Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 22, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2

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2 iDEfiO WARNS MEXICAN PEOPLE Says Subjects Are Unable to Govern Themselves and Need Another Dictator. MEXICO CITY. Nov. 22.—"1f the present state of domestic affairs which , has existed during the first year of my | administration continues to its end, the M x ■ 11! m nd another dictator." This statement was n d< by Pregi- i dent Madero at a banquet in the na tional palace ir. celebration of the an mversari of the beginning of the : .Madero revolution. The statement that I he people are not abb to rule them- ; elves created a sensation through the i city today. ’ The nation ha. won its liberty at the 1 proa- of peace.'’ said Madero. ’ But I P .oai s ti.ey think peace Is less impor- j tant than liberty. The press is largely I •.sponsible for the present conditions in our epublic. The press has lost its respect for authority and I have appealed to congress for legislation to . correct this a bus. ." Madero went on to say tiiat in order to be strong the government must be respected. "I laugh at calumnies* di- ■ ted at me." tae -president declared. But the proas lias done great harm in timer ways by encouraging revolt, by: riming "tori -s of great rebel victories. !■ has retarded pm jfp ation am 1 , ought to be punished." President Madero said that a law n iking military sci vle. 'compulsory wouid soon be passed and pleaded w ith 1 is hearers to work for peace in order to etain the foreign capital already In vested in M- xico and to bring in fresh capital. II warned Mexico tiiat manv urge foreign enterprises welt getting ready to withdraw if peace Is not I brought, about at once. CITIZENS HELD AT BAY WHILE BANK IS ROBBED bowling green, onio, Nov. 22. ! "With the fifth explosion, yeggmen sue- ; eecded in blowing the safe in the Munn bank at* Portage, this county, and es caped with $4,000. Armed confederates stood guard out side the bank building am’ warned citi zens attracted by the explosion to. keep a safe distance, under penalty of being killed. AUGUSTA TO HAVE BARGE LINE. AUGUSTA, GA . Nov. 22.—Augusta | will have a barge line on the Savannah river. A company Is being organized, with a capital stock of $150,000, to build I barges. The . ity of Augusta has voted to take $50,000 worth of stock in the barge line. f DIAMONDS 1 o RICH , CUT CLASS / 'O/Vai L» “ _■■ _■ 1 IS A MOOSE ( «' t ( 1 m k L W w lIOVF.T BOV GEORGE EVANS, “Greatest MlnMrel of Them All.” Atlanta lodge. No. 523. I. .-.al Ordei »f Moose, gives |7 a week, sickness or Accident; JIOO funeral; free medical attention members and family. Dues <sc per month. For Moose free Uni versity. fr-.-e Tuberculoids Sanitarium, free Home for Aged and infirm. 2jj quarterly No assessment* Non-zee arlan. Non-polltlcal. Only reliable men wanted. Boozers will not apply. The initiation fee of Atlanta lodg-r, tor a short time, is $5 only >2 with I application and $3 when initiated. ' Uster |25. Examination $1 Modtc-il •xnminers Dr. A. P.hojes, 802-3.4 , Atlanta Bank building; Dr W. IL b e.’. 30J-2 Walton bulldlvp. Get "X- ' in-ilned earl}’, please. It is important. ■ 1 o'j snould join todav and sa ’e S2O. I M. WALDo KENNEDY. National Director. Peachtree St . Candler Bldg. eo-lmon. 1. 147. !’. O. Box 14v4. ' ’.'per. da’.’ ..nu evening. Wei » • • I Mrs. A. G. Vanderbilt at Home, Happy With Her Baby I SHE LAUDS AMERICAN WOMENS M ate | ’ & She ft MrS ‘ Recently Alfred G. Returned to |S& wSHHEgL j||l Vanderbilt. America | \ JWi From After a X Her * ss*** Long ■ a Most HEmp- O Stay ■ Recent < ; W * - ’ / Im! : I ; Z-' >3 Abroad. . . ’ < MSB Photograph. F ‘ JO- ? ■ • Y I - . _ __ W< . ■> .. /Eft* ' O ‘ fl \ I rl ■ I • - r ■ ‘ ■ jKMMSEwaBaiX \ Wh£|: \ wreMwaffflMoFft i Mhaswaii > t Jfej.rgpao-W i aMMIiM•. */ ■ s z <•*/-»«»*»* roe*r-w £>*r ? JT ’''s' Papers from ‘My O1 Town' Always in Demand HOME NEWS THE BEST I’he traveling man hurrying to the station stopped at the corner and put down his grips. "Wait a minute," he said to his com panion. "I want to g-'t n paper from home. Got the 'Frisco Examiner?" Sam Wasserman, who provides the news from home for thousands of wan derers afield, passed out the paper from his news wagon uptown and took the nickel. Just behind the traveling man came a swarthy organ grinder, who let his monkey climb over the news wagon while he negotiated in broken English for the latest issue of L’Arado Italiano. Behind him came a decrepit workman who dug a nlcke' from a dirty tobacco sack and held it out In silence. Sam passed over The Weekly Freeman, from Dublin, for the old man was a regular customer and always wanted that paper and nothing else. All Want New* From Home. "They all want the news from home," said Sam. "The Atlanta papers are all right on the big news, but. of course, they can’t carry all the little stuff about home folks that a man finds in the pa per from his own home town. There was a guy used to come by here every month or two and get a little paper from lowa, and he wrote me a piece of poetry. I stuck it up on the wagon, and lots of folks read it: I When I’m on the load and tired, and there’s nothing In the mail; And trains are late and business dull, and It's hard to make a sale. The thing that rests my weary brain and drives away my frown Is the gossip in the paper from my own home town. Don't talk to me of China, or the trou bles of the czar; I'm tired of the gunmen and the Bul gar-Turkish war; I want to see who's married, who's dead, who's up or down; Ip the place I'd love to be right now. my own home town. Yes, the sheet may be a punk one. and the headlines rather tame, But it’s got the news of folks I know, and calls them all by name; It tells of Jones’ brand-new house, and the twins of Mamie Brown— Oh, there’s real news In the paper from my old home town. He Sells Them All. Sure, >’.<• hi-11 paper- all the wuy tcom M’-xlco City un • > Tacoma, Cictn way up in Maine down to K»y Wert. 'Every town, evety city,' is ra> i.iof”. Got: rtguiur ’-ui'or.ier i for .o', o'.' then , lee. ' IHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1912. Sunday and buy their home papers for the whole week back. 1 save them for those fellows. Sometimes a man gets a paper from home when he's been away a long time, sees a headline on, the front about somebody he knews, and stands there reading until the cop asks him to move on and quit blocking traf fic. ‘■Queerest thing 1 ever saw hap pened last month. Man comes up and buys a Los Angeles Herald. He runs his eye down the paper while I'm mak ing change for a dollar bill and all of a sudden he lets out a groan and turns all white. He kind of steadies himself against the wagon. “‘What's the matter, friend?’ I asks him. He points to a little headline in the paper. " 'My baby’s dead,’ he says, kind of choking up. 'l've been off my route a week and the telegrams must have gone wrong.’ Big Business tn Foreign Papers. I "No, we can’t handle the little county papers, of course. It would take a wagon as long as from here to the city hall. But most folks are satisfied with ' the papers from the nearest big city in their state. Sunday i s the big day. of course. 1 sell 275 New York Ameri cans every Sunday, and they're on all the news stands, too. which cuts Into my business some. It doesn’t seem to matter how old a. paper from home is, If a man wants to buy. They’ll take anything they haven't seen since they left. But sometimes a fellow comes by here and wants this morning's St. Louis sheet. When I ask him if he thinks they send papers by airship, he looks foolish and buys yesterday’s. "There’s a big business in foreign pa pers in Atlanta, considering what a small foreign population we’ve got. I sell fifty Greek papers, The Atlantis, every day. I handle five Italian pa pers. but they’re all published in New York. There are four Jewish sheets on my wagon and they all sell. They're printed in Yiddish, you know. There's two Swedish papers, and they sell. too. One of them is the Nordstjernan, which means 'North Star,’ and the other is -he Swenski Atnerkanski Bosten. I don’t try to say that one. There's a good demand for the English weeklies and Lloyd’s News, and I sell two Irish, two German and five negro papers. "Foreign languages" Yes. I speak ; sou German, Spanish and profane. Here comes an old fellow sot Ln Domenlro del Carrier* That's a I ►’.ig , paper, and he buys it every day.’ Want i> rent your rooms, apartments. ' ■ises. business locations, etc.'.’ An ad in The Georgian’s Rent Bulletin on the wan' a i age® > :1! fl'.' ........ .... . « r . 1 Talks of Her Child and Plans for an Old-Time Christmas Celebration. NEW YORK, Nov. 22.—“1t was a Wonderfully brilliant night—up to and a more than I had expected.” That is how the beautiful young wife of Alfred Gwynn Vanderbflt de scribed. In her apartipents of the Ho tel Vanderbilt, her impressions of the first night of the horse show. It is the first big fashionable function In this country at.which she has appeared since she became the wife of the mll ' Bonaire. ’T have seen many wonderful aggre gations of women in London and on ; the continent since I left America. But American women need envy no women for they tire of Incomparable beauty and taste. Such an array of women 1 in the boxes at Madison Square could not he challenged for beauty," added Mrs. Vanderbilt. Told that her wonderful costume at tracted more attention than that of any 1 other woman present. Mrs. Vanderbilt shrugged her shoulders indifferently and said: "Oh, that's because I have only just returned. 1 have seen so many won derful frocks and beautiful women that j I can not see why I should hav.e been | ' particularly noticed.” Her Wardrobe Is Wonderful. Despite tiie young matron's protesta tions. it is said by those who have seen i her gbwns that no woman in New York i possesses the wonderful wardrobe of Mrs. Vanderbilt. Her gowns have been ' ' made by the greatest modistes in the i i world, ami made, not from models, as ! most gowns arc made, but by artists who have particularly studied Mrs Vanderbilt’s distinctive personal beau ty. She has frocks for every afternoon and evening, it is said, of her stay in this country. Particular attention has been paid to the gowns which will , wear at the horse show, her husband’s special reason for returning for this visit and for the opera in which they share equal pleasure. Asked if the baby, which has blessed their home, looks like her, Mrs. Van derbilt laughingly said; "Oh, it’s such a tiny lamb that we 1 couldn’t tell when we came over here, i iit has eyes, that some days are the color of mine and on other days Mr. i Vanderbilt says are just like his. So i wt desired to wait until we returned in I the middle of December to decide the > question. I want them to be '.ike his | father's and he is anxious for the tiny ] j thing to look like me. • '}•. - ' ... ■ .... - 1 j MORGAN CASE IS 1 BEFOMITEHS Evidence and Argument in the Paschal Hearing Ended—No Decision Expected Today. The case <il Flagman A. M. Morgan, dismissed at the same time Conductor T. T. Paschhl was discharged from the service of the Georgia railroad, was taken up by the board of arbitration this morning at 9 o’clock. The hearing probably will be completed before nightfall. Both evidence and argument in the Paschal case ended yesterday' afternoon at 5 o’clock, when Vice President Mur dock made the closing speech in be half of the unions. All day the speeches i had continued, and it was with a sigh of relief that the spectators heard the board announce the end of the famous case which entailed a strike on the Georgia railrosfd, causing a loss to the road and .men of several hundred thou sand dollars. No decision will be announced by the board today, as they will consider Flagman Morgan's case at the same time that they are pondering the ques tion of Paschal’s reinstatement. The board has until December 2 to give a decision, according to the terms of the arbitration agreement, Which sets forth that a decision should be reached with in thirty days after the selection of the third member of the board. Judge, W. L. Chambers was selected on Novem ber 2. The railroad's side of the case in full was presented for the first time yes terday' afternoon when Superintendent Brand and General Manager Scott read their briefs defending the action of the road. Call Paschal “Dangerous Man.” Both declared that Paschal had not been discriminated against, and both vehemently asserted that the safety of the passengers riding on their trains depended upon the discipline maintain ed. That Paschal was a dangerous man, so far as the public safety was con cerned, was the assertion Os both. Superintendent Brand was forced to stop reading because of his emotion during a part of his speech when lie was speaking of the road's endeavors to maintain the record of seventy-five years of service without ever having a passenger killed in a wreck. Upon Conductor ’Paschal he placed part of the blame for the complete de moralization of the operating force of the Georgia railroad last spring, when a number of wrecks occurred, in one of which four passengers and an engineer were killed. He declared that Paschal's doctrines, preached to the younger em ployees, had no doubt influenced them toward carelessness and a disregard of their charges. Murdock concluded the case by show ing that the union had maintained the same contentions throughout the prog ress of the case, and that Paschal had ' been unjustly treated. The hearing I ended at 5 o'clock. COURT LOCKS WARRING COUPLE IN ROOM, BUT RECONCILIATION FAILS SAN BERNARDINO, CAL., Not 22 - Attemptlng to reconcile a warring couple, Judge Oster locked them in his private room and proceeded with the court busi ness. Alter an hour they emerged, smil ing, but still at war. Divorce granted. HIGH SCHOOL DEBATE. EASTMAN. Nov. 22.—A debate between representatives of the Eastman High school and the South Georgia college will be held at Mcßae tonight, the sub ject being. “Resolved, That Georgia should establish and maintain a system of high schools.” Carson Knight and Myrick Clements will represent the East man High school, taking the negative side. [ ARMY ORDERS | Captain Arthur F. Cassels, from Sixth to First artillery in Philippines. Captain Nelson T. Maregetts, from First to Sixth field artillery. First Lieutenant Emory T. Smith, from First to Fifth field artillery. First Lieutenant Louis H. McKinley, from Sixth to First field artillery. First Lieutenant James P. Marley, I from First to Sixth field artillery. I Second Lieutenant Iveus. Jones, from Fifth and First artillery. Second Lieutenant Claude E. Thum mel, front First to Fifth field artillery. Second Lieutenant Louis A. Beard, from Sixth to First field artillery. Second Lieutenant Frank A. Turner, , from First to Sixth field artillery. Second- Lieutenant George S. Gay, from Third to First field artillery. Second Lieutenant Harold H. Bate- 1 man, from First to Third artillery. Second Lieutenant Thomas Osborne, 1 relieved from Fifth field artillery. Second Lieutenant W. H. Dodds, from Fifth to First field artillery. we won’t mind which one of us it chooses to look like!" Plan Old-Time Christmas. Mrs. Vanderbilt said they were re turning especially before the holidays so that the baby could have its first Christmas tree with all the family. "We shall hang up the baby’s stock ing and all the rest of the old-time Yuletide things, for we adore our baby, and life is indeed wonderful with so much to live for," she added with ra diant enthusiasm. Mrs. Vanderbilt has improved won derfully in looks since she left here less than ten years ago. She still retains her graceful slenderness of figure, but she has gained in poise and expression. “I am so happy—we both .are so hap py—that's always the secret of any woman's looks," the little mother ex - | plained when asked t?o seer,' of her j •i ll rr • •»<* ' [searching sidelights J ON GEORGIA POIITICsI By JAMES B. NEVBI. The governor of tieorgia gets a sal ary of approximately sl4 per day. I Every- day, averaging the year round, L H ® jXMrt'S » rxrrvSM- ‘ he is asked to give away, for one pur pose and another —frequently a very worthy pur pose, so far at i that goes that much, and more. There come to the executive of fice daily about 50 letters. Easily ten per cent of them are requests for money. In Wed nesday's mail, for instance, the r t were five such I letters —one ask ing help for a church, one for a library, one tor a school house and two for the distressed families of prisoners in the state penitentiary. In many letters, the specific amount of help deslrld 1-s set forth—two of the letters that came in Wednesday re quested an even $5 each. That, was more than two-thirds of the governor's salary for the day, and it Involved only two-fifths of the requests received. If the governor responded to every petition fur financial aid he receives he - would never break even on his salary . The present governor—as no doubt have all the governors before him — does respond to a good many of the re quests he gets. Sometimes the appeals are very touching; sometimes they come from people who unselfishly ha»e been friendly in acute crises; some times the appeal is for a cause so worthy that failure to respond is all but unthinkable. And y*t, even as the matter stand..,, the drain on the purse of the governor is terrific. Unquestionably a great many people seek to take advantage of the execu tive. He is asked, time and again, to help out financially on projects entirely impersonal to him, and of doubtful character. The matter of sitting the true from the false, the real from the make-be lieve, the honest from the fraudulent, is a task that falls largely to the govern or’s private secretary—in the present case, to Jesse Perry—and it fs not an easy task, either. Perry, however, manages to get away with it most sat isfactorily. Campbell Wallace, of the. Georgia railroad commission, employs in his daily labors an interesting relic of the long ago—a paperweight of burned clay, upon which is modeled an excel lent likeness of Grover Cleveland. This paperweight was made when Cleveland was a candidate for presi dent the first time —in 18K4. to be exact. That makes the thing 28 years old. which is quite a respectable age for a paperweight. It shows Cleveland as a relatively young man, in the very flotv er of vigorous vitality. This veteran among clerical equip ments probably was brought into the office by one of the members of the earlier commissions, and it has been there, in constant use, ever since. And it looks very little the worse for wear, too. Wallace is thinking now of getting it a Woodrow Wilson companion, in order that it may be retired eventually to honorable Inactivity, and preserved as a glorious souvenir of the Democratic past in this land of the free and home of the brave. Governor Brown says he wishes it made plain that the boys corn club I prizes won in Cherokee by Thomas: Payne, Homer Atkins and John San- j dow—the first named being the winner I of the first prize throughout the Sev- ! enth district —were won entirely by the,| boys' own efforts, and that they indi-'j virtually and severally deserve all the glory attaching to their performances. The story has been published that this winning yield—ls7 2-3 bushels to the acre—was made on the governor's Cherokee county farm—which is true. But the governor insists that It be re corded carefully that he did not do th» raising. He thinks it glory enough to have furnished the land upon which such creditable work was done by these sturdy young Georgians. Already the complaint has been reg istered that north Georgia is under taking to "hog" the forthcoming Fed eral pie distribution in Georgia, and a . squeal has come up from south Georgia accordingly! Discussing the matter o» Federal patronage recently. The Jackson Her ald said: 1 he wooos are fail of candidates, end quasi candidates, near-candi dates and prospective candidates, i so. tire various offices In Georgia at the disposal of the next admin istration. One paper stated that ft Senator Smith intended to see tiiat Hooper Alexander would be the next district attorney for the Northern district of Georgia. Torn Shackelford would also like to have that job. Mae Johnson, of Bar tow, wants to collect the internal revenue, while a dozen would like to be United States marshal for this district. There are many who want something frbm the next ad ministration, but have not decided just what it is. The Savannah Press copied this par agraph. and in commenting upon it noted that while it did not mention | many people, all it did mention were j north Georgia gentlemen. The Press referred to the matter more in sorrow than in anger, of course, but it let It be known that the north Georgia preponderance of pie avail- I ability had been taken into ronsidera- 1 tion, anyway! "It must not be supposed that south ! 11 : z'.. will be found .'ugglng far in tliol rear when the returns ure a’d in ■ I The Press. One would think not— yurel}! " I Honorable Seaborn Wright. i ■ reports to The Rome Trlbuir -H' -’-'i I that he has made fine crops o n I A-muchee creek farm this y va I particularly brags on his oat <■;./ I What the former represent','-',. • I many friends throughout c ' 1 would like to know, howeve I grew on the lawn he sowed win, H seed meal last spring, under ■ ful delusion that he was bid-'!; J blue grass? a The many friends of John u,. r lga „ I Jr., Washington correspondent f,,- \ I Atlanta Constitution, will rc-gr-E- ■ H lenrn of the death of his littk°<i S ter, Irene, which occurred in ti ■• u ■ tional capital on Tuesday morning -E I John Corrigan is extremely ■ with the Georgia delegation ' I gress, and lias an extensive .mquah-B jtanee throughout the state, m,. H rigan was Miss Irene Hand, of p,' ■ .'j' K a daughter of J. L. Hand, former s t a t'/ H senator. The little girl Mr. ami Ji r , ’ Corrigan lost Tuesday wus just "flv.jl months old. S The suggestion advanced by \nurev, | J. Cobb, former justice of the court, that President Taft be tendered I by President Wilson the first vacancy ■ that occurs in the national suj remE I court after the inauguration of r;.'.. ] at . ■ ter, has been received throughout the ■ state with varying emotions. Many ■ newspapers enthusiastically Indorse th- ■ idea, others Indorse It mildly, and still K others reject it emphatically. The suggestion, coming from Judgs H t 'obb, was a distinct and sincere corn- B pliment to the president anyway, I Governor Brown will not be able to ■ deliver the address of welcome to the B Boys Corn club convention, to be held B on December 3-5, because of a pre- B vlous engagement to participate in the B program of the national governors con- B vention, to take place in Richmond at B the same time. When the governor agreed to open B the Boys Corn club convention, he was B under the impression that it was toB meet on December 2. When he found, ■ however, that it would conflict withß his previously made engagement lu B Richmond, he was obliged to cal! it 'ft. H as much as he regretted to do so S Baby’s *ll VoictewMl Every woman’s heart responds to I the charm and sweetness of a baSy’s R voice, because nature intended her for R motherhood. But even the loving R nature of a mother shrinks from the R ordeal because such a time is usually R a period of suffering and danger R Women who use Mother’s Friend are R saved much discomfort and suffering. H and their systems, being thoroughly R prepared by thia great remedy, are R in a healthy condition to meet the R time with the least possible suffering R and danger. Mother's Friend i» R recommended only for the relief and R comfort of expectant mothers; it is in ■ no sense a remedy for various ills. R but its many years of success, and ■ the thousands of endorsements re- B ceived from women who have used it R are a guarantee of the benefit to be R derived from its use. This remedy R does not accomplish wonders but sim- R I ply assists nature to perfect its work. R : Mother’s Friend allays nausea, pre-R J vents caking of ♦ I the breasts, and T|lQ||l(r6R I contributes to jrv Cllfl I strong, healthy * I . motherhood. Mother’s Friend is soWR :at drug stores. Write for our free ■ book for expectant mothers. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atiar.t*. Cx ■ THE ATLANTA TONIGHT. 8 O'CLOCK SATURDAY MATINEE AND NIGHT CHARLES FROHMAN J’Kl> MAUDE ADAMS IN J. M. BARRIE'S “PETER PAN” Extra Matinee Friday. 50cJ T '” “ Eddie Leonird w ‘; , L U,_ I ~TsHWuTmO S.. DE W»« & »'<•, ’j WILLIS FAMILY. IQt WHI Tl HM - ' JULIET! '■■ ■ . I —— * Tue8 ’ Thurs - ? 3 ,; rUllul III*" Mat. evening? atb: ■ I . . Little Emma Bunting Players In Great Production cf JTHE TWO OR PI tA \ < . Secure Seats Early. - Next Week—"MERELY MARv _J This Week ■ wnm B^'n -rVnrs i S'.w.b” | LYRIC pyg BEULAH POYNTEK IN HER GREAT SUCCESS “LENA RIVERS" LYRIC ; I Matinee* Tuesday. Thursday a-d Saturday „ “The Shepherd of the Huis Dramatized From Haro'd B* Wright’s Novel.