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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA,- GA„ TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1913.
KNOX TELLS OF TUFT'S
Still Peeved Over Panama
Matter and Won’t Treat
With Republicans
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
WASHINGTON, March 1.—Presideht
Taft’s last word in the American-Cdlom-
tbian controversy was said today in a
‘long- report by the secretary of state,
submitted to the senate by President
. Taft, detailing the fruitless attempts
made by his administration to reach an
amicable adjustment of the - dispute.
That Colombia “appears to have closed
the door to further overtures on the
part of the United States,” and seems
to await the Democratic administration,
is Knox’s statement.
The report minces no words in ex
plaining “rebuffs” to the United States
administered by the Bogota government.
Colombia wants the Question of dam
ages which she sustained by indepen
dence of Panama to be submitted to
the Hague tribunal. Knox declares
that this could never be agreed to by
the United States, as it would call in
question the sovereignty* of Panama
and this might imperil America’s title
to the canal, granted this country by
the new republic of Panama.
OFFERED $25,000,000.
Knox details how as much as $25,-
000,000 has been offered Colombia in
settlement of the dispute, but refused.
He explains all the diplomatic inter
changes, treaties and notes which had
been exchanged without result, detail
ing even the diplomatic incident when
the Colombian minister here cited Colo
nel Roosevelt’s statement that “I took
tlje canal zone,” as evidence of offense
to his country.
■) :
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But as we cannot all have perfect
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LEGISLATURE FLAYS
GEORGIANS VOTE AGAINST
GOliAPENSATION ACT
Name*
Bk
SCHOOL1EVY VETO
Leader of Governor's Forces
Calls on Members to Over
ride Veto and "Political
Treachery" Is Charged
DOROTHY JOHNSON
such rapid improvement in the health
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users of Syrup Pepsin have learned to
avoid cathartics, salts, mineral waters,
pills and other harsh remedies for they
do but temporary good and are a shock
to any delicate system.
If no member of your family has ever
used Syrup Pepsin and you would like
to make a' personal trial of it before
buying it in the regular way of a drug
gist, send your address—a postal will
do—to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 425 Wash
ington St., Monticello, Ill., and a free
sample bottle will be mailed you.
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
COLUMBIA^ S. C., March 1.—In the
closing hours of the session Governor
Blease put the legislature in fighting
humor by vetoing the bill providing
for a one mill levy for the common
schools which had been passed at his
request. TI19 message accompanying
the Veto was taken by the house as a
reflection on them and raised a storm
of protest.
Chairman pick, of the ways and
means committee, denounced the gov
ernor’s action as a piece of “political
treachery,” and Mr. Nicholson also
flayed the executive, saying that he
didn’t-see any use in having a legis
lature.
Leader Rembert, of the Blease forces,
had informed the committee on free
conference op the appropriation bill
that the governor was going to sign
the one mill levy, and acting on this
the conference cut out all the appro
priations for the high schools as it
was covered in the one mill levy.
BROKEN FAITH CHARGED.
Members charged the governor with
breaking faijth with the conference
committee, and Mr. Rembert said that
the governor had told him he would
sign the one mill levy. The discus
sion grew bitter and at times vitrolic,
for the smouldering resentment against
the governor’s attitude broke out intQ
flames. Leader Rembert joined in the
discussion and asked the house to
override the veto, which was done, 78
to 20.
When the veto reached the senate
the fires of resentment broke out afresh.
‘“Are we going to let the governor slap
us in the face with his messages and
submit tamely while he dictates to us
how to vote?” exclaimed Senator Sulli
van, who moved that the veto be over
ridden.
Others joined in the denunciation add
the bill went ove# the veto 31 to 9. The
veto of the one mill tax bill has caused
dissension in the ranks of the gover
nor’s followers and some are in open re
bellion.
Some roundly, condemn his course and
one asserted that he never believed the
governor wanted the one mill tax lev
ied, but that it was done purely for poli
tical reasons and that he knew all the
time he would get some excuse of ve
toing it.
■' “It is toftimy rot, pure and simple!”
exclaimed Representative Nicholson, in
his speech denouncing the veto. One
asserted that the governor did it sim
ply to be spectacular and he was
insincere in his attitude on the matter
from start to finish.
i
Every Georgia Congressman
Except Brantley Opposed
It—Passed by House
BY BAX.FH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, D. tf., March, 1.—A
desultory filibuster extending over five
weeks had its climax in the house to
night, when the workmen’s compensa
tion bill was passed, under a suspen
sion of the rules, by a vote of 217 to 81.
The bill was amended in many impor
tant details by fhe house, but some of
its most objectionable features still
remain. It will go to conference and
there is small chance of its becoming a
law at this session. Senator Hoke
Smith, Senator Bryan of Florida, and
others will talk the conference report
to death in the senate, if necessary.
President-elect Wilson is opposed to
the bill as passed tonight. He favors
the principle of compensation, but does
not indorse the details of this measure.
Two Georgians led the fight in the
house for and against the bill, and all
the Georgians in the house voted
against it except Brantley. Congress
man Brantley was its leading champion,
while Congressmap Hardwick was its
most active opponent. Mr. Brantley
made his last speech as a member of
the house and received an ovation. The
organized labor forces of the south,
more particularly those of Georgia, are
bitterly opposed to the bill, though
many labor leaders, in. other sections
of the country urged its adoption. The
bill applies to the employes of railroads
and express companies and fixes an
arbitrary scale of compensation for in
juries, also depriving the injured from
the right to proceed in the courts. It
it contended that it will operate to
nullify the desirable features of the
employers’ “liability act.”
Address
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v 91'
HOUSE INSISTS ON ONLY
ONE NEW DREADNAUGHT
UNDERWOOD SAYS HE
WILL STAND SQUARELY
BEHIND GOV. WILSON
^Democratic Chairman of Ways- and Means Discusses the
Report That He Was in Minority on Important Commit
tee-Three New Members to Be Selected March 5
Disagrees to Senate Amend
ments and Sends Bill to
Conference
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, March 1.—The naval
appropriation bill, with the senate
amendment to authorize two battleships
was sent to conference by the house
today after a short but lively debate.
Representative Padgett, of Tennes
see, chairman of the naval affairs com
mittee, called up the bill and vainly
sought to have a vote on the battle
ship program before the measure went
into conference.
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(Continued From Page 1.)
representatives, from 396 and 435 mem
bers.
Age and service pension law, increas
ing Civil war pensions.
Eight-hour law covering government
contracts.
Admission of Arizona and New Mex
ico to statehood.
Use of poisonous white phosphorus
in match-making prevented by exces
sive tax.
Pure drug law amended to prevent
misleading labels on patent medicines.
Wireless communication brought un
der careful regulation, the law requir
ing the wireless on all ocean vessels
to be adequately manned.
Government cross recognized official
ly as branch^ of government service
in time of war.
Federal relief given to 1912 flood
sufferers in lower Mississipi valley.
Commerce court and tariff board vir
tually legislated out of existence.
Industrial commission authorized, to
study relations between capital and la
bor.
This congress has witnessed the rat
ification of any important treaties with
foreign nations. The arbitration trea
ties with France and Great Britain,
negotiated by President Taft, however,
were not ratified, because the senate
so amended them that the president con
sidered they did not carry out the un
derstandings made with the two pow
ers. ,
AGREEMENTS PERFECTED.
In the two years, however, the follow
ing important agreements have been
perfected:
Pecuniary claims treaty with Great
Britain.
North Atlantic coast fisheries agree
ment with Great Britain.
Fur seal treaty with Great Britain,
Russia and Japan.
International wireless treaty with
leading foreign nations.
International war prize agreement.
International agreement covering san
itary measures for the control of epi
demics.
General arbitration treaty with
France extended to 1918.
Copyright treaty with Hungary.
International agreement covering as
sistance and salvage at sea.
Investigations covering a wide range
of important subjects were conducted.
In addition to those enumerated (the
“money trust,” campaign expenditures
and steel inquiries), special committees
and the regular standing committees of
the two houses have conducted the fol
lowing:
Tariff hearings, by ways and means
committee, in preparation for new Dem
ocratic tariff bills.
Currency hearings, preparatory to
framing monetary reforms.
Investigation of affairs of American
Sugar Refining company, and its alleg
ed domination of the market.
Inquiry into the Titanic disaster.
Investigation of conditions along
Mexican border, and alleged financing of
Mexican revolutionists by Americans.
."Shipping trust” inquiry, to determine
extent of the common control of ocean
routes.
Investigations of Indian affairs, on
various reservations, and at Washisg-
ton. ,
Investigations of agricultural, treas
ury, and other government departments.
Investigation of land grants about
bay, Alaska.
President Taft has used the veto pow
er freely throughout the congress. Ful
ly twenty bills have met his disapprov
al, including Democratic tariff bills, ap
propriation bills which contained com
merce court, civil service and army re
organization and legislation of which
he did not approve; water power bills
in which the principle of federal con
trol was not recognized; and the immi
gration bill containing the “literacy
test”, feature.
But for Fifteen Long Years,
Mrs. Dickson .Could Not
Stand on Her Feet for
Any Length of Time
Dallas, Tex,—“I cannot recommend
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For 15 years, I was a sufferer from
such severe pains, caused from woman
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stand on my feet, long at a time. I
also ,had backaches and headaches. I
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I am so thankful that I took your
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My advice to all women is to try
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BY RALPH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, D. C., March 1.—The
report that Democratic Leader Oscar W.
Underwood has lost control of the ways
and means committee, which was pub
lished in Atlanta, Milwaukee^ Toledo,
Cleveland, New York and other papers
last Sunday morning, has created some
surprise in Washington. The surprise
comes, not from the fact that the re
port is discredited, but from the fact
that many persons were surprised to
learn that Mr. Underwood had ever con
trolled the committee. They recalled
that he was outvoted in committee at
the last session of congress on many
of the tariff schedules, and they were
surprised at the attention attracted last
week when it was reported. that v he had
been again outvoted in the committee.
It is tho hope of Mr. Underwood and
his supporters that they will gain con
trol upon the reorganization of the
houge, when three of the present mem
bers of the committee will retire and
three new men will be elected. Repre
sentative Ollie James, of Kentucky, who
becomes a senator, and Representative
Charles B. Ransdell, of Texas, will leave
the committee. They are among its
very progressive members, and have not
always been in sympathy with Mr. Un
derwood’s views. Representative Brant
ley, of' Y Georgia^ one of the conserva
tives, retires also. If the Democratic
caucus names as successors for these
men Progressives of the so-called Bryan
type, then Mr. Underwood may not re
gain control of the committee, but, on
the other hand, if it chooses conserva
tives, Mr. Under wood’s position will be
assured.
Mr. Underwood and several of his
committee colleagues do not attach im
portance to the fact that, as chairman,
he has been outvoted in the preparation
of bills to be submitted to the extra
session. The differences in the com
mittee, it is learned, are as to policy
and are not personal.
“I read the story with considerable
amusement,” said Mr. Underwood.
“The Democratic members of the ways
and means committee frequently di
vide, and the alignments differ at
times. There are two members uf the
committee who have voted with m^ on
most every occasion. Recently
these men were outvoted, and the news^
papqr men got hold of it. I attribute*
the story to the fact that this news
got abroad. What amuses me is that
in this particular instance it was my
own vote that places these two men in
the minority. A member of the com
mittee can nut have his own way all
the time, and there must be compro
mise and concessions all round.”
The first test of strength in the
next house will come on March 5,
when the Democratic caucus will meet,
to adopt a program for the extra ses
sion. Leader Underwood favors com
pleting only a partial organization of
the house. He thinks that only two
or three committees should be named
—ways and means, accounts, banking
and currency, possibly, and appropria
tions.
Many other of the older Democratic
members differ with Leader Underwood
pn this' question. They think the en
tire organization should be completed
and will resist Mr. Underwood’s plan
in the caudiis. But the contest will
in no way affect Mr. Underwood’s lead
ership. He will be re-elfected chairman
of the ways and mans committee by
the caucus, unless the present indica
tions are'vwrong.
IfyJnrierson’s Drinking
ECZEMA
Also called Tetter, Salt Rheum, Pruritus, Milk-
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ECZEMA CAN BE CURED TO STAY, and
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million case of this dreadful disease. Now.
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or, j. £. uannao*”, az* Court Block, Sedan®,•mo.
References: Third National Bank, Sedalia, mo.
Could you do a better act than to send this no
tice to some poor sufferer of Eczema?-«(Advt.)
;
Saving and Investing
CORPORATION FARMING—AN
OPPORTUNITY.
BY JOHN S. OSKISON.
For several*sound reasons, farming
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corporation. The change is going to
be of interest to a number of different
classes.
A farm run by a corporation can, in
the first place, get capital at about two-
thirds the cost of the individual far
mer. It can effect economics of opera
tion which will add a profit not possible
to the average individual. In market
ing, there are tremendous economics
which must be Effected if farming is to
go on the same basis as the other or
ganized businesses of the country. The
president of one of our western rail
roads has estimated that it costs seven
billion dollars to market six billions of
dollars’ worth of produce. That is,
the consumer pays more than twice the
farmer’s price.
Farm corporations are, therefore,
coming. The investing public is going
to be asked to buy the securities issued
by them—to furnish the cheaper capital
public, you will have to investigate this
new form of security and find out the
factors which make for safety of capi
tal interested and profits from operation.
In another sense, the opportunities are
even better. These corporations will
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to take hold of them, exactly as they
do in the big industrial! organizations.
Already, the production of city-born
students in our agricultural colleges is
close to 50 per cent in the east and
the middle west.
The chairman of the Texas farm
life commission said the other day that
there is a .chance in Texas to save the
farmers of the state over $10,000,000
a year in interest charges alone if
money could be obtained for them at
5 per cent instead of 10 per cent in
terest.
That is a characteristic modern com
ment. Such expressions, " hniltifclied
many hundreds of times, by all sorts
of people, point clearly to the coming
of the new type of farming.
STOPPED
By His Wife
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HOW SHE DID nTBlLEi
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or relative from drink.
It is not even necessary to write a letter to
her. If you prefer you can simply send your
name and address oh a postal card. She will
understand what it is that you desire and
will reply at once in a sealed envelope so
that there will be no publicity in your affairs.
As she has nothing to sell do not send her
money. Just be careful to write your name
and address plainly so that you will be sure to
receive her letter. Mrs. Anderson’s complete
address is: Mrs. Margaret Anderson, 506 Pine
Ave., Hillburn, N. Y.
# This is a sincere offer of a wife and mother who
is truly anxious to send you this information. Be
bure and write her if you have one whom you wist
\icure of drinking.
SWELL, NIFTY SUIT
eat In Quick!
Most marvel
ous tailoring ,
offering ever made! Be our sales- [
manager in your town—$250
a month. Enough coin to fill your
pockets. Nifty suits for you to wear
—ALL FREE. Make *60 to $75 a
week selling our nifty suits. It’s
easy! Orders turned over to you. No
experience, no money necessary.
We Pay Express
on Everything
You pay nothing—absolutely nothing, j
EVERYTHING guaranteed too.
Write-Hurry! Send a postal 1
*■ *— card n n ’ hf
away for this great free offer. Never anyj
thi.ig like it. Get our book of beautiful^
samples and full particulars—all free.
You assume no obligations whatever, so write at once.
American Woolen Rlills Co.
Dept. 3 °5.
CHICAGO, ILL.'
NEW FEATHER BEDS ONLY $7.20
|WiNew Feather Pillows,Equipped with Patent
Vacuum Ventilators, only $1.00 per pair
For a limited time we offer
full 36 lb. Now Featherl
beds $7.20 each, 6 lb. New
Feather pillows, fitted)
with patent Vacuum Ven-1
itilators, $1.00 per pair,
f. o. b. factory, cash with
order. All New, Live,’
Clean and Odorlessfeath-;
ers. Best A. O. A.|
Amoskeag feather
:.. P proof ticking. All]
goods as represent!
— erl or money book.
Prompt shipment. Our bargain!
F rice list ana order blanks msdlCMfl
ree. „ BUY FROM FACTORY
DIRECT and save middleman n
profits. Reference. Americanl
Exchange National Bank.Greens-
boro. AGENTS WANTED.
SOUTHERN FEATHER AND PILLOW COj
Dept. C, Greensboro, N. C.
IS
$5.00 An Hour 1
Sounds almost too good, doesn’t it? Yet
1 it is the simple truth—we have agents that
easily clean up $5.00 an hour and more anytime they
feel like it with our wonderfully complete and attractive
Any and
Every
Day
You
Like
FREE SAMPLE OUTFIT
Showing the Best Tailoring On Earth
You can do as well or better. Just go out any time and pick up’85.00
an hour among your friends—with our swell line of Made-to-Measure
Hand-Tailored Clothes, orders come in so easy you’ll be amazed and^
delighted—no need to want money for anything—this big opportunity fixes you *
financially on “easy street”—never broke—always plenty of the “ready” in your
pocket—work only an hour or so a day if you like. And, remember that
Your Own Elegant Free Suit
Makes You the Best Dressed Man in Your Town
You’ll be the leader—the real center of attraction—as you go down the
■treet in the ultra stylish and up-to-the-minute clothes we make to your
own measure. It’s good advertising for us—yourswell “front” pulls biff
business—that’s why we can afford to keep you the top notch dresser.
WORK GUARANTEED PERFECT
OR MONEY RETURNED
We put you in business on our own capital. We give you ex
clusive territory, which will yield you big money returns—$60 to
$100 a week or more —it’s up to you! Weundersell everybody—give
finest tailoring at prices that simply compel business your way—
Suits $9.50 and up; Pants $2.50 up—satisfaction guaranteed.
Send Us No Money!
Not a penny! No money or experience needed. Just send your
name and address and everything will be shipped—Express Pre-
pa/d—absolutely free. Don’t hesitate a moment—forget all
other claims—our competitors may swell up with big bom
bastic claims, but we’ve got the real “goods”—you’ll say
so the minute you get what we’re waiting to send you—
FREE! Write today- NOW!
Postal Brings Everything—FREE
ELK TAILORING CO.
a i
We
Pay
All The
Express
Qiarges
752B Jackson Blvd..
Chicago 1