Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 23, 1912, FINAL, Page 2, Image 2

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2 HOPKINS BOY IS 51.000.000 BABY Rich Atlantan Plans to Leave Fortune to Grandson Named for Him. Atlanta is to have a miHion-dollar I baby The suit brought against Russell Hop kins. of Atlanta and New York, by the grandmother of Mrs Hopkins, may bring about a • hang* .n family arrangements and send little Josephine e Hop kins. the 'miHion-dollar baby.’' bark to her father and mother. And now that trouble has arisen between the. younger that John Randolph Hopkins, 2d, who is generation and the eider, it is promised just a year old. will be another '’milllon dollar baby.’ and a rival of his sister, for Dr J R Hopkins, of Atlanta, the baby’s grandfather, says his will will provide for his young namesake. Dr. Hopkins refused to take seriously the charges made by Mrs. Lawrence yes terday against his son. Russell, former Xtlantan and consul representing Panama here, who eloped several years ago with beautiful Vera Segrisf, fled up the Hudson with her nn his yacht and married her despite the objections of “old Mrs. Law rence and his wife, grandparents of the bride. Dr Hopkins believes that Mrs Lawrence has been deceived by attorneys or others into making charges against her granddaughter s husband, and Is con fident that everything will be straight ened out Russell and Wife Both Jim Dandies. ' Russell is all right.’ - he said. He was talking to a reporter on the shady ve randa of his home at Peachtree and Baker streets. “Rtwsell may be a high roller, but that’s his business, and I’ve never heard anybody say he was any thing but a good fellow and straight as a die Hie wife is all right, too. Russell’s s jim-dandy, and his wife’s a jim-dandy. They don’t have to wheedle money out of Mrs. Lawrence or anybody else as long as I’ve got a red, and I’m not broke by a long sight. “You know little Josephine. Russell’s baby girl, is living with her great-grand mother. Mrs. Lawrence The baby is worth a million or more, left her by Dr rence. and the old lady is very fond of the child I don't know what arrange ment will be made now that Mrs. Law rence has fallen out with Russell May be he will take the baby home with him. She was never legally adopted by Mrs. Lawrence, you know. She just lived with the old lady. “I Guess He'll Get Everything." “But she won’t be the only ‘miHion dollar bab\' in the Hopkins family Look at this picture That’s young John Ran dolph Hopkins, the second. They named him for me. He's a year old now, and he < a Jim-dandy I guess he’ll nave ev ery thing I ve got when my time comes. 1 haven't any children but Russell, you know The little girl has a fortune of her own. so I guess the boy will get mine You ought to see Russell’s home up the Hudson It’s the pride of the river No. he doesn't keep bls zoo any more. It outgrew the place and I persuaded him to give it up Hut he has a yacht and motor cars and everything else to make him and his wife happy Wby shouldn't they ? “Yes. Russell has a business. He suc ceeded to several enterprises which Dr. Lawrence left He doesn't fritter away his time Certainly, he's a free spender, but he has it to spend. He Isn't a bad box Never gave me any trouble. He just likes to have a good time, and 1 guess be has it You can’t make any of his Atlanta friends think he has done any thing wrong “ Now the Second Baby's In Lime Light. The doings of Russell Hopkins have been among the sensations of New York ever since Vera Seagrist, heiress to the millions of old Dr. Lawrence, of TJster ine fame, eloped with the young Atlantan who met her while she was touring the South Their home up the Hudson, their steam yacht, young Hopkins' challenge to Sir Thomas Lipton for a yacht race from New York to Panama, his driving a team of zebras down F’ifth avenue all these made excellent ‘ copy for the New York papers. The birth of the first baby, now three 'ears old, was followed by the an nouncement that she was the heiress to more than a million from her great grandfather. Dr. Lawrence. The birth rs the second child, John Randolph Hop kins. 2d. didn t create such a furore, but the announcement today that he will be heir to his grandfather's estate may place him in Hie limelight beside his sister. DR. WILEY PLEDGES BABY TO WED PURE FOOD GIRL WASHINGTON. May 23. Dr. Har vpy W Wiley has announced the for ma: enaaßement nf his son, one week old. m the daughter of R. M Allen, pure food commissioner of Kentucky The bride-to-be is two years old. QUAKE 4.000 MILES AWAY SHOWN BY SEISMOGRAPH WASHINGTON M;,j 23. The seis mograph at the Georgetown universi ty registered tile ■o.tnent of an earthquake las: nignt about 4.000 miles distant from this city, it began at 9:50 o’clock and lasted until 11.22 o'clock. The heaviest shock eurred at 10:35 o'clock. TO RESTORE APPETITE Take Horsford's Acid Phosphate Its use is especially re w. : tor restoration of appetite, Hirer gm and vi tality Try it. ••• Warm Springs baths can’t be beat in the United States. The water is the finest. GRAND CANADIAN TOUR McFarland s Seventh Annual Tour offers on* solid week of travel through seven stairs and Canada, covering miles ncludmg 500 miles bj water. \ r itlng t’hiejnnat . !»etr<Buffalo Nuagd ra Falls and Toronto. Canada A seh • «nd lir ur. part\ leaves Atlanta, <Ja J j> i in a -pecial Pullman train TWO BIG FORTUNES WERE COMBINED BY HOPKINS MARRIAGE ! The wedding of Russel] Hop kins and Vera Seagrist com bined two great fortunes. The wealth of its members is esti mated at: Mrs. Josephine Law- rence $1,000,000 Dr. J. R Hopkins .. 2,500,000 Mrs. Russell Hopkins 1,500,000 Josephine L. Hopkins (will get) 1,000,000 John R. Hopkins II (will get) 1.000,000 By the time the two children are of age. the rather large for tune already in store for them will he materially increased. The estate of Dr. Hopkins, the grandfather, is splendidly in vested. and that on the moth er's side is in a capahly admin istered trust. BIG PRISON FIRE LOOKS LIKE PLOT Factory Burns at Chicago. Im periling Hundreds in Cells. Guards Prevent Escapes. CHK'.AGO, May 23. —An Invesi igation of a fire which burned the broom fac tory at the Bridewell and threatened the lives of hundreds of prisoners early today lias been begun by the county authorities. It has been rumored that the fire was incendiary and was part of a plot for a wholesale delivery of prisoners. The burned factory was 30 feet from two cell houses in Which 1.000 prison ers were confined. Dense volumes of smoke i>oured through the barred win dows of the cell house. It is the belief of the authorities that the fire may have been started in order to force a transfer of prisoners to an other cell building and that In the con fusion a break for liberty would be made. The prisoners at the Bridewell do not wear stripes. The prisoneres were ordered by the guards to lie fiat on the floor. Careful watch was kept to begin the transfer if it became actually necessary, but the fire was extinguished before the lives of the prisoners were actually endan gered. Nashville Ball Club Receivership Tangle Dismissed by Court KNOXVILLE. TENN May 23. The Nashville baseball receivership was dissolved today by a decision of the court of civil appeals, holding that the grounds upon which the receivership were asked were insufficient. The court, however, disclaimed juris diction in the matter as to the in junction prohibiting the club playing in the state on account of alleged vio lation of the Sunday taw. holding that this must first be heard on its merits in the lower court. Four of the judges took this view -in an opinion handed down by Judge Hughes. A minority opinion by Judge Higgins held that the receivership should be dismissed and tlte club should be allowed to play on all days other than Sunday, pending the disposition of the lower court's in junction as to Sunday games. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS PLAN GRAND BARBECUE The local council No. tifiO. Knights of Columbus, will celebrate its tenth anniversary with a grand barbecue at I’olai Rock Springs neat l.akewood on next Saturday from 1:30 until S p in. Past State Deputies Major O'Leary, of Savannah; Victor Daw, of Augusta, and R. A Magill, of Atlanta, wilt be guests of the council. Short addresses will be made by Bishop Gunn and Rev Father Rapier and other prominent speakers. The very best the market affords will be served by the committee, with M. C Carroll as chairman and John Carri gan. Sr., in charge of the pit. Tickets 50c; on sale at Southern Hook Concern. 71 Whitehall street M. C. Carroll's. 172 Peachtree street, and from any member of the committee. • i RUSSIA PLANS LONGEST TUNNEL IN THE WORLD ST PETERSBURG. May 23.—The government is planning the longest tunnel In the world. It is to be fifteen miles long and, with other facilities, will connect Tiflis and Vladikavkaz, the lat ter place being a town in Ciscaucasia. The two places are only 125 miles apart and at the present time a roundabout I Journey of 940 miles is necessary in or | !':■ to go from one place to the othei m Toronto without chang* *55 psy» neceaaarv expense for Yhe tour High-rla-s features are guaranteed Mair -already linked Names furnished Send for tree picture of Niagara Kails and full information to J K M-T'arlaud. Man tger. Peachtree si., Atlanta, Ga , j I’hor.e Main 4605-J. THE ATLANTA GEUKGLAAI AM) NEWS: THURSDAY. MAY 23. NI'CLUNG, HERE. HITS NEW GOINS U. S. Treasurer Says One-Half and 3-Cent Pieces Would Be a Nuisance. • i Lee McClung, treasurer of the United States, doesn't think the proposed half, cent and three-cent coins will fill a. long-felt want, or make the high price of living any less altitudinous. He said so himself today, as ho drove in with Robert F. .Maddox from the former mayor’s country home, on the way to a luncheon given at the Capital City club by Mr. Maddox to a number of visiting bankers. "The three-cent piece would be very convenient in Cleveland, Ohio, where they have three-cent car fares," he de clared, "and the half-cent coins might every now and then be handy in a bar gain sale, but th" trouble they'd cause would overbalance their convenience. Think of the poor bookkeepers who would have to struggle with adding up half cents, and dividing odd amounts by odd amounts. Pounds, shillings and pence wouldn't be a circumstance. The Parable of The Dying Scotchman. Once there'was a Scotchman dying in a London hospital, and the attendant desired to soothe his last moments. "'Can I do anything to make you happy, Sandy?’ he asked. " If I could but hear the bonnie bag pipes skirl once again,' said Sandy, hopefully. "So the doctor brought in a bag piper and he made the rafters ring. When he had skirled his last note the doctor bent over Sandy and found the crisis had passed. The Scotchman was growing well. But. all the English pa tients were dead "That sums up the proposed new coins. They might make happy' the few. but they'd be a nuisance to the many. The Georgia Bankers association which meets at Atlantic Beach this week may leas’ Lee McClung treas urer of the United States, hut the old Yale men in the party will drink only to the health of Rung McClung. Yale. '92. the greatest halfback, < >ld Eli ey. . boasted, and one of the few athletes who captained both the football and baseball teams In the same year. McClung and his plays filled as many newspaper columns in those days as Ty Cobb occupies now. He captained the Blue eleven in the fall of '9l, the famous year when Yale rolled ,up a total football score of 420 points, while their adversaries never once crossed Elis line. That was a record score which stands even unto this day. And "Rung" McClung did a little more than his share in nutting the ball over the line, though such stars as Heffelftnger, Dr. Hartwell and Hinkoy. Yale's greatest end, were his compan ions on the team. When McClung left college he went hack to his home in Knoxville, Tenn., took off his college clothes ami pitched in to work for the Southern railway. He spent several years with the rail road. climbing from one place to an other. and then Yale called him again He went to his alma mater as treasur r of the college, and stayed there until William Howard Taft, of Yale, succeed ed the colonel in the white house. Then Mr. McClung was appointed treasurer of the United States. He wouldn't say today whether he expected Mr. Taft to continue at the old stand after March, 1913, neither would he make audible comment on the result in Ohio Bui he said Atlanta looked like the lives! town he had seen in many moons. Mr. McClung was guest of honor at a luncheon this afternoon at the Capita! City club, and tonight will be given a dinner by Mr. Maddox at his country home. "Woodhaven." on Paces Ferry road. Mr. Maddox and Mr. McClung will leave tonight for Atlantic Beach, w here the Georgia Bankers association, of which Mr. Maddox Is president, will open its convention tomorrow. The guests, at the "Woodhaven" dinner will be Hon. Lee McClung. Governor Jo seph M Brown. Mayor Courtland S. Winn. Judge William T Newman. Wil liam L. Peel. Robert J. Lowry, Frank Hawkins. Asa G. Candler, W. F. With am, George M. Brown. Thomas J. Pee ples, John K Ottley. Ernest Woodruff. Clark Howell, James R. Gray. Samuel M. Inman, Morris Brandon. William H. Kiser. C. c. McGehee. Jr., J. 1,. Dickey. Jr.. Dr W S. Elkin, W. O. Jones of New York and James F. Alexander Shirtwaist Man Back On Atlanta Streets: Bit Late This Year The shirtwaist man appeared in spots on Atlanta streets today, and because of his late advent created no ripple as he might have done earlier in the sea son. When the custom first became estab lished it was good form to wear only a white shirt this to please the ladies, of course. It was soon discovered, however, that a white shirt remained so about five minutes, if the wearer hap pened to be within a mile's radius of the Peachtree viaduct. For that reason it was decided that something a little less attractive to Atlanta's tffioiee col lection of sooty snot would be worn in the future. Freed from the hot embarrassment of a coat, the shirtwaist man looked i very happy this morning, even though a little lumpy in spots I STORE BURNS NEAH MARIETTA M ARIETTA. GA . May 23. The store i nouse and dwelling of W Z. Daniell, on the Atlanta road about two miles ' fr< Marietta. were entirely destroyed ' by fir, The loss is about 11,500, w ith msui'l” • KICKERS’ COLUMN If you are unhappy, have a grouch or a grievance, here’s the place to tell about it. In today 's mail to The Georgian w r ere many letters from kickers and from people with real or fancied grievances. How can we help these poor mortals'.’ If vou have troubles of any kind, send a letter to the Kickers *Editor, The Georgian, and maybe the editor can help you. Where’s the Old Southern Home Dinner We Read About? To tlje Editor: Is there any place in this city where a hungry man can get an old Southern home dinner? I'm ffom Canada, and I thought the people of Dixie lived on the best in the land; but do they? I’ve read about real fried chicken, but w here < an you get it? Does any hotel or restaurant in town serve beaten biscuit? I'm hungry for pig’s jowl and spinach. Isn't it a Southern dish? Where can I get it? KIMBALL HOUSE GUEST. Who will help this hungry man? Any hotel, restaurant, case or s boarding house manager is invited to reply. The Georgian will gladly publish such let ters. Is There a Real Good Laundry Anywhere in This City? To the Editor: Help! Help! Do you know of a good laundry anywhere in town? 1 can’t find one! Such laun dries as I have tried ruined my cloth ing. Buttons are torn off. handker chiefs are ruined by big blotchy ink marks, and my collars are cracked so I can’t wear them.TRAVELING MAN. Much truth in tills. Rut there is probably one, and perhaps two good laundries in this city. Who knows? We would be glad to hear frorfi managers of laundries. Wants a Shower Bath That Will Keep Him Cool- To the Editor: Wlty doesn't some wide-awake person open a shower bath establishment in the downtown.district where a fellow could run in every aft ernoon for a cooling shower and rub down? It would be a great comfort. Hundreds of men would be willing to pay 25 cents or even 50 cents for such a luxury. INQUIRER. A good idea! Who will put the plan into operation? Where Has the Rustle Os Silken Skirts Gone? To the Editor: tine of the most charming sounds of my boyhood days was the rustle of my mother's silken skirts. Atlanta skirts don't seem to rustle or are my ears losing their keen hearing? Or was it the petticoats that caused the rustic.', 1 understand petti coats arc no Johgefrjde .Y.igfur.- • . - Afi yM.U FfiGY- This is a nartirularljLany I caFo, I Can it he true that skirts do not rustle in Atlanta any The; insinuation that pettieoa'is, have, .vanished is, of course, ridiculous. Tfb'l It*? l < • * r 7—4 if •? , ■ Cotton Crop Anyway For Georgia Farmers, Despite Wet Weather The Georgia cotton situation has as sumed a more optomistie aspect, ac cording to reports which are reaching the state department of agriculture dail v. J. J. Brown, assistant commissioner, said today that indications pointed to a cm,, which would be at least 70 per coni Os that of 1911. Improved weather conditions, he said, placed the farmers in better condition than was deemed possible tw'o weeks ago. It is estimated that, the continual wet weather of the early spring cut down the cotton acreage as at least 20 p r cent. In addition to this cut. exploiters <>f the Rock Hill plan have succeeded in getting pledges which will reduce the acreage at least ten per cent. $5,000,000 MINERAL DEVELOPMENT PLANNED CHATTANOOGA. TENN., May 23. The Durham Coal and Iron Company Is negotiating the purchase of a large body of mineral and timber land in Sequatchie valley on the Southern rail way and will expend $5,000,000 in de veloping the property and increasing facilities. The land is rich in iron ore, coal and timber. This company plans to erect a large steel mill, reserve plant, blast furnaces, coke ovens and by product plants. • The principal industrial plants of the company will he located in Moccasin Bend, which the company recently ac quired. Reducing the Cost of Living. In these days of soaring fcod prices n behooves the eareful housekeeper to pick those foods that give the most nourishment in proportion to their cost-. With the prices of meats beyond the reach of a table allowance that once proved sufficient, one must choose something that provides meat nourish ment without meat cost. That food is found in Faust Spa ghetti. Faust Spaghetti I- made from rich. 1 glutinous Durum wheat, it provides as i much neuroshminet as many times its value in meat or eggs. A 5< package of Faust Spaghetti will provide a gen erous hel|>ing to five persons. You can not find a cheaper food, nor a better food nor a food that is so universally enjoyed. .Many thrifty housewives who I serve spaghetti in some form very oft lon make it the chief dish f;or dinner lance a week —and they say that it | do> not only prove economical, but als > receives the hearty approval of their familir s Write for our free book let of Faust Recipes. MADLL BROS 1 ia*’l St. Louis Avenue, St. Louis, Me 500 MARINES ARE ROSHEGTO CURA U. S. Jackies to Enlarge Force Now at the Guantanamo Naval Station. WASHINGTON. May 23—Five hun dred marines were ordered to sail from she League Island navy yard, Philadel-, phia. on the Prairie today, to join the force now at the United States naval station at Guantanamo. Cuba. The force Is under the command of Colonel Lincoln Karmany. It was officially announced by the government tha't Estenoz and Yvonet, two chief leaders of the rebellious ne groes. had asked for a conference with the government and that it had been refused. President <3omez says he will accept nothing but unconditional sur render from the negroes. Senor Lare do, secretary of state, declared today that the revolt would be crushed out before night. The order was issued by Secretary of the Navy Meyer, acting on a request from the state department. Rush or ders also were issued' today to naval stations along the Atlantic coast to hold all marines in readiness for immediate movement. Gunboats Ordered Cleared for Action. Wireless orders were sent from Key West to the gunbots Nashville and Pa ducah. now at Guantanamo, to clear for action and place themselves in position to protect American interests at that point. Today’s movement of marines followed closely on the receipt of dis turbing dispatches from Guantanamo, which stated that 3,000 armed negroes are marching toward the United States reservation, pillaging and burning as they go. A number of important Amer ican interests in the neighborhood of Guantanamo and Santiago already have made representation to the department that their property is being seized and the lives of their employees endangered and have requested that the government of the United States provide adequate protection for them. In view of these appeals, the state department today transmitted to Pres ident Gomez, through Minister Beau pre. the statement that the United States, while undesirous of Interfering in Cuban affairs, must demand that the naval station at Guantanamo, together with the lives and property’ of Ameri can citizens throughout the island, be adequately protected. Situation Serious Officers Admit. The Cuban gunboat Cuba, with 600 troops on board, is expected tn arrive at Guantanamo today. The govern ment. apparently unable to estimate the strength of the insurrectionary senti ment, has sent out forces by train to Oriente provinces. The Cuban mili tary authorities admit the situation is extremely dangerous, but think they can- control It. The state department's action in ask ing that marines he dispatched to Guantanamo today' is believed here to he hut the first move in a concerted program of intervention in Cuba —an intervention which practically would mean annexation—as it was stated at tlie close of the second military' occu pation of the island three years ago that "if American troops ever have to return to Cuba they would stay there.” Washington Reports Inflame Cubans HAVANA, May 23. Reports from Washington that the United States is again considering intervention in Cuba because of conditions which have, fol lowed the negro uprising caused in tense feeling throughout this city to day. President Gomez, in a public statement, denied that the situation has gotton beyond the Cuban govern ment. H" declared that ho expected to have the revolt in Oriente and Las villa provinces under control within a short time. Rurales have been sent against the armed negro bands and fighting is im minent at several places in the inte rior. It is reported that a number of whites have joined the negroes and are fighting under the banner of the in surgents. Helps a Judge in Bad Fix. Justice Eli Cherry, of Gillis Mills. Tenn., was plainly worried. A bad sore on his leg had baffled several doctors and long resisted all remedies. “I thought it was a cancer." he wrote. "At last 1 used Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and was completely cured." Cures burns, boils, ulcers, cuts, bruises and piles, 27, cents at all druggists. ■ Saturday, p. m., auction lots and bungalows. North Boulevard and Eighth street. LIEBERMAN’S ANNUAL TRUNK SALE is saving dollars to trunk and baggage buyers. Red tags, marked in plain figures, show a saving on every piece of goods in the house. $22.30 Trunks ~,.516.50 $18.50 Suit Cases. $13.50 $16.50 Bags $12.50 $14.50 Trunks ... SIO.OO SIO.OO Suit Cases. .$ 6.75 SIO.OO Bags . ..-. . $ 7.00 SIO.OO Trunks ... .$ 7.50 $ 7.50 Suit Cases. .$ 5.50 $ 6.75 Bags $ 4.50 LIEBERMAN’S Ths House of Guaranteed Baggage 92 Whitehall Street. Drinking Water Trust Arrives in Atlanta; Three Firms Merge Even drinking water has come under the rule of combination, and compe tition is no more. The Atlanta Mineral Water Supply Company has taken over the old competing concerns —the Bow den company and the Ben scot com pany—an has an exclusive agency for Tate Springs water, and now all lithia sells at the same price and comes front the same wagon. Yod can pay your money and take your choice. Atlanta drinks 1,000 gallons of lithia water every day in the warm months and pays an average price of fifteen cents a gallon for the privilege. For years the Bowden and the Benscot companies have been rivals for Atlanta business. The Benscot springs are north of Austell, Ga., while the Bow den springs are a few miles south. This season the stockholders of the two companies got together and de cided to make one wagon to do the work of two. They consolidated, and Guy Holcomb, who managed the Bow den company, is now president of the new conctjrn. But the price of lithia water hasn’t been boosted. It remains at 75 cents per three-gallon case, and you have your choice of brands. BBOfSffiT.R. IS 'EASY PICKING' Governor Thinks Conservative Democrat Can Beat Him on Third-Term Sentiment. Governor Joseph M. Brown thinks Theodore Roosevelt's nomination to the presidency of the United States by the Republican party would be a most hap py circumstance for l he Democrats. The governor believes that a level headed, reasonably conservative Demo cratic nominee would "beat Mr. Roose velt to a frazzle” in November. “Unless I mistake the American peo ple, the time has not yet come when they are. willing to throw to the winds their convictions with respect to the grave perils of a third term in the pres idency for any man." declared the gov ernor today. “I still think that the American people will hesitate before giving to Roosevelt what Washington refused and Grant was denied. "Mr. Roosevelt spoke truly when from tlie white house in 190 S lie proclaimed a dignified refusal to consider a third term for himself, and said that, al though lie had been elected only once, yet the people in their anti-third term ideals respected the substance and not the form of things, and that he de clined -to be a party to the upsetting of this wholesome precedent. "Mr. Roosevelt's nomination by the Republicans would make Democratic 1 success, if sensibly pursued, an assured thing in November," concluded the gov ernor. VEST POCKEJ KODAK The new Vest Pocket Kodak is a wonder. Uses roll film. Eight exposures without re loading. Weighs nine ounces. Ball-bearing shutter. Bril liant reversible finder. Menis cus achromatic lens. Uni versal focus. Pictures 1 5-8 by 2 1-2 inches, beautifully clear and sharp. The price is six dollars. Get yours to day. They are going fast. Catalog on request. A. K. HAWKES CO. KODAK DEP’T 14 Whitehall St. On the Viaduct JURY DPI 3 FDR DARROW TRIAL LOS ANGELES. May 23.—The un lucky thirteen was still in evidence in Judge Hutton’s court room this morning when examination of tales men was resumed in the trial of Clar ence Darrow for bribery’. The trouble began when, after hav ing secured a jury of twelve men w,th comparative ease, counsel and court decided to throw in an extra juror for good measure. Thirteen veniremen were borrowed from another depart ment of the superior court, and so far as examined they nave proved to be possessed of more fixed, stubborn opin ions and prejudices than all the men examined for the regular panel pos sessed. District Attorney Fredericks, whose opening statement to the jury is ex pected to prove sensational in the ex treme, predicts that the trial will last to the middle of July. Assistant Dis trict Attorney Ford believes a verdict will be reached by June 15. Rogers and Darrow agree with Ford, but arrive at the conclusion by a different process of reasoning. All Run Down In the spring that is the condition of thousands whose systems have not thrown off the impurities accumulated during the winter —blood humors that are now causing pimples and other eruptions, loss of appetite, dull head aches and weak, tired feelings. The medicine to take, according to the testimony of thousands that have been cured by it in the spring, is Hood's Sarsaparilla Get it today. In usual liquid form r>r chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. — — I I Opportunities Much has been said about the magnificent oppor tunities awaiting every young man or woman. It is generally admitted that ready money opens up opportunities. t The regular depositor in this bank has the best chance of accumulating money with which to grasp opportunities. Are you a depositor here? AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK Low Summer Excursion Rates CINCINNATI, $19.50 LOUISVILLE, SIB.OO CHICAGO, - $30.00 KNOXVILLE - $7.90 Tickets on Sale Daily, Good to October 31st, Returning City Ticket Office,4 Peaclrtrce