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MISTAKE POLICE
FORBURGLAHS
Patrol Twice Called by Excited
Citizens Only to Find Fel-
low Officers.
Policemen came near being arrested as
burglars in two different instances with
in The past two nights, as the result of
calls to the police station by excited citi
zens, who mistook the officers for prowl
, Ing marauders.
H hen two plain clothes officers at an
e«iT l \ hour today tried the door of a store
at Pine and Hunt streets, a drowsy
neighbor near by peered out of his win
dow, saw the two suspicious looking men,
and quickly telephoned the police station.
Call Officers Anderson and McWilliams
were on the scene in a jiffy, finding their
fellow officers standing in front of the.
store.
I guess you’re on the Job, all right,
so we won’t take you down this time,”
said Mc\\ illiams as he and Anderson rode
away.
The morning previous Cycle Policemen
Garner and Jeff ares found a mule among
a lot of boxes next to a store at Grant
street and Milledge avenue and were
driving it out when some one near by was
aroused by the noise, and called the sta
tion, announcing that burglars were try
ing to get in the store.
Anderson and McWilliams sped to the
store on motorcycles, were confronted by
-the two supposed burglars, aided them
in getting the, mule out of the lot and
returned to the station.
LAUNCH WITH 25 ABOARD
MISSING FOR TWO DAYS
SANTA BARBARA, CAL., Aug. 14.
Boats are searching the Santa Barbara
channel and Santa Cruz island waters
for a launch which left here Monday
wit h an excursion party of 25 men and
women and has not been heard of
since. She carried only one day's pro
visions.
A vast amount of ill health is due to
impaired digestion. When the stom
ach fails to perform its functions prop
er, the whole system becomes de
ranged. A few doses of Chamberlain’s
Ta dets is all you need. They will
sti-ngthen your digestion, invigorate
your liver, and regulate your bowels
entirely doing away with that miser
able feeling due to faulty digestion.
Uy it. Many others have been per
manently cured—why not you? For
sale by all dealers. «*•
VACATION KODAK
Vp ws Os the scenes you visit will prove
a never-ending pleasure to yourself and
friends. Jno. L. Moore & Sons have
Kodaks and all accessories. Fine fin
ishing a specialty. 42 North Broad St.
/ <777 Easy Hreezy Comfort fioute”
W\ \ sail from the leading cities in the south to resorts in north and east
\ M z*X Ihrougb trains to Savannah made up of large, easy coaches and sleeping cars,
\ 'm wl
\\\ j v *> Then, Ho! for a trip by rail and
ship, and a sail on the boundless sea
lHf\ Z The mammoth steel steamships of the “Savannah Line” 400 feet long: are the
L X \ \\\\ / most modern, luxuriously appointed, comfortable and safest ships which
. f \- \ ■ \ X \"s\ ply tlle soutllern waters. Capacity 6,200 tons. Wireless equipment.
J I 7) » Broad promenade decks give ample opportunity for exercise, while easy
/ y/• - k steamer chairs in shaded’breeze blown corners, offer inviting opportunities to
TM I '7\< those seekin & restful effects of a sea trip, with its invigorating salt air.
jy V y I ' Y Round Trip From Atlanta: 7 _z r
York $38.25 o, |. C°° le % 6<f
Jp Boston ■ $42 - 25 C freezes
/j/l I n\ E Including Meals and Stateroom —. ...
//fl I **' While at Sea ' ■- ; “ ’
/ d 1 Comparative Low Fares From A "ff' /////X
W* Other Places. ./ /J '7 '/ *
\ ieing with up-to-date hotels, these ships are equipped with staterooms de
luxe, cold and hot, salt and fresh, tub and shower baths. Table de’hote service x \ Is'"" / ~ A** *. /
aboard furnishes the choice delicacies of northern and southern markets, all of —1 rzzrl H s V/
which are kept fresh by refrigeration. Best of table waters. All bread and ~’"~J I L \L z // /
pastry cooked on board ship. 1/
For further particulars, call on or write any Agent -.... y/l!/
of the Central of Georgia Railway or its connections. 4 “** / ' '
W. H. FOGG, J. E. CARMACK, fIX
District Passenger Agent Traveling Passenger Agent,
Central of Georgia Ry. Ocean Steamship Co. \ 0* \ \\ 1W
Atlanta, Ga. . Atlanta. Ga. I y\. VZ
Fourth Notional Banl Building C \VW / n STEAMSHIP COMPANY
Hurt and Healy Off to Good Start
SKYSCRAPER RACE IS ON
They’re off in the skyscraper steeple
chase.
William Healy announced this week
he was ready to start work on his
office building in Forsyth street.
Joel Hurt announced his long-project
ed Edgewood avenue structure a week
ago.
Betting is even on the finish. In
fact, several bunches of loose money
have been placed in the future books
for several years, ever since the first
negro stuck the first pick in the Healy
property and the eighteenth reporter
published the ninety-seventh story that
Joel Hurt was about to put up that
building.
Always in “a Short Time.”
For these many years the principal
occupation of city editors on dull days
was to send the cub reporter to learn
from Joel Hurt just when that office
building would be started. The cub in
variably came back with the facts,
which were these: That the plans were
being drawn, the property was about to
be cleared and within a "short time”
Atlanta would have a new member in
the skyscraper club. Then next year
about the same time a new cub would
go get the same story. He didn’t see
Mr. Hurt, who wasn't in, but he got the
information from "the office.”
But Mr. Healy’s building operations
were carried on with no more conceal
ment that that offered by a high board
fence. True, Mr. Healy was reticent
almost to a fault; true, he preferred to
abide by his works and not by his
words; certafnly, he was never guilty
of deceiving trusting reporters by fill
ing their brains with fantasies. But he
COAST LINE AGREES TO
$400,000 TAX INCREASE
The Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
Company, the last of Georgia’s service
corporations to report satisfactory tax
returns for 1912, has informed the
comptroller general that it would ac
cede to $409,000 increase fixed by the
state.
The increase is on the $14,257,221 re
turns of 1911, bringing the railroad's
taxable valuations for 1912 up to $14.-
657.221.
The returns originally reported by
the railroad were $13,562,200.
FUGITIVE HIDES IN SWAMP.
MACON, GA Aug 14.—Hiding in
the swamp a few miles below Macon,
Jackj Cleveland, a negro, wanted in
Houston county for burglary, is defy
ing arrest. Tracked to the Ocmulgee
swamp by bloodhounds, he was almost
overtaken, and only succeeded in es
caping by twice emptying his pistol and
firing his gun several times at the offi
cers.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
assuredly was going to build something,
and there was the hole to prove it.
It began when the old structures were
cleared from the lot and one negro and
a mule began delving in the" top sur
face of tomato cans and paving stones.
After a while the negro struck soft
earth and worked faster. Soon the hole
was big enough to bury a dog in. After
a while you couldn’t see the mule's
back without leaning over the fence.
Hole One of City’s Sights.
The hole became one of the sights
of the city. Visitors came from far
countries to look into its yawning
depths and place bets on whether the
miners would strike coal or oil. The
pile of rock which occupied one corner
was moved again and again that the
earth beneath might be torn out and
hauled to the surface. The Aty grant
ed Mr. Healy an extension of time for
laying a sidewalk there, on the plea
that a towering structure would soon
go up. But instead of going up, the
workmen kept going down. Mr. Healy
undoubtedly has the finest basement in
Atlanta, even if he never builds any
thing over it.
Mr. Hurt beat Mr. Healy in the first
lap, for the Hurt theater actually was
%uilt. It wasn't the tall building At
lanta expected, but it proved that Mr.
Hurt really did plan the rejuvenation
of Edgewood avenue. Mr. Hurt has
always felt a deep interest irf this sec
tion and its upbuilding, even discarding
the sordid reason that he owns most of
it. He has labored to bring business
that way, even as Asa G. Candler has
striven for the upbuilding of the north
side. And he is going to have a big
building there if he has to build it him
self.
SUES RAILWAY WHICH
DIDN’T RECOMMEND HIM
W. M. Savage, formerly a brakeman
of the Seaboard Air Line, says the
company is indebted to him tn the sum
of SIO,OOO for refusing hint a letter of
recommendation when he quit its serv
ice.
Savage asserts, in a suit filed in the
city court today, that he was later em
ployed by the Atlanta, Birmingham and
Atlantic Company fpr a few dayc, then
discharged because he had no letter
from his former employers. He charges
that failure tn obtain the tetter caused
him to be blacklisted in railroad cir
cles.
VETERAN RAILROADER DI d.
LOUISVILLE. KY, Aug. 14—Joseph
M. Ryan, Jr., division freight agent of
the B. & O. S. W., and a veteran rail
road man, died here of heart disease,
heart disease.
TROST RIME HAD
CURIOUS MISHAPS
Crowbars in Wheels and Mo
lasses in Boilers Hindered
Independent Refiner.
DENVER. COLO., Aug. 14.—Letters
and telegrams indicating that H. O.
Havemeyer. head of the American Su
gar Refining Company, had been the
controlling factor in the beet sugar in
dustry in Colorado, were introduced to
day in the government’s inquiry to dis
solve the Sugar trust. To relieve the
monotony of the documentary evidence.
C. H. Keyes, of Denver, who operated a
small Independent factory, told of the
strange mishaps that had befallen his
machinery during the time the trust
was'seeking control in the Western
states. Molasses, he said, had been
poured into his boilers, and crowbars
had been placed in the machinery.
The first of the telegrams was one
from Havemeyer, addressed to Chester
S. Morey, head of the Great Western
Sugar Company, which said:
“Can not pay more than $4.50 for
beets.” It was dated February 16, 1903.
An answer in a letter written by Mo
rey assured Havemeyer that he agreed
heartily regarding this price limit. An
other letter, written in 1903 by Morey,
says:
“You will never get the interests of
northern Colorado in proper shape to
handle acreage and labor until all hands
are in one company." Another letter
told Havemeyer that if he wished to
suggest any new names for the directo
rate of the Great Western Sugar Com
pany certain directors would willingly
step aside to allow the Havemeyer can
didates to be elected. It had been tes
tified in New York that Havemeyer had
nothing to do with the Great Western
concern. •
STRENUOUS EXERCISE
CAUSES SUDDEN DEATH
ROME, GA., Aug 14.—Shortly after he
had pushed a wheelbarrow filled with
sand around his back yard, Captain W. P.
Simpson, president of the Exchange bank
and Simpson (Grocery company, died at
hfs home here from a bursted blood ves
sel near his heart. He was one of the
best known bankers of the state, a Con
federate veteran and a leading member
of the First Methodist church here. He
was born in Tennessee and came to Rome
32 years ago. Funeral services were held
yesterday afternoon.
EVERGLADE PROBERS
ABSOLVE WILSON, BUT
RAP ASSISTANT HAYS
WASHINGTON, Aug. 14.—The opera
tions of Assistant Secretary Hays, of the
department of agriculture, in North Caro
lina, with J. O. Wright, a former depart
ment employee, are criticised in a report
of the Moss committee which investigated
the Florida Everglades and other affairs.
The report just made public hints that
impeachment proceedings were narrowly
escaped. *
Secretary Wilson is not condemned for
the Florida Everglades affair, in which it
was charged that land agents had used
their influence at the department to pre
vent publication of official reports unfa
vorable to the land projeqf.
Loose management is charged against
the department, however, in that connec
tion.
Elliott and two employees
of the department who were discharged
on technical grounds after publication of
the Everglades charges and who have
since been indicted, are left to the courts.
Representative Sloan Is preparing a
supplemental report in which he expects
to defend the administration of the de
partment. Both reports will be submitted
to the house this week.
No young woman, in the joy of
coming motherhood, should neglect
to prepare her system for the physi
cal ordeal she is to undergo. The
health of both herself and the coming
child depends largely upon the care
she bestows upon herself during the
waiting months. Mother’s Friend
prepares the expectant mother’s sys
tem for the coming event, and its usa
makes her comfortable during all the
term. It works with and for nature,
and by gradually expanding all tis
sues, muscles and tendons, involved,
and keeping the breasts in good con
dition, brings the woman to the crlsic
in splendid physical condition. The
baby, too, is more apt to be perfect and ;
strong where the mother has thus
prepared herself for nature’s supreme
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given a young expectant mother than
that she use Mother’s Friend; it is a j
medicine that has proven its value !
in thousands of
cases. Mother’s eaTW wr~
Friend is sold at MaUil la ILK 3
drug stores.
Write for free KIILWIJ
book for expect
ant mothers which contains much
valuable information, and many sug
gestions of a helpful nature.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atluta, Ga.
PENSIONER 109. IS DEAD.
HOOPESTON, ILL., Aug. 14.—Har
rison Ingram, 109 years old, died here
last night.
His father was a soldier in the war
6f 1812.
Ingram was said to be the oldest
pensioner on the government roll. He
was a tobacco user from youth.
CASTOR 1A
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Kt ■
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Y' A/ " ‘ I® i :
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