Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 29, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
HOKE-LITTLE JOE
LINES IMIHfi
Macon Convention Nearest to
Love Feast Georgia Has
Known for Years.
States m< : I p. i n .. real ind
near, returning from Mac..n and yea
terday’s s:,i’. convention. expressed
th- • today as w<
i.-ficd xx it ■ - onv. ■ -.n-v.-rk,
T' . virion- contests coming before
the .01 vention. w hil. strenuous in their
toward s< ttlement, were fin
ished to the satisfaction of the nia
ly to remain
T. - Btox . -Pottie contest was sot
th ' on a 'st Jam.' . 1 hi■ and satist o’torx
terms-, ail the way around. Broyles’
manly attitudi won him thousands • f
friend- :■ 01 . - foaming of Pottle.
His ex- ma! withdrawal from the con
test. ittpled w ith Ir. qu- st that his ad
versary be male th<- unanimous nomi
nee of ih< convention, wa ■ rated a fine
thing for i. a tnony «nd pea . inside the
party
Price Played Cards Right.
Price, as practtc.all) all agree today,
w 1. t,i.> on •• pos-|b|e compromi-e can
didate in thr :gri< ultuml eommission
ershi| .< ■ T • • between Blalock
and Brown had cone Io where neither
could swing to t other, in any possi
b! cirmimstane.-.
Price played far-seeing polities early
in the gam.- when ho refused to indulge
1” ■ er-and-t ongs methods
adopted by Brown and Blalock, and his
dignified campaign unquestionably
mad' victor? possible for him yester
day
Discriminating observers are saying
today that Joint 5! Slaton's approxi
mate!:. unanimous nomination, accotn
pitshed as it was by a combining of all
political factions in Georgia, means an '
end forev. ■■ to tae ancient factional or.
_ dm of 1 hlngs.
With Slaton's inauguration is sched
uled to disappear all of the old 90-
calli d Hoke and Litt I. Ju. ” line-ups In
Georgia
Every One Is Satisfied.
With Slaton as governor, there is to
be. if the wis. and knowing ones arc
right, no moie "Smith" faction, and r.o 1
more T own" faction. The tost of ai
man’s fitness for political preferment ;
in Georgia hereafter is to be something I
betti : and more conclusive than wheth- |
er he was, years ago. a "Hoke" follow - |
er or a "Little Joe ' partisan.
Slaton’s speech before the convert- :
tlon was a w inning utterance. It poured |
oil over such troubled waters as still
were ruffled and. as one returning pil- I
grim remarked today, it "left a good ,
taste in 1 verybody's mouth"
The unpleasant things which hap
pened in Macon seem not to have left
lasting impressions, and if those who
hav< thought It over since the moment
of adjournment are right, it was. after
all. more of a re il Democratic love feast
than not.
ALBANIAN PEASANTS RAID
CITY: LOOTING PREVALENT
SAL< 'NIK A. EUR' TEAM TURKEY,
Aug 29 Albanian »• <r ants have raid
ed the eit.\ of Ipek, looting tin bazar, a
numb, r f shops and many private res
idences aeeotding to 1 message just re
ceived I ' • from th. scene of th' out
rag. The Albanian authoritii s ar
power’. - to check th.- depredations of
the peasantry, the m.-s-ag. added. Sol
diers who tried t stop th. looting were
fired upon and driven to cover
MASONS HOLD CONVENTION.
Tll.Tt 'X. GA . Aug 29 Masons from
three count!. - are gathered .it Tilton
today for the annual Tri-County Ma
son! convention Tin convention,
compos, d of th. . Masonic lodge of Mur
ray. Whitfield and Catoosa counties,
is being presided over by Worshipful
Master S. E Berry, of Hilton.
ARMY ORDERS ~|
WASHINGTON Aug. 29 The fol
lowing armv order- I) tv. been Issued
First Lieutenant Robert F Harbold.
Twenty-fifth infantry, from Kansas
Stat. Ac -i- ■; ■ ■ Manliat tan
Kans to hi 1. .-n -nt.
Fiist I.i* uten.mt ('hart - A Hull.
Seventh ■ ■ ,p, 1 , (s professor
milltarx scion. ■■ '.nd cuties at X. w
Hamp-hire c ■ ..f W ieultur. and
the M m, N. H
The fol w ig cl ■ mI ■■ stations
of officer- 1 H ■ -■ 1 ■ ordered
Captan. M" ■ ' S’.ixir fr.-n .irmx
tian-port s. ry ■ ■ • s>n ■ > an- 1 ■ 1 o
Madis n Ba ra<k- X Y
First I . it Georci M. I.Awards,
from W. t 1'
Islands F • 1 ■ t \\ . Il T
Earle fr ait E 1 ven ' K. ■ • to
P‘. ■' l : -p • 1.1 -■ ’ anti
Edward <T rke I '■■ ■ I 1- k X. bt i
to I’l-.i! ph: ■ I- . -la. . nant
Dan I’. MeGulr. '■ ■ I'.-t I .n tn 0
to Phlb| 1
Major Jrving P. I’ ■. :* >:t mTmin.
<.
r.l of insul t r atluh
First Lieutenant C'i; o Srhudt.
cou-t artillery ■ p. liippino
to hi - < unpanx
detailed f-r g< n<T.il iwr iitii.. •i \ icm
at Providers • . K. 1
To Drive Out M afar.a
and Build up the System
Take the Old Standard <»R<>Vl‘ S
LESS CHILL 'ro.X •' You lu a what
y are tak .* r T 1 • t. rn ula
pm. -d - : every I ’tie. b’.ov. t : ” is
f • ; ' Q iitune and Iron in a ta>tvi' >
f 'T|: at . the n t . ffe ’ual f.iriu Ft r
gru'.’ ; : • .••■ (»! dr< n 50c
The Atlanta Georgian—Premium Coupon ;
as partial payment tor any of the Beautiful premium g» ods displayed there.
See Premiun Parlor Announcement ozi Another Page }
DAPPER SAM SCHEPPS
IS HELD AS ‘VAGRANT’
a X
■
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■I
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y'3' * -Vy ■
■> L ■xiiMt.WTf.. . < A t - SHMM
iSr wwt r* IBu
t A? 3
6 ~- * y
Attired in the extreme of fashion. Sam Schepps, held in the
Rosenthal ease, was arraigned in a Xew York court as a “va
grant this week. Ihe remark able photograph shown here pre
sents hint pleading with Assistant District Attorney Rubin to be
remanded to the West Side prison until after the trial of Becker
an<l his alleged accomplices. His plea was granted.
GAMBLING CAN BE
STAMPED OUT. SAYS
N. Y. GRAFT PROBER
XEW YORK. Vug 29 William J
Flynn, former deputy police commis
sioner. now in charge of the United
■’rtat. :.i ■. : t \ ice in New York wa i 1
called before the grand Jury by Dis
trict Attorney Whitman today to tell
of the gambling .situation in Xew York. .
as relates to charges of police grafting. ,
Before going to the Criminal Courts
building, Mr. I'ljitn declared gambling
in Xew \oi k could be st imped out.
this in spite of deejarntions to the con
trary by city officials.
I’he grand jury a-sembled to hear
graft evidence to,lax. after an adjourn
ment of ,i week Considerable interest
v. as i entered in tin summoning of Mr
i’lynn :u witness, because lie has been
ip : 'ini 'i bx the aldermanic graft in
vestigating committee to aid in its
work
MISS BERRY’S MOUNTAIN
SCHOOL BEGINS SESSION
ROME GA. \ug 29. Miss Martha
Berry's famous school for mountain
hoys and gills opened today with the
largest enrollment in its history. So
numerous have been the applications
for enrollment that it has been neces
r.iry to turn away more than 100 pu
pils The outlook tor the school this
vear is tin most encouraging in its
i nver \ number of improvements
i have b< , n niado on the school plant
this summer.
The growth of tho school sinejt- its
foundation ten x'.ir- ago has been pile
nomennl From a more log cabin the
I in. itution '■ i grown until now its
|.b\: .-al property - worth more than
FIND GOLD WATCH
IM COW’S STOMACH
11 XUWBURGH. X Y. Aug 29 In th
I st-xp ii h o a tub. r< ular c .w killed In re I
IS at" Vete” earian I-’ink found a gold
I wan ■ an I nain lost by a summer I
I : -aid. • 'l’n d>scov< iw raises a coni- I
' ■i, ■ u< ■! of oxx lie: sip the I
w I.' '. • ah’ f I th" I arc »s. the
‘ fa;n-. I xxho bought the cow and pre
:i I x . r L. ntctr.s or the loser of
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AXD NEWS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 29. 1912.
Up and Down
Peachtree
Shriek Sends Shivers
Up and Down Marietta.
1 he early morning .juiet of Marietta
street was broken today by a sudden
s.tiiek which pierced the atmosphere
from Hive Points to the trolley build
ing. broke up a cow auction in Eorsyth
street and spoiled tile gossip in the city
hall. It was followed by another, and
then another, as though a woman were
suflering all the torments of a Jttne
bug down the back. of her neck. Every
body dropped work and ran to the
street.
1 he shrieks came from a theater near
the I'ive Points and the more they came
the worse they got. The first cry .if
anguish deepend into a long, elastic
wail, like a steamboat blowing for t
wood yard. This was interrupted as
suddenly as though the fine Italian
hand of the villain had closed upon
Tessie's windpipe. Horror-stricken, the
mob rushed wildly toward the acene.
Then the shriek switched Into an ear
splitting note such as a 60-horsepower
clarinet might produce, reached its
crescendo, fluttered a bit and came
down like a Jap acrobat doing the slide
for life. The amazed listeners had
reached the door by this time. Some
hesitated, but a few hardy spirits went
boldly in.
The man was putting 'a new rinky
dink on the rag-time orchestrion in the
; obl" And "Et < ryb’dy s I'oln’ It" was
the only victim.
BRIDE-TO-BE AND CASH
GONE. STILL HE'S GLAD
| CHICAGO. Aug. 29. .lames Puffy ir-
I rived in Chicago w ith the intention of
I marrying a young woman who.-. ' name
■ : said is Grace p.sso, Early today he
went to the South Clark street police
station and reported that his pocket
book was stolen, pr. sumably by hi- in
tended bride She . old not be found.
"1 would not marry her now for any -
thing." sod Puffy to the police ser
geant. "I'm glad I found out about
her." Puffy and th. young woman both
.ante from Detroit. Mich. There was
's4 in the po< k. tbook.
CLUB TO BOOST BUTLER.
BI'TI.EK, GA, Aug 29.—" The But
ler Bo s-t-r club" has ben organized.
With ill. following oftieeis .1 \V. Ed
. d.'. pr. si.lent .1,1 \\ in ha : \ ice
st .nt. I. >•'. P eti’es. treasurer, anil
1. C. Smith, st <t e tary,
:VETS TO MARCH
UNDER OLD FLAG
Parade This Afternoon to Fea
ture Last Day of State Con
federate Reunion.
MARIETTA. GA., Aug. 29.—Hun
dreds of Confederate veterans crowded
around Miss Regina Rambo today when
it was learned that she had been
knocked down by a dray and after re
covering from a fainting spell had re
fused to be taken home for a longer
time than to change her dress.
Miss Rambo is known to nearly every
veteran present, as she has attended
many reunions, and last year invited
i the vetejans to Marietta. Her spirit
and dete’mination not to let the acci
dent mar the day was commented upon
by all of them, w ho termed her a true
daughter of the South and with the
pluck and endurance of the women of
the Uonfederacy. Miss Rambo is ap
parently unhurt after the accident,
which was caused by unusual traffic
conditions in the town.
A larger crow d than was here on the
opening day gathered for the final ex
ercises in the court house. In the ar
mory another gathering took place with
the Sons of Veterans as leaders.
To Gather Under the Old Flag.
Larger crowds than ever took advan
tage of tiie interurban car service and
came up from Atlanta. Among them
were several companies of Roy Scouts,
w ho are here to take part in the parade
this afternoon.
After the business meeting of early
today veterans are looking forward to
the parade, which starts at 3 o’clock,
and when they again will gather in
martial assemblage under the familiar
old banner. Bright, new, Confederate
flags have been provided for the parade
and in it also will be the tattered ban
ners that went through four years of
battling in Virginia, in the West, and
in the battles around Kennesaw moun
tain. when the spot where the reunion
city now stands was the scene of strug
gling armies.
In the parade, besides the veterans,
will be many auxiliary orders. The
Sons of the Confederacy will take part
in uniform and various maids and
sponsors will take part. In addition
to them there will be the Marietta Ri
fles, a number of mounted police, the
fire department and numbers of local
orders.
Boy Scouts from Atlanta will vie
with those of Marietta in keeping time
to the steps of the old soldiers.
Ball To Be Gala Event.
Among one of the most attractive
features of the parade will be the
mounted sponsor of the cavalry and her
maids of honor. Other sponsors and
maids will ride in carriages.
Miss Etta Hardeman, of Gainesville,
is sponsor for the cavalry and she will
have as her maids Misses Rosa Wil
lingham. Marjorie Wikle. Willie Mac
Blair, Eloise Brown. Emma Gardner,
Ette < ’ogburn. Laura Margaret Hoppe,
Mabel Hardeman, ami Mesdames Will
Fleming, Amos Way and Tate Hyde,
of Marietta, and Misses Margaret
Rushton, Susie Woodward and Wands
leigh West, of Atlanta; Misses Vera
Warlick and. Lilah Roberts, of Macon;
Miss Mamie Jones, of Cartersville;
Miss Fannie McCormick, of Rome; Miss
Hattie Sue Lowe, of McDonough; Miss
Helen Estes, of Gainesville, and Miss
May Woodward, of Griffin.
The crowning feature of the reunion
w ill be a grand ball tonight at the audi
torium. given in honor of the maids and
sponsors and the veterans. This is to
be one of the largest social features of
the year in the state.
WANTS DIVORCE FROM MAN
SHE LOVED 1000 YEARS AGO
ST. LOUIS,, MO . Aug. 29. Artist
Ralph Chesley Ott is the defendant in
a suit for divorce filed by his wife, Mrs.
Jane Schaufert Ott, in the circuit court
this morning. Mrs. Ott alleges that
her husband was insanely jealous and
drank to excess. She asked the custo
dy of their two baby girls.
Mrs. Ott declares that when she at
tired herself in her fashionable gown
h.-r husband accused her of dressing to
attract other men.
Shortly after their marriage a full
pagc feature story appeared in a news
paper and was syndicated throughout
■ the United States, in which it was set
forth that the romance of the couple
began thousands of years ago in Egypt.
HE COMES HOME TO PAY
OWN FUNERAL EXPENSES
SCHENECTADY, X Y.. Aug. 29.—W.
M Clark, a former resident of this city,
but now of Elizabeth, N. has arrived
here to visit friends and incidentally
to pay his burial expenses, he being
supposedly dead and burled for the last
six weeks. A’ about that time a mar
was killed at Binghamton and through
cards in his pocket it was thought to be
Clark.
I His sister was notified, went to Bing
hamton and identified the body as being
her brother’s The burial was arranged
! for and the sister paid the expenses.
ALABAMA DEMOCRATS TO
RAISE CAMPAIGN FUNDS
MOXTGOMERY. ALA. Aug. 29
Chairman Brook- Smith, of the central
executive committee of the Wilson-
Mai- .all Democratic Clubs Association
of Alabama, has called a meeting of
the committee for Saturday at the state
capitol, to discuss the raising of funds
f’i the national campaign.
The members of the committee are
Breaks Smith, chairman; H J Wil
lingham of Montgomery; Frank I’
Gias-. Sr., of Birmingham; John H.
Bankhead. Jr . of Jasper; James G < tak
ley, of Ashby John . King, of Consul,
and John H. Wallace, Jr., of Hunts
ville
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
The state convention in Macon was
not the great big show the Baltimore
national thing was. to be sure, but the
Macon convention was some nifty little
old show, nevertheless!
If ever a rapid-fire convention was
pulled off in Georgia, that Macon con
vention yesterday was one.
Nash Broyles started the, fireworks
when he withdrew from the court of
appeals race, and threw the convention
solidly to Pottle.
It was all kept pretty well under cov
er until the convention got it, “hot off
the bat!” Every element of the dra
matic was carefully preserved, and
nothing went wrong with the stage
settings.
And the withdrawal made a pro
nounced hit with the convention.
The Broyles-Pottle deadlock was an
embarrassment of the most positive
kind. Both men were popular with the
delegates—everybody admitted that
each had made a fine race and that
both were entitled to emphatic credit
for the cleanliness of the methods of
campaigning indulged in.
Pottle simply had a shade the better
of it in the popular vote—that’s all
His victory was based upon that, for it
was the compelling cause of Broyles’
eventual withdrawal.
In getting out of Pottle’s way, grace
fully and in manly fashion, Broyles
won the Pottle men’s everlasting grati
tude. And certainly his own splendid
following approved the course he pur
sued.
Unquestionably, Broyles is very
strong before the people of Georgia—
stronger todav than he ever was.
If the Broyles-Pottle fireworks were
interesting, however, the Price-Brown-
Blalock performance was melodramatic.
Blalock kicked the lid off right from
the word go. and went after Brown’s
scalp pggressively and pugnaciously—
almost savagely!
The feeling between Blalock and
Brown was very bitter. Then the de
partment of agriculture had waded in,
and undertaken to flood the tide to
Brown with all the force of the patron
age and influence at its command.
Tom Watson, too. was vigorously
hacking Brown —and that’s why Tom
Hardwick got in behind that Price
boom and helped push it along to mag
nificent victory.
And after it was all over, there was
not a man in the entire state of
Georgia one-half so happy as was "Oh!
Jim" Price.
"Old Jim" was there, with a big
hunch furnished by himself, that he
was to win.
Price had scanned the hoiizon care
fully in every direction, not only with
ATTORNEYS CROOKED,
SO SHE ACTS AS HER
OWN COURT LAWYER
NEW YORK. Aug. 29.—Mrs. Anna K.
Daniel, of 12S West Eighty-second
street, announced to Supreme Court
Justice Ford that she wanted to argue
her own case, because all the lawyers
she had come in contact with were so
"crooked" she could not trust them.
Justice Ford told her to go ahead.
She declared at once that in her opin
ion the "universal criticism" of the ju
diciary and the members of the legal
profession is deserved and that the
most she could say in favor of the
judges is that they are better than the
lawyers.
Mrs. Daniel pleaded for a stay of pro
ceedings in the action brought by the
United States Trust Company to fore
close a mortgage on her home. Unless
the stay is granted, the property will
be sold Friday. Justice Ford reserved
decision.
FINN’S HEAD CAUGHT FLIES
BECAUSE HE USED VARNISH
WINSTED, CONN.. Aug. 29.—Pat
rick Finn. Os Lake street, being in
formed that turpentine would remove
paint from his hair, applied part of the
contents of a bottle supposed to con
tain that liquid.
At church the flies made a bee line
for his head, and stuck there so that he
had no difficulty in swatting them
When service was over Finn’s head was
liberally dotted with dead flies. He
discovered he had used floor varnish
instead of turpentine.
MMMrWWMUaiI I ■ ■ ■— : *l* ■ HIM > - »1 r. ie-., MIIII J —j w M
Correct Proverb Solutions
Picture No. 47 Picture No. 48
WH6R6 DO -TOO ~T f=/\ fO. - - N-hLewjar V— z —— 77
WAVf ME TO k/ \ TH-T HE-T«ei»e L-^——-J UP TOO KNOW . ' NOT r-tc |
H'T it eo-SS- L | fiV"' « lttKT /TWHO STOLE A / n r »VE BEEN =—
( tu THE CENTER? ' 7 I BAG OF PEAWVIS M HERE ,0b
—--. -J guts nn URcMM'c Hz'-s five-minutes n'n
y '> cart? L/gy? oo«» Dj
kers THK-r t Xi«r v 7 I ~ i Guiltx wo
(\ '.aiaout ( U.'A \\ r eU.aZf '• Ms ,'>x > allrnht
’f O JW
/
Strike while the iron is hot. Ik declares himself guilty who justifies himself
before accusation
naked eye, but with the strongest field
glasses he could procure.
Strain his eyes as he would, he could
see nothing but rainbows. Price sim
ply was written in the stars, and "Old
Jim" couldn’t see it othewise, not in
as many- trials as he cared to assign
himself.
And the anti-Brown line-up cer
tainly made that guano odor stick to
Brown!
Guano to the right of Brown, guano
to the left of Brown, guano in front of
Brown, volleyed and thundered.
The fertilizer trust was trotted out.
and upon, it was tacked a big placard
reading, "This is Brown's dearest friend
—and boss!”
Brown, whatever the merits of the
case may have been, couldn't get away
from that thing—and it swamped him.
Early Wednesday morning it looked
as if the Brown crowd were about t<
put over the Elbert county man.
Everybody suspected it—except Price.
"Old Jim” never lost his belief in
himself and the ultimate triumph of
his cause. He was optimism personi
fied, from start to finish.
When it was al! over, and victory had
perched high upon the Price banners to
stay put, the crowd tried to get a
speech out of "Old Jim."
And that is' right where he made his
getaway!
He fled from that convention hall as
if the Indians were after him.
He plunged into a taxicab and told
the driver to take him somewhere—
anywhere, just so it was made a quick
job.
And the chauffeur threw the throttle
—if that's what a chauffeur does—w’ide
open, and he went away from there
with "Old Jim!”
"Old Jim” made it safe to the Lanier
hiiuse and there he locked himself in a
room and defied the mob to make him
deliver the oratorical goods.
The truth was, “Old Jim” was too
full—of genuine joy—for utterance. He
is no Demosthenese, anyway, and if hr
■ had been compelled to face that con
vention crowd he likely would have
broken down and wept salty tears.
And. after all was said and done, the
finish was the finest thing in the whole
show, albeit the least spectacular.
Jack Slaton’s nomination and speech
had been wisely- postponed to the end.
It was a good speech, received with
enthusiasm; and-it served metaphori
cally to bind up the bleeding wounds of
all who had lost out.
It was full of appreciation, hope and
belief in Georgia and the Democracy.
It was a fine benediction, after* a
convention that was as th: filing as any
"old-time religion" revival could hav
been.
BRIDE, 22, HAS HER
STEPSON, 39. HELD
FOR ANNOYING HER
NEW YORK. Aug. 29.—Charles Gray.
39. a real estate dealer, was arraigned
in the Gates avenue police court in
Brooklyn on complaint of his step
mother, Madeline, 22. charged with dis
orderly conduct. Both lived at 681
Gates avenue
Madeline Gray a very pretty brifle of
a w eek, married Charles Gray's fat het ,
aged 65. But thes on insulted his step
mother while intoxicated, and her step
daughter-in-law, who married Charles
only six months ago, joint d her step
mother-in-law in court and told of the
abuse that her husband had heaped
upon the young Mrs. Gray. Magistrate
McGuire sent Charles Gray to the Kings
County hospital to give him a chance t.,
have something intelligible to say for
himself at the end of his st ty there.
Riggs Disease
If your teeth are loose and sensitive
and the gums receding and bleeding, you
have Riggs Disease, and are in danger
of losing all your teeth.
Use Call’s Anti-Biggs, and it will give
quick relief and a complete cure. It is
a pleasant and economical tretment,
used and recommended by leading min
isters, lawyers and theatrical people who
appreciate the need of perfect teeth. Get
a 50c bottle of Calls Anti-Riggs frpm
Jacobs’ Pharmacy, with their guarantee
to refund the money if it fails to do all
that is claimed for it. It is invaluable
in relieving sore mouth due to plate
pressure. Circular free. CALL’S ANTI
RIGGS CO.. 23 Williams st., Llinira, N. Y
REBELS 10 SLOT
MEJIGANS
Campa, a Mexican Insurgent
Chief, Fixes Sept. 15 as the
Slaughter Day.
EL PASO, TEXAS. Aug. 29—After
September 15 all Americans in Mexico w ill
be put to death, according to a threat
made by General Emilio Campa, who has
an army of 400 insurgents in the Sonora
district.
News of this menacing statement was
brought here today by Thomas Holland,
a former Texas ranger who recently has
been foreman of the San Geronimo mines
in Mexico.
It is thought Campa's threat was re
sponsible for the message to General
Steever from the war department asking
if more troops were needed on the border.
BRIDAL PAIRTIDE ABOUT
TOWN IN CIRCUS WAGON
PITTSBURG, PA., Aug. 29.—With
brass bands playing and 2,000 cheering
neighbors, friends and others following,
Harry Spohn, a well-to-do young mer
chant, and his bride, who was Miss
Mary Brown, were driven through the
streets of Crafton, a suburb, caged and
ironed together in an iron-barred car
nival animal wagon.
Spohn and Miss Brown eloped ta
Grove < 'ity, Pa., on Monday and were
married.
Are you discouraged?
Have you any REAL reason
to be? Probably not —ten to
one it is your liver. You need
Tutt’s Pills
The effect is gentle, yet rarely
fails, even with the ordinary
dose as directed. Take no sub
stitute —sugar coated or plain.
•MHI- msr ww -iiiiw ■ LI ...answ iiw n an——
HOTELS AND RESORTS.
Ocean View Hotel
Fabio Beach, Florida.
After August 18, Until Close of the Season
Will Put On the Following Special Rates:
30 Desirable Rooms, European Plan.
Daily rate: SI.OO, one person; $1.50, two
persons.
Weekly rate: $5.00, one person; SB.OO,
two persons.
Lower rates in tw > bed rooms for three
or more persons.
Special rater in young ladies’ dormitory
for week-end, or weekly parties with
chaperone.
Excellent Case in connection. Dances
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
nights.
i
I
I’r. Hines has given his entire |
life to the study of the human g
and how to correct refracted
errors with lenses. With him
it does not matter how compli
cated or how dim the sight nfiight
lie, if tiie eyes respond to the
light he can uncover any and all
hidden defects, and correct same
with glass's in a manner that
l gives | 1 .isure, comfort ami re
sults herebefor.- unknown. He
| wishes all to know that his prices
I are no higher than elsewhere,
S and,that there are no charges for
I examining when glasses are
a bought.
j HINES OPTICAL COMPANY
91 Peachtree St.
Eetween Montgomery and A'cazar Theaters 1