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About Wayne County news. (Jesup, Ga.) 1896-???? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1906)
“TI1E LITTLE DONE, THE VAST UNDONE.” The little done suslainsth niTcnn's soul; It knows it for an atom of a whole. A tiny atom scarce worth heaven's seeing. Or man's acclaim or e'en a moment's 'And lliis being: although fellow a or a Ffate Hold the aecomplislieJ thitg; as truly great. Nay, not undone the thing that's done, but what's Gives strength and comiort underneath the The sun; m poems thnt the poets never write. Yet dream and drink through many a sum¬ The mer night. chiselled when imperial statues the mind *Js by no need of handicraft confined. The vast that beckons, stoops, hut never lfs yields brightness fuller in these earthly fields— These are the things that lift the spirit up And fdaee unto its lips the living cup. That give unto the soul of man tIre strength injurious To bear with all the year's length! —New Orleans Timcs-Democrat. • O' SOUTHERN ROSES and NORTHERN LILACS "Oh!—Oh!—Oil!” The woman in’ black turned and saw Helen drop to her knees. She was at her side in a moment. “Beau¬ tiful!” Helen was saying into the depths of the creamy roses. “Where did they come from?” “From Virginia; came by mail yes¬ terday,” said the woman in black in a soft Southern drawl. Helen noticed the accent, and thought it sweet. She did not know it was Southern. “You put them here for us?” “I put them here for him.” The woman in black pointed to the name on the marble slab. “He did me— did us—a very great kindness years ago.” She was on her knees now, beside Helen, helping to arrange the white lilacs. “I love them so, the flowers,” she sai u . A robin was caroling overhead. Faintly there came to them the thrum, thrum of a drum, and far down the road a cloud of white dust was rising. “It was a beautiful day, just like to-day,” the stranger was saying, in her soft, Southern drawl. “Nature was joyously, exuberantly happy, but our hearts were heavy and sad. It seemed to me as if mine was broken, as if I could never lie happy and merry again. Down in our pasture, tents were pitched. From our side piazza we could see blue coats mov¬ ing about them. I haled those blue coated men •— marauders — I called them Jiy every despicable epithet I could think of. I hated them because they were quartered on us without in¬ vitation. Only a few weeks before, a party of them came into our garden, and one of them wont along and smashed the sashes of* our hotbeds with his heel, and they helped them¬ selves to our radishes and early vege¬ tables. When old Tom called to them to 'leave ’em thar, we wants ’em to eat,’ they laughed at him and retort¬ ed: ’We want ’em to eat, too, old Mr. Blackbird!’ “To tell the truth, we had not very much to eat In those days; we were u short rations oftm, and now I re¬ flect they must have been, too, those boys in blu$. I hated them most, I think, because only a few days before they had killed and eaten my pet heifer. “Oh child, those were hard days, cruel days! But hardest on us whose homes and dooryards the fierce, bloody battles were fought. Our house was watched. I'd seen the men picketed about it. We were suspected of harboring an escaped iiiir.. prisoner, a spy, they deemed A squad of blue coats came riding up o lane one morning. They were coming to search our premises. We'd expected this for several days. They dismounted and tied their horses to the garden fence. One of them came to me. I was sitting or. a bench alongsidr the house. Over it I'd spread a rug I'd fetched from the hall. “’Ihe officer explained, or attempt¬ ed to explain to me that he had seen detailed to the painful duty of search¬ ing our house. 'Don't,' I interrupted, ’make any apologies; they're quite out of place at such a time, aud from you. Our permission you do not need —we are at your mercy, sir!’ “I could have struck him dead, standing there, cap in hand, had 1 been able. 1 think I looked my hatred. He looked embarrassed, pained. At a signal from him the men entered the house. He had bid¬ den them give as little offense as pos¬ sible and be quick. He stood there, cap in hand, w hile the men were in¬ side—it seemed to me they were ages inside. His face was partly averted. It was a fine, noble face, a face to win confidence. He may have a mother at homo, or a sister or a sweetheart at home. 1 thought. I had never as¬ sociated these tender ties with ray hated enemies before. The men came out and he went toward them, and it seemed, led them away from me. “ 'All right,’ he said, 'I was sure there was no one concealed side that house ’ Did he the word inside? I thought he was sure he did. aud the froze ihe blood in my veins. “"He came back and stood over me. What did he mean to next? Oh. how anxiously I his face while his men searched outbuildings. And when they had done, he pointed to their horses, turning to me. cap still in hand, said: 'I hated to make this search, but we have to obey orders. Say to them, to your people, that you will not be subjected to this annoyance again while I am on duty, but I shall be relieved of duty here at 8 to-morrow morning—S o'clock to¬ morrow morning,’ he emphasized. “I know what he meant. I he meant ‘get your house in before that ’ Tears sprang to eyes, tears of gratitude, tears of lief. I would have sprung up and gone to him and shaken his hand, had I dared to get up. ‘Oh sir, thank you, thank you!’ I murmured, and reached him a couple of roses off bush that grew beside me, the of that bush.” The woman in pointed to the creamy roses on soldier’s grave. “He came and took them from bowed low, and mounted his Then I saw Benny’s feet sticking from under the rug, Benny, for they were searching. And I that that officer had seen them, I'd been literally sitting on Benny that time—making a bench of him.” “Oh, he did see them, grandpa me he did,” broke in Helen, “and told me how sorry he felt for you, said he kept the roses a long time, very long time And you were beautiful girl?” The woman in black blushed and looked very beautiful to Helen. was the girl,” she said. “And said I nearly crushed the breath of him, I was go heavy.” “Benny was your brother?” “No, he was my playfellow, and af¬ terwards my husband. “We got him away that night, in old Tom’s clothes.” “Grandpa said he hoped you would, for your sake. And he is-" “Dead; has been these many years.” The woman in black touched her somber dress reverently. The thrum, thrum, thrum had been sounding louder and the cloud of dust hr.d been coming nearer, along the road. The little procession of vet¬ erans turned up the avenue of the cemetery. The woman in black and the girl in white put the last linger¬ ing touches to their floral tribute, the rosec from Virginia, and the lilacs from York State, on the Federal sol¬ dier's grz.ve and passed down the lit¬ tle narrow walk, arm in arm, as the little procession of veterans came up the driveway.—American Agrlcultui» ist. FORESTS TURN TO PAPER. Acres of Trees Consumed Daily in Ephemeral Literalure. if one asked “the man in tho street” what paper was made of, writes R. IC. Duncan, in Harper's Magazine, he would almost certainly say “rags,” and for the fair white Sheet upon which I write this would bo true, but for paper in general the answer would be absurdly inadequate for there exists not one one-thou¬ sandth part of "rags" that would be necessary. Our civilization exists largely ou a paper basis, and in Eng¬ land alone it requires 650 mills, pro¬ ducing some 30,000 tons a week, to fulfil our needs. To feed these mills science laid her hand on cellulose, which we cannot make, but can only take from plants. In the plant the cellulose of the cell walls, with the exception of cotton, which is unique, does not stand up pure and free and uncombined, but exists always in crusted chemically with some other substance. The substance of woody fibre is thus always cellulose X, and the problem for science was either to manufacture paper directly out of cellulose X (lingo cellulose or wood fibre) or to devise some practical method of extracting the X substance from the cellulose and thus obtain it pure and free for paper. Both meth¬ ods are practiced to-day. Paper botes, wrapping paper and almost all the newspapers of (be land are made, not of rags, but simply of disinte¬ grated deal boards pounded and mashed and amalgamated into pa¬ per. Any one of the large London or American daily papers consumes eacu day fully ten acres of average forest. Such paper does not last. The wood fibre out of which it is made is, unlike pure cellulose, acted upon by light and air and water and the organisms of decay’. This is bad, but not wholly bad, for most of the literature appealing on this paper is made as mechanically as the paper itself, and it is fitting that it should be as ephemeral in fact as it is in nature. But sometimes Literature twith a capital L) appears on this wooden foundation—and that is a tragedy. Had Mr. Pepys written his admirable dairy upon what we call “scribbling paper,” we would to-day have no Mr. Pepys. England alone every year imports some 350,000 tons of this mechanical wood pulp to turn it into paper. She imports also some 200,000 tons of what is called "chem¬ ical wood pulp” — i. e., wood from which the inerusting impurities been removed and which consists cellulose almost pure. Testing Missionary’s Patience. The Rev. Frederick B. man, the noted and successful sionary to the Zulus, was Philadelphia about missionary “I afii very hopeful of it,” he “I may be a little too hopeful cause I have had such good It is better, though, to be too ful thau too doubting. “Much depends upon the of the people one works among, I can sympathize a little with a sionary who returned home China in a very despondent mood. “A Chinese convert stole this sionary's watch and then came to him the next morning to how to wind it up.”—Boston ; ^./%/k/wwkA mm *** *** *** *3811 6 -TT ular eicnee j—* %** *** ¥38* *** -*?**........... A wakeful and night-crying baby is, nine times out of ten, a badly fed baby. His wakefulness and his cry¬ ing are the calls for relief of a poorly digesting stomach and bowels. The food is given too often or in too great o.uantity, or it is of poor qual¬ ity, and this may be the case when the baby is nourished in the natural way as well as when it is ted from a bottle. Sometimes night terrors are a purely nervous affection like epilep sy, and sometimes they persist, like a bad habit, after the existing cause has been removed or has disappeared of itself. The child who cries out in the night should not be shaken and scolded, for if the causa is nervous, this tviil only make the trouble worse, and if there* i3 a physical cause for the trouble it should be sought for and remedied. An analysis of the ashes of the re cent Vesuvian eruption shows, we are told by the Revue Scfentifique (Paris, August 18), that "they pear to contain substances that might make them useful to farmers as a fertilizer. This explains why, after the eruptions of Pelee and Vesuvius, the slopes of these volcanoes * * * after a few rains, became covered, it would appear, witl! luxuriant vegeta¬ tion, so that their destructive activity is scarcely recalled. They cause crops to grow that they may destroy them at the next eruption * * * and fertilize the soil afresh.”—Transla¬ tion Made For The Literary Digest. Travelers have noted that Damas cus blades are made only when the wind is from the north. The experi¬ ments of M. Anozoff were Suggested by this hint, and have consisted in hardening steel instruments by cool ing them in a powerful current of compressed air instead of quenching in water.' The trials indicate that for very sharp tools this method Is superior to any other, The effect varies with the thickness of the mass to be hardened, and Increases with the coldness of the air and the rapid¬ ity of the stream. The chemical synthesis of our food must remain a dream for the present we are told by Professor T. Bokorny, a German chemist. With the aid of sunlight plants form carbohydrates from carbonic acid or formaldehyde or methyl alcohol and in like man¬ ner sugars or carbohydrates have been produced in the laboratory by agitating formaldehyde with excess of hydrate of lime. The artificial process, however, cannot yield cane sugar to retail at five or six cents a pound, while Emil Fischer's albumen olds cost many times as much as the natural products. The fact has often bean commented on that catalogues of earthquakes appear to indicate a greater frequen¬ cy of such disturbances of the crust of the globe in winter than in sum¬ mer, and various explanations have been suggested. But Moils. Moutes sus de Ballore, in a recent communi¬ cation to the Academy of Sciences in Paris, maintains that the increase in the mean number of earthquakes in the .. colder ,, season is . apparent ... and not real, and he explains the anomaly by the suggestion that, such movements being mere readily noticed inside habitations than outdoors, tho num¬ ber recorded is naturally greater at the time when people remain longest indoors. Tolil From tin* Inside. A red-faced man was holding the Attention of a little group with soijie wonderful recitals. “The most exciting chase I ever had,” he said, “happened a short time ago in Russia. One night, when sleighing about ten miles from my destination I discovered, to my in¬ tense horror, that I was being fol¬ lowed by a pack of wolves. 1 fired blindly into the pack, killing one of the brutes, and to my delight saw the others stop to devour it. After doing this, however, they came on again. I kept on repeating the dose, with the same result, and each res¬ pite gave me an opportunity to whip up my horses. Finally there was only one wolf left, yet on it came, with its fierce eyes glaring in antici¬ pation of a good hot supper--” Here the man who had been sit¬ ting in the corner burst forth into a fit of laughter. “Why, man," he said, “by your way of reckoning, that last wolf must have had the rest of the pack inside of him!” * “Ah!” said the red-faced man writhout a quiver, “now I remember, it did wabble a bit.”—Harper's Weekly. Profit From Smoke. In Brussels, Malines and other Bel gian towns a novel method of not only getting rid of smoke but turn¬ ing it to good account has recently been employed. The smoke is driven by a ventilating fan into a filter filled with porous material, over which a continuous stream of petro¬ leum. benzine, alcohol or some liquid hydrocarbon fiows. The result is that the smoke is entirely suppressed, while the filter yields a gas of great heating power, which can be used for domestic purposes and for driv¬ ing gas engines. The filtering ma¬ terial itself also becomes a good com¬ bustible during the process.—Chica¬ go Journal. ' TURPENTINE TRUST Alleged by Uncle Sam to Ex¬ ist in Georgia and Florida. CHARGE IS BEING PROBED Main Allegation is That Nava! Stores Monopoly is Too Ciose to That cf Standard Cil Company in Its Operations. ... ” lrom ? v r come ’ ' fw York that . deral e ** government is getting af ter turpentine trust,” which is sup Posed to have its headquarters in Sa vaunah. Ga. The news is that the i’nited States district attorney there is co-operating with the southern district of Georgia in this movement. It is alleged that a hard and fast agreement exists be tween the various constituent com t~.S. pa thes belonging ,o the socalled end that the business and teritnry have been divided up in regular oc kipus fashion. It is Intimated that fhe turpentine trust socalled is in ortesf de^ee°by l th e d Standa'rd^Oil company. It is known that the Vandard Oil interests in Ihe past have endeavored to afirrrb the turpentine and rosin. Industries. E. S. Nash, president of the New American Naval Stores company, just formed from the Patterson-Downing and s. P. Shotter companies, said that ho did not know' anything about the suggested prosecution, ‘Have the companies with which you are associated ar.v connection with the Standard Oil?” Mr. Nash was He declined to answer on the ground that the question was too per¬ sonal in its nature. Alexander Akeiman, I’nited States attorney, was In Savananh recently on business, now supposed to have had connection with naval stores mat¬ ters. NEGRO STAVED OFF NOOSE. Gained Brief Respite from Gallows by Fighting Sheriff and Helpers. Fighting with the desperation cf a man who has nothing to lose. Mims Devereaux. a negro sentenced to hang at Milledgevilie, Ga., Friday, between the hours of 10 a. m. to 2 p. m., for the murder of another negro, kept at bay the sheriff aud all available help for nearly two hours, the execution not being accomplished until one hour after the time named in the sentence, and not until nearly ever}’ means had been exhausted, including the pouring on him for Hirer-quarters of an hour of water from the fire hose. Tho trouble started when the sher¬ iff entered Deverraux’s cell and or¬ dered him to don his gallows clothes. The sheriff had just offered the clothes to him when Devereaux threw a full bucket of water in his face, following it with the bucket, which missed the sheriff, who stepped to one ''L., This was „ followed ___ bv . another „ buck- , , f 1 , ’ f nd * * ,a “ b " tUr ... ' and a nother VotU, '‘ wl,ich forced the sheriff , out of the corridor between the cells, as the sheriff did not wish to shoot him. The retreat of the sheriff left the negro in possession of his cell and the corridor between the cells. Finally three men rar.de a dash for him at the risk of their lives and succeeded in overpowering him. Devereaux was then securely tied and led upon the tiap. His neck was broken and he died without a struggle. SPONSORS AND MAIDS BARRED. Give the Veterans First Honors. Say Daughters of Confederacy. Resolutions to abolish sponsors and maids of honor at reunions of United Confederate Veterans were adopted Friday bv the United Daughters of the Confederacy in convention at Gulf¬ port, Miss. Reunions, the resolutions state, ap¬ parently are no longer for the enter¬ tainment cf the veterans, but rather tor the entertainment of the spon¬ sors and maids of honor, The large rums raised by the hostess cities are expended to give sponsors and maids Ihe nest hotels, while the veterans are lodged in vacant hotels and bed¬ ded on cots. EIGHTY-TWO DOLLARS FOR CENT Specimen of First Coinage Struck in 1793 Sold at Auction. A specimen of the first cent struck in the United States mint in 1793. with thirteen links in a circle on the reverse, was sold for $S2 in New York Friuav at the end of a two days’ sale of coins held at the Hotel Bartholdi. ORDER FOR LEE CENTENNIAL. General’s One Hundredth Birthday to Be Celebrated January 19. An order fixing January’ 19, 1907, for observance of the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of General Robert E- Lee was announced in New Orleans Wednesday by Adjutant Gen eral and Chief of Staff William E. Mickle. United Confederate Veterans. The order was issued by command of Stephen D. Lee, general commanding. NEGR0 EXCAPES NOOSE. Had Been Identified by Woman as Her Assailant, But, Through Accident, is Proven Innocent. In just four and one-half minutes after a jury in the Fulton county su¬ perior court at Atlanta Friday after¬ noon, had retired, Joe Glenn, a negro, was found not guilty cf the charge of criminally assaulting Mrs. J. N. Camp. Xhu3 was brought to a close cne of ihe most remarkable cases of its kind ever tried in the co\.-~y —a case which will long stand as a precedent for t'ther communities' to follow; a pre¬ cedent which will doubtless do much to save the unlawful and unprovoked shedding of human blood. On November 1J Mrs. Camp, a white woman, was assaulted by a ne gre who afterwards tied a leather „ t' ' tr0und . , h " throat a5most chok - * ^ her t0 death ' She fi,U cot * now tbe name of her assailant. Jn a few hours Joe Glenn, a negro farmer liv¬ ing some three miles distant, was ar¬ rested. Mrs. Camp identified him as t*e »*»*>. dtbous* her first d ’ d not coinci, * c v - ;t h general ap r,crrance of the n egro. On November U Glenn was indicted by the grand jury. Three prominent lawyers of the Atlanta bar were appointed tel to defend him. Just one day later, after the fairest of trials, he was ac quitted and the toils began to fasten themselves around another negro, Will Johnson, who was captured in a mote section of the city while Glenn's trial was hi progress. In fact, up to the time of the ture of this latter negpo h looked much a? if Glenn would be convicted on a case cf mistaken identity Evidence that seemed proof posi five pointed to him as the man. The •victim of the assault had been con fronted with him a few hours after the crime am) declared him to be the man. Again, while on the stand tell ing her pitiful story’, she had again seen him suddenly brought ‘into the room. With every nerve of her five woman's nature suffering the quisite torture which only a woman in her position could feel, she cried cut: “You are 'he one—you, you low down rascal. Oh, I’d like to kill you. Yes, put on that old hat. You—you— you—” Apd then, words failing, she be¬ came convulsive with a paroxysm violent weeping. Owing to this outburst on the man’s part a mistrial was asked. It was refused and the trial proceeded before a jury composed cf some the best citizens of the county. A number of character witnesses were introduced. Ail stated that Glann was a hard-working negro who bore a good reputation in the community, paid his debts and had never been in .trouble. Scarcely had the afternoon session begun than the surprise cf the day was sprung, Tho jury was retired aud Judge Roan was informed a negro had been captured in West End who tallied exactly with the scription of Mrs. Camp's assailant. Pending his arrival several other wit ncsees were examined. Finally Will Johnson, a black gro of slender build, was ushered the room He sat cowering in of the judge’s stand. Officer Buntyn was placed on the stand and stated that he had titat day a few hours before arrested son in West End. The negro had double barrel shotgun and was acting suspiciously nud when placed arrest he was found to have on suits of clothes, a pair of a pair of socks, while around his body was tide a mass of female clothing. He wore a slouch hat almost cal with that worn by the flegro Glenn. The hat was turned up in front. effect on the audience of this seen evidence was magical, seemed certain guilt on the part Glenn in the face of Mrs. Camp's tification was turned to doubt and to certainty of his innocence. —--— AGAINST THE COLORED ELKS, -— Macon Judge Decides Negroes Use Badge of Order. Judge A. L Miller, presiding for Ridge W. H. Felton of Bibb superior court, in Macon. Friday, rendered a final decision in injunction proceedings of Macon lodge order of Elks against a score of negroes in that city, re straining them from using the name, title and insignia "Improved Bencvo lent and Froiective Order of Elks of the World,” or any similar name, in any colored order in Bibb county, within the state of Geoigia. EXPLOSION KILLS FOUR MEN. Boiler of Cotton Ginenry Blows Up With Disastrous Results. Four men were killed and a score injured, several fatally, by the ex p! os j oa 0 f a boiler of a cotton gin at Caulksville, Ark., on the Arkansas Central railroad Thursday'. The dead are: John Gilbert, owner of the gin: Geofige Marshall, Charles White, Wii liam B. Beil. ATLANTIC coaST LINE. PASSENGER SCHEDULES. ‘‘NOTICE: These arrivals and de¬ partures are given as information, as well as connections with other com¬ panies, hut arrivals and connections are not guaranteed.” ✓ Arrivals and Departures at Jesup, Ga., in Effect May 27th, 1906. Departures. For Savannah and points North and East. Train No. 58 leaves 7:40am ! Train No. 82 leaves 11:25am Train No. 80 leaves 11:20pra ! For Wavcross and South, west. No. 89 leaves 5:00am No. 85 leaves 11:30am No. 21 leaves . 4:45am j f*’o. 57 leaves 8:35pm i For Jacksonville and points south V ‘ . a Sh0rt . Une . - ’ , No. 85 leaves 11:30am For Firikston via Short Lin^. No. 27 leaves 5:05ain Arrivals, jr r0 m Savannah and North and Bast. No gs arrives..........4:55am I g5 arrlvea ..........11:15am j ^° 21 arches..........4:40pm - arrives ..........8:30pm ; Jacksonville and South From points via Short Line. No. 82 arrives 11:20am From Waycross and points South and West, via Waycross. No. 68 arrives , ,7:35am No. 82 arrives 11:05am No. 80 arrives...... ..11:15pm No. 22 arrives 7:45pm I i From Folkston via Short Line. No. 28 arrives 7:30pn» Nos. 26 and 27 dally except Sunday. j j All other trains daily. j Connections made at Port Tampa j with United States mail steamship of ! Peninsular and Occidental Steamships line of Key West and Havana, leaving | Port Tampa Sundays, and Thursdays, at 11:40 p. m. For further information, through M.'i'vxieo, trains making local stops i ai d schedules to other points, apply. TICKET AGENT, JESUP. GA. B. 1. MORGAN, Traveling Pas¬ senger Agent, Savannah Ga. E. M. NORTH. Division Passenger i Agent, Savannah T. C WHITE, Gen. Pass. Agt, Wil j inington, N f j W. T. CRAIG, Pass. Traffic Mana¬ ge!, Wilmington, 'N. C. I j j ROOSEVELT IN PANAMA. j H e Arrived Somewhat Ahead of Tim® j and Was Compelled to Walt Sev¬ eral Hours for Committee. ! The first trip of an American pres i ident outside of the boundaries of the i United States was successfully con- 1 stimulated W ednesday afternoon a-. ! 1:39 o clock, when the battleship Louis j k.na, having on beard President Roosevelt anil his party, dropped an¬ chor in the harbor of Colon. The Lou¬ isiana. which arrived ahead of sehed ! ule time, was convoyed by the Ten- 1 nessee and Washington, and the thre^ j vessels anchored about a mile from j the dock during a heavy rainfall. j Owing to the fact that the Louisiana | arrived ahead cf time, neither Pres¬ ident Amador of Panama nor Chair¬ i Shonts hand to welcome man was on ! President Roosevelt. They left Pan¬ ama at 4.3b ift a special train for i Colon, and at 8:30 Wednesday night I boarded the Louisiana and extended a cordial greeting to America’s chief executive, in President Amador’s par¬ ty, beside Mr. Shonts, was Chief Engi¬ neer Stevens and Executive Secretary Reed of the commission, and Mr. Squires, the Amertccp minister to Panama. During the afternoon President Roosevelt received the local newspa J per correspondents on board the Lou j iriana. He said his voyage had been I pleasant and uneventful, and express e( j himself as gratified at the wel¬ come which the citizens of the isth¬ mus was preparing for him. He stated j that he proposed to look into the Ja I maica labor question and also intend j €Q to |ee every tiling possible concern j ing the canal, Extensive precautions were taken i to protect President Roosevelt during his three days’ visit on the isthmus, and it is reported that a number of anarchists have been arrested in Co I ion or at Panama. All steamers ar riving at the isthmus are inspected and suspicious characters have been imprisoned and will be held in custo¬ dy until President Roosevelt departs. LIFE TERM FOR GRIMES. j Man Who Killed Widow at Roswell, Ga.. Convicted. John Alexander Grimes was found Ftillty of the murder cf Mrs. Evelyn | McGinnis at Roswell, Ga., and sen¬ tenced to life imprisonment. This oc¬ curred Wednesday in ihe superior j j court weakness in session the at line Alpharetta. of Mental was defense.