Newspaper Page Text
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rm: Atlanta Georgian and news.
There Is Still Time to Help 250 Poor Children Get an Education
Atlanta's schools opened yesterday, but there still are many poor children who will not be able to attend and get the education necessary to make them good citizens.
Their parents are too poor to buy them books and suitable clothing. Superintendent Logan of the Associated Charities has sent out an appeal for funds. The Georgian and
Sunday American has headed a subscription list with $59. Won't you help? Your nickels and dimes and dollars will make for a better citizenship in Atlanta. Contri
butions may be sent to the Associated Charities or to The Georgian.
DEMOCRATIC TUFF BILL
PASSED I SENATE BY VOTE
OF 44-37 AFTER HARD EIGHT
LATEST
NEWS
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—By a
vote of 44 to 37, the Senate to-day
passed the Underwoo<*-Simmons tar
iff bill. Senators Thornton and Rans-
dell of Louisiana were the only Dem
ocrats to vote against the bill' while
Senator Poindexter. Progressive, and
Senator I^a Follette, Republican,
voted for the measure. Senator Lew
is was paired with Senator Gronna,
but announced that he intended to
vote for the bill anyway, and did so.
The bill now will go to the House,
and probably will be sent to con
ference this week.
Vice President Marshall a.nnounced
as conferees on the bill Senator Sim
mons, Shiveley, Johnson ad Williams,
Democrats; Penrose, Lodge and La
Follette, Republicans.
The vote In detail follows:
Against the bill: Borah, Bradley,
Brady, Brandegee, Bristow, Catron,
Clapp, Clark of Wyoming, Colt, Cum
mins, Dillingham, Fall, Gallinger,
Jackson, Jones, Kenyon, Lippitt,
Lodge, McCumber, McLean, Nelson,
Norris, Oliver, Page, Penrose, Per
kins, Ransdell, Root, Sherman, Smoot,
Stephenson, Sterling. Sutherland,
Thornton, Warren, Weeks, Works.
Total. 37.
For the bill: Ashurst, Bacon,
Chamberlain, Chilton, Clarke of Ar
kansas, Fletcher, Gore, Hitchcock,
Hollis, Hughes, James, Johnson,
Kern, La Follette, I^ewls, Lane, Mar
tin, Martine, Myers, Newlands,
O’Gorman, Overman, Owen, Pittman,
Poindexter, Pomerene, Robinson,
Saulsbury, Shafroth, Sheppard,
Shields, Shiveley, Simmons. Smith of
Arizona, Smith of Georgia, Smith of
Maryland, Smith of South Carolina,
Stone. Swanson, Thompson, Tillman,
Vardaman, Walsh, Williams. Total,
44
Pairs: Bankhead with Goff; Bryan
with Townsend; Burton with
Thomas; Crawford with Leas; Cul
berson . with Dupont; Reed with
Smith of Michicanfl Total, 12.
Absent and not voting. Burleigh
and Gronna.
Senator Bristow, of Kansas, offered
an amendment placing a duty of 15
per cent ad valorem on swine, cattle,
sheep and other domestic animals.
The House had a duty of 10 per cent
on these animals, except swine, and
the Senate has placed them on the
free list. The amendment was lost,
29 to 33.
Senator MoCumber, of North Da
kota, asked that wheat be tak*n
from the free list and a duty of 15
cents a bushel be placed on it. His
amendment was defeated.
Senator Bristow’s suggestion that
eggs be taken from the free list and
a duty placed on them was turned
down.
Senators Gallinger, Clapp and Nor
ris attacked the banana tax.
On a roll call the banana tax of
one-tenth of 1 cent per pound fin
ally was agreed to by a vote of 32 to
38.
The Democrats also by a vote of 32
to 38 defeated an amendment offered
by Senator Bristow, placing a duty
of 15 per cent ad valorem on all
meats. This leaves meats on the free
list.
A committee amendment was
adopted which exempts from the tax
of 25 cents per gallon all pure wines
made from fresh grapes, berries or
other fruits.
Anti-Trust Move Loees.
Senator Gumming* of Iowa, spoke
in favor of his amendment placing
on the free lint all articles in which
competition has ceased He said it
was aimed at the trust.
Senator Cummings' amendment
providing for free listing trust-made
articles and transferring them to the
dutiable list when the objections had
been removed, was defeated 20 to 43.
In the closing hours of the debat-
Senator LaFollette. of Wisconsin, of
fered many amendments to the'bill,
all of W’hich were defeated. He an
nounced that he stood for a system
BIRMINGHAM EXCUR
SION ROUND TRIP $2.50.
Special train leaves Old
Depot September 22. Re
turn on regular trains.
SEABOARD.
CHATTANOOGA.
$2.00 Round Trip $2.00
Thursday, September 11,
1913. Good on all regular
trains. Good return until
Saturday night.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
of protective tariff based on the dif
ference in cost of production at home
and abroad.
By a vote of 30 to 48. Senator Nor.
rls’ amendment intended to curb the
coffee valorization trust was defeat
ed. This was the first of the votes
taken under an agreement which will
lead to a final vote on the bill to
day.
Senator Clark of Wyoming, Sena
tor (>!>er, Senator F»enrose and Sen
ator Root, Republicans, voted with
Democrats against the amendment.
By a vote of 43 to 35, the Senate
rejected Senator Gatronl’H substitute
for the wool schedule. Senator Mc-
(’umber’s amedment increasing the
rates on barley, wheat, flax and oats
was defeated 48 to 25,
HE SHOT ST
MILLEN, GA., Sept. 9.—The shoot
ing of two white women by two negro
boys threw Mlllen into n gr> at state
of excitement again to-day.
Mrs. W. L. Wimberly und Mrs.
Alice Butler, while riding in a buggy,
were shot by two negro boys. Mrs.
Wimberly was badly injured about
the face. The other lady received
several shot wounds about tlie face
and shoulders.
The boys were caught and Jailed.
One claims he was hired to do the
shooting.
An extra guard has been placed on
the Jail and trouble is feared.
Kentucky Man Held
As a Double Slayer
RUSSELLVILLE, KY.. Sept. 9.—
Ellis (’lark, a prominent young mar
ried man, Is being held to-day fol
lowing the killing of Charles and Mar
tin Foster, brothers, at the village of
Shakers, near here, yesterday.
(’lark declared that the brothers,
following a quarrel, came to his home
armed and intended shooting him, but
he was too quick for them.
WOMAN HURT IN DUEL.
HOPKINSVILLE, KY., Sept. 9 —
In a duel here to-day between An
drew Johnson and H. S Hicks both
combatants and Johnson's mother-in-
law were wounded.
MONTREAL, QUEBEC, Sept.
9.— Mrs. William Thaw, mother of
Harry Thaw, accompanied by
her daughter, Mrs. George Lauder
Carnegie, left here this afternoon
for Coaticook, where her son is in
jail.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—The
House to-day passed a bill ad
mitting free of duty all articles
to be exhibited at the Panama
Exposition in San Francisco in
1915 and establishing copyright
and patent regulations for arti
cles that are brought to the ex
position. The bill now goes to
the Senate.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—Be
lieving the cruiser Des Moines is
not of sufficient strength ade
quately to protect American in
terests in Santo Domingo, the
State Department to-day re
quested becretary Daniels to
send another warship to the is
land republic. The Nashville will
be sent to San Domingo as soon
as possible.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—Sec
retary o fState Bryan had a nar
row escape when half of the ceil
ing in his office fell to the floor
iust after he had left the office.
Workmen repairing a leak in the
gas pipe with a lighted match
caused an explosion which loos
ened the ceiling itself directly
over the Secretary's desk.
NEW YORK, Sept. 9.—“The
Fight” and "The Lure,” the two
tenderloin dramas that have
aroused a storm of protest here,
will be withdrawn temporarily
from the stage immediately. Un
der the terms of the agreement,
both plays will be produced be
fore 23 members of the Grand
Jury. If sixteen or more jurors
approve of them, the plays will be
continued. If not, they will be
withdrawn permanently.
NASHVILLE, TENN, Sept. 9.
—After the regular Democrats
to-day had gained complete con
trol in the election of committees
at the extra session of the Gen
eral Assembly, Governor Hooper
hurled at both houses a startling
message urging the enactn ent of
the laws to make Tennessee com
pletely "dry.”
CORONA, CAL., Sept. 9.—Ed
Waterman in a Buick car won
the light car race in the Corona
road race this afternoon in one
hour and 37 minutes and 204-5
seconds. The distance was 102.45
miles. Earl Johnson in Reo No.
2, was second; Goode, in a Stude-
baker, third.
LEXINGTON, KY., Sept. 9.—
Cecretarv J. Pelham Johnston, of
the State Racing Commission,
announced here to-day there
would be at le st ten and prob
ably twelve entries in the classic
four-mile endurance race to be
run at Churchill Downs in Louis
ville October 8. The $1,000 gold
cup, the troph * for the contest,
was placed on exhibition to-day.
PARIS, Sept. 9.— Mrs. Emme
line Pankhurst, the militant suf
fragette leader, has disappeared
from her hotel in Trouville, where
she has been recuperating, and it
is believed she has sailed for the
United States incognito.
Lightning struck one of the
turrets on the tower of St. Paul's
Methodist Church, corner Grant
and Sidney streets. Tuesday af
ternoon and demolished it. Tele
phone and electric wires were
broken by the falling of several
large blocks of granite which
were dislodged. The damage was
not serious.
BANK CASHIER INDORSES
BAGWELL BUSINESS COLLEGE
Beginning September 15
This College Will Give
Week’s Free Course
to All Who Apply.
$ 3 0 0 in Scholarships
Awarded as Prizes.
Would you like to secure a business
•ourse free? Steady employment at
a good sulury Is assured. Opportuni
ties for promotion are unequaled.
Read what a bank cashier says of
our graduate. Mr. A. E Anderson.
The Day Class will be formed Mon
day morning at 9:30, September 15; |
Evening Glass, 7:30 p. m.. September
15.
$300 in Scholarships
Will be awarded as prizes to those
who make the best records during the
week’s free course All will have a i
chance to win a scholarship free.
Portions Secured.
The College secures positions for all
Its students and it agree* to place
everyone who finishes the course. All
who enroll for this demonstration
course do so absolutely free, and are
under no obligation to continue.
Send in your name for either the
day or the night class at once. Call,
write or telephone Bagwell Bunirn
Go lege. 34 l.uckie st. Atlanta. Ga. j
Bell phobic* Ivy 4U7S. (Advj I
ARTHUR E. AN DZR30N.
Asst. Cashier Bank of Kingston.
J O. Bagwell. Pres. Atlanta, Ga.;
Dear Sir—I have had a gradu
ate. .Mr. A. E. Anderson, from vour
college as my assistant during the
I ts; ten months and he hus been
very satisfactory, indeed.
He was well grounded in all
principles and phases of bookkeep
ing.
1 congratulate you on the splen
did work you are doing.
(Signed! B W BLACKMON.
Cashier Bank or Kingston.
FRIENDS FEAR
Detectives Find No Trace of the
Famous Politician, Who Disap
peared One Week Ago.
NEW YORK, Sept. 9.—It became
known to-day that "Big Tim” Sulli
van. former powerful East Side poli
tician, who has been ill for a year of
a mental defection, has been missing
for a week from the home of his
brother in Kingsbrldge, and that pri
vate detectives, who have been
searching for him, have about given
up hope of finding him alive.
Sullivan’s physical condition had
improved of late, but his mind had
not. He was continually under the
delusion that he was being perse
cuted by his friends.
Last Tuesday morning Sullivan
managed to elude his three guards.
Although practically all of Mr.
Sullivan’s friends expressed the ut
most anxiety, among the few who
did not was William B. Ellison, coun
sel for the missing man.
"About ten days ago Mr. Sullivan
came to my office to consult me and
his mind was clear in every detail,”
said Mr. Ellison. "In fact, he was
normal, I thought. He brought a
$2,000 check he had received from a
theatrical enterprise in which he is
Interested and we talked for some
time over business matters. Mr.
Sullivan also talked over the political
situation. I know that he had dis
appeared but I did not worry, for my
own opinion was, and is, that he has
gone West or to Canada, where his
theatrical concern has large Inter
ests.”
Mr. Ellison said that if it was true
that the missing man has suffered
from suicidal mania he (Ellison)
never heard of it.
Fire Marshal Joyner
Inspects Columbus
COLUMBUS, Sept. 9.—Columbus
will be inspected by the executive
committee of the Georgia Fire Pre
vention Society Thursday and Fri
day. September 25 and 26, according
to a decision reached by the members
of the committee at a meeting held in
Atlanta a few days ago.
There has not been an inspection in
Columbus in pome time, but the large
number of disastrous fires of the past
two years has led State Fire Marshal
W. R. Joyner, to come to Columbus
on a tour of Inspection.
Girl's Neck Broken
In Runaway Crash
PARCHMAN, MISS., Sept. 9.—Miss
Ruth Stratton, daughter of a farmer
here, was killed outright in a runa
way accident to-day.
She was driving a mule to a light
buggy. The mule took fright and
ran away. The buggy overturned
throwing Miss Stratton against a
stump. Her neck was broken.
T
SNUB £01. BLEASE
Georgia Executive Ready to Honor
South Carolina Requisitions
in Meritorious Cases.
Shriner Officials
Delayed; Coming to
Plan 1914 Conclave
F
World-wide Wireless
Strike Threatened
Special Cable to The American.
GENOA, ITALY, Sept. 3.—A gen
eral strike of wireless operators is
threatened.
Marconi operators on Italian trans-
Atlantic liners to-day served notice
of a strike, and cabled to union head
quarters in European ports and New
York urging a general sympathetic
strike.
Impersonates Negro
Newt Lee and Begs
Palmer Pease, an aged negro, con
cocted a new begging scheme Tues
day and he was fairly rolling in
wealth until he was recognized by
Policeman Milam.
Pease hobbled down Whitehall
street stopping people to tell them
that he was Newt Lee and that he
had had hardly a bite to eat since to
was released from the Tower, where
he was kept as a material witness in
the Frank case.
Get Rid of
Mosquitoes
B esldes the
u n sightly
swelling and
the pain, there
Is REAL DAN
GER In mos
quito bites. Not
a few, but a
great many
dangerous dis
eases result
from mosquito
bites—malaria,
WTHLSSfe! typhoid, etc.
Jacobs’ Mosquito Lotion
Banishes Mosquitoes
It is harmless to the skin and does
lot Injure fine fabrics; neither
[reasy nor sticky. Its odor Is pun-
tent, not disagreeable, but It lnstant-
y drives nway mosquitoes, fllea,
gnats and other Insects. Use It.
15c, 25c, 50c.
All Jacobs’ Stores
Declaring that he would honor
requisition papers signed by Gov
ernor Cole Blease, of South Carolina,
regardless of any refusal of the lat
ter to honor similar papers from
Georgia, Governor John M. Slaton
Tuesday morning defined hi* position
in regard to the rumored strained re
lations between the two State execu
tives.
"I want to say that I will not hesi
tate for one moment to grant requisi
tion papers from Governor Blease if
the case warrants it,” said Governor
Slaton. "I intend to treat the State
of South Carolina just as I would any
other State.
"It would be a very bad condition
of affairs, indeed, for any one Stat3,
especially a neighboring State, to oe
an asylum for the criminals of the
other State, and vice versa, by com
mon consent of the two Governors.”
Governor Slaton’s remarks^ were
the result of rumored statements at
tributed to Governor Blease to the
effect that he would not honor requi
sition papers from the Governor of
Georgia because of Governor Slaton’s
recent action In refusing to grant the
extradition of Attorney Zachry, of
Augusta.
Because the New Orleans Shriners
were showing them such a good time,
or some equally as good excuse, the
delegation of Shriner officials, who
were due to arrive in Atlanta at
10:45 o’clock Tuesday morning, will
not reach the city until midnight. A
great reception had been planned for
this morning.
The delegation arranged the details
of the national convention in Atlanta
In 1914. They had Just returned from
Panama, where they installed a new
temple.
Those In the party are W. W. Ir
win, Imperial potentate, Wheeling;
Frederick R. Smith, Imperial deputy
potentate, Rochester; J. Putnam Ste
vens, Imperial chief rabban. Portland,
Maine; William S. Brown, imperial
treasurer, Pittsburg, and E. A. Curtis,
imperial captain of the guard, Savan
nah.
Den of Lions Raided
By Gainesville Police
GAINESVILLE, Sept. 9.—The city
police have made a raid on the Den
of Lions, secret and Insurance order
with several hundred members In this
city.
It Is claimed that the Lions do not
cohfprm to any curfew regulations,
but on the contrary that the "den"
remains open all night sometimes,
and that intoxicants are indulged in
by its members. -
OF
E
Says He Broke Law and Should
Pay Penalty—Fugitive Has
No Hope of Bail.
COATICOOK, QUEBEC, Sept. 9.—.
Harry K. Thaw has settled down to
a monotonous wait until the next step
in the court proceedings, instituted
in an effort to prevent his deporta
tion, Is taken at Montreal. Thaw has
not much hope of getting bail.
The withdrawal of the gambling
charge against William T. Jerome, to
whom a public apology was made
last night by Justice Mulvena, led
Thaw to say:
"I would hate to see Jerome or any
one else go to jail, but he broke the
law, and I think he ought to have
been punished to some extent."
FOR INDIGESTION
Take Harafard’t Aeld Phosphate
Half a teaspdbnful In ^ater before meala will
be found a rrateful relief from distress after
Ad?.
CHATTANOOGA.
$2.00 Round Trip $2.00
Thursday, September 11,
1913. Good on all regular
trains. Good return until
Saturday night.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
THE ELTON
A Knapp-Felt soft hat, full of what
the young chaps call "pep.”
A more dignified description would
be "smart.”
The style is well suited to young and
middle ages and comes in rix distinct
colors at
$3
Cl oud-Stanford Co*
61 Peachtree St.
m CiTY TICKET OFFICE Of
& EITHER PHONE
THE ATTRACTIVE WAY NORTH &. WEST
WiBiTonAsKlbftlmiftte
ImrOiTaYEucfLabel
Don’t just say “lithia water” or “lemon,
lime and lithia” to the soda dispenser,
but demand Wauseka—the true lithia
water — and see that you get it. Iden
tified by the Yellow Label on container.
This is the lithia water recommended
by physicians and shown by analysis of
eminent chemists to contain the greatest
percentage of medicinal lithia salt (bi
carbonate of lithium) held in perfect
solution in pure water.
You’ll recognize its superiority over
other lithia waters as soon as you taste it.
Served at leading founts from the
container with the YELLOW LABEL
bn:
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T' •w T
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on y by
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12
Phones:
Dell. Ivy
A 11anta