The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, September 27, 1906, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. i Thursday. SEiTEJinwi 27. lans. The Atlanta Georgian. JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES, Editor. P. L. SEELY, President. JT Telephone Connection!. "V Subscription Rites: Published Every Afternoon Except Sundsy by THE GEORGIAN CO. st 25 W. Alsbsma Street, Atlanta; Ga. EatenO aa eteond-claia matter April B, ISOS, at tka Postoflce at Atlanta, Gt.. usd" act of conxrew of Unrcb l 1171. One.Year . $4.50 Six Months....... 2.50 Three Months 121 By Carrier, per week 10c like this, may be allowed to go at large and perhaps meet face to face the woman whose honor he has eougbt to utterly wreck and destroy. Subscribers falling to rseeiva THE GEORGIAN promptly and ragularly, and raadars who can not purchase the paper where THE OEOROIAN should be on sale, are requested to oemmunieate with the Circulation Manager without delay, and the com plaint will receive prompt attention. Telephonesi Bell 4927 Main) Atlanta 4401. roil TEltltlTOKY OUTSIDE OF G E O It O-l A. Eastern Otriers: Western Olfleee: Colter Bids.. New Yory. Trllmue Bldg.. Chicago. Tha Georgian calla tha attention of Its multitude of correepondonte to theie facte: That all communlcatlona must be eigned. No anonymous communioation will be printed. No manuaerlpta will be returned unleta stamps are Inclosed for the purpeee. Our correspondents are urgently requested to abbreviate their letters as much aa poiaible. A half a column will be read, whereaa a full column will be patted over by the majority of readers. Col. Anderson and His Men. There la never a rote without ita thorn and never a tragedy without Ita hero. The rosea which will grow out of the muck of civic tragedies of the last two months will probably live In the •erener peace and tranquillity of our Southern women and In the more completely recognised security of our Anglo- Sazou civilisation. The heroes that grow out of the occaelon are more than one. Many men have done gallant and timely things during the progress of the riot that Is now at an end, and many men of Atlanta have demonstrated their claim to the reward and admiration of the people of this city and of the state. if we should strlko comment In tho secondary ranks of official life our lists would be full of the subordinate officers whose fidelity, courage and soldierly Intelligence have helped so largely to bring order out of chaos. But since we cannot well s|ieak of more than one man at this time, let us say that the central flgtire In force and In service who emerges from this embrogllo Is Clif ford Anderson, colonel of the Fifth regiment of Georgia. Colonel Anderson Is In point of fact an Ideal soldier. Cool, resolute, unshakable In hlg balance, clear (loaded In every emergency, and absolutely bravo, he commands the unlimited respect of his lieutenants and the absolute con fidence of the men whom he controls. He has added in these trying days many and larger laurels to an already high and well established reputation, am: It Is scarcely too much to say that the bearing and the oxecutlvo ca pacity of the colonel of tnc Fifth Georgia within tho last five days stamps him as perhaps the first soldier of Geor gia. And wlmt has been said of tho colonel may also with cordial and grateful approciatlou bo said In lesser degree of bis officers and of his men. The majors, tho lleuten ante, the captains and the adjutants have nil done their eplendld and brilliant parts In those trying hours, and the men behind them with choerfulness and admirable self control and with unflinching courage have won the respect and the admiration of the people of Atlanta fur their sol dierly qualities and for tbelr devoted fidelity to the city and to the state. i Did Mr. Brantley Say It? Mr. C. C. Rrantley, of Georgia, Is quoted as having told The Washington Post that The Georgian had advo cated the revival of the Ku Klux Klun to suppress tho . negroes. If Mr. Brantley, of Goorgla, skid this to The Washing ton Post, he waa either misinformed or malicious. The first paper to condemn editorially and locally this absurd and anarchistic proposition was The Georgian. We ridi culed It from Its first silly start from Its silly source, and helped to laugh It out of any consideration. Mr. Brantley ought to know more or talk less. The Georgian has been In all this emergency the most conservative paper In Atlanta except Tho Constitu tion, whoso conservatism amounted to apathy. While these fierce and flaming extras of Saturday were being Issued to enrage the mob, never an extra came from The Georgian. We saw the danger and held back the presses. A Dangerous Delay of the Law. It has been represented to The Georgian that un der the statutes of tho state no criminal can lie sen- fenced to die until thirty days have elapsed between the commission of the crime and his execution. It strikes us that In cases like those which havo re- cently aroused and distressed the state, this Is a bad law and ought to be repealed. When a criminal Is convicted of the’erime of crimes, the crime which Is transcendent above all crimes, the crime which subordinates all crimes, tha law should hasten and not delay the satisfaction of popular vengeance, of outraged society. It Is a terrible thing lor a woman whose life has been worse than destroyed, whose happiness Is gone, and for her husband, brothers rnd children who sit with her In the ahadow of a forever darkened home, to wait for thirty long days before the law vindicates and punishes the crime which la worse than death and deadlier than as- saaslnstlon. It It has not already been done It ought as speedily •as possible be the i»llcy of the legislature to repeal this delay of law and to iiermlt execution to follow fast upon a fair trial and Judicial condemnation. If in no other Instance, there ought certainly to be made an exception in this case, because In thle way only can the Impatient eagerness and vengeance of an out- raged people be satisfied. And along this line It may be said as well that the law should visit some vastly heavier punishment than mere Imprisonment upon any criminal who vigorously and viciously attempts an assault upon the virtue and lire of a good woman. Legislators and cltlxers have only to put themselves In the places of men and womon upon whose famlliee this awful ahadow has fallen to realise bow keen and poignant must be the shame and bitter- ness, to know that the Bead who has wrecked a home Hcarst’s Brilliant Victory and Its Results. With William Randolph Hearst against a frantic fighting field at Buffalo, the New York editor has won the gubernatorial nomination of the Democratic party upon the first ballot by an overwhelming majority. No tribute more remarkable baa ever been paid to any man In the plctureaque and atlrring politics In New York. Three weeks ago Mr. Hearst was nominated for gov ernor by the Independence League devdted to the over throw of bosses, the cleansing of elections and the es tablishment of clean government by the people. The Democratic leaders Implored him not to accept this nomination with the assurance that they would nom inate him themselves. He held fast to !>ts convlctlous and sternly refused. Then the Democratic leaders urgently besought him to postpone his Independence League convention until after the Democrats had nominated him at Buffalo. This was alio firmly declined. Then the Democratic leaders once more Importuned him to Induce bis Independence League to nominate only the head of the tlcaet and leave the rest of the ticket to be named by the Democratic convention on the 25th. This alio Mr. Hearst very resolutely put aside. And now after having refused all compromises, after having dolled all bosses, after the most resolute and scathing denunciation of many of tha leading politician! of the Democratic organisation, Including those who have held the machinery of tho party In their hands for the past twenty years, tho Democratic convention on Its first ballot, without a waver, by a vote of 304 to 130 nominates the great reformer with unparalleled enthusiasm. Fought by Jerome with a bitterness born of that apoa- tate'a consciousness of hts own disloyalty to plodges where Hearst has been so heroically true; fought by Me Clellan, whose Impotency and weakness have been so fearlessly exposed and so fearlessly fought; fought by McCaren with all the venom of a defeated and belabored politician In Brooklyn, William R. Haarat easily, tran quilly and triumphantly rides the wave at Buffalo aa the serene, undisputed and absolute master.of the situation In New York. With the regular nomination of the New York Demo cratic convention In one hand, with the enthusiastic nom ination of tho Independence League In the other, and with the demonstration of hla unparalleled popularity among the peoplo ns Illustrated In the last municipal election, who can doubt William R. 1 (caret's sound, logical and brilliant promise of n triumphant election at the Novem ber polls* The Democratic party could not do less than to nom inate him. He was the only ninn who ronld win In New York at this time. He was the only man whoso policies of people believed. He was the only man whose policies of sympathy and helpfulness with the rights and Interesta of tha people were so dear, so vigorous, so thoroughly consistent and so absolutely vindicated In actual results that no other man approximated his hold upon tho confi dence and affection of the mass of the people. Mr. Hearst's nomination by these two distinct bodies In Now York will Inevitably work a revolution In the pol (ties of that state. With all tho force of Roosevelt Indorsed by Hughes, there ran be no estoppel of the tidal wave which Is going to carry Mr. Hearst Into tho governorship. By tho eta tlxtlcs of the last flew York municipal election, 40 per rent of tho men who voted for Hearst In that election wore honest Republicans disgusted with the greed and graft of their party and- famished for a revolution that would be tho means of putting honest men and methods on top; 40 per cent of his supporters In the coming etate election will spring from this same body of honest Lincoln Republicans upon whose necks the yoke of psrty no longer rests heavily and who have learned to place public honesty and official purity above the shibboleth of corrupt and selfish political organisations. And with this 40 per cent of Republican votes Joined to a solid support of the Democratic party, outside of the Ryan-Jerome-Bel- mont hybrids of the "Trust camp," It seems s matter of absolute certainty that Mr. Hearst will be returned by the next election as governor of New York by a majority ranging from 50,000 to 100,000 votes. If he Is—and the "It" seems scarcely necessary—what then? Well, then, he enters Into his political career absolute ly vindicated of the fiendish and Infernal slanders with which tho corporation and tmst monsters have hounded every step of his Indefatigable and wonderful career. He has eighteen months In which to Illustrate as governor of New York an executive capacity which has never hsd a superior among the public men of thla republic. And If with this vlncldntlon and with this opportunity this great and fearless Democrat “makes good,” as we are sure he will "make good,” then thoughtful men— Well, thoughtful men can see for themselves what tre mendous possibilities are trembling along the national hortson of the Democratic party. LOOK8 LIKE A "SHOWDOWN.” WHAT YOU GOT BILL? OUR PLA TFORM-—The Georgian stands for Atlanta’s Owning its own gas and elec tric light plants, as it now owns its water Tooths. Other cities do this and get gas as low as 60 cents, with a profit to the city. This should be done at once. The Georgian believes that if street rail ways can be operated successfully by European cities, as they are, there is no good reason why they can not be so operated here. But we do not believe this can be done now, and it may be some years be fore we are ready for so big an undertaking. Still Atlanta should set its face in that direction NOW Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria Is a distinguished or nithologist, and his knowledge of the science of birds Is equaled by very few In Europe. He devotes a good deal of time to the subject, and Is a member of the Ornith ological Society of Vienna. Morris Brown, of Lincoln, Neb., nominated for the United States senate by the Republican state convention of hla state, Is attorney general of Nebraska at present. He was born In lows forty-three years ago, and has been a resident of Nebraska since 1883. Dr. D. T. MscDougal, of the department of botanical research of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, has gone to the deserts about Tehuacsn, »*>uth of the City of Mexico, to make observations. He Is accompanied by Dr. J. X. Roee, of the United 8tatee National Museum. Lotta, the once favorite adtress. Is said to be one of the biggest taxpayers among the women of jloston. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O BOBBIE'S E3SAY8. O By William F. Kirk. O O 00000000000000000000000000 Shews. Shows Is whare you go to forglt that you haven't got much munny to pay rent & the butcher. Tlinrc are 2 kinds of shows, goad shows & bad shows: had shows are divided In many dlffcrnt kinds, all of which can be seen In New York & other places. New York Is a grato town for shows that Is the nlsest thing ubout our grate city. Tho kind I like best Is mellerdrams, whare the hero Is blit like mister Jef fry* A hits the vlllun on the nnas In Act 1, 2 & 3. In the flrst Act thare Is a scene whare the sawmill Is In work ing order & the hero Is tied to the log & the' log le going to the saw. Save him! hollers the heroes lady love. He Is on the log & he Is aleaping like Mister Jeroam, Is thare no man here strong enuff to salv him? 1 Will! says tho boy detektlv, I will save him or lose my oan life, A tho boy detektlv throws hlsself against tho saw A the saw stops beekaus the dolsktlv lias on a fancy vest with big buttons A the buttons stop the saw. Anothfr show I like Is the coinlk opry. 85 gurls corns out with long hair A short dresses A sings "Hall to tho I Sultan, he Is heer!" Then tho Button cums out A says What Ho, my fatth- ■futwlves. Sultnns are from the East A are always pollght. so they call thare household "my falthfulwlves." Then the funny man cums out A says "the Limited Mnll Is cummlng A there Is a tall off the track, whare Is the rail?" A the hero saye 1 will find It, 1 am Harkshaw! Thare Is only one kind of play rnalks me cry, that Is the farmer play, thare are 6 cows, 8 horses, 24 kids A n barn In the scene. Also thare are 8 farm ers, one of them says "Ben, we shall have to sell the old homesled, I bet It on the Giant* A you know the rest Then Ben sets up on the fence A says We shall never sell the homested. A the other farmer says all rite, then I will welch for the sake of our fath ers h inm A mine. Thare Is another kind of play I like, but I doan't like It vary much. It Is the problem play. The gurl cum* In A says Whare I* tho 8-room flat you promised me? Then the feller says Rents Is too high In New York, let us talk a 5-room flat A the gurl says You kur! I wnnt you to know I euil have married a Pittsburg mllllonntr; A the vtllun says farewell. I doant know wleh vlllun, everybody Is a vll lun In a problem play. That's all 1 know about shows. A FAMOUS POEM. J. L. McCreary, who for the past thirty years had been a government clerk at Washington, and who died a few day* ago at Duluth, was the author of the familiar poem beginning with the stanza: There t* no death! The stars go down To ii>6 upon norno fairer snore. And blight In heaven's Jeweled crown They shine for evermore. This poem, which has. appeared In so many school readers and collections of poetry, has been commonly, but errone ously, credited to the pen of Lord Ed- srd Bulwer Lytton.—Nashville Ban ner. Destruction of Birds. From The London Telegraph. Ladles who patronise the use of birds’ feathers In millinery may be Interested to know that certain spe cies of bird* are threatened with ex tinction by the prevailing fashion. The French organ, L'AvIculteur, reports that In one market recently nnd at one sale there were disposed of U.ooo hummingbirds, 38,0#n paroquets. 15,000 kingfishers, 20,000 aigrettes and many thousand other birds of gorgeous plum age. Oermany sends to London every year 20,000,000 feathers to be worked up Into trimmings. The one hope for the poor birds Is that the day may soon arrive when to wear the feathers of wild bird* will be deemed bail form. Nothing else can save them. The greater their beauty tbs worse tbelr Impending fate. Jffngd otr (Copyright, 1908, by Amerlcan-Journal-Examlnsr.) You call me an angel of love and light, A being of goodness and heavenly Are, Sent out from God's kingdom to guide you aright In paths where your spirit may mount and aspire. You say that 1 glow like a star on Its course, Like a ray from the altar, a spark from the sourco. Now, list to my answer, let all the world hear It; I speak unafraid what I know to be true: A pure, faithful love Is the creative spirit That makes women angels. I live but In you. We are bound sout to soul by life's holiest laws. And If I am an angel, why, yo* are the cause. As my ship skims the sea I look up from her deck, Fair, Arm at the wheel shlnea love's beautiful form: And shall I scorn the barque that last night went to wreck. By the pilot abandoned to darkneas and storm? My craft waa no stancher; she, too, had behn lost Had the wheelman deserted or slept at his post. I laid down the wealth of my soul at your feet (Some woman does this for some man every day). No desperate creature that walks In the straat Has a wickeder heart than I might have, I say, Had you wnntonly misused the treasures you won. As so many men with heart riches have done. This Are from God's altar, this holy love flame That burns like sweet Incense forever for you. Might now be n wild conflagration of shame, Had you tortured my heart or been base or untrue: For angels and devils are cast In one mould. Till love guides them upward or downward, I hold. 1 tell you the women who make fervent wlvea And sweet tender mothers, had fate been leas fair. Are the women thnt might have abandoned their lives To the madness that springs from and ends In despair. As the fire on the hearth, which sheds brightness around. Neglected may level the walla to the ground. The world makes grave error* In Judging these things. Great good and great evil are born In one breast; Love horns us .and hoofs us, or gives us Our wings, And the beat could be worst and the worst could be best You may thank your own worth for what I grew to be. For the demon lurked under the angel In me! —ELLA WHEELER WILCOX 0OOOOOO0OOOOOO00OOOOO0OOOO O GRAND DUKE8 AND O THE REVOLUTION. O 0 o O By Robert Crosier Long. O O O O0O00OO0OO0O0OO0OOOOOO00OO St. Petersburg. Sept. 15. For the flrst week In October Nicho las II haa convoked the most Important council that has been held In Russia since the Winter palace conference of 1881, when, after the assassination of Alexander II, the eloquence and per sistency of Constantine Pobledonost- seff, procurator of the holy synod, broke down t|ie constitutional plan, and entailed for the empire twenty-live years of unrelenting repression. The esar hns summoned hla relatives and a few Intimate councillors. M. Stolypln, the premier, will attend, but the gathering Is essentially a family one. There will be half a dozen grand dukes. Count Ignatleff, 51. Pobledonost- self and Colonel Putlatln, nominally the czar's secretary, but In reality a per sonage of Immense weight In political crises. The grand dukes, who for years past have been Ignored ns advisers of the crown, will once more be asked to give their views on three alternative poli cies—either to concede genuine re forms; to let things drift until the convocation of the new douma, or to return once and for all to the old sys tem of absolute rule. Foreigners believe that there Is a grand ducal party which rules the exar In the Interests of reaction. Russians laugh at the Idea, and with Justice. There Is no concrete grand ducal par ty. The czar's relatives profess all shades of political philosophy, and none: and they dlfTer so flereely on personal questions that half of them will hardly speak to the other half. Orund Duke Vladimir Is not now on speaking terms with Grand Duke Alex ander Mlrhatlovltch, and Vladimir’s brother Alexis hates him even more, for It was Alexander who laid before the czar his misdoings as head of the navy and his romantlco-flnanclal rela- Washington; Raphael T. 8emme«"' nn °i naval disasters to her greed and to enoe DeanlV'oP*Allantil > *at ll th P1 ' >r ‘ Alexis' dishonesty. Ths esar himself James. Atlanta, at the fit. never receives Vladimir; and the K.n , n< * v,P Uk ® Nlcola * >’lcolalet|ch, a* ter, treats all his relatives with con temptuous condescension. CONSISTENCY! To the Editor of The Georgian: Juat a few last words about the riot ous mes». The closing of the bars cooled the brains of exited men and store < order™ UOh “ * he m, "“« *• "* What authority will order tl.„„, opened again, that all sorts of men may indulge an appetite that was promptly recognized as dangerous? ™ me nu,h °rity that closed them, of course. Didn't the anti-saloon ladles and gen- tlemen obsenre all this, and won't they bother us drinking bucks with the stubborn argument of facts hereafter? We heard something about nude p|c- tures In dives. There are some pictures [f nskedest kind of naked nudes In the high-toned saloons. If the partnership of liquor and lust I* to be busted, why not rasp the dia mond-studded libertine In his paln?e along with the beast In the dive* Consistency Is high-priced jewelry b . ut i° tr} ’ 11 on Just once and stand before the looklng-glaa* of truth WATCHMAN. 1 GOSSIP GEORGIANS IN GOTHAM, 3 By CHOLLY KNICKERBOCKER. New York. Sept. 27.—Whether the etock exchange objected to the oppo sition or the new police Inspector for the district wanted to know what ho could do, doea not appear, but the fact la that the broken can now devote all their time to the "big game" without having their attention divert ed by the rustle of the poker deck, the click of the rbulette wheel, or the note of the crap dies. Police Inspector Formosa and sev eral members of his staff visited the organized gambling places and order ed them to discontinue thslr opera tions. There was no spectacular dis play, no theatrical raid, merely a word. But that sufficed and the proprietors have shut up shop. The gambling rooms In question open to men of wealth, were mostly pool rooms and faro bnnks. Business had been done In a quiet manner, but recently ths cashier of a large financial Institution was discovered In one of the places by his employer. As a re sult of this he Is now looking for a new Job and the gamblers are In mourning. Elliot F. Shepard Is the flrst of the Vanderbilt cup racers to get Into trou ble because of hla love.for speeding. The grandson of W. H. Vanderbilt was arrested, token before Justice Wells and lined |10. * Mr. Shepard's auto ran over and killed Madeline Marduet, In Stour, France, In October last. He was fined 2120 and compelled to pay 24,000 as damages to the girl's father. Mias . Cordelia Hatch Dearbon daughter of the late Dr. Dearbon, of this city, and heiress In her own right to a fortune of 2100,000, who startled her social world by eloplnr with ths family coachman, Harry GUI. only to find that he was already a benedict, will again be weddsd, thla time at the home of her mother In Montclair, N. J. The bridegroom Is James Holland, a Boston business man. The elopement of Miss Dearbon In October, 1901, which resulted in the marriage being annulled by Supreme Court Justtcs Wllmot Salth, last December, was one of the greatest sensations of the sum mer social season among the New York colony In the New Hampshire hills. Miss Lucy Wormley, of Richmond, Va., Is to be married to Stewart Lind say Crawford, of Montreal, on Satur day at the residence of Judge and 5!rs. Pryor. This marriage Is of Interna tional Interest. Miss Wormley Is a well-known Southern beauty, of distinguished fam- "y. She Is the daughter of Mr. and rs. P. Llghtfnot Wormley. Her an cestor* have been prominent In stirring colonial events, and prevloua to that. In England's history. Mr. Stewart Lindsay Crawford Is ths son of Colonel and Mrs. John Craw ford, of Verden House, Montreal. Sirs. Lee Arthur has resorted to ths Injunction to obtain from her husband, with whom she Is not living, a wedding gift that he'promised her before sh* became his wife. The gift was the royalties on the play "Breaking Into Society," In which Mr. Arthur waa playing and drawing 21,000 a week In royalties. Mrs. Arthur In her complaint allrges that he haa failed to pay her the money she should have had and that he sold the production. Miss L. DeOroot, of this city, has set the world of dog fanciers a-talklng by her purchase of the famous cham pion bull dog Mahomet at a pries re ported to be 26,000. This Is the sum that was paid a few years ago for Champion Rodneystone by Richard Crokrr, Jr., which caused a great deal of comment at that time. Mahomet arrived In this port two days ago with Mlnnonetsnks, having hern purchased on the way over by hi* present mistress. He Is whit* and hrlndle and son of Khalifa and Lady Dorothy, whose sire Is Rodneystone. Many British experts considered Miss DeOroot'* purchase the best of his kind ever bred. He Is a heavyweight and has won 200 flrst prises, Including a number of cups for the best dog of any kind. The much-married woman has gone nnd done It again. Mrs. Mary J. Wake- mnn-Saunders-Powers - Godfrey-Oay- Idndley-Crowther had made seven matrimonial ventures when last sh* was In the public eye, two years ago. Some of the husbands died; others she divorced. Now she I* married to the eighth, and, of course, ths future holds possibilities. The eighth husband la a Mr. I.ePage. Announcement of ths marriage of Fred Gebhard and Miss Marrle L. Gamble has been made. The fact that thoy were married on January 2 and kept It secret caused general surprise. Ml** Gamble was a member of the original Florodora sextet; she also fig ured in a romance, having eloped with Horry Wlmsatt, an employee of ths government printing ofllce at Wash ington. The marriage was not happy and she obtained a divorce. Mr. Geb- hard also was married before. He was divorced by Louise H. Morris, a beauti ful young woman of Baltimore, In 1901. It was the purpose jf Mr. Gebhard to keep his marriage a aecret for one yenr, hut the examination of records of vital statistics, made for entirely an other purpose, resulted lg the discov ery of his name among those of secret benedicts. In connection with the ceremony an Interesting story I* told. After the Rev. Henry Marsh Warden, the hotel chap lain, had pronounced Mr. and Mrs. Oeb- hard man and wife, the groom discov ered that- he had left hts pocketbook at home. He was compelled to watt until the next day before sending a chock for THIS DATE IN IHSTORY. New York, Sept. 27,-Here are gome of the visitors in New York today: ..ATLANTA—.Mrs. J. H. Hlrsch p JLimTfS D « 5 E WnaSSTo. E Kenlmer, J M. Speer, W. 51. Turner, don!" 11 * h * 8 ' M * L °nant, M. 13. Qor- M. 8 Drayton AH—c ' Mrs. 51. IN WASHINGTON. Washington, Sept. 27.—At Wn.hi— ton hotels today; " a *" , ng- OEOROIA-Mlss M. M. Hines, of SEPTEMBER 27. KOI—LoulOCUI of France born. Died May "‘“SsMEsrijr* h,ro ' bor »- liSzlvniT. *° ,h * British. . # ni a who dofon.Ud tha 1\ f * " * ft (* ocnlnit ftrit revolmion! dk£ r, a. * »«*» -*• Knozrllle. Tcni. " M la ^SSS5 ,l *? r S8ST r - nr "« "'*■ "or, TKlw,’." l {f 1 , i ;i[. r jq‘;" r - ' -,,r k nominated WS-Knxlnn.1 an , ' f