Newspaper Page Text
10
NEW PRINCETON
CHIEF INDUCTED
Taft and Other Notables See
Wilson's Successor Brilliantly
Inaugurated.
PRINCETON. N J. May 11 —Before
a brilliant assemblage of Princeton
alumni undergraduates, trustees and
faculty and many thousand guests and
representatives from other institutions
throughout the country, including the
president and chief justice of the Unit
ed States. John Grier Hibben, the four
teenth president of Princeton univer
sity. was formally inducted into office
this morning.
The academic parade which proceed
ed to the steps of Nassau halt for th'
ceremony was the most brilliant <v i
eeen in Princeton. At the head of th
procession in the first division wi ii
President Taft, Chief Justice White.
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
Pitney, President Hibben and the presi
dents of other universities present for
the occasion. There were eleven divi
sions in all, the undergraduates led by
Sanford B. White, president of the
senior ciass, bringing up the rear.
Pitney Administers Oath.
The inaugural exercises were opened
with prayer and Scripture reading by
Dr. Henry Van Dyke, professor of Eng
lish in Princeton university. The auc
, Woodrow Wilson as president
< ' Princeton, then received the oath of
< ■•. , .d by Mahlon Bltneyf '79.
. - . ait" justict of the supreme court
.J' United States. After President
Hibben had taken the oath, the charter
and keys of the university were deliv
ered to him by John Aikman Stewart,
senior trustee and ex-president pro
tempore of the university, after which
President Tibben delivered his inau
gural address.
The title of his address was ‘‘The Es
sentials of a Liberal Education.” In
the course of his remarks he said:
“The university Is not especially de
signed for the purpose of fitting a man
directly for the daily duties of his fu
ture work In life. It should not at
tempt to develop a particular talent for
a particular task, but the whole man.”
Immediately after the inaugural cer
emonies the representatives from other
institutions, ail official guests and the
alumni of the university proceeded to
the gymnasium for luncheon. Those
who made speeches were President
Taft, Chief Justice White, Dr. Francis
Handley Patton, president of the
Princeton Theological seminary and
ex-president of the university; Presi
dent Hibben, President Abbott Law
rence Lowell, of Harvard university;
President Arthur Twining Hadley, of
Yale, and President Nicholas Murray
Butler, of Columbia.
Following the luncheon the party at
tended the Princeton-Cornell baseball
game, of which President Taft was an
interested witness.
Now is the time to get rid of your
rheumatism You can do it by applying
Chamberlain’s Liniment and massag
ing the parts,freely at each application.
For sale bv all dealers. *««
THERMOMETERS.
And kindred instruments. Jno. L.
Moore & Sons are headquarters. Incu
bator and brooder thermometers. 42
North Broad street. •»«
White City Park Now Open
WINDOW BOXES FILLED
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 1130.
The biggest sensation of the
year next week at the Bijou—
MERMAIDA, the diving Venus.
We Believe We Will Win
°4 With These Rules
%
We Will Be Open These Columns Will
in a Few Days Jr Notify You
• o °a
■•& DOZIER & GAY PAINT CO. %
31 South Broad Street j
HILLYER TRUST IS NO
LONGER DEFENDANT
IN BIG POWER CO. SUIT
By a consent order of Judge W. T. New
man, the Hillyer Trust Company, trans
fer agent of the Georgia Railway and
Power Company, has been removed from
the list of defendants in the case of W.
A. Carlisle against C. Elmer Smith et al.
By this order the trust company is al
lowed to transfer 5,130 shares of stock
of the Georgia Railway and Tower Com
pany and all injunctions are removed
from it.
The original case was brought March
26 by W A. Carlisle against C. Elmer
Smith, E. L. Ashley and Mrs. E. L. Ash
ley to recover one-third share of the prof
its resulting from the merger of the
North Georgia Electric Company and the
Etowah Power Company into the Georgia
Power Company. Carlisle claims that the
net profits have been $406,000 in cash and
$3,700,000 worth of common stock in the
Georgia Power Company.
If he is not judged a partner Carlisle
asks $500,000 for having gained the stock
holders' consent to the merger.
1 UTILE OIIPEfSH EMS DYSPEPSIA
AM MAKES STOMACH TUMBLE WISH
Indigestion, Gas, Heart
burn, Headache and other
distress will go in five
minutes.
If you had some Dlapepsin handy
and would take a little now your
stomach distress or Indigestion would
vanish in five minutes and you would
feel tine.
This harmless preparation will di
gest anything you eat and overcome a
sour, out-of-order stomach before you
realize it.
If your meals don’t tempt you, or
what little you do eat seems to fill
you, or lays like a lump of lead in
your stomach, or if you have heart
burn, that Is a sign of Indigestion.
IF NOT, WHY NOT?
Have you “gardened” yet? If not, why not?
Is that backyard going to stay bare and unsightly
this summer, or will you make it both beautiful and a
money saver, keeping your table supplied with fresh,
crisp, tender vegetables such as you can’t buy, and at
the same time making a dent in your grocery bill? f
<n> e e e
Most everybody likes beans, beets, eggplants, squash,
tomatoes, sweet peppers, etc., all of which are easily
grown in a small backyard garden. If you haven’t
started, it’s a good time now. Seeds almost jump out of
the ground this warm, showery weather.
We have either seeds or plants of everything you
need for the garden. Come, if you can; phone,, if you
can’t come. We deliver daily in all parts of Atlanta.
H. G. HASTINGS & CO.
16 W. MITCHELL ST. PHONES 2568
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1912.
ROAD GETS SUIT OF
PASSENGER HURT IN
WRECK TRANSFERRED
On motion of-the defendant, the case
which R. C. Casey filed against the South
ern Railway Company in the May term
of the Fulton county superior court for
$15,600 damages has been transferred to
the United States court.
Caeey alleges in his suit that the de
railment of the Southern train from At
lanta to Birmingham, which took place on
March 1. at Oxford, Ala., was caused by
poor condition of the track and the worn
flanges of the car wheels, and that in
the resulting wreck and ‘‘side-swiping’’
of a switch engine he was permanently
injured and unfitted to earn his living
as a mechanic. He goes into details and
says his right arm was broken, cut and
bruised, his back twisted and hurt, his
nervous system shattered and that he
suilered numerous cuts and bruises on his
body and limbs
Ask your Pharmacist for a 50-cent
case of Pape's Diapepsin and take a
little just as soon as you can. There
will be no sour risings, no belching
of undigested food mixed with acid,
no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness
or heavy feeling In the stomach. Nau
sea, debilitating Headache, Dizzi
ness or Intestinal griping. This will
all go, and, besides, there will be no
undigested food left in the stomach
to poison your breath with nauseous
odors.
Pape’s Diapepsin Is certain cure for
out-of-order stomachs, because it pre
vents fermentation and takes hold of
your food and digests it just the same
as if your stomach wasn’t there.
Relief in five minutes from all stom
ach misery is at any drug store wait
ing for you.
These large 50-cent cases contain
more than suffcienUto thoroughly cure
almost any case of Dyspepsia, Indiges
tion or any other stomach disturbance.
♦
In Sorrow, Rather
♦
In its issue of April 30th, the Atlanta CON
STITUTION printed two quotations from EVERY
BODY’S MAGAZINE, and prefaced them with
the words:
"EVERYBODY’S MAGAZINE makes the
following remarks.” : r
The two quotations were selected and presented
in such away as to make it appear that EVERY
BODY’S MAGAZINE was enthusiastically in favor
of one candidate for the presidency and definitely
opposed to another candidate.
The publishers of EVERYBODY’S MAGA
ZINE have always kept it non-partisan. They be
lieve that partisanship would lessen its value to its
readers and be injurious to it as a publication. EVERY
BODY’S MAGAZINE takes sides only on moral
issues.
The article from which the Atlanta CONSTI
TUTION quotes was intended to be an absolutely ’
fair, non-partisan comparison of the eight men who are
most prominently in the public eye as candidates for
the presidency. In each case the same method was
pursued in balancing the candidate’s qualifications—
what his friends said for him was contrasted with what
his opponents said against him.
Without explaining this, the Atlanta CONSTI
TUTION printed what was said in favor of one
candidate, with no mention of what his critics said
against him, and in contrast, quoted what another can
didate’s opponents said against him, ignoring what his
friends said for him.
To show the unfairness of what the CONSTI
TUTION has done: It would have been perfect
ly possible for the CONSTITUTION, by extending
its comments, to have made it appear in turn that
EVERYBODY’S MAGAZINE was indorsing
each candidate on the list; also that EVERY
BODY’S MAGAZINE was opposing each candi
date on the list.
. This might have made EVERYBODY’S MAG
AZINE appear ridiculous, but it would not have been
as unfair, in the opinion of the publishers of EVERY
BODY’S, as what the CONSTITUTION did do.
We ask every reader of this announcement who
read the quotations in the Atlanta CONSTITUTION
to turn to the May number of EVERYBODY’S
MAGAZINE and read the opening article, by Erman
J. Ridgway, entitled “WEIGHING THE CANDI
DATES,” and then to let us know whether he thinks
that a good, clean, honest American newspaper like
the CONSTITUTION has any right to juggle with
the facts as the CONSTITUTION has done.
THE RIDGWAY COMPANY, Publishers of
EVERYBODY’S MAGAZINE
• * - ■ - .