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

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIA*. GIRL SAYS REED IS HOT THE WHO MADE ATTACK Miss Mabel Lawrence Fail ed to Identify Black in Jail. D0000C0O000000O00000OO00OO o a O GOVERNOR OFFER8 , O o REWARD FOR NEGRO. O O 0 O Governor Joseph M. Terrell O O Thursday morning authorised ft O O reward of $260 from the state for O O the arrest of the negro assailant Q O of Misses Ethel and Mabel Law. 0 O rence. This amount will be paid O O to the person or persons who ay- O O rest or cause to be m ted trie O O negro and delivery of . to the O O sheriff of Pulton count; O O O ooch>oooooooooooooock><h>oooo Arthur Reed, the negro who dtted the description given by Mabel Law rence of the negro who assaulted her am! Miss Ethel I-aw rence, was seen Thursday morning at 10 o'clock by Miss Mabel Lawrence, who was accompa nied 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 ahe saw the man, but declared (Irmly and without a shudder that Reed was not the man who assaulted her and Miss Lawrence at Topenhlll Monday. Residents In the neighborhood of Co penhlll have not ye; given up hope of capturing the assailant of the two women, and are still searching the woods In the eastern part of Pulton county and In DeKalb county. ICE KING AND MEET,; AND “POP” DODGE MORSE FLEES By Prlrate l*aa*l Wlr*. Saratoga. N. Y„ Aug. 23.—Charles W. Mora., the lea king, who came here Saturday and engaged apartment! In the orand Union hotel for ten daya, left Saratoga auddrnly. and today there wee considerable gossip concern ing hit reason. It was satd that when Morse en tered the dining room he sat down at a table face to face with Captain Charles bodge, of Atlanta, Ga., the former hut bend of Mrs. Dodge-Morse. They recognized each other lmmedl ately and both men became excited Morse arose and hurried to another table. Dodge was once manager of one of the biggest hotels In Atlanta. Ha was known aa “Pop" Dodge to thousand! of citizens and the traveling public. BUILT SPECIAL COFFIN FOR WOMAN WHO WEIGHED QUARTER OF TON By Private helled Wire. Washgton, Aug. 21.—Borne to Ita final resting place by ten atalwart men, the body of Mrs. Jaquelln A. Johnson was Interred In the cemetery at Falls Church. Va., this afternoon. Mrs. Johnson was (I years old, and weighed COO pounds. Funeral services for Mrs. Johnson were held on the veranda In front of her late home, near the reser- DETECTIVE GOES AFTER HARRV HANDY Detective I-oekh/irf left Atlanta Wednes- . *** nftcriMHUi for Kvatisvllle, I ml., where * be goes to l»rlii* Istck Harry Handy, who la wanted Iti Atlanta for nnsault and Iwit- terr and for skipping Ida laind. Handy wan In Atlanta this winter con* ducting n Minall printing atand In front nf the ItIJnii theater, printing vlaltlitfl card* end the like. While In thin city. Handy got Into n quarrel with the land lady- of his hoarding bonne mid atrnek her several time*. The landlady awore out a warrant In the Justice court, and llaudy put np a I wind of $50. When the caae waft rilled. Handy did cot appear and the how! waa forfeited. At the time he waa raptured, a few daya ago. Handy and hla —**- — duetlng the rani printing following n rarolral show. MARSHAL AND DEPUTY NA THREE OUT FOR Ernest Koutz, Dr. Q. Y, Pierce and Tom Poole May Run. voir on tha Conduit road. The Rev. J. F. Kontz, pastor of the United £reth> ren church, officiated. The black casket was the largest ever made In this city. It was 6 rtei long, 31 Inches wide and 20 Inches deep. Floral tributes of unusual size 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. Bpeetll to The Georgian. Sparks. Oa.. Aug. 21.—John White hurst seriously cut T. L. Shannon, city marshal, and II. ?.. Whitehurst stabbed W. H. Dikes, deputy marshal, In the back yesterday afternoon while the of ficers were trying to arrest Jack Whitehurst. Jack Whltehurat wna aatd to be drunk, cursing and raising gen eral disturbance. Dikes' wound was alight. injunctioTagainst TELEPHONE COMPANY To keep the Atlanta Telephone am! Telegraph Company from pursuing course which results In the mixing of high and low tension wires ami con sequent trouble at Fast Point W. R. Polk, Jr., owner of the electric light ing plant out there, has obtained temporary Injunction compelling the telephone people to suspend wotk In thnt suburb. In his bill Mr. Polk alleges that, though he had a franchise flrat, the telephone's workmen have come along und erected poles among hla wires and euung their lines Immediately above 111-. He alleges that every now and then one of their wires falls across there from his plant, and that when that happens there's trouble In both ra tups. Hr calls attention to the liability of the 3,000 volts from the electric light wires entering Into the telephone bust- pees, thereby endangering life and property. Judge I. S. Roan granted a temporary Injunction and set the hear ing before Judge J. T. Pendleton Sep tember (. SAYS SEN. ALLISON IS NOT VERY ILL Rr PH tale I-eased Wire. Washington. D. C.. Aug. 33.—Alarm ing reports regarding the condition of Senator Allison, of Iowa, are combated today In a dispatch to the Washington office of the Ilearst News Service from Dubuque, by Lee Kly, private secretary to the senator, who says: “Senator Allison Is Improving stead ily. The report that he Is seriously III Is erroneous. He look a walk today. The senator Is taking a good rest." The election of Hubert L. Culbereon 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 yeer to fill the vacancy when Col. Culberson's term as chairman of the Fulton county board of commissioners of roads and revenue expiree on De cember 31. For this plum three candidates are already In sight. The friends of Er nest C. Kontz are uralng him to make the rare. 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 hla law practice. Another prospective candidate le Dr. George Y. Pierce, former aldermen front the Fifth ward, who says he will run If no one else from Ms section of the city tries for the place. He says he thinks that considering the fact that the Fifth ward has not been rep resented on the board for many years a candldntr from that part of the city should be nble to win. Tom Poole, of Lakewood, 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 field. MACON-ATLANTA LINEJHARTERED Intenirban Electric Line Ready to Begin Work. WASHINGTON PATRONS ARE TO LOSE *50,000 By Private I.eased TVIre. Washington. Aug. 31.—Washington gamblers In the stock market lost heavily by the welching of the bucket shop of the firm of M. J. Mage 46 Co, which yesterday found Itself at < the wrong end or a great number of beta and promptly suspended payment. There are said to be hundreds of "cus tomers’' of the firm In the Mty, and their losses probably foot up at least $10,000, M. J. Has,* Co. had three corre spondents In Washington and did an extenstv- loudness here. They were represented by Wade A Hedges, whose offices are I .tested In the Ouray build- tng at Klghth and O streets, northwest, Lynn A Well, with offices In the Adams building, at 1335 F street, and Benjamin P, Hnyder. at 1433 F etrtet. Deaths and Funerals. Miss Beulah MoDonald. The funeral services of Miss Beulah McDonald, who died at the Presbyte rian Hospital Thursday night, were conducted at Poole’s chapel at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon. The Interment was at Westvtsw. Mrs. Thomsa E. Grsen. The body of Mrs. Thomas E. Green, who died of tuberculosis at u private sanitarium Wednesday morning, was taken to Spring Place, Oa., for funeral services and Interment at 8:30 o’clock Thursday morning. Miat Anna E. Enlee. Miss Anna E. Enins, 33 years old, died Thursday morning at 40 Park street. The body will be carried to Dillard, Oa, for funeral services and Interment Friday morning. Jacob D. Bloom. Funeral services of Jacob D. Bloom, who died at the Grady Hospital on Wednesday, wera held at Swift A Hall c'o,’s chapel at 3 o'clock Thursday aft ernoon. The Interment waa at West- view. A charter for tha inter-urban llna, the Atlanta, Gridin and Macon Elec tric Railway Company, waa granted for a period of 101 years Thursday morning by Secretary of State Phil Cook. This line la to be about 05 miles In length, Including side-tracks and spurs, and will link Atlanta and Macon by electricity. It will pass through the towns of Forrest, Jonesboro, Love- Joy, Hampton, Sunnyalde, Griffin, Fogy, syth, Macon and Atlanta, and the coun ties of Fulton, Clayton, Henry, Spald Ing, Pike, Monroe and Bibb. In the city of Atlanta the route will be aa follows: By double track through Capitol avenue, single track to Little to Fraser to Rawaon and double track to Trinity avenue to Washington street, across the Washington street viaduct to Gilmer to Ivy to Exchange Place, to Pryor street. The capital stock lx to be 3100,000. The Incorporators are N. P. Pratt. W. A. Wlmblsh, Clifford L. Anderson, EdWIn P. Ansley, Atlanta; W. J. Mas- see, J. T. Moore, Mlnter Wimberly, Macon; W. J. Kincaid, Jamea M. Brawner, Seaton Qrantland and K. B. Drewery, of Griffin. THREE CONVICTED FOR STEALING LAND By Private Leased Wire. Wishlngtun.Aitg. 23,—Uersuse he had II- legally fenced In nearly all the public lands In Wheeler county, Oregon, C> Barnard hat been convicted nt Portland and acn- leiircd to two years is prison and to pay s fine of 12.00). according to telegraphic advices recelvsd today at the laterlnr ile. uartment. Two of hla aaaorlatea In the lliitte Creek land. Live Htock sad I.umtier Company, Hendricks and Zachary, bnvt also been found guilty, but boa nut been sentenced. Now Bank for Rutlodge. A charter was granted by the aec retary of state Thursday morning to the Merchants and Farmers' Bank of Rutledge. Capital stock $25,000. Throe Countioa Misting. With only the counties nf Stswart. Murray and Houston missing property returns made to the mmieroller front 142 counties show a net guln of $40,. non.004. When the other three are In and with the corporation Increase of over 14,000,004 added, property values combined will show an increase for 1904 over 1*03 of about $44,500,000. CANDIDATES TIE FOR LONG TERM. Mpeclsl to The Georgian. Savannah, Ga., Aug. 2$.—There la a tie for the long term In congress. Sheppard carried Bryan, Chatham. Ef fingham, Liberty. McIntosh and Tatt nall counties, with a total vote of IS. ^ Itrannen carried Bulloch, Burke, Emanuel. Toombs, Jenkins and Scre ven, with a total vote of 1$. For the short term Overstreet will get 20 votes, Sauaay 4 and Clifton 4. RABUN COUNTY. Clayton, Us., Aug. 2$.—Rabun coun ty gives Eatlll 4, Howell 3$S. Russell 50. Hoke Smith 245, James Smith *7. BRANNEN CLAIMS EFFINGHAM VICTORY. Savannah. Ga., Aug. 23.—Itrannen claims Rffingham by a safe majority. CLERK AT CAPITAL CUTS OWN THROAT BOYS' REFORMATORY TO OPEN OCTOBER 1 For the purpose of dlncueslnit the finishing work and furnishing nf the Juvenile reformatory on the state pris on farm at Mllledgevllle, the prison commission will be In session Friday morning. To complete the building In first- class condition the commission exceed ed the appropriation of $10,000, given for that specific purpose, by $1,600, and part of the $$,000 allowed by this Inst 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- fonnatory will be open for the re ception of inmates by October 1. The commissioners wilt probably enter Into some discussion ns to the uniform adopted for the youths. General Evans is opposed to clothing them In regular orison stripes or to the use of shackles, lie says that all Idea of convict should be removed from the boys who will go there to be moulded Into useful ell I- aens. FIGHT TO BE MADE ON CONDEMNATIO OF CITY PROPERTY l Suit Is Brought Against Gate City Terminal Company. fo an application for an Injunction filed In tbs equity division of the superior court Thursdey, W. W. Vlsanskl, as nttor ney for Louis Rosen fold, an Invalid, who hits been Ited-ridden for tbirty*flve years, has attacked the constitutionality of the Georgia law for the condemnation of prop erty. The Gate City Terminal Company wnnts some property of Itosenfeld on the east side of Mflffftiui street, t a abort distance north of Hunter, and on August 11 began condemnation proceedings to get It with out consulting the owner. It Is claimed. The bill nlieges that they attempt to condemn this property as part of the main line of a railroad which they claim they Intend to bulhl. The petitioner claims, however, that "the defendant corporation waa not formed for the purpose of run ‘ • g tt railroad," on<l that “II ntebtlnii of the Incorpom- a railroad * “ not now fntead to do so." One seettou asserts tbst the orgsnlsa.* tlon Is “a sham and a shell." sod that Its only Intention Is to provide terminals for tlie Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic and the HealMHird Air Line railways. The petition, after claiming that the de fendant corporation was trying to condemn more property than was necessary for its uses, and that Jnst and adequate compensa tion for the property had not been offered. f iroceeda thus to attack tha set of the 1 ‘ ~ tloner tinder article 8, stations 6 and YTot the constitution of the-United States, which Insure to hhn that neither the atate of Georgia nor any other state ean pass a law which will deprive your petitioner of hla property .without dne process of law, nor shall private property be taken for set out would bs taking bis private property without dne process of law,* In thnt ft would permit th# defendant to enter ufon and take possession of your petitioner's property before tbs value thereof and the property rights of petitioner In the prem ises are finally adjudicated by a Jury or by the courts of competent Jurisdiction." Among other questions which the peti tioner demands lie answered are “Who are the stockholders of the Gate City Terminal Company !" and “What Is the exact location of the right-of-way for the main line?" On account of the Hines of Judge J. T. Pendleton of the Atlanta circuit, Judge' L. 8. Roan heard the petition ntid granted a temporary Injunction. The hearing for a “ rmanent Injunction waa set by him for ptember 8 before Judge I’fpdlutoo. big- Sum TO C0STJXJRAS690 This Amount to Be Expend ed for Firing of Sa lutes. ARMY OF HELLO GIRLS QUIT; REFUSE 70 USE BACKDOOR My Private Letted Wire. Chicago, Ills, Aug. 2$.—All the tele phone operators In the central ex change, the second largest telephone switchboard In the efty, about 300 girls In all, struck today. The management ot the telephone concern hod made an arbitrary rule that all the operators must enter the building by a rear door, making it nec essary for the girls to go through narrow alley. The order wax Issued yesterday and the girls. In a body, m titled the management that they woui enter the building by the front door usual, or not at all. There are 18,500 phones In the board and every one of them Is out of busi ness. The downtown business district* suffer greatly by the strike, practically all the phones being out of service In side the loop. CASH INVESTED IN PLANTS AGGREGATES SI2,686,265,673 By Private Leased Wire. • Washington, Aug. 22.—The census bureau has completed Its compilation of statistics on the manufacturing Indus tries of the entire country, showing that the total capital Invested Is $12,684,206,- 47$, an Increase of 41.1 per cent over that invested five years ago. The aggregate amount of wages paid In 1*05 was $2,411,540,532, an Increase of 29.8 per cent. The fact that there were only 16. per cent more laborers employed, 1905 than In 1*00 shows that there was a considerable Increase In the average amount of wages earned per employee. LITTLE NEGRO RESCUES STOLEN RIG FROM THIEF While I. R. Shropshire was attending to •on:. Iiu.Iiicm In the court house Wednes day afternoon Will Hnmpton. a small negro lad, drove away with hi. horoe and huggy. which Mr. Shropshire had left standing on the Hunter atreet aide of the, court houae. Hampton drlrlng down the atreet. Hhropahlre'i negro, who ta about the aame alxr aa IlniimtMi. Jumped Into the vehicle mid shovel the thief Into the atreetj then, having recnptnred the atolen gooda. drove uWn.v with a glrii on hla face. Probation Officer Ologr wna told the uninc of the negro who had appropriate:! Mr. Mtiropahlrc'a turnout, and nrrested Jlnmptou aj 7 o'clock Thursday morning. PEEK-A-BOO SHIRT WAISTS MAY BE REGULATED ttfentlon of the pnrlty organisation:: pointedly directed to n threatening nil legislation may presently he de- Spectal to The Georgian. Washington, Aug. *1— Olaudius A. Ashmore. 30 years old, a clerk In the department nf agriculture, altimpted to commit suicide this afternoon In his room at * H atreet, Northwest, bv cut ting his throat and his left wrist. Ill health la given aa reason. Physicians feel certain that he will recover. Bg Private Leased Wire. Washington. Aug. 23.—Mrs. Klliabeth Boyle, n member of a prominent Phila delphia family, who came to Washing ton on a sight-seeing lour, slipped at t|»s top of a long marble flight of steps on the east aide of the war. state and navy building this afternoon and rolled to the bottom, breaking her collar-bone and possibly several riba. GENERAL SMITH'S TRUNKS ARE ON STRANDED SHIP. By Private Leased Wire. W ashington, Aug. 23.—General James F. Smith, the new governor general of the Philippines, who wna stranded In Honolulu with hla family through the grounding of the steamer Manchuria, has cabled the war department that he wll> go on to Mnnlla on the trans port Logan today, provided he can get Ids trunks and baggage off the 31 un- churla. T. S. Travis Arrsstad. After having been chaoed tor the past two months through nearly a dozen towns and bv more than twenty different officers, T. 8. Travis, nlias J. C. Ilunnlcutt, was arrested Wednes day afternoon by Patrolman Bach Rowan. At the time he wai arrested Travis was working at the Western Union Telegraph Company on Alabama atreet under the name of Hunnlcutt. Travis la wanted by Sheriff M'Glil In Tuscaloosa, Alabama, for grand lar ceny. By Prlrnte [.eased Wire. Washington. Aug. 21.—The great na val review off Oyster Bay on Labor day will not coat Uncle Bam one mil lion, as has been reported. It will cost only $60* oyer and above the expenses of maintaining the fleet of forty-five vessels 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 navy does not use Its heavy guns In saluting, but the small six- pounders. It also uses old fashioned black powder that has been condemned for all the other purposes. The cost of the discharges, as estimated by the bureau of ordnance, Is 60 cents per shot. Including wear and tear on the gun and ship. SUPPLY OF BALLOTS RAN OUT ATPRECINCT Several Voters Were Deuied Suffrage at Oak Grove. A number of would-be voters In the Onk Grove district were unable to ex press their sentiments In the election Wednesday on account of an Insuffi cient supply of ballots. It was stated Thursday morning that the baltota sent out were much too few to accom modate the unexpected number o voters. The registration' for the Oak Grove district wns 148. Notwithstanding this It In stated that the committee sent out only 100 ballots and several of these were spoiled In marking. A great deal of dissatisfaction was ex pressed by late comers who found themselves disfranchised by this error Iq the supply of # b!ank tickets. 150 BANKS IN U. S. GIVEN $3,000,000 Bjr Private Leased Wlr*. v Washington. Aug. 23.—Secrutary Shaw announced this afternoon that he haa placed $3,000,000 of government money on deposit In about 150 banka In the I'nlted States. This ir.oney goea to replace funds previously withdrawn from the banks on account Panama- expenditures. The denosfts yf the banks Is brought up to not less than $60,000. Fiftetn Fila Information. Since the now law passed by the last general assembly was signed a few daya ago fifteen corporations have made returns to the secretary of atate. all of them Atlanta concerns. The first to file the required Information and en close the necessary $1 was the Atlanta Gas Light Company. The corporations have until November 1 to file this in formation. From The New York JVorld When congress has disposed of the beef scandals It may In* called upon to consider the peek-adion waist. Rev. Father George M. A. Schoerner, of Rochester. Pa., who Interrupted hts ser mon st Cecilia's Roman Catholic church last Sunday to order two women In peek-a- boo waists from the building, bss created a precedent. He .told his parishioners to go home and take off those ‘Mmi thing suits." adding. “This Is n church, not a bathing house. ' The attention Is thus i evil, and . _ , , ... manded to prescritie the number and slxe of the holes In the “lingerie" waists, which ■hall ndbilt the breezes and- Incidentally afford tantalising views of the shoulders of the wearer. Since the hue and cry over open-work hosiery, which began with the merest pin- •ricks and has now eouie to a finish no .hleker than s face veil, the matter of our national modesty bss had some fearful shocks In woman's wear. Mere man might, have worn open-work socks and peuk-a-boo shirts till' the crack of doom amt no one would have credited him with more than an Ingenious desire to keep cool. Rat the vlaloir of • pink plumpness through those hide-and-seek arrangements which meet f 'ou on nit types of the female form dtvfne s “a horse of a different color.” Had Father Behoerner been conversant with present-day fashions he would have a-ltoo. The bathing dress of todny Is In* finitely more discreet than woman s street garb. Of silk or mohair, It exposes only the throat. It reaches below the knee, the black stockings are without an aperture uml the arms ore covered half way or quite to the elbow. Ret this demure figure l>esldr a girl In cut-qjit embroidery waist am mark the^ difference. Tha linen fs cut out In large chunk* fo accommodate the dejdgn and tho effect Is laiulnoua. A large leaf of warmly tinted flesh Is charmingly outlined In eyelet em broidery, or a piece of aatln skin looms up as tho center of a roue. If It Is a con ventlonal pattern you have flesh formed In squares and angles. More often—anil by far the most piquant—It Is Just holes; bole that have Increased In dimensions throng! the seasons; holes that give you kaletdo scoplc and embarrassing visions. You gasp descent lias l»een rapid. that It _»n. Our By 1802 we had the year 1904 found us wl 1 .... «Wl to unaccustomed depths and apologized fer themselves with large blue bows on the lingerie Iwnefttb. ny un we hail arrived nt "panels.” with Islands of modesty be tween. and In the present year of grace we lihve “allovera”—an occasional dot on the open-work fo sore the situation. The •feevea have risen from ellww length half way to the shoulder. . . .. But this Is not all. Home genius, doubt- lens to keep pace with the times, has In- tfoduc^l the open-work corset. We now only nwnlt shredded lingerie be fore the fashions of the FIJI Island belle are accurately followed. law or the brown- tailed moth nloiic can save us. FROM TOWER IN THE SKY RACE RESULTS ARE FLASHED IS PUT RIGHT UP TO THFPRESIDENT Army Chief of Staff Holds Conference with Mr. Roosevelt. By Frirate Leased Wire. Oyster Bay, N. Y„ Aug. 2J._ T h» soldier color line squabble at Broun- vllle, Texaa, where ao much friction between townspeople and negro regu- lara haa occurred recently, waa put aquarely up to Preildent Roosevelt to. by Brigadier General Bell, the United 8tatea army chief of staff “My object It to get word direct from the president on thla matter" said General Bell, "In ordiy that \v* may act in the matter according to his wishes. The negro company has already been replaced at BrownvIU, by white troops, and haa been sent to Reno, but there la 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 bis exact views." Upon leaving Sagamore Hill' Genera) Bell refused to dlscuas the conferenc' with the president. REBELS CAPTURE 11 WITHOUT FIGHT San Juan/ de Martinez Taken by Guerra’s Forces. By Private Leased Wire. Havana, Aug. 2*.—News reaches here that Guerra haa captured San Juan de Martinez, the western terminus of the Western railroad, without resistance. Negro Newsboy Arrested. Because Willie Barksdale, a negro newsboy, struck a ltt/le white newsboy on the head with a rock, a moh nf about twenty-five newsies chased the negro several blocks until finally he ran Into' the arms of an officer at the corner of Whitehall and Alabama streets. Willie says the white buy spat on him and called him a liar, so he struck hhn with the rock. The lit tle negro had a cut place on hla 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 lart in the reception to William J. tryan on the occasion of his return to the. United States. Colonel Livingston wilt leave for New York next Wednes day at neon, the reception to be on the evening of August 30. It Is probable that Colonel Livingston will make a speech nt the banquet aa one of tho representatives of the Southern Dem ocracy. THE SPUR OF NECESSITY. By JOHN ANDERSON JAYNE. Thla ury-ual picture shows the methods employed by the poolroom men to flash the results of the Saratoga (N. Y.) races to their patrons. Copyright, 1006, by Amerlrsn-Jourunl Exam iner. In one of his most aitrcessful liook*. Ju lian Ralph tells «f n cow puncher lie met away out on the plains “about sixteen tulles from nowhere.'* who was pnlllin.* a by the horns, am! drugging It to mwii. iswcr to tile Inqlury why he was doing It. the tnlncher made reply: “llecati*** I've got to do It—that's why.* Deponent atiyeth not what liecsine of the _jw puncher, but If the fads in the case would Is* known, you would find that In* arrived nt his destination, for when a thlug must Ih* done. It usually 4s done. People, who ncmnupllrii usually do It «u- der the apur of necesslt;*. . The tuen who have, *et the re$l blm*»l • da world tingling with the eoiisdousnefi i an accomplished purpose have done It because It must t*e (Tone. Duty Is n tremendously hard task master, but nt the end duty luvitrlnbly turns Into beauty with rose garlands for those who ols»y her inandnt(*s. Hee s limit engaged In the pursuit of hit own sweet will, and you will find thorns and briars Infesting his pntjj, while for tho one who does liecuttse he must, nml I**’- canse It's right for him to do, the thorns and briars are only nurseries for th«* most brllllsnt of roses. Doubtless many n man set forth In senna of the Oohleu Fleece before the brave Js- stm started ou his voyage, but with thetu It was only n pleasure quest, while for mm It meant the possession of all tluit m**« hold dear amt precious, mid for which they are willing to sacrifice all things. Htont hearts are they who accept tbf conditions In the race ot life, knowing/‘/'‘J at the end then* Is a victor’s crown: fan'* hearts are they who, knowing the lion is In tho way, refused to go out In streets. , ., The world’s great Imttlcs nrp not , In the porli»rs $»r in “my lady’s five •» clues teas," bat In splendbt arenas, when* coin* K titors nr$* salesmen seeking to deliver 9 goods, captains of Industry striving »« keep the plant going ti» full capacity, and reformers continually lighting against tu* twin foes of life, greed sud graft, ana wickedness “In the high places.’’ It Is not Elijah moaning under n JimlPJf tree, but Klljnn out on the mountain ihnaj* Ing the gauntlet at the feet of the proph«*»* ot Baal, who makes Ills name shim* on tne sky of history. It la not Coperuleu*. re nouncing anti recanting his theories. Copernicus with hla soul In n tension «r heroic resolve, muttering: “I •*» rigm- that gives to the world a aew conception of space and the glories of the arcinn* *ty al*ove us. . . when a Grant kuows that he. and n only, cun pay his Ann’s debts you will h him Imckflug down to his self-hup"*"' task with greater ardor than p" buckled uword In any war of the rrpuwic. Wheu a Hlr Walter Heott must who* Wavcrly Talcs t«> clear his name «*r • smlrchment out from the brain. V nr . n»# necessity, come the novels that give f " history of Ib-oftnitd a tinge of romance glory unaeeu by the common eye. Samuel I fc Clements ftmls that credit™ 1 are clamoroua and threatening for**’ 10 *"”’ then the Yankee, wlio nevsr was In K * Arthur’s *iMtrf. coni|*els the prim*** nn'» 1 to work with Tom Sawyer <« i. .nn, digging gold from the ndm magtnatliHi thnt shall give hhn from palu ami n competence for m* For tho man who la pousesse*l of an nn- oinpH-rafde, unyielding, *fef*niifu«‘d. slstent heart there Is ho such thing ns f* If your load Is henry don’t waste ergy In whining nl*out If. KM**nd J . strength III enrrylng It. Lift It t" •' j shoulders und with genuine grit, groc** " . gumption In yonr heart, tote It to tb» 1 Of tne way. And when the end of way la reached, great will lw your utreuriB* greater your reward, while yonr great J* sfactlon will be found lu the tbougo • Because I had to do It, I (lid It-