Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 01, 1913, Image 8

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V 12 D I! KARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA.. SUNDAY, JUNE 1. 1913. sms SCHTiST ■t* “ Prof. Munsterberg Explains the Power of 10-Year-0ld Psychic Wonder of Warren, R. I. BOSTON. May 31 — Proft-Minr Mun- sterberg haw explained the mysterious power of Beulah Miller, the ten-year- old. "psychic mystery," of Warren, R. I. The scientist investigated her amazing powers and decided that her art is useless for any practical pur poses. "She cannot know anything which others do not know beforehand," says Professor Munsterberg. "Clairvoyant powers or prophefic gifts are not hers and, above all, her mind reading is a natural process. The edifice of sci ence will not be shaken by the pow- * r F of my little Rhode Island friend. "Beulah Miller has unusual gifts and her performances are extremely interesting, but I think everything can be explained through her sub conscious noting of unintended signs. "Where no signs are given which reach her senses, she cannot rea 1 an one's mind. But the signs vvhicn she receives are not noticed by her consciously. She Is not really a ware of them; they go to her brain or to her subconscious mind and work from there on her conscious mind." Professor Munsterberg discovered that the girl performed her feats more successfully when her mother and sister present, even when she was blindfolded, but he declares there is no intended deception. Regarding his tests and- the results Professor Munsterberg writes in the Metropolitan Magazine: "The psychical powers of Beulah Miller were not brought before the public by the child or her family; there was no desire for notoriety, and in s-pite of the very modest circum stances in which this carpenter’s fam ily ha«* to live, the facta becam.* known before any commercial possi bility suggested itself. "The mother was startled by Beu lah’s psychical gifts, because she no ticed two years ago that when th family was playing 'Old Maid," Beu lah always knew in whose hands the dangerous queen was to be found. Then they began ro experiment wlrh cards in the family circle, and her ability to know of what the moth r or sister was thinking became more and more interesting to them. Slowly her school friends began to notice »t. and children in the Sunday School told th* 1 miniwtor about Beulah’s queer mind reading. Child Always Willing. "The mother, the 12-year-old slater Gladys and Beulah herself were most willing to agree to anything that would make my test difficult, and they themselves asked to have everything tried with no member of the family In the room. Beulah was quite happy to show her art under unaccustomed conditions, as, for example, having her eyes covered with thick bandages. "When inadvertently some one turned a cahrd so that she could see !t she was the first to Wreak out Into childish laughter at having seen it. In short, everything indicated such perfect sincerity and the most care ful examination yielded so absolutely no trace of intentional fraud that l can vouch for the honesty of the In tentions of all concern**! In the ex periments carried on so far. "We may take a typical illustration. 1 drew cards which she could not possibly see. while they were shown to the mother and sister on the otlmr side of the room. The first was n nln^ of hearts; she said nine of hearts. The next was six of clubs, to which she said first six of spades; when told it was ndt spades, she answered clubs. "The next was the two of diamonds; her first figure was four; when told that it was wrong, she corrected her self two, and added diamonds. The next was nine of clubs, which she gave correctly; seven of spades she called seven of diamonds, then spades: jack of spades she gave cor rectly at once, and so on. We saw tUat in order to succee 1 some one around her. preferably the mother and- sister, who stand nearest to ner heart, have to know the words or the cards. Those visual images must be in some one's mind, and she has th^ unusual power of being able to read thorn there. Such an explana tion even seems to some a very mod est claim, almost a kind of critical and skeptical view—a mere "case of mind reading." When Beulah is Helpless. "I mention at first one fact whicn was absolutely proved by my experi ment?-. namely, that Beulah Miller’s succes«es turn into complete failures as soon as neither the mother nor the sister is present in the room. “All the experiments which 1 have conducted in which I alone, or 1. to gether w ith the minister and judg*\ thought of wordis or cards or letters or numbers, did not yield any betu-r results. In one series, for instance, in which we all three made the* grea*- cat effort to concentrate our minds m written figures, she knew the first number correctly orPy in two out ol fourteen cases. In mother series of twelve letters she did not know a single one of the first trial. "Sometimes when she showed splen did results with her sister Gladys present everythir g stopped the very moment the sis’, >r left the room. Bometirm s Eeulah ,. lew the first half of a word while Okays stood still in the same room, and' could not get the second half of the word when Gladys in the meantime had stepped from the little parlor to the kitchen.” BOYS ON COAST TO COAST WALK TO GET EDUCATION WARREXSBURG, MO., May 31 — Walking against time to win scholar ships in the Springfield, (Mass.) Training School, Eric Nillson and Patrick Dobbs, aaAi 18 and 20 years, arrived in Warrensburg on their mp from Newark. N. J.. to the Pacific Coast. The youths ^re grad uates of the Newark Hieti School and are members of several athletic clubs of that city. The clubs offered o send the youths through the Massa chusetts training school if they would make the trip. They are to cover the distance in 150 days. Cat wh i L h tie8 H Lik1l.y| Count Szechenyi to Rest in U. S. fj|S PM|||]|[ ODG niTW P/ii if i nui - Has Crippled His Wife’s Dowry Prodigy. vhen 3he married, In fi> Count SzecbdPi/i hoc spent $8,000,000 $4,000,000 lusical prodlx Tintype 75 Years Old Gives Woman Fo rtu ne Miser’s Sister Identified After Long Search by Picture Taken in Childhood. DENVER. May 81.—By mean* of tintype photo taken more than years ago, Public Administrator Woodward has found heirs to tin | $20,000 estate left by Leon Lc Fevre I aged rnls^-r and recluse, who diet i here in February. 1012. Woodward, after almost a year’; 'A# *4 . » fg \})*n***m: effort, traced the photo to a small ! town in Belgium and succeeded in establishing that It is a likeness of i the aged miner’s sister, Amelia, taken I when she was a girl. Miss Le Fevre. who never has mar ried, is pa*t 87. She ant^two grand nephews of her brother, all living in ! Belgium, will receive the latter's es- | late. Must Throw Stones, As a Punishment Class Organized by Massachusetts Judge to Discipline Young Offenders. MALDEN, MASS.. May 31.—Judge j Bruce of the local court has adopted | the Mikado’s system of making the | punishment lit the crime. rr he Judge j j has organized a class in stone-throw’- j i ing, and on Julj’ 3 it is expected that j j as many as twenty-five boys will be ! collected in a large field which the j Judge is to hire, and there, under the | eye of Probation Officer Kiilion. they j will be made to throw’ stones for an j hour. or. says the Judge, "until they get their fill," thus receiving pun ishment fitting the crime and furnish- i ing amusement to the crowd which will undoubtedly gather. James Barnett, seventeen, and Leo j Halligan, sixteen, of Revere, were the j culprits who brought upon themselves this poetic justice. They were brought into court by Chief that town i for stone-throwing. Judge Bruce j looked them over and pronounced j sentence. WOMAN HAS TO PAY BACK $42,000 ALiMOiMY GRAND JUNCTION, COL.. May Jl ■ —A decision rendered in the Supreme j Court of Massachusetts places Mrs.! Viola S. Martin, formely of t!iN ! section, in an embarrassing situa- i ! tion in that she is ordered to pay i I by the Colorado courts in ' 19'Uk ! j Meanwhile Mrs. Martin has spent a j large portion of the sum she is ordered to repav. DEER INDIGNANT WHEN NOT j FED, AND KICKS MAN r S FACE W INST ED. CONN . May 31. -John ! Moore met a tame deer browsing) near the Highland Lake trolley June- j tion. He extended his right hand toward the animal, which at once ap proached and sniffed it. Finding the hand empty the deer j InJVhWace and bounded away. Moore ; is to-day minus t\t j teeth and his | face is badly swollen. Mrs, Vanderbilt Obliged to Change Her Plans for En tire Summer. NEW YORK, May 31. So serious I are the financial losses of the Count | Ladislaus Szechenyi that he and his young Countess, the former Gladys! Vanderbilt, are planning to seek a refuge from their difficulties in Arrnr- iea. according to report from Budu- The hasty departure of Mrs. Cor nelius Vanderbilt a few years ago to join her daughter in Austria is now believed by friend? here to have) been a rush to the rescue. That the Countess will be brought back to this country by her mother is predicted bv societ\ in New York and in New port. It is probable that the Count will come, too. That he has sunk $4,000,- 000 of the fortune that dowered his bride has not caused a break in his | relations with her family, so far us is known. Lost in Business Deals. His losses w ere the result of unw ise, ill-timed ventures on a scale far be yond his business capacity. The money \va? not squandered upon him self. He will in all likelihood find shelter from the financial storm under the protecting power of the Vander bilt millions. Word reached Newport yesterday from Mrs. Vanderbilt that she had suddenly, changed her plans, and in- [ stead of returning immediately would remain with her daughter until Sep tember. A the time of her departure sue intended, her friends say. to return after the briefest of visits. The al teration of her plans has caused sur prise. Her departure itself was a surprise, because she was just com pleting arrangements for reopening "The Breakers" a; Newport. Whether or not. at that time, she had received not known. Budapest dispatches would indi cate that the Count’s Investments, bv Wliat Some Titles Cost American Girls Countess de Castellane, formerly Anna Gould, had to pay $11,500,000 for Count Bonis debts and extrava gances, and then married the Prince de Sagan, who owed $4,000,000, which she is now helping to pay. The Earl of Yarmouth had his debts of $2,000,000 paid by his wife, who was Miss Alice Thaw, and had $1,500,- 000 settled upon him. A half million of this was in real estate, and was saved by the Thaw lawyers when the cou ple separated. Count Szechenyi had $5,000,000 settled on him, of which he was to have the in come for life when he mar ried Gladys Vanderbilt. Three million dollars more which she had as her share of the Vanderbilt estate is gone, and four years of the income with it in the Count’s effort to be a financier. :ive i hort time.! it a fortune in imost fantastic, t sums, i: it- said, went into th; j I ion of a submarine wireless * United States and other Gov -1 * ernments, but which never reached perfection—nor profit. Three other Hungarian noblemen^ besides the Count are said to be heav ily involved with him These men. who were associated yvith him in various enterprises, are Count Paul Szapary, Count Karac- sonyi ami Count Degenfeld. The.first one married money, his wife bring ing him $1,000,000. The second owns the finest house in Budapest, and the last is the owner of a famous racing stable. Among the stories circulated about Szechenyi is onA that he wished to be the Vanderbilt of Austria. It is s\iid that he - onceived the idea of a group of capitalists dominated by him '--If and a few others for the handling of big enterprises*. One of the big enterprises was the Krasso- Szorvny mines, near the mines of the Austro - Hungarian State Railway* These mines are iron and coal. Mine Proves a Failure. Years ago the railroad experts yvent over them and said they would not pay to work. The Count had a Belgian engineer make a report. It was all that could be desired. It de clared the property worth $100,000.- 000. The Count and his friend? ac cepted it and put in their money. Expensive machinery w as installed. | houses built, shafts sunk and men put to work, but the output of the mine never met the cost of produc tion. The Count also has figured in the) Budapest and Vienna Boerses vVith out success. The stories printed that the Coun tess left Austria because of the snubs by the Count are absolutely untrue. The American wife was well received. The cause of the departure is purely J financial, probably to give the Van derbilt family and the Count time to i breathing spell and think it Animals Interfering With Main tenance of Denver, Laramie and Pacific, Now Building. CHEYENNE. WYO., May 31.—Five hundred million prairie dogs, the In- I habitants of the biggest prairie dog town in the world, .are soon to be at tacked by the Denver, Laramie & Pa cific Railroad, which Is building northward from Denver, and which mpit pass through one corner of the town for a distance of about sixty miles or so. The railroad officials plan to make w ar upon the lit tie* animal? by drop ping into thfcir holes ball? of cotton saturated with carbon bisulphide. The fumes, in which no animal life can exist, so penetrates and permeates the holes that there is no escape, and the prairie dogs are suffocated. The railroad finds it necessary to exterminate the little animals to pre vent them from so undermining the roadbed as to make traffic insecure. The entire town will not be attacked, but only that portion through which tiie line is to be constructed. This town, the largest dog town on the continent, is located down on the line between Colorado and Wyoming. It is fifty miles wide, 140 long and contains 4,480,000 acres. Out in this country the ranchers estimate prairie dogs by ihe acre and the conserva tive number is 100 d*fgs to that much ground. On that basis the big town contains nearly 500,000,000 dogs—to say nothing of the owls, the rabbits, the lizard, the horned toads and the rattlesnakes which infest the dog burrows. Difficult to Capture. Of all animals the prairie dog is the most difficult to capture, either dead or alive. It is almost impossi ble to secure one by means of a gun ; in case the shot kills it its comrades rush out, grab the dead brother and dash back into their burrow with the body. Should a snare be set and a dog caught he sets up a peculiar barking to which dozens of his fel lows instantly respond. The string 1? gnawed in two and the former cap tive and his rescuers disappear. Should a wire be used instead of a string the rescurers will quickly gnaw off a foot or a leg in their efforts to assist his escape.••The dogs never venture far from their dens, and, if for any reason they find it necessary to get to cover in a hurry, do not hesitate to run into the burrow which happens to be closest to hand. That the dogs actually honeycomb the earth of the towns i9 well known by those who have studied their life. Dogs which run into one hole can be seen a few moments later peeping from a hole some distance away. One of the strangest things about a prairie dog town i? ihe manner in which the inhabitants secure water. The prairie dog towns are invariably located in desert localities, where there is* no water for miles. Scientists have proven that often the water strata lie several hundred of fe'et below the hard, barren, sun baked clay and sand. But the carbon bisulphide, being heavier than air, will search out every nook and cranny of the burrows, and. after following the litle dog to his last stand, will overpower and strangle him to death. Scanty Diet There. Their diet consists of four articles: cactus, roots of wire grass, tender green shoots of the stage brush and grease wood. These four species are the only ones of ah plant or tree life capable of growth in the Western deserts. The prairie dogs are thrifty enough to keep fat and sleek on a diet upon which a ground ?qulrrel would starve to death in a week. The colony of dogs which lives down in the big town evidently set tled there hundreds of years ago. In its present size it has been known to exist for fifty years. While prairie dogs multiply about as rapidly as do rabbits, the younger animals remain in the burrow with their parents until there no longer is room for them. Then they are thrown out and are forced to either get into another den or dig one for themselves. While there may Rave been millions of new burrows dug in the big town since white men first observed it. the limits of the colony are practically the same to-day as when early pion eer? and gold seekers first located it. The railroad company may be forced to asphyxiate millions of the little animal? and to destroy hundreds of thousands of burrows In making its sixty-mile path through the col ony. but the builders say it is ab solutely necessary to clear the right of way before safety from that source of danger can be assured. ADOPTED BOY. INHERITING FORTUNE, CAN’T SPEND IT JENKINSTOWN, PA.. May 31.— Randall VY. Dickinson, the 11-year-old student of the Ahington Friends’ School, who Is declared to be heir to 5230,000 by the death of William Russell Randall, an uncle, is the ad mitted hero of all other boys at the school since the news of his windfall became public. • As a matter of fact, young Dickin son's money will be trtuitod as any other minor youth's mokey—it will, of course, be safeguarded 'by trustees and guardians until the bov reaches a legal age. Young Dickinson is said to have been adopted from a Philadelphia in stitution eight years ago by Samuel T. Dickinson, a Virginian. Scientists Will Explore the Fam ous “Spanjsh Diggins” in the Northwest. CHEYENNE, WYO., May 31.— "Spanish Diggings." the famous Wyo ming wonderland of American an thropology and archaeology, where in a prehistoric time a vanished nation manufactured its implements of war, agriculture, and the chase will thi> summer be the scene of active ar chaeological explorations at the hands of several Eastern universities. Because of their remoteness from a railroad, the "Diggings" have re ceived scant attention from scientists. Recent Investigations. The most recent investigator w is Professor Loomis, of Amherst, who, four years ago, spent a short time among the old quarries and as a re sult shipped to his college more than 7.000 archaeological objects, besides a large number of invaluable new forms of paleontology. The name "Spanish Diggings." was given these immense prehistoric quarries by early explorers who thought Spaniards from Mexico had worked the strata for a precious min eral of some kind. But scientists latter made the discovery that the Span iards never even heard of the "Dig gings" and that the work was done by a prehistoric people. From these old quarries the prehis toric-people obtained materials for their stone weapons and to-day there are blocks of all shapes and sizes scattered around the pits by the mil lion. The quarries gave up flinty rocks of all shades and colors, and it is supposed that this fact served as a magnet which drew aborigines from all over the continent. Many Specimens. There are agates, chalcedony, jas pers and flints in white, black, brown, light, dark and brilliant yellow, grays of all shades, lavender, violet, purple, pink, red and white mottled striped and Vermillion banded. All these rocks are fine and dense and break with deep conchoidal fracture. Quartzites of scores of shades, rivaling the more beautiful agate? in coloring. were made use of and quarries where this rock was secured are among the larg est in the region. The prehistoric workers showed grat ingenuity in their work of ex cavating through solid rock. One >f the quarries shows a shaft about 20 feet in diameter and 30 feet deep. In this quarry a number of the gran ite wedges used by the ancient miners are still in place seemingly just ready for tfte strike of the stone hammer. Ancient House Sites. Down on the plains, 1,000 feet below the quarries, there are the ancient house sites in which the quarrymen lived. These sites line for miles the banks of a stream which long since ceased to flow. Yet the men who worked in’ the old quarries secured their water from that stream. Furthermore, geologists say that in the days when the making of stone implements was the chief industry of this continent. Wyoming must I have had a different climate and an- | other elevation, one not so high cs to-day’s. But by some freak of nature the 1 landts have been pushed up above the | line at which successful farming 1 ceases. About these village sites on ) the dry stream beds thousands of fine J stone implements can be gathered as easily as gravel in a sand bed. Why these people abandoned the imple ments in whose manufacture there was so much labor, is one of the un solved mysteries of the "Diggings." Numberless Paths. As an indication of the numberless workmen who at different times worked in these quarries, there can yet be seen the old path leading from the villages down on the plain up to the quarries on the heights. And this old path is over solid rock, which was gradually worn down by the passing of thousands of feet. The Eastern scientists expect to spend the months of July and August in their explorations of completed im plements, as well as those of every stage of manufacture. FIG CULTURE WITHOUT USE OF FERTILIZER IS TRIED LOS ANGELES. May 31.—About 6,500 Smyrna seedlings are now pot ted at the United States Introduction ! Garden at Chico. Cal., undergoing an i experiment for fertility without the aid of an insect. Seven or eight va- | rieties are represented, and they are | ail fertilized from the pollen of oth-r trees. It is hoped to produce a self- ! fertilizing seedling fig. and if this is I accomplished it will be a great step ] in the fig raising industry of this 1 country. Another interesting fruit is the al ligator pear, or avacado. Heart Breaks When Ball Team Is Beaten 1 Schoolboy Pitcher Grieves to Death Because His Club Lost in Contest for Pennant. ST. PAUL. May 31.—"Hal I pitched, my school would have won the pennant, but it’s too late now; we’ve lost ” Willie Liesser, fourteen, champion pitcher of St. Paul Grade Schools, sobbed these words, burled his face in bed clothing and died of a broken heart. / Willie attended class at Baker School Wednesday. He won his third consecutive victory, pitching a two- hit no-run game. Thursday’s battle was to decide the school’s pennant chances. He worried, causing a head ache, and was detained at home. The new pitcher lost the game. When the principal and comrades called on Willie he still was con fined to his bed with a headache. "What’s the score?” he cried. They told him, a moment later he was dead. Physicians say death was due to a broken heart. Playmates placed Willie’s baseball suit oyer his body. Woman Just Escapes Being Devoured Alive Lion Springs at Her Out of Cage, but Is Killed in Time by Owner. ALTOONA. PA.. May 31.—With the hot breath of a lion fanning her cheek and his roar mingling with her screams for aid as he stood over her in an iron bound cage, Mile. Florence, a woman animal trainer of the Ferarl Carnival company, faced death by being eaten alive here this after noon. Mile. Florence had forgotten her whip in the cage. As she went to re cover it the beast sprang through the air, landing with full weight on her shoulders. Realizing that his sharp fangs would sink into her flesh. Col. Francis Forari. who chanced to be nearby, acted almost instantly. With t\\;o jumps he was at the cage with a Colt revolver. He sent a stream of bullets into the lion’s hide at such short range that a burn surrounds every bullet hole. The revolver did its work and the king of the jungle fell dead with his claws entangled in the clothing of the woman. She was saved but severely scratched. The animal was worth $5,000. TO SEEK NOES Figures Being Steadily Forced Upward—New Record Should Be Set by End of Year. WASHINGTON, May 31.—The In- flux of immigrants into the United States for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1913, will probably be greater than for any other year in the history of the country. Judging from the re ports now being received by the Com missioner General of Immigration, the arrival of aliens in this country by the end of June will pass the high water mark of 1907, when approxi mately 1.200,000 immigrants landed on the shores of America. Statistics received by Commission er General Keefe show that for the first nine months of the present fiscal year, which ended March 31. 1913. a total of 888,899 immigrants arrived in this country at all ports of entry. If this ratio should keep up it is esti mated that at least 420,000 additional will arrive during the last three months of the year which will bring the grand total up to 1,308,800. the highest mark ever reached, according to the records at the immigration bureau. There were admitted at the port of New York during the first nine months of the present fiscal year, 644.273 immigrants of all classes, in cluding those who had previously been in the country and those who declared they intend to remain here but a short time. According to the statistics p.repared by Commissioner General Keefe, im migrants arriving at the port of New York brought with them $23,312,327, representing a per capita of $36. i There were 6,755 immigrants dis- ; barred from landing in New York j during the first nine months of the ! present fiscal year. For the month of ! March 90.044 immigrants were ad- i mitted at New York. During the fis- I cal year ended June 30, 1912, but 838,172 immigrants arrived in this country at all ports, while for 1911, 878.587 landed. Beats Dogs in 500 Mile Race for Gold Alaska Miner, Afoot, Chases Woman, Who He Says Robbed Him of $5,000 Worth of Precious Dust. TACOMA, May 31.—Walking 600 miles, making from 50 to 60 miles n day, Ben Dahl, a miner, reached Fair banks, Alaska, before Norah Moore, who, traveling with a team of dogs, was, it is alleged, trying to steal gold dust belonging to Dahl. The woman was indicted on a charge of grand larceny. The gold i? valued at $5,000. Dahi asserts the woman promised to become his wife while he was at the Hammond River diggings. 600 miles nortli of Fairbanks. He signed a paper, which later turned out to be a bill of sale, and let woman have the gold, he says, on the understand ing that sh<- would use it to establish them in the real estate business at Vancouver. He declares the woman rlJsappeareu with the gold and a fast team of dogs. Then he set out on foot, reaching Fairbanks several hours before she did. DROPSY SPECIALISTS give quick relief usually from the first dose. Dis tressing Symptoms rapid ly disaopear. Swelling and short hreath soon removed: often gives en tire relief in IS to 25 days. A trial treatment FREE l v mail. Dr. H. H. Green's Sons Box 0. Atlanta. Ga. FIND THE MORAL. MILWAUKEE, May 31.—One*good way to get a husband is shown at the State University, where half the girls of the graduating class of the cook ing department are wearing engage ment rings. PIONEER’S HEARSE LUMBER WAGON ON DEATH REQUEST LINCOLN. NEBR.. May 31— Dr. C. W. B. Cox, 70 years old. a pioneer, is dead in the sparsely settled sandhills of Blaine County, and his dying com mand that his hearse be a lumber wagon has been literally carried out. He settled in Blaine County long be fore the earliest homestead laws of the county went into effect. For near ly 35 years he lived in one community. I Gives Quickest and Surest Cure For All Sore Feet The following is absolutely the surest and quickest cure known to science for all foot ailments: "Dis solve two tablespoonfuls of Calocide ! compound in a basin of warm wa ter. Soak the feet in this for full fif teen minutes, gen tly rubbing the) sore parts." The \ effect is really w o n d e rful. All \ soreness goes in- 1 jstantly; the feet J 1 feel so good you, I could sing for joy. | Corns and cal- c louses can be[ peeled right off. It^ ’ gives immediate relief for sore bun- I ions, sweaty, smelly and aching feet. A twenty-five cent box of Calocide ’ is said to be sufficient to cure the worst feet. It works through the pores and removes the cause of the ' trouble. Don’t waste time on uncer- [ ta\n remedies. Any druggist has Cal- i ocide compound in stock or he can get it in a few hours from his whole- | sale house. It is not a patent med icine. hut is an ethical preparation. Green Park Hotel, Green Park, N. C. <Blowing Rock) Literally a home ajnong the clouds, 4.300 feet. Pure. cold, spring water. Delightful scenery, bracing air. fire at evening and blankets at night for comfort. Fine turnpikes for motoring and driving. Booklet. Vddre-s until June 15. Raleigh. N. C afterwards. Green Park. N. C. HOWELL COEB. Talcum Puff Company yf Miners and Manufacturers, llnsh Terminal Building, Brooklyn, Now York. Famous Mineral Springs. Outdoor Gymnasium. Atlanta Phone 5856-A. Magee’s Physical Culture Health Home CASCADE SPRINGS Prof. F. B. MAGEE, Former Physical Director of Y. M. C. A., Proprietor, R. F. D. No. 1, Atlanta, Ga. Cottages, Camping Privileges and Pavilion for Private Parties For Rent. 5% miles from center of City, 2y 2 miles from White hall West End ear line. For Rate3 Drop Me a Card. NEVER LOSE A FISH! By Using the GREER _ v LEVER W*. J HOOKS ORDER BY MAIL The best Fish Hook on earth for Sea, Lake and River Fishing. No losing bait, nor coming heme without your largest fish. No breaking loose nor tearing out. No springs to get oilt of order. We claim for the LEVER hooks that a fish does not have to be hooked on the bait hook to get him. If he pulls on the bait the larger hook will spear him. MADE IN FOUR REGULAR SIZES. PRICES—Size 8, 10c each: 75c doz. Size 1-0, 10c each; $1.00 dozen. Size 3-0, 15c each; $i.50 dozen. Size 5-0, 15c each; $1.50 dozen. Liberal discount to dealers. —MAIL ORDER BLANK— Greo” Manuf»''*nring O 2% Walton St., At ant*. Ga. Enclosed mid ^ l . v»nict s«md me by return mail size Greer Lever Hooks. (Name) (Address i Greer Mfg. Co. 2 1-2 Walton St. ATLANTA, GEORGIA , * J *