Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
To HER 20. ifwvj.
13
CRICHTON’S BUSINESS
COLLEGE ENROLLS
MANY PUPILS.
Demand lor Stenographers and
Bookkeepers Greater
Than Ever Before.
DICTIONARY IS TORN TO THREADS
IN DOING JUSTICE TO THE CIRCUS
Crichton's Business College, Kiser
building, l» a live, wide-awake, strictly
' „„Kiern business training school. It
sl eps In tune to the prdgresslve music
nf the twentieth century, and, thanks
t« the spirit of these stirring times. It
is appreciated by an Intelligent and
discriminating public.
Within the last few weeks students
have been enrolled from the states ,of
Georgia, Florida. Alabama, Pennaylvn
nla and South Carolina, and a numbei
have made arrangements to enter next
week. Although the attendance has
largely Increased within thg Inst few
months, the management finds it Im
possible to supply the many demands
[hat are being made by buslhegs men
and others for office, men and women
On Wednesday of this week six op.
plications were received for stettogra
phers and bookkeepers.
Business men know that Crichton':
pupils are well and thoroughly taught,
and havs come to rely on his school for
competent office assistants.
Daring Death Dip
Darned Dashingly
Described.
RUSSIAN NOBILITY
FLEEIHGTO BRITAIN
Grand Dukes Expected to
Purchase Estates in
England..
By RICHARD ABERCORN.
London. Oct. in.—England will be the
refuge of the Russian nobility, and
probably of the grand dukes also, when
the inevitable crash comes. Already
numbers of wealthy Russians are ar-
ihliig here, and qunptltle* of jewelry
and other valuables have Been sent to
London for safety.
The principal safe deposit company
In London Is constantly receiving jew.
elry. plate, pictures and other works of
art from Russia, and it la believed that
many of these valuable! come .from
ihe imperial palaces. OiA of the pic-
tinea is a magnificent Titian, several of
whose works are owned by the Grand
Duke Michael Alexandrovltch. The to.
lal value of the treasures from Russia
deposited in London amounts to many
millions of dollars.
A mysterious Russian gentleman hah
been making Inquiries in the London
estate market as to the best estates and
town houses. The Inquirer refuses to
give his name or that of the client for
whom he Is acting—a circumstance
which seems to confirm the assertion
that one or more of the grand, dukes of
Russia Intend to settle in England.
■Nothing Is more, likely, for England
Is the traditional refuge for continental
royalties who arc forced to flee from
their own country.
The "l-angworthy Marriage," a ro
mance whleh stirred all England twen-
iV-flve years ago. hae had an Interest
ing sequel In the engagement of Miss
Gladys Langworthy, who figured In the
ntralr ns nn Infant, to the Hon. Charles
Molesworth, second son of the eighth
Viscount Moleamorth.
All England In the early eighties sym
Isiihlzed with Miss Langworthy'i
mother, a beautiful Irish girl, who war
brutally deserted by her husband
rhortly after inunjuge.
Edward Langworthy was an
"tensely wealthy ranch owner In the
Argentine Republic, who, coming to
Europe on hla yacht, met Mildred Long
at a parish hotel, and fell In love with
her. They became engaged.
During n cruise In Langworthy'i
jacht he suddenly suggested to Miss
Icing that they should be rjnrrled
forthwith. The marriage took place at
I'acn, France, but Langworthy refused
to have an English cersmony and
sailed with his wife for Argentina. •
On arriving at Buenos Ayres. Lang-
worthy coolly told his wife that the
marriage was no marriage and sent her
back to England with 5250. The cast-
oil wife eventually became a mother,
and her shameful treatment by Lang-
worthy wus made known to the public
ny At. T. stead, who wrote a vigorous
series of articles In his paper. The
Pall Mall Gazette. By hts agitation on
"half of the deserted mother and
child, he secured In the courts a ver
dict of $100,000 damages for Mrs. Lang-
wnrih)'. nnd nn* annuity of 11.000 for
bet baby girl.
Some years later the husband end
» wife reconciled, and when Mrs. Lang-
wortlty died her repentant husband,
•muring lie could not aurvlve her.
■°ok Ills own life.
I'nlcss sir Thomas Llpton utilizes
m» present trip to the states to smooth
•nr his difficulties «1th the New York
J'A'ht f'lub, as to rules, he Is apt to
himself elbowed out of the way as
challenger far the America's cup by, no
!'*' 8 personage than that ? royal
lech reman, the German emperor.
W Am hung men here are openly dls-
2™"* the possibility of the kaiser
•ending a challenge and all are ogreet
hat an attempt by Germany to win the
JSL* ou >d give the contest a decided
nucii " n “ “ needed flavor bf
halser, of course, has a strong
li V' V" n l° r the sen, and since lie
,hc throne his Interest In
In.,.*, nod especially In raring has
by leaps and bounds. As
that Interest. It Is only
lea V“ U u', to clt ® h,B "ending to Anier-
hl " schooner yacht Meteor be-
Rsrre.rtt ** llev « d at that time that the
oho ^* l ’ould build the fastest
‘.I 8 * yachts m the world.
thl,' 1 ", ll "* German designers, viewing
'hliL., cma,kable "trldes In naval ar-
tSeb Ur *' hoheve that they can-hold
lachi * v * n with Americans, In
c5!l]L li ' ,e "" Un «' It-the kaiser should
kore £5*’ ,?.* pH the yachtsmen hei-e
STc, "HI. tlje German yacht
aSlSpwK tor lhe cup would be
ndently formidable If make a s»-
ENAMELS.
line of Lucas 4 NoaJ's
ili Iron Bed. Enamel. Bath Ed-
tor 8,1 purposes.
BORGIA PAINT AND
CLASS CO.,
40 Peachtree.
By PERCY H. WHITING.
Held happily and hopelessly helpless
and struck speechless and spellbound
by the delerlous, delectable and de
lightful display of soul-stirring and
slght-satlatlng (help!) stunts produced
and put forth for the extreme edifica
tion and enlightenment of the circus-
seeing public nnd solefully satisfied by
Bnrnuni * Halley’s big bouquet of—
Whoa, back up!
Our English was (or were) not ever
thus. But we went to the circus Friday
night nnd are llnble to lapse Into un
controlled adjectives at any minute.
For If ever a show had a verbal and
rhetorical bouquet of American words
coming to It, Barnum & Bailey’s Is the
said show. « .
It Is there, with the real circus, from
the tint® you hit the pink lemonade (or
was It yellow? The light was bod and
the color Isn't material) until "chuck
ling and expectant death" (see page 15
of the program for the rest of the ver
bal pyrotechnics) gets a short arm Jolt
aoutbwest of the solar plexus and Miss
Isabelle Butler lias looped the gap.
dipped, lo death.apil completed the act
which ended the show-, apt], according
to the program, was a peerless,'peril
ous, pre-eminent, puzzling, prodigious,
plunge, perfectly and prettily perform-
1. (Fan von beat It? I pass.)
Writing of a Cireus.
Writing about a circus Is more or
less like criticising grand opera. For
one thing It Is so different. And then
again. It's always good, always about
the samsi—everybody has seen It be
fore. and anyway It la too wonderful to
be tackled by an ordinary word-car
penter—even as you and I.
■ When, they semi n man to write, up
the circus he gets nn advnnce grouch
on beeause there Isn't' anything worth
wrltlngubout. And Avhen he gets away
and the sights are still whirling before
his eyes, the sounds are In hts ears, the
smell In Ids nostrils and the tingle In
his nerves he gels another grouch be
cause he Is expected to tell all about It
■ i a measly three or four thousand
brds. It's easy enough, to knock the
top off another barrel of adjectives and
lard them through a column- of stuff.
You ran always truthfully say that
the menagerie Is the best a travelling
allow ever carried; that the giraffes
are the largest find most numerous on
record: that Abe bl-harned rhinoceros
Is the only one of Its kind ever shown
In Atlanta: that the Llamas and the
Yaks nnd the Pttheclurus Sclurus and
couple of score of others whose
names we positively refuse to spell are
the best In the business. They are. AVe
admit It. And the prime, prink, pre
tentious. processional prelude was the
grandest ever, nnd more than compen
sated us for not seeing a parade. Like
wise the body of the show was the
greatest yet. And the climax of all was
the "Dip to Death," which tops every
thing In the hair-rising and blood
curdling line which has yet been at
tempted by anybody-outside an Insane
asylum.
' You could tell It all and yet miss the
charm of It. the mysterious something
that makes the circus America's favor
ite form of entertainment. The aounds
and the sights and the smells, the gilt
ter ot the tinsel, ihe antics of the
clowns, the constantly changing pic
tures, the wonderful acts and the thril
ling climax. Someway they combine to
bring back the memories ot the first
circus you ever saw, and how grand It
was; nnd unless you watch closely
you are back a dozen years or fifty
maybe, and enjoying the fun with the
delight of a child.
Too Much to Tell.
To tell about It ell—it would take all
of today’s Georgian, nnd besides—
what's the use? Nobody could hope to
see It all, nobody wanted to. No mail
who went to the show—unless he wns
blind—saw any less than he wanted lo
—or any more.
The "Dip of Death" was the big act,
but It needs only passing comment. It
has been told of tn newspaper nnd
poster until even those who can not
read know how tt goes. And It goes
Just like the pictures, only more so.
Mis* Butler can have her Job. Nobody
else wonts It. This business of butting
through the air Id a big automobile
and taking the chance of landing right
side up on a meaaly little platform
Is not for ours.
Probably the next best act wos the
aerial performance of the Imperial
Viennese troupe. It Is the best of Its
kind that Atlanta has ever seen. The
Grimntbo troupe of female acrobats was
also the best up to now. 8o were a
flozcn. twenty, flfty of the others.
And the clowns! More of them then
ever, funnier than ever, belter than
ever. Thev were the men who
ceived the bursts of applause and who
drew forth the shouts that nearly took
off the roof. Maybe It wasn't high art,
but the people liked It, end laughed.
And that's what ths clowns were there
for.
Ail In all. It w^s the best circus that
has been turned out as yet.
It exhibits Saturday afternoon and
Saturday night. Owing to fhe fact that
the circus can not be moved In this
state on Sunday. there wlll.be no hurry
In getting away and the management
gives Its word that the night perform
ance will be complete In every partic
ular.
MISS MINNIE THOMPSON
Beautiful Texas Girl who is Menage Ridtr with Barnum dl Bailey, Typi
fiss Latest Ideas in Circus Costuming.
WILL COLLABORATE
ON LIFE OF GREAT
RELIGIOUS LEADER
Wftlt
Holcomb nnd Mr
Sam Jones to Complete
Biography,
WILL BE LAID 70 BEST
A 7 HOUR OF MEMORIAL
SHE WOULD HA VE JOINED
Mrs. Mary Lizzie Os
born To Be Buried
Sunday Afternoon.
VALUABLE TERRITORY
ANNEXED TO CLARKE.
The funeral ceremonies over the
body of Mrs. Mary Lizsle Osborn, who
dropped deed In the rotunda of the
state capitol shortly before 1 o'clock
Friday afternoon, wilt take place Sun
day afternoon at 3 o'clock at Trinity
Church, the seme hour set for the
memorial srrvlre In honor of Rev. Sam
P. Jones. The Interment will be in
Oakland cemetery.
Airs. Osborn was a great admirer of
Sam Jones and had gone to the capitol
for the purpose of viewing the body
for. the Inst time. She wos accompa
nied by her granddaughter, Katherine
Storey, end a niece. Miss YVIIIIe El
liott, and was nne of the big crowd
hlrh tilled the rotunda.
Suddenly the crowd was startled by
scream nnd tile scene of an aged
woman fulling to the floor. She whs
given assistance Immediately and car
ried Into the office of the attorney
general. Mrs. Unborn never spake af
ter she was placed on the couch In the
office.
Mr*. 0»bom we* one of Atlanta’s
oldest residents. She was a daughter
In an Interview with Mrs. Sam Jones
regarding the publication of an author
ised life of her distinguished husband,
she said that before her husband'*
death she had planned to have Rev.
Walt Holcomb, bis co-Worker, spend
the winter at the Jones home on this
work.
Since the sudden death of the even
Relist the work will be begun at onre
by Mrs. Jones ar.d Rev. Mr. Holobmb.
It was the lest request of Mr. Jones
that Mr. Holcomb a exist In the compl
latlon of this work.
While Mr. Jones had several meet
Inge arranged for himself and Mr.
Holcomb, the letter will take np these
meetings and carry out, as far as pos
sible, the wishes and plans of his da
voted friend.
JOINS
IN MEMORIAL TO
HONOR SAM JONES
Tabernacle He Built Will
Be Crowded at Meeting
October the 28th.
Special to The (leorglsn.
Nashville, Tenn.. Oct. JO.—Elaborate
memorial services will be conducted tn
memory of Rev. Samuel Porter Jones
at the Hymen auditorium on Sunday
afternoon. October 28, at 9:30 o'clock.
Three prominent speakers, who have
not yet been deflnltety selected, drill
deliver brief addresses, and persons
who wsre converted by the cetebratd
evangelist will be Invited to speak.
Such Is the skeleton program adopted
by a committee appointed to make
preparations for giving appropriate ex
preaalon to the esteem with which the
deceased evangelist was regarded, and
to the grief which his death has occa
sioned.
The committee selected the date
specified, It being regarded as Inad
visable to choose an earlier date for the
exercises, ax within a briefer period
such preparations as It la desired
should be made could not be consum
mated. Although no speakers have yet
been selected for the occasion. It Is
practically assured an effort will he
made to Induce Evangelist George R.
Stuart, who wee associated with Mr.
Jones for fifteen years, to deliver an
address.
The committee, which waa appoint
ed at n meeting of friend* and admir
ers of (he deceased evangelist, la com'
posed of the following members: Blah-
op O. P. Fitzgerald, chairman; Rev. R.
Lin Cave, of the Christian church;
Rev. William Given, of the Msthodlat
church: Rev. G. W. Bull, of the Pres
byterian church; Dr. A. C. Cree, of the
Baptist church, and the following lay-
msn: D. W. Turner. Alex Perry, Br.,
Caswell E. Rose and Allen G. Hall.
MR8. M. E. 08B0RN.
of Nat Mangum, e pioneer cltlaen, end
a sister of Wheeler Mangum, member
elect of (he city council. Two daugh'
ters, Mrs. W. H. Storey and Mrs. I. T.
Goodrum, survive her. She was a con
slstent member of Trinity church.
DEATH LIST AT HAVANA
NOW NUMBERS TWENTY
rics of races of real Interest.
The Infant daughter of Lord anil
Ledv Willoughby de Eresby occupies
a unique position In the nobility, as
should no brother be born to her she
will eventually. In the ordinary course
of .events, be one Jay a peeress In her
own rights. Lord Willoughby Is the
son and heir of the earl of Aneoeter,
and hi* wife no* Miss Elolte Breese,
* New York heiress. Their marriage
was one of the greet social events of
last December. . . , •
In the British peerage It Is usual to
have the title descend through the
male line, but In the barony of Wil
loughby de Eresby. which wns created
*00 years ago, the descent Is In both the
female and male lines.
The earldom of Ancasler. which the
husband of Mies Breese will one day.
If he lives, succeed to. Is of recent cre
ating, dating only from 1IK
Havana. Oct. 20.—The known death
list In Havana, as a result of the terri
ble hurricane which swept over this
section of Cubu, has reached twenty.
Beores were injured in the city, and
the property loss will amount to a mil
lion. The city was directly In the path
of the storm which raged for many
hours, the wind -blowing at from >0
to 100 miles on hour.
More than 100 houses were blown
down. Eight persons were killed and
Tnjured by the collapse of a tenement
house. A number of bodleB, mostly of
sailors, have been found In the har
bor. 0
Brooklyn Gots Off Short.
Ninety per cent of ell the trees In
the city were blown down. At Camp
Columbia 400 tents were blown down.
The whole city was In a state of
Many persons
Special to The Georgian.
Athens. Ga„ Oct. 20.—Wlnterville lias
decided to come Into Clarke county. I
The election held there resulted In this alarm for many hours,
choice. Only one dissenting vote wns
cast. This will add to this county
much valualbe territory, and a large
number of citizen* of whom Clarke
county Is Justlr proud.
were swamped In bed owing to the
roofs of their dwellings being blown
off. In some' houses the inmates hud
dled down stair* around the door, this
being the safest place should tjie house
collapse.
The American warships' withstood
the storm In good shape. The cruiser
Brooklyn dragged her anchors and
touched bottom, but got off again with
out damage.
Schooners Blown Into Park*.
Thirty-five lighters were sunk In Ha
vana harbor. Some of them were load
ed with sugar and with other mer
chandise from the steamer Mom rus
tle.
Tire schooners tn the harbor either
foundered or were blown ashort.
All the railroads outside of Havana
are partly paralyzed and the telegraph
poles are down.
It Is reported that great .damage was
atised to the tobacco crop.
WOMAN’S MISSION
EXPRESSES REGRET
Resolutions of regret and sympathy
were adopted by the Woman's Home
Mlselon Society ot North Georgia con
ference nt a recent meeting.
' The resolutions ere signed by Mrs,
W. B. Higginbotham, president of the
society, and Mrs. R. P. Milan, corre
sponding secretary. Airs. Sam P. Jones
Is second vice president of the society.
NEGRO METHODISTS
EXTEND REGRET
STATISTICS.
DEATH8.
J. O. l*«*onariL M jreari old, died at 294
Conn laud at reel.
Florence K. Wood, I yetir old, died at 1S4
8. Foraytb atreet.
Ula* (jorenn jCrepaliair. W year* old, died
of general liability on ffceatv*
Arn Mnlony. 14 years old. died of appen-
iMcitfi at 17 Weal Coin atreet.' -
Husnn B. Fa liaise. M yeara old. <1W of
pantlyala at 44 Pel* Bfi
lells nve
I3S West
; old. died of apo*
Fourteenth atreet near Peach
tree atreet. liond for title.
WOO— lliirgcan Smith to C. M. Mettle, lot on
Warrouty
. lot on
$i.w»-K.iwin i 1 . -mrnrn
non. lot on Iturkwlitle drive. Bond for title;
$2,310—B. 1'. Analey to Hugh Klrhnrdaoii,
lot on Hnrkftdalo drive. Hnud for title.
$1,430— B. P. Analey to Hugh Itlchardaon,
lot on Piedmont avenue. Rond for title.
$1.260-Mr*. M. t\ Forties to W. K. Talley,
lot on' Myrtle atreet near Tenth afreet.
Wnrfnlfty Heed.
11,600—W. E. Talley to W. K. Crouch, lot
<W Myrtle »treet near Tenth atreet. War*
raotjrrtred.
$2,100—M. la. Petty to A. IC Hinton, lot
McDonough road near laiijey street.
•■story
PROPERTY TRAN8FERS.
IM.0M—Jasper. N. Smith lu r. I. Benton.
A nn Ihwstnr street it*nr Jackson street.
Wsrmnty Ac**!-
111.2*1—Miuthcru Heal Estate liuprate-
.rent 1 'n -in KJwsril 11. Innisii, lot on La-
Farettc ilrlrc. Bond for title.
ILJJO-Alro. Alice M. I'lillllp* to Sirs.
Helen J. WllllaiaisKi. lot on Isiwlou ntrcct
neor Oglethorpe sveone. Warranty deed. .
H.ISD—Vletor L Pwltb to t-oarn t\. Ilor- avenue,
ry, let on Fourteenth street sear Peach- 173—J. W. Flournoy, to repair oae-storg
Warranty deed.
BUILDING PERMITS.
Jl.ono—ti. II. I’lillllp.. 10 Itulld on
frame dwelling nt 32 I’bkert street.
175—('much At. soil G. t’n., to re-cover
frame dwelling at 3 Hill street.
12.900—Mr*. Itachnel Bert*, to liulld two-
story frame dwelling at 93 East Georgia
Resolutions of regret on the deatb of
Rev. Sam P. Jones were passed at a
meeting of the African Methodist Epis
copal Ministers’ Union, of this city.
Appreciation is expressed In the res
olutions of the rtegro ministers for the
many d*eds of charity of Rev. Bam P.
Jones, and sympathy Is extonded Ihe
members of his family In their be
reavement.
MOB’S COMMITTEE
SEARCHED JAIL FOR
ALLEGED ASSAILANT
Monday Night,
Oct. 22.
COUNTESS OLGA VON HATZFELDT
And a Big Feminine Array in the New York Casino Success,
Little Duchess
The Mail Lavish, ‘Musical, Girfical Comedy Production Seen in Yeara, with
a Cast of Clever Comedians, including
ROBERT LETT and a DASHING BEAUTY CHORUS.
50— PEOPLE IN THE ENSEMBLE 50
Prices 25c to $1.60. Sale now open.
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23*24. MATINEE WEDNESDAY.
ARTHUR DUNN
IN THE NEW MUSICAL COMEDY SUCCESS,
THE LITTLE JOKER
COMPANY OF 60. 20 MUSICAL MEMBERS.
MR. DUNN’S Pr.tty Choru«of"HI HI” GIRLS.
Tour Under Direction of Frank Buckley.
Night. 25c tn 31.5(1. Matinee 25c to 11.00. Sale now open.
THURSDAY MATINEE and NIGHT..
OCTOBER 25.
THE DRAMATIC EVENT OF THE SEASON
MABEL MONTGOMERY
* IN THE GREAT EMOTIONAL DRAMA,
ZAZA
^L P ! ay t? 0v I!. r Thou ** nd Tim *» ty MRS- LESLIE CARTER.
Played In New York 500 times: Boston, 50 tintei: Philadelphia, 50 timesi
Pittsburg, 35 timazi SL Louis, 30 times;’' San Francisco, 75
timesi Washington. 49 lime-.
a«le on»n* Tuesday.
■ _ „ _ _ . WEEK COMMENCING MONDAY,
El B I OCTOBER 22.
J MATINEES^TUESDAY^THURSDAY
ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY
Wells. Dunns & Harlan Present
THE CHARACTER COMEDIAN,
CHARLEY ORAPEWIN
In the Merry Musical Farce.
THE $4
AWAKENING
OF
40 in the Company—Comedian*, Singers, and Dancers. Tha Latchkey of
Laughe.—40 in Cast end Chorue.
MR. PIPP.
E
Jerome Junoe, rielrgntr tn the romlnrf rnn
volition of the American Federation uf La
has saketl all tt»« Qaldhe to coni’
mealeete with him regarding matters re
qttlrfof hla attention. Hla card follows:
"All trade unloaa of the state who hove
<1 neat Iona they desire to have submitted to
thnlr national officers at the coming ron
ventlon of the American Federation of La
bor. to Im* hold hi Mlmmapoll*, Mian., No
vember H, are Invited to rommunktite the
sama to me, nnd at the delegate of the
rni prompt
- convention. ,
•'Member* of trades unions who have any
vlted to ••m.iniuelraie nJM
"It Is the desire ef the delegate to the
American Federation of l4ibor to lie of as
much arrvlee a* posalble te the organisa
tion of the state, and loral tmlonn and
miters Wre Invited to ftamtah ttiggeallmit
It they beHeve will lie of lit wet tn ti>»
labor organisation* of the ho.ifb, aml|
matter* latruftUg I
brought to the . . .
•' JKROMB JONKF."
GRAND
Matinee Today—Tonight.
BLANCHE WALf.H,
In Clyde Fitch’s Great Play,
“The Woman in the Case."
Night, 25c to $1.50. Matinee, 25o
to $1.00.
THE BIJOU
Matinee Today—^Tonight.
Jacob Litte* Incomparable Company
“ American Play,
In the Popular
IN OLD
KENTUCKY
$20,000 Prtfn-
Hon.
Next Week:
“CHARLEY GRAPEWIN.”
WIFE OF BURTON
TO BE
Blip
Spat-ial to Tire t;r»r*l*n.
Montgomery, Ala., Oct. 20.—A mob
of nearly 100 assembled at Court
square last night and appointed a com
mittee. composed of W. K. Holloway,
president of the Montgomery Banking
nnd Trust Company, and J. M. Burch,
owner of the O. K. Grocery Company,
to go to the jail lo see It Thompson,
the negro who attempted to assault the
Cain child yeaterday. wax there. The
crowd could not wait tor tha commit
tee's return nnd all marched to the jail.
The committee, after searching every
cell, reported the negro was not there.
The mnb dispersed, but not before D.
G. Black had been knocked down by a
constable for making a speech to the
mob Inciting them to riot. He was
locked np and Is still In jail.
Hherlff Waller, after getting the ne
gro from the Wetumpka Jail, has mys
teriously disappeared, and It ’ls not
known where the negro Is now.
The grand Jury, which la In session,
returned an Indlclnlent against the na-
gro for criminal aaggult.
325—J. K. ITltinnn, lo build frame barn
el 1 tlitaklll street.
tMO-O. Y. fierce, to l.nlliL addition to
frsaie dwell!** st M Pendent arenne.
9750--Inure* It. Floyd. In build frame Imni
III* ‘ " ——‘
Is to Stay at Hotel
While He Is in
Prison.
Abilene, Kan*., Qct. 20.—Joseph
Ralph Burton, formerly United States
senator from Kansas, accompanied by
Mr*. Burton and tbeir nlsce, will leave
thnlr home her* Sunday morning for
St. I,oula, arriving there Monday
morning.
Mrs. Burton will accompany him and
remain In Ironton while her husband is
serving hla sentence. Airs. Burton, like
her husband, has always maintained
that the former eenatur Is Innocent and
that be has been persecuted beyond
reason.
Mrs. Burton, with her mace, will
stay at a hotel or boarding house-In
Ironton and busy herself with fancy
work and sewing while her husband I*
In jell.
Mr. Burton, at hie home In Abilene,
received a telegram from F. W. loft-
man. his attorney, at 8t. Louis, an
nouncing that the latter bad made ar
rangements for the senator to be tn
court In that city Monday morning,
00060000030000000000000000
o o
O MUST PAY OVER ALIMONY O
O OR SERVE TERM IN JAIL. O
O . — O
O Special to The Georgian. , O
a Athens, on.. Oct. ■ 20.—Judge 0
O Brand 'hex ordered that Bnm D. O
O King, a prominent men, be sent O
O to Jell unless he paid alimony O
~ which bis arlfe bad sued for and O
o gained In the court. Mr. Kins O
O says he I* unable to comply with O
□ the order of the court as lo the 0
o payment of the alimony. O
o o
0OOOOO00OOO0OOO0OOOCOOO0OO
Georgia State Fair Grounds
TONIGHT AT 8:15
aOel.10-20
Xhe Stupendous, Thrilling, Besu-
tiful, $100,000 Spcctscle,
PAIN’S
LAST DAYS OF
POMPEII
And Grand $1,500 Nightly
Fireworks!
Terrific Earthquakes and Awe*
Inspiring Volcano.
400 People
Pretty Billets I
Big Specialties!
Prices: General admission,
with good seat, 50c. Reserved
seats 75c. Box Seats $1.00.
Children under 9. C5c. Sale
at Jacobs' Pharmacy 9 a. m.
until 5 p. tn.
DR. J. H. POWELL,
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Office. 315*316 Century Building.
when the mandate of the supreme court
.11s’ In' -*-ntMi. will I** formal
ly presented and li«- will h** given
<n charge of the court official*.
JNO. L MOORE it SONS
Arc sole maanfartarvrs vf the lu'.-^inl
Kryptok liivUUile* bifocal *i;<«»•'« in
gl*. TU** Kryiriu
... girfvg
vvoieut. St*fu* t*>lh f.n
1 ^n*pt 41via
Nurilt Hi
limn,
la aoe kUm a Ufa.
9-om for table. 4:
deutial IwIMI**,