Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 07, 1913, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

— . I t .A I > , V . * I * ^ I if i t * 'r i i OF JURY BIAS Prisoner and His Counsel Are Equally Confident They Will Be Able to Get a New Trial on Ground of Outside Influences. Cheers for the Solicitor After Recesses and Applause in Court Will Be Principal Points Urged by Lawyers for Convicted Man. Desperate efforts to save Leo Frank from the gallows, to which he was consigned by sentence of Judge Roan, are taking definite shape. The trump card of his lawyers will be affidavits or showings of some sort to the effect, that certain members of the jury which convicted Frank were deeply biased against him by more than one incident. Meanwhile, Solicitor Dor sey is satisfied that the case he made against Frank will stand. Argument for a new trial will bo made before Judge Roan October 4, just six days before the date set for Frank’s execution. Then Frank’s lawyers, headed by Luther Rosser and Reuben Arnold, will exhaust every re source at their command to obtain a new trial or to stave off the death sentence. Apparently Leo Frank has an im pregnable confidence in his advocates. Occasional bulletins from the Tower, where he is held, declare that he fol lows the usual routine of his rather methodical life as closely since his sentence as before. His attention to matters of health is scrupulous, in cluding daily exercises and cold baths and a careful selection of food. He directs the affairs of his factory by daily consultation with his assistants and associates. He receives his friends with a calmness that would make him out indifferent to the fate that overshadows him. Business Associates Visitors. Almost every day Sig Montag and Herbert Schiff, his associates in the business of the National Pencil Fac tory. are his visitors, besides other friends. His wife and his father-in- law come also, bearing his meals, and hardly a minute of the day is he alone. But never a time during the day is there any appearance of per turbation on the part of the prisoner. Neither have his lawyers exhibited any signs of dismay. It is generally believed that they are confident they can prove the existence of undue prejudice against their client, and an element of unfairness in his trial. This they will attempt to prove by a chain of incidents, chief among which will be cheering which attend ed the appearance of Solicitor Dor sey outside the courtroom on more than one occasin, and the applauds which burst out even in the court room when the trial was at its most tense point. „ . _ It mav be that the fight of the de fense will be made along other lines as well, but none of them has been revealed, nothing except the charge of undue influence on the jurymen. With the interest that has grown about the figure of Frank, the negro Jim Conley almost has been forgot ten. However, he was recalled last week when it was announce*! an ef fort would be made to obtain his In - dictment by the Grand Jury on the charge of being an accessory aJ*ter the fact in the murder of Mary Phagan. In the light of Frank’s conviction and the negro s own statement on the wit ness stand, it is believed this will be effected without delay. Await Day of Argument. Altogether, for the first time since the murder of Mary Phagan. the case has assumed something of an un-. eventful tone. There is still the en thralling interest with which all At lantans have invested the case, and the lawyers involved are laying their plans without rest. But the interest must wait and the speculation must be held up until the day for the argu ments before Judge Roan. It appeared at one time last week as if a lively interest in the case would break out like tire, when Clara Bell Griffin, an employee of the Na tional Pencil Factory, as was Mary Phagan was mysteriously missing f^r the space of a day Then It was that speculation was rife, and all sorts 11 possibilities were suggested. But the girl was found at Grady Hospital, and the sus'eestion of another Mary Phagan mvstery, and a likely effect on the Frank case, was driven away. IIEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1913. 5 D Charlton’s Iron Nerve Breaks *1* • *i* *!•••> 4*«4> * •;. Italian Inquisition Is Feared *!*•*!• +•* Father With Him During Ordeal Porter Charlton, young American, who faces trial in Italy on Charge of murdering his beautiful wife, is shown boarding the vessel that carried him back to Europe, ami is again shown seated with members of the nvr. with > ho-, lo became friend ly on the voyage. Three Herds of Wild Buffalo Discovered Two Hundred Animals Found Canada Are Descended From American Bison. EDMONTON. ALBERTA Sept. <>.— Three distinct herds of wild buffalo have been located west of the Slave River on the extreme northern boun dary of Alberta, by a party of cruis ers sent out by the Dominion Forestry Department. Chief Pierre Squirrel, guide for the party estimates there are fully 200 animals in the herds. The buffalo re semble the American bison, from which they descended, but life in the hilly region lias made them more agPe and fleeter of foot. Church Owns Large Tracts of Land in Alberta and Is Buy ing More. CALLS JUDGE MURDERER WHEN HE DROWNS HER DOG FORT WAYNE, Sept. S—Shriek- ing between sobs that “Judge Mungo- van is a murderer” and begging to be allowed just a few minutes more with her loved one before the verdict of death was carried out. Mrs. Gertrude Stout hugged a diminutive skye ter rier to her heart in Police Court. "Don’t shoot him.” she sobbed. “I’ll buy chloroform if you’ll only murder him that way.” The Judge granted her plea. The dog bad bitten a little girl. CALGARY, ALBERT A. Sept. 6.— That the Mormon Church heirarchy in Salt Lake City practically has decid ed to abandon its Mexican coloniza tion scheme and devote all of its out side energies to the development of its lands and settlements in southern Alberta, was the announcement math- semi-officially at Cardston, south of Calgary, last week, on the occasion of the visit of Joseph F. Smith, of I’tah, head of the church. Mr. Smith came to Alberta to dedi cate the site of the new temple to he built at Cardston, and the first to be erected outside of Suit Lake. Owns Thousands of Acres. President Smith made no secret of the fact that the church of the Latter Day Saints had great development plans for the country south of Cal gary. The church owns hundreds of thousands of acres of lands in this territory, und is prepared to add to its holdings as often as it can. no matter what price has to be paid. President Smith also indicated that the church would make an attempt to buy out the Blood Indians, who own a large reserve in the Mormon terri tory. He said he did not care what the Indians wanted for their lands. The church was wealthy and could af ford to pay them a good price. Ready to Obey All Laws. Smith said nothing would be car ried on in the new temple contrary to the law of the land. He also strongly emphasized tl^ excellency of British institutions. British govern ment, British law and British justice. He especially mentioned in this con nection the desirable observance of the Sabbath he had noted in Canada in comparison with the laxity pre vailed in the United States and other countries. He concluded b> scoring the liquor traffic and by the statement that the whole American continent was the land of Zion and that the Mormon faith would eventually dominate the wortd. Dried Canteloupe Is Godsend to Farmer Merit of Desiccated Melon Discov ered by Chance—Problem of Waste Solved. LOS ANGEI.ES, Sept. 6.—With the perfection of experiments now ASG.H.R.CHIEF Liveliest Race in History of Or ganization Predicted for Chat tanooga Encampment. pri- Young American Undergoes Third Degree Pre paratory to Being Put on Trial in November. Special Cable to The American. COMO, ITALY, Sept. 6.—Some thing of the cheerful Indifference of Porter Charlton seems gone. The young American, awaiting trial on the charge that he killed his beauti ful wife shortly after their marriage three years ago, has grown nervous under the strain of the exacting third degree of the Italian police. More than once the delicate-seem ing youth has been on the verge of collapse when the police remorseless ly plied him with questions, and, in the sinister way that belongs to no one else but Italian police, sought to break his nerve. But only when his father entered his cell, a day or\two ago. did any thing like an actual break of nerve occur. Then the young man threw himself on his father’s breast and cried like a baby. The father, Judge Paul Charlton, was shaken also by the demonstration, but not to such an extent as was his son. Away from the police, however, Charlton seems to collect himself. He has made himself as comfortable as possible in his cell in St. Domi nick prison, laying in a supply of his favorite tobacco, obtaining a book in which he purposes to keep a diary, and devoting himself to the study of Italian. His father has Joined him in learning the language, that the two might easily follow the course of tlu- trial. Fearful Ordeal Ahead. Charlton will be put on trial in No vember, until which time he will be forced to undergo the fearful ordeal of an Italian police inquisition. The refinement of cruelty, it is said, at tends this experience, and every pres sure is brought to bear on the pris oner, from the gantlet of a thou sand questions to solitary imprison ment in dingy, filthy dungeons. Many prisoners have been known become raving maniacs under the system. During all his three years of con finement in a New Jersey Jail Charl ton was building up his health by careful living and frequent exercise. He seemed all the time Jo be obsessed by the fear of the ordeal in Italy, al though none except the most careful observers could observe the dread. To every one else he was the cheer ful, nonchalant young fellow’, who promised every one that he would be back home by Christmas, and who made numerous engagements for that holiday season. The inquisition through which the police drag the young prisoner is un doing the health work of three years, it seems. Charlton’s nerve is break ing under the ordeal. Charlton’s nerve broke once before. It will be remembered, when the night after he was arrested at Jersey City there came a written confession sign ed by him, that he had killed his wife after a bitter quarrel, in which her ungovernable temper had ren dered her practically a maniac. Aft er he beat her unconscious, ne put her body in a trunk and sank it in La*ke Como. Two Ple^s Are Planned. The confession has not since been repudiated, and is considered to be genuine. What Charlton’s defense In the Italian courts will be has not been fully established, although It Is be- fieverl that his lawyers will plead both and a reasonable Justiflca- < harlton reached Italy, It has vealed that his wife was killed ows on the head inflicted by a iner and a statue representing Love. These Instruments, as w r ell as the trunk w’hlch held her body, will be displayed to the prisoner at the trial. After the death of his wife In June, 1910, Charlton fled to the United States, but was arrested w’hen his steamer landed at Jersey City For three years he remained in a New Jersey jail, while every means at the command of lawyers was put to use to prevent hi- deportation and trial, even to an appeal to the United States Si^reme Court. But every thing failed, and two weeks ago he was taken to the Old World fur trial. There Is no death sentence in Italv, bur life imprisonment can he Inflicted with mental tortures that make death preferable, according to those that know. going on In th(‘ Imperial Valley, Cali fornia, the w’orld will be given an other luscious dried fruit—the dried cantaloupe. The turn into profit of some of the millions of small cantaloupes left In the field every year was a problem the growers feared would never be solved, until Thomas D. McCall, of El Centro, accidentally discovered the fine quality of the dried article. Mc Call had dumped a great heap of can taloupes to one side, breaking sev eral. These dried and gave forth such a fine aroma that McCall was at tracted and he tasted them. He found them excellent and now cantaloupe growers are drying all their small melons. The dried varie ty is said to have a much finer fla vor than the fresh fruit. Finger Prints Prove Indian Signed Note Pawnee Denies He Affixed Signature, but Marks on Paper Con vict Him. WASHINGTON, Sept, a.—Two or three finger-prints on an “I. O. U.” are as valid as a formal signature, In the opinion of the finger-print ex pert of the United States Marine Corps. The expert establishes the genu ineness of nineteen finger-prints which were given to him for identi fication and the finding is expected to cause a certain Pawnee Indian, who denies signing a note for 1300, con siderable embarrassment. < HATTANOOGA, Sept. 6.—Every indication points to a spirited contest at the Chattanooga encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic for commander-in-chief. Five States have .'•'o far made entries, and each entry is a popular man. The States already in the contest for the prize are, in alpha- !!i al order, Indiana, Michigan, Ni - bra ska, New Jersey and South Da kota. The Department of Indiana has in dorsed O. A. Somers, a private in the ranks. Mr. Somers lives at Kokomo, and is a popular man with the mem bers of the Grand Army. He has the active and undivided support of his State and counts on help from a num ber of the strong States of the Cen tral West and from every member of the Grand Army: to use the words of a friend and supporter, "who believes that the time has come when vote soldier should he honored t Nebraska has entered the lists with Colonel <\ E. Adams, a banker and farmer, of Sui»erior. Nebr. He is in dorsed by his State Department, and has a war record linked with the his tory of the Fourteenth Army Corps. Colonel Adams won distinction on many fields, is loval to the Grand Army’s interests and a successful man “f affairs. Michigan Presents Gardner. Michigan will come to the encamp ment carrying the flag of the Hon Washington (ktrehu r. of Albion, the well-known editor-Mtatesman, and en ter him as a candidate for the honor Colonel Gardner enlisted in the serv ice when only 16. was with General Sherman during the campaign from Chattanooga to Atlanta and sustained a serious wound at Resaca, which ne cessitated retirement on an honorable discharge. He was a member of Con grrss from Michigan ten or a dozen years, serving with high honors on a number of important committees, making a national reputation as one of the Republican leaders. New Jersey’s candidate for the hon. or is Colonel Ralph D. Cole, a popu lar Grand Army man, who has a cred itable war record He has th« in dorsement of the New Jersey Depart ment of the G. A. R. and Is regarded as the candidate of the Eastern sec tion. although sectionalism plays but little part In the selection of the com mander-in-chief. South Dakota has indorsed Captain N. H. Kingman, of Selby, and will come to Chattanooga determined to land him. Captain Kingman organ ized a company in the Thirteenth Wisconsin Regiment, and served with that organization until the close of the war. He has been one of the prominent figures in the Grand Army of the Republic since its organization and his strength is general. With five strong candidates, said to b^ the greatest number ever presented before a national encampment, the tight for the honor promises to be spirited and full of interest. It should be explained that these men are can didates in the sense that their re spective State Departments have in dorsed them. 20.000 Veterans in Parade. General Allred B. Beers, command- or-in-ch1ef. has forwarded to the Chattanooga Encampment Association the formation for the parade of vet erans at the forthcoming national en campment. General Boers gives the number of veterans ’ikely to partici pate in the parade at from 15,000 to 20.000. The parade is made up of the national officers of the Grand Army, the officers of the departments and representatives, and then the mem bers of the organizations who are present at the encampment and the Sons of Veterans. The average age of enlistment dur ing the Civil War having been 25 and the war having continued through four weary years, It stands *o reason that most of the living veterans are now nearly 80 years old. This Indicates that for every vet eran who is physically able to make the trip to the forty-seventh national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic at Chattanooga in Sep tember there must be at least 25 who can be present In spirit only. Out of consideration for the tens of thousands who can not be present the program committee of the Chatta nooga G. A. R. encampment associa tion. has arranged for advance publi cation of an edition de luxe of the of ficial program. Commercialism strictly barred—no advertising what ever appears in this volume. It con tains photographs of the commander- in-chief, past rimmandersi, officers of the many organizations allied with the I G. A. R.. department commanders, fa mous generals of the war, scenes on the battlefields and a variety of other items of great historical interest. Ardenites in Kimonos Observe George Day As Single Taxers Celebrate in Tree Top Homes, Brown Addresses Anarchist Faction. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 6 The sin gle' tax colony of Arden to-day, in kimonos, night dresses and all kinds of up-to-date costumes, celebrated the* seventy-fourth anniversary of the birth of Henry George. Had George been alive he might have objected to the celebration and *.ie attire of the celebratory. As it was. he prob ably satisfied himself with turning over in his grave. The celebration resolved itself Into two meetings, one by the ardent Ardenites. at which Esperanto and politics were discussed, and the other JAIL ATTIRED Notorious Pickpocket Exchanges Clothes With ,a “Fair” Visitor and Makes Quick Getaway. presided over by George Brown, an archist, at which anarchy was the real live topic. The Ardenites held their meeting in the Woodland Theater, while the single taxers, in their open-air cos tumes, perched themselves upon the branches of trees and applauded. The Brown farewell party wal held surrounding Brown’s bungalow. Aft er It was all over Brown announced that he had leased his bungalow and was done forever with Arden. Arden breathed a sigh of relief, because, wasn’t it George Brown that mad*# Upton Sinclair and other Ardenites pound stone on the Delaware roads because they insisted upon playing ball on Sunday? $85,000 Painting by Rubens Lay in Attic SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 6.—Jim Cummer ford, alias Frank White, a no torious, pickpocket and ex-convict, es caped from the Alameda County jail by exchanging clothes with a young woman caller. The exchange of clothing was made while the corridor of the jail was filled with Sunday visitors. The girl slipped off a white duck suit and a picture hat and stood forth in the man’s costume she had on under this The prisoner put the girl’s suit on over his own clothes, fastened on the hat, which had a wig and veil at tached and the couple, accompanied by another young man, walked out of the door past Ehe unsuspecting jailer. Deputy Sheriff Stachler was hood winked so badly that, he shook hands with the bogus girl at the gate. He heard a giggle and thought it was a Critics Pronounce Canvas Found In Chicago Garret an Artistic Masterpiece. (’HU'AGO. Sept. 6. A Rubens, one of the most elaborately painted and perfectly executed canvasses ever painted by tne great Dutch color mas ter, has been found hidden in an ob scure corner of Chicago. It Is one of the most valuable, if not the most valuable, paintings in Chicago, its worth being placed at $85,000. The painting prior to its removal to a studio in Michigan avenue, where it Is now In process of restoration, hung in the old family home of Judge Sid ney C. Eastman, of Kenilworth. AH critics who have viewed it pro nounce it to be one of Rubens’ mas terpieces, and from an artistic point of view literally priceless. About a year ago there came to the Eastman homestead a Frenchman named Chataine, who “discovered” the treasure. Twice Married, He Asks Two Divorces California Pair Had Two Ceremonies Performed and Now Seek a Double Divorce. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 6.—Do a man and a woman, twice married to make a marriage doubly sure, also have to secure tw r o divorces? This is an odd point that arose in the Superior Court here through the filing of a divorce complaint by James J. Hafflnger against Lily Banchiero Hafiinger. The couple w’ere married at Clay ton. Cal., in 1911, and three days later in San Francisco remarried by a jus tice of the peace. Hafflnger sued his Wife for divorce last January and was granted a decree. In the proceed ings the Clayton marriage only was mentioned. Mrs. Hafflnger did not contest the suit The fear now that he is not really divorced prompted Hafflnger to file a second suit. Stachler missed his prisoner a mo ment later, and gave the alarm, but the man and the two confederates who had helped him to escape had disap peared. A handsome young man and a pret ty girl called at the jail In mid-after noon. just at the time when the cor ridor of the jail was thronged with visitors. They asked to see “Frank White.” Stachler. remembering the alias, called in Cummerford and gave them a corner of the corridor in which to visit. Then he was called to an upper floor. When he returned, the young man and the tall girl dressed In white stood at the jail door waiting to be let out. Stachler was* busy, hut he remem bered the very agreeable young couple who had called fo see "White,” and he promptly unlocked the door for them. As they were passing out. a tall, slen der young man stepped to the door and crowded out with them. Stachler knew he was not one of the prisoners and. although he did not remember letting him In. he assumed that he was a visitor. He shook hands with all three and dismissed them. Cummerford was awaiting trial on a charge of grand larceny. He was ar rested June 29 with George Hoye, alias Burnes, alias Riley, by Inspec tors Green and Gallagher of the Oak land detective bureau, for picking the pocket of K Tato, a Japanese, of a wallet containing $10 and a small check, as he boarded a street car with a baby in his arms. Three pickpock ets were implicated and but two were arrested. Cummerford served a two- year term at Folsom prison for as sault with a deadly weapon. LE SAM AS Agricultural Bureau Demonstra tors Teach Dairymen How to Improve Product. WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—The De partment of Agriculture has issued the following statement outlining its policy in dealing with the milk situ ation : “It is erroneously supposed the de partment has established absolute .standards and bacterial counts to which all milk coming under its Ju risdiction in interstate commerce must comply. “It has not and will not establish any rule declaring that milk contain ing less than a certain number of bac teria per cubic centimeter is good milk. "The department is carrying on an extensive campaign of education to help dairymen produce and market good, clean milk. Its work is pure'y educational. The dairy division Issues educational bulletins, supplies farmers with these bulletins, and also sends men into the field to show milk pro ducers how to make changes w’ithin their means which will raise the quality of their milk and also in crease their profits. “These demonstrators have helped milk producers who supply over 209 cities. In each city these demon strators co-operated with the local health authorities, not to help them to secure evidence or bring prosecutions, but to Improve, the local system. “Where desired, they explain meth ods of pasteurization and shipping and handling of milk. Through this bureau the department supplies tu berculin for testing herds. “The Government’s first investiga tion Into interstate shipments of milk was in 1908, around Cincinnati, before that city had a milk inspec tion department. “The records of infant mortality 1n Cincinnati from 1909 to the present time show a decrease of about. 33 per MINISTER ‘CANS’ BURIAL SERMON BY PH0N0RGAPH MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 6.—The Rev. G. L. Morrell, a well-known Minne apolis minister, pastor of the People’s Church here, whose place of worship is in a downtown theater, has started for a tour of South America and a trip around the Horn. Mr. Morrell’s last act before his departure was to visit the store of a talking machine dealer, w’here he preached his own funeral sermon into a machine, to be used in case of his death during his absence. Spinster Buried in Shroud 50 Years Old Indiana Woman Made Silk Dress for That Purpose When Fiance Was Killed in War. LAWRENCEBURG. IND.. Sept. 6.— The funeral of Miss Elizabeth E. Greasley marked the end of a well- known family. Her shroud was a silk dress, Which she made for that purpose before the war between the States. The material for the dress w’as giv en to Miss Greasley by her father and the dress Is fashioned in the style of ante-bellum days. Miss Greasley was disappointed in love early :n life, when her sweetheart joined the Union Army and lost his life on the battlefield, and she never married. She owned more real estate than any single woman In this city. Auction of Jam Ends Suffrage Grocery Road Bars Sunday Specials for Fans i Votes for Women Store Falls When All Patrons Move From Town. Rejects Baseball Rooters’ Money and Says It Will Run Only Church Excursions. LA CROSSE. WIS. Sept. 6.— Money for Sunday excursion business \n considered tainted by the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad, which quite recently instructed it* agent at Onalaska, Wis, to refuse the money collected by baseball fans at Onalas ka for a special train from that town to Gatesvllle, Wis., when the two teams were to play for the amateur championship of Western Wisconsin. Disappointed fans were notified that the railroad would haul excur sion trains on Sunday only for re ligious purposes. NEW YORK, Sept. 6.-e"How much am I offered for these strictly home made preserves, made by one of our celebrated suffragists?” This invitation to bidders opened the auction of the contents of the Suffrage Pure Food Store, No. 2540 Broadway, yesterday and marked the end of an experiment by a group of suffragists to reduce the cost of liv ing Mrs. Alice Snitjer Burke, manager of the store, explained that the fail ure was clue to listed customers being away for the summer. AN TIPPLER FAKES SUICIDE RAIN PERFORMS MIRACLE; TO SILENCE IRATE WIFE TURNS CREEK INTO WINE LEBANON, OHIO, Sept. 6.—While- friends and relatives sniffed carbolic acid and wept over the prostrate form of James Fumbles, who they thought had committed suicide, he awakened from his peaceful slumber before a physician arrived to give the final word. Later it developed that he had thought to make his wife repentant for scolding him when he returned home Intoxicated. He had sprinkled a circle of carbolic acid on the floor aim gone to sleep in the center of it. ASHTABULA, OHIO. Sept. The old Biblical miracle of turning water into wine has been performed again in Harpersfleld, a small town a few’ miles from here. As a result of a heavy rainstorm. In which hundreds of bushels of berries were knocked from the bushes and 1 washed down Bronson Run, the wa ters of that rivulet assumed arlch j red color, and the inhabitants, after I tasting it, smacked their lips and pro- i nounced it a fine article of blackberry i wine. 1 IDEAL TRIP FOR SEPTEMBER. The Warm Springs Ho tel will remain open until September 15, and those who are acquainted with this famous watering place will find it ready and anxious to serve them with the best the country affords. This is just the season to en joy the baths and the beau tiful country surroundings. HEADACHY, BILIOUS, MSTIPITED, CLEM YOUR LIVER—DUKE I BOX You’re bilious! You have a throb bing sensation in your head, a bad taste In your mouth, your eyes hurt, your skin is yellow with dark rings under your eyes, your lips are parch ed. No wonder you feel ugly, mean and ill-tempered. Your system is full of bile and constipated waste not properly passed off. and what you need Is a cleaning up “inside.” Don’t continue being a bilious, constipated nuisance to yourself and those who love you, and don’t resort to harsh physics that irritate and injure. Re member, that your sour, disordered stomach, lazy liver, and clogged bow els can be quickly cleaned and regu lated by morning with gentle, thor ough Cascarets; a 10-cent box will keep your head clear and make you feel cheerful and bully for months. Get Cascarets now—wake up refresh ed—feel like doing a good day’s work make yourself pleasant and useful. Clean up! Cheer up! CANDY CATHARTIC ‘Developer of Efficient Executives’’ Salary Measures Capital Value You have a capital value. It increases or decreases. Your income is based on this value. The average increase in sal ary of men attending Schools of Commerce varies from 6.4 per cent to 15 per cent each year. Capitalize the gain at 5 per cent—it represents $1,320 to $3,360 a year increase capital value while in school. Has your capital value in creased that much in the last year? Work decisively THIS year. You can grow. You can increase it. Take our rollrgiate courses in Commerce, Accounts, Finance and Commercial Law. Class hours don’t conflict with your work or pleasure. Number of students limited. Your future life and hap piness muy Ik? in the balance. Decide right. Enroll now. Work be gins September 15th. Evening School of Commerce Georgia School of Technology 165 W. North Ave., Atlanta, Ga. Gasses 6:15 to 8:15 Ivy 4775 Free booklet on request MARRIAGE INVITATIONS CORRECTLY AND PROMPTLY ENGRAVED SEND FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO., ENGRAVERS 47 WHITEHALL ST.. ATLANTA. GA.