The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, June 26, 1906, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. DENTAL PARLORS^ 191 Peacblrti Strut, Atlanta, 6a. " MISS HOOD REPORTED TO RE IN SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA oven tCHAUL A MAY. Dr. C.G. NEEDHAM, Prop. Rubber Plates f A rfl 22-K Gold Crown V / • 3U Porcelain Crown t Bridgework, per tooth J PAINLESS EXTRACTING rnrr| TEETH CLEANED 1(1 XL. Hours, 8 am. till 8 p.m. 8undmy, 9 a. m. till 4 p. m. WE TAKE IMPRESSION AND PUT IN YOUR TEETH 8AME OAY. UP A TRIPLE HOCH TO PRINCESS ALICE GERMAN GREETING FOR LONGWORTHS By MALCOM CLARKE. Special Cable—Copyright. Kiel, Germany, June 21.—The Ger mane, figuratively epeeklng, ahouted a triple “Hoch to Prince*. Alice.” The irftlng she received today on the -•r**ta when *he left the Seebaden- malt, the hotel where ahe and Con- j.-reeeman Longworth are stopping while at Kiel, waa courteoualy enthus- I ictlo, and when rite-and her huaband fnrted to wltnesa the racea In the ten* Ci r of Alltaon V; Armour** yacht, Uto- wann; there waa a merry tooting of whistles from the veaaela nearby. It waa only early today that Mr. and Mr*. Longworth returned to their autte In tha hotel after having been tho gueata of the emperor on the lmpro- v laed Imperial yacht Hamburg. He »;n ao preaalng a hoat, with the Prin ce** Eltel Frederick, apeclally com- m inded to be here from Potadatn to act aa hoateaa, which waa especially i ttliiK- aa ahe heraetf in a bride, that i i* I.nngwortha were atlll on theHain- l.u g.after 11 o'clock laat night. The Longworth*, with the Armour*. II * ■ yard and George, with Mr. nnd 'Mr*. Jordan L. Molt, of New York, were the kalaer'a chief American meat* at dinner on board the Ham- burg. "Prince** Alice’’ had the aeat of 1 ■: r at the emperor'* right, Mr. Long- w.nth.waa to her left, with the Prln- ceae Eltel. Witticism after wlttlclam from'hi* lip* led'Ilia aalllea at the ta ble and Mr*. Longworth, reeponillng to the eplrlt In which the emperor chose >■} grace the occasion. waa at har beat alao. After dinner, the kaleer led the way to the Hamburg'* quurter deck, and there the party aat about. In moat democratic faahlon. In wicker chair*. DECISION MAY AFFECT EVERY TAXPAYER Special to The Georgian. Chattanooga. Tenn., June 25.—The decision of Judge Allison, of tha dr cult court, In declaring-that the tax levy made by the city council of Chat tanooga, In which property aaaeeaed at 11,000,000 In tho new Ninth ward was taxed la Invalid, may have a very far-reaching effect. It la claimed that since the court has declared tha levy Invalid It may Involve the taxes paid by every tax-payer In the city. The opinion waa alao' baaed on the tact that the naaeaament of taxes must be made on January 10 and the terri tory Included In the Ninth ward wax annexed to the city of Chattanooga on May 21, 1(05, following the date for the assessment. • LYNCHING INVESTIGATION HAS BEEN RENEWED Special to The Georgian. Chattanooga, Tenn., June 25.—It I* said that secret service men from Washington are again In the city In order to secure more definite Informa tion na to the Ed Johnson lynching. It Is said that they are alao afar a num ber, of wltnesxes who know something of the lynching. WAREHOUSES - - Now is t h e time to build. No roofing so near adapted to this purpose “vul canite . .... ... .. . j It tomorrow. by tha National Board of Underwriter* and Southeast ern Tariff Association .and “YOU CAN PUT IT ON." ATLANTA SUPPLY CO., Role Unite Agents for Georgia. 2> and II South Pryor Stmt. ATLANTA, QA. J. C. GREENFIELD. Proa. C. A. PEEK. Ser.'y. WASHINGTON, D.C. AND RETURN AIR LINE RAILWAY ROUND TRIP $17.75 ROUND TRIP Ticket* will be sold at this exceeding low rate on June the 21th and July 2d and 2d; final limit July 11. 1(05. By payment of a fe* of 60c ticket* may be extended until August It, 1(05. Two trains per day carrying through aleeplng cars to Washington, and both are equipped with veatlbuled day coaches and Cafe Dining cars. Telephone No. 100 for further Information or aleeplng car reserva tions, or call at Ihe City Ticket Office, Na IS Peachtree street (English- American Building), or on the Ticket Agent. Union Passenger Station. D. W. MORRAH, C. B. WALKER, ' City Paaa and Ticket Agent. Depot Ticket Agent. W. E. CHRISTIAN, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. MISS JOSEPHINE HOOD, From a photograph taken shortly before her marriage to “Lord Douglas," tha alleged bigamist, last December. “LORD DOUGLAS," Aha. John C. Cavendish, alleged bigamist, who married Mias Jose phine Hood, of Ashevillt, N. C. (Cut from photo Identified by girl’s mother.) Many Join Family of Missing Girl to Raise Big Reward for Capture of Bigamist. Special to Tha Georgian. Asheville, N. C., June 26.—Mlsa Jo sephine Hqpd, the Ashevlll* girl, who waa married to "Lord Douglas,” alias John C. Cavendish, In Naw Iberia, La., December 18, last, and who left with her’huaband for an extended visit to Mexico, and whoae whereabouts since been unknown, Is believed to be In Santa Ana, Cal- where she la work' Ing In nn effort to maintain herself, having been deserted and left prac tically destitute. A letter has been received here bringing the Information that a young woman was in Santa Ana, In a pitia ble condition, sick and pennlleaa, and striving to earn har own living. 'Tha letter waa written by Mrs. Thomas J. Candler, of Long Beach, Cal., friend of Mias Hood's family, to her friend, Mrs. Edith Ward Beam, of Asheville. Mrs. Candler had been In Santa Ana a few days before the wrote the letter, and had heard of the condition of the lost girl, but aha did not learn the young lady's name. From the tone of her letter. It le evi dent that aha wae not aware that the grlef-atrlcken girl was a daughter of her-Intimate friend. Telegrama have been aent to the chief of police, mayor and eeverat other people In Santa Ana, and the relatlvea of Miss ilood are momentarily expect- ig a message bringing Information hlch will lead to her location, i In nearly every Instance, when Cav endish married, he took hla wives to Monterey or some other place In Mex ico, and there deserted them and left them penniless to return to their homes aa best they could. It Is be lieved that Miss Hood was also taken to Monterey, nnd that aha has suc ceeded In working hsr way back Into the states as far as Sants Ana, and expects to eventually reach her homa nnd friends. The proximity of Santa Ana to the Mexican border lands color to ths theory that Mlsa Hood was de serted In Mexico. Mrs. Charles M. Platt, an aunt of the missing girl, said last night: "I realise that nothing can be cer tain yet, but 1 am fully confident that my niece has been found. 1 know that she Is grieved over her misfortune, and that the reason she does not write Is because she does not want us know of her desertion. She waa on* of the proudest girls I ever knew, and I am certain she would rather work herself almost to death than call for help from her family.” •The cltxens of Asheville have been thrown Into a rage of anger by the loss of Mlsa Hood. A reward has been offered for the capture of Cavendish, and a fund la being raised by pop ular subscription to make the sum large enough to Induce Pinkerton's de tective agency to take up the hunt. A letter has been received by Mice Hood'* mother from Mrs. Gladys 81m- mons-Cavendlsh, of Memphis, Tenn., on* of the deserted wives of the biga mist, which gives an account of how she was duped. She met the alleged aon of the marquis of Queenabury In Hot Springs, and Was married to him after a short acquaintance. She went with him to Monterey, and expected to go near San Lula Potosl, where he said ha had 226.000 In gold burled be neath a tree. He told her soon after arriving at Monterey thkt he needed funds, and when a dispute arose he attempted to kill her by administering poison, and fled, leaving her without any money whatever, to make her way back home. This Mrs. Cavendish has offered a reward for the arrest of Cav endish, and will Join the Asheville rel atlvea of Mlaa Hood In bringing him to Justice. Secretary Root has taken the matter up with the United States officials In Mexico, and ordered the consul at Vera Crux to have that city thoroughly Governor Swanson, of Virginia, and the governor of Louisiana have stated they would probably offer rewards for Cavendlah'a arrest, as he has commit ted acts of bigamy In both of those states. JUST THIRTY YEARS AGO FIRSTPHONE WAS EXHIBITED ffr UP IN THE OZONE "In the Land of the Shy ” KENILWORTH INN Situated in a Private Park of IM'Acree, Biltmorc, Near Ashe ville. N. C., 2.5M Feet Above the Sea Level. “HNUar THt SLACK TO aPKNO THE IUHMHW ■ „ »scvx°u»d as Ike leading bofel la tbs mountains of Western Rerih Cnrollaa. It# ternary la tbs world will compare with tbs tlsw frets tbit haul. Mount Mitchell and Ptagab In fill vlsw. adjoin* nnd overtop** tbs Hlltmor# estate. Cool, lavtgoreUsg cUattsTmng- - ! •" "t*n *11 in* y*ar. Writ* oc_wi— ter beetle* tad rets* A» II. HOOKE. Proprietor. nr Private leaned Wire. Boston, June 25.—Juat thirty yeara ago today on June 26, 1I7(, at the Cen tennial Exhibition In Philadelphia, the telephone waa for the first time ex hibited to the public. A few months before Alexander Graham Bell had perfected hla Invention In Boston, but it was not until a month after the opening of the Centennial that It oc curred to hint to exhibit the wonder working device at the great fair. The managers at Philadelphia, re garding It as rather Interesting than useful, gave the telephone an Incon spicuous place. Aa a matter of fact, but for the Interest taken In It by Dom Pedro, the emperor of Brasil, tha wlde-awako monarch who made It his business lo copy Ihe best features of American Inatlluttnna, the telephone might not have attracted much popu lar attention during the Centennial. But the scene In which the Brasilian einiierur was the chief figure had a far-reaching effect. Afterwards, In deed, until* the exhibition closed, the telephone shared with the then cele brated Corliss engine the distinction of being the renter of attraction. For Dom Pedro's benefit Dr. Bell recited over the telephone Hamlet's oft-quoted soliloquy, and this Is said to have been the first public demonstration of the practical value of the telephone. The telephone as seen by those who visited the Centennial Exposition did not at all resemble In appearance the Instrument with which people of to day are femlller. I*>rd Kelvin, who was the first scientist to hall the tele phone as a scientific triumph, described the Instrument exhibited at Philadel phia aa "homespun and rudimentary,” but It embodied the essential princi ple without which the electrical trans mission of the sound of the voice would be Impossible. In the thirty years since ths Centen nial the telephone Instrument Itself has been perfected and, at the same time, means have been devlaed to bring It Into practical use. The first, telephone switchboard waa constructed at Bridge port. Conn., In 1177. A little later at Anaonla. Conn., a process was devised by which the outer surface of copper wire could lie so hardened that the wire could be strung from pole to pole. This process provided a bstter con ductor than the Iron wire previously used and thus mad* It practicable to telephone over greater distances than were at first considered possible. The original Bell company adver tised In 1177 that the telephone could be used for distance* up to 20 miles. Today thousand-mil* conversations are of ordinary occurrence over the lines of the Bell system, and, under special conditions this distance has been near ly doubled. As early aa 1U4 the use of the telephone bad grown to such an extent that an experimental line was constructed between Boston and New York. Early In 12(2 New York , waa put la telephonic communication 3 deect 3 erst*. Never s*M la balk. with Chicago and a line from Boston to the Western metropolis was opened soon after. Now tffe long-distanc* wires extend from Canada In the north to the Gulf of Mexico on the south and from the Atlantic ocean on the east to what waa one* known as the Great American desert on the west. The line* of the Belt system alone Include six million miles of wire and connect more than 40,000 clttea, towns and villages In the United States. Over the Bell wires nearly 10,000 communi cations pass every minute, or 14,000,000 each day. the total for the year being 4,500,(00,000. Elghty-nlne thousand employees are required to . keep the plant In order and the trafllo moving, and one person In every 13 la a sub scriber to the service. The development of the telephone system has been brought about with marvelous rapidity, but the engineers say that what has been accomplished Is only the beginning. It Is predicted that the time will come when there will be one telephone to every five per sona In this country. At the same time Improvements In apparatus and the In vention of new device*, such aa ths loading coll* and repeaters now being Introduced on the Bell long-distance lines, will greatly Increase the dis tance over which telephoning will be possible. HAYS IS PARDONED. Columbia, 8. C, June 25.—A par don haa been granted to Hoyt Hays of Ocooee county, twice convicted of killing his wife. Oovernor Heyward was convinced by Handwriting Expert David N. Cavalbo of New York that a note left by Mrs. Hays Indicated sui cide was genuine. It’s Easier to cur* tbsa endure thorn dreadful sick or nervous headache*. It's *11 In knowing kow. In Juot n few mlnntss, without nny other effect* but Ju*t to cure lbs pels— Dr. Mlleo' Anri Folk Fills will relieve yon of your suffering. If It'n nny pain, anywhere, or from nny cents. Just tike of Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills end la a very few ml nut** you will have so further thoeghts shoot either pain* or pill*, and ess go about your lionline or pi**turn, free from *nffering "••tfe’ue* Dr. Mlleo' Aatl Pnln Filin for servos* or sick headache and sen- rnlgla. We nr* not tfnM to take thru. »• they «o set ageet the. heart like so House of Departments Going into our place, and from one department tp the other, is just like going into a small city of 50,000 and going to a dozen different houses to get just what we show you under one roof. We have tried to establish a reputation that would last by giving the best values on everything and the lowest prices always. Did You Know That we carry a very large line of Paints, Stains, Varnishes, etc.? Well, we do. We have a depart ment of Paint that will nearly compare with the largest houses in the city. There is one thing we can tell you, you will make a mis take if we do not figure on your contracts. The Silver Line Whenever you want to buy Silver ware and want the very lowest price, it would be well to see us. This one department is almost a store within itself. In 25-year plate Community Silver we can surprise anybody in class or price. The Mechanic Is in his glory when his tools go to suit—just as tho Wall street speculator is way up when stocks go to suit him. Our line of Tools cannot well be reckoned until you come and look over the immense lino of standard brands we han dle. Crockeryware Have you over visited our China and Crockeryware Department? 'Well, it means just this: InDinner Sets,-Odd Pieces, Cut Glass, Glass ware, and to get quickly to the. point, this one department in our place will equal some exclusive dealers. Our prices tell the tale. House Furnishings We doubt very much if we would carry a larger line of stuff if we were running exclusively a House Furnishing House — that’s the beauty'of trading with us. We not only carry this line, but dozens of . others. Some Odd Things That hardly belong to any depart ment, such as Biscuit Machines. SteamCookers,Washing Machines, Bljie Flame Stoves, Bread Making Machines, and a hundred other ar ticles of much value, when once you have used them. Here is where you get all this. If you cannot find just what you want at our branch houses you can sure find it at the main house on Peachtree. We are always glad to please a customer, for that is sure to make another—hence no pains is spared to please everybody. King Hardware Co., Main Store 53 Peachtree Street.' 87 Whitehall Street. 116 Decatur Street. 203 Peters Street. PRINCESS MARISHKIN. A nihilist assumed her name on Tuesday last In order tu get near enough to Trepoff to kill him. By means of forged letters and docu ments the woman sought an Inter view with the exar. In order to carry on her negotiation* It waa necessary that ahe should see General Trepoff. She waited for him In his office and aa he entered the woman arose, drew a revolver and aimed at him. f 1 “BREATHING SPACE” BALLOT. Register your views on this subject by filling In this ballot with (X) marks and mall to “Park Editor, Atlanta Georgian.” Do you favor the general propo sition of tho desirability of acquir ing small tracts of land In central portion of the city for park and public comfort purposes, and per petually maintained aa such? X in Squire Indicates Your Choice For Against Do .you favor the calling of n meeting of citlgens and Interested persons within 30 days to form a temporary organisation? Do you favor tho chartering of a permanent “Civic Commission,” * under legislative authority, to se cure donations and maintain a per manent organisation for the exten sion of tho work as outlined In plan suggested by J. G. Roaaman In | The Atlanta Georgian, June 13? 1 Do you favor the Issuance of 3500,000 bonds by the city of A*. J lanta for the purpose of securing . at least two sites, one-on the north | side and one on the south side? 1 Name .! Address.. J SAVANNAH EXPECTS HOKE SMITH SOON Special to The Georgias. Savannah, Ga, Juno 26.—Though the exact date for the appearance of Hon. Hoke Smith In Savannah Is not known. It is expected that he will deliver a speech here In the near future. Much Internet la manifested In the coming address. BREACH BETWEEN MIZNERS HAS BECOME PERMANENT By Private Leased Wire. Chicago, June 25.—That the breach between Mrs. Wilson Misner, the wid ow of the late Charles T. Yerkes, and hsr young husband, has become per manent, and very wide. Is declared to day by the former’s friends to be proved In tho fact that, though Mrs. Misner has bees close to death from appendicitis, preceding an operation for her relief, .the young man waa not notified, or,, If notified, paid no atten tion to hla bride. Malaria Makes Pal* 8ickly Children. The Old Standard, Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic, drives out malaria and bullda up the system. Sold by all dealers for 27 years. Price 6( cents. Vaudeville at Ih* Casino. Madame Theree Renx. the famous European horsewoman, who /recently startled New 'York because of the great novelty she presented at the New York Hippodrome, Is the head line feature of the bill of vaudeville that will be of fered the Casino patrons for the week that starts Monday night. It la be lieved that this Is the strongest vaude ville attraction that has been brought South. Aside from the great novelty of the headliner, wno will present a wonderful act In the exhibition of a duo of horses, one of which Is the gift of the emperor of Austria, Mme. Renx was brought to America by the Hippodrome manage ment and startled all New York. Others on the Mil that wUI bid for attention are Waterbury Brothers and Tenny, tha Chadwick Trio, the Broth ers Meets, LeRoy and Woodford and the cameragraph. Treloar at Ponce DeLton. Theloar, tha strong man. will be the free attraction at Ponce DeLeon during the week that suns today. Treloar I* a wonderfully developed athlette, and has a record that any athlete ran be proud to own. He will be assisted by Miss Edna Tempest, and wilt go through a routine of feats that win in terest. Treloar was ones an oarsman for Harvard, and la also the winner of the prixe offered by the Physical Cultuie Exposition In New York for the mast perfectly developed man. Treloar will appear at 5 o'clock each afternoon and at~t0:20 o'clock at night on the free act stage. WILLIAM III INTERN ED. Special Cable. Brussels, June 26. —William W grand duke of Luxemburg, has been Interned In the aaylum of St. Bla*lu*- Bavaria. He la totally paralysed «o that hi* hand has to bo guided to *l*n documents. This event Is full of con sequences for the future of the duchy. The duke has six daughters, but nc son. Huntsville Church Excursion. Special to The Georgian. Huntsville. Ala. June 2*.—On n**t Thursday, the Sunday school of tn* First Baptist church will run *belr an nual excursion over the Nash vine, (iiattanongn nml St. Louis railroad to fl-till Springs. Tenn. Several hundred people expect to attend., ARE YOU GOING TO PAINT7 Linseed Oil Is the life of paint See that It Is pure. Spencer Kellogg 01 ® Process Linseed Oil Is the ““**• brand In tho United 8t»tes. Sold by F. J. COOLEDGE Si BRO , Atlanta. Savannal*