Newspaper Page Text
10
CL
Four, Bundled in City District,Increase
Their Totals, but Make] Slight
Change in Relative Positions.
I nominate, as a candidate in The Hearst’s Sunday Ameri
can and Atlanta Georgian Pony Outfit Contest:
Name
Address.
Nominated by
Address
GOOD FOR 1,000 VOTES
Only One Nomination Blank Can Be Voted for Any Contestant.
Wm. Hood 1150
Miss Texla Mat* Butler 1000
Mias Anna Graham 1000
Albert Leake 1000
Merrlot Brown Reid 1000
Miss Frances Summers ,. 1000
District Number Six.
William Turner 17845
Mias Beverly Swanton 9700
Miss Susanne Springer 6250
Edward DeLoach 6695
J. T. Sewell 5055
Edgar Wilson 2745
John Lovett 2710
George Nelson Baker 3090
G.tv Reynolds 1505
Miss Ora F. Dozier 1790 j
E. F. Marquett 1270
TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.WEDNESDAY. MAY 21. 1913
BURLESQUE PAGEANT
BY 1.700 MARCHERS TO
FEATURE TECH FINALS
A continued burlesque pageant
j participated In by all students
< and alumni will furnish the great
est feature of commencement week
at the Georgia Tech. The mon
ster parade will be formed at
j 4 o’clock June 10 on the campus,
and will proceed uptown to be re-
Mias Margaret Thornton
.11715
. 6570
. 2940
. 1500
. 1115
1170
Very much in earnest, and energetic to a degree, the city carriers
and newsboys are furnishing one of the most exciting contests of all for
one of The Georgian and American pony outfits.
Ross Greer. Mose Brodkin, Harold Hamby and O. B. Bigger are run
ning in the order named, but they are not far apart.
Tuesday was their busy day, It seems, for Ross Greer brought In
3,000 votes and raised his total to 30,240; O. B. Bigger brought in 2,000
votes and raised his standing to 19,760 votes, and Harold Hamby in
creased his total from 18,635 to 19,585. Mose Brodkin remains station
ary at 2.100.
Other Big Gains Made.
Other big gains were made for the day. George Rosser, of District
1, Jumped £8.935 to 32,585, a gain of 3,600 votes.
Florence Grecnoe, Nathaniel Kay and Oscar Eugene Cook, all of Dis
trict 4, brought in about 1,000 each, but their relative positions remain
unchanged. t
It still is possible to nominate candidates, and the lists will remain
open until May 31.
Names and standings of the contestants in the various contests fol
low:
District Number One.
George Rosser 32535
Jacob Patterson ... 17030
Josephine Simril 15390
Vera Nelle Brantley 10885
Miss Margaret Lewis 8750
Janet Oxenham 6755
Hugh B. Luttrell 6660
Edgar Watkins, Jr 6475
.las. O. Godard 6295
Willie Ivey Wiggins 621.
Miss Frankie J. Smith
Hillman McCall*
Miss Mildred Stewart ..
Dorothy Stiff
Nellie Martin
Miss Estelle Sullivan ..
Phillip S. Reid
Miity Louise Thompson
4 570
3355
2220
2030
2190
1730
1405
1435
Mollie I^ee Kendall 1405
Glenn Moon 1330
Andrew May 1295
Thomas M. Price 1270
Norman (.laidwell ••• 1250
James Grubbs 1140
Wm. Lisle 11.45
Lottie Mae Dcdman 1130
Eugene Morgan 1100
Wyman Conard - 1000
Yoland Gw in 1000
Harold Holsombach 1000
T. L. Hoshall, Jr 1000
' ov Mauldh 1000
Albert Smith 10J0
Mis.; Louise McCrary 1000
Miss Sudie King 1000
Miss Gaynell Phillips 1000
Mies Mary E. Peacock 1000
Robert A Harden 1000
Miss Edith ('lower 1000
Miss Ruth Grogan 1000
H. E. Watkins. Jr 100*) I Jonn
Miss Annie Phillips 1000 1 Roy
Mildred Brickman 18950
Willette Mat hews 19735
J. P. Goets, Jr 6245
Miss Mabel Bracewell 3400
Miss Mary Wells 2735
Mi. e *s Evelyn Oxford 1800
Ernest E. Hamonck 1250
Anne S. 8latton 1040
Willie Reynolds 1000
Harry Brown
Miss Alma Coleman
Joe R. Smith
Howard Grove
Claudia Cochran
Annie Mealor
1000
2335
1000
1000
1000
1000
Marion Wells 1000
District Number Four.
Fannie Mae Cook 40790
Florence Greenoe 33545
Nathaniel Kay 21120
Oscar Eugene Cook ...... 14210
W\ H. Hamilton, Jr 8755
Ida G. Fox 5965
Mill Wilhelmlna Tucker 5425
Nell Reynolds 5450
Howell ('onway 3650
Lillian Maurenberg 4185
Miss Ida Bloomberg 5965
Charles Ernest Vernoy 2460
Agnes Shatren 2335
II. L. W. Brown 2150
Miss Maude L. Berry 2210
J. Walling Davis 6250
Louis Joel 1695
Guy Quintan 161 &
Miss Marie Toy 1550
Miss Beatrice Brunson 2175
Raymond Smith 1460
Thrasher 1425
Young 1420
Charlie Hood 10
Miss Grace Davis 1000
Gregory J. Eaton 1000
Angle C. Newton 1000
Benjamin F. Safiets 1000
Miss Virginia Jackson 3695
Grady Harris 1325
Ad Gay 1310
District Number Seven.
A. Morrison
Philip Gil' tein ....
James Allen
George H. Melton
Joe DuPre
Lawrence McGinnis
Clyde Mitchell 1640
Claude Higgins 1JJ0?
('has. R. Walker, Jr 1725
City Carriers and Newsboys.
Ross Greer 30240
Royal Barbour 2280
Harold Hamby 10685
O. B. Bigger 19570
Mose Brodkin
John Trimble • • 14630
J. 73. Moore 12715
Roy Cook 0600
Raymond Wilkinson 13140
Harold Turner * 6850
Irvan Willingham 8015
Powell Pend ley 11750
Sterling Jordan 6610
Sidney Ney 8820
Everett J. Cain 3410
Norman Gooch 2930
Bonnell Bloodworth 2610
Charles Barron 3350
St. Leonard Veitch 1975
I,. M. Harrison 1660.
Frank Garwood * 1545
Robert Correll 1300
Olin Neal Bass 2020
R S. McConnell 1220
Grady Cook 1180
Johnnie Evans 1000
Out-of-Town Agents and Carriers.
John Martin. Jr., Columbus, Ga. 17645
Ambrose Scarboro. Royston, Ga. 3865
Jake Palmer, Murphy, N. C 3030
I^eon Spence. Carrollton, Ga. .. 4150
II K. Everett. Calhoun, Ga 2460
Jas. S. Plunkett, Gaffney, H. C. 2180
Aubrey Hopkins, Anderson,
8. C 1835
Thos. W. Rylee, Gainesville, Ga 1585
M. E. I)asch, Stone Mountain,
Ga 2410
Robt. Newby, Vienna, Ga 1360
Chas. B. Havey, Lithonia, Ga... 1000
H. Esserman, Rome. Ga 1345
John Toler, New Orleans, La... 1340
Leon B. Spears, Woodstock, Ga. 1285
Alfred Ohappelle. Sparta, Ga... 1145
James Wilkins, Gaffney, S. C... 1015
L. Bennett, Brunswick, Ga 1000
Jos. Milam, Cartcrsville, Ga.. .. 1000
Herman Corliss, LaGrange, Ga. 1000
Smith Fallaw, Opelika, Ala 1000
R. E. Hudson, Unadilla, Ga 1000
Hugh Parrikh, Adel, Ga 1000
Paul Swint, Gibson, Ga 1000
X. N. David, Cedartown, Ga.... 1000
Rupert Mobley, Covington, Ga.. 1000
I Georgia School Boys and Girls
I Andrew B. Trimble, Lithonia ..11485
j Ennie Spinks, Chipley 8155
Lola Casey, Chattahoochee .... 6255
Virginia McCowen, Marietta Car
line 4210
Clifford Henry, Carrollton 3805
C. E. Crawford, Chipley 3080
Esther Boorst^in, Covington ... 2995
M. Means, Meansville 11190
Margaret Danner, Doraville. . .. 2995
Belle Stowe, Toccoa 2855
Gertrude Moseley, Menlo. Ga. . 1825
H. H. Redwine, Fayetteville .... 1000
Felix Reid, Union City 1000
27oi . , | .| . , | p ii ana win — -
7801 Legislature Likely to Issue Oall viewed by Governor Brown. More
Upon Assembling and Canvass
Returns Within 50 Days.
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
Of all the various ways sug
gested of choosing a successor to
Senator Bacon, now that the Fed
eral amendment providing for pop
ular election of United States Sen
ators
cient number of States, the Legisla
ture likely will adopt the method of
calling a Senatorial election Imme
diately upon assembling, and pro
viding that It be held early enough
to get the returns back to the Leg
islature for canvassing before ad
journment.
This will necessitate a short sen
atorial campaign, of course, a* the
General Assembly can sit only fifty
days under the Constitution, but in
asmuch as Senator Bacon la to have
no opposition, the shortness of the
campaign will not be protested in
any quarter.
Once the Georgia legislature sat
forty-nine days continuously, and
then adjourned four months before
sitting the last day, in order that
some impeachment proceedings
might be considered; but the Inno
vation aroused a greAt deal of ad
verse comment, especially as the
Legislature concerned paid Itself
double mileage, and that plan of
procedure hardly will be tried again
soon.
Senator Bacon himself is said to
think that the best course to pursue
will be to hold the election as out
lined, and his friends in the General
Assembly are shaping their plans ac
cordingly.
The Legislature might authorize
the Governor to appoint a Senator,
and postpone the regular election un
til the next general State election,
but few members of the incoming
Legislature seem to approve that
suggestion.
Senator Bacon will be the first
Senator elected under the new order
of things. James Hamilton Lewis,
of Illinois, Georgian, was the last
Senator elected under the old plan.
I than 350 of the alumni have already
written E. A. Turner, chairman of
i the committee in charge, that they
will take part. It is believed in the
neighborhood of 1,000 graduates of
the famous institution will journey
to Atlanta for the sole purpose of par
ticipating in the unique demonstra
tion.
With every student and 1,000 alum
ni in line there will he 1,700 repre
sentatives of everything burlesque
for Governor Brown to inspect. Ev-
Mi«s Christa Powers
Oliff Moody
William Ernest
Arthur Pepin
Lillian Smith
Chas. Johnson
Frank Price. Jr
District Number Two.
Miss Robert Harbour
Eugene Willingham
.2619
.21910
Miss Elizabeth Smith 108$
9790 !
9715 |
8300 I
5880 !
4630 I
3945
2935 l
2435
2170
2115 I
1850 !
1740
J. W. Collins. Jr
Miss Marjorie McLeod ..
Miss Lottie McNair ....
Elsie Gosnell
Miss Elizabeth Garwood.
Mies Idelle Shaw
Miss Edith Gray
Edmund Hurt
Ray Warwick
J. Edgar Sheridan .......
Miss LaRue Church
v tt Matthew*
Paul M. Clark
Wm. Wellborn
Clinton Hutchinson
Miss Virginia Walton 1650
Miss Nellie Reynolds 35S5
Chas. M. Kellog. Jr 1380
BMgar Sweetzer ....
Max Clein
Robert Wood
Martin C<
Buel Crawley
Willie Harden
Raley Ray
Miss Lucy Withers
Mies Elizabeth Downing
Robert R. Andrews ....
Misv Catherine Fussell .
J. R. Wood
J. P Tucker
Nick Caroli
Sarah Paxton
W. Saxnet
Ed Ferguson 1000
Pierce Smith 1000
District Number Three.
Charles M. Stevens 23270
erford
1009 | Paul Theodow n 1460
1000 Miss Annie (. aham 2110
1000 Estelle Honor 1380
mO0 David F. Nowell 1295
1000 i William Henderson 1290
1000 Louise Simpson 1290
1000 Mose Gold 1250
Miss Susie Black 1230
. Miss Meta Mitchell 1870
! : : i: II Id
James Edens 1000
Vivian Broom 1250
Miss L. E. Abbott 1000
Miss Lovie C. Dean 100)
Miss Alice Feldman 1000
Frank Henley 1000
Miss Annie Mae Hllsman 1000
Milton Holcombe 1000
Lynn A. Hubbard %.... 1000
3n0 * Harry Stone .... 1000
3;>20 | mi ss Sarah Whitaker 1000
Miss Margaret White 1000 1
Charles stone 1000
R. H. Brown 1000
Miss Rosemund Humphries .... 1035
Hugh Terrell .. 1000
Miss Carlotta Purns 1000
Lowell Battle 1000
Miss Lillian L Brown 1000
Miss Marlon Overstreet 1000
Jack Kllman 1000
Bugene Bay Ilia looo
Sam K. Nece 1000
Esther Hutchins 1000
lionise Whitman 1645
Myrtle Jottee 1000
Annie Slatten 2650
District Number Five.
1425 !
1245 |
1130 !
10)0 !
iooo
iooo !
iooo I
i: 30 ,
1000 I
1000
1000
1120 1
1030 i
1000 :
, 1000
1000
Frank Ison. Jr 23995
Richard Rainey 9055
Harndon Thomas 6275
Mias Louise Chewning 5015
Emery Ward 6775
Dick Do. ton 3800
Miss Margaret La Feure 3050
Miss Mary Holloway 2065
Miss Lueile Berry 2115
John Baker Long 1260
Roy Coleman 1550
PUTS AN END TO BACKACHE
MAKES WEAK KIDNEYS STRONG
>
A Few Doses Give Relief,
Helps Lifeless Organs Re
gain Health, Strength and
Activity. _
It is useless, dangerous and un
necessary to be tortured with the
digging, twisting pains of backache
and rheumatism, or suffer with dis
agreeable kidney and bladder dis
orders any longer.
The new discovery. Croxone, pro-
i Tides a remedy which every sufferer
f can now depend upon to promptly
| and surely relieve all such misery.
< Croxone relieve? these troubles
{ because K ouickly overcomes the
< cause of the disease. It soaks right
$ into the stopped-up. inactive kid-
] neys, through the membranes and
linings; cleans out the little filter
ing glands; neutralizes and dis
solves the poisonous uric acid and
makes the kidneys filter and sift
from the blood all the waste and
pbisonous matter that clog the sys
tem and cause such troubles.
It does not matter whether you
have hut slight symptoms or the
moft chronic, aggravated case of
kidney, bladder trouble, or rheu
matism that it is possible to imag
ine, for the very principle of Crox
one is such that it is practically im
possible to take It into the human
system without resuits.
An original package of Croxone
costs but a trifle, and all druggists
are authorized to return the pur
chase price if it fails to give the
desired results the very first time
you use it.
TT
Ralph Little, Commerce : 1009
Warner Webb, Griffin 1000
E. A. Heckle, Cornelia 1255
Etheridge Bradley, Smyrna .... 1015
Ernest Baker, Washington .... 1040
Lily Wilkes, R. F. D. Atlunta .... 1000
J. P. (’raven, Baxley 1000
J. H. Hewlett, Conyers 1000
Helen Mitchell, Richwood •<.... 1000
(’has. Harlan. P. F. T>. Atlanta . . 1050
Rudolph Campbell, Fairburn .... 1000
W. Harrell, Jr.. Quitman 1500
Robt. Mobley, Jr., Quitman.... 1055
(’. V. Turner, Jr., Quitman .... 1000
G. W. Posey, Jr . Juniper 100)
Mary Allen. Juniper 1885
Jessie Tabor, Loganville 1095
Mattie L. Johns Loganville .... 1Q05
A. E. Gilmore, Jr. Tennille 1000
Richard Johnson, Tennille 1000
.]». P. Tucker, Jr.. R. F. D. Atlanta 1000
Edna Jennings, Newnan 1000
Thos. Lamar, Waycross 1000
Evelyn Davis, Baconton 1000
W. B. Dismukes, Mystic 1000
Cary Bresel, Rome 1009
Susie Glenn, Social Circle 1000
Joe Tink, Gainesville 1090
Eleanor Lindsay. Tucker 1050
Sidney Newsome, Union Point .. 10S)
Patrick Jones. Macon 3.280
Gladys Daniel, Bolton 240
Elmer Towns, Social Circle 22 *0
Terry Strozier, Greenville 2250
W. L. Mattox. Newnan 2900
Belle Ragsdale, Lithonia 4066
Maxwell Aubrey, Bolton 1985
B. C. Elder. Blakely 1S79
Chas. E. Keely, CartersvlUe 1S00
Berry Clein. Columbus 1795
Patrick Jones, Macon 1690
Emory Steele, Commerce .... 151"
Blake Nichols, R. F. I). Atlanta 2965
Berta Davis, Fayetteville 1690
Alfred Wilkes. R. F. D. Atlanta 1650
Wm. Reid, Columbus 1425
Wm. Talliaferro, Mansfield .... 1240
Clay Burruss, Carnesville .... 1265
Ruth Aiken. Carnesville 1125
Gertrude Marshall. Savannah .. 1150
Mary Caldwell. Chipley 1130
Jessie Collier, Barnesville 1170
Rives Cary, Barnesville 1100
Will Chapman, Barnesville 1090
Clyde Stephens, Barnesville .... 1075
Ernest Turney. Chipley 1085
Paul Jo&sey, Forsyth 1280
Carl Bragg. Woodcllff 1089
Robert Davis. Columbus 1060
Miriam Stansell, Gainesville .. 1055
Anna Johnson, Summerville .... 1056
j. C. Smith, Oxford 1069
Sallie Evans, Douglasville 1110
Bennett Jeffers, Douglasville .... 1185
H. C. Ogilvie. Savannah 1090
Krva Blackstock, Hogansville . . 1030
\V. A. Hollis, Hogansville 1030
H. E. White, Flovilla 1040
J. L. Brewer. Egan 1165
E. Scarborough. Macon 1025
D. S. Morton. Raymond 1105
Chas. Clark, Loganville 1010
Brannon Sharp. Commerce .... 1000
G. W. Davis, Bremen 1000
Cecil McGahee, Lithonia 1090
Jimmy Logan Grantville 1950
Sarah Carter Savannah 1000
Dan Patrick, Conyers 1000
School Boys and Girls Outside of
State of Georgia.
Robert Hyatt Brown 4386
Rodney Stephens 4255
Miss Dorothy Davis 1145
Ralph Turner 1350
Miss Annie McCa&ell 1080
Novel Wheeler 1015
Pauline Trull lftOO
J T Webb, Jr. ... 10 *0
Lindsay W Graves 1000
George Andrews 1000
Fain E. Webb, Jr 1090
Miss Lydia Bemley 1000
Henry Hicks 2910
McGee Hunt, Westminster. S. C. 1075
Geo. W. Chamlee. Chattanooga.
Tenn. r n n n ■ w ■■ ■ 1000
has been approved by a suffl ery man who will take part in the
pageant is authorized to go the limit
in his burlesque interpretation. He
may follow his own fancy and im
personate any character he pleases.
He may take his idea from any pub
lic character of the day, or delve into
history, mythology, fiction, military
life, Indian, something characteristic
of Tech life, past, present or future;
or appear as a sailor, student, en
gineer, convict, sport, stoker, horri
ble example, rambling wreck, Afri
can Kaffir, rough rider, colonial, con
tinental, clown, Mary Ann, Buster
Brown, Uncle Sam, Mut and Jeff or
Happy Hooligan.
Marks Quarter Centennial.
This commencement marks Tech’s
quarter centennial, and every effort
Is being exerted to make it the most
memorable of afll. The largest class
ever graduated from the institution
will receive diplomas. Of unique in
terest is the part which the class of
’93 will take in the features, par
ticularly in the burlesque pageant.
Distinction will be added to the pa
geant by the participation of these
men, most of whom have attained
great prominence but who retain the
most intense interest in their alma
mater.
While commencement week doiS
not begin until June 5, an address by
William Jennings Bryan, June 2,
really marks the beginning of the
most interesting part of the school
term. The distinguished statesman
accepted an invitation to address the
Tech student body several months
ago, and the students are planning
a great demonstration for him.
Thursday, June 5, commencement
week formally begins with a “Bull
dog Dance” at Segadlio’s Dancing
Academy, at 10:30 p. m. Friday,
June 6, the literary society debate
will be held at 8 o’clock in the eve
ning, followed by a cotillion at 10
o’clock. Saturday, at 8 p. m., the an
nual freshman oratorical contest will
be the feature.
Junior Prom on Monday.
The baccalaureate sermon will he
delivered at 11 a. m., Sunday, June 8,
with another address at the Tech Y.
M.‘C. A. at 8 p. m.
The following week will be unusu
ally lively. The sophomore german
will be held at 10:30 a. m., Monday;
a literary address at 3:30 p. m.; presi
dent’s reception from 5 to 7, and the
junior promenade at 8 p. m.
Tuesday the annual meeting of the i
alumni will be held at 9:30 a. m., with
Founder's Day exercises at 10:30.
Class Day exercises and demonstra
tion for the alumni will be held at
3:30, followed by the forming of the
burlesque pageant at 4. Founder’s
Day oration will be given at 8:15,
Governor’s reception at 9:30, and the
annual banquet at 10:30 p. m.
Wednesday, June 11, will be th»
“big day.” At 10:30 a. m., the formal
commencement exercises will be held,
and at 1:30 p. m. the graduating class
will be the guests of the Chamber of
Commerce at a luncheon. At 10
m. the annual Pan Hellenic dance
will be held.
Thursday, June 12. marks the wind-
i up of commencement with the
senior class banquet.
The graduating class, which is the
largest in the history' of the institu
tion. is composed of 78 young men.
In the number are five special cer
tificate men.
Members of the Class.
The following young men compose
the class:
ARCHITECTURE—Paul Henderson
Clark, John Cobb Dennis, Harrison
Samuel McCrary, Jr.
SPECIAL ARCHITECTURE CER
TIFICATE—James McCutchen Rus
sell.
SPECIAL TEXTILE CERTIFI
CATE—Charles Alwln Adair, Robert
Evan Davis, Thomas Bourke Floyd,
Jr., Henry Campbell Grouse.
TEXTILE ENGINEERING—Fred
erlck Param Brooks, Llewellyn Lee
Brown, Morris Marlon Bryan, Charles
Locke Crumley, Dean Hill, Lawrence
Maddox,
Carr. James Cuyler Chalmers. Cyrus
Sands Crofoot, Charles Cleveland
Ely, Jr., William Austin Emerson,
Marion Searcy Estes, Jacob William
Feldman, Simon Armstrong Flemis-
ter, Thomas Herbert Oclphin, Charles
Sidney Hammond, Albert Paris Hill,
Isadore Bernard Hirsch, William
Cheesborough Holmes. George Mel
ville Hope, Robert Ledbetter Hughes,
George Washington Lalne. Jr., John
Barnard Law, Jr., Ralph Waldo Rey
nolds, James Kelso Rockey, John
Henry Schroeder, Harry Segel, Aus
tin McRae Wynne.
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING —
Oliver Porter Adams, Walter Read
Boyd, John Copeland Brooks, Joseph
Tooke Lee Brown, Victor Carleton
Browmson, Theo Wilkes Davis, James
Rembert DuBose, Lawton Bryan
Evans, Jr., Andrew' Scheihing Goe
bel, Harleston Jennings Hall, William
Phin Hammond, Richard Manley
Harris, Melville Ames Jamison,
George Bowers Jew'ett. Jr.. Felix
Henry' Lanham, Albert Lorch Loeb,
Hugh Luehrmann. Aristus Jackson
Phillips, Jack Phinizy, Charles Ed
ward Porter, Jr., Maxwell Lamar
Rahner, Augustus Lee Stribling, Er
nest Kennon Thomason, William Ar
thur Ware-
Farmer Leaves Money
In Will to His Tenants
Those Who Lived on His Land Over
Year Received $100; Less Than
That, $50.
Grover C. Edmondson, of Brooks
County, is an Atlanta visitor.
Mr. Edmondson will be the “baby”
of the new House, but he will be one
of the livest wires therein, neverthe
less. He is only 22.
He says his bill to cal! a Consti
tutional Convention will be heartily'
supported by very rnaay members
of the incoming House, and that he
personally has every reason to be
lieve that It will pass both Houses
and become a law eventually.
J. W. McWhorter, County School
Superintendent of Oconee County', has
been appointed by Governor Brown
member of the Board of Directors
of the Georgia Experiment Station,
located at Griffin, Ga„ vice J. D
Price resigned.
Mr. McWhorter represents the
Eighth Congressional District on
that board. Mr. Price, when he
assumes his duties as Commissioner
of Agriculture, will be ex-officio a
member of that body.
Senator-elect W. E. Spinks, of
Paulding County, who will represent
the Thirty-eighth District in the next
General Assembly, gives it as his
opinion that Senator John T. Allen,
of the Twentieth, will win the fight
for the presidency of the Senafie.
“I am not taking a particularly par
tisan stand in the contest for the
presidency' of the Senate myself,”
said Senator Spinks, “hut I have
talked to a number of Sertators. and
it is my opinion that Senator Allen
has the inside track now', and likely
will keep it. He seems to be recog
nized as a well balanced and able
parliamentarian, and there is no
charge of factionalism lodged against
him.
“The impression seems to be that
the incoming Legislature is to be
somewhat different from those of the
immediate past, especially in that it
BOSTON, May 2 —An estate val
ued at nearly $750,000 was left by a
Dorchester farmer, Charles H. Green-
w'ood.
He directs that $85,000 be set aside
to erect the Grenwood Memorial
Building "for the welfare of the
neighborhood or pupblic.’* Other pub
lic bequests raise the total to $122,-
000.
Greenwood had about 70 ten
ants. To those who lived in hi3
houses over a year he gave $100; over
six months, $50.
CAN NOT BE FOUND
City-Wide Search Is Made for
Dr. M. R. Mitchell, Commis
sioner from Kansas City.
A citv-wide search for Dr. M. R.
Mitchell, a commissioner from the
Kansas City Presbytery, was begun
Wednesday by the United Presbyte
rian Assembly to acquaint him of the
death of his wife in Kansas City
Tuesday night.
,A telegram announcing the sudden
death of Mrs. Mitchell came to Dr.
D. F. McGill, first clerk of the Assem
bly, Wednesday morning, asking that
Dr. Mitchell be notified. A request
that Dr. Mitchell step to the platform
and receive the message brought in
formation that the Kansas City man
had not been present at the Assembly
meetings for two days. Several of his
friends expressed anxiety as to his
whereabouts. Efforts to learn where
he was stopping in Atlanta also were
unsuccessful.
Shortly before noon a report was
brought to the Assembly that a man
answering Dr. Mitchell’s description
had been seen walking hurriedly in the
direction of the Terminal Station
Wednesday morning, and his friends
are of the opinion that he had re
ceived a telegram telling of the death
of his wife, and was hurrying to catch
a train home.
It is probable that Dr. Mitchell’s
friends will undertake Wednesday
afternoon to learn whether he has
left the city. The Assembly, after
hearing of the death of his wife, Join
ed in a prayer service for him.
INDIAN FORCE TO ACCEPT
LAND NOW WORTH MILLIONS
Relative of Emperor of Austria
Weds Chicago Girl Soon
After Meeting.
KANSAS CITY, May 21.—The
nephew of Francis Joseph, Emperor
of Austria, came to Kansas City the
other day and was married.
Edward A. J. Fretherr VonWall-
staten is the way the bridegroom
signed his name on a hotel register.
In Austria he is a count. In this
country he is a machine manufac
turer. The bride was Miss Olive A.
Jameson, daughter of George Smith
Jameson, of Chicago.
The couple met three week ago at
Eldorado Springs, Mo. They became
engaged three days later.
"We shall leave for Chicago to
night,” said the Count, “and in June
start on a tour around the world,
visiting Uncle Francis in Austria.”
VILLAIN IN MOVIE SHOT.
LEAVENS WORTH, May —Pa
trons of a moving picture show here
were momentarily panic-stricken
when a spectator, believing the vil
lain was going to murder the hero v>f
the picture, drew a pistol from his
pocket and fired at the struggling fig
ures on the canvas.
WASHINGTON. May 21.—Forced
to accept a Government grant of 160
acres of land, and now receiving be
tween $9,000 and $12,000 monthly,
since oil was discovered on his prop
erty, is the fortune of Eastman Rich
ards, a Snake Indian, one of the tribe
of famous Crazy Snake. Many other
Indians are getting from $500 to
$1,000 a month from their oil in the
same district of Cushing, Okla.
Richards disappeared several years
ago, and when he reappeared he was
forced by, the Government to accept
the grant of land which bids fair to
make him a millionaire.
> Guy Haynes Northcutt
CHEMISTRY—George Dudley Van-
will be neither a “Joe” Brown nor _
Hoke Smith Assembly. Judge Allen: Kaufmann, George Lamar
has a fine record as a lawyer, is rated ~ TT ' ““ x ’ *
fair-minded and safe in matters gen
erally, and I find many Senators In
clined to him heartily as President
of the Senate.”
Senator Spinks says the farmers of
his vicinity are feeling much more
hopeful of their crops since the re
cent rains, but reports a great need of
much more rain. He says the rural
citizenry is not talking politics much
nowadays.
Former Commissioner of Agricul
ture Thomas G. Hudson, who has
been quite ill in a local sanitarium, is
much improved and expects to be out
again shortly.
Epps, James Oliver Clarke
ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY —
Richard Fuller Sams. Jr., Samuel
Daniel Frankel, Raymond Fernando
Montsalvatge.
CIVIL ENGINEERING—Dominic
Cessario Ashley, Albert Clark Mat
thews, Jr., James Aris Roby, Samuel
Norwood Hodges. Homer Cook, Wal
ter Grady Miller, William Dunlap Kel
logg.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
Eldridge Hayslip Arrington, Arch
Upshaw Avera, Joel Halbert Berry,
Giles Featherston Bunn, Herbert Earl
MEXICO PLEDGES ITS
CUSTOMS FOR LOAN
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
MEXICO CITY, May 21.—Thirty-
eight per cent of the customs re
ceipts of Mexico has been pledged as
collateral for the $100,000,000 loan
from foreign bankers, authorized by
Congress late last night. The amount
is to be placed at 90 and will run for
ten years. The interest rate is 6 per
cent.
DROWNING DUPLICATED.
OREGON, CITY, MO.. May * At
the same spot where his brother was
drowned twenty-eight years ago, the
body of James Bird Lamb was found
pinned under a wagon in the Molalla
River, two miles from Molalla.
Automatic Phone to
Register Fire Alarms
Dentist’s Invention Sends in Call
When Heat in House Becomes
Too High.
WARRENSBURG. MO., May 21.—
Joseph D. Peake, a Warrensburg den
tist, has lately perfected a unique and
useful instrument, an automatic fire
alarm.
This alarm, as shown by a working
model, is an ordinary thermometer at
tached by electrified wires to a tele
phone. Attached are fine copper
wires, the w'hole being charged from
a small dry battery'.
These wires lead to the house or
office telephone. In case of a fire
starting In any part of the house, the
circuit closes and the alarm is con
ducted along the wires to the tele
phone and from there by signal to the
central telephone office.
The Perfect Baby
Of the Future
A Simple Method That Ha« a Wonder
ful Influence Upon the Future Infant
Too much can not be laid for a 1
edr, familiar to many women as Mother's _
tt la more eloquent In It* action than all tba t
rules ever laid down for the guidance of expectant
IT’S POOR ECONOMY
to use cheap stationery. Letters written on distinctive
stationery are sure to be read. Our line of*
STEEL ENGRAVED and EMBOSSED
Letterheads, Envelopes and Business Cards
Are in a Class Alone. Write for Prices and Samples
J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO.
47 Whitehall St. ATLANTA, GA.
TRAVEL IN COMFORT
only with a
Self-lifting Tray Trunk
Daily demonstrations prove conclusively that, this
is the best, and most practical patent Tray Trunk made
to-day.
Manufacturer’s Sale Prices
$7.00 to $25.00
in all sizes and styles.
LIEBERMAN’S
The House of Guaranteed Baggage.
92 Whitehall
r
Established 1865
EISEMAN BROS., Inc. Incorporated 1912
The Natty New Nor folks
Now on display in our Crystal Cabinets:
Come in and try on some of these
splendid models from America’s Master
Tailors—Youths’ and Young Men’s pop-
uar favorites;
Full Belt
and Half Belt
styles—
made of a fine variety of highly fin
ished Cheviots, Serges, Worsteds and
Crashes, in solid colors, penciled effects
and fanev mixtures.
Youths’ Norfolks
$15 to $20
Young Men’s
NORFOLKS
$18 to $30
HESS SHOES
Oxfords in Blueher
style, English last,
Fashion’s Footwear
favorite, all leathers.
$5, $6, $7
The new Straw Hats! Fifty styles to se
lect from, $1.50 and up.
Cool Underwear. Outing Apparel of ev
ery description.
Eiseman Bros.
Inc.
■L
11-13-15-17 Whitehall
Entire Building
We carry a large and eomplete line of Trunks, Traveling Bags, Suit
Cases, Etc. Trunk and Bag Dept., Third Floor.
r
mother. It la an external application that aprradl
its Influence upon all the cords, muscles, llgamenta
and tendons that nature oalls Into play: they t>x
pand gracefully without pain, without strain, and
thus leare the mind care-free and In Joyous antic
ipation of the greatest of all womanly ambition.
Mother's Friend must therefore be considered at
directly a moat tmporant Influence upon the char
acter and disposition of the future generation. It
Is a oonceded fact that, with nausea^ pain, ner
rousness and dread banished, there la stored up
•u<1» an abundance of healthy energy as to bring
Into being the highest Ideals of those who fondly
theorise on the rules that Insure the coming of the
perfect baby.
Mother's Friend can be had at any druggist at
$1.00 a bottle, and it la unquestionably one of those
remedies that always has a place among the cher
ished few In the medicine cabinet.
Mother's Friend la prepared by the Bradfleld Reg
ulator Co., 189 Lamar Bldg.. Atlanta, CJa.. after
a formula of a noted family doctor.
Write them for a very lnstructire book to ex
pectant mothers. Bee that your druggist will supply
rou with Mother's JTnend,
m