Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 17, 1913, Image 8

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' i ■ ■ * /1.\ w i.T:: i I ! Elks Discover Cure For Obese Brothers Editorial Criticising President Wilson’s Fed eral istic Tendencies Will he Mad • a Public Document of Record-—Senators of Both Par ties Applaud His Views on Reciprocity London Times Defends Wilson and Underwood; Criticises Mr. Hearst’s Message About Tariff. LONDON. April 17.—Mr. Hearst’s attack on Wilson's fiscal policy as an ifnitatior* of British policies i6 largely quoted by Washington corres pondents of principal London papers. The London Times is specially in terested by Mr. Hearst’s reference to itself. It prints a long dispatch con-1 tafning such phrases: “Mr. Hearst’s newspapers have enormous aggregate circulation. • • • He is always ready to sling mud at the British Lion.” The London Times correspondent concludes thus: “It is possible Mr. Hcarst may have reasons of his own for believing Mr. W'lson is a confirmed free trader, but if he is alluding to the Under wood bill, then his understanding of free trade is as faulty as his knowl edge of the general policy and fiscal views of The Times. Official expert analysis of the Underwood bill just published confirms my estimate of^ Its protective nature. The average ad valorem rates work out about 25 per cent reduction on the present tariff rates. When taken in connection with the retaliatory features the measures are a far cry from British free trade.” Ion lnj? ccmineht was heard in the Capitol: Senator O’Gorman, of New York— ’I read Mr. H<:rst'.s letter with a great deal rtf Interest.” Senator Chamberlain, of Oregon— “I agree in the main with many of the things Mr Hcarat has said. I do not believe should be too rad ical In our revision of the tariff. 1 favor downward revision. Demo crat ic revision, that will reduce the rates materially; hut these results should he worked out gradually. Some of the rates that have been agreed upon by the House Commit tee and approved in the eaueus ary too low. Mr. Hcarst has stated his position clearly, and it will have weight.” # “Argument by Hearst Will Do Good for Whole Country" DEVEL0PS1CHILD' ODDITIES •—in the— DAY'S NEWS Ask $12,000 for Life | Housemaids’ Union Husband and Wife Of Child Car Killed; Formed in Chicago In Jail as Insane Drama League Speaker Says Theatricals Are Best Means of Teaching Self-Expression. WASHINGTON, April 17. The signed editorial b\ William Randolph Heatst published in the Georgian vestArday «»n the Fed* i alist ic tendon Hep of President Wilson and /ilso treating of tin President’s tariff vtewV. will be put Into the <'ongrefi fdnnal Record and sent in genet al distribution throughout the countre Representative Willis, of Ohio, en deavored to get unnnimou consent for this purpose, but he was met with? an objection by Representative Hardwick, of Georgia. "It 'is a most interesting and in structlve article,” commented Mr. Willis in making his request “Never mind about 'the objection nqw,“ said Mr. Mann, the Republican leader “wA will find a \\ ty later to put the article in the record.’’ W»lson Silent After Reading. Mr. Hearst’s editorial was read ear ly by President Wilson. He so in formed the newspaper men, but de clined to *makc any' comment. The editorial furnished the topic oi conversation and discussion in the cloak rooms and at private offices. Many Democratic members were loth to n^tke formal comment: they art- seeking Federal latronage from'tin* President. They want to remain on good terms with the Executive until the appointments are made. The foi- 7. a A :.3-. . ; Nebraska— argument ad Senator Norris, of approve of the tariff vanned by Mr Hearst will do good throughont the country. Of <*ours.\ 1 could not b* expected to agret \iilh Mr. VTllson’s tariff views, and I hope they will not prevail, for he wants our duties removed to too great a degree. Whether he is going :o use the offices to control votes foi the tariff bill it is too early to say. He has not don*' so yet. If tie re- no reason why ngress and say Bowling—That's It—and They Are Installing $1,000 Alleys in Clubhouse. if your new spring suit feels un comfortable and you’re losing that swagger figure that used to be the despair of the Peachtree maidens, lis ten— The Elks have found a cure or think they have. Its simple, as all good things are. The answer is bowling. The pastime made famous by Hendrik Hudson, tie man for whom the river is named, is hailed as the greatest cure for obesity ever discovered. That's one of the reasons the Elks are busy rush ing plans for the installation of two splendid bowling alleys, to cost $1,000, in the tin*- clubhouse on Ea*-t Ellis Street. They all expect to tie as tjim as Exalted Ruler Al Dunne when they once get a-going. Secretary Theo Mast is getting his arm In shape writing notices of committee appoint ments and receipts fur checks. The alleys are expected to mark the re vival of a famous sport in the South. Amateur theatricals are the greatest means at hand for the development of the modern child, according to Mrs. A. Starr Best, of Chicago, chairman of the organization committee of the Drama League of America, who spoke before a notable gathering of women | this morning at the Carnegie Library. I Mrs. Beat expressed the hope that J Atlanta would take the lead in the South in organizing branches of Ihe league. She suggested that a training school for directors bf child work and a civic theater be established here. Give Self-Expression. "The plays that children have given under the auspices of the Drama League.’’ slv 1 said, "have been of in calculable benefit, both to the children and the work. We have never tried to make them professionals or In any sense to train them for the stage. It has been the only means of self-ex pression afforded poor children. It has given them self-confidence and extended their knowledge of good lit erature. “Our work among children on the playgrounds has bepn of the greate-' benefit There was an instance in Chicago where a girl of 10. carrying a small baby and with her 2-year-old sister dragging at her skirts, attended every rehearsal. Children Keen Judges. “Children are the keenest Judges of the good and the bad in the plays which they present. Nothing means anything to them but the play. T1 actors do not count.” At the conclusion of her address Mrs. Rest discussed the methods of work and organization informally with the women present. This after noon she talked before another meet ing at the Georgian Terrace. SHOT BY AN ICE WAGON.—Paul Rieloff was shot by an ice wagon ami seriously injured at Decatur, III. Rie- loff was crossing the street when the steel tire of the wagon crushed a .38- caliber cartridge on the pavement and the bullet struck Rieloff below the left eye. TOWN ELECTS SALOON KEEF ERS. Two saloon keepers were elect ed by popular vote at Elk Point, Un ion County, South Dakota, when, un der a new law limiting saloons to one for each 600 inhabitants, the number of drink emporiums at Elk Point had to he reduced from five to two. TEMPTED DEATH A*S JOKE. In her suit for divorce. Mrs. Gertrude Einson, Trenton, N. J„ charged that her husband was coarse, illiterate and a practical joker of an unusual kind. She said her husband hid himself in a steamer trunk and when found we 'unconscious and laughed heartily at the so-called Joke. He was aston ished when the other members of the family were unable to see any fun in it. she said. "MOVIES" MAY AID I S. Sec retary Redfleld, Washington, D. c.. has decided that moving pictures which show what the Department of Commerce is doing for the people of the United States would he of grea’ value both to the department' and others. He has appointed a commit tee to confer with a moving picture concern. Dipsomaniac Chases Girls With Ice Pick Two Glasses of Near-Beer Sent Him on Rampage. W. A. Cason Tells Recorder. Family Sues Trolley Company for Death of 3-Year-Old Daughter Last October. George P. Farrias, a railroad flre man of 208 South Avenue, is to-day awaiting action op a $12,000 damage suit, filed against the Georgia Rail way and Power Compain for the death of his three-year-old daugh- er, Willie Charline, killed by a street ar last October. Farris alleged in his suit that the street was clear and the motorman should have seen the child 100 feet ahead. One of the little girl’s com panions ran out and tried to jerk her from the track, the suit set forth. She. too, was struck by the car. Chartered by American Federation of Labor—To Demand Better Working Conditions. CHICAGO, April 17. -Domestic prvants fn*Chicago to-day were sup plied w'ith union cards showing mem bership in a real labor union. The Household Workers’ Association has been given a charter by the Amer ican Federation of Labor. As soon as the now union has gain ed sufficient strength and''a walking delegate is elected, demands will he made upon housewives for better conditions, regular hours of work and Wednesday and Sunday afternoons off. Each Has Other Locked Up on Lu nacy Writs, Following Marital Troubles. MACON, GA., April 17.—Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Roquemore are occupying adjoining cells in the Bibb County jail, both charged with insanity oh warrants sworn out by each other Mrs. Roquemore was first arrested on a lunacy writ taken out by her husband, and then Roquemore. when he visited his wife at the jail, was taken in custody on a warrant sworn out by her. and procured for her by relatives after she was locked up. The Sheriff assigned Roquemore to the same (‘ell with his wife, but she protested, and the man was then put in the adjoining cell. •*c3 trains rorn that I he should not vis:* Cleans from Parlor to Kitchen HERE is a use—a need—for Absorene in every room in the house Nothing can equal it for the safe, sure and thorough cleaning of statuary, of art objects in the parlor. The draperies, the portieres, etc., as well as the wall covering. Use it in the hall. Remove the black spot above the chandelier Use it up-stairs—refreshen, brighten the paper in the bedrooms. 5 In the kitchen, Al ircne is indispensable for removing dust, mar! etc., from the wall paper or calcimined walls. Wall Paper Clearies* ith' Cleans without rubbing a Ml requires no mixing—and, l>e**t of i A 15c can of Absorene often s.frc- Try Absorene on window shade? refion the shades to their original freshness and brightnes A large can of Absorene cotta but 15c. at these stores. Without lu-MTlK. It 1-* s mi dirt or litter behind, redecorating an entire room. It will remove nil the dust and grime ftnd Jacobs’ Pharmacy Co. 10 Stores Absorene Mfg. Co. St. Louii, Mo. what lie wants to say, if he cares to follow that procedure, even though the Jefferson Democrats of the past denounced it.” Senator Poindexter, of Washington “I r< tl the 'otter of Mr. Ht arst uni think i: "’Ith much inter*.*-t. I am in hearty accord with him in his clearly ex pressed views on reciprocity and the reasons he assigns, ft is one of the best expositions of that subject I have heard for a long time. This thing of reducing Our rates to the lowest notch without demanding something of the other fellow is go ing to do us harm If we are play ing ill** business game, and want to win business for the. American peo ple, we ought not to lay our hand on the table and let our opponents see it. It is not good business sense to throw down all our trade barriers and let foreign nations come into our matket and not demand* something from'them in rciiirn. Mr. Hearst’s letter cor. he read by all Americans with profit " Senate Townvtnd, of Michigan— "I haven’t read anything In a long time that pleased me more than this letter of Mr. Hearst. I was surprised bo - 1 it coming from such a dis tinguished Democrat and a man of such influence in his party, but it •Ing 4 * triii* in every word. it is logi cal and cleai. and wha: is more tc the 'point, it D ilie truth bluntly spoken ami easily understood. With the newspapers he publishes to cir culate such a letter these words of warning from Mr. Hearst to the Dem ocrats of the country are bound to have a great influence upon the thought of the country. Wilson’s Program Means Disaster for Home Industries” “It is plain tha President Wilson’s mind is bent toward free trade. He speaks of artificial conditions in the Cnited States and insists that Amer ican manufacturers and producers must operate un lor competitive con ditions Those onditions as Presi dent Wilson womd impose them, ap pointed out by Mr. Hearst, would mean UsaCM* for American indus tries. If rates are reduced to the { minimum figure we are forced into competition with foreign cheap ma- teriai^and cheap labor, and American Convict Marathoner Loses to Policemen Speedy Prisoner Sheds Garb, Files Shackles. Runs 3 Miles, and Is Cap tured All in 40 Minutes. His record-breaking epeed in cov ering ground and disposing of con vict garb and shackles was no he»p to John Daniels, a negro. The county police were just a little faster and within 40 minutes the fugitive was under arrest, with John Webb, a ne gro thought by the police to have been an accomplice in the escape. Daniels escaped from a county con vict wagon on Peachtree Road. Offi cers c. C. Heard and A. J. Carroll caught Daniels and Webb in a section house just off Marietta Street. While covering the three miles from Peachtree Road to Marietta Street Daniels changed his clothes and had his shackles filed off. Friedmann Refuses U. S. More of Serum Scientist Declares He Has Given Health Department Sufficient for Tests. Two glasses of Atlanta near-beer that will cause a man to go on a rampage in his boarding house, ter rorize the place with an ice pick, and cause girl guests to flee to porches and the street for refuge are worth a fancy price, in the opinion of Re corder Nash Broyles. He so expressed himself when he imposed a fine of $25.75 on W. A. Cason for just such a performance in the Atlanta Hotel, 32 Houston Street. Cason explained that two glasses of near-beer caused it all. "Well, I’ll just let you pay $12.87 1-2 per glass,” said the court. Witnesses testified that young! womeh In the hotel mistook Cason‘s ice pick for a pistol and were in a panic. Women’s Hair Made Glorious Parisian Sage Stops Falling Hair and Dandruff. Every Man Likes Pie And every man can eat it without taking a moment’s thought about digestion when the pie crust is light, flaky, tender as you can make it with v *■ A Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard This recipe makes perfect pie crust. Try it: Mix J teaspoon salt into It cups flour; work in 1 cup Swift’s Silver- Leaf Lard, moisten with water, roll out. Spread with tablespoon ful Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard, dredge with flour, roll up like jelly roll, pat and roll out, roll up again and cut off enough for lower crust,. Roll out remainder for upper crust and when ready for oven put few small dots Silver-Leaf Lard on top. Shortening that makes good pic crust will makettasty pastry of all kinds. Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard is put up in tight covered, new tin pails. Every x one bears the Govern men t inspec tion stamp guaranteeing the purity and wholesomeness of the lard. Buy a pail. Ask Your Dealer for Silver-Leaf Swift & Company U. S. A. WASHINGTON. April 17. Dr. Friedrich F. Friedmann, it developed to-day, lias refused a request of the Federal Public Health Service for more of the serum which he claims is a "cure” for tuberculosis. Surgeon General Blue is reported to have asked Friedmann for further samples Dr. 1 New York DentaS Offices 28' and 32' . PF.ACHTREE STREET. Over the Bonita Theater and Zakas' Bakery. Gold Crowns . . . $3.00 Bridge Work . . . $4. 00 All Other Work at Reasonable Prices. ESTABLISHED 23 YEARS ^ DR.E.G. GRIFFIN’S GATE CITY DENTAL ROOMS BEST WORK AT LOWEST PRICES All Work Guaranteed. «Our* 8 to 6 - Phnne*M. 17p8- Sund.iya 9 1 T . Whitehall St.. Over Brown «€ Allen* T labor and American material cannot compete with th“ tariff barrier com pletely removed. Mr. Hearst makes his point with .*gard to reciprocity in such, clcan-out English that any body ought to be able to see it. As he ask*. What earthly good will it do us it \\»> tear doAvn the tariff and get tiothing by way of a bargain in re- tu'n'.‘ \Y( simply open our own mar kets to our competitors and do noth ing that °ains us an additional dol in' of trade abroad. “Reciprocity is the only solution and Mr. Hearst is wise In seeing it and courageous in expressing it so clearly. ’ Speaker Clark—“Because of ihe pressure of business I have had to lay the at tide as id e to-day for close reading and stud*, to-night. Until l haw gun* over carefully what Mr. Hears', has to say J will make no (oinmem." Representative Pou, of North Caro lina—"Freni the oniments I have heard th article has in it sound rea soning . . d is important." Representative Burnett, of Alabama “1 have had itiv doubts about the wisdom <»f rev : dug thr*old Federal- i ti( custom of ir.i President reading his address to Congress, I have be • ieved tlw^ys tha* the plan of reel- profits advocated b\ Mr. Hearst was • ’ I h umeral i • uoctrine. .iyd should N a n u ' in t h«* Tariff bill." SUES STORAGE CONCERN FOR DAMAGE TO FURNITURE Assorting that damage to the amount of $1,050.50 was done to her furniture by a fire n John J. Wood- side’s storage warehouse in Febru ary. Ml>s Carolyn Croll has filed suit teens! Wood-side in the Superior Court for that amount. Miss Croll said the furniture was! stored in August, 19-11, bv her father. W. H. Croll. ; of Iris' serum for purposes of analysis. i)r. Friedmann Is declared to have aid that he had already supplied Surgeon Anderson, director of the hy gienic laboratory, with a little plati num "loopful,’’ and that he could spare no more. The amount furnished by the Berlin scientist, according to Surgeon Gen eral Blue, was a .mere drop. POWER COMPANY MAY YET RECOVER $10,000 FORFEIT ROME. GA. April 17 There is a possibility that the Georgia Railway and Power Company may yet obtain the $10,000 which it deposited with the city us a guarantee of its good faith in obtaining a franchise, and which i! has forfeited by not exer cising its option. For the fourth time Council l as been (ailed upon to re fund the money, and this last time the vote was six to five in favor of keeping the money. Heretofore the vote has not been so close. If you have anything to sell adver tise in The Sunday American. Lar gest circulation of any Sunday news paper in the South. Nothing so detracts from the at- $ tractiveness of \votna,n. as dull, faded, lusterless hair. There is no excuse for this con dition nowadays, because notice is < hereby given to the leaders of The 1 Georgian that Parisian Sage, the quick-acting hair restorer, is sold with a money hack guarantee at 60 cents a large bottle. Since its introduction into Amer ica, Parisian Sage has had an im mense sale, and here are the rea sons : ) it is safe and harmless. Con- j tains no poisonous lead or harm- j ful ingredients. j It cures dandruff in two weeks ] by killing the dandruff germ. ) It stops falling hair. < It promptly stops itching of the > scalp. . I? j It makes the hair soft and luxu- ] ? riant. s It gives life end beauty to the t hair. s It is not sticky or greasy. ? It is the daintiest perfumed hair S tonic. ^ It is the best, the most pleasant and invigorating hair dressing made. Made only in America by the Giroux Mfg. Co. Buffalo, X. Y. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every package. j All reliable druggists, depart- s ment stores an 1 toilet goods coun- j ters have Parisian Sage Hair s Tonic. 5 For sale by Jacobs' Ten Stores. RATES ATLANTA MADE Varnish so Different Mending Liquid and Leather Gloss A Handy Varnish Applied With a Cloth Old Furniture Made New. Varnish Your Auto at (light. Have New Car Next Morning. Water-Proof Dust-Proof Heat-Proof No brush marks. Dries hard in five hours. Leaves a smooth glass-like surface. Why pay a painter when you can varnish just as good? Telephone for Demonstration. The Amber Chemical Co. Office 702 Forsyth Bldg. Laboratories 91 Piedmont Ave. Phone Ivy 3131. 1211-12 Fourth National Bank Bldg. f K'S v,? fiBBI