Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 11, 1912, HOME, Page 12, Image 12

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12 BOY BUNK HEAD ONDEWEST Deposed by Claxton Directors and Held. Charged With Loaning Money to Self. SAVANNAH, GA.. May 11.—Follow ing a meeting of the board of direc tors of the Merchants and Farmers Bank of Claxton, the resignation of James R Smith, the pnsident, was ac cepted. and a warrant issued for the deposed officer, charging him with withholding the stock book of the bank. The book, it is stated, has since been returned by the father of the young man. who is not yet 21 years of age. Following the meeting, W. L. Ed wards. th£ newly ’ elected vice presi dent of the bank at whose instance Smith was arrested, and Judge Davis S. Atkinson, legal adviser for the bank, held a conference with Mills B. Lane, president of the Citizens and Southern Bank of Savannah. It is understood that Lane expressed entire confidence In the atrength of the bank. It is be lleved he has consented to lend ft his •aalertance if needed. Juat tahax action will be taken by the board of directors relative to the deposed president is problematical. J. L. Kennedy has been ejected president of the bank, and Smith dropped from the directorate of the Institution Smith was arrested in this city, in company with his wife and child, at the . Instigation of Edwards, on the ground ' that he had violated the state banking law by negotiating a persona.!. loan through the bank, giving his personal note therefor, vjithout the consent of the directors. U. S.-TREAStfRER TO BE ATLANTA MAN’S GUEST Lee McClung, United States treas urer, will be the guest of Robert F. Maddox, president of the Georgia Rank ers association, dpring the convention at Atlantic Beach May 24 and 25. Mr. McClung will make one of the principal addresses of the convention. He will .come to Atlanta and go to At lantic Beach on the special car of the Atlanta party. SMITH, ALONE, HOLDS COMMITTEE MEETING Shalby Smith distinguished himself by being the only member present at the meeting of the public works com mittee of the county commission today. General C. L. Anderson and Tull C. Waters, the other members of the com mittee.' are out of the city. Only rou tine matters were taken up. I ~ MID WA Y1 eartt .-' • —• , : . \T I 11 MIDWAY DDqBBsUOOIVOWN vr rp king of all subdivisions • ! ' A ■' '’ I -l-TXJ" pTTTFrm] - “ ‘ —close to two railroads : i F; „ ■ L J ' ' * —~J * . jT]" —WITHIN A FEW HUNDRED FEET OF THE TROLLEY LINE TO I fl F=r=T-T / ’M J L Xj ? * 7 ' \ J \ ATLANTA ; ’ ?l "* -RIGHT IN THE BEST POSITION FOR THE GREATEST ■ fl \ t ; ! 77 J - \ GROWTH AND VALUE INCREASE! X/7 77„ ~' c 9 ‘ s < ■’i P7 P. '■* s H — -1 T~~. —y. . | You can not hesitate. The lots are sellinc fast. Come out todav. Take J." - Lu L. I P —|i - i i ; ; .. a College Park car, get off at Estes’Crossing. 7; • -—PZ3 PL_J. ~IJI2I 7I ~ ~ '* ” S X - \ Notice how conveniently Midway is situated. Just a few hundred feet •: ‘l* ‘ \IL J, r* P*"! LZ~ wr ~ t i n. , , ~~' 7 ' - \ from Estes’ Crossing, Jonesboro Ave., on the Atlanta and Fairburn Elec- ’j) |» " *! \ r |4 — i l 7T'A tric Railwa y- Directly between the A. &W. P. and the A., fl v- . ® Hp" — t4 ® ’ * * 91 * r / B- &A. Railroads. Midway between the centers of Fairburn ® ~ : r~—! , I■ W ’ 1 "I~'i *J ’ \ and Union City, and within Union City’s corporate limits. fl : I ■ 1 - . *\ Each lot in Midway is a full 50 by 145 feet. Each lot faces ■ ■••' Plt:. rJ ‘ 1 ? ! s ; T 7 ' —i~— r s— i ' ’ AJX ’ - - \ on a wide street and runs back to a 20-foot alley. fl Jr* 1w I 1 7 17 71 " !-< e / 3 LllZ£ ~T - ? ' ' - ■= ' There can be no doubt as to the value of Midway lots to- '-F -I - * ’ ♦ J \ d a y, tomorrow, or next year. They must increase. They ■ 17 TTTTTTrn 7 — L “ ; ! 7 1,7 , * „, o 3 *' A must go up, up, up. For just so sure as Union City is the ’ ■ I ; ? ' ■> - J 7 ~71 7-- 7-xx - f '7 *■*« l I A-17 I 17 l 7, greatest suburb of Greater Atlanta, the half million city, so is H ’ j ' •» Z r ’ iS ‘ 77r RT« —\ Midway the greatest subdivision of Union City. • t— — . ' ' | I* ’ i s' I' ” *7717J7T7'1 Directly in the path of progress, of growth, of improve- ~~ t- — — I .j I ! ! I ’ " " 3 . ment, of residential and commercial building, of sure and ’N* s .■ j -- —:• e P z * 1 < ; \ j : : I I „ I I ~~~i \ O n the finest automobile highway in the South—on H , ‘”' 111 7 ' ° , I I * three railroads—with a fine street car service—and the t 1.7 7 I'*■ " ~ "'■: -7 7 ’ s heart of Atlanta only sixty minutes away. . ' ’ - - . ..Z X ~ " 1 —" ' e -IJj \ NO TAXES—NO INTEREST. « H 1 ? ■' *'■ • '. ~I 7i ~ * 11 Tr 1 .1 ; Lot Prices are only $75, SIOO, $125; $lO cash, $5 a H . D ? z -e, e 1 7 7 2 \ month, without interest or taxes. 7“JX—LJ 2L—-- u - •7 , ' , 77° Call at our office or see our salesmen. I THE ATLANTA I I REALTY OWNERS I I II ? "T ' Li. 1 M 1,1 ?js ?? ; ?J°? J 1012-16 Empire Life Building I HANSCOM SPEAKS AGAIN . TO YOUNG MEN SUNDAY 1 z x -i- WSsjajiMMß JI Dr. Georse Lnrinu Hanscom on his favorite norse, “Prince Denmark.” , | SERVICES IN The Sunday morning services at ' North Avenue Presbyterian church, at Peachtree street and North avenue, will ba conducted by Dr. W. W. White, of New York city. Dr. White Is the founder and president of the Teachers Bible Training school of New .YqrH. a deaf, thinker and an eloquent speaker. The evening services yill be especial ly attractive, due to special music and an interesting sermon to be delivered by Dr. F. H. Gaines, president of Ag nes Scott college. DR. OGDEN RETURNS. Dr. Dunbar Ogdon, pastor of Central Presbyterian church, has returned from Richmond, Va„ where he went to preach the annual commencement sermon of Union Theological seminary, and will be in his pulpit again tomorrow. The semirfary has drawn upon At lanta three times to till vacancies on its faculty. Dr. Strickler and Dr Rice, former pastors of Central church, are there, and some months ago Dr. W. L. Lingle resigned the pastorate of First Presbyterian church to accept a chair. Dr. Ogden's subject at the morning service will be "A Good Soldier.” and in the evening he will preach on "The Aristocracy of Heaven.” AT RAILROAD Y. M. C. A. There will be a specially fine service THE-ATLANTA at the Railroad Young Men's Christian association rooms, 31 1-2 West Alabama street, tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o’clock. Rev. George Loring Hanscom, the new pastor of the Central Congre gational church, will be the speaker, and he wiy bring a message that will delight all who will hear him. Charlie Shultz, who has been heard before al these meetings, will sing again. The association orchestra will play, and the song service will be an enjoyable part. METHODIST BOARD MEETS. The mid-year meeting of the board of missions of the North Georgia con ference will be held in Baraca hall, ’ Wesley Memorial church. Tuesday evening and Wednesday of next week. The eleven presiding elders of the con ference have been Invited to meet with the board. Dr. J. E. Dickey will pre side. Mr. H. Y. McCord, treasurer, will make his semi-annual report. His books will close for this meeting Tues day morning. Many topics of Interest to the elders and the board will be dis cussed. such as "A Policy for Our Mill People," "The Rural Church" and “How to Develop Missions Into Self-Support ing Charges.” DR. BRICKER'S NEW SERIES. Dr. L. O. Bricker will begin a new CHARGES DEAL IN FLfIBIMW Gibbons Threatens to Invoke Law to Get Second Guber natorial Primary, JACKSONVILLE. FLA.. May 11.— Declaring a trade has been made be tween Park Trammel, leading candi date. for the Democratic nomination for governor in the recent primary, and W. H. Milton. his nearest competitor, whereby the latter has announced his retirement, Cromwell Gibbons, fourth man In the race, declares he will invoke the law to get Into the second primary. Gibbons declares that should Senator Fletcher succeed James W. Locke as United States district judge, Milton will be named to succeed Fletcher in the senate and Trammell will be sup ported against Senator Bryan when his term expires. series on Sunday evening sermons at the First Christian church, which, he says, are designed to build up the soul’s fighting qualities, to put a heart of courage and faith and gladness into human lives, to make the daily task a delight, and to give to hard-driven, care-laden men and women that divine philosophy of life w hich will keep them fit for their work and glad they are alive. The subject of the first sermon, tomorrow evening, will be "The Cour age to Face God's Good, Hard World.” There will be a platform sanitation meeting at the First Congregational church, colored, tomorrow night at 8 o’clock. C. J. Haden, .general chairman of the movement for the cky, will make the principal address. There will be other addresses by W. B. Matthews, on the movement from the point of view of the teacher; by L. B. Palmer, from that of the physician; J. B. Greenwood, the citizen; Eugenia Hope, the home; W. J. Trent, the working man. H. H. Proctor, the pastor, will preside and speak of “The Need of a Training School for the Colored Work ing Girl as a Permanent Aid to the Movement.” There will be special mu sic by the chorus of the church, in charge of Professor P, M. Thompson, and the general public is invited, white' as well-as-colored. - ■ • Collections for the sufferers from the flooded Mississippi valley will be taken in many of the Atlanta churches Sun day morning. Dr. John E. White, of the Second Baptist church, will make the flood the subject of his sermon, and through the efforts of the Evangelical Ministers association many other pas tors have agreed to solicit funds from their congregation. T. R. SWAMPS TAFT; - MINNEAPOLIS GOES FOR HIM OVER 3 TO I MINNEAPOLIS, MINN., May IL— Roosevelt will have a handsome major ity of the delegates-to the county con vention which meets in Minneapolis Monday morning. Last night's prima ries brought out the largest vote ever recorded at a primary in Minneapolis. Full returns from the 116 city precincts give Taft 92 delegates, Roosevelt 32.6, LaFollette 33 and fusion 60? Returns from a]! larger country towns are in. but quite a number of the smaller villages are yet to be heard from. In the country LaFollette is running strong. Late returns give him one more delegate than Roosevelt. La- Follette has 25. Mr. Taft is a bad third in the country, but 13 delegates. This gives Colonel Roosevelt 350 delegates. Mr. Taft 105 and Senator LaFollette 58. The fusion ticket did not, enter promi nently the fight in the country. HAB HEMORRHOIDS FOR FREER YEARS Had Awful Thue, Bleeding and Sharp Pains. Cuticura Ointment Gave Immediate Relief. After 2 Boxes Cured Permanently. R 35 Octavia Bt., Pan Francisco, Calif. —"T suffered with piles [hemorrhoids] for fifteen years bleeding piles. I surely did have an awful time. I was distressed continually also nervous at night, with sharp pains at intervals, and U worried me as the bleeding caused a weak and fainr, feeiing. "I used which seemed to irritate, used a dozen of their boxes, but it did no good, I also used and without results. Then I saw Cuticura Oint ment advertised. I got some and it gave im mediate relief. After using il two times, it stopped the bleeding, and after two boxes I was cured permanently with no more bleed ing. I always keep a box of Cuticura Oint ment on band for family uses, such as chapped hands, pimples, etc. It is worth its weight in gold.” (Signed) John Tansmaa, Nov. 29, ’ll. ECZEMA HEALED !N 4 DAYS Formed Hard Crust on Scalp. Very Itchy. Marlboro, N. Y. "My little girl had ec zema on the scalp. First a small mattery pimple appeared. The pimple broke and a watery substance ran da the skin, forming a . hard crust which was very itchy.. If was on the top of her head, and the crust became as large as the palm of my hand. A friend rec ommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment. In four days the scalp was all healed, no sign of crusts or scabs eoiild be seen. She has not had a sign of eczema since Cuticura Soap and Ointment aired her.” (Signed) Mrs. H. B. Cooley, April 3, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold everywhere. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. book. Address, "Cuticura." Dept. T, Boston. Tender-faced men should shave with Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick. ’ ' * ‘ -a., . a.a-a * * * • V*-.A ' ‘ ’ ' • • - • r - and Someday artglUfl l rfe-z— --sefyourAqy r up in - Business, t M* , '• * I 111 li I il !• * * It is the ambition of every father to see Ziis boy some day tsecurely fixed in a nice busijiess. If you tsa ve money for no other purpose, why not now putting money in the bank for YOUR HOY’S FUTURE? Perhaps that same money that will set your boy up in business will make x a comi'ortable old age for vou. Do YOUR banking with US. 4 per cent on Savings Deposits CENTRAL BANK & TRUST CORPORATION Candler Building BRANCH: Mitchell and Forsyth Streets H CUCCESS IS GOTTEN BY the sure steps you take in advertising. GEORGIAN pj W ANT ADS are sure step* H * ping-stones to success. The LEAST COST AND THE HP gg LARGEST AND QUICK EST RESULTS. vTV kaLi vv- V- ' —1 ' —■