Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORG LAN AND .NEWS.
Exact'Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW TO*R CITY.
Established 1861.
The Lowry National Bank
‘ OF ATLANTA, QA.
Capital. ..; ....$808,000.00
Surplus and Profits $700,000.09
Designated Depository of the United States Government.
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
Accounts Large and Small Received. *
American Express Company's Travelers’ Checks and Brown Brothers'
Letters .of Credit, avalleble In all parts of the world.
A SCICNTirtC TREATMENT FOR
Whiskey, Drugs, Gigaretto and Tobacco Habits.
Also NEURASTHENIA or NERVE EXHAUSTION. Admlnletereff
by Speolsllala for thirty yeare. Correspondence con Ddontlal.
Thn Only Krefi-jr Institute In tloOr*!*.'
229 Woodward Ave., ATLANTA, GA.
EVANS COULDN’T DIVIDE SELF
SO TOWNS MOVED HOLIDAY
J
Ae -Mutual red. unique compliment hat
beoo paid General C. A. Evant.
Memorial day tblayaar fall! on April JS,
I citation, bar* Iteen
rant to hnvc hint
„ the
farmed eereral of the pleN-
Than tb.ee or four of the town* held a
conference. It reaulted la their fixing ecp-
arete date* for the obierrance of Memorial
to they mlxht hart General Even.
When
them.
hie Information nee
' BirnesrllU 9011 cali
brate Memorial day. amt Oene.roI Krana
will apeak on the entire,consecration of all
the Houth to anataln the cause of the
federate.
Saturday be will Iw nt Decatur, and will
accept the handedvne Confederate monument
from the Daughters of the Confederacy.
There he will declare that the Confederate
movement wn* founded In ahaolute truth.
Hominy General Hvnu* will apeak In
Greensboro on the lofty character of the
people who promoted the Confederate move
ment.
On Monday In Griffin. General Evans will
Lee. Jr. Thera General
apeak on thellfe and ^mracter of Genera
UNREASONABLE EXPLANATION
WORSE THAN NONE AT ALL
This mlfht bo called the tale of the shirt
Ineidenully the ahlrt. Ita cheapness, and
• drink of booae dlepenaed. ao be claimed,
t* a eoelal way. earn red Coot Daria, a col-
arc«i 7f*m , mao".of Vienna, a :.'rm on tba
rock pile, and a humorous declalon from
the court of appeals.
. At the story goes. Coot I»ttla was oh-
•erred hr two Viennese one evening to take
from his pocket a bottle aud a (laas and
dispense to the delectation of Perry Street
a drink of “white lightning."
Confronted with the minion of the law.
Coot put up the feeble defense that he
was Just firing Parry a “nip onten hla bot
tle." Daring the period of Imhlblnc. Coot
recalled that Perry owed him 10 cauta for
a ahlrt. and demanded pay. Perry paid.
On r-nvlctlon in the city coart of Vienna,
Toot appealed to the coart of appeals. Here
t at tan hands of Jud
le whet he got
el!. vvi*(i-h met with the approval
udjre P
> of bis
Pow-
“From a defendant caught In an apparent*
ly guilty eltimtlou; au unreasonable esplan*
atlon la worae than no explanation at an “
I’pon thla general proposition, Judge
all ela bora tea as follow*:
“Why the defendant should hare started
off from n ‘dry’ town, on n visit to hla
E arenta, carrying only two bottles of whls*
y. a drinking glass, a cork screw and a
shoe tiutfoucr; why he nought such secln
sion In the nlaht time to give his kinsman
a harmless drink:.why he should bare re-
- ... . of|
Jn
,- Ug draught: why shirts
should be so cheap In Vienna; why Street
was not called to corroborate hla unfortu
nate lH»nefactor’a statement, were questions
which must bare weight'd heavily on the
minds of the twelve InreHJgent men who
tried the case. All these things may have
been the result of coincidence; the Jury did
not think ao; nor do we."
The Only Laxative
Used by Those Who Know
►
People sent on harsh physic after
they know what It does.
That griping and pain are symptoms
that tba .bowals are Irritated.
Yon have corns to think, perhaps, that
snob effects are necessary, else yon
would never endure them.
But they are not; they ore wicked.
That Ireftatioa el the stomach It tba
Casts of nearly all dy.p-;,. ».
That Irritation of the bowels—causing,
tba tiotuf tb callous—is the cause
et coeitta atlon.
Ceaeareta bring the same resnlts with*
ent injury.
They never gripe—never pain. They
are as harmless as laxative foods.
Selu aud pin cathartics increase tbj
trouble that you seek to cure.
Use them frequently and you’ll need
them always—in constantly larger
dose*.
But Cascarets cause the bowels to re
sume their proper functions. One
sever needs them tong. Tbit it the
only laxative taken by those who
know.
CsMaist. an camljr table!,. Then era .old
br el» dmtfixs. bat bmt ta bulk. Be .are
to tot lb.ceasfae. wRb CCC oucvwy tablet.
The boats marked Ilk. this:
Tba eeat-pack-i hot t, ja cn‘,.
The m.nrw'eaunesr h*i, vt.-euia.
llAlire Lyse, ail ■
v pun
is
T
Philanthropist Addresses
Southern Educators
at Memphis.
0000000O0000O0000O0O0O000O
o o
O CONSCIENTIOUS EXERCI8E O
O OF ELECTIVE FRANCHISE O
O
S Democracy requires very large
Intelligence and very exemplary O
character that It may clearly per- O
0 celve the fundamental principle 0
0 of our government, carefully guard 0
0 the attempts to abridge Ita pow- 0
0 er or’ encroach upon Its rlghta. 0
O It also demands a clear, consrten-
0 tlous exercise of the elective fran-
S chlte that the great American ex
periment may win Its way to per- .
0. manent triumph.—Robert C. Og- 0
0 den. 0
a
Q0000O00000000000000000000
MEMPHIS, Tenn., April 43—The fea.
ture of the opening session last night
of the eleventh conference for educa
tion In the South was the cordial ex
pression of appreciation on the part of
the members for President Robert C.
Ogden, of New York.
Cheers and handclapping continued
several minutes When he arose to
speak.
There was an. Immense crowd In the
Lyceum Theater when the exercises
were begun in an address of welcome to
Tennessee by General Luke E. Wright,
former ambassador to Japan.
The delegates present represented the
North, East and South.
The greetings of the city were pre
sented by Mayor J. II. Malone, and
Chief Justice J. Af. Hill gave a wel
come from Arkansas.
J. B. Aswell. superintendent of edu
cation of Louisiana, spoke on “County
Supervision.”
Mr. Ogden appeared to have fully re.
gained his strength and vigor since his
Illness of a year ago.
His address In part was as follows:
"Personal associations exist with the
general education board, but no organic
unity or community of Interest. Any
persona desiring to pursue thla Inquiry
further are respectfully referred to the
report of the tenth conference, which
me, at Plnehurst. N. C., one year since.
In' that volume Is n careful historical
study of the Southern Education Board,
prepared by lls executive secretary.
"The convening of the eleventh con
ference tor education In the South
marks the completion of ten years of
organic life. Theee ten years have
nessrd an educational renascence
throughout the Southern states.
"Fronting licrt for the first time In
Its history the great southwest, a sec
tion of country In which the conference
has only as yet a few personal friends,
we may -look and hope for a great ex
pansion of Its spiritual life.
"We believe It to be quite alone and
entirely unique In its character, the
only organisation of Its kind In ths
country—perhaps In the world. The
conference does not concern Itself to
any great extent with professional
nethods. with questions of pedagogy
ts first appeal Is to the people as a
bole, to men and women of every
rode, on behalf of. tpe. public school,
fhools will be Jutit. as good, and cer-
ilniy no better, than the people desire
them to be. To promote that purpose
ths-conference deals with principles
more than with methods. The elements
that go to the formation of the edu
cational Ideal, the progressive plans for
better education, have their place In the
rich program prepared for us by tjie
executive secretary of the Southern Ed
ucation Board, Mr. Edgar Garden Mur
phy./ Thus Industrial education, com-
pulshry school attendance, high schools,
county supervision, teacher tralnlnf.
life school funds, campaign methods.
... found among the topics to be dis
cussed by the array of able educators
whoso names spfiesr upon the program.
Without comparison, which our copy
book slips tell us Is 'odious.' I may men.
lion that Ihe conference and -the city
will be honored by the presence and
participation In our exercises of the
don. James Bryce. British ambassa
dor to our government, but more than
that, the author of the best book ever
written upon our Institutions—I rsfer
to the 'American Commonwealth.' Mr.
Bryce not having as yet arrived. I may
with propriety quote a remark concern
ing him made to me a short time since
by a very'distinguished hualneas man
and author. 'Mr. Bryce Knows more
than any other living man.'"
, Robert C. Ogden, president of the
general education board of New York,
and of the Southern.Educational Board,
met with the state, euperlntendente of
the Southern etates. represented by the
conference of education now In session
here, and Invited them to be the guests
of the general education board on a
trip to New York and Boeton next Oc
tober.
BIBLE INSTITUTE
LARGELY ATTENDED
CORDELE, Ga., April 83.—Ministers
of the South Georgia conference have
continued to arrive to attend their In-
atltute here. Rev. K. Read, presiding
elder of Cordele district, gave an ad
dress on th« "Child Question.'' or the
"Kingdom In the Cradle."
. Dr. J. B. McOehee, the venerable
president of the Institute, who Is now
on the v \Vayrros» district, announced
that he would move his case at the
next annual conference for superannu
ation. He has been a Methodist
preacher for t< years and a presiding
elder for »7 years.
Rev. L. J. Ballard made a stirring ad
dress on the "Organised Pastor." Bev.
O. P. Cook made an address of high
Import on modern methods for preach,
ere.
The seeelone of the Institute will
close today.
■ At the evening service yesterday. Dr.
Gross Alexander, lecturer for the
South Georgia conference Institute
here, spoke for an hour and a half to a
Igrge audience. At II o'clock yesterday
morning Dr. Alexander spoke of the
gospel of fit. John.
Wallace Ho]ftdns Leaves
Palatial Offices in Sher
iff’s Custody.
CHICAGO, April 23,-Wallace H
Hopkins, bead of the atock brokerage
firm of Wallace H. Hopkins ft Co.,
bought a ticket from Chicago to some
place yesterday, stepped on a train and
disappeared. The palatial, offices he
left In charge of Deputy Sheriff filnnott.
The creditors he left behind are legion.
It was declared by Frauds A. Harper.
Hopkins' attorney, last night, that they
would lose 3100.000 or more.
The firm transacted the largest busi
ness In mining stocks in the city. At
midnight Mr. Harper said every In
vestor who hod not received stock cer
tificates would loss his money.
The United States government, as
well as attorneys for the Investor*,
were before poetoffice Inspectors yes
terday. The postofilee department has
been Investigating the methods of the
firm for two weeks. The report of this
Investigation will be made the basis of
criminal prosecutions. It has to do
with the efforts of Hopkins to float
$1,000,00(1 worth of stock at par In the
Consolidated Zinc Company.
DESERTING WIFE
SEES HUSBAND
PLUNGE TO DEATH
NEW YORK, April 83.—Because his
wife Is leaving him for good and would
nqt heed a plea to return to her home,
Meyer Glassenberger leaped from the
window of his home on the first floor
of a East Side tenement today nnd was
dashed to death on the walk In plain
view of hie fleeing wife. She In pros
trated.
The Jumping Off Place.
"Consumption hail nie In Its grasp:
and I had almost reached the Jumping
off place when I was advised to try Dr.
King’s New Discovery: and I want to
say right now, It saved my life. Im
provement began with the first bottle,
and after taking one doxen bottles I
was a well and happy man again," saye
George Moore, of Grlmesland, N. C. Ae
a remedy for coughs and colde and
healer of weak, sore lungs and for pre
venting pneumonia New Discovery Is
supreme. 50c and $1.00 at all drugglets.
Trial bottle free.
ATLANTANS BUY FINE HARNESS.
Goldin's Harness Factory, $0 Ma-
rlrttn-et., has recently made’to order
for Mr. Asa G@. Candler. Mr. John 8.
Owens end Mr. J. G. Oglesby, the very
finest harness It Is poslble for expert
harness makers to produce. The high
eet grade htrneea obtainable today Is
manufactured here, and Atlantans are
learning to patronize home factories
maklnrthelr own goods.
CLICQUOT CLUB GINGER ALE
made from chemically pure end spark
ling water and bottled by experts in a
spotless plant. Ask grocers and drug,
gists. Clicquot Club Company, Millie,
Mass. SHewmake ft Murphey, Selling
Agents, Atlanta, Gs,
CLICQUOT CLUB GINGER ALE
BATTALION 8PONSORS
FOR COMMENCEMENT
OPELIKA, Ale., April 83.—The spon
sors for the battalion and different
companies at. the Alabama Polytechnic
Institute for the coming commence
ment exercises at Auburn ore an
nounced today aA.follows:
Bnttallon Captain R. H. Liddell, ad
jutant, Miss Annie Rrlce Miller, of
Camden; for Co. A, Captain H. W. Al
len. Miss M. L. Alexander, of Sedallo.
Mo.: for Co. B, Captain C. E. Fort.
Miss Ardella Hudmon, of Opelika; for
C, Captain C. M. Howard, Miss
Marguret Hubbell, of Montgomery; for
Co. D, Captain J. I,. Skinner. Miss L.
Allen, of Mobile: for Co. E. Captain B.
A. Ellabury, Miss Sarah Warren WII-
klneon. of Montgomery; for the band.
Lieutenant W. L. Newberry, Miss An
nie Avery, 'of Enatey.
UNVEIL MONUMENT
TO 0EIJMIETE9IIS
2,000 School Children to
Take Part iu Cere*,
monies.
I POISON
Bae Pains, Can
cer, Seal? Sldn,
• Pimm
$1,000,000 FOR
CATHOLIC CHURCH
CHICAGO. April 23.—A million-dot-
endowment for Ihe Roman Catholic
hutch Extension Society was under-
tnkep with a meeting of the board of
governors of that organisation yester-
To start the fund Ambrose l*»-
trle. of New York, a member of the
•ard. Immediately pledged one-tenth
of the amount—IIOO.OW. The meeting
I of the board un* held Ir. the rooms of
the unfitly In tbefUookiTj building.
We Will Send Sample 8howlng How
B. B. B. Cures Above Troubles, also
Eczema and Rheumatism.
For twenty-firs years Botsnlc Blood Balm
(B. B. B.) bas been curing yearly thou
sands of sufferers from Primary, Secondary
•r Tertiary Blood Poison and all forms
of Blood Disease*. \Ye solicit ths most ob
stinate ensee, for B. II. B. cures where all
else falls. If you bars exhausted the old
methods of treatment and still hare aches
nnd pains In bones, back or Joints. Rbeu*
mntlsni. Murun i’ntche* In mouth. Here
Throat. Pimples. Copper-Cols red Hpofs. Ul
cers on any part of the body. Hating
Korea, sre run down or nervous, hair or
eyebrows falling ont. take It. R. R. It
kills the poison, makes the blood pure am)
rich, healing every sore and completely
(•hanging the entlr 4 “^ “ —
healthy condition,
or open, itching ti
of Ersema all leave .. ..
son nnd pacifying the blood with R. R. R.
In thin way a flood of pure, rich Idood Is
sent cireet to the skin surface, the Itching
stops forever and every humor or tors Is
healed and cured.
BOTANIC BLOOD BALM (B. B. B.)
Is pleasant and safe to take: composed of
pure Botanic ingredients. It purifies and
enriches the blood.
DRITJGI8TH. It TER LARGE BOTTLE,
with directions for home cure.
clean.
»n. Itching, watery bllstere
: humors. Risings or pimples
leave after kilting the pul-
FRE* BLOOl CURE COUPON
This coupon (cut from The Atlanta
ncorxtsni Is kmhI for one large samp!*
of iCitanlc nisod Balm sisllcl free
fu plilu package. Xlroplr fill (a jrmr
name nti.ft p.adrem. on .lotte.1 lines lie*
-ow am! mall to BLOOD BALM CO..
Atlanta. Us.
State name of tronhle. If you know.
aectlons of Walton county tomorrow,
the occasion being two-fold, the an-
nual rally of county schools and the
unveiling of the handsome monument
recently erected at a coat of $2,509 on
the court house square In this city, to
the memory of Walton'* Confederate
dead.
The exerdaea of the county schools,
In charge of Clmmlssloner Robert L.
Payne, will begin promptly at < o'clock
and will last until the noon hour, after
which the unveiling exercises will be
gin. It Is easily estimated thnt some
1.000 school children, with recitations,
speeches and songe and other educa
tional features, will be In attendance
to Interest and profit the hundreds of
visitors to the city.
At 2 o'clock every veteran will march
thru the streets, escorted by those
two fine companies, the Winder Rifles
and the Walton Guards.
The address by Governor McDaniel
will greatly. Interest ihe audience.
Following le the official program of
the unveiling exercleee:
Marshal—E. C. Arnold,
Parade of veterans, escorted by the
Winder Rifles and Walton Guard*.
Assemble around monument,
fiong—"Coronation."
Prayer—Rev. J. O. A. Radford,
fiong—Agricultural School.
Addreae—Governor McDaniel.
Address—Mr*. Mary Sandldge, first
president Memorial Association.
Presentation of Monument—Mrs.
. Adams, president Memorial Asso
ciation.
Unveiling of Monument—Louise
Walker.
Acceptance of Monument—Judge R.
Knight.
fiong—"America,'' by all the schools.
8ong—"Dixie," by Mre. McCutchen's
music class.
Benediction—Rev. W. E. Ivey, chap
lain R. E. Lee camp.
NATIVES OF INDIA
ARE IN REBELLION;
10,000 IN FIELD
SIMLA, India, April 83.—A' eerloue
native rebellion ha* broken out In
northern India. The Mohmand tribe,
10.000 strong, Is already In the field nnd
many Afghans nr* Joining them. The
rising of other tribes le Imminent.
Is understood all Ihe available British
troops will be mobilised on a war foot
ing today.
CLEVELAND IS
VERY SICK
LAKEWOOD, N. J, April 83.—That
the condition of former President
Cleveland la again causing great anxie
ty to his friends became known today,
altho the physicians In attendance de
cline to talk. It Is rumored that he ts
suffering from an attack of rheumatic
gout, aggravated by a severe return of
his old complaint of Indigestion.
CLYDE-CHARLESTON
AGENTS MEET HERE
J. A. McNeill, manager of the Clyde-
Charleaton steamship line, held a meet
ing of the agents In his territory In Af-
Innta Wednesday, at which general
tralfic matters were discussed. The
agents reported that business was good
following the recent depression. There
were present agents from Charleston,
Nashville, Birmingham. Montgomery.
Meridian (Miss ), Macon, Augusta and
Atlanta.
Mr. McNeill appointed Edney Ridge,
formerly of the Georgia railroad, as
sistant to W, C. Bates, commercial
agent, with the title of soliciting agent.
00000000600000000000000000
O BRIDE 77 YEARS OLDt 0
0 BRIDEGROOM AGED 81 0
O ^— O
0 PEORIA, IIL April 23.—John H. O
0 Faulhausen. aged II. and Mrs. 0
O Amelia Berhends. aged •*, were O
0 married yesterday. They were O
O the oldest couple that ever ob- O
O talned a marriage license In Peo- o
0 ria. O
O O
C60009660000000000000OOQOQ
Southern Pacific
SUNSET ROUTE
LOW RATES
West, Southwest and
California
Write the undersigned for low round-trip rates each first
and third Tuesday of March and April to points in Louis,
lana, Texas, Arizona, Oklahoma, etc., with stop-overs al
lowed, good for 25 days from date of sale.
Very low rates also to
CALIFORNIA
from all points from March 1st until April 30th vfa New
Orleans and the
, SOUTHERN PACIFIC.
Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars via Atlanta, Montgom--< |
ery and New Orleans to California Without change. Best
equipment. Oil-burning locomotives^
Ask for literature about the West.
J. 7. VAN RENSSELAER,
General Agent,
124 Peachtree St. Atlanta, Ga.
CLASPING SWQRDTO BREAST,
AGED VETERAN IS FOUND DEAD .,
NEW YORK, April 23.—With a amlle
on hla face and clasping to hla breast a
sword which he had carried ao one of
Morgan's raiders In the Civil war. Col
onel William 8. 8. Farwiek was found
dead In his squalid little apartment on
the top floor of a rooming house.
Warwick was once affluent and en
tertained visitor# to New York In splen
did style, but disastrous losses reduced
him to penury* The discovery was
made by an old negro “mammy” whom
Warwick had brought from the 8outh
years ago when he was prosperous.
The old negress did not desert him In
his poverty, but cafried his rolls and
coffee to him every morning and took
cares of bis apartment. Warwick was
said to be a cousin of 8enator Daniel,
of Virginia, and a brothcr-In-law of
Signor Ardftl, once a famous compossr*
The friends and supporters of rhnrlcs VP.
Itornbardt, csiidldnto for leglulntnro. «ill
hold a meeting Hsturday. April 25. at 7:39
K . in.. In tbs Atlanta Federation of Tr.-ni'**
nil. Mr. Bernhardt report* Ids cninpnlcn
its In the very lies? of condition, nod tho
meeting will he held for the porno* • "f
letting his friends iIInounn condition* •)*
they tlnd them. It Is expected tlint :i
Inrgo crowd will lie present nnd ninny
speeches on the Issues of the dny will !»•
heard.
Southern Standard of Satisfaction
HOGLESS LARD
Nature made it, and made it
right-the just-right cooking-fat for
all purposes—the economical sub
stitute for butter. There’s no in
digestible hog-fat in it. It’s the
pride of the South—her leading
agricultural contribution to inter
national food-purity.
>