Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 26, 1913, Image 3

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3 TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS TUI ACTS TO BE Appropriations Bill, as Framed, Pleases Governor—Needed Revenue To Be Provided. The one disturbing element in the program of financial legislation as mapped out by Governor Slaton just prior to the assembling of the Leg islature. and as outlined by him in his inaugural address, seems more than likely to be removed, thus avoid ing either an Executive veto of the general appropriations bill or an ex tra session of the General Assem bly. „ The general appropriations bill, as , framed up in the House and as like ly to be amended in the Senate, will be entirely satisfactory to the Gov ernor, provided sensible and neces sary tax acts are passed to produce the revenue called for. And it may be stated as a fact that the legislative skies have been stead ily clearing for the past few days , with respect to that. Tax Acts Also Expected. Not only does it now seem likely that the big appropriations bill will go to the Governor ten days ahead of adjournment as he has requested, but the tax acts will accompany it, in order that he may consider all at the same time and In their exact vital relations to one another. The tax acts will provide the nec essary increase in revenue to cover the appropriations called for, and this increased revenue will be distributed as equitably and as justly as possi ble. Chairman Aiken. Vlc e Chair man Cole and every member of the Ways and Means Committee, has been constantly at work upon the tax acts of late, to the exclusion of all other business. May Raise Tax Limit. No attempt will be made in the general legislative tax acts, however, to cover the deficit now existing in the State ^treasury. The Legislature seemingly inclines to propose a con stitutional amendment of limited du ration, providing for an increase in the tax limit of one mill for one year and one-half a mill for a second year, as recommended by the Governor. This increase will raise something over $1,000,000, which will wipe out .the deficit and leave something to spa re for further necessities between this time and the date upon which the amendment, if ratified, can be put in operation. The money thus extraordinarily raised will, of course, pay the com mon school teachers in full and start them off again with a clean slate again t th" State, and with no dan- * ger of r future situation of indebt- cir.es: >< h as now exists. Expect Bill to Pass. Tin !. 1! providing for tax equaliza- t-cn 1! pass th*» legislature. There ' 1: i doubt whatever of that in the rr n i of those members Who have ciesely observed the trend of events lately. . , It will not be the bill the Governor hoped for, hut it will he a bill pro- # viding a plan of tax equalization that can be expanded and perfected by later Legislatures, if it seems to wora to the people's satisfaction. It will carry provisions for coun ty boards of tax equalizers with a State hoard of limited powers to su pervise the entire work. The State board will not be permitted to equal ize the assessment of taxpayers, but it will have power to equalize the counties. Measure To Be Compromise. This measure will he a decided compromise between those who are advocating a State board of far- reaching authority and those who ob ject to any State board at all. Without some sort of State board it generally is agreed, however, that tax equalization would bp a complete farce, and not worth while in any particular. The Legislature has eighteen days of life to its credit after to-day. Com pared with other Legislatures, the present one really has worked rapid ly, particularly wdth respect to the appropriations bill and the tax acts Inasmuch, also, as there is no like lihood that it will lose any more time whatever from Monday forward, it looks as if its labors for the first session of its life will prove to be very satisfactory. Scotch ‘Brithers’ to Meet Friday ‘Nicht’ A meeting of the Atlanta Scottish Association has been called for Fri day night, August 1, in the Kiser Building, at Hunter and South Pryor streets. Chief A. Cruickshank’s call sent out to the brothers says: "Gang hame braw and early get yer tawtles and saut and tak yer braw breeks or kilt and yer best gra- <-vat out o’ the kim. "Meet wi' us a’ on Friday nicht, August 1. at aucht o'clock in the K. of P. Hall. Kiser Biggin, Hunter and Sooth Pryor streets." DON’T ENDURE -USE RESINOL Don’t stand that itching, burning skin torment one day longer,, Go to the nearest druggist and get a jar of Resinol Ointment and a cake of Resinol Heap. Rathe the patches of eruption with Resinol Soap and hot water, dry, and ap ply a little Resinol Ointment. The torturing itching and burning stop instantly; you no longer have to dig and scratch; sleep becomes possible, and healing begins. Soon the ugly, tormenting humor dis appears completely and for good. Resinol Soap and Resinol Oint ment are also speedily effective in even the stubbornest caseg of pim ples. blackheads, dandruff, sores and piles. Prescribed by doctors for eighteen years, and sold by every druggist in the United States. Trial free; Dept. 12-P, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. CAMERA MEN SCRAP FOR CHANCE TO PHOTOGRAPH ATLANTA BEAUTIES She’s a pretty brown-haired blue-eyed, girl who is likely to get big vote. Widow of Victim Asserts That the Facts Were Suppressed to Protect the Military. That she was not allowed to tell her story of the shooting before the military court-martial, and that sol diers shot at her hrother-in-taw after he had called to them not to Are again was the testimony given by Mr*. B. 8. Dunbar before the Military Com mittee of the House Friday after noon when the investigation into the Augusta killings of several months ago was taken up. The investigation is being held un der a resolution introduced by Repre sentative Beck, of Carroll County. The other witnesses were Mrs. Rob ert Christie, widow of one of the men killed: Sheriff John W. Clark, of Richmond County; Palmer Christie and L. M. Dohme, of Augusta. They were represented by Clem E. Dunbar, former member of the House. Mrs. Dunbar charged that one of the officers told her he had become ex cited during the shooting and or dered his men to shoot promiscuous ly. but that Major Claude Smith had refused to allow her to testify to this effect. When she asked Major Levy why she had not been allowed to tell her story correctly before the court- martial, she said he replied that the military must be protected. "For God's sake, don’t shoot. Don't you see I am trying to slop my ma chine?" are the words which she as serted Christie told her he said to the soldiers. 'He was on his way to my home in his automobile to get his wife. He saw the soldiers, but thought nothing of it. They fired at him and he attempted to stop and called to them not to shoot again, but they tired another volley and wounded him in one of his lungs, which caused his death a short while afterward." When the hearing Is resumed Tues day It probably will continue each afternoon through the week. Practi cally every military officer who was on duty in Augusta, as well as many privates, will he summoned to ap pear before tbe committee. They Are Eating Off The Mantel inPhilly PHILADELPHIA. July '26.—Phila delphia has an epidemic of boils. At one Walnut street shop one-third of the girls are away with boils, while at another fashionable place one- half the employees ere unable to sit down. Physicians attribute the outbreak to the recent heated term. Contest Editor Deluged With Pic tures—Thought of Big Task Gives Him Nightmare. Recently Governor Slaton refuse*! to be the judge in the selection of 500 portraits of Atlanta youngsters for the Temple of Childhood at the Pan ama-Pacific International Expositi jn, on the grounds that the job was too difficult because there were so many good-lookers. The Beauty Contest Editor is keep ing awake these nights, and when he has managed to get a bit of a’.eep, he has had nightmares, for fear that the same sort of thing is going to happen to his contest. Honestly, there are just so many beauties being nominated every day that The Georgian photographers are actually scrapping among theinselv< s to decide who shall make the picture The latest one submitted is that of Miss Elinor Macy, only daughter of Mrs. Grace Keefer, of 80 East Four teenth street. Miss Macy made her debut recent ly and is regarded as one of Atlanta s fairest, rihe has fair skin and dark blue eyes, with a wealth of rich dark brown hair. That she will get many votes is predicted by her friends. Who's the next one? “Watch Atlanta—she’ll get you yet! 500,000 by 1920!” SISTER OF ATLANTA MAN DIES. BUFFALO, July 26.—Mrs. Ellen V. Omalley, aged 30, a sister of William i B. Sanders, of Atlanta, is dead at her ' home in Geneva, where burial will hr held Monday afternoon. No Eligible List of Assistants to Recently Named Atlanta Inter nal Revenue Collector. An unusual situation will arise upon the transfer of the office of Internal Revenue Collector, when a special agent arrives in Atlanta August 1. The retiring Collector, Henry S. Jackson, fears hsi successor, A. O. Blalock, of Fayetteville, will be placed in an embarrassing position. “The Collector of Internal Revenue is the only office,” said Mr. Jackson, “which really has no fixed term. All other appointive offices in the Gov ernment service are for four years, but the Collector’s term is subject to the will of the President alone. “When a Collector of Internal Reve nue goes out of office, the terms of his deputies expire automatically, for they are appointed by him,” said Mr. Jackson. “At present there is no eligible list, and when I go out >f office, there will, therefore, be no deputies "If my successor, Mr. Blalock, sees fit, be may appoint my deputies, but after appointing them he can not dis charge them without good cause, for a man is never dismissed from the Government service, after he qualifies by civil service examination, except for some disdemeanor. “No civil service examination for deputies will be held until Auerust 15, and It will be September before the results are known. In the meantime, I am sure the Government will not he content to let the Atlanta office run without deputies. I am sorry for Mr. Blalock and hope the matter can in some way be adjusted so his friends will not be disappointed. ' Conference on Mexican Situation Kept Secret — Ambassador Denies Interviews. WASHINGTON, J.-’- 26.—Ambas- sador Henry Lane Wilson reached the office of Secretary of State Bryan to-day and expressed his views on the Mexican situation. The interview with Bryan was preliminary to the one which the envoy will hold with President Wilson. The Ambassador’s first act on his arrival here to-day was to repudiate almost entirely the Interviews sent out from New York last night. ‘Most of the statements attributed to me this morning are absolutely false,” he said. “I did not call Gen eral Carranza a bandit or refer to the revolutionary movement as a campaign of bandits, nor did 1 say that all talk of mediation was rot. No Chance for Mediation. “I did say that a board of media tors going into Mexico at the present time would have as much chance as a board of arbitrators in the midst of strike conditions that prevailed in West Virginia some months ago. I am not to be placed in the attitude of being a mere press agent for Huerta.” The conference between Secretary Bryan and Ambassador Wilson last ed about 45 minutes. It will be re sumed at 3 o’clock this afternoon. Mr. Bryan was forced to suspend the in terview at 11 o’clock to keep an en gagement with the Foreign Relations Committee of the Senate to discuss the proposed Nicaraguan treaty and the Mexican situation. Bryan stated that Ambassador Wil son would not see President Wilson before Monday. He declined to dis cuss the interview with the Ambas sador. Only One Real Revolt. “There is only one bona fide rev olution with high ideals in Mexico,” continued the Ambassador. "That is the revolution in the State of So nora, headed by Governor Pasquiera. They are fighting for states’ rights and doing no looting.” The Ambassador said the Huerta government was “strong and virile," and that, if recognized by the United States, it could establish peace. He denied, however, that he ever said he favored recognition by this country. “I am not here to advise th > Presi dent on any course.’’ he addf*d, “hut to make a first-hnnd report on condi tions. Personally, 1 never recognized the Huerta government." After Secretary Bryan left for the Capital, Ambassador Wilson started to work on a lengthy written report which he will present to President Wilson on Monday. He declined to discuss the plans of mediation which it is proposed the l nited States shall undertake. Has Prepared Policy. Ambassador \\ ilson said he has pre pared a “perfectly definite, complete policy, lined in memorandum form, which the United States should pur sue in Mexican affairs.” The Ambassador indicated his dis pleasure at the sending to Mexico of special representatives. “I might take this opportunity to say I resent any statement in anv newspaper that I am to be interro gated during my stay in Washington in regard to my personal affairs,” said Ambassador Wilson. “The President and Secretary of State have given me no Indication of such a situation, and they have shown me the greatest con sideration, except in one tiling the sending to Mexico, on behalf of the President, it is said, of William Bay ard Hale, the magazine writer, and of Regina LI H. DelVaiUe, on behalf of the Secretary of State, to make per sonal investigations. “William Bayard Hale and Reginald H. VelVaille are equipped wdth secret copies of the State Department code. I know that assistance in the use of the code was sought from one of the secretaries of the American Embassy in Mexico City. I think if the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations knew of it there would be an investigation “William Bayard Hale got to Mex ico City and gave his views on public questions the first day he wag there. The Huerta Government people there say he came to Mexico with a brief of conditions from the Maderistas.” Legislature Praised By Governor Slaton Words of praise for the work of the Legislature were spoken by Governor Slaton Friday night at a banquet given to the Ways and Means Com mittee of the House at the CapHal City Club by Chairman L. It. Akin. “I have every confidence in the gen tlemen composing the Georgia Legis lature this year. I do not believe I have ever seen a finer and more effi cient. body,” the Governor said. President J. Randolph Anderson, of the Senate, and Crawford Wheatley, chairman of the Appropriations Com mittee, spoke on the subject of tax reform. SEASHORE EXCURSIQI AUGUST 7. Jacksonville, Brunswick. ! St. Simon, Cumberland, At I lantic Beach, $6.00—Limit j ed 6 days. Tampa, Fla., $J —Limited 8 days. TWO SPECIAL TRAINS 10 p. m. solid Pullman train 10:15 p. m. Coach train. Make Reservations Now. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. SPECIAL NOTICE! Wilton Jellico COAL $4.23 July Delivery Only Place Your Order at Once JELLICO COAL CO. 82 PEACHTREE ST. Ivy 1589 Atlanta 3668 The dinner dance at the Piedmont Driving Club Saturday evening will be one of the most interesting in the series of week-end dinner dances en joyed by the club members through out the summer. Several large par ties will be entertained, and the usual dance will follow’ the dinner. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Morgan Mo- Clung, of Knoxville, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Adair, who returned last week from a trip around the world, will be the honor guests at a party enter tained by Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Adair, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. George Kent Var- den will complete this party. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lewman will have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Felder, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ad- ger Smythe, Dr. and Mrs. Willis West moreland and Mr. and Mrs. James 1. Williams. Mr. and Mrs. James L. Riley will entertain Mr. and Mr*. Hudson Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Nym McCullough. A congenial party . will include Misses Marion Goldsmith, Ruth Stal lings. Mary Butler, Messrs. Hal Hentz. Lynn Werner, Lewis Carhart, W allace Draper and William Manry. Mr. and Mrs. George Harrington will entertain a party of eight. Mr. and Mrs Edward C. Peters will have n party of nine, and Mr. and Mrs. A. Fitzsimmons will entertain a party of four. Other hosts of the evening will he Mr. Royston Cabiness and Mr. Chauncey Smith. Crawley-Dickenson. Announcement has been made or the marriage of Mies Helen Crawley to Mr. Arthur Wood Dickenson, the ceremony having taken place at th^ home of the bride’s parents in Holly wood, Cal. Miss Crawley Is a former Atlanta girl, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crawley, who removed sev eral years ago to California, where they have resided. Mr. and Mrs. Dickenson are located at Hollywood, where Mr. Dickenson j is in business. Birthday Party. . . . Little Mav Belle Miller entertained her little friends at a party Friday I afternoon in celebration of her btrtn- Those present were little Misses Unis Fuller, Annie Ruth Johnston, Olive Fuller, Rosa Reisman, Marlon Lawson. Sophie Shields. Willie Mae Brown. W. J Nelms, Louis Gholst n |and William Miller. Informal Parties to Visitor. Mrs Slaughter, of Chicago. the guest of Mrs. William Stewart, is be- I ing tendered a series of Informal par ties. Mrs. Fred Stewart gave a spend - I the-day party for her Tuesday, and I Mrs Robert Brure Morrison enter- ' tained informally in her honor Wed- j nesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. King Entertain. Mr. and Mrs. Olmstead King enter tained at a supper party Thursday evening in compliment to Mr. and Mrs W P. White and for Mr. and Mrs.' Frumptnn Ellis. The house was decorated with pink and white flow ers: n basket of pink rosea adnmad the center of the table. Ten guests were present. Megee-Harper. Mrs F. E. Megee announces th? marriage of her daughter, Eva. to Mr. ■t H Harper. The marriage took place at the Walker Street Methodist Church at 7:30 p. m. Saturday, July 2fi Mr and Mrs. Harper are at hems to their friends at 690 South Boule- vard. Port-FriscH. ¥ _ , Mr. and Mrs. Alexander L. Fort an- Inounce the marriage of their daugh ter. Minnie Janet, to Mr. Jesse M. Frisch on Tuesday. July 15. Mr. and j Mrs Frisch will be at home after August 1 at No# 179 Grant street. Dance at Crystal Palace. The young men of the Tech Sum- I mer School gave an informal dance Friday evening at the Crystal Palace. Refreshments were served. About 70 ol’ the dancing set were present. Miss L’Engle to Entertain. Miss Tracy L’Engle will entertain at an afternoon tea next Thursday at her home on Peachtree road for her guest, Miss Clara B. Lilley, of Lowell, Mass. Spend-the-Day Party. Mrs. Stewart Roberts entertained ! at a spend-the-day party Saturday | for her guest, Mrs. Otis Ham. of | Jackson, and for Miss Margaret Rush- ton's guest, Miss Clio Carmichael, of ■ Jackson. • Ice Cream and Cake Festival. The young people of Immanuel Congregational Church plan to have in ice cream and cake festival in the grove at the corner of Stewart ave- j nue and Brookline street Tuesday ev ening, July 29, for the benefit of the church. All the neighbors and friends of the church are cordially invited. Miss Murphy Hostess. Miss Julia Murphy was hostess at a matinee party at the Forsyth Sat urday afternoon, inviting twelve girls to be her guests. After the matinee the party had tea at the Piedmont Club. M’KEENBTTOBE OUSTED: UTS I Mrs. J. Murchison Thomas is visit ing in Savannah. Miss Clara B. Lilley, of Lowell, Mass., is visiting Miss Tracy L’Engle. Mr. and Mrs. Percy H. Whiting left Friday night for Augusta, Me., where they will reside. Miss Mary Bob Huson, Mr. Bryans Hu8on and Mrs. Frank Fenn are at Indian Spring. Harold Watson, son of Mr and Mrs. Earle W. Watson, is ill at his home in East Lake. Miss MoEvB. Scott, of Columbus, Ga., is visiting her cousin. Miss Effle Louise Walker, in College Park. Mrs. R. G.. Taylor and son will spend the rest of the summer in Dernorest, Tallulah Falls and Clayton. Misses Tommie and Marian Per due have returned from a camping trip with friends in North Caro lina. Miss Sarah Cowles left Saturday for Sewanee, Tenn., to visit Mrs. Warren Boyd, who is spending the summer there. Dr. and Mrs. Thaddeus Morrison announce the birth of a daughter July 23 named Clare Lee for her mater nal grandmother. Mr. C. A. Horne and his daughter. Miss Madge Horne, are now in Lon don, after an interesting stay in Nor- I way and Sweden. Misses Laura and Annie Feather- | stone left Atlanta Thursday to spend ; two weeks with Mrs. R. E. Mills, in i Birmingham. Dr. and Mrs. R. T. Burnley an- I nounce the birth of a son July 20. The child has been christened Winston I Tolbert Burnley. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Raine and Mr. and Mrs. William Prescott have been in Asheville for some time at the Grove Park Inn. Miss Lillie Myers is the guest of friends in Galveston. Texas, for three wqeks. She will visit in New Or leans before returning. Misses Ethel and Virginia Rodgers are guests of Miss Slattlde Scott, in Columbus, after attending a series of house parties in Columbus. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Morgan Me- Clung, of Knoxville, arrived Saturday morning to visit Mrs. McClung’s par- , ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Adair. Mrs. Max Epstein and little son. with Mrs. Epstein’s mother. Mrs. Sa- | rah Lazear, will leav© Sunday for Atlantic City and Rehoboth, Del. Mrs. Lottie Gray Browne, of the I Atlanta Institute of Music and Or- ' atory. has gone to Columbus to visit Mrs. R. R. Gunby for several weeks. Mrs. Richard W. Courts and chil dren leave Atlanta Saturday night for Louisville, Ky.. to visit Mrs. Courts’ mother, Mrs. J. B, McPherson. On the completion of their visit Mrs. Mc Pherson will join them for a stay of several weeks at Olympia Springs. Postmaster Says He Never Heard of Inefficiency Charges Ex cept in Newspapers. It was reported to-day that Post master Hugh McKee will not be outsed, but will be allowed to finish out his term, which expires some time between January l and 15, 1914. This understanding is said to be the outcome of a visit of Postmaster McKee to Washington last week, at which time he conferred with Post master General Burleson and First Assistant Postmaster Roper. “All New to Me/* He Says. Mr. McKee has arrived home from Washington, New York and other Eastern points in company with his daughter, Mies Jessie, whom he met at the rtearner on her return from Paris, where she has been studying for the past year. “I have read the published reports to the effect that I would be ousted.” said Mr. McKee, “but the papers know more about It than I do and I haven't anything to say except that It’s all Greek to me. “My visit to Washington was most pleasant. I had a long talk with the First Assistant Postmaster He was most courteous and showed me about the Capitol Says Atlanta Shall Judge. “Of course, I do not know what the reports of the Postoffice Inspector contained. If they found inefficiency in the Atlanta office I never knew that it existed. “So far as these Inefficiency charges are concerned, and I am not sure that any were made officially, 1 will place myself before the citizens of Atlanta to be judged. They know whether they are getting good service or not and they are the only people really competent to judge.” WOMAN’S BODY FOUND. COLUMBUS.—The body of Dollle Clarke, who was drowned in the Chattahoochee River Wednesday three miles below Columbus, was found by the crew of a Government boat nine miles below the city, hav ing floated down stream six miles. BALTIMORE, MD. $20.85 Round Trip $20.85 Tickets on sale August 1, 2 and 3. Return limit Au gust 15. Through electric lighted steel sleeping cars. Dining cars on most con venient schedules. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. tat' i MANY A SLIP Twixt eye* and lip. If j n o. L. Moore & Sons fltted your glasses, they are comfortable and stylish! Did Jno. L, Moore & Rons fit yours? Their attention to detail is perfection. "Trifles make per fection—perfection is no trifle." Jno. L. Moore & Sons, Oculists’ prescriptions, 42 North Broad street. Are You Sick, Diseased, Nervous, Run Down? H«v« You Blood Poison, Kidney, derand Urinary TroubleeT IF SO, CONSULT (FREB) Dr. Hughes, Atlanta’s Long Estab lished, Moat Reliable SpociaJift. I core to stay cured NERVE. BLOOD and Skin Disea sea. striotubjL Prostatlo Trouble*. varicocelel HYDROCELE. Kidney. Blad der and Uri nary Dlseaeaa. Piles and all Chronic and Private 1 Mseaaea of 1 and Woman I give 606, tbe celebrated German preparation, for Blood Pol sou, and Guarantee results. Everything abso lutely confidential. If you can*t call, write. Free Consultation and Advice to AIL HOURS—9 a. m. to 7 p. nx. Sundays, I to 1. DR. J. D. HUGHES Oppo.lt. Third National Bank. W4 North Bread St, Atlanta, Qa. MODERN OPTICIANS Meaning right-up-to-the-minute in every respect. Well arranged ve testing rooms fitted with the latest scientific testing instruments, and >resided over by < ipticians of experience and ability. A complete lens- .Tinding plant, employing only expert workmen; making every style, form >r combination of lenses the genuine Kryptoks (invisible bifocals), Torlc icases and smoke or amber tints. Every style of latest mountings and mines for you to select from. If you would take the l>est cafe of your •yes, remember that a perfectly fitted pair of glasses Is the l»est eye insur- mce. I^et us make the examiuatlon for you to-day. Our prices are very moderate. A. K. HA WKES CO. 14 Whitehall SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT For the six months ending June 30, 1913, of the condition of the American Casualty InsuranceCo. OF READING, Organized under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, made to the Gov ernor of the State of Georgia, in pursuance of the laws of said State. Principal office, Colonial Trust Building, Reading, Pa. I. CAPITAL STOCK. Amount paid up in cash $325,009.00 II. ASSETS. Total assets of the company, actual cash market value.. .. .. ..$590,670.63 ill. LIABILITIES. Total liabilities $590,670.63 IV. INCOME DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THE YEAR 1913. Total income actually received during the first six months in cash $169,591.34 V. EXPENDITURES DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THE YEAR 1913. Total expenditures during the first fix months of the year in cash $184,734.75 A copy of the act of Incorporation, duly certified, is of file in the office of the Insurance Commissioner. STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA—County of Berks. Personally appeared before the undersigned, E. P Van Reed, who, be ing duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the president of the American Casualty Insurance Company, and Ciat ttie foregoing statement is correct and true. E. P. VAN REED. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 22d day of July, 1913. E. B. WELDER, Notary Public. Name of Agent at Atlanta—J. B. MARBURY. Opticians i miy i ihiiimriB H1CAGO CHOICE OF ROUTES JF AND GOOD SERVICE !y ®