Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 7, 1906.
DOUBLOONS
A THRILLING NOVEL OF MYSTERY,
TRAGEDY AND A STOLEN FORTUNE
By EDEN PHILLPOTTS AND ARNOLD BENNETT
(Copyright, 1906, by Eden Phlllpotts and Arnold Bennett.)
Svnonai* of Previous Chapters,
u-Bteri). n gentleman In di.tres
Wne n night watchman on Klngsway,
^ cLn^wben Be aces a tlgnre crawl out of
|g>ndo<i. an ■* ln n tr p, 1( .ij, ti, p nP:t t
hen'® /i,, murdered body of Captain Pol-
nornlnB ™ sea captain, Is found In the
'■"h The bouse Is called the Corner
2 and is kept by Adrian Hllgay, who
lodging to distressed gentlefolk
i *. h , tl cents a nlglit. Philip meet, an
•Wind. Sir Anthony Dldrinc, from wJTotu
’"li.T.fSfiO which relleres his necessities
"nl Is then summoned to attend the In-
on the captain's body and fall, under
Sion A negro cook furnishes the lm-
„iVinn A negro cook runusnes me im-
°Uinf Information that the dead cnptnln
artsnt iniorm. brother with
.enir two relatives—a brother with
SlUhe bad quarreled. and a daughter
Phom. UP mtmtra Cnmllnn
(ilralda. on the stage. Mrs. Caroline
Kerr, the captain's next-door neighbor at
P"' 1 tt.„.. Is n«l m) mm witnMa
he Corner House. Is called as a witness,
she says she was engaged to Ite married
e captain Pollexfen. 'The coroner ex-
2AJ; the opinion thnt the captain was
P'”"' , for the two thousand odd pounds
St’he had on his person. The evidence
gjSSS treaaure Sfd Ku^S
£t°/ return”'0° v®'oTSur^^
"SJ P An"thony nk Wdrlng takes Philip to
at. clul> to reveal a great discovery to
ji. f Olrsida,’wbom the - baronet loves,' hns
ranlabed,
The baronet's other guest nt dinner Is
ui« Josephine Eire, nn actress, who. after
.itsnppearance. has been slven
woman’s dressing room
ftiit VOUUg WOluBIl L ----- - -
heater. While the party s discussing an
Kratr spread. Detective, Vareoe. of
Scotland Yard. Is announced. He asks Miss
Ec, permission to examine her dressing
L!,,' In nn cltort to And some clew to
Sfmlsalna Olralds. The detective tells
hem of the extraordinary Interest manl-
S,ted In the mystery liy the Marquis af
Itindego l’hlllp returns to the Corner
through sheer abaent-mlndedness, have
changed Into evening dress, which
would have been to create a sensation.
He found some thirty out of the at*,
ty clients of Mr. Hllgay seated at their
long tables In the refectory. The boys
were securing a brown stock soup; a
few of the guests were absorbing the
sees a re-
Ertuihle looking yonng woman nt n win
K? opposite. She Is combing her hnlr.
ind proceeds to stare the young man out
5f rountensnec. lie closes the window,
mill, down the shade and owns himself
CHAPTER IX—(Continued).
Beginning of Philip’s Inquiry.
Philip decided to dine In the house.
With two hundred and fifty pounds In
111 pocket, he was conscious of a pow-
.rful desire to postpone the real an
nouncement of the reign of economy
until the morrow, and tp fare very well,
git that night, at the Cafe Royal. But
atlve force of character, aided by his
rlsh to acquaint himself with the In
mates of the house, enabled him to re
lit the horrid temptation. After all,
lie was earnest. Moreover, he had a
ireer to carve, and Instead of dwelling
the captain's murder, which did not
.. the least concern him, he must con-
ern himself with the process of earv-
ng. He descended to the office and or-
ered his dinner from Mr. Hllgay, who
[eked off Ills name ln one of the ledg-
ri on the desk In the office, and gave
Im a little receipt for tenpence.
A gentleman with an adventurous
me and an appearance of. prosperity
n<l self-possession was In the office
rlth Mr. Hllgay, and this Individual
timed at once to Philip.
Mr. Masters, I believe?”
Yes," salil Philip, gruffly, objecting
the noise.
I am the special commissioner of
lie Evening Record. YJ’e are making
special Inquiry Into thls-er-alfalr.
had the pleasure, of seeing you In
Durt this morning,' nnd"—
So glad It pleased you," said Philip.
I had only been ln the dock no
oubt your pleasure also would have
ten special."
The special commissioner laughed
lilly. "I shall be very much obliged,”
he continued, “If you will give mo a
few moments."
"I will give you all the time there
Is,” said Philip; “that Is to say. twen
ty-four hours In every day. Take It
every bit. I don't ask to share It with
you.”
And he left the office and the special
commissioner.
It Is difficult to Justify his behavior
toward this representative of an au
gust profession. The fact was,-how
ever. thnt the Evening Record had
printed a special column In Its best,
facetious style nn the ducal episode
*t the Jlu Jltsu sohool, and Philip
had not been enthusiastic about the
tone of the references to himself.
He wns just a little late for dinner
through having dropped off Into a dose
during the process of excogitating upon
hie future; he had not yet recovered all
th» sleep Inst nn the night nf the mur
der. He descended to the front base
ment, where Mr. Adrian Hllgay's pay
ing guests refreshed themselves In un
challengeable respectability, with a
certain nervousness. In the first place,
ne had prominently figured at the In-
Jiuest. and the talk would certainly
henr upon the Inquest; he might be
tptestloned; he might even be regarded
!th suspicion. And, ln the second
Place, he was really rather too well
dressed for such an assemblage. To
cat a ten-penny dinner In a frock
c»at that had cost five guineas only a
couple of days before seetned to border
upon Imperfect taste. But what was
If *° do? Ho could not be changing
•alts all day. And If he had
changed at all at that hour he might,
soup holselessly, and a few were not.
The place and the people looked ex
tremely mournful. Philip at once per
ceived that nothing can be more tragic
than gentility divorced from riches.
There were far more gentlemen than
ladles, and far more aged than youth;
not one woman was young, or had been
young recently, and Philip was decld-
dely the only man under forty. Clothes
were sombre, vague, either too loose
or too tight; linen was like snow long
fallen. Conversation scarcely existed,
and such talk as struggled into being
was stupid and banal. He had ex
pected to be greeted by a buxa of chat
ter about the inquest, to hear a vi
vacious conflict of theories concerning
the Identity of the murderer. But
nothing of the kind. Misfortune, dis
appointment, failure and solitary life
had made Mr. Hllgay's guests egotists
of the most ferocious sort. They were
swathed In Innumerable thicknesses
of their wrongs and their exasperated
desires and their foiled hopes. The
murder of all the captains of the mer
cantile marine would scarcely have dis
turbed them from their fakir-like con
templation of themselves which Is the
characteristic of genteel and lonely
poverty.
They addressed themselves ti
their ten-penny meal with an in
tensity of purpose that was al
most sublime. Philip had taken
a place at the end of the table nearest
the door; half a dozen empty covers
separated him from his next neighbor,
a man In a dark gray suit and a red
necktie; not a soul showed more than
a passing, faintly hostile Interest In
him. The two persons whom It might
have amused him to contemplate, Mrs.
Upottery and John Meredith, the
young man with the scar and the
g leasant voice—were not present.
loubtless Mrs. Upottery, after her
exertions of the morning, had resumed
her bed of sickness. Possibly John
Meredith lacked tenpence. And ln
brief, as Philip sat there, having Im
bibed the excellent eottp. and await
ing the excellent New Zealand mutton,
In that low-celled room with its four
cold electric lights, Its bare furniture.
Its collection of forlorn but prim hu
manity, and Its Inhuman boys Imitat
ing, in perfunctory manner, the wait
ers of a fashionable restaurant, a deep
sadness took possession of his spirit;
he wanted to run away and be Joyous;
he wanted to pretend that there was
no such thing In this world as ugly
undignified failure. He swore he would
not stay in the Corner house another
twenty-four hours. Indeed, he had a
mind to move straight away, without
even tasting the excellent New Zea
land mutton, to the Savoy hotel. With
two hundred and fifty pounds he could
have a hundred days of splendor at the
Savoy.
Then Mr. Vascoe came Into the re
fectory. He was disguised as one of
London's rejected, a consumptive man
with pale hands and a flushed face and
stooping shoulders; his suitability for
a philanthropic lodging house seemed
to be perfect, but Philip recognized him
Immediately by his gait and by hla
eyes. The recognition diverted Phil
ip’s thoughts, and he was Inclined once
more to remain at the Corner house for
the mere sake of adventure. Mr. Vaa-
coe strode uncertainly to the other
end of the room, where a place hap
pened to be vacant. He gave hla
little receipt form and commenced hla
meal without a word, eating raven
ously. Once hla glance met the rov
ing glance of Philip, and Philip raised
ever ao slightly his forehead to indi
cate to Mr. Vascoe that his disguise
had not been Impenetrable. In return
Mr. Vascoe ever ao slightly raised hla
forehead, presumably to Indicate to
Philip that he relied on Philip's discre
tion.
The detective's presence there could
mean one thing only—that the detec
live suspected the murderer, or an ac
complice of the murderer, to be among
the guests of the house.
Philip gazed up at a notice on the
wall, to the effect that nothing but fil
tered water could be served at lunch
and dinner, but that guests might
themselves Introduce beer Into the
house, providing the beer was bottled.
And as he gazed the printed notice ap
peared to fade and the portrait of
Olralda to shine through It. The way
In which that portrait haunted him,
challenged him, distracted him, was
hlghlv disconcerting. It was curious
how the vision of It made him dream,
made him resent the evidence of Sir
Anthony Dldrlng, and even of the mar
quis of Nandego. Was she dead?
Would her wonderful corpse one day
be discovered to the horror of the
town? Or did she live, somewhere. In
some mystery withdrawn? He dealt
absently with the New Zealand mut
ton, with the potatoes mashed, with
the cabinet pudding, with the youthful
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gruyere—It was a satisfying if unorlg
Inal repast. He heard the voice o_
Vascoe now and then, emitting some
phrases which he failed to grakp. And
the next thing was that Vascoe rose
and left. Vascoe, beginning last, has
finished first. He drank half a glass
of water and followed on Vascoe'*
heels. But when he arrived on the
ground floor there was not a sign o
Vascoe. Mr. Hllgay was eating neat
[7 In hla office. He did not queatlon
Mr. Hllgay about Vascoe. No doubt
Vascoe was present In the house with
the privity of Mr. Hllgay, and Philip
felt, therefore, that he could not be
too discreet Besides, he had no right
to Invade the office of Mr. Hllgay,
whose bearing toward himself, so
friendly on the Tuesday night, had
somewhat altered since the Inquest.
He stood a moment at the front
door. The crowd had dispersed. The
workmen In the trench hod gone. The
trench showed Its little warning lamps
in Strange street, and without doubt
the watchman, Charlie Lad, resumed
his nightly vigil In the cabin at the
comer. Overhead the sky was beau
tifully clear and the moon Just rising.
In a gloomy and wavering mood Philip
climbed the stairs to get his hat and
overcoat; the thirty diners were now
straggling upward In ones and twos.
It needed physical exercise and In
two minutes he was heading along
Holbom for Oxford street and the re
mainlng distance to Bayswater. Nev
er, he thought, had anything so do
pressed him as the excellent dinner
offered by Mr. Halgay to his boarders
at the price of tenpence, or one shilling
if not ordered In advance. He said to
himself that he would have preferred
to consume "two stone steps and a pint
of thick." at a coffee stall. Tomorrow
his career must receive attention. He
must peruse with diligence and dis
crimination the advertisements In the
Dally Telegraph and the Dally Chroni
cle, and he must advertise, he must
get testimonials, he must gird up his
loins against the world, he must con
celve a plan of campaign.
But he could not control his thoughts,
not even though he bought a best ci
gar at the little tobacco shop on the
northeast side of Oxford Circus and
began to smoke It ln order to steady
his nerves. He could not dismiss that
puzzling and distracted portrait from
before hla eyes. He could not refrain
from striving to penetrate the mystery
which enshrouded the disappearance
of Olralda and the death of her father.
He tried to think of a clew, only one
little clew, and the quest seemed atr
surdly hopeless. Varcoe's effort seem
ed to him equally ridiculous, for al
though Philip had the highest opinion
of the London police as mirrors of
courtesy, controllers of street traffic
and walking directories, he despised
them as trackers of a criminal. He
could Imagine a detective In Parts or
St. Petersburg-performing miracles of
craft, but London was too matter-of-
fact. too blunt, too heavy footed. Had
he not, for example. Instantly pene
trated Varcoe’s disguise? There were
sixty persons In the lodging house.
Would the police search the entire
building? Impossible. The stranger
seen by Mrs. Upottery ln the Cap
tain's room—how could the police hope
to hit on that man? The boy who had
given the false alarm to the watchman
—how to distinguish him from all the
other boys In London. These persons
had vanished. Olralda had vanished.
The dead man's brother had vanished,
The blood-marked atone had vanished,
The Captain's papers had vanished.
And, to cap all, there were the confus
ing and contradictory theories of the
Russian secret society and the West
Indian buried treasure—both of them
wild. Incredible, grotesque theories—
which honest, credulous, crude un
conscious foolishness might be expect
ed to draw across the true scent of the
murderer.
He was still fretting In the maze of
multitudinous and useless conjecture
when, at the Marble Arch, an Insist
ent hawker forced him to buy the sec
ond extra of the Evening Record at
one penny, a hundred per cent aboye
Its face value. He glanced through It
under a lamp post. Nearly the whole
of Page three of the Record was given
up to the Inquest and to the brilliant
futile performance of the Record's spe
cial commissioner. The latter stated
briefly that “Mr. Philip Congleton Mas
ters" (The Record's passion for leav
ing nothing out Is to be noted In the
full and accurate revelation of Philips
name), "whose connection with a re
cent episode at the Jlu Jltau School, ln
Jermyn street, will be remembered, be
trayed a strange disinclination to say
anything whatever. Doubtless Mr.
Philip Congleton Masters had reasons
for this reticence which seemed suffi
cient to him." The special commis
sioner had evidently also been disap
pointed by his reception at the wid
owed hands of Mrs. Upottery, but
chivalry had prevented him from show
ing thnt disappointment too keenly.
Philip, feeling that, after all. a spe
cial commissioner Is, Just as much as
any other nentlent being, an Illustra
tion and proof of the great Darwinian
law of the survival of the fittest, care
fully folded up the paper and gave It
to the hawker to sell again.
Instead of going straight on he
turned abruptly down through the noc
turnal groves of Hyde park, crossed St.
George’s place, went along Bird Cage
walk and so reached Westminster
Bridge. After tarrying on the moonlit
and lampllt embankment, he walked to
as far as the Temple Station, and then
mounted Arundel street and came to
Aldwych and Klngsway once more. The
Metropolitan theater and Pleasure
House, with facade and glorious blue
radiance of electricity, was disgorg
ing theatrical patrons; the music hall
moiety of Its evening's activity was
not yet finished. Three nights ago,
penniless, Philip would have crept by
unostentatiously on the side of the
road, but tonight, bulging with bank
notes, he pushed with a certain care
less deliberate annoyance through the
well-clad throng. Every man except
Philip seemed to be Intent on getting
himself and his women folk sent home
like parcels, and the openers of cab-
doors, official and unofficial, were par
ticipating In the prosperity of the Met
ropolitan and British empire. Now
among the corps of openers was a ne
gro, and though all negroes have the
air of being the same negro, Philip by
minute Investigation soon satisfied
himself that this particular negro was
Identical with Massa Coco—not the
Masaa Coco of the Inquest In broad
cloth and many tears, but a Massa
Coco attired In effective tatters for the
business of drawing tears from the
eyes of wealthy and susceptible females
at eleven fifteen of the night. Philip
wBtrhed him In the pursuit of coin
until the crowd had thinned to a trickle
of unhurried persons, and he was Just
approaching to speak to him when, at
the next entrance, the audience of the
music hall suddenly burst forth to lake
such cabs as the theatrical contingent
had left. It was after half past eleven
when Coco, breathless and apparently
satisfied, drew Into the shadow of the
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COLONEL J. C. WOODWARD, A. M„ Prat.
wall to count his gains and then Philip thl * tlme - that section having had this
accosted him. honor ln the past senate, presided over
The negro appeared to take huge de- I b )' H°n. IV. S. West, of Lowndes. It Is
light In being noticed. not known whether these gentlemen |
“Yes. sab, yes, sahl" he whined, "I I will follow the precedent set by ex-
know you, aah; my clothes, snh? Don’t Speaker Newt Morris In 1602 and Pres-
ask me, sah. Because I’m a respectable | dent W. S. West, of the senate In 1905,
nigger and I don't like to tell you. You ,n making a personal canvass of the
seen my portrait In de paper, sah? Oh, nominees at their homes throughout
yes, sah, and my name underneath it. th * , . ,
I's too sorry. Captain the only fren' Thl » was a novel departure In state
Massa Coco had.” I politics and attracted much attention
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’Havethepollce been after you?” at the* time. An active‘.“.ate canV«, RAILROAD SCHEDULES.! SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Philip asked. | by the present five aspirants would 1
'After me, s<
eotnesUlfter qua. *T told ^iTjudge "what I house. ' _ _ ] JjWURS" aS’D 'iitlVUCp
- - -I a—..at. t. u *•» i*»— ■ M« No.—De]
know. J answer d. Judge. I not S°»'b*•“
answer'ebbery 'pertinent p'leeceman dormant and make no claim for thk VffirUtt*.*" iiSsS
dat comes along. Good night, sah! °™ce at this time. She has had four NiihVlK'.ll-W am
ipart To—
Good night! " ’ (presidents of the senate since recon- 7* Marietta..'. 1:60 pm
He walked away past the deserted etructlon. . | * 1 Nashville.. 7:26 pm
and dartt front of the theater, and then They were: The late Rufus E. Lea-
he came back. |ter # of Chatham;_Hon. Fleming CL_du-
74 Marletta..l2:10 pm
• 92 Nashvllle.4:69 pm
73 Marietta.. 6:M pm
, Nashvllla.. 7:16 pm * 4 Nashville. 1:60 pm
CflN'TtlAL Of GKOrtOlA RAILWAY.
Arrive From— I Depart To—
"But I tell you, aah, because you are Blgnon, then of Chatham; Judge R. Q. Savannah..... 7:10 emfMacon.,...... .12:01 am
gentleman, I tell you. I saw de caT Mitchell, of Thoma. father of Repre- ^ “J
tain’s brother tonight. Yes, aah." I f, e . nt “ ,l . v ® ^ondren Mitchell, and Hon. KSaiK..... pS SsvsoniC.. 9:S ™
"What! The man you saw In the I Weat, of Lowndes. | Macon 7»6 pm'Jeckfionvllle.. 8:80 pm
hotel In the Waterloo road?" Whether the action of the twenty- " AYLAN’fi AS*li wfebf UoLn't Ii'AiL-’ -
•■Yes, sahl" second senatorial convention ln in- ROAD.
"You're sure?” doming Hon. T. S. Felder, of Bibb, tot Arrive From— I Depart To—
“I’s dam sure, sah!" I the presidency of the next senate, will *fWma Q:«am^Montgomety S:» am
•Wherar be construed as the administration ° ES
In a cab, sah. Just down there.” He candidate, remain* to be seen, but tht tZsSRfr;' ' tSKngSUL"' p5
pointed to St. Clement's Danes. resolutions Indorsing him were offered «Montgom.ri. 2:<o pm>Monts'm'ry.U:lS pm
"What time?” by Judge A. L. Miller, chairman of the 1 •DfilTj. All other trains daUj except Buu*
"’Bout 7 o'clock, sah.” . recent state convention ln Macon. dsy.
“Which way was he driving?" Those resolutions were as follows; A ,: '"" f,, 11 “A Wf 1
"Up Klngsway, snh.” "Resolved first, That ths Hon. Thos. ftSSfAtlint^^ermiwd^staflon*^eSrner P *ol
"Have you told the police?” S. Felder, this day nominated by this Mitchell street snd Madison .Venue.
"Not me, sah. What Is de p'leece to convention a* the Democratic nominee t)g6fi(TIJI' XiirCUdiO *
me? I’s too sorry for de captain’s for senator from the Twenty-second Arrive From— I Depart To-
death, but p'leece most ’pertinent.” senatorial district. Is, by reason of his .Augusta,—
And he ran off in the direction of the brilliant service to the state during the I Coorer....,
Strand. | past seven years In the house of repre- --
Here!” Philip said, but Massa Coco sentattves, by his remarkable quallfl- " • "|:5
u — • 1 cations as a parliamentarian, by hla •Aufueta’.'.'.’.’r. lilt pm
took no heed.
I am
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lilnninKlinin. Memphis, Kodsas City and
— ^ .Springs. Arrives Memphis 8:06
‘▲offntUL. ...11:46 pm
The shock of this Information, even untiring devotion to the Interests and *lfiily. All o~th6r'trilns Tlally except 8un<
though he did not unconditionally ac- service of the people, eminently fitted day. .
cept It as a fact, produced a turmoil In to All the high poaltlpn of the presl-| AlU LINE KAlL_WA£,
Philip's mind which had a curious ef- dency of the senate. 'I Arrive —_
feet. For he suddenly thought of a trl- | "Resolved second, That this conven-
an ytsisaa ♦ hsrafnra hopahv nynrmlv anil I "^^pkl|| • • • •
l.w York 3 :.>) pm
Josrot 7:40 pm
llrmlughsm.. 6:23 j::
Shown In C^ttrs) t m*
Depart To—
Birmingham.. 6:40 am
Monro* 7:26 am
New York....12:00 m
Abbeville.... 4:60 pm
ilngton.. 9:36 pm
fling Incident which h* had utterly for- tlon does therefore hereby warmly and
gotten, and the Incident assumed now, .trongly Indorse the candidacy bf Mr.
for som* Inexplicable reason, a strange Felder for the position of president of
and formidable Importance, namely, the the next state senate and respectfully
swift raising and dropping of a blind invoke ln hi* behalf the votes and sup-
In the window of the Comer house a^ | port 0 f his fellow senators for that re-
the moment when he was speaking to Sponsible office."
the —- on the morning of the dls- Thl , „ emulated to make the other PINE LUMBER MARKET
covery of the con»e. Here, he reflect- | candidates sit up straight and do *ome| IS DISTRESSINGLY QUIET,
tall thinking.
ed, was conceivably a clew.
e hurried up to
street.
Hperlnl to The Georgian,
Brunswick, Ga., Sept. 7.—The yellow
pine lumber market Is quiet and the
He felt sure that the window was the
first floor window nearest the comer I CONFEDERATE VETERAN8
,? tr o15i e G0 0N AN EXCURSION. I majority of the big lumber dealer* at
>y, and a moment a Inspection of I — - .. Urunswlck have a fewer number of
the house served to confirm nls mem-I gpec | a1 to Th< » Georgian. orders booked than they have had at
— ”** ' Brunswick, Ga . Sept. 7.-The mem-|«ny lime In the past two year, or
natea. He went meditatively upstairs, ■ ' ” . ' more. The number of Inquiries being
an<1 w*, 1 !® '’ r VIwIST . o T J k .' Un,ted Con ‘ sent out from dealers North and In the
struck 12 and al) the light* except that federate Veterans, went on an excur- m | d( ,, 0 W est Is smaller than usual, and
In the hall were extinguished. He a | on to Femandlno, Fla., yesterday on very little business Is being bid on by
stopped In the darkness at the corner I the steamer Emmeline, returning to I local dealers.
of the two corridors on the first floor, Brunswick last night. In addition to
and drew from his pocket a small elec- the members of the local veterans JOE M’DONNELL CAMP
trie lamp which he usually carried. By camp quite a number of friends and TO HOLD REUNION
accident he dropped It, and in groping I relatives of the veterans took ln the 1
for It, he displaced one of the house I excursion. The excursionists were metlRpeclal to The Georgian. *
Kir 1 ' r S^li a #£? , u?«»"l at Fernandlna by representatives of Chattanooga, Tenn., Sept. 7.—The
hfitt f nn £ l 5 e J ocal . Confed ® rate Veteran * Camp joe McDonnell camp. United Confed-
lhat P ,ace - l*rate Veterans, of Ringgold, Ga., will
hold Its annual reunion at the Georgia
monqment, Cblckamauga Park, Sep-
the door of the room In which the blind
had been ao suspiciously lifted and
dropped. There was not a sound In the I SCARCITY OF LABOR
great house. Then a board cracked,
and then the door of the room opened,
brusquely, and a man appeared, ft was Special to The Georgian.
John Meredith, with the scar. Brunswick, Ga,, Sept. 7.—Work on
(Continued In Tomorrow's Georgian.) | the new Glynn county court house Is
being badly handicapped on account of
DDODDDOOOOOOOOOOOOOOODOOOO I difficulty In securing labor. Contrac
— 5 tors, builders, lumber and crosstie
I men, mill men and practically every
HANDICAPS CONTRACTORS.|'-^r^when tf. Wlldjri. brigade
Cumberland hold their reunions here.
O CIGARETTE SMOKERS „„ „„„ f j
O BARRED FROM SCHOOL. Q| tndu , t ry In Brunswick employing day
S laborers Is complaining of the scarcltj
S of labor, and vigorous demands are
^ I being made for the rigid enforcement
O Special to The Georgian.
g Professor*°A?*J. TKZaSftf Yh'e QI "vagrancy b^'*
Brandon Training school, of War- O of the va « ranc > lawa '
O trace, will banish cigarette amok- O AWTAW DDCQincur
era from his school this year, ac- 6 ATLANTAN PRESIDENT
OF LUMBER COMPANY.
O ers from his school this year, ac- O
O cording to a statement made by 0
O him recently. He denounced cl- 0. _ „
O garette smoking In scathing Ian- O Special to The Georgian.
0 gunge and declared that he would 0 Savannah, Oa., Sept. 7.—The Dolph-
Q retain no students who Indulge In 0| McMillan Lumber Company has been
organised here. The company has two
O this habit. 0
0 0
00000000000000000000000000
Patrolman Is Exonerated.
Special to The Georgian.
Chattanooga, Tenn., Sept. 7.—Patrol-
man Joe Chambers has been exoner
ated by the coroner’s Jury for the kill-
mills. Tiie officers are: President, J.
E. Tarver, Atlanta; vice president,
John Moore, Augusta; general mana
ger, J. G. Dolph, Savannah: secretary
and treasurer, J. E. McMillan, Snvan-
nah. Messrs. McMIltsn nnd Dolph are
welt and favorably known In the lum-
bec business of Florida and Georgia.
Ing of Oscar Cothran, who was shot ( ctdcct CAR SYSTEM
. " .... ,k, .i-.. — 1 ntt i nan otoisivi
to death by the patrolman Tuesday
night. The coroner's Jury returned a
verdict of justifiable homldlde because
FOR BRUN8WICK.
and lived at Sheffield, Ala.
It believed thattheofficerfirtNl tawlf- ( , “ T ?*« e °t an ; , , „ _
defense, as It was shown that Doth- Brunswick, Oa.. Sept. 7.—It has been
ran was firing his revolver at the of- announced here today that all arrange-
fleer. The dead man was a molder. | menu of a financial nature looking
to the construction of an electric street
car line In Brunswick have been com-
. pleted, and that within the next four
and WHISKEY HABITS or five weeks the General Construction
'’’""pony, "t Atlantn, will begin the
tieuisM "sent »"Jt#i£ w ‘ ,r,t °» laving tracks. A franchise
R. M. wooLLRV. M*D. anH granted J. II. Neff, of Jacksonville,
f Atlanta,Ua.OfficeIMN.PryorStKet. Fla., some time ago, and It Is under this
franchise that the General Construc
tion Company will build nnd operate.
This car line franchise has been u bone
of contention between two political fac
tions In Brunswick, ami has been made
a local lesue to a certain extent In af-
I fairs politlcaL
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
An Emergency
Story.
There was excitement
In the A family when
one of the children
broke an arm. The
doctor was needed
quickly. There was
not a Bell telephone In
the house—much un
necessary delay and
worry resulted.
IN THE MEANTIME
when one of the B
children broke an arm
there was no delsy—
no worry. A doctor
was reached Instantly
over the Bell tele
phone.
The A family should—
Call Contract Dept M. 1300
SERVICE
IS SATIS
FACTORY
lUriiilnKl
CwomM _ r —__
p. in.; Koums city 9:46 a. ni., and Colorado
tipringa 8:16 a. m.
7:00 A. M.—No. 12 DAILY.—Local to
Charlotte. Danville, Richmond and A»he*
vllle.
7:65 A. M.-N. 7, DAILY, Chnttanoojra.
12 NOON. sNo. 88, DAILY.-Wathinffton
and Routhwpstprn Llraltpd. Electric light
ed. Sleeping, library, observation and club
cars through without chaugo. Dining pars
serve all meals on route, arrives Wash*
IDgtoa ».t2 a. m.; New York 12:*3 p. in.
1,-66 P, M.-NO. 46. DAILY,—New y ot »
Uxpreas. Day coaches between Atlanta and
Washington. Hleoper* between Atlanta.
Charlotte and Washington. Arrives Wash
ington 11:06 a. m.; New York 6 p. n.
12:15 P. M.-N’o. 8, DAILY.—Local for
Macon, arriving Macon 2:4« n. m.
4:10 P. M.-No. 10, DAILY.—Macon .and
Ifawkltitfvllle. Cullman ouservatlon chair
car Atlanta to Macon.
4:25 P. M.-No. 37. DAILY.-Pullman
Bleeping car nud <ray coachei to Birming
ham. Arrives Birmingham 9:16 p. m.x
Memphis 7:15 a. m. ‘
4M P., M.—No. 18. DAILY, except Sun
day. "Air Lino Belle’ to Toccoa.
4:80 P. M.—No. 22, DAILY.—Griffin and
Columbus. Pullman palace aieeplng car
im i ^
ettevllle and iTort Valley.
J “ M.-No. “ ’
— ,— —ittanoofft —
Isotilsvllle. Arrives Romo 7:20 p. m.j Dalton
8:81 p. m.: Chattanooga 9:55 p. m.; Memphis
6:20 a. m.j Louinvlilo 8.60 n. m.; 8t. Loula
6 p. m.j Cincinnati 8:10 a. m.
6:15 P. M.—No. 26, DAILY.—Makes all
11:16 P. M.-No. 14. DAILY.-Florida Lin.
vllle. 6*Uu Through sleeping can
coaches to Jacksonville and Brunav
rives Jacksonville 3:60 n. m.; Ur
• a. tn.: BL Augustine 10 a. m.
11:30 P, M.-No. 97. DAILY.—Through
lanta to flhrmpsrt TonTi..
to Dtrmlngbnm. ArrDes Birmingham 6:16
a. m.s —
. m.; Meridian 11 a. in.: Jackson 2:25 p.
I.; Vicksburg, 4:06 p. in.; Bhreveport 10.60
^ m. Sleepers open to receive passengers
13 KlGIIT-No. 26. DAILY-—United state.
Fast Mill. Sofia TMtlbuleu train. Sleeping
cars to Now )ork, Illdimnn l, Charlotte and
Asheville. Coschea to Washington. Dining
cars servo sll meals en route. Arrives
Washington 6:26 p. m.t New York 6:23 a. m.
Local Atlanta.Charlotte sleeper open to
receive paseenrera nt 9:66 p. m. Local
Allanla-A«h»vllle eleejjer open 10:36 n. m.
Ticket Office No. 1 Peachtree, on Viaduct,
Ivt.-rs ImlMtntr. and new Terminal Station.
Doth ’Phot ‘ '
No. I, on
WILL PROVE AN ALIBI IN
HIS ASSAULT CASE.
Spools! to The Georgian
Chattanooga, Tenn., Sept. 7.—Walter
S. McKenzie, the prominent lumber
man of Nashville, Is sum that he cun
establish an alibi before the grand Jury
when It begins to Investigate the charge
of assault which has been lodged
against him. He Is charged with as
saulting Mrs. Annie L. Tydetnan, a
pretty young woman of tills city, on
the night of July 26.
Sam Jones Tabernacle
Meetings, Carters- '
ville, Ga.
On Scptemper 15th to 23rd, inclu-
■Ive, the Western and Atlantic rail
road will sell tickets from Atlanta-
Dalton and Intermediate stations, to
Cartorivllle, at rate of one fare for
the round trip.
Sam Jones will bo assisted by
Evangelist Oliver and other mlnlstira
of renown. Prof. E. O. Excell will
have charge of the music, and other
gospel singers of noto will attend.
Thrie services each day, 10:30 a. m..
3:00 p. tn. and 8:00 p. m., and tha
people of Cartersvllle will welcome
the great crowds with the same boa-
pltallty they have always shown.
CHAS. E. HARMAN,
Gen. Pass. Agent