The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, September 13, 1906, Image 2
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
JEWS BUTCHERED
FOLLOWING A PLOT
BY. m TROOPS
Signal Displayed From City
Tower to Start
Massacre.
St. Petersburg, 8ept. 11.—A rumor
v i In circulation today that Zeenaide
Kmioplanikoyo. the girl who on Au
gust 2# assassinated General Min at
IVterhoff. wa« executed at daybreak,
She wax aeritenced to be hanged Mon
day night. .All that cnn .be (earned la
i hat she wai taken out of the fortreaa
of St. Peter and St. Paul thin morning
and placed on hoard a ahlp bound for
Schunaelburg prlaon.
Advlcea received today innntly front
refugees nourcea unite III giving the
fighting at Sledlce the character of an
anti-Hebrew attack. In many caaeathe
aoldlera apnreil the Uvea of Jewa upon
the payment by the menaced peraona
of $26. Troop* ranaucked 204 houaea
In Waraaw and made 1,000 entente,
chiefly of Jewa. Some of the prlaonbta
are mere children.
JEWS WERE SLAUGHTERED
AS RESULT OF PLOT.
Tendon, Sept. II.—The Tlntea pub-
lLhea the following:
"A telegram haa been received
the effect that according to refugeea
who have reached Waraaw the dlaord
era at Sledlce were the reault of a de
liberately planned program, and the
atntement that the trouble aroae waa
caused by an attack on a patrol la en
tlrely unfounded.
"The maaascre began In two differ
ent remote Quarters of the town an
noon an a red light waa shown on the
city tower. The police were told by
the aoldlera not to he afraid, aa their
orders were to kill Jewa. All through
the night Jewish houaea were tired
upon and later they were plundered.
"When a deputation, headed by rab
ble went to the commandant and urged
hint to give orders to end the blood
shed, he replied that he would not give
mi order until the members of the
bun (Jewish socialist organisation, had
surrendered. Aa this waa Impossible,
the bloodshed continued. Artillery was
employed, and whole Quarters were de.
strayed. The Jewa killed and wounded
number hundreds.
"The panic la spreading to Warsaw
nor] other towns, where the 'Black
Hundred* will carry out Its program In
the sum* way, demanding the surren
der of all revolutloarles under threats
.if lire and massacre against the
whole population."
STATISTICS.
BIRTHS.
To Mr. ninl Mr*. A. II. I*blitlps, at 29 1111-
Hurd afrrot. * artrl. - . , ... ,....
To Mr. it■!*! Mr*. lllT'dfoorfc. nt 14$ Little
**To * Mr. K imil Mr*. J. J. lllrton, nt 37
Iimjrlt** street, n girl. . ...
To Mr. nml Mr*, i. M. Unnej, nt 40*
fniiltol a venae. n girl. , Jil .
To’Mr. unit Mr*. ltolK*rt Manky. nt 491
Ow *tr«*t. n girl.
To Mr. Hint Mr*. Ultra, nt 1*1 kennotly
Street. n girl.
To Mr. nml Mr* 4. T. Unwkloa, nt 102
Love street, n flrl, ^ , ..
To Mr. mid Mr*, tlnrrl*. nt 10 Form wait
* To Mr K nml Mr*. J. M. c’ollom, nt 64
spring itrwl, n girl.
DEATH 8.
Mi*. Rn*nu M. 4ojri»er, 66 yeara ohl, »IW
of dropsy nt 114 Irwin street
John V — M
niminry
R. A. Hamel
Aoder nrenne. _
will In in II. Holbrook, 36 year* old, died
nt 124 Peeples street.
builoinqTpermits.
1150—Itolrert Perry, to repair one etory
< frame dwelling at 10 MIHer ntreet.
Ii>>3—T. 0. Pater, to build ebliuney and
throe atore flue* nt 201 Auburn avenue.
1245—l>. F. Went, to build 'one-story ner
viiut** bouse In reur of 14 Knit *treet.
J 1.160—0. F. Went, to build out*ntorf
frame dwelling nt 2«7 Waldo street.
ITA-J. A. Fisher, to eut window In brick
w ill nt North Pryor nnd Wall afreets.
S/B—Wiley fllbaon, to ndd to one-story
frame dwelling ut 12 Newman street.
t Jntnea r. Raundera to ndd to one*
*t<..v frame dweltlng ut 82 Lake aveuue.
S »—Ifenry Rlmnion*. to repair one story
uii — m
W. J. BRYAN ACCEPTS
INVITATION TO COME
HERE SEPTEMBER 20
William Jennings Bryan will be In
Atlanta September 10, aa the guest of
the Young Men's Democratic League.
Wednesday morning tbe following
telegram was received:
"St. Louis, Sept. II. 1*01.
"Lamar flllL President Young Men's
Democratic League, Atlanta. Ga.
"Many thanks for Invitation. Ac
cepted for September 10.
"W. J. BRYAN."
Mr. Hill eteted that arrangements
for tbe reception of Mr. Bryan are now
only In the embryo, but that deffnlte
action would be taken Thursday, when
the finance and the executive commit
tees of the league will hold session.
"If Mr. Bryan arrives In the morning
he will be taken to one. of the hotels,
either the Piedmont or the Kimball,
for breakfast," said. Mr- Bill. "It Is
probable that he will then be given a.
public reception nt one of the hotels.
After luncheon he will be taken over
the city, nnd. If he slays until a la|e
train, will deliver an address nt Pied
mont park, Otherwise the address will
be scheduled for the afternoon."
The public reception to be given In
his honor will be one- of the largest
affairs of the kind ever participated In
by Atlanta, and It Is believed that there
will be an unprecedented crowd to hear
him speak. .
It la believed that there will be many
out-of-town admirers, who will gather
to hear him discuss the national Issues.
All the committees In charge of the
arrangements have been appointed
President Hill. The members are:
Finance Committee—C. G. Hannah,
J. E. Maddox, Charles E. Currier,
Charles I. Ryan, James A. Farmer, R.
F. Maddox, W. L. P(el and J. K. Orr.
Special committee to act In conjunc
tion with the regular reception com-
mlttee—R. R. Arnold, chairman: Louis
Ghotstln, F. L. Seely, I- W, Foreman,
Charles Daniel. J. R. Gray, J. E. Mad-
dox, Sam D. Jones nnd J. J. Hastings.
Reception Committee—B. M. Blount,
E. I- Rhodes. C. H. Kelley, A. B. Steele,
J. W. English, Jr.. I. H. Haas, C. W.
Cry-men, c, d. HIM, Arnold Broyles,
C. T. Ladson, John Morris, Howard
R. Callaway, A. A. DeLoach, J. C. Hall-
mnn, John W. Grant, Frank Hawklnn
E. C. HIM, J. C. Payne, B. J. Elseman
PLOT DISCOVERED
TO BURN HA VANA
AND PILLAGE CITY
75c TO 1.50 BAGS
AT A QUARTER
White canvas and colored madras hand
Pink, blue, and green. Fresh new bags
75c to 1.50
bags.
that sold from
Thursday Morning,
9 O’clock,
25c
Government Troops
Ordered to Take the
Aggressive.
By MANUEL CALVO.
Havana, Sept. 12.—The proclama
tion of martial law by President Palma
brings Intervention by the United
States measurably nearer In the Judg
ment of Impartial observers. It has had
the effect of drawing Ihe lines between
Loyalists anil rebels sharply and has
sent many prominent tnen Into 'the
rebel ranks who were maintaining at
least a semblance of neutrality.
It Is openly staled that the action of
Ihe government was due to the discov
ery of a plot to throw Havana Into n
state of anarchy, the conspirators hav
ing planned In kill the horses of nil the
fire engines and then to set (Ire to sev
eral places In the city and at the same
lime In attnek the palace and halt the
city.
Senator Zsayas Joins Rsbsls.
Secretary of War Montalvo Insist
ed on the declaration of martial law
and the arrest of suspects and had the
support of all members of the com
mand.
Thirteen alleged members of the re
volt Junta are now under arrest, In
cluding IJr. Mencla, a personal friend
of Jose Miguel Gomes.
Senator Zeayaa has Joined the rebels.
The government troops have been or
dered to assume the aggressive.
It Is reported from Santa Clara
province that General Esquerrn has
joined the rebels and that they have
given him command on the condition
that he attack the city of Clenfuegos.
Fighting Is In progress around Clenfue
gos.
Seaport Town Is Looted.
The seaport of Mariel, province of
Plnar del Rio, has been'sacked by
band of Insurgents. In the provinces
of Plnar del Rio and Santa Clara the
Insurgents nre committing outrages
upon women and looting the small
towns.
A dispatch from Clenfuegos to La
I.ucha, says that Brigadier General
Creates Forrera, with a large band of
rebels, entered the town of Cruces yes.
terday and selxed 19,000 that was In
the town council's safe. The same
hand captured a government train as*
obtained 110,000.
GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP
OPPOSED BY SEN LODGE
J. Faltff. 28 yearn old. died of pul*
» tuberculoids at Sheltering Arm*.
„ Imrnell, 80 years old, dlad nt 191
Bunion. Hopt. 12.—Speaking at the have made those men your masters.
annual outing of the Republican county
association of Plymouth nt Nantucket,
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge declared:
"When you place the bunlnesn agency
of the country In the hands of one man
or group of men at Washington, you
They will control the government per
petunlly, for It In not human nature to
resist the power which they would rep
resent. Regulate the rnllroadn—yes.
control nnd watch oVer the great com-
blnutlouH of capital- •**, but take the
railroad property—n .
frame dwelling nt »*. K. Fnlr street.
jl.V-Cl. \v. lllekf, to lay floor lit office nt
37 Whitehall itreet.
IliO—Itev. A. Ruatace Day, to recover
frame church at 241 Auburn avenue.
$200—P. II. Travis, to excavate hanetnrnt
.and add to ouc-atory frame dwelling ut 1*4
Little street.
PROPERTYTRAN8FER8.
LL250— Amattdn 4. Moore to G. W. nnd J
I*. McCarty, lot on Crew afreet near lot of
Sat K«t*er. Warranty dead.
$1,709. Penal Hutu—Harper Uroa. of lilt-
i. 'to Mra. Helen W. Owens, lot oa W.
Ilf ill street near William* street. Itnnd fo?
1, $!%O0. Penal Kuui-L. C. Fincher and G.
N. Hurt to John lay. lot on Fortune street
tienr Bast avenue. Rond for title.
$8,n0(^-Mr*. KIIru llood to A. G. Itbodei
and J. J. Ilaverty, lot on Anhby street neat
West Rod avenue. Warranty deed.
$710—W. Wonda White to Mra. Marguerite
Underwood. lot on West Cambridge it venue.
Warranty deed.
$3, (X JO—Joe I W. Utile to T. II. Pitta, lot on
Oak atreet n«tr A. l». Adair lot. Warranty
deed.
$2,000— Renfroe Jnrkson to Southern Ktntet
Life Inauranee Co., lot on Alexander street
uedr Weat Peachtree atreet. Lmii deed.
$70V->|taa Lulu Jeter to Mr*. Helen N.
Goodwin, lot on Rroyles street near Hyilney
street. Warranty deed.
$860— David L lien tie to Nelnon Wood, lot
on Frnaer atreet nenr Fulton atreet. War
ranty deed.
DYSPEPSIA
REMEDY CURES. *
Monay Back If it
Fails to Cura.
Dyspepsia In any form, gas.
. betehlag, bitter taste, bad
1 breath, dtssy spell*, ooiir
11 o n a e h, heart flutter
nertonsne**. apecka or b**e
before the eye*, romlty feel
lag, pain la stomach, side «»r
bark. Mad alt other symptom*
of Indigestion or By*pep«ta.
Tyner* IJyapepoU Remedy
■■■PH strengthen* weak stomachs,
i (top* eollc and headache, in 5 minutes.
Heals eaaker sore*, cure* Catarrhal Dys-
pepota with Hawking. Spitting. Coughing,
also Kidney and Liver Trimble, nil of wklra
artae from a week stomach. Tyaer'a Dr*
l pepala Remedy composed of pure Ingre
dients; no poisonous drags need. Safe cure
aad the best remedy for *11 dlse*»e* arising
fr*ra »t«Hooeh treat!**. Draggtet*. *r sent
w by express for 6V Circular and Medical
^^drtre Free hr writing TYNER'S DY3-
■fePSlA REMEDY CO., Augu.?., Ga.
LOCAL BOTCHERS
ABE IN DANGER OF
SEBIOUS TROUBLE
Washington, Sept. 12.—Unless At
lanta, On., butchers and retail deulers
In meat get busy within abmit two
weeks, they will likely have a lot of
trouble, owing to the negligence of
these man to upply for exemption from
Inspection, to which they are entitled
under the law, the deimrtment of ag
riculture anticipates that on October
! they will And themselves In a serious
position. This will mean, for one
thing, that In muny localities the sup
ply of meat will be decidedly limited,
especially where persons living on the
border of one state depend upon butch-,
era or deulers living In the adjoining
state.
Under the new law retail butchers
and dealers In ineut are exempt from
Inspection, but they are required to up
ply to the department for exemption
certificates. Without these they nre
prohibited from Interstate trade,
In order to prevent any such contin
gency the agricultural department has
used every means to call the attention
of butchers and dealers to the difficul
ty which will confront them. He ere
fury Wilson has published advertise
ments In papers In every state and ter
ritory and has employed men for the
special purpose of acquainting meat
dealers personally with the fact that If
they do not have the exemption cfrtltl-
cutes they cannot transport their prod
uct from one state or territory to an
other.
Up to this time there has been little
resi>onse from the men the department
Is trying to reach. Not one In ten has
applied, and the general attitude of the
dealers has been, according to the of
ficials of the deimrtment, one of ex
treme Indifference.
Nearly every retail dealer In the city
of Atlanta will be affected by the por
tion of the United States meat regu
lations on which the foregoing special
Is base*). The exemption certificates
are only issued when In the judgment
of the secretary of the deportment of
agriculture the meat which ts being
handled by tbe dealer through Inter
state channels Is pure and has been In
spected.
There la hardly a retail meat dealer
In the city who does not handle other
than home grown ineata and all of
these will have to apply for the certifi
cates of exemption.
In doing this proper blanks must be
applied for and filled In telling the ad
dress of the concern, the quantity of
meat handled and from where it la ob
tained a* well aa numerous other data
of like nature.
Chairman Walter A. Taj lor stated
Wednesday that the abattoir men who
i CHARGE
MADE BOEHMS
Assert They Were Forced to
Work in Coal
Mines.
Bamboo Suit Cases, half Bamboo Suit Cases and Boston
Bags of Japanese grass and bamboo.
50c*to 4.00 Bags and Suit Cases
Thursday
25c to 2.00
Notion Department,
First Floor.
Chamberlin-Johnson DuBose CQ.
mo iiiirn m mm. aaverai
rk»> he took WIU Mothokey,
lirown and other ne$roee,'who
lined lin.Tt each for illrurderly
Two negrora who appeared at Ihe po
lice elation Wedneaday morning told
atorlfla of inlatreatment while being
employed at Iron mlnea near Uartera-
vllle, Ga. They aald they had been
beaten by Ihe guard., fed on food not
Ml for n innn to eat and paid only
50 rente a day after being pfomlaeil
11.60.
The negroea itated that they had
aworn out warranta agalnat several
guarda at the mlnea, charging them
with peonage, but no record of auch
warranta could be found In the federal
office* where the negroea claimed to
have been.
For aeveral month* pant n labor
agent haa appeared at the police xtn-
tlon und paid the fine* of a number of
negruea nrreeted for email offenaea,
auylng that he would tnke them a rail
road camp or other work and allow
them to work and return the amount
of the tinea to hint. Several week*
, . WIU
who were
dleorderly con
duct.
In the Coal Mine*.
Three two negroea ataled Wednea-
day that they had been rent to the
mlnea of the Georgia Iran and I’oal
Company, about 20 mile* from t'ar-
teravllle. Here they aatd they had been
worked with *tnte convict* nnd kept
tinder guard night and day. They aald
they hud worked twenty-three day*
uml releaxed without uny pay or their
fare home and they had walketl to At
lanta, leaving t'urtrr*vllle Monday
night. They ntated that a guard ann
ul with H revolver had kept them un
der eurvelllance and Mothokey exhib
ited acara on hi* leg and arm which
he *ntd were Inflicted by brutal blow*
from the guarda.
The negroea claim that they had
been promlaed tl.60 a day a* wage*
with the underntandlng that the
amount of their fine* and 35 rent* u
day for board nhould be held back.
They claimed that they received noth
ing for Ihelr twenty-three day* of
work.
Mothokey atated that he had aworn
out warrant* In the United state*
court* agalnat the guarda at the mine*,
alleging peonage, an offenae agalnat
the federal law*. Inquiry at the of
fice* of the federal court* failed to
ahow that the warranta had been !a-
aued.
Demands tha t pa tterson
ANS WER CHARGE OFO WNING
STOCK IN GA. RY.&> ELEC. CO.
William M. Smith Sends Red Hot Communi
cation Touching on Gas and Electric
Light Franchise.
In n bllaterlng card, Attorney Wil
liam M. Smith, with offices at 226-12!
Equitable building, calls on Council
man W. H. Patteraon to answer yhe
charge made recently by Alderman
James L. Key to the effect that Coun
cilman Patterson was a stockholder In
the Georgia Railway nnd Electric Com
pany. The card la aa follow*:
To the Editor of The Georgian:
September 8 you publlahed on the
front page of your paper a two-column
communication from Alderman James
L. Key. Alderman Key charged Coun
cilman W. 11. Patterson, of the Eighth
ward, with accepting a position and
serving on the special committee from
council, to Investigate the franchises
of the Atlanta Gas Light Company,
while at the same time being a part
owner of said company. Alderman
Kay'a communication seemed to be In
rea|H>nae to a letter from Councilman
Patterson, publlahed on the editorial
page of your paper of September 7,
1996, Councilman Patterson's letter ap-
l>eareU to have been provoked by an
editorial In your paper of September
5, 1906.
The charge* against Councilman
Patteraon, being In my opinion very
serious, the prevloue Issues of the 6th
and 7th were Immediately aecured and
re-read very carefully. The papers
have been scanned cloaely In the hope
for nn Immediate anti complete denial
if any auch relationship between Coun
cilman Patterson and the Georgia Rail
way and Electric Company.
The writer voted for Mr. Patterson,
In preference to a friend and brother
uttorney. with the Idea of giving Ihe
city a business man's administration.
Personal confidence In both aspirants
existed then and exists now. hor, It
would be difficult to convince the
friends of Councilman Patterson that
he would accept a tsialtlon as Judge
anil juror to pass upon his own rights,
where the existence of these rights
were the sole Issue. Alderman Key
must be mistaken. If sow he has done
Councilman Patterson Bn Injustice and
placed him In an unenviable light be
fore every' cltlxen of Atlanta, thousand*
of whom are behind Alderman KejMn
Ihe tight for an opportunity to deter
mine the rights of the city as to Its
franchises.
If the charge were true, the raae
would be the city of Atlanta vs. W. H.
Patteraon et at., and the laeue for Ju-
Nursing Movers and Malaria.
The Old Standard, Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tonic drives out malaria and
do Interstate business will also come builds up the system. Sold by all
under tbe regulations. dealers for 27 years. Price 60 cents.
be,
FLOOR PAINT,
Lucas & Lonow’s in full
line colors at the
GEORGIA PAINT AND
GLASS CO.,
40 Peachtree.
ror Patterson to decide would
whether a teat case should be made,
Involving thousand* of dollars of Juror
Patterson's money. In any court of the
land, Juror Patterson would be ex
cused as a matter of law and that "for
cause.' No lawyer In Christendom
would accept him ns a Juror. The su
preme court woo PI ’■■ ■■ r.o n»v ■loop,.
Ion he should make In the trial of auch
un Issue.
The present committee of council Is
analogous to a committing court, and
If Councilman Patteraon were In an
analogous position In a committing
court. It might be Judge Patterson de
ciding whether Defendant Patteraon
should be tried for murder. The prin
ciple Is the same. Councilman Patter
son must be perfectly Impartial be
tween the city of Atlanta and the Geor
gia Railway and Electric Company and
must have no bias or prejudice either
for or against either party. Can a man
be perfectly Impartial nnd without
bios or prejudice In the trial of an
Issue where his life or hts fortune Is at
stake? Who Is It that could not fore
tell his verdict?
Councilman E. W. Martin, F. A. Qull-
Man, E. E. Pomeroy and other able rep
resentatives In council, with whom I
am personally acquainted, would never
serve on a committee under such cir
cumstances. Hon. Lewis W. Thomas,
Councilman Patterson’s opponent In his
race for coundL would not, and the
friends of Councilman Patterson refuse
to believe that he haa done so. Only
hlB own statement or much stronger
proof than a simple statement of such
a charge can convince them. The
charge against Councilman Patterson
that tie has accepted a committeeman’s
place while secretly an owner of stock
In the company Interested, calls for a
response from Councilman Patterson.
If anything, It puts him more strongly
on the defensive than your timely ed-
ttorlal, which provoked a long letter
from him.
It Is true that Councilman Patter
non has appeared to light every move
made to determine the rights of the
city and the gas company. Alderman
Key asks why ? It does seem that there
Is no valid reason why the matter
should not be Investigated.
Many havs waited to t«o what Coun
cilman Pattsrson would say as to this
charge. He ought to answer. Th*
people want to know. Hit constitu
ents who placed him there demand th*
information. Are you, Councilman Pat
terson, the representative of the peo
ple or the Eighth ward and of the city,
or of yourself and fellow stockholders?
Answer, are you a stockholder in the
Georgia Railway and Electric Combany
or the Atlanta Gat Light Company?
Have you over been? If not now, but
have been in the past, when wee the
transfer made? Give ue the date. If
MYRTLE ALLEN FOUND
OVER COLUMBUS BAR
Myrtle Allan, the 16-year-old girl
who disappeared from her home at 116
Chapel street, last Saturday afternoon,
hoe been returned to her home from
Columbus, where she was found Tues-
day night locked In a room over Dan
Adams' saloon.
The girl wee locked up at the Co
lumbus police station and afterwards
returned to her mother, who le a wid
ow. She slated that a man named
Howard sent her the money to pay her
fare to Columbue, and that she was not
satisfied at home. The Columbue police
state that It Is her second escapade of
the kind.
SEIZED BY NEGRO
COMMISSION MEETS
TO SELECT SITES
A meeting of the county commissioner*
Is being held Wednesday afternoon definite-
ly to select the sites for the three camps
where the members of the county police
force will he stationed and to foramina-
rales and regulations for the government
of the police.
While It la practically certain that one
station will lie near Buckliesd, In the north
ern part of Fulton county; one went of At-
lanta. In the Buttle HIM dlatrlet, nnd the
other near lakewood aoutb or the city, the
members of the committee to whom the se
lection of tbe sltea was committed will not
•ay Just what haa been done.
Sir. Terner-Do I lore you? I swear It!
Spencer, N. C., Sept. 12.—"I've got
you at Ia*L" were the words which
greeted Mrs. Cora Koonts, wife of P.
T. Koonts, a well-known employee of
the Southern railway, here, as ihe
entered an outbuilding at her home
yeeterday afternoon. A big black ne
gro, who afterward gave his name aa
"Buster” Helllg, grabbed her by Ihe
arm and attempted to drag her Into
th* house. -Mrs. Koonts screamed tnd
frightened the negro, and he fled to
the woods.
Mrs. Koonts's young son reached the
scene In time to see the negro, who
was pursued, but escaped. Today he
was arrested by Chief of Police J. «■
Crus and given a speedy preliminary
trial before -Justice W. L. Ray nod
bound over to court.
Fir* in Bakery.
The bakery of George Mau, at the
corner of Garnett and Whitehall
atreet*, caught Are from the ovens on
Wedneaday morning at 2:30 o’clock and
about 1200 damages resulted.
AMVSEMENTS
NORANP
companies before entering council, is it
to be returned to you, upon the expire
tlon of your term of office? Are you
related through yourself or family to
the stockholders of either company?
Do not hedge, dodge, equivocate or
make general denials. Answer Aider-
man Key, and let tha people know the
truth and the whole truth; go into de>
tail, be specific and satisfy th* people
who tent you to council at their repre
sentative that you are true to thoir
interests and have not compromised
yourself at has boon charged. They
withhold thoir verdict, waiting for your
answer.
(Signed.) \VM. M. BMI’fH.
Atlanta, Ga., SepL It, 1966.
A representative of The Georgian
was advised by Alderman Key that the
charge would be made that Council
man Patterson waa a stockholder In
the Georgia Railway and Electric
Company. The Georgian refused to
print the charge until a Georgian rep
resentative had conversed with Coon-
cUman Patteraon and received from
Councilman Patterson conllrmatlon of
the charge made by Alderman Key.
By his own admission Councilman Pat
teraon Is a stockholder In the Georgia |
Friday and Saturday, September 14-15-
MATINEE SATURDAY.
Wm. A. Brady's Big Musical Cornea?
Success,
“FOXY GRAND PA.”
60 Funny People, Including Bi9
Beauty Chorus.
Night Price*: 25c to $1.00. Matinee.
26c and 50c.
MONDAY. TUESDAY. SBPTBMBEB «•*
MATINEE TUESDAY.
Great Mlg Musical Comedy Pro-lU' M''"
COMING THRO’THE AYE
Fight? In th* r*uwrknl>I*
'Haim, *tnjr*r* and danrar*. Th*
beauty choni* of alxtr. Mrfnt P rtrr .-Slit,
fl.M. Matin** 25* to |l. Bala op*n* frw7-
the BIJOU
you transferred your stock in those Railway and Electric Company.
TONIGHT. MATINEE THURSDAY
The 8i>u*fttfnnstl aud Emotional Pran* *
“How Hearts Are Broken"
A atormy atory of th* H*art and
told In four art#. . „
A m-rtil* diapUy of rare ap4**dor.
Iitjou prices.