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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
Progressives LaFollette and Poin
dexter Join the Democrats
and Vote for Bill.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—The On-
derwood tariff revision bill hat* passed
the Senate and Is now in the hands of
a conference committee, which will
within two weeks adjust the differ
ences between the Senate and the
House measures.
The tariff bill as passed by the Sen
ate retained the principal House pro
visions, Including: free sugar and free
raw wool, but revised other rates
■till further downward. The aver
age ad-valorem rate In the bill now
Is approlxmately It per cent, a de
crease of It per cent from existing
rate# and nearly 4 per cent lower
than the House rates.
The Senate’s additions to the House
free list with 1912 as & basis will
cost the Government more than $44,-
000,000, but by adding a tax of one-
tenth of 1 cent a pound on cotton
for future delivery, a tax on bananas
of one-tenth of 1 cent a pound; re
storing the requirement of
Negro, Saved From
Gallows by Women,
Gets Life Sentence
Lige Lane, a Clinch County negro,
condemned to hang for assault on a
white woman, began his term of life
imprisonment Wednesday following
the commutation of his sentence by
Governor Slaton late Tuesday after
noon.
The commutation was the result of
recommendations of the Prison Com
mission, Judge, Solicitor and Clerk of
the Court, as well as numerous peti
tions signed by white citizens, Includ
ing 96 per cent of the white women
of Clinch County, urging executive
clemency.
Governor Slaton said he was
prompted to exercise clemency by ev
idence submitted by the white citi
zens of Clinch County against the
woman victim.
Cook Prepared for
‘Blue Sky’ Companies
Secretary of State Phil Cook Wednes
day completed the compilation of ap
plication blanks for the enforcement of
the new “blue sky" law on January L
The blanks provide for a full state
ment as to the authorized capital, both
Issued and outstanding, bonds author
ized. bonds issued other securities, pre
ferred stock, liabilities, and the num-
i ber of shares and bonds owned; the ac-
I tual cash Invested, the yearly salary
| pay roll, the estimated net worth of the
full ! dme devoted to the company by each
Internal revenue tax of $1.10 a gallon I and every officer,
on brandies used to fortify wines and
by increasing the sur-tax rates on
large incomes. Senate leaders believe
they have provided an actual increase, j
The Senate made these other im- I
portant changes:
Lowered the normal exemption ^ , .... .. .
from the 1 per cent income tax from I Healthy business condiUons through-
$4,000 to $3,000 for single persons, out the Southeast during the fall and
with exemptions for wives and de- | winter are indicated by the action of the
pendent children; exempted the in-j railways of this section in calling upon
—
Ask Shippers to Help
Keep Up Car Suppt
shippers to aid them in maintaining an
adequate car supply during the crop
moving season. Car builders are being
urged to turn out new equipment as
rapidly as possible.
Shippers can render assistance by
loading and unloading cars as prompt
ly as possible.
comes of mutual ins .trance compa
nies which revert to the benefit of
stockholders; increased graduate sur
tax on large incomes to a maximum
of 6 per cent on those more than
$600,000.
City Incomes Exemptd.
Exempted Incomes of municipali
ties derived from operation of public
utilities and changed the date from
which the tax shall be computed for
first year from January 1 to March 1,
1913
Free list cattle and other live stock, |
wheat; hair of the angora goat and , The Peachtree Creek sewage disposal
some agricultural products; restored J pj an t, second only to the crematory as
oat meal and rolled oats to the dutl- a Q f contention in city politics, at
able list and provided an elaborate
Peachtree Disposal
Plant in Operation
Inspection of meat imports.
* Reduced House rates on woolen
manufactures to become effective
January 1, 1914. ... ...
Provided in the sugar schedule lor
immediate abolishment of the Dutch
standard test; postponed operation or
proposed reduced rates until March 1.
1914, leavtng the provision unchanged
for free sugar In May, 1916.
Slightly increased rates on finer
cotton goods, reclassifying the whole
cotton schedule and changing the silk
schedule from an ad valorem to a
specific basis.
Provided <or an administrative
force to handle income tax collections
without regard to requirements of the
civil service.
Struck out a countervailing duty on
wood pulp.
Greatly reduced rates of the metai
schedule.
President Can Retaliate.
Struck out many reform provisions |
in the administrative section; re-
jpeted the anti-dumping clause; the 5
per cent tariff reduction on imports
In American vessels and the require
ment for inspection of books of for
eign manufacturers in undervaluation
cases; but added a provision giving
the President authority to retaliate
against nations which discriminate
j last is completed and is operating satis
factorily. The event means great relief
to the North Side of the city.
W. A. Hansel. Assistant Chief of Con
struction/said he was well pleased with
the operation of the plant and that the
test undoubtedly would result in its ac
ceptance by the city.
Sec’y Lane Better;
Ill From Overwork
BERKELEY. Cal., Sept. 10.—Dr. Fred
erick Lane, brother of Secretary of the
Interior Franklin K. Lane, announced
to-day that the Secretary was nearly
recovered from the sudden illness that
came upon him here yesterday. While
reviewing a parade of native sons, Sec
retary Lane collapsed.
Dr. Lane said the illness was due to
overwork and a complete rest was all
his brother needed.
‘Big Tim’ Sullivan Is
Found With Friends
NEW YORK. Sept. 10.—“Big Tim"
Sullivan, who fled from the home ol
against Amreican goods by proclaim- | his brother, Patrick H. Sullivan, a week
ing increased rate? on certain goods; j ago, was located to-day at Smlthtown,
adopted a provision excluding goods ; l. I., in a hotel kept by James P. Kil-
manufactured chiefly by child labor, r0 y one C f t ^ e ol< j friers G f the Tam-
child
and provided for the creation of a j
commission to revise the customs ;
laws.
Important additions to the free list
included:
Antimony ore, limestone rock, as
phalt. asphaltum and bitumen, fabrics
of jute yarns, wool blankets valued at
less than 40* cents a pound, text
books. sugar machinery', cast iron
pipe, surgical catgut, cement, creo
sote oil, denatured alcohol, flax and
hemp, furs and fur skins, gunpowder,
pig iron, shiegelosen, ferromanga
nese. wrought iron, iron slabs and
blooms, photographic moving picture
films, steel Ingots, blooms and slabs,
cattle and other live stock, wheat,
saw r ed cedar, angora goat and alpaca
wool and paper twine for binding
wool.
Lady Camoys Quits
Society for Her Son
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Sept. 10.—Society circles
see but little of Lady Camoys, who
formerly was Miss Mildred Sherman,
of New York, since the birth of her
son, now- two months old.
So engrossed with her child is Lady
Camoys that she has found no tim<.
for entertaining or accepting any of
the numerous invitations that some
to her.
many leader.
Colonel Mike C. Padden, for years one
of the mof#t constant aides of ‘‘Big
Tim," escorted Sullivan to the place
and is now with him.
Two-time Mayor of
Athens Runs Again
ATHENS, GA., Sept. 10—W. F.
Dorsey, who has served two terms
as Mayor of Athens, announced this
morning for the third term to suc
ceed H. J. Rowe, who until now has
declined to stand for re-election.
Several other candidates are con
templating entering the race.
The Joy of
Coming Motherhood
A ^fnderful Remedy That is a
Natural Aid and Relieves
the Tension.
Mother's Friend, a famous external
remedy, Is the only one known that 1s
able to reach all the differ ant parts In.
Broughton Eschews
X-Rays and Politics
MACON, Sept. 10.—“I am confining
myself sirictly to the old-time religion
kind of sermons and am not dealing
with politics and such topics as the
X-ray skirt in this series," declared the
Rev. Len Broughton, who is conducting •p© distress"/'™
volved It is a penetrating application
after the formula of a noted family doc
tor. and lubricates every muscle, nerve
tissue or tendon affected. It goes direct
ly to the strain©^ portions and gently
es J *
but aurely relieve;
ness or strain
all tendency to sore-
a revival at the City Auditorium.
His nightly meetings are attended by
over 1,000 people. He declared, how
ever. that if it became necessary' he
would touch on the Macon political
situation.
Trinity Opens With
Record Attendance
By Its daily use there will be no pain,
- > distress, no nausea, no danger ol
laceration or other accident, and the
period will be one of supreme comfort
and Joyful anticipation
To all young women Mother's Friend
is one of the greatest of all helpful In
fluences for it robs childbirth of all its
agonies and dangers, dispels all the
doubt and dread, all sense of fear, and
thus enables the mind and body to await
the greatest event in a woman's life with
untrammeled gladness
Mother’s rrlend Is a most cherished
remedy in thousands of homes, and is
of such peculiar merit and value as tc
make It essentially one to be recom
mended by all women
You will And It on sale at all drui
DURHAM, N. C., Sept. 10.—Trinity
College, with the largest endowment of
any Southern college, opened to the JL mother s Friend Is prepared only by
student body to-day for the sixty-first r-V.^. ra D..i*!ri_Company. 1J7
session.
The attendance was a record breake~
and the freshman class is said to b
the largest in tha history of the college.
w.i. mm it uu feib at an dn;s
stores at $1 a bottle, or the druggist will
gladly get It for you if you Insist upon
It. Mother's FTIend Is prepared only by
the Bradfleld Regulator Company. \Zi
Lamar Building. Atlanta. G;i . who will
send yo- hv mail, sealed, a -t v inmnio-
,lVf ‘ expectant motheis. Writs
ter ii _ ...
G. Q. P. IS EUITED BAItRSSCORED
Mann Says It Shows Country Op
poses Low Tariff—Democrats
Claim They Held Vote.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Com-
menting upon the success of the Re
publican candidate for the House in
the Third Congressional District of
Maine, Senator Smoot, Republican, of
Utah, said to-day:
“Of course I am pleased with the
result. It mean* that the people of
the country do not like the Demo
cratic tariff bill and will not have it
long.’
Senator Ollie James, Democrat, of
Kentucky, said;
“The Third District of Maine 1# an
old Republican stronghold. If it had
not been for the fact that some of
the Democrats deserted to the Repub
licans the outcome might have been
different yesterday/*
James It. Mann, minority leader of
the House, said:
“The results show, first, that the
country In decidedly for protection for
American Industries, and secondly,
the current now Is running strongiy
with the Republican party,
“My request to Republican speak
ers who went up tjiere was that they
invite Progressives to come back into
the Republican ranks and that the
Republican party itself would be suf
ficiently progressive to satisfy sane
men.
"While the Progressives did not all
come back, at least one-half did, and
I believe the other half soon will. I
recognize the fact that the Republican
party can not live unless It be pro
gressive. One destructive party is
enough. That accounts for the Dem
ocratic party.”
Senator Galliger, of New Hamp
shire. Republican leader of the Sen
ate, said:
“It means that the reaction already
has set In. It foreshadows the doom
of the Underwood tariff bill and also
indicates the disappearance of the
Bull Moose vote.”
Senator Kern, of Indiana, majority
leader of the Senate, said:
“We kept up our vote and had It
not been for the desertion of one
of the Democratic leaders we might
have won.”
L
Sponsor of Currency Act Tells the
House Why They Fear Loss of
Stock Gambling Profits.
Disrs Up Money Dying
Man Told of Hiding
SHIPMAN, ILL., Sept. 10.—On his
death bed recently Clayton B. Kel-
lam. an eccentric farmer, confided to
his brother Henry that at various
places on the farm was burled con
siderable sums of money which he
could have for the digging.
The brother found $9,000 in gold
and $1,000 in bills.
INSTALL CITY OFFICIALS.
BARNESVILLE, Sept. 10 — Mayor J.
M. Cochran and the new Aldermen,
T. J. Berry, J. B. Bush and W. J. Sum
mers, have been Installed.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—De
nouncing the bankers who have crit
icised the Glass currency reform bill
as designed to institute political con
trol of the banking business of tne
country. Chairman Carter Glass, of
the House Banking and Currency
Committee, opened general debate
on the measure in the House to
day.
“I was present when an eminent
banker suggested to President Wil
son that tbs Federal Reserve Board
might be used for partisan purposes,**
Glass said, “and hoard this banker
vainly challenged to show how it
might be dons. I never shall forget
the emphasis with which the Presi
dent declared that no man would
ever be found who would tarnish his
fame by so flagrant a prostitution
of his high office.”
Where Banks Will Operate.
Glass Indicated that Federal re
serve banks probably would be locat
ed at New York, St. Louis, Cincin
nati. Washington, New Orleans and in
Pennsylvania.
“The batteries of the big banks
have been turned upon this board,"
said Glass, defending the reserve
board plan, "and yet there is hardly a
power enumerated in this bill which
has not been exercised by the Gov
ernment for 50 years, or. indeed,
which has not been confined to one
or two public functionaries."
Scores Present “Reserves.”
“We have permitted banks to pyra
mid credit upon credit and to call the
credits reserves. They are not re
serves. When financial troubles conic
and country banks call for money Lo
pay creditors they find It Invested
In stock gambling.
“The real opposition,” he continued.
“is not to Government control, upon
which we shall never yield; it is not
to compulsory membership. which j
also was provided in the Aldrich bill.
It Is to loss of profits from a system
which makes them the legal custo
dians of all the reserve funds of the
country, $240,000,000 of which funds
on November 24, 1912. they had put
into the maelstrom of Wall Street
stock operation.”
Slatons at Country
Home for Autumn
Governor and Mrs. John Marshall
Slaton have opened their magnificent
country home on Peachtree road for
the fall months, leaving Colonel J. G.
Perry, private secretary to the Chief
Executive, In charge of the Governor’s
Mansion.
Slaton to Attend
State Fair Oct. 23
MACON, Sept. 10.—“Governor’s
Day” at the Georgia State Fair will
be October 23. Governor Slaton and
his staff will attend.
An invitation, supported by Sena
tors Bacon and Smith, has also been
extended President Wilson.
Plennie Miner Gives
Fish Fry to Friends
Plennie Miner, chief Deputy to Sheriff
Wheeler Mangura, has invRecThla friends
to a barbecue and fish fry at Germania
Park Saturday afternoon. Automobiles
for ail will leave tbe Thrower Building,
corner of Mitchell and Pryor streets, at
12:80 o'clock.
The party will be composed of ocmrt
attaches and newspaper men
Detective John Black Exonerated
and Row With the Pinkerton
Agency Is Settled.
Unwillingly Turns
Airship Somersaults
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Sept. 10.—Kent, an Eng
lish airman, unwillingly duplicated
the feats of Pegeoud, the French avi
ator. in turning somersaults with his
machine in the air.
Kent lost control of his machine
when 2,000 feet in the air, turned four
complete somersaults, but regained
control and landed .safely.
City Detective John Black has
been vindicated of the adverse crit
icisms of his conduct In the Frank
trial.
The fight on the Pinkerton Detec
tive Agency on the ground that evi
dence bearing on the Frank case was
withheld from the city police ha« been
amicably settled.
These were two matters settled by
the Police Commission in executive
session late Tuesday night, it was
learned Wednesday. Police Chief J.
L. Beavers and Detective Chief New
port Lanford gave an explanation of
how Detective Black got entagled on
the witness stand during his cross-
examination by Attorney Lather Ros
ser that wae satisfactory to the
Commission.
J. BL Kelley, of the Philadelphia
agency of the Pinkertons, was Intro
duced to the members of the Police
Commission as the new head of the
Atlanta office. He is highly recom
mended. It was explained that H. B.
Pierce, the former superintendent, had
left the Pinkertons.
The Police Commission was con
fronted with grave flnancal worry
when it was announced that the ap
propriation for the police payroll was
$9,690 short. The department asked
for $295,600 to maintain its normal
strength. It was thought that this
amount had been given but recently
It was discovered that the appropria
tion was only $285,910.
This matter will be referred to the
finance committee of Council.
SUIT IS LILT IS
SIME LIW TEST
Commission Denies Apartment
Owners Extension of Time to
Abate Nuisance.
The refusal of the Smoke .Commis
sion to grant an extension of time to
apartment house owners before they
are compelled to comply with the
smoke laws likely will lead to a suit e nt boilers and buy new ones to com-
Mrs. Pankhurst Still
In Hiding in France
%
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Sept. 10.—Mrs. Emmeline
Pankhurst, inventor of militant methods
in the suffrage campaign in England,
has not sailed for the United States
incognito, but is in hiding in France,
according to statements made at the
headquarters of the Women’s Social and
Political Union to-day
Miss Wickham 18 to manage Mrs.
Pankhurst’s American speaking tour.
preme Court of Georgia would make
the same decision.
“From what I have learned, we
would have to throw’ away our pres
to test the smoke ordinance In the
Supreme Court.
“We are in sympathy with the
movement to abate the smoke nui
sance. but we do not think it can be
done arbitrarily." Edward Durant told
the commission. ‘‘A similar law re
cently was declared unconstitutional
In New* York, and I believe the Su-
ply with the law’/*
About twenty apartment house
owners went before the commission
Tuesday afternoon. One of their ar
guments was that schoolhouses went
not required to obey the law.
R. M. Harwell, chairman of the
commission, replied to the apartment
house owners that they already had
had more than a year to comply with
the law.
CASCAF.ETS TONIGHT! DIME ft BOX
$500,000 CHICAGO FIRE.
CHICAGO, Sept. 10.—A fire of mys
terious origin destroyed the shops of
the Nickel Plate Railroad in South
Chicago to-day. The loss was esti
mated at $500,000.
FAIRBURN DROUTH BROKEN.
FAJRBURN, Sept. 10—The long
drouth which has prevailed In this
section has been broken. Growing
crops have been benefited.
No odd# how had your liver,
stomach or bowels; how much your
head aches, how.' miserable and un
comfortable you are from consti
pation, indigestion, biliousness and
sluggish intestines—you always gel
the desired results with Cascarets.
They end the headache, bilious
ness. dlzzlnete. nervousness, sick.
sour, gassy stomach. Thsy 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 keepsi your head clear,
stomach sweet, liver and bowels
regular, and vou feel cheerful and
bully for months.
The Famous Center Aisle Is Full of Fall Novelties •iiviVvvVciVlVfavVfViVV^
Ladies’ Home
wwwwwwwarn
, RICH & BROS. CO.
Journal Style
Book for Fall
5c t
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Who says Romance is dead?
Read the exclusive feature in | - ^
The Sunday American how a j
Southern beauty swam the tor-1 dj,
rent to get to the minister before I 2J
her pursuing father. | 3*
i ; ' W
Mr _ A
I Final Clear a way at Fractional Prices [
Of Every Summer Dress & Suit in Stock |
KEELYS
Misses and Children s
Footwear
For style and service
shoes for young P C °P
service
offer
or
more style
tli an the sh oes we
no line of
le contains
qualities
you.
They a.re all made hy skilled work
men, on patterns that give room
for the growing foot to develop
properly. Constant, special care
in selecting models for the young
people has produced some excep
tionally excellent styles for our
display th is season.
We offer you th esc in all leath
ers—tans, patents, gun-metal and
vici kid.
I
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Regardless of former prices, and without any restriction or reservation, every sum
mer dress and suit in stock now goes at a slight fraction of its former figure.
Because these next-to-nothing prices are purposely made to clear our stocks, we shall
accept no phone or mail orders, send no goods on approval or C. O. I)., nor make alterations. Moreover,
we shall not hold goods over for later inspection. Positively no goods to be returned for credit.
197 Dresses Worth Up to $45 & More to Go at
These 197 Dresses include
the very smartest styles and
materials of this season.
Scarcely one came into the
stock before July. Values
just as stated. Choice $4.75.
32 Dresses were formerly $7.85
39 Dresses were formerly $9.85
57 Dresses were formerly $11.85
22 Dresses were formerly $13.85
29 Dresses were formerly $15.85 to $25.
18 Dresses were formerly $28.75 to $60
)
$4.75
All $3.85 to $6.50 Dresses to Go at
59 Dresses wore formerly $3.85
76 Dresses were formerly $5.85
18 Dresses were formerly $6.50
153 Dresses in all, your choice at
$1.85
at
2 White Wool Suits, were $25
1 Black Wool Suit, size 54, was $45
4 Ratine Suits, were $7.85
8 Linen and Ratine Suits, were $9.95 to $35
MC
|
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All $7.85 to $35 Suits to Go
$4.851
(Sale starts at 8:30 a. m., and not a moment sooner. Ready-to-Wear—Second Floor)
3
The Best Leather Goods News You Have Ever Read Over Our Name Is This Sale of r*2
5
$6 to $8 Genuine Cowhide Leather Bags & Suit Cases at f
3
i
£
3
on Sensible Lines
lity tke Best
Made
Qua
Sold at Moderate Prices
$1 to $3 Pair
KEELY'S
J*
5
£
-2
A Trunk Sale of
Odds & Ends
Because these are sample
trunks and odds and ends,
we got them at 40 per cent
underprice. We shall sell
them the same way.
They are all the famous Mendel
Trunks. Variously In three-
quarter and full sizes, and
steamer trunks, 36 to 44 In.
These are the sale prices:
$15.75
$16.75
$14.98
values from
$23.75 to $25.
values
to $29.75.
Steamer Trunks.
Values to $30.
Because of extensive changes in his factory, this man
ufacturer had to clear his sliowrooms of all bags and suit cases.
To store them meant moving them back and forth with a con
sequent loss and worry. So he didn’t move his goods—he sold
them to us. One quick loss settled the whole business. There
Very Out-of-the- Ordinary Sale of Leather
a sale without precedent in our store history.
Never before to our knowledge have genuine, cowhide
leather suit cases and hags sold for $3.95. Cowhide
leather, mind you, not sheepskin, nor goatskin nor a com
position of paper and ground-up leather masquerading as
honest leather. No, sir, these are real simon-pure cow
hide leather bags and eases, duplicates of the very num
bers which have sold here freely at $6, $7 and $8. See
them in the window. Choice $3.95.
.95
is the reason for this
Goods---
Genuine natural cowhide traveling bags.
Imported frames, leather lined, with inside
pockets. Fine brass mountings, sewed edges,
protected comers, well riveted. Styles for men
and women. Sizes 16, 18 and 20 inch. Choice,
$3.95. (Luggage Annex—Main Floor, Right)
$6 to $8 Genuine Cowhide
Leather Suit Cases, $3.95
Made of genuine cowhide leather. Full size,
linen lined. Strong sewu-aown ring handles,
leather protected corners, firmly riveted on.
Choice of straps all the way round, short
straps or with no straps at all. Some with
catches; some without. Size 24x26 inches. See
window. Choice $3.95.
1
49c
$1 Ready-Made
Stamped Waists
High neck or sailor collars, long sleeves.
Stamped for French, eyelet or punch work
embroidery.
(Main Floor—Center)
Iw/WWMMWM M. RICH & BROS. C0.MMMMWM m. rich & bros. co