Newspaper Page Text
TIMES, SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1907.
m b.
Oft OUTING.
The Well Known Mer Enter
tains a few e! tiis friends.
Y GEORGIA SQLONS Will BISS THE
| COliAIKT.
was Elected Southern Mill jlii Get Little Sat-
They Will go to Wariaw Island and
Rough it for a Few Day*— Negro
Kills Another in H®** of Savan
nah-Young Apple, With Broken
Neck, Continues to Improve.
Savannah, June 2C.—Rev. Bascom
Anthony formerly of Valdoma but now
pastor of Trinity Methodist church
her.*, is going lo lead a number ol
preachers on his annual pilgrimage
to Warsaw Island the middle of July.
They will go In search of health,
happiness and contentment and it
they catch any fish they will le satis
fied. Among the others in the par
ty will be Bev. Osgood Cook. Rev. |
J. A. Smith. Rev.
Rev. T. J. Ellis and
Methodist ministers
Georgia Conference.
Govtrnor Terrell's Message Deal* In
Taxation, Finances and Educational
Matters—Senator Hardman Intro
duced a State Prohibition Bill This
Morning, and a Hard Fight on it la
Expected.
Atlanta, Ga., June 26.—The gener-
imorce Commie-
the Transcon-
iiiested by the
the Northern
The Interftati
eion Will not
Oriental Rate
Mllle—Explaim
Got It.
It is understood from good author
ity that the interstate commerce com
mission will dismiea the complaint of
Chewers who read the
information given in this
space in next week's
paper will know why
ai aKBf'mljly of Georgia convened to- Soul , ltrn goods mamlfactur .
day at noon, with an attendance of
and exprters of cotton goods to
nearly every member of the house and the 0r)ent agaJngt ^ , a „ roads _
senate preeent, and prepared for o wh|ch are charged v|lh - navl „ g g , ren
lively time. An appalling array of lower trana-oontlnenUl rates to New
small bills are tucked away In mem- j England
hers' desks, ready to be sprung as I Although no opinion has leen han-
soon as the dust of the preliminaries dt ' d doWn the co ” ml " lo ' ! 0y
\ Darley,
or more
ig South
Anthony
and Mr. Smith are always anxious
in July to go camping and roughing
it and In recent years Mr’. Ellis has
been one of the party. The others
who will go will be new comers but
they will have a good time all the
aame.
Who Bought the Central?
There are many In Savannah who
believe that todays’ meeting of the
directors of the Central Railway In
Macon will result In the announce
ment In a short time that the Central
/ha: been sold. It is not thought here
> r - Rvpr. that, the Baltimore and Ohio
ra iroad has bought It. It Is more
probable that it Is some other east'
em road.^iat Is friendly to the Mor
gan Interests. The Ocenn Steamship
Company It is believed Is also to go
with the Central railway.
One Negro Kills Another.
Bon Simmons, a negro, has been
s placed In jail on tho charge of kill
ing flus Wilson, also colored. Will
son wag found In the road with an
open knife In hla hand. Simmons
oonfeasea the killing but saya Wilson
came at him with a knife and be out
him In eelf defensd. The police be
lieve that 8!mmoni placed the knife
In Wilton’s hand, after he
,, „ . put In writing, It Is understood that
|n,Vi cleared away. Many of Iheae are comml9ll0n „ as formed „ B dec|s .
| local in nature, but It Is believed that ;(on and when It is announced within
some of the most important measure* . the next week will uphold the high
will be introduced during the first er rates from the South to the Orient,
days of the session. The complaint. was brought by a
Judge John W. Akin, of Cartertfvil.e number of-cotton manufacturers, and
was elected president of the State wag known ag the cotton differential
Senate, his only opponent being J.jrate cases.” The cases have been
J. Flint, of Spaulding whom he de- pending since the early part of Feb-
feated by a vote of 32 to 10. Friends ( ruary, while the commission has had
of Tom Felder, of Bibb, announced (them under .advisement since May
this morning that he would not be 14 when argument was heard,
in the race. | The complaint charges ’that the
Senator E. T. Steed, of Carroll, trang- continental railroads have glv-
elected president pro-tem pf the
Senate. Charlie Northen was re-elec
ted secretary 1 of the Senate.
Governor Terrell’s ipeasage was
read to both houses. It deals with
taxation, finances, educational mat>
ters, monuments to Confederate sol
diers, etc.
Senator L. G. Hardman, of Com
merce, today introduced a bill calling
for prohibition all over the state. A
big fight Is anticipated over the meas
ure. /
Senator Gwinette introduced a very
stringent anti-pass bill.
The House ahd 8enate will meet
Jointly at 11 a. m. tomorrow to can-
vasa the vote for Governor.
John M. Slaton, of Atlanta, was re
elected speaker-of the House. J. R.
Jackson, of Jones county, was elected
en a lower rate to the New England
cotton mills which ship to Japan and
China, subjecting the cotton manu
facturers of Georgia, South Carolina
and other states to unjnst discrimi
nation, which, it* is Alleged, is a direct
violation of the railfoad rate law.
In the decision to be handed down
by the commission in the next few
day^ it Is understood that the posi
tion .it will take will be that the low
rates granted to New England mills
are not unreasonable upon the record
of the case.
Decision of Commission.
It will be held by the commission
that as the trans-continental rate 1*8
regulated by water competition to the
Orient from New York, 'tbw Manufac
turer* of New Bngli
to a differential
Tobacco gratifies chewers
at less cost than cheap to
baccos. Chew what you
know about and know what
ypu are chewing'.
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY
WINStON-SALEM, N. C. 1
Make a
Resort of Your
- - ,/th, Screven Houit.
By ■ deal whloh ho feu closed with
Mr. 3. 'J. Dab it 1, expected, tbit
G*d D. Bryan will seour* control of
the Sc/even House. He will remod
el n pert of the house nnd will tear
away the (treater portion of It. He
expects to make It a eplendld com
mercial-hotel. If this deal te con
sumnint.il and whet hi expected to be
done: |» doe*.and the handsome Ho
tel Chatham of Chatham Clrclo which
la to be a tourist hotel Is built, 8avan-
nan will be rich In now hoatelrlea
She needa them. The present Screv
en Houre Is one o( the oldost hotels
In the state. It haa served Its day.
Mr. Dub, the prpprletor, thinks that
he is entitled to a rest at ho la moro
than three score years and ten and
has been In the hotel business almost
since attaining his majority. He for-
,morly kept a hotol In Augusta.
School Closing Exercises.
The closing exercises of the
vannah lllgii School will take place
tomorrow night at the Savannah The
atre. There Is a large class to grad-
uate this y?ar. The grammar schools
will clore on Friday. Savannah le
the last city In the state to dote her
public schools In the summer nnd the
last to open them In the fall.
Brlda Keeps Her Name.
There was a wedding nt the Catbe-
drnl of St. John the Baptist this mor
ning that was unique because the
hr’de and groom had the tame name.
Mr. Michael Patrick Decgan was the
groom nnd Miss Katherine Phllomena
Deegan the bride. The hrlde and
groom nre dlstnntly related. The
ceremony was performed by Rev.
Father B egan, n eoftsln of the bride,
nr.d Mr. John’M. Deegan. of Phils-
delrhln was one of th- groomsmen.
The Magic No. S.
Number three Is n wonderful mas
cot for Geo H. Parris of Cedar Grove.
Me according to a , mter which
r-ad«: "After suffering much with
liver and kidney trouble, and hedora-
ttr: vreatly dheauraged by the failure
to find relief. I tr od Electric Btttoti.
nnd as n result I am a well man to-
day. The first bottle relieved and
♦b-oe bnttlea completed the cure.”
Guaranteed be t on earth for atom-
ec'nf liver and kidney troubles, by A.
E. Dlmmock, W. D. Dunaway, drug*
glsta. BOc.
liniment, of minor
, . No hllln were II
traduced tn the Houee.
It II expected that W. A. Coving
ton, of Moultrie, wilt Introduce ta
abiolute prohibition bUI, modeled
oloeely after the Willingham bill, ot
1899. ^ y /
Atlanta Attorney In Trouble.
Lee 3. Langley, a well known local
attorney la eohflaed In the Fulton
oouftjt Jail,, charged with attempting
to aaiaalt the 13-year- old daughter
of Mra. Mima, of Atlanta. I-angley
proteata hla Innocence.
Tapp and Howell at Outs.
Following^ an offensive article In
tho Constitution. In which Sidney C.
Tapp, editor of the American Re pub
the commission, i^ it emjsay, to eon
alder New England la position to
have lower rates
The decision which will be handed
down by the commission, .will affedt
one of three cotton differential cues
filed by Southern manntactnrera. All
of the complaint. Involved vital prim
clples. The caeee were brought In
each Instance by manuefeturers ■ or
shippers of Southern cotton Piece
iron fill find ntnof/i ,llee.i * AW- - ■■■
goods and waste direct from the mills
of the South to the Orient.
One of the cases dealt only with
the rates to point, on the Pacific
coast. The other two Involved the
through rates across the continent
and the Pacific ocenn—part water
end part rail, to China and Japan.
Th» commission dismissed the case
lie. considered himself held up to (Involving rates to the Pacific coast
ridicule, Mr. Tapp addressed a do- on May 1, leaving only the two caqes
rnnnd for an apology to- Hon. Clark on trans-continental rates to be de-
Howell, asking who assumed reapon- elded.
alblllty for the article. j Tho order dismissing the last two
Last Saturday Mr. Tapp waited at cases will be substantially upon tho
the street corner for Mr. Howell’s same basis as that which controlled
appearance, with the Intention, no. Hhe decision of the Pacific coast caso.
cording to his ow n statement, of d •• I
manMfeg an opolngy. or bringing on What Our Repcrtar Saw |n New York,
n personal difficulty. A friend dls-l A recent visit to one of the largest
suaded him, and the matter la appar- j Paint factories In the world, disclosed
ently closed, since the publication ot' machinery that wac producing 10,000
an editorial apology last Sunday. |sallona of paint, and doing It better
Th« correspondence between the and In leas time than 100 gallons could
two was published .Tuesday afternoon ma de by hand mixing,
by The Georgian. ' | This was the celebrated I,. & M.
Atlanta’s City Extension. Ipalnt.
The committee on city extension I Th ® L - * M - Zinc hardens L. &
haa formally accepted the report of | M - *•>**« l*hd and makes L. & M.
the executive committee, calling for 1>olnt woa r like Iron for 10 or IB years,
the annexation of nenrly every dl’-l d gallons L. & M.’mixed with 3
trlct surrounding Atlanta, and cm- t** ,,ons Linseed Oil makes 1 gallons of
bracing about 50.000 population. Sev- palnt Rt 8 00,1 of le, » than *1.20 per
oral of those voting reserved the
right to light before council again
right to fight before council against “ any d<>fect exl,t8 |B L. & M.
the annexation of certain suburbs. In wU * re Paint house for nothin*,
niniiina, —* ■ Donations of L. & M. made ’*
eluding some of the most Importan
The new city limits If annexed, wPI
give the city a total population of
about 1S0.000.
gallon.
If any defect exists In L. &
> r>
• « *0 X , ' , .
The market i* full of shade*—good, bad and indifferent, but, the Vudor stands in a
class alone a»J the standard Porch-cooler, with a reputation as unassailable ps
Ivory Soap or White House Coffee. A hundred thousand American hames,' inclu-
i
ding the White House at Washington, are equipped with them. Here in Valdosta
^ the scores of Vudc r Shades on nearly every street, some hung three years ago,.are
. the best testimonials we could ask. :: :: :: :: ::
Light strips of linden wood, fast oil dyed: warp of
strong seine twine; srhooth-runnlng pulley and cord ar
rangements for immediate adjustment to any height—
these are some of the points that characterize the per
fect shade, a shade that hangs straight, looks well and
*
wears Indefinitely.
We carry two stock colors--dark green and mot
tled olive green. Widths to fit a>l spaces up to 10 feet.
An outlay of two to ten dollars ados another room to
your house the most comfortable summe- room you
ever had. /
All shades hung free of charge.
Oakley & Go
churches.
Sold by B.
F. Whittington.
f Bert Barbrr of Elton Ws., say--
“I have only taken four doses of your
Kidney nnd Bladder Pills nnd they
have done for me more thaa nnv of*
er medicine has ever done. I am
still taking the pill, as I want a per*
Mr. Barber refer* to I gists In
Dewitts Kidney and Bladder Pills,
which are unequgled for Backaehe
weak kidneys. Intlamatlon ot the blad-
dre and all urinary trouble,. A weeks
-reatment for 25c. Sold by W D
Dunaway. ,
For Over Fifty Year*
Ar old and well tried remedy—been
used for over sixty years by millions
of mothers, with perfect success. ~
soothes the child, softens the guku,
allays sit pain, cures wind colic an,
Is the best remedy for dlnrthosa. I;
pleasant to the taste. Sold by dtui
•ery part of the ; world
la Incalculable. Bo sure and ask
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup and
take no other. Guarantee*, nnder
the Food and Drags Act, Jane 30tn.
11906, aerial number 1,098.
FOR DYSPEPSIA
DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT
E. C. DeWITT de COMPANY. CHICAGO, XXX.
unaway, Valdosta, Ga.