The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, September 20, 1906, Image 2
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 50, 190*.
ONE-HALFTHECROWD
WAS TURNED AWAY AT
AUGUSTAJPEAKING
Bryan Given Hearty Recep
tion at First Stop in
Georgia.
Special t<» Tbo Georgiau.
Augusta, Oa.. Sept. 20.— 1 There were
as many people turned away from the
Grand opera house last night from the
Bryan npeaklng aa were admitted to
tlie building, at more than a half hour
before the time for* the curtain to go
up the opera house was filled from pit
to dome with anxious listeners.-
The address of w elcome was made by
Hon. J. C. C. Black. They were In the
national congress together and have
been close friends for a number
years.
Mr. Bryan made one of. his charac
teristic speeches. He mildly referred to
railroads and corporatIons,but In the
most part of his speech he talked of
tbo great Democracy of the South. He
. said that there need be no Democratic
speech made here, as the people were
Democrats pure and unadulterated, and
w ere true to the core.
* Mr. Bryan spoke for about an hour.
After his address there were prolonged
cheers for several minutes. After this
had subsided there was a call from
Hon. Boykin Wright, who was In one of
• the boxes, for three cheers for Bryan.
JThls came neararalslng the shingles
froth the roof.
After his address Mr. Bryan held a
reception at the Albion hotel. At 11:30
o’clock last night he left for Atlanta.
ATLANTA’S DISTINGUISHED GUEST.
8POKE UNDER PORTRAIT8
OF CALHOUN AND HAMPTON,
special to The Georgian.
-Columbia, 8. C., 8ept. ■ 20.—Three
'thousand people assembled on the Uni
versity campus yesterday to hear Wil
liam Jennings Bryan speak.
The audience was made up of repre
sentative men from every county In the
slate, composing a committee of four
hundred. Ha stood under the portraits
of Calhoun and Hampton, to whom he
made eloquent reference In his opening
remarks. He was presented by Gov
ernor D. 8. Heyward.
Mr. Bryan was entertained at break
fast by a committee of represent at Wr
gentlemen of the state. At 10:30
‘o’clock Governor Heyward and escort
called on Mr. Bryan In motor cars, And
the party took a spin out Into the coun
try before the speuklng.
c After the speaking, Mr. Bryan was
'given a public reception at the state
cnpltol, and a luncheon at the home of
Captain W. K. Gonsales, where he met
Governor Heyward, ex-Governor Hhep*
;pard« Martin F. Ansel,, governor-elect,
land Richard I. Manning, Mr. Ansel's
late opponent.
NEGRO LAWYER
PLACED UNDER BQND.
'Special to The Georgina.
> 4f * Charlotte, N. C., Hept. 10.—-G.
(Rich, a prominent negro lawyer
! Durham, N. C., has been arrested and
placed under a $2,000 bond. The charge
against him Is conspiracy to defraud
G. W. Hawkins, of Vance county, who
jls a colored man of considerable prop
erty.
Pals Dslioats Women and Girls.
The Old Standard, Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tonic, drives out malaria and
builds up the system. Sold by all
dealers for 27 years. "-Ice 60 cents.
FRANCE~AND BELgTumT
PROTEST AGAINST LOOTING.
Tangier. Hept. 20.—Official protests
have been made by France and Be -
glum to the sultan's government be
cause of the pillaging of stores at
^CataiblAncA by twenty-five men, with
Chief Talelna at their head.
250 8TUDENT8 ENROLL
AT GEORGIA UNIVER8ITY.
Special to The Georgian.
Athens, Oa.. Hept. 20.—8otne two
,hundred and fifty students enrolled on
the opening day of the University of
Georgia. The ltloth term of the college
will be one of the most successful from
opening Indications In the history of
the state Institution.
MRS. MILLIE G. LINDER
DIE8 AT ALEXANDRIA.
,8peclnl to The Georgian.
Anniston, Ala., Hept. 20.—Mrs. Millie
G. Linder, widow of the late Dr. Un
der, of Alexandria, and an nunt of T.
*M. Draper, of Oxford, died at her home
yesterday afternoon from the Infirm
ities of old age and was burled at
Union church at 9 o'clock this morning.
Mrs. Linder was In her 80th year and
had resided In the Alexandria Valley
-the greater part of her life. The fu
neral was largely uttended from this
city and Oxford.
JUDGE JANE8TNDOR8ED
BY TALLAPOOSA BAR.
• Special to The Georgian.
Tallapoosa, Ga.. Hept. 20.—Much In
terest In the contest over the new court
,of appeals Is felt in this section of the
state.
• The bar of the Tallapoosa circuit has
./given hearty Indorsement to the cnndl-
dacy of Judge Charles G. Janes, of this
city, who for twelve years presided
over the circuit as superior court judge
HON. WM. J. BRYAN.
Excerpts From Mr.
Bryan’s Chicago
Oration.
Perhaps never In the history of
American politics did one speech so
vearly make a man’s reputation as that
ellvered at the Chicago convention of
1896 by WllUam Jennings Jiryan. Al
though Mr. Bryan’s part In the con
gressional debate on the repeal of the
Bherman law In 1893 made him known
er the country, the effect of the
Chicago speech was electrical and
transformed un undreamed of candi
date Into the Democratic presidential
nominee.
From this Introduction,
supreme dignity and force Immedlat
ly secured the attention of nn excited
convention, he swayed the throng of
men and In his climax transformed , “tent* of organized
wilderness, who have made the desert
to bloom as the rose—the pioneers
away out there (pointing to the West),
who rear their children near to nature’s
heart, where they can mingle their
voices with the voices of the birds—
out there where they have erected
school houses for the educntlon of the
young, churches where they pmise
their Creator, and cemeteries where
rest the ashes of their dead—these peo
ple, we say, are ns deserving of the
eonshleratton of our par(5' aa «nj’ peo
ple In this country. It Is for these
thnt we speak. We do not come us
aggressors. Our war Is not a war of
conquest: we ure fighting In defense
of our homes, our families, and pos
terity. We have petitioned, and our
petitions have been scorned; we have
entreated, and our entreaties have been
disregarded; we have begged, and they
have mocked when our calamity came.
We beg no longer; we entreut no
more; we petition no more; we defy
them.
“The gentleman from Wisconsin has
said that lie feared a Robespierre. My
friends, In this land of the free you
hlch by Its 1 need not fear that a tyrant will spring
I up from among the people. What w
* need Is an Andrew Jackson to stand,
Jackson stood, against the encroach
enlth.
them Into a chaos of frenzied men,
mild with enthusiasm.
He started off:
“Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the
Convention; I would be presumptuous
Indeed to present myself against the
distinguished gentlemen to whom you
have listened If this were a mere meas
uring of abilities; hut this is not a
ontest between persons. The hum
blest cltlsen In all the land, when dud
In the armor of a righteous cause. Is
stronger than til the hosts of error. I
ome to speak to you In defense of a
ause as holy us the cause of liberty—
the cause of humanity.
“When this delmte Is concluded, a
motion will be made to lay upon the
table the resolution offered In commen
dation of the admlnlstrutloi), and also
the resolution offered In condemnation
of the administration. We object to
bringing this question down to the level
of persons. The individual tx but an
atom; he Is born, he nets, he tiles; but
principles are eternal: and this has
been a contest over a principle.''
Then after plunging Into the history
of the silver movement among the
Democratic iwtrty, he wanned up In
oratorical fervor:
"Ah. my friends, we say not one
word against those who live up the
Atlantic coast, hut the hardy pioneers
* have braved all the dangers of the
'They tell us that this platform
made to catch votes. We reply to them
that changing conditions make new Is
sues; that the principles upon which
Democracy rests nre as everlasting
the hills, but the>**tmist he applied
new conditions ns they arise. Condltl*
have arisen and we are here to meet
these conditions."
“You come to us and tell us that the
greut cities are In favor of the gold
standard; we reply that the great cities
rest upon our broad and fertile pral
rles. Burn down your cities and leavi
our farms, and your cities will spring
up again, us If my magic; hut destroy
our farms and the grass will grow In
the streets of every city In the coun
try.
"My friends, we declare that this na
tlon ^s able to legislate for Its owi
l>eople on every question, without wait
Ing for the aid or consent of any other
nation on earth; and upon this Issue
we expect to carry every state In the
Union. I shall not slander the Inhabi
tants of the fair state of Massachu
setts nor the Inhabitants of the state
of New York by saying that, when
they are confronted with the proposi
tion, they will declare that this nation
Is not able to attend to Its own busi
ness. It Is the Issue of 1776 over again.
Our ancestors, when but 3.OD0,rt0o in
number, had the courage t > declare
rcggBBBgggBBBBgggag^^
Ansley Park Auction Sale
MONDA Y, SEPT. 24, 1906.
00 OUT AND SELECT YOUR LOT AND ATTEND THE SALE
ORREST St GEO. ADAIR. ANSLEY BROS. CHARLES M. ROBERTS.
their political independence of every’
other nation; shall we, their descend
ants, when we have growiwto 70,000.-
000, declare that we are les^lnr|pend-
ent than our forefathers? No, my
friends, that will never be the verdict
of our people. Therefore, we care not
upon what lines the battle Is fought.
If they say bimetallism Is good, but
that we can not have It until other na
tions help us, we reply that, Instead
of having a gold standard because Eng
land hae, we will restore bimetallism,
pnd then let Englund have bimetallism
because the United States has It. If
they dare to come out In the open field
and defend the gold standard ns a good
thing, we will tight them to the utter
most. Having behind us the produc
ing masses of this nation and the
world, supported by the commercial In
terests, the laboring Interests and the
tollers everywhere, we will answer their
demand for a gold standard by saying
to them: You shall not press down
upon the head of labor this crown of
thorns; you *hnll not crucify mankind
on a cross of gold." •
AT THE THEATERS
Murray d. Mack.
The program omits the authorship of
"Around the Town,” which Murray &
Mack have chosen for their Instrument
of torture this season. After the per
formance at the Grand Wednesday
night, It was strongly suspected that
Ollle Mack wrote It himself, with the
assistance of the hell boy. It Is the
limit, and then some.
But a long-suffering public, forget
ting what the two are now In the mem
ory of what they used to be, might
forgive them had they not ventured
too far. It didn't matter much what
they did to the comic songs of today
nobody could make them much worse—
but when Gladys Van butchered
lleve Me, If All Those Endearing Young
Uhurms," It was too much. There are
some things even the downtrodden
public can not suffer In silence. Why
did they let her do It?
The two Ms have surrounded them
selves with a score of accomplices, In
cluding a mild-mannered man with
voice rather asthmatic In Its lower
notes and decidedly wobbly at the top.
’Ie continued the carnage by rendering
Dearie" In a way which brought tears
> all music lovers. There was a time
■ hen one might welcome Murray
Mack with a certainty of seeing pret
ty girls In number and hearing plenty
of new Jokes, even though no one
expected anything but rough-and-tum
ble methods. But a spot light and a
search warrant wouldn’t find any this
season. D. G.
Earthquake Story.
„ While there were many sad features
to the San Francisco disaster, It had
Its funny side as well. Every day some
laughable Incident is related us having
taken place during the trembling of the
m the Pacific coast. One of the
funniest incidents and one actually en
acted Is being told by Al. G. Field, the
minstrel, who will appear Friday and
Saturday at the Grand.
vas during the seismic disturb
ances In 'Frisco." runs the story. “The
ground was trembling viciously and an
•Id darky, panic-stricken, ran from Ills
a bln on the outskirts of the city. He
j dropped on his knees In the road and
cried **ut, 'Oh, Lordy! Lnrdy! sen yo’
son down yore. Humpin’ terrible am
gwlno to happen In a minute.* At that
instant the earth trembled again and
two small brlcfc buildings on the oppo
site side of the street fell with a crash,
j The old darky dropped to the ground
I again, and cried out louder than be
fore. ’Oh, Lordyl Lordy! Doun' yo
PICTURE OF WM. J. BRYAN
AT SI. LOUIS CONVENIION
BY JOHN IEMPLE GRAVES
Following the national Democratic
convention In St. Louis In 1904, when
Judge Alton B. Parker was nominated
for president to oppose Roosevelt, Hon.
John Temple graves, who was in at
tendance upon the convention, wrote
from- St. Louis his Impression of Wil
liam Jennings Bryan—-the overtowering
figure of the occasion. In that tribute
to the great Nebraskan he said:
But all tributes and all orations In
the great hlsV>rlc assembly of dele
gates and people fade Into Insignifi
cance beside the continuous popular
Idolatry that followed William J. Bry
an. It was not only one time, but
every time; not upon special occasions,
and upon the slightest provocation any
suggestion of him swept the vast as
sembly Into a storm. Every mention
of his name was magical. The sight
of his Impressive figure was a signal
for the wildest enthusiasm, ana he
alone was potential to still the storm
which his slightest word let loose.
Took Bryan to Still tha Storm.
"Time and time again, when the
Democratic chairman and the sergeant
at arms, and the officers, and the po
lice, were simply as leaves In the temp
est bf popular excitement, one lifted
finger of the grsat Nebraskan could
bring almost Instant stillness to the
turbulent enthusiasm which all the or
ganised forces of the Democratic con
vention could not control.
"No man ever saw Bryan—the real
Bryan—unless he saw' him at St.
Louis. Those w r ho have seen him else
where have seen the great but tranquil
teacher, preaching In patience and bid
ing his time. Those who saw him at
8t. Louis saw' Bryan at his best and
greatest, with all the Hon aroused by
opposition and offense, and all his mar
velous eloquence winged to Its loftiest
flight, by the occasion and the emer
gency. And to have seen Bryan at
his best was to have seen the world’s
best at his best.
"Fbr no man living and few' men dead
have ever looked upon so peerless an
orator, so Incomparable a master of
assemblies as Bfyan at St. Louis. The
delegates before him were iron,
pledged, predetermined. Inaccessible
and Immovable. Men could have been
selected from that vast assemblage,
with open minds and uninstructed wills,
and given an hour to this matchless
leader of men, and he could have
swayed and led them as Demosthenes
moved the Athenians to ‘march against
Philip, to conquer or die.’
"When the student of oratory In art.
or the student of popular leadership
In expression, seeks In the future an
Illustration to make Immortal on can
vas or in description, he will find the
Ideal In the great Nebraskan, who
was the unchallenged and unequaled
hero of the Democratic convention pi
1904."
LIFE INSURANCE
Do you contemplate in-
surancef Write me for
“inside proposition.”
Money saved is money
made. Best old line coni,
pany. Address
P. O. BOX 91, STATION B.
RAILROAD SCHEDULES.
Showing the Arrival aud Departure of i» fl -
senger Trains of the Following Itoaii..
WKSTKIIN AXD AT LA ST 1C UAH/RuTT?
No.-Arrive From- I No.-Depart T*vL a
* 3 Nashville.. 7:10 ami* 2 Nashville. 8 35
73 Marietta... 8:33 am I 74 Marietta..1210 nr
•93 Nashville..11:45 um • 92 Na*hvllIe.4:M ST
75 Marietta...’ 2:60 pmf 72 Marietta.. 5*39 In
• 1 Nashville.. 7:86 ptu|* 4 Nrfkbvllle. 8:50 K
CENTRAL OF (JEOltGL* RAILWAY
SOME OF MR. BRYAN’S
MOSI POPULAR STORIES
FAMOUS CROSS OF GOLD SPEECH
WHICH SECURED THE NOMINATION
William Jennings Bryan Is a good
story teller. Besides punctuating his
speeches with homely anecdotes he en
livens his conversation by recounting
stories possessed of the trtprit of having
a good point.
Mr. Bryan's stories fall Into two
classes: Those he has gleaned at
home and the recent acquisitions from
foreign sources which he carefully se
lected and stored away for future ref<
erence during his trip around the globe.
The anecdotes that smack of the red
soil of Nebraska are the best for po
lit leal speeches. The tales that came
to him In Japan, India or Turkey he
reserves for the private ear of his
friends.
In his speech at New Haven and
again In Newark Mr. Bryan used an
anecdote to Illustrate what Mr. Bryan
says the Republican party has been
doing to excuse Its failure to curb the
trusts When ho launches this yarn
he pulls down the corners of his mouth
In a quizzical manner, affects a drawl
and slowly moves his head from side
to side as If his was the task to recite
the obituary over the body of one late
ly departed.
There was once a man," goes Mr.
Bryan’s story, "who was sued In court
for returning with a crack across the
bottom of It a kettle he had borrowed
from a neighbor. The neighbor w'as
very angry.
"The maq who was sued put up
three defences. First he said that he
hadn’t borrowed the kettle. Then.
hen that failed he said that the ket
tie was cracked when he borrowed It.
And finally w*hen his second argument
was disproved he said that he had
mended the crack before he returned
the kettle.
"And that," concludes Mr. Bryan, "is
the way the Republican party defends
Itself against the charge of not keeping
its promises on the subject of trust reg
ulatlon."
The Nebraskan's argument that the
Republicans draw' campaign funds out
of the pockets of the men who find the
high tariff to their advantage he finds
well Illustrated by a story which is
not altogether .new. After explaining
his belief that no Republican dare
touch the present tariff for fear of of
fending those who, he alleges, contrib
ute the money for the campaign work,
Mr. Bryan tells the following:
"There was once a man who went
Into a clothing store. He stole a coat
and started to run down the street. The
clothing dealer hurried out Into the
street and shouted ‘Stop thief!’ but the
thief would not stop.
"Then the clothier appealed to a po
liceman and the policeman shouted
•Stop thief!’ but the thief would not
stop. Then the policeman drew his
revolver and shouted to the fleeing
thief, ‘Stop or I’ll fire!’ Then the ex
cited clothier cried out to the police
man:
"‘Shoot him In the pants; the coat
belongs to me!'
"80 there you are," concludes Mr.
Bryan after reciting this anecdote.
“The Republican party don’t dare to
■hoot the thieving trusts In the coat,
because the coat belongs to them. They
don’t dare to shoot the trusts In the
pants because the pants belong to
them. They don’t dare to shoot any
where, for fear of hitting something
that belongs to them."
Mr. Bryan sometimes mAkes Jokes at
the expense of himself and of the Is
sues on which he has met defeat. While
he was being taken over to Newark on
the third day of his stoy In New York
he told the newspaper men this tale:
“My former campaigns and the re
sults that came of them remind me of
a man who came out to Nebraska to
take up a farm," said he. ‘This man
was a greenhorn and he did not know*
much about the cyclones that some
times visit our prairies. But he had
some sort of wisdom.
"He put a strange looking wooden
fence about his place that looked like
a chicken coop. It was built In a tri
angular shape. A farmer drove by
when this greenhorn was putting up
his fence and commented upon Its ap
parent Instability.
" 'Why, the first good wind that
comes along,' he said, 'will blow your
fence over like Jackstraws.’
" *Oh, all right,’ said the greenhorn,
who was also an optimist. ‘My fence
Is five feet broad at the bottom and
four feet high. If It blows over it will
be a foot higher than It Is now."
"That's what I hope my political
fence Is like," sold Bryan, with a laugh.
Another Bryan story was lifted bod
ily by Congressman Lentz In his speech
at New Haven on August 31. Mr.
Lentz was busy holding the crowd
until Mr. Bryan should appear from
the meeting of the New England Dem
ocrats In the Tontine Hotel, across the
street, so the use of yie Bryan thunder
was, perhaps, permissible.
There was once a funeral out In
Nebraska—so runs the yarn—and the
preacher who had been asked to de
liver the eulogy was a stranger *n town
and did not know’ the departed sister
very well. 80 after he had said all that
he could he suggested that If anybody
else could say a few - words about the
poor dead sister It would be a good
thing to say them.
Three or four of those who had
known the deceased In her lifetime
made appropriate remarks. Then there
was a pause. At last one old brother
rose and said:
"Well. If we’re all through speaking
About the departed sister, I will now
make a few* brief remarks on the tariff."
Mr. Bryan enters into the spirit of
his stories with great gusto, gesticulat
ing with his hands and modulating his
voice to suit the periods. His eyes are
expressive; they light up before the
point of the story Is reached and his
piny actor’s mouth trembles Into a
smite.
When the point of the story comes
each word Is enunciated slowly and
distinctly with a lingering emphasis on
each as if the narrator was loath to
come so soon to the end of his tale.
After he had been Interviewed for the
last time by the newspaper men who
had followed him about on his Jour
neys out of New York, Mr. Bryan, re
membering that he was once a reporter
and not forgetful of the difficulties that
sometimes beset the path of the Inter
viewer, told the newspaper men about
how he was once Interviewed In a rapid
fire manner in Louisville, after he had
been defeated the second time for the
presidency.
"A young man bustled up to me with
his pad all ready," said Mr. Bryan,
"and announced that he had been sent
by his city editor to Interview me.
"‘Mr. Bryan, are you going to run
again for president?’ he asked.
Well,’ said I, In view of the fact
that I have been defeated within two
weeks It would be hard to answer that
question.’
All right, scratch that. Now*, Mr.
Bryan, what will be the next platform
of the Democratic party?’
" *1 certainly am not In a position to
tell.’
He drew another line through his
pad.
“'Now, Mr. Bryan, what person do
you think will be available to run for
president on the Democratic ticket If
you do not run again?’
Again I can not answer that ques
tlon,’ I replied with earnestness. •
right, Mr. Bryan: much
obliged; pleased to have met you;
good-by.’
"Now, there was a man who had
done what he had been told to do,"
concluded Mr. Bryan with a heart
laugh.
The Commoner relates with great
glee one Incident that befell him In Jn
pan. He went to one of the temples In
Toklo to see the shrines of some of Ja
pan's departed statesmen. It was at
Shlba park, where the most beautiful
of the Tukugawa tfmplep are located
This was the first Japanese temple
that Mr. Bryan had ever visited
was accompanied by several dignitaries
of the municipality of Toklo, who hud
come to act as an escort of honor.
At the temple door the Japanese gen-
Arrlre From—
Savannah 7:10
Jacksonville.. 7:59 nui
Macon 11:40 aiu
Savannah 4:15 pin
j impart To-
Macon........ .12:01 am
Savannah 8:« nm
Martin... 4:00 |>o
Hurniuioh s.is |,J
■"“a
Jlick.ttnvlllf R;3, [
Macon ........ 8:00 inn
ATLANTA AM* WKST i'OINT luTC
ROAD.
Arrive From— I Depart To-
•Selma 11:40 anrn.Montgomery 530 nm
•Montgomery. 7:40 pm •Moutg’ni’ry.l2:45 p n
•Selma 11:3a pm •Helnm 4:20 nn
La Grange 8:20 am[LnGrunge.... 5:30 nm
•Montgomery. 3:40 ptni’Moutgjirrjr.ll:l5 nm
•Daily. All other tralue dally except g UB .
day.
All trains of Atlanta and West Point
Railroad Company arrive at and depart
from Atlanta Terminal station, corner of
Mitchell street and Madison
IlKOllOIA ltAILUUAl).
Arrive From—
•Augusta 6:00 am
'■ l
ngton.
•Augusta.. .
LIthouln 3:25 pm
•Augusta 8:15 pui
41:45
7:46 am
12:30 pm
Depart To-
•Auguita 7:15 am
Llthonla Peffi nin
•Augusta 8:39 pm
(.’Olivers.. 5:00 pm
Covington.... 6:10 pm
•Augusta Il:t5 pm
•Dully. All other trnliii daily except Sup.
dny
SDAHOAKD Alii LI.Ne UAIlAVAiT
Arrive From— I Depart To-
Wnshlngtoii... 6:30 nmlfirinlnghani.. 6\V> n
Abbeville 9:45 auilMonroe 7:20 :
Memphis 11:45 nm New York... 12 00
New York 3:30 pmlAhhevlile....
SO UTHERN RAILWAY.
Trains Leavo Atlanta* Nsw Terminal
Station, corner Mitchell and
Madison Avenue.
N. B.—Following schedule figure* pub
lished oniy aa mformutlou aud ar* out
guaranteed:
6:30 A. M.-No. 13. DAILY. "CHICAGO
AND CINCINNATI LIMITED." A wild
vestfhuled train Atlanta to Cincinnati with
out change, composed of veatlbuled dny
coaches aud PiiUmno drawing room sleep
ing cars. Arrives Rome 7:30 a. m.; Chat
tanooga 9:46 n. m.; Cincinnati 7:3<j p. ui.;
Louisville 8:16 p. in.: Chicago 7:23 u. in.
Cafe car service. All meals between At-
inclnnatt.
-No. 30 DAILY, to Griffin end
Columbus. Arrives Unfflu 7:11 s. oi.; Co
lumbus 10 a. m.
6:J5 A. M.-. o. 12. DAILY, local to Macna.
Brunswick and Jacksonville. Make* all
itops . arriving Mncou 9:15 a. m.; iirune-
wick 4 p. m.: Jacksonville 7:40 p. m.
7:00 A. M.—No. 35. DAILY.—Pullman to
Birmingham, Memphis. Kansas City uml
Colorado Springs. Arrives Memphis 8:0#
p. in.; Kansas city 9:46 a. m., and c-dorado
'A?' ,1 M. < ^No. 12 DAILY.—Local
Charlotte. Danville.' Richmond 1 and Ash*-
vHle.
... Sleeping. .....
Cars through without change. Dining can
icrvo all meals en route, arrives Wish-
Ingtoa b.i2 a. ui.; New York 12:4? 5. m.
j:00 P. M.-No. 40. DAILY.—New York
vJxpresH. Day conches between Atlanta tnd
Washington. Sleeper* between Atlanta.
Charlotte and Washington. Arrives Wash
ington 11:06 n. m.; Mew York 0 p. n.
12:1a ** “
lmui. 'Arrives Birmingham 9:15
Memphis 7:16 a. m.
4:30 P. M.-No. 13. DAILY, except Sun
day. “Air U.»o wede" to Toccoa.
4:30 P. M.-No. 22. DAILY.-Orlffln and
Columbus. Pulltnau palace steeping car
ami day coach *“
4:35 P. M.-N
ettevllle aud
4:60 P. J
drawing room
sen yo’ son down yere. Yo* cum down
ye re yo’self. DIs ain’t gwlne ter be no
chile’s play."
“A Wife's Secret."
The Bijou offering, "A Wife's Secret,"
may \yell be classed with the most pop
ular attractions of the season at the
Marietta street play house. It presents
a most attractive story which sets forth
a powerful moral. As a picture of real,
breathing human life the playf com
mends Itself to theatergoers. The role
of leading interest Is that of the young
wife of the rector portrayed by Qffece
Hopkins. She Is turned out of a happy
home because of fancied wrong-doing
and the husb&nd will not listen to an
explanation, being prompted by the
voice of a spinster slater, 'who Is the
chief mlschtef-mal^er. The interest is
sustained throughout the four acts and
It is only during the last five minutes
of the play that the final denouement
of the story Is given out.
Better pleased audiences than those
who are attending tb< p<rformance this
seldom
eek hove seldom witnussd a drama at _
th BUou and It is not surprising that oanv.’t* also’ in "Wonderland:
the capacity of the popular play house
Is taxed nightly.
Mary Marbla and Littla Chip.
The latest musical comedy New York
success, "Wonderland,” by Victor Her
bert and Glen MacDonough, produced
and staged by Julian Mitchell, will be
the attraction at the Grand next Mon
day and Tuesday.
The plot of "Wonderland" is based
upon a German fairy story of the
Brothers Grimm and tells of eight
princes who are given to wandering
over the land as they usually do In
fairy tales. They live In an enchanted
castle and through the love philters of
a Doctor Fax, a specialist on affairs of
the heart, they win the affections of
the eight charming daughters of the
King of Herat. An abundance of fun
is furnished by Dr. Fax. This role Is
played by Little Chip, the clever en
tertainer who made so many friends
during his engagement with the Welles-
Dunne-Harlan Company. Mary Mar
ble, another member «»f the same coin-
.-No. 23. DAILY.—Local to Far
id Fort Vnhey.
M.-No. 16, DAILY.—Throocb
>om and alceplox eara jo Cin
cinnati and Memphla and Chattanooga to
LoulivUle. Arrives Home 7:20 p. m.:.Dalton
8:36 p. m.: Chattanooga 9:65 p. m.; Memphis
8:20 0. m.: Louisville 8:50 a. in.; St. Louis
0 p. m.: Cincinnati 8:10 a. m. „
«:16 l 1 . M.-No. 26. DAILT.-M.kM «M
■tops.’ Loci 10 Iledtn; arrive H.fllo M
P I P. M.-No. 14. DAILY.—florid. Un-
ltp<l. A iull.1 vetllimed train to JackMa-
Tllle. Pin. Through iL.plag cam and il«!
coaches to Jackaonvtlle and Brunswick; ar
rive* Jacksonville 3:60 a. m.; Brunswick
8 a. m.: St. Augustine 10 a. m. .
11:30 P. M.-No. 37. DAILY.—Through
Pullman drawing room aieeplng car. At
lanta to Hhreveport. Local sleeper Atlanta
to Birmingham. Arrives Birmingham »,»
a. m.: Meridian 11 a. in.; Jackson 2;28
m.; Vicksburg, 4:06 p. m.; 8breveport 10.54
j.^m. Bleepers open to receive passengers
12 NIQI1T-NO. *6, DAILY.—DhltOd SHIM
Fast Mall. Solid vestlbuled train. Sleeplni
cars to New ' ork, Richmond, charlotte ana
Asheville. Coaches to Washington. Dlnlnj
cars serve all meals en rout*. Arrive*
Washington 9:30 p. m.: New York 0:23 a. m-
Local Atlsnta-Charlotte eleeper opeo to
receive passengers at 9:00 p. m- boj 7 *'
Atlanta-Ashevllle sleeper open 10:30 p.
Ticket Office No. 1 Peachtree, on ynducf.
Peters building, and new Terminal Station,
noth ’Phones. City office. 142 main; dtpoL
No. 2, on Terrolua! exchange.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
and WHWKJY HABITS
cared al fowwltj
I). M. WOOLLEY M- D.
>tm (jia. Office 104 N. Pryor
tlemen began to remove their
according to unalterable custom.
Bryan took ofT his oxford ties and " a *
horrified to find that most of the great
toe and part of the second toe of on*
of his feet were protruding boldly ir 't
his sock. There was no help for »j-
the great American statesman with i”
guard of honor had to patter o'*
the bronze floors of the shrines a
Shlbn with two toes exposed.
"Never have I felt the lack of dlgnlD
so much as on that occasion,’ ■■**>
Mr. Bryan. "Anyway, I bought tnj
socks In Japan and that accounts 1*
the fact that such a hole, could
worn between the time I put them •
In the morning and the time. 1 toon 1
my shoes at the temple door in w*
afternoon.”—Sew York Sun.
LEADS j o .
All the standard brands. "Red Sea!
"Carter," "Railroad." at the
GEORGIA PAINT
GLASS CO.,
40 PEACHTREE.
AND