Newspaper Page Text
2
GIRL TELLS 11 5.
OFFICER ‘WHITE
SLAVE’ STORY
Miss Goodwin Repeats Her
Narrative of Theatrical Ex
perience in Atlanta.
Miss Geneva Goodwin, nineteen -
’ear-old girl and main witness in the
local "white slave" irises, took the
stand this morning before United
States Commissioner Colquitt in the
Federal building. A feature of the ses
sion wajs the appearance of 35 women
witnesses subpenaed by both sides.
Miss Goodwin testified that she was
a nurse in Cincinnati when she was
engaged by a theatrical booking agen
cy ami agreed to come to Atlanta to
join the Metropolitan Musical Comedy
Company. She arrived, here at 3 a. m.
and was met by Robert Grier and taken
to 34 Garm tt street, where she was in
troduced to Mrs'. Emma Hudson. She
found be< r bottles and cigarette stumps
in the room, and, becoming frightened,
told the members of the troupe that
she preferred to sleep in a hotel. Mr.-.
Hudson, she said, offered to share het
bed with her, but the offer was refuse!
and Geneva was taken by Arthur Jack
son to the Cumberland hotel, where she
spent the night.
"Never Flirted."
She went back to the Garnett street
house the next day and was told, she
declared, that she must live as the wife
of one of the "odd" men in the com
pany, and Jack Amason and Jackson
were designated as "odd." She talked
a v. hile and smoked a cigarette, but
refused beer. After the company en
joye<L-more beer, the girl went back to
the hotel. The next day she applied
for a place as nurse at the Gradj- and
St. Josephs hospitals, but was turned
down. She < otthl gel no money from
the troupe, she declared, to buy a tick
et back to Cincinnati.
On cross-examination, the girl
named her father for the first time.
He is W. A. Goodwin, of Pineville, Ky.,
a construction contractor for a coal
mining company. Geneva said she had
been two months in Cincinnati as an
under nurse and previously a sales girl
at a department store at Pinevilh and
previous to that time stayed at home.
She said she had gone to a local., drug
store with Jack Amason for cigarettes
for Mrs. Hudson. She said she told the
members of t t< troupe that she didn't
flirt under any conditions.
The Company's Morals.
In concluding her testimony, the
Goodwin gill declared that no member
of the company, with the exception of
Mrs. Hudson, had tried to teach her
anything immoral, although Amason:
had told her nobody was inclined to be
prudish.
Detective Chewning testified that ho
had gone Io 34 Garnett street looking
for the company, but was told by a
drayman that, the company's effects had
been taken to the Terminal station The
detective said he later found the troupe
at 270 Whitehall street. Detective J. 11.
Lewis testified to the same facts.
James Hardaway, a slenogt apiiet,
swore that he took a statement from
Mrs Hudson at the police station, in I
which she asserted that Grier had win d
the girl $lO to Cincinnati, so she could
come on down. K
MAN. 104 YEARS OLD. FARMS.
ROME GA.. Nov. 26.- The Chitwoods
district of Floyd county claims the old
est man in north Georgia. He is Philip
Lundy, 194 years old. "t'ncle Philip"
is hale and hearty, and raised a good
crop this year He makes baskets in
the winter and walks to Rome some
times twice a week.
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I J
Accused Attorney and Wife Are on Verge of Collapse
GIBSON JURY FAILS TO AGREE
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'.W IJiiriiHi \V (Jilt-.it nnl uTe ,t> tliev appeared in court during
’in- trial nF lit'- lawti-r tor lite iiiiintof of tin- Countess Szabo.
Division Said To Be Nine For
Conviction to Three For
Acquittal. x
GOSHEN, N, V.. Nov. 26. -The, jury
trying Burton W. Gibson, for the mur
der of Countess Rosa Menschik Szabo,
on Greenwood lake, July 16, announced
its inability to agree at 11:15, when it
had been out fifteen hours ajid thirty
five minutes. The division was said to
be nine for conviction and three for ar
quittai. Twice before it. had-reported
a liisagr. enii-nt, but each time had been
shut back by Justice Tompkins to ct>n
| tinue its deliberations.
| Foreman J. L. Hicks, of the jury* had
' announced when the second report was
l made at 9:47 o'clock,’that there was a
I possibility of a verdict being reached,
so when word was sent into court that
the jury was ready to report again at
11:15 o'clock, there was a flutter of
excitement. Gibson was again taken
into court from his cell, anil, despite the
likelihood of a verdict, he was calm.:
Mrs. Gibson was not in court, having
been ordered to bed an hour before by
her physician.
The news of the disagreement wa's
kept from lief upon orders of Dr.
O’Reilly, one of the medical experts for
the defense, under whose care she lies.
Jury Interrogates Judge,
The first report from the jury came
at three minutes after 2 a. m., or six
hours and twenty-four minutes after
the jurors got the case. Justice Tomp
kins, who had gmm to a-, neighboring
hotel at the close of the day's ..session of
court, was summoned, and J. T. Hicks,
foreman of the jury, announced that the
twelve could come to no verdict. They
were ordered back, and then the fore
man asked:
"Does the question of guilty or not
guilty hinge on whether Mrs. Ritter
(Countess Szabo) was strangled-.'"
"It rests upon all the evidence." re
plied the court. “If you find she m'fft
her death at the hinds of the defend
ant. then your verdict must be ren
dered‘in the first degree."
“Must we consider all the other evi
dence in its relation to murder'."’ asked
another juror.
"You must,” replied the court.
Attorney Robert H. Elder, counsel for
the defense, jumped to his feet after
the juror had ceased questioning Jus
tice Tompkins and shouted:
“I move—”
Before he could go any further he
was stopped by Justice Tompkins, who
said he would not consider any mo
tions at that time.
When the jurors had gone back to
their room the judge returned to his ho
tel, leaving word that he would accept
a verdict at any time.
Both Near Collapse.
At 2:30 o’clock the jury again Re
sumed its deliberations At that hour
both Mr. and Mrs. Gibson were awake
and both were bordering on collapse.
Mrs. Gibson wept violently in the court
room as the jury retired, and had to be
comforted by two women friends. Gib
son wa< pale mil trembling as he wa
led back to his cell, and court attaches
feared that lie was going to faint.
Later in his cell Gibson regained his
composure and sent a reassuring mes
sage to Ills wife, telling her not to wor
ry. as he was sure "everything would
come out all right."
So keen was the general interest in
■li' ease that more than loi) spectators
l hung about the court house all night
i waiting for a verdict. > ■
While Gibson was eating bis bregk
ifart. Mrs. Gibson pleaded with court
I attae... - to be allowed to sc, him. bll*
her request was refused. Mrs. Gib
, son becaim so nervous over the long
drawn tension that Dr. O'ReHley, one
i of the medical experts for the defense,
had to I", nist. an opiate She told
j In i frauds that sa- had played tor a.i
hour this morning ."or her husband's
THE \TL.\XT.\ GEORGIAN AND NEWS.TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1912.
Happiness of Senator Tillman Is at Stake
FIGHTING FOR CHILDREN
COLUMBIA, S. Nov. 26. Hearing of
an action of law which has as its stake
the happiness of I'nited States Senator
BenjahYn .1: Tillnjan began today in the
South Carolina supreme court, Chief Jus-’
. the Gn'ri presiding.
The'.petitioner In fact, is Benjamin R.
Tilln)a>n,-. 'Jr . ..but Ills aged father is the
one, who is pursuing the pending ease. .
Tlio lirtii'ing was before the full supreme
court;..... Jlahy women prominent In the
higher Rur-lal walks of the st&te and men
of higlr', pupstige were presMit. Senator
Tillman was one of the most conspicuous
figures at the hearing. His son, Benja
min R. Tillman. Jr., the son's divorced
wife and their two little daughters,
Dousehka 'Pickens and Sarali Stark Till
man. were also in the court room.
At noon the hearing was adjourned un
til next Monday in order that the counsel
for young Tillman might present evid
ence in rebuttal to several affidavits sub
mitted by tlie deponent, Mrs. Lucy Dugas.
Each side was allowed one hour for pe
tition apd exhibits of B. R. Tillman. Jr.,
and the return affidavit and exhibits of
the deponent, Mrs Dugas. The reading
of these documents, both of which were
[ voluminous, consumed practically the
whole time of the court until near noon,
when a recess of ten minutes was taken.
'Her tip; recess Henry A. Tillman, of
counsel for the petitioners asked for an
extension of time to put in evidence af
fidavits tn rebuttal to those Mrs. Dugas,
alleging that B. it. Tillman. Jr., had been
under the influence of intoxicating liquors
l in November of this year. This the court
I allowed, extending the time until Monday.
The case is remarkable because of the
fact that the aged senator, in the bill of
particulars filed with the court, lias ad
mitted that his son hast been a drunkard,
though he is now reformed.
• The suit is for the custody of the sena
tor's two grandchildren, the offspring of
DERISIVE SMILE OF
DEFENDANT RILES
DYNAMITE JUDGE
INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 26.—Defend
ant Olaf Tveitmoe’s pel petual smile,
characteristjr-of this coast labor leader,
so irritated Judge Anderson at the dy
namite conspiracy trial this forenoon
that the court ordered him removed
ftom counsel’s table and placet! in the
midst of his fellow defendants. Judge
Anderson interrupted the cross-exami
nation of McManigal:
“1 don't know why the defendant
'i’veitmoe is seated at counsel'.- table.
He has .-indulged in repeated demon
strations for days. There is a perpet
ual smite of derision upon his face. I
am not going to tolerate it any longer,
and I warn you all to behave your
selves. Mr. Marshal, you will place
this gentleman back with the other de
fendants and keep him there." .
Tveitmoe went His face was crim
son.
U. S. EXPERT SAYS TURKEY
IS NOT IN PROPER FLAVOR
WASHINGTON. Nov. 26. —Saying
that the turkey is not in proper flavor
at this time of the year, Acting Chief
Chemist Doolittle, of the department of
agriculture, gave out a turkeyless
menu.
acquittal.
The jurors looked pale and disheveled
when they came into coprt at 9:17
o’clock and reported again to Justlia
Tompkins that they had been unable to
agree. Foreman Hicks said he thought
there was a chance of reaching a ver
dict, and the Jurors were sent back to
continue their deliberations.
Gibson < rented a scene in court Just
after Foreman Hicks had announced
the disagreement. As Justice Tomp
kins was thanking the Juro:s for their
efforts, the defendant jumped to his
fqe,t. exclaiming:
"Your honor, may I make -”
’’No.’’ snapped the judge.
Gibson persisted in addressing the
jury . grow ing more and more • xcited as
he proceeded. Finally he subsided and
Justice Tompkips completed his re
marks. Attorney Elder later explained
tlfnt Glbsoii only wanted to ask the
Jury to make another attempt to-ar
rive at av» edict. Gibson's iron nerve
Was ,shu,ttyred as he was led back to
■us cell. His eyes were downcast and
he shook from head to foot.
it Ava» regarded as certain here that
Gibson would timer ..gain stand trial
for murder, bitt < barges of fraud are
pending against him in New York
county.
At noon D. Rellley said It would be I
safe to Inform Mrs. Gibson of the dis- 1
agreement and this was done. She
went at once to the jail and flung her- I
self into hi husband's arms, weeping >
Inconsolably.
his son and his daughter-in-law . formerly
Lucy Dugas, q granddaughter of former
iJoryer Pickens, of this state. A«t present
the little ones are in the custody of their
mother, who resides at Edgefield, but who
is said to be contemplating their removal
froni the state.
This is the second attempt of the
aged statesman to secure the two chil
dren. On the first occasion the court de
cided that the mother was better prepared
to i;ear the children because of the father’s
weakness for liquor, which was alleged
by Iris young wife.
The senator, ton that occasion, wrote
nto a petition, which he submitted to the
court, a pitiful appeal. "We love them,”
he wrote in the midst of the formal legal
paper. "We love them dearly and we will
care for them tendefly.’’
Wife Won Decision.
Despite al! his personal popularity and
influence, however, the court decided in
favor of Mrs. Tillman, Jr., holding as
just her allegations to the effect that
young Tillman was a drunkard and was
unable to support their children. The sen
ator was much downcast by tills finding
an<l for a long time refused to discuss his
son's falling. He was overtaken by a
paralytic stroke which nearly cost him
his lite. During his convalescence he
called for the children continually, mourn
ing their loss in his delirium.
In the summer of 1912 Mrs. Tillman. Jr.,
got a divorce in Ohio from her husmand,
tlie senator's young son, and since that
time she has lived in Edgefield. It was
in 1910, two years before the divorce de
cree. that the children were granted to
her by the South Carolina supreme court,
after a severe tight against Senator and
Mrs. Tillman and B. R. Tillman, Jr.
In the South Carolina court today the
case was begun in which the Tillmans are
making their last effort to get the chil
dren away from their mother.
GEORGIA R. R. CAN’T
REMOVE W. U. POLES
FROM RIGHT-OF-WAY
In obtaining from Superior Judge
Pendleton today a temporary order re
straining the lessees of the Georgia
.railroad from removing poles and wires
from along the railroad’s right-of-way,
the Western Union Telegraph Company
reopened condemnation cases affecting
several Georgia railroads.
On suits brought by the Georgia road
and the Western and Atlantic railroad
to stay the telegraph company's con
demnation proceedings recently, the su
preme court decided that a railroad had
prior claim over its own right-of-way
uid the \\ estern Union could condemn
only such property as had not been
designated by the railroad for specific
purposes. <
In bringing suit today, tlie Western
I nion attorneys asked the court for a
pei manent injunction, ou legal grounds
not involved in the other trials. Judge
Pendleton gave the Western Union a
temporary order, and set the hearing
for December 7.
OH! “You
Do you look forward to
mealtime with real pleas
ure or do you have that
‘don t rare” sort of feel
ing? 1 hen, by pH means,
try a bottle of
Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters
It coaxes the Appetite,
aids Digestion, prevents
Constipation. Bilious
ness, Colds, Grippe and
Malarial Disorders.
WmiT
i HAS NO CINCH
Keeping City’s Street Streams
| Flowing Is Not a Holi
day Pastime.
Continued From Page One.
busy keepin' ’em goin' to stop and
count 'em. Hey you. back up there!
Didn't you see me give you the stop?
Come on, now. Keep straight across.
Yes, laijy. the postoffice is two blocks
straight up and one to the right. No,
ma’am; the Westview cars don’t pass
the corner. Go up to Broad street. No,
sir: I can't tell you just where 498
Moreland avenue Is, but that car’ll take
you there.”
Up Decatur street comes a string of
one-horse drays, creeping along with
each horse’s nose hung over the wagon
bed in front, and every driver half
asleep on his seat. The white glove
goes up, the line halts and jams, block
i Ing the sidewalk and cutting off forty
pedestrians who want to cross. Officer
Mitchell steps over.
“Go ahead, you,” he commands. “You
next man, hold up there. Let these
people by. Open up that line.”
, Down comes a six-cylinder car, load
ed with young folks, a woman at the
wheel. It dashes into the jam; she
tries to turn into Marietta street: and
the driver coming south barely pulls up
his team in time to check a smash.
The woman driver Is contrite.
“Oh, I thought you said go ahead,"
she explains. The traffic cop is all
smiles.
"Don’t ever turn to the left around a
corner,” he says, quietly. “Swing way
out to the right and take the outside.
Then y'ou won’t get into trouble.”
Amateurs Worst To Handle.
Down comes a clattering truck, load
ed loosely with iron bars and clanking
like a tin roof in a gale. The driver
must be making his last trip, for he
sends his mules flying into Peachtree,
only to be checked by that white glove.
“Look here, you,” says the traffic man.
"I’ve warned you once. Next time you
come through here like that it's you to
the station house. See? Now, drive
on."
“It’s negro draymen and amateur au
to drivers that give us the most trou
ble,” explained one of the officers.
"Folks that are used to passing here
don't worry us much. They drive down
and wait for the signal and don't lose
much time. But these amateurs, they
come through lickety-split, scared of
their car, and afraid to monkey with
it, and they’re likely to hit somebody. .
And the negro drivers, why, they come
a-bustin’ through like they had a ten
acre field to drive In, ’specially along
late in the evenin’, when they’re on
their way home to hot catfish and beer.
The motormen, too, give us trouble
sometimes, but the company has post
ed orders that they've got to mind the
traffic policemen just like anybody else,
and they ain’t so bad now.”
Two Men at the Points.
There are two men on duty at Five
Points most of the day. Burnett will
take the difficult Decatur street -cor
ner for an hour, while Mitchell holds
down the lighter corner of Edgewood
and Peachtree. Then they will swap
jobs for an hour, Each is given an
hour and a half off for lunch, and while
one is gone the other must guard all
five of the arteries, which is some job
and E. C. Thornton, one of the best
traffic cops on the force, guards the cor
ner when the others go off duty.
“It wouldn’t be so bad if folks didn’t
try to cross* the street nine different
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CARLTON
Shoe and Clothing Co.
36 Whitehall Street
Convict s Plea Cites Turkey Day Proclamation
NOVEL PLEA FOR PARDON
Governor Brown was more or less
“hoist by his own petard”—whatever
that is—today when Joseph Benson,
an unwilling guest of the state at the
prison farm, Arote him petitioning for
release, and quoting the governor’s
Thanksgiving day proclamation to
prove that he ought to have it.
The prisoner clipped from the exec
utive document the following para
graph:
And while we are giving thanks
for blessings vouchsafed for our
selves, let us seek i jt the needy,
the helpless, the disconsolate, the
fatherless and the orphan, and ex
tend to them such help as will
bring joy and fullness to their
hearts, ever remembering that to
us is the divine promise. “The
Eternal God is thy refuge, and un
derneath are the everlasting arms!”
In this clipping, the words “seek,”
“needy,” “helpless" and "disconsolate”
were heavily underscored, and along
with the quotation from the Thanksgiv
ing proclamation came the following
letter:
ENGINEER. HURRYING MAN
T° HOSPITAL, INJURED
ST. JOSEPH. MO.. Nov. 26.—Harry
Busse, a railroad conductor, is in a
hospital here with his feet cut off, and
Norman Hawkins is suffering from se
rious injuries, as the result of a series
of peculiar accidents.
Busse had one foot severed and the
other crushed by a train at Stouts,
Kans. Ho was being rushed to St. Jo
seph in an improvised special train
made up of an engine and way car,
when it jumped the track near Elwood,
Kans., and Engineer Hawkins was se
riously hurt.
ways,” explained one of the traffic men
In a lull He had just helped an aged
woman across the street, protecting her
three children, two hand bags, a basket
and a parrot in a cage, and had paused
to run a handkerchief around the in
side of his helmet, though the ther
mometer marked around 40. “But they
start across from any old place and
go any old direction. Sometimes they're
kept hopping lively out in the middle
of the triangle, but mostly they get
over all right. They’ll grab their hats
and run across right in front of an au
tomobile and then stop on the sjffe'valk
and look back like they hadn’t been in
a hurry, anyway. Honest, some folks
are funny. And sometimes they’ll get
to talking and stroll across, kinder
slow, like there wasn’t a trolley car or
a truck in 40 .miles, just as uncon
cerned as you please. It’s a wonder
to me there ain’t more folks butted
into |>y bicycles and run over by auto
mobiles than really happens. We can’t
play nurse to everybody on four cor
ners at one time.”
Two Big Rush Periods.
The great rush comes in the morning,
when everybody is hurrying into town
for business, and another is between 4
and 6 o’clock in the afternoon, when
everybody is going home. When'the
office buildings begin to pour their in
habitants into street cars and automo
biles, when the thousands begin filling
the sidewalks, when the dazzling head
lights throw their glare into the faces
of‘drivers coming the other way, when
street car gdngs and electric horns be
gin playing the Devil's Ragtime in the
dusk, then the traffic cop begins to
feel that a lonely beat in the suburbs
would be the next best thing to a per
petual vacation.
“But we take it as it comes,” said
Charley Mitchell, with a tired look.
"Sometimes it's bad and sometimes it’s
worse, but you can get used to any
thing.”
And the gloved hand shot up to halt
a motor car until a beer wagon went
clattering by.
»
Dear Governor —My term win ex .
pire on December 9, and will y oll
make me and my loved ones hap.
puy, as you suggest in your hope
ful proclamation, by letting me be
home with them on Thanksgiving
day? I would like to take Thanks
giving dinner with my folks. That
would bring me joy and fullness
I am both "disconsolate" and
“helpless.” Yours respectful!?..
JOE BENSON,
Governor Brown said he would |j;- e
to do all he could for the “disconsL
late” and the "helpless” on Thanksgiv.
ing day, just as his proclamation sag.
gests, but that he necessarily has tu
draw a distinction between those in
that state because of misfortune or
justice and those in that state because
of viciousness and deliberate intent.
He intimated that the state’s gu est
petitioning for clemency upon a para
graph from the Thanksgiving proelal
mation, in all probability, would be the
state’s guest on Thanksgiving day. h,
said he understood they were preparing
to give the prisoners an excellent tur
key dinner at the state farm on
Thanksgiving day.
SAUERKRAUT CROP IS
LARGESTJNNIANY YEARS
FREMONT. OHIO, Nov, 26.—With
the opening of the sauerkraut season
here thia week, factory owners declare
the product is the largest in years. Fre.
mont is the center of the kraut indus
try in the United States.
EX-MAYOR’S SON DEAD
ACWORTH, GA., Nov. 26.-Lewis L
McMillan, aged 21. the son of forme’
Mayor G. W. McMillan, is dead, the fu
neral having been held from the Acworth
Presbyterian church, and interment in
Liberty Hill cemetery, Acworth.
QUICKLY CURES THE
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New Remedy Makes Kidney
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Pains Disappear, as if
By Magic.
It is no longer necessary for any on*
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nary disorders to contend with, or be
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and its heart-wrenching pains, for the
new discovery, Croxone. quickly and
surely cures all such troubles.
Croxone is the most wonderful rem
edy yet devised for ridding the system
of uric acid and driving out all the
poisonous impurities which cause such
troubles.- It is entirely different from
all other remedies. It is not like any
thing else ever used for the purpose.
It acts on the principle of removing the
cause. Pills, tablets, and other reme
dies at the best, merely stimulate the
kidneys, giving temporary relief. Crox
one cleans out the poisons.
It soaks right In through the walls,
membranes and linings, like water In a
sponge, neutializes. dissolves and makes
the kidneys sift out and filter away all
the uric acid and poisons from the
blood, and leaves the kidneys and uri
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well.
It matters not how long you have
suffered, how old you are, or what you
have used, the very principle of Crox
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possible to take it into the human sys
tem without results. There is nothing
else on earth like it. It starts to work
the miriute you take it and relieves you
the first time you use it.
If you suffer with pains in your bacl:
and sides, or have any signs of kidney,
bladder troubles, or rheumatism, sue 1 '
as puffy swellings under the eyes, or i'
the feet and ankles, if you are nervous
tired and run down, or bothered with
urinary disorders. Croxone will quickl'
relieve you- of your misery. You can
secure an original package of Croxone
at trifling cost from any first-class
druggist, such as Jacobs Pharmacy
who will personally return the pur
chase price if it falls in a single case
(Advt.)
ATLANTA THEATER
TONIGHT
Wednesday Matinee
The Heart Breakers
With GEORGE DAMEREL
Nights. 35e to $1.50; Matinee. 25c to n
SEATS NOW SELL'NG
HENRY W. SAVAGE Presents
THURSDAY and FRIDAY
Thanksgiving Day Matinee
The Funniest of Comedies
EXCUSE ME
Prices, 35e, 50c, 75c, SI.OO and R
HPAND keieh Mai.
WnMrIU VAUDEVILLE Ton_g_M 1.-2
A REAL SHOW next week
TOM nawn & COMPAfiY Mclntyre
Kite E j'nore 6 Sara Williams
JUL ET?- Heath
La Tosca Mullen b Coogan 8h
3 EicardosThe Shillings
FORSYTH BUNTING
This _W eek—Tue s.,_Thu rs. ,_S at M £«•
LITTLE EMMA BUNTING
—Playing In—
MARY ANN.
Next Week—“LOVERS
LYRIC
Matinees Tuesday. Thursday and
Saturday ,
“The Shepherd of the Hills
Dramatized From Harold
Wright’s Novel-