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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
THURSDAY, JULY 5. 1W
WILL MAKE PLANS
r FOB FIRST PLANT
( COTTON STALK PRODUCT CO.
GETS DOWN TO WORK.
Location of Factory To Be Decid
ed on at Saturday's
Meeting.
At a meeting of the executive com
mittee of the Cotton Stalk -Product
Company to be held at the office of
President Harvle Jordan In thla city
Saturday, plana for the erection of the
fleet factory will be completed and ar
ranyementa made for all the prelimin
ary work In connection with the fit,-
onn.ooo enterprlae.
Prealdent Jordan ha# announced that
It la the Intention of the recently or-
. a-inlied company to build one plant
) right nway In order to ahow conclua-
Iveiy the practicability of the propoel-
. tlon. The engine# to be uaed to drive
1 the machinery will be the beet and
• mat modern type of the Internal com-
buatlon atyle and the fuel to be uaed
* ill he alcohol, which will be manufac
tured by the company aa one of the
bv-producte of the cotton atalka.
It la the Intention of the company
to build planta all over the South, the
coat of each to be In the neighborhood
of JIAO.OOtt. Peraonally Mr. Jordan
vlahea to aee the flrat factory located
In Georgia and at the meeting on Sat-
urdny will endeavor to aecure either a
loiatlon In Macon. Augueta or Atlanta.
Special to the Georgian.
Valdosta. Ga., July 6.—The directors
of the local baseball association gav
up their franchise this morning and
Valdosta Is no longer a member of the
Georgia Htato League. The team
been a loser from the beginning and
the present owners have lost several
hundred dollars on It. not to mention
what the former owner sunk. The play-
era Were paid their salaries last night
from the 15th of last month up until
now, and most of them will leave here
tonight for their homes or to some
other leagues.
COUNTY TREASURER
TO BE NAMED FRIDAY
SEVERAL ARE ALREADY AN
NOUNCED FOR THE
POSITION.
A county treasurer will be named
. iday morning at 10 o'clock by the
< minty commissioner# to act until the
ecessor of Columbus M. Payne, who
died last Tuesday, can be elected.
There are several candidates for the
place.
Whether the commission has the
post it to fill the vacant place until the
expiration of the regular term, Decem
ber 31. or merely until n special elec
tion can be called, has been discussed
by the commissioners and tbs matter
h is been referred to L. Z. Rosser, the
county attorney. No opinion has been
iclvon. ,
It Is stated that among the candi
date- for the office of treasurer, to
Which Is attached a salary of 15,500 a
year, are 11. L. Culberson, chairman of
the county commissioners; E. T.
Jnvne, Jr., son of City Tax Collector E.
T. Payne and a nephew of the late
treasurer; 51. M. Welch, of the aecond
ward; Lucian Harris, a clerk In the
office of the county tax collector; W.
tv. Draper, councilman from the flfth
ward, anil T. D. Meador, of the Lowry
Hank. A number of others are said
to he aspirants for the nfflcx.
YOUNG SYRIAN DODOES
RESCUED FROM POLICE
The two Syrian boys, John and Malik
51.-see, who were arrested Wednesday
a- hoboes were taken In charge Thurs
day by Mike Goerge, of 101 Decatur
sM.-et. the wealthiest Syrian of thla
c |ty.
George has refitted them with de-
, cat clothing and will cars for them
until he hears from their relative In
Mobile.
The two boys won his favor by their
al-lllty .to recite the Lord’s prayer In
Arabic.
CURSElToFFICER '
AT THE TERMINAL
C. O. Chaffin, said to be a wealthy
railroad contractor of Knoxville, Tenn.,
( was arrested Thursday morning for
curataff Officer Brown at the Terminal
nation.
it is allsgsd that Mr. Chaffin at
tempted to go through the gates at the
nation without a permit and when re-
I n rained by Officer Brown, cursed the
; latter. The charge of curalng an om-
.. • mu recorded against the contractor
at polios headquarters.
Deaths and Funerals.
.. Judge Columbus M. Payns.
The funeral services of Judge Colum
bus M. Payne, the lata treasurer of Ful
ton county, who died Tuesday night,
win be held at the reeldence of the
family. ISO Spring street, at 4 o'clock
Thursday afternoon. Dr. W. W. Lan
drum and Dr. C. E. Dowman will of-
th late. The following will act aa pall
bearers: n. A. Hemphill. A. P. Stew
art. 11. M. Wood, W. D. Green, Judge
Ernest Kontx. and John Corrigan. The
Interment will be at Oakland.
Mrs. Mery L. Andersen.
Mrs. Mary L Anderson, 21 years old,
dad at her residence, 12 Lee avenue at
l o . i..ck Wednesday'afternoon of .ty
phoid fever. She Is survived by a hus
band and several children. The body
w a. taken to'Cbamble* for funeral and
interment at 1 o'clock Thureday after-
n---n.
Robert Harper Harris.
Robert Harper Harris, the Infant son
of Mr. and Mrs Henry R. Harris, died
at the residence of bis parents, 21 East
Harris Street, at 1:11 Wednesday night.
The funeral was held at the residence
at I o'clock Thursday afternoon and the
Interment was at Wsstrlew,
J. L. Roper.
J. U Roper died at 4:11 o'clock Wed
nesday- afternoon at the Grady hospi
tal. after a short Illness. He had been
taken there from hie home. No. 217
Gienu -1 av.nue, for: treatment for
»'".na h tro lbliw and this was the cause
Funeral arrangements
BALL TEAM DISBANDS BRYAN WILL WIN
FOR JHE SEASON, ON THIRD TERMISM
AUGUSTA REBELS
AGAINST BOYER
CLUB THREATENS TO SECEDE
FROM SOUTH ATLANTIC
LEAGUE.
H peels I to The Georgian.
Augusta, Ga, July 5.—Secretary
Htelner, of the local baseball club, has
wired President Boyer, of the South
Atlantic League, that If he, does not
reinstate the live men that Latham
put out of the game In Savannah yes
terday and Are Latham and also resign
himself from the liend of the league
that the Augusta club will withdraw
from the league.
. This. action was on account of the
manner In which Umpire Latham for
feited the game yesterday to Havan-
nah.
It Is understood that If the Augusta
club should withdraw there will be tin
effort made to secure the Nashville
franchise In .tits Southern League.
Steiner tin# nlso notified Manager
Ranslrk not to play this afternoon un
less all of the suspended players are
reinstated. There promises to bs quite
a sensation sprung about the deal that
has been In existence to put Augusta
out of the first place.
HOUSE AND SENATE W. A A. COM
MITTEE TO VISIT CHATTA
NOOGA FRIDAY, JULY 13.
On Friday, July 13, the house and
senate committees on the Western and
Atlantic railroad will leave here for
Chattanooga on a special train for the
annual Inspection of the property.
Senator Crum le chairman of the
senate committee and Senators Hand,
Wilcox, Foy, Reid, McHenry, Candler
and Alsabrook are the other members.
Representative Land, of Wilcox, Is
chairman of the house committee, and
there are forty-four others on the c«m-
mlttee. They will leave here early In
the morning and probably spend the
dsy and night In Chattanooga.
inasmuch as Important measures nro
now {tending before committees of both
the senate anil house affecting the fu
litre course of the state In relation to
the property, thle trip of the Joint
committee may have Important effect
on any legislation passed this session.
Evidently superstition has no ad
herents In either committee, since the
trip has been planned not only for
Friday, but for the 11th of the month.
Special to The Georgian.
Thoiussrllte, Os., July 5.—The Mesons of
the second congressional district, who nrt
holding tbelr snuttsl convention here, will
adjourn this erenlng. The next piece of
meeting was choecn thin morning sud Is
Blakely.
The officers elected thle warning are W.
H. Forster, of Boston, worahlnful master;
•b. ruiatci. ui iHiimu, ntnaiiuiiui iuaa
J. W. Teddy, of Dawfcon. settlor warden
* ultt, junior warden: B. it.
kitty, secretary and treat*
tirer; J. M. Itiishln, of Boston, chaplain.
Fifty dollars waa given to th* Masonic
home and 1100 to the M uni ford hodit.
00000000000000000000000000
O FORECASTER MARBURY
SAW WEDNESDAY'S GAME.
Distressing Perfumes
By CLARA MORRIS.
“W
F. know whnt we are, bat .we
know not wbst we may he,"
and, ns utr enrlent and honors-
able laundress would say, "dey
Is Isshuus of trntb" In that some.
To think that I, who have looked with
contemptuous eye upon Ihoee gentlemen
who go np to their state capitals and, after
passing In can! gomes half the ulght-for
praitlce. doubtleae-enter legislative halls
next day, and. slipping wearily to their
shoulder blades In arms chairs, pass new
laws for the guidance nnd roulrol of the
whole people; that I, who have believed we
had laws to burn-lnoperallve, clumsy, un
heard-of obi laws, with hair grown both
Ion* and gray In Hip Van M Inkle like sleep
—sud that If oor officials were to prod
as of them awake Into activity, getting
m "busy, aa It were, we would need
__ laws: and ever I have turned the coldest
part of my shmildtr upon the rural maker
of laws for the guidance and control of
crest cities. And yet. sad yet, behold me
at-In the open, tuning my Pipes
,.._onsij lining up my voles In s
welling cry for s new law-one to meet the
Injury about to lie romptalned of. made
both Inshle and criminal. At alt events,
you'll let me tell yen shoot It. because I
am speaking for hundreds, perhaps thou
sands., of other anffrrrrs beildra ntraelf.
A certain young WaiMijgton woman, who
Is cmislricrcd n < i . . .
nuunred to tue her Intention of Iwlng pres,
ent St the Thursday enutluee of the net.
play. I mentioned the matter to.one os
I— or the enst, nnd n quick glance fount.
mm , anil, to our eatlafne-
itljr held
Hon. bright nnd alert nnd evident
fust nod hr to by the unfolding of tl
The Drat net waa king; lietara Its eu .
ever, a change had come upon oor critic:
the dropped In her place, her hand sough-,
her temple, she looked pals- no. not lumui.
but distressed. We on the atage etehnuge.1
glances Whnt waa 111 The rest of the
house was on tiptoe of pleated excitement.
When the curtain-rose on the second net
our critic was gone • •
Actors are a aeoaitlvs lot. and to those
who knew of her presence this Wag like a
cut direct; only, even when I felt ihH
warmth growing in my rheeka. i said quit
positively, "She mutt have become III,
amt presently I noticed twe other younl
women' who hail been near her alao holding
their hands to tbelr heads Next u| '
the delinquent wae In n box, radiant,
lighted, enthusiastic. I
When I saw her In my dressing room the
burnt unt with: "Hid you miss me yealerg
of
tot
been announced.
LET THE GEORGIAN
Follow You on Your Vacation Trip.
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keeping ported on what is going on at home than by
reading THE GEORGIAN,
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Name
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Slate
Time
Now Gelling The Georgian at
Atlanta, Q a 1906
Forecaster Marbury went to
the boll game on the Fourth.
He had' "orter” gone tho day
before, for that. umpa needed
some one fo explain the weath
er to him. When the man who
makes the .weather goes out for
it ball game, look out for Ideal
weather.
Thero has been rain all over
the country In the last few a
days and about the only hot 0
place on the weather map on
Thursday morning wae Macon,
which wae one of the three
town# In the United State#
where the mercury soared above
(0. Pretty hard on Macon.
The conditions favor fair and
pleasant weather In this section,
and the following forecast has
been sent out accordingly:
Foreceat.
Fair Thursday night and Frl- 0
■ dtur. ■
Thureday temperatures:
7 a, m. ,.. ... .,-..70 degrees 0
.3 a. in, ., ., ..74 degrees O
> a. m. .. .. .. ..77 degrees 0
10 a. 7* degrees 0
11 a. tn ..82 degrees 0
12 noon, 84 degrees
1 p. IS degrees
2 p. m ..87 degrees
Moonlight Picnic.
A moonlight picnic In honor of the
Young Men's Helpers' Claes of the
_ Trinity Methodist Church will be held
“ nt Grant Park Friday evening by Mies
Daley Dnvles. The party will leave
from the home of Mite Tally, 178 south
Pryor street at 7 o'clock.
day? Oh, what mortification 1 suffered at
tha thought of being misunderstood! But
1 bed either to get to the clean, open sit
or feint denri nway therw In that pnhlle
place. I reeled at I walked—I was whits
as a ghost. Hey, for heaven's sake. '
there no law to protect .the woman wb<
coarse per
get the hot
lor that ae-
from the brutal attacks of i
fume fiend? Never shall I
•mother of henvy, sickening o
return
wMil m aim ueieni ur*i -tv «*■ ,/'
I tried to fen It awey-no use In t
heat Intenilltrri the odor; my he
were slow ami muffled; nr trig
that. The
jeert-beata
Muffled; nt sight grew
dim; a bend like of iron came down upon
iny brows—Ikon deadly nausea forced me
to retreat, even at the risk Of Iwlng consid
ered Ill-bred nnd unkind by Ihoee whose
good opinion I valued, and. at the coat of
uiy llexet uuri my ploasuro In the play. lw>
you at 1U understand, and can yon pardon
my flight, or 1 speaking In Greek?"
"No," I said, "you are not speaking In
dead Greek, hut In n living. - not to any
yon juatly term her, baa hail her fan with
me .also, only ahe cornered and put me to
the torture In a pew In 8t. John rhurrh.
where there might lie hyaterta, fainting,
even lying, but no retiring. Am) I faintly
recall that 'from battle, murder ami from
sudden death’ was followed on this occa
sion by my parenthetic, but earnest en
treaty. 'from the torment of overpowering
perfume, good Lord, deliver oaf
1 meant no wrong; that wag simply the
Instinct of eelf-preserratloo, expressing It
self on Impulse, for I suffered such deadly
tuiusm, such swimming of the head from
the oppressively suffocating, dense perfume
with which oor tormentor was saturated,
that I truly Iwllova.l should bavo coilOMOd
lud I not f-mml It neeeaoary to aw a
E lll.l, 1 jack-rotted stranger | had Invited
share my pew. And by fanning and tha
help of the lavender salts 1 ever carry
‘ -' ' it tronbles of my own nor
El lengthy services I lie rely
kept her from being overcame. Daring
prayers the elderly gentleman In the next
pew sheltered his open oostrilled Iwak of
a nose In a greet handkerchief, and damns
■ ' biased la tht ‘ " *
the spreader
-a all wee o .
as she sailed neat, end Are
BS sue sane,i iiubi. sou " .- iru. is.,
nnd heavy-eyed, charge. I their headache*
to her. She bad caused meetal profanity,
end she bad nude It-utterly ImpcistbU
for a ilosen people at least to lore her as
themselves, aad she was hedged to lie a
roarae and valgsr woman, when perhaps
she was modem amt refined, only having
defective sense at smell.
But really then should be some restraint
east shout s woman like that; she la Irre
sponsible. Perfume, a substance Invisible.
Ei«'KSSM'W &S3
delicate In the extreme, tad moat sparingly
used. There Is. for loots see. a root. Sow re
nte smell to orris root that never ever-
powers. A violet sachet powder leaves a
deliriously dctlcote suggestion at the Uvtng
breath of the little purple flower, clinging
tn the laces, fen or stores of the reflned
woman, while many toilet waters sod Vin
cents for the l-sth leave about the user
lust that expression of pies seat odor that
LOCAL NEWS CONDENSED
80 DECLARES COLONEL HEN-
RY WATTERSON.
Kentucky Editor Says Nebraskan
Alone Can Unite the Demo
cratic Party.
By Private Leased Wire.
New York, July 5.—William J. Bryan
will be the Democratic nominee for
president In 1808.- President Roosevelt
Is playing bis cards so ns to compel
the Republican party to renominate
him. and In a light between Roosevelt
and Bryan the latter will win on the
simple issue of third termlam.
This Is the view taken of the politi
cal situation by Henry Watterson, who
spent the Fourth of July at Manhattan
Bench Hotel.
"I am clear upon the point that Mr.
Bryan can ale,-- unite the rarty with
some show of carrying the country."
said the colonel. "I am more Inter
ested In measures than men. and It
C'-S'S me no sacrifice of feeling to ae-
cept the situation as I see It. But
i- -.«■ ugu i put the activities of party
work behind me."
W. R. C. Meeting.
At 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon th*
members of the Women's Relief Corps
will hold their regular monthly meet
ing at the reeldenco of W. M. Scott,
312 Grant street. All members are
requested to be present, ae matters of
Importance are to come up for con
sideration.
German Flag Displayed.
Upon the roof of the Century build
ing there was floating on Wednesday
the flag of the German conaulate, who
has offices In that building, and In
honor of the birth of a son* to the
crown princess of Germany the flag has
been ordered to remain In place
throughout Friday.
Original Decorative Idea.
Manager Will Zimmer, of.the new
Kimball,-received considerable. praise
Wednesday for the orlfflnallty he show
ed in the holiday decorations of the
dining rooms of hie establishment. In
addition to the usual bunting nnd flags
hround the walls, each table cloth was
composed of hundreds, of tiny flags
neatly worked together, while the nap-
not even an Invalid can quarrel with.
Ob, bow many men here I heard hold
forth furiously over the heavily perfumed
woman who Is s torment te ell near her:
sinning down tbelr heart-beeta, clouding
their brains, and robbing tempera, up the
wrong way. "And thero plagues of.sicken
ing odors are the delicate creatures that
cry ont against the smoke of e decent
cigar!" exclaimed a certain lawyer, who
had had an erenlng ipotled nt the theater.
I do not liefleve that these slater women
who adore perfume have realised that they
are censing actual suffering to others about
them: aleive all, they have not understood
how often they are mfujmigsri; eurh over
powering perfume trailing behind them be
ing accounted like any eccentricity of cos
tume, heel or hnt. or transparent blouse
•g a bid for puMIe notice, sod they are
kins were of the name design and made
valuable souvenirs of the day. The
entire hotel was gayly decorated In
honor of the Fourth.
Fined In Two Cases.
E. J. Jones, an autolat, woe arraigned
Thursday morning before Recorder
Broyles on the charge of running his
machine without a number. He waa
fined 86.75 for this offense and another
85.75 for contempt of court, he having
failed to appear In eburt at tho time
the case was first eet for trial. Tho
cases were made by Policeman Bar
field. '
New Captain Takes Command.
Police Captain Jett, who was elected
captain Tuesday night by the police
commission, assumed his new duties
Wednesday at midnight. At that time
the new captain went on duty In com
mand of the morning watch. He re
lleved Senior Police Sergeant Frank
Whitley, who has been In command
of tha morning watch since the re
tirement of Captain Moon.
8ue* Street Car Company,
hire. Belle Yarbrough filed suit ‘for
JHO.OOO against the Georgia Railway
and Electric Company In the superior
court Thursday morning, alleging per
sonal Injuries while a passenger on a
street car on March 30. Her husband,
M. J. Yarbrough also brought suit for
85,000, alleging the loss of the services
of hla wife and other Injuries
placed In the claea of reckleae young Idiots
who make giggling response to handker
chief signals from stranger*.
Now, It would be eetler for one lone man
to check a stampeding herd of steers than
to atop one woman from doing anything
that she believes adds to her attractions.
Ho for all those hot. heavy, smotherly per-
£““**- whose twee le the unspeakably
vulgar musk, let ua have the protection of
* few. Treat them like the poisons; make
it Impoeelble to buy more than a few drops
at a time; and make the selling chemist
take name sod aiklreaa of those who pur-
phase. Throw difficulties In the way of the
buyer until the forbidden manufacturer of
strong perfumes cm era to produce these
vaporous poisons. and only sends out harm
less highly fragrant waters
FILTHY
ADVERTISING
Is Rejected by
This Newspaper
Tbat is one reason
why it has been given
in popular esteem the
title of Home News
paper. Only CLEAN
ADVERTISING ap
pears in The Geor
gian. Are vou one of
the 23,000 heads of
families who indorse
this policy of
CLEAN
ADVERTISING
FELDER COMMITTEE TAKE AC
TION—NO CHANGES IN
THE RULES.
At a meeting of the Felder Fulton
county executive committee, held
Thursday In the basement of the court
house, the following rules and regula
tions for the primary were unanimous
ly adopted:
Resolved, first, That a primary elec
tion be held in -said county on Wednes
day, August 22. 1906. for the nomina
tion of a governor. Judge of the supe
rior court, Atlanta circuit, nnd nil state
officers, to be elected on Wednesday,
the third day of October, 1908. •
Resolved second. That the polls of
said primary election shall be opened
In each ward In the city of Atlanta at
7 o’clock a. m„ and shall remain open
until 7 o'clock p. m., and in each coun
try district at 8 a. m., and close at 3
p. m. That a ballot box shall be placed
at ench voting precinct In the city
wards and country’ districts. In charge
of the three sworn managers and the
three sworn clerks ns designated In the
attached list. In the event any man
ager or clerk shall not appear at any
of the respective wards or country dis
trict precincts, the managers and
clerks appearing shall respectively ap
point men to All all vacancies, on said
day.
Resolved third, That all white Dem
ocratic Registered voters, whoso names
appear on the list of registered voters
up to nnd Including August 12, 1909,
shall be entitled to participate In said
primary election.
Resolved fourth. That no registration
certificates shall be allowed on primary
election day. The managers will not
allow any one to vote unless his name
appears on the regular registration
lists, as furnished by the county regis
trar.
Resolved, flrst, That this executive
committee assemble at the court house
on Thursday, August 23, 1906, at noon,
to consolidate the returns of the man
agers, and announce the result.
Resolved, sixth, That the rules adopt
ed by the State Democratic executive
committee, nt Its meeting In Atlanta.
Ga, on April 30, 1906, be, and the same
are hereby, made a part of the rules
governing the county Democratic pri
mary, as hereinbefore provided, In so
far os applicable to said county primary
election.
Resolved,seventh.That a sub-commit
tee composed of five regular members
together with the chalrmnn and secre
tary of this committee be appointed as
a sub-committee having In charge all
of the details necessary for the legal
and proper holding of the primary
election, as herein provided. Said sub
committee shall have authority to make
provisions for all necessary expenses
incident to the holding of said primary
election.
During the meeting C. I. Branan.
who was at the meeting aa a specta
tor, asked for the floor and when the
privilege was granted stated that he
now recognised the committee In ses
sion as the legal one, although he had
before been a member of the Maddox
committee. Mr. Branan then preaented
a petition signed by a number of dtl-
xens and officers, asking that the coun
ty officers be put on salaries instead of
fees, ae Is now the case.
Mr. Terrell proposed a resolution
stating that the committee wae of the
state and not a county executive com
mittee, therefore the petition could not
be accepted. This resolution wae
adopted.
How Delano Resigned.
Washington Cor. New York World.
Some of the older members of con
gress were telling stories about the
government printing office and their
experiences there.
■"Did you ever hear," asked General
Grosvenor, "how former Public Printer
Palmer told Columbua Delano Jte must
resign?”
Nobody had, and Grosvenor con
tinued:
"Palmer waa a protege of Columbus
Delano, secretary of the Interior under
Grant. Delano was the victlm of some
rascals In the general land -office, and
Grant had to ask the old man's reslg-
"Delano knew the dlamiaaal waa com
ing, but he determined that he would
never know of It. He had been
Ing the summer at hla home near Mt-
Vernon, Ohio, and one day got a letter
postmarked Long Branch, where Grant
waa staying. Delano knew tha
was from Grant and did not dpen u-
Ha telegraphed Palmer to meet him at
tha Nell house, Columbus, and when
they got in the room Delano handed
Palmer the letter from Grant, saying-
•Read that: don't let me know what it
says. I will go out of the room, and
when I return you tell mt what I bad
better do.’ ...
"Delano paced up and down the hall
a few minutes. When he returned to
the room Palmer remarked that It must
be mighty nice up in the country
much better than Ilf* In Washington-
That was en • irh Delano sent his res
ignation on to Grant, and to his dying
day Delano was able to say that ne
er saw any request front Grant far
resignation."