Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 05, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2

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2 AUTO SH COST WILL BE 5100.1100 All Motor Car Concerns and Accessory Houses in Atlanta Join in the Plans. Every automobile concern in Atlan ta and every representative of an ai eessory house will b> represented in the Atlanta Automobile show, which is to be held at the Auditorium-Armory November 16-23 This was made cer tain at the meeting and dinner which the Automobile and Accessory associa I lion held last night at the Transporta tion club That the show will be a complete success and "ill be the hugest exhibit of its kind ever held in the South is without doubt. since the plans of th* promoters hair been announced. The show is going to cost the auto mobile men and accessory men mop than $100,600. and 22.000 square fg't <■*- spate will be allotted to exhibitors. Al- ; ready 10 550 square feet have been de- < manded and checks to cover 25 (>er; cent of the cost have been tiled with the committee in charge. Last night the remaining space was taken atm | checks will lie sent in today It i- , probable that more apace will be de manded than the main auditorium at fords«and that several allotments will | have to be cut down and the space pro portioned among the exhibitors Business Men's Aid Asked. A t all for Atlanta business men to I pet behind the show and boost it was sent out last night, when Wylie West, chairman of the show committee spoke on the benefits of the show to Atlanta. "This is not a private < nterprise." said the chairman, "nor is it a show that will benefit automobile dealers alone, it is going to advertise Atlanta., and when Atlanta is advertised, every line of business in the city gi Is a boost Now. w. want all the business men heie to help us make the show a sin • cess." Tlie allotment of space is to lie left entirely with thi show committee and every applicant for spate will be noti fied by registered letter when am! where the allotment is to take place. Applicants are compelled to post 2 per cent of the cost of their spate at the time of the application and the re maining 75 per cent must be paid at tile time tlie allotment is made The committee will have rough sketches made of tin floor space in th< main auditorium, and the applications w II be die ided Into t las <■- Those who ask for 1.200 feet will be put in one and those who ask for less than that in another This was decided upon a- necessaiy In older to kep the spm-t --d'mia- within bounds Another Meeting m Two Weeks. An interesting report was given by th. show committee The auditorium decoration- practi. illy at' completed and soon the building will be turned ox, r tn tin . .i i pent Tht great majority of the details turn- already been worked out. but sev oral mure committees will yet have to he appointed to a: rang' fur entertain ments ami minor d■■tails of the show. ’t he nssoi i ition admitted to mi niiiii - shi| tlie following: Michigan Mo'.oi Car Company Sigma Kngineet ipg <'em ' pany. Oakland Motor Car Com] any, and th* Southern I >urt is Motm t oiii pany. The association authorized th admis.-ion of the luiinson-t lew inin-i Company umb the memlu i shl|i < tificate of tin <;■ w Inn Company There will be mother meeting in , two weeks to perfect all arrangement ■ i for the show WOMAN WORKS IN FIELDS AND HARVESTS OWN CROPS LKE< HBVRG PA Sept 5 Assisi ed only by he fourteen-y ear-old son. Mrs Annie Patton, widow of John Patton, of Boggs township. is complet ing the harvesting of crops almost ei. tirely by her ow n efforts In the spring the pinned her fields and lid m- farm work. Including the cultivating -ow ing cutting and leaping and has . r..| ■ which compare favorable with tlms. run by men. She has harvested 211 bushels ~f wheat, more than 4')n bushels of oats, corn and potatoes and sma er y eg<- tables She worked in tin tie is fi. :n early morning unti late a night, be sides attending to he- ho isi ho .’< ’■> ties She -ays she found tile woik :■■ over-fatiguing and is in excellent health as a r< -ul< of hi outdoor ■ \ ercisc ENGLISH MOTORBOAT IS WINNER IN FINAL RACE lit X . INC" )N N y ... pt. ■ I• . Harms wo I’l cup n th». inoto.bon: tro phy will rctu i! to I" 11».. i io 1 In ’in: th: <1 contest «»:’ the r -'scni bum < >• between Eng;: It and \inerican mo » b the M. r I IV. an Englis b?u:. won \ estv: das, giving l!h Brits < two \ii tui i' - oni '• t .' • H.t i>\ K lii'iTs* HI. an Ann -rican boat. was set <>a : N<» o’, n - tin: - ’unci ’ i. - wen idea). 29 PROFESSORS WORKING IN BIG STEEL PLANTS PITTSBI RG. Sej I>u .ng i s imine |»ofi->su.s fi\»m . ■> a and schools in 19 states ha\« m n cm- I !uy» d n tiie in<..> <»f Piti di:;. jus: so; the expt .i<im •. They w< . pa i i on an average of 20 •ms an ho: •• abnu* $1“ a mon; The Atlanta Georgian Premium Coupon iTh s coupon w I be accepted at our Prem m Pa-'or, *0 East Alabama at., a« part a payment for any c* the beautiful prem-um y ds d splayed there. ( See Premrun Parlor Announcement on Another Page Cycle-Auto, at Forty Miles an Hour, Keeps ’Em Healty BABY A REAL SPEED FIEND .. -‘i. W rayiVl \\ . Ins wilp. Hiid Ihe spred-fiend baby, on inotorcycle-anto. BANKERS DOIWTE TOOORNSM Memberships of Boys Clubs Grow and Exposition Will Be Larger This Year. • Menjbemhip in the various boys corn clubs over the state is far more than double what II was lasi year, and the coin show which is io be held this fall in the Auditoriurn-Armory will be pro portion;! tely larger Already the seven banks < mnprising the Atlanta t’learlng House have subscribed $650 to the show 'This.was done at the solicitation of \\ I. [’eel. president of tht- American National hank, who took: the matter up with the banks at tlie re quest of Secretary W G <’o.»per, ot the' Chamber of •iirio-fi <■. who is on his va < a t ion Colonel I'vel received the subscriptions pioinptlx. and with them « ame onthusias tic h-tlers from officials of the banks, slating the ■•h-usure they felt on learning that the i orn sht.w is again to be held A list of sulist ript ions b\ the banks is. as follows: 1 American National bank SIOO, Atlanta National hank SIOO Lowry National bank SIOO Fourth National bank SIOO. Third National bank SIOO. I nlton National bank |sb. <'« ntral Hank and 'Trust Corporation SIOO I ip and Down Peachtree When Master's Away, Servants Will Play. I’eacht residents \\<"e ’rtulcd io a bit of votnedv recently over which the\ still art* laughing It was pre sented during the absence of■« weil known and w<;ilthy citizen whose lux uriafit auburn lock> pebuliafiiics of manner and disdain for autoniobib s has made him a noted character. Even aftt noon fvea s th o u gentleman ha* been scon seated, alone in the ’. ;v -- ai of a high-wheeled cap ve out Pea< ind i nsting g ant es of scorn at parsing m<> tor cats Hi> g oom, • d u«'i. a liv eried and hatighix Afro an h i tht reins over a handsome pan of high steppets • But the o d gent > man wens awa\ for i vacation trip, leaving his servants Io exercise the horses. They did Peach’ • •• >av\ them a few days ago. In he dive ’s scat was a stab’c ho\ Wt tring the iiverx of the regular 1 ■ ■ • . ' - . \i ’ *he e.i si .it, dressed elaborately, even 1 ' t; * ' <»’ the eai -t while groom, puff ■' r'■ and - uning a his ease >i;..iii>t th.- cushions while he gave cult "'" l s lo his menial. The man had) beeoim the mtist- r for the day. and | I'i- "V ' 1 imitation of h.s .■■ , ent lc em ' "as good enough f,,r vaude- POLICEMEN CLUB MOB IN MINNEAPOLIS RIOT Ml NNE\f •' 'I IS. Ml N.\ S, pt a I 1 roubl. t it developed a street jmecling. '-aid to have been cemdu-trd Iby Socialist-, c.ius, <i rioting here, in hhu :i |„o-< , Dell .11:,l plain clothes ! ' '■ ase.' ~<lO nt, n Sev. I! nil mln 1-s lot th,. r.'Wd ate in pa i I today. \ scire "f mor» "etc > ill'll, d by t ■ poll. , 1 . -one yyeie I'eourted -e\i lily hurt I' ■ .’c ■ "f t • -11.. ting attt aipted ■ * g* I ■:» t 1 o'v d to disperse before THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TH I RSDAY. SEPTEMBER 5. iTu. Dan Wieley Says It Beats Med icines and Cures—Passes Fastest Autos. I oily miles an hour on a motorcycle auto surpasses all the medicines and treatments and cures for keeping the coin of the loses in the cheeks of mother and child, in the opinion of Dan Wielely. a consulting engineer I'lte ordinary youngster of three might be expected to flinch at speed as fast as that marie | JV t | H . average express train, with the wind tearing at ont's face and only mother's steadying hand for piote<'tlon. But Baby Wielely is a speed fiend, and as the peculiar looking vehicle con structed by his father eats up the miles he past crows for 'more." Wide ly made more than' 10 miles an hour on the speedway with his wife and child sitting beside him while a . row ) jof -pectatoi's gasped at his reckless ness He lardy takes anybody’s dust on tlie roads about Kutton county, ano '■ ’lf' it th" possibility of accidents, rhe pictur. show s just what the ma chine is and there are few others Ilk, it in this part of the country. | GREENVILLE & KNOXVILLE EXTENSION IS SURVEYED '•.Rl' ENVILLE. S. <■„ Sept. 5. Ei om an oflb i.il snur»t‘ it is learned that th<‘ work <»f i xt< nsion mi the Greenville and Knoxville lailwav will begin with in the next 30 davs. Within the past week engineers have completed the survey from I >avenport to Gap (’reek Gap. h distance of twelve miles. This gap is at the lop of the Saluda ridge, and the route laid out by the engineers is» on a grade of 6S feet to the mile. This is considered a remarkably low grade for a mountain road, and is an agreeable surprise to the promoters. The Gap (’reek route is the lowest route across the Blue Ridge mountains between Richmond and Atlanta Re -1 ent developments certainly mean that the Knoxville load will be put through within the next twelve months. SOLVES HEAT PROBLEM BY DISCARDING CLOTHES NKW HA\’E.\. Mu.. Sept. .. N'oL , stem i» i»the:of Prouf Island, in the \ i - . ... ■ i < tinv hav* solved the perplexing prob '» ai of how to keep too' It very and economical - tiiev wea • no < iothes. and never get all ’het up.’’ wi’ r. : hes< untei. nit d pow bo> s go to the field to split the soil inio fur i < . i utifi an ! to dig up nature in a nat u al mode. One Lav while plowing lhe.v got caught in a l.cav v rain. Thev put their clothes in the furrow and plowed them under to keep the garments drv. WOMAN. 98. IS SURVIVED BY HER 113 DESCENDANTS DIXd.X, ILL.. Sent. 5 one hundred ami thirteen direct defendants sur vive Mts, E I< Miller, who died it |l'.t"l'.iv Mr.- Miller wt<s 98 years ■I- S',.. .-on <1 ..J without difficulty ' ind up ami about only a few day s before ehe died. She is surviveii by font -nits ami two daughters. 43 g.and childrett and <’• I g: e.i I - gr;t ndchild t en. Al tin ilr.'dt.-n weie present at the f uiiet it!. NEW CHURCH TAKES PLACE OF OLD HEPHZIBAH EDIFICE WASHINGTON. GA.. Sept 5 - The ded ication of Hephzibah Baptist ehur< h. in Lincoln county, yesterday, was an inter <<ting went to the Baptists of Wilkes and Lmcoln counties, in the place «*f the jedifhe wl.ich has stood for many genera ’L>ns a: the foot of Graves mountHur the . i ngrt ga 1 n ha> donated sufficient fr.nds | • ’ ' • plend 'a building ’ W s T'orsev. pastor of i • First Baptist church of Washington. •• ' 'c‘<i ti e <h»di atorx sermm. which I * h 'is? med l<\ one* • the largest < ‘ ngrega• iocs ♦ assenioln <<n the his : s o' l l J. H. [IM HAS HIS W OFFICE ■■ ” ■' ■- -—• • Realty Expert Now in Business for Himself Has Made Many Big Deals. ; Tht. new real .state offices of .1. H. Ewing, until iccently an associate of ■ Edwin P. Ansley, president of the Ans ; ley Real Estate Company, are open to day at 116 Candler building, H. left • the Ansley company yesterday to es l lablish a business of his own. 1 Mr. Ewing is recognized as one of Atlanta's most thoroughly informed men in regard to teal estate values. 1 Em fourteen y.ars he was city tax as st ssor. and in that office he had his Hist training in realty values, over three yea is ago he entered the Ansley offices as manager of the sales department. In this position he closed some of the most important deals in real estate that have been .made in the last few ) • ■ars. Some of his larger transactions a’ re: , Some of Deals He Made. Lot at North Forsyth and Luckie , -treets. for tin Realty T tt-t Company. . to High Richardson for $325,000. ( Property at Decatur and Courtland, , In Albert Steiner and others for SIOO,- t 000. a Property at Decatur and Piedmont, for the Mahoney estate, sold for SBO,- 3 000. l-'or Mrs. s. e. I'abani-s. the Sco tia apartments, sold for $130,000 and later resold for $150,000. ( To Mrs Morris Brandon, l«0 feet on North Forsyth street for $175,000. This I was sold for the Realty Trust Cotn -3 I pany. A largt number of other transac ( lions, involving from s2'i.Ooo to $40,- 5 000. also hlive been made through Mr. Ewing. The property was located at various places near the business een tei of the city, on Carnegie . Har ris. Spring, Luckie, Peachtree and oth ) . ■ strt •■is. GREENFIELD SPEAKS TO MASONS IN TABERNACLE ’I he Rapi'> Tabernacle auditorium was filled last night at a meeting of the Ma sonL lodge <>f instruction, when Joseph (’. Greenfield, past master of Gate Cit.v lodge N.i 2. lectured on “origin and j Symbolisms. Fclldw Graft Degree " The place of meeting was changed from the k ’Temple on account of the crowd. Governor-elect John M. Slaton intro duced the speaker. Howard K. Gole. se i nior warden of Palestine lodge. No. IS6. ■ • conducted the examination in the degree. } H N Wood, past master of Piedmont lodge. No 147. was master of ceremonies. A musical program was rendered by ■Charles s. Sheldon, organist: J. AV. I Marshbank and W Joseph Hubner. vo ' calists; (’ T. Wurm, cornet soloist, and ■ C II Buchanan, violin soloist 1 MULAI HAFID HAS SPENT $15,000 IN ONE GAY WEEK . PARIS. S,|t. 5 Ex-Su.tau .Mulai ,• Halid, of Morocco, lontinues spending . his $60,090 annual allowance fiom the French government at the rate of sls - ■ : OOH a week. Today he bought $2.1<00 ( worth of paint macho animals, also -ix i live animals, to wit. four Great Danes • so sSt‘O and ty\ o cows for s2su. It. 7 then "ent to tlie village of the Ft, nch •>Guiana natives and gave the crowd of dancing girls a handful of gold an.i , itn-uc. < -sfttlly attempted to buy two -of ’the prettiest gii s. R I ——— ’MOVING TO ATLANTA. • J M'KSoN GA . Sept 5.—A H. i Smith, one of the leading ami • wealthy I citizens of Jackson. Is moving his fam i i'y to Atlanta : tis week, urn! wilt teside I, ” Pc.i'.U'C, stree: M Smith, who ; "ib stil' maintain hi.< interests h'-'e. is Identified with almost . very promi nent < nt< i prise of the »ity. DUNG GIRL SEES INGEL; IS CURED After 37 Doctors Give Her Up, Tuberculosis-Diabetes Pa tient Recovers. LONDON. Sept 5 Saved by an angel who met her at the gates of death and bade her turn back to mortal life. Miss L>orothy Kerin, who has been a bed-rid den invalid from tuberculosis and fiia betes. is today running about her home. -04 Milk wood road, as though she had I never been ill a day in her life. Miss Kerin, who is a beautiful girl 22 years old, had been given up to die by ihirtj-seven doctors. Saturday they an nounced that she would die before mid night. Sunday morning she suddenly opened her eyes. Her mother bent over her. “Dolly, do you know me?” she asked. "of c ourse I do. mamma. ’ replied the girl. * I am to get up. The angel told me to. An angel from heaven met me a s the gates of death and brought me back.” j And the girl did get up. seemingly un . der a mysterious influence, and ran down : stairs. A friend of the family, an athe ' ist, at sight of her fell on his knees. ; praying to God. Mind Also Is Expanded. No: Jess remarkable than the restrda tion of her physical health is the effect of her inexplicable experience on her mind. She came forth from her visit io the valley of the shadow with a se rene faith in an infinite power, a belief in a spiritual law. a clarity of mental view and an eloquence of expression usually acquired only after years of hard j study. Miss Kerin has written an open letter in reply to the many inquiries which she has received as to her recovery. In this letter she sajs; “I was conscious yesterday for the first time in several days. It seemed to me that I was slipping out of life. 1 heard the whispers and sobs and prayers of those who love me best. Everything grew black. I did not even think: I just drifted without an effort, without a thought, into deeper blackness. Sees Dazzling Light. “Suddenly I saw a light—dazzling, brighter than any fire I had ever seen, i Stretched from out the great golden , | flame I saw two hands. Then I heard a ' I sw’eet voice say clearly. ‘Dorothy, your I sufferings are over. Arise. You can ■ walk.’ Then I heard mother asking me if I knew her. “’There is a science of religion, as well as a science in every phase of the mate i rial universe. We live in the midst of ; wonderful lands. In my own case 1 real ize that mv long illness and quietness , prepared me to receive a message from the voice which health and success and ambition sometimes stultify. “I do not feel that the the dreamer or any of the ultra-religionists are nearer God than any man or woman today who accepts the truth, and who opens the window’s of the soul to the . light of the spiritual world.” ASKS $500,000 ALIMONY AND A TOTAL DIVORCE , DENVER, Sept. s.—Mrs. Annie L. , Thompson, who with her husband, Alonzo Thompson, once lieutenant gov- > ernor of Missouri, spiritualist and phil . anthropist, has come in for consider able notoriety recently, has filed suit < for $500,000 in the district court against her husband. The petition filed by Mrs. Thompson asks for absolute divorce. It contains . sensational charges against her hus band. the outcome of the feud in the , Thompson family that has kept them in court several months. Infidelity and extreme cruelty are the main charges. . .though the petition mentions man.', others. 1 LUMBER COMPANY FIGHTS FREIGHT RATE INCREASE CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Sept. 5. The McLean Lumber Company, of Athens and this city, has filed a pe tition before the interstate, commerce commission against the Cincinnati Southern and Alabama Great South ern railways, alleging that the addi tion of th' pioposed increased .rates on lumber f ont Chattanooga. Birming ham, Tuscaloosa and Crabtree, Ala., to Canadian points will mean discrimina tion against these points in favoi of Knoxville. Cincinnati and other place.-. ‘ Th< petition asks that the defendants ’ show cause 'Why such disc epancy , should exist. PET DOG BITES WOMAN AND DEATH IS RESULT ■ ST. Liil'lS. S-pt. 5. - Mr- Caroline Smith. 52 years old. died at the City hospital supposedly from hydrophobia, as the result of being bitten by her pet dog last April. She was taken to the institution several hours before by her son. and was suffering from con vulsions and othri symptoms of rabies. She soon lost eonsciousnes.'. She fi.st became ill three days ago. The wounds which were on the left w l ist and index finger of her right hand were cauterized at the time of injury. CONTRACTOR ASKS COURT TO FREE HIM OF DEBTS J. J Morrison. 65 \\ hltefoord avenue, giving his occupation as that of a 1 ''ontrai to, has filed a petition in the Federal court asking to be declared a ' bank: apt. Liabilities o' $3,1 64.05 are shown in i the petition, which states that Morri son has no assets A pauper's affidavit was attached to the petition in lieu of 1 the usual deposit of s3o so c osts of I filir.g. BUTTS TAX RATE RAISED. JACKSON. GA.. Sept. 5.—J <> ' Gaston. Butts county commissioner, hasj fixed the tax rate at 12 mills this year, an increase of 2 mills over last year. I • This is one of the highest rates Butts • county has etc- had. It is made nec cssa y. it is stat'd, by the cost of tne • haing.tng and th» expense of tinning' the courts. 1 'SEARCHINGSIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS By JAMES B . NEVIN. Gilmer must be the grand old po litical paradise of Georgia—not. Gilmer is yvhere they seem to spe- 1 W irt| the hard cider flows engagingly enough, if you care for that sort of thing. The inhabitants of Gilmer are all right a. most. For the most part, they ate God-feat ing and pious. The personal integrity of the people is so pronounced that few , if any. front doors have locks in Gilmer. The only thing they hesitate not at all to steal in Gilmer is an election — and they do not consider that anv sort ’of sin. I ’ The conduct of the judgeship hear ing in the senate chamber of the cap- ■ itol is puzzling. : I'o the ordinary layman, it seems i queer enough, surely. To the lawyer, Versed in the layv, it certainly must be ( a scream, where it isn't a tragedy. The state committee is sitting both ! as judge and jury. In those circum ’ Stances, the rules of evidence necessa- I rlly are expected to be relaxed consid ' erably. As a matter of fact, the said rules sag sadly in the middle and bag at the knees. i Any old lawyer asks any old ques i tion he any old pleases—and things skid right along, regardless! ' It is difficult for some poeple to tell whether one or two members of the ■ committee are members of the com mittee or attorneys for the defense. ■ One committeeman. sitting there as • both judge and juryman, frequently ’ runs down and holds whispered con j versations with counsel for the defense —every now and then the defendant , runs out upon the floor and holds con < sultation with this committeeman. i The spectacl" of a juryman v.hisper -1 I ing to counsel for the defense, and of ! ja defendant consulting in undertones ! yvith a juryman, is not particularly ed ifying—particularly to an onlooker yvho has no violent prejudice, one way or ■ another, in the hearing; Counsel for the prosecution frequent . ly propounds this illuminating query: "Mr. Witness, did you see any illegal HE PRAISES WIVES WHO HAVE KITCHEN IDEALS DEVELOPED CHICAGO. Sept. 5. —"Kitchen tetn- ■ perament” in wives is advocated by i Rev. Frank C. Bruner, of Ogden Park I Methodist church. . "As much interest ought to be put I forth in pi eparing a meal as in play ing a piece on the piano." Rev. Mr. Bruner told bis congregation. "A poorly kept kitchen has created , mote than one divorce.” . He cited Martha, 'sister of Mary,: mother of Jesus, as the ideal "heroine of the kitchen." "When it co ij. s io a full considera tion of choosing an all around «ife." ' said the pastor, "we are inclined to ' think Martha would excel her sister i Mary, who was forever sitting with a ! book in her hand or listening to some one talk. "Martha, yvith all her Double, did her ’ best to have something for the family, , to eat.” PASTOR CRUEL. WIFE SAYS. AMD ASKS SEPARATION ALBANY N. Y. Sept. 5 -Mis. I Louise F'. Owens, of Albany , has ■[ bt ought an action for separation f om her husband, the Rev. Oscar Lee Oyvens. a Baptist preache . alleging that he is ' guilty of grave offenses and often has treated her in a cruel and inhuman • manner Mrs. Owens charged that he hus ' band choked her into insensibility on one occasion at Mannington, W. Va.. and beat her many olhe- times. She also claims that Owens compelled her to obtain money from relatives to suppott him and that she bought the furniture when they went housekeep ing. The clergyman asked for time to prepaic an answer to his wife’s charges MAN DRAWS WIFE FROM LOT OF FIFTY ASPIRANTS RICHMOND. IND.. Sept. s.—Henty Rogers. 60 years old. came to Richmond seve al weeks ago from Pennsylvania, advertised for a wife in local neyvspa- I pers and received mote than 50 replies from tvomen who were tviiling to be come his bride. So confused was Rog- i ers in attempting to reach a decision | ' front the reading of the letteis that he | shuffled them up and drew one blindly I fiom the pack, with the result that it ; was announced today that Mi s. Sarah | Arvin, of Richmond, has become Mrs. I Henry Rogers. JACKSON LETS SEWER WORK. | JACKSON. GA.. Sept. 5.—J. B. Me | Crary Company, of Atlanta, has been awarded tlie contract fm plans and .* pct ifleations for a s°weragc system by the Jackson city council. As soon as the cost 1< ascertained council will j 1 <ll an election on a bond issue f,j voting in Gilmer on the day of the pr maty ?” Nothing wrong with that question eh? Certainly, the ONLY thing wrong with it is everything, anyyvay! Counsel for the defense made sever, ineffectual efforts Wednesday to hea it off—and then gave un in despair. Leading the witnesses is everybody business. They all do it—when tn lawyers exhaust their versatility alon. that line, the committeemen butt in. Mr. Luther Rosser, of At'anta, is cidedly the most interesting party • the hearing. in the middle V>f a \y ilderness of if,.. Lord-knoyvs-what. Mr. Rosser stan.L forth a thing apart, and more i worth the price of admission. it must be extremely difficult so witness to refuse Mr. Rosser anythin- He has the sweetest and mos; pelling smile that a witness ever - undoubtedly. It lights up his face :■ a bonfire of genuine good fello.j it is the most insinuating and engag ing smile! Example. Mr. Rosser talking: "T’nc truth is. Mi. Witness <. dawns), you don't REALLY spreads and dimples) know whe this thing happened or not (smile b.;, into full bloom); now. Do you (Smile scintillates and explodt s i. , seventeen million distinct and rate Joy-', that scatter th'emselvts , over creation! ) That single. "Nov. Do you; yvortlt going miles to hear. It is attuned to the lower notes of staff, and ends, as gently as the patter ing rain in June, seven notes hr . decrescendo! When that smile has finally |. u ,.. ho is a curious witness, indeed, if | t . isn’t ready and willing to be most eommodating and benign. Ib.at eventual and concluding Do you?" Its a benediction an. song—that's all! And all the time, down in front, fum bling a newspaper and saying no: , - at all. silent, grim, picturesque. >■:; Patterson—" Snacks.” Noyv and then a faint smile ijluiui nates his futrowed sac whetj the cross and direct examinatioi | is running riot and tlie rules of ev idence have been thrown to tlie vind-. Apparently. Patterson is exeteisr | not at all! Whichever yvay the 'l.ii,-; I ends, the presumption seems var an ied that "Snacks" w ill b "Snack -. just as he alyvays has been. Is the whole thing a corned.. i farce? I Or is it a serious thing—a tragedy ’’ i It isn't a melodrama, for all :’:r I stage settings and attributes. The entile proceeding cititer is av, y silly thing and foolish —or it is a trtat te. of deepest copeprn, the progri ss of which well might give the stat, pausi • the v.hile an answer is being sough: I from out tlie mass of evidence mu neat-evidence produced. BOY WALKS ON WATER: HEIR TO GREAT RICHES USES CURIOUS SHOES NEWPORT. R. 1 Sept. 5.- Th" the vicinity of Brentons Cove, tills city, had a surpris; w hen John Niehi. a Pro.\i>. tin son of M >. John H Rtov and heir to many millions, walked on on the water with a pair of eanoe-lik. | shoes. While at first he had a little d ffi i in navigating, the boy soon became :t - eustomed lo the neyy footgear and v ab’o to move along with considerabi speed, lu all. he cove'cd about a ini' l ' and had a lot of fun at the same L u I he curious shoes yvere made by |b s ttne’e, !j. Le Roy Dress, r, an while they are not an original idea ■ •Mr. Dresser, .they have one featur*. “ his own, that of having sevea! pad I i arrangements hinged on th bottou i which enable the walker to pus against the water. Th"' shoes, v i a c about eight feet long and six incltt - yvide. arc built of a light frainevuH. covered with canvas, and have a com partment in the center for the feci. Master Brown was assisted by uncle and by his tutor. E. Hoffnio yvho accompanied him in a skiff, keel ing close by in ease of an accident ctaltze in voting lunatics and jail birds —provided they vote right. Gilmer is yvhere the county regls trais prepare one voting list for—- well, for the fun of it. perhaps— and "somebody” prepares another voting list for the use of the election managers. Gilmer also is where they raise the finest moun tain apples in the world, and yvhere ATLANTA THEATER Scats Now on Sale Season's First Play THE MU SIC AL RAIN B O W The j BALKAN PRINCESS! Given By- The No. 1 and Only Company | FORS Y T H DAILY AT 2:30, 7:45 AN D 9:15 VAUDEVILLE SX . • IT IS THE SOCIETY FAD’ REAL POPULAR P R I < > 2, LYRIC WEEK I Mats. Labor Day, Tues.. Thurs.. Sat Ker MINSTRELS I 40 People. Sale Now Open .