The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, August 21, 1906, Image 5

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. TUESDAY, AUGUST 21. 190(1. SEEHOWALINELOOKSWITHOUTSP'ACES Looks Queer, Doesn’t It? Now See How a Famous Label Looks. “Union libel, union label, Nothing else but this I see; In and out, where’er I wander. Oh tell me what can the meaning be?” Nothing simpler, friend of mine. Listen to us just a bit: All that’s fair and clean and square, Best that can be done—that’s ft. Ever honest in its stand, Lasting in its purpose grand. This Is (he Libel Thai Prelects (he Worker end Guarantees fo (he Public a Square Deal. IT HAS A REPUTATION. ATLANTA TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION, PoslofflCB Bn 266. |DR. JULIAN THOMAS INVENTS BRAND NEW FLYING MACHINE THAT MAY SOLVE PROBLEM | By Private Leased Wire. New York. Aug. 21.—It any man de- I serves to tly It la Dr. Julian P. Thomas, formerly of Atlanta, Ga., but now of New York. Thera la no more enthusf- | aatlc aeronaut In the country'. Hence, it Is to be hoped that the new flying machine that he has Invented In col laboration with Major C. J. 8. Miller, of Franklin, Pa., an aeroplane which will really fly, is true. According to Major Miller, the ap paratus will mark an epoch In.the his tory of aerial navigation. > The ma chine will fly any distance desired, he says, and will be under perfect oon- trol of the operator. He claims forty- five miles an hour or more can be made In the neoroplane, and that It'Wlll carry an engine nnd gasoline enoughjjo run from Franklin' to New York ami back again. There have been so many epoch marking flying machines which have failed to make good that the wise aero naut Is satisfied to wait until Dr. Thomas’ machine does some flying. FRIENDS OF MR. CANNON TO FORM‘UNCLE JOE' CLUBS ....gCJlgOLg.*JtP-COLLEOE8..... 8CHOOL8 AND COLLEOE8. GEORGIA MILITARY COLLEGE. University Preparatory. Three Courses. Full faculty of expert teach ers. Discipline after West Point model. Captain U. S. A. Commandant Terms reasonable. Next session begins Tuesday, September 4, 1906. New Il lustrated catalogue on application. Address Wm. E. Reynolds, A. M., President, Box 82, Milledgevillc, Ga. By Private Leased Wire. Washington, Aug. 21.-^Encouraged at the action of the Republicans of the Eighteenth Illinois congressional district in indorsing Speaker Cannon for the presidency, and the prediction of President Roosevelt that "Uncle Joe" would be the next occupant of*the white house, Republicans from nearly every state in the Union, temporarily residing in the national capital, will meet in the Ebbltt house parlors next Thursday evening at 8:30 o'clock to organize a "Cannon Club." James W. Crooks, of Danville, 111., Mr. Cannon’s home town, and a per sonal friend of the speaker, will preside over the meeting, and Albert S. Brow if, of Texas, a clerk In the navy depart ment, ,wlll act as temporary secretary. I Vete for J. G. Weodward for Csuhty Trsasursr. THE SOUTH'S LEADIN6 MILITARY COLLEGE-PREPARATORY HOME SCHOOL GEORGIA MILITARY ACADEMY Ti ^ COLLEGE PARK, QA. Limited to 80 boarding pupils, with ten teachers. Special preparation for Southern colleges. Graduates accepted by colleges without exami nation. Parents cordially Invited to visit and inspect the school before entering their sons elsewhere. COLONEL J. C. WOODWARD, A. M„ Pres. WASHINGTON SEMINARY North Avenue and Peachtree Street. ATLANTA. For Girl* and Young Ladle*. Boarding Department atrictly limited to provide refined home life. Cla**e* divided into (ectioni averaging about ten students to secure personal instruction. Faculty of eighteen college graduates. Primary, academic, college preparatory, music, art and elocution. Certificate admits to Vassar, Wellesley, Etc, 28th Year begins September 13, 1906. Catalogue on application to Phone 647, J North. L. D. SCOTT, EMMA B. SCOTT, , Pripclpala, , COLLEGE and Dn P V ATT Caineaville Conservatory MJ XV. XL* il GEORGIA Two Mwnti Institutions under one miMfenwit. The Collet* furnishes high court* In Unfotfe, literature, science nod kindred subjects; faculty of IS J well-equipped laboratories. The conservatory offers best advantages In music, elocution, art; special course and traioinc classes for Music Teachers; 50 Pianos | two pips organs; most beautiful concert ball in the south. Brenau had 27J boarders last year, il location. Altitude 1J00 feet. For catalogue, sildrri , Associate Presidents. Gainesville. Geohoia [BRIDE OF ASTOR IS REPORTED ILL | By Private Leaned Wire. Richmond, Va., Aug. 21.—Mrs. Wal- Idorf Aator, formerly Miss Nannie Langhorne of this city and Albemarle I county, who, with her husband, has I been vlaltlng her father, Chlawell D. Langhorne, at Ilesboro, will not visit the Old Dominion before returning to England. Mrs. Astor has been tndlspos- led ever since reaching America, and has not been able to attend any of the many entertainments planned In her I honor. Mr. and Mrs. Astor will sail for Eng- I land on September 1, accompanied by Miss Nora Langhorne, and will go di rect to "Cliveden," the famous country I seat, given to his son by William Wal I dorf Astor for a wedding present. Do you want Woodward I for Treasurer? If not, be sure to vote for Culberson I READY TO GIVE LIFE TO SAVE HIS WIFE WHOM HE ACCUSED | Mpeclnl to The Georgian. Chattanooga, Tenn., *Aug. 21.—Be- I cause her husband charged her with being Intimate with some other fellow, Mrs. George Thompson, wife of a rlv- erman, plunged Into the Tennessee river with suicidal Intent, and In order to save her the husband followed, but had It not been for the heroic efforts of a former steamboat captain the cou ple would have gone to watery graves. The woman was going down "for the last time" when the steamboat captain grabbed her by the hair and dragged her Into a yawl. The husband clinched the side of the boat and held on. Congressman E. Spencer Blackburn, of Nortfi Carolina, Mr. Cannon's native state, and ^erry Matthews, of Indiana, will address the meeting. Officers will be elected and a committee named to encourage the organization of clubs throughout the United States to boom the candidacy of "Uncle Joe." Five hundred campaign buttons will be distributed to those who attend the meeting. The buttons bear a likeness of "Uncle Joe," with the Inscription: "You. Mr. Speaker, will be the next president of the U. S.—Theodore Roosevelt." These are the words which the presi dent addressed tp Mr. Cannon at Sag amore Hill, about three weeks ago, when the speaker attended thp confer* ence of the members of the Republican congressional committee. SON OF ROOSEVELT HEADS FOR BAD LANDS By Private leased Wire. Omaha, Nebr., Aug. 21—-Hermit Roosevelt, son of the president, left on a long overland horseback trip to the ranch on which his father first started his Wild West career, located near Medora, N. Dak. Regular cow ponies are being used, and a round-up outfit, grub wagon, with camping equip age, follows the party. Captain Seth Bullock has charge of the outfit, which consists of Bullock, Bullock's son, young Roosevelt and sev eral others, Including Roosevelt’s East ern friend, John Heard. At Medora young Roosevelt will meet many of his father's old friends, men who rode with him during the stirring days of the cattle rustlers' war. The trip will consume a week or ten. days, and Js purely a camping trip, no hunt ing being Intended, though some fish ing Is being done. WEALTHY DOCTORS HELD FOR COURT Blacks - Transferred From Post to Avoid Further Trouble. By Prtvnte Lessed Wire. t Washington, Aug. 21.—AH the negro troops atFort Brown, near Brownvllle, Tex., have, as a result of recent trou bles there, between citizens and troops, been transferred' to Fort 'Ringgold. Tex^ which Is 100. mtleb from Fort Brown. One company of the Twenty- sixth Infantry, composed entirely of white soldiers, . has been ordered to Fort Brown to take the place of the negro troops transferred. The order for this shifting of gar risons was Issued yesterday by Major General Ainsworth, military secretary, and followed an urgent plea from United States Senator Culberson, of Texas, who declared the situation was such as to demand Immediate action on the part of the military authorities In the Interest of pence. Major C. M. Penrose, reporting on the trouble at Brownvllle, says ho Is satisfied that the killing of one citi zen and the wounding of others at that place was the work of negro soldiers who were quartered at Fort Brown, but that the guilty ones were not found. CURTIS IS MAKING GAMEST OF RACES Any Straw Hat Now At 50 Cents Except Panamas at HALF-PRICE MUSE’S AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE FOR WOMEN DECATUR, GA. Six miles from Atlanta. F. H. GAINES, D.D., President. 1. Nine Building,. 2. Modern Gymnaalum. 3. Ample Laboratorlee and Equipment. 4. New $60,000 Dormitory. 6. Superior Advantagee In Music and Art. 6. Health Record Uneurpaned. ENROLLMENT FAR IN ADVANCE OF ANY PREVIOUS YEAR AT THIS DATE. SESSION OPENS SEPTEMBER 19. Georgia School of Technology A technical institute of the highest rank, whoae graduates, without exception, occupy prominent and lucrative positions in engineering and commercial life, located in the most progressive city in the South, with abounding opportunities offered Tts graduates in the South’s present remarkable development. The forty members of the class of 1906 were placed in lucrative and desirable positions o'fort graduation. Advanced courses in Mechanical, Electrical. Textile, Mining and Civil Engineering and Engineering Chemistry. Extensive and new equip ment of Shop, Mill, Laboratories, etc. New Library and new Chemical labo ratory. Coat reasonable. Each county in Georgia entitled to fifteen free ffholarshipa. The next session begins Sept. 2$, 1906. For catalogue, address K. G. MATHESON. A.M.. LL. D„ President. Atlanta. Georgia [PREPARE FOR OPENING OF AUGUSTA 8CHOOL8 Special to. The Georgian. Augusts, Qa., Aug. 21.—'The first work about the echool buildings was done yesterday In preparing for the opening, which will be on September Superintendent Evans state* that he does not look for any great Increase In the number of pupils this year over what It Is usually, but that he Is ex pectlng a good attendance. The In creaae In iiatronage In the school* ha* been regular for a number of years, anil the buildings are usually filled. All of the principals, will be In their of fice* about ten day* before the time for the term to begfn, and they will enroll the pupils, both new and old. The enrollment will probably be several hundred more this year than last, as that Is about the usual Increase. VETERINARY MEDICS MEET. [ Ily Private IsniwhI Wire. New Haven, f’onn., Aug. 21.—From every part of thd United State* and Canada members of the American Vet erinary Medical Association are gather ed here for their forty-third annual meeting. Mayor Studley welcomed the visitors. Dr. J. Q. Rutherford, of Ot tawa, Ont„ responded and President I William H. Lowe, of Paterson. N. J., delivered his annual addresx Reports of other officers and various committees made up the for the remainder of the day. Clinics anil papers and discussions -on many topics relating to I veterinary medicine and surgery will 1 occupy the next three days. Peacock’s School for Boys. Motto: Individuality. 223 Peachtree Street. Gives certificates to enter Tech, University of Georgia, etc., with out examinations. Limited number of pupils to a teacher. Small classes; Individual work. Public Invited any morning to visit our rooms. Opens second Monday In September. D. C. PEACOCK, Principal. Phone 990-L. 8CHOOL8 AND C0LLEQE8. SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY Largest Pharmacy School in the South. Demand for Our Graduates Exceeds Supply. Address DR. H. CRENSHAW, Atlanta, Ga. PRESIDENT WALTER WILL NOT RESIGN. s i"“ lul t„ The Georgian. 1 n-tsmouth, Va., Aug. 21.—The re- J:' ,rt tha * President Alfred Walter, of board. Is to resign, has been ••• h!»mJ as •untrue and without founda- Uon * ’ a t the office of James A. Blair, of Blair & Co., New York. With the rumors of Mr. Walter's res ignation comes the report that Kdward I F. < v>st, the present traffic manager of the Seaboard system, Ik to succeed him. f But, with a denial of the impending withdrawal of President Walter at hand, the reported promotion of Traffic .Manager Uost aeenw to be mere airy persiflage# WANTED A BOOK-KEEPER AND 8TEN06RAPHER WHO HAS ATTENDED THE SOUTHERN SHORTHAND and ATLANTA, QA The Lcodlna Business School of the South, en OOMEIPINO, Shorthand and P 1 *** XhffHah Departments. Jj 10,000 O rad uatee; fOOstadenteaanu- ally. Receive# from two to five application* drily for office Militants. En dorsed by Governors, Senators, Bankers, professional and business men. Its Dip loma is a sure passport to a good position. Enter now. Catalogs# fry#. Mention this C. BRISCOE. Prtti, or L W. ARNOLD, V.Prest., Atlanta, 0a. By Private Leased Wire. Fairmont, W. Va., Aug. 2L—A senna- tlon wan created in society and busi ness circles last evening, when Dr. «G. W. Keener, an optician, of Wheeling, W. Va., swore out warrants for Dr. Lee B. Boyers, a physician, and Dr. A. Badgley, a dentist of this city, charging them with being guilty of an Illegal operation. The subject of the operation is alleged to have been Miss Beasle Keener, a daughter of Dr. Keener. Miss Keener was employed In the reception room at Dr. Badgley's dental parlors, and it Is charged that Dr. Boy ers performed the operation at the in stance of Dr. Badgley. The two defendants were arraigned before Justice Bennington, and gave bond of 13,000 each. The defendants are wealthy and enjoy a large practice In their professions. EXILED “AMERICAN GETS TURNED DOWN Councilman A. L. Curtis, candidate for alderman -from the First ward. Is In the race to the finish. He wants your vote; he wants your efforts la his behalf; he wants your Influence. He has Ideas for the betterment of the city. He has experience In civic af fairs, and he has a reputation for hon esty, energy, fearlessness and fair deal ing that Is unassailable. He Is a suc cessful business man, easy to approach ready and willing to extend n helping hand, generous to his friends, (iCrsona,' and political, and charitable to his ene mies, personal and political. F. E. PURSE “THE PRINTER.” PRINTING OF Al l. DRSORIPTIONS VJ PETER F. CLARKE, cashier of the Germania Savings Bank, is an able fi nancier and an experienced accountant. As treasurer of Fulton county the coun ty’s funds will be properly cared for by him. VOTE FOR PETER F. CLARKE. OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS 16 1-2 E. MITCHELL ST. ATLANTA, GA. CAPTAIN M’COY IS MILITARY AID Bjr Private Leased Wire. Odessa, Aug. 21.—Ambassador Meyer has refused to pay any attention to the plea for justice made by an American citizen named Gunston, who was ex pelled from Russia because of his al leged political activity. Everybody admits the race for Treasurer is be tween Culberson and Wood ward. Who do you want to win? FORTY ARE ARRESTED ON RIOT CHARGE By Private Leased Wire. 8ofla, Bulgaria, Aug. 21.—'The Gt^ek metropolitan, and forty other Greeks and Bulgarians are under arrest, charged with having caused the riots that resulted In the burning and other excesses at Ahlelu. BUILDING BIG PIER AT BRUN8WICK WHARF Hpeclnl to The Georgian. Brunswick, Ga., Aug. 21.—Chapman Company, contractors, who have charge of the work of constructing the piers of the Brunswick Steamship Company In South End, are rushing the work as fast as material for the piers can be delivered them. Big pile driv ers are driving down the oreosoted pil ing for the bulk heads, and the dredge Atlantic, which Is expected back here in a week or two, will, upon her return, pump In sand behind the piling ana complete the work. Nearly all the pil ings for the big warehouses of the company have been driven, and the lumber for the construction of the building# Is being delivered to the con tractors. By Private Leased Wire. Washington, D. C., Aug. 21.—Captain Frank McCoy, of tho Third Cavalry, has been appointed military aid to the president. Captain McCoy Is now on leave of absence at Lewlsport, Pa., but will report to Washington In time to Assume his duties In connection with the social functions at the white house during the coming season. Girardeau proposes to perform personally the du ties of the office of county treasurer. KNIGHT8 OF PYTHIA8 PREPARING FOR MEETING Rperinl t<f The Georgian- Anniston, Ala., Aug. 21.—Members of the Knights of Pythias throughout the district are taking great Interest In the meeting of tho First District Pyth ian* to be held at Oxford Lake Thurs day. Reduced railroad rates from all pnrts of the state have been granted nnd several hundred delegates are ex acted. The first session will lie called to or der at i o'clock and the evening ses sion will lie followed by a theater par ty and midnight banquet. Grand 8pr*ad Arranged. Hpeels 1 to The Georgian. Anniston, Ala.,. Aug. 21.—laical members of the Alpha Tau Omega fra ternity have arranged for a grand spread to be given In the Hotel Ala bama Thursday night, the affair to conclude with a grand reunion anil dance. Neatly engraved Invitations are being mailed today and many guests from Birmingham, Atlanta and other cities are expected to attend. Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 21, ’06. TO THE VOTERS: I am confident of elec tion. I have had no polit ical organization behind me. I have relied on my reputa tion in your midst for the past 38 years. I feel that I need say nothing to my ac quaintances and the old soldiers, except to be sure and vote early. *** W. W. draper; SHINGLE BUYERS You are losing money if you buy Laths and - Shin gles before getting our prices. Beg to draw your attention to our “Carolina Special Cypress Shingle.” Our “Carolina Cypress Shingle” is an exceeding ly high-grade shingle‘of full dimensions and of most attractive looks. All old contractors and property owners say the Best All Heart Cypress will last twice as long as Best All Heart Pine. One inspection of our “Carolina Special Cy press” means that you will buy, as they make the neatest roof and will outlast Heart Pine. CAROLINA PORTLAND CEMENT CO. FRANK A. HILBURN A WINNER Popular First Ward Candidate for Alderman Is Not a Flopper. Frank Hllhurn, candidate for alder man from the First ward. Is widely known over the city. Mr. Htlburn has represented his ward In council to ad vantage and has a reputation for good, honest work for the city. Mr. Hllburn has for years been engaged In the un dertaking business. In which profes sion he has gained prominence. Mr. Hllburn Is a Confederate veteran, com mander of Camp W. H. T. Walker. He has held this office for two terms, and has served with distinction. He Is known to he a friend of union labor, and his record has been consistent. He has never flopped. It will be a matter of Interest to all grocery merchants to know that Mr. Hllburn Is strongly In favor of Im proving all back streets. When elected he will work to this emL ••• ROUND TRIP Summer and Convention Rates. Round trip summer excursions from all points East to Pacific Coast and Northwest, from June 1 to September 15th, with special stop-over privileges, good returning to October 31st, 1906. Summer Rates to Colorado,June IsttoSepUO Use the splendid through service of the SOUTH-' ERN PACIFIC from New Orleans, UNION PA CIFIC from Kansas City or Chicago to all points West, Northwest and Southwest, including palatial steamship service from San Francisco to Japan, China, Australia, etc. Through Pullman Tourist cars from Washington, Atlanta, Montgomery, etc., and from St. Louis and Chicago to California. WRITE ME FOR LITERATURE AND INFORMATION. J. F. VAN RENSSELAER, General Agt., 124 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga. R. 0. BEAN, T. P. A. G. W. ELY, T. P. A. We Are Closing Out Our Entire Stock Of summtr ahoa* at remarkably low prices, splendid bargaii Our repair department i* unexcelled. Give ui a call a find that w* will aav* you money. CARHART SHOE MANUFACTURING Bell ’Phone 1355. 11 VIADUCT I and you will CO., PLACE.