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1911COTTON0ILL
REPORTED AGAIN
Democrats Declare Taft Should
Approve It. Despite Former
Veto—Score Tariff Board.
WASHINGTON. June 4.—Declaring
the report of the tariff board lacks in
formation needed to revise the tariff
and pointing out the same “weakness”
as existed in the report on the wool
schedule, the ways and means commit
tee today reported the cotton bill. This
measure is identical with the bill pass
ed last session and vetoed by President
Taft. It provides a reduction of duties
on all cotton products varying from 25
to 45 per cent.
The Democrats argue this measure
should meet the approval of President
Taft, "despite the fart that he vetoed it
at the last sessiort."
The majority members uphold the
Underwood bill as “practical legisla
tion” and attack the tariff board be
cause of “its failure to deal completely
with any phase of the firoposed reduc
tion." The report especially calls at
tention to the refusal of the board to
give the names of English cotton mills
from which the tariff experts obtained
the information that wages are higher
this country than In the United,
Kingdom.
Minority members of the committee
also filed their substitute bill prepared
by Representative Hill, of Connecticut.
It follows conclusions of the tariff
board. The rates in the bill are slight
ly higher than in the Underwood bill,
being based on protection instead of
“revenue only." The majority report
says:
Board's Report Inadequate.
"The only change which has occurred
in the situation since list summer is
the submission of the tariff board re
port on cotton manufactures which was
submitted to congress by the president
in his message of March 26, 1912. in
his message the president said: ‘I now’
recommend that the congress proceed
to a consideration of this schedule with
a view to its revision and a reduction
in Its rates.’
• "The executive tariff is now In har
mony with the majority members of
this house on the general policy to be
adopted in spite of his veto of last
summer and the only question remain
ing Is to what extent the reduction in
cotton duties shall be carried.
"It was pointed out In the previous
house report that the tariff board re
port on wool was not in reality a tariff
report. This comment is applicable to
the report on cotton manufactures, al
though the latter contains much more
materia! than the former concerning
rates of duty and the method by which
they are to be levied."
♦ BOY HUNTER’S FALL
DISCHARGES GUN;
BROTHER IS DYING
MACON. GA., June 4.—-Baxter Tid
well. thirteen years old. is dying in
the Macon hospital, with a load of
birdshot in his body. John Tidwell,
hla nlne-year-old brother, accidentally
wounded him. The boys went spar
row hunting on their mother’s farm, a
sou miles from Macon, yesterday, when
John, walking behind Baxter, stumbled
his Anger pulling the trigger of his
gun The shot penetrated the lad’s in
testines and his death is regarded as
inevitable The mother is prostrated.
T, R DENOUNCED BY
GEORGIA WOMAN FOR
CRITICISM OF DAVIS
MACON. GA.. June 4. Mrs. W D.
Tamar’s denunciation of Theodor?
Roosevelt for his designation of Jeffer
son Davis as a “traitor" featured the
Davis birthday, memorial exercises here
yesterday‘afternoon. She said, among
other things, that Roosevelt jvas ignor
ant of American historj
LOSS OF EYE INSURES
WAGES FIFTEEN YEARS
SAN FRAN'TSt’O. June 4. In the
first decision of the kind of California
Industrial accident board has ruled that
Harry Chris* an employee of the Paci
fic Telephone and Telegraph Company,
who lost an eye while at work, shall
receive sino for medical and surgical
expenses, full wages for hospital time.
65 per cent of his wages for the fol
lowing eight weeks. 65 per cent of his
estimated loss in earning capacity
thereafter for a maximum period of
fifteen years.
The board find- that, although the
loss of an eye does not necessarily im
pair a man’s earning capacity, it in
creases the difficulty of finding work.
STOLEN PIE AND BISCUITS
PROVE FATAL TO DEER
POUGHKEEPSIE. N Y Tune 4
Biscuits and pumpkin pie are fatal to
deer. A voting buck poked its head
through the kitchen window <>t Mrs.
Lawrence Dutcher, in Ojlvnea, Ulster
county, today, and after devouring a
dozen biscuits and a steaming pie
scampered back into the woods.
Several hours later the animal was
found dead by a party of picnickers,
and all the village thinks it was killed
by acute indigestion.
THE LAX FOS WAY.
If you had a medicine 'hat would
strengthen the liver, the stomach. the
kidneys and the bowels and at the same
time make you strong with a systemic
tonic, don’t you .believe you would soon
t be well?
That’s "The Lax-Fos Way "
We ask you to buy the first bottle on
the money-hack plan, and you will ask
your druggist to sell you the second.
It keeps tom whole tnsld-s right
There Is nothing else made like Lax
Foe
Remember the oame—LAA-EuS. •••
Woman Answers John D.'s Pastor
10 DON’TS FOR HUSBANDS
CHICAGO, June 4.—A “decalogue of
don’ts for husbands" was issued today
by- Mrs. Myra Strawn Hartshorn in re
sponse to the “ten don’ts for wives ”
compiled by Rev. W. W. Bustard.
Rockefeller’s pastor of the Euclid Bap
tist church, of Cleveland.
Mrs. Hartshorn sent this message to
husbands:
1. Don’t marry a doll and find fault
because she is not a helpmeet.
2. Don’t be afraid of a woman with
education and some brains.
3. Don’t forget that nine out of ten
times your wife wants to hh your chum.
4. Don’t nag your wife until she
looses her temper or goes insane.
PRISONER, TO PROVE
SELF THESPIAN, WILL
DO SKETCH FOR JURY
MACON. GA.. June 4.—When Wil
liam Meegan takes the stand in the
United States court this morning to
tell his defense to the charge of coun
terfeiting he will sing, act and recite
for the benefit of the jury', so as to
prove that he is a vocalist, author and
thespian, and not a maker of spurious
money'. Meegan was arrested here re
cently following a search of hfs rooms,
when tools for coining money and a
lot of counterfeit quarters were found.
Meegan claims that a man named Wil
liam Finer, whom he befriended by giv
ing'a few nights free lodging, left the
articles in his room unknown to him.
Piner has disappeared, though sum
moned by both the government and
the defense as a witness.
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
Wednesday, This Most
Remarkable Sale of
Women 9 s Stylish Suits
$25 to $35 Suits at
sls
S4O, $45, SSO and S6O Suits at
S2O
All tipw and stylish—not a last season's Suit in the collection.
You know the standard of excellence maintained in this Department.
You have seen these Suits and admired them, at their regular prices. Then
yon know what the occasion for Wednesday means —the opportunity to
choose from elegant and fashionable Suits in all the wanted colors and
materials at these extremely low prices.
The Reason for This Wonderful, Low
Pricing of Choice Suits
Naturally there must be a reason for a sale of this kind —for we would
not. under any ordinarvcircumslaucc. offer such reductions on most-want
ed merchandise at this season.
Our store is under course of reconstruction. The building of an eight
story structure, which has been under way since January first, is about
half completed. By turns the various departments have been given over
to the contractors.
The Space Occupied by the Women 9 s Apparel Sec
tion Must Be Given Up to the Workmen
This department must in a short time be consigned to smaller quar
ters. and the place now occupied be closed for the work of remodeling,
along with the other part of the building. This means at least two or
three removals, all of which will result in damage to the stock. And so.
aside from the urgent necessity for reducing the present stock to meet the
small, allotted space, we are offering these choice, new Suits at this sac
rifice Wednesday, rather than move them several times—or store them
away.
It is an occasion for saving that every practical-minded woman will
want to share.
The Suits are choice, fashionable, new—the stylish, popular mate
rials: Whipcords, serges, mixtures —in every desirable color tone of the
season.
Don’t Overlook the Pricing
For Wednesday
$25 to $35 Suits at sls
S4O, $45, SSO and S6O Suits at S2O
THE ATLANTA GEORG TAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY. JUNE 4. 1912.
5. Don't make the blunder of be
lieving that a four.Tive or six-room fiat
can occupy all of her time, energy or
brain pow er.
6. Don't forget that life without chil
dren is a mighty empty sort of exis
tence.
7. Don't refuse to do what you can
to lighten the burden qf child rearing
in your home.
6. Don’t forget that you get out of
marriage exactly what you put in it.
9. Don't make your purse strings the
means of controlling your wife’s
thought and conduct.
10. If there are no children don’t op
pose your wife's taking her place be
side you in the work-a-day world.
BUILDINGS BOMBED
AFTER SHOOTING BEE
IN A GAMBLERS’ FEUD
NEW YORK, June 4. —Four buildings
were dynamited early today in the big
gambling feud w hich broke out yester
day morning when “Jack" Selig, an
East Side gang leader, was shot in a
gun fracas. The bomb explosions fol
lowed each other closely. They were
in lower Fourth avenue and St. Marks
place, and all the buildings were badly
damaged. The police say that friends
of Selig or members of his clan had
been or are yet tenants in all the build
ings.
Selig, who is known to thg police as
an East Side feudist and dangerous gun
fighter, lies in the Bellevue hospital in
a critical condition and may not re
cover.
The war started when an attempt
was made to shoot up Louis Poggi’s
Chinatown saloon.
PEFFER LOSES LEG
TO FINISH HISTORY
OF POPULIST PARTY
TOPEKA, June 4.—ln a little room
in Christ hospital, a thin, gray-haired
and whiskered man lies on a couch
and dictates for 20 to 30 minutes four
times a day, that the real history of
Populism may be preserved. At 82
years he has suffered the amputation
of a leg that this history may be com
pleted. It probably never will be pub
lished. but will be kept in the archives
of the Kansas State Historical society,
w'here it may' be reaq by historians in
the years to come.
William A. Peffer was the first and
only Populist senator from Kansas.
The guileless, long-whiskered man was
the butt of the cartoonists and joke
smiths. and his w hiskers furnished am
munition for bombardments of ridicule.
One chapter ot the book is devoted to
the “Whiskers of Populism." Peffer has
the same whiskers he has always worn.
Feel
Grouchy «
It is not your fault —it
is your liver. No one
can be in good spirits
when their system is
not carrying off the
waste products.
Tutt’s Pills
regulate the bile ducts
and put you in a good
humor with yourself
and the world. At
your druggist—sugar
coated or plain.
aSK ANY Man who knows clothes—he will tell you that they
™ find their highest ideas realized in these clothes made
Rogers, Peet & Co. and Hart Schaf'B
i ner & Marx. ■
\ life* None but the very highest qual-
ities of fabrics are used; the styles
- are conceived by master minds in
the art of clothing the human body;
Vi- the garments are made by the very
\ ” \v/ " A best tailors in the world; and with
\ ' \\7 / ' / the purchasing power of providing
/A \j // t f\ for millions of garments makes pos
/ \ // ' A \ sible the superior values given for
/r \ v \\ y what you pay.
V**/ \ II Suits that show their value, $lB, S2O and $25 *
k i rj V and more; besides, they keep showing it.
o / / Panama Hats *
\ / The king of summer hats in all
shapes to suit—-models that you’ll
J enjoy putting on your head. Bang
ka J koks of the sheerest possible weight ■
—so light you can
I II ' hardly feel it. 1 '
i \ I Splits and Milans |
I'l/ in finest braids;
Sennits in popu
lar sailor style—all priced to sell.
Hats $1 to $lO for Panamas
DANIEL BROS. CO.
Good Enough for Anybody;
Within Reach of Everybody
Subscribe for
THE GEORGIAN
And Get This 45-Piece Set for a
Fraction of Its Value
’saws* ,x' • --"A-: 4$
SEE SAMPLE SETS DISPLAYED IN OUR OFFICE WINDOW AND IN THE DISPLAY WINDOW OF THE
CARLTON SHOE CO.. 3« WHITEHALL.
Every Piece Warranted To Be Perfectly Shaped
High Grade American Semi-Porcelain
The thinness of the ware, the rich Royal Blue and Coin Gold Decoration, delicately
shaded into the pure white, make this set equal in appearance a,nd utility to the highest
priced imported china.
THE DECORATION CAN NOT WEAR OFF
It is applied by a new process that fires it into each piece underneath the glaze." This
insures a lasting beauty, heretofore rare among newspaper premium dishes.
WE SEND COURTEOUS MEN AND WOMEN TO PRESENT THE DETAILS OF
THIS OFFER, UPON REQUEST. These representatives will not annoy you with the
usual insistent tactics of the average solicitor. If you can resist this offer after it has been
explained to you, and you have seen the dishes, we will not subject you to further impor
tunity. But we would like to tell you about it.
THE GEORGIAN, Circulation Dept. BothPhlnes'sooo
7