Newspaper Page Text
TUB A'I'fiAMTA UKOKUJAN AM) NKWS.
LEFT FACTORY,
MRS, FRANK SMILING
AS SHE LEAVES COUR'
Continued From Page 1.
©nly to have it given first to the de
fense.
What had the appearance of being
the most sensational testimony of the
day was that given by R P Barrett, a
machinist on the second floor of the
factory, when he declared that he had
found a pay envelope under the ma
chine used by Mary Phagan. The pay
envelope, however, when it was
shown to the Jury, was discovered to
have on it no date, no amount, no
name, with the exception of a loop of
one letter, no number nor any other
mark to identify it as the pay en
velope that the Phagan girl received
Saturday, April 26. Nor was any ex
planation suggested as to how she
may have happened to be at her ma
chine when there was no work being
done that day and the machines were
not in operation.
Barrett testified to the finding of
the alleged blood spots on the second
floor near the woman’s dressing room
and the strands of hair on the lath
ing machine. No more was developed
out of the testimony then was al
ready known to the public when Bar
rett anounced his discovery a few
days after the murder. Barrett also
declared that a white subetance had
been used with the apparent intention
of removing the splotches of red
Sweeper Telit of Splotches.
Mel Stanford, a factory sweeper,
coroborated Barrett in history of the
finding of the spots and the white
eubstanc^ that was spread over them.
He said the .spots were not there when
he swept the factory Friday and that
the first he noticed them was when
they were pointed out to him the
Monday morning after the murder.
Mrs. George \V. Jefferson. who
works in the polishing room, gave
testimony of the same sort. She al<*o
testified that cords like the one found
around the neck of Mary Phagan
hung on a post in the polishing room
She said that this was the only placi
on the second floor where they wen.
kept, but admitted that they might
drop on the floor and be swept to any
part of the factory. She said thut
three shades of red paint were used
In the pollehlng room, but that all of
therm were distinguishable from blood
and that the spots she saw near th*
women's dressing rom were none of
the paints she had described.
Monteen Stover, the 14-year-old
factory girl, gave exactly the teatl-
*fltfdu Tnon V that had been expected. She
aid she had entered the factory at
.2:05 the day of the tragedy, and that
f ■’Yank was not in his office. She > said
that she looked about in his office
T for him and on failing to And him
left the building. She testified that
she looked at the clock as she depart
ed, and it was 12:10. Her story con
tradicts the statement of Frank that
he was in his office all the time after
he came from Montag Brothers at
about 11 o’clock until he went to the
fourth floor to see Harry Denham and
’Arthur White at about 12:50.
Dr. Claude A. Smith, city bacteriolo
gist, testified that he found four or
five blood corpuscles on one of the
chips of wood that were brought to
him. He could not tell whether or not
it was human blood. These chips
were the ones taken from the floor
where the alleged spots were found.
He said that in his opinion the blood
stained shirt found at the home of
Newt Lee, the negro night watch
man, never had been worn and that
the blood on it was put on the inside
of the garment and seeped through
on the outside.
Mrs. Leo Frank,
wife of
defendant in
Phagan case,
and Julian
Boehm, a friend
of the family,
snapped as they
were leaving
the courtroom.
Mrs. Frank
evidently
is well
pleased with
the course the
case is
running.
Stork and Cupid
Cunning Plotters
llttny a New Home Win Have a
Little Sunbeam to Brighten It.
Cm
Sherlocks. Lupins and
Lecoqs See Frank Trial
Ttwv It anally • certain, decree of ( treed In
•WJ arotnon a mtnd at tr the prohibit pain, (lit-
trott and dinger of child birth But, thinks to a
BMtt remarkable mapdy known ee Mother • Friend,
all fear la banietoed and the period U one ef us-
bounded, Joyful anticipation
Mottjer'a Friend W ueed ejrternally It la t
tsatt penetrating application, m*k*a the mtierlot of
the stomach and abdomen pliant eo they expand
eaaUy and naturally without pain, without dlatresa
and with none of that peculiar nausea, nervouaneaa
and other symptoms that tend to weaken the proa
pectlee mother Thua Cupid and the atork are held
•*J> reneraUon they are rated aa cunning plot
len to herald the coming of a little auntwam u>
fta^den the heart* and brighten the hornet of a
boat of happy famine*
There are thouaanda of women who have ueed
Mather a Friend, and thua know from eiperienca
But It la one of our rrea'eet cootributtoiu to
fcMlthy. happy motherhood It u eold by all drug-
nata at $1 00 per bottle, and la eapoclalty recoin-
needed aa a preventive of caking breaata and all
auch Ulalroaaea.
’ :* to Bradfleld Regulator Co.. 13] T.amar
Atlanta. Ga . for their tcry valuable Look
M-ctai.t motbona tkot a WkU« M •ther'g
to day.
Vanderbilt University
104€ STUDENTS 125 TEACHERS
CAMPUS OF 70 ACRES, alao apodal cam-
pue for dop’ta of Medici no and Dentistry.
Expenses low. Literary courses lor graduate*
l undergraduates. Professional course* in
peering.Law. Medicine. Pharmacy. I>en-
^ Theology. ScDdforcatalognamingde-
® ent - J. E. HART. Secy. Nashville, Tenn.
Thera are enough “hists,” aha’s”
and those other exclamations that
mark a true detective beside the
badge on his left suspender, to fill a
whole volume of Gaborleau thrillers
at the Frank trial.
A stranger whirled from the Ter
minal Station to Judge Roan’s court
room would be convinced before he
had been In that temple of Justice
five minutes that all Atlanta earns its
living following clews and that if
Sherlock Holmes was made a mate
rial being he could beat Jim Wood
ward for mayor by 8,000 votes.
Ever since the body of Mary Pha
gan was found, practically every man
of voting age and a lot of those who
Just think they are, have evolved a
theory as to the crime they regard
as incontrovertible as two plus two
makes four, and have a system of
ratiocination (beg pardon, Mr Poe),
that either proves beyond the shadow
of a doubt that Leo M. Frank is guil
ty. or that he is innocent, or that
Jim Conley did It. or he didn’t, or
that somebody did, but they’ll be
hanged if they know who.
Theorists There for Vindication.
The census of 1910 gave Atlanta a
population of 154,839, and it is safe to
say that 154,839 sure-Are theories
have been evolved.
And everyone of the theorists wants
to go to the courtroom to see his the
ory upheld and see the theory of the
other fellow smashed to smithereens.
Atlanta’s deductive and induct lye
powers were never even dimly real
ized until this week.
Chat with the throng around the
courthouse. Mingle with the Lupins,
the Lacoqs, the Anna Katherine
Greensi n the room where the issue
is being fought
Clerk Turns Detective.
Your surprise iwll be suddenly con
verted into admiration and then into
awe. A person, whom you had mis
taken for a clerk with a brain capa
ble of knowing nothing more complex
than a suit will sell for $19.99 quick
er than it will for $20, you discover
has a reasoning power as infallible
as that of Socrates and a knowledge
of things criminal that makes him
the most, deadly foe to crime sin e
Bertillon.
He can take an envelope, locate it
on a second floor and in a flash con
ceive just ho wa deed of murder was
committed.
He can watch a man’s hand trem
ble and immediately conceive him a
perjurer and a villain of the deepest
dye, although he doesn’t ask him if he
had taken on too much the night be
fore.
“Signs Air Hopeful,” Says Uncle Ben.
He can point out the fatal weak
ness In the attack of a lawyer who
makes more money In a minute than
he himself makes In a week A man
selected by a sovereign people to rep
resent the majority of their law be
comes a mere novice under his merci
less criticism.
“But the signs air hopeful,” re
marked Uncle Ben Green, from out
Hapeville way, as he listened to the
findings of the amateur sleuths and
chewed tobacco.
“The signs air hopeful,” he repeated.
“I’ve been a-sittin’ here since the trial
begun, and from what I hev seed of
these deteckertlve fellers we’ve got
right now, it's a pretty good thing
that a new crop is a-cornin’ up.”
Woman Is Named to
Supervise ‘Spooning’
ASBURY PARK. N. J.. Aug. 1.—
Mayor R. S. Bennett has appointed
Mrs. Nanette, a social worker of Bal
timore, as a special boardwalk po
licewoman.
She will watch the “spooners” and
"mashers” and act as a censor of the
bathing costumes.
FALLS 100 FEET. UNHURT.
GAINESVILLE. FLA.. Aug. 1.—
After falling 100 feet from a balloon
here Fred Lomen was unhurt. His
fall was broken by the branches of
a tree.
Another Line Added
To Southern System
MACON. Aug. 1.—J. H. Palmer,
former chief clerk of the Georgia
Southern and Florida Railroad, will
be general manager of the combined
Hawkinsville and Southern and Gulf
Line Railroads. The Gulf Line was
yesterday purchased by the* Hawkins
ville and Southern for $261,000.
The entire system, extending from
Grovanla, through Hawkinsville,
Ashburn and’Sylvester to Camilla, is
a subsidiary of the G. S. and F., which
is in turn controlled by the Southern
Railway.
OBITUARY
The funeral of Hoy D. Terrell, 4-
month-old child of Mr. and Mrs.
N. J. Terrell, of Moore’s Station, on
the Marietta car line, who died ear
ly Thursday, was held from the
home Friday morning. Interment
was at Adam8ville.
Mrs. D. C. Collins, twenty-nine years
old. died at the home in College
Park Thursday night. She is sur
vived by her husband, three small
children and her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. A. P. Holton, of College Park
Funeral services will be conducted
at Mount Zion Church at 4 o'clock
Friday afternoon. Interment in the
• churchyard.
The funeral services of Thomas A.
Smith, who died Thursday at the
home of his sister. Mrs. N. L. Moles,
No. 34 South Humphries street,
will be held at the residence Friday
afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. Interment
will follow at Greenwood.
The body of Mrs. Emma E. Smith,
who died at the home. No. 13S
South Forsyth street, Wednesday
night, will rest In Atlanta Park
Cemot ?r:\ following funeral serv
ices at the chapel of Harry G. Poole
at 2 o’clock Friday afternoon.
Mrs. Fannie Bobo, sixty-six years old.
died at her home in Riverside
Thursday night. She Is survived by
one daughter, Miss Bessie Bobo.
The body will be sent to Doqglas-
ville for funeral and Interment
POWER STATION DOUBLED.
COLUMBUS.—The Columbus Pow
er Company has doubled the capacity
of its substation in Newn&n because
of the growth of business In that
town. The substation lias b^en es
tablished about one year.
TO-DAY’S MARKET OPENING
NEW YORK COTTON
Cotton quotations:
Incompetent Employers Doomed
to Certain Failure—Working
man’s Rights Paramount.
By B. C. FORBES.
“It can’t be done” is the favorite
argument of many employers when
urged to treat their employes more
liberally in the way of wages or
hours or rest days or conditions of
service. And they flatter themselves
that their obiter dictum—their say-
so—settles it, leaves no room for
argument, closes the case finally and
irrevocably.
* • •
Skinflint employers are going to
learn a few things before the world
is very much older. They are going
to learn that few things “can't be
done” when the public makes up its
mind thal they ought to be done.
Not many things that are right and
just are impossible.
• • •
The eight-hour day, you remember,
was socialistic, anarchistic and ab
surd when first advocated. Nothing
could be more imp««“sible, all but a
few far-seeing, broad-guaejed, large-
hearted, humane employe:* argued.
Well, the eight-hour day was ushered
in without any tremendous upheaval
in ths-industries concerned.
m 9 *
“It can’t be done” was once the
pet reply to please for the abolition
of seven-day work in the steel in
dustry. To-day not five per cent of
the United States Steel Corporation's
employes work seven days a w©ek.
• • •
Sunday labor in certain industries
used to be considered absolutely un
avoidable. To-day it has been radi
cally reduced, almost eliminated in
most directions.
* * •
The railroads at first vowed that
rebating simply could not be stopped.
To-day they are infinitely grateful
that the law stepped in and annihi
lated it.
• • "-e
Political parties could not be held
together, it was urged, without bosses.
To-day the bosses are being driven
out to the advantage of all.
• * •
“Can’t” is an overworked word. It
is too often the refuge of the unfit,
the lazy and the coward. Sometime*
it expresses a fact; more often it i«
an unconvincing excuse.
• • •
What is here written ie for the edi
fication and exhortation 6f certain
corporations and other large employ
ers who glibly declare that sorely-
needed reforms for the benefit of their
workers “can’t be done.” These em
ployers are ready to admit that they
would like to do certain things, that
justice is on the Side of the reforms
and that they hope at some distant
date conditions—especially among
their competitors—will so change that
it will be possible to mix a little more
humanity with their money-making.
• • •
They would like to let their work
ers off one day every week, or every
month. But “it can’t be done.”
• • •
They would like to pay all theif
helpers a living wage. But “it can’t
be done.”
• * •
They would like to better working
condition#.. But, again, "it can't be
done.”
• * •
Gentlemen, it CAN be done. And
it WILL be done.
• •' e
Any man who can’t pay his work
ers a living wage has no right to own
a business. If he can not supply the
brains necessary so to mAnage a con
cern that it can pay decent wages,
then stop him from being ah employer
and let him become an employe. If
capital can not be handled in one
industry so as to afford reasonable
wages, then let it seek other employ
ment. Not only is it an economic sin
to continue the use of capital in an
unprofitable business. In one that does
not pay for the things necessary for
the sustenance of the workers en
gaged in it, but it is a crime against
humanity, a crime against society, a
crime against the State, for if an em
ploye receives less wages than is ab
solutely needful to maintain'life, then
others—the butcher, the baker, the
dry goods merchant, the landlord,
etc., etc.—have tp make up the dif
ference, since men and women can
not allow themselves to starve to
death.
The employer who persists in re
plying “it can’t be done” to requests
for reasonable treatment of workers
writes himself down incompetent, un
fit to enjoy the services of others.
Capital and labor are net sufficient
to insure business success; MAN
AGEMENT is the third and indis
pensable requisite. And any employer
who can not supply if intelligently
enough to enable him to deal fairly
and decently with workers has no
claim to be allowed to remain an em
ployer. That Inexorable law which
decrees the survival of the fittest
marks such an one for destruction, as
he ought to bo marked.
* . «
It may be necessary to be more
specific it! a subsequent article.
I. “jFtr«t| r»-« v
lOpenID i.arh'Low ' Ca'l.l CoS*
Auk. . .
111. 76111.76111.75H1.75111.71-72
Kept
1 i. . . 11.33-35
Oct. .
11.26111.26’11.24 11.26 I! .32-33
| Nov. . .
11.16- !8
Dec. . .
111.20;11.2.?;n.20111.23)11.18-19
1 Jan. . .
11.13 11.15 11.12)11.15'11 .11-12
Feb. . .
' i 11.12-14
Mch .
11 .23 11.23 :i,23 11.23111.20-21
May
ill.28111.28 11.28,11.28 11.21-23
June . .
! J j 1 '11.23-24
NEW ORLEANS COTTON.
I Cotton quotations:
1
!First! Prev.
[Open High'Low Call 1 Close
Aug. . .
I i ' 111.6 -63
Sept. .
1 I 111.36-3*
Oct
111 .32'11.32 11.32111.32(11.31-32
Nov. . .
! 1 ill. 28-30
Dec. . .
11 .33 .1.30 11 .30H1.30!11.26-30
Jan
.111.28 11 .28 11.28111.28,11.30-3
Fch.
| ! ! I 11.27-29
Mch. . .
| j ] ill. 4’
May . .
1 1 ! i 111.46-47
mm FLOOD IF VOTES
IIS CLOSE
T
LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET.
.Futures opened steady.
" Opening
Range.
. .6.30
• 6.21%
.6.12%
.6.08
.6.03
.6.03%
.6.04
.6.05
.6.06%
Aug . . .
Aug.-Sept
Sept.-Oct.
Get.-Nov.
Nov.-Dec.
Dec.-Jan.
Jan.-Feb.
Feb.-Mch
Meh. - A pr.
Apr.-May
May-June
June-July
.6.09%
.6.09
Prev.
2 P. M. Close
6.31 6.29
6.22% 6.20%
6.14 6.10
6.09 6.07
5.02
6.02
6.03
6.04%
6-03%
6.06%
6.08
6.08
6.04
6.05
6.06
6.07*
NEW YORK STOCK MARKET.
Stock quotations to 10 a. m.:
10 Pi
STOCK— High. Low. AM. Cl
Amal. Copper. 70% <70% 70% 1
American Can 32Z 32% 32Z :
Atchison ..... 97% 97% 97% 1
Beth. Steel... 34 34 34
B. R. T 88 88 88 f
Can. Pacific.. 215 215 215 21
C. and 0 55% 55% 55% {
Erie 29 29 29 J
G. North, pfd. 125% 125% 125% 11
G. North. Ore. 35% 35% 35% J
Lehigh Valley 150 150 150 H
North. Pacific 109% 109% 109% 1(
Pennsylvania. 113% 113% 113% 11
Reading 159% 159% 159s% If
So. Pacific.... 92 92 92 i
So. Railway.. 24 24 24 J
Tenn. Copper.. 30% 30% 30% f
Union Pacific. 148% 158% 158% If
U. S. Rubber. 60 60 60 f
U. S. Steel... 59% 59% 59% E
do, pref. .. 108% 108% 108% 1(
Utah Copper.. 48 48 48 4
Wabash, pfd... 7% 7% 7%
West. Electric 63% 63% 63% f
LIVErtPOOL COTTON MARKET.
LIVERPOOL Aug. 1.—This market
was due % point lower on August and
2 points lower on later positions, but
opened quiet. 1 to 1% points higher. At
12:15 p. m. the market was steady, at
a net advance of 2 to 2% points.
Spot cotton in moderate demand at 4
points advance: middling 6.57d; sales
7,000 bales, including 5,400 American.
COTTON MARKET OPINIONS.
Atwood. Violett & Co.: Anything un
der 80 for the report would be an in
centive to higher prices temporarily.
Miller & Co.: We think prices will
continue to he controlled by climatic
conditions in the southwest.
Josephthal, Ijouchheam & Co.: We
advise sales on all strong spots..
Julian Hawthorne in Perhaps His
Last Work in Prison Foresees
Wonderful Reforms.
Continued From Page 1.
a system of hygiene and bodily ex
ercise and diet somewhat resembling
the old Spartan rules instituted by
Lycurgus; and a general discipline of
mind, manners and conduct as strict
as that of West Point but more en
lightened. What had been a stigma
became a certificate of merit, and by
and by, instead of being sent to Jail
by sentence of court, men who had
failed in life or felt themselves weak
and incompetent voluntarily applied
for admission. For what they pro
duced they were paid good wages;
their families were supported by the
Government until the men’s earnings
could care for them.”
Denounces Present Method.
In another article in the same num
ber, on “Self-Respect,” Hawthorne
brands the dress and branding of
prisoners, under present-day prison
rules, and the substitution of num
bers for names as a crude anachron
ism. as are also, he says, the titles of
“convict.” “felon” and "Jailbird.”
“Their effect,” he writes, “is to pro
duce in the prisoner a feeling of rad
ical and permanent separation from
his fellow men. It is an attempt on
the part of finite human beings to in
flict eternal damnation on some of
their fellow creatures.’’
Hawthorne declares that most pris
oners mean to be good when their
term is up.
“Whether or not their Resolution
holds firm.” he writes,” depends part
ly upon their native strength of char
acter, but in a larger part- upon the
treatment they get in jail. Shooting
and clubbing prisoners and subjecting
them to torture ’pas proved unsuc
cessful In leading them toward sweet
ness and light. Need for the actual
dub and gun may arise in an emer
gency, but the more firm and uniform
the discipline, founded, as all disci
pline should be, on enlightened prin
ciples of order and efficiency, the less
likely is such emergency to occur.”
Names of Victors in Georgian and
American Pony Race To Be
Announced Sunday.
The pony contest is over.
Winners in the exciting races con
ducted by The Georgian and Ameri
can will be announced Sunday, If it is
possible to complete the necessary
clerical work in time.
Until midnight Thursday votes were
received. Wednesday night the con
test manager and his assistants work
ed almost as late. Friday finds them
exhausted with the late hours and the
strain, for the excitement of the con
testants proved contagious, infect
ing the whole office.
Thousands upon thousands of votes.
30 many that the aggregate seems in
credible, were received Thursday and
up to the very last minute.
Mort of the b >ys and girls took to
heart the repented warnings that'
over-confidence was fatal, and put
copious quantities of - “ginger” into ^
their final efforts.
This wa.*: as true in the country as
in the city. The mail brought hun
dreds of letters for the contest de
partment.
From every point of view, it hasy
been a thoroughly successful contest,
ar.d, conducted in the most strictly
impartial manner, there has not been
a word of complaint.
Nothing remains but to count the
\T)tes and announce the eleven win
ners of ponies and carts; the eleven
saddle ponies, and the twenty-two
watches.
Spain Loses Heavily
In Moroccan Battle
Special Cable to The Georgian.
TANGIER. Aug. 1.—Spanish troops
are suffering enormous losses in the
campaign against the Arabs in Mor-
rocco.
A terrific battle if* raging near Te-
tuan. Hordes of natives are reinforc
ing their comrades and inflicting ter
rific slaughter on King Alfonso's men.
It is believed unless fresh troops ar
rive that the Spaniards will be anni
hilated.
The Kind You Have Always Bought,
is the caution applied to the public announcement of Castoria that has
been manufactured under the supervision of Chas. H. Fletcher for over
30 years—the genuine Castoria, We respectfully call the attention of fathers and
mothers when purchasing Castoria to see that the wrapper bears his signature in r
black. When the wrapper is removed the same signature appears on both sides
of the bottle in red. Parents who have used Castoria for their little ones in the
S ast years need no warning against counterfeits and imitations, but onr present
uty is to call the attention of the younger generation to the great danger of intro
ducing into their families spurious medicines.
It is to be regretted that there are people who are now engaged in the
nefarious business of putting up and selling ail sorts of substitutes, or what should
more properly be termed conterfeits, for medicinal preparations not. only for
adults, but worse yet, for children’s medicines. It therefore devolves on the mother
to scrutinize closely what she gives her child. Adults can do that for themselves
but the child has to rely on the mother’s watchfulness.
&PZ
7»or
mi
lgf§
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.
AYegetable Preparation for As
similatliKj the FoodanilReguia
ling the Stomachs aiuLBowlsof
Promotes DigestlonCkerful-
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narcotic.
£nipt of Old DrSAMUimWl
Pumpkin St*d~
jllx. Senna *
Bodtrlle Salts-
Anise Seed ♦
ItxmSeed-
'Jari/MSim
Apcrfect Remedy forCnrsftya-
tlon, Sour Stoiaach.Dlarrtaa
Worms .Convulsioiis.Feverish-
ness and Lo ss OF SLEEP-
Facsimile Signature of
The Centaur CompatO,
NEW YORK.
«i ixi rant peel under the frooa
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
Letters from Prominent Druggists
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
Central Drug Co., of Detroit, Mich., says: “We consider your Cantoris
tn a class distinct from patent medicines and commend it’,'
Christy Drug Stores, of Pittsburg, Pa., say: "We have sold your
Castoria for so many years with such satisfactory results that we cannot
refrain from saying a good word for it when we get a chance.”
Jacob Bros., of Philadelphia, Pa„ say: “We take pleasure In recom
mending Fletcher's Castoria as one of the oldest and best of the prepara
tions of the kind upon the market”
Hess & McCann, of Kansas City, Mo., say: "Your. Castoria always gives
satisfaction. We have no substitute for it and only sell ‘The Kind You
Have Always Bought,' the original."-
The Voegeli Bros., of Minneapolis, Minn., say: “We wish to say that we
have at all times a large demand for Fletcher’s Castoria at all of our three
storeB and that It gives universal satisfaction to our trade.”
Polk Miller Drug Co., of Richmond, Va., says: "Your Castoria Is one of 1
the most satisfactory preparations we hare ever handled. It seems to
satisfy completely the public demand for such an article and is steadily
creating a growing sale by its merit.”
P. A. Capdau, of New Orleans, La., says: "We handle every good home
remedy demanded by the public and while our shelves are thoroughly
equipped with the best of drugs and proprietary articles, there are few
If any which have the unceasing sale that your Castoria has.”
M. C. Dow, of Cincinnati, Ohio, says: "When people In Increasing num
bers purchase a remedy and continue buying it for years; when it passes
the fad or experimental Btage and becomes a household necessity, then
it can be said Its worth has been firmly established. We can and do
gladly offer this kind of commendation to Fletcher’s Castoria."
CENUH4E CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THI CIMTAUR COM FANY, NKW YORK CITY,