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LA NT A CLOT? GIAN A YD \TWf3
London Paper Says America Has
Received Insulting Rebuff from
Second Rate St^te.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Aup. 25.—In an editorial
on the Japanese and Mexican ques
tion?. under the caption “Amateur
Diplomacy,” The London Standard
sayp:
“President Wilson can not be'eon-
gratulated on his first essay in the
conduct of foreign affairs. * * *
The relations between the two r*
publics have reached a crisis and
President Wilson has involved him
self and his Government in some
embarrassment.
, “The United States has received a
.brusque, even an insulting rebuff from
second-rate State and a ruler whom
it officially regards as a usurper.
“President Wilson, it appears, in
structed Mr. Lind to go on negotiat
ing. but it is not clear that he has !
anything to negotiate about, except |
an apology, which General Huert
shows no sign of offering. * * *
“Considerable anxiety will be fen
as to the tenor of the message on ,
the subject which the President will
submit to Congress. Meanwhile. w< •
■learn with interest that Mr. Bryan
propose to go on with his lecturing
tour.
“One might imagine that tho vir
tual Foreign Minister of the Union,
in such a crisis, might find enough to j
occupy him in discharging or even
in learning the duties of his impor
tant office, but foreign affairs do no-
seem to be taken quite seriously by
the present admint«tration in Wash
ington.
“One can not be surprised at a-
certain amateurishness in American
diplomacy when one remembers it
is under the supervision of a states
man whose best energies have beer !
. reserved for the platform and the i
press, and a United States ambassa
dor may be a professor, publisher,
popular essayist, or apparently any-
thing else but fhe expert in the diffi-
. cult and complicated science of in-
, ternational relationship.”
Wilson’s Policy Is
! Savagely Attacked.
LONDON. Aug. 25.—The Saturday
Review savagely attacks President
Wilson’s Mexican policy. It says,
, “Wilson unconsciously is playing the
game of those in the United States 1
who want control of Mexican politic? j
* in order to fill their own pockets.
“If he wishes to plunge his own
. country into a war that would last
for years, drive Mexico back into
anarchy, and play the game of his
own political enemies,” the article
states, “he will continue his present
policy and try to break down the
. Huerta regime. On the other side is
the alternative of accepting a trifling
reverse of policy.”
‘Nick Carter’ Held
As a Fake Sleuth
“LET JOHN DO IT
Copyright, 1913. International News Service.
Nqo A HEAD JOHM
AMD PEACE BE WITH
you! .
8! MOTHER IS
Oilii
But Man Accused as White Slaver
Reiterates He Will Make
Vigorous Defense.
SAN FRANCISCO. Auk. 25.—De-
daring he intended to put up a vig
orous defense when placed on trial in
the United States District Court
Tuesday morning. F. Drew Caminettl,
companion in their flight to Reno
with Maury Diggs. Marsha Warring
ton *nd Lola Norris, explained the
reasons why he refused to pica I
guilty.
“These reports that I intended to
plead guilty were occasioned by the
anxiety of my mother following the
conviction of Diggs," said Caminettl
“She was of the i mpression that !
would stand no show whatever on
1 trial and that it would possibly b'
better for me to plead guilty and
throw myself on the mercy of the
court.
“Both my counsel and myself have
induced her to look differently on th >
matter since. In the first place, l,
could not think of pleading guilty to
the charges placed againsi me and
admit that I was a White slaver.”
Caminetti said he would not try to
shift the blame for the elopement oil
the shoulders of Lola Norris.
Gamblers in Panic as
:N.Y. Police Open War
NEW YORK, Aug. 25.— The gam
blers of Gotham were terror stricken
to-day when they learned that Pollc
Commissioner Waldo had started a
crusade against them and that* hr
had issued orders to close every gam
bling place in the city. Waldo has
taken personal charge of the crusad-
and as the first step he made a tour
of the Tenderloin.
He found conditions there bad and
he stripped the shields from two
^embers of the gambling squad ol
| Deputy Commissioner Neuberger.
MOTHER'S FRIEND
DENVER, Aug. 25.—Frederic Van
Rensselaer Dey. author of the Nick
Carter detective stories, is under ar
rest here charged with impersonating
a secret service officer.
Dey, who for many years wrote
a Nick Carter story every week, lives
in New York. He left for Los An- j
geles two weeks ago on a vacation.
His health Is bad and he has been in
several sanitariums. His friends say
that when he is ill he has hallucina
tions and aimagines that he is one
of his own story book detectives.
‘Gospel Stick’ Latest
White House Novelty
WASHINGTON, Aug. 25.—A “Gos
pel stick” in the present administra
tion offsets the “big stick” of a pre
vious White House occupant.
President Wilson has received a
cane of dogwood elaborately carved
with his initials and scriptural quo
tations. It was the gift of the Rev.
C. Clifton Penwick, a negro bishop
who has seen service among his peo
ple in Liberia, and who is a Con
federate veteran, having served in
the Thirty-eighth Virginia regiment
of Pickett’s division. *
Bishop of Natchez
Received by Pope
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
ROME. Auk. 25.—Pope Pius has
received in private audience John Ed
ward Gunn, Bh'hop of Natchez, who
was greeted most cordially.
Bishop Gunn was formerly pastor
of Sacred Heart Church, Atlanta.
9 Young Wilsons in
One Cabinet Family
WASHINGTON, Aug. 25.— The
largest family in the cabinet circle,
that belonging to Secretary of Labor
and Mrs. William B. Wilson, has ar
rived in town and will take immediate
possession of their new home at Six
teenth and T streets, N. W. There
are nine children.
Mrs. Wilson will be assisted by her
daughter, Agnes, who for years acted
as her father’s hostess in Washing
ton. A younger daughter, Miss Mary,
will probably be one of the debu
tantes of this season.
Until a short time ago, scarcely
one person in a thousand had
ever tasted a really good soda
cracker—as it came fresh and
crisp from the oven.
Now everybody can know and
enjoy the crisp goodness of
fresh baked soda crackers with
out going to the baker’s oven.
Uneada Biscuit bring the bak
ery to you.
A food to five on. Stamina for work
ers. Strength for the delicate. Give
them to the little folks. Five cents.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY I
j
Rev. A. R. Holderby Says Circum
stantial Evidence Would Cru
cify the Saviour Again.
Branding circumstantial evidence,
especially when extorted by the third
degree, as dangerous and unjust, the
Rev. Andrew’ R. Holderby, pastor of
the Moore Memorial Church, in his
Sunday sermon declared that if the
Angel Gabriel were to visit the earth
he would very likely be convicted of
some violation of the law on that sort
of evidence.
“It is quite certain,” Dr. Holderby
said, “that Jesus Christ would again
be suspected and arrested and cruci
fied just as he was 1900 years ago—
and it would be on circumstantial evi
dence.”
Dr. Holderby arraigned the laws and
courts of to-day. declaring that our
so-called courts of justice are too off
en courts of injustice and persecu
tion.
“If you have any grievance with
yoiir neighbor,” he said, “you ha
bettor settle the matter by arbitration
and steer clear of the courts. This
the Bible injunction. You will not
likely get justice in some of our
courts.
“In the eyes of the law to-day i*
seems that every man is presumed to
bo guilty of some devilment unless n<
can prove his innocence,and any man
may be convicted of some immorality
upon the testimony of any irresponsib’.
witness who has been put through th»
‘third degree.’
“God exhorts all men to ‘do jus
tice, love, mercy and to walk humbly
with God.’ This is the summing
of religion. It is the Golden Rule,
and if men were governed by this law.
earth would become heaven. There
would be no need of preachers >r
lawyers or courts or juries or jails.
“But this law of heaven is no’
obeyed, hence the sorrows an I
miseries of earth. YVe are living in
an age of injustice and cruelty. This
divine law of justice and mercy is
often violated by the State as well if
the individual. The law as adminis
tered 'by the State is inclined to b *
vindictive and unmerciful.
“The world to-day is feeding on tb •
sensational. The people demand th<
sensational, though it be at the ex
pens** of an innocent victim. If tie
Gospel were sensational, it would b.
more popular.”
DR. FARNUM TC < '.Gh,
Special Cable to The A*!an*a Georgian.
PARIS, Aug. 25.- Du -.:n Fainui .
announced here to-day that at tie-
conclusion of the coming season h-
c '11 rc’iri from t : ?:..*> iid bccom
« valkrar husiziCAd iiia.ii.
Ziegler Honeymoon
Yacht Stuck in Mud
BOSTON, Aug. 25—The $150,000
honeymoon yacht( built for William
Ziegler, Jr., 0 of New York, was
launched to-day. “I christen thee
Gem,” said Mrs. T. N. Sanborn, of
Fairhaven, as the yacht slid into the
water. The Gem immediately stuck
on a mud bank. A tug and twenty
men are trying to get her off.
The Gem is 165 feet long, 2,200
horsepower, and will make twenty
knots an hour—when she gets out of
the mud.
Bog Is Sole Heir of
His Aged Mistress
EXETER, N. H.. Aug. 25.—Her dog.
Dompy, is the sole beneficiary of tht
will of Mrs. Anna A. Barbour, of
Stratham, who died July 30. aged 70.
She was an eccentric, but kind-
hearted woman, noted for her love
of domestic fowls, cats and dogs, of
which she usually harbored many.
II EVERY HOME
! Comfort and Safety Assured
j Before the Arrival of the
Stork.
The old saying- what Is home without a (
mother—ahould add "Mother's Friend.*'
In thousands of American humus there la a
bottle of this splendid and famous remedy that
has aider! many a woman through the trying or
deal, saved her from suffering and pain, kept her
In health of mind and body In advance of baby's
coming and had a most wonderful Influence In
developing a healthy, lovely disposition In lhe
child.
Thera la no other remedy so truly a help to
nature as Mother s Friend. It relieve# the pain
and discomfort c aust ! by the strain on the liga
ments, inukes pliant tJuaw flJ>ers and muscles
which nature is expanuing and soothe* the In
flammation uf breast glands.
Mother's Friend is an external remedy, act*
quickly and not only banishes all distress in ad
vance, but assures a speedy and c-omph-te recov
ery for the mother. Thus .-.he becomes a healthy
woman with all her strength preserved to thor
ouglily enjoy the roaring of her child. Mother's j
Friend ran he had at any drug store at 11 00 a ,
bcttlr. und Is really one of the greatest blessings ,
ever diaciwcred for exptetant ninth***!*. Write to ,
llradfleld Regulator Co., 128 Lamar llldg., At-'
lauta. Ga., for their free book. Write to-day. It ■
la most Instructive.
- ■ *
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This Big Bcaufilully Illustrated Book Sent FREE, tells
Where To Live In
New York City
The selection of a New York City Apartment can be done any
where, at home, on the hotel veranda, o» even en route, if you
have • copy of the
1913 Krto pTT^rfWrmi 5th Annual
Renting Guide
An indispensable reference to best vacancies in HIGH-CLASS
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AMERICAN FLAG
THIS COUPON and 90c entitles the holder to an American Flag, 5 feet
by 8 feet, when presented at our offices,
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
20 EAST ALABAMA ST. 85 PEACHTREE ST.
Flags will be mailed at an additional charge of 10c for postage.
Every man is proud to say he is an American, and it is
bis duty to see that “Old Glory is flung to the breeze” on
every appropriate occasion.
See that you have one of these flags at your office or at
your home.
Take advantage of this offer.
Hearsf sSanday American
and
Atlanta Georgian
20 East Alabama Street 9 Edgewood Avenue.
ATLANTA. GA.
Valued at Five Dollars
cents
This beautiful American Flag, the very latest, with 48
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Cut out Coupon below, and bring to THE HEARST’S
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