Newspaper Page Text
FOUR
500 Jewel Base Burners
in Use in Augusta.
i Iw/T
JUMfifR
Our Full Line of Heating Stoves is Now Ready.
Hverythiiiff From a Small Gas Heater to
a Jewell Base Burner.
SPETH BROS.
BRAND JURY ill
MEET ON MONDAY
Superior Court Civil Session
Begins Also Monday. Sixty
Cases For Grand Jury to Con
sider.
The tfranri Jury. compft*«<l of 3fl
mrn, and a tmviwx** Jury, of HO men,
drawn Sept. 30th. for appearance
Monday morning, Oct 16th, will be
gin a m t**lnn of the superior court to
morrow morning
The grand Jury has a remarkably
large number of chhch for conaldorH
tlon, aoma *<> odd Of that number
there are six murder eaaea, ettaea of
lanHUlt with intent to commit murder,
caeca of involuntary manslaughter,
ewea of robbery, burglary. forger \
94c with oti. exception the docket
la an unprecedented on*
The pcAainn of auperlor court for the
trial of civil Caeca, for which HO Jurors
have been drawn, will begin Oct. 16th,
at 10 o’clock.
The criminal aeaakm of the auperlor
court will begin Monday Oct. Both.
Since the Compilation of the docket.
Utile more than a fortnight ago. an
other alleged murder baa been added.
Win I’arker Ima b« en charged with
the alleged murder of Hoy-ale W alker.
The ahootjng occurred Saturday night.
Sept 30th, on the old Savunnith road
Parker wan bound over to the higher
court* from Magistrate Hen nett'a
court
The following la the schedule of
cases for the two week* following
Monday, Oct. 16th, which will In de
voted to the trial of civil caa«a:
Monday, Ocober 16.
Charlea Hush vs. lVrkina Manufac
turing Company.
A K. Bont vs J V. Franklin et al.
Hattie Holmea va. Augusta Hallway
and Electric Company
Anne Polot v». Prnncle Tolot.
Cleora K Si go vs. Mra. B. Cart
ledge.
Tuesday, October 17.
Minnie Hammond vs Cliarleaton
MODJESKA TOMORROW
AIN EINTIRR FEATURE PROGRAM
I •‘Crossin* the Mps In a Motor" Rare scenes of rugged beauty In exquisite colors.
nomenal * bo* ’ 'actor. ' P,CM,W ,hn ’ "like featuring Jimmie, the phe
-111 "Dan, the Dandy,' a foireful film, showing the diaappAntment of a father In his son.
BONITA TOMORROW ~
An Extraordinary Picture Program.
"A SQUAW'S LOVE."
An Indian Poem of love in pictures.
“THE WAGER.”
' cur * f <,r darkest Ills, and It lightens the doctor's bills
Musical program by a seven-piece orchestra
I Overture -Italian i n Algi> rs” Rossini. '
11. Selection—The Red Mdl—Herbert
111 Waltz Dream of Cleopatra- Kantd.
Ten times more than all other
makes of Base Burners
Combined
We have just received one car
load of them ranging in
price from
$35.00 to $65.00
Constructed on a scientific and coal saving
principle. It is warranted to do the work of
three grates and to use less fuel than one.
Buy one now for your hall or sitting room
and however cold the weather you will be com
fortable all winter and save one third fuel.
nml Wezti-rn Carolln* Railroad.
Fannie Minima vs W. J. Morris.
Irish American Hank «t al. vs. A
F. Purdy et al.
Julius Baum vs. Abram Orbs*
Anna L, Hood vs, Augusta Railway
and Khotrli- Company.
W»dene»day. October 18.
Palsy WillUm* vs, J. G. Williams.
Joseph Marshall vs Fortner Jones
Merchants and Formers I.lne vs.
Consolidated Steamboat Company.
Arms A t-ee vs. Foztal Telegraph
Company.
Joseph H Day vs Augusta Lumber
Company.
Thursday, October 19.
Oolfln G llanklnson vs Augusta
Railway and Electric Company.
Samuel Minims Itloom vs Chgiles
ion and We-tern Carolina Railroad
Julia Daubet, admlnx,, vs. Mrs. W.
1.. Jones.
Julia Daubet, admlnx., vs H E.
Davis.
Friday, Ootober 20.
Julia I>anbet ( admlnx., \-s. Sarah H
Jenkins.
Julia Daub. t vs. .Caroline D. W il
liams.
T 0 le-nnonu vs, Augusta-Aiken
Railway Company
Citizens Hank vs R E. and s, W.
Skinner.
Joseph II Day vs. W. R Rohlnson.
Saturday. October 21.
Entire day given over to tmoontost
ed divorce vases.
Monday. October 23.
Jennie Williams vs Augusta Rail
way and Electric Company.
Siraust, ()un.'-t & Co, vs Bessie I„
Goodrich.
William Wlglmm vs. J, H l-'lvnt.
ton Brown \s. Augusta Railway
and Electric Company
Merchants and Farmers' Line vs
Mrs. Corrie k. Pou
.1 M. Richardson vs W l| ti J I,
O'Dowd
Willie Cobh vs Charleston and
Western Carolina Railroad
Tuesday, October 24.
M. M. Smith vs. Augusta Railway
anil Electric Company.
John Gordon Wilkinson vs Rem
Re m sen
Rosa F II lives \s, .1 A Simms
Mrs Janie F Burcklmlter vs. Char
leston and Western Carolina Rail
road.
William T Gary, adm, vs. Mamie
Cooper.
I. W Hurch vs. Allen W. Jones.
Caleb Hamilton vs. Rachael Cotton.
Wednesday, October 25.
Tim Lemmon vs Georgia. Railroad.
Anna Washington vs. Augusta Rail
way and Electric Company.
T. L, Jones vs. C. W. Crane and
City Council of Augusta.
Edith Fromms Berekmans and Jos.
R. Lamar, proponnder, vs. Louts A.
Berekmans et aI, hdrs-at-law
Carrie Jones vs Charleston and
Western Carolina Railway.
Charlotte Marlng vs. Charleston and
Western Carolina Railway.
s. C. Parish vs. Emma Parish.
Thursday, October 26.
Clarke or Butt vs Gus Fermenter
et al.
D G Fogarty, nominated executor,
vs Michael Quinn, heir-at-law
Anbury Hull vs. U. B. Frost.
H It Willingham vs Buckeye Cot
ton Oil Company.
William Bosstnger vs Riverside
Mills
Haekett, Bell & Dendy vs. W. K.
O'Keefe. ’
Friday, October 27.
Citizens Bank vs C. T. Schmidt
i N. J Ashley vs. W. F Sheehan et al.
Mrs, Virginia m. Wycllffe vs. Union
Savings Bank
Janies G Dawson et al. vs Eliza
eth N Cranston.
W M, Fisk vs. Charles C. and Fan
nie \\ inburn.
H. C. Eve & Co. vs. J, Jacobs.
Augusta Real Estate Co. vs. Owtn
H. Nixon
P D. Williams, adm.. vs Charles
ton and Western Carolina Railroad.
H M Cassels et al. va. Georgia
Railroad
Citizens Bank va Black. Christie
Manufacturing Company.
NEW PAPER APPEARS.
Waco, Texas. -The Waco Morning
News, carrying full Associated Press
based wire service and other news
features made Its frst appearance here
this morning It Is published by John
G Murphy and C. H. Tuppor. of San
Angelo.
You’ll sey its good too when you try
coo. BINGO is it's name.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
It pays to trade
at home
and at an
exclusive Stove
House where
all parts are
kept in stock
and all stoves
.are put up by
experienced
stove men.
Every Stove we
sell is sold
under a guaran
tee.
Our Motto:
If Not Satisfied
Money
Refunded <
Clever Falsehoods About Public Servants
3o*ie Stories About Heney, Li ndsey and Cannon, Three Mili
tant Figures In the West.
The Kansas City Times prints the
following interesting story: Three
extraordinary men sat down to lunch
eo n together In a Denver restaurant
recently, relates George Creel in the
Columbian Magazine for September
The three men were Judge Ben. B.
Lindsey of the juvenile court of Den
ver, Francis J. Heney, prosecutor of
the San Francisco boodlers, and ex
Senator Frank J. Cannon, of Utah,
who Is fighting politics of the Mor
mon church.
The three men exchanged expert
ences of the slanders and libels that
they had encountered—the lies that
had been told about them to discredit
them and their work with the people.
Mr. Creel sat with them and took
notes. He calls his story, expressive
ly, “Polecat Fighting." And he
writes:
“ ‘What's the worst they ever said
about you, Heney?" Lindsey askad
“And over their dishes the three
bega n to exchange reminiscences of
appalling slanders that had been at
tempted upon them, of miraculous es
capes from those assassins of a pub
lic man's reputation that are hired to
follow every reformer, of amazing lies
circulated by apparently respectable
newspapers and the still more amaz
ing credence give n those lies be in
telligent readers.
Heney's Thrilling Time
"Heney is a man of peculiarly, win
ning genlaJity, with a smile that is
b broad, boyish grin. He told—as if
It were a boarding school row—of
the murderous anack that had been
made upon him by Morris Haas in
San Francisco, and the wav in which
public sympathy had been turned
against hint and to Haas by news
paper accounts of the shooting, not
only in California, but throughout the
whole country, by the dispatches of
the Fan Francisco correspondents.
“ 'You see, they made it out that
Haas didn't want to serve on that
second jury which was to try Abe
Kuef, the grafter boss of JSan Fran
cisco; that he fought against serv
ing because he was afraid his prison
record would he found out—and he
had lived that down, they sail
" 'They described him as the pro
prietor of a cigar etore, who ‘enjoy
ed the respect and esteem of the
community' after years of haru ,vork
and square living Aud so. wnen I
came along and brutally exposed him
—not out of necessity, but from the
sheer joy of disgracing him —the poor
devil went crazy, rushed out and got
a gun. ran back again and shot me.
" ‘As a matter of fact, Haas had
bee n the keeper of a low grocery and
was openly living with a woman to
the shame of hie wife and family.
His prison record wasn't a secret, and
he boasted to his paramour that hia
vote for Kuef's acquittal would put
him back ou his feet There wasn't
a single thing about the man's case
that called for the slightest conside
ration, and it was imperative that 1
should get him out of that jury box.
As for going mad with the disgrace
and shooting me down in a "burst of
insane rage, he hustled out oi the
courtroom and wasn’t seen aga.u for
sevgn months.
■" It wasn't until Reufs third trial
MILLER RANGES
Everybody knows the last word has been said
when you mention the name MILLER, as applied*
to Ranges. A com=
plete line of all the
different styles is
now on sample
and we will take
pleasure in show=
ing them to you.
$35.00 to
SIOO.OO
Miller Ranges
“Come to Us For Labor-Saving
Kitchen Helps of ali Kinds”'
AGENTS FOR THE MAXWELL
AND MITCHELL AUTOMOBILES
that we saw Haas again. Ten ju"or3
nad been selected, and I was prov
ing that, tie eleventh man* had been
a bribe giver and a participant in
municipal corruption. The defense
had exhausted its peremptory chal
lenges, I had two left, and it seemed
a cinch that we would get two hen
est men and begin the trial. There
was pretty generaly belief that Rues
would break down and confess rather
than take chances with a square jury,
and if Rues confessed, tha' meant
bringing in the men highe* up, yov
know.
“ ‘The judge called a nignt session,
the first in the case. As w>- entered
the courthouse that night, Haas was
hanging around at the -top cf a dark
staircase. Foley, my body guard, hap
pened to be walking ahead. He push
ed Haas out of the way. The next
morning Haas came into the court
room, and for two weeks fairiv haunt
ed the place. He was always trying
to slink into the press chairs just be
hind me, and I can’t tell you how
many times Foley shooed him away.’
“ ‘What on earth was the matter
with you!" exclaimed Lindsey. ‘Why
didn't you have him arrested? -
“ ‘On what charge?’ Heney shrug
ged. Right up to the day of the
shooting the papers ridiculed my body
guard, and if 1 had had Haas arrest
ed they would have yelled their heads
off over the 'terrible outrage’ and
my cheap ‘grand standing.' To tell
you the truth, I didn’t think Haas had
the nerve to pull anything off. All
through the three trials the courtroom
was Rill of the gang's rekl bad men,
and 1 reckon I'd got in the habit of
watching them. Anyway, [ had reach
ed a sort of ‘what's the use' stage.
You ought to know how it is. After
the first week or two a man’s nerve
naturally lets down—he comes to see
that if it's going to happen, and all
that If it’s going to happen, it's going
to happen, and all the watching in
the world won't help. Of course, 1
saw Rues and his attorneys going
white every now and then. Even the
judge took notice of their jumping
and dodging, and asked me what 1
thought it meant.
‘‘ ‘Well, after two weeks of con
stant trying, Haas slipped Foley's
eye and got into the chair right be
hind me—close enough to press the
derringer barrel right against my
head You see, the idea was to take
no chances of just wounding me. But
! happened to be laughing at the
time If I'd had my jaw s together 1
would have lost njore than niv hear
ing in my right ear.'
“‘A master slander,' judicially
commented Senator Cannon. 'By far
and away the most successful lie that
the interests ever put across. It
alienated the sympathy of people who
could not have been reached any
other way.'
“ ‘lt caught me,' shamefacedly con
fessed one of the newspaper men.
Brand Whitlock and I talked it over
at the time and’
" 'And you thought I was a brutal,
bullying prosecutor who got what
was coming to him,' Heney r nodded
never mind apologizing. You had
plenty of good company. Wherever I
go I find honest people still believing
the lie—still half convinced that I
brought it al! on myself.’ ”
•“The Car That Owners Advertise”
We take pleasure in refering any of our
friends to the users of the Cole Car, either in
this city or anywhere else.
Model C---4 Passenger—Price SIBOO
In the Cole Car you find class, style and
beauty.
Silence, speed, power pud comfort are lead
ing characteristics of the Cole Car.
Our unit power plant renders it silent.
The wonderful Cole Motor gives it both speed
and power.
The large roomy body, large wheels and long
base makes it comfortable..
*
The Lamar Motor Co.
C. B. LAMAR, Pres. J. C. LAMAR, Sec. & Treas.
H. J. GEWINNER, Manager
For Free Demonstration Phone 2726
c-Ci!\iDAY, OCTOBER T 5.
Judges of good cigars say the BINGO
is the best on the market.