Newspaper Page Text
■EMM
DF OGLETHORPE
Men Resurrecting Old College
Will Name Date Tomorrow
for Corner Stone Laying.
One hundred men who gave SI,OOO
each to the new Oglethorpe university
fend will be among the guests at a din-1
at the Piedmont tomorrow night I
r. hen steps will be taken toward the I
~ sanitation of the board of dbectors,
. octfon of officers and .arrangements
for a charter. The dinner will be a
notable gathering of Georgians con
nected with the ancient univeisity and
the new. and the guests will include
many of the most prominent men in
the state.
The date for laying the corner stone
of the new institution will be fixed at
this metting, and the ceremony will be
perhaps the most peculiar in history.
\ot only is the new university an iso
lated instance of the resurrection of .an
ancient college, but the combination of |
circumstances surrounding it is most
unusual.
All the alumni of old Ogletho
within reach will attend the dinner, and
thest include the governor of the state ■
and an ex-moderator of the Southern ,
Presbyterian assembly. One of the sen- .
ators from Georgia, Hoke Smith, is a
member of th? board of ineorpotators
of tin 1 new university, while the other, j
A O. Bacon, is a direct descendent of I
the founders of old Midway church, '
which founded the old Oglethorpe. Andi
the ceremony of laying the corner stone j
will take place during the great Pres- :
byte’ian convention next May, when. J
for the first time in history, al! fijur
great assemblies of the denomination I
will meet at the same time and in the
same city. The four moderators of the 1
four bodies of this Pan-Presbyterian
gathering will have a prominent part j
in the ceremonies.
Next President “Oglethorpe Child."
It is pointed out that the next presi
dent of the United States, who will be
in office then, will almost certainly be
a “child of Oglethorpe.” Woodrow
Wilson Is a nephew of Dr. James Wood
row. for years a professor in old Ogle
thorpe, and Theodore Roosevelt is a
descendent of many Georgians who
sleep beneath the sod of old Midway
church yard. It is the desire of the
new board to have the new chief exec
utive take part in the corner stone cer
emony.
Among the guests at the banquet to
morrow night will be Ivan E. Allen,
Custis N. Anderson. E. P. Ansley. J. T.
Alderson. Dr. Milton Armstrong, James
Rachman. Dr. Steven Bai nett. Dr. W.
It Brannen. Milledge, Ga.; J. M
P.r.inner, Griffin. Ga.; William Bensel,
John A. Brice, J. B. Brooks. .1. Epps
Brown, Edwin Broyles. E. P. Mcßur
ney. Dr. Phinizy Calhoun. C. Murphy
i .indler. S. W. Carson, S. A. Carter.
F. W Coleman. Dr. Newton Craig, Ju
lian Cumming. Rome, Ga.: Herbert B.
Davis. J. J. Eagan. H. F. Emery, J.
IV English, W. M. Everett. 8. M.
Fincher. F. O. Foster. (’. E. Graham.
Greenville, S <’.; J. R. Gray, H. D.
Green, Conyers, Ga; J. W. Hammond,
Griffin, Ga.: George W. Harrison, Ray
mond Hastings. W. P. Heath. T. P.
Hinman C. S. Honour. George M. Hope,
B. I. Hughes, Rome, Ga.; Frank Inman,
Henri A. Inman. S. M. Inman, Thorn
well Jacobs, E. G. Jones, Dr. W. S.
Kendrick. Clyde L. King, George E.
King. J. Cheston King. Lucien L.
Knight. Porter Langston, R. J. Lowry,
T. S. Lowry, Macon. Ga.; L. C. Mande
vi' . Carrollton. Ga.: W. D. Manley,
Dr. K. G. Matheson. Charles D. Mont
gomery. Wilmer L. Moore. Gillam Mor
row, W. S. Myrick, Milledgeville, Ga.;
I S. McDowell. Griffin. Ga.; Henry
K McHarg, Stanford. Conn.: D. I.
?’ Intyre. Charles D. McKinney. W.
Neal. J. K. Orr, .1. K. Ottley, W. F.
I’irkhurst, Jacob Patterson. Rev. Fritz
H iischenberg, Hugh Richardson, E.
Rivers, Booker Scott, Dr. Archibald
Smith. Hoke Smith. E. J. Spratling, Dr.
1 I Stacy, Elberton. Ga.; W. O. Steele,
■i P Stevens-. Dr. (’. W. Strickler, D.
Thompson. Covington. Ga.; .1. O.
irnedoe, Valdosta, Ga; Sam Venable.
- I- Wallace, Dr. Hugh Walker. Edgar
1 tkins, George W. Watts. Durham.
N C: W. Woods White. W. F. Wine-
•f. C. R. Winship, A. D. Witten, Mar
nsville, Va.; J. C. Woodward. Rev. A.
' l-ittle, W. E. Hill. Asa G. Candler.
Charles W. Daniel, Dr. John E.
■'bite. Joseph McCord, T. H. McCrea,
tor Smith. W. T Healy. John W.
''' nt, E. C. Kontz, Dr. R. O. Flinn. Dr.
L Morris, Bulow Campbell, John J.
' ■'lside. c. j. Martin. Charley Elyea,
'" n Smith, W .B. Crouch. Marietta. 1
'■ • Frank E. Block. Charles Wachen-|
■I \V. Lumpkin, Ernest Woodruff.
R- Dußose, Henry Goetchius. Co
'ils. Ga.; Bennett H. Young. Louis-
Ky.; James Watt. Thomasville
H. Alexander, Jackson. Miss, j
W Corley. Ingleside, Ga.
DURYEA FORTUNE GOES
TO NURSE—A WOMAN
MINEOLA, L. 1., sZpt. It!.—Out of
“State of $344,588.90 left by Walt -r <
1 ‘uryea, who lived several years with
broken neck, $155,98':.90 goes to Miss'
•line Peregrine, according to the tax,
ii.iisers report. Duryea received his I
ir ' while diving in shallow water at i
'is Point, and Mi.-s Peiigrlne nursed
for ten years. Tin will gives $lO,.
'ach to two wealthy sisters and |
"I the remainder goes to < i.irity, i
'•U‘ST PRODUCE UNION
CARD TO PAWN TOOLS
1 w IRK S»q.t !•; A m w nil i
I' Into < ffe< t Io I e Uih- r- of tin '
'"rk Pa a nhidket a ill !••>>. I
tb.lt Ili n fl r ■ w ''i o io f me- I
‘ f ll' at ' ' l'l t t •'t ' , *() j) ! t |
'it show hit union iaid.
Camera Man, in Aeroplane, Catches Flyer at 120-Mile Pace
SPEEDING IN SKY, SNAPS VEDRINES
. \ •
Z
/ -Tua
I Ws
oR
\\ ' :
■ Iliy
WILSOK THEORIES
ENMST.R.
■Democratic Tariff Program
i Would Plunge Country into
Bankruptcy, He Says.
SANTA BARBARA. CALIF., Sept.
16. Into southern California came
< olonel Roosevelt today to renew his
attuck upon Governoi Wilson. The ex
president assailed the 1) mocralit can
didate for his . iriff stand, saying that
if Wil-on gets the presidency and at
tempts to put into effect the tariff pro
gram enunciated in the Baltimore plat
form. he will plunge the country into
bankruptcy.
"It is amazing that the Democratic
party is brazen enough to try to jam
such a platform down the people's
throats." said the colonel. "They are
fooling only themselves. The people
are going to show by a derisive vote
that they are not bamboozled by the
empty Wilson theories.”
Roosevelt glowingly referred to the
prospects of the third party winning
this fall.
“From what I’ve seen here in the
West, I believe we are going to beat
the bosses." he exclaimed. "It s a. sig
nificant thing that the bosses have di
rected their whole fight against us. You
don't hear Penrose, or Guggenheim, or
Barnes railing at the Democratic par
ty. They are after the Progressive par
ty.
“They’ll Never Catch Up.”
“Well, we are in the lead, and they’ll
never catch up.”
The ex-president glorified California
for its vote in the recent primaries.
"Your state leads in the whole Pro
gressive fight," he said. "California
put up a solid front in the Republican
convention —that is. it did with what
delegates were not unseated. Your
Progressive delegates were courageous
in face of a terrific pressure on the
part of the bosses.
"If the Progressives had wanted to
sacrifice their principles at the Chicago
eonven'ion. they could have bartered
for the nomination. 1 could have been
the nominee there if I had agreed to
wink at the bosses. But I would not
come their way. They tried it and
failed. Then they were bound to cheat
us. In November the Progressives will
show the bosses where they belong.
Roosevelt lef; San Francisco last
night at 10 o'clock, after a day of rest.
He winds »P his California campaign
tonifiht witit a speech in Los Angeles.
INSANE WOMAN HEIR
TO NEARLY $200,000
ST LOUIS, Sept. 16.—A fortune, es
timated to be worth between $150,000
and $200,000, may go to a patient of
the Home for the Incurable Insane at
j Bartonville, 111., who is the nearest
' bloml relative of Emil Schaefer, of
Belleville Mr. Schaefer died Wednes
day intestate. The fortune consists
mostly of cash and bonds, although a
few parcels of real estate are in
i' eluded.
Tile n a rest relative is Mrs
| S. hw <r /.. an aunt of Schaefer, who w as
' declared hopelessly insane fourteen
'.ears ago and was committed to the
I avium.
Mis. S< hwattz has two childn n. Wil
liam. a mim r, and the father of a large
■ i' imily, living in modest circumstances
| in Belleville, and Mrs. Mary Platte, of
St. Lotti- . On the death of the mother.
I the valuable estate would go to them in
: equal shares.
MASHER GIVEN A YEAR
AND FINE FOR HUGGING
SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS. Sept. 16.
i Wishers can expect no tnerey from San |
j Antonio judges, for Judge P 11. Shook
|of the iTinnn.il court has set a prece-
I m Ip- lining one young man $26" and I
[sending him to prison foi a year.
I Jose i iiel .ii, a Mexti.iii youth, was '
(convicted nt puttlnt his a n around a|
| yruing girl, duughter .f .. lei-m. ie in. |
I. . [|. i.i- 1. ivtug a moving ph luii-|
.-hoyy here.
YTTF ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 16. 1912
Remarkable Is Accom
plished While Dashing Thro’
Air at Chicano.
Taking pictures of Vedrines, winner
of the International Aviation Trophy.
| as he sped around the course, at mote .
titan 100 miles an hour, was the te
matkable feat, accomplished by a Chi-i
< ;<go photographer seated in a '
Wright biplane traveling above the;
Vedrines monoplane at 42 miles an
' hour.
Vedrines. who won his laurels two
’ years ago. when he was the first to
cover the course in the Paris-Madri
tace, used a Provost machine, develop
ing 14" horsepower, and at times at
taining the unprecedented speed of 12"
mile- an hour. As his machine circled
the triangular-shaped course at Clear
ing, near Chicago, it appeared as a
white streak, spouting flame and leav
-1 ing a trail of smoke in its wake.
The photographer, seated beside Max
Lillie in a Wiight machine. soared
1 above the field, keeping well nut
• path of Vedrines as the intrepid
Frenchman's monoplane shot aroiinu
the course.
5 At no time did the Wright machine
- exceed a speed of 51) miles an hour and
this rate seemed a snail's pace when
) \ edrlnes shot by. Once, when directly
J above Vedrines. the photographet
snapped his camera and again when
• the Provost machine, tilted at an angle
r of 45 degrees, cut through the air at
the stake post. The gasoline smoke
was issuing from the panting engine of
i the Prevost machine in such volume
• that the camera had no difficulty in
photographing it.
Vedrines' Remarkable Time.
Vedrines' official time for covering
the 23 laps of the course of 124.8 miles
was one hour ten minutes and 56.85
seconds. Prevost and Frey, the only
. competitors to complete the course, fin
ished in one minutes ami
25.75 seconds, and one hour. twelve
. minutes and 13.70 seconds, respectively.
Lillie, from whose machine the cam' r.i
man obtained his pictures, was the
only American aviator to complete. He
made six laps of the course in 28 min
utes and 41 seconds.
The first to attempt the course was
Vedrines. There v. s n- formality about
his start. He had ascended, and was
half around the couise, before the huge
crowd of spectators was actually aware
that the race was on. Before he had
completed the first lap his machine was
traveling at its maximum rate of speed.
He Hew so low that he was scarcely
above the line of steel pylons marking
the course, and at times he went so
close to th ■ -trui tii. es in passing them
that the wings of his machine seemed
to brush the frame-work.
Other Frenchmen in Air, Too.
It was evident that he did not intend
to cover a greater distance titan was
absolutely neci-ssay. Prevost and
Frey quickly shot into the air with
their machines, and followed in the
close-clipped path set down by Ve
il fines.
Though driving a machine of 40 less
itorsepowe: than that of Vedtines. Pre
vost drove a pretty race. Several tim*’S
it seemed that he would win out over l
Ills competitor. Frey soon dropped be
hind. and after the first few laps was
not a serious contender.
On the twelfth lap, with the race half
finished. Prevost was but ten seconds
behind Ved ities and appeared to lo*
gaining at every lap. It was a nerve
tacking moment for the thousands of
spectators, and no more thrilling sight
was ever witnessed. «-
By the fifteenth lav Vedrines ' had
gained a lead "f 32 seconds over Pr ■-
vost During the remainder of the race
he inc eased this gap until the last lap
was completed, when the judges an
nounced that he hail beaten his fellow
countryman by more than five minutes
BOSS FLOGS AN EMPLOYEE
HE BELIEVES TO BE THIEF
EUGENE. t'REtl. Sept 16 Taking
the law into Ills own hands. F J. Seho.
field, proprietor of a chemiial works.
: idministered a punishment of fifteen
■ ashes w ith a raw hide on the back of
j James Daughty . Otte of his employ , es.
I who w is alleged to ipm been t aught
| •trilling a small sum of mono from
Ia a 'l'a nln liivi Daughty tim > ho ir.
Io leave tile city,
»
ummSiiiwiiimO'l
■ t
■
Wil-
Jjpgß
U ft •MS ' '
w
Sftw'z -- 5 G.. ' , >
L>_
I \vo \ii ws oi \ th ities nt • ill monoplane photographed
ii'om anothei' machine. I hese a e probably the most remarkable i
aeroplaiii piciucos ever taken. I’hey were made by ft Chieatjo
photograpbo' iiom a 'A “i't'lii biplane, which soared above \’ed
rin - I'v :i"Pr- ■ . ' e/ai; as it raced oyer the ('hicayo avia-
tion field, spoutiny liame anil smoke. Vedrines won the Inter
national Aviation Trophy.
TARIFF EXHIBIT SHOWS
U. S. GOODS COST LESS
ABROAD THAN AT HOME
NEW YDHK, Sept. 16.—New Yo'k
ha? found a new censer of interest in
the tariff exhibit which was formally
dedicated by Governor Wilson.
■Meetings are held practically every
hour from early morning until In o'clock
at night, and there are thousands of j
people who are inspecting !!'.■ educa-1
tional exhibits and paying extra close i
attention to the corps of speakers.
The public Is shown how much j
cheaper household goods would lie if!
protection were cut off, and th. trusts I
are shown as the chief beneficiaries of i
the present tariff system. .
in the window of the exhibit are in
stalled six fat porkers, all alive. Each
of these pigs is labeled with one of the
following appellations: Sugar Trust.
Woolen Trust. Match Trust. Steel Trust,
Harvester Trust and Thread Trust.
New features are to be introduced
into the exhibition every day.
Idea Is Woman’s.
Every Friday will be ladies day. and
next Eriday at noon Mrs. J. Borden
Harriman will be the s; t aker. It is
only fair that the D< mocrats should
give a day a week to women, because
it was a woman who conceived the idea
of the exhibit.
The credit is due to the wife of Con
gressman James 1.. Slayden, of San
Antonio, Texas. Last spring Mrs.
Slavden had occasion to buy a sewing
machine of American make in San An
tonio. Some time later, while traveling
in Mexico, she found she could buy the
same machine there for 40 per cent
less. Then she discussed the matter
with her husband and learned that the
trusts exported their goods to foreign
countries, where there was competi
tion. for less money than they demand
ed for them here at home.
’’Why don't you get up an exhibit and
show that?" said Mrs. Slayden. "You’ll
have half the housewives in America
preaching Democracy from the house
tops."
Colonel Blows Hot Air.
So the idea of the exhibit was grad
ually evolved. It has many attractions
Ender a tent there is a "Tariff Mis
fortune Teller." who will explain the
"tariff misfortunes" to any one who
wants to hear them. You can find out
there just what you would have to pay
for any article if there were no protec
tive tariff.
There is a group of three wax fig
ures against one wall. One of them
represents the capitalist, “this man
gets It;" another the workingman,
“this man pays it," and the third.
Colonel Roosevelt, blowing hot air
through a tube. A placard makes him
say : "What in blazes ails that pay en
velope I'm blowing as hard as ever?"
A group ot small balloons repre
sents tile "fragrant fragments of the
Tobacco Trust." This is also a symbol
ic group. In another place a live horse
will work at a treadmill. He is just i
out of reach of the fodder which he
continually Strives to get. "Doesn't
itayi horse sense," reads the placard.
"Neither do you If you keep yourself
on the protection treadmill any longer" .
Another placard informs the public
that the Democratic patty takes good
• ate of this horse
Famous Cartoons Shown.
There are < tit toils on the walls by
at th. famous New York cartoonists, i
They ate Hie original drawings ot the
cartoons which have appeared in va
rious newspapers lately. There are
quotations from Roosevelt and refuta
tions by Woodrow Wilson, and all sorts
of tables, statements and even epi
, grams, such as the following:
"The tariff is not a stimulus, but a
I sterilizer.”
"The threat to reduce wages if the
j tariff is lowered is the hallmark of ig
* norant management."
j One of the crowning features of the
: exhibit is a home in which several
rooms tre represented, in each room
the articles are labeled with the prices
l.'tnl for them by the exhibit commis
sion and the amount they would cost
if there were no tariff. For instance,
the placard on the dining room chairs
toads as follows:
Cheaper Abroad Than Here.
"Eor these dining room chairs we
( >aid het<‘ $6. Ihe duty is 35 per cent
' I the value. rhat is the reason we
paid so much."
I lie duty on household goods varies
mtween 3i per cent and 60 percent; on
clothes between 55 per cent ami 90 per
cent. A sewing machine is exhibited
with the receipted bill showing the
amount paid for it by the exhibit com
mittee. The placard reads:
"This sewing machine costs in New
York S3O. It is offered for export at
$18.62. The foreign dealers can add
33 1-3 per cent to cover charges and
profit and sell in England or Holland
for $24.83. Shoes ate shown for which
$3.85 was paid in Calcutta and a du
plicati' pair for which $5 was paid in
New York. There is a typewriter for
w hich S9O was paid. The export price
is given. at s.is. A cigar is exhibited
which cost 15 cents in New York, and
which is sold for 7 cents in Gibraltar."
Dress Goods, Too.
One of the most interesting features
of the exhibit is a dress which is pla
carded as follows:
I he cloth In this dress was secured
from the agent for Senator Lippett's
mills This doth matches Tariff Board
Sample 129.
"Senator l.ippett want/T] more 'pro
tection' of this cloth, and so the duty
was increased from 3a per cent on the
value under the Dingley bill to 51.42
under tlie Payne-Aldrich bill .
"This cloth retails at 17 cents in Eng
land.
Illis cloth retails at 25 cents in the
('tilted States.
“Eor a dress like this:
"Cost of II yards in United States is
$2.75.
< ost of 11 yards in England is $1.87.”
HE SLEEPS IN THE STREET
YET HAS A $1,044 PILLOW
t'HICAGO, Sept. 16.—William Ear
rar made a bed with two battered and
worn suit eases in front of a building
m West Randolph street early today
After wrapping himself in a coat con
taining bank books showing deposits
of $1,(144. he lay down and went to
*’*' w,,s awakened and taken to
Despluines street station by Policeman
John Harun. Earrar. who Is 62 years
old, said he lives in Chicago, but re
fused to give his address "I don't like
to waste money on hotels when I , <n
beep Just as well outside," he said.
FffllW PHOTOS
ON GLOCK'S DIAL
| Pictures From Album Replace
Figures on Face of Woman’s
Unique Timepiece.
CHICAGO. Sept. 16.—Here is the
ideal family clock—a combination of
the family album and the timepiece.
Upon its dial there are no numerals.
Instead there are photographs of a
mother, a father and their ten children.
This strangest of chronometers Is
ow ned by Mrs. Carolina Heyden, widow
of Frederick Heyden. who died a week
ago. the oldest of Chicago street car
conductors in pbint of service. The
Heyden family has resided at 848 Will
avenue for more than 30 years.
Instead of telling the time as other
people do, members of the family spec,
ify it by use of the names of the chil
dren or the parents upon w boss like
nesses the hour or minute hands rest.
When it is twenty minutes after 11
on plain, every-day. ordinary clocks, it
is "Ida after mother” upon this one.
For the photograph of the daughter.
Ida, now Mrs. Waarich, covers the nu
meral 4 and the picture of Mrs. Heyden
covers the numeral 11.
Father Covers 12.
“Father and mother" has always been
the wayto tell the time as exactly 11
o'clock, for the photograph of Mr. Hey
den rests in place of the numeral 12.
"Father ami Anna" is 1 o’clock; "Fa
ther and Christina" is 2 o’clock; "Fa
ther and William'' is 3 o'clock, and so
on for all the hours. Whenever both
hands designate the midnight or the
midday hour, it has been just exactly
"Dad" o'clock. The picture of Fred
erick Heyden is at the top of the dial.
Visitors at the Heyden home have
laughed at this sttra.ngest of timepl ces,
but a ways have been convinced of the
merit of the real family clock before
' leaving.
“You see. it does away with the old
family album that always seemed to
collect all the dust that blew Into the
house.” explained Edward F. Heyden, a
son. whose picture covers the numeral
8. “With this device we always ar< re
minded of our brothers and sisters,
even though all except three of us are
married and away from home. Mother
sees her children about her constantly,
and the picture of our dead father also
always is before us. You couldn't buy
j that clock. It is the one treasure of the
I family.”
Combines Clock and Album.
Mrs. Hayden was the originator of
the idea of the clock some fifteen years
ago. When wondering what, to give her
. husband as a birthday gift, she thought
, of a clock and then of an album. Her
next idea was a combination of the two.
_. Her husband prized it as the best gift
he ever received.
Fredetffek Hayden was buried Labor
day, and the old-time street car em
ployees of < hieago assembled round his
grave. He was 64 years old. The fam
ily now has had a tiny black wreath
painted about his picture on the (lock.
A similar wreath encircles the photo
graph of a daughter. Christina. Mrs. T.
M. Kannen, the only other member of
the family who has died.
The ten children whose pictures cov
er the numerals 1 to 10, consecutively,
in the order of their ages, are as fol
lows: Mrs. Frank Gaul, Mrs. T. M.
Kannen. William T. Heyden, Mrs. C. M.
Waarich, Sister Aloysia (Mary Hey
den), who is a nun in Baltimore. Md.;
Frederick L. Heyden. Paul A. Heyden,
of Hagerman, N. M.: Edward F. Hey
den. Albert .1. Heyden and Martha R.
Hayden. The last three named and rhe j
mother reside at the family home. All '
the others, except two. reside in Chi- '
cago.
What We Never Forget
according to science, are the things as- j
sociated with our early home life, such i
as Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, that mother I
or grandmother used to cure our burns. !
boils, scalds, sores skin eruption-, cuts, I
sprains or bruise s. Forty years of i
cures prove its merit. Unrivaled fori
piles, corns or cold sores. Only 25 cents ■
at all druggists, *»» j
(Advertisement.)
Violent Cathartics
Injure Health
Side step purgatiret—their harsh action m
liable to injure the bowel*. Why not u«e |
CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS
a parly vegetable remedy
that ha* been successfully
used by millions for J
h»Wn century. Acts
gently but swely
and not only |
quickly relieves Q i a
but forever ends
the misery offf 5
constipation. Use them tor dizziness, indiges
tion, mk headache and all liver troubles.
SmoM Pil. Small Dose, Small Price,
The GENUINE must bear sigaaiure
The Universal Endorsement of
MTUi ■* mirrnti '-w - ■ -"rw-
(B^kKil^C^
JBb V w&H
■ WV S3MB*
is shown by the fact that over twenty tons are used
daily. This means that approximately 10,000,000 con
sumers daily O. K.” Davis Baking Powder for its un
equaled quality and economy. Noother Baking Powder
gives such general satisfaction as to quality and price.
Sold by ail good Grocer*. Insist on having it.
FIVE KNOWN OHO
IN NMT TRAGEDY
Six Other Apprentices Thought
to Have Perished When Lake
Michigan Cutter Capsizes.
(’HK’AGO. Sept. 16.—A detail of na»
val apprentices from the I nited States
training station patrolled the beach
under the high shores of Lake Michi
gan just off Lake Rluff today watching
for the bodies of six of their compan
ions, drowned when a cutter bearing a
pleasure party whs capsized 300 feet
from shore yesterday. Watch for the
bodies had been continued all night,
but only five of the eleven believed to
have lost their lives had been recovered
early this morning
Officers at the training school today
began checking up of the apprentices
to find out exactly how many persons
were in the party a bon’d the cutter.
“The best estimate now is that there
/were 25 boys in the boat.” said (’ap
tain Fullam, of the cutter. “How
ever, there may have been one nr
two more or less. We are now check
ing up to determine accurately. Four
teen of the boys were rescued. Five
aie known to have drowned. We be
lieve the bodies of six others are in the
water.”
Government to Investigate.
There will be two investigations of
the : ragedy. One w ill be an inquest to
deterinin • the nienner of deafch and
make a formal report. The other will
be made by a naval board of inquiry.
Chief Gunner’s Mate W. Negus, who
was in change of th* party, blamed
himself for the irag dy. Although
<’aptain I’ullnm that Negus did
all that euuM be doae, the cutter’s
commander has disappeared and it was
feared at the naval station todav that
he may have harme 1 himself. Search
for him was begun.
The accident occurred after the cut
ter had been rowc.l rouie distance into
the lake. A noithwest wind sprang up
md Negus turned and strove vainly to
reach the shore. *
The wind freshen- d to a gale and the
inexperienced lads became seasick and
practically helpless at tn” oars Negus
tried to reaHi the training station, but
driven before the gale changed his
course to reach the lake bluff pier.
Three hundred feet from shore he
threw oat an anchor, hoping to hold
the boat off the beach where the waves
were carrying i». It capsized and the
crew tunibl d into the water. Many of
the boys could not swim.
Uncle Ezict Says
"it don’t take mot-e’n a gill uv effort
to git folks into a peck of trouble" and
a little neglect of constipation, bilious
ness, indigestion or other liver de
rangement will do the same. If ailing,
take Dr. King's New Life Pills for quick
results. Ea-y. safe, sure, and onlj 25
cents at all druggists. •••
(Advertisement.)
Mr. \\ S. Gunsalus, a farmer living
neat Fleming, Pa., says he has used
<'hamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy in his family for four
teen years, and that he has found It to
be an excellent remedy, and takes
pleasure in recommending it. For sale
by nil dealers
(Advertisement.)
EXQUISiTE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 1180.
(Advertisement.)
S3MR
Health is the foundation of all good
■ looks. The wise woman realizes this
and takes precautions to preserve her
, health and strength through the pe
i riod of child bearing. She remains a
pretty mother by avoiding as far as
possible the suffering and dangers of
such occasions. This every woman
may do through the use of Mother’s
' Friend, a remedy that has been so long
in use, and accomplished so much
good, that it is in no sense an experi
ment, but a preparation which always
produces the best results. It is for
sxternal application and so penetrating
In its nature as to thoroughly lubricate
every muscle, nerve and tendon in
volved during the period before baby
comes. It aids nature by expanding
the skin and tissues, relieves tender
ness and soreness, and perfectly pre
pares the system for natural and safe
motherhood. Mother’s Friend has been
used and endorsed by thousands of
mothers, and its use will prove a com
fort and benefit nii- y
to any woman in C II {TyI fS/? 7A
need of such a
remedy. Mother’s •cf’Zri
Friend is sold at
drug stores. Write for free book sot
expectant mothers, which contains
much valuable information.
IRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
3