Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 01, 1913, Image 3

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*■ 6 h f. THE ATLANTA UKOKWLAN AND NEWS. TO GEORGIA BEAUTY WON BY GRIDIRON STAR TD HIS SISTER Youth Wounded by Brother of Victim Declares He Now Is “Ready to Do Right.” Admitting the basis of the charges over which he was shot,, but declar ing that he was “ready to act the man, ” Joe Williams, of No. 209 Ken nedy street, lies at Grady Hospital a victim of hullets fired by T. Ezra Harrison, No. 79 Kennedy street, to avenge his sister The physicians believe that Unless septic conditions develop Williams may be dlcharged within a short time. The Injured man admitted to a re porter Monday that he had been in timate with Harrison’s sister, but de clared that he had been willing to do the right thing s<f far as he was able. Harripon is in a cell at the pojlce station and said he would have noth ing to say in regard to the shoot ing until the trial. Excitement was great in the Owl drug store on Kennedy street when Harrison walked in and confronted the young man he claimed had ruined his sister. Shot as He Takes Drink. A half-dozen customers were star tled by Harrison’s violent denuncia tion of Williams. It was the first time the two had met since Williams went to Savannah some time ago. Williams was standing quietly by the soda fountain. Harrison saw Williams as soon as he entered the ond walked directly toward him. •'•Du have ruined my feister and J graced my family!” he cried. A are you going to do about it?” Ilia ms is said to have replied was willing to do the right Rut that the drug store was place to discuss it. He then 10 the soda fountain and r a glass of water. As he w l ing the glass to his lips, wit- v say that Harrison drew a .[ -caliber revolver from his pocket and opened fire on the young man, i houting: “That’s the last drink of water you’re going to take on this earth, for I am going to kill you.” Three Bullets in Body. Three of the shots took effect. One penetrated the right shoulder and one entered the abdomen. Williams fell to the floor in agony. He was rushed to Grady Hospital. Detective Adams was in the store at the time and placed Harrison under arrest. Williams is said to have begun his attentions to Miss Nora Harrison about two years ago. According to members of the family, young Harri son went to him one day and warned him that the girl was young and in nocent and that he would be held re sponsible for any wrong that, hap pened to her. Several months'later Williams went to Savannah. While he was gone a baby was born, which now is 14 months old. The girl confessed to her parents that Williams was the father. He returned to Atlanta two weeks ago. Sunday was the first time that Harrison had seed him since his re turn. Tennessee Doctor Is Held as a Slaver MEMPHIS, TENN., Sept. 1.—Dr. J. D. Stevens is under a $500 bond here on a charge of white slavery. Fed eral officers charge that he brought Elizabeth Martin to Memphis from St. Louis and that the couple had lived together almost two years. Dr. Stevens has a wife and son liv ing in Knoxville, Tenn. - Mrs. “Ted” Coy, who was Miss Sophie Meldrim, of Sa vannah. Secret Marriage of Miss Sophie Meldrim to Yale Star Startles Atlanta Friends. 03ITUARY. The body of Harry Robson, a former Atlantan, who died Friday at Cuba, Mo., arrived in Atlanta Monday morning. Funeral service® were held at the chapel of Barclay & Brandon immediately after the ar rival of the remains. Mr. Robson was the manager of an amusement park at Cuba. Interment was at Oakland. The funeral of Mrs, Dell Tyler At wood, who died Saturday at the residence, No. 107 Glennwood ave nue, will be held at Barclay & Brandon’s chapel Monday after noon at 3 o’clock. She was 79 years old. and is survived by her hus band. H. L. Atwood. Interment at West view. The funeral of James E. Small, who Hied Friday at a local hospital, was. h- Id Monday morning from the Sa- j red Heart Church. Interment at Westview. A. L. Maddox, who died Saturday night, will be buried in the Dora- ville churchyard Monday afternoon following funeral services at the church at 3 o’clock. Mrs. Virginia Richardson, sixty-eigni years old, died Sunday at the resi dence, No. 478 Courtlarid street. She is survived by three children, M. G. Robertson, Mrs. W. L. Harrison and Mrs. Luke Langford, of Thom- Funefal ftervlees will bt ••'•! at 3:30 o clock Monday aft ernoon at Patterson’s chapel, the Rev. J. B*. Robins officiating. In terment at Oakland. The funeral of Mrs. Henrietta Cueen, who died Saturday at the residence, No. 373 Formwalt street, will .be held at 2:30 Monday afternoon at Poolfc’s chapel. 8hi VM twenty- two years old, and i® survived by her husband, J. L. Queen. Inter ment at Westview. The bodv of F. E. Timmons, a Con federate veteran, who died Sunday afternoon at the Soldiers’ dome, is at Poole’s chapel pending funeral arrangements. He was eighty-two years old. Edward Harris Coy, six feet two inches tall, weighing two hundred pounds, and only three years ago re garded as the greatest football play er that ever wore a cleated shoe, made the ptax play of his life Sun day when he married Miss Sophie Meldrim, of Savannah, at Asheville, N. G. ' v “Ted” Coy had bucked and bat tered hts way through many a pow erful line at Princeton and at Cam bridge, more than once turning de feat into a gloribus victory' for the Blue of Yale, but never did he face stouter opposition than when he lowered his head at Dan Cupid's sig nal and- rushed over one obstacle aft er another in ’His charge toward the goal of love in a little church in North Carolina. Miss Sophie Meldrim. daughter of General Peter W. Meldrim, of Sa vannah, has been THE belle of Geor gia since her debut three years ago. She haa • been courted At home, in Europe and in every social center she has visited since her coming out. Rumor has time and again linked her name with this brilliant match and that. Society editors have been on the alert for the announcement of her engagement for more than two years, but never has Ted Coy’s name been linked with hers until last Oc tober, when Georgia played Vander bilt at Ponce DeLeon Park. Coy came down from his business in Chat tanooga to act as referee of that con test. Mias Meldrim came up from Savannah to act a s sponsor-for the Red and Bla «. They met aftei the game, and from then on Yale’s greatest fullback has besieged Miss Meldrim. The sudden marriage Is understood to have been as great a surprise to the relatives of the young couple as it was to their friends. It was known that Coy had been assiduous in his attentions to Miss Meldrim and had made several. Ibng 'trips to visit her at th£ home of her parents, General and Mrs. P. WV Meldrim, of Savannah, but that they were contemplating an immediate wedding was not suspected by any one. General Meldrim was in New York at the time. The young bride is known through out the South for her beauty and grace. She has traveled considerably and wherever she has gone the fame of her attractiveness has spread. She has been the guest of friends in At lanta a number of times and is wide ly known here. Mrs. John D. Little freqnently has entertained her and Miss Meldrim became a conspicuous figure in local satiety circles in her brief visits here. Coy greatest Football Star. Coy was heralded in 1908 arid 1909 as the greatest fullback of all time. He startled the football critics of the country by the brilliancy of his play. Miss Meldrim went to Asheville about ten days ago, ostensibly to at tend a party given In her honor by Miss Mildred Cunningham, of Sa vannah, a lifelong friend. Saturday she left for Toxaway, where she was met by Coy. He returned with her to Asheville, where she has been one of the belles for several seasons. They obtained a license at once. Plan Return to Chattanooga. Hearing that a baptismal service was being conducted in'the new Trin ity Episcopal Church, they wont there and the ceremony was performed by Rev. Wyatt Brown, the .rector. • Miss Cupningham and Mr. Smith, the busi ness partner of Coy, were the only attendants. The young couple left Monday foi an extended honeymoon through the East. They will return to Chatta nooga, where the groom is engaged | in business. Maxine Elliott Balks At Too Much Realism Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, Sept. 1.—Maxine Elliott, who makes her re-entry to the stage as Potiphar’s wife, in Sir Her bert Tree’s production of “Joseph and His Brethren,’’ at His Majesty’s Theater, September 7, has found Sir Herbert’s insistence for realism more than she bargained for. In the last act Miss Elliott should be carried off the stage by two Ethi opians. She insists they be white men blacked up. King George Hit by Lure of Race Track Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, Sept. 1.—Against the wishes of the Queen, King George has developed recently a devotion to racing equal to that of his father. He is dissatisfied with the perform ance of his present striftg of horses and has instructed Lord Marcus Beresford to buy for him half a dozen of the beet yearlings obtainable and to procure them at the forthcoming Donqast&r #ale. Prisoner-Poet Laments the Poor Training of “Animal Curiosi ties” in Federal “Zoo.” Declaring that the men behind the Federal prison bars are so imperfect ly trained as “animal curiosities” as to positively shrink when gazed upon as monstrosities, Julian Hawthorne, prison poet and philosopher, In Good Words, the official prison organ, sa tirically criticises the, so-called "Plum mers” who Invade the secret clois ters of the unfortunate convicts. No doubt the science of penology advances by leaps and bounds as a result of such methods, the noted prisoner declares sarcastically, and the resemblance to the zoo Is notable, but, be adds, there Is one difference between the two, In that some of the criminals have retained some of their unr«generate human sensibilities and can’t stand public stares. The world, he says, having In Its wisdom and profound understanding of the needs of human nature cre ated these populous hermitages where crime and vice may be miraculously extracted from the body corporate of the community—the world, having ac complished this signal act of sagaci ty and benevolence, is presently be set by the curiosity to see how the charm works. How Visiting Parties Act. “Even as slumming parties,” he de clares further, “are organized In the cities to observe the peculiarities of crime in its making and effervescence, so does the solicitous citizen, w'ith family and friends, betake himself cheerfully to the penitentiary to mark its aspect and conduct when under constraint. The men don their come ly afternoon attire, the ladies enhance their native attractions with the chromatic charms of fashionable toi lets, and in groups of from two to tWehty they storm our battlements, invade our secret cloisters, cells, hos pitals and studios, peer curiously into our factories and w'orkrooms. where the happy operatives warble at their tasks; stream through the portals at the dining salon while the animals file in to their provender, keeping time to the stately strains of the band, and finally stray out in the grounds sur rounding the mansion, where they in spect the tuberculosis camp and watch those of us wlv> are agricul turally* inclined disporting themselves among the melon patches or the hen neries.” Prisoners Want Solitude. Instead of rejoicing, in short, as the zoo animals doubtless do, he says In closing, the men behind the bars actually incline to shrink out of sight and wish that, while they are objects qf ignominy; they might be left to deal with’ it under no other supervision than that of their masters and of one another. Good Parisians Balk At Silhouette Gown Conduct of Police in Dublin Strike Probed Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. DUBLIN, Sept. 1.—A public inquiry into the conduct of the police during the rioting *n the tramway strike was demanded to-day by the Lord Mayor as the result of allegations that con stables were using their influence and authority against the strikers. The Inchicor district virtually is under martial law. The police were unable to handle the situation, and troops were sent there. Tram serv ice is at a standstill. Ancient Church Sold In France for $4.19 Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. PARIS, .Sept. L—Ancient churches are cheap in France. One sacred edi fice at Clairqtontalne, near Paris, has just been sold at auction for $4.19. Numerous historical mementoes were removed by the local authori ties, including a tablet recalling that the church was built “in honor of God and of Our Lady” in 1100 A. D., by Comte Kimun de Montfort. CHICAGO, Sept. 1.—Paris does not approve of the slit skirt and her transparent sister, if a dyed-in-the- wool Parisian is to be believed. Ba ron de Mortuargue, who has been in the West studying Irrigation prob lems on which he will write a book, said to-day. “I notice in Chicago many young —and old, too—women wearing the slit skirt. We In Paris do not ap prove of It. There is, of course, a certain class of women who will wear It, but very few of the best French people countenance It.” Sue to Bar Columbus Caravels From Fair CHICAGO, Sept. 1.—If Thomas Q’Shaughnessy, an artist, and his at torney, John F. Rosen, are success ful to-day In obtaining an injunction against the Nina, Plnta and Santa Maria, replicas of the three caravels in which Columbus discovered Amer ica, the three vessels will not go to San Francisco. Q’Shaughnessy and Rosen maIn clined that the sails of the vessels were* given in trust to the Chicago South Park Board for the school chil dren of Chicago, and therefore should remain here. Noted Educator Hurt In Fall From Train BALTIMORE, MD, Sept. 1.—John C. Childs, of Lakewood, N. J., a uni versity professor, who has served n institutions in all sections of the country, is in a zorlous condition to day as the result of falling from a Pennsylvania train going 50 miles in j hour near Pdrrymau, Md. That the teacher was not killed is considered remarkable. He stated that, he was ill and had leaned out of the window of the car in whion he was a passenger when he lost his balance and felU Capture of Slayer Of Worshiper Near When Tom Harris, a negro, at- I tempted to. quh t a gang of negro ruf- I flans who were raising a disturbance j in front of his house while religious j services were being conducted there j Sunday afternoon, one of the rowdies shot and killed him. Harris lived at No. 4 Fifth avenue, and was known to be quiet and respectable. The slayer fled and had not been apprehended early Monday morning, but the police have a clew to his whereabouts .and expect to capture him before nightfall. COLUMBUS GIRL WHO WILL BE FALL BRIDE BIG BUST LETS Third Degree Fatigues Him—May Collapse When Shown Trunk He Hid Wife's Body In. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. COMO, ITALY, Kept. 1. Porter Charlton, the young American, was arraigned to-day before Examining Magistrate Regnftni for preliminary Interrogation on (he charge of beating his wife to death with a hammer and a statue of “Love,” then burying her body in Lake C6mo. Young Charlton Is confined In a large, airy room with iron-barred windows in St. Dominick prison. He Is allowed to send out for hi® meals and to have any books he desires He Is allowed to purchase tobacco, being an inveterate cigarette smoker. One of the first things the prisoner did was to send out for pens, paper and ink, saying he intended to keep a diary urlng his captivity. When the trial proper begins, Deputy Camera, who was hired by Charlton’s father, will be his chief counsel. The interrogation of Charlton on nls arrival lasted three hours and w is carried on through an interpreter. The young prisoner was greatly fatigued when he was taken to his cell. At the next examination Charlton will be confronted with the trunk In which he hid his wife's body in the lake. It was feared that the grew- some sight will prove too much for him and that he will break down. THE PLAY THIS WEEK Twenty Tons of Dynamite Used in Removing Last Barrier in the Miraflores Locks. The Lyric Reopens. The Lyric Theater reopens for the season to-day, after being dark all sum mer, with Miss Emma Bunting and her company as the attraction. It is said that Miss Bunting has appeared in At lanta in at least five hundred per formances, and the advance sale of seats indicates that there has been no diminu tion of her popularity with Atlanta play goers. The play which the little actress offers this week Is a comedy In four acts called “The Circus Girl.” George Whitaker, the leading man, also has an agreeable role. The character In “T!<* Circus Girl” which Miss Bunting win portray gives her an opportunity to wear some striking new costumes. Seven Good Acts at the Forsyth. Labor Day week at the Forsyth is going to be an event in the opening of the new theatrical season. The man agement has gathered seven of the most representative acts in the Keith circuit, and collectively the bill should prove one of the most entertaining that has yet attracted capacity testing gatherings to the busy theater. The star offering will be “The New Leader,” presented by Sam Mann and Ills company. This is a story of stag* 1 life. It deals with actual and supposed happenings at a vaudeville theater ut the Monday morning rehearsals. Mr. Mann will he the leader of the orches tra, his company will appear as stage hands and performers, und an Interest ing story is told. A comedy feature will be “Flinders’ Furnished Fiat,” the funniest farce In vaudeville, again Introducing Willard Simms, one of the star comedians of the theatrical profession. There are other fine features. Grand Movies. Kinemacolor exhibitions are growing very popular at the Grand. The big theater. Is an Ideal place for the proper exhibition of motion pictures and faith ful to promises the management Is of fering programs of real merit. Kine macolor Is exhibited exclusively at the Grand, and In addition there are first- run black-and-white pictures. The program for Monday and Tuesday will be "The Struggle.’’ a two-reel dra ma that is said to be of Intense Inter est, and theie will be an additional fea ture showing “Life In Lapland.” Wed nesday and Thursday will record the exhibiting of a two-reel comedy, “Keep ing t'p With Hubby,” and a beautiful seashore picture showing motor'races at Brighton. At the Bijou. The second week of the Jewell Kelley Company’s engagement will begin this afternoon at the Bijou, presenting the very Interesting comedy drama, “The Man from the West.” This play Is In four acts, the first representing Matthew Lawton’s drawing room, the second a garret In New York City, the third Matthew Lawton's office, and the fourth Matthew Lawton’s drawing room. The story of "The Man from the West” has to do w’ith an attempt of Matthew Lawton’s enemies to ruin him by de predating the stock of the San Diablo mine, which is*owned by Matthew Law- ton. Brilliant scenic effects will give the production a metropolitan afr and every detail of the staging will be care fully carried out. Atlanta Sales Open. This morning at 9 o’clock the treatri- cal season was formally opened when the doors of the Atlsnta Theater were thrown open and the sales of seats began for Wednesday night’s first per formance of “Mary’s Lamb.” This mu sical comedy wifl play at the Atlanta Wednesday and Thursday ntgnts with a matinee Thursday, the opening being two weeks In advance of that in pre vious seasons. The force at the Atlanta is practi cally unchanged. Richard Arrowood Is again treasurer, with .1. R. MaeEaeh- rori, Jr. ;i< his assistant Dan Abater has charge of all advertising, other than the newspapers; while the stage crew is that of last season, with Howard Norman in charge; A. V Rymskl, elec trician, and Cliff GUI property man. The house is under the management of Ho mer C. George, who represents Klaw & Erlanger and their syndicate part ners. TO ENTERTAIN TRAVELERS. WAYCROSS.—One night of each month will be given to the traveling men of Waycross and other cities, according to the plans of the enter tainment committee of the Board of Trade. A smoker will be arranged. PANAMA. Sf.pt. t.—The last re- mnlnirxr barrier at the Pacific end of the Panama Canal was blown out by dynamite yesterday morning It wa* an intensely Interesting spectacle. At exactly 9:30 o'clock an electric switch, was turned on and the 1,500 spectators. Including the Shriners visiting herei from the United States and officers of the British cruiscT New Zealand, werd rewarded hy a wonderful sight. Hun-f dreds of tons of mud and stone werel thrown high in the air and the thun^ derous roar of the explosions re-4 echoed In the nearby hills. Twenty Tons Exploded. About twenty long tons, equivalent! to 44.800 pounds, of 45 per cent dyna-4 mite constituted the blast', which wad one of the largest ever set off In the canal. The charge, which was planted iri 541 holes at an average depth of 301 feet, tore a big gap In the barrier, buS not to a sufficient depth to permit! water to flow through, as the sea level channel was at low tide. Equally Interesting as the explosion was the actual breaking of the barrier yesterday afternoon, the tide creeps mg steadily up until at 1:35 o'clock it was level with the top of the gap. A workman seized a shovel and made a. small trench through which a rill of water trickled. Gradually It widened, until an hour later a raging torrent, with a 35-foot fall, poured through an opening 400 feet wide into that part of the canal between Gamboa dike and the .Miraflores locks, whlcti previously had been excavated by steam shovels. Cut Entirely Pilled. This cut, which is 5,000 feet long, 500 feet wide and 41 feet deep bel >w mean sea level, was entirely filled by 3 o’clock, when the waters of the Pacific laved for the first time the solid masonry of the Miraflores io ks. Dredges passed last night through the opening, and in a few days the last vestige of the barrier will be re moved, giving a practically completed channel at the Pacific end. The dredges will begin on September S ' > remove the last harrier of the Atlan tic channel. When this work is ac complished, ships may navigate in iho lock ends. Miss Kathleen Golden, of Columbus, whose enfraerement to Mr. William Clarke Pease, dr., is announced. Miss Golden will be a bride of the autumn. Her wedding will be of much interest in Atlanta, where she has visited frequently. U. S. Marine Band To Tour the East SLAYS CAROLINA CHIEF OF POLICE A, L. Walker Shoots Down J. B. Harter, of Allendale, at the Lena Depot. LENA, S. C., Sept. 1.—Much ex citement has been created by the killing here Sunday afternoon of J. B. Harter, chief of police at Allen dale, by A. L. Walker. Mystery Is added to the tragedy In that Walker absolutely declined to make any statement of why he killed Harter. According to then nly eyewitness, the Rev. William J. Langston, Walker placed his pistol against Walker’s Hide and emptied it in hla body. Walker made no attempt to escape, but after his victim had fallen to the floor and was writhing in the last agonies of death, stood and gazed upon him. The shooting took place at the depot, when Harter was in conver sation with the Rev. Mr. Langston. Walker came up excitedly and asked. “Mr. Harter, where is my pistol?” to which Harter replied, “I haven't got your pistol.” Walker advanced on iiim, saying, “Well, you must have It.” Then he suddenly drew a pistol from his pocket and struck Harter to the ground with it. Harter sprang up and struck Walker with hie fist while he drew his pistol with the ther hand. Walker then began firing, putting five bullets into Harter’s body. Walker was placed under arrest and Is being held in the Hampton County jail. “I will make a statement at the proper time.” said he, and refused to discuss the killing further. Feeling is somewhat tense here. Harter was well known throughout this section. Slays His Wife and ; Shoots at Officers 1 MOBILE, Sept 1.—-W. D. McKin non is in Jail at Geneva charged with the murder of his wife. He chased her through their home on Sunday and as she was jumping from a win dow shot her, firing both barrels of a shotgun. When deputies came to ar rest him. McKinnon shot at them without effect. He made no further resistance and was easily jailed. Both McKinnon and his wife were members of prominent families. GOLF TOURNEY AT ROME. ROME, GA., Sept. 1. -The Coosa Country Club will start on Labor Day a big golf tournament. Men will play eighteen holes and ladles nine holes, at medal play. Chips will be offered for the winner and runner-up in each event. IE IRE INTERVIEWS SELF Attacks Jerome for Interest Case—Constable Who Got Ha beas Corpus Threatened. WASHINGTON, Sept. 1.—President Wilson, it was announced to-day, has granted the United States Marino Band a long leave of absence so that the famous organization may make the fortieth tour of its history. The trip will last from September 25 until November 15, and will take in New England. Michigan and West Virginia. U. S. Blackmailers Clean Up $1,000,000 SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, Sept. 1. While former District Attorney Wil liam Travers Jerome, of New York, was ln Quebec to-day conferring with the provincial authorities in connec tion with a new move to deport Harry K. Thaw, the prisoner wrote another question and answer inter view ln his cell. In it he attacked i Jerome for his activity in the case, j If the writ of habeas corpus ob- | talned by Constable Boudreau, of Coaticook, is upheld by Judge Hutch- j inson to-morrow, the Thaw' legal bat- tery Is ready with an appeal to «tay | action. Lawyers representing Thaw’ to-day j were trying to induce Boudreau to withdraw his writ. Boudreau was 1 threatened with suit for false arrest j unless lie drops the habeas corpus proceedings. Thaw sent word to the Constable he would push any legal claims he might have against Bou dreau If the habeas corpus proceed ings w'ero not dropped. The writ is returnable to-morrow before Justice Hutchinson. Thaw must he produced ln court then un less a new legal move Intervenes. Jerome refused to say anything about his mission to Quebec, although It was reported. th#lt his trip In volves a fresh a]d"*nl to the Governor of the Province to quash the com mitment detaining Thaw* in St. Fran cis Jail. NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—W. S. Burns, son of the’bead of the Bums Detec tive Agency, who arrived on the Im- perator, said: “There are more American crooks in Europe than ever. The Parisian police estimate Americans have given up $1,000,000 to them in oiackmaii the past year.” MRS. FRANK PEARSON (Soprano) Soloist at Hotel Ansley After the Theater Wednesday Evening. Sept. 3d. At the Hotel Anulry Cafe and R&lhakeller you *et Superior Service and Cuisine of the Inimitable Ansley quality. A bite at the Ansley before the matinee will give a good start toward the enjoy ment of the afternoon. THEN DINNER - An After-Theater Supper will wind up the day with aatlsfactlon. 10ISTER The rallying cry of After-Theater Parties. Motel Ansley Lobsters come direct from the Hear, cold waters of rock hounct Maine. In Ansley style they are perfection. OYSTERS— CoW. hiaoious Cape Cod Oystera, fresh from the Sea What more do you want for an After-Theater Sup per? Motel Ansley caters to the highest el mb patronage Under the personal management of MR. J. F. LETTON. There Arc at Least 1000 Men in Atlanta Earning Perhaps $1500 Per Year Who ran easily make $5,000 or more soliciting life lnsurnnee. If you are an intelligent, high grade man and not satisfied with your present position. It is your duty to Inquire tn regard to our propositions by letter or In person. Ajiyone reading this ad who can suggest to me the name of a man whom he believes will make a good solicitor will do a serv ice, and I will be glad to Investigate. R. F. SHEDDEN, Mgr. The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York Assets Over $600,000,000.00 Grant Building Atlanta. Georgia