Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, May 13, 1907, Image 14
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THE ATLANTA GEORGIA X ANT) NEWS.
Or This for $75.00.
This for $100.00.
This for $150.00.
COUNTY
STATE
Someone will get the above houses with lots they occupy for the price stated above the respective photographs.
If you are interested in this proposition fill out the Coupon and mail it to
R.C, WATERS PASSES A WA
WELL KNOWN WHOLESALE
MERCHAN! AND CITIZEN
PLOT TO KLLL
Boldest Plan in Cen
tury to Assassinate
Ruler.
Bt. Petersburg, May 13—The great
est terrorist plot In a century, having
for It* main purpoae the assassination
of the cur, has been discovered and
today eighty men, hitherto believed to
be loyal officers, have been thrown Into
prison,
Cur' Nicholas Is so menaced by as
sassins that he Is guarded night and
day with extreme vigilance, nnd the
extraordinary precautions have led tho
revolutionists to. redoubled boldness
and energy. i
The conspiracy, which was foiled
through accident, was the boldest In
the history of these attempts.
Officials Admit Plot.
Officials today admitted the exist
ence of this plot and the arrest of the
elghty-two terrorists. The date set for
the assassination was Kustcr. The
plotters Included officers of the reserve.
subordinate officials and civilians
whose loyalty hod never been ques
tinned.
It was planned to approach Tsars.
koe-Helo In groups, every one of the
conspirators practically throwing uway
his life at the outset. Then there was
to lie a sudden and daring attack on
the palace from several quarters,
was the object to throw the palace
guards Into confusion and in that way
enable some few of the conspirators to
reach the cxnr.
Eighty Man Arrested.
Thirty-four of the group arrived pre
maturely at the palace and aroused
the suspicion of the guards. The whole
thirty-four were token Into custody
and searched. Documents were found
them, revealing tho entire conspira
cy nnd Implicating the others. The re
mainder of the band were caught In St.
Petersburg beforo they started for the
palace.
The czar has been In such terror
that he failed to attend.the wedding
of his cousin, tho (.rand Duke Nicho
las Nlchohirevltch, who married the di
vorced Princess Anastasia, of Monte
negro, Sunday.
Ladies will be the recip
ients of especial courtesies at
our auction sale near Tech
School, Tuesday, 3 p. m. Let
your wife or mother come
out and buy the house or a
nice building lot at what
they may think it worth—
besides one lot will be given
away at sale. ’Phone us for
plats or information.
S. B. TURMAN & CO.
Pound Ksspsr Dstainsd.
Special to Ths Georgian.
Chattanooga, Tsnn., May 11.—Andy
Smith, a negro, city pound keeper of
Chattanooga, la under ehargea of
grafting, carrying a pistol und resist
ing nn officer.
Ill
As Agent of Govemmenf in
West Indies He Estab
lished Naval Station.
Special to The Georgian.
Dalton, da., May 18.—Colonel fien-
Jandn E. Green, sdn of (Jtmeral buff
Green and one of tho most prominent
citizens of Dalton, died last night at 8
clock. '
Colonel Green was 86 years of’itge at
the time 91'Ida death.. Between the
years 1843 and 1855 he was actively
engaged In United States governmental
affairs, serving as secretary to the le
gation In Mexico City, and as secret
agent to the West Indies. Coming to
Dalton live In 1855, ho Immediately
devoted himself to tho development of
the city. In Colonel Green’s death
Dalton has Inst her oldest os well as
one of her best dtlsens. 1
Colonel Hen N. Green, born In Elk-
tori.'; Ky., February IMS. graduated
from Georgetown College, D. C, In
1838, after which ho graduated from
the law department of the University
of Virginia, nnd Boon after commonred
the practice of law In New Orleans,
latter he practiced law In Washington
City, nnd In 1849 was Kent by the state
department under President Taylor us
secret atfent to the West Indies, looking
to tho purchase of Culm by the United
HAVE YOU HEARD
THE NEW SONG?
(t
Her Brown Eyes
Rested In My
Heart”
The sentimental song “hit’
of the year.
Edward H. Walker,
of College Park, Ga.
By
EDWARD H. WALKER, Author.
Published by The North American
Music Co., of New York. It will have
a great run throughout the country. For
sale by
Phillips & Crew Co,,
and
Cable Piano Co,
MR. R.C. WATER8.
Well-known wholesale merchant who patted away Saturda-* and
wat laid to rett In Wettview Monday morning.
After a lingering Illness, Mr. B. C.
Waters tiled at the homo of hls daugh
ter, Mrs. Charles Derby, Saturday
morning.
The great white plague was Known
by hls loved ones to have marked him
months ago. It was only through travel
and heroic trentmentHhat he survived
so long.
Mr. Waters entered the wholesale
produce business at 75 South Brood
street twelve years ago, on»l today the
firm of Waters A Cp.{*rt8 conspicuous
In Its line, having been brought to the
front mainly through the efforts of Its
senior member just departed.
Ills life was an example In Ita purity.
He lived close to hls family, making
Hls help to the sick And needy la
well known to those nearest him. A re
markable* love of nature was noticeable
In this man, who combined with It an
unusual capacity for business, hls
Judgment being sought by nmny^who
were uncertain of tlielr own.
Mr. Waters was conscious of ap-
prouchlng death and fpoke of hls safety
Just beforo the end, asking that tele
grams be sent to hls sisters and to hls
brother, Mr. Wood An. Waters, of Hot
Springs, Ark., all of whom had been
visiting him In Atlanta recently.
He leaves three daughters, Mrs. Der
by and Misses Lynwood nnd Vera Wa
ters, and two sons, T. L. and Hugh Wa
ters. With these there are many others
mourn hls loss.
The funeral was conducted by Dr.
Thirty - Two Persons
in Special Almost
Instantly Killed.
was among those taken to San Luis
Obispo.
Miss Cora Young, of Cleveland. Ohio,
was frightfully Injured. Her body had
been showered with boiling water and
when women friends removed her
clothing the Imprint of the coyset stays
were left deep In the flesh.
List of Dead.
Following is a Hat of the dead now In
the Santa Barbara morgue:
J. DOUGLAS IIIPPLE, potentate.
Rajah Temple, Reading, Pa.
H. K. GITELLMAN. Reading, Pa.
A. L. ROLPH, Reading. Pa.
C. GILBERT 8TEFFE, Reading, Pa.
S. S. SNYDER. Reading, Pa.
LOUIS N. ELLENBORGEN. Allen
town, Pa.
HOWARD MOYER. Hazleton, Pa.
A. D. WASSON, Ismalla Temple,
Buffalo, N. Y.
CHARLES S. HENRY. Lebanon, Pa.
JOHN W. CUTLER. Binghamton,
N. ,Y.
CHARLES M. LOWING, Pullman
conductor, Buffalo, N. Y.
G. W. AUSTIN, New York, agent
for McCann's Tourist Company,
JOHN LACEY, negro dining car
waiter.
R. W. SWEENEY, dining car waiter.
GEORGE F. HAGERMAN. Heading,
Pa.
BENJAMIN STOLTZE, Reading. Pa.
HARRISON HENDEL. Reading, Pa.
THOMAS J. BRUMBACH. Reading,
Pa.
Following are the names of the wom
en who met death In the wreck:
MRS. WILLIAM W. E8S1CK. Read
ing, Pa.
MRS. S. 8. SNYDER. Reading, Pa.
’ MISS STOLTZE. Reading. Pn.
MRS. J. W. CUTLER, Binghamton,
up. as nearly us he could, tuc loss of T. P. Cleveland Monday morning at 405
wife and mother who died thirteen East Gturgla avenue and the Interment
veurs ago. (took place at-West view cemetery.
States government nnd to tho estab
-'Jl3lmient of naval station In Santo
Domingo. He wus Instrumental In the
surveying and construction of the old
E. T. V. and G. railroad, now port of
the Southern.
He was married on July 24, 1866. to
Miss Lizzie Waters, of Lexington, Ky,
who survives him. He 1* also sur
vived by one aon. Duff Green, of Lo
noke, Ark, ami two daughters. Miss
Carrie Waters Green, of Dalton, and
Mrs. R. L. Cooper, of Savannah.
FELL UNDER TRAIN;
TWO BOYS KILLED
Special to Tho Georgian.
Fitzgerald. Ga, May 13.—One of the
worst accidents In the history of this
city occurred Saturday night when
Johnnie and Judd Rocks, aged about 14
und 12 years, respectively, were In
stantly killed and their bodies horribly
mangled by a train on the Ocllla and
Valdosta railway at the Central ave
nue crossing. The horse they , were
driving was also killed. The boys saw
the train coming and tried to stop, but
the horse became unmanageable and
ran dtrecttv Into the side of the en
gine, overturning the wagon and
throwing them under the engine
wheels.
SHOT SON-IN-LAW
AS HE LA! ASLEEP
Birmingham, Ala, May 11.—At Mays-
vllle Saturday night Mrs. Mattie Con
nelly shot and killed her son-in-law,
Frank Albright, shooting him with a
shotgun as he lay In a drunken stupor
on hls bed.'
Albright was a merchant, 10 years
old. He was drunk when he went home
from Huntsville, where he spent the
afternoon.
Hls wife and children fled, but the
mother-in-law remained and sent
Chadwick to a neighbor’s house for
ammunition, with which she killed the
drunken man. Mrs. Connally Is 45
year* of age. Is divorced from her hus.
band, and Is the mother of eleven chil
dren. Together with Charlie Chad
wick. l« years of age. she has been
detained on a charge of raurdef.
spit of gtJl'ABE A SO HONEST.
000000O000OOO00<KXK>00O0000
o 0
O CORPSE TRAIN PASSED O
O BY RETURNING SHRINERS 0
0 IGNORANT OF DISASTER. O
0 — 0
0 Santa Barbara, CuL, May 11.— O
O The relief train returning to Santa O
O Barbara, with Its dead, was aide- O
0 tracked at a lonely switch for the O
O passage of other trains, and wait- 0
0 cd for two houra, while train after O
O train of Shriners bound from Los 01 «• Y.
0 Angeles to their Eastern homes 0 MRS. LEWIS N. ELLENBORGEN,
0 swept by to tha North. . In the 01 Allenton. Pa.
O darkness the occupants wero O I _ MRS. HENRY J. FISHER, Cleveland,
0 passing the funeral train. 0
0OO0O000OO00O000O00OCOO00O
Santa Barbara, Cal, May 11.—Thir
ty-two people were almost Instantly
killed Saturday afternoon by the wreck
ing of a special train of Shriners re
turning from the flesta at Los Angeles.
The train wax running at the rate of
nearly a mile a minute when It struck
defective switch at Ronda, Cal, a
small station among the sand dunes of
the lower Pacific slope. More than a
score were seriously injured.
Twenty-flvc bodies ore at Santa Bar
bara and seven more are at Obispo,
where the Injured were carried.
Wrack Complete.
The train plunged through the de
fective switch, Instantly the locomo
tive, baggnge car. diner and Pullman
were hurled Into a heap of wreckage.
Nearly every person of the thirty-
two In the diner was Instantly killed.
Scores were scalded by ateam. Many
caught In the debris were roasted alive.
The wreckage caught Are from the
coals of the engine, but was quickly
extinguished.
Engineer's Arm Broken,
Engineer Frank Champlains was
hurled twenty-flve feet beyond the en
gtne. He got up and ran three-quar
ters of a mile, seeking help, before he
discovered that hls arm was broken,
and that he was severely scalded.
Only two of the nine men of the
diner crew are numbered among the
dead. The remainder, though cooped
up In the nnrrow kitchen and pantry,
sustained Injuries.
Reading People in Car,
The diner was filled almost entirely
with Reading people when the wreck
occurred. Immediately after the smash
those who were not Incapacitated
Jumped from the train to render aid,
but the gruesome scene before them
unfitted many for the work.
Men, who tolled hard at the task of
rescue, collapsed completely, many of
them before the work was finished.
Women Under Baggage.
Mrs. John W. Cutler, of Binghamton.
N. Y, was In the baggage car, where
she hail gone to rearrange her trunk.
Her body was driven through the floor
and the wrecked car had to be Jacked
up before It could be released.
Mrs. Fred Grummond, also of Bing
hamton. was. with her and went down
under the baggage and broken timbers.
When rescuers reached the two wom
en. Mrs. Grummond reached out and
grasped the feet of one of the men.
•Tl! not let you go until you get me
out." she shouted.
Ohio.
MISS CORA YOUNG, Cleveland.
Ohio.
MRS. BRUMBACH. Redding, Pa.
Unidentified woman, probably Mrs.
Mary C. Ivina, Reading, Pa.
The following dead are at San Luis
hospital:
RICHARD ESSICK, Reading, Pa.
OLIVER T. KAUFFMAN.
HENRY MILLER.
ALONZO B. ROGERS. St. Paul,
Minn, Pullman car conductor.
S. A. UYCKFORD, San Francisco,
brakemun.
Injured.
Injured at San Lula hospital:
Engineer Champlain, badly scalded.
Fireman Glen Thompson, face nnd
arms scalded nnd Internally Injured.
Ex-Mayor Howard A. Harteell, of
Easton. Pa,- Injured, not seriously.
Mrs. Hendel and daughter, Helen,
of Reading Pn, not serious.
A. R. nnefel, of Bennls Point, Ore
gon, scalp wound, right-hand and leg
hurt.
J. Calvin Hoffedltg, of Reading Pa,
left shoulder fractured, scalp wound.
Martin Henry, of Shamokln, Pn,
aralded.
Mr. Boyd, of Reading, Pa, leg broken.
Mrs. Fred Greenwood, of Bingham
ton, N. Y, leg broken.
POLITOL W IS
BOILING IN OHIO
Cleveland, Ohio, May 13.—No politi
cal gathering has excited so much In
terest as that of ths meeting of the
slste Republican executive committee,
to be held at Columbus -»n Wednesday
of this week.
The friends of Secretary William H.
Taft, led by Arthur I. Vorys at Co
lumbus and Congressman Theodore t-
Burton, of Cleveland, will Insist on an
Indorsement by the committee of Sec
retary Taft as Ohio’s choice for the
presidency, and will stubbornly oppose
the linking of that Indorsement with
the prospective contests for either
United States senator or governor.
Senator Foraker has Issued a state
ment on the Ohio alluatlon, s*ytnr
that so far as he was concerned no
effort whatever had been made to
make a deal, bargain or compromise
with anybody about anything; >> e
thought Mr. Cox was striving for part>
harmony, und Mr. Foraker was willing
to accept’the results. If the convention
should act favorably on Mr. Cox* rec
ommendations. , .
Mr. Foraker says he will request th.it
the cnll for the next state convent! n
, „ . .provide that the delegates be _elected
. Sbe was rescued alive, however, and from the various counties at orlman*-.
ON TERMS OF $10.00 CASH AND $10.00 A MONTH WITHOUT INTEREST?
All Situated in Beautiful
NORTH SIDE
PARK
NAME.
NO
STREET.
These houses are built of
Long Leaf Yellow Pine and
Are New and Complete