Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 09, 1913, Image 5

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* THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS, TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1913. GEORGIA NEWS IN BRIEF Guards Save English Premier From Injury by “Young Hot Blood” Militants, Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON. Max 9. Kn\«h sufl'ra- selte outrages stirred England to- w day. Members of the ''Young Hot Blood” service of the Women’s Social and Political Union burned Oaklea mansion, at Barrow, causing a $50,000 Le-s. ‘ Uher temple Asquith mi rally members of the union al to attack Premier and Mrs. and First Lord of the AU- 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 I heir Guards Only the fact that they had a heavy bodyguard of policemen, soldiers and private detectives saved them from injury 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 fur 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 horn- 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, a Other do umerits low ’’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: Ar* you willing to die a violent death to-day? Are you afraid of dynamite or any other high explosive? Will you swear to hunger strike if sent to jail? Will you renounce the softer characteristics of womankind in favor of a great principle? Are you healthy and strong and able to hold your own against a pingle policeman? Th° arsonettes and the members of the dynamite squad are recruited from the “Y. H. B.” service. King Edward Speed ‘Fiend/ Says Autoist Late Monarch’s Chauffeur Tells in a Book of His Ruler’s T raits. Special Cable to ^he Atlanta Georgian. LONDON. May 9.—Interesting trials in King Edward’s character are revealed in the book, "What I Know,” by C. W. Stamper, private automobile xoert to the 1st' monarch. It says: The King liked speedy traveling, bu* insisted on careful driving through towns and villages. His walk was never leisurely. He was in and out of a motor car or a train in a moment. "He spoke rapidly, ate very fast and smoked hard. Speed was the essence of his nature." The King'.-* chauffeur always was I instruc ted by The equerry to observe the legal speed limit, but if the King complained, he was to increase the speed temporarily and gradually to ,.sTaeken it again. ’ SEABOARD MAY OBTAIN LINE TO CHATTANOOGA GADSDEN, ADA. May 9. The election of .1. 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 lane will enter the Gadsden district and will probably get into Chattanooga over the Ten nessee. Alabama and Georgia Rail road. , ROM E-GADSDEN RAILROAD PROMOTERS MEET AGAIN GADSDEN. ALA.. 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 nv . 'ing of the officers and directors. The company will be in corporated immediately and steps will be taken looking to financing the project. Ce ntral Stockholders to Meet. SAVANNAH. The stockholders and directors of the Central of Georgia Rail way ami ocean Steamship Company will meet in Savannah Wednesday. On Big Drainage Committee. SAVANNAH Mayor Richard J. Da vao t has been notified of his appoint ment as a member of the general educa tion committee of the National Drainage ! Congress. To Eulogize Chatham Artillery. S.W ANNAH Clans are on foot to increase the Chatham Artillery to two batteries, with Captain Richard .1, Da- \ani as major Lieutenant Edward G. Thomson and Lieutenant E. D. Wells will be elected captains. Theater Hat Law Effective. COLUMBUS.- The new city ordinance regulating the wearing of hats in motion ’picture shows, theaters and other pleas ure (daces, is effective in Columbus. R. F. D. Carriers to Meet. SAVANNAH. -Savannah will-welcome rind entertain about 100 rural letter car riers on May 30. when the First Dis trict Association will be in session here Injured by Dynamite. DALTON. -Gordon Foster, a promi nent young farmer living east of here, was critically injured while dynamit ing stumps on his farm. SCHOOL PUPILS TO Eighth Grade Will Render Folk- Song Program in Auditorium Friday Evening. To Teach Mathematics. DALTON. For the fifth consecutive \ear, .Major T. S. Lucas, superintendent of the Dalton Public School system, lias i been elected to the chair of mathematics at the Summer School of the South, at I Knoxville. Tenn Fence Row Gets Into Coifrt. i MACON. Mrs. W. M. Sneed has been I bound over by the City Recorder to the : City Court on the charge of pointing a pistol at Mrs Beatrice Isaf, a next-door neighbor. They had a dispute about trie fence which sejiarated their lots. May Build Water System. COLUMBUS. Notwithstanding the fact that the Columbus Water Supply Company has recently purchased $100,000 worth of pipe for new mains, a resolu tion has been Introduced in City Coun cil asking for an election on a bond is sue to build a waterworks system. Farmer Not Guilty. COLUMBUS.—Joseph Chambliss. a prominent merchant and farmer of Meri wether county, charged with violating 1 tha postal laws, was found not guilty by a jury in Federal Court. Acts Like Crazy Man. COLUMBUS.—Not having spoken a word since March 16, Bill Oreen. who is confined to the Muscogee County Jail on a charge of killing O. D. Kitchens, a young insurance agent, smokes ciga rettes incessantly and gives every indi cation of being a crazy man. Leaves for Ecuador. MACON. Judge A. Miller left to-day for Washington, where he will be In structed as to his duties as arbitrator in a railroad dispute in Ecuador. He goes from Washington to New York, whence he will sail for Panama. j Chinaman's Assailant Sentenced. AUGUSTA. - Judfee Henry C. Ham- I mond, in Richmond Superior Court, sentenced Ed Robertson, a negro, to serve nine years and nine months in the penitentiary for assaulting and at tempting to murder Jam King, a Chi nese merchant of this city. Perjury Trial May 26. MACON.—-Jesse C. Harris, a promi nent Macon lawyer, and law partner of Representative Minter Wimberly, will be tried on May 2f> for perjury, the in dictment for which was found against Mm by the November Grand Jury in its ; investigate t into the primary election irregularities. Farm Sale Set Aside. MACON.—It being testified that Cicero Johnson, a prominent Macon man. was laboring under a mental aberration when lie (mid John W. Bradley $25,000 for a Jones County farm, a Bibb Coun ty jury has decreed that the deeds shall be cancelled and the purchase money returned to Mrs. Johnson. The eighth grades of the city schools, assisted by a selected num ber from the seventh grades, will sing in concert at the Auditorium Friday evening at 8 o’clock. The program will b^ folk songs of many countries. William M. Slaton. Superintendent of Schools, will be in charge of the evening's program. Dr. Percy J Staines, the organist, will be accom panist. Miss Kate Harralson. direr tor of music of the schools, will con duct the chorus. Thirty-five of the city schools will be represented. Some of the boys from the first ! grade of the Boys’ High School have been invited to have charge of dis tributing the programs and seating the audience. The concert is open to the public. The program leads: Songs of England—"The Fox Hunt;” "Weel May the Keel Row.” Songs of Scotland—"Flow. Gently, Sweet Afton:” "Auld Lang Syne.” Songs of Scotland and France (by Seventh grades)—"Blue Bells of Scot land'; ” “My Normandy.” Songs of Ireland—"Spirit of the Summer Time;" "Isle of Beauty.” Songs of Wales—"The Rising of the Lark;” “Why ^Lingers My Gaze.” Songs of Austria and Italy (by, Seventh grades)—"The Hills of Ty ro!;” "Santa Lucia.” Songs of America—“ ’Way Down Upon de Swanee Ribber;" "Dixie;" "Home, Sweet Home.” 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*^ the Rev. John Solomon, after he had conducted Sunday even ing services in the United Christian Church at Arlington. N. J.. 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 said, 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 aid Homeless Women. GERMAN COUNT TO WED CATTLEMAN’S DAUGHTER KANSAS CITY, May 9. -A ntar- riage license was issued to-day to Edward A. J. Frieherr Von Wallstat- ten, of Chicago, who says tie is a German count, and Miss Olive Anna Jamieson, the daughter of a cattle man. Von Wallstatten gave his age as 44 to the license clerk and that of Miss Jamieson as 40-. House Tries Glover For Attack on Sims! Washington Millionaire Charged With j Contempt for Striking Ten nessee Congressman. WASHINGTON. May 9. The j House tnei an hour earlier than usual j to-day to take up and act upon the case of Charles C. Glover, the mil lionaire bank president, whom a spe cial House committee found guin£ of contempt for assault upon Repre sentative Sims, of Tennessee, in Farragut Square on April 18. The in cident was 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 Glovers ar rest to answer the contempt charge. NEWS JOTTINGS ABOUT TOWN John F. Cone, president of the Travelers’ Bank and Trust Company, is making a trip to Eastern cities. The hearing of the v>arallel cases of E. E. 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. U.S. CHECKS I0LL OF TUBERCULOSIS Death Rate Decreased From 174.5 to 139.7 Per 100,000 Population in Last Decade. WASHIJljpTON, May K. That the death rate in the United States from tuberculosis during the decade end ing in 1910 has diminished from 174.5 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 assoeiatlon for tne study and prevention of .tu berculosis. "In other word .' 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 in New York City, 289.1 In 1881, had declined to 180.1 In 1912. He made no mention of any w-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. iVriAri i aiirVum iVu«»it* rd mVvvt i miVVrWmim rirmm irniVViiWri i* m I M. RICH & BROS. CO. Loses Pants Seat, But Wins Election Determined Candidate Does Not Let Accident Coat Him Vote He Goes After. WINSTED, CONN. Max 9. Rob ert E. .Maher, an officer of the Win- sted Edge Tool Works and Reimbli- can candidate for Burgess in the town election, lost the seat of his troupers In getting a delinquent voter t1> the polls, but came out a vfetor. 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 (aught in his trousers seat, 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 gum wood timber ir. West Florida. 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 J. Rousing Sat. Sales Don’t Miss ’Em. Ready at 8:30 50c to $1 White Goods All new fabrics: Bedford crepes, Satin Poplins, Tosca crepes, Bordered Voiles, French Pique, Voiles, Madras, Chiffons and plain and striped shirting Madras. Full pieces; choice Saturday at 25c s ; Big Sale of Silk Stockings From one of the best makers in America, lie 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 QQc Stockings 30 mZ 5 -g: f. I !< \ 11 a : <r„ i | I J Stockings Full fashioned: fine!' finished. All sizes. Black, white, tan and a few colors at 69c; black only at 98c. 3 I j f Macon Policemen Suspended. • I MACON.—Because he sat down while on duty and with orofanlly told his lieutenant to report it. Policeman John Melts is under indefinite suspension. Policeman Gatliff has been suspended for five days for entering a house In the restricted district while on duty and not ! on official business. STRIKE OF STREET CAR MEN IN CINCINNATI IMMINENT CINCINNATI. May 9.—Nothing will stop a strike of the employees of the Cincinnati Traction Company, ac- i cording to views expressed by ieaders ! <>f the-men to-day. The street, car of ficials have decided to ignore the men. ■laiming the union is not strong enough to cripple service. TAUNTED. HE ENDS LIFE. BUFFALO, X. Y. May 9.—Jibes from acquaintances over Ills defeat fur th<' ofiic ■ of s< hool commissioner drove Frink Kosmovvski 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. ft is the healing oils and balsams of Hyomei which medicate the air you breathe, reaching the most re mote afr cells in the nose, throat and lungs, killing the catarrhal germs, and restoring health to the musous membrane. t in using Hyomei you are treating nr catarrhal troubles with the na tural remedy, for it gives a curative bat It 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 Nso 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 he a penny's expense, while if it cures the cost i& nominal. A complete Hyomei Outfit sells for only $1.00. Extra bottles of liquid if later needed 50 cents. Druggists everywhere. Have Lunch To-morrow in Our Cool, Attractive Balcony Tea Room at the Main Store l HE Balcony Tea* Room at out Main Siore is one of (he most attrac tive places to have lunch in town, and our wholesome. Southern home cooking has become famous through out (he 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 side 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. Sale $5 to $8.50 Bags at 2‘ 91 New Baps, good styles, but odds and /h ends; the one or two of a kind that clutter gb up stock. Black and colors, all sizes and shapes. $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 s I 3 3 Al! Trimmed Hats: Half Price Choose any Spring trimmed Hat: pay just half the original (narked price. All marked with yellow tickets. This offer refers to Spring trimmed Hats only; the strict ly Summer Styles are nn1 included. Were $10 to $:>(); now $5 to $15. (Millinery—Second Floor.) Among Saturday’s Specials Ro(1*1 Reef with Creamed Potatoes. 25c Latah ('hops with Apple Sauce. 25c\ Sandwiches Tongue, l<w Oeviicd Ham. /Or ! I Chicken, 10c Swiss Cheese. I0t Tomato. I Or Ham, 10e Phi< ken Salad Sandwich, I5e iRk r ^ < N QM-Y Tariff! Saturday’s Shoe Special Also tine 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 p 250 pairs of Wo- u men’s Button, lja«*e and Strap Oxfords, in White, Blank and Tan. $3.50 values for 95e. Children’s Shoes ! *- ! ; i i i 150 pairs of child’s § \ Black, White and § j tan Strap Slippers, $2 and $2.50 values, 95c. ijj \<> Exchanges. Refunds or C. O. I>*s at above prices. , 3 ’ J* K j r ASKIN & MARINE CO. "I V° ^ A « vfl! UK' \hV.-M 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 Men’s Summer Suits—$15 —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. Askin & Marine Co. i the Drummer, Meets a Lady Sunday American m