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BETTER STREETS
■ LOOKED FOR
Changes in Construction De
partment Methods Expected
to Bring Improvements.
Leading nu mbers of council declared
today that th< eliang* - in the city con
struction dep.iitm nt ovid<d by coun
cil yesteldax afternoon would mean a
marked improvement in street and sew-
R. .Xi flat ton. the limit of th.- de-I
I a :ment. said that h< was satisfied -
w ith th-- action of council xn.T expected I
impi'ovenmnt in bis department.
Council nan Harvey Hat'che stai t< d
a stout def ni-e of the department in
opr*• i‘ hi to th' t• 1 in Tnfasu'
ter*’<v a ft'moon, but practh-ih \ tb;in
tight b» lot' tlu* sj><'‘i;i com
mittee oil ♦ •organization. whose r< |>ojt j
Chairman Cha b W Smith wa pre- ;
renting. had be< n rumph ted.
During one of Hv•♦•h» s <
lAiin Albert Thomson int< 11 upled ilim I
with, tho r ma i 1<:
“I think Councilman Hat< a. Is tlio .
O*il\ man in Atl mt a who Jo* - nqt want i
tn .<• r < work of tin* construction <!<•-
part men t done a little b'ttcr.'’
Bcsiiie- p oviding form»» »■ strict
t < j,. at ions f< < ->r.i a< tm s. tin* m w
. < : ,im . qm •-a j.. 1> I • utllttx
co; pora t ions to prepare f<>. street im
p bv sin h linn•< as the chief
of construction shad specifj. The p o
vi-i-.m is intended to prevent such (’<-
pivs as occurred in t'i" Peachtree and
Ala. iet t;i >t: cets woi k.
An ar a ng'iiimt is to be made with
the troliex t.omp.iu’ to transport con
victs and ♦ ushed rock by trolley* cars
instead ‘>f b\ wagons. T-ds will save a
great deal of tine- and money.
\ ’ appointment •• of inspectors in the
deputmeiit must b« approved b\ the
st cuts committee
SAVANNAHANS ADVOCATE
INLAND WATERWAY PLAN
SAVANNAH. GA Dee. 24. Judge A. j
!>. Moore of the t'hutham county board
of commissioners; Joseph F. Gnpy, stat" I
railroad commission* i and executive |
otlicer of the Chamber of Commerce. I
and Pleasant A. Stovall hit ye-returned i
from Washington, where they were in
conference with General Bixby, chief of
the board of engineers of the National
Rivers and Harbors congress, relativi
to the proposed opening of the Inland
waterway from Beaufort. N. to Flor
ida.
Congressman Charles G. Edwards met
the delegation In Washington and help
ed’lay the matter before the engineers
BAR ASSOCIATION SEEKS
TO DISBAR TWO LAWYERS
CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Dee. 24. -
The grievance committee of the Chat
tanooga Bar association, composed of
S. Bartow Si tang, Frank XI. Thompson
and Frank Spurlock, is engaged in the
preparation of a new petition which will
be filed in the circuit court, praying for
■in order disbarring Robert T. Cameron
and A. T. Roark front further practice
of law before the courts of Tennessee.
Cameron and Roark were recently ac
quitted In Federal court here upon
white slave” charges.
SAVANTS TRAVEL 12.000
MILES. MISS AN ECLIPSE
LONDON. Dec. 24 —The official re
port of the British scientific expedition's
fruitless journey to the mountains of
Brazil to observe the total eclipse of
the sun on October 10 it rained all day
—is thus summarized:
Duration of eclipse. 113 seconds;
preparation of charts end instruments
at Greenwich observatory. three
months; length of journey out and back.
12.000 miles; absence from England,
ten weeks; equipment carried, three
tons; net results, nil.
RETURN TO FARM TO
CUT COST OF LIVING
WASHINGTON, Dec. 24 The way to
lower the high prices of food lies in more
intensive farming, cultivation of unoccu
pied lands near the large cities and more
intelligent method of agriculture. In the
bpihipn of Professor Milton Whitney, chief
of the bureau of soils. ''Mor** people must
return to the farm, i'ntil this is done l
am afraid that we ian.net expect a sub.
stantial reduction in tlp* high cost of Iff-
Png.” ho said. .
EX-MESSENGER BOY'S
ESTATE $14,600,000
XLB.XNX N X'.. 1 tee. 24 The estate of
Louis A Heinshelnier. of New York, who
died three years ago. has been appraised
by the state controller's office at $14,000,-
••00 An unusual feature of the appraisal
is that it shows that Mr Ileinsheimer ha*l
a hank balance of $3.500.000 in cash Mr.
, Heinsheimer spent all his life in XVall
Street, rising from messenger b.«y to
membership in the firm of Kuhn. 'Loeb is
GIRL'S'BROTHER KILLS
SENDER OF POST CARD
WUJTMAN GA . Dec. 24.—Bryant
Folsom, living about three miles from
Quitman. has surrendered to tile sheriff
of Brooks county to answer for the
death of David XX uldron. whom he killed I
while at the Fulton home. The I
slaving. Folsom claims, was caused by
an objectionable picture postcard sent j
to Folsom's sister by Waldron,
MATCHES BOY CARRIES
IGNITED BY SPANKING
' HK'.xgo, ii,., 24 An irate parent
I»tt Johnny Mi .„ ross her km 't.. 1
spank him Th, first smack brought al
mi't ~f flam,, from the seat of pun-|
L‘ r ‘'?'7" had mutches in his
Christmas Editor Santa Claus to 400 Poor Kiddies
MOTHERS ALSO REMEMBEREQ
TOMORROW!
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Pathetic Scenes as Gift Pack
ages Are Given to Parents at
Office of The Georgian.
A libe of women stretching from the
second floor down the stairs to the
street thronged The Georgian office
early today. Mothers with bent shoul
ders and wrinkled cheeks, shivering
even on a mild Christmas eve like this
because their clothing is worn thin;
women whose dull life of toil and hard
ship has not driven out the mother
love: they came intent on bearing home
the packages of toys and garments the
Christmas Editor had promised them
for their children.
For ten days the good people of At
lanta had been pouring their contri
butions into the Empty Stocking Fund.
For a week the Christmas Editor and
his volunteer assistants had been
.shopping and packing.
And when the fund was closed and
all the money counted, it was found
that enough had been received to give
400 children a package of shoes and
clothing and a big bag of toys and
fruit.
$2 Bill For Each Mother.
And more than this, there was a new
two-dollar bill in an envelope for every
mother on the list. Those two-.dollar
bills helped a lot toward putting a
Christmas dinner in the pantry for to
morrow .
With the assistance of the Associated
Charities, which made up the list of
'children ifi need of help and which aid
ed in delivering the gifts when delivery
was necessary, the distribution went on
rapidly. In most cases the mothers
were sent a note Inviting them to call
at The Georgian office for a package for
the children.
The Christmas Editor did not care to
humiliate any mother or child by mak
ing public delivery of a "charity" pack
age. In some cases, w here the mother
was ujiable to call, the gifts were sent
out in a plain delivery truck with no
indication that it came from a public
fund.
Pathetic Scene in Toy Room.
It was a pathetic scene, this line of
silent women waiting at the door of the
toy loom. They clutched their cards
tightly in chapped'and reddened hands
and huddled together in a corner while
their packages were being looked up.
They seldom spoke among themselves.
There was none of the cheery, reckless
good fellowship that prevails among
, most throngs of strangers in these days
: before Christmas. Hardship and suffer
ing and poverty do not lead to bon
homerie: rather they breed distrust and
indifference and silence.
Each of these mothers was watchful
for her own. each determined to gain
for her children that which they had
iron promised. Some of them wore
clothes so old. so thin, that the wearers
were blue from cold. Hut as they re
ceived the packages of warm under-
.ViaAA i’A CTORGIAN AND NEWS.TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1912.
wear for the little ones there was never
a, word of envy, never a hint that some- |
thing might have been done for them- I
selves. Was there ever a mother who
would not go cold to clot lie her babies,
who Would not starve that her children
might be fed?
Did the Best He Could.
The Christmas Editor, looking on the I
line of waiting mothers, wished he
could have given comfort to these
grown up sufferers, too, though the
fund had been started for children only.
But he knew the bits of green paper
given each mother would ™o a little way
toward making her comfortable, and
this was the best he could do.
When the list, made up in advance by
the Christmas Editor and Miss Thomp
son, of the Associated Charities, had
been cared for and every package de
livered, it was found that enough toys
remain to give a liberal sunnly to sev
eral orphanages which Santa Claus
might otherwise leave off his calling
list.
Appeals Come Too Late.
The 1 Georgian had many appeals late
yesterday and today to supply clothing
and toys to poor families in various
parts of the city, some coming from
the poor themselves, some from kindly
neighbors.
But these applications came so late
. that nothing could be done. Every gift
. had been distributed, every cent had
. been expended. There was no time left
to buy and deliver additional packages.
If the requests had only come earlier
—but the, same folk who put off their
I Christmas shopping put off their we|J-
■ meaning intent to tetl The Georgian
about that poor family around the cor-
. ner. until it was too late. Now it Is up
, to the procrastinators to help that po :r
, family themselves.
SOCIETY WOMEN ON
JURY CONVICT TOILER
CLAY CENTER. KANS. Dec. 21 Clay
■ county’s first woman Jury served In Jus-
• tlce Guy R. Martin's court They found a
Mexican laborer, who had been caught
, with a number of pairs of stolen shoes
guilty of receiving stolen goods The
i court room strongly resembled a woman's
| club Quarters when the case was called.
.The jurors were all prominent workers tn
' * the woman's suffrage cause.
'
WOMAN TEARS $50,000
TRUST DEED TO PIECES
. i
CHICAGO, Pec. 24 Mrs. Emma S.
t Haskell walked into the office of the
county recorder here, asked to see a $50.-
' . 000 trust deed to which she and three
• relatives were parties, tore it in three
pieces and ran from the building She
may ba arrested
AGED CHATTANOOGAN DIES.
•’H ATT >OGA TEN \ i• < . 24
1 Mrs. Rachael Cook SteLsdatler, one of
i the pioneer settlers of Hamilton eoun-
I ty* Is dead here at the age of 71
\ i are 8 < la aui viMi I -•’u. Jo
seph Stvisdatt* r. of New Orleans, and
one daughter. Mrs. E \¥. Gurnet , of
this city. The ru neral took place today.
■ with the interment here.
OAIRYTEAGHING
CIR OFF JAN. 6
Georgia Southern and Florida
Announces Itinerary for Free
Instructors.
Vice President and General Manager
J. B. Munson, of the Georgia Southern
add Florida Railway Company, an
’ nounced today that arrangements have
been perfected for the Southern rail
-1 way’s "dairy instruction car” to make
a tour of towns along the Georgia
Southern and Florida railway from
January 6 to January 11. The itinerary
1 is as follows:
Monday, January 6 —Bonaire, Ga., 2
1 to 5 p. m.
Tuesday, January- 7—Cordele, Ga., 9
a. m. to 12 noon: Unadilla, Ga., 3 to
5:30 p. m.
Wednesday, January B—Tifton.8 —Tifton. Ga.,
9 a. in. to 12 noon; Ashburn, Ga., 2:30
to 5:20 p. m.
Thursday, January 9—Hahira. 8:30
to 11 a. nt.; Adel, Ga., 1:30 to 4 p. in.
Friday. January 10, Lake Butler. Fla.,
7:30 to 10:30 a. m.; White Springs,
Fla., 2 to 5 p. tn.
Saturday, January 11—St. George.
Ga., 9 to a. m. to 12 noon: Valdosta,
1 Ga., 8 to 10:30 p. m.
The "dairy instruction ear" was orig
inated by President Finley, of the
Southern railway, and the Georgia
Southern and Florida railway to en
, courage the development of dairying in
i territory served by these lines by prac
tical demonstration and lecture work,
showing improved methods of dairying
and tin attractive profits which can be
I made by those taking up the industry
!in the South. For this work the car
1 is fitted up like a model farm dairy and
is in charge of Dr. C. M. Morgan, dairy
agent of the Southern railway, who is
an expert dairyman with wide experi
ence. At each stop demonstrations of
improved methods of dairying and il
lustrated lectures coveting every phase
1 Os the industry will be conducted by Dr.
I Morgan, who will be assisted by other
experts representing the railways, the
-.State College of Agriculture and the
' state and Federal departments of agri
’ I culture.
i I
KANSAS CITY GIRL IS
ROBBED OF $7,000 GEMS
, KANSAS CITI. Dec. 24 A robber who
broke into the apartment occupied by
i Miss Nina .1 Hanna. 1808 East Eleventh
. street, stole $7,000 worth of diamonds
I The jewelry consisted mostly of heirlooms
f Miss Hanna Is a niece of Philip C. Hanna.
. consul general to Mexico and former cun.
sui general to Porto Rico.
REGORDINGHEASE
DF WffIENTS
I
Greatest Activity in Atlanta
Building in This Line—Num
ber Reaches Nearly 100.
Contracts already made between real
estate firms and house builders and
citizens indicate that in the year 1912
there will be an increase of ten per
I eent in the number of Atlanta people
| living in apartment houses. There are
Lit present nearly lot) apartments worth
Li pp; oximately $5,000,000, including the
| sites, and capable of accommodating
appi oximately 5,000 persons, and the
estimate is that 500 additional tenants
will move in during 1913. With the
exception of hotels, there has been a
greater proportionate increase in apart
ments than in any other type of public
building in the city.
AL L. Thrower announced today' the
opening of the new $50,000 apartments
at the northwest corner of West Peach
tree and Peachtree place. This build
ing is throe stories and built of con
crete, containing six six-room apart
ments. It is on a lot 75x175, facing on
Peachtree place, and containing front
age on West Peachtree, which will be
used for a front yard.
B. M. Grant & Co. have thrown open
the Werner apartments on Washington
street, opposite the state capitol, and
there are many other apartment build
ings, among which the Albert Howell
structure at the southeast corner of
Peachtree and Ponce DeLeon stands
out as a ‘‘head-liner.” The Howell
apartments are expected tn be com
pleted in the early spring. The frame
work practically is done, much of the
brick laid and some of the massive
stone pillars up in front. Apartments
w'ill soon be built on West Cain street,
in Inman Park and in the Ansley Park
section. Three of those planned will
cost about a quarter of a million dol
lars.
FOUND DEAD IN WRECKAGE
OF CARLOAD OF WHISKY
I
| MACON, GA.. Dec. 24.—1 n removing the
. wreckage of a recent derailment on the
Central of Georgia railway at Smarrs near
here, the body of a dead negro was
found in one of the cars. This car con
tained 60 barrels of whiskey, nearly all of
which had been brdken open by the col
lision. The negro had evidently crawled
into the car at the original point of ship
ment and had been sealed in with the
liquor. The coroner’s jury was unable to
determine whether the negro died from
injuries received in the wreck or from
excessive drinking.
REDUCE OFFICERS WHEN
PRISONER GETS AWAY
DAVENPORT, IOWA, Dec. 24.—For
allowing a much wanted criminal to
escape after he had been placed under
arrest and surrounded by four officers,
three detectives were reduced to the
rank of patrolmen and suspended for
fifteen days. Twelve shots were fired
at the escaping prisoner, none taking
effect, although two of the detectives
were expert shots and members of local
gun clubs.
FIRST WOMAN MAYOR
ELECTED IN OREGON
WARRENTON, ROEG.. Dec. 24
With equal suffrage only a month old
in Oregon, Miss Clara Munson, daugh
ter of a survivor of the Whitman mas
sacre, was elected mayor of this city
over J. W. Detrich by sixteen votes.
She is the first woman mayor elected
in this state. She carried her ticket
GIRL. JAILED FOR ROBBING
EMPLOYER. HANGS SELF
NEW YORK, Dec. 24.—Rather than
face trial on the charge of robbing her
employer, Mrs. Lillian Scott hanged
herself in Harlem prison today with a
rope made from a bed sheet. She was
28 years old. and was charged with hav
ing stolen about $2,200 worth of furs
and jewelry from Mrs. Oliver Searles,
for whom she was housekeeper while
Mrs. Searles was abroad.
WILD BULL RUNS AMUCK
IN CLEVELAND STREETS
CLEVELAND. OHIO. Dec. 24—Lives
of scores of school children were en
dangered and several men and women
were knocked down and injured when a
wild bull, escaping from the stock yards
at XX'est Sixty-fifth street and Clark ave
nue. ran amuck over the west side. The
beast, pursued in an auto, was finally
killed by Charles Greene, a Civl war vet
eran.
PRESIDENT OF THE “TUB
TRUST” IS TO WED AGAIN
PITTSBURG, Pa., Dec. 24.—Divorced a
month ago, E. L. Dawes, millionaire head
of the so-called bath tub trust, announces
that he will marry Mrs. Mary Meyers
Toerge. formerly his confidentfay secre
tary, is March. His friends say the mar
riage is most likely to take place within
a few weeks. Mr. Dawes is 64 years old,
but appears to be much younger. He has
been married twice.
Modern Expert Dentistry at Reasonable Prices
$5 Crown and <FX|
O !*-■ ■ Bridge Work
\ " 1 ] get of C.IZ
(S^i-■■•"•••• Teeth
I AH ° tl,<T d«»tal work at prices that
''U I Y V I V I H will Pl«*s®. Plates made and dellv
V. 1 I I 1- <red sam ® day.
Dr. E. G. Griffin s Gate City Dental Rooms
24% WHITEHALL STREET.
Bell Phone 1708 Hours: Ba.m. to 7pm Sundays. 9a. m to 1 p m
H. C. WORTHEN NEW
GENERAL MANAGER
OF W. U. IN SOUTH
H. C. Worthen, general superintend - I
ent of the Western Union Telegraph I
Company in Atlanta, has been pro- L
moted to general manager of the<
Southern department, a newly created [
o/fice, according to the announcement
issued from the New York offices of the ;
Western Union.
Traffic Supervisor B. P. Hancock has I
been elevated to the position of division '
traffic superintendent and Special 1
Agent J. P. Edward, another Atlanta !
official, has been raised to the position
of traffic superintendent of the South
ern section.
The promotion of these three officials
will be received with gratification by
the Atlanta public, with whom they j
have come in contact for the last sev- I
eral years.
The rise of Mr. Wortlien to one of
the most important’ executive offices in
the Western Union service has been re
markable. The new general manager
of the Southern department is but 36
years old. He entered the employ of
the Western Union at the age of thir
teen at Shelby. N. C. He served as tel
egraph operator and rapidly moved
through the various grades of the
Western Union service.
His experience covered a wide field.
Three years ago lie was made general
inspetor for the general manager at
New York. He came to Atlanta as
Southern superintendent two’ years
ago, with jurisdiction over the Western
Union lines from West Virginia to
Louisiana.
Mr. Worthen is a member of several
of Atlanta’s leading clubs and enjoys a
wide acquaintance.
W. W. RICHARDSON,
FORMER ATLANTAN,
DEAD JIN MARYLAND
News has been received in Atlanta of
the death at Drummond. Md.. Sunday
night of William Wightman Richard
son, a native of Atlanta, formerly en
gaged in newspaper work here, and
lately news editor of The Washington
Star.
Mr. Richardson attended the Atlanta
public schools. He early engaged in
the banking business, but soon entered
journalism with Josiah Carter’s Even
ing Herald. Afterward be was asso
ciated with Benjamin M. Blackburn on
The- Daily Commercial. Twelve years
ago he went to Washington to accept a
place on The Star, of which he became
managing editor, as well as news editor.
Mr. Richardson leaves his wife, for
merly Miss Lula Clabaugh, of Washing
ton; a child, and a sister, Mrs. R. W.
Hood, of Atlanta. He was a brother of
the late Frank Henry Richardson, who
was at one time Washington corre
spondent of The Atlanta Constitution,
and later editor of The Atlanta Jour
nal.
CHILDREN, SENDING
LETTERS TO SANTA
IN FLUE, BURN BABY
LOUISVILLE? KT? Dec. 24.—left
alone by their mother did
Christmas shopping this morning, Mar
garet and Russell Schubnell, aged five
and seven, were sending letters up the
chimney to Santa Claus, when they
set fire to the baby buggy containing
their eleven-months-old sister.
The buggy was consumed and the
infant burned to a crisp.
PATIENT AT HOSPITAL
INSISTS HE’S NOT DEAD
ST. LOUIS, Dec. 24.—Wace Jean, a
Hungarian laborer, sat up in bed at
the city hospital and denied he was
dead.
"The report is greatly exaggerated,”
said he, paraphrasing Mark Twain, in
flawless Hungarian. “I’m only badly
hurt.”
Wace, according to a report that came
from the hospital, died yesterday even
ing from a fractured skull, suffered
three days ago, when he fainted in the
kitchen of his home at 4352 Clayton
avenue, and fell over backward.
Hospital authorities are unable to ex
plain how the false report got out.
MAN RUN DOWN IN TUNNEL
RECOVERY VERY DOUBTFUL
DALTON, GA„ Dec. 24.—George S.
Landers, secretary of the Rocky Face
Silica Sand Company, had not this
morning regained consciousness as a
result of being struck by a XVestern
and Atlantic passenger train in the tun
nel near Tunnel Hill, north of here,
Saturday afternoon.
Landers was caught In the tunnel and
ft is believed that on seeing the train
approach he dropped to the ground
alongside the track and was struck by
the engine's pilot. His skull was badly
fractured. He has only a slight chance
to recover.
GET YOUR FRUIT CAKE
AT ZAKAS’ AND YOU
WILL GET THE BEST
There is no better fruit cake made'
than that sold at the Bread and Cake
Store of D. Zakas. 30 Peachtree street
—Five Points—and best of all, is the
fact that it is cheaper than you can
make it in your own kitchen. Pound
cake, angel food, coffee cake, pie; in
fact, everything in tme bakery line is
there, and It is pure, elean and whole
some. Flesh bread, buns and rolls for
every meal in the day and every day in
the year. (Advt.i
■DEMES’
, FDR CAR SAFETI
Committee Asserts Many Trol
leys Are Without Fenders.
Seeks to Enforce Law.
Despite tile declaration of troliev
company officials that all the cars in
Atlanta are equipped with fenders, tie
i Chi abet of Commerce committee on
| public safety is working today on a
plan to force the company to provide
really adequate protection for pedes
trians. The committee declares that
many of the cars are without fenders
or so poorly equipped that no real safe
ty is provided, and the chftmber will
try to have the city ordinance enforced
The death last week of flve-year-olij
Theo. Hoffman, mangled under a cai
in Grant street, was the specific case
which stiried the committee to action.
The boy was not struck by the wheel?
of the car. His little body was rolled
by the trucks until his life was crushed
out. A proper fender would have lifted
the child from the rails and tossed him
aside with perhaps only a few bruises.
Chairman W. J. Lowenstein, of the
public safety committee, made an In
vestigation and discovered, he reported
to the chamber, that many cars have
no fenders and many fenders In use are
wholly inefficient. He addressed a let
ter to President Wilmer L. Moore, of
the chamber, urging the board of di
rectors to start action which would
force the company into providing effi
cient fenders.
W. H. Glenn, superintendent of the
trolley company, declared that good
fenders, so far as there are any good
fenders, were in use on all cars.
“Exactly what is a good fender igjj
question,” he said. “Each manufac
rarer claims his is the best. We have
a new improved mechanism on the
Whitehall-Peachtree line, but even this
hns failed to work at a critical moment
| We are complying with the law the best
we can. It is not true that some cars
are fenderlera. Those where the fend
ers do not appear from the street havi>
them far under the car, just in front
of the wheels.”
SUSPECTED SLAYER OF
DEPUTY SHOT TO DEATH
FORREST CITY, ARK., Dec. 24.—A
sheriff and posse in pursuit of Cecil
Mallory, suspected of having shot and
killed Deputy Sheriff B. S. Moore, eatne
upon their quarry as Mallory was walk
ing into Widener, a small station on
the Rock Island railroad. Two of the
posse literally riddled the suspected
man’s body with buckshot, death re
sulting instantly.
| DEATHS AND FUNERALS'
Mrs. Bertha Norton.
The funeral of Mrs. Bertha Norton
aged 30 years, who died yesterdaj
morning at a private sanitarium, xvas
held this morning at 9 o’clock at Harry
Poole’s undertaking establishment, in
terment following in Greenwood ceme
tery. Mrs. Norton lived in Lakewood
Heights. She is survived by her hus
band, W. M. Norton.
S. D. Davi*.
The funeral of S. D. Davis, 26 years
of age, of Dalton, who died at a pri
vate sanitarium Sunday morning, will
be held this afternoon at 3 o’clock from
Harry Poole’s undertaking establish
ment, interment following in Caseys
cemetery.
Albert F. Kuhns, Jr.
The funeral of Albert F; Kuhns, Jr,
20 years of age, who died yesterday
morning at the residence, 227 North
Boulevard, will be held from the home
tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o’clock, with
interment in Oakland cemetery. The
deceased is survived by his father and
mother. Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Kuhns.
Sr., and his wife of a few months.
THE ATLANTA tc £ I ' s ght
Also Tues., Wed. Nights, Wed. Mat.
CHARLES FROHMAN PRESENTS
DONALD
With Carroll Me- 19 II | A %
Comas. Will West, 11 11 ! fl 1
Ethel Cadman and L/lllllli
Fifty Others.
BRILLIANT SUPPORTING CAST.
Prices 50c to $2.00.
Thurs., Frl., Sat. Mat., Sat. Night.
SEATS ON SALE TODAY.
A. S. STERN Presents
IDA ST. LEON
(Late of “Polly of the Circus.”)
A New Comedy Drama
"FINISHING FANNY.”
Nights, 25c to $1.50, Mat.. 25c to sl.
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DINKELSPIEL’S CHRISTMAS
BY GEORGE V. HOBART
Empire Comedy Four—Lew Hawkins
Miss Robbie Gordons and Others.
Little Emma Bunting
And FORSYTH PLAYERS
"The Little Gray Lady."
Special Xmas Matinee.
LYRIC T tt'g E K
Mats.. Tues.. Wed.. Thurs.. Sat.
SPECIAL XMAS MAT. WEDNESDAY
THE BIG MUSICAL REVUE
THE FROLICS OF .912
WITH
RUBE KITTY
WELCH 3,111 FRANCIS