Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 02, 1912, HOME, Page 5, Image 5

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FIEND BOY KILLER TELLS OF GRIMES Started Slaying Career by Poisoning Drunkard—“ Grace of God Only Saved Many.” BUFFALO, N. Y-. Dec. 2.—J. Frank Mickev self-confessed murderer of one ,n'n\.'nd two boys, today told the story ‘ f i n < lift, dating from the time he was ’ years of age up to the time of his 'i. <t for the murder of Joseph Jo sephs. a seven-year-old Syrian boy, - Wi( s strangled to death at Lacka wanna N. Y- on October 12, 1911. According to Hickey, his criminal record commenced with the killing of a man named Edward Morey, in Lowell, Mass., when he was a clerk in a drug <tore. The man was one of the most prominent druggists of Lowell, but he degenerated into a common hanger-on. through drink. Hickey placed a dose of laudanum in a drink of whisky, which he gave to the man and which was the cause of his death. Five years later, while working in the newspaper district in Boston, he took two boys to his room and tried to kill them and himself by tearing out the cas fixture*, allowing the gas to fill the room. x Police Saved Them. The lolice rescued the three, and Hickey was arrested. The grand jury found no bill against him. A year later Hickey went to Quincy, Mass. Another attempt was made in Law rence, Mass., to kill a boy by strangling him beside a railroad train, in full view of several employees. In 1902 Hickey met and strangled to death a little newsboy named Michael Kruck in the city of New York. During the interim lie attempted to strangle at least a dozen other boys, whose names he does not know. He said today these boys were only saved by the grace of God. Hickey told of the Lackawanna mur der. and said the writing of the postal cards which led to his arrest was brought about by compassion for the Josephs boy’s parents. Sane, Says Expert. The trial for the murder of seven year-old Joseph Josephs will be gin before Justice Charles W. Brow n m tite supreme court on December 15. In sanity will be the defense, it was an nounced here today. Attorney Ernest \V. Mclntyre has been retained by Hickey and wifi make a hard fight to save the self-confessed murderer of the Josephs boy and of Michael Kruck, of Now York, from the electric phair. Counter io the insanity plea. Dr. I'harles iV, Putnam, an alienist, talked with Hickey for an hour. Dr. Putnam reported that Hickey is apparently in command of his senses. Hen:y Kruck, father of the New York boy alleged to have been murdered by Hickey, has asked permission to see the prisoner. Superintendent Regan told the man he could do so. CITY CAMPAIGN STARTS FOR THOMASVILLE JOBS THOMASVILLE, GA., Dec. 2—Two candidates for mayor of Thomasville in the primary this month are K. T. Mc- Lean and Roscoe Luke. It is probable that the announcement of opposing boards of aidermen may start some little excitement, but so far neither side has put out candidates. For city treasurer there is -a race on between J. W. H. Mitchell, the incum bent. and J. J. Mash, and for marshal A. B. Milton is opposed by Sam Doss. TO DISPOSE OF SCHOOL. THOMASVILLE, GA., Dec, 2.—A mass meeting to decide what will be done with the Youngs college propertj’ will be held here tonight. It is the sentiment of the citizens generally that it be bought for public school uses. I is to be disposed of at public .sale to morrow. The trustees have offered the’ property for $20,000. MEIGS IS AMBITIOUS. THOMASVILLE, GA., Dec. 2.—Meigs, in Diomas county, which is going to nake a fight for the now county of Hansell, is- getting ambitious in other ways and will institute a White Way lx soon as its new electric light plant is installed in January. CERTAINLY ENDS STOMACH MISERY Pape’s Diapepsin” Re lives Your Indiges tion in Five Minutes. tioi> lUl |,' upset stomach, indiges- food y™: , ,' r ’. 1 ’ -'yspepsia: when the stubborn > eat l *’' rn >ents into gases and ">u feei n ß i v ' ,u ' b.-ad aches and \ (l! , r c " ~n<l mbst ruble, tiiat’s when pepsin ’r/ 1 , nia B*c in Pape's Dia -1,1 »'■ minu't’- keß SUCh lnise, Y vanlsh revolt'll'ir Kt, " na< ’h is in a continuous i)leas<. r ''° u * an ’’ Set it regulated, It's s.,’ n„’ r >i youi ' sak<> tr r Diapepsin. ~ji ...i I ''less to have a bad stomach n,..' ° ur n,, xt meal a favorite food ... rmn take a little Diapepsin. wp. ~,, r '!, n °t be any distress- eat Pepsin I,K because Pape’s Dia- out-nr ,-1 • f loes" regulate weak, "’illlons of s r am ß " n: "' 1 ’ S , 1 th ‘ lt s! ' eK U itP •» oi sales annually. I'iap. .'.L, f*' flf ’y-ee'it ease of Pape’s ll’<- I’liinb . an J' drug store. It is • , "* s '• purest stomach relief ami •< acts almost like magic ' ntili. . d ;;;ml pleas er, i ’ !ivlJ " hies: truly belongs in Wln '’ (Advt.) Congress Loses Landmarks With Present Session PASSING OF OLD GUARD WASHINGTON, Dec. 2.—The end of the sixty-second congress, which con vened its last session here today, means the passing of many of the "Old Guard,” who for years have shaped national legislation at the capital of the United States. This is especially true of the house, where political changes are more fre quent and where a man to hold on is required to placate a constituency every two years. The Democratic landslide of Novem ber 5 removed practically the last ves tige of the old-timers in the lower body of congress. Heading the list of those whose faces will be missed when the gavel calls to order the extra session of the sixty-third congress is “Uncle Joe” Cannon, of Illinois, former speak er, former “czar” and veteran of more than a third of a century’s service in the national house of representatives. “Uncle Joe,” who is now in his sev enty-seventh year, "died game/ if such a term may be applied to political mis fortune, Until the ballots were counted against him, the Sage of Danville asked no quarter and gave none. Neither does he ask sympathy now in the hour of defeat, but there is a note of pathos running through the undoing of this powerful warrior of other days. Would Have Been Harmless. “Uncle Joe” asked merely the privi lege o ’ dying in harness. As a member of a hopeless minority, he could have done no harm to the “progressives” of later days; a return to congress prob ably would have rounded out a life largely spent in the public service—but the voters of the Eighteenth Illinois congressional district willed otherwise and he quits on March 4. Should he choose; “Uncle Joe” is in position to deliver a valedictory to the sixty-second congress which will be worth coming miles to hear. He was in politics before some of the members of that congress were born. He leaves the call of public life at an age given few men to live: he has seen the ups and downs of many a campaign, and there are few Democrats who would have denied him the privilege of ending his days amid old surroundings. Nevertheless, it is predicted that “Uncle Joe” will quit congress without a whimper; his cigar still will flourish at an angle of -46 degrees and his form will be erect when he crosses the threshold of the house in the closing hours of the sixty-second congress. Dalzell, Too, Passes. John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania, famed as “tiic high' priest of protection,” lost out in the primaries last fall. He leaves congress three months hence in company with "Uncle Joe.” The late Vice President Sherman, long-time member of the house, has an swered the final roll call. Tawney, of Minnesota, was retired two years ago, largely because of his espousal of what was known as Can nonism. He has a “lame duck” job to day on one of the numerous govern ment commissions. ; Sereno E. Payne, author of the Payne tariff law, the passage of which marked the beginning of the end of Republican rule in the house, survives. He was re-elected and in the sixty-third con gress will stand alone as the last mem ber of a once dominating coterie of Republicans. With the retirement of former Speaker Cannon, Mr. "Payne be comes the nestor of the house. He is growing old and feeble and probably will be among the missing before many years have passed. Representaitve E. D. Crumpacker, of Indiana, who was always “regular,” also met his Waterloo on November 5. He had been a member of the house for eight terms and successfully weathered the Democratic storm which overtook Indiana in 1910. This time he went under. Tariff Expert Hill Goes. Representative Ebezener Hill, of Con neticut, is another conspicuous member of the “Old Guard” who was forced to retreat by a Democrat at the recent elections. After a service of eighteen years, Mr. Hill will retire to private life next March. As a member of the ways and means committee, Hill, of Connec ticut, has long been considered as one of the tariff experts of the house. He was an ardent protectionist; his voice was ever ready to denounce such doc trines as free trade and, a tariff for rev enue and Democrat and Republican alike will miss his familiar form. Cyrus Sulloway, of New Hampshire, pointed out as the biggest man phys ically in the house, also rounds out eighteen years service at the end of this session. One of the towering land marks of the house, a regular of the regulars, will have passed when Sullo way goes back to the seclusion of the New Hampshire hills. John J. Gardner, of New Jersey, who for twenty years has been of the inner circle of Republicanism, will also be among the absent ones when the roll of the next congress Is made up. For twenty years he has stood stolidly by the Republican guns. Son-in-Law Nick Laid Up. "Nick” Longworth, of Ohio, a minor ity member of the ways and means committee, lost out by less than a hun dred votes. The son-in-law of former President Roosevelt cast his fortunes, as usual, with the G. O. P. at the last election, but the combined Democratic and Bull Moose opposition was too much for him. Since his defeat he has wired friends that he was merely “laid up for repairs,” which would indicate that he has hopes of coming back two years hence. Mr. Longworth lias been a, member of the house for a decade, but ho has been regular and a pro tectionist from the beginning. Regard less of family ties, he refused to desert the Republican colors on November 5, and the Democratic tidal wave engulfed him. Prince, of Illinois; Tilson, of Connec ticut; Young, of Michigan; Currier, of New Hampshire, and others .more or less prominent who have fought in the Republican ranks for years, will be mus tered out of political life when the Democrats take complete possession of noth branches of cnngtis: three months hence. Among the few Democrats who rHK ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1912. have failed to return, after long serv ices, are Representative Wilson, of Pennsylvania, and Representative Lamb, of Virginia. Lamb was defeated in the primaries; Wilson in the general election. Lorimer Vote Beat Cullom. The order changeth in the senate also, although the transition Is more gradual. Conspicuous among those who are finishing their Washington careers is Senator Shelby Cullom, of Illinois. He has been a member of the since 1883 and has reached the age of 83 years. But for his vote in favor of Sen ator Lorimer the venerable Illinoisan might have been permitted to end his days in the senate chamber. Senator Crane, of Massachusetts, quits on March 4. He announced his retirement prior to the election and his political adversaries say it was because of the handwriting on the wall. Sen ator Crane is known as “Whispering Crane,” and has always been a silent and yet efficient worker for the cause of the “Old Guard.” Guggenheim, of Colorado; Dixon, of Montana; Brown, of Nebraska; Bourne, of Oregon; Briggs, of New Jersey, and Bailey, of Texas—all men who have long served in the upper branch of con gress—will become political “has beens” at the close of the approaching session. New blood will be in evidence in both the house and senate; young men, com paratively speaking, have taken their places at the wheel of state, and the "Old Guard," mighty, forces for good or evil in the days of Aldrich and Cannon, will yield to the new regime ordered at the polls on November 5, 1912. BANKER ENTERTAINS CABBY AND HIS BRIDE WITH TRIP TO PARIS PARIS, Dec. 2.—Tarn McGrew, of the Franco-American bank. Place Ven dome and Honolulu, has demonstrated that he is the most accomplished host in Paris by reason of his having en tertained six most unsophisticated per sons from Lyons. McGrew recently inherited a handsome fortune and somewhat previously a lesser one from his wife, formerly Mrs. Scott Essex. Business took him to Lyons, where he was greatly delighted with the accom plishments of his cab driver. The lat ter. growing confidential, confided to McGrew that he was about to marry. "Very well," said the American, “bring your fiancee and friends up to Paris.* They came—the cab driver in a glazed hat, his fiancee, who was a pretty chambermaid; a garbage collec tor and his wife, who runs a hennery; a restaurant waiter and a young dress maker. Mr. McGrew hired a family automobile and all got into it. “Now, you are my guests,” he said, and they were. He showed them all the sights, the music halls, and dined and wined them. A week passed and tluj cab driver and his fiancee were not mar ried. Finally Mr. McGrew succeeded in suspending the festivities until they went to the mayor's office and the hap py pair were safely married. McGrew Is now in a sanitarium recuperating. GRAY GENTRYADVANCED IN TELEPHONE SERVICE CHATTANOOGA, TENN., Dec. 2.—Qyay Gentry, district manager of the supply de partment of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, has also been ap pointed manager of the Chattanooga ex change of the Cumberland Telephone and Telegraph Company. He is a nephew of President W. T. Gentry, of the Southern Bell and Cumberland companies. J. R. Porter, local exchange manager for several years, will go to Knoxville as division superintendent for the Cum berland company for eastern Tennessee. W. K. Boardman, at present division superintendent, with offices at Knoxville, will be moved to Nashville and advanced to division superintenednt for the Amer ican Telephone and Telegraph Company, his territory being the whole of Tennes see. INDIANA MAN GETS FIRST SHAVE AT 100 YEARS OLD HUNTINGTON. IND., Dec. 2.—Al though. he will celebrate his 100th birthday anniversary December 14, Ja cob Sopers, Huntington's oldest resi dent, submitted to his first shave at the hands of a barber today. He did it under protest. The barber was sum moned secretly by a daughter, who wished to prepare the veteran for a photographer in anticipation of the coming celebration. THOMASVILLE ELKS HONOR DEAD THOMASVILLE, GA.. Dec. 2.—The Thomasville Elks held a lodge of sor row yesterday afternoon at the Broad Street theater, in commemoration of the members who have died since the organization of the lodge here. The eulogy was given by W. I. Maclntyre. SAUER'S PUP.E FLAVORING EX TRACTS have no equal. Sold every where 10c and 25c the bottle, at your grocer’s. (Advt.) When you have a bilious attack, give Chamberlain’s Tablets a trial. They are excellent For sale by all dealers. (Advt.) EXTERNAL VAPOR TREATMENT— Best For Croup and Cold Troubles Ulf’ ICC Croup and CAI Vff » Iwlwld Pneumonia w £t No need now to dose your stomach with jiauseating drugs, simply apply the new treatment, Vick's Croup and Pneumonia Salve, well over chest and throat. Cover with warm flannel cloth. Give the pa tient plenty of fresh air. The worst cohl is relieved in one nlpht; croup in After a minutes. The curative vapors are ii.a tined In tin sf'lve. and when applied to I the body the heat releases them and | 1 1,500,000 XMAS SEALS RECEIVED Atlantans Expected to Buy 500,000 of the Red Cross Stamps. One and a half million Red Cross seals will be distributed in Georgia dur ing the Christmas season. They now are being sent out by the Anti-Tuber culosis Society of Georgia from the headquarters in Atlanta, and plans are being made to have one of these seals on every Christmas package sent out in -the state. The seals will be put on sale immediately. It is expected 500,000 seals will be sold by Atlanta, 200,000 by Savannah. 120,000 by Augusta. 25,000 by Bruns wick, 50,000 by Columbus. 120,000 by Macon, 40,000 by Waycross, and smaller numbers by the other towns in the state. Every town in the state will have an agency for the Red Cross Christmas seals, the sale of which will enable the state of Georgia to establish a state wide anti-tuberculosis work and local anti-tuberculosis associations in every town in Georgia. The seals are used as decorations on Christmas letters and packages. They have become quite popular and will be used largely throughout the United States during the Christmas season. BONE KILLS YOUTH HURT AT PLAYING FOOTBALL PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 2.—A tiny fragment of bone, a splinter from a fractured leg, killed fourteen-year-61d George W. Hayes when it touched his heart, according to physicians at the Children s Homeopathic hospital today. The remarkable fatality is being inves tigated. According to physicians, the boy was injured in a football game on November 11. He was taken to the hospital with a broken leg. The break was apparently healing when the boy complained of pains in the heart. The physicians learned that a small piece of bone had been carried through his veins to the heart. It lodged there and caused his death. ELOPER HAS GUARDIAN, LICENSE REFUSED HIM ST. LOUIS, Dec. 2.—The fact that John P. Draper, of Wayne City. 111., has a guardian prevented him from obtaining a license Wednesday in Belleville, 111., to marry Miss Eva L. Umbenhower, of An drews, Ind., with whom he eloped, after having met her through a matrimonial advertisement. Although greatly disappointed be cause of their failure to obtain a license to wed, the couple declared, before de parting, they would try elsewheree. HeaSthyo Women who bear children and re main healthy are those who prepare their systems in advance of baby’s coming. Unless the mother aids nature in its pre-natal work the crisis finds her system unequal to the de mands made upon It, and she is often left with weakened health or chronic ailments. No remedy is so truly a help to nature as Mother’s Friend, and no expectant mother should fail to use it. It relieves the pain and discomfort caused by the strain on the ligaments, makes pliant and elas tic those fibres and muscles which nature is expanding, prevents numb ness of limbs, and soothes the inflam mation of breast glands. The system being thus prepared by Mother's Friend dispels the fear that the crisis may not be safely met. Mother’s Friend assures a speedy and complete recovery for the mother, and she is left a healthy woman to enjoy the rearing of her child. Mother’s Friend is sold at drug stores. Write for our free f’ rICHO book for expect- ant mothers which contains much valuable information, and many sug gestions of a helpful nature. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atluta, Ga. CHICHESTER S PILLS THE DIAMOND BBAND • ,l! " md *nd O"ld 13k ~ scllel wi<! > Blue Ribbon. VZ rq no olbrr. Boy of your W 1/ uT DrueglM. Ask forCIfI.f'BES.TEHN* lx DIAMOND BRAND* rp yearsknownasßest,Safest. Alwiysßeliabln SOLO BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE I L A R Opium, Whiskey and Drug Habile treated ■ |k g gat Home or at Sanitarium. Book on subject I ImM DR. B. M. WOOLLEY, M-N, Victor CmsHHmß Sanitarium. Atlanta. Georgia. they are inhaletl through the nostrils anti mouth. These vapors reach the affected part Immediately, Insuring quick relief; no danger of an upset stomach; no in terfering with tlie digestive organs. The treatment is entirely external. Vick's <'roup and Pneumonia Salve (times in three sizes 25c. FOc and sl. I druggists. Sample mailed on re<iuest. Vick I'lienifca! Company, 125 Oak street. Greensboro, N. C. (Advt.) RICHEST HEIRESS IN MACON LOSES $900.00 BROOCH AT BIG BALL MACON, GA., Dec. 2. —Miss Monica Dempsey, Macon’s wealthiest heiress and debutante, is mourning the loss of a diamond brooch worth S9OO which mysteriously disappeared at the bril liant Thalian dance Friday night. The brooch was pinned to her dress, and is thought to have been lost during the german. The wee sma’ hours had arrived be fore the absence of the jewel was ob served, and a report of the fact created a sensation in the dance hall. Officers of the Thalian club spared no efforts in the search for the brooch. A very lib eral reward has been offered to the finder of the valuable for its return. NAMED TO HEALTH BOARD. Governor Brown today appointed Thomas J. McArthur, of Cordele, a mem ber of the state board of health, vice M. S. Brown, who resigned as represen tative from the Twelfth district, and was reappointed from the Third. Visit the Candy Section In | Ready=to=Wear Prices Drop In Our | 1 2nd Annual December Clearance Sale|| All Ready-to-Wear Blue-Penciled! Not a Garment Escaped! sr' —For we have started our Annual December Clearance, when we must sell •£ every coat, suit, dress, skirt and petticoat. {Jpl 35 —Sale started today; plenty of garments for tomorrow’s choosing. These Sr* are P r^ces that are speeding them out: ■ejj I I • I Sr* w Coats at Dresses Suits at Suits at = $9.95 $2.98 $lO $4.95 | 35 There are smart look- Made of tine, firm qual- Trig styles in smart One of the best values 1 ing. all wool black diag- tty of serge, in plain and serge and diagonal in sale H(?avy aU onal coats that are very fancy tailored models. t• i -T u . „. . J _ , , , , high waist line effect, wool fabrics. neatly I cleverly tailored. Long. Staple black, gray and and panel sklrU button- r , . t .... , i graceful lines. full navy. Coats satin lined ed down the front. High llaae coats with panel . length, wide revers. A aud splendidly man tai- and low neck, long or skirts. Nobby mixtures R 3 dressy general purpose . . p QT ,\,i short sleeves. Trimmed . ™ . lor 35 coat. Also a few Eng- ,oreil ' Panel . style in combination piping. hair hne effects and I lish covert coats for skirts. All of this sea- All sizes for ladies or a few in solid colors. ZJ 5 * I street or auto wear, son’s newness, and misses at the start of Colors are black navy Sr* i i "tas belted back styles. never sold before for the sale. K’avy, brown, . , ’c- ’ Thoroughly rain-proof, less than $14.95. All gray and black. All brown and gray. Sizes Ihard to duplicate under sizes for misses and new fall and winter *’ or niisses and ladles. !J* $lB to $25. women. Choice $lO. models, at just $2.98. Only $4.95. Sensational Sale of Silk Petticoats ejj Season’s Smartest Styles. Actual Values to $4 at A maker’s sample line of fresh, crisp a silk petticoats. Made of sturdy messa- U* T '-'tai ( ne > a ree flowing quality. Hardly I 1 an - v two alike; all colors, all styles, all JL • JL sizes. Plain colors and fancies. " ; 35 , All in the new close fitting styles, most of them with deep accordion fcx yilB '■ ■* pleated ruffles, some with dust ruffle. Every color on the card, black, white, ' gjg 'r j I \W Solid colors and changeables, all black, white, red, gray, pink, navy, Copen- 2-7 I '' Il I 11®' hagen and cadet blue, etc., stripe effects in black and white, green and white, *7 I IW/ln I etc ” P astel an<J street shades, etc. Worth to $4 at $1.49. None sold to deal- / I IWI 1 ers. Sale Tuesday, come early. 5* Knit Petticoats 25c $1.25 Petticoats 98c J v.-£* Y A clinging, close-fitting petticoat. Black halcyon messaline (cotton) JJL-. » to conform t 0 present fashlone . W ell Petticoats in regular and extra sizes. JL. . .x . . u 1 hey re splendidly made, and pret- knit, close weftve, with give and my finished with accordion pleated elasticity to insure its holding shape. ruffle. for 50c Petticoats of QQr. for ladies’ 50c seer- Efl— for white, pink or blue _ O»7C firm flannelette, neat 027 C Bucker gingha m petti- OvC flannelette petticoats checks and stripes in dark with deep embroidered'ruffle. 'S= patterns. Scalloped ruffle. coats with deep scalloped ruffle. Very showy. I UM Up to $5 Skirts at $1.25 & $1.50 House Dresses Choose from serviceable corduroys a OE* Clearance of about 150 dresses in per- in blue or brown, black diag- O’ I XC** cales, chambrays and cotton serges. UWr* onal cloths, and light mixtures x Trig styles in solid colors and neat “jg carried over from spring. Broken lines, so luck stripe and figure effects. A great bargain, and gr" consists in finding your size. there’ll be no more at the price. ' 23* ; Clearing $4 Dresses at School Dresses Cleared at Sr All wool blue serge dresses in the /K O 168 dresses that formerly sold up to •L neat Peter Thompson effect. / MM $1.89. Sizes 6to 14. Materials are per- M&f* BgT 'Jfcl Sailor collar and shield, trim- cales, ginghams and galateas. All new med in red or white braid. Sizes 6 to 14. Just style, in plain colors, stripes, figures and checks, 42 in all. neatly trimmed. Values to $1.89, and only 98c. gj 7 g All Wool $3.00 to $7.00 Sweaters at Great Sale ° f sl • g 35 We’ve had some big sweater gr". j S sur S1 Qx Gloves at 69c i • S ZEs T X Repute week. ’ added all those from our own good stock, and now offer wonderful success when we ran WL. you unrestricted choice at just $1.98. out of sizes early in the morning. ‘ Wired for another lot; they’re The maker’s sample lines and surplus stocks have been here ready for Tuesday’s selling S-e —shown before, hence some of them are slightly soiled. Others are ’ ‘ I fresh from their boxes. All up to the minute in style, in material, Gloves are in a good quality skin, workmanship and finish. So many kinds that any woman or ln aud wel l miss can be fitted and suited. But $3 to $7 sweaters at $1.98 Black, wMte all 5E USB won’t linger, the prizes go to early comers. sizes. Only 69c. 3s* j 100 Ladies’ Rain Coats $2.98 Yum! Yum! ' ■-'-jg Fresh, wholesome chocolates, bon- These coats in tan only with plaid backs, storm collar, sleeve bons, peppermints hard candles etc tabs. Some extra lengths, all sizes. Save SI.OO to $2.00. $2.98. 15c to 25e a pound " GEORGIA EXECUTIVE GOES TO GOVERNORS’ MEET AT RICHMOND Governor Brown, accompanied by Mrs. Brown and Miss Cora Brown, left today for Richmond, where he will at tend the national conference of govern ors, to be held in that city on Decem ber 3-6. The governor is on the program of the convention for an address, upon a topic to be selected by Himself. He will deliver the address, but has not an nounced his subject. Governor Brown had hoped to get back to Atlanta in time to take a hand In the boys' corn show, to be held in the capitol this week, but it is not like ly that he will be able to do this, as the conference in Richmond may ad journ to Washington to be th® guest of President Taft on Saturday. WHITFIELD COURT CONVENES. DALTON, GA., Dec. 2.—Whitfield su perior court convened today for a week's session, ' Judge A. W. Fite presiding and Solicitor S. P. Maddox representing the state. Both civil and criminal dockets are heavy with cases continued in October. h AFTER GRIPPE OR PNEUMONIA the enfeebled system readily accepts any disease —Nature’s resistant force is depleted and Scott’s Emulsion is needed. Its highly concen trated nourishment is im mediately distributed to every organ. With Scott’s Emulsion nature repairs waste, con structs healthy tissue and active, life-sustaining blood. Nothing ogeah Scott'o £muUion tn eonsu/escitca. Scott & Bownr. Bloomfield, W. J. If-ffi 5