Newspaper Page Text
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Five different grades of Rice including "Domino "were placed
under the magnifying glass and photographed. No. 1 repre
sents Domino while the others represent various inferior grades.
DOMINO RICE ^
I Pound Size 10 cents
2% “ Size 25 cents
Is Sold Only
in 8anitr*ry
Packages
AT YOUR GROCER
0
New Orleans
TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
Jerome Taken by
Surprise, He Says
MANCHESTER, VT.. Sept.
1ft. William Travers Jerome
was here at 10:JO o'eloek to
day. and said he had not heard
that Thaw had been deported.
He was greatly surprised by
the news.
Jerome was asked what he
thought of a story in a loeal
paper that newspaper men at
Norton Mills had formed a
plan to help Thaw escape if he
was deported. Jerome “pooh-
poohed” the suggestion.
CASCABETS TONIGHT! DIME A BOX
No odds how bad your liver,
•tomach or bowels; how much your
head aches, how miserable and un
comfortable you are ^rom consti
pation, Indigestion, biliousness and
sluggish intestine?*—you always get
the desired results with Cascareta
They end the headache, bilious
ness, dizziness, nervousness, sick.
sour, gassy stomach. They cleanse
your Liver and Bowels of all the
sour bile, foul gases and constipated
matter which is producing the mis
ery. A Cascaret to-night will
straighten you out by morning—a
10-cent box keep** your head clear,
stomach sweet, liver and bowels
regular, and you feel cheerful and
bully for months.
They declare
the new dances
if done prop
erly are not in
the least
immodest.
Difficulty Encountered in Getting *
Venire to Pass on Guilt of
TNI DEPORTED
III DEFIANCE OF
COURT ORDER
Whirled Across Border to Ver
mont Crying “Kidnaped!” and
Trying to Leap From Auto.
Double Slayer.
CHATTANOOGA.
$2.00 Round Trip $2.00
Thursday, September 11,
1913. Good on all regular
trains. Good return until
Saturday night.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
EXCURSION TO BIR
MINGHAM.
$2.50 round trip, Septem
ber 22. Special train leaves
Old Depot 8:30 a. m. SEA
BOARD.
Continued from Pago I.
gratinn Building. Hr shouted and
waved his arms until he was ex
hausted. The authorities had pur
posely chosen an early hour when
few persons were about.
Robertson had to hold Thaw In the
automobile, as the fugitive struggled
with all his might to leap to the
ground. Thaw implored the hand
ful of persons who were attracted by
hi* screams to help him, but they did
not attempt to Interfere
By the forcible ejection of Thaw
from Canada to-day the fight shifts
to the United States, unless, by a pre
arranged plan. Thaw is seized in Ver
mont by private detectives employed
by former District Attorney William
T. Jerome, of New York, and taken
back to Mat tea wan.
Kidnaping a Dramatic Climax.
That was evidently what Thaw
feared as he was being taken away
from Coaticook. He did not have a
chance to warn his lawyers to meet
him at the United States line and
fight against his seizure there by rep
resentatives of New York. He also
thought that Jerome had gone to Ver
mont on Monday night.
The virtual kidnaping of Thaw,
Upon orders of the Dominion Gov
ernment and in artual defiance of
orders from the high courts of the
land, was a dramatic climax to the
fight that Thaw has made against
ejection No moving picture drama
could have been staged with such
spectacular details.
When N. K. LaFlamme and Barris
ter Greenshield, who were instrumen
tal in holding up the Board of In
quiry’s order of deportation in the
Court of Appeals there, heard of the
ejection of their client they were
thunderstruck. At first they would
i charge of contempt of court for the
j deportation of Thaw.
Mr. Greenshield said that a political
issue would b« made out of the Thaw
case in Canada. (
"The Government will lose every
I Parliamentary seat in the Eastern
townships,’’ s nd he ‘‘The deporta-
1 tion of Thaw Is a farce and it will re
act against the Government because
I it has been plainly shown that the
people in Ganarln ar* all for Thaw.
The ejection of Thaw was an outrage
j and was unjustified.”
New York Had Issued
Extradition Papers.
ALBANY. N. Y., Sept 10.—It was
announeed to-day at the Department
I of the Attorney General that the ex-
j tradition papers for the return of
! Harry K Thaw to this State had heen
• signed some time ago by Acting Oov-
i < rnor Glynn The matter was kept
quiet so that In the event of Thaw's
, return to the United States the papers
could be immediately served without
a. hitch.
Carnegies Stunned
By Sudden Deportation.
MONTREAL,
Sept.
10.—When
George louder Carnegie, brother-in-
law of Thaw, was notified of the fugi
tive’s deportation he could not speak
j for a few minutes.
“It can't be true,” he gasped. “The
i Government would not go over the
| head of the courts. An injunction ex-
! ists here making it illegal to take
j Th iw out of the county, and an ap-
i peal is pending from the decision of
'Judge Hutchinson in the bureau ha-
: heaa corpua proceedings at Sher-
I brooke. I won’t believe that Harry
has been taken over the border until I
see him on United States soil.”
IVJrs William Thaw, mother of Har
ry, had reached this city yesterday.
Later In the day she was reported to
have left for Sherbrooke or Coaticook.
MILLEX, GA., Sept. 10.—The Case
against Mrs. Edna Perkins Godbee for
the killing of her divorced husband.
Judge Walter S. Godbee, and his
young bride in the Millen postoffice
was not called Wednesday morning,
but will be taken up Thursday morn
ing.
One hundred and sixty Jurors. 100
of them drawn by Judge Henry' C.
Hammond at midnight Tuesday, will
be the number from which the twelve
to try Mrs. Godbee will be drawn. I:
Is feared this will not be sufficient.
Mrs. Perkins Godbee was not
brought to the courthouse to-day.
The delay in beginning the trial
arose from the court's knowledge of
the difficulty In securing the jury.
Germany to Probe
15 Deaths in Airship
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
BERLIN, Sept. 10.—The War Of
fice to-day ordered an official inves
tigation of the wrecking of Zeppelin
balloon L-l in the North Sea off
Heligoland last night, with a loss of
life estimated at fifteen persons. .
The superficial investigation show
ed that the dirigible balloon ran into
a storm. She waa driven to the sur
face of the sea. where her cars and
compartments filled with water. She
was unable to rise and was battered
to piece by the ■fraves.
R.E.George in Council
Race in Fourth Ward
R. E. George, often mentioned as a
probable candidate for the City Coun
cil from the Fourth Ward, has an
nounced.
That Interest in the coming charter
election and the naming of ten Coun-
cilmen and five Aldermen daily is in
creasing is shown by the fact that
several thousand voters have reg
istered in the last ten days. The reg
istration books close Tuesday.
not believe It.
Crowd Yells “Outrage/*
When the news got about in Coat
icook that Thaw had been taken to
the line public feeling was aroused.
A crowd surrounded the Immigration
building and there were demonstra
tions against the Government and in
favor of Thaw Many women were
In the crowd.
“An outrage! An Injustice!”
•creamed the crowds.
In themeantime news had gone to
Sherbrooke. Attorney W. L. Shurt-
leff, counselor of record for Thaw,
Immediately got Into action, but could
do nothing to check the arrow-like
flight of the immigration authorities'
auto, which was speeding toward
Norton's Mills. Vt.. with Thaw hyR
terically denouncing the immigration
departmtnt from the tonneau.
Persons living along the highway
traversed by the automobile said that
the car (lashed by in a cloud of dust,
but above the humming of the motor
could be heard the protestations of
the prisoner.
Newspaper men in Sherbrooke hur
ried to Coaticook In automobiles and
followed Thaw on toward the Ver
mont line. •
Thaw To Be Seen in
Movies in Atlanta.
Harry K. Thaw will be seen in the
movies in Atlanta all of next week.
All of the scenes of his trial, togeth
er with all of the principals who
have figured in the case since the
departure of Thaw from the United
States into Canada, will be pictured
at the Grand.
Just before the trial In Canada
Thaw was induced to pose for a mo
tion picture. The promoters also in
duced the judges to permit taking pic
tures of the trial.
The general manager of the Keith
circuit, E. F. Albee, arranged for the
exclusive use of the films, and .lake
Wells, when advised the picture
would be available, immediately got
in long distanoo telephone connec
tion with Mr. Albee arid arranged to
have the films rushed to Atlanta.
Demands Officers Who
Deported Thaw Be Cited.
MONTREAL, Sept. 10.—Attorney
Greenshields. one of Thaw’s attor
neys. said that he would demand that
Immigration Officer Robertson be ar
raigned before the King's bench on a
Turkish Army Duel
Causes Five Deaths
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
VIENNA. Sept 10. A duel between
Turkish officers In Adrlanople yester
day caused five deaths. The fight was
a sequel to the quarrel between Enver
Bey. the Young Turk leader, and Abuk
Pasha. The latter, after a verbal en
counter. shot Enver Bey in the arm.
The Government ordered Ahuk’s ar
rest. and when officers arrived to take
him into custody, his brother officers
drew their swords. Five were killed
and twenty wounded-
Whistles Urged for
Traffic Policemen
Secretary Fred Houser, of the Atlanta
Convention Bureau, wants to put At
lanta’s traffic policemen on a “whist
ling” basis.
“We should follow the hlg city idea.”
said he. "The whistHng system was
adopted years ago by Chicago and New
York. One blow of the whistle signals
the traffic to north and south, two
gives the signal for the east and west
trend. The wiggling thumb method of
the local department is slow and an
tiquated.”
London to Have Opera
At 12 Cents to $1.25
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON. Sept. 10. — Thomas
Beecham. undeterred by Hammer-
stein’s failure, plans to build a new
opera house in London to cost $1,-
250,000.
The plan is to provide opera for
the masse* at prices ranging from
sixpence (12 cents) to five shillings
$1.25). The house will seat 4,000.
Chesapeake Bay
Almost ‘Fished Out’
WASHINGTON. Sept. 10.—The
Chesapeake and its tributaries are
doomed soon to become fish less, ac
cording to official reports.
Excessive catches by anglers i§
[blamed for the danger of fish extinc-
f tion.
$500,000 CHICAGO FIRE.
CHICAGO, Sept. 10.—A fire of mys-
j terious origin destroyed the shops of
the Nickel Plate Railroad in South
! Chicago to-day. The loss was estl-
I mated At $500,000.
RECITATIONS ARE
OEING HEARD IN
BASEMENTS
Continued from Page 1.
has experienced since its removal
from the High School building, larger
quarters will be needed.
Tech Also Grows Rapidly.
When the removal was made at the
suggestion of Superintendent Slaton
the enrollment was 75. It Is now 23?
and growing rapidly. That It will
reach 500 within three or four years
is the confident prediction.
Among the districts most needing
new\school buildings at once, ac
cording to the superintendent, are the
Ninth Ward. Ea^t Atlanta, where
about 30 children have to wglk a
mile and a half to the Faith School.
Ansley Park. South Atlanta and
Pittsburg. New quarters also are
needed for the English-Commercial
High School and better facilities are
needed at the Summer Hill Negri
School.
Superintendent Slaton is much
gratified at the evidence of the pop
ularity of Atlanta’s school system
with the parents and children.
Urges the City to Act,
He expressed Tuesday the wish
that steps would be taken at once
more fully to provide for the care
and instruction of the children that
are applying for admission to the
schools.
Among the schools which have re
ported overflows on the first day are:
State Street. 28; Fraser, 12; Inman
Park 23; Form wait. 60; Williams, 5;
Peeples. 94; Grant Park, 6; Lee, 7;
Pryor, 56; North Avenue, 3: W. F.
Slaton. 12; Edgewood. 29; Faith. 6;
Highland. 83, Home Park, 3: Georgia
Avenue. 81. Hill, 9; Forrest Avenue.
26; Exposition Mills. 36; Mitchell.
110; Gray, 9; Luckie, 10; Fair, 21;
English Avenue, 17.
Do you know, you dlrciples of Terp
sichore, that when you twist and
squirm, and whirl, and dip. and duck,
and shrug your shoulders, and wiggle,
and do the thousand and one other
things that popular opinion has asso
ciated with the latest dances, that
you are not dancing the tango nor
yet the turkey trot, but an adaption
of the rag. a sort of combination of
the. turkey trot and the barroom rag
In which the steps of the latter pre
dominate?
It’s a fact!
Frank Hale and Inez Patterson,
headliners at the Forstyth this week,
with a tangoing and turkey-trotting
act. say so—and they ought to know.
They ar giving in Atlanta this week
their first performance after an Eu
ropean tour of several months. Hale
claims to be the champion rag and
Texas Tommy dancer of the world.
"The real tango is not danced at
all in the United States.” they say.
"It is not danced anywhere but in
Paris and T»ondon and Buenos Ayres
—that is. it is not. danced correctly.
There are a few couples in New York,
whom we recently saw, who have the
right steps, and who will be able to
dance the real tango soon. We used
to think we danced the tango, until
we went to Europe and saw the real
dance that was introduced in Pari3
by dancers from South America. The
tango came originally from Buenos
Ayres, in the Argentine Republic, and
is now danced all over Europe, es
pecially in London and Paris.
"The tango that is dan^td in Amer
ica bears little resemblance to the
real tango. It is a sort of an adap
tion of the old rag dances and the
Texas Tommy; a combination of the
turkey trot and the barroom rag, with
the latter predominating. There are
no whirls, and exaggerated dips and
throwing of the woman in the real
tango; it is a dance almost as smooth
and graceful as the waltz. In place
of the dips that Americans put in
the tango there should be but the
slightest bending of the knee; it is
more of a walk to music than any
thing else.
“Whatever may be said of the
American tango, the real tango is
no immodest. When American danc
ers learn the beauties of the real
tango, they will discard the rough
not immodest When American dane-
adopt the real dance.”
Miss Patterson declared that in her
opinion the tango will enjoy greater
popularity in the North than »n the
South, because Southern music is not
so "raggy" and is more dreary anu
soothing than the music of the North.
CARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.
Marshalls Seeking a
Home Send Prices Up
WASHINGTON. Sept 10.—Vice
President and Mrs. Marshall have
found the fly in the Vice Presidential
ointment. It is the possibility of
renting a house in Washington suit
able for Uncle Sam’s second in com
mand at any price that comes with
in the Vice President’s means and
his salary of $12,000 a year. What
they most desire is a furnished house
at not over $2,000 a year. It seems
impossible to get it.
Houses that promise well leap in
price when it becomes known that
the Vice President wants them.
$30,000 BEAUTY
PARLOR MET
I
NEW YORK. Sept. 10.—Mrs. Made
leine Force Astor. widow of John Jacob
Aetor, has had installed in the Astor
mansion on Fifth avenue the most
elaborate and complete private
“beauty parlor” in the world.
To the electrical wizard, W. Gentry 1
Shelton, was given $30,000 with which {
to fit up a 15 by 15 room on the sec
ond floor connecting with Mrs. As
ter's bedroom. He canvassed the
world for the last word in electrical
beauty contrivances.
There is an Oriental rug on the
white tile floor and a rare painting
looking down from the ceiling. |
Myriad electric globes concealed in
the molding light the room with a
soft glow.
The hairdressing chair. which
takes any position that the operator
wills, is of carved wood inlaid with
gold. The electric hair dryer above
the chair emits either hot or cold air
as desired.
There are electric face bleachers,
marcel irons and vibrators of the most
modern type, most of the instruments
being plated with gold or mother of
pearl and arranged in caskets with
blue silk linings.
Spanish Princess,
Deaf, Grows Dumb
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
MADRID, Sept. 10.—Little Prin
cess Marie Christian, 2-year-old
daughter of King Alfonso, has be
come totally deaf and Is gradually
losing her power of speech. Her 6-
year- old brother. Prince Jaime, is
deaf and dumb.
Queen Victoria is heartbroken, and
for three weeks has daily prayed for
an hour in the chapel of the castle,
imploring divine intervention against
the approaching affliction. Special
prayers are being said throughout the
city.
CASH GRO. CO,
Consult your pocketbook; it beats
the te'? phone book.
Can’t Get Anyone to
Accept $7,000 Job
SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 10—Gov
ernor Hiram W. Johnson would ap
preciate having somebody accept a
$7,000 position in the State Govern
ment.
Every one to whom the place has
been offered has turned it down and
the Govern<Sr is worried.
It is a judgeship in the State Ap
pelate Court, made vacant by death.
5 YEARS FOR STEALING MULE.
CALHOUN Sept. 10.— Sal Talant. a
white man. pleaded guilty to stealing
a mule from J. H. Shope. of Sonora-
ville, and was sentenced to five years
in mo ehaingang.
No. 20, $2.55; No. 50, S5.93
Argo Salmon, can 12'Ac
20 Pounds Sugar $1.00
No. 10 Silver Leaf Lard $1.35
Rex Hams, special, lb 18%C
Rex Breakfast Bacon, lb 18 3 4 c
Diamond C. Best Bacon in
America, 1-lb. boxes 32c
Fancy Lemons, dozen 9c
16-oz. Condensed Milk can 8' -c
16-oz Evaporated Milk. can...7'/»c
6-oz. Evaporated Milk (full
cream > . 3J4C
Fancy Salmon tall ran 6 1 2 c
10c Can Ga. Care Svrup 4' ,c
CASH GRO, CO,
No. 10 S31-
$2.C0 TO CHATTANOO
GA AND RETURN
\V. and A. Railroad will sell
round trip tickets from Atlanta to
Chattanooga and return for train
leaving Atlanta at 8:35 a. m.
Thursday, September 11, 1913,
good returning not later than
train arriving Atlanta 7:35 p. m.
Saturday, September 13, 1913.
C. E. HARMAN,
General Passenger Agent.
STAGE TURKEY-TROTTERS DEFEND NEW DANCES;
DECLARE AMERICA DOESN’T KNOW REAL TANGO
Inez Patterson
and Frank Hale
HUNT TOR JURY
E