Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 20, 1912, EXTRA, Page 3, Image 3

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COL WATTERSON T fl 15 W HE'S Louisville Editor Gives Reasons ; ■ for Opinion That Missourian Should Be Chosen. w VBW YORK, June 20.—Henry Wat terson was asked at the Manhattan club why champ Clark should be nominated and Woodrow Wilson defeated for the presidency. The Colonel replied thus: "The New York World, having knock ed Champ Clark over the ropes and sent Judson Harmon and Osca» Undefwood each to his corner to suck his thumbs, takes up the gloves for Woodrow Wll son. "True to its environment, The World is of the East, Easterly. It can see nothing west of the Alleghenies, or south of the Blue Ridge. 'lt is in the East,' says The World, ‘that Demo cratic victory must be won. It is in the East that Rooseveltism must be overthrown. It is the East that must | save the country from a third term and all it implies.’ "The World is carried away by a kind of intellectual hysteria. At Bal timore the Democrats are not only to nominate a candidate for president. • Th y are not only to pui a ticket In the field. They are actually to make a president, because, to leave Roosevelt anti Rooseveltism out of the question, no parts, debauched as the Republi cans, can hope to prevail in a national election. Must Consider Character. "Hence, at Baltimore, the Democrats must consider not alone the availabil ity of the candidate they nominate, but the character of the man they are to put in the white house. "Acting upon a wealth of knowledge acquired during a period of opportu nity in friendly service, most reluc tantly I felt constrained to part compa ny with the governor of New Jersey. Os a sudden there came a revelation of personality, as by flashlight, making it plain that when the fairy godmother bent over the cradle of the little Wood tow Wilson to give him so many bless ings, he withheld the virtue of fidelity, without which the rest, however shin ing. are tainted. "No honorable man can learn the faits and inspect the proof which I > i hold and have repeatedly offered to produce under proper restriction as to ; personal rights and party interest, and remain of the opinion that the govern- . oi of New Jersey is either a trust ’ worthy or a safe man to be invested with the Democratic leadership and the presidential office. "The World itself appears half-con scions of this. Dwelling high up in the air. in utterance, by turns ethereal and sublimated, our good brother of the gulden dome affects too often the | oracular when a modicum of simple 'hoss sense’ were more to the point and better to the purpose. "But surmounting its acknowledged objections and discounting its sinister auguries. The World proceeds to de bate the question of availability, when, in choosing a president, Democrats need chiefly to consider the question of character. Os self-willed men af fecting perfectability—quite too good tor the use of this world—the people ire not wholly ignorant. One of them n the coming race for president were mrely enough. Plenty Better than Wilson, " Who is a better representative of Democracy than Woodrow Wilson?' ‘ asks The World. Why, any one of a dozen Democrats in whom the elements of flesh and blood predominate over the «!ements of excessive culture and over wrought ambition; in whom the essen tlals of every-day wisdom, of loyal faith, of stable, honorable, generous manhood, prevail over self-exploited virtue and dogmatic self-assertion; any one of a dozen Democrats who have had even a little experience in public affairs as against a doctrinaire maxi of letters who has acquired by a life time in the class room the tyrannous cast of wind and the disciplinary habits of the schoolmaster, and who, suddenly located to the presidency, would lose all real sense of the relations of things, f PV er he possessed any faculty for making common cause and working to harness. The country very much needs an ■ii r Lincoln. It does not need a mild mannered Roosevelt, which is all that .- . ■odrow Wilson Is, We may find ob- , lion to every one named in con nr-, lion with the Democratic nomina- V ''on for president, but most of all to the governor of New Jersey, because alone among Democrats is repre -nied as idea). • Clark Fills Requirements. • The Democratic party wants a Dem oi r.it. tried -and true, in the white house. Wo want no man there who thinks himself so great, and whose friends think and tell him he is so great, that when the test comes he is ’good for nothing. Champ Clark has been at Washing ton long enough to know who’s who and what’s what. He ought to be and is good enough for plain people that want a man and not an angel for their „ r , Idcnt. He has been In the thick of factional fighting during revolutionary times. Inevitably lie has said much he might have better left unsaid. So have all of us. If he had not he wotild have been ill fit for his Job. or for any other job. A politician, even a states man. may be too prudent. Champ Clark is simply a man—an ' honest man a man of ability and ed ucatlon—a man of flesh and blood. Hu Is i Democrat. On every essential Is sue Os the time In is as sound as a piece of s. .tsonei timber and as straight •* j siiinglt . ( i| n nut elect him we cau el*cl one.’’ City Urchins Get Taste of Wholesome Life DIXIE BOYS CLUB IN CAMP Two ways to train boys, top. street gamin puffing < cigarette, undermining his and mind. Below, in the I camps, strengthening his I and making ruddy cheeks. S' W •' ■■ ■ ■ ■ \ \ . w .ft 2 lIF 1 ip wriiE./ 1 / .m wffw Wh - - Up and Down Peachtree Atlanta’s Elevator Conductors “Champions.” Among the sights to be seen In At lanta are the elevatons. Long pause (like this )■ That for the! purpose of allowing the gentleman from | the brushes of Baldwin or me grasses | of Glynn to say scornfully: "We have | elevators in Brunswick." And that’s not to be denied, either If • any one should fee' a dout>t about it. ask the fellow who reads the unex purgated state news letters. There,’s a story about that elevator every day. But to go on with the story—Atlanta elevators are notable because of the peculiarly thoughtful i haractei of theii operators. B’or instance, if a man wants to get off at the tenth floor the lad who pulls the rope is never so inconsiderate as to stop at the eighth. He knows that it's very irksoine to climb upward, and besides, it might bring on hard words.) And if the passenger wfre particularly I petulant, he might insist on the ele- ) vator taking .-mother start and stop- i ping at the propel station.. So in order to avoid embioglios orl misunderstandings of any sori, he al ways goes to the eleventh or ibc twelfth, thereby giving his passenger an easy ascent to his destination. Then again he's always up on the topics -of the day and is ever ready to , discuss them intelligently. His tact in ■ respect to this is little short of marvel - ; lous. If he Sees a gentleman in clerical garb get on he is sure to venture a prediction on the Flvnn-Johnson fight, | because he knows that the minister’s | mind is steeped in theology and that ; something light Is always refreshing, j And so on. A Harvard professor who weighed] the brain of an Atlanta elevator boy j once safid--however, statistics won't throw much light on the situation, be sides The Georgian is not using as bestos paper these days. Again, and Yet Again—Those Clocks! "If the clock at Peachtree and De catur streets says fifteen minutes after four and the big one on W hitehall gives the time as 4:32 and the one in tlie Piedmont hotel swears it’s, half past—what time does the 4:40 train to Augusta leave?!’ This column didn't ask the question. This column by the same token is not responsible for an answer. And, hav ing successfully dodgefl responsibility thus far. it sees no particular reason for becoming mixed up farther down. So quotation marks will be continued in use. The speaker—let Os say—is 1 Rhoderick Dhu from Decatur. Said he: ] "I wanted to leave town—strange to say. I was at the Piedmont hotel and,] looking at my clock, decided that 1 had i just fifteen minutes to reach my train. I boarded a car. It was 3:05 o’clock After I had ridden three blocks 1 looked out of the window and saw by a ma jestic looking timepiece that the time was 3:04. 'My.' sez I to myself, 'this trolley line is some fast.’ A block far ther, however, and 1 tytrsed it for a lag gard, for the time, according to a well known clock whose face i« familiar to all of you. was 3:20. the time I should have been speeding away. The ear was too slow, so I Jumped off and ran. Rushing up to the ticket window at the Terminal, I breathlessly asked if my train haxi gone. “'Look at the clock, man.' said the always polite ticket vender. 'You are a half hour ahead of time? ” SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA Argued arsd Submitted. M M. Rooks vs. W. \V. Tindall ei al., from Fulton. L. S Raines vs R. T. Raines, from Fulton O. F Taylor vs T. E. Means, from Fulton. Burton Smith v-. F. D. Shaw et :il., from Fulton. • 'entr.il of Georgia Rallwav ''on. pany vs. J. H. Clark, from Fulton. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN A’ttD NEWS. THURSDAY. JUNE 20, 1912. ' At on a boy iiii i l' wn ' /Tqg’&Jy *•' : \ 1 ‘ K t jM&tIL - k - ! it 1 iQBp A \ I ; // " ' \\ ww I I.*' \\ J1 MCE TOW JO UN OF SRC MT Second Sunday in May To Be Celebrated as a National Fete. PARIS, June 20.—1 tis now fairly certain that the second Sunday in May will henceforth be celebrated as a na tional fete in honor of Joan of Arc. I do not think there is any purpose to do away with the traditional July 14, which commemorates the taking of Bastile, for that would profoundly of fend republican sentiments. The Joan of Arc movement is no new I one. A vote in the senate as far back ias 1894 approved a national holiday I each year for the maid of Orleans. For I some reason or other the idea was shelved by the chamber of deputies. Then came the Dreyfus affair, and the hostility to the army to which it gave rise. The public cult for Joan of Arc was shorn of many of its out ward manifestations and the grandiose ceremonies that has accompanied tiie maicUs anniversary at Orleans for five centuries were forbidden by the gov ernment of the day. Gives Army Symbol. When Joan of Ave was beautified by the pope, it began to be seen that a magnificent weapon had been put into the hands of the Catholic party. It enabled them to rally the people to a common standard, and it gave to the army its surest symbol. M. Mlllerand, since he has been min ister of war, has spared tio efforts to restore military prestige and national patriotism. The finishing touch to his work would be, h< considers, th< annual glorifica tion of Joan of Are by till sections of the French people, without distinction whatever. Whv do they ah sav. "As gdbd as ■ro-er's - SABER'S pI.RE FLAVOR i.XG EXTRACTS naw received thlr •t. ugliest Aineilcap and European .war as. • Outing at Silver Lake Is a Great- Moral Tonic for City Lads. The annual encampment of the Dixie Boys club Is on at Silver latke. Every day now the lads are splashing in the , water, playing baseball, climbing trees and having a good time generally. In order to accommodate a large number of boys, the club has been obliged to seek subscriptions from At lantans, and as yet the full amount lias not been realized. George Dorr, superintendent of the boys club, says this of the camp: “It takes the boy away from city ] lia inis and gives him a touch of I wholesome life. When he- returns to . the city he doesn’t care for the dark | des. for the "crap" games and ciga i rette smoking like he once did.” | , In the above pictures two boys are shown. One Is in the city and away from helping influences. He is smok ing a cigarette, and seems to believe that he is engaged in an unusually "devilish" occupation. The other boy is climbing a tree is strengthening his limbs and bringing the bloom to his cheek. To Drive Out Malaria and Build up the System Take the Old Standard GROVE’S TASTE LESS CHILL TONIC. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the most effertual form. For grown people and children. 600. BABY'S DISFIGURING ECZEMA CURED All Over Face and Hands. Hard Crust 1 Formed. Scratched and Made It i Bleed. Entirely Cured by Cuticura ] Ointment with Cuticura Soap. »—.— McKinley Ave., Ballston, Va. “Ever •ince my baby was four months old she was troubled with eczema. Ara ih would come out over her (ace which I j thought was a teeth rash. The eczema went all over , her face and nanus. First, it was just little sores and then it was a hard crust ; formed all over it. She I A would scratch and make it i ' bleed, which of course ' made it worse. Her face was terribly disfigured by i running sores. She could | /Si; cP not sleep and I did not know what to do. After I had used one box of the Cuticura Oint ment together with the Cuticura Soap her face was as clear as it could be. and has been ever since. I have always used Cuticura Soap since, and ’hall use no other a’ long as I can get Cuticura, for mv baby was entirely cured by Cuticura Soap and Oint ment.” (Signed) Mrs. L. B. Cox,Sept. 7, 1011. RASH ITCHING AND PAINFUL Face aad Ann* Scaly M*ue«. Stun Red. 115 Pleasant fit., Gloucester, Mass. “A rash began coming on my face and arm. It was Hi-iung aad painful and used to burn. My face and arms were in scaly misses and th* skin was rough and red. It would keep me up uighu. I got one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment and soon U wa« entirely well.” .Signed) Mies Viola Richardson, Nov. 16, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold everywhere. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. book. ‘.ddress, ‘‘Cutie: a." Dept. T, lioxton. Tender-faced men -houlii shave with Cuticura Soap Shaving Slick. LOKOON CHARITY BALL BRILLIANT Under Direction of King, It Will Surpass Any Social Event of Season. LONDON. Jun- 20. —The costume ball at Olympia, which Is to he given in i aid of theatrical charities, will be a I most magnificent affair. th< culmina ting point in faejfof a brilliant London season. Il is under direct patronage : of King George, projected upon a scale so unusually lavish, and the people of the rank and fashion who have signt- I tied their intention of patronizing the | hall ar. so numerous that the event is likely for some time to remain unsur i pus-ed amongst society functions 'Kh' committee, * upon which are a number >f prominent people, have con ceived the happy idea of arranging for i the elaborate and extensive decorations land fittings oi the International Horse I show to remain intact for the ball Olympia will, in fact, be transformed into a veritable conservatory. A series of massive trellis arches bearing thousands of rambler roses will surround I lie vast interior. Siate | l\ palms and brilliant flowers w ill en ■ lianee the beauty of the scene, and th" ; exterior of the boxes, which will sur i i.mud tlje floor space, are to be faced | with marble, and adorned with choice I rose? climbing up golden trellis work, i Silk curtains will conceal the roof and l form a blue sky over a scene garden- I like in its ga neral aspect. Special Floor Laid. A special spring floor, the largest ever constructed will b> laid for this one occasion. Some idea of its extent may be gathered bv stating that it will provide nearly four times the floor space of the Albert hall. Soft carpets, hundreds of yards in length, will be laid on the promenade, converted for the time being into a spacious floral lounge. ■ xlending round 'he entire building and over Hoking th floor bdow Hundreds of private boxe< will a commodate those spectators whe desire to witness |he scene without joinlne in ihe dance. Illumination will be provided bv means of some 600 arc lamps shaped liki tulips, tinted with pink and fading Into ■ delicate white, whilst some 16.- 000 powerful incandescent lamps will be distributed amongst .the trellis ari lies'. i The print iprl legations have promia- ■ o to assist and to form par/les in the , muioiial costumes of their various ■ountrics. Man Coughs and Breaks Ribs. After a frightful coughing spell a : man in Neenah. Wis., felt terrible pains in his side and his doctor found two i ribs mid been broken. What agony Dr. King's New Discovery would have | saved him. A few teaspoonfuls ends a I late cough, while persistent use routs I obstinate coughs, expels stubborn colds or heals weak, sore lungs. "I feel sure it’s a God-send to humanity,” writes Mrs Effie Morton. Columbia. Mo., "fox I believe J would have consumption to day if I had not used this great reme dy." It’s guaranteed to satisfy, and you can get a free trial bottle or 50- cent or SI,OOO sfbe at all druggists. **♦ Makes the Nation Gasp. The awful list of injuries mi a Fourth of July staggers humanity. Set over against it. however, is the wonderful i healing, by Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, of thousands who suffeied from burns, cuts, bruises, bullet wounds or explo sions. It’s the quick healer of boils, ul cers, eczema, sore lips or piles. 25 cts at all druggists. ••• A TEXAS WONDER. The Texas Wonder cures kidney ann Madder troubles, removing travel, cures diabetes, weak and lame backs, rheuma tism, and all Irregularities of the kidneys end bladder in both men and women Regida'es b'adder troubles In children If not sold by your druggist, will be s n» by mail on receipt of SI.OO. One smao bottle is two months' treatment and sel dom fails to perfect a cure. Send for tea tfrr.onlals from this and other states. Dr E. W. Hall. 292 S Olive-st.. St Louie. Mn Sold bv druggists ■- - ' ■ usually gives quick relief ■juuroi an< j soon removes all swelling and ■ ■* short breath. Trial treatment sent Free. | Dr.H. H. Gree'n's Sons. Box O. Atlanta, Ga. ! SWEET POTATO PLANTS of our famous Nancy Hall variety at $1.75 per thousand, or $2.00 ex press prepaid. Prompt shipment, good count and safe arrival guar anteed. , BEAR'S HEAD FARM. Pine Castle, fla. Chronic Diseases THE reason many doctors do t not have success :n treating chronic’or ion<- tanding U'senses is because they do nut I ESeis OH. WM. M. BAIRD original ideas re- Brown-Randolph Bldg gardlng the dls- Atlanta, Ga. eases in which I specialize which are set forth in my mon "graphs. They're free by mail in plain. | seab-il wrtippe- Mi office hours Hie X to I 7; Sundays anil holidays, 19 to 1. Ex amination is tree. Bids Girls to Earn Their Own Living BE INDEPENDENT OF MEN Business Advice to Southern Girls Train yourself to he independent—to earn your own live lihood if need he. Remember that there are many dignified trades and pro fessions in which a woman can easily make a competence. \\ lien women lawyers are legalized in Georgia there will be real dignity and learning added to the profession. Women will have a far cl'faner life viewpoint when they know they can provide for themselves. —Mrs. C. L. Bovard, architect, lawyer and real estate expert. Train Yourselves for Career, . Advice of Atlanta Business Woman to Sisters. "Every Southern girl, of whatever station in life, should be trained so she will be independent of any man in mak ing her way through the world.” That statement expresses definitely the sentiments of Mrs. C. L. Bovard, Atlanta's successful woman contractor and real estate dealer, who. incidental ly, Is a lawyer byway of furnishing herself one more means of her much loved independence. “Personally J would rather be com peting with men in honest, straight forward business than managing the woman’s part of a home," continued Mrs. Bovard, as she put her signature to a deed that represented a client’s investment of several thousand dollars in Atlanta real estate. “1 think it gives a woman a clearer, cleaner life view point if she feels she’ll be able to take care of herself successfully. Mind. 1 don't say that a home with husband and children do not constitute the su preme happiness in a great many cases or the majority of cases where woman’s happiness is involved. All the same, if I were giving advice to girls I would have them learn the way to make a comfortable livelihood so that if the Worst came to the worst they could still look the world In the face with out any fear of the poor house." Practices What She Preaches. That Mrs. Bovard has practiced quite thoroughly what she preaches, she ex plained, byway of showing that one woman may find even more than one way of making her way to affluence tn the South. Mrs. Bovard still is young, but ten years ago she was a woman lawyer in Florida. "1 practiced there." she said, "and J think 1 may say that the law brought me a very comfortable inde pendence In Florida. But I had a nat ural ambition, to make more money and friends in Atlanta convinced me that it would be a pity to throw away the chance offered by this quickly growing town. So I came here, but I could not practice law in Georgia and I became a real estate agent. Well, the competition with the men in real estate became keen. I don’t know, but I hat it was even a little keener because J was a woman. "But certainly I asked no favors. I told everybody that so long as I was in business I expected to be treated just as one business man treats an other But it wasn't long before I found it very lucky that I’d practiced law and knew the ‘ropes.’ Collections in my real estate dealings became bad and I found that some of the lawyers whom 1 employed to make them for me weren't getting the money as they ought to. Then I undertook the collec- get io the cause of the troutile -incor rect diagnosis. I have helped many a chronic invalid by being able to find the cause and removing it. That’s why 1 have been called b crank on diagnosis. My 39 years of experience in such diseases, in cluding diseases of men and nervous d I s o r d e re, have made it possible for me to obtain suc cess in many cases I where others have failed., I have some : ' I c? With two trains daily carry- I j ing coaches, and drawing room sleeping cars. All I IjSl Bjl wS BI meals in dining cars at 8 reasonable prices and with -Zi"' ! the mostsatisfactory service, f CI scenery all the I mHB II B t I way; following the base of I I the Chilhowee and Smoky |h| Mountains, the beautiful || Clinch River, through g | Knoxville and across the Si n ||[i|||||rg|lß| great Cumberland and Blue Ridge Mountains, the Coal I district of cantem K'-rHucky t a» and the famous Blue < irass | I Mui I section of that state. No trip | I | like it Elast of the Rockies. | «;it is the most attractive way "'■L.c'rJ| and if you contemplate a 11 trip to the North or North- | Wt Erff J west phone us and a rep- > \ I resentative will call on you HI with full particulars. Sill 8 CITY TICKET OFFICE I 4 PEACHTREE STREET The Indian Players in HIAWATHA at Inman Park Daily at 4:00 and 8:30 p. m. (Sunday excepted). BENEFIT UNCLE REMUS MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION. ADMISSION 50 CENTS CHILDREN 25 CENTS RESERVED SEATS . .. .25 CENTS EXTRA tions myself and I don't mind saying that I made them. Entered Contracting Field. "Then I developed into the contract ing business, quite naturally by build ing houses for my real estate clients. I had to employ my own men and some times I made my own designs. In all I’ve built 35 houses and the real es tate transactions run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars during the past six months. I'm saying that only to prove the point that any woman of ordinary ability may make her way through the world. “And I believe that when woman are given the right to practice law in Geor gia this year you will see a splendid addition to the bar of the common wealth and women practitioners who will lend dignity and real erudition to the profession." ’ Mra. Bovard toid the reporter she believed the day near when Southern women would be trained to be Inde pendent financially. “When they once take up the idea you will find that they will open for themselves new, dignified, successful ways of making a livelihood of which nobody now dreams.” she concluded. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they can not reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you have a rum bling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it Is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Ca tarrh, which Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We wtll give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cun not. be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. .1. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. HOW EMBARRASSING Nothing m more em barrassing than to be constantly throwing off gas. Tutt’s Pills will stop it and at the same time make your breath sweet and your skin clear. At your druggist— sugar coated or plain. CORSYTH TTM«y. w ■ Atlanta’s BusfatTheater ( Tsaifht JOE WELCH iMext Week. TRIXIE FRIGANZA Gue Ed- I Asihi Japs—3 Belmonts wards Tom Linton and Jungle Himself and Girls. Hibbert & Warl His Big ren—Montforts. Song Revue I 3