Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 05, 1913, Image 3

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TTTE ATLANTA (i EO-RG lY\ X A N't) NEWS, HONEST! NEVER AGAIN FINALLY YIELD; LEAVL SCUTARI Ambassadorial Court Is Conven ing for Decisive Session as the Little Kingdom Gives Up, CETTINJE, May 5.—After de fying the powers for a month, Kinq Nicholas to*day decided to give up the citadel of Soutari. Scutari was occupied by a Mon tenegrin army on April 23, after a siege lasting six months. During the latter weeks of the bombard ment the European powers re peatedly warned Montenegro to cease the cannonade. Soutari will remain an Albanian city. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, May 5 — Official an nouncement was made In the House of Commons this afternoon by Pre mier Asquith that the Ambassadors had received a formal communica tion from Kins Nicholas to the ef fect that Montenegro has decided to leave the disposition of Scutari to the powers. “This decision on the part of King Nicholas is satisfactory to the pow ers,” said the Premier. “King Nicho las is to be congratulated on this welcome decision in both the interests of Montenegro and the peace of Eu rope.” A telegram from Cettinje said that a ministerial crisis has been precipi tated by the attitude of the Montene grin Government toward Scutari and that the resignation of King Nicholas’ cabinet had been given and accepted. The downfall of the cabinet was brought about by the rejection by Crown Prince Danilo of the proposi tion of the ministerial council that Montenegro stand firm and even go to war against Europe if that step is necessary to retain Scutari. The session to-day of the ambassa dorial court was to have been one of extreme importance, as the program included final action on the attitude of Montenegro. A meeting of the National Parlia ment of Montenegro has been sum moned for May 8, when official sanc tion will be given to any course adopt ed by King Nicholas. Plan to Divide Albania Likely To Be Dropped. PARIS, May 5.—Belief was ex pressed in diplomatic circles to-d.iy that Austria and Italy soon will aban don their plan to divide Albania. Strong opposition to the plan comes from Germany, which country con siders the power of the triple alliance would be considerably weakened in the "’event of a general war, as the two powers would have to put armies into, Albania to maintain their interests. According to the Anstro-ltalian plan, Albania would be occupied by j troops of the two powers much th ■ same as England occupies Egypt. Plan to Invade Albania Not To Be Abandoned. VIENNA, May 5.—Count VonBerch- thold, the Austrian Foreign Minister, announced to-day that the Austrian Government had just received assur ances from Montenegro that King Nicholas would abandon Scutari un conditionally. This will not prevent Austria and Italy from sending a military expedi tion into Albania, it was said. Fresh Eggs Part Man and His Wife Fact That Husband Gave All the Product of His Hens to His Mother, Secured Divorce. CINCINNATI. May 5 —Mrs. Zella t’unningham. of Walnut Hills, who was granted a divorce from William Cunningham, alleged cruelty as one of the grounds. One form of the cruelty she charged was her husband’s re fusal to give her any of the fresh eggs that were the products of the family chickens. She alleged that he gave the eggs to his mother, who lived with them. Mrs. Cunningham alfi*o testified that ‘when her husband was away on a trip he gave the key to the hennery to his mother. 14 CONVICTS ESCAPE FROM A FLORIDA CAMP TAMA, FLA., May 5.—A big man hunt is in progress to-day around the head of Tampa Bay. Fourteen convicts, some of them life termers, escaped from a stockade near Largo last night. Guards discovered the break and headed off the rest. One bloodhound was killed during the night by the fugitives. J0NE5 Ar CO LAWYERS BY TbE terms of Your. LATE UHCt.es VUILL You Inherit $1000000 Copyrifht, UH3, lntci u* lion a > New* MUM *TM OVER o'iEO I CAN NOW mO IN TO BUSINESS, 1^1 TIRED VYORK/Nq FOR OTHER FToPle V/hat sort of Business WERE You QoiNqiNTo? I f. BACH 7?)7ME MR^L •' i/I qoinq/nto The CHICK.EH MI5IN9 BUSINESS - Lots NET IN IT THEY V SA'i Mexican Ruler Plans Concentra tion Camps, and General Mas sacre of Foes Is Feared. t-W-M-M-H-H-fr-H-fr1 l-t-H'* H-I'H -l-H-H-H-t-H-I-I-H-t-H-H-H-H-t 'Miracle' Denounced By Bishop as Fraud Famous Bleeding Effigy Removed From Shrine—Priest Claims Supernatural Mission. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. PARIS, May 5.—The controversy between Bishop Potiers and Mgr. Va- ehere Abbe de Gratelou over the sup pression of the “miracle” known as the “Bleeding Heart of Poitiers" is arousing tremendous interest through out France. Several years ago a priest noticed that an ordinary effigy in the chapel at Mirabeati en Poitiers was exud ing drops of blood. Thousands of pilgrims flocked to the shrine. It was claimed that a drop of tne mysterious blood effected the cure of various dis eases. The present bishop, lately appoint ed, has denounced the “miracle” as an imposture and ordered the removal of the effigy from the shrine. NEGRO PUGILIST ON TRIAL ON WHITE SLAVERY CHARGE CHICAGO, May 5.—Jack Johnson, negro pugilist, was called to trial be fore Federal Judge Carpenter to-day on charges- of violating the Mann white slave law. The Government's star witness, Belle Sehreiber, formerly a manicur ist, of Milwaukee, Wis., later a bur lesque actress, was being guarded at a downtown hotel bj r Government agents. United States attorneys said she was ready to testify against John son. IS SCORED BY CRITICS American Medicine, in Bitter Ed itorial, Says German Savant’s Attitude Is Boorish. > OLD FOLKS FliiD NEW ALL KIDNEY AND REMEDY RELIEVES BLADDER MISERIES ) Drives Rheumatic Pains Away, Re lieves Backache and Bladder Disorders After a Few Doses Are Taken. Sleep-disturbing bladder weak nesses, backache, rheumatism and the many other kindred ailments which so commonly come with de clining years need no longer be a source of dread and misery to those who are past the middle age of life. The new discovery, Croxone, re lieves all such disorders because it removes the very cause of the trou ble. It soaks right Into the kid neys. through the walls and linings; | cleans out the little filtering glands and cells, and gives the kidneys new I strength to do their work properly. It neutralizes and dinar Ives the poisonous uric acid substances that lodge in the joints and muscles, causing rheumatism; and makes the kidneys filter and sift out all the poisonous waste matter from the blood and drive it out of the sys tem. It matters not how old you are or how long you have suffered, Croxone is so prepared that it is practically impossible to take it into the human system without re sults. You will find it different from all other remedies. There is noth ing else on earth like it. It starts to work immediately and more than a few doses are seldom required to relieve even the most chronic, ob stinate case. You can obtain an original pack age of Croxone at trifling cost from any first-class druggist. AH drug gists return the purchase price if Croxone should fail in a single case. NEW YORK, May 5. This man lias outraged every sense of propriety and abused in the most astounding manner the courtesies and considera tions extended to him for the purpose of proving the correctness of his claims. “His attitude from first to last has been one of boorish disregard and complete indifference to the feelings of his colleagues. He has snubbed and ignored the physicians—men of high standing—delegated by the Gov ernment. to investigate the effects of his treatment.” The above Is a part of an arraign ment of Dr. Friedrich Friedmann, In the current issue of American Medi cine. The attack is contained in a lengthy editorial and is the bitterest yet made upon the turtle germ “curist.” U. S. Surgeon Silent on “Cure.” WASHINGTON, May 5.—Efforts of Dr. John S. Billings, of the New York Public Health Association, to get. Sur geon General Rupert Blue, in charge of the Federal public health service, to issue a statement regarding the Friedmann treatment for consumption have been futile. Surgeon General Blue has told the New York physician that he is not prepared to either allay optimism or boost pessimism, so far as the Fried mann serum was concerned. MOVE ON TO UNIONIZE CHICAGO’S STOCKYARDS (’HU’AGO, May 5.—A movement to unionize employees in Jhe stockyards of Chicago was under w'ay to-day fol lowing a meeting of mill workers, who signified a willingness to Join in the campaign for higher wages, better working conditions, better eating- places, and more sanitary conditions. JAPANESE~~RAISE $5,000 FOR WIDOW OF AIRMAN SAN FRANCISCO, May 0 —A ca- blegram to a local Japaneye newspa per to-day stated that a publication in Japan had subscribed $5,000 for the support of the family of Tunko Tak- eishi, a Japanese aviator who was killed yesterday, landing in a flight ffcorn Osaka to Tito, Japan. Take is hi trained in America. Close Congress Ten Years, Hill Suggests Then, Railroad President Says, the Country Would See Unprece dented Prosperity. ST PAUL, May 5.—Congress should adjourn and stay adjourned for ten years in order to better conditions In the United States, according to James J. Hill. Mr. Hill attacked the Congressional legislation, which, ho said, had pre vented a more rapid influx of immi gration. Laws that have been passed recently are responsible for the flood of immigration to the Argentine Re public, he asserted. “If he could just tie a be!! on each one of our illustrious statesmen who is trying to keep workmen out of this country and adjourn Congress for ten years. T believe the country would see an unprecedented period of prosper ity,” he said. “Business men then would carry on big undertakings without fear of legislative interrup tion. $20,000 FIRE SWEEPS MIAMI WATER FRONT Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. | MEXICO CITY,. May a- A new anti-Government plot, width was to have broken into a general uprising j to-day, has been nipped ’in the bud j by the aggressive measures of Presi dent Huerta. The first news of the conspiracy came from Cuernavaca, capital of Morelos, and stated that this was the day sei for an attack on the Government forces. This is the fifty-first anniversary of the capture of Puebla from the French and Is the Mexican Fourth of July. A national salute fired from a bat tery at the National Palace in honor of the occasion caused widespread ilarm, as many persons thought the city* had been attacked. Massacre Is Foreseen. The Government has decided to es tablish concentration camps through More'en. All inhabitants of the State must gather at these camps or ran the risk of being put to death. This step i.s believed to be the forerunner of a massacre throughout the State. President Huerta lias ordered that no quarter be shown the Zapatistas Although the Government Is try ing to minimise the outrage perpe trated by the Zapatistas near the Azumba last Thursday, when a train was wrecked with the loss of 3 60 lives, further details, adding to the horror of the tragedy, were received here to-day. Victims Are Tortured. Men, women and children were tor tured before being put to death. The barbarous rebels, with the savagery of cannibals, drank the blood of their victims and ate their flesh. Acts of unbelievable cruelty were practiced on the women and children. Reports that the Government has completed arrangements to borrow *55,000,000 ironi France and England on the strength of recognition of the Government by England were offloial- :> denied. Law Forbidding Arms Exportation Effective. WASHINGTON, May 5. The joint resolution of Congress March 14. 1912, passed to authorize the President to prevent the exportation of arms and ammunition from the United States into Mexico was made effective by decision of the Cnited States Supreme Court to-day in the cases of the Gov ernment against Joseph E. Mesa and Arnulfo Chavez, <»f El Paso, Texas. Professor W. H. Taft, in First Yale Lecture Ex-President Says "Majority of the People Will Never Get the Ballot in United States.” NEW HAVEN, May 5.—"A major ity of the neople in the United States probably will never be given the ba! lot," said Professor William Howard Taft, in opening his lecture course on “Some Questions of Government." lie said when the Constitution was adopted ;■ century ago. only about one in 2,5 of the 4,300,000 people of the country, Including women and children, were given the ballot. The number has been constantly extended until to-da^ about one in six has i vote. Should the electorate privilege be extended by the admission of women, only about 30 per cent would he given the ballot, and it is not likely that a majority of the people will ever be accorded It. Senate Committee to 1 Fight Wilson's Plans ! for Currency Reform Will Oppose Every Effort to Rush Through Administration Bill. WASHINGTON, May o. The Si-u. ate committee on banking 1 and ^cur rency is unalterably opposed to a number of the features of currency legislation suggested by President Wilson and Secretary McAifoo. The members of the committee are wide apart on what the law should be. They say they do not intend to be coerced or impressed into the support of an Administration bill to which they cannot give their adher ence. * I Practically th© only conclusion I reached was that there should be no legislation at this session of Con gress. A subcommittee consisting of Sen ators Owen. Hitchcock, , Shafroth, ■ Bristow and Weeks has drafted thirty inquiries to be addressed to promU nent bankers and economists throughout the country. Hero are some of the questions “What are the essential defects of our banking and currency system?" “Should a new system include Spate as well as national banks?” “Should there be one central re serve association or a number, a.nd>if the latter, how many?” “Should the Aldrich-Vreelahd act be extended after Its expiration in 1914 7 if »o. should it be amended?” "Should additional currency be per manent or temporary?” “Should national banks be required to keep their reserves in their own vaults ami with their own reserve association?" "Should the rate on discounts be the same for all, and should this ra f 3 be published weekly?” Politics Barred on Chautauqua Circuits ! Booking Agents Give Statesmen "Tip” That Only Old-Time Orators * Are Welcome This Year. WASHINGTON, May f» T Pol i tkal| speakers are not desired on the sum mer Chautauqua circuits, according to Information that reached here to-day. i The booking agents have informed a ; number of Representatives and Sena - ! tors who make a good deal of extra j money In the summer on the ledture I platform that old-style lecturers are In demand and that there 1s no inter- I est In politics. Representative Hobson, who hasar- j ranged a number of speaking en ] gagements, will confine hi* talks to temperance topics. Secretary of State Bryan is the chief Chautauqua headliner. He generally receives more than *f>00 for each lec ture. Tulane Debaters Win Triple Match Louisiana University Gets Two De cisions and Georgia One—Wash ington and Lee Loses. ^ATHENS, UA., May D Tiilarie University won two of the three de cisions in the triangular intercollegi ate debate with the University of Georgia and Washington and Lee University Saturday night, the third decision going to Georgia. The one subject debated was "Resolved, That labor unions are inimical to the Industrial welfare of the United States.” One Georgia team met a Tulane team in Nrw Orleans, a Tulane team met one from Washington and Lee at Lexington, Va.. and a Washing ton and Lee team met one from Georgia ifi Athens. Georgia won in Athens, while Tulane won at New Orleans and Lexington. Macon Pastor Resigns. MACON.—Rev. C. P. Coble, pastor of Vineville Presbyterian Church, his resigned to accept a pastorate at High Point. N. C. Vegetable Parade For School Pupils Spokane Boys and Girls Will Carry Products of Garden In Toy Vehicles Through City. SPOKANE. WASH May 8 Haul ing vegetables with play express wag. one, v heel barrows and tricycles, 6,000 Npokftpefidbi Chi)djien will tajte part in a vegetable) parade that will be Uie concluding ♦•vent of a garden contest m vfhioh .sfjveml*thousands boys and girls «!r*> 4 auiiog. as .many backyards io bkwsiiin and U> pro luce real money. Following the parade, which will be held the weel o r the June pow-wow. or carnival, the horde of young gar deners will take their vegetables to the public stadium to be disposed of by auction This Is the second year of the gar den contest, which Is conducted by tho Chamber of Commerce and the Y. M. C. A., and every one of the 33 grads school in the city has between 150 and 200 boys and girls cultivating garden plots. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of EDWIN P. ANSLEY W. FLOYD JOHNSON ANSLEY & JOHNSON Fire :: Accident :: Health Liability :: Automobile INSURANCE All Claims Settled at This Office PHONE IVY 873 821 REALTY TRUST BLDG. THE “DECATUR SECTION o White City Park Now Open Guaranteed Fresh Country MIAMI. FLA., May 5. Huffstatler Ways, the largest 1n Miami, with a i 60-foot boot nearly completed and} three smaller craft, was destroyed by j fire last night, the loss being about! $20,000. The flames curled over the, oil tanks of the Gulf Refining Com . pany, and shipping along the entire' water front and many palatial resi dences. hotels and warehouses wen- endangered. The i-aiisp »>f the fire i- unknown. Some of the RECENT Developments in this Growing Section of DEKALB COUNTY Tlie Mayor and Council of Decatur have let contracts for PAVING parts of 1 COLLEGE AVENUE, CANDLER STREET. M’DONOIJGH STREET, .IEFEKKHON PLACE and PONCE DE LEON AVENUE In DECATUR. I’art of this work is now under way. The GOOD ROADS COMMITTEE of the Decatur Hoard of Trade has let a contract for imtendamlTlng CANDLER STREET from the corporate limits of DECATUR to Morgan Street, aud the work Is now belug done. MORGAN STREET In EAST LAKE Is now being laid with macadam and tnrvbi binding to meet Candler Street. PONCE DE LEON AVENUE Is now passable for vehicles from the GEORGIAN TERRACE to the beautiful Court House Square art Decatur, and this lieantlful avenue will soon Is* an exact counter part of-EAST LAKE DRIVE. When at! this work Is eoinpleied. during the next three or four month*. DECATUR will tv at the CENTER of the REST SYSTEM of DRIVEWAYS opt of Atlanta. TILE WALKS are now being laid ou KINGS HIGHWAY and CHURCH STREET; thus completing modern sidewalks for these streets to the corporate limits of DECATUR. The NEW PUBLIC SCHOOL BUILDING the second In three years- Is now being constructed In DECATUR. Many NEW' homes are being erected at East Lake, Oakhurst, Kirkwood, and In other parts of the "DECATUR SECTION” as well as in DECATUR Itself. The people of KIRKWOOD—one of the most attractive parts of the “DECATUR SECTION”—are TURNING THINGS UPSIDE DOWN, grading aud macadamizing streets, laying concrete curb and walks, and building new' homes in everv part of the town. Tlie STONE MOUNTAIN ELECTRIC LINE extending from Decatur through INGLESIDE, SCOTT DALE and CLARK SfTON, to STONE MOUNTAIN is opening up a lieantlful NEW coaiutry, a most important addition to the "DECATUR SECTION." DEKALB- AVENUE from Maysons Crossing to Kirkwood, Is now being laid with vitrified brick, making another MODERN driveway through KIRKWOOD and OAKHURST to DECATUR. What la BOUND TO HAPPEN with ALL THESE MODERN IMPROVEMENTS GOING ON IN the "DECATUR SECT ION V” Ride through tills section and see for yourself. Send for Book let. Decatur Board of Trade Bell Phone Decatur 148 Weekes Building DECATUR, GA Cts. Doz. Case 16c Doz. 5 Cases 1544c Doz. Most Prompt and Effectual Cure fo" Bad Colds. When you have a bad cold you want a remedy that will not only give relief, out effect a prompt anti permanent cure, a remedy that is pleasant to take, a remedy that contains nothing injurious. Cham berlain’s Cough Remedy meets all these requirements. It acts on na ture’s plan, relieves the lungs, aids expectoration, opens the secretions and restores the system to a healthy condition. This remedy has a world-wide sale and use, and can always be depended upon. Sold by all dealers. White City Park Now Open Meadow Gold ft Butter,Pound Purity Putterine 17'4c Breakfast Bacon lb 12%c 40c Coffee lb 28c 30c Pure Coffee lb 22c 80c Tea lb 39c Cash Grocery Co. 111-120 Whitehall Established 1865- EISEMAN BROS., Inc. FOR SALE—RESTAURANT Doing big business. Must be sold at once. Owner, Box 55, care Georgian. Pin.ty & LeDuc Paris -Incorporated 1912 Hat Department: Main Floor, Right \fi I id ported Model French Panama IYACH I SHAPEi 50 Other Styles, $1.50 and Up You’ll feel as cool as you’ll look, in one of * these light, “dressv” straws! s S EISEMAN BROS., Inc. 11-13-15-17 WHITEHALL J Im