Newspaper Page Text
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Alleged Slayer of Mrs, King Will
Say She Committed Suicide,
It Is Said.
(By International News Service.)
COURTHOUSE, CONCORD, )’ O
Nov. 27.—Southern chivalry will be
the defense of Gaston B, Means, This
came today from a well-informed
gource as Means’' trial on the charge
of murdering Mrs. Maude King,
‘wealthy Chicago and New York wo
man, entered its second day.
It is generally understood now that
Means has completely changed the
evidence he gave at the Coroner's
hearing after the mysterious death of
Mrs. King. At that time he claimed
accidental shocting. Now, it is un
derstood, he will tell the court Mrs.
King died from a self-inflicted wound.
To cover the discrepancies in the two
stories, Means will put forward his
plea of Southern chivalry. He will
maintain that he did not tell at the
Coroner’s hearing that Mrs, King had
committed suicide because he did not
want to smirch the name of the wo
man who had been his benefactress.
He will maintain the instincts of a
Southern gentleman kept him from
telling the true circumsances of Mrs,
Mrs. King's death until now, when it
becomes a matter of life and death
with him. ‘
The State is prepared. They have
gathered witnesses to show that Mrs, |
King was in high spirits on the night
of her death. It is also rumored they
are prepared to introduce evidence
that Mrs. King was an unwilling
member of the fatal target shooting
party on the night of August 27.
While the trial drags slowly on to
day a little gray-haired woman waits
a hundred mileg away. The little
Bouthern woman, now 77 years old, is
harboring her strength and praying
for power to attend the trial when
the right time comes, She is Mrs.
Anne Robinson, mother of Mrs. King.
In a weakened condition, she is going
to exert every effort to reach the trial
and to testify to what she knowg of
Gaston B. Means. The little woman
has sent her lawyer, Phil C. MeDuffie,
to aid the prosecution. She has de
nounced her other daughter, Mrs.
May C. Melvin, who has been a con
stant companion of Meang since his
arrest.
Means Is preparing to take the
stand in his own behalf. Counsel for
the defense has deemerd this néces
sary, although it ig understood Mrans
has no desiré to undergo the grilling
cross-examination which he knows
will come from the State and lay
bare his past.
As the 150 special veniremen came |
into court today it became evident
the State will select its jury with |
care. A change of venie wag dr-nls-d|
the State, and Solicitor Clement is |
determined he shall get as fair a jury |
as possible. From the questions agk
ed the first jurors, it became cvident
that the proces of jury selection will
t’ko at Jeast two days.
Peanut Buyer Killed
ALBANY, Nov. 27-~News has just
reached here of a difficulty at Leary,
Calhoun County, near here, where-
Phil Wiailttaker was killed by Wil
n, a merchant,
. Whittaker was peanut buyer at
Yeary and Jordan was cashing the
checks given by Whittaker after the
bank closed for the afternoon. A negro
presented one of Whittaker's checks,
and for some reason Jordan requested
mknegro to have the cashier of the
indorse it. The negro reported
the matter to Whittaker and the lut
ter, who is said to have been under
e:hinfluence of liquor at the time,
t to see Jordan. Jordan ex
plained that the check was not prop
erly made out, but Whittaker left the
Store, remarking that he would be
back. When he re-entered the store
Jordan shot him down with a double
barreled shotgun, death resulting in
‘stantly.
~ Jordan immediately called up the
sheriif of Calhoun County, at Mor
gan, and notified him that he was
Teady to surrender,
Li i
uleut, Atkinson Is
' Lieutenant Harry M. Atkinso we
who has just rect‘)ived his (‘omr:hmg:n
in the Coast Artillery of the regular
army, was iu Atianta Tuesday to spend
Several days on furlough before report
h{ to Fortress Monroe.
deutenant Atkinson is the son of
M. Atkinson, chairman of the
of directors of the Georgia Rail
and Power Company. He is a
graduate of Harvard and Plattsburg.
i
, |
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|
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. !
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at Once. - I
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“ This happy combination of baisam
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. Bearch as you will, you will not find
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Pecovery by its proper use. i
_ Children take it without coaxing
and wise mothers have it handy for
dangerous croup. 1
. Tear this ad out and take it to
Four druggist with 25 cents and he
Wil give you the genuine Dr. Bell's
- -Tar-Honey.—Advertisement.
e
4 443 *
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AN ADE AW fl”fw 18 R S
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S e il . | et | Al
Ay Y A T\ Srrnd Vaiihs
A Te R TS R\ e
[:% w T f‘;‘é“‘,fi‘m‘.
‘| s c St d:fifm.mx.‘a; h”‘,fié‘?fiv‘nfll :‘3—“:-
¢+ ) EEN down to hear Billy Sunday?” asked the Colonel, as
B :lrlx: car bumped over the new rail joints. “Haven’t hit
> trail yet, have yon?”
“Not exactly,” said the Judge. “But 1 met a men after the
'F':-—““—————«—‘-——:” meeting last Sunday night who was all
| worked up. Billy had him scared to
I ISE THEY ! e
il \ R“TMWAY l “He does reach down and stir up
\ d\é%“:;‘“‘,‘%fl .I their inside souls, I reckon,” said the Col
‘ > I' onel. “I should say Billy is a kind of spir
i A ) : itnal dose of calomel, good for us every
:" ,‘ &%, = | nmow and then whether there’s anything es
i Y @“y || pecially wrong or not”
| ‘&; Q{ [ “This fellow was the janitor in my
| /| building,” sald the Judge. “He was con
f;s’,‘{ | siderably excited.
| ¢ “l told him I didn't think he need
|EE R ) | bother himselt abont the proximity of
|e (4 %|| hellfire, so long as he behaved himself
l‘l %; i 1 || and'kept on going to church, as he has
| /% || done for years. But that didn't pacity
| S 2% | him. And after a while I learned what
" i:"; ;;“' || was worrying him.
% ,f) { { “‘Did you get what Mr. Sunday said?’
i;. ’é}gj‘ l: he asked me. ‘Did you hear him talking
' 2 :;7 :{ || about the way them stars are flying around
}{ A 4 7§ | the sun at the rate of forty, billlon miles
& ’ \g’? % || a second, or thereabouts? .
pR Sid “ “‘Yes. Mr. Sunday had some vivid
| % :Mv | astronomy,’ I admitted. ‘What's Interest
iy Yk A ’ ing you especially?
; ‘:;‘1.?-'-'5 .s“‘ { I “‘Well, sir,’ sald the janitor, ‘he's a
DL A &l man that tells the straight and honest
| truth, I should say, bein's he's a preach
“: Il er, And I heard him say the earth was
) turning around so fast that if it wasn't
for the law of gravitation everything in town from the Candler
Building to a paving stone would fly off in the air like a drop of
water off a grindstone. Just leave the earth sudden and disap
pear from there, with nothing but an empty spot.left behind.’
““Well, he's entirely correct about that,’ I agreed. The jani
tor looked ;nore worried than ever.
““Well, ain’t that enough to keep any man skeered?” he ask
ed, ‘The way they're fightin’ and revolutionizin’ all over the world
right now. some Congress or Legislature or somethin’s Hkely to
take a fool notion and repeal that law of gravitation, or whatever
it is. And the minute they do it, before they've got time to real
ize what they’'ve done done, we'll all be going straight up, head
over heels, with a flock of skyscrapers chasin’ us through the air.
Believe me, this man Sunday is givin’' the people somethin’' to |
think about serious.” : ‘
A 4 A%
S A oo N /]
Commercé Chamber
Between the hours of noon and”b
p. m. Tuesday the Atlanta Chamber
of Commerce will hold its annual elec
tion of officers ana directors, with
every member in good standing enti
tled, and urged, to vote. The nomi
nating committee, meeting some dave
ago, offered for president W. H,
White, Jr.
The other officers recommended by,
the committee are: E. P. Mcßurney
first vice president; J. Epps Brown,
second vice president; Henry W, Da
vie, treasurer; directors two-year
term, Preston Arkwright, E. D. Dun
can, L. D. Hicks, George D, McCutch- |
eon, W, R. Prescott, Haynes McFad
den, Allen F. Johnson, E. M. Hudson;
directors to fill unexpired terms of
one vear each, Lee Ashcraft and W
D. Ellis, Jr. e,
Tabloid Comedies at
.
Rialto Make Good
Milton Schuster and his bunch of en
tertainers worked the crowds at the
Rialto Theater Monday for a lot -of
laughs., The policy of tné)lold musical
comedy has proved already succes=ful
there, with the second week of it just
begun. This week. as last. there will
be n change of bill Thursday.
Together with the tab comedy, there
fs a five-reel feature pilcture, ‘‘Please
Help Emily." featuring Anna Murdoch,
and the first installment of the new
Paramount serial, “Who Is Number
‘Otne'.“’ with Kathleen Clifford as the
star, \
- The fi'”’ and the quartet of the Mil
ton Schuster company are more effec
tive this week than last, presenting a
number of bright features and several
specialties that tickled the audiences
Monday. The shows are being made
continuous, lasting until 11 o'clock in
tlhe evening.
(By International News Service.)
LOS ANGELES Nov. 27.—James G.'
Seripps, managing director of twenty
two papers in the United States, has
beon granted a stay of execution of the
orcer of the District Board of Appeals
ordering him to "American lLake pend-i
ing his appeal to President Wilson for
exemption, "
The board allowed Scripps whatever
time is ru--‘vss*ry to present his case to
the President %o show he is more valua- ;
ble to the country in his newspaper
work than as a soldier. J
Is Sold for SIOO,OOO
SAVANNAH, Nov. 27.—Attesting the
demand today for farm lands the Val
jambrosa farm, comprising 5000 acres
has been so'd to the Val'ambrosa Farms,
Incor orated, by W. C, Q‘awson for
SIOO 000 Back of the Vslambrosh
Farms, Incorporated, are big retail
butchers and grocers, who intend to cul
tivate the big tract to a highly efficient
state and iretail the products directly
through their chain of stores in Savan
n~h, Norfolk Tampa, St Petersburg and
other places in the Scuth.
HEATHEN LOSE CLOTHES.
CHICAGO. Nov. 27.—A certain tribe
in the Zambesi country of Africa will
have to worry along without clothes for
a while. The Ladies’ Aid Society of
the Bantist Church of Gary. Ind., has
received word that its yvearly contribu
tion of clothing for. the heathen went
down on the steamship City of Athens,
which struck a mine off Cape Town.
Observe Centennial‘
SAVANNAH, Nov, 27.—The Inde
pendent Presbytepian Church will
celebrate within the near future the
one hundredth anniversary of the
dedication of its present building.
President Monroe was present at
the laying of the cornerstone in 1819,
and an effort is to be made to have
President Wilson present at the 1919‘
celebration, this being considered es- i
pecially apropos because of the close '
connection of the President with the!
church in his early manhood. He anc
his first wife were married In it ‘
100 Albany Shriners
To Attend Alee Fest
ALBANY, Nov. 27.-—~More than 100
Nobles from the Albany District
Shrine Club will go to Tifton Thurs
day to attend the Thanksgiving cere
monial to be put on by Alee Temple
at that place. The delegation expects
to be the largest from any city at the
ceremonial, Tifton s making big
plans for the coming of the Shrine
‘hosts, and magy people not members
of the order will go to Tifton for the
}festivifles, among which will be a
}football game between Norman In
‘ stitute and the Second District Aggies
for the prep championship of South
} Georgia. !
| PR U e SRR RN
Women to Plan Sale
.
Of Christmas Seals
Numerous women's organizations have
pledged interest and co-operation in the
campaign for selling Red Cross Christ
mas seals, it was announced Tuesday
by Mrs. Beaumont Davisgon, recently ap
pointed chairman of the general wom
en's committee. The first meetinf of
women will be held Wednesday after
noon at 3 o'clock at Edison Hall, Peach.
tree and Ellis streets. Heads of twen
ty-five or more organizations' are ex
pected to be present.
Brief talks on the antituberculosis
work will be made by Miss Rosa Lowe,
secretary of the Antituberculosis Socle
ty, and Frank E. Lowenstein, president
of the Ad Men's Club, which will car
‘l ry on a sales campaign for the seals.
.
New Assistant Pastor
.
. For Dublin Church
l DUBLIN, Npv, 27.—The First Bap
tist Church has announced that {t is
'proboble that Rev. David Kellam, of
! Chatanooga, will accept the position of
assistant pastor and chorus leader of
the church here and move to this city.
‘ The Dublin church has been on the
lookout for gome time for a man to fill
this position, but have been .waiting
until they covld find a suitable man who
lwould be in position to accept the work.
IF YOU HAVE
~ WEAK LUNGS
gi."';’.‘é.&"’:‘."’;.‘.’:‘}m““ Ttreah &ir wnd rem. and
y
ECKMAN’S ALTERATIVE
Many have found this Calclum preparstion &
tonic suiled to their needs. and it may meet the
requirements n your case. Contalns no Alcohol,
Narcotic or Habit-Forming Drug.
$2 size, now $1.50. $1 size, now 80c.
Buld Jo loating Gremsias,
: ed yewrspaper loi DULNE romes
A VR INCWSpAapery 105 OURLIRCIIE TUinee
. .
“The Wild, Wild Women,” Causes
New York Theatergoers to
Shake With Laughter,
NEW YORK, Nov. 27.—Harry Fox,
the comedian who is known from one
end of the continent to the other in
vaudeville and musical comedy, is
making New York shake with laugh
ter by means of brand-new harum
scarum song that he is singing. The
song is one of those things that hap
pen once every few years, and already
Fox has made it the byword of New
York. It is called “The Wild, Wild
Women Are Making a Wild Man of
Me.” At the Alhambra Theater,
where he has first introduced the wild
[song with its funny lyric and its
‘amuslng melody, Fox has had practi
'cally every man, woman and child
singing the song with him.
Yesterday he went to one of the
~armories, where there was a soldiers’
entertainment, and for five minutes
the whole regiment was shuffling its
feet and laughingly singing the song
with him.
Those who are familiar with the
fun-making antics of Fox will read
ily appreciate what a scream it is
when they read the following words,
which start with a slow, halting
rhythm and then work into music of
the most abandoned type:
There’s something the matter
with me,
Yes, something the matter with
me;
Friends that I meet say I'm ail
ing, /
Even my own family.
My doctor said, “Boy, take a rest,”
But, take it from me, I know best.
CHORUS.
It's the wild, wild women, the wild,
wild women,
Are making a wild man of me,
They tried to brin‘ me up a min
ister's son,
And, oh! the naughty girls, just
see what they've done.
Oh! the wild, wild women, the
wild, wild women,
They've taken advantage of me,
Hist'ry tells that they did to Marc
Antony,
Now, you can just imagine what
will happen to me,
Oh! the wild, wild women, fero
cious women,
They are making a wild man of
me.
Fof says himself that he finds it is’
the best antidote for the blues that
has cocme along since the declaration
»* war, and that he hasn't gone an,v-“
where yet that it hasn't changed stony |
faces into wreaths of smiles. |
Since Fox sprung the song on the
public several other leading entertain- |
ers have secured permission to sing
it, and it is having the same effect at
the famous Ziegfeld Frolic, where Van
and Schenck are singing it, and at the
Winter Garden, where Quarry Lewis,
another great comedian, is sending
titters through the audiences.
All the performers who are singing
the “Wild Women"” song sav that it is
bound to have even a greater vogue
than such songs as “Sister Susie
Sewing Shirts for Soldiers” and
“You're a Doggone Dangerous Girl”
toth of which were introduced by Al
Jolson.
DUBLIN BANS FIREWORKS,
DUBLIN, Nov. 27.—Notice is being is
sued ahead of time by the mavor and
eouncil that the Ild will be clamped
down tight here on the holiday fire
works, as has been the custom for two
years, and etpecially this year when the
fira menace {8 more to be feared than
usyal on account of the war situation.
Gold "rown $4 '}‘\ o
Others Charge 1:-\; gl
S _____( A\ I’,l2.:‘;‘\ ' %
From $8 to sl2 (S{GLO¥
T TID TST Ly s .. .‘ ’
All Work GUARANTEED | Made and Delivered Same Day
SET OF c | GOLO SILVER
TEETH 9O ’ ,:":'::, $4 ? filLing S }'muus $1
All Other Expert Dental @Tng Low in Proportion
DR. E.G. GRIFFIN’S
——————=GATE CITY DENTAL ROOMS————
5 W. Alabama Street ©u:.nnshapane
Phone M. 1708——Open Daily 8 to 6; Sunday 9 to I——Lady Attendant
GEURGM MAYOR ENTHUSIASTICALLY
INDORSES ACID IRON MINERAL NOW
FOUND OUT TWENTY YEARS AGO THAT THIS
NATURAL IRON REMEDY-WAS THE VERY
" THING FOR HIS STOMACH TROUBLE.
RECOMMENDS IT NOW.
TWENTY YEARS' EXPERIENCE PROVES BEYOND
DOUBT THE TONIC PROPERTIES OF
NATURAL IRON.
ALL DRUGGISTS HAVE IT. ‘
With all the talk about “iron” and
what it will do for the system, it is
interesting to note the type of peo
ple who for years have taken it.
Without a doubt, fron is a wonderful
medicine. Mixed with alcohol or other
injurious elements, it oftimes is coun
teracted, however, The following tes
timonial, written twenty years after
first taking Acid Iron Nineral, is a
wonderful statement. Coming from
a man of his standing, it speaks val
umes for the benefit of people trou
bled with indigestion and stomach
troubles,
MAYOR INDORSES IT.
Mayor Pinkston, of Parrott, Ga.,
says: “I suffered while still a young
man with indigestion, but about twen
ty years ago I bought a bottie of Acid
Iron Mineral on the recommendation
of a good friend, and ever since I
’hnw recommended it and used it from
‘time to time with splendid results. 1
have recommended 1t these past twen
'!y years to many others, who have
likewise used it with much benefit It
is with pleasure that I recomgend it
Child’s Last Christmas
On Earth Made Joyous
ByEmpty Stocking Fund
By THE SANTA CLAUS GIRL.
1 thought that there was*noth
ing in the whole wide worid quite
as touching as a letter from a
child who was afraid that Santa
Claus was going to forget him
when he makes his rounds on
Christmas Eve, and I probably
told you so, but now I have
changed my mind. Because
Tuesday’'s mail brought me a let
ter that is to my way of think
ing very much the most appeal
ing of all the hundreds of letters
that I have read this year.
It is a letter from a mother, and
you can readily see that that
might be very pathetic. But that
isn't all. You will have to read
the letter and see for yourself.
“Dear Santa Claus Girl:
“l am writing you this to tell
vou that you are sure pleasing
God by your efforts and work
that you do every Christmas. You
may remember that I wrote you
last yeas for my two children,
Mary and J. A. Well, J. A. has
gone home to heaven and that
was his last Christmas on earth,
and if it hadn’t been for the
Santa Claus Girl of the Empty
Stocking Fund of the Atlanta
Georgian it would have been a
sad Christmas for him and his
mother; for what mother is not
sad when her child is sad, and
what mother is not made glad
when her children are happy?
Well, last Christmas was the
first Christmas I ever had to beg
for mine, and I want you to re
member Mary again this year,
and my nine-months-old baby.
We have had typhoid fever and
sickness and death in our family.
We are poor, and are made poor
er every day on account of food
being so high, and the man of the
house doesn't make any more
than he did four years ago.
“l thank you with my whole
heart for making my little J. A's
last Christmas on earth a happy
one and for what you will do this
year.”
His last Christmas!
And we made it a happy one—
you and I and every one of us
who had anything to do with the
Empty Stocking Fund, whether
we contributed our money or our
time and effort to make Christ
mas a real celebration for some
1,500 kids all over the city.
Can we afford to take any
chances this year? This may be
some other kid's last Christmas
and we musn’t let it be an un
happy day when it is in our
power to make it otherwise with
such a little sacrifice on our part,
with no sacrifice at all {n lots and
lots of cases. All of a kid's
Christmases ought to be happy,
but the last one that he will
srend on this earth—and we can’t
tell which will be the last, you
see. That is whv we musn’t take
any chances. We must see to it
that every single child in At
lanta is remembered by Santa
Claus this vear, and then if be
fore next Christmas some of them
20 on to join little J. A, we will
krow that we did our part to
make their little lives as full of
happiness as a child's life ousht
to be, and that their Jast months
were not embittered by a disap
pointment too hig for them to
bear. a disaponintment that we
might have averted.
That is a very biz thing to do.
I think, a bigger thing than lots
of you realize, because vou have
never thought what it is for a
to. everyone troutled with indiges
tion.” Signed E. S. Pinkston (Mayor
oft Parrott, Ga.).
Acid Iron Mineral is the natural,
concentrated product of a most unus
ual medicinal iron deposit. It con
tains no alcohol or narcotics, and in
this highly concentrated form is the
cheapest, strongest, most satisfactory
iron tonic and system regulator yo
CX\ use. A few drops mixed in :
glass of water makes an unequalec
iron tonic. Start taking it today anc
note how quickly the system responds
to the effect of this natural iron. Iron
is essential to the blood. It makes
rich, red blood, helps the appetite and
digestion and tones one up in a won
derful manner,
Unlike many mixtures of the chem
ist with iron as the chief medicinal
element, Acid Iror?Mineml is perfect.-
ly harmless, is nos a patent medicine,
contain no alcohol and whole fam
ilies take it. A few drops in each
glass of water during meals, or after
ward. Get a bottle today at any good
drug store in Atlanta.—Advertise
ment. ?
LNgSeS DB L i -
U TS T % i 5
child tc go toyless at Christmas,
But it is time to think now.
Christmas is only four weeks
from today, and {if you delay
much longer it is going to be too
late, and some kid whose last
Christmas you might have made
happy is going to have a pretty
bad time. You don’'t want that ‘
to happen, do you? Then send in
your coniribution and do your |
part toward making the tragedy
of empty stockings an unheard
of thing in Atlanta this year.
Previously acknowledged $126
: Wobbh & Vary: .5 .....50.00 B
Mary E. Harris .\....... 1
TFORRE o iavivaintii 312 |
King's Daugh ‘
Ser%e Turl?ey Dinner
Members of Georgia Libby Circle,
King's Daughters, who have been con
ducting a case at the Aragon Hotel for
several weeks to raise®funds to carry
on the organization’s charity work
-among the poor of the cit ythis winter,
announced Tuesday that a special din
ner will be served Thanksgiving Day.
There will be turkey and all the *“fix
in's."”" Tables will be reserved in ad
vance irTgeople notify the women in
charge. e dinner will be served from
12 to 2:30 and again in the evening from
5 to 8:30.
i —————
ism T
Journalism Teacher
At Columbia Dies
NEW YORK, Nov. 27.—Franklin
Matthews, associate professor in the
school of journalism, Columbia Uni
versity, died suddenly Monday in the
Pennsylvania station here. He was
stricken as he stepped from a train.
He was widely known in the newspa
per fleld.
IVY 1021-
OUR NEW TELEPHONE NUMBER
STORES ALL OVER ATLANTA |||
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Children’s Society ‘
Plans to Build Home
G ]
Directors of the Georgia Children's‘
Home Society will launch on Thanksgiv
ing Day a campaign to obtain funds for|
building a home, it was announced
Tuesday. The society, which - finds
homes in private families for hundreds
0! poor and orphan chidren, needs a
building where such chlldrexx can be
kept pending permanent arramngements,
Robt. B. McCord, ,superintendent, re
ported at the board meeting Monday
afternoon that 172 children had been in
rusted to the society in the last year,
and that 131 had been found good
homes. There are 41 remaining, await
ing adoption.
Chinese Sailor Get
SAVANNAH. Nov. 27.-—~Captain Jame-:«ll
Morris. colnmander of the British ship
Gretavale, is strictly ‘‘in the soup” about I
a willy Chink, formerly a member of his
crew, who escaped into the United
States while ‘‘seeing' Savannah. The
officer is under sso¢ bond to the Gov
ernment to produce the Chinaman. who,
aboard ship, answered -to the name of
Walter Chinchin. Captain Morris is en
deavoring, by the slender clew of the
Chinaman having bought a ticket for
Washington and left here by train, to
locate the Celestial and save his '‘soo
bucks.”
Ry L CLOTAING
| ) L 1275 for HEN 2nd WOMEN
- COCH COBB COo
10 WHITEHALL
TIGER KILLS PARTNER.
TULSA, OKLA., Nov. 27.—Shot in a
quarrel over the disposition of some
whisky, George Tilley, alleged bootleg
ger, is dead here today. His slayer
and alleged partner, George Gooch, who
was shot by Tillely, also is expected to
die. After being wounded Gooch fired
five shots from the sidewalk, each blg
let taking effect in Tilley’s e.bdomen.,‘
Neglected
L 4/ Celdsbring |
Pneumonia i
ALI
’
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o c
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