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V V'rnnrirVVT V^VI^'VVTVVT' LANS! I 420-426 7 | Hons? Br? t 150 Doz. One-] I House Dress* Y A fortunate purchase from < ? ables us to offer you this great I a with black, light blue and pink ! v finished with bias folds of same > ished deep hem. Sizes 36 to 44, I ROOM-SIi I Two Extr | $4.00 9x12 Feet | nese Matting Ru ? 9x12 Best Japanese Mattin: ? lion and all-over designs. Mad A Chicuga straw; all new color coi % kind.. | 9x12 Feet Deltox | Rugs, Worth $8. ' | 9x12 Prairie Grass Rugs? Y unvpii th^ smoothest and the 1 WW W ""J ?v ? ; * ing made. Plain green, green w ? and red. 6x9, $3.79: 8x10, S4.98 j WHITE 25c White Fre * J 48 inches wide; fine, sheer g * dresses. This lot tomorrow at,; | Three Great Special White Dre 11 Specially adapted for making ni 't * occasions: all 48 inches wide. 50c French Batiste (regular, fii , 1 For tomorrow only at, yard... i: Colored W | 25c Mercerized Imp ;; Price, \ I 36 inches wide; permanen ? ;; terial for separate skirts, two-p * tan, onion, pink, blues, black, gr 1 etc. This lot to close at, yard. :: , l2J4c Floral C % A large assortment of stv ? waists, kimonos, dresses, etc., ? At, yard 1;; Three Bf ^ $1?50 1 sra?... 98? ! 54-inch All-wool Satin Prunella, one of the highest grades imported; in dark and medium navy blue. Only 150 yards. Be quick; _ worth $1.50. At one day. per yard I Ten High-gi Slightly Dama To S At Your <C a : A water pipe burst $ flooding the store and : $ high-grade Pianos. We | Pianos to you at your , I ?Three KimballsI?One Arion? ?One 1 Come early and m TT TIT IT i T. F. ^/UlLrlL. | " 523 11th || OUT OF THE IHG J* aniiM iBiwrrrTTiriTTiTn ^U^gnBl TWi .W ns im mi mi mfWJnun SHOT DEAD BY NEGRO AS PARADE PASSED Lynching Narrowly Averted Dazing Foarth of July Celebration at Harrisonburg, Va. HARRISONBURG. Va.. July 6.?The celebration of the Fourth of July brought to Harrison bur* the largest number of tsltors ever in the town on a single day. the crowd being estimated at 30,000 persona Immediately after the monster parade, which was over two miles long sad filled with floats of the more prominent business firms, and while eleven bands were playing a tragedy was enacted In earshot of the multitude, when yiak Barbour, colored, of Augusta counyr shot and Instantly killed James Lee, a well known Hveryman. ^ At the scene of the tragedy there was 0 BURGH. IS ST. 417ss?s in a Bif piece Lawn 5S, Worth $2.0 one of the best house dress manufa f>argain. They are made of a fine figures and stripes. The waist is fastened with good pearl buttoi and positively a $2.00 value. Spe IE RUGS, a Specials. Japa= @*0 AO jg . . \ Atti o -* /4 ? * 4-?/? VIA/Iol U i\u^. i^tv\ auu ai iiont uivuaie of the highest grade mbinations. The $4.00 ;0orass $6.50 -the Deltox make. The closest )est wearing summer floor coverk Each?W.b?rder:bI"? $6.50 GOODS. inch Lawn, 15c. rrade; ideal for waists and j s in Imported Sheer ss Materials ce, fine waists and dresses for all 50c Mercerized French Batiste, lish), 50c Persian Lawn. ash Goods. erial Suiting at Half 1254c. t-finish fastMye; the ideal maiece suits, etc. We have this in ay, wistaria, old rose, 12&C Irgandies, 6l/^c. les and colorings; splendid for ' - ? 1 . ?r ? ior tncse warm aays. ??? Goods 1 4 $6.25 Dress Lengths, $3.69 u Tarda Extra-quality 50-inch All-wool Cream Chiffon-weight Panama; only 15 dress lengths; sells regularly at $1.25 per yard; a tremendous sacrifice; nearly half price tomorrow; worth $6.25. Entire ?? ? ? s jr*. dress length of 5 (fhO yards for a *ad@ Pianos, 1 iged by Water, | /Tt _ I yu | Dwn Price's over our salesrooms? |j slightly damaging ten are going to offer these g own prices? | ?Three Hinzes? | -Two Straus? 1 Dunbar? | ake your selection. 9 EY & SON, 1 St. N.W. | II RENT DISTRICT. ? no policeman, and the negro was caught by bystanders and turned over to the authorities. Before the negro was landed in jail a mob of 5,000 bent on lynching collected. Circuit Judge T. N. Haas and Mayor O. B. Roller made addresses to the crowd, promising a speedy trial and imploring that the law be allowed to take Its course. These, aided by the sheriff and his deputies with drawn guns, held the crowd at bay. Lee was sixty years old and leaves a wife, two daughters and a son. Lee caught the negro in the act of stealing whips and ordered him out of the stable. The negro walked out, then turned and shot Lee down. D. B. Wainrifht Promoted. Dallas B. Wain right of the District of Columbia has been promoted from a <3,000 to a <4.000 position in the coasl and geodetic survey, and John P. Prat! of Washington from a <2.500 to a <3,000 place in the same oAee. Harold Heath of California haa been appointed a naturalist in the Alapka fur i seal service at a salary of <3><pK T &Bro. 42S 8? ST. | f PuFehase | o,$1.19| icturers in the United States en- % : quality lawn, in white ground x neatly made, with Dutch neck, y as. Gored skirt, fin- rt? fl | Q } cial for one day, at..& * " X StlkSo 1 85c 24-inch Pongee f At 50c yd 0| 85c 34-inch All Pure Silk Pongee for X 50c. Beautifully finished and rough > enough to be very desirable: black and natural 0/> V colors only. A good value Y at 85c, for *. 59c Black $ Kabutais . . . *5VC ? A 27-inch Black Lyons Dye ?t, Habutai; all pure silk, and X a 50c value for ai' ^ V ^ 75c Black ra_ ? liabutais . . . <3>VC :j: 36-lnch Black Lyons Dye Habutai; *t* perfectly finished; spot X proor, last black and per- a splratlon proof. A good ^Uf* X 75c value for Y .. LineeSo I v 39x36 Union Huck, X extra weight and ab- _ ?r / y sorbent; 15c quality. 1 T>U/L/? X Special ^A2 Y All-linen Extra Weight Silver Bleached ^ X Napkins; $1.85 value. Tl ^IflD X Special, dozen aPflsTTX X Size 22x44 Double-thread > Turkish Towels; 30c qual- X ity. Special, each X 68-4nch Silver Bleached __ _ * * German Damask; 90c qual- X itj'. Special, yard * ^ Laces? I Chiffon Veiling. 36 inches wide, 1??- Y inch hemstitched border. We have y this Veiling in all leading shades, Y and very desirable for cov- J* ering large hats; good val- ? _ *:* ue for 75c yard. Special, X Cream and Ecru Tucked Net; y pretty size tucks and fine net; used y for yokes and sleeves. This _ _ y net is 75c quality. Special, gOf *j* All-over Black Silk Embroidered X Net. 18 inches wide; very dainty pat- X terns; pretty for mak- ^ ^ Y ing yokes; |175 value. J | #?U Now. yard < Chiffon Veiling in all desirable l* shades; extra width and _ 5, quality; good value at 39c /Of* X yard. Special, yard Y Bargains, f 60c Mohair Sicilian, yd . . VC $ 4 4-infch Navy Blue Mohair Sieil- Y ian; reversible, dust repellent and J* highly lustrous; nice for a good i separate skirt or bathing suit; salt Y water does not affect the color. Only five pieces. For a ?> _ A day these ?*?c Sicilians X are. per yard x In THE GROWTH OF RURAL DELIVERY Fourth Assistant Postmaster | General Delivers Address at Raleigh, N. C. RAL.EIGH. N. C., July C.-Reviewing in great detail the legislative history attending the development of the rural free delivery service in this country, P. V. De Graw, fourth assistant postmaster general, declared that "from the viewpoint of morale" that service was far in advance of any other part of the civil service. In order to sustain that claim for excellence the fourth assistant postmaster general quoted statistics to show that last year out of 41,000 carriers only 175 had been dismissed for cause. Mr. De Graw's address was delivered before the North Carolina state convention of rural carriers, assembled here. He appeared as the representative of the Postmaster General. Routes Number 41,089. ."There are now In operation throughout the United States 11.089 rural routes, served by 41,007 rural carriers," he said, in summing up the present force engaged in that work. "The appropriations for the establishment and maintenance of rural delivery for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1910, were $37,209,000, and the appropriation for the fiscal year which commenoed July 1, 1919, is $38,800,000. Reverting to the beginning of the rural free delivery service, Mr. De Graw said: "For a good many years the residents I of the larger cities had enjoyed the piivlt lege of having their mail delivered to I them by carriers at their residences J daily. Based upon a recommendation made by Postmaster General Wanamakcr, a joint resolution was passed by the Fitty-flrst Congress and approved October 1. 1890, authorising the Postmaster General to test at small towns and villages the practicability and expense of extendin-. the free delivery system to offices of the third and fourth class and other officers not embraced in the free delivery. The experiment was put on trial and continued until three years later, when Post-! master General Bissell, in his report for the fiscal year 1804, recommended thaii the service be discontinued or extended to 40,000 other post offices. Congress ac-! cfcpted the first alternative and discontinued the appropriation." After several unsuccessful attempts to establish rural free delivery an experimental service was begun October 1, 189 > and between that date and June 30, 1897, there were eighty-three routes established out of forty-three post offices in twentynine states. This beginning was made upon appropriations aggregating $40,010, and the results obtained proved that the ' experimental service had rendered benefits In excess of the expenditures involved and that under wise restrictions it could be continued with advantage, l "When it is stated that rural carriers i throughout the United States travel 904,000,000 miles a year it seems incomprehensible and beyond belief," said Mr. De 1 Graw, who then reviewed the growth of the service in North and South Carolina and in Georgia. iffitoat , , " - . T ' * FOR AN A dainty suggestion is offei gown for a semi-invalid. It is gray cashmere, with pleatings 1 falling from beneath the sleeves bodice and trailing skirt gatheri ' ? ? I 1 1_ *1 wnicn passes iruiir anu u?*c.i\. u material. The edges of this cr gether over the hips by butto sleeve is short and slashed ope neath, and is untrimmed. HOW TO PROTE WHILE SALT-V Wrap Heavy Towel to Absorb Water Under Ru ; , . . . ? , * * - It is useless for a girl to try to appear beautiful when 'in bathing; if she wishes to keep her hair dry, and In my opinion good looks should be sacrificed, because nothing will more quickly destroy color and texture of the tresses than salt water. ' To keep salt water from the hair oilakin scalps are excellent, but not sufficient protection, for wben the waves dash up from below, as in swimming, water gets in between the cap edge and hair, and then is held in. Unless extra protection is combined with the cap, I con slder It, because it can nwa wsier, wur^e than nothing. It Isn't pretty, but a cloth bandage beneath the edge keeps out water. For this a rather small towel should be folded to a width of five inches. The hair should be twisted high on the back of the head, but not brought up to the forehead, for there is danger of wetting, when it Is too far forward. The bandage should be held above the left ear, at the edge of the hair, and brought around tight as may be without causing headache. The cloth must be flat, and down below the hair' CLOVER LUNCHI FORM OF E One of the prettiest of luncheons for l afternoon or evening can be worked out j with clover as a ?otif. All the decorations can be of clover, red and white. Bowls of the fragrant blossoms should stand on mantel and tables, while in the center of the lunch table spread with doilies and napkins repeating the trefoil design nja.v be a block of green turf from which springs a bunch of fresh and growing pink white clover. Let the large red clover leaves radiate from this to each cover, where there should be little boulonnleres of leaves and blossoms. The refreshments can be Arcadian in their simplicity. If you wish to serve a course luncheon have berries au nature for the flrst course, then sorrel soup with croutons and sorrel leaves or cress as relishes. Follow with clover fritters, which are made from the white clover blossoms dipped in regular fritter batter and browned quickly in olive oil, and clover sandwiches, which are delicate slices of homemade bread spread with sweet butter that has been packed in a covered basket of fresh clover blossoms long enough to become impregnated with the odor. Hot biscuit and honey make a delightful course and honey cakes with strawberry ice cream may be the dessert. It you do not wish as many courses, clover sandwiches with honey cakes and ice cream, supplemented by a fruit punch and homemade mints, pink and white, will be suf ftcient. . | Any of the flower or butterfly games I will be appropriate. Here, for example, is a flower contest. Provide each girl with a typewritten copy of the questions, pencil and paper. The .ne who can answer such a list accurately receives the prise. 1. The flower of June. Rose. 2. The Blaster flower. Lily. 3. The flower that calls to church. Belle. 4. The flower that describes a large and vigorous girl. Bouncing Baby. 5. The flower with dark eyes that rjlooms in July fields. Black Eyed Susan. ?. Wee Crimson Tipped Flower." ualsy. 7. The precise flower. Primrose. 8. A girl's name and the color of her talr. Marigold. 11. The flower that stands for thought. Pansy. 10. The flower associated with Faust. Marguerite. 11.?The modest flower that poets love. Violet. 12. The flower that describes a number of Friends. Quaker Ladies. This list can be extended to include as many more names as desired. For prises that can be made at home nothing la prettier than hand-embroidered belts or opera glass bags, using the clover blossom design. Instead of having a grab bag I would bestow the gifts by the unraveling of a cobweb. Before the arrival of the company wind strings of different colors all over the house, passing them through keyholes, outdoors, in at the windows, upstairs and down, j When the time for unraveling the web '.-.c INVALID. " ' *' '. ' AMb ^^Wyjftjr* llvM^^r ? ! .m^m red here for a house gown or a j , simply, but prettily, made of < of white net at the throat and . The frock has a simple fulled ] ed into a girdle of gray liberty, j trough a stolelike tunic of the j ^erdress are caught loosely tons of silk and silk cord. The n, showing the net sleeves beCT THE HAIR 7ATER BATHING Tightly Around Head i > That Leaks in ibber Cap. edge. The bandage. should be pinned i firmly wherever it stops. I know one girl who places over this a strip of oil silk, five inches wide, but this precaution is ; hardly necessary. The cap, when pulled over the bandage, should cover it. If it does not, only about one-half the width wlil be exposed. The object of the bandage is to absorb the water that otherwise would make Its way to the hair. A girl who swims will require a thicker towel, for once the absorbent qualities are used, water will surely reach the hair, but an ordinary towel will hold a large quantity. A big silk bandanna tied over such arrangement makes it less homely, and a wide shade hat covers unbecomingness, but the latter is apt to be In the way. When salt water has soaked into the hair it must be washed out at once. It causes both sticktness of the locks and dryness of the scalp, a combination Injurious as well as unplesant. To release salt water from the hair soap should not be used unless of a kind made especially for salt water, for the former Increases stickiness. Plenty of clear water will remove the salt. Dry the hair rapidly In the sun. MARGARET MIXTBR. iON DAINTY NTERT AINMENT arrives give each person the end of a strincr which ihn mnci %*?! v ?? wm- WllVtV UUVI1 OiltJ finds the dainty little souvenir concealed at the end. EMMA PADDOCK TEEFORD. Dress Hints. Outing hats for young women are particularly charming this summer. There Is a mushroom shape of Java straw that Is pretty and quaint. The crown is wound with a soft ribbon tied with a rosette bow on the right side, while the left, at a point directly opposite the rosette is deoorated with ioose bunches of polyanthus. This is a sailor shape, covered smoothly with white linen, the trimming, a scarf of white mull caught in the front with a huge spray of wild roses. It is remarkable what nice serviceable ' dresses and suits in white duck can be bought for $5. \ It seems hardly worth while to buy the material and take the trouble of making 1 when they can be bought so reasonably. Imagine a semi-princess gown of soft ' white duck with panel front and back, the former handsomely embroidered and the latter pleated, the lower half of the skirt a deep knitted flounce and the neck cut in a deep round effect filled in with chemisette of net sold for this sum. The sleeves are long and trimmed at the wrists with embroidery. One may choose from white, blue, lavender, tan and rose. A Curious Nest. From St. Nicholas. , East year, early in June, a beautiful pair of wood thrushes, or wood robins as we often call them, began to build their nest in a pear tree within a few feet of the house and twelve feet from the ground. It was one of the most public places they could have selected?close to me aoor wntcn people were constantly using and within teu feet of the street 1 with its bustle and noise. The nest progressed rapidly to completion through rain and shlna The bulk of it was made of coarse leaf stems, grass and strips of berk. All were solldjy fastened together wltn mud gathered from the street. But they departed frocn their usual method of nest bunulng by weaving lo a large number of strips of white cloth a foot long and about one inch wide,'so that one end was firmly fastened In the nest. Finally the inner lining of rootlets was finished, and the eggs, three in number, of a greenish-blue color, were laid. Two of them were batched and thsf young birds safely raised. A few days later another nest similar in every way was begun nearby and decorated with, its ornament of strips, but the birds abandoned it before completion ' for unknown reasons. uiimminminii nn m iminniui mi nimo Store Hour jpci Tie Kendo OflOBM It's One of the S % IP m^(H) I luiv^unt. ^/i A?W i 500 Beautiful One-piece Di reps, batistes, imported ginghar range of colors; the designs in yokes, many phases of the sma stripes and plain colors, both li up to $12.50! II $5 One=Piece Br The Gondolier stock of Da Dresses in the most approver they are in plain color chambr; light blue, pink, cadet, rose, tai of embroidery; lower skirt pie; $12.50 Russian The cleverest designed All cadet, white and natural linens broidery trimmed around tuni leather belts; these are the mc of the season; all worth $i2.5c : Beautiful $6.98 ^ A large variety of the Dai India Linon Dresses ever show ! tastefully trimmed with lace an India linon; no store would th $6.98. b FPL UMTW/W /ffcTTlT BOYS' NEW WASH SUITS, I> < styles and In a variety of material! ; are up to $1.50. For a day BOYS' KHAKI KNICKERBOCKEF In all sizes; sold usually at $1. Fo : : day reduced to BOYS' WOOL, KNEE PANTS SUIT materials and finely tailored; these | sold regularly up to $8. They are to POSTAL SAVINGS BANKS TO BUNG OUT HOARDS U. S. Treasury, Circular Says, Will Be Benefited?Bonds May Be Refunded. NEW YORK. July The Jnly circular of the National City Bank, in discussing the possible benefits to the federal Treasury of the operation of the new postal savings banks law, says; "In its bearings upon Treasury affairs the new postal savings bank law Is practically a government finance Mil. The law Is one which will operate In various directions If Ha worklnga prove measurably justifiable of the theory on which It was! constructed and on which it was advo-l cated by the President and members 01 the administration. "It is expected that its first effect will be to call from its hiding places considerable money that is now hoarded by persons who have not yet learned to have confidence in the established banking institutions of the communities in which tbey live. There is every reason to believe that the aggregate of such sums reaches well into the millions. Whatever the sum, nearly all this money will be put promptly at work under the new law. it will constitute a new source of banking deposits. The law requires that 5 per cent of the postal savings funds shall be held in the United States Treasury as a reserve, permits the investment of 30 per cent in government bonds or other securities and specifically declares its intent to keep the remaining 65 per cent on deposit in the national and state banks of the communities of origin, although there Is a provision under which even this may be invested in government securities upon the decision by the President that the general welfare or the interests of the government demand it. Bow It Will Benefit. "But there are several distinct ways in which the accumulation of postal savings may serve the United States Treasury at times when financing operations are necessary. For some months the Treasury has been sailing very elose to the wind, with the prospect of having to face the issue of bonds or other securities at almost anv time. By careful work and with the assistance of the corporation tax. which is now coming in. it is expected that any financing operations will be postponed at least until fall, after the general elections. "With an issue of canal bonds proper out of consideration the postal savings bank law affords a source of relief which it now seems provable will be utilised as soon as the new system has provided a sufficient amount of funds. The new law authorises a special issue of 2H per cent bonds, which by specific provision do not carry the circulation privilege. This rate of Interest would hardly give them an investment basis, but it is provided that the postal savings funds may be invested in them. Under this provision the way lies open for the reimbursement of the Treasury for these heavy canal expenditures as soon as the postal banks have attracted sufficient deposits. This is the most material and practical means of relieving the Treasury which the new law affords. Effect on National TU"b? "Anotherpossibility Is that the $64,000,000 of 8 per cent 1006-18 bonds now outsanding might be refunded by the new 2H per oents. ..The 3s are payable, andthe new law specifically provides that whenever any outstanding bonds are subject to ir. ii 11111111 in 1111111111111 ii muni mi initm-rm , Close at 6. i. Pirttara 1 tarn! ts of the Season! ? % i s: 8 to 5; Saturdays H ? I mSSS^SSS ii : Iter lift, ft UU VU, % 0 |J"' ensational Sale Event Be Sure to Be Here! Dresses , . . resses in fine lawns, linens, (\JI ns. etc.; in white and a full x, elude lace and embroidery ^ J rtest tunic effects; checks, MT ght and dark. Values are 4 U esses . . . /^jj inty and Pretty One-piece V^jl I styles for this summer; ays, percales, linenes, etc.; ff~ 1, reseda; yokes and collar j ited. Dresses- . . (n -linen Russian Dresses, in ; beautifully lace and em- ^ c, yoke and cuffs; patent HT >st stylish summer dresses Vs>. Vhite Dresses, ((\\ onrl PrMflocf WTV*tf#? \ >l| 1 HVOI ailU X I VktlVOW TV n; white, pink, light blue; d embroidery, lingerie and fTj! link of selling them under Bp' feai i r MANY smi BOYS* "BRO'V 5; values (J /r superior qualify ........ ' Special one-day t PANTS BfOYS" KHA r Tliurs- sises 4 and 5 y ^ 39c. Sale price. "B, IN THE DOUBLE-BREASTED S* suits have straight knee pants; siaes be closed out tomorrow at........... nimtiumminmimiiniiinnniiim.inni Wonderful By Br Washington's Foremos -.Dentist Has Relief For Thousands. % * e ?. DENTISTRY work has always been looked upon by the majority of people as j more or less a painful affair In t which the dentist receive# all the profit. , Dr. Wyeth has discovered a j means whereby all pain la elim lnated while operating upon a patient. His great knowledge of the profession, together with | DR. WTETH. years of practical experience, has brought about this wonderful change. Now suffering hupanlty is crowding his dental parlors to be treated, knowing that there is j actual relief without the old-time attendant pain, ji His offices are also pleasantly cooled by electric fans, which further adds to the comfort of patients. call they may be replaced by the ne< authorised 2V4 per cents. "A. third possibltty Ib one which ma --** ? n?A#An?i<i offont nn thA ni /CI lift V C ft |/!ViVUIIU ? ? ?tlonal banks of the country. In attemp ing to establish a central bank one < the first and most difficult problems to ti solved would be that of providing for th national bank notes now outstanding. I order to make satisfactory provision f< them some means must be found ft taking care of the $685,000,000 of 2 pt cent bonds now pledged by the nationi banks as security for circulation and pul lie deposits. The' new law authorises tt Investment of postal savings funds 1 the 2 per cent bonds. By purchasir these bonds ffom national banks for a count of the postal savings system co responding national bank circulatlc would be retired and the way would i paved for the Issue of that amount < notes by the new central bank."^ JEALOUS OF WIFE'S 000. One Ground for Complaint on Whicl . JU9< XftvwwOA- WMS tJMVOKOO. < ATLANTA. July Marjorle Pal terson, the beautiful young wife of Pre |219| WM\ ' - v- ! i? ? "1 j j ; t i i r Spcials. TOIB" OVERALLS. MADE OP f ? denim; sold regularly at ;i?c. | y ^ price , j> Kl BLOUSE WAISTS.' IN Bars; the price everywhere is ? yQ ]j; rrLE: EXTRA QUALITY ^ | nQ i| are 14 and 15 years only; ^ J e^O fi 1 Discovery ....Wyeth ?? j . I As to payments there is ?? -j I need to worry, as iwras axe ar- i : ranged whereby a little is paid ] each week as beet suits each individual patient - J j Fillings in Gold,Silver, j I Platinum & Porcelain, j Gold Crowns, J -a $ a $ e? j Bridge Work, 0^9 Trf a>j Myjftrtegt SuctionTectl^ j Thev never alio or droD. l ?? ASETT I Dr. WYETHI Painless Dentist 427-429 7th St. N. W. Largest and' Most Thoroughly j Equipped Parlors in Washington. Appointments May Be Made by Telephone. I We keep open until 8 p.m. for II j the accommodation of those that II; cannot come during the day. Sun- |r day hours, 10 to 4. BALTIMORE OFFICE: 36 West Lexington St. I PHILADELPHIA OFFICE: S.E. Cor. 8ttf and Market Sts. CAUTION: "if I office always be sure you are in the right place. Remember the name (Dr. Wyeth). | and the number <427-4:19 7th street). J w W. Patterson, a leader In Atlanta business and- social circles, was yesterday granted a divorce on the ground of L_ cruelty. Mrs. Patterson alleges her busband was unreasonably jealous of her and cruelly abused her because she did * not make all his shirts. "Mr. Patterson was always jealous of ma" her deposi'? tion read. "He was even jealous of mjr (r little dog and made me give him up." I r - T~' I Good Time? i* Laat light?eating big dinner la often =: the maker of a BAD TODAY. Whynatf IJ etnmarh and boneia. Tontee get to eafler if yon dent help nature unlead with CA8CARBTS. "They nurd while you sleep"?yoata O. X. in the A.WL k Tomgfat'a the night totaha aara ef to. . mmm