Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 09, 1913, Image 4

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4 THE ATLANTA GEORG TAX AND NEVA S. EKJLDA Y. MAY 9. 1913. FEUD III STITE DEPARTMENT Connor-Brown Fight for Place in Next Administration Sets Poli ticians Gossiping. W>ll tiffined and authoritative ru mor? of a finul-clan? row inai,de the Georgia Agricultural Department, In- volVing the present and the next ad ministration, is the piquant morsel of gossip political observers are chew ing upon. The present < ’ommiesioner of Agri culture. .1. .1. Connor, and the oresent Assistant Commissioner, .1 J. Brown, both, it is shUI. aspire to be Aaslstant < 'ommissioner binder Commissioner .fames D. Price, who goes into office in June Some time ago Commissioner Con nor and Assistant Commissioner Brown are said to have had an un derstanding, the alleged setting aside of which Is now the cause of the dis turbance within the department. Brown Is understood to have prom ised Connor his assistance in the rnat ter of the recent election of a man ager at the Agricultural Experiment Station In Griffin, in return for Con nor's assistance in landing the As sistant Commiss^nerahip under Price for Brown. When the election of a manager tbok place at Griffin recently, how ever, Connor was not elected, the plum going to Professor DeLoach, of Athene. Since that election. Brown's friends < laim that Connor has entered the iace for the Assistant Commissioner- ship under Price, and Assistant Com missioner Brown has been outspoken in his indignation and surprise The Assistant ('ommissioner will he appointed by Commissioner Price after he is sworn In. and in the mean- time the disagreement between Con nor and Brown as to which, if ei ther, shall have the assistant's place is extremely interesting to political observers throughout the State. New Gowns Shock ‘Bath House' John •And It Takes Some Shock to Get Me,’ Admits Famous Chicago Alderman. CHICAGO. May 9. Alderman Bathhouse" John Coughlin is xo s socked at the gowns he sees on ttie streets that he has drafted an ordi nance to regulate women's dress, sole ly. li* sayr. on moral grounds. "We must pass an ordinance pro hibiting women from wearing vulg.v and suggestive dresses," lie told the Judbiar\ Committee. "Some of th“ • iresses 1 see on the street shock my moral senses, and it takes some shock to get me. The gowns are awful. No wonder there Is business for a vie? commission.” Granite State Honors Pierce After 40 Years New Hampshire Democratic Legis lature Favors Statue of One- Time President. CONCORD. May <*.— Franklin Pierce, the only President from New Hampshire, seems assured, at last, of * statute by his native State. The Senate has passed a House bill pro viding for a $15,000 appropriation. Governor Felker is expected to sign the measure The fact that Pierce was a Demo crat and pro-slavery man has hith erto aroused strong opposition to a statue The Legislature is Demo cratic for the first time in forty years. Miss C.H. Jones Dies; Set Church Record 4h Member of Second Baptist Congre gation Never Missed Sunday School in 60 Years. Neve; having missed a Sundry school service for more than 60 years is the record of Miss Carrie H. Jones, aged 81. who died early Friday morn ing at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Dawson. 120 Park Street. The deceased was a member of the Second Baptist Church ami resided in Atlan ta 35 year*. She came to Atlanta from Abbeville. S C. The funeral will be held from the Dawson residence at 3:30 o'clock Sat urday aftemocr. Rev. Dr. John E. White and Rev. Dr. John F. Purser oifi.dating Deacons of the Second Baptist Church will act as pallbear ers. Interment will be in Oakland ('emetery. The deceased is survived by two nieces, Mrs. Homer Dawson, of At| anta. and Mrs. C. T. Henderson, of Port Tampa. Fla.; a nephew, Bruce Jones, and a brother. Captain J. Hill Jones, both of Port Tampa. OBITUARY NOTICES. PRETTY VASSAR GIRL AFTER 'BIG PAT'S'SHOT-PUT RECORD MISS ELIZABETH A. HARDEN. PATRICK MDONALD SETTING A NEW MARK. L F Matron at Soldiers' Home Dies Suddenly Mis, Aba T. Clayton Drops Dead After Five Years' Service to Confederate Veterans. Railroader Tells How Secretary of Interior Got Unfavorable Im pression of Controller Bay. WASHINGTON, May H. Richard S Ryan, president' of the Controller Bay Raiiroad and Navigation Com pany and one of the principals in-the Dick-to-Dick letters, opposed Gov ernment ownership and operation of railroad? in Alaaka and attacked the accuracy of the Railway Comm Us- ?ion’a report, on proposed route?, be fore the Senate Committee on Terri tories to-day. Ryan averted the conclusions of the commission are at variance with facts, and if the commission had used . scientific facta -I* possession of the Government it? report would have been entirely different. Ryan referred sarcastically to the "w onderful visit" of Former Secretary of the Interior to Alaska and asserted that his unfavorable opinion of the Controller Bay country was due to the i ct that he became “scared." Ryan said that when Fisher start ed up the Bering River he lost heart at the sight of breakers, demanded to be let out of the boat and walked through marsh lands back to Katalla. Mis* Aba T. Clayton, matron at the Confederate Soldiers’ Home, dropped dead Friday morning in her room after superintending the prep aration of breakfast for the 06 in-j mate? of the home. She had been afflicted with heart trouble. Miss Clayton had been matron at | the home five years and had won the} hearts of the old veterans after whose comfort she looked with painstaking tare. Her death was a distinct shock to them. A sister. Mis? Kate Clayton, of Atlanta, was notified and the body was brought to the undertaking e c - tabli.vhment of Barclay and Brandon, from where it will be sent to Greens- j boro Ga., til ? lamily home, for in - ! t erment. Lad, 13, Says He Shot Suitor of Mother Declares He Ordered Man From Home. Then Fired in Self-Defenee. CLEVELAND, OHIO. May 8,-Du- son Host it, 32, i? in a critical condi tion to-day from a wound inflicted last night by George Lukin, 18. sort of Mrs. Amelia Lukin. The boy sur rendered. “Kostit had been calling on iny mother for seven months," the boy told the police. "I ordered him to- leave last night. He pulled a revolve: arrd fired twice. Then I took aim with my rifle and he dropped, crying he had been shot." Walter S. Wimbish. former Atlanta insurance man. died Friday morn ing at tiie home of his daughter, Mi>. Frank Archer, in Rome, Ga. Th< funeral services will be held ; n Rome S;‘: urdiiv mot ning, lid t^e body taken to Cedortown, Ga., for inir-rnient. Mr. Wimbish. who was 'jxtv-fivr years old. is survived bv out Ton. Carter Wimh’sh. of Bir mingham. and two daughters. Mrs. Catherine Kendrick. 71 Capitol Avenue, died Thursday night at a private sanitarium. Mrs. Kendrick Is (survived by her husband E. L. Kendrick; a daughter. Miss Mary * Kendrick; four sisters, Mrs. Mary L. Darden and Mrs. F. J. Sweeney, of Atlanta: Mrs. Mollie Ward, of Paducah. Ky.. and Mrs T. J. Burke, of Birmingham, Ala. Funeral serv ices will be conducted Saturday morning at 6:15 o’clock in the Im maculate Conception Church. Bu rial will be at Sharon. Ga Wealthy Not Safe by 1915, Lecturer Says J. F. Emerson. Minneapolis Man, Predicts Great Revolution of the Unemployed. Unless conditions materially change It will not be safe for a millionaire to step outside of his home in 1915. This Is the prediction made b\ J F. Emerson, of Minneapolis, who will lecture at Cable Hall Sunday after noon. “If a change does not take place to stop the rapid Increase of the number of the unemployed, 1 predict that by 1915 there will he such a revolution as will make the million aire afraid to step outside his home for fear of having his brain? blown out by the starving man who awaits him," Is the comment made by Em erson. Emerson's lecture will be free to the public. The subject will be “Was Man Created for Heaven.*'' SEVEN MEN GIVE PATCHES OF SKIN TO SAVE BOY NEW YORK, May 9 If 10-year- old William Caldwell, of Nutley, # N. J.. survives the burn? which he re ceived when he fell into a bonfire several weeks ago, it vvJU be through the aid of patches of skin from no less than seven men. who have vol unteered for the sacrifice. The sur geons figure that he needs 180 square inches of skin grafted upon his body to save his life. NEW YORK. Ma> 9. “Well. 1 swan- Just at this point the automobiles around Forty-second Street became congested, and genial “Pat" McDon ald. pride of the traffic cops and champion shot-put ter of the world, broke off his exclamation. Maybe it was best so, for Patrick had just been told that a Yassar College girl was after his shot-putting laurels and he seemed a bit “miffed." Ho did not seem at all pleased to think that his athletic prowess a GERMAN ARMY DIRIGIBLE LOST TWO DAYS IN STORM | Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. KOENIGSBERG, GERMANY, May 9.—The Cassiopeia, a spherical Ger man military balloon, which ascended from this city Wednesday with ( ap- tain Von Wobeser and two passen gers on board, lias been missing 18 hours in a storm, and fears are fit for the safety of the aeronauts. THIS EXPLAINS How Our Christmas Saving Club ' Can Help You h is a simple method to help you save by making small weekly payments. Here are some classes you can still join, if you come in to day or to-morrow : For 33 Weeks, Starting April 21st. Class 5 Start with five cents, increase five eenls each week, total at Christmas $28.0;') Class 5A Start with $1.05, decrease five cents each week, total at Christmas $28.05 Class 2 Start with two cents, increase two cents each week, total at Christmas $11.22 Class 100 $1.00 each week, total al Christmas $33.00 Travelers Bank & Tryst Company Peachtree at Walton Branch, 297 Marietta Street should be o’ershadowed not by young college girl, at any rate. But Miss Elizabeth Abigail Harden, | of Newark, N. J., and a freshman at- Yassar. is just as proud of her record as McDonald is of his. and she said to-day that she will shortly do even better than 38 feet and 3-4 inches. In the shot-put McDonald’s mark for the 24-pound shot is 39 feet and 3 3-4 inches. No Yassar girl will ever reach Fat's record, however, for they throw a seven-pound shot at the girl’s col lege. Miss Harden’s triumph came in the annual field meet at Yassar last week, and she was easily the star of the day. Besides the shot-put even. Miss Harden won the basket ball throwing contest with a mark of SO feet 13 1-8 indites and the baseball throwing with 205 feet 7 inches. In both the latter events she broke rec ords held by Miss Inez Milholland. who heretofore had been held the champion all-around woman athlete. Like Miss Milholland, the Newark girl is an ardent worker for votes for women, and the only blight to her triumphs of Saturday was the fact that the meet kept her from march ing with the other 10,000 women who are fighting for the ballot. ■J Established 1865- EISEMAN BROS., Inc. -Incorporated 1912 — FROM WEAK, INACTIVE KIDNEYS Recent Reports Show Hundreds Suffer With Kidney Troubles and Don't Know It. W1 White City Park Now Open There are score? of nervous, tired, run-down people throughout the city suffering with pains in the back and sides, diary spells, weaknesses of the bladder (fre quently causing annoyance at night), who fail to realize the se riousness of their i roubles until such conditions as chronic rheumatism, bladder troubles, dropsy, diabetes or even Bright’s disease result. All this is due to weak, inactive kidneys. The kidneys are the ill - terere of the blood, and no one can be well and healthy unless the kid neys work properly. It is even more important than that the bow el* move regularly. If you suffer with such symp toms don't neglect yourself anoth er day and run the risk of serious complications. Secure an original package of the new discovery, Croxone, which costs but a trifle, and commence it? use at once. When you have taken a few doses, you will be surprised how differ ently you will feel. Croxone cures the worst • ases of kidney, bladder trouble, and rheu matism, because it removes the cause. It cleans out the kidnevs. and makes them filter out all the poisonous waste matter and uric acid that lodge in the joints and muscles. causing rheumatism: soothes and heals the bladder, and quickly relieves you of all \our misery. \ ou will find Croxone different from all other remedies. It mat ters not how old you are or how long you have suffered, it is so pre pared that d is practical!.' impos sible to lake it into the human sys tem without results. \n original package of (Y«x- one costs but a trillc. ami all drug gist? are authorized to return the purchase price if i« fails give the desired results the very first time you tiT*c it. Remodeling of the Store In Active Progress! / Installation of 36 huge crystal CABINETS for the dis play of onr SEVEN SUPERB LINES of MEN’S and YOUNG MEN’S CLOTHING, is now being rapidly pushed to completion. When the final Cabinet is installed, the equipment will not only be the largest of its kind in the South, but second to none in America. Yon will see the period's BEST CLOTHES, AT THEIR BEST now, on dis play in our CRYSTAL CABINETS. Men’s and Young Men’s Suits $15 to $45 Cool Straws for Hot Days Now is the time to relegate the winter felt ahd don the cooling Straw. We have very popular Braid, in 50 dif ferent shapes. $1.50 and Up The Famous Hess Shoes for Men Nothing in shoe-craft equals the HESS for style, finish, comfort and REAL SERVICE. Made of the finest matrial possible to put in footwear, and following the demands of correct dressers in every point of shoe-making proficiency, these splendid models in all leathers are sure to please you in every respect. Blucher models in the swell ENGLISH lastings. so popularly evidenced the FA VORITE VOGUE. Come in and be fitted to a pair. $5—$6—$7 Eiseman Bros., Inc. 11-13-15-17 Whitehall | The South s Largest and Most Complete Retail Clothing Store Ji Men and Religion Bulletin No. 56 “The Way, The Truth and The Life” Mansions in Heaven, Factories on Earth, And Certain Houses The night of His betrayal, Jesus said: “Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me. “In my Father’s house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.” You believe, and yet are troubled. His cross and love have made you dissatis fied with self and with what you see and hear. Visions of a heavenly home for you can not soothe you, so long as yonder hovels pour streams of children into Mammon’s maw. “They should be at play,” you say. Instead, factories and mills are marring their hearts and lives to make dividends for men. Not this did Jesus mean, when He said: “Suffer the little children to come unto Me.” And you would not—could not still the pity born of His spirit surging in your heart. Rightly, you deny that woman’s virtue de pends on money. But many families receiving less than a liv ing wage must live within cheerless walls. And this, you know— When their girl is lost, fathers and mothers are not consoled by the thought that, had their wage been greater they could have saved her fiem the colorless, gloomy home which made her the more easily beli eve the luring lies of an easier way to live. “Better had she died,” you cry. True! But you will not defend the hovel and the wage. You recall: “The day-spring from on high hath visit'd us, “To give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet in the way of peace.” ■ And so, when some misguided man says: “Segregate a few women for the common good.” You answer: “Who shall choose the victims? “Since when did God give man the right to assign some to mansions in the skies and send others to lodgings in hell?” You justly say: “Have done with the lie that men being lower than beasts makes necessary the ruin of some women!” Even should a creature, like the fabled Min otaur of Crete, more monster than man, ap pear, you will not talk of sacrificing girls for him. Instead, you will lock up the brute. Segregate him in a cell; that would be well. The day has past for the making and selling of white slaves in our city. God’s pity for His children is opening your eyes and ears. You will help your sister. Never again will you consent by silence to her destruction. Heaven help the man who thinks you will. You are awake. “You believe in God.” THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE MEN AND RELIGION FORWARD MOVEMENT.