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W INSTON CHURCHILL,
First Lord of the Brit
ish Admiralty, robbed by a
woman in a Riviera gambling
house.
British Admiralty Head Loses Pa
pers and $2,500 After Visiting
Riviera Gambling Resort.
LONDON, April 23. — Winston
Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty
and one of the foremost .statesmen in
JCngland. if was learned to-day, has
been the victim oi' a most daring and
sensational robbery, in which a beau
tiful and mysterious young woman la
suspected as the possible agent of
some foreign power.
By the theft the First Lord of the
Admiralty not only loses $2,500 in
money, but highly important confiden
tial naval data, such as might eager-
ly be sought as of greatest value to
any nation not too friendly with
Great Britain.
The robbery has greatly aroused
the entire Admiralty, and Mr. Church
ill has put Scotland Yard detectives
on the trail of an aristocratic hand
which lias Just appeared in London.
Won the Money at Card6.
The First Lord of the Admiralty
met with his misfortune immediately
after having won the money at cards
on the Riviera recently.
Shortly after visiting Toulon.
Churchill's cruiser anchored off
Cannes, where the First Lord received
an Invitation to go ashore.
He went alone to ;i fashionable
house, noted for high play, where he
found many well known society Iver
sons gathered around the tables.
Churchill soon was engrossed in a
game, and after an hour’s play found
himself richer by $2,500. The First
Lord of the Admiralty was warmly
c ongratulated on his sudden streak of
luck, especially by a beautiful young
woman, who, with two aristocratic-
looking men, had*paid dose attention
to Churchill and Ills play.
While chatting with this young
woman the First Lord of the Ad
miralty stowed his wad of raoiS?y
away in his right hip pocket. A few
minutes later he took his leave. It
was not until he was aboard his
cruiser and lie started to tell about
his luck that he found the wad was
missing.
This was bad enough, but with the
money had disappeared the pocket-
book containing notes on British naval
matters which would be extremely
valuable to foreign powers.
It is rumored the woman In the
case is a member of an international
band actively engaged in espionage.
The political section of Scotland Yard
Is making secret inquiries.
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WHEN I stole:
SiTS STRINGER
Express Messenger Sentenced to
Eighteen Months for Stealing
Five Thousand Dollars.
JESUP, GA.. April 23—J. Dillard
Stringer must serve eighteen months
in the penitentiary for stealing $5,000
from an express package in transit
by the Southern Express Company
between the Brunswick Bank and
Trust Company and the Central Bank
and Trust Corporation of Atlanta. The
young express messenger, who, when
arrested, confessed the theft and re
turned the entire amount stolen, was
arraigned to-day in Wayne Superior
Court. He pleaded guilty ajid Judge
Graham, after lecturing him on the
evil of wanting money that was not
honestly earned, pronounced sentence.
Stringer stole the $5,000 on tho
night of April 16; was arrested two
nights later, when he confessed and
returned the money; was indicted
yesterday and sentenced to-day.
Collapses in Court.
Stringer made a pathetic statement
to the court. He said:
“1 was drunk and took the money.
I brought it here and buried it for
safe-keeping. As I got sober, I real
ized what I had done and decided to
return the money. I thought of my
father and mother and my God, and I
wanted to return the money. I would
not give It to the detectives, but I
wanted to give it to my route agent,
Mr. Avery. I asked the express agent
in Brunswick to wire Avery to come
at once, but lie would not do it. I
never did anything like this before
and 1 never will again. I want to ask
the mercy of the court.”
During his statement Stringer was
very nervous and collapsed into ills
seat when he finished, the judge hav
ing to repeat his order to stand up
while he was delivering the sentence.
Plea From Home Town.
A petition from Stringer's home
town of Pine Park was directed to
the Solicitor General, requesting that
as light a sentence as possible be im
posed. It was signed by all of the
leading citizens of the little town. B.
A. Alderman, a merchant from Pine
Park, was in court and made a state
ment to tlie judge concerning the pre
vious good character of the prisoner.
He stated that Stringer had a good
reputation at home, was never known
to drink or carouse, and that the news
of the robbery was a shock to the vil
lage.
Stringer is a member of the Baptist
Church and was f*erving as clerk of
the Pine Park ehurch up to the time
he went to work for the express com
pany.
The parting between the boy and
his old father was very touching. As
his father told him to be a good boy,
Stringer made a brave effort to hold
up, but as the jail door swung open he
broke completely down, and, throwing
his arms around his father’s neck,
wept Jike a child. After a moment he
recovered, and, handing his father a
letter, went into the jail.
C. E. Stringer, the father, and Mr.
Alderman, Stringer’s former employ'
er, prepared to leave at once for home.
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M ISS JEAN GORDON,
child welfare worker,
who promises to startle South
in Sociological Congress speech.
BLUE W LI
URBED BK
Secretary of State, in Report,
Says Many Companies Are Op
erated Solely for Promoters.
Secretary of State Philip Took, in
his annual report, made public to
day, calls on the Legislature to make
a revision' of charter laws of the
State, particularly clauses permitting
railroads with trackage of 1,000 m les
to obtain charters at as small an ex
penditure as companies whose tracks
are only a mile long.
“Fees for charters to corporations
ought to measured by the magnitude
of the corporate property or the.
amount of the capital employed,’’
said the secretary, commenting on
the present provisions. “The char
ter fee for a small bank with a capi
tal of $25,000 is the same as that
for a bank of $500,000.”
Stringent legislation was urged
against “wildcat” financial institu
tions, whose name he said was
legion. He declared many so-called
investment companies, industrial
banking companies and similar or
ganizations were operating without
any regard for the benefit of the
stockholders, but only for the profit
of the promotet-9.
‘‘It is to be regretted,” he observe 1.
that the bill known as the ‘blue sky
law,’ introduced in the last Legisla
ture by Senator W. J. Harris, failed
of passage.”
Mr. Cook reported the incorpora
tion of fifty-two banks during 1912.
with an aggregate capital stock of
$1,540,000, and of a number of trust
and backing companies, with an ad
ditional capital stock, bringing the
total to $2,240,000. The increase in
apital stock Ly all chartered State
nstitutions was $3,460,000.
Fourteen new railroad companies
were incorporated during the yea 1 ’
with an aggregate capita^ stock of
$3,750,000 and a trackage of 923
miles.
f Oratory‘Saves Bill
For Flagler Shaft
Florida House Votes Against Indefi
nite Postponement .of $10,000
Monument Measure.
Noted Southern Child Welfare
Speaker Promises Truth Con
cerning Conditions in South.
“The child of the South must be
given his chance,” is the declaration
of Miss Jean Gordon, noted child
welfare advocate, in a letter received
to-day announcing her acceptance of
a place on the program of the South
ern Sociological Congress which con
venes here Friday.
Miss Gordon said she would make
a speech before the convention that
will “stir the South as it has never
been stirred before.” It is the in
tentlon of this noted woman to pro
duce startling facts and figures in her
address.
“It is my aim,” she said,” to lay
bare the truth concerning the condi
tion of the child in Louisiana,
State that has forgotten the little
lives left in its care. Its future citi
zens must be builded from the ma
terial that it now has in hand. If
this material is tot properly brought
up the future of the State is dark
“This is my chance to bring to the
attention of the entire South condi
tlons in the State in which I live and
I shall do it with all the vigor at my
command.”
4 Escape House Raid
By Way of Windows
Women and Man Arrested by Police
At Spring Street Place Be
fore Recorder To-day.
Four men made a spectacular es-
ape by leaping through windows at
an early hour to-day when plain-
lothes officers raided the home of N.
Powell, 95 Spring Street.
Powell and his wife were taken
into custody, as were also two wom-
n, who gave their names as Miss
Lena Barnhardt, 433 Greenwood
Street, and Mrs. John Bryant, a wai
tress in the Aragon Hotel. All gave
bond for their appearance before Re
corder Broyles this afternoon.
In the trial of Mrs. Minnie Smith
in police court yesterday afternoon,
Judge Broyles told her she must
either leave the city or behave her
self.
“There’s no room in Atlanta now’
for a woman of the streets, declared
the Court.
Eiseman Bros.,
11-13-15-17 Whitehall
1 he Largest and Most Representative Men s Wear Store in the South
Sheriff of Boston
Banishes Toothache
Fits Up Dental Chair in Charles
Street Jail to Help Suffering
Prisoners.
BOSTON, April 23.—“A man with
an aching tootn is lit for any crime,”
says Sheriff John Quinn, of Suffolk
County.
So the Sheriff, a distinguished
criminologist and penologist, has set
up a dentist’s chair in the Charles
Street Jail.
A dentist has been employed to
treat every person who has the tooth
acne or whose teeth have been neg
lected, this as a deterrent to future
crime.
TALLAHASSEE, FLA.. April 23.—
The most eloquept speeches of this
session of the Florida Legislature were
precipitated in the Home by a mo
tion by Representative Hendry, of Lee
County, to indefinitely postpone Rep
resentative Floyd’s bill to appropriate
$10,000 to erect a monument to Henry
M. Flagler at Key West.
The orators of the House came to
their feet to plead against an “insult
to the family of the commercial poet”
who now lies at the point of death at
West Palm Beach.
The effort to kill the bill proved un
successful and. it took the regular
cource to the Appropriations Commit
tee. •
Dr. Osier Announces
His New Ptules of Life
“Forget the Past and the Future
and Live in the Present,”
Is His Dictum.
NEW HAVEN, April 23.—Sir Wil
liam Osier has outlined new rules far
practical daily life. Thrfy are:
"My method is the freshest, oldest,
simplest and usefullest: Forget the
past, forget the future.
"I’m no genius; my friends have
found that out; but take no thought
for the future nor the past. When
the load of to-morrow is added to the
load Qf yesterday many men falter on
the way.
"The first two hours of a day de
termines that day. Quit tobacco and
liquor. Bright eyes are the thing."
Girls Banish Tango
At Sorority Houses
Vote “Naughty” Dances Out, but Re
fuse to Make Promises About
Dancing Them Elsewhere.
CHICAGO, April 23.—The tango
and kindred dunces will be barred
out of Northwestern University so
rority houses permanently as the re
sult of a referendum vote taken^by
fourteen girls’ societies.
"We shall not dance the tango at
our sorority houses,” said Mfss
Pauline Pearson, chairman of the
Pan-Hellenic Conference, when she
announced the vote to Miss Irene
Blanchard, dean; "but please under
stand the girls are not pledged not
to dance it elsewhere—at fraternity
houses, for example.”
Chicago Foreseen as
Venice of America
Business Men Will Go to Offices in
Yachts, Declares Commo-
dore Thompson.
CHICAGO, April 23.—“Chicago will
be the greatest aquatic city in t |,„
world,” was the declaration to-duv rr
Commodore William Hale Thoim,.,,,,
of the Associated Yacht and how.;
Boat Clubs of America.
"No other city will have such r a
cilities for water sports when th«
plans of the Chicago Plan Commls
sion are completed. Imagtm more
than 15 miles of protected waters and
Iugoons within the city limits!
"The playgrounds for the peoni,
will be unsurpassed by any city W h e n
the improvements to the ink.. f ron ,
are made; business men can come to
their offices in their yachts.”
Harvard Man Slain,
His Father Asserts
# i
Disbelievers Report Lucien Tennant
Killed Himself Because of Dis
appointment in Love.
TERRE HAUTE, IND., April 23.—
R. S. Tennant, father of Lucien Ten
nant, Harvard student who was re
ported to have committed suicide on
account of a disappointment in love,
to-day said he believes his son was
murdered. He sent a younger son to
Cambridge to-day to investigate the
case, and wired the Harvard authori
ties asking a complete investigation.
Tennant was found dead from bul
let wounds, and the case was declared
to be a suicide.
More Children in Dalton.
DALTON.—The Dalton city school
system will get an additional appro
priation of approximately $1,000 annu
ally for the next live yeara The 1908
census showed 1,219 children of school
age. With the 1913 census practically
completed, 1,483 names have been se
cured.
Men and Women
Can
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With
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oald. Poor hair and filial baldness are
duo to the dandruff germ.
Nowbro’s Herpicide will destroy
lundruff and stop the hair from falling.
Further evidence of this is found in a
letter from Mrs. F. Nellson. of Tomah,
\\ is. She says: *'l fought the worst
Kind of dandruff for nine years. I have
been using Herpicide now one week and
<n> scalp is healthy, the dandruff has
gone and the Itching has stopped. It
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Newbro’s Herpicide. These off brands
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obtained. It stops itching of the scalp
almost instantly.
Newbro’s Herpicide in 50c and $1.00
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Send 10c in postage or silver for sam
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Dept. R.. Detroit, Mich.
Applications at good barber shop*.
Jacobs' Pharmacy, special agents.
Drinmore Wins
$10,000 Handicap
Limon Finished Second and Lorenzo
Third in Feature Event at
Epsom, England.
EPSOM, ENGLAND, April 23.—The
Copthorne plate, valued at $1,000, was
won here to-day by Matelot, with Am
bush second and Sartoi third.
Warden won the Betchworth selling
plate evnt, value $1,000, with Marco Pru
nella second and Constance third.
The Tadworth plate, $1,000. was won
by Neville Holt. May Cup ran second
and Winbury third.
Tho City am: Suburban handicap, one
of the big classics of the British turf
season, was won by Drinmore. This
race is worth $10,000 to the winner.
Distance 1L miles. Limon ran second
and Lorenzo third. The betting in the
City and Suburban was 10 to 1 on
Drinmore. 100 to 7 on Limon and 15 to
2 on Lorenzo.
The Hyde Park plate. $1,000. was won
by Elgon. Gold Vein ran second and
Decagona third.
$973,700,200 NEEDED TO
RUN ENGLAND FOR YEAR
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, April 23.—It will cost
$973,700,200 to run the English Gov
ernment during the ensuing fiscal
year, according to Chancellor David
Lloyd-George, who introduced the
budget in the House of Commons.
This is a big increase, caused by ex
penditures for army and navy arma
ments. No new taxes will be imposed,
however.
Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads
The Sunday American. YOUR ad
vertisement in the next issue will sell
goods. Try it I
IS BORATES
TeF
Oufltarcfaf'd Pwa
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save a part of it despite tke Ligk cost of
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“The Bridge of Endeavor spans
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i
This hank offers you many inducements;
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Is Your Name
On the List?
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“Want Ads”
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The following ad is similar to
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THE EEST in real estate can be had by read
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mark it. The “Want Ad” man will be at her
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Read .
GEORGIAN
WANT ADS