The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, August 23, 1906, Image 4

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'• 4 THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. GIRL SAYS REED IS NOT THE WHO MADE ATTACK Miss Mabel Lawrence Fail ed to Identify Black in Jail. DCH»0«»06HS000do<H»000000OO C Governor Joseph M. Tyrrell O O Thursday morning authorised a O O reward of $250 from the state for O O the arrest of the negro assailant O O of Misses Ethel and Mabel Law- O O rence. This amount will be paid O 0 to the person or persons who ar- O 0 rest or cause to be «■ 'ed the O 0 negro and delivery of to the 0 O sheriff of Fulton count; 00000000000000000000000000 Arthur Reed, the negro who fitted the description given by Mabel Law rence of the negro who assaulted her and Miss Ethel Lawrence, was seen Thursday morning at 10 o'clock by Miss Mabel Lawrence, who was accompa nled by her father, at the Jail, and Miss Mabel declared that Reed was not the negro who committed the crime. The little girl didn't hesitate when she saw the man, but declured firmly and without a shudder that Reed was not the man who assaulted her and Miss Lawrence at Copenhlll Monday. Residents In the neighborhood of Co- pcnhlll have not yet given up hope of capturing the assailant of the two women, and are still searching the woods In the eastern part of Fulton county and In DeKnlb county. DETECTIVE GOES AfTEH HARRY HANDY Detect I re Lockhart left Admits Wednes day afternoon for Evansville. I ml., where he goes to bring Imck Harry Handy, who 1s wanted in Atlanta for assault nnd bat- tery ami for skipping Ills I total. Handy was In Atlanta this winter eon* ducting n small printing stand In front of the Illjnit then ter. printing visiting cards end the like. While In this city, llnndy pot I lady of his h several times. — warrant In the Justice court, nnd Handy put np a I>ond of $60. When the case was ctiled, llnndy did not appear nnd tlie bond Was forfeited. At the rime he was captured, n few days ago. llnndy and his wife were ducting the cant printing following a carnival allow. MARSHAL AND DEPUTY NA \lCE KING AND MEET,; AND “POP” DODGE MORSE FLEES Ilf 1 ‘Hvn It' I-4'iiiwhI Wire. Saratoga. N. Y„ Aug. 28.—Charlea W. Ilga, tlie tee king, who came here Saturday and engaged apartmenta In the Grand Union hotel tor ten daya, left Saratoga auddenly, and today there waa considerable gossip concern ing his reason. It was anld that when Morae en tered the dining room he aat down at u table face to face with Captain Charlea Dodge, of Atlanta, Ga.. the former husband of Mrs. Dodge-Morse. They recognized each other Immedi ately and both men became excited. Morae arose and hurried to another table. Dodge waa once manager of one of the biggest hotels in Atlanta. He waa known aa "Pop" Dodge to thousand# of dtlxena and the traveling public. BUILT SPECIAL COFFIN FOR WOMAN WHO WEIGHED QUARTER OF TON By 1'rlvot* Leased Wire. Washgton. Aug. II.—Borne to Ite Anal reeling place by ten etalwart men, the body of Mra. Jaquelln A. Johnson Has Interred In the cemetery at Kalla Church, Va., this afternoon. Mrs. Johnson waa 56 year* old, and weighed 600 pounds. Funeral services for Mrs. Johnson were held on the veranda In front of her late borne, near the reser voir on the Conduit road. The Rev. J. F. Konts, paetor of the United Breth ren church, officiated. The black casket was the largest ever made In thle city. It was 6 feet long, 14 Inches wide nnd 20 Inchee deep. Floral tributes of unusual sire and beauty .almost covered the large cas ket from view. Dong black curtains were hung from the roof of the veran da during the funeral. THREE OUT FOR Ernest Koutz, Dr. G. Y. Pierce and Tom Poole May Run. Special to The Ueorjrlnn. Sparks, Oa., Aug. 22.—John White hurst seriously cut T. I. Shannon, city marshal, and B. 7,. Whitehurst stabbed W. H. Dikes, deputy marshal, In the back yesterday afternoon while the of- fleere were trying to arrest Jack Whitehurst. Jack Whitehurst was said to he drunk, cursing anil raising gen eral disturbance. Dikes' wound was slight. TELEPHONE COMPANY To keep the Atlanta Telephone* anti Telegraph Company from pursuing a course which results In the mixing of high and low tension wires anil con sequent trouble at East Point W. R. Polk, Jr., owner of the electric light ing plant out there, has obtained a temporary injunction compelling Hie telephone i>eople to suspend work In that suburb. In his hill Mr. Polk alleges that, though* he had a franchise first, the telephone's workmen have come alone nnd erected poles among his wires and strung their lines Immediately above his. He alleges that every now and then one of their wires falls across those from his plant, and that when that happens there’s trouble in both esmps. He calls attention to the liability of the 3.0t)0 volts from the electric light wires entering Into the telephone busi ness, thereby endangering life and property. Judge L. 8. Roan granted a temporary Injunction and set the hear ing before Judge J. T. Pendleton Sep tember S. SAYS SEN. ALLISON IS NOT VERY ILL By Private Leased Wire. Washington, D. C\; Aug. 22.—Alarm ing reports regarding the condition of Senator Allison, of Iowa, are combated today In a dispatch to the Washington office of the llenrst News Service from Dubuque, by Leo Ely, private secretary to the senator, who says: "Senator Allison Is improving stead ily. The report that he la seriously til It erroneous. He took a walk today. The senator Is taking a good rest.” The election of Hubert L. Culberson i county treasurer In Wednesday's primaries has precipitated other hos tilities. A special election will have to be held between now and the first of the year to fill the vacancy when Col. ulbereon'a term aa chairman of the Fulton county board of commissioners of roads and revenue expires ot| De cember 21. this plum three candidates are already In sight. The friends of Br- nest C. Kontx are urging him to make the race. He said Thursday morning that he was considering the matter and would In all probability enter the lists If he could spare the time from his law practice. Another prospective candidate la Dr. George Y. Pierce, former alderman from the Fifth ward, who says he will run If no one else from hit section of the city tries for the place. He says he thinks that considering the fact that the Fifth word has not been rep- esented on the board for many years l candidate from that part of the city should he able to win. Tom Poole, of I^kewond, will also announce. It la said. Though these are the only three who have Intimated that they are "In a re ceptive mood” their announcements will probably bring others Into the rteld. MACON-ATLANTA LINEJHARTERED Interurban Electric Line Ready to Begin Work. Deaths and Funerals. Mist Beulah McDonald. The funeral services nf bliss Beulah McDonald, who tiled at the Presbyte rian Hospital Thursday night, were conducted nt Poole's chapel at S o'clock Thursday afternoon. The Interment waa at West view. Mra. Thomas E. Qrstn. The body of Mrs. Thomas E. Green, who died of tuberrulosla at a private eanlturtum Wednesday morning, was taken to ttprlng Place, Oa.. for funeral services nml Interment at 8:30 o'clock Thursday morning. Mist Anna E. Enloa. Miss Anna E. Enloe. 23 years old, diet) Thursday, morning at 40 Park street. The body will be carried to Dillard, On., for funeral services and Interment Friday nooning. Jacob D. Bloom. Funeral services of Jacob D. Bloom, who died nt the Grady Hospital on Wednesday, were held nt Bwlft ft Hall (Vs chapel at 3 o'clock Thursday nft- ernoon. The Interment was at Went- view. charter for the- Inter-urban line, the Atlanta, Griffin and Macon Elec tric Railway Company, waa granted a period of 101 years Thursday morning by Secretary of State Phil Cook. This line la to be about 26 miles In length, Including . tide-tracks* and spurs, and will link Atlanta and Macon by electricity. It .will pass through the towns of Forrest, Jonesboro, Love- Joy, Hampton, Bunnyalde, Griffin, Fo» syth, Macon and Atlanta, and the coun ties of Fulton, Clayton, Henry, Spatd- Pike, Monroe and Bibb, the city of Atlanta the route will be as follows: By double track through Capitol avenue, single track to Little to Fraser to Rawson and double track to Trinity avenue to Washington street, across the Washington street viaduct to Gtlmer to Ivy to Exchange Place, to Pryor street. The chpital stock Is to be 1100,000. The Incorporators ace N. P. Pratt. W. A. Wlmblsh, Clifford L. Anderson, Edwin P. Anstey, Atlanta; W. J. Mas- see, J. T. Moore, Mlnter Wimberly, Macon; W. J. Kincaid, Jamas M. Brawner, Seaton Grantland and N. B. Brewery, of Griffin. THREE CONVICTED FOR STEALING LAND Bj* Prlvnt/ 1.4**Be<1 Wire. Washington,Aug. 23.—Because h»* had II* legally fenced In ueorly all the public lands In Wheeler county, Oregon. C. Barnard baa been convicted at i'ortlsmt and sen tenced to two years In prison and to pay a line of $2,00j, according to telegraphic ndvices received today at the Interior de partment. Two of hla associates In the Butte Creek (.and. Live Stock and Lumber Company. Ilendrtcka and Zachary, have alto been found guilty, hut baa uut been sentenced. EIGHT TO BE MADE ON CONDEMNATIO OF CITYJWERTY Suit Is Brought Against Gate City Terminal Company. Ia an application for an Injunction filed In the equity dlvlalon of the superior court Thnraday, W. W. Yiaanskt, aa attor ney for Isoula Uosenfeld. an Invalid, who has been bed-ridden for thirty-five yearn, luta attacked the constitutionality of the Georgia law for the condemnation of prop erty. The Onto City.Terminal Company wants some property of Itoaenfeld on the enat aide of Mflugum afreet, a abort distance north of Hunter, nml on August 11 began andeuinafiou proceedings to get It with' ut consulting the owner, It la claimed. The bill alleges that they attempt condemn this property as port of the m .._ line of a railroad which they claim they Intend to build. The petitioner claims, however, that “the defendant corporation waa not formed for the purpose of r nlng or opcrutlng a railroad," and that was never the attention of the Inrnrpora fora to operate n railroad, and they do ot now Intend to do »o." One section asserts that the organisa tion la “a aham nnd a abell." nnd that lta only Intention la to provide terminal! for the Atlanta, Birmingham nnd Atlantic and the Heabonrd Air Line mllwnys. The petition, after claiming that the de fendant corporation waa trying to.condemn uiore property thou waa neeeaaary for lta uses, and that Just and adequate a tlon for the property bad not b«rn R roceeds thus to attack the act eorgfa legislature approved Dece 1834. under which the defendant la Naw Bank foe RutUdgo. A charter waa granted by the sec rotary of state Thursday morning to the Merchants and Farmers' Bank of Rutledge. Capital stock $25,000. Three Countiee Missing. With only the counties of StewarJ. Murray and Houston missing property returns made to the comiendler from 142 counties show n net gain of $40,- 0(18,006. When the other three are in and with the corporation Increase of over $6,000,000 added, property values combined will show an Increase for 1806 over 1905 of about $46,500,000. WASHINGTON PATRONS ARE TO LOSE $50,000 By Private Leaaed Wire. Washington, Aug. 2$.—Washington gamblers In the stock market lost heavily by the welching of the bucket shop of the firm of M. J. Sage 41 Co., which yesterday found Itself at the wrong end of a great number of beta and promptly suspended payment. There are said to be hundreds of "cus tomers" nf the firm In the city, dnd their loHfR probably foot up at least $50,000. M. J. Sage& Co. had three corre spondents in Washington and did an extensive business here. They were represented by Wade A Hedges, whose offices are located in the Ouray build ing at Eighth and O street!, northwest, Lynn * Wall, with offices in the Ada ms building, at ISIS F street, and ' ’ Snyder, at 142$ F street. Benjamin ] CANDIDATES TIE FOR LONG TERM. Hpeclul to The Georgian. .Savannah, Ua., Aug. 23.—There Is a tie for the long term In congress. Sheppard carried Rryan. Chatham. Ef fingham. Liberty, McIntosh and Tatt nall counties, with a total vote of IS. Hrnnnen carried Bulloch, Burke, Emanuel, Toombs, Jenkins and Scre ven, with a total vote of 18. For the short term Overstreet will get 20 votes, Baussy 6 and Clifton 4. RABUN COUNTY. {Mayton. Oa., Aug. 23.—Rabun coun ty gives Esttll 4. Howell 315, Russell 60. Hoke Smith 265, James Smith 97. BRANNEN CLAIMS EFFINGHAM VICTORY. Savannah, Ga., Aug. 23.—Bmnnen claims Effingham by a safe majority. CLERK AT CAPITAL CUTS OWN TIIROAT BOYS' REFORMATORY TO OPEN OCTOBER 1 For the purpose of discussing the finishing work and furnishing of the Juvenile reformatory on the state pris on farm at Mllledgevllle, the prison commission will be In session Friday morning. To complete the building Ip first class condition the commission exceed ed the appropriation of $10,000, given for that specific purpose, by $1,500, and pari of the $3,000 allowed by this last legislature will be used to cover .this deficit. The balance will be used In furnishing the building, preparatory to receiving boys. From the present outlook the re formatory will be open for the re ception of Inmates by October 1. The commissioners will probably enter Into some dlarusslon na to the uniform adopted for the youths. General Evans Is opposed to clothing them In regular R rlson stripes or to the use of shackles. Ie says that all Idea of convict should be removed from the boys who will go there to be moulded Into useful cltl- «ens. •roceeds thus to attack the act of the December 18, , ot la proceed Ing with the condemnation: "It la contrary *i> and In violation of the rights of the petl .Joner under article 8, sections 6 and 14 ot the constitution of tho United States, which Insure to him flint neither the state of Georgia nor any other state can pass a aw which will deprive your petitioner of his property without due process of law. nor shall private property be tnken for public use without Just compensation. Your petitioner alleges that to condemn his pri vate property and take same a gay from him In such a manner aa In anld state law set out would he taking hla private property without dne process »>f Jaw, In that It wonbl permit the defendant to enter ufon and take possession of your petitioner's property before the value thereof and the the courts of competent Jurl Among other questions which the petl (loner driuntids lie answered nre "Who arc the stockholders of the Gate City Terminal ’onipanr!" and 1Wh#t la the exact location f the right-of-way for the main line?" On account, of the lllnes of Judge J. Pendleton of the Atlanta circuit. Judge 8. Roan heard the petition and granted temporary Injunction. The hearing for _ K rmanent Injunction waa set by hhu for pteinlter 8 before Judge Pendleton. BIG NAfilLRlw T0C0STJTM90 This Amount to Be Expend ed for Firing of Sa lutes. ' By Private [.rased Wire. Washington, An*. 23.—Mra. Elisabeth Boyle, a member of a prominent Phila delphia family, who ram, to Waahln*. Ion on a alght-aerlng tour, .Upped at the top of a Ion* inarbl, tll*ht of atepa on the anal aide of the war, atate nnd nary butldfn* thla afternoon and rolled to the bottom, breaking her collar-bone and poaalbly aeveral riba. By Private Leaaed Wire. Wnahlngtnn. Au*. 23.—General Jamea F. Smith, the new governor general of the Phlflppfnrr, who waa atranded In Honolulu with hla family through the grounding nf the ateamer Manchuria, haa cabled the war depn \meiu that he will go on to .Manila on the Irene- port Loxan today, provided he can get hla irunka and baggage off the Man churia. gpectat to The Georgian. Waahlngton. Aug. 33.—Claudius A. Ashmore, 30 years old, • clerk In the department of agriculture, attempted to commit suicide this afternoon In hla room at x H street. Northwest, be cut-, ting hla throat and hla left writ*.. Ill Travis la wanted by 8heriff M’OIII In health la given as reason. Physician* | Tuscaloosa, Alabama, for grand lar- feel certain that he will recover. ceny. T. 8. Travis Arraatad. After having been chased for the past two month, through nearly a dozen town, and bv more than twenty different officers. T. 8. Travis, alias J. V. Hunnlcutt, waa arretted Wednes day afternoon by Patrolman Zach Rowan. At the time he wae arrested Travis was working at the Western 1'nlo.i Telegraph Company on Alabama street under the name of Hunnlcutt. By Private l-enacd Wire. Waahlngton, Aug. 23.—The great na val review off Oyster Bay on Labor day will not cost Uncle Bam one mil lion, aa haa been reported. It will coat only 3(0, over and above the expenses of maintaining the fleet of forty-five veaaela for one day, which Would have to be borne whether or not there was any review. The only extra expense attached to this big dlaplaj will be for the salut ing. The nnvy does not use lta heavy guns In saluting, but the small slx- poundera. It also usee old fashioned black powder that has been condemned for all the other purposes. The cost of the discharges, aa estimated by the bureau of ordnance, Is 60 cents per shot. Including wear and tear on the gun and ship. supplTofTallots RAN ORTA]'PRECINCT Several Voters Were Denied Suffrage at Oak. Grove. A number of would-be voter. In the Oak Grove district were unable to ex press their sentiments tn the election Wednesday on account of an Inauffl- clent supply of ballots. It waa stated Thursday morning that the ballots sent out were mdeh too few to accom modate the unexpected number voters. The registration for the Dak Grove district was 148. Notwithstanding thla It Is attled that the committee sent out only 100 ballots nnd aeveral of these were spoiled in marking. / great deal of dissatisfaction was ex' pressed by late comers who found themselves disfranchised by this error In the supply of blank ticket*. 150 BANKS IN U. S. GIVEN $3,000,000 By Private I.rated Wire. Washington. Aug. 33.—Secretary 8haw announced this afternoon that he has placed (3.000,000 of government money on deposit In about 130 banks in the United State*. This nreney goea to replace fundi previously withdrawn from the banks on account of Panama expenditures. The.deooalts of the banks Is brought up to not less than 360,000. Fifteen Fils Information. 8lnce the new law passed by the last K neral assembly was signed a few ys ago fifteen corporations have made returns to the secretary of state, all of them Atlanta concerns. The first to file the required Information and en close the necessary 31 was the Atlanta Gas Light Company. The corporations have until November 1 to file thla In formation. '* ARMY OF HELLO GIRLS QUIT; REFUSE 10 USE BA CK DOOR By Private Lminl Wire. Chicago, Ills.. Aug. 23.;—All the tele phone operators In the* central ex change, the second largest telephone switchboard In the city, about 300 girls In all, struck today. The management of the telephone concern had made an arbitrary rule that all the operators..must enter the building by a rear door, making It nec essary for tlie girls to go through narrow alley. The order was issued ytaterday and the girls, In a body, nq tilled the management that they would enter the building by the front door usual, or not at all. There are 13,500 phones In the board 111 im>’ one of them Is out of busi ness. The downtown business districts uff'-r Ki'-atiy by tin* strike, |>r;icf f.jiffv all the phones being ou^ of service In aide the loop. CASH INVESTED IN PLANTS AGGREGATES $12,686,265,673 tty Prlvnfe Leased Wire. Washington. Aug. 23.—The census bureau has completed Its compilation of statistics on the manufacturing Indus tries of the entire country, showing that the total capitaUnvested Is 312,686,265,- 673. an increase of 4L3 per cent over 1 that Invested five years'ago. The aggregate amount of wages paid In 1906 was (2,611,640,632, an increase of 29.8 per cent The fact that there were only 16, per cent more laborers employed In 1905 than In 1900 shows that there was ai considerable Increase In the average amount of. wages earned per employee, LITTLE NEGRO RESCUES STOLEN RIG FROM THIEF While I. 8. Shropshire was attending to ■pme liusIiieNk In fhe court house Wednes day afternoon Will Hampton, a small negro lad, drove away with hla horse nnd buggy, which Mr. Hhropshlre had left atitndlug on the Hunter street side of. the court house. After the little negro had driven around town for a couple of hoars another little ne- gro, one who works for Mr. Hhropshlre, saw Hampton driving down the street. Mr. Hhropshlre'a negro, who Is about the annie alxe ns Hampton. Jumped Into the vehicle nml shoved the thief Into the street; then, hiving recaptured’the stolen goods, drove nwny with s glrn on his face. Probation Officer Gloer was told the name of the negro who had appropriated Mr. Hhropshlre'a turnout, nnd' nrrested Hampton at 7 o'clock Thursdny morning. PEEK-A-BOO SHIRT WAISTS MAY BE REGULATED From The New York World, When congress haa disposed of the lieef scandals It may In* called upon to consider the peek-a-boo waist. Rev. Father George 51. A. Scboerner, of Rochester. l*s., who Interrupted hla ser mon at Ceellla’i Romani Catholic church last Sunday to order two women In peek-n- boo waists from the building, has created a precedent. He* told bis parishioners f go home nnd take off those "bathing suits, sddlng. "This Is a church, not a bathing house." The attention of the purity organisations .w thns pointedly directed to a threatening evil, and legislation may presently be de manded to prescribe the number and site of the holes In the "lingerie” waists, which shnll admit the breese* and Incidentally afford tantalising vlowa of the shoulders of the wearer. Since the hnn nnd cry over open-work nalerr. which began with the merest pin- , ricks and hna now come to n finish no thicker than a face Tell, the matter of oilr national modesty has had some fearful shocks In woman's wear. Mere man might have worn open-work socks and peek-a-boo shirts fill the ergok of doom nml no one would hare credited him with more than an Ingenious desire to keep cool. But the ‘ -*“* “* “trough these _ which meet you on nil type* of fhe female form divine Is "n horse of n different color." Ilnd Father Schoerner been conversant with present-day fashions he would have realized that, ns a matter of fact, he was casting an undeserved aspersion on the bathing suit In comparing It with the peek- •boo. The bathing dress of tpdnv la lu the throat* It reaches below the knee, the black stockings nre without nn aperture and the arms nre covered half way or quite to the elltow. Hot this’demure figure beside a girl In cut-out embroidery waist nnd murk the difference. The linen Is cut out In large chunks to accommodate .the design and the effect Is luminous, k large leaf of warmly tinted flesh Is charmingly outlined In eyelet em broidery, or a piece of satin skin looms up ns the center of a rose. If It Is a volitional imttern you have flesh formed In squares ami angles. 51ore often—and by far the most piquant—It la just holes; holes that have Increased In dimensions thr * the seasons; holes that give you kn scoptc and embarrassing visions. You gasp .... „ jku pretty girl's neck- nnd gave such fleeting glimpses of the Interior decoration that It; was hailed os a positive Inspiration. Our descent 1ms been rapid. Ily 1902 we had adopted graphic open-work Iwirder to the yoke, which left In a question no flight. Tho year 1904 found us with V'a that stray, ed to unaccustomed depths nnd apologized for themselves with large bine bows on thef lingerie beneath. By 1906 we had arrived nt ••panels." with Islands of modesty be tween. and in the present rear of grace we have “nll overs"—nn occasional dot on the open-work to save the situation. The sleeves have risen from oIIkjW length half Way to the shoulder. , , .. Rut this Is not all. Home genius, doubt less to keep pace with the times, has In tfiMluccd tho open-work corset. 5Ve now only await shredded lingerie Ih». fore the fashions of the FIJI Island lielle nfe accurately followed. Law or the brown- tailed moth olono can FROM TOWER IN THE SKY RA CE RESULTS ARE FLASHED IS PUT RIGHT UP TO THFPBESIDENT Army Chief of Staff -Holds Conference with Mr. Roosevelt. Hr I’rlvate Leased Wire. Oyster Bay. N. Y.. Aug. 23.-Th, soldier color line squabble at Broun- vllle, Texas, where so much friction between townspeople and negro reg u . lars has occurred recently, was put squarely up to President Roosevelt to- !>y Brlgadler General Bell, th. United States army chief of staff "* "My object Is to get word direct from the president on this matter" said General Bell, "in order that w« may act In the matter according to hi* wishes. The negro company has already been replaced at Brownvm, by white troops, and has been sent to Reno, but there Is still considerable feeling there, and as the president’s last message to the war department was a bit ambiguous I .came to Oyster Bay to get his exact views.” Upon leaving Sagamore HIM General Bell refused to discuss the conference with the president. REBELS CAPTURE A WITHOUT FIGHT San Juan de Martinez Taken by Guerra's Forces. By Private Leased Wire. Havana, Aug. 28.—News reaches here that Guerra has captured San Juan de Martinez, the western terminus of the Western railroad, without resistance. Negro Newsboy Arrested. Because Willie Barksdale, n negro newsboy, struck a llt/le white newsboy on the head with a rock, a mob of about twenty-five newsies chased the negro aeveral blocks until finally he ran Into the arms of an officer at the corner of Whitehall and Alabama streets. Willie says the white hoy spat on him and called him a llnr, so - he struck him with the rock. The lit- tie negro hall a cut place on his head, probably Inflicted by a member of the youthful mob. Livingston to Meat Bryan. Congressman Leonidas F. Livingston has been invited to attend and take mrt In the reception tn William J. Iryan on the occasion of his return to thecUnlted States. Colonel Livingston will leave for New York next Wednes day at noon, the reception to be on the evening of August 30. It Is probable that Colonel Livingston will make a speech at the banquet as ope of the representatives of the Southern Dem ocracy. THE SPUR OF NECESSITY. By JOHN ANDERSON JAYNE. Thla unuauftt picture ahoira the meth«<!a employed by the poolroom men to flash the results of the Saratoga (N. Y.) race* to their patrons. Copyright, 1906, by American-Jouriui! Esmii- Iner. it hla in out aurcesHfn I Imm**. Ju lian Ralph Ml* of a vow puncher lie met a tray out on the plnliiN “nlMiut nlxteen tulle* .from nowhere," ' who wan pulling a «v by Hie horn*, nml drugging IP to town. nuHHer to the Irujlury why lie ««* doing It, the puncher nuule reply: M Hoeitii*e I ve got to do It—that'* why. Deponent aajretb not what beenme of the cow puncher, hut If the fnet* in the c;n*e would be known, you would find Hint h" arrived nt hi* <lo*tliintloii. for when a thing innat bo done. It UMually la done. People who nccnuipll*li. usually do It un der the spur of ueco»ntij'. _ The men who hnve **t the red Mood m beenuae U limit In* i Duty I* n trenieudoiialy luiril tn*k nuizter, hut nt the end duty Invnrlnhly turn* Into ‘ muty with row* garland* for tho*»* who n*y her iiiiiudnten. , .. 8ee n mini engaged In the purault of hit vn aweet will, mid you will find tl»«»rii« and brlnra Infesting hla path, while for fn* one who doe* hecuuHo he uiuit. nnd i* 1 - cause It's right for hliu to do, the thorn* and hrlara me on;y nn merle* for the ui»»t brilliant* of rosea. Douhtlex* ninny :» man net forth In h the Golden Fleece lief ore the brave Jn- son atarted on hla voyage, hut with them was only a pleasure quest, while for mm It meant the |h>n*i>*mIoii of all that men hold dear nud previous, nnd for which they are willing to s.ivrltlve nil thing*. Htont hearts are they win* accept tlij coudlttoiiN In the race ot life, knowing tim» nt the end there I* n victor’* crown; fil'd heart* are they who, knowing the ll«n i* tn the way, refused to go out hi tun streets. , ., The world's great Imttles nre not fons'd In the parlora or In "my Indy's teas." hut In sploudlj: arena*, whe petltor* nre *ntc*iueu necking to dclher the good*, captains of Industry striving keep the plant going to full capacity, am reformers contlnnnlfy fighting ngainzt hi twin foe* of life, greed and graft, aim Wlckedue** “In the high plnre*.' It Is not Elijah moaning nailer n Jumper tree, hut Elijah out on the mountain Ing the garni Get at the feet ot the proptmt* of Rnal, who makes hi* name shine mi im* sky ot history. It Is pot trogerulcux. re nouncing and recanting bis theories. " ‘ Copernicus with bis soul In a tension ».* heroic resolve, tuutterlug: "I •*»» r, f'V’ n tbnt gives to the world n ■ear conception of space and the glories of the aribiiig sky nlnive us. . llrt When a Gmnt krtowa that he. and im only, can nsy his firm's debt* jwi "j” 'JJ him buckling down to Uls self-lniP"JJJ task with greater ardor than he ‘ Imckled swonl In any war of the repnnuc. When a Hlr Walter Mcott must ante Wgveriy Tab** to clear his name or smlrchuieut out from the brain, spurn**' 'j necessity, come the novels that give history of Kmrilnnd a tinge of romance glory unseen by the common eye. " »!" Huniucl I*. Clement* finds that erem- nre ctnuiormis nml threatening f° r , then the Yankee, who never was hii f » Arthur's court, compels the prince an ' pnujier to work with Tom mwy**r j lluck Finn, digging gold from tin* nibm I tus glim tlon that shnll give him zur* ■ , from p*ln and a competence for »»*> sge. . * „„ -in- For tho man who Is possessed < — a.. determ 1 ere Is no such thl In nenvy don t ... ig a I mut It. r* T ' strength lu carry lug It. Lift , , nu shoulders and with Knnnlne grit. jtrij' ,f tbf or me wsy. Aim worn me wsy Is reached, great will la* your streng, greater your reward, while your gri^J fsfsctloii will lie found In the tli>«4f Decause 1 bad to do It, I did IL