Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 23, 1913, Image 2

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THK ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FIXED IT 63 Probe Begun of Binghamton Hol ocaust as Death List Grows. Girls Trapped at Benches. BINGHAMTON, N. Y, July 23 Searching parties* to-day worked in the ruins of the building of the Bing hamton Clothing Company seeking bodies believed to be buried there. Streams of water were played on the building all night to cool them enough to allow the rescue work to begin. Workmen at daylight began digging at the tons of charred timber brick and mortar, in an effort to reach the bodies still known to be buried in the debris At noon on Wednesday nineteen bodies had been recovered. The death list will roach 63. It was estimated. Ten injured are in a hospital. Of th^ 111 persons in the building at the time the fire broke out only 38 ee- cvped. Forty-four are missing. Girls Mistake Alarm. Belief thac the alarm was sounded only as a fire drill, caused the great loss of life. When the girls and worn en working in the factory realized that the building was burning the main avenue of escape had already been cut off. Instantly the other »*x Its were choked with panic-stricken girls. , Many reached th$> windows but the 1 firemen and others bent on rescuing inmates were powerless to aid them, owing to the rapidity with which the flames licked up the inflammable mill material Eighteen minutes elapsed from the time the Are broke out until the ■walls fell and the building was in ruins. Fire Laid to Smoker. Reed B. Freeman, president of the company, attributes the fire to the carelessness of an employee in throw ing a cigarette butt under a stair way, where inflammable material was stored. Smoking was prohibited in the building, but many employees were addicted to the habit, according to Freeman, and often went to the alley near the building to smoke. Rtgid investigation of the Are will be made by the authorities. They will Investigate the charges made that gasoline was stored in the build ing, dangerously near the stairway from the upper floors and that the fire escapes were so exposed that many victims were burned while try ing to descend. YOU MAY SAY WHAT YOU LIKE- fofujrritfit. 1WS. International New* Herrin*. -$UT HES> A FlrtE MOHEY MAKER*. P1SSIVF policy SCORED Exhibit May Be in PI IT Cl/IRT rjlfl Commerce Chamber uLI I ulMIll InU Pittsburg Policemen Want to Form Union A.THORNTON AT PITTSBURG, July 23.—At the sug gestion of Joseph G. Armstrong, Di rector of Public Works, the police men of Pittsburg are planning to or ganize. The new' union, if the plans of the movers are successful, will be incor porated under the rules of the Amer ican Federation of Labor. Judge Not Coroner, Gets Daring Joker YONKERS, N. Y.. July 23.—Pas sengers on a street car here dove from every available exit when Stanzianno Nazzano, a laborer who sat on n rear seat, absently-mlndedly knocked the ashes from his cigar with a stick of dynamite. He was arrested and fined $30. Coming of The Sunbeam How to Avoid Those Pains and Dis- tr®*& Which so Many Mothers Have Suffered. Hundreds Mourn Young Atlanta Banker—Prominent in Social Life of the City. ow of Mother's It It * in. rn«iu Here in * rruii-uy tint sofuuia the mue fie*, enable* them to e$i*and without any strain ttpon the Ufameut* and enable# women to to through maternity without pain, nausea, morning •lekneaa or any of the dreaded ajrmpwnu ho fa Slhlar to many moihora There la nc foolish diet to harass the mind. Th* thoughts do not dwell upon pain and suffering, for all auth are avoided. Thousand* of women nc longer resign tfieroselve* to the thought that sickness and distress are natural They know better, fo« In Mother'# Friend they have found a wonderf i‘. penetrating remedy to banJfth all thoae dreaded experience#. It la a subject every woman should he familial With, and even though site may not require such » remedy, she will now and then meet some vro*- x>sctl ve mother to whom a word In time r'«»ut Ing. This famous remedy la sold by all drug Mother’s Friend will c*nne as a wonderful b.css News of the death of Austell Thorn ton, a prominent young Atlanta man, was received by his friends here from Ashvllle, N. C., Wednesday. Accord ing to the dispatches, Mr. Thornton died in his cottage near that city at 3 o’clock Wednesday morning. All members of the family were at his bedside. Mr. Thornton was about 31 years old, and had resided in Atlanta since childhood. Six years ago he married Miss Bob Venable. He was prominent in society and club circles, being a member of the Piedmont Driving Club, the Capital City Club and of practically every other prominent social organization of the city. The funeral will he held Thursday afternoon at 4 o’clock from the family home, 611 Peachtree .street. Inter ment private at Oakland. Mr. Thornton was .one of the best known citizens of Atlanta, and at the time of his death was a director in the Atlanta National Bank. He had largo private interests and at one time was president of the Pine Moun tain Granite Company. He was edu cated at the University of Georgia. His father, the late A. B. Thornton, was also a director in the Atlanta Na tional. He is survived by his widow and two children; also his mother, Mrs. Albert Thornton; his brother, Albert Thornton, and his sister. Miss Janie Thornton, all of Atlanta. Wills $400,000 for Home for Old Maids YORK. PA., July 23.—The will of Miss Anna I* Gardner, which was probated here, sets aside $400,000 for the erection and maintenance of a home In this city for aged unmarried women of Pennsylvania and la only tl Off a nhUp 1 la OLDEST NEGRESS DEAD AGAIN. M1LLEN.—Mary Morgan, a ne- it la for external ue< 1 press, 114 years old, is dead here to- rMllx.worth^lu wdgbt ln gold. >*riu | ^ay. She was the oldest woman in •fair. and to-day to the Bradflald Regulator Co., 1J? Lamai , , ,, .. . , , nirig Atianta. I,*, fur a uij*t valuable uki* f voorgia at tlie time of her death. FOR THE LIVER TAKE LIVER EASE Noted Lecturer to ‘Talk’ to Deaf Here George William Vedltz, of Colo rado Springs, former president of the. National Association of the Deaf, will deliver a lecture to the deaf people of Atlanta in the sign language at Taft Hall Saturday night, August 2. Mr. Veditz’s subject wiLl be ‘ Faust.” He also will deliver a sermon to the deaf Sunday mornin, August 3, at the Second Baptist Church. Rey. John Wesley Michaels. South ern evangelist to the deaf, also will be in Atlanta at the same time and will assist Mr. Vedltz. ANSLEt PH TO l Divers' Heads Crash; 1 Dying, Other Hurt CONNERSVILLE, IND., July 23.— Edward Voltz was fatally hurt and Frank Davis may die of injuries re ceived in diving at a beach here. Davis dived from a high spring board and was followed immediately by Voltz Just as Voltz reached the water Davis bobbed up and the.** heads met with a crack. Davis was under water two minutes. THE PLAYS THIS WEEK Residents Will Demand Reason for Delay—Quest Vain De clares Mayor. Calomel Has Been Completely Displaced by Dr. Verdier's Liver Ease. Be sure you get the perfect substi tute for Calomel when you need a medicine for the liver. DH. VERDIER'S LIVER EASE is made of imported drugs, purely vege- ble and acts on th< j liver as thor- jh]y as calomel with none of the d after effects. PR VERDIER’S LIVER EASE contains no drug that can produce salivation, there is no irritation of the j stomach and bowels and no sickening after effects ! Take PR VERDIER’S LIVER EASE | and go about your work as though you I were not taking a medicine at all. A j dose at bedtime w ill cleanse the svs- J tern of all impurities and stimulate I the liver to expel the bile promptly with no discomfort You can get PR VERDIER’S LIVER EASE at any | drug store for 60c per large bottle ' fully guaranteed “Good Morning, Judge." The universal verdict of the patrons of the Bijeu is that this week's attrac tion. “Good Morning. Judge,’’ is one of the snappiest, liveliest and most pleas ing musical comedies of the season, and judging from the cordial reception that has been given the attraction so far. standing room will be at a premium the entire week Differing from most of the musical comedies that have, been offered at the Bijou, "Good Morning, Judge,” has a well-defined plot, which concerns the election of a German brewer to the mayoralty of his home town and the many ludicrous situations that arises when the good-natured brewer is forced to assume the position of municipal Judge The musical numbers are new and up to date and the costumes In ket ping with the splendid tone of the attrac tion Forsyth Packed. "Sold out" has been the record at every performance at the Forsy th this week, and a wonderful advance sale for the remaining performances Indicating that the busy theater is going to make a new attendance record, possibly eclips ing the figures set up by Miss Keller mann two years ago The show is one of the strongest that has ever been of fered in vaudeville in Atlanta. There is not a weak spot, every act counts and the applause is distributed evenly The oig feature of the program is the appearance of John F. Conroy, the only .person who possesses every kind of medal that has been awarded for hero ism. Conroy has saved 137 lives As sisted by two pretty girls, he gives a diving exhibition that is superior to any that has been seen in Atlanta. Thrills at Big Movie at Grand. A more wonderful photo-play than Victor Hugo's “Les Miserables" has rarely been seen. There Is interest in this 12.000 feet of him from the Intro duction of Jean Valjean until the last Inch has been run off. and the Grand Is being filled at the dally matinee and night performances. The characters of the Hugo novel are played by some of the most distinguished actors of France. The performances are given at 2 30 and at 8:30. Funeral Designs and Flowexs FOR ALL OCCASIONS. Atlanta Floral Company, 455 EAST FAIR STREET. A delegation of Ansley Park citi zens will go before the Streets Com mittee of Council at its meeting a week from Friday to protest against the lack of work in Ansley Park and to insist that Peachtree Circle and South Prado, for which money has been appropriated, be paved at once. These citizens declare they will de mand to know' who is responsible for the delay. The money was appro priated January 1 The property own ers are to pay a greater proportion than the city. Yet not a pick has been stuck in the park during t,he seven months of the year, with the exception of one short block on Lom bardy street. Mayor Woodward declared Wed nesday that little relief from such conditions could be expected so long as our present system of government was in effect. He said he had been trying to tell the people all the year that they could not trace responsi bility in matters of such gross incom- petency and negligence. “This new charter of Council’s the Legislature is about to submit to the people • s far worse,” he said. “It provides for a board to supervise the construction department, which will be about as satisfactory as the re mainder of our boards. "The Ansley Park citizens will have to frighten fhe whole city government into action to get any real results.” President to Free Four Life-Termers | LEAVENWORTH. KANS., July 23 T. A. Keating. Arthur Hewitt, Boh Clark and Gilbert Mullins, sentenced to serve life terms in Leavenworth Prison, will be free in July, 1914. Pa pers were received at the Federal Prison here to-day from President Wilson commuting their sentences, providing the behavior of the four men is good. The four were convicted of the murder of a guard in the prison mu tiny in i90l. when 27 Federal con victs escaped. Kaiser's Lieutenant Joins U, S, Cavalry CHICAGO. Jyly 23.—Dr. Otto Gold- feld. son of one of the oldest and wealthiest families In Germany, a graduate of Gottingen University, and until one month ago a lieuten ant in the Kaiser's army, becomes a United States cavalry trooper to-day. Dr. Goldfeld spent the last month trying to forget that he had been jilted by a girl. He aJso spent about $32,000 at Paris and Monte Carlo as he tried to forget. His pay as a trooper is $16 a month His father sends him 200 marks a month. Debate on Resolution, Guaran teeing American Citizens’ Rights Abroad, Is Resumed. WASHINGTON, July 23.—Debate on the Fall resolution, guaranteeing constitutional rights to American citizens abroad and protection to their property, was resumed w'hen the Senate convened to-day. Though the wording of the resolu tion was general there was no at tempt to cloak the fact that the Mex ican crisis is the issue. Senator Fall said in regard to the j Mexican situation that no greater j error could be made than a contin- ( 1 nance of the dilatory tactics pursued | by the United States in the past. I Agreeing with Fall in this view were j a large number of Senators in both j sides of the chamber. Many held the opinion that the I Senate should take no hasty nor un- I toward steps. An incendiary state- I ment by that body might fan Mexi can resentment against Americans Into flame and cause diplomatic com* j plications, it was believed. President and Bacon Confer on Mexico. WASHINGTON, July 23.—President Wilson to-day summoned Represen tative Flood, chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, and Senator Bacon, chairman of the Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee, to the White House to confer on condi tions in Mexico. The delicacy of the present situa tion enforced a policy of secrecy at the White House, but it was asserted that the purpose of to-day’s confer ence was to discuss the advisability of removing the ban from shipments of arms and ammunition to the con stitutionalists in Northern Mexico. General Carranza and other revolu tionists have been pleading for weeks for the removal of this prohibition, claiming that they are entitled to the same privileges accorded to the Ma- derists by President Taft. It is doubtful if any decisive move will he made until after the removal <>f Ambassador Wilson, but It is prac tically certain that this Government will favor the removal of the prohi bition relative to the shipment of arms to the rebels and then will await developments in the hope of estab lishing a stable government in Mex ico. U. S. Prepared to Act on Short Notice. WASHINGTON, July 23.—Dispatch of a gunboat to Mexican waters, in addition to the four battleships al ready there, the presence of Secretary of War Garrison and General Leonard Wood on the Texap* border and the summoning of Ambassador Henry Lane Wilson to Washington are taken to indicate the intention of official circles here that the Mexican situa tion will no longer be allowed by President Wilson to drift. Reports from Chihuahua and Coa- huila indicate the centralization of the Federalist forces in those prov inces and the opening of railroad communication from the capital to the border within a week. BLUDGEON TALE IF DEFENSE Chief Declares Pinkertons Made No Report of Alleged Find to Him. Continued From Page 1. The location of the proposed per manent Atlanta manufacturers’ ex hibit probably will be definitely known within a week. The commit tee on arrangements has several propositions under consideration, and a report Is expected soon. It is' understood the majority of the committee favors leasing four upper floors of the Chamber of Com merce at Pryor street and Auburn avenue, the old Y. M. C. A. building. The Board of Directors of the Cham ber, it is unofficially stated, made a fair price to the manufacturers. it was too light to serve as a weapon This was the only club found in the factory at the time any oossible weap ons should have been found ana would have been found.” Date Still in Doubt. Reuben Arnold said Wednesday that the defense would ask for no continuance of the Frank case except for such imperative reasons as the absence of material witnesses or the illness of counsel. Luther Rosser, chief of counsel, also has indicated that no move will be made by the de fense for further delay in the trial unless an emergency arises of the sort described by Attorney Arnold. Informal conferences between the counsel in the Crawford will case and those in the Frank case, in both of which Rosser and Arnold appear as attorneys, have resulted in the announcement that the persons in terested in the Crawford hearing are willing to w r aive the priority of their case and permit the Frank trial to go on Monday. $250,000 if Bartender Holds Job Six Years “ o^Potatrf'vtew “Let ’Em Wear Anything They Want,’’ He Says—“If They Can Stand It, I Can.” X-Rays' All Depend Finds Cat, Whiskers And All, Petrified COTTONWOOD FALLS., KANS., July 23.—While repairing the floor ot his house John Mann, a farmer living southeast of ntre, found a petrified kitten in perfect condition. The cat weighed five pounds and its body was smooth and hard as though the w'ork of a sculptor. Its tail, feet and ears were intact and there were a few whiskers projecting from the jaws. Widow, 94, Sues for 46 Years' Alimony LONG ISLAND CITY, N. Y„ July 23.—Mrs. Deborah VanNess. of Gar den City, 94 years old, has begun suit in the Supreme Court here to collect 46 years’ alimony from the estate of her husband. Cornelius VanNess, who died three years ago. She was granted a divorce from her husband in 1867, and discovered recently that she was allowed $600 a year alimony. PHILADELPHIA, July 23.—Edward Musse. bartender at a Delaware Wa ter Gap hotel, has fallen heir to $250,- 000 from a German uncle “providing he stays continuously employed at the position he occupies when he learns that he is heir to my fortune.” To appease the nephew, who is now 24, the uncle provides he may receive $65,000 each year until he reaches the age of 30, when he-gets the principal. A codicil provides if he marries "re spectably” before January 1, 1914, he is to receive an additional $14,000 from each of two aunts. U. S. Is Confident of Breaking Film Trust WASHINGTON, July 23.—It was announced to-day at the Department of Justice that the Government has finished the taking of testimony in the prosecution of the anti-trust suit against the motion Pictures Patent Company, the moving picture trust. The defendants, twelve of the largest film companies in the world, will present their case the first week in October in the Federal Courts of New York. The Department of Justice is confident of success. Oriental Fruit Fly Threatens California WASHINGTON, July 23.—Secreta ry of Agriculture Houston to-day asked Secretary of the Treasury Mc- Adoo for aid in the fight against *he Mediterranean fruit fly, which men aces California fruit interests. He wants Secretary McAdoo to hoid in quarantine all passenger vessels entering California ports that officials may examine luggage for fruit bear ing the fly. OBITUARY Realty Men Invited To Meet in Atlanta Congress Blamed for Printing Office Waste WASHINGTON. July 23.—The | Joint Committee on Printing of the ' two branches of Congress took final steps to-day toward launching an in quiry into the Governtment Printing ! Office. It is charged that thousands of dollars are wasted annually in the j printing of useless documents. The committee believes members of I Congress rather than the Public | Printer are to blame. An invitation to hold its 1916 con vention in Atlanta will be extended to the Association of Real Estate Ex changes, which won will hold its 1913 gathering. The Atlanta invitation will be drawn up by Mayor Wood ward and presented to the convention by President Harry White, of the lo cal branch of the organization. Alderman I. N. Ragsdale, of the Tenth Ward, is back of the movement to bring the real estate men to the Gate City. Lima Keeps Lonely Slit Skirt as Curio Gets $7,692 Year to Let Tobacco Alone NORRISTOWN, PA., July 23.— Leonard Thomas, of Haverford. will receive $100,000 on his twenty-first birthday if he can swear on that day that he has never used tobacco in any form during his life, according to the will of his grandmother, Elizabeth Van Horsen Nicholson, probated here. Leonard is 8 years old and has not used tobacco yet. LIMA, OHIO, July 23.—In the relic room at police headquarters to-day hangs the first and last slit skirt ever worn in Lima. Mayor Shook in sentencing Mary Shedrick, the wearer, to pay a fine of $25, ordered the skirt taken from the woman and sent to the dry cleaners. The skirt came back to-day and Chief of Police Earnest ordered it hung in the relic room. 2,000 Teamsters on Strike in Cincinnati CINCINNATI, OHIO, July 23.—Two thousand teamsters went on strike to day as the result of the order of the union yesterday, following the break between the men and the members ot the employers’ association. The only teamsters not affected are the bakery and ice wagon drivers whose grievances were recently ad justed. The funeral of Mrs. Nettie Regensteln, who died at the home. No. 457 Wash ington street, was held from the home Wednesday morning. Interment at Oakland. The funeral of Mrs. Rachel C. Harland, who died at her home Tuesday morn ing. was held from the residence Wed nesday morning. Interment at West- view The funeral of Melvin Nesbitt, fifteen- month-old child of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Nesbitt, who died Tuesday, was held from the residence in Capitol View. Wednesday morning Interment at West view. The body of W. L. Golden, who died at a private sanitarium Tuesday morning, was sent to Cordele, Ga., Wednesday for funeral and interment. He was fifty-two years old, and is survived by a wife and one son. The funeral of Mary M. Mapes, thirteen- month-old daughter of the Rev. ahd Mrs. A. L. Mapes. who died Tuesday, will be held from Poole’s chapel Wed nesday afternoon at 2 o’clock. Inter ment at Westview. The funeral of Mrs. Camelia Joyner, who died at a private sanitarium at noon Tuesday, was held from the residence at No. 249 Hill street, Wednesday, and the body was sent to Blairs. S. C., for interment. Mrs. Joyner was twenty- one years old. and is survived by her husband and parents. The body of Roger Hendrix Mott, who died at a local sanitarium Tuesday, was sent to his old home at States ville. N. C.. Wednesday for funeral and interment. Mr. Mott was thirty- one years old, and is survived by one sister. Mrs. C. H. Mills, of Statesville, and one brother, Dr. C. B. Mott. The funeral of Alfred E. Harwell, two- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Harwell, who died at the home. No. 153 Oglethorpe avenue, Tuesday night at 7:30 o'clock, will be held from the residence at 3:30 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Rev. S. H. Hall will of ficiate. Interment at Greenwood. The funeral services for Joseph A. John son, a pioneer Atlantan who died Tues day morning, will be conducted from the residence. No. 302 Luckie street, at 4 o’clock Wednesday afternoon. Pall bearers will be Captain Henry Jen nings. Frank Whitley. A. Q. Adams, George H. Sims. James Hudson and Andrew Klassett. Interment in Oak land. In Boulder. Colo., the diaphanous 'silhouette skirt may be worn In the shade only. AND In Lima, Ohio, this revealing gar ment of line without substance Is absolutely taboo. BUT In Atlanta to-day Mayor Wood ward averred that the new gown problem was one for women only to decide upon for themselves. Atlanta will not try to regulate 9kirts. A spirit of conservatism has marked the police department since the vindication of Miss September Morn, who was discovered in a moun tain pool in the show window of a book store. The skirt question has been before the people ever since Mrs. Adam, more generally known under her mai den name of Eve, first appeared garbed in the foliage of the ancient ficus carlca. There are those who hold the mod ern tendency is back to the foliage skirt, not the fig leaf, but possibly the leaf of the asparagus fern or other chiffon-like vegetable. How Other Towns View It. Miss Mary Lindsay, of Lima, Ohio, the town named after the well known bean, has been arrested because her slit skirt left practically nothing io conjecture. The Mayor of Boulder. Colo., has is sued an order in which he admits that a woman may wear as thin a skirt as her taste and the weaver’s art will allow. But he insists that it be worn on the shady side of the street only. The courts will probably have to decide the course to be taken by a fashionably gowned women when the s'un at the zenith illuminates both sides of the street. “It’s Up to Them,” Says Mayor. Mayor James G. Woodward de clared that he certainly would not undertake to tell women how to dress. And the policy of all the members of his administration would be *o leave these matters entirely with the women. "If they can stand it, I can," he said. "It doesn’t bother me and I don’t think it any business of the police to interfere. "Whether it’s a silhouette skirt or a sheath gown, it’s entirely up to them.” Anniston’s Mayor Missed the Shock. ANNISTON, July 23.—Annistonian? received their first "slit skirt” shock Tuesday, when a young woman from out of town appeared on Noble street, the principal business thoroughfare, attired in one of the ultra-garments, minus the old-fashioned petticoat. Mayor J. L* Wikle was in Birming- nam. Chief of Police Shiretzki and Recorder J. F. Green were non-com mittal. Frogs Oust Mice as Bogies of Fair Sex PORT CLINTON, OHIO, July 23.— Thousands of frogs are migrating overland from the marshes of Lake Erie and the Portage River to San dusky Bay. In the evenings when they lift up their voices their num bers seem to have been multiplied to millions. They fill the roads and streets and hundreds hop into homes. Nervous women have become more afraid of the clammy little frogs than of the proverbial mice. Women Give Tillman Fried Chicken Shower WASHINGTON, July 23.—Follow ing his assertion that the frying of chicken was unknown here, Senator Tillman was swamped with samples of fried chicken sent by local house wives. NOMINATION BLANK I hereby nominate as the most beautiful girl in Atlanta: Name Address Only one of these blanks will be credited to any one contestant. VOTING COUPON For any regularly nominated Candidate in the BEAUTY CONTEST . Name of Candidate. Address Fill out this Coupon and send It to "Booster Button” Editor ot The Georgian and American. BANKRUPT SALE WHOLESALE MILLINERY STOCK AND FIXTURES Of Myers Millinery Company, Bankrupt In pursuance of an order passed by lion. P. H. Adams, Referee-tn Bankruptcy, 1 will receive sealed bids on the stock of millinery, con sisting of items invoicing approximately as follows: Ribbons, $5,000; wire, $194; Hat Pins, $65: Thread, etc.. $288t Mourning Veils. $100; Hat Bands, etc., $378; Braid, $950; Velveteen. $98: Velvet. $1,285: English Crepe, $153 : Felt. $07: Furs, $47: Mallne, $.367; Chiffon. $998; Scarfs, $188; Veiling, $706; Lace, $812; Mali, $124; Silk, $1,000; Plumes, $3,829; Aigrettes and Fancy Feathers, $2,800: Flowers, $3.282; Children's Headwear, $843; Ladies’ and Frames, $1,750. Total $20,000. Also office and store fixtures Invoicing $1,825. Also bankrupt's leasehold Interest In a five-story building erjulpped with elevator located at No. 39 East Alabama Street, now renting at $200 a month, .lease expiring June 30, 1915. I will accept said bids up and until 11 o’clock A. M. of Friday, July 25. next, at which time said bids will be opened at Room'No. 613 Grant Building, Atlanta, Ga. Bids may be submitted as an entirety or separately on the stock or fixtures or lease and are subject to the con firmation of the court. For further information and inspection of stock and inventory apply to H. A. FERRIS, Trustee 402 Rhodes Building, Atlanta. Ga. Mayson & Johnson, Attorneys for Trustee. 1 “f * ■