Newspaper Page Text
V
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
CLOTHING AT BANKRUPT PRICES
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday
AT NO. 8 WEST MITCHELL STREET.
N N *
Will be sold regardless of manufacturers’ cost. Eleven thousand dollars’ worth of Men’s, Young Men’s and
Children’s seasonable Clothing, Every article of clothing in this store must be sold in the next few days.
TREMENDOUS VALUES AWAIT YOU.
GREAT CUT IN GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS, SHOES, HATS, CAPS, Etc.
THE STOCK OF W.F. WESLEY IN BANKRUPTCY
Girl Was Unwilling
Cause of Sweetheart’s
Arrest on Theft Charge
Trenton, N. J., March 1#.—Altho .he
did »o unwittingly. Ml«« Carrie Whltea-
ley, of this city, caused the arrest' of
her sweetheart. Joseph Ambrose, In
Camden, on a charge of stealing several
automobile tires. A warrant for grand
larceny was Issued for Ambrose's ar
rest. Detectives learned that he was
keeping company with Miss Whltesley
and questioned her.
The detectives kept a close watch on
the young woman and Sunday saw her
drop a letter In a mall box. The
slruths discovered that the missive was
directed to Ambrose, and. journeying
to Camden, found the man at the ad
dress given on the envelope.'
Ratified as Bishop.
Rome, March 16,—-The pope today
ratified the appointment of Manager
John Farrelly, at presen*, spiritual di
rector of the American College, at
Rome, to be bishop of Cleveland, Ohio,
In succession to the Igte Bishop Horst-
man, ,
HIS SON-IN-LAW, TOO
Loeb’s House Found Full
of Liquor.
or keeping liquor on hand for purpose
e. /The detective*, who had inspected
or some time, made.a complete search
charges, for selling junk without a licence
and for keeping
him for tome time, made.a complete
of the house, finding severs! hundred ;
of brass and a considerable quant..,
whisky. The whisky, which was in pint and
tmarter pint bottles, was found sscreted in
three different lota and In the moat unex
pected places.
Loeb is the son-in-law of Morris Cohen,
who was recently fined and sentenced hear
ily for selling whisky. It was for the_wed'
ding of hia daughter
claimed to have the whikky, _ .
covered In his house. Loeb will be tried in
the recorder's court Thursday afternoon.
Five Mon in Airship.
Friedrichshafen, March 16.—Count
Zeppelin's new model airship with the
Inventor and four other men on board,
made a successful descent In a field on
the shore of Lake of Constance today.
A woman can understand anything
If she Isn’t asked to explain why she
does.—Chicago News.
RUSH FOR TICKETS
FDR M FESTIVAL
Two Music Houses Besieged
By Reservations For
Season Seats.
Great business In the sale of season tick
eta for therOreat Son thorn Musical Festl
val la reported by Phillipa & Crew and the
Cable Company, where the aeaaontleketa
were pldceu o“ “*■
morning.
i sale at 10:30 o'clock Tuesday
ed tbnt over $T.'(j00* ’had"been paid In' for
sensou tickets, and that the rush appeared
to hare' Just started. Letters were coining
In from all over the state, Inclosing remit
tances for reservations. These mall re-
qnests. stated Mr. Crew, were receiving
exactly the same attention that personal
purchasers enjoyed. Each remittance wna
numbered, and the very beat seat called for
at the exact time the remittance was re
ceived waa marked off for that applicant.
Mr. Crew stated thnt receipts showing
what Beats were reserved would lie mailed
out Tuesday evening or Wednesday morn
ing, so that out-of-town patrons might
know their wants had boen attended to and
be advised what seats they had secured.
At the Cable Company over 100 receipt*
for season tirketa had been Issued at noon
Tuesday. These receipts called for from
one to six seats, snd represented a total of
R rolmhty more than 100 seats sold during
ie morning. As only season tickets are
now on sale. It la easily to be aeon what a
rush Is being uinde for the coveted places
at the big festival.
The following schedule of prices for sea
son ticket* has been adopted: _
For arena senta, 17.60 for the five perform*
M °For' dress circle seats, $7.60 for the five
performance*.
For balcony seats, tfrtfor the five perform
ances. . • ' „ , ,
limited number of boxes containing
neats each fire offered at 140 for tho
five performances; and a limited number
containing six seats *haeb, at 160 for the
jflvc performances.
ADDRESS TO NEGROES
Dr. Eliot Visits Atlanta
University.
Chart** W. EUot, during bis abort atay in
Atlanta, visited, Atlanta University snd ad
dressed the students snd tesrhers. Thus
one# more Mr. Eliot has expressed his la-
srork of higher education for
President fcare accorded to
Professor W. E. B. DuBois, ss one of the
Harvard graduates on the faculty, th* honor
of .introducing the president of the oldest
college in the country to the students of the
oldest eollege in Atlanta.
In his address President Eliot Commended
the ntudents for their excellent singing and
TO SOUTHERN WOMEN
New Orleans Priest Speaks
On “Southern
Chivalry.”
Baltimort, March 16.—Rev. E. 0. da la
Moriniere. of Naw Orleans, delivered an in
teresting leetura last night at Loyola Col
lege on “Southern Chivalry.” He was In-
‘-odueed to the audienee aa tha ”ailv*r
nruad orator of tha South.”
The lecture reviewed the Southern causa
snd portrayed the patriotism and valor of
I Southern soldiers and tha courage of the
uthern%omen. The lecture aaid in part:
”Of our aobl# Southern women, what shall
- say I Thair patriotic achievements may
not ba graven deep In the tablets of human
history, but thay are glassed in tha Im
measurable mind of Him who crown* every
virtue and rewards every sacrifice. Thru the
long and dark hour* of tha protracted stag-
how sublime their influence, their pa-
e, thair aspirations, their sufferings and
their exampte. When the struggle waa over.
In tender appreciation of the brave deed*
wrought in the name of freedom. In proud
memory’ of |ha slain, they dotted our deso
late land with soldier*' monuments, gath
ered aacred dust, mounted guard by un
marked grave* and kept in unfading fresh
ness the remembrance of the martyrs who
had fallen during the eventful epoch.
••I have waked th# echoea of bygone days
that you might remamber to what achieve
ment you ara fallen heirs, and that great
deeds must ba worked for, bltd for, died for
aa in the days of Gettysburg, Richmond and
NEW LIQUOR RULING
Hendrix Guilty, Tho He
Didn’t Own It.
On* who furnl.hf. Intoxicating liquor
at a public place la guilty of violating
tha act of 1107. even tho he la not the
owner of auch Intoxicating liquor.
Such waa the declalon of the court of
appeati Tuciday In afflrtnlng the ver
dict In the caaa of M. J. Hendrix, who
waa tried and convicted In the city
court of Savannah on tha charge of
violating the prohibition law by aaient-
Ing to the giving of liquor to a negro In
hla place of buetnesa. Hendrix waa
fined <150. He claimed that he did not
own the liquor, but It waa ahown that
he had given It to the negro.
The court further held that Hendrix
L EVENT
Savannah To Hold Home-
Coming In Memory
of Oglethorpe.
Y
OU CAN SEE. IN THIS STORE THE
new and cox-rect fashions in Men’s
Spring Suits—and only these, for we have no
old stock or “off” styles.
We’ll show you Rogers, Peet & Co. and
Hai-t, Schaffner & Marx all-wool, hand-tailored
clothes for men.
And “special models for young men”
from Ederheimer, Stein & Co.
These makers guarantee their garments to
us; we guarantee them to you.
So, you are doubly protected in buying
your Spring apparel in this store.
Daniel Bros.Go.
L. J. DANIEL, President.
45-47-49 Peachtree St.
spok# of mutir aa one of the important ele
ments of a liberal education. Two distinct
attributes of civilised men he emphasised as
development
ring f
.. rwH
flration In" order to obtain the means
future, more aubatantial satisfactions. Her-
ondty, the ability to work steadily, day after
day, month after month, year after year.
lie referred to tho separation between the
races in the Mouth and showed that this con
dition made it all the more important that
Atlanta University should exist to train men
and women for professional railings, such aa
teaching and the ministry. "I* It not
clear,” he said, "that the colored race in
our land must have its own representatives
in all departments of professional life in
order to assure its genuine advance in pros
perity and civilisation f"
SCOTTISH DEGREES
Will Be Conferred at Great
Ceremonial.
Th, fdrxinl opening at th. KWiliUh Rite
■p*rtni<*nt> of tin- now Slavonic temple will
1m> cel.hmt.iS in Atlnnt.. April IMS, hr a
general convection of th. Heottlih - lilt.
Mnnous of th. Southern Jurladlctlon of th.
L'nlted State..
Th. object of th. general convocation will
be to penult the rainllilatca of .mailer
town, to receive the degree. In full eere.
monlnl and thereafter to hare the opporin-
nlly of attending and enjoying them. A
further object l> to encourage n eloeer
«tndy of the l>e.n!!ful eymholl.m nod pro-
found pblloaophy a. exemplified In tb« Sint,
tl.h degret**.
An- executive eominlttee for the eonrm-n.
lion hat lieen named with Jooeph Oreen-
flelit, chairman: John Ullmore. tnaanrer,
and Kd II. Ilafer and IHnl Hurkert, were,
tar lea
Senate Adjourn, to Friday.
Waxhington, March 1#.—The xenate,
after a abort executive aemion, ad
journed until- Friday noon.
Texan Man Named.
Waxhington, March 1#.—The presi
dent today sent to the aenate the nomi
nation of Rentfro B. ('ranger, of Texan,
to be collector of cuxtomx fot* the <ll<-
trlit at Braxo, de Santiago, Texaa.
living of the liquor.
ASK A FORECLOSURE
A., B. & A. Case To Be
Heard On Thursday.
There xeentx to he consider,hie uncertain,
ty a. to the next move In the Federal court
enae of Old Colony Trnal Company, of Han-
ton, a, trainee, ver.ua the Atlnnta. Bir
mingham and Atlantic llallritnd Company,
following the tiling of n trill of foreclosure
by the former In the Atlanta office of the
Federal clerk Monday.
The hearing on (Ida paper will be Imfore
Judge Iron A. Pardee, or (he Called State,
court of niipeala, la New Orleans, next
Thursday. At till, healing I. also expected
to come np the matter of new rece'ren
for the road,-wbh-b .It. I, understood the
■oliio.-ity bondholder, will make n Ugh! for.
The hill pray, for receiver,, a. doc* a alinl-
Inr Itlll Sled Monday l>>- the Old Colour
Trust Company ngntu.t the tlrorgla Tetinf-
nal Company, and "Imllar hlUa Hied lu the
Savannah, Ga„ March 18c-An “Old
Horns Week" for Savanah during the
•econd week In February next, for
which th, main event trill be the un
veiling of a <17,000 monument to Gen
eral Jamea Edward Oglethorpe, la being
projected here now, and the enthuilaam
with which the people of the city have
received the auggeetlon assures Its sue-
ceaaful consummation.
Aa the atate of Georgia contributed
<15,000 toward the monument and as
Oglethorpe was the founder of Geor
gia, It la contemplated making the un
veiling an event of atate and national
Importance.
Some time ago Prealdent Taft prom-
la,d he would visit Savannah soon
after he became prealdent. He will be
waited upon by a representative com
mlttee and asked to make no plans for
the 11th day of February, next. The
governor of Georgia and the governor
of Bouth Carolina will ba gueats of
honor alio, and It la Intended to make
the affair a memorable one.
The committee on monument,
which Hon. J. Randolph Anderson
chairman, hax been In conference with
Mr. French, the famous sculptor, and
has accepted a design which Is arils
tlcally beautiful and historically faith
ful. All of the patriotic societies In the
state wll be called upon to participate,
a portion of the fund having been de
rived from all parts of the state and tha
Oglethorpe monument commission,
consisting of representatives from
every part of the stato.
MUStTaY FOR ERROR
HE CONFESSES CRIMES
Guilty of All Charges, He
Says.
Lexington. Ky* . March 16.—Cnrtls
Jett, who Is serving a life sentence for
the assassination of James B. Mar
cum and Jim Cockrell, has given out
another confession In the Frankfort
penitentiary. In which he anys he Is
guilty of all of the crimes laid at his
door. Ha declares, however, that ho
litis prnferacd religion nnd that Cod hits
pardoned him for every bloody deed,
and he calls on Governor Willson to do
likewise.
E. DURANT IS NAMED
Succeeds Crum as Collector
at Charleston.
Washington, March 16.—Edward Du
rant. Jr., who was today nominated by
the pnsfdent to be collector of the cus
toms at Charleston. 8. C„ Is here. There
Is little doubt but that he will bo
promptly confirmed to succeed tha ne
gro Crum, whose nomination waa de
feated In the last congress.
Italian Police Fear
■ Roosevelt’s Coming
Will Bring On Trouble
Milan, March 16.—The Italian police
aro In a atate of trepidation over Mr.
Roosevelt’s arrival in Naples early in
April, and they hear with dismay that
the ex-presldent'a wife and three chil
dren Intend to sojourn in southern Italy
until June. Every effort will be made
to dissuade Mr. Roosevelt from setting
foot In Sicily and the earthquake re
gion.
MEMBERS DRAW SEATS
Special Privileges Granted
Favored Few.
Washington, Merely 16,—The house
drew seats this morning. Before the
drawing Representative Ransdell Intro-
rimml an ain»*n<ltiu‘n» allowing the fol
lowing ni'-mbt-r**' to ttecopt ***ats In ad
vance of the drawing, which was clone:
Representatives Bingham. Kclfer, Sher
wood, Payne. Clark of Missouri, Taw-
ney, Livingston, Perry, DeAfmond and
Tolbert.
The Supreme Court Rules
Against Telegraph Co.
If a telegraph company mlsquotas the
price of a commodity In transmitting d
message, the owner of the commodity
may recover from the company the dif
ference between the price which should
have been quoted and that which was
actually quoted by the telegram, plus
any Incidental expense which may have
arisen In connection therewith, accord
ing to a decision of the court of appeals
handed down Tuesday.
The cose waa that of Truitt against
the Western Union Telegraph Company.
Truitt sent a telegram to tha Hender-
son-Law Company, of Enterprise, Ala.,
quoting One cotton seed at 75 cent* per
bushel. The telegraph company mis
quoted the price aT 15 cents per bushel.
The quotation waa accepted aa correct
and the seed were purchased at that
price, but when the error, was discov
ered the purchaser declined to pay 75
cents, but Anally agreed to compromise
at 60 cents per bushsl. Truitt then
sued the company for the difference be
tween the price and the 76 cents per
bushel. He secured a verdict and the
telegraph company appealed.
The declalon was affirmed by th*
higher court.
HE SOLD BEER TO BOY
Federal court at Blrjnln-.l.un sgaliiat the
rood In that state nnd the Alston
initial CoBipnoi'.
BIS
test rnllro.il orciulxainm In th>> Mouth:
celvera «f Hie road, arfedal . . __
minority tiondliolilers will attempt to have
displaced.
tsry
New York. March 16.—Lieutenant Pe
ter Beery has been dismissed from the
police department for not preventing
the escape of Francis G. Bailey, the
fugitive president of the Export Ship,
ping Company, of New Jeraey, who got
away from the steamship Utaleln In the
harbor of Puerto Cortex. Honduras, on
the night of July 1 last, while ha was
In Beery’s custody.
Try to Break Snell Will.
Bloomington, Ills., March 16.—Rich
ard Knell, the disinherited son of tlm
late Colonel Tom Hnell. today resumed,
his Aorts to break the will of the eel-
centric old man whose whims for womi-
on w-ere talked of from one end of thfe
country to the other. Attorneys went
to Kprlngffeld to tile a, petition asking
for a rehearing In the’celebrated will
case, i
Quinn Is Fined and Loses
License.
I. Quinn and bi* negro bartender, who
keen * nenr-ltfw at a ml at the cornw of
Butler ninl were arrested
Tuesday morning, ('barged with selling
near-beer to minor*. A cnae of drunken-
no** wn* made against u negro nor named
MeCaii Monday uigbt and during bi* trial
he teatifled that be had been made drunk
bjr near-beer which he bought of Quinn,
gulnn wa* inimedlatele arrested and
* 1 for trial. He wa* found
HOO a
Fleente revoked.
RED MEN AT WORK
Want 100 Members For the
New Company.
mustered in on Monday night at tho I. O.
O. V. temple. Murh enthusiasm waa dis
played and great auereaa i* predieted for this
new branch of the Red Men.
KflferU will b# made to seeure over 100
member* before the meeting of the great
council of the state in June. The officers
selected were: Captain. J. W. Smith; first
lieutenant. Thomas Ivey: second lieutenant,
P. L. Guest: adjutant. \V. J. William*: first
sergesnt. 4. 1>. Quinn; quartermaster ser
geant. W. L. liamhrirk. Meetings will he
held each week at Choctaw Tribe s wigwam
tad all Red Men are invited.
Tomorrow
Terminates
Tomorrow
(Wednesday)
is the final
of the 33 1-3
per cent
Discount
Sale.
Better take
advantage
of it.
Our Special Sale
of Men*s and
Youths* Stylish
Spring
Suits
At the
Attractive Dis
count of
These suits are splendidly
tailored, ..made of high-class
fabrics and not one un
worthy or midesirable gar
ment in the lot. Tomorrow,
(Wednesday) is your last
ehance to get a handsome
Spring Suit at a saving of
Eiseman
3'
Bros.
11-13-15-17 Whitehall
ATLANTA