Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 16, 1912, EXTRA, Page 3, Image 3

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O TO IL EMSESIN He Makes Formal Announce ment of Intentions Prior to Sailing on Vacation. NIIW YORK. Nov. 16. immediately his inauguration as president of 1 I'nitid States Woodrow Wilson ■' !• vail an extraordinary session of "iig,.-ss to convene not later titan 'evil 15 f or the purpose of revising the • iff. according to announcement made •' hint last night. 1 he president-elect will sail for Ber ’ituda at 2 o'clock this afternoon for a ration and will return December 16. •" set at rest in the meantime specula "U as to what he would, do with re ■■ <1 1" tariff revision, he issued the "'flowing statement: 1 shall call congress together in ex m'dinary session not later that} April I shall do this not only because I "J- that the pledges of the party "light to b ( . redeemed as promptly as " il'lr. but also because 1 know it to in th" interest of business that all nceitainty as to what the particular "ins of tariff revision tire to he should temoved as soon as possible.” Extra Session Necessary. d '.'ond this brief announcement the -"'ernor said he had nothing- further to Most of the opinions he had re '■<‘d from public men seemed to be In "i - an extra session, he declared, governor did not intend to ex s himself about an extra session so after his election. Although he favored the idea of an extra ses ' "n because the present arrangement ' 1 d nut bring the new congress into ■ ‘on until thirteen months after its ' ’ion. he bad expected to spend more in ascertaining public opinion, ''i'h.the time to he consumed in dis- 1 " ion the governor felt that if an extra ' ion were not called, the benefits of nt revision would be postponed for U'tieally two years. Permits Laying Plans. 1 iiioughout the campaign he reiter u'd that he desied an immediate re ’■;ion of the tariff and that the Demo otic leaders know perfectly well how proceed about it. The governor was '"pressed by the argument also that 'Hi an early announcement as to an 'tra session Democratic leaders in "ngress could begin to t:tke counsel at " ly date so that much of the pre ninary detail could be worked out be— congress convened on Vpril 15. governor was prompted . incident •l in making his early announcement | ' fact that many members of eoii ' were <1- sirous of arranging f"' ' oimnodations in Washington for the xtra session if then was to be one SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS . By JAMES B. NEVIN. The fact that great many—a majority, in tact -of the postoffice com missions held in Georgia nowadays L /-I either are of re cent Issue or ar to bt reissued be fore March 4 next, is not disturbing in the least the Democratic faith ful out after post office pie hen am' there throughout the state. The unterrified Democracy is not possessed of a memory so short that it can not re call bow relative ly similar the sit uation today Is to the situation at the expiration of (4rover Cleveland’s last term in the white house at Washington: and the faithful remembers how its sort were removed abrutly and unceremoniously then for "perni cious political activity” in office, and other theretofore unheard of high crimes and misdemeanors; and the faithful further itj, very much of the opinion that away will be found at the psychological moment to shake loose those Republican losers unwilling to let go their good tilings of their own free will and accord. A postmaster in Georgia, recommis sioned by President Taft in February, say, may hug to his bosom the fond il lusion that h< is good for four years more from that date, if nothing less than the hugging will make him happy But the militant Democracy, long hun gry for pie and all but starved, knows better. It feels quite sure that it has not been led up into the mountains and shown the kingdoms of earth to no immediate purpose. Hope deferred maketh the heart sick, as the poet puts It —and Democracy is in no mood to have its present ram pant hope of pie deferred one minute longer than absolute necessity de mands! There will be a rattling of dry bones throughout Georgia along about—oh, well, say May 1. That will give the Big Host at Wash, ington time to get the Democratic table set and the pie ready for the slicing. tin the subject of pie. The Savannah News evidently is edited paragraph ieally by a sad and more or loss pessi mistic dog. for, in discussing, as polite ly a- it might, the pie situation in Geor gia nowadays. The News unburdened itself Thursday after this fashion: I: is noteworthy that Im victori ous T.iction in partisan politics is always desirous of "harmony.” As THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 16, 1912. ■•mon as-it gets into office, the. soft pedal is put on and the people are > urged to forget factional differences and unite for the good of the coun try. Hut the defeated faction will hear to no plea fo.r unity until it gets in the saddle, ami then its dis ciples in turn become apostles of peace. The forecast by some of the political prophets that the Federal patronage in this slate will be used to harmonize the political factions is interesting. But before forming an opinion it will be just as well to wait and see into whose hats the plums begin to .fall. The Democracy Ijas been waiting so long that it will not resent waiting a bit longer, perhaps—but the waiting must be more or less brief, as it were. William V. Turley, of Chattanooga, a former Atlantan, is the first Southern Democrat to announce as a candidate for public printer-at Washington. He is a member of the typograph ical union and is now conducting a print shop in the Tennessee city. , Formerly Turley was a newspaper man on Tennessee and Washington pa. I pers, and three years ago conducted a theatrical journal for .Take Wells in ' Atlanta. During the last Cleveland adminis tration he was employed in the govern ' ment printing office, but was the first , man to get the Republican ax after the i change of administrations. Former Representative .1. Lindsay Johnson, editor of The Rome Tribune* • Herald, called upon President-elect Woodrow Wilson at Seagirt Thursday. ' The colonel called merely to pass the 1 lime o' day and ask his former fellow Georgian how all the folks were get ting along, although some of the colo- 1 nel’s friends already have suggested him for a diplomatic post of conse quence abroad during the next adtnln- 1 istration. ' Colonel Johnson fought long and well for Wilson in Georgia. . Already speculation as to the where abouts of the next “winter capital’’ of ■ the nation is rife. Witness the following: Augusta will no longer be the i winter capital of the nation. , Jacksonville has offered Presi dent-elect Wilson a winter home. Why not invite him to Macon to attend the opening of the new Ho tel Dempsey and to make it his temporary residence for vacations? —Macon Telegraph. tine year ago, just about, Govern or Wilson came to Savannah. He will doubtless repeat the experi ment soon. -Savannah Press. ' President Wilson will be. a business man's president, and wherever he lo cates the “winter capital” it must be in a bustpess'nbin's city. Atlanta v.itn becoming modesty, of- DOCTOR STRAIGHTENS TWO CRIPPLES' SPINES PHILADELPHIA, PA., Nov. 16. Two young cripples, both suffering from curvature of the spine, were wheeled into the operating room of Jefferson hospital, where the dt xterity of a "bloodless” surgeon. Dr. E. G. Abbott, of Portland. Me., .straightened the backs of the little patients in about 45 minutes. Without much pain, with the patients absolutely conscious every minute, this eminent surgeon was able to ma nipulate the spinal columns to such an extent that the spines were straight ened, then placed in a plaster cast, and the sufferers were able to walk out of the operating room with no difficulty. darrowwlll be own ATTORNEY NEXT TIME LOS ANGELES. CAL.. Nov. 16. —The second trial of Clarence Darrow, the Chicago attorney, on a charge of jury bribing growing out of the McNamara dynamite base, in which he was chief counsel for the defense, is scheduled for November 25. From present indica tions a second continuance will be granted. Darrow says that in case the charge comes to trial he himself would do much of the active court room work, and possibly select the jury to try the Case ' < TYPIST TRIES SUICIDE; NEW JOB DOESN'T SUIT CHICAGO, Nov. 16. —Miss Theresa Tlieraldsen attempted to" end her life by inhaling illuminating gas. She is a stenographer. She told the police that she secured a new position Tuesday, had trouble with her employer and de cided to end her life. She went to her home and turned on the gas. ATTACKED BY AN ANGRY BOAR. YOUTH MAY DIE STERLING. ILL.. Nov. 16.—Thomas Davis, eighteen years old. of Rochelle, was injured in a light with a mad dened boar, which had escaped from a pen and attacked him. fers Itself as an ideal place from j-verj point of view. Congressman Thomas W. Hardwick, in his Macon “Wilson jubilee” speech the other night, quoted Scripture in such wise .against the Bull Moose can didate for the presidency that it got a mighty good laugh from the big audi ence present. Mr. Hardwick had been digging around in the Bible and had discovered that the one and only reference to Armageddon therein occurs in the six teenth chapter of Revelation, sixteenth Happening to n nd tin- fifteenth verse. Mr. Hardwick discovered that, applying it to Colonel Roosevelt, the colonel had “been stripp -d of Ids borrowed doth- s and left nuke' 1 ’" Busy Week Ahead for N. Georgia Methodists WORK STARTS TUESDAY CARRoLLTON, GA.. Nov. 16. -The con vening of the North Georgia conference in this city Wednesday morning of next week necessitates much preliminary work on Tuesday. Bishop .1. 11. M’o\. of Birmingham, will, as is cusiHm-iry. hob! a. session of the cabinet on Tuesday, when he will confer with his eleven advisers. Drs. B. IT Al len, AV. P. Ixivejoy. J. 11. Eakes, AV. T. Irvine. T. J. Christian. L. G. .Johnson, Pletcher Walton, AV. L. Pierce, Joel T. Daves, J. W. Quillian and W. B. Dillard. Important matters preliminary to making the appointments for 1913 will be brought for war* 1 Also on 'Tuesday the fo.ur classes of undergraduate preachers will meet com mittees of examination, and will have to be approved by these committees before they can be advanced to higher and grad uate grades in the ministry. These "classes are as follows: First Year - Revs. W. \V. Burgess, Dah lonega: S. L. Hogan, Tunnel Hill; W. L. Harrison, Commerce; H. L. Hendrix, Chickamauga; W. G. Norton, Gubligna; F. C. Owens, Fairburn; J. O. Pettis, Adairsville; J. AV. Stephens, Clayton; J. R. Turner, Aragon; AV. \V. Watkins, Homer; C. N. Hays and T M. Sullivan. Second Year—Revs. W. M Barnett, Gainesville; V. L. Bray, Eatonton; J. AV. Brinsfield, Toccoa; M. D. Cunningham, Dahlonega; J. G. Davis, Ball Ground; W. R. England. Flowery Branch; J. L. Frank lin, Lincolnton; .1. B.xGresham, Marietta; Z. V. Hawkes, Mansfield; L. B. Linn, Ea tonton: J. J. Lovern, Bellton; T. B. Mid dlebrooks. Nashville. Tenn.: B. F Mize, Gracewood; J M. Mize, Rome: J. A. Partridge, <’ave Spring; J. T. Pendley. Rome; O. M. Ponder, Primrose; Lucien Roper, Dallas,' G. T. Sorrells, Rutledge; M M. Stewart, Augusta; C. A Swift. Dearing, anti \V. L. C. Wailes. Augusta. Third Year Revs. William I. Deßarde leben, Walter P. Carmichael, Cotter S. Martin, William Oscar McMuilan. Jeffer son S Strickland, Marvin B. Whitaker. Marvin Williams, William Arp Woodruff and .1. J. Copeland. Fourth Year Revs. \A . W Benson. Irby Hendefkon, Dederick P. Johnson, Terry 11. Maxwell, George W. Hamilton, Edward <l. Mackay. Richard F. Elrod, Walter A. Wells, Marvin Swilling and A. T. Hind Tuesday night the Widows ami t orphans Aid society will hold its annual meeting ami elect officers for another year. Organization on Wednesday. The first day’s session, beginning at 9 a. m., Wednesday, w’ill be taken up with organization, ti e appointment of commit tecs, the hearing of reports from the gen eral officers of the M. E. church, South, at Nashville, 'Tenn., and reports from the educational work in the conference. In the aftern<M»n the various hoards and com mittees will be in session. Wednesday night will be held the an niversary exerctses of the Sunday school board, of which George M. Napier is president; Rev. Henry IT Mays, secretary, and Re\ S. R. England, treasurer. This meeting will be addressed by Dr. Charles D. Bulla, a leading expert and specialist In Sunday school work in the Methodist church, South, and 1 »r. E. B. Chappel, Sunday school editor, of Nashville. There are 772 Sunday schools in this conference and HK.220 scholars, as reported in the last year book. on 'Thursday night, Dr. I S. I'arker, of Nashville, at the head of the Epworth league work of the • Lurch, will be the sneaker. On Friday nigiA Dr. H. M. Dußose, of Augusta, will be the speaker at the church extension annual conference exer cises. Dr. B. P. Allen Is president of this board, and Rev. C. C. Cary the secretary. on Saturday night the board of mis sions will hold a public meeting, and will he addressed by Dr. W. W. Pinson, gen eral secretary of the board of missions of ihe Southern church, with headquarters at Nashville. Dr. J. E. Dickey, of Emory college, is president of this board; H. Y. McCord, of Atlanta, treasurer, and Rev. W. H. LaPrade, Jr., of Sparta, secretary. A total of $ IOS. 572 was raised last year for missions in this conference. Bishop Preaches Sunday. Bishop McCoy will preach Sunday morn ing at the Methodist church, and the local pulpits w’ill be tilled by members of the conference. Sunday afternoon the conference will meet in memorial session, when the mem oirs of ten deceased ministers of the con ference will be read. The committee on memoirs consists of Revs. M. S. Williams, AV. O. Butler, C. H. Branch and G. W. Duval. The chief feature of Monday's sessions will be the announcement by Bishop Mc- Coy of appointments of ministers for the next confcrem-e year. Final adjournment will follow’ this. The South Georgia conference -will meet at Savannah, Ga., Wednesday, November 27. Bishop A W. Wilson. <>f Baltimore, presiding. Whilst the North Geoi.da conference Is in session there will be four others meet ing the North Alabama, at Birmingham, Bishop Hendrix presiding: the Texas, at Marshall, Bishop Mauzon in charge; the Western North Carolina, at High Point, presided over b.y Bishop Denny; and the East Oklahoma, at Holdenville, Bishop AV. A. Candler presiding. 'The Florida conference will assemble at Tampa, December 18, presided over by Bishop H. C. Morrison. WIFE SEEKS A DIVORCE FROM TACITURN SPOUSE ST. LOUIS. MO., Nov. 16.—Five months’ silence between Jacob Krause and Mrs. Lillian Krause was broken when Mrs. Krause informed her hus band she was going to file suit for di vorce, “All right, go ahead,” Krause said, and the silence was resumed. Mrs. Krause filed the suit. Suspension of conversation five months ago was not. the result of any special quarrel, according to Mrs, Krause. Her husband had been taci turn and uncommunicative before that, she said. TESTIMONY IS TAKEN IN $500,000 WILL SUIT CHICAGO, Nov. 16. Taking of tes timony In the suit to break the $500,000 will of Mrs. Mary Corkerj- is on be fore Judge Dever in the superior court. The last juror has been selected. The complainants are seeking to have the will set aside on the ground that Mrs. Corkerv was insane GIRL LIVES ON CANDY FOR OVER EIGHT DAYS ST. LOUIS. MO.. Nov. 16. —Knowing that she might expect arrest at any time on a charge of forging thirty checks, Mrs. Fred Kasper. 21 years old, who prefers to be known by her maid en name. Beulah McPherson, remained in her home at 1200 North Leffingwell avenue for over eight days, subsisting on candy. After putting on her bast clothes, she went down town, bought a new sl9 hat with a green feather, returned to her home and awaited the coining of Special Officer Behnken, of the circuit attorney’s office, who ar rested her. GOES TO JAIL BECAUSE ALIMONY IS NOT PAID ST. LOUIS. MO., Nov. 16—David L. Kearney, of East St. Louis, is in jail, also In a dilemma. He can’t see how he can earn any money to pay alimony while locked behind prison bars, but the judgment of Judge Vandeventer, of the East St. Louis city court. Is that he must remain In jail until he catches up with his alimony payments. Kearney Is $450 in arrears in his set tlements with his former wife, Lulu, who obtained a divorce in January, 1911 MINCED HAM ENDS LIFE OF TWO IN ONE FAMILY MASON CITY, IOWA, Nov. 16. John Davidson and his brother, Ken neth, are dead at Milford from utoniaine poisoning, caused by eating minced nam purchased at a local shop. I Cure the Failures of Others. At Your Own Price and Terms to Suit You wEji&i 7 American European Specialist. the X-rays, Vibra- tory llasßage, Static Electricity, Galvanic h'aradio end Sinsusofdal Currents, etc , and Or.one Generator for successfully treating CATARRH, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, PILES AND STRICTURE WITHOUT THE KNIFE OK PAIN. PA RALYSIS. BRONCHITIS, ETC. I also cure gonorrhea and gleet with the latest discoveries, serums, etc.; blood poison with "606" or 914. as the case requires, and guarantee results. Diseases of WOM EN cured with local and electrical treat ments without the knife or pain. I can cure you cheaper than other specialists because I treat you personallj and have to pay no assistants I carefully prepare and furnish al medicines. Call today, as I make no charges for CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION. Suite 1-2-3-4-6 at 8264 Peachtree street. Hours front 8 a m. to tp. m. Phone At lanta JSOT. W. H. HOLBROOK, Ph G., M. 0. The South’s Leading Specialist. 3 Q u a 1 I fl cations: Graduate and post graduate of seven of the best colleges In the I’niteil States. Special courses in Europe. Reference: Several hundreds of cured and grateful pa tients. MY GUARANTEE IS: You don’t pay me any profession al fee ts I don’t cure you. I have the most complete ly equipped offices in the city, such as