Newspaper Page Text
THE ■ ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
ftOB IS ELECTED
PRESIDENT OF BIG
STEEUOMBINE
Queers and Directors Are
Chosen at Meeting Held
in New York.
ROCKEFELLER IN FEAR
OF ASSASSIN’S KNIFE
Mi I l» Tie Georgian
0,did«n, Ala., Sept.
7.—A special
■Bnouncefl the completion of the mey
0 f the tacey-Buek and Southern
•L, Company interests in this city
,' d Motion. Moses Taylor, of Kean-
„ n courtlandt & Co., was elected
Jreildent; C. P. Perln, chairman of the
L r d- E. T. Schuler and C. E. Buck,
°| C e presidents, and George F. Schuler,
“"-““"(rectors are: Oaklelgh Thorn,
ttobert B. Van Courtlandt, J. D. Lacey,
John Brindley, H. B. Schuler and
Courtlandt Van Camp.
A meeting of the stockholders of the
Southern Steel Company was held in
Ihlt city l*«t Saturday, at which time
iho capital stock was increased from
III tKHl.fioo to 115,000,000. Announce-
senu of the plans qf the new Interest
ire ospected within a few days.
It »as announced from n reliable
oource today that the Southern Steel
"ompany would move Its offices from
Jlrmlngham at an early date, as prac-
Ically all the company’s Interests are
'entered here. It Is further stated that
'he company will erect a handsome
office building In the heart of the city
or lt» use.
WIFE DISAPPEARS
Hlddletown, N. Y„ Sept. 7.—The po
lice department of this city has been
aiked by Frank McGowan, of Baltimore,
to look for his wife, Mrs. Alice Mc-
Gouan, who disappeared somewhere
between England' and this city. Mrs,
McGowan sailed from England on
August 25 on the steamship Philadel
phia. o( the American line. The steam
er arrived, but the anxious husband
could not find bis wife. He appealed
to the Ellis Island authorities, but they
knew nothing of the missing woman.
Thinking that hla wife might have
come here where she lived nt one time,
the husband has appealed to the police
to find her. The husband haa cabled
to his wife's address In England, but
received no answer.
AMUSEMENTS
"GRAND
TONIGHT ANP SATURDAY—MATI
NEE 8ATURQAY.
TIM MURPHY
AND DOROTHY SHERROD IN
OLD INNOCENCE
Night prices 25c to $1.50—Matinee
Be to $1.00. Sale pow open.
BIJOU
0NIGHT 8:30—MATINEE 8ATUR
DAY.
Haverly’s Mastodon
Minstrels
Same Bijou Prices. Next week
"HOW HEARTS ARE BROKEN.”
. NEXT WEEK—Usual Matlneee.
The Sensational and Emotional Drama
"How Hearts Are Broken.
A stormy Story of the Heart and
wal, told in four acta.
A scenic display of rare splendor.
Same Bijou price*.
(CASINO
TONIGHT 8:30—MATINEE TOMOR-
ROW.
6 HITS in vaudeville—g
ENOUGH.
Order Seat*, North 236.
Wheat and Jackson Sts.
MONDAY and TUESDAY,
Sept. lOandll
Gentry
Bros*
Shows.
^heir Pour Shows Actually
^ Combined.
act- higHIy educated ponies, 150 dog
(Semin, v 1 monke y«. 2 herd* of per-
T™ ln i, h »by elephants.
ttenca ’s Leading Amuse-
th. ® en t Enterprise.
tills CAM ! mb * Family—first time In
II,.*, un * r y. Their blggeet and beat
-_ Grind and Gorgeous Street
a * 10 a. m. Monday.
Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. T.—The fear
of the assassin In again In the heart
Of John D. Rockefeller and the oil king,
fearful that some anarchist will at
tempt hla life, la constantly surrounded
by a body guard of five detectives.
In addition. Dr. r.lggar, Mr. Rocke;
feller's constant companion, la also
somewhat of a guard. The men do
their own woVk without ostentation and
are under orders to avoid newspaper
men. Great wealth has Its drawbacks.
LOVE IS AN INCENTIVE
TO WORK, SA YSHALL CAINE
By Prlvnto Leased Wire.
London, Sept 7.—In these days when
newly-made millionaires are casting
off their wives who have atuek to them
through the struggle to success, the
following Is an Interesting opinion by
one of the world's foremost students of
human nature on the subject, "Does
Love Spoil a Man's Work?"
By HALL CAINE.
"Dpes love s^oll a man's work?”
"Well, that depends upon the woman
loved.
"If.she be the wrong woman, tho
husband Is like the man whose boat
has sprung a leak. Half the time that
ought to be spent In making way Is
spent- In baling out. If she be the
right woman, she Is that much extra
"One sees, of course, the obvious ad
vantages of celibacy to pioneers like
Cecil Rhodes, Just ns one realising Its
practical necessity to priests, as well
as to men who carry their lives In their
hands and should think of nothing but
work and duty. In the hour of peril,
having wife and children Is apt to make
■ coward of a man.
‘A brave woman by a man's aide Is
an added strength.
"The marriages of literary men have
often been unhappy; the selfish o'
sorption required by the literary ca
log is not generally helpful to domestic
"The same might be said of the mar
rlages of painters and still more of ac
tors, where the aame condition* apply.
But against the Barons, the Shellys,
the Coleridges, the Dickenses, the Lyt-
tons, you may well set the Brownings,
the Southerns, the Scojts, the Word
worths and the Tennysons,
“It Is obvious that some of the hap
pleat marriages of literary men hav,
not been to literary women, but to tho
sweet and simple souls who were no:
all too good for human nature's dally
food.
"Coming to humbler condltlopp of
life, I should say thaj marriages among
working people generally unsettle the
woman: She becomes a worse servant,
hut the man becomes a better servant,
for the added sense of pergonal respon
sibility with the coming of wife and
children makes a man more cartful of
his duty and more anxious to keep his
place.
"In the limited degree In which I am
an employer and a landlord, I certainly
want my men to be married."
MISTAKE MADE IN DRUGS
KILLS. MAN IN HOSPITAL
By Private Lea soil Wire.
Chicago, Sept. 7.—Poison adminis
tered by mistake to Joseph Michaels,
21 years, a patient at St. Lukes hos
pital, caysed his death yesterday. The
fatal blunder waa made In the drug
department of the hospital. Michaels
was given a large dose of atrophlne,
Instead of pratropln, which had been
prescribed by attending physicians.
A coroner's Inquest was held In the
afternoon at the hospital and the Jury
returned a verdict assorting that death
had been caused by the administration
of poison by mistake. No one wi
censured, hut the coroner wlll make
further Inquiry.
GOES HOME TO KILL SELF
ON SWEETHEARTS GRAVE
By Private Leased Wire.
New York. Sept. 7.—When the La
Provence steamed down the bay bound
for Havre there atood on her deck one
who looked hla last on America, tha
land of his adoption, for he la on his
way to Lecco in Lombardi, Italy, to
commit suicide on the grave of his
sweetheart,
Luigi Contartml is the man's name.
He Is but 24 years old. and hla return
la In compliance with the wish of Jose
phlne Ballantlnl. expressed in her let
ter to him written Just before she
drank a fatal poison, rather than marry
one whom her parents would force
upon her.
Luigi has been In America for four
years. Soon after his arrival he went
to Oklahoma, d here he prospered and
became a wealthy ranch owner.
FUGITIVE IS CAPTURED
BY A BOYHOOD FRIEND
By Private I.oaird Wire.
Chicago, Sept. 7.—After eluding de
tectives on his trail for over two
years, William Donahue, accused of the
murder of Walter Gelsbert, a Chicago
druggist, on April 8, 1204, was ar
rested Inte yesterday In Indianapolis
by Detective Joe Kennedy.
' When the officer confronted him,
Donahue tried to fight for his liberty,
but was forced to surrender at the
[mint of a gun.
Donahue was arrested after officers
UNION STATION
PLAN CALLED OFF
Special to The Georgian
Valdosta, Ga., Sept. 7.—It la definite
ly announced that the proposition for a
union pgssenger station In this city la
ofT, and that the Georgia Southern and
Florida and Atlantic Coast Lina rail
roads will begin within a short while
the erection of separate atatlona. The
Coast Line will at once let the contract
for a station to occupy the site of its
old station on Patterson street. The
building will b« 210 feet long and two
storlea high, and will contain quarters
for the Southern Express Company.
The Georgia Southern railroad,
consideration of the closing of. Florida
avenue by the city council, and the
granting of yard facilities, has agreed
to build a handsome new. passenger
station^ to occupy the site of Its pres
ent depot, and work on the structure
Is to begin in not less than 90 days. It
Is said that the railroad company will
build a station not approached by that
In any town of similar site In the
country.
The city council granted the Atlantic
Coast Line right to cross Patterson
street south of the present crossing. In
order to reach with side-tracks a num
ber of large warehouses which will be
built In that section.
Sam Jones Tabernacle
Meetings, Carters-
ville, Ga.
On Septemper 15th to 23rd, Inclu
sive, the Western and Atlantic rail
road will sell tickets from Atlanta-
Dalton and iptermedlate. stations, to
Cartersvillc, at rale of one fare for
the round trip.
Sam Jones will be assisted by
Evangelist Oliver and other ministers
of renown. Prof. E. O. Excell will
have charge of the music, and oihvt
goapel singers of note will attend.
Three services each .day, 10:30 a. m..
3:00 p. m. and 8:00 p. m.. and the
people of Cartersvlile will welcome
the great crowd* with tho aame hos
pitality they have always shown
had followed him thousands of miles—
even aa far aa Ireland. He alwaya
managed to escape their grasp a few
hours, and the Chicago police had al
most given up hope of capturing him.
Lieutenant J, O. D. Storen, who han
dled the case from the first, received
tho news of Donahue's arrest today.
Kennedy had known Donahue since
the two were boys, and he said he
surely had his man. Storen w||l leave
today for Indianapolis with extradition
papers for ths prisoner to bring him to
Chicago for trial.
JOHN WESLEY GAINES'
IS
By Private Leased Wire.
Washington, Sept. 7.—Representative
John Wesley Gaines, of Tennessee, who
has been In Washington for tha post
fortnight working on the literature the
Democratic congressional committee Is
preparing to send Into, the campaign,
left hurriedly for his home In Nash
ville last night In response to a tele
gram Informing him that his mother
was not expected to live. hire. Gaines
Is 70 years old, but aside from the
Infirmity of age was In good health
when Mr. Gaines left home.
VALD08TA 8CHOOL8
HAVE LARGE ATTENDANCE.
Hpctinl to The Georgian
Valdosta, Ga., Sspt. 7.—The opening
of the Valdosta public schools this
week was marked by the largest at
tendance 111 the history of ths city. Un
der the superintendency of Professor
R. B. Dnnlel the school system here
has been brought to a high state of ef
ficiency, and with, the erection of the
new high school building which was
opened last spring, adequate facilities
were provided for the growth of school
population far a number of years. Both
the white and colored schoola show an
ytcreaseij attendance this year, and It
Is probable that the figures will reach a
total of 1,500 before th, term Is far ad
vanced.
Money for Gala Weak.
Special to The Georgian.
charleston, 8. C., Sept. 7.—The Gala
Week committee has announced that
It has secured the (5,000 subscriptions
nsked for the biggest free show which
Chtiieston has given In years Tho
Fall Festival here this year Is planned
to eclipse anything of the kind which
has been given slr.ee the early '90’s. •
Floods Imped# Work.
Special to Tim Georgian.
Charleston, 8. C.. Sept. 7.—Charles
ton's new union station, to cost alto
gether over (220,000, is now over half
completed. Grant Wilkins, of Atlanta,
Is the contractor erecting the main its
TB LET CONTRACT
Williams Syndicate to Ex
tend Lines Into Other
Sections.
Special to The Georgian
Valdosta, Ga„ 8ept. 7.—It Is an
nounced here that the contract for the
building of the connecting links In the
Georgia and Florida railroad from this
city to Augusta, will be let on Septem
ber 15. A syndicate of capitalists,
headed by John Skelton Williams, re
cently acquired control of a number of
short fines In South Georgia, Including
the Valdosta Southern railway, from
this city to Madison, and the building
of a few sops In the system will build
a through line from Augusta to Madi
son, Fla. One of the most important
connections to be effected Is the build
ing of a fine from Valdosta to Nash
ville, In Berrien county, where connec
tion will be mnilc with the Douglas,
Augusta and Gulf, and the people of
this section are watching with the
keenest Interest tho preparations for
the building of this line, which will be
26 miles long.
FELDER NOMINATED
FOR STATE SENATOR
Convention Indorses State
Platform Adopted at
* Macon.
Special to The Georgian.
Forsyth, G*-, Sept. 7.—The senatorial
convention of the Democratic party of
the Twenty-apcond district of Georgia
met here yesterday and was called to
order by Hon. F. M. Stafford, who ivas
chosen temporary chairman. Hon, B
F. Hill was chosen as secretary. Mr.
Stafford was later, elected chairman of
the executive committee.
Colonej S. Rutherford nominated
Hon. T. B. Felder, for senator, in
neat little talk. The nomination was
seconded by B. F. Hill, Jr., E. M
Owen and Dr. J. p. Thurman. On mo
tlon of Judge A. L. Miller, the,nomtna
tlon waa made unanimous.
In accepting the nomination, Colonel
Felder made a speech, putting himself
on record as favoring, and pledging
himself to advocate, all reform legis
lation espoused by the chosen leaders
or his party In this state. He unqual
ifiedly Indorsed the platform adopted by
the late gubernatorial convention held
at Macon;
At thp noon hour the convention ad
Jpurned In a hody to the Hotel Laneas
ter, where ah elegant dinner was served
—the compliments of the Monroe dele
gallon.
CALL BOY
RECKED CAR
Slteclnl to Tho Georgian.
Anniston, Ala., Sept. 7.—Grover
Witt, aged 16, employed as call boy
at the Oxanna Junction stntlon of the
Southern Railway, was horribly crush
ed and Instantly killed at 2:40 o’clock
yesterday afternoon when two enr* of
* heavily loaded eastbound freight
train left thp rails at the foot of Sixth
street and were overturned.
The dead boy was taking a ride
from the union depot to the junction,
as Is his usual custom. Thp car woe
filled with slog, several tona of which
were thrown upon him, and It was
only after 40 minutes of work that h|s
body was recovered. The train was
proceeding to Atlanta,
FRIENDS OF COMpR
TO CONTROL COMMITTEE
Special to The Georgbiu.
Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 1 7.—There
will be a conference of the friends of
B. Comer In Birmingham Saturday
to discuss the meeting of the state
convention In Montgomery on Monday.
Comer’s friends are anxious to con
trol the next state committee, and will
make a strong effort along thla line.
Found on
the Skin
Phosphate
Direct from the
brain
ling
and
We know that active brain work
throws out the phosphate of potash,
for this product Is found on the skin
after excessive brain work.
Brain workers, In order to keep well,
must have proper food contalnli
phosphate of potash to quickly
irely rebuild the used-up tissue.
That one can obtain such food has
been proven In thousands of esses
among users of Postum Food Coffee
and Orape-Nuts.
Both contain phosphate of potash in
minute particles, just as It Is fur
niihed by nature In thp grains.
This product blends with albumen
and makes the gray matter that builds
the brain and fills the nerve centers.
In no way can thla gray matter be
made except by the action of phosphate
of potash upon albumen, and this min
eral should be Introduced to the body
just as It comes from nature's labora
tory, and not from the drug store. The
human system Is more or less fastid
ious about taking up the needed ele
ments, and, as might be suspected, It
III favor the products of Mother Na
ture rather than the products of the
ig shop, however valuable
for certain uses.
they may
Athletes, lawyer*, journalist#, doc
tors. ministers, business men and
others who earn their living by the uae
of the brain, are using both Postum
Food Coffee aq0 Grape-Nuts Food.
Both products are manufactured for a
reason. They were originated by an
expert, and the regenerative value of
both the Postum Coffee and the Fond
CHA8. E. HARMAN,.
Gen. Pass. Agent
. tlon building, snil has had some dim- has been demonstrated beyond quea
I culty In making time limits because of I tlon. Made In the pure-food factories
floods which have swept into, the ex-1 of Postum Company, at Battl* Creek,
cavatlon work* Mich.
WOMEN WHO INTRODUCED
THE PEARL EARRING FAD
INTO NEWPORT SOCIETY
JlATLANTAN CHOSEN
SERGL-AT-ARMS
BY P J, CLERKS
Organization Not Affiliated
With Federation of
Labor.
Special to The Georgian
Savannah, Ga.. Sept. 7.—The follow
ing officers were elected yesterday af
ternoon by the National Association of
Postofflce Clerks, after which the con
vention adjourned:
President—Frank T. Rogers, Chicago.
Flrgi Vice President—Charles Kirk,
Toledo, Ohio.
Second Vice President—J. Thurlow
Barrett, New Orleans.
Third Vice President—Charles H.
Mitchell, Portland.
Secretary—V, J. Gibbons, Scranton.
Treasurer—John J. O’Brien, Boston.
Sergeant-at-Arms—\V. J3. Hunt, of
Atlanta.
Advisory Board—Frank P. v Lorang,
Detroit; "VV. A. Hickey, Bt. Pa\jj: Rob
ert Connelly, St. Louis; M. Buttimer,
Savannah; R. E. Martin. Nashville.
Finance Committee—Joseph Burns,
Kansas City; J. W. Templeton, Ottum-
la.; Thyme* Salmon, Bloomington;
Con Desmond, Washington, D. C; Lin
coln, Lincoln, Nebr.
Organization Committee—Chairman
eastern division, J. XI. Farrell, Lowell,
Mass.; chairman western division. Col
onel James Power, San Francisco, Cal.
Peoria, I1L, was selected ns the place
for the next meeting, after a spirited
Contest with Saratoga Springs.
There were two tickets put forward
for officers, headed by Peter Wynn, of
New York. The vote was 88 to 64. It
» announced tliaf the clerks were
not affiliated with tho Amerlcun Feder
ation of Lsabor, an Impression hai
been spread abroad that such
case.
P. Mayer, on the right, at the Sandy Point Farm fete, where they Intro
duced tho pearl earring fad th Newport society.
the
77 STEAM SHOVELS
ON WA Y TO THE MORGUE
‘ ‘ CORPSE "GETS GRIP ON LIFE
By Private Lea mil Wire.
Washington, Sept. 7.—After being
placed In the morgue wagon and start
ed on a Journey fo the place pf un
known and unclaimed dead, John For-
qythe, 40 years oid, who waa apparently
lifeless when fished from the water at
the north end of Highway bridge yes
terday, showed signs of life while op
the way to the morgue. He now lies
unconscious on a cot In the Emergency
hospital* but has a fair chance of re
covery. ‘ ‘
WALKING ARSENAL JAILED
2 HOURS AFTER WEDDING
By Private Leased Wire.
Washington, 8ept. 7.—Two hours after lie
was married to Hiss Ilattle E. TuyU>r, 18
years old, of Itlrhpatcb, Vs., Malvern B.
llughc*, of Isowmoor, Vn„ was locked up
at the Sixth precinct police station, charg
ed with carrying eopcenjcd wcapouv. When
Ing bride refused .
She wild be bitd (men drugged.
Iftiglic* Is only n country boy and unac
customed to the way* of a great city, and
he brought along for protection the revolver
and knuckles.
ELLA WHEELER WILCOX
Has a Word for the Woman Who Is Jealous
of Her Son’s Wife.
P
EHIIAl’8, Jhe most pathetic tragedy
which the press his recorded this
many it month was that of the young
husband who sent his wife homo
after months of vulu effort to reconcile
his mother to her, and then committed
suicide. Hu left n and llttlp note to each,
•aylug he hoped they would lie happy.
Olio can liiuiglne the tender hearted young
fellow, loving both women and feeling his
duty toward both, worn out with the
strife Indwreu the two, and finally giving
up the battle of life. “
It was a weak thing to do, and there
Wos ft lack of stamina In the man’s char
acter, uf course, hut It Is all very piti
ful.
Not long ago a mother said to wet
"I love uiy son so dearly I shall he wild
with grief when he marries.“
••Perhaps not,” I said; "If be marrlca
n lovable sort of girl, who will ftdd a <iew
Joy to your life, lustead of taking one
away.”
••Oh. I love him so, I should he sure
to bnte hla wife, however lovable she
t*re," was her reply.
But thla Is not loving a son; It ...
loving herself when a mother, with no
cause, feels such an antipathy for even au
Imagined daughter-in-law.
Selfish Mothers.
We never hear a father talking in this
extravagant manner of his devotion to a
daughter. It Is seldom, Indeed, that a
father aud sou-ln-law get on badly togeth-
We often see them In business asso
ciations the licet of friends.
Yet fathers love their daughters quite
aa deeply and dearly as mothers love their
•pus.
It la s sad hour to a parent always when
a child's heart turns to a new and absorb.
Ing love, when tho > r oung life Is sunk
ke a brook In the broad river of mar.
Jage and the dciM-ndcnt member of the
household circle fiecomes all Independent
Is maintained. It la l(ecnnae this nnwlll
lug mother-lndnw willingly took some
mother's sou for her husimnd that she
IMssesesd her own son to love anil grieve
It wool
rltnling 1
* parehte-es|
i|d lie amusing were It not so Ir-
tn observe the titter forgetfulness
Ms—especially mothers—regardinij
•crMvtn/WL* ■■ ^
ELLA WHEELER WILCOX*
Richmond* Va., Sept. 7.—The largest
order tor steam shovels ever received
at the Richmond branch of the Ameri
can locomotive Works came yesterday
when requisition calling for 77 of these
lormouH engines was received.
It has been rumored that a govern-
mfiht order for 150 of these steel
dredges would soon be made for the
Panama canal, and It is said that such
on order as the present could only come
from the government.
COTTON WAS DAMAGED
BY WEDNESDAY'S STORM
Special* to The Georgian.
Anniston, Ain., Sept. 7.—As the re
sult of Wednesday afternoon’s severe
storm, which wfw general throughout
this section. It la estimated that ut
least 25 per cent of the cotton crop
Is utterly ruined and much of the re
mainder badly damaged. ‘ The high
wind and driving rain destroyed the
open bolls and droVe sand and mud
Into those which were not fully open.
Local farmers are rather gloomy over
the prospects for'a successful crop
this year.
MINISTER THANK8
DISPENSARY 8UPPORTER8.
Special to The Georgian
Decatur, Ala., Sept. 7.—Dr. S. E.
Wasaen, pastor of the First Methodist
church and the president of tho local
dlnyonBnry or^anluntlon, Is out In an
open letter thnnklng those \vh<» voted
for thd dispensary In the recent elec
tion.
$23.55
son and husband becomes a must difficult
A young couple bad better naas their
early years together In a tent than under
the paternsl roof.
I (iid the jKxir fellow who killed him
self, ss the only way out of hla trouble.
two women would have been settled
with time.
It Is to be hopcil that woman's widen-
...g sphere will lepve Its Influence upon
her ns a niother-Jii-Jnw und make her na
semdtde aud fortieni'liif as tfie average fath
er-in-law Is toilsy.
early proceedings In the
FIRST CALHOUN BALE
PLACED ON MARKET
By Private Leased Wire.
Anniston, Ala., Sept. 7.—Tha first
Calhoun county grown bale of cotton
of the season of 1906-07 was brought
Into this city lost night by J. w. Clem
ent, of Choccolocco Valley, and ginned
at the plant of the Anniston Fertiliser
and Ice Company.
WORK ON CAPITOL
HAS BEEN RESUMED
Special to The Georgian.
Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 7.—-Work on
repairing the old capUoI has begun In
earnest and the flooring on the second
^floor has been torn up and a new one
Is being put In. Work on the south
wing addition Is progressing nicely and
the ways 11 •* beginning to show what It will
:-cbmer r sod when that new- really look like when completed.
called a weeping womnn'i atten
tion to the fn^l that her ilmighter-lii-law
waa not the first i>er*on who married a
mother’s son.
Ydu evidently did.” I remarked.
■Oh, no; I married nn orphan,” she re
plied. with an air of self-righteousness.
Better Live Alofie.
But If your husband's mother had
lieen living, I doubt not you would have
married hlui Just the same,” I said.
The mother who really loves her son I tet
ter than she loves herself does not make
scene when be chooses a wife. *be
tries to lore the girt he bss c hosen for bis
sake, and ahe realises that the love a uian
l»ears bis wife In no way Interferes with
the love be l*ears bis mother, unless the
mother chooses to make It nn Interference
through selfish Jealousy and petty unrea*
It wonbl seciu in this age of the world
fhst n man ought to know lietter than
hla married fife under the roof
LOUISVILLE,
KENTUCKY,
—and Return—
VIA
SOUTHERN
RAILWAY
Tickets on sale September
10*11, limited to September
15, 1906.
Two trains daily, leave At*
lanta 5:30 a. m. and 4:50
m.
Passenger and Ticket Of
fice 1 Peachtree Street.
Phone 142.
J. C. LUSK,
District Passenger Agent.
ARE YOU GOING TO
PAINT?
If i), uxe Southern Home Lead and
Zinc Mixed Pair.ta. The standard of
quality in tho Soui v . for tho past
twenty-two year.i.
F. J. COOLEDGE & SON,
12. N. Forsyth St Atlanta.