The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, December 26, 1906, Image 6

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■-* ' ( OTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. ■■■■ i.NKSDAY. DECEMBER THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN :enn mint cmvis. uiitr r. i. sear, nsmttr. Published Every Afternoon '.Except Sunday! By THE GEORGIAN COMPANV, At 26 Wert Ate heme St.. Atlanta. 0«. Subxcrlptlsn Rate*, one Tear II JJ kii Jjf Three Month....... By Carrier. Per Week M Telensones mnneotlos all departments. Lana dletance lermlnala. Smith fc Thom Men. advertmissrep- reaentatlvea for all territory outalda of ueoratn. rhleaao Office Trthns* lllda New York Office Potter llldy. If you bare any trouble aettlna THE GEORGIAN. telephone the Circulation Telephones: It Is ileatruble that all roismunlrt lions lntemle.1 for publication In THE GEORGIAN l>0 limited to 100 words la leoath. It Is linperatlre that they be sfanctl. as an evidence of eood faith. Ihouah the names will, lie withheld II requested. Rcjectetl inanuscrlpts will pot lie returned unless stamps are spat tor the purpose. THE GEORGIAN prints so unclean or objectionable ndrrrtlaloa. Neither # does It print whisky or any liquor ads. ... for Atlanta's owulna Its own ass and electric llahl plants, as It now awns no waterworks. Other cities do operated successfully by European rifles, as they ore, there Is no S"«d irason why they cannot be so operated here. Hut we do not believe this can fie done now, and It tuny lie aonie years before we ore ready for on Ida an un dertaking. Mill Allium should set lie fees In that direction NOW. William J. Bryan warna Democrat! through The Commoner that the ' “aaft and sane element" of the Demo cratic party la trying to sneak again Into the leadership and capture the organisation. It It Juat aa well to keep an eye open for thla—that la if we want to win. The meanest man now baa bis hab itat In Iowa. He gave hla wife a fine shotgun and his two-year-old-aon a box of cigars for Christmas presents. If hit wife haa any spunk she'll try the efflcacy of her gift on that hubby's anatomy. Because a Pennsylvania prophet predicts the end of the world two years hencs la no reason why the man with a mortgage due three years hence should cease to hustle for the money. Though the appraiser of the port of New York haa barred the reporters 'from Ills oOlce, that won't keep the real alert ones from finding out the things the appraiser la ashamed of. "Rockefeller Is a gargantuan per son," aaya Maxim Korky. None of iis know what that la, but It sounds like something we have nlwnya believed Ur. Rockefeller to he. The millionaire, Eugene Higgins, when queitloned as to the report that ha waa to marry Emma Calve said: "Why. 1 never saw the lady." Mr. Illg. Kina la totally blind. -T, .. - . , / Whenever we wish to shatter the claim* of Memphis to superior iiopula- tlon, we have only to auuex one of our many suburbs. Memphis has an nexed them all. Richmond Is annexing all eastern Virginia In an effort to lie ceusused at over 100,000. And yet we suffer Deca tur and Bast Point to go unfathered by Atlanta! Philadelphia's right to be called the City of Brotherly Love was proven the other night when thirty imgltlau tried to pound the life out of ench other. Jobu D. Rockefeller aaya there ta too great extravagance these days. Too bad that Mr. Rockefeller's so rich that be can't afford to be extravagant. It may ba unkind to tutlcliwte. but it's dollars to doughnuts that Miner Hlcka will be telling all about It from the lecture platform In a short time. Maybe that rough rider who refused an office la the one that Mrs. James G. Blaine. Jr„ juat divorced, an nounces she has decided to marry. There are sixteen distinct and sep arata parties represented In the Qer- man relchatng. la that what we are coming to In thla country? Edward Harrimao aaya he v. Ill spend $10,000,000 to rehabilitate Benjamin Odell. Odell mutt be a very valua ble man—10 Harrlman. A physician aaya that autolng de velop* the nerves. It frequently de velops an autopsy when the pedes trian Isn't watchful. "Money la tight," aaya a market item from New York. Money ought to come to Atlanta on Chrlstmaa day to get sober. Next Monday when the bill comes In you will know the eost of the Chrlstmaa present your wife gave you. The scientist who insists that all men are made of soap is likely to create a panic among the Weary WII- K U the Laird of Bkibo nearing the Id of his dreamt? Press dispatches )lel- .1 thousand dollar gift of hla. NOW, OUR CHRISTMAS PRESENT FOR “THE TEOH.” We cannot find a better time than this to stress once more the needs of the Technological School, and the urgent appeal which that great institution makes to our Atlanta. The Technological School needs more land. It has readied the limit of expansion, and it must either stand still or go forward from this time. Neither Atlanta nor Georgia can afford to have it stand still. We people in Atlanta scarcely realize the meaning of this superb institution to our municipal life or the prestige whieh it confers upon our entire educational system in the South. We do not know that the Technological is now by common consent one of the ranking technological schools of the entire country. Re cently four presidents of the leading universities of the country united in declaring Georgia’s great school of technology Xo be the lending technological achool of the South and one of the ranking ‘ schools of the entire country. Its repute nnd fame has literally spread through the worlds In its present correspondence there are five applications for admis sion from the Philippine Islands, one from India, and a large num ber from the Northern and Northwestern states. The Technological School is is an honor to Georgia, and should lie the favorite child among Atlanta's institutions. It is worthy of all it asks, and has upon our municipal gov ernment the same claim that a brilliant and noble son would have upon the resources bf a wealthy and broad-minded parent. Atlanta literally cannot afford to let the Technological School - stand still for want of the little land it needs to enlarge its cam pus and to erect additional buildings. Why, we do not realize, speaking simply from a- material standpoint and outside of its superb mental benefits, what this great institution means to us. Do the merchants anil business men of the city understand that the Technological School spends every year one hundred thou sand good round dollara among the business institutions and boarding bouses of Atlantal Do they realize that this great institution gives annually 125 Atlanta boys the best technological education in the world at no higher cost than a street car ticket to and from the school? Do they realize that by actual statistics it very large number of the annual graduates of the Technological School locate in this city, mid add to its scientific and instructive and constructive life, the splendid reinforcement of these magnificent and admira bly equipped young men—for the up-buildilig of Georgia and its capital I Do they realize that nearly one-half of the last year’s gradu ating class have settled in Atlanta, and that many of those Who go out for a time- into other lomilities drift back to the betterment of this capital city with their brains and energies! The merchants of Atlanta are prospering gloriously just now, and the volume of their lii|si»ess in this period of great ex pansion and financial fulness is enough to satisfy, but if the time comes when conditions are depressed and fnoney less plentiful, they should realize that the Technological School both in adversi ty and in prosperity, as a permanent customer, will continue to put those one hundred thousnnd dollars every year into circula tion in the city. What the Technological School asks of Atlanta is a mere pittance as compared with it* great value to the city, or with the munificence with which the state has already given. Within these 18 years, the state has given $700,000 to the school, nnd the city within these 18 years has given only about $100,000. And this in vietv of the fact that one-fourth of the techno logical rolls are made up of Atlnuta Imys. The state lias just now cheerfully given $17,500 to the Tech’s immediate necessities, and the Tech only needs at this time the mere pittance of $4,000 whieh itsfrieuds are asking from this great, rich and magnificently prosperous city of Atlanta. We cannot bring ourselves to believe that Atlanta will refuse to give promptly nnd gladly what its greatest institution needs. The people of this city ought to begin to realize what this great college means to it, and they ought to learn to love it, to take a personal and fervent pride in its merits and in its splendid use fulness. and they ought to be ready at all times to respond to its plainly manifest necessities with a heartiness ami liberality worthy ot thin incomparable Atlanta and of these great and pros perous times. , Any great educational institution is in its final analysis dependent in large purt upon the city in whieh it is located. We can recall the efforts that Atlanta made to secure the location of this institution here. We can rcinembpr how eagerly we desired it. how highly we estimated it at tlint time, slid how much of help attd co-operatiotj we promised in the hour when its location was not yet assured. If the technological school were located in any Northern cit.v it would have been crowned and enriched by donations and en dowments that would have amply and superbly answered all its needs. Only recently the city of New York gave voluntarily three uud a half million doiiurs to Columbia university for build ing purposes alone. The city of St. Iamis has recently enriched Washington university by splendid gifts of inouev and land, and we ull know how royally every year adds to the princely reve nues and endowments of the University of Chicago from that great city and from great individual citizens who hold it as Chicago’s greatest ornament aud its most useful institution. Come then, let us with one accord crown this beautiful aud generous Christmas senson with this act of noble public spirit. We have provided immediately on Tuesday, for the joy aud happiness of the individual members of our individual families. Now let ns come up in a large, cordial and royal answer to the appeal of this brilliant and beloved child of the municipal ity. Let us equip her for larger service, and let us reward her for splendid usefulness in the past so prolific of noble sous. And what we do, let us do quickly so that the gift may have the double value of sufficiency and of splendid heartiness. There needs only now some $4,000 to be raised for the Technological School. Let ns do this before Christmas week creeps to its Saturday evening close, and let the Tech front the New Year not only with the money whieh it absolutely needs for this vital growth, but with the quickening and inspiring demon stration of Atlanta’s continued love and pride and confidence. the plutocrat. The great Masonic order of the Templar Knights cele brated In stately and ploua ceremonial their allegiance to the grand com mander and bent their reverent kneea In manly homage to the Supreme Orand Master of the Universe. . It waa a Christmas day of rich prosperity—never In the memory of the oldest celebrant had there been such fulness In the avenues of trade 9 or la the revenues ot the Individual as on Tuesday. The akles seemed 'to open In such a shower of gold as fell at Danae's feet, and the golden stream ran from the flooded counters through the friendly streets, and from the carpeted aisles of the synagogue Into the home* of the poor. There was no joy of gifts that was not tasted somewhere on Tuesday and there was no known case of suffering In all this goodly city and Its suburbs that went unrelieved. •, * It was a Christmas of beautiful order and decorum. Xo stream ot turbulent noises ran hideous through our lighted streets and darkened alleys; no drunken figures reeled along our happy thoroughfares, and no thought of strife or lawlessness disturbed the amiable atmosphere of the holy and the happy day. With the keen brace of the cold tempered under sunlit akles, with warmth In our halls and comfort In our homes, with happiness and con tentment throbbing like a psalm through every heart, It. was indeed a holiday to remember to the end of time. May the Prince of Peace send to our dear Atlanta a thousand Christ mas days like this! , I LOOK TO SCIENCE By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. (Copyright, 11106, by Amerlcan'-Journal-Examiner.) I’ look to Science for the cure of crime; To patient righting of a thousand wrongs, To final healing, of a thousand Ills. Blind runner now. and cruel egotlat. It yet leads on to more than mortal sight. And the large knowledge that means humbleness And tender love for all created things. I look to Science for the Coming Race, Growing from eeed selected and from soil Love fertilized and pruned by Wisdom's hand, Till out of mortal men spring deml-gods, Strong, primal creatures, with awakened eouls And normal passions, governed by the will, , Leaving a trail of glory where they tread. I look to Science for the growth of faith. That bold Denier of accepted creede— That mighty Doubter of Immortal truths Shall yet reveal Qod'a secrets to the world And prove the facts It seeks to overthrow, And a new name shall Science henceforth wear— The great religion of the Universe. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. ITInca, If w« only had the tLmv, And were not on the evening shift, We’d do the cuteat little rhyme, •'Where !• Laat Year’* Christmas aiftr • —New York Mall. ttlna there It about the only thing that really counts lu this old world.—Flor ida Timer-Union. Science will probably never be able to explalu why so many meu who look like lobster* arc fascinating to women.— St. Louts Poat-Dlapateh. When a woman grabs her skirts arouud her knees and begins to double up you cau never tel! whether she sees a mouse or Is going upstairs.—New York Frcs*. Good character la not merely reputation on the outside. It shine* through like the electric light In n clean and transparent bulb.—Dallas News. > Kouthtrii papers talk, they would -favor the punishment of that dismissed colored battalion as deserters.—Mllwnukeo Sentinel. “Nearly every man who gets married nowadays wears spectacles," says The New York Press. Probably ruined hla eyes (luring courtship trying to see his finish. Washington Post. “Times change and meu chauge wit l hem,” declares Secretary Hoot. But n signs of change ore given by the worn* who preside over the booths In the Chris ma* bniars,—Cleveland Leader. Bill Skeexfk* always was thoaghtfut of Ills wife. The other day he ate some qf her bread aud told her she was ton light for such heavy work. The woman did uot know whether to laugh or cry.—Vineland Weekly Vine. Says Dr. Vance; “Women today wont too much money. They are too Intent upon keeplug up with the procession." Hut, doctor, It isn't so much wanting to ••keep up" as It Is this infernal "running abend." -Buffalo Newt. To any that opportunity knocks but once at every unit's door Is false, for not - ’ar of our life but opportunity pulls doorbell of nope, reason nnd action, nnd It Is our own fault If we do not wake up and ara*p the skirts nf paaslug for tune.—Baltimore American. BRASS TACKS. MISS swift:S INJURIES MAY PROVE VERT SERIOUS; JUMPED FROM CARRIAGE By lumping from a carriage drawn by wildly dashing runaway hones at 11:30 o'clock Tuesday night. Miss Jeanette Swift, a daughter ot Mrs. Lena Swift Huntley, waa stunned and badly cut. and so far her physicians are un able to tell whether or not she Is se riously Injured. From the same carriage Harvey Hill jumped after Miss Swift made her wild leap, and he, too, was badly bruised, although he waa able to be out Wednesday. Miss Swift and Mr. Hill were re turning from the theater and were proceeding out Peachtree street when the horses became unmanageable. For several blocks the speed of the animals Increased until they were In a wild dash. Mr. Hill opened the carriage door, and standing on the step, was telling the coachman to drive slower and avoid an approaching car. when Miss Swift opened the door on the op posite side of the carriage and leaped. Mr. Hill then jumped, being thrown violently to the ground. . He was able to go back to where Miss Swift had. fallen and found her cut. bleeding and unconscious. This was ot Sixth street, and passengers from the car which the carriage nar- rowjy missed came back and assisted Mr. Hill In carrying, the unconscious young lady Into the residence of Cap- lain w. G. Raoul, where physicians were summoned. Later she was taken to the residence of her mother, beyond Brookwood, on Peachtree street. Inquiry at the Huntjey residence Wednesday elicited the Information that Miss Swift was resting quietly and serious results were anticipated, a|. MISS JEANNETTE SWIFT. Who was hurt by jumping from a Moving Carriago Christma, Night. though at present the physicians were unable to state postlvely. Miss Swift Is the third daughter of Mrs. Huntley nnd Is a sister of Mrs. Cleveland Buck, anan and Mrs. Willis Jones. SOUTHERN IS LIFE SA VER; SAVED FORTY MULES B\ NOT RUNNING ON TIME It Is easier to write silly letters Hum II Is not to mall them. The spinster has a strentous time trying to in like herself believe thnt she Is a mnn hater. Stake the average man to a drink, _ square meal und a good cigar and he cares not how wags the world. “THE MORAL TONE." To the Kdltor of The Georgian: The mercenary pandering to the vice and frailties of the- under world evinced by certain newspapers In the big whls. ky advertisements Is a saddening fea ture of the Christmas time. Its legiti mate, result will be seen In Ihe crimes nnd heart-rending scenes that will make a mockery ot Christ's natal day In hundreds of Georgia homes. I wish that the good people of the state would actively nn<l substantially show their appreciation of The Georgian's policy In this matter. It warms the cockles of the heart to see a great newspaper Imbued with such noble principles. On the other hand, how can we have any faith In the candor and principles nf a paper which will barter its respecta bility for the price of a whisky ad vertisement? Let Ihe moral precep tors of the community ponder over the above proposition. Yours truly. H. A. MANN. Mlllen. Ga., Dec. 22, 1906. BETTER FEW 8AL00N8 ' THAN MANY BEER 8HOPS. ATLANTA'S IDEAL CHRISTMAS. The Ideal Christmas of the decade, if not the century, has been cele brated In Atlanta. > It was a Christmas of peace, of proeperity and of order. There were no wrangling* of faction In our municipal life, no feuda in our society, no bitterness among our iieoplc. There waa the peace of the Sabbath upon the birthday of The King. The joy bells of gladness chimed nnbmkeu by the pandemonium of un earthly nolsea. and the home was -alike the palace of the peasant and To the Editor of The Georgian: Referring to the low price of beer license In Atlanta, calls to my mind a scene 111 the largest city fo Texas twen ty years ago. A man sent me a draft on a gVoceryman. whose place of busi ness was In the suburbs of the city. I called on him about 11:30 a. m. His clerk told me that the "boss had gone to dinner." but he would be back In 13 or 20 minutes, and asked me to take a seat. I glanced over his stock and thought he had about one thousand dollara on hantl. 1 took a seat on the trout veranda. Across the street was a little beer saloon, with 12 or 15 kegs that were empty, piled up on the outside. My conclusion was that the beer saloon would be starved out end closed in two months. In about twenty minutes the boss came back and paid the draft. In that time the beet- man had made nineteen sales of beer, mostly In one- lialf gallon pitchers, to women or chil dren. A wagon hod called and left seventeen kegs of beer and had taken away the empty one*, and the grocery- man had sold a pint of molasses to a negro on a credit, out of his thousand- dollar stock of good*. No. Mr. Kdltor, bettfr a half a dozen regulated whisky shops In a city than one beer garden. If we care anything for the rising generation. A. H. STEAGALL. Def.and. Fla. than a man who has to walk. Handsome Is that handsome does’ nbls to tho man with s tt... whiskers protruding from his Chicago News. The more a man gets from this old world the more he thinks that the world owes him. Tha evil of a debt lies largely in what It was that led a man to get Into It. It takes a real optimist to belong to the mjnority and not view with alarm the acts of the majority. Some men find It tajtes Jess courage to face the world than to face their wives. It takes a brave man to tell a woman that her hat Is not on straight after she has left the house. The ordinary man would tell fewer lies If other men did not ask him no many questions. Nobody but a real hero will go Into a battle when he knojvs the enemy Is go ing to defeat him. Life never proposes a problem, to anv mnn greater than his ability to solve. The world often finds out to Its sor row that there Is a great difference between reputation. and character. .Some men' never forgive Providence for not consulting them about their birth and the time for them to die. The higher the object hangs the more worth striving for it Is, as a general rule. Fortunately the world never judges :t man by the way he talks when he has his first love affair. The wisest men are those who were once foolish, but managed to get over Hurrah for the Southern railway! A champion has appeared on the scene to defend the Innocent”and help less and poverty-stricken thing. Mingled with the deep sighs of sor row over his mlsfottune In losing eigh teen fine horses, on none of which was a penny of Insurance, one of the horse dealers who suffered from the great fire at the stock yards Tuesday Is also slnrlng of the glory of the Southern, particularly that sweet habit It has of coming In so lata It sometimes meets itself going out. To be more expljelt. A hard-work ing horse dealer, one who had labored for some six or seven years earnestly and xcalously, had succeeded In gath ering together eighteen fine horses, which he had at the stock yards, and had got enough coin of the realm to order two car loads of fine mules, for ty In sll. | The mules were shipped and were due In Monday about midnight. When this dealer heard that all the stock at the yards had been burned to death, lie was almost paralyzed. In addition to losing his eighteen horses, which were uninsured, he had lost, he figured ou’, forty mules, also uninsured, ami not ull paid for. He hastened out to the scene nf the ruins nnd wept bitterly over his xad misfortune. He suffered the deepest pangs of sorrow and grief and he lie- moaned In sighs and tears the awful calamity that had overtaken him. Tuesday afternoon about 2 o'clock l.e received notice from the railroad that his two car loads of mules had ar rived. Tho train was Just fourteen hours late. "It's an 111 train that blows In late and does nobody good," he meditated li the tears lied to shelter, hotly pursued by laughter. 2 CONDUCTORS WOUNDED; NEGRO ASSAILANT KILLED Spacfal to The Georgina. Meridian, Dec. 26.—AI 5:30 o’clock Monday afternoon, Colonel 8. I. McCanta reeelr**d a meaaafe from Governor James K. Yardamnn, ordering troop* from here to Wahalak to quiet the disturbance created there by the aerlous wounding of Conductor Cooper, of tho Mobile and Ohio, by drunk* negroes, and later tbe killing of Offl* O’lirlen, In attempting to arrest them, pfnln J. T. IS bell, of Company D, Captain J. I*. E. Sullivan, of natter; responded, with their respective t __ mnnds, and were conveyed at once to the WORLD’S DELIGHT. Nora Hopper. At the end of day and the edge of night I aaw the woman called World’* De light. If you looked In her eyes no aoul wail there, But her eyes were deep and her eyes were fair. If you touched her bosom no heart there bout, But, O, the rose In her breaat ».vas sweet! Her naked feet were too soft to go After a wanderer, to and fro; Her little hunds were too weak to hold Wild love back from the outer cold; But, O, her fingers, and O, her feet. Naked and beautiful—sweet, sweet! At the edge of the Pit, though lie | feared to slip, A man might linger to kiss her Up. I In the eyes of Death might a weak man stare, Made hftid by the gleam of her bosom seeqp on a special After a few skJrutblD’f last night. In winch six negroes were re ported killed nnd badly wounded, the mili tia aucceded In restoring quiet. The sit uation at that place Is reported well In hand at noon, but all trains from here yes terday carried tinned dtlaens to the rrem* of hoatllltle*. A report to Trainmaster J. (I. Minnie**, from Crawford, on yesterday moraln-', »«■ nounce* an outbreak there, caused by th*» attempted assassination of Omuuetor Frank Cloplon uud the probably fata! ■booting of Conduetor Bob Harrison in tin* melee, during the latter part of whirl* the negro who began the fight was killed. Where the Georgia Delegation Live in Washington. 8ENATOR8. Auffuxtus O. Bacon, 1767 Oregon avenue. A. S. Clay, the Normandie. CONGRESSMEN. W. C. Adamson, the Oxford. C. L. Bartlett, the Shoreham- Thoma* M. Bell, the Iroquois. W. G. Brantley, the Chapin. T. W. Hardwick, the Shoreham. \V. M. Howard, the Bancroft. Gordon Lee, the Shorelmm. E. B. Lewis, the Metropolitan. J. W. Overstreet, the Metropoli tan. L. F. Livingston, 1916 Blltmors street. J. M. Grigffa, the Metropolitan. THIS DATE IN HISTORY. Some men lose so much time telling what they nre going to do that they never have time to do It. , There Is never any doubt about real goodness. It Is only the quasi-good ness that is questioned.—Florida Times- Unlon. The average girl declines to marry a lot of men because they neglect to nsk her. Even an optimist I* apt to backsllJe when he has a boll on the back of his neck. Our Idea of nn Impossible man Is one who hasn’t a hit of foolishness In bis make-up. And when a man bumps up against ban! luck he always blame* some other fellow for shoving him. .Most people find fault with their neighbors In order to get even wlUt neighbors who find fault with them. After being let In on the ground floor ot a big deal, a man sometimes dis covers that some other chap crawled In through the cellar window.—Chicago News. DECEMBER 28. A glance of her glomerous eyes to earn.' > .. . * . I R9J—Emperor FrederJrk II. one of In the uttei most parts of the outland most remarkable historic figur.'* "I sea , middle ages. horn. It led December A man may voyage—and there Is she. .... ... , In the noisy heart of the market place I I'O-Mw' iwfirnnilroc produced In !.•">, Abashed, the merchants behold her ism-TiJImy Sf’ftKjbor* .... .u C * • Admiral George Dewey, United Sin When^the lava xmother* the sleeping j «a«T. N»»nc may escape her, and none may win; She'* the foe without and the guard within. She 1m* tempted the % light, *he In Bought the day; * The hour* nre her weapon* that *tab and *luy; — . She has emptied of peace the quiet night, The world's desire and the worid'a de light. l»*nn» Bulletin. GEORGIANS IN GOTHAM SMILEOGRAMS. "Yojr father Is In politics. Isn’t he! my boy?" asked the stranger. . "Yeti.” replied little Tpinmy Tipples, “but mom thinks he's notin' cured of It." . • “You don't say?" ~Yrh; his stumpiirk's gone back on him on' he can't drink like he usler."— Philadelphia Press. 'Listen to this. Murla," sold Mr. Htubb as he unfolded his scientific'pa per. "This article States that in some of the old Roman prisons that have been unearthed they found the petri fied remains of the prisoners." "Gracious. John.'" replied Mr*. Stuhb. with a smile, "I suppose you would call them hardened irlinlnals."—I'hicagj News. vear Ids "Mother, does Dr. Smith „ everyday rlot(ies under that long whig gown When he preaches?" asked a III. tie Bill who had seen the edge or the minister’s trouser* under hi* robe "Yes. dear." was the replv. "Well." sHe continued, "now I kn New York. l>ee. 26.—Here in* nm.<' the visitor* In New York today: . ATLANTA—K. A. BrndoneS, L- Brown. II. Fellow*. . SA VANN All—J. J. t'oelirnue, G. \. >" ey. MACON—tV. Wolff. "John's done right well up In 1 clly, after all." "Do tell!* "Yes, I've Jes liearn that lie'* rt ‘ ered from one appendicitis, two .im mobile*, one heart failure an' 'nre business ones."—Atlanta Constfli!'' * why It Is called a surplus."—Harp« * Weekly. The big touring ear had Just whirr'*l by with a roar like a gigantic *>»'• and Pat and Mike turned to wat-. disappear In a cloud of dust. “Thlm chug wagons must cost a ' av cash." said Mike. “The ri" fairly Mimin' money." "An' lie the smell av It," snlffd ' ■ .''it must be thin tainted money «■ • he bearin’ so much about"—Bucv*» Magazine,