Newspaper Page Text
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An Artist's Idea of How the Streets of Atlanta May Look if Conditions Are Not Improved
THE CRYING SHAME OF THE GREATEST CITY OF THE SOUTH
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THIS PICTURE DOES NOT REPRESENT A SCENE IN ATLANTA. IT IS A COMPOSITE PICTURE OF SEVERAL
PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN ON THE STREETS RECENTLY BY GEORGIAN PHOTOGRAPHERS.
CRIPPLED SHIP 15
3MONTHSATSEA
Japanese Fishing Smack Drifts
to Coast of California—Crew
Is Arrested.
SAN DIEGO. I'AL, July 20— Blown
off the coast of by a typhoon
thiS'e months ago, caught in the Jap
anese current and trade winds and
swept more than 7,000 miles across the
Pacific, the junk Sumlyoshi Maru
brought its crew of five Japanese
through winter's cold, summer's heat,
sunshine and storm until its barnacle
covered, waterlogged hull began sink
ing and its lateen sails flew in shreds,
to the south California coast near En
cihitas, 35 milea north of San Diego,
Thursday night. Today the Japanese
are prisoners of the Federal govern
ment.
With all hope of proceeding farther
in their sinking ship gone, the five sail
ors fook to their one small boat and
made their way to shore. There they
fell into the hands of the immigration
authorities. The shipwrecked foreign
ers were making their way toward Es
condido when overtaken and arrested
by immigration inspectors.
They were brought to San Diego and
placed in prison on the charge of being
illegally in this country. A report of
the capture was sent to Washington and
pending advices from the department
of commerce and labor the Japanese
will be held as prisoners.
Blown Out to Sea.
The junk was on a fishing cruise,
bound from Yokohama to Hakodate,
when caught in the typhoon and blown
to sea. When the wind abated the
Sumlyoshi was 1,000 miles south of
Yokohama. 1.500 miles from its desti
nation. and in the grip of the Jap
anese current.
The junk was carried east nearly
4,000 miles It crossed the equator off
the Central American coast, and was
then blown 1.500 miles up the American
coast by northerly winds Captain Yo
shida sighted Honolulu early in June,
but was carried south of the Hawaiian
group.
Several pounds of food were left
when the shipwrecked mon landed.
Their water supply gave out five days
before.
A WHOLESOME SUMMER DRINK
Horsford’s Acid Phosphate
Better than lemons or limes—more '
healthful and satisfying. Refreshes and ’
invigorates. •••
i
AX.
PETITION \
(If you are desirous of bet- n.
tering the condition of At-
lanta's streets, cut out this cou
pon, fill out the blanks and send it
to the councilman who represents the
the ward in which you live.) n.
To Councilman , n.
City Hall, Atlanta, Ga. X.
Realizing the disgraceful condition of At- >v
lanta 8 streets. I ask you to use every effort in
your power to bring about better conditions. 'X.
Name
Address
k- X.
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
Gordon Lee has announced for con
gress again in the Seventh district, and
this time he is to have no opposition.
Mr. Lee has had opposition every
time before this, and it must seem to
him that the present situation is just
about too good to be true.
When he was first elected, ‘‘Rufe'’
Hutchens disputed things with him,
then Judge Fite undertook tq put him
out of business, the third time he ran
Walter Akerman endeavored to de
tach his scalp, and the last time he ran
Mose Wright essayed the job.
Having weathered all these strenu
ous gales political, Gordon Lee event
ually may reach a point of view en
tertained by’ a lot of his constituents
for a long time, and that is that there
Isn't any use trying to put him out of
congress without his own consent, any
way.
In the laaf presidential and congres
sional race in Georgia, Mr. Lee’s dis
trict went for Taft Republicanwise by
about the same majority that it went
for Lee Democraticwise.
This time, however, the Seventh is
going for Wilson and Lee.
Mr. Tillman complains that
whereas he was once called a wild
man. he is now dubbed a reaction
ary. Perhaps the senator merely
has grow n to be a bit old-fashioned
in his ways.
There were distributed among the
members of the house yesterday a num
ber of copies of former Congressman
William H. Fleming’s argument favor
ing the proposed amendment to the
Federal constitution providing for pop
ular election of United States senators,
published originally in The Augusta
Chronicle.
Regardless of whether they' agree
with Mr. Fleming’s ideas as set forth
therein—and many do—legislators gen
erally are not at all backward in pro
nouncing his article a fine argument
in favor of the proposition. It is schol
arly, fair and persuasive—such an ar
ticle as could have come only from a
man of serious and patriotic impulses
and trend of thought.
Mr. Fleming undertakes considera
tion of the famous Bristow amendment,
so-called, in calmness and dispassion.
He presents a splendid brief In favor
of the amendment as it stands, and as
it has been indorsed by the national
1 Democratic convention.
A Georgia statesman accuses the
senate of passing a bill recently
that is rankly unconstitutional
from three points of view. It might
be very well if a lot of the bills
it passes dissect that way, perhaps.
The Hon Joe Hill Hall went up to
Rome Thursday, to be a. guest of honor
at the Merchants and Manufacturers
anm.al barbecue and jollification. He
| wa. the center of an interested group
■ f noble Romans during bis entire stay.
1 and they do say he made a most favor
able impression.
Last night he addressed a large
I gathering of citizens in the Floyd coun-
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1912.
ty court house, and made many friends.
Colonel J. Lindsay Johnson, editor of
The Rome Tribune-Herald, is support
ing Mr. Hall in his race for the gov
ernorship.
One Georgia exchange calls it the
“dictagraft.” which isn’t so bad,
either!
The bill to force the railroads to pull
mileage in Georgia slipped through the
senate Thursday as if things had been
greased for its passage,
After all the argument pro and con
that has ben indulged in with respect
to that measure, one would have thought
somebody might have been depend
ed upon to start a row on the floor
when it came to a third reading, but
there was nothing whatever doing in
the rowing business.
However, one never can tell. The
senate passed a bill unanimously the
other day, which provided that rail
roads in Georgia might furnish Con
federate veterans free passes, if they
desired, and the house knocked it into
a cocked hat via the railroad commit
tee. which sent It back with a recom
mendation that it do not pass.
There Is a big split in the Georgia
“bull moose” party, but why should
prospective Georgia Democratic
postmasters be expected to weep
bitter tears because of that?
About the hardest thing to figure out
in Georgia politics nowadays is who
is who in the railroad commissionership
races.
There are three of the present mem
bers up for re-election—Commissioners
Gray, Trammell and Hillyer.
Disposed to dispute with these gen
tlemen are James J. Flynt, \V Trox
Bankston, Charles Jackson Shipp, J. H,
MacGehee and S. Guyt McLendon.
Under the rules of the state Demo
cratic executive committee, each can
didate is required to say specifically
w hich incumbent he opposes.
So far, only Mr. Flynt has announced
formally with respect to that, and he
designates Paul B. Trammell as the
official to whose seat he aspires.
Mr. McLendon, it is said, will op
pose Judge Hillyer. and Mr. Shipp. Mr.
Gray.
These various contests will mix
things up magnificently in dear old
Georgia this year.
ARMY ORDERS
WASHINGTON. July 20.—Army or
ders;
Captain O. G. Collins, coast artillery
vorps, from 165th to 135th company.
Captain W. P. Kitts, Eleventh infan
try. to pax department at San An
tonio. vice Captain C VV. Castle, pay
master. who is assigned to Eleventh
Infantry.
SEABOARD AGENT RESIGNS.
COLUMBUS. GA July 20.—G. H.
Whittaker, for several years commer
cial agent of the Seaboard Air Line in
Columbus, has tenderid his resignation,
effective August 15. to accept a position
with the Hardaway Contracting Com
pany. He will be succeeded by M. A.
Calhoun, at present a traveling freight
agent of the same road.
NEW CHURCH FOR COLUMBUS.
COLUMBUS. GA., July 20. The con
gregation of Broad Street Methodist
church announces that beginning next
week a new edifice, to cost SB,OOO or
SIO,OOO, will be erected. The present
church building will be torn down and
the hew building erected in a different
■■art of the city.
« BOARD
MCE A PUZZLER
Hand of Tom Watson Seen in
Entry of Flynt Against
Trammell.
The entrance of James J. Flynt in
the railroad commissioner race spe
cifically against Commissioner Paul B.
Trammell, following the announcement
of Colonel S. Guyt McLendon specifical
ly against Commissioner George Hill
yer, has set many political tongues
a-wagging.
Only a few days back, Judge Flynt
was a prospective candidate against
Commissioner Hillyer, and Colonel Mc-
Lendon was an announced candidate
for the United States senate against
Mr. Bacon.
A more or less sudden shifting of the
cards has changed all of that, and not a
few who keep an ear close to the
ground are asking why.
More than one observer of events
and things, who also is able to put an
Occasional two and two together in
such wise that they unmistakably
make four, see in this lightning change
of attitudes upon the part of Judge
Flynt and Colonel McLendon the
fine Italian hand of Thomas E. Wat
son, “the red-headed person” from
McDuffie, and the sometimes Warwick
of Georgia politics.
Mr. Watson recently has had many
kind words to say of both Judge Flynt
and Colonel McLendon. He would like
to see both of these men put upon the
railroad commission, as, no doubt,
would many other people. Unques
tionably. he will support them with all
the vim and vigor of his nature.
Hillyer a Hoke Smith Man.
Moreover, while Mr. Watson would
delight to elect Colonel McLendon, he
would particularly delight to elect him
as a rebuke to his ancient enemy, Hoke
Smith; for Senator Smith, when gov
ernor, summarily dismissed Colonel
McLendon from the railroad commis
sion. and Commissioner Hillyer has
been known generally as a Hoke Smith
man. And. again. Paul B. Trammell
also was identified with the Hoke
Smith faction rather closely in the past,
and holds his commission now by vir
tue of Governor Smith’s appointment
at the time Judge Warne;- Hill was ele
vated to the supreme bench.
Wherefore, if the sage of Thomson
can stack the cards against both Hill
yer and Trammell, Hoke Smith men.
and each, therefore, persona non grata in
Watson's political household, why isn't
it good business, from the Watson
viewpoint ?
This may be good politics, from the
Watson viewpoint say the friends of
Ttammell and Hillyer. but It Is not
overwhelmingly brilliant politics from
the viewpoint of those who have been
disposed to accept in good faith the
overtures of the Brown-Slaton people
in the matter of doing away with fac
tional lines in the primary next month
ami the elevation of Mr. Slaton to the
governorship as a non-factional candi
date and general all-around peace
maker.
A Cry of Peace?
If Mr Watson, as a. leader in the
Brown-Slaton ranks, is to make open
and specific warfare on ceriain men.
more particularly because they are
Hoke Smith men than because there is
any objection to them, what shall the
Hoke Smith men, disposed to be peace
ful and serene, do about that?
Already a number of Hoke Smith
partisans are saying that there are
certain loud-voiced Brown-Slaton nier
bellowing "Peace" from the house tops,
the while their emissaries and gum
shoe lieutenants are down in the dark
of th" cellar undertaking to put un
pleasant thing- over on the unsuspect
ing Smithites.
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ut_ _ ‘ . . :■■
S. CAROLINA BANKER’S
WIFE IS ARRESTED ON
SHOPLIFTING CHARGE
CHARLESTON. S. C„ July 20.
Charged with petit larceny by an em
ployee of a department store, Mrs. He
loise Guerin, wife of a banker in Sum
merville, S. C., was held in SSOO bail
in the Jefferson Market police court,
New York city, according to informa
tion received here. The complainant
against Mrs. Guerin was Miss Flora
For,ter, a store detective, who charged
her with taking jewelry worth $4.25
from a counter.
Mrs. Guerin while at the Imperial
hotel with her husband. Joseph A. Gue
rin, president of the Dorchester bank
at Summerville.
She said she saw some dress pins,
cuff pins and cuff buttons which she
liked very much. She made a selection
that totaled $4.25. Taking that amount
out of her purse, she put it on the
counter, she said, and asked the sales
woman if she might take them without
waiting to have them wrapped. The
saleswoman answered in the affirma
tive. she declared.
After Mrs; Guerin left the store the
detective accosted her.
If you are a housewife you can not
reasonably hope to be healthy or beau
tiful by washing dishes, 'sweeping and
doing housework all day. and crawling
into bed dead tired at night. You must
get out into the open air and sunlight.
If you do this every day and keep your
stomach and bowels in good order by
taking Chamberlain's Tablets when
needed, you should become both healthy
ana beautiful. For sale by all dealers.
...
SEASHORE EXCURSION
VIA
SOUTHERN RAILWAY,
MONDAY, JULY 22, 1912.'
i
$6 Jacksonville: Limit 6 days
$8 Tampa: Limit 8 days
$6 Brunswick; Limit 6 days
$6 St. Simons: Limit 6 days
$6 Cumberland: Limit 6 days
TICKETS GOOD RETURNING ON
REGULAR TRAINS WITHIN LIMIT.
Tickets to Jacksonville and Tampa
good only on special trains leaving At
lanta 8:00 p. m. (Pullman sleeping cars
only) and 8:30 p. m. (coaches only).
Tickets to Brunswick, St. Simons and
Cumberland good only on regular trains
leaving Atlanta 9:30 p. m. Both phones,
Main 142. Write James Freeman. D. P.
A., Atlanta, for further information.
EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO,
Call Main 1130.
I Bl fl ■ Opium, W’htskry and I»hjr flablt treat-
;Et jfl C <>< Borne or at Sanitarium Rook nu I
c,JMRi « iutuect Fraa. Dtt. B. Id.. WOOLLET, j
24-N Victor Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga. I
’ " i
JOHNS' DIGESTIVE TABLETS
A Remedy For DYSPEPSIA-INDIGESTION. Price 25c
Are Guaranteed by L D. Johns Co., under the Food
and Drugs Act. June 30, 1906. Serial Mo. 2619.
Free Sample at any Drug Store in exchange
for this adv. or mail direct to ’
1.0. Johns Co.. 1123 Broadway. N. Y.. U. S.A.
Mealtime
Should find you with a hearty
appetite—-
And your food should taste
good,
A "don’t care” sort of feeling
indicates—-
Some disturbance of the
Stomach, Liver or Bowels.
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
Will tone and sweeten the
stomach-
Regulate and assist the
digestion-
Make you feel like new.
Try a bottle and be convinced.
READ THIS.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney and
bladder troubles, removing gravel, cures
diabetes, weak and lame backs, rheuma
tism, and all Irregularities of the kidneys
and bladder in both men and women
Regulates bladder troubles In children
If not sold by your druggist, win be sant
by mall on receipt of SI.OO. One small
bottle is two months' treatment and sel
dom fails to perfect a cure Send for tej
tin-.onlals from this and other states. Dr
F.. W. Hall, 2926 Ollve-st.. St. Louis. U<>
Sold hv
DROPSY usually gives quick relief
U u i and soon removes all swelling and
short breath. Trial treatment sent Free.
Dt.H. H. Green's Sons, Box O, Atlanta, Ga.
T* I S S 3? 8 E?® an Y sort nee ds the
Km I Em ■ a>W ILb attention of an oculist.
A C* no ma^er simple the trouble may
I Iw■ be, improperly fitted glasses will make
it worse.
11 "T* the doctor, then bring your pre
'wr Em S scription to the
ATLANTA OPTICAL CO.
1142 PEACHTREE STREET.
Manufacturers of Perfect Eyeglasses and Spectacles.
MARRIAGE INVITATIONS
Reception and Visiting Cards
CORRECTLY AND PROMPTLY ENGRAVED
SEND FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES
J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO.,
Forty-seven Whitehall Street Atlanta, Georgia
Hffl Bffl CASE
OF nuns
Itching and Burning. Could Not |
Sleep or Rest. . Afflicted Parts I
Irritated and Inflamed. Cured by I
Cuticura Soap and Ointment.
Okalona, Ark. —"I had a bad case of ■
Itching and burning piles, and tried many ■
remedies without relief. I could net sleep ■
nor rest at night. The affected parts were E
irritated, also inflamed, and my family E
physician said I would have to undergo an ■
operation. ■
“ I bathed good with Cuticura Soap In I
pure water about fifteen minutes, then I E
applied the Cuticura Ointment. I did this 9
four times a day for two weeks, then three E
times a day for another week, and in the ■
space of three weeks I was cured sound and ||
well. Ono box of Cuticura Ointment with ||
Cuticura Soap cured my case of piles of six ■
years' standing. When I commenced to use K
the Cuticura Soap and the Cuticura Olnt- ■
merit. I only weighed one hundred and ||
twenty-eight pounds. Now 1 weigh one |g
hundred and cighty-eight pounds." (Signed) g|
Floyd Welch. Dec. 11. 1911. E
For pimples and blackheads the following E;
is a most, effective and economical treat- fc
ment: Gently smear the affected parts with H
Cuticura Ointment, on the end of the finger, fl
but. do not rub. Wash off the Cuticura K
Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura W
Soap and hot water and continue bathing
for some minutes. This treatment is best m|
on rising and retiring. At. other times use |h
Cuticura Soap freely for the toilet and bath. ®
to assist in preventing inflammation, irri- l|
tation and clogging of the pores. Sold fl
throughout. the world. Sample of each
mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address B|
post-card “Cuticura. Dept. T. Boston fl
4®'Tender-faced men should use Cuticura
Soap Shaving Stick, 25c. Sample free. fl