Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 01, 1912, HOME, Page 3, Image 3

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’ACCORDING TO WEBSTER copyright, 1912. by international News Service. BY WIN SO R IVTCAY I ?A>sE_ JHE -r OF FIRE TO THE VAST CROWD GALLERY- I ‘ I MjY t&Z _ j fc/ZXt X'Y ' S j ) AKMrdiSll'ill 111 HHKOWiM- i®ofl CJIDO fldODOfl (Kidl ft n AFTER PRATER HOSTILITIES BEGAN '• z „ ’ 7 FoUIf “ UW . t 1 JANP A GtNERAL M . /, &Z ' Zjl I Z' ! .; .. . z yUa sU WAS egowtED QjJT helo W.M P <oA.uF l3 T ° fwHf N THE SPEAKER. ft FRWIE GEDRGUNSAGREE TO SUM UNDERWOOD Should Clark Again Pass Ma jority. This State Might Go to Him-Wilson, Never. By JAMES B. NEVIN. BALTIMORE, July I.—A change in the weather Sunday brought refresh ing rest and some source of sorrow to many delegates In Baltimore town, but the morn of Monday broke finding little change in the real situation with re spect to the Democratic nomination for the presidency. This morning it looks tike Clark or chaos. Beginning imme diately upon adjournment Saturday near midnight, the mixers and the fix ers have been at work, some of them as they never worked before. What their efforts have brought forth will be evi denced in the balloting today. The general Impression is that they have accomplished little, if anything, in the way of a settlement The Georgia delegation, after much discussion within itself, has decided to stand -pat and continue voting for Un derwood. There is some sharp division inside the delegation with respect to the advisability of doing that. Cer tainly there is a vehement protest against continuing the support of a lost hope after it becomes as apparent as the noon day sun that it has become a lost hope. One Underwood delegate yesterdav said lie felt like staying here until Christmas rather than change to an other candidate. A colleague reminded him. more or less sharply, that long before Christmas a president of the United States will have been elected and that some people might be so fool ish as to be willing to stay here until Christmas wrangling over an impossi ble thing, but that he positively and certainly was not. Clark Tightens Lines. ' nquestionably Clark seems to have tightened up his lines splendidly since Saturday night’s adjournment. Some where in the voting today, if not in the earlier ballots, Clark will once more cross the majority and go well along toward two-thirds. If Clark does cross the majority line again, and it be then apparent that. Underwood is not gaining and has not gained. Georgia may break to the speaker. It will not do so so long as Mr. Underwood's leaders insist that the Alabama man has a chance to be nomi nated. and some of these leaders now insist that Underwood’s opportunity has come to him and that he must win by reason of the deadlock, or not at all. Outside of the Underwood leaders, however, there are few—precious few— pathetically enough, yho will say they nelleve Underwood has a ghost of show. •So far he has not received one vote west of the Mississippi. Nobody, save his most earnest partisans, says he ever ? it may be that the Underwood leaders are right and the other leaders Unrt" 8 ’ bl " ,hP appalent lru th is that Underwood can nol be nominated. Wilson's Pleas Ignored. nless (Shamp (’lark, who fairlv and of the o "' CPiVPd a ma3 ° rU >' naX ’’ V : nt " ,n ’ 18 awardpd nom once h. n " pre ’ lde nt'al candidate inside S rP< PiVed a vote ever I,’ C ° h nvent J on of -Hher big partv sequentlv 66611 ‘ Pn ' ed ,w °- thlrd s sub- Martin vT P ‘ n the 1801ated < aap of Martin Vanßuren-there likely will he no nomination soon, if ever mlTur' w’JV" 0 d ° Zen ° r more old fa ‘ Ge r ° W Wt,Bon leada « of lhe «nd th p V h PrSUaSlOn he,e Baltimore, XX”; wa^r pvr slnce this urging the Georgia deles 7( dPr ’ P * oUßly "«•"> for Unde, wood e ' P^ a h t l? n 10 Btand hoping having *' are now seeking to turn < J^ Sted hj and bv \Vi|'., l ’n" ln gld ,o WHson, that jority In the convents? ach ! eve a ma the convention will ,in'’f an , d ,hat then >hu= far has refu^ d d " «hat It a l '” him the nJ for ' lark— They ng urf . that V y '"o-thlrds. strength. o Xa ’ " h of the (’lark ceived no help from G r | , . av . ,n « lp people thus fat wtiiThJ? 1 nderwood "’U« -opping"n"’ 1 >o Wilson, promotion t |, p W1 ’ ' ndcrwood’K ,b ‘ iison lr ad e- nn v PrS ‘"V’ '’ pri gi. ~ii, h , llt ( . ar ‘ hoping that * dead wall, hr atns out against Bids Girls to Learn to Keep House HOME MAKERS HAPPIEST » llgf / < •' WaßjMßwg , -'W v I I ißry ' \ ■ : W I- • r V/'l / VL • 1 Br/ < wi\. S *• " ;s&S viMn ■■ <s ' - Tla Mrs. John M. Slaton. Mrs. John M, Slaton Has Per sonal Charge of Beautifully Appointed Residence. i "When all girls are trained again as they used to be in all the arts that go tn make a home, from the cook stove to the piano, there will be more happy marriages in America and a more progressive country." Mrs. John M. Slaton, wife of the man who is the leading candidate for the governorship of Georgia, who is her self proud to be known as one of the most accofnplished housekeepers in Georgia, laid down this formula very seriously. "I should think it would be every Southern girl's ambition to be able to conduct a household personally, to su perintend its every department from the arrangement and the preparation of the breakfast dishes to the drapery of the walls. She should check over ev ery expenditure and she should know what things in a household cost. Os course the women of America are not responsible for the high cost of liv ing, but I am afraid that some of them are responsible in great part for the height of the cost.” Home Beautifully Appointed. Mrs. Slaton stood in the receiving room of the Slaton country home on Peachtree road, a home that is ad mittedly one of the most beautifully appointed, not only In the South hut In the country, and she admitted smil ingly that the appointments of that home were of her own design from cel lar to garret and even out through he great lawns and groves and gardens that stretch In flowered acre- mi every sldr "Let's glurt at the pantry,' said Mrs inn AJ luaM’A GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. JULY 1. 1912. Slaton, and after she had shown a row of little compartments fashioned to hold In perfect order every corn elvable dish and plate, pot and pan tlfattever went to make a feast, she pointed to “the closet." where a hundred differ ent Jams, jellies and other fruit con t sections had been made with her own t hands because, she said naively, her ; husband especially like those kinds. ■ “I'm a great believer in the outdoor i living.” said Mrs. Slaton. "That's why we’ve made this little breakfast porch i with nothing between it and the lawm > but Its floor and its roof and the . screens.” , It was a very pretty breakfast porch with a broad swing hanging invitingly 1 just back of the flower-crowned ta ' ble. "When we have no guests we use ■ this breakfast porch at every meal In' , the warm months, " explained Mrs. Sla ton* "Save for Mr. Slaton’s study and my r boudoir it Is relly our favorite 1 room in the whole house." Mis. Slaton seemed really much fond ’ er of the open breakfast porch than the splendidly appointed banquet hall just beyond, though the banquet room • Is large enough to seat a hundred at Its tables and its silver plate and china represent treasured gifts of legislative bodies to Governor Slaton as well as , the splendid selections of Mrs. Slaton's mother and herself. "Mother Taught Me." ; "All I know about housework,” con i tlnued Mrs. Slaton, "mv mother taughi me.” Mrs. W. B. Grant, the mother, aided that her daughter had really been a satisfactory pupil. Then she confessed she prepares het husband's breakfasts In her kitchen with her own hands In spite of a ret Inue of cooks and her Japanese butler ! Sato. "Sato's going to l>< a great states man In Japan,” she said, "ami be Is Just as good a chef while he Is pre pat Ing here sot his calling." TIPPINS BILL IIP ONNEXTMOM « Prolonged Convention at Balti more Prevents Legislature Tackling Beer Measure., The Tippin- anti-near beet bill, set as a special order of business in the house of representatives today, was passed over and set foi next Monday, upon the motion of Hooper Alexander, leading advocate of the bill. Mr. Alex ander showed that Randolph Anderson, the leading opponent, was still in the Baltimore convention, and declared that iie would not take an advantage of his opponent's absence. The house and senate concurred in a resolution to adjourn from Wednesday afternoon to Monday morning, taking three days off to celebrate the Fourth of July. The house received a bill increasing the license tax on cigarettes and ciga rette papers to S2OO per year for each stand in the state. The present license tax is $25 a year ai.fl the bill would practically prohibit the sale of Ciga rettes in Georgia. The senate received a resolution in troduced by Senator Emmett Shaw to investigate the re-ieas>ing of the West ern and Atlantic railroad, more espe cially pertaining to the Chattanooga terminals. The committee is to be composed of two from the senate and three from the house, and is to hold over until the next session to report. This means that unless the commit tee takes the form of a permanent commission provided for by special act that the report will be made to the governor. Per diem not to exceed SSOO and stenographer expenses not to ex ceed $250 is provided by Senator Shaw s resolution. The Chattanooga authorities are v?ry anxious for the state to dispose of the present terminals in the business dis trict of Chattanooga by long-time lease so that streets may be cut through the property. The mayor and city com mission of the Tennessee city have urged the state to act at once. A bill to appropriate SSOO to purchase .i portrait of John Mclntosh Kell, cap tain of the Alabama In the Civil war, was taken up for passage. Dr. George Brown, of Eulton, moved to make the sum S2OO, the same amount appropri ated for a portrait of General Clement A. Evans. It was passed as amended. Mr. Thompson, of Madison, offered a bill to pay all county treasurers SIOO per year. Treasurers now receive fees running from $1,500 to $5,000 a year. Ga. Senate Tables Move for Wilson National politics held lhe boards in both houses of the Georgia legisltaure today when the senate tabled a resolu tion calling for Georgia's support for Woodrow Wilson in the national conven tion, and the house spent more than an hour in hotly debating the Alexander resolution indorsing the action of the Baltimore Democrats in the resolution against the influence of Wall Street. The Alexander resolution was adopted by R 2 to 87, hut only after it had been characterized as a slap in the face of the Georgia delegation, which had voted against it. In voting, more than a score of members arose to explain their posi tion. and there were addresses lauding Bryan and abusing him, praising and eon detuning Underwood and Woodrow Wil son, commending the delegation repre senting Georgia and censuring it. 'l he matter was introduced in the house by the receipt of a telegram from Rep resentative Roddenbery, calling upon the assembly to rush to Baltimore a memorial urging that the party platform include planks against the white slave traffic and alien immigration. A committee was ap pointed. which drafted resolutions urging these planks, lint Mr. Alexander, a mem ber of the committee, quietly added an amendment, the same as that introduced by him last week which was killed by the objection of Mr. Garlington Provokes Storm of Debate, Wilson boosters in the senate cotild marshal but seventeen votes today when the. Adams resolution calling Georgia's support for the New Jersey governor came up. The resolution, which had been signed by sixteen senators, was talHotf Indefinitely by a vote of 23 to 17. Senator Graham sprang the only sen sation when he amended the resolution b> substituting thr name "f ''hanip t'lark for that of Wilson The motion to table came from Senator Mann aitei five minutes debate. NELLIE BLY PICTURES BIGCONVENTION ASA HIVEOF HUMAN BEES By NELLIE BLV BALTIMORE, July D— It's buzzing !i|>e a mammoth swarm of bees. Bryan ■ante on with a small demonstration; not as much as was expected. The del egates are all in their seats. The jour nalists are filing in slowly. Many seats are still empty in the press section, although every seat in the building out side of this section is tilled. Mrs. Taft comes in just three min utes after Mr. Bryan. She sits in the balcony on the first row, dressed in a purple linen coat and skirt with a white shirtwaist, wearing a chain around her neck, her hat turned up at the side and having a big wing. It is ali solid purple, a deeper shade than her gown. A few' cheers. That means Bryan has gone over to speak to Mrs. Taft. She smiles and the women with her look delighted. They are not abashed by the 48,000 eyes centered upon them for a moment. They seem to enjoy the sensation. Bryan goes back to his place on the platform. He looks satisfied. 1 wonder if he has a promise of what he most desires. The chairman raps for order, and prayer ij offered. The entire audience stands so far as the eye can detect. The Only Murphy is standing. He is in his ghjrt sleeves. Almost the en tire audience is tn its shirt sleeves: still 1 can’t see Mr. Ryan. The white hat of a woman in the next chair Is visible. Prayer is over. Twenty-four thousand persons sit down at once. The movement is ac companied by human voice sounds like a long, loud, threatening roll of thun der. Hears Bryan Rap Belmont. The meeting is called to order. Some one gets up and objects. He says the delegates are stopped by the police and can’t get in. The chairman rules that the police should clear the hall and give admission to all delegates. Bryan gets up to make a speech at tacking Thomas F. Ryan, August Bel mont and those representing them. It is funny. Who could tell who rep resents those vast moneyed interests? A man gets on the platform and pro tests against the criticism of Mr. Ryan, who is a delegate from Virginia. Some one yells from the gallery and the po lice go to the man. He ought to have been put out because he wore a vest. Tt is a bully move of Mr. Bryan's, it appeals to those who haven t got any money. Have you ever noticed how those who have no claim to fame struggle to be little the famous? Do you notice how those who have not the ability to make money hold up as if in shame those who can? Oh, that master stroke! Who* con ceived the idea, no one tells, but it was a speech that appealed to the envy and hate of the people. 1 had to like the man because, he dared to say what we all know. It takes courage to do that. Rut he had the courage because he was face io face with defeat. It was dare or die. When tile uproai got so bad that Bryan could not be heard. Hal Flood, of Virginia, put his arms around Bry an’s neck and whispered to him for at least ten minutes. Vt hen partial quiet was restored. I felt sorry for Mr. Ryan. He was a delegate and whether he had money or n<> money his rights were as good as Mr Bryan's. It was discour teous to say the least. Mr. R>«n could not reply. He had to stand all the abuse of the eloquent Bryan. Editor Mooney, of Memphis, who sat beside me, wrote this and banded it ■<> me. “When a party loses its manners it • light to die." Mrs. Taft Watches. Bui leave it to ttie gentlemen from Virginia They were gallant and brave. They meant that no outside should criticize their choice, their se lection or their fellow delegates I write this as Hie roll cal! goes on. The buzzing <>f the mammoth bee swarm goes on with an occasional re proof from the platform. Mrs. Taft watches the audience almost continu ously through opeia glasses. She is quiet. A woman on her right tvho looks as if she had sacrificed every biiai of paradise on earth to adorn her hat talks and fans continuously. Women on Mrs. Taft's left have a tabulation sheet and ate carefully registering 'he V oler Senator LaFollette, erstwhile Repub- lican aspirant, endeavored to come upon the platform. He is reporting the convention. He is shoved gently but firmly back. That must be a jar. The fickleness of fate! Had chance taken a different turn Ito would have been the object of the world’s attention, and now, just be cause Dame Fortune dealt a better hand to Mr. Taft, poor LaFollette is shoved unknown and unheeded down the stairs. Bob Chanlee's Glasses. Mrs. Taft slips quietly out of her chair and the talkative lady' who re mains behind suddenly loses her ani mation and looks tired. Creighton Webb has just taken a seat in the front balcony. He is pale and has a purple shirtwaist which adds to his pallor. Miss Clare Bryce, whose red hair is in tensified in here by the vividness of the blue gown. Is yvhfspering to Bob Chanler, who has adopted black rimmed glasses which rival the largest ever worn by’ a proud Chinese man darin. The gifted Bob evidently' means to see what's going on about him here after. The result of the roll was re peated. Some one said it was '■’ac curate. Editor Mooney, of Memphis, suggested to Melville Stone that it would he a good thing tn have an add ing machine “I am an adding machine,” replied Mr. Stone. "Mooney meant figures, not popula tion, Melville,” said another reporter quickly. Bryan, having fired his speech into the convention and gotten rid of his hatred for those who have more than he has. has left the platform and gone back to ills hotel to dictate for the newspaper men his story of how ft oc curred. "Busy' as a bird," said Editor Moonev, who had followed his idol to his hotel. It is 12. the bottle is no more the fa vorite of babes and drunkards and cir cus bears. Everybody With a Bottle. Even when I look I see men and women draining bottles joyfully and unabashed. It looks as if everybody in the armory has a bottle. J have seen some with two. That makes at least 2,000 bottles in this building. Imagine the joys of the gentlemen who use sleign bells in the summer. I mean the gentlemen who sing: Any rags, any clothes, any hotties today, is the same old song in the same old way." And then he says on the phonograph record in a gruff, fierce tone. “Any rags, lady?" And the lady says in a high falsetto, "No rags today," and snickers. They are working the can now' in the balcony where Bob Chandler sits. It is a small red can and it’s taking the place of a loving cup. Each one drinks from it in turn. And that in this microbe persecuted age. And whop even the common peo ple have sworn devotion to the sani tary individual paper cup. Some one is throwing up balloons labeled t’lark. it may be a sign, hut they won t float and the majority burst. Senator Luke Lea, of Nashville, Tenn., the youngest man in the United States senate, came up while the Clark men were howling to talk to Editor Mooney. Are you for woman suffrage?” I asked the handsome senator. "Did you put it in the platform. Mooney?" he asked. "No, but it ought to be there," said Mr. Mooney. "Women could conduct a Democratic convention better than the men run this aggregation of frenzied delegates." “And do you and the senator believe in woman's suffrage?” I asked. Yes, I do. and have believed in it for years." hi- said. "If we permit women to work and force them into the shops and factories, we should give them all the political rights we have. “If women could vote they would command better wages and they would not be discriminated against as they now are. Also any woman who pays I axes, should have a property right to vote Women should control their separate estates entirely free of a hus band's interference.” “Will you support woman suffrage in your paper hereafter?" "The paper I serve is a bigger insti tution than I am," he said evasively. Everything has been heard except the "lioun' dog." Strange that even the song is not heard during this demon stration. As for the "houn." no one seems to know lie is not here. M', Clark's daughter is on the plat form, She waves a (lag, but quite as if site must. Site does not look as if she felt she could < rea.tf much noise. She's i prill,' girl and dressed beeiiminglj in blu'-c Pity she has not more, vim. FELDER FIGHTS TO LIMIT FUNDS Railroad Employees to Con tribute if Attorney General Enters Race for Governor. Attorney General Thomas S. Feld’r came to town today to consult with friends over his proposed entrance into the race for the gubernatorial -nomi nation. "I don't know yet whether I will run or not,” said Mr. Felder, "but if I do I will make one of tne issues of my' cam paign a law limiting candidates for governor in the amount of money they shall spend to secure the nomination.” Mr. Felder refused to go into par ticulars and would neither affirm nor deny that he meant the statement as a slap at John M. Slaton. "Wait until I decide whether I’ll run or not,” he said. ‘Til know next week, and then I'll have something really in teresting to say." Railroad employees in Georgia will contribute s3,not) or more to the cam paign expenses of Attorney General Felder, if he declares himself in the race for governor against Joe Hill Hall and John M. Slaton. Tull C. Waters, one of the Fulton county commission ers. has begun a systematic' canvass among the railroad men and says all will help. Joe Hill Hall, also from Macon, ex pressed doubt that Mr. Felder would be a candidate, but said that even if Fel der did run it would not affect the re sult of the campaign, which is a re mark Mr. Slaton's friends were willing to accept and indorse. A mass meet ing of Hall supporters is to be held at Macon tonight, when a permanent or ganization will be formed. It appears likely the county of Bibb Is to be split into two factions, having two guber natorial candidates. WILL OPEN ~~ NEW OFFICES WEDNESDAY United Doctors Ready to Receive Patients—First Patient Will Be Treated Free. The opening of the new Medical Of fices of the United Doctors, at 2 1-2 Auburn avenue, will mark an era oi progress for Atlanta. For several months past some of the most promi nent business men of Atlanta have beer striving to secure the location of this institute. Now their ambition is ac complished, and the sick and afflicted of Hiis territory can reap the benefits of coming to Atlanta and being cured by these modern medical speciali-us who have performed such wonders in other larger cities. The United Doctors, as the name im plies. is an association of expert medi cal specialists, who have united to or ganize a new school of medicines, a new and mote scientific and positive system of curing human ailments. For centuries the world lias been full of different cults and isms in medicine, we have the old root and herb doctor with his bitter potions, the Allopajh with Itis pills and quinine In herob , doses, the Homeopath with his tritura tions and infinitesimal doses, th€> Eclec trlc, the Osteopath, the Christian Sci entist; we have been doctored by’ heat, by electricity, by baths at Hot Springs and by a multitude of men and meth ods. Some of the patients were cured, some died who should have been cured. It was Impossible for the ordinary per son to say which method of treating diseases was the best, and the physi cians of the various schools were so biused that they could see good only in their own methods; all others were necessarily bad. Evidently there is good *.,i all of them, for they cure some cases, and some bad In all, for they all failed and allow misery to remain and death to come when a cure should ba effected. A tremendous stride forward was made when the Association of the Unit ed Poetoi- was formed. This staff of scientists treat men and women Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness, Piles, Rupture, , C;»iicer. all the skin diseases All diseases of the rectum are positively cured by their new ties merit. Their office* will be open to r<- ft Ive patients Wednesday mot tling a a o'clock. Remenfher ihoir generoti fe of tree treatment, excepting ut'ill t lip , to the tlmt 10ti who t all. 3