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NOSE
Grading of Peachtree
Blow to the Coasters
When the city ent the hump out of Peachtree
street and lowered the grade on West Baker
street it did a good thing for drivers and mo
torists, but it nearly ruined the best coasting
hill in Atlanta, as half-a-hundred boys and girls
discovered today when .they arrived with sleds.
The Baker street hill had been known to three
generations of youngsters as the best coasting
place in Atlanta.
The vonngste s were out before breakfast to
day. with sleds of as many different kinds as
There were kids. There were real store-bought
ones with steel runners, hastily-built coasters ot
soap boxes on board runners, mother s best
rocking chair sawed off and converted into a
si*-’
-That the Un n VGrf? o
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Let Us bethankfulwe're Not mormons
IIIUSSIIN TROOPS
BOE MEi
j Czar's Soldiers Sent to Prevent
Further Massacres of
Christians by Kurds.
ST. PETERSBERG, Nov. 28—Rus
sian soldiers are reported to have in
vaded Turkish Armenta from Batoum
to protect Christians from further mas
sacres.
Word was received from Tiflis by
I way of. Odessa that several hundred
I men. women and children had been
! killed by Kurds.
Americans in .
Turkey All Safe
WASHINGTON, Nov. 27. —Through
W. Stanley Hollis, the American con
sul general at Beirut, the state depart
ment today received reports from va
rious consuls in Turkish territory that
all American citizens in Asiatic Tur
key are safe and unmolested. Except
ror some excitement among the Mo
hammedans at Haifa and Adana,
everything is reported quiet in this re
gion.
The United States cruiser Tennessee,
the navy department was informed to
day, has left Malta for Smyrna, where
she is expected to arrive on Friday.
Retreating Turks
Continue Tortures
ATHENS. Nov. 28.—The retreating
Turkish army' in Epirus is continuing
its depredations. A dispatch from Epi
rus today states that twelve villages
have been burned within the past few
days and many Christians put to the
sword after being tortured.
Five hundred Turkish prisoners for
merly soldiers in the Salonika garrison
were sent to Greece on a ship today
following discovery of a conspiracy to
kill their guard >f Greek soldiers and
escape.
BLACKSHEAR WANTS CAR LINE.
WAYCROSS, GA., Nov. 38.—Black
shear people are anxious for the Way
cross Street and Suburban Railway to
extend the line to that town as soon
as possible. The street car directors
will consider the proposition Just as
soon as the main city lines are com
pleted.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AAP hvvt> rm ksDA Y. NOVEMBER 28, 1912.
a a a
WHAT I’M THANKFUL FOR
Interviews With the Sub-Conscious Selves of
Great and Near-Great Georgians.
Governor Joseph M, Brown: I am
thankful that I can roam In Eden, even
if my old friends Adam and Eve can’t.
Secretary of State Cook: I am thank
ful that a secretary of state is permit
ted to preside as a court occasionally.
It keeps him so happy that he is a
mere secretary of state.
Assistant Commissioner of Agricul
ture J. J. Brown: lam thankful that
Tom Watson’s voice still is so loud and
his hair so red that neither can be lost
sight of for any considerable length of
time.
Judge Robert Pottle: lam thankful
that a miss is as good as a Mile, and
that Atlanta still has sucli a fine re
corder.
Railroad Commissioner Murphy Can
dor: lam thankful that hair pulling in
this state is not as popular as railroad
mileage pulling seems to be.
Insurance Commissioner John Cope
land: I am thankful that I got my
alary In time to play Santa Claus to
nyself.
Captain “Tip" Harrison: I am thank
ful that the war is over, but that there
are a few people left who will listen
to a fellow talk about ft.
Secretary to the Governor Jesse Per
ry: lam thankful that the mistletoe
crop is not a failure this year, and that
it Is considered de rigeur to attach
bits of it to chandeliers and things.
Adjutant General Obear: I am
thankful that the militia can not get
along without me. for I should be very
miserable if it could.
Secretary of the Prison Commission
Yancey: lam thankful that sufficient
people manage to get into the peniten
tiary to keep my job worth having, *
Executive Secretary Ulm: 1 am
thankful that I have the weight of not
more than one administration a time
on my shoulders.
A dine Chambers, Carlos Mason, W.
C. Puckett: That Charles T. Hopkins
has quit city polities.
Hoke Smith: That not everybody
who wants a government job knows my
address,
Mayor Winn: That January I is less
than five weeks off.
Aldine Chambers: That the next ad
ministration promises to have so many
fights on its liands that nobody can tell
what two years will bring forth:
James G. Woodward: That th' vot
ers of Atlanta don’t believe in Dr. Os
ler's theory.
Carlos Mason: That the chief went
ahead and brought all that trouble on
his shoulders w'ithout putting it up to
me I have troubles of my own.
Chief Beavers: That Carlos Mason
imi Jim Woodward are too busy fight
ing each other to bother me.
Copyright, 1912, by the
Star Company.
Marion That a citizen may
put up a good fight and tell others how
to vote, even if lie isn't registered him
self.
Colonel "Bob” Lowry: That the Dem
ocratic congress promises to reduce the
tariff on red neckties.
Henry S. Jackson; shat I've saved
up something for a rainy day.
Clark Howell: That Underwood sup
porters are considered just as eligible
Democrats as original Wilson men.
W. T. Gentry: That I don't, have to
receive the kicks on telephone service.
The girls are paid for that.
Billy Smith: I am thankful that
gray hairs are still respected.
Hooper Alexander: I am thankful
that a district attorney's job pays more
than a governor’s salary.
Frank L. Stanton:
My heart is mighty thankful,
1 could dance and shout and sing.
They read it. and they never know
That just one brief, short year ago
They read the same durned tiling.
a
U. S. Pen and Jail
Prisoners Feast
Eating and playing marked Thanksgiving
da> for hundreds of the city's poor, as
well as tiie many prisoners at the Fed
eral penitentiary, today, in spite <>f the
snow covering the ground and the chilly
breezes freezing things up generally.
rhe inmates of the Federal penitentiary
probably were more feted and dined than
any others, but those protected by the
Srdvatfon Army had some treat them
selves, while the Associated Charities
joined in the good work.
Everything from an orthodox Thanks
giving dinner with turkey* and cranberry
sauce to a vaudeville performance en
tertained I’ncle Sarn's prisoners. The
vaudeville performance came at 10 o’clock
this morning in the prison chapel. A
number of the performers at the Grand
appeared through the courtesy of Hugh
Cardoza, manager of the theater.
Vaudeville Acts Enjoyed.
For many of the prisoners ft not only
was the first vaudeville performance of
their lives, but also the first acting of
any kind they had ever seen, and It was
with wide open eyes and mouths that they
watched in startled wonder the feats of
the acrobats and heard the songs of tenors
and sopranos. At 12 o'clock the big
dinner was served, Mrs. I. Springer*do
nating 81'0 oranges, or one orange for
each man.
The prisoners at the stockade and po
lice station were not so fortuante. The
stockade inmates had a half-day of rest
but the food served was the same pork
and beans, with an extra dish of fresh
pork. The same meal was served to the
prisoners at police station.
The convicts in the Fulton county
T. E. Powers
" r 5 ~ The Famous Cartoonist.
DIXIE EDUCATORS
IN ANNUAL MEET
Thousand Delegates Are Ex
pected at Convention Open
ing Tonight in Louisville.
LOUISVILLE, KY.. Nov. 28.—Edu
cators of the states south of the Mason
and Dixon line and as far west as Ok
lahoma began to assemble in Louisville
today’ for the general sessions of the
Southern Educational association w hich
will continue through Saturday night.
A thousand delegates are expected.
The first meeting will be heir] tonight
at Warren Memorial church. J. N.
Powers, state superintendent of educa
tion for .Mississippi, will respond to
the address of welcome. Dr. E. E. Rail,
of the University of Tennessee, will
speak on “A False Educational Basis
and Some of Its Ills," and Dr. William
Dinwiddle, president of the Presbyte
rian university of Clarksville, Tenn.,
will speak on "The Bible and Educa
tion.”
Three sessions will be held Friday
and Saturday. The papers on the pro
gram cover all subjects of special im
portance to education in the South.
There will be a round table of state
superintendents of tiie South Friday
afternoon.
SENATOR WHO FATHERED
EXCLUSION BILL IS DEAD
Ll>S ANGELES, Nov. 28. —Former
United States Senator John P. Jones,
miner, financier and for 30 years, 1872
to_ 1902. senator from Nevada, is dead
from a complication of diseases He
was in his eighty-fourth year.
Senator Jones was one of the small
group in congress who got for the Pa
cific coast the passage of the Chi
nese exclusion bill.
ehaingang had plenty to eat, with fresh
pork and other extra dishes. They re
ceived a full day of rest, for which they
were thankful, as the wind would have
been cutting as they worked along the
thoroughfares of Fulton county.
A big turkey dinner for the Salvation
Army was marked by the attendance of
hundreds who rarely had tasted such lus
cious viands as those served by willing
hands. Tiie poor generally were invited
and they took advantage of the oppor
tunity to eat dainty dishes, chicken and
turkey.
The Associated Charities also served
the many they befriend with basket din
ners, and thereby warmed the hearts of
many who were cast down and misera
ble. Suffering and misery wor forgotten
In the Joy of once moreea ting a real
Thanksgiving meal
E4Y DOC lb"l f 1U- HAVE SOME \
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THAT WOMEN AKE not WEARING
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THAT THERE ARE FqoK LESS OF
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THAT COAL 15 NO HIQHER.
— __i
Dr. George Brown and
The Gambler s Watch
Dr. George Brown, third man of the candi
dates in the first mayoralty primary, is bank ir
Atlanta for the first time since friends of Janies
G. Woodward and Aldine Chambers revealed let
ters indicating they had Dr. Brown's support.
Never a direct word could be secured from Dr.
Brown, for he was in New York.
The Doctor did not talk polities.
I got the most interesting souvenir of my
whole collect on.” declared Dr. Brown, radiating
smiles and good fellowship. ‘‘George Considine,
proprietor of Metropole, whose business was ruined
by the tragedy, gave me Herman Rosenthal’s
watch.”
That is very interesting,” cont'nued one of
the group. ‘‘But you know the finish of that,
mayoralty race was certainly a hot fight?”
“George Considine is an old friend of mine,”
said the doctor.
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