Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 29, 1913, Image 2
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2
in*. AiLA.N i A Uf.UKUIAA AA L» At. VMS.
SISTER THIS
Mrs. Pearl Hartley. Prostrated by
Shock, Declares Robbery Was
Motive for Crime.'
Continued From Pago 1.
the murder is urn* which shows the!
work that of two negroes woh were
• I
said to have been seen driving away |
from the burning home at sunrise j
Wednesday morning The men rode j
in a one-horse wagon, the body of i
which was tilled with oats. Tracks
of the hoi*8<
near the ri
vicinity was
of frc*sh oats
found nearby.
Despite the assertion that the ne
groes drove away. Sheriff McCurdy's
rnen made a rareful search of the
woods surrounding the home, believ
ing it highly probable that the mur
derer might have hidden therein to
Match the burning house, and will
scour the woods again to-day An
other theory is that he might have
been wound* <i by Mrs. Stevens before
he killed her. and had been forced to
drag himself to the woods for escape.
That the man may he laying there
now is a possibilitv expressed by the
police The shell found in the shot
gun used by Mrs. Stevens was ‘found
to have been discharged.
were found on a spot
ns# In, the immediate
discovered a small pile
Human footprints were
T e Georgian-American Pony Contest
VOTE COUPON
Heaist's Sunday American and Ailanta Georgian
PONY CONTEST VOTE COUPON, THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1913
5 VOTES
NOT GOOD AFTER JUNE 13, 1913.
Vote for
Address
CARRIERS' AND AGENTS' BALLOT.
Heai st ’s Sunday American and Atlanta Georgian
Pony Contest Vote Coupon, Thursday, May 29, 1913.
C V/HTCQ NOT GOOD /fFTER
^ V V/ I K.O JUNE 13. 1913.
Vote for
Address
SCHOOL BOYS' AND GIRLS' BALLOT.
YOU MAY SAY WHAT YOU LIKE—
HUE IF LIES If
-JoHbl Bull may have foett foou^h iM Colonial J)aY5/
-ANPVIE MAY wave MADE A SLIGHT MISTAKE' IN
THE WAR OF Ifel2-I4- —
Sister Believes
Son Innocent.
In a darkened room in a Utile house
at 33 Dairies Street, with a physician
in almost constant attendance, lies a
worn.in prostrated by grief. Absolute
quiet has been ordered by the doctor
an 1 the anguish tears at her heart in
a silence broken only by her own sobs
and the hushed patter of childish
footsteps as her children play quietly
about the house.
She is Mrs. Pearl Hartley, sister of
Mrs. Sarah (\ Stevens, whose charred
body was found lying beside that of
her adopted daughter In the smoking
ruins of their farm home seven miles
from Atlanta. Prostrated by the
shock of the tragedy, with her imagi
nation made vivid by her suffering
and grief. Mrs. Hartley is seeing in
especially under the re
frigerator with
CN
S TRAY particles of fats and
oily food# work into the
floor cracks or oilcloth and
nutrify This gives rise to
bod odors and also serves to
breed disease germs and
vermin.
r\ penetrates every nook
and corner and disinfects as
well as cleanses. It
will sweeten the air.
too, and overcome
o b .leetlonahle
smells of all kinds.
Also use C'\ oeca
•tonally innido of
your refrigerator
All firopfri. Druggist*
mid Department St tires
The i/clloxr packoff*
10c, 25c, 5Or, $1
West DISINFECTING Cli
Atlanta, Ga.
V
$3,59 Recipe Free,
For Weak Men
‘ Send Name and Address To-day—
\ You Can Have It Free and Be
Strong and Vigorous
< 1 bate iti m> possession a prescrip
$ tion for nervous debility, lack of vig-
r or, weakened manhood, failing meni-
l ory anti lame buck, brought on by
S excesses, unnatural drains, or the
) tollies of youth, that has cured so
] many worn and nervmis men right
in their own homes- without any atl-
( J
s ph)
/ ditional help or medicine—that I
< think ever> man who wishes to re-
> gain his manly power and virility.
} quickly and quietly, should have a
? copy So 1 have determined to send
\ a copy of the prescription free of
( charge in a plain, ordinary sealed
cn\elope i■ • any man who wilt wri >•
5 me for It.
This prescription cornea front a
ihysician who has made a special
l study of men. and l am convinced it
> Is the surest-acting combination for
?the cure of deficient manhood and
( vigor failure ever put together.
S f think J owe it t«» my fellow-men
? to send them a copy in confidence so
(, that any man anywhere who i« weak
£ and discouraged with repeated fail-
; ares may stop drugging himself with ,
c harmful patent medicines, secure
y what I believe is the quickest acting
) restorat ive. up-building SPOT-
« TOUCHING remedy ever devised.
4 and so cure himself at home quietly
> and quickly lust drop me a line
(like ihis Dr. V K. Robinson. 1 ;*76
■ Luck Building. Detroit. Mich . and I
; will send you a copy of this splen-
\ did recipe in a plain, ordinary en
[ velope free of charge \ great many
5 doctors w ould charge J3.0O to $6 00
< for merely writing out a prescription
A I FRnh fT' rfli free
the darkness of her room the terrible
happenings of that night of horror.
Mrs. Hartley'.- only surcease frym
suffering came for a few moments
late Wednesday pft»inoon. when, tin
der tin* influence of opiates adminis
ter* <1 by her physician, she recovered
.sufficiently to talk to a Georgian re
porter. Mrs Hartley sobbed audibly
throughout the interview, and her
eyes, red with weeping atid reflecting
the anguish that tore at her hear.,
emphasized her word® as she cried for
vengeance on the murderer.
"Why do they always murder wom
en.'" -he cried. "It is terrible. Little
girls are murdered w hen they g<» onto
the street, and now n woman is not
safe even In her own home.”
Faints at News.
Tin notifying of Mrs. Hartley of
the death of her sister and niece
formed one of the most dramatic and
pathetic incidents of the entire trag
edy She was downtown Wednesday
morning shopping, when word came
to her home on Dalney Street that her
sister and niece had been murdered.
Mrs Lena Thompson a neighbor, of
24 Dalney Wtreet, volunteered to go
downtown find find Mre. Hartley and
tell her the sad news.
After a search of an hour Mrs.
Thompson found Mrs. Hartley In the
Kress store on Whitehall Street. A.-
she stood trying to locate the sister of
the murdered woman in the crowd of
shoppers Mrs. Hartley, warned by in
tuition that something wap wrong,
pushed through the crowd and hur
ried to Mrs Thompson.
"What is it?" she cried. "What’s
the matter?”
Mrs. Thompson, seeking to break
the ne\ys gently, told her that her sis
ter’s home had burned down and that
she had been badly injured.
• It's worse than that.” Mrs. Hartley j
cried. I feel it! 1 know it If worse |
than that!”
She screamed and fainted in the
arms of Mrs Thompson She
was soon revived and taken to her
home Mrs. Thompson endeavored to
calm her on the trip on the street car
with tin- assurance that everything
was all right
As Mrs. Hartley entered her yard,
one of her little daughters ran out of
the house, tears streaming down her
face
"Oh, mamVna." she cried. "Aunt Sa
rah and Cousin Nellie have been
killed!”
With a scream. Mrs. Hartley fell to
the ground in i swoon. She was
picked up by Mrs. Thompson and
members of her family and carried
into the house. A physician was
called and administered opiates. Un
fit* r the influence of the medicine she
was able to sit up in bed for a few
moments late in the afternoon, hut
collapsed again when she learned that
her nephew, the son of the murdered
woman, was being sought by the po
lice as the murderer of his mother.
Believes Boy Innocent.
Mrs. Hartley refused to believe the
boy could be capable of so diabolical
a crime.
"He may have been a bad boy.” she
said, "but 1 can not believe he would
kill his mother and sister. There must
be some mistake."
Mrs. Hartley advanced the theory
that the murder may have been com
mitted by some person with robbery,’
as the motive. Mrs. Steven- was an
energetic business woman, and up to
the time she moved to her farm had
been engaged extensively in build
ing operations, mostly In East Atlan
ta. She had a number of men in her
employ, and Mrs. Hartley said she
often kept » considerable sum of
money in her home. She said ^he
had known her sister to have as much
as $500 in her house at one time.
I. ess than a week ago. she said. Mrs.
Stevens wrote to her that she was
coming to Atlanta to sell some of her
property. It can not be learned that
she banked the proceeds of this sale,
and Mrs Hartley’s theory is that she
took the money home with her; that
this fact became known to some one.
and that she was murdered and the
bouse tired for purposes of robbery.
Up to about six months ago Mrs.
Steven* lived in the 700 block, Boule
vard. and moved to the country be
cause of her failing health. Resides
her husband and young son. Mrs.
Slovens is survived by six sisters,
Mrs. Pear! Hartley. Mrs. 1. Smith,
lira. M. A Golden, Mn J N. Pat
rick and Miss Lily Whattle.v. «‘f At
lanta. and Mrs \Y. <\ Sims of Means-
ville. Oa.. and three brothers. Ser
geant Whattle.v. of the Atlanta police
force, and T. (?. nnd H T. Whattley,
of Barnesville. Ga.
9 Property Owners
In Macon Vice Net
MACON GA.. May 29 — Nine Ma
con property owners, five of whom
art* promihent in business and socie
ty. have been indicted for leasing
houses for immoral purposes. They
are J. * ’ ay Murphey. Eden Taylor.
.7f Sam » Moore. L. (> Steven® Sam
Dunlap. H. Kessler Dan O'Conned,
J. W. Ford and H. D. Kaplan.
These indictments are part of the
Grand Jury crusade against the re
stricted district.
BCR LONDONS
L*fer/.inJ G.r&lkrf Sjfar/Mve/
TAe SCARLET PIAGUE
FRIE MAGAZINE
GIVEN WITH NEXT
5
fHj 5AY,ol&chap,Pont Foot/
WITH that HAMTR1CAH 0OHNM1E. >
GOT HAWfUt- TEMPEP-V
WHEN GET^ HEXITEJX <
i've "ad a’orriuci:
. Vi/I-TLI * * J — ■ '
[ CLOSES
REUNION 0 F
Old Soldiers of the South March
Along Chattanooga Streets Un
der Tattered Battle Flags.
i'HATTAXOOCA TENN. .May 29.
The twenty-third annua! reunion of
tHe Confederate Veterans closed to
day with th* viterans' parade, in
w hich i he old soldiers of the South
marched under the tattered battle
flags of half a century ago and under
f a reunited
-Adt> HE MAY HAVE Got IN WRONG PURtNO
OUR Civiu u/AR,-
-B>UT HE CAN GIVE FINE ADVICt?
the Stars and Stripe
country.
Military bands furnished martial
music to which the tottering old sol
diers, hundreds of them in gray uni
forms. uamped through the down
town streets. Grandstands along
Market and Broad Streets, the prin
cipal thoroughfares traversed, werF
filled with visitors and 1’hnUanoogans
who lustily cheered the old veterans.
General Bennett H. Young, mount
ed on a Kentucky thoroughbred
charger, headed the parade. General
J. P Hickman, of X.ishville, com
mander of the TTennt sseo Division
was chief marshal.
tlxoduG oF Visitors Begins.
I he exodus of visitors begin im
mediately after the parade and
throughout the afternoon and night
special and regular trains will be
leaving the depots every hour.
The runion festivities will come
to a formal close to-night when the
on ted crate Veterans give
to sponsors and
t Bennett H. Young
Sons of
their annual l»a!
maids of honor .*
pavilion.
Several hundr
to Da.ton. Ga..
a reunion of Gen
ston s army tha;
campaign from
lanta. \t this
icet
«i veterans will go
o-moi:ow to attend
i ral Joseph K. John-
participated in the
Ulnttanooga to At-
ime memorial serv-
Da
PONY CONTEST DRAWS
ENTRANTS, CERTAIN OF
SUCCESS, FROM AFAR
Atlanta children were the first to catch the fire of enthusiasm in The
Georgian and American pony contest. The children out in the State and
outside Georgia were a little slow at first.
Rut how they are coining now !
Every mail brings a heap of letters from distant addresses, and the
letter® are full of "ginger.” Every girl or boy seems sure of winning.
Dorothy Davis, of Dothan, Ala., writes: "I have my subscription
book, and so i am going to work in earnest now."
Please send me subscription blanks, etc., so I can win a pony." a®
<). s Morton. Jr., w rites, is a more frequently used wording.
The flood of mail is becoming a serious problem. Once this week two
men in the contest department worked all night answering letters, anj
then did not catch up entirely with the work. It is hoped, therefore,
tha; contestants who do not receive answers the following day will re
member that it is r.ot always possib’e to go through all the letters, check
all the votes and keep up w ith the routine work of the contest >n a day,
and be patient.
Names of contestants and their standing- follow :
District Number One.
DOLLAR CAMERAS
, ) Brow nie Cameras. $1 to $12 5
{ Anybody tan afford a camera at ^
ji these prices. Send for catalog and 5
J l new finishing price list. A. K ^
If Mawkes Go.. Kodak Dept., 14 \
Whit
will be held by Daiton Daugh
ter* of tin* Confe.icra v, Professor Jo
seph T. Deery. of Atlanta, being the
orator.
To Decorate Federal Grave*.
Several hundred of the Confederate
veterans will remain in Chattanooga
to-morrow and participate in the
Grand Army of tnc Republic Memo
rial Dav exorcises at the National
Cemetery, where several thousand
Federal soldiers are buried.
This afternoon "The Pied Piper of
Hamelintovvn" wilfhe presented as a
pageant at Warner Park by several
Hundred Chattanooga children.
Young Again Commander.
General Bennett H. Young, of Ken
tucky. commander-in-chief; General |
Theodore S. Garnett, of Virginia,
commander of the \imy of Northern
Virginia Department; General George
l'. Harrison, of Alabama, commander
of the Army of Tennessee Depart
ment. and General K M. VanZandt.
of Texas, commander of the Trans-
Mississippi Department. were re
elected, and Jacksonville, Fla., was
chosen for the 1914 reunion by the
veterans at the principal business ses
sion of the reunion late yesterday aft
ernoon. Next year s gathering will be
the firs; reunion held in Florida.
Jacksonville defeated Nashville, Its
nearest competitor, which lias had
two reunions, by a vote of almost 4 to
1. Houston. Texas, and Tulsa, Okla.,
received scattering votes. The selec
tion was then made unanimous.
"Turkey Trot” and "Virginia Reel.”
A parade by the Sons of Veterans
y esterday afternoon and a ball for the
veterans at Bennett H. Young Pa
vilion last night were features that
attracted the interest of the thou
sands of sponsors, maids of honor and
other visitor®. At the ball the Vir
ginia reel and quadrille of 50 years
ago were danced between snatches of
the present-day "turkey trot" and
two-step.
Brussels increases Army.
BRUSSELS. May 29. A hill to in-
« reuse the Belgian standing army
from lOrt.otm to 350.000 because of the
unrest in the kingdom, was passed
by the chamber of Deputies to-day
Radical Socialism is spreading rap
idly.
George Rossen
Josephine Simri!
Vera Nellie Brantley .
Jacob Patterson
Miss Margaret Lewis .
Jas. O. Godard
Hillman McCal’a
Janet Oxen ham
Edgar Watkins, Jr
W illifc Ivey Wiggins . .
Hugh B. Luttell
Miss Frankie J. Smith
Andrew May
Miss Louise Thompson
Mollie Lee Kendall . . .
Miss Mildred Stewart
Nellie Martin
Dorothy Stiff
Miss Estelle Sullivan
Pauline Trull
Glenn Moon
James Grubb-*
Phillip S. Reid
Thoma® M. Price ....
Wit BUI®
Lottie Mae Dedman . .
Eugene Morgan
Wyman Conard
Yoland Gwin
Harold Holsonback ..
T. I,. Heshall. Jr
Roy Mauldin.
Albert Smith
Miss Louise McCrary
Miss Sudie King ...
.Miss Gaynell Phillips
Miss Mary E. Peacock
Robert A. Harden ....
Miss Edith Clower • • •
Mis.- Ruth Grogan
H E. Watkin®. Jr.
Miss Annie Phillips ..
Miss Christa Powers
01 iff Moody
William Ernest
Arthur Pepin
Lillian Smith
Chas. Johnson
Frank Price. Jr.
Louise McAllister ...
Sidney Clark
Donovan Owens
Morgan Glover
Chas. Whitner. Jr. ...
Jack Shinholser
District Number Tw
Miss Robert Harbour .
Eugene W illingham. Jr
J. YV. Collin®. Jr. ...
Miss Marjorie McLeod
Miss Lottie McNair . ..
Edmund Hurt
Miss idele Shaw
1; isnell
Miss Elizabeth Garwood
J. P Tucker
Miss Edith Gray
Miss Nellie Reynolds .
J. Edgar Sheridan ....
Ray Warwick
Paul M. Clgrk
Mi*e LaRue Church ...
Wm. Wellborn ...
C’inton Hutchinson . ..
Mis® Virginia Walton .
Edgar Svveetzer
Chas. M. Kellogg. Jr.
Max (Mein
‘Robert Wood
J R. Wood*.
Martin Comerford ....
Buel Crawley
Willie Harden
Raley Ray
Miss Lucy f Withers ....
Miss Elizabeth Downing
Robert R Andrew s . .
Miss Catherine Fussed
Nick Caroli
Sarah Paxton
W. Samet
Ed Ferguson .
Pierce Smith
54530
27820
216)0
1 <030
11810
95. J
7650
6755
64 <5
6215
6100
5665
5595
3910
3105
2190
2030
I860
1650.
1545
Maurice McGairy ....
District Number Three.
Willetts Matthews
Charles I*. Stevens ..
Mildred Brickman
J. P. (loots. Jr
Miss Mary Wells ...
'Mss Mabel Brace well
Miss Alma Coleman . .
Miss Evelyn Oxford .
Ernest E. Hamorick .
Mine sL Slatton
Willie Reynolds
Harry Brown
Joe R. Smith
Howard Grove
Claudia Cochran
Annie Mealor
Marion YY r e!ls
District Number Four.
HO*! I , ann * e Mae Cook ....
0 Florence Greenoe
Nathaniel Kay
Oscar Eugene Cook ....
W. H. Hamilton. Jr. .
J. Walling Davis
Miss Wilhelmina Tucker
Miss Ida Bloomberg ...
Ida G. Fox
Nell Reynolds
Lillian Maurenberg •..
.Miss Annie Graham ...
Annie Slatten
H. L. W. Brown
Howell Conway
Myrtle Jones
Miss .Maude L. Rerry .
Fred Vicery
Miss Marie Toy
Charles Ernest Vernoy
Agnes Shalren
Miss Beatrice Brunson
Miss Meta Mitchell
Louis Whitman
LouL Joel
Guy Quillian
Raymond Smith
Vivian Broom
John Thrasher
Paul Theodown
Roy Young
Estelle Honer
David F. Nowell
William Henderson’ ....
Louise Simpson
Mose Gold
Miss Susie Black
Ralph Rose
Miss Rosemund Humphries
James Eden
Miss L. E Abbott ....
Miss Lovie C. Dean .
Miss Alice Feldman ..
Frank Henley
Miss Annie Mae Hilsman
Milton Holcombe
Lynn A. Hubbard
Harry Stone
Miss Sarah Whitaker ..
Miss Margaret White . .
Charles Stone
R. H. Brown
Hugii Terrell
Miss Carlotta Burns ..
Lowell Battle
Miss Lillian L. Brown .
Miss Marion Overstreet
Jack El!man
Eugene Bayliss
Sam K Neee
Esther Hutchins
Valentine Jenkins
1385
1145
1130
1100
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
n2;>0o
29410
14220
10875
8300
774 0
7365
5880
4765
3980
3945
3585
3o 85
3520
2900
2435
1850
1740
1650
1425
1380
1245
1180
1120
1090
1000
1000
1000
1000
100 *
1000
1 000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
District Number F
Frank Ison. Jr
Richard Rainey
Harndon Thomas .
Emery Ward
Miss Louise Chewnlnr
Miss Lucile Berry ...
Dick Denton
Aiiss Margaret Le Feure
ve.
1000
44050
41190
25816
12665
5070
34011
2335
1800
1250
1040
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
80275
49470
31220
23210
16130
8045
7915
6390
. i 9 ti 6
5450
4185
4060
3795
3740
3650
3125
2615
2600
2465
2460
2335
2175
1870
1645
1625
1615
1460
1450
1425
1420
1400
1380
1 €95
’290
1290
125.'
1230
1130
1035
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
loor
100c
1000
lOO*'
1000
1000
40380
38505
8525
7575
7490
44 75
3800
3520
f nomiriatr 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.
oy
Roy Coleman
Miss Anna Graham
John Baker Long •
Jno. B. Long
Miss Mary Holloway
Wm. Hood ...
Miss Texia Mae Butler
Albert Leake
Merriot Brown Reid . .
Miss Frances Summers
District Number Six.
William Turner
Miss Beverly Swanton .
Edward DeLoach
Miss Susanne Springer .
Miss Virginia Jackson . .
Edgar Wilson
George Nelson Baker . ..
John Lovett
Grady Harris
Gay Reynolds
Miss Ora F. Dozier
Mis* Margaret Thornton
K. F. Marquett
Francis Summers
Charlie Hood
Miss Grace Davis
Gregory J. Eaton
Angie C. Newton
Ben jam iii F. Safiets ....
district Number Seve
A. Morrison
James Allen
George H. Melton ....
Clyde Mitchell
Chas. R. Walker. Jr.
Henry Hull
Phillip Gilstein
Lawrence McGinnis ..
Jot- DuPre
(Maude Higgins
Willie Mae Dempsey .
Joy Carroway
Miss Alma Hudson ...
Fannie Bettis
City Carriers *nd Newsb
Mose Brodkin
Ross Greet
Raymond Wilkinron .
O. B. Bigger
John Trimble ....
Harold Hamby
Irvin Willingham ....
Roy Cook
J. E. Moore
Powell Pendley
Harold Turner
Sidney Ney
Sterling Jordan
Norman Gooch
Olin Neal Bass
Everett J. Cain
Charles Barron
St. Bernard Veiteh . .
Royal Barbour
Bonnell Blcodworth
Grady Cook
L. M. Harrison
Frank Garwood
R. S. McConnell
Johnnio Evans
Out-of-Town Agents and Ca
John Martin, Jr., Columbus. Ga
Leon Spence. Carrollton. Ga.
Patrick Jones. Macon
H. K. Everett. Calhoun, Ga.
Ambrose Scarboro. Royston. Ga
M. E. Dasch. Stone Mountain
Ga
Cha®. Barron. R. F. D.. Atlanta
Leon B. Spears. Woodstock. (Ja
Jake Palmer. Murphy. N. C
Jas. S. °lunkett, Carey Sta., Ga
Thos. W. Rylee. Gainesville. Ga
Gladys Danle’s, Bolton
Smith Fall&w, Oj>eiika Ala..
Aubrey Hopkins. Anderson. S.C
Alfred Chappelle. Sparta. Ga..
Robt. Nevvbv. Vienna. Ga
Jos. Milam Cartersvllle. Ga...
H. Esserman. Rome. Ga
John Ta’er. New Orleans. La..
James Wilkins, Gaffney. S. C..
Chas. B. Havev. Lithonia. Ga
L. Bennett. Brunswick. Ga
Herman Corliss. LaGrange. Ga
R. E. Hudson. Unadilla. Ga....
Hugh Parrish. Adel. Ga
Paul Swint. Gibson. Ga
X. N. David. Cedar towm. .Ga . .
Rupert Mobley, Covington. Ga
2.750
2085
2070
1970
2065
1150
1000
1000
1000
1000
M. Means. Meansville
Virginia McCowen, Marietta
Car Line
Lee Bowden. Athens
Ben Steinberg. Cartersvllle ....
LoiiCasey. Chattahoochee ...
Enme Splr.ks. Chipley
C. E. Crawford. Chipley
Clifford Henry. Carrollton ....
Gertrude Moseley. Menlo
Blake Nichols, R. F. D . Atlanta
24400 Chas. E. Keely, Cartersville ...
19435 Belle Ragsdale. Lithonia
15665 Anna Johnson. Summerville ...
8450 Will Chapman. Whigham
6270 John Logan, Gainesville
4675 Mary Caldwell. Chi pi* '
3785 Esther Boorstein. Covington . .
3185 Margaret Danner. Doraville ...
2340 Terry Strozier. Greenville’ ....
1880 Belle Stowe. Toecoa
1790 day Burruss. Carnesville ....
1780 (Berry. Clein, Columbus
1485 Mary Allen, Juniper
1330 Rives Cary. Barnesville
1305 P.eginald Houser. Macon
1000 Maxwell Aubrey, Bolton
1000 Betta Davis, Fayetteville
1000 YVm. Reid. Columbus
1000 Warner Webb. Griffin
Elmer Towns, Social Circle ....
13210 Patrick Jones, Macon ..'
5425 Reginald Houser. Macon, Ga. ..
4 635 ^ L. Mattox. Newnan
2715 Alfred Wilkes. R. F. D. Atlanta
*>6d0 B. C. Elder, Blakely
2405 Jimmy Logan Grantville
1775 Cary Brezel Rome
1170 Emory Steele. Commerce ....
1115 Carl Bragg. YVoodcliff
1000 W. A. Hollis. Columbus
1000 ^V. Harrell.* Jr.. Quitman
1000 Horace McConnell. R. F. D. Atl
1000 Sarah F. Spier. Monroe
1006 Helen Mitchell. Richwood ....
s> J. L. Brewer, Egan
53080 Horace McConnell R. F. D., At-
51775 lanta
34085 Ruth Aiken. Forrest Park ....
30795 Paul Jossey, Forsyth
25700 E. A. Heckle, Cornelia
24955 Wm. Talliaferro. Mansfield ...
152*0 Virginia Young. Roswell. Ga. ..
14205 Jessie Collier, Barnesville
13195 Gertrude Marshall, Savannah ..
11750 Bennett Jeffers. Douglasville ..
10165 Sailie Evans, Douglasville ....
8820 D. S. Morton, Raymond
6910 Ernest Turney, Chipley
6825 Sidney Newsome, Union Point .
68 H) H. C. Ogilvie. Savannah
5675 Chas. Harlan. R. F. D. Atlanta.
65 7 > f J. P. Craven. Baxley
40S5- Clyde Stephens. Barnesville....
3045 Robt. Mobley. Jr.. Quitman ...
2610 Miriam Stansell, Gainesville..
228) Robert Davis, Columbus
1560 Eleanor Lindsay, Tucker
1545 H. E. White. Flovilla
1220 Ernest Baker. Washington
1000 Erva Blackstock, Hogansville. .
rriers. E. Scarborough. Macon
18695 Etheridge Bradley, Smyrna ....
8065 Chas. Clark, Loganville
5830 Jessie Tabor, Loganville
4995 Mattie L. Johns, Loganville ....
4340 J. C. Smith, Oxford
Brannon Sharp, Commerce ....
3930 G. W. Davis. Bremen
3860 Cecil McGahee, Lithonia
3195 Sarah Carter, Savannah
3130 Dan Patrick. Conyers
2915 H. H. Redwine, Fayetteville ...
2915 Felix Reid. Union City
2710 Ralph Little. Commerce
2380 Morris McClure. Jackson
2085 C. V Turner. Jr., Quitman ....
1455 G. W. Posey. Jr . Juniper
1360 Lily Wilkes. R. F. D. Atlanta..
1370 J. H. Hewlett. Conyers
1345 Rudolph Campbell. Fairburn ...
1340 A. E. Gilmore. Jr.. Tennille ...
1015 Richard Johnson. Tennille ...
1000 j. p. Tucker. Jr. R. F. D. Atl..
1000 Edna Jennings. Newnan
1000 Thos. Lamar, Wavcrose
1000 Evelyn Davis. Baconton
loon w. B. Dismukes. Mystic
1000 Susie Glenn Social Circle ....
1000 E. V. Turner. Jr.. Athens
1000 Elsie Cummings, Savannah
Georgia School Boy® and Girl®. Grady W. Griffith. Athens .
Andrew B 4 . ^9575 Amy Davi®, B*
16180
125S0
12515
11015
9245
9 155
8530
8435
7120
5680
5150
4640
4605
4590
4 415
4340
4245
3820
3610
3305
3265
3150
3145
2 765
2665
2615
2340
2325
2285
2250
2125
2065
2000
2000
1970
1950
1875
1650
1595
1505
1500
1405
1430
1380
1330
1405
1290
1280
1255
1240
1175
1170
1150
1135
1110
1105
1085
1080
1080
1180
1075
1075
1055
1055
1050
1050
1040
1040
1030
1025
1015
1010
1005
1005
1060
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000'
1000
Police, Despite Conflicting Affida
vits, Call Him Strong Wit
ness Against Frank.
Continued From Page 1.
the officers he could not write a word.
He refused to be inveigled into mak
ing an attempt at handwriting of any
sort. He would not put a pencil to
paper that the detectives might get a
specimen of his penmanship. For a
long time they believed he was so
ignorant he could not write his own
name. Then they found some leases
he had signed for watches and knew
that he had been lying again.
Jus; as the Giand Jury was about
to si; and it appeared likely tl it/
Frank would be indicted, the negro
broke his silence for the first time
He told the detectives that it was he
who had written the notes, but th*t
he had written them at Frank’s dicta
tion on Friday. April 25. Frank had
approached him in an aisle at the
factory and had asked him to com*-
into the office, he said. He remem
bered that it was four minutes before
1 o’clock.
That he had been at the factory
Saturday he denied emphatically. Be
tween 10 o'clock in the forenoon and
2 o’clock in the afternoon he had been
on Peters Street, according to h?s
story.
The detectives ridiculed Ills story
and continued examining. Gradually
he broke down under their question
ing. and it was established that he
had been lying again and that he
actually had been in the factory Sat
urday.^ presumably at the very time
the girl was murdered. This was the
first time his presence in the factory
on Saturday had been known.
Admitted Hiding in Plant.
He had kept it a most profoun i
secret up to the time it was gouged
out of him by .the detectives. He
weakened further and admitted that
he had been hiding down on the first
floor as persons went in and out.
He described practically every per
son that entered or left the factory
betw een 12 and 1 o’clock. But he de
clared that he did not see Mary Pha-
gan when she came in the building.
Out of all who entered or left, the
murdered girl and Lemmie Quinn ap
pear to be the only ones he missed
seeing, according to his story. /
He explained this by saying that
he must have fallen asleep for a lit
tle while. He saw Miss Corinthia Hall
and Mrs. Freeman leave a few min
utes before 1 o'clock, but did not see
Mary Phagan enter about five min
utes after the hour. Neither did he
see Lerqmie Quinn, who is said to
have been at the factory about 12:15.
TO DAY’S MARKET
OPENINGS.
NEW YORK COTTON.
Quotations in cotton futures:
• I | IFlrstl Prev.
lOpenlHigh Low I Call.I Close
27 ill. 28111
34 11.34111
43 11 .46111
29111.29 11
'11
11.06|11.07(11,06|11.06|ll.
06‘ii !06ill
0111.01 11
11
11 .10 11.10 n .10 11 -in tl
May
June
July
Aug
Sept.
Oct. .
Nov
Dec.
Jan. .
Feb.
Mar.
11.28;11
11.35 11
11.46 1 1
111.30 11
11.07 11
11 .02jll
28 11 .
35 11.
4(511 .
30111.
08 11.
02ill .
.46-47
.51-63
.65-56
.36-37
.16-18
.10-11
.08-11
.06-07
.06-07
.06-08
.16-18
NEW ORLEANS COTTON.
Quotations in cotton futures:
1 First! Prev.
iOpep(High!Low I Call.I Close.
May .
. 1..
112.35-42
June .
5lii ! 94lii94
11.90-93
July .
. . ji.95,11
12.01-02
Aug
. . 11 .55111
5 11.55 11.55
11.63-64
Sept
. . j |..
11.35-37
Oct. .
.11.1611
ii .isji.io
11.21-22
Nov. .
11.20-2*
Dec. .
. .11.16 ii
6 11 .1511.15
n.ts-20.
Ian. .
11 .2.T-24
Feb. .
11 .20-23
Mar. .
• I**
; (11.22-24
LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET.
Futures
opened easy
Opening
Range. 2 p. m.
May ... 6.4i @6.39 s /2 6.391*
Mav-.June . 6.42 06.38 6.39
June-July . 6.38L.06.34 6.34%
July-Aug . 6.36 06.33% 6.35%
Aug.-Sept. 6.26 06.23% 6.25
Sept.-Oct. . 6.13 06.12% 6.12%
Oct.-Nov. . 6.07 06.06% 6.07
Nov.-Dee
Dec.-Jan. . 6.02 06.03 6.03
Jan.-Feb. . 6.02 06.02% 6.03
Feb.-Mar. . 6.O3%0)6.O4 6 04
Mar.-Apr. 6.04%
COTTON SEED OIL.
Prey.
Close.
6.46
6.46
6.41%
6.39%
6.29%
6.10
6.10
6.07
6.06
6.05%
6.06%
6.07%
NEW YORK STOCK MARKET.
Stock quotation® to 10 a.
STOCKS
Amal. Copper
Am. Smelt. .
Atchiaon
Am. Can
do. pref
Can. Pac. . . .
Corn Prod.
Dis. Secur. ..
Gt. West. . . .
Mo. Pac
Penn
Reading
R. Island
Southern Pac.
U. Pac.
Utah Cop.
U. S. Steel...
High.
735*
65' 4
9»( 8
32%
•?/*
228
10
. . 1C/ 2
13'/ 4
33* B
109%
160 2
16%,
96%
149(4
4*3/4
60/4
Low.
65' 4
99'/,
32 3 4
92'/,
2283-.
10
101/,
13U
33»s
1093,
160',
1«%
96' ,
149'5
49=4
60
m.:
10
a.m.
733*
65/4
99' .
3
92' 2
22734
10
10/a
13'4
33%
109%
160/o
16%
96‘/a
f49'/;»
493,4
60'/4
Prev.
Cloae
73
84' ?
99 <4
32H
92' 2
2304
9%
10/ 2
13
33%
109'%
1604
16t#
m2
15134
4934
60
STOMACH TROUBLES
Htriftrd'a Acid Rhoiphet*
Trodurr* healthy activity of weak and disor
dered stomach* A® excellent strtnfth builder.
Ad?
1Ve have Beautiful Bedding
Plants. 3c each. Atlanta Floral
Co., 555 E. Fair Street.