Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 13, 1912, HOME, Page 4, Image 4

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4 DR. M'ARTHUR TO REIN HERE “My Heart Is in the Work in Atlanta.” Baptist Tabernacle Pastor Writes. Dr. Robert S MacArthur will remain tn Atian-a tn carry nn the great work of the Tabernacle b”gun by Dr. Len G Broughton, now fn London. The famous Baptist minister, who is at present in the North, has so written a prominent member of the church which was recently serio ,s.y divided, but which has patched up its differ ences most harmoniously. Friends of Dr. MacArthur had been much worried lately by the fear that he would respond to the unanimous call issued by Calvary Baptist churr h. of New York, to return there. Dr Mac- Arthur. however, dissipates these fears in his letter, in which he speaks most enthusiastically of his work here. Dr. MacArthur writes that his "hon or, duty and pleasure" have led him to I his decision, and adds. "My h> art is in the work." R. L. DODD. INSURANCE AGENT. IS BANKRUPT R. L. Dodd, an insurance man. is a voluntary bankrupt In a petition ■ filed in the Federal court he says his i debts amount to $1,378.78, and he has no assets, except an insurance policy of $1,250. which has no "surrender value.” He is represented by Attorney John T. Smith. Let Me Send You A Treatment of My Catarrh Cure Free W fwlwHßh EL - Bara v&x 4t.vz.fs - .faauMMIIHJMb' C. E. GAUSS. I Will Take Any Case of Catarrh. No | Matter How Chronic, or What Stage it Is tn. and Prove ENTIRELY AT MY OWN EXPENSE, That It Can Be Cured. Curing Catarrh has been my business I for years, and during this time over une I million people have cotne to me from I all ovfer the land for treatment and ad vice My method is original. I cure the disease by first curing the cause. Thus mv combined treatment cures where all else fails I ran d emonstrate to vou In Just a few days’ time tha' my method is quick, sure and c.mplete, because it rids the system of the poisonous germs that cause catarrh Send vour name and address at once to C E. Gauss, and he ■will send you the treatment referred to. Fill out the coupon below. FREE This coupon is good for a package of GAUSS COMBINED CATARRH cure sent free by maii Simple till m name and address on dotted lines below and I mail to C. E GAUSS. 2550 Main St . I Marshall. Mich The < o<i I kj? freshness of »Q\ J&Ufr well venti- AsAjA lated rooms if" ■ in summer is V»-. _ * ■ a j a y t o . every mem- her of the household. Clean floors, newly painted, waxed or varnished. Bath room trails covered with while, light blue or buff paint. Window sash and sills freshened by the magic of the paint brush. Look over your house and see if you can’t add to sum mer comfort with a can of paint. All kind »of enamels, paints, varnishes and stains "'h f-r a special purpost . rorgOPaht andGlassCo. ■-.-37 L- -ki- »'««♦. • E'anch, 54 N. Bread, WILSON CHOOSES ■M GRIEF But Holds Up Name for Com mittee to Announce—Said To 3e McCombs. SEAGIRT. N J. July 13.—Governor Wilson hss selected his candidate for i chairman of the Democratic national ! committee The mar chosen is said to be , William F. McCombs, whose efforts re ! suited in the governor's nomination for ■ the presidency, but Governor Melson said I today that he would not announce the i name of his candidate, leaving it to the national committeemen to ratify or reject his choice There is expected to be no difficulty over this, however, as all the committeemen who have been here have i expressed their willingness to accept any ; one whom the candidate favors. Governor Wilson arranged to hold a i final conference today with Robert S. I Hudspeth, national committeeman from New Jersey, prior to the latter's departure for f'hlcagn, where he will lay before the national committee the governor's wishes. Colonel Robert Ewing, of Louisiana, a ! national committeeman and delegate-as- ■ large to the Baltimore convention, held | a long conference with Governor Wilson ! today. Other callers expected during the day were Senators Watson and Chilton, ;of West Virginia, and Representative I Broussard, of Louisiana. Wilson’s Manager Confers in Chicago CHICAGO, July 13—William F. Mc- Combs. campaign manager for Wood row Wilson, was expected in Chicago today. He planned a number of quiet conferences during the day. Monday he will be on hand for the reorgani zation meeting of the Democratic na tional committee. He will be named as Us new chairman. The Illinois Democratic committee will hold a meeting in the Sherman ho tel at the same time to begin planning for the state campaign. McCombs and the state leaders will hold a conference afterwards to discuss the best method of working for both the state and na tional ticket. Georgia Teachers Congratulate Wilson KNOXVILLE, TENN.. July 13. Georgia teachers attending the Sum mer School of the South, in Knoxville, numbering 149, have sent the following telegram tn Governor Woodrow Wilson, Democracy's standard bearer: "The Georgia teachers attending the Summer School of the South send greetings to Governor Woodrow Wil son. and congratulate the Democratic party upon the wisdom of l*s choice. (Signed) "T. S. LUCAS, ''Chairman <'ommlttee." Professor Lucas is superintendent of the Dalton, Ga., public schools and a member of the Summer School faculty. Underwood’s Home I To Raise Wilson Fund ; BIRMINGHAM, ALA., July 13.—Bir l mingham, the home of Oscar XV, Un derwood, will do its share toward rais ing funds fur the Democratic national campaign to elect Wilson and Mar shall. A start has been made here, con tributions being asked from all parts of the state. The call is beißg circu lated from one part of Alabama to the other, and <he contributions will be sent to the treasurer of the national cam paign committee Just as quickly as'the money accumulates. No special amounts are being asked fnr. BARTLETT COMES HOME TO FIGHT FOR CONGRESS MACON, GA . July 13. —Congressman Charles L. Bartlett has. arrived here from Washington to begin an active campaign for re-election. The vigor ous opposition to Mr. Bartlett caused fits fre i Is to advise him to personally j appear in the dis’rlct for a while be fore thf primary. One of the chief ar- Ig.iments used by Candidates Cooper i on-.l Wise against Mr. Bartlett is that | has been in congress too long. He is now serving his eighteenth .year. SUPT. BRITTAIN TO SPEAK. DALTON, GA., July 13. -The officers I of Hie Whitfield County Sunday School (association have called the annual con. 1 I vonlion for Saturday, . August 3, at Pleasant Grove. Among the prominent peakers will be Prof M L. Brittain, state school superintendent .. . ■■■■■_. j Your Health Is Just What Your Stomach Makesit HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS 1; Promotes a speedy healing of all stomach ills. It soothes the nerves, aids digestion, ■ ' builds up wasted tissues, nourishes and strengthens, restores normal health, in. suring profound sleep. Ute It Morning, Noon, Night. •i I THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1912. SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS By JAMBS B. NEVIN. Considerable uncertainty exists in the lay mind, at least, as to Just exactly what will constitute a two-thirds ma jority of the house and senate, in the event of an executive veto of the Tip pins hill, and a subsequent effort to pass it, notwithstanding. In the congress of the United States, precedent and practice holds that, a two-thirds vote of a quorum—a ma jority of the elected membership—ls sufficient within the meaning of the law to override a veto. That practice I is followed in legislatures generally, but it is by no means certain that practice and precedent in the Georgia legisla tures will sustain such a view of the rules. The actual rules themselves arat vague and uncertain. In reference to a two-thirds vote in one place, the house rules merely prescribe a “two-thirds vote of the house; - ’ fn another place, they refer to a “two-thirds vote of the elected membership.” The constitution Itself leaves the meaning of the re quired two-thirds vote in matters re quiring it a question of construction largely. The ruling followed in the house of congress whereby two-thirds of a quo rum voting is held to come within the meaning of the two-thirds prescribed, has been passed upon and upheld by the supreme court of the United States, hence would seem to be fairly well es tablished there. The objection to that view is that less than one-third of the elected house might, under its operation, block the passage of a measure over the execu tive vote, for one-third of a mere quo rum necessarily would be less than one-third of the house, in its entirety. It likely will be held that it requires two-thirds of the entire house member ship to overcome a veto in Georgia that is to say, 123 votes in the house. The fact that Tom Watson will support Woodrow Wilson seems to hurt in some quarters mightily. Still, that is not the real reason Tom will support him, perhaps. Speaking of the governor’s forthcom ing veto of the Tippins bill, who knows, really, that the governor will veto It? The governor says nobody nows what he is going to do about it —not even Mrs. Governor. One of the governor's warm partisans says—but he withholds permission to use his name, and admits that he speaks without authority, anyway— that the governor likely will not veto it, if it comes to him with a clear two thirds vqte of both houses behind it. This man says the governor will take the position, in that event, that his veto will already have been presumptively overcome, and that to Interpose it would be the mere arbitrary use of power to an inconsequential end. As the law seems sure to pass the senate by an easy two-thirds, and as it already passed the house by a sub- CHILD LABOR BILL IS EXPECTED TO PASS; NO OPPOSITION SEEN Hooper Alexander's child labor bill will come up for passage in the house Monday morning, and its passage by a fair majority seems assured. Cotton mill owners, through their as sociation, have agreed to offer no op position to the measure, and promise to enforce the law, certain compromises having been made which will satisfy them. The age limit of fourteen years for children working in mills and factories will be put into effect gradually. The age limit will be twelve years in 1913, thirteen years in 1914 and 1915, and fourteen years in 1916 and thereafter. There are no exceptions, such as are found in the present law. which enable evasions of the age limit regulation by unscrupulous parents or employers. 3 ATLANTANS GO TO EXPLORE WILDS OF SMOKY MOUNTAINS Three Atlantans start this afternoon upon a trip of exploration which will take them far from civilization or hu man habitation for at least two weeks. They have undertaken opening to geog raphy the trackless border region of the Smoky mountains in North Caro lina and Tennessee. The three who began the trip by train to Bryson, N. C.. are E. M. Boland, of the Young Men's Christian associa tion. and Henry and Albert Bridewell. 243 Glennwood avenue. From Bryson they will strike off into the heart of the mountains with nothing bur Clingman’s Dome and the Chimney Top peaks for guides. Much of the way will have to be literally hewn through trackless vir gin forests. Finally the trio, after hav ing explored more than 100 miles of hitherto unknown country, will emerge jat Knoxville, Tenn. MRS. MARTHA J. MOORE DEAD. GREENSBORO. GA.. July 13.- The funeral of Mrs. Martha Jernigan Moore, who died at the home of her daughter. Mrs. J A Reynolds near Siloam. Greene county, was held at White Plains. She is survived by seven daughters, Mrs. B. F. Bethune and Miss Julia Moore. Milledgeville. Ga.; Mrs. W. F Heard/Florence, S. Mrs. F H. Bradley. Bradley. S (?.; Mrs. J. A. Reynolds. Siloam, Ga.. Mrs. J. W Rey nolds, White Plains. Ga., and Mrs. J. A. Kendrick. Sharon. Ga. TO STOP NIGHT COTTON MOVING. JACKSON. GA . July 18—The Farm ers union of Butts county passed a resolution at the last meeting asking |,T T Moore, representative from Butts county, to amend his bill, prohibiting |:be ginning of cotton at night, as to i prohibit the hauling or carrying of cot- I ton to any public ginnery in the county ‘after dark. » •tantial margin over that figure, it may be that the wish ouitlined above is fa ther to the thought in th'e mind of the man advancing it. Anyway, "Little Joe" will answer the puzzle when it comes to him for solu tion, and in the meantime all is specul latlve. Mr. Roosevelt has "repudiated General Sickles.” The general doubtless is more or less uncertain whether this is repudiation No. 234.768 or 465,82«. Who knows the membership of the “conversation committee" in the Geor gia house of representatives? There must be such a committee, for on the big blackboard that stands in the rear of the hall yesterday appeared this sign: “The Conversation Commit tee will meet in room No. 15, at 4 o'clock this afternoon." are a number of members clearly eligible for enlistment on that roll, all right. An enterprising Savannah gentleman has discovered that » Woodrow Wilson is a direct de scendant of an Irish king. Good campaign "dope.” anyway. Representaltve Joe Hill Hall left last night for a stumping tour of south Georgia in the interest of his candidacy for the governorship. Mr. Hal) spoke at Pelham today and will speak at Sylvester Monday morn ing, at Camilla Monday night, at Thomasville Tuesday morning and at Boston Tuesday night. In the meantime, he has designated Mr. Burwell, cf Hancock, to look care fully after the interests, the rights and liberties of the common people in the legislature. Either Mr. Hall or Mr. Burwell is eternally on guard there, when the general assembly is in session. An optimist is a person who be lieves that some time or other the Georgia legislature will fail to sit its full 50 days limit. Speaker Holder has announced his perfect willingness, now that Con gressman Tom Bell has decided to be come a candidate to succeed himself, to participate in .a three-cornered joint debate, if his two opponents—Mr. Charters and Mr. Bell —will agree. Some time ago a joint debate be tween Mr. Holder and Mr. Charters was proposed, but Mr. Holder was not particularly smitten with the idea. Now, however, he is of a different opin ion, and, if the others are willing, the speaker will be on hand at the place agreed upon. A three-cornered dispute between Holder, Bell and Charters would be well worth going to hear. All have had abundant experience in campaigning and stump speaking, and no one of them is to be classed as even an approximately indifferent orator. TYPOTHETAE HEAD HOST TO MEMBERS AT COUNTRY PLACE Athletic events. including a fat man’s race, a potato race and a num ber of other contests, are making fun for the Atlanta Typothetae on its outing on Roxboro road today John Aldridge, head of the organization, is entertain ing the members at his home. Besides the three leading events, a 100-yard jdash, open to all. a standing and run ning broad jump, pole vaults and other contests are arranged. Prizes are offer ed in each event. The sports are on during the after noon, following a dinner served at 1:30 o’clock. The morning hours were spent in various forms of recreation. During the summer months mothers 1 of young children should watch for any unnatural looseness of the bowels. When given prompt attention at this time serious trouble may be avoided. Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy can always be depended upon. For sale by all dealers. |s Full Weight ' to the ton is guaranteed when you or der your coal from us. Full heating value to the coai is guaranteed when you order our best Lehigh coal. Full satisfaction, a steady burning furnace, an economical coal bill, less ash. cinders and dust in the house are the advantages when you order your coal here. Don't wait for the cold spell—order today by mail or telephone. Randall Bros. MAIN OFFICE PETERS BUILDING. * YARDS: Marietta etreet and North avenue, both phones 376: South Boulevard and Geor gia ra lroad. Bell phone Main 535. At lant»3o3: McDaniel street and Southern railroad. Bell Main 354. Atlanta 321; 64 Kroog street. Be'l Ivy 4165 Atlanta 703; 152 South Pryor street, both phones 936. ROOSEVELT BIDS FDR SOUTH’S MD Repudiates Address of General Sickles Hitting Woodrow Wil son for Being from Dixie. OYSTER BAY. July 13.—The speech made this week by General Daniel E. Sickles, attacking Woodrow Wilson be cause he is a son of the South, was repudiated by Colonel RoosevelU whom General Sickles was supporting in a statement issued here. In his state ment, Colonel said that he did not “care a rap" where a man was born or whether his father wore the blue or the gray so long as he was the right type. General Daniel E. Sickles, at the meeting for the organ ization of the new party in this state, was quoted as saying Woodrow Wil son was “born amid rebel surround ings and that we of the North have never been disposed to put °”ch a man in the white house.” "The call for the progressive con vention," said Colonel Roosevelt, “stated that this was to be a nation-wide, non sectional movement, free from any of the sectional or other 'jealousies and bitternesses of the past. Tn my speech at the Orchestra hall mass meeting in Chicago in which I stated I would ac-r cept the progressive nomination if tendered to me, I also stated that we appealed alijce to the men who wore the blue and the men who wore the gray and to the sons of the men who wore the blue and to the sons of the men who wore the gray, “I am myself by’ blood half a Geor gian. The brothers of my own mother served in the Confederate navy just as the kinfolks of my father served in the Union army. Lindsay, Too, From South, “No man has been more prominent in this movement than Judge Ben Lindsey, bom in the South, whose father served in Forrest’s cavalry. 'TVe appeal to Northerner's and Southerners, Easterners and Westerners alike. All I ask is that the man himself be of the right type and as an American he face in patriotic spirit, from a stand point of one to whom all the citizens of this country are equally dear, the great and vital issues which now con cern all the American people alike. “And I do not care a rap where he was born. I feel very strongly that we have now reached the point where all of us alike, wherever we dwell, can treat the memory’ of .the great deeds of the men who wore the blue and the great deeds of the men who wore the Constipation and Sluggish Liver Don’t take chances. Get CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS right now. They never fail to make the liver do its duty. They cure constipation, banish indiges tion, dtive out biliousness and J the blues, stop dizziness, clear the complexion, put a healthy glow on the j cheek and sparkle in the eye. There are many imitations. Be sure and get CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. The pill is smell, dose is small, price is small, but results are jreat. The GEM'UxE must bear signature: fior/wncf p/anf ntMing / - s - R4zz?/ .. grow a forftmei 1 i "WHATSOEVER A MAN SOWETH, THAT ALSO SHALL HE REAP.” You can not reap anything else; you MUST reap what you sow. If you want a fortune, PLANT THE SEED that will produce a fortune. One deposit after another in the bank is the seed that has grown all great fortunes. Start a bank account and have some thing in your OLD AGE that will make you secure and comfortable. Our bank is a secure place for your money to grow in. Do YOUR banking with US. 4 per cent on Savings Deposits Use Georgian Want Ads gray’, and of the high valor and lofty adherense to the right as each side saw the right, shown by’ both sides, as making a iconfmon heritage of honor for all our people in which all our people should share. And whether a man's father wore the blue or the gray matters not to me if the man himself stands true to the great ideals which it is imperatively necessary that our people should translate into living acts if the plain people of this republic are really to secure the rights which our form of government was designed to secure for him.” ( HATCHER LEAVES G. S. AND F. MACON, GA., July 13.—HaTley Hatcher, superintendent of the Georgia, Southern and Florida, has resigned to accept a partnership in an engineering office in New York. F. D. Scott, train master. has ben appointed to succeed him. and A. E. Marsh, chief train dis patcher, has been appointed trainms ter. What Makes a Woman? One hundred and twenty pounds, more or less, of bone and muscle don't make a woman. It’s a good foundation. Put into it health and strength and she may’ rule a kingdom. -But that’s just what Electric Bitters give her. Thou sands bless them for overcoming faint ing and dizzy spells and for dispelling weakness, nervousness, backache and tired, listless, worn out feeling. "Elec tric Bitters have done me a world of good,” writes Eliza Pool, Depew, Okla., “and I thank you, with all my heart, for making such a good medicine.” Only 50c. Guaranteed by all druggists. *»* Millions or housekeeoers and expert Chefs use SAUER'S PURE FLAVOR ING EXTRACTS. Vanilla. Lemon, etc. Indorsed by Pure Food Chemists. Proverb Contest closes at noon, Tuesday, July 23. Am ple time remains for new contestants to obtain An swer Books, Proverb Guides and Puzzle Pictures. SAVEYOUR FRUIT Insures the safe ar rival of perishables. If you are a car-lot Fruit and Truck ship per, write today for OH A kOMKTI Polar Pre-Cooler Co. 149 Empire Bldg., Atlanta,G a. Io g It I q I q| aL-O a: I O |h—' z| i J E I n'