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HtSAKST'S SUNDAY 'AMWRU AN. 'ATLANTA. (.’A , SUNDAY, MAY 4, 1913
5 C
Society
LEGAL REVENGE Prdiu
FORLDVETHEFI’
Folk Forego Beauty Sleep for
+•+ -;•••>• + • •!•«•!• %•••!• •!*••!• +••!*
Flowers Enhance Magnificent Homes
Gardens SHETLAND PONIES
Grand Jury Expected to Probe l
Old-Fashioned Plants Rival Parvenues in Bril
liancy and Attractiveness. Fashionables
I )o Their Own Work.
Three of Atlanta's society folk working in their gardens. Mrs.
Shirley Brooks (at the top'. Mrs. T. B. Felder (on fhe left', and
Colonel Willis B Rattan. >
FOR BIG CONTEST
10 BE HEBE SOON
Twelve Best Specimens of the
Famous Tennessee Breed Pur-
David F. Houston
Tells Good Jokes
6ecretary of Agriculture Member
of Jolly Alfalfa Club at National
Capital.
WASHINGTON, May 3. Secretary
David Franklin Houston, of the De
partment of Agriculture ia a member
of the Alfalfa Club, whose motnbers
assemble In the dining room of the
(Accidental Hotel at 12:30 o’clock ev
ery week day.
Mr. Houston, although reserved or.
E.
FOLK SOI FETE
1,000 Pupils of Public School*
Will Participate in Auditorium
Concert Friday Night.
Alleged Elopement of Clubman
Legless Man Proves
Wonderful Farmer
Wife May Search
Husband’s Pockets
Anything But Money May Be R
moved by Spouse, Says
Learned Judge.
Missouri Man Overcomes Physical
Handicap and Makes Suc
cess of Life.
PARIS, MO., May 3.—A young man
with no legs, yet who can traverse a
county at pleasure, getting about al
most as well as those who do have
legs, and who manages and does his
part of the actual work on a farm
of 240 acres, Is one of the prodigies
Monroe county has given the world.
His name Is Earl Craft.
He Is a son of Charles E. Craft, liv
ing near Paris, and he was bom on
a Monroe County farm 25 years ag).
In good looks, manners and general
demeanor he might pass for Sir
Richard f’almady, the legless hero of
Lucas Malet’s novel of that name. At
the age of twelve years Earl was
taken with necrosis of the bone, for
which there is no specific, and both
his legs were amputated at the hips.
Hr* can hook or unhook a tear;,
ride a horse, drive a gang plow, cul
tivator or binder, and do almost any
thing else to be done on a farm, save
gather corn, at which he is not very
handy. Last week he built and roofed
a hen house without assistance, and
is one of the most efficient men in
the County.
$120,000 CARPET.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, May n—An offer of
$ 120,000 lias been refused py Jolian
Kcrmovv.-ky. of Prague, for a carpet
whin , he claims, he, can prove was
used 1* the Prophet Mahomet when
at prayer.
LAKEWOOD, N. ; J„ May 3.—The
right of a woman to search her hus
band’s pockets while the latter Is
asleep, and to retain anything ex
cepting money which she may find
In the pi ckets, was upheld by Mag
istrate Andrew J. Staring.
The decision v as rendered In the
case of Caleb McKelvey, a prominent
merchant, whose wife swore out a
warrant for his arrest because bo
used too strenuous methods in trying
to force her to return a perfumed
note which she found In his pocket.
Mrs. McKelvey told the Court that
she had suspected her husband for
some time of bxjir.g friendly with a
certain neighbor who Is now In Cali
fornia, and that last night she de
termined to secure, if possible, some
form of material evidence.
Mrs. McKelvey found the letter,
read It and kept it. McKelvey was
held for the Grand Jury.
FARM STAYED IN SAME
FAMILY FOR 150 YEAflS
BLOOMS BURG, PA.. May 3.—For
the first time since it was claimed
from the wilderness, the Hagenbuc’n
Farm, near Hidlay’s Church, Colum
bia County, is without a Hagcnburh
as an occupant. Elmer W. Hagen-
buch, the last of his farmily to work
the farm, moved away lasl week and
a stranger for the first time hold--
possession It was 150 years ago tnat
Jacob Hagenbuch, a great-grandfath
er of the last occupant, took the land
gL>r his own «nd began to clear It off.
dimirlly, Is a jolly story teller when
the Alfalfa Club members meet. When
Walter H. Page Ambassador to Great
Britain, Secretary Lane and other
members gut together for lunch to
day Mr. Houston told them a negro
story.
"It was at the old Southern Hotel
in SI. Louis," said Mr. Houston. "The
colored waiter told a new guest that
Ills landlord seined anything. No de
ference what you ask for, you kin git
it.' said the negro.
" ’Well,' said the guest, ‘bring me s
piece of elephant steak.’
“The negro looked puzzled a min
ute and passed out to the kitchen, but
soon he returned and reported: ‘Boss,
we don’t serve dem except whole. We
ain’t got no pieces.’”
Armistead Out
For Aldermanship
■ ——— «
Printer Announces for Council Place
to Succeed F. J. Spratling
From Seventh.
Jesse Armistead, president of the
Atlanta local of the International
Typographical Union, yesterday an
nounced hts candidacy for Alderman
from the Seventh Ward, to succeed
F. J. Spratling. who has announced
that he will not stand for re-election.
Mr. Armistead is the first candidate
to announce for the fall election, w hen
four Aldermen and ten Gounc|lmen
are to be elected.
Advocates of charter reforms have
announced that they will put out
candidates in the fall. Mr. Armistead
said he was for charter revision, but
not redicat reforms
Ruse Saves Woman
From Indiana Mob
Dressed as Policeman, Slayer of
Youth Is Hurried From Gary
to Escape Violence.
CROWN POINT. IND., May 3 —
Mrs. Grace Smith, dressed In a police
man’s uniform and seated in an auto
mobile, in which were a number of
Gary officers. Mayor Knotts, of that
»ity, end Chief of Poll e Neuman, was
rushed here this afternoon to escape a
mob reported about to lynch her at
the Gary jail. Mrs. Smith a few
nights ago went to Gary "and shot and
shot and killed Clarence Murphy in
the roadhouse of his father.
This afternoon friends of Murphy
met and determined to foe. revenged
on th' woman The would-be lynch
ers endeavored to Intercept the auto
mobile on its way.
’Movies’ Aiding in
Search for Child
Pcture of Missing Girl To Be Flashed
on Screens All Over
Country.
CINCINNATI, May 3!—‘‘Movie” ex
hibitors throughout the United States
will try to find Catherine Winters,
aged 9, of Newcastle, Ind„ daughter
of a prominent physician of that city.
Her picture will be f.ashed on motion
picture screens throughout the coun
try. The girl disappeared from her
home on March 21 and it is believed
she was stolen.
It is believed this is the first time
the motion picture screen has been
used to show pictures of missing per
sons. Police authorities approve of
the plan.
Ex-Senator Bailey
To Defend Glover
More than 1,000 students of the
eighth grades of Atlanta’s publls
schools, with a few selected from the*
seventh grades, will participate in a
folk song concert to be given In the
Auditorium Friday night at 8 o’clock.
Dr. Percy J. Starnes, the Auditorium
organist, will be the accompanist.
Songs of England. Scotland, Wales.
America, with a group of Dixie songs
as a finale, will be sung.
Miss Kate Harralson, director of
music for the Atlanta schools, will
conduct the chorus. She has been,
working for some time on the pro**}
gram. The concert will include th#
following numbers
Songs of England, (a.) "The Box.
Hunt," (b) "Weel May the Keel How ”,
Songs of Scotland, (a) "Flow Gent-1
ly. Sweet Aft on,” Ob) ”Auld Lang*
Syne.”
Folk Songs, (a) "The Blue Bella of;
Scotland,” (b) "My Normandy”—SsvJj
enth grades. *
Songs of Ireland, (a) “Spirit of the*
Summertime,” (b) "Isle of Beauty.” *
Songs of Wales, fa) "’The Rising o!$
the Lark,” tb) "Why Lingers My
Gaze."
Folk Songs, (a) "The Hills of Tyro. ,fr
(b) "Santa. Lucia"—Seventh grade*.
Songs of America, (a) " ’Way Dowr\
Upon de S’wane© Rlbber,’ (b) “Dixie, j
(c) “Home, Sweet Home”—Seventh,
grades of Crew, Edgewood, Formwa'f^
Calhoun. Williams, I^ee, Peeples and
Pryor Schools.
Mental Baseball in
Church on Sunday,
Women Take Part in New Game ak
South Norwalk—Bible Questions
Strike Them Out.
NEW YORK. May 3.—Mental base
ball was the game played Sunday
night by the Juniors and Seniors
of the Baptist Church at South Nor
walk. Conn. The new game is played
with nine on a side. Bible questions
are asked.
When a batter is up and fails to
answer three questions, he is out. It
he answers oneViuestion correctly be- •
fore he makes three misses, he is on
first base. He is forced to second by
the next batter or left on first. When
the bases are full a good batter
brings in a run and a bad one may
retire the side with the bases full.
The Rev. Dr. Hartley umpired. The
players were women with two excep
tions, and the Juniors won by a scon*,
of 8 to 5.
Cat and Dog Start
2 Fires With Tails
Animals Knock Over Lamps In Dif
ferent Houses Within
Two City Squares.
CINCINNATI, May 3. —A cat and
a dog imperiled a whole section of
this city when with a sweep of their
tails they overturned lamps in houses
within two squares of each other and
started fires.
The dog. a big Newfoundland,
barked at two children. He knocked
over a kerosene lamp with his tail.
Simultaneously the cat upset a
lamp. The two fires which resulted
grew rapidly and when the fire d • •
partment. reached the scenes the
blazes had grown to threatening pro
portions.
VISITORS SHOWN SKILL OF
ATLANTA’S BLIND WORKERS
Members of the Susannah W esley Bi-
hl^ class, of Druid Hills, and blind work
ers. in the Georgia Association for the
Blind Broom Factory. 33° Simpson
Street, united Thursday night in a so
cial gathering.
One of the features was a demonstra
tion by the blind of their skill at their
work. Before the gaze of their visitor*,
they made several brooms in record
time.
wreckers,’ He Says.
•apture anywhere.
There are about
a thousand million
chased for The American.
; WINNERS OF BLUE RIBBONS
;
: Coupons for Free Theater Tick
ets Will Be Redeemed When
To-day's Is Clipped.
Heie they come!
Heie is new* of Interest lo the boy*
and girls of Atlanta who have entered,
j or will enter, the pony outfit contest:
Nashville, T*nn., May 3, 1913.
| Th* Sunday American,
Atlanta, Ga.
Leaving to-night after rounding
up twelve beat ponies in Tennes
see. Promise contestants finest
animals to be had anywhere. All
in perfect health and in good shape
for trip.
Whiteside An Expert.
James f Whiteside is an expert in
j horseflesh, who has specialized in po-
I nlos. The Georgian and Sunday
American delegated him to go to the
Blue Grass region of Tennessee and
buy the best twelve Shetland?* he
could find, young, broken to harness
and thoroughly sound.
He telegraphs that he has suc
ceeded.
Middle Tennessee is the great pony
breeding region. Contrary to the gen
eral impression, the Blue Grass belt
is not confined to Kentucky, but ex
tends through the adjoining State. In
deed, the greatest breeding farms, ex
cluding horses* for the race track, are
in Tennessee. A colony of breeders
of Shetland ponies has gathered in
Tennessee and their stock is acknowl
edged the best in the United States.
From these The Georgian and
American’s expert, has chosen the
prizes for our contest, picking little
fellows who trace their ancestry
straight back to the biue^bloods of
the Shetland Isles, where the original
breed was developed.
The ponies soon will be In Atlanta,
if they are not already on the car.
As soon as they arrive they will be
shown on the streets, in order that
every boy and girl in Atlanta may
look them over and be sure that .they
are really worth winning.
Nominations continue to pour into
Tiie Georgian and American offices by
telegraph, by telephone and by mall.
The number now crowd* the century
mark closely.
From such widely .scattered locali
ties as Anderson, S. C., and Piedmont,
Ala., they come, and from almost ev.
ery town in Georgia, to say nothing
of ihe scores of contestants In th“
city.
The subscription books which the
contestants will use in (he contest are
ready. There have been many re
quests for those book" from contest
ants who are anxious to start work at
once, and the news thai they now
may he had in quantities for the ask
ing will be welcome.
Books in Pads of 25.
The hooks are in pads of 25, where
from the subscribers get their re
ceipts and the contestants get the
voucher for their voter.
Meanwhile the coupon® are appear
ing daily in The Georgian, and the
first Sunday coupon, good for fifteen
votes, appears to-day. These cou
pons must be voted within fifteen
days, and most of the contestants are
sending them in at once.
Tiie final coupon, completing the set
wherewith you may get free seats to
the Atlanta Theater, also appears to
day. If you have saved the first three
clip out this fourth coupon and send
it in with the others, and The Geor
gian and American will take pleasure
in presenting you with a seat for a
performance of Miss Billy Long's
stock company.
Standard Oil Ally Will Represent
Banker Arraigned in House
. for Attacking Sims.
WASHINGTON, May 3. When
Charles C. Glover, president of the Riggs
National Bank, appears before the House
on the charge of contempt in attacking
Representative Sims, he will be defended
by Joseph W. Bailey, vtfo was practi
cally drummed out of the Senate on ac
count of his connection with the Stand
ard Oil Company.
Mr. Glover, whose arraignment was
recommended by a select committee of
the I-Iouss, will be called to account im
mediately afler the disposition of the
tariff bill
Charles Frohman Ill !
In His London Hotel
Condition of His Health Causes
Anxiety to His Friends Abroad.
Confined to His Rooms.
—
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON. May 3.—Charles Fro.h-
inan’s health is causing his friends
the greatest anxiety recently.
Since his arrival in London he ha.^
visibly declined. He keeps to his,
room, and recently requested the S«i- i
voy Hotel management to remove him 1
from the suite he has usually occu
pied to a quieter one.
H*> declines to see all callers and .
telephone calls *o bis room are for
bidden.
With Whole Family.
HUSBAND TO PUSH CASE
‘Here’s Chance for Courts to
Make Example of Home-
Sun hats and big aprons on, and arm
ed with rakes and other implements,
Atlanta matrons ate losing beauty
sleep getting up these mornings to
make gardens.
Even Atlanta men. husbands and
brothers, are getting the fever.
Raids that look like bargain days
ai'e being made on greenhouses and
seed stores—and there isn’t a bulb nor
a root or branch that Is safe from
through the summer. 1 didn’t find our
red clay a drawback, as so many peo
ple told me it was."
Country Places Brilliant.
Out at the country places of At
lanta people, the same 1tory of
springtime planting is being re
peated. Mrs. S. D. Felder believes in
The Fulton County Grand Jury is
expected to make a thorough tyobe
this week of the alleged sensational
elopement of John D. Mattlford,
wealthy Atlanta clubman, with Mrs.
Bertha Evelyn Barwick, her mother,
Mrs. Annie Laurie Jeter, and Mrs.
Barwick’s two children. John A.. Jr.,
rosebuds around jn everybody’s gar
dens preparing to open up in a night
into red and yellow and pink and
every other color down to green just
as soon as they get a little older. And
there will be trainloads of phlox and
verbenas and zennlas and other
and Dorothy.
John A. Barwick, the husband, head
bookkeeper for the Exposition Cotton
Mills, yesterday had a long confer
ence with Solicitor General Dorsey,
going into all of the details of the
elopement and laying before him the
numerous soul-mate love letters
found by the husband in his wife’s
writing desk, some of which were
published in la*'t Sunday's American.
Barwick is anxious that both Matti-
ford and Mrs. Jeter be indicted for
kidnaping.
Husband Asks Punishment.
They are being sought now on war
rants taken out in Justice James B.
Ridley’s court.
To an American reporter Barwick
declared he would resort to every pos
sible legal recourse.
In appealing to the law, he said, he
hoped to teach the lesaon that the
< ouris and the law will protect homes
and that other men may find it un
necessary to resort to the "unwritten
law."
Barwick said:
•f have placed my case in the hands
of the law and have appealed for legal
satisfaction, not because it will bring
my family and my home back to rue—
that is out of the question—but that
my example may save some weal
Ionian and some other man from be
coming a murderer in avenging him-
' f.
'If the law upholds me in this* in
stance and severely punishes the
w reckers of my once happy home,
other husbands will know’ that they
« - ah rely on the law. Home wreckers
loo. will know that swift, sure and
.severe punishment will be theirs, and
t-'ney innv be deterred.
* Time for Courts to Act.”
"The history of such cases in the
past, however, 1 will admit, has been
very discouraging. If a man, though
be was a vicious home-wrecker, havi
* little money behind him. he could
get out for a small fine.
"Jt is now time for the courts to set
s new precedent and w arn the hom°-
wrecker that he must go to the peni
tentiary for a long number of years.
If the courts would only make ex
amples of such people as these—the
ones who have blighted my happiness
— they would avoid much of this ‘un
written law’ killing.
"Men have no assurance that the
courts will punish such offenders,
hence they rely on the revolver as a
means of surer vengeance. I easily
could have killed that man Mattlford
on more than one occasion, but I re
frained. Now’, I have appaled to the
courts, and it i9 up to them to deter
mine whether they will discourage
‘unwritten law’ tragedies.
"If the laws themselves are not
sufficient, they should be strength
ened.”
Stayed by Mother’s Influence.
Barw’ick said that it was the influ
ence of his mother, now deceased, that
prevented him from slaying his rival,
end prompted him to appeal to the
courts.
“My mother always taught me to bo
peaceable and to shun all that was
wicked.” said Barwick, “and her influ
ence has guided me throughout this
tragedy of my home. Whenever i
would feei nat I ought to go out witn
a pistol and riddle the man who stole
my wife's love from me. my mother’®
influence would stay my hand. 1
could never make up my mind to
shoot.
"Of course, my home and my wife s
Jove are gone forever—I'm done with
her—but I Gust that I may be the
means of saving some other home."
Clerk Steals Money
to Assist Churches
Howard John Didn’t Gamble. Didn t
Drink, but Robbed Employers
for Charity Work.
kV.CT©
•v
things—for old-time flowers are lead
ing the vanguard of popularity this
season.
When the girl reporter rang the
phone at a dozen places she found
the houses deserted for the gardens,
and everybody too busy to come In
side and talk.
At the home of Mrs. Phinizy Cal
houn a voice that sounded like it be
longed to an old negro mammy of
long standing said:
“Mis’ Calhoun say she cain’t speak
to you jes’ now. She’s busy plantin’
flowers outside."
“That’s just what I wanted,” chirp
ed the girl reporter. "Run out and
tell her I’m writing a garden story
and want to know about hers. Ask
her if she's going to have some old-
fashioned flowers, and what she’s do-
i«g out there, anyhow.”
Long pause while mammy went and
came back.
"Mis' Calhoun say she's killin’
wurms,” said mammy.
"Did you ask her about the flowers
she’s going to have?" questioned the
reporter.
Mammy's broad smile of a mission
fulfilled made itself heard over the
Both Kinds Planted.
CAMDEN, N. J., May 3.—Howard
John, formerly oromlnent in church
work, pleaded guilty of embezzling,
*1.000 from a Arm by which he had j ••Yes'um,” she said, “I ast her. She
been employed, most of which, it is sav s , )e g Nv j n e ter hab some of both
said, was applied to charitable use.-. ^ sort g_ ( ] 0 ole-fashion kind and de
new-fashion kind, too.”
Mrs. Shirley Brooks was planting
Although a representative of the firm)
that mere/ be extended, John
as sentenced to an imprisonment of
uot 1"SS than eighteen months nor
ijioro than seven years.
The representative of the fttrn said
she young man lound it easy to get
away with a small amount of money
and finally he "lunged deeply, fie
old not gamble and he did not drink.
He. however, applied the money to
help build tempi,. of worship and tc
help his fellow man.”
Called to Fire, Finds
Own Family Dead
SAN FRANCISCO, May 3.—When
Police Sergeant George H. Schall re
sponded to an alarnV in Tennessee
Hollow to-niglit be found it was his
own home that was in flame? and
that his wife and three children hud
b^en trapped and burned to death.
Mrs. Schall, who was a paralytic,
had been left alone with the children.
Tn7 of them had the croup. The
Eldest, 8 years old, poured oil on the
fli«. An explosion followed.
nasturtiums in cunning little rows by
the side of her walk when the girl re
porter got out to her home on Third
Street, into which she has moved for
the summer.
"I think everybody ought to have a
garden," she said, sowing the seeds
carefully so as not to get them too
thick. "Even if they haven’t got but
enough space to dig a hole, they can
plant something in that if it’s nothing
but a cypress vine. Flowers do help
the looks of a place so.”
She told the reporter that she is go-
• ing to.have a regular little grass lawn
in the back where she can drag out
big chairs and plenty of sofa pillows
i n th*' summertime. There will be
hollyhocks all along the back fence,
big boxes of bright-colored flowers on
the front porch and morningglories
over the yard walls and upon the sides
of the house.
• It's a mistake for people to think
a person has to be experienced to grow
flowers,” Mrs. Brooks declared. "Last
year was my first try-out, bid 1 hud
splendid success. All I did was to
Pave the ground well broken up and.
[fertilized. Then I was careful to wa
iter the plants morning and afternoon
hardy flowers, and the ground around
her home on Howell Mill Road Is all
ready for sowing a variety of sweet-
old-tim^y things.
"I jiaven’t any system about plant
ing my flowers," she told the reporter
as she was busily cutting the weeds
down among her loses. “I just throw'
the seeds out broadcast and let them
come up where they will, like wild
flowers. I love to see them blooming
ten feet away from a bed.’’
She had petunias already open, and
out next to the road rows of violets
framed a triangle where salvia this
summer will make a bright red patch
of color.
Mrs. J. M. High is laying plans
for a pretty garden for her new place
out on Peachtree Road. While it’s
going to be a bit formal in style, if
will have a rustic fountain, and spice
pinks and bachelor buttons are go
ing to have their own little corner
in it somewhere.
If you wander down by the sun
dial In Mrs. W. S. W’itham’s yard
this summer, notice the four-o’clocks.
She’s planted them already and they’ll
be coming up soon. Along in June
the whole place will be abloom with
a riot of pink roses, fairly covering
the porches and pergolas. She will
also have sweet peas. Her snowball
trees are now a/ mass of white. Later
there will be quantities of peonies.
"My garden is always such a com
fort to me," she told the reporter.
"And this spring particularly I have
spent hours in It every day. There is
always something so restful about
flowers. ’
Long-Ago Blooms Her*.
Sweet Williams and cockscomb
and other long-ago blooms are among
the simple things that Mrs. Harry
Atkinson has planted this spring,
which will add a quaint touch to her
formal garden. Carnations grown in
her own conservatory this winter
turned out excenfionaily well.
Mrs. Robert Maddox ha.® also added
other plants and flowers to her
grounds and gardens, so beautiful at
any season of the year.
Pansies are looking up—great beds
of them—out at the home of Miss
Ellen Peters, but Mrs. E. L. Con
nelly’s golden fields of daffodils and
jonquils at West End are almost
gone.
"There were literally thousands or
them,” she said, sneaking of how lux
uriantly they grew. "Every day-
dozens of people stopped to admire
them and wanted to buy. But T have
never sold them—-I love the oppor
tunity of giving them away too much.
I call that my cup of cold water."
Another home garden enthusiast is
Colonel Willis E. Ragan, of 574
Peachtree Street. He is amply jus
tified in his enthusiasm, too, because
his hyacinths and tulips during the
early spring are without contest the
most gorgeous sight in Atlanta. But
no Atlantan finds greater pleasure in
the sight and fragrance of the hya
cinths than their owner.
None So Satisfactory.
"There is no plant so satisfactory
none so fragrant, none so easy to
produce, none so beautiful.” he said
yesterday, when he stood in his gar
den. which represents his own labor.
Aided by his butler and his chauffeur,
he set out the plants himself, as he
does every fall. *1,000 or 8,000 of them.
“Personal attention and personal
work is the secret of all garden suc
cess,” he said. He is not afraid to be
seen, armed with pick and shovel, in
full sight of the Peachtree parade.
Colonel Ragan sets his bulbs anew
every year, getting them from Hol
land. Every variety and shade is in
his garden, mingling with a glorious
blaze of color when the plants are in
bloom.
Colonel Ragan voiced an earnest
recommendation to every Atlanta
householder to plant tulips. And they
all would, maybe, if they were as
sured of the success that marks his
labors.
Woman’s Eye Worth
$25,000, Says Jury
Husband Awarded $5,000 By Same
Body For Logs Of Wife's
Services.
NEW YORK, May 3.—A jury
awarded $25,000 to Mrs. Mae I. Pet ; -
son in the Supreme Court before Jus
tice Platzel. Tiie verdict was against
the Ocean Electric Railway Company,
which operate® cars between Rocka-
wav Beach and Far Rockaway.
The same jury awarded to Ernest
E. Peterson $5,000 for loss of Mis
wife’s services. Mrs. Peterson w'a t
run into by a car of the defendant
company at Tent City on September
I, 1909. The sight of her right eve
was . destroyed. A deco dent in th
side of her skull remained after th*
injury'.
K Guaranteed Fresh Country
EGGS
16
x /l
Cts.
Doz.
Case 16c Doz. 5 Cases 1544c Doz.
Meadow Gold A J
Butter,Pound vlv
Purity Eutterine 1714c
Breakfast Bacon lb 12^c
40c Coffee lb 28c
30c Pure Coffee lb 22c
80c Tea lb 39c
Cash Grocery Co.
111-120 Whitebait
t