The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, September 14, 1906, Image 6

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* 11 ■■ — TIIE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. -1 The Atlanta Georgian. JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES. Editor. P. L. SEELY, President. E Telephone Connections. Subscription Rates: One, Year $4.50 Six Months ....... 2.50 Three Months 1.25 By Carrier, per week 10c Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by THE GEORGIAN CO. at 25 W. Alabama Street, Atlanta; Ga. Coined as second-class matter April B. ISOS, at tbs Postofflee at Attests. Gs.. usdcr set at constvss of bfsrcb A 1ST*. Subscribers failing to reeeivt THE GEORGIAN promptly and regularly, and raadsrs who can net purchase the paper where THE GEORGIAN should be. on sals, aro requested to communicate with the Circulation Manager without delay, and the com plaint will receive prompt attention. Telophonett Boll 4927 Mein; Atlanta 4401. SMITH A THOMPSON' ADVERTISING UEl’RBRF.NTA- TIVB8 yon TKRRiToftv oCTHiitn oy iihohiiia. [ Eastern Offices: Western Offices: _ [ 1'otter Hide.. New York. Tribune Bldg., Chicago. More Evidence of Corporate Negligence. It would not be difficult to convince the people who patronize the Marietta branch ot the Georgia Railway and Electric Company that there la a grave neeeaalty for the regulation ot the itreet railway company. They have suffered In a great many forma from a lack of those facilities to which they are reasonably en titled. The fare Itself would appear to be quite out of proportion to that which la charged on the other subur ban lines of the company, and what la of at least equal moment Is the fact that while the people of Marietta have freely granted to the corporation the right to use the streets of their city, the company has not seen fit to provide any depot facilities whatever. At this end of the line the same condition prevails, and while the Marietta cars stop directly In front of the Georgia Railway and Electric Company’s magnificent of fices In which It would be easy, one would think, to es tablish some kind of a waiting room, the fact Is that no provision whatever Is made to shelter waiting patrons from the sun and the wind and the rain. All thla's but part and parcel of the arbitrary and selfish manner In which this autocratic monopoly admin isters Its affairs without regard to the comfort and pleas ure of Its patrons. . This new line Is becoming ono of the most popular and prosperous In the entire system. It Is only fair that all the auxiliary facilities which such a line requires should be supplied for the patrons of the road. But fre quent remonstrances seem to have met with no substan tlal response, and those who live In Marietta and Atlanta and along the connecting lines have too long suffered from the greed and the selfishness of the Georgia Rail way and Electric Company. Perhaps this company thinks that 1^ can go on In definitely Ignoring the just demands of the people, but we verily believe that t public sentiment Is being aroused In this community which would make It the part of wis dom for the company to make some concesllons to the people before they fatigue Indignation and drive the peo ple to make the Oeorgla Railway and Electric Company, with all Its allied utilities, one of the paramount and sleepless Issues of the hour. “Al” Adams Again. Information comes from New York that “Al" Adams, the notorious policy king and backer of M. J. Sago & Co., after having failed a few weeks since for some thing like $2,000,000, Is now making arrangements to open up his chain of bucket shops again. Of course It Is no part of his purpose to return to the defrauded and confiding customers the 12,000,000 which they trusted to him. But a life of commonplace .tranquillity la unendurable to this high financier and his able lieutenants, so ho Is making arrangements, accord ing to this rumor, to resurrect such of his old bucket shops as were In charge of men on whom he could rely and so will begin again an active campaign for fleecing the public. Wo do not know what measuro of truth there may be In this rumor, but we do know that If It has any founda tion and there Is any way In which the law could reach such a man as he. steps should be taken to prevent his further fleecing of the public, It would seem. In all conscience, that the career that “Al" Adams has led In the past and the term he has served In the penitentiary, would put the public on notice against any enterprises In which he or bis lieutenants might engage. If this were not sufficient to open their eyes, then his more recent escapade In high finance, namely, this failure for 12,000,000, should be sufficient to put the pub lic on fair notice that they could not afford to touch any enterprise with which his name was Identified, It may be depended upon that If he begins operations again It will be but a rehearsal of the past, and that as soon as a fitting opportunity presents Itself he will be ready to swoop down upon the unsuspecting flock ot Inmbs and fleece them to their very skin. The full details of his proposed resumption of busi ness have not yet been given out. It Is hoped, for the sake of that class of peoplo who Insist upon trading with him and with any concern with which his name may bo Identified, that he will find such obstacles In the way of his resumption of business that he will not be able to perfect the arrangements he contemplates. The South has undoubtedly suffered Its share from these various speculative affairs to which he lent mate rial aid and comfort, and In the light of the further fact that there cannot possibly be any basis for legitimate business transactions with concerns of the ebaraeter with which be has been Identified, there should be no more attempt to play with the fickle goddess through the in strumentality which he has placed at the disposal of the people. The world at large Is entirely sick and tired of “Al” Adams and his speculation ventures, and It Is to be hoped he will be allowed at the present Juncture to “sink to silence like a tavern brawl.” He has cut a wide swath In his time. . Let us hope that It Is permanently at an end. Some Municipel Ownership Examples. The entire community has become thoroughly aroused on the subject ot municipal ownership of public utilities, and every bit of information which can throw any light upon this subject should be given to the people. We see no reason why corporations owned largely by foreign cap italists should mulct the people of Atlanta when by the operation of these utilities the city could save hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to her citizens and give them a better service In every respect. ■ The question has already been discussed from a great many points of view. Surqly none of them could be more enlightening than to give concrete examples and Illustra tions of the profit and efficiency derived from their oper ation In other cities. This question of municipal ownership Is not a new one. There are various cities throughout the world which have found It practicable and profitable, and In some of these cities municipal ownership has extended not only to public utilities but to other lines of com merce which hitherto hfd remained In the bands of pri vate Individuals. Mr. William E. Curtis, the veteran correspondent of The Chicago Record-Herald, who la bow traveling In Eu rope. writes from Vienna of municipal ownership In that beautiful capital ot Austria. That the Viennese are a happy and a prosperous people does not need to be ar gued. Vienna Itself Is one of the most splendid cities In the world, and except In population compares favora bly with Paris Itself. And yet the city government of Vienna not only op erates a street railway system but a brewery, a number of flower stores, a storage warehouse, stone quarries and other lines of commercial and Industrial activities which furnish commodities to the people more cheaply than they were ever bought under private ownership. No one Is contending for such a municipal ownership Idea for At lanta as prevails In Vienna, and yet the success of her street railway system will throw a direct light on the pub lic utilities In which .we are really Interested. We are told that the city government owns all of the street car lines and that they are well managed and kept In excellent condition. In point of fact, the Vienna street car system Is one of the finest In the world. A 2-cent fare Is charged before 8 o'clock In the morning In order that the working classes who are In greatest need of cheap transportation can get to their work at a nominal cost. The gross receipts ot the com pany have greatly Increased since the city took hold of the lines, but It is conceded that the expenses have In creased more rapidly, so that the net profits are only about one-third as large as they formerly were. The burgomaster of the city, who Is devoted to the cause of municipal ownership, takes pride In this very fact, and points out that the employees ot the streot railway are the men who heve largely received these benefits through higher wages and shorter hours while at the same time Increasing the effectiveness of the ser vice and allowing the people In general to participate In the general benefits of cheaper fares and better facili ties. While, as we have said before, no one Is contending for the municipalization of anything except the recog nized public utilities at this time. It can do no harm to add In passing that Vienna also owns a number of flow er shops and sells flowers from the parks and cemeteries at a handsome profit. Lovers of the aesthetic do not need to be told that this constant pruning and gathering of the flowers with Intelligent discrimination not only mast keep the parks and cemeteries themselves much more beautiful add abundant In their floral array, but that It provides a means of furnishing the people with flowers for various purposes at .a nominal cost. Undertakers and caterers are the largest customers and the city makes enough monoy to pay all the gardeners In the em ploy of the city and a portion ot the other expenses for maintaining the parks. The net proflta last year were about $17,000. Buildings which remained standing after the Inter national exposition of 1873 were not ruthlessly destroyed, aa In Chicago and St. Louis. They were used for per manent purposes. The main building, which was ot great site, was converted Into a storage warehouse which Is probably the largest In the world. It Is operated by the city, Is divided Into soctlons tor storing grain, wines and household effects, and yields to the cljy tn average no' Growth and Progress of the New South A Glorious Future. From time to time we have endeavored to furnish in this column facts and figures which show the Incomparable reeources of the South, joined with her salubrious climate and her ready access to the markets of the world. The latter will be even more notable when the Panama canal shall have been completed. But we could not possibly present all these facts more eucclntly and more Impressively than In the graphic phrase which recently appeared In large lettere on the cover of The Manufacturers' Record, They should be clipped out and pasted In the hat of every patriotic Southern man and read whenever the opportunity presents Itself. Here they are: "Give free rein to your Imagination and let It picture the future of a section which has one-half of the Iron ore of the United States, nearly three times as much coal as Great Britain, Germany and Pennsylvania com bined, which holds a world monopoly on cotton production and Is rapidly becoming a great cotton manufacturing center, which dominates the phos phate rock and sulphur trade of the world, which has much of the richest oil territory known, which has one-half of the standing timber of the country, which produces all the sugar, all the rice, most of the tobacco, and adds to these 800,000,000 bushels a year of grain; and then think of Us water-powera, Its splendid rivers. Its great seacoast, Its expanding commerce, and remember that Its cotton crop alone annually exceedi the total gold and silver production of the world, and that every dollar of gold annually mined on earth Is not enough to pay the South's bill against Europe for cotton, and you will get Just a faint conception of the future.” NOOKS AND CORNERS OF AMERICAN HISTORY A FORGOTTEN MATCH By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY. IHHHNItMMHIMIHt “Poor old Spain!” It Is what nearly all the world Is saying to Itself these days. How easily did the great republic utterly crueh the Spaniard In the fate war over Cuba! What a burlesque of a nation Spain Is today—a mere dot on the map, a reminiscence rather than a fact, shadow without any substance! And yet one hundred and twenty-five years, the 2d of January, a Spanish I'orce Invaded our territory, marched, unmolested, right across one of our "sovereign states,” accomplished Its purpose and marched back again to Ha starting point with drums a-beattng and banners a-flylng! For some unaccountable reason France, after being beaten by England on the "Heights of Abraham." and Just before the treaty was ratified giving England the fruits of her victory, se cretly ceded to Spain everything west of the Mississippi, as though she had said to herself, "The Briton has beaten me between the Mississippi and the Alleghanles, but he shall not have the domain west of the great river without a light with Spain." The capital of "Upper Louisiana" at the time was St. Louis, founded In 17*1 by the French, and It was from this point that the march In question was made. Starting from St. Louis, on the 2d day of January, 1781, slxty-flve Span- uoj ui niiuiwJi tioi| biaij-iim. ojmii- lards and Frenchmen and sixty Indians, of the Sioux, Ottawa and Pottawat- tomle tribes, commanded by Don Eu genio Pourre, marched straight across the state of Illinois to Fort St. Joseph, at the mouth of the St. Joseph river, In the present state of Michigan. At Fort St. Joseph the English gar rison of a few score men was overpow ered, the 1 Spanish tldg wait raised above the raptured stronghold, and with the revenuo of $60,000 a year. A few miles from tho city thete Is a stone quarry which Is owned end operated by the municipality. It was purchased more thnn 25 years ago, when the city was undertaking a groat system of public Improvements, and millions of dollars worth of stone have been taken from It. While there Is comparatively little public construc tion going on at this time, the overplus of granite Is sold to private Individuals and corporations, and last year this municipal quarry yielded a net profit ot $19,000. Thus we aee that the three municipally owned enter- prlscs outside of the street railway yield to Vienna an annual net profit of practically $100,000 a year. The success of the street railway system under mu nicipal ownership and tho possibility of furnishing ex cellent facilities of travel, with good hours and good wages to employees, nominal fares for the laboring classes and a snug profit over operating expensea. Is the point which we wish to bring out It Is full of enlighten ment to the people of Atlanta who are Interested tn se curing the best results from our public utilities. Pourro, with his Spaniards, French men and Indians, marched back to St. Louis. This march across the state of Illi nois was no Utopian affair. It meant business. There was a method In It Aa the sequel will show, It was Inspired at Madrid, and was a part of a deep- laid plot to accomplish one of two things—the recovery of Gibraltar from England or the establishment ot a great Spanish domain upon the North Amer ican continent. Immediately upon Don Eugenio Pourre's return to St. Louis, Don Fran cisco Cruvat, governor of Upper Lou isiana, started a messenger to Madrid with the news. It wae a year before the message was delivered and pub lished In the Madrid Gazette. And then the fun began. John Jay, our representative at Madrid, saw through the buslnas at a glance, and wrote Franklin, at Paris, to keep hla eyes open. Franklin had not been sleeping. The news reached Franklin ! soon after It did Spain, and Franklin, with his great good sense, wae not slow In "catching on" to the true Inwardness of the game. In the meantime the treaty of Ver sailles was on the carpet, and In Its very first session It was revealed that France and Spain were In a conspiracy against us. Then appeared the true cause for the Spanish march across the state of Illinois and the planting of the Spanish flag on the stockade of Fort St. Joseph. The Spaniards had already established themselves at Baton Rouge and Natchez, and with Fort St. Joseph added to their triumph they were pre pared to lay claim to the vast territory between the Mississippi and the Alle- ghanics! And then the first card was played with England. Spain would relinquish her claim to the aforesaid domain If England would give her back Gibral tar. But no! England would do no such thing. It she had to she would give up the colonies between the Alleghanlqs and the Bea, but by the Red Cross of St. George she would not vacate her stronghold at the gateway of the great Blue sea. Spain had played her first card and lost. And then she began the game with the ambassadors ot the United States. At Paris Spain had her astute am bassador, Count d'Aranda, whose part It was to hold In the diplomatic battle her rights upon the eastern side of the "Father of Waters." But Franklin was there, and Adams was there, and not an Inch would they budge from the proposition that Uncle Sam's domain extended to the middle of the Mississippi. The Castilian coaxed and threaten ed. Every device known to the diplo matic art was tried by him, and tried In vain. Our self-taught ambassadors beat him at every turn, and when the final terms were made with Great Brit ain Gibraltar remained In the hands of England and over every Inch of soil between the Alleghanles and the Eternal River" It was decreed that Old Glory" should float. And thus ended the aftermath of the Spanish march across the state of Illi nois. A LITERARY FROG. By CLARA MORRIS. vhat nn awful bother It !■ to choose n novel for Jane." him Hjioken thus of her trouble to She tno a full minute Itefore ahe discovered I was a stranger, who had taken the place of her companion. Apologies were waived aside In friendly spirit. She proved a hopeful, laughing, trusting the iniiHiKsilde; —she likes Just to glntice nf a new I took and shut It up In a single word." “Pleasant for tlie author." I observed answered. "Why, Just what/It's like." ~‘4 f She enught up a Istok to Illustrate with. y\t cousin opens her new Itook and finds the scene laid at the seashore, she claps It 'Humph! •hut. twists her lips, and says, Shipwreck or life-saving?' it mills mentioned, she slaps the Itook to with the one word. 'Htrlko!' If mines are mentioned, 'Cave-In—or explosion!' While If the Itook opens with a 6 o'clock tea, she fairly snorts, ‘Divorce!’ " f laughed, and so did she, but rather ruefully. "Then does she never really rend a book?" I asked. "Oh. she used to, but now she says they are all repetitious; and she Just Jumna from front to back, then once In the middle; It's all Jump, Jump, Jump, like—" "A sort of literary Jumping frog, * I ‘^Oh!" she exclaimed. "1 don't want to be mean to cousin, but I’ll have to tell papa that Just to hear the windows shake at his laugh. You see cousin, therefore, cuts you down to such small choice. She •ays a French book Is Immoral, a Scotch one a sermon, and nu American one tame to ennui. See what a pile of luniks I re l»cen through! She enn goes* the formula of every book extant!" She groaned. ... , . "No, she can’t." I asserted. "Izook here what about a l»ook that hat no villain? (Her eyes widened.) A l»ook without a crime of any kind to avenge? (She slfook her head.) Without." I sternly added, "without nn adventuress—without change of scene—no landscape mania? "Impossible! Impossible!" she gasped. "Walt," 1 said. "Now don't scream; book without a divorce?" "But," she charged, ‘why, there s no mnterlnl left to ninke a book of!' Yes, there Is." 'Well, no one would care to rend It, then." , . . . "It holds you with a grip of steel. There Is not a commandment broken, and yet It ts strong enough to hold a lunu reader." , ... . , She came close to me, and, with Unnclng eyes, said: . „ „ “It Is very wicked to tell lies/ I GOSSIP By CHOLLY KNICKERBOCKER] New York, Sept. 13.—Friends of Mr, William McKinley In thla section art concerned at the news from Ohio that her health will not permit her to attend the unveiling of the statue of her dl, tlngulshed husband. It has been known that Mrs. McKinley has been feeble t„ t some time, but It was not realized that she was In such a state that she would not be able to attend thla Important function. Mrs. McKinley Is a typical American woman and much of her hu*. band's success was due to her klndlv sympathy and capacity to help. Thu t. true of most all men. The good women of America of the type of Mrs. McKln ley may some day get part of the credit due them In the mnklng of our coun try. you know where there Is s truly "Yes." She took my hnmls snd cuddled them under her cheek; she cooed nn If she hud been nbout four yenrs old. "Make me happy, happy! Help . play one on the literary frog—for she could not guess that. Plena* tell me—or maybe It bus no name, either?" ’But, It has. and a very odd one. 'Oh, what?" I saw her scribble the Initials, "P-M." and then she elnsppd my bond and said. Oh, you the dearest thing that has ..»e this day!" we both laughed and pnrtfd. , MEN AND WOMEN. Lottn. the once favorite actress. Is said to be one of the biggest taxpayers among the women of Boston. Thomas Bent, the premier of Mctorla. Introdueea songs In his speeches, but never sings tho songs of the present day. intuiiiv n mm is .mss who was recently received Into the Do minican order at Hunts Point, N. Sir Douglass Fox. who has Iteon com missioned to prepare the new plans fo the long-tnlked-of English Channel tunnel. Is regarded by th" members of Ills profes sion ns one of the greatest engineers of his time. The favorite hobby of the queen mother of Spain is collecting playing cards. Her majesty “ ‘ possesses, for Instance, the fa mous pack of Ivory cards which rrltic ** ids LAND OF WILLIAM THE SILENT THE HAGUE, HOLLAND By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX, HR emblem ot The Hague, the court T elly of Holland, I, the stork, nut, slat, sod alas, for tho pretty young - queen, she has Just experienced her third disappointment In five years, In her hopes of giving her devoted land nn heir The Georgian extend* a cordial welcome to Dr. H. E. Stoekbrtdge, who hat recently assumed the dutlee of agri cultural editor of The Southern Ruralltt, of this city. Dr. Btockbridge comes well equipped for the duties of his poeltlon and The Rurallst le to be congratulated on Its acquisition. If this spelling controversy keepe up. Den Chaucer Is liable to get before the people. Repair the State Fair Buildings. Wo are Informed that tho finance committee of council will moet«n Saturday for the purpose of consid ering the suggestion that $2,604, or some such sum, be spent on tho buildings at Piedmont park, tn order that they may be In proper condition when the fair often*. We believe that council would be acting wisely In making this appropriation, and we trust that the finance committee will rocommend It. The state fair of last year brought 40,000 people to Atlanta and during tbelr stay, considering the matter purely from a business standpoint, they left a great deal of money In the city. Council has frequently made ap- propriatlona for the entertainment of conrentlona, and It Is pointed out that the fair will bring more people here In two weeks than all the conventions within a decade. Moreover, the property which council la aaked to Improve belongs to the city Itself and therefore hat a special claim on the attention of the city fathers. Everybody Is looking forward hopefully and buoy antly to the state fair, which promises to be the most successful In our history. It Is highly necessary that the buildings and grounds should be placed In good condi tion, and that at an early date, ao lot the appropriation be made at once and let the work of repairing and beau tifying the building* and grounds go forward. A new achool of theology, representing several de nominations, has been succesafully opened In connection with Manchester University, England. The Methodist Episcopal mission In Japan la erect ing at Nagasaki a splendid brick structure for s college building, capable of accommodating 400 students. to the throne. It seems to an observer that every wom an la Holland, Save the queen, Is the mother of, at leaat, two or three chil dren. If ho heir cornea through Queen Wllhel- mtna then the throne goca to some distant relative, some German princeling, It Is whispered, nnd there are bUck looks when ever the whisper Is heat., tor ns the purr ing cat loves the aggressive dog, so Hol land loves Germany. .. „ % It la no wonder tho Hollanders adore Queen Wllhelmlna and desire her to per petuate the royal race. She Is the only one left to continue tho 1 wish every mother In America would give her young tons the story of this great nnd got*! man to rend. It la more excit ing than any novel ever written, and more Ion he was ready to extend freedom to othera to worship aa they would. No man felt more than he that the persecuted re former, who In thrn became a bigot, was doubly odious." Ills firmness was as great aa hla piety. Whftn only twenty-four years of age ho resolved to devote his life to driving the Inquisition from Hollnnd nnd to establish ing the liberty of bis country, lie arrived at his goal. In the fnce of the powerful opposition of Hpnln, then In the height of her glory. When he died "the little chil dren wept In the streets." Ills direct line heentne extinct with his grandson; but Queen Wllhelmlmt Is the last of his blood, through her descent from a cousin. Remote ns the relationship may seem to us lu America, It Is one to he rev erenced and to wish to perpetunte In Hol land. in-] ll enn be found complete In Motley a History of the Dutch Republic. William the Silent (who, despite his t! was a great orator and moat elo- The stories of the unhappiness of the qneen In her marriage are absolutely denied bv every Hollnuder. The vice secretary of the American embassy also declare**] utterly without foundation, to hla Eugene, the comrade of Marlborough, nl ways carried with him In nil the cam paigns In which he took part. Mrs. Russell Rage la a descendant of Mile* Htandlsli. Her maiden name, Olivia, was also that of her parental grand mother. Olivia Rtnudlsli. Notwithstanding Mrs. Sage's great wealth nnd Interest In humanity, she has reached the nge of years without ever having been abroad. Emerson Hough, the author. Is a great traveler, never contented to remain In one place very long. He was the first man to cross Yellowstone park In tho winter, nnd some eleven years, ago he spent most .s Ik. . le 1,1 at,.I Vs. The death of James A. Garland at South Hanover, Maas., brings to a deft nlte end a strange romance. A great stir In society was caused when iiaiy Tuber Garland sued for a divorce after four years of wedded life, during which the Couple had been blessed with four sons. Mrs. Garland obtained custod* of the children. ’ Garland was graduated from Harvard nnd was a millionaire-when he left col. lege. He was a great sportsman. H, met Mary Tuder, of Brookline, .Mans hnrl fhnv ivapa den it*n tntvoihoe i... .. and they were drawn together by their love for outdoor life. The wedding was celebrated In the church at Brookline In 1893 and was a great society event The happy couple -went on a cruise to the Mediterranean. On their return they went to reside at Chestnut MIL and-later In Brookline. In 1900 society waa surprised to hear that Mr*. Garland had sued for divorce naming Mrs. Kimball, wife of a Yal, athlete. Mrs. Garland obtained her di vorce. In 1904 Garland, who was cruising on his palatini yacht Barracouta, was vis. Ited by his divorced wife and a recon ciliation took place. A trip was made to a minister and they again were made husband and wife. Since then they have lived In happiness nnd no cloud came to mar their second honeymoon until Mr. Garland's fatal Illness. Miss Corrlnne Violet, sister of At- wood Violet, the cotton man. Is being congratulated on having defeated Den nison Hatch. Jr„ In'a swimming match across the sound, from Thrnggs Neck to Great Neck, L. I. The race lusted for two hours and a quarter. Miss Violet won by two lengths. Work on the New York, Westchester and Boston Railway Company's viaduct at Bronxdale and Hunt avenues, the Bronx, has been tied up by Mrs. Fred erick Uueryn, wife of a policeman. With a big revolver she held fifty laborers at boy. The Dueryas contend that they own the middle of the street and that until they are paid for the damage to their property they will not let the work proceed. -Another sensation Is sprung. The Rev. A. D. Chandler, of the Baptist temple, who with other preachers has been protesting against the manage ment of the Bronx zoo for exhibiting In the monkey cage the little African pigmy, Ota Hengn, declares that th, "savage" Is neither a pigmy nor a bushman, but Is merely a Kaffir boy. A fortune teller was vindicated when Robert McKenzie, n discharged em- ployee of the Realty Trust Company, was arraigned In the Richmond county court on a charge of burglary, "You will capture a tall, light young man very soon." tho fortune teller had said to Miss Charlotto Squires, 18 years old, of Bay View, S. I. Miss Squires thought she meant a husband, but It did not happen that way. The girl was sitting on the porch of her home when she saw a "tall lleht young man" rip the boards off a cellar window and enter the home of Roy Holllngshead, an /actor, who Is on the road, and had closed up the house. Miss Squires sent her little brother for a policeman, nnd then she mounted guard at the window. Tho Intruder saw her and remained concealed In tho cellar until the police cutne and dragged him out. GEORGIANS IN GOTHAM. naked One day recently n colleague nsl Speaker Cannon what. In hln opinion, i the mnln difference I>etween the dars his youth nnd the present time. "Well,' answered Itnrle Joe, reflectively, "when I was a youngster a young man win Is fled to paddle his own canoe, hut now one thinks Ip of state.’’ Hole, Mass., served to ms sciennnc menus nnd nsaoctatcs samples of the sen fotwl long regarded ns unfit for eating, on which he hns been experimenting during the summer. has been experimenting . Woods Hole Is n place where biologists from all the leading universities of Amer ica study during the summer. In Race for Judgothip. Special to The Georgian. Athena. Ga., Sept. 13.—Judge Fred Foster, of Madison, Is a candidate for position on the bench of the new court of appeals. He is making on active campaign for one of the offices. f lit, s*c "I 1 turn/. • hi- was kind, uuinercenary sud imwin.h. Ho lived muoiig mon who were sooklnc fur personal advancement, yet he refused position and power, when It would bav« been wise to accept It. He lived In nn age of monstrous Ids- otry, wbe ‘ the torture rack, the.prison and the stake nwalted those who dared think for themselves; yet he was ns oread.as the universe In Hls charity toward other faiths thsn hls own. He lived when religion was a elook. un der which Jealousy nnd tyrauny carried Its tmlnnrd to stab an enemy, yet he was deeply, sincerely and profoundly relmoos, loving Got! .with, all hit heart, and hls I in teenth centum. be*ytt endured hardship, poverty nnd discomfort for year* In order to free hls people from the swfnl tyran ny of Hpnlii, lie swiveeded lu hls herculean effort, and dotn of Holland states was assured. There was mueli lu the rhnraet.r of our Lincoln that resembled the ehsrseter of Willism th* Silent; siat thers. » *>'"1 hr tragedy of * similar ejlmsi of the two live* Itut the llolloml hero fneeit f»r greater difficulties nn.t ws, nt- lerly alone lu hls greatness ol eh. ,-neter nSIst&JMPsy* of hint: ‘Tils m<»t promi nent qwllty was hls .Piety- Froui hls ._ the face with s eoBBtsnt smile nml emture-1 In-ts'- ■ant labor, end trlsls with * serenity more than human. "While s convert to the reformed nil,- persona! knowledge. There In one earloua thins whleh I have Belgium, nnd for notleed In Holland _ which 1 would like in explanation. That I., the reuinrkAhle fre That l». the remarkable freunency of curvntniv of the tplun nnmn* tho Inhntd- tsnts. I have enacted ns many ns slz humped bark. In n single promenade, ami no day passes that I do not tee, st least, that cumber of tbes« unfortunates. It seems, too, more prevalent suioug men than women. 1 have wondered If the very early age at which young hoy* begin smoking here enn nreount for Ik Small l»y«. not orer six or seven yeors of age, are constantly seen in these countries smoking not cigar ettes, hut elgsrs. The young men are. a* a role, of low stature, which ts another result tno physi cian. tell n.) of early smoking. Mentnllr, physically or morally, th, boy who begin, smoking liefore he attain, hi, growth I, Injured. Meantime, then* I, n notleeatlle absence of eyeglasses In Holland. In a eompnny of twenty. It Is nnnaiml to see two young people wearing glasses, and I hare seeu but three children In my whole month here *o disfigured. Fraternity Rant, Club Room*. Slieelnl tn The Georgian. Athens, Gs., Sept. 1*.—Chi Pal fra ternity of the university have rented the Mallory house on Prince avenue for a club house the coming season. The owner, Van Deadwyler, Is this week putting the building In fine shai place for club rooms. KITTY OFCOLERAINE. ****** 0,10 niorn l ,, ff wns trlfe- W,t roIcrf| trb * P of milk from the fair of ■ she stumbled, the pltch- whleh influence physical ms ladles ohaervn- Mt* to a traveler In Hollnnd. la this targe percentage of people afflicted with spinal curvature otmerrante in the streets. I wish some statistician would give os- art figures in this matter. It would lie Itttvrentlttit to know If the m*tarty really prevails to the extent It seems to me, after a month's observation, and If ao, why? The Hague, Holland. Matrimonial tickets are supplied hy the Ouuultan Pacific railway to settlers In the Northwest Territory who wish to make a Journey In order to seeure it wife. On pre senting the return coupon and the mar riage cerftflcfite the Mler la entitled to trvm tt*ji*B**«tlott for hla bride. When she mw er It tumbled, And all the sweet buttermilk watered the plain. e "°, whwt ^shnii^i do now? ’Twas looking such a pitcher I'll ne'er meat pride of n*r dairy. O Itaroey Ym Voieral'ne “ pln|p,,! to ,h,! CrU of New York, Bept. 12.—Hers are some of the visitors In New York today: ATLANTA—J. Fisher, J. H. Rey nolds, F. Spain, W. H. Galloway, D. F. Shumate. J. B. Wright. IN WASHINGTON. Washington, Sept. 1$.—The follow ing Georgians are registered at Wash ington hotels: GEORGIA—U. L. Dupre, of La- Grange, at the National; Henry C. Cunningham, of Savannah, at the Ra leigh. IN PARI8. Paris, Sept. IS.—Jacob and Mr». Haas, of Atlanta, Oa., registered nt the office of the European edition of The New York Herald today. THIS DATE IN HISTORY. SEPTEMBER 13. 175t—General Wolfe killed la ntMuIt Quebec. 1795—rnptnln Vancouver returned from four years* voyage of discovery. 1*14—British attacked Fort Bowyer, Moblk. 1831—Albany and Hchrtiectady railroad, first In til., mtntm nf Voter Vnrlr i«tl»* tit'll I' 1 lii the state of New York, opened M traffic. . 1847—Americans tinder General Scott de feated tha Mexican* nt battle of Chapultape*. 1862—Conrederatca opened fire on Harper* Ferry. 1874—Monument to General Lyon, killed at battle of Wilsons Creek, unveiled at Ht. Isont*. , 1906—Admiral Togo’* flagship destroyed by explosion; 699 Urea loat. 1 "*ehi!?*i!er l ’* M * h,,r ' nn ‘ l l, - w Th** '®h « mlafortuno .hmild give her such pain. A kiss 1 th*i» gave her-br/ore J eJJ/J lea re her 8h 'i,' rn *Jr,l toe ouch ph-esure she'd break It again. ' T '^ r ®® rt ^^7 i " , whlug ieamm, I ran'! tell the 'me elngie—thnt'a dtana- Misfortune* will plain. For very soon after poor Kitty' Th 'ra?ne 11 * pl,r " r w8 * w,ln,, ‘ ln (W» Will Be in the Race. Bpeelnl to The Georgian. Athena, On, Sept. II.—It la state* on good authority that Hon. J Holder, of the adjoining county 01 Jackoon, will be In the race for con gress two years hence In the Ninth dis trict, and It Is presumed that the In cumbent, Hon. Thomas M. Bell, wUl stand for re-election. Mr. Bell made a remarkable race two years ago In the primary against F. Carter Tate, had held the seat for a long time, unu beat him, with some to spare. Murder 8tlll le Mystery. Special to The Georgtaa. Brunswick, Ga., Sept. IS.—'The kill ing of two 'negroes In the outskirt* of this city lost Sunday morning still shrouded In mystery. The two women arrested In s house near the places where the bodies were found, still refuse to talk, although the offic er* . are satisfied that they know —ANoNi 1IU18. Ideal about the matter.