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TTTK ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TEKSDAV. APRIL 29. 1912,.
FACTORY EMPLOYE’S ARBI “™
AS SLAYER NEAR. AS RESULT
RS. J. W. COT.FWAN, below, mother of slain Miry Pha-
gar, and Ollie Phegan, si-ter of the murdered nir! Mrs.
Coleman is piostrated by grief over the crime, and warns all
mothsrs of working girls to watch carefully their loved ones.
GUILT WILL BE FIXED
DETECTIVES DECLARE
Continued From Page One.
the executive head of the National Pencil Company's factory, and|
considered that the action was warranted from the standpoint of
safety if for no other reason.
SLAYER’S HAND PRINT
LEFT ON ARM OF GIRL
Hope for apprehension of the slayer of Mary Pliagan has
rome to the police with the discovery of distinct finger prints,
stamped in blood on tile sleeve of the dead girl s jacket.
The discovery was made by a Georgian reporter in the course
of a minute inspection of the girl's clothes yesterday evening.
The finger prints are on the right arm of the light silk dress.
The imprints of two fingers arc just below the shoulder, staining
purple the lavender of the child's dress anti penetrating to the
arm. as if they were established at the pressure of powerful lingers
grasping her arm.
A third print is that of a thumb, blurred somewhat as with
a great pressure, but offering possibilities of analysis. ' With 1 In*
discovery of the linger prints, detectives employed in the ease be
lieve they hav a tangible clew. The Bertillon system of detection
will be brought into play, and suspects will be placed through
its unfailing catechism.
The search for other finger prints will be made zealously.
Detectives of the Pinkerton agency, several of whom are on Ihe
ease, are known to affect largely this mode of detection, on the
theory that every man has his distinctive finger prints, and that
the impressions of the lingers of no two individuals are identical.
The evidence borne in finger prints is regarded as conclusive
in modern courts. On this fact the police of Atlanta to-day are
hoping more firmly than ever that they will be successful in their
trail of the man who killed little Mary Pliagan,
l)r. .) W. Hurt. County Physician, conducted last night a
close examination of Mary Phagan s body, in the effort to deter
mine the nature of the injuries indicted by her brutal slayer. He
entered alone the chamber in which the dead girl lay. and at the
conclusion of It is inspection refused to make a report of what he
had found out.
Militants’ Violence Arouses Bitter
Feeling — Mrs. Pankhurst
Still Outside Bars.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, April 29. -England .s
becoming thoroughly moused again*! ;
the violence of the militant suffra-
gettcH, and the early prophecy of Mr*. ,
Emmeline Pankhurst t: ^t thc“ would
bo *i o ar of the sexes seems nearer j
of fulfillment than ever before.
Anti-ruffragiits at a meeting to* j
day made angry speeches, condemn- {
Ing.the suffragetten for burning the [
grandstand on the Neville athlete
field. A number of suffragettes pres
ent tried to speak. They were seized
by the antis and severely assaulted, i
Because of her physical condition, .
Mrs. Pankhrust. who was temporarl:»
released from Holloway Jail \prll 12 i
because of Illness brought on by a ,
hunger strike, was granted an exten
sion of leave to-day by the home >f-
flee.
$100,800 for a Gainesborough.
LONDON, April 29. Thomas
Oainesborough s painting. "The Mar
ket Dart,” out of Sir Lionel Phillip 1 *’
collection, was sold by auction for,
$100,800, ;i record price for a Dairies
norough ’picture.
VICE SQUAD' FOR ID.EJllOPEII
;e parade cookinc school
Startling Plan Is Proposed by
Daughter-in-Law of Presi-
l dent Tyler.
NEW YORK. April 2# In Hitpa
rade of May 3 let there be a banner
marked 'Vice.' If only one woman
marches behind that banner, thus de
claring her desire to free herself
from the dominion of man. the sight
of that brave woman would stir every
heart and th** cause would take an
onward .sweep toward success. Will
.. that banner wave in that procession,
and who will be that brave woman?”
This is the proposition put up to
the Woman Suffrage Parade Commit
tee by Mrs. G. Vere Tyler, widow of
Dr. Lachlan Tyler, who was a son of
President Tyler.
Furthermore, Mrs. Tyler not only
makes this appeal, but she has found
m woman who has promised to march
carrying the banner.
“I have read this call sent out by
the Women Suffragist Committee
asking ill women to Join the march."
she remarked, "and I trust they arc
sincere it. their declaration. 1 am
going to test their sincerity. If they
are sincere no woman in that great
aggregation of New York women
could possibly object to the woman
who will bear the banner*'Vice’ and
behind whom will march, I hope
hundred** of her sisters in the sam<-
profeasion."
' Martin in England,
His Family's Theory
Ad Asking for Communication With
Missing Man's Brother Gives
New Turn in Case.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georqian.
LONDON. April 29 Fresh dev* 1-
opments are expected in the mystery
surrounding the disappearance of Jo
seph W. Martin, of Memphis, Term.,
as the result of an advertisement i*
Toe London Times to-day.
Tills ad. which appeared in *he
“personal column.' said that It is '
the utmost importance that Mr M a *
tin communicate with his brothe
The insertion of the ad in a London
newspaper would indicate that Mar
tin's family believes Mr. Martin Is
atill in England and that he is volun
tarily hiding.
The police have dropped the sea n I
for Martin.
OCILLA RAILROAD TO BE
l EXTENDED 230 MILESi
Daughters Unite With Ladies'
Auxiliary of Y, M, C. A. to
Raise Funds.
The Ladies Auxiliary of the Y. M
U. A. and the Daughters of the <’on-
federac.v, of A lanttt. have united In
one big cfTori to lalso funds for the
daughters, T icy will establish \
cooking school in tin Y. M. <\ \.
building to nn for two week*.
The school will teach every kind
of cooking kn twn to the culinary art.
Not only will ‘he "every day” menus
be prepared, but the pies that mother
used to make, and the latest crea
tions from the Parisian kitchens will
be taught.
The Atlanta Gas Company has vol
unteered to furnish materials and
pay all expenses for the exhibit! >i,.
The school will be run every after
noon from 3 until 5:30 o'clock. li
will be in charge of Mrs. St. R. Dull,
an expert.
Students to Build
Columbus Caravel
Harvard Men Plan to Pass Through
Panama Canal in Replica of
Ancient Craft.
MADRID April 29 The studen's
of Harvard University have asked
v’ayo t'uga, the designer of the
lumbu.s caravel at the Chicago exp •-
| sitlon. to sell his designs, as they
propose to construct a similar care
ive! to pass through the Panama C.i-
■ nal at its inauguration as a compli
ment to Spain. It is proposed that
the ships shall go to San Fraud sc j
afterward.
Senoi Puga replied that he won'*!
present the designs willingly without
I anv cost.
Models of to* Nina the Pinta and
I the Santa Maria. I’olumbu?' thr^e
1 famous little vessv's. Mere exhibited
I at th- Columbian Exposition in Chi
cago in 1893.
"' 1,1 ' ■■■' T ' r irr
Fire in Magazine
Menaces U, S. Ship
| Crew of Supply Boat Celtic Risk
Lives Battling Flames Which
Threaten Explosion.
LOYALTY SENDS GIRL
TODEFENDMULLINAX
A
I NASH VI 1.1.1: *;.\ A; i .1 '
•
Sfcbjifchern Railroad Company, an
noupcep that r.'- road will <>xttnd it
1' tines front Mjicon to Jacl,.-u»wLU. a
| jfiistanCe of 23ft mile-
The road w ill travers** h r}< IT *»>»*■•
■ ;ion of Georgia The following<ttn
porta nt towns will be touched, jf'it*
tt aid. Perm and Rochelle. ' Th
ilia Southern aftcady is op Tfuiivj
fifty mil » of ruAd.
Celtic, tied up at the
w Yard, risked their
Are which was dis-
starboard magazine
t* d presumably from
thus!ion among casks
a! hundred gallons of
iti i alcohol. It
Brave little Pearl Robinson!
Her loyalty and devotion to Arthur
Mullinax. me of the four men held
in connection with the brutal
strangling of Mary Pliagan. form the
only bright feature In a sordid and
revolting crime.
What did she care for the stares
of the groups of people that hung
about the detective headquarters
when the life of her lover appeared to
be in danger?
What did she rare for the re
marks that were directed at her when
she pushed and shoved her way
through the morbid crowds awaiting
for a new sensation?
What difference did it make to
her that her name instantly would be
on the lips of everyone as the defend
er of a man pointed out by one wit
ness as the mysterious person with
little Mary Phagan the last time she
was seen alive?
Love Gave Her Courage.
It was the ages-old story of a wom
an's heart refusing to believe any ill
of Hie man to whom it is pledged and
devoted.
In the young heart of pretty Pearl
Robinson was implantejl that eter
nally feminine and eternally remark
able attribute ns deeply ns though
slm were twice her Ik years.
She knew Arthur Mullinax. liked
him. probably loved him with the im
plicit trust of a woman. He had
been good to her. kind to her. and
always gentle and eourteou- Tha*
w.is enough lie could not have been
guilty of the terrible deed that has
shocked a community as it has not
been shocked before in years.
And she was not afraid to tel! to
the world her confidence in the In
nocence of the man toward whom the
watering and shifting finger of sus-
m. ion had pointed at "various time.-
the authorities began following
Ws of the hatYiing
in connection with the gruesome kill
ing. How could they associate him
with such an act —that of a fiend and
beast? When the first shock had
passed she was all action. She would
tell the officers their mistake. She
had no sooner made up her mind than
she proceeded to carry out her inten
tion.
"Arthur Did Not Do It!”
A few minutes later she was in til ■
office of t'hief of Detectives Lanford.
She was surrounded by sharp-eyed
and keen-minded detectives. Th it
did not disconcert her In the leas'.
She trembled from the thoughts <f
the terrible crime with which the
name of her lover had been linked, but
not from any fear of the guilt of him
she had come to defend.
"Arthur did not commit that awful
deed," she told Chief Lanford. in a
positive and not-to*be-eontradic*.ed
manner.
That settled it. She had said the
final word. < >f course, she went on and
told of his movements on the night of
the tragedy, and with the aid of his
landlady established a very strong
alibi. But that was incidental in her
mind. All that muttered and was
consequence was what her heart told
her—"A it bur did not do it."
GARRISON MOVES TO RID
THE ARMY OF POLITICS
WASHINGTON, April i’9.—Seore
tary Garrison has issued an order ti
put an end to appeals to him for
favored treatment of individual of
fleers of the army and to stop politi
cal "influence." According to the or
der any communication made to the
War Department outside the regular
military channels for favored treat
ment of an offl. , r in any w ay, will
promptly be referred to that officer
Mary Phagan's Stepfather Thinks
She May Have Written One
cf the Messages Found.
Continued From Page One.
most interested person in the world
in saving the hide of the night
watchman?
Did the child write the notes her
self. was she forced to write them,
or did somebody else write them?
The notes are written to throw sus
picion off of the night watchman.
Translated in that way. the argu
ment would go to bear out the ex
pressed belief of the girl'.- stepfather
that the negro committed the crime.
Ollie Phagan. the 18-year-old sis
ter of Mary, said that, while she did
not know, of course, she did not be
lieve that Mary wrote either of the
notes. She knew her handwriting
well, and the rough letters did not
look lik<> hers, although they might
possibly be.
Real Scene of Struggle Found.
Excitement prevailed to-day among
those interested when it was found
that the scene in which the fearful
'truffle between the dead girl and
her assailant took place was not on
t!u* second floor of the pencil factory,
as it was thought, where a few
strands of her hair were found in i
the cogs of a steel lathe, but in the
dressing room of the place. This was
made certain by drops of blood all
over the floor of the room, and a
lag of her dress that was picked up
and which showed that it had been
used to gag her. The strip was of
silk, and had been cut with a knife
from the front of her lavender dress,
which was new. and which the child
was wearing for the first time.
It was said that the discovery was
made by some qf the girls employed
at the factory, who slipped upon the
blood which, In one place, had formed
a small pool. The ran out excited by
the appearance of the place. The I
dead girl’s hair had only caught in !
the steel lathe when her mflrdered
had dragged her by it.
This would go to corroborate the
belief of several persons acquainted
with the tragedy's various angles that
Mary Phagan never left the building,
or at least only for a short while
from the time she entered it to get
her money Saturday until her life
less form was picked up and carried
from the basement by the authorities.
They say she might have etiher been
accidentally locked in, or purposely
taken back in the building by her
murdered, who obtained entrance
either by a key or went in by prying
off a staple from an alley door.
WATER RATE IN MACON
RAISED TO TEN CENTS'
MACON. G.V. V)iril 29.—The mini-|
mum water rate for wholesale con-!
same vs was raid'd last night from S I
to 10 cents. The raise has been h -j
for* the Water Board 1 *r two year. |
It was carried by a divided vote i
Has the murderer of pretty little
Mary Phagan slipped the net that
the polite moot carefully spread for
him?
Is th. author of the trims that
shocked the city and State with Its
terrible brutality still at large?
Is the mystery, a® baffling, in its
myriad conflicting elements as it is
revolti ig in its details, Kill as far
from ;olution as It was when the
beaten and bruised little body of
Mary Pliagan was found lifeless in a
pile of trash and litter in a Forsyth
Ftreet basement ?
When the city detectives and Pin
kertons picked up the twisted skein?*
of evidence this morning they ad
mitted that they were as badly
tangled as when they laid them down
after working incessantly upon them
until long after midnight.
They are positive, hovever, that the
guilt will be almost certainly fixed be
fore nightfall. It only remains to
follow each thread of evidence out to
"To what person will the damning
thread lead?" is the question that be
holding the entire city in suvpense.
No other tragedy in years has so
grlpjfed thf people as this one of the
laughing, inpocent girl lured to htr
death.
When the final truth is known will
the accusing finger-point of guilt b*
leveled at—
Newt Lee, the negro night watch
man, against whom suspicion was
strongly directed to-day. although he
at first was held only as an important
witness.
Or—
Arthur Mullinax, of 60 Poplar Street,
formerly a street car conductor, w ho
was the flrrt man arrested and se
riously regarded as the possible mur
derer. The evidence against him is
slighL
Or—
J. M. Gantt, an employee of the Na
tional Pencil Company until three
weeks ago, arrested as he got off a
car in Marietta yesteiday. The evi
dence against him is far from con
vincing.
Or—
Geron Bailey, negro elevator man
in the pencil factory, who was ar
rested at about the same time a*
Mullinax and held os a material wit
ness.
Or—
Some man whose name has not been
previously mentioned in connection
with the case.
Police Expect Results.
The police are confident that they
will know in a few hours the identity
of the slayer.
Chief Beavers, Chief of Detectives
Lanford, Detectives Black. Starnes,
Has’Iett. Rosser and Bullard and Pin
kerton operatives were on the case
again early this morning. Out of the
many clews obtained yesterday they
expected to get a definite lead and
bring order out of the confusion that
hampered the first two days’ work.
They have everybody in custody
against whom suspicion has been
strongly directed. They have a mass
of Information and a mas« of testi
mony, much of which is conflicting
From this they will eliminate the in
accurate and improbable and proceed
carefully to weave the net of evi
dence.’
No mystery in recent years has
served to excite the public mind a>
the Phagan murder. Detective head
quarters have been thronged with per
sons who have believed that they had
clews to the perpetrator of the crime.
All day yesterday was a ceaseless
procession going into the detectives’
offices and'another procession coming
out. The officers were harrassed as
much as they were aided.
Many Worthless Clews.
Countless persons came to give
general information about Mullinax,
or Gantt, or Lee, or Bailey. Others
came to identify Mullinax as the man
they had seen with a girl on a certain
street at a certain time Saturday
night. Others were pure that it was
Gantt they had seen.
Some of the information was abso
lutely worthless and some was re
garded as furnishing possible dews*.
While some of the officers .were
hearing the various tales of these peo
ple. other detectives were putting the
prisoners through a grilling examina
tion of their whereabouts at every
minute of Saturday night.
Third Degree for Lee.
Newt Lee. the black night watch
man. was given the "third degree” in
the belief that he knew much more
about the crime than he professed.
He snowed signs of weakening seve-
al time?, but each time recovered be
fore he had made any admissions se
riously damaging either to himself
or any of the other prisoners.
The shifting of suspicion to Lee
wa?« the most startling development
of this forenoon, although what basis
it had in actual evidence is hard to
determine. It is known that the Cole
man family are inclined to believe
that he knows a great deal more
about the crime than he has been
pleased to tell. Screams in the build
ing were heard by persons in the
livery stable nearby, according to
stories Current to-day. How could
Lee have made his rounds overv half
hour and not have heard them, mem
bers of the Coleman family ask
O. L. Bagiev. ’ shipping clerk for
the Atlanta Milling Company, was
with Gantt Saturday night and left
him a few minutes after 1ft o’clock,
according to a statement to a Geor
gian reporter. Bagley declared:
"Gantt is but a casual aequaitanee
of mine, though 1 have known him
for about a year. I do not believe he
is the kind of man who would have
committed the crime.
"I met him early Saturday night in
the Globe pool room and talked to
him some time. My brother and a
friend of Gantt’s, named White, were
playing a game of pool. Gantt dojs
not play and we sat down and
watched my brother and White. About
10 o’clock Gantt and myself strolled
out of the pool room and walked
around. We went a block or two out
Whitehall Street, then turned and j
came back, walking back to Alabama i
Street and up Alabama to Broad
Street. I told Gantt that I was going
to catch a oar and he said he would
go back to the pool room. 1 noticed
that he walked up Broad Street, my
car came along and I went home. 1
caught the 10:30 o’clock car.
Had Started West.
"In the course of our conversation
Gantt told me that he had left Atlanta
to go to San Francisco anil had gotten
as far as St. Louis but had been held
dp there several days on account of
high water. He said he then changed
his mind and came back to Atlanta.
"He also told me that he probably
would go to farming; that his mother
had offered to give him a 500-acre
farm near Marietta.
"That Gantt could have met th-.
Phagan girl la.or in the night and
committed the crime appears iinprob- ;
able to me. as most of his conversa
tion was about him preparing to get
married in August. He eeemed to be
very much in love with the young
lady.
"Our meeting Saturday night was’
accidental. I had not seen him for
three or four weeks and asked him
where he had been. He then told me
of going to St. Louis."
Chicago Theater Will
Hold ‘Remnant’ Sales
Cuts to 50 Cents $2.50 Seats Unsold
Hour Before the Performance
Begins.
CHICAGO, April 29.—A “remnant”
sale of tickets is announced by a
leading downtown theater. Hereaf
ter all seats unsold at 1:30 -o’clock
on matinee days and 7:30 o'clock at
night will be sold at 5ft cent?. T i ■
first of the sales will be to-morrow
night.
Regular prices range from $2.50 to
75 cents.
Managers of other theaters said
the plan would bring about a snail
advance sale and a jam at the box
office an hour before the curtain
rose.
“Watching Baseball
Games Is Harmful"
Play Furnishes Too Much Excite
ment for Spectators. Says Dr.
Sargent, of Harvard.
Slayer of C. M. Goddard Con
victed of Manslaughter, but
Judge Allows Jury Poll.
Superior Judge L. S. Roan to-day
declined to pass sentence on Elmer T.
Darden, found guilty last night of
manslaughter, until he had discussed
the case with the jurymen to definite
ly established their idea of the weight
of the sentence to be imposed.
Darden, convicted of the man
slaughter of C. M. Goddard, who was
shot to death in the Union station
March 13. received the verditc form
ally in Criminal Court this morning.
His attorneys instantly asked for a
poll of the jury and this was granted
by the court.
The jury reached a verdict at 9
o’clock last night after remaining out
two and one-half hours.
The defense introduced only one
witness, Darden, who made a long
statement to the jury, in which he
narrated the events that led up to the
fatal encounter in the Union Depot.
The statement had been prepared in
advance by Darden and his attorneys,
but several times Darden entirely
forgot it and branched off into an
arraignment of the man he shot. A
great many spectators at the trial and
his attorneys said Darden’s statement
to tbe jury wa largely responsible
for his conviction.
Judge L. P. Roan's formal charge,
excluded the probability of finding ,i
verdict for acquittal, except in more
flagrant cases, and it was a foregone
conclusion the jury would not acquit
the prisoner.
During the long trial he sat with
his three children, Mrs. May Pierce,
Fred and Naomi Darden. When the
judge was charging the jury as to the
verdict in the event of Darden being
found guilty of murder, the two gir s
broke down and wept. The father,
sitting between them, placed his arm
around their shoulders and said:
"Don’t cry, my children; don't you
see I’m not crying. It doesn't matter
much."
A. W. Long, a witness introduced
by the State in rebuttal of the testi
mony of Darden, told of Goddard’s
dying statement.
"Yes, L know Mrs. Darden." the
dying man told him. "She was a
good, honorable woman—one of the
finest women in the world. I am sor
ry lor her sake.*’
CAMBRIDGE, April 29.—Dr. Dud
ley A. Sargent. Harvard's expert on
physical culture, said to-day:
"The excitement attending bad
games is harmful. Thousands of men
and boys and even women become
unduly excited over the athletic
prowess of professional players.
"There is nothing wrong with a
ball game as such any more than
there is with a theatrical perform
ance as such, but such games arouse
emotion without furnishing a motor
outlet. We arc overdoing one phase
of the so-called love of sport."
MARKET OPENING.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON.
Quotations in cotton futures:
‘Bally’ Customs Men
Hold Wedding Gifts
Sir Wilfred Peck Declines to Pay
Duties on $10,000 Worth of
Presents for His Bride.
NEW YORK. April 29.—This is Sir
Wilfred Peck’s opinion of the United
States customs officials, expressed to
day :
"I say, mv word, what a bally,
blawsted, mercenary set you chaps
are."
Sir Wilfred landed to-day on the
liner Lapland. With him were about
Slft.ftftft worth of bridal presents in
tended for Mias Edwina Thornburg, a
St. Louis beauty and heiress to whom
he will be married ori May 7.
The customs officials insisted on
turning Sir Wilfred’s trunks topsy
turvey. after which they told Sir Wil
fred iie would have to pay 45 per cent
duty on the presents. Sir Wilfred
balked.
"I cawn’t do it. ’y'know,” he ex
claimed.
"The mercenary chaps” were ob
durate. Sir Wilfred finally quit the
pier, leaving his wedding gifts behind.
FLOWERS and FLORAL DESIGNS
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.
Both Phones Number 4. 41 Peachtree '
First Prev.
IQpenlHighlLow j Call.'^Close.
April . ! TT.88
May . . .12.04:12.04 12.03 12.03 12.00-01
June . . 11.94-90
.July . . .11 81,'11.8! 11 .80 1 1 .80 11 .78-79
Aug . 11.43 IL.13'11.43 11 .43 1 1 .43
Sept. . . 11 .18-20
Oct 11.09 1! .09 11.09 11 .09 11 .08-09
Nov 11.08-09
Dec. . . . ti. 10 11.10 11.10 11.10 11 .08-09
.Ian. . . . 11 .21 11.1211.12111 .1211.10-12
Pel) ,ll .09-1 !
NEW YORK COTTON.
Quotations in cotton futures:
ATLANTA
THEATER
1!|Ms 15c to 50c
ALL THIS WEEK
Except Wed L Thurs. Nights
Miss BILLY LONG
And Company In
A Butterfly
on the Wheel
First Time in Atlanta
1 First! Prev.
Open;High Low Call. Close.
April
11.43
Ma>
.1 1.25 11.29 11 .25 11.29 11.25-26
•lune
. 11.90 11 .90 11.90 11.90 11 .37-38
July
. 1.1.40 11 .41 11.40 11.40 1 1 .37-38
Aug
.11.25 11.25 11.25 11 .25111.22-24
8*»pt.
11.03-05
Oct .
. 11 .01.11.01 11.00 U.00 10.99-11
Dec.
. 11.05 11 .05111.04 11 .0411 .03-0-1
.Ian.
.11.01 11.02 11 .01 11.02'JO. 99-01
Mch. .
. : 11.07-09
LYRIC
This
Week
Mats. Tues.,
Thurs., Sat.
BILLY THE KID
A DRAMA OF THE WEST.
With the Young American Star,
BERKELY HASWELL.
LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET.
LIVERPOOL. April 29.—Due 5 points
lower on May and 2Vi^3 ! ~ points lower
on other positions, this market opened
quiet at a net decline of 4f&4 1 / £ points
on near months and 3<&'3% points de
cline on late positions. At 12:15 p. m.
the market was steady at a net decline
of 3 points on near positions and 2Vi
points lower on distant months
Spot cotton steady at 2 points de
cline; middling 6.68d: sales. 8.00ft bales,
including 7.70ft American bales; re
ceipts, 10.000 bales.
Home Again With Vaudeville
CflDCVTU Mat. To-day 2:30
rundl in To-nicht at 8:30
To-night at 8:30
NEXT WEEK
Sophye Barnard--Lou
Angler & Co.—Chris
Richards — Gaby — i . .
Heim Children—Barr ! Gui Edwatfs
& Hope—Muriel & j Kld Kabaret
Francis and Others.... ]
COMING! BASS' MAY SALE
See Big Bargain Ad in Wednesday Georgian