Newspaper Page Text
4
J lit, ai vjr.uuiiM.v Ai\U AH.VV S. Nl.N hMIA V. M A 'I 14. 1HD.
BIG SHRINE MEET
FDR ATLANTA
Balloting To-day Expected to
Bring Victory to Forrest
Adair and His Aides.
Continued From Page 1.
tonally. When Atlanta ha a won For
rest Adair's place as a master politi
cian and manager of men will be es
tablished. He Is h wonder and he
know? Shrine polities from beginning J
to end. He is intimately acquainted j
with the men who manage the af
fairs of the Shrine. They have been
his warm personal friends for years,
and they are standing by him man
fully now Just as he haa stood by
them manfully In the past.
Indeed, all the Atlanta delegation
has worked faithfully and hard for
their city’s success to-day.
The last word Mr. Adair delivered
to me for transmission to The Geor
gian Just before he left the Hotel
Adolphus for the Imperial t'ouncil
session to-day was. "Tell them I am
going to bring home the baron, as i
promised to, all for the glory of the
Imperial Order of the Shrine, and for
the glory of old Atlanta."
And he Is going to do it, too. As
one Shriner remarked to me to-day,
“Atlanta's fight was won the minute
that man Adair hit Dallas, If It wasn’*
won before that."
Parade a Big Spectacle.
I^ast night's big parade was a mag
nificent spectacle. More than 15,000
Shriners. either in glittering patrol
robes or the more formal dress suit,
and red fez, were In line. The parade
required two good hours to pass a
given point, ns there were, besides the
Shriners' 41 bands, numerous camels,
chariots, mounted officials and queer
and dinky contraptions propelled in
one way and another—rigged up the
Lord only knows how by Shriners in
accord with some inner Shrine phil
osophy not revealed to the profane and
unregenerate sons of the desert. That
parade, amplified and extended as it
likely will be In Atlanta next year,
Is going to look mighty fetching along
Whitehall and Peachtree, even as I
said in a previous wire about the great
parade of tlv Arab patrol.
Certain differences between the un
ion hands marching in the parade and
the Yaarab Drum Corps of Atlanta
were amicably adjusted, and the At
lanta drummers marched in both pa
rades yesterday. This incident, which
for a time looked as if It might give
rise to some embarrassing complica
tion. was smoothed out and has caus
ed no unpleasantness whatever. Not
a bard was missing from last night's
parade, and the drum corps was all
there, playing its part in the parade
handsomely.
Only One Contest for Office.
The only contest for any office Is
over that of imperial outer guard, the
lowest of the Imperial Council offi
cers. There are a dozen or more can
didates for this place. All other of
fleers move up consecutively each
year, making the list of officers to
be chosen to-day. except 'imperial
outer guard, as follows:
Imperial potentate. William W. Ir
win. Wheeling. W. Va.
Imperial deputy potentate. Frede
rick R. Smith. Rochester, N. Y.
Imperial chief mb ban, .1 Putnam
Stevens. Portland. Me.
Imperial assistant chief rabban.
Henry F. Nledringhaus, Jr.. St. Louis.
Imperial high priest and prophet,
William S. Brown, Pittsburg.
Imperial treasurer, Benjamin W.
Novell. Boston.
Imperial recorder, Charles Overn-
shirr. Minneapolis.
Imperial oriente guide, Ellas T. Ja
coby. Indianapolis.
Imperial first ceremonial master.
\V Freeland Kendrick, Philadelphia.
Imperial second ceremonial master,
Ellis L. Garret son. Tacoma. Wash.
Imperial marshal. William J. Mat
thews, New Yory dtv.
Imperial captain of the guard. Er
nest A. Cults, Savannah. Ga.
Four New Temples Chartered.
Charters for new temples were
granted by the Imperial Council to
San Diego. Cal.. East St. Louis. Ill.;
Parkersburg. W. Va.. and Nashville.
Term Dispensations were granted
The Georgian-American Pony Contest
VOTE COUPON
Hearst's Sunday American and Atlanta Georgian
PONY CONTEST VOTE COUPON. WEDNESDAY. MAY 14.1913
5 VOTES
NOT GOOD AFTER MAY 29, 1913.
Voted for
Addre ss
Hearst’s Sunday American Atlanta Georgian
Pony Contest Vote Coupon, Wednesday, May 14, 1913.
S vrvrrc not good after
¥WI May 29. 1913.
Voted for
Address
SCHOOL BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ BALLOT.
Cubist Walk Arrives in Atlanta HUNDREDS OPPOSE
Every Move Has Angle of Its Own MANGHASV1
+•+ ■ -i-a-r
Even Faces Have Futurist Lines
BAEITHE HYOMEI
FOR CATARRH
Health Comes From Knowing;
How and What to Breathe.
asses without
le old adage.
! a breath of
disea se- breed -
ed by all who
disease is not
he germs find
their lodg-
Hardly a day j
confirmation of
"Man's Life is bu
air."
Dust laden with
ing germs is inha!
use ihe streets, but
developed unless the
conditions suitable ft
ment and growth.
With people having catarrh there
is an ideal culture medium for
these germs. The irritated mem
brane and weakened tissues is .»
hot-bed where germs thrive and
multiply.
If you have catarrh or any trou
ble of the breathing organs, caus
ing stopped-up head, sniffles >r
morning choking, you should use
the easiest, simplest and quickest
remedy, the direct method of H> -
omei. This wonderful medication
is taken in with the air you
breathe, directly following and de
stroying all germs that have been
inhaled, repairing any damage they
may have worked and so healing
and vitalizing the tissues as to
render catarrh and germ infection
no longer possible.
The unusual way in which drug
gists seii Hyomei should dispel ill
doubt as to its curative proper
ties. They refund the price to any
one whom it fails to benefit You
do not risk a cent in testing the
healing virtues of this breath of
life. Complete Outfit. $1.00. Extra
bottlfM of Hyomei liquid, f later
needed 50 cents.
Shreveport. La., and Halifax. Nova
Scotia.
The first business "session was held
yesterday and Imperial Potentate
Cunningham made his formal report
at an open meeting held In the Scot
tish Rife Cathedral. The order now
haa 133 temples, hl« report stated, and
on January I last the membership
was 185,446, a net gain for the year
of 12,790. He said the funds of the
Imperial Council on hand March 1
were $1 14.421.
After the adjournment of the Impe
rial Council this afternoon various so
cial functions will be given in Da bus
In honor of the visitors, and to-night
and to-morrow they will begin theli
returning caravans home.
A large number of Atlantans will
make a short tour of Texas, while
others will return home via Hot
Springs. Ark. The entire outfit should
be home by Sunday morning, Forrest
Adair with the bacon.
Present for Governor Colquitt.
The Georgia Shriners will present
Governor Colquitt. af Texas, a hand
some loving cup to-day. as an evi
dence of their appreciation of his
open friendliness to the cause of
Georgia and Atlanta, in the matter
of choosing next year's meeting place
The Governor spent yesterday and
part of to-day In Dallas, riding in the
parade of the patrols with the im
perial potentate as an especial guest
of honor. He is a native Georgian,
and has not failed to let all with
whom he has talked to-day know it
As a matter of fact. Governor Col
quitt actually boasts brazenly and
outspokenly of his Georgia ancestry
and the fact that he was born in
Georgia. He is a Brooks County man
and is closely related to the family
of the late Governor and Senator
Alfred H. Colquitt.
Because of these facts and his
friendship to the cause of Atlanta, the
Georgia Shriners have determined to
honor hirn with a Georgia loving cup
of solid silver as an evidence of their
good will. The Governor has no idea
i hat lie is I o I VI I he < UP. It will
be presented to him Thursday in Aus
tin by Illustrious Potentate Adatr.
who. with a number of Yaarab dele
gates. will leave Thursday morning
for a swing around Texas
Austin, the capital, will he the first
stopping point out of Dallas
Georgia Templars
Meet in Columbus
COLUMBUS. GA.. May 14 —The
annual conclave of the Grand Com
ma ndery, Knights Templars of Geor
gia. convened in Columbus to-day
with about 400 in attendance. The
opening feature was the annual pa
rade. following which the Grand Com-
mandery assembled in the Asylum of
St. Aldemar ComtnanQery, where ad
dresses of welcome were delivered by
Mayor Chappell and Sir Knight Wal
ter \V Curtis. Then luncheon was
served.
At 2:30 o’clock the Grand Corn
mandery convened for business. Grand
Commander F. Theodore Petri, of
Columbus. and Grand Recorder
Charles L. Wood, of Savannah, made
their annual reports.
The annual Templar service w ill be
held to-night in Trinity Episcopal
church and will be presided over by
Eminent Grand Prelate Troy Beatty,
of Athens. The annual address will
be delivered by Past Grand Com
mander James L. Mayson, of Atlanta.
Tile Concerns’ Fight
Bares Legal Tangle
Two tile companies are in legal
dispute over the right to lay a side
walk on the south side of Williams
Mill Road, the tangle revealing an
unusual situation in the office of the
City Chief of Construction.
The lee Tile and Construction
Company has secured a temporary in
junction restraining the Cement Tile
and Stone Company and the city from
proceeding with the work. Hearing
on the petition for a permanent in
junction is pet for May 17.
As agents for the property owners,
the Lee Company claims the right to
do the work, and sets forth that if
the Cement Company is allowed to
continue, the property owners will be
forced to pay the city an assessment
for work already contracted for with
another concern.
W.W. Drake, Atlanta
Hardware Man. Dies
W W Drake, for years identified
with the builders’ hardware business
in Atlanta and successful as a hard
ware man on the Pacific Coast, died
at his residence. 348 Spring Street.
Tuesday night.
He is survive*! by his wife, former
ly Miss Pink Hunnicutt, of Atlanta;
one son. W C. Drake: one sister.
Miss Mabel Drake and one brother.
Lloyd Tate, of Alabama
Mr Drake was born in Midway,
Ala in 1865 His father was Dr.
William Green Drake He spent his
' youth in Atlanta and for sixteen years
was prominently identified with the
J Clarke Hardware Company here. Ten
years ago he went West
Funeral services will be conducted
at the Spring Street residence Thurs
day morning at 10:30 o’clock.
Solicitor General Dorsey Working
on New Clew in the Factory
Slaying Mystery.
alius knows
Just what to do to fix a boy what’s got
a blood* nose!
My r* ain't president becoz. he says,
he never run,
But he coo’d do as well as any presi
dent has done
A president may beat my pa at pilin'
up the vote.
But he can't beat him. I will bet.
a-whittlln’ out a boat!
My pa ain't rich, but that's becoz he
never tried to be;
He ain't no lectrlcian. but one day he
fixed the telephone for me!
My pa ain't never wrote a book, but 1
know he could,
Becoz the stories that he tells to me
are alius powerful gofxi!
My pa knows everything. I guess, an'
you bat I don't care
'Co* he ain't president or rich as any
mlllyunaire!
Whenever things go wrong, my pa can
make 'em right, you see;
If he ain't rich or president, my
pa'a go»al enough Ter me!
Woman Witness Excited.
Mrs. Mary Barrett, the woman who
is said to have been in the factory
the Saturday afternoon that Mary
Phngan was Hilled, was In a sta,te o*
great excitement when she emerged
front the office of Solicitor Dorset
Tueadav afternoon.
She had been summoned by
Solicitor to tell of what she saw
while she was at the factory. It was
evident that she believed her* knowl
edge of the affair had been misrep
resented. When she came from the
office she declared, ^dramatically:
"If anyone has told any lies on me
in connection with this murder they
will certainly suffer for It."
The daughter of Mrs. Barrett was
heard to tell t’he Solicitor:
"I'll talk with her to-night, and
then maybe she'll do what you ask."
Move for Fingerprint Bureau.
The Police Commission at its meet
ing Tuesday night authorized a
thorough investigation into the ad
visability of establishing a finger
print identification system in Atlan
ta. This move was made largely as a
result of the mystery that has con
tinued to surround the Phagan case
and the possibility that it might have
been cleared up within a few days had
the city had a fingerprint expert
There were several distinguishable
fingerprints found In tne factory base
ment. Persons who have had ex
perience in detective work believe that
they might have developed the most
valuable clews In establishing the
identity of the criminal.
Chief of Police Beavers told the
commission of instances in which fin
gerprints had fixed the guilt of pris
oners when there were no other clews.
He was appointed by the commission
to work with one of the commission
ers in making an investigation into
the feasibility of the bureau plan.
Friends Say Frank’s
Actions Point to Innocence.
If Leo M. Frank is guilty of any
connection with the murder of Mary
Pha*an. his actions in the Tower be
lie the time-honored theories of the
greatest criminologists the world ha*
ever produced, visitors to the prison
er declare.
Famous psychologists, working on
the supposition that the great weight
of guilt upon the mind of a murderer
will, if given time, finally overbal
ance the cairn exterior with which he
faces his accusers, have mtde excel
lent use of what th^y have termed
"silent treatment ”
Prisoners accused of horrible crimes
have been thrown uito cells and left
to brood in the ybng hours of the
night. Often a scream, ringiug down
the prison corridors, will tell the tale
of their guilt. Cell keepers, rushing
up. have found prisoners rt -enacting
their crimes, muttering the same
words they used when they slew their
victims and beating the air with their
fists. In one celebrated case demon
strating this, the man beat hi* brains
out against the bars before he could
be rescued. His action, it was claim
ed afterward, was due to overpower
ing remorse following the realistic
pantomime of the death scene in
which he figured
The psychological the».r\ i* com
monplace. The mind of the murder
er contains two sections—the normal
and the subconscious. It is in the flrsl
that he frames his denial of guilt;
yet the truth is always present, lurk
ing in the subconscious mind. And
Stockholders in Bankrupt Cotton
Mill Lead Opposition—Peti
tion Heard Thursday.
The application for pardon of J J.
Mangham. the wealthy Spalding
County cotton mill president con
victed of embezzlement when his
firm failed, will come before the State
Prison Commission Thursday.
Mahgham was head of the Boyd-
Mangham Manufacturing Company,
of Griffin, and wat* sentedeed to one
term of four years and another of
twelve months. He was received at
the State farm August 21. 1912.
A determined battle for his libera
tion is in prospect, but hundreds of
protests that have been submitted to
the Prison Commission indicate that
the fight to keep him imprisoned will
be fully as bitter.
Pages of signatures follow peti
tions praying that the commission
refuse to recommend clemency in the
case of Mangham. The signers are
for the most part stockholders in the
company and citizens* of Coweta and
Spalding Counties.
In the application for pardon. It is
represented that Mangham was not
guilty of embezzlement or any other
crime and that his conviction was
due to Ihe wave of public feeling
against him.
A brother of Mangham. ronvicted
at the same time, was sentenced to a
fine of $1,000, which he paid.
Mathieson Named to
Relieve Chief Rowan
George Mathieaon. county police
man, has beer recommended as as
sistant chief of the county force r>y
members of the police committee of
the commission.
Mathieson has been connected with
the county police organization for
some years. If appointed he will as
sume charge of the force in the ab
sence of Chief Zack Rowan, who de
parts from Atlanta soon because of
ill health. Chief Rowan has secured
two months’ leave.
RACE
ENTRIES
PIMLICO ENTRIES.
FIRST—Selling, 3-year-olds and up, 6
furlongs: Effendl 117, Double Five 112,
xBen Loyal 110. xDaingerfleld 107, Syl-
vestris 112, xJoe Knight 114. xQueen
Bee 102, Ambrose 104.
SECOND—Selling. 3^year-olds and up.
mite: Hans Creek 95. Horace E. 107,
xRock Fish 85. l»rd Elam 107. xorowoc
88. xGolden Treasure 102, xNadzu 102,
xU. U. Buster 102. Mileage 105, Bryn 93,
xCloud Chief 102. xFairy Godmother 88.
THIRD—Selling. 2-year-olds and up,
6 furlongs: Magazine 115, Popgun 108,
xl’rogressive 100, Perthshire 117. xYork-
ville 105, Bi* Dipper 100, xChllton Queen
102, Striker 107, xRobert Bradley 105.
FOURTH— Emerson Steeplechase. 4-
year-olds and up, 2 miles: Killarney
138. Me 147. Roland Pardee 140. Shan
non River 147, Earl Grey 140. Elbart
147. Bally Hack 140. YVellship 140. Fly
ing Yankee 140, Sir Giles 140.
FIFTH—Selling. 4-year-olds and up. 6
furlongs: xTod tiling 103. x Eaton 106,
Cherry Seed 103. Ixithario 106. xYork
Lad 106. George S. Davis T03. Vigorous
HI, Fanchette 106. xTheo Cook 106. Muff
96. Futurity 111, Question Mark 108.
Frog 108. Bertis 106, Lltle Ep 108, Cat
101 Royal Vane 103.
SIXTH—Three-year-olds and up, sell
ing. mile—xRaiph Lloyd 90. Blue Mouse
lOo, Agnier 105. Hatteras 107. Uncle
Oble 98. Tactics 112. O'Em 105. x Judge
Monck 105. Font 107. xElla Grane 88.
Lad of Langdon 112. Elwah 105.
xApprentice allowed claimed.
Weather clear; track fast'
AT LOUISVILLE.
FIRST—Selling, three-year-olds and
up, 6 furlongs: Mae Taft 92, Marla C.
96. Theresa Gill 96, Dr. Jackson 97. Al
Block 97. Clinton 98. Gerrard 98. Cedar
brook 101. Merode 104. Tillies Nightmare
104, New Haven 106, Detour 106, Coreop-
aiSml.06, Calash 108. Recompense 109.
&COND—Selling, two-year-olds, 4Vs
furlongs: xJudge Gheons 92, Mary
Pickford 97, Greenbrae 97. Jack Crowdus
100, May L. 103, Gladys Y. 103, Meshach
104. Sonny Boy 104. Chas. Cannell 104,
First Degree 105, Harwood 106, Lindar
106, Salon 107, Dr. Samuel 107, Buzz
Around 109.
THIRD—Purse, three-year-olds and
up, mile: Leochares 93. Prince Hermis
96, Yankee Notions 96. Polly D. 99, Ymir
104. Coy I^ad 104, Irish Gentleman 108
FOURTH—Three-year-olda and up.
the Tobacco stakes. 6 furlongs; Benanet
88. Casey Jones 102, Praetorian 107,
Royal Tea 108, Presumption 112. Mor
ristown 112, Azyiade 112.
FIFTH—Selling, three-year-olds, mile
and 70 yards: Volita 100, Bright Stone
• 00. Billy Holder 102. Marshon 102, Gold
Color 102. Maddalena 104. Ballyshe 104,
Old Woman 104, Ba-rsac 106, Kingling
107, Guldepost 107, Fellowman 107. Aft
erglow 108, Harry Lauder 109.
SIXTH—Selling, four-year-olds and
up, mile and one-sixteenth: Bonne
Chance 104, Startler 106, Syzygy 106,
.I^ove Day 107. Cracker Box 10.’, Floral
Day 107, Bobby Cook 108. Princelike 108,
Wander 108, Forehead 108. Wintergreen
108, Sir Catesby 113.
xApprentice allowance claimed
Weath.er clear; track fast.
Southern Convention, at Saint
Louis, to Re-elect Macon
Minister as President.
ST. LOUIS. May 14.—At the open
ing of the sixty-seventh annual
Southern Baptist convention her-'
this afternoon little opposition had
developed to the re-election of Dr. E.
C. Dargan, of Macon, Ga.. as pres
ident. and predefions were that he
would be chosen unanimously, the
ballot taking place at 5 o’clock.
The convention actually began
with a business meeting at the Plant
ers’ Hotel at 10 o’clock, when mat
ters of routine management of th*
convention were disposed of. Ae ear
ly as noon the Third Baptist Church
was crowded with visitors awaiting
the formal opening at 3 o'clock.
Leaders of the* church believe t h«
most important matters to come be
fore the convention will be the dis
cussion of a proposed $1,000,000 loan
fund for new church buildings and
the Judson centennial movement. It
Is proposed to raise a $1,250,000 fund
for foreign missions in honor of
Adoniram and Ann Judson.
The first day’s program included
reports of the Sunday School board,
the foreign mission board, the South
Mexican mission and Chinese mis
sions. The convention sermon will
be preached to-night by the Rev.
Thomas W. O’Kelley, of Raleign,
N. C.
WORRIES TO DEATH OVER
BATTLE OF MOONSHINERS
Miss .Tanif Cooper. fiT Juniper Street, the society sir* who
introduced the cubist vvnlk among the fashionables of Atlanta.
Pose Must Be Gracefully Angular,
Hands and Elbows Akimbo.
Who-o-pa! It’s here: THE CUBIST
WALK.
Observe: First. hold the body
gracefully angular—yes. gracefully
angular is the way it should be held;
then place the hands and elbows
akimbo; ahkles parallel, and there
you have the correct position to do
the Cubist Walk.
It puts the Peachtree Prance and
the Piedmont Glide 'way in the shade.
Angles Into Atlanta.
This latest fad in ambulation
springs from tHe brain of Miss Hazel
Allen, of Los Angeles, and has just
come to Atlanta.
To Miss Janie Cooper. 67 Juniper
Street, and a favorite in the city’e
society circles, belongs the honor of
first trying the Cubist Walk. She
liked it. Its grace appealed to her
and to the bevy of other young ladies
who have followed Miss Cooper’s ex
ample.
On Order of Egyptian.
The walk, according to Miss Allen,
is on the order of the Egyptian.
"It is difficult." declared Miss Al
len. "as every motion must be angu
lar. Even the expression of the face
carries out the fun. It is called the
Cubist Walk because it is in line
with the ideas of Cubist apd Futurist
painters.
"I would rather do the Cubist Walk
than eat." she avowed, "and before
long i will be the rage among society
girls of the entire nation.”
there it remains until finally the ter
rible pressure brought to bear by its
weight will overpower the norma)
mind and prevail. It is then the
prisoner is easily trapped into an ad
mission of his guilt.
Quiet Alone Needed.
I For such a state to be brought in
the mind of a prisoner quiet all 1
solitude are required. He must Ik*
left to brood over the crime. Then it
is that the horror to the human
mind of what lie has done will flna’iy
wreck the denial the guilty man has
drawn up. and in despair his confes
sion follows In such cases the ®e!f-
confessed criminal is a case for ab
ject pity. The mental fight through
which he has gone and lost is pitiful.
It affects his entire physical being
ns well, and oftentimes following
such cases the prisoner has been
found prostrated on the floor of his
cell.
In striking contrast to this theory
is the deportment of Frank since
his incarceration at the Tower. Con
fined on the theory that he had a
hand in the death of the Phagan
girl; placed in a lonely cell; passing
his nights in solitude; never at any
time seeing the light of day except
as a prisoner in the clutches of the
law. with it® iron bars, steel doors
and uniformed officers. Frank has
maintained throughout the two
weeks of his imprisonment a surpris
ing degree of cheerfulness.
To his friends who have been per
mitted to see him Frank has proven
by hi® attitude, if nothine else, his
innocence, they declare
If Frank were a guilty man." said
Dr. David Marx, the noted Jewish
rabbi and a personal friend of the
pencil factory superintendent, "he
would have been crazy by now. He
could not have withstood the solitud
and conditions to which he has been
subjected by the law. That he re
mains calm and cheerful is proof
conclusive that he is innocent, for ir>
nocence alone could save a man's
mind under such conditions."
Among the other of Frank s many
friends who have visited him at the
Tower were Leopold Haas, of Haas
& McIntyre, real estate dealers.
"Every friend that Frank has made
since he came to Atlanta ie still as
loyal to him as ever." said Mr. Haas.
"His cheerfulness even in hisr con
finement has served a great deal to
keep up this loyalty. No one who
talks with Frank in his cell cm come
away still believing he committed the
horrible murder or was connected
with it in any way. 1 entertain not
the .slightest doubt of his acquittal
once his trial corner up"
Arthur Heyman, of the law firm of
Dorsey, Brewster. Howell A- Heyman
declared after a visit with the prison
er that to say that Frank was guilty
of the murder of Mary Phagan was
preposterous.
Alumni of Georgia
In Atlanta to Meet
Matters of interest to the 500 At
lanta alumni of the University of
Georgia and to Georgia alumni over
the State are to be discussed Thurs
day night at 8:30 o’clock at the Uni
versity Club. Notices sent out by
Thomas W. Connallv, ’04. announce
that plans are on foot for special
cars to be secured for local alumni
to attend commencement at Athens
on Alumni Day. and that the ques
tion of the proposed alumni bureau
will also be brought up. The alumni
bureau will be in charge of a paid
secretary whose business it will be
to keep lists of all university men,
publish a weekly or monthly journal
and have on hand all literary propa
ganda of the university, with special
attention to commencement programs
and athletic events.
Fraternities Plan Reformatory.
SAVANNAH.—Through the efforts
of Simon N. Gazan and as a result
of a controversy between himself and
the Associated Charities over the dis
position of a wayward girl, a move
ment for the establishment of a re
formatory has been started by th»
Savannah Elks and Eagles.
Battleship Plans is
Navy Office Stolen
WASHINGTON. May 14.—Secre
tary of the Navy Daniels to-day ad- j
mined that important plans of the
electric wiring of the new battleship |
Pennsylvania were stolen from the
drafting room of the Bureau of Con
struction and repairs of the Navy De- |
partment the evening of March 4.
last. Duplicates of these plans were i
abstracted from the same room about
ten days later.
Secret service men have been work
ing on the cas*e but have obtained no
clew. Secretary Daniels explains that |
many Inauguration visitors were per- !
mitted in the State. War and Navy i
Building on March 4 and the. de
partment believes one of these vis
itors took the plans.
LEXINGTON. KY., May 4.—Abraiwwn
Potter, father of Revenue Officer Mark
Potter, who was fatally wounded in a
battle with moonshiners in which three
were killed, died to-day of heart fail
ure from werry over his son’s part in
the battle.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Gives the system the best
preparation for the hot
waves of summer which are
so enervating to the weak
and run-down. Take it'
this spring.
Get it to-day In usual liquid form or
in the tablets called Sarsatabs.
We have Beautiful Bedding
Plants 3c each. Atlanta Floral ‘
Co., 555 E. Fair Slreel.
NEW “PORK BARREL” PLAN
IS EVOLVED IN THE HOUSE
WASHINGTON, May 14.—A new
"pork barrel" plan has been evolved
by Democratic leaders of the House.
It is embodied in a resolution which
the Rules Committee has agreed to
report, providing f6r the creation of a
new committee to which all bills au
thorizing appropriations for good
roads shall be referred.
ATLANTA
MATINEES
MONDAY
WED. and SAT.
25c
All wUaak Except
Mil WEEK TO-NIGHT
Miss Billy Long Co.
In a Farce With 1.000 laufhi
Are Yoj a Mason?
Nights
15c to lOc
WIT—“’THE DEEP PURPLE”
Seats Now.
FORSYTH Z: E
Mat. Dally
Evanlng
8:30
PAUL DICKEY&C0.
Next Weak
ADAM A EVE
World s Greatest
Monkeys
APOLLO TRIO—HEWHOFF A
PHELPS—BILLY WELIS-
CLARENCE WILBUR CO. -
MAYO & ALLMAN & OTHERS
Good Kodak Finishing
Can not be done with cheap chem
icals and cheap paper. John L.
Moore & Sons. 42 North Broad
Street, use only the best of both at ,
reasonable charges Prompt service
Fresh films always on hand
Guaranteed Fresh Country
EGGS 16!
| Lemons 12£c
No. 10 Pail S1I- ■*
ver Leaf Lard JL mrnm m
Swift's Premium e
Hams, pound A t 2u
Brookfield or ^8 <4 .
Parksdale Butter. Jib
1C0 Pound Bag
Purina Chick
en Feed JL
CASH GROCERY GO.
118 & 120 Whitehall
The New Low Cuts
For Men
At $4.00 and $5. 00 we have a most attractive
line of Summer Footwear for Men, in every
desirable style, from the swell new English last
to the most conservative shape, and from dull
leather to white canvas.
We’ll be careful that you’re fit comfort
ably, 'too, in any style you may select. Our
Shoes have always had a reputation forstylish-
ness and long wear, which is largely due to the
care we take in fitting.
We are showing the newest modes in
Patent Leather
Dull Leather
Tan Russia Calf
Tan Vici
White Canvas
Gray Canvas
White City Park Now Open
Ponce DeLeon Rink Now
Open.
CARLTON'S
Thirty-Six Whitehall