Newspaper Page Text
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HUNTED OIL U
IS DEPORTED IT
JEKYL ISLAND
House Officers to Ask for
Power to Break Doors of
Rockefeller Mansion.
NEW York, Jan. While -bout
100 private det»<’tiv« *lepu ' un-
der Serg’-ant-at-Au 1 rH !' Iti<
dell, vs the h*n, *• .-.-ntativ. .
continued their I. i foi W il
liam Rockefeller, who Hied .’*■ ;*
Witness by th** Puj*» •■•»rna •• iiivv
tigating the dh-d* \ fru.'t. t «»*’.
. ■
arated point.-
A word Ing to on*- -t; v ■ i
living in the Ma<-ka\ < <.t j. • J’ kyl ;
island, >*ff th* - *ast *»T - ir; uotli' i
had him visiting h * ••«»> Wi 1 ...io, in ,
Greenwich, ’’onn.. . • fl ■■ n i ' i< - ’
ported him m !,;>■ T . y., ;
«ountry plm-« .
Although it v. ;■ fah :y • . : hul ■
Mr. Uo<-i:» h-H*t was not in hr 1 -.vn I
house b’lfty-fourh street and i tih|
*. ..u- th- \ fgilam < i» f t- ~. - !
1 ere v> a« not 1 *•!.»
Seregant-ut-Arms Kid.i- . uo , i».
<umlng im»r<- . u»i mor** . uk<\ l.i
m.’Succe: , j considering tLi advis
billt> •>!’ having Chairman ’*u,r». -i t .
mom y . ust < mini;r* ■•. .* I. t h ■ u••
</f 7vpr‘-ser.ta Tlv-.m io issue an ;■( art;,
jnent giving th** s<ar<h*i power m
hi’v ok Cov. u the dooi: oi • * I!(«.< k,
fell* r” *» that th** mansion t tight be
searched to axcitain Mr. R . i> i- ihr’-
* :.avt whvn-.t bo ms.
“Oii Magnate Hiding.”
Air. Riddell beib‘V« . hat the lb»rk* - .
feller cas* will be the fir t math i taken
up when 1 o.igr«’FM conv» , ii» > .‘. Th*
grant-at-arms is < m\ in< ♦*! ih:*t Mi.
Rockefeller Icnouh*- it uaiili-d hut i
wilfully evading service. H* Hu h*
probably would submit a report to Rep
resentative Pujo toda or tomoiT..’ giv
ing evidence to show that tin oil mag
nate is hiding.
The first signs of lif* at tin Rovkv .
feller town lmus< was visible at s
o’clock when a inaid opened a window
on an upper floor ami looked *»ut. < »ne
of the detectives shouted "A happy *
New Year to you.” but the maid lam
med down th*- window ami di pp- ar**l
from view. A few minutes later she re
appeared and posted a letter in a mail
box across the street.
The four Burns d< tectlv* - and Dep
uty Sergeants-at-Anns Archibald Bon- 1
han and <L. Houston, who had been i
on duty all night. Immediately reported
the matter to Mr. Riddell, who said he
would consult with the postal authori
ties on the advisability’ of having the
address on the letter made public, one
of the detectives said he bail learned I
on good authority that Mr. and Mrs. '
Rockefeller had left the residence Sun
day night and had not returned since.
Physician Defends Rockefeller.
Dr. Walter I’. Chappelle, family phy .
sician for the Rockefellers, said today
that Mr. Rockefeller probably fell him
tgelf justified in avoiding service because
of the condition of his health. The do* -
tor said that any excitement was dan
gerous to Mr. Rockefeller, who has been
suffering for some time from a serious I
throat ailment.
"A sudden shock might kill him, and i
the strain of testifying would surely |
• teil on him,” said the physician.
TWO NEW OFFICIALS IN
RICHMOND COUNTY JOBS
AUGUSTA. GA., Jan. 1 A large
number of Richmond county officers
took the oath of office today. There
are only two changes among the county
officers, one being in the clerk of
court’s office, where Daniel Kerr suc
ceeds W. D.A. Walker, and the other
> in the office of the solicitor general of
the Augusta circuit, A. 1., Franklin
succeeding Solicitor Joseph S. Itey
( nolds. Ordinary A. R Walton was
elected for four years and the remain
tit: ■ of the officers for two years.
SEVERAL CHANGES MADE
IN JACKSON COUNTY JOBS
JEFFERSON, GA . Jan. 1. S. J. Nix.
retiring clerk of Jackson superior court,
will resume the practice of law hero. N
B. Lord today retires from the office <>f
tax receiver and becomes »-Jerk «»f the
superior court. Sheriff Ben H. Collier r«
tires from his office to his farm west of
the city Samuel C Potts is the new
sheriff, with J. \V Stockton as chief dep
uty. Obe Hawks becomes tax receiver,
succeeding Mr. Lord. 1». R Marlow and
T. T. Stapler retire from the county cm- 1
mission, being succeeded by \V. \\ Hat.
cock an*i L. D Xi kelson
FORMER GERMAN CONSUL
AT ATLANTA NOW IN HAYTI
Dr.
perial German consul Atlanta, ,a«
been given by his government the dou
ble appointment of acting ■ >.iiiif-1v in
Hayti and San Domingo. U s h.
Germany.
Dr. Zoepffel was .sent :r> . \t.an m
several years ago to Havana, whets ■
was tlie acting German minis;, r. Sin •
he lias held several diplomat!, portion.-*
in Centra! and South America.
CHICAGO WOMAN WILL
LEAD BAND IN PARADE
W ASHINGTON, Jan. 1. Mi - Wil-’
ham Kent, wife of Representative Kent, 1
of California, former’s of Ch *ag*». ha>j
Loen named chairman of th* band com - ,
. fttee for the RUffraght j * a<le p* take
in Washington on Ma Th*-
*.ate has been .set mb*’ day ;.ma* *•; i
the coming *»f the new adm:nistra:ion.
in order not to intcft ic ivt . 1 ? i.
WHAT TheT ‘WATER WAGON’
_ _QID FOR MARY GARDEN!
AFTER Pounds by BEFORE
i Vji
-MH W aj
■Hy ; J
M.irt t ..idloii, poieil alter and before her tibsiintuee treat nienl.
Mary Garden’s measurements before and after going on the "water wagon."
AFTER BEFORE.
He.oht A-’i 3 V 0U p dS 154 pounds
2 e ' 9 ,6 o 1-4 inches Height 65 inches
Height sitting 34 inches Height sitt.ng 34 nches
G.rhofneck 131-2 inches Girth of neck 14 nches
Girth of chest 33 1-2 .nches Girth of chest ' ' 35 1-2 nches
Girth of v.a.st 26 .nches Girth of waist 27 nches
r'Vu . Y PS 14 .nches Breadth of hips . 14 12 inches
Girth of thigh 211-4.nches Girth of thigh 211-2mches
9 ,r !|’ °J ca . ! 13 1-4 inches Girth of calf 13 1-2 inches
Girth of ankle 8 1-2 inches Girth o f ankle 8 1-2 inches
Girth of upper arm 101-2 inches Girth of upper arm . 10 3-4 inches I
Girth of forearm . 9 1-4 inches Girth of forearm . 9 1-4 inches
n' rth .,? f w ' r,! >* 61-4 inches Girth of wrist . ... 6 1-4 inches
o rea a!!? °! s, '°“ lc, ers 16 1-2 inches Breadth of shoulders 16 1-2 inches
Breadth of waist 11 inches Breadth of waist 11 inches
CHICAGO, Jan. 1 You who in
tend to inis- your right hand sky
ward on January 1 and make a sol
emn vow never to touch another wee
stua' or vet ra large drappie forever, or
hardly eva .. take heart, for if you are
overweight y otn alistineti -. will bring a
great reward.
’.’hell in lies ii little y of Mart
j Gat'd’ n that has Ju I leak' - out
About two w.i-ks ago ''llf Mary
awoke to the fuel that she weighed 154
pounds. Tills was an awful shock, es-
I peeially as years ago ‘-he had vowed
I never to weigh ever 135.
The question was what was to be
done? Mary thought it over and de
cided that going on "the water wagon"
was n good thing to try. She tells
the story herself, so It must be true,
and her declaration is that within two
weeks <>f elimbing to that bourtti from
which a majority of travelers return,
site had lost twenty pounds.
The German Method.
When Mary Wils seen by a ri |-ette ,
she said:
"Yoll see, jllSt as I lIUVe sWOl’lt nevi ,
to lie over 35 years old. I have taken
President-Elect Refutation of 111 Fortune of ‘l3"
WILSON’S LUCKY YEAR
PRINCETON. N. .1 . Jan. I. "An
other lucky year has started -the year
of 1913" was the observation made
today by President-cleet Woodrow \\ ii
son, whose life so far has proved a
continuous refutation of the old super
stition reg.wiling th' ill-foltum of "13,”
I For President-elect Wilson 13" has
(proved a signa of good luck, and in
idlseu’s'ing this today, he said:
'How has i' e numb, • '!’: tlguied in I
Imy lif, ? Xlways in < onn ctioti with I
. settle good I'o. tulle You know tll-’l
je'vto’.al ■_ •’’!eu- w hi. 'i is to east itsl
(vote otileia v electing me to the t- e-i-l
I denvy is to in. "t Jatinary 13, 191'- I’ .'- j
hap- you have noticed t!'ll if tie nu- I
’ literals making up the y< a 191 in whi
1 vas e’.-eted p .-idem a: mid. . up
■ I
HUNTERS' DOGS FIND
MAN FROZEN TO DEATH
C \MI »EX X J . .Ui; The b. of
. b»srph B Haines. »*.’» years old. was found
i frozen to death it a swamp rear Had
(donfichl. b\ <. »k> wlu were with hunt
• ctr
THREE RIVALS FOR SAME
GIRL SUICIDES TOGETHER
\IFNNA Jc 1 Tliri'c Vvlll’.g II • ,
I Who w • ii I\. with •> . san . glr I
f
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.WEDNESDAY. JANT ARY 1.
an oath never to w.-igh over l!'.s|
pounds.
"You know how it is in tlie Tyrol
and in the German places. They don’t
mind being fat a bit. Honestly, a fat
prima donna over there is de rigueur.
They nearly had me hypnotized. 1 be
gan to believe it m.vsell. So | drank
beer! It is insidious. It glows on j
one. It grew on nu- -twenty pounds ofj
it. One day I woke up with a start. I I
was hugt—think of it twenty pounds
to the bad.
Strenuous Life Began.
"Well. 1 began leading the strenu-|
I ous life then and there. I just wal-|
‘ lowed in charged water and I took ever
so many baths, and no one knows how
many rubs, and 1 didn’t eat anything
, starchy, and 1 suffered a. good deal." If
. there is one tiling that Mary loves to
i do it is to older dinner and then to eat
i it without worry.
. "But 1 couldn’t land over here with
those twenty pounds, now. could I?
You know what the nevvspupers are
, They would say I was getting tubby
and that I’d be funny as Salome, and
oh, Im. not for little Mary 1 just got
- ; busy, and here 1 am." j
mine is the thirty-first term and if
thes. numbers are placed backward
the r. suit is 13."
The president-elect waltehed the old
y. ai out and the new one In. retiring at
13 minutes afte 1? o'clock, further in
connecti at w ith the reversed supersti
tion of 13.
Mr. Wilson was a profess," at j
i I’l'ineeton university 111 years and was I
|the thirteenth president of that insti-J
(tuc 'i M Wilson !':•< qtu ntly points
I "Ut th.,', tin aie 13 1,-ters in the name
■\\ , -drow W .son. so -n, v, uses lib
' tian na ne, "Thomas.” Und< his
I ~, nt trip t om It,■:amnia ... left his |
I I mt.me the. >n I’ridu.'.. I•- . ■ mb, : I
Tie 11 st i ■ . son to whi.lt the pi.-si
-1,, nt-, 1,-et w -hed it hairy yen was
Hi ta dT .> .. the s« ..g- nt
I ho is M. \\ , n ’s bo,i> gun ,1
ONIONS MAKE HIS HENS
LAY IN COLD WEATHER
SIHI.NGFIFI.I', MASS . Jun 1. Haw:
unions te<l to liens make them l.i\ even In I
the noblest weather, according to F F I
Woodward, of Fast Longmeaoow. wh. 1
won several prizes at the recent poultry
1912 MACON'S WETTEST YEAR
MACON, GA.. Jan. 1. The year 1912
iwa- the wettest In th' history of tin
Macon weather bureau, a total of
| Inch. ' of | oelpitatlon having boon •-
p Otdeil during the pa-t twolv. mont <
T . .
I Miss Garden executed a pas de seul.
Then she laughed and sat down.
Thinks Arms Same, Too.
ell. there’s one thing 1 have never
toivl anybody." said tile vivacious star.
"I am the exact prototype of the Venus
de Milo. My measurements are prac
tically the same as hers were, and they
j are not much out of the way even when
i i am rallying that extra twenty pounds.
I You see. it is very • venly distributed.
I and I don’t stick out anywhere on ac
i count of it. It is really more my con-
I science that bothers me than the extra
| weigl.t.
| "Now, the Venus has no arms. 1
■ have. My arms tire declared by the
sculptors to be just the arms Venus
must hive had. How’s that for dis
tinction? W.-11. I've promised to sing a
, | little song lor some friends of mine In
rein arsa! at 11 o’clock, so you don’t
I mind if I run away, do you? Come
| around for tea any afternoon and I’ll
’I Show you how to make it Russian
| style."
j Just how Mary lost those twenty
pounds is still something of a problem,
for she won’t walk a yard except on the
REPUBLICANS PLANNING
TO DITCH SEN. PENROSE
I’ll I’SB’i ItG. Jan. t. Republican lead
ers of the state, including Secretary of
the Commonwealth Robert McAfee and
State Highway Commissioner H M.
Bigelow, plan a reorganization for the
party under the leadership of Governor
Tener. The candidacy of George E. Al
ter for speaker of the house is a part of
the plan.
The leaders say the people have de
clared against I’nited States Senator
Penrose, and that the wise thing to do
is to name Tener as party leader on a
pr« gresslve platform.
20 SALOONS CLOSED UP
BY MACON CITY COUNCIL
JIAf'oX. GA. Jan. 1 \|i -alo.ms
and lockor clubs on t'otion avenue anti
Fourth street, below i 'her. y, were abol
bj < ity < oun s'. By
| this action of council _m saloons a.e
I i-los-ai tip. Petitions signet] t>j hun
dreds ot >atzens and p opertj owners,
II '■te-ting against the further licensing
I saloons on tile.- thoroughfares,
i prompted t: . act ior,
MARRIAGE RECORDS BROKEN.
Mv *' 'V GA. Jan. i a, i records
have been broken by the number <f
I marriages in Bibb county last year.
' 1 tiumb< is nearly double the wel -
lings of three years ago ami an in-
■ '.is Os m arly 300 over 1911. During
the vear Just ended there were 637 no.
gro and 471 white tnartiagos
BARBECUE FOR CAR MEN.
I ''Ll MUI'S. <; \ . Jan. The officials
>t the < olumbus Kailroa.l t'ompat ' will
;uae their nitt'l". >. s ~n annual barbecue
l' l! ’’ otst"" ro.i> Thursday night. \
’’’her Os >• tr.,l ■ t't citizens have rt—
■ Vi •!’ Vi:' I -
LMffLM.U'
150. SAY EXPERTS
Not Even Growing Aged. De
clare German Specialists,
Who Urge Sane Sports.
BERLIN. Jan. 1.- The man of i
1 war the subjecr of a .symposium in the i
i Tageblati. Medical experts, business I
• men and artists agree that a man of 50 j
lis no oldi than a man of 40 and in a j
. number of instances decidedly more !
; useful.
Professor Krause asserts that it is
ab.'uid to describe a man of 50 as even
gro'vir.g old. 'inly in exceptional cases,
due io special causes, does lie reveal
decreased elasticity. D’. Krause rec
ommends sane sport as the best insur
ance against old age for a man of 50.
Dr. Lappman, another eminent spe
cialist. declares that a man of 50 is of
i highly intellectual worth, and on ac
count of his responsibility, experience
land rational living possesses countless
I physical and mental advantages over a
youngei man.
Professor Arthur Kamp, president of
! the Royal academy, says great artists
lot' all times Lave done their best w-ork
; bet ween tile ages of lu and 60.
I>r. Leon Zeitlin, secretary of the
i Berlin Retail Trudes association,
'blames the Americanization of Ger
. many 's commercial life for increasing
tile prejudice against men of 50.
THIS HAMLET GREATEST
PRIMARY WHEAT MARKET
GRAND l-'oRKS, N. D.. Jan. L—Ele- i
! valors at New England, N. !>.. a town
: of 200 Inhabitants, are daily handling
! 30.000 bushels of wheat, and it Is now I
I certain that approximately' 2,000,0001
bushels of the 1912 crop will be mar-;
i iteteil at this little hamlet in Hettin
| ger county. From 200 to 456 teams
' have been in New England daily for the
past month and a half. The town lias
five elevators, and the mlllion-bushel
mark was passed on December 20. This
town lias the distinction of being the
greatest primary grain market in the
‘ United States.
SHE WANTED TO SPANK BOY
WHO THREW BANANA PEEL
MACON, GA.. Jan. 1. Mrs. It. Gold
gar, a well known Macon woman, want
ed to spank the boy who threw a ba
nana peel tinder her feet on Cherry
street yesterday afternoon, after she
had slipped on it and broke her tight
leg.
| “Come back here and I'll spank you
good,” she shouted at the fleeing
youngster. M:s. Goldgar was unable to |
I arise, und when an ambulance was
I summoned und site had been sent to
tin- hospital it was found tiiut a bone
was fractured.
TUBERCULOSIS SPREADS
AMONG AUGUSTA NEGROES
AUGUSTA. GA.. Jan. I.—The annual
report of Dr. Eugene E. Murphey, pres
ident of the Augusta board of health,
shows that the increase In tuberculosis
victims in this city is alarming. The
Increas- In mortality is confined, how
ever. to the negro section of the city,
and the majority of the victims are of
the pauper class.
Dr. Murphey makes strong recom
mendations that the city make better
provision for the care of its tubercu
losis poor in the future.
GIRL ASKS $2,000 FOR
KISS SHE DIDN'T GET
KANKAKEE, ILL., Jan. L—Charles
Hay den, highway commissioner of Kan
kakee county and a leading farmer,
has been sued for $2,000 damages by-
Miss Mary Crocker. She alleges that
he attempted to kiss her and placed
one arm around her. greatly to her em
barrassment.
TO FIX BUDGET FOR COLUMBUS.
COLUMBUS, GA . Jan. 1. -At the
monthly meeting of tin- city council ( ,f
Columbus, to be held tonight, the ordi
nance providing for the yearly budget will
be introduced and placed on its first read
ing. I: Is expected that there will he
but very few changes in the tax ordi
nance and license schedule for 1913;
COLUMBUS CLEARINGS GROW.
COLI MBt’S. GA.. Jan. 1. -The clearing
house association of Columbus shows
bank clearings for 1912 amounting to $25,-
(>81.404.03, compared to $22,156,464.60 in
ll'll. making a gain of $3,527,939.43 in 1912
over ll'll.
11
\\; cop
■ \Si^ J * L,Tr
Maxwell
House
Blend
Coffee
The choice of the
South’s most exclu
sive winter resorts
every year. It must
be best.
A»k yoar grocer for it.
Cheeh-Neal Coßee Co.,
!*MbriUe, Jaete*«sTilte
— ::
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
BY JAMES B. NEVIN.
Prolesso ■ .'J. 51. Parks, president ■ . |
. the Georgia N.e a.al am! Industrie!
school, th'- state's great institution for I
% *
F ■
(gills in Mllledg. -
I vllic, is an AL.m-
I ta visitor.
i Professot I’a . -
I one of the
, South’s n*<
compll.ihed edu
cators. His rep
' utation for tlto- -
i "Ugliness is not
| confined to tin
state of Georgia
aione. Under his
able management
the Normal school
at Milledgeville
has grown to be
truly great—one
of the state’s big
gest and best as
sets. indeed.
"There is only one- girl in the school
who does not reside within the state."
said Professor Parks, discussing his p--t
institution today, "and she is tFGeorgla
girl, all right, temporarily exiled in
South America.
"The Georgia Normal is a state in
stitution. reserved for Georgia git's.
And, anyway, we can not accommo
date anything like all that apply for
admission, as it is. Last yea v.
turned away almost as many as we ac
cepted, and this year it was just the
same.
“Our gills are to be found every
where nowadays. They come to us
from all parts of the state, and we st .id
them forth prepared for their splendid
| life's work—teaching. I wislt tve could
I take in all tile Georgia girls that apply
and outsiders, too. But. of course, we
lean only take care of pur own. This
1 we do. as far as we are able.
"The Georgia Nonna! is best ad
vertised by its loving friends—by the
girls that come to us and go forth a few
months later equipped for their call
ings.
"I wish every Georgian could visit
the school in Milledgeville, and see
what we have to offer. The state would
want to double our capacity at once, if
Georgia just knew all that is being dorn
in lite school.
"The legislature never set up a finer
institution, and the state's money could
go to no worthier or more helpful
cause."
Colonel Jesse Perry, the governor’-'|
private secretary, after a two weeks’
vacation in south Georgia, where the
elan Perry most does congregate, is
back once more in his seat of the
mighty, under the big dome over on
Capitol Hill.
Colonel Perry spent his Christmas
holidays hunting quail. He evidently
has heard something of the lute perni
cious activity of Game Warden Jesse
Mercer, however, for the tales he re
lates of his prowess witlt the gun ate
so astonishingly modest that his friends
are reluctant to believe them alto-
I get her.
"Do you know." said Perry, discuss-'
ing his trip, “that one day I shot 58
times and only got .seven birds? Well,
it is a fact! Time was—passed forever,
I fear me much—wlien the story would
have read the other way around—l
should have killed 58 birds in seven
siiots.
“The birds are very plentiful, how
ever. this year—l got up fifteen coveys
in two days, for instance, in one end of
Mitchel! county.
“Bitt I wasn’t much on the kill —only
got some twenty-odd birds on my en
tire trip—and th" most of these I
brought back to the governor."
It was evident enough that Perry had
not the remotest idea of seeking mem
bership either in Mercer’s Ananias club
or the county jail gang, upon a mere
issue of quail shooting, at least!
the enfeebled system readily |
accepts any disease Nature's
resistant force is depleted
and Scott *s Emulsion is
needad. 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 equal* Scott s t.mul*ton
1 it« convaleaence. >
B Scott & Bowrie. Bloomfield, N.J. 12-S2
Clogged-Up Liver
Causes Headache
It's a foolish proceeding to suffer from eon
alipation, tick headache, biliousness, dir z mesa,
indigestion and kindred ail
ments when CARTERS
LITTLE LIVER
PILLS will end all X,
vegetable. ? TTLE
iBWER
on liver I
and Wo. j M—fli
bo welt. . - i
Small Pill. Small Doit, Small Price.
The GENUINE must bear signatura
; T!. .i.aut of Mrs. Charles W. Ad.i ;n .
Ison, which occurred in Carrollton M
I day morning, will occasion much
row, not only in het otvn home, b u »
among th, Georgia delegation in
gress. of which her distinguished
band Is a veteran member.
The sympathy of the entire stat,-
igo out to Repre.-entativc Adamson n
I his great loss.
i Mrs. Adamson was pa tieular.y tteu-l
. for her charity ami catholic trend ;
thought. She was closely Identifivl
with "Very good work in her home to. t
and was prominently, but not ostent. .
tiously, connected with much of t »
benevolent endeavor of the naliot
capital.
She was a gifted musician, and a >.
gether a charming friend to those f,,-.
tunate enough to come within the fa
vored circle of her acquaintance.
Judge Richard B. Russell, of the co in
of appeals, is one of the most remark
able workers in the state—as a matte’
of fact, it is doubtful whether Itis equal
fob straightaway, conscientious and in
telligent work in the matter of prepar
ing judicial opinions is to be. found in
any state, especially as concerns th"
quantity turned out.
Judge Russell never puts an opinion
on paper until he has it clear in his
mind. When he starts dictating—in
rarely writes an opinion witlt his owt
hand—lie gets away at a jog trot, an-i
ite never breaks his pace until the opin
ion is finished. Tile judge frequent ..
keeps itis stenogiapher hard at i; ..
night long; but when the stenogr tpi.
is through, both lie and the Judge liav
accomplished a big pile of work, anl
the recesses between the judge's activi
ties are much longer than the average,
moreover.
When in the mood to turn out work,
Judge Russell finds no dlseomf.
what V'-r in rocking along on one meal
a day. partaken of most any old time,
and two or three hours sleep. And tin
great volume of the judge’s work is ac
complished at no sacrifice of clearnes
and intelligence in quality, for it gen
erally’ is admitted that his decisions a
of an extraordinarily high order al
ways.
Judge Russell never took any prizes
at beauty sliows—but lie is a mighty
good judge, and being a judge is hi
life's best work
The dispute between Spring Place
und Chatsworth as to which shall be
tlie county seat of Murray county lias
been settled, and settled wisely, most
people will think, by Secretary Phil
Cook, in favor of Chatsworth.
Chatsworth is a hustling, bustling lit.
tie town, located in the middle of Mur
ray county, and on the main line of the
Louisville and Nashville railroad. It
has many commercial advantages over
Spring Place, particularly in that the
latter is several miles from any rail
road.
An overwhelming majority of Mur
ray county citizens evidently was in
favor of getting tlie county seat away
from Spring Place, for that little town
received only 155 votes in all. The
votes that went illegally to Eton prac
tically all were favorable to Chats
worth. as between Spring Place and
Chatsworth. It was mere local pride
that rounded up some 400 illegal votes
tor l-jt'ip, after it hud been injected
into tlie election without due process of
law.
All’s •■veil that ends well. Murray
county will be satisfied with Chatsworth
as its county seat.
Governor Brown returned to Atlanta
today, after a short visit to itis home
in Marietta.
FLOWERS and FLORAL DESIGNS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Both Phones Number 4. 41 Peachtree.
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THE ATLANTA Mat ' 2^ da >
LAST TIME TONIGHT -
Werber i Luescher Present
MIZZI HAJOS
In the Operetta Triumph
The Spring Maid
Orchestra, $1.30 and $2; Balcony
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Thurs., Fri., Sat. Mat., Sat. Night
sets selling now
9 ,
HENRY W. SAVAGE _
EVERywomAII
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Great Cast. 150 People
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DON'T MISS IT.
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UR A ND - The Antique Girl”
Keith With 15 Musical Com-
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Daiiv Mat Murray & Lane. Frank
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Evening Per- Venetian 4. Gere <£.
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LYRIC TH,S Mats. Tues..
‘ WEEK Thurs. and Sat.
Special Matinee New Years Day.
W. A. BRADY, Ltd.. Presents
BABY MINE
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Next Week—"lN OLD KENTUCKY”