Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 07, 1913, Image 3

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II KARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA, GA.. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 1913. 3 D Panama Is the Luckiest Nation in the World HOME" WRECKER Lo ^M™nsM?Goat *!••*!• ^ Canal Makes It Money Lender, Not Borrower This, the latest photograph from the.Canal Zone, was taken with a camera turned to the southward from Forebay. It shows one of the gates which guard the approach to the celebrated locks at Gatun. In case of accident a second gate to the same lock is pro vided. A hea vy fender chain is also placed in the channel some distance from the gate. If the vessel is proceeding at proper speed this chain falls to the bottom, out of the way. But if the craft is moving t.oo rapidly the chain remains stretched across the channel. The vessel strikes it and is gradually' brought to a stop. ‘Twilight of Wall Street’ Is What Some Observers Call Present Dullness, Which Brings Wolf Close to the Brokers' Doors, Retired Merchants and Everyone Else With Money Refuse Now to Play Other Man’s Game. Exchange Members Sell Autos. NEW YORK, D*c. 6.—It is the Twilight of Wall Street. The dar- :ni r and spectacular, plunger is gone forever. The public is apathetic to ward stock speculation. One of the it .st picturesque elements in our diblic life is passing. These are some of the conclusions drawn from the dullness on the New York Stock Ex- . hange. the. failure of brokers to make a living, the dry rot. •It was not so in the olden days.” vVa\ back in the Black Friday era. lay <p.uld or Jim Fiske wouldn’t hes- • : ,t#* at all to appear in the public - ire mart and flay the opposing ci'iiwd of either bulls or bears with ;iv utmost freedom. Everybody knew what they were about, and nobody i bought of complaining in the sense of considering their faults as of a Dublin character. Everyone Took Chance. Later came the great speculative r.is of our national life. wheiF a “million share day” was considered nothing, when doctors and lawyers ami merchants gambled in stocks, from every hamlet, when the little, speculators were myriad and the big speculators were as fierce if slightly more cautious, than in the seventeis. Harriman flinging railroads into .In- gambling pit. John W. Cates and other men of his type leading spec ulative campaigns which netted them :ens of millions, foxy old James R. Keene, engineering pools—for many years th^ American people stood for them and simply laughed. Then the great outcries began. They’ve never led to the actual gov ernmental reformation or abolition of the Stork Exchange, but they seem to have put it almost hors de com bat simply by the force of public opinion. “Nobody's buying!” the brokers cry. “We never sell anybody from up town,” complain the hungry-eyed ones, meaning that the merchants who accumulate fortunes no longer follow the custom of retiring, seat ing themselves next the ticker, and proceeding gradually to turn their hard-earned wealth over to the men of stocks and bonds. The “men from uptown” are coming to realize that this is the broker's game—not theirs. And the broker is selling his auto mobile. He‘s no longer known as the wine buyer.” He’s no longer known s the patron saint of the chorus lady. Too Much Machinery. The floor of the Exchange these days resembles the lounging room of a clubhouse. The exchange is a club in i eality. Will it become one in name? Will it turn into a mere social or ganization, with traditions of busi ness? Hardly, because there are more se curities to be traded in each year. There must be a public auction room where they can change hands. The trouble just at present is the broker age machinery is too big for its pur poses. It is built on a scale to handle gie.it speculations and little specula tions, and when it has to come down to calm and peaceful transfers, it is 'ike a sightseeing automobile carry ing a single passenger. There is no profit* Prevent 5K!n Blemishes in Metals and Agriculture, but Long War- hidden, Prosperous at Last. Panama i$ the American colonies to declare inde- New Scheme Devised Soup Silencer Need To Lower Egg Prices Is Urged by Judge Sterilization Plant Being Erected in i He Also Decides Against Carrying Pittsburg to Try Out New Peas or. Knife—Fines Two Process. for Fighting. PITTSBURG, Dec 6.—A plant to sterilize eggs is building here. An egg. even in hot weather, can by the sterilization process be stored for ten months and when taken out be as fresh as a newly laid egg, according to those who have made the process a success in Europe for the last live yea rs. The promoters* say the price c>f fresh eggs will have to come down, as it has in Europe, because the egg Uius stored can not be told from the freshly laid ege\ The eggs are subjected to tlie ac tion of carbonic acid and nitrogen gases. This kills all the bacilli. They arc then packed in cases in which <9 sterilized air, and these cases are her metically sealed. The eggs can then ^be kept for at least ten months—the longest period yet tried. Bones of Ancient Race Discovered!’ JACKSON, MICH., Dec. 6.— 1 That Jackson County was once thickly populated with the mound builders, now extinct, is the belief of persons who have made a careful study in re search work here. Recently a large number of bonus, clay pipes and other articles were un earthed In a mound on the banks of Eagle Eake. and since then other dis coveries have been made, which leave little doubt that large numbers of mound builders inhabited this part of the State. HAMMOND. 1ND.. Dec 6.—Jim ere din- | Stevens and George Purgin j ing at the same table in a Hammond j restaurant. While eating peas with j his knife, Jim’s hand slipped and peas rolled off into George's coffee. A tihgt followed. Roth men were ar- i rested. Each charged the other with I assault and , battery. Jim pleaded in' extenuation that when George drank his soup ii sounded like water rush ing into a drain. Judge E. H Ames fined each man 1 cent, and explained that a knife is not a conveyance for peas. He said he hopes Maxim soon will invent a soup silencer. Deer So Plentiful Cows Are Labeled most independent nation, financially, in the world. It is the only nation which receives interest on money it has loaned instead of paying interest on funds borrowed. The country, vastly rich in re sources of mines, fields and sea, has come into its own—and all because of the canal. Panama has no bonded debt upon which to pay interest. It has invested in gilt-edge mortgages in the United .States $6,000,000. bringing in an in come yearly of about 4 1-2 per cent. There is $300,000 on deposit to guar anty# the parity of its currency, and. uf'*^this year, the United Stales will pay a perpetual yearly rental of $250,000 for the canal. The income from taxation amounts to about $5,000,000 yearly, and there is no army, no navy, and no expen sive courts to keep up. All money is available for improvements, and Pan ama is the only nation collecting in terest on its own money instead of paying out interest on loans. Schools Are Numerous. There is one school to every 165 children of school age in Panama, and nowhere in the country are there enough unemployed laborers to sup ply the demand for workers, and the* pendence. The social movement, in Europe epitomized by the French revolution, made headway on the Isthmus slowly. When the other col onies were deserting Spain Panama remained loyal, tbe loyalty being based largely on incompetence. Tbe lack of ethic unity on the Isthmus, of economic independence, distrust of Bogota, with whom her revolutionary ciestinies must be placed, and the presence of strong garrisons, all had an influence on that loyalty, and the home Government in IS 14 conferred upon the Panamanian cities the title of “Faithful.” Colombia Rule Unhappy. Until February $* 1822, it was an independent State. Then it became the Dcqiartnient of tbe Isthmus of the new Republic of Colombia, and its troubles, far from being over, contin ued alipost without check until 1903, when the independence from Colom bia was effected. The period of Colombian rule was one of strife, for when Colombia happened to furnish a capable and kindh Governor, the Panamanians themselves waged an internal row. In 1903 the United States attempt ed to deal with Colombia in an effort to build the Panama Canal. In the Stock Broker Shares Residence With Former Spouse and Accused Man. S A N FRANCISCO, Dec. 6.—Her- j bert L. Nelson, frenzied financier and • promoter, is held by the San Fran cisco police for the police of Detroit. He is alleged to have stolen one wife from H. S. Warren, stock bro- i ker, and to have swindled a Detroit j woman out of $2,000. Warren, stock broker, and his wife. May, accomplished, and the mother of j a* beautiful 13-year-old daughter, j Evelyn, met Nelson in t 1908. “You understand,” says Mr. War ren. “sometimes a woman can not , control her emotions. That was the \ case with Mrs, Wairen." Nelson was married to a daugh- ! ter of W. J. Brown, prominent com- j mission merchant of this city. “In January, 1911. I received « let ter from my. wife, asking me to divorce her, that she might marry Nelson.” said Mr. Warftq. “I filed suit, charging desertion, and the de cree was granted. In April, 19 LI, Mrs. Warren and Nelson were mar ried, somewhere in Oregon. 1 have always considered our separation, not as a divorce, but as a dissolution of partnership.” So in September, 1913. when Nel- i son, said to have been a fugitive from j a swindling charge, arrived in De- ; troit, penniless, with the former Mrs. Warren and Miss Warren, Warren i met them at the depot and took them | all to his own home, at No. 104 Hoi- ' brook avenue. There the former hus band, his daughter, his divorced wife and her present husband lived until ! June. .1913. when, according to Mr.' Warren, they left all of a sudden. “My daughter was of on age when she should have a mother's caiv, and I felt that she should he with her I mother: but I wanted her. too, and did all in my power to help Nelson to stay and make his home here, that my daughter might have us both,” he said. large mining, agricultural and timber# tall of that year it became apparent DANBURY. CONN.. Dec. 6.—Under e law which protects them until 1917, deer are becoming so numerous in this section that they are a men ace to automobiles on the State roads. The strong headlights of automobiles have the same effect as “jacking,” the anlmaIs • 1 : q th bright rays [ just as they do when shooters use a calcium light to kill deer at night. George C. Manchester, of New York Citv. who arrived here from the North, reported that a buck with large antlers was attracted by his search lights near Kent, and that he was go ing so last he could not avoid hitting the animal. In confirmation of this story, a veracious correspondent says that farmers arc now labeling tUeir co^rs so that immigrant servants can tell them from the deer. Kansas ManPlanning Cruise of 7,000 Miles Critic Criticised, He Sues Show Manager KANSAS CITY. MO., Dec. 6.—Be fore the Sweetheart, Edward H. Witte’s new ocean-going launch, with her owner and a party of friends on board, reaches Chicago next April, she will put 7,000 miles of water be hind her. The cruise will take the Witte par ty down the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers, through the Gulf of Mexico, up the Atlantic coast to New York, through the Erie Canal and the Great I Lakes to Chicago. Kansas Too Rich as Farmers Prefer City CHICAGO, Dec. 6.—The State of Kansas officially complains of being too rich. Its cry of protest relates particularly to the distribution of its people. The percentage of population liv ing in the cities Yias risen in ten [ years from 34 to 39. In measuring the significance of this fact one must remember that a “city” is an aggre gation of 1.000 iiersons or more. By Using Cutlcura Soap and Ointment t hey do so much lo promote and maintain the purity and beauty oi the complexion, hands and hair un der all conditions, and are unexcelled in purity, delicacy and fragrance for the toilet and nursery. A Panama Cleaning, Need of Jerusalem CHICAGO, Dec. 6. The ancient city of Jerusalem, according to the Jour nal of the American Medical Associa tion. needs just such sanitary measures as were taken under Federal supervision in the Panama Fanal zone. Out of the 70.000 people of Jerusalem. The Journal says, at least three-flfths are suffering from enlargement of the 9pleen. $726.79 Nugget Is Found in California JOLIET. ILL., Dee. 6.—A suit for $10,000 damages is the latest event in the war between M. R. Kelly, dra matic critic for The Herald, and the management of a burlesque show at the Orpheum Theater. Kelly saw the show and was so pained his review was far from com plimentary. Charles LeRoy, manager of the company, addressed the audi ence and said the hostility of the crit icism was due to Kelly having been thrown out of the theater. Kelly was accosted by one of t ie troupe, who struck him in the face, breaking his glasses and leaving him on the street. This disagreement was patched up later, but Kelly tiled suit against Le Roy and the theater. ‘Jesse James Cave' ' Found in Oklahoma ALT US, OKI. A., the fact that th< D c. 6.—Owing to •< lebrated and.no- r *n- torlous James brothers ma dezvous of a famous cave near Abus it is called the Jesse Janies Cave oy the people of the surrounding coun try. That they did make a hiding place of it is evident by the names carved in the soft stones, “Frank James, May 1, 1870," being foremost among J them. The cave nroper is about a mile long and at all times of the year filled with water. Love at First Sight Ends in Divorce * 'itirursi -Hup mul Olemenf i wnflij, * I tor a I Pumpl" of **3 . ma; '-P book Gldrear '* iu ,, 'iirt». I •*". '»n vhn aj«i sPhp ;■ .< ii beet f»r «»in mi] a okoyilli:. cal., i >e«. - on, largest nuggets ever found in this sec tion of the State has been taken from the works of tho old Emma mine in Niiusliew section by C city. The nugget w. oiiMrt.7. and gold, and The Emma has a r** H. Hug) l mtr ) All workc, r>mpan: Niri is SEATTLE. Dee. C. -Ralph S. Hopkins, | Seattle capitalist and clubman, has been f the divorc ed’ b\ Agnes V. Hopkins. the beautiful and talented Superior, W is., girl, who h»- married October 14. 1908. Mrs. Hopkins' general allegation was cruelty. The couple was married under ro mantic circumstances. She was in Seat- ;ie on a visit when Ralph Hopkins met her. He immediately laid siege to her followed her back to Superior, and finally won her there. »f the interests are forced to import labor to operate their plants. The country is rich in gold and hardwoods. There is a fine field for agriculture and cattle raising. The United States has made the cities clean and healthy* and the interior of the country always was so. And so. after hundreds of years of strife, Panama has "come into its own. Famed for Its Fish. The waters of the Pacific Ocean at Panama abound in splendid fish, and there is a tradition that the name Panama was the old Indian word for “place of abundance of fishes.” At all events, after the execution of Bal boa in 1519. the Spaniards began to explore the Facile Cosret ami found a small fishing village called Pan ama. and on August. 15, 1519. Gover nor Pedrarias announced! that the place would be the site of his .future capital, and established tbe first per manent settlement in the New World. Two years later a royal decree made Panama a city, and it became the scat of a bishop. For 30 years expeditions were sent out from Panama in search of gold, and from here, in 1524, were started the voyages of Pizarro and Alniagro, w hich ended in the discovery of Peru and the vast wealth of that country. On April 3, 1527, an expedition went overland through the divide at Cule- bra ami sailed down the Chagres River to the Atlantic, traversing ex actly the same route which the ships will take when the canal is finished. Panama was l'ar from being a quiet place. Whenever the ships came In from Peru laden with gold and jewels there usually was a fight for some part of it. Pirates and contrabandists har assed the isthmus, but the city of Pajtama grew, and before 1550 tbe place had some 3,000 inhabitants, with about as many more in the outposts, and a cathedral had been built. Harried by Pirates. This period saw the rise and de cline of Panama. Spain’s own deca dence played a great, part in the fall, as did the attacks of the English and French on the trade of the Indies and the inability of Panama to develop its own resources as the transisth mian trade decreased. But the pi rates and buccaneers did more than anything else to wreck the country. Morgan and Drake and the others burned the towns, killed the inhabi tants. and stole, the plunder which had been brought up from the south. In 1671 tiie old city of Panama was destroyed and a few years later the present city, a few miles away, was founded in what was believed to -be a safer place. To shut out the pirates and the enemies of Spain a. sea wall was built around the new town in 1674. and it was successful. The King’s Jest. This wall, which is still standing, Cost SO in ii- • he King ot Spain said that lie did not under stand why he could not see it by sim ply looking to the west out of the windows of his palace. Actually tbe wall Is about 30 l’eet high and of the same width. It is built of stone and earth. . The milestones irt Panama, after! the independence from Spain in 1821, are the completion of the Panama Railroad (1855) and the start of the construction of the Panama Fanal, in 1881. The first 70 years after the new town was built were qu^ei ones, marked by good government, but still years in which Panama was prostrate, because of t ie abandonment of the i trade route. Then came 90 years ot internal strife, and finally, on Novcm- j her 2s. 1*21. ram? the declaration of j indopendf nee from Spain. * Panama was th** ln>t of the South that the government at Bogota, the capital of Colombia, would not ratify the treaty allowing the United States to construct the waterway. Then fol lowed the bloodless revolution of No vember, 1903, when, with the assist ance of the United .States, Panama became independent of Colombia. Treaty Ends Trouble. On February 26. 1904. Panama signed a treaty with the United States which practically ended its troubles for all time, for then it be came a protectorate of the United States, which since then has assisted largely in choosing its Presidents, cleaned up its cities, and contracted to pay it enough money to make it the most independent country, finan cially. In the world. Cuts Off Finger to Fool Law: Plan Fails NEW YORK. Dec. 6. An attempt to beat the finger-print, system proved unsuccessful to-day when Joseph Sniple was identified at headquar ters, though he had had a sixtli finger on his hand amputated to fool the experts. As the prints of the remaining fin gers of the prisoner were the same a« those in the record of Sniple. the police examined his hand closely and found a tiny scar, w here the sixth finger had been. He then admitted that a specialist had operated on him. Sniple was caught with three other men in a basement on East Fourth street, n which the police say they found $2,000 worth of stolen hair goods. Man Who Always Gets Up at Noon After Morning Nap Now in Difficulty. •ST. LOUIS, Dei-. 6.—The myste rious disappearance of an alarm clock from the ho iAe of William Neighbors vas solved and as a result Neighbors is matching pennies to decide wheth er a goat owned by his son is more valuable than the clock. Neighbors rises early to milk the cows. Then he completes his work and about 9 o’clock takes a nap. aris ing at noon, tie relied on the alarm clock to rouse him from his slum bers at the noon hour. About noon while he was standing in the yard he heard the alarm ring ing and investigation showed the sound came from inside the goat. The alarm continued ringing until it ran down and its presence (lid not seem to cause the goat the slightest inconvenience. Punches Bridegroom As He Is Being Wed CANTON, OHIO. De« “ 6. This is the story of a young Lochinvar who came out of the West Just in time to soo his sweetheart made the wife of another. Tliis Lochinvar is Joe Baker. >He had been courting Anna \ anak and had her promise to marry him. He told her to wait a few months while he went West. While Baker was getting the funds Tony Bobrok met Anna, proposed, was accepted and the wedding cere mony was in 'progress when Baker arrived. Silently Baker walked to the bride groom and delivered a hard blow on the jaw. The police did the rest. Wild Man Captured By Hunting Party MOBERLY. MO.. Dec. 6.—In the famous annua! Missouri coon hunt here, attended by Governor Elliott W. Major and the majority of the State officials, a wild man was captured who had lived in the woods since 1890. He had a wooden leg. which he had carved from a tree limb, and in a hole in the leg he carried bees which he hod captured. He also had bees in a stovepipe hat he wore. After he had been fed and given liquid refreshments he told the hunt ers Ills name was Thomas Siebler. He had taken to the woods follow ing a disappointment in love. His clothes are of fur from rabbits, foxes, coons and possums. Child Has Ter> Million Years Back of Him in Fight With Environment NEW YORK, Dec. 6.—The encour aging word of science that "heredity is overwhelmingly a force for the Improvement of the race;" that “the child at birth has not a few months, but 10,000,000 years of unbroken life to back him in his fight with envi ronment,” and that “even In the slums four-fifths of all the children are born normal and healthy." was proclaimed by Dr. Woods Hutchinson. “One excitable gentleman,” he said, “figured out that at the rate at which Insanity was increasing we would all be mad in a century and a quarter. “He forgot that the increase was due largely to the fact that more cases of insanity are cared for to-day than formerly. And. at the worst* only from 1 to 2 1-2 per cent of Hu manity is defective mentally. “A careful use of negative eugen ics. preventing the breeding of real defectives, can reduce, that proportion- almost, to nothing." TWO POUND BABY HEALTHY. WABASH, IND., Dec. 6. Mr. and Mrs. William Morrison, residing south of here, are the parents of a 2-pound baht-, which physicians declare is the smallest child ever born in Wabash County. The child is healthy and fully developed. Jersey Now Raising Horse-Hoofed Hogs PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 6. —Nine teen hogs with hoofs like those of j horses were shipped here this week. According to the experts of tlje Bu reau ol’ Animal Industry, this new brand is far more sanitary than the common variety. Much of tlie objection to the hog from a sanitary standpoint has been due to its feet. Between the toes of the everyday brand of porker dirt nc- | cumulates, and germs easily are bred, j In the new type this Is said to be impossible. Neglected Kidneys cause headache, dizziness, lame back, torpid liver and dropsy. If you arise unrefreshed in the morning, are weak, depressed ami have indigestion, ail are symp toms of kidneys so diseased that the blood is improperly purified. You need Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy because ii fcoes right to the seat of lhe trouble and is the most re liable and successful kidney and liver remedy known to-day. Nothing else can do you so much good, for it has a persistent re storing action on the kidneys and liver which brings perceptible re lief almost immediately. Mrs. E. Arnold. Kersey, Colo., writes: “T suffered from kidney trouble and found no relief until 1 commenced using Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy. Two months after I began using it I was a well woman.'' Each far a purpose Sold by all Druggists I — Kidney and Liver Remedy '1—Rheumatic Remedy J—Diabetes Remedy 4— Asthma Remedy 5— Nervine , Constipation .—pm. ( Biliousness ) Write tor a free sample, giving the number of remedy desired, to Warner's Safe Remedies Co., Dept. 435. Rochester, N. Y. Given To Have Smooth, White, Soft Skin All Winter ' (From The Woman Beautiful.) Does four skin chao or roughen easily in this weather, or become unduly red or blotchy? I*et me tell you a quick, easy way to overcome the trouble and keep your complexion beautifully white, smooth and soft the winter long. Just get au ounce of ordinary mercolized wax at the nearest drug store and use a lit tle before retiring, as you would cold cream. Upon arising, remove the coat ing with sudsy water. Tbe wax, through some peculiar attribute, flecks off the rough, discolored or blemished skin. The worn-out cuticle comes off just like dandruff on a diseased scalp, only in almost invisible particles. Mercolized wax simply hastens Nature’s work. Used as required, it keeps the face con stantly free, from devitalized scarf skin and only the healthy, young-looking skir. is in evidence.* ft’s the best treatment known for weatherbeaten, age.], muddy, freckled. pin«pled and ail unbeautiful complexions. Some skins wrinkle easily In winter. There’s au excellent remedy in a harm less wash lotion made by dissolving 1 07. powdered saxolite in L pint witch hazel. This will quickly eradicate every line.- Advt. Stopped Night Sweats and Banished Cough lx' oil arc suffering with » continued cough, ^ cold or T.ung Trouble which doe* not yield to | any treatment, it might be of the greet**! value S io you to investigate whet Kokman’s Alterative, a medicine for the Throat* and l.ung.*, liaa a*' S coittpllflhed for many similar sufferings. Many ) who Iihvo Investigated and used H have voltin S tartly declared that It was the means of saving their live* Read this '•at': "Gentlemen: For four 'ear* I was troubled with a cough, which gradually became worae. I had night sweats and pains In my chast T t waa losing ui> appetite and had become so thin ) and weak I could not attend to my household duties. A physician pronounced my disease ) Lung Trouble. Not t>eing satistled. I was exam ined by Iho physicians of the Polyclinic Iloepltal. They »ko confirmed my trouble, and I uu <>r , derod away for treatment. My nephew would not allow me to go until 1 Itad triad Kckman's Alterative Itefore I had taLen the medlcim- , three weeks l had marked relief, night awrjis ceased, pain in Uie breast relieved, cough hr came loose and e**}, fever left me, and 1 com jneneed getting well. My health became nor mal. I am In excellent health now, and ha-e been for twelve years." (Signed) (MKS. 1 MAIIY IVASHOV Care Ed. Green. 1722 8. 17th St.. Phil* (Above abbreviated; more on request.) Bckman's Alterative has ben proven •, years’ test to be moat efficacious for severe Throat and Lung Affections, Bronchitis, Itr- rhlal Asthma. Stubborn Golds and In upbuild ing ’he system. Contains no narcotics. ;>ni • or liablt-forming druga Sold by all Jacobs' Stores and other leading druggist Wr the I'.cKtnan Laboratory. Philadelphia. I’a fo' t#ooklet telling of recoveries and additional evi Absolutely FREE! 11 GRAND CHRISTMAS PRESENTS 2 Parisian Ivory Clocks 2 Watch Fobs 4 Silver Picture Frames Can you find them ? 1 Beautiful Silver Tea Set 1 Chest of Silver, 18 Pieces 1 Diamond Locket Making up the Santa Claus Smile, Contatiwl in t hdLs piotwre tre tha heart* of Twgiv* Children, which arc to inaJia up the Santa Cteofl BMILJC. Otit line them and (Kate In keaa than 16 words vrtry OM Aanta e'fccnld make «nr*rj »vm am! la. For the bool analjaifl of this picture (to be determined by three J udfM, eompoewl of Jack- sonTtlJe business men) will be glvw the Tea Set; the ■ eroTxi beat, the chest of • liver; the thtrd beet, tbe Diamond Locket: the next two best. the Parisian Ivory Clooks the next two. the Watch Fobs. the next fo or. fhe Picture Pramei, and to the next thirty w1lJ be given a Pur chasing Order, good in the purchase of a lot In Grand Boulevard. Bach person •tending In an answer will be given a souvenir lead pencil, if called for SZITD IN YOUR SO LUTION TODAY, as contest closes Decem ber 18, 1913. Important— Write Name and Ad dress Plainly Name Address GRAND BOULEVARD INVESTMENT CC 202-204-208 Bisbes J:dg. JACKSONVILLE, LORIDA i