Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
THURSDAY MAI 30, 1WT.
LETTER
MEET
IN
Gather From All Parts of
the State in thie Cen-
» tral City.
Bad Blood
If responsible for most of the dis
eases and ailments tbat afflict hu
manity. To rid yourself of It take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
* Liquid or tablets, 100 Doses 3L
Special to The Georgian.
Macon. Ga., May 10.—The sixth an
auoi convention of the rural free de
livery letter carrier* Is being held In
)laco,p„ beginning at 11 o'clock Thurs
day... The meeting Is presided over by
President J. B. King, of Thomaaton.
There are a very large number of
rural-letter carriers In the state and
they penetrate almost every lane and
by-way In the state with the mall for
the'.many country homes.
A large number of carriers will at
tend 'the convention, which will be a
most enjoyable one.
TWO WOUNDED MEN
LEAVE THE HOSPITAL.
1 Special to The Georgian.
Macon, Ga., May 10.—The negro.
George Stapleton, who was shot six
time* last Monday night, one shot
pasting through his body. Is still alive
and improving. Mis chances for re-
1 covefy now look favorabM. '
The wound In Officer Coley's leg Is
giving him a great deal of -paln. It Is
nothing more than a flesh wound,
however. It will be eeveral weeks be
fore the officer Is again able to b<
on - duty. Henry Jlennet and
ArnNd, the two white men who were
struck by stray bullets, have been re
moved from the hospital to their
homes.
COMMITTEE DI8CU8SES
PLAN OF CITY BOUNDARY,
- Special to The Georgian.
Macon, Ga., May 10.—At the. meeting
of the sub-committee of the general
. annexation committee, held Tuesday
'night at tha residence of Judge Speer,
l provisional boundary lines were agreed
I'upon for the new territory. Judge
j Speer's suggestion that a large circle
jibe drawn, with the city hall as a cen-
Iter, was adopted In part. South Mo-
i con had expected to suggest an Irregu-
- lur line, but It was decided that the
suggestion of Judge Speer was better.
According to the agreement reached,
an -are with a radius of three mllea
Will be described with the city hall aa a
I center, this arc being terminated by
the river at each end. The aro on the
east side of the river will be smaller,
-having a radius of.onty two miles. The
dnd of the two arce will be-Joined by
the river, so that the shape of tho city
will be a figure made up of portions
of two clroles of equal alxe.
ANTI-ANNEXATIONISTS
WILL HOLD MEETING.
8pecla! to The Georgian.
Maeon, Ga., May 10.—A meeting of
those who are opposed to annexation
In Mast Macon will be held Thursday
evening at 8 o'clock In the Madonlc
Lodge rooms,' dn Main street, over
Small's store. This 'meeting has been'
called by R. C. Evers and others. Mr.
Evers stated that those who favored
annexation would be welcomed at the
Awnings
For stores, Offices,
Residence*. Public
Buildings, etc., manu
factured and put up.
All work guaranteed
Lowest price*. Phone
or wrlta for
eaUmates.
J. M. HIGH GO.
Atlanta Ga.
meeting and would
courteoas treatment.
id would be accorded most
BUILDING INSPECTOR
ELECTEO FOR MACON.
Speclaf to Tb'p Georgian.
MacoiLtOs,, May_S0.A-W. B. Pausing
has been elected building Inspector for
the city of Macon. This election took
place at the meeting of the city council
Tuesday night. Five applicant* were
nominated by Alderman J**M B. Hart
and the voting then began, Mr. Paulllng
winning out In the contest by a vote of
1 to 1.
BRYAN WILL WIN,
SAYS CHAMP CLARK
Congressman from Missouri
Thinks Republican Par
ty Is Badly Divided.
Alcohol
not needed
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is not a strong
drink. As now made, there is not a
drop of alcohol in it. It Is a non-alco
holic tonic and alterative. Ask your
own doctor about your taking thla
medicine for thin, impure blood. Fo).
low his advice every time. He knows.
CT« publish th* form oIm J.C.kyr Co.,
of all our preparations. Lowell, Man.
PRESIDENT OF MERCER •
TENDERS CLASS RECEPTION
eprefal to Tlit Georgtaa.
Macon. Ga., May 10.—Dr. S. Y. Jame
son, president of Mercer University, will
tender the denlor claas a reception on
Thursday evening.at 7:10 o’clock, at
hi* residence In University Halt. Thl*
will be one of th*‘first events of the
commencement season which will for
mally open Sunday with the com
mencement sermon.
The members of the senior clan are
looking forward to this reception with
eagerness.
FIRE CHIEF INSPECT8
COMPRE8S BUILDING.
Special to Tho Georgian.
Macon, Ga., May 10.—Chief Jones of
the fire department, Chairman Leon S.
Dure of the fire committee and Super
intendent A. C. Bllnn of th* Macon Gas
Light and Water Company made an In
spectlou of tha work dona on the new
building pf the Atlantic Compress Com
pany plant Wednesday tndrnlng.
Chairman Dure will at ones take up
the matter with the builders, as he
deems it best to give, the proper notice
at the present rather Ithhn watt until
the work has been completed.
Mr. Dure has not os yet ascertained
whether the builders Intend to Install
secondary Are department of Its own.
If You Have
The Union Label on
your printing it signifies
to 25,000 working peo
ple in Atlanta that you
wish their patronage.
See The Point?
OFFICES U8ING THI8 LABEL:
Prtss Huddleston Printing Co ,
It & Forsyth
&sr‘ier I «^bH M C.! ? i.t ta i’-,Tr
B at l'nb. Co.....* Central Are.
D-Turner Co. .*-71 Ivy St.
‘rtntlng Co....M Central Are.
s Prlntln* Co.....* 8. ~ *
Muting Co 65 B.
homason Co *H 8. Broad
1’rlatlng Co li-n Wain
" ... l* Bdsowo,
..2114 SForayth
Atlanta Typographical Union,
620 Candler Building
P. O. Box 266
Atlanta Phone 873
MR8. KILPATRICK DIES
AFTER LONG ILLNESS.
Special to Tha Georgian.
Macon, Ga., May 10.—Mrs. W. H.
Kilpatrick, wife of Professor W. H.
Kilpatrick, who for a number of years
was vice president of Mercer Univer
sity, died Wednesday morning In Co
lumbus, after an illness of almost two
years.
The news of Mrs. Kilpatrick's death
will be learned with regret In Macon,
where the lived for a long time and
where she had numerous friend*.
Before her marriage Mr*. Kilpatrick
was Miss Marie Guyton, of Marianna,
Fla., where her father Is a prominent
attorney. She Is survived by her hus
band, little daughter and her father
and mother,
Mrs. Mqssly Dsad.
Special to The Georgian.
Macon, Ga., Slay 3#.—After an III
ness of two weeks, Mrs. H. M. Mosely
died at her home, on Gordon street,
Tuesday night. Mrs. Mosely had been
married only eighteen months and. her
husband Is connected with the O. S.
& F. railroad. She Is survived by her
mother, Mrs. J. 8. Byrd, ot Macon.
The body ugu shipped to Reynolds,
Ga., Wednesday afternoon, where the
funeral and Interment took place.
FOR SHORT WHILE
MACHINI8T8 ARE TRANSFERRED
Special to The Georgian.
Macon. Go., May 10.—The mechan-
lea who' are now employed In tha Cen
tral shops at Macon have been wor
ried for the past few days over the no.
tics received by them from the master
mechanic that they would be expected
to report for work In Savannah, Au
gust 16, pending the completion of
work upon the new shops In this c
There were several of the mechanics
who wished to Investlgaite the mennln
of thle order and asked Savanna
friends about It. Aa many of the 8a
vanhah men were mlatnformed, they
‘ ‘ ly motlv
a In Ma
mean but a
small demand for the regular mechan
ics In Macon, .
Macon men will be retained In Sa
vannah only Hmg enough to allow the
work In Macon completed. There will
be many more mechanics brought to
Macon. The shops at Cedartown will
Furlough Is Granted.
tMHtltll
Special to The
Macon, Go., May 10.
-At the meet-
upon a motion by chairman Sloan,
the public property committee, Park
Keeper Halsey waa granted a ten daye'
furlough, and upon a motion by Al
derman McKenna, Mr. FltigeraM re
ceived a similar favor. The grants
were unanimous In both Instances.
BIG DOCK STRIKE
MAY END SOON
New York, May 10.—It la now be
lieved the striking longshoremen have
won their light and that a settlement
will be reached within a few daye, on
terma favorable to the men.
A conference waa held between the
representatives of the staamahlp com
panies and a committee of the strikers.
Michael Reagnn believed, as the con
ference waa a friendly one. that It
would lead to negotiations which would
end In a settlement.
16,000 Vets in Pared#.
New York. May to.—War veterans
and military escorts formed In line
early today for the three bit memorial
day parades In Manhattan. Brooklyn
and tha Bronx. It waa estimated that
16,000 veterans turned out In Manhat
tan alone.
The day’s events included addressee
by Governor Hughes and Governor
Curtis Guild, Jr., of Massachusetts, at
the unveiling of tablets In the Hall of
Fame at New York University.
Savannah, Ga., May 30.—In an Inter,
view here Hon. Champ Clark, of Mis
sour), said;
"I don’t think the time has arrived
when a Southern man can be nominat
ed because the plain Democrats are for
William J. Bryan. For years I have ad
vocated the nomination of a Southern
man. I may not have been the plopeer
In that matter, but I was among the'
earliest.
"There are ecores of men in the South
who would make tip top presidents, but
It seems to me from reading and from
conversing with the people of eight or
ten states In which I have lectured
since congress adjourned that the rank
and flle are for Bryan, and that he can
have the nomination If ho wants It."
He objects to quibbling over a plat
form of principles end holds to the
Idea that what the party needs Is to be
Democratic, as he thinks the Repub
lican party Is badly divided.
headachIs AND NEURALGIA
FROM C0LD8. ‘
SPEAKER J.G.CANNON
RETURNSjm CAPITAL
Visited Place of His Birth
and Addressed College
Students.
Cold and Grip rerae<
TARIFF ASSOCIATION
MAY BEjNVESTIGATED
Georgia Mayors Adopt Res
olution Asking For Light
On Operation.
Athens, Ga., May 30.—The Georgia
League of Municipalities yesterday
elected the following officers:
President, J. A. 81ms, ot Rlchlmd;
flrst vice president, H. V. Colvard, of
Dalton; second vice president, John W.
Maddox, of Rome; third vice president
J. D. Monk, of Moultrie; fourth vice
president, T. H. Fincher, of Fort Val
ley; secretary and treasurer. Bridges
Smith, of Macon, elected for life.
Last night at Dupree Hall the mayors
were glvrn a banquet, which concluded
the entertainment features.
The next session ot the league will be
held In-the city of Albany, that place
having been chosen over Columbus, and
the choice then made unanimous. On
motion of Mayor Chappie, of Colum
bus, the date of the session will be
named later. ,
Following an address by J. A. Betje
man, Recorder E. G. Smith, of Macon,
~’ered this resolution, which waa
opted: ■<-
"Resolved, i That we, the mayors of
Georgia, In convention assembled, rec
ognising the need for more common
labor and more settlers In Georgia, do
indorse tho earnest and forceful work
which the Georgia Immigration Asso
ciation la doing In securing deslrablo
Immigrants, and do urge that the state
direct and control Its work for the fu
ture."
May?r Cheatham, of Randersvtlle, In
troduced a resolution asking the body
to appoint a committee to Investigate
as to whether the Southern Tariff As
sociation exists and Is being operated
In violation of the anti-trust laws, and
It found so. the committee to confer
with tho governor and attorney general.
The resolution was adopted.
Tha resolution also stated that It the
law Old not cover the question that It
bs brought before the next session of
the legislature.
ADD DEATHS AND FUNERALS ....
Howard Miller, of Perry.
Special to Tbs Georgian.
Perry, Ga., May 10.—Howard Miller
died Monday at the home ot his mother,
Mrs. J. R, Miller. He wai 2< years
old and a young man of promise. Ho
left here about five years ago for Texas,
where he lived until about two weeks
ago, when hla mother went to Texas
and brought him home.
Victory for Independent 'Phone*.
New York, May 30.—D. A. Reynolds,
president ot the Orest Eastern Tele
phone Company, which owns the New
York Electric Lines Company, Insists
that the decision or the court of ap
peals, supposed to be a bar to Inde
pendent telephone enterprise* In this
city, was really a victory for the Inde
pendent telephone interests.
Greensboro, N. C, May 30.—Accom
panied by his private secretary and a
stenographer. Speaker Joseph G. Can
non, who has been a visitor to this
place, left last night for Washington.
dinner was given the speaker at
Gullford-Ben Bow Hotel here yester-
iday evening and thl* was followed by
a reception In the rooms of the Mer
chants and Manufacturers' Club, which
was largely attended by the people of
the city.
While In the city the speaker visited
the place where he was bom seventy-
one years ago this month. He also
visited the Guilford battleground, the
old Quaker meeting place and other
points of Interest. This . was the
speaker’s flrst visit to the state since
he left here many yeara ago.
Joseph G. Cannon yesterday ad
dressed the students and faculty of
Guilford College, within two miles of
the place of his birth, the occasion
being tAe annual commencement exer
cises of the college. In the afternoon
he spoke at tho laying of the cor
nerstone of the new dormitory of the
college.
GET IN THE SWIM
Hundreds of working people have
started saving accounts with Atlanta's
oldest savings bank, the Georgia Sav
ings Bonk and Trust Company, since
the flrst ot the year, and many of them
have accumulated a considerable sum
by depositing In small amounts regu
larly every time they draw their pay.
How Is It with you? If you have never
nod a bank account, come to this old
savings bank some Saturday often
between the hours of 4 and 6 and
the working people lined up with de
posits of from 11 up and we are sure
the happy smile they wear will Induce
you to start to save.
Four per cent per annum lntere*t
paid and compounded for you January
and July. ✓
BALLARD BIFOCAL AND
TORIC OR CURVED
LENSES
havo gained a reputation In two years
no oth*r firm In th* «ntir* South has
made In a half century. Not these
lenses alone gave us the lead, but op
tical service In every way not usually
found elsewhere. Ask any Atlanta
man about us.
WALTER BALLARD OPTICAL CO,
7b Peachtree Street.
EX-FEDERAL YETS
PAY TRIBUTE TO
Monuments Are Unveiled in
Washington to Generals
Mower and Kelly.
Alumni Elect Officers.
Special to Tho Georgian.
Douglasvllle, Ga.. May 10.—At the
annual meeting of the Alumnl-Alum-
nae Association of Douglasvllle Col
lege the following officers were elect
ed President, J. Raymond. Duncan, of
Douglasvllle; vice president. Mrs. W.
C. Abercrombie, Atlanta; secretary-
treasurer, Miss Dallle Matthews, Doug
lasvllle. The .annual reception and
banquet were held yesterday evening.
CH3OOOOGOO<KJOO<1<I0<KKKSCKH3OOO
O O
O SOILED HAND8 LOOK O
GOOD TO MR. R008EVELT. O
O
O Newcastle, Pa., May 30.—"A O
o soiled hand looks as good to me 0
O as any other.” announced Presl- O
a dent Roo*evelt yesterday at New- O
O castle Junction, when greeting a O
O lot of machinists from the Baltl- 0
o more and Ohio shops. The presl- 0
O dentlal train was late arriving and O
remained only a few minutes. O
Crowds of railroad men greeted O
O the president. O
O<KI00<KJ<KKKHJ<KJO00<KHJ000000
Washington, May 30.—Veterans
marched along the same line of march
today that they and their comrades fol
lowed when Lincoln reviewed them at
the close of the Civil war.
At Arlington cemetery, where 20,000
sleep, James Tanner, former command-
er-ln-chlef of the Grand Army of the
Republic, made the principal address.
Many Spanlsh-Amerlcan war veter-
ans were also In the parade. Speeches
were made under the auspices of the
Grand Army of the Republic, Society
of the Tennesseo and Society of the
Army of Virginia.
Monuments were unveiled to' th*
memory of Major General Joseph An
thony Mower and Major General Ben
Jamln Kelly.
All government business was sus
pended for the day. Flags are at half,
mast on all public buildings and all
statues of the Civil war veterans ate
decyated with natlonnl flags.
DR. WHITE SPEAKS
AT COMMENCEMENT
Special to The Georgian.
Forsyth, Ga., May SO.—The regular
graduating exercises of Bessie Tift
College took place May 28. The bac
calaureate address was delivered by
Dr. John E. White, D. D„ of Atlanta.
He took for hla subject "The Growing
of a Soul," and explained how every
thing Id nature contributes to the de.
velopment of the soul, and also how
man's mission on earth Is to fit the soul
for higher realms.
The following young ladles received
diplomas In the A. B. degree: Misses
Lottie Appleby, Sallle Mae Arnold, Do
ra Brlgg, Warren Battle, Rose Baker,
Alice Barton, Juliet Bracewell, Mary
Lou Carmichael, Maud Cheney, Hattie
Collins. Lois Crawford, Mamie Conner,
Clara Davis, Nell Dlx, Nannie Dover,
Bessie Fields, Lorena Graham, Annie
Harper, Sue Tom Hogan, Rose Myr
tle Hogan, Ethel Jackson, Vashtl Jones,
Jennie May Jay. Fannie Alice Moore,
Me* McDaniel. Maggie Mull, Nell Pin
son, Luclle Zellner, Flora Goss.
Diplomas In music were given to
Misses Carrie Belle Edwards, Mamie
Tinsley and Carrie Worsham. Miss
Claudia Dunaway received the degree
of B. M., which makes her eligible for
conservatory work. Miss Augusta
Hatcher finished the course In expres
sion. Those receiving tho B. L. .degree
were Misses Nelle Landrum and Flora
Bonner.
Mr. B. J. W. Graham, of Atlanta, de
livered the medals. Those who were
successful ns medal aspirants were:
Junior medal, Miss Janie Duggan, ot
Sparta; piano medal. Miss Esra Mor
rison, of Jackson; voice medal, Miss
Anna Oxford, of Waycross; uniform
medals. Miss Addlo Pinkston, of Parrot,
and Miss Annie Oxford, of Waycross;
Florence Pickard medal, Miss Lola
Crawford, of Rayle: Action medal. Miss
Bessie Dunn, of Waycross; ready writ
er's medal, Allss Rose Baker, of Louis.
vlUe,
GEORGIA INVENTORS
GRANTED PATENTS
Washington, May 30.—R. W. Bishop,
patent attorney, reporta the Issue of the
following patents to residents of Ala
bama and Georgia;
Plow beam and handle, T. M. Man
nlng, Rome, Ga.; portable test meter, C.
H. Evers, Birmingham, Ala.; grading
machine, W. A. Jones. Coolldge, Go.;
bed spring, T. R. Woodward, Augusta,
display case, B. P. Ramsey. Louls-
le, Ga.; wood distilling apparatus,
J. McArthur, Colltns, Ga.; adjusta
ble plow heel, G. W. Simmons, Yellow
River, Ga.
8kating on Monday.
On account of the May-June Music
Festival's being held In the rink of the
SL Nicholas Auditorium at Ponce Do.
Leon Park, there has been no skating
possible there this week, but all will be
In readiness for tha return of the
skaters on Monday morning. At that
time all of tho seatB will have been
removed from Inside the rink and the
11.' .1- again placed In excellent c .edi
tion for skating. In addition, the huge
Parisian i.rchestrion which arrived last
week has been set up and will play Its
flrst overture on- Monday morning. Aft.
er this this orchestrion will furnish
music for every session of the rink.
“The Household Surgeon”
Dr. Porter’s
Oil
Antiseptic
Healing
A Household Surgi
cal Dressing for all
wounds, sores and
skin diseases, whe
ther slight or serious.
AMtfif table Prepara lion for As -
s Inflating theTood and Regula
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
Im IMS ( IIIU>lli:\
EromotegTJfgesHon,Cheerful
ness and ffest.Contalns neither
OptumiMorphlne nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
tfOUMrONOBMIlMH
i JW-
hJkfk-
dErS>M*3Ure
A perfect Remedy for Constipa
tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms,Convulsions,Feverish
ness aidLoss OF SLEEP-
Facsimile Signature of
NEW YOBK.
Dosi s - ]j C i vr s
EXACT COPY OF 7PHAPPEB.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature'
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
The okntauh oompmit, new youk city.
Jacobs’ Prescriptions
There is more to the proper filling of a prescription than it appar
ent at first glance. The success of the physician, the health, the very lift
of the patient is dependent upon the care end judgment of the com
pounder, and tha quality of the material he usee.
Accuracy ie everything, and the pharmaceutical chemist must give
his entire mind and thought to this one particular line, if he it to give
the beet that ie in him.
Jacobs* Prescription Department
hat prepared for this contingency, and In thla department maintains four
expert pharmacists who devote their entire time to the filling of prescrip
tions. They have no other duty and no other thought, and their experi
ence, coupled with the use of the most complete laboratory of drugs and
chemicals in tha United 8tates, supervised by the same executives whose
care has bean the causa of our success, assures both physician and pa
tient
Accurate Service—Fresh Drugs
Reasonable Charges
In building up this unukual establishment we have borne In mind that
th* rudiment* of the druggist's success I* the proper dispensation of drugs.
Our service Is prompt. We maintain ■ messenger service that will call
for and deliver your order. .
Jacobs y Pharmacy
6-8-10 Marietta Street.
23 Whitehall Street.
WOMAN’S CROWNING GLORY
Is her hair. If Gray or Blenched,
It ran he restored to Its iintnrni
color without Injury to hcnlth or
scnlp by one nppllcntlou of tho
Imperial Hair Regenerator
I can not he de-
I your hair col
Imperial Chem. Mfg. Co„ 135 W. 23d SI., K. T.
Sold by Jacobs* Pharmacy, Atlanta. Ga.
MOTHER
DON’T
KNOW
when her boy or girl will be called on,
be on the safe side, and send them to
the natatorium. Our ninth year, thou
sands of bathers and not an accident.
Tuesday a. m. and all day Friday
Ladles only. Sunday, men only. Prl
vate parties evenings 8 to 10.
HOTEL8 AND RE80RT8.
HOTEL WOODWARD,
Broadway and Fifty-Fifth
Street.
NEW YORK CITY.
A high class transient and residential
hotel, catering only to a refined
and exclusive clientele.
T. D. GREEN, Manager.
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS
GREENBRIER
WEST VIRGINIA
(Tbs **OLD WHITE" Solphur.) Now
open, t anions for Its sulphur baths.
Hodtrs Improvement., with private
h»'hs. Permanent orchestra. Terms, 316
;• *3. -rck, 350 to ISO per month. Write
for Illustrated booklet. Address,
GEO. A. MILLS, Jr., Manager.
Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs. \y. V*.
President Ie Re-elected.
Wrlghtsvllle. G*.. May 30.—The board
of trustees of Warthen College met for
the purpose of electing teachers for
Relieves pain-antisteptically cleanses-quickly heals.
It is sought after and continually used by all who give it a
irst trial. Nearly all Druggists now sell it. 25c.
several years, was re-elected for the
term of two years, and has accepted.
The other teacher* wer* not elected.
TAX NOTICE
State and County Tan
Books now open. Make
your returns at once and
avoid the rash. Books
will close in a few days.
T. M. ARMISTEAD,
Tax Receiver.
A scientific troalatil M
Whiskey, Oplam, #*«
phlne, Cocaine, Cblsn!*
Tobacco and Ntir.ailU*
■fa or Nene EthantHi*
Tin Only Keeley In'i-
hilt in Georgi*-
229 Woodward Ave„ ATLANTA, GA.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY.
Arrive Front — I Depart l'o-
fisvnnntli .... 7.00*m Mtcou
Jacksonville . 7.64 sm Mncon 3.69 U
M*con 11.40 stnj Mncon 4.W P'S
Mncon 4.15 pin Jackeonville .. 3.JJP”;
Macon - 8.10
EXTRACTED
lively wltheol
s&xra&J£
t&l
Bragg & Ryon
OSTEOPATHISTS
E. ETBragg
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office*: 324-325"”Century Bldg.
Bell Phone 3901
SWSSRB
:ms-Jspfs
_B. M.WOOLUm**
Ofice 104 N. Freor