Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 25, 1913, Image 2

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T ■ K ATLANTA GEORfJTAy AND NEWS i'EIDA V. APRIL 25,1913. C iOVERNOR BEN W. 2 HOOPER, of Tennessee, and Governor O'Neal, of Ala bama (below), who will speak before Sociological Congress here. i1 S r GEORGIA t NEWS IN BRIEF Elevator Man Forces Senator to Apologize Keeps His Prisoners Good by Refusing to Let Them See Ball Game When Refractory. PATROL SYSTEM USED THERE I n d tj h If * it &} P 1 7 u fi: Ill th •d W8 Sc rra« BU It i It f 1 am rac f hie ing tha abc I no Liie* Rv. the an<! fell he’* At etc att i f I II ■M 1 s if •8 V ci Inmates Are "Docked" Day’s Pay’ for Each Infraction of the Prison's Regulations. "There will be no flogging either o men or women in the Kentucky Stat .Reformatory while 1 am warden, un- I <«-*8 every other method of discipline tails." was tin* assertion to-day of A. 1 : J G. Wells, who was placed in charge of the Kentucky institution a few months ago. Warden Wells is in Atlanta to at tend the sessions of the Southern So ciological Congress, which began to day. He is particularly Interested »n i conferences oli courts and prisons. % His attention was called ito the re-I Vent agitation by some of the Georgia Vnonvict camp wardens who wish again | «o be given the privilege of whipping their women prisoners. It was then tie made known his own policy in re spect to corporal punishment. He said none of his prisoners had been Hogged since he took office, although some of them are the most hardened characters. Many life termers remain !in the reformatory, but it is the in tention to remove these to the State penitentiary wihln a short time. Never Had Whipped Prisoner. "1 don't sa> that I never will flog a prisoner, hut I never have, and 1 really never expect to have to,” said l he wardeh. When he was told how county war dens are chosen in Georgia, choice be ing governed in many instances by friendship or political considerations. Warden Wells shook his head in dis approbation and remarked that a more destructive system and one more demoralising to effective penolo gy could hardly he devised. “No Ktute should give such a seri ous and complicated problem over Into the hands of incompetent, inex perienced or brutal men scattered in at REVIVED Postoffice Contract Let. TIFTON--The contract for the erection of the poatofflee buihliriK at I Tlfton has been let to JariieH Itevauil. of Canton, Ohio. The Ijulldln* com pleted will coat $47,500. Holds Myers, of Montana, Prisoner in Car Until He Retracts for Epithet Applied. Government Must Curb Califor nia or Defy Arrogant Japanese, Says Mr. Graves. Augusta Pastor to Speak. Til TON Tin commencement ser mon for Tlfton High School this year will he preached In the school audi torium Sunday. May 18. by Hr. J. R. Sevier, of the First Presbyterian Church, Augusta. BY JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES. WASHINGTON, April 25. When Minister Plenipotentiary and Amlia sudor extraordinary of country conveys to the the United States such a foreign President of message as Boost Morgan County. .vIAldSo.V Tin- Madison Chamber of Commerce members have made a one-day automobile campaign for a greater Morgan County. They met j with great enthusiasm at Rutledge, Bost vvick. Apalachee, Buckheud and j Godfrey. Grand Total in This Country Four and One-half Billions—$45 for Each Person. about the State, have this county A«m, It should at wardens are men broad experience If the convict least pickf State m camp »: «co that d for th ‘TALES’ TONIGHT BIG FEATURE OF n SEASON along human- met Kentucky fo Stale oonvii | The Constitution o bids the working of outside prison walls. Warden Wells said that 40 members of the reformatory population are women. All hut live of these are ne gro women of much the same stamp as those with whom the Georgia war dens have to deal. How They Are Disciplined. ,How does he discipline these hard ened and vicious women and the near ly 1,400 men without the use of the lash? Hero is his answet : By night classes attended by half the prison population. By a system of demerits imposed by a prison court of the same style as tn ordinary police court- “except that we treat them better," says the warden, By meetings for the guards and other prison official.**, in which all the phases of criminal life and prison dis cipline are considered and planned. By deprivation of privileges for minor infractions of prison discipline; the solitary for more serious offenses, Prisoners Rabid Fans. "We have regular hall games at the reformatory." said the warden in ex planation of one feature of his sys tem* “If one of the women becomes refractory, she Is not permitted to attend the ball game. In the dullness of prison life the women grow into Just as rabid ‘fans’ as the men. For bidding her to see the game is as terrible as tearing her child from her breast. You would be surprised to learn how effective this mode of pun ishment is. “Convicts are paid 10 cents t day for their work, if they are disobedi ent. they are brought into the 1 i11A» Music Lovers Await With Eager Anticipation Presentation of Tuneful Fantasay. TO-NIGHT’S OPERA Offenbach’s ‘"Hie Tales of * Hoffmann.” (In French.) Olympia Fncda Hem pel Giulietta Maria Duchene Antonia Lucrexia Bori Niclaus .....Jeanne Maubourg Hoffmann Carl Jorn Dupertutto Dinh Gilly Coppelius—Miracle Leon Rothier Spalanzani and Schlemil Andrea do Segurola Lindorff Basil Ruysdael Crespel . . Giulio Rossi Cochemlle and Franz Albert Reiss Pitichinaccio Angelo Bada Natanael Petro Audieio Hermann Paolo Ananian Luther Bernard Begue Conductor, Giuseope Sturani. Curtain at 8 o'clock. the Viscount <'hind‘J. the Japanese Ambassador, has twice repeated to President Wilson in the White House within t » du it amounts practical- ly to a Japanese ultimatum. It has come to the point where the United States must either compro mise the lights of the State of Cal ifornia and surrendi r to Jiyam or buckle on Its armor and defy the .arrogant contentions of the Japanese (loVei niUflH. The message which President Wil son telegraphed to the I’alifornia Governor and Legislature was sent without even waiting for the special session of his Cabinet called to con sider it. In that rnessag* President Wilson 11mealed to California and to public • •pinion upon the basis that they did not know the consequent es they were Inviting. Miy Have Other Menaces. * if course, the people could not he expected to Know the situation they wen* fronting if the President, who proposed to take the people into hi* confidence, had pot confided to them the insi 1* information in Ids posses sion. Nobody knows as yet wiiut othei menace and threat is held in the White House and the State Depart ment in addition to the two warlike messages <alled by Ambassador c.’hinda to the President. it l.s enough to know that the Presi dent and the Secretary of State an both bombarding the Governor and tin Legislature of California with daily appeals not to do what both tile Governor and the Legislature de sire to d< und feel it absolutely nee- esaary that they should do. In case California proceeds to pass the law cxetudirig only Asiatics from the perpetual ownership of kind, the President will either appeal to tin eonrLx >r to refareiiduin. State's Rights Involved. If it Em an appuul to the courts the • mention will he one* «»f State's rights, as distinct as tlr.it rained by the Civil Wu r The issue of 1S61 involved the rights if the States to perpetuate human slavery und tin* extreme right of each St ite to withdraw from tho union. Tin* Iss- •• to-day in Califor nia is over the right of that State to control its own affairs on the matter of citizenship and the alien owner ship of land. If the State’s lights issue should he sharply projected, hn it must he in this matter, it is a question if the Supreme Court, as constituted ut present, would sustain the anti* . tates right Idea. Lin ton, - of Ten nessee; WhHe, of Louisiana; Lemur, of Georgia, and Van Deventer, of St. Louis, leariy one-half of the Supreme Court were all born in the State's right zone of the republic. The only course which the Presi dent could consistently maintain would he to induce- 10 per rent, of the population of California to call for a n ferendum to the people in case the Legislature should puss the law which infuriates the Japanese, This referendum, if it should he culled, would give time for the tumult in Japan to he allayed, and serve the additional purpose of enabling the 1'nitud States to provide for eventual ities. if they must he met. Whatever quieting influence may be derived from this probability is neutralized b\ the apprehension that when Japan thinks the proper time has come to strike she will strike at once without formalities ami w ithout negotiations, us^he did in her con tests with China and Russia. Steed Memorial Orator. TALBOTTON.— Memorial day will he generally observed here and in ail surrounding towns to-morrow. Wal ter L. Steed, of Butler, will deliver the memorial address here and will be introduced bv W. N. McGehee. Preached 50 Years. CLAYTON.— Rev. J S. Dixon, aged 77 years, is dead at his home at Tiger. He was one of our most popular Bap tist ministers and began preaching in 1863, 50 years ago. By B. C FORBES. Tho United States has more sav ings bank deposits than any other country in the world. It has four times as much as France, as much as France and Germany combined and not far from half as much as all other countries combined. Its grand total is $4,500,000.000—four and a half billions of dollars. The average to each depositor is $445. If the total were distributed, every man, woman and child in the Union would get fully] $45. WASHINGT#*N. April 25.—Senator Henry L. Myers, of Montana, was held a prisoner In a Senate elevator by u conductor who demanded an apology or a fight fur an epithet applied to him. Conductor Lamb did riot know the Senator. Operating under rules, he carried the other Senator*’ to the floors designated. Finally Senator Myers, with an oath, demanded to be taken to his floor. Lamb turned to the Senator and said: "No man can 'use. the name to me you have used and get away without an apology or a fight. This car goes no farther until you do one thing or the other.” Senator Myers reached his office. Lamb still holds hU Job. Poet Kemp Scoffs When Sinclair Weds Runaway Causes Death. LAFAYETTE. J F. Shu ford is dead at hi.*' home here from an injury received in a runaway accident sev eral months ago. College Head Resigns. HELENA. Professor R. J. Strozic . who for tlie past twenty years has been president of the South Georgia College, has tendered his resignation. I shall not set forth the facts of the savings bank situation in New York State. The conditions will be found, on close examination, to apply in some particu'a” to nearly every State in the Un on. ‘He's Getting Conventional.” Cries ‘ Tramp” Versifier Who Figured in Novelist’s Divorce. New York State alone has savings bank deposits of $1,690,000,000. This is half as much again as the whole of the United Kingdom and is not very far from twice the amount helc, in Franch. Atlanta, By Opera, Wins Seaboard Head S. Davies Warfield, Baltimore, Be comes ‘Booster’—Declares Gath ering Surpasses New York. Grand opera lmt* opened the eyes | of the country to the progressiveneas ! of Atlanta, hut it is doubtful if any ! of the converts have been more enthu- j aiaetic over their “discovery” than H. i Davies Warfield, chairman of the j hoard of directors of the Seaboard Air Line Railway, and president of | the Continental Trust Company of j Baltimore. Mr. Warfield yesterday witnessed the performance of “La Giocondu,” | and forthwith moved up into the front row of Atlanta boosters. “That Atluntu should support an | opera that equals, end in some ways | surpasses, that of New York,” he de- j clares, “is almost unbelievable. I have ; never seen anything that impressed ! me more than the performance yes- : terday afternoon. Never before have : l seen as brilliant a gathering, not ! even in New York." This stupendous sum is in urgent need of additional protection. Ton many savings oanKS in the Empire St?.te are hoverinq dangerously near the bankruptcy line Some of them have not a reserve of $1 for each $10C on deposit. Worse still, there is no law enabling the authorities to en force the correcting of this alarmin'* deficiency. Ncthinci more deplorable could he imagined than any untowar incident which would start a stam pede of the 3,000,000 savings bank de positors in this State which might spread to the 10,000.000 depositors scattered throughout the Union. NEW YORK, April 25.— Harry Kemp, the “tramp * poet.” is utterly disappointed* that Upton Sinclair "should do so conventional a thing as get married.” It was Kemp’s attentions to the I first Airs. Sinclair, which furnished j the novelist grounds upon which to divorce her. "What a lvactio^!-" he exclaimed disgustedly, ".imagine Upton Sin clair getting married! And with all ihat society Hub-dub, and the la-la- la— I’ve not ik.e slightest animus against Sinclair, and 1 know hi doesn't hear me any ill-will for what uappened in Jersey.” he explained. But what does he gel married for. He's getting conventional!” Al| danqer can be averted by prad ding Albany Legislators into passing a hill now before them “to amend the hanking law. in relation to the crea tion of a reserve fund for savings banks.” Voters should let their State Representatives know very emphat ically that no shill v-shallying wit! this vitally important and necessar measure v. ill »- * tolerated. The nee; for action WITHOUT DELAY is im perative, but opposition is being cn gineered by certain politicians whe put their pockets before patriotism Rockefeller Is in Good Golfing Form Out Early on Links at Pocantico Estate—Appears to Be in Fine Health. The preposed law is not revolu tionary. It will upset nothing. i will not stop the payment of a single savings bank dividend. A few insti* tuition* which have no business to be paying more than 3 1-2 per cent would obliged to keep to that rate until they had built up a reservi offering reasonable protection to it; patrons. This is a light price to pa y for the removal of the very grave danger that will he engendered by the defeat of the bill. At present the State Banking Department is abso lutely powei’lezs. Its hands are tied It cannot lift a finger until a bank's solvenc/ has been impaired! It c not lock the stable door until th: horse has been stolen. TARRY TOWN, X. Y„ April 25. John 1). Rockefeller has returned t< his Pocantico Hills home for tin spring season and is in great golf ing form. He is out on the links | early every morning. Mr Rockefeller plays a great game. I He appears to be in excellent health, / and in high spirits over his play. He is overseeing the finishing j touch ok on Ids mansion on the hid and observing the progress made in j his new ice plant, which wifi make a ton of Ice u day and save him *1-’ u ton ut the present prices. Prevention is cheaper. Once let dis aster break out, and there might bf no cure. Remember, $1,620,000,000 de posits are at spake in New York State alone, and $4,500,000,000 throughout the country. Moreover, an upheava among savings banks would precipi tate panic among every other clas of banking institutions. II; prison court over which l presto may fine them two day*' or four i pay. Or I may condemn them t< punishment of having me It* them for half 40 hour nr an l This is a deterrent for those wh- : mdined to he insubordinate Parole Law in Force. "Another provision even more fective is that which is affordei .the parole law. V\ ♦ give indetermi nate sentences and the law permits the prison commission to par 1 | t The delightful and fantastic "Tales of Hoffman” will 'be the grand opera offering to-night in tho Auditorium. This lyric opera, which was one of tin* last works of Jaquea Offenbach, is recognized as one of his best produc tions. It is clever and unusual in its situations. It is amusing without having the buffoonoiV with which Of fenbach tilled some of his other op eras. And, unlike man> of his other operas, the music is well fitted to the words and action. To-night's opera is expected to at tract an audience rivaling the record- breaking crowd at “Giocondu” yester day. The fantastic plot of the pla> opens ;n a win- cellar in Nurmhurg. w j r, the poet Hoffman and convivial com panions are drinking. Those with the - t an use Hoffman of being in love, j Lindorf. a wealthy man. is greatly in love with Stella, a singer, with w horn Hoffman also is infatuated. Undo f plans to get Hoffman hope-i leasty intoxicated so that Stella may see him in a disgustingly maudlin MARKET OPENING. NEW YORK STOCK MARKET. Stock quotations to 10 a. m.r 10 A.M. 75' 4 68' 2 38' 2 34 241' 4 67' 4 25 115 16**, 56' 4 159 37* b 101&8 105' 2 30' 4 1143 B 25 162^ 21'. 2 36 99> * 25' J 108' * 152* 8 613 4 STOCK— High, x Amal. Cop . 75' 4 Am. Smelting. 68' Anaconda 38' 2 American Can 34 Can. Pacific... 241' ? C. and 0 67' 4 Cen. Leather . 25 III. Central. . 116 Interboro . . IB-^ do, pref. 58' 4 Lehigh Valley 1594 B Mo. Pacific.... 373 N. Y. Central., N. and W. O. and W. Pennsylvania. P. Steel Car... Reading .... Rock Island... do, pref. So. Pacific... So. Radway. St. Paul Union Pacific. 152 7 s U. S. Steel 61* 101S 105' > 30' 4 1145 8 25 162 ! s 21* . 36 99' s 25' . 108' Low. 75' 4 68' 2 38' 2 34 241' 4 67' 4 25 115 16 3 s 56' 4 159 37' 4 101 ** 105' 2 30' 4 114*8 25 162 3 8 21' 2 36 99' « 25' • 108' t 152* , 6F4 Prev. Close. 76' 2 67'4 38 34^8 244 67' 4 24*4 116' 4 16 56 158*4 37! B 101' 2 105' 2 30 114' 2 25 162’ 2 21'/® 36' a 98-L 25' f 108* fl 152' 2 61*4 O the infill- ( proposes to I ef- by vfiets at the end of their minimum sentence if they have a dean prison record.” Warden Weil* 5 was a judge in t a>- loway County during the night rider out rages, and won considerable fa vorable notice because of his adjudi cation of these troubles. It was dur ing his membership on the board of control of Kentucky's charitable in stitutions that the plan was intro duced of abolishing practically all r* - atraint of the inmates of ipsane as\ - hams. The* are permitted to forget ire a lit to il treated e entire] As Hoffman succumbs cnee of the heavy wine h tell-the story of his various loves, but at this point Offenbach, instead of having Hoffman repeat them, has Hoffman's lov, - actually portrayed on til* stage. Tills offers the opportun ity for the fantastic situations. There is shown Olympia, Hoffman’s auto- J mrtton sweet heart, who moves and | sings as though alive, the false sw eet- ! heart, Giuletta. and the frail Antonia. “La Gonconda,” with ail its gloom iness and near-murders and suicides, 1 was highly pleasing to a large audl- j epee yesterday afternoon. The fine art of tht brilliant singers made it I the most notable performance of the ! week. x—Ex-dlvidend 1» _• per cent. NEW ORLEANS COTTON. Quota!ions m April Ma> June July Aug. Sept. Oct. . Nov. I >eo. Aton futures: F; rs t 1 'Open High Low Fall. C 12.20H2.22 12.20 12.22 12. ’ 1 ! 12 ’rev. lose. 08 20-21 14-16 Ian. 12 .06 12 .03 12 .03 13 .05 ■06 11 .08 11 .08 It .08 11, ;i 11 .39- 40 ii '.21 jit '.21, ii . 27 11 .29- -30 11 .29- ■ii il .27 n 2" ii •'7 11 .29 n . 2!» it .29 u .29 11 .31 -32 Feb. 1.39-40 NEW YORK COTTON. i.her minds are employed ar though the\ u: Tuts plan, frown Auction ;n,* t j., awry and exactly ae rational, its intro- GOLF TOURNEY STARTS AT BR00KHAVEN TO-MORROW ath ns in cot ton tu tares First Vrev. < pen 1 High Low Cali Close. “7 777.7 11.57-59 11.16 11.46 11.42 11.42 11.47-48 A pril May 11 His Sp’ v ituality Was Far Too ‘Spirituous’ So Julius McBrayer Served Time on Chaingang—Sentence Just Commuted. Julius McBrayar declares he never again will seek to increase the fervor of his religious worship by resort to spirituous liquors. McBrayer tried it in a Haralson county church some time ago anil only yesterday the commutation of his twelve months’ sentence on the chaingang was announced. McBrayer took an active part in the church service#, but his spirituality was of the wrong sort. Companions of McBrayer were let off with fines of $50. He. because he had given trouble before, was given a more severe sentence, which was commuted to present service on the payment of a $100 line. Marie Rappold Back From Operatic Tour She Returns From Europe With In spirations for American- Made Gowns. NEW YORK. April 25 Marie Rap pold. the prima donna, has re turned from Europe. She has been absent six week und has sung in the leading European opera houses. She comes back to fulfill en gagements in this country. Miss Rappold says that, when not •singing, she spent her time in study ing the latest European fashions. While she believes in having her gowns made on Fifth Avenue slu* holds that the inspiration u woman can get in the ateliers abroad is of immense value in doing business with the American modistes. Mr. \Y, season at the Biookhuven w to* morrow It will 1m an . igln. . n-hoa phfy h event. Brizes awarded to H»» first throe h»w U.34 11.50 11.5:: n.55-56 ’ ’ 11 .tt 1 t.:*s II 11-42 11.23-23 H.1911.1S 11. IS ll. *:o-:*2 H 21 n .:*) H .20 114-::5 11 26 PROHIBIT SALE OF FEATHERS. HARRISBURG. FA.. April GovciJ or Teller ha> signed tho J«.»nes ! hill forbidding tin* s t . of eigre, ; s i.rC ituiiui feat In « > in I Vnn.-yl- van in. The great majority—nearly a*l—o our savings banks have been oapabi unselfishly and patriotically managed They are philanthropic institutions The trustee of a savings bank accepts a sacred office. His duty is not to pay unwarranted rates of interest in order to outdo a rival organization, but first, last and all the time to insure the absolute safety of every dollar entrusted to his care. The savings banks, however, have been victims of circumstances. You to the very finest securities in the land. But do you also know that these securities have been sinking, sinking, sinking in value during re cent years? Competition for capita! has been so keen throughout the world that borrowers—Governments. States, municipalities, railroads, pub lic utility companies, industrial cor porations. mercantile firms and indi viduals—have raised interest rates to such heights that the older bonds carrying 3, 3 1-2 or 4 per cant, have naturally fallen in price since they yield so much less than the ones now being offered. New York Central 3 1-2 per cert bonds, which sold above 111, are nov. worth only 84. New York City’s 4 per cent bonds have fallen from 103 1-2 to 92 1-2. Atchison 4 per cents, once worth 106, are now below 93. You can thus sae how the assets of the savinos banks have shrunk in value, incidentally. I do not believe the decline in bonds will go appre ciably farther, but that is not the po*nt. . IVE-MILE MOVING SIDEWALK .S PLANNED FOR CHiCAGOANS CHICAGO, April 25.—A moving Idcwalk five miles in length will bi .ecawmendtd to the City Council) Jong with the plans for the new „akeshore Boulevard between Jack- -on Park and Giant Park. B. I*'. Hedges, a manufacturer, who proposes tho moving sidewalk, said: “The new boulevard wfiil be of great benefit for those of us who own au- omobiles. Let's spend a few dollars or tho great mass of the people: who lavo to walk.” .ESS LIKELY TO WED, GIRL GETS $15,000 FOR TWO TOES LOg ANGELES, April -Became it r ohanco of marrying were lessen- • 1 by tho loss of two toes, Miss \Yari- uh Htarok. a school teacher, was war led a judgment of 915,000 against he Pacific Klecuio Company. She vas injured In a ear crush a year go. Tho company's attorney 'o-day orvoci notice* tnat they would appeal . orn the decision. ’EARY GIVES LECTURE IN CAIRO ON THE POLE CAIRO, April 25,—In response to a pedal request Rear-Admiral Peary, vho discovered the North Pole, dr iven d a brilliant lecture before the •Ihedival Geographical society, de- cribing his nine Arctic expeditions ind tho discovery of the Pole. Tho i ■ ture, c hich was illustrat< d w ith hides, was followed with intense in- - crest by a large and distinguish'd ludienee. At the conclusion there was gr.at applause for America and he: ex plorers. Q vere. _ Epicure) leaei emmam * WALTON ST - JUST 0TF PEACHTREE BUCK BECKER TO LOSE JOB WITH CRACKERS Duck Becker will be released with in the next iVu days by Bill Smith, manager of the Ci ackers. If Becker can not be placed in some of the minor leagues he w ill be turned back to the Senators. At the stain of the present season Becker looked to be one of the most promising on Smith’s staff, but lie never has got to going right during the regular schedule. ATLANTA THEATER Matinees Wed. and Sat. Matinee* 10c and 25c Nights 10c to 50c ALL TH I S WEEK Kelt Malinee Satuiday Miss BILLY LONG And Company 9n “WILDFIRE” NEXT WEEK A BUTTERFLY ON THE WHEEL MONGOLS ROUT CHINESE TROOPS IN NIGHT BATTLE GRAND *?£ Mat. Today 2;|0 TwIgM no TRUELY LITTLE SKATTUCK 1 BILLY JAS. LEONARD & CO ED URORTOSi MAHLO TRIO FREQ ST BNC5 & CO. IT IS KEITH VAUDEVILLE PEKIN. ''HINA. Apri 25. Ac cord ing to telegrams received here. * Y mi.lander Pang 1if b> the Mongols nea Mongol* made a sud s been defeated Dolotior. The ien night attack title suffVri capiun LYRIC TKI5 WEEK GEORGE SIDNEY i rd hie Ti n irr! e: a in BUSY IZZY The AStaUlt G!«ll« She.v Evar Get Your Seatb Now TROUSER GOWNS Yes, the very newest thing from Paris is the trouser gowns for women. They are here. Lady Duff Gordon in The Sun day American tells all about them. Lady Duff Gordon is the famous “Lucile” of London and the foremost creator of fashions in the world. “WILD WOMEN” The supreme court of New r York has just decided “what is to be done to militant suffra gettes if they start in on a cam paign of lawlessness in America as they have in England.” A most important article to both men and women. DANCING OFF FAT The third of an instructive series of articles by the well known dancer Ruth St. Denis, “How to have a beautiful fig- Copiously illustrated. ure. ANNA HELD This beautiful star of the stage plays “A Respectable American Woman,” and the story is well worth reading. She defends American women in a charming way. You may re member she was the songbird who sang “I cannot make my eyes behave.” THINGS YOU OUGHT TO KNOW Just why you are getting bald. New things about sunburn. What school children should eat, and a score of other things not found in books. All these exclusively in the great Sunday American Order your paper NOW. Both Phone*, Main 8000 The Market Place of the South”