Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, February 02, 1907, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

i THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. BATUBDAY, FEBRUARY 1 MOT. No Appetite Means km of vitality, vigor or tows, and to often a pre- ctinor'orproetrating sick ness. Tins to why H to serious. The best thing you can do to to take the great alterative and tonic Hood's Sarsaparilla Which has cured thousands. STEVENS TO LOSE ERIE CANAL JOB IF GETS PANAMA? Washington. Feb. 2.—President Rmisevelt held a long conference this forenoon with Mr. Stevene. A« superintendent of public works In N. w York state. Mr. Stevens will be th*- builder of the great Erie, Port Hu- r .in. Hudson and Champlain canal and ui!t have the disbursing of the $101,- umo.Ooii which New York has set aside f .i the purpose. There Ih considerable • .imment over Mr. Stevens*, attempt to build the Panama canal, as well as the New York ditch, and Influential papers ,,r the metiTipolla have gone so far as in .suggest that he quit the Ne\y York ptare if he gets the Panama Job for .Mr. (diver. When Mr. Steven* left the white house he wan very reticent over his visit and shut his Ups firmly as a re ply to most of the questions pro pounded. "Is there anything In the dual rela tions you have assumed that will cause unv friction?” Mr. Stevens was asked. "Nothing whatever." hr exclaimed. “In one case I am the commissioner of public works In New York state, a Mate officer: In the other I am a bank, rr.o-financier. ~ RAILROAD OFFICIAL h* PICTURE OF FUTURE Washington. Feb. 2.—Hatting forth the views of \V. t\ Brown, vice presi dent of the New York Central lines and president of the American Hallway Association, n letter written by him to a friend In Washington on the railway fiscal situation and tpade public here, is taken as a formal protest by the railway* against the deal which they have received In the past two years. Air Brown paints a pessimistic picture of railway development of the Imme diate future, prophesies business de pression within 18 months, and ex plains that the situation Is not due to what has been done tn the way of gov ernment supervision to the railroads, but to the way. it has been done. Legislation so far enacted will not Injure the railroad*. he says, unless the htUMMAte commerce commission re- ilure* freight rates so n* to deplete Ih*9E. L'“\ ruuc.i. It la popular, ernll- t that causes danger. VENERABLE JUDGE MAY PROVE FATAL -Slipping $l'“nai to Tb**., Georgian. Thumasvllle, ya., j.*eb. 2.- **n I he sidewalk In front j-ldence on Hansell street last night Judge a. H. Hansell fell, fracturing his l'ip J dnts. Judge Hansell was carried 1,1 " his home nnd physicians sum- nm, l After an examination they an- i'oinced that the recovery of the pa* :* nt uas very doubtful hecauae of his d\aneed years In life. •Bulge llansell Is 84 years of age ami • jv feeble. Hr Is one of the most iMtngutshcd citizen* of this section, ud there Is much regret over the ac- JORDAN WHS I BIG POINT III FIGHT Chattier Shorthand Resolution to Force In vestigation of New York Exchange. CoQtAlni 10 ilmpl* rulq* tod the alpbtbat That'! alL Many ara holding good po- •ltiona after only flva to ala waaka atudy. A Hat will ba furnlthed upon application. tO now puplla enrolled la ona week In January. 000000000000000000600000 198 Peachtree Street, Atlanta. A POSITION SECURED FOR EVERY GRADUATE. NIGHT SCHOOL furnishes Special courses, Monthly rates. Write or call for new and attractive catalog. 000000060000006066060006 JORDAN SANGUINE OF WINNING OUT Says Speculators Don’t Know Boll Weevil From Baby Elephant. Wa hlngtnn. Fab. 2.—It la not In the Interest i.r the .health of Hie New York Cotton exchange Unit ocraaloned the return tit Harvle njnlitu of Atlanta to UlU rlty ihiittiK the. J1U»4 two tlaya. About x!x weekn aao Mr.. Jordan nine here to throw a liarp.inn Into the Manhattan cotton aparulatnn-. Ah prea. Idcnt of the Southern Cotton Aaaocla- tion he I'rqueHte.l the pnatmaator gen eral in tHHite a fraud order againat the York Cotton KxchaitKe and debar the institution from the use of the mails. His present visit here Is for the purpose of having cotturess tuke the mutter up by ordering the Investl. Ration .if all cotton exchanptes. Such a resolution wuu Introduced hy Repre- sentatlYet! Livingston and Burleson nnd reported unanimously by the com mittee on Interstate anil foreign com merce tiMlny and will be taken up by the house on Monday. It requires the rretary of commerce and labor to make a thorough Investigation of the methods of these exchanges and to C. 0. HILL, a; B., Principal Shorthand Department 1 Prof. J. O. Bagwell, City. O Dear Sir—It gives me very O • great pleasure to add a faw O worda of teetlmony to what O 1 haa already been laid and ba- O i coma known of your Chart!,r 0 Syatem of Shorthand^ o S I had tha privilege of being 0 a pupil at your achool only 0 five waakt, and for tha past O O three montha have held »uc- o , O ceaifully ray flret position with O O the DeLoach Mill Mfg. Co., of O o thle city. . o O 1 can very truthfully aay that O O I have found no trouble what- O O evar alther In taking or read- O 0 Ing my notaa from the flret day O O I began to work. Am gain- O O Ing In apaed and accuracy each O 0 day. and have found the study O O Interesting and satisfactory In O O every way. 1 believe the eynteih 0 O even better than alt that haa O O been said of It. O O a O Very cordially youra O O MRB. O. W. BRUNNER. O OO0OOO0O0OOOOO0O0000O0OO THIS SCHOOL IS ESTABLISHED FOR RESULTS. 000000000006000006060000 o o O Prof. J. O. Bagwell. Atlanta, da. O n gg| BH ■ 1 V. ■ iiiicS wtm - ’ I ——-—JL - J. O. BAGWELL. A. B - PMBldML-. O Dear Mr. Bagwell—In regard 0 want to aay that H was a per. O 6 feet aucceaa with me. I wns O O In achool about aix weeks when O O I could take dictation and O O transcribe It on the typewriter O 0 without any trouble, and after O O studying the syatem about aev- O O en or tight week*. I was ready O O for a position. I ant now with O O tha Atlanta Phonograph Co.. O O and am giving aatlsfactlnn. O O I never saw anything like It. O O It I* so simple that It seems O 0 that any one could learn It In a O O very ehort lime, and I advise O O every boy and girl who la Inter- Q O rated In Shorthand to take up O' O the Chartier System. O O Thanking you for the Inter- O O eat you took In me while In O O school, I remain, alncerely, O O .0 O 8IDNET E. 0088.—O o o 000000000606006000000600 ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO GEN. JOSEPH E. JOHNS! ON WAS BORN IN VIRGINIA Jordan I* nmUflftit that tin* ii*h- nltitfon will ho adopted and he ha* doubt that tin* evidence lie ha* plac at tho disposal of the postmaster Ren- ult In the Issuanr fraud order against the New York Cot ton Exchange. rdan, In an Interview, de clared: S— ilnf for and In behalf of the Southern Cotton Association In the ffort to drive these •bucket-shop* ex- hangc* out of business. In Georgia we hail legislation adopted whjch went into effect December 31 that drove every one of these ‘branch wire* and 'bucket- hop’ operator* out of the state. Simi lar legislation In now pending In Texas, Arkansas. Tennessee. Alabama and South Carolina, where the prospects arc favorable for It* enactment. In the other cotton growing state* similar laws will be offered at the next meet In* of their legislatures. If these fellows want to gamble let them do so." said Mr. Jordan, ’"but t4w»y cannot Juggle with the. co’toti crop. European buyers took to the New i exchange fluctuations, built- upon fraudulent and flilitlou* trading, as a basis for buying quota.-, lions Just think of those, jugglers who know boll weevil from a baby etnpnnnt fixing the prices of the Arurr- dlo'n crop. The rules ot revision nnd form of contract In vogue at the exchangepreclude the pos sibility of legitimate dealing. It Is worse than n poker game with • man holding to the deni. We cotton iwers do not fight against these gambling house* on moral principles, hut from a business standpoint.” CONGRESSMAN FLACK NEW YORK •Malone. N. Y.. Feb. 2 — Congressman William Henry Flank, of .Malone, who has been seriously III for several months past, died at 8:If* o’clock this morning. He won 46 year* of age. represented the Twenty-fifth district and had been in congresa four years. a pall-hearer nt the funerala of Grant uml Sherman. HI* death occurred in 1891. SAW MILL BURNED * IN SOUTH GEORGIA: WIRES ALL DOWN sp-rlal to The Georgian. Valdosta, Ga., Feb. 2.—It Is reported here today that the largo saw-intll of J. N. Bray & Co., at Cecil, Ga., was burned at an early hour this morning, but particular* are not ascertainable. It Is believed also that the railroad dt pot wa* destroyed, as the telegraph office was in that building and the operator here has been unable to get connection wilh the place since the fire. “JFEA R NEITHER MA DHOUSE NOR DEATH CHAIR"—THA W New York. Feb. J.—Harry Thaw, yond a doubt that I wa* Justified. "I win gladly plact* my fate in the rtrig*, made the following statement: "1 expect to go free, i am perfect ly satisfied with the Jury a* selected. hand* of this Jury, i fear neither, the death chair nor the mad house, for I know that 1 shall go free. I believe that 1 shall receive a fair trial nnd 1 know that I shall be ac quitted. "I certainly shall take the witness stand In my own defense. "I have absolute belief that I shall stand in my own-defense. ”1 am in perfect health and shall undergo my ordeal without u break down. mental or physical." The rxamlnntlon of witnesses on be half of the defense will be done hy iHMphinc M. Del mas nnd Mr. DeltnaN A K111lo i rLA U JV1 MlLtfiAh.Lj Agency. "Printer*’ Ink,” which, an every one know*. Ih devoted to advertising nnd advertisement writing, call* especial attention to the ‘‘copy** written for an Atlanta producer and ^retailer by thla Ann and oople* a number of the ad vertisements In full ato a model fbrnd- vertlsement writers. “Prlntera* Ink” de vote* part of the apace to comment on the matter In these ads. and doea not hesitate tn bestow* strong praise upon the manner In which the campaign Is handled. \ PR AISED IN ‘ k PR IN TER S' INK'' GENERAL JOSEPH E. JOHNSTON, !•*«» If. M. ROSE TRIAL HEARD IN COURT Tlir • it. r-vtlle. (lit., Feb. The'jury la m the < nso „f R. M. RnecTininr M a Co. and a verdict Ih expected afternoon. ■ Hose was arraigned under an In- M,,,,, t issued by the grand Jury of county. rial of the other case* will fol- In t 'blent occurred In the court to. ’hi' h caused Judge Kite to *e» ' rllh’lse the liquor dealer. While • wns waiting for a hearing a M'in was hr.night In for drunk* Where did you get the II- a "Y Judge Kite. "I ordered it." fr*,n inquired the jnd***’ *e & Co ," replied the *.KORijia MILITARY WILL BE INSPECTED liY CAPTAIN MERGEN ■ I In Tglftn. •ga, Tenn.. Feb. 2.—Captain "inpiiny It. Twelfth caviiiry. ppointed hy the war depart* t the state military if eoiglu. and STEAMER went aground IN A DENSE FOG. 'Utkin Feb. 2.—Tile British from the British ' N o folk, was floated • ni i ia<*lug t t.H|..,re .u Cape uouu iu g fug tuday. Deaths and Fimsrals Z. T. Carr. The funeral services of Z. T. C who wa* found dead In his ra-un at 380 Decatur street Tuesday morning. " conducted Friday afternoon at 3 oclol-K In the chapel of Harry <5. J aole * Co. The interment wa* in WestMew cemetery. Mrs. Annit Jenkins. The funeral service- of Mrs. Annie Jenkins, who died In Knoxville I enn., Tu«-"dav night, wer- «.mducyd 1 hum- day afternoon. In th** « htipel berg. Bond A- Bloomfield ent "as West view f tlreen- The Inter- emetery. In Indian Territory. Wni'it lias linen rei-nlvnil Imre an- nuiim Inx the itnalh nf Annin M*i V. In- fnnt iln.iKlit.-i .if Rr. «n.l ,Mr« .1 M. Siaiilf- nt At’ke. lint T Him »ee inKnn IU e r.'" liay* UK" with illtihthe- riu uml di.il IVednemUy ni*H' A. M. Burke, the pies. . l.ltlier all,-it In AH'kn Tin baby Mine . Sta night but death , Hu- rf.ee. Mm Georgia Sheet*. The funeral services of Ml Sheets, th •rghi laughter of Mr nnd Mr« .. trt who died nt the family ,1 wireet. Friday aft- rondiutcd in the elia|*d „,,g t Rond «v Bloomfield, on hi.ontng at in o’clock. Tin* token to Winder, tin., for In- Mr*. Alii* Porrym^n. fuller Aliin died Friday morning at her residence. 147 •’Impel straet. were conducted Saturda> mornln* at Temple B.iptM fib Ihi .1 h\ In an. Iu •tli slater uuU tUicw urt'h. Mis |*cn Milan h ho ml W M. Per* . two biuthvrs, j Ulldreu. Fuhdtt\. Tehrunry 3, wtll tie the cen tennial-anniversary nf the birthday of one of the South’s most distinguished citizens and soldiers. General Joseph E. Johnston, of Virglnl.i. The opinion of hi* antagonists after the bitter struggle of the sixties had passed Into history, I* one of the best tribute* to the generalship of **Joe” Johnston. Said General Grant: "1 think 1 faced nearly all the general* of the Confed eracy, but Joe Johnston *gHvt-ine mor< unxlety than any of the other*." Gentral Sherman said of "Joe" John ston that he wa* "equal In all the ele ment* of generalship to Io»c." Colonel Chesney, the fatuous English war critic, said that, "measured by the difficulties he overcame. General John ston lead* all American commanders." Classmate of Lss. Joseph Eggleston Johnston "a* born In 18D7 In Prince Edward county, Vir ginia. He graduated at West Point, being a chu-sinaie of Robert E. Ia»e He served in the Black Hawk, the Hem- Inole and the Mexican wars with dis tinction. His rise In the American ar my wa* us follows: Able t* General Scott, first lieutenant of PqiMgraphlml engineers, captain In Mexican whi. lieutenant colonel Vollgeur*. breveted major, breveted colonel, breveted lieu tenant colonel, lieutenant colonel First United State* Cavalry, appointed quur. termuster general June, I860, rank brigadier general. On .Vpril 20, 1881, lie resigned his i ommlssion to enter the Confederate service. He. was one of the first flv brigadier general*, afterwards full g-n erals. With 9.000 men. he Joined Beau regard and defeated the Federal army nt the First Battle of Bull Hun. In the early part of the campaign of lx«2 lie was tn full command of all the forces In Virginia. Jle was Injured on May .11, 1862, at the out tie of Fair Oaks, nnd "n* unlit for service until Novem- her. lie wns defeated at Jacks*.n May 14. In an attempt to relieve Vicksburg, which was being besiege*! hy Grant. Campaign in Gsorgia. He was put ill command of all thc forces In the southw-ext on November 2.*i. 1MW. He ochuphd Dalton. Gh . with 7,7,jti>h men Gnju ial Hh. rm«n, wirh a superior army. for»*ed him back t** Hesaca, thence to Altoong Pass, tion* »* t*» Kennesnw mountains, where John ston won. and thence n 'n»s* the Chat tahoochee. Atlanta, tiir base of his supplies and communhatbm. threatened to he cut off. He occupied Atlanta July. 1X84. determined t*» lt**l«l the dtv to the !*•*». The Itlchiuoiiit authorities were dls- s.itlslled with General Johnston, and he wns removed, General Hood taking hi* command. • In February. 1X6.*,. when all ho|»e wa* practically gone. Johnston, ut the earn- i st request of I^e. was put In command of th*’ temnunt «»f the Army of Tennes see and all troo|w in Houth Carolina, Georgia and Alabama. Ills force was hopei«hsly outnumbete«i. and on April 26. 1X671. he capitulated to Hhennan nt Durham's Htatlon. II* 4 was ole, led \o t digits* by Ilf* Richmond district **f Virginia in |x?6. lie was aptHiinted Ctilted States rum- mUslouer vf t Allrogds iu li$5. He was When ‘‘Printers' Ink" devotes thrse pages to an article on one firm's ad vertising "ropy." It means that the firm must have done something out of the ordinary, for "Printer*' Ink." though large In reputation, |* a llttla publica tion—In Inches—and does not wante space. But It gives three ‘ page* to pralnlng some advertising written, .by Arm!*tend Ar MrMIrhael. the two young Atlanta advertising men, formerly doing business as the Lowman Advertising Printer*' Ink.” a* every aaptrtug ad. } writer «»r agency can testify, and tha a coveted one. Armlstead St McMIrhael. formerly the Lowman Advertising Agency, In a stock company with W. M. Armlstead as president and J*JC» M cMIchael secretary and treasurer. The agency^ officer are 1n the L*gndler building. Second District School. The Griffin Manufacturing Company * secured the contract to build the ag- j rlcultural achool buildings for the Bee* • ond district at a meeting of^the tmD- tees at Tlfton Friday. Their bid war for 848,000. and the main achool build ing Is to be completed by Aiiguit 18. Governor Terrell attended the meet ing. returning to Atlanta Saturday morning. America’s Best Clothes at 25 Per Cent Off No wonder this reduction sale, of ours is creating such a sensation among well- posted clothing buyers. The clothes offered are from America’s two best makers— Hart, Schaffner & Marx and Rogers, Feet & Co.—and are not equaled in style, qual ity or fit; and the 25 per cent, reduction covers staple blacks and blues, full dress and Tuxedo suits as well as fancies. Underwear, Etc., a Third Off. Underwear prices are ere cut one-third—nil styles and grades, cotton, cotton and wool, all wool, wool and silk and all-silk. ’Twill pay to buy your next wiufnter’s supply now. The stock's complete; no trouble to find your size in anv stvle. Scriven’s Winter Weight Elastic Seam Drawers, $1 grade 67c; 75c grade, 50c. Winter weight night shirts reduced a third—a great Winter weight Pajamas at l-.‘l off—outing flannel, collection to choose from. madras, Oxford and silk fabrics; all sizes. Hats Reduced One-Fourth All winter styles in &• K., ('base & Co.', Knapp Felt and Knapp-Felt de Luxe hats are reduced one- fourth, including the new tellescopi- shapes in black and colors and all the Smart styles iu derbies. It's n won derful lmt buying opportunity. $3.00 grades at $2.26 $4.00 grades at $3.00 $3.50 grades at $2.65 $6.00 grades at $4.50 A very good assortment of sizes in nearly all styles. Shirts Reduced Ties and Sox $1.00 Shirts at $1.50 Shirts at $2.00 Shirts , $2.50 Shirts at $3.00 Shirts at Manhattan Star and other good makes negligee and fancy stiff bosom stylos. .. 75c $1.15 $1.40 $1.75 $2.00 winter All fniicv neckwear is reduced a fourth—nnd it's probably the largest collection iu town. Fancy hosiery goes, too, at a quarter off, including a newly imported line of French lisle novelties. DANIEL BROS. CO. Clothiers. Hatters, Furnishers, Shirt Makers 45-47 Peachtree, Opposite Walton Street.