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PROCEEDINGS OF THE
IN THE HOUSE.
July 15.
The house of representatives, after
ref f bill of Senator Born of the
an tl-pab. t ass district bv the coSira decisive
nlr '7'5 <o ?8 Le
vote , .I,., bill will 'be resumed in its
tion 01 u
, .
Emotion A m 1 to reconsider defeated the pension
bill- which v h imd had been been ueieateu, was was
! carried csolution calling on Governor
A t ch legislature his
i Smith 10 J + .... ' rea
Isons for dlb ™ iaal ss nK ns Joseph J ° SepU M M * Brown "° Wn
I laid ovei one p day. da v
was
July 16.
m ipet ion to leasing the convicts of
iho L„rsdav state developed on all sides
when the Holder convict
>isnre’ was offered to the house. A
^ tendency, if to lease at
| limit to one year the lease and by
ID throw the question, for
i tbat means
final settlement upon the next admin
istration Mration with its new legislature pre
'^nnlv two speeches were made dur- Mr.
, II g .vj’p session. The first was by
Holder of Jackson, the author of the
measure, and the secoffd by Mr. Cov
iington of Colquitt, who had the floor
when the house adjourned.
July 17.
Almost the entire time of the house
of representatives was occupied Fri
la morning in a continuation of the
( the question of the dis
discussion of
[position of the state’s convicts. Mr.
.Covington finished his address, which
was begun Thursday. Mr. Jones o£
Alexander, Mr. Fulltoright of Burke,
mV novd of Spalding, Mr. Wright of
Fiovd and Mr. Holder of Jackson ex
dressed their views in legards to the
i-o'ivict leasing system.
The house concurred in the senate
I resolution calling for investigation of
lhe convict lease system.
July 18.
I). I The house was in session but thir
minutes, during time the following
I -bills were passed: by Mr. Odum of
Baker, to create board of county com
mission, to repeal act creating the
hoard of county commissioners; by
Mr Flanders of Johnson, to create
boaid of roads and revenues; by Mr.
Haywood of McDuffie, to create a
board of road, and revenues; by Mr.
Strickland of Pike, to incorporate the
I town of Williamson; by Mr. Simmons
of Gilmer, to create new charter for
Ellijay; by Mr. Peterson of Montgom¬
ery, to incorporate town of Orland;
i by oil'- „• Simmons of Gilmer fa to ftaaaoi repeal
act incorporating town of Ellijay; by
Mi. I ient of Heaid, to lepeal act
granting new chartei for franklin,
by Mr. Alexander of DeKalb, to au
thorize bond issue for Decatur; by
iMr. Front of Heard, to create new
charter for Franklin; by Messrs.
Camber and Alexander of DeKalb,
ho authorize mayor and council to
fissue bonds; by Mr. Burwell of Han
[cock, to by repeal Mr. act Berry incorporating of Union, Cul- to
verton;
incorporate town of Blairsville; by
Messrs. Brown and Watkins of Car
roll, to create office of commissioner
of roads and revenues; by Mr. Cal¬
tech of Gordon, to authorize town of
Calhoun to deed certain lands; by
Blackburn and Bell of Fulton, to
amend charter for East Point; by
Mr. Ballard of Newton, to establish
public school for Mansfield; by Mr -
Beterson of Montgomery, to create a
new charter for Glenwood; by Mr.
Swilling of Franklin, to authorize pub
hc school system for Lavonia; by
Messrs. \i x and Wilson of Gwinnett,
to amend charter of Norcross; by Mr.
Mays of Butts, to create new charter
for Jackson; by Mr. Boyd of Spald
big, to authorize Griffin to lav out
certain streets.
They July 20.
heard a message from Gov
ernor Hoke Smith read in which the
governor gave his reason for dismiss¬
ing Joseph M. Brown. It was referr¬
ed m the judiciary committee.
I nder a special order the house
look up the bill by Mr. Dunbar of
Kiehmond providing for the valida¬
tion of certain countv and municipal
bonds concurred in the senate
amendments and passed the bill.
rim house then went into a com
WrlTt f 1 °V™ 0 ' Floyd Wh0le took h0Use the floor and and Mr ’
spoke favoring . the Alexander substi
<°h he C T vict lease b111
atli-e '
At h V° n £ 1USi ° n ° f Mr Wright s
alduss ’
Mr. Barrett of Stephens pre
?itt A ^ ‘he bill.
Ha tu °- f Ribb s l ieaklng 011 the
.airett substitute had the floor when
tase adjourned.
' ;„, ,ollowm S bills were passed by
'•nanimous ... consent: By Mr. Thurman
’’ talker—A bill to create the conn
caur t of Walker county. By Mr.
P, h A bil t0 create
n S wT
»y court comt of o f VV nghtsville. hi ',i
The Juiy 21.
convict lease question, which
as ,ile special order of the day,
1 ame up as soon as the house conven
ed 1 uesday morning.
Al 8uments pro and con were made
,
j !l A\ise of Fayette, Mr. Black
,,‘ ll n ot a Y ton Fulton, of Worth, Mr. Butt of Fannin,
v 'i Mr. Smith of
wl h and Ml - » a 'l of Bibb secur
fl °° r ^ ust before adjournment
ami v address unfinished.
Th was
following f bills were be unan
con sent, read the third time
and ‘TT* : R v Mr. Blackburn of Ful
t 0 fi bl 1 to -
ia] ihffs i P r °vlde for two spec
it ■ • in . the superior courts of
and aid f 0 unRes - By Messrs. Young
it Tuggle t , of Troup-A bill to
'he time of holding the supe
Wool andTu countS lq of'west’
W'o r l U
* nd
Florida a
re h V buyers representing leading
,° f the ' ;,ate The " 01>
'
a.r *s> larger than it was last,
s on;
over 20,000 pounds being
ifT powers ^
f. ftol.
Fla., on the sales made
GEORGIA LEGISLATURE
IN THE SENATE.
Preaident July 15.
F1 t was again in the
thp *75 illness niI } esb of'hU ot fnth father, °“ whose a . ccount con- o£
UU ‘?" ?' T"" 1 “ 8,111 CTUta “
a ' *: v s ^ n ‘ ue bill (by re
quesT) piovlding that “power plants
shall^b have -!vp !,owor °.' t0 lleat use water t0 tne for l )Uolic con
a, purpoges from
-! aQy near b
6 ‘ a 11 ° r cenl 0 ' r
the s a in ue sha11 be returned to the
f tream . at the same P^ce from which
11 t was taken,” was made the special
order of the day.
fa speaking in opposition to the bill
enat01 ' 3 Overstreet and Henderson
f^arged lad , been that do ’ le considerable for the bill. lobbying
Senator Williford T , and Senator Boyd
f. lso si»°ke at some length in opposi
t on to the bill. The bill was lost by
a ^ ot « 21 to 6.
. .l ut bl of i’ telegraph f01 the regulation of the con
dispatchers operators and train
ot common carriers and
other purposes, was passed with
u °vfm°* lt10 ^
...^ bl .J°. r 110 Provision of an aux
' Iary n ” lltia ’ composed only on veter¬
ans of f the Spanisli-American war and
such men as had served a full enlist¬
ment in the national guard, which
would provide a proper guard for the
property and lives of the state at
such times as the regular national
guard should be called out of Georgia
by the president of the United States
was passed without opposition,
July 16.
At the sesion of the senate Thurs
day appropriation ..... bills giving the
University of Georgia $10,000 for the
remodeling of oid college at Athens
and $5,900 for the equipping of the
Carnegie library at the Georgia
School of Technology were par.ed,
During the debate over the appro¬
priation bill for Carnegie library,
Senator Wilkes of the Second district
made many sensational statements
concerning Andrew Carnegie.
The Shaw resolution, calling for the
appointment of two members of the
senate to act with the three members
of the house on the investigation of
the convict- lease system, was passed
with, but one dissenting vote.
July 17.
Friday’s session of the senate was
uneventful and quiet.
The Shaw resolution on the investi¬
gation of the convict lease system,
which was adopted Thursday, was
reconsidered and laid on the table and
p e lder resolution on the same
subject was adopted This course
wag taken because the house had
h d a j rea dy adopted the Felder reso
lutjon
following bills were passed;
g enator Lashley—To prevent the
0 f fish from Brass Town creek
^ owns county. By Senator Wilkes
^, 0 i UCO rporate the town of King
wood j n t he county of Colquitt. House
1)d ] j )V ’relief Mercer of Terrell—To
vide f or from the state tax
on our dispensaries in Terrell county
-
u
July 18. of the senate
There was no session
Saturday, that body having adjourned
Friday until Monday.
July 20. reading of
Tiio senate heard the
governor’s special message, with
? u comment It was referred to the
'
.
JlU p° . '
esid ent F i vnt announced his ap
j Dointment9 fr0 m the senate for the
u tion of the convict lease sys
* °, the sta te prison commission fol
u,iaei th Fe i der resolutions as
lows: Twenty-sec¬ ^
Senator Felder of the
ond district, Senator Brock of the
Fourth Senator Hayes of the Thlr
teenth.
July 21. of Senator
The good roads bill
Bovd of the Thirty-second district,
came’ up for final action and in the tabled sen¬
ate Tuesday morning was
after a lengthy debate.
A bill by Senator Camp to incorpor¬
ate ate the city of Lavonia, Franklin
C °The n ‘tag „ SSPd
1 Marlin tax bill was called
gpecia i order and brought forth
the most rigorous discussion of any
that has been considered by
. a f n sev eral weeks. the
The Martin bill provides that
tax on fertilizers shall be raised from
proceeds" twentv-five * go' cents per ‘the ton, the
i to towards support
f the eleven congressional district
h't . f be«“ s tate These schools
ireadv buil. for and their muat sup
ha , \ e a addiiional rune's
p0 ‘ • wilkes spoke at some
,® e ,h opposing the measure. senate took
President Flynt of the
and wh en that body adjourn
ed had not finished his speech favor
ing the bill.
Yowls. soothe
“This lullaby doesn’t seem to
baby. “Wonder why not !
“I suspect lie takes it for competi
tion. ••_\Vashington Herald.
—--- county. B^Mm R Aj r
rior court of Troup
_
Glenn of Whitfield A court of , Dal D j.
the act creating the city
ton. By Mr. Odum o -
court to amend of Newton. the act creatu . S " c J
Jasper—-A bill to ? ra a creat
the city ^ 0l "; . .. Bv
ing ot Q jn 0 * t —\ bill to
Mr. Wilson - the the citv city court court
amend the act creating
of Buford.
bein'aSE? have
tor towns :
Indianola, Lowndis - )r
SbeUan ^'irtiner fe .
’ Richhmond county,
signed; Marline/, n. .
Jesse \V Clark, vice J. B. Morton, it
s. county, Ar
signed. Ingle* x % K F al .r
1 j one s, resigned.
nrv
AT LAST THE WORM TURNS!
-***■£ % f YouR I
QiVAu!) TrlE ANNULMENT O
of OUR MMS1AC1JH tKAL
GS0t/Na5' L
V nmi nit mi y
Tr^ / ■Cp
ft- i \
R
.# c. If 1
«&• 4S>
^b / gffoRt PfiOCtiWNt \
f fuarritR.'.Gs'.S. 1 rwsT \
ASK iov - Do You WEAR a I w
I R Al ? ArtOiSAuTriAT
i » • VShape .Vy
to YouR own; '
v
rs fill m __>-7
J i 1 O l ?s
f n -[m: 6C|15 GtoMA Vi t-W ■> now
r V2 ■
1
' <
AtlAnTA BonoSAL\
—Cartoon by Triggs, in the New York Press.
There has been introduced into the Georgia Assembly a timely bill relating to
the “wiles and blandishments” of women. The measure provides that if any woman,
whether maid or widow, shall betray into matrimony any unsuspecting male subject
of the State by scents, paints, powder or perfumes, cosmetics, waters, artificial teeth,
false hair, iron variegated, stays, corsets, drop-stitched, pads or padding, rainbow hoops hosiery, or high-heeled shoes, V-cut
waists, lace, or or by any other deceitful
means or artful practices, the marriage, upon conviction, shall be null and void. As¬
semblyman Glenn, who introduced the bill, represents a summer resort district.
. » PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT HONORS GROVER CLEVELAND. "
Names San Jacinto Forest for Former President, Who Created the Reser¬
vation-- Informs Mrs. Cleveland of His Proclamation.
Oyster Bay.—President Roosevelt
has written to Mrs. Grover Cleveland,
informing her of a proclamation he
has signed changing the name of the
San Jacinto National Forest to the
Cleveland National Forest, in honor
of the late former President, The
letter is:
“Oyster Bay, 1908.
“My Dear Mrs. Cleveland—It has
recently been my privilege to sign a
proclamation changing the name of
the San Jacinto National Forest to
the Cleveland National Forest. May
I express to you the very great pleas¬
ure it gave me to take that action—a
pleasure mingled with a keen sense
of the loss to our country and to our
citizens in the death of President
Cleveland. On February 22, 1897,
President Cleveland signed the proc¬
lamation creating the San Jacinto
Forest Reserve in Southern Califor¬
nia. The date—February 22—was
no mere accident, since the signature
of the proclamation was timed to
BROTHERS TRAPPED, IHUEO THEMSELVES.
Posse Stormed Home of Mao Who Had Slaughtered an Inoffensive
Meat Periler.
Benton Harbor, Mich.—Both Au¬
gust Gross, who without known cause
shot and fatally wounded an in¬
offensive meat pedler named James
Kirk, and his younger brother, Fred
Gross, lost their lives in a pitched
fight with Sheriff Tennant and a posse
of seven men who went to the Gross
home to arrest August Gross, One
of the officers was injured. The
Gross brothers are both supposed to
have been insane.
After shooting Kirk, Gross barri¬
caded himself in his farmhouse,
twelve miles from here, in Pipe
stone township, and through the
night exchanged occasional shots with
the crowd of farmers and officers who
were guarding the premises to pre¬
vent his escape. His younger brother,
Fred, joined him in the defense of the
house, and the aged mother of the
two men was also in the building.
The officers found her almost pros¬
trated with terror when they finally
broke into the house.
• EDICT THAT WILL WRING THE HEARTS OF COLLEGE BOYS AND NEGRO GAMBLERS
Tailors in Convention Decide to Make No More Flashy Clothes After
This Summer.
Chicago _ Woe for the college i
vouth the negro gambler and the
flashy’ bartender The speaking,^ tailors’ con- tore
vention, figuratively
leff^the'drop-front^the pocket four-inch flaps \
trousers cuff the frilly
and other innovations of the season
wasn’t enough to interest a ragpick
er Indignation of the tailors over
bizarre garments rose to a high pitch
and they vowed even college boys
would have to submit to conservative
clothes in the fall, even if the foot
hall gatherings came to look like a
camnmeeting the cher
in' the campaign against sounded
ished fads John E. Spann a
“keynote” in his speech: stemmirg
“Your salvation lies in
the torrent of freakish garments,” he
said to th» assembled cutters. “The
tailors originated the so-called gin
gerbread stvles for their college pat
ronage. but they have got beyond us.
They were saP/pfi seized udou u »®} greedily by
the manufacturers,
what the makers were waiting lor,
but the curves and frills conceal de-
House of Seven Gables
Now Gills’ Settlement.
She will use the estate In settle
S ‘ )e * kiDS 01 »*' pl “ >
’’TfFUffoi wlie ® ‘ T(fvanta be^n cin"S need
i7 ?ha« <r es SKl has
fandmarks ooe of the
be preserved.”
coincide with the birthday of our first
President.
“President Cleveland was one of
the first to recognize the need of for¬
est preservation, and the creation of
the San Jacinto and other forest re¬
serves, with a total area of 25,686,-
320 acres, was one of the results of
his foresight in this direction.
Throughout his life he took great in¬
terest in conserving the natural re¬
sources of the Nation; and I particu¬
larly regretted his inability to attend
the meeting of the Governors in May,
because that meeting was in part the
fruit of seed he had sown years be¬
fore. The name of Grover Cleveland
will always be prominently identified
with the movement to protect the
forests of the United States, and it
seemed to me eminently fitting that
one of the forests which he created
should bear his name throughout all
time.
“Sincerely yours,
“THEODORE ROOSEVELT.”
The posse drove to the Gross farm
in two automobiles from Benton Har¬
bor. Shortly before their ais’ival the
Gross brothers had rushed from the
house and taken position with their
guns near the front fence. After
about fifteen shots had been fired at
the officers, who replied with rifles
and shotguns, August left his cover
and ran for the house. Tred was
wounded through the leg, and when
he found that he was unable to fol¬
low, fired a bullet through his own
head, dying instantly Expecting Au¬
gust to open fire momentarily, the
posse closed in on the house, entered
it and found the crazed man dead on
his own bed A single shot from a
shotgun had pierced his heart.
August Gross was a well educated
man. Worry over his failure to get
financial returns from a sight which
he had invented for military rifles is
said to have unsettled his mind, al¬
though it is declared that insanity is
hereditary in the family.
fects of fit. Long coats cover up the
misfit of the barrel’ trousers. Con
servative styles with a draping effect
that require careful tailoring will
The cutters were urged to pad the
shoulders only when ‘absolutely nec
essary to give the figure proper shape
and to balance the garment sufhcient
ly to give the wearer distinction and
individuality.” Unusual fabrics were
also selected by the ta.iors for the
discard Conservatism in shades will
replace the “zebra” styles and ether
summer novelties.
Colors will be toned down to con¬
form to the greater conservatism of
design. Brown, it was said .would
he the prevailing hue for fall suits,
with a strong representation of green
ish tints
“Overcoat styles, said one speak
er. “will be ’boxy three-quarter
lengths, with a tendency to shortness.
For morning wear black-oraided sin
gle-breasted fot frocks of vicuna or chev
will be in great demand, to be
worn with a fane r waistcoat and
striped trousers.”
Bog Seizes Wire and Dies
to Save Young Master.
wire and tore it from the hands.of
,!^ t ,hU «c.“d
i 1 Bra«u?r'started ,» push made the wire the
i from his hand when the dog
i ! leap to rave for Ms five life. minute.. The hop wa,
unconscious
The
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■9\
of Technology
is better equipped and organized in all
departments than ever before, and pre¬
pared to do the best work in its history.
Free Scholarships
In order to afford the young men
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assigned to each County in the
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I formation necessary for prospective
I students, and setting forth the ad
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Next session opens Sept. 30th.
For further information address K. G.
MATHFSON, A. M., LL. D , Pres., Atlanta, Ga.
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Schedule of Trains at Covington
EAST WEST
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i ( 4, 1:89 tv m - cs O 9 Ol
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The marvelous mechanical inventions
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WANTED 1KFOKMATION KKGAKIUNO
Farm (or Business
for sale. Not particular about location.
Wish to hear from owner only -who
will sell direct to buyer. Give price,
description be had. and Address, state whea possession
can
L DARBYSHIRE. Box 9999 Rodmter, M. T-