Newspaper Page Text
6
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GM FRIEND OF
DIREGT PRIMARY
Senator O’Gorman Tells How
Speaker Was Misquoted at
Dinner to Gaynor.
By ALFRED HENRY LEWIS.
WASHINGTON. Jun* 12. Setting
the vote of th* I."rimer cas* for July •', j
seriously invaded the vacation i ansi
of Senator O'Gorman He had Intended
to go to Europe, and bought tickets for
himself and family foi July fi. Along
eante tlte Lorimer case and th* (>'<lor
man reservation on the limr had to !>•
cancelled. Lorimer would hare b**n
bettei off if O’Gorman had stuck to his
original vacation program.
it is dry weathei. and therefore
sign- mat fail. Should affairs go a> I
they seem to threaten, liotwr. the
vote on the sixth will strip the toga
from Lorimer's unworths shoulder#
Upon whirl) occasion it will be inter
esting m read the vote Especially to
those eduiuled to read between the
lines
O'Gorman Looks For Bolt,
O'Gorman, like most Democrats and
all Republicans, is greatly interested in
th* march of events in t'hliago II .i«
his view that the steam toller nerve of
the Taft men will in no wise fail or
falter, and that Taft will he finally the
nominee ar the Republican convention
Then as (''Gorman reads the stars
there will be a Roosevelt holt, a
Roosevelt rump convention and a sec-I
ond Republican ticket with Roosevelt
at the top. The bolting ticket should I
be Roosevelt and Hadley, although as
to the latter tt'Gorman expressed no
beliefs.
’ It Is a Demo, ratio y ear." said f rGor
man
"Whether the Republicans run Taft
nr Roosevelt or both, the result wilt be
th* same. The Democrats will win
The teasons of Republican defeat are
so deeply seated In the popular breast
that I yerlly believe the personality of
the candidates will cut little If any
figure
“Any Republican they could nomi
nate would be beaten be arty Demo
crat we might put up."
Talk having swung to candidates. 1
spoke of Champ Clark and that dinner
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 T saw the story In print,
expressing my feelings about the mat
ter The story undertook to put
squarely into ('lark's mouth the words
and sentiments of other gentlemen who
spoke at the dinner and who happened
tn be strongly of the opinion that di
rect .primaries were a delusion and a
sna re.
"('lark, in opposition \igorou-ly de
fended the direct primary system"
O'Gorman did not say so, and, indeed,
avoided naming any one save ('lark. It
Is the common word, however, and not
denied bv gentlemen who ware present
at the dinner that the two who at
tacked direct primaries were Mayor
Gaynor and Senator Hoke Smith.
Gaynor set the ball of discord roll
ing as usual.
Clark so thoroughly, not to .say ex
haustively wiped up the floor of <li<
cusslon with Gaynor, and Hoke Smith,
who himself has no use for direct pri
maries. felt moved to come to the les
cue Smith came, but it is not thought
that he rescued anything
Mrs. Priscilla Pollard.
Mrs Priscilla Pollard. t>K years old. who
died al Hapeville today, will la' carried
to Wauchula. Fla . for Interment tonight
A Way to Keep Well
The most common source
of ill health is constipation.
You’ll never have it. if you
TAKE
J a cobs’ i
Liver Salt
Only a pleasant, efferxes
cent. before breakfast stimu
lant. hut there's nothin? bet
ter for a weak stomach
I lon take substitutes.
I -2 lb Jar 25c
16c additional by mail
Jacobs’ Pharmacy
Atlanta, Ga.
- _ INIII _
Diseases of Men
> At X experience <>l 3i> .'ears has shown
■*’* me that more human wrecks are
caused by a chronic local ditease than
b\ ar.) v>her Nu
disease needs more
careful or sclen-
N&ral tifle attention to
WK effect
also know it etc is
'■so jsg no ’ 'it’ for
W. Jg specific blood poi
’vp gon 'J . int ary
'' ijw removal of syiuu-
JiS Experience. < are.
k '"
t < ; ’w'-A tails and a tbor-
ML. niigh know h of
gwatae- ’*V . Wtfi how and " • n ' o
T" , -SK use the rcmeilics
; o ’ know ii to bi bt-ne-
•JS * fictal ill the treat-
MImHML ■ WtWf ' m**nt of ibis dis.
wear fw». w « ease produ e re-
DP. WM. M BAfRD sups Honest bus
Brow"o Randolph Bldg. inP _ methods and
Atlanta. Ga. conscientious treat
men) are features of m' office Exam
inations frei office hours k to 7. Sun
days and holidays lb to 1 My mono
fe,. graphs'fr*« u. plain. sealed »ra..'W
“POLICE! POLICE!” I 1
By James J. Montague.
—— i
What landed in the street just now?”
A startled stranger cried.
' A Georgia Roosevelt delegate,”
The veteran replied. •
‘They're walloping the Colonel; you can hear Joe Dixon roar
From the lobby of the Congress to the Minnesota shore,
And despite his ululations they will wallop him some more,
When they trot out the steam roller in the morning.”
* Ar ROOSEVELT
Ng V DEI. TF
"Why should they do such awful things?”
The startled stranger cried
They shouldn't. But what.’s that to them?”
The veteran replied.
‘ They say that they are doing it for William Howard Taft.
But really they are laboring to keep their ancient graft,
Which they have got small chance to hold unless the Colonel’s
gaffed
Effectively and deftly in the morning.”
L.. Eghicacojj^” 8
tv U * ■• - ■
‘ Os course the Colonel doesn't mind,
The startled stranger cried,
‘ Oh, no; he doesn't mind at ah,”
The veteran replied.
"He's merely loading fifty guns and whetting ninety knives,
And coming to Chicago after certain persons’ lives.
There'll be abundance doing from the jump when he arrives,
Which ought to be about convention morning.”
“BOSS” BARNES CENTER
OF POLITICAL INTEREST
<H|i ’ Kr;< >, .lune 12 Fear that dole- ’
gales already seated for Taft by the I
labors of the Republican national com
mittee might shift to Roosevelt; fear
of a dark horse, fear of a delegate <
stampede that might be started with i
the Roosevelt mass meeting scheduled I
for Frida' night, projected William i
Rarnes. Jr.. of New York, Into the een- I
ter of the political stage today. Barnes
heads the New York delegation of 90.
Roosevelt men have claimed that they ;
would get a large slice of these votes.
Where they eventually go is about the
most important factor in the entire sit
uation That is the real importance of
Barnes.
The political waters, here ate trou
bled. Leaders of the Taft anad Roose
velt factions want no compromise. Rut
there are others -and there are a lot of
them -who begin to view with favor
the idea of a compromise candidate.
Wallet 1.. Houser, leader of the La-
Follette forces, who has arrived on the
ground and who controls 36 delegates,
is helping the Idea along A number of
delegates who were seated by the com
mittee have expressed sentiments not
quite so pro-Taft as their leaders de
sire Some of them nre big men. It
has worried the Taft campaigners
Should th# infection spread to the
New York delegation, which is largely
anti-Roosevelt rather than pro-Taft.
and should the delegates from the Em
pire State cast even a slice of their
votes for a third candidate on the first
ballot, real trouble would begin.
Taft Banks on First Ballot,
The Taft men are banking on a first
ballot nomination. They are reasona
bly sure that if they fail to name their
candidate on that ballot there would be
little chance of holding the Southern
delegates in line They must have them
according to the Inside figures which
now show Taft .’.63 -counting the dele
gates the national committee is relied
on to give him.
And so when Barnes arrived he was
j met by Taft leaders and he held a long
i consultation with them. He brought n
I model platform w ith him and the Taf
I men are ready to allow him to be the
chief designer of the one the conven
tion adopts provided lie holds his del
egate- in line for president. After a
number of confer, nc<» Barnes deviated
I there would be no compromise candi
date. That is believed to mean that he
‘wt keep ’he delegation as solid for
Ta ft as ho ca n.
There has been a lot of talk about
■ mpromi-■ ■ endidate." said the New
York state chairman "That is a
■ft 'i-i vr t move pure and simple. The |
... om * supporters know they are ;
.it. i. They hate -t.tried third ..tn-,
; didate talk to try ti weaken the Taft !
cans, Thai the Roosevelt men are
taiking < ompromt-i is positive evidence
that their cause has been lost.”
Barnes assorted with vig.tr ami di
rectness that Taft would be the nomi
t re. But the situation is not very pleas-
I Ing to the Taft lead, r- For that mat
j t, r, it is no: yery pleasing -,o the Roose-
■ Veit leaders. A few days ago the ca m -
' p.iign managets arrived, ttnllmbered
their typewrit, is and issued a few I
, aim- The leas' tha: any manager i
mould see for bi- candidate was 6hfi
T to is no r.. need of anv one ba
ling troubled with constipation. Cham- |
, be: lain's Tab'ets w ill cause an agree- I
; able movement of the bowels without I
anv unpleasant effect Give them a
. . trial. Em sale by all dealers. •••
$21.35 ROUND TRIP
TO BALTIMORE
! From Atlanta Low rates from ,
otbei stations tickets sold June
Peachtree Street SEABOAFD
20 to 24 City Ticket Office, 88
12? 1912.
votes. They are not giving out figures
today
Bare Majorities Claimed Now.
Occasionally In the quiet of some se- (
eluded place they will whisper the
number they hope to get—and the num
ber is always just barely about 540, the
needed majority. The managers them
selves are having their own difficulties
in making up their own private tables.
And besides the big fellows, there are
a lot of others who are shaky. Taft
Southern negro delegates have been en
tertained by Roqsevelt negro entertain
ing committees, have Imbibed Roosevelt
sentiments along with certain refresh
ments and they are not as solid for
tile president as they were. The man
agers are trying to figure it out, and
one thing seems to be certain: A lot of
the Taft delegates seated with such
care and pertinacity at the committee
sessions are looking for a g'oofi politi
cian to step into the Roosevelt band
wagon.
NEGRO DANGEROUSLY HURT
IN FIGHT WITH WHITE MEN
Two white men. one with several
knife cuts In his side, are held in the
police barracks and a negro lies badly
wounded in Grady hospital as a result
of a tight last night on the corner of
Georgia avenue and South McDaniel
street. The negro may not live. The
injuries to the white men nre not seri
ous.
C. \V Lawson, of 94 Garibaldi street,
and 11. Neely, of 201 Ira street, both
employees at the Sotuhern railway
shops, are the white men who are Jailed
and John Allen is the negro who was
cut up. A preliminary hearing has not
yet been set. Allen says one of the
men threw a rock at him.
PUBLIC TO BE HEARD ON
PIEDMONT PARK SCHOOL
With the board of education and the
park board at daggers points over the
proposal to build a new Eighth ward
school in Piedmont park, the park
committee of council will hold a public
heating on the matter tomorrow after
noon at 3 o'clock.
At the instance of the board of edu
cation n resolution setting aside a plot
In Piedmont park for a school Ini was
lot oduced In council. The park board
is bitterly opposed to any encroach
ments on this beautiful park.
FIGURES IN EXTRADITION
WAR HELD FOR BIG THEFT
Xl<\\ YORK. June ’2. T\\ ? police lieu
; tenants met the Kronprinz Wilhelm when
slit* arrived today and arrested (’lark \
Miller ami Alfred M Motlex, ir upon
the charge of grand larceu' "f SIOO,OOO
from the I’nhed States Lithograph Com
pant The two men have figured in in
tvrnati uuiF negotiations for weeks
The\ are charged with getting SIOO,OOO
trim William tHttnan -Ir.. urcsMvnt of
the United Suites Llthogt a phlng Cum
panx. bx making false representations
concerning the xalue of a lithographing
process
Ihe Uncle Remus
Presents the Indian Players Lnd‘
HIAWATHA, '
AtINMAN PARK. A™ /
PERFORMANCES AT
,-1 (/mission 50 cents
Reserved Seat.
Indian Villaci 0 Oren at 10 O*C*ock <S
irmsiiFTli
ISIMTMi
I 1
| “Assumes His Office a Gift at J
Disposal of Bosses in Desi- '
ance of the People.” '
* I 1
<»YSTER RAT. .Tune 12. In a state- <
ment in which h? charges th? conduct <
of th? president of the United States 1
with being “dangerously near treason.’
Colonel Roosevelt again assails the ae- «
Hons of the Republican national com- <
mitt.ee and the Taft forces. He says in <
part: "
“The question at Chicago becomes 1
clearer with every vote of the national
••ommittee. It is simply whether the <
people have th? right to nominate <
whomsoever they wish for the highest
office in their gift, or whether by de- 1
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 had the opportunity to express :
their wishes at the primaries the plain <
people, th* rank and file of the Rcpub
llean party, have repudiated Mr. Taft. g
Now we are face to face with the ques
tion whether the people rule the Re- ,
publican party or whether the party is f
to be ruled by the discredited bosses f
whom t'he people have themselves re- I
pudiated. J
Taft. Repudiated, Appeals to Bosses.
"Mr Taft has been repudiated by the j
people. and he now appeals to his rep- c
re j»?n Ia ti ves in the national commit- r
tee, half of whom have themselves been r
repudiated, and asks them to force his 1
nomination on the rank and file of the ;
Republican party, who have declared ?
that they do not wish him. Mr. Taft }
at one period of the campaign said 1 |
was unjust to him because I stated that s
rhe bosses were for him and the people
against him. Events have proved that I I
I was right.
"How do those bosses hope to nomi
nate Mr. Taft? What they did in the
Thirteenth Indiana district supplies rhe
answer. In this district the conven
tion which assembled Io elect two dele
gates to Chicago contained a clear and I
uncontested majority of Roosevelt men. 1
Rut the chairman, a Taft man. refused
a roll call and declared the Taft dele-
< gates elected on viva vote vote, where
upon the majority of the convention .
elected two Roosevelt delegates. Yet
the national committee seated the two
men, the fraudulently of whose claims
had been thus shown.
Would Mean Prison Elsewhere.
"Unfortunately, there is no law to
touch the astounding misconduct of
which the national committee has been
guilty, and which it has sanctioned in
the cases which have come before it If
the contest was one for the nomination
of an aiderman In New York city, and
obscure men In rhe Democratic and
Republican parties who 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
bossism in politics and special prlvi
, lege in business, who are now perpe
trating the same kind of wrong on an
infinitely larger scale, are immune be
cause as yet, unfortunately, the law
does not touch nominating conventions. I
"Mr. Taft assumes. and Messrs ,
Barnes, Penrose, Mulvane and company
assume, that the presidency is to be
treated as a gift within the bestowal of
»he politicians In defiance of the duly
expressed wish of the people.
Such conduct com's dangerously
near being treason to the whole spirit
of our institutions, to the whole spirit
i of democratic free government. I do
not believe that the people will tolerate
I such conduct, nor do I believe that so
, her Republicans will consent to see the
Republican party sacrificed to please
> the bosses whom the party has repu
diated.
"If the national committee continues
as it has begun, 1 believe its actions
twill be repudiated by the convention."
Mrs. Elizabeth McHugh.
Mrs Elisabeth McHugh. 85 years old.
died at her residence. 45 West End Place.
* toda) The remains will be carried t<>
. Conyers. (la.. for interment tomorrow.
’ Several relatives survive
<
WINDOW BOXES FILLED.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 1130.
’
Wall Paper
| Largest Assortment in the City.
GEORGIA PAINT & GLASS CO,,
35-37 Lnckie St.
’'——
CORSYTH I T * d «y **•
>; ■ Atlanta's BnsiestThester J Tsr.ight B:3® ’
LILLIAN SHAW. CLIFF GORDON, .
McConnell & simpson.
Johnson-Howard-Llzette, Campbell & i
‘ ' Yates. Smythe <& Hartman. Schreck A. I
f ■ Percival.
; Next Week: TRIXIE FRIG ANZA
Memorial Association
Icr the Direction of F. E Moore in,
the Indian Passion Play
13th to June22d (Sunday excepted)
4 AND 8:30 O'CLOCK.
Children Under 12, 25 cents
i - *
's Cf cents extra
Sunday Excepted), Admission 10 Cents.
: Brady Won t Bolt =
: But Just Sit Tight :
And Vote for T.R.:
• •
• —— •
• CHICAGO, June 12. —Even if •
• Roosevelt bolts the convention •
• there will be at least one vote •
• that still will be persistently cast •
• in the Coliseum meeting for him. •
• It will be cast by State Senator •
• Francis P. Brady of Illinois. Sen- •
• afor Brady won't bolt. •
• "What would you do if Roose- •
• veil did bolt?" he was asked. •
• "Sit tight <in my seat in the •
• Coliseum," he replied. •
• "How would you vote? What •
• about your Roosevelt instruct- •
• tions?" •
• T still would vote for Roosevelt •
• if I was the only man left in the •
• convention that was voting that •
• way, ' Senator Brady said. "A •
• bolt won't help the party in No- •
• vember, hence mv attitude." •
• • I
•••••••••••••••••••••••••a
NEPHEW OF GOULD
DIES FROM WORRY
AND AUTO INJURIES
RICHMOND. VA.. June 12.—William
Northrop, nephew of Jay Gould and head
of Frank Gould's traction interests in
Virginia, is dead at his home here
from the effects of injuries sustained in
an automobile accident May 27
Mr Northrop's death is believed to
have been partly due to worry over the
fight for a competitive power and light
franchise sought by the Richmond and
Henrico railway. His company has been
bitterly opposing the granting of this
franchise for several months.
Several nights ago. Rev. George W.
McDaniel, pastor of the First Baptist
church, speaking on behalf of the Rich
mond and Henrico petition at 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
no names were called. He threatened to
sue the minister for heavy damages.
Proper explanations later cleared up the
situation.
COLUMBUS COTTON
MAN PRESIDENT OF
MILL ASSOCIATION
WARM SPRINGS. GA., June 42—Fred
B Gordon, of the Columbus Manufactur
ing Company, Columbus, Ga., has been
elected president of the Associated Cot
ton Mills of Georgia, in annual conven
tion here He succeeds C. D. Tuller, of
Atlanta, late president of the Exposition
Cotton Mills, who died several months
ago.
Fuller E. Callaway, vice president of
the association, called the convention to
order and presided pending the election
of a new president.
A feature of yesterday's session was an
address by R J. DeLoach, professor of
cotton industry at the State College of
Agriculture at Athens, on the history of
cotton transportation Committees were
appointed and other business transacted
't’he convention is in session this after
noon and will hold another session to
night. when adjournment will be taken
FRANCE HAS’RECALLED
ALL BRONZE COINAGE
PARIS. June 12.—The treasury de
partment of France has called in all
the bronze coinage and it is to be re
placed by nickel money. The mint is
now rushing the coinage of eight mil
lions of francs in one and two centime
pieces.
WILSON SPURNS REQUEST
TO RETURN TO MEXICO
MEXICO CITY, June 12. Spanish
newspapers here published a report that
the Mexican government has made three
separate requests upon the I'nlted States
ambassador, Henry Lane Wilson, who Is
ai Washington at present, and that Mr
Wilson will not return as ambassador.
The Working Man and His Money
Save, Save, Save. The Future Will Care For Itself
(The following article Is printed
bv permission from Mr. Thomas
Tapper s book just published by the
Piatt & Pock Co., New York, and
copyrighted by them. entitled
"Youth and Opportunity”)
lET us keep before us the aver
age workingman and his
money, and let us ask what
his money means, what Its power
Is- and how it may serve him now
and in the future: for every man.
who earns little or much, looks
upon money almost hungrily as the
one resource of safety. He wants
the use of it now and the com
fort of it tn the future. Most peo
; pie get the one—-the use of it i-
I the present—but not the other,
future protection of it. Can a
I have both?
It Is a comforting tac’
that he can. But In or
workingman of any st
have thia two-fold use o
i must begin the study
I things:
1. Os the money he a
2, Os the time he pos
From these he must g
fold satisfaction he see
comfort and future Inst
How shall he begin"
Assuming that he giw
I best there Is In him for
he receives, it. becomes
money Is only another f
best there Is In him.
and works, is faithful t<
and at the end of the
pay envelope GIVES HIM
QUALITIES BACK AGAt.
ANOTHER FORM. This nmne.
a thing he can exchange readiij
fc- ether things R.j. before -• be
gins to exchange it he should pause |
IMPEACHMENT OF JUDGE
FAVORABLY REPORTED
WASHINGTON. June 12. Chairman
Clayton, of the house judiciary commit
tee, has been instructed to favorably
report to the house the resolution of Rep
resentative Berger, impeaching Federal
Judge C. H. Hanford, of Seattle.
195 Pairs x
Men’s Shoes
Sg I
Now O E*
Strictly high-
class values
exclusively.
t ’
Tans, Patents, Vicis, Gun Metal
Carlton Shoe Co.
36 Whitehall St.
■ ■
Cheap and Delightful
EXCURSION
To Brunswick, St. Simon, Cumber
land Island and Jacksonville, Fla.,
I $6.00 round trip;
!
Tampa, SB.OO round trip,
: Via
I
A., B. & A. R. R.
FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1912
Trains leave Union Station 7:30 A. M.
and 10:15 P- Parlor* and Sleeping Cars.
Trains make direct connection at Brunswick
for the Islands.
1 Full Information, City Ticket Office
1 70 Peachtree Street
; Phones, Bell M. 11 Atlanta 223
By THOMAS TAPPER.
power of mind anti body. The
money he earns should serve him
faithfully, and he. in turn, must be
faithful to himself in the use of his
money. I’p to the present moment
he pas perhaps saved nothing. The
rule of his life has been a varia
tion of "easy dime, easy go.” Rut
ft has not put him forward. He
is no better off. has nothing in
hand. He is, in fact, a little older
and a little nearer the time when
his efficiency may be less than it Is
today.
He Must Makfi Himself a
Student of Money.
If he can succeed in seeing him-
Read This Article On Another
page.
Deposit your Savings in this
Strong, Progressive and
Growing Bank.
We Pay 4% on Savings
Travelers Bank &
Trust Company
BELASCO SCARES BURGLAR
1 AWAY WITH STAGE PISTOL
1 NEW YORK. June 12.—Would-be
burglars were chased from the roof of
the theater by David Belasco,
, who used a stage pistol to intimidate
the prowlers.
fairs in order. It has occurred to
him that anything a man can not
afford is really a waste. and waste
is the most expensive of all habits.
Extravagance is exceptionally ex
pensive. Earnest men are unani
mous in their denunciation of it.
Mr. Theodore Roosevelt has said;
"Extravagance rots character;
train youth away from it. On the
other hand, the habit of saving
money, while it stiffens the will,
also brightens the energies. If
you would he sure that you are be
ginning right, begin to save."
Five cents thrown away for a
thing one does not need is all the f
money a dollar can earn in twelve
nths. Invested at five per cent.
*lve cents placed in the sav-
nk daily, amounts In fifty
nearly $.3.000.’ A dollar
me and lost cannot be
rerest in one year on
tan S2O. Small sums
even for so short a
ears, accumulate Im
*'n cents saved dally
amounts, at four per
y $450. One dollar a
In a savings bank
>r fifty years amounts
0.
itratlons should give
the power of a little
ch considerable sums,
CONSTANTLY SET
n Wanamaker, who is
started in life on a
week salary, says:
etween Spending
•ng a Part.
difference between the
who spends al! of his salary
j the clerk who saves part of
«*- is the difference, in ten year*