Newspaper Page Text
4
6 DEAD. 45 HURT
WHENTRAIN
15 DERAILED
Pennsylvania Flyer Jumps the
Track and Rolls Down 25-
Foot Embankment.
WESTCHESTER, PA., Nov. 28.—Six
persons are dead and 45 injured as the
result of the wreck of the Western Ex
press on the Pennsylvania railroad six
miles from here early today. That so
many escaped death is considered re
markable, as the train, after jumping
the track, plunged down a 25-foot em
bankment.
The dead have not been identified.
Twenty of the injured were brought to
the Westchester hospital and twenty
one were rushed by special train to a
hospital at Harrisburg. Six of those
injured are believed to be fatally hurt.
The w’reck occurred at Glen Loch, a
lonely flag station six miles from here.
The express was composed of two en
gines, a postal car, a combination bag
gage car and smoker, one day coach
and nine sleeping cars.
As the train was rushing along a
level stretch of track at high speed the
first engine jumped the track. The sec
ond engine, the postal car and the com
bination car remained on the track, but
the first five sleepers, which were all
steel, left the track and rolled down a
25-foot embankment. All those killed
were in the cars that went over the cm.
bankment. Word was wired to nearby
towns for relief trains and physicians.
A train with twenty doctors and a large
staff of nurses arrived from Philadel
phia to assist in caring for the injured.
A snow storm was in progress and a
heavy wind blowing which aaded to
the sufferings of the victims. Great
difficulty was experienced in removing
the injured. The cries of those pinned
in the wreckage could be heard fat
from the scene of the crash. Those
who escaped injury did heroic work
until outside assistance arrived.
LONDON POLICE HEAD,
SHOT BY CHAUFFEUR,
SERIOUSLY WOUNDED
LONDON, Nov. 28.—Sir Edward
Richard Henry, chief commissioner of
the London police, who was shot last
night by Charles Bower, a chauffeur,
was iti serious condition today and the
attending physicians, while hopeful,
would not commit themselves to a defi
nite prediction of his ultimate recovery.
Hriwer was remanded until Saturday
to awaitXhe outcome, of the wound.
The police have learned that Bower
applied for a taxicab license a month
ago, but that it was refused by the po
lice. They attribute the shooting to
revenge.
Although Bower fired three shots, but
one struck the mark. This entered the
left groin, inflicting a dangerous
wound. Sir Edward has been head of
the metropolitan police since 1904. Be
fore that he was in the Indian service.
WOMAN SAVES FOUR
SLEEPING FAMILIES
PERILED BY FLAMES
Occupants of the rooming house at 96
Cooper street are giving their thanks to
Mrs. Rex Johnson who, waking at 10
o'clock Wednesday night, found the house
in flames and, disregarding her own
safety, ran up and down the halls waking
those sleeping in other rooms. She did
not desist in this work until the safety
of all was assured.
The house was owned by Mrs. J. G. C.
Bloodworth and was occupied by four
families.
Friday and Saturday
BEST FANCY BOLTED
MEAL
CENTS
PECK
10 Pounds Best Grits 19 c
10 Pounds Best Head Rice. 59c
1-2 Pound Walter Baker
Cocoa 17 i. 2c !
10c Walter Baker's Cocoa 71-2
10c Fold 's Macaroni 7 l-2c
10c Package Corn Starch 5 l-2c
15c Hosford’s 10 l-2c
25c Bottle Olive Oil 12 l-2c
Guaranteed Eggs—Doz. 27 l-2c
Cottolene—Largest size . . $1.09
Cottolene—Medium 46c
English Walnuts (pound). 121-2
Black Walnuts (pound).. .2 l-2c
CASH GROCERY CO.
118 White! all
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B NEVIN.
Just because one old man walked 71)
miles to got a pardon for a wayward
son. in order tjjat the son might "take
Thanksgiving din-
a etv-w
ner with the old
folks,” and just
because a four
teen-year-old girl
petitioned the
governor to tak?
her brother out of
the chaingang and
put him in the
state reformatory,
and just because
both pleas were
successful, Gov
ernor Joseph M.
Brown does not
wish the impres
sion to become
deep-seated in the
public mind that
every old man
walks 70 miles ami every fourteen,
year-old girl who calls at the executive
offices can put over stunts of similar
persuasion.
The governor has much of the milk
of human kindness in his make-up
and he believes in extending executive
clemency wherever it is indicated, hut
a merely sympathetic plea, a "sob"
story with nothing substantial behind
It, does not get anywhere particularly
in the Brown philosophy.
The governor lets it be understood,
gently l»ut firmly, that executive clem
ency in iiis office arises out of merito
rious cases only, and parties encour
aged by late events need not waste
either their time or the governor's with
pleas for commutation of sentence, un
less there is very substan
tial in the cases besides the sympathet
ic end of it.
And there were entirely sufficient
reasons for clemency in the eases of
the old man and the young girl, re
cently successfully argued before the
governor.
Referring to a statement made by the
executive department of the state of
Georgia to the executive department of
the state of Oklahoma, to the effect
that the governor of Georgia is power
less to remove or In any Wise discipline
a sheriff in Georgia, and that the sher
iff may be reached byway of a trial by
jury-, and in no other way. The Sa
vannah News comments vigorously as
follows:
The necessity for a change In ex
isting laws was impressed on the
people of this state during a recent
Georgia railroad strike, and in the
case of one or two lynchings and
at least one hanging. The Georgia
sheriff Is responsible only to the
people who elect him, but when he
shows a disposition to look more
carefully after his own re-election
than after the enforcement of the
law, it does seem as if there should
be some method of administering
discipline more speedy than the
slow-moving trial by jury.
It is altogether likely- that two new
laws will be proposed In the next legis
lature vitally affecting the points raised
by The News.
A statute will be proposed giving the
governor more direct power in the mat
ter of disciplining a sheriff derelict in
his duty, and another will be proposed
providing for the execution of all crim.
Inals condemned to death at some cen
tral point within the state —either At
lanta or at the state farm, near Mil
ledgeville.
Both of these acts will greatly aid,
so many people think, In the sure and
orderly- enforcement of the criminal
law.
Game Warden Jesse Mercer says that
more hunters' licenses are being Issued
in Georgia tills year than ever before,
and with little or no friction.
When the licenses were first required
by the state there was considerable
kicking from various quarters, and pro
tests were registered frequently. This
year, however, the licenses are being
taken out and paid for cheerfully, as the
■ " 1
Yo<<™
I
f Ml f f
ARE THEY WEAK OR PAINFUL?
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Do you have night sweat* ?
Have you pain* in che»t and *ide*?
Do you *pit yellow and black matter?
Are you continually hawkin* and couchin*?
Do you have pains under your shoulder blades?
Th#** ar# Regarded Symptom* of
Lung Trouble and
CONSUMPTION
You should take Immediate step* to check the
progress of these symptoms. The longer you allow
them to advance and develop, the more deep seated
and serious your condition becomes.
We Stand Ready t* Prove to You absototely.thiu
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the German Treatment, has cured completely and
permanent It case after case of Consumption (Tuber
culosis), Chronic Bronchitis, Catarrh of the Lungs.
Catarrh of the Bronchial Tubes and other luna
troubles. Many sufferers who had lost all hope and
Mho had been given up by physicians have been per
manetly cared by Lung Genuine. It is not only a
cure for Consumption bats preventative. If your
lungs are merely weak and the disease has not yet
manifested itself, you can prevent its development
you can build up your lungs and system to their
normal strength and capacity. Lung Germine has
cured advanced Consumption, In many cases over
tive years ago. and the patient! remain strong and
In splendid health today.
Let Us Send You the Proof—Proof
that will Convince any Judge
or Jury on Earth
We will gladly send yon the proof of manv remark
ab.e cures, also a FREE TRIAL of Lung Gerralna
together with our now 4(Pp O ge b.H.k ( | n colorslonthe
treatment and care of consumption and lung trouble.
JUST SEND YOUR NAME
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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1912.
public seems to have been educated up,
in away, to the fact that the game
laws are designed not only to protect
the game, but to protect the hunter and
the sports as well.
"The game laws of Georgia," said Mr.
Mercer, "are working smoothly and
most satisfactorily. I do not antici
pate any widespread violations of the
statutes, moreover, as the public seems
to realize that we have made up our
minds to enforce them rigidly, and
impartially, wherever a disposition to
violate or evade them is discovered."
Chairman of the Interstate Com
merce Commission Judson J. Clements,
who formerly represented the Seventh
Georgia district in the national con
gress, said In a recent interview that
increased speed is not the thing the
traveling public needs or desires so
much as it is comfort and sanitation
In travel.
The commissioner thinks that dirty-,
dingy- car#, stuffy, badly heated and
poorly ventilated, minus perfectly san
itary arrangements for drinking and
toilet purposes—these, and poor depot
equipment and so forth, are much more
to be deplored than that it takes five
hours, rather than four and a half, to
go from somewhere to somewhere else.
So exacting are the duties of the
commission in Washington that Mr.
Clements seldom gets to Georgia now
adays, byt he came down to vote for
Wilson and Marshall on November 5,
all right!
A nice, little gubernatorial boom for
"Rufe” Hutchens, of Rome, has been
Inaugurated by some of his admiring
friends.
Georgians .generally will not object
to a Hutchens gubernatorial boom, of
course —but with John M. Slaton's in
auguration still some six months off. it
does look as if the Hutchens boom has
been trotted out a little early in the
game!
The court of appeals has. cleared up
the atmosphere in two particulars, with
respect to the new game laws.
The court holds that It Is unlawful to
hunt-Any sort of game at any time, pro
tected or unprotected by the law. save
in one's own militia district, without a
state license to hunt; anjl that game,
protected and unprotected, can not be
hunted on land other than t-he hunter's
own, without the owner's permission.
The court also holds that a hunt with
hounds, legally started, may be carried
onto land where the hunter has not the
owner’s permission to hunt, but that a
new hunt may not be originated there,
without the owner’s permission.
The game laws are now very well de
fined in Georgia, and the authorities are
of the opinion that those who violate
them must. In most instances, do so de
liberately and knowingly—and they will
proceed accordingly, where necessary.
Despite the depressing predictions of
a few who said the country- would go
straight onto the rocks of hard times
right after the national election, The
Winder News sees ralnsbows a-plenty
in the skies, and thinks things look all,
right in Georgia.
Protesting vigorously against such
"hard times” wails as it has heard, The
News advances these suggestions:
Yes, times are hard, if you listen
to the song of the money-grabber
and the pessimist. But Is there a
real reason for hard times?
Cotton is selling today for a third
more than it did this date last y-ear.
And It Is a debatable question as to
whether the crop is off more than a
third, compared with the average
crop raised in this section.
When a few Glooms and Grouches
Jregin to predict hard times, every
old Money-bag and Skin-flint starts
the bailiffs to hustling and a situa
tion is created that Is hurtful. Most
of these men are like the Irishman
who heard the bank was going to
the wall——he wanted his money
right then. When told to draw his
check and it would be given him,
he said:
"Faith, and if I can git it, I don't
want it.”
If those who owe money will
honestly do what they can to meet
their obligations, and if creditors
will be as lenient as circumstances
will permit, times will soon loosen
up.
Reports from all over Georgia indi-\
cate that times are all right
It seems that politics does not neces
sarily depress business in this state, for
Georgia has had lots of politics during
the past two years, and hand in hand
with it came abundant prosperity.
Representative Samuel J. Tribble,
who is just completing his first term
in congress, and will begin a new one
on March 4, passed' through Atlanta to
day, on Ills way to Washington.
He believes the Democratic congress
now in session will shape largely the
tariff program for the coming special
session of the new congress, and that
the extra session need not last more
than 60 days. He believes the tariff
will be revised sharply downward and
that right off the reel.
Mr. Tribble Is of the opinion that the
Democrats would make a fatal mistake
to trifle with the tariff issue, in the
light of the late presidential campaign
results.
RAILROAD AND EXPRESS
MEN PREPARE FOR XMAS
MACON, GA.. Nov. 28.—A1l of the di
vision officials of the Central of Georgia
railroad and about 40 of the agents of
the Southern Express Company met
here yesterday afternoon and last night
and formulated plans for the expedition
of the Christmas freight business. They
discussed means for the best handling
of the thousands of packages and
adopted a system which will, it is be
lieved, result in better service and more
satisfaction for all parties concerned in
the transportation of holiday goods this
year.
THINK GOO, CRIES
PATRICK, IS HE
GOESjHEE
Lawyer, Twice in Shadow of
Chair For Slaying Million
aire Rice, Pardoned.
OSSINING, N. Y., Nov. 28.—" Thank
God, this is a real Thanksgiving day
for me."
These were the words uttered today
by Albert T. Patrick, convicted slayer
of William Marsh Rice, who was par
doned from Sing Sing prison by Gov
ernor Dix after his ten-year fight for
freedom, during which he twice was
within the shadow of the electric chair.
Patrick, who was sentenced to death
In 1902 for the murder of Rice, an aged
Texas millionaire, in New fork city In
September, 1900, had waged an unceas
ing legal battle for his release and had
spent a fortune.
Wife Overjoyed by Pardon.
Governor Dix sent the pardon from
Albany by mail yesterday, and it was
expected that Patrick would be released
about noon.
Mrs. Patrick, who married the lawyer
in the Tombs In New York city on
March 30, 1902, arrived here this morn
ing from her home in Brooklyn, over
joyed at the successful conclusion of
the long battle.
"I knew my husband would win his
freedom, because I knew that he was
innocent,” said Mrs. Patrick. "We have
had a hard struggle, but the result jus
tifies all our efforts.”
Warden Kennelly, who knew unoffi
cially that Patrick had been pardoned
| before the papers arrived from Albany,
had made all arrangements to release
the prisoner.
May Fight For Rice Fortune.
It was reported that Patrick may
leave soon for St. Louis, the home of
John T. Milliken, his wealthy brother
in-law, but may return to New York as
a claimant for the millions left by the
aged man for whose murder he was ar
rested.
Milliken aided Patrick in his fight,
spending large sums to sustain the le
gal battle. He always had believed in
Patrick’s Innocence, and was one of the
first to wire his congratulations when
he learned that Governor Dix had
granted a pardon.
Many of the persons throughout the
United States who have been deluging
the offices of New York governors for
ten years with letters and telegrams in
Patrick’s behalf sent telegrams of con
gratulations today addressed to Sing
Sing.
WOMAN HELD FOR
DISORDERLY CONDUCT
ATTACKS PRISONER
Mrs. Minnie Harmon. 130 Gilmer street,
who will be arraigned before Recorder
Broyles tomorrow afternoon for disorderly
conduct, caused a scene In police court
yesterdaj- afternoon and temporarily
halted proceedings when she attacked
Hattie Davis, a negro woman, in the
prisoners' room.
Officers rushed into the room and sep
arated the two women before any serious
damage was done. The Davis woman
screamed, wildly for help when assailed
and startled the whole court room. Fear
ful that Mrs. Harmon would renew the
attack, officers removed the Davis woman
from the room.
She said Mrs. Harmon began beating
her without cause.
SWALLOWS POISON WHEN
WIFE WON’T “MAKE UP”
ST. LOUIS. Nov. 28.—William Har
pool, 23 years old. a chauffeur, attempt
ed to kill himself by drinking poison at
the home of his mother-in-law, after
his wife refused to return with him to
their Springfield, HI., home, which she
left a month ago.
SUFFEREDTORTURES
WITHECPA
Spots Burst and Ran All Over Face.
Sore and Inflamed. Had to Tie
Mittens on Hands. Cuticura Soap
and Ointment Cured Completely.
Freeland, Md,—“ Baby’s eczema started
In little spots and would burst and run all
over Ills face and wherever the water would
touch his face, it would make another sorn.
I’lmplos would break out and make his face
sore and inflamed, and he was very cross
and fretful. It was awful. He suffered
tortures from it, and wo had to tie mittens
on ills hands to keep him from scratching.
We tried everything we knew and had him
to three doctors, but they could not help
him. A friend of mine told mo of the Cuti
cura Soap and Ointment and I went to a
drug store and bought them. -When wo
would bathe his face with the Cuticura Soap
and apply the Cuticura Ointment, he would
be much better. He would wake up in the
nights and cry with his face and we would
put on some of the Cuticura Ointment and
thou he would rest all right. By keeping
this up every day his face began to heal and
then got well altogether. He suffered just
about a year lieforo we used the Cuticura
Soap and Ointment and they have cured
him completely of the eczema. We use the
Cuticura Soap all the time and there Is no
better soap for the skin.” (Signed) Mrs.
Harry Wright, Mar. 21. 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment do so much
for pimples, blackheads, red. rough skins.
Itching, scaly scalps, dandruff, dry, thin and
falling hair, chapped hands and shapeless
nails, that it is almost criminal not to use
them. Hold everywhere. Liberal sample of
each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad
dress post-card "Cuticura. Dept.T, Boston."
*• Tender-faced men should use Cuticura
Soap Shaving Stick, 25c. Sample free.
General Thanksgiving. His Diary
From Plymouth Rock to Rock-and-Rye—A Stirring
Autobiography of Holidays From 1623 to 1912.
New England, November 27, 1623.
This day Fare You Well Buckhorn.
Certain Salvation Drybones and your
servant beseeehed the new parson to
pray for rain again, and see if he could
not fetch it this time. If he doesn’t,
we’ll get another parson. It has been
a dry season and a hard one. Nothing
to eat but wild turkey, bear steak, ven
ison, duck and vegetables such as are
found in the marsh or raised by hard
work. Wish I’d stayed in England, but
wife insisted on booking a stateroom
suite in the Mayflower. Said all the
best people were, to be on board and
one might as well not come at all as
watt for a slow boat.
November 28.—Thursday. The par
son got his rain and holds his job. I
suspect that he saw the cloud hanging
over Cape Cod before he started, but he
kept on exhorting until the clouds
opened up. We are thankful the drouth
is broken, but still more so that the
parson didn’t have to cohort more than
three hours before getting action. A
donation party for him next week. Gov
ernor Bradford suggests we give thanks
this day for our blessings and do the
same everj- season. Maybe he's got
something to be thankful for. Being a
governor pays well.
Thanksgiving Day, 1624.—R05e at 4
a. m'., took my blunderbuss and went
hunting for Thanksgiving dinner. Fair
luck. Two turkeys, a deer and three
Indians. Former fairly fat. The wife
prepared a great feast of turkey and
venison, with a dish of red berries from
the swamp which are so sour as to set
the teeth on edge, but the last ship bore
suger in plenty from the Indies. It
also boi-e a cargo of the rum of Ja
maica, which we did test with great
pains. My head is like to split. It
must have been the berries, which are
called “cran” in the language of the In
dians.
November, 1690. This day came a
strange pamphlet from Boston which
the printer does call a newspaper and
says will print-It once each week, to in
form the colonists of what the world is
doing. Methinks he will have a great
task to find new wonders to record
every week in the year. It sets forth
that turkey is of greater price than in
the history of Thanksgiving day, a fat
pair bringing sixpence in silver. Ye
printer blames the high cost of living
on the aristocrats. Methinks he will
cool his heels ih the stocks for this.
November, 1773. It is Thanksgiving
day, but much talk of discontent with
English rule. The tariff on tea will be
oru ruin, making the rich richer and
the poor poorer. lam thankful this day
that I do not drink tea. There is no
tariff on rum.
November, 1781.—This be truly a day
of Thanksgiving. My Lord Cornwallis
has surrendered and the British are
driven forth. My senator and iny con
gressman do promise I shall be keeper
of the-mint, which doth greatly appeal
to me, for surely there is money in it.
A merry quip, that, and one which shall
live through the ages.
November, 1863.—News has come
over the line about what General Sher,
man said war is. The general is dead
right. Only it’s colder than the place
he mentioned. Ate Thanksgiving din
ner in camp. Mule steak, planked. Cof
fee made of sweet potatoes, roasted
brown. Sassafras tea on the side. Last
course, moonshine licker stilled in a
coffee pot from corn the mule would
have eaten, had he lived. We give
THANKSGIVING
To the public at large We Thank
You Sincerely for having helped us 7?\
to a successful and prosperous year /J \y / J \
since last Thanksgiving Day and r A \
we not only hope that your Deal- I /\ I
ings with us have resulted in a full iP&pv' 'M b :
measure of Satisfaction to you, but f M :
also wish you the Privilege of V
Celebrating with I"lealth and Happi— ||r I ’
ness, many Thanksgiving Days to bIWI
come | V I
Suits and Overcoats i |
Foi the Celebration of this Thanksgiving Day— |
buits and Overcoats bearing the Insignia of Quality
"X. --of Fashion'and of Service— U
Such Suits and Overcoats we re thankful iF"' sA
2m today and it is the pleasure of this
have ”ou see them tomorrow—
\ Suits for Men and Young Men sls to SSO
f # A>\ Overcoats for Men and young Men
/1 Xx\ —sls to S6O
■p,\ v Suits for Youths sl2 to $25
' ntbf 1 Sk.} ""'O Overcoats $7.50 to S3O
• I our Gloves,whichare so essential for your
I time a a£outit I Comfortandthe proper requisite for good Jress,
J ', „ 1 I arc delightful to draw on—and a distinction to
wear—Dressed Kid or Fur Finished—sl to $5
EISEMAN BROS., Inc.
11-13-15-17 Whitehall St.
thanks this day that we’re alive and
that Marse Bob Lee is driving the
Yanks clean Into Canada. Reckon they
haven’t anything to be thankful for ex
cept better grub than this.
November, 1893.—Just home from the
World’s Fair. Thankful I don’t have to
live in Chicago. The wife and Uncle
James and his wife and all the rela
tions came to dine. I carved the tur
key, which was a large one. But when
everybody else was served nothing was
left but the neck. Everybody works
poor father. Brother William brought
| from Tennessee a flask of liquor, war
ranted twenty years in the wood. My
only regret it that it seems small for
its age. But let us be thankful for
these small mercies.
November, 1912. —Began celebrating
at the club last night. Everbody bought
but the captain. Wanted an appejlte
for Thanksgiving day’s dinner. If I
ever got it I lost it again. Mouth this
morning tasted fuzzy, as though mice
had built nest in it. Required a small
bracer. Bought one for friend. Friend
bought for both. Another friend came
In. More friends. Mass meeting.
Home to dinner. Turkey didn’t taste
good to me. Bad crop this year. Bunch
was better. Helped wife mix it. Put in
pint when she wasn’t looking. Won
derful what extra pint will do.
Later. Brother William says he also
poured in a pint. Uncle Dave says he
was afraid it would be weak, so he
brought a pint along and poured it in.
Suspect Thomas, Jr., home from college
for day, also put in quart or so. Solid
silver ladle floated in it.
Went to football game. Looks like
eleven prize fights with nothing barred.
Can’t see why young fellows are such
fools. Nearly froze. Stopped at club
on way home for minute. Spent two
hours and twenty dollars. Went to
other club. Boys there celebrating
Thanksgiving. Joined in. Thankful I’ve
got latchkey of my own. Got home all
safe and sound. Wife awake. Wide
awake.
Tomorrow a. in.—l’m thankful that
Thanksgiving' day won’t come round
for another twelve months. Pass the
ice water.
WHY NOT GET
A GUARANTEE?
Every Article of Merit that is Sold
These Days is Guaranteed —No
Guarantee Often Means
Poor Quality.
There is very little excuse for any
person to claim that he has been
“stung” on a purchase. Fifty year?
ago the buyer had to look out, but to
day it is unusual .to find a merchan*
who will not return the money for any
article that has proved unsatisfactory.
An excellent this kind of
fair dealing is shown by the clean-cut
guarantee that ail Atlanta druggists
give on Dodson's Liver Tone.
These people tell us that any person
who pays 50c for a bottle of Dodson’s
Liver Tone and does not find it a gentle
and most pleasant liver .onic, harmless,
but a sure reliever of constipation and
a perfect substitute for calomel, cap
get his money back just as quick as
they can get it out of the money draw
er.
Dodson’s Liver Tone has practically
taken the place of calomel. It is abso
lutely harmless, sure in its action and
causes no restriction of habit or diet.
No wonder the drug people are glad to
guarantee it, while other remedies that
imitate the claims of Dodson’s Liver
Tone are not guaranteed at all. (Advt.)
EX-SUPERINTENDENT OF
SUNDAY SCHOOL FINED
WAYCROSS, GA., Nov. 2S._j oh
Zelner, an ex-superintendent of a neg ro
Sunday school, with his wife, was con
victed in police court on charges of vi
lating the city whisky ordinance
usual fine of SIOO was imposed on ea t
Judge Felder, who this week paid’’
SI,OOO fine in city court for selling
whisky, was again tried on a similar
charge, but was discharged.
|“One Minute fi om Peachtree"'
SILK
Neckwear
SALE
SI w
FRIDAY
37c
EACH
3 For SI.OO
One hundred dozen of
these beautiful Silk Ties,
and not one in the lot
worth less than 50c. On
sale tomorrow (Friday;
at 37c, or 3 for SI.OO.
Buy Your Xmas
Ties Now
ALLEN M.
PIERCE
“Men’s Dept. Store”
16 Marietta St.