Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, December 03, 1907, Image 15

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at N THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TBERDAT. PRCnMnr.R ». 15 FOR sale-real estate. j£, L. THROWER. splendid LITTLE COTTAGE j of five rooms, on South p.venuo, for $2,100> three hundred cash w d balance $18 per month. TW 0 ALMOST NEW FIVE- room cottages, on Jones avenue, for $1 600 each; $100 cash and bal ance like rent, TWO SPLENDIDLY BUILT SIX- room cottages, on Simpson St.; price $2,000 each; $200 cash and balance $20 per month. What do you expect for your money t These houses rent readily for $20 per month. M. L. THROWER, 59 N. FORSYTH STREET. FOR SALE—REAL ESTATE. W. E. WORLEY, Real Estate and Loans. 415-16 Empire Bldg. IE ESCAPE FIVE ACRES JUST TWO MILES FROM the city, one-fourth mile from the car line. All cleared. Ju«t a pick up at $600. FORTY ACRES OF LAND NEAR PACE S Ferry Road; good land Had a mnnll bouse, lot of fruit tree#. Price la $700; worth $1,000. NINETY-ONE ACRES NEAR OAKLAND City. #lx mile# from Atlanta; good rich lend. Thirty acres cleared. 8lxty-one acres In good timber, almoct enough ta pay for it. Price reduced to $40 per acre; one-third cash. — 7H ACRES AT EAST LAKE, REDUCED now to $560; get bu»y. 1,007 feet of road front on this. WATCH FOR MY SUBDIVISION ON Ponce DeLeon nve Plata ready and «nle ■tart# Decern Iter 1. Some big, fine corner#. W. E. WORLEY. Twenty-Five Charred Bodies Brought out:. g L. 0. Smith Visible H.M. ASHE CO. Dealers/ We have 200 of our competitors' mi- I Chinee, some almost new, tor eale ‘ •heap. WOCKWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOft O STATISTICS. OOMCKWOtOlMOmOOliOl^ c Q PROPERTY TRANSFERS. $12—U. Welmer to J. M. Couch, lot In Fulton county. Warranty deed. 21,800—Mrs. n. T. Chapman to Mrs. F. F. Rogers, lot In Fulton county. War. ranty deed. 12.500— J. H„ Joseph and Henry Hlrsch and M. L. Blckart. executors of Morris Hlrscb, to A. R. Payne, lot on North avenue. Loan deed. * 110—Georgia Industrial Realty Com pany to Southern Railway Company, lot on Decatur street. Quitclaim deed. 14.000— Mrs. E. J. Mitchell to T. C. Mayson, B. B. Watkins, J. M. Davis, T. H. Meacham. J. W. Warner, T. C. Car ter and W. St. Lampkln, lot on .McDan iel street. Deed. 12.500— Union Congregational Taber nacle to Congregational Church Build ing Society, lot on McDaniel street. Loon mortgage. J2.500—Union Congregational Taber nacle to Congregational Church Build- In* Society, lot on McDaniel street. Grant mortgage. 1200—S. B. Turman and H. R. Tur man to W. R. Dorman, lot on Lake- wood avenue. Warranty deed. $225—/. w. Dourman to Mrs. F. Su- her, lot on Whlteford avenue. Warran. ty title deed. >225—J. H. Dourman to Mrs* F. Su per, lot on Whlteford avenue. Wararn- ty title deed. $260—C. E., A. E. and George Dour man and .Mrs. C. A. Adderhold, lot on Hhlteford avenue. Warranty title BUILDING PERMITS. 1100—R, SI. Gann, 528 Marietta street, to repair dwelling. 22,500—Pittman Hayes Company', 182 Park avenue, to build dwelling. 23,000—Pittman Hayes Company, 186 Perk avenue, to build dwelling. 3100—Sira, SI. A. Goldin. 750 Ma- mtta street, to re-cover house. $2,500—W. T. Crouch, 344 Myrtle to build dwelling. 13.250 j. b. Daniel, 325 Ponce D®- .°, n “ venup - 10 build dwelling. 33.250—J. B. Daniel. 82# Ponce De- Leon avenue, to build dwelling. 2..600—George Mau,- 123 Cooper ••oeaL to build dwelling. , , . 00 !!; -Armour Packing Company, , Alabama street, to make Inside alteration*. 1150-aty of Atlanta, 363 East Hunt- tng* trW1, t0 rn,8e ftnd under P |n dwell- ON OPENING DA! Public Galleries Filled to Hear Reading of Mes sage. Washington, Dec. 3.—While the re served gnllerle* were not so crowded today when the house of representa tives met as they were yesterday, the public galleries were filled with per sons anxious to hear the reading of the president's message. Even more mem. bers were present than yesterday. A full senate today heard the read ing of the minutes of the opening day without the omission of a wprd. Sen ator-elect Johnson, of Alabama, was sworn In. messenger from the house an nounced the organization of that body, then Chairman Allison was Appointed to wait upon the president. He report ed his mission had been performed and Immediately thereafter Assistant*Sec retary Lntta, the president's messenger, presented the message and a moment later Its reading was begun. Belle Vernon, Pa., Dec. -2.—No man escaped alive to tell the tale of hor ror of the Naomi mine, shattered by Sunday night's explosion. Heroic res cuers have penetrated Into the further most recesses of the workings and have found the charred remains of twenty-five workmen. Before the end of today all the victims of the disas ter, between forty and fifty, It Is hoped, will be removed from the mine and the horrifying task of Identifying the dead begun. STHBlili To the General Public This company desires to furnish the very- best of service. To this end we ask your co-operation. We very much desire a friend ly spirit of mutual effort for the betterment of the service we furnish. If you have any complaint to make, any suggestion to offer concerning the service, we want the benefit pf it. If there is any rule we enforce which does not meet with your approval—if you know a rule to benefit the service which we have not adopted— please let us know it. % Washes DEATH8. \.:£ nr . y . w,,e > r ’ c °lor*d, age 35, died at McDaniel street crossing, aui t, w«^! ur<,en * colored, age 7 day#, died at 32 F ortune street. WILL CLOSE SALOONS ... .. ON CHRISTMAS DAY. Imttnnooga, Tenn., Dec. 3.—Every m »n In the city, save two. has I.C. " ,l “P er not to open hie sa- Iwn» on < hrlrtmaa day. This action 2m..- 1n , take n. It Is said, without con- umnit the exclae board, which has ^ne control of the saloons of this city TRAIN TURNS UIL „, ENGINEER IS KILLED Montgomery, Ala.. Dee. 3.—Kastlmund pas* senger train on tho Southern railway turned over wbeu It struck an obstruction near STnrlnu Inst night nml Engineer Little was killed. Ill#* flrpuutn was fatnlly Injured. No vnMongers wore hurt. There were “ mors that w “ - *' wreckers, trail. Tremendous Sea Over Decks of Mount < Temple. Halifax. Dec. 3.—Six hundred and thirty passengers and a crew of 54 had a remarkable escape from death w hen the Pacific steamship Mount Temple, bound from Antwerp to St. John, N. B., struck* on the rocks of LaHave Iron Bound Island. Although they were in great peril for many hours and sub jected to the exposure of the cold, not one of them wn* lost. The Mount Temple went on the reef while a terrific snow storm raged. The snow was so thick that It was Impos sible to see half a length ahead. The liner went miles out of .her course. As she grounded a tremendous sea washed over her decks, smashing the boats and leaving only half of them fit for r~rvlce, but no boat could have lived in that sea anyway.' Captain Boothby determined to try landing the passengers by a basket rigged by a breeches buoy from the ship's rail to the top of the cliff. A brave crew’ manned one ot the boats and with superhuman efforts at last succeeded In getting a cable from the ship to the shore at the foot of the cliff. Hour after hour this work went on and when the saven hours had passed the 630 men, women and chil dren and crew of 64 were on the Island. GEORGIA RAILWAY THE ATLANTA GAS & ELECTRIC CO. LIGHT COMPANY TAFT SAILS FOR Czar of Russia Will Receive Secretary of War on Tuesday. NOT GUILTY VERDICT IN BRADLEY CASE Continued from Pago One. St. Petersburg, Dec. 3.—Secretary of War Taft Is due to arrive here today, when the czar will receive him In au dience. Tomorrow M. Iavotsky, minis ter of foreign affairs, will give a din ner In Ills honor. He will leave for Hamburg, where he Is to embark on Thursday. Mr#. Taft Growing Weak. Worcester, Mass., Dec. 3.—The latest bulletin on the condition of Mrs. Louisa Taft Is that she Is failing and probably will not survive the week. : on tbe New York, Dec. 3.—President Perelvnl 8. Hill In tbe course of tbe beurlng yester day In tbe case of tbe United Htate# ugnlust tbe American Tobacco Company, before United State# Coiumltnloner .Shield# as ref- , irnld that uny jobber cau get tbe goods of the American Tobacco Company direct, except In ^iew York city, and that the American Tobacco Company I# willing to MUppty any Jobber hi any other city who enu p«y for the good# lie order#. An allowance, averaging 5 per cent, wit less anld, whb paid all Jobliera for auy in- TeHMc In the sale of American Tobacco Company's product#. * A Fortunate Texan. Mr. E. W. Goodloe, of 107 St. LouU street, Dallas, Tex., says; "In the past year I have become acquainted with Dr. King’s New Life Pil!s,\and no laxa tive I ever before tried so effectually disposes of malaria and biliousness." They don’t grind nor gripe. 25c, at all drug store#. 8 BUCKETS GOLD TOR CONVENTION Chicago. Dec. 3.—Eight buckets of gold were carried by thfe Colomdo delegation which is on its way to Washington to cap ture the uext Democratic cwrentlou for Denver. Tlie gold coin, $103,030, wna left In safe deposit vault while the committee took In the "fat stock »hmv/’ . The Cblrugo committee will assure the national committee that tho alterations In the eotlseum will enable It to scut 14,0001 larger appropriations for agricultural l,e preskient Thomas I\ Knight #ald: "Chi- igiKwIU not try to buy the convention. Kansas City I* regarded us Cblcugo a most formidable rival. BIG PEABODY FUND Governor Hoke Smith will leave at noon Wednesday for Washington to attend the National Elvers and Har bors Congress, which meets there Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Governor Smith will deliver nn ad dress on either Thursday or Friday, his remai | needs of Improvement: On pext Monday Governor Smith will go from Washington to New York tft attend a meeting of the Peabody board there Tuesday nnd Wednesday. He will return to Atlanta a week from Thursday. It la not Improbable that this will be the final meeting of the board, as the plan for a final distribution of the Inal sum Is contemplated. Since the Income from this amount haa been UL-ed for aiding school*. *It I* now con templated by the board to make a final distribution of the $2,500,000, thus winding up tho work of the board and the necessity for Its further existence. This Idea may not be carried out Juat yet, hut It seems more than probable. While in Washington Governor Smith will seek to aid the state In two or three pending matters. one Is for Aatunpes New Position. special iu lut* ijcurgiuu. randier, Uu., Dec. 3.—R. C. Simmons, a prominent citizen of tuts county, nus assumed his new duties as manager for the firm of Webb Brothers here. schools and another to secure the Con federate rolls in the war department at a reasonable figure. Killing Over Politics. Taylor, Miss., Dec. 3.—H. E. Grave, r marsh«l of this town, last night shot and killed J. W. Debter. The men had been bitter political opponents, and Debter la alleged to have been talking about Grave when the shooting occur red. some In morbid curiosity, eat with bated breath. Mrs. Bradley Pallid. In her chair, her form bent, her face pallid, her bosom heaving, sat the cen tral figure In one of the most dismal dramas ever portrayed upon life's great stage. ' It was the fragile figure of An nie M. Bradley. Not the vigorous wom an of halcyon days, when she charmed with her brilliant Intellect and capti vated with her beauty—but the Annie Bradley of today, a woman aged be fore her time, a shrinking, pitiful, deso late shadow of her former self. At last the little acts of court for mality were over. Clerk Hawkins opened the verdict. Clearly, deliber ately. but with a peculiar tremor In his voice, he read the words, "We the Jury find the defendant, Annie M. Bradley, L.it gMllty." Sighs of Relief. There was a stir, a hundred sighs ot relief nnd then for a momenfthe same breathless silence reigned. There came a semblnnce of Impending ap plause. interrupted by loud rapping# by the court bailiffs to quell the dem onstration In Its very beginning. Again quiet, a few more formalities, the dis charge of the Jury, with the thanks of the court for n duty well doi»e, 4 and the preparations for the adjournment of court. Mrs. Bradley scarcely realized that the Jury had ruled in her favor. When asked about her plans for the future, she first sold: Her Futur^ Uncertain. "Why,'I have not thought about nhat I should do. Tho present seemed no appallingly absorbing that I had hardly looked ahead. Each day has been full of Its sorrows and each hour of Its suffering that it seemed a# If my neart would break, under tho weight. '"But one has no conception of what, the brain nnd body can stand when put it) the test. Before the trial I thought I never could go through with it—and then I had no conception of what It would bring. Then the strength came, tut at timesTi was hard—oh, so terri bly hard! Returns to Salt Lake. "I shall go back to Balt Lake—back to the place nnd the people who knew me," said Mrs. Bradley. "It wll be bo much easier out there where evoryone knows me than staying here or going to some strange place where only one side of the story has been told. "My conscience harts me no mutter l ow many truths they tell about me. I have heard all they have said and I accept my past. But It is the little kindnesses, the little acts of helpfulness and understanding which go to my heart and pierce It to the roots. I have tried to change—oh, so many times, and I have wanted to change. Put It seemed to me that I nan always chained—always chained. It’s the first step, the first step that turns one cither Aiaeisment a-m. izc.ane ii. h. Ass’n. Death Mrs. J. It. BeverljrM 57 8. Pryor 8L Par " 49 8. Pryor 81., by 1 BANKRUPT SALE. In re A. N. Jenkins A Scott Co. In accordance with an order of the linn- ©ruble P. II. Adams, referee. I, the under signed receiver, will offer for sale la \he office of P. II. Adams, referee. 613 Pruden tial building, December 7. at 10 a. m., tbe following property, to wit: Book#, office furniture nnd, fixtures, flies nnd flnng cabi nets, list of accounts and list of agents, and the good will of the bunfnes# hereto fore kunwn a# the business of A. N. Jen- kin* A Scott Co. Accounts aggregate some $8,000. face value: stock of liooka Involve ap proximately $4,000 with office furniture nnd fixture# of tbe value of $1,000. An examina tion of the Inventory and ot the property may lie had upon application to the under signed. RAILWAY SCHEDULES Showing the Arrival and Departure of Pas senger Trains of the Following Roads, Subject to Typographical Errora. GRAND PAUL GILMORE IN THE NEW COMEDY, THE WHEEL OF LOVE Nlfht 25c to »L50. M.tlnr. 2Sc to $1.0). Friday and Saturday N.xt—Mat. 8at. The Klrke La Shell, Co. Present -“THE VIRGINIAN”— —WITH— W.S.HART FRANK CAMPEAU And Notable Associate Players. Night 25e to $1.50—Matinee 25c to $1.00. THE BIJOU MATINEE TODAY—TONIGHT. THE SENSATIONAL MUSICAL 8UCCE8S “WINE, WOMEN and SONG” Barrow Will Assist. Albany, N. Y., Dec. *.—For tho pur pose of ndmlnlaterlng the trust created by Anna T. Jeanes to Booker T. Wash ington nnd Hollis Burke Frlssel, of the $1,000,000 endowmej fund, known as the fund for rudimentary training choohf fir Southern negroes.” article* of association were filed with the'aec- _ retary of state of the "Negro Rural to the right or to the left, and after .School Fund." David C. Barrow, of that all things cotne, oh, ao easily and > A then*, Ga., was selected as one of the so relentlessly." | trustee*. ipfi.nitiau oiAiiu.x, No. Arrive from— So. Depart to— •42 Weat Pt.. 8:15 am 35 N. 0 6:20 am x44 Weat Pt. 10:30 am 19 Columbus.. 6:10 am 18 rolmnbui.il :15 am S3 Jlont*m'y. 9:40 am 38 N. 0 12:00 n o 39 N. 0 2 '* 40 N. 0 2:00 pm 17 I'nlumlma. 20 4'nltimbna 7:80 pm 41 Weat Pt, 34 Montfm'jr 8:85 |im|37 N. O 26 N. 0 11:53 prol Trnlna nmrkr.i • run dolly except Sunday. Trains marked tbna x rim Sunday only, oilier trnlna rnn dally. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY. Arrive From- I Depart To- Snvnnnnh .... 0.50nml.\l«con 11.40pm ‘ "aeon 9.0) urn .neon 4.00 pni lacksonvllle.,. 8.10 pm vanuah .... 9.15 pm MUSTPOSTDEUYED IRIS CORRECTS In n letter prepared by tbe rsllroad com mission, wblnb will be sent out to the head officials of every railroad In the state, at tention Is on find to the law ORPHEUM THE BEST OF VAUDEVILLE. Grace Leonard; Zaretsky Troupe; Van Brothers and Eight Feature Acte. Matinees every day except Monday. Phones Bell 3146; Atlan ta 1754. Uptown ticket offlcea, So da Fount Jacobs' Pharmacy; Kim ball News Stand. Children free at Matinees If with paid grown-upa. int'IitM to be accurate. > state. THIS ENTIRE ,WEEK (By Desire) Present Season Positively Ends Sat urday Next. Performances at 3 and 8 Dally. Adults 25c. Children 15c. Death at Covington. Covington. Ga., Dec. I.—Lost night Mra. A. A. Hopkins died at her home In North Covington after a lingering Illness. Mrs. Hopkins was the wife ot Dr. Hopklna, one of the leading den tists of this Spctlon. Besides her hus band. Mrs. Hop! children. tiopklns leaves two small Body Sent to Talbotton. Columbus, |a„ Dec. 3.—Tho body of W. T. Claiborne, who waa found dead at his home In the eaatern part of tho city yesterday, was taken to Talbot ton, his former home, where the fu neral and Interment took place. . 5 Scholarships at Cox College —to be given away by The Georgian in its Subscription Contest. These Scholarships entitle the young ladies who win them to the full literary course beginning in the fall of 1908—for whatever grade pupil may stand examination. , There are 94 Prizes to be given away—among which are $1,000 in Gold; one $2,000 Automobile, one $650 Runabout, tv. -uty trips to Cuba, twenty Dixie Business College Scholarships—stenographic or commercial—five Musical Scholarships at Klindworth Conservatory of Music, covering 36 weeks; five complete Scholarships in Cox College, College Park; fifteen Solitaire Diamonds, to be seen at Schaull St May’s, and fifteen Gold Watches, to be seen at Crankshaw’s; ten Kingsbury Upright Pianos, $350 each, from Cable Piano Co., and one Grand Piano. WHY WE DO THIS. , * n »" 'P«P«r with a aubscrtptlon lint the nine of The Georgian spends >nh.—i ;? al of ,,m * and money each year collecting and renewing Itn . t onr ' Experience hoslhown that the une of npeclal prizes and the n»«. . me I lt expertn to do thin work In a wine inventment from a busl- „etandpolnt. We simply contract with an expert who knows the man- „ these things an the engineer known his engine. We have th» r ,r i 0lBc * In The Georgian building. In which to conduct in A? r .. a lar ** force of assistants will conduct the contest and person- i. * i almost every home In Georgia. The Georgian and News Is maln- »rh«- i f or ** a Paper—It goes some to other states, but not nearly so much as sis r SH*™ < '°- We do not try to get circulation much outside of Oeor- ,, making It a homo paper. This opportunity Is superior to ““•* given here before, because the wealth of prises which x. - on Lbeen equaled are to be divided to Atlanta and Georgia alone, mu.?*. have told our. readers, the advertiser, who pays three times as oln.i«.i^?* rd i he «*pense of newspapers ss the raader pays, needs large these ■!£?* ,0 brtn * him customers. So newspapers can afford to give v,rti..Hr uc -! n ® nt * (tom time to time for the benefits they bring their ad- add « * °* or gl*n Is going to 30,00# homes now. and we expect to srv Ta 1 " T * *° ,en thousiuid more before this contest ends In Febru- nen, *°' c * 1 led prises are genuine and will be exhibited In promi se f oon - The Georgian does not simply give them away—for ouUs' h?. u 5? *" return—but the one who wins the prise need make no thisgivraf'r’jf^ ** k n' r frlend * *° take ’ rt, e Georgian and use tbe votes