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pWlCJt-A-YMEK
VALDOSTA, GA., SATURDAYS NOVEMBER 22, ISOS.
WITH THE RAIROAD
PEOPLE.
Line’s New President
He Wai Promoted from a Clerk’s
Place to the Head of the 8yetem,
Prominent Railroader* on a Hunt
In Thl* Section—The Georgia
Southern’s New Train.
The election of Mr T. M. Emerson
as president of the Atlantic Coast
Line to succeed Mr. R. G. Erwin, re
signed, was told in our dispatches
day before yesterday. Mr. Erwin re
tires from the management of the A.
C. L. to secure the rest which long
service has entitled him to. It is
said that he is very wealthy, having
received more than a million dollars
from Mr. Morton Plant for engineer
ing the deal by which the Plant Sys
tem became a possession of the At
lantic Coast Line.
Mr. Emerson, the new president, is
said to have started his career as a
clerk in the office at Wilmington at
jjy|75 a month. He is said to be a man
democratic temperament and those
who know him say that no man would
bring the A. C. L. management closer
to the people *
He is fifty-four years of age and is
thoroughly democratic in his ideas.
One who has known him for several
years said of him, today:
“Mr. Emerson is ’&
one can approach
that he is to be i
GARDNER AND SULLIVAN
MEET IN FRISCO TONIGHT.
Ban Francisco, Not. 24—Jimmy
Gardner and Ulke Sullivan meet In
the ring at Woodward Park tonight
in a third attemt to settle the ques
tion of supremacy. Gardner Is a six
to ten favorite In the pool rooms.
The contest Is expected to go the lim
it of twenty rounds. The Fitzslm-
mons-O'Brien contest will be held In
Mechanics pavilion Tuesday, Decem
ber 20th
RAILROAD AGENT WENT INSANE
Left Depot and Office at Coffee and
Disappeared.
Brunswick, Ga., Nov. 23—Tempo
rarily Insane, for which no reason
can be assigned, C. H, Cason, freight
and passenger agent of the Atlantic
and Birmingham Railroad at Coffee,
a small station In Coffee county,
Sunday afternoon walked out of the
office without saying a word, leaving
all tickets and a large sum of cash
money in the drawer.
People around the Station did not
at first think there was anything
wrong with the agent, but as the
hour approached for the arrival and
departure of trains he failed to show
up at the office. People were there
who wanted to purchase tickets; the
office was wide open, but there was
no agent. Officials of the railroad
were notified and Immediately sent
an agent there.
Finally, Cason not returning, his
friends feared that he had met with
some mishap, and a searching party
was sent out for him, but It was not
until yesterday afternoon that
was located. He had
miles up the road and!
off Into the woods,
utterly Insane. He r .
but talks about craty
. to think that a
jtiicrs are after him.
CHHS AGHMSTiUF ME TELLS
DR. BRADLEY.
North Georgia Conference to Male
what caused
—)o(—
gnates on .• Hunt,
i P. Hanson and a party of
Prtfcilroad men have been
Wo or three days at Kinder
hldg and hunting trip. They
private coaches and during
ay the party killed three hun
dred partv^gM and critaght sixty-five
flue t/out*. Ur the pkrty were Major
Hanson, president of the Central; I. E
f nerton. S. P Parrot/ of the Geor-
v Southern & Florid*; W. H. Pleas-
t* pf the Ocean Steamship Co., W.
H. Wluburn, traffic inanager of the
.ffentral; General Manager Molse, of
tjfce Central: W. H, v Fogg, geryral
ticket agent of the Central and Dr.
J. B. S. Holmes, of Atlanta The par
ty ended their outing yesterday and
returned to Atlanta.
—)o(—
Georgia Southern’s Service.
The “Valdost* Express”
Georgia Southern and Florida road
pronjlses to be the most popular train
in this section and it gives that road
the 1>est sendee between Macon and
Valdosta' that is given between any
two cities in the state. And the fact
that the new train is carrying many
passengers, shows that the business of
the territory Justified the improved
service. ’ •*.
The train reaches here from Macon
about a quarter to one o’clock each
ay and returns at four o’clock, giving
isengers up the road three hours
this city. Valdosta appreciates
(‘ service which the new' train gives
city.
—)o(-
Hazlehurst to Irwinville.
j .A. .7. Henderson is quoted as
saying that the Ocilla and Valdosta
railroad will put on through trains
front Hazlehurst to Irwinville before
December 1. The Ocilla and Valdos
ta Railroad has leased from the At
lantic and Birmingham Railway Com-
pny Its line of road from Ocilla to Ir
winville; And, will operate through
tiltaf. ^
i jrhe Atlantic and Birmingham turn
ed ovdr its office and depot facilities
k Ocilla %o the Ocilla and Valdosta
rdad yesterday and the latter road is
running on. the brnch line of the At
lantic and Birmingham from Bushnell
to Irwinville
The Broxton, Hazlehurst and Sa
vannah Railway Company, Mr. Hen
derson said, will go ahead with con
struction east fromalzHT(. .Tu flD
.wards Savannah without delay.
tb
Is, station,
ft* -and cash drawer
for several hours,
nothing was touched. A new agent
has been named to take Mr. Cason’s
place at Coffee.
1,000 BALES OF COTTON.
Either D stroyed or Damaged by
Flames at Augusta
Augusta, Nov. 23—Augusta was vis
ited tonight by a fire which destroy
ed or damaged 1,000 bales of cotton,
and also damaged the warehouse in
which the staple was stored
There is no possible explanation of
he cause of the fire as the compart
ment in which It originated had not
been opened for two days and there
ere no signs or smell of fire before
the blaze burst forth.
The warehouse is owned by Nixon
& Danforth. and the building and con
tents were fully covered by Insurance
The loss is estimated to be in the
neighborhood of $40,000.
The fire is now under control, but
the fire department is still playing
on the burning mass.
Distinguished Atlanta Divine la Ac
cused of Heresy, Based Upon a
Lecture Which he Delivered Some
Time Ago.—The Objectionable Part
of the Lecture.
Newnan, Nov., 23—Keen interest
is taken by Methodistss everywhere
in the annual session of the North
Georgia conference begun here today
owing to the announcement that the
charges of heresy against Rev. Dr. H.
.Stiles Bradley, of Atlanta, who has
recently accepted a call from St.
John’s church, SL Louis, are to be
laid before the conference for consid
eration and action. The sermon
which it is claimed gives ground for
the principal charge against the min
ister, was preached by Dr. Bradley
in 1902, at Wesleyan Female college.
Preaching from the text: “If, when
we were enemies we were reconciled
to God by the death of His Son, much
more, being reconciled, shall we be
saved by his life.” Dr Bradley spoke
in part as follows: ’jfci
“The Apostle Paul’
the merit and influent
of Jesus harmonizes with'Jesus’ state
ment about fils death He says that
the 'loath tf Jesus reconcile^ ns fn
' Goo, and rut Gocf, '<•.b
Sim- n(k*essary <l>r Jeansjl doo
Peabody's Gift Accepted.
The board of trustees cf the Uni
versity of Georgia met in Atlanta the
past week and transacted considera
ble routine business, but 'Its most
important action was the acceptance
of a gift from George Foster Poabody
of 399 acres of land, the same being
part of the proposed university cam
pus extension and comprising what 4s
known as the Whitehead and Carlton
farms, for which Mr Peabody paid in
cash $22,500 .
The proposed campus extension in
all Includes 540 acres and since,
through the beneficence of Mr. Pea
body, 399 acres of this have been ob
tained there remains but 141 acres
to be acquired to complete the cam
pus extension. The city of Athens
has already raised $1 1,000 toward this
and enough of the university alumni
fund has been loaned to the annexa
tion movement to guarantee the pur
chase of the whole area which Is un
der option.
For Stabbing Another.
Deputy J. R. Wisenbaker, who is
doing service during court, went out
near the Byrd Hightower place yes
terday to arrest a negfo named John
Williams, who was accused of stab
bing another negro. The warrant
against Williams was sworn out by
been 1 ’*-moment tijflfr'hliipiy of the
humaAA/ace when .but ntfher has
not been the be*tl$iend of each in-
.dividual In the -early chapters of
Genesis we find the record of an ev
erlasting covenant between God and
man. Even after the story of the first
sin. when the curse was pronounced
the words immediately following are
'For thy sake, cursed be the ground
for thy sake.’
“In other words, after a fall from
innocence, the best thing is work.
When wo remember Christ's words
about the Father as loving us more
tenderly and wisely thnn nn earthly
father loves his children, we are sur
prised that any one can think of God
as become so infuriated with out first
parents, because of their disobedience
that he refused to love or make
friends with them, and that he trans
ferred his hate to their offspring and
to their offspring’s offtfspring, from
generation to generation till hundreds
of millions of human being came Into
existence suffering out their brief
time and were damned; that God
looked on all the time, and, in the
sweetness of revenge, refused to stop
the Interminable prqcesslon Into hell;
that he persistently refused to make
terms with man till he had gutted
his vengeful heart with his sons
blood Is not scriptural. It is unreas
onable. It ia a picture of a mon-
sterou8 demon and not of Jesus, the
Christ.”
The charges of heresy brought
against Dr. Bradley were fully consid
ered and discussed as without foun
dation by the board of stewards of
Trinity church, Atlanta, of which he
is pastor, and their revival at this
time Is declared by the friends of the
accused minister as savoring of per
secution At the same time they wnl-
come the proceeding as likely to
clear Dr. Bradley once and for. all.
RE FBEEHAN.
The Condemned Negro Laughs
He Says That Freeman Stole S3 while
he Wee In Jail Here and That he le
the Meaneet" Nigger Unhung—He
Aleo Says That he Can Prove an
Alibi In ,th». Sears Cue.
Alt Moore. Ale negro who is con
demned to die on the gallows for tak
ing a part lit the murder of the Car
ter children, wee told yesterday
about the now evidence which Lawyer
Cooper■ hentaind and which will be
uaed befortMP)board of pardona In
behalf dt'Wjk/AtB and hla boys.
It was claimed that Squire Jowera
had found * negro named Freeman,
who says that Alt Moore confessed
In fall that ha killed the Carter chil
dren and tb# Joe Bentley and Tim
McDonald hldM ia the bloody work.
Alf Moore laughs at this statement
and says that Freeman la a liar. "1
never talked to Freeman while ha
was in jail." said Moore, "and the
only thing 1 know about him Is that
he stole |2 or |3 frqm one of the oth
er prisoneni'While we were asleep.
If J had Mnf 'ln'thla cell, I think I
would beat that;,, lie -back In bis
about tt
SENATOR BURTON ON THE
WITNESS STAND AGAIN.
St, Louis, Nov. 24—Senator Burton,
took the stand in his own behalf to
day in the trial charging him with
acting as counsel for Baltimore com
pany while holding office of senator
He testified closely along the lines
followed In his former trial, and gave
details of conversation with Presl
dent Parian relating to employment
by the company. Burton said in his
testimony that President Parian dis
tinctly told him that he would not be
expected to use his Influence in apy
way with the post office department.
uth.”
and the r
wher»
fejrVlj
al*j asked about the mur-
:ars In Coffee county
connecting hln^wlth
trrira
that I was aevei 'wiles front
nt Ion i
nf Raw-
kill two Oh
never agreed to lty
that he-had so;
to it with that Scars mui
but f do n know who did the work
for him."
It Is understood that the lawyers
in the Kuwllnga case have about aban
dotted their Idea of going to the su
preme court of the United Statos with
case, but are circulating petitions to
bo presented to the pardon board and
tho governor asking clemoncy
their clients.
A BANK FOR NORMAN PARK
One Was Organised There With i
Capital of Twenty-Five Thousand.
Norman Park will have a bank to
be known ns the Bank of Norman
Park. It was organized yesterday
with a capital of twenty-five thousand
dollars, of which fifteen thousand
will be paid In at once, and business
will begin in a very short time.
Mr. J. B. Norman, Jr., Is one of the
largest stockholders In the Institu
tion and he was elected president nt
the organization.
The entire set of officers elected as
follows.
President, J. B. Norman, Jr.
Vice President, K. W. Horne
Secretary, Z. H. Clark
Directors: M. D. Norman. R. L
Norman, V. F. Norman, Jno. M. Nor.
man, G. F, Clark, J. Boncnson, J. K.
Lanier, J. B. Norman, Jri R, TV.
Horne and Clark * t
A alto 'W»a agredd u;
for the biank and work wLflhej
NEGRO BISHOP IS
NOT PLEASED.
at Macon Conference.
<•
j.->
soon ax practical on the bank build
ing, which Is to be of ,yjK pressed
Two Brothers in Accident*.
Mr. J. F. Fender has returned
from 8irmans, Fla., where ho went
to see about his brother, A. F. Fen
der, who was badly wounded by the
accidental discharge of a gun while
going hunting last Friday. The weap
on was In a buggy and It was dis
charged by a movement of the whip
which caught the trigger. The flesh
and muscle of one arm was shot off.
The young man was brought to the
home of his father, Mr. W. A. Fen
der, at Naylor, and is getting along
very well at present.
few days before this accident,
J. B. Fender, another brother,
happened to quite a serious accident
by being caught under a sawmill car
riage. He was considerably bruised
up and would have been killed if he
had not managed to get hold of the
carriage and drag himself along with
it.
Blow Caused Death.
Anapolis, Nov. 24—Tho courtmar-
tial of Midshipman Meriwether, charg
ed with manslaughter in the death
of Midshipman Branch continued to
day, with the examination of medi
cal men. Tho trend of testimony
showed that while autopsy might
have developed cause of death exist
ing prior to fight, the surgeons are
convinced that death was due to blows
received in the fight.
Were Married Yesterday.
Mr. Robert L. Plymel and Mrs.
Mattie Hart, of Remerton, were uni-
his victim, the offender being landed j ted in marriage yesterday afternoon
in a cell to await the action of the at the Methodist parsonage, Rev. C.
court b 1 A. Jackson officiating.
New Bank Organized.
Tliq Bank of Hnhira has been or-
ganizeu with Mr. W. 8. Wltham tem
porary president The new bank has
a paid In capital of $15,000 and it will
begin work at once upon a handsome
bank building of brick and stone. It
will begin business about the first of
January. All of the stock in the con
cern has been taken.
Mr. Wltham has also organized a
new bank at Obe, Ga., which will I
have n capital of $25,000 Much of!
Norman Park is one of the largest
towns in the country ntot having a
bank and ns (there if® lot of money
Wbsstoss.U -
•*j*y (}■ domttiofi h;i..
support ftoip the b-glnnlDK. w.
trie Observer.
gBT GOSSIP KILLS WITNESS',
Excited by .Assertion That .Couple
Met at Her Home.*
New York, Nov. 24—Excited by the
chnrge that an accused wife had met
a corespondent at her home .Mrs. Ru
dolph Heinrich, wife of a well to do
business man of Weehawken, wns
stricken with apoplexy outside the
court room to Vice Chancellor Stev
ens, Jersey City, yesterday. She died
while being taken to her home In a
carriage. *
Paul Schneldor, of Spring street,
West Hoboken Is suing his wife,
Rosa for absolute divorce before the
vice chancellor and he has named in
his suit Henry Hagor, of Angelique
street, Weehawken. Mrs. Heinrich
was one of the witnesses. The wit
nesses were excluded from the court
room, but some person told . Mrs.
Heinrich that there was sworn testi
mony being givert that Hager and
Mrs. Schneider had met at her home.
She became very much excited and
had to bo restrained from going at
once into the court room. At the
door she staggered and fell to the
floor unconscious.
He Makes an Impaaaloned Attack
Upon the United States Govern-
ment and Especially the Supreme
Court in hie Annual Addreaa—Ho
Wants Negro to Leave Country,
Macon, Ga., Nov. 24—Whon the Ma
con conference of tho African Meth
odist Episcopal church of aeorgla
wns convened yesterday mhrnlng In
East Macon .Presiding Bishop H. M.
Turner ,ln his annual address made
an Impassioned attack on the United
States government, particularly the
supreme court Incidentally the bilk,
op took up the gubernatorial race'
and took a shot at the candidate
whose platform embraces a plank
tho disfranchisement of the
After the preliminaries usoa( at
opening of the conferenco
Turner delivered hie address la
hp said, among other
“While we ere act hex# to dlicffss
politic*, yet the minister ^f the -go*:
Ml V. <~A ^l.a «*
DID JORDAN MAKE MONEY?
Reported In New York that He Made
Fortune in Cotton.
York. ,Nov.24—Joseph H.
pel should be Interested it the'wol.'.
tore of V# country an* fhp propaga
tion of v cLrlo righteousness aa much
as anyjtimr class of clUacns. Tea,
pleased with the discus-
alon t3iat. Is going on In Qoorgta
about thi negro. [ j i
ajg- hot. pleiad* Vi tl
\ 01; title i itiln'
iCiwtr- to got ■
whero 1 - untwining 'nr CIoctT
thi Bnlleil •
have part In my prayer. That
nable fdftltotlon which raped theMe-ySl.
gro of every vestige of human or man
hood’s !ight>-~-the men that compose
that body may got to heaven the
best way they can, but very little
help God will grant them from any
request that I make. ,
“The negro will never be anything ...
in this country but a scullion until
ho shows his ‘ manhood. Go to Attic* •
and build up a great nation that will''
command the respect of tho civilized vj ‘
world.
“Well, said tho bishop, “wo did'';'
not come hero to talk about these '
things.” He then entered Into a dls-'
cusslon of heresy and later whisky Tt
drinking among his raco. ,
While Bishop Turner was talking **
about the treatment the negro is re
ceiving, Rev. T. N. M. Smith inter
rupted to say: “The negro waa given
his freedom by the republican party
and his prlvlllges have been killed by
the same party.”
Then Bishop Turner said: “We
could organize and agitate and pay
men to stay at Washington and plead
for the cutting down of the southern
representation while tho south is
pleading for our disfranchisement,
and much good could bo accomplish
ed.
“But the negro Is a miserable cow
ard. He JiiHt stays here and preaches
Hoadley and Harvlo Jordan, the latter I ’Heaven up yonder’ and 'Hell down
omler,' and says ‘Wait on the Lord’
Why wait on tho Ioord to do for you
what you can do for yourself.
president of the Southern Cotton
Growers’ association, were the lead-
rs In a sensational bull movement
In cotton, after the publication of tho
government report today, which caus-
d the staple to leap $5 a bale within
ive minutes adding $50,000,000 to Young Roosevelt Will Have Surgeons
the value of the total year’s’ crop. Fix It Up.
Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 24—Inves-
BROKE TEDDY’S N08E IN BOUT.
Hoadley and Jordan are credited with
having made nbout $8,00^,000 by the
iderful rise In cotton. Hoadley
trols personally 200,000 bales of
the capital stock in both of these | Hj>ot cotton now In New York. On
banks Is taken by farmers In the two *bls his profits were more than $1,-
sectlons.
Federal Court for Valdosta.
It Is announced that Judge Speer
will be here on tho lithe of December, was a bull and that ho
to convene the United States court for
the Southwestern division
He will go from here to Albany,
opening court there on the 18th Inst. [ nouncod
The session here is expected to be a J bear as
busy one, as the docket Is heavy.
Spiritualist mediums generally
claim that tfcelr ghosts move In the
best circles. :! 4 ?
000.000,
In the early excitement it is report-
I that Daniel Sully had been caught
nt he denied this report and said he
peeted 14-
nt cotton before Christmas.
Theodore Price was reported to be
heavy loser on the day, but he an-
himself as enthusiastic a
or and says the report con
firms his belief In a largo crop. He.
laughingly estimated his losses at
$15,000,000.
Subscribe for The Dally Times.
tlgation of a report that Theodoro
Roosevelt, Jr., had his nose broken
In last Saturday’s football game be
tween tho Freshmen of Harvard and
Yalo has disclosed the fact that the
young man will submit to an opera
tion within a day or two for aa old in
jury received In a boxing match and
not on the gridiron.
Some time ago one of the small
bones In young Roosevelt's noso was
broken by a blow received in a friend
ly bout. Tho fracture was set at the
time, but as It healed the nose becakno
slightly misshaped.
Tho trusts and corporations which
use public franchises In an oppres
sive way ought to be doing some
heavy thinking since last Tuesday.