Newspaper Page Text
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SUFFBDGETTES
Zing Edward Speed
'Fiend/ Says Abtoist
Uff» WonawsVa Chaufftw TBtT» Irv
ft Soak of His RuterTS
remit*.
Guards Save English Premier:
From Injury by “Young Hot
Blood” Militants.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, May 9.—King
George and Queen Mary left just
before noon for Aldershot to re
view the troops. Elaborate pre
cautions were taken to guard the
royal couple from suffragette
violence. Troops, polloemen and
detectives surrounded the auto
mobile.
LONDON, May 9.—Freah suffra
gette outrages stirred England to
day- Members of the “Young Hot
Blood" service of the Women’s Social
and Political Union burned Oaklea,
mansion, at Barrow, causing a $00,000
loss.
Other members of the union at
tempted to attack Premier and Mrs.
Asquith and First Lord of the Ad
miralty Winston Churchill and Mrs.
Churchill as they were on their way
to the Victoria Railway station to
day*
Mr. and Mrs. Asquith and Mr. and
Mrs. Churchill were leaving on a
Journey to Venice, where they will
embark upon the Admiralty yacht
Enchantress for a cruise through the
Mediterranean for Inspection of Brit
ish fortresses and navy depots.
Saved by Their Guards.
Only the fact that they had a heavy
bodyguard of policemen, soldiers and
f irlvate detectives saved them from
njury at the hands of militant suf
fragettes.
Mrs. Flora Drummond, or “General"
Drummond, as she is known because
of her Amazonian qualities, who col
lapsed In Bow Street Court yesterday
during the trial of the women arrest
ed In the raid on headquarters of the
Women’s Social and Political Union,
was in a serious condition to-day.
She had refused to eat for a week to
spite the government and her health
has become so badly deranged as a
result that an operation may be nec
essary. She was removed to a nurs
ing home this morning
Love Wins New Ally.
Interesting sidelights on the or
ganization of militants are being
brought out at the trial of the mili
tant leaders. Letters seized by the
police include a number of passionate,
burning love letters from a former
Socialist member of Parliament. The
letters show that he is infatuated
with one of the leaders of the “wild
women" and that he allied himself
with the "cause" at her command.
Other documents show that the
most dangerous branch of the union
Is called the “Service of Young Hot
Bloods." No one but young unmar
ried women of high courage are ad
mitted. These are some of the ques
tions put to them before they are ad
mitted into this branch of the union:
Are you willing to die a violent
death to-day?
Are you afraid of dynamite or
any otner high explosive?
Will you swear to hunger strike
if sent to jail?
Will you renounce the softer
Board Reports Conditions at tfra
State Asylum Call for
Many Reforms.
characteristics of womankind in
favor of a great principle?
Aref you healthy and strong and
able to hold your own against a
single policeman?
The arsonettes and the members of
tile dynamite squad are recruited
from the “Y. H. B." service.
Suffragettes Deluge
Mail Boxes With Paint.
ROMFORD, ENGLAND, May 9.—
All the letter boxes in this city were
filled with paint by suffragette* to
day and much valuable mall matter
destroyed.
Wiley, ‘Cow Center/
Loses Depot Fight I
*?
Mathis Is Given Station by State
Railroad Commission—Victor
Cited Its Beauty.
«irjking new mathpdp of handling
patients in the Georgia State Boni
ta rli*m at Mllledgevllle are urged In
the annual report of the board of di
rectors, submitted to Governor Brown
Friday. The most important recom
mendation* arei \
The enactment of a sterilisa
tion law, applying to certain
classes of criminals and defeo-
fives, modeled after recently en
acted laws of New Jersey and
Indiana.
A ban on the commitment of
epileptics (not Insane), feeble
minded oMIdren, harmless senMes
and paralytics and persons es
caping trial by pleas of lunaoy.
This is a hospital and not a pris
on.
The report declasses that poor re
sult* have been obtained at the insti
tution in the cure of insanity on ac
count of the crowded conditions and
the lack of facilities tor segregating
and treating the ourable cases apart
from the criminal and hopelessly In
sane. A psycophathlc hospital Is
urged.
No Provision for Children.
“No provision is made In our State
educational system for the care and
treatment of feeble-minded children,”
states the report. “Most of them are
capable of training that will aid in
their happiness and fit them for some
usefulness. Only 'the grosser types
are committed to the State Sanita
rium, while the great majority are
allowed to grow up without oare.
“Further commitment with the in
sane should be stopped and some
adequate provision made by the
State for these children"
The report criticises the present
system of confining epileptics not in
sane In the sanitarium, pointing out
that, associatioq with crazy persons
tends to hopelessly depress them and
also has a bad effect on the insane
persons. A hospital for epileptics Is
recommended; and it is suggested
that it should be named for T. O.
Powell because of the great service
he has rendered the State along such
lines.
Negro Quarters Insanitary.
Alarming insanitary and over
crowded conditions in ^the negro
building are reported and the need
of $100,000 for an annex to this build
ing is said to be imperative. To sep
arate the acute insane from the hope,
lessly insane an appropriation of
$135,000 is urged. For a nurses’ home
$40,000 is asked.
There are 3,429 patients in the in
stitution, 1,108 having been admitted
this year. The daily average during
1912 was 3,424, an increase of 41 over
1911. The .annual average Increase
during the last five years has been
89. Of eleven criminals committed,
three were found to be sane.
The Average cost per patient last'
year was $163.06. The total income
of the sanitarium was $630,000.
There is an exceedingly high death
rate among the negro patients. Most
of the deaths in the institution are
from tuberculosis and pellagra, re
cent increases in pellagra deaths be
ing reported as startling.
The report was submitted by John
T. Brantly, president of the board.
Other recommendations for changes
in the laws governing the institution
are:
That the three nearest adult rela
tives can, with the consent of the
Ordinary, waive the ten days’ notice
of trial for lunacy. This is to prevent
victims being held in jail during the
ten days.
Wiley, the “natural center of the 1
cow movement," and the most popu
lous town of the vicinity, with twen- |
ty-three persons, loses its fight for 1
an agency station on the Tallulah
Falls Railroad.
By order of the Georgia Railroad
Commission, Mathis is the victor.
The Tallulah Falls Railroad has been
instructed to build a station there
and put an agent in charge.
Both towns are in Rabun County.
They engaged in excited strife over
the location of the station. Mathis
built its plea on its natural beauty.
R0ME-GADSDEN RAILROAD
PROMOTERS MEET AGAIN
GADSDEN. AI.A., May 9 —J. W.
Wadsworth, president of the Rome
and Gadsden Railroad, and other of
ficials elected at a meeting of those
interested in the company here last
week, went to Rome, Ga., to-day to
attend a meeting of the officers and
directors. The company will be in
corporated immediately and steps will
be taken looking to financing the
project.
TAUNTED, HE ENDS LIFE.
BUFFALO. N. Y.. May 9.—Jibes
from acquaintances over his defeat
fpr the office of school commissioner
drove Frank Kosmowski to suicide,
according to a report submitted to
Sheriff Becker by deputies to-day.
Better Than
Medicine
Breathe Hyomei and Be Rid of
Catarrh—Cleears Stopped-Up
! Head .
Nature has a remedy for catarrh
and troubles of the breathing organs,
a treatment that is far better than
dosing the stomach with medicine.
It is the healing oils and balsams
of Hyomei whicli medicate the air
you breathe, reaching the most re
mote air cells in the nose, throat and
lungs, killing the catarrhal germs,
and restoring health to the musous
membrane.
In using Hyomei you are treating
your catarrhal troubles with the na
tural remedy, for it gives a curative
bath to the air passages. It has a
powerful healing and antiseptic ef
fect similar to the air in the moun
tains where the forests give off the
fragrant and healing balsams.
Hyomei has benefited so many suf
ferers of the worst cases of catarrh,
with offensive breath, raising of mu
cous, frequent sneezing, droppings in
the throat and spasmodic coughing
that it is sold under an absolute guar
antee to refund the money if it does
not do all that is claimed for it. If
the treatment does not help you,
there will not be a penny's expense,
while if it cures the cost is nominal.
A complete Hyomei Outfit sells for
only $1.00. Extra bottles of liquid
if later needed 50 cents.
Druggists everywhere.
Specl «teC*Wp-t<rTha Atl antw OeorflTa n,
LONDON, Mar 8,—Interesting'
trial* In K2og Edward's oharaoter are
iwrested to the book, ~Wh«t l Kimm*
by C. VP, Stamper private automobile
ut‘
towns and villages. His walk was
never leisurely. He was In and out of
a motor car or a train in a moment.
"Ha spoke rapidly ate very fast and
smoked hard. Speed was the essence
ofhls nature.”
The Kina'* chauffeur afamyft was
Instructed by the equerry to observe
the legal speed limit, but if the King
complained, he was to increase the
r »d temporarily and gradually to
ken It again.
Church Learns Its
Pastor Was Convict
Minister Who Disappeared From.
New Jersey Town Is Sought
by the Police.
NEW YORK* May 9.—The disap
pearance of the Rev. John Solomon,
after he had conducted Sunday even
ing services in the United Christian
Church at Arlington, N. J. f was ex
plained. yesterday when it became
known that the police of Newark and
Kearney were looking for him on be
half of the authorities of Elmira Re
formatory. Solomon, it was sa4d, had
broken parole from that institution.
Since February Solomon has been
acting as assistant pastor of the lit
tle Arlington church, and also as
treasurer of the Jersey Home for
Destitute Children and Homeless
Women.
U. S. CHECKS TOLL
Oeatfi Rate Decreased From
174.5 to 139.7 Per 100,000
Population In last Decade.
.WASHINGTON, May 9.—That the
death rate In the United States from
tuberculosis during the decade end
ing fn 1910 has diminished from 174.6
per 100,000 of population to 139.7 was
the statement made here by Dr.
Frederick L. Hoffman of Newark, in
an address before the sociological
section of the National association
for the study and prevention of ti*-
bercukrais.
"In other words.- said Dr. Hoff
man, "nearly 200,000 lives were saved
from 1909 to 1910, in the campaign
against this disease.”
Dr. Hoffman stated that the death
rate 1n New York City, 289.1 1n 1881,
had declined to 180.1 In 1912. He
made no mention of any so-called
“cures.”
Surgeon B. S Warren, of the U. S.
Public Health Service, affirmed
that deaths of government employees
from tuberculosis were much lower
than that of other laborers In similar
occupations, because of the superior
sanitary conditions ”
"About 50,000 new cases of tuber
culosis are constantly drifting about
the country for long periods without
even consulting physicians,” was the
statement by Dr. Harry Lee Barnes
superintendent of the Rhode Island
State Sanitarium.
House Tries Glover
For Attack on Sims
Washington Millionaire Charged With
Contempt for Striking Ten
nessee Congressman.
WASHINGTON, May 9. The
House met an hour earlier than usual
to-day to lake up and act upon the
case of Charles C. Glover, the mil
lionaire bank president, whom a spe
cial House committee found guilty
of contempt for assault upon Repre
sentative Sims, of Tennessee, In
Farragut Square on April 18. The in
cident waa the sequel of criticism
made by Mr. Sims upon Mr. Glover
in connection with real estate trans
actions In Washington.
A special committee of the House
recommended that the Speaker is
sue a warrant for Mr. Glover’s ar
rest to answer the contempt charge.
NEWS JOTTINGS
ABOUT TOWN
John F. ('one, president of the
Travelers’ Bank and Trust Company,
is making a trip to Eastern cities.
The hearing of the parallel cases of
E. B. .Skipper et al. and Matthew
Delaney et al. against the Guarantee
Trust and Banking Company, prob
ably will not be completed before
the middle of next week. The case
occupied the entire time of the Supe
rior Court on Thursday.
Loses Pants Seat,
But Wins Election
Determined Candidate Does Not Let
Accident Cost Him Vote
He Goes After
WINSTED, CONN.. May 9. Rob
ert E. Maher, an officer of th«* Win-
sted Edge Tool Works and Republi
can candidate for Burgess in the
town election, lost the seat of his
trousers in getting a delinquent voter
to the polls, but came out a victor.
A few minutes before the closing
of the polls Maher was apprised that
a certain elector had not exercised his
rights. Jumping into an automobile
he started in quest of the voter, whom
he found at work atop of an ice
house. Maher in coming down the
Ice run came in contact with mails
which caught in his trousers
completely removing it.
He got to the polls on time with
the voter, however.
PENSACOLA TO* BE SITE
OF BIG WOOD PULP MILL
PENSACOLA. FLA.. May 9.—The
biggest paper mill In the South will
be located in Pensacola and In opera
tion in the near future, according to
Frederick Kauffman, president of the
Georgia Wood Pulp Company, with
headquarters in New York. He has
been here several days investigating
and Is said to have secured options on
250,000 acres of gumwood timber in
West Florida.
. RICH & BROS. CO. i
SEABOARD MAY OBTAIN
LINE TO CHATTANOOGA
GADSDEN, ALA., May 9.—The
election of J. W. Middendorf, a di
rector of the Seaboard Air Line, as
president of the Alabama Company
strengthens the rumors circulated
some time ago to the effect that the
Seaboard Air Line will enter the
Gadsden district and will probably !
get Into Chattanooga over the Ten
nessee, Alabama and Georgia Rail
road.
1
CHILD BURNS TO DEATH
PLAYING WITH MATCHES
MACON, GA., May 9.—Emmett El
lis, ten-year-old son of A. J. Ellis, a
Macon contractor, was burned to
death In a fire which destroyed the
home of D. B. Ellis, at Roberta,
Crawford County, late yesterday aft
ernoon.
The boy had been playing with
matches In the garret of the house
and it is supposed that the fire start
ed that way.
Rousing Sat. Sales
Don’t Miss ’Em. Ready at 8:30
50c to $1 White Goods
All new fabrics: Bedford crepes, Satin
Poplins, Tosea crepes, Bordered Voiles, 9 X
French Pique, Voiles, Madras, Chiffons J
and plain and striped shirting Madras.
Full pieces; choice Saturday at
GERMAN COUNT TO WED
CATTLEMAN’S DAUGHTER
KANSAS CITY. May A mar- :
riage- license was issued to-day to
Edward A. J. Frieherr Von Wallstat- i
ten, of Chicago, who says he is a
German count, and Miss Olive Anna
Jamieson, the daughter of a cattle- (
man. Von Wailstatten gave his age
as 44 to the license clerk and that
of Miss Jamieson as 40.
Big Sale of Silk Stockings
From one of the best makers in America. He calls them
“seconds”—let him have his way; you will have a hard
time to find the “hurts.”
$1 & $1.25 £Qc $1.50 Silk QQ
03 Stockings 30
Stockings
c §
■
s.
I
Full fashioned: finely finished. All sizes. Black, white, (an and
a few colors at 69c; black only at 98c.
Sale $5 to $8.50 Bags at
Have Lunch
Y V
To-morrow in Our
Cool, Attractive
Balcony Tea Room
at the Main Store
* HE Balcony Tea Room at our
Main Store is one of the most attrac
tive places to have lunch in town,
and our wholesome, Southern home
cooking has become famous through
out the State. Three months ago
we opened the Balcony Tea Room,
and our patronage has increased so
rapidly that we have been com
pelled to extend both Bide balconies.
It is like a big horseshoe now, al
most circling the building, very cool
and attractive, and many of the
tables have an interesting view of
the panorama below.
JS T ew Bags, good styles, but odds and
cuds; the one or two of a kind that.vlutter A
up stock. Black and colors, all sizes and
shapes.
2
.98
$1.25 to $2 Kid Gloves at |
Broken sizes and assortments in a great
outclearing. One and two clasp style,
real French kid and lambskins. Black,
white, tan, mode and grey shades. Not
all sizes in each style.
59c
All Trimmed Hats: Half Price
Choose any Spring trimmed Hat; pay just half the
original marked price. All marked with yellow tickets.
This offer refers to Spring trimmed Hats’only; the strict
ly Summer Styles are not included.
Were $10 to $30; now $5 to $15.
f;
m
%\
S-. i
(Millinery—Second Floor.)
Among Saturday’s Specials
Roast Reef with Creamed
Potatoes. 2,5r,
Lamb Chops with Apple Sauce. 25c
Sandwiches
Tongue. 10c Deviled Ham. 10c
Chicken. tOc Sttiss Cheese., 10c
Tomato, 10c Ham, 10c
Chicken Salad Sandwich, 15c
* Also fine salads, chicken in va
rious styles, vegetables, home-made
pies and cake, hot and cold bever
ages and our delicious, rich, home
made ice creams and sundaes which
are not. excelled anywhere in the
world.
You will enjoy ■ lunch to-morrow
if you take It in our
Balcony Tea Room
Jacobs’ Pharmacy
At the Main Store
ECONOMY BASEMENT
Saturday’s Shoe Special
p 250 pairs
u men’s Button, Lace
and Strap Oxfords,
in White, Blaek and
Tan. $3.50 values
for 95o.
Children’s Shoes
of Wo-
150 pairs of child’s
Black, White and
tan Strap Slippers, $2 and $2.50 values, 95c.
No Exchange, Refunds or C. O. D.’s at above prices.
'•»k
Why is the soda cracker today
such a universal food?
People ate soda crackers in the
old days, it is true—but they
bought them from a barrel or
box and took them home in a
paper bag, their crispness and
flavor all gone.
Uneeda Biscuit—soda crackers
better than any ever made before
—made in the greatest bakeries
in the world—baked to perfection
—packed to perfection—kept to
perfection until you take them,
oven-fresh and crisp, from their
protecting package. Five cents.
NATIONAL BISCUIT,COMPANY
r
ASKIN & MARINE CO.
The Prettiest Styles of the Season in
/
Women’s Summer Dresses
—The prices begin at $2.50, and you can find the exact
style you want at any price you wish to pay. There are
so many different styles, and so many dainty patterns and
trimming ideas, that we can’t describe them all. Come
in and let us show them to you.
Summer Waists, Lingerie and Tailored Styles, $1 Upward
Special Values in Summer Millinery All This Week
—Summer styles—those nobby club checks, fancy serges and
mixtures. Special assortments at $15 and $18—fully guar
anteed in every way. Come in and try them on. That’s the
best way to judge. Other special assortments at $20 and $25.
Low, Plain Prices. Separate Departments for Men’s and
Women’s Garments. Everything Guaranteed.
Open a Charge Account.
s
Askin & Marine Co. I
78 Whitehall Street
j
n jgn w\ m g £ w u Exclusive Feature In The ::
Sam, the Drummer, Meets a Lady Sunday American