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2 MERCURY UP 10 TN, THEN DROPS Breeze Checks What Threatened To Be Record Climb—Little Relief Is Seen. Atlantans on the streets may not have noticed it, but at any rate the mercury dropped two degrees at noon, and as a result the record climb on which it had started was balked ef fectively. The prospects, however, were not particularly encouraging, for the mercury indicated a disposition to again oMmb. At the Weather Bu reau it was stated that the afternoon temperatures would depend on the formation of clouds and the continu ance of the breeze which halted the cHmb of the bulb, The &rop in the temperatnre came in the hour from 11:80 to 1%:30 o'clock. The official thermometer reg isterad 96 demTess at 11:80, and It looked them as if another record breaker wa# in stors for Atlanta. Cool breeses got real busy thereafter, ‘however, and at 12:20 the mercury was at 93 degrees. There i® no rain in sight. At the 48 Rogers Pure Food Stores Remember — Place your order early at the nearest Rogers Store. Stores close promptly at 1 o’clock. Bogvrlc'l Special Fresh Roaste | The two best Oreamery Butters indAtlann. Meadow Gol 1 and Piedmont . 31 20 Limit, 2 lbs. to customer. Two solid carloads of the finest Georgia Watermelons. The price is low and the quality the best we ever had. " Fresh shipment of Junket Tablets. Junkat is an ideal health food. e 100 A collection of valuable recipes for milk desserts and ioe cream, by Janet MoKenzie Hill, with each purchase. Whitman’s Marsh- 1 5 mellow Whip ...... O The !‘l.:m:ru:a Lnl%gu Flour. Just received so R st ... 100 Borden’s Bt. Charles Evapo -8 cans, bbc; dozen, $l.OO. Our sanitary bakery ocou ples the entire top floor of iour big building on Garnett street, away from the dust e oy ... 330 . ... {2OO dozen pint jars Stuffed } &Kvu, 88c value; as long as . .......280 2 qts. the Best Grape Juice 780 2 qts. Red Rock Ginger Ale 27° 2 Red Rock G&r Ale 160 2 cans Hawaiian Sliced Pineapple .. 320 2 cans Oalifornia 2 Cali st P ......29C 3 cans of lfl: !‘:‘Limons Pied mont Hotel Bran Sugar Corn 27c 3 glasses Pure Apple Jelly 240 3 glasses Pure Currant Jelly ..... z7c j Large size IPeannt Butter 21 C =Large glass containing 16 to 20 whole ;Nutmegs 10c ' Genuine Imported : . Molagses, can 12c | The 48 Rogers Stores. Shop at the nearest to in sure prompt delivery. 8 N. Broad 195 E. Georgia 11 Ponders 213 8. Pryor 32 Willlams 236 Caplitol 118 E. Pine 280 OIE 121 BEdgewood 356 8. Pryor lg W. Peachtrees 389 Boulevard 133 Forrest 427 Grant 248 Houston 439 Whitehal) 161 Peachtree 468 Btewart 270 N. Boulevard 464 8. Pryor $OO Hemphill 68 Woodward 309 Ponce Deleon 31 8. Pryor Tl R BEa- M uston 87 223 Cha oG A tol Nown;:;,m (th'o-. Ghm | B ome WOMEN’S CLUBS 'TYPICALCHILD SLAVES - OF MILLS OF GEORGIA At top, Neil Power, aged 10, on left, and Jo Veal, aged 11, Neil turns stockings in a hosiery mill. He says he ‘“haint been to schood. much.”” Jo went to work before he was 11 years old, de spite the fact that his wages were not needed. - » e ‘,” 4 4.'... ¢ rA,;é' 2 w‘?;’;\ > g i B Re S, s 1| AR 4 e };wt»w/fi%fi’m o, e # i g LW W i 5 s ks ooy e , B oo 2 Gy ‘; y & v - STR LR o ! + \Go W w B ~i_"'""" 4A S Sia ; £0" By o B A b vk 7 7 '7‘(/ ';_'&«,, g 13:9 B'( i {M\{ b YRR ¥ % E. 2 2 P 7 v 4’; b ) " P 7 e ‘ el ; ; g 4{[’ %M "flM % 2 PP 45 8% . AR v, E i BEINN T R 7 ; : Wy i i N i M- AN AN PPN L e e S § e P s R LK L e i ) % ~rf’: 453 X By e sPi b 5 "“n“: 4 ; ‘:”" 4'.:‘??4/5 3 / ':; /g o g : DA W wmf”% % QN‘A,,,'fig~ ‘ g 4k ’,5 fi ¢ >:'f. H'l‘,«' ‘ v),':fé}' 4 ”; B G , s, &"‘ ¢ | ‘:;-:.2,4-;3@.»5 . 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S LSRR R '.:?:':‘(D;\ o ; 8 i A SRR AR, S - O e N A CORRRE SRR ST PR ] AN RWO R o ’& BLO LRI BR R L G ' L R ! N siy NWY .‘q‘r:?&&z'".&l‘»\&‘*k. RetA iy N b (Rt SRR L J\i RTS \,‘f&fi St i SRR R N e B B e SR Nt i TN R BRI RS BTG SR B SRR ObARR LG R B Sor, T A RATE PWISR R T o2k S SR ;“&f _SN"&PRO 8 TN 4 \ A£i ' A 3,‘\:&(\-;9 ";%Q"“ %) "'fi" &§¥ \"&‘l‘ ‘(({-', e& iy » N vl ORGSR ASI DR SN ST R D el b G N S P S"\*fi;\._ R P A «'x. ?1 :‘:::' ) ? : (LT : additional burden which will be put |and applicants for ald because they I enr ora rinances &Vanna On uaa y upon the community if the law re- had had no schooling and were the fuses to except children of widowed | Victims of child labor. To Keep Out Plague New War on Cancer|:ni ccrendent purents is sma. ana| These fgies bo 00, Dt % o further believe that, regardless of the Igelway. Southern secretary of the X et extent of the burden, it is eminantiy | National Child Labor Committee, who SAVANNAH, June 30.——After being| DETROIT, June 80.—Henry Ford, the|just, and will be readily assumed by hafT!;‘aid; 2 R 5 ok notified of the appearance of the bu- automobile manufacturer, has an-|a just and generous people. : e low wages whic e cotton bonie plague Ju New Orleans, through | Rounced that he will personally finance; “Tite hearts of our people are not ?dli}n‘;ml‘arfig:xe: tohfe('}:or‘eg;i‘li::::t!;eass the Board of Health of that city, Dr an unrelenting war against cancer and |so callous to the needs of others that because the ; oom;:;ete with children N PORTE O 3 HWIS O = city, DT tuberculosts. children must be allowed to care for | '" O o )théir Wik 1n nbt snovkh W. F. Bruner, of the Savannah Board| g 4 will use the Detrolt General Hos- | thelr dependent parents at the ex- |, "y "0 " The majority of the chil of Health, announced to-day that this | nital, to which he recently gave $3,000,- | pense of their own jov and usefulness. | 3., who'go to work at 10 or 12 will city may quaranteen against the §oo. The minds of our people are not 80|, .erg 5 adults, be able to earn more plgae i hetnk a 8 LiGament soh He said: "Our':mgvltal will not bs\_a‘dull as tof fail hto see that “, is wise |)o7 55 & weelk, and thousands even 3 = | repair shop. It will be a producer. e | economy for them to care for such " e port for those vessels of the West a;gt"ong‘;{m t]?;tn\:'e“wgl ,;?):?:‘\};r(:! "“r;"c‘l D‘arents)!nstea.d of permitting young less. L v cancer, u e quere " ' Indles, where the disease generally | . have faith that we can find a way. th.l‘ldren to attempt to do eo. & : has its incipiency. We expect to produce our own experts; 1 recall a visit I made last year J 'l dWh 1 H This is according to a compact| We MS begin at the bottom and work [to the home of a woman, then 19 a,l e 1 e ls agreement entered into when the bu- upward until we educate ourselves and | years old, who had worked in a mlll - bonic rat appeared {n New ()rléann in the force of hospltal men a 8 Wwe edlcate | since she was 10. She had recently EX'Wlfe Weds A a;in 1912, when the ports of all the na- our"h’“lr_‘.t,h_‘.’,'.'..u_“.),lno}‘_l_lé,,s.!wps' undergone an operation, and was still g tion entered into an agreement to en- - : confined to her bed. £ by force a rigid quarantine if the dis- Youngest Ca,thohc e Married at Age of 12. TERRE HAUTE, IND, June 30.— ease began to spread. g ‘ She owed $3O, her credit at the Wil SR TR B‘ h C t d grocers was exhausted, there was am Kurkendal, 30, was arrested e —————————————— IS 0p ODSGCT& e notaing to eat and the rent was over- to-day on a warrant procured by J. BETTER THAN LEMONADE. T du:‘. Sl‘lehhm‘ls t::d clhlldren lddepend. P. Post, who said Kurkendal threat o = ent upon her, vear old. i o Mortords Acia phosnass, | ST: AUGUSTING FLA. June 30| “when she was LO, b faher 20| Ing b Tuarr the divorced 3. Kk ry & spoonful in a glass of co L & > &8 s - endal. water with sugar. Refreshing and in- | Michael J. Curley as Bi was put to work because both hers ; : vi&omt!ng. Keep a bottle handy.—AD- Cs (“ fl;.‘ ‘ym itiey. &8 qushnn of the and her mother's earnings were need- ~‘g?rkg?&’y v\;(;e!te’:nt!;&rj:&g:o !ta% VERTISEMENT, atholic ocese of St. Augustine| .5 ¢or the support of themselves and h'*:\:xeymoon an took piace in the cathedral here to- |other younger children. ¥ e 4 2AR R day. Bishops Keilly, of Sa\'annnh:l “At 12 she married, her husband send or mail our rou Corrigan, of Baltimore, aud Donohue, | being a mill hand little older than NAVAL BILL I 8 SIGNED. Y of Wheeling, were consecrators. The | herself, WASHINGTON, June 3¢.-—Presi ‘t,o me for quick pemml ceremony was largely attended by “After her marriage she worked on|dent Wilson to-day signed the naval | ¢ prelates and priests while her husband shared the bene- | appropriation bill, carrying the pro iBol'7lo6. The Collego Co- thhop (‘urlE‘y. :4“)'“"1 of aige gs fits and soon began to lag on his own | vision for two dreadnoughts to he " the youngest Catholic prelate in the | job, constructed during the Rest Sacal Op,”’ 119 Peachtree street.|wora “At 18 the second child came, but year. 4 THE ALTLANTA GHEUOKGIAN AND NEW 5’ BACK CHILD LABOR BILL Sheppard Measure Is Indorsed by More Than 100 Organiza tions, Including As sociated Charities. Continued From Page 1. en and . hildren by voting for the passage of t(his bill"” Mr. Logan, in his statement in dorsifig the bill and promising his support to the measure, declared that {ts best featurs is the fact that it protects children regardless of the poverty of their parents. He cites an instance of a young woman who had been reared in the mills and at 19 was an old woman, broken with hard work, and dependent upon charity for something to eat, Mr. Logan sald: “Your pending child labor law is sound in every respect, and espe clally in extending protection to all children, regardless of the poverty of their parents “Charity workers know that the JEWISH WOMEN INDORSE ~ CHILD LABOR MEASURE The Council of Jewish Women through its executive com mittee has indorsed the Sheppard Child Labor bill. The reso lution says: Whereas we, the Atlanta Council of Jewish Women, realiz ing that our State ranks among those with the highest per centage in illiteracy, and that child labor is largely responsible for;1 this condition as well as other evils arising from its abuses; an Whereas it is necessary for a child to reach fourteen (14) years of age in order to acquire a simple school education, and to attain a natural physical development; and 4 Whereas Georgia has the poorest labor laws in the Union; an . Whereas the Sheppard substitute child labor bill aims to eliminate the abuses of child labor and the injurious effects of night work : Therefore Be it resolved, That we do hereby indorse the child labor bill as revised by the National Child Labor Committee to be presented by Mr. Sheppard as a substitute for the bill bearing his name, now on the calendar of the House of Representatives, and do call upon our Legislators of Fulton County that out of respect to the women and children of their State, they do exert themselves in behalf of this bill as behooves their position in this State of Georgia. before its birth the husband and de serted her. “Back to work she went, #o soon that her body, already strained by the task it assumed too early, gave way; hence the operation. “She hasn't had a chance—and those two little chiléren of hers, what chance have they? “When the opponentg of child la bor legislation talikk about the prob lem of the widowed mother, remind them of the problem of the genera tion that is to come from the ex ploited ohild.” McKelway's Theory Sustained. The fact that child labor instead of remedying poverty is a cause of poverty is further brought out by a recent report of the Secretary of the Associated Charities in Savannah, Misg Helen B. Pendleton. An ex haustive study of 75 cases made by Miss Pendleton showed that 84 out of the 75 had become objects of charity ALL GEORGIA FOR M.ECOLLEGE HERE Many Cities Indorse Atlanta for iiversity Site and Pledge Support More indorsements of Atlanta as the gite for the Methodist University for the South were reported Tuesday. At Gainesville the board of stew ards of the First Methodist Church unanimously passed resolutions ap proving the movement to bring the institution to Atlanta, The congregation of the First Methodist Church of Milledgevilie unanimously voted in favor of At lanta and adopted resolutions ac cordingly. According to advices from Milledgeville, the citizens, and espe cially those of the Methodist denom ination, are heartily in accord with the movement to win for Atlanta the location of the university. Americus Methodists indorsed At lanta Sunday morning, when a halt was called in the regular services to permit L. G. Council, a prominent local banker, to read a resolution urging Atlanta for the location of the BSouthern Methodist University. Moral and financial support was pledged. The resolution was unani mously passed by the 1,000 Americus Methodists. Sent to Asylum, Nun Sues Indiana Bishop INDIANAPOLIS, June 30.—Charg ing that she had been committed against her will to a hospital for the insane and that her confinement had resulted in great financial losg to herself, Miss Mary Regina Kerr, of Louisville, Ky, who alleges she was a former member of the religious order of the Sisters of Mercy, to-day filed suit in the Federal District Court against Bishop Catard, of the Cath olle Diocese of Imdianapolis, Bishov Coadjutor Chartrand, of the same diocese; Mary Curren, a member of the order of Sisters of Mercy, Jef fersonville, Ind, and Michael Wahl, Chief of Police of Jeffersonville, Ind. She asks $190,000 damages. 3 Georgians, Absent From Congress, 111 WASHINGTON, June 80.—The geats of three Georgia Congressmen are vacant to-day on account of fll ness. Senator W. 8. West is confined to his room on account of a fall yester day, in which he sprained a hip. Rep resentative Charles 1. Bartlett is re cuperating at a hospital after an op eration, while Representative Wil llam Schley Howard is ill at his home, having secured a leave of ab sence to undergo treatment and fully cover. Rector Assailed for Running Ball Team CATSKILL, N. Y., June 30.—In sisting the Rev. Mr. Clinton, rector of the Episcopal Church here, can not consistently manage the village base ball team and preach the gospel, the women hera have circulated a petition calling upon him to give up one or the other. Calif. Woman Wins At Tennis in England Special Cable to The Atianta Georglan. WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND, June 30 Miss Elizabeth Ryan, of Californta, to-day won the semi-final in the la dies’ singles of the tennis champion ship tournament. defeating Miss Send your roll to me. Films finished efficiently in 8 hours. The College ‘‘Co- Op,”’ 119 Peachtree street. QDR. J. T.GAULT Specialist (for men) Estabiished Eleven Years 32 inmans Bullding Biianie * Georgis INEFFIGIENCY 5 CHARGED T 0 BAUKNIGHT A charge of Inefficiency and hints of more serious charges when the case comes up, were made Tuesday against P. F, Bauknight, fleld secre tary for the Georgia Assoclation for the Blind, by the Rev. J. W. Blosser, in reply to Mr. Bauknight's suit filed Monday against the present board of directors of which Mr. Blosser is a member, The poor financial condition of the association, ascribed by Mr. Bauk night to the fact that the directorate is interfering with him in his work, was charged by Mr. Blosser to the fleld secretary’'s own mismanage ment, » Bauknight Once Probed, ‘“The directors have found the af fairs of the asmciatio& badly man aged,” said Mr. Blokser. “They brought charges of Inefficlency against Mr., Bauknight. An investigation was made, but thers was no officlal report, an en deavor apparently being made to suppress or delay it. It generally is known, however, that things there are in a very bad way. “The present directorate will wel come the court action. Personally I am glad that it came. I don't know that we will oppose putting the asso ciation into the hands of a receiver 20 long as he {s competent. Says People Dislike Him, “It 1s immaterial to us whether the court adjudges us legally elected or not. If we are deposed, another board will have to be chosen and no sin cere board will retain Hauknight as fleld secretary. I think court actton willput the association on the roaa to success. It is rather fortungte that it came at this time. “It I 8 true, I think, that the blind people ‘cuss out’ Bauknight, but they have not been inspired to do so by BIG CUT IN PRIGES On Guaranteed Tirgs Made by the Most Celebrated: Manufacturer in the World , Compare our prices and decide for yours| _ GUARANTEED 3,500 MILeS o. i CTh we .. i W 30x3 11,70 819 344 2435 1. 00121670 118 5% 2% B - 107 NG 364442 -3500 24 Other sizes in proportion. :» Specials for This Week On FACTORY BLEMISHED | 40k $2168 35 $2% NATIONAL TIRES. With limited guarantee. 1 . s 1.79 B v i iea: 30X3 I'2 5.8 10-00 34X4 s ' ' ‘ G ociveiii o 0 BB B Other sizes in proportion. MGoods ;hipge((li 0. 0. d? with privilege of examina ot oney refunded on g:o retur'ned intact within & week. Automabile Tire Gompany§ A. N. BOLTON, Mgr. ‘ 234 PEACHTREE. ATLANTA, C Open 7A. M. Ivy 4580. Olose BP. M. | CASH GRQC_%E“RJ CO. Sell 8 To B Wednesd Large, Selected, Jui ¢ E No Limit or Condi- A tions, One or 1,00( fi 1 Cent Each. | S e e ™ T zg_c!w . s e SRR T CASH GROGERY COO., 37 S, Brog fo G vy il i because of his domi . When the case com# may be SomMe s ¢ YOU THROW AWAY MORE THANSIS CENTS AIDAY' on petty triflg you no real ¢ satisfaction. amount will | an Athnta in your home : alelpfl , i : ATLANA TELEPHONE & COMP”qfi%