Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 02, 1913, Image 3

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0 V Tflt'. iV 1 liA;\ .“l l I I'jU IV \ II A •> A.> If .vm • KJ 1 * I I i I ' . ' I f! A I .1 «/ • tl > , (If Nance Gwyn Sues for Freedom Dancer Was Four Times Bride Specifications Given for No. 5 Leader Colony in Naucy Gwyn, dancer, whose fourth conjugal voyage has Atlanta’s Oriental; Governing Department That Will j ^Tl' uat ^ 1 f ' uori ' a 1 Illul ,lt ‘ m, r au<l " ll ° s,, ‘‘ ks t *"' P° r * Brings Bride and Optimistic Reports. Lee Hand, who went back to China for a bride, and took f an active part in the establishment of the republic, has returned “Honn ” vn ith his wife and said to-day that ‘‘despite inter- nad dissensions, the Chinese republic will live, and in time the powers will be forced to recognize the new Government.” Hand is one of the most popular young member.- 1 of Atlanta’s Chinese colony and sixteen months ago when he crossed the seas to wed he carried with him the best wishes of a host of friends heiv. With his pretty young bride he is to-day receiving the congratulations of these well-wisher.- “My wife,” eaid Lee, “has never been to America before, and every thing is so new to her. She couldn’t help but wonder at the groat cities through which we passed.” Lee Hand went to China last year primarily to bring back his bride. The revolution was then in its inception. He made hundreds of speeches in be half of the rebels-’ cause* and at one time was enlisted as a soldier. A well educated man, a fluent talker and in spired by his intimate knowledge of the American republic. Hand was an effective worker in the establishment of rule by the people. Was Nearly Mobbed. “I was not the only Chinese from America who went over there and made speeches,” said Hand. “The American, influence is what really brought the re volution to a success ful culmination; there were a large number of us and we made speeches day and night. We told them about this country and what a free gov ernment had done for it. and they be lieved us. I thought I was going to be mobbed more than once, but man aged always to get out of the tight placer. “The republic will live; it is bound to, because it is founded substantial!.' upon the principles of the American Government. Young men are behind the movement and they are inspired by the greatness of America. And every year the number who come here to study is increased. “The industrial growth of China is just now beginning. Lack of rail roads has always been the great drawback. It is surprising how much building js going on. And the Chi nese are building these roads them- selves. They have American archi tects and engineers, but it is Chi nese money and the Chinese will con trol the roads. Awakens to Possibilities. “Another awakening that hold} hope for the future is the beginning of the mining industry. The country is rich in gold, iron and other min erals and they have lain idle. Just within two yean* have any real steps been taken. Insure Greater Security for Depositors Probable. By JAMES B. NEVIN. That much constructive legislation with respect to Georgia banking laws is in serious contemplation for the in coming Legislature is now an assured fact. Indeed, it looks as if the entire banking code, from top to bottom, will be thoroughly reformed, and with an eye largely to the greater «‘cur- lty of depositors. So successful and beneficial has been the operation of the new insur ance law. that Georgia financiers arc greatly encouraged to hope for much banking legislation this summer that was denied them last. At a recent convention of bankers in Savannah this matter was refer red to a sub-committde from the state organization and some very definite recommendations already have been agreed upon. The Legislature will be asked to set up an independent department of banking, with a superintendent, to be appointed by the Governor, in charge. It will be asked that this department be made separate and distinct from the Treasury Department. In re questing this bankers do not intend to reflect in any way on the present state treasurer, who also is state bank examiner, but; merely that the bank ers think their business may be more satisfactorily conducted under dis tinct management of its own. Among other things, the new bank ing laws proposed will require the superintendent of banks to have had not less than, five years experience in practical banking, but he must not be connected with the management < any bank or have business relations with any bank. The new laws also will provide for a board of bankers, as an advisory institution, to be paid a certain sum per diem, when called in session: for an assistant superin tendent, and such bank examiners as may be required, but not moic than one examiner for every 75 banks; for authority whereby banks may be closed peremtorily when found to be violating the law. with additional au thority within the department to pro ceed with the liquidating of closed banks, if advisable. The tentative salaries to be named in the new law are $4,000 per nupi for the superintendent. $2,000 for the assistant, and $1,800 for til- examiners. Banks examined wifi pay ;t fee of from $12.50 to $150 for each exami nation, according to the magnitude of the work. These fees will go to the maintenance fund of the depart- j ment. There are many other features <>f these new laws yet to be agreed upon by the bankers, but the foregoing are some of the most salient points in volved. The last proposed banking act was lost because of two things —first, it i was permitted to drag in the Hcus > [ too long, and second, it\was entirely too voluminous. The new act is to be much smaller in volume and is to be pushed from the meeting of the General Assem- I bly. photographs show her in two nu-ent poses Important Sayings By important people on topics of live interest “I believe thut no non-resident alien should bo allowed to hold a single foot of land in the territory of the United Slates. If Japan now threut- but they do not label their pies oi ens us with war, what would she do when millions of her citizens hav acquired land in our country must preserve to the American far raer the right to own the soil of our country without competition which would drag down his stand ard of living. I would not surren der it unless we had spent the last drop of blood in American manhood and impoverished our country for a hundred generations.'—Represen- Census Report Shows Decrease 1 in Three Years—Violent Deaths ! and Suicides Increase. tative Sisson, of Missouri. >\t present there i» little opportunity for the ultimate consumer to know what is inside a pie. Many bakers use benzoate of soda in foodstuffs, other foods to that effect. By the new system of placarding or having true facts set forth on the menus* the consumer will know what he is getting for his money.”—Health Commissioner E. J. Lederie. of Now York. 'Trained men are more urgently needed in the consular service than in any other branch of the Govern ment. Both parties filled tjiese *n • flees for political consideration un til the system of consular exaar • nations was put into effect by Mr. Cleveland in 1N95." Senator Lochj-e, of Massachusetts. w ***¥** * ^ v < * 4 , ' WASHINGTON, May 2.—In a bul ns have J j e(in ma de public to-day by Census tr> . W e Director Durand regarding the causes I of death .for the registration area only of the United States for 1911, the total deaths from all forms of tuber culosis Is given as 94,205, or 158.9 per 100,000 population. The i*ate for 1910 was 160.3 and 160.8 for 1909. The, death rate for the paat three years has been con siderably lower than those of the pre ceding five years. A marked increase, however, is shown inrthe number of suicides and deaths by violence. “The total number of isuicidew, ’ says the report, “for lull was 9,622, an increase of 1.082 over 1910. The death rate, however, increased only from 16 to 16.2 per 100,000 and was lower than that for 1909 or 1908. “The death rate of whites from suicide, 16.5, was higher than that of negroes, 10.3. The highest suicide death rates were in California. 30.1, Montana 27.8; Colorado, 21.7. Among the big cities. San Francisco, 39.4; St. Louis, 37.7; Los Angeles. 37.2; Den ver, 36.5. “Of the 54.028 deaths in 1911 clas sified as violent deaths (excluding suicide) more than nine-tentho, 50,121. were of an accidental or unde fined character, the remainder being due to himicide. The death rate from ! accidental and unspecified violence j was S4.6 per 100,000, slightly higher ! than in 1910, 84.3; but lower than the ; averages for the consecutive periois 1901 to 1905, S4.9; and 1905 to 1910, SO. Homicide caused 3,907 deaths in I 1911. or 6.6 per 100,000. The big cities having the highest rutes were Mem- hit;, 191.7; Scranton, 177.3; Birming- i ham. 151.9; Albany, 131.7, and Boston, \ i ■ ; '*o r > i m CASTOR IA Tor Infants and. Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought SI W / Bears the Signature of l Set the example in your family by using COJ.C0TES TR»oe R ( O DEATim CREfm The your will health of household be better. It is practically certain that Wil liam J. Harris, chairman of the State Democratic Executive Committee, will not resign the chairmanship when he goes to Washington to be director of the census. Mr. Harris has consulted with a number of his friends, and with many members of the state committee as t<> the advisability of his resigning, an:i with unanimous voice they have in sisted that he dismiss the idea from his mind. They say there is no earth ly reason why he should quit the chairmanship, merely because he is to be an office holder in Washing ton. Indeed, many precedents sus tain the other point of view. Mr. Harris, therefore, has all but definitely made up his mind not to resign. Representative Ed Wohlwender, of Muscogee, the only man in the last House who succeeded in browbeating i seemingly reluctant rules commit tee into doing something it didn’t want to do, is in Atlanta's highly ap- mociative midst today. Wohlwender will return to the next House, which is insurance sufficient against a dull time, anyway. Represenative R. <\ Leaner, of Crawford County, says the people of his section are more awake to the necessity of good toads nowadays than they ever have been before. His county is contemplating a $150,000 bond issue with which to carry for ward much fine road work already under way. Mr. Lesuer is ver> much interested j in tiie proposed Federal aid to goo-.i I toads, and will take a hand in shap- ng such summer legislation as is necessary to put Georgia in line for its share. The Albany Herald rather forcibly expresses the opinions of a great many Georgians to-day when it ways: “It seems that there is to be no end ;o prohibition agitation in Georgia. The prohibitionists now have their urohibition and the liquor drinkers have their liquor whenever they want 'l; but nobody appears to be satisfied. Many good people, including thou sands who stand for temperance and consistently practice it in their daily fives, have become tired of a pro tracted agitation which accomplishes nothing and profits nobody except i Ui\\ small politicians and professional agitators, but It seems that there is no escape from it and that it is to go on forever.” Representative Tinsley Ragslaud to-day said he was thinking of an nouncing himself a candidate for speaker, “as a sort of compromise’’ — although what it is that is to be | compromised, the gentleman from I 3’alnot didn’t say. Congressman Tom Bell’s base may be known to Tinsley, and he m i.v have had. if in mind when he made his speakership announcement. Bell says when he first mentioned ihe fact he lmd a notion of running . , for Congress, nobody apparently. was NF-NT—cure—_ ? j sufficiently interested even t.» as* . guara tcr<i in \ \ “Well. Tom, why don't you?” Nevertheless Tom evehtualh *i elected to Congress. She Has Faith in Prophecy of Hindoo Soothsayer, Who Pre dicted Seven Husbands. NEW YORK. May 2. — Nance Gwyn, whose “Dance of the Dawns” won her fame in America two years ago, has brought suit in tlie English courts against* her fourth husband, Charles Romer Williams, former Brit ish army officer and now partner ir. the firm of Thomas Agnew Sons. London, picture dealers. Since bringing • irl, Miss G wyn has been in this country, living in a ! studio-apartment at 116 Central Par's South. “T began suit for divorce because it was the only thing 1 could do un der the circumstances.” said Miss Gwyn last night. "D tails of the I charges I have made will come out in court. N “Of course, it i.* rather unusual for a girl to haw had four hus bands at iny age. I am but twenty- six. My first marriage took place when f was only sixteen. M\ first two husbands- David Stuart and Eric Trafferdwyr—died. I was divorced from my third. Thomas Caffrey. I won’t be bound to a man whom I can not respect and love. “Despite my four experiences I do not feel that i know men thoroughly. Ann so, though there is no purticuhi individual in prospect now probably murr\ again. A soothsayer in Hong Kong 1 WHICH IS THE BETTER, MR. PRACTICAL MAN OR COLLEGE "GRADC’ “Which is the better, the col lege man or the practical man?” For the first time an authority has diagnosed the two cases. Howard Elting, president of the Chicago Association of Commerce, after obtaining the opinions of representative men. has compiled a table on the college man in comparison to his brother practi cal. man Mis bad points are: 1. impatience to succeed. 2. Lack of persistence. 3. Tendency to snobbishness. 1. Lack of Industry. 5. Lack oi thrift. 6. Lack of technical training. 7. Lacks appreciation of time. S. Easily discouraged. His good points are: 1. Has more concentration. 2. Knows where anil how to get information. 3. Reasons one step to another. 4. Is more adaptable. 5. Is more conscientious. 6. Has keener appreciation of duties of life. 7. Able to solve difficult prob lems. 8. Has higher ethical arid moral standards. 9. Has larger view of life. SURGEONS USE FINGER TO REPLACE WOMAN'S NOSE LOS ANGELES. May 2.—Surgeons in the Pasadena Hospital to-day were building a new nose on the face of Mrs. Mabel Johnson, of Los Angeles. They were using the third finger of her left hand, piaffing the tip of the finger between her eyes and removing the bone nearest the palm of th • hand to form the tip of the artificial nose. The doctors said the skin was knit ting well and that the blood supply apparently was uninterrupted. Tin operation will last several weeks. Crippled-up Sufferers Find Relief After Few Doses of Croxone are Taken. It is needless to suffer any long er with rheumatism, and be all crippled up, and bent out of shape with its heart-wrenching pains, S when you can surely avoid it. f Rheumatism comes from weak, inactive kidneys, that fail to After <*. from the blood the poisonous waste ) matter and uric acid, and it is usc- ( Ie‘ : s to rub on liniments or taki i irt'dinary remedies to relieve the ? pain. This* only prolongs th«- mis- ? cry. £ The only way to cure lheuma-' > tism is to remove the cause. The ) new discovery. Croxone, does this < because it neutralizes and rllssclves > all the poisonous substances and i uric acid that lodge in the joints s and muscles, to scratch and irri- j tate and cause rheumatism, and ) » leans out and strengthens the ^ stopped-up. inactive kidneys, so > they can filter all hi poison from • tiie blood, and drive it on and out ) of the system. ( ( .oxime L the most wonderful j medicine ever made for chronic rheumatism, kidney* troubles ;jncl ; bladder disorders. Yoiywiil find it j different from all other medicines, j There is nothing else on earth like ^ it. It matters not how old you arc. or how long you have suffered, it Is practically impossible to take it into the human system without re sults. You will find relief from tiie first few doses, and you will be surprised how quickly all misery and suffering will end. An original package cf Croxone costs but ;t trite at any first- class drug store. An druggists are au thorized to sell it on a positive money-back guarantee. Three doses a day for a few days is often all that is ever needed to over come the worst backache or uri nary disorders. Two Generations ■ Now Using It i Nation's Most Popular Lax ative Keeping Millions of Amsrican Families in Good Health. Hindoo once told me that I was destined to have seven husbands.” “Have you any particular model in mind for your next mate?” she was asked? “Ye-.’' was the serious repl>. “My next husband mu*t be an American and he must be a brunetce. Three of my husbands were English and three v ere 6 feet 3 inches tall Mr. Caffrey was an Irishman. “But really,” she continued, “I do believe that the man or woman who is honest enough to admit that he or she has made a mistake and seeks to •correct it honorably should receive public approbation and not condemna tion as at present.” Miss Gwyn .was married to her present husband in the spring of 1911. The ceremony was performed by a Justice of the Peace in Pa ter.-on, N. J. j U. S. Formally Recognizes China. PEKIN, CHINA, .'.la; 2*.—The ' United .States lo-ciny r.-rngnizeri - na. E. T. Williams, the. American . Charge d’AiTai.rs and Act.ng Mil; > - ter. called on Pres-iuert Yuan SIR : Ivni and p nted IT--:, -a i Wh.-on’sj Ring' to the rtew republic. Not Enough Heroes For the Pedestals Seven Nations Have Failed to Con tribute Patriotic Statuary for Washington Building. WASHINGTON. May 2. -only thirteen of the twenty.one republics on the Westt n Hemisphere which form the Pan-American Union, have raised statues of their national he roes in the magnificent marble build ing here 'devoted to advancing the interests of pan-Americanism. In the main hall of the building stand twenty-one marble pedestals. On ten of them are busts of chosen national lieroe-. “hile th > ' Latin American countries than si-1 < There must ) an article that < two generatior ) In the fi- j had greater ; ) that success < than Dr. Call; f which is now ( generations ol ; families is < j more general. ) ly. is that it ha ^ represents itsi tonic; it does genuine merit to : c.i the ' feat ol f users. / •of medicine none has -uccevs, nor retained to a greater degree, \ being used by two I" v. in mstant ly becoming The reason, primuri - s merit. It is what it If to be, a laxativ' - not make exagger- fir ated claims nor use coarse language to set-forth it." virtues. It is a medicine, but so mild and gentle a medicine that thousands of mothers give it to tiny infants, and yet, in a slightly larger dose, it is equally effective for grown-ups. L is for any disorder of the stomach, liver or bowels, for constipation, no matter how chronic; for dyspepsia, no matter how severe; for bilious ness, sour stomach, gas on the stomach, headaches, drowsiness aft er eating, and similar complaints arising from a (‘logged-up condition of the bowels, ft io pleasant to the taste and does not gripe. It can be used with safety and good results by anyone at any age or in any condi tion of ivafth, and thut person’s health will improve. Every drug gist sells it and the prii- is only fifty rents and one dollar a bottle. Thousands of families tkrougnbut ■ — — ELSIE LEWIS. the country are never without ll In the houee, 'among t^em Mrs. Clara Lewis, Becks’ Storo; Ky., who gave it to her baby. EUfie. while teething, and says: “it is the best medicine in the world tor the stomach and bow els.” She writes that she keeps it in the house for every member of tin* family, takes it herself and that h« r mother recovered her health and gained in flesh by using Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. If no member of your family has ever used Syrup Pepsin and you would like to make a personal trial of it before buying ihjn the regular way of a druggist, send your ad- ell. ral will do—to Washington h, and a free mailed you. W. B. Happy , ' Hooligan Earns $1,000-Nit! 9 caught! Mr. Batch and Major Stoneheart a cozy talk Their i T e was These are some of the great features to be found exclu sively in the Comic Section of The Sun day American, next Sunday. Order Your Paper Mow BOTH PHONES Main 8000