Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 31, 1912, FINAL, Page 2, Image 2

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2 CITY TREASURER OF GRIFFIN IS J SUICIDE Prominent Citizen Slays Self After the Burning of His Account Books. Continued From Page One. position to handle their funds for an other two years. It was at 11 o’clock Tuesday night that he again took the oath so fatnillAr to him. A few minutes later he left the city hall, apparently in the best of Spirits, bidding his associates "good night," and wending his way to his picturesque old Southern home a few blocks away. There a few hours later, with the message of Major Smith, ailing for an audit and a new system, ringing in his ears, he placed the muz zle of a revolver in his mouth and fired a bullet through his brain. Whatever may have been his motive, it died a secret with him. Members of the city government and ehlzens generally were saddened Wed nesday morning when the news went out that their long-time and beloved | old clerk and treasurer had been ’ stricken with apoplexy while preparing to enjoy his breakfast. Mayor Smith’s desire for a change in the conduct of city affairs was widely known even before his inauguration, owing to the fact that it was an issue In the campaign and had been dis cussed from day to day. A farewell note was left by Nall. Ini t he made no reference to the destrue- I tion of the city’s records, but voiced i his determination that they should | never be examined. As to the reason 1 of this determination ha gave no word, so far as has been learned. H< wrote: •‘My Books Shall Never Be Examined.’’ ”1 am determined that my books shall never be examined. I have checked and rechecked them, and have found them absolutely correct. 1 am satisfied that no one else could have found anything wrong." Then he added: "But the horror ol it all, and the thing that caused me to determine on this course, is the fear that I might be stricken helpless and left a burden on those illy able to care for me." Another sentence read: "I am very, very tired.” Nall’s friends are firm In their belief that he was simply laboring under the hallucination that he was suspected of some possible wrong, and that this er roneous thought that his honesty and his long-used system were questioned drove him to desperation and to his tragic end. They say Nall suffered a slight stroke of paralysis a short time ago, and since then seemed to fear that lie would be stricken helpless and would have to be I cared for by his three daughters. Nall i was a widower. Douglas Boyd Finds Books All Missing. Immediately following the announce ment of the death, Mayor Smith or dered the clerk’s office closed until aft er the funeral on Friday. On Satur day the finance committee, of which Douglas Boyd, of the Douglas Boyd Company, is chairman, opened the of fice and made the discovery that the important books were missing. The finance committee. In called session Monday, instructed Mayor Smith and Mark J. Janes, one of the members, to go to Atlanta and employ expert ac countants. The report of the accountants is ex pected In about a week. The first evidence as to the destruc tion of the records was furnished in a confession to the finance committee by Bill Holloway, negro janitor In the city hall. He said that on Tuesday morn ing. before the new administration took charge that night, Nail placed two books on the edge of the furnace door In the basement of tlie city hall and told him to push them Into the furnace. He says he did so. Members of the committee later learned that a negro cook in the Nall home, Mary Holloway—no relation, however, to the’ janitor—had confided to another negro that Nall "had been burning books and papers in his home for two weeks before his death.” She ■was closely questioned by the commit tee. but denied this statement. She admitted, however, that on Tues day morning three books had been burned. She said her husband came to the Nall home that morning -to build a tire, as usual, and that Nall gave him three books and told him :o burn them. Chairman Boyd Doubts a Shortage. The negro tore up one pf the books and threw it in the fire. but as it was SO hard to tear, laid the other two books aside. Nall, she said, later came along and threw these books into the fire. Beyond tills, no further evidence has been found as to the destruction of the records. Chairman Boyd says: "I don’t think Nall was short in his accounts, but I believe he felt offended at the idea of his books being audited and his old system changed, and simply determined that this should not be. He had been in the office so long that, he felt that bis methods should not be questioned. He probably brooded over the situation until he decided that uther than submit to the new order of things he would destroy the records and then kill himself." Committeeman Jane.'. '.’ho Alta a elose personal friend of the aged man and who lias been In personal charge of ’he office since the tragedy, is firm tn hi- belief that Nall's mind w.o •.ml.nl- •••••••••••••••••••••••••a •CITY ON SOUND BASIS; J MAYOR SMITH SAYS; • • • This staff ment was made by • • Mayor J. Henry Smith: • • "T Griffii ound * • financially. While the loss of thf • • rec ires has temporarily demor- • • allied affairs, th. city is not as- • • fected seriously. We have on hand • • a cash surplus of $6,401.01, and the • • taxes for the year 1912 are, as yet. • • uncoil* cted,” • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••a TALL OF Mill AGITATES ENVOYS Real Crisis of Peace Conference Billed for Resumption of Ne gotiations Tomorrow. LONDON. Dec. .11.—Consternation was caused among the Turkish peace delegates today by a telegram from Bejgra.de that Scutari had fallen before a combined attack of Servians and Montenegrins. Reiehad Pasha, of the Ottoman delegation, declared that if this proved true, it would show fla il: rant violation of the Chatalja armls- Toinorrow will s< r the real crisis in the peace conference. Representatives of the allies declare that if Turkey con tinues to balk the negotiations, when they are resumed Wednesday, they will declare their mission at an end and war will be resumed. Russia Proposes Demobilization PARIS, Dee. 11.—The most important move yet made to relieve the tension in Europe resulting from the Balkan war was made here today when P. A. Iswol sky, the Russian ambassador to France, called upon M. Haymond Poincaire, the French foreign minister, and proposed that Russia and Austria go into accord upon the immediate mobilization of their reserves. Mr. Iswolsky had been authorized by his government to take such a step, and It indicated that in the eye of the Russian government the way to com plete peace and accord among the pow ers of Europe is now open. The pro posal was that the armies, which were mobilized during the gloomy days of the war, should be dismissed. M. Poincaire took the matter under advisement, promising to consult with tile Austrian minister. MRS. W. C. ADAMSON, CONGRESSMAN’S WIFE, DIES IN CARROLLTON j CARROLLTON, GA., Dec. 31.—Fu ’ neral services were conducted from the ■ Methodist Protestant church here this i afternoon for Mrs. Minna Reese Adam son, wife of Congressman W. C. Adam son. of the Fourth Georgia district, in terment following in the city cemetery. Mrs. Adamson died yesterday, after an illness that confined her to her bed for several months. She had been lu ill health for several years. She under went an operation several months ago, but failed to improve. Her condition became so critical two weeks ago that Congressman Adamson was summoned from Washington. Mrs. Adamson Is survived by her husband, three sons. Charles A. Adam son. New Orleans, who is connected with the United Fruit Company; Reese Adamson, Atlanta, of the Ford Motor Company, and Ernie Adamson, who is reading law in Carrollton; two broth ers. Erskine Reese, Decatur, and M. B. Reese, Heflin. Ala., and one sister, Mrs. A. R. Blander, Nashville, Tenn. anced and that his deed was the direct result of hallucinations and broodings. Practically every one in Griffin knew and liked "Uncle Tom" Nall. He had some few enemies, of course, political enemies, acquired through ills long years of political activity, but these were overshadowed by his widespread popularity. During his 3S years of of fice life he had opposition but three times. Each time he was elected by an overwhelming majority. Nail’s friends give him the credit for the re-election of Congressman Bart lett, of the Sixth district, in the recent national election. Walter Wise. Judge Bartlett’s opponent, is said to have made the statement in Griffin that he would carry Spalding county by at least SOO majority, which would mean his election. Bartlett, hearing this, hast ened to Griffin to confer with Nall, his friend ami ardent supporter. How He Saved Day For Congressman Bartlett. "Toni, what about this?" asked the congressman "Will Wise get 800 ma jority here?" ’ He will get only 375 majority, Judge.” replied the astute old politician. "Well, Tom, if we can keep his ma jority below 375 in this county I’ll be elected." Nall went to work at once, writing letters to his friends and making a personal canvass. When the votes were counted on election day Wise’s majority in Spalding county walk 871-- Judge Bartlett was re-elected. Shortly before Nall’s death, Con gressman Bartlett visited the aged offi cial and told him he wanted to do Something for him. as a testimonial of appreciation. "That’s nit light. judge, fm satisfied with th, fact that we beat him." re plied the old man. , Nall’s friends .my he could have been postmaster of Grittit) under the new Democratic administration bad u live 1 and desired the place THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS TUESDA Y. DECEMBER 31, 1912. JUDGE FITE ON HAPS HIGH COURT Declares Tribunal Which Con victed Him Has Changed Its j Recorded Opinion. Continued From Page One. abusing and charging me with hav ing begun it. But, fortunately for me, what I have said is written and in print, and what the court of appeals have said also is written and in print; and the bench, the bar and the peo ple of Georgia will judge us by the facts, and no abuse of me by the court of appeals will help them or hurt me. What Judge Hill says as to the Shope contempt case in my court is untrue, and he went out of the record to say it, and I have more cause to attach for contempt the judges of the court of appeals for this than they had to attach me, and have as much authority to do so, as my court, like theirs, is a constitutional court; and it is my duty to maintain its integrity, Charges Untruth To Judge Hill. It now seems to me that if, as a court, I am bound by their con struction of the law in my case, it is my duty, as a court, to attach them for what they say as to iny alleged judicial conduct in the Shope case, which is untrue, and, to me, seems clearly libelous and slan derous. The truth is, I did not find him guilty of contempt, nor did 1 put him in Jail, but dismissed the rule on the filing of a proper an swer by him. Judge Hill’s attack on Mr. Fow ler. the prosecutor in the McCul lough case, a man who loved his home, his wife and his children more than he does a "pig and heif er,” and who is as honorable, truth ful and virtuous as Judge Hill or myself, is, under the evidence in the case, only a pert of which lie quotes, slrnply outrageous. And his defense of the negro, who Is now and has been for some time in the penitentiary on his own confession of guilt in open court. Is, under the evidence in the case, only a part of which he quotes, abso lutely pitiful, all of which shows his inability to comprehend the facts in the case and that he is not sat isfied with the final disposition of it. “In faith, ’tis strange, ’tis passing strange: «. 'Tis pitiful, ’tis wondrous pitiful.” Challenges Hill to Resign With Him. Judge Hill says: "It is not a question of the abolition of courts, but a question of the abolition of judges," and intimates that he is ready and willing to refer the mat ter to the people, and I accept his implied challenge, and make him this proposition: That he and 1 resign immediate ly, our resignations to take effect when our successors are elected and qualified, and go to the people and let them at the ballot box decide who "has dragged the judicial robes through the mire of personal venom, injustice and slander.” I will meet him in the open, face to face, before the people all over Georgia—not in my own interest, but in the Interest of any reputable lawyer who may oppose him, leav ing my own candidacy in the hands of the people of the Cherokee cir cuit. In conclusion, 1 will say what 1 have heretofore said, in substance, that I did not charge the Judges of the court of appeals with corrup tion, but did charge them with in competency, and criticised their de cisions accordingly, and in doing so I was not in contempt, but was within my constitutional rights as a free American citizen, and every well Informed lawyer knows it, and more, the people know it, and the judges of the court of appeals would know it but for their incom petency. 21 ATLANTA GREEKS WILL SAIL FOR HOME TO HELP FIGHT TURK In response to a call from their na tive hind for volunteers In the war against the Turks, twenty-one young Greek resi dents of Atlanta will leave tomorrow afternoon for New York, where, on Jan uary 4. they will embark on the steam ship Ixicorila, bound for Greece. The party is made up of Greeks from even part of Atlanta, and Is not bound into an organization. They will leave At lanta together, having secured transpor tation in a body, but the group will dis integrate upon reaching tlie shores of Greece, each member betaking himself to the detachment representing his native community. A call was made by the Greek gov ernment upon ti>e declaration of the war with Turkey. The Greeks in America who still owed allegiance to the native land were given four months grace in which to wind up their affairs in this country before leaving. Impatient, how ever. a detachment of 150 left Atlanta several weeks ago. ami those who will leave Wednesday have yet much respite left. Several of the twenty-one who will leave Wednesday ure American citizens, and owe no duty to Greece. Bach of the party will pay his own expenses of trans portation and subsistence. THROWS CAN OF CORN IN QUARREL: KILLS MAN MARKED TREK. ARK., Dec. 31. Wil liam JohtiH ami Alex .Smith quarreled over a girl. Johns threw a ran ■ f corn, which hit Smith .n the head tin-' killed him. Johns was arrested. Secret Friends Engage Lawyer for Mrs. King INSANITY TO BE DEFENSE U/ i w I fe F r / Y W JI 1 - ’ / / / If w* / / / . 1 // / / / Nick Wilburn, (he Jones county farm Hand, held for the murder of James King, which h e confesses he plotted with King’s wife. Attorney Hopes to Send Con fessed Death Plotter to the Asylum Instead of Gallows. MACON, GA., Dec. 31. —A leading Macon lawyer, who wants his name withheld for the present, has been em ployed by parties, whose identity will not be divulged, to represent Mrs. Katherine King, confessed death plot ter. This lawyer is going to Grays to morrow by automobile for a confer ence with the prisoner. If she gives her consent, the lawyer will at once start a legal fight in her behalf. He intimates that he will not be content with saving her from death on the gal lows, but that his hope, if his employ ment is ratified by Mrs. King, is to send her to the state asylum for the insane.' “1 accepted the employment, such as it is, witii great reluctance,” he states, “and am proceeding mostly in the case on account of a feeling- of sympathy for the woman. If she does not want counsel, if she herself wants the law to take its course, xvhj, of course, I shall drop the case at once. However, if she assents to my conduct of her case, 1 will get busy without delay. The chief condkion of my employment as attor ney for Mrs. King is that I must not disclose to her the names of those who have paid me my fee.” Sheriff Fearing Suicide Attempt. Fearing that Mrs. King- may attempt to commit suicide and that she may endeavor to secure outside aid to that end, Sheriff Charles Roberts, of Jones county, is closely watching the jail at Grays, where the woman is a prisoner. Today a woman sent Mrs. King a quart of buttermilk. The sheriff received it and poured it on the ground, saying, ”1 don’t know whether anything is in that milk or not.” The sheriff declares he will take no chances with his prisoner. He allows no one to send Mrs. King articles un less first inspected by him. He de clines to permit food to be given her except by himself. Notwithstanding that petitions for a speedy trial for Mrs. King and Jesse Nick Wilburn are in circulation in Jones county, it is not likely that tlie con fessed slayers of Jami s King will hear their doom pronounced until the regu lar April term of th, Jones county su perior court. it is stated bj those in touch with th, situation that Judge James B. Park does not favor special terms of court, believing that tlie.' t-iigenilei feeling and promote an unhealthy sentiment, ad verse to the defendants. No request for a special term of court will 1 come from Solicitor Joseph E. Pottle, so if one is ordered, the action will be taken in response to the petitions now being signed at Round Oak, Hillsboro. Grays and Bradleys. The petitions recite that the killing of James King by Wilburn, as the re sult of the plotting of Mrs. King, is the worst and loulest crime in the an nals of Jones county, and tliat tlie good people of the county, condemning such outrages, desire that the guilty parties shall be given early trials and the iaw x indicated. Mrs. King Refuses To See Visitors. .Mrs. King lihs requested Sheriff Rob erts to turn away all persons other than her relatives who call to see her. unless the visitors want to pray with iter md give her spiritual encourage ment. She lias not s.en a single one of hvt ninth<> since her jail confine- ment. A Bible has also been furnished her, by urgent request. The woman is heartbroken at the refusal of her children to visit her, and today wrote Nina, her sixteen-year-oid daughter and favorite child, begging her not to forsake her mother. Tells of Poison in Another Confession. In another confession to Detective Moore last night, Mrs. King admitted that she had put morphine in his coffee, but the poison hardly affected him. A second attempt was made when Wil burn, at her suggestion, put strychnine in the husband’s whisky, and this failed because Mrs. King saved his life with a narcotic. The third attempt, when the man was shot with his own gun, was successful. Mrs. King also declared that two months ago she and Wilburn planned to kill King w ith a pistol, using a weapon belonging to Frank Wilburn, Nick’s brother. They were then to take the discharged cartridge out of the pistol and put it in King’s revolver to make it appear that he committed suicide. This plan was never executed because they could not get King alone, one of the children always being present. Mrs. King’s second confession shows that for at least four months she and Wilburn daily plotted to end the life of her husband. Fool for Confessing, Says Nick Wilburn. Wilburn lias also declined to receive any more visitors at the Bibb county jail. Today he told Jailer Hicks that he was “the biggest fool in the world for ever confessing.” "If I hadn't acted like a crazy man and told that confounded detective all about the thing, I believe I could get out of this scrape,” he said. Wilburn is buoyant at the expecta tion of having active legal representa tion, his father, who visited him yester day, having decided to engage counsel. Lawyers See Nothing To Halt Conviction “There should not be the slightest difficulty in convicting Mrs. Katherine King and Jesse Nick Wilburn of the murder of James King. The legal dif ficulties in obtaining conviction on an unsupported confession do not apply to this case,” said Thomas R, Felder, of the new firm of Felder, Anderson, Dil ion \\ hitman, today. He was asked by The Georgian to define the le gal status of the noted case. "The prisoners will not be permitted to plead guilty of murder, but should they make no preparation for defense attorneys won d be appointed for them and pleas of not guilty entered. Under the law a confession, entirely unsup ported by other evidence, is not per missible as evidence. But if there Is ot.<r e\idetice—such as the negro's, who might swear he saw Wilburn go ing toward King in tin. woods —this would serve to convict. "And where there is such evidence the confessions will be admitted, if they were made voluntarily und without fear of punishment or hope of reward. Con fessions elicited under the 'thi:d degree’ would not be admitted. “In this case, for instance, tlie sheriff and other officers and the newspaper men to whom Wilburn and Mrs. King made free and voluntary confessions might be summoned to swear to the substance of the confessions, and this evidence, taken with the corroborative testimony and circumstances surround ing tin- ease, should be sufficient for conviction." CORONER PROBING DEATH. ANNISTON. Al.\ . Dec. .: I—(’oroner J 1,. Murphy is invesilgating the al leged sulcidi of Marshal Davis, a negro of Hobson City, found <li ad todaj. Th< Is suspicion tli-'- a intirdet. has be,m committed. WOODWARD FOR SANDSREFORNIS Heads of Police and Park Boards. Hit by Expert’s Re port. Are Angry. Continued From Page One. would see the police department as en tirely different—they Jiave, in fact, ”\Ve've got the best police depart ment of any city of the size of Atlanta in America. Cites Compliment Taft Paid Police. “President Taft said it was the best regulated town he had ever seen. When he was here last he noticed that the policemen were able to keep back the crowds during the parade without rop ing off the streets, and he commented on their fine work. “Abqlish the police commission? The department hasn't been conducted so harmoniously and so businesslike in years. "He says our policemen lack ‘punch and snap.’ Well, the greatest part of the work of our policemen is to catch negroes. We’ve got men who are ex perts. I had rather have one of these brave men than ten who stand up with awesome military bearing and then run when a negro ‘pulls’ a rock or a razor on him. our traffic officers are as good as such officers in New York.” Park Board Head Resents Criticism. President J. O. Cochran, of the park board, was bitter in his reply to the statement of Expert Sands that the park board was useless and even re tarded the work of the park depart ment. “He was hired to report certain things, and those things he had to re port.” said he. "Outside of his recommendation that the park board should be abolished, he did not say anything that was not al ready known. The trouble with our parks is lack of money. Why didn't he tell us where to get more money?” Colonel F. J. Paxon’s Chamber of Commerce committee on municipal re search will consider the report at length within a few days. Then the report will be submitted to council, through the city board of municipal research. Legislation Necessary To Adopt Suggestions. Council will have to get charter amendmepts from the general assem bly in order to adopt the more impor tant provisions of the report. Councilman Clarence Haverty, chair man of the city board of municipal re search, said today he was w’ell pleased with the report. He said it was full of material for great good. The report of 8. G. Lindholm, the ex pert who investigated the schools and health departments, is expected within a few days. The Sands report not be submitted to council until the Lind holm report also is ready. ZACK ROWAN GOES TO FLORIDA RESORT TO BENEFIT HEALTH Zack Rowan, chief of the county po lice, who has been ill for the past year, has gone to St. Petersburg, Fla., to re cover his health. Chief Rowan expects to spend two months at the Tampa bay resort. During his absence Lieutenant Robinson will be in charge of the coun ty force. During the past summer Chief Rowan spent several months at the Robinson sanitarium in an effort to recover his health. He was told by physicians that he was* suffering from a form of kidney trouble. MAKESWIFEHIS" BOXING PARTNER TO TRAIN FOR RING CHICAGO, Dec. 31.—“ My husband insisted on putting the boxing gloves on with me, and this is why I started a fuss," says Mrs. Harry Bullard, 3716 South Wabash avenue, when she was arraigned before Municipal Judge John Courtney. “He thinks that he is to follow in Johnson s footsteps, and, as he can not afford to pay men to train him, he forced me to spar with him.” Mrs. Bullard and her husband were arrested at their home, where they were found in ilsti" combat. Each was fined $2. COLORADO APPLE KING IS LOOKING FOR BLOND WIFE NEW YORK. Dec. 31.—1 V. B. (Toss, "apple king” of Colorado, whose prod ucts are entered in the apple contest here, says lie would like to find a wife. A blond one about So is preferred, and he’ll accord interviews to all appli cants at the Breslin hotel. You’ll Never Be" Lonely at the Grand" PD A kin TH,S WEEK “The Antique Girl” Keith with 15 Musical Com- Vaudeville , edy Stars. Daily Mat- Jl U u ray &Lane. Frank Many max Mullane. Grant & Inees and Hoag. 4 Florlmonds. Evening Per- Venetian 4. Gere & formances £^Td X . NeXt WCek LYRIC M,t »- Tue «- “ ■ Thurs. and Sat. S W Cia Z N^d?pa r r e 8 B .^s y - BABY MINE WITH WALTER JONES AND THE NEW YORK CAST. BEAVERSOPPOSES PULICEBDARO ABOLITION ; Declares Sands Recommenda tion Would Give Too Much Power to One Man. Taking issue with Municipal Expei Herbert R. Sands, Chief of Police Junaq L. Beavers tqday declared hfnisei against tlie abolition of the police board ' which had been recommended br tlie prober. The chief declared that und« r th e civil service rules the board is perform ing a valuable service to the depart, ment, in that it chooses policemen who are capable, mentally and physically, from the heads of the force on dowr through the supernumeraries. To abolish the police board, accuru ing to Chief Beavers, would place too much power in the hands of tlie chief and his under-officers, and this privi lege might be abused. Likewise, he asserted, it might leadtol the choice of chief by popular elec-1 tion, and bring back into the depart-j ment the politics of the old days prior to civil service. ‘Little Politics in Department Now.” "There is less politics in the police; department,” declared Chief Beavers, "than there has been in the 24 years I have been on the force. Prior to years ago, when civil service was inau gurated, policemen shook in their boots for fear they would be left off the fores by.a turn of the political wheel. Thej needed to know who their friends were, and about election time, when changes were looked for. they were mighty anx. ious. Citizens against whom officer made cases said, ‘Never mind—l'll ge: back at you on election day.’ "Now all that is changed, and the members of the force are free to do their duty, without feeling that thej owe anything to anybody in a politics, way. This has increased the efficiency' of the force, and it would be a grea* mistake to take any step calculated t< upset the civil service.” Answering a question as to the heir or hindrance of police boards, Chiel Beavers declared: "The poltce -board never has ham pered me.” “The entire police force does not ap pear to have the ‘punch’ or ‘snap,’’ said the expert’s report. To this Chle; Beavers replied: "I think the police force has enoug?. of both ‘punch’ and ‘snap.’ At least, a lot of people think the ’punch’ is prettj strong.” Opposed to Military Training for Men. As for setting-up exercises and ex treme military features, Police Chic: Beavers dissented again. He takes th* position that the members of the de partment should at all times present ; neat appearance and exhibit suffleien authority and force to maintain the nee sary discipline, but that there siiouli be no czar-like measures or lack (■ civility toward citizens. “If strict military measures are " qulred of a police chief,” says Chit Beavers, “the chief will take ft out vi his men, and his men will take it out o' the people. There is such a thing going too far in such reforms. “Our traffic squad and men on t'n front in the day watch are required i. have white gloves and white collar-: the ensemble und march to and fron the station is in the nature of a dail? drill, and there is a daily inspection " each watch as it goes on and comes of duty. "The men are provided with two uni forms a year—winter and summer—ar.< are required to keep the uniforms i' good condition at all times. They alsi are required to shave clean whenevi necessary. You can go to anj- of th' larger cities in the country, and I deul' if you will find a force of men wh< present a better appearance. I went t» New York and Toronto, and found s n: policemen who looked lots worse tlw members of the local force. "The tendency'of military featur would make a machine of the force knock-down and drag-out affair. ' soldier applies one principle, obey* rule, while the policeman must fit '■ to individual eases.” -■■ - - THE ATLANTA Tonight, Wed. Mat. and Wed. Niglit Werber <S. Luescher Present MIZZI HAJOS In the Operatti Triumph The Spring Maid Orchestra, $1.50 and $2: Balcony 50c, 76c, SI.OO, Thurs., Fri., Sat. Mat., Sat. Night SEATS SELLING NOW [YERywoHANI | Her Pilgrimage In Quest of Lo'C | Great Cast. 150 People Nights, 50c to $2.00; Matinee. 25c *'■ $1.50. DON’T MISS IT. wm " i BIMIg