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TTEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA. Ha., STMT) AY. ArGTTST 17, IMS.
PASSED B1 LEGISLATURE;
LAUDS
Act for Equalization of Taxes Is
Regarded of Supreme Impor
tance, Meaning Millions of Add-
Revenue to Ga. Each Year.
Measure Was Passed Orly After
One of Most Dramatic Fights
General Assembly Has Known.
Will Revolutionize System.
The 1913 session of the General As
sembly of Georgia, which adjourned
Thursday night, passed more than
three hundred bills. Of these more
than 260 were local bills, designed to
relieve conditions exlstinfl in indi
vidual counties, and not operative in
any other ‘county. The remaining
ones were general bills and local bills
of general application.
Practically all of the measures have
been engrossed and sent to Governor
Slaton’s office, and need only the »ii-
nature of the Chief Executive of the
State to become laws.
Governor Slaton has already signed
some of more important bills. He
signed the Llpscomb-Miller-Anderson
tax bill, to be known as the Lips
comb act, within a day after It passed
the House, and Friday he signed the
bill giving mothers equal rights with
fathers to the custody of minor
children.
Other bills received the official O.
K. Saturday, but the great majority
of them will not be signed until the
coming week.
Of the 50 or more general bills
lhat passed both branches of the
Legislature, 1J» are of importance, and
their effort will b<* generally felt
throughout the State.
Governor Praises Work.
They h been praised by Gover
nor Slaton, Speaker Burwell, of the
House, and President Andernon, of
t^e Senate, as comprising one of the
best Legislatures the State has ha 1
since the Civil War. They have
passed five tax measures that will
revolutionize the taxation system of
the State, and add millions to the
revenue**; they have raised the stand
ard of physicians in the State and
•centraUsed the control of practicing
doctors; they have heard the plea of
.Georgia mothers and enacted a law
tb.it places her on a par with the
JUthcr and recognizes her ability to
•rare for her own child; they have
established a home to care for the
wayward girls of the State, and they
have shown their friendship to the
cause of higher education by passing
an appropriation bill that carries
large sums for the maintenance of
the educational Institutions of the
State.
By far the most important measure
passed by the House is the bill creat
ing the office of State Tax Commis
sioner and county boards of tax as
sessors This law has been charac
terized by veteran members of the
House and Senate and by legislative
experts as the best measure that has
—
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Name
Important Bills
Made Laws by
I913 Legislature
Here are the moat important
billn that panned both hounen of
the den era I Annembly, and which
become lawn upon receiving the
nii/nature of th< Governor:
To provide for a State Tax Com
missioner and County Boards of
Tax Assessors.
A “blue sky" measure, to regu
late the sale of stocks and bonds.
To allow freight trains to run
on Sunday.
To increase the occupation tax
on corporations.
To place a special tax on bot
tling works.
The general appropriation bill.
To provide an inheritance tax.
To regulate the practice of
medicine and raise the standard of
physicians.
To create a new charter for the
city of Atlanta.
To create municipal courts in
Atlanta and abolish the Justice
courts.
To provide an additional Supe
rior Court judge for the Atlanta
Circuit.
To provide for the permanent
reqistration of voters.
To establish and maintain a
Home for Wayward Girls.
To enable judges to grant char
ters in vacation.
To create a Western & Atlantic
Commission to Investlqate the re
lease of the State Road.
To give the mother equal rights
with the father In the custody of
minor children.
To provide a tax of $5 on auto
mobiles.
To create a commission to in
vestigate the advisability of the
State publishing its own school
books.
To allow trial judges to place
persons convicted of misdemean
ors on probation, and to provide
county probation officers.
To orovlde for the popular elec
tion of United States Senators.
Off in Canoe on 7,000-Mile Tri
+•* +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+,
Couple to Make Record Cruise PET BILLS DYINJa
+•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+
Argonauts to Visit the South
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Green, who have started from Staten _
Island to cruise to New Orleans and baek in a canoe. Recently Elected Congressmen
Have Hard Time Telling Why
District Doesnt Profit.
/
l I
X
been passed In Georgia In 50 years.
It will revolutionize the taxation
system of the State, and conservative
estimates place the amount of reve
nue it will add to the funds of the
State at $1,000,000 a year, sufficient to
clear the State of debt and allow
plenty of money to conduct the busi
ness of the Empire State of the South
in a manner commensurate with her
Importance.
Four other tax bills that will bring
In largo sumtf, though the amounts
can hardly be estimated until the
laws are tried, were passed—the au
tomobile tax bill, th * inheritance tax
bill, the special tax on bottling works
and the occupation tax on corpora
tions.
Inheritance Tax Important.
The inheritance tax alone Is expect
ed to bring into the treasury hun*-
dreds of thousands of dollars.
The bill providing for the State
Tax Commissioner developed the
hardest fight. Opponents of tax re
form in the House, where the hill was
first introduced by Lipscomb of
Clarke County, led by Sheppard of
Sumter and Stovall of Elbert Coun
ty, succeeded In defeating the origi
nal bill and securing the passage of
what was known as the Sheppard
substitute, providing for county
boards of equalization only. This
measure went to the senate, where It
was defeated and the substitute pre
pared that eventually became a law,
by Senators Miller and Anderson. Ten
Senate substitute, with Its provisions
for a State Tax Commissioner and
the county boards or assessors, cam* 1
back to the House during the last
days of th«* session.
The fight that developed was one of
the most thrilling and dramatic the
House has ever seen. During the
time the bill was under considera
tion by the Senate, tax reform i em
bers of the House had converted
many of their original enemies. Ef
forts to destroy the b**l by substitut
ing amendments were defeated, and
the bill was brought to a vote during
the latter part of last week.
To Shaker Burwell, of Hancock
County, belongs the credit for the
passage of the bill. From the time
the original Lipscomb bill was Intro
duced he worked hard to get the bill
through, and when toe Senate substi
tute came to a vote, and Henderson .'f
Jones County, a staunch friend of tax
revision, tied up the vote after a
thrilling ride .to the Capitol in <n
auto, Speaker Burwell made th'
measure a law by casting his vote >n
favor of it.
Features of Tax Bill,
The bill is modeled after similar
laws that are now on the statute
books of a number of Northern
States, where h has worked satis
factorily. Its main provisions are as
follow s:
It creates the office of State Tax
Commissioner at $2,500 a year, anil
County Boards of Assessors.
The Tax Receivers of the counties
shall open their books February 1
and close them May 1.
In ten days after the books are
closed the Tax Receivers shall pre
sent the returns to the county boards.
The county board is to be composed
of three members, appointed by the
Board of County Commissioners or
the Ordinary.
The county board must examine the
tax returns and equalize them
The taxpayer, if dissatisfied with
the decision of the county board, can
ask for reconsideration and arbitra
tion. The differences shall be adjust
ed by three arbitrators.
The county boards shall complete
their work by July 1.
The State Tax Commissioner shall
carefully examine all tax returns sub.
initted by the countv boards and ree
Commend decreases or increases.
The State Tax Commissioner shall
1 carefully investigate all taxation quts-
' v yfj
J x '> >■
f ■ ■ art wzx»«vo6oiure
Yearning to See Dixie and West Prompts Young
Pair to Make Hazardous Journey.
NEW YORK. Aug. 16.—“We have
never been South,” said Mrs. Walter
Green half to herself. There was
yearning in her tone.
"Nor West,” said Walter Green,
who heard her.
They sat In their canoe as it drifted
with the tide, their faces turned away
from their Staten Island home, to
ward the South.
Mrs. Green looked at her husband
with a quick inspiration.
“Iyet’s go.” she said, eagerly.
And so they planned within a few
minutes the 7,000-mile canoe trip on
which they started yesterday and
which will take them not only South,
but West, revealing to them the
grandeur of the Mississippi, the
warmth of the Gulf Coast and the
stretch of the Atlantic Ocean. The
two young persons, enthusiastic ca-
no * ‘c both of them, and inveterate
campers, will be away from their
home for ten months or irtore in the
course of the Journey.
Will Call on Wilson.
They started up the Hudson River,
I going on the first stage of the „ourn,\v.
to Yonkers. Thence they will go
; through the Erie Canal to Buffalo,
through Lake Erie to Ashtabula, then
to Beaver ('anal and Rochester. Pa.
From there they will go up the Ohio
to Pittsburg, down the Ohio to Cairo,
up the Mississippi to St. Louis, down
the Mississippi to New r Orleans, across
the Gulf of Mexico and along the
coast to St. James City, Fla., through
the Everglades and a river or two to
Palm Beach, up Indian River to Jack
sonville, along the Atlantic coast to
Chesapeake Bay, up to Washington
to call on President Wilson and pre
sent a letter from Mayor Gaynor. Last
they will go by canal to Delaware
River, Raritan Canal an river to
New York Bay and home.
A crowd cheered the gay young
couple at their start. A party of
suffragettes, admirers of Mrs. Green
for her daring, presented her with a
“Votes for Women” pennant, which
her craft wil’ l: The life-saving
crew' of Clifton, t Greens’ home,
gave them a pennant, which also be
came a part of the equipment.
Light Equipment Carried.
In order to make the canoe as light
as possible, they took only four boxes
containing provisions, camp equlp-
pago and olothing. and two large
duffel bags containing a small cir
cular tent and bedding. All was
covered with canvas, which will ne
used as floor of the tent.
It Is the intention of the couple to
put into a city, tow’n or village each
night, pitch their tent and sleep for
eight hours. When the stores they
carry run out, they will get new sup
plies at the places where they w r ill
stop.
The Greens are anticipating with
the greatest eagerness the portion
their trip that will take them to the
South, about the gulf and the South
Atlantic coast.
tions and recommend laws to the
General Assembly.
The Tax Commissioner shall visit
annually all the counties of the State
and investigate conditions.
if the county board Is dissatisfied
with the decision of the State Tax
Commissioner upon it* returns, it may
appeal for arbitration, to be conduct
ed the same as when a taxpayer ap
peals to the county board.
Governor Slaton already has ap-
j pointed a State Tax Commissioner.
Judge J. C Hhrt. and the formation
of the county boards probably will be
begun at once. The law becomes op-
eraiive January 1, 1914.
The medical practices act abolishes
i the old system of a separate board for
j each school of medicine, and creates
I a joint board to pass upon the physi-
j clans w ho apply for permission to
; practice in Georgia.
The bill for the establishment of a
j home for wayward girls, to be known
; as the Georgia Industrial Home for
Girls. carries with it an appropria
tion of $!<V* '0. The original bill car-
»ried a $30,000 appropriation, but was
cut $10,000 in the House and $10,000
more in the Senate.
Though the Legislature passed
many measures that are recognized
as good, there were many other good
bills that failed to get through. Many
of them, however, were held over until
the next session for various reasons,
and may be passed then. Among them
w-ere a number of child labor bills,
measures designed to remedy work
ing conditions, the vital statistics bill,
compulsory education bill, and others.
In addition to aiding in the fight
for tax reform, in which they were
strong factors, the Fulton County
delegation—Blackburn. Smith and
Cochran—succeeded in getting
through three bills that directly af
fect Atlanta. They aie a bill creat
ing a new charter for the city, a bill
establishing municipal courts, and a
Dill providing an additional Superior
Court judge for the Atlanta Circuit.
The three Fulton County men. Bfack-
burn and Smith especially, were rec
ognized as being among the lead
ers in the House, and were in the
forefront in the fight for all the re-
form legislation that was passed.
correspondent representing the home
paper that he has Introduced the fore
going bill and will push it to an early
passage. The people back home are ■
duly elated and begin to get gl^d that
they retired the former Congressman
and sent so active a successor in his
place.
In a short time the new' member
drops around to the committee to
which his various pet kind bills have
been referred. Without desiring to
appear too solicitous, he gently in
quires w'hen he may expect the com
mittee to get together and take up
the pressing need of his district. The
chairman, w’ith equal gentleness,
breaks the news that it will be abso
lutely Impossible to do anything for
the present.
Caucus Rules Forbid.
In the first place, says the chair
man, a quorum of the committee isn’t
in town. In the second place, the
caucus has forbidden the report of
anything except currency, tariff re
form and pressing appropriations bills
or resolutions mt this session. The
new member Is absolutely unable to
see the justice of such a mandate,
even though he may have been a
member of the caucus. He thought
the rule would apply to the other fel
low, not himeslf. There is general
woe and lamentation.
It is the same old story, told over in
about 50 different ways. Each new
member has a peculiar complaint, to
make and peculiar local needs to sat
isfy. There is nothing doing, however,
and,the recruit statesman is told that
he will have to wait until the regular
session rolls around.
Young American Travels in Steer
age, but Is Confident of an
Early Acquittal.
By JONATHAN WINFIELD.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 16.—The new
members of the House—there are ap
proximately 150 of them—are begin
ning to find out something about the
Intricacies of legislation at Washing
ton, and Just now they are busy ex
plaining away a bunch of campaign
promises. The new member isn’t get
ting anywhere with pet legislation
and he is a sorely distressed indi
vidual.
Nearly 7,000 bills and resolutions
have been Introduced in the House of
Representatives since President Wil
son called the Sixty-third Congress
Into extra session early in April.
About one In a hundred have received
consideration, and the ratio bids fair
to be maintained during the remain-
i der of the extra session owing to a
rule of the Democratic caucus which
binds the House committees not to
report out legislation before the regu
lar session, which beeins in Novem
ber.
In consequence of this unexpected
caucus rule, the new member who
came to Congress leaving many prom
ises behind is up against it. His
hands are tied; he may introduce bills
and resolutions to his heart’s content,
but they won’t get anywhere for
months, and perhaps not then. It is
embarrassing to make explanations,
especially when a statesman beat out
some other fellow by promising bis
things for the district.
All Have Horde of Bills.
The average new member, as soon
as he reaches the House chamber,
walks up to the bill basket and drops
therein a bill providing that the town
of Jonesville shall have a $25,000 post-
office. He follows this with a dozen
or so bills proposing that certain wor
thy pensioners in his district shall
have their annual pensions increased.
Then he comes along with the crying
complaint that the little B< l River
needs about $50,000 or $100,000 to im
prove navigation in order that the
towns of Squash Center and Hickory
Hollow may have increased transpor
tation facilities.
Congressman Newcomer then pass
ed the word along to the newspaper
Continued From Page 1.
son of Paul Charlton, law' adviser of
the Bureau of Insular Affairs, and
former President Taftfs classmate at
Yale. He has stood by his son through
all the fight against extradition.
Extradition Fight Begins.
The fight began the day after the
confession appeared. It seemed at
first that the young man surely must
go back to Italy to face trial, and
every legal step w r as taken against
it. His friends, led by his father,
took the position that he could not be
extradited, because Italy had always
refused, under the extradition treaty
of 1868. to return Italian subjects to
the United States to answer for
crimes committed here.
They lost this fight, when Italy
made a request for the prisoner. The
fight was resumed, and Charlton’s fa
ther entered the insanity plea, in a
habeas corpus suit. Losing this in
the lower court, the father appealed
to the Supreme Court, in which,
about a month ago, the opinion of
Justice Lurton was handed dow r n, to
the effect that Charlton was subject
to extradition.
Officers arrived in the United
States from Italy last week to take
Charlton back for trial. Conflicting
reports have been spread regarding
the young man’s health, certain phy
sicians contending that he is the vic
tim of pulmonary tuberculosis and
others that he is in perfect health.
Newspaper reports, written by men
who have seen him, say that he ap
pears healthy. He has been allowed
an unusual degree of freedom while
being held In the Hudson County jail,
being permitted to take walks, auto
mobile drives and two hours of ex
ercise- each day. Sometimes he was
taken to picture shows.
Charlton Expects Acquittal.
Charlton is cheerful. He has ex
pressed the opinion that he will be
acquitted in spite of the evidence
against him. and has told his father
and mother and other friends as well
that ho will be back home for Christ
mas dinner.
The tmal will be held in Milan
some time early in the fall.
Appeals have been made to Secre
tary of State Bryan, and an attempt
even has been made to reach the ear
of President Wilson to present the
extradition of the young man. His
father has stopped at nothing to save
his son. But all attempts have proved
fruitless. Secretary Bryan. Jiidee
Charlton’s personal friend of long
standing, has expressed his sympathy,
but declared that it was impossible
for him to do anything for the son.
The plans for the defense will take
the form of an inquisition to bring
out the moral and mental traits of
the murdered woman, besides the
consideration of Charlton’s sanity.
Attorneys will try to show that there
was great provocation for the killing.
It is hoped in this that the sen
tence of Charlton will not be the
short-living death at solitary confine
ment in an Italian dungeon, but a
more tempered punishment. )
Autos Are Barred
By Canadian Island
Residents of Prince Edward Will Not
Allow Machines to Enter
Province.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 16.—-"It seems
strange in these days when automo
biles are seen on every street, on
every country road *hat there should
be one section on the American con
tinent where these vehicles are posi
tively prohibited,” said R. A. Dewey,
of Toronto.
"Recently the Canadian Parliament
enacted legislation to permit the use
of self-propelling carriages In the
Province of Prince Edward Island, but
it is by no means certain that the
legislation will be effective. There
is every indication that the law will
never be put in force because a pleb
iscite on the question was taken
throughout the island when the an
nual district school meetings were
held.
"The returns that have come thus
far indicate that the farmers are
strenuously opposed to allowing auto
mobiles on Prince Edward Island.
More than 90 per cent of the popula
tion voted no on th* proposition, and
in some of these places the vote in
the negative was unanimous.
Husband Who Got Message of
Her Death Overjoyed to See
Her Alight From Train
Wealthy Father at
Last Finds Daughter
Search of 38 Years Ends In Aston
ishment for His Policeman
Son-in-Law.
POTTSVILLE. PA., Aug. 16.—An
thony Lloyd, a policeman, living on
$65 a month, was surprised when
John Strause, aged 76. walked into
his home and embraced Mrs. Uoyd,
who turns out to be his only child,
lost to him for more than 38 years.
Strause Is worth $200,000 and lives
In Laramie City.
Many years ago. after he returned
from service in the Seventh Pennsyl
vania Cavalry of the Civil War, he
placed his daughter. Emma, in the
charge of relatives and went West.
Though wealthy, he was unable to find
any trace of her until his sudden
meeting.
PASTOR SHEDS HIS COLLAR.
GRANITE CITY, Aug. 16.—A new
pace has been set by the Rev. W. W.
Brown, pastor of the First Baptist
Church at Granite City, who tells the
men to come without collar or neck
ties and with sleeves rolled up if that
will conduce to their comfort. He
promises to do likewise.
CHICAGO, Aug 16.—Heinrich
Dietz became the happiest man In
Chicago yesterday, and his condition
in this respect is likely to be chronic.
It all happened in a few seconds.
From the depths of woe Mr. Dietz was
raised to an ecstatic Joy that almost
took his breath away.
Dietz is a Russian who came to
this country about a year ago, and
earned money slowly and saved it un
til he could rent and furnish a small
apartment at No. 529 Hartland court.
Then he saved some more and sent
a steamship ticket to his wife. She
embarked for America. Dietz ex
pected her to arrive here yesterday.
On Thursday night K. W. Kempf.
the ticket agent at No. 120 North La
Salle street, handed Dietz a telegram
from Philadelphia reading;
“Your wife Eva died to-day—on
9:40 B. and O. Comm’s Immigration.”
That message dropped a somber
curtain on Dietz’s happiness. To cap
his misery, he had almost no money.
Kempf in sympathy lent him $10 and
gave him a note to P. Hursen, an un
dertaker. Hursen read the note, then
returned the $10 to Dietz and sent a
hearse with him to the La Salle street
depot.
Dietz was mournfully watching the
train when suddenly he saw a plump,
rosy cheeked young woman leave it.
With a shout he sprang forward and
Mr. and Mrs. Dietz were clasped In
each other’s arma
Mrs. Dietz had sent a telegram as
her husband had requested, but the
operator had written "died” instead
of “arrived."
RECEIVES FORTUNE IN OLD
AGE AFTER LIFE OF DENIAL
INDEPENDENCE, OREO.. Aug. 16.
After years of toil and broken health
and a continuous struggle in courts,
James A. Simmons, of this city, has
received $17,000.
FARM SEEDS
We shall take pleasure in quoting current prices at any time on re
quest, or shall fill all orders intrusted to us at lowest existing prices at
the time the order is received.
We have just received our New Crop Seeds of Crimson Clover. Alfalfa
Clover, Dwarf Essex Rape, Hairy Winter Vetch, Georgia Rye and
Grasses. Let us hear from you.
IVldVSSLLAN BROS.
‘Arch” 12 S. BROAD STREET
THE BRIDGE BLOCK.
Bell Phone 3076.
CO.
“Bob”
Atlanta 593.
Nance Believed Mad
When He Slew Wife
Relatives Declare He Was Mentally i|
Unbalanced When He Left
Knoxville Friday.
KNOXVILLE, Aug. 16.—George R.
Nance is believed by his wife's rel
atives in Knoxville to have been in
sane when he killed her in a hotel
at Hamlet, N. C., yesterday. They
recite incidents connected with bis
former residence in this city that
cause them to suspect he was men
tally unbalanced.
At one time Nance left home and
his wife did not know of his where
abouts until she received a cablegram
from him in Liverpool, England. Soon
thereafter he came here and they re- I
mained until they went to Greenville, j
S. C., last March, where his wife was
manager of a sanitarium operated by
a company with hospitals in various \
cities. For four years she was head I
of this company’s hospital at Los An- :
geles. Her last station had been at
Chattanooga, where her local rela
tives thought she was yesterday.
Mrs. Nance was born in Sweet- i
water, Tenn., and had many relatives
over East Tennessee. She married |
Nance in Alexandria, Va., nine years
ago, and they had no children. Mrs.
J. T. Steele, of Jacksonville, Fda.; Mrs.
B. T. Baker, of Alexandria, Va.; Mrs.
Jerry Reagan, of Portland, Or eg., and
Mrs. J. A. MeCampbell, of Friends-
ville, Tenn., are her sisters.
FASTEST GROWING DENTAL
BUSINESS IN ATLANTA
WHY?
Because Public Confidence
is completely established—
because every claim is made good.
Whitlaw, the Only Dentist Who Says;
“If It Hurts, Don’t Pay Me.”
WHITLAW PRICES
RUN AS LOW AS:
Porcelain Crowns ....
$3
Gold Crowns
$4
Bridge Work
$4
Plates (Gold Dust, Rubber) . . .$5
And remember, if it
hurts, it doesn’t
cost you anything.
fii
Original Painless
Dentist
The claim that It does not
hurt is absolutely genuine.
I can kill a live nerve, fill
the most sensitive cavity,
extract a tooth, crown a
tooth, in fact I can perform
the most difficult operations
without hurting you a par
ticle.
c
Lady Attendant and
Ladies' Rent Room
TERMS TO SUIT
Phone Main 1298
)
DR. WHITLAW, PAINLESS DENTIST
Largest and Most Thoroughly Equipped
Sanitary Office in the South
73 1 2 Whitehall St.
TAKES PRIZED BEES FOR
VACATION IN MOUNTAINS
HOOD RIVER, OREG., Aug. 16.—
W. W. Dakin, who owns the largest
apiary here, lijft for his vacation in
the forest reserves above Parkdale.
Mr. Dakin took two hives of bees to
the mountains to gather honey from
fireweed in the burned-over regions.
“I am going to try for some of the
prises offered at the State fair." said
Mr. Dakin.
BRING YOUR VACA
TION
Films to us for prompt and correct
finishing. Use nothing but the
best of chemicals and Velox paper.
Fresh films and supplies always on
hand at John%L. Moore & Sons',
42 N Broad street.
THE UP-TO-DATE
CAFE!
The Savoy Cafe has been remodeled, and is now fully
equipped with the best and most up-to-date equipment in the
South. It is clean, wholesome and inviting. Everything
spotless and sanitary. A meal or lunch here is a real delight.
THE
"JUST AT FIVE POINTS”
SAVOY CALL
34
Peachtree
QUICK SERVICE - LOW PRICES
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