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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
KATL'RDAY. OCTOBER 6, 195S.
No Fertilizers,
No Frosts,
No Irrigation,
Orange and Grape Fruit Groves on Easy Terms
I Location, BARTLE, The Winter Resort of Cuba I
is the biggest American-Canadian Colony in Cuba. Two express trains with Pullman coaches daily.
None of the Groves are more than one mile from the railroad track and front on public road. I
station built by the Cuba Railroad Co.
If you can invest $20.00 per month for fifty months and
put it in a grove in Bartle you will then, have an income
of one thousand dollars or more per year and a property
worth at least $2,000.00 per acre.
BARTLE
With 80 trees to the acre,. 1,000 oranges to the tree, 200
oranges to a box, $3.00 per box, Is $i;200.00 the acre.—
U. S. Consul Hyatt.
WINDSOR TRUST CO., of New York.
BANK OF BRITISH NORTH AMERICA.
Toronto, Canada.
WINDSOR TRUST CO., of New York.
All Contracts Registered With the Trust
Company of Georgia, Trustee.
REFERENCES:
Cuban Lands in Large or Small
Blocks for Sale. '
CHARLES T. PHILLIPS,
Rooms 1406-7 Fourth National Bank Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Call at Office or Write for
Prospectus.
HOWARD GOULD AND WIFE
HA VE BEEN PARTED SINCE
RETURN FROM EUROPE
Polished Plato Olaaa tor stores.
| Polished Plato Gla.u for residence*.
' Polished Plato Olass for show cnsos.
I Largest stock ot Plate Glass In the
l South.
1F. J. COOLEDGE & SON.,
U N. jForsyth BL
AWNINGS
TENTS
UPHOLSTERY
A\AIER t> V0LBER&
ISO Bo. Torsyth St.
WANTED
A BOOK-KEEPER AND
STENOGRAPHER .
WHO H»S ATTENDED THE
SOUTHERN SHORTHAND
ATLANTA, GA.
Thb L'eadlna Buklne**'
School of the South,
•IIJ, MCWTtl I nun gnu iu ui
application* drily for offlea aMletante. Ki
dorsad by Goternor*, Senators, Banker ,
n.Mfraalonal and business man. Iu Dip
loma Ian aar* passport ton rood position.
Eater now. Catalogs* free. Mention thla
paper. Address A. C. BRISCOE, Pratt. or
Cw, ARNOLD, V.PraaL, Atlanta, Qa.
i ■ WE BUY
Confer,'Lead, Brass. Zinc, Rags. Bot
tles^ Burlap. Wash Cotton, Sacks. All
out of town orders solicited.
PIEDMONT IRON AND METAL CO.,
. >1 •
175 Madison Avenue,
. t Both Phones 1739.
ATLANTA, GA.
nnuM
i ATLANTA DENTAL COLLEGE
OPERATORY
Corner Edgewood Ave. and Ivy St.
The .Oollege-1* open and ready for
i work. Pilling operations of all kinds
! douo.frce. None hut experienced stu-
.dents.ire allowed to operate.
S Atlanta Dental College.
QW, A' ffew (i t!our« before hi* death
Friday nftfmoon, William Todd, aged
63, wn» walking along Broad ntreet,
about noon, In fairly good health. Itut
near the Neal Bank, on the same street,
he was attacked by apoplexy and fell
to the ground. F. 8. Blxhy, a friend,
was passing, nnd carried him home,
where he died at 6:40 ofclock, never
regaining consciousness.
Mr. Todd, a native of Scotland, was
a member of Company B, Seventy-
ninth New York Infantry. Iu the civil
war, and for several yearn was adju
tant of the O. M. Mitchell Post of the
Grand Army of the Republic.
Mr. Todd la survived by his slater,
Miss Janet Todd, and daughter, Miss
Martha Todd, both of whom lived with
him, and by hla son, Kenneth Todd,
who Is a reporter on The Macon News.
Funeral : services- will be conducted
Saturday night at 7:30 o'clock at the
residence, 65 Culberson street, by Rev.
L. JL Walker, of the West End Pres
byUrlan church. The body will be
taken to Marietta at 8:35 Sunday morn
ing for interment in the National cem
etery. Grand Army services will be
held at the grave.
Comrades of*the O. M. Mitchell Post
are requested to accompany the. body
to Marietta.
CHATTANOOGA TO BUY
BASEBALL FRANCHISE.
Sperlnl to The Georgian.
Chattanooga, Tenn., Oct. 6.—If the
baseball franchise of 8hreveport or
Little Rock in ‘the Southern League Is
to be sold, Chattanooga will most prob
ably be the buyer. - The greater pgrt
of 110,000, the price asked, 'has been
subscribed by leading citsens here and
the remainder will certainly be raised.
It Is said that the Shreveport and Lit
tle Rock teams los* money last season
and for that reason the franchise Is for
sale. A meeting will be held In a few
days to complete an organization. If
the franchise is purchased John Dobbi
the noted veteran ball player, will be
made manager of the club.
FIDDLERS' CONVENTION
HELD AT BAINBRIDGE.
Special to The Georgian.
Balnbridge, Ga., Oct •*—Ftddlgrs
from all the country round were In
Balnbridge Thursday night to take part
In the fiddlers' convention held In the
cdurt hquse, under the auspices of the
Daughters of the Confederacy- Evgry
fiddler wax assisted by a frlehd with
the straws, and when one struck up on
the old “Virginia Reel" there was a
general shuffling of feet, and but for
the crowded condition of the^ouse the
converitlort might have ended In an old-
fashioned reel. The prise* were award
ed as follows: First prize, H. J. Young;
tterotui prize, J. F. Haivklits; third
prize, R..M. Bowman.
For being thrown about by the hesi
tating movement of a street car at the
corner of" Penehlre^ nnd Marietta
streets, Mrs. E. J. Halo has sued the
Georgia Railway and Electric Com
pany for $10,000 for Injuries sustained.
In a suit filed Saturday morning she
claims that on September 13 she was
on the buck platform of a car about to
alight, when the motormnn started off
with u Jerk. This threw her violently
toward the back of the platform. No
sooner had she been hurled against the
controller box than the car stopped
with another Jerk, throwing her for
ward and against the side of the rear
door. In the few seconds It took to do
this she sustained bruises and wrenches
and shocks nnd things which she claims
are worth $10,000.
GOVERNOR JELK8 COMMENDS
80LDIER8 AT MOBILE.
Hpedul to Tho (leorglnh.
Montgomery, Ala., Oct. 6.—Governor
Jelks, who returned yesterday frdm
Mobile, where he* has been looking over
the situation after the storm, Issued
general order No. 19, in which he high
ly compliments the soldiers of Mo
bile for the manner in which they have
conducted themselves nnd for the work
they have been and are now doing.
CAR WINDOWS SHATTERED
BY ROCK THROWERS
N<wv York. OcL 6.—It was stated-to-
day that Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gtotild ‘
have been living apart since their re
turn from Europe last month on tfye
steam yacht Niagara. While Intimate
friends admit the estrangement, they
deny that either has begun an action
for divorce.
Howard Gould since his return from
abroad, has been living at the Waldorf-
Astoria und his wife has been at the
St.* Regis for three weeks. At the
Waldorf-Astoria today It was said that
Mr. Gould had started on a three days'
crulae on hi* .yacht. Following Mr.
Gould's departure, Mrs. Gould left the
St. Regis and went to their country
home at Sans Point, L. I.
She witnessed the race for the Van
derbilt cup this morning from a box.
The Countess de Castellano, Mr.
Gould's sister. Is the only one who haa
entertained Mrs. Howard Gould. She
was an actress In 1897, Mrs. Gould's
sister, Ella, last week In San Fran-
GRAND DUKE OF HESSE
TO DIVORCE NEW WIFE
Special to Tho Georgian. •
Spartanburg, 8. C.. Oct. 6.—Passen
ger train No. 40 over the Southern en
mute from Atlanta to Washington, was
attacked by a gong of rock throwers
Thursday night between Spartanburg
nnd Greenville. The gloss In several
windows was smashed nnd fragments
of glass were scattered over the pas
sengers. Pieces of glass struck T. >1.
Hunter on his 19ft wrist and cut .the
tiesh tn severs! places.
Rocks were hurled In at the windows
on both sides of the train, smashing
the windows In both the day coaches
and the Pullman cars. The train was
stopped nnd an Investigation was
made, but no trace of the gang ot rock
throwers was discovered.
GOVERNOR LETS CONVICT-
REMAIN WITH BROTHER.
8peelal to The Georgia^. , ,
Montgomery, Ala., Oct. f.—Tho-gov-
emor has extended the parple of Thom
as J. Long ten days and he will remain
at the bedside of his brother, who Is
111 In Mobile. The convict's tithe was
up, but his brother's condition so
bad the governor determined ..19? let
remain longer. ■*
Rev,.Carter Chosen Chaplain.
Special to The Georgina.
oolumbuB, Ga.. Orf. 6— Rev. W.' A.
Carter was elected chaplain ot camp
Henning, succedlng the late Rev. A.
M. Wynn. Dr. Carter's work in the
hospital during the civil war made him
an enviable record among soldiers.
Chief Williams goes to Washington to
meet the I'ommlttce of the national as
sociation. -
Berlin. Oct. It Is reported that the Grand Duke of Hesse, who was
divorced from Princess Victoria of Saxe-Cbbdrg and Gotha, In 1901, Is
contemplating a divorce from his second wife, Princess Eleonora, whom he
married In October, 1905, on the gro und of Incompatibility. '
SAYS HE IS TO MARRY
DAUGHTER OF PRESIDENT
Cincinnati, Ohio, OcL A man
who gave hla name as Thaddsus Zieg
ler. formerly a grocer of Frankfort,
Ky., walked Into Chief Mllilkln'a office.
Introduced himself, and asked If the
chief could get him .transportation to
Washington. Chief Mllllkin started to
reply, but his caller proceeded:
"You see I've had a vision and the
Lord told me to go to Washington.
He showed me that I was to marry
Kthel Roosevelt. She Is the president's
daughter, and the Lord has willed that
we marry.”
Then Chief Mllllkin realised what
sort ot n case he had to deal with. He
was given a place to sleep In the cen
tral police station for the night and the
police will try to find his friends and
notify, them to take change of him.
WIFE PLEADS FOR HUSBAND
THAT SHE MAY GET BREAD
At the close of police court Saturday
morning Mr*. L. B. Mulkey, ot 319 East
Fair street, whose husband was on
Thursday afternoon sentenced to aerve
a term of thirty days In the city stock
ade on the charge of beating hie wife
and child, appeared before Recorder
Broylee and made a plea that her hus
band be permitted to pay s line and
secure hts release:
"I h»Ve no one tn support me," said
Strs. Mulkey, ''and l don’t know what
I will do If he la kept In the stockade
for thirty day*. Judge, I wish you
would let him pay a line. He Is kind
and good to me when he Is sober'and
would never have acted as he did If he
had not been drinking."
Judge Broyles told Mrs. Slulkey he
was sorry for her, but that he would
have to refuse her request.
"Although at times It works hard
ship* on tbs Innocent, the law must be
enforced and men punished for their
misdeeds," said the recorder.
NOT WITH THE ^ARTY
THAT NOMINATED HIM.
gpeclsl to The Georgian.
Montgomery, Ala., OcL J. A.
Hurst, of Etowah, who was nominated
for lieutenant governor at a mass meet
ing of Republicans at Birmingham, has
written the - secretary ot state asking
that his name be taken oft the certifi
cate of nomination, as he does not want
It, as he is not with that wing of the
party. The .secretary of state has no
authority under the law to take .his
name off and the only way It ran be
done Is for Mr. Hurst to write to every
probate Judge of the state resigning the
nomination.
The grand jury of the Federal court
has returned a true blit against Dr. E.
C. Ripley, charging that his assault
upon J. C. King, a negro mall carrier,
several months ago, resulted In the
obstruction of United States'mall.
It will be remembered that there be
ing no vacant seats upon a Peachtree
street car. Dr. Ripley asked King to
give his seat to a standing whits lady.
The negro, It Is alleged, refused the re
quest very impudently, whereupon Dr.
Ripley, who was just recovering from
an operation for appendicitis, struck
him.
King then proceeded to have Dr.
Ripley brought before the United
States court upon the charge of Inter
fering with the delivery of United
States mall. It being a Federal offence
to do to.
SHOTGUN AND PISTOL
ARE USED IN OREL
Special to The Georgian, ’
Columbus, Ga., Oct. (.—John Jack-
son and July Gilbert, hie son-in-law,
engaged In a shooting at the latter's
home last night, Jackson using a pis
tol and Gilbert a shotgun. Both were
slightly wounded.
Both surrendered to the police.
Neither will talk of the affair.
It will be heard In police court Wed
nesday.
CLIFTON MILLS 8UIT
NOW BEING HEARD
Special to The Georgian.
Spartanburg, S. C., Oct. (.—The suit
of the Clifton Manufacturing Company
vs. the Southern road, claiming dam
ages In the sum of 190,000 for a con
signment of cotton that was lost In
transit, la being heard In the court of
common pleas. Several years ago the
Clifton mills purchased a lot of cot
ton from factors In Mississippi to be
■hipped over the Southern. The cot
ton was first delivered to a compress
company In Birmingham to be com
pressed. It Is charged that the cotton
was delivered to the compress com
pany, but was never delivered to the
railroad company after being com
pressed. It Is said that the compress
company failed several years ago,
SOLICITOR FOR WHISKY
BOUND TO COURT
Bpertsl to The Georgian.
Spartanburg, 8. C„ Oct. (.—John
Crawley, a young man. has been bound
over to the court of general session*
to answer to the charge of violation
of the dispensary law, soliciting orders
for a whisky house and receiving the
money In advance, which act the state j
contend* Is In violation of the law.
FATHER ANO l SONS
WERE TILL BOOZER
"You people must be having soras
kind of a family reunion," remarked
Recorder Broyles Friday morning In
police court when M. B. McAfee, s
young white man, appeared before him
on the charge bf drunkenness and was
fined 35.75.
The reunion Idea was suggested to
the recorder front the fact that both
T. V. McAfee, father ofiyoung McAfee,
and E. 8. McAFee, another son, were
arraigned In police court Thursday
afternoon on the charge of drunken
ness. Father and son were each fined
$5.75. The fine of the son was paid
and the father went to the stockade.
M. B. McAfee was ordered held in the
police station until Saturday afternoon
to give him a chance to pay his fine.
E. S. McAfee was again arrested
Saturday morning for drunkenness and
will be tried Saturday afternoon.
MR, EMMONS' NAME
USEDWITHOUTCONSENT
The following statement has bees
received from Rev. M. J. Cofer:
"M. R, Emmons, whose name was
announced as chairman of the com
mittee named to select the campaign
committee for the prohibition elertbn
In the spring of 1907, has not attended
the meetings held In thla city, and haa
not expressed himself on the question
of prohibition, and he declines to serve
on the committee. At a conference,
held before the meeting yesterday,
when the committee was suggested. *
gentleman present suggested the name
of Mr. Emmons, and he was placed on
the list.
This conference was held Just be
fore the public meeting assembled, so
there was no time to confer with Mr.
Emmons, and It was a mistake to use
his name without his knowledge and
approval.
(Signed)
"31. J. COFER ”
A Kfsstfl* k»at*i«ue
Wilder. 0»l»*.
stilt. Cecelte. Cilenl
relicts lid Slid' 1 "'
■h n Kerri (iti»>"»
Ik* Only Keeley ln«6*
Me in Georrt
229 Woodward *»»., ATLANTA, GA.
FLOOR PAINT,
Lucas & Senour’s in full
line colors at tho
GEORGIA PAINT AND
GLASS CO.,
40 Pcachtroo-