Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, March 26, 1907, Image 7

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THE ATLANTA GEORGI AN AND NEWS. TUESDAY, MARCH M, IMT. Be Careful In Buying Clothes The Local Market Is Flooded With Inferior Qualities OU’RE going to buy clothes this Spring; maybe this week, for Easter wear. JL You’ll be offered clothes of all sorts; some very good; some that look good and are not good. It isn’t safe, in buying clothes these days, to trust to looks; plenty of clothes in the market, made of part cotton fabrics, look very well until you wear them awhile. If you want to get the worth of your money you must be sure of all-wool; and if you want to be sure of that, you must know the maker and what he stands for. There was never a time in all the history of the clothing business when the maker’s name stood for so much to the wearer as today. It means more now than ever before in clothes to “buy by the name.” No names, so far as we know, stand so definitely and uncompromisingly for all- wool quality as Hart, Schaffner & Marx and Rogers, Peet & Co.; that’s why we sell their clothes. As for style, and finish, and fit, all that’s necessary to satisfy you is that you make comparisons; make them. You’ll need no further argument. Suits—$15 to $40 We’re showing the new Spring lines in our new clothing salesroom—one of the handsomest men’s stores in the country. We want you to come and see the store and the clothes; we won’t ask you to buy if you don’t want to; but we do want you to come and look. Daniel Brothers Company Copyright 1907 by Hart Schaffhei; Marx 45“47“49 PeaChtfeC L - J. DANIEL, President OppOSitC W^altOfl St. “ Copyright 1907 by Hart Schaffner Marx NEW RULE WOULD Harvie Jordan Discusses Car Number Resolution Just Adopted. Cme irregularities In the handling of laid at tin* door* of tin* rnllronds, ts raunMl tin* National Association of Cot- "i Manufacturers to pass resolutions *bir!i. if carried out, will prove tho un- the small cotton buyer In the touth by refusing to honor drafts nttuched *. It would be a death blow to •prruiors on small capital.. . The spinners demand that cotton be load- r, l in »-ars and the bills of la ling show the numbers on the cars actually holding un before drafts on shipments will red by them. They also demniul 're cotton Is sold landed, nil freight •hall lie prepaid by the shippers. The following resolutions were drawn tip ml passed March 21, by the American Manufacturers’ Association, Char- s - n copy of which was sent to Harvb- Jordan, president of the Southern Miii.-i AR8<H, * nt * on * *>y President It. M. The Resolutions. "Wliorcns. Grave Irregularities exist In ***** "lilpment of cotton, entailing heavy Rnam-i.iI I ox* mid Inconvenience to splu- bills „r lading being drawn omitting Jr 'in - numbers and Initials, rendering jm-tii useless at initial place of movement r*i \’ r months before being finally 'aiiP.i, getting weter-sonkod before being . nu.r.-ssed and otherwise carelessly anil *S¥""tly handled. belt resolved, That _ with GREAT BIBLE CONFERENCE IS GROWING EVER} DA > Increasing Interest 1s being manifest ed In the liible conference now on at the Baptist Tabernacle, and at every service the big auditorium Is filled to overflowing. In the matter of attend ance and religions enthusiasm Tues day brought a greater success than the previous day, and many accepted In vitations for prayer. Melvin Trotter, the mission worker from Grand Rapids, Mich., opened the 9 o’clock service Tuesday morning on his special subject, "Rescue Mission Work.” He was followed at 10 o’clock by Dr. ,T. M. Gray, of Chicago, on "Syn thetic Bible Study." His analysis Is very Instructive and Interesting. "Gypsy” Smith was again In the pul- t at the regular >31 o’clock sendee, and In his usual characteristic and straightforward manner preached the gospel and delivered a powerful ser mon. Twenty or more missionaries en- 0000000000000000000000O004g| a TABERNACLE PROGRAM 0 FOR WEDNESDAY. 0 <5 9 a. m.—Dr. Melvin Trotter. 0 10 a, m.—Dr. J. M. Gray. <1 11 a. m.—"Gypsy" Smith. 8 p. m.—"Gypsy” Smith. O O The 3 and 4 o'clock hours will be 0 O devoted to Bible school work, by 0 O Dr. Gray, "Gypsy" Smith and Miss O 0 Blodgett. O 0 0 00000000000000000000000000 gaged In the grand mlslsonary rally at 3 o'clock, and at 4 o'clock’ Dr. Gray resumed his analysis of the different books of the Bible. At 7:30 o'clock "Gypsy” Smith will occupy the pulpit. A ministerial conference will take place next Thursday at the North Avenue Presbyterian church. All tho ministers of Atlanta and visiting min isters have been Invited to be present to hear Gypsy Smith. KEY'S INJUNCTION WOULD MASTER Commission Says it Would Disrupt the Police De partment. BATTLESHIP GEORGIA EQUITABLE TO LEND SETS SAIL FOR CUBA" MONEY IN GEORGIA "(•'•nlng of the eotton Reason of 1907- *ibl spinner* deellne to honor drafts •lupniiied by bills of biding cov- It further""resolved. That no Cr. i , honored, regardless of ear mini- ,. r " »' »« furnished on hill of Ini ; Us. r Ci l ,, pors resort to split shipment than .11,1 ....... ,k..' ...Ml ^ Tlio fr..™ 11 ,- Hrvm inai rollon con ne oruereu Bl >?nii.fvan,V nn<i rece * vcd quicker and with ih« , T h# Pr ®«ent Syatem. »-tIce nt present In force Is for the . m " ,v r r deliver his shlpnuui to !a«lln.» -rVi nn '* receive therefor a bin of a J??; Thjs bill of lading Is attached to ilhun ,,p **D«nd cashed at the locnl bank, w hi th V I,,, . v,v r to continue his business g-nV 4 n ar> , . n . 1 involved In the first shin- i, J, .“'’this means a buyer with 15.000 ■? the MM. " : »»is that the cotton buyers will serious situation next fall.” said Jordan, "If the splnnera agree Half Hundred Men With Measles Are Left Be hind/ hsv, 1 ■ "'•'■■II, It lilt- by these resolutions, h.., . the buying of cotton into hnii.ts of the large buyers and till/ will udenrr to depress the price, be- V 1 ’’ ***iall buyer will Im» forced out market. s ';'ild be impossible for the buyer to 'i*»m the railroad agent the car , 1 ,'vhleh his particular shipment *'*•» be loaded. SHU. the spinner ojpo'n ii'V, ..anting, because he pays for R»! gi i ‘I* ii°#On the ground at the orlgl- th*. point four or five months In th“ '"''i "'enther before It Is put in ,’ho railroads claim they have tL-r,. 1,1 ipbtont to.handle the cotton, so Washington, March 26.—After nearly half a hundred sailors, suffering from measles, had been sent ashore for treat ment Jit the naval hospital, the new battleship Georgia, on which the fnen- sles epidemic first developed a month ago, was' thoroughly fumigated and renovated yesterday and started today for Guantanamo, accompanied by the spick and span new cruiser St. Louis, which ha* gono out for her first duty. ENGLISH SPINNER TO VISIT ATLANTA John I*. Tottersall, of Manchester, Eng laud, Interested in cotton spinning, will come to America next April In the Interest of the cotton spinners, and he has written a letter to President Harvie Jordan, of the Cotton Association, that he expects visit Atlanta before returning. . ••lie will also he present at the» Intornn- tlonal Congress in Vienna, said President Jordan Tuesday morning, ’’and he writes • wishes to discuss subjects which win treated nt this gathering. I may SI"ft, Vienna to tell the spinners about growing, gathering and shipping cotton, ISdilw mnkn .... effort m «#t, the- splu- m>r» to put buyer. In Ihe belli*. Mr*. J«m Wiflflin*. Mr,. Jesse Wiggins. aged 44 years, died at her residence, 118 Mangum street. Tuesday morning after a long Illness. She Is survived by her bus- tmnd Jesse Wiggins, and two daugh ters/ The body will be sent to Dallas, Ga Wednesday morning, where the funeral service* and Interment will take place. 4% Interest Compounded, ’ Allowed In Oui SAVINGS DEPARTMENT On and After January 1,1907 TH E NEAL BANK E. H. THORNTON, President. W- F. MANRY, H. C. CALDWELL, F. M. BERRY, Vice President. Cashier. Au't Cashier. Proposes to Put Out Mill ions at a Very Low Rate. President Paul Morton, of the Equit able Life Assurance Society, will be In Atlanta next month, and at that time plans for turning loose In Georgia sev eral millions of dollars will be perfect ed. These plans call for the lending of several million dollars of the Equlta- reserve fund throughout Georgia, on real estate, and already several ap plications for loans have been favorably passed upon. Not only will a large amount of money be lent by the Equitable on real estate, but It will be lent at low rates of Interest. Instead of paying 8 per cent for money, and, as In some cases, more than the legal rate of Interest, people getting money from the Equlta* ble will only have to pay In the neigh borhood of 5 per cent. They will get money at New' York rates. For some time past J. W. Mooyer, the appraiser for the Equitable, has been making u tour of several of the Georgia cities looking over the field In company with Henry H. Steiner, of Steiner A Burr, state managers of the Equitable, and he Is expected back In Atlanta Tuesday from Augusta. Manager Steiner has already return ed, and he reports that the officials of the company arc well pleased with the outlook and have already received a number of applications. The Equitable already has money lent : Atlanta, but in the past It has not gone out In other cities in Georgia. In the future this policy will be changed and money will be lent all over the state on real estate. With President Morton will come Vice President George T. Wilson. They investigate financial conditions. This new branch of the Equitable’s business will be handled through the office of Steiner and Burr, the state managers. 42D BALLOT FAILS TO BREAK DEADLOCK Police commissioners declare that If the proposed application of Alderman Key for an Injunction, to stay the ap proaching general police election, filed, It will mean the dlsorganlxlng of the entire police department and will work much harm. One commissioner, when asked li regard to the proposed Injunction, eald "Such an Injunction will be an un fortunate thing for the police depart ment. It will simply disorganize and disrupt the department and throw It Into politic*, the very thing the com mission has been working so hard to avoid. “A* to the commission Itself, the In junction is immaterial. We Intend to follow the law and It will simply be u question of who Is right, Mr. Key or the commissioners. The city attorney has held that the civil service institut ed by the old board at the hurried riot call caucus Is Illegal, uhd the city council also declared Its disapproval of this action by the adoption of resolu tions of censure." Whether an election Is held whether an Injunction Is granted, the situation as concerns the chief will not he affected. This also pertains to the majority of the force. If an Injunction Is granted, holding that civil service Is now In effect. Chief Jennings will con tinue at the head of the department. Should an election be held, Chief Jen nings will be re-elected. It was learned Tuesday that no cau cus of the commissioners has yet been called. PROF. ABBOTT'S DEATH CASTS GLOOM OVER THE CITY OF ATHENS Providence, R. I, March 21.—The forty-second ballot for United States senator today gave Colonel K. H. I. Goodard, 40; Colonel 8. P. Colt, 37; Senator Wetmore, 30, and ex-Govemor George H. Utter. 1. There la no prospect of an election this week. Hpeclal to The Georgian. Athens, Ga.. March 26.—The news of the death of Professor D. Q. Abbott, of tjie University of Georgia, was re ceived at the university and In Athens with great sorrow. There was no pro fessor In the University of Georgia more popular with everyone than was Professor Abbott. Professor Abbott was born In Colum bus, Ga., fifty-one years ago and lived there until he entered Emory College. He graduated In the academic depart ment In the class with Bishop Warren Candler and the following year took his master of arts degree. After leav ing Emory he begnn his life work as a teacher. He was made superintendent of the schools of Hlbb county, which position he held for twelve years. He waa then elected to the chair of math ematics In the State Normal school at Athens. He held this chair for four yearB, until hts election two years ago to the adjunct professorship of mathe matics In the University of Ceorgln. About five weeks ago his health be came very bad and he left for Macon to rest up and recuperate. He became worse and went to the Enoch Pratt Sanitarium In Baltimore. It was known at the university that Professor Abbott was very sick, but It was not realized here how near the end was. Professor Abbott leaves a. wife and two sons, Hunter, a resident of Wash ington, D. C., and a young son,'Horace, aged 13. The remains will arrive In Athens, accompanied by his son. Hunley Ab bott. over the Southern railway at 7:15 p. m. Tuesday. The Anal arrangements for the fu neral have not been made. FEDERAL PRISONERS TO MAKE Atlanta Prison to Send Ex hibit to Jamestown Exposition. The United States penitentiary Atlanta wilt be represented at the Jamestown exposition by a splendid exhibit, the work of convicts. The display will be a part of the' general exhibit of the department of Justice, and will no doubt attract great attention. It will be the first time that work of the big penitentiary has been exhibited to the world In this manner. feature of the exhibit will be a collection of photographic views of the prison, taken by a convict, and done In fancy trimmings. The cover design, done by this convict, Is n handsome piece of work. Accompanying tho photographs will be n history of the Institution, by Warden Moyer. Another splendid feature will be an octagonal granite vase, two feet In diameter and four feet tall. A hand some wood mantel, a lot of Inlaid wood work, a complete set of stone cutting tools, fifty-six pieces In number; pic ture frames, and numerous smaller articles will compose the remainder of the exhibit. The exhlh 15 and Is to be In place the date on which the opens. CHILD OP FIFTEEN TO GOTO ASYLUM Girl Slayer of Balm is De clared Not Respon sible. That Easter Dress will not look well without a new Hand Bag to go with it THE LATEST in Blacks, Tans and Gray in Ladies’ Hand Bags and Pocketbooks PINNACLE TRUNK MFG. GO 162pJ8mE M fr; LOWRY NATIONAL BANK, At Atlanta, In the State of Georgia, a t the close of btndness. March 22, MOT. w RESOURCES. LIABILITIES. Loans nml discount* $3,136,539.08 Capital stork paid In f 8A0.000.0l Overdrafts* secured and unse* Httridu* fund 600,000.00 <•(11*041 1,229.65 L’ndlvlded profit*, leas expense* r. 8. bonds to secure circulation. 600,000.00 paid..... 102,459.58 H. bonds to secure 1\ 8. do- National bank note* outstaml- poRlm 220,000.00 |i lu , K to oiYipi* national bfiuk* 14MM.W M Due to state hanks and hankers.. 40S.280.Zt 31 i , 5S-S Due to approved reserve agents.. 69,846.W Dividends unpaid 60.OJ S'ZZMS! Individual depoMlt*. mihjeet to heck. 1,856.981.911 57,000 00 84,707.21 Demand « fortified •'ashler’s •rtlfleates of deposit., heeks outstanding... 256,?22.4 410.71 293.201.66 Impoidts of 3.34 >.70 fleers 159,925.16 Bonds borrowed. 7.8UO.OO Carmel, N. Y., March 26.—A child of fifteen la going to Matteawan for the murder of a baby. In the court house of Putnam county, Jennie Ruth Burch, pretty git I, with Mohawk Indian blood In her veins, Is being tried for the murder last September of Wilbur Winshlp, a 2-year-old boy. The moth er saw the girl give the baby a poi soned peach, then saw the girl eat part of the same peach. She saw the girl drop, writhing In the agony of strych nine poisoning, as she held the dying baby in her arms. Three days later the agonized moth er heard the same girl beside the cof fin of the dead baby confess to the murder. She said she did It because she loved the baby. All this In true beyond peradventure of contradiction. It will all be sworn to on the stand. But for all that the trial Is a solemn, legal form with the end already net tled. Five alienists appointed by the state have examined the girl and have agreed on «>ne Krflent fact—she was not responsible for what she did. She could not be responsible for what nhe Other bonds to secure l'. 8. d posits 8. bonds on hand ’reinluiu on 1\ K. bond* I loud*, securities, etc Due from nntlounl hanks mot re- u gent to Due from state banks and hank- Due from approved reserve agents (’hecks and other cash Items Exchange* for clenrlug house— Notes of other national hunk*.... ' riictionnl pnper currency, nick els. and cents 2,184.74 Lawful Mouey Reserve in Bank, vlx: * Specie f 38.675.06 l.egnl tender notes— 114.840.00— 152,915.63 Redemption fund with IT. 8. trens- airer (5 per cent of circulation).. 25,006.60 % Total $5,206,696.93 Total $5,206,696.95 STATE OF GEORGIA—COUNTY OF FULTON, ss: I, Jo*. T. Ortne, cashier of the almve named hank, do solemnly iwnor tbit the above ntntemeut la true to the best of my knowledge and belief. Jos. T. OR ME, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 26th day of March, 1907. UEXItY A. Pt’IlTKLL, Notary I’ubllc. Correct—Attest: JOHN E. MURPHY. MKLL It. WILKINSON, t THOMAS EGLKSTON, ’ V Directors. did. She could not be responsible, for this pretty girl Is hopelessly Insane. Dr. Granger, of Mount Vernon, up- pointed by Justice Mills, has exam ined the girl and he agrees with the others. SICK HEADACHE Djr*pe*l* relieved, Conatlpatlnn avoided. Bowel* rrxutatcd, no pain, no arlpiDf. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. SUES ATLANTA FIRM All profits accruing from the sale of Gordon gtn and a perpetual injunction aro asked as judgment In u suit filed Tuesday in the United States court by Tanguery-Oordon & Co., of England, against Gordon-Reld Company, an At lanta concern. The English company claims that the Atlanta company Ih also Infringing upon Its trademark, which is valued by them at $100,000. They assert In their brief that the Atlanta product Is not genuine and Is sold for considerably less than the genuine. WAS SELLING MULE TO GYPSY BAND B*rn**vill« Man Commi**lon«d. Clarence H. Willis, of Bamexvllle, wax commissioned captain and o«- Blstnnt Burgeon of the Second regi ment of Infantry Tuesday. Money for Two Dldrict*. Checks for 12.000 were moiled Tuei* day 10 the socretorles of the boards n! trustees In the Ninth and Tenth dis tricts, thus completing drat payments to the agricultural schools. Lieutenant Poole, of the county po lice. arrested J. T. Williams on Tues day morning while ho was offering a mule for salo to some gypsies camped on Capitol avenue. Williams confessed lie had stolen the mule nt sunrise from Ed. Uoogler. at Conley, Oa.. and that he had only recently been released from the chain gang for a similar of- j fense. The owner was notified and the VISIT HAVANA NOW “BEELINE’S” S. S. Brunswick '40 Round trip to Havana includes all expenses on steamer. Return- ia on same boat oar- nuts two days in Ha vana, but pood for six months if desired. Fortnightly from Brunswick, Ga. The safest and nrost enjoyable trip of the season. Knuh dny a period of de light. Luxurious staterooms, broad promenade decks. Flna e u I • I n e. Write early and engage your rooom J. G. LIGEOUR, Commercial Agt. Dept. 2.