Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 26, 1913, Image 3

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.SATURDAY. APRIL 26, 101: Slaying Plot Laid To President Yuan Chinese Ruler Is Accused of Sar* tioning the Assassination of Minister Sung. Mrs. Appelbaum to Take Up Jail Missionary Work Bbnuci^ um SaysHusbandToldHerinDream She Was Innocent LOST OAOCHTER $50,000 Crematroy Payment Approved DOCTOR TELLS Head of National Committee'on Prison Labor Has Substitute, for “Degrading System.” / ystern the i terizing the convict-lease ns “degrading slavery,” Prof, agg Whitin, chairman of the : \ - 1• committee of the National lit tee on Prison Labor, in the m o on courts and prisons, one opening sessions of the South - ,. n i S iciological Congress, this morn- offered a substitute, rii- convict, whether in the Nortli or the South, ’ said Prof. Whitin. “should be worked and .worked hard. There is nothing worse : r the prisoner than idleness. But ie prisoner should not be made a jiluvt- for the benefit of the business rests; to till the pockets of the . ch manufacturer who buys him from the State. State production for State consumption should be the watchword in the handling of the ,nvict camps, and business methods should be applied to increase the ef ficiency of the camps. The men should be given.hope for the future through interest in their work and the knowledge that they will get a 1 return. Would Segregate Races. The main point of Prof. Whitin’s j substitute for the present convict j system are these: Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. SHANGHAI, CHINA. April 26.— 'Charges that President Yuan Shi- Kai, of China, sanctioned the assas sination of Dr. Sung, former Minister of Education, because of the latter’s ambition to become President of the Chinese Republic were made here to day by th. civil and military govern ors of the Province of Kiang Su. These allegations reveal a bitter political struggle which is being waged in China between the follow ers of President Yuan Shi-Kai and Dr. Sun Yat Sen, one of the chief founders of the Republic. Dr. Sung was shot to death on March 20: it develops that lie was a candidate for President, having the support of Dr. Sun. The activity of Dr. Sun’s friends began to alarm the President. The murder followed. Mrs. (’allic Scott Appelbaum nod her son. Claude, snapped .just after the mother had been acquitted of the charge of slaving her husband. They will return to Montgomery to live, and declare they will never be separated again. Girls End 500-Mile Hike in Fine Health Two Los Angeles College Students Reach San Francisco Day Ahead of Their Schedule. 1, Convicts should be diveded Mto gangs which should follow the sex and color lines. 2. Work On a farm is prefer able to road work, because the f irm produce may be consumed by tin- charitable institutions of the State. All work done by the con victs should be organized along ;,nes which will produce efficiency ami minimize the hardships of | the prison. !. The, gang should be divided bo three grades, and each grade ild be worked separately, so i mi the same grade of speed 1 prevail throughout tire t Men should be prompted from one grade to another, be- c.eise of increased efficiency. Wages as Incentive. Tin* incentive for efficiency ~ M ild be in the shape of money \vhi< h should be paid to the con- \icts according to a fixed scale. > be determined by the nature of tin* work and the value of the average convict. Three-fourths of tie « v ang savings amassed un der this method should be used • * furnish extra incentive for.ef- i ! i< ncy. and the other one-Jfoprth should be used as an incentive for the guards. 6. The earnings of the convicts should be distributed to those le gally entitled to them; to their wives and families if they are married, or the officers of the >unt\ to whom costs must be paid. Preceding the address of Professor j Ktagg. Hooper Alexander delivered an interesting address on the “The Con- ! Met. Lease and the System of Con tract Prison Labor—Their Place in j distory." The session this afternoon j i\ the form of an informal discus- 1 * ,. because of the absence of the wo speakers scheduled to deliver ad - i ' resse*-i -Governor Emmet O’Neal v Alabama and Dr. F. Emory Lyon, of j Chicago. For Child Welfare. I" Hastings H. Hart, director or, 1 h Iping department of the Rus- il Sage Foundation, New York, de- livcred t he . principal address at tin f onferenee on child welfare held till-* j morning at the First Methodist ’hurch. Dr. Hart urged the necessity of a "tumuniiy program for child welfare, •y«] in a speech of some length out* 45n • ‘(I what had been done in some of no large cities looking to the better protection of Children. He • a strong appeal for the aboli- ! m of child labor and stressed the of gi\ ing the delinquent, de pendent and defective children more ,;i “ and attention in the various communities. /' ,rs * Fate Waller Barrett, formerly 0 Atlanta, but now general superin- SAX FRANCISCO. April i>6.~ -Radi- | allng liealtii and happiness and all, of the cheering, entiling; messages that goes with these possessions, Aliss Grace L. Drown and Miss Margaret Scarborough, the two Los Angeles college girls who, one month ago. s.arted out from I,os Angeles to walk to San Francisco, have reached here. I They arrived at the St. hYancis Ho tel -a day ahead' of their schedule time. The distance of a trifle more than 500 miles was covered a I an average of about 17 miles a day. AVornen object to long hikes be cause they think it injures their com- : plexion, but we have proved that! neither open air nor March winds will! hurt a girl's complexion." Chairman. Ashley, of Council Sani tary Committee, Signs Vouch- • ers, After Long Delay. New York Millionaire Says Miss ing Heiress Is on Way to Join Him in Boston. BOSTON. April 26—Seventeen- year-old Ramona Borden, the heiress and daughter of Gail Bor den, the New Ycrk millionaire, was found in a Back Bay resi dence at 2 o’clock this afternoon. At 2:15 p. m. the girl was re stored to her father’s arms. BOSTON. April 26 Gail Borden, the millionaire milk dealer of New York, announced at 2; 25 o'clock this afternoon at the Hotel Essex that his missing daughter, Ramona, had been located and that she is on her way to join him in this city. Mr. Borden said: “We Know ulii i. Ramona i> We are going then this afternoon. I hop* | to reach my girl before nightfall. We : have visited certain places in Boston i where she might have been. Now I am convinced sin left the city. "It is my opinion that Mrs. White (Mrs. W. J. Whit- of Cleveland) came on here with Ramona, left her niece ; here with a friend, and In an auto mobile doubled her tracks and took Ramona with her.” Mr. Borden was neav collapse through misery, loss of sleep and ; over-exertion. ii * had jumped over i to Boston from New York on the mid night train on receipt of news that Miss Borden, in company with Mrs. White and Mrs. T. T. Bache, of New York, had been in New Haven Thurs- 1 day night and had pushed on to Bos ton yesterday After several weeks of delay. <’oun- I cllmun Claude L. Ashley, chairman of j the Council Sanitary Fommiltee. has { approved the voucher for a $5O.O0nj payment on the new crematory. Councilman Ashley at first took the. position that the Destructor < ’ompany, | of New York, would have to mundu- mtts him, but his change of mind now j will for • the company to mandamus Mayor Woodward, for the Mayor is ticking to the policy of refusing to m ike anv payments on the plant until ihd legality of the contract is decided | by tin* Supreme Court. FOR HIS HEtTH President Takes Week-End Trip Down Potomac River Toward Hampton Roads. Ball Players Call On President Wilson Members of Boston Ked Sox Given Warm Greeting at the White House. WASHINGTON. April 26. Presi dent Wilson received the members »f the Boston orld’s champion baseball club at the White House yesterday, shaking hands with each one and complimenting them on their goo? work in tlw games he had seen. The Red Sox were introduced *o the President by Secretary Tumulty, himself an ardent baseball fan. When the President greeted Capta.n Wagner he laughed and said: “You took advantage of mi ab sence ro beat Washington in the nin f h inning Thursday.” The President departed before the ninth inning ralh of the Red Sov, which won for them the game. Woman Suggests Beer at Symphonies WASHINGTON. April 26.— On the advice of his physician. Dr. Fa rev Grayson, Fnited Stores Navy. Presi dent Wilson threw aside the cares cf state to-day and. accompanied by M:ss Eleanor Wilson, set sail down Che Potomac River on board the yacht Sylph. The party left Washington .it 9:30 a. m. to-day. It will’return to morrow night. The destination of the President s unknown to the White House u- taches. For the next 36 hours he will be entirely out of reach with the land, except through me wireless on the Sylph. He will be unbothered by any official cares of the White Hous°, and Dr. Grayson predicted that his patient will return to Washington without the least trace of the intes tinal trouble which has indisposed the Fhief Executive for the past week. The Sylph is expected to steam down Chesapeake Bo\ as far as Hampton Roads, perhaps going a short distance to sea t«i-morrow morning. Mrs. Wilson did not accompany her husband on account of important so cial engagements scheduled for th a afternoon and to-night. Naval Stores Men Seek Federal 0, K. TREASURY OUSTED Freed Widow Plans Visit to the Plan Gigantic Selling Combine to Combat Buyers—Emissaries to See McReynolds. SAVANNAH, GA.. April L>6 -J. A. G ( ’arson, president of the Carson Naval Stores Company,* and J. Ward Motte, of the Producers’ Naval Stores 1 om Pan.v. a re irj Washington for a conference with Attorney General Mc Reynolds regarding the legality of the formation of a proposed gigantic com pany for the marketing of naval stores and to relieve the factors of the grip of the buyers, at whose mercy, they claim, they now are. The leaders were told by District Attorney Alexander Ackerman that the formation of such a tampan v would be permissible under the law. All factorage concerns are to be interested in the combination. Women Need No Vote, Says Miss Wilson President’s Daughter Urges Club Congress to Share in World's Civic and Social Work. Ho *nd of X of the Florence Crittenton Association, with headquarters lington, D. (\, spoke on the is now being done by that ; 11 on and the necessity for the •h'ning of the field. ‘•lose of the regular program nnber of improptu talks were 1 prominent sociological work- ir " m various points in the South. Them being Dr. L. T. Royster, ■•k, Va.; Dr. George Sehon, ot iio . K\\, and Dr. Tray wick, oi BALTIMORE. April 26. — Miss Mar- i garet Wilson, daughter of the Presi dent, sounded the keynote of the (Jon- j gresit of Women at McCoy Hall by de claring that they should take active I part in the world’s work for social and civic bettcrrftent. Addressing th* General Federation of Women’s Clubs, j Miss Wilson said: "Let me plead for women to take an active part in politics. Let them work from a social center when pub lic questions are concerned and have their opinions heard.” “Did you mean that women should use the suffrage?” she was asked. “No.” was the smiling reply; “it is not necessary. I feel.' WASHINGTON. April 26 Follow ing the announcement in the H» arsi papers ten days ago that the Nation al City Bank, of New York had a profitable monopoly of Treasury De partment, information, Secretary McAdoo has made public the follow ing statement: "It develops that the National CU\ Bank of New York, acting ttiro'tffeb Mr. Aili y Vice President of the Riggs National Bank of Washington ha« employed a clerk outside of the De partment who has been given a desk in the office of th* Comptroller of the Currency and who has tor the past eight or ten years made regular re ports to the National City Bank oa the condition of each national bank in the country promptly following every call of the Comptroller of 'he Currency. "This is of course irregular ahd improper and immediately upon its discovery it was stopped. "It is only fair to say that the hanks claim that the information so obtained is only such as in due course is made public by the indivi dual banks or the department. But the method employed-* of installing a private employee with a desk in the Treasury Department — gives the hank- so favored an undue advan tage, in the way of advance informa tion, over all other banks in the country. At the same time, it tends to establish intimate relationships with the employees of the Government and to the acquirement of informa tion of a confidential nature that ought not to be given to private in dividuals or corporations, and which, if given at all, should be published to the entire, country. “Many of the transactions with the department arc necessarily of a con fidential nature, and no Government employee should upon any inducement or consideration, supply information to any private interest beyond what is given out officially to all.” Dr. Wilbur a Speaker. > . 1,,Ps the important conferences s " n labor and child welfare, del- i to 1 ,le congress attended cqn- °t four other departments •gieal work. \ moig t ho§( "•■dvered addresses at thesecon- ; “ s "'"Te Dr. Fressv L. Wilbur. ; ! the Federal Bureau of Vi i ! i<s. at the conference on ■ akh; Dr. Hastings H. Hart. " “t the child helping depart- j 1 * the Russell Sage Found,i- ; the conference on child wel- Al / A - Auerbach, of Little Rock. I ;!u* conference on organized! Professor H. C. Brough, >f 3 tJ of Arkansas at the ! on race problems; Bishop ngc, of Wilmington, N. F.. •< inference on the church and: Indicted Policemen Face Trial by Board Fighting While in Uniform and on Duty Probable Charges Against Oliver and Jackson. lerencei "rning similar in eharaoter i., 'essions wen* held this Th! e? <5 Hy J everybodv in Atlanta read* _ Sunday American. YOUR ad- 3ood s ',t! the iS:iUC Wl " Se " Indicted by the Grand Jury on a chaise nf assanil and battery grow ing, out of an attack on the former County Police Chief. \Y. H. Johnson. Lieutenant John Oliver and A. W. Jackson, of the County police, prob ably n ill be tried, before the trial in the i 'riminal Court, by the County Board for fighting while in uniform and on duty. The fight followed Johnson's verbal eh.ug'-s to Pouaty f’ommissioner R. B. Turman that Lieutenant Oliver had iaken dinner at a downtown restau rant with a married woman, and that the County police force was honey combed with graft. Johnson says Oliver and Jackson lured him into a jury room at the Thrower Building and attempted to beat hijn to death. TO WELCOME DEAF AND DUMB IN SIGN LANGUAGE MACON. GA.. \pril 26. When the annual convention of the .Georgia Deal arid Dumb Association is hela in Macon on June 6 and 7. the ad dress of welcome will be delivered by Mayor John T. Moore in th<* sign language. The mayor is not afflicted but has long been an adept in the use of the deaf and dumb alphabet. The executive committee of the association only this week decided on Macon as the place for the 1913 con vention. It is expected that there will he fully 200 in attendance. NEGRO NAPS AS HE IS SENTENCED TO DEATH JACKSON. MISS, April 26. Will Thorpe, a negro convicted of killing another negro, was granted u new trial because he was asleep In court when the sentence of death was pro nounced. The judge mistook a snore for a negative answer when the pris oner was asked if he had anything to say before he was sentenced. Grave of Man She Was Accused of Slaying. zAIrs. (’ailie Scott Keller Appelbaum, yesterday acquitted of the charge of slaying her husband, to-day unfolded her plans for the future, and declared that her recent experiences had deter mined hei to devote the remainder of her life to missionary work, especially among jail prisoners. "I am going back to work as though no such tragedy had ever come into my life. - she .-aid. "I wHl travel for a Chicago firm. But my greatest in terest -will* be irr missionary work. 1 expect to visit every jail and prison that I possibly can. As she sat in her room at the Tab ernacle Infirmary, she spoke in a strain of optimism. “I am so lonesome when i think of niy dead husband," she said. "With all his faultsall his little faults I I in all his faults I loved him and love him still. When the great tragedy came the world turned black. All 1 Could do or think was to bury myself in tears for him. Prayed for Vindication. "I had cried this wax for days. Theft one day I realized that I was charged with being his murderess. Feeling the grim horror of this accu sation. I fell on iny knees to God and prayed that the world be shown 1 was innocent. “Then Jerome came to me in a dream. He put his arms around me and said: “’Dear little girl, you are having such a hard tirm*. But you are in nocent.’ ” She naid that her heart lightened after that and that her- principal thought to-day was to go out to his grave in VVestview cemetery and cov er it with flowers. "I went to his funeral.” she said “but I never have,seen his grave. I want to go out and warm that cold earth that covers him.’’ To Visit Her Parents. Mrs. Apeplbaum explained that within a few day.®, as soon -as she is strong enough, she will go to see her aged parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. R Scott, at Brevvtpn, Ala. "Most of my money is gone," she continued, “but I have several thou sand dollars left. 1 will rest a few months and then go to work. I have always been a good business woman and made lots of money. "Before the trial, when I was <n jail. I did not want to see rnv par ents or anyone. My spirits were so crushed and my heart so torn with grief 1 wanted to be alone. But now i am not ashamed to face the world. "The memory of those poor cre atures in the Tower w ill ever inspire me to help the unfortunate. With this inspiration 1 know that my experience has not all been for bad.” Likes Pecp*e of Atlanta. Mrs. Appelbaum, after she was freed, said to a number of friends: “Oh, T do love you all—and aii the people of Atlanta—you have been so good to me. And I want you to know that I didn't do it.” she added. “I loved Mr. Appelbaum as I do Claude here. To a woman the man she loves Is always like her child. I wouldn’t have killed him no matter what he did to me.” About that tine .1. P. Lindsay, of (’harlotte, N. ( '., Mr. Appelbaum’s former partner in buxine.us, rushed in like a whirlwind. "Wouldn't you like to hav. a nice, 'large beefsteak. Mrs. Appelbaum: -i great big juicy one?” he questioned. Mrs. Appelbaum. pale and wan, looked up at him. “You bet.'” she said fervently. "Well, we'll have it,” said Mr. LimL sax - . “Jones and I here (Jones was the attorney from Charlotte) will see to it. And then you’re going out to the sanitarium for a day or two. I've phoned my wife in Charlotte that ev- TRAIN SET Oi FIRE Georgians Honored At Big Universities Lager Urged as a Magnet to Draw. Men to Concerts in Chicago. BY SUFFRAGETTES Robert B. Troutman HBads Law Re view at Columbia and Boykin Wright, Jr., at Harvard. $70,000,000 Year From Income Tax Special Cable to The American. LONDON. April 2 6. - Arsonettes. from the Women's Social and Political Union, resumed their attacks on the railroad interests to-day. A station ary train on the tracks of the Mid land Railway was found to be afire hear TecTdlngton Station, Middlesex, by employees of the station, and be fore the blaze could be extinguished three compartments of one of the cars had been burned. A woman's clonk was found in of the cars, showing that the incen diaries had made a hasty departure. erything's all rigot with you. She's tickled to death." Laughs at Cotton Gloves. Mrs. Lindsay is Mrs. Appelbaum’s best friend. They were inseparable when Mrs. Appelbaum and her hus band lived there. A minute later Mm Appelbaum began to laugh a little hysterically as she was putting on her gloves. “They’re just cotton.” tile said. "I wanted silk, but the woman at the jail who went to buy them didn’t un derstand, I guess. Thank God. I am free again to go and come as I want ‘o and do as I please. I can get things myself now. Oh—” •She drew i long breath and sank back in her chair, exhausted with happiness. Dr. J. S. Liebman, her physician, who had been summoned when she fainted, appeared at the door w ith hi.*' grip. "It was just from joy. doctor, "she told him, happily. *ril be all right now. I am going off to ake a long rest somewhere." "You’re going to ?»ta> in Atlanta a little while till you get Kronger," he said as he gave her some medicine she made a face about, but took du tifully. To Visit Old Home. She said she didn't know w here she would make her home. She and Claude would have to talk it over an I decide later. But It was sure Claude would go back to Montgomery for a while anyway, as he is at work there. Tt was p -ible she would go to her parents at Brew ton. Ala . for a few weeks. "Do call up the Tower and tell them I’m free, somebody.” she ypoke up a little later. "They were all so good to me dow n t her' .” From the jail the word earth* back that they were all as glad as she was —they had expected it. "Why. for my part, to tell you the truth. I'm sorry to see you go." spoke up a deputy sheriff. ‘I was hoping the jury would make a mistrial of it so that you could be with us that much longer." That reminded her of a little piece of paper. "Here’s what the whole trial rested on this little tiling.’ she remarked. "Mr. Moore (her lawyer) gave it to me for a souvenir. But ! wouldn’t keep it for anything I don’t need anything to remind me of the trial. It's all been too miserable." She opened the paper. On it was written: Q. Could not these wounds have been self-inflicted? A. I don’t think so. It was the question the coroner had asked J. \V. Hurt, county physi cian. when he was holding the inquest xjver Appelbaum’s body, and Dr. Hurt's reply, which led Mrs. Ap- pelbaum’s arrest. Mr. Moore had held it in his hand throughout his argu ment to the jury. "But I saw Dr. Hurt in jail the other clay.” Mrs. Appelbaum re marked, "and he told me he didn’t see how they could hold me. as there was no evidence to prove I was guilty." Robert B. Troutman, a graduate of the State University in 1911. has just been elected editor-in-chief of the Columbia University Law Review jin New York City. This is the high est honor that can be conferred upon j a law student; and Troutman’s ! friends are congratulating him. Troutman is the youngest son of the late Dr. Marcellos L Troutman, who was at one time pastor of Park Street Church in Atlanta, pastor , at Athens and elsewhere. It is coincidental that Harvard F*ni- versity has pecentlv conferred the same hoftor . upon Boykin Wright. •?r.. of Augusta, by electing him presi dent of its Law Review. Mr. Wright i is also a graduate of the University of Georgia. CHICAGO, April 2G "Why not let our men drink beer and smoke al symphony concert.-?” asked Mrs. Fa.v Pierce, a sister of Mrs Theodore Thomas, during a discussion at a ses sion of the NaLohal Federation of Music Clubs. "When Theodore Thomas first j came to Chicago In* gave concerts; every day except Sunday in an ex-j position building on the lake front. I and men were allowed to drink beer and 1 smoke at their leisure. And Mr Thomas made money, too. Why not j return to such methods if that iK the only .way we can gel out men to go to such concerts?” This is Amount Hull, Credited With Framing Bill, Says It Will Produce. Saved from Drowning by a Baby Carriage WASHINGTON, April 26.—Discus sion of the income tax provision *f the Underwood tariff i»ili was the fea ture of the debate to-day in -th-* House. Representative Hull, of Ten nessee. who Is given credit by th * Ways and Means Committee for drafting most of the income tax pro vision, explained the measure. Hull declared the income tax wou-J produce $70,000,000 n vear and cou: i be adjusted to raise $150,000,000 a year. He predicted the provision per mitting th-* collection of most of the tax on incomes at their source from the persons taxed would prove popu lar. and at the same time assist th<* Government in obtaining every dollar of revenue to which it was entitled. Woman Uses It and Her Belt to Pull Boy in Pond to Bank. GIRL KILLS HERSELF; ACCIDENT, SAYS FAMILY Still Another Dupe Identifies Von Klein Little Rock. Ark., Woman Says He Used Marriage PrJt to Get $5,000 Gems. CHICAGO, April 26. - Edmond K V Von Klein, arrested recently on com plaint of Miss Ethel Newcomb, who j charged he Induced her to marry him j and then disappeared with her dfa- [ monds valued at S3,500. was identified last night by a second woman, win* i hu>s she was his "dupe.” She is Mrs. j C. A. Temple, of Little Rock. Ark. Mrs. Temple assorts Von Kle in, un | ib*: the name of Weavei B. Clark, took HELM ETTA. X. J.; April 26. Lift ing a neighbor's baby from it.**' car riage Mrs. Anno Petrosky vised the vehicle 'as a life-saving apparatus when she re scued five-year-old John Kiosky from drowning in a pond. Mr*- Pairosky heard the screams of a child and going to the bank ?*aw a child struggling to keep his feet. She ouicklv took tile baby out of a carriage nearby, and pitched it toward tin* drowning fad. holding the handle with a belt she took from her waist. The boy grabbed the front wheel of the carriage and was pulled back to safety. HUNTSVILLE. ALA.. April 26- Miss Elizabeth Hen.* ley. a stenogra pher, 23-year-old daughter of Mrs. \V. T. HenHey. is dead at the home of her mother, shot through the brain. The tragedy was first reported as a suicide, but relatives sav it was an accident. The girl had no reason for suicide, they say, and those who knew her well declare she would not have ended her life? SUGGESTIVE SONGS WILL BE SUPPRESSED IN CHICAGO her to Milwaukee six months ag » where he disappeared with her jew dry, valued at $5,000, on the day set for the wedding. Von Klein is at liberty on bones, pending the outcome of the legal figai for his extradition to Portland, Grog. BANK STOCK INCREASED. Permission to increase the capita! stock from $25,000 to $37,500 w is u. anted the Oconee County Bank. »t W'htkiusvllle, to-day by Secretary cf State Cpok. A. YV. Ashford is presi dent of the bank and J. Warren Smith i'f» cashier. CHICAGO, April 26. -The sugges tive song, common in the cheaper theaters and in some cabaret shows, is to be suppressed by the < ity po lice. Major Funkhouser. second dep uty police superintendent, to-day sent notices to every theatrical manager and instructed the Chicago Board of Censors to allow no suggestive song to be sung Bride and Groom Victim of Hazers New life for the Spring-Tired, Renewed strength for the Weak, Louisiana Youths Arrested for Duck ing Girl in Public Trough and Imprisoning Husband. Greater vigor for Brain-Workers, MIDLAND. LA., April 26.—Eight young men were arrested to-day for the hazing they gave Clarence Wied itor anil his bride, whose rnarriag was announced Ins*t night The mar riage had been kept seen t for live months and was announced at a din ner party by the mother of the bride. The guests imprisoned W'iednar in a coal bln and left him there all night. Mrs. W'iednar was ducked in a public trough. Steady nerves lor the Nervous, A wealth of health for Everyone, In the famous Spring Medicine, GRAND CLOSES TO-NIGHT; i FORSYTH OPENS MONDAY Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The Grand closes to-night with the presentation of the bill that has been attracting good crowds nil the week, in spite «.f grand opera. Beginning* Monday. Keith .vaude ville will be transferred to* the For syth. long known as tin most popu lar theater in :he South and the play house ; hut made the reputation of Keith entertainments in this part of the country: Manager Cardoza said to-day a higher- standard than ever would be maintained at the Forsyth. Thousands recommend it. Your druggist sells it. 1 o-day buy and begin to take it. <D» # # ® m m # <ffl> mg in Order Your Paper Now. Both Phones Main 8000 American # # # ^ (O') * (ft # ®