Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 05, 1913, Image 2

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THE ATT. A XT \ GEORGIAN AND NEWS (tops «hp Ret there? A. About, 6 :30. nere when you Rot up? A. Yes Rip did you leave the house? A. Around 8 o'clock, vou Bee before you left the house? My wife see Mr. or Mrs. uot see Mrs. Se- ’ sure whethtr 1 saw foot. ltd yen odltie t0 town? ear line? A 1 have the vo lines I do not remem- Re I took, at lines are there? A The Street and the Oeorata lines 1 don’t recall which id. ^Dld you talk to any one on the A. I don't remember. What time did you arrive at factory'* A About 8:26. Who wa* at the factory? A. I way, the day watchman, and the |ffl. • boy. whose nRme ia Alonzo fann Q Was the front door locked -1 A. No Q. Where was Holliway? A By the time clock on the second floor, hie usual place Q Were Holliway and the office hoy the only persons there? A From all I remember. Q Do you remember that any one was back about the machinery? A. I don't know of any one being there. Tell* of Employes’ Arrival, cj How long arter you arrived was It before others came in'* A. I don't know' exactly, but think it was about half an hour. Several persons * ame in for pay envelopes. One man a me in for his son’s envelope and another for his step-son’s envelope. One was Jimmy Graham's father. Q. Waa It a half or a whole holi- dav" \ It was Memorial Day and the factory force had been grented a whole holiday The office force was jo report for the handling of orders. Q. Did‘any girls come in for their pay envelopes*’ A. Nettie Smith got hers and her sister's. q. Did > ou w ait on them? A Yes. Q. Were there any others In the -office the time? A. 1 don’t remem- )»er Q Was there a clerk in the of fice? A. The place of the clerk is • acan' . but It was being taken by one iif the^j^Hcsinen. Herbert Schiff. I n tjjer whether or not lie t the 11me 1 paid A. I talked several minutes with Darley and Campbell. q. Did you do Anything at all on the financial sheet? A No. Delves Into Buaineaa Details. Coroner Donohoo here questioned Frank at length on each detail of his work in the office at the factory' during the forenoon of Saturday, April 26. and as to the manner the financial sheets and cost sheets of the company were made up Coroner Donehoo asked: "Did you make out the financial sheets Saturday?” A. Yes Q In your own handwriting? A. Yes Q. When did you make it out? A. Saturday afternoon. Q What date would that sheet bear? A Thursday. Q Why didn't you make it out Thursday? A. Didn't know the pay roll. Q Why didn’t you make out the financial sheet in the morning? A There were too many other things to be dona. Q How many orders were there on April 26? A. I think about eleven. Q Did you go to Montag Broth ers' Saturday? A. Yes. Q. How long were you there Until nbout 11 o’clock. Daniea Drinking With Darley. Q Did any one go with you? A. No. Q Didn’t Mr Darley go down to Cmikshank’s ami have a drink with you? V No. Q. Who waa at the office when you returned? A Miss Hall, the stenographer, and the office boy. Q. How old is the office boy? A. About 15 or 16 Coroner Donoiioo asked Frank Q Xfter Mary Phagan left Satur day, did any one come into the of fice'* A Yes. there was one person whom I have not mentioned up to this time. In fact. 1 did not remem ber it until 1 had thought over the matter considerably. 1 knew that he had been in the office, but could not recall until a day or two ago the exact time. \ Visitad by LarrmPa Quinn. Q. Who nyas this? A. Lemmie Quinn Q. Is this the first occasion you have thought of it? A. No, 1 have thought of it several times. Q. What did he do? A He came into the office and said: ’Good morn ing" He said: "You see you cant keep me away from the factory even on holidays." T merely said: Yes.” or something like that. He sa'd he saw 1 was quite busy, or that he wouldn’t detain me or something like that. Then he went out. Q. What were you doing at the time he came In? A. Transcribing orders. Q. Wliai time was he there? A About 12:25. How long after the girl had been there? A Nearly fifteen mln- Krte* Q Where did Quinn go? A He nt out of th^ office and I heard k whether he or A. About 12.10 the little girl who was killed came in. Q Was any onc with her when she came In?—A. No. Q. Did you hear her talk to any one a* she name in?—A No. Q. How did she announce wernelf? A. I think she asked for her pay. q How did you get her pay en velope?— A. J asked her what hrr number waa. Q. Do you remember her number? —A No Q. Have you looked up her number | since her death?—A Yes, but 1 don’t remember what it was. Q Did ahe say anything else? A. Yes as she was going out Hhe stopped, turner! and asked me if the metal had come. Q Did you check the pn\ roll after paying her?—No. We never do that Q Where was »he w hen she asked about the metal?—A She was in the outer office near the door. Q. Did she call back as an after thought? A. It seemed like an aft- erthought. Q. What was the amount of her envelope? A. One dollar twenty, 1 think. Q. How waa It made tip.’ A. She had worked part of the Friday, part of the Saturday and part of the Monday previous. Q Do you remember how the pay was given her? A. I do not remem ber the denominations, as the en velopes were sealed. Heard Steps Die Away. When she < ame In to get her pay, that disturbed your work, did it not? A. Yes. for a minute or two. Q. Where did she go when she left the office? A. I heard her footsteps dying away. Q. Did you know her name? A. No. but her face was familial*. Q How was she dressed? A 1 don't remember. Q. Was her dress light or dark” A. What I sn v: of it I think it was light. Q. Did she wea r a hat ? A I don’t remember, but think she did. Q. Was it straw? A. I couldn't say. Q. What did she do with the mon ey? A I don’t know. Q Dia you notice whether she had a parasol or not? A I don’t remem ber seeing one. Q What time did she come in? A. I don’t know exactly, it was 12.10 or 12:16 Q How long did it take you to pay her? A. Two minutes Q How did you Identify her? A. Just took her number. Q. Was her name on the envelope? A. I don’t remember, but it should have been. Said He He*rd Girl’s Voica. Q tsid any one else come in be tween 12 and 12:15? A. No. but as sha went out I heard a girl's voice as Mary was walking down the steps. I don’t know what was said. I just hs*rd a girl’s vo'ce talking. Q. Don’t you remember that you made an entry on the pay roll after paylnR her? A No. Q Had the metal of which Mary Phagan sprike come at that time? A. I don’t think It has come yet. Q How does it get to the factory? A On a dray. Q How do you know when it conies in? A. The chief clerk checks it in. Denits Sending Girl Back. Q Do you know off-hand when that metal copies In? A. Yes. and 1 In this Instance particularly, because we wen* short. Q. You are sure you didn't send the little girl back to see whether it had come In, are you? A. 1 did not. Q. IMd you ask Schiff about it? A. No, because I would know about it. Q. How do you fix the time that she came in as 12:10 or 12:15? A. Because the other people left nt 12 and 1 judged it to be ten or fifteen minutes later when she came in. Q Were you out of the office from the time the whistles blew at 12 until the time that Mary came in? A. No. Q. Were, you out of the office from the time Mary left until the time Quinn came in? A. No. Q. Was Quinn foreman of the tip ping plant. A. Yes Thinks He Left Plant. Q. Did Mary work under him’’ A. Yes Q How was Quinn dresaed? A. I don’t remember. Q Had he been working Saturday? A. No Q. Did he have on overalls? A. No. he was dressed up. Q. Had he been working all the week until Saturday** A Yes Q. What on" V Fixing machinery and the like. There was some metal that he could work on Q Did he go down stairs when he left your office? A. I don’t know hut i think he went out. 1 heard his footsteps die away. Q. llow old is Quinn? A He is 25 or 80 Q. How long lias he been with the National Pencil Oompanv ? A Three or four years. Q. Is he married? A Yes Q. Wiiat time was* it when he left? A. About 12:25. Q. What were you working* on when Quinn left " A. Getting ready to go to work on the financial sheet. Q. Do you remember what papers you got together? A. One of them was a production sheet Q How much is there of that? A It Is a big sheet 14x30 inches and shows the w hole week’s production. Q. Anything else? A. I looked over it for some time to *ee if it waa cor rect. Q You hadn't left the building since M19P Hall left about 12 o'clock? A. No About 1 o’clock l got read' to go home and found Arthur White and Harry Denham and Mrs. White up stairs. Hold them that 1 was go ng home to lunch and they said they would stay and finish work. Mrs. White said she wanted to go. 1 aft erward went down, put on niv coat and went out. When Did Watchman Leave? Q. What time did the day watch man gc? A. I don't know exactly. Q. When you went upstairs how long did you stay? A. About two minutes Q. When you came back what did you do? A. Put on my coat, locked the door and went out. Q DjA^^i lock any other door ex- cept^g^^Hh'p door” No. A trifle after o'clock, jjay watchman stay ht watchman but Sat- early Hugh Dorsey, Solicitor General, on left, and Judge W. D Ellis. The former is hard at work on the Phagan case. The latter has charged the Grand Jury to probe the slaying thor oughly. Coroner’s Jury Likely to Hold Both Prisoners In the following story will be found the developments in the Pha gan case up to the time the inquest was resumed Monday afternoon: It is said, but without authority, that a great deal of very important evidence has been accumulated, but that it will not be presented at the Coroner's inquest. Instead, it will go directly into the hands of So licitor Dorsey, who, as the chief prosecuting officer of Fulton County, is really In charge of the case now, although it has never been the duty of a prosecuting officer to interfere with the functions of the Coroner. May Hold Both Lee and Frank. It seems probable that both Frank and Lee will be held for the Grand Jury. The testimony brought out at the Coroner’s Inquest will be turned over to Solicitor Dorsey, who wl'I study it carefully and make such fur ther investigations as he may deem necessary, using the detective force of the city for that purpose. Judge Fills of the Superior Court on Monday instructed the May Grand Jury to investigate the mystery in a thorough manner. It is not likely, however, that the Grand Jury will take up the case for several days. The matter of presenting evidence on which indictments may l- found is ; n the hands of Solicitor Dorsey. H° lias charge of the Grand Jury, and it is lie who presents the Evidence and v\ho frames the indictments, and it may take him several days .o strengthen tain links in the chain of evidence, so that when indictmen.3 are brought they will be found to he legally correct and will leave no op portunity for the lawyers engaged by the accused to make objections ir court. It is the intention of Solicitor Dor sey to keep secret all evidence in his possession until the matter has been passed upon by the Grand Jury, in dictments found and the case brought to trial. Frank Maintains His Innocence. Everything depends upon what transpires al the Coroners inquest. Frank’s testimony may make neces sary an entirely new deal of the cards He still maintains his innocence, and Lawyer Rosser, his counsel, declares that there is no evidence by which to connect him with the case. Coroner Donehoo will hold a con ference with Chief of Detectives Lan- ford and Solicitor Dorsey before the inquest to decide upon the witnesses who will be asked to testify. In addition to Lee and Frank, the detectives will have on hand persons they have been Interrogating since the inquest adjourned last Thursday. Sev eral of these are said to have made disclosures of great importance Dorsey’* Action Misconstrued. There seems to be a misapprehen sion in the public mind about the at titude of Solicitor Dorsey. Rumors on the streets and gossip in newspapers that he “has taken the Phagan case out of the hands of the police and out of the control of the Coroner” is not true, for the very simple reason that Mr. Doreey Is the chief prosecuting officer of Fulton County, superior to the police, the detectives and the Cor oner. He may act with them or inde pendently of them. As Solicitor he is the most important official in the county government, more powerful than the Mayor or the Police Com mission. The Phagan case is in the hands of Mr. Dorsey now-, as it has been from the beginning. The function of the Coroner's office is simply to gather testimony and evi. dence that is turned over to the So licitor for him to act upon. Statement by Solicitor* Solicitor Dorsey made this state ment: “Air. Scott, of the Pinkertons, has given to this office valuable informa tion. The policy of the Pinkertons is to establish the truth They recog nize that this office will receive from them to that end any information they have, but under no circum stances do they expect to get any in formation we have gathered from other sources.” ing this work? A. I think he gets a round sum of so much per week. Q. Did you excuse him Saturday? A. No, I haven’t seen him for tw’o weeks. Q. Is the front door usually locked or open when Walter is there? A. It is generally open. Q. Then any one could go in there at any time and you would not know it? A. Yes. Q Has it ever been true that you were alone there before? A. Yes. Q. Where did you go after leav ing the building” A. Up Forsyth Street to Alabama. 1 think it was a Washington Street car. Q. Do you remember any one on the car? A No. Q. Where did you get off the car? A. Georgia Avenue and Washington Street. ‘Straight Home.” Q. Where did you go then? A. Straight home q. Whom did you see at your home? A. My mother-in-law and wife were going to the matinee of the grand opera and had eaten their lunch. My father-in-law* and myself ate lunch together. Q. Who served the lunch? A. The servant. Q What did you do after eating? A IJt a cigarette and lay down to take a nap. Q. Who was there at the time” A. My father-in-law went down to the hack yard to look at the chickens. Q. Did he come back before you woke up? A. No, T got up and left before he came back. Q How long were you asleep? A. Only a short time. 1 hardly went to | sleep at all Q What time did you leave home? A It must have been about IU min utes of 2 o’clock. Q. Did you see any one when you eft the house? A. Yes. I saw Je rome Michael and his mother and walked up to Glenn street and spoke to them Q Did any car pass you going to town? A. No. Q. What car did you catch- at what time? A. It must have been the 2 o'clock car. Q Did you know any one on the car? A Ye^. a cousin of my wife's. Mr. Ix>eb Q Where did you leave the car? A The streets were blocked on ac count of the parade and 1 got off at Hunter Street adn walked. Lid you speak to any one on feet. A No. I walked down eel and saw* the pa- corner of Whitehall and Alabama and bought some cigars and a package of cigarettes. Q Do you >«rnoke cigars or cigar ettes? A. Sometimes cigars and sometimes cigarettes. Q. Where did you go next? A. To the factory. ^ Q Where did you cross Forsyth Street? A. J don't remember. Q. Did you unlock the door? A. Yes. Q What time was it? A, 1 don’t know exactly, but about 3 o’clock. Q What did you do then? A. Went up to see about the two men I had locked in. They were fixing to go home. 1 told them 1 was back and then went to the office. A few* minutes later i heard the bell on the clock ring and these boys (ame in. White borrow’ed $2 from me. and I remember I joked him about needing money so soon after pay day and he replied that his wife had robbed him that morning Q How did you know it was White's wife when you went upstairs before leaving for lunch? A. Earlier in the day she was in the office and told me that she was White's wife and wanted to se White. 1 told her to go upstairs and see him. Q. 1 thought you said there were no outsiders there? A. That’s right— it is true that she was there. Q. How long does it take to make the financial statement? A. About an hour and a half. It took longer on Saturday or account of Thurs day’s entries not having been made. Council Ignores New Woodward Charges No Official Attention Will be Paid to Pipe Alarm Accuaations—Mayor Threatens Court. Council will approve the report of the investigating committee exoner ating all city officials of charges cf graft, it was declared Monday. Both committees were in session up to 3 o’clock drafting the reports, and a', the members were agreed*. The re ports will be read Monday afternoon. Mayor Woodward's new bitter crit- iearns of excess charges on the new Are alarm system will pass without formal official attention from Council. Mayor Woodward himself said he ex pected no action from Cojncil. "The only way I have of making • . effective fight is to refuse to sign th- k for the first payment on the and atr the matter m cour’." 1 don’t expect to get ant “ from Council cn these t They can't afford tf one." . _ hetb- take his fire jalar t court. JURY TO PROBE Judge W. D. Ellis, of the Superior Court, delivered the following ad dress tr> the new Grand Jury, and touched upon the Phagan case: “Under our system of judicial pro cedure. we have in the Superior Court of this county six term 3 each year. Grand juries are drawn and impaneled at each term, but the du ties of making investigations into matters of a general nature, such as the" inspection of the offices, the boolfs. papers and records of the Clerk of the Superior Court, of the Ordinary and cf the County Treas urer, the duty of examination of pub lic buildings and their condition, the examinations of the lists of voters, and tho examination of convict camps, the inspection of the jail and such other matters concerning the public welfare, the peace and good order of the county at large, are re quired at the March and September terms. “While such matters are looked after by the grand jurie of the terms named, yet you are not pro hibited from inquiring into such mat ters if you deem it necessary, or if brought to your attention by the court or the Solicitor General. Cites Violation of Liquor Law. “You are impaneled at this the May term specially to inquire into and take action upon cases of viola tion of the penal code. While you are to consider all violations of the law', and bring to trial by presentment or indictment all who are probably guilty of crime. I will call your spe cial attention to some matters. “Look to the violation of the law against the sale of intoxicating liq uors. Find true bills against all who conduct clubs, which are run for the purpose of selling liquor. Un der the law, locker clubs can be oper ated. but if a club is organized or maintained for the purpose of mak ing money by the sal? of intoxicating liquors, those who operate or main tain it are violators of the law “If a locker club, organized for so cial pleasure, Is conducted as such an organization, it is permitted that the members may keep liquor as a part cf the social establishment: but if the sale of intoxicating liquor is the pur pose and the social feature only an excuse for the organization or opera tion. then those who run such an al leged club are guilty and should oe brought to trial. Defines Tippling Houses. “I want again to call your special attention to keeping open tippling nouses on the Sabbath day. Every club, no matter how well organized and operated within the law*, ie a tip pling house if the members are per mitted to assemble there on Sunday and drink intoxicating liquors. Even a private citizen would be guilty of keeping a tippling house on the Sab bath day if he allows his friends and neighbors to assemble in his parlor and drink* intoxicating liquors on Sunday, and this would be true even if he furnished the liquor free or al lowed those who assemble to bring it with them. J charge you to look closely into this matter. "I wish to invite your careful at tention to the lave against carrying concealed weapons. No man, under the law r . has a right to carry a con cealed weapon. Officers of the law may openly carry them and private persons may carry them openly oy obtaining a license, but nobody has a right to carry a deadly weapon con cealed. This is a free country, and life and person ought to be safe in It. “Good people do not go armed, but the vicious and desperate do go armed. The good citizen is certainly as cour ageous as the bad, and he is entitled to walk in the pathways of life with out being at the disadvantage of be ing shot down by some cow'ardly vil lain w'ho walks about armed and equipped' for slaughter. Law Bars “Gun Toters.” “If all men are to have an equal showing, all ought to be allowed to go armed or all ought to be compelled to go about unarmed. The law has decided which equality shall exist, and it declares that no man shall go about with concealed Nveapons and none shall carry* pistols even openly unless he shows some reason for it and publicly procures a license. “It is claimed that public houses of prostitution have been abated In this county. Of course, it is desirable that prostitution should cease, but the abatement of the evil of lewd houses in known localities makes it most probable that assignation houses will spring up, and that the illicit intercourse will be shifted from known localities to dark and secret places. “A thousand such cases are not in the aggregate so revolting as one case of seduction of a virtuous girl or the rape and murder of little Mary Pha gan. 1 charge you to look carefully and deliberately into all these mat ters. and especially to investigate sus pected places of assignation or houses or places run for the purpose of pros titution under the name of rooming houses “The Mary Phagan case calls for your immediate and vigorous attention. The power of the State is behind you. What ap pears to bo an awful crime has been committed and the welfare of the community, the good name of Atlanta, public justice and the majesty of the law demand af the hands of this Grand Jury and of all officers of tho law the most searching investigation and the prompt bringing to trial of the guilty party. “This is a good community* There are thousands of intelligent nd law- abiding people, a vast majority of our people are good and virtuous, but, like all other communities, there are bad people in it. The reputation and The American-Georgian Pony Contest Vote Coupons Hearst’s Sunday American and Atlanta Georgian PONT CONTEST YOTE COUPON. MONDAY. MAY 5, 1913 GOOD FOR 5 VOTES Voted for Address Voted by CARRIERS’ AND AGENTS’ BALLOT. Hearst’s Sunday American and Atlanta Georgian PONY CONTEST VOTE COUPON, MONDAY, MAY 5, !9|3 GOOD FOR 5 VOTES Voted for I.... Address Voted by SCHOOL BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ BALLOT. PIKEVILLE. KY., May 5.—The story of how a 16-year-old girl, in an effort to end the moonshining ca reer of her two brothers, caused two deaths and the serious wounding of another man, was told in official dis patches to the Government authori ties to-day. The girl, Ardelia Hall, went to Deputy United States Marshal Mark Porter, in Pikeville, Ky., and told him where her brothers were running a moonshine whisky still at Blue Notch, in the mountains, and offered to lead a party of officers to the spot. Porter swore in John Sloan, of Pikeville. and Marion Ramey, of Elk- horn City, Kv., as deputies and. led by the girl, went to the still. They were destroying the apparatus when fired on from ambush by Solo- man Hall, Dave Hall and Tom Rid dle, a negro. Sloan and Ramey fell dead and Porter was seriously wounded. Por ter returned the fire, using Sloan’s re volver, until he became unconscious. The moonshiners seized the girl and were dragging her toward the Virginia State line when she broke away and, catching Porter’s horse, rode into Elkhom City and spread the alarm. A posse is searching the moun tains for the moonshiners, and a bat tle is expected if they are overtaken. ■ Cure for Stomach Disorders 1 ' Disorders of the stomach may be avoided by the use of Chamber lain's Tablets. Many very remark able cures have been effected by $ these tablets. Sold by all dealer®. White City Park Now Oppn ft progress of Atlanta attracts to it large numbers of people from all parts of the country'. a °d some of the worst people from other places come here and add themselves to the bad element of our county. Let the Grand Jury get after the bad element. You indict all violators of the law in Fulton County and the court will see that speedy trials will follow and that certain punishment will be in flicted on the guilty. Should Not Exploit CHme. “I do not sympathize with the com mon cry that humanity is all bad. 1 do not believe that the tendency of humanity is for the bad. I believe that it is unfair to cry out in a sort of wail of despair because crime is committed. I doubt if the holding out to public view' of all the. frailties of the human tide is conducive to the public good. “There is no perfect community anywhere, and probably never will be upon the face of this world of ours; but in trying to elevate and promote good citizenship, in .’.Tying to suppress crime and disorder, we should not be led into the error 0/ bringing reproach upon the people of one of the best communities in the world by exploit ing the misdeeds of a few*. "Jjet us rather contend for reaching to the high lev^el of honesty and virtue and at the same time ferret out and punish the guilty who are upon us, and who, by their conduct, violate the laws which condemn the vicious and which give praise to and provide for the well-being and safety of the good Recalls Oath of Socreoy. "I w^nt to remind you of your duty as to/matters which occur in tiie GranY Jury room. Your oath is to keep/secret the State's counsel, your fellofrs’ and your own. unless called on [0 give evidence thereof in a court of (justice. *‘The object of the law is to allow the utmost freedom in the Grand Jury room, in making honest and fair in vestigations. It is bad faith, and a violation of his oath, for a grand juror to tell what transpires in their delib erations. but it is not an uncommon thing for the general public to be in formed of things that transpire during the Investigation of alleged crimes. “Look to this, and if there is a vio lation of it. you should investigate, find out who has betrayed the confi dence reposed, and report to the court the offending person.” A ext week. Beautiful Bedding Plants, 3c each. Atlanta Floral Co., 555 E. Fair Street. CO TO MERGER Bequeathing the bulk of her estate, amounting from $115,000 to $120,0d , to Mercer University, the will of the late Mrs. Barbara C. Dodd, who diet! here April 30, was tiled for probate in the Fulton County Court of Ordtnhvy M on day. To the Grady Memorial Hospital Mrs. Dodd bequeathed the proceed® of a $2,000 fur. I for the maintenance <f the infants’ ward at the hospital. This amount was left in trust with the Central Bank and Trust Corporation, together with a like amount for 'he Georgia Baptist Orphanage at Hap.* ville. A sum of $1,600 was left in trust for the maintenance of her grave, any excess in its earnings to go to Mer cer. Mrs. Fannie T Ackerman, of New York, sister of Mrs. Dodd, receives $5,000 outright, while her brother, Henry E. Dibble, of Campbell County, was left the earnings of $5,000 placed in trust with C. E. Currier, executor of the estate. Barbara E. Dibble. <1 niece, living in Montgomery, receives $2,00t) and a handsome marquis ring set with nine diamonds. All her ether jewelry is to be sold by the Central Bank and Trust C •- poration, the proceeds to go to :h * Home for Old Women in Atlanta. This will amount to several thousand dollars. The remainder of the Dodd estate is bequeathed to Mercer Uni verst: y. which, it is estimated, will com;..»•?#«* an immediate donation of practically $100,000. At the death of her brother an additional $5,000 will go to the Baptist college, it having been made residuary beneficiary. Mrs. Dodd was the widow of Philip Dodd, a wealthy wholesale grocer of Atlanta, reputed as a man of great wealth. She had but the two near rel atives. None of their children, except the niece in Montgomery, was naified as beneficiary in the will. It ie said that in 1909 Mrs. Dodd destroyed a will by which she had- bequeathed most of her property to relatives. ATLANTA ALL THIS WEEK Eicepi Wrtneisty Might THEATER Miss BILLY LONG Wed antf $»< Company In The Qirl From Out Yonder «IT WEEK-’’Are Tou a tiffcts lie to 50e Seats—Wttfaniajr f m 1 Our Christmas Saving Club Is Still Open By special request we have extended the time for a few days longer, and have ordered new supplies. But when these supplies are exhausted, the Club must close. Join today and avoid disappoint ment. A nickel will start you. Travelers Bank & Trust Co. Peachtree at Walton —J