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POLITICAL WAR IS ON IN CHICAGO
TAFT WINS FIRST
WIGHT
15 NOW ON
Roosevelt Men Will Not Try to
Unseat Opposing Commit
tee Members.
CHICAGO, June 6.—The national
committee of the Republican par
ty held its first pre-conventfon
meeting at 2 o’clock this after
noon. With the rap of the gavel that
called Its members to order one of the
bitterest fights that the Republican
party has ever known was ushered in.
The first fight will go to Taft. That
was conceded on all sides today.
There will be no contest over the seat
of Victor Rose-water, acting chairman
of the national committee and commit
teeman from Nebraska. This was Inti
mated strongly from the Roosevelt
headquarters. It was announced, boldly
from the Taft seat of war.
The committee has heretofore oper
ated only under temporary rules. It
has decided to frame permanent laws
for its own government, and today a
report of the permanent rules commit
tee, headed by Committeeman Brooker,
of Connecticut, will be considered. The
rules will make two things explicit—
the manner of hearing contests and the
limits of the term of a. committeeman.
They will include a provision that the
contests shall be heard by territories
and states in alphabetical order; that
each side shall be allowed not to exceed
30 minutes for the presentation of each
contest over delegates at large and fif
teen minutes for district delegates; that
where cases are similar district con
tests may be bunched and heard all at
the same time; that the same evidence
may be used in various cases from the
same state; that no delegate whose
election was not In accordance with the
call and whose name was not filed at
the time fixed by the call shall be seat
ed, except that where there is no con
test the delegate may be seated on a
majority vote of the committee.
Hearings Open to Newspaper Mon.
The one innovation will be a deci
sion to hold open session of the com
mittee while hearings are under way.
The hearings will not be "too open,”
however. A limited number of news
paper men will bo allowed to listen to
the stories. Then they will be shooed
out before the committee votes.
This does not meet with the full ap
proval of the Roosevelt men. Senator
Dixon today voiced the complaint of his
faction.
"We court full publicity," said Mr.
Dixon. "This proposal is the height of
foolishness. It is when the roll is called
that the contests are decided. When
the vote is taken the public should be
present. If the newspaper men are ex
cluded during the voting it would be
the height of underhand methods.”
Another move planned by the com
mittee is disapproved by the Roosevelt
men. Victor Rose-water will be elected
permanent chairman of the committee
■—assuring that he will serve until the
convention is over. Rosewater was ap
pointed acting chairman after former
Governor Hill, of Maine, elected at the
December meeting of the committee,
died. He is a staunch Taftite. ’it was
admitted by various members of the
committee that Rosewater would be
elected after the roll call today.
De-fsat Roosevelt Single Object.
In fact, the entire Taft program,
hinted before the arrival of Congress
man McKinley, has crystallized today.
Rosewater will* be elected chairman. He
will be official chauffeur of the steam
roller. The committee will seat all the
Taft delegates. At least, they will seat
them until Taft is certain that he has
enough delegates to nominate, and un
til the “moral effect” on the supposed
ly wavering Southern delegations is
sufficiently impressed. Root will be
made temporary chairman. Root will
also be advanced for permanent chair
man.
The Taft program has one object
only: Defeat Roosevelt.
It is an open secret about headquar
ters of the Taft faction that Senator
Root’s keynote address will be in a sad
minor, so far as the Roosevelt faction
is concerned. He has been selected for
the permanent seat. Roosevelt support
ers affirm, because Roosevelt has le,t it
be known that he will fight him.
About the time that Root receives the
second election at the hands of the
convention —according to the prophecy
of the Taft men—Colonel Roosevelt,
with his followers, will file from the
hall and the “rump convention” of the
Move On Now!
says a policeman to a street crowd,
and whacks heads if it doesn’t. “Move
on now,” says the big, harsh mineral
pills to bowel congestion and suffering
follows. Dr. King’s New Life Pills
don’t bulldoze the bowels. They gen
tly persuade them to right action, and
health follows. 25c at all druggists. *•*
BALTIMORE, MD,, AND
RETURN
Account Democratic National
Convention —tickets will be sold
June 20 to 24. $21.35 from At
lanta. Proportionately low rates ’
from other station s—SEA- i
BOARD.
Hanover Inn, the new I
hotel at Wrightsville Beach, ■
already open. Warren H. j
Williams, manager. I
Oyster Bay candidate’s followers will
begin.
On the prophecy of a bolt, Senator
Dixon and those closely-associated with
him are assiduously putting the soft
pedal.
The talk affects Senator Dixon deep
ly. It is preposterous, as he views the
situation, to conceive that a candidate
with enough votes to nominate him on
the first ballot should bolt.
Both McKinley and Dixon gave out
statements of delegate strength. Dixon
claims 527 for the colonel, gives Taft
171, figures 130 uninstructed and
shows that 204 have been contested.
South Worries Taft Men.
The one thing that Taft men are
anxious about is the Southern delega
tion. The Southern delegates are the
real key to the situation. Fear that
the Southerners may join a band wag
on movement to Roosevelt keeps the
Taft men out of bed at night and busy
during the day. It is for this reason,
partly, that the committee has decided
to adhere to the “alphabetical order” of
hearing contests. It is not as the Taft
men figure it, until Indiana is reached
on the list of states, that the Roosevelt
men have a contest with any merit.
Before that time the steam roller will
thoroughly impress wavering South
erners with the futility of switching to
a "lost cause.”
The first day’s grist of the contests,
scheduled to begin tomorrow morning,
includes Alabama. Alaska and Arkan
sas.
The voting in the national commit
tee on the contests “to save time” is
viva voce. According to the present,
rules, it will require a demand on the
part of twenty members of the com
mittee to secure a roll call. The Roose
velt men assert that they have that
many members, but they have never
theless started a movement to secure a
roll call on demand of five committee
men. The steam roller will flatten
out this demand, according to the com
mitteemen today who will talk.
“Arsenic Bottle Program,” Says Dixon.
In an interview at noon today Sena
tor Dixon expressed an assurance that
the “arsenic bottle program” could not
be put through, because of the high
character of the men on the national
committee.
"What is your mew of the prospects
of this steam roller program?” Senator
Dixon was asked.
“It takes 27 men, a majority of the
53 on the national committee, to put
through this arsenic bottle program the
Taft people seem to want,” he replied.
“There are not 27 men on the commit
tee who will take the Republican party
out In the alley and cut its throat.
Senator Dixon admitted that he held
the proxy of a committeeman whom he
did not name.
“But I will not sit in on
my contests,” he added. “I have given
my proxy to another man and a fair
minded man."
"Have you given it to Colonel Roose
velt?” was an interrogation.
“Colonel Roosevelt has the same
view of the matter that I have.” replied
Senator Dixon.
HOLDS'rECORD OF 3 YEARS
FOR FIRST COTTON BLOOM
AUGUSTA, GA., June 6.—J. W. Mc-
Nair, of Blythe, Ga., has brought the
first cotton bloom of the season in this
section to local cotton factors, Ramsey
& Legwen. Last year and the year
before he had the first bloom exhibited
at the Augusta Cotton exchange, and
he also had the first bales of cotton of
the season in 1910 and 1911. He ex
pects to have the first bale this year
also.
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Youths Swell Suits
We heli eve we sell the Best Youths Suits
in town —beat models—-best fabrics—-best
tailoring—best fitting and best looking—
To appreciate these you ve only to see a
recent lot of the snappiest colors, blues and
blacks, we have to show you—
Novelty Shades sl2 to $25
Blues and Blacks $lO to S2O
Young Men s Norfolks : n novelty mix
tures-—stripes and plain blues-—Cheviots,
Crashes and Serges—s2o, $22.50 and $25---
Special attention is given to Youths and
Young Mens Apparel—-we 11 please you
well —try us and see —
Eiseman Bros.
11-13-15-17 Whitehall St.
ir.waW'fM —i— miwi ii'« i ii'i i i n /caamganr,-sunrr7.ii^w
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1912.
Quits Federal Job
To Work for Taft
RICHMOND. VA„ June 6.—ln order
that he may be free and unhampered,
Louis P. Summers, internal revenue col
lector for the Western district of Vir
ginia. has resigned to manage the Vir
ginia forces for Taft at Chicago inci
dent to the meeting of the national Re.
publican convention. He will be suc
ceeded temporarily by David F. Bailey,
of Bristol, it is stated.
The Taft people are confident that
Summers, who is reckoned as a magic
organizer and political director, will be
able to successfully stem the tide of
Roosevelt defection in this state.
J. R. Pollard, the negro lawyer of
this city who maneuvered the recent
black and tan convention held in Rich
mond last month, has left for Chicago,
to appear as counsel for the Virginia
contestants before the national com
mittee. This wing of the state Repub
lican party will put up a fight for rec
ognition of delegates from all ten dis
tricts but the Seventh and Ninth. In
these two the negro population is so in
considerable that the black and tans did
not feel that they had any ground for a
contest. They will also make a con
test for the four delegates-at-large.
JOHN W. GRANT REMAINS
FIRE INSURANCE DIRECTOR
ATHENS. GA., June 6.—At the an
nual meeting of the stockholders of the
Southern Mutual Fire Insurance Com
pany, held at the home offices here, the
old officers. President and Treasurer
Billups Phinlzy and Secretary Arthur
Griffith, were re-elected again. The
directors, consisting of ten from Ath
ens and one each from Atlanta, Macon,
Columbus and Augusta, were all re
elected. M. A. Obyne, of Savannah,
was elected to fill the place made va
cant by the death of Henry Blun, of
Savannah. The Atlanta man on the
board is John W. Grant.
FREE
RHEUMATISM
CURE
Old, Deep-Seated Cases Take Notice!
Smith’s Blood and Liver Syrup in. the
past 30 years has cured thousands of
Rheumatics after every known remedy
has failed. Smith's Blood and Liver
Syrup does this by purifying and enrich
ing; the blood—sending a flood of vivify
ing blood direct to the paralyzed nerves,
bones and Joints, giving strength and
warmth Just where it is needed At the
same time Smith’s Blood and Liver Syrup
kills the active poison In the blood, which
causes rheumatism. In this way a cure
to-stay-cured is made. If you have bone
pains, swollen joints, aching back or
shoulder blades, Mood thin or pale skin
even if bed-ridden with the worst rheu
matism, give Smith's Blood and Ltver
Syrup a trial. We guarantee a perfect
lasting cure.
Sm'+h's Bleed aed Ltver Syrup Is
pleasant and safe to taka, composed of
pure Botanic ingredients. It purifies and
enriches the blood.
It cure, oonetipetion.
DRUGGISTS, $1 PER LARGE BOTTLE.
Free Rheumatism Cure Coupon.
This coupon cut from The Atlanta
Georgian is good for one sample of
Smith's Blood and Liver Syrup
mailed In plain package. Simply fin
In your name and address en dotted
lines below and mall to SMITH’S
BLOOD SYRUP CO.. 34 Wall St., At
lanta, Ga.
i
200 Delegates Hold
Balance in N. C.
RALEIGH. N. C., June 6.—With both
sides predicting victory, the North Car
olina state Democratic convention con
vened at noon.
The convention today was preceded
by Underwood and Wilson rallies when
lines of action were laid. Os the 1.000
delegates, neither Underwood nor Wil
son has a majority, and the 200 dele
gates favoring neither will deeffie the
contest. It was confidently expected by
those 'opposing instructions that they
would defeat any motion to pledge the
delegates to Baltimore.
Nearly 5,000 delegates and visitors
had arrived by noon, making this the
largest state convention in point of at
tendance ever held in North Carolina.
Former Governor Glenn delivered the
keynote speech. Locke Craig, of Ashe
ville, will be nominated for governor by
acclamation. The chief state contests
will be for positions of lieutenant gov
ernor and corporation commissioner.
Former Governor Glenn, in his key
note speech, arraigned the Republicans
for failing to carry out their pledges.
He was interrupted by applause when
he mentioned Underwood, Wilson and
Bryan.
Former Lieutenant Governors Daugh
ton and Winston took charge of the
Underwood forces on the convention
floor. From the applause it was im
possible to tell the relative strength of
Underwood and Wilson during the ear
ly session.
SUMTER TO HAVE FISH.
AMERICUS, GA„ June fi.— Game
Warden McMath has received from the
L’nited States aquarium at Warm
Springs. Ga., a supply of government
fish to be distributed in Muckabee creek
and other water courses of Sumter
county.
JJtt.HIGH GMWNIL
FRIDAY BARGAINS
Mill-Ends 12 l-2c Gingham
Toile du Nord, Red Seal, and other |
famous brands of Dress Ginghams, 1
plain and fancy, never sold under I
12 l-2c yard. Big purchase of mill- “
ends, while they last ~. Yard
Bargains in White Goods
Fine white goods for Dresses and
Waists, including lace dotted, I■ ■
striped and plaid effects in lawns
and Swisses, also fine Madras and JI x Wr
Pique for Shirt Waists and Skirts. __ _
Values 25c and 35c at * arci
Fine Embroidered Robes
Soft Mull and Lingerie Dress Pat
terns, embroidered in Japanese and
Eyelet work, flowers, bands and UX
material for dress in dainty pinks, V
blues, champagne, violet and white /
effects. Regular SIO.OO values, while jW
they last
Remnants Linens, Voile, etc.
Values up to SI.OO yard.
2 1-2 to 10-yarft lengths of the finest
Suiting Linens, Voiles and Lingerie ff
in the season’s popular colors, will f fL 4
he offered in our Dress Goods De
partment at a bargain. Values to ,
SI.OO .. . . Yard
Children’s White Dresses
$1.25 AND $1.50 VALUES.
Dainty Yoke Dresses for ages six C AA
months to two years, also French ()|iVv
Dresses and Buster Brown Dresses
for ages two through five years —of
fine nainsook, lingerie cloth and
lawn. Regular prices $1.25 and r ,
$1.50 Each
Bargains in. Corsets
REGULAR $1.50 VALUES.
W. B. Corsets, R. & G. Corsets, ()|*||||
and ventilated Corsets, all new hip-
less, low-bust models — the shapes
to fit all figures—as a leader for
Friday, $1.50 Corsets Each
Arkansas Names J
Clark Delegates
LITTLE ROCK, ARK , June 6.—Del
egates at large to the Democratic na
tional convention were scheduled to be
named today by the state convention
here. The delegates will favor Champ
Clark. Resolutions have already been
adopted directing the Arkansas,delega
tion to vote for Clark as long as his
name is before the convention. Sena
tor Jeff Davis has been indorsed by the
convention for re-election. Joe T. Rob- I
inson was nominated for governor.
BURGLAR GETS NINE YEARS.
AMERICUS, GA., June 6.—-Ed Riv
ing, a burglar, who, with his pals, op
erated in Americus for several months,
has been tried in the superior court
and given five years for the first of
fense and one year each for the other
four, making a total of nine years.
A TEXAS WONDER.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney and
Madder troubles, removing gravel, cures
diabetes, weak and larne backs, rheuma
tism. and all irregularities of the kidneys
and bladder in both men and women.
Regulates bladder troubles in children.
If not sold by your druggist, will be Bent
by mall on receipt of SI.OO. One small
bottle is two months' treatment and eel
. dom fails tc perfect a cure. Send for tea
timonlals from this and other states. Dr.
E. W Hall. 2926 Olive-st.. St. Louie. Mo
Sold by druegiste.
SHINON POLISHES
For All Metals.
GEORGIA PAINT & GLASS CO.,
35-37 Luckie St.
Branch Store. 54 N. Broad Street.
Friday and Saturday
Specials at Rogers’
Specials here .Give orders
quoted are early Friday
for two days if possible
Fri da y I .. f and avoid
and Satur- the Satur
day —only. day rush.
While many merchants are
complaining of dull trade, the
Rogers Stores continue right along
with constantly increasing sales.
May business this year was greater
than ever, and June has begun
with bright prospects for another
record-breaking month.
Pure foods of high quality
low prices—good service—these
are the reasons.
10c pkg. Fig Newtons All for
10c pkg. Baronet Biscuits < 1 Q
5c pkg. Uneeda Biscuits ) *
Specials in Canned Foods
For Friday and Saturday Only
Special sale, Friday and Saturday of 4 regular
5c cans of Potted Meat (ham or tongue flavor),
for 14c.
4 cans of Imported I 4 large cans of best Lye
rtiTOS 24c w ,iny 27 c
(Regular price 10c per (Regular price 10c per
can.) ’ can.)
4 cans of Georgia Pie Piedmont Hotel Brand
Peaches QC Sugar Corn, regular
for OvC price 15c, at 11
(Regular price 15c per per can *
can.) (3 cans for 31c.)
Pickles I
Quart Jar, 25c value, 15c
15c Pint Size Jar Only 8c
Fresh Vegetables
Fresh Tomatoes, 12c quart
Georgia Snap Beans, quart |
Finest New Irish Potatoes,
654 c quart
New Squash Cucumbers |
Onions Beets
Green Cabbage
New English Peas
Fine New Peaches
Extra Fancy Fresh Florida
Pineapples, 8 C Each
16c grade Cali- Large packages of
fornia Evaporated Seeded Raisins
Peaches, 2 pounds
for 21c. 9c per pkg.
Soap Specials, Etc.
Proctor & Gamble's Almond Cream Soap, 3
Lenox Soap, 3 cakes for cakes for 10c.
10c. Regular 10c rolls of
Sweet Maiden Toilet Toilet Paper, 3 rolls for
Soap, 3 cakes for 10c. 19c.
ROGERS’
35 PURE FOOD STORES
5