Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 13, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2

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2 TIFT IS FIGHTING FOG HOME STATE President Must Defeat Roose velt in Ohio or “Take the Count” in Political Game. Continued F'om Page One. 'eason That his strongest followers have been the ones that have more greatly j antagonized the regulars in he past fight. Working For Harmony. Since Clark nnr leads with half nr a majority of the district vote, the big gest figh’ will com*' in the selection of i thr delegates at ’arge. Unle 5 s some one < andidate develops a controlling force tn the convention, this vote ".ill go unim-trusted, and there is something of a tangible movement to have It th:-' way in order to bring about harmony and prevent d word after the partv has suffered so much on that accoun' The men most prominently mentioned for delegates at large have refrained from stating their preferences, and with such men as Senator Luke Iyer ami ex- Governo: Henton McMillan ft is not known just whom they would favor most for the nomination. The Republicans in East Tennessee, led by the mighty \V J. Oliver, of the Panama canal fame, are coming to the convention by the-thousand? in Roose velt's behalf. The following for Roosevelt refuser to believe the claim that the state is all . for Taft, except for the two votes in the Second district, and unless the state committee allows them the 17 out of; the 24 that they claim, a meeting far more sensational than the noted mob i convention of 1908 w ill he the result T. R. Meetings Cheer Up Yates ,T. St. Julian Yates expressed htm«elf today as more than well pleated with the results obtained throughout Georgia Saturday in the various insurgent Re publican conventions. Mr Yates is the president of the Georgia Roosevelt Progressive Republi can dubs, and as such is deeply inter ested in the proposed reorganization of the partv in this state. He has kept close account of the progress of things and find.-- much consolation in the situ ation as It exists today. Despite a little friction that cropped nut between two of the participants in the Fulton county convention just be fore adjournment Saturday afternoon. Mr Tates claims that II was a com plete success, and says lhat reports from 109 of the 146 counties in the state indicate great enthusiasm for the new movement everyw here Will Name Delegates. fteleg.ites from all counties holding convent loir- Saturday have been elected to a stale convention Io be held in th senate chamber in the state capital on May 17 This convention will elect four delegates at large to the Chicago na tional convention J St Julian Yates likely will be chairman of the state convention, and probably will be mad one of toe delegates at large to Chicago. District conventions will be hold on May 19 to select two delegates, respect ively, to Chicago. All of these insurgent delegates un doubtedly win be instructed positive!'.' and unqualifiedly for Roosevelt for president. Fight G r ows Bitte'". The fight between -he regular and in surgent factions in Georgia is bitter In the extreme. Roth white men and ne groes a'o lined up on each side, about equally divided. The regular organiza tion already has elected Its delegates to Chicago and instructed them for Taft, and It now declares that no other dele gates possibly can be recognized The insurgent faction, nevertheless, proposes to put itself in readiness to go before the national convention in the beet contesting shape it may. in the event that Mr. Roosevelt - friends con trol the convention tn the vita! matter of its organization. Walter L Johnson, the accredited head of the regular Georgia Republican organization Is a Taft man. and a Fed eral offj. --holder He refused to have anything whatever to do with the tall for Saturday s conventions A. G’.aves, the secretary of the regulat state or ganization. bolted the regulars and as. fumed responsibility for the Saturda.v * call. He is a Roosevelt man. and is not a Federal office-holder All California Is Claimed for Clark SAN PRAN.-lsro. Mat i; . p.verv county in California w " s . f or . Clark at the Democratu primary Tues day. according 'o the deductions of i; H Dewitt, president of the Champ Clark lefiigue. Mr Dewitt has issued a state ment in which lie declares ci ;1 .„ Wi n win by an overwhelming . p. also I predicts Clark will he nmnuuHeu at Bal timore on the first ballet Taft and Rooaeve.lt managers both laun I victory for their candidates tn the state I Secretary of State Knox was sent ■ iforma last week to stump so, tin - (S dent and left feeling ■ -mfiden: chief's success Ex-Senator Beveridge, of Indiana, followed upon s-.-retarv Knox's heels on behalf of vti- He left last night for the Ea ■ Woman suffrage will prove a i g • in Tuesdays primarv The vote wdl |. the largest by far ever polled in the smte TAFT NAMES WOMAN TO HELP BURN PAPER MONEY WASHINGTON, Ma' 13 U’e.'>r* Taft has appointed Mifr Loutr-e L* '*■>> te a member of the rff’calb « ine-" r ' th* de ’ru< tion es »'•>. urrn-niH paper mon*' ”f th*- men’ Mu-? !.*>-» er Hv first Human t<- aerie in th.' <.apa<un Hoodoo of 13 Mice His Gift on May 13, 23 Years Old Today | J. Embert Brown, city ticket agent of s he Seaboard Air Cine, had a birthday to- ’ da? and rr eived thirteen mire a* rne of ; his birthda? presents. This is thp 13th of : I the month, too. Mr Brown has been by mice , i «atinjr ti' keis. documents and other j things mb e delight in. and Saturday ' afternoon he set a trap for them Wh*n ; he opened the affire today he found thir ; teen mire scampering about. Rrnwn is i exa'-Uy 23 years old I am going to keep these mire as a i ■ birthday present, and I think to have ’ t' em quit destroying papers around the j office would bo the best gift I could re- ! i reive. ' he told a friend. — ry ! I ——————— J- TmM t fl' I'M j's i. , x . i & 11 ' x R. ” J w-ch — i—L> air JRBE ■- I \jK • . Mi- W~ ~ » ~!• - fitter- - r «EaE — ”K» f / ra?Wllfr fit Jr ‘ f W • . ..St J JTMCToiwr " T 3<Hwi~oiE>neM''.' , LLA ? ~a~~ I'he "hoodoo' dry dock al thp Brooklyn navy yard, showing the battleship I’tah after be ing warped. At left. I'jigineor h. H. Harris. I . S. \.. who solved the problem of the dock s con gfruction on quicksand. At right. Roar Admiral Leutz. cammandant of iho navt yard. Affinities Elope to Augusta, But Police Find Their Paradise AVGCSTA. GA., Max 13 Augusta today turned up a real affinity case. The pollen officers of this city. at the request of II S. Gotthelf, of Now York, hate placed under arrest .Mis. Gotthelf and Antone Guntcrrnan, a German elec trician, with whom she was Ilyins In this city Mrs- Gotthelf and Gunterinan n ere 'sqjnqns am ui .1811110 > xzo.v n uj punoj the latter’s two children with them. Mis Gotthelf. who had deserted her husband and two little daughters in New York, stated to the police that her husband mistreated her and she found solace and happiness in her life with Gunterinan. They had started a Rar den. Gotthelf some time ago wrote the city editors of two local newspapers about his troubles and they informed the po lice, who began a search for the eloping wife Mis. Gotthelf says that her hus band is the son of a wealthy clothing importer of New York, but -hat he is dissolute in his habits. She declares that she will not return to New York. OUSTED FROM COURT CLERKSHIP, JOHNSON FIGHTS TO KEEP JOB SAVANNAH. GA May 13. Tomlin son F, Johnson, for nine years rlvrk of the I’nited States canrt for the South ern district of Georgia, has received no official notice of his removal. nor of the ippnintment of Conk <’layton, of Ma con. in hl* stead. Judge Emo \ Speer is said to have announced the appoint-j ment of Clayton in Maron Saturday { The contemplated change in the office was a surprise. When it wa learned that Judge Speer » ontemp ated naming a new clerk Johnson s friends got busy in hi-. b« - : half Influential letters from man> Sa xannahlans asking his retention in of ten and a petition to that effect, signed • l»x -.he h iding of the Savan ■ nah bar, were forwarded to Judge | Speer. Johnson -of the h.-*t known men in this part of thr state. A son of Governor Hir?<hel V Johnson, ho was f<n manx c ars in the I’nitt d | State-- : i ;r\ service, soixed five* • years as dlector of the port The new appointee was indorsed bx i ; Senators Enon and Smith and Con-i ignssiur-n Hughes and Bartlett. The | ' : a son tor the change, as announced by* Judge Speer, is Fliat, in future, the clerk ’ must attend all the sesduns of the court n hi- district, the judge holding that a xo’.ng man with a tobust constitution ; nc< essary. WHITES IN SOUTH AFRICA NOW FEAR NEGRO PERIL ■ 'PE TOWN, rytoy op s<»l TH ,\E t;'- A Maj C The < oio» question was i l>r.- pn.nunently to »h« front h\ the I • -oo p of Ihp premier. General Louis . E ’’ *de* n parbament. to appoint a ; fi.’nn. m -nmiire into the “blat k ‘ pen’ problem ’ * . ■ ’ n ba-, ’-erp inc*a -’ngb at ’’ • 1 ’ ' - • ’e nt « i n io 'ph x Inca in eon - r - f ‘ f f 1 he. [t c ; tent made on j THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: MONDAY, MAY 13. 1912. “HOODOO” DRY DOCK THAT COST 20 LIX LS AT LAST HAS OCCUPANT \\ i \\ "v\ ■. wL? \\ \\ fcrST REUNION LOSS TO MACON SMI Thousands of Cots Never Used by Veterans and Provisions Are Dumped Into River. MACON, GA.. May 1.3. —Careful es timates place the financial loss sus tained by .Macon people on the reunion at not less than 5250,000. The greater part of this was invested in thousands of cots which were never used. There are numerous instance? where the loss falls upon those least able to bear it. In one case an aged school teacher mortgaged her home, spending SBOO for cots, and failed to rent even <>no A Russian barber, who had saved SSOO to bring his parents from the old country, likewise bought cots, ami did not have a single roomer. The trouble was that the people of Macon were over enthusiastic about the reunion. They confidently expected and prepared for 150.000 visitors. I .ess than 40,000 came. Os the 200 lunch stands, only four made aux profit, and one is said to have lost $1 1,000. In the last two da.vs more than 50.- 000 buns, loaves of bread and sand wiches have been dumped into the river. Souvenir dealers were also hard hit. PICTURE SLIDES TO HELP DEVELOP LOVE OF ART IN ATLANTA lypprofiuct ions tn hand-colored slides <T the world’s famous art masterpieces with a short lecture on each one is planned h\ the Mlanta Art Association f<»r every | Friday afternoon from 3 to 6 o'clock at the Montgomery theater. There will be no extra « barge for the ■didr . which have been secured by the local association with a view of educating Mlanta people to an .appreciation of art. The slides have been secured with the co-operation of the American Federation of \rts. the Metropolitan museum and the Petroit Museum of Art. Hex W. W Memmmger will make a short talk ex plaining each picture as it is shown. On next Friday samples of English art '• xx ill be shown. These will be followed ! b \ French. Flemish and-Italian master i pieces PIONEER'S BODY BORNE TO GRAVE WITH HONORS Th® fune-al of Sampson A. .Mon;.-. | one of the best known • of Atlanta's pioneer citizens, at St. Pauls Methodist x'hui'i'h yesterday afternoon, was at tended. bx an honorary escort from among the most prominent residents. Rex R r Frazer officiated and the inte; ment was in Oakland teinete-x Mi Moi ■■ died late Satuidav after noon .11 io- home, 236 Park avenue, f-oni a stroke of paralysis He was 69 | x rar? of age and as one of th- city’s | most aitiv® business men had accumu lated a considerable estat- H” *v ;< •. Confederate veteran, served two term? n Tn® city out”'' and wa= affi i.vt xxith a number of fraternal " ganiza -iont H® i? -'irx ived h- >v " if l ',-ore I . on. T 1 Mo-t it, and a daughter M:; •.I. H I'wins. ; Dog-Fondling Women Not Worthy of Name Os Wife, Says Pastor br Charles O. Jones, of Grace Meth odist church, thinks that a xvoman who fondles a dog instead of a baby is un worthy of tite name of wife.' He told his congregation so In a ser mon on "The Duties of Motherhood," preached last night. "They asked Napoleon what was the greatest need of France." said Dr. Jones, "and the emperor answered that France needed mothers." Dr. Holderby. of Moore Memorial church, took occasion Sunday to criti cise the action of the Methodist bishops in t ccominending that the ban he lifted f-oin theatoi going, card plaxing and dancing. 'll is a clear eoinnrom Ist- with the devil." said Dr. Holderby "Should these recommendations bo adopted the whole church xx ill receive a tremendous blow. "In this compro’r’.‘■•ng the churclb is surely losing power. The old-time gos pel of sin and judgment and eternal punishment Is no longer bt ing preach ed. The world is demanding a soft gos pel of ttie church, and I am ashamed to sax it is getting it." Dr. K. Dean Klien wood, of Ihe First I’niversalist church, took the opposite view of the question. He told his con gregation thai the old-time religion would not satisfy the twentieth cen tury. "Not that there is a lack of religion." said Dr. Ellenwood. "but the religion that i? preached fails to appeal to the love of reason, to the love of (air play, w hich is tlie predominant charade; - istie of our enlightened ago. The old time religion is not enough." FATALLY SLASHED IN CHURCH ROW. SHOOTS HIS FOES;BOTH DYING DAI.I.AS. GA. Max 1.3. After bis throat had been cut bx Grady and Grover Cooper at Bethany ciiureli six mile* south of Dallas, yesterday aft ernoon. V. 11. Mct’ard drew his pis tol and shot the Coopers, both of whom are expected to di® from their wound*. Mct'ard bind to death a few minutes after it® was cut. the jugular xcin being se vet eri The killing was the result of an old feud between the t’oop, ;s and Mct'ard. The three xxete attending an all dax .'inging at Bt thanx church when th® oiri trouble was renewed with fatal effect. 4 MAN |S BOSS IN ITALY. BUT NOT IN AMERICA NEW Y'IRK. Max 13.—Giuseppi Per. o appea ed before Judge .Mayo in children s court and asked for an order for the release of his son. w hjnn he had requested plax ed in the Catholic pro tectory as incorrigible. "Whx is it x®u want the boy back? You asked t® jiaxe him confined." Judge Mix.. asked. "Mx xx if.- don't like it." said Pcrro You are boss of your own house, are • xou n® 1 aid fudge Max® peer® looked sadb at tb® ..udg® and replied ■ In I'.al' - ”i bet th* man is boss; but I I in America, no. I Dreadnought Utah Warped Into Slip as Officials Look on With Fingers Crossed. NEW YORK. May 13.—Dry dock No. 4. in the Brooklyn navy.y^d—the "h.oo i doo dry dock”—which has Keen seven years in the building and has cost $2.- B'lo,ooo on an original congressional ap-. propriation of $1,000,000; caused the deaths of twenty men; wounded at least 400 others; precipitated tiie bank ruptcy of two or three engineering films which tried to construct it. and raised havoc generally with routine in the yard, has an occupant at last. The I’. S. S.-I'tah. champion shooting ship of th® North Allantic fleet and among th® newest of t'nei® Sam’s dreadnoughts, was floated into the hug® dock early while Admiral Luetzc. commandant of the yard, and half a dozen navy department bffiiials fiom Washington crossed their lingers and held their breaths as the big battleship was slowly warped into position and lifted out of the water. Champion For Bad Luck. If such an inanimate thing as a con crete dry dock can exert a sinister in fluence. dry dock No. 4 wins easily as champion among - the hoodoos. Hero is its unenviable record: Congress appropriated Sl.nfifi.Dnn in 1905 for the dry dock, which is 748 feet long. 120 foot wicl® and 35 foot deep. This " as considered sizable enough for even th® largest dreadnought that should he built within two decades at least. George R. Spearin A- <’o. were awarded the contract for its construc tion. Difficulties beyond enumeration xx or® encountered almost 'immi d'at'!y, th® most serious being that quicksand instead of solid bottom receivetl the pib * sunk to start the dock. As soon as a pile was "sunk" it would com® bobbing up again to the surface. Death? and injuries among the work men. xvith consequent heavy damagej suits, followed, and th® Spearin firm. In sore financial straits, .abandoned th® job Jinx Hit Anothe- Firm. Th® William.- Engineering Company ■was n®xt to wrestle with th® jinx An increasingly largo number of men me: death oi grievous injury, the same old quicksand was still at work: th® tint® limit expired w ithout mui h progre.*® on the dock, and th® contract with th® Williams firm w:t annulled. Th® Wil liams company, like it- predecessor, was p’actieally impoverished by its futile, attempt to break the hoodoo. Then the proverbial luck of the I’nit cd State.. liavv cam® to the rescue. En - gineer F. B. Harris was detailed as spe i ial engineei officer to assist th® third I ft: m of eont: actors. Holbrook. Cabot & Roilins. He solved the problem. He devised a system of caissons, similar to those used in the cons tt uetion of skyscraper I foundations, for the overcoming of the quicksand. One hundred and two of these caissons were driven to a 9<>-foot depth and a steel and concrete wall five feet thick built around them. HE CUT HIS THROAT TO PREVENT AMPUTATION NEV* ' '>RK May*l3 In terror ar t thought of having hi- r’ghr leg amputated ~a boa f the ankle, la-oh Grcr n. plumber. ! attempte«i tn commit suicide b- rutting his t)irva’ a» 3er.e? h- pital. He v ill 1 Pastor Rescues Girl From Watery Grave And Then Weds Her SAVANNAH. GA.. May 13.—A ro mance. beginning two month? ago when Rev. Fred H. Williams rescued Miss Emily 1,. Trice, of this city, from drowning, resulted in the marriage of the couple here v esterday. Williams and Mis? Trice were on a boat ride on Wilmington river, near Thunderbolt. While stepping from a rowboat to a larger craft, both the young people fell into the water. The tide was running pretty strong, and Williams had considerable difficulty in getting out with the girl. Up to that time th- couple had been good friend?, but an experience of that sort naturally made a difference, and the friendship quickly ripened into something mote I serious. Ellen Glasgow May Drop Pen and Give Time to Suffragists RICHMOND. YA. May 13- tequa’. suffrage will be kept fresh in th? minds of Virginia legislators, according t<» Mises Klien.c. Glasgow, th* 4 author, who 1 has just returned tn her home in this city following •-< trip to New York whore .she and other .* uffragettc* of ‘ Virginia, including Mi-s Mar? John ston. r>a rtici pa ted in the recent suffra gist parade. ■ It is reported that Miss Glasgow is i thinking of retiring from the sphere of ' writing, so as to devote all, hfj time to the cause of the equal ballot. She foai'- it will he some years before \ irginiii w ill be sufli* iently enlightened to grant the ballot to women. Mi s Johnston, who is now devoting ■ practically her entiii time to tlio cause, rs a little more hopeful. She thinks a constitutional amendment allowing women tn vote will 1..- gained at the 1 next session of the Virginia '-gislature t'.vn years hence. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN INSTALLS DR. WALKER AT NOTABLE SERVICE Dr. Hugh K. Walker is’today official ly pastor of th® First Presbyterian church. He was installed at a special service attended b.v the entire member ship of the church and mdny visitor*. Since coming io Atlanta from Eos Angeles two month® ago. Dr. Walker has become one of the most prominent figures in Christian wotk in the citv. ftfficiating at th® installation service wc:,® Dr. W. L. Lingl®, of Richmond Theological seminar.’, who preceded Di. Walker in th® pastorate; Dr. A. R Holderby, wlio presided: Dr. J. L.vti.u Bachman, of Knoxville; Dr. A. A. Eit- He. Dr. Dunbar H, < tgdeft and Elders John J. Eagan anti S M. Inman D". I.ingle lead the Scripture lesson and delivered the sermon; Dr. Baehman delivered th® (itarge. ®xpoundine th® duti®sj of the pastor to th® church, and John J. Eagan, on® of th® elders, closed the ceremonial part of th® service with p raver, HAS WRITTEN HOME ONCE EVERY WEEK IN THE LAST 36 YEARS MED-tR.V. lEE., Max 1.3.. T.. . a rry out a promise made to his father on leaving the family home thirtj -six years ago. Pro fessor William H. Dftvis. of the Southern Illinois State Normal university, has writ, ten a weekly letter to the parent, now 80 tears old. living at Hamilton. Ohio. In that lime Davis has mailed !.904 reg ular weekly missives to his father. He continues the practice. MOTHER GIVES BABY AS SECURITY FOR DEBT CINCINNATI. May 13.—A month-old bab.v was held as security for debt until Judge William Lueders reached into his pocket and gave $lO to .Mrs. Frank Fair, so that she would consent to give back the child to her mother. Mrs. Frame.® Geilig. eighteen years old. The mother had placed the baby w ith the woman as security until a sio board bbl could b® paid. Th® couple had called at th® court to have adoption paper? issued Tite judge l®nt the monox to th® father until he set ured a nositloai. MOCK WNNIAGE LOST HER DOWER Mary Lee Turpin Was Not At lanta Hotel Man’s Legal Wife, Court Declares. DUBUQUE IOWA. May 13—The 5250.000 fortune of the late F. As. Tur pin. whose hotel interests in Atlanta were large, will not be divided to give Mary Lee Turpin a widow' share. Circuit Court Judge Benson has put forth a decision declaring that Mary Lee Turpin was never legally married to the hotel man. in spitj of the fact that she had lived with him in New York and Chicago. The case was one in which one of i the oldest families of Georgia was con- I i erned. September 21. 1910. Mary I.ee ! Turpin filed a petition with the dis-- ; trict cou-t asking for a divorce from , Turpin, then proprietor of the Julien l hotel of this city, and also interested in hotel property at Macon. Ga.. Knox- I ville. and Atlanta. Ga. Before ervice could be obtained on 1 the defendant, he died al the home cf | relatives at Macon. A few days after i his death, the woman, claiming to be I the widow, had an administrator of [ the estate appointed. This was H. J. ; Grave, of Dubuque, a clerk in the office ' of the clerk of the district court. Mother Fought Suit. March 3. 1911. the woman applied to i the court for a widow's allowance. Suit ! was resisted by decedent's mother, who | alleged that the woman claiming tho i allowance was not the widow of her Ison, never had been his wife, and that ■ hr never had intended to make hi t hi, ; wife. i In the trial, attorneys from Macon and Chicago assisted the best local i lawyers. Witncase. were brought from i New York, ,Macon, Atlanta and I Jacksonville. Fla. In her suit for divorce the plaintiff I allegefl she and Turpin victr married I hi New York city in September. 1908. and that they lived at the Hotel Girard as husband and w ife. She alleged that, the suit m vei came to trial before th® death of t| lc defendant. In the trial undo the petition for a widow's allowance the plaintiff said she w as 32 years old: that she .was born at Brunswick. Ga. At the age of abou* It she was married to James C. Smith. •> locomotive engineer. In 1904, aid he wav killed in railroad accident. After that, the plaintiff alleged she worked for Captain James McKay, own er ami operator of coasting vessels, as tenographer. bookkeper and. vunfiden tvil secretary. Claimed a "Mock" Marriage. She vv as called to Jacksonville by the illness of a brother, and there met Tur pin. From that time on the' mecfre quently and eventually became engaged to marry, the plaintiff said. Early IfT September. 1908. she added. Turpin sent her a telegram to journey to New York, where they were to be married. She macle-the trip, met him in Jersey City, went so-an office huflding in New York city, wa? married by a man she sup posed was a civil officer. Then the two went to the Hotel Girard. She Showed in court pages of the ho tel register containing their names. in the spring of 1910 at the Majestic hotel in Chicago the woman said Tur pin told" her they were not married, and that the ceremony was a mock one. Then she tried to commit suicide by drinking water which had been poured over matches. The house physician saved her life. Oil the part of the defense it was not denied that the plaintiff and Turpin had lived .as husband and wife ai varied places, but It was denied that they were cvei married. GREAT LAKES SWEPT BY STORM: HARBORS CRIPPLED; 2 KILLED CHICAGO. Max 13.—Heavy damage was reported today as a result of the storm that swept Lake .Michigan yes terday. while two men here are dead. The three-masted .■» -hooner Quickstep, w hich nearly went down in sight of the harbor and was towed in*after a five hour battle with the gale, fa badly crip pled. Damage along the entire lake front is reported and at Indiana Har ber. at th® southern end of the lake, where th® northeast gal® had 'full sweep the I® s will reach into thou- < sanris of dollars. Aldis avenue, the lake front di’® of that city. w as under mined by the tons of water that were hurled against it. water mains and gar - pipes torn out and residence property heavily damaged. The two men who lost their Ilves in Chicago were blinded by the driving rain and walked into the path of ap proaching tree- cars. SPENT 40 CENTS FOR 39-CENT DIVIDEND CINCINNATI. Max ■ 3 . , A idcnd jg something nm he sneered at even when th® sum total of it is only 39 cents. It. was because of that fact that four attor nexs made application before ludg- Holdster for an order of the United States court declaring George M. Meyer entitled to be paid 39 cents out of what is left of the bankrupt estate of <■ j Voss ler The judicial order was duly given Bvrd Billey, court clerk - , being directed to hand over that amounlt But. in order to obtain the 39 cents dividend, the claimant I,ad to spend 40 cents In pay,ng a notary publie. who prepared the affidavit' that was required. SHE HAS $1,890,000 BUT KEEPS TEACHING 5™ ni " l Miss Chari®"® S" up her life work ar a ’ each“r' n Spence s -chool for girls - . "" r n 'e l ® 3 Her broker? have lust bo U rh’ for t. ■.*-ir.-®n' r®> Mi,, B ak®r a seven apartment house for s3s9i9i)n. en ' WBr?