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Being the Ncws of Each Day of the Week in Condensed Form Specially For the Busy Man and the Farmer
VOL. VI. NO. 24,
ac A MONTH, 36c A YEAR
WIL3ON REFUSES
10 HALT WAR
ON TRUSTS
Tells Delegation of Manufactur
ers That Business Depression
Is Only Psychological.
’
WASHINGTON, May 28— The
President to-day was requested to
limit his trust program at the pres
ent session of (ongress to the pas
sage of the trade commission bill by
a delegation from the Illinols Manu
facturers’ Association, the Ohio Man
ufacturers’ Assoclation and the Na
tional Vehicle i}”d Implement Asso
ciation,
President Wilson refused the re
quest of his visitors, but said he was
ir sympathy with their purposes.
The delegation presented a petition
stating that thousands of business
men favored the establishment of a
trade commission empowered to
make a survey of the trust problems
in the United States. After such sur
vey was made they believed it would
be proper for the Administration to
proceed with further trust legisla
tion. They said there was a great
.slump in business at the present time
and much unemployment due to the
uncertainty of business men over
pending legislation.
“Policy Ahsolutely Necessary.”
The delegation stated that their
organizations represent over 33,000
factories, 1,800,000 employees and
$782,000,000 of capital.
The White House issued this state
ment regarding the visit:
“The President said in reply to the
Illinois delegation that in his judg
ment nothing was more dangerous
for business than uncertainty; that it
had become evident through a iong
series of years that a policy such as
the Democratic party now was pur
suing was absolutely necessary to
satisfy the conscience of the country
and its perfception of the prevailing
conditions of business; and that it
was a great deal better to do the
thing moderately and soberly now
than to wait until more radical forces
bhad accumulated and it was neces
sary to go much further.
Depression Only Psychological. |
“The President also said that while
he was aware of the present depres
sion of business, there was abundant
evidence that it was merely psycho
logical, that there is no material con
dition or substantial reason why the
tusiness of the country should not hc‘
in the most prosperous agd expand- |
lngx condition. He urged upon his
visitors the nevessity of patriotic co
operation on the part of business men
of the country in order to support
rather than to oppose the moderate
processes of reform and to help them‘
by their own intimate knowledge of
business conditions and processes. :
“He told his visitors that it was
his earnest desire to serve and not|
to hinder or injure the business ot‘
the country in any way and that he
believed that wupon reflection the,\'j
would see that. the course he was
urging would in the long run not]
noly, but in the short run also, be
the wise and serviceable course.” R
Bryan Again To Be
RTTE T
WASHINGTON, June 2. —Secretary
Bryan admitted to-day he would lecture
on the Chautauqua platform again this
summer, but said that he intended to
do so in thé time of his vacation. He
added, however, that his program would
be dependent upon developments in the
Mexican situation, intimating that he
would not lecture if he were needed in
‘Washington.
The first engagement of Mr. Bryan is
on July 4, when he “will lecture some
where {1 North Carolina.’’
Succeeds in Second
Jail-Breaking Pl
GADSDEN, ALA, June 2 —-Harry
Barkfield, a white man serving a long
sentence in the city chaingang for vio
lating the prohibition law, to-day was
successful in his second attempt to es
cape jail.
Sunday night, Barkfield dug a hole
through a wall and was about to leave
when discovered by the warden, who
locked him in a steel cage. This morn
ing he broke the lock on the door, and,
with Lonnie Russell, another long term
prisoner, escaped.
MULE SHOT UNDER RIDER.
DALTON, June 2 —While Tom
Nance was riding a $2OO mule belong
ing to his father, Jack Nance, the
animal was shot down from under
him and killed, Who fired the shot is
» mystery.
«#5» ATLANTA, GA., WEEK ENDING JUNE 2, 1914.
lintered at the Atlanta Ga., Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter.,
'SOUTHERN GIRL BECOMES BRIDE |
" OF KERMIT ROOSEVELT NEXT WEEK|
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MSI Lo e
NEW YORK, June 2.—Colonel The
odore Roosevelt, his daughter, Mrs.
Nicholas Longworth, and his cousin,
Philip Roosevelt, are passengers on
the White Star liner Olympic to at
tend the wedding of Kermit Roose
velt and Miss Belle Wyatt Willard,
daughter of Colonel E. J. Willard, the
American Ambassador to Spain, in
Madrid on June 10.
The Roosevelt party will disembark
at Cherbourg, proceed to Paris and
thence to Madrid, returning on the
night of the wedding to Southampton,
whence they expect to return to New
York on the Imperater on June 18.
To Address Geographers. .
Roosevelt has been invited to ad
dress the Royal Geographical Society
in London on the subject of his South
American expedition. The date the
society set, however, was June 18.
This is the date Roosevelt starts for
home. He has been obliged to decline
the society’s invitation for this rea
son. He said that he hoped to meet
various members ¢f the society while
in England.
The wedding has been arranged to
take place at noon at the British Em
bassy chapel in Madrid. The cere
mony is to be performed by the Rev.
Dr. Samuel Watson, rector of the
American Church of the Holy Trini
ty, Paris, assisted by the Rev. Her
bert Brown, of the British Chapel,
Madrid.
This will be the first time in many
years that a member of the family of
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a foreign diplomat has been married
in Madrid.
Miss Willard a Southerner.
Miss Willard is the eldest of the two
daughters of Joseph k. Willard. The
other daughter is Miss Mary Eliza
beth Willard. Miss Willard made her
debut two years ago and was one of
the most admired of the younger set
in Richmond. She is blonde, rather
small, with clear cut features. Dur
ing the last two seasons she has been
prominent in the social life of Rich
mond, Washington, Baltimore, New
York and Hot Springs, Va., and it was
at the latter resort she met Miss Ethel
Roosevelt, now Mrs. Richard Derby.
Kermit Roosevelt ia now 24 years
Published Weekly B
THE GEORGIAN COMPANY
20 E. Alabama-st., Atianta. Gy
KERMIT ROOSEVEILT
old. He has been one of the public's
favorites of the Roosevebt family. He
was educated at Groton, preparing for
Harvard, where all the Roosevelts
were educated. He served as official
photographer for his father on the
famed African trip, and has just re
turned from Brazil, where he has been
with his father hunting and exploring.
OLD MAN LEAPS 17 FLOORS.
DETROIT, MICH., June 2.—An old
man, who has not been identified,
leaped to his death from the seven
‘tieenth floor of the KFord Building to
ay.