Newspaper Page Text
the weather.
Rain Tuesday night. Wednesday fair
,„d much colder. Temperatures Tues-
(taken at A. K. Hawkes Co.'s
Store): 8 a. m.. 68: 10 a. m.. 51: 12
noon, 50; - p. m., •*».
The Atlanta Georgian
"Nothing Succeeds Like—THE GEORGIAN”
AND NEWS
"Nothing Succeeds Like—THE GEORGIAN”
SPOT COTTON.
Atlanta, nulet; 9c. Liverpool, easier; 5.09.
New York, dull: 9.30. Savannah, quiet;
8 16-18. Augusta, steady; 9V Galves
ton, steady; 9hi- Norfolk, quiet; :• 1-18.
Houston,, easy; 9>\. _ .Memphis, steady;
Mobile
) 1-18.
VOL. X. NO. 100.
HOME(4th) EDITION
ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY; NOVEMBER 28, 1911.
home(4th) edition price.- aaas
He Will Soon Be In Our Midst
“I Wish for the Triumph of Mr
Pope Brown at the Polls,”
Declares Judge.
LETTER ANSWERS WHITE
.eaders of Prohibition Cause
Are Not Standing Aloof in
Present Campaign.
Men like Dr. L. G. Hardman and
Judge Covington, the authors of tho
prohibition law, arc standing aloof, and
men like Judge Hammond. Judge Ross.
Judge Anderson and Dr. N'unnally and
many ether leading prohibitionists
whom I might name refused to bo
drawn into such a campaign." declares
Hr John E. White, pastor of tho Sec
ond Baptist church, In a card In Tues
day's Atlanta Constitution, In which
the minister endeavors to sustain a
contention that prohibition Is not an
Issue In tho present gubernatorial
campaign. The Joe Brown followers are
those endeavoring to sidetrack this Is
sue even In the taco of the positive
declarations of Pope Brown for the
strengthening of the prohibition laws
and Judge B. B. Russell for abolishing
Iheni and substituting local option.
Hut Judge Covington and other pro
hibition leaders are not standing aloof,
declare the Popo Brown leaders. In
stead, they are actively supporting
Pope Brown’s candidacy, especially
Judge Covington. Volney Wlllll
Pop, Brown’s campaign manager, has
given out a letter written by Judge
Covington at his homo in Moultrie last
Wednesday, November 22, and ad
dressed to W. P. Anderson, president
Of the Fulton County Pope Brown club.
This letter contains tho following posi
tive declaration:
I take this occasion here, however,
say that with the present candidates
and the present Issue, I wish for the
triumph of Mr.. Pope Brown at the
polls. I am constrained to say this and
to authorize you to publish It for tho
reason that many of my prohibition
friends In the state have seemed to
think that some public expression of
my position Is proper."
And tn a postscript Judge Covington
adds this slgnllicant statement:
"There Is no way to prevent the
liquor question being a recurrent Issue
la Georgia polities except for the pro
hibitionists to register a vote that .will
serve for ail lime as a lesson arid a
warning to aspiring office seekers.”
Full Text of Letter.
Here Is tho full text of tho letter:
"Dear Sir—Yours received. I con not
say definitely whether I can address
your proposed meeting. 1 will let you
know soon.
"I take occasion here, however, to
that, with the present candidates and
the present issue, I wish for the tri
umph of Mr. Pope Brown at the polls,
am constrained to say this and to
uthorise you to publish It for the rea-
ou that many of my prohibition friends
i the state have seemed to think that
owe public expression of my position
i proper.
"In 1907 the legislature of which I
»'as a member made unlawful the man
ufacture and the sale of intoxicating
liquors In this state. This legislature
met In its second session In the summer
uf 1908, and In the meantime tho brew
frs were offering for salo In various
parts of Georgia so-called non-ititoxl-
ating beers. Our-court of appeals had
n the meantime decided, or given out
hat they would decide, that the sale
» such beer* was not violative of law.
tho legislature, therefore, amended the
lax act and laid a tax op such dcal-
:tw, expressly negativing the Idea that
“y intoxicating beers wero so taxed,
tr licensed. That this was a mistake
«as recognized by tho time the next
eglslature met. In 1909, and the lead-
hg prohibitionists fought the taxing or
icenslng of such dealers, with the re
mit that they were prohibited In all
"sees except In cities of over 2,500
mpulatlon.
Tipplns Bill Will Pass.
The present .legislature, which was
a session last summer. Is on the point
f passing what la known as the 'Tip-
Ins bill,' the effect of which will be to
Continued on Last Page.
ATTEMPT TO BRIBE
Two Men Arrested After Pass
ing Five Hundred Dollars to
Talesman Lockwood.
HAD AGREED TO HANG JURY
MORSE’S LITTLE DAUGHTER
CLASPED IN DADDY’S ARMS
Detective Browne, Who Was in
Hiding Near Premises, Saw
Exchange of Money.
\ THIS IS ABOUT THE SIZE OF ATLANTA’S THANKSGIVING BIRD.
Mathewson, The Georgian’s photograph*!*, had an awful draam about the arrival of a giant turkey last night,
and got up in his sleep and took a picture of it. If all Atlanta's turkeys were rolled into one it would be about this
Thanksgiving Day Should Top
All Attendance Records Ex
cept Long Island Event.
By PERCY H. WHITING,
Savannah, Ga„ Nov. 28.—A warm
rain and windy weather greeted tho
tens of thousands of automobile raco
fans as they turned- out thla ■morning
for a day of tlme-kllllng.
The last official practice for Thurs
day’s grand prize was scheduled for to
day and tho cordon of flagmen was
thrown about the big seventeon-mllo
circuit at the regular time this morn
ing. Owing to tlio rain and wind, how.
over, little work was done. Tho cars
that were to tako part In both tho Van
derbilt and grand prize camo thru tho
former race In good order and need no
further tuning. Tho other machines
wero all In good shape a week ago. No
practlco will bo held tomorrow, and
Thursday morning at 9:80 the free-
for-all cars get away for tho 400-mlfo
race for tho grand prize. Tho road
authorities examined the local course
as soon ns yesterday's race ended and
pronounced it In ex
thousand convicts-i _
machines will work on It steadily until
the grand prize starts.-
Monday’s crowd around the Savannah
course was so large that on Thursday
there should be a • holiday outpouring
that will top anything ever seen at an
American automobile -raco. meet, with
the solo exception,of those at the Long
Island motor parkway.-
ATLANTA’S TURKEY DINNER
TRIFLE CHEAPER THIS YEAR
MR. AND MRS. ATLANTA, Dr.
To CUTTEM & SLIOEM, Caterers to the People.
November 30—Turkey $ 6,000
Sauce and Fixings 18,000
Total $24,000
Please remit!
Atlanta’s turkoy bill for Thanksgiving
day will bo about 86.000, according to
tho best estimate of the commission
merchants. There will-be about 2,000
ordinary turkeys consumed at an aver
age of 82.60 each; some four carloads
of average-sized birds, mainly shipped
here farm Tennessee.
Hotels, high-class cafes and some of
the near-beer Baloons that serve turkey
dinners, will have shipped to them
about 250 turkeys averaging 84 each.
For these choice ones they pay 27 conts
a pound, besides the express charges.
The turkey bill is but one Item In
the Thanksgiving menu of Atlanta,
which Includes fat hens, chicken, oys
ters, celery, cranberries, rabbits, chest
nuts for stuffing and mountains of
fruits and vegetables. It is not far
from the truth to say that tho bill for
the trimmings and dessert will be three
times the turkey bill.
More Eaten on Christmas.
Three times ns many turkeys are
consumed Christmas as on Thanksgiv
ing day, according-to the commission
men. There are but'two months of the
rhen'tui
lanta market.
Mrs., Householder may go to market
for her Thanksgiving-dinner this,year
In -thcsglad - knowledge that nearly
everything naturallyinBSOclated with tho
last Thursday of November, In the edi
ble line.,-Is a, bit-cheaper than a year
ago. The contents of-her purso will
go further, toward a bountiful repast,
and when the day comes and she sur
veys tho white cloth dotted with big'
and little and medium-sized dlzhes,
each holding It* savory burden,, and
notes the ravenous, roving glances of
the kiddles, this thought in her house
wifely, economical mind will atand up
add to her Thanksgiving cheer.
Turkeys are from one to one nnd one-
half cents per pound cheaper than last
year, both dressed and on foot. Aver
age turkey Is selling Tuesday at 22
cents per pound dressed and eighteen
cents per pound on foot. The choice
ones shipped to the hotels are bought In
Tennessee at 27 cents per pound dress
ed. There are plenty of turkeys, but
the majority of them arc small. Ten
nessee Is depended upon mainly for
Atlanta’s turkey supply, for growers
thero make it a regular business and
know how to feed them. Denlers say
that the north Georgia mountain peopla
are beginning to raise them In quanti
ties.
Hens and chickens will be cheap
enough. The former run from fifteen
to eighteen cents, the latter from 19 to
24 cent*. - Rabbits are selling from 15
to 25 cents. Vegetables that have been
home-grown are cheap. Those brought
from Cuba, Florida, California ano
other • centers are more expensive.
The best oysters are selling at 40
cents a quart. Cranberries are a shade
higher, averaging around fifteen cents
per-pound."Celery
prices are normal.
Dr. Morris, Whose Car Killed
Farrow Hall, Given Limit’by^
Recorder Nash Broyles.
Had Dr. Morris - been driving at a
rate of-eight miles an hour he. would
have>heen within the law. .When he
drove eighteen or twenty miles an hour
he was without the law. Hence, he was
an outlaw.” . . .
As an accompaniment > to this ex
presslon. Recorder Broyles on Tuesday
morning vigorously applied the law to
IV. O. H. Morris, a physlc an of Buck-
head, whose automobile last Friday
morning ran down and kill'd Farrow
Hall, a contractor of X1S McAfee-st., at
Forsyth and Luckfe-sts. Dr. Morris
flnaj 8100.7E on !*» charge of vio
lating .the city speed law. and was held
for trial In the ztate courts on the
charges of involuntary manslaughter
and violating the state automobile law.
The latter offense embrace* the charge
that Dr. Morris drove reckleszly on a
public highway of the state.
Attorney W. A. James, counsel for
the physician, announced that he woula
appeal from the decision of the recorder
in the city case of exceeding the speed
limit. Bond waa later made tn all caae*
and Dr. Morris waa yeleased, pending
trial In the higher courts on the two
ztate charges and the decision of these
courts In the protested city caae.
Attorney Harry Ethridge, a promi
nent member of the Tabernacle Bap
tist church, of which church Mr. Hall
was a deacon, conducted the prosecu
tion. In summing up the case Attorney
Ethridge denounced Dr. Morris as being
f-arge profits oft are realized from
thing which Is advertised and If
*" anything-that you don’t want
don’t know what to do to realise
E?® profit on it. Just write a little ad clearly guilty of criminal negligence in
ties , an<J atur once with us you've the slaying of Mr. Hall, and pleaded
a it a hundred purchasers have - - - - ■ •* * " — -um
N it.
USE GEORGIAN WANT ADS.
that he be given the full penalty of the
law. He also vigorously assailed reck
COLD THANKSGIVING
-Another, Icy wind Is swooping down
upon Atlanta from the Northwest, the
third one for this month. The weather
man says that the sky will be clear
Wednesday, but that the cold wave will
be upon us, the Indications’being that
tho mercury will drop to 24 by Th
day morning.
. So far the lowest temperature In the
wake of'the wave has been four de
grees below zero, at Sheridan, Wyom
ing, Tuesday morning. The tempera
ture has already started dropping, go
ing to 44 at 2 o'clock. But the real
cold is not expected to arrive until
Wednesday afternoon and night.
becoming dangerous for people of At
lanta to be In the streets.
In his statement to the court Dr.
Morris had said that he attempted to
stop hfs machine and avoid the acci
dent but was unable to do so, and also
expressed deep regret over tins Uagedy.
As to this, Attorney Ethridge dramat
ically exclaimed:
“Dr. Morri* says he Is sorry, and no
doubt he is. But like hts effort to
op his car, hit regret comes too late.”
Witnesses testified that Dr. Morris,
who was in a. two-passenger car, waa
driving entirely too fast at the time of
the accident, one witness estimating the
speed at eighteen miles an hour and
another estimating It at eighteen or
twenty miles. Mr. HalPhad Just start
ed across Forsyth-st. at Luckie, when
struck, and the evidence showed he
waa knocked a distance of several feet.
It waa also shown that the car ran
about 16 feet beyond the point where
Mr. Hall fell befQre It was stopped.
Dr. Morris explained that he may
have be/n going "a little fast" before
he reached tha corner, but that he
slowed, hi* car at that point. He said
that when he saw Mr. Hall start acroes
the street he put on hlz brakes and that
Mr. Hall stopped. Thinking Mr. Hall
less autoists generally, declaring U Is had stopped to let him by, he said, be
- - -A-.,;,- ~
STRAINEDBY A SPEECH
While Intended To Be Pacific,
Lord Grey’s Remarks Gave
Offense to Germany.
Loe Angeles, Nov, 28.—Three men
sic nrroHted today in an alleged Jury
bribery plot In the McNamara case.
The men are: Bert Franklin, former
ly a deputy United States marshal, now
running a private detective agency, em
ployed by the attorney* for tho de
fense; Captain White, a juror In. an
other department of the superior court,
and John T. Lockwood, a Juror drawn
In the panel that reported to Judge
Bordwell today. The arrests were made
by Detective Samuel Browne, attached
to tho district attorney's office, and by
a number of his deputies.
Browne alleges that the two men,
Franklin and White, had bribed Lock-
wood to hang the Jury In the Mc
Namara case. He asserts that $500
had been paid by Franklin to Lockwood
and that White, showed him $3,600 more
which was to be paid a* soon as the
work was done.
The three men 1 were arrested after.
It Is alleged, the entire transaction had
been witnessed by Browne and Ills de
tectives, and the men, with the money
In -their possession, were hustled away
to the Jail. They were taken* to JalL
Photo by Mathewson.
MISS JENNIE MORSE AND LITTLE ANNA.
Anna, the thirteen-year-old daughter of Charles W. Morse, arrived
in Atlanta Tuesday and went to the poet hospital to see her father, for
the first time since hie conviction. Her aunt. Miss Jennie Morse, also of
Bath, Maine, and her brother, Ben, accompanied her.
CITY PAYS DOUBLE
FI
So Reports Electrician Turner
at Meeting of Committee on
Lights and Power.
In a report to-the council committee
on electric lights and power. City
Electrician R. C. Turner states that
Atlanta la paying a 100 per cent higher
rate for the electric power for schools,
hospitals and other municipal build
ings than itiany other cities are pay
ing. He urges that a new contract bo
made with the Georgia Railway and
Electric Company, or - that tho city
build a private plant.
The report was read fit a meeting of
the committee Tuesday morning at
which Preston Arkwright, president of
the Georgia Railway and Electric
Company, and Engineer W. R. Collier,
were present. Mr. Arkwright Imme
diately went Into a discussion of the
claims of the city electrician, but ns
only two of tho committeemen were
present consideration waa postponed
until a meeting of tho committee Fri
day afternoon at 8 o'clock.
However. Mr. Arkwright made the
point clear’that Atlanta was being
charged the same rate as private cus
tomers, and that the rate* were ap
proved by the railroad commission.
"I don’t want the insinuation that
the city Is being discriminated against
to go unchallenged," he said.
Wants New Rate 8yztem.
The city electrician’s proposition was
Anna,’a School Girl, Sees Father for First Time Since His Sen
tence Began—His Son and Sister Arrive Also—But a Brief
Visit Is Permitted by the Attending Physicians. ,
For the first time since he was sen
tenced to serve fifteen years in the
Federal prison in this city Charles W.
Morse, the former Now York banker,
looked Tuesday upon the face of his
daughter, Anna.
The girl—a slip of a lass of thirteen,
1th deep blue eyes and hair that hangs
in a luxuriant braid well down to her
waist—stepped up to her father's cot
in the post hospital at Fort McPherson
fifteen minutes after sho had arrived
from her home in Bath, Maine, on tho
Birmingham Special, and next Instant
aa in a flood of tears.
Behind her stood her aunt, Miss Jen-
nlo Morse, who had accompanied her,
and Ben Morse, the sick man’s son, who
had Joined tho party at Baltimore. They
had been met at the station by F. L.
Seely and whisked to the hospital In
his car.
For an instant not a word was
spoken. Then Morse, half raising and
utterly unnerved, took tho girl In his
arms and called her again and again
by name.
gut a Moment’s Visit.
Early in the day It was seen that
the patient would not bo strong enough
to enduro a prolonged visit even from
those dearest to him, and It was ar
ranged that the members of the family
should remain but a few moments, so
after the greeting they left the hospital
and went to the Piedmont, whero they
wllMive during their stay In Atlanta.
Later Tuesday, if the patient is.strong
enough, they may return to the hos
pital, but under no circumstances will
they bo permitted to tax tho strength
of Morse. Major David Baker, tho post
surgeon, who has charge of tho cas<\ is
fully alive to the fact that the leaat
undue excitement will retard the recov
ery of the sick man, and the members
of the family aro equally anxious that
ho shall not be overtaxed.
Slnco Morse was transferred from
the prison to the hospital and placed
under the care of four experienced
nurses sent on from Washington at the
direction of Attorney General Wieker-
Hham. he ha>* repeatedly called for his
daughter. Jfls greatest desire was that
she come to Ids bedside, ami when
Major Baker decided to allow his pa
tient to see whom ho wished, the girl
was sent for.
It was a bit over two years ago that
Morso last saw tho girl. Ho was then
out on ball, awaiting the reopening of
his caso In New York, nnd had gone tn
his old home in Bath to obtain needed
rest. Ho had given Instructions that
Anna bo kept wholly ignorant of his
misfortune, and this order lmd been
carried out to the letter by members
of his family.
How tfla Secret W*e Kept,
Not only did the family refrain from
telling the girl what nil wero aware
she would eventually discover, but ihm
Continued on Last Page.
175 NEW CITY STREETS. COLONEL T. E. SCREVEN
IS DEAD, AGED 82 YEARS
that the city be given one rate for
all Its 'buildings. He explained that
having all the business lumped to-
gether would give the city a much low
er rate according to the schedule of
rates of the electric company. It was
arguing this point that took up more
thun an hour at the meeting.
At present the city has 65 different
contracts with the. company, each
standing on Its own merits. The con
tention of Mr. Turner Is that the city
should have one contract, nnd Instead
of being a retail customer of the com
pany get a wholesale rate.
In reply, Mr. Arkwright said that
giving the city one rate for all Its cur-
rent would be discrimination, and he
explained how the rates were classl-
London, Nov. 28.—While Intended to
be pacific In It* nature,: the speech de
llvcrcd in the house of commons yea-
terday by Foreign Minister Grey on
Morqccan negotiations among Great
Britain. Germany and France, has
tended to draw more aharply the lines
existing between Great Britain and
Germany according to diplomat*-who
were willing to discus* the speech to
day.
For the first time in many year* the
leader* of contending political factions
In Englaml stand snoulder to ahoulder
on a recognised policy. All are back
Ing up the Speech delivered by the for
eign minister, and special attention I*
being called to the fact that no public
utterance In a decade has resulted In
such a display of patriotism as the
Grey address.
Press opinion, as stated today, up
held the policies of the foreign minis
ter a* representative of the wish of
the people of the empire. The expla
nations furnished In the speech have
satisfied the curiosity of the English
eople on some chapters of England’s
Iplomatlc negotiations hitherto secret.
released his brakes and started ahead
again. At this. Mr. Hall, the doctor
said, walked right In front of the car.
He was of the opinion Mr. Hall did not
zee him at all. ,
installation. He said that no Indi
vidual was given one rate because he
happened to own several buildings, and
that It tvould be dlicrimlnatton that
the railroad commission would not ap
prove If the city was given one con
tract for all It* institutions.
Councllmen John E. McClelland -and
J. J. Greer were the only members of
the committee present, nnd Mr. Mc
Clelland finally made the point that
the contract with the electric company
did not expire until March, 1918, and
that he did not feel at liberty to un
dertake to abrogate that contract with,
out Instructions from council. Mr. Tur
ner called his attention to the ruling
of City Attorney Mayson. which Is that
all contracts automatically come to end
at the end of each year, by a provision
of the charter.
Csergisrr Cut It 20 Per Cent.
The contract the city now haa was
made In il*07 as the result of a cam
paign by The Georgian for the city to
build Its own plant. The contract then
resulted in a lowering of the electric
power rate about twenty per cent to all
individuals, as well a* the city. It was
made for five years, and tho one council
can not legally bind another.
there Is a
moral obligation that the contract will
be abided by untn Its expiration.
Mr. Arkwright finally stated to the
committee that It would be Impossible
fqr his company to make on* rate:to
the city for all Its plants. Mr. Turner
then produced a contract recently made
by .New York city, in which a low
wholesale rate was made to the city.
"The way they got theirs, tho," said
Mr. Turner, "was to buy a tract of land
and prepare to build a generating plant
of their own.”
Mr. Arkwright smiled and said that
he did not think It would be wise for
Atlanta to build a plant. He continued
I Continued on Last Page,
Population of Atlanta Will Run
Over 160,000, According to
Figures in Revised List.
The addition of about 176 ne» streets
will bo the feature of the new 1912 At
lanta city directory, how in course of
mmpletlon by Joseph \\\ .Hill and his
staff. These are streets opened'by sub
division promoters and neighborhoods
i h it an; ••xtondi ntf till* city, and tlndr
official creation’marks os well as any-*
thing elBe the wonderful growth of At
lanta.' 7* . *
1911 directory, published
ber, was 166,470. The new directory
will put It beyond 160,000, but Just what
the actual*figures will be Is.impossible
to aggregate, until about December. 10.V
Tho. new directory covers not only,
tho city proper, but ail It’s suburbs—'
eomprehendlng Greater Atlanta.,* In se
curing the names Mr.;Hill's staff rode
to tha . end of all the car lines, except
tho Marietta, and walked' back,/ thus
covering8160-square,miles of territory.
a’s 4912 * city, directory* will not
Officer of Hampton’s Legion
and Member of Famous
Family Is No More.
Colonel Thomas Edward Screven,
South Carollnan nnd veteran of the
sixties, died Monday afternoon at his
residence, 69 Crew-st. He was In lib.
eighty-second year and had .been 111
but a'short, time.- 'Friends anil rela
tives had.been summoned nnduvero at
his bedside: when' he passed away.
-. Colonel Screven was educated for the
legal profession and was one of th*
first to.enlist from, his native state, lie
entered the Confederate service
tain of Hampton's legion. Beaufort dis
trict troops, and was one of the most
gallant and daring-of that state's
troop*. '
The cavalry of-Hampton's legion was
later organized ns tho. Second South
Carolina regiment, with M C. Butler ns
colonel. On the death.of Major Hamp
ton, Captain Screven became major and
later colonel-of the same regiment.
When General J. E. B. Stuart chose
AtlarUa’fll912 - city directory, will not his soldiers for the celebrated dasli
be ready for distribution-until Decern- th ru Pennsylvania he selected tho Hcc-
ber 16, when 1,600.copies, an average <>nd South Carolina cavalry. At that
of about one.to each hundred of pop- time Colon-1 M. C, Butler was colon. 1
ulatlon, will bo fresh from the printer. ar >d Thomas E.‘Screven waa lieutenant
The 1910 directory gave the Atlanta colonel,
district a population of 206,427, having ' After the war Colonel Screven re-en-
78,270 names In the book. A multiple lered the practice of law and was elecl-
of 2 1-4 .was .used-to,obtain the total ed Judge of the Beaufort district. Later
population. The-llll directory showed h ® was compelled to resign on account
209,002 population.In tho district. or failure of,hi* eyes,.due to exposure
Features that are observed by Mr. during the war.
Hill are that the names of at.least 500 As a result-of the Impairment of his
people, union labor devotees, were 1m- vision he was kept from active parth-l-
posstble to obtain. This, for the rea- patlon In his chosen profession and wm
son that a non-union printing firm Is forced to retire Into private life,
publishing tho book. These 500 per- Colonel Screven was a man uf mod-
sons refused to stive their names. !*»t and retiring disposition. He united
Another bunch of reticent people met I the hignest sense or honor and
by the name collectors are the tax-
dodger*.
"Many men told our name collectors
to keep their names out of the direc
tory, as they did not want to pay th*
21 school tax," said Mr. Hill. "Some
of these taxdodgers were observed to
have numbers of children of school age
and enjoying all the city’* fire, police
and other protection, yet they want to
dodge taxes. We laughed and obtained
their names anyway.
"The longest name In the city direc
tory has now disappeared. This was
tho Greek who has changed his name
to George Moore. The old name was
i-m i ng to remember." ■
Mr. Hill Is now preparing a new map
of Atlanta, which will oe up to date.
Thomaa B. Wilson, assistant city engi
neer, drew It and the Rand-McNally
Company, of Chicago, will print it. It
will measure 39 by 42 Inches and will
Include all the new streets anil commu
nity set lions , stabllslu
character the genial nnd kindly gra<-
of the old-fashioned type of Souther
gentlemen and charmed those wit
whom he came In contact.
Business Days
Before
21
CHRISTMAS
Shop Early and
Avoid the Crush
■ 1909, _