The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, July 07, 1906, Image 9

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Another Extraordinary Shoe Sale Began This Morning—Don't Miss This Great Bargain Opportunity. All sizes and widths are still to be had in all styles. Come early before assortments are broken. Hundreds of clever buyers have attended this great Shoe Sale today and everybody who has visited our Shoe Section agrees that no such values have been offered anywhere this season. The collection includes Shoes for general Summer wear at home, on the street or for outings—Shoes that will give good service and perfect comfort Two of the leading styles are shown in the accompanying illustrations. One is a plain Oxford Tie of select kid with turned sole, medium Cuban heel, patent leather tip and wide lace. The other is a smart Blucher Tie of plain kid with turned sole, full military heel and patent leather tip. Either of these Shoes Would be excellent value at $2.00. There are other styles in the collection, also; including about 300 pairs of White Canvas Oxfords and Bluchers that are equal to Shoes sold elsewhere at $2.00 to $2.50. All are from good manufacturers; well made, perfect-fitting Shoes and every pair is new, made up for this season’s business. This sale will be continued tomorrow. The sale price is i . . Choice $1.49. As this sale is for complete clear- ' ance, none will be sent on approval or sold subject to return or exchange. Samples of the Line can be seen in one of Our Show Windows Today. Keely Company Some New and Exclusive Styles in the New Brown Shoes at $3.00 and $3.50. ROUND TRIP Summer and Convention Rates. 11 pc East to Pacific Coast and Northwest from June 1 to Sept. 15, with special stop-over privileges, good returning to Oct. 31,1906. N. E. A. Meeting at Los Angeles, July 9-13. Elks Meeting at Denver, Colo., July 16-21. Summer rates to Colorado, June 1 to Sept. 30. Hotel Men’s Convention, Portland, Ore., June 25-29. Use the splendid through sendee of the SOUTH ERN PACIFIC from New Orleans; UNION PA CIFIC from Kansas City to Chicago. Through Pullman Tourist cars from Washing ton, Atlanta, Montgomery, etc., and from St.Louis and Chicago to California. Write me for literature and information. J. F. VAN RENSSELAER, General Agent. 124 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. ’ R. O. BEAN, T. P. A. G. W. ELY, T. P. A. U. S. RURAL MAIL CARRIERS GETVA CA TIONS THIS MONTH Special to The Georgian. Washington, July (.—Rural mall car rier* all over the country will be get ting their vacation thla month. Here ie a statement on the eubject Issued by Fourth Assistant Postmaster Oeneral DeOraiv: "The law. allowing rural carriers af ter twelve months' service fifteen days’ vacation with pay, Including Sundays and holidays, became effective July 1. The regulations under which such va cation will be granted will be Issued to postmasters as soon ns printed. The postmasters will be authorized to grant such leave, and carriers of over twelve months' service, whlrh accrues after the first day of July each year, will be entitled to pro rata leave of absence with the pay of one apd one-fourth days each month during the remainder of the fiscal year. Substitutes for car riers on vacation will be paid for such service at the rate of 1*00 per annum.” JUDGE BLECKLEY PASSES SE VENTY-NINTH BIRTH DA Y JUDGE RUSSELL HEARD El THREE Tl Speelnl to The Georgian. Roy.ton, Os., July (.—Judge Richard ”• Russell addressed an audience of 3.000 representative cltlxens of Frenk- j n. Hart, Madison and Stephens coun- ««• , at Carnesvllle Wednesday. After the laying of the corner-stone of the new Franklin county court-house, the Judge began his address at 12 o'clock, and for two hours he spoke of the Is sues of the campaign and his connec tion with It. In referring to the charge that he t\a* running In the Interest of Clark “pwell. he said the men who ctrcu- • ,,,,, or t°W It was a malicious slanderer and did not have backbone enough to come out and say he was the only candidate who meant anything to the common people. He •Jjf 1 ® ot hl * flr *t v,,,t to Carneavllle wnen as a young lawyer he walked Ofove to carnesvllle end tried his first case for B. H. Wllk- ee*°"' •>!» fee only paying his hotel bill, not leavte him enough to pay hack fare back to Harmony Grove. 81m' that time he has been solicitor general and Judge of the western circuit. Friends of all the candidates Join In admitting that his was the ablest speech ever made In Franklin county, and to the largest audience ever as sembled to hear a political speech In Franklin county. EXCELLENT SERVICE TO V. RIGHTSVILLE BEACH, NORTH CAROLINA. During the months of June. July and August the Seaboard Air Line Railway will operate on Its train leav ing Atlanta at 9:35 p. m., every SAT URDAY, a through sleeping car to Wilmington, N. C.; returning the through sleeper will leave Wil mington Thursday at 3:00 p. m„ arriving In Atlanta at 0:30 a- m., Friday. Arrangements have been made with the street rail way people at Wilmington to have cars ready at the depot to Immediate ly transport passengers to the hotels at Wrigbtsrllle Beach. Baggage will be checked to destination. WEEK END rate, good for five days, $*.25; SEASON tickets. $18.65. SEABOARD. Up In-the mountains of Habersham at his home, Rabun Gap, former Chief Justice Logan E. Bleckley quietly cele brated his seventy-ninth birthday on Tuesday, July 2. , To him went the warm greetings of friends In Georgia who remembered that this day marked the seventy-ninth mile-post In the brilliant and eventful life of this great-minded Georgian. He Is spending the evening-tide of life up amid the solitude and the peace of the towering mountains that encircle his home. There tho days go by calmly and serenely. Judge Bleckley Is not strong physic ally now, but his great Intellect still I urns undlmmed. All Georgia will wish for him many, many more birthdays In his quiet retreat In old Habersham. COMMIT TRAGEDIES Hpe-lnl to The Georgian. Savannah, Ga., July (.—In lower South Carolina there were several trag- lh ® I 1 ** 1 * our year " edles Wednesday. Negroes shot and" stabbed and all escaped arrest Hugo S. Kgelmitch, a young white man, was shot and Instantly killed by Dan Flnnlck, colored, at Moland. Charles Harrison, 14-year-old son ot G. it. Harrison, of Beaufort county, was taken to the Park View sanitarium here at noon today. It was stated at the sanitarium tonight that he cannot recover. Young Harrison was shot by Julian Mortimer, colored, according to the boy's father, who with two aunts, accompanied him to Savannah. D. Green, colored, had his throat cut and was stabbed In the breast and back several times by Moss Riley, colored, at Lassiter’s mill, near Purys- bury. Green Is expected to die. Riley escaped In a boat. About a mile from Hardeesvllle, a son ot Lewis Hmlthers was shot by Henry Hodges, a negro. He will prob ably recover. GOLDEN RE-ELECTED WATER COMMISSIONER a member of the board of water com-, mlssloners of the city council Wednes day night woo a compliment. A strong fight was made by a local paper to de feat Mr. Oolden. Tho police commission at Its regular meeting Wednesday afternoon elected Second Lieutenant Augustus Reynolds to be first lieutenant and 8. J. Ellison to be second lieutenant. Ellison has been first sergeant fob Epilepsy ran In wrM. The dltcor^rjr that t la purely n n«*rroua disorder baa IM to tho application of tb« great nerre restorer. Dr. Miles’ Restorative Nervine with the happy retail that thousands have been completely cared, and others are being cured every day. ••In the year '« I was stricken with epilepsy. Ik>ctors treated me for several years, but 1 grew worse. I would have such awful fits. I cannot tell my awful sufferings. A druggist recommended I>r. Miles’ Nervine, and I I (ought a bottle, and found It helped cne, and t took throe more and am cured. I had only one light spelt after I commenced tak* fog It. I do hope the time will come when everybody will know that your medicine cures these awful flta.” JOHN I.EWI8, Clarion, Pa. 8pedal to The Georgian. f> r . yi^' Nervine Is sold under n guar Columbus, (ftu, July 'Th« election antee that your druggist will refund your of T. £. Golden to succeed himself as money if first bottle does not benefit. SCHOOLS AND COLLBQB8. 8CH00L8 AND COLLEGE8. WALL ST. BANKER t MAKES SUGGESTION IN SPEECH Say* There Ie No Provision in Law for Fluctuating Demand 1 For Currency. By Prlvete Leased Wire. New York, July (.—The epeech de livered yesterday before the banker*' convention at Lake Champlain by Frank Vanderllp, vice president of the Na- tlonl City bank, In Wall (treat, waa a bitter disappointment to those oper ators In the street who bad been work Ing for higher prices. was expected that the Standard Oil, through Mr. Vanderllp, would throw light on the stock market posi tion. Instead, however, the orator con fined himself to an address on cur. rtney. He recommended that the gov. eminent should establish a bank, hav Ing the power to Issue, whose sole business would be In its relation with other banks, and whose chief opera, lions would be lbs re-dlscounttng for other banks. "I do not mean," said Vanderllp, that any existing Institution could be metamorphosed Into such a central bank. It would have to be freshly organised from the beginning. Its con trol would need to be largely In the hands of the government, and Its own ership will be distributed among bank ers In the country." Mr. Vanderllp said In part: "Part* of excessively high rates for money, recurring seasons of stringency following each demand for funds with which to move the crops; periods of superabundance: of gorged hank vaults snd interest rates falling to a point where the return on a loan Is hardly worth the expense of making It—all these things are significant signs of our Impel fee t financial system. They point. I believe, with absolute certainty to ward organic weakness. "At the present time there Is reason for believing thnt the country at certain seasons requires $1*0.000,009 more cur rency to transact Its business than Is required at other seasons. To meat this fluctuating demand for currency there Is absolutely no provision In our laws.” POSTOFFICE RECEIPT# SHOW BIG INCREASE. gpertal to The lirorslas. Chattanooga, Tenn.. July (.—The Chattanooga poetoffice receipts for the year ending June 10 amounted to CSM6S.29, compered with I22S,- »*(.!( for the former year, which la a gain of 120,402.01, or II per cent. COLLEGE and RD F\I A IT Coniervstoryi D A V ctOKGIA Tve ssnii loaUtstMM iu4ar oseawsafousl. Th Colilfi fatallhel kl,b csuiw Is $500.00. The shove reward will be paid for such evidence na will lead to orreat and conviction of the party or partiea who malicioualy cut a number of wirea on cable pole at corner of Peachtree and Seventh streets, during Wednesday night, April 19, or Thursday morning, April 20. A like reward will be paid tor such evidence aa will lead to the arrest and conviction of any per- aon or persona malicioualy inter fering with or destroying the property of this company, at any point. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company, I. EPPS BROWN, General Manager. ■ end WHISKEY HABITS cased st beawwitb* IB-M.W00LI.8Y.MJX Jflice 104 N. Pryor fitreet. LUCY COBB INSTITUTE, Athens, Ga. 1906 1907 The FORTY-EIGHTH session of the Lucy Cobb Institute, an Institution for the education of youna women of Georgia, will reopen on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. For catalogue and room reservations spply to MBS. M. A. LIPSCOMB, Principal. GROVER CLEVELAND NOT SERIOUSLY ILL By Prlrate Leased Wire. New York, July S.—The reported se rious illness of former President Gro ver Cleveland waa denied today by Dr. John H. Carnerhan, of Princeton, who ha* been attending Mr. Cleveland einca ha returned from Buiiard'a Bay on Wednesday night. Over the long-dle- tance telephone Dr. Carnerhan eald: 'Mr. Cleveland's lllneea Is merely a _..jht attack of Indigestion, which wee painful, but not dangerous He Ie up today and stirring around. Thera Ie no truth In the report that he la se- riously III." GERMAN SINGERS CHEER ADVENT OF NEW WILHELM. By I’rlvsto Leased Wire. Newark, N. J, July (-—The full- throated delegates to tho twenty-first annual Hoengerfeat ot the northeast Saengerbund. yesterday lafl for their homes. The grand prise, donated si n e years ago by the emperor of Germany, was carried away to Wllkeebarm. I'm-, by the Concordia Binging 8ocl< ly. The birth of a near heir to the German throne, Kaiser Wilhelm's first grand son, was announced to the singers amid great cheering