US."00 September »0 '»^riS7W 7aj|: American Can . . 25.)00 -cotton-Browins States anBd 30,b83 Clover [email protected]>0. Canadian Pacific . - 14 .—Cash Wheat, Unent; 353? eoastwi^.^S. . 70.SOO in """ St Louis, October hard Send iw List oi Oltermjv Reading • • . 35.200 track No. 2 red 92<&! middling. 13Vn: net Southern Pacific . . ] 4B 300 r n Baltimore-Nominal; mldd ®Co'rn „ . sales, none, Union Pacific . • • • .103,300 ^ -^,^9g--H-^ No 71M| N . 2 white Pt 0n P i, 1,809. United States SteM t white 41'A®42. ^ock t,1?0 e'Kp or°ts%,LFrar sf'Lo'uls, "October ' 14.—Close . Wheat, Harris, Forbes & Co, »U ^srssB^-^vn C ^ 13.50; net re- f 5o8 3l4.°ana in all other states !«.- cernber 87V4: May "1%®91%-. YorH-Qulet; .^"^r a Corn, December 08 % ©68 ^ . May New Cotton Region Bulletin, Prime c^ipta. "eroWflTconUneVi^, coastwiae, 612.754. »„,»!»•,, cotton durinB Hats December 40%. May "'ra. .. 14.—For the 24 foreiRii cotton Kansai City, October 14.—Cash- V'heat, SS 50. §yf. W. Harris 4 Co ; Atlanta. October -^ -^^ t, Septembeimportsr amountoof ™~f'Kd "t o -7.oi.7"5n"l,ale"s. ^^' of m No 2 hard 83%@8>d 72; No. J white i j. $8.50 to $8.25. iniddllng. 13.50, stock, oood butcher Boston—Quiet; Temperature. 4 b Oats' No 2 white 41%; No. 2 mixed 40% NtW YORK 6S Sirba^Wg'hSf f^m ^n o^e-r S7 75 to 88.00. 031. 4 ! STATIONS OF -"•S"! JoMSUl ~£3 aome^c^ot- Ught 87.73. ATLANTA J JSSK s^.sS5-i\vC receipts, none, groo=>, DISTRICT. c ~ S*r Heavy n U h 7 0 1 $7.50. 3.116. S« -«» nk?S a'. .V«l blfes \°0 N^'Sir ¥ VSriir5a^; Texas City—Net receipts,. 6,100. &ross, 75 66 .00 ATLANTA, clear . . 45 .00 weak; December 91 5-16 .May 97% • , 8,400; stock, 14.330. a-Chattanooga, clear. 75 ^rs^sssw™^ sr^ ft>c,^r?^Sr^ week, Assets Realization 48 .00 Corn, spot easy, export 11% f. o. b. atloat. October Columbus, clear - - 84 all other countries. _ receipts t t M Total Tuesday at ^T^orta, net, 98,235. 70 39 .00 Oats spot easy; standard white 45%®40 Light u°*han l; ed. * t I : i.4G. Gainesville, clear . 43 .00 No S 4B@45%, fancy clipped white 4T@48. steady ,4? -. 0»-io" o! Tovember ,40 1|?- Greenville, S. C., clei 11 U l Company Consolidated, three days, at all port,, net. 81 47 .00 topl°^o ?°c"lower on Ughta. kfeetf i o.7°rtVerf'l?C"[email protected]; Griffin, clear . • • 46 .00 Port Receipts. n-Macon. clear . - - 79 Comparative J16~.75(S)16.2B: No. 1 B°«th- CAPITAL AND SURPLUS *11,OOO,OOO 242.327. . 83 50 .00 3 port» n rt h n No. 1 southern soft $ln.50 Monticello, clear . . 48 .00 Hubbard Bros. & Co. Live Stock. Si Il5 3°o @ 16 o0 Total since September t at all ports, net, Newnan, clear 78 Fonowlne w.»e^n«t. *•£»»££ 1 with 78 41 .00 year. the cooler S.093.430. Home, clear . . • 78 39 .00 day last lie offerings Chicago. October ures £70 Temporary financial aid to Spartanburg. a. *-. clr. .00 1913. If: ' her Tallapoosa, clear . 74 43 33,045 61.B36 SO 42 .00 Galveston 12,283 12.017 10s. futures £184 10s. large enterprises pending Tnccoa. clear . 44 .00 West Point, clear SO New Orleans r>,561 3.105 Those states feel" the weight of this selling ^'oVc^and 'warrant'. Y2B 1 Vkdd.. at all port3._6l8.9U. Mobile \ 26.061 12,475 in the ahltrage holdlne for B ">" •"•- St Louis, October 14.—Lead $4.30. permanent financing. Stock Savannah.. •• •• G 303 3.845 count which hai present Spelter $5.30. Toxafi Rainfall. Charleston 4,827 6.541 ,._ th the E interior Movement. Kone Mining Kastland. Haskell, Hondo, n f r Corrc.ponJ.nc. /n«W re- Vilmlneton 2705 8,264 P?e°s s.o n in financia^S^lall circleclVcleB"^.s the- market ,.,, 20,- e pessimistic In tone and one hears $3.t> Llano. 'MarW Norfolk. 407 of course, Shee...vis.-.----RecelptB. „_,_,, . 14000^i>« ^, steady t_o strong NEW YORK PHILADHJI-1A 109.S74. 6,400 .roj-v few x'avoi'ituitfavorable; viewv.«,, ^s expre.-sed.—._»,- , al- "'ieelP g o o yparllngg $5.00® Linseed. verthouE> ,ie™,h all, ":,^admiml,t that the cotton ggoodo s native sheep. 14.—Linseed, 25 Bnma St- 104.946 Jpadf i. tn an excellent condition. «H_n , K:5or.aml,s.tnauve.b|5.86®1^ Receipts CHICAGO middling. 13. net r«- *, U1U., October. $1.37'4; Augusta—Steady, 6338. ahipments, 3,310, December, 51.35%. bid. Vint H«tion»l Bank BW» celpts. -l.OSO; sroa- sale£. 2,468; stock, 34,200.

stock, salSs, 2,3 Wilmington . c ul t middling. 13°t. net_ Charleston . . st. Louis— * ,?3 ; 2 160; shipments, 1, i Augusta . . . Liverpool Cotton John F. Black & Co. WILL Savannah . . sales,'none; stock, ATLANTA . Liverpool October 243. erOMt. Montgomery . State of Georj Mobile , - - eufpments, Memphis . ; net VU-kstmrg . 1.C14; Ne\s Orleans 5a. Ry. & Electric, stam Little Rock Houston Oklahoma . Southern Ice preferred. New Orleans Cotton. a-Mlnlmum temperatures are for 12-hour nprlod ending at S a. m. this date. b-Re- Orleans. October l-^^nd^ton^ relved late, not Included in averages.. x-Hlgh- smd" prices broke est vi-sterday xx-Lowest for ;jt hours ending am 75th meridian time. Ilemarks. \vpather prevails throughout the belt. Visible Supply of Grain. Company Mch.-Apr. Temoeraturs-s are somewhat higher .,ver the , 14—Visible supply f-f " entral and lower in the east- Apr.-May . western an May-June the 'New York produce rn dlttricls. e 1 .on HBRRMAVS- June-July C. S . July-Aug. Section Director. '"—dinc'r4e3a3seT2blT3hoeoO. Aug.-Sept. Wheat In bond ... "«ere npt wen .-u^V take ad- Corn increased i"":,0"";. vrere'not n«re«i« and «W not Cotton Seed Oil. them. C a Country Produce. vantage ^.^^ steady at a decline 4.—Cotton 8ft! !n bo nd .'--as, The American Audit Company The opening ™* ,,i s and Rye increasea 136 OOtt. 4 Butter Unchanged. n nnnr ca e Home Office 100 Broadway, New York City. lSll^^S-,00. F W LAFEENTZ C. P^A. ^resident. ^ ! T^n«aK s City, October 14.—Butter, cream- y- sales: do. summer yellow Movement of Grain. ?J? firsts. 27: seconds. 2R- packing. 22. THEO. . Ct.t'H,.. . uiH, 11 .i*.. < Prr«. «n9_ s±» 7.00;^ do. sum- St. LOU.S. October 14-(Three3dayH>-Ren- ^^i - ' A^atR* 2!»; seconds. 18. ,at Bunk I Poultry hena,-11; roosters, 9; ducks. 10: > Building to - - cetpts: Flour, 24.000, «h ""^ pntR. -ploiir, •ord. to 24 down b- ay 100,000; oats ^"=.000. CM . 2aooo. oati. prlnK^rs. 11. t()ber J4—poultry: chickeni. , • poll* The weather 14000; wheat, 53,ouu, c«ii». - — Colorado and dry weath ^"'sprl'nBS. 'l2' turkevs' 18: ducUs 13%: oelt. The lack sa'.ooo. ._ as the. res^^^ SeB°utter.' creamery. 31. .X KKBS. 24. (-._,„>,„,. 14.—Butter steady, Coffee. DP Weekly Weather Report. >j0,,. York °'2'~ ~Ttr',H SO 'i Iffl 81: nr«W, anuary . New York, October 14.—The' coffe^mark.-! g nin tub1?: cr~a ,, ,i/,a«i7U, : th1rd"« 24©2r,: i Vice pesdent, October 14.—Mean tempera- obruary sec r Washington normal throughout the wan lower today under "„,„.„ 95 poiiitn 28 ©30; "^-extrnH, "30%©31; Hrsts, 28 O. BrBID^/ELL, C. P. ,;..,,. »„,„•,. >^ vo were above The greatest excess March . " " 7 \ 9 (n) 1 2 2 After opening at a decline ot -"'•," hiKher ' d pril . • ' ". 7'.2S 07.31 7..!fi®7.27 nrices rallied on bullish crop aav.i . as I . 14—C-otton seed prod- European cables and nrmness In Brnjni. « Memphis Octob' oil '9390. meal S27.00® sold oft again, closing steady, 17 to ^b point. cts. prime basiR, Weekly mean temperatures llnters •dHOiS'i. « 1-4 to 76 degrees over the east- 7.50; TO 11-16, nornlntu: B"«" IG- 1 ow mi ranged «om »•« the central and from s?rlct iood ordinary. 12 9-1"^'^q ™ , 06ntoa°0 over the western portion of the cot Naval Stores. trlct low Ga_ r><-toher 14.—Turpentine 12%; » idling IS*: good ""> Savannah. v 724 •'receipts. 814: ship- l8 1 l t0 e B na t, pot .~\ oo"re°ls"hrBher at The To°we8t weekly ™>£v$?Vg**£?-B& firmentam at 38J4; , "".2- 8 %7 3iop . n Rosins flrKi0 : at 8»8.00: Santos, s s occurred at ^.-,11^ chrlati. Texas '2.3^r/-Vi ; ^v^ r» 3.«'7?4 :": 7JOOO sixes and 8520iS200 for sevena; Santoa ru- ato c "llpte^.oooT'JmwMahy 60,000. celpts, 12,283; , • '_ cred as follows: Opening. Closing. Dry Goods. .. 10.15 bid 10.86O10.SS Provisions. October 14.—Cotton ., 10.SB bid 11.11® 11.01 •w Tork, [email protected] [email protected] ber 14.—ParU '21.00 cotton y !. 11.12 bid 11.15 ©11. IS . V and Liverpool Grain. .. 11.21 bid 11.26 @11.2S .. 11.88 bid 11.36©11.3S Liverpool. October .. 11.45 hid 11.49 <8> 11.50 .. 11.48®11.50 PfcNSACOLA.FLA. , 7.3 . [email protected] . at Wilmington. N. 10.54® 10.BS spring. 11.00 aak 10.10@10.« were favorable for got lO.T j , Bagging and Ties. it there was too mucn 10,84 bid portion of the Caro- 7%d; December St. Louis. October l4.-Iron cotton ties. 10 %d; Bagging, 11- Unas. Hocap ttflae, »• iNEWSPAFERr lEWSPAPERr ^c'**^^ Page Thirteen THE CONSTITUTION, ,ATl«ANTAt WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913,

Coppedtfe to Mi^s MilUred -L,. Wilson, 21 I BM|f>ICJYT%ffc RAILROAD SCHEDULES acred v*eat aiats AtiamovUie-i<'airDurn road, ' «t^l HJ1 B-iV^ M xr PERSONAL I HELP WANTED-J-Feraale lima lot ii, iourtecumi ait-uricL. uctober l<*. , WE &LAKB BWUcnts from combines Jl.Oo ixoMtw "ANI> 'orslcEg: ^ / 50——JU.IT3. ijtitllt; Jj|UE*Ut£& j311Ht4 LQ 13. Si- each. 7014 Peachtree. at. Mrs. Allle Gal- WHEN you want stenographic or mulU- Arrival and Departure of Pa: Kin-it, lot i^orta aide \v extern, avemie, 117 ADVERTISEflENTS laher. Call Ivy 136C-J. •rapblnc work or competent help ot any Train* Atlanta, . 1. EKION H TRIAL Ifcet eaac ol Jjttvitj street, Aixlou. October kind, call Bellamy Business Ac«ncy. 1330 The following schedule figures are pub- FREE SAMPLE sent to ladles of "Queen lished only as information and are nov Pagpe. Col. Delight" superfluous hair remover. ..Candle r bids---. , $700—Bmily K. Mills to K. H. CaldweU, I National Specialty Co.. P. O. Box SOS, At- | WANTED—Youn g lady steno-bookkeep«r; guaranteed: Jr., lot weat, bide .feepiea street. IdO teei Auction • Sales ...... 14 4 Btato exoerlence and salary expected; •Dally except Sunday. south o£ uorUou atreet, one»tmritt Point Kuilroud Co. >i atati iuve an , a,ffecUon£Joe Head to No. Arrive From— No. Depart To iiary &. Aieau, lot nunu fame ateixer ave- Business Opportunities — . 6 I407-J. 129 South Pryor street. SALESWOMEN—SOLICITORS. •Went Pt.. S:15*m FLOWER SHOP, 121, Whitehall St., -will sell Law Enforcement Forces Win Business and. Mall Order WE have positions open for 3 first-close, ex- •44 West Pt. 8:55 am 35 New Or... 6:46 am uefense Will Attempt to Show all Imported bulbs at cost on ac. regrading. perienced salesladies: Eood salary and 18 Col'mbua 10:20 am j 9 columbus. 6:45 am Skirmishes in Both Houses ' «i*ij—jotui a. Owena to J. O. .Pinner, lot Directory 14 i BEFORE coins to work get a shave at 47 steady employment. Pleaee do not apply 35 New Or. 10:45 am 33Montsom'jr »:10am That Admiral Eation Poi- •n e»t tsiue *aranu V lew ttv enue, ^.»U Jeet 4 MoDanlel street. unless vou have had experience In selling iv Or.. 2;26 pm . 9 New or.. 2.00pm iit/fvii 01 V\ ut/cijtttuci *iveijiit^i «/i/xiy u. fa«p— Cast-Off Clothing 14 tfftim'y 7?05 pm IT ColambUB.. 4:05 pm of the Legislature. ttiriuer i*, iyi«. Cleaners, Premiers, Etc. ... 14 3 IV VOU WANT first-class houM cleaning suits and dresses. Call for Mr. Seay, South- tone to W. i?\ C*it)seli3, No. 2 Dressmaking; and Sewing;.. 14 R 36 New Or. ll.-SSpm. U West Pt... 5:46 pm l-*l«i«jico street, -iO-vluO. taepteiuutsr *—~w. J?, dsLafeuuti Ly j&. a.', jJdttJttbrt, HELP WANTED—Male. WANTED—Get government jobs. Ble pay. I ' Central of Georgia Railway. Plymouth. Mass., October 14. —Th e | Nashville, Tenn., October 14. — t-aw For Sale—Miscellaneous .. 14 3 Write tor tree list of positions available, i No. Arrive From— .xo. Ucpurt T to «. Wilby, lot STOKES AJND OFFICES. twolve iurors before whom Mrs. Jen- enforcement forces won skirmishes in For Rent—Apartments .... 15 i "WANTED—Stenographer and office assis- Frankll.i Institute, DepU 604 G, Rochester, **•Thomasvliie . «..'- -5 am- Savanna- h 8.00am ni» May Eaton will be tried on the both houses of the Tennessee leglsla- lu.ua lot for Rent—Housekeeping N. Y. . Jacksonville. 6:47 am Albany 8: 00 am tant; good chances for promotion for good. Savannah..." 6:25 am Macon .".... 12:30pn> •Charge "of murdering her husband, ture when the first business of the spe- ( u-ran« wnby to .Mr**. Minnie ilar- Rooms IS i steady workers, located in healthy, hustling: WANTED—First-class manicurist, who has Albany +llll south. Georgia town. F-733, care Constitution. had barber shop experience. Bilks Barber 6:25 am Macon 4.00 pm Admiral Joseph Giles Eaton, a cial session called by Governor Hooper , kowu/., . Ocujuer lu. for Rent—Houses IS a Shop. 406 Franklin St.. Tnmpa. Fla. Jacksonville.' 7:25 am Jacksonville. 8:30 pm (Uvtive of Alabama, at Assinippi last waa taken up here tonight. oa.va.uiia.il ,viary Price, lot Far Rent—Offices .... 15 z EXFKRIBNCED CLERK for hlgh-cla*"!. 6.25 am Savannah .. • 9-.J& pm him poison, were of 30 Eeet buuLii 01 corner Btreet ana fancy grocery, must be able to take orders ACTIVE, Intelligent woman over 25, perma- Macon ... 10:50 am V aldosta 8.30pm .vJ - r<"h .*.*>Ijy giving. •* court. Bills prohibiting: the shipment \v C»L cxvmue, ou yi. octoucr . For Rent—Farms ..... 15 2 over phone courteously, state salary and ref- nent work, expenses guaranteed, requires Savannah.. . 4:20 pmJacksonville. 10:10 pm 4>_uu — j.. ±1. \\ Birdie V. For Rent—Rooms .... 14 7 . Macon ... . 7.IS pm . nomaavllle. 11:45 pm Go: iiia.ii. Jot norj a a.venuet For Kent—Stores 1 . C.i'uaiu Albany. 11. weax ot 15 ! WANTED—Drug clerk; state experience; atroet, iix7Ji. faep- For Hen t—Typewriter* . . 14 5 i good position to right man; aend ref- WANTKD—Girl for nurse and general W « i 7. i i Vi innroval entorcing the prohibition law ana j erences with application. E. M. Baker, housework. Apply ready for work to 850 { Southern Itullway $l,-y<>—H. £3. Berry to T. G. Spencer, lot Help Wanted—Male . . . ia 5 Druggist, Savannan, Ua. H^shland_ave.,_corner St. Charles. j "Premier Carrier of the Sontli.." When con?t i -2p«Ss tomorrow morn- making saloons public nuisances to be on iiuiii.li Midti l^riiiicis street, ^DU met west Help Wanted—-Female . IS PHOTOGBAPHERS-^Flrst-clasB re-touoher. Arrival . Departure Passenger Train*, H'ISK the indiotmen t c t will be read and abated by court were introduced m ol ^CtLuuiiil bureyt, uuivi^u leet. July 6&. Address, with samplea, statinp salary. Da- Atlanta. "fc> V«v- inun...- -*". /Alber-*. ,, * .t -r.F . T-Barke, , r wiln. l Krt*-Vboth% Vimini.houses0 . T>Thi ^e> oanti-prohibitio *i 14 _ n r«Vl i Hi t- in n >1—vv. fa. jyurUcti to VS. L*. i^urdett, lot Kelp Wanted—Male and Fe- PROFESSIONS AND TRADKS. -. 'P'2 'O'lowinsr schedule figures ore pub- District 8 via' Studio. Jacksonville, gift. I make a £ opening address for the forcea introduced similar bills on law i, biocK Jriw, on central avenue, ovxii- reet, ) male IS lished only as Information, and are not Then th»- jurv. accompanied by enforcement with the exception that idiid lot IdO. seiilanoer | Horses and Vehicles 14 4 BE A BARBER ^uarunteeti. they provide that in cities of more than •>*.>->•—C. Q. j.rimble to W. Lt. a-uu \V. S. MEN WANTED to learn barber trade. Easy J"W. 4^«11VU i'lUlIlFrom— No. Depart To— the district attorney, counsel for Mrs. 14 O •work, big wages, few weeks completes by HELP WANTED—Male and JSB'ham... 12:01 am 3b No* York 12:16 am (i.aton, will bo take-n on a special trol- 35,000 population a vote be taken on .Bmuett, same property. June J.-, lnoa. 1 1 prohibition, and in case non-prohibi- }iu.LH)0—ivi. H. ciarK to 1>ran* C-, Owens, Goods .... 14 4 our method. We teach you quickly, cheap-, 08 Now York 5 -00 am 20 Columbus. 6:20 am ' -v car to th* Eaton home at Assmlppi. No, ll£ Luetele street, 352-85 leet. October 14 4 ly, thoroughly and furnish tools. Give you Female. IS Jack'vllle. B .30 am 13 Cincinnati. 6:40 am The trip is expected to occupy the tion carries that the saloons be al- Advertisements . , « Wash'ton. 6 25 am ,'lowe YES — y°" have two hands, rof. O. O. tal college. 100 N. Butler St. lfork t..^ senat, :, e .-to- reject o--n------first reading- ,,, -,- th, e i 3*00—Saruh and Cordelia Huft to E. T. 'IB am li Hrunswlck. 7:45 am. The government'* case rests on thf Munlc and Dancing; . . . 14 r, P Branlng will teach you the barber trade. JChatta... 10.36 am 2y Bir'ham. 12:3dazn contention that Mrs. Eaton gave her .bill authorizing removal of officials for Chaplin, lot on north mile Mutt road, 95 reet (It's easy.) Taught in half time of other Opposite Grady Hospital. 'Macon... 10.46am I misfeasance in office, but the motion i\\eat o£ -Ellsworth avenue, 4/x.ioo feet, j Musical Instruments . . 14 5 colleges. Complete course and position in 38 Now ioikll:ulam "Ptolu Valley 10:45am 40 Charlotte. 12:00 n'n j -was lost. In the house plans were totptemuer 6. i Personal . 13 4 our chain of shops. $30. Why pay more? JF you have city acquaintance, and will J J;. mbU3 10.50 am D Thousands of our graduates running shops ! devote throe hours of your time each day 6 Macon... 12.20pm ,„ "h'e primofth^alfTh.;y»f written j gad^tp curtaii tho authority ot *DuU—iieiiry L. Wilson to Mrs. Mary C. lpooi al,,i ]||iitnri1 JiullB l« 13 ' Cinclniiau 11 10 amSO New Y'ork. 2:15pm Quii.il, lot on northeaut corner McMillan and ,„ „* " " » .... or making ffood wages. Atlanta Barber . to TOy business, you can easily earn *CO to 40 B ham... 12 40 n 3o Columbus. 12.30 pm _ c'ornpu-t„ ,„,„e v,i=,™.history. r.o(C h«herr lifeB since I r£eo6fnize members of the body pre-- uamittn atrtets, i*oxi.d6 teet.fc3eptenn>e r11 . ,*none stenosrapners . . 14 College, 10 Eaat Mltrhell street. _ 1 |ioo p«r week. Call at once. W. P. ColeSCoiumbua, . i;io IS Chatta.... 3.00pm her marriage to the admiral in 1906. vented a vote on the law enforcement —Atlariia Keai Estate company to ! Professional Cards 13 4 At Moler Barber Col- 1 1408 Candler building. 89 Bir'nam... 4 10pm She h4b taken exercise on the farm measure at the last session. A motion i- ! i 13 7 t 3g L,uckle street. mrlotte. S, IS Toccoa... 4:30 pm connected with the jail and is in excel- line street, bun feet went oC Stewart ave- We do cood work INTELLIGENT man or woman to distribute 5-Macon.... 4 22 Columbus. 5.10pm to continue under the old rules waa Kenl Eatnte For Sale . . . . 15 3 "and Hair Put" - lent health. lost by a vote of 53 to 37 nue, 5ux^uu feet. April la, lulu. ana nair v_.ut Glve U8 -trial. literature, S12.00 per -week guaranteed. At 37 New York. 6: 5 Cincinnati. 5:1.0 pm Mrs Katon reached court smiling?. The fight to take authority from the , . —juran,ueit. vT. H. Autur to T. JU. Johnson, Entate For Sale or ESL- least ten weeks' work. State age and experi- 2S.Pt... Valley. 6.20pm Her face had more color and was ful- B t> October 10. 15 WANTED—Firat-ciaaa wheelwright for re- ence. Zlegler Co.. Philadelphia. . 8:1G pm 25 Heflin. .. . 6:45pm speaker ia expected to continue to- I ^ ,«Ji»u—AU;,, ?. " . . ' \iola- \V. ijogan to J. W. pair work, steady employment; also U Kan City.. 9.20pm 10 Macon.... 5:30 pm ler than at the time of her arrest last morrow. One of the moves to be made ( Remu\ nl Notices .. 4 horseahoer. F. Chris Kramer, 33 West 1 MEN and tvomen wanted for government uiy, lot on nortti. Hide oeor^ia Itailway IGChatta. .... »:36tm 44 Wash'ton.. 8.46 p.n March. She was dressed In black. against him, it is said, is to place the Ji,let.-Lric company, Hu .feet ea^t ol Lribaon Broad st.. Savannah, Ga. j Jobs, $65 to $150 month. FosiUons open. 24 Jack'vllle. 9.3. 0 pxtli l ReKtaurants . . 14 a lint free. Franklin Institute. Dept. 6 G., 10.20pm appointment of committees in the t. luxiUU teeL. Aiay 4, 191^. Seed & Pet Stock . 7 WANTED—One first-class automobile trim- RocheBter. N. Y. - 8.00pm 11 SUrevep't. 11.00pm hands of a committee on committees to 0 atidl excnaii^e of property—George „ , mer Salary $3.50 per day. One first-class , ^ _^———~-i^i—^_ __^ . „-—— ' 14 Jack'vllle 11.10pm be named by the house. Tonight's \\ 1 .mult to sxillia li. Cabiinlas, No. «71 , Situations Runted- Male lit a blacksmith, salary J3.50 per day. No trans- i QO ON THE STAGE tell All trains run dally. Central time. Fledinu ( you how. City Tlceet Office. No. 1 Peachtree St. sessions in both house and senate were a\enue, bOxi J5 teet. October 3. I Situations Wanted—Female 13 u portation furnished. Must give good refer- I pa.t,f..,,r ,_„,, Bo_ 400 c...e Constitution.. held under the old rule* ^l.UUU- B. C. Kipley, agent, to Mr.s. i.. C. . situations Wanted—Male & ences. J. A Dann, Miami, Fla. ! Particular Tree. Box 400. care_ aain-i eL al., lot on aoutneaat side (Georgia ( Arrival and Departure of Passenger At 9:45 the houses adjourned until ( Female 13 e JDI2NTJST WANTED—Registered In South Trains. Atlanta. TODEFRAOD 11 o'clock tomorrow. raiiio.nl riyht-of-way at northeast corner Caro-Hna. Wire or write Union Painless of propert> of J. P. McLionald, 150x400 teet. 14 WANTED—Teachers The following schedule figures are pub- Stocks & Hondo .. . . pewrltera & Supplies 24 O experts and Quick and full of bublnoss, and later. The Interstate Teachera' I •Dally except Sunday. Tuxicahs 13 7 g«H d wages for the right nxen, ' refererces Agency, Macheca Bldf?, New Orlearm. t ••Sunday Only. THROUGHJSEJ1F MAILS $y,r,00-TW. H. Kranklln to John D. Dick- required. Atlanta Gun und L.oclcsniith Com- UNION PASSEVOEK STATION. WATERWORKS SYSTEM son, Nos. 73-75 Orrne btreet, !iJxl40. October W anted—I}oard-Roomn 14 7 pany, 29 Mi Marietta 8t., Atlanta, Oa. Phone t.&l-t;(JIAL,l.V principals and assistants. Atlanta,. Birmingham and Atlantic. 1'J, 191J. . IVnnted—Miscellaneous 13 7 Poster's Teachers' Agency. 613 Third Effective Sept. . Arrive. ATain^214ti o^~ wire at once. National Bank Bldg.. Atlanta. Ga. .McDonald and Hendrey Con- 14 — Tran.si erred to Mra. A^nes T. Turner. Oc- 14 8 Brunswick, Waycroaa Alabama City, Ala., October toliur ^S, lal2. Wanted—Money . . "WANTED—Men to learn the barber trade. SOUTH ATLANTIC TEACHERS' Aeency. and ThomosvUle .. 6 30 anuj 1:30 am (Special.)—A new system of water- I W 000—Augustus Baker to Charles Heath, Wanted—Real Estate . 15 complete course given tor $JO; position 1125 Atlanta Nat. Bank bids, Atlanta. Oa. Coraelo •12:35 pml «4:00 pm \ icted at Memphis and May works and sewers to cost SI".000 w.ll lot v,ebt t.ide jjaniel street, 50 feet south of Wanted—Teacher* . 13 furnibhed. Call or write. Southern Barber Brunswick. Waycrosa be completed in this clt\ b._y„ ." "" " " GarLrell strpot, 50x84. October 9 College, 151 Decatur street. Atlanta. Ga. and Thomasville 8: IB pmpm| 10:00 pm Join Sims in Atlanta. 1. When this system i& completed, >1')0,000—busi-in C. James to John D. Bab- WANTJ3D—First-claaa white barber, none £*uilniuu aiuupmtf cars on ulyat Alabama City will be one of th-3 most bage, .li , lot weMt Hide Peachtree street, other need apply. Candler Bldg. Barber twoen Atlanta and Thomaavllle. "Dally S37 feet north of West Peachtree street, 50x Shop. cept Sunday. up-to-date sanitary cities i.i the south ISO. October 11. AUmphis, Tenn.. October 14—J. M. The J. B. McCrary compxiiy, municipal THAT LOST ARTICLE MAY SALESMEN A1NB SOLICITORS. Georgia Railroad. — McDonald, McKemp. Okla.. and E. L. engineers, of Atlanta. Ga,, wore con- man who understands general No- Arrive From— No. * ~ tracted with to do this work. jLoau Deeds. ' W A N T E D— An experienced . Hendroy. Lonoke, Ark., were found $1.^50—Mrs. Mary L. Clarke t>t al to Mrs. NOT BE FOUND TODAY office work and collecting:; good 8 Augusta.. 6 25 am 4 Augusta 12:10 n't Alice May Taylor, lot south side Faith ave- Or tomorrow or next week. In fact, • Cov'eton. 7.30 am 2 Au^Ubta & guilty in the United States district a month or more may elaptje before salesman with established trade 93 Union Pt. 9 30 am New jTork 7.30am court ,here late today c,'n five counts Democrats Are Elected. nue, 56x130. October 10. references. C. L,. Seacord. 71 1 AUKUbta.. l.bOpni •26 1-ithonia 10.3. 0 am $400—T. B. Johnson to Miss Ruth Wee- it turns up. A little persistency may to travel in Georgia with a spe- •25 Lithonia. 2:10 pm .. 3.^5 pni of conspiring to defraud tnrough the Wheeling. W. Va, October 14.—M. M. Band, lot north side Brookllnc street, 600 be necessary. Often the article re- Whitehall, City. 27 Ne« lorlt 94 Union ft. B.OO pm "se of the mails in connection with Neely, democrat .was elected to con- feet west of Stewart avenue, 50x200. No mains unfound; often fear of prosecu- cialty line of fine read3'-made and Aueuuta 8.20 pm*10 Cov gtou. S.10 pm gress in the special election in the date. tion or hope of more satisfactory rewartt WANTED—People to write true stories on the operation am turned four hiurs after the case was road, adjoining above tract. October 13 beaUs and amethyst alternating. Finder will Good proposition for the right respondent wants situation; graduate phy- Murphy accommodation .. 4.05 pmjlG.50 am Haralson Takes Trip. —James A. App^rson, Jr, to Henry be suitably rewarded. Address Mis. Morri- sician; well educated, clean and capable; ctiven to the Jury this afternoon after Sohenthal. JMo-----. 3S Sell- s avenue, 4Dxl90 Oc- 1 sette or Mr.. M.. V.. Calvin,, care Constitu- .L trial lasting- a week. Attorney Frank I... Haralson, 402 tober S ' ------man. None but salesmen with married; ten years* dispensing; will consider Seaboard Air tine Railway. Falling to negotiate the $7,000 bond tlon, giving name and residence ot finder. drug store or general office work, no objec- Effective April 27, 1913. Kiser building-, will leave today or to- ?l, body wants, men some good surrounding town as shipping a Memphis. 12-40 pm 6 Norfolk,. 12:60pm Motlou for New Trial. Wolgast vs. White. Ha.nklng ,xnd Havings compa-ny lot and women, age 21, $9.38, ago 35, $14.08, and billing clerk; am capable and experi- 6 Sir'ham- 12:40 pm 6 Fortsm'tn.. 12:50 pra A motion for a n,ew trial, which will Lakewoort avenue. ISO feet south of Lethja , LOST—I bunch of keys. Finder will please age 50, J23.00; age 55, $35.55, rates based enced. Best references. Can do general 22 Bir'ham. 12.10 pm 23 Bir'ham.. 4:15 pm Milwaukee, October 34.—Ad Wolsast street ijOxlSO feo October 11. return to Mr. Everett, Plttsburg Plate office work and use typewriter. Address 5 Bir'ham.. 6:06 £m tie argued next Saturday, acted as a i on the American experience table of mor- F. 734, care Constitution. B New York. 4.SB pm .scaj aeralnst the pronouncement of sen- and Charley White, lig-htweishts. weie $1,300—(,. C to »,ime,'lot southwest j Glgaj^Co.^_B6__W_ . Alabama. Regard.— - talltj , safe and sound, large reserve fund B Wash'ton. 4.55pm 5 Memphis. 5:05 pm tence. The maximum punishment pos- today signed for a ten-round no- corner Highland avenue and Lavonia L,OST—Sunday afternoon, brlndle Boston j deposited with home state, every one wants WANTED by traveling salesman with 6 B Norfolk.. 4 65 pm 18 Abbe'e. S.C. 4:00pm decision boxing contest in Milwaukee nue feet. October 10. bull pup, with fancy collar, white faco , it \\uen once explained to them. Write S. years' experience position as city sales- C Portem'th. 4 :55 pm 1J New York. 8.65pm sible ib five vears' imprisonment and on the night of October 34 The boys ?.>«-!—Mrs,. S. A! Klrnbrougrh to same, 1-1 and throat, clipped ears, curler! tail, reward, i \y. joiner. Southern Mgr.. G9S Temple Court man. Thoroughly familiar with city trade. 12 Bir'ham.. 8 36 pm 12 Norfolk. . . 8:65 pm a Cine of ?1,000 on each of the five are to -weigh not over 133 pounds at 6 Curr.m .street. ! SxlOO feet. October 10 163 POJJCS de Leon avenue. Phone Ivy 651. building, Atlanta, Oa. Address A-115. Constitution. 20 Monroonroe .. &.0(y.u0u upm 1t-f-2 Portsm'thnn min i.u- CT.8:5W5 Dm t ouri ts. o'clock that evening. WANTED—By middle-age man, position as City Ticket Office. 88 Peachtree St. Upsides the four men, whos« trials bookkeeper or assistant cashier, have had etuled today, C. A. Bonds, of Kansas three years' experience in bank. Address A Western and Atlantic Railroad. Ciu; J. Jl. Sims, of Memphis: W. F. 112. ConHtltutlon. No. Arrive From- No. Depart To Churchman, of Indianapolis, and G. F. YO0NG MAN of good education and good S Nashville.. 7:10 am 94 Chicago... 8:00 em Tr.enp-es, of Chicago, were indicted, references desires position tis salesman 73 Rome.. . 10-20 am 2 Nashville.. 8:36 am ih.itfsred with misuse of the mails as In city or out. Address K. G. H., 98 Crew »3 Nashville. 11-45 am 92 Nashville. 4:50 pm officers of the trust company which ATLANTA'S STRIDES street, Atlanta Go.. 1 •Nashville~ " "" . 7-30pm 5:15 pm 95 Chicago. . 7 50 pm 4 Naahvllle. a-'iotim turned Us afairs over to the All Night $J.oOO—Ruby T. Smith to Iterrhaiits and graving M. .1. B., 1804, either on \Vest AN experienced male stenographer open for ind Day bank, of this city, of which Mechanics Banking and Loan company. lf>t I Peachtree or Decatur car, Saturday after- night work, can start at 5 30 p. m.; will Hendrey was president, after an ex- norths eyt corner Davis and Foundry street ^, i noon. Call Ivy 2725-L and receive reward. AN opportunity for several lot salesmen of •work reasonable. Address Stenographer, care istence of about two months. Bonds, thrce-ciuarter of Here October 13 . . . — ~__ abiliti and proven record to form a prof- Constitution. TAXICABS who went to Canada after his convic- FROM DAY TO DAY JL.OST—Sunday afternoon, brimlie Boston i [table and permanent connection with -ha •*^r^~**-~<*w*r*rw«-w^jk>N»^ bull pup, with fancy collar, unite face Beading subdivision company of the south, tion some months ago on a similar Quitclaim Dertls. WANTED—Position as assistant bookkeeper ami throat, clipped ears, curled tall; rewaril. , operating only in high^class properties in In wholesale house, 5 years' experience charge as an officer of the All Night §1 and Othei Consideration—Christina rind 1S3 Ponce 'lf_Jtjeon_avenue:_Phone Ivy l>il. Atlanta. For interview tee Mr. McElroy. and Day bank, did not return for trial All the Latest Real Estate and J. K. F,lK0 feet. October 8 ot Jack, reward If returned to 68 B. loth AN experienced linale stenographer desires evidence against them wag Insufficient will start this morning the work ot street, or Ivy 2ti34. traveling need apply. Commission only. IVY 5190. ATLANTA 1598. $4tOOO—T. J Tread well to W M. Vichofs State present line, references and full par- a position at o||ce; can give referenced. to warrant trial. regrading Whitehall street from and A. E. Kellej. «8 Kast Fair street, 30>. '« ticulars. Address A 13&, Constitution. Address A-137, care Constitution. Slm» In Atlanta Prison. Mitchell street to Brotherton, accoid- 117 feet. September 16. ihg to the announcement wf Captain steno-bookkeeper wants Sims pleaded guilty when arrested R. M. Clayton, chief of the city con- I.l.'ii. SELL ALTOLOMA LOTS permanent position , best reference given. last year and Is now serving sentence P. H. Brewster. Albert HoTffell, Jr. SITUATED on Stone Mountain car line, Addregs A-162. care CoTtstitutlon. _ struction department, on Tuesday. $43—John 1 \Voodbide v. K1U Heard, qumter-acre tra< ts to live-acre tractn; 11 the United States prison at At- After all the hitches a,nd hinges that 98 Hay good street, 40xllj. Xo date Hugh M. Dorsey. Arthur Heyman. WANTED—Young man. 3 years' experience small w eekly payments, without interest; in printing office In country shop. Address lanta, Ga. He appeared as a witness the proposition for this important $257—South Ri\pr l>rick company v. S Doraey, Brewster, How.ell & Heyznan, liberal contracts to salesmen. Call now. for the prosecution in the present i piece of work has met, H appears that Gra.ce Keet'er, .Mo. T37 Pieamont avenue, Attorney s-at-Law. A-153, care Constitution. ^^^^ H. G. HASTINGS & CO. trials. it will begin October 15, as was at 2l(p. No U.UP. Offices: 202, 204, -i05, 206, 207, 208, 210 _ __VV_._ P. _COLE SPECIAL RATES for Situation Wanted *dB.. 3 SEEDS, BULBS AND POULTRY Besides today's conviction Hendrey first planned. IF YOU have city acquaintances and will de- lines one time, 10 cents; 3 time*. IS cent*. SUPPLIES. was found guilty last year of using l>e«ls to Secure. Kiser Bulltling, Atlanta, Ga. cash - ? >- '~ experience; can furnish Freeslas, Oxalla, Roman Hyacinths, and. rooms each upstairs There will also S350—r ,t a Adair, 79 Decatur, chanse Bridgework 13.00 i best of references, A-167, Constitu- Chinese Lilies. Ask for our Bulb cata- be four apartments in the rear of the store front. West Construction company, Vv 01 is Crowns $3.00 tion. tion. logue. WANT A DEMOCRAT building on the Georgia avenue side contractors. bllvur or Amalgam Fillings fiOc - WANTED—Position as housekeeper or BU- BliTTER LOOK out for Sore head. this, ia New NCKTO Church. May Sell Central Parcel. Gold Fillings $1.00 f \ pervisor. Would prefer one that would Bring this coupon. It will entitle you to » ' y servicei s In day time one of the worst diseases your chickens FOR POSTMASTER Mr. Everett is also di awing plans Considerable interest for realty men discount. property for sale, wants an active salesman i 7,^.,iRH"^r'""ift7"3 " r «"TT^Vif^itinb n ' can have, it is very contagious but if taken for a new church, building- for the i.nters' in the possibility that the who knows the city and Is well known lo- I y.!!?._^°- V ^°" ~j^ in time Conkey's Sore Head Remedy, will Warren Methodist church (colored), b'ulldmg of the f 01 mor Guarantee ^'SSSw^bili_^U_uuported. bulbs_if it^"?^ic^rt tost on ac. regraainte gra'dlS.' , S5£r'. yN o oth,. « sa&man connecte. Addresd "wits A-138h th,e WANTSD^A^fiSTWherer'a helper, doing sewing, emendin I cang b ane ad darumoth-- cure it. BO cents a box, guaranteed to cure. Waycross, Ga., Qet&'ber 14.—(Special.) M t Iurnlahed WJ3 HAVE all sizes of Flower Pots, Bulb which will be ereoted at Greensforry Baiikin"- & Trust company, on East > ftS.. C.„ SCOTT ^ HBND&KaoN HOMB , care Constitution. Ine in return for a room, board and small Resolutions calling- upon the eleventh avenue and; Mildred stieet. The build- AlrxbamTi street, just of£ Whitehall, _. l-AKi^Ort—'jirocHles, pimplea — wages. Address Mrs. P. M. Garvey, 64 Allene Pans and baucers district congressmen and the senators ing will be of brick and t-tone con- may soon be thrown on the market | ana ackheads cured. Face and scalp «pe- WANTED—First-class stock salesmen for avenue. Phono West I27S. BIRD CAuES and supplies. of Georgia to have a democrat named tuce, netK a.ud buot developing, man- high-grade proposition, Tennessee and struction and of classic deslg-n It and snumpoouitf. all ki/iua ui bu.tr Mississippi territory. Aciaress 'Manager," SEWING WANTED in private family by ex- PHONE US your orders. We deliver prompt- ois postmaster at Waycross without will cost $20,000. The Atlanta National bank has ione, everyiuinK up-to-uu-tu and man- JOS Tennessee JTruat bldg., Memphis. perienced colored woman. Address Dress- ly t« all parts of the city. further delay were adopted at a meet- maker. 256 Currier street. Realty Directors Meet. broug-ht suit tor foiet'losure on this my own crt&tins, all wont guar- WANTED — Hustling live-ivire salebrnan tor ing of citizens here tonight. The reso- property to cover payment of notes anteea, special culls Una deatu cans bollclt- established business concern. 94 >•£ Whlte- DO YOU NEED A STENOGRAPHER' Bell Phono Main 307fi. Atlanta Phone 533. lutions said that "to 'the victors belong The board of directors ot the \t- overdue from the defunct banking eu, snrouumg ana asamung tue unUertaiier. hall utreat. , Room H.______GOOD ONE' Call Remington Employment (jVHCH—AND—BUBJ the spoils." lanta jReal Estate hoaid held a meet- 178 *'orresi. avenue, corner iieaiora. ivy AN AGENT TO SELt. MAPS — Others are ----DeHh- . - Iv- y _ 815—. - -- .- , _ MCMILLAN Buot,. &EEIJ COMPANY, The consideration of the resolutions ing In the office C'E President Harris COThis"property is located on the south ! B»»5.. making $8 per day. Vou can do the samo. EXPERIENCED, well educated. stenog- THE NEW HIOH QLjVl_iil hliKO SsTOK.C. was vigorously opposed by John W. G. White on Tuesday an pcii-ioro. iriiuuo jiiuiu liotf. FOB SAL.JE—Shetland ponifi. this yoar'a of about 50 feet, with a depth in the Ga. . _ stenographer ' If so. call West 1313. colts, ready to ship, crated F. O. B. Nash- ttve committee for the city would be The matter was thoroughly discussed is FJLUWIJ.K SHOP, lal Whitehall St., will sell THREE lot salesmen of proven ability and "named and did not stipulate 'further and Mr. As-bill, executive of the rtj il neighboihood of 100. Theie - all imported bulbs at cyst on ate. regrudlrtg-. 81'& 1AL, HATES [or Situation Wanua »d» ; 3 ville; horse colts from 533 to S60 allies $60 two-stoiy banking building the • who are willing to "go after It" can HncA oi^e time, IO ceata; 3 time*. 15 cent*, to $90. J. P. Fr.mk, JO! Fourth Ave. N., business. When the chairman, C. E. estate boaid, was directed to mail out COAifoOjND U-VJtva£-*N—Alude dally for ca- make connection that will net $300 to ?600 cash with orders always. NjisiwIUe, JTenn _ _ „ Dunn, l,eft the yuestion to the meeting. letters to aSrents all over Georgia and Jot. turrli, atjatuutiu, uiseaaus ol nose and per month. Peachtree road. Easy payments. 7 It was decided to consider the resolu- the southern states to ascei-t un ius,t thruat ahd eurs. This IM tne season to ue No Interest. -No taxes. See Mr. Witt, cara MONT\ J.javv coLiL.li: KKNXI:IJ, beautiful tions and they were adopted. how much sv-> n t. m. pioposition for cured, special reduced rates. Ur. txeorge | Glover Kealty Co. ' pedigree puppies, jVlrfa Bottt iifield. Phone state and southern orsanizationt, uf jarowil. dl^-14 AuaLeli bu EDU^CATIONAJL Decatur Mr. Bennett offered as a substitute SALESMAN WANTED—Map and Atlas \v t, carry a complete line of field, ffardea :i resolution calling: &'n President VTil- real estate men Vv ould receive. Tho or- WANT AD RATES feathers curled while you xvalt. salesman with something new, a live AiLAiNTA bCHOOL OF and flower seed, albo pet stick. J. C. Mc- son to intervene In Mexico. This, he ganizations would probabH be effected W. Pe-acuiree. Ivy t&2&. one. New man made $^2.95 Monday. High- Millan, Jr., Seed Co., J3 fa. Broad Bt. ik-clared, was for the best of the coun- tlirough a southoin convention of 1 Insertion lOe n llnr your cumbini£8 made up by the S. A. grade solicitors wanted. 521 Candler bids.. PRACTICAi, MILLINERY 11 V- realty men in Atlanta. Clayton oonipuuy'a method, ^our switches Atlanta, Ga. TEACHES full course millinery in slat :i Insertions flc a line do not lanylo and we do not have much TWO young men over 21 years of age to act weeks_ . Our rates are lowe_r_ fo__ r what we Realty Luncheon Friday "Voon. 7 Insertions 5c a line waste. 3b^ Whitehall titreet. Puone ^itun as salesmen and learn the real estate ' Elvivoe you than any other reputable school,. The regular monthly luncheon-of the No advertisement accepted for less 17t>9. We nell swltcnoa. business. Quick promotion. See Mr. Ander- , N! ow I' s th* o time to Ftart' . 60 you finis- - -h fo- r m- treatment foforr irreiruiai-»we»irregularities. Triaxriail _bonoxj oby ~ ~,ion —e ^;i n ^, °goo d^^- condition to lease or aell having been mortally wounded while Lynes agency, has sold for Or. \V. B. sifications, will give you complete switch for »1. Work guaranteed. Addrcaa Un Institute, Pept. 47 O.. aocheater fc . N. Y. | ™,i ?n cents. Frank Edmondnon & Broi,. writ_e E. C-, car___e ___ shoc.ti1jg-""duck"s"on Eagle lake today, Hamby to James Phillipson No. 96") information. And, if you wish, they Mrs. Minnie Green, Wehadkee, Ala, Route -WANTED—NtRne ~ -"" ' -a of men ~ , 18 ^~~to « , wisliln- • ~a Manuracturln«_""• *» ^ g. Chemists~,-- -,_.. , . H ,,Nort »r h— .Bron^ >r, —d ^WANTE «,.»Dnn —nFo r™ cash, waste paper, raf stock, Robert White, aged 19. rescued from , Highland avenue, a residencp property, w ill assist you in wording your 1, Box: 14. to be Atlanta mall carriers. *67 month. J. i gtrnet Atlanta. G*. ! Atlantic Supply _Co. Phone Main 3»1«, want ad to make it most effective. drowning- Walter Williams, A com- i for a consideration of $5,350. t,. K.. this office. will call. _ panion who had fallen overboard. j pr. J. • H. Lorenz 'has bought from We ask that you do not unwit- FLOWER SHOP I WE pay cash for second-hand' furniture, any tingly abuse this phone service. Ac- WHITEHALL* 4 doors from corner of FOR colored Southern Automobile School, White's shotg-un was accidentally , th« MeKeldin estate .No. 18, Kdse- day and nlplit clauses, corner Magnolia POOL AND BILLIARDS 1I kind. Cameron ^Furniture Company. Mam counts are opened for ads by phone -Mitchell. Flowers. **l\>*7^**i^w& .^H »,^y "stf-SetsT : discharged, inflicting a fatal wound, wc.'od avenue, 63x71. between 'Coca- 3229. The shock threw young- Willlanis cola place and Butler street, for ?22,oOO. solely to accommodate you.. Make COHSBTIEBES cao !» dairy wagon driver; mar- *"^ 'P".Bia?~*at' "the" TBRiMINAi' HOTEL TWO second-hand cash rejlutera. Phono payments promptly after publica- - reached over phone, tvy ; no^ciUldren. ]U>18 Century Bldg. 5|,>ae PARLORS; 35o In checka for Met _Main_435j-_Morrow-Kennedy Company. overboard. White, despite his injury, , - — — - - tion or when bills are presented by p< L crept forward In the boat and rescued j PKOPBKTV TKAA'8FER.s. 3690. Splrella Corset Shop, 721 Grand Bldg. I STRONG youne man about 15 for delivery , Good tables, good cues, and a. nice bunch of . WANTED—Motion picture outfit. & C.. WUiams. White died a few hours ™ mail or solicitor and you accommo- ^continued in Next Column.) | boy. lO^S Century building. J clever boy*. i care News, Monlicello, Ua, oUt.J-ai«. u. date us.

JWSPAPERf Fage .Fourteen. THE CONSiatCTlOsr, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913. Yotar Trotuibfles to a .-Telephomie iit THie "CONSTITUTION Want Ad Office These Cotaminis Have ht Home Manny a Wandering Son, Buy a Little Ad BUSINESS AND MAIEs (BUSINESS AND MAIL BUSINESS AND MAIL LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS AUTOMOBILES MONEY TO LOAN BOARD AND ROOMS NORTH SIDE. ORDER DIRECTORY ORDER DIRECTORY ORDER DIRECTORY COMMISSIONERS' SALE NICELY furnished room, with board, tot W. A. Hemphill Estate. LOANS $25.00 AND UP couple young men. Ivy 2423-J. "*w»VSt .5ii-J-X.-X£.^«*.~wsM-~s~' WOOO ------On Furniture, i^ianos -ri LJ^.J!. L/oarcl, close in. 84 W. MANUFACTUKKHS~ot patterna_ moHSST GEORGIA, FULTON COUNTY. t. 1911 4-PASSENGER Cadil- ATLANTA TfTLB GUAKA-.WED COM- "JT^DTCoUins^Transicr Company patented artlclee. also cabinet work. Work BY VIRTUE of an order of the Honorable ' or Indorsed Notes, Peachtree. Ivy 7635-;. PAfl-T, ground floor Etiultaiile buildine. 1 John T. Pendleton, judge of the superior 1 Bell phone Main 54JO IVY 76S7 9 '. MARIETTA ST. promptly done and guaranteed. Atlanta court of the Atlanta circuit, as passed in the lac, in perfect condition. AT RATES permitted by the Uwa of tha Btat* HEAVY HAt.-r.IXG DONK. Safes, macbin- Wood and/Iron Novelty WorfcB. 886 Marietta case of Mrs. Lulu Belle Qulnby v. Mrs. Mar- Our easy pajmcni plan allows you to pay as AJ\'J-> ROOMS CLOSE ARCHji «-ry, nuilritns material. Got our prices. Bt. W. E. WHlllaroa. Mgr. Main 1SS4-J. guerite H. Pegram et al No, 2771.! Fulton back to eult your Income. Wo al«o protect you \VAI.L PAPER. j Will trade for deed to, vacant from publicity and extend every courteey to IX. A WILLIAMS STREET. W. C. ME A DOR superior court, we, the undersigned commis- ualca tbd carpvlng at a. loan satisfactory to yon 516 Empire Bids. Phono Main 1537. : sioners appointed therein, will sell at public CLEAN room& and uflbt cooked meals; walk- Residences. Bungalow ^ and Apartment i ~TJD5:A WAY~T3£OST~ 5c AND loc WALL PAPER outcry to the highest bidder between the lot, value $700. In «v«ry way. in_g distance;_ all conveniences, homo life. HOUSPS. ! EXPERT liatch repairing. satisfaction 107 WHITEHAIJU our lOc wall paper equal legal hours of sale on the first Tuesday in. l S guaranteed. 6 Walton st. just off Peach- to the beat 25c kind. Let us show you. November, 1913. to \vit, November Gl V^MITH. over 6c and lOc. Below Mitchell at. Paper- "Ail that tiact or parcel of land, GEO. P. MOORE Room 318 Atlanta National Bank Call I-vy 7036-J. reasonable Main ISld hangers furnished. part of land lot No. 78, of the 14th Fufi-T^JLASS'^-epai-- .vork on guns, pistols, bicycles, motorcytles. locks, keys, cash district of originally Henry, now Bldg. Bell Phone Main 440. STUDENTS! STUDENTS! registers, unr-brell-iif sclsaors knives, trunks, Fulton, county, Georgia, commenc- 10 Auburn Avenue. GOOD room and board. 39 E. Harris St. ATLANTA UPHOLSTERING iron safes, gi aphophones and slot machine**: FOR SALE—Miscellaneous. ing on the westward side of Foun- 236 WHITEHALL MAIN 2475. dry street at Its intersection with NICELY fur, front room, with or without A-lsL, &mdH of furnitu.ro repaired, upholster- keys fitted jn any part of the city expert the right-of-way of the Western and MONEY TO LOAN board, steam heated apartment; couple ed, reflnibhed. cushions made for porch workmanship \\ork ...uaranteed. B B. Lock SECONU-HAND PRINTING MATERIAL Atlantic rai_|vvay, thence northwest- or two gentlemen. 183 Spring street, Apart- furniture. Gun No 4 South Porsyth at the viaduct. erly along said right-of-way one PLENTY of 6 and 7 per cent meut 3. Ivy 1561. Atlanta ptionf *.208. FOR SALE CHEAP. hundred and sixty-six and four- BELL, MAIN 1680. ATLANTA 272. r c. DOWTJES 230 California cases, cost 75o; sale price 20c. tenths (166.4) feet, thence north- WORLD'S SERIES money to lend on improved T r 29 V, Marietta St. 90 lower case news cafces, full size, cost 50c, easterly one hundred and nlnet> - WILL-be of Interest and so will these pick- The Boarding & Rooming House *lWVEl. n..^TffoSTNG 2146 Atlanta__4922. eight (198) feet to the westward ups In used cars 1913 electric starter, 6- aale price 16c. cyiinder, 40-hor»epower, 5 passenger Mc- property, either straight or BUREAU OF INFORMATION LUMBER. ^ Galley rack, holding ten galleys, up to three •_ide of Marietta street, thence CO. columns. $3. southeasterly along the westward Intyre, run 3,000 miles, $895. 1913 electric monthly plan. Also for pur- No. 4 North Pryor St. PATERSOX LUMBER CO. 10 wooden double frames, cost $8.00; sale side of Marietta street one hundred starter. Hudson "33," 5-passenger, at the HAS newly opened the best 5 price J3.7S. and sixty-four and two-tenths right price. 1912 32-horsepower Hupmobil* WE represent boardinp and rooming houses is the firm to Ret the b"st lumber d.t the 12 double Iron frames, holding 12 casts, coat (164 2) feet to the corner of Mari- touring car. 1912 fore-door Hupmoblle road- chase money notes. Foster of Atlanta. Information free. _ and lo-cent store in the city. lowest prices. Let us, llsure jour lumber J17.EO, sale price *10. etta and Foundry streets, thence ster, 1396. 1912 fore-door, 6-passenger Ford. FOR ~RENT — olTo nicely furnished room, Give us a vtbit. 61 W. Mitchell St. hill Ivy iliSl. Atldntd. f>251 __ _ One proot press, will take a three-column southwest along the westward side $326. Flanders "20," 4-p&ssenger. »225. 1912 ^Bobson, 11 Edge wood Ave. with excellent table board. 84 W. Feach- MULTIGRAPHING. ADDRESSING. galley, sale price J10, of Foundry street two hundred and fore-door Buick roadster, $425. Late fore- 4IONEY to lend on Improved real estate. C. tree st. Ivy 7836-J. .BUS DIR— ___ Two stones and one stand to hold taem. twenty-three (223) feet to tho be- door, 6-passengor Cadillac, $875. 1912 fore- C. McGehee, Jr.. 622 to 624 Empire bldg DOCTOR. WANTED to occupy B-room, about S feet long; sale price 310. ginning point, details of said tract door, (-passenger StudebaUer, J3S6. Stud«- steam-heated suite, \vith private bath, n THE LBTTEK CRAFT SHOP. One ttooden case rack, holds 30 full-sice being shown in plat by Hall Bros. office opening on sidewalk, has been occu- _.__^ £*L£\f?SQ?- - — BEST niultleraphing work In south. Prompt August 16, 1912." baker raceabout, $195. Buick roadster, $196. SPECIAL HOME JFUNDS FURNITURE, household goiT-lfa. office fix- . service. All work g-uaranteed Business cases, cost $10, sale price 94. 1912 fore-door Maxnell Special, $395. Baby TO LEND on Atlanta home or business pied by a doctor for the last G years. Peach- turea, and in fact, everything you want. Ser\ko Company. P. O. Box 83B. Atlanta. This material will be aold In lota to suit. This tract of property has been sub- Maxwell, $100. Ford closed delivery truck, property, at lowest rate. Money advanced tree Inn, 391 Peachtree st. Ivy 7011. Pay your own freljht. Address divided Into eleven lots and will be sold in almost new, at a bargain. Let us paint your to builders. Write or call BOARD, gentlemen can secure ex- JACOBS AUCTION CO. parcels 09 shown by said subdivision before old car like new. Satisfaction guaranteed. cellent table board, $6 per week; walking 51 DCCATUK faT ... THE CONSTITUTION. the courthouse door of Fulton county, Geor- Salis office, 4 Walton street. "Storeroom and distance of Candler hldg. Ivy lisa. .Vear Kimball House zsell phono 1434, At- Atlanta. Ga. gia. S. W. CAJJSON lanta 21-bu _ Terms of sale are one-fourth cash and t^e shop. 362 Peachtree street. Co-Operative FURNISHED rooms and board; steam heat: •> - Quick, Keliable Q/_J balance on or before one, two, three, four Automobile Exchange. 24 SOUTH BROAD STREET rates reasonable. 55 W. North are. Ivy BlCYCjLK__.iiK__j>j;_M.I^ •>• -> Messensrers *"* and five years; deferred 'payments bearing PARTIES wanting large loans on business 5774-L. AMERICAN MESSENGKR SERVICED High Grade interest at 7 per cent per annum, payable COLUMBIA AUTOMOBILE property, or money to build business FOR RENT—One first floor furnished room, IVY 452. ATLANTA 19. seml-annually. Sales subject to confirma- houses on central property, please- come to witn private bath. With or without R-BLIABLi; SBRVICU GUARAXrElSD__ i MECja^_SICA_l_^ ENtUNEEJfHNG. EXCHANGE eee us. The Merchants and Manufacturers' JELLICO COAL tion of court. 287 EDGEWOOD AVENUE). board. 66 W. Baker street. For information apply to Banking and Loan Company, 209 Grant ROOM ana board for young man or couple, r " G. V PLANTE, M. E." LARGEST exclusive dealers of used cars In bjdgj^ Telephonp Ivy 6341. T^)trt..nrT^eT^Uo_r5'X. itlu.u fa645. BURNWELL JELLICO COAL Real Estate Agent. MORTGAGE LOANS IN "ANT AMOUNT ON WANTED—Two gentlemen to board in pri- UOTNO "TO Bt ll_il> ' \V t have SJGFICJE^FJJVNITLKg MOORE & POMEROY, Company, 12 Houston street. DESIRABLE PROPERTY. SEE L. H. vate family. Phone Ivy 3698-.T. o\er to builtl «l small M H* sr,.-.^.. „.- SHBPARD BRYAN. CADILLAC "-passenger tourlne car, 1911ZURLINE, EDGAR DUNLAP INSURANCE for quick ti.uU T T Pitic-t .11 Lafr.ni. HORN E-CANDLER CO- COMPANY, HOSSER & BRANDON, model. In excellent condition, electric AGENCY._202 CANJDLBH_JJLDG. _ ROOMS with private bath and board at :i Kt. _Phone I\y 707'-f E Linden St. Ivy 152. Mlpa Annie Dennis. 84 NGI.TH PRYOR ST. SLATON & PHILLIPS liffhts, ^nd fully equipped. Pi Ice right. Pre- FARM LOANS—We place loans~ln any^ ^ COjrxC_BETE_, DESKS chairs and lllins cabinets, office 427 Decatur St. FELDER, ANDERSON, COBURN & mler Salea Co., 451 Peachtree St. ivy 63a. ROOMS and board for small family or lies. Phones Ivy 1158, Atlanta, amount on improved farm lands in Geor- gentlemen. 60 Piedmont avenue. WE HUILL aiuthaiB Burial I WHITMAN, ELECTRIC coupe, Itauch & Lang, beautiful- gia. The Southern Mortgage Company, Bell Phone Ivy 2961. Atlanta 1996 Attorneys. ly nnlbhed and in perfect condition. Prlcb Gould building IF YOU want good room.) a,nd board, call at 130 Ivy at., near Houston. Ivy 4138-J. vaults a ipeci ilt> Uykcrua by sum Concrete COMMISSIONER'S SALE OP ROAD 11,200 Premier Sales Co., 45Z Peachtreo St. CAN make several loans $100 to $500 oil Co.. 319 Austtll Bullduig , . O. W. GAY MFG. Ivy 639. acceptable security, will buy few short- NEWLY fur. front rooms ^Ith board; close MANTJFAfTURERS or store and ofHce fll- WORKING MACHINERY. ~~ CKC'SHEIJ STONE : On the flrat Tuesday, being the 4th day THE AUTO LISTING AGENCY. Office 6^0 term purchase money notes A C. Riley, .fr., in. Atl. 2S70. 106 Auburn avenue. [5ToT~^ToKir'ASir^ASa.rToT.rFA: ri7~ turet,. General contracting and repairs. Rhodes building. Manufacturers and deal- 612 Third National Bank building 391 Edpfnvood avenue _ Ivy 1021. of November. 1913, I will sell before the BRIGHT room, fltat-clas'. board. 7} -West CI-USHLD faTO-MJ granite sund. concrete FOR SALE courthouse Uoor In Gainesville. Ga , at 1U s' agency. Used, rebuilt and marked-down 6 PER CENT LOANS on Atlanta property. Fifteenth street. Ivy 7099-J. sand 414 Rhodes Bide.. Atlanta, da. ^^J»AJNlS^AND^CRg&OJB. o'clock, eastern time, complete equipment cars. Write for descriptive list. J. R. Nutting it Co.. 801-4 Empire Ufa for road v, orhtng, consisting of building. SOUTH SIDE:. C. F. BINDER & SON LORING SPRINGS One 24 horse-power Port Huron Roller STOWERS GARAGE FOR real estate loans see W. B. Smith. 70S '^^tianta^-arpeirCleaaing; Co. => of high-grade paints, w ith divided front rolls, complete with 34-36 Auburn Ave. Ivy 75^9. Fourth National Bank building. STRICTLY exclusive, first-class 27 W. ALEXANDER. IVY 41Sfa. u liite lead and creosote t. tain a. "We make front tank, canopy top, one 10 horse-power Storage, Overhauling and Repairing of all V, 13 <_]' an all kiucls ot carpets and rues, also readj imvptl paints to order. Corner La Mentone, Ala. Port Huron Roller w Ith solid front roll, Kinds. board. No. 97 Capitol Square cleaning feather pillows and beds, 10 Franco arid Lo\\ry streets. Bell phone Ivy complete with, front tank, canopy top, ten FOK SALE—Reo 5-pashenger touring car, in ' 2 i -.Atlanta Ga. Improved JPort Huron stone cars, 4 yards _ WANTED— _ _ (opposite state capitol). Address A. GIFFEN LEVY, capacity, one mounted water tank with excellent condition, for quick sale, $41i». KKEP your houhe painted and tinted. 1 This machine left by private individual with WE can invest your money for you on first HAR~RIS & CO. Embry Conbtruction Company, 318 Fourth sprinkling attachment, one F-24 Ing-ersoll- THE ELMS HOUSE Box 909, New Orleans. Bargeant steam rock drill ua for sale. Apply Southern Auto Company, mortgage, high-class, improved property. COMFORTABLY furnished rooms, with RUt-S ileai.ed and- bound. Furnltxire re- National Bank. MaiA 1455. 92 South Forayth btreet. It will net you 1 and £ per cent. ualic-il and packed. Twenty yeara experi- The above part of the equipment Is noxv TCRMAN, BLACK & CALHOUN. board; table boarders accommodated; ence, ^ach Harris Her. .-98 Piedmont Ave. I DO ALL. kinds o£ carpentering work, situated at Hall county farm, 3 miles from SALE—Buick roadster, model 24; practi- students at special rates. 2»l Eaut Hunter bu'lding and repairing. West 132-J. Gainesville where it can be seen. cally new, equipped with electric lights, _ Second Floor Empire. _ -street. Atlanta phone S6.J7-B. FLOWER SHOP, 121 Whitehall street, will ORir,\T.VI. Ru^s Lleanod like new , also re- PLUMBIC,G AND IIEATJLNG CON- Also one No. 4 Champion Rock Crusher extra tube and casing, bargain for quick 51 Cox i > sell all imported bulbs at cost, on account with mountings, with 30-foot elevator and sale, can arrange terms. Call Main 1610. 384 WHITEHALL! pah ing ami up-holstc-rlne 'V* - '- AC'fOS& STOCKS AND BONDS Auburn avenu*1 _1^> '13 >__T 8-foot 3-inch revolving screen complete, and FOR SALE—Electric coupe in good condi- lencea. Excellent meals. Main 3098-J. ' timber frame with chutes Cor stone bins, tion, a bargain. P O. Box 812, City. EXCELLENT board and comfortably fur- -JACKSON CO. DO YOU WEAR SOCKS? one 25 horse-power AJax Center Crank En- FOR QUICK SALE. -Vtlanta Oriental" Rug & Cleaning Co. SPECIAL attention given, to overhauling nished rooms, modern conveniences. 226 9\1J KUl.S cleaned $1 30 and up Ivy 3471. IF SO. buy them direct from tho manufac- gine on boiler, mounted, one Champion WANTED. 100, 200 OR 300 shares Idan-j gold mining E, Fair at. Bell Phone. Main 60i7. heating and plumbing work. 28 Luckle turer, four pairs for one dollar, delivered winding drum, two cable cars, with iron for stock at $85 per hare, neeu mon,'V. An- street. I\ y 5327. to your address. Guaranteed against hole track for cable cars. FOR EXCHANGE—Equity in nice B-room TWO nicely furnished rooms, with or \vith- bungalow. East Lake, for an automobile, swer quick. Address C-502, care Constitu- A^E^A^y^ or darn for four months. Cherokee Mer The above portion of the property is at tion. out board. 88 Stovall street, on Hast Lake J. L. M'NINCH chandlslng Co., 65 Elbert St., Atlanta, Ga. the Hall county Quarry, 3 miles from prefer Ford 1913 model. Charles Bible, 468 car line. Main 5539-J. A1ADDOX & BEST work, reasonable prices. 209 Mari- Phone Main 4861. Gainesville on Shallow Ford road, where it Woodward ave. "WANTED—Two gentlemen to board in pri- ULiT Lfc> build that iitw \\agon. or repair tho etta street. Main 6276-J. Atlanta 2127. can be seen WILL EXCHANGE equity in new 5-room vate family; extra nide room; close in. uU ono. All work guaranteed. SAFES - The above machinery has only been used bungalow on acre of ground for first-class BUSINESS^OPPORT^JNITIES Phone M. 4278. _ ^ PE'ri-tlb MAIN 3711 1 to macadamise about six miles of narrow automobile. Main 1419. WA^NTRD^A^ljorTn^ .M ONB Y SAVED by buying your pi u mblnff road and it. in fair condition. It will be THJ3 WEBB HOUSE, Good rooms and ex- _____ material of Picker t Plumbing Company. BOUGHT, sold and exchanged. Bank WANTED—6-pa8aenger Ford, must be in a Httlo cash, to go into the automobile cellent board. 142 S. Pryor St. Atlanta \Vo tell everi thing needed in the plumbing sold and delivered as it stands, and will KOod condition. Will give Warranty deed business, repairing1 and overhauling, selling safes, vault doors. Combinations be sold as a whole to two beautiful suburban lots. Owner. Ivy TONES," i II E line Prompt attention to renair work 14 *fa The above property to be sold under and on consignments and trading for rea' estute, NICELY furnished rooms, with board, close SUITS midc to urd r \\t Jo tteam dytlng and DiLjt Hunter Both phones 550. changed. 652.!. celling gasoline oil and accessories. T have In. Atlanta 6146-B. 137 _S._JPryor. French £>y cKaulng \\ u-U called for and de- by virtue of a consent decree In the district the experience and one of the lest locations Ivv 3471 court of the United States for the northern SUPPLIES—ACCESSORIES. In the city for the business. Address or call NICE, clean room, board and lodging. 124-A ^vj.rti! J", I Ldtcuooil "" - !. BANKERS' SAFE AND district of Georgia in cases of Good Roads East Fair. - W1IIUEHALL TAlLoniNc, AND PRESfa- Machinery Company v Hall County, and Atlanta Electric Garage Co. and sae me, 362 Peachtree street, and let me l^li CO.. now located at bi> Whitehall ADVANCE PRINTING VAULT CO. Hall County v. Good RcntCls Machinery Com- 34-30 JAMES ST. Phone Ivy 48J1-J. C. A. go into detail and bhow you \vh*»re we ca,u THE GREEK House, 92 Garnett at., for- Terrace. Clothes cleaned , Propel. Storage both make some good money. W. W. merly located 62 Walton Bt. Atl. 1939. la-ctt^n Kuaij-nttoU Atlanta ^-ISjl^^ _ , CO. No. 35 East Mitchell Street. parties. Title to same will be perfect. batteries rebuilt, repaired and charged. Thomas LISTEN! Extra nice rooms, with or with- KUH PU.L,&falixi., diems altering, cleanini" BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. Cut price on Terms of sale—CASH Spark battery work a specialty. General •J7.000 FOR 81,000. out board. BOS S. Pryor. Main 24C6-L. 1 FLOWER SHOP, 121 Whitehall street, will tco T. N. \Vilburn Ji>5 Marietta. Atlanta lNG~coiiPAN\. \v. Destroys chicken mites and C—J\.- fo~JLX and platinum of every de- Under and by virtue of an order of the supplies and accessories, at -16 Peachtree, facts for you. Why not investigate An I __ table boarders.^ M^ 88 - J. 66 Netson st, .Bakfcr. W^j Tailoring, cleaning, precis- all Kinds of insects. Phenol! no Company, scription, amalLest quantl- Hon. Percy H. Aflame, Referee in Bank- coiner Cain. Georgia Motor Supplies Com- Interview places you under no obligations. FOR RENT—Nicely~~furnlbhed roomj£ "wTtjqi cU.d dicing, bills made to order. Ill* 100-A Ci.lgc.%% oud avenue. JVIain 2317. Atr PAIR FOR titles accepted, business ruptcy I will sell on the premises at lb _> pany, Masonic Temple DUIg Ivy 1100. When and where may I aee you? Real board, clo^e in. 201 South. Forajth. 1inta 303& A confidential. Phone Ivy ^eachtree street, Atlanta, Ga , on Friday Estate, P. O. Box 218. 3710, representative will October 17, 1913, at 11 o'clock a. m.. the E. H. ODOM BRO- CO. I HAVE a good saw mill outfit complete WEST END. THE \\ 1I1TL WAY TAILOR ROOFING. call GEN'L SMEI/TINQ stock of fixtures belonging to the estate of HAVE your ^automobile repaired THB and in good, condition, located in plenty A GENTLEMAN wishing a nice home i\ith AND Dry Clt-uum.? Coiupanj. ft K Eman- itoof Man. WORKS, 607 EMPIRE LIFE BUILDrNG. Wood Bros V of original pine timber and now running; board in a refined, private family, can uel. frop AHuriuij. rfcpaiung anil dye- NEWBANKS West 1142. Only equity in cash register, cutting ma- 4B "AUBUKN AVE. IVV 6893. also good logging outfit with cattle, in find it In West End. 20 minutes from Five ing , bulta diy Cleaned. \\ ork called for SECOND-HAND safes, all sizes, home safes, chine and five pair of scales sold Balance good condition, which 1 would sell or ex- I pointt,. PKone West 493-J. and delivered Nuf t.ed. ' 11 Woodward J N LITTLE paints and repairs all kinds $15 up. Hall's bank and burglar-proof of fixtures sold free from all liens. EDGAR VERNON GARAGE cnange for a, business in Atlanta. Good rea- TWO nice rooms, either for rent or for avjeiiue. Muin '2143 _ : pi roofs, sellb .intl puts on roof felt and safes, vault doors. C Jt Daniel. 416 Fourth P lnt 0 This is a splendid place for a market. STORAGE, REPAIRS AND SUPPLIES, son for offering to sell or exchange. Ad- boarders. West 122. 2. _ J .* Whitehall. JUainJl^ National Bank build!nig. Terms of sale cash. Sale to be confirmed Oi-t.N ALL. JMIUH1'. 14-18 W. HARRIS, dress quidc, if interebted. Saw Mill Owner, UNION MUTUAL DRY TTjl "W">TTTD ROOF LEAKS, call Roof OPfClblTB .ENTRANCE CAPlTALi CITY R. 2. Malone. Ala. ' J--C X \J U ±t r>r W B. Barnett. 242 FOR CASH we are closing out at cost all CL.UB. IVY 1371. . CAFE, soda fount and cigar stand, all new, WANTED—Board—Rooms CLEANING CO. Homphtll avenue. Ivy 7238. plows, harness, robes and miscellaneous Eeceiver. fixtures for sale in suburb of Atlanta do- PRESSINO, d> t.iiit? and dr> cleaning a stock we ha.e on hand. Now is your chance Motor Car Service Co. t TWO or tnree young men to boar specialty ajlJ \v ork neat!} «ione called for SLATE ROOFING CO. Main to get what you need In this line at tt WOOD BROS.. Bankrupts. REPAIRS, overhauling, rebuilding and re- ing good business. Owner leaving city. Will vate home; t\vo connecting roonib and delivered. Bell phono Ivy 7J15. 159 Au- Ibl"; Repairs and new roof- bargain. Atlanta Plow & Vehicle Company. painting, ball-bearing repairs a spccia.lt>; sell on good terms. Room 207 JDakota hoteU ovely bath^ good mea no other boarders. IMJIn avt-nue R Hcmleison Prop, i Ins- No. 97 S. Foraytli St.. Atlanta. Ga. "William A. \\ right. Insurance Commis- storage. 830 to 3J6 Kctgewood ave. Ivy JOT 1. WOULD diapobe of interest Jn picture the- north side. Call Ivy 57J6-J. sioner v. American Life and Annuity Com- ater to right party with few hundred dol- YOUNG lady desires room and board in :»anv. No. 29993 Fulton Superior Court. NORTON VULCANIZING & lars. Safe proposition; worth in vet. tiff a ting. j private family. References exchanged. Ad- ^T^'TTj *, \-peitfa iioth phuuefc -Main _KEfAJHiya. National Cash Regiters Izing ofvall gas enclnea. A trial will con- 1 S35. $E>0. $60. (75. $100 and up, terms «asv, ihould not be granted CAFETERIA, lady or gentlemen. good table board. 84 273*. Atlanta >8J'J M J \\ . James i^ Co ..TTT^NCA' ^LovK sutPl-X COM: __ GEO. L. BELL, J. S. C of A C . vince. Oili*-^ /I ^j bautli Purs\ th street _^_ __ AVe dNo make chimney stacks, ivy 72-10. THE NATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO.. 54 MARIETTA ST.. W. 8. Dobbins, Prof. West Peachtree. Ivy 7635-J 60 Ivorth Broad Street. METAL WELDING CO. A modern and up-to-date place Cor lunch- TWO rooms and kitchenette, toed room, fur- 1F~ \^>\J lltetl a. cuiiH ai-tor huildtr or t* „- 101 North, For*'} th street, Phone us and FCtSTOFFICE DEPARTMENT. Washington, 86 Garnett ?t. Phone Main 3013. eon for business men and ladles. Call and pert i ouf man, c ill Cuiiniri&httm. office our r t pr^ent itlvp vii.l call. FLOWER SHOP, l-'l Whitehall fctreet, will September IS, 1913 Sealed proposals see us. nished, if desired, 170 N Jackson. Ivy 21oVj Peteis fat Jt jJUOtio "\La.lu 1 17 Kt,p ur sell all imported bulbs at cost, on accouiit ill be received at this department until 1-i 3504-J. T\. HEN 1^ TROUBLE CAL.L. SAVE3 your auto and motorcyle tires by BXTKA nne lunch served with Springer's \\ork ot ull kinds A'l u oi k jruar.inteeiJ of regradiiigr. o'clock m. on the 18th day of December, usfne Auto Puncture Cure, Seals valve FOR RENT—Large, convenient rooms, clos- Vrit.e*i t ca.son.iblt, 1913 from patentees or their assignees for Bohemian beer. lOc per bottle, Jl 00 per leaks and all punctures up to 2 0-penny doz. i5 S. Pryor. M. 1526 or Atl. 3778. ets, conveniences. 53 W. Baker street. iL: STOVE DOCTOR" BURLAP BAGS granting the u^e of patented improvements spike automatically at once, preserves the IF YOU need ou a homo on ea^i terms upon application to the Fourth Assistant Hayes' P1 ace. children, references required. 142 Grant like lent, d.ivi \v hero in the citi tjiiitecl TO COOK AND HEAT WII/TON JKULICO COAt, $4.75 JPEB TON Puncture Cure Co., Atlan ta, Ga. Bldjc chom.e. o I ilell_*ivtuue ____ fuint'-hdl if desired tall Mam 307-.T B B SAFES, tiles, cabinet, new and second-hand. "wH"h*N" in" ne^d o£ ua-rpenter \\ orlc call South Pr\or _t.oiner_ Ravvson Gookin Bank and Office Equipment Cora- REPAINTED. THREE ffi-st floor rooms, close In. 182 pany, 113-115 N. Pryor street. HOUSEHOLD GOODS NOTICE TO BUSINESS MEN Rawson st. Bell phone Main 3228-JT. \J A Johnson, %Vest 1288-J, estimates on TOPS recovered and repaired. Wheels, axles DINNEB 2Bc; excellent table. The Pon- all job \\ ork price -. reasonable _ ^ _ ONE Burroughs adding machine at a bar- LAV11SCJ recently nought the entire stock and springs repaired. Higrh-crado work clanna. 22 and 24 East Ellis St. ' gain. For further information address P. of the Natloral Furniture Manufacturing at reasonable prices FUHJVISHEb—N ORTH SIDE. ^ . O. Box 277. City Co.. vi Well discontinued business, w/e can JOHN M. SMITH. ld >our orders loi bia.uda -low. L»CL up- make very cloae prices on library tables, 120-122-124 AUBURN AVE. THE PICKWICK stairs price on biand^. All \vojk fuaran- NEW ID-story antt fireproof/ l ATLANTA SAFE CO. oak and mahogany dressing tallies, etc., Harxvell Kuhber fatanip Companj. -^ /a Autogenous Welding Co. Steam-heated rooms with connecting: baths* stroe-L Bargains in new and second-hand safes. also we have a few ranges left, which were Convenient shower baths on each floor, Real Lock Experts. Sate Artists. Main 4601. on exhibit at the merchants convention by AUTOMOBILE ond machine parts of all HOTEL PASADENA 77 Falrlle St., near Carnegie library. the Atlanta Stove Works. Advance Bar- kinds welded 1S2 Courtland St. Ivy 671. BO HOUSTON STREET, -— - FOR 1SALE —Anythin g you want or could retts and Imperials, solid cast, no lieet lv Laundry pousibl " call for. Jacobs Auction House_. 51 j UNDER new management, nice, laige. clean. 32 E. NORTH AVENUE \\UHthall Decatu'r 3t. Bell 1434. Atlanta 228S. Iron: there Is nothlns better In use. aliy rooms 1 block trorn Oandler ruildlng. Al'DONALD FURNITURE CO., Reasonable rates. Daily, weekly and month- A HOME for business men, hot and cold KEl'AHUNG AJvD UP- STu\ H AND RANGE REPAIRING. FORM LETTERS multlBraphed , prompt 110 W. Mitchell at., beyond Terminal Station. ly. Oa'y nice patronage solicited. ivy f water in each room, furnace heat, electric X\ f --wcep chimnejs. and n*"at *\ ork at reasonable prices. BARGAINS Tn~seconU^hand motorcycles, all S621-J. lights, good service, meals next door, ref- ^ 1 1 FOR SALE—Battenburg door piece, cost erences required. Ivy 63.35-J, iLUro upiioi.ai.ertu. tiiia i e" - ^ hitch Lll St Bell Phone Main 2699 MUIVTIGRAPHING CO. $20, for 55, electric lamp, $6, electric fan makes. 62 N. Pryor, Atlanta, Ga. GUB R 0 m a 5 ^ _ paired no\\ beiure tlie tall ru&h t=ee me, Bell Pbone Main 1158. 8 N. -Forsyth St. S*1 stair carpet and 4 lugs $25, brass Castle. HOTEL GEORGIA a n°d u p.N e^ YOUNG man wants roommate in private ai> 1 call for, dclivci and jjuaranteo my umbrella stand ?1, mahogany telephone and clean place. 2J% W. Mitchell street. steam-heated apartment 2 blocks Candler \\ork. Xj. \\elloii, 41 Auburn ^,\t,nue Ivy stand J3, clothes hamper 51.60, 4 prs,. lace One block from Terminal Station. Md&. JjXtra large room, separate beds, tlla JJ*«7 _ __ Wedding Invitations !unse£eni «ES£ curtains 76 cents per pair, and kitchen MUSIC AND DANCING* bath, no other roomers; reasonable. Ivy 50 CENTS. 6496. _ , _ _ _ icpaired. upnoibtering, retiri- $3.0o. Can t tell from eteeli engravingx. table $2 Ivy 6008-J ATLANTA1NSTITUTE OF MUSIC AND HILBURN HOTEL, f AT. GSMNN S bHon SHOT 0 Luckle street, Thomason Printing Company, 29ft Mari- 10 AND 12 WALTON STREET. neat I > aone \\ ork called tor acid opjMiMte I'leUinont hotel BoLh phone-. In FOR SALE—500 heaters and stoves of all ORATORY. Music in all Us branch*^. COMFORTABLE, well furnished room, ad- , lountj K. <"itr&on. 47 J JUa-rtetta etta street. Atlanta, Ga. Chartered and empowered by tiie state to FOR GENTLEMJC-V only, center of city, joining bath, in private, steam-heated, a Imirj ' Call Taticab company for auto kinds 1,000 yards interwoven China mat- near new poatofflce. Rates, 50c, 75o Atlanta J'ib?. rent sei\ict'_ ting cost 35c, to so at 19c per jard, also confer degrees. Phone Ivy 69S6. Send for apartment, north side, gentlemen only. Ivy 1,000 ARMY TENTS, 18-oz. U. S. duck, catalog. ^0 East Baker street. and $1. 4« 15. ____ NL.1L.L -^ HI NTUR, shoe repalririp^ Wo^-k slightly used We have all sizes. Call or car load new chairs and rotkers, every de- l_j.TviU.N caileil lor and delivered. 485 Eds-snood write, Tents. 295 S. Pryor St., Bell M. 2643-L. scription. Jacobs Auction Company, 51 De- CLASSES will open Septenjoer 1 lor vocal and New Management. Rates Reasonable. STEAM-HEATED front room; private KiKli' A.TLAN 1A 1 HON E a\_enut. vtla.nta 1->J7. _ :atur street. ) instrumental music at 2,12 Spring street. Mra. Cool Rooms. home; electricity, hot bath; excellent All Kl FLOWER SHOP, 121 Whitehall street, V ill WE FAY highest cash prices for household Theresa Grant-Hoffman. meals. Ivy 1294-J. ___ an guur-tnteed 1 AVANTED—1 000 pairs old t,hoo.i forTepair^ HOTEL PEACHTREE. I "ins ilurphvs O1S Stand. 847 Marietta at sell all imported bulbs at cost, on account coob, pianopanos ana d of nee furniture, cash DANCING school, latest steps, private Inatruc- Atlanta Phgno_j_187. S3 Vfr Peachtree St. FOR RENT— *One corking line steam-he-ited' b Atlanta 5749-F Give rne__a trial. of legrading adVanced on couaiKnment. Central Auction tlo.ts Phone Ivy 6067-J 48 W Peachtree room, one block from C.tnrtler building: \V e Charge Less _;{_« ^ Company. 12 East Mitchell street. Bell THB best of them stop at the Eai Hotel. steam heat and all conveniences, for two \\ ANTED—Barbers to Know ve carry full et Atlanta 42 to 62 Decatur street, center ot city: "~ I^J155iSfi^ line fixtures and supplies in stock In At- i>IlMJmj ^jao.«mMa» «>»«^.*i - „ young men onlv. Apply Apt. No. 4, Wel- JMoncricf Atlanta Co.^^; 25c and up a day, SI 60 and up per week. lington Apts.. corner Houston and I\ y sta. , lanta. Write for catalogue. Matthews & JACOBS' AUCTION CO. will buy anything Atlanta phone 2(>15. R. JANKO, TAILOR Lively, Atlanta, In the way of household soods. We pay ^U^M^^FKUMENTS^ WITH private family, one block from Pied- "b'ointLxe Original Moncrief LADIES' and gentlemen's first-class tallor- the hiBbest cash price. Call Atlanta phone mont park, one or t\\o furnished rooms PUP\VCC uJione Jloncrief Furnace Coia- jng^_at nlecjmra _prices_ SO ^ Hunter St. RUBBER ttres put on your baby's .2285 Bel' Main 1*34. 61 Decatur street. WHEN in ^^u^t^^vhe^e^To^pu^cliaae^^^^^ to men: references to be exchanged, break- *!••-••* carriage. repaired, repainted and. piano, so to the wholesale \v arehouse of pau>' 139 bouth ir-oor street, a^ain 2!>S. recovered. Ivy 3076. Robert Mitchell. 220 FOR BARGAINS In furniture, household fast furnished If desired. Ivy 7082. _ CJll tor S P. Aloncrlft or J B, Lee. ^ soods or office fixtures, call Atl. phone The Baldwin Piano Company, 40 \Vet>t A1&- TWO ROOMS in private home, near Peach- r-.S tailora c-nd furriers, tSagewood, * bama street, Atlanta. NOBTH AND 8OC.1JH SIDE. 228S, Bell Main 1*34. Jacobs Auction Co., NORTH S1UE-. tree, southern exposure, steam heat, hot 1'eaclitiet Room 20-i Peck GET OUK prices on lumber and building 61 Decatur street. _ water, phone. Excellent ou to call at your material. We can Have you money. Patter- ! PIANO B \RQA1.NS—Clevelnnd-Manntng Plaao smoke, no noise Call Ivy 5347 or Ivy 612S. earliest convenience to have your suit made son Lumber Co. Ivy 5251, Atlanta 5251. Bper cent by buylne your furniture I Co . SO «Jorth Pryor street. 53 WEST BAKER and \ our lur^ rt modeled hatll_factlon guar- from Kd Matthews & Co.. 23 E. Alabama EXCELLENT table, very desirable rooms; NEWLY fur. room, new bungalow, in Inmaa street steam heat. Ivy 7683-J. Park, to couple without children, two busi- ^^ t fetin -\te-ii.--, A itoh and EMPIRE FISH MARKET FURNITURE and rugs at lowest prices. ness ladies or two gentlemen, with or with- "'OyVtei" lit. s'Auourn Ave. _Bpth phonea. PISH DAILY. 11.! Whitehall street. Koblson Furniture Co.. 27 B. Hunter. DEVLIN DINING ROOM, 177 out board, also use_of garage._Ivy 4466. Nv_'iii- u__-.^v~-.' ItoH Ou. fc're--U Ii-_h and oys- 86057 At- FISH DAILY. 11^ Whitehall St. BRIGHT, attractive room, adjoining bath, ters all tne time. 230 Aubur.i. Atlanta QLASS TR AX SFERfaVta 567'1-B. FLOWER SHOP. lil Whitehall street, Vf_T DRESSMAKING IV > ST. 7 O'CLOCK DIN- in private home; heal furnished, and -will St. STL. __ 9S, Walton street sell all imported bulbs at cost, on account furnish breakfast it desired. Pbone Ivy of regradlng HORSES AND VEHICLES DRAFTING, DESIGNING NERS. $4.00 PER WEEK. 6738-J. , ,,..,„..-.— -•'l&H -SJAf-KK"'. J5-> .Marietta St. 'ITU HITERS. o2.T~uio~pracUcar~treatme_vt^orTheT horse Atlanta plume _1»1. Freah llah daily. "bTASUARD FOLBlNOT FCfR SALE—Two roll-top deaks and two and treat your own and your neignbor s LATEST MODELS TABLE BOARD CLOSE IN FOR RENT—Three furnished rooms, either JtOX _. The machine for personal chair... also two office i UBS for salp etock tells you all about the horse, how to for light housekeeping or roomers, on FTor travelers, the profebsions, stu- cheap Address A 158. Constitution. Biek a sound one, how to tell his aee cor- I Ivy 3205-L. -118 t-prlne St. 85 LUCKIE ST. IVY3i52__ north side on car line. Call Ivy S494-J. BKUb. it RICH SSCV^ the home. m> ladj s boudoir. Wt. G Heatine and Plumbine Co. rectly, how to treat all his diseases success- j EXPERIENCED dressmaker wants plain ATTRACTIVE front room, all conveniences, l.U<.,L\\OOl> VMJ. BOTH !?i« Price. *5U. A L Johnson. 406 Eqult- 4j FalHla St. Ivy 6S7U. futiy This valuable work has never been and fancy sew ing. reasonable rates. Call PEACHTREE INN single gentlemen, references; very desira- ON JLHL.KS?—All Kindij of domtJtic Leatti^ kble Bide. M-1"-- VTT'XTT' SIGNS signifies best quality. given to the public before. Price, 60 cents, ' Atlanta 5600 A. or 111 Washington street. HIGH-CLASS residential hotel, all modern ble. Ivy 27J-.-J. 316 West ePachtfee. 1VEJ.1N J-Kent SiRn Co. 13CH4 Peachtree st. postpaid. W. H. Edgar, ^70 Whitehall St., I WANTED—Dres-.makinE and sewing at pri- convenience.*; meals excellent, single FOR RENT—'I furnished rooms, era, live jjeebo fej-tliers, a ..pecialty. write BAGS AM) SUITCASES BJ5- Atlanta, Ga. room with meaia, $7.60 and up per week; Reference or phone lo1r samples and prices. R. ^ " -' REPAIRED, W A fTP~F K SELLS BARGAINS IN FUR. I vato home!., $1.__1 per day, all work bath, private family, to men. l*.ubankt, 7-, ,. boutii Bruad St Atlant W AKK.JC.iN 121 Marietta St. Main 1786. FOR SALE—Shetland ponies, $75, $86, *100, i strictly guaranteed. Dressmaker. 374 East without meals. $3 and up. 391 Foachtree. exchanged. Ivy 70--5-J. > '«»LASS. MfitiU>K~ASri_>~"R...;i AiK87 FOR SALE cheap, second-hand safe.A^aT $126. $200, $250, $500. delivered In Atlanta, Hunter street. Phone Ivy 9129. LARGE, bright front room In Inman -Park; or rcpan \vorlv, call dress Box A 109. care Constitution. Ga. Address C. G. Phillips' Pony Farm, i private family, furnace heat, ail conveni- Lojd, Main 4027. Atlanta 3^2. Cortland Ohio I encas, reasonable. Ivy 7875-J,. orsytb street. \Voriv Kuaranteed., ... FIVE heavy draft horses. Woodward Lum- FOR RENT—TYPEWRITERS j LARGE room, nicely furnished, north elde. Stove--, and gutter work prompt- CLEANERS—PRESSERSj ber Co. private home, to gentlemen only. Phone ^ dime aad euaranteed. Dixon & Thomas, TY-eiiWRiTKRS RENTED all convenlencea. Ivy 784's-J. Ivy 4649. , iigawood avenue. Atlanta phone a34S. WAXYtil)—Vour pr*»B3lng aad cT 4 MONTHS FOB *5 AND UP. REFINED young couple can furnish meals Little" Gem Grocery, ^ Simmons Dry Cleaning Co.. 165 Xnvin. Rebuilt Tyi,ewriters J.J3 to *7». to several persona; lovely ateim-heated ONE front room, with kitchenette, for egsa, butter and chickens,, little price for Prices reasonable. Ivy 2541. b'iORAGE & WAREHOUSE I AMERICAN WRITING M..ACHINB CO. Weat Peachtree apartment, room can be housekeeping. 42 W. Peachtree. Pbone large amount. Phone Main S14.. ._. I 48 North Pryor St. Phone\ Main 3B26. rented In apartment It desired. Phone Ivy Ivy 1837-L. •i R If ' Taylor Made" We move, store, pack and ship household ! MOST complete line of rentau machines In 2144. WANTED—Roommate for nice tar. room Detachable handles, goods exclusively. € and 8 Madison avenue. the south; all machines flrAt-clase coudl- •with younff man, in walking dist. las W. __ THE WASHINGTON, 38 Bast North ave- ~*eachtrea htreet._ ill tirlces. No chargre for repairs. Phone -.. Main 1-S6S-3310. Atlanta. 1422. _. tion. Remington. Monarch.* and &nutn nue, tinder new management, offers e\cel- Main 3743- Taylor Umbrella Company. tatlon to typewriter. Phone M. 3399-J. Premier. Rental .rates from J-1.67 to »,.»« lent accommodatlona; rates reuonable; table NICDLY furnished rooms at 178 ivy itT LADIES' and gent.,' hats cleaned and re- Whitehall. per month per machine. Kenfilnston Type- boarders alao aoliclted. Ivy "'—' close m._JAtlanta phona 2943, shaped. Late styles; best worls. Mail or- 42 Kiser building. writer Company i ders givfen prompt attention. Acme Hatters. AUCTION SALES 56 NORTH BELLEVUE INN TWO nicely furnished front rooms, close In. 20 East Hunter street. " VIADUCT PLACE IKE SOUTHERN AUCTION AND SAt.- NICELY fur. tingle or double rooms, Wc-un- -23 Capitol avenue. Main 29Sg-Ij. Main VAGB CO. at 90 S. Pryor will buy or aell heated, with or without mtul*. si Kaat FOR RENT—Two nicely furnished front IIOKSK SHOEING AND WAGON" rooms,, all conveniences-; gentlemen »re-,' REl'AJLiUMU. Recovering a Specialty. People with means to yciur furniture, household soods or plait*. TlUrd Ivy 1S98-L. Phone Bell Main 2306. TWO rooms with connectlne bath and board srred. 152 Courtland St. Ivy 6187-_C.v. WOOD PATTERNS^ tor two couples in private home, one ONE nicely furnished room; convenience)!: * t '^CimMINGS^HOEING'COT' anything you have block from Peachtree. 81 B. North avenue gentlemen preferred. 282 Houvton ..treat. SUlLDlNL-r, repairing and painting. • rubber "^obertsorT~Pattern Works TYPEWRITERS Phone_ ly y_4680-J. tires put ou at reasonable pHces. 115 140 JSJDGBWOOP AYE.__IVY_6026._ for sa&e read Constitution! CAST-OFF CLOTHING SEND address our office for l.-aluaWe In- Ivy 7844-J. Qilmer street. T"carS; \ve'ir~Bri.nircas]r~-.or "shoes, formation.. Oliver 'Typewriter \ Agency. 64 Coatiuftd on Next (Continued in Next CcMumu.j Continued in Nest Column, want ads, every morning ana clothing. The Vestlare, J66 Decatar at. Auburn ave, Contf-naed in Next Column.

KWSPAPLRl T^VT J'T' THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, 0A, .WEDNESDAY, OCTOJ&EB Page Jbifteeii. stitution Want Ads Work to tine People Who Mpply Themnio There's No About Jt. It's'a Fact li UL C/ .

FOR RENT—Rooms FOR RENT—Stores REAL ESTATE—Sale, Exctfge FOR RENT—Houses REAL ESTATE—For Sale. REAL ESTATE—For Sale. .REAL ESTATE—For Sale. FOR RENT—Storeroom. «l B. Alabama St. NORTH SIUK. George VV. Sclple. Both phones 203. 19 MODERN, steam-heated trout room, north Edjrewood avenue. THE MOST SUCCESSFUL SPECULATOR IS THE aide, walking dlatance; very reasonable. I HAVE at 238 Humphries street, cor- W. A. FOSTER & RAYMOND ROBSON , ghone Ivy 47S-J. FOR RENT—Drug store In good business ner of Stephens street, the prettiest ONE WHO BUYS EARLY AND ALLOWS FUTURE NICELY furnished, ateam^heated~rooma. a<2- Ejection of "West End, doing good business. Phones 1031-1D32. 11 EDGEWOOD AVE. - Atlanta Phone 1881. 'Joining bath, 'for ecntlem<.n. fclorence Soda fount and fixtures. Call 411 Peters st. proposition in Atlanta, Ga., for invest- DEVELOPMENTS TO MULTIPLY HIS INVEST- Apt., Porter Plaqe. Ivy 7819. ment. A $1,500 loan is due in four FOR RENT FOR SALE MENT. ' . . ONE nicely furnished room for two gentle- years and a $800 note due in January WE HAVE the following property for sale man; all' cot«veni«>i ces; clobe In, ia v«il- 16-R. H., 306 E. Hunter ?8S.OO of a company that Is liquidating its af- Haras at. Ivy 7236-J. at 7 per cent against this place. My 10-R. H., 384 St. Charles . .. 60.00 fairs: '" NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY FOR RENT—One nicely furnished room; BEAUTIFUL WEST END equity in this place is worth $950, 10-It. H., 310 Juniper 35.00 210-2IO-A Howell. Rents J21.20. price, all conveniences; walking distance. Ivy 10-R. H.. 200 Oak 55.00 Si.600. S288-J. ' BUNGALOW counting on what real estate men of R. 2H Howell. Rents S11.20. POce, *900i 58--60 Sampson. Rents ?17.20. PrM, $1.400. ALTOLOMA THREE steam-heated rooms; private home. IOMPL.BTELY furnished ; am leaving the Atlanta say it is worth. If you have lo-R. H., 34 Norwood . .. 25.00 city and will rent my home to reliable 9-R. H., 4 LaRosa Ter S7.50 •1S6-488 Houston.. Rents $19.20. Price, $1,600. Phone Ivy 387 and rvy_2j»£g_ . any nerve and want to trade go and 169-71, Glenn, store. Rents $30. Price, $3.500. BEFORE THE STONE MOUNTAIN , 34 CONE STREET 9-H. H., 43 Ponce de Leon plnce .. 40.00 All of the above are good rent-paying pro- board; look at this place. I will take money, ?-R H.. 643 FVJsewood 46.00 positions and are worth investigating; terms. CAR LINE BEGINS TO OPERATE EI,BGA!*!*T rooms, with or without d located, in best residential section. Thin _.__ _^_ ..... _ , _ homse Is newly fufnjshed in every Detail, automobile, horse and buggy, stocks S-R. H., 86 Avon 40.00 ALSO 3SB Houston-end BOO Houston, which ON NOVEMBER FIRST. GENXliBMEN deslriris large well furnished tssession at once. Phone West lt*^, or ap- 9-R. H.. Churcl* anil Sprlns, E. Pt. . 2?.00 are good home propositions, for $2,000 front room. Call Ivy 4SJ1. ply and bonds or anything else but a yel- " struct. 8-H. H., 363 Capitol ?G.OO each; terms. I'"OR RENT—Comfortably furnished room Ofl KENT on Gordon st., 10-roowi house; low dog or a blind mule. I am leaving SEE ANT SALESMAN. for couple or gentlemen. 05 W. Harris St. large lot, garage a.nd aervant'a house; will S-R. H., 151 Jackson 50.0,0 GOULD AND PASCO THE VERY BEST corner lot left on Myrtle FOR RBNT^Nlceiy furnished room with rent aa two aprtw., or whoits house. Phone town and must dispose of this place S-K. H.. 37 fonca do t,eon Ave.. Dec. 27.50 West 1023 attur 9 a. m. street, 52x160. Well shaded, and cheap at SUBDIVISION all modern' conveniences. 210 Spring at.^ this week. The place rents for $25 8-R. H.. Munayhlll $2b.OO price we have it. Corners like this are set- FOBT~RE.\"T^:; large. well-turni»hed roomst 8-R. H.. 16 Norwood £5.00 tine scarce on the north side. See Mr. AN ANNEX TO ALTOLOMA, CONTAINS one first floor, ono upstairs.. 81 Houston UNFCKMSHIJl). per month. Do not be afraid to make 8-R. H., 151 Myrtle - .. 60.00 Bradshaw or Mr. Martin. St. Ivy 7S7J-J. , $13.10 PER MONTH—Four-room house with S-lt. H., 53 Atlarta 25.00 FOR RKNT—One nicely furnished room; reception hall; newly and beautifully an offer. I might take less than you 66-ACRE FARM in Cobb county for $1,500: MORE THAN 100 ADDITIONAL LOTS—FROM conveniences. 110 Spring^t^^M. 266S-J. painted; 2 blocks from school; 76 yards of think. Come to see me at 407 Edge- 8-R. H., 41 Howa-d, Kirk. . . . 3...00 will trade for small residence in Atlanta. double car line; water, ga.«, sewer, ahiuwalky 8-Rl H.. 45 Howard. Kirk 35.00 See Mr. White. _/ ONE-HALF ACRE TO THREE ACRES EACH, JTOK RENT—Nicely fur. rooms with isitchen- and .curbing; jjooU neiKtibornooti. Ware & ette. Ivy 6002:L. 143 Spring street. wood avenue, Atlanta, Ga. 8-R. H., 701 N. Boulr>tld . . .. 76.00ON BROOKS STREET, convenient to . two Harper. No. 726 Atlanta National Bank S-R. H-. as Norcross 35.00 car lines, we have a new bungalow for sale Bldg., Main 1705, Atlanta 1868^ cheap, and you can name your own terms. ONE DOLLAR A WEEK Fi'iiVtsHv.!i—SOI:TH SIDE. FOR RENT-—9JT Ormond street. Seven-ro,oni S-R. H., 120 W. Tenth 60.00 7-R. H., 222 Ira 20.00 See Mr. Cohen- DRAINED NURSES house, good basement, all conveniences. SOUTH K1RKWOOD. In this fast growlns NO INTEREST—NO TAXES. J20. per month. Apply C9 E. .North ave- 7-R. H., DeKalb avenue 22 50 town we have three or four G-room cot- BEAUTTFTGL,l.y furnished rooms for nurses nue. or call Ivy 4466-L. THIS is absolutely the most remarkable lot sale ever inaugurated in. the city •or will rent to young men or young ladles; ,7-P. H., 307 Crew r.treet 30.00 tages, with all conveniences, except gas. targe and light: all conveniences; suitable GET our Weekly Kent Bulletin. We move RESIDENCE DISTRICT. 1-R. H., 1102 Peachtree .. ;. .. 70.00 $3,000 to $4,000 on easy terms. See Mr. of Atlanta, and I can refer you to more than 100 satisfied purchasers in for housekceplnir. M. 2507-J. tenants renting Sli!.50 and up FREE. See Radford. notice. John J. Wootislde. the Kentlng TWO renting houses two blocks from Ponce 7-P.. H.. 5S Currier 4J.50 Altoloma.o If you can spare the small weekly payments, thereby creating a 1 OH 2 well fur. rooms adjoining bath; all Agent. 12 Auburn avenue. Ue Leon avenue and three blocks from most wonderful savings account, I advise you to procure your lots in Gould convenience^; nice location; walking dis- Peachtree; lota 40x100. Price until Saturday, tance. Call forenoon or evening, 319 Capitol FOR RENT—Choice 7-room cottage, fur- $1,KOO, Address. Investment, A-139, care Con- and Pasco Annex to Altoloma while the property is fresh and you can make nace heated, open griLtoH. handsome man- stitution. FOR RENT—Apartments. FOR RENT—Apartments. tels, bath and electric fixtures, screens, a choice selection. • NICELY fur. double room for 4 persons. screened sleeping porch, hardwood noor*, FOR SALE. Furnace heated; good baths and plenty of servants' rooms, north sifle, between Peach- FIXE, shaded building lot on prominent hot water. $4 per week. Also room for J2.60 trees. - Phone owner, ofllce 80 Ivy, residence north side street. For quick sale ?300 to SELECT YOUR LOTS TODAY pel" week. 1U8& S. Porsyth a'.reet. 2155 Ivy. $500 cash, balance monthly. H. J. Lynch. FOR RENT FOR RENT—Houses, stores and apart- P. O. Box 519. OUR AUTOMOBILES ARE AT YOUR DISPOSAL FIVE nicely fur. rooms for gentlemen only. ments. Call, write or phone for our Bul- I HAVE a nice 6-rocfm cottage In beautiful • can bo secured, table next door. Mrs. S. r... letin. Both phones 6408. Ueorge f. Moore. South Kfrkwood, near car line. I must sell AT ANY TIME YOU DESIRE TO GO—JUST , Richmond. 170 jVaHhlngton_St_ . M. 2649-J. 10 Auburn avonue. - this place quick and will give easy terms CHOICE 7-room, steam-heated apartment; Washington FOR RENT — Oiie nlceiy furnished front CALL, for or write for our Weekly Hent Bul- to quick, purchaser. Call Owner. Main 2243. CALL OR PHONE MY OFFICE AND ONE OF room. 138 W. Fair; close In. letin. Edwin P. Ansley Rent Dept., 78 N. NORTH BOULEVARD HOME, on large lot Forsyth street. Bell phone Ivy 1(100; At- and in nne condition; every convenience MY SALESMEN WILL SHOW THE PROPERTY. i XIR.VISHRO — WEST END. lanta 3G3. nnd a bargain, if sold Jn the next ten days. street. Price right to good tenant. » BEAUTIFUL, furnished front room, adjoin- OUR weekly rent list given full description Urgent, Box A-141. care Constitution. ing bath, use of goruge. West End. West of everychlnK for rent. Call for one or let ASK Air. Babbage first to sell your proper- 1099-L. us^ mail^it^to you. Forrest & George Adair.^ ty. Peachtree and Jamea. 115 McKenzie W. P. COLE, Manager TWO nicely furnished rooms, couple. 165 SIX KbOMsT~batir~gas, good Harden, barn. bids- Ivy 1561. . See LIEBMAN Lawton, Weal KnO. Phone West 702-J. chicken hou«e, 4liG South Boulevard, front- NORTH SIDE HOME, in very best section, 1408 CANDLER BLDG. PHONES: IVY 432; ATL. 953. THREE furnished housekeeping rooms; all ing park. Price $^3. Phone Main 18U9 or wide lot, all, improvements; will sell $1,000 Tf you cannot go, call, phone or write. conveniences. West Kfiii. l^hone \\*. - 1205. apply on premises under value If taken at once; ho agent need 17 WALTON STREET. LUVKL.1' rooms, with or without meals; ev- 5-ROOM bungalow, acre of land, ti-foot wire answer. Address Owner, Box A-143. care eiy convenience: private home. W. 9ffO-J fence In Center Hill, chert road, conveni- Constitution. ent to cur. 175 Marietta M.. Atlanta 3632. ONE furnlHhod room, private home, in West L*ET US build you a home on «asy terms, End. West 1237. FOR RENT—Six-room housf, large lot, near like rent, anywhere in Vhe. city. United EDWIN L. MARLING Lake wood, on old HapevlLle road. Apply Bldg. Co., 400 Temple Court building. FOR RENT—Offices FOR RENT—Offices REAL ESTATE. 32 EAST AL.ABA MA STREET. BOTH PHONES 1287 FURNISHED on t'lVFUHNISHKU. to uwner. ,3US ,B. Huntur_^-ru«t._ NORTH SID&—Anslsy Park lot. 100 feet FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurnished, 2 SEVEN KODAKS, yard. jK-rchL'^; u-alklnffdU- front, overlooking: clubhouse, tennis courts, NORTH SIDE RESIDENCE—On North Slor eland avenue, we have a magnificent 8-ro rooms, and bath—$-0. Phone Ivy tion of three streets; now under a two- GRANT 1?ARK COTTAGE""—Near the Augutita avenue entrance to Grant Park, wo FOR RKNT—Two rooms, furnished or un- year, lea'se. Price, $2,500 and worth twice have a modern. 6-room cottage that we offer for $2,500; $100 cash, $25 per month furnished ; all modern conveniences. 266 as much. Address M. T. L.. Box A-140, FRONTING MARIETTA AND BROAD STREETS for the balance with no loan. It you .age this jp^ace you will quit paying rent. Houston street. Apply 166 N. Jackson. care Constitution. NORTH SIDE COTTAGE—On one of the best north side streets we offer a modern, Ivy 6615. . FOR SALE—Swell 14th street home; all im- Fourth Floor 6-room cottage, with every known convenience, oast front, -for $3,500; $100 ca,sh, TWO unfurnished or one furnished room In __^™_ provements; garag-e. etc. Bargain. Owner, $25 per month for the balance. Thla is the only north side cottage in this section good neighborhood; near car line; electric OFF1CK SPACE— S1LVKY BLUCi. COVj N. Broad st. that can he bought at our price and terms. See us at once if you are in the market lights, bath convenient. Phone West S05. FOH offices and stores in the biivey FOR SALE—4-room house, 7 Echo street; THIRD NATIONAL BANK BUILDING fol* a home. two 4-room negro houses on Julian street, STREET LOT —O n the .very best part of Ormond street, we offer a $1,250 building, located at Five Points. renting for $25 month. This is a big bar- lot for $750; one-hal-half cash, bbalance easy. The owner needs a little money at once. For Rent-^-Housekeeping^ogms Edgewood, Peachtree and Decaiur gain for cash sale as owner needs" the Be quick if you want a pick-up. money. Pick this up and make some money. See ,\ N OUTH SID1J. streets, see us. Address C. W. S., care Constitution. FOR RENT—Three connecting rooms, ideal- G. R. MOORE & CO.. POR SALE—By owner, in best part We-it ly arranged, for housekeeping. 46 E Ellis. 116 LOBBY CANDLER BUILDING. End, G-room new bung-alow; nice lot, Southern Guarantee & Investment Co. FOR RENT—One largo room and kitche- ATL. PHONE 2483. IVY 4U78. every convenience and improvement; must YOU CANT BEAT THIS nette'; all conveniences. 1S1 Forrest Ave. sell at once at a sacrifice. Address A 159, ON PREMISES FOR RENT—-Three housekeeping rooms. 413 Constitutl on^ ON MAYSON AVE., beybnd Inman Park, I can sell you a 2-story modern 10-room ' Courtland street.. Ivy 6084-J. FOR REXIV-CANDLER 1NMAX PARK~APARTMEN'T, ' modern fn home, in A-No. 1 condition; new fixtures, new plumbing Just put in; on a FOUH larse, upstairs rooms, closets, sink. every way, on one-half of 110 foot lot; porch, bath; one separate meter, private BUILDING STORES AND buyer must assume small loan at 5 per cent; very pretty level lot, 60x275; east front; three feet above sidewalk; street home. 7 Boulevard Place. ' will sell at SOc on the dollar. Address In- REAL ESTATE—For Sale. REAL ESTATE—For Sale. pavements and tile sidewalk already down and paid for; lawn, fruit and'poultry . OFFICES man Park, Box A-142, care Constitution. yards, and a vacant lot adjoining, 43x275, level, east front, and a new 6-room FOR RENT—-Two furnished rooms for SOME attractive stores in Candler building; double house on the rear of lot, in a choice neighborhood; car line; all for housekeeping-; all conveniences; walking Candler Annex and Commerce Hall, avail- IF IT is real estate you want to buy or sell. distance. E>£ W. Baker street. It -will pay you lo see me. ' A. Graves, 24 $7,500, $750 cash, balance easy; or will trade. This property is easily worth able'now and, January 1. Also some very de- East H un tor street. J10.000. Owner jg-ot to sell or trade. • sirable oiilce space. Asa (Jr. Candler. Jr., GEO. P. MOORE SOIITH SIEE. Agent, 2~a CandltT building. See Mr. Wilk- LIST your property with us for quick and REAL ESTATE AND RENTING."1 ONE room down stairs for light housekeop- inson. satisfactory results. Fischer & Cook. Main ingr,' two front rooms upstairs same; g-entJe- 38RO. 10 AUBURN AVENUE. men preferred for board. ° FOR RENT—^One office suitable for doc- EDWARD H. WALKER 2 FURNISHED rooms for housekeeping. 108 tor's office or hairdressing parlor*?., tor BUSINESS DISTRICT. REAL ESTATE DEALER. 35 NORTH FORSYTH ST. ' further information yce Dr. H'. Jensen, 23 *& Pulllam at. Main 5045. K FOH SALE. THE MAN THAT MADE COLLEGE PARJC GROW. NICELY furnished, connecting housekeeping VyhttehaH. _ ^ CENTRAL AVE. corner, not far from Union DO YOU KNOW North Boulevard, between Ponce de Leon avenue rooms, lovely location. 101 Capitol ave-une. FOR RENT—Front pftiue and stock room, depot, 76x9G; suitable for business or and North Avenue? Do you? Well, property in this block is Main 2484-J. suitable for print ins1 or manufacturing, manufacturing site. Cheap for Quick sale. H. J. Lynch, P. O. Box 619. selling from $7,500 to $10,000 for average homes'. In this same block NO. 69 NELSON—Two furnished rooms for has electric Hffhts and steam ]ieat, 'AZ% Au- rent. Main 3676-J. 69 Nelson. buri^ avenue, 1,400 square feet. $20 now. Call we have an 8-room, 2-story house for $5,800. The'lot might not be between 2 and 5 o'clock. Ivy '6841. _ SUBURBAN HOME, 7 miles from Five quite the width of some of the others, but there is plenty of comfort, LOOK AT THIS! FOR RENT—Rooms for l(ght housekeeping GFIT1C1SS tn .ihe Moore budding at No. 10 Au- Points, IS acres, over 2,000 feet railroad, on first and second floors. £01 S. Forsyth. burn avo. t». heat; passenger elevator. car line and' river frontage. Splendid truck in this place. It also has automobile privilege on the side. Terms. lights and janitor service. $12.00 to $18. Ona land, suitable for subdivision; best factory - END.. fu^nir-hed office;- price SlT.fiO. sites near Atlanta; Siding within 200 feet of FOR RENT— Four rooms and kitchenette, property. Electric lights and power. Good FIRST-CLASS negro investment property, which rents for §13.20 $6,750—BRICK STORE—Marietta street. New and pay- ideally arranged for lislit housekeep- car service. Best rea-son for selling, Bra's- per .month. Price, only $1,200 cash. ing:-- all modern conveniences. 200 Oak St. tow, owner, 659 Candler annex. ing about 9 per cent income while it enhances in value. \Veft 323-L. _ IF YOU ' would like to purchase some of the most desirable ocean front lots at INMAN PARK, perfectly level, east front lot, on finished street, Can arrange terms. the Wilmington Beach, Wilmington, N*. C., for ?900 cash. RENT—- ^Apartment s $3,150 PER YEAR .address Lots A. B. C., Wilmington. N. C., Tor tHr^e, fJvo or ten years General Delivery. WU.JilSO.BU, CORNER STORE and cottage combined on car, also oa finished street FOR RENT —Tw o newly finished arid newly SUBURBAN. and which rents to white tenants for $12.60. Price, $1,050 cash J. R. NUTTING & CO. furnished apartments, furnace heat; all . - rse rac; o,s o mer on an ; or terms. . modern conveniences. 1 Baltimore Block, can make deal in timber which will prove FOR SALE OR LEASE Ivy 61S8-J. very interesting:; over 1,000 acrea of pas- [THE Whitlock House. Marietta, Go.., 34 801-4 EMPIRE LIEE BLDG. BOTH PHONES. rooms, furnished complete. Open and do- WE ARE PREPARED to build a "bungalow," 2-story house or 2-family FtTHNISHED, AND UNFURNISHED. Ing good bu-slness all the year. Address apartment for you on a pretty corner lot, Ponce de Leon avenue. IN the. very best section of Inman Park we j M. O. "SVhitlock, Marietta, Ga. This location is beyond the springs. And we only ask $60 per foot have a modern apartment, complete in every •way e.nd equipped with every conveni- I TIMBER L.A3VDS. for the lot. Size, 50x150. Lot is perfectly level for 100 feet back of ence. Will rent furnished or unfurnished at TIMBER FOR SALE—5.0 acres virRin tim- building line. We furnish all plans free. Suppose you think about BURDETT REALTY COMPANY a low figure for a. year lease. Cu.ll -^:r. ber (pine>, near Atlanta, close railroad. LaHatte at . Ivy 1508. Everett & Kverett, Adtlersa A-13G, care Constitution. this 2-family house. Will arrange separate entrances. One section *13-14 EMPIRE BUILDING. PHONES 2099. 224 Brown-Randolph .building. of this house would rent for $50 per month. This will help pay for it. FARM LANDS. Easy terms. ' PEACHTREE LOT IN BROOKWOOD. Beautiful elevated lot UNFURNISHED. APPLE AND CHICKEN 114 1-2x400 feet. Absolutely the best lot for sale in this section. THE BOSCOBEL FARMS Surrounded by some of the best homes in Atlanta. Terms. CITY. Come to our office and seo samples of ASHBY STREET HOME W. PEACHTREE, SOUTH OF NORTH AVENUE. Two good Corner Euclid Avenue WANTED—Modern home on Piedmont ave.. Georgia apples; aome remarkable bargains; Juniper or Myrtle HIS., for a customer, tf ono will exchange. Sure fortune in apple 2-story houses on lot 75x187 feet to twenty-foot alley. These and Hurt Street. you want to He!! please ,ru!t us iiud wo \vi[l $7,300—NORTH OF GORDON STREET, we are offering this Immediately inspect your property siiui soe houses rent for $1,600 per annum, under 12 months lease. We can you. (Jaiioway & Smith. .Umpire buildiutr. """TV. M. SCOTT & CO. attractive tvVo-story, eight-room house at the above low price. Steam Heat and Janitor, Service. Main_l4_0. . • 210-212 GOULD If you want a real home-like place, modern and up-to-date in every sell at a price at least $100 per foot under value, and arrange terms. One 3-room apartment. .$32.50 "WANTED—Nej?ro iiivt-stmvnt properly ~ra f FOR SAIjli—-00 acres, 1 mile OR-lethorpe the, Kourth ward. We hare the cu-stomer J university »ite; %-intle Peachtree road, respect, built for a home, in perfect condition, you will buy this on Call at office for price. It will surprise you. One 4-room apartmeni; ?35.00 with the ca-sh. Galloway te Smith, Kmpire aajoining Folsom land und Anhford Park. building-. Wain 3-10. Takes $5,000 cash to handle, balance the spot. East front, lot 48x200 feet. Nothing better for the money. terms. Will' take firrtt-class property part pay. Address Owner, P. O. Box 1737, At- Terms all O. K. FITZHUGH KNOX FARM I/AXDS. lanta. Ga. IN DRUID HILLS WE NEED SOME FARMS FOR OUR CUS- 1613 CANDLER BUILDING. * TOMT3HS. WRITE US PL'UL, INFORMA- FOR SALE—6-room. east front bungalow, in WE HAVE a splendid home on a beautiful lot that can be bought for less TION' AND GIVE US YOUR FARM FOR Decatur, S-1.000, Fletcher Pearson, 422 At- TURMAN, BLACK & CALHOUN than $15.006 with $3,500 cash. IF INTERESTED, come In or phone and SALE. JUST SO IT IS IN liKOHGI -V lanta National Bank building". we will come to see you, as we cannot give any information about this over F1SCHT3R Jt COOK. 4TH NAT. BNK. BLDG. IF YOU have a farm to sell, list It with 203 Empire" Bldg. the phone. UNE six-room apartment, steam heated, hpt us, as we are having calls every day for and cold water, u.11 modern" conveniences. farms. Johnson & Young, 215 Peters Bldg., Ptn- . month 555. A. W. FarliBger 304 RJEAL^STATVE-^al^Exch'ge Atlanta. Ga^ N. Boulevard. - •_ FOR SALE-^--i.'0 acres rich farm land a PEACHTREE PLACE HOME IN the Helene and Herbert, 240 Courtland WILIj TRADE fit" SI-ILL'."" "~ miles from Fort Valley on Macon road, at HERE IS a h'ome and location that with the price, $8,750, makes a bargain street, corner Cain, close Ju, on north I "WILL trade for an nutnmoliilf ;ind . stories, all conveniences. Price $11,000. Easy windows 3 sides, giving perfect light and 1 A GOOD LOT on Whitehall Street. This property'is on a corner. CANDLER BLDG. ventilation ; comfortable in summer and win- terms. ter- 3 beautiful i rooma. with kitchenette ; iarge bath, 3 closets, steam heat, hot and SOME good property in Ansley Park to trade for-income property. cold water, vacuum cleaner, Janitor service. shades, gas range and refrigerator furnished BUNGALOW free. Best claaa ot tenants. Phone Ivy 428. IN the Druid Hill section. Price $5,000. Every modern con- WHY NOT OWN YOUR HOME? S^HOOM APT., private vbranda, sleeping porch furnace heat, elecirip lights; north venience. Easy terms. , THE MILTON STRAUSS CO. IF TOO HAVE $500 to Jl.OOO. we will FURBISH THE LOT, and side- earv walking; no children ; *45 ; fav.- also BUILD THE HOUSE, and arrange for EASY monthly oraaie U ms 'on lease. Ivy 961-L or Main 521 HURT BLDG. payments like rent. Our lots are on i • _ . ..__ SPRING STREET CORNER TEL. IVY 46<66. APT~. In tha Bell, cornner North PRICE $13,750. A real bargain. Easy terms. ' • DBEWRY STREET Boulevaroulevar d anand Ponce do Veon avenue; al»j 4-rm. apt. Corinthian, 136 W. PeacJ- on the north side, just beyond St. Charles, running Into Highland ireo sireei. Apply Charles P, Glover Realty See avenue. Two car lines 10-mlnute service; school In sight; charted Company. 2Vi Walton street. _ NORTH SIDE HOMES street; water, ga^ sawer, tile walks, electricity, phones, etc. For 5-KOOM APT-, private \-eranda, . sleeping S5.250—ON A GOOD cherted street on the north side, we have a new stone- details, call on the porch, furnace heat, electric lights; north trimmed bung-alow. It has six rooms and sleeping porch: has combination side; easy walking-; no children; $-i5;_ fa- W, L. & JOHN O. DuPREE fixtures, hardwood floors and tile bathroom. The lot is laree and on a nice vorable terms on lease. Ivy 961-L*. or Main elevation. Can make terms. ATLANTA DEVELOPMENT COMPANY 129.'*. ' ..' . REAL ESTATE. R. H. JONES, SR., Gen'] Mgr. ' G-RUOM APT,, The Lillian, corner Juniper $7,500—On PIEDMONT AVE., bet\veeni Eighth and. Tenth" streets, we have a 609-13 THIRD NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. iina Eighth; strictly modern, first-class, 501 Empire Bldg. . Phone Main 3457. comparatively new S-room, 2-story residence. " It also has sleeping porch $65. j. w. Goldsmith. Ivy 373S-J. and garage. This is In one of the best home sections ot the city. It ia rent apartments 01 convenient to Tenth Street schooj_jind_Piedmont_Park Terms. _____• you warn J3^900—IN"INMAN PARK, and near new North Avenue school we have a nice Ansley Park Lots on Easy Payments 6-room cottage on well-shaded level lot. 50x160. This Is In a good neigh- HOME BARGAINS ^^_ borhood and cheap for the price. Can make terms. ••'•_. WE OFPEK a new 2-story, 8-room home, modern in every particular, in th« Six choice residence lots in the built-up section, one block from Piedmont WE HAVE several pretty bungralows in West End and Inman Park; also a beat section of Poace d« Leon avenue, tor $11,500, on terms. CasTj, $2,600, S2U PER MOiViJB car line, $2,250 to $3,000, according to size. beautiful home on corner lot on Ponce, de Leon. , , balance 11.250 per year. This la a high-class home at the right price. BUNGALOW, new, right at Druid Hills; has every convenience, fur- TERMS: 10 PER CENT CASH AND $2Z -W. T. NEWMAN & COMPANY nace heat, etc. Price, >S,000. Term.8, >500 cash, balance easy, front of store, and well suited for per mpntb, interest 7 per cent—a high-class lot on easy terms—as Ions as they HEAL ESTATE .: '.••-• .--..• TWO BUNGALOWS, between ""th e Peachtreee, at $6,75<>r~o~ n eapy terms. WiT location tor milk depot or drag store. WARS last. Itaese lots »re in close proximity to Golf Links and . Can recommend aboye properties as good values, for speculation, or home * HARtBR. 725 Atlanta National Bank BELL PHONE MAIN 4311.. . 904 FOURTH' NAT'Ii BANK BLPG. building. Main 1T05. and Atlanta 1868. show them in 10 minutes. Auto waiting. , proposition. FOB. KENT—One splendid *tore. 30 Capitol avenue;' look at it; also lodge hall for rent two nights. Phone Abbott. Main 1S91. HENRY B. SCOTT R. G. WQODBERY & COMPANY Continued in Next Column. 218 EMPIKE 'BUILDING. PHONE MAIN 604. WANT ADS lOc Lito WAST ADS REAL ESTATE 317 &KFXBB BLOC. PHONE MAIN It.

lEWSFAPESr EWSFAPESl Jj'T* ^3f7Y?5r'w^

Page Sixteen. CONSTITimON, ATLANTA, GA., WEDNBSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913.

distinguished 'patient seems to be rap-] Idly improving. : There is no doubt LODGE NOTICE but that the charges to which he has AT THE THEATERS, SER IS READY been' subjected have added gravity to his condition. Dr. I. H. Goss, of Athens, C A special communication and Dr. H. R. {lodgers, of Mount Airy, of Piedmont Lodge No. 447. have been In consultation." James K. Hackett. F. & A. M., will T>« h«ld in Masonic Temple this (W«d- TO CONFRONT ENEMIES TO LOSE FEDERAL PUCE (At the Atlanta.) nesday) evening:, October CHIEF MUST BE TOLD Friday night James XK. Hackett, one 15, 1913, at 7:30 o'clock. The of the greatest of the heroic type of Entered Apprentice degree Ready to Appear Before Com- OF LIQUOR SHIPMENTS Mrs. J. M. Pierce Too Familiar Felder Presents Motion About President Wilson to Name Suc- stars, will come to the Atlanta with be conferred. All Masons. duly his new play, "The Grain of Dust,", qualified are fraternally invited to meet mittee No Matter What It With t)ther Men in Parish Copper Fumes Suit—Notes cessor to Atlanta Negro Who dramatized from the David Graham •with us. O. S. I*AIK, Rome, Gal, October 14.—(Special.)— Phillips' novel of that name. He will Worshipful Master. A unique experiment in prohibitory About Georgians. Is Recorder of Deeds. lay two nights and Saturday matinee, May Cost Him, Declares Husband. ?or which engagement seats are now H. M. WOOD, Secretary. legislation, fathered by.Seaborn Wright selling. Much Interest is being shown and passed unanimously by Rome's city in the coming of the romantic actor, Mcnint Airy, Ga., .October 14.—(Spe- council last night, requires a report o-f Declaring that his wife and another By John Corrlunn, Jr. By John Corrtaan, Jr. and a tremendous crowd is sure to FUNERAL NOTICE. cial.)—fhat he will be ready and con- all liquor shipments in excess of one man, whom he does not name, had Washington, October 14.—(Special.) Washington, October 14.—(Special.)— greet him. He is surrounded by an front his enemies before the congres- gallon, to be ma-de to the chief of police been tried by the deacons of the Pond- Thomas S. Folder, attorney general of President Wilson will shortly appoint excellent company, of which several ers 'Avenue Baptist church, and that Georgia, presented a motion today to a successor -to Henry Lincoln Johnson, members are well-known. Of these, sional committee whenever that body and city clerk. The ordinance is some- the "good hand of fellowship" had DAVIDSON—The friends, of Mr. and what similar rn one passed in Atlanta the supreme court asking that the of Atlanta, as recorder of deeds of the David Higgins has starred for year's Mrs. J. B. Davidson, Dr. and Mrs. P. W. may desire: it, no matter -what tt 'may been withdrawn by the church. Dr. J. in his own plays, while others are Douglas, Miss Bessie Davidson, Mr. and ^/co'st him, -was .the statement made by a few- months 0.0:0, but declared uncon- M. Pierce, a dentist, in the Inman agreement between the state of Geor- District of Columbia, ana congress will prominent, thus assuring a fine pre- 1 stitutional at that time. It. embedles building-, Sled suit for divorce yester- gia and the copper companies at Duck- be asked to pass legislation placing this sentation of the play. Mrs. B. H. Cocroft and Mr. and Mrs. Judge Speer today- and localizes, the famous U ebb bill, Ralph Davidson are requested to at- The Judge passed a very comfort- day in superior court against Mrs. town, Tenn., be made a part of the $4,000 job under , the department of tend the funeral of 3. B. Davidson at and is entirely constitutional, says Mr. Susan B. Pierce. court's record in the copper company Justice. At present, Johnson, who was his late residence, SO Augusta avenue, able day and took a short .ride with Wright. ..'..* The petition states that Mrs. Pierce "Mutt and Jeff in ~Panama." In brief, the ordinance recites that cases. formerly a -well-kijown, negro lawyer which will be held this afternoon at 3 ttriends; riding his favorite horse. His has been cruel to the dentist, and has The agreement Was made by author- o-£ Atlanta, reports'to no one but the f beverage con- damages. This sum will be disbused and with the Intermixture of the races, smartest of the cartoon musical plays, FUNERAL DIRECTORS tt. month ago at Highland, N. C., with and sides, with him in the affair. by a board of arbitrators representing hearty co-operation Is hardly to be ex- symptoms pointing .towards ptomaine tained in the package, etc. The city Dr. Pierce relates tliat his wife was and the company is up to an excellent clerk is required to inform the chief of the state and the copper companies. pected." standard giving much fun. Singing •{ARCLAY & BRANDON CO. poisoning, acute indigestion or indica- 1 infatuated with another man besides Recorder Johnson admits having tions of some pathological abdominal police within two hours, and matters the one with whom she was tried. The (Georgia Headlight Cane. and dancing and spectacular effects FUNERAL. Directors, are cow located condition. His ' case has-been marked are then left to the discretion of the been absent from his office three weeks help make the production one worth Neither of the men are named in the Attorney General Felder expressed during'1912. while to those who like this type of in their new borne. 246 Ivy etreet. by repeated exaggerations with intense officer. Tho ordinance declares all petition, but it is declared " that the the hope that the decision in, the Geor- \ -The recorder has considerable pat- sufferins since the first attack at liquor shipments not so reported as ipso one with whom the suit states Mrs. musical comedy. corner Baker. Auto ambulance. Highland and the present time. The facto illegal. gia Headlight ease would be handed l.ronage at his disposal. Eleven white Pierce was tried by the church deacons down by the supreme court next Mon- any popular theater than "The Lights of Goth- vannah's population has dengue fever. who sought to settle old scores when Senator Hoke Smith. . am," which is being so well received and !s The disease is epidemic here, but no the eas was turned out by a spoony Represenative Adamson entertained making so many frfends for the company alarm is felt as it seldom is fatal. Dr. couple. Senator Smith at his apartments at Lavinder has reported the epidemic to Prosperity Sale A call was sent into police headquar- ' G. C. Tittle Released. this week. The plot Is brimful of Interest- luncheon today. If patronage matters ing incidents, the story holds the attention Surgeon General Blue at Washington, ters and when Callmen Milan and Pal- were discussed, it was evidently ar- Macon, Ga.,' October^14.—(Special.)— of the audience from start to finish, and ' In the opinion of Dr. Lavinder and mer arrived on the scene choas had nol ranged satisfactorily, aa both appeared Grower C. Tittle, one of the three men the several sensational scenes'in the den oc- other physicians the disease is carried the least subsided. Clarence McDuffy well pleased with the conference. mixed up in the shooting ,tt Third and cupied by the gang o.f bandits Is one of the by a mosquito. Share in Our Profits of No. 215 East Merritts avenue, anc Among the Georgia visitors in Wash- Poplar streets Saturday afternoon, has most interesting tha't has Deen given in a. John Irwin, of No. 75 Inman avenue ington today were Judge John J. Mar- been released from the B:bu county melodrama Jn recent years. were placed under arrest, after they tin, of East Point, who came to attend jail under $500 bond, signed by his had been dissuaded from making tar- the dinner of the Aztec society last employer, L. C. Ricks. Tittle denies H. S. REMINGTON DIES The sale enters its' second big dav. In gets of each other from behind trees night; G. N. Saussy and wife, of Sa- that he took any part in the shooting. Burlesque. They were both charged with sus- vannah, and Pat H. Rice, of Augusta. (At the 'Columbia.) FROM EATING SAUSAGE whatever department you enter you are sure picion and will answer for their play- That "HlBh Life in a Cabaret" IB the fulness before Recorder Nash Broyles beat offering held out to the patrons of the this morning. Salaries of Deputy Collector*. . Columbia theater Is attested by the over- Savannah, Ga., October 14.—H. Sharp to find the best bargains that ever greeted Positions of deputy collectors of in- : flow audiencea which are attracted every Remington, a resident of Columbus. ternal revenue have seemed very at- MORTUARY. .matinee and nlebt. Three Dig specialty acts Ga.., on a visit to relatives here, ,die

soue surroundings, an^d accessi'bl e to car lln-e, schools "and WeeTkno- w of no prettier location tor a home for the man of moderate Four Full Q'rts E. B. Gibson's flt «V £\f\ Four Full Q'rts of E. B. Gibson's means. Pricek $8.500, on reasonable terms. Celebrated Monogram Rye . .

W. FliOYD JOHNSON.; The Most Remarkable Offer in History EDWIN P. AI88LEV. " Cat thi» Ad. out and Mail with Your Order. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded. ANSLEY & JOHNSON Yon can depend upon our Whiskey. «*. We have a reputation to maintain. bean the attaran^ All Fire, JJabiMty and Automobile Claims E. B. GIBSON, Distiller, • JE.JL GIBSON, Distiller, Adjusted and Paid Here ^^ar BOX 144 CHAT^NdpG^T^lHi^ BOX 144 CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Phone Ivy 873 300^301 Forsyth Bldft. THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION STANDARD SOUTHERN^ NEWSPAPER.

coflfm on -the •trerta «nd at aeTrastandfe 8 < Vol. XLVI.—No. 121. ATLANTA, GA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1913. Dally aad Snnday. carrier delivery, IS cents weekly.

Wit ^

A Series of Page Advertisements For «

THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER9'

!* Advertising Itself f- &? Entitled

The Atlanta Constitution—An Institution The Constitution As The Standard South- ern Newspaper Prestige and Advertising Values The Distinctiveness of The Morning Newspaper The Why of the Morning Newspaper ?

m 96°/o of the Women in the Homes Where The Constitution Goes Recftf It Regularly 1 *&&C3&~ -1 Two Newspaper Enterprises The 7 ri-Weekly Constitution

_____ ' The Constitution's Circulation Report

1j.s;^3~&^M»::'W^ iHK . A I LAM A, GA.. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER. 15 1913.

aH|r##^^

* •• '•'• 5? The Atlanta Constitution=An Institution

HE Atlanta Constitution is today, as it has give them a square deal. The startling accuracy of its polit- ical prophecies has become proverbial. been for years, recognized as the news- The Constitution has always believed, and lived up to the paper most typical of Atlanta, of Georgia belief, that while the editorial columns belonged to the paper, and of the South. the news columns belonged to the people. The Constitution has always recognized that the intelli- Its name is a hearthstone echo with the gence and strength of no community could be stronger than day-laborer and the clerk, the silk-hat man, the that of its farming element. It has always stressed its agri- cultural features. capitalist and the man behind the steam shovel. It established first a Weekly and then a Tri-Weekly— It is the voice of Atlanta, of Georgia, and of the South, to which has grown into the greatest Tri-Weekly newspaper in the nation and to the world. all the world. It is preeminently the newspaper of the South- That is why it has come to be known as "The Georgia Bi- ern farmer. It is the Southern farmer's every-other-day daily. i ble." People do not use illustrations of that nature without It trails the rural carrier into 107,000 rural homes three times i careful thought and long comparisons. You swear folk on each calendar week. the Bible. The people of Georgia swear by The Constitution This means, roughly estimated, and counting five mem- • because of its accuracy, its truthfulness, its inspiration, its bers to the family, 530,000 Southern farmers and their families cleanliness and its usefulness. read The Constitution three times a week. The estimate is Why is it that Atlanta, that Georgia and the South turn purposely conservative. instinctively to The Constitution? Why do YOU personally like That is why the heart of the rural South, the feeders and the newspaper? Why does tjie native-born Southerner, and the largely the clothiers of the rest of us, look to The Constitution •if as the supreme court in all those functions a newspaper may ?? great mass of other Americans we are so rapidly assimilating, If rely upon The Constitution as a sure guide to Southern senti- discharge. & ment and the spokesman of right public opinion? It is conceded that The Constitution's persistent propagan- % Here are a few reasons. They will interest you, since they da is chiefly responsible for the diversification and the better *9 analyze to the furthest the psychology and anatomy of the per- farming methods that are gathering momentum in the South f? today. t? sonality of "The Standard Southern Newspaper." •< • This summarization explains why men, women and chil- t ? The paramount reason is that The Constitution dren through Atlanta, Georgia and the South regard The Con- tf today, as always, issues a complete, sane resume stitution as the court of last resort for news, for breadth of of twenty-four hours' news. It is not scrambled opinion, for promptness, for education and for accuracy. From the day in 1868, when the first crude sheet appeared, together with news half told and features cramped to this day, when the finished and expensive product leaves from very frenzy of haste. the great perfecting presses, The Constitution's efforts have It is a Southern newspaper—with Southern instincts and always been to— Southern viewpoint. Keep close to the heart-beat of the people. ** »4 The Constitution was started with a great mission. It was • i • To make Ishmaelites of all the sharp-traders £• established in 1868. The year brought the high-tide of the mis- •i • eries and the tests of Reconstruction. A whole people was be- with the public confidence. t ing born again. Chaos ruled the land. Bitterness and fear To sacrifice profit, if need be, for truth and i[ 4•< •i lurked at every corner. A negroid government was upon the for service. » people. The institutions of centuries' growth were in the melt- •• ing pot. On each side was misgiving. Upon every hand was To ignore gaudy and clap-trap methods, even if the need for courage and for vision. though they brought a dearly-bought temporary ••• It was the privilege of The Constitution to serve the city, success to competitors. i% the state, and the South under these conditions. To keep jam up with progress, but never to mis- It was its privilege to stiffen the backbone of the timid; to soften the asperities of the irreconcilable. take selfish hysteria for progress. It was its right to sustain hope when hope appeared folly; To cater to no class exclusively, but to be when thousands in despair were abandoning the South. worthy of the friendship, or at least the respect, Where concession was compatible with dignity it preached of all classes. concession. To hold such a course as to be regarded as the Where inflexibility was indicated it counseled a stand that was unreceding. ever-advancing standard by which all other com- The Constitution found little difficulty in this task. It parisons are made. knew the mighty and unconquerable spirit of the Southern For forty-five years this policy has been religiously fol- people. It knew the superabundance of the South's natural re- lowed. That is why, whether people come from Atlanta, from sources. In those dark days, it looked beyond and saw the Georgia, the South or the nation, they hail The Constitution destiny that lay on the other side of the abyss. unquestionably as fully entitled to be known as "The Standard The man who is closest to you is the man who has stood Southern Newspaper." at your elbow in the day of test. That is how The Constitution That is why The Atlanta Constitution is something more grew into the warp and woof of the confidence of Atlanta, of than a newspaper. It is Georgia, and of the South. Its hold has steadily increased with the years. When the "Force Bill" threatened to revive the nightmare' A SOUTHERN INSTITUTION of Reconstruction, it was the campaigning by The Constitution It is that element of prestige, representing the that so stiffened the spines of Southern congressmen that the nght ensued which sent that ill-advised measure to the discard. confidence of the public for many years, that gives In later days The Constitution's policy has uniformly been it an added value as a home newspaper, apart from one of construction, as against destruction; of reconciliation, its superiority in purely journalistic excellencies. not ^vindictiveness nor the role of the historic ghoul. The Constitution's viewpoint is nation-wide, not pro- Its 50,000 circulation is superior for advertising vincial. purposes because its readers, probably half of whom 4.-* _In *he Politics of the city and state, The Constitution's at- have read the paper for a long period of years, in- titude has been the same. It has conscientiously sought out stinctively give the advertising much the same cre- and followed what it regarded as the best eventual interests the majority. At the same time it has avoided intolerance. dence as they do the news and editorial matters, be- 1 he paper might be sincerely opposed to certain policies ing influenced by it in their purchases similarly as or candidates. That did not prevent it from doing its best to they are in other activities by the paper itself. THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER"

I SPAPFRI 'SPAPERJ ELE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA.,

M^

•9 t ? tf \ • ; The Constitution as the • p Standard Southern Newspaper

HERE are various types of newspapers each with its distinct appeal and of varying degrees of popular- ity j.n different sections of the country. All of them are represented in the South. €LOne is the sensational newspaper. It is not as fashionable as it used to be. Many shrewd news- paper men, trained in sensing the public taste, think it is waning very fast. Faking is its foundation. Its program is to hit the reader every day between the eyes. If bona fide news serves its turn, that news is played up in blazing, hysterical headlines. The reading matter screams and smells of fire. It is merciless when it treats scandal. Sometimes it is reckless of the community welfare so long as it shocks the pennies from people's pockets. If material for these spasms is not forthcoming, it has often been known to resort to invention. Its editorial views are biased, bushwhacking and uncandid. type is the feature newspaper. It is much milder than the first, but their programs have something in common. It is always in search of the picturesque, the unique, the bizarre. Often it prints accurate news. Oftener the news is "muffed" or obscured or muddled in the effort to distort a feature out of it. It abounds in graphic pictures. Its editorial, like its news policy, is casual, flippant and happy-go-lucky. €LA third type is the ultra-conservative newspaper. Some mighty fine sheets are in this class. Most of them lean too far backward. They are afraid of progress in the news and public issues until progress has grown whiskers. An innovation generally gives them the palsy. For a thing to be new is to make it rest under suspicion* They never like to get from under the shadow of the established order. A great big world-thrill- ing event generally leaves them with a steady pulse-beat. €LThere are other types* These three are archtypes. €LThe Atlanta Constitution, as "The Standard Southern Newspaper," is distinctive enough as to have almost if not quite created a fourth pronounced type. €LIt is the plumb-line by which Atlanta, the state, south and nation gauge other newspapers of the same class. If Since its establishment it has been operated upon a clean-cut, the Titanic disaster like reciting a lesson would not get very far. definite program, with definite journalistic purposes behinc^ If The Constitution employs able and highly-trained men to put it. That program has not been and is not the result of accident. GINGER into The Truth. It was not stumbled upon in the dark. It is the result of a keen and patient study of the paper's field, microscopic examination 1f It believes in an attractive dress for itself. Good clothes on of the best and the worst in its contemporaries, and intimate man, woman or newspaper represent good taste. sympathy with the ideas of its constituency. If Typographically, The Constitution is a model. It strives for all the grace compatible with the correct estimate of every 1f The Constitution is an entity. article's worth. If It represents the best of other types of newspapers, with an If It employs experts who know what's what and who's who in added individuality of its own. the news, and what credit to give men and events. It is not 1f First of all, it prints the news of other countries, its own wedded to any arbitrary typographical formulas, when impor- country < its own state and its own city. The public wants in its tant things happen. newspaper, primarily, a report of all the news occurrences that are informative and interesting and fit to print. The Constitu- If When occasion justifies, to use street parlance, it "throws it tion gives right of way to news. The greater portion of its ed- into the high gear" in the matter of type display. But it strives itorial organization is concentrated upon the task of gathering always to preserve consistency between the real importance of the news and presenting it properly. No newspaper of its class news and its typographical presentation. anywhere prints a more comprehensive news review of the 1f It believes in features that are entertaining—in entertainment world occurrences. itself. If It gives the TRUTH in the news prime consideration. It re- 1f It retains humorists and facile artists to relieve the paper of gards itself as in a compact with its readers to deliver certain the heaviness which the printing of unflavored news only goods. It does not knowingly deliver damaged or tainted goods. would entail. 11 It believes allegations should be verified before they go to its 1f It prints fiction, essays and various other classes of matter readers. It does not countenance smutty or suggestive news. that are as entertaining as they are informative, so that the It stresses cleanliness. paper will provide interesting reading for every taste and mood. 11 This does not entail prudishness. It means THE TRUTH 1f In its editorial columns it honestly strives for what it believes stripped of sly embellishment. to be for the good of the largest number. If But it does not believe there is any necessity to present the 1f It does not fawn. news dully. "An honest tale spreads best being plainly told," If It does not misrepresent. f but that does not mean TOLD PLAINLY. 11 It does not mind making enemies. If Everyone likes a bright but accurate talker, and everyone If It avoids provincialism. likes a bright but accurate newspaper. The paper that described If It tries to be national in its viewpoint. ; ^ALTOGETHER ITS PROGRAM IS TO APPEAL TO THE JUDGMENT, THE CONFIDENCE, THE BELIEF IN THE WHOLESOME THINGS OF LIFE, THE SANE DESIRE FOR SANE PROGRESS AND FOR ALL WORTH WHILE THINGS OF EXISTENCE, OF THE BEST TYPE OF SOUTHERN PEOPLE.

€LThe program has been undeviating. tf «? €LlHATisWHY •f EAT A CONSTITUTION n? IS "THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER"

i

- • !< {NEWSPAPER! NEWSPAPER! ^•(Pfr v* gnwp

THE CONSTITUTION. ATLANTA, GAl, WWDKESDAY, - OCTOBER 15.

t*

»•< «* £• Prestige and Advertising Values

DVERTISING has developed so rapidly along the various In evidence of this there are about 2,500 men in Atlanta courses of least resistance that fallacy after fallacy have who are members of one or more of the three leading social A had their vogue. Millions have been wasted in the dis- clubs. The majority of men in Atlanta of considerable means covery of their error. The most flagrant abuses, contradic- or income are members of one or more of these clubs. The tory to good business principles and commercial ethics, have entire population which they represent, on a basis of five to crept in and seemed to thrive. each family, is but 12,500, or 7 per cent of the entire popula- tion. If a newspaper reached every one of their homes.it But crooked advertising methods have about hanged would have but 2,500 class circulation in Atlanta. themselves. Wildcat methods and questionable business de- There are no stores in Atlanta catering to the wealthy vices based upon advertising, are curling up and disappearing classes exclusively. Fifth Avenue in New York is lined with •& before a national sentiment for honesty and conservatism. them for miles. There are not enough wealthy people in the Advertising is very rapidly systematizing itself. Sound busi- city to provide a profitable patronage to many stores carrying •fite ness principles are coming into their own. The advertising adventurer is finding no more easy harvests. The public is only expensive merchandise. Ninety per cent of the stock of not gullible today. Studious analysis and the finest sort of Atlanta stores is sold to all classes. Most stores carry some conservatism in the expenditure of advertising appropriations lines of goods that only the wealthy can afford, and some lines are taking the place of reckless speculation. Advertising is very that only the poor will accept. Broadly speaking, however, stores are not stocked for the classes, but for the masses, be- much nearer being a true business science than ever before. cause the masses make up the great "90 per cent." €t C C, C. The same thing is true of newspaper circulation. Any •i? newspaper of circulation running into the thousands must NE of the phases of this reaction is the increasing aver- reach about the same general average of people as any other sion of advertisers to buying space merely on circula- paper in the same field. O tion statements. A few years ago, "How much circu- Consequently 1,000 actual circulation, the kind that is lation has your publication?" was invariably the first, and delivered in the homes, of one newspaper in Atlanta and Geor- frequently the only, question a publisher was asked gia among white people is, on that basis alone, worth about as to answer. In order to answer it effectively and truthfully, much for advertising purposes as an equal quantity of any as nearly all of them desired to do, he directed the entire other newspaper. energy of his operating organization to producing circulation figures, regardless of cost and of profit to himself or the adver- C, G. C, C, tiser. He was driven to that extreme by the advertiser. HERE is, however, a distinction that relates to quality In recent years the most skillful advertisers; those with rather than to quantity, which is responsible for a very the largest annual appropriations; those whose business suc- T great difference in circulation value in relation to ad- cess is the most contingent upon their advertising program, vertising results. are discounting mere circulation figures. They are systemat- It has been demonstrated repeatedly, by exhaustive tests, ically gathering information from which to answer for them- that all other things being approximately equal, the longer a selves such questions as these: publication has had the same list of subscribers and the better What is the character of the publication? its standing with them the higher is its productiveness as a What is its age? medium for legitimate lines of advertising. This element is commonly referred to as PRESTIGE. What kind of people are its subscribers? It is accounted for on two grounds. The longer a news- Over what area does its circulation range? paper goes into a home the more it becomes a part of the fam- How does it secure and hold its subscribers? ily life. The reading of it regularly becomes a fixed habit. It *$? Is its appeal to its constituency such as to elicit their con- is read thoroughly day by day. The more thoroughly a paper fidence in its news and editorial opinions? is read, for any cause, the more is the advertising read. Instinctively people who read advertising, and nearly all What proportion of the people it reaches are both by loca- of them do, unless it is obviously not entitled to it, give it the tion of residence and station in life reasonably possible same general credence they do the news or editorial pages purchasers? upon which it appears. If a reader has confidence in the de- i Is its management such as to give complete credence to pendability of his newspaper, intuitively he transfers that con- its circulation representations? fidence to its advertising columns. The association of ideas is Advertisers desiring to reach only certain classes are de- inevitable. manding even more special information, for the purpose of de- CL CL CL CL termining what mediums will give them the most responsive circulation, in relation to their particular advertising. HE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION was established forty- * five years ago. It has always been the same general At the convention of the Associated Advertising Clubs of T type of a newspaper it is today—conservative, clean, America, in Baltimore last May, there was a veritable Outcry able, enterprising and progressive. Its circulation has had a from national advertisers generally against unnatural in- gradual growth from a few thousand to approximately 50,000. creases in newspaper circulations, bringing with them inev- itably increased rates. They demanded solidification; inten- The average period of 1,000 subscriptions taken at random • sification of circulations within natural bounds; the minimi- in Atlanta recently in a test upon another matter, was found to zation of waste; and the employment of only those methods be ten years. Probably half of its present subscribers have i of expanding circulation as will produce permanent readers taken the paper many years, some for twenty-five years and i among responsible classes. more for ten years or more. G. C. C C A considerable part of The Constitution's constant in- t HERE are, broadly speaking, among the whites, no crease in circulation comes through sons and daughters of old £ classes of people in Atlanta and Georgia in relation to subscribers entering new homes of their own, with the paper T newspaper circulation. In such cities as New York, as one of the first family investments. Chicago and Boston, there are distinct classes, each sufficient The Constitution is referred to as "The Georgia Bible." It to maintain newspapers of class appeal. For example, The is a great Southern Institution. It stands for all that is best in New York Evening Post and The Boston Transcript, both ex- cellent and prosperous papers, are read almost exclusively by southern life, both traditionally and currently. It has that wealthy and cultured people. prestige which goes with reliability. Here in Georgia everybody is pretty much alike. There It is those two factors, in relation to advertising values, is not much difference between any of us in dress, food, more than any distinctions in the classes of people it reaches, habits and sentiments. There is only a small proportion of which gives it a very high value as an advertising medium, very poor people and almost as small a percentage of people and which more than offset mere quantities of papers distrib- who are wealthy. uted as the basis for circulation figures. a THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTIONJ "Jf/E STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER'

ti?

1EWSP4PERS -IWSPAPFR! miff** •^P^g^Cjy^i-T!^-

* THE COWniTtmON, ATLANTA, OA., -fi OCTOBER* 35,

OggiPOTTO f si? •• •• !fc

; ••i The Distinctiveness of i B.• i**sr the Morning Newspaper *•

Sf NEARLY every section of this country the representative newspapers are issued in the morning— -the New York World, the New York Times, the New •S? •I? York Herald, the Chicago Tribune, the Washington Post, the Memphis Commer- & •S? cial' Appeal, the New Orleans Times-Democrat, the New Orleans Picayune, the Seattle Post- Intelligencer, the Los Angeles Times, the Springfield (Mass.) Republican, '. i ?sr?- the Richmond Times-Dispatch, the Houston Post, the Cincinnati Enquirer, the Cleve- a* land Plain-Dealer, the St. Louis Globe- Democrat, the St. Louis Republic, the Minne- apolis Tribune, the Louisville Courier- Journal and the Atlanta Constitution. :: i ^ These are the names that come to one's mind instantly when leading newspapers i ? are thought of* \ CL Why? Not because of their age, the extent of their circulation, the names of their •-9 ••*v• owners, the volume of their advertising, or such special distinctions, but because ili they are representative. They reflect sectional sentiment. They are the most forceful editorial influences in their communities. •. ? The fact of their issuance in the morning and not in the afternoon is a prime i factor in their success. They have no greater facilities in securing news. The transmission of news under modern methods is practically instantaneous. News from a World-Wide viewpoint is in the making twenty-four hours a day. No more news happens to the advantage of morning than evening papers. CL Afternoon papers must be produced in about seven hours to meet distribution f conditions. Morning newspapers are produced in about twelve hours. i €L That approximate five hours is the difference between jthe flashing of news in bulletins, hastily gathered facts, meager details, articles written under stress of time limited by minutes, editorial consideration between an editor's desk and lino- • type machine; and information verified and digested, rumors confirmed or rejected, the news written thoughtfully and well, skillful selection, tasteful and pleasing typo- graphical presentation. ? The slower process makes a little soberer newspaper. It is minus the screams^ The ink is likely to be dry when one gets it. I$ut it contains consistency. It is a finished product. It represents the same enterprise, alertness and human interest |4 with thoroughness and care added, which make for reliability and confidence. » «** *LIN RELATION TO MOST MATTERS FOR WHICH NEWSPAPERS ARE

»~o SERVICEABLE, DEPENDABILITY IS QUITE AS VALUABLE AS INSTAN- rr

•4k •* TANEOUSNESS. i THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION " "THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER g i*

^^fl":"^^^ ^Ir^r^^HirlrflrflrflT^^^tHfP^^flrfH^flr^rlrrl-rlHlHlH^^

SPAPFRf 'SPAPERJ THE CONSTITUTION. ATLANTA, GA., T ; OCTOBER gi, 1913.

• • •. The Why of the Morning Newspaper

11 Advertising results from any newspaper, whether borrow some portion of the credence which those su- for a jewelry store or a second-hand shop, are depend- periorities give it as a newspaper, and advertising re- able, aside from the merit of the advertising itself, sults are correspondingly increased. on quantity of actual eireulatiotfr^as represented by ^Contrary to a lingering belief, based upon conditions copies which go into the home; the extent to which which have passed away, morning newspapers are at its subscribers are the substantial portion of all good no disadvantage in relation to circulation among classes of people; its attractiveness as a newspaper working people. The general acceptance of the eight- which controls the amount of time its readers devote hour day enables the wage-earner to work less hours, to it regularly which in turn regulates the likelihood as a rule, than his employers. They now report for duty of the advertising being read; its standing and influ- at 7:30 or 8 o'clock. They arise at 6 o'clock or ear- ence with its readers who instinctively give the ad- lier, with ample leisure to read the morning news- vertising the same credence as to the news and edito- paper. rial columns. 1JThe afternoon paper sometimes bases its claims of IJThe hour of the day or night at which a newspaper superiority as an advertising medium upon the theory is published is of less importance than these things, of the family circle around the library table with the but whatever advantages there may be in that are in evening paper passing in whole or in part from father lavor of one delivered in the morning. to mother, from mother to daughter and son until it had been digested column by column by every mem- Hit has from 2:30 o'clock at night, the approximate hour at which morning papers are printed, until 6 ber of the family. o'clock to reach the door-step of subscribers in ad- 1fThe family circle in that sense is not the institution vance of their rising. it used to be. More than ever before, especially in the cities, people are seeking entertainment and recrea- IJWith mail editions printed as early, in some cases, as tion after working hours. Recently an Atlanta news- with The Constitution for instance, as 10 o'clock at paper made the plausible statement that ten per cent night, it has from five to ten hours in which to travel of the people were now engaged professionally in en- with night trains to outside points for breakfast-ta- tertaining the other nine-tenths. ble reading. Afternoon papers can cover only ,a IfThere are something like 5,000 automobiles on the1 small area on the day of publication. city streets or country roads practically every night, 11A morning newspaper reaches the family circle at each providing pleasure for from three to five per- the beginning of the day's activities; when the minds sons. of all who read it are clear and fresh and responsive 1llt used to take from $1 to $2 to see a play with a to impressions from the printed page whether news choice of two or three theaters. Nowadays a nickel or advertising. Good salesmen make their most im- or a dime secures admission into one of a dozen portant calls in the morning before their prospects' moving-picture play-houses, where a thoroughly minds are tired and their sensibilities dulled. pleasing and for the most part wholesome entertain- Iflt is generally accepted, because nearly all men read ment may be had. They are all packed afternoon and a newspaper before going to work, that, the morning night. newspaper is superior for advertising addressed to HThe streets of Atlanta are busy with people in the them. morning but in the afternoon and evening they can scarcely accommodate the crowds that throng them. IfEven more generally women, to whom the major- ity of advertising is addressed, whether their house- KBaseball, golf, tennis, card-playing, dancing, musi- hold work is done by servants or not, have more leis- cal concerts, lectures, week-day evening church serv- ure for reading between the time the morning meal is ices, social visiting, the parks—in fact, practically all over, the children off to school, the day's routine de- activities of a recreatory nature are in direct competi- termined, and noon than at any other period of the tion with the afternoon newspaper at the time of its day. publication and delivery. Consequently, it has its own natural handicaps as an advertising medium. HAny fair investigation will substantiate this. Re- HThis is said not in depreciation of the evening news- cently The Constitution tested the extent to which paper, for most of them are good mediums because women read it and learned, as a part of the result, not they have true merits as such, apart from the mere only that 96 per cent of the women in the homes fact of publication in the afternoon from which no where the paper is delivered read it regularly, but of special advantage accrues to them. these, 73 per cent do so in the morning hours, 8 per cent in the afternoon and 21 per cent irregularly as IJThe Constitution's 45,000 Daily and to time. Of those who read it before noon, 27 per cent do so about 7 o'clock, 38 per cent about 8 o'clock, 48,000 Sunday circulation, its full repre- 27 per cent about 9 o'clock and 8 per cent after 9 sentation with the substantial people of o'clock. all classes, its excellence as a newspaper fin the same investigation it was learned also that of according to the best journalistic stan- those who receive an evening paper in addition to dards, its incomparable influence with The Constitution, 83 per cent read the evening paper its readers, supplemented by the fact no more regularly or thoroughly. ' that it is a morning newspaper—the UA morning newspaper, constructed after and not only morning newspaper in Atlanta— during the hurly-burly of the active business day, is complete, accurate, well edited and dependable. In are combined to make it a fine medium that sense it is more conservative than its afternoon for all advertising purposes for which contemporaries. The advertising columns inevitably any newspaper anywhere is adaptable. •Jr THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION "THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER

OTHMHIHIHMHMHM 1 p Wj!A!U-nu\jF« ir^' 1r»u»»WT-i?.-- •»•*> t-n^.-

THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA., JFBIM:SO. / Q1S»DB1?!, 35, 3913.

!jaii!^^ : —; -

* <-•',•*'

f »2o 96 % of the Women in ttoe

* •->#: The' Constitution Goes Read It Regularly!

HE CONSTITUTION made a comprehensive and exhaustive test recently to determine for itself and its advertisers the extent to which the women in the homes where the paper is delivered read it, and what effect the store advertising it prints has in relation to their purchases. A letter containing ten simple questions was sent to 1,000 women in Atlanta, the heads of house- holds where The Constitution is delivered regularly, scattered at random and without special selection. All the replies to these letters, in the handwriting and bearing the signature of the women themselves, together with the complete tabulation from which these percentages were made, are on file in the advertising department of The Constitution, and all who are interested in reviewing them are invited to do so. s? The tabulation of the replies showed these ASTONISHING RESULTS O of the women in the homes where The Constitution is delivered read it regularly.

tF9f /O read the advertising.

iff /O say they are influenced in their purchases by the advertising.

O read The Constitution in the morning; 7°/o in the afternoon, and 20% at some ungiven time. of those who read it in the morning do so about 7 o'clock; 38% read it about 8 o'clock; 27% as fate as 9 o'clock, and 8% after 9 o'clock. O spend half an hour reading it and 52% read it an hour. T do not read the paper at all; .001% for lack of time; .002% because paper is carried away from home; only 1 out of entire number because she was not interested in newspaper reading. /O read The Constitution as much or more than an evening paper. , .;— '"• ' } ' .. The average period of the subscriptions of those who answered the questions was 20 years. Not a single woman of all those who answered did not like The Constitution as a newspaper, THE DEDUCTIONS If the percentages derived from this test are applied to the entire Atlanta circulation of The Constitution, it means that— 14,4QO Atlanta women read The Constitutionv regularly.

' ' • f . • - 12,900 Atlanta women read the advertising in The Constitution. 12,000 Atlanta women are influenced in their purchases by this advertising. (If the same formulas are applied still further to the entire circulation, both city and country, of 45,000 Daily and 48,000 Suaday, these figures would be more than doubled.) This makes a guaranteed audience every morning in the year for all advertising containing a meritorious and opportune announcement to women. MR. ADVERTISER-—In the light of these facts, what is to be said of your business sagacity if you permit a single issue of The Atlanta Constitution to enter that many households and to be read by that many

*i - •i? women, without your business message ? THE ATLANTA CONSTITUT "THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER"

{NEWSPAPER! WSPAPER! THE ATLANTA, GA,, WEDNESDAY, 35, 1913,

Which Demonstrated The Atlanta Constitution's Extraordinary Hold Upon Its Constituency of Readers

THE CONTEST THE WOMAN'S EDITION In the winter months of 1912-13, ending on On June 4th, The Federated Women's Clubs of 1 February 14th, The Atlanta Constitution conducted Georgia issued The Woman's Edition of The At- a Merchants and Manufacturers' Contest, an in- lanta Constitution, which has been for years the genious joint advertising and selling campaign in official newspaper of this body of women's clubs, which many manufacturers of trade-marked the largest and strongest in the United States, em- products, with national distribution and a number bracing 118 clubs and 18,000 members, as well as of Atlanta retail businesses, participated. The Daughters of the American Revolution and The A voting contest, with $6,000.00 in cash and other prizes, United Daughters of The Confederacy. Special de- was the means by which the interest of the readers of the paper was concentrated upon certain lines of goods and particular partments, edited by club women, in which all the stores. Many Church societies, lodges, charitable organi- organization announcements, addresses by the offi- zations and under special terms, individuals, competed for cers, etc., are printed, are prominent features of prizes. the Sunday paper. Votes in the contest were given only for labels and cartons from trade-marked merchandise and for invoices, receipted The primary object of the edition from the Fed- bills and cash register tickets from retail stores which were eration's standpoint was to obtain the nucleus of brought to The Constitution office and deposited. Every vote the Ella F. White Memorial Endowment Fund for represented the actual sale of merchandise. the maintenance of the state work. •s? The total vote represented the sale of $494,039.00 in grocer, drug, food and beverage The Federation, through its permanent organiza- tion, as well as a special organization created for the products; purpose, not only wrote and edited all the news and $757,554.00 inj^ail sjtorje merchandise; editorial matter, but sold the advertising and 15,000 • » $1,251,593.00 was the aggregate business done copies of the edition. The women were entirely •B by the advertisers participating as a direct result of responsible for its success, except in the preliminary * the campaign. The indirect benefits in new trade plans and some guidance from time to time in the and additional publicity were incalculable. technical phases of the production. 3* At the close of the campaign four large rooms The Woman's Edition was 126 pages in size, the largest single issue of a newspaper ever printed in the state and one of and a great deal of overflow space in The Consti- the largest in the history of journalism. It had a circulation of tution building were occupied by tons of labels and' 60,000 copies. Each copy weighed two pounds. It contained cartons. 8,258 inches of advertising. The Federation of Women's Clubs These were the results for a few of the products: participated in the profits substantially. 1,9OO,OOO labels, representing $95,OOO.OO of Uncle From every journalistic standpoint The Woman's Edition Sam Bread. was notable. It was entirely different from the usual type of 1,OOO,OOO bottle caps, representing $5O,OOO.OO of newspaper special editions. All the matter was of the most Red Rock—a 5c drink. interesting character. The women did real newspaper stunts ? 6 truck loads of carton lids, representing $1OO,OOO.OO in the way of interviewing prominent men on delicate polit- of Cottolene. ical subjects, attended police court as reporters, and obtained 1OO,517 bands, representing SIO,517.OO of the Web- striking photographs. The art work, the typographical make- ster Cigar. up and the arrangement was exceptionally fine from every crit- 94,428 cartons, representing S9,442.OO of Post Toas- ical viewpoint. M< ties. The issue attracted national attention. There was scarcely 1OO,OOO wrappers, representing $6,OOO.OO of Clean- a newspaper of importance in the United States that did not ing Soap. comment upon it as a remarkable achievement, both for the $23,OOO.OO of Gold Medal Flour. Women's Clubs and The Constitution. These two enterprises, both of them completed in the ensuing calendar year, have unusual significance when the complete facts about them are stressed in relation to The Constitution as an advertising meaium. \ So far as can be ascertained, The Constitution sold more merchandise, a total of $1,231,693.00, in the •S- M. & M. Contest than was ever sold by a similar plan in this country. The Woman's Edition was the most successful from a journalistic as well as a financial standpoint of any similar enterprise evef undertaken in this country. WHY? Constitution readers are its loyal friends. This is especially true of the women. It is able to secure from them, for any enterprise for which it stands sponsor, a large enlistment, because of its hold upon them through its character, its journalistic excellencies, and all the elements that make it a fine family newspaper. No other newspaper of relative size could have sold $1,251,393.00 in merchandise through such a sell' ing plan because its prestige with its readers would not be strong enough to enlist enough people in buying certain brands of products and trading at certain stores. No other newspaper enjoys the relationship with as strong and powerful organization as The Georgia «rf Federation of Women's Clubs, as to have made The Woman's Edition the notable success it was. If the readers of The Const itud m, particularly the women, by their attachment to it, enable the paper to accomplish these two, remarkable things upon its own initiative, does it not signify that they read the paper, that they have confidence in it, that they give advertising addressed to them a sympathetic interest that can scarcely be secured in any other advertising medium? ts? J & TH S ^LANTA CONSTITUTION "THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER" W *? •i i* ji&Hs^amHi~i~i«&E%&^ ^

Uht^b^k*-*. NEWSPAPER! $9 The Tri-Weekly Constitution

HE TRI-WEEKLY CONSTITUTION, printed on Tuesdays, Thursdays and • K ti? Saturdays, is the greatest newspaper of its kind in the world. I6* €LThere are many agricultural and stock publications, and a few weekly and •If n»< ?• s&mi-weekly newspapers of large circulation, but there is no other three-times" a-week newspaper anywhere catering directly to the farming element of even approxi- if mate standing or circulation. €LReaching its readers every other day, with the news of the world summarized for the previous 48 hours, it occupies a distinct and exclusive field as an every-other-day daily. €LThe ordinary farm paper issued weekly, fortnightly or monthly cannot print the news. It prints farm in- ? formation—not current news. The weekly or semi-weekly newspaper even when attempting to print the news, as its chief function, is too infrequent in its issue to keep the average farmer posted as to market and crop conditions. A Tri- Weekly or every-other-day newspaper strikes the exact medium between the daily and the weekly or monthly farm publication. C./n the crop growing months, when the average industrious farmer and his family must work from f(sun to T? • ( • sun," he does not always have time to read a daily newspaper. At such periods also he reads his farm paper ? 9 if he has time. Its perusal is not essential. He will, however, take time, in preference to all other literature that reaches his home, to read a newspaper every-other-day simply to keep posted as to what is going on in the world, and to keep track of crop, weather and market conditions. €L That is why The Tri- Weekly Constitution fills such a distinct need in the Southern States and why it is so popular in every rural district south of the Mason and Dixon line. €LThe average circulation of The Tri-Weekly Constitution is 107,000 copies per issue, making a total weekly issue of more than 300,000. €LThe uniform subscription rate is $1.00 per year. There is not a name on the subscription list, except some- thing less than 1,000 service copies, that is not a paid in advance subscription. This very low price for 156 issues of an up-to-date, every-other-day daily is so low as to almost maintain 100,000 circulation without the em- ployment of the usual expensive circulation promotion methods. €LThe approximate circulation of The Tri-Weekly Constitution by states is: ? GEORGIA - - - 34,040 TENNESSEE 3,040 ARKANSAS - 2,020 VIRGINIA - - - - 1,300 ALABAMA 25,780 OKLAHOMA - 580 NORTH CAROLINA - 10,100 MISSISSIPPI 7,060 KENTUCKY - 1,440 SOUTH CAROLINA - 11,280 LOUISIANA 2,200 OTHER STATES 325 FLORIDA --- - 3,480 TEXAS - - 5,080 TOTAL 107,725 €LThe advertising rate for The Tri-Weekly Constitution is 50c per agate line flat, or $7.00 an inch for the three issues of each week. Advertising is accepted only for the three consecutive issues without change. CE,On account of the extent and range of its circulation, over thirteen states, it is especially adaptable to na- tional advertising, of which it carries a larger volume than any other similar publication in the south. v w CUWbre than half of the advertising it prints is "keyed," enabling advertisers to check exactly the number of I inquiries or the amount of the sale of merchandise each advertisement in each issue produces. Because of these provable results, The Tri- Weekly Constitution has for many years been generally known as one of the half dozen best advertising mediums in the United States for the lines of advertising for which it is adaptable.

i €LANY CONCERN WITH DEALER DISTRIBUTION COVERING THE SOUTH CAN REACH 500,000 PEOPLE, THREE TIMES EACH CALENDAR WEEK, THROUGH A MEDIUM THAT IS POPULARLY KNOWN AMONG ITS READ- ERS AS "THE GEORGIA BIBLE." (LIT WILL PAY TREMENDOUSLY FOR ANY MAIL ORDER ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN APPEALING TO RESIDENTS OF RURAL ROUTES AND SMALL CITIES AND TOWNS. THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION "THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER"

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THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, i GA., ~W £L>KE^BAY, OCTOBER'S, 1913. jQipiDipqiipiiiipcipOT^ The Constitution's Circulation Report ••••••• •••••••••••IMHiHIIBHHHlBHHHIHHBHHBIHHHHHHHif^flaHIM •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••B ••••••••HMMHBHHHBMMH1 \

The sworn circulation of The Atlanta Constitution reported to the United States government, as required by law, for the six months

period ending September 30, 1913, was:-- « f

• f t f DAILY

H? Paid circulation - 42,686 t ? To employees, samples, office • *t T? f? uses and free 1,037 •f t• ?• TOTAL CIRCULATION - - 43,723 t ?

•* f• SUNDAY : f I? Paid circulation - 45,649 To employees, samples, office uses and free 1,781 TOTAL CIRCULATION - - 47,430

? Average Circulation Month of September 1913

T ! DAILY .... 43,816 I SUNDAY - - - 47,66O

Approximately 40% was in the city of Atlanta, 55% within a 50-mile radius, and the remainder in contiguous territory, most of it in the State of Georgia.

•• •9 I? •f tf rr\THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION t? THE STANDARD SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER"

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