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2
Boy Wins Judgment
vs . .
On City for Injuries
(By International News Service.)
TULSA, OKLA., Der, 13.-—~Paul Wells,
11 vears old., was awarded $22,000 dam
Ages against the city by a jury here
Thursday., He had asked for SIOO 000
The boy was struck by a fire truck
while riding a bicyele last summer and
he was so injured that he was made a
¢ripple for life.
“HOME.OF SCREEN + SUCCESSES
3 ey
' Amc
- sl R ERC- LXA
DAVID W.
GRIFFITH’S
“THE GREATEST
THING IN LIFE”
LILLIAN GISH,
Robert Harron
VAUDETTE
MARY
PICKFORD
“loana_Enls"
ITam tolp.n
Adults, 15¢ Children, 1
in a Pippin of a Play
~
“STRING BEANS”
(Paramount
Also
A CHRISTIE COMED
The Gaumont W y — » )
the latest news views v ere
ang with the Wys v CAs
Aasass eS A L i AAass/ AN AL an DN
L e s
v
| Plans Are Formed for
2 LY
.l Discharged Surgeons
‘ (By International News Service.)
i WASHINGTON, De¢. 13.~The pol
| icy to be followed in discharging
l physicians and surgeons in the army
corps will be to release those who are
shove 45, or who have served more
than one year as soon possible and
immediately to discharge all others
| who can show good cause.
l This information was given Mid
dle Western Senators by the surgeon
generai’'s office Thursday., The new
outbreak of Spanish influenza in the
Middle West has found many of the
, smaller towns practically without
' physiciang to cope with the disease
Any physician who can produce a
letter from the Mayor of his city or
some other municipal official saying
that he is badly needed at home will
be discharged from the service im
mediately, the surgeon general's of
fice said.
. .
“Deliberate Lie,” Reply of
v
Bowles to Fraud Charge
(B{ International News Service.)
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 13.-~"A delib
erate le,”" was the reply of Rear Ad
'nm‘ul Francizs T. Bowles, assistant gen
eral manager of the Emergency FKFleet
l('mpurnlh-n, to the statement credited
{ to SBenator Vardaman, of Mississippi, in
the Senate, that there was fraud at the
| Hog Island shipyards.
The reply of Admiral Bowles was con
tained in a telegram he sent to Senator
lrlunmn Fletcher, chaifman of the Sen
ale commerce commitiee
TN L o
A ERC,
TODAY
ELSIE
FERGUSON
"UNDER THE
GREENWOOOD TREE"
GRITERION
e i -
TODAY
THOMAS DIXCN' .
“The One
qunan”
Covyngh.. 1918, Intervational Keature Service, loc
Registered U. 5. Palent Offlee
Copyrigh' . 1918, International Femture Service, ine
Registered 1 & Patent Oftee.
Copyright, 1918, International Feature Service, lne
Registered U. 8. Patent UMce
. »
Rail Traffic Improving,
y .
Says Director McAdoo
(By International News Service.)
- WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.--With the di
version of war munitions, the traffic it
uation., as regards railroads, coastwise
and overseas shipping, 1&g vastly im
proved, Director General McAdoo an
nounced Thursday. During ithe Ilast
week a total of 14,814 bales of cotton
were handled at Northern and South
\tlantic ports, and the movement of
raw sugar from New Orleans to New
York and Boston proceeded satisfac
torily
Many wooden vessels have heen re
leased to the shipping control committee
and more will be released. Of the four
lake boats taken over by the coastwise
lines, three will be immediately released.
Concerning troops in training camps,
the railroad administration has record
of 8,600 discharged
“Arrangements for the storage of ac
cumulation of war supplies which will
not be needed overseas Is progressing
favorably,” said Director McAdoo. "“The
plan to throw overboard at sea the high
explosives accumulated on the seaboard
is expected soon to be carried cut.”
The United State« shipping board re
ports fresh labor difficulties and slow
unloading at a number of yards, but ac
cumulations are not serfous.
The shipping board suspended work
on 314 hulls, and stopped overtime very
generally.,
289,108,070 Ten-Dollar
. . . »
Bills in Circulation
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Dec, 13— There are
21,000 SI,OOO hills in ecirculation, accord
ing to a statement of the Comptroller of
the Currency Thursday. There are §B,.
000 SSOO bills Aoating around and 34,1186,-
500 bank notes of §IOO denomination
But the good old $lO note is the most
popular, for there are 289,108,070 of them
in eirculation.
. .
Bill Passed Stopping
’ . .
. S. Housing Projects
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Dec 13- -All housing
projects undertaken by the Government
throughout the United States that are
not more than 75 per cent completed
must be abandoned under the Reed res
olution, passed Thursday by the Senate
without a roll eall
.
Restrictions Pul on
. . .
Bolshevist Advertising
IB( International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Dec, 13, -Bolshevik
representatives have been refused free
passage over Finland and distribution of
Rolshevist literature In that country
has been banned '‘for the maintenance
of order,” according to advices to the
Stale Department
ATLANTA THEATER
TOl‘ight s“md‘l‘l’m!:" and
“THE TRAIL of the
LONESOME PINE"
Saturday Matinee Best Seats SI.OO
- e g
i
|
\ SRAND |
Continnons | to 11 P M
Afternoon, 16,1 Night, 10, 20, 30
rRESCOT™
Master Mind of Mental Mysticism
g VYaoadevil) \et b
Gladhss Brockwell, in “The Strange
KRS AUV RS TR Y
R &L Kniliio' g, [
’ v
\o'n"n iL n o b slt
o SUPRENT VAUDY "
WA E NORDSTROM
| Musical omedy sta Notorious
Deiphine and oth Keith acts
The best by test
A Ceewie ivewspuper 101 volken€ric loiies
“T'he Trail of the Lonesome Pine,”
a regular old-timey melodrama
with the rude and corrugated
necked people of the Virginia
mountains as its characters, opened
1 three nights' engagement Thurs
day at the Atlanta Theater. It's
just as good as John Fox's novel
and the sentimental ballad which
followed it.
Louise Price is the June Toiliver
of the romance, and she is quite
good for the eyes, The company is
a fairly good one, but does not de
mand extravagant praise. The
sottings are well done.
“The Trail of the Lonesome Pine”
will be at the Atlanta Theater for
the remainder of the week, with a
matinee Saturday.
’
Loew's Grand Presents
.
An All-Star Bill
Frescott and Hope Eden have a won
derful act at the Grand for the last part
of the week. Frescott is a master of
the science of mental telepathy and he
enables Miss Eden to tell you anything
vou want to know--whether the sweet
heart in France is coming back soon, or
whether you're gnln{ to find the ring
you lost —every question in your mind is
u‘nswvrml by Miss Eden without hesita
tion,
She told Paul that his name was Paul
Patton, full or sober, and diagnosed the
case of a love-sick young male person as
a bad case of indigestion. One woman
was advised to undergo the operation
she had been contemplating immediate
ly, and an anxious yvoung woman was
told that her father would recover from
his illness,
There is not a poor act on the whole
bill, which is something out of the ordi
nary for vaudeville in Atlanta. Allen
and Francois come second to Frescott
and Eden in the favor of the audience,
the male member of the act showing
much ability in impersonating a Spa
ghetti Hound,
Bessie LeCount has ability. She gives
Mustrated descriptions of how a boy
dresses. and then a woman (interior
decorations not shown), and when she
rolls a cigarette you can almost see the
tobneco,
The mannikin act by Maxon and Mor
ris 18 a novelty, and proves entertaining,
while Gordon and Day have a good bicy
cle riding act, Miss Gordon furnishes an
abundance of pretty scenery--her face
ix real pretty—and Day furnishes a
bunch of laughs and a trick pair of
trousers,
Gladys Brockwell appears in the fa
vorite Fox subject of the beautiful but
sad girl, who must marry a rich man,
to please her mother,
.
MarieNordstromFeatures
. .
Clever Bill at Lyrie
Fascinating Marie Nordstrom, former
pu"ulur musical comedy star, is the
“glad girl” of the Keith bill for the lat
ter rurl of the week at the Lyric
Miss Nordstrom effervesces the Polly
anna Philosophy of joy, and communi
cates it to the audience. Before her aci
was fairly under way at the opening per
formance Thursday the nm‘irm-« wis
glad she was on the bill, When she had
finished the audience was so full of joy
it wouldn't rest satisfied until she had
responded to several curtain cails and
finnlly added another feature A hat
song, lustrated by Miss Nordstrom by
the donning of a variety of hats of all
styler, was decidedly unique and scored
a big hit
Mabel and Billy Bellday proved them
selves to be clever funmakers, ‘They
have a rough and tumble singing-danc
ing-juggling-comedy skit that set the
house in an uproar,
“The counterfeiter girl” was another
plengant skit put on by Edith and Eddie
Adair, the prineipal feature of which is
A seene in i shoe store between a clerk
and a stylish girl customer |
Shattuck and O'Neil are a feminine
)
[ES
i MOVIES:
e |
Friday and Saturday.
STRAND-—Charles Ray, .’m YString
Beans.”
ALAMO No. 2—Douglas Fairbanks, in
“The Half-Breed."”
VAUDETTE~-Mary Pickford, in “Joanna
Enlists.”
FORSYTH—EIsie Ferguson, in “Under
the Greenwood Tree.”
CRITERION—Thomas Dixon's *“The
One Woman.” -
“;l;l'lvOR—-»Mary Boland, in “The Prodigal
rife. "
RIALTO-—D. W. Griffith's “The Greatest
Thing in Life.”
SAVOY —Friday, "“The Heart of a Girl"”
with Rarbara Castleton. Saturday,
“Wolves of )?ulturf’
ALPHA —Friday, “"The fLure of the Cir
cus.” Saturday, Eileen Sedgwick, in “All
for Gold."
At the Strand.
Charlie Ray, in “String Beans,' is scor
ing again at the Strand. This steriing
actor, who has come to be associated in
the minds of all movie fans with country
life and small town parts, is provided with
one of his most effective and charming
plays, which was heartily enjoyed by large
audiences all day Thursday. The picture
will be shown today and Saturday. The
program also containg news pictures of
unusual interest, covering scenes both overs
seas and in this country,
At the Vaudette,
For genuinely rlelm{mm humor and time
ly interest, announceément is made that
Mary ickford's photoplay, “Johanna En
lists,” a screen adaptation of Rupert
Hughes' successful story, “The Mobiliza
tion of Johanna,” which will be shown at
the Vaudette today and Saturday is per
haps the most pleasing offering of the sea
son. One feature of unusual interest which
makes this photoplay most notable is that
the military scenes with which it abounds
presents the members of the 143 d Regi
ment, Field Artillery, of which Miss ick
ford is the hc;n‘ov:;'ry colonel,
e lh,:.
David W. Griffith's markable war
picture, “The Greatest Thing in Life”
which s being shown at the Rialto The
atpr this week, is a wonderful photoplay,
hoth in the high qualit yof the acting
and the superior direction and photogri
phy it evidences. Dainty Lillian Gish and
Robert Harron have the leading roles and
the suppoyt is in VOry Wig excellent.
At the Forsy(h.
From the standpoint of rapid aetion;
Elsie Ferguson's latest Arteraft picture,
“Under the Greenwood Tree'' which is
being displayed at the Forsyth Theater
thig week, s one of the hest seen at this
popular playhouse this season it
delightful photoplay and may be :een
again and again with profit. The support
18 highly adequate.
At the Criterion,
“The One Woman,” Thomas Dixon's
stirring photodrama of love, religion and
politics, which is being shown this week
ut the Oriterion, possesses all the elements
that go to make a picture of unusual ap
peal. It is presented by an unusually ea
pable cast and has been given an elaborate
production. Dixen s the author of “The
Birth of a Nation. The bill this week
also offers a very amusing Vitagraph com
edy
s e ——————
Service Accounts of
Many Troops Missing
(By lntornnlon‘l News l»vioo.z
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13-" With but
few exceptions, the enlisted men who
have been returned from France have
arrived in this country without service
records and without any other ')a(;‘cm
which contained a statement of their
accounts, thereby mnklnf it tmpossible
“}’, determine what pay, if any, was due
them.”
This admission is made in a letter ad
dressed to Chairman Sherley, of the
House n’sprnprlnuonn committee, Thurs
day by General Lord, chief of the divi
sion of finances of the War Department,
an the department’'s investigation of
charges made in the House that Amer
fea's soldiers were returning from over.
sens 'broke”’ because of not having re
ceived any pay for months, /
—————————————————————————
duo, who sing and indulge in rapid-fire
comedy conversation.
One of the cleverest trained animal
acts seen here in a long while is given
by Terschow's cats—really wonderful
performers,
The Henrst-Pathe news pletorial and
an educational film make up the motion
picture end of the bill
By George McManus
Pa Isn’t Such a Bonehead as He Looks
Skinny’s Education Is On the Bum
By JOHN GOLDSTROM.
Maggie Teyte, by sheer force of
personality and intelligent energy,
overcame the handicap of a cold
iast night and delighted an appre
ciative audience at Egleston Hzll, in
the Music Study Club’s third recital
of the season.
She had scarcely sung a couple
of bars of Mozart's Deh Vieni Non
Tardar than it became evident that
the Atlanta fog had affected her
voice. In Schindler's La Colomba
she did better: and when she had
finished her first group with Si
bella’'s Boeca Dolorcsa and Sotto 11
Ceil she had not only overcome her
handicap, but seemed also to have
expelled most of the fog from her
throat
Foliowed Gretchaninoff’'s La Nuit,
Fevrier's humorous Les Petits Ca
nards and his La Priere Qu'un En
fant Ne Meurt Pas, Moussorgski's
La Pi Ebavarde and Poldowski's
Cortege, in which the British sing
er demonstrated that she sings
French better than most French
divas do. In fact, the slight cold
even helped her enunciation a lit
tle
It was in a group of songs by her
former preceptor, Debussy, that
Teyvte showed to best advantage.
(Mextase Langoureuse, De QGreve,
Chevause De Bois, Recuillement
and Fentoches brought out the best
in her marvelous equipment of ex
pression. The observation was made
last night by several persons that
Maggie Teyte could sing for the
movies and “get it over"
Of her final group Tom ‘Dobson’s
At the Edge of the Sea had to be
repeated. No little share of the ap
plause aceorded this number went
to the accompanist, Walter Golde,
who did more than an aecceptahble
job all evening. Carpenter's SBil.
houettes and the trifling Toa Young
Gentleman closed an exceptionally
enjovable program.
.
Police Commissioner Is
Arrested as Violator
(By International News Service.)
VANCOUVER, B. C., Dec. 13.-W. C
Findley, British Columbla prohibition
commissioner, Is under arrest, charged
with ilegally importing a carload of rye
whisky Into the province. He was ar
rested Thursday at Blaine, on the in
ternational boundary
Findley has been relieved of his of
fice as rmmhlllon commisgisoner and
{)rn\-im-i.u officers say more charges will
w made against him "
Findley was campaign manager of
the prohibition mo®ément and on rec
omemndation of the rruhlhmnn organi
zation was appointed prohibition com
missoner
Urges Bi-Partisan Boa™
For U. S. Reconstruction
‘&ly International News Service.)
ASHINGTON, Dec, 13.-A ‘“recon
struction commission,” of ten members.
five Republicans and five Democrats, to
be appointed by the President to in
vestigate all problems involving capita
and labor, demobilization of t‘\o arms
and navy, finance, ete, is vrovided for
in a bill introduced in the House Thurs
.Ju\ by Representative Selhiman, Re
üblican, of Maryland. and referred te
the House labor committee
The bill provides that the members
of the proposed commission hall serve
for two years, shall receive 35,00 a year
and traveling expenses and shall expond
not more than 5100000 a gear in “the
course of thejr Mvuulnln‘
PIAVA Y, pununmpiuil 18, IHio
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PWithers
By FRANCES COWLES.
Withers an Aristocratic Family of
Virginia.
It was often the case in colonial days
that the most distinguished families
showed the least concern about matters
genealogical. Free from the traditions of
the mother country. it would seem as if
these daring colonists and pioneers cared
little for family distinctions, and even
when they had much to be justly proud
of by way of aristocratic relatives back
in old England, they thought little about
such matters. So busy were they in
finding & home for themselves and their
progeny that they had little time to
consider the honors handed cown to
them by their ancestors.
Quite naturally the Virginia family of
Withers were of excellent connection in
the Old World, still the family records
are sadly lacking. The coat-of-arms be
lJonging to this family here depicted is
known to have been ‘‘granted to and
confirmed to Sir Richard Withers, of
2ast Sheen, the ancestor of the poet,
and registered in the college of arms,
London."”
The coat-of-arms is deseribed thus:
Argent a chevron, gules, between three
crescents sable The crest is a rhi
noceros or, It is said that the first set
tler of the name came from Lancaster,
England, and settled in Stafford, Va
There seems to have been a James
Withers, who came to Virginia about
1609, He had an only son, James, who
had six children: John, James, Benja
min, George, Peggy and Hannah,
John and Benjamin migrated to Ken
tucky. James married Susan Waller
and George married Betsy Scanlon.
A. W, Withers, of Gloucester County,
Virginia, to whom the preservation of
the coat-of-arms is due, was the son of
Dunham Withers, the son of Reuben
Withers, who was born in Kentucky,
removed to Alexandria, and finally in
1816 settled in New York (Mity. Reuben
was the son of Thomaz and Elizabelh
Bonham Withers, of the Virginia family
of the name,
(Copyright by MeClure Syndicate.)
SRRDE dandaiioibin. Gl St So SR el o SRR SRS AR
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DAVID T. BUSSEY, "
FORD DEALERS,
188 Peachtree, Ivy 360‘
Copyrighi. 1915, International Featurs Service, Lam
Registered U. &. Patent Office.
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CAMP JACKSON, COLUMBIA, 8. f‘..'
Dec. 13.—Changes are coming thick and
fast at Camp Jackson. Following the
announcement that Brigadier General
Robert M. Danford, who has command
ed the field artillery replacement depot
and the camp for many months, had
been transferred to Washington to serve
in the office of the chief of field artil
lery, it was announced that Brigadier
General Dennis H. Currie, commanding
the 172 d Field Rrtillery Brigade, would
assume command of the camp,
On the heels of this came the state
ment that General Currie had been as
signed to Fort Sill to become command
ant of the artillery school of fire there,
and that Colonei P. 'W. Booker, senior
instructor of the field artillery replace
ment depot, would command in the in
terim between the departure of General
Danford and the arrival of another gen
eral officer Now orders have again
been changed and General Danford wiij
remain here until the arrival of Briga®"
dier General Thomas H. Rees, who will '
command the Twentieth Field Artillery
Brigade and the camg . General Ross 1s
expected to reach Columbia on De
cember 16. 4
29 9 .
The officer's club of the Tweifth
Regiment, recently completed, will be
formally opened Friday night with eight
yvaudeville actg, followed by a dance.
.Musn' will be furnished by the Tenth
Regiment orchestra. The club is one of
the most comfortable in the camp. One
of the features it boasts is a fireplace
six feet wide
- - .
A farewell dinner was given in honor
of General Danford at Ridgewood Club,
the hosts being the members of his
staff and brigade commanders at Camp
Jackson. The affair was in direct charge
of Coloneil Ranier and Major Milligan,
camp adjutant. After-dinner speeches
were made by General Danford and
Colonel P. W, Boocker. Those in at
tendance were Brigadier General and
Mrs, Danford, Rrigadier General and
Mrs. Currie, Colonel King, Colonel Mur
ray, Colonel Booker, Colonel Smith, Col
onel Ahearne, Colonel and Mrs. Van
Duzen, Colonel Goetze, Colonel Parker,
Colonel Dickinson, Colonel Osborne, Col
onel and Mrs. Paine, Colonel and Mra,,
Ranier, Colonel Sandford; Major Millis"
gan, Major Whiteside, Major Martin,
Major and Mrs, Purnell, Major Harri
son, Major and Mrs. Crunden, Major
Peterson, Major and Mrs, Owsley, Ma
jor Huey, Captain Brown, Captain Long
Captain Lydecker, Captain Rainsford
and Lieutenant Dean.
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