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TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
THURSDAY, APRIL », lNfe
3
y Things You Think Of In The Spring-Time
We are extremely anxious to sell you what house furnishings you iftay need for
summer use. It is our greatest pleasure to guarantee every dollar’s worth of
goods that we sell. These are just a few specialties, and don’t think for a moment
that we haven’t anything else you could possibly desire* for we have, and our
prices never lose a sale.
Absolutely Impossible
Almost to keep refrigerators in our house this sea
son. It is a positive fact that we have several
times sold out before the arrival of another car.
Right now our stock is ' full and the very best
makes shown by any market.
La Belle ....' $8.00 to $25.00
Gumey $11.00 to $50.00
Columbia ' $15.00 to $55.00
Opalite $35.00 to $100.00
Ice Boxes $5.00 to $30.00
Nursery Refrigerators $4.00
Ice Cream Freezers
We have several makes,
but this year our leading
Freezer will ‘be the Light
ning and Blizzard. There is
none made better that we
have ever been able to find.
Prices—
1- Quart
2- Quart
3- Quart
4- Quart
6-Quart
Blizzard.
$1.25
1.65
2.50
Lightning.
$1.50
1.90
2.25
2.75
3.50
8-Quart
....: 4.00
4.50
Coolers
The best galvanized lined—
2- Gallon $1.50
3- Gallon $2.00
4- Gallon / $2.50
6-Gallon .' ! $3.00
8-Gallon $4.00
Porcelain lined—
2- Gallon $3.00
3- Gallon $3.50
4- Gallon $4.50
The most beautiful line of
Hammocks on the market.
We have never had so many
designs to show before. The
prices run from $1.25 to
$7.00.
See our Show Window.
Delight for All
The Law is certainly incom
plete without one of our
great Swings.
They afford great pleasure
for the old as well as the lit
tle fellows. A most econom
ical luxury. Substantially
made of seasoned oak and
will last several years. Price
for the largest only... .$6.00
KING HARDWARE CO.,
53 PEACHTREE ST.
87 WHITEHALL ST.
GERMAN PRINCE
IS BADLY HURT
AT
Thrown from His Horse and
•Is Picked Up Uncon
scious.
Berlin, April 15.—Prince Eitelfritx,
second and favorite eon of .the kaiser
and the most popular member of the
royal family In Germany, was seriously
and perhaps fatally Injured today while
participating In the military maneuvers
on Doeberlts plain, near Potsdam.
The prince was thrown from his
horse and received a concussion of the
brain, besides severe bruises and lacer
ations. Ills fall was witnessed by a
great concourse of troops and citizens
and caused tremendous excitement and
alarm.
Prlnco Eltel was unconscious when
picked up. Princess Sophie, a bride of
less than a year, at once devoted her
self ,to nursing him. Physicians were
summoned from Berlin and the kaiser
was notified.
Grave fears are felt for the life of the
young prince. He has endeared him
self to the German people.
MM DISCONTINUE
RURAL MAIL ROUTES
Adamson Will Oppose Any
Movement For Abolish
ing Lines.
ROOSEVELT MAY
OUTLINE POLICi
Undei’stood Memorial Day
Speech at Indianapolis
Will Be Signal.
THE BIJOU
Tonight Matinee Today.
Special Matinee
(Friday)
MEMORIAL DAY 3 p. m.
ntF.TTY GIIU.S—PUETTY HO-NGS.
AROUND the CLOCK
MUSICAL COMEDY IN TIIItEE ACTS.
11-2 Hours of Music and Full.
Next Week—
“THE LITTLE DUCHESS."
EL DORADO
JNi: night ONLY—FRIDAY APRIL 2*
MARY MANNERING
IN THE NEW AMERICAN PLAY,
“GLORIOUS BETSY.”
Rv lllDA JOHNSON YOUNG.
Direction Ham and Dec Shuhcrt (Inc.)
11 y arrangement with Jss. K. llsckstL
CURTAIN RISES 8:15 SHARP.
Prices 26c, 60c, 73c, $1.00, $1.50, 92.00.
Box sent! $2.60. Sole now oja-n st box of
6rc only, 9 n. m. to 6 p. m. dally.
ST. NICHOLAS AUDITORIUM,
MAY 29. 30. 31 and JUNE 1.
Grand Opera Stars at Popular Prieas.
Season tickots, $3.00, $4.00 and $5.00,
on salo. Call or write W. C. HUM
PHRIES, 519 Empire Building, Atlanta.
Ga. Reduced railroad rata, one faro
plus 25 cents for round trip.
No. 7 VIADUCT PLACE.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
“UNGRATEFUL BEGGAR”
"PIEROTT’8 GRIEF”
“STEALING TOMATOES”
IB
vflTr
K:1 li
No. 46 Whitehall Street.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
“LEON HERRMANN’S MAGIC
ILLUSION.”
“NOAH'S ARK”
"MORNING PICTURE"
"BUCK’S PRANKS ON A SUBUR'
BANITE"
“SIGHT8 IN A GREAT CITY"
“THE ATHLETIC BURGLAR”
“HOTEL GEHELOT”
Special to The Georgian.
Hawklnsvllle, Ga.. April 23.—The con-
tract was let on Wednesday to Huggins
& Smith to build a city hall and utidl-
torium for the city of Hawklnsvllle.
Tlioir bid was $16,470, being the lowest
of all bids made. W. R. Gunn, archi
tect. of Macon, prepared the plans.
To Obtervo Memorial Day.
Special to The Georgian.
Gainesville, Ga, April 25.—Longstrcot
Chapter, Daughters of the Confederacy,
have arranged an Interesting program
for the observance of Memorial Day
Friday. Major J. M. Kimbrough, com
mandant of the University cadets, now
In camp at Chattahoochee Park, will be
chief of staff, and direct the military
forces.
The following Is the program:
Invocation. Rev. O. J. Copeland; In
troductory, Colonel H. W. J. Ham; ad
dress. Colonel J. O. Adams; music,
.. .. University band; bestowing cross of
-’•’-riS honor by Mrs C. O. Sanders, president
dltcbsil, cliJJil eorucitsL die ehapter. ,*r-.. •-
No. 77.1‘eachtre* street.
CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES.
1 *> to 5 |>. DL, 7 to It p. m.
THIS WEEK S BILL:
IVofessor Rands and Ills dogs. Leonard
Rose In “A Tip on the Derby," Miss
',•;• While In Illustrated snugs. Perry it'
.It,. In "The Last Farewell." Masler Roy
St Nicholas Auditorium
PONCE DE LEON PAUK-Skatlng Dally.
11 to 1—3 to 5:30—8 to 11.
Ladies free mornings. Music every
night, Tuesday, Thursday and Satur
day afternoons. Special music st
matinee Memorial aftornoon, Friday,
April 26th.
ATLANTA
vs.
NASHVILLE
APRIL 24, 25, 26 and 27.
GAME CALLED AT 3:30 P. M.
FRIDAY'S GAME CALLED AT
4 O'CLOCK.
LADIES’ DAY THURSDAY.
PRISONER DIES;
FAMILY UNKNOWN
George Owens, a white man, • about
20 years of age, died at the Fulton
county Jail Wednesday night after a
brief Illness. He was carried to the
Jail from police station Saturday morn.
Ing. being held oqthe charge of bur
glary from a railroad car. He had
previously served thirty days In the
stockade.
On Wednesday afternoon he com
plained of being III nnd was sent to the
hospital, where he died about 8 o’clock
of congestion of the lungs. Nothing Is
known of him or his people. The body
was removed lo the undertaking estab
lishment of Harry G. Poole, where It
will bo held until his family Is heard
from,
Atlanta Dental College at the
Grand tonight. You are invited
to attend. Vocal and instrumental
music.
E LAST FIGHT
FOR NEGRO'S LIFE
Johnson’s Lawyers Will
Appeal to the Prison
Board.
V •
The case of Will Johnson, the negro
under conviction for an assault upon
Mrs. Georgia Hembree last June and
In whose case the supreme court re
cently refused to Interfere, will be laid
‘ *1ref
leys
gro's life.
Attorneys Stevens and McElreath,
who represent Johnson by appointment
of the court, are convinced that a mis
take has been made, and stated Thurs
day that they could not rest easy about
the case until every effort Is made to
prevent his execution.
Judge Roan, of the criminal court,
stated Thursday that he will re-sen-
tence Johnson next Monday morning.
EX-GOV. JENNINGS
AND PRES. HULLEY
COME TO BLOWS
TO RUN LIQUOR
OUT OF
NEW YORK
Albany, N. Y„ April 25.—“We’ll close
$3,000 saloons In this slate,” declared
the leaders of the prohibition party to
day when a delegation of 200 came to
attend the hearing before the senate
committee of the prohibition bill In
troduced by Senator Gates, of Oswego.
CONTRACT IS AWARDED
FOR HAWKIN8VILLE CITY HALL.
Tallahassee, Fla., April 25.—Former
Oovernor Jennings, of Florida, and
President Lincoln Hulley, of Stetson
University, at DeLand. came to blows
last night In a hotel lobby over a
movement In the legislature. It Is said,
to secure an amendment to the uni
versity's charter. The lie was passed
and' the clash followed. The combat
ants were separated before either had
suffered materially.
•
ARE YOU LOOKING
FOR BUSINESS?
If so, the UNION LABEL on your
printed matter will bring it
IT COSTS YOU
NOTHING
OFFICES THAT FURNISH
THE LABEL:
Iluddlootou it ChrfMtUn.21 8. Forsyth
8jrl Lester it Co 2* N. Broad
I'urhniu Printing Co 2% 8. Broad
* * ». 16 W. Alabama
itral Ave.
_ 71 Iry Ht.
. - . M-Central Ave.
Lnllntte Printing Co.....20 H. Broad
Ward Printing Co 5& 8. Pryor
Jobu Thomason Oa../...6ty 8. Broad
Blosser Printing Co......3840 Walton
Converse A Wing 104 Edgewood
ATLANTA
TYPOGRAPHICAL
UNION,
620 Candler Building
P. O. Box 266
Atlanta Phone 873
BELIEVE GIGANTIC SCHEME
TO SWINDLE TRUST COMP’Y
New York, April 25.—The amount of
money atolen from the Trust Company
of America, according to a statement
made today by Assistant District At
torney Murphy, Is expected to be hun
dreds of thousands of dollars In excess
of the sum stated by the officials of the
company.
William O. Douglas, the loan clerk of
the company, and O. M. Dennett, the
Wall street broker, under arrest, are
believed to have beep subordinates
merely In a gigantic swindling con
spiracy. Mr. Murphy said today that
he believes there must have been i
third man, but his Identity Is a mys
ten r .
Robinson Honey, who has acted as
counsel for Dougins, was not engaged
by the prisoner, but by another person,
according to his own statement, but he
refused to say who the party was.
LOEB MAY FALL
INTO GOOD JOB
Washington, April 25.—That William
Loeb, Jr., secretary of President
Roosevelt, will on or about the first
day of next January step from the
white house into the presidency of the
Washington Railway and Electric Com
pany. carj,not yet be authoritatively
stated as the settled program of the
Interests In control of the property.
It Is understood It Is the Intention
of the president not accept another
term, and he desires that Mr. Loeb
should have a position of sufficient In
dependence for an officer of the ad
ministration second In dignity only to a
member of the cabinet to step Into.
BOB TAYLOR
In his new lecture "Temptation” at the
Baptist Taberhacle next Friday night.
ARE ON TRAIL
OF BOB TURNAGE
GEORGIANS LEAVE
FOR JAMESTOWN
Commissioner of Agriculture T. G.
Hudson and S. R. Fields, of Cordelo,
left Thursday at 11:10 o’clock, via the
Seaboard, for Norfolk, where , they will
attend the opening of the Jamestown
Exposition Friday.
W. N. Mitchell, chairman of the
Georgia commission, and State Geolo
gist W. S. Yeates are already on the
scene. The executive committee of the
Georgia commission, composed of
Messrs. Mitchell, Hudson and Fields,
will have a meeting Friday to deter
mine what steps sre necessary. If any,
in completing the Georgia exhibit at
Jameatown.
From later Information received at
the office of the prison commission It
appears that none of the escaped negro
convicts from the Durham mlnea was
killed In Chattooga county.
First reports stated that one was
killed, but this proves erroneous. One
of the wounded negroes will die, It Is
believed. Sam Johnson, the. negro
preacher, who was the ring-leader In
the escape, got away, but was captured
next day.
It Is reported that one of the White
escapes has been located and will prob
ably be arrested soon. It Is believed to
be Robert Turnage, the Atlanta man.
TAX NOTICE
State and County Tax
Books now open. Make
your returns at once and
avoid the rush. Books
will close in a few days.
T. M. ARMISTEAD,
i . Tax Receiver.
0000000000000000O0O000000O
O MASSACHUSETTS MAN O
O SHEDS SKIN THREE TIMES..O
O 0
O Worcester. Mass., April 25.— O
O Norry J. Moytt. who had been O
O shedding his skin for the third O
O time, died today In the city hos- O
O pital of pneumonia. He went there O
O six weeks ago for treatment for O
O dermatitis extollatlsa. 0
ooooooooooooooopoooooooooo
Andrew Csrnogie Oil,
New York, April 25.—Andrew Car
negie,, because of a severe cold, will
be unable to deliver hit address at the
Centennial ceremonies at Cornell' to
morrow. Mr. Carnegie has been III
since Monday. <
HUSBAND ARRESTED
FOR WIFE MURDER
Wllkesbarre, Pa, April 25.—Believing
that Mrs. Simon Bugon, of Pittsburg,
had been murdered, state constabulary
this morning arrested the husband, at
work In the mines, and then dug In the
cellar of his house In the hope of find
ing the body. The woman has been
■pissing for a week.
IS RYAN AFTER
U. S. SENATORSHIPf
New Yiprk. April 25—The growing be
lief that Thomas F. Ryan Is after a
United States senatorshlp Is strength
ened by his recent activity In the state
politics In Virginia.
For many years, Mr. Ryan has main
tained a residence at Oak Ridge, Nel
son county, sufficient to give him a
high political rating. He has long
been a member of the executive com
mittee In the Virginia Democratic
party-
KENTUCKY JURY
COULD NOT AGREE
Lexington, Ky„ April 25.—The Jury
In the cose of William Briton, charged
with the murder of James Cockrlll, was
discharged at noon. Eight were for
acuulttal and four for conviction.
Special to The Georgian.
Columbus, Ga, April 25.—Hon. W. C.
Adamson was In the city yesterday on
his way to Marion county for the pur
pose of looking Into the matter of rural
routes In that county. The postoffice
officials are making recommendations
for the abolishment of rural routes in
Georgia, the excuso being that the pat
ronage Is too poor to Justify the de
partment In keeping them up
It Is Mr. Adamrc'.'.’s desire that none
of these routes shall be abolished, de
spite the recommendations of the In
spectors, and he Is giving his personal
supervision to the matter. He Is also
In communication with the postofflee
department In regard to the malls be
tween this city and Atlanta via the
new route of the Central of Georgia
railway from Greenville to Newnan.
8TORE BURGLARIZED
AND THE 8ET ON FIRE.
Rome, Ga, April 15.—Wednesday
morning about 4 o’clock, the store of
William Tarvln, In the northern part of
the city, was burglarized and set on
fire. This 1b the fourth time the place
has been robbed and attempt made to
burn It down.
Fire In Hotel.
Shortly after two male guests, both
of whom nro said to havo been intoxi
cated, had left their roolh Thursday
morning In the Georgia Hotel, 29 South
Pryor street, fire was discovered in the
room. The timely discovery of the
blaze probably saved a serious con
flagration. The firemen were quickly
on the scene and extinguished the
names before any great damago had
been done. Only tho’bed clothing was
burned. How tho fire started Is not
known.
Washington, D. C, April 25.—Presi
dent Roosevelt Is expected to explain
for the first time In public his Idea In
regard to over-capitalization of rail
roads In his speech Memorial Day at
Indianapolis.
Most of the big Hues of railroads In
the United States aro greatly over
capitalized, xome of them having a
funded debt and capital stock of Issues
amounting to from two to ten times
their actual cost.
It Is the purpose of the president to
get at the facts rather than to suggest
a remedy, but It Is the facts themselves
which the railroad men are most anx
ious to conceal.
300 YEARS TOTAL
CHAIN GANG TERAAS
Wednesday was an unlucky day for
law-breakers In the criminal division of
the superior court, and as a result the
Fulton county chalngang and the peni
tentiary reaped a goodly harvest. Out
of a total of twenty-soven cases tried
twenty-six were convicted, aggregating
a total of 300 years which wlil be
served In the chalngang and the peni
tentiary. Thla breaks all previous rec
ords made by the court over which
Judge L. S. Roan presides.
HORSES LEFT LOOSE
CAUSE MANY FINES
Drays and other vehicles must not
be left In the streets unhitched and
without a driver.
This Is the mandate of Chief of Po
lice Jennings, who has given Instruc
tions to the policemen to rigidly en
force the law on this subject.
As a result of the order, a number
_ people were arraigned In police court
Thursday morning and were each fined
$1.75.
Atlanta Dental College at the
Grand tonight. You are invited
to attend. Vocal and instrumental
music.
BRUMBY MONUMENT
PLANNED BY YETS
The membors of Brumby Camp of
tho Spanlsh-Amcrlcan war Veteran*
aro requested to meet In tho Red Men a
Hall Thursday night, at 8 o’clock, for
the purpose‘ of discussing plans for
raising a fund to erect a monument to
tho memory of Lieutenant Brumby, of
Marietta, who was one of the victim*
of tin* war with Spain. Tho ramp pro-
posea to erect tho monument on the
grounds of tho capitol.
‘Oh, naughty, naughty!” say the Tad%
“That blooming little Rose
“Is flirting with the tidy Tod
“Because he has new clothes!”
IGMT 1*01 BY ,
TINY. TADS CO. NY. I hit,
It is only natural that the well dressed man is
the popular man. His clothes say that he respects
himself, and everyone must respect a man who
respects himself.
Wfe can give self-respecting men the clothes
that they ought to wear. We'll give you something
more than just "a new suit'' Our name on a suit
of clothes stands for quality, fit and sightliness.
Every detail, no matter how small must be
RIGHT—or the garment doesn’t leave the store
MUSE’S |
— — 3-5-7 Whitehall St.