About Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1911)
..iefc,i [PROGRESSIVES GO AFTER HBEHT nocrats Expect to Carry the State in the National Elec lion in 1912. farmers WANT ABLE MAN nncetonian Is Held in Higher Esteem as Candidate Than Is Champ Clark. ....lean politic* I* undergoing a grsst .-,2-not in upheaval as some who JlfJfTa. change would call It. n«x.iva I* o word used to liken a t» destruction-earthquake* and i‘raaeltang* th*t I* taking place I* a L Tm. ehanoe—a «upportlng of common terLSelpK* by the men of our nation «*3" CS Rg to th* political party that . uAwIna itself most strongly In favor '. Sjr, principle* and of the greatest IfLaTS the n rcateet number. “till a turning has meant turning to tic oarty and to a great de- ™ /«7trom The party that ‘has been C^oisr for the past twenty year*. I /dress ha* shown the largest evl- LS^fttll wonderful change, and now Inuoult* plain that the people are look- ]|t a Democratic prceldent In 1912* I ln lJJ Georgian I* convinced from out- V.'..eearance» even If It were not bj - , *i~n thot the one thing nee- L..,/Tto aesur* Democratic «ucces* the Iresidential election la the selection ,7oove?nor Woodrow Wll.on a* th. nond- 1" umuii we believe this we have for-a I, . I™, heen orlntlng In this column "l dev*new* n *tor es and editorial, from if!, eeet piper* of the countrv, giving our !!s?r! an opportunity thua to know. *r.d ffiJSJo to .elect Woodrow Wll.on as fiCSSlMto represent Democntly. r^Thi.ls being done by us without even a Lulsiitlonfront Governor Wilson or *nv enpeonnetted with him In -any way. and 'it our own axotnaa. I A staff correspondent of The Chlcagro I Journal, writing from Springfield, say*: “presidential' candidate, ore under [discussion a nong.the host of delegate* leathered here for the state fa r. It lied to .be that Republicans held the | floor undisturbed at the atate _ roundup of politicians, but Mn y**rth» Democrats outnumber the Republic^*, sad It Is'vociferously apparent that the democrats expect to win in both atate tnd nation In 191i. _ -Woodrow Wilson, governor of .New jersey, iwms to be ft favorite for prci* Mont among the country Democrats, i-fth Champ Clark a close second. If a well-organised Wilson movement 1» be- irun and nothing happens to arouse the uipfcton of Bryan men aa to the former •ollege president’s progressive spirit, It iught to be easy for the New Jersey- nan’s backers to get the Illinois dele Three Hundred Republicans Meet in Chicago to Organize National Movement.' REPRESENTING 25 STATES Garfield’s Presence Worries Delegates — Roosevelt Sent Former Cabinet Member. Chicago, Oot. 16.—When 300 pro gresslve Republican, from 25 states met here today to organize a natural move ment, ono queetlon woe upon {be Upa of every man. It was thla: “What are the plans and Intentions of James R. Garfield, former secretary of the Inte rior In President Roosevelt’s cabinet?” Garfield came to Chicago Saturday, hut when the Insurgent meeting opened he still maintained a Sphinx-like si lence. This silence waa exceedingly ominous to the managers of the LaFol- lette boom and tbs opponents of the Taft tariff policies. It la known that Garfield came to Chicago at the special behest Theodore Roosovelt. What attitude \he will take toward Taft la anxiously awaited by the Insurgents. Plant Taft’s Defeat. The real purpose of the gathering la to formulate plana for the defeat of President Taft for renomination as a candidate of his party In 1912. While the call which went out several “ptugnapj ales. •There Isjio prejudice among the II mils farmers against a college profee- ir. Scientific agriculture has built up large reaped for the educated man’s lethoda." Business and Property Will Be Distributed Among Four B^g Corporations. SCHEME FILED WITH COURT Five Accessory Companies To Be Broken Up Into Ten or More Subsidiaries. New York, Oot. 16c—The reorganise- ’"i plan of the American Tobacco impany wus filed In the United States circuit curt shortly before noon today. The plan provides for the distribution d the business and property of the to bacco trust among four corporation*, rney are the American Tobacco Qom- wny, the p. r, l.orlllard Company, the j-Wtt & Myers Tobacco Company and !riT ,, J - Re > nolda Tobacco Company, i tie [He "acceaaory companlea” Which , 1 hlted state* supreme court found 5° constitute, in and of themaelvea, combinations In reatralnt of tAide, are to be broken, up Into ten’ or more sub sidiary companlea Other subsidiaries are to be separated from efleh and all hies* fourteen fragments. foreign business Is to be made In- “pendnu of the combination by cut ting louse the Britlsh-Amcrican Tobac- Continusd on Last Pag*. week* ago to the ’’progressives’’ of the party to meet In Chicago did not say In plain language that the conference was designed to further the presidential candidacy of Senator LaFollette. of Wisconsin, every Insurgent politician recognized in It a movement to nomi nate the senator. This, meeting la attended by LaFol lette supporters only. Those senators who followed LaFollette In the lost two eesslonf of congress dominate it. and the other progressives will follow their lead. It la reasonable to expect, there fore, that the gathering will give the LaFollette boom nation-wide scope. Leaders of Movement. Gifford Plnchot. who led the rebellion against the Taft-Balllngcr conservation policies: Louis Braudels, of Boston, who was Pinchots attorney; Rudolph Cpreckels, of 8an Francisco, a multi millionaire; Medlll McCormick, of Chi cago, former publisher of The Chicago Tribune: Charles R. Crane, of Chica go; Senators Bourne, of Oregon: Bris tow, of Kansas; Clapp, of Minnesota; Cummins, of Iowa, and a score of Re publican representatives ore on band to taka part In the deliberations. Several governor* of states and sov- sral hundred leading progressives are here to aid lu drafting a platform and Continued on Last Pag*. VOL. X. ATHLETICS WON • START 1 IE BOX i aent i afte ball championship aeries. paw. Rube Marquard. ; FIRST INNING. without offering at any of them.' Doyle filed out to Lord. Snodgrass walked. Murray filed to Colllna No r hits, no errors. ' Lord singled to right Lord went to second on Murray’s fumble. C ‘ ' sacrificed, Marquard to Meakle. Colllna’ first ball. Marqfiard put the next one over for a strike, and then Collins went to firBt on a clean single. Baker fanned. Murphy filed to De yore. One run, two hits, ona a ' SECOND INNING. Merkle went out on a grounder, Barry to Davis. Herzog doubled to center. Fletcher went out Collins to Davis, to center field, scoring Herzog. Mar quard fanned. One run, two hits, no errors.-' Davis went out by the Doyle to Mer- IS NOTAELE EVENT Jamfs Cardinal Gibbons Cele brating Fiftieth Anniversary of His Priesthood. HIGH CHURCHMEN ATTEND Special Ceremonies Began on Sunday and Will Continue Thru Thursday. Baltimore, Oct, 16.—From every cor ner of the United States there gathered In Baltimore today archbishops blah- ops, tnonslgnora and prieata of the Ro man Catholic church and distinguished churchmen and laymen of other denom inations to take part In the culmination of the golden Jubilee of James Cardinal Olbbons as a priest and the silver Jubi lee of hi* eminence’* elevation to th* cardlnatate. , On June 9, thla year, the cardinal given a reception, at which the presi dent of the Ui— J — " nltcd States, William H. Taft, VIcg President James Sherman and former President Theodore Roose velt In addresses paid high tribute to the man fchose benign diplomacy has made him on# of the moat be’ loved citi zens of this country. Th# ladder of good wishes even reached to the pon tifical throne. _ _ Continued on Cast Pag*. ong the first base line, which Meyers grabbed and throw to Merkle In time. No runs, no hits, on# error. - THIRD INNING. Devore fanned. Doyle filed HARD DAY'S TRAVEL F0R“l ATHLETICS, V , \ GIANTS.', ',', 1 t - i t ICO 002 001 , 010 000 000 -3 - i ATHLETES— AB 1 B H PO ir E Lord, If. ’. Oldring, cf. Collins, 2b. ..; Baker, 3b Murphy, rf. : Davis, lb Barry, ss Thomas, c. ^lank, pi • • • ••••••• • • • • • * •rat* •-•Two • ••• iswm •• • • 4 -4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 f 2 2 1 (. 8 U i 1 0 . 4 1 « 0 2 0 2 0 C 0 ir 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0> 0 ?! Totalss 29 3 4 27 0 GIANTS— ) 6 AB 1 B H PO A T Devore, If. 4 0 0 4 0 l Doyle, 2b 4 0 0 1 3 <>i Snodgrass, cf. 3 0 2 1 0 o- Murray, rf.* 3 0 0 0 0 1 Merkle, lb . 3 0 1 7 0 1 Herzog, 3b. ......i 3 1 1 1 0 0 Fletcher, ss 3 0 • 0 I 1 0 Meyers, c. ...- 3 0 1 9 1 0 Marquard, p 3 0 0 0 2 0 Crandall, p. - 1 0 0 (i 0 0 • • • • #;e • • • * 0 0 0 0 0 0 • Totals 30 1 b 24 7 3 ... ; » UMPIRES—Connalfy, behind bit| Brennan, on th# beast. Start From Gett^burg, Pa., at 6 O’clock—Staunton, Va. Is Destination. GOVERNOR SMITH FIRST OFF Trip From Philadelphia to Fa mous Battlefield Marred by Storms and Bad Roads. the reason for the faith THAT IS IN US l*roin The Manufacturers Record. . Farms and plantations of*the ‘United States will yield this year— 2.769.348.000 bushels of corn. * , 873.641.000 bushels of ogta. ''•>5,516,000 bushels of wheat. 278,552,000,bushels of potatoes. 145.951.000 bushels of barley. 20.677.000 bushels of rye. 22.600.000 bushels of rice. 15.670.000 bushels of buckwheat. 715.543.000 pounds-of tobacco. 46.969.000 tons of hay. Retween 13,000,000 and 13,500,000 bales of cotton. ^ Marketing these crop* and others and handling $2,500,- ?"',00(I worth of product^ of mines and foresta, as a basis *" r "lanufacturing, trade and commerce, mean employment h’? 245,000 miles of railroads and for financial institutions, kiuong which the national banks have— — *10,379,439,384, resources. * 5,489,995,012, individual deposits. $ 1.929,875,822, capital, auirphis and undivided profits. , These facts should lead-the country to make it* text, Not Worry and Wrangle,” and to live up to the By PERCY H. WHITING. Gsttysburg, Pa. Oet 16.—With the weather and th# tourlAs keyed up for an extremely hard dajfts run, the Glld- denltea got away this momlnr at « o’clock. More than 182 miles lay ahead of them, many of thaae mile# over tre mendous hills. Realising thla. tha ref- erfee ordered a 6 o’clock start and modi fied the strenuoslW of the program by calling for an eabler schedule for tho morning Jaunt. Care In the first cl*a» will be allowed the average sixteen miles an hour, instead of the usual twenty; Cla*» two and three may go fourteen miles an hour Instead of eight een, and tha cheaper care, dlvtalbn* four, fiva, Six and xeven, will go twelve Instead of sixteen miles. In the aft ernoon the higher figures will again go In force, t ■ ^ The morning nip will take the tour ists to Winchester, 86 miles, and the afternoon Jaunt to Staunton,-Va, »4 miles more. The first car that checked out was the Maxwell carrying Governor Hoke Smith. He had an early engagement to meet Governor Olascock and did not Intond to take, any chances of being This will be the toughest, day’s rgn until the sands of Florida are reached, gild the tourists are looking'forward to It with no very pleasurable anticipa tion. The start was picturesque; nearly 100 care were lined up around the public Square of Gettysburg, and as they checked out In the deep gloom of a lowering October morning Ahsy seemed only moving blotches In an ocean of /laricness. The Glidden tour bumped Into Get- Lord. Snodgrass singled to right field. Murray went out. Plank to Davis. No runt, on* hit, no errors. Lord fanned. Oldring fouled out to Meyers. Collins filed out to Devore, No runs, no hits, no error*. FOURTH INNING. Merkle went ouL Collins to Davis. Herzog filed out to Barry. Fletcher bounded a fast one' to Barry and was thrown out at first by thre* yards. No runs, no Mts, no errors. Baker went out. Doyle to Merkle. Murphy lifted a high, easy fly to De vore. who swung onto It Davis went out on a foul to Chief Meyers. No runs, no hits, no errors. FIFTH INNING. Meyers went out. Baker to Davis. Marquard fanned at threo wide ones. Devon struck out, and for tho third time at that No runs, no hits, no errors. Barry went out Marquard to Merkle. Thomas also went’out Fletcher scoop ing and throwing to Merkle. 'Plank fanned. No runs, no hits, no errors. 8IXTH INNING. Doyle grounded out to Davis unas sisted. Snodgrass singled over Baker's head, but In attempting to stretch It Into a double he was thrown out at GORDON COUNTY FAIR TO OPEN ON TUESDAY Fair Weather Prevails and the Giants and Athletics Are on Edge Monday. QUAKER FANS CONFIDENT Estimate Places Attendance at Second World’s Champion ship Game at 38,000. 8hlbe Park, Philadelphia, Oet. 16.— More than 30,000 frenzied fan* were Whooping their ecstasy In and around the playing field whsn'the New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics lined up here today In tho second scuf fle of the seven-round go for the base ball champlonshltyaf the world. With tha reticence common to all great men. Managers McGraw and Mack refrained from announcing the names of the chosen athletes who will do tha pitching for their respective forces until they were compelled to hand tha actual facts to Umpire Klem Just before the final words ’’play ball- brought th* vast army of spectators to Its feet for another mighty howl of Joy. However, It wa# pretty generally un derstood that Marquard and Coombs would do the dollvering. A cloud as big as a handkerchief threatened the biasing blue of th* sky Just before play was called and the brood green of the field glistened like a lake. A soft tingle In the air bright ened the eye and qulckoned the pulse until the thousands were ready to laugh or cheer at anything. Sort o’ Wat Diamond. Tho experts In the grandstand who were on hand early took In this glo rious amity of ,-arth and sky hii-1 r.- marked gloomily that they hoped tha Property Between Railroads to Become Scene of Factory and Jobbing Activity. BELLWOOD BRIDGE HELPS Syndicate Said To Be Buying Land Near Thurmond-st. in Whoiesale Quantities. The conversion of an extensive resi dence section on the west side Into a manufacturing and wholesale district the latest nnd largest realty Im provement on foot for Atlanta. While no definite plans have become known, reports that suoh a plan Is well under way are based on present real estate activities In this particular »ec 7 Cslhoun, Os., Oet. 18.—North Georgia's biggest fair, the Gordon County fair, wilt open In Calhoun Tuesday for five dayi and nights. Tha best fair ever held by the anjoclatlon Is awuirnd. Exhibits from every part of tho county are coming In and tho buildings will be taxed to bold the big show. Thera will be special fea tures every day and North Georgia day, Thursday, October It, will be a great event. IP v. Charlie I). Tillman, of At lanta. will conduct the singing, and O. O. Harwell of The Georgian will Judge the poultry., NEW YORK BALL CRAZY. SAYS OWEN ON RETURN tysburg from Philadelphia yesterday afternoon after an awful day and afternoon . , . .. thankful to be here. After a cloudless sunrise, a storm blew .up In time to dotfse the start, and there was storm after storm right to Gettysburg. Also the roads were tremendously bumpy. The pace and the roads told on th* tourists and the care as well, and th* net result was a bunch of bruised Gllddenltee and a lot of penalisations. No cam went out, but a FTanders that reported when the ■cores were posted. However, it was'said to be on the wav. Governor John K. Tener of Pennsyl vania and Governor Smith were to have graced the morning run. but they • Continued on Last Pag*. “The Prodigal Judge” starts in The Georgian today. Read the first installment. second by ten feet, J/ord to Barry. Mur- ho gave him ray was fooled by Plunk, wl three wide ones. No runs, one hit, no errors. Lord filed out to Snodgrass. Oldring filed out to Devore. Collins doublad to left field. Baker hammered out a home run over the right-field fence, scoring Colllna ahead of him. Murphy fanned. Two runs two hlt*L no error*. 8EVENTH INNING. Merkle singled to center. Herxog hit an easy fly to Oldring and was put. Fletcher pushed up a short fly to Baker. Merkle was caught napping oft first and died by Plank to Davis. No runs, bns hit, no errors. Davis filed out to Doyle. Barry filed out to Herzog. Thomas filed out to Fletcher. No runs, ns hits, no errors. BIGHTH -INNING. Mayan lined out to second. Crandall, batting for Marquard, went out from second to first Devore struck out for the fourth time. No rurw. No hits. l'lank fanned. Merkle dropped Lord's high foul, after which Lord fanned. Old- firing out, second to first. Nno hit*.. No Un *‘ ‘ NINTH INNING. Doyl# fanned. Snodgrass fanned. Mur ray out, Collins to Davis. Nno hit*. N 6UMMARQ. Two-base Hits—Herzog, Colllna. Home Runs—Baker. Struck Out—By Marquard 6. by Plank 7. Sacrifice Hit—Oldring. Wild ntch—Marquard. Attendance—20.000. First the Princeton backs were weak, md now It Is tho forwards. Hare they -bsorbed the Ell Idea of sending out 'weak? reports? HERE'S A CHANCE TO GET . $5,000 OF EASY MONEY The largest reward offer that has come to Sheriff C. W. Mangum’s office In yean has been received from th* Pinkerton National Detective Agency. » The Bank Of Montreal offers 16,096 reward and fen per cent of the money recovered for th* arrest and conviction of the parties who bugtartzed Its shfe at th* New Westminster, B. C„ branch on September 16. from which was stolen several hundred, thousands of dol lars. Descriptions of the five and ten- dollar notes end unsigned Uznitad checks are given. J. H. Owen, chief deputy sheriff, re turned Monday morning from a ten-day trip to New Tor*. He was unable to gst a ticket Saturday to tho first gams In tho world's championship series be tween the Athlstlge and th* Giants. “The tickets wore 120 each and there were so many rumors of faks tickets be ing sold that, had I felt like spending tbs 120,1 would have been afraid of the paste board offered me. The entire metropolis was baseball mad Saturday,” said Mr. Owen. JUDGE-B. P. BAILEY IS DEAD AT JACKSON Jackson, Ga„ Oct. 16.—Judge B. P, Bailey, clerk of Butts county superior court, died at his boma In thla city on Sunday nlgbt at 7:60 o’clock. He wad formerly Judge of tbe county court hare and bad been clerk of tb* superior court for several years. Judge Bailey was 67 years of age, a Mason and Knight of Pythias. Surviving him are his wife and seven children, Mlseea Minnie and Eva Key Bailey, Rosa Franklin and Marian Ballsy; tore* eons, Charles and Howard Bailey, who are In the United States navy, and Hrith Bailey. The funeral arrangement* have not been an nounced. pending th* arrival of bis was a bail sky Tbr fly hit balls. Thab pessimism was not communicated tn tho fans, however, nnd Joy unalloyed reigned In grandstand and bleachers. At least 8,009 fans were lined up bo- fore the pork by tho time tho gates wore oponed at 9 o'clock, and from then upoiica ai v u KIULA, turn itum mco* a steady strum of humanity pourd thru the turnstiles. The police handled the crowds In admirable fashion and tho military precision of the uniformed force prevented disorder. Three arrests on tho grounds fur nished diversion for the crowd of fans during the forenoon wait Two of them were pickpocket* and the third was a fan who became so pugnacious over his scat In the bleachers that the police hud to run him tn. It was estimated that the receipts for today’s game would bo approximately 170,099. On Saturday It was given out In Now York that th* receipt* were above 177,000. but the Polo grounds are more capacious than Shlbe park. Tho local ball park was brilliantly decorated for th* game. Bunting, flags and pennants hung about the steel and concrete stadium. Special trains were run from Now York, which brought an army of fans Into Quakertown from the tlon and the fact that options are being obtained on tbe residence properties. The section affected lie* between the Southern and Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic railroads, and Thurmond-st. and Nortb-ave., Including Slmpson-aL and Joncs-ave., both of whloh thor oughfares represent a lot of valuable residence property. Several options. It Is understood, have already been ob tained In this Immediate vicinity. The persons taking the options are believed to represent a syndicate of dealers who contemplate the transformation of the entire section. This theory Is given tutded strength' by reason of the fact that this district la now regarded as the only close In and practicable section tn tho city for a manufacturing and wholesale district combined. It Is easily accessible to the Southern, the Western and Atlantic, the Seaboard and the Louisville and Nashville railroads on one side and the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic on the other, and lies almost in tho shadow of the Terminal station and the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic freight sta tion. * Its situation la considered Ideal. It M known that a plat of the whole district has been mode arid that pro posed routes for spur tracks from the different railroads have been mapped out metropolitan district Enthusiasts from Washlni ngton, Baltimore and other points west and south came into Philadelphia by train loads to see th* gladiators dash. From Mist to Sunshine. The day broke with the skies gray and the weathsr misty and the multi tude of fans rose up from their couches with anxiety pictured on their faces. By 7:60. however, the fog began to scatter Strangely enough Latham waa member of th* old 8L Louis Browns In Von der Ahs'a day, when the# won a world's championship. One of the oldest veterans In the American league, Charlie Hemphill, bus been released by tbo Yankees to the White Bos. EGGS RESEMBLING LEMONS LAID BY A DALTON HEN Dalton. G*, Oct. 16—Two peculiar hen eggs were shown here by G. Stafford Saturday, the shells of tb* eggs betnr firm but peculiarly dented ilk* a ‘ _ lemon peel. The eggs were by tbe same hen and were unlike sny ever seen here before. “The Prodigal Judge” starts in The Georgian today. Read the first installment. I • Uvlf SISSi Ww * V B — %w m rawao.* and the sun began to break thru the clouds, giving promise of line clear weather for the game. Ticket specula tors were able to put It over on th* Phlladelphlana Just as their brethren had handed It to Naw Yorkers. However, th* situation was not sewed up so tight a* It had been In New York odd scalp er* along Broad-st qffersB seats for as low as 15. Here Is th* way some of the Athlet ics sized up th* situation before they took tbe Held today: Captain Harry Davis—“Watch wallop thtm. It Is our turn to win and we will.” Jack Mclnne*—“Well do the trick. Th* Giant* had a hitring streak end now It's our turn. I wish I was going ~ hard to have a place In the cast Pretty luck for me. eh?" Eddie Collins—“We'll beat them sura. W* would have beaten them Saturday but for that boot of mine.” Ottoman Government Declares She Can Not Accept Italy’s Proposals With Dignity. Constantinople, Oet. 16.—The peace negotiation* between the continental en off upon declaration by the Ottoman government that she can not accept Italy's proposals and' maintain her national dignity, rays a- report printed today In The Ikdam. The publication Is said to be authori tative, coming from a semt-official source. The Adam Indicates that Tur key will pursue a hostile course against I(fix. Small Lot Brings 64,100. Not only have options been obtained, but some of the property has already changed Glands. One piece of negro property in Tyler-st.. Just off Simp son—a lot only BO by 100 feet—sold a few days ago for the sum of 14.100. which glvts an Idea of the manner In E ’hlch values In this section have en- anced. This activity and the current reports of the proposed big Improvements have followed the recent action of the United 8tates court In giving permission to the receivers of the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic to sell about 69 houses and lota lying beside the railroad In this territory. Thla court action served as the opening wedge, and It Is believed now that It will be but a short time un til manufacturing plants, warehouses and other enterprises will begin to blossom forth. Faetory Invasion Has Begun. In fact, manufactories have already commenced the invasion. Work of ex cavation. which has been In progress for several weeks at Slmpson-sL and the Southern railway, has almost been completed and within a short time this site Will be occupied by a 676.000 plant for the -National Paper Company. AI-' moat adjoining this site. In Slmpson- sL, stand* the plant of the Atlanta Pa per Box Company. Just a short block away. In Jones-ave., Is the plant ot illrsch A Spitz. Another manufactory has also recently been built In EUtott- sl. Just below Ty!er-*L Continued on I : Peg*. “The Prodigal Judge” starts in The Georgian today. Read the first installment. WANT ADS Published by all the Atlanta papers for the week ending October 14,1911, six days to the week: Georgian a&° 2,899 Journal Constitution. .2,164 1,339 On Saturday the Atlanta papers carried Want Ads as follows: Georgian 763 Journal 338 Constitution 228 THE GEORGIAN prints no btsr. j’HE GEORGIAN prints want ads under the claeslficatlon "Situations Wanted" free. • Other classifications ONE CENT A WORD