Newspaper Page Text
FRENCH MAID DESCRIBES THE KILLING OF DE SAULLES
Says De Saulles Made as If to
v . .
Strike Former Wife Night
0y
of Killing.
(By International News Service.)
MINEOLA, L. I, Nov. 28.—Suzanne
Monteau, the French maid who ac-
Companied Mrs. Blanca De Saulles on
the night the latter shot and killed
her former husband, today gave a
most graphic description of the trag
edy,
“Oh, it was terrible, terrible!” she
sobbed,
"My meestress say ‘I want my boy,
and the Meester De Saulles say, ‘you
not have him; now or ever—no use
to argue.’
“And then Meestress say, ‘there is
only one thing to do,’ and then—oh!
it was terrible, I scream and run
out on grass.”
The maid told of the arrival of the
offi('f‘rs, the arrest of herself and Mrs,
De Saulles and their incarceration.
Immediately on cross-examination
the District Attorney attacked the
Witness with all the fury of a tornado.
“You are not excited, are you?” he
almost shouted.
_On receiving a negative reply he
cnen asked her what she was crying
about while talking of the shooting.
Defense Interposes.
~ Before she could answer the de
fense entered objection saying the
question was insulting and that one
seeing such a tragedy would natur
ally be affected.
“Yes, perhaps so.” retorted the Dis
irict Attorney. “Some who did not
see it wept.” He referred to counsel
for the defense (Mr. Uterhart) who
\'\t‘e;rt while Mrs. De Saulles told her
story.
“Quite right,” shouted Attorney
Uterhart, “and some who claim they
saw the tragedy did not weep.”
He was referring to Marshall Ward,
chum of Jack De Saulles, who testi
fied he was a witness to the shooting.
The maid's most damaging statement
was that “De Saulles acted as though
I.xe Was going to strike her ‘Meestress’
Just before the shots were fired.”
Try as he might, the District Attor
ney could not shake her from this
testimony.
Amalio Errauzuriz, sister of the de
fendant, was called on to tell of the
injury received by the defendant in
an automobile accident in Chile in
1915. The defense contends that the
injury on the head subsequently re
sulted in a diseased brain, which
brought about temporary lapses of
memory. Mrs. De Saulles was thrown‘
from the car and struck on her head, |
the witness said. |
Slhe told of how the child, Jack De
Saulles, Jr.,, returned from the De‘
Saulles home and often repeatea
these words to his mother:
“Oh, T forgot, ‘Booby’ (the nursc
employed at the De Saulles home)
told me I should not love you any
more. She told me I should be bad.”
The defense succeeded in bringing
out the fact that the defendant suf
fere dfrom chronic headaches, infer
ring they dated from the automobile
injury.
Trial Speeded Up.
With promises by Judge Manning of
probable night sessions and the possi
biity of holding court on Thanksgiving
Day as well as next Saturday, oppos
ing counsel speeded up today.
Judge Maning is decidedly dis
pleased over what he terms “inexcus
aple delay.”
After learning that but 24 witnesses
in all were to be introduced, the court
was convinced the trial would be out
of the way by Thanksgiving.
The defense was ready to introduce
five additional witnesses today before
bringing in its experts. The testi
mony of three expert alienists will
be used in further support of the
theory of temporary irresponsibility.
The prosecution also will introduce
three alienists who have been watch
ing the defendant for three days, and
who, it is understocd, are ready to
give damaging testimony against the
lapse of memory theory.
The counsel for the defense con
tends that the testimony of the de
fendant counsel completed late yes
terday afternoon was a ten strike.
It was pointed out that she clung so
tenaciously to the “lapse of memory”
gtory as to leave no doubt as to the
condition of her mind.
Mrs. De Saulles stood the grilling
cross-examination remarkably well.
After being on the witness stand for
nearly two. whole days. she walked
to her seat with the sprightly step
of a school girl of 15.
Attorney Uterhart, counsel for thc
defense, plans to conclude the testi
mmony of the three alienists by putting
{o them a hypothetical question of
aprroximately 10,000 words. ;
The question will embrace praot}-
cally all of the more impor?ant testi
mony regarding the ronditm'n of t'hn(
mind of the defendant, ending with
the query “if you knew sx;oh evidence
had been introduced and if such were
the acts of the defendant, would vou
hold that she was of _sound mind
when the act was committed?
It is a foregone conclusion their
answer will be “no.”
Should the plan of the court be
realized, the case will be ready for
jury consideration probably by Sat
urday night, and, in all events, not
later than next Monday.
First Witness Called.
D. Stuart Iglehar!. of Roslyn, to
wvhom Mrs. De Saulles appealed on
the night of the shooting to accom
pany her to the De Saulles home, was
the first witness called today. He
told of a telephone call from Mrs. De
Saulles asking him to accompany her
in which, he testified, she said:
“T have just heard little Jack is be
ing put to bed at ‘The Box' (the De
S o 7 d that his
Saulles country home) an £
father is at the Meadowhrook Club.
1 must go over and bring my boy
ho;‘n}:é object of the defense in this
testimony was primarilv to show that
the defendant did not expect to meet
her husband when she went after the
b?j;'me]ia Errazuriz, sister of the de
fendant, was the next witness,
" THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN @22 A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes @© @ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1917,
‘BRIGHTEN THE CORNER' TIME !
o ¢ E LI Re PR
ORI B SR e R e
R ¥ A e
'f“‘(‘%""":'}’g“l'v{’; G:ff‘ Sl '>,:;: it 'w';,.i. L”" A T s 3 "
TR IAR e 7AR
S e ui 3 6RY MSTER— /o T
Bt %{ L OWY DNt Yo ¢ A}%
e “?i‘-‘f:'k?;i; eho | CRMDUFLAGES T
%f’.’&é{}‘ N -’;’f';'sgf,ié ;"f L e e J‘-f‘ }» =
.4_,:,.1: 0 k Wil Fageyt A ) i Vs, : o oe T B
e[N i \“iu‘s\ g e i
WAR Sl DPR LSRN |
,fl" \’% D -;::',;,-éfi.,%,;gi“/?im il N
4PRRR ‘l X f)‘g‘v;',.-gf&é*fg'f TLt s‘[, e &
v b A ..‘:., R .:‘ S .‘:E‘:..l‘\ NI gj:" 3 # % ;
20 / R .y N ,\\\,A'A( Iw\ ,".‘:?,"9;3‘ é’: ( ) | N Tase o
W ) \W R st s (U o g
& NN e e . : /:
é;;;‘ &) \'\)‘ ITy ) = "‘;A‘l \ "“" """“ W" ‘{';‘?" -'}‘”"ly ,\‘\\\;fig
D@l et e \ vqf”z APt o ey f
T 3 W\& , if“s ot e 5 P 21 .
N \U& X \*\;\‘%;«3l”.’l3 St/ | \ Be £
e M S S WEREGET T v A B <
i N W BN N\ -
flflgi"'\ffléb'/MN‘\‘\\\\"\Y\".»" v 7 AOPD RN =S
;'"3. ('b’l e\t e 4 \\ SNANY R, )\-’ 4 ¢ ".’ O, 2 g
3F 1o N\ \\\fi N\ ¥ % /rl- ) > 3508 N T .
g (WY AW XSY e eNL g
e S AN N AN «R Y et At eR\ PR
TN 2007 NN R "R o %) g .
4l\ ‘l'\ ) S \*fl* Vet ' /\\g‘, ” g
e : W [ .. o iy < o .‘“;:‘.\ & Mg
1; ] ‘X\ /'/\Ta lhy ‘/\”\\] i'_:v‘ : l}'\ 3 ’:’_‘Z‘éfi P ;;“"\ ‘\‘ .‘
‘; ~ ‘ ,)l \n‘ i'. \'-f ‘».'{.;‘7"",; R) ! z‘.,c giv X ,»‘"4‘ \\ % | ,{ 3
‘f'/)/‘ lANG BAN | 4 e b\; IS o 8 )
|l / | -\w NS N Poa T &"/ »
I“O(\ 1) {l};‘/5 S & B e g T AN
A" Jfit TR ' /{"n “-'_ Q/ i ;ot Sivd A% - | @A) o
! "“ R ?;fi;‘i:/' ";? $ ‘?Zo\ : "fié g };A ‘ ‘fs:i'\ X\ o
L ol ‘ inv :'?y ") 43 { ’.‘!" 4 iy oS ) .e, 4
ol F./ e ! ;i f{f‘; E '303/» § i&y i»\‘ S‘M “‘f Q ‘ L 8 B
S R fee Ba, / TOL G SR "" y
ol PR e e SR A
e :4' !". :.'.: =a_‘ 5/ rQ Q //' ,4&";] } - y'.’:‘, "l, .’ : ._‘.}‘ £ : {?, F : ;( 8 i
E'f' Hg‘ I ""‘l i/ SS ke "’S'f 3 63"'./‘ 515 S S ’:,‘; 570 n R
oRS i SN ) AN ,
g hANY (f -g’t .‘," ¥ ‘.v: Lo/‘ e \ i ;.‘-“ # . i l
AR IRR TN e i LR ,
A S *’"%*fi* SAy & T fRN s J
LA @»y*‘; gh »Q_ i fir& } e ‘ - ‘.
. %~ e . BRGNS 3 eN $ A
TN et sV) RS T =
Highway Commission to Pass on
Bids for Part of $670,000
U. S. Fund.
| i
} Sixty counties made application
Wednesday before the Georgia High
way Commisison for participation in
‘the 1918 and 1919 Federal appropria
tion for the improvement of Georgia
public highways, amounting to ap
proximately $670,000, $270,000 for 1918
and $400,000 for 1919. Some of these
applications were new ones and some
were left over froln last year.
Nothing definite was accomplished
at the morning session, the commis
sion adjourning until 2 o'clock.
Following the meeting the chief en
gineer of the State Department will
make a thorough examination of the
bids and decide on the ones which are
most impartant. He will render his
report to the committe as a whole.
Bids favorably reported by the en
gineer will be applied by the com
misison to the general project for
highway improvement in Georgia and
forwrded to Washington.
The 1918 appropriation is already
available, and the 1919 fund will be
available next July. The money will
be appropriated on a two-year pro
gram after the county has furnished
an amount equivalent to the Govern
ment appropriation.
. .
Villa Bandits Loot
Train and Kill Fist
land! Ivy
(By International News Service.)
EL PASO, TEXAS, Nov. 28.—Villa
bandits have held up a Carranza
troop train en route from Juarez to
Chihuahua City south of Villa Ahu
mada last night, killing 50 soldiers
and wounding a large number, ac
cording to advices received here. The
bandit losses are reported to have
been slight.
It is believed that Martin Lopez,
Villa’s second in command, was the
leader of the bandits
The Government forces attacked
were the advance guard of a force
leaving Juarez to reinforce the gar
rison at Chihuahua City. The train
was looted of its guns and ammuni
tion, the report said.
Other trains following were not
attacked by the bandits.
A large force of troops, including
those who evacuated Ojinaga and
were sent to Juarez, have been or
dered to Chihuahua City. General
Juan Cordova, commander of the
troops who fled from Ojinaga when
the Villistas attacked, will be tried
by court-martial.
Suspect Says He
.
Has Slain 23 Persons
(By International News Service.)
NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—That he has
bee nimplicated in no less than twen
ty-three murders in this city and ad
joining towns was the startling con
fessicn mads here late today by Ralph
Danielle, alias “Ralph the Barber,”
to Assistant District Attorney Ra
mand, according to the police. Dan
ielle was brought here from Reno,
Nev., by Brooklyn police authorities
on an indictment in connection with
the death of a man in that borough.
Banquet to Conclude
. .
Furniture Convention
A banquet Wednesday night at the
Piedmont Hotel will bring to a con
clugion the annual convention of the
Southern Furniture Warehousemen’s
Association. The final business ses
sion was held Wednesday morning.
Tuesday afternoon the delegates
took a trip to Stone Mountain, and
Tuesday night attended the Billy
Sunday meeting.
Will you not, reader, fill out this coupon, return it to the Santa
Claus Girl, according to your ‘means? The money you subscribe
—every penny of it—will be used to make Christmas happy for
some one or more little ones who otherwise will know no Santa
Claus this year.
THE SANTA CLAUS GIRL. E
Care The Georgian, ; ;
§ \ Atlanta, Ga.:
i+ Inclosed herewith please find §......, a 8 my con
{ tribution to The Georgian’s 1917 Empty Stocking
{ Fund.
: Will you please see that this money is used di- ¢
rectly to fill one or more empty stockings of the little E
§ children of the poor in Atlanta. ¢
{ I appoint vou my Ambassador of Sunshine on {
! Christmas Day. . %
(Signed) %
¢ ¢
E '~“Nv4\v"’WN\,\nvr'.'...................é
U. S, Marshal Captures Men Who
Had Barricade! Themselves in
Swamp on Island.
PENSACOLA. FLA., Nov, 28—
United States Marshal J. B. Perkins
has arrived here with H. Sistrunk,
Arthur Rowe, George Wilder and
Mack Bennet, who are charged with
resisting the draft. These men, with
Tom Powell, were arrested at Bum
blebee Island, where they had bar
ricaed themselves in a swamp to defy
the officers.
Powell, who was charge with aid
ing and abetting the four others, fur
nished $5,000 bond and v/as left at
Gainesville. The men were captured
without a shot being fired, but much
uneasiness was felt by friends of the
marshal and officials here, as nothing
was heard from him from the time he
left here last Thursday until the re
ceipt of a telegram yesterday saying
he had captured the men.
Bumblebee Island is at the head of
the Suwanee River, just south ot tue
Georgia line.
.
Price of Turkeys Is
' .
Reduced in Chicago
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—Chicagoans
who waited until today to purchase
their Thanksgiving turkey haved
money by taeir patience. State Food
Administrator Wheeler gave Chicago
a cause for thanksgiving by cutting
four cents per pound off the price of
the Thanksgiving bird.
Fresh turkeys are being sold today
at from 35 to 41 cents per pound in
stead of 37 to 42 cents, and storage
birds are retailing at from 30 to 35
cents a pound instead of 34 to 39
cents
xs
New Ruling on War
.
Tax on the Movies
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—The
Commissioner of - Internal Revenuo
Tuesday ordered that moving pictur=e
theaiters charging 5 cents admission
during the day and more at night
shall pay their war tax only on the
everning exhibition angi not on gross
recéjpts. The tax applies only to ad
mission tickets valued at more than
5 cents.
' '
Lawyers Offer Services to Regis
tered Men in Answering
Questionnaire.
The Atlanta Bar Association, at a
called meeting held Wednesday in
Judge John T. Pendleton’s courtroom,
tendered to the United States Gov
ernment its services to aid registered
men in this district to comply with
the Government's orders in the an
swering of the questionaire recently
issued, through which a complete his
tory of each registered man is to be
compiled.
All registered men who desire this
legal assistance will be aided by the
Atlanta lawyers in answering the
many questions entirely free of charge,
In 6rder that the work may be done
systematically, headquarters will be
established in the courthouse and
from five to eight volunteer lawyers
will be on duty throughout each day.
By this means large numbers of reg
istered men can be accommodated
daily. In addition to this, it was speci
fied that any registered man may ob
tain this legal advice and aid free of
charge by calling on any lawyer friend
at the latter’s office.
An executive committee, with At
torney Edgar Watkins as chairman,
was appointed by President W. Car
roll Latimer to have charge of all de
tails of the free service. The other
members of the committee are Attor
neys Waverly Fairman, Alex Meyer,
Shepard Bryan, Armenius Wright, Ar
thur Hynds, Philip Alston and Owens
Johnson.
A resolution was adopted asking the
County Commission to at once provide
a room in the courthouse as head
quarters, in which the volunteer law
years will do duty.
Announcement was made that all
lawyers who desire to volunteer should
communicate with Chairman Watkins
without delay, in order that the proper
assignments might be made and
schedules of work mappeéd out.
Under the plans of the association,
one shift of lawyers will be on duty in
the headquarters from 9 o'elock in the
morning until 2 o'clock in the after
noon, and another shift from 2 o'clock
until 6 or 7 o'clock at night. This
schedule, it was anticipated, would
give all registered men an opportunity
to seek legal advice in the shaping of
their answers.
MILITANTS RELEASED.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—The
eight suffrage prisoners who remained
in jail when twenty-two militants
were released yesterday were uncon
ditionally freed today.
Small Purses Are Doing Their
Best, but Stockings Are
'
Still Empty.
By THE SANTA CLAUS GIRL.
Atlanta children certainly have
their small hearts tucked away in the
place they ought to be, and when you
come to think of it, they must not be
such small hearts after all. They
must be pretty big hearts and pretty
kind also, and very easily touched by
the sorrows of other children who
are not so fortunate as they them
selves.
Perhaps it is because they could
not have a bigger disappointment
themselves than to be forgotten by
Santa Claus that they understand so
well what this prospect of a toyless
Christmas means to the kids whose
mothers and fathers are not so well
off as theirs. They don’t have to sena
their memories back over a score of,
vears or even over five years or one
year. It isn't a question of remem
bering with them, you see. They un
derstand this tragedy of childhood
because their imaginations can not
picture a worse calamity. Imagina
tion has to be founded on experience
to a great extent, and while their
short little lives may have held some
big disappointments, there is nothing
that they can picture to themselves
that is even comparable to this one
thing that threatens the children they
see around them all the time.
Savings Banks Sent In.
And so, as soon as they realize that
such a thing can really happen, they
set ‘themselves to do their part to
avert it. And a large part it is, too.
Many and many a small savings bank
found its way to The Georgian office
last year, with all the pennies and
dimes and nickels that had been
saved industriously during the whole
year, Sometimes it represented every -
thing those children had saved in their
whole lives, and they gave it freely
and generously to keep other children
from being unhappy, as freely and
generously as little Mary E. Harris
sent in a dollar yesterday after read
ing some of the children’s letters in
The Sunday American.
They certainly set us grown-ups an
example sometimes-—those kids with
the big hearts and the small savings
banks. They only have to realize that
unhappiness really exists before they
set out to prevent it as far as lies in
their power, and they have the sort of
hearts that are going to be just as
glad over the things that other chil
dren get ag over their own more ex
pensive toys.
And I think that there is not a kla
in Atlanta, not a single little boy or
girl, who would not be willing to do
without one or two of the things he
has asked Santa Claus for this year in
order that the money they represent
might be sent in to the Empty Stock
ing Fund to make some other child’'s
Christmas nappy.
Children Not “Choicy.”
It doesn’t take very much to make a
most wonderful Christmas for an
Empty Stocking Fund kid. Bless
their hearts, they are not “choicy,” as
one small girl said in her letter. They
haven't been educated up to expen
sive toys because they have never had
them and none of their friends have
ever had them, so that, buying in
quantities and getting good prices as
we do, $1 will do unbelievable things
for one of these children—candy, nuts,
fruits, toys and all.
Not a very big, amount for vou to
give, is it? It wouldn’t take any self
denial on your part, and it would
change the face of the earth for some
child. Just reflect that $5 from you
will mean a real Christmas for five
children, whose names will otherwise
have to be taken from the list, and if
you can give more it means at least
one child for each dollar, one child
who is absolutely depending on you
for all he will have this year.
Let's help the children out. T.et's
not leave all the burden on those
THIS store will re
main closed Thurs
day, November 29th—
Thanksgiving
Day
D LTI
P
e ’F\4l
See Our Advertisements in Thursday Night and
Friday Morning Papers for Really Important News
Richs,
e -
)
' American Flyer |
i 168 y {
) $ {
. Not Killed But
- Held in Germany |
|
e
By HENRY G. WALES, 54
’2 Staff Correspondent of Interna- g“
? tional News Service. g
5 ARIS, Nov. 4 (by mail to New !
? York, Nov. 26).—A post card ;
) has been received from Ser- {
) geant Everett F. Buckley, of Kil- ¢
! bourne, 111, an American aviatori
{ fighting with the French army, |
{ stating he is wounded and a pris
{ oner of war in Germany. :
Buckley was brought down in
side the German lines at Verdun 0
| on September 5, and as his ma- t
chine was on fire it was reported 3
{ he had been killed.
! The news today wes received by 3
! the French captain in commnndé
| of the Escadrille N-125, to which |
! Buckley was attached, and it é
caused great rejoicing among his
French comrades and the Ameri
cans. The card was dated May
fi] ence Hospital prison camp, but |
{ gave no details,
e s o
Pacifist Professor
(By International News Service.) |
RICHMOND, VA, Nov 28—
Recommendation that Professor Leon
Whipple, of the chair of journalism
of the University of Virginia, be dis
missed, was made here today by Pres
ident Alderman. He declared that
Professor Whipple's pacifist utter
ances were a diggrace both to the
State and nation. In a recent ad
dress Professor Whipple said he pre
ferred spending his money aiding
Morris Hilquit in his ambition to be
come Mayor of New York to buying
Liberty bonds.
Pyt
Y
Determined Hunt on
For Spies in Uniform
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—A deter
mired hunt for spies wearing the uni
forms of the United States or of any
foreign power allied with the United
States in the war was inaugurated
Tuesday by officers of the army and
navy.
Civilian spies will be apprehended
by the Department of Justice, but
spies in uniform present a difficult
problem, with which American offl
cers feel they are best fitted to deal,
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—Turkey
growers were receiving an average
‘price of 21 cents a pound for their
'birds on November 15 the Depart
ment of Agriculture announces. This
compares with a price of 18.6 cents
on November 15 last yvear and 14.6
cents, the average November 15 price
for the preceding four years.
small savings banks which haven't a
very large store of dimes and nickels
and pennies in them. They help ever
and ever so much, but if the whole
thing is left to them there are going
to be lots of heartbroken kids in this
town on Christmas morning.
- So let's you and me help them out.
- Here are the contributions received
'so far:
Previously acknowledged ....$132.00
”I‘hh Georgian Company ...... 100.00
CRBI L 0 i i iviisiins s 2000
CURPIAS CRandisr ... iivoveeiin 2.50
RN B HOVIH ..o 5.00
W. A BoWhorier. Jr.....ccis 50
‘Blizabeth Hames ............. 100
}.\l. . MAETUASY . ... 0 ivoes” TOO
IV BLBRUYIEY & oaiiiiieis .50
O B QAN it 1.00
I Barmon B, Perkins .......... 100
Cola B, MOTRAIY ... iviiiiivns 1.00
Co Ve opensteln . ...ovoviiiee 1.00
W B BORICINe . . o i .50
P G NANOSY iik 2.00
‘A FOISOA L. desslineitin: i .60
L mebal B
o e |
Alabama Conference Convenes
for 85th Session—Bishop Col
lins Denny Presiding.
(By Internationai News Service.)
DOTHAN, ALA., Nov. 28.—The
eighty-fifth session of the Alabama
Methodist Conference convened here
Wednesday morning at the Lafayette |
Street Church, with Bishop Collins
Denny presiding. Delegates to l!ml
conference have been arriving on
every train. A meeting of the his
torical society was held last night
at 7:30 o'clock,
The executive officers of the con-|
ference are: President, C. H. Motley;
secretary, Dr. Thomas M. Owens. '
Dr. E. C. Moore, pastor of the,
Court Street Church, Montgomery,
will deliver an address Wednesday
on “The Life of Asbury, First Meth
odist Bishop.”
The conference is largely attended.
KILLED IN FRANCE.
CALUMET, MICH., Nov. 28.—Hen
ry Bortimore was notified today of
the death of his son, Roy Bortimore,
2, on the battlefield in France, Uor«{
timore enlisted in the regular army
five years ago. His brother Carl also
is in France. 1
IRVING BERLIN’S TERRIFIC HIT
E 3 P . % 28 '
b R 88l & - iRI
OMEE gy You want
oy - B ERRRN 7Ry e .
SupEROpSS T T this one. It
Oy, g\ isnewand
Il very tune.
N R N
.. fl‘» & "3\ ful. Read
@ 4e" below how
%i ; :»: ":xi 6% ..". 5 ""g‘
. INUNGADATH NP 7 L v
A copy of this beautiful song will be sent you
“free” if you will give us the name and address of
some one thinking of buying a piano or player
piano.
If you are a buyer your name will be accepted and
we will send you interesting literature on these in
struments.
USE BLANKS BELOW AND WRITE PLAINLY.
Theßaldwin Piano C
€ DAIAWIN I'laNo VO.
103 N. Pryor St. Atlanta, Ga.
INFORMATION BLANK.
NONTR TR, . i ihnis ke
AGATOEE. s i sivnvsviboisnenvsiniinscitdonvostees »
NAME OF PIANO OR PLAYER-PIANO BUYER.
AQAYoBE (i i i e e
AQATERE o, ioiiuiviis hovrseesins iasvnci i
Use Separate Sheet of Paper for Additional Names.
o e o _— e
To the SOLDIERS and SAILORS
—_———— e =
What better way to kesp your boy, relative or friend
fn touch with home than by sending The Dally Geor
gian and Sunday American.
Our Subscription Department has perfected a plan to
see that all mail subscriptions are handled promptly to
the training camps in this country and abroad.
The Postofice Department has authorized the ao
eeptance of mail subscriptions addressed to our soldiers
and sailors overseas, at regular domestic rates of
postage. X
You can now send The Daily Georgian and Sunday
American to your soldier and sailor friends abroad as
cheaply as to one of the training camps in this country.
For additional Information, write or call upon
The Subscription Department
THE
.
Atlanta Georgian and Sunday American
20 East Alabama Street. Phone Main 100
' ’
Report of Conspiracy to Destroy
Storage Depots Sent Out
From Washington. 3
LEXINGTON, KY., Nov. 28-—=
Warning that a plot is on foot to de=
stroy food storage depots was issued
to Kentucky store owners and dealers
in foodstuffs today by F. M. Sackett,
Kentucky State Food Administrator.
The warning is based on telegraphia
advice received by Sackett from
Washington. !
“Telegraphic information from,
Washington has informed me,” Sacke
ett’s statement said, “that the Gove
ernment has definite information of
a plot to destroy elevators, stockw
vards and other places where foode
stuffs are kept.
“I have been instructed to take theé
matter up with store owners and ine
form them of the situation., Adequate
precaution should be taken againsk
fires and any other destructive meass
ures. the enemy might undertakes
Guards and watchmen should be sta«
tioned in such places as seems ned¥
essary.”
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tabletag
Druggists refund money. if it falls to cure. B. Wa
GROVE’S signature on each box. 30c.—Advertise=
ment.
3