The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, October 25, 1906, Image 2

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. TiirnsriAT. or-ronEn 3. im. II. S. CRUISER DENVER ROBBED OF SILVER Duel May Be Fought by Cuban Editor and ' Alondoso, HUNDREDS OF VETERANS A I I ENDING DEDICA IION OF ILLINOIS MONUMENT 'HavaMs.'dit.' 25.--A^ has been caused by the flUoY'Pearaq<-e from the rnilscr Denver 'of -Jour silver gob lets forth big part Of lh» sorvtdeMf plate presented; to. the vessel by fhe city of 1 If-nveiv The , goblets ..'cere evidently stolen at the 'reception given last night on board the wgrsliip. Tile Denver sail ed this luofnlint," - ■ . it isf rumored fer-i .duel v-m be fought-bv Selior Mendosa. a Member of the AvsuAjainentc, njid Renoi; llnsernor Alonsru o /writer on .El iMOndo, which liaper attacked Mendosa on account of the telephone concession which Mendt db was accused of delending Illegally. FAIRBANKS SPEAKS ; FOB CONGRESSIONAL Sp**<»lal to The Georgian. Little Itoek, Ark., Oct. 25,-For the first tine in the history of Arkansas, a vice president of the United "States has dellr* efed speeches In a Congressional district In thla state In tiehalf of a ltepnbllcan nonii dw for congress. Vice President Pnlrhnnks nrrlred nt . Inc from tho rear platform of his car «t nil stations between those points. He Is the gnest of George Tllles, the ltepubllcati nominee for congress In the Fourth die trlct. He closed his rsmnslgn In the die trlct Inst night st Fort HinTtli. where 1k made his twelfth speech of the day. « The Fourth district Is the one that has l»fen represented the past fourteen years ;'l trlct Is Ben H. Craven*. When President Uonoerelt was here In October he told the Republican leaders that lie deal red ‘that st httat-one Republican congressman ' should im elected from Arkansas this year,. and they promised If given asstafknee one should be sent from the Fourth Strict. Three weeks ago. Secretary Leslie M. Shaw made four speeches In the district. The Republican t'ongresslonsl committee Is lending ctcry assistance possible In the campaign for the Republican nominee. Special to The Georgian. Vicksburg, Miss., Oct, 26.—Special trains today brought hundreds of veterans and other visitor* from lUluois to attend the dedication bt the $200,000 temple-monument erected In the National park to the mem ory of thgJIUuolf soldiers who fought and fell lu tJmK Wstoftc siege of Vicksburg. Governor f>ento*n and other official repre sentutires of Illinois, the members of the state commission, amt the First regiment, Illltiols national guard, of Chicago, among the arrivals. Governor Vnrdntnnn, of Mississippi, nod Governor .Blanchard, Louisiana, with many veterans of the two states, have accepted invitation* to partici pate In the ceremonies. L The exercises or the week open with a ■* ’* tonight. * memo- place. public reception to the visitors I Tomorrow the grand parade to the rial ami the dedication will take ph . .. thousand or more soldiers will be lu the procession. The oration of the day Is to lie delivered by the lion. William .1. Cal houn. of Chicago. On Saturday, there will be tin inspection of the Illinois, mar kern and monuments scattered throughout the military park, and n Joint camp Are of Union and Confederate soldiers will be held In the pavilion of the Country Club Ju the e veulng. Costliest War Memorial. The Illinois monument la one of tbo handsomest and costliest war memorials ever erected In the United Htafes. It Is In the form of a rotunda or circular teifir pie, and bears considerable resemblance to the Grant memorial In New York city. . Thee temple la. hearty f) feet In diameter, < ami from the base to tb# top of the dome I I the height f* ti feet. The entrance It I through a Tetrastjle Doric portico S3 feet wide and projecting 14V& feet on the south facade of the temple. .The pod I men t Is supported by' four faimesat columns. Tl fact* of the pediment is ornamented, wli a sculptured group representing History enrolling the names of the Illinois sol dier* and 'sailors who took /part lu the great campaign anil siege from March 29 to July 4, 1*63. On the frieze la Inscribed. In raised lettera the word ••Illinois.’ Around the exterior of the temple engraved In bold letters the well-known phrase of Lincoln’s Inaugural: “With mal ice toward none, with charity for nil; and the last phrase In . General Grant's fare well order to the army; “Let us have IM Tbe Interior walla are covered with ,ronae tablets bearing the names of nil the Illlnola soldiers who took part In the siege. Immediately above this large panel Is Inscribed the name of Abraham Lincoln, and Immediately underneath Is this name of Richard Yates, the war governortof Il linois. On the right Is the name W I lyases S. Grout, and to the left that of General John A. Logan. Picturesque Site. The site of the temple Is ope of the most conspicuous and commanding lu the mill tary park.. It Is upon a small knoll on the north side of the Jackson highway, few hundred feet from the iblrltf resl- nee. which during the slece was known as tho “white house. *1 and- is within 80 rods of the strongest pf the ponfederate de fense*. kuown .during'the siege! a& loft Hill. Upon the same site wsa. located during' the siege the - fflmous McAlljpter II- BEGGAR USED NAME OF ASSOCIATION IN RAISING CASH Associated Charities Forced I to Make Arrest of Vagrant. $3,000 PAINT STOCK AT COST. For the next 30 day* we are offering our entire atock of painta at ACTUAL C08T. The stock It complete in every detail, and conalats of the leading branda of White Lead*, Ready Mixed Paints, Varnishes, 8talna, Enamels, Colors, Brushes, Painters’Supplies, Roof Paints, Etc. These goods must go! We are compelled to get rid of them to make room for our mammoth 1907 stock of Wall Paper. WILLIS WALL PAPER CO GOING TO TUNNEL BEHRING STRAIT < Trenton, N. J.. OcL 26.—’The Trans- Plherlan Railroad Company, which alma to tunnel Behring strait,, was In corporated here with IS,000,000 capital. The railroad line will run from Kansk Station, on the Trans-Siberian rail road, to (Jape Prince of Walee, Seward Peninsula, the Alaskan .terminal. ' HYPNOTISM 18 BLAMED - BY DE8ERTED GIRL.WIFE. -Mias Anna Kline, FOUR PERSONS TO SAVE New York, Oct. 25.—One thousand pieces of skin taken from four persons will save the life of Mrs. William Rus sell, of Tarrytown, sister-in-law of Coroner Russell, who, while camping at the Thousand Islands, was horribly GIVE SKIN WOMAN'S LIFE * v " ‘ ' /• h : - a burned by a gasoline stove. Mrs. Russell had to remain In camp suffering untold agony, without the at tention of a physician; two days: The skin Is being taken from her husband, •on, Coroner Russell and her physician, Dr. Falclle. FEDERAL CONTROL OF ROADS OPPOSEDB Y‘CITIZEN' GOULD Bt. I,ouls, - Mo., Oct‘ 25.—“If ths gov- eenment. beUevef^tt uatt manage our railroads better' thAn we can,” sold George J. Gould In' an Interview, “and It wishes to operate them, I have no ob jection to selling our property. I would sell to the government as willingly as lo an Individual or company, were the lines to be disposed of, though ours are good properties and not on the market now. That Is how I, as a railroad man, feel In regard to the public ownership of ciFrters. > "But. as a private citizen," he contin ued. "1 am opposed lo the public own ership suggestion. The - government could not manage the properties suc cessfully. Private capital and enter prise Is better equipped than the gov ernment for directing railroads. "Public ownership, or government ownership as It Is more properly called In countries having a different politi cal origin, Is not the success In Europe that some Americans believe It to be. In fact, .government ownership Is n failure Hi Europe." , LUCIUS TOLD WEIRD TALE; GOT TEfl YEARS ANYWAY St. I.ouls, Oct. 26.' f pretty trained nurse, met a stranger Ivlng the name of John C. Crocker, nt lashvllle. Ills., through n matrimonial advertisement, and married him. deserted her, after obtaining 12,000 of her money. She now believes she was lured Into matrimony by some hypnotic power of the swindler. Miss Kline was heir to part of an •state of I-ewlston, Pa., and drew part of her Inheritance from a Philadelphia bank to give It to Crocker. The accomplishments of Ananias and the imagination of Baron Mun chausen have been surpassed. The testimony of a negro named Luclns Pace In Judge Roan’s court Wednes day eclipsed all records. Pace waa on trial for the robbing of the house of a negro named George Underwood, north of Atlanta, 'a few weeks ago, and with shooting a boy named Will Culbert', who Uvea with the latter. The testimony showed that the prisoner had entered the house, stolen a bottle of whisky, after break ing open a trunk with a flat iron, had shot the Culbert boy, who tried to stop him, and had later been captured and turned over to the police by Under wood. '. t When Pace went on the stand to Did You Ever Know How It feels to be perfectly well? Perfectly wall means a lot. Not an Ache, all or protest of any kind from body or mind. The Heaven of perfect polee when the life forces drWe rich, strong red blood through the veins find DU one with an Indefinable Joy, when nature and all the world seems to be sending caresses to you. Then tbe sky Is beautiful whether It be gray or a deep restful-'eternity- reaching blue or covered with softly moulded, round bosomed clouda lastly floating about and tbe breeze Is kind and sweet whether It smooth your cheek with the soft touch of the wo man who lovea you or energetically fills your lungs with tbe strong tonic of life. ' \- ■ Trees nod, tbe fallen leave* frisk about In fairy grace, flowecS smile and spnd their fragrance and every friend you meet seems a warm hearted broth er reaching out tor companionship. Perhaps an open Ore beckons, beside which tabby purrs out her soft song of peace. Harmony from every side greets fhe harmony within and there steals over one from head to foot the subtle, sensuous tingle of warm new blood, the perfect poise of a well-fed nervous system. All this Is absolute evidence that the possessor has been fed right and should stick to that kind of food and habits which have produced the result. The facts stand forth and the conclu sions are certain. If trouble, distress and Inharmony fill tbe days and blot out the rightful peace every human be ing has . right to change the food. It your present method of feeding makes Imperfect cells and falls to build the soft gray matter In brain and nerve centres scattered over the body, look alive, Quit tbe old diet and take on a new and better one. That’s plain common sense. Right then la the exact time to quit coffee absolutely sad select meela wisely. Suppose you try for breakfast, A little fruit. A dish of Grape-Nuts and cream, Two aoft-botled eggs, A cup of Postum Food Coffee. Step at that, It will carry you easily until the midday meal, which can be either n lunch of the same things (If a dinner Is expected at night) or the heavy meal can be taken «t midday. Take only one heavy meal In a day In addition to the two light ones. At tbe heavy meal have one good meat course, with one or two vegeta bles, and a rich, aweet Grape-Nuts pudding. After a few day* on these meals a change for -the better will come over tbe body In practically ev ery case where the disease has not become too firmly flxeil and chronic. Remember health la a matter of wisely selected food and a harmoni ous mind. It will be a tremendous help to read the little book, ’The Road to WeltvHle." found In pkgs. of Postum and Grape-Nuts. Thera’s a Reason” and a pro found one. 1 * i testify In hlk’ bi-n behalf ho had- the benefit of 'a plea of not guilty, but when hi* lawyer heard hie weird tale he withdrew ‘the plea and allowed his client to get a sentence of ten years without further ado. Pace led elf his memorized testi mony, which he treated after the man ner of a school boy dealing with nn Ill-remembered declamation, with the statement that Underwood was "grand rascal,” and had set fire to hts (Pace’s) house. How did he know? Because Underwood didn’t love him as much as some people did. In explaining haw the Culbert boy got allot, the prisoner said the boy had stolen something from the house him self and hnd requested him (Paee) to kindly shoot In his direction as he ran, and that he "accidentally shot ths kid In the stomach." But In telling liow he won captured, he told a tale which would have made the Spanish Inquisition seem prompted by the ralllt of human kindness. Not only did he have twelve or thirteen pistols'shoved In hts face arid get about that many, commands to pray, but he was compelled, so he said, to get down on his knees In the woods and eat dirt a la "mumble de peg." Not only Is all this contradicted by other and more reputable witnesses, but the county officers have pretty good evidence that the house that was burned was set on fire by Pace htm- self after being packed with install ment-plan furniture jin which he hud made no payments. It has even been proven that he stole the pistol with which he shot the Culbert. boy. chargeHns J. C. Logan, sec re tary •’of the Asso elated Charities, was placed in the rath er unique position of haVIng'to have beggar arrested Wednesday, Instead of meeting his wants, as la the custom with the institution, which he repre sents. It happened In this way: Mrs. Ellen Stovall, who gives Her home as Chattanooga, went around the streets to the different stores of the city Wednesday begging for money for the expressed purpose of getting to her brother In Savannah. On the petition fur aid, which she handed around, Was the statement that the Associated .Charities was Instru mental In securing half-fare tickets for her and her husband. One.who saw thla and fefc an Interest In the chart ties, called up Mr. Logan, and told him about It. He, of course, stated that the Associated Charities had not heard of the woman or tbe petition before. Shortly after Mrs. Stovall came tq Mr. Logan's office. She Bail had a new petition drawn up, In which her par ticular appeal to the charitably In- ell* of Atlanta was the great misfor- tune of her husband, who had consump tion, chills and a broken arm—that's all. She said her husband was at the Farmers' Exchange, hotel, on Decatur street. Mr. Logan started to the hotel to Investigate.. When Mr. Logan and Mrs. Stovall arrived r,t the Patera bulldlng-the hero.of that pathetic pe tition waa standing at the entrance, waiting for the return of the latter. Stovall Was taken to a physician and thoroughly examined. Despite the fact that the bones seemed a little rusty from lack of uae, and there was some doubt as to whether hla heart was In the Tight place, the physician declared that Sto'- vall waa In the pink of condition. Mr. Logan had. the man arrested fof vagrancy. He. says If It Is true, that Mrs. Stovall bos a brother In Savannah nnd he can help them, the Associated charities Will send-both to Savarinah. SEARCHING FOR PAL OF ACTRESS' SLATER SOUTHERN MARKET Chicago, Oct. 25.—Leonard Leopold, Implicated by the confession of How ard E. Nicholas In the murder of Mrs Leslie, the actress, Is believed to be In hiding at BiiAau, Ilia.' Information from there reached th# police yesterday that Leopold left the city on Monday, nearly five days after the murder in the Palace hotel, and went to Bureau, where he visited the home of M. J. Welch, formerly a drug gist In Whlcago, Tor whom Leopold had worked. Leopold and Welch went hunting on Tuesday. Upon being questioned by Welch, Leopold Immediately disappear* ed ahd has not been seen In that vl-‘ clnlty since. However, the police are scouring the country thereabouts, 000O000000000O000000000000 D ONE DAY IN JAIL 0 0 FOR KILLING A MAN. 0 O 0 O Chatham, Va.. Oct. 25.—in Pitt- O 0 sylvanla circuit court today, John 0 0 Little, charged with killing G. C.'O 0 .Tankersley, was convicted of aa- 0 0 eault and battery, Aped 6100 and O O sentenced to one day In lall. o 0 0 00000000000000000000000000 Piles. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. POSTUM DesMolnes, la., Oct. 25.—Governor Cummins Is charged in an open let ter with having proposed to tbe lead ers of the Democratic party that If they would prevent Claude R. Porter from running for governor and Induce him to be a candidate for congress against Representative Hepburn, In the Eighth district, that he and hla friends would see that Porter was elected. The same .terms, according to the letter, were offered If the Democrats would retiirn General J. B. Weaver In the Sixth district against Representa tive Lacey, and Judge Martin J. Wade In the Second district against Repre sentative A. S.' Dawson. 000O0000000000000000O00000 O O 0 HE FIND8 L08T COIN 0 0 AFTER SIXTY-FIVE YEARS. O O O O Attlee, lnd., Oct. 25.—Just be- O O fore leaving hla home, Frank 0 O Bookwalter, a millionaire, of 0 O Springfield, Ohio, then about 6 O O years old, lost a coin which his 0 0 grandfather had given him. One 0 O of his first acts upon returning to O O hts home in this,place after an ab- 0 O sence ef (5 years, waa to search 0 O for ths coin. It was found unde.- O 0 the stone steps In front- of the O 0 house with one slue black and the O 0 other side untarnished. O 000000000000^0000000000000 Suffered for 23 Year*—Tried Every thing Without Avail—'‘Pyramids'’ Doing the Work. A Trial Package Mailed Free to All. The rectum, like the mouth. Is lined with that soft, satiny .material known as mucous membrane. Piles Is a dis ease of that membrane, and the blood vessels that lie under It. Fissure and Fistula affect the same membrane and belong to the same family. Pyramid Pile Cure slipped Into the bowel, melt and spread them- Mlves over the diseased and painful surface and act Juat aa a selva would if the trouble waa on the outside of the body and could be easily seen and gotten at. The Immediate relief they give even In the most agonising cases wtll'startle you, as It tins already startled many thousands of "doubting Thomases” be fore you. who have tried everything nnd sent for the sample package, firmly convinced that they would again ' disappointed. But they weren't. Pyramid Pile Cure don't disappoint. . They cure. They are for sale at alt druggists at 51) cents a box -and are worth an even hundred to the person who needs them. , "This Is to certify that I have used three 50c boxes of Pyramid Pile Cure and It has benefited me more than any other pile remedy I have ever used. I used the sample which you sent me. together with the three 50c boxes, and I am so much better, hut not entirely cured, as my case Is one of twenty- three years' standing. I did not expect to be cured all at once. I had almost lost all hope of ever getting nny rem edy that would help me until I tried Pyramid Pile Cure. I believe they will entirely cure me If I continue their use, which I Intend doing ao long ns I can get the money .to pay for them. I do. not think any one ever suffered very much more than I have at times. Then 1 .wdBld be so nervous I could not get any ease In any position I could place myself. I can not express my gratitude for the good your medicine has done me. I will continue to tell my friends of their merit. Yours, Emma' Bodenha- mer, Bedford, lnd." or If you wont to prove this matter at our exiiense. before purchasing, send your name and address to the Pyramid Drug Company. 55 Pyramid Building. Marshall, Michigan, end receive e trial package free by return malL 54 N. Broad St. Bell Phone 3441. . Atlanta Phone 276. SEVEN ARE INJURED ON TROLLEY LINE Several of Those Hurt at Chicago Expected To Die. TAKES DROP OF 40G FEET; NOT EVEN A BONE BROKEN Pottsvllfe, Pa., Oct. 25.—Gosslppo Schroeder, of Pottsvllle, fell 600 feet down an abandoned mine hole, but was rescued alive, after he had been vir tually abandoned.'' ' r When he waa examined It was found Schroeder did not even have a bone broken. It Is the most extraordinary escape known In the history of anthra. cite mining. . Chicago, oct. 25.—The Inevitable ‘bad rail" waa responsible last night for Another street ’ car jcolllslch. Ir which seven persons were seriously In Jured. Two of them may die. The injured are: John Carroll, nose broken and cut on head. Celle Denert, both arms badly cut and Injured about neck and shoulders. Josephine Mclnerney, left arm cut and Injured Internally. Mrs. Ethel McDowell, left arm cut and Injured Internally. James O'Donnell, hands cut and body head and arms and thrown 4 lnto Bub bly creek when cars struck, rescued with difficulty. Charles Stadtman, cut on head and body and Injured Internally. Stadtman and Mrs. McDowell are the moat seri ously Injured. Pale Delicate Women and Girls. The Old Standard, Drove's Tastelts* Chill Tonic, drives out malaria anil builds up the system. Sold by all dealers for. 27 years. ""Ice 50 cents. T GET SQUARE DEAL, TREY CHARGE Sped*! to The Q<torglan. Knoxville, Tenm., Oct. 25.—T. 8. McMa nuo, until recently general auperlntendent of the Southern railroad, *wa* tbe chief wltneaa lief ore the Investigating commit tee, luqurfng Into the relation* of the Southern railway to the coni producer* yea tehfny, nnd hit taatlmony proved to be tbe feature of thejMtalon. Mr. McManna resigned hla position on Oc* tober 1 to take active management of tba Sterling and Winona coal mines. In tbo hllddleaboro district, It will be remembered that the Southern recently acquired the Virginia and Booth- western, tapping the eoal fields In this dis trict. He testified that he owned atock In cer tain Mlddlethoro coal companies, .wbll* Southern railway. He said be resign* poattlou paying him 91,000 per year to taka n place paying 16,000. Thla, be aald, was because lil« family waa sick much of tha time In Washington, and he hlpiaelf threatened with n physical breakdown, has moved.hts family to Knoxville. He denlra be Is, or expected to be, gtL officer of the Mnurfng coal exchange, say ing he considers the Kterllng mine prop erty n splendid Investment, and w*IU oper ate It. lie mts he owns fifty shares of Hterllng Coal Company stock, for which le paid cash, or Its equivalent, nnd that t wna a bona-fide sale. He also swore he owued one hundred shares of WInoua Coal Company stock, paring $3,000 therefor, - par value of which la $10,w)0. Many Complaints Made, Numerous complaints were made of un fairness or discrimination In the furnish ing of cars to Jelllco operators by tbs Southern and the Louisville and Nashville railroads. Witness complained that before the main line of the l.milarllle and Nash ville was opened Into Knoxville and At lanta, that edmpany refused to furnish' cars for use to Southern markets on the Southern railway line*. The alleged ra- fuwli Af the Bonthern Railway Company nud of tbe LouhiyUle and Nashville ndl- — ... accommoda tions lu IxOUlavTlIe. Nashville. Knoxville anil Atlanta was also tb* subject of lilD ter complaint, judge Clemeuta stated that the commission had now no authority to remedy the distress caused by thla re- fnsrtt of the lines to co-operate in this re gard. Road’s Lina of Dafanae. Tbe line of defense of the Boat hern Hall way Company, a* IndU .«*d liy tbe cross- examination of wltncsmM, Is that there la nothing Illegal lu tbo company making a contract with tho* Mnuring Coal ex change to furnish the Houthern with com pany coal; and that If/there has been an npparenf discrimination Mn the number of cars famished. It tins l*eu because tbe Man ring people are supplying company coal. The Rwtltern holds to the policy that where the coal cars available are not sufficient, the company mnst first use the cars to secure sufficient fael for lta own use aa a common carrier. Louiavilld Inquiry. The !,oulsvll!e luqulry will be along the saute lines aa that conducted In Knox ville and will deal with the relations of the Louisville and Nashville railroad to the eoal mining Industry. It Is aald au effort will bo made to establish tbe ffcet that tha Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company own* the Louisville Property Company, a corporation which own* about 5,000 acres of laud In Keatacky lnd Tennessee, and which leases coal veins to companies on a royalty ImsIs. An effort will be made to prove th*t the Incorporators of tha Louisville Property Company are, or were, officers of the LoutsvHle and Naabvill* HARDWOOD GETTING SCARCE; FORESTRY EXPERT’S VIEWS H. B. Holroyd of the forest aervlce. United States department of agricul ture, has been engaged especially. in this work for the past five years. For over a year Mr. Holroyd has made a special study of timbers used Iq the ve hicle trade. “For some years our forestry men K alktd of the growing scarcity of hard- roods and timber of all kinds. A few years ago many manufacturers laughed at us, and we stopped. Now the man ufacturers have waked up to It, and they are doing all the talking/' said Mr. Holroyd to a reporter of The Geor-' glan. "In the manufacture of vehicles there Is no timber that will take the place of hickory save, perhaps, the eucalyp tus, the growth of which Is confined almost entirely to California. The for. estry department has made aome ex periments along this line, but not to an extent to prove conclusively that tt Is as valuable as hickory. ‘The catalpus can be grown In the South, and there Is going to be a con siderable development In scientific for. estatlon In this tree in the next few years, tt Is of rapid growth, and re sists decay remarkably well. It Is very valuable for posts, crosstlsa and similar Uses, and many great railroad systems are growing It. "The South has more hickory now than any other section of the country, but even thla Is golnjt to be exhausted within a few years unless some atten tion Is paid to scientific forestation." PREHISTORIC GIANTS’ BONES TAKEN.FROM ILLINOIS HILL Quincy, 111., -Oct; 25.—From what is known as one of the Illinois river hills, about midway between Coopertown and the river and eight miles from Mount Sterling, In Brown county, several skeletons, by actual measurement eight feet long, and several pieces of re- markable pottery, beeds and curious Implements have-Men taken out. the bones crumble badly almost as soon as they ere taken Into the open air. They are so numerous that It Is believed a pre-hlstorlc burying ground has been found, greater In extent and more per fectly preserved than any yet discov ered. RAILROAD OFFICIALS PAY SHORT VISIT President Milton H. Smith and Fourth Vice President George Evans, of the Louisville and Nashville, and President John W. Thomas and Vice President Horace F. Smith, of the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis railways, are among the men high up In the-railroad world who visited At lanta Wednesday. None of them would give out"a state ment of any lrlnd. The Louisville and Naehvllle- officials. It Is thought, were looking Into matters concerning the new trains between Cincinnati and Atlanta, which will be put on the road at an early, but Indefinite, date. The officials of the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Lou la railroad visited the new freight station, nnd the terminals of the Louisville and Nashville. HEADACHE* AND NEURALGIA FROM COLDS LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine, the world wide Cold and Qrlp remedy removes cause. Call for full name. Look for signature E. W. Grove. 25c. MANY DOGS EATEN IN KAISER'S REALM Berlin, Oct. 25.—Official returns from the slaughter houses of Prussia for last year show that the number of dogs eaten was 1,558, and horses 81,312. Those who want the frontiers opened for Importing foreign cattle will make use of the figures. WEBB NOT BAILIFF FOR JUDGE PDCKETT Justice -O. E. Puckett denies that Pat Webb, who was arrested Tuesday af ternoon on a charge of contempt of court, was a bailiff In''hts office. —•‘I don't oven know the man." de- dared Justice Puckett Thursday. "He was never connected with my office. [ would like for a correction to Ite made." CONFEDERATE VETERANS MEET IN DALLAS. Special to The Georgian. Dallas, Tex., Oct. 25.—Hundreds of visitors are In the city' to attend ths opening annual reunion of the Texas division of United Confederate Vet erans. The meeting waa called to or der shortly before Id o'clock. After a prayer, General H. W. Graber Intro- duced Mayor Curtis P. Smith, of Dal las, who welcomed the visitors. H. H. Thomas delivered a greeting on behalf of the Dallas Commercial Club. Gen eral Graber then turned the convention over to General Van Zandt. of Fort Worth, the division commander, "'hr introduced Hon. T. M. Campbell, the next governor of Texas. Senator Cul berson will address the reunion tomor row afternoon. YARD STICK. A handy thing to hnve about the house. Call by and we will give you one—a good one. Georgia Paint & Glass Co., 40.PEACHTREE. ARMY TRANSPORT OFFICER DISpHARGED FOR STEALING. Ban Francisco, Cat, OcL 25.—chief Officer J. X. McLees, of the United States army transport Logan, has ,xen dismissed from the service because he stands accused of robbing the room* pseengers on the troop ship on her recent trip from Manila.