Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 14, 1912, HOME, Page 2, Image 2

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2 TEDOYANDTAFT CLINCH IN OHIO President and Man Who Made Him Attack Each Other as Crowds Cheer. Continued from Psge One. give a fair dial to b-Mh manufacturer and consumer The ex■ president mad" a veiley threat to bolt if .•Uftcd -tn -f the. nomination "If th-'v trick u* t: the contention I'll hav- a g at deal ,r >; s.t. he declared Their Trails Cross Al Many Points. STEI REWILLE Ma- 14 —| President 1 if! left a sfrinc <»f ac« u-j through the* state* for • olon* | p!t. who followed in h ® wake, io| ans* r r. The first point where Gm Taft special crossed the R-- - volt battle line n.o al Steubenville Mr Taft got on the ground here lai • night, and in the midst of a cir< le of red fire, said his piece and j Wt ~t 7:30 o’clock today. l«o hour-1 and 40 minutes befot*• the colonel was; scheduled to .urtv At hast Liver pool Mr. Taft was thr»e hours ahead and na- Scheduled to reach <‘anion at , no-n. while Colonel Rosevelt will make this ( ity his night stop Late today the tab nil hr tmn-d Tie 'Lift special will follow Roosevelt into War ren at « 13 p nr. turn' ho.i s after . the colonel has spoken there, and the same differcm * of time will exist at Mi'--, which M Taft r. mh- - il 6:55. M Young iown where th pi.-si-l-nt w-; mild his night njer-ting, Roosevelt had a two hours visit. C reus Keeps Down Size of Crowd. R'-sidu:' Taft had to divide honors] vrb i ■ iri as at Wellsville today, but he took the division good-naturedly and If. cl-cd h-aitiiv when t-dd why there wa- so small a crowd al th-' station there to meet him. The president mingled praise of hi own administration with attack- on Roosevelt today, and at Wellsville he I de-’ia’vd that if Roosevelt Is returned] .to thf white house for another four yrai- the bosses will lie as much in cv idem e as ever." Th- president replied to hl- predeces sors charge that the bos-e are sui-- ' porting Taft bv asserting that Roose j velt wa- as -leu i friend to the b-ss as an.' other candidate. Girl His Champion. v Salincv t'l-. while the pi-shlcnti was talking trusts, < little girl in tie , foreground, angired because h>-i !>••> t companion wore- a head covering, shouted. "Say, Smlttie. take your hat off." and, herself amoving the offend ing headgear held it while the presi dent continued his spree'.. President Taft conducted a class in. patriotism in East Liverpool, ami iftei he had been duly satisfied that the] hundred., of school children who vvc-i-' massed directly beneath the balcony] from which hr spoke were glad they win Americans and happy under the Stars] and Stripes, he turned tils attention to 7,<inj or 9.000 voters and told them about ‘ his administration. H- parlleuiarly appealed to them, mos: of them being in the pottery bus - iness. through the provisions of tlie| tariff which hr said, prevent- fraud in the pottery business by tinder-v al- 1 uation k ’ . . "1 am not fawning upon the people by saying hat whatever they do must: necessarily be right." said the pre - i dent. Clark Winning in California Fight SAX ERA X* ’lS< '<>. May 14. Presidon. I tial primaries the first In which worn- . en have ever voted -were held in t'al- I ifornta today After months of the most active kind . of campaigning, the (’lark, Wilson, ] Taft. Roosevelt and LaFollette boom ers strove today tn get the voters to the ' poll*’. X Few campaigns in this state have been 'attended by stich keen interest. 1 Women have taken an active part and they will increase the size of the vote. th« vast majority of th-m favoring Clark, who looks like an easy winner over Wilson. The olectiot -th- first in Cai-fornia a' which vol--. - ha . > right Jo express their p: ■ Terence for. nominating a pre dent. The Democratic campalg- between Champ. Clark and Woodrow \\ son has been spectacular Disinterested fore casters today predicted that Clark would arry the state in spite of M il son's earefu pe ipd organization. Interest mi tr,-- Rei übli-an side- was I heightened bv the num --f Governor' Johnson from Sm LiFr>lkttc to' y olorm Roos-vc.r, The tight between the Taft and Roosevelt for- es has been ] bitter during th- cner- impaign, and sp: <■ was adds : to ■ through the at tacks b Lal-’o! tie on Governor John son and th* Rooe-vc ■ follow c ■ Despite toe fig- - made igam.-t the colonel, figuic- Gom unbiased source, indicate Rcossv e!t vv-r win tm- Cuiif i. 1..a dtk g..: :-n ... -he Krpubi: an ticket. Here .«• e th' fot-' s.-ts n..ci-- today f-om the various I:-. -tua.t-rs ■Roosevelt -. il! arty the -: .■. I , plurality of not less th,in : .i.urin ami by a majority of in-- .-s- than Ou--. John W S'etsoi j-r. sident f the Roosevelt leag .■ "President Tat' wi.; carry < - ifornia by a very hands.-m- maj - ity. Culo nei Charles Mifflin Hamm-.n-i. -> tnagt-r of the Taft - ampaign “Late adv ices - oming t . ail se, tions. -oftfiim our prediction tha l Champ daik will -any .-very county in the state "- R. H. I'- witt. eiiairm.iii of the Demo-rati- st..;-- - , t- -al - ~-m . mil tec. I am confident that Sena’or Lal-- lette will be the - hoi-- of the f-c. voters of this stat- Roosevelt laf' have both failed to ,n!-, our prob lems.’ - Rudolph Spreckels. Xo statement -ame from Woodr--" ■\x .i-on .- manage- n.. c-ipg , a active -i - -he la ■ gr.c - hr.TC' we -a ■ nw •' t-d - • ■ .it-- y-_ ge.es our.’ . M men fi-tked iju th* State Heavy Loser by Printing Being Padded, Union Official Asserts ’hat the Mate of <;eorgia has o«t 11><>usandf of dollars each year ; through its dealings nith the present • sta’e printer. Luther H Still, president j of the Atlanta Typographh al I'nion, No. I 4S. submitted his detailed statement tn lda> t«- Philip Cook secretary of stale. ■ showing just how the state has lost < I’hrougl’ alleged excessive padding of the | house and senate journals Mr Still makes his charges bluntl? an<i submit? his evidence to substantiate ihem He sa* s that bv padding the house nr'! senate journals of 1911 the state pi inter gained 402 pages in one book alone, which amounts in ca -h to between and $3,000. As another example he calls attention •o a pamphlet entitled ’’Manufacturers.’ issued by the state department of labor, jand for which the state paid Its printer ! $67 for four thousand copies The pamph i let was of only four pages, and another! j printer offered to execute the same job | I for only $35. • I polls, voting early, •Reports from the ; state indicate that unusual interest was j displayed b> them. With the addition i (d‘ the v<»te> of the worn* n, it is be lieved that the vote in the state wil 1 he twi< <- as great as ever before. • Taft Wins on First Fest in Tennessee NASHVILLE. TENN. May 14. Taft ! Ilf pubii' ans won th- tii i test of strength in the state (-invention here, toi ay when Koster V. Brown, of <'hat tanooga. whom President Taft appoint ed attorney general of f’orio Rico. waj» elected chairman over W. V. Poston, of <’rock(‘tt ((»iin’y. the Roosevelt candi date for the chairmanship 'l'hen the i’ift majority hastened to take a recess until 3.30 o’clock to hear the report of the credentials committee. I'oHowing Ihe adjournment al 12;3O • oc.ork, the Roosevelt lenders claimed 'at the state committee robbed Ro" • \(dt of more than 60 votes, as only the 'iel gallons seated by the .-tat ■ .im inltter \vere allowed to pnrtjcipate In the balloting. The committee is loaded with Taft men \ break by the minor. I ity is •■xpected when the credentials I'ommlttpe reports, sealing Taft dele | gates from conieMcd counties. Clark Captures Wyoming’s Vote i'HEYEXXE, \VY<>.. M 11. i - 'hamp -'lurk and President Taft wen- I tin- i-lioi-a- of tln-ir rf-si-ei-tivf- partif’s ] in Wyoming for tin- pi - - i-l- nt in I noml I nation-, and delegations t-lcdg-'d I" them will be sent to (’liie.-ig-- and Bal iilnmve In spite of thf fact that Gov ci nor I'aiey is otic of th-- original I "Roosevelt governors." onlv on-- county in th-- slat-- favored the Colonel. iw .rn ■ ' Ju '<l ■ ■<*«? SagxiKdr ■■ 1- M‘ V ' I ’H&lfir 1 l«O’-.i*.'. W '- •J.'iWtl fi. vV v Es ■ ■ |||f V z ’J‘ r 1 ill f ? it^BSr 1 Wb,) " I ac^e a I EffWl’MlKß Wben everything is working s^ow — When you art in a peck of Hr smk£,<■:' ‘ trouble — / When you are at your wits’end '.*'• what to do next — •■ ',?\'l•» ■■;' t * Take a good cnew. ■ 1* help you fasten down to work. Seems to just slip in and smooth out the J> rough places and untangle all your diffi- culties ’ i The c^ew without an equal is f* DRUMMOND ™ I I CHEWING TOBACCO I An inviting golden plug, rich with flavor you and you get twice the pleasure from it. of natural leaf Burley. " So, although it may costa trifle more, Drum- It contains none of the harshness, none of niond is really an economy chew. J| the heart burn of the old-style, strong, dark. Wrapped in wax-paper, enclosed in a neat tobacco. metal box—Drummond is always clean, * Half the amount of Drummond will run always fresh, always tempting and satisfying. At your dealer's— I IOC I r ' WS<. '^iW"' ''' : • -^ - **“* - **' ' I ** - r’iy. r: dtawSßOh- ’ IHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: TT'ESDAY. MAY 14, 1912. CONTRITE THIEF RETURNS GEMS Truax Jewelry. Stolen in At lanta. Mysteriously Reaches Owner Year After Theft. A.-.mysteriously as they were stolen in Atlanta more than a y ; ear ago. jewels worth $1,500 have been retu-n’-i to Mrs. ('harks H Truax in ''hteago by a- on:- ienee-strb ken thief. The iden tity of tuo thief is just as great a mys tery imw as when the jewels were first d:s ov -). ri missing. The pa-kag-- containing the stolen jewelry was wrapped In manila paper and was received by mall at the Truax j home in Chicago. The place where the i package was mailed is not. known. Dr. I Herbert Truax, proprietor of the Truax sanitarium in Cherokee avenue, a brother of Charles H. Truax, has re ceived a. telegram telling of the strange recovery of :he lost gems, hut details vv ere not given. Stolen More Than Year Ago. The jewels were stolen last February while Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Truax were in Artlan'a, Mr. Truax having beer called her- by the d-ath of his mother. Mrs. Galloway Truax, of 425 Cherokee avenue The robbery took pl.me in Ihe Truax home. A nurse, who is said to have been the only pers-in who had a- -'ess to the room In which the Jewels were kept, was a. rested by detectives but later released for lack of sutfi- lent evidence. She Im mediately left Atlanta and went, to a small Georgia town. There all tr.i-'i- of her was lost. Charles H Truax’ is a member of th" firm of Truax. Greene & Co. of Chi cago, d-aleis in m- dieal supplies. | FOR KISSING GIRL WHO ASKED HIS AID MAN IS HELD TO GRAND JURY On a i lorg- of attempted criminal assault. Merit Hairston, a former resi dent of Elberton, Ga.. has been hound over to the grand jury by Recorder Broyles. The ■ onng woman to whom the offense was offered gave the evl i deni e w hii-b resulted in him being held Ao m dlng to her statement, she had ! Just arrived in Atlanta and was seek-i I Inga boarding place on Edgewood avc | i Um- v. In-n -Im ne t Hairston. who I agreed tn direct her. fnstead he led her | to his room on Auburn avenue, took : tier in his arms, and kissed her. At this sin- fled from tin- room and | brought the police. Mrs* Grace Is Still in | Search of Bondsman; Husband Sitting Up Mrs. Dais: Grace, under an indictment charging her with trying to kill her hus band. Eugene H. Grace, faces another night in the Tower, as her bond has not vet been made by her attorneys, and will nnt be made today. The accused woman, although at first worried over the fact •hat she was unable to make bond, now accepts the situation optimistically. No indication of a change of mind has been given by the wounded husband since his announcement that he is un willing to place his signature to a mort gage to Mrs. Grat e’s Spruce street home, in Philadelphia, so that she can raise the necessary security for her bondsman Bj refusing this he not only prevents her irom being released on bond, but hinders ner to some extent in her efforts to raise Binds for her defense al the (rial. Reports from Newnan toda> are that Grace is much improved, and is now able '/» sit in a roller chair and be wheeled about the ?aid at his home. ~AT THE THEATERS" AN ALMOST UNKNOWN DUO PROVE FORSYTH S BIG HIT Keller Mack and Frank orth, a r-ait of song writers, presenting ’The Wrong Hern. ' caught the fam-v of last night’s Forsyth s audience, and for about twenty minutes enjoyment reigned supreme. The jokes an- funny, the lines ate witty, the action is fast, the songs are good, and the ( omedian fa the real thing as a laugh ma ker. Caroline B. Nichols, al the head of the Fadeitcs of Boston, eighteen young lad: musicians, is one of the biggest, best and most entertaining musical vaudeville acts ever seen in Atlanta. And a majority of them can whistle, too. and pucker their lip' becomingly. ”Kn Soundine," a ser enade. in which the stringed instruments were featured, proved a \er\ popular of fering. although i hex roamed afield in popular melodies, 100. and made a hit ihereh.v The finale, ’’Auld Lung Syne.' (•angle the popular fanc\. causing a half I dozen curtain rails for the leader. 'l'he Three .losetfx Brothers, a Euro ; pcan acrobatic act. closed the bill with i Mime very pleasing work. H was of the ‘Ooreotyperl strong man and head-to-head i posturing, hut. the entire art is far above the ordinary of its kind. “The Fighter and the Boss,” played h\ Sullivan and Battling, was an interesting actlet. its melodrama bring considerable iclieved b\ the pugilistic slang of the “prize tighter with a mission.” cither arts on the bill are Powers, the ventrilocuisl. with Paulina, his clever au tomatic doll aid: the Six <>’Connor Sis ters. character singers; Ben Smith, black face. KENTUCKY FARMER TO SPEAK. EASTMAN, GA., Max 11 Robert L. Garrett. secretary-1 reasui’cr of the Farmers I’nion of Kentucky, will make an addres- here in the interest of tin Katmers union on Thursday. May 23. The regulai meeting of the Farmers I t»i"i; of Dodge county will he held r Friday of this w eek. CLARK WILL WIN. STATES ED SMITH Baltimore Newspaper Man Is Sure Speaker and Taft Will Get the Nominations. Ed Smith, nf The Baltimore Amer ican, and for some time of The Post and Herald, of Washington, is in At lanta today. Mr. Smith is on his wav- to Texas, touching various points in the South for a day or so as he goes, while politics is by no means the primary object of his visit, ho is looking into the Southern situation. particularly the Republican end of it. in passing. The Baltimore Anjerican is one of the stoutest-hearted and staunchest | Tat't partisans in the entire United States. The American is edited by Colonel Felix Agnus, and in the Re publii inism of the old persuasion, - ’olonel Agnus can sea far greater ex cess of Republican virtue ’han any w here else he may look. His paper is standing by the president. Says Party Will Survive. "There is little, if any. doubt that the president will be renominated.” said Mr. Smith. “It is true that there is much strife within the party, and grave anxiet.v is felt by some Republicans as to the future. But the Republican party has survived many internal dif ferences in the past, and it will survive many more, no doubt. "President Taft, needs only a handful of delegates to place the nomination safely in his hands; these delegates he will get inevitably. Ohio will stand by him in its primary of May 21. And, af ter Taft is nominated, the warring factions wifi come together—maybe not ail along the line, but as an approxi mate whole, anyway. In the Easl, Taft's nomination is regarded as all but certain. Clark Gene"al Favorite. "The general opinion on the Demo cratic side of the fence seems to bo that Champ Clark will win that nomination. He has. nude a surprising showing thus far. and there are a number of slates vat sure io go for. him. It. surely will be Clark, or some Democrat not now in th-- running. And If Clark should win the country would have a chief magistrate of whom it might well b" proud. Champ Clark would make a patriotic president of these I'nited States. "I think a,battle between Taft and Clark would be a battle royal. And 1 believe that is what the country is go ing to see next Xovember. moreover." ■' - ■ 1 CHATTANOOGA TO SPEND $75,000 on 1913 REUNION CHATTANOOGA, TEXX., May 14. The Chattanooga Chamber of Com merce will begin immediately to raise a fund of $75,000 to aid in the entertain ment of the Confederate veterans, who will meet here in annual reunion next year. Secretary M. H. Evans believes that this amounj will be necessary. He anticipates the attendance of 60.000 v isitors, including the veterans. The Chamber of Commerce will call a meeting within the next few days, -v hen an executive c ommittee will be selected to plan for the 1913 reunion. ANNIVERSARY SALE OF froWrT BRASS BEDS iWTIL y $13.50 Value $7.50 CTTTPh ’I Every Brass Bed in stock to be l i! , ;l||.jl|r iSI i ' moved in this sale, and to do this ’|| pHTspH's’L, rjy! Lfe-*, I quicklv wo have cui the prices like ( 'l !,;/’]?; ijiffiLjfe J this: sl3..M> Brass Beds $ 7.50 $35.00 Brass Beds $23.25 $20.00 Brass Beds 12.50 $45.00 Brass Beds 30.00 $27.50 Brass Beds 17.25 $50.00 Brass Beds... 35.00 TERMS IF DESIRED. (iOLDSMITH’ACTON’WITHERSPOON CO. 62 PEACHTREE. LIFETIME FURXITURE XORTH BROAD CLEANER ATLANTA Most everybody is cleaning up these days. Thousands of the city's hack yards needed it. What's the use. however, of letting those back yards stay idle this summer when they might .just as well be paying their way. USEFUL and BEAUTIFUL One 7 lialf of the vacant back yards put in vege tables would supply this entire city with vege tables. If you use your back yard for a nice family garden this summer the '‘high cost of liv ing'* won't worry you any and you will lie daily supplied with fresh, tender xegetables of a qual ity you can’t buy in market. If don't interest you, it will certain ly look better to have beds of easily-grown flow ers than a bare or weed-co\ered spot. The time is now. and our store is seed and plant headquarters for Atlanta. H. G. HASTINGS & CO. 16 W. MITCHELL ST. PHONES 2568 I PAINLESS DENTISTRY FOR LADIES AND CHILDREN Our PAINLESS methods of performing all dental operations appeal particularly to nervous women and children. Many ho have hesitated to endure the torture j of the usual dentist's treatment havp come to us and had their dental work done in very best man ner and without pain. They have become our firm and loyal friends, and are constantly sending us other patients. If you need any dental work try our painless treatment. >ll Work Exami- Gmntesd nation * Ten Years Fre ® These Are Our Prices for Best Quality Dental Work GOLD CROWNS, $4.00 AND $5.00 SET OF TEETH, $5.00, BRIDGE WORK, $4.00 Atlanta Dental Parlors OR. C, >. CONSTANTINE, Proprietor anil Manager Cor, Peachtree and Oecatur Sts, Entrance Peachtree Often Exhausted When Spring Came On, But Never Since Taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Mrs. A. Hopkins. 225 East Ragle St.. East Boston. Mass., writes: Years ago 1 learned what a good medicine Hood's Sarsaparilla is. When spring came on I was thoroughly exhausted and obliged to take my bed. k thought I would rather die than be so tired. I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, and before long was perfectly well. Since then, spring has never come without my haw - ing Hood's Sarsaparilla." Got it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs.