Newspaper Page Text
2
ftRIZDNA BEFORE
STEAM ROLLER
Continued From Page One.
is alleged, did nor keep tlieit pledgt 10
the national vorrtmitlee ..hen ft made
Its investigation and peace offer. He
has a contesting set of deb-gates. Still
a third faction of the party is in the
field with another sei of delegates.
Altogether the matter offers a tr.ngle
that promises o take a lot of tim»
A novel complication confronts the nt<
tional committeemen. There is no R<
publican party In Louisiana Al the
last election, held some months ugo.
the party failed to poll 10 per crni of
the vote. Under the Louisiana lav. it
thereby is no longer recognized : «
regular partj ..tijanizalion and can
get It - names on the ballots: on)- by pe
tition.
Governor Osborne
in Michigan Tangle.
The Michigan case offet» anolhei
party tangle It Involves as one of the
delegates appearing in the squabb'e
t'harles S. Osborne, another of the
"original’' Roosevelt governors. Charges
that state troops were imlled to keep
unwelcome delegates out of the con
vention hail form the basis of the con
tention.
In Missouri, which is the next to
come up when Michigan is disposed of.
the Taft, men art the contesting par
ties The Roosevelt delegates at larg
were elected at a convention in Si.
Louis in whit It Governor Herbert. S.
Hadley was the principal figure. After
ihe convention a few Taft supporters
gathered in a. room of the Planters
hotel and elected Otto F. Stlfel and
three others as Taft men. The Roose
vel' men say that only a few of (he
Taft men knew the move was contem
plated and that rhe men who brought
the contest participated In the regu
lar convention.
The Taft men. however, plan to make
a hard fight in Missouri, and the Roose
velt men have already begun to charge
that the steam roller will be used.
Here’s the Program
For First Two Days
CHICAGO. June ITie sub-com-|
ntitl.e< on arrangements for the Repub
lican national convention has flamed a
program for the first two days. Aftr
that they don’t dare venture No one
knows what will happen on the thiiu
day. Here is the program as far as it
< ould be fixed
Tuesday, June 18.
Convention called to order at noon.
Prayer by chaplain.
Presentation of gavel to rtiulunan of
national committee
Rending of convention call by Secte
ta y Hayward.
Address of temporary chairman
Presentation of gavel to temporary
chairman.
Election temporary office s
N.’tning of committees on permanent
ot ganizat'nn: rules and order of busi
ness. < n-dehtials. resolutions
Mi seell. in eons business
Wednesday, June 19.
<'a|t to ord< r by temporary . halt man
Prayer by chaplain.
Report of (ommittee on credentials.
If this is not ready, visiting marching
clubs will be received.
After acting on credentials report,
reports of following committees to be
receiv erl:
Permanent organization, t tiles and
order of business, resolutions.
Selection of honorary vice presi
dents
HOBBLE SKIRTS PUT ON
BOYS AT REFORMATORY
WILMINGTON. DEL.. June 12.-
Hobble skirts have been adopted at
the Ferris Industrial school, where all
the bad boys of Wilmington are sent
to be reformed. The feelings of the
boys have been sorely injured by the
innovation, but the skirts have come
to stay, the officials of the institution
say The dresses have been adopted,
not so much to wound their pridg, but
to act as a deterrent upon the in
mates who have a penchant for run
ning away When encumbered by the
dress of a woman, a boy can not run as
fast as in his own clothing.
EMPLOYES’ COMPENSATION
BILL PLACED UPON SHELF
WA S HIN <JTO N .lune 1 ? The jud i -
ciarj’ committee <>f the house voted to:
postpone consideration of the working
men s compensation bill wt oh has*passed i
the senate N’< further action <>n the bib
is expected during the session
FATHER. SON AND ANOTHER
DEAD IN FIGHT OVER LAND
FULTON MISS. Juti<- U In a e j
volver fight glowing out of litigation
over land, J< fferson Warren John
Routs and l’i> son Garland Rou.s wei,
ail killed today
ACID SLAUGHTERS FISH.
DA I.T< >N GA . Juni 12 Aw t ••••k ,>n ■'
the Louisville and Narhville railroad)
near Chatsworth in Murray count;.!
caused the death of thousands of fl«h
when a lank car containing acid tinned]
over ,n Holly creek the acid killing
the fish
DALTON TO OIL STREETS
DALTON. GA .-Jum I.' ■ A quantity!
of oil ,to be placed on Selvi ige and)
< 1-veland streets and Thornton avenue;
has arrived. Last year the city > \peri - I
mented with oiled streets. The work !
will o<-: dom more extensively this yea
METHODISTS MEET AT JESUP
JESUP, GA June 12 —The district
conference for this district of the
Methodist church is being held in Jesup .
this week. More than 200 minister. |
and delegates are attending he tonfei '
rne», which is being held at tb“ First'
Methodist church, of which Kev A.
Lesur u pastor I
Draw Drowning Person Into Stern of Boat
AVOIDS TIPPING RESCUE CRAFT
L'V‘ JLT
\ i wWFWRfc?
// // A
J Jgsßr > /
h .■ //
/AmmIHB 9 S /
T /X -0"
Zhy '^' ss ‘ r;l Hiotnas and expert
boatmen denionstratinf' the rightJ
/ ’.i;i' to get, from the water into a|
boat.—at the stern.
iGEORGIAWANTED
AT ’FRISCO’S FAIR
Despite Statutes. Effort Will Be
Made to Appropriate SIOO.-
000 To Be Represented.
Shall the state of Georgia. appro
priate .SIOO,OOO or more to send a great
exhibit to the Pana ma-Pacific Interna,
tional exposition at San Francisco in
1915 and show rhe world what Geor
gia Is doing?
In spite of the fact that the constitu
tion of the commonwealth makes no
provision for such a direct appropria
tion, state and local officials are taking
such a t re me nil oils interest in the prop
osition that the Chamber of I'ommri.e
has already authorized the appoint;
ment of a committee to confer with
the governoi and other -late leaders to
ascertain If some way cun not be
found to send on to the coast one of
the most progressive exhibitions of
Georgians progress in commerce. edu
cation, manufacture and the arts that
has ever been gathered together.
Fa ir Booster Appeals to Georgia,
.Colvin B. Brown, chief of the do
mestic exploitation department of the
Panama exposition, is now in Atlanta
In consultation with Governor Brown
President Moore, of the Chamber ’of
Commerce, and many other leaders All
of them have responded cordially to
ills invitation to Georgia, to .loin the
27 states that have already made ap
proprlations for participation in the
great fair. Mr. Brown has pointed out
to them that Georgia, as the foremost
state in the South, will be given what
ever space she cares for in the" expo
sition buildings, free of charge, and
that there is an insistent demand from
all parts of the country that this com
monwealth appear before the great in
ternational assembly to give the world
a graphic demonstration of her won
derful development in trade, commerce,
agriculture and in education, and par
ticularly that she send an exhibit that
| will show conclusively her wonderful
| triumph in the sociological problem.
I with especial regard to racial regula
tions
Georgia Men Favor Plan
To this invitation the governor and)
other leaders have replied tbit! they
■ire enthusiastically in sympathy with
the plan, and they undoubtedly will
use their best offices to secure the ap
) pvoprlation from the legislature Mr.
I Brown says that for SIOO,OOO the state
lean be welt represented at San Friin-
I i -i o. though the states that have no
I fur a > epted have averaged an appro
priaimn of about $200,000 each, while
l New York leads w ith $700,000.
ALL SITES PROPOSED FOR
CEMETERY BRING PROTEST
i Because of protests of citizens, the
I cemetery commission and the .emetety
I committee of eounyi' have rejected tv
I proposals for a city , emeter' N
I bid” will be asked
| Ai the meeting veete 'day > ternoon
I sire” we-e offered In ever' di.eetion
I from t e city. But an eque rumbei of
citizens objected to each one
VOTES OF WOMEN KEEP
TOWN FROM GOING DRY
PASADENA CAL. Jun, 12 The
v,i>m»n vote- < of Pasadena saved this
city from going dry . a.< shown by final
retro ns. They flocked to the polls and
cast theit strength for the gi anting of
hotel and restaurant licenses, th- .a
son sci theit activity being the report
that if the city went dry Adolphus
Bus'h the million ire brewer, would
'•loxe lu« tamou” sunken gardens and
move hit '.inter home to Santa Monica.
THE .ATLANTA GEORG IAN AX I) NEWS. WEDNESDAYS JUNE 12. 1912.
Experts Show Way to uraw
Drowning Person Aboard
Life-Saving Craft.
The .safe method of drawing a person
aboard a rescuing boat, is shown in the
accompanying illustration.
Recurrences of the two fatal acci
dents at Piedmont park may be pre
vented, almost invariably, if the res
cu< • ” in the boat which hurries to the
aid of tile victims will maneuver so
that the rescue can be made from the
stern.
The er. urr should stand near the
stern of the skiff and grasp the victim
so Hint be may be drawn aboard so
closely to the broad end that his weight
will not tip the boat, and thus pre
cipitate a second accident.
if there are two Victims floundering
in the water, both should be forced to
clutch the craft as near as possible to
the stern. Thus the boat will be bal
anced until both victims can be drawn
aboa rd.
The illustration is posed for The
Georgian by Miss Vera Thomas, of At
lanta, a skilled swimmer. The picture
shows the weight of three persons on
the stern and the craft fully maintain
ing Its equilibrium.
ARTIFICIAL COTTON
PROJECT PROVES A
SWINDLING SCHEME
PARIS Jun- 12.—-The French au
thorities that the project of two
project of two Frenchman named Boui
bier and Gassier to make artificial cot
ton is a huge swindling scheme.
The two men announced in 191 1 that
they had discovered a method of mak
ing cotton at a low price, and declared
that the success of that plan would
close all the American and Lancashire
cotton mills and cause the cotton plan
tations of the world to be put to other
uses, Signor t'rispi. the Italian depu
ty. was Induced to invest in the pro.it,'
and gave the two Frenchmen SIO,OOO.
With Bourbier and Cassler, be went
to Manchester, and met the cotton mer
chants. who proposed the forming of a
syndicate with a capital of $2,000,000.
A Belgian engineer by toe name of I
Bloch engineered the combine giving
titc Frenchmen $6,000. Bloch -oon aft
erward became suspicious and em
ployed detectives to watch the French
men.
VISITING GERMAN TARS
SAVE TWO FROM FLAMES
NftM YORK. June 12 —Sabots from
the ’ ’.siting German squadron rescued
a woman and a baby during a fire in
Brooklyn early today . Thesailots w. re
returning on a street car when they
saw a house in flames. Mrs. Francis
Wagnei. who resided there, tt.ts at an
open window on the second floor, with ;
he- baby clutched io he br. a-t el)-!
ing for help. Without waiting fo 1 the I
car to stop the sailors jumped off
|and dashed Into the ,burning, smoke
; f' ed rooms.
OIL MILL TO PAY DIVIDEND.
THOMASTON, GA. June 12. —At the
i annual meeting of the stockholders of
the t’pson County Oil mills, which is
capitalized at $50,000. the usual divi- j
< end of six' per cent was ordered paid
July 1. Directors chosen tor the year
are: F. J. Cooiedge, of Atlanta. D. C.
i Leonard, of Greenville. S. C : Jaqies I
K. Atwater. J. J. Oliphant. S Y. Prjiitt. I
F. M. Garner and W O. Britt, of Thom- I
as ton.
NEGROES TO HAVE BIG FAIR.
THOMASTON, GA . June 12.—The [
annual Inter-county Negro fair win be :
held this year at Thomaston. October
22 to 26. The fair association owns I
its own grounds of six acre- within
the city limits, and ha? a'l necessary ,
buildings to house exhibits More than
SSOO iii cash prizes will be given awi’.l
GEORGIA AVIATOR 1
FALLS TO DEATH
Lieutenant Hazlehurst. U. S. A.,
and Flyer Welch Killed in
Test Flight at Washington.
Continued From Page One.
in about 75 feet of the ground, and it
then straightened out sharply, too
quickly, the observing flyers thought.
Without warning the aluminum wings
crumpled or collapsed upward so that
they almost met above the engine. The
machine dropped, then turned her nos* |
toward the earth and dived.
Instantly Killed.
The accident occurred about 1.000
feet from the hangars. When the first
witnesses reached the.wreck, both of
the men were dead. Welch was buried
in lhe debris, but the body of Hazle
hurst- had been hurled fully 20 feet
away .liter th? machine struck. Welch's
clothes were practical’’ all torn from
his body, which was bruised and bat
tered. Hazlehurst's skull was frac
tured and his head badly disfigured.
Five minutes after the Hight began,
the flag over the aviation field was
half-masted.
Captain t'harle- deF. Chandler, com
manding the army aviation corps, at)
once convened a he*, rd of inquiry con-!
sisting of seven army officers, w ho had
been witnesses to the catastrophe. A)
preliminary inquest shed little light i
upon the cause of the tragedy, as)
nightfall made it necessary to postpone!
the investigation.
Lieutenant Hazlehurst was in his
2fth year and was ' unmarried. The
home of his parents is Macon. Ga.. but
he was appointed to West Point from
Mississippi- being graduated and com
missioned a second lieutenant in 1908.
He had been with the aviation corps
since la : March, when he was detailed
to it a: Augusta, Ga.. the winter camp.
CHILD SUICIDE AGAIN
EPIDEMIC IN BERLIN
BERLIN. June 12 Tile epidemic of
child suicides, which was so prevalent
in the spring, has broken out again in
Beilin. Several cases we'e reported
last week, and three fresh cases air
I now noted.
A school boy of twelve, fearing pun
ishment for neglecting his home wo.T.
threw himself from lb- balcony of a
s-eond flooi flat in>•> • paved court
yard. A servan girl. aged sixteen,
poisoned he self because she had lost
a coin and a school girl, aged sou -
'em. who had been kept shut up so t
sou- days, killed herself with gas.
CORELESS APPLE IS
LATEST PRODUCTION
GEORGETOWN I) El 1. . Jun- 1 ..
1 There will be no cole Io throw awn,. I
after one has eaten an apple if Frank
Rodgers, n fruit grower lie e. succeeos
jin experiments he hps undei way to
day He owns a tree that has produced
now so: two years seedless and < orc
less apples
The f nit ; s of the ti-ma: size, and
I \ f-’-y highly flavored Hi a- g if, ing
l some ' the twigs into othe- fees in
his o'e'ia'd. and hopes in the course of
a few y ears to make hi- fortune.
CAPT. R. M. DOYLE NAMED
REAR ADMIRAL BY TAFT
\SHI NG TON. hint- ’J. President
Taft ba« nominated Captain Robert M
| Doyle. I S X ’•.» be rear admiral
Thr nomination of H O JoffTie e ' ' be
i ' I’a er ai Xowata, Okla , u unh-
I d ra w n
ACTRESS' SONGS
STOP NEAR-PANIC
Burning Fuse Alarms Forsyth
Audience, But Lillian Shaw
Brings Quiet Back.
i
• ■ ■
Music —meaning the classic stuff—|
m have powe; to soothe the savage)
| breast, but it takes up-to-the-minute)
Yiddish ragtime to put the finishing
: ouches to a theater pinic. This was
’ (iemonstrated las' night at th» Forsvth
when Lillian Shaw, the singing com
edienne. prevented a s'.ampede when o
*ute of the spotlight in the balcony)
blew out.
Wherefore, Miss Shaw’s friends aie
) making very much of a heroine of her:
toclay. and unless plans made by the
enthusiasts fall down she will be given
a eguiaticn l“vee bv the "fire suf
-. ferfrs" when she appears to sing het |
; life-saving Yiddirher ragtime tonight. |
Song Allays Fright of Audience.
i Miss Shaw was in the midst of her
i second song last night when the spot-I
j light in the balcony flared up suddenly
and began belching smoke like a blast
1 furnace. Down in the orchestra people
I looked around, saw the smoke and fire,
and got out of their seats preparatory
f> • a rush to the door. In the balcony,
loser to the blazing spotlight, the peo
nle were already hurrying toward the
< and some were crying out in
glit.
M's.s Shaw saw that the theater was
non the very ve ge of a panic. Step
:ng Io the footlights, the actress mo
tioned to rhe orchestra leader to con
tinue playing the refrain of her song
| Then she shouted to the frightened au-
I dienee:
i "Now. everybody sit down. This is
no fi’e. I’m still here and we're all go
ing to stay, for the next verse of this
song is a pippin."
The calmness and assumed care
lessness of the actress helped out her
: reassuring smile, and the audiencesank
| back into its seats again.
Second Flare-up Adds to Disorder.
Rut a second flare-up of the spotlight
threw several women into anothe fini
te and once again a few of the most
timorous cried out and moved again
toward tlie doors. But by now the
ushers had come to the aid of Miss
Shaw. Manning the fire exits, they
cried out that there was no danger;
that only a fuse had burned out, ami
that a fire in the theater was impossi
ble, anyway.
Thon Miss Shaw played her truifip
card.
"Here goes for that third verse," she
called across the footlights, and with
the orchestra to help her she dashed
into the rollicking Yiddisher rag avjaiii.
The audience listened to het to thr
finish. When she was done the smoke
had disappeared. While Miss Shaw
made her change Cliff Gordon assured
the audience she was coming back.
TWENTY-FIVE SECURE
i PHARMACY LICENSES
FROM GEORGIA BOARD
SAVANNAH, GA., June 12. At the I
examination of candidates for licenses. I
conducted before the state board ;of,
pharmacy, with President Herman JC.
Shuptrine presiding. J. B. Woodcock,
of Register, carried off the highest hon
or —being given a license as pharma
cist. Sophie V. Gaines, a negress, of
Macon, and B. A. Novit. of Ashburn,
were licensed as apothecaries.
Those licensed as druggists are N.
is. Arthur, Athens: W. A. Blisingame,
l Moultrie; J. B. Carter, Nichols: Thom
| tts Clark. Jr., Jacksonville: .1. C. Crutn
i bley. Blitch: Jack Davis. LaGrange:
J. I. Giggins. Americus: R. H. Green,
Milledgeville: L. E. Goodwin, Plains;
W. i’. Harper. Anderson. S. C.; W. W.
I Holt, Savannah: G. M. Parkerson.
Eastman: W. T. Petry. Manchester. C.
F. Rowed. Macon; R. H Sapp, Doug- I
las. A. M. Swift. Metcalf; ,1. W. Ealler, |
Macon: R. H. Weaver. Mays. Fla.: Em-'
ma L. Webb. ■Sumter; Ella L. Stillson, )
I Atlanta, and S. L. Thompson. Albany.)
I The last two are negroes. Thirty-eight -
j took the examination.
CAROLINA FRIENDS ATTEND
WEDDING IN SAVANNAH. GA.
SAVANNAH. GA.. June 12. Among j
the guests for the wedding of Miss)
Leila Storm Jones to Charles L. Lyon
last night were Mr and Mis. J. B
Neighbors and MiSs Jean Neighbors, of
M icon. Miss Mary Fid wards Rivers.
Miss Marie Simmons. Mrs. E. S
j Lowndes and Mrs. J. M. Rivets, of
i i’barleston, S. c., and Mrs F. M. Horl
beek. of Columbia. S. C. Mr. Lyons
was originally from Richmond Va but
has been living in Charleston, S. C.. for
sevf ’;‘l years. Samuel Aiigm tus White,
of Columbia, was best man. and Miss
| Julia Jones the b"id”’s sister, maid of
. lwn '"’-
U. OF G. ALUMNI PLANNING
COMMENCEMENT REUNION
\ meeting of the one hundred and I
I twenty-odd University of Georgia men;
i v, ho at e members of the University I
) club has been called for tomorrow night I
for the purpose of arranging the details
of a trip to the annua' commencement ,
■.nd to discuss other mattoss of inte.es:. I
Alumni day will be celebrated at i
Athens on Tuesday. June IS. Many'
members o f the club are planning to go
to Ai tens on that day.
FAMOUS RESORT OF OHIO
SPORTSMEN SWEPT BY FIREj
! S A NOt SK Y. OH!<), June 1? Fir** de- I
i siroyeci the old Schardt hotel on Kelly s I
sland. a meeca of Ohio sportsmen. There
' was no tire department and a bucket bri- |
gade a quarter of a mile long was formed ;
b> men, women and children, who passed
along pails of water from the lake The i
Hammelin hotel and several adjoining i
building* were saved Loss. <12,0 'O. par
tially covered by insurance. |
L
Up and Down
Peachtree
Bill Blevins Takes
Wart Off 'n His Chin.
Mr. Blevins leaned against the gran
ite post just outside the Kimball and
rubbed a spot on his chin which was
covered by an expanse of courtplaster.
Occasionally his eye would rove toward
the Decatur street corner, whence came
I the hoarse cries of the itinerant ven
! ders of corn salye.j safety razors and
I s’x-pietures -of- yourself-
u wait who infest the locality. Mr. Blev-
I ins was evidently sore.
■ "What’s the matter, Bill'.'” inquired
a friend. "Been having your picture
made and mad because it looks like
you?”
"Not edzackly." returned Mr. Blev
! ins. "Feller done played me a low -
| down trick.
I "This feller, he didn’t say much. I
j been tryin' to be soshable with him all
) this week. He’d listen a while and then
I git up and move off. Plum’ discour
i agin’.
"Yestiddy, this feller he buys a box o’
| salve off’n that peddler up at the cor
ner—no, he ain't there now. Es he was,
j he’d be a-lieKin’ me or me lytm, right
' now. But he garnishes this salve o’
his’n to take off warts.
"This feller I’m tellin’ about had a
wart big as a pigeon egg, right on his
finger, and I seen him spread that ped
dler’s salve on it. Then he wropped a
rag ’roun’ bis hand and lit out.
"This mawnin’ I seen him. an’ I sez:
'Did hit take off your wart?’ and he
sez. kinder short, Hit shore did.’
"You seen that wart on my chin.
■Well. 1 buys me a box and.spreads hit
on. Hit warn’t more'n five minutes till
I was yelling fire and bloody murder.
Hit nigh-about burnt me alive.
"I goes back to this feller, an' I sez,
'Did that stuff burn you much?'
" 'Hit durn nigh eat up my whole
blamed hand.' lie sez.
“ 'Then, why in the name of kingdom
come didn't you say so?’ I sez. 'Look
here at this chin.’
" 'You didn't ax me, - says this feller.
But I'll be dad-burned es 1 don't git
even .with him ’tween now and nex’
week or my name ain't Blevins. Got a
plug o' chewin’ about your clo’e?”
Street Gamins Play
Ball in Death Trap.
A baseball game light in the jaws of
death—almost—furnishes tense enter
tainment for loiterers on the viaduct
bridge nearly every day in the week.
To the regulation stunts of future Ty
Cobbs are added features that keep a
goodly crowd of spectators gasping,
and that are not warranted to soothe a
weak heart.
The youngsters pl-ay on the tracks of
the Western and Atlantic, with engines
drilling ail about them and shifting
trains interfering with home run hits.
In the midst of an exciting game it's
nothing unusual to see one of the rag
amuffins scamper in front of a huge
locomotive and scoop the ball almost
from tinder the cow-catcher. That
none of them is maimed for life is a
constant matvel to the scores who ap
plaud their daring as well as their
skill with the horsehide. More than
one train window has been broken by a
baited ball, but a little thing like that
I never worries these enthusiastic future
greats Not infrequently when the ball
I has clashed through the glass one of
■ the youthful players will s-wing on ti e
train and coolly ask the:4.’i'U(iuc,ge ;foi
"tha,t ball." And. he usually gets jt, for
trainmen are great .tans, In fact, tlie
men about the yard are among tllf
most enthusiastic spectators, which ad
counts for the games nor having
stopped long ago. . < -l
AUTO HITS BRIDGE: 1 DEAD:
LUMLEY IS BADLY INJURED
■ s
BINGHAMTON. N. ¥. June 12.
Lewis M. Morgan, a dry goods dealer,
is dead: H. P. Welleri. a neuspapei'
man, is fatally hurt, and Harry A. Lum--
ley. formerly manager of the Brooklyn
| baseball team, who was’ recently' de
i posed as manager of the Binghamton
| team tn the New York State league is
| seriously injured as the result of an
I automobile accident early today. The
j machine in which the men were riding
j skidded into an iron bridge near Harr
: pevsville and was wrecked.
SHORTERTEACHER GOES
TO RICHMOND COLLEGE
I RICHMOND. VA.. June 12—Profe.j
■ sor J. M. D. Oldsted. of Shorter coll
lege. Rome, Ga._ has been elected asL
sistant professor of biology at Rich:
mend college. It is understood he will
accept.
DOG CATCHES A FISH:
USES MASTER'S TACKLE
NEW YORK. June 12. A dasclt
hound, belonging' to Eugene McCarthy,
seized his master's fishing pole, which
bad been set at Highland lake, and
hauled out a big sunfish.
I
Diseases of Men
Y experience of 5
i me that more i
I caused bv a chronic
< 1
isy
DR. WM. V. BAIRD
Brown-Randolph Bldq
Atlanta. Ga.
. ment are feature® of my office Exam
i inatlons free Office hours tn 7; Sun
nays and holidays. 10 to 1. My mono-
I graphs free in viain. sealed wrapper.
GMFffIOOF
DIRECT PHIMARY
Senator O’Gorman Tells How
Speaker Was Misquoted at
Dinner to Gaynor.
By ALFRED HENRY LEWIS.
WASHINGTON June 12— Setting
the vote of the Lorimer case for'July 8
seriouslj invaded the vacation plans *
of Senator O'Gorman. He had intended
to go to Europe, and bought tickets for
himself and family for July 6. Along
came the Lorimer case and the O Gor
man reservation on the liner had to be
cancelled. Lorimer would have been
better off if O’Gorman had stuck to his
original vacation program.
It is dry weather, and therefore
signs may fail. Should affairs go as
they seem to threaten, however, the
vote on the sixth will strip the toga
from Lorimer’s unworthy shoulders.
Upon which occasion it will be inter
esting to read the vote. Especially to
those educated to ’read between the
lines.
O’Gorman Looks For Bolt.
O’Gorman, like most Democrats, and
all Republicans, is greatly interested in
the march of events in Chicago. It is
his view that the steam roller nerve of
the Taft men will in no wise tail or
falter, and that Taft will be finally the
nominee at the Republican convention.
Then—as O'Gorman reads the stars
—there . will .be a Roosevelt bolt, a r
Roosevelt rump convention and a sec
ond Republican ticket with Roosevelt
at the top. The bolting ticket should
be Roosevelt and Hadley, although as
to the latter O’Gorman expressed no
beliefs.
"It is a Democratic year." said O'Gor
man.
“Whether the Republicans run Tait
or Roosevelt or both, the result will be.
the same. The Democrats will win.
The reasons of Republican defeat are
so deeply seated in the popular breast
that I verily believe the personality of
the candidates will cut little if any
figure.
"Any Republican they could nomi
nate would be beaten by any Demo
crat we might, put up."
Talk having swung to candidates, I
spoke of Champ Clark and that dinnei
given by O'Gorman to Gaynor, at which
Clark was wrongly reported as having
assailed the direct primary.
Clark a Primary Defender.
"It was regrettable." said O’Gorman
"that such a foundationless ‘ yarn
should have had a start. I wrote Clark
a letter, when I saw the story in print,
expressing my feelings about the’mat
ter. The story undertook 1 to put.
squarely into Clark's mouth the words *
and semimynts of other gentlenten who
spoke at the dinner, and v. ho happened
to be strongly of the opinion that di
rect .primaries were a delusion and a
snare.
“Clark, in opposition vigorously de
fended the direct primary system."
O’Gorman did not say so, and, indeed,
avoided naming any one save Clark. 1;
is the common word, however, and not
denied by gentlemen who were present
at the dinner that the two who at
tacked dij-ect primaries were Mayor
Gaynor and Senator Hoke Smith
Qa,yp,qr ff 'seX ball of discord roJ-
. ing, as .usual..
Clark so thoroughly, not to say ex
haustively .wiped up. the floor of di--
cussion with Gaynor, and Hoke Smith,
who hitr.self has no use for direct pri
maries. felt moved to come to the res
i cue. ' Smith came; but it is not thought
I that he rescued anything.
WINDOW BOXES FILLED.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 1130. '
Through Sleeping Car At
lanta to Lake Toxoway,
N. C.
Effective first car leaving Atlanta
Sunday, June 23, 'Southern Rail wav will
operate through sleeping car service
between Atlanta and Lake Toxoway
N. C., on the following schedule: Leave
Atlanta 8:45 p. m.: arrive Henderson
ville. N. C„ Si'Otf" a'.'nt.: arrive Lake
Toxoway 8:10'a. m. Returning, leave
Lake Toxoway 7:20 p. tn.; arrive At
i Santa 5:25 a„ m.
' '***"■ 1
Vou&twO
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4