Newspaper Page Text
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rejoinder of smith
TO HQ WBLl’S SPEECH
In the next i»Ioe
=====
ill hi
In DU rejoinder .if lulf an In hl«
litlMie With Clack Howell, Hr. Smith
|»olic a* follow*:
p-s, Miow ci|i*en». i hid opt know
L g> much afraid ? »'«* ol Mr. Howell
I mill I llitenef! to h|jn- race to face
|»ad afraid of him! Hour ridiculous!
nhot? HI* Intellectual power? llo*
I * ,i,„wn to you that he haa any?
I■ u ant to tell you pp'e thing. I have
I-it: charged him with anything that
Inot true. I h*ve charged him to
I w, face with the record* of the nenate
|.Mch show- what he did when the
lit. fonale, having passed the house;
, k4t he was' president and that he
•flently If 1 |t die. I have charged that
,, the next session Murphy Candler
introduced the bill and that he never
Sened Ills Up* for It un|j| It had al-
I JJjiiy received the IS Votes that made
I K 'Here Is a leltfr from Murphy Cund-
I u r v. 1: i Introduced the bill. He tella
I me that If <'IM'k Howell "'?* for thla
I bill hefure lie vdled he never found It
I hi I ■•■ III give the paper to the pres*.
I He supported that fRinchlge bill Just
hike he worked for General Gordon,
i Thtn he t ome* to you and talk* about
| m v frankness or iny truth. I refer you
I to'hi* statement at Montlcel|p that'he
sorke.l for General Gordon. It was
I published In hla paper that he said at
I Month cllo that he worked and vptpd
I for General Gordon. If n man Is to be
I crltli Ised for «h‘ot he says, I wilt leave
I >|r jlnufll to th? criticism that follows
[shat lie said.
Back 19 Freight Rates.
•nut lot us get back to freight rates
I moment. Let US go hack to what he
I la tiding now- tfe says lie won’t he ye-
| i;H.ii«ihlc for tpe editorial written In
Ibis paper; somebody else did If. Rut
I lore is an extract from the speech he
| matir at Mubteton only a few days ago.
I He says your railroad commission
I itands ready to rectify pny discrlmlna-
Itlm in rates In lie state, and these are
■the cnly rates over tyhleh the commjs-
er. He saya there are dla-
In local rate* noiv com-
fte prjdes himself upon
EJjJ* *■»* Ohe Stevens' son-in-law.
wanted tb* boys to mskp a light the
to put the old gang froi
and wanted ....
Ipe Democratic executive committee,
re fil* 1 b f** to hol <> ‘hen.
n ^Sjsmp.%ssst
imnir from eft* xui* at
ilded fo their xj*w. Now,
out f
who - were
Urge and I'ylMfUi tp tfilrVl
I* It fair. Is It candfd, when hs knows
he wu* for yeoman*, when hs know*
the $d“ang* , th"t I was forced to*ake!
aet°uTC? w nj? , ca > 0 |6fr«;
i power.
plained of.
the proposition that there wi* nothing
that the railroad Commission' could do
that it did riot w ish to do. There is the
■ stinv. Anybody con write a few nice
I lines about pop- he lriyes ^IWnta. Any
I raphemore at cfljlegt; could have de-
l.-l.'iimeil tlpise fpif sentences with
Istil. ii lip expressed fils loVp. My fejlow
(citizens, let me go one step Iprllier. H(s
Isviiient want of Information upon the
subject Is pitiful. \Vhen lie told you
that lie had given to tHe rqljn
of Georgia the credit
Iductloo In fiRlght fati
Ifroad coin-
Calet!. that Vo3t body,
v..ur chamber of commerce, your
freight late bureati secured, and went
mt to state, ‘Y*V,‘ t gave'It tp thetp.'
they got It from the catlr n ad comrols-
|»i.in.’ why pis ignorance _iri puifui. _
■saying lie 'will 'do, withdraw frri$
Irace. I think, between me qm
It ant* to ivlthpfaiV. He Is n
■■jMuiw. 1 was glad tp concede him
■liiiost like doing What he keeps on
ffdfc - a -
,-jg.u thd ybu,
his Joint cllnounsldn. ' I wunt tobooiit
I., I Y Bi I.Jt candiaT ily deTr
SXe’i. 1 * ?* ■■ ‘be statement
that hp worked for the election of I
eral Gordon. “ 1 .
Explains Requsst to Yeomans.
But let us see what else he Is do
ing. Let us see what els* he I* polng.
He ha* ’utterly misconstrued what I
said to Yeomans and he has mussed
and mixed It so completely that you
cannot tell what took place at all from
hi* description of It. I did want Yeo
mans to call the state fommlttfe to
gether. I suggested It. I wanted them
to get lo work. I wanted them to dp
something besides being ornaments.
But they' belonged to the old machine
and they were not much for Parker
anyhow, and they would not offer to
come. I suggested, |hen, the advisabil
ity of (heir considering the question
as to what would be the future of the
men voting for Watson who hod vqtpd
formerly and during the-years after
words for the organisation. After con
ferring' about It we both ‘ concluded tt
wa* not necessary to call them to-
K ther. We did not want them, but
CW that nothing could tend to keep
thsni aivny from the' vottng If they
wanted to. . x .
Repudiates Committee's Action-
"Noiy what has the committee don*
but insult everybody who Wont’ prom
ise what he will do year* hence? I
utterly repudiate that pondpet of the
commute*. If that Is Democracy, I re
pudiate that with It. And he says f
attacked the organisation, the leader*.
knows as much about Deriiorratlc prin
ciples D* h* knows about freight rates.
«'f*
him up on<! koep h|r
not five ybUmfeH Irt
I*.in name that he ivlll
Commipsipn Hfid NotbiOB to Do With It
| "Sow, t want to fell >*ou about t|ia(
tjuitlpn. The state railroad potpmls-
iop hud nothing to do with It. They
I.-' interstate ratej. ' They' irsre tipi
.nl rates, tt was obtained by an
bereement front the general frf|glit
pmnnf the big rajlroSdsyetem*'burn
ing lino Georgia from PHt(i|de of
kMighi. and the railroad commission
rid homing to do with it. ' 1 'won’t
|uu>t him of Intending to "tote whirt
fniie. r doirt'tnjint he know*, and
lor railing Ijl
lo save linn.
ip* you ought to expect'him
iforind- "1 'don’t btamC hlin
ienr.” replying to d remark from the
iMIen.e. “fwriht to come trt hts
ctpies as tie knows about rreight rates.
Poor, prtlful party, If he Is td lead It!
Poor, unfortunate merchants It he Is to
run freight rate reduction for ItaeV ?
Let us look at* it a moment. Let us
turn te other states. Suppose there
were Hepubllean committees all over
the united States Wlio decided that
every mari who vo(ed' with them this
year and changed hts vote fb'r the
Republican nominee two year* hence,
should be disqualified. What would we
think qf It? We Would jhlril? that
when we come to discuss the |*si|es
that they ought to have the right to
determine what they wquld do. Whet
t condemned your committee for Wia
undertaking to fie up every Georgian
as to What they were to do tw'o years
hence.' I am not ‘afraid to rnndemri
that. The people all over Georgia con-
dehih that. OVer two-thlras of the
county’•committee* had acted. They
knew’ that' they obeyed the' wishes of a
small ring In opposition to tbe wishes
of the pebple.
■'dUqt on* filing more, n^d I eni
you fpointing to Mr. Iloncll), and
simply Invito you. my fellow citizens
to join the procession."
Mr. Smith concluded with hts grew
'tpry. In which the little bo> let h|.
favorite goat go because of the crowi.
he wes In. saying: "I lor* you, Billy,
but I can’t stand your rompauy.’i
SMITH DISCUSSES
FREIGHT RATES
Continusd from Pag* Two.
th# party, yqf), If Pfctssary. h? *h*
■this Isglslature, tq bring It to an end.
No man should be nominated for the
state senete who hes not been selected
at the ballot box, nil the voters In hi*
entire senatorial district participating
Ip the nomination. If the people or
Georgia are to control their own af
fair*. they must strike at the very
root of those evils tn our present *ys-
tem that hlndet' popular goverhment.
They must not only Imv* the authority
thsoretlcally. but they must have It
practically, (foil] tfje party machinery,
which gives them ail
exercise th* authority.
"I cunpot tpo strongly Impres* upon
the employee* of tad railroad compa
nies, the men engaged In liaridllng the
trains, and working tn the shops *m
working on the track*, that their In
terest*arp with'tb* Mopt* Iq this
•‘remGf. ri lie Sam* I dltlcal potter
which prevents action In behalf of
lower freight and passenger r
prevents legislation to proteet the ...
ployees of (he ro|lroi)il rqpjpanles. The
laws of Georgia do not tndsy protect
the employees of railroad companies
a* do the English lows and th* laws of
many state* of the UnlttH.
"Tokf us an Illustration the rule lt>
Georgia that If a railroad’employee is
In the slightest tsgree at fault, he
rdnnot recover In ci»* he Is TriJiireil.
This |a tp* jaw In few state*. Nearly
everywhere eicepl In Georgia, the ex
ercise of reasonable cure |? oil that- is
OTfeatu^iii
WM IntroJut-Fd Jn fho penatf which put
wd employee* In till* reapect upon
rallrondfi, an^ thei.
the senate, mnde quick worH
Important to the Interest of the «m-
am go-
ia|f hour Is
more,
■■. . they piy
, or not. < «
'I ask that those going out will ho
os quiet as they can. because t am not
sSw’going oSn
who u-ant to heat* the near Wlf.
Goes‘After The 8avanqah ftsws.
!‘t cmlt_'ypuc atfentlon to ijie"ntl|-
tude of The Rayannah Morqlng News
toward Mr. Howell's candidacy. The
8i)vannati News Is the paper which
runs a Jrtit’ ofttce and tights' iml«n la
bor In Savaririnh. tytiy,'Mr? Hop’cll
used Ills own reporter,' Mr- l-ew|s, to
send a report of one of hts speeches
to' The Savannah News.
VTher* |s nothing they can Bay about
me persbrially that-they sro not ivllllnk
to use. Ray after Urfy th»lr editorials
attack me. -— L ’—
piiii' from that par for chhiliy.
pu*e the statement, but I um sorry
■'man u ho win make statements he
ternw*
I' lilwu hecitlrie'of tluit InVineV. I have
: tiecame'of that'monCy.' I have
mt paraded It. I h;ivp never wonted
a man lie put UP to Mk pif qtles-
r.i In ought ll out. nnd he has harped
11! hit since. I have rtever'rcfetted
■ speech fidrri thnf time to this
S h Jef«l,r c WA«:
from ihar mopsy.
. i»».
i It an over 'Georgia. 't have told
t n s In a personal way, blit It It a
; -I story and If lllustrofes the ram-
'ai.-rn I hove had conduct. ‘ I have
s'n lighting the Cause' df the pehpte
"i Ju«t cutes nqnlnst the - combination
f ran,,,,,,! lawyefii'and hired polltl-
l*n« i knew whin I ittnrfed the light
ft) "u Hist even,’ falsehood that ma-
Ignfty arid rngenultV rohld suggest
|7*htd I"’ luiricit ht me. I hkVe not been
lliapiifiliited. Now for the stoiy.
'Th
nth 'hor.ma WW hhd ■ dream and he
freameii he died’ and wept to hell.
(rYnlvellng man down In
rsta Who had n
(■"a I here he'met the devil, nnd the
I'vliasked lit in What wait going nn In
1. and he told him that Upke
■ nil! as running for governor os’the
I'H ■ andldate nnd was going to
Mneeted, The dsyll got mud He
ii'i he was not for Hoke Smith and did
■' Hke him at all. nnd he reached
nt .111(1 touched a button, and at once
""ile lot of tittle dkylls irtfot up Ip
plr. and he says; ’Boy*, get ready
K” to Georgia. ‘ nr - all over the
Ip S ing nfolte Stntth even'whene.
goel him from th* mountains to !|te
Will line.’ The little devils left to
r *m'!y. The big devil turned around
'he lirmhiner hnd asked him Who
' .'uniting Hoke Snitch, nnd fhe
''miner mentioned some of th# can-
l™*h''. some of the hired politician*
o of the corporation nttnrneys
line of the balance, and Ihri devll
leached down and touched the
■nee more; and back ram* th<
r-vils, and the h|g d*vil said to
! Roys; | hath- f.mnB out who I*
Hoke Smith, so It wopft be
r' lry f.ir yqn | C go to Georgia St
I Cslls Howell pres) Joker.
outli- has come n'ir# wltlt another
He l» a great joker. He lias told
' """ -lory about my controlling the
-nventlhn ’when 1 Yeoman* was
“de i re-hVrit or chafrmtm* He knows
'•"! not want Yeoman* for chairman,
ken body else knows' so. ft*’ knows
F* 'he Parker men did not take any
K, 1 " ‘h* organisation of that con-
JJ T h »y made their light for Pat-
“ ''ft the old giing tn run th*
,' • And he was a Yeomans man.
f -uaioht for Yeomans.' Yeo-
There or* only two plausj
ble explanations. One would tie that
t’lark Howell and Estlll are In com
bination. Anotttrir Would bo that' Ks-
tlll knows that Ulirk Is dead and
out of the race, and'ddq't w*qt to kill
him any deader. Why. If .von should
vote tor ('lark Howe|l you Mow yQti
are not voting for a governor. You
hnve heard him here tonight. Why. 1
knew from the first It he would Just go
ployees of the. railroads, but th* peo
ple must be tn control before a
of their passage lyoutd be jus^
To Impress Employ***.
’’Aq effort lias been priade <o Impress
the employees of railroad companies
with the idea that a reduction
freight rates would pieon a reduction
of their wages. I cannot too empjmtl-
cally tell them thqt I would never be
a party to atich action.
’’The shippers of Georgia do not de
sire an advantage at the expense of
that faithful body of men who make
th* operating force on the railroads.
They Insist that the railroad compa
nies should pay their employs** good
wages. It I* not the money whlmt I*
expended |hnt we criticise.
’’We deny the right' pf rallrpa<l coifl-
linnles to pay dividends and Interest ot
watered stocks and bond?, we run
cede them the right to pay good wage*
and to make a fair profit on the-money
dcthally put Into the properties. '
fleer* who px their salaries realise that
the railroad companies could get no
proflt by grinding down their employ
ees, as th# law w||l nr ~ mj
Ings of the road’ at n
ees, as th* law w||l stop tpe mt earn
Ings of the road’ at n fair proflt upoi
the money actually Invested, nml when
the railroad 'ronipahles'.underti
profit upoi
lit Whci
took ’ to
they would bo met with the
rate*, and that watered stock
over Georgia and
at him and listen to him hi* name
pegnl*. All If"' prcsllg* he hks
I in Georgln ha* disappeared since
the people'have found him put. But
he say* I should hnve left It to KultOn
courity, and' he woljhl retire If I beat
him here. 1 don't want him to retire,
t want hint to stay |n the race. (Turn
ing nnd faring Mr. Howell). Since 1
bought The Atlnn|a Journal, your pa
per nnd your people have relentlessly
followed me ot every point of life, an 1
i want you to stay In'this race imfii
the flnlsh. And when th* Pnlsh comes;
It Is your tlnlsh. *
« >Vill Crush Ring
UK of the railroad lawyer*
Is Strong' end the grant combination*
hre powerful, but when the psopl* Of
Georgia cdn'rlud# lo take a part? oiey
will rise Iff tlielr majesty'end crush the
political agent* of the great eorporn-
tlnns and their allies and' their big law-
Je *f called the people of Georsla to
tlori. and, thank GAd, they are ar
rayed In bit tie line. From the moun
tains to the Florida line, from Ala
bama to Houth I’arolinn, the people of
Georgia hare takeri charge of his race;
the fact Is, | am not exactly running
for governor, the people ore making
the race, arid Juat ualng my name to do
It with; You can fool the people a
while, hut cannot fool them all th»
time: On the ?Sd dny of AUgnst; vflrin
the news cornea, Fulton county, mad*
uri of the same patriots that are found
In the balance of the state, will lln» up
with' the bniahre of the people of Geor
gia In a triumphal march for ponjilar
government. The'tlme will come When
It will trike more brains as well ns
more brawn to"make’a tafe in Georgia.
It you want to hnve a part In the nom
ination for gDverndr and whnt fo riend
possibly to Dick Russell, possibly to
sOme Hew map. then vote- for -nark
Hrtwelt 1 for H he carries the’county,
you don’t know who I* going to lie
governor. You'a re voting for a pig Inn
Bag. He known, they all know, thaf
hate got mors strength In aeorgln nnd
a greater following because I nm aim-
ply representing th* people, thin all
four of them put together. They show
ed t|il» when ihey postponed the nomi
nation olitiost urttfl nfter the election.
Primaries Will be Osciaive.
"The fact jn. they could not rail f
too soon,'until they know I hid th»m
bentep, and then they could not post
pone the agony foo long. But tjie ?5d
or August wilt com* along some tfme
and the JJd of August will come along
CM? wi
ptqpo
made
freight rate
K^e7iri4.u b en d y’« X Ji? #:
ploree*.
"Tho men who dp the actual wprk
on re|lrrtad(i have »eeq my ctlenfa In
Case* 'ngHInst railroad companies for
twenty-ilve year*. I have sought‘to
serve them bo‘b <P «nd out bf the
court house, and the^ ran trust me atilt
:^ u h^rajX'c.« , ' ,,y, ? o,,,,on
Dfsfrsnchlit th* Ntgro.
"I advocate legislation hlilch will dis
franchise 95 per cent of the negroe* ot
Oeorgla. I cannot too strongly state
that I do not advocate legislation which
will disfranchise qny white mat) In the
state.' fjlx Southern atateq hive passed
legislation dlsfrenchlslrig the negroes.
The testimony whteh comes over.
1'heimlwly (rent ihffjt state* i* that
the legislation has worked well and to
flib satisfaction of the people 6f the
states, that the negro** ore better la
borfr* and more contented than evei
before, and that they hafe been entirely
eliminated from politic*. In presalnir
th« disfranchisement of tlra n cgro, 1
stand upon th* same prlnclple enunrl
nted by AbreHam' Lincoln—
!’ 'I 'Will say that i am' not a
have been In favor of brlngl
in any 'way the aoClat and
equality of the white and black
that I am not, nor ever have been. In
favor of Inaktng voter* or Juror* Of ne
groes, nor of qualifying them to hold
ofrlre nor lo hiter-marry with white
, I dl«api>rnv<Hj an
to pan legislation
tliafraiu hMiiJc the negroog. Today It li
a t-.-iT u. tni i siki’ i ■ • j
no <i|>|>oKltlon fo Uout f‘»r jw Mfit-al i**»
•OS and f.n Ho il.tp** that |H>lltKhI
could be pmg} out of It. The
Atlanta ('onatltutloh editorially ap
proved di*frnnchl?tMnpnt leglulfttlon In
1901. If It* arm not for the' fif
teenth amendment to the constitution
of the t'fitted State**. I would favor leg-
talutlon whlpb eliminated the right of
•uftrago to the bTack* mitn rfi CIrorgla.
That amendment only praventa the
■tate from controlling who nhall vote
to the extent of declnrlna that the righ
tq vo^ ahull not he denied of abridged
on account of race, nddf or prevlbui
condition of eervitude. Leglidatlim
can be pnaeed which will accomplish
the desired result, which will not In
terfere with the right of any white
man to vote, and yet rid the Mote of 95
per cent of the negro voter*.
Favors Alabama Plan.
“I advocate leglalagon upon the line
qf th* lSgI*lat|od nd'jpted Ifi Al«b»»na
It would be aqbstantlally this: That
In addition to the prencpf requjreqiejiu
for rtglatratlon in flgqrgla, jsa’ch per-
uon rrglMterlng muat bring hlmaelf
BWUt.r « r,>v ' ?
arm fin regfMer aqii vote.
'Becond. The itrscemlant* of tpen
who sarvsd In the Revolptlonery par?
or the war of lilt, the Mextrun war. |h
the war bet«rcn the state*, elthsr »n
th* Unlmi nr the I’onfederate slue, can
i “" i -d' vote.
[•’or six months aftsr the
adqptlon of the law, nqy man wha In
the Oplhlob of the reil»th»fJn haa a
a P »W.ngd w ,y W “ "
i?%^r. U ?o n n. O «UI\ 0 on r 3^,e«
hfm G rtft ?li*.5[fk d r?‘?.R r »in'S
%t the law further provide that n
RfM ##rate^I?d^
pay'bis taxes to register. 1
"These provisions make no dlrcriin-
Inatlon on" account or raci, color ir
previous condition of servitude: hiR
without that din ilmlnsttoh, they tdr-
nlsh the opportunity for every wBjU
man to register, and thyy dp not per
mit the opportunity ror 9 per bon', of
the negroes to register.
"But m>’ opponent Insists that no
necessity pilots In Georgia fo) s)icli
in roupd numbers, 125,am m'-
■ in Georgia who, If they paid tllHr
.;
There at" *Yxt) iiv. ■.iqqtte* in Geor-
m
A| to the Vrt*>tf p r i >» r ) r ’
We hnve many elections In Georgia
Iq which the "w)>|te prlrimry cpn not
b* used, such as F'f l I!ou«.
location of county court house elec-
tlon*,' local school tag ejection*, and
fence elections. In these elecll ms. the
vote °( Ml? jgoqraflf purchnsahle jl?*
S ro te just as effective as the yple of
le white man; but I believe that title
legislation la Important with rpferpup?
Co alt of our elections.
"I favor
man whe
wap* tt* . _ t JP Bl..„
the recent action of tiie state Demo
cratic Executive committee. ' It passed
nil* Which "os calculated
cry mini out of t
or our eiccinuis.
avor the "lilto primary, hut any
,vho sqys white primaries Will a|-
b* suflUk'M Is iiilstaken. 'Tokfi
. Vr
’ the prlmnry '
pacts lo Vole the tti'Fibllqhn 1
or the-Prohlbltton tleltnt, .ir the
ullst ticket. In the national election.
!’J (lo nof thlHjf the resolution Wh
penpler'and I Wilt say, In addition
this, that jhere'l* a physlral dlfferen-.
befween the While and 'black ’ races
wh|ch, I believe, will foroyer forbid the
twi races living together on term* oT
social and political equality.’
“Light Is breakldg upon the people
1th rsference to
' rif'the negro.
Hon. Charles Francis Adams, during
the month of May, on returning from a
ay of several months In Africa, d»-
| tkr inferiority of tbe negro
elsred th* utt
race w ti
African
fertor ’to 'the Boult
close of slavery." H 1 , W^ rT
dlfferCnce between the African and An
glo-Saxon wag too great \o admit of
measurement.’ " 1 1
“He declared that, looking about him
nohg African* In AfflCIC fhe scrile*
o the Bbuthern negro at the
’ slavery." rfe tteclared tltaj ttli
some time, and you won’t have to wait
until the convention meet* «o And out
Who will be the next governor oroeor-
In the first place he won t have It
... In the first place he won i nave li zacu ....a..., ..... c,,...,-
{Eecause te cannot carry Fulton county. clP4»l'«>. shvuld fmv# beeq dealt wife
States have Indulged on this topic. We
have m-runHy wallowed In a bog of self-
sufficient Ignorance, especially we phil
anthropists and thsoriats of New Eng
land.' ' He quoted with approval Worn
Blr Hamficl Baker, h*.'fjStoWa: ' ’So
long a* It I* generally considered that
the negro and white man are to be gov
erned b? the e*me law* arid guided by
the same management, so long will the
fdrmer remain m Ihdtn In the side'of
every romrriunlt.tiln which he may Un
happily Belong.’ Then he declared upon
hts own pari "the whit* man rind black
man cannot flourish together, the lat
ter helrig considerable Ilf number, Under
the some system nf government.;
Work Oene in Ignorance.
‘Then' he sift! ’The no'rttHooe py
those who were In political control at
the close of our civil war was work
done In utter Ignorance of ethnological
law and total disregard of unalterable
fact. • • • The negro, after emsn
its beta
rous trouble, but aytothfr executive
uinmlttrc might make ll *o bread
drive oat of our primaries eveiy
n 'who Would ndt ■pledge himself
permanently to yp|* for th? national
nomlneen of the Democratic party.
"OvVr 69,000 white men Wmitfl tntre-
by b*' etcludrid frem ot|r Democratic
primaries. This would reduce tile re
maining white vote tp about 210,000.
and leave outsldk the Democratic patty
275,000 men entitled to vote In tho
state. ‘
"Today, an effort I* being made to
form a coalition umoltg 'wblte men
whop) It I* clolmed will be excluded
from the prlmtfry to rtih aM IrtdepefltD
ent ticket find use the negro rote.
"I believe flic wise course Is to plant
ourselves squarely upon th? probqst-
tlon In Georgia th*t th* negro I* In no
respect the equal of th? Whlfe man,
ano that he can not in future In this
state occupy a position of eqaatlty.
occupy the natural statu* of thefr race.
fcwirK
whites and the blnrks. will flno them-
* elves' treated w|(h greater kindness
and will prove to be more eonlejited
and bcltfr wprkers than they are to-
HOKE 8MITH THE OBJECT
OF gI8 PWN pHARITY
Conf-ued frpn) Page On*.
LIVES ARE LOST
III RIG STORM
TEARS DOWN HOUSES AND
DOES GREAT DAMAGE.
Picnic Parly of Twenty Strangely
Miising—Mepibers Thought
To Be Dead.
By Private leased Wire.
Detroit, Mich., June Detroit and
parts of Ontario were vlelted yester
day by a violent wind alarm, which *j
lljne* raged «t the rale of 90 m|lef an
to r -
In Detroit th* street car traffic was
teftKs'iRii'mi'S'ig
The storm was no less sevsre out In
the slaf?. Halt eccoimtunled the Wlnt
"■ nW«W5f
« reut dam age to v
attlds the '
Ircps w'ar
plds tjt? animal
Mown down and'
vegetation
I tent of 1
row* were drowned at Kltnl. Msn'y o
e telephone linen Were PUT ou
nlsslon.
. 'tfar^ot"^^ u!h , . ,, 'a k nS C M e | r .*' ^5,'ne “‘?m"
while «e|epH.)n(ng.
par ' ,y,tu
do* id? fe^rVAS
year* old were uprooted and hurled
arroas the street, while tall telephone
Unconflnned reports of loss qf life nd
the river ere current, one pf iht
reports Is that eight lives wet
he rival' near Wdlfs. a ream W. .
I Irked up by the wind and
te Qfllf’lsle bridge.
, rapt) companies are making
JLSj.ndjflfl-^mT' 1 ' ,tf jgj 1 ^
FEAB THAT PICNIC PASTY
PERISHED DURING STORM
«>’ Frivols |-en*ed \\Tre. |
■Toronto, Out.. Jtinu 9.—’■ha tornado,
arriompgtjleft by a clpudburijt. which
swept over this territory, did damage
amounting lo hundreds of thousands
of dollars. A very'(urge portion of th#
city I* entirely Unroofed; families arc
Impassable on account of being tilled
with ireris. No fatalities have b 1
ported, but It Is feared that
Jf
!
SPOKEN RV CROWD
A ttiw of the remark* made by 1 mem
ber* of the* nudlencer
IK IKK,
PACKERS ORDERED
TO FIX THEIR HOUSES
WRECK INVESTIGATION ~
COMPLETED SATURDAY
BLAME CANNOT BE FIXED BE
FORE THE MIDDLE OF
IIPXT week.
Tjie Inveallggtkm a* to tpe cot.se*
of (he u'rei'h at fg|r «rget cretllnf
WedneiUay night, caqafid by t|i(; rul*
Mttlqn of q f-pptrul qf Meut«ii| x^\av
(isacnger with an AtjtfjlUl nnd IVesl
in wlilch
jins 'was' killed and tniiiy inlu'reil, Was
linlshrd Baturday . site in tm. How
ever, the flxlng of the hlumt can not
Imi acrompllehed, n was lidielilly
(tatejl, until tj)« t?stlmoqv J)t t||« sit-
. four . _
hnse who have been Conti net Inc the
Investigation are HufMrlntrtid.'iU \V. M
•*ox and Treihhiastcr F. U. ItefflteU,
of the Atlanta sud W’est I'-rim. untl
Official Threatens to
Close Up Plants For
Violation.
MORE WRJSOK VICTIMS
ASH $20,000 DAMAGES
Taro more <|itiiiflfre fu|l« n;nlii*t tlm At
lout* nml Went ro|ut oiifl the rmtriil «iii
ammnt of the wrvqt oi tbe Atlniifn qqd
We*t Point plynk trn lit June • were filed
Friday aftertMMtb. Alum Ititrdlii'. I»r her
mother and tiei| friend. )|r*. 4. At. Iliirtlln.
«*!»■ for nllegliig Oin|' |jer "nervet
were ■liuttfred niHt t|io w** liriilcetl.
fiaafuNfaiuJ l|ijiired In fifitj abofil her
rjj. jftoijrticV.. |«idf. W(t: siHjotijj'o it nil
py Prlrtst? |-rased wire
Chicago, J^« 9.—jlulltjtng t'oiiiiuts-
Slpner Bsrtsen has given Kelson Mor
ris A Co. flv# days to comply with ths
building laws, under pcnOity of t los
ing the piunt- Fifty-seven Violatl ,,■
uf the law were fount! In the packing
"A list of violations of the building
ordinance Is hereby handed to you,"
read* Rartzen's order. "You will com
ply with thess requirement* within flv*
(lay* or I shell close your nUtot " ‘St
"We have ordered that true dr fat '*
I remedied," said the superintendent
'ifflmsieM'JZ
ha* been ordered. We will obey
w."
TAKE A MODERATE - VIEW
PF THE BEEF SCANDAL).
^Pfclal t '(title.
London. June 9.—After s week's dlq-
cp Ml tut of tb» t'hlcago meet (Cgqdd.
th're la n tendency among'Britons to
bel|eve that the evlle are npt so grc.it
as was. supposed at the outset. Many
of the principal Journals tak* a more
take to play Into the hands of the Ocr-
5 isn imckere. who are the derceet dq-
ouncrirs df th* Afrterlrhri iiroducu.
h? statements at the weekly meeting
of the Liverpool health committee, r?-
aSajirlng Urltleh consumers as to Ato-. •
lean tinned meste, are the chief fsetors
III bringing about the reaction.
BRUNSWICK FANS BUY
FRANCHISE FROM
ALBANY.
Special to The "Georgian.
Brunswick. 0*., Jupe (-oysl fans
ch.s fi d lajt ojqhj with ,
as, of Albany, lo tran*?
I I'resldjnt •
i»|w M lr*nci"
heailay wlti'Cordate, thlff trif>■<■ |H"
Iter? *(th Cultimbus.
PRADO QF 4 NS LEY PARK
WILL HA YE LINE PA VINO
Edwin P? Ansley Has Dqnp Rem^r^bie War 1 ''
To Secure All Cjjy Convepienpe^ For
Beautiful Resident^ Sectipp. •
frail I
soak it iq blip: ;
Lay It on heavy. Bo!
Seventh Inning. Otnrk!
Hoff about freight titles?
MtMimU
’divine
April 27, bar seeount
“■ ' "20, brir accoopt, 14; and
7. BO
1.00
Smith, the candidate with
call’:
February 2. two botles Somer
set Whisky BI.50
April 17, one quart of sherry . |.|0
April " '
stay
beV itl' Bdmerset Whis
ky •
December 14. water ......
f call your attention," said Mr.
....well, to the following entry In re 1
fn«. and the red ink Owner’s rebate gU
eq h|n}:
April 11, bottle eperlal fine II-
•W-#
December 15. owner’e rebate
of onsethlrrf . . . .••• .15.00
w fent '4v;. r s.
right In the earn* spot
Glare: _
Hole wanted thnee negroes In Wash
Ingtflh t/> watt on Blmr “
RttRUP 1
How-Bnilth-Horw-llow-Bin-Bm-Hoo.
ray, htHtrny; hats up arid thrown awayl
&ln't* be U toQ hard on hint!
f>t‘s"have « little more of the boose
talk; I IlSaMt! " ‘ ” r ” ' ■' r ‘ '
Freight rates, freight rat?!, hooray
(amsll boy of mine)!
Talk to him. Hoke!
Hooray for Dr. Nunnally!
Phew!
The Hope of the Slate, hooray!
How about tho boose story, Hoke?
l-ast lap, lloke. belter sprint!
ItOoray,' Roomy! (a qon pjrtlren).
Alright, bubber, well stand by yflu!
That’s a'hot ope!
■■■■■ -that Mr. Blnlth
•PJeJl of the charity he made
fere pc- to In Taf
allafuioet
if
IS SERIOUSLY ILL
Spactal Gable—Copyright.
London, June Dispatches from
Teheran report" the serious Illness of
ltJ6 fil'lfl uf Fffliil. * *
Hr. Th. Moricssen. „f th* ttootoglesl )|»-
Beast St ('(qwnhigcn. Is (it |,reseat tn Wash,
laxton. .tadyisr i*" »*» Hi tpe .Nsilotuil
Mr.sraiu,
Let* him have tt hot, f-’lffk!
Put him out; put him out!
Let him stay In!
How’s'Toln Watson?
lie’ll nevrih nlske the boat!
How about Blsliop Turner?
Oh, thSiVe Mr. thf and Bo on the
Hurrah for Howell; It’s all hla way I
(going out).
Hurrah for Hoke; he won the debate!
(ditto).
GORMAN'S TOGA
FALLS 0N WHYTE
By private leased Wire
Baltimore, Md., June 9.—Governor
Warfield hss appointed William Plhk-
ney Whyte, former governor, as United
States senator to succeed the late Ar
thu Pue Gorman. It'had been generally
supposed that Gorman and Whyte were
bltte/ political foes? artd’ th* appoint
ment. for till* reusop. lias rauaed con
siderable comment.
TM"new senator was born In this
city August 9, 1924. He sjudfed law,
took a course at tbe Harford Law
School and was admitted to the prac
tice of Me profeeston’ Id 1(49 ' He Whs
elected to the house of delegates of th*
Maryland iHtlslaldre In HIT. He re
Ijul ji very small portloji of tho ci||
sens of tjijq c|ty rcsl||e whet B<jw|p
P. Ansley has j>*en doing toward the
rSlilUMlPfl Ilf ff Qtaat'cf At|*n|p jn tlfl?
For mpre than six niontli* s hundreij
t?#m* and more (hen ge maiji’ liiep
l>?en " l Nh-
tlful Ansley park to Its present condi
tion. Thl* great force, tinder the per
sonal direction of Landscape Kiiglneer
fluff la {till engaged In ihe wortc. It js
Impossible f? place on pppcf what has
been accomplished. More than t?n
mils* of msgolflcent bouleysrdi and
driveways, 76. fp end 90 f??| In width,
!>«ye ***en *U(jr<| (o' jhe city, tp#py of
the*? covering some pf the.moil his
toric polnj* iq lli? ha|(ie(tei(j* dllri?*
«l>? pf 4 ,l 9 n !*'
Thl? week jho coonty commissioners
passtd up th* ppViof' «f tjt” Prado of
Ansley park from Peachtree circle to
Piedmont avenue. This action was
taken because tills convenience means
a saving of a mile and half to the grp*
era) ptjpllc. Prcvjoq* to this time nlj
fwslsn ??rr esraiifiH fa «'■&» tllhtr
Flflegpth sfreet oj [he r<Hitjwijy oppo-
all? fV’esa f.'olller’* pffcj, epmp ihr?e
miles beyond Fjftcijptp street. An ef
fort to get this roadway, tpaklng pos
sible the connection of these two imiei
Important fe'*identlit| thoroughfer?* In
Atlanta, haa beep ipjife for aeverat
year*.
ernor Swann United States *c
fill out the'term hf Rie tate
iojjfjop, sy>riri|r3
Beth City and Ceunfry Advantagss.
in this'developnient, for which $lr.
Ansley la personally and solely fespon-
sjtjje, city watjr, aewers pnd fwyepienf
ape guaranteed fp tli [p*' residenjs of
dpsjcy park, 'f’hje means nlithjng less
(hap ‘hat every proper j? owner In Ihe
park will enjoy every cl|y advantage
while at the eame lime hla liome Is
ejtuated In [hg very midst of tjie ftmj-
hills of the Blue Ridge. '
Perhape the' greatest advantage of
this peaut|ful park property Ilea In
th* fact thnt‘ , lt I* located dlrectly op
poslle Piedmont park-
W?;t fcUHBtfrilf gf •!'- » UlreFtlf
faces that pofjlop of piedmont park
which nas been saved for Its natural
jBfltfr ?pj remit always be presereejf
as th* coolest resilnif place and fa-
rsrw? p!e>'f r ! , .?,;!i 1 r| 1,11 AMsnWF
for comlpe gep?ratlone.
U |? jus] sucji 'local!.t,is as tpls that
have mad? prqpjjty, similarly located,
Iq other i'lties, jitp most yaluajiji ■>(
n|l metropolitan t?*l estate. It ipfnpt
tUut this ssotjop must'pectmie th* Geij-
trul Park, Weet, of Atlanta, end tn*
home of the nncel residences of th«
rjly In the Ipimsdlate figure. It Is tl’.lr
aim* pndffloiH park; also, which u
to be (lie hiiflte bt tho BxposKloa ot
aifdeo value of real estate In fhls Itu-
fllSdlp'T-tf'lvn f»f 'bis *“tns fjffjq
'PR H?P 1| V tt?
Greater Atlanta at Hai)f
Atlanta Is Just at the beglp^lgg "l
> m m ^ puidir sesit
lucji ns rap ntit lHt found In all of
b?r »'!f[d?|ftl (jl*to'r[t. ’ ■*' '
«.tHl|ierp [ agent* are Durryjng ty g|-
Isnta as nevsr before, and ftuttiricj
spd grept Industrie* grp pnplyjni f"t
*[) fhe/ pup
land. -In 1171 he wes alerted governor
of Maryland and In 1124 United Slates
senator.
in 1110 he del-lined re-election a*
senator) and in Hte'fAttowIng year wail
elected mayor of Baltimore, fn IMf
he became attorney‘genera) of Mary-
Is'nd a'hfl in nil w*'s appointed by
ildent Harrison s deleg
“""id of*'Americsn Nstt
cttneil. ' Jri
roimnii
i that
,h»C)Jyof
i mofli rrrrm
ehnlrmsivof thre
pared’Ihe new rharibr <i
Baltimore and In 199o ht
tp*! R#“Hjs df 4
locijjlops more rap|i||y [ban
tm aicummodateti.' +[ir quvslliiii tv
w(j?re are tfjese pew iiimint x«Jtif
lo make their Immee Northward bar
rv*r b??n ih« direction of trsgim f"
A«| ? i,jn. || Is In |(j? ijor||tc r u -cc„ n
the moat vnjonbli; In .>[|.m|ti. t!is|
these new comer* wlll'tns|st iip> n iiiak-
In* (Ijelr hom?* for’ property «wp i
"'""'‘Dwrff «5'* ff »U? Wp«'-*r
cirty crater of the Immediate future.'
It la only u matter of a very feu
years before Alliinta. "the nietropdj|a“m
the gt>u|h. "Ill be *C||y of JfjO.OO;' per-
spqji. These njw-comers gre K'dng t?
Insist upon I’urchgflng praDtriy when
all their rights will be prnwhd JSr
no chance for depreclatli n by 'jh<
wrong klntj (If Jejtan|s , *or qni-Vaa ml
neighbors! Uniform jawn?, brecl i > t
levari!*, handsome residence*, many ni
ihem 'alf*a'dT erec(*3,‘ IfTe'Tstrst nnc
ntost modern appljt'nces anf appoint-
r n t\ft “m™ fsf psr Li
at tpe eoniltj* auction sale of this pi q
erty next Y^I^jy "a{tofndon. Vttch ,t.
wilt never happen again. These nr* tin
last remaining lots tn Ansley Fork, am
the flna'l rhupce' to 'secur? property Ir
ibte'wsHseYTsyjmj'Htf*’
On another poge Tpe Atlanta Geor
gian Is nible to reproduce'* p(of of grere
Jiitlre resldentlal 'parti?'with'the namet
of ihoso wjto' havg purchasej prdjd t;
?' «l|»' fl'NTSB «* »1>®re
t»**n offered a big advance on fhe pr|. t
paid. Read the name* of these Atlor.
fans, wjto bejleve In Ansjey Park, urn
consider them In the light of m ight.'" -
T(iIs work of '<jeyel5>pmen[' /» now it
progress, but all the driveways . .
ojieri and provide eyfly opporfuiilt} ! >
enjoying the' most bfoutffUl .i n. .
walk In lp*"*q|'/re cRy* ps' veil as th.
most historic. It is well "ttorth' th.
while of every Atlsrjan fo ('‘reT °*it t<
•Insjsy; park tfurlng th' M& MU lav
and iff* what ^.wln P. .\n<i,. ,n,| th,
nl* Hplrlt art «)oliii( f *r a xr**at«
»|l* fh this Inn • •li tis- lucucoL
. f - :