Newspaper Page Text
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CITY OF THE GREAT KING
By REV DR. JAMES W. LEE,
Pastor Trinity Methodist Church
N O one can ever forget the moment
when, for the flret time, ho beholds
- the walls and towers and minaret*
Jerusalem. The feeling* called up by
* vision of the Holy City can not be
ipresaed in words. A prince, who I
** afterwards king of Auatrla, upon
rrtvJng within 100 yards of the Jaffa
Ite, asked the driver of hie carriage to
fop. When the door was opened, he
•me forth and upon hi* knee* made
|l way Into the city of David. Some
fc'h Impulse seizes every one, of depth
[ feeling, when arriving before the
tile of that sacred center of rellg-
a BeiatjHo above all other cltfe* on
irth, Jerusalem stands for the relit*
mis element In human nature.
Hun has always felt that he was
mre than the beasts that perleh, and
6rusalem Is the perpetual witness to
lie intensity of this feeling. Inland,
ft'-d up. rock-bound and rock-under-
Irncd. Jerusalem, by all the pinnacle*
hu* have pierced the heaven* from
itr temples, churches, mosques; by
I! the wars that have raged around
m devoted ‘ Inhabitants; by all the
>|ood that ho* reddened her etreeta,
md by nil the prayers and hymns from
he love of her saints, has perpetually
olred man's undying belief In Ood,
nd the necessity he wa* under to love
tnd serve Him. No city haa been «o
>ften pillaged. So often demolished; yet
hr smoke had hardly ceased to go
p from her flre-awept ruins before
er people began to replace her pal-
res and to rebuild her walla. By
uma, the nations surrounding her
•me up and emptied upon her devoted
rad nil the resources of relentless
orv. but amid It all and In spite of
all, thl* city of the conscience con
tinued to weep and wall and alng songs
and wrtto prophecy and offer sacri
fices. Her sufferings have made her
great and have turned the very stone*
of her streets Into objects of affec
tion. For thousands of year* human
Ups have been wearing away the
etonee of Jerusalem with their kisses.
Jerusalem Is a small city, and has
never been largo, but ft ma had more
Influence upon the thought und senti
ment and conduct of the human race
than any other. Jerusalem hn« never
had any commercial Importance. Its
only trade consists of the symbols and
Objects of affection* such as mother-of-
pearl croeses, and carvings of the Sa
vior's face; flowers Croat the Holy
Fields ovtr whore »< res walked the
blessed feet nailed for our advantage
on the hitter cross; olive-wood stamps
and paper weights, and DfotifK - of
S laces connected with the Savior's Ktfs,
trosaltm Is on unworldly city and
ministers to the lofty and holy In man,
and stands for the eternal In human
nature. Jerusalem Is the only
city on earth where every kind
of money Is current—Greek money,
French money, Italian money.
German money, American money,
Egyptian money, Hindoo money, ana
every other sort of money Is good, for
to the city of David the tribes of all
the earth continue to go up; there
they all find welcome. Jerusalem Is
»»-'■ .-itv of mun, and enjoys the dis
tinction of being the only city the Son
f Man ever wept over. The walls sur
rounding the city contain 40 feet of
human history. For 4,000 years, Jeru
salem has been the altar, the confes
sional, the mourners' bench Of the hu
man race. This 1ms been the place
where human nature has meditated.
repented and aspired; here the Infinite,
the undying ana spiritual in inan have
expressed them*elve* In the melody of
*ong and the Importunity of ceaseless
prayer; here the currents which drift
toward God In human nature have
come to shore; heie their swell and
sweep have lifted themselves Into the
psalms of David, the prophecies of Isa
iah and the wallings of Jeremiah.
The place has an Infinite charm for
poor, brnpted, frail humanity, because
here Is the spot where One of our
own flesh and blood first conquered the
world, the flesh and the devil; here
virtue and honor and purity and holi
ness and tenderness and pity and sym
pathy and charity were enthroned and
Invested with the prestige that conies
from succeeding. They failed at Athens
In Hocrates, hut they triumphed In
Jerusalem In J*aua Christ. Human na
ture was dignified and ennobled by the
success of Christ at Jerusalem. He
showed what man can be and do.
Jerusalem Is Many Cities, Built One
Upon Another.
There Is the Jerusalem of Melchlze-
dek, living In his devotion, standing
serene and beautiful above the storms
and clouds and ' hanging fortunes of
time. There la the Jerusalem of the
Jebualtes, anchored forever to the
threshing floor of Araunah. There Is
the Jerusalem of David, with Its pal
aces in song, Its trees In song. Its
Mount of Olives In song, perpetually
holding Its place in the unending pulsa
tions of divine music, refreshing the
ear and charming the hearts of the
saints of all ages. There Is the Jerusa
lem of Solomon, with Its temple cov-
REV. DR. JAME8 W. LEE.
ered with gold, gleaming under sun of
the deep Syrian sky throughout all
time. There Is the Jerusalem of Nehe-
mlah, built with a weapon of warfare
In one hand, and an Implement of In
dustry In the other, appealing to the
strenuous of all ages. There Is the
Jerusalem of Isaiah, breathing In
prophecy nnd falling In tears, but ris
ing In aspirations jhat are never to
pass nway.
There is the Jerusalem of Jeremiah,
changing ^Ith the fader.**-.- *f hi- -ad
and mournful poem, but eternal!) f.\**d
In the walling and the tears of the
prophet that God raised up to tell His
native city of her sins. There Is the
Jerusalem of our Saviour, with Its
temple. Its palace of Herod, Its Garden
of Gethsernane and its Mount Calvary,
permanent in the New Testament
Scriptures. There Is the Jerusalem of
Titus, with Its raging fire and moulder
ing ruins still burning and smoking In
the glowing periods of the historian
Josephus. And then there Is the Jeru
salem of the crusaders, with its songs
and gallant knights living " today In
Tasso’s verse, and loved today ad In
the time of Peter the Hermit.
.11. i - , •
If we are to have any rational con
ception of universal h!*tory, f we must
study It from Jerusalem. Condorcet
said that* had Xerxes been .Victorious
at Salamls, we might still he bar
barians, and Gibbon remarked that but
for Charles Martel's victory, Moham
medan doctors might today be teach
ing the Koran at the University of Dx
ford; and Pascal went so far as to de
clare that if the hose of Cleopatra had
been shorter, the whole face of the
earth would have been changed. What
ever may bo our estimate of the fancies
of these great men, It*!* beyond quesd
tlon that had It not been for Jerusa
lem and the transactions which took
place within her walls, human history
ns we know It had not been. The Ini
tial stages of the great consummation
I toward which all human activity moves
were inaugurated In Jerusalem.
in.
It Is to this City of the Great King
r that the countries around the Medi
terranean Sea owe their charm and In
terest. Among the great cities of the
past It was humble ^ In position and
small In extent. To the west of her
stretched Egypt, like a green ribbon
for two thousand miles, producing
enough wheat every- y««r to teed haI *
the world. Under the very shadow of
her mountains lay 'Tyre and Sldon,
crowding with their ships every market
under the sun. To the east of her was
Babylon, dazzling and corrupting the
nations with her wealth. Somewhat
further away on the west, was Athens,
seated on her throne of hills by the sea,
a queen of beauty, attracting students
of the world by her art and learning.
More distant still was Rome, embracing
by her arms of war all the peoples of
the globe. Surrounded by cities strong,
rich and Imperious, Jerusalem seem
ingly had small chance for a career.
Alexandria could rely upon her corn,
Tyre upon her purple dye, Babylon
upon her wealth, Athens upon her
beauty, and Rome upon her legions,
but What had poor, rock-encompassed
Jerusalem to rely on, os a reason for
existence, or & future of Influence. With
her patches of environing soil held by
terraces to her hills, with her narrow
valleys hardly sufficient to produce
bread for her people, with no army
and no power, how could this weak
mountain town hold up'her head and
compete for a place In the history of
the world? While the cities about her
were augmenting their .wealth and In
creasing their domlnnions and whiten
ing the sens with their ships of trade
and Ailing the world with the din of
tfielr battles; the people of Jerusalem
were writing poetry, chronicling their
spiritual hopes, uttering their prayers
and reading from the Interior depths
I of their souls the literature of Heaven
I ns God breathed It Into the spirits of
I her Inspired men. Now, In this far-off
time, after the empires have passed,
after the tumult of battle has ceased,
after the temples have fallen, after
the forms In which material civiliza
tions clothed themselves have vanished,
we And alone remaining, to bring us
news of the countries long gone, like
a forgotten dream, the prayers and
chronicles and visions and dreams of
a poor Hebrew people, who had faith
In their day to trust In God and to
consecrate their lives to His service. If
some Hebrew dreamers had not been
taken captive from Jerusalem to Baby
lon. the very name of that vast empire
had doubtless passed from the memor
ies of men, Had not the Jews, by the
exigencies of fortune come Into rela
tions with Egypt, interest in that won
derful land might never have been re
vived. St. Paul, cruclfled with the
Christ, who died on the cross In Jeru
salem. preached a sermon on Mar’s
Hill, that has done more to conserve
the beauty lying by Its side than all
other things put together. Jerusalem's
title to Immortality Is due not to any
thing external, hut to the devout, b»*nu
tlful. Interior lives of her saints. Their
prayers have preserved the perfume of
her flowers, and their sacrifices and
sufferings have made her gates gleam
with the radiance of Heaven.
DEA TH OF ROOSEVELT
IS PLAN OF NIHILISTS;
PRISONER TELLS PLOT
GENERALIOLEDO'SMEN
INVADE GUATEMALA
ly Private Leased Wire.
Mexico City, June *.—Private tele
gram. from Salvadore ahnw that Gen-
Toledo I, now well within the
euthern part of Guatemala with i,000
rail armed men end abundant unmu
llljp
rerotutlonleti are receiving an
ibundtin, • nf armi and have well-Mled
heft.. The revolution la far from
etna era,had. There la much enthusl-
the revolutionary aide and
Ilarrlle. I, reported moving on
Ith largely Increased force,.
hneralI
Ice. will
Russians in Portland,
Oregon, Vote to
Assassinate.
BLAYER OF M'KINLEY
IS LAUDED BY THEM
trip to Washington to Carry Out
Harder of President Arranged
by Members of Band.
fe Private Leased Wire.
^Portland, Ore, June 2.—A plot among.
I, I®* g«‘ party **f Kunlun nihilists hi
Rla city to assassinate President Roose-
Vlt, has been discovered through the
^reat of a Pole charged with assault-
if arvfiul of the Russians.
The plotters. It Is learned, have been
alt log to get enough money together
t icml a IJiirty to Washington to nc-
•mpll.h the deed.
Detective, on the case havq learned
te outlines of the plot. The 1’ole tuh!
Mm he \vn. threatened with-death, by
le Kue.iimh nnd the court dliclinrised
bellow countrymen of the Pole-told
« police or the meetlnga of tha nihil*
it, no-l their plotting,.
CaotgoH, who killed Prealdant Me-
Intey, ho, been lauded by them ae a
tie patriot.
PATTERSON WINS
THE NOMINATION
SETTLEMENT WORK
IS lEIKJUIIED
"FREE KINDERGARTEN AND 80
CIAL SETTLEMENT AS80CIA
TION" WANTS CHARTER.
ADMITTED TO BAIL
WERE SIXTEEN MEN
8pcclal to The Georgian.
Nashville, Tann., June 2.—Tha atate
Democratic convention held In thle city
haa coma to a cloee after the etormle,t
«e,«lon In th« history of the atate,
Malcolm R. Patterson, of Memphla,
representative In congress from the
Tenth district, was nominated for gov
amor, no other name being presented
The nomination cornea after four days
of tha stormiest stats political gather
nig In the history of Tennessee, and
after a campaign mads notable by the
bitterness and personal nature of the
contest between Mr. Patterson and
Governor John I. Cox, Incumbent.
Between the Patterson and Cox
forces the feeling was at whits heat
when the convention asaembled laat
Tuesday. Turmoil and strife, end even
oersonsl encounters marked the open-
ng aeaslona, and for four daya and
nights ths turbulence continued while
the battle for supremacy was waged
fiercely.
When tha convention reassembled at
o'clock Horace II. Palmer wa. In-
Stull,-.1 u, 1-eriminrtit vliulrinnn, and
only Patterson', name wa, presented
He was nominated on a viva voce vote.
Much enthusiasm prevailed.
At lilt n. m.. on ths sixth ballot,
Harvey H. Hannah wa, nominated for
railroad commissioner and the conven
tlon adjourned sine die.
ATLANTA RECEIVES FIRST
CAR OF WATERMELONS
IN FREIGHT WRECK
peclal to The Georgian.
Jacksonville, Fla.. June I.—An At-
gtlc Coast l.lne freight was wracked
lar Newberry early thla morning.
Conductor Henry Mallard was killed.
I leaves a w ife and an Infant eon re-
ling near liete
The cause of the wreck It unknown.
• eoooaooo'oooooooao
0
WHEREBY MR. MARBURY
HITS IT JUST RIGHT.
. Who would have thought It?
MTIdty morning the sun was
•emlng down with fervor,
sky wns almost undecked by
'• and not even the most
Vtrtc of corns gave wnrn-
l ' k uproachlng rain, ltut the
-nan predicted rain be-
t yet glay- A lot of-folk.
the prediction, but
"Cvne all right, one-
»,!*%ch of It.
ornlng. with the
-tth dark lowering
The V«her man re-
Tbla dcsptctlnn by surmls-
up peopler Saturday night
he hits It off so
„ .-an congratulate
It Mr^ lhr taulh 0 „
ate be m‘ Thomases, who
„ mats as Cassan-
Setx
even hatmperature Friday, O
tfnlmum Saturday, O
O
The first car of watermelons to
reach. Atlanta wa, received yesterday
by J. J. linrnea-Faln Co., of No. J7
South Broad street. , ,
Although this Rrm stands amonr the
youngest business houses In ths city,
they ore by no means In tha rear when
It come, to getting shipments of pro-
duce nnd fruits, and as a proof of their
hustling qualities they are ths first to
receive it car'of watermelons on this
market this season, and will have no
trouble In disposing of them at fair
prices, aa the demand for this article
always meets with ready sale on tha
Atlanta market.
This car nf melons left Gardner,
Fla., May II, and waa grown and
shipped by Messrs. Fussell A Roberts,
thereby giving them the honor of plac
Ing the first car nf melons on ths At
Isnta market this season.
dr Saturday night O
5 000000900
$500.00.
The above reward will be paid
for such evidence rs -will lead to
arreat and conviction of the party
or parties who maliciously cut a
number of wires on cable pole at
corner of Peachtree and Seventh
streets, during Wednesday night,
April 19, or Thursday morning,
April 20.
A like reward will be paid for
such evidence as will lead to the
arrest and conviction of any per
son or persons maliciously inter
fering with or destroying the
property of this company, at any
point
Southern Bell Telephone and
Telegraph Company,
°|J. EPPS BROWN,
General Manager*
An organisation that will be known
i the -Free Kindergarten and Bo'-
dal Settlement," which will have for
Ite mission ths establishment of kin
dergartens and the amelioration of the
condition of the poor of Atlanta, !m*
applied to the superior court of Ful
ton county for a Charter.
The petitioners who will undertake
ths settlement work are welt known
Atlantans. They sre V. H. Krelg-
shaber, J. M. Alexander, Monroe L.
Blckart, Dr. David Marx and Dr. B.
Wlldauer. The organisation asks that
It be Incorporated for twenty years
and that permtslson to buy and sel
land and all ths other usual preroga
lives of such corporations be grant
ed It.
8!aton A Phillips represent the pe
titioners.
CIVIL MR STATISTICS
WOULD COST $71611
To get Juet the mort Important eta
tlstlca of Georgia companies In the
Confederacy from the United States
war department In Washington v/lll
cost this state $7,080, very nearly as
much as the entire work of compiling
the Confederate records has cost
date.
When ths roster committee Inquired
as to ths cost of securing the rolls of
some IS companies from the wax de-
:mcnt, the staggering sum of $11,-
wae named. That frightened the
committee so badly that It cut down
the estimate to tne more Important
facts wanted, and with fear and trem
bling asked how much that Information
would cost. They expected figures
around tl.SOO to $1,100. Whsn tha re
ply came back to Governor Terrell Sat
urday that this work would be done
for the very reasonable figure of $7,0(0
the governor came near fainting.
The mater committee will meet next
Wednesday, when thla latest develop
ment will be discussed. They haven't
anything like that much money
id on thle work, end If the' rolls
J are secured an appropriation will
have to be granted by the legislature.
Governor Terrell Is of ths opinion
that ths cost of doing this work Is
much too high.
THREE ARE KILLED
GY EALLING ORE
FOURTH ESCAPED WITHOUT
BEING INJURED.
Were Walking Up Slope When
Part of the Mine Roof
Caved In.
Special to The Georgian.
Birmingham, Ala., June !.—Three
miners, Lewis Cross Ktl Jonas and
Henry Lindsay, ware killed by falling
ore and rock In the Woodward ore
mines here early today.
The negroes were walking up the
■lope when a part of the roof gave way.
A fourth miner was with them, but
escaped death.
10 YEARS FOR YEATIS
IN THE PENITENTIARY
Special to The Georgian.
Balnbrldge, Go, June (.—Argument
In the Teates case dosed last night at
t$:tO o'clock and the Judge charged the
Jury.
They remained eut all night and at
:4S o’clock today returned a verdict
of voluntar.- manslaughter.
The Judge sentenced Teates to the
penitentiary for ten years. There Is
some talk of trying for a new trial.
Teates took the verdict herd, aa be
was expecting an acquittal.
Special to The Georgian.
Charlotte, N. C. June 2.—The sixteen
men who were arrested on a charge of
participating In the mob at Wadesboro,
which It I, alleged lynched Johnson
last Monday morning, were- admitted
to ball yesterday evening after a pre
liminary hearing before Judge Neal, of
the superior court.
The bonds were fixed at $6,000 each,
and were readily given.
The "probable grounds” were estab
lished upon ths evidence of Miss Alice
Boggan, daughter of the sheriff, who
was In the Jail when \e mob entered;
Sheriff lloggan, H. D. Kendall. H. D.
Kendall, Jr., Walter Meeks and J._ L.
Pratt; The two Kendalls turned state's
evidence.
Thirty years ago I
made my first public
appearance at the
Centennial Exposition
at Philadelphia. I was
a stranger then.
People took away
specimens of my writ-
in g as curiosities.
Today everybody
knows me and these
specimens fill the mail
cars.
Every one of my
thirty years has been
a year, of progress—
both in quality and
sales. The year 1906
is emphasizing my
supremacy—my sale:
for the first quarter
breaking all existing
records.
Today I am the
oldest and still the
newest. Not that I
was first am I best,
but that I am best am
I first. I am the pro
duct of the second
generation of Rem
ington artisanshipu
My New Models rep
resent the experience
of the old combined
with the progressive-
ncss of the new. In
my present form I
embody all the quali
ties which have made
me famous—plus im
provements so funda
mental as to create a
nev standard of type- ,
writer work.
Remington Typewriter
New York and Everywhere
>■ ■ ..1^1
PROPERTY VALUES
AS THEY INCREASED
Advance sheets of the comptroller
general's annual report for liOrf show
the Increases aa distributed in prop
erty values over the year of 1904.
The total Increaao appearing on the
tax digests la $27,789,009, but to thla
must be added the railroad and other
corporation values, which do not ap
pear on the digests. These show an
Increase over 1904 of $9,199,61$, bring
ing the total taxable valuation of In-
creaee of 1905 over 1904 up to $38,-
946.627.
Georgia’s total appearing on the tax
digests for 1904 .was $467,031,279, to
which le to be added railroad and oth
er corporation values of $72,688,476.
For 1906 the figures dn the tax digests
show $464,920,283, while the special
corporations are $83,019,994.
Some few comparisons will show how
this huge Increase In wealth le dis
tributed. Value of improved lands In
1904, $132,342,897; 1906, 1142,721.776.
City and Improved property, 1904,
9135,740,104; 1905, 9143.728,407. Bank
shares and surplus, 1904, 318,471,827;
1905, 220.693.226. Merchandise. 1904,
327,906,861; 1905, $30,276,095. Manu
facturing, 1904. $26,626,991; 1905, $18,-
997.348. Horses, mules, and cattle,
1904, $27,865,243: 1905, $32,863,474.
For 1906 there were 209,460 White
voters paying boll tax, 115,373 blacks.
There were 1.863 lawyers, 2,409 doctors,
440 dentists, 22 veterinary surgeons, 36
architects, 43 civil and mechanical en
gineers, 298 presidents of corporations,
and 10 superintendents of same. Only
15 professional men defaulted. The di
gests show 31,668,176 acres of Improved
lands In 1905'.
WARRANTS TAKEN
FOR BUSINESS MEN
BIRMINGHAM CITIZENS CHARGE
BRICK COMBINE IS MAIN
TAINED.
font* r*yrboln*tc*l Society, Robert Rr.r*n
H«rrl*on. pre*Tdeot. meet* orenr Rtindajr
nfternoon at 3:J0 o'clock at V& Peachtree*
Subject for tomorrow, •’Paycbolonr
Ontlmlaro." Ten mlnnte talk bjr ad-
red thinker*. Thirty mlnnte* inualcnl
program under direction Professor Wa
r. Clrace, the blind pianist. Visitors
always welcome to this school.
NOTES FROM LABOR WORLD.
Plans are under way at Minneapolis
for the forinalton of a Consumers’
League, the main object of which will
be to combine the purchasing power
of organized labor.
According to a decision handed down
recently by Justice Blshoff In the New
York supreme court, union wages must
prevail when the city Is an employer.
A picturesque fight 1* In progress at
South Bend, Ind., between the Amal
gamated Association of Street Railway
Employees of America and the South
Bend Railway Company. For two
years the union ha* tried to compel
the railway authorities to recognize
their organization. Now the union Is
running twenty automobiles, which
were purchased especially for that pur-
ppse, In the streets of South Bend, In
opposition to the trolley cars.
For the past flve years the trades and
labor assembly of Springfield. Ohio, has
sustained with great success one of
the largest university extension lec
ture centers which Is conducted under
the auspices of the University of Chi
cago.
The telegraphers’ eight-hour law in
Maryland goes Into effect today.
A number of ministers In Birming
ham. Ala.,. It is announced, will soon
become members of the Birmingham
Trades Council.
Thus far this year the recent strike
at Winnipeg, Man., has been the only
one In which the Amalgamated Asso
ciation of Street and Electric Railway
Employees of America has engaged.
The International Association of
Marble Workers, which has a member
ship extending over a large part of the
t'nitf'l St:11f• -s -inti «';,n; : .:.i win meet
In annual convention .next week at
Chicago.
It is said that the new movement to
organize the farmers Is meeting with
much encouragement and that there
are already 500,000 members in the
Southwest.
ARE YOU GOING AWAY?
If go, have The Georgian mailed to
you. Mailed to city subscriber, while
away from home for the summer
months at the regular rate of ten cents
a week—no charge for malllnr. Sent
to any address In the United States or
Panada. Foreign postnge extra..
Special to The Georgian:
Birmingham, Ala., June 2.—Accord
Ing to warrant* eworn out today for
the arrest of four of Birmingham’s
well-krtown cltlxena, Alderman John
R. Copeland and T. H. Sima and Wal
ter L. Robertson and Z. T. Mosely,
there It a brick combine In Jefferson
county. The warrant, were sworn out
by M. G. Smith, a man who claims to
have been Injured by the alleged com
bine, and are returnable before the
criminal court.
All four of the men are charged with
rmlng pool, or combination, to re
lat, tha quantity and price of br
while a second warrant waa luued for
Mr. Copeland, charging him with com
bining to control corporations with
regard to the price or production of
brick. —-
According to the attorneys In the
cue, a number of prominent men will
called on u witnesses, and It le
said startling disclosures may be
made.
118 Peachtree St., Atlanta.
GEORGE ROBERT DIED
EARLY THIS MORNING
George, the eleven-months old son
of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Robert, of 240
Peeples street, West End, died this
morning at' M0 o'clock at the home
of . his parents after an Illness of four
months, with pneumonia. The death
was particularly sad, aa tha little fel
low was the only child. The funeral
arrangements hare not been com
pleted, but will be published In the
morning papers. Tbs Interment will
probably be In West View.
Mr. Robert it manager of the local
branch of the American Baptist Pub
lication Society. He la a young man
with many friends who sympathise
with him and Mrs. Robert.
AD AMERICANS MASSACRED.. ..
DISASTER THROWS STOCK
OF MINE ON MARKET
By Private Leased Wire.
New York, June 3.—The market
opened fully ten minutes before the
hour on the curb In one stock, Greene
Copper.
The dtauter at the mines of that
impany wu the cause of thousands
■hares being thrown on the mar
ket, which broke.the price from 261-4
to 24 S-t. The selling wu In large
blocks, snd what little supporting or
ders came In failed to have any ef
fect. Greene quoted 24 1 -24134 3-*;
United 63 8-49641-2; Boston 271-1
038 1-4; Mackay 74 7-1071,
TELEPHONE
VISITS
Talks over the telephone with friends at
home or far away arc practically the same
as personal visits. The home equipped with
a Bell telephone can enjoy this pleasure.
With extension- sets you can talk from up-
’ stairs or downstairs.
Bell Service Is Satisfactory.
The Rates Are Reasonable.
Call Contract Department, Main 1300.
1
Southern Bell Telephone
and Telegraph Co.
fir
PAINT YOUR HOUSE
LET
US
with test WNITI llAD AMD OIL He rtadj.iritedpainlt uted. Oar naterUI will latt double tbe flat
tad attest cost. It job need A / TERMS CASH D fl ROY R7^
paiett let ut figure *ltb joj l>l V-F W • OR CREDIT. I* U. DO* Dips
Ladies’ Phaetons,
Light Surrles,
Bike Buggies,
Home-made Harness,
Riding Saddles.
Real Runabouts, .
Rubber Tires,
Banner Buggies, ,
Balster Springs, ‘
Work Wagons, Ete.
Front New Depot. E. D. CRANE & CO. 44 & 46 Madison Ave.
j
NOTICE TU CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
We now hjve In operation the largest and best equipped Cement
8tone Plant In the South. We make a full line of building stone, window
and door sllla, lentels, columns, pillars, steps and brick.
Mr. P. Pelegrenl, the oldest and most efllclsnt stone worker In -At
lanta, Is In -charge of our ornamental and special work department.
Estimates made on all clause of buildings, walls, etc.
Atlanta Concrete Manufacturing & Construction Co„
No. 53o Edge wood Avenue. (On the Bridge).