Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1915.
———'—-"’_"—.——_“_‘\
1
.
Suspected Swindler Arrested at
St. Petershurg—Driven Into
Port by Rough Weather.
TAMPA, Feb, 25.—Traced and ar
rested through a newspaper picture, a
Man belleved to be Dr. J. Grant Ly
man; wanted in New York for alleged
violation of the postal laws in stock
swindles said to aggregate $200,000,
has been arrested at St. Petersburg,
twenty miles from here, aboard the
Jaunch Leroy, which he bought here
Baturday and in which he sailed for
Clearwater Monday. |
The man will not talk, but his iden- |
tification is believed by officers to be
complete, On him was found $14,905
in cash and- a certified check for
$5,964 payable to bearer and indorsed
by John H. Putnam Company, whi¢ch
was one of the aliases Lyman had
-used in New York.
The man told Smith, one of the
owners of the Leroy, when he bought
the boat, that he wanted to go hunt
ing along the Florida keys. They
provisioned the boat and left Clear
water Monday noon, but the weather
was heavy and they put into St. Pe
tersburg Wednesday. Yesterday aft
ernoon Captain D. B. Sweat, of a fish
boat, saw the Leroy tied up at the
railroad dock in an out-of-the-way
place as he came in from his cruise.
When he called at the postoffice for
his mail and got a copy of a Tampa
paper he found that the Leroy was
being hunted. He notified Chief of
Police Easters, who, with a police
man, took the supposed Lyman into
custody. They claim he made a move
for a gun, but they were too quick.
The suspect cleverly shipped a
trunk from here to Jacksonvilie to D.
E. Jackson on Sunday and Federal
officials have been watching that.
With a steamer trunk and two suit
cases he went to Clearwater by auto
on Sunday, having bought the Leroy
for SSOO here the day before. It is
believed he had intended to make his
way to Cuba and perhaps to some
South American country in the boat.
Chief Easters, of St. Pe:ershurg“
has received a telegram from the Fed- |
eral authorities at New York con-|
gratulating him on his capture and
telling him to hold the man at any
cost. A Federal marshal now is on
the way from New York to take him
there,
A man from Los Angeles, where
Lyman is said to have operated two
yvears ago and where he is alleged to
have skipped a big bail bond while
under stentence, visited the police
station at St. Petersburg to-day and
identified the man under arrest as
Lyman. The police withhbld hisi
name at his request but say the
identification is positive. Lyman has
retained attorneyvs and will thake a
fight for release hy habeas corpus.
Washington and Lee
Head to Visit Here
Kt |
Dr. Henry Lewis Smith, pruldont‘
of Washington and Lee University,
will be in Atlanta next Tuesday for o.]
meeting of the alumni of that school.
There will be a supper at the Piled- |
mont Hotel in his honor.
Among the prominent men to be in- ‘
vited to the meeting are Dr. K. G.
Matheson, of Tech; Bishop Warren
Candler, Thornwell Jacobs, Dr. F. H.
Gaines, of Agnes Scott, and Dr. Plato
Durham. An effort also will be made
to have Tinsley Rucker, of Athens, a
graduate of W, & L. in 1867, attend.
Judge J. T. Pendleton, of Atlanta,
& member of the class of 1869, is tak
ing a leading part in the arrange
mer.ts for the visit of Dr. Smith. All
W. & L. alumni are requested to
communicate with Phil L'Engle at
once and signify their intention of at
tending the supper.
Many Government
Positions Are Open
The following Government places
are open and clvil service examina
tions will be held here from time to
time:
Cook for Indian service; marine en
gine and boller draftsman (50 vacan
cles); master steel maker for New
York navy vard: teacher of domestic
art in the Indian service in Arizona;
fleld civil engineers; map colorist:
physical metallurgist at Boston navy
yard; teacher of free-hand drawing;
tinner's helper,
Further information ¢an he obtained
from T. C. Shaw, Atlanta Federal
Building.
High Winds Spread
High winds at midnight Thursday
resulted in the burning of one resi
dence and damage to two others on
Highland avenue.
The residence of Mrs. Sam Walker,
at No. 9 Highland avenue, was de
stroyed, and one occupied by w. G.
Brown, at No. 15 Highland avenue,
and a vacant house at No, 3 Highland
avenue, were damaged.
0f Auto With Train
ANNISTON, ALA., Feb. 25.—~R0y
Watson was instantly killed and Ar
thur Gaboury died in A hospital here
to-day as the result of a collision of
the touring car in which they were
riding with a Louisville and Nash
ville freight train at Leatherwood
crossing, five miles from this city.
Western Electric
Agents in Session
Fifty representq'ves of the \\‘..(.\
ern Electric Company in the Routh
were mesting in convention st the
Hotel Ansley Friday
They will attend a banquet in the
piain coNgp of the hotel Friday night.
and will complete business sessions
Snturday.
Champion Loné Distance
Singer Tells of His Trials
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Monroe Oppenheim’s voice isn't as
golden as Caruso’s nor as high, in
pitch or price, as Geraldine Farrar's,
but it's just as durable. It's what
you'd call a good, all-round, catch-as
catch-can, general utility voice, equal
ly useful for crying, “Libretto! All
the words and music!” in the theater
aisle or singing for the six hundredt!?
time that day the chorus of!
‘M-O-T-H-E-R’ behind the counter in
a 10-cent store. And it won for Mon
roe the first prize in the national con
test of the Song Publishers’ Contest,
Just held in New York,
Oppenheim sang for fourteen con
secutive hours in that contest, with
out pausing except for one deep
breath between songs and an occa
sional stop for a beer, which any
Saengerfest vocalist will explain is
the best whistle moistener extant. He
sang every song his particular pub
lisher was pushing, most of them 506 or
60 times each, and was acclaimed the
champion song plugger of Tin Pan
Alley, which is gomewhere in the vi
cinity of Broadway and Forty-second
street, New York, N. Y. Then he
came back to Atlanta, with his voice
a bit shaken, but still open for en
gagements,
“It wouldn't be so bad,” confided Mr.
Oppenheim, over the counter, “if there
was a bit more variety to it. But
everybody wants the same thing for a
week or g 0 on a stretch. 1 bet 1 hit
the top notes in “When [ Leave the
‘World Behind’ eleven thousand times,
Stella Griffin Files
The State Prison Commission Friday
had under consideration a formal ap-
Rllcnlon for a pardon for Stella B. Grif
n, the young Carroll Coum{y school
teacher who was given a four-year
term for perjury after she had con.
fessed to complicity in a conspiracy to
blackmall George B. Rauch, Atlanta
credit man.
The petition for clemency was strong
ll; recommended by Attorney Thomas f!
elder, who conducted the prosecution
in the conspiracy trial, and also by
Rauch, and, it was understood, will be
backed By a number of prominent ejti
:v\‘o. who have become interested in the
rl.
Credit System for
The Board of Fduecation, at its meet
ing Thursday aßernoon, adopted a
credit aystem for tesling aplicants for
teachers’ places when they are proper-
Iy equipded Diplomas, certificates of
experience and an_ Interview with Bu
peirntendent Landrum wiill take the
place of examinations,
The board elected two new teachers,
Hugh 1. Garrett, to the f.run}“-.r the
Boys' High Echool, and Miss zabeth !
Baker as an Instructor in the Commer
clal High School,
Prince Drops Suit as
Wife Bares Secret
(By International News Service.)
NEW YORK, Feb, 25.—An agree
ment effected outside of court has
been reached in the separation suit of
Prince Miskinoff, which came to a
sudden end Tuesday. Prince Miski
noff agreed to drop his sult when he
was informed that & baby girl which
the Princesg isx rearing is not hisown
child, but a foundiing.
The Princess stated that there
could be no reconciliation.
——————————
Builders Elated by
Winning Conventionl
Atianta bullders were rejoleing Fri- ‘
day over the announcement that At
tanta had been selecied for the 1917
convention us the Natlonal Associs- |
tion of Bullders’ Exchange. This city
Iw:n chosen unanimously after the
third ballot at the Baltimore convens«
tion Thursday \
Charles Bernhardt, assisted by Frad
Houser and Dan Carey, led the fight
and when I tried to sieep at night I'd
wake myeelf up with the chorus, Just
row it's that ‘Mother’ song. You
know it—‘M is for the million things
she gave me,” and down through the
alphabet. I start in at 11 a. m. and
sing it «teadily until the \6§ o'clock
whistle blows, Oh, sometimes some
body blows in with a request for ‘A
Perfect Day’ or some of the clasiscs,
but most of them ery for ‘Mother.’
“No, I'm not temperamental. I sing
just as well on a Friday as on a
Tuesday, and I've learned not to
strain my voice. It covers about three
octaves, from low G to high G, and all
the popular songs are inside those
limits.”
The Whitehall street store where
Mr. Oppenheim and his paper meg:-
phone plug for popular songs all y
is frequented by purchasers who in
sist on hearing a sohg before they
buy it. It is the plugger's duty to
sing anything from the sextet in “Lu
cia” to “You'd Never Know That Oid
Home Town of Mine” when requested,
and if he doesn’t display the goods to
advantage, there's a sale lost.
“Wait until it gets a little quiet,
and I'll sing you something really
worth while,” eaid Monroe, laying
down his megaphone, A rotund wom
an with three children in her train
paused before the counter,
“Won’'t you please sing the chorus
of that ‘Mother’ song for me?” she
asked. |
“It will be truly a pieasure,” quoth
Monroe. ‘
that won Atlanta’s choice. They were
aided and abetted by the ideal climate
of the Gate City and the widespread
knowledge of its famous “spirit.”
ADVERTISEMENT,
It's Mercury! Attacks the Bones,
Salivates and Makes
You Sick.
There's no reason why a person
should take sickening, salivating caio
mel when 50 cents buys a large bottle
of Dodson’s Liver Tone-a perfect
substitute for calomel
It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid,
which will start your liver just as
surely as calomel, but it doesn’t make
you sick and can not salivate,
Children and grown folks can take
Dodson's Liver Tone, because it is
perfectly harmless,
Calomel is a dangerous drug, It Is
mercury, and attacks your bones,
Take a dose of nasty calomel to-day
and you will feel weak, sick and nau
seated tosmorrow., Don't lose a day's
work. Take a spoonful of Dodson's
Liver Tone instead, and you will wake
up feeling great. No more blllousness,
constipation, sluggishness. heagache,
coated tongue or sour stomach, Your
dru'gm says If you don't ind Dod
son's Liver Tone acts better than
horrible cnlomel, your money I 8 walt
ing for you.—Advertisement
(@ PREPAREDNESS!
Don't walt until a Cold or
‘ RS THRSES v
Protect Yourself
ELKIN'S
C:i
APSULES
Sver Hol o Hinin Bae
Soo'd in Atlants by~
THE ELKIN DRUG COMPARY
Five Pointa. Grand Opera Mouse
President
t Di
William C. Royer, manager of the
Pledmont Hotel, Friday night will en
tertain at a dinner for Mell R. Wilk
inson, president, and other members
of the Presidents’ (CTub, an organiza- |
tion composed of heads of the various
Adanta civic organizations. |
The dinner will be in the colonial!
room of the Piedmont at 6:30, and
will be the first of a series of monthly
dinners by the Presidents’ Club. The
members of the club are:
Victor H. Kriegshaber, president of
the Atlanta Chamber of Commetce;
F. J. Paxon, president of the Atlanta
Convention Bureau: Ivan E. Allen,
president of the Southeastern Fair
Association; W. W. Orr, president of
the Retail Merchants’' Association;
Robert ', Maddox, president of the
Clearing House Association; Lee M.
Jordan, Rotary Club; Julian Boehm,
'Ad Men's Club; Luther Z. Rosser, Sr.,
‘l»roxidem Atlanta Bar Association; J.
1.. Baldwin, president Credit Men's
Association: C. H. Kelly, Freight Bu
reau; Charles Willlam Bernhardt,
l president Atlanta Builders’ Exchange;
i What Is Thrift? K
: It is not the perlodic deposit of g
= a fixed sum for & number of :
§ months, to be withdrawn and .
= spent. ( ’
g Thrift {s the saving of a por- £
= tion of earnings every week ev
= ery month in every year, deposited g
'_g oy’ : where it will earn an income, as 4
g 2 Py (} « fortification against adversity, t;
= g ¥
§ .fi'f .h« ‘ Buch funds deposited with ue 5
g : '-.-‘!L, earn 4% interest, and may be .
é S withdrawn whenever needed. =
is' o 3 =
g . 4! Atlanta Trust Company
s 1 140 Peachtree Sireet i
= 4R & ATLANTA 3
: Y TRIIRE E
S sl ‘
i "? | ’
: L | :
X e ¥
-e, N =
g Atlants Truet Building
N O AN s i e Gll4
z ’
Men, Don’t Miss This!
An Extra
Spring
Suit o
I PAT Bl K
WITH EVERY SUIT ORDER
Read this again—AN EXTRA SPRING
SUIT FREE with every Suit order. A
straight, open, ‘‘above board’ offer, with no
‘strings’’ attached to it.
We made a lucky purchase of several thou
sand yards of smart, new woolens. YOU, our
patrons, old and new, will get the benefit of it,
and incidentally, we will add a thousand new
customers to our list.
Starling Saturday, Feb. 26
e —————————————
Two Suits for the s 00
Price of One, Both -
Tailored to Your l AND
Individual Meas- . UP
BN
Just come in, make your selection from our
assortment of over 500 handsome new wool
ens, let our tailor measure you, then make an
other selection from an assortment of nifty,
new summer woolens, and we'll make them
BOTH to §our individual measure-—but YOU
JUST PAY FOR ONE SUIT.
Spring Is Almost Here
This offer is scheduled to last ONE WEEK ONLY,
but it will be wisest to CHOOSE EARLY, as our ‘‘pur.
chase’’ of woolens may '‘give out,”’ and the sale dis.
continued. Perfect fit and satisfaction guaranteed in
both suits. You take no chances.
For the Tailoring Surprise of Your Life,
Leeds Woolen Mills
M. A. MARGOLES, Manager
The Only Woolen Mills Store in Atlanta
91 PEACHTREE ST.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
J. B. M. Hoxey, Associated Charities;
W. O. Foote, Atlanta Typothetae; E.
M. Horine, president Atlanta Associa
tion of Building Owners and Mana
gers; O. T. Camp, Grocers’ Associa
tion; R. R. Otis, Real Estate x
change, and Charles J. Haden, presi
dent of the Georgia Chamber of Com
merce.
Johns Hopkins Men
Dr, Frank J. Goodnow, of Johns
Hopkins University at Baltimore, who
is to be entertdined by the Atlanta
alumni of that institution, will reach
Atlanta at 2 o'clock Saturday after
‘noon.
! He will speak at a banquet to he
given in his honor at the Hotel Ansley
Saturday night., .
Girl Training School
o
- Committee Meets
Members of the executive commit
tee of the Georgia Training School for
Girls met at a noon luncheon at the
Piedimont Hotel Friday to discuss
furthering the scope of the s=chool's
influence and benefits,
Wilmer L. Moore, the president,
presided.
BBy 0 s R oeT I . SO.Sy Sy S B & W,
f@"“" V o D
v A AEALTE) N
\(/PRICES ALWRYS )
3 THE L T A
- OWEST 4
E§)l32 h."- +T, A i 5 .70 7AO oL S “"e’“\\‘@
. _THESE PRICES ARE LESS THAN WHOLESALE COST. QUAN
TITY RESTRICTED TO ONE ITEM TO A CUSTOMER.
SI.OO Wampole's Cod Liver Oil. . .55¢
$3.75 Horlick’s Malted Milk. . . .$2.55
35¢ Lapactic Pills (100's) ......19¢
35¢ Limestone Phosphate .. . ... ..20¢
25¢ Fleet's Phosphate of Soda .....17¢
50c Fleet's Phosphate of Soda. . ..35¢
SI.OO Fleet's Phosphate of Soda. .65¢
25¢ Sanital Face Cream .........10¢
25¢ Laxative Bromo Quinine . ...17¢
25¢ Woodbury's Facial Soap .. 17¢
25¢ Bromo Seltaer ... ... one.vir 38
25¢ Hick's Capudine ...........18¢
50c Lilly's Asbic Pills (100) .....35¢
SI.OO Nuxated Iron ............73¢
Demonstrations in Pure Food Department
Balcony—Main Store
We want you to taste Pappy’s Flor
ida Marmalades and Jellies. Try a
dainty dish FREE at the Demonstration
Table in our Pure Food Department.
Delicious Marmalades of Kumquat,
Lemon, Orange, Orange and Grape
fruit make most palatable sherbets, ices,
salads, cake fillings and are also served
on ice cream. Guava Jelly Cheese Balls
are particularly pleasing.
TO INTRODUCE TO YOU PAP
PY'S FLORIDA JELLIES AND MAR
MALADES WE OFFER THE FOL
LOWING SPECIAL PRICES ON—
Guava Jelly—s-oz. size, Il4¢c; 9-oz.
size, 24c.
Kumquat Marmalade—s-oz. size, 14¢;
16-oz. size, 34c.
Orange Marmalade—s-oz. size, l4c;
16-oz. size, 34c.
Lemon Marmalade, Grua:‘fruit Marma
lade and Orange and pefruit Mar
malade—>s-oz. size, 14¢; 16-oz. size,
29c.
CRYSTAL DOMINO
‘ 2'“). SUGAR 196 i
Saturday Savings in
Toilet Articles
75¢ PINAUD'S LILAS VEGETAL 59¢
75¢ TOILET WATERS, WOOD
AURIEEOTEE s citsonadenesgos il
Including Violet Elite, Arabian Bou
quet, Violet Eve, Blue Lilly.
50c ONE OUNCE PERFUMES. . .29¢
Violet, White Rose, Carnation, Heli
otrope, Lilac, Apple Blossom, Cut
Roses.
VANTINE'S MINIATURE PER
PUME SBTB ..cccovesicsvn i
35¢ BAY RUM, 4 pint ........19¢
60c BAY RUM, full pint ........37¢
MERINO WOOL POWDER
PRITE L ibsiin saiivtnce: N
With dainty ribbon bows.
WASHABLE POWDER PUFFS,
5¢ and 10¢
808 BETTY'S SOAP FOR CHIL-
B . il dss i T
SN IR . cveoecisn i
OLD-FASHIONED FLOWER
SEEDS.
The kind that really grow into beau
tiful flowers and plants, s¢, 10¢, 25¢
' SEND YOUR
TD T R
bt »@}/’\ &l o
Wzl gmf//é s o <), Cilkd)
SEE OUR SPECIAL CANDY SALE ON PAGE TWO.
50c Dorin’s Rouge ............34¢c
50c Pebeco Tooth Paste ... .. ....32¢
e LBl .. e i
50c Glover's Mange Remedy ....30¢
25¢ Squibb’s Castor Oil (14 pint) . . 14¢
50c Nestle's Food ... . .. .v... .33
$1.50 Fellows’ Syrup ..........98¢c
25¢ Pond’s Vanishing Cream . ...12¢
25¢ Holmes' Frostilla ..........10¢
50c Gillette Blades (6) .........25¢
15¢ Blue Jay Corn Plasters .. ....10¢
50c Phillips’ Milk Magnesia ... ......30¢
206 Sal Hepaticn ... cue. cn il
20c Eagle Brand Condensed Milk. .13¢
SYLMAR BRAND RIPE OLIVES, medium;
pint can, 206; quart ................3080
DROMEDARY GOLDEN DATES ......%
Three packages for 26c.
CARPENTER'S WHOLE RIPE PRE
SERVED FIGS—
-11-08808 OB ....caviuiviivaiiii, IR
Iponnd 08l 1.11. ikl o
MALLAIRD’'S BREAKFAST COCOA—
SRPOURE .. isiiiisiibiNi cane
SPOMAR (iiiii.i i e B
15¢ ENOX'S GELATIN ...cv.oshiiv. .d 8
FIVE POINTS COFFEE, pound ......30¢
A delicious combination of extra fine
Mocha and Java.
SUNSHINE EiS&OGs
BISCUITS
i TAKHOMA BISCUIT,
‘ Circus Animals, }
w 5 ) Grahams, : C
B 3 Lemon Snaps,
(Snmhine Lunch Biscuits, )
Yum Yums Ginger Snaps,
/ Afternoon Teas, \
Butter Thins,
Cheese Wafers,
| Chocolate Fingers, \ C
loc \ Dainty Marshmallows, |
Ginger Snaps,
Fig Sni Bars,
Vanilla Wafers,
Guaranteed Rubber Goods
HOT WATER BOTTLE--Japeco Brand,
No. 150, very strongly constructed of pure
red rubber, with reinforeed seams, guar
anteed for twelve months. Full 2-quart
pide, spodial, B 8 ...iciiiii.iiii e
GILLETTE METAL HOT WATER BOT
TLE, or Bed Warmer, will radiate strong
heat the entire night without refilling.
A Bood I At siiiiiidiis il
FOUNTAIN SYRINGE—Japeco Brand, No.
100, made of pure red rubber, reinforeced
seams, guaranteed one year. Rapid-flow
tubing and three hard rubber nozzles. Big
YR W . i e
FOUNTAIN SYRINGE—Japeco Brand, No.
SYRINGE AND HOT WATER BOTTLE—
Japeco Brand, No. 150 ............$l5O
RUBBER SHEETING-—Double-coted, 14-
vard wide, best quality rubber, at, per
.\'fl!‘tl .31.50
SANITARY NAPKINS — Princess Brand,
O TOP i..... 0. i iid
PODUNDA ALCOHOL STOVE, with 10e
can solid sleohol .........csinsuei
GOOD
Booes . .o . T
““The Return of Tarzan.”’
““Mother.”’
“The Things That Count.’’
““Martha-by-the-Day."”’
‘““The Call of the Cumberlands.”’
“Love lnsurance.”’
“A Weaver of Dreams,”’
“The Garden Without Walls.”’
“Madeap.”
“The Man in Lonely Land.”
-ATLANTA, GA.
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