Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, June 14, 1907, Image 7

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IJliLj AlhAA'X'A GEUKG1AN AND xNiiVVcj. Until July 1st next, we will E I % I I adjust, regu- ^™^™late, clean out and oil up FREE any DISC OR CYLINDER MACHINE Sent to Us on Following Conditions: Condition 1st All machines must be delivered at our warerooms, 37-39 Peachtree street, by hand or by prepaid express, marked plainly with name and ad dress of owner. Machines sent otherwise will not be received. Condition 2d Owners of machines must agree to pay for any broken, defective or missing parts, and to take machines away at their own expense. SPECIAL OFFER We will take at fair valuation your old machine, old horn and old sound box in exchange for a New Victor or Edison Machine, up-to-date in evervparticlar with modem horn and improved sound box. Write for large Catalogs and Prices PHILLIPS & CREW CO. 37-39 Peachtree Street SOUTHERN DISTRIBUTORS PROGRAM AT TECH FULL OF INTEREST TO ALLJEORGIANS Hooper Alexander to Deliv er the Principal Address. CITY TAX NOTICE. Books are now open for Hie payment of 2d in stallment of city tax. E. T. PAYNE, City Tax Collector. THINK8 GOVERNOR HA8 RIGHT TO NAME SENATOR. Special to The Georgian. Montgomery, Ain., Juno 14.—Soma claim that aa tha legislature of Ala bama la now In session—tha racais be. tog In effect actual session—the gov ernor can not appoint a senator to suc ceed Senator Morgan, the Idea being that appointment Is a recourse taken only when the law-makers are not In ecsslon. Speaking of this question, Senator John W. Overton, of Randolph, said: ''I think under the constitution of the United States the governor has a right to appoint a successor to Senator Mor gan to hold until the reassembling of toe legislature on July 9, but no longer. The legiHiature Is not In session now, having recessed until the date named. Several lawyers of ability with whom I SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. 8CHOOLS AND COLLEGE8. IS YOUR BOY PREPARING FOR GEORGIA TECH? IF SO, SEND HIM TO DONALD FRASER SCHOOL FOR BOYS NEAR ATLANTA. WE REFER, BY PERMISSION. TO PRESIDENT K. G. MATHESON, OF THE GEORGIA SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGY For Catalog Write G. Holman Gardner, Principal, Decatur, Ga. have talked take this view, while others take the opposite. However, I do not think the governor Is obliged to ap point under the circumstances, as con gress Is not In session and will not be for sdme time, and there Is no actual necessity to make a selection prior to the reassembling of the legislature next month." NEED 25 TEACHERS FOR CITY SCHOOLS An examination for teachers and su. pernumerarles for Atlanta city schools will be held on July 22 and 23 at the Boys' High School building, by order of the board of education. Superin tendent W. M. Slaton makes ths an nouncement at this time. In order that those desiring to apply for the exami nation may have time to prepare them selves. About twenty-five teachers and su pernumeraries will be faqulred at tha opening of the next term. Burial of J. L. Houser. Special to The Georgian. Perry, Ga., June 14.—J. L. Houser, of Macon, was brought here yenterdny and burled In Evergreen cemetery. Mr. Houser was raised near Perry. He wae a son of the late L. M. Houser. Ho leaves a wife and four sons and a large number of relatives and friends. FIRST BRICK LAID IN THOMASVILLE STREETS. Special to The Georgian. Thomasvllle, Ga., June 14.—The first brick In Thomusville’s vitrified pave ment was laid with ceremony Thursday afternoon by Mrs. J. A. Epply. Six of the city's blocks will be paved, and cement sidewalks laid. The total In vestment will be more than 390,000. The work Is being done by_the Geor- a Engineering Comp ... their employ a nei Nlcholls, who lays el*l _ ute and puts down 40,000 In ths course of a working day. TYBEE BY THE 8EA VIA CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY. Week end rate, 20.25; tickets on sals Saturdays, limited Tuesdays following date of sale. Season rate, 312.15; tick ets on tale dally, limited September 30th. W. H. FOGG. D. P. A, Atlanta, Ga. President K G. Matbeson has Issued the official program for the commence, ment exercises of the Tech, and In It Is named as principal orator Hon. Hooper Alexander, of DeKalb county. In addi tion addresses will be made by Chan cellor Barrow, of the State University, and Chairman Nat E. Harris, of the board of trustees. On Thursday morning at 11 o'clock Mrs. Richard Peters will present to the school a portrait of the late Richard Peters, who donated to the school four acres of the campus. The presentation address will be made by Bishop C. K. Nelson, and Hon. N. E. Harris will receive It on behalf of the school. Following Is the official program of the commencement exercises: Saturday, June 16, 8:20 p. m.—Facul ty-Senior baseball game. Tuesday, June 18, 8 p. m.—Senior class banquet at the New Kimball. Wednesday, June 19, 8 p. m.—Annual promenade. Thursday, June 20, 8:30 a. m. to 11 0. m.—Exhibition of shops, mill, foun dry and laboratories, students engaged In work In all departments named. Thursday, June 20, 11 a. m.—Presen. tatlon to School of Technology by Mrs. Richard Peters of portrait of the Hon. Richard Peters. Presentation address will be made by Bishop C. Klnloch Nsl. son, and portrait received for the school by Hon. N. E. Harris, of Macon, chair man of board of trustees. Presentation will occur In the college chapel June 20—Annual meeting of the board of trustees; 12 o'clock, luncheon to board of trustees; 8:15 p. m„ com mencement exercises at Grand opera house, as follows: Music. Prayer by Dr. J. S. French. Music. Announcement of theses. Annual Address—Hon. Hooper Alex ander. Music. Address—Chancellor David C. Bar- row. Delivery of Medals—Associate Jus tice Marcus W. Beck. Music. Degrees Conferred—President K. G. Matheson. Closing Address to Graduates—Hon. N. E. Harris. Benediction—Dr. J. S. French. Alumni banquet at 10:30 p. m. DEATH OVERTAKES STUDENT AT TECH Alberta Cook a Victim of Meningitis While on Way Home. Alberta Cook, aged 18 years, a mem ber of the freshman class at the Geor gia Tech, died Friday morning at a private sanitarium, after a short illness with meningitis. He became 111 Sunday morning at the school and was taken to the train to be sent to his home. In Covington, Ga., but he became worse and was sent to ths sanitarium. He Is survived by his mother. Mrs. R. C. Cook, of Covington; two brothers, Joel R. Cook, also a student at Tech, and H. Claude Cook, of Atlanta, and two slaters, Misses Elisabeth and Jua nita Cook, of Covington. The body will be cent to Covington Saturday morning at 7 o'clock. The funeral services will be conducted there Saturday afternoons The Interment will be at the Cook burying ground. CHARGE THAT NEGR0E8 AIDED IN ESCAPE. Special to Tbs Oeorslan. Meridian, Miss., June 14.—The offi cers of Meridian have made a number of arrests today of negroea who har bored and afterwards, It Is alleged, aided to escape the negroes who shot and stabbed the officer* at Meehan Sta tion, In resisting arrest. The negro Hill and his wife, who shot and stabbed the two arresting officers, cams to Meridian and. It Is claimed, were hid den and afterwards smuggled out of the city. They are still at liberty, but may be captured before night. GeneralUtilityClothes- “YgkuvneaZ Suits The Greatest Values for the Least Money $18 v&netfe SllltS f° r ^ 1 “JRain Will Neither Spot Nor Wrinkle Them.” JL Because wo manufacture our own goods and eliminate middle men’s profits—by selling direct, enables us to sell you a suit of clothes for $10.00 that is, in addition to being waterproof, as styl ish and of as good workmanship and fit as any ordinary suit sold at $18X10. And onr way of hacking this statement ia by selling you a suit on Ten Days Approval so you may convinoo yourself by comparing our suit with those other stores sell; and if yon find that our price is not lower, come and get your money back. In addition to our $10 suits we have others in various shades and patterns that compare with those other stores sell for as re gards price and quality in this way: $20.00 SUITS; OUR PRICE $12.00 $25.00 SUITS; OUR PRICE ...$15.00 $30.00 SUITS; OUR PRICE ...$18.00 Order by Mail If unabln to come In person, our guarantee holds good on mall orders as well aa on purchases made personally. Please give also and shade desired to avoid delay. Goodyear Clothing Co. 51-53 Whitehall St EDISON EXPECTS ELECTRICITY DIRECT FROM COMMON COAL New York, June 14.—Thomaa A. Edl. aon has Just given out the first Inter view since the announcement on hla sixtieth birthday that he had quit the cares of a money-making Inventor for that of a scientist. "The great scientific discovery which I expect to tee before I die,” remarked the man whose own Inventions have done so much to revolutionise modern life.” Is the direct generation of elec tricity from coal. "Imagine what will be the conse quences. Then locomotives will be thrown Into the scrap heap. There will be great power plants established at the mouths of the mines, from which the electricity will be sent out over the country by wire. Electricity will be sc cheap It can be used by the humblest tenement dweller. "Ships will no longer be driven steam. Electricity will be their motive power. Then It will be possible to cross the Atlantic In three days. "At the present time nine-tenths of tho power obtained from coal Is lost by the use of boilers, wheels nnd dyna mos. With the direct generation of the electrical current, therefore, the world will have ten times more energy than now.” GROOM ALONE IN LONDON; SAYS BRIDE DESERTED HIM New York, June 14.—George Bron son Howard, the author, announced to. day that he had. been deserted In Lon don by his bride on their romantic honeymoon. They met In Baltimore and were married within twenty-four hours afterwards. After arriving from Europe on the White Star line steamship Adriatic, Mr. Howard tried to lose himself In the FRENCH MAYORS HAVE QUIT JOBS Paris, June 14,-Forty more mnnlclpil councils have sent In their resignation! to accordance with tbs plans of the centnl committee of tho wine growers' organisa tion at Argellsrs, but up to the present this Involves hardly more than 3 per cent of tho mnnlclpelttles of the four federated departments, ns the disaffected ares Is de scribed. The only municipal olllcea open In the protesting communities are those where births, marriages and deaths are regia- CASTOR IA for infants and Children Tha Kind You Have Always Bought city. passage-at-arme with his beautiful bride's father. W. W. Skinner, of Nor folk, Va. It wan said that Mr.'Skinner In In the city and In seeking the young author who eloped with hla daughter and with whom nhe later wrote her parents she found It Impossible to live. No expla nation has been made to Baltimore or Norfolk eoclety for the separation of the honeymooners. Bear* tha Signature of REE Course In Chartier Shox*thand B i e 98i-M ne At Bagwell Business College 198 Peachtree St. MI8S ARuENA LOVE, .?.° Br !E her with John Foster Co* rtha W * eks ' Stud 7 with Chartier ATLANTA, GEORGIA. The superiority of CHARTIER SHORTHAND over all other systems has already been fully es tablished. But in order that everybody may have an opportunity to investigate for themselves the wonderful possibilities of the Chartier system of Shorthand, BAGWELL BUSINESS COLLEGE will give a FREE TEN DAYS’ COURSE to all who may apply. The day class will be formed Monday morning, 9 o’clock, June 17; Evening class, Monday even ing, 7:30 o’clock, June 17. Everybody welcome. Call, write or telephone us. Your name will be en rolled in order of application. All those who enroll for this class demonstration, do so ABSOLUTELY FREE, and are under no obligation to continue. Come, and tell yoor friends about it. Court re porters, professional stenographers and shorthand instructors are especially invited and urged to at tend this demonstration class. After one week’s instruction the average student should be able to read and write at a moderate speed ordinary business letters. The old line systems like Graham, Munson, Pitman, Gregg, ete., consist of hundreds of rules, al most os many exceptions and thousands of hard-to-learn word-signs and contractions. CHARTIER SHORTHAND consists simply of the alphabet and 10 SIMPLE RULES. That’s all. Situated on Peachtree, next to Governor’s Mansion. With pleas ant grounds, cool and commodious rooms, it is an ideal location for a summer school. IDEAL LOCATION . WILLIAMS, SUPREME COURT OP GEORGIA. Friday, June 14, 1907. Judgments Affirmed. Dobba va. Mayor and Council of Bu ford, from Gwinnett superior court, be fore Judge Brand. R. R. Arnold and Harvey Hill, for plaintiff In error appearance contra. Klnard ve. Hale, administrator, from Pike superior court, Judge Reagan. W. W. Lambdln and 8amuel Rutherford, for plaintiff in error; J. F. Redding, contra. Columbus Show Cane Company vs. Brinson, from Muscogee superior court. Judge Little; Charlton E. Battle, for plaintiff In error; J. H. Martin and A. W. Conart, contra. pp. administrator, vs. Fidelity Mu tual Life Insurance Company, from Muscogee superior court. Judge Little. J. L. Willis and 8. B. Hatcher, for plaintiff in error; Goetchlus It Chap pell, contra. Christian vs. Knight St Co., from Marlon superior court. Judge Little. J. J. Dunham and W. D. Crawford, for plaintiff In error; George P. Munro and W. B. Short, contra. Georgia, Florida and Alabama Rail way Company va Jernlgan, from Ran dolph superior court. Judge Wright Donalson & Donalson and Pottle It Glessner, for plaintiff In error; M. C. Edwards, contra. Garrett vs. Crawford, from Clay superior court Judge Parker. M. C. Edwards, for plaintiff In error; Rambo & Rambo and W. A. Scott, contra. Harrell, administrator, vs. National Bank of Commerce, tram Webster *u- >erlor court, E. T. Hickey, Judge pro me vice. B. F. & G. Y. Harrell, for dalntlff In error; E. A. Hawkins and V. A. Dodson, contra Callaway vs. Waxslbaum Company et at, from Lee superior court, Judge Littlejohn. Long & Bon, Allen Fort & Bon, Lane, Maynard & Hooper, for plaintiff In error; Hardeman & Jones, Winchester and E. P. Johnston, contra Nesmith, administrator, vs. Hand, from Mitchell superior court. J. W. Walters, Judge pro hac vice. Pope & Bennet, for plaintiff In error; no ap pearance contra. . Payton et at vs. McPhaul from Worth superior court, Judge Spence. Payton & Hay and T. R. Perry, for plaintiffs In error; no appearance con- Anderson vs. Halt from Wilcox su perior court. Judge Martin. Haygood & Cutta. for plaintiff In error; no ap pearance contra. Judgment Reversed. Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company vs. Edmondson, from Warren superior court. Judge Holden. Joseph B. A Bryan Cummfng, for plaintiff tn error; E. P. Davis, contra. Dismissed. Georgia Loan and Trust Company et plaintiffs tn error; Cranford A Wilcox, contra. Docket Calls. The cases of the criminal docket will be board on Monday next. The call of the civil docket for argument will be resumed on Tuesday, beginning with the western circuit, and going through ths docket CONVICT FIGHTS TO GAIN LIBERTY In on effort to prevent recapture, Charlie Bailey, a negro who escaped from a gang of city convicts Thursday afternoon, seined an ax and held at bay W. H. Pine, a stockade guard, at 67 Collier street About this time. Mounted Policeman Camp appeared on the scene and went to the rescue of the guard. Officer Camp coverod the negro with his re volver, forcing him to drop the ax. Offer which tho two men closed In on him mill plm-ed him unrlci .,n -<!. ~n arraignment Friday morning be fore Recorder Broyles, Bailey was fined 325.76 or thirty days additional In the stockade. He made his escape from a gang at work In Williams street. Cavalry Captain Found Guilty. Denver, Colo., June 14.—Announce ment has been made that Captain Ed munds. First cavalry, courtmartlalcd at Fort Logan, May 24, was found guil ty of conduct prejudicial to good or der and military discipline. MUNYON’S SUCCESS In Curing Old Chronic Cases of RHEUMATISM Patients Given Up as Incurable MUNYON’S Restored to ealth by X RHEUMATISM REMEDY matter what your friend.- may aay, no mat- 1 want every rheumatic to throw sway all ledlcloee, all liniments, nil plastsrs, and J ML'NION'8 3 X BHBCMATMII CbBE. No matter what your doctor may aay, no remedy routelna so sali cylic add. so opium, cocaine, morphine, or other harmful drugs. It la put up under the guarantee of the f guars I, hut I Pure Food sud Urn* M I consider the best. Bed, bring the empty bottle refend your money. If you here any other ailment remember that we put up afty aeveu different reme dies for Ofty-aeren ailments. Wo here no "cure atls." Our Cold Cure curee tb. cold. Our rough Cure te worth more than all the eutulalone, all the oils, at! the bulsswe, sad cough cures that hare ertc been mule. Ton cau prove tble statement by the In vestment of * cents Mr Klduey Cure. 1 believe, hta saved more llvee end cared more chronic cases of bladder sud klduey ailment than any known remedy. Money back whenever It rails. My Dyspepsia and Stomach Remedy ena bles one to est a good, equtre meal and ^Sy* Constipation Ointment given i ral movemeut In from two to three n nnd to rapidly tar * tics nnd weaken If you are ue you can't aleep. down, don t fat yon's Pew Pew — atroug. make you sleep anjl make you cheer- * Mr Headache Core atops all headaches In from three to ten minutes, and la a good heart and stomach tonic. All persons suffering with Hies I nnd Is rapidly taking the place of all cathar tics and weakening nostrums. nervous and despondent If J >. If you are weak and run- ell to get a bottle of Uun- you's Pew Pew Tonic. It will mnke you Stenographer with Fulton County Dally al. va. Mllltown Lumber Company, from Record after 7 Weeks’ Study Chartier Berrien superior court. Judge Mitchell. Ta 'J'J ~ Fifty-third sud Jefferson streets. — * for Philadelphia. Pa. Shorthand, Hendricks, Smith It Christian,