Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, August 22, 1907, Image 7

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j TJfcUS ATixAJNTA GEORGIAN AND/NEWS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, »vr. $15.00 Suitsk 16.50 Suits 18.00 Suits 20.00 Suits 10 $22.50 Suitsj 25.00 Suits 27.50 Suits' 30.00 Suits O t h e 15 20 $32.5(TSuits lt 35.00 Suitsr 37.50 Suits' 40.00 Suits r Specials -and these are Rogers, Peet & Co. anc Hart, Schaffner & Marx suits-Americas best. The sale includes staple blacks and blues as well as fancies. ~ “You’ll have to hurry,” for selling very rapid. Summer Pajamas Lot of $1.50 Shirts Odd Underwear Gordon 50c Suspenders 2 Sc and 3Sc Fancy Sox Copyright 1907 by Htrt Schaffner ii Marx ' at 1-2 Price at 75 cents at 1-2 Price at 25 cents at 3 for 50 cents 50c Rumchunda Silk Four-in-Hands at 25 cents Daniel Bros. Co. L. J. DANIEL, President 45-47-49 Peachtree Street. YOU SHOULD NOT Mils Our Regular August Clearance Sale TRUNKS, BAGS AND SUIT CASES It Mean* Money to You. Come and See for Yourself. PINNACLE TRUNK MFG. CO., 62 PEACHTREE ST. ATLANTA SCHOOL OF TELEGRA PHY OFFERS $70 COURSE FOR $40 A FEW DAYS ONLY THE $55 TELEGRAPHY COURSE AND $15 TOUCH TYPEWRITING COURSE FOR ONLY $40 THIS WEEK. “USURPATION OF POWER IS ACTION OF JUDGE”—WATSON 'Continued from Pag* Three. % of Ita wounded nor buries its dead, quarter'* is its terrible watchword: beside its yearly piles of slaughtered women and children, the bloody harvest of Gettysburg seems Insignificant. And you are to blame for It. coukTha prudent, economical* administration, Inst end of the maddest extravagance and watte In national and atate affairs. But you are going to do better In the future. God grant It! Y “ much worse, if you tried. Yon could not do Well, what are you going to do? Organ* -ie, build warehouses, establish newspa send out tpeakers, fix the price of wha sell, etc. Travel in Circle. All of that aoundi well. But. look here u are fixing the price ol i other fellow la fixing the price of what you buy. How about that? Can be not slide his figures up aa fast ns you slide yours? Plfteen cent* for cotton, and a dollar or two for wheat are refresh ing; all t ).ur price of cotton and wheat? In that case, we move about n good deal, but we don't go anywhere. We are active, but not progressive. Like mules In the old-fash- loned gin. we walk all day, but we don't travel: and. when night comes, onr pnth la lieaten Into a very nice circle, bnt some other fellow has gotten sway with the lint. We are the mules, mighty patient males at that: and we keep going round and round all the days of our lives; anil we are -'bf- **•- ‘ " ** ~ Just ns the mules used to he. As a class, we get just what the mules got—regular feed In return for pulling the machinery which turn* ont wealth for our The Greatest Demand for Telegraph Operators in the History of This Country. The email eum of *40 will buy the *55 Telegraph and Railroad Accounting ('ourae, and tho *15 Touch Typewrit- Ing Course, both combined, at the At- lanta School of Telegraphy during the next few daya. Thla la the young people’s greatest opportunity to learn a profession with in four or five months, at a nominal expense, that will Insure good positions paying from *60 to *100 per month. But It Is Important to be trained at a practical school. The Atlanta School of Telegraphy Is such nn Institution. It has the regular railroad wires run- nlng Into it! Not In course of con struction, but now In operation. Thla feature makes the course worth twice as much as a course given where there are no railroad wires. Then the Touch Typewriting Course adds 100 per cent to the value of the Telegraph Course, and the two coursea. worth *70, ere now given for only *40. But only a limited number will be re ceived at this rate, for the school Is filling rapidly. The great demand at the present time for operators and the requirement of 20,000 or more next March, Is stirring the whole country to action. The Atlanta School of Telegraphy Is run by the long-established Southern Shorthand and Business University, of Atlanta, and this, as everybody knows, is a guaranty of Its being the best. Call or write at once for theee epeclal rates. A. C. Briscoe. Pres., or U W. Arnold, Vice Pres., Stelner-Emery Building, Atlanta, On. Allin Hollingsworth. Allln, the Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L, D. Hollingsworth, died Wed nesday night at the family residence, 352 West North avenue. The body will be sent to Rex, Ga., Thursday after noon, where the funeral service and Interment will take place. Mrs. Nora E. Ingram. Mrs. Nora E. Ingram died Wednes day afternoon at her residence. 111 N'lles street. In Howells Station. She Is survived by her husband. The fu neral arrangements have not been completed. Mrs. Eveline*E. Millar. Mrs. Eveline E. Miller, wife of R. M. MHIer, died Thursday morning at her residence, 27 Tennllle street. The body will be sent to Plowery Branch, Ga., rrlday morning at 7 o’clock. Evelyn Gawdet. The funeral services of Evelyn Gaw. det, the Infant daughter- of Mrs. E. G. Gawdet, who died Wednesday morn ing at a private sanitarium, were con ducted Thunday morning at 10 o’clock In the chapel of Greenberg, Bond & Bloomfield. The Interment was In Westvlew cemetery. Robert Braselton, Jr. Robert Braselton, Jr, the 14-year- old son of Robert Braselton, died on Thursday morning at 2:10 o’clock at the family residence. 92 South Pryor street, after an Illness of ten days. Robert Braselton, his father, has |>cen a member of the Atlanta police depart ment for eighteen years. The funeral services will be conduct, ed Friday morning at 10 o’clock at the residence. Rev. J. D. 8plvey, of Clark- ston. Ga. will officiate. Besides his parents, Robert Is survived by a broth, er and two aunts. The Interment will be In Oakland cemetery. 41o Interest Compounded, Allowed In Our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT On and After J anuary 1,1907 TH E NEAL BANK E. H. THORNTON, President. W. P. MANRY, H. O. CALDWELL, F. M. BEERY, Vice President Cashier. Ass t Cashier. masters. No gin house that was ever built was pat together with a stronger pnrposo to lien eflt the owner of the mutes—hint, and not the mideai-thnn was onr system of class, legislation constructed for the definite pur- pose of enabling the beneficiaries of spe. clnl privilege to get rich nnd stay rich gt Inn will lie like the _ es to enre Ini putting salve nn the sores, never in tho world will our goverami system restore normal and happy condl tlnna to our people until we are given constitutional treatment. We mast remove the aource of the disease. We inusti ilrlt from tho body the canse of the sickness What la the canael It can he summed np In one word; close ... leglslj asked something special, nnd In every caae where the government ana clal privilege. It has been rlly, at the expense of the The government has nothing of Its own to S ve sway; and, thorofore. whan It leg!*. tes In favor of aoms, giving them advan tage! not posaesaed tiy all, there Is some- thing gained liy those who are ftvored nnd lost by those not favorsd. (1). An equitable system of national tax atlon la surely n prime necessity. Have we got It 7 No! An Extravagant Government. One of the moat extravagant governments the world ever saw Is supported In Its wastefulness by a system or national taxa tion which Is almost Incredibly unjust, it does not tax accumnlated wealth. It does sot tax large Incomes. It does not tax vaat landed possessions, gorgeous palaces, mines of silver and gold, or any other form which tangible values take. It does not tax the colossal corporations whose revenues exceed those of the gov srnment Itself. It exnets no tribute from Insurance companies, eiprcss companies, banking companies, telegraph and tele- —id and “ "" phone companiea, railroad Pullman car la pay the tax when we buy the necea- I tlra nf life; and under each a system the ch pay than the poor. A more Infamously unfair arrangement never hail the respectable name of law. (2). A sound financial system Is certain ly another absolute necessity. Have we got It? No! The money of the constitution la no longer good money. Those who favor s restoration of the system of Jefferson Hamilton, Washington. Jackson nnd lien, ton are railed "cranka.” Who ealla no that? Why. the spokesmen and writers who represent the organised bankers. These gentlemen asanre ns that gold Is the only good money for tlnsl payment; that paper money la dishonest, cheap and nasty when Issued by the government, bnt nice ami clean and correct when issued ' themselves. Furthermore, that the government sets lastly nnd wisely when It taxes a hundred million dollars surplus ont of the pockets of the people, and given It to s few pet ‘ inkers to nse In fhelr business. The Farmers’ Union could not do better than to plant themselves on tits “money nf the conttltntlon" ss their demand; and ness « ctpl*. ‘Kuna! and asset Justice to all men” ap plies to every relation existing between the governments^.he g^. Have we got It? We have already seen bow tba exploiters of the facial privilege have mafia laws to thetr own advantage, with ruinous consequence* to the unprivl- k TUat tba Farmers' Union will combat by Philadelphia, Aur. 22.—In a bold holdup, as coolly carried out aa If had occurred on an unprotected road, William H. Hicks, aged 27, paymaster for the Scffaum & Uhlinger textile works, at Second street and Olenwood avenue, waa robbed of $6,000 yesterday afternoon and shot In the arm by one of the three bantUts. Hicks pulled a gun and showed light. As he did so. a pistol shot rang out and he fell with a bullet in hli left arm. Another highwayman Joined the two, one grabbed the valise and ran, each taking a different direction. In his effort to avoid capture the fei< low with tho bag dropped it. Both were captured. The Family Physician. 014 Dr. Riggers, in the shape of h!a Huckleberry Cordial has been the family physician of many a home all over this country, where he has enred so many bow el troublea and children teething. Dysen tery. Diarrhoea and Flux. Sold by all Druggist*, 26 and 60e bottle. resolution and vote the Injustice of our protective system there can be no doubt. Their own self-preaervation demands It. Not until you get broader markets will your products command better prices. Not until you wage war upon # the wall-builders and breach those walls will you have broad er markets. Not until you make an en trance for the stranger who wants to com pete with the wall builders can. you prevent tboso robbers from running up the price of what you buy, to offset any advance of price to what yon sell. Out of many more matters that might be discussed, I will select but one more. It Is the matter of public utilities. That which la essentially public In Ita nature * •-- - * * “ pub —i we . . ownership of our main atreta. we nre willing to re spect the owner's rights to the private road through hla place, but we can not allow private ownership of the public rond. You may own the creek, but not the navigable river. The boat Is wine, but the deei water lake heloftga to us all. The ship yours, but the ocean belongs to mankind. In this day of marvelous development along certain Unea we have got things mixed. Individuals like Harrlman and Mor- f an and Gould are In conrrol of public ntlll- les—such as railroads, telegraphs and tele* J hones. All these public utilities must be airly assessed, honestly paid for. and taken over by the public for the use of us all on equal terms. witness the break-down of private owner- shir “* “■ *■"—**"" * * rail government, nnd nearly all the others are defying the states. The president la trying to bring the Harrlman crowd Into respect for the law, while n number of Houthen governors are trying to enforce utea which the oath of office bl to enforce. Federal Interference. To add to the confusion, Attorney-General Bonaparte virtually threatens the atatea with federal coercion. Whatever else may be said, It la clear that the gravity of the situation reveals the dangers of private ownership of public utility. These railroads nre nothing more nor less than public roads. Like the navigable river, a railroad sbonld belong to the pub lic. It Is bound to come to thnt. Thq high- headed action of Judges Pritchard and Jones, backed up by the threatening atti tude of Mr. Bonaparte, simply hastens the day when that which Is Caesar's ahall be rendered unto Cneanr. Whoever wrote the threatening note of Attorney-General Bonaparte Is mors of a corporation partisan than lawyer. The statement that the federal govern ment will support the federal Judges In all matters where they have "regularly taken lurledlctlon" commits the administration far upport of the papers showed Jurisdiction of the case. I think I know the henrt of President Roosevelt ns well ns anybody doest nnd my opinion Is that he will not hesitate a mo- ment when the test conies to re— bumptious Bonaparte and bis t ■traction of constltntlnnal law. A* old as the bills Is the adnge, "The aov- erelgn Is not to be sued, save by his own teenth amendment to the constitution—nut there by ttie states after Chief Justice Marshall In the ease of Chisholm vs. the state of Georgia had taken Jurisdiction of the suit of nn Individual against a state. What Marshall did In the Chisholm case, directly, these usurping judges, Pritchard and Jones, are now doing by Indirection. If Bonaparte backs them up he will be violating the thirteenth amendment, just aa those usurping Judges nre doing. In Virginia Prltehard actually enjoined tho corporation's commission from exercis ing a legislative function. Suppose an Kngllsh court seeking to en join parliament from action upon a given piece of legislation, nnd you will have tbo measure or Pritchard's usurpation. Let ns devoutly pray thnt the Farmera' — uraxlnr ' * Union will i : In strength, until demands of the agricultural classes In such a way that congress ran not resist them. After all, these demands reduce themselves to the simple determination to save our selves from legalised robbery. "To keep what belongs to ns, to reap where we hnvo sown, to peacefully enjoy the frulta of our owu labor’—these are the modern to wishes of the organised farmers. Yet, to get that much and nothing more, each alterations will have to be umde In onr national system as will almost amount to a revolution. Ro fnr has class legisla tion gone, so deep baa special privilege sunk Its roots, that it will require years of tho most patient. Intelligent and conr- ;eous effort to even make a good begin- Ing. But, first of a!!, organise. Let every far mer go Into the Union. Forget your past differences. Forget old feuds. Let the dead past bury its dead. For the sake of Illwrty, _ mntry, nnlte. For the sal and good government, unite. thing — * It till you ger it. ... a land where the 1 vat Ion Is also free. Free for Good government Is yours without price If yon will but rise up and give It to your selves. MEN’S DAY Friday In ths Furnishings:— and Half-a-Day Saturday ... SICK HEADACHE Poemvct* Cuncn 8r Theic Li tux Fill*. Djrapeil* rellored. Constipation aroMed, Bowel* regulated. DO pain, no grlplo,. 8MALL PILL. SMALL DOSB. SMALL PRIOR, £ 751 Ladle* beat Pillow *Bhrin noMen. | Great, np to date Inrentlon. Pinnae L moat perilenlar bonirwlTcs. Satirise- j tlon riarantnxl. 2> ,r»t, three act, ca. £i Meh’s Athletic Neck Shirts, Swiss ribhed lisls, with or without slssves. 50 cents Shirts, At 36c Men’s Athlstic Neck Shirts in silk lisle, with or without slesves, Swiss ribbed, elastic, *cooI garment. 75c Shirts, a thin, Rsgular At 53c Scriven Drawers Men’s Scrivcn Drawers of sturdy bleached drill, with elastic seams and web ankles, price.. .60c, 75c, 1.00 Men’s Seeks Men’s fast black, medium or gauze lislo Socks. Double heel, toe and sole. Pair 25c Men’s real Maco Cotton Socks, with white split sole. Double heel, toe and sole. Pair 25c Men’s navy blue, brown and dark red lisle thread Socks, with double heel, toe and sole •....25c Negligee Shirts Men’s White Negligees, plaited bos oms. The famous “Broadway." With attached cuffs. Price 1.00 Suspenders Mefl’s Guyot Suspenders, the genuine, in neat patterns and good colors.. .50c > Mens Egyptian lisle thread Undershirts, with ankls lehgth drawsrs to match. In odd sizes. Regular 75c undsrwsar. At 59c Men’s Scrivsn, Elastic Seam khee length Drawers. The regular 75c quality, At 50c Men’s Uhioh Suits with ath- Mens checksd Nainssok, full letic neck, short sleevss, ankls cut khse^ Drawers, finished with length. Fins white bleach'd pearl buttons and hahd-worked lisle. 1.50 Uhisn Suits, At 98c buttonholes. 50c garments, At 39c lies Men’s Wash Ties in white, with self and black iigurcs. 25c Tics...».. .19c Men’s Silk Batswing Ties, in neat Rumchunda Silks 25c and 50c Night Shirts Men’s Night Shirts in soft Sheer Nain sook. Trimmed or plain; full wide and long 1.00 Men’s Muslin Night Shirts, without - collar; odd sizes 50c Men’s soft Cambric Night Shirts; trimmed or plain, without collar.. .75c Pai ajamas Men’s soft light-weight Nainsook Pa jamas, neatly trimmed with finishing braid, price 2.00 ajamas Men’s fine mercerized, soft Nainsook Pajamas, with pearl buttons; colors, pink, light blue and white; price. .3.00 Chamberlin-Johnson-DuBoss Co.