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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
Wi;i>Ni:SI>AY, 8EITKMBKK 12. 19*36.
30 DAYS NOTICE
Hearing Before Commission
Takes Place in Nation
al Capital.
Washington, Sept. 12.—The full
membership of the Interstate commerce
commission was present at a hearing
this morning over the question of ex
port cotton rates. Several score of
railroad men from cotton-carrying lines
and Cotton shippers were present, amp
ly represented by eminent counsel.
The commission was asked to modify
that provision of the lsw requiring
railways to give 30 days’ notice by
publication before changing rates.
John Sharp Williams, minority leader In
the national tamtso and n large prodncer of
cotton on bis Mississippi plantations, occtp
table
NEW POINT DEVELOPED
IN DAMAGE SUIT AGAINST
STREET CAR COMPANY
Man With Transfer Skipped Two Crowded
Cars and Was Put Off the
Third.
Dtal n scat nt th«* tnfili* for cnimscf.
ruffle mnnager of the K< -
i urging that thoyld nwthcMl
urodu —
-omrawlnt fufnra of tbo South, be conahl
rrctl, ires largely IkxhkI up In (hla Itaue.
MALT TAX MATTER
TO COME OP
Druggists Hope to
License Re
duced.
Get
The pawn brokers and the pharma
cists are slated for a lengthy pow-wow
with the tax committee Wednesday af
ternoon at 1 o'clock, when efforts will
be made to curtail the tax ordinance
In several directions.
The pharmacists were served with
notices by License Inspectors Ewing
nnd Hayes to pay the 1200 on the sale
<>f malt extracts sevsral weeks ago.
Some have sent In their checks and
City Attorney James L. Mayson haa
ruled that all will have to pay. Since
the ruling and the exclusive article on
the subject printed In The Georgian,
the drug store men have swarmed tu
the mayor's parlor every time the tax
committee shotted any eigne lit holding
session, but the fight to have the ordi
nance removed has never been pulled
off.
The pawnbrokers have been served
ultli notices and, In most coses, have
paid Into the city coffers a 160 license
for selling other than second-hand
poods. It Is their purpose to have thla
ordinance removed.
In order to see If he can be. legally
ejected from a car because he Is two
cars behind the time punched on his
transfer when the two care which
passed him were crowded so he could
hardly have gotten a foothold, A. 8.
Schell, a skilled machinist living In
East Point, has brought suit against
the Georgia Railway and'Electric Com
pany for $2,000.
In his petition, which was filed on
Wednesday In the superior court b>
his attorneys, E. F. Childress and J. H.
Pitman, he claims that hs got a trans
fer from the Houston and Hunter line
to the East Point cars.
He admits that the transfer declared
It waa good only for the first car on
tho route, but claims fluff the drat two
cars to pass him at ths transfer point,
Whitehall, near Broad street, wore
crowded to the steps. He got on tho
third car and the conductor told him
hla transfer was "N. O.," and told him
further that he was “man enough to
put him off”—all Of this, so the peti
tioner. claims, without provocation on
his part. He says that the conductor
called him In substance a dead-beat
and that thereupon he told the street
car employee quietly that he would not
pay or leave the car, Insisting that
ths transfer be accepted. He says that
ha waa then forcibly ejected from the
car at the corner of Whitehall and
Park streets. After this recital of al
leged facts the plaintiff proceeds
tell why he Is entitled to damages from
the street railway people. He says
that acting under Its franchise the de
fendant has so placed Its double tracks
that competition Is shut oft and
monopoly Is formed.
He claims that the company could,
were It eo disposed, furnish enough
cars to handle the trathe comfortably
or could attach trailers or supplement
ary cars on the same schedules already
run, as Is done In other cities of less
population than Atlanta. The plaintiff
claims that tha defendant company
neglects to properly care for Its pat
rons, although It has a full knowledge
of the Inconveniences suffered.
Mr. Schell, who Is a skilled mechanic,
has, he says, ridden on the cars from
East Point and paid his fare, practical
ly every day for many years, and that
ths conductor knowingly misrepresent
ed him when he placed him In the
hearing of other people on the car li
the category of dead-beats and dlshon
est persons.
At the last meeting of the county
commissioners the street car company
was requested to give better service on
the East Point line.
HAL DANIEL, AGE 7 YEARS,
TRAMPS TO CHATTANOOGA;
. BOY HAD STUCK PIN IN HIM
INTRUDERS SCARE
A report of burglars nt the home of
Mr*. H. O. Keen, 17 divans street, at
11:30 o'clock Tuesday night sent Call
Uthcer, Smith tu the scene as fastH
Ills trusty bicycle could roll. .When
lie got there he found no burglar, but
several frightened ladlgg and children.
M re.* Keen waa awukened by a strong
o<lor of escaping gas and on Investiga
tion showed that two Jets, one In the
parlor and one In the halt, were turned
on at full pressure. As they had left
i he gas turned off, the people In the
house were certain that there hod been
Intruders.
A telephone message brought the of
ficer to the house, but a search failed
to show that anything was missing,
ami It waa evident that If a burglar had
entered the house hr had departed
without taking anything of value.
AUTOISTS THROWN
INTO A HAY STACK
New York. 8opt. 12.—While driving hla
racing automobile at n «|w*«*tl of uourly a
mile a minute on the Vanderbilt
conrac on L»tig Inland today. Krneet Keel
er, taking the turn nt Flaherty’* lun. run
Into a telephone pole. The mnehlne leaped
hlirti Info the air, a wreck, and threw
Keeler and hla machlnlat over n fence
Into a buy stark. They were only slightly
hurt.
FISHER’S SISTERS
RESIDE IN DALLAS
Special to The Georgian.
Hollas. Tei., Sept. 12.—W. C. Fl.her, who
wes killed In the wreck on the Weetern
still Atlantic railroad, I" Georgia, today,
Inin two slaters In Dalian, Sira. t). 5.
Prime end Mrs. J. I,, Peacock. PUlier haa
been employed un the road twenty-live
years.
Mrs. Roberson Dead.
Special to The Georgian.
Anniston. Ala., Sept. 12.—Mrs. J. A.
Roberson, wife of a well known local
newspaper man, died last night short
ly before midnight at her home In
South Anniston, after a long Illness.
She had but recently returned from tbe
Grady hospital In Atlanta where she
underwent an operation.
Bio 8uit Against Central,
Isaac Q. Buttles has tiled a bill In
the auperior court demanding 120,000
from the Central of Georgia Rallrosd
for Injuries sustained at the McDaniel
street crossing June t, when he walked
from behind one train In front of an-
yther.
Mrs. Mary Coleman.
The funeral of Mrs. Mary Coleman,
who died Tuesday at a private sanitar
ium, will be held from the Church of
Immaculate Conception at >:30 o'clock
Thursday morning. Interment at Oak
land cemetery.
Mrs. Coleman was the widow of An
drew Coleman, being 51 years of age,
and Is survived by four sons and four
daughters.
Tha following-named pel!-bearers
will meet at Harry G. Poole A Co's, un
dertakers, It East Hunter street, at
8:M Thursday morning: John P. Mur
phy, A. C. Draught!, Richard Hasting,
Patrick McHIgh, E. D. Murphy. M. A.
huraklne, E. F. Hill and Mr. Hartsook.
m
"It's heaps better tidin' with a ticket
than trampin'," said ,7-year-old Hal
Daniel when he returned from Chatta
nooga Monday. “Gee, this hoboln’ bus
iness ain't half as much fun as Jimmy
Sullivan said It was. Guess I’ll go
back to school.
For the prodigal returned after three
days, In which his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. N. M. Daniel, of 271 Central ave
nue. had been alternately weeping and
wiring In the hope of Itndlnr him. Stor
ies of kidnaping, drowning and other
fearful things had enlivened the In
terval between Hal’s departure and the
news that he had arrived In Chatta
nooga, "where his kin people lived at."
Hal started to the Crew street school
last Friday, wondering whether the
new-stylo spelling would make It'hard-
sr or easier to pass Ills examinations.
Hs was so absorbed In his meditations
at school that when a big boy stuck a
pin In him he yelled and was repri
manded. Somebody told Hal he would
be suspended, no he sold his books to a
second-hand dealer for $1.26 and thus
equipped for travel, started on a Jour
ney to tho West, where there are In
dians walling to be killed and no boy-
terror of t(ic plains to do tho killing. ,
niK BUI Burk, patrolman of the’
Chattanooga department, was walking
his beat Sunday mornlnrf, when he saw
a youngster on the curbstone who
looked as though he had been through
a milt.
"What's the matter, kid?" asked tho
policeman.
"I'm hungry,” Mid the youthful In-
vnnder of the wild and woolly West.
"I haven't any ride and I haven't any
money and I don't see any Indians and
—and I want to go hd-o-mo. It's din
ner time and I haven't had breakfast
yet.”
"Well, Mr. Diamond Dick," said Pa
trolman Burk, “before we go out In
dlan hunting we’ll walk over to the
restaurant and you'll have dinner
me."
Under the Influence of ham and eggs
and a big mug of milk the boy traveler
became loquacious and entertained the
policeman and the Greek restaurant-
keeper with the story of his wrongs
and the pilgrimage which follqwed.
"I was at school and a big boy stuck
a pin In me and I hollered," he ex
plained. "It hurt, too. .And then De
cause I hollered I got suspended. Then
I was afraid *.to go home and get
lickin', so I sold my books and came
over here.”
"How'd you get here, son?" asked
Patrolman Burk. "You shore must be
a walksr If you made It here since
Friday."
"Oh, I got on the train and rode till
they put me off," explained Hal, "be
tween bites of pie. “Then I got on
the next one and rede a little bit fur-
ther. There's lots of trains, you know
But I walked part the way. And
haven't had to wash my face since
left home."
When Hal told hla name at tjie police
station nnd confided to the desk ser
geant that he had aome kinfolks In
Chattanooga, It was easy to straighten
out matters. A telegram to the At
lanta home brought more Joy than the
yellow envelopes often carry anil a tel
ephone soon called Hal's Chattanooga
relatives to the station. Hal arrived
In Atlanta Monday morning, well fed,
clothed and ready to take up arithmetic
and geography once more.
But I'm not going to atart out West
again until I have more money and can
get to the real pralrlea," he remarked,
after breakfast. “Chattanooga's a bum
town. But that was mighty good pie.'
D. O. K. K. SIGN IS OUT;
NO, NOT NEW KU-KLUX
\
goooooooooooooooooooooooog
D. 0. K. K.
O • o’clock tonight. , O
O BE ON HAND. O
80000000000000000000000008
Ths above placard was posted
Wednesday morntng In several uptown
drug stores nnd soda fountalna What
the letters stand for or who posted the
signs could not be ascertained by In
quiry of the clerks.
It's one of the lodges the boas be
longs to," said one clerk. "I guess he
stuck It up there,"
"Is the Ku Klux to meet tonight?
Shall the city be terrified by white clad
horsemen and midnight marauders?
What shall we do about It?" These
were aome of the questions the cltlsens
asked each other.
"If dem Ku Kluxers begin rldln'
roun' die town I'm sho' gwlne find
nnudder home," remarked one old ne
gro. "I Bin’ forgot wartimes."
OIL TRUST GETS
SEPARATE TRIALS
Findlay, Ohio, Sept 12.—Pleas of
“not guilty" have been made to all
barges brought against the Standard
Oil Company by Proucutor David, in
the local court. The defendants de
manded sepnrate trial by Jury.
Little knots of men gathered at street
corners and discussed the portentous
placards. Pointed questions regarding
the membership were asked and "Are
you a Ku KluxT’ took the place of the
usual salutation.
Half tho city was on tiptoe with ex
pectancy.
"Where will they meet? Is It a se
cret? I'd like to go and look on If I
knew where. But the Ku Klux would
be a mighty bad thing. The police
should break It up. They ought to turn
out the military”
Then the whole thing exploded when
the head of one firm walked Into his
•lore after lunch nnd answered an In
quiry as to the placard.
"That? Oh, that's only a meeting
of the Dramatic Order of the Knights
of Khorasson. Just a side-show of the
Knights of Pythias, you know."
That settled It. The Knights
Khomssan lost their paraphernalia at
the firs In the Kiser building Monday
night, hut they decided to hold a meet
ing anyway. And that’s what the mya
terious placards meant.
IS TO LIQUIDATE
Chicago. Scot. 12.—It I* Just nine month*
In order to make this possible Judge ‘•wnwilttee.
Hanker adjourned the session of the
court to the first Monday In October.
rush of the $26,000,000 Institution* he wreck
ed. T'Hlny the Equitable Trust t'mupanv. a
Walsh concern, bus resolved to "liquidate"
—that Is. the directors have given up hope
of redeeutnjc the assets pawned through the
i\al*b failure to the Chicago clearing In
YOUTH’S DEAD BODY
IN Y. M. C. A. POOL
Buffalo. N. Y, Sept. 12.—A little
game of ttg In the swimming pool of
the Central Y. M. C. A. came to an ab
rupt* end. when one of ths swimmers,
Perry R. rants, struck something In
the water that felt like a body. An
Investigation followed and Edward A.
Seymour brought up the body of Wil
liam S. Wagner, bushboy at the Y. M.
C. A. barber shoji. He wns 1$ years
old and had been at the shop about a
month. *
OOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
O CUP TO BE AWARDED §
O BY MR. ROOSEVELT. O
O - ~t>
O New York, Sept. 12,—At Oyster O
O Bay, Friday, President Roosevelt O
O will formally present the Roose- O
O veil cup to Commodore Perk, O
O whose yacht Vim won It for the O
O American Yacht Club In the Ron- O
O der Klasseer off Marblehead re- O
O cently. o
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOtJOOOOOOO
Petition in Bsnkruptc),
Christopher C. Weaver has fil*d a
roluntary petition'of bankruptcy In
the clerk's office of the United States
court. Liabilities, $1,031. No assets.
OF ENGINES
Two Canadian Pacific
Trains Are Bad
ly Wrecked.
Sault Ste Marie, Mich, Sept. 12.-
Sections of trains 1 and 2 of the Cana
dlan Pacific collided at Azllda, near
Sudbury, at. 7 o'clock this morning
killing thirteen.
Third, section of No. 1 t»as making
siding when third section of No.
west bound, crashed into It nearly
head-on, wrecking many coaches.
Railroad officials are secretive and
no particulars nor names have yet
been learned.
T
ME INTO POLITICS
SEC, SHA1A
Special to The Georgian,
Salisbury, N, C„ Sept. 12.—At a mass
meeting last night, all of the commit
tees on arrangements for the Bryan
reception were appointed. Mr. Bryan
will be Introduced by Hon. R. W. Hack-
ett, Democratic candidate for congress
In this district, and It Is remembered
that Congressman Kluttz was the orl
glnal North Carolina Bryan man, sec
nnded his nomination at Chicago and
was in the delegation that first voted
for him.
In his speech here Monday night,
Secretary Shaw said that hs had feel
Ing against Bryan bscause the Ne
braskan had brought him Into politics.
Years ago when Bryan stumped Iowa,
Shaw waa Invited to reply to him.
THROUGH MISTAKE
MAY NOT RECOVER
Hpcclnl to The Georgian,
Rome, Ga., Sepf. 12.—Mistaking
bottle of carbolic acid for medicine,
Miss Gelda Pntterson, of Six Miles
Station, swallowed the poison last
night und no hopes are held out for
her recovery. Dr. William Delay, of
Rome, was summoned by telephone to
attend the girl. Mtss Patterson Is an
orphan 18 years of age and lives with
her slstor, Mrs. John Cobb.
TO MEET FRIDAY
Havana, Cuba, September 12.—
Congress Is to meet Friday and there
no doubt that President Palma will
be authorized to use the money re
maining In the treasury after national
debt obligations havo been covered, for
the purpose of the war. All expenses
Incurred up to date will be approved.
The government will thus have nearly
125,000.000 available. .
Trains nre now running between
Pinar del Rtn and San Juan de Mar'
tines and trains from Havana can go
us far as Consalacton, near which point
the battle took place.
S ARE FIRED
BY BOLT PROM SKY
Chicago, Sept. 12.—Lightning, which
came with a rain and thunder storm
that broke the hot spell today, caused
terror and great property loss In Oak
Park, Austin and other sections of
Chicago's west border, striking eleven
houses and setting them on fire. Help
was summoned from Chicago.
TLANTANS ELECTED
IS OFFICIALS BY THE
GEORGIA J, 0,0, A,M
Hpeclnl to The Georgian.
Augusta, tin., Sept. 12.—The state council
meeting of the Junior Order United Amort-
cn» Mechanic* closed nt S o'clock this after*
Tbe election of officers was Jiint be
fore the close* which resulted In Atlanta
getting n mnjortty of the officers. There
wns a committee appointed to appear before
the legislature to light the immigration bill.
Tbe next meeting will t»e held In Dames-
vtlle.
The officers elected today are as follows:
Htate councilor, M. if. Ahlxitt, of Atlanta:
state vice-councilor. George Ott, of
Savannah; Junior past state councilor,
II. Moxley, of Macon; state secretary,
„ ft. Dillingham, of Atlanta; sjate treas
urer, O. A. Vnekett. of Atlanta; state fn-
Mitlnel. William Withers, of Atlnnf*;
outside seutlnel, W. B. Hloun, of
Gainesville; state chaplain. Her.
IW
... C. J-. IL .8. Moll. Of Savannah; A.
Russel! Shirley, of Atlanta; A. J., R.
l'earre. of Atlanta. National representa
tires, J. U. Uttleton, of Augusta, nnd Jo
seph E. Lovelace, of Atlanta. Dejmiy nn-
. ^- 7| 0 ( savin-
tloual councilor, C. C. Lebey,
KING
TO
EDWARD’S MARKSMEN
COMPETE WITH CRACK
REGIMENT OF NEW YORK
Upper photo shows Sir Howard
Vincent, M. P., and aide-de-camp
to King Edward. He will accom
pany the Westminster Rifle team
to the United States. The lower
pictures show two of the Queen's
Own Westminster Volunteers who
are coming to America to com
pete with the Seventh New York
National Guard marksmen.
I BRYAN WILL VISIT
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
I Special to The Georgian.
New Orleans, La., Sept. 12.—William
| Jennings Bryan will visit New Or- [ -
I leans during Ms forthcoming tour of
the South, responding to an Invitation ]
sent by the New Orleans Progressive j
Union, Mr. Bryan has wired that he j
I will come here September 24.
| Baton Rouge has also extended him rr
: an Invitation, and it Is likely that he'
will visit that etty.
1 SHOOTING TO MURDER,
IS THE CHARGE AGAINS7
LAD WHO SHOT YOUNG GIRL
Shooting and wounding with irttent
to murder," all that In large letters. Is
written after the name of Horace
Black; but Horace don't seem to mind
It In the least. Perhaps It's because
he la Just a little chap—not any larger
than his ten and a half years of life
would lead you to suppose.
Horace Is charged before Judge
Bloodworth with the Intention to mur
der little Miss Chester, the very win
some 8-year-old daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. J. E. Mooney, of 385 Formwalt
street.
Horace Is the son of J. H* A. Black
and lives next door to. Miss Chester
Mooney.
It all happened Sunday last late In
the afternoon. Miss Mooney was giv
ing an Impromptu Imitation of a tight
rope walker on the dividing fence be
tween the Black-Mooney property,
when Horace enme along gunning for
sparrows with hla air rifle. So far the
attorneys for both sides agree, but It Is
still a point In question whether he In
tentlonally took deliberate aim and
poured shot Into Miss Mooney's arm or
whether his aim was somewhat shaken
by the Impromptu performance on the
fence and he accidentally hit little Mtss
Mooney.
However this may be. Miss Moonsy
was shot In the arm and she cried very
hard and was taken from the fence.
Horace was taken Into the house and
severely chastized by hla father.
Miss Mooney's parents swore out the
warrant against Horace and the date
of trial will be settled upon IVednes
day afternoon. Attorney Madison Bell,
for the defense, said It would be set for
Thursday at 11 o'clock.
Horace states that It was all an ac
cldcnt and that he Is very fond of lit
tle Miss Mooney, this latter with
blushes while he sat looking out the
window of Judge Bloodworth's window,
his cheek pillowed on the handle of an
umbrella Wednesday waiting to face
tho charge:
"Shooting and wounding with Intent
to kill."
BR YANIS MISREPRESENTED
DECLARES HIS RELATIVE
the party will win Its victory on tbo tariff
Issue," so declared ex-Governor William
Hhennnn Jennings, of Florida, a leading
politician of his state and a first <*ousin
of the "peerless leader." who Is In Wash
ington today on departmental business.
dislike to see Mr. Bryan criticised
about the portion of his speeches referring
to the government ownership Idea, He has
l*ecn misquoted nnd misrepresented. I *
been with Mr. llryan ever alnoe he la ..
In New York from Knropo, aud have hearc
all his speeches. In none of them does he
make tbe government ownership of rail-
FILTHY
ADVERTISING
Is Rejected by
This Newspaper
That is one reason
why it has been given
in popular esteem the
title of Home News
paper. Onlv CLEAN
ADVERTISING ap
pears in The Geor
gian. Are vou one of
tbe 23,000 heads of
families who indorse
this policy of
CLEAN
ADVERTISING
TO MOVE TO
ALL CHILDREN OFF
STREETS AT NIGHT
Ordinance Committee Will
Consider the Prop
osition.
Elevators, children, automobiles a n( t
"dives" will be discussed frankly and
freely by the members of the ordinance
committee Wednesday afternoon at s
o'clock.
The meeting will be the most impor-
tant that the committee has held tar
the past four months.
Tha ordinance, which If paecsd win
keep the little tots of the town off the
streets after nightfall, Is especially |m.
portant. It will be something of a ran.
ovation df ye good old days when ths
curfew was In vogue.
The elevator ordinance Is one which
has been long run up and down the
floor from the city clerk's office to the
council chamber. It calls for many
safety appliances on elevators and win
be fought with vigor by the owners of
large buildings.
The “dive’’ ordinance Is probably the
most Important of the four, so far a,
the morals of the city are concerned
The ordinance makes It Imperative for
any one opening or operating a restau
rant or lunch room to get the consent
of the adjoining property owners and
f daces the power of giving the licensee
n the hands of the city fathers, if
passed, some 200 of the Decatur and
Peters street "dives" and lunch rooms
will be closed.
The automobile ordinance regulates
the side on which an “auto" must pass
a street car.
BOY'S ANGRY MOTHER
WHIPS YOUNG GIRL
IN PUBLIC STREEI
Special to Tbe Georgian.
Anniston, Ala., Bef*?- 12.—Because
she had exercised an unwholesome In
fluence over the youth of West Annis
ton, Leola Stubblefield,* a young white
girt of about 20 summers, said to have
come here from Talladega, was on yes
terday evening chastised with a raw-
hide whip by an angry mother.
On a charge of vagrancy and Immor
ality, the young woman was arrested
In the L. A N. park yesterday after-
noon In company with the son of the
lady who later administered the pun
ishment to her. She made bond and
was at the station to leave the city
when she was seized In the welting
room by the angry mother and taken
to a secluded spot near by, where she
was severely whipped In the presence
of many spectators.,
ALLEGES THAT TRAIN
WAS AHEAD OF TIME
Widowof Engineer Imputes
Wreck to This
x Cause*
Alleging that a passenger train waa
nine mlputos ahead of Its schedule st
the time her husband, W. W. Lambert,
freight engineer, was killed In Florida
December 18, 1805, and that her hus
band's train was four hours late, and
that the train dispatcher was at fault
In not properly arranging their meet
ing, Mrs. Alma M. Lambert has filed
suit In the superior court asking $25.-
000 from the Seaboard Air Line rail
way.
AFTER TWO YEARS
NEGRO IS ARRESTED
Special to Tho Georgian.
Charlotte, N. C„ Hept. 12,-Nesrty two
years ago, Grace Collette, a resident of this
city, discovered a negro man under In*
bed, and catching him bj the collar thru*
him out the back door. The matter was
reported at once to the police, but the
„„ . _ jj»c ,—..
burglar bad fled and only Inst Monday
a.. • • * : -A|r - • —
be captured, and brought Into court the
A tw following.
In tolling her story Tnesdsy, the nervy
ornuu related bow the burglar suddenly
■ged from beneath her l»ed ami de
led all of her money, anil when ene
woman
erneri
mu ml
tried' to talk he told, hereto keep iju
WILL ATTEMPT TO MASH
GREAT NEW BATTLESHIP
New York, Sept. 12.—Ths new but-
tleahlp Connecticut will be taken "Ut
her dock In the navy yard this af-
put Into commission on September
ahe will be subjected .to Interesting
testa. To test hey stability, 40 tons
Sll. iU ICBV Hr/ fiiauim/, .a t
-eights will be placed on one aide ut
the veasel, and the degree which sh«
yields will be fully noted.
FIVE 8HOT8 FIRfeD
AT CITY DAIRYMAN.
BpeHal to The Ocorglan.
New Orleans, La., Sept. 12.—Pirrr*
Casa me, a dairyman, waa the victim
of a foul attempt at assassination th>«
morning on the outskirts of the city.
Five shote were fired at him by un
known parties, who hid In ambu. n.
Cszama waa hit three times and bud j
wounded. The police are working "n
the case, but have thus far not been
able to obtain a clew.
ON TRIAL FOR KILLING
DE8POILER OF HOME-
Special to The Georgian.
Bristol, Tenn., Sept. 12.—The trial
John Orr for the murder of George
Jones was begun today. The evidence
for the prosecution has been concluded
and apparently a strong case Is made
Orr shot and klllsd Jonez at the
union depot because of alleged InUn’.a./
between Jones and Mrs. Orr.