Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 24, 1913, Image 43

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HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, 0A„ SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1013. Divorced Wife of Millen Judge, Who Killed Him and Young Bride, Shows No Remorse. Planned Shooting With Care. Trouble Alleged to Have Started Twenty Years Ago Over Prison er’s Property—Jurist Is Said to Have Slain Brother-in-Law. MILLEN, Aug. 23.—Convinced that Bhe has been an instrument of jus tice, satisfied that the work she had planned for days has been well per formed, Mrs. Edna Perkins Godbee. In her cell in the Jenkins County jail, to-day calmly and confidently awaits the hour when she will face a court to answer to the law for the slaying of her former husband. Judge Walter M Godbee, and the bride who had taken the slayer’s place in his affections. Mrs. Godbee saw life pass from the body of the man with whom she had lived for years, and there was no re morse shown on her face. While im prisoned for his slaying she was told that she must also answer to the -charge of having murdered his wife. She did not blanch. She had determined on the death of both. She had planned her deed care fully. She believed that she was jus- ti r ed in resorting to arms to avenge hei real or fancied wrongs, and per sons who know her best declare she is ready to meet the consequences. No effort to obtain ball has been made by her. She has waived the right of preliminary trial. She is con tent to remain in jail until her time of trial comes. Started Twenty Ye«rs Ago. The attitude of this woman, who has passed her fiftieth year, is one of the most remarkable features of this remarkable tragedy. Twenty years ago, when Judge God bee and his second wife found they were mismated, the foundation for the double slaying was laid. The cli max came Monday morning in the Millen postofflce, when Judge Godbee was almost ingtantly killed and his young wife fatally wounded by pistol shots fired by the woman from whom he had been separated by the courts. Both Judge Godbee and the woman held as his slayer are of prominent Jenkins County families. Godbee had been prominent in politics. He had been married three times. His first wife died many years ago, but, at his request, he is buried at her side in the cemetery at Waynes boro. Soon after her death he mar ried Miss Edna Perkins, daughter of the late Mills Perkins, and heiress to considerable property. They lived in apparent happiness until the early nineties, when the first signs of trouble came. At this time Judge Godbee acquired rights to cer tain properties which belonged to his wife before their marriage. It Is charged that the judge afterward sold this property and reinvested the pro ceeds for his own personal benefit. Shot Brother, Is Rumor. Then there is an old story that years ago in Burke County Judge Godbee became involved in a difficul ty with a brother of the woman he afterward married, and killed him. He pleaded sel^defense and was ac quitted. There is no record., though, that this trouble had any bearing on the marital differences of the couple. Friction between the coupie reached a critical stage ten vears ago, when Mrs. Godbee filed suit for divorce In Jenkins County, charging cruelty on the part of her husband. She declared that the judge had hu miliated' her before her children, had driven her from his room and had nailed the entrance between the two chambers in which they lived. Even after this suit was filed there was a reconciliation, but the trouble cropped out again about five years ago, when Mrs. Godbee again entered suit. She was granted absolute di vorce, but the judge was successful in resisting her plea for alimony. Mrs. Godbee was also given the custody of her minor child, Miss Sarah God- bee, with whom she lived at the time of the tragedy. Divorce Didn't End Trouble. The divorce decree did not end the troubles of the pair, however. Mrs. Godbee always contended that the money on which Judge Godbee was living luxuriously after the decre* rightfully belong to her. It is certain that she was In strait ened circumstances at the time of the killing, and it is believed that the sight of another woman enjoying the fortune she believed hers, while she virtually was living In poverty, had no little to do with # her determination to take justice into* her own hands. ' For after the divorce Judge Godbee married again. His third wife was Miss Florence Boyer, 25 years old, of Youngstown. Ohio. After their meeting at the sea shore Judge God bee continued his courtship at her home, and little more than four months ago he brought her to Millen as his bride. A crisis was reached. Soon after the Judge’s return, it is declared, he received demands from his former wife that he contribute to the support of her and her daughter. In these demands she cited the fact that she was entitled to at least part of the In come he derived from property which had originally been hers. Judge F©ar©d for Life. Intimate friends of the Judge say Chat from that time on he feared, not only for his own life, but for that of hi® bride. So alarmed did he become that on receiving a threatening letter Sunday he refused to take his bride to church, although he was a steward of the First Methodist congregation, and re quested the pastor, the Rev. E. E. Roue, to come to the Hotel Estelle, where he had apartments, to conduct private prayers. It evident that on, that same day J UDGE WALTER M. GODBEE and his third wife, whom he married four .months ago, and who, with her husband, was slain by Mrs. Edna Perkins Godbee, divorced second wife of the jurist, now awaiting trial in the Jenkins County jil. Victims in Millen tragedy, „ ... who are buried side by side at HEHT TOLL FIR Detectives Shadowing Mail Thief Believed to Have Cached $40,- 000 After Robbery. Mrs. Godbee No. 2 decided on the deed she comnlitted Monday. She got into communication with Marshal P. T Foote and requested him to call on her at her daughter’s home. There, the marshal says, Mrs. God bee showed him a .32-caliber pistol. “Will this kill as quickly as a .38?" was the surprising question he was asked. “It will if It hits the right spot.” he replied. She seemed satisfied with the answer and the Interview closed This same pistol was in Mrs. God- bee’s handbag Monday morning when she went to the Millen postofflce. She knew that each day the judge visited there early in the forenoon to inquire for mail. She was seated writing as he entered the building, accompanied by his young wife. Tried to Save His Bride. Eyewitnesses declare that the Judge saw her and immediately seized his bride and hastened to leave the place. His retreat was too late. The woman who had divorced him was on her feet. Her pistol was in her hand and she leveled it steadily. The first shot struck him in the body. The wound was mortal, but with his last strength he threw' himself between the piMtol and his wife, acting as a shield for her. Another shot sent a bullet through his brain. lie died instantly. Mrs. Godbee stood frozen with horror. One look at the judge’s body told his for mer wife that she had done her work there well. Again the pistol was lev eled and as the young woman cried hysterically two shots were fired into her body. She sank to the floor, then attempted to rise. A third shot lef. her lying helpless. The divorced woman then turned and without haste left the postofflce and returned to the home of her daughter and calmly t.ld her what she had done. She was found there a few minutes later bv Sheriff M. G. Johnston, who placed her under arrest. Mrs. Godbee died Tuesday night in the apartments in which she and her husband had lived during the two months of their married life. Mrs. G. W. Boyer, mother of the slain bride, was en route from Williamsport to Millen when her daughter died. An interesting legal point now 'irises. It was at first contended that as the shooting took place in the postofflce, a Government reservation, the United States Court would have jurisdiction in the case. Now', however, the point is advanced that the Government merely leases the postofflce property and that ac cordingly the case will b.e tried in the Jenkins County Circuit Coijrt. Bulk of Estate to Daughter. The will of Judge Godbee has been found in the possession of W. B. Wal lace, a merchant, and one of the dead man’s closest friends. The val ue of the estate is between $45,000 and $50,000. He bequeathes the bulk of his property and securities to his daughter by his first wife, formerly Miss Maggie Godbee, now' married and living in Augusta. Small portions of the estate are left to Frank Mills and King Godbee, sons of the divorced wife, and Miss Sarah Godbee, also an issue of the second marriage. The divorced wife is not provided for in the instrument. Frank Mills Godbee has been appointed tem porary administrator of the estate of Judge Godbee. and A. S. Anderson, temporary administrator of the estate of Mrs. Florence Boyer Godbee. The third Mrs. Godbee has been burfed beside her husband and his first wife in Waynesboro. The condition of Mrs. Boyer, the slain bride’s mother, is said to be somewhat improved fol lowing her collapse upon first seeing the dead body of her young daughter. Her two sons have come from Penn sylvania and will remain with her un til she returns to her home at Wil liamsport. Neither of the boys expresses any animosity toward the slayer of their sister and her husband, but both join their mother in hoping that exact justice will be done. Archibald and I.eRoy Boyer, the brothers, have not yet decided whether they will attend the trial of the second Mrs. Godbee. African Chieftain Is Harvard Student Begins Stupendous Task of Reduc ing His Own Language to Written Form. CAMBRIDGE. MASS., Aug. 23.—A full-blooded African chieftain has just passed his entrance examinations it Harvard with flying colors and will enter the university next September as a member of the class of 1917. He Is P. Gbe Wolo, and his people, 300,- 000 strong, are the Kru® of Liberia, on the west coast of Africa. They have no written language, so that the only way he can communi cate with his family is through trad ers on the coast, who send the mes sage by word of mouth along the trail. He has begun the stupendous task of reducing his language to writing. Woman Works as Circus Roustabout Breaks Down While Handling Heavy Tent Pole and Her Secret Is Revealed. LA CROSSE, WIS., Aug 23.—Mrs. Ada Broughton, unable to support her two children and Invalid husband on wages paid a woman, donned a man’s attire and labored beside farm hands in Dakota wheat fields. She broke down under the strain and catpe to La Crosse to seek lighter employment, becoming a circus roustabout. Lifting heavy poles and canvas resulted in her com plete breakdown. Then she told her story to the police and collapsed. She was taken unconscious to a hospital. Relatives are on the way from her home at Rice Lake* ‘Star Baths’ Latest Complexion Remedy Young Women Campers Take Night ly ‘Plunge’ in Milky Way Beams on Tower. NEW YORK, Aug. 23.—Star baths are the fad at, the summer camp of the Young Women’s Christian Asso ciation in Blauvelt, N. Y. Miss Mar ion Hopkins, the camp leader, is given credit for the innovation. The baths are taken on top of a hip*. tower in the center of the camn. It will ac commodate a dozen bathers. There is a long waiting list of young women campers who are anxious to enjoy the reported benefits of imnier- sion in starlight. Chief among these is said to be the “star-shine complex ion.” Veering of River Threatens Farms Every Laborer Available Is Rushed to Head Off Flow of Missouri. KANSAS CITY. Aug. 33.—Charles Savage, a negro man robber, released from the penitentiary in Leavenworth, is being shadowed by three detectives. He will be kept under watch con stantly because somewhere is hidden $40,000 of the $50,000 In currency he stole five years ago from a registered mall pouch, and nobody except Sav age knows where it is. When Savage was released he was met at tfie door by his mother and a young woman to whom he was en gaged before he was sent t6 prison. They came at once to Kansas City to see an uncle, who is dying. “They needn’t watch me,” he said. “If they think I’m going to dig up $40,000 they’re mistaken. I wish I knew where thei£ was $40,000 buried.” “Isn’t it queer that $2,000 in $20 gold certificates of the same series as stolen from the mail sack were found blowing around in the wind near your mother’s home in South Leavenworth this spring?” Savage was asked. “Yes, that’s queer. I don’t under stand.” he answered. “I read about that, and I figured it out that some person who lived in South Leaven worth had stolen that mail sack and hidden the money there, and the rain had washed away the dirt where ir was buried, and the wind got at it and blew it away.” Tents Only Shelter For Toledo Families City Is Growing So Rapidly That Builders Can Not Construct Houses Demanded. TOLEDO, Aug. 23.—Because the olty has not enough houses to rent and build ers are not able to construct houses as rapidly as they are desired tents are being used as homes in Toledo. Two tent colonies have been estab lished in the city. In both districts oc cupants of the tents are owners of lots on which the temporary homes have been erected. The lots have been pur chased as home sites and tents are serving as temporary homes. The tent homes consist of living rooms, dining rooms and kitchens. Each has a flower and vegetable garden and one is equipped with a chicken nark, a stable and outbuildings. Diving rooms are convertible into bedrooms, and ham mocks, stretched in the open, are used day and night. College Professor Seeks Laborer’s Pay Unable to Make Both Ends Meet. Teacher Resigns Chair in University. BERKELEY, CAL., Aug. 23.—Un able to make both ends meet on a salary of $900 paid him by the Uni versity of California, Paul Boehncke, an instructor in the German depart ment, has withdrawn from the fac ulty and is seeking a position in which he can support himself and family of two children. During the last few summers Boeh ncke has managed to augment his meager salary by working as a plas terer at from $5 to $7 a day, or near ly twice the amount he was paid by the university. Goes to Cemetery Instead of Ball Park Fan Mistakes Funeral Hack for Om nibus on Its Way to Diamond. MONTGOMERY, MO., Aug 23.—A baseball rooter came here from a distance to attend the St. Charles- Montgomery game, and by mistake he got into a hack at the depot filled with pallbearers going to a funeral. As he had crepe on his hat, the ballbearers thought Vie had come .xs a mourner and he was taken to tie cemetery instead of the ball park. Finding himself in a funeral pro cession, he woke up and escaped. He got to the ball grounds Just in time to see the home team win. Rector Denounces Paid Choir Singers Clergyman Declares There Is No Worship in Their Strange and Unutterable Music. FREEMONT, NEBR., Aug. 23.—Every laborer available is being sent by the Burlington Railroad to Folsom to fight the Missouri River, which is again eat ing into the valuable farm lands of that section and threatening to cut its way to the railroad tracks. Many car loads of stone have been dumped into the river. The river suddenly began veering from its channel a few days ago. Inside of two days it had swamped 30 acres of lan<l. Fear is now felt that the river will cat its way back to the extensive put in within the last year at a cost of more than $500,060. BRIDGEPORT, CONN , Aug 23.—The Rev. E. J. Craft, rector of Christ Epis copal Church, caused a sensation while addressing a meeting of the parishioners of Calvary parish by telling them what he would do if he were entering upon a new pastorate. For one thing, he said, he did not be lieve in paid singers for church choirs "The service of the church was designed for the people as a whole and not alone for the choir,” he said. “These modern choirs take the worship away from the people of the congregation and do all the worshiping themselves. They sing In wild and strange "ways and in unut terable tongues the praises of God.” BERI BERI CAUSED BY RICE DIET, SAYS EXPERT Special Cable to The American. BERLIN, Aug. 23.—The Berlin Med ical Association reports that the well- known investigator of beri beri, Dr. Max Moszkowskl, finds, after a re markable experiment, that the disea.se is caused by the use of rice. Dr. Moszkowskl for 138 days sub sisted almost entirely upon rice. All the symptoms of beri beri manifested themselves. At the close of the experiment an injection of serum containing an ex tract of rice resulted in a complete recovery. Tame Trout Craves Petting; Fed by Hand Feel® Insulted if Food Is Not Served in Manner to Which He Is Accustomed. Colonel Gailliard, of South Caro- lina, Breaks Down Under Tremendbus Task. More than any other section of the country, the South is expected to realize in prosperity and develop ment by the opening of the Panama Canal. But the South is to pay its toll and pay for it dearly. Just when the canal was an as sured fact, Senator John T. Morgan, of Alabama, father of the Isthmian Waterway idea, died as a result of his years of ceaseless labor impress ing the necessity of rthe canal on Congress. Nok Lieutenant Colonel David Du Bois Gailliard, of South Carolina, the army engineer who dug the Culebra Cut, has had to abandon the scene of his triumph and return to the United States to give his nervous system shattered by his work, a rest which it has needed for months. And that is not all. From the zone the advices come that Colonel Wil liam L Sibert, of Alabama, the army engineer in charge of the work on the great Gatun Dam, is on the point of a breakdown and it is extremely doubtful if he will be strong enough to stay in the zone to see his work completed. Careers of Two Similar. The careers of Colonel Sibert and Colonel Gailliard have been remark ably similar. Gailliard was bora in South Carolina; Sibert, in Alabama. They entered West Point the. ,same year and both graduated in 1884 among the first five men in their class. After their graduation, both were sent to Willets Point and in 1908, when the canal w’ork was put in the hands of the army engineers, Colonel Goethals immediately picked the two Southerners as his chief aides. Sibert was put In charge of the work on the Atlantic side, which included the building of the Gatun Dam. while Gailliard was in charge of the work In the interior of the zone. That Lieutenant Colonel Gaillard had suffered a nervous breakdown w r as known only to a few of his inti mate friends in the army. A few weeks ago w-’hen his condition be came serious the matter was brought to the attention of General Bixby, the chief engineer in Washington, and by General Bixby called to the at tention of Secretary of War Garrison, who immediately granted the strick en engineer a long leave of absence. Lieutenant Colonel Charles F. Ma son, Medical Corps, U. S. A., the di lector of the Ancon Hospital, in the Canal Zone; Mrs. Gaillard and Lieu tenant Colonel Gaillard’s young son came with him and weht with him to Baltimore, where he will enter the John Hopkins Hospital. There he will be under the care of some of the most eminent specialists in nervous disorders in this country. Leave Did Not Aid Him. Colonel Gaillard was in New York less than two months ago after a six weeks’ leave of absence that he had taken in the hope that the rest would benefit his health to the extent that he would be able to remain in the Canal Zone. He sailed from New York on June 27 last, again to take charge of th e work in the Central Di vision. Those who talked with him at that time remember that he expressed a desire to get away from the Isthmus as soon as his work was finished, but, he added, with a touch of sadness in his soft Southern voice, “When I do leave it will be with deep and sincere regret.” Lieutenant Colonel Gaillard is the first of the famous army engineers' employed In the construction of the Panama Canal to be stricken as a result of his work. A few weeks ago Colonel William M. Black, Corps of Engineers, the chief of that branch of the service in this part of the United States, the officer who was head of the engineering board which solved the problem of raising the old battleship Maine, was in Panama and was Gaillard’s truest. Close Friends for Years. The two officers have been inti mate friends for years. During his stay at Empire, the headquarters of Colonel Gaillard, Colonel Black noted and realized that the builder of Cu- lebra Cut needed a long and cqmplete rest. “Gaillard,” said Colonel Black last night, “is one of the most wonderful organizers the army has developed. His work in the Canal Zone has been little short of marvelous. He laid out his plans in such a way that he got the maximum out of everything, es pecially in the handling of the rail road part of the work. He was also able within a few months after he took charge at Empire to double the work accomplished in a specified time. Some of the things that he did experienced railroad men had said were practically impossible.” Woman Given Job Of Cleaning Up State Success In Making Tacoma a Spot less Town Causes Promotion In Service. TACOMA, Aug. 23.---Because of her successful efforts to transform Tacoma Into a “Spotless Town,” Miss Arizona B. Wimple, food and market inspector, is to be rewarded with a bigger Job— the cleaning up of the State of Wash ington. This was the advice received here to day from the Governor’s office In Olym pia, where It is said Miss Wimple is to be appointed State bakery and sanitary inspector. tier methods in cleaning up Tacoma were simple and direet and Included publicity as an aid In bringing about the desired reforms. Frequent inspections of bakeries and other food dispensing establishments were made and the score announced in the newspapers. Miss wimple, who is young and pret* ty, will receive $4,000 a year from the State. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan. ESTES PARK, COLO., Aug. 23.— Sunbeam, the pet speckled trout in the fish hatchery at Este.s Park, has Just recovered from an indisposition caused by stomach trouble or rheu matism, and is again able to take its place as the only pet trout in cap tivity. The fish, now a 3-year-old and about eleven inches long, is as good an example of gentle and loving trouthood as it is possible to find. Fed from the hand from the time it was hatched, it feels insulted now un less its food is given to it in that way. It is very fond of being stroked and petted, and will swim around and rub itself against a person’s hand whenever a chance is given It. OF FATHER LOST BLOCKSWEDDING IB IGF M YEARS OF PI Employees’ Pension Measure Approved Pennsylvania Cities Are Permitted to Establish Fund for Faithful Municipal Workers. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 23.—Under the provisions of an act passed by the Legislature, which Governor Ton er has approved, this city is given au thority to establish a municipal pen sion fund for employees. The act ap plies to all city employees who have given twenty years of service to the city. The act provides that in the event of the creating of the fund every em ployee will be compelled to pay Into the fund 1 per cent of his yearly salary. The pension to be allowed the bene ficiary will be equal to one-half of the average yearly salary received by him during the last two years before his retirement. Apache War in ’80’s Is Cause of Divorce Husband Deserted Thirty Years Ago by Wife Who Didn’t Like Wild West. CHICAGO, Aug. 23.—Geronlmo and his wild hordes of Apaches, who ter rorized New Mexico in the eighties, were the direct cause of a divorce suit which Allen L. Eaton begun yester day in the Superior Court against Zuma E. Eaton. The Eatons were married in Silver City, N. Mex., in 1886, when the Apache uprising was on. Mrs. Eaton, who hailed from Pittsburg, did not enjoy the wild Western life her mar ried life entailed, and she deserted her husband. Common Laborer Strikes Big Gold Vein Ore Will Run $60,000 to Ton and Mine Is Largest In Southern Oregon. MEDFORD, OREO., Aug. 23 —What is reported as the biggest gold strike made in Southern Oregon has been been reported by Elmer Higginboth am on the mine owned by him and M. G. Womack on Kane’s Creek. The ore will run $60,000 to the ton, ac cording to assays of samples made here. Higginbotham had been a common laborer for many years until Womack offered to “grub-stake” him on a prospecting trip up Kane's Creek. Miss Edith Randall, of Boston, Expects to Find Corpse on Glacier at Foot Mt. Blanc. BOSTON, Aug. 23.—Miss Edith Ran dall, of this city, has gone to Cham onix, Switzerland, one one of the strangest errands known. She hopes to find in the glacier there the body of her father, who lost his life climb ing on Mont Blanc forty-three years ago. Ten others were lost with him in a snowstorm near the summit. All told, two Americans, one Scotch man and eight guides and porters died. F’lve of the bodies were recovered. It is expected by guides that the six others will be delivered up by* the glacier this year. Scientists are interested as it may supply evidence to prove their theo ries on the speed of the annual march of glaciers toward the valleys. Miss Randall’s father, John Ran dolph. a Boston banker, was fifty-four when he lost his life In 1870. Last year Miss Randall came to Chamonix, as the ice axe and several small articles relonging to Mr. Ran dall had been found by guides at the foot of the Glacier des Bossons. Many Americans and English Al pinists, a* well as guides, joined in the search for the body, but without re sult. All hope for better luck this summer. Dweller in Desert Sees First Pine Tree Full Grown Woman Is Mystified by Foliage—Also Takes Moun tain Snow Bath. Young Engineer Kept From Lova by Succession of Revolu tions in Republic. DENVER, Aur 33.—What rhe.no® has a little fellow like the god ol love in a mix-up with a big bully Ilka the person who hold® down the Job of god of war? The young man if* Arthur N. Zwo- tow, a mining engineer employed la Mexico. He and the young woma.1^ Miss Mildred Lowln, have tried to get married five times, to use thetr own expression, and eaoh time that god of war person has “butted In” and dealt Cupid a knock-out Now. Young Zwetow is in Concepcion del Oro, a mining camp near the border of the State of CoahullA. Six month® ago he wrote his betrothed that ho had obtained a leave of absenco and the wedding balls would ring any^ time she ®aid. The young woman got' her trousseau ready and sot the wed ding day. But the bridegroom did not come. A letter from him said the Fed era Is had started a war, the rail road had quit running, bullet® were flying and he had to stay. So it has been for five euoce®stv% attempt®. Stranger Is Son, Gone for 20 Years Father Turns Wanderer Away, bu* Mother Call* Him Back, and Reunion Follow*. CHICO, CAL.. Aug. 23.—Mias Ilene Looey, of Visalia, cousin of Frank M. Moore, of this city, a grown worl- an, saw her first pine tree when she went with the Moores for an auto trip to the mountains. She has resided long In the desert southland, and was not only pleased but mystified fit the foliage and the fact that she could reach the snow bound regions of the Sierra Nevadas inside of an hour's time. The party left here especially to give Miss Locey an idea of the diversified climate of the Sacramento Valley and a snow bath In the higher altitude. GLASGOW. KT, Aug. 23.--V!Tgtl Huffman had been away from hom® twenty years, seeking hi® fortune in Alaska, and the father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. James Huffman, w«r® sitting in a room of their home near here discussing him and wondering if he would ever come back. There was a knock at the door and Mr. Huffman opened it to see a dusty traveler, who said he was tired and was seeking lodging for the night. Mr. Huffman thought he could do noth-* ing for him, but Mrs. Huffman “reck oned” they could manage somehow. Then they led him into the haJJ, un der the swinging lamp, and as th® light fell on his face the aged oouple recognized him as their son. Husband in Prison; Wife Willed $20,000 Richmond Woman Given Share of Estate After Helpmate Is Sen tenced for Embezzlement. RICHMOND. VA.. Aug. 23.—Mrs. Maud Kent Rowley, whose husband, William J. Rowley, formerly connect ed with a hotel here, was recently sentenced to serve two years In State prison for embezzling $8,000 from the Jeffereon Hotel in this city while au ditor there, inherits $20,000 from the estate of her aunt, Mrs. Junius A. Morris, of Richmond, who died Au gust 3 at Atlantic City. The value of the estate is placed at $496,000. FRECKLES Don't HW® Thom With a Vail; Re move Them With the Oth4ne Prescription. Till* prescription for the rsznovai * of freckles was written by a prom- | tnent physician and is umuuly so ., successful in removing freoVries and • giving a clear, beautiful oornplexton that It is eokl by Jacobs' Pharmacy under an absolute guarantee to re fund the money if It fails. Don’t hide your freckles under a veil; get an. ounce of othine and re move them. Even the first few ap plications should show a wonderful Improvement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine; It I® this that is sold on the money-back guar antee. Here is the Very Newest in Home Lighting Fixtures It is one of the very newest Indirect Lighting Ideas of Lighting Fixtures, generally conceded nowadays that diffused light is by far the best for home. It is CANDLES BURNING AT WAKE SET HOUSE AFIRE CALGARY, ALBERTA. Aug 23.—A fire which started from candles set about a coffin at a wake, at the house of J. Selar, here burned the hair a?id eyebrows off the body of an aged wom an Portions of the face were charred. Firemen extinguuibetl Lite blaze. The fixture shown in the illustration is highly artistic and one of the very newest designs that has been pro duced and is exclusive at the J. E. Hun- nicutt & Co. store. And you are buying it—not only from the finest and most exclusive stock of fixtures in Atlanta, but from a firm who absolutely guarantee you an EXPERT INSTALLATION. $15.00 and Up Come and look at this highly attrac tive fixture that is shown in this ad vertisement. Equipped with four lights, ready to switch on the current for the price above. Lighting Fixtures of Character and Distinctiveness to the Home are Found in Greatest Assortments Here If the Lighting Fixtures are well designed and executed, they form an important part of the interior decorating—if they are of the ordinary showy kind, the entire effect of a room may be easily destroyed. OUR EXTENSIVE LINE OF LIGHTING FIXTURES embodies a large and varied range from the simplest to the most elegant, but even the simple, less expensive fixtures show correctness of design and careful workmanship. The special designing of lighting fixtures appropriate for your particular requirements Is one of the strong features of this concern. J. E. HUNNICUTT & CO. 53-55 N. Broad St. “Look for the Tfie Store Front 1