Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 29, 1913, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

TTTF ATLANTA GLOtJCTAN ANT> NEWS. Greece and Servia Allied Against Bulgarians, Who Claim Treaty Violations, Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. PARIS, May 28. —Actual war be tween Bulgaria and the allied armies of Greece and Servia is very near, according to a statement made here to-day by M. Teodoroff, Bulgarian Minister of Finance, who Is here on a political mission. "Only tremendous pressure by the European powers can prevent a fresh conflict in the Balkans." said M. Teo doroff "Unknown to the outside world, affairs have been getting more and more serious for months. An army of 280,000 Servians and Greeks Is massed on the western and south ern frontiers of Bulgaria, ready for a general outbreak. "The contention of the Bulgarian Government is that Servia and Greece are exceeding the terms of the agree ment drawn up by the Balkan league before the outbreak of the war with Turtcey." Austrian Reservists Ordered Remobilized. VIENNA, May 28.—Remobilization of the Austrian reservists, recently dismissed when peace in the Balkans seemed rear, was ordered to-day by the Government. A telegram from Athens states that S other flght between the Bulgarians d Greeks north of Salonika is im minent. The Bulgars are massing vast quantities of heavy artillery at Elevthera, about 100 miles east of Salonika. A Sofia dispatch to The Reichspost to-day sta/tes that the Bulgarian Gov ernment has decided to submit the future status of Salonika to the pow ers. Tension between Bulgaria and Servia, however,' is tightening. Greeks to Fight To Hold Salonika. SALONIKA. May 28.—Premier Vinezilos, of Greece, arrlt'ed here to day en route to Sofia, where he will try to patch up the differences be tween the Greek and Bulgarian Gov ernments. The Greeks maintain that Salonika must remain a Hellenic possession. King Constantine is reported to have given the impression to his staff that Greece will flght Bulgaria be fore she will consent to give up Sa lonika. Debate Feature of Agnes Scott Finals Sixteen girl graduates, dressed in white, marched to the chapel at Ag nes Scott College Wednesday to be ■presented with a “sheepskin” and a Bible. Tuesday night there was a debate between the Mnemosynean and Pro- pylean Literary Societies on charging tolls of American coastwise vessels that pass through the Panama Canal. The Propyleans won, representing the negative side of the argument. Miss Charlotte Jackson and Miss Sarah Hansell represented the Mnemosynean Society and Miss Em ma Jones and Miss Emma Pope Moss the Propylean. CABLE NEWS Important Events From All Over the Old World Told in a Few Short Lines. Gabrielle Ray Seeks a Divorce +•+ »2-s+ +•■{■ +»+ +•+ Stage Beauty Sues Eric Loder beauty, who is suing her husband, Eric Loder. N8 GHSNEEII Ml WILL GET MM IICOTTON HD [ Only Revision Senate Plans of Income Tax Lessens Burden on Married Men, WASHINGTON, May 28.—The Un- derwood tariff bill as reported to the Democratic caucus after the revision of Its various schedules by the sub committee of the Senate Finance Com mittee Is forecast as follows: There will be no ohange In the cot ton, sugar and wool schedules as written into the measure by the House with the exception of a slight increase In duty on wool manufactures. The only change in the income tax amendment will be the aleration of sub-section D, so that a man of fam ily will not be compelled to pay as great a tax as a single man with the same Income. In the cotton and wool schedules a period of from fiO to 90 days of grace will be extended to manufacturers be fore the provisions of the new bill go into effect. The rest of the bill takes effect the day after its passage The amendments to the Underwood bill permitting the arbitrary valuation of imports by the Secretary of the Treasury will be adopted. In the metal schedule duties on structural steel will be revised downward, while ferro-maganese and pig Iron will be free listed. Wheat, cattle and other staples whose manufactures are all on the free list also will be free listed. Duties on pottery will be raised. President Wilson, it was stated, has been notified of the proposed change? in the bill and has consented to the revisions. Jack London’s new story, “The Scarlet Plague,” begins in the American Monthly Magazine given free with every copy of next Sunday’s American. Atlanta Decorates for Secretary's Coming Monday in His Fa vorite Beverage, With the coming of Colonel William Jennings Bryan on Monday all At lanta Is rallying to the support of her reputation as a grape Juice cen ter. # Grape Juice In every form—in bot tles big and little, square and round, and some of It as old as the vintage of last August—Is making its appear ance In every show window to greet the eves of the world-renowned con noisseur, "Grape Juice Bill." At the Capital City Club Colonel Bryan will be the guest of honor at a dinner to be given by Colonel Wal ter P. Andrews. No wine or other liquors will be served, but in their stead will be an abundance of grace Juice cocktails, grape Juice highballs, and grape Juice punch. This fact was revealed In a letter of Instructions to the steward of the club In which Mr. Andrews made implicit hia de sire that the precedent of "wine- less" dinnera established by the dis tinguished Secretary of State in Washington be followed here. The dinner will be served at the club at 6 o'clock. It will be attended by a number of prominent Atlanta citizens. Mr. Bryan will arrive in the city at 5 o’clock. At 8 o’clock he will deliver an address before the students of the Georgia School of Technology at the Grand Opera House. LafesfanJ (znatfcrS S/xir/Mve? TAe SCARLET PLAQUE Dcgin? in FRtE MAGAZINE GIVEN WITH NEXT SIMM Miss Tutt's Pupils Give Recital Friday Pupils of Miss Tutt’s music school will give a recital at the Gable Con cert Hall Friday evening. The class is large. The concert will embrace solos, duets and sextets. "La Grace," from Bohm, will be Interpreted by Miss Marian Holmes, Miss Mary Howell, Miss Alma Marsh, Miss Vivian Marsh, Miss Janie Hall and Miss Edna Tra der. Selected sextets will be ren dered by Miss Tutt, Miss Hall, Miss Gregory, Miss Holmes, Miss Mon- crief and Miss Sims. Senator Sentenced For Seeking Bribe NEW YORK, May 28—Former State Senator Stephen J. Stillwell, of the Bronx, who was convicted of brib ery Saturday, was sentenced to-day to not less than four years.*nor more than eight years in Sing Sing prison. Stillwell was found guilty of so liciting a. $3,600 bribe in connection with legislation at Albany. 6 Boys to Speak for Peacock-Fleet Prize The awarding of athletic emblems and the annual declamatory contest will feature the closing exercises of the Peacock-Fleet School Thursday evening. A gold medal will be given the winner of the declamatory con test. The following boys will speak: D. B. Osborne, Frank Weldon. J. A. Wayt, J. M. Coleman, Lewis Sams and A. W. Powell. FREE. NEXT SUNDAY. The Amerioan Sunday Monthly Magazine, contain ing the first chapters of Jack London’s new story, is GIVEN FREE with every copy of the next Sunday American. RECEIVERS’ HANDS C. & E. I. Also Is in Bankruptcy Because of Tightness in the Money Market. ST. T,OUI8, May 28.—The expect- ed receivership for the St- Louis and San Francisco (the Frisco System) and the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroads was recorded here to-day. Thomas H. West, chairman of the board of directors of the St. Louis Trust Company, and B. L. Winchell, president of the Frisco lines, were appointed receivers of the Frisco properties by Judge Sanborn here. In Chicago at the same time Fed eral Judge Carpenter appointed W. J. Jackson, vice president and gen eral manager of the C. & E. I., and Edwin W. Winter of New' York, as receivers for the C. & E. I. The direct cause of the receiver ship was given as the tightness of the money market. The liabilities of the C. <& E I. were placed at $80,- 000,000 and those of the Frisco at $200,000,000. Trenton Doctor Has 'Cure’ for All Ills UNDRESSED BY LIGHTNING. MT. VERNON, ILL.. May 28.—J. A. Vanwinkle, a farmer, was struck by lightning which stripped him of all clothing and burned the hair from his head. MARKETS IfRENTON, N. J., May lng all diseases are traoaabt* to Wood Impurities. Dr. Eugene B Wfltoe, one of this' city's foremost surgeona and medtoat practitioners, annonasod to day that he had discovered a sqMRsb whloh, he saya, will (rare nearty ‘orsiy known ailment. He has offered to hold puhlln-olinlcs In the City Hall Dispensary trooef the supervision of other phjirtetlBS. Color Line Sought i In Rail Mail Service WASHINGTON, May 18.—Robert A Prather, of Little Rock, Artt.. has presented td Postmaster General Bur leson a petition signed by more than 8,000 white Tallway m«Jl clerks asking an order segregating whits and negro clerks In the railway mall serYloe. The Postmaster General .said he wonld take the petition under consid eration. , CASTOR IA For Infant* and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of MARRIAGE INVITATIONS CORRECTLY AND PROMPTLY ENGRAVED SEND FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO., ENGRAVERS 47 WHITEHALL ST., ATLANTA. GA. Page of Great News To morrow Don’t Miss MAKES RHEUMATISM PROMPTLY DISAPPEAR It! WWWWWWK RICH & BROS. CO. i J Crippled-up Sufferers Find n Relief After Few Doses Croxone are Taken. of Asks Restoration of Her Conjugal Rights—Action Goes Undefended, PLYMOUTH, ENG., May 28.—The British liner Garth Castle arrived here to-day bearing the 50 passengers of the Taltus, which was in collision with the steamship Inca off the Span ish coast Monday. Flyer Falls 1,000 Feet. BERLIN. May 28.—Herr Horn, a German aviator, was killed to-day while flying near Burgwedel. He dropped more than 1,000 feet. Avia- W'or Horn was the two hundred and t eventy-aecond victim of aviation. Meted English Author Dead. LONDON, May 28.—Lord Avebury (Rt, Hon. Sir John Lubbock), banker, statesman, author and scientist, died lo-day, aged 79. He had served ten years in Parliament and for 25 years was secretary of the London Bankers' Association. Gulf of Smyrna Reopened. CONSTANTINOPLE, May 28. The Gulf of Smyrna, In which two steam ships were sunk In the last fortnight by striking floating mines, was re opened for steamship traffic to-day. 'fitter being closed since Sunday. A new lane through the mine fields was opened. A wonderful magazine given FREE with every copy of the next Sunday American. FULL OF SCABS What could be more pitiful than the condi tion told of in this letter from A. It. Avery, Waterloo. N. Y.: _ . We have been using your Tettcrlne. It’s the beat on earth for skin ailments. Mrt. 8. C. Hart was a sight to see. Her face was a mass of scabs. Tetterlne has cured Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, May 28.—Gabrielle Ray. the famous Gaiety beauty, has brought action against her husband, Eric Loder, asking for a restoration of her conjugal rights. The action vVill be heard at the coming session of the divorce court and is prelimi nary to a suit for divorce. Loder lias made no defense. The basis of the actress’ petition has not been disclosed. Gabrielle Ray and Eric Loder, son of the late Alfred Loder and grand son of the late Sir Robert Loder, were married here March 1, 1912. Miss Ray was one of the most popular and beautiful musical comedy ac tresses in England. She had been showered with attentions from many notable gallants,- including ex-King Manuel of Portugal, Lord Dalmeny and the Marquis of Anglesey, but she declared her heart had been touched only by tlie dashing young Loder, who is tall, good-looking and wealthy. Miss Ray and Loder were to have been married at Windsor. February 29. the day that made 1912 a leap year. At the last moment the charming, bride-elect changed her mind, and literally left Loder “wait ing at the church." The next day Miss Ray relentedl and the marriage took place. The Loders amassed a fortune in the tallow trade in Russia, and the | baronetcy was one of the jubilee honors conferred by Queen Victoria in 1887. Radio-Telegrams By Morse Signals PARIS, May 28.—Professor Albert Turpain, after a series of researches extending over three years, has suc ceeded in solving the problem of reg istering radio-telegrams by Morse signals. By using highly sensitive relays he succeeded in inscribing currents of one-millionth of a microampere. Such exactness is unnecessary, but with wires of a diameter of one-tenth of a millimeter he has constructed a relay cable to close currents of ten to twen ty microamperes. Atlantans to Build St, Joseph's School AUGUSTA, GA., May 28—The con tract for the construction of the new St. Joseph’s Academy for girls in Augusta has been awarded to the Mackle-Crawford Construction Com pany of Atlanta. The new buildings will be located on Monte Sano and will cost about $200,000. The school at Washington, Ga., was burned last spring. It was then moved !.o Augusta, when $100,000 was raised with which ten acres of land was purchased as a site. Arkansas Cotton Men in Convention LITTLE ROCK, May 28.—Leading cotton men, representing buyers and sellers from all sections of the State, have formed the Arkansas Cotton As sociation, modeled after the Oklahoma organization. The purpose is to promote the cot ton industry and protect both buyers and sellers: to arbitrate differences and establish rules governing the cotton trade. It will meet annually in Lit tle Rock, but the main operations are to be controlled by a board of nine directors. It adopted rules as to stand ard-sized bales and wrapper weight. SINGERS OFF FOR BIG FEST. Forty German singers of Atlanta, headed by Professor Hunter Welch and George Man, axe en route to Charleston, S. C., where they will participate in the annual Southeast ern sangerfest. It is needless to suffer any long er with rheumatism, and be all crippled up, and bent out of shape with Its heart-wrenching pains, when you can surely avoid it. Rheumatism comes from weak, inactive kidneys, that fail to filter from the blod the poisonous waste ! matter and uric acid; and it is use less to rub on liniments or take ordinary remedies to relieve the pain. This only prolongs the mis ery. The only way to cure rheuma tism is to remove the cause. The new discovery, Croxone, does this because it neutralizes and dis solves all the poisonous substances and uric acid that lodge in the jojnts and muscles, to scratch and irritate and cause rheumatism, and ! cleans out and strengthens the stopped up, inactive kidneys, so they can filter all the poison from the blod, and drive it on and out of the system. Croxone is the most wonderful medicine ever made for chronic rheumatism, kidney troubles, and bladder disorders. You will find it different from all other remedies. There is nothing else on earth like it. It matters not how old you are, or how long you have suf fered, it is practically Impossible to take it into the human system without results. You will find re lief from the first few doses, and you will be surprised how quick ly all misery and suffering will end. An original package of Croxone costs but a trifle at any first-class drug store. All druggists are au- ; thorized to sell it on a positive money-hack guarantee. Three ! doses a day for a few days is of ten all that Is ever needed to over- ! come the worst backache or uri nary disorders. Jack London’s new story, “The Scarlet Plague,” begins in the American Monthly Magazine given free with every copy of next Sunday’s Amerioan. Eckman’s Alterative FOR THE THROAT AND LUNGS Eckman’s Alterative is effective in Bronchitis, Asthma, Hay F< rar, Throat and Lung Troubles, and in upbuilding the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates or habit- forming drugs. For sale by all lead ing druggists. Ask for booklet of cured cases and write to Eckman Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa., for ad ditional evidence. For sale by all of ^ Jacpbs’ Drug Stores. It. Cured hy Tetterine Tetterlne cures ecaema. ground itch, rlr.g- irorra end all akin trouble*. He effect is magi' al 50c at drugglet*. or by mall. SHUPTnINE CO.. SAVANNAH, GA. High Grade Monumental and Cemetery Work Artistic Designs Best Workmanship Satisfaction Guaranteed 173 E Hunter .St. Bell Phone Main 1125 ATLANTA MARBLE & 6RAMTE CO. A Profitable Summer For Your Boy The Riverside Naval Academy, in the Blue Ridge foothills, on placid Lake War ner, solves the long-vacation question.' Life on the water, learning to swim, dive, man a boat, etc., under direction of a graduate naval instructor. Expert coaching in sports of ev ery kind. Enough serious study to overcome deficiencies or to insure advanced standing. Cadets live in floored water - proof tents or in perfectly appointed dormitories, as preferred. Magnifi cently equipped dining hall. Eight weeks session begins June 26th. Charges $100. Uni forms, $20. No extras. For catalog, address RIVERSIDE NAVAL ACADEMY Box lit Gainesville, Ga. § 35 The Annual “Let Go” of Irish Laces At Less Than Present Cost to Import The Final Clearaway—the Sale That Can Come But Once a Year Real Irish Hand Crochet Medallions, Motifs, Beadings, Seamings, Edges and Insertions Real hand-made Irish laces arc almost as staple as diamonds—they are always in fashion. But every year at this season we close out our stork of Irish laces to give us a free hand for the coming year’s importations. This year, having sold nearly all the Irish laces in stock at a fair profit, we are free to sell the rest without profit. Therefore, starting to morrow, we oifer our complete stock of real Irish hand-made laces at these half and less than half prices. Seamings, insertings and edges, ^ to 3-4 in. Former prices 35c to 60c, at.. Picoit edges and ribbon headings. Former prices 35c to 60c, at Medallions, many styles; were $2 and $2.25; now : Medallions, were 25c, now 10c. Were 50c, now . .25c Real Irish Edges & Insertions 23c 15c 85c All charge purchases lor the rest of May go on June Statement, payable in July. Width 1 to 14/2 in. 1 to 1% in. 1^4 to 2 in. 1% to 2 in. 2% to 3 in. (See Window Display. Formerly Sale Price 50c to $1.00 a yard 39c 75c to $1.25 a yard 45c 98c to $1.50 a yard. 65c. $1.50 to $2.50 a yard 86c. $2.25 to $3.00 a yard. 95c Sale at 9 A. M. Main Floor, Right) Rich’s Summer Linen Sale The 30th Semi-Annual event brings the world's best linens at prices remark ably low. . To-morrow we feature tablecloths and napkins—six wonderful lots at price* lower than you had ever expected to pay for such qualities. We feel almost impelled to say, “Hurry, don’t let such ‘plums’ escape.” Good, pure linen table $2.90 $4.90 cloths, odd lots to close. Included are sizes 2x2 yds., 2x2y 2 yds., 2x3 yds. Values $4.00 to $5.00 each. Now at $2.90. Tablecloths of extra fine quality and beautiful round designs. Sizes 2x2 yds., 2x21/2, 2x3, 2V 4 x2'/i 2i4x2i/ 2 , 21/2x214. Choice at $4.90. $6.90 Extra fine tablecloths, including fine Moravian damasks. Sizes 2*4x21 i yds., 2*4x21/2, 2*/ 2 x2y2, 2*/ 2 x3, 21/ox31/ 2 . ’ Values $10 to $15 each. Now at $6.90. $2.90 $4.90 $6.90 62 dozen napkins, sizes 22*4 to 24 in. Guaranteed all linen. Values $3.50 to $4.50 per dozen. Now at $2.90. A gTand aggregation of splendid quality napkins. Sizes 24 to 27 in. Values $6.00 to $7.50 dozen. Now at $4.90. Some of the finest nap kins in our stock. Values $10 to $12.50 dozen. Now at $6.90. (■Linens— Main l''loor, Lpft Aisle.) J wtmmmmmm m. rich & beos. co. mmwmmftmms