Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, May 17, 1907, Image 10

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THE ATLANTA GEUKLUAjn jvinDtnEWS. 'rniDAT, MAT 17. 1507. JACOBS’ PHARMACY. I JACOBS’ PHARMACY. Jacobs’ Cut Prices. Jacobs’ prices are consistently the lowest. Our unusual buying facilities enable us to secure the manufacturers’ bottom prices, and OUR customers reap the benefit. Besides, our enormous patronage is surety of a constantly fresh supply of medicines and drugs. We carry without exception the largest supply of medicines, drugs and sundries in this section. Every proprietary remedy, every drug, every chemical,, every botanical drug, every rare, costly drug, can be found here £ Jacobs’ Cut Prices. Miles’Nervine bottle, 80c dozen, Miles’ Heart Cure bottle, 80c dozen, Miles’Anti-Pain Pills ...box, 18c dozen, Miles’Nerve and Liver Pils box, 18c dozen, Laxative Bromo Quinine box, 18c dozen Piso’s Consumption Cure bottle, 20c dozen, Piso’s Catarrh Cure bottle, 40c dozen, Paine’s Celery Compound bottle, 80c dozen, Peruna bottle, 80c dozen, Wells & Richardson’s Butter Color 13c 20c 40c Cascarets Box 10c 24c $8.00 $1.75 $1.75 $1.75 $2.00 80c 48c Customers purchasing four boxes or bottles receive benefit of the dozen prices. Jacobs’ Pharmacy. 6-8-10 Marietta Street. 23 Whitehall Street. $25,000 Sale Sudden Drop Dry Goods, Slippers, La dies’ and Men’s Furnish ings. CLEAN SWEEP P IERCEC BUSY STORE ^ Opposite Postoffice 60 Marietta Street. Southern DryGoods and Shoe Go RANSOM WILL BE HEAD OF ALL C0770N CRUSHERS I.. A. ltniinoin, district manager of the Southern Cotton Oil Company, who la wlMteil to 1m* elected president of the Inter* Mate Cotton Heed CrtuhenT Association, n lilrii meets next week In Jamestown, hna gone on in the Fair City to prealde over n meeting of the rulea committee of tbla or ganization. which convene* there Hnturdny. Mr. Itauaoui wa* accompanied hy E. I*. Mcllurney, who la the Georgia member of this committee. There la it number of amendiuentM propoanl which will lie thresh ed out hy tbla committee, and recommends- tions formulated for the convention'* adop tion next week. Theae rule* will govern the aale of thla Southern commodity, nml will also he recognised by the New York produce exchange, which I* alio to have a delegation lu attendance upon thla conven tion. The election of Mr. Ransom to tbla high office will more the headquarter* of an iiHMoclatlon which represents n capital of over Sto,oon.ono to Atlanta, and make* thla eltv the center of the cotton seed and cotton oil Industry In the Houth. Orrin W. Potter Dead. Chicago, May 17.—Orrin W. Potter died at noon today at hla mansion, 130 Lake Shore drive. pennant, winner, BQUAKB AND LUTHER A. RANSOM. Who will bo elected president of Inter state Cotton Crushers' Association. GREENBRIER WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS WEST VIRGINIA (The "OLD WIIITK" Sulphur.) Now open. Famous for Us sulphur baths. Modern Improvements, with private baths. Permanent orchestra. Terms. $15 to 125 week. $60 to 39t) per month. Write for Illustrated booklet. Address, GEO. A. MILLS, Jr.. Manager. I Greenbrier White Hulphur Springs, W. Va. AT THE THEATERS 0 LEASE CONTRACT IN SUPREME COURT b Absence of expressed stipulation in t lease contract, setting forth the class >f tenant upon which prohibition Is nade, served as a bar to Injunction. This rather Interesting issue la de- lermined by the supreme court In a leclslon rendered Friday morning In he case of Dodd et al vs. Ozburn tt al. O. T. Dodd and Mrs. A. D. Warren eased property on Mitchell street to S. A. Ozburn and R. B. Martin. The ease contained a clause permitting tub-leasing, with the restriction that 2o saloon be permitted. It was sub- eared to the Southern Auto and Elec- lic Company for a garage. Gasoline las stored there, and Insurance rates tdvanced on this and adjoining prop erty about 2 per cent. Injunction proceedings were Instltut- kJ, but the lower court refused It, and he case went to the supreme court, tills court affirmed the lower court •n the ground that no violat'en of con tact existed. Ths Great Lafayette. The vaudeville head-liner and tnystlf nuigh lnn. tafnyete. Is continuing to pi! large iiudleueea ot the Rljott. The nerfi anee Is one of the beat of the kind ever seen oil a loesl stage, and thoae who would enjoy an nfternoou or evening of wholesome pleasure will do well not to miss the at traction, which wilt close Its engagement with Saturday night. "A Runaway Match." The summer season at the Casino will open on Monday night w ith that hrl edy. “A Runaway Mutch.*’ The eom t .uiiy Is composed of popnlnr Bijou favorite, bend ed by Bob Ifiirty anil Johnny Jolitmou. and the specialties Introduced during the action of the play will add greatly to the pleas- COLDS CURED IN ONE DAY Munyon a Told Cure Relieves the head. .. ores Grip and obstinate Coughs and pro vents pneumonia. Hold by all dmcgUta. 2Sr. If yon bare catarrh or are afflicted with ure of the audience. On account of an error In booking, tt was found Impossible for Little Chip and Miry Marble to open the Casino, ns at tlrst an nounced. They will lie here on Mfl$r 37. Hale of seats for the Casino during the summer will lie found at the BIJoti box office from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Matinees will lie given on Tuesday, Thursday and Hnturdny afternoons. ' Fawcett Stock Company. Regan Hnghston, an actor of note, has been selected by the George Fawcett Htock Company to l>e ono of the leading men for this company, which opens the summer sea son at the Grand on Monday, May 27, when ’•The Henrietta” will lie the offering. Mr. Hnghston tins never ptnyed In the Houth be fore. hot has made an enviable reputation by Ids clever work In Cleveland, Buffalo, Baltimore and Ht. Paul, where he was a prime favorite. His Inst engagement wan with the David Belssco presentation of “The Heart of Maryland/' Pastime Thoatsr. Friday and Ha tun! ay are the last opportu nities offered the Atlanta theatergoers to see the clever vaudeville bill which Is be ing presented at the Pastime Theater by a and Lawrence James lu Illustrated songs are top-Ilners and ure making a hit. Chil dren at the 3 nud 4 o'clock matinees are ad mitted for 6 cents. WILL JOHNSON’S FATE TO BE DECIDED SOON A decision Is expected from the prison commission Friday nfterpoon or Saturday morning, deciding the fate of Will Jobusou. the Fulton county negro, under sentence of death. Timekeeper I. II. McDuffie. Jr., was call* l from Blrintughum to testify relative to the time l»ook. and he was tiefore the com- mission Friday morning. The commission Is going Into the ease very fully, nud OF ILLINOIS DEATH GIRL Justice Refuses $100,000 Bonds Offered, for Release. KEELY’S KEELY’S KEELY’S Litchfield, ni.. May 17.—Five of Montgomery county', best-known and richest young farmer, have been ar- reited and Imprisoned charged with murder, following an Inveitlgattnn Into the death of Lola Nance, a daughter of John Nance, a farmer. It I, charge] the girl'* death was caused by an Illegal operation. The men Urreeted are Taylor Phipp,, Byron D. Davie, William Sharp, Oral K. Allen and Cullen Allen. Three of the men are married. They were locked up laat night In the county Jail, Juatlce Qraaael denying bond, although amount, up to 1100,000 were offered. Attorney General stead will appear at the preliminary hearing Saturday. BALLARD BIFOCAL AND TORIC OR CURVED LENSES have gained a reputation In two year, no other Arm In the ontlre South haa made In a half century. Not theae lenaea alone gave ua the lead, but op tical aervlce In every way not usually found elaewhere. Aak any Atlanta man about ua. WALTER BALLARD OPTICAL CO. 76 Peachtree Street. IS State Lecturer Davis Says Politicians Had Better Be Careful. Politician* who foater Immigration movements to Georgia are served with no tice that the Farmer*' union la watching them closely, and will keep an accounting/ Htnto Lecturer G. M. Davis, of Itoiiie, In an Interview Friday, replying to nonic strictures laid upon him and the union re cently In a card written by L. II. Martin, of Klberton, make* thla statement. Let* turer Davis sulci: "I have been ao busy that I have not had time to rtnly to the article of L. II. Mar tin, In which he condemned the Farmers' union for opposing Immigration. Voder no circumstance* will I allow myself to In* pe»* Konnlly drawn Into a controversy on the ;t. S o Farmers’ union goes on record as op to nil kinds of foreign Immigration, and will fight It to the death. Therj* Is to lie no compromise or let up. The union as an organisation will take no stock In politics, nud will Indorse no man for of- "The little pennut politician who makes nn effort to let down the liars or appro* prlntcN a single cent from the state treas ury to securo or eucouroge foreign Immi gration, without first submitting Tt to the whole people for ratification, had as well hang hla laat year’s stmw lint on a hick ory limb, nud cool bis beds In a mountain liriNik, for his name Is Dennis. "Georgia's 150,000 members of the union will watch every net of every man, and will register a protest against any encroach meat In the rights of the people.*' Only Mistake in Large Draft Had Caused Sus pected Shortage. Orangeburg, S. C„ May 17.—Laat September John W. Fnlrey, rnahler of the Edieto Bank, of Orangeburg, left town on Sunday afternoon and a few days 'nter a letter from hla, mailed In Chlrngo, told the president of the bank that he had found hi, account, hope lcssly Involved and could not tell what wa, the matter. He declared that he hail not taken a cent of the bank's money. Falrey ha, now returned to Orange burg and hi* assertion, have been proven true. He went to New York, then to Chicago, Denter, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Honolulu, back to Califor nia and then to ElPaso, Texas. He met a number of person, from Houth Car olina whom he recognised but none ,aw hint. In El Pa»o he took work n» a laborer In a packing house and one day wa, usked to temporarily superintend the So Tired It may be from overwork, but the chance, are its from an In active liver. —. With a well conducted LIVER one can do mountains of labor without fatigue. It adds a hundred per cent to ones earning capacity. It can be kept in healthful action by, and only by TutfsPills TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. 450 Skirts at $5 100 Browns; 100 Black Voiles; 250 Fancies The greatest skirt sale of the season be gins here tomorrow morning and every woman in reach of this store who has need * i ' of a skirt should attend. Four hundred and fifty brand new and very fashionable skirts are to be included in the offering. / 00 Brown Skirts-—There are brown skirts and brown skirts, but these are the fashionable “Congo” browns—in the exact shade that fashion leaders proclaim correct. They are made of fine light weight all-wool Panama cloth; allover plaited and extra full flared at the bottom. 1 00 Black Voile Skirts and Skirts of Black Panama Cloth; made in very newest allover plaited design and extra full flared at bottom. 250 Skirts of Fancy Mixtures, plaids, checks and striped effects. Made in several variations of the popular plaited style; some finished with stitched straps and buttons; oth ers in plainer effects. These skirts are from leading New York makers, are thoroughly well-tailored and perfect-fitting. Their normal' retailvalue is seven dollars and a half; but to create unusu ally large selling we offer the entire line to morrow at Choice $5 * See the Browns in Window Today Keely Company iondlng of a car and the checking of (he bill. HI, rapidity with figure, at tracted the attention of the manage ment and he was made an offer of an office Job If he would produce ref erence,. This he 'said he could not do, but declared he wa, honest nnd could look any man In the face. He got the Job. He wa, recognised by Samuel M. Deal, of Columbia, who I, In El Paso for' hi, health. Deal and Falrey had served In the 8pnnl»h-An,erlcan war together and knew eacn other well. Deal wrote back h South Carolina and started the effort to get Falrey back. Faircy's family had searched for him In nln. He wa, assured that hi. In tegrity was admitted on all side. In hi, home town and he would be wel comed home. He cante and Is now at work on hi, old account,. It ha, turned out that la linndllng'the largo cotton business during the early fall, one large draft wa. Incorrectly entered and caused the discrepancy. Th,y Don’t 8tutter. “Did yon ever see , wouptn who stut tered!” "So; now I come to think of It. I never did. "They are very rare," Mid the physician.- "I think It Is wife to say that the average person passe* through life without ever meeting a stuttering woman. "There are* two miaous for this: First, woman naturally—I don’t know why—ia lesa liable to the disease of stammering than man. Second, tf atie develops this ulsenso, she seta out with determination to cure beraelf, nnd ahe succeeds; whereas care less innn, rather thnn take the trouble of a eure, wilt go stammering ou to the end." —8t. 1.0111s Globe-Democrat. TERRORISTS KILL FOUR AND GET $5,000 Warsaw. Russian Poland. May 17.—Terror* lata today 'attacked the/ city office of tlm Vistula, railroad, and after a fight escaped with 36.000. Four persons were killed and uinc were wounded In the fight. Aa the robbers retreated the soldiers fired after them, but succeeded only In killing two by-standurs and hurting five others. THAT GOES TWICERS FAR 49 Lots and One House and Lot FOR SALE AT AUCTION, on next Saturday afternoon at 3 p. m., in Battlo Bill. This property is only 400 feet from the West view ear, and fronts on Battle Hill avenue (West Hunter street), Joe Johnston and Racine sts. These streets arc established grades and worked out bv the county authorities, and Battle Hill avenue is beautifully cherted. These lots are surrounded by homes, churches and the public free school fronts it on Joe Johnston avenue. We will offer the rea sonably easy terms of $25.00 cash and $5.00 per month, 7 per cent, will give 5 per cent discount for all cash. We will offer the 5-room house and lot on terms of $100.00 cash and $15.00 per month, 7 per cent. All this property is valuable and these terms put it in the reach of everybody. After the sale we will give away absolutely free $100.00 in gold, divided into 15 prizes, five of $10.00 and ten of $5.00. GET PLATS AT OFFICE 1. W. Ferguson, W. A. Foster, Agent. Auctioneer. 12 South Broad St. V