Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 10, 1913, Image 5

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5 V • / THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 10. 101,*,. Has 18,535 Votes,but When Analyzed, There is Nothing in That to Fright en Other Contestants. Many Have “Something Up Their Sleeves.” Frank Ison, of College Park, has the best start in The Georgian and American’s content for the pony outfits. He had 18.5S6 votes yesterday. Probably ho has many more to-day. Fannie Cook, 488 Pulliam Street, has 6,600, and Florence Greenoe, 387 Pulliam Street. hAi 6,046—there’s a close race in District No. i. In District No. 1 are George Rosser, 21 Bast Sixteenth Street, with n.24o votes, and Miss Margaret L#ewis, 26 Baltimore Block, with 4,500 votes—another close race. Then there is a considerable number with 2,000 and 3,000 yotes. All this may seem discouraging to the boy or girl who ha« simply the original, which goes with the nomination, It should not be, h#w- ever. Look at Frank Ison's lead, for instance, He has 18,586 votes. Take off 1,000 for the nomination. That leaves 17,636. Five yearly subscrip tions to The Georgian and American would yield 17,600. The 35 more which make up the total may represent the coupons clipped from the daily Issues of the paper. You can get five yearly subscriptions to The Georgian and American in no time at all, can’t you? Then you will have done as well as Frank Ison. The only difference is that h e, very wisely, has made a flying start. We predicted yesterday that th e votes polled by the contestants will leap up by thousands at a clip. W atch and see if they do not. The names of contestants and their sta nding will be published frequently that they may know how they an d their rivals are getting along. DI8TRICT NUMBER ONE. George Rosser -Miss Margaret Lewis- Jas. O. Godard Jacob Patterson Hillmann McCall Wyman Conard Lottie Mae Dedman ... Wm. Bisele Yoland Gwin Harold Holsombach . T. L. Hosliall, Jr. ... Mollie Lee Kendall Roy Mauldin Andrew May Jas. A. Murray Janet Oxenham Josephine Simril Albert Smith Dorothy Stiff Kdgar Watkins. Jr. .. . Willie Ivey Wiggins . .. Norman .Caldwell Vera Nelle Brantley . . Miss Louise McCrary Miss Sadie King Glenn Moon Eugene Morgan H ugh EL Luttrell ...... Miss Estelle Sullivan . . Miss Frankie J. Smith Miss Mildred Stewart Miss Gaynell Phillips Miss Mary E. Peacock . .21 East Sixteenth 5245 .25 Baltimore Block 4500 . 105 Fowler Street . / 2610 .574 West Peachtree Street 2600 .365 Luckie Street 1615 .63 West Cain Street 1000 . 60 Lovejoy Street ... 10 >0 . 42 Mills Street 1000 .373 Spring Street tOOO .386 Luckie Street 1000 .82 West Br.'er Street 1000 .105 Mills Street 10 )J . 131 Spring Street 1030 .62 West Baker Street 1000 . Imperial Hotel 1000 .47 Blast Eleventh Street 10 3 .9 East Alexander Street 1090 .358 Peachtree Street lOJO . f7 Grant Place 1000 . 602 West Peachtree Street 1000 .41 B. Tumlin Street 1115 .98 East Pine Street 1000 .31 Bast Alexander Street 1000 .78 East North Avenue 1000 .53 East Twelfth Street ........ 1000 .9 Ashland Avenue 1000 .574 West Peachtree Street 1000 .75 East Twelfth Street 1030 .4 West Peachtree Street 1000 . 198 West Peachtree Street 1600 .196 Ivy Street 1000 .85 Luckie Street 1090 .82 Simpson Street 1000 DISTRICT NUMBER TWO. Miss Lottie McNair 1250 DeKaib Avenue 4870 Ray Warwick 172 Angier Avenue 2910 Miss Mildred Brirkman 48 Kirkwood Road 2685 Edmund Hurt . 785 Piedmont Avenue 2125 Miss Edith Gray .25 Howard Street, Kirkwood .... 1960 Miss Virginia Walton >....670 North Boulevard 1650 Miss Nelle Reynolds 126 Cooper Street 1585 Miss Elizabeth Smith 34 East Avenue 1455 J. Edgar Sheridan 1 West Ashland Avenue ... Max Ctein 49 North Butler Street .. Paul M. Clark 16 Church Street Martin Comerforri 186 East Merritts Buel Crawley 126 North Jackson Street . Elsie Gosneil 127 Cleburne Avenue Clinton Hutchinson 60 Ponce DeLeon Place ... Miss Roberta Harbour 340 Ponce DeLeon Avenue Willie Harden Decatur, Ga. Sterling Jordan 23 Ferguson Street Chas. M. Kellog, Jr Decatur, Ga Raley Ray < 73 East Hardee Street Miss Idclle Shaw 179 Ea3t Pine Street Wm. Wellborn 35 Church Street Miss Lucy Withers 17 Maude Street Miss Marjorie McLeod 34 Greenwood Avenue Miss Elizabeth Garwood Decatur, Ga Miss Elizabeth Downing 457 North Jackson Street . . George M. Barnes 788 Piedmont Avenue Robert R. Andrews 184 Waverly Way DISTRICT NUMBERJ-HREE. Chas. M. Stevens South Kirkwood Miss Mary Wells 1.01 Ormewood J. P. Goets. Jr 32 Rogers Street Norman Gooch 121 Boulevard DeKaib.... Willette Matthews 917 Seaboard Avenue DISTRICT NUM Fannie Mae Cook Florence Greenoe > Nathaniel Kay Ida G. Fox Oscar Eugene Cook Louis Joel .. H. L. W. Brown Howell Conway Estelle Honor Miss Ida Bloomberg .... J. Walling DaVis ....... Miss L. E. Abbott Miss Lovie C. Dean .... Miss Alice Feldman Frank Henley Miss Annie Mae Hilsman Milton Holcombe Lynn A. Hubbard Raymond Smith Harry Stone Miss Marie Toy Chas. Ernest Vernoy 1109 1010 10oo 1009 loon 1000 1009 1000 1009 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 .10890 . 1395 . 1000 . 1000 . 1000 Miss Sarah Whitaker Miss Margatet White Charles Stone Miss Ida Bloomberg Miss Emma Freer . Miss Ida G. Fox Miss Estelle Sullivan Miss Frankie J. Smith Miss Susie Black John Thrasher ' R. H. Brown David F. Nowell Miss Meta Mitchell v- BER FOUR. 488 Pulliam Street 6660 387 Pulliam Street 6045 264 South Pryor Street 4785 147 Pulliam Street 3680 176 Grant Street 2465 140 Capitol Avenue 1695 450 Crew Street 1450 229 Woodward Avenue 1415 137 Pulliam Street 1250 53 Martin Street . 1110 143 Glonnwodd Avenue 1010 244 Hill Street 1000 360 Pulliam Street 1009 272 East Fair Street 1000 620 Woodward Avenue 1000 202 Grant Street 1000 90 Bryan Street 1000 394 Fraser Street 1000 66 Augusta Avenue 1000 101 Capitol Avenue 1000 439 Woodward Avenue 1050 219 Cherokee Avenue 1009 244 Glennwood Avenue 1000 552 Washington Street 1090 101 Capitol Avenue 1000 53 Martin Street 1000 126 Sidney Street 1000 147 Pulliam Street 1000 4 West Peachtree Street 1000 198 West Peachtree Street 1000 282 Ormond Street 1000 46 Buena Vista Avenue 1000 582 Central Avenue 1000 179 Capitol Avenue 1000 57 Pulliam Street 1000 DISTRICT NUMBER FIVE. Frank Ison Emerv W'ard Harndon Thomas Miss Louise Chewning .... Miss Maude L. Berry Donnell Bioodworth Miss Carlotta Burn Miss Texia Mae Butler ... Everett J. Cain Miss Anna Graham Miss Mary Holloway Wm. Hood Miss Margaret La Feure .. Albert Leake John Bake** Long Richard Rainey .College Park. Ga 20095 .Fort McPherson, Ga 1460 .94 Form wait Street 1640 .98 Formwalt Street 2125 .109 Cooper Street 1270 .277 South Pryor Street 1000 .123 Cooper Street 1090 .352 Whitehall Street 1000 *45 Ira Street IOoO .214 South Forsyth Street 1009 . Hapeville. Ga 1009 .371 Whitehall Street 1003 .72 Washington Street 1000 . 94 Crew Street 1000 .Fort McPherson, Ga 1000 . East Point, Ga. 1049 Daniels Fools Old Salts in Navy Office Department Navigators Learn for Flrat Time That Florida Has a Panama City. WASHINGTON, May 10.—The wlw old salts of the Navy Department thought they had caught Secretary Daniels in a land-lubber's blunder when they not a telegram from him ordering the gunboat Petrel to Pena, tna City by Stay In, Even the youngest navigator at the department laughed over the ines- *age and ceiled attention to the ge ographical fact that Panama City is on the Paelflc side of the Isthmus, while the gunboat Petrel J» now en route to Pensacola, Fla. It was sug gested that the Secretary be so in formed. Then some one thought of looking up the maps. A search disclosed that there is a Panama City on the Florida coast. Vincent Astor Host To Senatorial Party Young Millionaire Entertains Vice President and Statesmen on Yacht and at Estate. NEW YORK, May 10—Vice Presi dent Marshall and several United States Senators are guests for to day and to-morrow of Vincent As tor. The program is a trip up the Hud son oh hts yacht, Nona, as far as West Point for the annual inspec tion of the military post, a night at the Astor estate and a visit to Gov ernor Sulzer. In addition to the Vice President the party will include Senators John ston, of Alabama; Fletcher, of Flor ida; Overman, of North Carolina; Vardeman, of Mississippi, and Cham berlin, of Oregon, as well as a num ber of New York business men. ARKANSAS SAFE BLOWERS MAKE ESCAPE WITH $1,500 FORT SMITH, ARK. May 10—A posse was searching the neighbor- hood of Bonanza, sixteen miles south east of here to-day for three men who dynamited the safe in the First State Bank there at 1:30 o’clock this morn ing and escaped with between $1,500 and $2,000 in currency. The men left Bonanza on horseback, headed for Fort Smith. SUFFHETTE Infernal Machine Creates Panic at Reading—Another Discov ered in Liverpool R. R. Station. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, May 10.—A auffTagette bomb, with an electrical appliance similar to that found in St. Paul’s Cathedral, was discovered to-day in the package sorting department of the Reading postoffice. Finding of the infernal machine created a panic a/mong the employees. The bomb was turned over to the police. Another was found in the passenger waiting room at the busy Lime Street Railroad Station In Liverpool. The fuse of the Liverpool bomb had been lighted, but had died out before it reached the gunpowder. The in strument of intended destruction con sisted of a tin tobacco box filled with gunpowder and scrap iron. The Reading machine was wrapped in a bulky parcel to which the at tention of the postoffice employees was attracted by the sound of tick ing. The police were called in and on examination found the parcel con tained an electric battery connected to explosives and accompanied by quantities of suffragette literature. The parcel was addressed to a mu nicipal official of Reading, now on his vacation. The police believe it wis timed to explode in his residence dur ing his absence. The clockwork ar rangement was In perfect working ol der. _ Chattanooga" furniture HOUSE HAS $10,000 BLAZE CHATTANOOGA, TENN., May 10. The loss sustained by the Bowen- Jumper Furniture Company in a fire that threatened the West Side busi ness district yesterday afternoon was reported to-day to have been $10,000. Merriot Brown Reid 205 Cooper Street Miss Frances Summers *90 Orange Street Jimmie Warner 352 Whitehall, Apt.. B. 1000 1009 10o*J DISTRICT NUMBER SIX. Miss Beverly Swapton 45 Evans Street 1190 George Nelson Baker 381 Oak Street 1165 E. F. Marquett 20 West End Avenue 1150 Miss Edith Clower 24 Ellis Street 1090 MISS Grace Davis 159 Peeples Street 1Q09 Miss Ora F. Dozier 35 Sells Avenue 1090 Gregory J. Eaton 39 Eggleston Street 1090 Angle C. Newton 10 Bailey Street 1099 William Turner ..251 Lawton Street 1009 Edgar Wilson 40 Park Street 1000 Benjamin F. Safiets 23 Orange Street 1000 Gay Reynolds 18 Oglethorpe Avenue 1040 Miss Susanne Springer ..253 Jordan Street 1055 DISTRICT NUMBER SEVEN A. Morrison 77 Jones Avenue 24oo James Allen 66 Davis Street 1250 Joe DuPre 414 Simpson Street 1000 Lawrence McGinnis 47 Franklin Street 1000 George H. Melton 74 Newport Street 1000 CITY CARRIERS AND NEWSBOYS Grady Cook 20 Fortress Avenue .... Mose Brodkin 62 Gilmer Street Harold Hamby 8 McAfee Street Ross Greer 57 Whitehall Terrace . Sidney Ney 246 Washington Street Harold Turner 309 Luckie Street Roy Cook East Point. Ga O. B. Bigger 348 Glenn Street Raymond Wilkinson Kirkwood Station .... W. H. Hamilton, Jr 588 Woodward Avenue Jno. Trimble 401 South Boulevard'.. Johnnie Evans 120 North Avenue, East Hyman Feinberg 102 Gilmer Street J. E. Moore 600 Flat Shoals Road OUT-OF-TOWN AGENTS AND CARRIERS. James Wilkins Caff ney, S. C Hyman Esseman Rome Ga Bunn-Martin Columbus, Ga Ambrose Scarboro Royston. Ga James S. Plunkett Carey Station, Ga Leon Spence Carrollton, Ga 1000 7 17.. 3969 3485 311*1 2590 2374 2100 1995 1325 1050 1000 1000 1000 GEORGIA SCHOOL BOYS AND GIRLS. Miss Jessie Collier Barnesville, Ga. . . Maxwell Aubrey Bolton. Ga Lois Casey Chattahoochee, Ga. Clay Burruss Carnesville, Ga. Miss Mary Caldwell 1015 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1050 1050 1025 1000 Miss Sarah Carter Savannah. Ga Alfred Chappelle Sparta, Ga Miss Gladys Daniel Bolton, Ga Beaufort C. Elder Blakely. Ga. ... Mies Sallie M. Evan* Douglasville, Ga Paul Jossey Forsyth, Ga Gertrude Marshall Savannah, Ga R. W. Mattox, Jr 4 Perry St., Newnan, Ga. . W. L. Mattox 4 Perry St.. Newnan, Ga. . Miss Virginia McCowen Marietta Car Line Blake Nichols R. F. D. No. 6, Atlanta, Ga. Dan Patrick Conyers, Ga. . Miss Belle Ragsdale Llthonia. Ga Harry H. Redwine Fayetteville, Ga Felix Reid Union City, Ga Terry Strozier, Jr Greenville. Ga H. Eugene Whit- Flovilla. Ga Warren Taliafero Mansfield, Ga. Eugene Lee, Jr Covington, Ga Miss Ennis Spinks Chipley, Ga Elmer Towns Social Circle, Ga Patrick Jones Macon, Ga Clifford Henry Carrollton, Ga Miss Belle _Staine Toccoa, Ga Robert Davis .Columbus. Ga Eugene Scarborough Macon, Ga Ralph Little Commerce, Ga Horould C. Ogilvie Savannah. Ga Miss Berta Davis Fayetteville, Ga Warner Webb Griffin, Ga Emory Steele Commerce, Ga Andrew B. Tribble Llthonia, Ga Miss Esther Boorstin Covington, Ga .1 .Chipley, Ga 19"i 1000 1090 10 Oft 1090 1000 1009 1000 1000 1090 1099 1170 1000 1000 1000 19r > lOiC 1000 1120 1000 1000 1000 1000 1060 1020 1025 1025 1009 1009 1000 1000 1009 1000 1000 SCHOOL BOYS AND GIRLS OUTSIDE OF STATE OF GEORGIA. Rodney Stephens Abbeville, S. C 2035 Miss Annie McCar ell Charleston, S. C 1030 Novel Wheeler Florence, S. C 1015 Robt. Hyatt Mumhy Murphy, N. C 1000 Awbrey Hopkins Anderson, L. C 100*) Pauline Trull Raleigh, N. C. 10**0 J. T. Webb, Jr Piedmont, Ala 1050 Lindsay W. Graves Knoxville, Tenn 1000 George Andrews Opelika, Ala 1000 Fain E. Webb, Jr .Piedmont, Ala. 1000 Denies People of Milltownn Trietf To Intimidate Boisclair, as He Complained. Charles S. Parham, clerk of the Superior Court of Berrien County, in a letter to The Georgian to-day. ridi cules the charges that lawless and i disorderly tactics have been adopted by the people of Milltown to intimi date County Game Warden Boisclair. The letter is an answer to the fear of State Game Warden Mercer that his deputy in Berrien County is being attacked. It Is an answ er, also, to I the charges by Warden Boisclair that l the tow n and surrounding section did- J regard the laws and authority of off!-1 cers. "If Game Warden Mercer will use different tactics from those of Mr. Boisclair," the writer concludes, “he will find any amount of co-operation in punishing those w r ho knowingly violate the game laws, and w ill find no better people in Georgia.’’ His letter in part follows: “Conditions Misrepresented.” To begin with, conditions at Milltown are not at all as repre sented by Mr. Boisclair. He inti mates that the entire town and section is composed of people who disregard the laws of the coun try or the rights of man, when in reality there are no better class of citizens in Georgia than are found at Milltown Mr. Boisclair says that from 200 to 300 angry men gathered about him, threatening his life, etc. This statement is simply false. The writer was on tne ground as a disinterested specta tor at the time of the would-be trial, seeing and hearing a good portion of what was taking place, sizing up the crowd with fair ac curacy. and feels sure that not more than 50 people were gath ered there. Eighteen of this number were there from having been served with warrants to so be for trial; nearly all of the re mainder had gathered there from idle curiosity and had no part in the proceeding at all. No Demonstration. No demonstration of any kind was evident, except that of mjrth and fun which usually arises from such occasions. Those who had been arrested (or most of them, at least) took the matter as a huge joke, and had it not been that Mr. Boisclair went around there # with a concealed weapon, everything would have passed off quietly and good-humoredly. Mr. Boisclair says that Mayor Bill Pafford accosted him. lead ing, with vile epithets, an angry mob of 200 or 300 people, the crowd became menacing, etc., all of which the writer knows to be untrue. As before stated, there were not exceeding 50 persons on the ground and they were quiet and orderly, and had it not been for the fact that Mr. Boisclair was seen with a pistol on his person there would have been no words of any kind. Bill Pafford is a high-toned. Christian gentleman, who is known all over this, as well as adjoining counties. James Banks, the owner of the Banks Pond, saysr he has never objected to people fishing with hook and line in his waters, while R. T. Berryhill, a nephew of Mr Banks, w’ho has charge of the pond, has always been very liber al in his management of the fish ing privilege, never refusing any one that would ask him permis sion to catch as many fish as he wanted to. Friedmann’s Patients Bound by Common Tie. “Six of Dr. Friedmann’s tubercular patients are convalescing in Bellevue Hospital," said a physician just back from a visit to New York. “The fact that they have been treated with th© serum lias naturally caused h bond of sympathy among them, and they are generally to be seen togeth er, strolling in their bathrobes along the sunny walks in the hospital quadrangle. Other inmates of the institution who lack the distinction of contact with the syringe of the Berlin physician are inclined to in terpret their alliance as aloofness, and the sextet have come to be dub bed the guinea pigs.' ” Wanted to Know His Other Business. A New Yorker who is stopping at one of the Atlanta hotels, tells this one: A member of the Stock Exchange well known for his scorn of conven tion pulled the bellrope of a Long Island Railroad train the other even ing because, as he said, he was "tir ed of being a perpendicular sardine” and he was determined either to have a seat or get out. He was arrest ed. When the case came up in court the railroad's lawyer said in sinuatingly: “Are you a drinking man, Mr. Blank ?” “That’s my business.” said the bro ker with dignity. "Right,” said the lawyej-. “Now tell the court* Mr. Blank, if you have any other business." Bear Seats Are In Demand. “One thing I can't get used to," said the ticket seller at a downtown moving picture house, "ts the de mand for rear seats. All my life 1 have been under the Impression that folks who went to the theater want ed to get as near the stage as possi ble, but in the moving picture busi ness the reverse seems true. People want to get far back so they can get a better focus on the pictures. In this house the back seats fill up | long before the front ones do. I got a jolt the other day, however. A fellow came to the window and said, “ ‘Can you give me a seat in the . first row? I'm hard of hearing.’ “I told him we didn’t sell reserved seats—that he would have to take his chances with the rest. Anyhow. I assured him, the pictures were be ing run and it didn’t really make any difference if he was hard of hearing.” GRAFT POE PLANS REVENGE IF SLAIN Directs $50,000 Insurance Be Used to Prosecute Assassins if He Is Killed. Ricardi Sues Rigo For $100,000 ‘Loans’ Gypsy Violinist Says Woman He Eloped With It Hounding Him to Take Her Back. CROWDS VISIT REVIVAL TO HEAR EVANGELIST HAWKINS NEW YORK, Mav 10.—Georgr A. Slpp, former Ratne* law hotel keeper, who exposed the alliance of the po lice and underworld In Harlem's ten derloin, said today he had taken out I'iO.OOU worth of life insurance and added a codicil to hts will directing that the sum be spent tn prosecuting his murderers should he be assassi nated as the result of his exposures of the police graft syndicate Warden Hayes, of the Blackwells Island prison, Is having a. difficult time Hndlng occupations for James I’. Thompson, John J. Murtha, Den nis Sweeney and James E. Hussey, the four former police Inspectors who were sentenced to a year for obstruct ing justice. None of the prisoners has received industrial training.along any special line. Sergeant Peter J. Duffy, charged with collecting graft for Sweeney, will be arraigned late this month or early In June. In connection with the search for more evidence. Dis trict Attorney Whitman has learned of a “clairvoyant trust” which has paid big sums for protection. j NEW YORK, May 10.-That Mate. Ricarcll. formerly the Princess De- | Ohlmay and originally Clara Ward, of Detroit, is suing Janrzt Rigo, th” gypsy violinist *he eloped with sev enteen years ago in Paris, for 1100.- 000, became known to-day. M:ne. 1 Rlcardi claims this was loaned Ri*o ! In the three years they lived together. In his apartments here, where he is living with his latest wife, who was Kitty Emerson, wife of Caspar Emer son, Jr., of Philadelphia, Rigo de- ! dared the Princess DeChimay » hounding him because he refuses to go back to her. “My wife knows this,'' said Rigo, “hut I will never do it. I love my wife i madly. Nothing can separate us.' JOKERS GIVE BABY WINE; LITTLE GIRL NEARLY DIES PERTH AMBOY. May 10.—Twd men paid {46 tn fines for giving a year-old girl a drink of port wine. The child went into convulsions, but was restored. The child found her way Into a barroom Charles Webber picked her up and jokingly caJled for a drink. Benjamin Wonder, the proprietor, set a glass of port on the bar. Webber gave the child the wine. PILES CURED AT HOME BY NEW ABSORPTION METHOD If you suffer from bleeding. Itching, blind or protruding piles, send me your addrees. and I will tell you how to cure yourself at home by the new absorption treatment; and will also send some of this home treatment free for trial, with references from your own locality If requested. Im mediate relief and permanent cure assured. Send no money, but tell others ef this‘offer. Write today to Mrs M Summers, Box P, Notre Dame, Ind. Good Kodak Finishing Can not be done -with cheap, chemicals and cheap paper. John I* Moore & Sons, 4* North Broad Street, use only the best of both at reasonable chargee. Prompt service. Fresh films always on hand. me/or yTCobrado t Sommer * The revival which Evangelist Haw kins is conducting at the West End I Christian Uhurch continues to at tract large erowMs. Five converts i were baptized Friday night before one of the largest gatherings of the week. Following are sermon subjects for , the coming week: Saturday night, "The Wav of Faith;" Sunday morn ing, “The First Lord’s Day;" Sunday evening, “Salvation;” Tuesday even ing, "The Thief on the Cross;” Wed nesday evening, “What Must I Do to Be Lost.” There will be no services Monday. THE PLAYS THIS WEEK SALOONS ASK COURT TO FORCE CITY TO TAKE TAX HAMMOND, IND., May 10.—The first case on record in this State where taxpayers attempt to force a municipality trt accept thousands of dollars was brought to-day in the Hammond Superior Court, where 80 Gary saloon' men asked Judge Law rence Becker to mandate the city of Gary to accept $200 apiece from them. The Gary nuthoritfes hold saloon licenses to be $500 and refuse the $200 as provided by the City Council in an earlier ordinance. “THE GIRL” AT THE ATLANTA. "The Girl From Out Yonder,” the of fering by the Miss Billy Long company at the Atlanta Theater this week, will be presented at a matinee this after noon and again to-night. The play has proved immensely popular with patrons of the Atlanta, and .Miss Long has won many new frten<ls by her very capable a<Uing All the other member* appear to advantage in parts which afford them abundant opportunity foe the display of their special talent. KEITH VAUDEVILLE AT FORSYTH. Few acts presented at the Forsyth have attracted more attention than that of Gus Edwards’ Kid Kabaret, which is the headliner this week. The number comprises fifteen girls and boys, who dance and sing and offer other pleas ing specialties. Belle Story has proved a big hit. She sings delightfully. Wil liams, Thompson and Copeland have an unusually amusing sketch. The whole bill is one designed to please, and It succeeds admirably. Matinee tnis after noon. NEGROES GIVE FUND FOR CONFEDERATE REUNION CHATTANOOGA. TENN.. May 10. A delegation of negroes called on Mayor T. C. Thompson to-day and. after donating $40 for the expenses of the Confederate reunion, assured him that they would do all in their power to aid in the entertainment of the gray veterans. A book-folder, illualrated with views of the* Colorado Rockies. It tells all about the vacation delights of that Land of Many Mountains—about trout in the brooks, camps in the pines,' snow on the peaks, turquoise in the sky. Read, and you mill txisfc to go theft, lading advantage of the low-fart t Summer Excursions After seeing Colorado, there’< theCraad Canyon'of Arizona and the California Sierras er seashore : booklets about both, on request. You can’t afford la miss'theta “'See America'' outings in the Far West. 4 Fred. Harvey meals wi the way. JNO. D. CARTER, Sou. Paw. Agt. 14 N. Pryor Si., Atlanta, Ga. Phone, Main 342 COLD WEATHER THREATENS MICHIGAN’S FRUIT CROP BENTON HARBOR, MICH.. May 10.—The fate of more than $1,000,000 worth of fruit In the great fruit re gion of Michigan to-day was hanging In the balance as the result of un usually cold weather. A further drop in temperature threatened a disas trous freeze. Smudge pots were burning all of last night. A record crop is predicted if damage by cold is prevented. morphine: Liquor «nd Tobacco Addictions Cured Within Ton Daya by Our Now Pain loop Method. { Only Sanitarium in the World Giving Unconditional Guarantoo. j Our guarantee means something. 4 Not one dollar need be paid until a > satisfactory care haa been effected. f We control completely the usual f withdrawal symptoms No extreme nervousneaa, aching limbs or loss of sleep. Patients unable to visit Sanitarium can bo treated private ly at home. References: The May or of our City, the President of any Bank, or gny Citizen of Lebanon. Write for Free Booklet No. 2. Ad- droas CUMBERLAND SANITARIUM, F. J. Sanders, Mgr., Lebanon, Tenn. If. •, X—• y-' White City Park Now Open IN REFINISHING YOUR WALLS CONSIDER SANITATION VELVOTONE ELAT, WASHABLE WALL FINISH In addition to its beautiful decorative quality, is also sanitary and Is washable as marble. Phone us for color card. “We have a paint fer every use.” PH NKSilW. Ills. AM. aae Manufactured h, DOZIER & GAY PAINT CO. 22 E. Bay St., Jacksonville, Fla. 31 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Qa. PAGES OF FUN THE GREAT COMIC SECTION OF THE SUNDAY AMERICAN FUN AT HOWSON LOTTS :: MR. BATCH LOVES CHILDREN :: HAPPY HOOLIGAN MAKES A HIT :: JIMMY .SEES A FIGHT::