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VANDERBILT GOP
RACE POSTPONED
Rain Puts Track in Bad Condi
tion- Event May Take Place
Next Week.
MILWAUKEE, Sept. 21. Rain that
fell all night left the Wauwatosa course
ov< r which the Vanderbilt cup race was
b> have been run today a sea of mud
int.-ispi ised with pools of water, with i
' i! “ result’ that the race was officially
1 "' arch indefinitely postponed an hour
''‘foil time for tlie. start. The track
as in very bad condition.
ih officials were loath to call off the
>VI ni. The drivers returned dis
gustedly to their hotels today,
h was secretly agreed yesterday
1 if the races could not he run today
an ai tempt would be made to hold them
ear'y next , week.
' though official postponement named
n “ date for the race, plans to
run the race Tuesday have tentative
lv been made. According to the plans,
■ Wisconsin cup and Pabst trophy
would be made morning features
Tuesday, with the Vanderbilt cup
‘ afternoon card and the grand prize
"cdnesday. Some of the officials fa-
" a postponement of ten days, to give
' ratio r conditions times to settle and
’•' l the course in better shape.
RURAL letter carriers
CHOOSE NEW OFFICERS
/ASHVILLE, TENN., Sept. 21.—L.
" Brockway, of Clinton, N. Y., was last
?ht chosen president of the National
‘■ural Letter Carriers association at the
"atlonal convention that closed its four
; session. L. H. Wilson, of Olivia,
•dlnn.. was re-elected secretary. Evans
e, Ind., was chosen as the next meet.
,n K place.
Mrs. J. J. Mobley.
I he body of Mrs. J. ,T. Mobley, of
‘■'/field, Ga., who died at an Atlanta
sanitarium yesterday, was taken to the
. ’ lll \ hdnic today for funeral and in
l!l‘nt She is survived by her hus-
W'l and one son, at Oslerfleld.
READ THIS.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney and
•Mrier troubles, removing gravel, cures
.abetes, weak and lame backs, rheuma
’tn, and all Irregularities of the kidneys
»nd bladder In both men and women
•emulates oladder troubles In children
‘ r.ot sold by your druggist, will be Bunt
' niell on receipt of JI.OO. One small
’“‘ e , two months’ treatment and eel
(?*ls to Perfect a cure. Send for tes
■ ’blalr. from this and other states Dr
" / u Hall, 2026 OUve-Bt.. St. Louis. Ma
“ad by muggins.
FATE OE TROOPS
■MG 0. S.
No News From Nicaragua
Alarms Washington-—Plan
to Send Aid.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 21. -Unless
within the next 24 hours definite news
re’aches Washington concerning the
outcome of the battle between the
| American marines and the rebel forces
near Granada, the state department will
require that the Tenth infantry, now
at Panama, be. sent immediately to
Nicaragua to succor the American
troops. Government officials are thor
oughly alarmed for the safety of the
900 marines who left Managua to open
away to Granada and who, it is
feared, met with a vastly superior force
of rebels and may have been annihi
lated.
Less than a wek ago it was confi
dently announced that the American
forces in Nicaragua were amply able to
take care of any contingency which
might arise from the Latin-American
republic and that the revolt was prac
tically at an end. Today state depart
ment officials fear that the United
States is facing the worst foreign prob
lem it has met since the Spanish-
American war. for the Nicaraguan
rebels, unlike the majority of the Latin-
American revolutionary forces, are well
armed, disciplined and equipped with
the latest word in ordnance.
In order to capture Granada, where
women are being assaulted aqd men
barbarously tortured, the American
force will have to storm and take Fort
San Francisco, which Is manned by
General Mena's trained gunners and
which effectually guards all approaches
to the town.
As the marines have but three three
inch field guns with them, this, it is
thought, will be a most dangerous un
dertaking, and that the dispatch of
army reinforcements would be a pol
itic move. The infantry could reach
Nicaragua in two days and would be of
great aid in subduing the rebels.
| ARMY ORDERS |
WASHINGTON. Sept. 21 —Army orders:
Major Harry L. Pettus, quartermaster
corps now at Boyce. Va.. to office chief
quartermaster. Lieutenant Colonel Harry
L. Hawthorne, coast artillery corps, to
Ft. Hancock. N. I . and assume command.
Lieutenant Colonel Charles Grierson, from
Tenth cavalry for general recruiting ser
vice at Ft. McDowell. California. Lieu
tenant Colonel Joseph A Gasion, cavalry
assigned to Tenth cavarly.
■JTIIN Al LAA l A (iKObXiIAxX Ai\l) NEWS SATURDAY, SEPTEAi BEK 21. 1!»12.
J//
STOP GOSSIPING
TO BE BEAUTIFUL,
WOMAN ADVISES
NEW YORK. Sept. 21.—“ Paris worn- 1
. en never have the sallow complexion j
you see in this country," declared Mrs
Otto Weil, wife of the business manager:
of the Metropolitan Opera house, who I
returned after four months in Europe.
“Parisians who have reached the age
of fifty retain the grace and shapeliness
of twenty-four, and every one that I
asked for the reason for the wonderful
preservation of youth told me to eat
sparingly, drink sparingly, walk consid
erably, dream neveb and gossip not at
all.
“Thgre are no beautiful French wom
en who refuse to take exercise, and
their favorite daily recreation is walk
ing. You never see a French woman
gorging herself at a midnight restau
rant after the opera or theater. In
stead she eats a little salad and drinks
a little wine. Shp never drinks water’
SAILORS FORCED TO
BURN RAMMED BRIG
AT SEA; ASK $25,000
■ SAVANNAH. GA.. Sept. 21.—Through
the negligence of the steamer Roselands,
the Brigantine Sceptre, in command of
Captain Henry Burke, was rammed and
damaged to such an extent that It waffi
necessary to set fire to her while at sea
near Savannah, September 9, according to
a libel suit filed in the United States
court by Zwecker & Co., Ltd., owners
of the Sceptre, in which they ask for
$25,000, damages.
It is alleged in the libel that the
Brigantine was showing proper lights, and
used other signals, but that in spite of
these precautions the Roselands bore
down upon her and rammed her. hurting
her so badly that it was necessary to
sink her.
The crew of the Brigantine was brought
lo Savannah on the Roselands. Both were
British vessels.
SAVES TOWN
AT PERIL OF HER OWN LIFE
COSHOCTON. OHIO. Sept. 21.—Fire
threatened the destrtiction of New Cas
tle, near here, last night. As It was
the flames, which started in the store
of G. W. Darling, spread to eight other
buildings, causing a lose of $25,000.
That the destruction was not greater
was due to the pluck of Mrs. Dillon, the,
village telephone operator, who re
mained at her post, summoning help
from neighboring places, although hei
life was in danger and her own horn l
wa.- threatened by the flames.
-3 WRr
SENATOR DIXON TELLS
WHY HE LINES UP WITH
T, R.'S PROGRESSIVES
By JOSEPH M. DIXON,
Chairman of the Progressive National
Committee.
NEW YORK. Sept, 21 .—Republicans
and Democrats often ask me why, I
have allied myself with a “third party”
which can not possibly elect a presi
dent. I tell them that not only can the
Progressive party elect a president, but
it will elect a president. And I tell
them, further, that 1 should ally my
self with it whether it could elect a
president or not.
Most of the thinking men of this
country have recognized for years that
a new party was a necessity. They
have tried to vote with the old parties
1 with a clear conscience, and they have
failed to do so. The result has been
that they have either shut their eyes
when they voted or stayed away from
the polls.
The reason is simple. The old par
ties have promised the things that the
people have asked for; they have got
the votes of the people in considera
tion of those promises, but after they
have got the votes it has never occurred
to them for a minute that they had any
duty to perform for the people that
gave them the votes.
Lives Dedicated to Progress.
We have no record of achievement—
that we admit. But we have in our
party men whose lives are dedicated to
progress, men who can be trusted to
tatry out progressive principles if they
are elected to office.
Our candidate for the presidency has
been a progressive, although for years
he was allied with the Republican par
ty. Our candidate for governor lias
been a progressive, although for years
he was allied with the same party.
I do not think the enemies of either
Theodore Roosevelt or Oscar Straus t an
challenge that statement.
Mr. Roosevelt, as president of tln-
United States, made the Standard Oil
Company his implacable foe. If any
higher commendation can be given him
thm that. I do not know what it is.
H« made the Guggenhcims his mortal
en< nii> s. He caused William Lorimer
jgsa& ■s><■■- >■' ■*-
Elizabeth Dent, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. 11. W. Dent, on
lej’t. anil Pauline Swain, (laugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Swain.
to denounce him publicly. He aroused
the enmity of the Beef trust, of the
Tobacco trust, of every one of the com
binations of capital whose greed is re
sponsible for the present high cost of
living, which comes more nearly to
being the real issue in this campaign
than any other.
Mr. Straus in his capacity as minis
ter to Turkey averted a very serious
situation and probably saved this coun
try the horrors of a war with Turkey.
As secretary of the bureau which he
himself describes as the "bureau of hu
manity." he made a splendid record.
A People’s Platform.
It is not believable that a party
which would (,-nlist the sympathies'and
the energies of two such men as this
is not a party whose purpose is’to up
lift the whole people.
I have spoken in some detail of our
platform, and 1 shall speak of it later
In still more detail. As I have said, it
is a platform that comes from the
people, a people's platform, and the
reason we are finding it welcomed
everywhere is because it awakens a
responsive chord in the breasts of all
honest men.
Progress after all. is only tin enun
ciation principle. "Thou Shalt
Not Steal." The only thing we are
seeking to' do is to put thieves in jail
to the end that they shall cease to
interfere with honest men and women.
I
The housewives of this City are the most intelligent
found anywhere —that’s why they refuse to pay more
for other brands, when they can buy at moderate cost
VBh W W
WMTTtJ
the purest and most wholesome Baking Powder made.
Sold by all good Grocer*. Insist on having it.
INSTREL FACES
SISOOSUITHERE
Al G. Field to Fight Action of
| Shuberts for Alleged Broken
Contract.
When Al G. Field, the minstrel man,
comes to Atlanta early next week he
will appear in superior court to settle
a litigation over 4 contract for use
of the Grand theater last time he was
. here, said to have been made with the
Shuberts. The case will be heard by
' Judge Pendleton Tuesday morning.
Mr. Field Is under $3,000 bond to
guarantee the collection of damages by
the Shuberts. in case the court awards
1 a judgment in their favor. The bond was
signed by Forrest Adair, Atlanta real
. estate man, last September.
The case originated in 1911, when Mr.
Field was preparing to give four per
formances Ifi Atlanta, September 28 to
30. He opened at the Atlanta theater
and the Shuberts, owners of the Grand,
sued him. charging broken contract.
1 They asked $1,500.
I ... - . .
WOMAN BITTEN BY
MOSQUITOES SUES
ROME; ASKS $3,000
, ROME, GA., Sept. 21.- Mosquito and
fly bites and a stagnant pond are respon
sible for damage suit against the city
1 of Romo. Mrs. J. H. Harris wants $3,000.
i Jler claims are being heard in the city
I court.
Mrs. Harris says that three years ago
there was a stagnant pond next to her
home; that the stench from it was awful;
that mosquitoes and flies from the pond
. bit her, and that the bacteria they car
, ried in their stings gave her the
She says the city was at fault for not
' keeping the drainage ditches in front of
the pond cleaned..
“DOW” ROLLS
HIDE BIG THEFT
Officials Mystified in Tracing
$55,000 Stolen in Transit
From Pensacola Bank.
PENSACOLA, FLA., September 21
The theft from an L. and N. train re
ported yesterday by officials is said to
day to have been in transit a package
containing $55,000 from the First Na
tional bank in thin city to officials of
the lamisville and Nashville railroad at
Flomaton, Ala, The money was part ot
a shipment of $75,000 intended as a
pay roll, and was In bills of small de
nominations.
Reposts were current thgt the west
bound Louisville and Nashville train,
leaving here Wednesday morning, had
been held up and robbed, but this is
emphatically denied by railroad officials
here. Private detectives and special
agents of the railroad and Southern
Express Company are herein vestfgat-
Ing the affair.
The money was put in two sealed
packages at the bank, one centalninj
$55,000 and the other $20,000. Thesi
packages were delivered to the South
ern Express Company and in turn de
livered by them to the Louisville an<
Nashville pay car at Flomaton, to be
used in paving off the men as the cat
came south to Pensacola.
On being opened in the pay car. it
is said, the money package was found
to contain a roll of pages from a maga
zine In place of the money. The ex
press messengers. It Is said, claim the
seals on the packages were unbroken
while the packages were in their care.
No report has been made by the de
tectives investigating the matter, and
railroad and express officials refuse to
discuss the disappearance of the money.
TO RESUME MONEY TRUST
PROBE LATE IN NOVEMBER
NEW YORK. Sept. 21.—The Pujo con
gressional committee, which began its
investigation into the so-called money
trust in June, will resume its hearings
In the latter part of November. It 1«
possible that the hearings will be shifted
from New York to Washington at the
request of some of the committeemen.
WILTON JELLICO I
COAL
$4.75 Per Ton
SEPTEMBER DELIVERY
I The Jellico Coal Co.
82 Peachtree Street
J Both Phones 3668
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