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TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
ION'S LEG PUT IN CAST
BY SURGEON AT GRADY
Orders For Immediate Deporta
tion of Fugitive Expected by
Government Agents To-day.
SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, Aug. 28.
Sherbrooke is swarming with Cana
dian secret service agents awaiting
orders from the Federal Government
at Ottawa to take physical possession
•f Harry K. Thaw and rush him to
the border.
Counsel for the Dominion Immigra
tion Department and the State of
New York hoped that such orders
might come from the Canadian Capi
tal before to-morrow night.
Counsel for Thaw, flushed with vic
tory In having the habeas corpus pro
ceedings dismissed and the New York
legal representtive ruled out
court, confidently predicted that such
"Miss Queen,”
baby lioness
of Grant Park
Zoo, exhibiting
her fractured
leg in plaster
cast as she sits
complacently in
Convicts Released
For Work on Roads
JEFFERSON CITY, MO., Aug 28.
Governor Major has released from the
State Penitentiary 22 convicts who
worked on the roads last week. The
commutations were In accordance
with the Governor’s promise to take
fifteen days off the sentence of every
man tfho worked on the roads for
each day he worked.
Twenty-two men had earned 30
days’ commutation. Severity-eight
other convicts worked on the roads
and they also will receive commuta
tion of sentence.
NEW POSTOFFICE BUILDING.
CORDELE, Aug. 28.—The Cordele
postoffice is now occupying the now
Government Building, Postmaster F.
G. Boatright and his clerical force
moving into it to-day.
SHOOTS OUT FOE’S EYES.
LEXINGTON, Aug. 28 Basil Bow
ling, aged 15, of Breathitt Countj.
Kentucky, became angry at Carl Ely
and shot out both of Ely’s eyes.
lap of
Edward Boyd,
the lion keeper
Arrow points
to compound
fracture
shown in
X-Ray pho
tograph.
orders never would be Issued.
Following Judge Globensky’s affir
mation of the contention of Thaw's
lawyers, the latter declared that the
Matteawan fugitive would have to re
main In Jail here now Indefinitely be
cause of the faulty nature of the com
mitment. The next step Is being care
fully considered.
Ex-District Attorney W. T. Jerome,
of New York, who came here In the
capacity of a special deputy from the
office of the New York State Attorney
General, was in Quebec to-day plead
ing with Sir Lomar Gouln, Governor
of the province, to quash all proceel-
Ings against Thaw so that the rep
resentatives of the Department of Im
migration can lay hands upon him.
Mr. Jerome characterised the cour‘
proceedings before Judge Globensky
as "farcical," and hoped to bring the
Government's attention to them offi
cially, he said. It was Mr. Jerome's
\lan' to appeal to Premier Borden
lirough Sir Lomar.
Prisoner Jubilant.
Should the Government quash the
Iroceedlngs here, the immigration
(uthorities would have their way
Ibened to step in and seize Thaw.
The prisoner was jubilant to-day.
"I don't fear any secret service
hrents, for my lawyers have told me
lam safe," Thaw wrote'to the news
paper correspondents. "There is a
lhanre that I may elect to have my
trial before a Jury In October, by
which time I know I will have con
vinced all good Canadians I am oane.”
“Back on
the Job”
again and very quickly,
too, if you will only let
Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters help the diges
tion to become normal,
keep the liver active
and the bowels free
from con stipation.
These are absolutely
necessary in order to
maintain health. Try
it to-day, but be sure
it’s
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitter s
“Miss Queen,” Recovering Rap-
idly From Accident at Zoo, Now
Suffers Exaggerated Ego.
Miss Queen, the eldest daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Nero, of Grant Park,
who Is recuperating at the home of
her parents after having her broken
leg X-rayed and reset by Dr. Good
win Gheesling at Grady Hospital last
week, Is recovering rapidly from the
accident, hut faces the danger of a
calamity even greater than a broken
leg.
She is rapidly developing a case of
exaggerated ego, commonly known
as the “swelled head.’’
Miss Queen was a shy, timid young
thing two weeks ago. She had no in
timate friends, hut spent most of her
time playing with her younger broth
er. She never quarreled with the
butcher when the bone he left for her
had a trifle too little meat on it.
Then she broke her leg and was
taken to Grady Hospital. The fact
that she was not only the first of Mr.
Nero’s immediate family, but the first
of her face, to try to bite A leg off an
operating table In an Atlanta hos
pital; that she was the first of her
race to be punched, prodded and
X-rayed by a real, honest-to-good -
ness surgeon; that she now wears a
plaster of parls cast while her brothel
and papa and mamma wear nothing
but a roar and a ferocious expression
—all this has gone to her head.
She acts like a chorus girl!
Yearns for Publicity.
Miss Queen yearns for publicity
now, since she came home from the
hospital, with a great and unsatisfied
yearning. She pines for attention,
and if anybody looks at her brother
or any of her relations in the big
house at Grant Park, she cries in
much the same mantlet as does a cho
rus girl when she learns there is a
prettier girl in the cast than she.
“Miss Queen is mighty conoeited
since she came home from the hos
pital,” said Edward T. Boyd, who
takes care of Mr. and Mrs. Nero and
their children. “She used to run
away when anyone went into her
room. Now ft is all changed. She is
always showing her bandaged leg, and
gets mad if you don’t pay any atten
tion to it. I’ve seen her run up to
the bars of her cage, where a crowd
of people were standing, and stick her
leg, with its plaster cast, through the
bars as much as if to say: ‘Look a*
me; I’m the only thing around here
that there’s anything unusual about.
I’m the real attraction here!’”
Miss Queen was as unique a patient
as ever invaded the operating room
of Grady Hospital. When Mr. Boyd
brought her to the hospital in a cab
one day, the learned surgeons argued
for an hour trying to determine
whether she had broken her ulna and
radius, or had merely “busted some
thing.” They agreed that if she had
been a human being she would hav*
had a complete fracture of the ulna
and radius—since she was not a hu
man being, but a lioness, they declare
firmly that she “busted something,'*
and let it go at that.
X-Ray Picture Taken.
An X-ray picture was taken of the
broken leg, which showed that both
bones of the right foreleg were
broken a few inches below the knee.
It was what the doctors call a “com
plete fracture.” The pictures are prob
ably the only X-ray photographs of
a lioness ever taken in the South, and
are valued highly by the hospital sur
geons.
Miss Queen made three trips to
Grady with her guardian, Mr. Boyd,
and each of them was a strenuous
affair, especially the first one, when
Dr. Goodwin Gheesling performed the
operation. The young lioness is lit
tle and had a broken leg. but her
other three feet were in good working
order and her teeth were very sharp.
It took Mr. Boyd almost half an hour
to get her to the operating table, and.
when she got there it took three men
to hold her while Dr. Gheesling set
the leg.
Queen fought all during the opera
tion, developing an aversion to Dr.
Gheesling’s hands. Once when the
doctor was putting the finishing
touches to a bandage, and when Mr.
Boyd had both his hands fully occu
pied with holding the lioness. Queen
lunged forward and snapped vicious
ly at the surgeon's hands. Mr. Boyd
Qffckly threw his head against that uf
ATLANTAN SAKS
II. S. 1ST ACT
IN MEXICO
Dr. George Brown, Who Spent
Several Years in Republic,
Believes in Huerta,
Countess Ends Life
When Love Fails
the lioness, and Queen gleefully bit a
piece out of his cheek.
Queen has been placed in a cage
by herself since she broke her leg
and is getting along nicely. The plas
ter of paris cast probable will he re
moved within a week or two, and she
will again be allowed to associate
with the other members of her fam
ily. Tt was while playing with her
brother that she fell and broke the
leg.
Saloonist Shoots
Brewery Employee
ATJGtTSTA, Aug. 28— Frank Gan
non, employed as shipping clerk for
the Augusta Brewing Company, was
shot and possibly fatally wounded by
Fred Elliott, a near-beer saloonkeep
er, here last night.
Elliott surrendered to the poliee and
was put under a bond of $l.oon pend
ing the outcome of the injuries t3
Cannon.
BLUFF SPRINGS CAMPMEETING.
BARNESVILLE. Aug. 28.—The
rampmeeting at Bluff Springs, near
Zebulon, will begin Fflday and con
tinue through next Tuesday. It is
famous as a camp ground and has
often been the scene of great meet
ings. Rev. W. S. Branham, of Zeb
ulon, will be in charge.
HUNTSVILLE VETERAN DEAD.
HUNTSVILLE Aug. 28.—Thomas
Humes, a well-known Confederate
veteran of Huntsville, is dead after
an illhess of only three days, at the
home of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Elle-
lee Hilmes. He was 77 years old.
OHIO HAS SUMMER FROST.
CLEVELAND, Aug. 28.—This was
the coldest day of the present summer
here. The lowest temperature was
52. There were light frosts early this
morning in the valleys about Cleve
land.
Dr. George Brown, the Atlanta spe
cialist. who lived in Mexico several
years as an employee of the Mexican
National Railroad, holds decided opin
ions on the Mexican situation in view
of President Woodrow Wilson'S mes
sage.
His conclusion is that if the United
States Government expects to bring
about peace in that country it will
have to land troops and police it. And
in that event, he says, the various
revolutionists Immediately will band
together to fight a common enemy,
starting a new trouble.
Illustrative of present conditions,
Dr. Brown exhibited an Interesting
letter he has Just received from a
friend, an Englishman, T. Skrewes
Saunders, an employee of the Te-
ziutlan Copper Company of Aire
Libre, Puebla, a town in the south
ern-central part of Mexico. It took
this letter three weeks to reach Dr.
Brown. Railway mail service has
been paralyzed by the guerrilla bands.
Thinks Huerta Can Succeed.
Here are some excerpts from the
letter:
“As you know, things have been
going pretty hard with poor Mexico
during the past three years. Every
one wishes to cut the melon for him
self. and not only have they spoiled
the melon, but they have come pretty
near killing the vine.
“It Is beginning to appear as if the
present administration will make a
“go” of It. But no one can tell how
things will turn from one day to the
next, and those of us who have been
here the longest are the most reticent
in forecasting the future.
“The general election for President
has been called for October 28. There
is the probability of the defeated can
didates taking to the hills and rolling
themselves “loyalists,’’ “constitution
alists” or some such hlgh-faliitih
name, and keep the merry little game
of revolution going.
Wonders at Wilson’s Stand.
"One wonders at the attitude «-f
President Wilson. The preseht ad
ministration is doing everything in It?
power to safeguard foreign Interests
and restore order. Those against the
government are engaged in destroying
all property, foreign and native.
“They are committing such depre
dations and outrages as the Spaniards
did three centuries ago.
“When the rebels took the city of
Durango they committed such out
rages upon the young women of that
city that more than 50 girls committed
suicide to escape the savages.
“It is such acts as these that Pres
ident Wilson is giving moral support
in refusing to recognize President
Huerta.”
Dr. Brown’s Son Escapes.
Dr. Brown had a son, Charles
some months ago he thought his son
Brown, with the same company, and
had been killed. However, young
Mr. Brown escaped in safety and is
now in South Carolina.
Dr. Brown’s idea is that through
the general fig'htong of a lifetime
Huerta and his supporters have climb
ed to the top of the Government and
that they will not vacate until forced
to do so. regardless of the loss of lift
and property.
Colonel John T. VanOrsdale, com
mander of the regiment at Fort Mc
Pherson. said Thursday he had re
ceived no official communication from
Washington regarding the mobiliza
tion of troops on the Mexican bor
der.
He said all he knew was from the
news dispatches and that he did no*
know whether the Seventeenth Regi
ment would or would not he ordered
out.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
ROME, Aug 28 — A commotion has
been caused in society circles by the
suicide of the beautiful young Coun
tess Margherita Cicconi at a hotel In
Alban Hills, where she was living
with her suitor, Signor Pontocorvo
The Countess, who was widely
known for her culture and also as
a sportswoman, was the daughter
of Countess Schwartz, of Vienna.
When but sixteen she married a mid
dle-aged Milanese professor of music.
Her last letters accused Pontocorvo
of systematically ruining her finan
cially.
Autoist Held For
Knocking Down Boy
Benjamin Rentz, the 15-year-old
messenger boy who was knocked
down and severely injured by an au
tomobile driven by R. C. Bone, 7
East Ontario avenue, late Wednesday
night, was reported to be resting well
at the Grady Hospital Thursday
Bone, who was arrested, will be tried
in Recorder’s Court Thursday after
noon on the charge of reckless driv
ing.
Young Rentz wa* crossing Mitch
ell street at the corner of Whitehall
on his bicycle when the accident oc
curred. He sustained a bad cut over
the right eye and a number of bruises.
Chinese Police Slay
Yuan's Political Foe
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
PEKIN, Aug. 28.—-Gendarmes Fri
day last arrested and shot Represen
tative Wu Han Chi, who drafted the
motion asking President Yuan Shi
Kai to resign. To-day five Kuo Min
Tang (Democratic party) Senators
and four Representatives were ar
rested.
The Senate has passed a resolution
asking the President whether he in
tends to govern without the Parlia
ment and announcing that if it fails
to receive a satisfactory answer Par
liament wJll dissolve.
EASTMAN DRUGGISTS ORGANIZE
EASTMAN. Aug. 28.—The druggists
of the city have formed an organiza
tion for the purpose of adopting rules
governing the sale of cigars, ciga
rettes and soda water.
SODA BLOWS UP; HURTS FIVE.
PROVIDENCE, Aug. 28.-^The ex
plosion of n soda fountain in a drug
store injured five persons, including
Mr. and Mrs Hugh T. Kennedy, of
Boston.
TO REPRESENT FLORIDA.
GAINESVILLE, FLA., Aug. 28.—
Robert E. Davis, City Attorney, has
left for Montreal, Canada, as one of
Florida’s commissioners on uniform-
ify of legislation and also to attend '
the annual meeting of the American
Bar Association.
LOW PRICE FOR COTTON.
GAINESVILLE, FLA.. Aug. 28-
Large quantities of cotton have com
menced coming into Gainesville and
the ginneries will begin operations
this week. The ruling price has been
5 cents, although county buyers are
paying a^ low ns 3 1-2 centa
uHon unu. bu.,
BIRMINGHAM PASTOR CALLED.
HUNTSVILLE. Aug. 28 The First
Baptist Church o? Huntsville has ex
tended an unanimous call to the Rev
J. J. Johnson, pastor of the Twenty-
seventh Street Baptist Church in Bir
mingham, and he has accepted. He
will assume his pastorate here Sep
tember 8.
No. 10
10c Georgia Cane Bf*
No. 10 Cottolene $1.14
No. 4 Cottolene 48c.
Country Eqgs. dozen 25c.
Recandled Storage Eggs 17'/ 2 c
HHBHBnnHB
ENTERTAIN ORPHANS.
MACON. Aug. 28.—The orphan
children of Macon will be entertained
in a special manner here on Labor
Day The children of the Heph*ibah
orphanage will'be the guests during
the entire day of the Local Plumbers’
Union.
RUTHERFORD LIPSCOMB. HOWARD PATTILL0.
LIPSCOMP-PATTILLO
FIRE INSURANCE AGENCY
GENERAL INSURANCE
504-8 Atlanta National Bank Building.
Phones Bell 172 M Bell 114-M Atlanta 114
SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT
For the six months ending June 30, 1913, of the condition of the
Georgia Home Fire Insurance Company
OF COLU MBUS,
Organized under the laws of the State of Georgia, made to the Governor
of the State of Georgia in pursuance of the laws of said State. Principal
Office—No. 1048 Broad street.
I. CAPITAL STOCK.
Whole amount of capital stock $300,000.00
Amount paid up in cash 300,000.00
II. ASStTS.
Total assets of the company, actual cash market value $758,154.52
III. LIABILITIES.
Total liabilities $758,154.52
IV. INCOME DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THE YEAR 1913.
Total income actually received during the first six months
in cash $283,223.81
V EXPENDITURES DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THE
YEAR 1913.
Total expenditures during the first six months of the year
in cash ... $258,314.37
Greatest amount Insured in any one risk $ 15,000.00
Total amount of insurance outstanding 84,174,323.00
A copy of the Act of Incorporation, duly certified, Is of file in the of
fice of the Insurance Commissioner.
STATE OF GEORGIA—-County of Muscoge^.
Personally appeared before the undersigned William C. Cnart, who,
being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the secretary of the Geor
gia Home Insurance Company, and that the foregoing statement is cor
rect afld true WILLI \ m C. C<>ART;
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 28th day of August, 1913.
E. DAY WOOD,
Notary Public, Muscogee County, Georgia.
Name of State Agent ED S. HARRIS.
Name of Arait at Atlanta—HOWARD PATTILLO.
The Pacemaker
of Death Quits
Lincoln Beachey, the aviator,
whose desperate feats killed
nine of his imitators, tells why
he is afraid to fly. You can
read it all in
Next Sunday’s
American
which will continne to be the
pathfinder of Dixie in the
world of news, fiction and the
hundred and one features
which turn a hot day of rest
into one of solid enjoyment.
And if it is a question of tem
perature, the reader may find
also a discussion of
Your Winter
Furs
by Lady Duff-Gordon, the fa
mous Lucille of London and
Paris. She will tell in a de
lightful color page of the most
expensive furs in the world,
ermine, sable and chinchillas,
which will be used abroad this
year for wraps and coats.
And with the wit of the uni
verse in the
Famous City
Life Section
coupled with all the real news
in every field of endeavor the
next issue of the leading news
paper in the Southland will he
one that simply can not be
missed. So order it now from
your dealer or by phoning
Main 100.