Newspaper Page Text
T. R. FINOS THIRD
PARTY POPULAH
IN THE WEST
Colonel Answers Governor Wil
son’s Attack on Moose Plat
form in St. Louis Speech.
KEOKUK. IOWA, Sept. 4. —Colonel
Theodore Roosevelt entered lowa to
day for a bard day's campaigning that
included an address before the Pro
gretsi'f state convention. The colonel
vas deeply interested in the lowa sit
uation. and it was expected he would
r ?fe' to the statement of Senator Cum
min?. who will support Roosevelt, but
, the formation of a third party
in the state.
'.fter first hand observation of condi
t ons in Missouri and lowa, the colonel
has told his lieutenants here that it is
necessary to name Progressive tickets
t, th states. His speeches have taken
~n s melhing of the tang of those de
; vt red in Vermont, where he demanded
support for the P ogressive state can
didates as well as for himself at the
fall election.
The colonel's lowa itinerary today
iin udes Mount Zion. Biden. Ottumwa.
Oskaloosa and Des Moinc?.
The colonel is pleased with the out
|ook in the Middle West.
There is plenty of third party sen- ■
tinirnt in the West," he said. "The
fight lias just started. By November
the whole country will wake up to th'
fact that we are to be reckoned with
at the polls."
"Why Hasn't He Done Something?”
Woodrow Wilson's stand upon the
tariff, the trusts and the minimum
sage scale proposition was assailed by-
Colonel Roosevelt in St. Louis late yes- I
terday before the Missouri Progressive
state convention.
Taking up Governor Wilson's criti
cism of the Progressive policy in re
gard to regulation of trusts, Colonel
Roosevelt asked:
If the Democratic platform really
offers any hope for the solution of the
trust question, why, during the two
years that Mr. Wilson has been gov
ernor of New Jersey, has nothing been 1
done under Mr. Wilson's lead or even :
attempted by Mr. Wilson in New Jer-;
eey for the regulation of the trusts?"
The colonel was asked to advise the
state convention as to whether it should
name, a full state ticket.
“I felt that you ought to," he said.
"I feel that except in those states in
which we can take over bodily either
of the old parties we ought to run a
straight Progressive ticket."
Said the colonel:
"Yesterday Mr. Wilson, alluding to
the third party platform, asked: ‘.With
that program who can differ in his
heart, who can divorce himself in sym
pathy from the great object of advanc
ing the interests of human beings
wherever it is possible to advance?'
“I am very glad that Mr. Wilson
should be with us in his heart: but if
his party sympathizes with us in its
heart why didn't they in their platform
make a program at least remotely re
sembling ours? Our sympathy for the
program is not only within our hearts;
it is with our heads and our hands
also.
About the Ta riff.
"When he comes to the tariff. Mr.
Wilson attempts to quote me, but he
is singularly unsuccessful. He states,
for instance, that I am not concerned
with the interests of the general tax
payer, the general public.
"If be would take the trouble to read
what I have said or to read our plat
form, he would find that the commis
sion principle which we propose, and
to which he and his party are hostile,
has for one of its special objects the
careful consideration of the needs of
the general public. We are advocat
ing the commission system which has
been one of the pieces of governmental
and industrial mechanism that have
been so extraordinarily successful in
building up the great prosperity of the
Herman empire.
"I believe in protection; I believe that
if Mr. Wilson's free trade policy or
tariff for revenue only policy is in
good faith and not merely treated as a
■ tmpaign cry. widespread disaster will
result to American life.
Rut 1 don't believe for a minute
that a protective tariff by itself offers
in any way or shape the solution for
te economic and social injustice
against which we Progressives are
striving.
"Let Mr. Wilson study what has hap
pened to industry in England and in
Germany during the last forty years.
Luring that forty years England has
been under a free trade system and
Germany has adopted a high tai iff
astern. During that forty years the
onditions of the labor world have
tr'own worse in England and better in
Germany. Germany has advanced
relatively to England ail along the
■ne and especially- in the standing of
her people.
"As to what Mr. Wilson says about
'he minimum wage 1 can only say that
1 disagree with him in toto. We are
r ’t’ly advocating what we are sure can
be done and ought to be done. Evi
ently Mr. Wilson has not studied the
’editions about the labor of women
in factories.
The Trust Question.
Mr Wilson comes out squarely
’-■unst our proposal to regulate the
" ts He has not anything to put in
’ Place except a statement that he
i>y great Democratic think
s who have made the Democratic
■"-‘■rm on this subject.
Mr. Wilson has been governor of
Jersey for nearly two years. If
Baltimore platform really offers
11 nope for the trust solution, why
ur ing these two -years has nothing
Curiosity to See His First Portrait Nearly Disqualifies Old Buck as Model
DEER POSE FOR "SKETCH FROM LIFE”
ISS Carrie May Good- r;~ ' 7
I f MsL, \ son Sketching Old Buck
tpWJgf r ’'•‘vw -a
V.-’t LVi , , l'..
'\
\ TjigsL, ,$?. Tfc ■ -
C' yvL ~
Cy 4- 4
AUTD RIB SPACE
WILL NETSII,OOO
Motor Dealers to Meet Tonight
to Discuss the Allotment of
Exhibit Reservations.
Motor car dealers who plan exhibits
in the November automobile show will
meet tonight at the Transportation club
to discuss methods of allotting space
for the exhibitors and framing rules
to govern the show. Nearly every deal
er in cars and accessories in Atlanta
will be persent.
An unusually heavy- demand for ex
hibition spac has been made by At
lanta dealers, and it is evident that
every inch will be reserved long be
fore the date of the opening. There
are 22,000 square feet of floor space to
be sold,at 50 cents a foot, which will
bring a revenue of SII,OOO from this
source alone. All this will be spent
on the expenses of the show.
The committee in charge of the fall
exhibit is composed of Wylie West, of
the Eirestone Tire and Rubber Com
pany; John E. Smith, representing the
Apperson and Pierce-Arrow; L. S.
Crane, of the Pope-Hartford; R. S.
Abbott, head of the Ford branch; R. N.
Reed, of the R. N. Reed Oil Company;
C. H. Johrson, of the Stevens-Duryea,
and C. L. Elyea, of the Elyea-Austell
Company.
ST. PAULS CHURCH HOLDS
"HOME-COMING” SERVICE
All persons who ever have been mem
bers of St. Pauls Methodist church at'
Grant and Sidney streets have been
asked to meet again at the church
Thursday for home-coming and reunion
services.
A special song service will be held
and talks on the history of the church
will be made by various officials from
from the different departments. The
members which the church recently
has acquired will be given a reception
and welcome by the old members, and
for the former members, something of
what recently has been accomplished
will be told,
been done by New Jersey under Mr.
Wilson's lead for regulation of the
trusts?
•‘The answer Is because the states
by themselves can not get at the diffi
culty and it is pure toryism of the
most backward kind to suppose that
they can. and incidentally any such
policy would have the grinning sup
port of every law-breaking trust.
“Mr. Wilson seems to forget that
part of our program is to give to the
people themselves direct control over
their own government. When the peo
ple themselves thus effectively control
their own government and the govern
ment In its turn controls the big cor
porations it seems to me the veriest
folly of fear to express apprehension
lest under such a system the chief em
ployers. as Mr. Wilson says, because
they have ‘this tremendous authority
behind them,' may oppress the wage
workers.
“We have a genuine constructive
policy. Mr. Wilson's plan, as far as I
can gather, is merely to continue the
present futile system, adding fresh
and empty protestations of hostility
to the trusts, but giving no hint as to
any method by which these protesta
tions can become more than protesta
tions. We must supplement the anti
trust law by the kind of real and
efficient governmental control advo
cated in the Progressive national plat
form or «’ will not have made one
step towaid solving the trust ques
-tion-t*
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4. 1912.
Girl Artist Finds Willing Sub
jects for Nature Studies in
Grain Park.
Miss Carrie May Gocdson. who lives
at li2 Broyles street and is something
j c-f an a; List, went out to Grant nark to
<’<> some sketches from nature. \nd now
she's glad she didn’t pick the lion for a
subject.
Miss Good son strolled down to the pad
dock and made a sketch of the dear
little deer. She drew the fawns and
their mothers and then found a cool place
<»n the grass and began a portrait of old
Buck, the head of the herd.
Buck posed like a statue for a while.
Then his curiosity led him to wonder
what the girl with the pencil whs do
ing. Miss Goodson had stopped locking
at her subject and was bending over the
sketch.
Suddenly she saw a shadow on her pa
per and glanced up. ’There was old Buck,
his aniler’s almc-t in the artist’s face,
making a look at his own portrait. And
that’s the way tlie photographer, who had
been trying to, catch the deer in a mo
ment of repose, got the picture he wanted.
DOG IS CHURCHGOER
AND BASEBALL ‘FAN;’
FAVORS THE RED SOX
BROCKTON. MASS.. Sept I .Major I*'.
C. Blanchard, of Pleasant street one of
the men close to General Grant in the
Civil war, has a dog which, he says, could
not be bought for all the gold in the
United States Buster is his name and
he is one of the most popular dogs in
the city.
Buster's latest achievement is to regu
larly attend revival meetings in the tent
at Perkins park. Every night for two
weeks he has occupied the same chair,
sitting upright and apparently listening
attentively to the speakers.
Buster is also a great baseball fan.
Every afternoon he goes to the newspa
per offices and looks at the baseball bul
letins. He invariably barks when the Red
Sox or Brocktons win a gafne
COAL OIITsTRANGLES BABY:
MOTHER DISCOVERS IT DEAD
— i
ST. LOUIS. Sept. 4. —Sammy Hickman,
two years old, was choked to death yes
terday at his home, 1816 Market street,
Alton, by swallowing a quantity of coal
oil. which was dashed in his face when
he pulled the can off a shelf on which it
had been placed.
The child's mother. Mrs. Sarah Hick
man. was out in the yard when the ac
cident occurred. Although only a short
distance from the kitchen. Mrs. Hick
man says she heard no sound or cry i
on the part of the baby
Coroner C. N. Streeper held an in
quest and returned a verdict of acci
dental death.
maconTlog cabin club
WILL BECOME IDLE HOUR
MACON. GA.. Sept. 4.—Macon's fa
mous “Lob Cabin" club will soon be no
more.
The superior court has authorized
the change of the tame to the "Idle
Hour” club, and the former club
grounds will now be abandoned and
quarters established on the Forsyth
road on the former site of the Idle
Hour nursery and race track, which
were operated by the late 1. C. Plant.
The street car company has just com
pleted an extension to the Idle Hout
grounds The new club features, among
other things include a fine 18-hole goif
course. ,
8188 COUNTY'S TAX RATE
NOW HIGHERJHAN EVER
MACON, GA.. Sept. 4. Bibb county's
tax rate is the highest now that it has
ever been The rate ha« been raised to
9 1-2 mills, an increase of 11-2 mills.
The extra revenue to be derived from
the increase will be applied to a high
school, a new jail and concrete bridges
in the rural districts. A high school
costing SIOO,OOO will he built within the
next few months, and $25,000 will be
spent in remodeling the Jail. The
county coinmltsionets today raised the
tax rate.
FOY MT GUILTY
Os QIUPIMP HPT
111 dlliulllb llul
Actor Turns Court to Comedy
When Up for Permitting
Children on Stage.
NEW YORK. Sept. 4. Eddie F >\.
tiie comedian, .'.as at the bar in the
Jefferson Market court yesterday on
complaint of the Children's society on
a charge of permitting his children, un
der the age of sixteen years, to sing
with him on the stage. He reached
the court accompanied by his son, Bry
an. sixteen.
"Gee, I had to get up before darn,
and 1 didn't have time to milk the cows
before leaving New Rochelle. Isn't
I there a green room or other lounging
I place here where I can rest until my
lease is called?" said the comedian.
I Thomas B. Watson, agent of the
Children's society, testified tiiat he had
witnessed the act provided by Mr. lot
and his seven children —"Eddie Foy
and the. Seven Little Foys." He said
the children ranged in this progression:
(Six. nine. ten. twelve, thirteen, four
teen and sixteen years.
“Sort of Singing."
“Somewhat .of . a ladder?" interposed
Moses A. Sacks, counsel for Mr. Foy.
"Quite so.” answered Mr. Watson.
Then he testified that Mr. Foy sang
some songs and the children joined in
the chorus. Little Madeline Foy sang
a song called "Sweet Marguerite" all
by herself. He said she appeared to be
about ten years old.
Mr. Sacks began his cross-examina
tion of« Agent Watson by asking him
this question:
j "Did you say that Mr. Foy sang?”
I Yes; he sang,” answered Watson,
j and the crowd in rhe court room tit
tered.
"Do you call his vocal efforts sing
ing?" persisted Mr. Sacks.
"Welk it was a sort of singing."
"Was it singing, I ask?" insisted the
lawyer.
“It was an attempt at singing," an
swered Watson.
“Do you mean to say the children of
I Mr. Foy also sang?”
“The children's efforts were better
than the father’s," answered Watson,
and his answer was greeted with
laughter that shook the court room.
He "Talks” a Song.
Here Magistrate Breen broke in, and
his remarks brought forth a storm of
laughter. He said, in deep, judicial
tones:
"Mr. Foy is not charged with sing
ing."
Mr. Sacks suggested that the court
hear Mr. Foy sing and then decide for
himself if it is singing, and if, by I
heredity, the children could sing.
“The children don't sing at all," cried
out Eddie Foy at the top of his voice.
“I talk a song, and so do the chil
dren.”
“1 think that might be more satis
factory than if you tried to sing," com- ,
mented Magistrate Breen.
The case was adjourned until Wed- i
nesday.
ARMY ORDERS !■
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4. Captain John
Mcßride, Jr., coast artillery corps, re
lieved from staff commanding officer, ar
tillery district of San Francisco.
Captain John T. Geary, coast artillery
corps, to staff commanding officer, artil
lery district of San Francisco
Captain W. C Rogers, Twenty-seventh
Infantry, from army school, Fort Leaven
worth. Kans . to his proper station.
Captain Monroe C. Keith, general staff
to Sixth infantry.
INSPECTOR JIS
sguMS’ ■
Reduced Official Pays Nearly
All-Night Visit to New York
Prosecutor.
NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—Former Police
Inspector Cornelius G. ’in. ties, who ha
been reduced to the rank of captain, if
reported today to have furnished the
missing links in the chain of graft evi
ilince that District Attorney Whitman
has been forging since the murder of
Gambler Herman Rosenthal almost two
months ago. ■
Hayes called upon the district at
torney late yesterday and the confer
ence did not break up until earl; to
day. Immediately afteryard the report
went around that Hayes had “spueal
ed."
I ite conference was held behind
rosed doors in room No 15 of the Bar
Association building. The former in
spector was accompanied by his law
yer. Thomas D I'hacher.
Asks New Grand Jury,
The district attorney' left for Albany
today. He will ask Governor Dix to
is-ue a call for another extraordinary
session of the supreme court for the
purpose of investigating charges of
grafting in the police department.
Mr. Whitman takes the position that
inasmuch as the panel was exhausted
before 23 grand jurors had been se
lected at the first convening of the ex
tra session, it will be necessary so the
governor to call another session. This
step having been taken, another panel
of 100 men will be drawn, but the graft
investigating grand jury is not expect
ed to meet for nearly a month.
These complications, however. will
not in any way interfere with Justice
Goff trying Becker for the murder of I
Rosenthal on September 12.
"I was cured of diarrhoea bv one
dose of Chamberlain s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy,” writes M E
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The GENUINE muct bear aignature
EDROPEWRTIST
STUDIES MEES
Auguste Benziger Spends Sea
son at Summer Resorts
Watching U. S. Tourists.
PARIS, Sept 4 Augusto Benziger
the Swiss-American artist and taliest
painter in the world, is spending the sea
son in the mountain towns of Switzer
land, studying at close range American
character as it reveals itself in summer
resorts and hotels. His object is to be
able to make the portrait of every Amer
ican whom he will paint a human docu
ment. a vivid and indelible record, not
only of tiie face and figure, but of char
acter and life.
Benziger is 6 feet 3in his stockings. He
has the head of a philosopher, the eye of
a poet and a sympathetic power of in
sight into one’s character. 'To these Is
united a complete mastery of the media
of expression. He has taken to the spe
cial study of American character because
he finds in it the most interesting soul
and intellect.
Frequents Resorts.
And he has taken to the study of it
in hotels, in the mountains and at the
seaside, in dining room, sa’on and motor
car, at glof, tennis. < ard table and ball
room, and all during the American hol
idays in Europe, because he firpls that the
Vrnerican character there reveals itself
best.
A distinguished French woman of let
ters. whose, pen name is Pierre Decoule
vain. has done the same in literature.
Though all her studies of American worn-
I cn have been made in European hotels,
I the characters she draws are singularly
i striking and faithful. Benziger studied
he American in his native heath and
now in the international playground of
Switzerland. He has painted so many
Americans that he may be said to have
made them his specialty.
Painted Noted Americans.
Among the many he has portrayed with
his brush are President Taft, the late
President McKinley. General Miles, Colo
nel Roosevelt. Cardinal Gibbons. Richard
Croker and Joi n Pitcairn, of Philadelphia.
After Americans come the Swiss. He
has painted three puesidents of the Swiss
confederation And so complete is his
record that he paints them as they live
—in the spirit as in the body.
lie has a curious way of making the
sitter reveal himself. Il is by indulging
in lively anecdote, or pensive epigram,
or in any easy flow of wit. humor and
philosophy such as may suit the temper
amt nt of the sitter in question. The
consensus of the exports is that he gives
adequate expression to souls and sur
faces. to face, figure, furniture and dress,
to jewels, fashion, passion, sentiment,
thought, to things of the moment and
to things eternal.
“The White Plague”
DR. KING’S Royal
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MEMPHIS, TENN.
I Dr. E. G. Griffin’s Denta*Rooms
Over BROWN <£ ALLEN’S D RUG STORE, 24i/ 2 WHITEHALL ST.
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GHDBCH MINTING
TD COST J5.8D0
Noted New York Artist Will Do
Mural Picture for St. Lukes
Episcopal.
A painting by E. H. Blashfield. con
sidered the greatest mural artist tn
America, is to fill the space over the
chancel in St. Lukes Episcopal church
In Peachtree street within the next
year. The painting will cost about $5,-
(100. and will measure 13 1-2 by 18
feet. Mr. Biashfielrl will come from his
New York studios to study the interior
of the church before beginning his
work, and will pay another visit when
the painting is to be fixed in its place.
Mis. S. B. Turman called on the
famous artist in New York several
months ago and after several confer
ences persuaded him to undertake the
painting for St. Lukes. She has re
ceived a small .sketch from him, giv
ing his idea of the picture. It depicts
the Good Shepherd leading His flock.
It will be bordered by Gothic medallions
in keeping with the architecture of the
church. The sketch was shown to a
number of members of St. Lukes and
several prominent artists, and they
were unanimous in recommending the
acceptance of the design.
The mural painting will be a memo
rial to Dr. Robert 8. Barrow, former
rector of St. Lukes, w’ho was greatly
beloved by his parisionets.
Blashfleld has adorned the walls of
several of America's, most famous
buildings with his pictures. His most
celebrated works are the "Angel With
the Flaming Sword” and “Christmas
Bells."
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