Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1913.
* - • -w r ffmb?mf'giy
SOUTHEAST CQMPLIlCtNT EXPECT NEW EVIDENCE .
HT BUSINESS PROSPECT IN FIGHT ON SULZER
. "Crops Were Never Better” Is
v the Slogan From Every
Section
COLUMBUS, Ga., Sept. 4—Tire Indus
trial Index says in its issue for this
week:
“The southeast is not only confident
but it is exhilarated over the outlook
for the fall business season now begin
ning:. This confidence has a substantial
foundation. “Crop prospects were never
better,’ is the report that comes from
almost every section of the southeast.
“There are seemingly reliable indica
tions that good prices will be received
for cotton, and with a large crop nearly
assured circumstances warrant the buoy
ant confidence in an increasing volume
of business in almost every line.
“An infallible evidence of this con
fidence is found in the fact that the
construction of an unusually large num
ber of residences is about to begin or
has been definitely projected.
“Amog the larger items this week
that show this confidence is the an
nouncement that financial arrangements
• have been completed for the building of
a railroad between Pensacola and Mem
phis. The capital sto^k of the railway
company is to be increased from $1,000,-
000 to $15,000,0d0 and construction be
gun this week.
“St. Petersburg, Fla., will vote upon
the issuance of $227,050 of municipal
improvement bonds, and similar elec
tions will be held in Lithonia, Arling
ton and Norwood, Ga. Elections upon
the issuance of road construction bonds
will be held in the following Alabama
counties: Coosa, $75,000; Crenshaw,
$175,000; Conecuh, $50,000. Birmingham,
Ala., will vote upon the issuance of
bonds for building an auditorium.
“Among the items of construction
work to be done, as reported this week,
are:
“Bank and office building, Carroll
ton, Ga.; hotel buildings, Alice ville.
Ala., and Vandolah, Fla.; apartment
houses, two, Savannah, Ga., and* Tampa,
Fla.; bank building. Boaz, Ala.; bridges,
railroad bridge over Conecuh river, in
Alabama f Morgan and Coosa counties,
Alabama, and Coweta and Fayette
counties, Georgia; church buildings,
Birmingham, Ala., and Fort Meade,
Fia.; church building addition, Decatur,
Ga.; paving, Selma, Ala.; school build
ing, Marianna, Fla.; theater building,
Rome, Ga.; wharves, Manatee, Fla.
“Construction contracts have been
awarded as follows:
“Hospital building, Montevallo, Ala.;
laundry building, Atlanta, Ga.; office
building, Macon, Ga.; church building,
Newberry, Fla.; hotel building, Arca
dia, Fla.; clubhouse, Atlanta, Ga.j pas
senger station, Bradentown, Fla.;
school buildings, Demopolis, Ala., and
St. Marys, Ga.
“Industrial plants will be established
as follows:
“Foundry, machine shop and garage,
Flomation. Ala.; bottling plant, Mobile,
Ala.; brick plant, Falco, Ala.; packing
plant, Fa. Ogden, Fla.; sawmill, Dyas,
Ala.; woodworking plant, Dublin, Ga.;
canning plant, Greenville, Fla., light
ing plant enlargement, Lakeland, Fla.
Establishment of steel plant has been
* begun at Mobile, Ala.
“thirteen new corporations have
been formed during the week with
capital stock aggregating $364,500.”
May Introduce Number of
Other Checks Not Yet Ac
counted For
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—The legislative
commission, whose investigation of Wil
liam Sulzer’s official conduct has re
sulted in the impeachment of the gov
ernor, met here today to resume its in
quiry with the report current that con
siderable new evidence was to be sub
mitted. The opening of the sessions was
delayed till after noon on account of the
ceremonies arranged for the notification
of Mayor Gaynor of an independent re-
nomination for office at city hall, where
the investigators have been meeting.
It was understood that a number of
checks contributed to the Sulzer cam
paign fund not accounted for by Mr
Sulzer in his sworn statement to the
secretary of state, might be added todaj
to the list of checks representing sup
pressed campaign contributions, some oi
which were diverted from the purpose
for which they were given and used in
stock speculation, according to charges
made in the articles of impeachment.
It also was thought likey that the
committee would make some inquiries
regarding the disposition of a fund of
about $39,000 which was contributed
for the primary campaign conducted by
Governor Sulzer early this year. *
WILL MOVE BODIES OF
HEROES OF LAKE ERIE
Exercises Will Be Among the
Most Important Events of
Perry Celebration
(By Associated Press.)
CLEVELAND, O., Sept. 4.—One of the
most important events of the Perry vic
tory centennial celebration will \ye / the
removal of the bodies of the American
and British officers killed in the battle
of Lake Erie from their present graves
marked by a humble monument of* can
non balls to the magnificent Perry me
morial now being erected. Exercises
will be held at Put-in-Bay September 11.
Arrangements have been made in
practically every city on the Great
Lakes both in the United States and
Canada to have 'the national colors dis
played at half mast from sunrise to
sunset on the 1th of September; and
church bells will be tolled from 12
o’clock noon to 1 o’clock p. m., the hour
of the exercises. Col. Harry Cutler, of
Providence, R. I., Commodore Perry’s
native state, will be in command of the
exercises.
The catafalque containing the re
mains of the American and British of
ficers will be borne and accompanied
by a detail of non-commissioned offi
cers. i
SIXTEEN
DEATH
TO
E
i Sea of Fog, Bar Harbor
Limited Telescoped by White
Mountain Express Eight.
Miles From New Haven
AMAZON AND ORINOCO
RISE NEAR^SAME SPOT
NEW' YORK, Sept. 4.—Discovery
that the Amazon and the Orinoco rivers
have their origin near the same spot,
is claimed by Dr. Hamilton Rice, the
noted English explorer, and his com
panion, Lieutenant P. P. Ritter Von
Bauer, of Vienna, who have just arrived
from an expedition into the South
American jungles. For thirty months
they searched for the sources of the
two great rivers and traversed country
. through which they believe no human
beirig ever had been.
“The country we entered,” said Dr.
Rice, “was wilder than Africa at the
time Livingston entered it.
“We discovered the Amazon and
. Orinoco have their origin near the same
spot; in fact, their small feed streams
interlock and are not, as most maps in
dicate, widely separated. For fifty days
at a time we did not see a human be
ing outside of our own party of twelve,
but we came across tigers and tapirs
almost as tame as a household pet.”
Kids Who Stole Melons lons train was 3ust on the *** of the
Sent to Reformatory
LINDALE, Ga., Sept. 4.—Johnny
Mann and Jerry Newman, aged 12 and
14 respectively, were arrested In liindale
Monday afternoon on the charge of
stealing watermelons. They were car
ried before Judge J. H. Reece, of the
Floyd city court Tuesday morning and
entered a plea of guilty. After a
lengthy lecture by the court they were
sentenced to the state reformatory.
Th lads stated that they lived in At
lanta and had run away from home. The
older boy said that he had only a wid
owed mother, while the smaller boy in
knee pants and bare feet, stated that
both his parents still lived. They gave
excuse for leaving home.
SOMEBODY’S TAMPERING
WITH BRYAN HIGHBALL
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—An attempt
to tamper with the purity of Secre
tary Bryan's official tipple, the grape
juice highball, came to light today when
vigilant inspectors for the department
of agriculture seized a keg of what
they declared to be sprious juice when
it crossed the line into the District of
Columbia. The keg was shipped by a
California firm. The firm and its
agents here will be brought to trial
within the immediate future.
ton Get $60 Weekly
Clothes FREE!
Our mtn are dressed in the
latest styles and in the finest cloth
ing we turn out. Many make ov«r $60
weekly just showing our line of men’s
tai loring and oar tremendous assort-
ment or snappy woolens. You can
Ido the same by showing oar styles
and samples to friends. Your stylish
clothes will bring many orders.
That’s why we give you the suit or
overcoat.
Be Independent
— Be The Boss
We are one of the oldest
tailoring houses in the U. S.
are known from coast to coast. Our
iname alone will help you get bus
iness. Our big sample outfit is mag
nificent. Yon never saw such styles
;or woolens. Fit guaranteed absolute
ly. Our prices lowest. Any inex-
'perienced man Van make a big thing
With this line. We show yon now
to take orders. It won’t cost you
a cent. We furnish the capital.
HURRY. Turn your spare time into ^
dollars. Just send a postal.
Supreme Tailoring Co., Dept. 12 .Chicago
(By Associated Press.)
NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 4.—Six
teen persons perished and forty were
injured when the White Mountain ex
press, bound for New York, crashed into
the rear end of the second section of the
Bar Harbor limited, bearing sojourners
from Maine summer resorts. The wreck
occurred on the New Haven road, just
outside New Haven this morning.
Failure to see a block signal veiled
in a thick fog is given as the cause of
the accident by Enginer A. B. Miller,
whq says that as soon as he realized
the danger he did all he could to stop
the train. The brakes would not hold
on the wet track and the train, running
down grade, ploughed its way through
two wooden Pullman cafs, splintered
them to kindling, and killed or wounded
most of the sleeping passengers in the
berths.
The accident recalled the recent wreck
on the N’ew Haven at Stamford, Conn.,
when a second section train failed to
take its brakes and overran a block,
dealing death to passengers of the first
section.
A party of boy campers, sixty-five in
number, returning from “Camp Cobbos
see,” at Monmouth, Me., were in a Pull
man car which was overturned. Two
of* these boys, William Altschul, of Nor
folk, Va„ and Albert Greene, of New
York, were killed.
A party of young girl cimpers, pupils
of the Sidwell Friends school, Washing
ton, D. C., returning from Belgrade Lake,
Me., were in other cars of the Bar Har
bor express. These girls were not re
ported as injured.
Among those in the wrecked Pullmans
was Daniel Dunn, Yale football player,
who helped in the work of rescue.
There was panic among passengers
on the wrecked train, but this subsided
*and men quickly set about to rescue
those whose cries could be heard, in the
wreckage. Bodies of the dead first were
placed in a watermelon patch near the
tracks. After being examined and tag
ged by „ the coroner they were brought
into the city. The last body removed
was numbered sixteen. It was that of
a woman about thirty.
No one was seriously injured in the
White Mountain express which escaped
damage. Both trains were heavily
laden with returning excursionists from
fashionable resorts in Maine and the
White Mountains. They were running
behid time through a heavy fog.
The Bar Harbor Limited had stopped
in the block, but the last car of the
Picked at Golf Ball;
May Lose His Sight
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—An explo
sive golf ball may cost the sight of
Stafford Hawken, the twelve-year-old
son of Assistant United States Attorney
Hawken. The boy today Is in the hos
pital, where the physicians declare the
sight of his right eye is destroyed. They
hope to save the other. The core of
the golf ball exploded while the lad
was engaged in seeking to discover the
ball’s composition.
MAY BRIDGE POTOMAC
AT WASHINGTON CITY
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—Plans for a
$4,000,000 bridge which would link the
capital with Virginia, it was announced
today, are being considered by the house
commerce committee. The difficulty fac
ing the committee at present is said to
be the selection of the site for the Vir
ginia terminus <3f the structure.
It' is proposed to make the bridge a
structure that will itand for centuries
and will admit of the passage of such
shipping as uses the upper Potomac
river. Under the tentative plans, the
bridge would have eighty feet of clear
ance from the river’s surface, thus do
ing away with the necessity of draws.
The details are being worked out by
a subcommittee and a report is expected
in the immediate future.
ONE MILLION TRAVELERS
IN GOTHAM LABOR DAY
TO HIS WIFE FOB HELP
Has Only His Clothes Left, He
Says, Begging for Recon
ciliation
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
MACON,* Ga., Sept. 4.—Dr. A. B. Hin
kle is endeavoring to effect a reconcil
iation with his wife, who has left his
Ifome and has announced that she will
bring divorce proceedings. Dr. Hinkle
declared that all of his possessions,
valued at over $300,000, including prop
erty worth half that much, are in his
wife’s name, and that all he has in the
world is a suit of clothes. His splen
did office equipment even has been
deeded to Mrs. Hinkle.
“I am practically a pauper, unless
Mrs. Hinkle helps me out.” declares the
physician. Dr. Hinkle’s mother, who
fell to the floor and broke her hip in
the scuffle between the doctor and his
seventeen-year-old son Saturday night,
is in a serious condition.
The fight between father and son be
gan when the doctor reproved the boy
for urging Mrs. Hinkle to sue for
divorce. The Hinkle’s family affair has
excited great interest, as they are ex
ceptionally well known, and friends on
both sides are having much to say.
Dr. Hinkle has given his wife two
letters pleading with her to forgive him
and to come back to him. He also has
sent friends to see her. Mrs. Hinkle
refuses to see him. She declares that
she has “stood all she can.”
WOULD EXTEND PRESENT
PARCEL POST SYSTEM
Delegates to Farmers' "Con
vention Considering Changes
in Rates
SALINA, Kan., Sept. 4.—Consideration
of plans to bring about an extension
of the parcel post system, including the
raising of the weight limit and the low
ering of rater, was one of the problems
to which delegates to the annual con
yention of the Farmers’ National Edu
cational and Co-operative association
here turned attention today.
The principal address was that of
L. M. Rhodes, of Tennessee, secretary
of the association.
POINTS ON TUESDAY
Government Report Showing
Poor Crop Conditions Occa
sioned Unheard-of Rise
Cotton took an unprecedented jump of
nearly 70 points Tuesday morning, ac
cording to reports from the cotton ex
changes.
The rapid rise of the market brings
the price up to nearly thirteen cents a
pound. Within the past ten days the
advance on quotations has been well-
nigh 200 points, an almost unheard of
condition in the market.
The sudden rise is due to the report
of the government which was made pub
lic Tuesday and which stated that the
cotton crop was bad and had decreased
very much this year in comparison with
1912.
The poor cotton crop is due largely
to a drouth in the west, especially in
Texas and Oklahoma. In Georgia, the
report showed, crop conditions are
good.
Prices Sold $3,30 Per
Bale Before Market Closed
NEW YORK, Sept. 4,—The govern
ment’s fourth cotton crop report of the
season was followed by an excited gen
eral buying movement in the market to
day and prices sold $3.30 per bale above
Friday’s closing. The trade had antici
pated the official condition figures would
be unfavorable and the market had ad
vanced over $7.50 per bale during the
past two weeks, but actual figures
proved even more bullish than expected
and talk of still higher prices was
strengthened by reports that there had
been further deterioration in the crop
outlook since the government’s report
was compiled. • ,
Realizing was very heavy on the •ad
vance to 12.86 for December, but offer
ings were readily taken by further cov
ering and the broadening demand for
both trade and the speculative account.
local statisticians figure that on the
estimated area the government condition
of 68.2 against 79.6 last month, 74.8 last
year and a ten-year average of 74.7
pointed to a crop of not more than 13,-
500,000 hales.
Best-Hated of Farm Tasks
O N the spreaderless farm the thought of the great
heaps of manure piling up constantly in barn yards,
stables, and stalls, is a gloomy one. Those piles
mean much disagreeable and hard work. Three times every bit must
be handled. It must’all be loaded onto high wagons. It must be
raked off in piles in the fields. Then every forkful must be shaken
apart and spread.
Compare that old-fashioned method with the spreader way. You
pitch the manure into the spreader box, only waist high, drive out and
— the machine does all the rest.
And, far more important, if you buy an I H C spreader one ton of
manure will go as far as two tons spread by hand, with the same good
effect on the soil, and it will all be spread evenly.
1 H C Manure Spreaders
are farm necessities. The man who uses one will get the price of it
back in increased crops before its : -wness has worn off.
I H C spreaders are constru led -ocordin- to plans in which every
detail, every feature, is made u w .t. They ar built to do best work
under all circumstances, an' in atanr'. very strain for years. They
are made in all styles and sizes, tor small farms and large, low ana
high machines, frames of braced and trussed steel. Uphill or down,
or on the level, the apron drive assures even spreading, and the cover
ing of corners is assured by rear axle differentials. In all styles the
rear axle is placed so that it carries near three-fourths of the load.
This, with the wide-rimmed wheels with Z-shaped lugs, makes for
plenty of tractive power. Winding of the beater is prevented by large
diameter add the beater teeth are long, strong and chisel pointed.
A thorough examination of the I H C spreader line, at the store of
the local dealer who sells them, will interest you. Have him show
you all these points and many more. Study the catalogues you can
get from him, or, write the
COMPTROLLER CLEARS
MISTAKEN IDENTITY CASE
ment as to the speed of the White Moun
tain express. It was stated that the
engineer had his locomotive under usu
al control, but that the track was slip
pery and the grade such that it was
difficult to hold a heavy train.
The track on which the wreck oc
curred is protected by the so-called
“banjo signals,” a type which the pub
lic* utilities committee had ordered
changed. The New Haven road had be
gun the reconstruction and the line
from Hartford to Springfield already had
been changed.
Engineer Miller, of the White Moun
tain express, said, on reaching New
Haven:
“The fog was so thick I didn't see
the signal set against me until I was
almost abreast of it. Then 1 did all I
could to stop the train. I set all the
brakes and then jumped.”
Coroner Mix has begun an investiga
tion.
block limits. The signals had cleared
and the express had goten under slight
headway when the White Mountain
express of seven cars came along. The
engineer of the latter was unable to
stop his locomotive and crashed com
pletely through two of the sleepers on
the Bar Harbor train and knocked the
next sleeper over the embankment.
The shock of the collision was so ter
rific that bed clothing from the berths
was swept out of the broken windows
and, carried to the telegraph wires and
poles nearby, where it hung when the
wrecking trains arrived.
The two rear sleepers demolished were
the Pullmans “Chancellor” from Kineo,
Me., and the “Kasota” from Portland.
Nineteen passengers were in the “Ka
sota” and. twenty-two in the “Chancel
lor.”
All the passengers were in their
berths and in their night clothes, mak
ing identification of the dead difficult.
Dead and injured were brought to
morgues and hospitals in New Haven.
The engineer of the White Mountain
express stuck to his post and was only
slightly hurt. The two sleepers which
were crushed by the impact of the en
gine were a mass of splinters a few Fif+npn U'ililorl nutTO-hf'
minutes after the accident. The loco- r 11 IMIMUU UULIglll,
Stocks Fall When News
Of Wreck Reaches Exchange
NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—Heavy selling
of New York, New Haven and Hartford
railroad stock a? soon as trading opened
resulted In a decline of 2 7-8. bringing
the price down to 90 1-4, a new low rec
ord. News of the New Haven wreck
was known throughout the financial dis
trict long before the exchange opened.
J. Pierpont Morgan and George F. Ba
ker, president of the First National
bank, hurried to the office of the New
Haven railroad as soon as they heard
of the wreck. Mr. Morgan would not
talk except to say:
“We don’t like this sort of thing to
happen.”
Government Came Near Pay
ing Pension to Wrong Man,
Each Had Same Name
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—A case of
mistaken identity in which the auditor
for the navy department confused the
records of a white Civil war veteran and
a negro sailor of the same name, was
clarified today by Comptroller of the
Treasury Downey
John Esthur, a negro of Little Rock,
Ark., applied to the navy department
for a year’s bounty for service on the
battleship Ohij. The auditor credited
him with $21.62 and the claim was
about to be submitted to congress for
inclusion in the general deficiency bill
when the commissioner of pensions,
whose attention had been drawn to the
case, advised the author that he credit
ed John Esthur, the negro, with the
services for John Esthur, a white man
vaio served under two enlistments dur
ing the Civil war.
The comptroller today ruled that the
amount should not be paid, as the audi
tor’s settlement was based on the white
man’s record and the latter had never
applied for the amount due him.
motive ran on top of the wreckage and
remained almost upright for a consider
able time. The engine, No. 1337, was one
of the super-heaters of the type that
figured in the recent wreck at Stam
ford.
Among the dead identified at the
wreck scene are R. A. Hotchkiss, son
of Leonard Hotchkiss, of C. W. Scran
ton & Co., brokers, of New Haven.
ALBERT GREENE, New York.
WILLIAM ALTSCHUL, Norfolk, Va.
FRANK B. RUTTER, vice president
and sales manager Scranton Bolt and
Nut company, Scranton, Pa.
Woman, five feet, six'inches tall, 125
pounds; wore gold ring engraved “For
life or death, April 30, 1874.”
Young man, six feet tall, 200 pounds,
twenty-five years old; initials “S. C. F.”
on green stone gold ring.
H. F. MARTIN, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Woman with handbag marked M. H.
M. or M. H. H., died on way to hos
pital.
HARRY K. IAMI, died at Meriden
hospital.
HAROLD AVERY, New York, died en
route to hospital.
ROBERT YAHN, Philadelphia.
CHARLES W. PLACE , broker, 67
Wall street, New York.
WOMAN, family name unknown, giv
en name Mary Jane, Hartford, Conn.
The collision occurred on a straight
stretch of track overcast by a dense
fog. The grade at this point is slightly
descending.
Railroad officials would make no state-
.RING AND BRACELET GIVEN
I for eelling 6 boxes of Smith's Rosebud Solve ot
* 2bc per bo*. A great remedy for burns, cuts,
sores, piles, eczema,catarrh, croup.etc. When
•old return the $1-50 and wo
will promptly forward this
beautiful geld laid bracelet
and the gold filled wedding
ring, or choice from our large
premium catalogue. 8ENI>
NO MON E Y, wo trust you.
Roseiud Perfume Co.
Box 284. Woodaboro, Md.
iCAROS—IOCr essho -- ? uff ~ rag ** te ’ f^r*-
I ft ft IfitniWI WW p retty Girls. GoTkI Luck, Tele-
■ Eg? -tram, Lovers, Western Scenery, Tun. Holiday, Greefc-
ing, &c, some G colors gold embossed. Money back
If not delighted. 100for 10c. U. S, CARD CO,, CHICAGO. ILL.
fireenhaefcs
GINUiNS Ki«mM
money fro#* the 17. 8.
Treasury, »t Washing.
K STAB COhJH Dcirborn, Chisago.
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—It was esti
mated that the Labor day influx and
exodus of travelers here was over a
million persons. including* 750,000
bronzed vacationists, on their way
home, and 300,000 bound to the south
west and New England. Veteran rail-
read men declared that the volume of
travel was probably the largest for a
single day in the history of the metrop
oils.
At one of the great railroad terminals
it was reported that during the past DR. W. H. KNIGHT of East Saugus. Mas*., writes:
five days 191 extra trains had been run A * 4 “ —
carrying 500.000 passengers. Baggag
heaped in great piles at the railroad noticed a change lor 'the better aYter* ten day’s treat-
Many Trapped bv Flames
KIRKBY STEPHEN, County of West
Moreland. England, Sept. 2.—Fifteen
persons are believed to have been killed
and thirty persons injured in a col
lision of tw Q sections of the famous
London-Scotland Express early today.
Official reports accounted for nine dead,
while corespondents on the spot re
ported that the fatalities numbered
fifteen.
The wreck occurred on the Midland
railway, near Hawes Junction, the two
sections being northbound. The second
section dashed into the rear of the first,
telescoping several coaches, which burst
into flames. Many persons were
trapped, and, if not killed outright,
they were burned to death. At least
wreckage suffering injuries or burns,
thirty passengers were taken from the
and as many as ten of these may die.
The two trains had left Carlisle for
London at 1:35 and 1:47 this morning,
respectively, and the collision between
them occurred fifty miles south of Car
lisle on a lonely moor.
The first section of the train had
stopped to get up steam for a sharp up
grade when the section behind dashed
into the first train, piling up the sleep
ing cars, crowded with passengers.
Several of the cars caught fire and
many of the passengers were trapped.
Rescuers from farms in the vicinity
came on the scene too late to save many
of the passengers.
Nine charred bodies were taken from
the wreck and it was believed that sev
eral others still were among the debris.
About thirty injured passengers were
sent on special trains to the Leeds and
Carlisle hospitals.
Another disaster occurred near the
same place on December 26. 1910, when
eight passengers lost their lives and
twenty-five were injured.
AVIATOR’S LAST TRIP
WAS FATAL TO HIM
George C. Schmidt. Had Prom
ised Mother to Stop Flying on
September 4, His Birthday
(By Associated Press.)
RUTLAND, Vt., Sept. 4.—Judge Dyer
Spellman, who was a passenger with
Aviator George C. Schmidt when the
latter’s aeroplane plunged to earth at
the Rutland fair yesterday, killing the
pilot, is practically assured of recov
ery, physicians at the Rutland hospital
said today.
Although Judge Spellman was caught
in the machine just as Schmidt was, he
miraculously escaped without a broken
bone after the 400-foot drop. Burns
which he received when his clothing
caught fire were his principal injuries.
Schmidt, who, although only twenty-
t^ree years old, had been flying live
years, had promised his mother that he
would give up flying on September 4
his birthday. Both his mother and fa
ther saw him fall to his death.
Earl of Carrick to
Go on Stage Soon
(By Associated Press.)
LONDON, Sept. 4.—The Earl of Car
rick is the latest recruit from the ranks
of the nobility to the music hall stage
It was announced today that his ap
pearance had been arranged for an early
date in a one-act play entitled “A Roint
of Honor.”
The Earl of Carrick is considered one
of the cleverest amateur actors in aris
tocratic society. He is nearly forty
years of age. He sits in the house of
lords as Baron Butler, a title which he
received last year.
Commerce Commission!
congestion still is great.
A Physician
Cures His Wife
Of Consumption
With A Simple Home Treatment*
Book Fully Describing The Treat
ment Sent Absolutely Free
To Any Lung Sufferer,
DR. W. H. KNIGHT of East Saugus, Mas*., writes: , . . . .
“Mv wife was down with Consumption, when I ter the interstate commerce commission : today that
ordered the Lloyd treatment. She was very weak from nrrlnror! innner'tors to en immediately J ,
* night sweats, cough, and in a feverish condition. I ordered inspectors to go immediately named as j
—“ - u --ge tor the better after ten day’s treat- to the wreck scene to investigate. Chief
I»»r«*tor Belnap probably will go to
lus in the blood and tissue, and it is the Wallingford himself later today. It i&
POSTMASTERS NAMED
FOR GEORGIA OFFICES
.... to the wreck scene to investigate. Chief
terminals today bore evidence that the t, - m<> - en u -
Tubercle Bacillus >•> ,■■« uiuuu ubouc, «uu i$ ia uio
only remedy so far discovered that will do this. It is a
preventive as well as a cure. It should bo used by
DA IMTIMO OflCT on PCMTC« those who are run down, or those who fear the approach
I HIP4 1 ! NM J Cuo I lX) U t. IV I O $ of Consumption. It can be truthfully said that for the .. _. ni 0
cure and prevention of Consumption, it is the most Commissions M ork. Will conduct a pel-
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4—Postmasters
Bladen, Glynn county, N. Lang, vice
J. Lang, resigned; TIckanetley, Gilmer
county, A. Twiggs, vice L. Lowman, re
signed; Vulcan, WalKer county, J. Man
ning, new office.
* In the event of a probable vacancy
in the postoffice at Grantville, Coweta
To Investigate Disaster[^ m « s £ Mler wil1 be appointed
(By Associated Press.) i The postoffice at Temple, Carroll coun-
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4. ^-Pon re " I ty, will soon be advanced to the third,
ceipt of news of the New Haven disas- j or presidential class and it was learned
Warner Entriken will be
postmaster.
International Harvester Company of America
'Incorporated) L,, k Ml
Chicago USA
ffc H (8c iiiiiil ammi OR m (ticmi alt lyi ok m w. iy; 1111 w mm ^ m'
AS
RESULT OF SHOOTING
Militia Called to Michigan
Mines When Deputies Kill
Fifteen-Year-Old Girl
WOULD GIVE PRESIDENT
POWER TO TREE LIST'
(By Associated Press.)
CALUMET. Mich., Sept. 4.—The cop
per strike situation took a serious aspect
today as the result of the fatal shoot
ing of Margaret Fazakas, 16-year-old
daughter of a striker at the North
Kearsarge mine, when a picket of
strikers and women clashed with deputy
sheriffs guarding the mine.
The deputies claim „that they were
driven from the mining property by
the strikers, and when they returned to
protect the property that the picketers
fired on them. Mine leaders denied this,
srfying the deputies fired without provo
cation into the crowd of men and women,
wounding the girl and several others.
The military forces again took charge
of the patrol work about the mine at
Wolverine and the Kearsarge as a’ re
sult of this shooting. General Abbey
has ordered an investigation.
Governors Slip on
Overalls to Work
For “Good Roads’
Amendment to Kenyon Meas
ure Lets President Free List
Any Monopolized Articles
BT RALPH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 4.—Demo-
cratic leaders in the senate will proba*
bly report a substitute for Senator Ken
yon’s amendment which proposes to free
list the manufactured v products of the
trusts in the United States that will con
fer on the president the power to free
list trust-made articles by proclamation
whenever he ascertains as a fact that
any article made durable in the pending
bills the subject of a monopoly.
This amendment will be satisfactory*
to the senator from Iowa it is under
stood. ^
STRIKE HEARINGS RESUMED
BY COMMITTEE OF SENATE
LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Sept. 4.—Gov
ernor Elliott Major, of Missouri, joined
the Arkansas “good roads” workers this
morning, with Governor George W.
Hays, of this state and hundreds of
other prominent citizens. The governors
donned overalls and hurried to the
highway building sites in automobiles.
More than 100 automobiles were given
over to tne service and by 8 o’clock at
Capital aveneu and Main street, the
center of the business activities in Lit
tle Rock, thousands of people gathered
to watch the departure of the guberna
torial party and o'thers to the country
roads.
Governor Lee Hall, of Louisiana,
wired his regrets, saying that owing
to an extra session of the general as
sembly of that state he could not join
the good roads workers here today, but
he pledged his good will in behalf of
the movement.
Never in its history has Little Rock
seen such a demonstration as was wit
nessed this morning when the good
roads workers “hiked” to the country.
Mothers, wives and sweethearts of the
good roads workers joined in the move
ment, supplying fried chicken and other
delicacies. A bunch of boy scouts sup
plied drinking water. Under the procla
mation of Governor Hays two days, to
day and tomorrow, are to be devoted to
the good roads movement.
Durant Whipple directed the “army
of occupation,” as it was called. During
the afternoon a barbecue will be held
in the country, thousands of pounds of
meet and other food articles having been
donated for the feast.
M’REYNOLDS OPENS FIRE
ON “HARD COAL TRUST”
robable that Commissioner McCord, di
eetly in charge of that phase of the
■ a nmnrn jit + ««« cure ana prevention oi consumption, it
Us PmCED flflfl treatment of the present age.”
IO 1 MiULU ttl v)| ,UUU This is only one of hundreds of lefters
ter3 received from i
sonal inquiry.
physicians and others reporting cases of consumption ir»!l ' r\ ±
and lung trouble restored to health in all sections of the (juS H ( j £1ITID FI fS ft V
fJmted States. We want to Bend every lung sufferer' ^ ^ ^ ,
, s .hani»foiu — - - -— - - - Prominent in Washington
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—Members of
(By Associated Press.!
MADRID, Sept. 4.—In an antiquary
show window there was exhibited a
painting yesterday and a sign reading
“Authentic picture by Goya, 7.00'
pesetas ($1,365).”
A poor woman passing by. observe
the sign and at once caused a disturb-,
ance which attracted a big crowd. She
declared that the antiquary who now now'state thaYthey AREf CURED,'strong'
wants to sell the picture at so great a without ache or pain. happy, full of praise, after a few
. . . „ . , , , .. .. 7. - month s use of this simple home treatment.'Send your
Jljf e
absolutely free the startling statements of Dr. W. II. .
Kiester of Dayton, Ohio, Dr. C. G. Pinckard of Kansan !
City, Mo., Dr. J. H. Ward of Troy. Mo., and many
others who report results almost beyond belief, togeth- i
f:.r'.™ a . v % luable bo< $ lct on . t , h '’ inx.entionand the . g i r i s > camp on board the wrecked
treatment of consumption and lung trouble.
Ifyou are suffering from weakness, blood-spitting,; New Haven train were drawn from
bus-filled sputum, night, sweats, chills, fever, loss of lf «r»wn famiUx.0 n v imr
flesh, painful kings, distressing cough, wasted body, Hiany well Known families living in and
loss of strength —write me today and I’ll send you adjacent to Washington. For several
ABSOLUTELY FREE the sworn testimony of many
who, after suffering with just such distressingsymptoms,
are CURED, strong, able to work.
— tea. Send 10 o«nt* for 'i \1 month’s use of this simple home treatment.' Send your
onplo pMk efabeui #600.00 and book of veiuabla PHCe, yesteiday bought it from her for name and address TODAY. JUDD Q. LLOYD, 5061
20 cents. ^ Lloyd Building, iSt. Louis), Mo.
years the camp has been carried on by
Miss Hortense Herson, a teacher of the
Friends’ school, one of the best known
establishments in the fashionable por
tion of the city.
MESSINA AGAIN ROCKED
BY QUAKE RUMBLINGS
(By Associated Press.)
MESSINA. Sicily, Sept. 4.—An earth
quake caused a panic here early today.
It continued six seconds. The people,
alarmed by previous shocks, fled to
open * spaces.
MAN WHO MADE FORTUNE
IN STAMPS IS DEAD
NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—Thomas A.
Sherry, who made a fortune out of trad
ing stamps, died at his city residence
here last night. His fortune is esti
mated. at $10,000,000.
PHILADELPHIA, Se> t. 4.—Attorney
General McReynolds’ firs, and moot im
portant attack on the “hard coal trust”
was begun here today with the filing
of a civil suit for the dissolution of the
Reading company’s control of coal min
ing and coal carrying railroads—the
most potential combination in the an
thracite fields.
The Reading company with its sub
sidiary and allied corporations, includ
ing the Central Railroad of New Jersey
and certain of their officers and direc
tors, are charged by the federal govern
ment with violating both the Sherman
anti-trust law and the commodities
clause of the interstate commerce act,
i?i an attempt to monopolize the produc
tion and transportation of anthracite.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—After sev
eral weeks’ delay, the senate special
committee selected to investigate strike
conditions in the Cabin Creek and Paint
Creek coal districts of West Virginia
was ready to resume its hearings today
in this city. Mine owners will be given
an opportunity to present their side of
the controversy.
Guaranteed Rupture Holder
On 60 Days Trial
Won't Cost You A Cent If The Two Months
Test Doesn’t Prove All Our Claims
Too esn make a thorough 60 day te«t of this guaranteed
rupture holder without having to risk a single cent. We’ll
make one especially for your caae and let you see for your-
ell r ** • * ---*
•elf how it takes all the misery out of being ruptured.
Away With Leg-Strap
and Spring Trusses
So far as wo know, our guaranteed
rupture holder Is the onl^ thing of
.ny kind for rupture that you can get
on so days trial—the only thing we
know of good enough to staud such a long and thorough test
It’s the famous Cluthe Automatic Massaging Truss-made on
an absolutely new principle—has 18 patented feattires. Self-
adjusting. Does away with the misery of wearing belts, leg-
straps and springs. Guaranteed to hold at all times—lnclud,
ing when you are working, taking a bath, etc. Has cured
In case after case that seemed hopeless.
Write fer Frwe Book el Advice Cloth-bound. 104 pages,
explains th- dangers of operation, ahowsjust what’s wrong
with elastic and spring trusses, and why drugstores should
no more be allowed to fit, trusses than to perform operations.
Exposes the humbugs—shows how old-fashioned worthless
■russes are sold under false and misleading names. Tells all
about the care and attention we give you. Endorsements
from over 5000 people, Including physicians. VMte to-day
—find out how you can prove every word wo say by making
* so day test without risking a penny.
Box 673, Cluthe Co., 125 E. 23rd St.
New York City,
Jo Women
Who Dread
Motherhood
Si formation How They May Qfva Birth to
Happy, Healthy Children Absolutely With
out Fear of paid. Sent free
No woman need any long
er dread the pains of
childbirth. Dr. j. H.
Dye devoted his life
to relieving the sor
rows of women He has
proven that the pain at
cr.ildbirti.need no longer
feared by womanand we
will gladly tell youhowitmay
be done absolutely free of charge Send your
name and address to Dr ] H Dvt Medical
j Institute, 127 Lewis Block, Buf alo, N Y and
we will send you, postpaid, his v onderfui book
which tells how to give birth to happy, healthy
| children, absolutely without fear of pain, also
how to become a mother. Do not delay but
•rite TO-DAY.
Tailoring Salesmen WANTED
/ We want live, energetic hustlers, men who can make good; who are ambitious to start
in a business of their own. No canvassing; no experience required* no capital necessary.
We furnish everything to start. Hundreds are making from 9100 to $200 per month
and exf cnees. We guarantee absolute satisfaction and take all the ritik. We
are one of the largest woolen mills in the country aud positively have the only
up-to-date, high-quality, low-priced tailoring on the market.
A great many of our
men are makln^from
$25 to $50 Every Week
We fui nish a complete agents’ outfit, consisting of large sample book (not
a folder), order blanks, tape measures, advertising matter—in fact every
thing essential to the conducting of a high-class tailoring business.
Write today for this big outfit
We will start you at once on the road to Success. Le sure and write today,
DANIEL WOOLEN MILLS, Dept.6, 300 Green St, Chicago