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2 ATLANTA, TIRED BUT HAPPY, BIDS ITS GAY GUESTS FAREWELL Thousands at.- Play in Gala Streets on the Last Great Carnival Night Port. Hands of Rebels, Gives Them Complete Mastery of \'(l"‘»."f" M."l:'\.‘; Contnued From Page 1 U. S. Fears Desperate Move by Huerta. 4 Za i ¥ Carranza Recognizes O:l Men, General Curranzin lLas notifled the state Department that the Unitad Stutes can send representatives to the ail districis (o ook ol for Ameriead interests there Announcement of Carranza’s action was maide ot the White House to-day Me granted o special request sent to him from Washington and President Wilgan expressed hig pleasure over the answer from the Constituiionaliar leader When receiving the delegation of il men vesterduy who called at the White ilouse to protest against the neglect shown by the United States toward the owners of thess proper tien. President Wilson gave assur ineEs that as soon ax Tamploo was in the hands of the Constitufionalists he would make special efforis to have the ail properties protected. Last night he requested Secretary Bryan to get in imunediate touch with (’arranza and urge him o permit the oil wells 1o be reopened As a special favor to the I'nited States Carranza agreed Ly let unarmed civilians take charge of the properties Not to Recognize Rebe's. It was denied on (he highest an Liorit - thy State Department to dav that the (‘ons 11101 ats will he recognized £ heiligereants or thyt the RituAalioh respecting t ¢« Grovernments ittitude toward the Mexlcan factions would in at vay he changed pend R meatation werture In the office of Counselor Tansing ! wax ascertained that the State De partment’'s po vy o odictated by Becrs tary Breap, would net favor an aper avowal! of a recognition of the Car Y nEA ’L.!‘f‘l . S Dublin Man Makes . . Catch of Fine Fish DUBLIN. May 14--What ig prob Bihiy the ryest singie catct i hiR fish here many vVears was hrought te¢ Dubiin thi maorning " Hug Smitl hid 38 unusua TR Arp he caug na trot line from he Owonee Rive 1 few miles heiow [Dub LNpPaiE in alifornia Iregl and Vashkingion a rding o pians niet « and announced here by e Clarence rise Wilsor general sscretary the G BRI ADCE Rorto { the. Methodist 2.000 Hogsheads of ) » Tobacco Are Burned ILOUISVILLE KY ~ May 14 Eire carly to-d: legiroved 2060 hog heads of toba in a warehouse in e ‘ lixirie (Charles K an eleciriciar be 1 entangle n ve wires and TAR & A electr tod by view of Ihareds ! persons I'hie Bre OKS was ¥ CAR WORKERS ON FULL TIME ADSDEN ALA May 14 Fhe pant of the Gadsden (ar Works employving a it 700 men. w hAs been prunning five days a week has hegun operating on full time six .a_:.a- a week SRE—— 5 iyys : . Brilliant Ball at Audi . > torium Attraects Vast ] r S v I'hrong of Nobles and Beautifully Gowned P Women. Continued From Page 2, train of special mtesl cars has heen chartered for the trip ;f Great Night of Gayety. g Altogether, however, Thursday was a day of rest and reaction. And cer tainly rest wag neended, for never was thero anotner night like Wednesday's when nohnd aiept when nobody seemed to tire, when a hundred thou sand palrs of lungs tried themselves in as many shrill noles of pure ex therance, and Atlanta’ recls were a discardants babel I the name of Allab, the Marvelonus anid Paotent Krow ve. all pieapla, that there was t night for memory Hardlv so many peoapic were on | treets 14 the night of the great parade, which fact prerim served better the purposes of the carnival pirit There was just enaiigh room for the many hetero gereans bhands 1o fi up and down unimpeded, and for those who listed to o e Al every irbstone and hotel lobb and for automaobiles to creep | throtugh tha shiftiug mass of prome naders It was truly a night of antomobiles An nbroken line of glaring head Higghts stretehied for miles each way from Eive FPoint nd thousands rode ther: to tlie ot the festival, Aticl in # nnohiles or atoot there was | no difference, for ihose who rode \\'vrv‘ armalt with the . and paper 1 I ‘ )] int srture, and W i 1 of, confetty No Worries Last Night. ! 1 i g foir cavaliers, v 1l . i 1 r drills hg 1 @il 1 ) ' * WiLR u_ulhh‘: 0 o i ! t #leep or pack. ;{Wfl’;‘ :'fk‘ 9. C 7 1 ?:\ L AN L&.fi’ u.z:’ Y g s iy "\ ) ' S w 4 A , N o i [ ¥ ;i B g it X 4 » 8 :’M i ! \;l ‘ ,v 'y .__‘ \.{, ‘ “,_‘ “L: Bsl e “‘A' b e R Qo o S 0 R N ; PR Sl9 M;,gfi e P Yy, R J BN ."' '; 1 il ' ! B . ! 3 ' i [ o ol = it f’%‘%l( ) 5K I.aft to rieht Misx E 1 Ty (4 And so it was that the malidens of . Atlania recelved the attentipn of the ‘good felluws of the Shrine. Ever) Bhriner, like Jack Tar, found him a girl in the port of Atlanta; some of %’(!u- mere ambitions nohles were lad ‘eped with a veritable company of giris Hadl Temple held a grand march ‘mlong Peachiree n Shriner and a vers happy gitiat the head of iU Shriners tantd giris patred benind them But the EBvansvitle bunch was only ong oaf twentv-tveé that arranged such a pro [ ren o | MWahabi femple, of Jachson, Miss was: one of the merrisst Gf the ol ,mz-i-- up of siender youths who mignt have been gayv on Monday, muigilin Lon Tuesday, bl wereg vértainly manis ;.;u‘fl{ Wednesday night In thelr desire Fto make Atlanta sit up and notice Cthem Fach with a girl they marched §fr\,\m one hotel to another, thrust Lthemselves nto the crowded lobbics ?:md danced | Tt was the sort of tango that {s very ' dellghtful bßut alse rather naughty, Lthat they danced hitt thex were ’m%a‘fl,\' happy with thelr stunts ani e was evervhody who saw them Great Crowd at Ball. ‘ With danclng at every lamip post, ith(-rn seamed littte need for the ball at the Anditerium, bul, ‘n spite of Lihe competition. wmore than 10000 fun—-n ald women found their way 1o ithe great hall. and filled it so com i pletelsy thar the jam at Five Points fwas bt o mill agsembly in eompari» ism\. However, in the Auditerium they were pather more dignified, for ;i}'wn- is nothing like a dress suit to stiffen a fellow's hackbone And the girls sl wore soft chiffons ahd evas I nescent siike that hardly wonid ad Lmit of an ahandoned lamboree Foite the Auditoritint Hoor hecanie 3 Staleis radligng solae 8 VR seritiegit trory horealis. The ratment caf the preal throhe Biliterest a 8 1t E,\.xv\w} mieved for those who wore noe dress sujis were arfaved in their gor. geous patrel uniforms Solomon’s court could have been nothing ke this for glory. It was not until late that the crowd MERRY GUESTS AT BIG BALL GIVEN AT AUDITORIUM FOR THE SHRINERS ¢ b ‘er\' TP R ol ‘ L < 70 g i - 5 y M e ,~~.'-,’ A A . ’ i% ¢ : L £ . 3 b R % R i ' 3 et % ! \ A AN £ k 1) ; ; %% ’; o 53 TMy A i ' Jimmie Mather, Oriental dancer, and J. M. 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Bafors that there was a iof ofi futlle attempts at the turkey trot, but al wavs the lusty steps subsided into the dignity of theé general promenade whien the dancers bumped into their neghbors with erashes that must have knocked a few teeth loose And through tha eariv hnirs of the evening the Auditorium bhubbled and saethed with sound A dozen bands, some of them makeshifts and some of them splendid, each ore deaf to the sther and oblivions of the fact that a grovidencs b given edr drams to a weak bwmanhty. groumnd out o their fepertoire. from UDixie” to the wati ing wrlgulew of the Unira alr In the big vaulted chamber the sounid was deatening i'he Dbanny pipers of the Medicine Hat Band, fromi Alberta, Canada, were the lowi ost of them all, and thelr snperh drummer, whaose art of manipuiating his two sticks has made him the envy of every hov in Atlanta, perspired with the force of persuading the Npbles assenibled that here was a hand that {8 a bhand indeed Rut after a while they danced Me dinah Toniple, leafhfe Atlanta at midnight, came to the ball fired with 1 determination to show fts hosta and fellows how dancing !'s done up on Michigan aveniie in Uhicago. Frank L Roundy, the pride and hoast of Medinah, dipped and one-stepped un il four partners panted thelr capitu- Intion, and Bob Daly, another from the Windy (City, drew in a few notches his three-foot girth, and pranced into the lists Nothing (n Medinah Temple's gplorious showing in Atlanta was quite so glorious as its mwan dapee at the Audiiorium Nile Nobles the Heroes. And at er Medinah had set the ex ample amd departed sorrowfullyv for tha mideight chaoschon evervhody ger in with asride ef sectionalism o oy as dances shoild: e dunded. Thoe affair become nothing iese than an artistle contest, with the ladies of the chiffons ani aiiks lending them- | selves to it very willingly Nohles from Beattle and from Jacksonville, and a!' between, seemed \ery ready THE ATLANTA GEURGIAN AND NEWRS to prove that the new wrinkles in the ballroom accomplishment had invad ¢d their towns Of conrse, the men of Nile Temple wera the heroes. Not all of Seattle's conilngent was at the ball, because celebrating so great a victory as they won . Waednesday: entrils a’ great re sponsibility an many drinks, VOl know But those whe came wers roperiv exultant, and patronizing, and very, very friendly, indeed. to tlie dark-browed Nobles from California if 1 those of alifornia who 1M Many staved awayv, for the task of drowning so great a sorrow as befell hem Wednesday entaiis a great re sponstbility ind manv drinks, vou Know Although it must be known hat Islam Temple was a very plucky laser, and paraded the streets right heartily until very late pitching from 1 ree trick several dozen crates of oranges and telling Atlanta to come to the great exposition. Howheit, as you might eayv, the girls were very, very nice to the Nile Nables, and gave thein each a rose (o wear (and a smile nd made them BrOmi h there will ha a ereat many pledges to redeem in Seattle next vead The erowd in the haillroom shifted often, coming and going bhack and forth between the Auditorium and va Pointa, Tt was a dignificd. bea tifur assembly in the big hall, and the Wi X 11 was verv pleasant, and 11! that, but after all was maid and done there was much more jollity un der the lignisiand tlags of Peachtree and Whitehalh If vou wanted o dance, vou could iance as well {n the streats as in the Auditorfum, and there wag room he n sirees ears and automobiles m o vour 1 s around svery flock ? { ime along Hi-Grade Shrine Pen nants. The College ‘‘Co- Op,"’ 119 Peachtree. | stunts than von conld have palled off in the dress-syited, chiffoned Audl torium. The streets were the bes bet for tha fun-makers, with automo. biles filled with happy folks, witl trucks crowded to the guards, with ita haze of confetti and its Hehtning flashes of paper streamers tha !NH'OHS(-‘H'IHP\" young men and womer - huarled from side to side of the street and that became after a while s thick that evervbody was tangled uj iliiu‘- Tinocoon, that Arst recorded vic timy of dolitium tremens, ' By actual ¢ount, therea were 39 different metiviis of enjoving one' self in play en the sireets Wednesday night, from breaklng windows t kissing ' giris Kosalr Temple’'s men from Louisville, Ky, even staged fake funera! for the delight of all whe caredqdto gee. There was, indeed, a hot time ir Atlanta Wednesday night, and glon enough to last for vears to come. I was a grand fizale, worthy of a Wag nerian genius, The offivial farewsll was 'the ban: | quet at the Piedmeont Driving Club & | Frederick R Smith, Rochester. No Y ‘!ha\ newly elected imporial poitentiate It was served on the cool terrace of tha ¢lith, where (hiere was easiiy Space i for the 500 guests to have the time o! ! their lives | WHEN IT'S HOT »'ll-..- Horsford's Acig L‘h‘sg“in, thirst e tay H., 2 SR ; Y :"\‘ White Citv Park Open. SR - 3 - mFrE e k‘g e Ur\". be T. IR ] Y Specialist ({or men) - Established Eleven Years 32 inman Bullding Atlanta . Georgia \ | | | ' ¢ Coast Shriners Dispense Good | Cheer to Newspaper Men, ' ‘ Chanters Give Concert. While avervone was congratiating Seattle on its splendid victory in win. { ning the 1915 meeting of the Impe i rial Council, the Callfornians showed { that they were not cast down by i playing host to the newspaper men in {a royal little informal reception at { the “Hotel California.” | George Filmer, potentate of Islam; | George Meredith, potentats of Aah fmes Car! Heilbron, known as the | “curly-haired baby” potentate of Al Bahr; Leo Youngworth, Al Malaikah's | potentate, and Douyglas White, direc | tor of publicity for the mammoth Cal | {fornia contingent, igsued the invita | tlons to the workers on Atlant I's three :nnwwr»:mnrs and the fourth estaters i responded in numbers. | Concert by Chanters. R Deeble was there. To those | who heard the music discoursed by | the l.os Angeles band and Al Malal { kah's chorus of silver-voliced chant ers, Biil needs no ilntroduction. He {is their director, and he waved the baton at the reception while twoscore { of throats, somewhat reedy It is true | piped out the information that “Pug” | White was “style all the while” or words to that effect, and that varioas | other members of the convivial party | were “out of sight.” | Charlle ('ollier, popular Al Bahrite, | Jolned the festivities for a time, and other leaders in California’s Shrine i dom made merry at the party | Californians Good Losers. { If there were any sSore spots over | the defeat administered by Seattle { ther were not in evidence ! “We want to be good losers,” sald | Potentate I{lmer ‘Seattle can count |on us to help them out wherever it is | pogsible for us to be of any assis { tance Wae wanted fho council and | we wanted it badly, but we are not | going to let its losy rankle.” | ~ Oranges, the golden product of the E(inm«-n State, and some of the Call | fornia wines were given to the guests | as souvenirs of the visit to the West | erners to Atlanta ! : ‘Forrest Adair Thanks 'All Atlanta for Its Aid. | “Upon this occasion of retrospec | tion,” sald Forrest Adair Thursday, “my heart is full of gratitude for all Atlanta, which gave of its time, its | labor, its money—in fact, of its heart l to the success of this conventlon,. | My undving thanks go out to Burton | Smith and his aides, who worked | night and day, and even did police duty to supplement the efforts of the regular police; to Burt Adams and his automobile committee; to Mrs. Sla ton and her auxillary of ladies, who made this convention the most gra | rious of all affairs; to the commit l tees of reception at the stations, who | forgot hours and schedules, and l\\.-rkfld without relief: to Captain | Seamans and the patyol; to Dr. A, N. | ®lkin, who organized a corps of vol inmmxr physiclans and nurses; to Dr llnrnv ("hilds, who piloted to grand snecess the nightly dances; to the po lice department for its nunquestioning | support; to the men on the street | cars. who worked patiently, gladly, day and night, making of themselves bureans of information, as well as | indefatigable servants af the public's | comfort; to all the others who did va ;flrc nt service for Atlanta. | “It was this untversal sapirit of good :"6"-11.\\‘::'1110 and hospitality that made ,'H;s convention great In only At | tanta. 1 think, could this fine patriotf | ism be found so hountifully. I am elad 1 Hve in Atlanta.” . Zinhrah Noble Given Silver Loving Cup. . AMen of Zuhrah Temple, Minneapo lis arose late Thursday, after a ju ' Litee Wednesday night that set At ‘ ta by the ears The onccasion of | the festivities was the honor acecord ed A. M Shuey, captain of Zuhrah's I Patral, at the Imperial Council meet ing Wednesday, when he was given a large silver loving cup as "the father ' Df the Arab patrol.” | Captain Shuey it was who twenty | vears ago took the first Arab patrol to an Imperial Council meeting. His ' liiea hecame immediately popular, and | the next vear there were flve, and the | next even mare, until 81 patrols came 1o Atlanta. on the twentieth anniver | sary of the birth of the patrol as an institution. T. B. Mellish, of Cincin yatl, Tmperial Potentite the year of . Shuey's first patroi, made the presen Puts Strength in a ’ Woman’s Eibow and makes work easier -cleans the sink and the spigots, polishes silver, scours the cutlery and makes the face of a sad iron glad. That's Spotless for making pots, pans and cooking things clean as sunshine. POITLESS SI 5 No Acids No Caustic gets after dirt, grease and grime and fAzd:it. Won't hurt your hands It makes a nickel actlike a dime Get it in the big economy can at your grocer’'s. Use it once and you'll say that nothing else can take its place. 5 .7": A 4/‘ A b‘g ——SagL i can for f > £~ el (8 AN . eSS TTETTTTIN »f’ v VUL i 8 st v o Cents FORREST ADAIR PRAISES - SPIRIT OF HEARST PAPERS A Forrest Adair said Thursday: { “The active, invaluable part taken by the Hearst Atlanta | publications—Tha Georgian and Sunday American—in the ! Shriners’ eonvention reflects their greatness as newspapers They have supported this great enterprise with the energy and | unselfishniess that is the true Atlanta spirit, the spirit that has made Alanta great. “The splendid hospitality and ecivie patriotism of these papers, as revealed in the ‘Oas 3! thev established for the en- ! tertainment of Atlanta’s visitors, is something that Atlanta should never forget. There was nothing that contributed to the | quecess of this most successful of all Shrine meetings more than this open-hearted, open-handed, lavish ‘Oasis.” It was con- | ceived and executed out of a great spirit. § ““As to The Georgian’s daily exploitation of the convention, § to which it devoted most of its columns, there i 3 nothing more | to be expected of newspaper enterprise. It was not a paper for i Atlanta alone during the week, but for the entertainment and ; interest of all the visitors, from whataver section, with its home 5 news from every part of the country. Truly it was a national § newspaper. ““The illustrations were superbly indicative of the sig’nifi-g cance of the convention. Shriners’ fun, Shriners’ seriousness, | Shriners’ splendor-—all were caught by its alert cameras, md; displayed unerringly.”’ T ’tat!on. and Zuhrah, taking the honor as its own, bore (aptain Shuey an his loving cup on a jubilee tour oi the city that ended somewhere aboul dawn. | = Spokane Gives Civic | * Flag to® Atlanta. The Atlanta Chamber of Commerce 'and its division branches Thursday ;was presented with a municipal flag of the city of Spokane, Wash, by members of the Kl Katif Temple of the Western city. The presentation was made bs Frank A. (Chase, special representa tive of the Chamber of Commerce, and commercial organizations of Spo kane. In his remarks Mr. Chase said the flag was a token of good will from the city in the Northwest to the Capital of the Southeast. President Wilkinson responded, thanking the Spokane representative for his expressions of commercial friendship for Atlanta. Mavor Wood ward also thanked the delegation. The committes from Spokane is con posed of E. J. Voss, potentate of Hl Katif Temple; H. A: Pierce, of The, Spokane Chronicle, and A. P. Eben reiter. . . 1a! Louisville's Jolly Bunch Comedy Leaders. There have been many jolly Shrin ers in Atlanta this week, but there have been none jolller than the nobles of Kosiar Temple, of Louisville, Ky. The Kosiars have heen In the thick of whatever fun there was, and have started a ot of things on their own account. The Kentuckians have been guartered at the Winecoff Haotel since they came to Atlanta and have kept the hostelry in a turmoil with their stunts. The rube band of the Kosiar Tem ple, known in Shrinedom as ‘The Jays from Louisville,” has been on of the big attractions of the conven tion. FEvery man was dressed to carry out the playwrignt's idea of the farmer, and there were some of them who fixed themselves up as okl wom en-——fat women. at that: The band has paraded almost continuously since the nobles came here and could alwavs be depended upon to draw a crowd and a generous share of ap plause. The Kosiar hand, under the direction of Captain Clarence L. Mar tin, {8 reckoned as one of the best in the 60 bands that furnished the music for the big meeting. The I.ounisville crowd early pro claimed themselves the official fun makers and ‘starters of something’ of the convention, and they proceed ed to live up to thelr title. One of their stunts is the ‘‘burial act” where a pair of shoes and a sheet are made to do duty as a corpse. TH®y Invest the old ceremony with a lot of new wrinkles and have a lot of fun out of It | £ i ™ PR RIS CASE HOPELESS | ST FRIENDS THOUGHT 1% 0 PhEy i | m 23 5' LNy Couald Not Fat or Sleep. A Friend Advises Black-Draught, ‘ Which Does the Work. | Pomerovton, Ky~ This town s the !fhomn of Mr. A J Hughes, whose lcondition for five vears was such as x%'n‘d him, as well as most of his ;l‘riends, to believe that he could not | recover. ! Mr. Huzhes pow sayvs: "1 was {down with stomach trouble for five i}'ears. and wonld have sick headache 'so bad at times that I thought surely "l would die. i "My condition was such that I ould not eat or sleep. I fried many lifferent medicines. but they did e no good. s “Nearly ail my friends thought 1 ;would die. but one of them advised me to take Thedford’s Black-Draught. LEIF f] . it WEkd i . b v ! WEST POINT, GA,, May 14.—The Hady Baker Company’s Grocery, the irgest in this part of the State, early -day was destroved by a fire which reatened to sweep the entire busi ress section of the city. The loss is hout $75.000, The flames weras not discovered un ¢!l they had made considerable head Wi Within a few minutes after the irrival of all of West Point's fire ghting equipment it was seen that tha large building was doomed. The fire was fanned by a stiff breeze and X b nd all control. The flremen devoted thelr efforts L.etly 1o saving the other buildings from destruction. Several caught fire rom the sparks and brands that flew from the burning building, but the 1 were extinguaished with lttle ramage » N . Farewell Serenade = 3 By Aladdin Band, The band of Aladdin Temple, of Columabus, Ohio, gave The Georgiar nd A rlean a farewell serenade on 1 Y ¥ a few hours before -the ( » Nobles left for their homes that lOt out some of the best music heard during a week of good music The Aladelin band occupies an en viahle position among the bands of rinedon nd is easily one of the shi Tl Atlanta has seen. Every ne ts members is a Noble, and he mn makes has attracted a 1 deal of attention during the big e - I'he Aladdin band was always 1 f a crowd wherever it went. B. Heston is its leader : Columbus delegation com prised, b les the band of 87 men, & 1t of more than 50 and a half a ired lainclothes” Nobles. They 1 the trip to Atlanta in a special sl nd will Jeave for home Thurs night, singing the praises of At nta and the South. Noble Henry Baz notentate of the temple, de res tha O ans have had a better ne \tlanta than they have ever ] ention has undoubtedly he t remarkable {in the his » Shrine,” gaid Potentate ] s We've enjoved every min o r stav here, and will always rm spot in our hearts for \tlanta and her hospitable people.” [ followed his advice with but Httle faith “However, [ have "Hhw taken Black-Dranght for three months, and can truthfully say that I am well. ‘T haven't had sick headache any more, and feel so thankful for what Black-Draught has done for me.” This reliable, vegetable remedy has been in suecessful use for three juarters of a century. To purify the lcod, renew the appetite, regulate iver. stomach and bowels, we urge W ifer, whan the same relief 14 Ir. Hughes found {is withir easy reach of you? At every drug stora. Only costs one cent a dose. By 1t Begin to-day.—~ADVERTISEMENT.