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GEORGIA NEWS ITEMS
Interesting Happenings In the
State Gathered at Random.
Rntns Ruin Crops.
Crops of all kinds throughout the
state have been greatly injured by the
rainy weather. Cotton and corn are
far behind and the Iosb to the fruit
will amount to thousands of dollars.
Reports received at the agricultural
department from all sections of the
state report a great damage. Coupled
with this thera are hundreds of acres
of cotton that has never yet been
chopped out. This fact alone will
tend to make the crop short.
Grass has grown rapidly dnring the
pa6t three weeks and if the snn should
happen to shine at any time soon the
farmers will have more work than they
can attend to.
Commissioner of Agriculture Stevens
said: “The crop Is two weeks late.
The extreme wet and damp weather
has damaged the upland corn, and that
in the bottom lands has been over
flowed, which will necessitate a great
deal of replanting. suffered great
“The cotton crop has
ly and is exceedingly grassy. Hun
dreds of acres of young cotton have
not yet been chopped out for the first
time. In addition to this the cool
nights and damp atmosphere has caus
ed a great deal of the cotton to become
lonsv.
“The fruit <yop has been seriously
damaged. It is rotting on many of the
trees, and in many of the orchards and
vineyards throughout the state is fall
ing from the trees and vines. The
siege of the rainy weather has been
hard on Ae fruit growers, and the
once brilliant prospect for a fine crop
no longer exists. Grapes are suffering
more than anything else. The scarcity
of fruit will in all probability cause a
rise in the prices.”
After • Cotton Mill.
A delegation of prominent citizens
of Gainesville, visited Philadelphia
the past week to look after the move
ment of one of the largest cotton milla
of the Quaker City to Gainesville,
Negotiations have already progressed
far enough to warrant the statement
that the Philadelphia mill will either
be moved directly to Gainesville or a
Philadelphia-Georgia combination will
be made by which a new mill will be
erected in Gainesville to co-operate
with the present mill now operating
in Philadelphia.
Editor Fowlsr Still Alive.
Editor Fowler, of Toccoa, who was
so seriously stabbed in the neck by his
brother-in-law, Bert Safford, at Demo
rest, on the 21st, is still alive and
slight hopes are entertained for his
recovery. Safford is in jail awaiting
the result, but it is conceded by all
who have Been him that he is insane.
He refuses to Bay anything but “yes”
or “no” when questioned.
Atkinson Monument rand.
The movement to erect a monument
to the memory of Governor W. Y. At
kinson is bearing fruit.
This noble cause had its origin
among the people of Newnan, the
home place of the lamented governor.
It was quickly taken up by the friends
of the departed all over Georgia, and
has met with gratifying success. The
grand total subscription to the fund
to date amounts to about 31,700.
Work on the Ocmnlgec River.
Congressman Bartlet has notified
President Smith, of the Macon cham
ber of commerce, that the work of
cleaning the Ocmnlgee river will con
tinue steadily on, and that 840,000 of
the appropriation provided for in the
sundry civil bill will be available as
eoon as the present sum is exhausted.
The 320,000 which was appropriated
last year has been used, and in re
sponse to the notification of this fact
by Captain Gillette, who is in charge
of the general work, the authorities at
Washington informed him that the addi
tional 6um of $40,000 will be available
at once.
Jailer Whips a Mob.
Singlehanded and unaided Jailer
Tom Taylor at Rome, Ga., prevented
a mob from meting out summary pun
ishment on Gus Trout, a negro ac
cused of attempted assault. The at
tempt took place early Saturday morn
ing between 2 and 3 o’clock.
Taylor sleeps in the jail office, which
offers the only entrance to the jail
proper. Unsuspecting trouble he was
awakened by hammering at the office
door. He arose to see the trouble,
and when he opened the door several
men forced their way inside. They at
once demanded the keys to the jail
door and to Trout’s cell.
Taylor refused point blank to com
ply and the crowd leaped upon him in
an effort to overpower him. But they
reckoned without their host.
Taylor is short, but compactly
built, and possesses prodigious
strength. A desperate struggle began
in the small office, and Taylor was
crushed to the floor by superior num
bers, only to rise again and fling his
assailants to all sides. The bed was
emashed to pieces and the furniture
.overturned.
As the struggle continued Taylor
appeared to develop greater strength
and fonght them off again and again.
They finally secured his keys from his
pockets, aud while some were trying
to unlock the great outside door, oth
ers were attempting to keep Taylor
back.
Like an infuriated lion, the jailer
hurled them aside, and leaping to one
corner of the office snatched up a win
chester and leveling it on the crowd,
Baid with deadly coolness:
“Now, get out, or I’ll pump lead
into somebody.”
They saw he was in earnest and the
party disappeared into the darkness.
Want Receiver Removed.
In the United States district conrt
at Atlanta a petition has been filed by
the International Paper company ask
ing as one of the creditors of the bank
rupt firm, Wellhouse A Sons, that A.
Steiner, appointed receiver a few days
ago, be removed.
As the ground for the petition, it is
alleged that Mr. Steiner was the choice
of the bankrupt firm for receiver, aud
that the bankruptcy was pre-arranged
uv tho Wellhcuses, while ostensibly
involuntary.
Boycott Decided a* Illegal.
Judge Brinson at Augusta has filed
his decision in a ease that is impor
tant not only to tho newspapers, but
to organized labor, as it deals with the
right of unions to employ the boycott
as a means of compelling a rival to
employ union labor. Judge Brinson
decides as follows;
“The owners of the Tribune have a
property interest in that paper. They
have a right to such earnings os
they can to honestly make. Thu right of
‘aborers combine is not even re
motely involved in this case, nor is
their right to work for whom they may
choose, or to cease work, either in a
body or as individuals. Nor is their
right to patronize, whom they may
lesire.
i » All these rights they unquestion
ably have. No one could or should
seek to deprive them of these rights.
These circulars seem to have this
meaning, viz: ‘We, as organizations,
, ave boycotted The Tribune; we de
land of their patrons that they do the
«me. If the patrons do not do so we
lerebv put them cn notice that we
w jn boycott them also.’ One may be
intimidated by threats of property
off, as well as by threats of violence.
“Being governed entirely by what
^eems to be the current authority in
other jurisdictions of the United
states where those questions have
arisen, no other course remains but to
nold, under the admitted facts, that
ihe case of the plaintiffs is made out
and that they are entitled to the in
junction prayed for. The defendants
are, therefore, enjoined from sending
to patrons of The Daily Tribune tho
said circulars described in said peti
tion, or any circulars containing simi
lar threats, or from threatening or
using any means of intimidation to
cause said patrons to sever their busi
ness relations with said paper.”
Di viucim 'VnuiCu*
judge James A. Anderson, of At
lanta, one of the receivers of the
Southern Mutual Building and Loan
association, states that the stockhold
ers will not get more than 20 per cent
of the amounts found in their favor by
Auditor Hammond. Judge Anderson
urges that a speedy trial be given in
the exceptions to the auditor’s report.
He said that he was receiving letters
aud telegrams from the stockholders
asking when they would get their
money. There was great clamor for a
dividend.
No Fund* For State Encampment
Governor Candler says he will not
recommend the legislature to appropri
ate any money at the coming session
for expenses of a 6tate encampment
for Georgia troops. The governor said
at present the state was doing the best
it could for the soldier boys. Under
the present plan the state is giving so
much per year for company expenses,
the idea being, the governor says, to
build up the companies instead of reg
iments, ae heretofore. It is expected,
however, the friends of the military
will make a strong effort for a large
appropriation.
Solicitor Ia Named.
Governor Candler has appointed I.
H. Geer, of Colquitt, Ga., solicitor of
the county court of Miller. The new
ly appointed solicitor of Miller county
is a young lawyer of prominence, and
his selection was made by Governor
Candler out of a number of applicants.
ir yon hare something to sell, let
the people know it. An advertise
ment in this paper will do the work.
LOU BET GREETS COMMISSION.
President of French Republic Uxeivct
American Representatives.
President Loubet, at Paris, Friday,
received the national commissioners
at Elysee palace. They assembled
there, and when the entire party had
arrived they proceeded to the audi
ence room led by United States Am
bassador Palmer. President Lonbet
addressed the commissioners, express
ing his pleasure iu meeting them and
his gratitude to President McKinley.
DR.TALMAGE’S SERMON
rh« Eminent Divine's Sunday
Dieoourse.
Subject: Christ Oar Refuge — A Metmi-c
of Comfort, Commending the Ueliav*
lor of the Disciple* to Those Who Are
Burdened With Sorrow.
[Copyright ltwo.1
the Wasiiengtov, following disb D. C.—Dr. which Tutorage, in
urse, he hasse*’;
for publication this week, gives a prescrip
tion for all anxiety and worriment. and
illustrates the divine sympathy for all who
are in any kind of struggle. The tert is
Matthew xiv, 12, “And His disciples went
and told Jesus.”
An outrag*ous assassination had jnst
taken place. To appease a revengeful
that woman noble, King self-sacrifk.ng Herod ordered the death of
the Baptist. The of prophet, tne disciples John
thrown into grief group and dismay. They
were
felt themselves utterly defenseless. There
peal, was no and authority grief to which they could ap
pression. yet If there be must always human find ex
hear no ear to
it, then the agonized soul will cry it
kloud to the winds and the woods and the
wa#rs. $ut ‘here was an ear that was
willing to listen. There is a tender j>a
th(* and at the same time a most admir
able picture in the words of my text,
“They went aud to d Jesus.” He e could
understand all their grief, and He imme
diately soothed it. Our burdens are not
more than half so heavy to carry if another
shoulder is put under the other end of
them. Here we find Christ, His brow
shadowed with grief, standing amid the
group of disciple-, who, with tears and
violent gesticulations and wringing of
hands and outcry of bereavement, are ex
pressing skillful Brush, their woe. Raphael, with his
putting upon the wall of a
palace some scene pi sacred story, gave
not so skillful a Btroke as when the plain
hand of the arengelist writes, “They went
ana told Jesus.”
TfcA cdd Goths and Vandals onoe caire
down upon Italy from the north - Eu
rope, and they 7 upset the gardens, and
they broke down the statues and ewtpt
away tiful. everything So there that was good and beau
is ever ana anon in ;he
history of all the 6ons and daughters of
Our race an incursion of ro#gh handed
troubles that come to plunder and ran
sack and put to the torch all that men
cleft highly into prize. the There is no cave so deeply
shelter, mountains as to afford us
and the foot of fleetest courser
cannot The rear they ns beyond the the string quick pursuit. with
arrows nut to lly
dart we fall and
I feel that I bring to you a most appro
priate message, I mean to bind up all
vour griefs into a h undle and set them on
fire with a spark f rom Gcd’s altar. The
prescription that cured the sorrow of the
disciples have read wall that cure all your Godfrey heartaches. and I
hen his
arm y ■hey marched out to capture Jerusalem,
as t came over the hills, at the first
flash of the pinnacles of that beautiful
city, the anqy that had marched in si
lence lifted a shout that made the earth
tremble. marching Oh, toward you soldiers of Jesus 1 would Christ,
by on heaven, that
to-day, sonfe God’s *l;am from the palace of
God’s" mercy and strength, you might
be lifted into great rejoicing and that as
the prospect of its peace breaks <— your
enraptured hosanna gaze the Lord! you might raise one glad
In to
the first place I commend the beha
vior of who those unpardoned. disciples to all There burdened
souls are comes
a time in from almost every man’s that history when
he feels 6ome source he has an
erring Mture. The thought may not have
ench heft a# to fell him. It may be only
like the flash in an evening cloud just after
a very hot gumiher day. One man to get
rid of that, impression will go to praver,
another will stimulate himself by ardent
spirits, and another man will dive deeper
in secularities. But sometimes a man can
not get rid of these impressions. The fact
is, when a man finds out that his eternity
is poised upon a perfect uncertainty, and
that the next moment his foot may slip,
he must do something violent to make him
self forget where he stands or else fly for
Pefu^?. Some of crouch under yoke, and
bite the you when this a
you dust moment yon
inieht rise up a crowned conqueror. Driven
and perplexed as you have been by sin, go
and tell Jesus. To relax the grip of death
from your soul and plant your unshackled
feet upon the golden throne Christ let the
tortures of the bloody mortot transfix
Him. With the beam of His own cross
He will break down the door cf your dun
geon. From the thorns of Bis own crown
He will blaze pick with enough eternal gems victory. to make In your
brow every
tear on His wet cheek, in every gash of
His side, in every from kmg, shoulder blackening shoulder, mark
of laceration to
in the grave shatterinv. heaven storming
death groan I hear Him say, “He that
cometh nnto Me I will in nowise cast out.”
“Oh,” but you say, “instead of curing
my wound you want to make another
wound—namely, known that of convictio..! ” Have and
you never 4 surgeon to come
find a chronic burn it disease out? and -fco then the with sharp of
caustic all grace
God cornea to the old sore of sin. It has
long been rankling burned there; through but, by divine
graqp, it is out flesh these fires
of conviction, flesh “the eominr again as
the of a little child;” “where sin
abounded, grace much lhore aboundeth.”
With the life, ten thousand and tell Jesus. unpardonable sins
of your go
You will never get rid of your sins in
any c^her way, and remember that the
broad invitation which I extend to you
will not always be extended. King Al
fred, before modern timepieces were in
vented, eight used honrseach, to divide and the then day into had three three
parts, candles. Bv the time the first candle
wax
had burped and to the socket eight hours had
gone, when the second candle had
burned to the socket .another eight hours
had gone, and when all the three candles
Oh, were gone out then instead the day had passed.
that some of us, of calculating
our days and nights and years by any
earthly by the numbers timepiece, of opportunities might calculate and tliem
mer
cies .which are burning down and burning
out, never to be relighted, lest at last we
b£ amid the foolish virgins who cried,
“Our lamps have gone out!”
Again, I commend the behavior of the
disciples heard men to in all mid-life who are say tempted. they had I have
never
been led into temptation. If you have
Qot felt temptation, it is because you have
not Lied to do right. A man hoppled and
handcuffed, »s long as he lies quietly, doqp
net test the power of the chain, but when
he rises up and with determination re
solve to snap the handcuff or break the
bopnle And there then he finds who the power been 1 of the for iron,
are men have ten
and twenty and thirtv years bound hand
and felt the foot by evil of habits the chain who because have never
have power tried break it. It is they
never to very
easv with to go on down with the stream and
the around wind and lying on your oars, but just
turn try to go against the
wind and tho tide, and you will And it w
a different matter. Ae evil long habit aa we go down
the current of onir we swm to
get along quite around smoothly, and h'-d but if the after other a
while we turn and and
way, toward Christ haw pardon lay
heaven, oh, Von then how we to to
th£ oare! will have your teiupta.ica.
You have one kind, you another, you an
other, not one person escaping. the behavior of the
Again, I commend
disciples to all those who are abu;«t anl
to the slandered and persecuted. When
Herod put John to death, the disciples
knew that their own heads were not safe.
And d-» you know that every John has a
Herod? There are jieraons m life who do
not wish yoq vwv well. Your misfortunes
are honeycombs to them. Through the*
teeth they hiss at you, misinterpret your
motives, and would be glad to safe yon up
set. No man gets through life without
haring after a.pommeling. horned and Some husked slander and comes
you hoofed
to goro and trample you, and what are
you bo do? I tell you plainly that all who
serve Christ must sirffer persecution. It is
the.worst sign in the world for you to be
be able to say, "I have not an enemy in
the world.” A woe is pronounced in the
Bible against the one of whom evcrrbodv
speaks welL If you are at peace with all
the world and everybody likes you and
approves y«cwr tho work, it is because" you are
an idler m Lord’s vineyard and are
not served do/ng Christ, your dnty. All those who haw
however eminenf. all have
been maltreated at some stage of their ex
perience. You know it was so in the time
of George Whitefield when be stood and
invited men into the kingdom of God.
What him? did the learned Dr. Johnson say of
He pronounced him a miserable
mountebank. How was it when Robert
Hall stood and spoke as scarcely any unin
spired heaven? man ever did speak of the glories
of <And ns he stood Sabbath af
ter Sabbath preaching on these themes
his face kindled with the glory. John
Foster, a Christian man. said of this man.
“Robert Hall is only acting, and the smile
on his face is a reflection of his own van
ity.” upside John down Wesley Christian turned reform, all England and
with
yet the punsters were after him, and the
meanest John jokes Wesley. in England What were perpetrated
about is true of the
pulpit is true of the pew: it is true cf the
street: it is true of the shop and the store.
All who live godly in Christ Jesus must
suffer persecution.
And I set it down, as the very worst sign
in all of vour Christian experience if you are
any you at peace wn alj the* world.
The religion of Christ is war. It is a
challenge devil,” to “the world, the flesh and the
and if you will buckle on the whole
armor of God you will find a great host
disputing heaven. your path between this and
disciples in garb of to moumiue! all the bereaved. How How emblems many
of behold everywhere.’ many
sorrow you God
has His own way (peit of taking apar' a fam
ily. We must out of the way for com
ing generations. that others We must get off the
stage may come on. and for
this reason there is a long procession reach
shadows. ing down all This the time into from the valley of
eternity is emigration enterprise time that into
so vast an we
.•annot understand it. Every hour we bear
the clang of the sepulchral gate. The
sod must be broken. The ground must be
plowed for resurrect it i harvest. Eternity
must, be peopled. The dust must press our
eyelids. die.” “It is Thfe appointed unto all men
once to emigration from time
into eternity keeps three-fourths' of the
families of the earth in desolation. The
air is rent with farewells, and the black
tasseled vehicles of death rumble through
every street. The body of the child that
was folded so closely to the mother’s heart
is put away in the cold and the darkness.
The laughter freezes to the girl’s lip, and
the rose scatters. The b(V in the harvest
field of Shunem says. “My head, my
head!” and they i.rry him koine to die on
the lap of his mother. Widowhood stands
with tragedies of woe struck into th* pal
lor of the check. Orphanage crie« in vain
for father and mother. Oh. the prav# i*‘
eruel! With teeth of stone it eintebes for
its prey. Between tbs closing gates of th#
sepulcher our hearts are mangled and
n , , aK aJ
U.-U4CV*.
But Christ is always neap—before you,
behind you, within you. No mother ever
threw her arms apound her child with such
warmth and ecstaey of affection as Christ
has shown toward you.
Close at band, nearer -than the staff upon
which you lean, nearer than the cup you
put chief to with your which lip. neater than the handker
I preach Him you wipe away your tears,
an ever present, Jesus. all sympa
thizing, compassionate How can
you stay away one moment from Him with
your griefs? Go now. Go and tell Jesus.
It is often that friends have no power
to relieve vys. They would very 7 muen like
to do it, blit they oannot disentangle our
finances, they cannot ehre our sickness
and raise our dead, but glory be to God
that He to whom the disciples went has all
power in heaven and on earth, and at oui
call He will balk our calamities and at.
just the right time, in the presence of an
applauding will raise earth and a resounding heaven,
our dead. He is mightitw than
Herod. He is swifter than the storraj He
is grander than the sea. He is vaster than
eternity. nipotence will And every 7 sword of God’s om
the of leap infinity from lie its exhausted scabbard and
than resources that rath
er God s child shall not be de
livered when he cries to Him for rescv. 2 .
Suppose ihuch your child was in trouble. How
would you endure to get him out?
You would I say, "I don’t care what it will
cost. must get him out of that trouble."
Do you think God is not so good a father
as having you? Seeing you are in trouble and
all power, will He not stretch out
His arm and deliver you? He will. He is
mighty ain and to divide save. He can level the mount
the sea, and can extinguish
the fire and save the soul. Not dim of
eye, not weak of arm, not feeble of re
sources, but with all eternity and the uni
verse at His feet. Go and tell Jesus. Will
you?
Ye who#e cheeks are wet with the night
dew of the grave, ye who cannot look up,
ye whose hearts are dried with the breath
of sirocco, in the name of the religion of
Jesus Christ, which lifts everv burden and
captive wipes away and lightens twery tear and delivers every
plore and every tell Jesus. darkness, I im
A little you now child go with her father,
went a
storm sea captain, the to littie sea, and when the first
camd ehild was very milch
frightened, the cabin and and in the night rushed out of
where said. “Where is father,
’is father?” Then they told her.
“Father is on deck guiding the vessel and
watching mediately the storm.” The little child im
returned to her berth and said,
“It’s all right, for father’s on deck.”
O ye who are tossed and driven in this
the world, valleys up by and the mountains and down by
at your wits’ ends, I want
you to know ttye Lord God is guiding the
ship. Your Father is on deck. He will
bring harbor. you Trust through in the tl\e darkness into the
Lord. Go and tell
If you go to Him for pardon and sym
all is well. Everything will bright
up, and joy will come to tne heart, and
wUl depart, your sifts will be for-
f(rv<*n, ward path, and yom and foot will touch the up
that report above the what shining is done messengers
tell it until the arches here will
great of God re
sound with the glad tidings if now with
contrition and full trustfulness of -soul you
will only go and tell Jesus.
But 1 am oppressed as I think of those
who may not take this counsel and may
remain unblessed. I cannot help asking
what will be the destiny of these people.
Xerxes looked off on his army. There were
2.000,000, shaled. Xerxes perhaps the finest armv ever mar
rode along the lines, re
viewed them, came back, and stood on
some 000 high point, looked off upon the 2,000,
men and bdrst into tears. At that mo
ment, when every one supposed he would
be in the greatest exultation, he broke
down in grief. They asked him why he
thought wept. “Ah,” that he said, “I weep at the
so soon all this host wjll be
dead. ’ So I think of these vast popula
tions of immortal mem and women and re
alise the fact that soon the places which
know them now Will.know them no more,
and There they will be gone—whither, whither?
is a stirring idea which the poet
put in very peculiar verse when he said:
Tia not for man to trifle; life is brief,
And sin is here;
Our age is but the falling of a lc -f, -
Not lives, A dropping but tear. have
many One, only only one we—
How sacred that one;
sftould one life ever be—
That narrow span!
LABOR WORLD.’ •
The strike of the Union Street Rail
way men in Kansas City has been de
clared off.
About twelve hundred workers in
gas fixture factories in New York City
are on a strike.
Child labor in North Carolina mills
lias decreased fifty per cent, in the
past three years.
Yellow pine timber is getting scarce,
and Southern sawmills are now run
ning two-thirds time.
All the street railway employes In
Hanover and Cologne, Germany, have
struck for higher wages.
English labor statistics show that
270,000 workjieople obtained advance
in wages during April, while pay of
3300 was decreased.
City gardeners, who have been or
ganized as a local assembly of the
Knights of Labor, have fixed upon
$75 a month as the prevailing rate of
wages.
I on million dollars’ worth of build
ing improvements are tied up as a re
sult of the labor troubles lu Chicago,
and the advance in prices for build
ing material.
Robert years,
the oldest locomotive engineer in
America, died at fVorn Beloit, Wis. He
first ran an engine Plattsville to
Susquehanna, Perm., and ran the first
engine across the bridge at Pough
keepsie.
The union machinists of Philadel
phia have decided to demand on Labor
Day tlfls year that their employers
shall reduce the hours of labor from
ten to nine a day, -with a minimum
wage of twenty-eight cents an hour.
Where their demands are not granted
they will strike.
All union Laborers and teamsters
employed in rebuilding the street
railway system at Decatur. 111., have
struck because the Milwaukee firm
having the contract, contrary, it was
said, to agreement, had. discharged
union men and employed uou-union
men from outside towns.
NEWSY CLEANINCS.
Bjibontc plague lias broken out afresh
at Alexandria, Egypt.
Coal prices in the Saxony and Saar
districts of Germany have advanced.
There are 5207 motor cycles in
Fiance on which the annual tax L.z6
been paid.
The American Consul at Marseilles
reports that trade in France was in
creasing.
United States consuls have been in
structed to make reports on trusts iD
Germany. -
The astronomers at Griffin, Ga.,
failed to secure any photographs of the
recent eclipse.
The new Russian cruiser Variag ie
considered by naval experts the best
of her type afloat.
Germany is trying to secure Interna
tional agreement for a close time for
fishing in the North Sea.
Roasting peanuts on the street has
been found to be against the law by
the enthusiasts in the autl-noise crU'
Bade in. Chicago.
Otvtng to the stubborn resistance of
the Sultan the cities of the west coast
of Moroeco are still without tele
graphic connection.
In view of the contemplated prohibi
tion law in Winnipeg, the liquor men
are asking the Government for $2,000,
000 compensation for loss of business.
Postmaster-General Smith has stated
that there was no regulation forbid
d ng iiostal clerks to contribute to a
fund for securing legislation.
The citizens of Erie, Penu., are plan
ning the building of a monument to
Captain Charles V. Gridley, of the
flagship Olympia, in the battle of Ma
nila Bay, whose body Is buried there.
Baron von Ilbeinbaben, Prussian
Minister of the Interior, has issued an
order forbidding the Prussian provin
cial authorities hereafter to grant to* a
change of name to Jews, reserving
himself the right to grant such privil
eges.
RECEIVER APPOINTED
For Wellhouse – Sons, Wholesale P»pe r
Dealers, at Atlanta, On.
A. Steiner, president of the Atlanta
Brewing and Ice Company, has been
appointed .receiver for Wellhouse –
Sous, one of the largest wholesa e
paper houses in the city, as the resul
of a petition filed in the United States
circuit court by alleged creditors 0
the company. The appointment was
made by Judge William T. Newnfi* 0,