Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 30, 1912, HOME, Page 2, Image 2

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2 “I Have Committed the Worst Crime Possible for Woman---But, Oh, I Dread the Gallows'” MRS. KING WARNS OTHER WOMEN AGAINST PITFALLS DYNAMITERS ARE SENTENCED TO DON STRIPES Ryan Heads List With Seven Years Minimum Penalty Is Year and Day. Continued From Page One. for Judge Anderson to begin imposition of sentence. Tlie court room was filled with spec tators. who followed with breathless interest every incident. The defendants looked worried and the feeling that light sentences would be pronounced, together with fines, gave away at the last hour. When a seven-year sentence was passed upon Ryan, there was a wave' - f surprise throughout the room. The wives and children of thos* sen tenced bote Up bravely in marked eon- I trast to Stituidas's • tffttl deinonstra ’ lons Tlie most of tin- prisoners themselves maintained their calm lint serious de ’rteanor. Edward Phillips, father of .1 little gulden-liiii.'ed daughter of five years, stagge: <■<', is he was led from court '■oom. fie was the most visible affected ! f all. j p arrell First Questioned by Judge. When the defendants w 4- b ought .ef'Ce ~im Judge AlldelSOll began [ <1 petitioning several of them upon whose 1 a,,.- the ju.y hud difficulty in reaching ’ oticiusions'. He list called uu Patrick! Farrell. of Now York, on whose ease In judge understood the jurx had had sime difficulty in arriving at a eon lusion. Judge Anderson asked Farrell ■ f he voted against the resolution to continue the strike against the Post- McC'ord Construction t’ompanv before tlie executive board. Farrell replied that he did. “It is not a fact that you were tn sympathy with the dynamiting cam paign in New York?” "it was not," said Kartell. “After you < eased to be a melnbei of | tlie executive board, what position did you hold in the organization of Iron workers?” “1 held none.' Farrell was asked whv he tried to organize the international association ill New York in 1909, and bo said: ■'Certain members ask'd 1 I" u-e influence." Admits Farrell Might Have Gone Free. Judge Ami' rsoii sal'! 1. . b; on on '.he bench t'o: ten y< .•- mid he would rot sviiiem 1 a man he was ■iL’l’.ty. District Attorney AlMle: arose and .id that if tin ..' was any doubt in Ids 1 Miller's 1 mind whither the man should nut be discharged unde:' the.statute of imitation, it was one letter he wrote in ".iii'.i. Miller said lie believed that If th. question had been properly put In the court bv Farrell’s nttorneq. Farrell might have taken advantage of the statute of limitation. Miller then ar med Judge Anderson any ruling would >e ag .cable to him in tins case. He said the only defense put up in Far -ll's behalf l.y ills attorney was tlie question: "What's tlie difference be tween tlie case of Patrick Farrell and John R. Carroll, who was discharged'”' Farrell was seated* and James Cooney, of Chicago, was called. Judge Anderton asked: “Do you know any reason why Mc- Manlgal should have testified falsely against you?” "1 know none," said Cooney. Have you read the constitution?". "Yes." said Cooney. "Do you believe in it'.'" "Yes.” "Do you believe men have any right to violate the law on their own respon sibility?" asked the judge Judge Asks About Evidence. Judge Anderson then addressee At- | torney Miller. "Is there any evidence against th? miin except that introduced by MeMuu ’gal?" ifil.e: replied that the:-, w.is 11. said Cooney hud admitted be had the opportunity to talk to MeManiga’i. as the latter said he had. Fut thermore, the defense brought men here to sh. 1 | he did not have the opportuniti "Three of their witnesses neie brought here forth. sole reason of contradiction of MeManigal.” said Mil ler. “And yet they corroborated him. ’ one letter shows that Cooney Intro duced MeManigal to Ryan: atiot ter as-, serted that Cooney was talking too | much." After a few more questions Cooney uas permitted to take his seat, and James Coughlin, of Chicago, was called before the judge. Judge Anderson himself tH-eme.l to be giving the men a defense that their own attorneys had not accorded them. At one time he stated that only direct evi dence should be considered, as he him self hud heard that one of the d>fond ants last March hud staled that th jail would not hold the men if all iron imkers that hud knowledge <>f the von -J.iri.y Were t., be indiet.'. Judge mn then put a Um of tpiesttoiis " ' "'igliliii - imilar t " th.u. ■ -k'.d < .... i > I | l“If I Had Slapped Nick Wilburn’s I ace the First I i me He Squeez ed My Hand I Would Not Be in This I Tread ful Fix Now,” Moans the Plotter of Death. By Staff Correspondent I ci; A YS, C, A . I>' c. 3tf. I > '■ 'it'd by • | ||C| relatives, scorned by lie:- children | ' 'lid seemingiy without .1 fiietid, Mrs. I iKathrine King, who has confessed to I j plotting mid inspiring tiie mJ < ! < .' "! ! her husband. Jam. s King. a pi.iabh [figure. Sh. oc uples a roomy >< .1 u , 'tn. jaii h :., and Sheriff Hob .t- 1- klnoly going to ••xtra effort to make her prison lif. comfortable, but she tear-; fully de. i ires that ,lfe hem efol th is I tedious to I).a. "I would welcome death, if they only wouldn't hang me," site told □ Georgian reporle'. the first and only newspaj-t man to whom she lias talked concern ing the crime Im which her life is in jeopardy. In Cell Next To the Gallows. 'rip- .-!• wall, which acts as a parti tion so M s. King's evil, also supports I th< <!eu th 11 ap, and of Hi is she is cog til -1 zat 1. When s'e gazes out. of two of th*' ihr< < windows to her apartment her glan* >■ falls upon !!•■ little < mmTer.v on] the hillside in 1 .<• distance. From the window she r,in see the “Bridge • 1 Sighs,” which sue must tiavi-t.-e hi g dng t</ th-- court hous<’ to be sen tenced. ! “The,. < little to add to what 1 liavA/ I ..! i’c ii(l\ eon I’csscd,” M S. King told 'l’ll'' I Georgian. ”1 confessed because I did i not want to die with a lie on my lips. 1 I don’t beli» vc I would hav. admitted all, [however, if Nick Wilburn hud Uet«t si- I lent. Wht'ii he told the tri/h about I Jim’s death, there was ny n>c any • longer tor me to deny the fax is. 1 want to add this, so that people ma> form > Hie right/opinion of me. 1 am n»> more guilts of m\ husband’s murder than Nick V\ ilburn. 1 fell in lov«- with Nick, and he took advantage of my weakness to make me do things against my will. He told in*' that either lie or my hus band had to die, and as Jim was a con sumptive and etuild not jive much long er, I consented to his dejath. Nick il burn was the fust to puggest such a thing, an«l he mentioned it a half dozen times before 1 yielded. “I Had Gone So Far I Couldn't Resist." "I hud alrem.li gum' sotfar. 1 bail de ceived my husband so much, that I was not strong enough to resrfet Nick Wil burn’s idea. Ar.d once in my brain. 1 could not thltik of any thing else, ami then it Just sAcmed like we had to do .iway with Jim fly any of ns to he happy. I know uow'.Hiat I wasted myself and my love on iljick W ilburn, for 1 have found out that ms 'is u coward. That 1 Should have done ' so much for a man like him is one of my chief regrets. I .hope he hangs, and I hope they will let me see him die.” in speaking of Wilburn, thb woman's eye fairly blazes, ami her resentment seems to be deep and tigerish, only when she talks of her children does she show any real emotion. She is especially fond of Nina, her sixteen-year-old daughter, and of <'buries Union, her four-year old baby boy. That she has not been able to see her children causes Mrs. King great distress. Though she sub dued her mother love long enough to kill the father of her children, now, in her black despair, she is looking to them for her chief consolation. Their refusal to visit her keeps her eyes red and wet. •'Do you tliink you will hang'.'" Mrs. King u as “1 suspect I will,” she replied, as tea’s of fear, not of grief, appeared in her swollen eyes. "I have committed the worst crime ever laid at a woman’s door, and I know that I am a wicked woman, and I realize that I may die as a result, if they would just poison me. or shoot me. 1 not care so much, but I jUft can't bear the thought of that gallows. I dreamed about It last night, and i woke up screaming.” Repeatedly Asks ; About Insurance. Many beliele that Mis. King plotted ! ; 'c murder of James King more in o - | der to obtain the $2,000 life insurance I than because oi any love for Niek Wil burn In this connection, it Is pcculiar- A significant that even now ih iter aw ful predicament the thought of the in surani' monel Is uppermost in her mind. In tin interview with The Geor gian she alluded to the subject Ire quentty, and repeated.y asked if it were possible for her to collect the nionei. "Is there anj message you can give io nomen in gem .al as a result of your |, xpei ienci sin- xxas naked. "Yrs. the,' is." sh< instantlv eplied. "Sa.x to'every woman, if she is mar ried. never to let a man other than lier husband put his hands on her. It 1 had slapped Niek Wilburn's face the first i time he squeezed my hand. I would not ibe in this dreadful fix now." And then she began crying. Later she told about i hoix she and Wilburn fell in love. "My busband was practically an in valid," she said, “and there was not much aft'eetlen between us. Nick Wil burn stayed around our house a great deal, and often ate at the table with us. tine dux he told me that he had the blues, lieeause hi didn't have a friend in the world. I told him that he was mistaken, that I was his friend. He took my hand and squeezed it and held It for a long time. The next day he eame to tlie Pous . when my husband was away, and lie asked me if I meant what 1 said about being his friend. I said, 'Yes,' and then he grabbed me and kisseo me. Tin next dni lie kissed me .igain. I'ntll then my husband was the only man that had ever kissed me." Mrs King is a little, fruil woman, not i>i:: ilng ox a <oi pounds N' veithe '- ■ ■is ii". ' i.d.i of charm Though 1 -11111 i be figure i> well proportivlieJ TTFE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. DECEMBER 30, 1912. GOVERNMENTDF CITY UNWIELDY. SMUT Sands Finds Glaring Flaws in Atlanta's Management—He Raps Street Methods. Continued From Page One. | siderution of the const ruction depart ment. in regard to whicli the gieattst amount of criticism is recorded. It is unwise, the expert declares, to have as chief of construction an elective officer. The head of the department should have no campaign obligations and no politie'al fences to tend. "Such work can not be mixed in poli ties witiiout just such a result as At lanta Lus experienced,"'says Mr. Sands. "The chief of const!uct,ion should be appointive and should be the best man available in Atlanta or anywhere else In the United States.” Supervision of the work, of this de- I partrnent is not competenl, nor suffi cient. says the critic. Further, he charges that the spot Itlcations for work is too indefinite for efficiency; that no, businesslike record of actual cost of | , operations and repairs is kept, and that ; too many cuts are made in the pav"- j'taelits. Charges Favoritism Has Hampered Work. \'<V< serious charge that ward favor- Itisbi'i lias hampered the work of the depkhnent is made. Accommodation of m\itibers of the council, lie says, j should hot be considered in the propo sition; h complete engineering survey should ft made each year, a program of work Mapped out, and that tirogram adhered to “Tills xVoqld, of course," he says, "de mand that toe head of the department refuse ail .requests of council members and politicians to take up work except in the seqpenca in which it appears on the work tirogriim." Other cqmplaißts made against the work of tlib department, among a mass of critcisii of details, ate that the pavements hire pooiV’ selected, without expert aniilysls an<A examination and without rtteard to i-iatlve stresses v, hlch thef several caterings are to I bear; that; torn up strews are allowed I to remain-t‘oo long neglewed; that the] isolation Jif the stables Xastes time i and eneijgy; that discreptmey, xvhich | may be Wasteful of much m<du>y. exists ! betxveen the cost of department labor : an(Je-<H contract labor, one of ilffiieh is Tised by one department and one\y the other. The cheaper should be iNter-' mined. Mr. Sands declares, and the Na son why the city convicts are less tV flclent than county convicts should ba established. "The city and county governments of Atlanta should be consolidated,” he recommends. "Only in this way can duplication of administrative cost be prevented, and service equitably dis tributed. For example, there are two sets of tax officials in Atlanta, and the taxes for eaVh ire made payable at different places; there are both county and city gangs engaged In building the city's streets, and the city has no idea whether it is getting all the street work I it is entitled to from the county,” That the park privileges at Piedmont and Grant were let for too long a time, and with insufficient advertising and to a local politician, is the charge made by Mr. Sands against the administra tion of the park department. Also, he says, the parks are lighted and policed insufficiently. A park for negroes should be established, he declares. "The city is fortunate in having an efficient general manager of its parks," the report announces. “A park board is unnecessary, ami there is evidence that it has retarded paik development." Mr. Sands recomnfemis that a license tax be placed mi automobile owners and opei-ators, varying from $lO to $25 a year, according to the size and power of the machines, the proceeds to be de voted to the construction of park roads. Fire Department Needs Organization. The municipal expert urges a re- i arrangement of the administration of i the tire department. At present, he I thinks, there is too little organization. . It works satisfactortly at present, is his comment, but the future should be eon- I side;<'il. Os the water department hi' suys; "Tlie organization of tills department is even more incongruous than that of most of the others, in that, besides tlie usual ‘board elected by the council. ! there is a general manager elected by the people” i Water collections made quarterly are : sufficient; the system of billing is de fective; no Indication of underground ' leakage is obtainable—these are some of his remarks regarding this depart ment. Mr. Sands holds forth the promise of cheaper water for Atlanta. That the . rate could bo lowered is the Inference , he draws front the last report. I The building Inspector should be ap ’ pointive and competent bx training as ' engineers or architects to perform tin I duties of the office, he recommends. I The ordinance regarding defective tire - escapes should be remedied, he says, as ■ it offers too great an opportunity tor collusion betxveen inspectors and those politically poivertul to evade its r< - i quiremetltf. \t antu has inadequate i-rot-ctiou HE’S KEEN COMPETITOR ■ FOR TITLE OF PERFECT —— »—— I • ■* \ r "I I ' * $7 % * \ ■ n Wk * i - j I / r-T'W i - I teyw* f r r~x, JKKK /■ WMF lo iijaniiti IkTry. entr.i in tile ’■perfect younster" class. Little Beniamin Berry Develops Himself Physically by Lots of Outdoor Exercise. Here is another three-year-old At lanta boy who is claimed to be some thing of a model. His name is Benja min Berry. son of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Berry, of 109 Cooper street. Benjamin is, with one slight excep tion, a better .developed three-year-old than Bernarr Magee, Professor F. B. Magee's model Atlanta boy of that age. Little Benjamin Berry, who is the ex act age and weight of Bernarr Magee, differs from the young boxer-model es sentially in height and muscle develop ment. Master Magee was about all any fond parent could wish for in the way of physical development, and his right to bear the title of "Atlanta's perfect three-year-old boy" went unchallenged for a long time. But Mrs. B. L. Berry read about him, then took one long, loving glance at Iter own fine son. and since has believed that Master Benjamin at least deserves equal distinction with The Georgian expert’s own son. Mrs. Berry not only strongly believed I that, but she told her friends about It las well. As a result. The Georgian heard about young Benjamin, the rl from short measures and too infrequent inspection of weights ami measures, he claims The expert .ucouinends tin abolition of the positions of license inspector and assistant license inspectors, who. be says, merely are messengers and whose duties could easily be performed by the city clerk. Regarding the department of llnunees. the report finds fault with the secret method of making the city's budget of expenses. The work is of too great public importance to be done without the greatest publicity, he says. Also, he says, salaries are not paid on a standard basis of responsibility or serv ice. There is need of standardization. Business methods in connection with the city's administration are crude and imprudent in some respects, he thinks. Too little interest is secured on time deposits made by the city, no arrange ment is made to set aside a reserve to pay the city's bonded debt, and no lim it is placed on the amount of the city's money to be deposited in any one bank. other recommendations ar. : Elimination of the smoke nuisance. Legislation looking to pres ■ ntiou of automobile blockade. Efforts on the part of civic bodies to cover unsightly hare spots i n stl , .. • • : Measurements of • : Model Boy's Rival • • Height 38 inches • I • Weight 38 pounds • I • Neck 11 inches • • Chest •... .22 inches • • I'pper right arm, up ..... 7 inches • • I'pper right arm, down. .6.5 inches • • I'pper left arm, up 7 inches • • i'pper left arm, down ...6.5 inches • • Right thigh 12.5 inches • • Left thigh 12.5 inches • • Right calf .8.5 inches • I • Left calf 8.5 inches • • Right forearm 6.6 inches • • Left forearm 6.5 inches • • ■ •••••••«•••••••••••••••••• valry which sprung up over him, and— well, here is his picture, his measure ments and a comparison of his meas urements with those of the model. Both of the youngsters weigh 38 pounds. Benjamin's neck measure—ll inches—is one-half inch greater than Bernarr's; his chest is 1.8 inches great er, and his thighs are 1.2 inches farther around. The model's calf measurements are six-tenths of an Inch greater than Mas ter Benjamin's. Their upper and fore armmeasurements are almost the same, Benjamin's being greater by less than one-half inch. pavements along the edges of the side walks. Installation of qio • sig: . sa aW is lands, and tin r< fusal of permission to obstruct streets. Elimination of grade crossings. Elimination of overhead wires. The establishment of a city repair shop. The report of Mr. Sands was made to the Chamber of Commerce eoinmit . tee on municipal research. This com mittee Includes the following: Frederic J. Faxon, chairman; Joseph A. McCord, Harry A. Alexander. Alex C. King, George Muse. John J. Eagan. Charles J. Haden. John E. Murphy, E. H. Inman. Forrest Adair. W. H. Kiser. Reid Fulkman. J. N. Hazlehurst, Martin F. Amorous. This is the beginning of a systematic studs’ of public administration similar to that which has been in effect in New York for four or five years under a bu : reau originated by L»r. William H. Al ien. Some months ago, at the request of Mi. Faxon's committee. Hr. Allen came to Atlanta and conferred with that bod,\ in legat’d to Inaugurating I this work in Atlanta. Ti e result was • that this committee, through a sub committee. headed by John E. Murphy. j.aised funds to defray tile expense of ti:<' prelimlnan stud' made bv Mi Sands. FAMILY REFUSES TO AID fffl WHO SLEW Brothers and Sisters of Mrs. King Declare She Deserves No Sympathy. t Continued From Page One. James B. Park will wait until then to dispose of this ease. It is believed that a trial at this time would intensify public feeling, which at present is strong and unconcealed in Jones county. A reporter for The Georgian, who visited Grays, Bradleys, Wayside, Janies and Round Oak, saw groups of men on I nearly every cornel, and all of them were discussing the murder of Jim King. The consensus of opinion is that the crime xvas tlie worst in the history of Jones county, and that -the confessed murderer's should pay the extreme pen alty. Just now there is little sympathy for Mis. King and none for Wilburn, her accomplice. ; Community Still Shocked by Crime. Tiie indignation at flic startling rev elations concerning the murder of tlie planter is not any greater than the shock under which tlie community still appeals to. labor. The confession of Mrs. King literally dumfounded the county. On every hand expressions of surprise are heard that she should have committed such a crime. The Kings are luted, in the rural I vernacular, as “fine people” and "first class folks." Mrs. King's people also stand high in tlie esteem of the com munity, and they appear to be much above the general strata of country folk. What hurts Mrs. King’s relatives most of all is that she confesses to an affection for Wilburn. This is par ticularly the view taken by Mrs. John King, a sister. Sheriff Charles Roberts says he will keep Wilburn in the Bibb county jail until the day of the trial. Wilburn was saved from a mob Thursday night only by a ruse and hurried work on' the part of the sheriff. He advocates deferring the trials until the regular term of court. ir either Wilburn or Mrs. King hang, they will be the first to die on the gal lows in Jones county since 1885, and | site w ill be the fiist woman to bang in G< vrgia since 187-1. Insurance May Not Be Paid to Anyone The s2,duo life insurance policy for which Mrs. King plotted the jnuvder of hei husband probably will never be paid to any one. Certainly it will not be paid to he.', even tiioug'n she escape the scaffold. A leading Atlanta insurance official today quoted a famous case on this point. "The McEwen case, in Virginia, xvas exactly like this,” lie said. “McExven, then mayor of a small city, murdered a person whose life was insured in McEwen's favor. McEwen was htuiged. When tlie point of payment of the in surance to McEwen’s heirs was raised the courts ruled that the company could not pay the pqlicy. even if it desired io do so, as such a payment would ba against public policy. “In case this company should desire to pay the King policy to the children of the dead man, instead of ills wife, who was named as the beneficiary, the other policyholders might interfere on tlie plea that the claim had matured through fraud and that their Interests would suffer through its payment. “It is a delicate question and one few law yers would care to answer oil hand. The McEwen rase brought an entirely new point before the courts and the ruling- upon it miglit not be followed in tiffs state." WOULD-BE TEACHERS DIDN'T KNOW‘AMERICA’ SPOKANE, Dec. 30.—More than 501 per ' ent of those who took the exami nation for school teachers failed to an. j xjv< r the qa--lions. "Who wrote ’Home, I Sweet Hom-” and "What is th- last I stanza in 'America?’”' THE ATLANTA, Tues, and Wed., Mats. Bott Days , BuV Seats Now Werba & Luescher Present the Famous Hungarian * Prlma Donna, ~ t% v. tVr . MIZZI HA JOS, in Musical Triumph Matinee 1116 SpH9lg MalO Tuesday Most Artistic of Operettas Prices 25c, 50c, 75c, sl, $1.50 and $2.00 Thursday, Friday and Saturday, with Matinee Saturday SEATS ON SALE TODAY. Nights 50c to 2.00. Mat. 25c to 51.511 Return of Last Season’s • , GREAtER P CAST f V [gf WOMf I Marvelous Production til" 11 1 150 -On the Stage—lso ■ Her Pilgrimage In Quest of L«' e I All Her Children, Ex cept Baby Boy, Ex press Scorn for 1 heir I Mother and Say She Should Be Punished for Her Crime Against Their Father. By Staff Correspondent AGGATESVILLE, GA. (Jone- . „ Jn . ty), Dec. 30.—Here, home <,f .\| fi John King, sister of Mrs. Katherine King, the five youngest children , f ti, latter are staying. Mrs. John King j F a sister of Mrs. Kate King, and they , r t also wedded to brotliers, both us • are now dead. Mrs. John King children of her own, and now that si • has taken charge of the other flock ;,. r home is somewhat crowded. Visitors from Round Oak, v , , :u a ,.. many, find it a pathetic spe< i" I, ;! - Mrs. John King's home. Four-Year-Old Boy- Cries for His Mother. only one of the children of jp, Kathrine King cries to see he: ik little Charlie, four years old, wh.,. now, lias never slept away fr., ni mother, and who does not understimj J wily the men sc^rudely took her awav from him last Friday, despite > screams and frantic, childish pl-auiu e “1 want my mamma,” he cries all Gar long, and none df the other children . ,m console him for her absence. I.ittle Emory, who is six years !’ understands dimly that hie mother lias done something wrong and is being punished, and that he must neither see nor ask to see her. Nannie, ten years old, and a m •> beautiful girl, matured beyond iter years, says: “Mamma killed my Papa Jim, and they are going to kill her. I cry about iter, but I don't want to see her any more.” James, thirteen years of age, declares that he is not going to the jail to see liis mother. "If she conies back here I will love her, but I don't want to goto the jail,” he says. ‘Mother Ought To Be Punished.” Nina, sixteen years old, a pretty, in telligent young miss, takes a philosoph ical view. “Mother has done wrong, and she ought to be punished, but 1 hate for them to keep her in tiiat horrid old jail. She is my mother still, and I love her. However, I am not going to •see her. If B i le hadn't killed fatheron account of that good-for-nothing Nick Wilburn, maybe I would feel differ ent.” Die eldest , ciiild, who is now Jlrs. Frank Wilburn, eighteen years of age. says, briefly,' “l am througii with mam ma. I don’t sympathize with he a all." Sympathy in Jones county is univer- j sal fur the children and for .Mrs. John' King. There are apparently none who I feel any pity for Mrs. Katherine King. |VETERANS MUST GET PERNHSSION TO WED I>AXTON, OHIO, Dec. 30. - Dayton pro bate court officials have a plan to stop “scheming women” marrying veterans at the Soldiers home here in order to ge: their pensiofi money. Hereafter, the coati attaches declare, applications bj and young women lor licenses to wed wE be referred to the authorities of the home NEGRO WILL BE EXTINCT IN 2122. ASSERTS EXPERT NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 30.—" The ne gro race in this country will be ex tinct in 2122” said Professor Willitt Benjamin, the noted scientific lecturer, who has made a study of the nepe race. LYRIC TH| S Ma,s - Tues., WEEK Wed., Thura., Sat. Special Matinee New Years Day. W. A. BRADY Ltd., Presents BABY MINE WITH WALTER JONES AND THE NEW YORK CAST. You'll Never Be Lonely at the Grand n A THIS WEEK GRAND Antique Girl' i Keith With 15 Musical Com- l Vaudeville edy . , Star ‘ e , an k _ , .. . Murray &Lane, Frank Daily Mat- Mullane. Grint I I inees and Hoag. 4 Florimonds Evening Per- Venetian 4 Gere * . Delaney. Next ween ■ formances RAY COX.