1. In the defendant’s trial for murder, the evidence for the State which consisted of testimony of eyewitnesses, disclosed that the defendant, with no apparent provocation and under no circumstances of mitigation or justification, approached the deceased while he was plowing in a field and shot him with a gun. The defendant introduced no evidence, and made no statement to the jury. While the reference by the prosecuting attorney, in his argument to the jury, to the fact that the defendant made no statement, "The defendant did not think enough of his defense to make a statement in his own behalf,” was improper
(Bird
v.
State,
50
Ga.
585;
Minor
v.
State,
120
Ga.
490,
2. In
Lucas
v.
State,
146
Ga. 315 (7)
(
3. Since, as pointed out, eye-witnesses testified on behalf of the State that they saw the defendant standing near the deceased and immediately thereafter saw him shoot the deceased with a shotgun, thus malting out a plain case of wilful murder, and the defendant introduced no evidence and made no statement to the jury, the admission in evidence of testimony of such witnesses to the effect that near the scene of the shooting there were bushes about three feet high, behind which the defendant might have hidden and slipped up on the'deceased, -even if objectionable, was not so prejudicial, in reference either to his actual guilt or his right to
*785
have the jury to recommend mercy, as requires the grant of new-trial. See
Haupt
v.
State,
108
Ga.
60 (2) (
4. The court did not err in overruling the motion for new trial. Judgment affirmed.
