The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, December 14, 1906, Image 4

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4 THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ntIDAY, DECEMBER II, 13C«. SNOW TIES UFJRAFFIC Blizzard Weather Now Obtains in North west. Grand Fork, S. D., Dec. 14.—The prospects are that railroad traffic In North Dakota will be tied up tight to day by the heavy a now which has been falling alnce yesterday. In the eastern part of the state there has been Just enough wind to roll the snow In to cuts. Blizzard weather prevails and the snow It drifting badly. The Soo Is tied up all the way west to Ardoch. The fuel situation In the small towns Is unchanged, only an oc casional car of coal having gonfe through. Mtlbh suffering is being ex perienced. CABINET CHANGES TO COME MONDAY INSTEAD OF 24TH Washington. Dee. 14 -Most of the ratli ne t changes srhcilttleil will take place next Moutlay, In Mm. I of Uereuilier -I, ns plan ned. Attorney Grnornl Moody will tnke llie OStli of olTh-e n* nn assorlntc Justice of the supreme court, niiil will thus leave the de partment of jnstlee Without r. head. The vacancy will be but uioiuentary. if It exists at nil. for ('harle.i .!. Ilonaimrle. now sit ref ary of the navy, will Iniinedlntely lie sworn In ns attorney general; Victor II. Metcalf, lit present secretary of eomnieiee mid lulmr, will hecoine w-«retary of the nary, and llsear H. Htrans. who Ins Imtii • sidn ted to till* tin* place left vnennt by the t'alltonihin. will hii-ome secretary of cola* laeree nnd 1;iW. It Is iinderstooil that tin* official Induc tion Into office of the various cabinet 1111*111- ln*r* will tnke place about uihiii 011 Mou- •lay. fc-er clary Shaw nil] led retire nil IIJ March 4. when Post master General Coitol- you will tnke his place. N HYPNOTIC STATE SUSPECTED NEGRO TELLS Of MASSACRE Galveston. Tex., Dec. 14.—While Ir. a hypnotic state, a negro charged with others with the murder >f Mrs. J(Mndltt, wife of h farmer near Bdfp*. Tex., and her four children, gave a graphic «!e*crlptl< n of the tragedy. In Its minutest details. Professor \r- nold guaranteed the subject would re- <4ta the truth If he voluntarily submit, ted to the test. The murder* were committed a year ago ufia circumsMn- tlat «jvldence pointed to four or five negroes. The man pictured every act nt the crime and supplied every missing link In til** circumstantial evidence gathered -by the officer*. The court will not permit the accused testifying white hypnotised, but the prosecution proposes ranking him confess to the details revealed w hlle he was unde; the power of the hypnotist. F«»r month-* another negro has been held as the murderer. IN THE ART DEPARTMENT. Thihgs to be Made and Thihgs All Ready te Hang on the Trse. Hoop Bags Vsils Pin Cushions Fancy trimmed pin cushions, oblong or square; in pink, light blue, red, yellow, 50c, 75c, 1.00, 1.60, 1.75, 2.25,3.00. Sofa Pillows Collar ahd Cuff Sets Sofa Pillows in de signs appropriate for men’s dens,, for mi lady’a boudoir, for the cozy corner. Pillows readv for use, 25c to $10.50. Coque Boas Embroidered collar and cuff sets in dainty designs, 50c. « Hoop Bags, a bandy thing for small arti cles for the laundry; 60c ones at 35c. Laundry Bags Laundry Bags, the large, spacious ones in fancy creations, at 50c, 75c, 1.00.' * viauze rahs Beautiful gauze- spangled Fans, plain, white or hand-paint ed; prices from 50c, 75c, 1.00, 1.60. 1.75, 2.25, 2.50, 3.00, 3.75, 4.00, 4.60 up to 15.00. A daintier present was never given. Veils in all descrip tions, in black, brown and navy blue; by the yard, 50p, 75c, $1,1.60. Ready made Veils with ruffles of ribbon, at 1.00,1.50 and 1.75. Ready made Veils with chiffon ruffles, at 1.00. With lace at 2.00. Ready-made Veils, with borders of velvet to match, at 2.25 and 2.75. Bed Room Slippers Hand crocheted bed room Slippers, with lamb’s wool insoles, for men, women and children. For Children 75c. Ladies, 1.00. For Men, 1.50. Men’s Neckties In new Holiday Designs. Rich colorings and designs 25c 50c 1.00 Cut This List Out and Paste It on Your Shopping Program. Dresser Scafrs Dresser Scarfs in dainty creations of dotted Swiss and point d’esprit, trim med with lace and lined with pink or blue, 1.25, 1.50, 1.75, 2.25, 3.00, 3.50. Mercerized Pillow Loops with big tassels as a finish at either end. All colors for 25c. Silk Pillow Loops, finished with large silk tassels at ends. Price 50c. Pillow Ruffles with draw string to gather same, to put around pillows. Price, 50c. Silk floss Pillows, all sizes; prices for 20 and 22-inch Pillows, 50c; for 24 and 26-in. Pillows, 75c. / Strawberry Emo ries at 10c and 15c, Everything tq Mak? Sofa Pillews With. Silk finish crochet- cotton in bright col ors, at per spool, 5c. Needle Books com plete with papers ■ of needles of all kinds. Prices, 25c and 35c. Brass Rings, Jew els, Embroidered Cot ton and Silks for Em broidery, gold or steel beads for purses. Coque "Feather Boa in dainty blues, pink, lavenders, grevs and black, 6.75, 7.50, 8.00, 12.50. Mirabeaus in. brown and white, at 16.50, in brown at 20.00. And in all white Sets at 20.00. DuBarry Scarfs Beautiful DuBarry Scarfs, elegant de signs in dainty shades or solid color; prices from 4.50,6.00 to 10.50 Stocks Stocks of all kinds; fancy embroidered stocks with fancy or solid color ties, at 75c and 1.00. Smart stiff collars, embroidered with hemstitched ruffles around bottom, 1.00. Nobby little ties of soft pretty colors to wear with stiff linen collars; price 50c each Handsome embroid ered collar and cuff sets; price 6.00. PIEDMONT BONDS REDEEMED BY CITY YEARS BEFORE ODE The fW.ftrtn bond* Issued for the purchase of the Piedmont park June ir», 1901, have been taken up by the city. The bond8 will be delivered to the city comptroller Saturday, years before maturity. These bonds were Issued by the Piedmont park trustees five year* ago, and the payment «*f them was as sumed by the dty. They are n per cent bonds. The city treasury Is In such rohI condition that the trustees of the |»|ed- niont park have called the tmnds in. it being stipulated that the city could do this five years before maturity If *1*. airable. They were due June IV 1911. By doing this the city saves $3,000 a year in Interest for five years, or $13,ft»n) altogether. THREftTOFTHUSTEES DRIVES NEGRO PASTOR TO COMMIE SUICIDE Special to Tbe Georgian. Columbia. 8. C, Dec. 14.—Rev. c\ P. Kelson, a negro Methodist preacher, committed suicide at his home In Or* angeburg yesterday by cutting his throat with a razor, because his church truatees were threatening to arrest him for misappropriation of money belong ing to the church by raising tne amount of a mortgage. He had also gotten into debt around town and a committee of white* had waited upon him for preaching Inflammatory sermons on the race Issue, though the reports about the latter are said to have beep circu lated by negroes desiring to get rid of him. Nelson had had the chuk-e of ap pointments of the conference the past i, several years, being an able man and trusted by the whites ever} where. Things Ornamental, Things to Wear and Things to Use. Chamberlin-Johhson-DuBese Co. HUGE QUILT UP TO GRAND JURY: - PLEA OF MU Another chapter In the case of Rob ert E. Turnege, now a prisoner In the Tower, charged with beating and at tempting an assault upon Mrs. «Carrte t*omHtock, of 36 South Humphries Htreet, will probably be written Sat urday morning, when the Fulton coun ty grand Jury will meet. That Turmige will he Indicted, the police officials have little doubt, and If this Is the cane, he will probably be placed on trial in the superior court before Judge Roan next week. Ttimage Is still a prisoner In the Tower, where he was placed .shortly after Ills arrest. That Insanity will be the plea of the defense Is generally conceded, and Attorney Madison Hell is now working along this line. It is said by officials of the sheriff’s office that Turnage’* father, J. \V. Tur- nage, declares his son Is Insane, nnd that he recites the fact that Ills two daughters have for some time past been afraid t»* remain in the house alone with their brother. Mrs. Comstock is recovering rapidly from the injuries she received, and It Is thought she will appear before the grand Jury Saturday morning at 10 o'clock and give «defence against her assailant. TOM M>A TSON HANDS ROAST 70 COL. MANN IN FIRST ISSUE OF JEFFERSONIAN UNCLE SAM BREAD Is Absolutely Purs. 00.00000000000000000030300 0 O O LOSS OF HIS SAVINGS O Q DRIVES MAN INSANE. O O O O Butler, Pa., Dec. 14.—Simon O 0 Zubek, a Russian, who lost his O O money fn a fir* that destroyed a O O lodging house a few days ago uni O O In which several thousands of dot- O O !ar- la savings were burned, was O O taken to the Insane asylum at O O Dixmoni today, a raving maniac.* O 0 O 00000000000OO0OOO000O0O000 “The Jeffersonian”.will be out Sat urday. And the way that Thomas E. Wat son goes after Colonel Mann, of Town Topics fame. Is enough to make even the colonel sit up and take notice. The foreword of "The Jeffersonian” contains Mr. Watson’s Impressions of Colonel Mann." It makes Interesting reading. "What Is the name without the man?" asks Tom Watson. He relates thfe "ugly dream” of his New York i experiences. The ogre of Watson’s bad dregm was Colonel Mann. The substance of Mr. Watson’s story Is that after getting him Into the magazine venture with his name as the chief asset, Colonel Mann, with one 4*. Q. De Fra nee, fired him out and seised the property. Hut the spirit of it fled with Watson, as Watson himself declares, and nothing hut the corpse of the muguzlne remains In their possession. Mr. Watson says that after the mag azine was started Colonel Mann made several propositions that caused him to smell a rut and size up tin* colonel as "a grand old rascal.” But he stuck to the mngazinc because Ills word was publicly pledged. Mr. Watson says that his salary of $600 a month was never paid, but that he was willing to go on working for nothing; he loved the magazine so. But he would nit stand for the Insertion in It of adver tisements of Colonel Mann's various publications. 8o he quit. Then Colon*! Mann rushed into court, got a Judg ment against the magazine for $6M't') and sold It at jiherifTs sale to himself "He actually had the sheriff to sell my name and was n?s enough to buy it. "Hut he did not buy me along with the name, and he did not buy the spirit of the magazine with the desks, the lion safe and the trade name." On the whole Mr. T^dtson thinks his experiences with Colonel Mann have done him good. He says: "They have put Into me once more that intensity of energy and purpose which otherwise might never have been mine again. What the spur I* to the 00000000007000000000000000 O O O GEORGIAN AND GLOBE O O DRAW BUSINESS FROM O O SAVANNAH TO ATLANTA. O O o O Mr. Simon Einstein, of the Globe 0 O Clothing Company, who Is one of O 0 Atlanta’s most forceful advert!*- 0 O ore, has handed The Georgian a O O letter he has Just received in re- O O sponae to one of his ads In The O O Georgian. 0 O The letter contains an order for 0 I O a suit and'Aome gent’s furnishings O O and conclude* with the following O O paragraph; O O "Have formerly bought m O clothing In Savannah, but Induced O O by ad In Georgian, the best of pa- 0 O pers, 1 am going to try you. Send O O by express. Respectfully, O O "HARDY J. CLARK, O O "Hazlehurst, Ga.” O O O COOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO BLAMES NEWSPAPERS FOR THE EXCITEMENT Special to The Georgiau. Columbus. Ga., Dec. 14.—Charles F. Hardy, charged with the murder of his father-in-law. Brooks, at Chlpley, was brought to this city today by Sher iff Hadley, of Harris county, nnd lodged In the Muscogee Jail for safe-keeping. When seen by your correspondent he refused to talk and safi! the newspapers made too great a sensation out of the affair; that it was bad enough anyhow, and he hoped tho guilty man would soon be caught. Hardy has been martied four years and has one child. He looked pale and haggard. A haunted look is In his eyes. He appeared desperate. Ho will be kept here until the excite ment dies down in Harris county before the preliminary hearing Is had. thoroughbred, what the bugle call Is to the cavalier, the recent attempt of my enemies to compare my ruin has been to me. "By the living God there Is no thought of surrender, no weakness A doubt or hesitation, but a resolution fixed a* hardened steel to march on. "What? Be a quitter? Falter or dicker now? Lower the flag and stack arms now? ‘Rather w ould I die.” COOOOOOi.'OOOOOOOOOOOCOOOCOO C Washington. Dec. 14.—Repre- O O sentative Grett, Democrat, of Ten- O C nessee, today introduced a bill to O O permit newspapers to contract O O with common carriers for trans- O O |N>natlon In exchange for adver- O O Using. O o o OO0OOO000OOOVOOOOOOOOO0O0O WIRED ABOUT DELAY AND TELEGRAM FELL INTO OTHER RANDS Special to The Georgtau. Columbia, S. C. t Dec. 14.—R. J. Coney, assistant freight transfer clerk for the Southern railway here, and Janies Clark, manager of a billiard and pool resort, have been arrested on a charge of entering Into a conspiracy to steal ten bulea of cotton. In the hands of the road, by diverting the shipment to Au gusta, where Slaik, it is charged, went to catch it and sell It. The alleged plot failed because the shipment was delay’d by an accident. When It failed to turn up at Augusta Clark wired Coney and ti:!» telegram was sent on to Washington. The young men come of excellent families and ‘heir arrests have created a sensation. They are out on bond today. BROTHER AND SISTER ARRAIGNED FOR TRIAL. Davton. Ohio, Dec. 14.—Fayno and Collins Gilman, a sister and a brother of th- girl found dead on the street a few days ago, were arraigned before Magistrate Wagner today charged with being accomplices In the murder of their idsler. Th.* hi-arini; was post- yuueii uMU JlvjiUiO. MRS,MISSOURI DAVIS CLAIMS»REWARD FDR ARREST OF NEGRO Mrs. Missouri Davis, wife of County Offloer D. S. A. Davis, has filed with the governor formal application fur the re ward of 1200 offered by the state for the rapture of Will Johnson,, the ne gro assailant of Mrs. ftlchurd Hem bree. Mrs. Davis, who lives at 285 Ashley street, sets forth that an November M she suw Johnson in the woods near her home. He was acting suspicious ly, and she called her husband’s at tention to the fact. Davis was arrest ed. tried and convicted. Mrs. Davis thinks shells entitled to the reward. The governor will decide the matter later. BICYCLE RACERS STILLJN STRIAE Men Are Going Around the Track to Keep Within the Rules. TWO OF TRAIN CREW KILLED IN WRECK Cleveland, O., Dec. 14.—An engineer and brakernan were killed and ten pas senger* were Injured In a rear-end col lision one mile east of Mentor, on the Nickel Plate railmad last night. None of the Injured will die. UNCLE SAM BREAD Is Absolutely Pure. Nsw York, D«c. 14.—Th, cont„t«sli in the six-day bicyels grind ars not racing, but simply going around on th, floor to k„p within th, regulation. Thsy ars still on striks against th, ruling of th, official,. The leora at 2 o'clock: Root and Felgar, 1,805.8. Downey and Moran, 1,805.6. Vanderatuyft and Stol, 1,805.6. MacDonald and Coffay, 1,805.6. Mattllng and Logan, 1,803.6. Hoppar and Downing, 1,806.6. Rutt and MacFarland, 1,805.8, Pya and Clarke, 1,808.6. Gaorgat and Georget, 1,805.6. Walthour and Bedall, 1406.5. Groton and Samuclion, 14053. Galvin and Wilay, 14064. Record, 2,125 mile, 1 lap, mad, by Millar and Waller in 1899. . 3 p. m. aeora—All 1421.7 except Wal thour and Bedell, 1421.6) Breton and Samuel,on, 1421.6; Galvin and Wiley. 14214. PRICE OF SILVER STEADILY DECLINES Washington, Dec. 14.—The govern ment price for allver i* ateadlly de clining. The director of the mint today bought 100,000 ounce* at IS.W ctnt J an ounce for delivery at Denver, 1-* cent lower than the latt purchas**