Newspaper Page Text
2
I. fl. LEAVES FDR
HOME; TIRED OF ■
HOSPITAL-
Crowds Gather at Station and
Shout Good-Bye to the
Colonel and Party.
tempted to force r.i- way in: < > 'tie < , ■ -
net '.« room Moijnw had hi •»,: .-i,<,<>
force his way aboard the Pennsylvania
t ra I n
V ' oud bad gatheied ahoi:: the has- ,
pital befoie a n n Lines were estab
lished and they were forced to stand,
some distant' awv {• om the building.
The crowd was orderly tn the extreme
There nss little of the shouting that
u*uail< narks th" cr.-wds tl nt greet
the colonel In (’hicago Instead those!
who appeared iwi» evidentl. either
drawn by < >ll ioalty nr in an effort to'
sh'"' their regard for the colonel with-|
>U' causing anv Undue ex, hmnetn
Several men whose appearance
.reused the suspicion of the noli, i were
tufetly escorted through the crowd and I
lold to go <>rg of these men is said;
io he the principal of a south side]
school, w ho defied polite authority ami
demanded a righ: to «tand ma the hos
pital He whs unable to furnish proof >
of his identity.
Another man asserted that in ■ :n;
correspondent for a Philadelphia news
paper, but wis unable Io show any i■" - 1
dentin .« and was put outside the Hit ■-
Th< police detail was under command •
of Lieutenant Edward Brady As-i.-i-!
ant t'hlef Hetman Sehm ttler had m om ■
ihe arrangements and was in personal '
■ ommaud of the plain clothe,s mon who'
formed the < olon°i's bodyguard.
Secrecy Maintained
About Departure Plans
Stereo' guard'd the plan* of thej
Roosevelts until the moment of depat-i
tore for the station. At (list it hat'
boen anntiunted that the' would go to,
the union station where their special!
I
car was said to have been waiting.;
Later it was announced that the polk- |
and the former president's confidential'
advisers considered making the star! I
from the Englewood station nt Sixty-I
third street. Late; another sniff wasj
made, and it w its annottm ed thai the ear
was waiting at hw Twelfth street ata
tion. at whn •- known as the . ommls- '
Wy station f the Pennsylvania, con
nected by a roundabout spur track w ith
its yards ne;" Englewood
Colonel Cecil Lyon was In personal
change of these arrangements. He con
sulted with Philip Roosevelt and The
od- re Roosevelt. Jr.
A: 7:22 Colonel Roost ’"II left his!
room. He was •eated in a wheeled'
chair and carried down the stair- He|'
left the hospital by the Twcntx “wilt; 1
street entrance. He wore a dark blue I
dressing gown' and looked cheerful mid I.
strong.
flood morning, hors, he said as ,m !
was wheeled through the hall where p
the newst a per men were uniting.
"Hnw’te you feeling, colone'? ' they
aaked
' ,u ‘i‘ to fight for nw life," he an- ,
awered. ,
Plain clothes men fell in behind the •
colonel as ho was helped to the waiting ,
limousine Two lines of officers formed i
a path through which the short dis- [
tance from the doorway to the waiting |
machine was made f
Crowd Cheers, t
Roosevelt Waves.
Th" crowd had increased tremen- ,
dously In the half hour before thp colo
nel left the building They were some
Utile distance fiom the hospital en- 1
trance, but they saw the colonel's exit 1
and there was a cheep
The colonel grinned His old hat
was jerked from his head and he waved ,
it at the crowd with a flourish that
brought another deafening cheer
If. Lambert preceded Roosevelt to'
I 1
the ambulance The colonel walked l
from the hospital door t<f the convex- t
ance. His step was firm and steady. (
Hrs Murphy and Terrell followed the
colonel. (
Eight motm cycle police formed the (
main escort of the ambulance Twelve ,
plain clothes men and twenty uniform- ,
ed police entered waiting automobiles i
and made the short run to the sta- ,
tion (
On the hospital steps the nurses and i'
sisters and attaches of the hospital wcie
grouped. The colonel turned to them. I
r-m led and said. "Good-bye. all. '
Once in th" ambulance Roosevelt lav ;
down on the swinging cot that had been
let down along one side of the convey -
ance In order that he might not hr
fatigued, th" ambulance was driven I ;
very slowly. Two motorcycle policemen H
headed the .ittie procession.
Police Officials
Everywhere.
Nexi was in automobile in which As- ■
sistant t’hi-f Schuettlei and tne plain '
clothes men rode Next came the am j'
bulance with motorcycle police on!
either side.
Hollowing was aimthe automobile in
which Colonel Chauncey Dewey. local I
leadei of the f'i ogi i-ss^ y e party and I
more plain clothes meh we seated.|
Mrs. Roosevelt, Miss Ethel and Theo
dore, Jr. were in the next iua< him
Colonei Cecil Lyon was in another cat
Iwith a number of policemen ami still
others brought up tije real.
V the station 50 uniformed polite, i
commanded by Chief of Police Me
lt eeney. were lined up along the private
ca r.
Hundreds of persons nad found out
where the private car wa< waiting and
they crowded around as 'lovely as the
police would permit Plain • orh'-s i.icn I
Cr »eyei yv. uej r The mo/ ■ of theny r •
in the row ri gathered at th«- nr weir,
working men
Dr. Lambert was the hist to leave the I
Gen. Evans Takes Charge of Department of Gulf
LAUDS SOUTH'S MILITIA
f $ V■ ■
/St
Wm Hl
i 'V
yiMI
I I \
y
Brigadier (icncral K. K. Kvatt'C new commander of the de
partment of the gulf, who has arrived, with his family, to lake
up his new duties.
ambulance Colomd Roosevelt follow
ed. Scheutthwas standing by the
ambulance door
'Hello, chief how ;i:e you?" slid the
colonel. "You look iusi Ido the morn
ing."
The assistant thief. arraye.r in lull
uniform, blushed at the coion- ■,'« com
ment.
Roosevelt walked unassisted to the
car and mounted the steps unassisted.
Party Off in
Two Private Cars.
Tile trip to tiw station was made in
an ambulance instead of a limoti-ino as
bad bean expected.
As the door dinged behind him the
colonel waved his hat' again. Amid
shouts, the ambulance moved forward
at . : 2i>.
"('lose in. xoii men" cried Assistant
Chief Schuettlm. and th" police sur
rounded the conveyance.
The Roosevelt party is traveling in
two private cars attached to train No
16. on the Pennsylvania railroad. in
the forward ear Colonel Roose’volt, Mrs.
Roosevelt. Miss Ethel. Theodore, Jr.
and Mrs Alice bongworllt are quar
tered
Drs. Terrell and l.<tmb"it and the
newspaper correspondents, Sec re la..v
McGrath and Stenograph-- Ma Hnw-re
established in the second car. A bell
cord was arranged from tin compart
ment occupied by the voldnel so that he
could summon eithei physician at will.
The ambulance drew up a the. com
missary station at Twelfth street and
Wentworth avenue. The cars were
waiting there. The cvlqnel got aboard
and the ears moved southward to the
main line of the Pennsylvania.
The cars were finally switched into
the I'nion station and attached to the
train there
A big crowd had gathe’ed at the sta
tion. When it was announced that the
colonel would not start from there
many of them left and only a few te
mained until the ear "Idea!." on which
Roosevelt was riding, rolled into the
station and was attached to the train.
Stands on Platform
Waves to Crowd
As he stood on the platform of his
private car the crowd around cheered.
Roosevelt lifted his hat
"Good-bye." he said. “Good-bye, all."
Then he entered the car
There were more chee's while M s
Roosevelt and the other members of
the party boarded the car.
Ml along tli? streets though which
the ambulance passed spectators stood.
In Michigan avenue a number of per
sons in automobiles tried to get dost
enough to tin- ambulance to catch s grit
of the colonel, but they were kept bacit
by the moto cycle officers.
As the cavalcade passed oxer the
Twelfth Street viaduct hundreds of la
bpring men on their way to work
stopped to watch the procession and
tile co,one! was c.ll-ered repeatedly.
Mrs Alice Longworth joineu tit
t rain at the I 'tllon si a tioti
Tile train was delayed a few minuies
by a w i <•< k in t Ip- y < rds.
The pain pulled out safely. ifon
ilieu- of persons tin.p y mad- tiieii way
to tin station and cheered. Othets
lined th- railings along t'anal street,
two blocks from site station, ami shout
cd as u- -hi s c.a swept by Plain
clotne* men w- re -tatioped on th*
b-tnges and \ a.lu-'t undet w hich th.
train pawsed as it ft the station
C'owii- not p■ miipr tn , onp-i -
ga: e th■- ’ e
I)• - on-' I s I rain w .«- ju 1 r, p n
minutes late. At Englewood a monster
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.AfONDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1912.
Veteran Warrior Declares He Is!
Glad To Be in “Dixie's
Livest City.”
i
«
Brigadini General R. K. Evans, the
, newly appointed-emtiniander of the De
partment of the Gulf, has taken up his
active duties in that office and now is
in full charge of the troops in the
Southern states.
i General Evans, who served in the
- Indian wars, the Spanish-American and
the l-'iliplno wars, likes the efficiency
•10l the troops in the South and is glad
I to retu n. He was born in Mississippi
1 ami was graduated ftom W est Point in
IS 75.
"1 do not expect to make any inno
vations in tin* department, because I
don t think innovation- are necessary."
i said the general yesterday .
"I like your national guard," lie re
i marked as he ’finished a conversation
over the telepnone with General Obea..
. of the National Guard of Georgia. "The
l-’ifth regiment men appear to be a fine
lot of sold-e s and are well officered. 1
am interested in the national guard
and the organization of slate troops.
• for 1 believe every man is the better
for some military • service.
Atlanta is a tine city." lie said, as
■ he walked down Peachtree at the Can
dler building. "It is the live-t Southern
city 1 know. The people here do thing’
and they're as hospitable as can be. It
■ make." one feel nt home when neigh
bors offer assistance as soon as one
• arrives, and that is what they did here.”
Genera Evans Is accompanied to At
i lanta by his wife, and his son. Lieu-
■ tenam Evans, who is his chief aid. The
g< neral served- in many of the Indian
wars on tin frontier during the seven-
■ ties, and also was head of the national
• guard for a time. He is one of the old
est men in point of service in the army
i and has a record for gallantry on the
> field.
MARSHALL IS TRYING TO
STARVE OUT CONVICTS
RAWLINS, VVYO.. Oct. 21.—-Richard-
I son. Haxtrum and Burke, three of the
convicts who escaped from the state peni
tentiary. are reported to have been lo
cated in a mountain fastness on Bridger
pass. .16 miles southwest of here
f Bridger pass is a narrow trail across
the mountains, where a few men could
] hold off a regiment as long as their food
supply held nut Marshal Hayes, of Raw
lins. lias left here with a large posse, in
tending to surround the three men and
starve them out.
. ■ i > ■ - - ■ .
LAUDER TO DO HAMLET:
HAS NEVER SEEN PLAY
i Lt'NHON. Oct, 21 Harry Lauder, the
1 Scotch cnoitdiiiu. tas been engaged to
play the prince in a production of "Ham-
. let.' He never saw the. play
s crowd was gathered Tltete the colonel,
w ith a daik blue dressing gown thrown
around him and wearing his dark blue
■' pajamas, waved ills good-byt from the
' ■ ear door of the car
Mis. Roosevelt tried to restrain him.
but the colonei insisted on acknowledg-
■ ing the greeting
Tie train let' Englewood fifteen min
utes behind its scheduled tim> and
reached Smith t'hi-aco nt f»: ■•.’> o't lock.
- The colonei was vine tn his berth
when the train pas*>-d 'mi". Mr’
i Roo.-eyelt was s-tiing beside l-.et htts
: band fanning him
•MILITIA INDORSES
EDITORIAL OF I
GEORGIAN
National Guard Officers Adopt;
Resolution Praising Stand on
Martial Law.
. r
AiA<’<)\. GA.. Oct. 21.—The Atlanta
I Georgian's editorial on "Jlartial Law "i
I was enthusiastically indorsed by the i
| annua! convention of the Georgia Na
l tional Guard Officers association ini
Macon Saturday afternoon.
x reso ution was passed expressing
the sentiment of the association that
the police and sheriffs of all troubled |
[communities -liotild exhaust every es
! forff to restore peace before calling for |
j the militia. The resolution also em
j bodied the thanks of the association to
| The Atlanta Georgian for its timely
land forceful utterance on a matter of
i such grave and general importance.
Reads Editorial.
Adjutant General \V. G. Obear read
i The Georgian s editorial to the meet-
I Ing. and then read the letter which
Governor Joseph M. Brown sent to The
Georgian commending the editorial. He
also stated that the editorial had been
formally indorsed by the National
Guard officers in Atlanta, arid as it
seemed perfectly to express the cor
rect sentiment, he thought it proper
and advisable for the National Guard
Officers association of Georgia also to
express its appreciation of the attitude
taken by The Georgian.
The secretary,. Captain Cooper D.
i Winn. Jr., of Macon, was instructed to
draw up tile resolution and make it a
| part of the minutes of the meeting.
General Obear stated to the meeting
| that he thought the editorial the most
I valuable and most illuminating dis-
I course on the martial law question that
(lias yet appeared in Georgia, and the
I other njtlitary officers concurred with
1 him.
Atlantan President.
Major Claude C. Smith, of Atlanta,
was re-elected president of the asso
ciation. Captain Cooper D.- Winn, Jr.,
of Macon, was elected secretary and
treasurer. The convention was ad
dressed by Brigadier General R. K.
Evans, commajtder of the Department
of tlfe Gulf, who declared that the peo
ple of the I’nited States did not lend
the proper' support to the militia. He
said It was a mistaken idea that this
country should mobilize,an army over
night. as it were. Other addresses were
made by General Obear, Major Smith.
Major F. L. Palmer. Captain R. H. Ma
son, Major J. D. Seamans. Captain W.
T. Spratt and others.
SON FINDS FATHER.
AIISSING FOR WEEKS,
SAFE IN ALMSHOUSE
J. A. Bailey, of 17 Lucy street, mys
teriously missing for two weeks, was
found today in the county alms house,
where he had been since he strayed
from his home. Bailey is so old and
infirm that he was unable to give any
information as to his identity.
W. H. Bailey, his son, came to the
police several days ago and asked that
a'search be made for his father. To
day Chief Rowan, of the county’ police,
reported'that the aged man was in the
alms house.
The old man was found in a little
stream on the line between Fulton and
Campbell counties about ten days ago.
half-drowned and ill from exposure. He
could give no intelligent account of his
identity and was placed in the Tower
for a day or two and then transferred
to the alms house. His son will take
him home and care for him.
MAKES DELIBERATE PLANS
for Committing suicide
MACON. GA., Oct. 21.—James J.
Broxton, a Macon grocer, shot and kill
ed himself, after det daring to his wife
and family that on account of ill health
he did n d care to live any longer. The
suicidi was committed with unusual
deliberation. He at ranged all of liis
business and persona! affairs, told his
family farewell, saying he was going
on a "trip." and then put a bullet in
his brain He was a well-known Ma
con citizen, and had for many years
conducted several stores in the Vine
ville section.
CANDIDATES ANNOUNCE
FOR WAYCROSS COUNCIL
WAYCROSS, GA.. Oct. 21.—Allen S.
Morton and C. M. Williams have an
nounced for aidermen from the Fifth
ward, anti others are thinking of en
tering the contest. In the First. .1. T.
Hopkins and H. Lester Marvil are the
probable contestants for the position
now tilled by James Sinclair, who will
not offer for re-election In the Third
it is generally understood that Fred
Br-we: the incumbent, will have no op
position.
PEDDLERS FINED SIOO EACH.
WAYCROSS. GA. Oct 21.—1 t costs
sl(Hi or nine months on the ehaingang
. to peddle without a licence in Ware!
county. This is the sentence imposed
by Judge John C. McDonald on five
peddlers. Four have paid the tine and
the fifth may pay out this week.
MORE CARS FOR WAYCROSS.
WAYCROSS. GA.. Oct. 21. —Addi
tional eats for the street railway are!
existed hole this week to he used on!
the Winona Park line which Is being
const ru'ted. The material for tite Gil-'
ihi Ist Park line is arriving and w m-k !
will he rushed on it w fftn the park "x- '
i tertsion is flnisbf’’
Woman Can Live on $75 a Month, Says Judge
REFUSES $l5O ALIMONY
MACON, GA.. Oct. 21. —Mrs.' Minnie
Ottinger Hartz has been awarded $75
per month alimony from her husband.
Morris wealthy’ Macon elec
trical engineer. She asked the court
for . a monthly allowance of $l5O, but
the judge in rendering the decision Sat
urday afternoon, said he thought any
woman could live comfortably’ on half
that much every month. Mrs. Hartz
valued her husband's real estate hold
ings in Macon .at. $.24,00.0, and said that
he was. a graduate of Georgia Tech and
capable of earning SSOO pet month in
his profession.
Air. and Airs. Hartz were married in
FEDERAL SHELLS
FOR VERA GRDZ
Mexican Troops Bombard Port
Held by General Diaz. New
Revolt Leader.
.MEXICO CITY. Oct. 21. —Federal ar
tille y. under General Beltral, began
bombarding the suburbs of Vera Cruz
at dawn, according to a dispatch re
ceived here by the government over the
wires of the Inter-Oceanic railway.
General Beltral had broken through the
:ebel lines west of the city, although lie
did not try to enter Vera Cruz, where
General Felix Diaz has his headquar
ters.
The United States cruiser Des Moines
and a German liner are in the harbor to
protect foreign interests. Captain Chas.
F. Hughes, of the Des Moines, has been
informed by General Diaz that the in
surgents would not molest foreigners.
Diaz has Issued a proclamation to his
rebel soldiers not to interfere with
Americans or other feeigrifers. nor to
injure property owned by foreigners.
Rebels seizing armaments or provisions
are expected to pay full value for them.
President Madero is trying to raise
an army of 10.000 men to defend this
city. The situation is critical here. An
attack from the 3.000 Zapatists. who
are gathered west and south of the
capital, is believed imminent.
Orozco Said to Be in South,
One report that was current today
was that Pascual Orozco. Jr., former
;ebel commander in the north, had come
south to help lead an attack upon this
city.
News that tlie Twenty-first battalion,
stationed on the island of L’lua. in the
harbor at Vera. Cruz, had gone over to
the Diaz cause, was expected. The loy
alty of this battalion had been in ques
tion since Diaz raised his standard at
Vera Cruz.
Mexico City got little sleep last night.
Rumors of the most disquieting nature
w ere circulated, keeping the people in a
ferment. Bands of students paraded
the streets, most of the night carrying
aloft pictures of Porifiro Diaz.
A strong guard of rurales patrolled
the streets and another detachment was
placed upon the grounds of the national
palace.
All the defenses of the city a e being
strengthened. AIF available artillery is
being placed upon the suburban heights
to command the surrounding country.
Double pay is being offered today to
laborers to work upon earth works and
block houses which are being erected.
The old works, which were erected
upon previous threatened invasions, are
also being used.
ATLANTA SOLDIER
DROWNS SELF IN
POND NEAR FORT
Hayden Thurman, a private in the
Seventeenth regiment, enlisted from At
lanta, was found dead in a pond near
Fort McPherson late Saturday night.
The coroner's jury returned a verdict
of suicide by drowning. •
Chaplain Durrant, of the regiment,
declares that most suicides among the
soldiers come in times of peace when
the regiment is inactive for some time.
Two other soldiers in the same regi
ment committed suicide several months
ago. Raymond A. Snyder and Arthur
Llewellyn ended their lives with car
bolic acid
Thurman was but 24 years of age
and had enlisted because of a desire
to see the world. He was unhappy when
assigned to the Seventeenth, stationed
nearest to Atlanta, and four months
ago attempted to commit suicide by
carbolic acid. A policeman prevented
him. He was an orphan and was rear
e'd by William H. Tull, of Oakland City .
He joined the army two years ago
The funeral will be held this after
noon at 2 o'clock at the chapel at Fort
McPherson. Interment will be in the
national cemetery at Marietta.
MORPHINE
Liquor and Trbacco Addictions Cured
Within Ten Days by Our New
Painless Method.
Only Sanitarium in the World Giving
Unconditional Guarantee
<»ur guarantee means sonietliing. Not
mie dollar need he paid until a satis
factory cure has been effected. •
We control complete!} the usual with
drawal symptoms. No extreme nervous
ness. achinc limbs, or loss nf sleep Pa
tients unable to visit Sanitarium tan be
treat ecl private!? at home. References:
The Mayor of our cit> . the President < f
an\ Bank, nr any Citizen of Lebanon
Write for Free Booklet No 2 \ -
CUMBERLAN'D SANITARIUM.
F. J. SANDERS. Met.. Lebanon. Tenn.
February of this year and separated in
June, after she had bad an illness, of
three months that cost $1,500. She was
formerly the wife of George Niemen.
of Atlanta, whom she married in At
lanta by Rabbi David Marx on Oc
tober 2, 1901. She left him six weeks
later and subsequently secured a di
vorce on the grounds of ill treatment.
The’ present divorce suit will not b"
heard until next February. Mrs. Hartz
charges her husband with extreme cruel
treatment. At the hearing on the ali
mony question, he proposed a recon
ciliation. but she refused to return to
him unless he deeded his property’ to
her. and he refused to do that.
MILD DUCKS KILL
OIL FIELD PROFIT
f
Mistake of These Fowls Costs
Tampico Operators Many
Thousands of Dollars.
TAAIPICO,' MEXICO. Oct 21.—Wild
ducks are causing losses aggregating'
many thousands of dollars to the oil
operators of the fields in the Tampico
territory.
Offhand, it would be a hard matter to
guess how these fowls could hurt the
oil business.
This is the way they do it: With the
first beginning of the cold season in the
more northern portion of the United
States myriads of wild ducks took their
flight southward, millions of them con
tinuing far down into Mexico.
Owing to the inadequate steel tank
age storage facilities, many of the oil
producers have been forced during the
last several months to build earthen
tanks to care for the big output of
crude oil. Some of these earthen reser
voirs contain as much as 2.000.000 bar
rels of the product.
When the present wild duck season
opened it was found that the fowls
wer» apparently unable to distinguish
the lakes of oil from water, and as a
result they settled upon the placid sur
face of the oil reservoirs in great num
bers.
The oil is of such- a thick, heavy’
character that the ducks were unaWe
to fly when their feathers became sat
urated with the fluid.
As a remit the trapped ones have
died by the thousands, greatly impair
ing and in some cases ruining the qual
ity of the oil. it is said.
In order to keep the fowls away from
the open oil reservoir, most of the pro
ducers maintain a guard at these places
day- and night. Even with all the
["shooing” the Mexicans can do. it is
impossible to prevent the ducks from
lighting upon the oil in large numbers
SOUTHERN’S DOUBLE
TRACK TO FORWARD
PEACH MOVEMENT
Construction of the double track line
north of Atlanta between Crosskeys and
Gainesville on the Southern railway will
be completed before January 1. 1913,
and will aid materially in the movement
of next season's peach crop. This in
formation is carried in the annual re
port issued today.
With the completion of this work the
company will have in operation between
Atlanta and Washington 288.35 miles of
double track, or 41 per cent of the total
mileage.
During the year the lap sidings be
tween Atlanta and Macon were com
pleted and placed in operation. They
are equipped with block houses and in
terlocking plants. This system has been
extended to the line from Macon to
Jessup and during next year ten more
such sidings will be built.
Construction of an additional main
track between Constitution and Rose-'
land. Ga., a distance of 2.82 miles, has
begun during the year, which, when
completed, tvill provide approximately
7 miles of double truck between Atlanta
and Constitution.
Saves Leg of Boy.
"It seemed that my 14-year-old boy
would have to lose his leg on account
of an ugly ulcer, caused by a bad
briuse," wrote D. F. Howard. Aquone,
N. C. "All remedies and doctors' treat
ment failed till we tried Bucklen's Ar
nica Salve, and cured him with one
box." Cures burns, boils, skin eruptions,
piles. 25c at all druggists/ (Advt.)
Fortunes in Faces.
There's often much truth in the say
ing "Her face Is her fortune." but It's
never said where pimples, skin erup
tions. blotches or other blemishes dis
figure It. Impure blood Is back of
them all. and shows ihi» need of Dr.
King's New Life Pills. They promote
health and beauty. Try them. 25 cents
at all druggists. (Advt.)
Drives Sallowness
from the Skin
I.adiei, imperfect -.onipleiiou u earned b»
a alugguh li»er. A few da»> trralmeat with
CAR I ER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS
will do more to clean up
the akin than all the baauty
cieauia tn creation.
Curea constipation, jMRgSSr,* 7 ;yi’etw '
unclogs the liver,
ends indigestion, dSHKwS& r ply • ■
biliousness and » ns ■ ■ £
dizziness. jgsgT
Purely a innnu>
table —never (ail.
Small Pill, Small hors, Small Prlea.
The GENUINE mint bear ngnstura
WHITMAN'S EIES
ON “JURY FIXER”
State Taking Extra Precautions
to Prevent Tampering in the
Trial of Becker.
NEW YORK, Oct. 21.-Extraordinary
precautions are being taken to prevent
any tampering with jurors in the lril
of Police Lieutenant Charles Becker
for the murder of Herman Rosentha
This became known today when the
third week's session began.
The suspicious actions of a man be
Heved to be a "jury fixer" about h«
court have been worrying District \
torney Whitman. Detectives hav. f ,,L
several days been keeping close • atch
on a man formerly well known about
the courts. In other days he was: v .»d.
ited with taking a significant interest
in the influence that might affect pros 1
pective jurors. The district attor, lf j
himself saw several things recently an,'
had others reported to him of suggesj
tloris to reach the jurors, and immerii.
ately put private detectives to watch
ing this man.
End of Trial in Sight.
This week is likely to wind up : ,
trial and a verdict is expected ( v ■
next week. Becker and his wife arc ex
pected tq testify Wednesday.
Among the rumors in circulation to
day was one that William Shapiro mJ
tiie four indicted gunmen would tes"i f y
for Becker. Shapiro drove the mu d-r
ear and is under indictment.
It has been reported that Shanio.
despite his affidavit in the hands ,-.r ■ J
district attorney that he could not i. .
tify any of the men in his car. is r. ,
to swear that Schepps and Vallon ~e
among them. The gunrm n. m. m- :•:»
to the same rumors, are eager to tes
tify that they were not in the < ar ir
an alibi will be their defense in their
own trial.
It will materially heln their c.i-. •
they can prove that the state witms-.r
were in the car.
CLEAN OUT YOUR
KIDNEYS AND
BLADDER
Get Rid of Backache, Pains
in Bones, Straining,
Swelling, Etc.
The kidneys and bladder need a
stimulant to expel the accumulations
of sugar and uric acid which 1
in these delicate organs and whi
accumulations cause so much miser
Stuaft'S Buchu and Juniper Compound
is made for just such a purpose. Ti '
remedy cleans out the k'dneys ami
bladder like hot water cleans on,
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Even diabetes is cured by its use. D e
sugar is quickly reduced after takin:
Stuart's Buchu and Juniper Cornpoiu
Wouldn’t it be nice within a weeli
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to the scalding, dribbling, straining, or
too frequent passage of urine: '!■■
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spots before the eyes: yellow skin:
sluggish bowels; swollen eyelids or ’i'-
kies; leg cramps: unnatural sao
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envy'.’
Take Stuart's Buchu and Juniper
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art's Buchu and Juniper Comp";; r;
contains only pure ingredients ir
■ quickly shows its power over kidn"
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quickly vanish. $1 per large bottle
at drug stores. Samples free by "rd'
mg Stuart Drug Company. Atlanta. C
(Advertisement.)
.r. W. Copeland, of Dayton, Ohl" i' lir [
chased a bottle of Chamberlain s '
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OBSTINATE
CATARRH
I cannot be corrected by local !
treatment; to arrest the flow O
1 secretion yon must remove the
cayse; this symptom is only
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I run down system.
Build your strength and vital
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it supplies the needed lime ami ;
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I and makes red, octree blood.
Scott's Emuh'on overcome* i
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H vigor.
■ seott ,% B-w-ir Bloomfield. S’. J I’ J