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PRESIDENT TUFT
NEAR MN,
SSTST.R.
“Assumes His Office a Gift at
Disposal of Bosses in Defi-*
ance of the People.”
OYSTER BAY, June 12.—Tn a state- i
ment in which he charges the conduct'
of the president of the Untied States I
with being "dangerously near treason," I
Colonel KoosevelNagain assails the ac
tions of the Republican national com
mittee and the Taft forces. He says in
pa rt :
"The question at Chicago becomes
clearer with every vote of the national
Committee. ft is simply whether the
people have the right to nominate
whomsoever they wish for the highest
office in their gift, or whether by de
liberate theft and fraud certain ma
chine leaders, acting in the interest of
special privilege, are to be permitted
to deprive the people of this right. By
an overwhelming majority where they
have bad the opportunity to express
their wishes at. the primaries the plain
people, tite rank and file of the Repub
lican party, have repudiated Mr. Taft.
Now we are face to fa. e with the ques
tion whether the people rule the Re- |
publkan party or whether the party is
tn be titled by the discredited bosses
whom the people have themselves re
pudiated.
Taft. Repudiated. Appeals to Bosses-
"Mr. Taft has been repudiated by the
people, and he now- appeals to his rep
resentatives in the national commit
tee, naif of whom have themselves been
repudiated, .and asks them to force his
nomination on the rank and file of the
R p 1 bl’ean party, who have declared
that they do not wish him. Mr. Taft
at on ■ period of the campaign said 1
was unjust to him because I stated that
the boss' - were for him and the people
against him. Events have proved that
I was right. ,
“How do these bosses hope to nomi
nate Mr. Taft? What they did in the
Thirteenth Indiana district supplies th<
answer. In this district the conven
tion which assembled to elect two dele
gates to Chicago contained a clear and
um on to wed majority of Roosevelt mon.
But th' chairman, .' Taft man. refused
a roll call and declared the Taft dele
gates elected on vivA voce vote, where- ,
upon the majority of the convention !
elected two Roosevelt delegates. Yet I
the national committee seated the two!
men. the fraudulently of whose claims j
had been ihtts shown.
Would Mean Prison Elsewhere. I
“Unfortunately, there is no law to I
touch the astounding misconduct of ,
which the national committee has been
guilty, and which it hast sanctioned in
the rases which have come before it. If
the contest was one for the nomination
of an aiderman in New York city, and
obscure men in the Democratic and
Republican parties w ho were acting as
election officers in a given district were
guilty of such conduct and their guilt
was proved, they would be sent to the
penitentiary. But the great and pow
erful politicians, the representatives of
bos.-ism in politics and special privi
lege in business, who are now perpe
trating the same kind of wrong on an
infinitely larger stale, .-ire immune be
cause as yet. unfortunately, the law
does not touch nominating conventions.
"Mr. Taft assumes, and Messrs.
Baines. Pi arose. Mulvane and company
assume, that the presidency is to be
treated as a gift within the bestowal of
the politicians in defiance of the duly
expressed wish of the people.
"Such conduct comes dangerottslv
near being treason to the whole spirit
of our institutions, to the whole spirit
of democratic free government. I do
not believe that the people will tolerate
such conduct, nor do 1 believe that so
ber Republicans will consent to see the
Republican party sacrificed to phase
the bosses whom the party has repu
diated.
"If the national committee continues
if if has begun. I believe its actions
will be repudiated by the convention."
NEPHEW OF GOULD
DIES FROM WORRY
AND AUTO INJURIES
RD 'H M» >NIVA . June 12 William
Northrop, nephew of lay Gould and hea«l
us Frank Gould’s traction interests in
Virginia is dead at his home hen
from the effects «»f injuries sustained in
an automobile accident Maj 27.
Air Northrop's death is believed to
have been partly due to worry ovei the
fight for a competitive power and light
tnim-hise sought by ihe Richmond and
Henri'" rai!wa\ His company has been
bitterly opposing the. granting of this
franchise for several months.
Several nights ago. Rev George
McDaniel, pastor of the First Baptist
fhur'h. speaking on behalf of the Rich
mond and Henrico petition .it a citizens’
meeting, assailed the head of the Gould
interests as a divorced man Though his
remarks applied to Frank Gould, Mr.
Northrop felt the gibe keenly because
po names were railed, lie threatened to
sue the minister for heavy damages.
Proper explanations later cleared up the
situation.
COLUMBUS MAN MISSING
FROM HOME FOR A WEEK
CfHJ MBIS. GA.. June 12. Roscoe V.
Filhrgtn. whm for the past few years has!
been empl'-yod in the undertaking estab
lishment of Herring Knight, has disap
pea red.
Ihe last that has been seen or hoard
of him wo« a week ago last night. The
puller havo been asked to aid in the search i
al is being made b.v members of hi-j
family and friends N«» reason has beet J
gt’e*' as " wb\ he should have ms 1
m j f.are.L Foul p.?;- it sutpeued. (
Canine T ramps Lose Their Lady Bountiful
COLLIE LORD OF FIELDER HOME
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Miss .Mine l-'ieliler ami her collie puppy -her “first real, re iinlar dog.
M iS fi !’i
GM M
I Carey and Adjutant General to
Arbitrate Row Over Grant
Park Guns.
Therp is every indication that the
fabled bird, the dove of y. o is hov
erins; the vvarrln:; camps of the park
board ai d the idj'.r.uil inni al p office,
ranmrs of , ia -hes to lite contrary not
vvithstandiiis.
The adjutant general himself is au-
Ihorit.v lor the statement that the brief
armistice, agreed upon in the debate
over the I ort W alker . annon, k likely
*•> develop into a pennaneir. time.
He said today that he would >o over
Park Director I'arey’s head anti press
the state's claim to the big guns before
Mayor 'w inn. He thrrtfght that the
mayor would recognize the state's un
disputed title and th, annon would be
forthcoming. It is t" be placed at the
Hunter street entrance to the state
capital.
ijoard Called Unreasonable.
Director Carey, although admitting
that negotiations were pending to.set*
tie the ;ow bv arbitration, is letting
none of the Grant park grass grow
under his feet. Hi is said to be mo
bilizing the park department employees
armed with picks and shovels to give
battle to the soldi l r bov s if Gem ral
Obear resorts to the militia.
General Obear says that the claims
of the park board are unreasonable.
There are four of the nice brass can
non at Grant park, according to the
adjutant general, and tile state owns
them all. < inly two ate noded in the
decoration scheme at the capitnl.
The adjutant general's idea is to
mount the guns on the granite abut
ments at the Hunter street entrance
to the capital exactly in the manner
two snob brass six-pounders are
mounted on the steps of the assembly
hall at the United States naval acad
emy.
SEVEN-STORY HOTEL FOR
ROME TO COST $250,000
roME, ga. Juno 12 Another Stet)
toward the erection of a 5‘250,000 l‘ot<l
Lu r»- v. i - taken ween the Broad Street
Hotel Company tiled a petition !<>r a
'barter
Local in* n villi mono ire interested
in the projp* 1 ind Eastern capital will
be used di i . completion It. is planned
to • tp» t a *o ; - stor.\ sirm 'ui-e at Fifth
avenue and Broad stiff The old <du ■<
J iifiii.s-. well kn-wn to the \p:-»rap trav<d
! itig mer will be torn '.own to make \\a.
I lor lhe nu-ovi l. buduoi©
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEM’S. AVEDNESDAY. JUNE 12. 1912.
—— I
Girl Who Has Cared for Hun
dreds of Foundling Puppies
Now Owns Regular Dog.
Sim e 1 li-year-old Aline Fielder ft as
big enough to toddle she has kepi her
I family busy driving away the stray,
homeless does that she'd bring home.
76'1 West Peachtree street, from her
daily walk or drive.
i ,lam sM. Fielder, her father, head of
ihe firm of Fielder * Allen, told a
Georgian reporter today that he'd bet
Aline had tried to domicile 20(1 dogs
on him in the lasi five years. It got so
bad at one lime that the family would
have a servant waiting at the gate to
receive tip strays the pretty girl wa
.-ure to pick up on her walks. This
servant had instructions to 'furnish
Aline's newest waif with a substantial
imal and a shako down for the night.
Then he was ordered to take it to al
chap whom Mr. Fielder subsidized to
give a home to the voting girls col-,
lection. It is said this man is waxing
opulent and has one of the most cu
rious dog tai ms m the country.
Now She Has a Regular Dog.
Hut though her tender heart was cer
tain to bring b light an average of at
least om foundling pup a. day, Alim
never had a real, regular dog of her
own until she win visiting to Athens.
Ga... a couple of weeks ago. Down
there she was out motoring with a
1 ouple of friends w hen a handsome col
lie pup dashed coss the road in front
of the speeding machine and raced it
for half a mile before finally disap
pi aring dow n i side street.
The motoring schedule was aban
doned then and there, upon the per
emptory orders of young Miss Fielder.
The machiiie was turned about and
sent in search of that collie, and though
it took all day. th, girl found life
dog. bought it it n prohibitive prior,
and brought it home.
It is the colliy in the picture. Its
'name is Sport ami foi the first Him
sinei she began gathering stray dog.,
Miss Field,r has lost in'erest in th,
vagabonds to lavish constant affection
upon the Athens beauty.
DR. J. S. SNEAD. HOSPITAL
HEAD, IS SUED BY WIFE
——
Hr I. S. Snead. 221 Whitehall street,
manag r of the Vu u»r sanitarium, today
| was m; de defendant in a suit for abso-
| lute divoffi
j Mrs. Snead says while she was serious
I ly ill recently in her husband's hospital
I he ordered her unthvitd to the < harity
1 ward of the Tabernacle infirmary, telling
| h r that lie needed h« r ’-oom.
They were married tn I'.’tij
Then is no r<-al need of any one be
i mg troubl'd with constipation. Chain-
I noriain’s Tabirds will cause an agree
able moxement of the bowels without .
anv unp -as int • ff<*< L Give them a i
trial. l*'ui cale h$ all d'.tkir. ♦
CIirSFIRETRAPS
INSPECTED TODAY
Officials Determining in What
t
Structures Laws Are Being
Violated.
The inspection of Atlanta’s tire traps,
which Fire Chief Cummings says are'im
periling the lives of 10,000 working girls,
is in full swing today Chief Cummings
and Building Inspector Hayes are in
charge of the inspection, several budd
ings have already been examined
The tw«» officials say they will make a
thorough inspection of the downtown dis
trict. including al! of the factors lofts
ami other mercantile buildings in which
girls toil, and in this way ase<rtain the
structures in which rhe tire ordinances
ate being \ olaied. Not ■es will then be
seiwed on the owners of all such budd
ings t<> comply with the law. Those re
fusing to obey the notice within a spec
ilied time will be haled into police court
and vigorously prosecuted
Many Without Sprinklers.
Many of the downtown lofts and stores
are without autoinatic sprinklers, as re
quired bv law. ami the chief and building
inspector are determined that these
sprinklers shall be installed at the earli
est possible moment.
“There are so many fire traps in At
lanta that it will be a big job to get
them all properly equipped. but never
theless this must be done ami that with
out delay,' 1 said Chief Cummings today.
“The situation is serious ami must he
remedied- the law must be enforced The
lives of out thousands <»f working girls
must be protected.’
COLUMBUS COTTON
MAN PRESIDENT OF
MILL ASSOCIATION
W ARM SPRINGS, GA.. June 12. Fred
B Gordon. of the Columbus Manufactur
ing I‘ouipiny. <’olumbus, Ga., has been,
elected president of the Associated Cot
ton Mills of Georgia. in annual conven-]
tion here Me succeeds c I» Toiler, of
Atlanta, ’ate president of the Exposition
Cotton Mills, who died several months
i ago.
Fuller E Callaway, vice president of
the association. called the '-'invention to
order and presided pending the election
<»f a new pre-’dent
A feature o| yesterday s session was an
;oldiess by R I I'cLoach. professor of i
-ollon industry at the Stale College of
Agriculture at Athens, on the history of
i ottoti transportation. <’oinmiti. es were
appointed and other business transacted
The convention is in session this after
noon and will hold another session (<»-
i night, when adjournment will be taken.
STUART’S
RIJCHII AND JUNIPER COMPOUND
BURsa KIONtV AND BLADDER TROUBLE .
AUSTRIAN COUNTESS
DIVORCES AMERICAN
FOR FAMILY FORTUNE
i MARTINEZ, CAL., June 12. —Louise
, Francis Goodall, well known in Austria
as Countess Ludofska. wife of Richard
Goodall. New f York playwright and stage
manager, was granted a divorce here to-
I <lay on the ground of failure to provide.
Mrs. Goodall said that she would in
herit $3,000,000 as her share of an estate
in .Austria when she was 25 years of age.
As a reason for her separation from her
husband she said she desired to become
I reconciled to her fa ml lx- so she would
I have no trouble in getting this fortune.
The Georgian’s
Great $16,000 ■
| rroverb Con- " -Kt I
; test Still Open I
land All the | 111
Magnificent ft 71 i I
i || s
Prizes Are Ab-
solutely FREE b illustrate the high standard maintained in our distribution, we
•Z point out that all of ten S4OO pianos to be given away are of the Cleve-
land-Manning manufacture.
Tim imorpian’s Great Proverb Contest
will always be open until the last, ami
i it wiH last a irmitl while yet. There is
plenty <»f time for yon to tret right in line
lor one of those big prizes that numbers
of people have been working on since ihe
publication of the first picture.
If you have not already started this
puzzle party, why not get the habit with
ig this picture ami get busy? I'here is a
large party at the Contest Department
of Ihe Georgian, and they are always
having fun with the pictures. There is
nothing so interesting as a little Proverb
Party. When you stop to think of the
magnificent prizes given in this contest,
and you not in for one of them, why
don’t you start then and be one ol the
sure winners? 'l’here is nothing to pre
' vent.
Th<* Puzzle today is very interesting
I to study. Solve this one, then when you
! get the paper tomorrow, solve the puzzle,
I and you will be really interested in the
I contest.
After you are sure that you are in the
right path for the prize you are working
for. send fop the back numbers ami put
;i few spare moments on them each day,
’ and you will have your set comp.leted
by the time the last picture has been
published.
The back numbers are on sale at The
Georgian office at the regular rate of The
Daily Georgian—2c per copy. They ma.v
be sent to any place by mail in large oy
small orders. All you need to do is to
send for them ami they will come to you.
We also have the handy little Proverb
Book for the contestants. It. is neatly
bound, and will be found very interesting
to study, both to old as well as the young
people. After the contest closes, there
may be little Proverb Parties given, and
the book will be found very useful in
this way._
We will send this book to any place
by mail upon receipt of 30c. or call at
■ The Georgian office. 20 East Alabama
street and get yours for 25c.
With these advantages, we see no rea
son why each and everyone should not
stand a good chance at winning one of
the handsome prizes we are offering. If
von do mH care for the $2,000 in cash,
which, of course, none of us would mind
winning, try for one of the pianos, auto
mobiles. hand-painted china and other
valuable prizes. There is not a cheap
prize among the lot.
If you do mH understand anything
. about the contest, write us and we will
answer your questions through Ihe col
umns of The Georgian. We receive a
number of questions each day regarding
the contest, and they are answered as
soon as we have space for them in our
columns. Simd your queries to us.
11. G. S Semi them in the form you
desire.
i E. Z. Mark Os course, you ma.v send
them in a hound book if you desire.
P. K Each picture or answer blank
must be on a separate page of your book.
Three solutions may be sent for each
! puzzle, if you desire.
K O. II Neatness will be counted in
i the awarding of the prizes.
NAKED CHILDREN TO
MARCH AS A PROTEST
AGAINST FOOD COST
CHICAGO, June 12. —Naked children
by the score will, it is planned, appear
in the streets through the congested
quarter of the West Side of the city
this week as a striking protest against
the suffering brought by reason of the
higlt cost of kosher meat. This was
decided on at a meeting of Hebrew
mot hers.
It is designed to attract the attention
of the public, they say. to what they
characterize as unnecessarily high prices
fixed both by wholesalers and retail
ers. upon the only meat they may eat.
This Is Picture No. 57
r
/VJwTwS pi Coe ydo
pow’r NOU I eoRRtO
wait tiu. i 90-f;
N° o u^ e ij) ■bTYkx -
sePoßb S]
ft OU. tl F" / AwOX TVAU
What Proverb Does This Picture Represent?
Proverb Contest Editor,
Atlanta Georgian No. 20 East Alabama St.
My solution to Proverb Puzzle No. 57 is
J
f
i
My Name is
Street or R. F. D. No
Town State
Hold all answers until you have the entire set. No /
answers will be considered if sent in before th* publlca-?
tlon of the last picture.
— >
Conditions of the Contest
The Atlanta Georgian Proverb Contest Is a contest ofz
skill and judgment.
Prizes to the amount of $16,000 will be given absolutely
free by The Atlanta Georgian to the winners. Every one
Is eligible to enter this contest, whether living in Atlanta or
out of town.
Each set of answers must contain only one answer to
each picture, but each person is entitled to send In three
complete sets of answers.
The answers to the puzzle pictures may be sent in writ
ing In long hand either with pen or pencil; they may be
written on tje typewriter or may be printed in any manner
to suit the fancy of the contestant.
Participation In any other contest now being run or
which may be run by The Georgian will not debar any one
from entering the contest.
Each contestant or any or all members of the family
will be allowed to submit one. two or three sets of answers,
but each set must contain only one answer to each picture.
Each set will be considered separately, but not more than
one prize will be awarded In one family. All employees of
The Georgian and their families are absolutely barred from
participating In the contest.
In case there are no complete lists of correct answers,
prizes will be awarded to the person submitting the great
est number of correct soluticns. In case of a tie, prize will
be divided equally between those tying.
Do not send your answers now. Keep them from day to
day, and at the end of the contest arrange them in numeri
cal order, and then send them all In at one time.
Under no circumstances should contestants begin to send
In their answers now. as all answers will stand no better
chance of winning a prize than the last answers submitted.
All answers must be delivered at The Georgian Contest
Headquarters either by mall or in person, Within the speci
fied time limit.
It Is contemplated to give contestants ten days after the
close of the contest to prepare their answers, so that they
can be sent In all together at one time.
The prizes will be awarded by a disinterested commit
tee of judges whose names will be announced later. These
ludqes will In no way be connected with The Atlanta Geor
gian.
In case contestants desire further Information, they
should address their questions to Proverb Contest Editor, 20
East Alabama street. Atlanta. Ga. All questions will be
answered through the columns of The Atlanta Georgian, by
mail, or in person.
There will be seventy five (75) puzzle pictures in the se
ries used In the contest. The solution of these pictures
must be written In the same manner as printed In the offi
cial Proverb Book.
Each and every answer must be written neatly or print
ed in the coupon published in The Atlanta Georgian or on a
page of some form of book by Itself, accompanied either by
the puzzle picture printed in The Georgian or a pen or penctl
copy thereof, and must have the name and address of the
contestant. •
Do not send in your solutions In "list" form. That Is,
do not write answers under one another on a larqe piece
of paper.
The Proverbs which will be used In the contest have
been carefully compiled by The Atlanta Georgian, and print
ed In a neat book for handy reference.
No Proverbs will he used other than those which appear
in this guide. For their own convenience, the contestant*
can procure this reference book at the Contest Department.
20 East Alabama street, Atlanta, Ga., at 25c a copy, by mall
5c extra.
CLAY MONUMENT IN
MARIETTA CITY PARK
READY FOR UNVEILING
MARIETTA. GA., June 12. -The
monument erected to the memory of
the la.te Senator A. S. Clay has been
completed and veiled in the city park
here. The material used is Georgia
marble. The pedestal is surmounted
b.v a life size bronze statue of Senator
Clay. The monument probably will be
unveiled within the next 30 days. It
is understood that Senator A O. Bacon
will deliver the principal address, and
other prominent men of the state will
take part in the exercise*.
3