Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, May 24, 1907, Image 13

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. rilliur, MAT ?<. 190?. 13 MENTER 4 ROSENBLOOM CO.—WORLD’S LARGEST CREDIT CLOTHIERS CLOTHING AT PRICES AS LOW AS AT ANY CASH STORE You know of course that you get the clothes on your first visit here—that you can put them on and wear them—and enjoy them— and that all we ask is a small payment of one dollar a week. We guarantee the quality of all our clothing —we vouch for the style and we state most emphatically that selling as we do from fac tory to family we do sell stylish, dependable clothing for Men, Women and Children on Credit at cash store prices. No red tape here—Everybody Is welcome to Credit. Men’s Blue Sertfe Suits $10 to $20 Men’s Fancy Cheviots $7 to $21 Men’s Raincoats & Topcoats $8 to $20 Men’s Genesee Shoes, only $3.50 Boys' Suits—age 14 to 20 $3 to $15 Small Boys’ Suits $2 to $7 Women’s Suits $10 to $35 Women’s Coats $7 to $25 Silk Waists $4 to $10 Shoes and Oxfords 1 $2 to $4 Exquisite Millinery $2 to $8 Genesee Shoes $3.50 FOR MEN STORE OPEN MONDAY EVENING. Over 71 Whitehall St. REPORT OF THE CONDITION -of~ The Fourth National Bank of Atlanta At the Close of Business May Twentieth, Nineteen Hundred and Seven, Issued on Call of the Comptroller of the Currency Assets Loans and Discounts $4,263,680.59 17,801.26 550.000. 00 16,576.24 340.000. 00 150,610.00 20,002.50 1,238,452.95 Overdrafts U. S. Bonds . . . Prem. on U. S. Bonds FourthNat’l Bk.Bldg Stocks and Bonds . Due fromU.S.Treas CASH- Due from Banks.$745,477.06 In Vault 492,975.89 1,597,123.54 Liabilities Capital Stock . . Surplus and ) Undivided Profits) * Circulation . . . Deposits Bills Payable . . I> 600,000.00 660,641.73 400.000. 00 4,586,481.81 350.000. 00 i,597,123.54 A Designated Depository of the United States, State of Georgia and of the City of Atlanta. Deposits May 20, 1907 ,586,481.81 Deposits May 20, 1906 3,961,826.92 Increase for One Year $ 624,654.89 # In submitting this statement we desire to call attention to the fact that on April first, the Capital stock of this Bank was increased by the addition of $200,000.00, a like amount being added to the surplus. We shall be glad of an opportunity to serve you in any department of banking. OFFICERS JAMES W. ENGLISH, CHARLES I. RYAN, DIRECTORS Federal Official* Return. With the acquittal of George F. Hurt, of the charge of peonage In the Federal court at Rome, the criminal docket was finished and Judge Newman returned to Atlanta early Friday morning. With him came Deputy Clerk John Dean Steward and the officials of the dtatrlct “Coruey'a are expected to arrive aome time Friday nr Saturday morning. Comml.elon Offer. Reward. Special to The Georgian. Quitman, Ga., May 24.—The county school commission of Brooks county has offered a reward of 2250 for In formation that will lead to the arrest and conviction of parties who, It Is be. Hevcd, ared three school houses near the county line between Brooke and Thomas counties. —— Jacobs’ Saturday Specials iJr. Lyon’s Tooth Power, Saturday only 13c Wyeths’ Beef, Iron and Wine 75c Jacobs’ Beef, Iron and 'Wine, made from Extract beef, citrate of iron and pure sherry—a blood pu rifier and tonic 25c, 50c and $1.00 Hood’s Sarsaparilla 88c In lots of 4 or more 73c Dr. Long’s Sarsaparilla, an invaluable Spring Tonic, renewing and invigorating the system. A powerful alterative and blood purifier 50 and $1.00 Handkerchief Extracts On Saturday, and for that day only, we will sell the following extracts at reduced prices. The perfumes are delicate and lasting with the true nature aroma. Violet de parme, Carnation, Apple Blossom, White Rose, Heliotrope. Regular Price 80c oz. Jacobs’ Saturday Price 29c oz. Roger & Gallet’s Violetde parme Toliet Wate. .78c Hudnut’s Violet Sec Toilet Water 75c Jacobs’ Violet Toilet Wter, a delicious, sweetly re freshing toilet aid, lasting and delicate; 2 oz, 25c; 5 oz., 50c; 11 oz 81-00 Jacobs 9 Straw Hat Bleach Will bleach and clean any straw hat, without loos ening the mat. Each box contains enough for 8 hate. Anybody can use it. Price 18c CORNER STONE LI FOR NEW BUILDING Warthen College Takes Now Life With Beginning of New Structure. Wrlghtavllle, Ga.. May 24.—The cor ner stone of the Warthen College was laid today. The Moaons had. charge of the ceremony. They marched to the site of the building and Dr. T. L. Har ris acted aa grand marshal After the laying of tile atone they returned to the chapel of the old build. Ing where Judge A. F. Daley Intro duced Rev. W. N. Alneworth, D. D„ the orator of the day. A barbecue din. ner was spread at 1 o'clock. The commencement at Warthen com menced last night? REACHES ATLANTA Solon H. Borglum, whose equestrian statue of General Gordon will be un veiled on the capitol grounds Saturday, arrived In Atlanta from hie home In New York Thursday evening and Is stopping at the Piedmont. He le ac companied by his wife. Sculptor Borglum will tell briefly Saturday of hie work In making the model for the statue. Friday ho viewed the work of the contractors and ex pressed himself a* pleated with the setting for his work. longdelayed¥rdict AFFIRMED BY COURT Jacobs’ Pharmacy £ Q M Marietta O-O-it/ Street. q o Whitehall Street. With evidence* of regret la baring to do •o, the court of nppeel* Friday morning nfflruicd the conviction and three-year »en- fence of Mark Holoumn, nu engineer on the Atlantic fonat Une. Tnentr-two yenra ago. Holoman. then a lad of I*, and Oacar Newman, a ln»y of nbont bis own age, went to a ilanco In Pnlnskl county. A difficulty a rose nud f oam; Newnuiu was stablied to dentb. or ninny years. Holom-iu sought a trial without obtaining It. In the meanwhile, he grew to men's ro tate, married and !>eesine the father of children. He U an engineer on rhe At lantic Const Mne. «r.d e. man highly es teemed. He was finally placed on trig* and received a tbree-yeor sentence. The court of appeals affirms this. It Is more than probable that the mut ter will be brouaht to the attention of the prison commission at its nest meeting, ami It la possible that Engineer Holoman will not have to am* bis acntenca In the pen itentiary. President. JOHN K. OTTLEY, Vice-President. Cashier. WM. T. PERKERSON, Assistant Cashier. J. D. TURNER. ALBERT STEINER. H. C. STOCKDELL. JOSEPH HIRSCH. J. R. HOPKINS. E. 0. PETERS. J. W. ENGLISH, Jr. JOHN J. WOODSIDE. GEO. W. PARROTT. JAMES W. ENGLISH. J. D. ROBINSON. J. R. GRAY. JOHN K. OTTLEY. DAN B. HARRIS. CHAS. A. WICKERSHAM. W. D. ELLIS. CHARLES I. RYAN. JAMES M. THOMAS. DIVORCE PUT STATISTICS. Coturabui rlan general assembly Eat adopted a report emphatically couneellD* the pobllebere nf rellgloua papers “to omit all advertisement, of patent or proprietary medicines suspected of being misleading and fraudulent.” The measure was adapted without dlacuselon. A special committee was appointed te resent to the assembly of 1904 a program or the Calvin centennial celebration In 1900. Out' hundred veterans of the civil war, both Colon and Confederate, among the members of the I-realiyterian assembly In session here, were tendered an ovation when they appeared upon the platform after devotional exercise* Divorce Under Ban. The report of the special rommltee marriage ami dlvoree was adopted, exprena- Ing Mtlafaetlon with the fsvorable results In the growth of public opinion on these qucetlons end enjoining ministers to be more careful In Hit exercise nf tlielr func tions lu the marriage of dlrdread poop!,. liar. Charles A. Dickey, of Philadelphia, chairman of the committee, speaking to the report, rejoiced lu the reapunse of public sentiment as espresaed lu the newspapers to the rising sense of restriction ns seen In the ease of sir. Corey of the United Slates Kteol Corporation. Ife said that when pan ic sentiment jmt the ban upon sneb a man n a high public position and eauaail the mlnlater who married him to ask the pardon nf Ids church nnd return his fee, there was hope of rleanslng the country of these lax illvoreea nnd alnfal unrrlngrs. And the church and Its ministry must take thu lead In this reform. Report of Committee. The committee recommended tho passage at tbs following reaotutloa: Unsolved. That Presbyterians are hereby enjoined to enforce the standards of our church, to bold to strict ncconut all minis- tera nndcr tbrlr cure and to nrga nil min ister* to regard the comity that should train from giving the nAuctlnn of our dim to the members of nnother church, whose marriage It In rlnintlon or the teachings nf the church whose communion they bare llegardlng the cnraplnlut from goutklwu 1'reahytcrlant atiout the mlaslotmrlcs nf the Northern church Interfer 1 — — *•—* chiefly III Oklahoma, Dr. of the home mission committee. re|M,rb*d that the testimony was so conflicting that no auction should le- taken. Bat missions lies should so conduct their work that nu aneb conflicts In the future would he possi ble. The report a na adopted. Recaption Held. last night s greet reception was glrca the ssaembly la the memorial tut!!. General I.. Harris and other officials were lu line and the cordial regards nf the city and state In the work of the great church were espresaed. The assomb'j will not ■- *- —" ■“*— — gator- DECLARES INNOCENCE WHILE ON 8CAFFOLD. Chattanooga, Tenn, May 24.—C. W. Baird, a white man convicted of wife murder, was banged at Fayetteville. Tenn.. at S o'clock this morning. Life was extinct eleven minutes after the drop felL Baird In his last words maintained hla Innocence^. PROPERTY TRANSFERS. 24,500—Albert Boylston to Adllne M. Lassalle, lot on. corner of Hayden and Simpson street. Warranty deed. 22,450—Mrs. Llxale Leola ltcynolds to Mrs. Annie Gllleland, lot on Olennwood avenue. Warranty deed. 21,600—Adllne M. Lnssallo to Joseph Hlrach, lot on corner of Hayden and Simpson streets. Warranty deed to secure loan. 21,000—Albert Boyliton to Joseph Hlrach, lot on corner of Haydsn and Simpson streets. Warranty deed to se cure loan. 2500—W. 8. Cannon to W. H. Har ris, lot on Jonesboro avenue. Warran ty deed to secure loan. 2626—George S. Lowndes to Richard Thornton, lot on West Third street. Warranty deed. 21,750—Mrs. Hattie S. Joseph to Mrs. Nannie Simpson, lot on Emmett street. Warranty deed. 2400—N. D. Davis-to Mrs. Hattie 8. Joseph, lot on Stats street Warranty deed. 2400—Mrs. Mattie Weaver to John J. Woodslde, lot on Will etreet War ranty deed. 2*80 (penal anm)—Empire State In vestment Company to Mrs. L. B. Web- star, lot on Joe Johnston avenue. Bond for title. * 2650 (penal sum)—Empire Stats In vestment Company to Mrs. L. B. Web ster. lot on Kaclne street. Bond for title. 27.000 (penal sum)—Agnes F. Plckert to M. II. Wars, lot on Boulevard. Bond for title. 2800—Oeorgs M. Brown to LsFayette Wall, lot on Exposition street. War ranty deed. 2300—Vesta Ellis to B. F- Ball and Delaa L. Bell lot on the corner of Kalb and Pearl streets. Warranty deed. 26.000—Mrs. Florence Cowles Wer ner, Edward A. Werner. Lynn Werner, Florence Warner and Ray C. Werner to Nick Pope and James Manas, lot on Central avenue, near Garnett street. Bond for title. BUILDING PERMITS. 2100—T. M. Wright, to build addition to frame dwelling at 101 Kirkwood avenue. 2100—Mpe. A. Barton, to build addl lion to frame dwelling at 14 Howell street. 2200—T. I. McAndcrton, to build ad dition to frame dwelling at 127 East Georgia avenue. 21.160—J.. P. Wright, to build one- story frame dwelling at 142 South avenue. 21.100—J. P. Wright, to build one story frame dwelling at 142 South eve. nue. 2110—S. W. Sullivan, to recover frame dwelling at 142 East Linden street. DEATH8. Hubert Otto Capps, age 1 year, died at 50 Daniel etreet. Julius Knufmnn, age 49 eyars, died ; St. Jos Charles Hospital. Ixtrsna Cain, age 9 years, died on Vannoy street. Edgewood, Ga. Oscar B. Fields, age 16 years, died of meningitis at Kdgavood, Ga. BIRTHS - (WHITE). To Mr. and Mrs. L D. Mobley, at 772 East Fair street, a boy. To Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Smith, t 43 Robins street, a boy. To Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Foreman, at 243 East Georgia avenue, a girl. To Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Rooney, at lit East Georgia avenue, a girl. To Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Peace, at 514 South Pryor street, a girl. Special to The GeortlalV Augusts, tin.. May M.-Compsny Third Georgia 1 - I of the „ ftanseal ibsadsd through nu nffl- Cntnpsny I wss Colonel John 4*. Taigas of that regiment a:. “ ,-Tiainsny D of Mi ered lu. CUT DAUQHTER'8 THROAT AND WOUNDED WIFE. AUGUSTA BUSINESS MEN SUMMONED INTO COURT. Charlotte, N. C, man. Jack White, who had been de mented for three years, last night hor ribly wounded his wife. Tho woman ran for help and ylien help arrived they found White's t-year-old daugh- dead with her throat cut. The negro la being pursued by a large crowd. Stricken 8ecsnd Time, ttpeclal to The Georgian. Columbus, Ga., May 24.—Far tht second time In less than two years, Sanitary Inspector It. W. Ledalnger has suffered a paralytic stroke, the sec ond one coming this morning at 7:10 'clock. Ho Is mors than sixty years old. Special to The Georgian. Augusta, Ga.. May 24.—Alleging that certain cltlsena and managers of cor porations have been Illegally taking water from the city by tapping the mains at different point*, subpoenas have been presented to Abo Ellin, man ager of tho City Ice Company. Colonel D. B. Dyer, owner .of tho Dyer build ing and president of the AugUBta Chronicle Publishing Company, and to Bure Miller, manager of the Dyer May 24 —A negro 1 building, to appear In court to answer to the charges preferred. Mre. 8atterwhlte Deed. Cuthbert. Ga., May 24—Mrs. G. A. Satterwhlts died at hsr homo In this city at an early hour yesterday morn ing. She was stricken with apoplexy and died In a few houre. She was a woman of large mean*, owning considerable fnrmlng lands In this county. She Is survived by ona daughter, Mrs. Elmore Jolly, of Daw- aon. Go. Ex-Senator Dead. Orand Rapids. Mich, May 23c-Ex- I'nlted States Senator John Patten died today. % Beautiful 1 an and Brown - - Low Shoes. —- Our slock is most complete and we are showing the most stylish low shoes in tan, brown, ‘Pat. kfdand Qun Metal ever shown in the South. r\ * V * J