Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 25, 1913, Image 4

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4 D IIEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, 0A„-SUNDAY, MAY 2'». 1*m. fit GREAT IN Plans Made for Unveiling Memorial Monument on Decoration Day. of WILSON MAY REVIEW PARADE Fleet to Enter Hudson River and Army Will Be Well Repre sented at Ceremonies, NEW YORK, Msy 24.—Distin guished civic, military and naval authorities will be present on Me morial Day. when the unveiling of the National Maine monument take* T>l«c*. plana for which were com pleted to-day. This magnificent example of the sculptor’s art, erected at the south west entrance to Central Park, In the heart of Manhattan, will com memorate for all time the heroes who lost their lives on the United States battleship Maine In Havana Harbor on February 15, 189*. There will be addresses by dis tinguished guests, a parade of Unit ed States troops, bluejackets from the visiting warships In the Hudson River, veterans of the Spanish war and civic societies and National Guard of New York It Is expected that President Wilson will review the proceselon from the balcony of the Hotel Plar.a at Fifty-ninth Street. With him In the balcony will be Governor Sulr.er. Mayor GSynor. who later will accept the monument In behalf of the city; Secretary of War 1,1 ndley Garrison, Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels. Rishop Greer. Jlsbbl Jo seph Silverman, General James Grant Wilson and William Randolph Hearst. On Memorial Day there will be a luncheon at the Plana at 1 80 o’clock, •t which all of the visitors will be guests. After the luncheon the par ty will proceed to the scene of the unveiling and lake seals In the re viewing stand. Fleet to Enter Hudson. < in the morning of Ma\ 29 a tteel of battleships, under oommnrrtl of Admirs] R.adger, wilt drop anchor 1n the Hudson, having come here for tile repeoisl purpose of attending the ceremonies Mayor Gaynor has Issued orders to the police to care fully superintend nil small boats carrying visitors to the flee;, to aec that visitors to the battleships are not overcharged and to see that the ema'l craft are properly equipped fey safety. In addition to the Amer ican warehlns. there will be « Cu ban battleship with soldiers and sailor* who will take part In th. parade The Cuban warship wilj bring with 1t h commission repre senting ItieK’uban Senate The Cu ban Minister to the United States and the Cuban Consul General will attend. Rear Admiral Cameron McRae Win Mow will be grand marshal of the parade, wffti some six or seven rear admirals as his aides among them Rear Admiral Fletcher who came to New York from Vera Crux. Mexico, to take part Behind the line of New York Cltv mounted po lice will march 5.000 sailors from the battleships Then will come United Stales regulars from all New York army posts. In commsnd of Major General Barry, commander of the Department of the East Fni lowing will be the United Spanish War Veterans, the National Guard of New York and New Jersey, Cu ban sailors and marines and civic societies Bluejackets to Go on Guard. Fairly on the morning of Memorial Day a. naval lieutenant in command of lto bluejackets will take posses sion of the monument While they are standing on guard, a huge wreath will be placed at the foot of the monument in the name of the United States Government, as di rected by President Wilson A floral wreath presented by the Rev Father John P Chldwlck. now con nected with St Joseph's Seminary at Yonkers. N Y. and who was chaplain of the battleship Maine, will be laid upon the monument, ns will wreaths sent by the Governor and Legislature of the State of Maine, and a floral piece sent bv Governor Sulxer and the Legislature of New York. The best buglers of the nssem- , bled battleships have been selected to play "tap# while thev surround the monument When the notes of the bugles ring out. the signal will be conveyed to the warships In the river and they will commence the firing of 21 guns as a salute. General James Grant Wilson, a member of the Maine Monument Committee, will present the monu ment to the city of New York, and Mayor Gaynor wilt accept Other members of the committee besides General Wilson are John W. Keller and Mr Hearst Sigsbee To Be in Line. The parade will start at 2:S# p. m. from Forty-second Street and Fifth Avenue and proceed north to Fifty-ninth Street, one of the mor- lnteiesting figures In line will he Rear Admiral Sigsbee. who was commander of the battleship Maine when she was blown up. Oh reselling the. scene of the cer emonies. the troops will be massed about the monument, so that the public may have a proper view and at the same time get near enough to hear the speakers. Many survivors of the Maine and relatives of the dead heroes will have seats in a special stand erected near the mon ument. Tlu i-qst of the monument was 1168,000. The original fund raised wss $148,004. with Interest. This would have been more than suffi cient hut for the fact that the Mu nicipal Art Commission directed that certain changes he made and that gates be erected at either side. This made' a distinct improvement in the appearsiH-e. but brought the tost higher. Mr. Hearst notifl d e tl-.e committee In charge of raising the fund that he would contribute SI for every dollar raised toward Pennsy's President Talks of Earnings English Policy, if Used by Hi« Sys tem, Would Yield but 4.83 Per Cent to Stockholders. Borne question has been raised hr to the statement by President Rea, of the Pennsylvania lines, that the Penn sylvania earned last year only 4.83 per cent on Its Investment in prop erty devoted to the public service. Preference in this case, says Mr. Rea. was to the earnings of $85,766,- 888 In 1912 from railroad business, alone- approximately 4.83 per cent upon the $741,120,877 actually expend ed on the transportation property of Pennsylvania Railroad Company. The cost of bonds and stocks of other companies held by this company Is not Included in this 3741 120,877. nor Is Income derived therefrom embrac ed in the earnings ,,f $3.7,776,869 In England the policy of railroads has been to pay out currently to stockholders nearly all the net earn ings. and provide for all Improve ments out of proceeds of sales of stock. If investors in stock and bonds of Pennsylvania Railroad had supplied directly all the money In vested In the transportation prop erty of this company, and if they re ceived the entire annual net earning* from operations of such property, they would to-day be getting only 4.83 per cent on their actual cash out lay. Kisses Lose Flavor At Honeymoon's Close Any Sort of Osculation Becomes Monotonous After Few Years of Married Life. STEUBENVILLE, OHIO. May 24.— Real kisses soon become monotonous, aooor4t&| t<» Mrs NUnnji Slenta, who, in her divorce testimony said: “Some couples may kiss each other right up tintII they are 60, in an attempt to fool themselves into thinking that their kisses have the genuine heart glow of the first month of marriage, hut it in all bosh. "Real kissing becomes monotonous during the second year, Intermittent from the fourth to the sixth, an 1 stopa entirely before the eighth year of married life." Queen Amelie, Defiant,May Elope HEIRS SEARCH Manuel Forbids Mother to Wed OHIO Cl 17 FOR +•+ •!•»•> -i-s-i 111 n n T She Loves a Rich Young Count PRESS BILL 1 17 X QUEEN AMELIE, of Portugal, who has broken with *“ l her son, ex King Manuel, because he will not consent to her marriage to a young Portuguese nobleman. \ / C A.y this additional expense by the committee, or approximately $20,- 000. The Board of Estimate of New York, after a thorough audit, has voted $7,000 to pay for the foun dation of the monument Presi dent Gome* of Cuba, has asked the Cuban Congress to vote Hn appro priation of $6,000 for the monument, and that is now pending. Tree* Are a Feature. An interesting feature in Conner- tion with the monument is the work of Park Commissioner Stover in planting trees about it In the rear of the monument he has what he calls "The Grove of the Fleet* consisting of several very rare scar let oaks, each to represent one of Admiral Dewey's ships*; red (wks. one for each of Schley and Samp son's ships, and a pin oak tree for each of the battleship* at present in active service in the Unite! States Navy. A description of the monument follows The principal motif of the new composition is a pylon 18 1-2 hv 21 feet and 40 feet high, with panels on its four faces It Is flanked by two colossi represent ing the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans, suggestive of the national scope of the memorial, the Atlantic typified by a young man In the full ness of his strength, the Pacific hr Hn old man half-slumbering The tigures standing would-be over 14 feet hign At the foot of the shaft, ahd fac ing the circle, is a group of sculp ture ante-bellum In Idea—Courage awaiting the flight of Peace, while Fortitude supports the feeble These are figures nearly twice actual life size. Above the group Is the fol lowing inscription; ••TO THE VALIANT SEAMEN WHO PERISHED IN THE M AINE P V F A T E U N \\ A RN- ED IN DEATH UNAFRAID.” On the lower part of the pedestal supporting this group is a conven tional boat prow on which kneels a figure of a boy holding wreaths of olive and laurel, suggesting the new era inaugurated in Cuba through the Spanish War. Fountain Toward Circla. A low fountain basin extends to ward the circle from this side of the monument. approached by three broad steps forming a stylo bate. The corresponding group on the side facing the park is post-bellum In motif—Justice, having intrusted her sword to the Genius of War to execute her mandates, receive* it again at his hands, while History records its deeds. The inscription over this group reads as follow s TO THE FREKDMKN WHO DIED IN THE WAR WITH SPAIN THAT OTHERS MIGHT BE FREE The pylon Is crowned by a group representing Columbia Triumphant, drawn in a sea car hy three plung ing horses This group is in bronze, cast from guns recovered from the sunken Maine, and is heavily gild ed. The group is 17 fret high, mak ing the monument 67 feet in height. Ail the other sculpture w ill be of Knoxville marble. In panels on the lateral faces of the shaft will be inscribed the names of those to whom the monument is dedicated At either side of the pylon aipi separated from it by two park roads are two entrances formed by four garden houses of the type fa miliar to the great park.- abroad. Each pair of houses constitutes a Beautiful Exile Insists on (Jiving Royal Hand • I iespite Son's Edict. Special Cable to The American. MUNICH. May 24 Queen Amelie of Portugal vows she will elope and wed the man of her heart if her son, King Manuel, the head of his house, persists in refusing his consent to her marriage. Queen Amelie—for so devoted Roy alists salute her still—was one of the loveliest women in Europe. Her forty-seven years have scarcely dim med her beauty, nor. ns is proved now rendered her less susceptible to the tender passion. The Queen has confessed to her son that vhc love* Count DeVassu- laes. a voting Portuguese noble tvho has devoted his life and hi* fortune to restore Manuel to the throne fro n which the Republicans drove him ~ that is to sa\ to restore to Manuel 8 fair mother her queenly glorv. Reminds Mother of Rank. Manuel, although devoted to his mother, who preserved his life from assassins, inexorably refuses his con sent to the union with Count De- Vassalaes. He reminds her that a princess of Orleans, a sister of the royalist pr - tender to the throne of France, the widow of a king, can not take as her husband any man in whose veins blood royal does not course. No argument has changed the de termination of son or of mother, tha one refuses to consent to s»uch a union, the other declares she wi.l follow the dictates of her affection. She is ready to defy her son. who in her eves is stilt her king, ready to shock her closest friends Queen Alexandra. Emperor William- half of ;he sovereigns of Europe. As all the world knows. Manuel is to marry soon the young Princess Auguste Victoria of Hohenzollern at Segmaringen. He came here to visit his widowed aunt. Duchess Charles-Theodore-Hire. Here, too, came Queen Amelie am! in the palace of the Duchess she told her love and her purpose. Stormy Scene Caused. A stormy scene followed. Queen Atnelie even threatened to abse,v herself from Manuel's wedding, w hich will take place at Signmringvn in August. It Is supposed she will go to I^ondon and marry there se cretly. Her Intended husband is very wealthy and has been promised by her a high official post in the event of Ft monarch’s restoration in Por tugal. All member* of the Portuguese royal family side with Manuel in this affair. They believe the Queen’s plans to be harmful to the prestige of the Portuguese crown But j*he is a woman of bravery and determination, she was a heroine on that fatal first of February five years ago in Lisbon When the band o' assassins opened fire on the royal carriage, the Queen threw herself be tween their bullets and her sons. Crown Prince Louis Philip and Prince Manuel. She even hurled her bouquet in the face of an asswssin so that he shot wild. King ('arlos, her husband, and their first horn, was killed. Manuel sur vived. ascended the throne, and now, bound by royal etiquette and prece dent. denies to his mother her dea *- eat wish. R epresentative s. a. RODEENBERY, Geor gia Congressman, who w?n?' Cotistitntional Amendment to prevent mixed marriages in this country. They Will Look for Money That Has Been Secreted for Many Years. MASSILLON, O., May 24. Hidden in the heart of this city is a fortune— a fortune In gold Midden by a young girl, legatee of her wealthy father, who lived the life of a recluf**. gre.v old, wrinkled and went Insane with the secret untold. Not even her bachelor brother nor her sister, spinster like herself, knew where she had deposited her treas ure. They remembered years later, when broken physically and mentally, she was taken to the Massillon State Hospital for the Inaane. how. after Th reading of her father's will and the distribution of the horde of wealth, she had stolen out one dark night with her bag of precious metal held tlghtlv Roddenbery Sends for Testimony in Johnson Case to Use in Argument. WASHINGTON, May 24. -Repre- tentative S. A. Roddenbery. of C.eor- ! gia, will soon pass his proposed I amendment to the constitution, pro- I hihi.ting the marriage of whites and blacks, and will use as part of his argument the evidence disclosed in the trial of "Jack” Johnson, the negro pugiJist, who has had two white wlv(*R, and who has just been found guilty under the Mann White Slave act. for his relations with another white woman, by a court in Chicago. Mr. Roddenbery’s amendment is as follow^: "That intermarriage between under her arm and returned an hour negroes or persons of color and Cau- 1 a VlL f ™ 1 y h a ^ 1 u ■ «■ tw casians or any other character of per - Jealou* of their own affairs, the I * . brother and sister asked no questions, i sons within the l mted States or an> They had placed their wealth in an ! territory within their jurisdiction, is old ironbound cedar chest in the low- forever prohibited; and the term studded upper floor. More than a year ago. the brother died from a fall and the surviving starter broke down and went insane. Guardian Find* Gold. While Mayor Kaley, her guardian, was settling up her affairs, he re ceived a letter and following the di rections it contained, went to the great chest, pulled away the strata of musty letter* and papers and there bursting through a paper wrapper, were negro or person of color', as here employed, shall be held to mean any and all persons of African descent or having any trace of African or negro blood." Mr. Roddenbery has sent to Chicago for a copy of the evidence taken in the trial of Jack" Johnson. "This is no amendment particu- yellow with age. were gold coins, larly favorable to one portion of our hundred, of them. bearing the mint! land , siljd M r Roddenherv. mark of nearly two generations ago. * The Mayor gasped He took the money to a hank and sent a police man to guard the house until he had completed his search. But no more money was found, although several thousand ' dollars were on deposit at a bank. Just where the hag the dead sister carried from the house is. has never been revealed. Even if she did know the only survivor of the three chil dren of fine of Stark County’s riche.st farmers could not tell, for she is in- Southern Negro All Right. ‘‘In that section far to the South of us such is the relation between the two races that no African with in all of Dixie land carries in his heart the hope or cherishes in his mind the aspiration that he can ever lead there to the altar of matrimony a woman of Caucasian blood. With ail the impositions vve are alleged to have placed upon this inferior race, such is our harmony, such is the black’s respect for the superiority of curably insane, knows no one and his former master, that he would seems to have lost the power of commit self destruction before he speech. would entertain the thought of matri- This is the story and mystery w.hlch srtirrounds the lives of Louis a fid Sophia Good, now dead, and of Mary Good, ending het days in the Massil lon State Hospital. Always peculiar mony with a white girl beneath Southern skies. "It would be detrimental to the highest welfare of both races for such a condition to exist. The per- plainest of livers, secluaive and se- |mission of such a thing by a sovereign cretive. dependent upon a parrot andj s ^ a ^ e ^ould be damning and a dan- hfclf a dozen music boxes for enter- - g- er s i^ n ai heralding an ill omen for tainment. these three for over forty W hich we can offer no excuse. We years existed almost shut off front ofln do no greater violence, we can the world in their little home at Hill and North Streets. With the last member of the orig inal family incapable of taking care of her affairs the heir* plan a thor- Ligh search of the property in an ef-‘ offspring, may . ... * .. 1 ......i 4 .v CJ . v i>1 Ka o i>IYer no more ill-fated injustice, to the negro in this land than to let our statutes permit him to enter tain the hope that at some future time he or his offspring, or she or her fort to locate Sophia’s gold bag. Heirs Will Search. Among these is MiSs Ada Ham mond. half niece of Mary Good, who is employed at the factory of the Deuber Watch Company, at Canton. Another half niece lives in Kansas and to these Mayor Kaley has given his promise to permit them to dig up the big lot on which the little home stands, search again every nook and cranny of the house, rummage through the teams of papers and taKe whatever other steps they see fit to locate the hidden wealth. Always secretive about her love af fair. the physical and mental break- dv*\vn which Mary Good suffered a few months ago loosed her tongue and she told of how. many years ago, w hen a young girl, she had'been en gaged to marry John Baer be married to woman or a man of the white race. It will bring gruesome and bloody con flicts. Intermarriage Repulsive. “Intermarriage between whites and blacks is replusive and averse to every sentiment of pure American spirit. It is abhorrent and repugnant to the very principles of a pure Saxon government. It is subversive to so cial peace. It is destructive of moral supremacy. "There is no place in all our South ern country w’here a negro can not go and find employment and peaceful habitation. There is no avenue of honorable labor and honorable em ployment in which he has not an opportunity to go. He is unintimidat ed. protected by law. aided and helped in every laudable ambition. Eight-Year-Old Boy Speaks 3 Languages New Mexico Child Educational Mar vel of the United States—Never Attended School. BOSWELL, N. D., May 24. Not yet eight years old, but qualified to enter high school next fall, which he 11 do, Raymond Ray, of Boswell, is the wonder of the educational world of the United States. Without a single day in the public schools, trained at his mother's knee sfhee he was a babe of a few months, Ray already has stood the tests re quired of the average boy or girl of fourteen, with six or seven years lo study in school. The 'child reads, write* and talks German and Spanish in addition to English, and is now about to take up Latin as a regular course. His record equals and almost ex cels that of Herbert Wiener, the fa mous son of Dr. Leo Wiener, of Har vard College, Who will receive his do. gree as doctor of philosophy ip Jun\ though but eighteen years of age. If he maintains His present rate of pro gress he may be qualified to enter college when ten years old. Wien *r matriculated at Tufts College when lie was eleven. Physically Ray is a young athle f e, w hile Wiener was not at his age. He plays with other boys and girls, and plays hard, while Wiener did litLie playing when his age. Girl Leaves Counter To Manage Big Farm Supervision of Every Detail Will Be Left to Woman When She Takes Charge. Film Shown All Over Country Advertises Big Meeting in Buffalo. NEW YORK, May 24.—Moving pictures are being used not only in this country, but r all over the world, for the purpose of calling attention to the Fourth International Congress on School Hygiene, which will be held at Buffalo the last week in AtW gust. The film now being shown in the cities of the United States was recently taken in Buffalo by Pathe * Freres, and gives a view of the school / children of that city signing a peti tion which is to encircle the globe, inviting educators, scientists, parents, city. State and national officials, to the forthcoming Congress. < Children Act in Film. The children of school No. 10 at ( Buffalo were the ones chosen for mak ing the motion picture, and their peti tion was ’••igned out of doors. Seated at a table on the lawn where the document was signed were Health Commissioner Francis E. Fronczak; Henry P. Emerson. Superintendent i f Education; Herbert A. Meldrum, President of the Chamber of Com merce; City Clerk Harold J. Bal- liett ; Dr. Franklin C. Gram and Dr. W. H. Heath of the Health Depart ment; B. Herbert Blakeslee, Executive Secretary; all of whom, are active work rs in behalf of the congress, which it is planned will he the big gest effort ever made in this country toward bringing school hygiene before the world. Motion pictures will be used at the congress itself. One of these will be the motion picture film entitled, "toothache.” which i^ produced un der the auspices of National Mouth Hygiene Association, and which tel is of the terrors of a toothache in the Jones family as well as of the need of oral hygiene. Family irt Picture. The chief actors in this film in clude John Henry Jones, Mrs. Jones, his wife; Mary Jones, their daughter; Master Jones, their little son; Arthur Moore, a Dental Inspector; Miss Maud Van Wert, a Dental Nurse; William Brooks. Dentist; Miss Metta White, Dental Assistant; Robert Jarvis, a hysieian; Miss Martha Johnson. Teacher; Miss Ella Whitehead, Prin cipal. Tln*re is also in the company a large number of school children. Sev-f eral interior scenes and one exterior are shown, including a dining room, a ' school room, and a reception room nt a dental office. The story of the film gives in detail the suffering of Jo in Henry* Jones from a bad tooth and his ultimate happiness when taken in hand by his little daughter Mary, who has been receiving dental in struction at her public school—in struction which is being given in but very few schools throughout this' 1 country and the need of which s strikingly apparent, according to fig ures furnished by the National Mouth Hygiene Association. Her wedding clothes wer* ready. ! but he has known through all the gateway. There will be one of these gates on each side of the footpaths, and partially connected by a low wall of the height of the present park wall and with aeats facing the circle. The material to be used for the pylon, the houses and the wall will be Tennessee marble, with a gran ite base of similar stone. Floral Wreath. One of the features of the unveiling of the National Maine monument on the afternoon of May 30 will l>e h little ceremony connected with the placing of a floral piece on the mon ument presented by President Wilson in the name of the United States. Father John P. Uhidwick. who was chaplain of the Maine when the war ship was sunk in Havana harbor, will place the wreath on the monu ment and it will be borne from the speaker's stand to the monument by surviving men of the battleship’s crew Rear Admiral Uameron McRea Winslow, who is to be grand marshal of the land parade, has issued orders and maps to commanders of military and naval commands that are to be in the parade. Major Genera! BarVy. U. S A., has been co-operating with him and has assigned Colonel Mal lory to command the troops from the army. There will be five thousand men from the North Atlantic fleet in the parade. Governor Sulzer and Governor Haines, of Maine, will take part in the ceremonies. Big Cross to Mark Marquette Church Huge Granite Shaft Will Be Erected on Site of Explorer’s Mission Overlooking Illinois River. BLOOMINGTON. ILL.. May 24 —A gl|fnntle cross of granite will shortly be erected on a lofty spot on the West bank of the Illinois River In 1-a Salle County, and whteh will be visible for many miles up and down the valley of the picturesque stream. This cross will marke the site of Father Marquette’s mission establish ed in the Indian village of Kaskaskit. April 5. 1676. the first Christian church of the Mississippi Valley an i the great West. The mission was named the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin and was famous for many years. Father Claude Ai- loeux. whose name is famous In the missionary annals of the Northwest, was also identified with this mission and succeeded Father Marquette April 2 7. 1677. The acquisition of Starved Rock .. ■ the State and the establishment of t State Bark, free to all the people has had the result of bringing thou- *<m s of tourists to La Salle County annually. and the day was set. when Baer was called to Indiana on business. He diej there and Mary Good never recov ered from thp shock. As her mind gave way a change came. She took from the trunk, where they had lain all these years, the white slippers and stockings she was to have worn at her wedding. She purchased some gaudy shirtwaists and tailored skirls and a new hat. In these she appeared on the street, attending public gath erings. Young as Sixtsen. Tm Jusl as young as a girl of six teen," she would tell people. One Sun day. worshippers arriving early at the First Methodist Church, found Mary Good sitting in a buck seat. She glanced about as they entered and when thev approached she exclaimed: "Is he out there? Has he come?’’ Her hearers were mystified. "Who?" they asked. "John." answered the woman eager ly. "Mv lover. John Baer! Don’t you know him? Why. I’m to marry him in this church to-day!" The church people took Maty Good home and soon after she was sent to the State Hospital. Church Left $100,000 by Woman Never in It Woman in Missouri Gives Fortune to Archbishop Glennon—Cousin Sues for Debt. ST. LOT IS. May 24. Agnes Bat- num, of Manchester, St. I-K>uis County, never attended church, her relatives- say. but she bequeathed more than $100,000. or about two-thirds of h»r estate, to Archbishop John J. Glen non for furtherance of the Catholic religion. This alleged eccentricity- was re vealed by E. J. Linchey. 587.8 Maple Avenue, a cousin of the woman, wni is suing to collect a* claim of $6,093 against the estate. The Mississippi Valley Trust Com pany is administrator. Linchey presented his claim to the Clayton Probate Court shortly after his cousin’s death and was allow,' 1 $2,047. He appealed to the Circuit Court and a jury returned a verdi ; for $300. Mrs. Barnum, who was 69 years old and a widow, spent as much time Linchey * home in St. Louis* as at he - farm in Manchester, the cousin aver red. and she was nursed and cared for by Linchey and his sister. Mrs. Sarali M< Nance. Mrs. Barnum bequeathed ab.rji $42,000 to a charitable organization. $3,000 to a cousin in Rochester, N. Y . and the residue of the estate to Archblsho*' Glennon Linchey said he, es the nearest sur viving relative, was u.ged to contest the will on the ground that his cous in was mentally irresponsible. generations that wedlock between him and a woman of the South was impossible, more, impossible than any other human undertaking to which he could aspire. He has the fairest opportunity to-day to go forward in industrial progress and moral devel opment, that he has ever had. and his opportunities for this growth and this progress are superior to those in any other section of the coun try. Conditions May Change. "But whenever the condition at which this amendment is directed prevails in the North to such an ex tent that these ideas and notions begin to creep into the heads of ne groes south of the Mason and Dixon line, and whenever we have a foreign tide into the Southland of the white race unacquainted with our customs and traditions, and when they begin to bargain and contemplate matri mony between the whites and the blacks there-- then the result will be fraught with disaster, and it will bring annihilation to the race which we have protected in our land for all these years. MINNEAPOLIS. May 24.—With a contract for $40 a month and a third interest in the profits, Miss Gra *o Simpson, of this city, will undertake the management of a farm at Bethe;, Minn. Having personal supervision over every end of the farm work, she will be ready, she says, to step in and plow, harvest or care for horses, as she is needed. "T’ll be the firsH up in the mornina and the last to go to bed.” said Miss Simpson. "I probably will have work twelve or fourteen hours earn day, w hereas if 1 worked in the city 1 would be working only ten. but I will be out in the open air and do healthful work, eating good food and sleeping well, and that beats city ex istence, anyway.” Teeth Marks Convict Four Young Burglars Sausages, Cakes and Crackers Bear Print of Boys’ Molars When Examined. Prisoners Weep When Fed on Vegetable Diet Workhouse Keeper Never Furnished Meat to Men Confined in Lockup. MARINETTE. WIS., May 24.— Prisoners at the Marinette' County workhouse, according to District At torney E. W. Miller, in a statement to the county hoard, had come to him so unnerved that they wept because they had been compelled to subsist on a vegetarian . diet of corn meal mush, potatoes and black coffee. When facing other sentences, fol lowing smeh experiences, they have pleaded to be sent to the rock pile at the county jail instead of to the work- house. Peter J. Christ, the workhouse keeper, has been suspended, pending his trial v on the charge of killing a prisoner in a quarrel. His salary is $1,650 a year, and out ot it he has to board the prisoners. An investigation hy the county commissioners is in prospect. Husband Kisses Wife: Placed Under Arrest Suit for Divorce Under Way and Spouse Objected to Public Osculation. ST. LOUIS. May 24.—Passengers on a crowded Main Street car in East St. Louis gasped as they saw a man. in working clothes, embrace and kiss a well-dressed woman, beside whom he had been sitting, and who had ignored his attempt to engage her in conversation. "1 want this man arrested,” she ex claimed a* he followed her into the police station a few minutes later. "He kissed mv* on a street car. right under everybody’s eyes.” The man explained that the women, Mrs. Henry \Vltemier. was his wife, who is suing him for divorce, and that he could not withstand. the tempta tion to kiss her. He was locked up. ; ^B^CATARRK: » OF the BLADDERJ Moved in ; r 24 Hours * Each Cao- t hears Lie (MIDY) i ~ania vJV 4 ~f C**rr>t*rfeil8 4 * .WWVVVVY MILWAUKEE, May 24.—Teeth marks as evidence to-day led to the arrest of four boys on a charge of having robbed five stores. Detectives found partly eaten sau sage links, cakes and crackers in all of the stores. Some of the remains showed plainly the marks of the teeth, so the detectives took the "evidence” to a dentist for examination. The dentist decided that the marks were those of boys’ molars, and this was proven to-day when the same dentist examined-the teeth of the boys under arrest and said the marks in the sausages came from the teeth of the boys. (not solo in stores) fitted to your measure in your own home by our trained corsetiere will sat isfy your every desire for style, comfort and health. Telephone or drop a card for corsetiere to call. SPIRELLA CORSET SHOE Phone W-428 i ABE RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS NEGLIGENT? Many Suffer Excruciating; Agony for Years Without In- if vestigating the Cause of; Their Pain or Its Cure. Rheumatism frequently comes from uric acid poisoning. Uric acid accumulates from undigested. , fowl remaining in stomach and if*- 1 testines. which ferments and putre- \ fies and generates this poisonous acid. ) If not expelled promptly it gets up < into the blood and finally forms crys- S talline deposits which settle in joints ; and muscles and stiffen them. ( JACOBS’ LIVER SALT has been < remarkably successful in the treat > ment of rheumatism resulting from ? uric acid poisoning. It is a true uric ( acid solvent which will break up the S | deposits already formed, dissolve the ) uric acid out of the tissues and hold c it in solution until expelled in the S urine. It will not cure your rheuma- ) tism overnight; neither did your ? rheumatism come overnight. But JA- s COBS' LIVER SALT will relieve you ) more promptly and surely than any- ? thing else because it thoroughly < purges the system of fermenting S waste, eliminates the poisonous uric ? acid and purifies the blood. ) Almost without exception the suf- s ferer from rheumatism is subject to 5 constipation, biliousness or dyspep- \ sia, and a sluggish liver is at the hot- ( tom of the whole trouble. JACOBS’ ) LIVER SALT stimulates both liver / and kidneys and makes them keep ( your system clean. No other liver \ medicine has the same solvent ac-y tion upon uric acid Therefore, i' J sist that your druggist give vou \rnt%, genuine JACOBS’ LIVER SALT /TT he hasn’t it. full size jar sent upon.r> receipt of price. 25c. postage free ■ f Made and guaranteed by Jacobs' Pharmacy Co., Atlanta.