Newspaper Page Text
i
Shot Man in Nevada, Rode Blind
Baggage and Box Car—Fit,
Plump and Happy.
CHICAGO, Jan, I.—ln San Fran
eisco on the 27th day of last July a
pale and trembling girl of 19 years
was released from a hospital, Her
¢physician said to her:
“You are well now. All you need is
@ great deal of fresh air and exer
cise. Have you money ?”
“No,” sald the girl, “but don't you
think I would get plenty of exercise
and air by walking from here to Penn.
sylvania ?
The girl was Miss Harrlet Madi
son. She arrived in Chicago, fit as a
polo player, plump as a dairy madid,
énd happy as a canary.
“I shot & man and two coyotes in
Nevada,” she said. “T rode 100 miles
or 80 in a box car, and another hun
dred or so on a ‘blind baggage.' 1
washed dishes for a week in Nebras
ka to earn a new palr of shoes, And
here I am. It's great!”
Miss Madison's home is at Folcroft,
Pa. She is on her way to that town
‘Sugar Trench’ Helps
InP;g ulsingGerman
ep gGermans
PARIS, Jan. I.—“ Trenches of Sug
ar” is the headline of a curious war
story in Clemenceau’'s Homme En
chaine. Twenty-five hundred tons of
Sugar were stored in an abandoned
refinery near Soissons when the Ger
mans suddenly attacked it. Sandbags
were lacking, but the French impro
vised bdarricades of sugar sacks and
repelled the attack,
Movie Fire Proves
.
Real; Actor Hurt
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. I.—Beatrice
Michelena and Willlam Pike, star ac
tors in the California Motion Picture
Company studio near San Rafael, were
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Balf suffocated and fl'tny in
@ fire scene that was .u.z‘:u
“faked,” but which proved real.
The actor firemen were no e‘ n
this emergency, someone ving
m on too much 011, and the Ban
department was called upon.
They took the actors out of the bulid.
e o oty sufleaed with
This would have made a gool
slim, anyway, only the San Rafsel
firemen made their rescue from the
Tear of the buliding, where the camers
could not cateh them.
SLAYS MUSBAND: M YEARS.
NVI L., Jan 1 e, Ada
& M%, NV ted d—“. mur
of her hustand, William Kephart,
been taken to the penitentiary
1o begin serving her sentence
sen years. A motion for a new m§
was withdrawn
I have cured are o ey pret
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Pallagra Bave 4 e
for othere Al ™' 0 4
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s & % o &1 b B e ¥ Vs
§ et ’ - o=l Sanger of as
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School for Airwomen to Open
@l @l @ e @ @
- v
Two Chicago Girls as Tutors
G| e e el e@l @l el i
’
Baroness Designs Aero Garb
S L & U
Baroness Andred De Beckendorff, who is to become an aviatrix
and set the fashions in dress for airwomen. Below is Miss Majorie
Stimson, of Chicago, standing by the propeller blades of her aero
plane.
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Katherine and Marjorie Stimson, Daring Flyers,
to Teach Aviation at San Antonio.
| NEW YORK, Jan. 1 —Doss your
o et
| .o, up to
minute. If she files upside down, she's
ultrafashionable, because that means
lln‘nuhopdho-m I.:l.lf whe
hasn an asroplane, ‘. -
_L'm. Because aeroplane xy.
m“h:o-.mw-olohquu
To provide better tutoring facilities
for women who want to learn to fiy,
the Misses Katherine and Marjorie
Stimeson, of Chicago, will open an
Aviation school at San Antonio in the
lgrln. Miss Katherine, who is only
19 years old, and who still wears her
Lalr down her back, already has made
& record as an air woman.
She was the first woman in the
world to loop-the-loop and te My up
.
Fails to Hy&mtize
.
Mayor in Courtroom
Mind Reader Is Fined and Jailed,
| After Mis Demonstration
| In Uselons.
| ALEXANDRIA, IND., Jan. 1 “May
os, | can hynotise you In the very ehalr
In which you are sented™ said’ Arthuar
Ryar, & ming reader and Mortune el
O e A X
Wales taid him he had the privilems of
e Rypi e si e
the cAher m"fl-‘:‘fi';fl Nave
mpSE e sST o
Mie Hamer the ”.ma : |
:‘ym .*SM
LA Y Ty e
-- . |
oNy i o
m merihe 8! the Hinte pengl »
Girl 13 Years Old
Champion Speller
CENTERVILLE 10WA. Jan |-
!l:lnl mfiug ':.n d‘um;
W ««-m""n'.'.
:’n. armaal mm [
l:cto Mise Marrison the tiniest of
the Ihirty -tee conlostants, wi
werde of thiee and four syileties
wm A B pres nucwl
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA. SUNDAY, JANUARY 2, 1916
side down. And she is still the only
woman who performs these feats
She has looped more than 250 times.
Miss Marjorie, who is two years her
.'?'nfi”,".‘}"‘“"’“"‘""’"‘
The fashions on dress for atrwomen
::ouuyflllhnl»lbo-l:::
Waldorf-Astoria she has decided to
“take up” aviation. She has adopted
the new diversion to occupy her mind
while she is wondering what has been
the fate of her husbhand, who & year
m - . .\
The baronett has positive idens
“nl:'d hohnhlm m"
*ta
mnanmhthmdm;
ore
Coaches Is Convicted
lm'w?ohb‘d“ Intirm, and
Not Dashing Bandit Vie. |
! time Putured.
. LOS ANGELES, Jes. | -Biwand b
:an B vl and stherwise fe9
jflm the picrtgre of Ihe Foung ard dash .
ii“ deaperads whieh nis vietime must
gun imagived. wes comvicted ot (hey.
CEnnA, Wie of being the bandit whe heid
Lap twenty . theee cur somches in Vel
{iowstone Park July 34, 1914, and
[ ere than o t:t;‘oum
wag ot » L L
fm his (hree WHRRetsrs raviog afld [
Setabiieh The AN e aitempt
g Pratmtds (hae mest Seenly nterestad
| AN I Bouthern (Nitfornia in he oul.
come of the trial wa: Charles o
Haward of the Cnea irande Hm
| Passdenn, whe was manager as the
of the wold-up of Ihe Thamb M%
park hontelry pemrest Ihe Sowve '
rablary Cme of (he victime of she loke
TR ernpped o h“t.uo.-:.u'm
:.nouuu.m-u n--Jn
perim e
'Nfi*md;”mm mw-oa\
tands of the A eg b |
Pot @eenteiet Gl ey hed ot s
iu:::‘
S —————————
Don’t Whip Children
Q—mmn—a-n-mnn‘
e e e e -:‘onn e u:n -
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FENETE 00 Bel i, Beeste W
Neighbors Tell Him What They
Think of Him, Until Signal
Mystery Is Explained.
NEW YORK, Jan. I,—ln the minds
of many persons residing in the vicin.
ity of One Hundred and Sixty-gixth
street and Fifth avenue there is no
good reason why a green flag should
be flying from the flag pole of pub
lic school No. 184, which is near by,
No matter what the leanings of the
principal, James B. T. Demorest, these
persons In a perfect avalanche of let
ters have stated that he need not
g 0 to the extent of hanging a green
flag out on a public school i.. Amer
ica.
. In the same neighborhood there are
persons who think that the hanging
of a red flag, whether it indicaies
Great Britain, the Industrial Workors
of the World or anarchy, is a most
reprehensible action, and so when on
the day following the first complaint
A red flag appeared on the school
house flagpole there were letters for
Mr, Demorest calling him a turncoat,
an anarchist and a whole lot of other
things.
“Fly the American flag and no
other,” was the burden of most of the
letters.
However, the flags have continued
to switch either daily or hourly and the
explanation of the whole matter has
been made clear, It seems that the
half time method of grammar school
instruction led to confusion ameng
scholars attending the school In ques.
tion and it became a common thing
for those who were not due for
classes to arrive ahead of time and
stand about waiting for a chance to
learn something,
The teachers and principal toak
every precaution to avold this con
fusion, even writing letters to the
homes of the little ones, but every
day there was a throng of children,
some very tiny, who stood outside
and pined for education
Then the signal system was decid
ed upon. Little Willle can look down
the street and find just where he
stands in the educational system of
New York. Green means “come on
’M
\
In” to some puplis and “stay away™
1o others. There is no more confusion
u‘tloeh-ml:tnl m:mlhmt‘;
ened when system started
rapidly dying out
—————
5 TADA CIFY, AV, don 1)
7. u -
have returned from (bheir n:cu in
Churchill County, Nevada. brough:
with them a bottle, & relic of & desert
tragedy. The bottle, with a necktis o
mmh“u-ch-pof-um
M“ wfln‘.n in lend mfl.l.';: the
neckiie are thess worde: las
stole horses on desert. Mmul‘:
o 180 miles on desert; died of thirst
and starvation. December 14 1871
P.C. Knox™ 80 faint are the penci!
marks that & number of other wor ‘s
mtu on the Ue can not be made
R R
—
Darkens Beautifully and Restores
- Its Thickness and Luster
% at Once,
[ fammon garden sage stened nis a
Beavy ten with suiphur and sleots
Sdded, will tarm gray. stresked L
faded hair beastifully dark and tus
SPAnt . remove svery Bt of fardro®
Mep somlp Heling and faili tair
Mizing the Sage Ten and 'xa‘r!‘«r
focips ot hame, hough. s reuble
SRS, AD shaior WAy W 0 Bet the
feady-to-ume tonie, oosting about 40
tents & large bhotile, ot drug stores
ERown s “Wysil's Sage and Bulphur
Compound.” thes aveiding & ot of
L
Whie wispy y. faded Bair te won
sinful we &l m'. e olain our
renthful appenrance and aitrn i
ness. By Sarbkening your halr wih
Weath's Mane aod Bulsbhar 8o ane
FRR L bemmase I @eee it oee wetar
Rty oo eveniy. You Just dampes &
epevtige o 00l btueh wi'h snd srg»
this Ihroaah your Mair. mbking aoe
Sl sirand 81 & thee Y% merniag
aE e Saire Bave Mimmgrmnted AH,
o aßether Spadinatben o » § wpl
Bair bowommes bmautifui'y deth g e |
00l and lusuriant aad you .ey
FERiE Jopnged Adver getment,
FiremenGetDemerits|
If They Try Suicide
Attempts of One Member of Los An
geles Force Cause New
General Rule,
LOS {\N(}ELES. Jan, I.—Any fireman
who attempts to commit suicide will re
ceive not less than five demrit marks,
A second attempt will be more severe
ly dealt with; the fireman will receive
not less than ten demerit marks for
this offense.
Upon the third attempt, assuming that
the fireman has not executed his own
dl-chuge. he will be fired,
In other words, says Chief Eley, the
Fre Commission concurring, not mo;e
than two attempts at suicide will be tol.
erated.
This Important matter was bmufht
before the commission by the oh of,
Wwho said there was a fireman out at Hol
lywood with a record of two attempts
at suicide against him.
"'The only way to discipline that man
‘.hltof glve him demerit marks,” said the
chief,
‘“Then we'll have to make it a general
rule,”” observed one of the commission
ere, and they did so.
e ——
3 .
Carries Baby on Back
On 250-Mile Trud
n e lrudge
S —
BETHLEHEM, PA., Jan. I.—To walk
from a northern Canadian town to New
York State, 260 miles, with his ten
month-old ehild on his back, was the
remarkable experience of Joseph Danz
:u;‘. who has just arrived in South Beth
ehem,
The man recently buried his wWife and
started out for this city to find work,
'minus funds for railroad fare. He oar.
ried the child, Indian style, walking to
Suspension Bridge, N. Y., where he got
ald and came here by train. In his lonls
Journey afoot the man gave the ochi
all necessary attention and sustained its
life by feeding it with crackers and
water.
——————
CHICAGO, Jan. I.—~Memory of a case
five years ago, in which he said he act
ed as attorney for a woman alleged to
have been defrauded by Anton Boenert,
80 years old, made Judge John Btelk
refuse to try Boenert in the Maxwell
Street Court on a confidence game
charge. He continued Boenert's case.
Another judge will hear it.
Boenert is charged with defrauding
Mra. Marie Viadyka out of $l5O in a
real estate deal.
THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY
TROUBLE AND DONT KNOW IT
Weak and unhealthy kidneys cause
80 much sickness and suffering, and
when through neglect or other causes
kidney trouble is permitted to con
tinue, serious results may be expected.
Your other organs may need atten
tion—but your kidneys should have
attention first because their work is
most impertant,
If you feel that your kidneys are the
cause of your sickness or run down
condition, commence taking Dr. Kil.
mer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney,
liver and bladder remedy, because if it
proves to be the remedy you need and
your kidneys begin to improve they
will help all the other organs to health.
Prevalency of Kidney Disease.
Most people do not realize the
alarming increase and remarkable
mvuuwv of kidney dissase. While
ney disorders are among the most
common diseases that prevall they
are aimost the last recognized by pa-
Uenta who usuaiiy content themse!ves
‘with doctering t‘o offects, whils the
original disease constantly undermines
the system.
SPECIAL NOTE—You may obtains sample size bottle of Bwamp-Root
by enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Thia vew
you the opportunity 1o prove the remarkable merit of this medicine. gtny
will aiso send you & book of valuable information, containing many of
e found l':;..r;‘ou hmhhn lb::.'d w"l“h}:lm nvw.-l'
T ¥y n 'y
15?:“' troubles. The vaiue and success of Swamp-Root are so well known
that our nauu Are advised 1o send for sample size bottles Address Dr
Kilmer & Co. Binghamton, N. Y. Be sure to say you read this offer in
the Atianta Hearst's Sunday American —Advertisement.
DR. CHARLES F. CROUCH
DENTIST
Atianta Trust Building,
140 Poachitres Street.
PHONES D Aey ATLANTA. GA
HAVE YOUR
Done in our plant, you will then be sure
that it is strictly correct in every respect,
ST e ey
TICBERIL™ = o s ot
'::'-::mod wher printing Gueswent w 0 e
Call wm 0 Tow paus | ppawstior oop ;s e
BYRD PRINTING CO. ATLANTA
e
“
THE CASINO s¥aATING
1 SOOUTH PRYOR STREETY "'Nk
MORNING AND AFTERNOON SESSIONS
FREE TO LADIES AND CHILDREN
SEMNONS- A B B W e T e
: )
Would Picture Wrongdoers’ Man
nerisms and Make ldentifica
tion by Officers Easier.
PHILADELPHIA, Jan, I—ls the
plans of Captain of Detectives Came.
ron do not miscarry, the detective bu
reau shortly will be fitted with a mov
ing picture machine with which to
“film” notorious thieves for the pur
pose of better identification.
Captain Cameron has had the plan
in mind nearly a year. ‘He believes
that If at least 100 feet of film can be
made of every notorious crook arrest
ed it will make identification easler
for the detectives,
“T think It's a good scheme,” the
captain says, “and we will get the
money to carry it through. The pho
tographs we make of crooks now are
all right in their way, but the detec
tive Is looking only at a plain piece
of cardboard with a man’s face on it,
“Now, with moving pictures of
crooks this could all be changed. We
would first mount the crook on a re
volving platform the same as is seen
in fashion shows. This would turn
around slowly while the operator was
fAlming him. Any peculiar manner-
Isins or tralts the man might have
could be noted. Then we would have
| him walk away from the camera In a
| stralght llne, say twenty feet. Then
we would have him walk up to the
camera and take off his hat
“In this way we could wateh his
walk: we could note the way he car
ries himself, and we could take note
of the way he lifted his hat from nls
head. Then at roll call every morn
ing we could throw these fllms on a
screen and the detectives could see
the crook they are after just as he ia
in real life”
A Trial will Convince Anyone.
Thousands of people have testified
that the miid and Immediate effect of
Bwamp-Root, the great kidney, lver
and b&‘d« remedy, is soon realized
and that it stands the highest for its
remarkable results in the most dis
tressing cases,
Symptoms of Kidney Trouble.
Swamp-Root s not recommended
for w-nnlu::. but If yout suffer from
annoying troubles, frequently
passing water night and day, smart
ing or irritation in pasaing, brick-dust
m:’mi. ma-ema backache, lsme
‘bac ixziness, poor di -
ance due to bad kidney trouble, skin
eruptions from bad blood, neuraigia,
rheamatism. lumbago, bloating, lrri
tabllity, worn-out feeling, lnck of am
bitlon, maybe loss of flesh or sallow
complexion, kidney trouble in its
worst form may be stealing upon you.
Swamp-Root Iy Pleasant to Take.
If you are already convineed that
Bwamp-Root is what you nesd, you
can purchase the regular Afty-cent
and one-doliar size botties at all drug
Stores. .
Cow’s Yield of Milk
BUFFALO, N. Y., Jan. I.—~Lady
Fontiac Johanna, a ccw valued at
$20,000, has just broken the world’'s
record for butter production by yield
ing 6568 pounds of milk i n one week,
from which was made 41.81 pounds
of butter. This eclipses the former
butter record by 65 1-4 pounds.
F conflicting claims
confuse you when you
; come to choosea tire-—-
hold fast to this thought~
The joint judgment of a
majority of consumers and
motor car manufacturers is
that Goodyear Tires give better,
longer service.
Goodyear sales to both of
these two great markets are
much larger than those of any
other tire,
(jOODYEAR
TIRES
£
* NOTICE
Eoropean war demands
have uuud.l shortage
etk
manufacture of White
Tread Tires
The color of Goodyear
S e
Biack,
Our supply of the required
materials assures the
AR TRy
l‘G P~ tires being furnished
N /l'. with White Treads.
,"‘ ’;:‘ b’l
VIO )
’ s"“ o)
Ol T
Ny " 3 ATLANTA
0 WD BRANCH
(X )} ) 225
o'o ' . Peachtree
+ a Street.
001 G
83 TN
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WORLD’S GREATEST PLANT WIZARD
Has selected Orchard and Farm of San Fran.
cisco (most pomn farm paper om the Pa
cific Const) as official organ M’m
sonal announcements of nngnm
and each month discusees in its columns the
absorbing and practical details of ks mar.
velous work in the creation of new Frufts
Flowers and Vegetables.
Barbank's fesl story sppoared se “ e
Orchard and F -
renar dal MS-M
sands supreme as the Pacihic Const’s lending farm
paper. That t w Luther Burbank's oftral organ w
only one of its many strong features. Those who want
10 know more about farmng on the Pacific Const will
find its columns full of the facts they need.
Wi Class Anthontie Relinbie,
Published the first of sach westh.
Bebscriptions 40 crate por year or § poaes SLA
ABDBRERSS.
ORCHARD
aia FAR M
IRRIGATION
Hearst Bldg. San Francisce,
coaveatreted pald tor creuiating b roe Terlh o Y
o hate. satre sts. o segesed
..- g ~
Girl, 4, Dies in d
RS
Cellar of Her Home**
St W
MEDICINE LODGE, KAN.,, Jan. % 4
Echo Brown, a 4-year-old dau ' )
of a farmer living east of Sh w?‘ &
was drowned by falling into a sprii g -
in the basement of the Brown home.
The cellar door had beea left q '}g
and, while playing under the houw g'
she fell into the water. R
5