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M ASON’S WEEKty
EDITE-D BY
THOS. E. WATSON
Vol. IL
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DRAWN BY GORDON NYE. r * . . •
Georgia 9 s Building Dedicated Tacts t 0 Co Orchard ’ s
Exposition Grounds, Norfolk, Va.,
Brought back to Jamestown by the
formal opening of Bulloch hall, the
ancestral home of his mother at Ros
well, Ga., and reproduced here as the
Georgia State building, President
Roosevelt is for the second time the
central figure of an attractive expo
sition program.
Outside of features arranged in con
nection with the celebration of Geor
gia day, the military and naval spec
tacle was not greatly dissimilar to
that which marked the visit of the
president when the exposition was
thrown open on April 26. He will be
the guest of the exposition for about
nine hours. He arrived with special
party, including Mrs. Roosevelt, on
the Mayflower at 8:20 this morning.
After receiving Georgia officials on
board and with them as his guests,
reviewing fleets assembled in Hamp
ton Roads, he was landed at the ex
position grounds at about 11 o’clock.
Atlanta, Ga., Thursday June 13, 1907.
He made two speeches, one as part
of the Georgia day exercises, and
the other at the convention of the Na
tional Editorial Association.
He received a parade of military
and naval forces, visited the negro ex
hibit, participated in the presentation
of the silver service by the state of
Georgia to the battleship named for
her, attended a reception given at the<
Georgia building by Georgians in
honor of himself and Mrs. Roosevelt;
and visited informally the New York
State building.
The weather provided another
Roosevelt day.
It was a distinguished party that,
reviewed the assembled war vessels
from the Mayflower. Immediately up
on the arrival of that vessel the party
of Secretary of the Navy Metcalf was
transferred from the Dolphin. Others;
to join the president were Governor
J. M. Terrell, of Georgia, and W. N.
Mitchell, of the Georgia State com
mission.
Judge Gabbert, Mrs. Peabody and
Bradley Say His Statements Fit in
With Incidents.
Denver, June 7. —Supreme Justice
W. H. Gabbert says that Harry Or
chard’s testimony fits in quite exactly
with the incidents connected with the
killing of Wally by the bomb intended
lor him. Mrs. James H. Peabody, wife
of the former governor, recalls dis
tinctly the night when two men fol
lowed her carriage. Orchard told of
following the governor’s carriage for
the purpose of kliuug aim.
Jacob Wolfe, through whom Or
chard said he communicated with Pet
tibone, vehemently denied that he had
■ever acted as an intermediary in
handling mail from Orchard to Petti
bone.
Max Malich, a prominent politician
.and labor-union man of Globeville,
;says Orchard told him he would kill
‘Governor Steunenberg because the
latter had prevented him from becom
ing a millionaire. Orchard reasoned,
according to Malich, that Steunen
berg’s request for troops during the
Coeur d’Alene strike compelled him to
leave the country and dispose of his
interest in the Hercules mine. The
purchasers subsequently became mil
lionaires and Orchard was the loser.
San Francisco, June 7. —Fred. W.
Bradley, former manager of the Bunk
er Hill and Sullivan mines in the
Coeur d’Alenes, said last night that
Orchard's statement quite fits in with
his experience.
“The attempt to poison me with
strychnine in the milk,” he said, ‘‘was
mainly frustrated by my habit of early
rising. I found a bitter taste in the
milk, spat it out and had the rest put
out of the way.”
Bradley referred to the allegation
that the explosion which wrecked his
home and injured him was caused by
an escape of gas in the front hall,
which was ignited by a match struck
to light his cigar.
"Possibly there were two explo
sions,” he said, “the first the infernal
machine and then an explosion of gas
(Continued on page 13.)
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No. 21.