Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 12, 1913, Image 3

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I X wr . lr I A CHAIR ON OF THE BALTIC 8pecl*J Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. QUEENSTOWN. IRELAND, Sept. 12.—The death ship Baltic of the White Star Line, bearing the body of Mayor William J. Gaym of New York City, arrives in port at 4:25 «. m., bringing fresh details of the famous American’s death. The stateroom occupied by Rufus W. Gaynor, son of the late execu tive, wa* roped off and guarded by a cordon of ship's stewards. It was explained that young Mr. Gaynor was overcome by his father's death and had been suffering Intense mental anguish for nearly 48 hours. Officials of the consular office in Queenstown visited young Mr. Gay nor and later viewed the body of his father, which had been temporarily prepared and lay In a stateroom. Officials who had entrance to Ru fus Ga.vnor’s stateroom said that the young man had not slept an hou* since his father’s sudden de: th at 1 o’clock Wednesday afternoon. Nor had he eaten anything. He has been constantly under the care of the ship’s physician. When Mayor Gaynor embarked for a sea voyage on Thursday, September 4, it was known that his physical con dition was run down. Mr. Gaynor showed signs of weakness, but after the ship had been at sea a few days he seemed to grow better. He spent much of his time alone or with his con. Seemed To Be Improved. * Officers of the Baltic, it was learned here, repeatedly asked Mayor Gaynor if they could not perform some spe cial service for him, but the sick man would reply: ‘If you treat me as well as you treat others. I’ll be satisfied. I am only a passenger like the others. I am content.” The* morning of Mayor Gaynors death the sick man seemed in better spirits than usual. He walked the deck for some time in the warm sun- chine. accompanied by the small son of one of the passengers. A warm attachment had sprung up between the tall, grave, gray-bearded man and the little 3-year-old boy. Mr. Gaynor had been telling the lit tle fellow stories about some of the big fish which live in the sea and laughed heartily at some of the ques tions which came back to him. Shortly before 1 o'clock Rufus Gay nor went below to look after his fa ther’s luncheon. He returned shortly to find his father huddled up in a deck chair. Young Mr. Gaynor thought at first that his father was deeping and shook him gently by the ehoulder. The pallor of the recum bent man’s face caused his son to be come alarmed and the ship’s surgeon, Dr. Hopper, was called. He immedi ately pronounced Mayor Gaynor dead from heart failure. Although Rufus Gaynor realized that his father’s condition of health was serious, he was completely stunned by his parent’s sudden death. It was all he could do to write the wireless message which wac received In New’ York City yesterday morning WOLFSHEIMER 114=116 Whitehall Specials For Cash Only BEEF Stew Meat 8c Brisket 10c Pot Roast 12 1=2 to 15c Rib Roast 15 to 17 l=2c Chuck Steaks 15c Round Steaks 17 l=2c Loin Steaks 20c Porterhouse Steaks 20c VEAL Veal Stew 10c Veal Chops 15c Veal Roast 15c PORK Pork Roast 17 l=2c Pork Chops 20c LAMB Lamb Stew 6c Lamb Shoulder 12 I=2c Lamb Hindqnarter 15c Lamb Legs 20c Lamb Chops 20c Hams, Sngar= ] Cured Picnic 14 I=2c ] Hams, Regular 20 to 22c Breakfast Bacon 21c Hens Dressed 19c A FULL LINE OF GROCERIES AT LOWEST PRICES by Robert Adamson. Mr. Caynor s Dr. Hopper, who was more or less acquainted with the history of Mayor Gaynor, said that his constitution steadily had been declining since ho was shot by a maniac in Hoboken. X. J., three years ago. Mr. Gaynor’s frame was emaciated, and Dr. Hop per said that it was only by the most tremendous exertion of will power that the dead official could l-^ve held himself to his tasks. The death of Mayor Gaynor cast a pall of gloom over the ship. All the dances and other festivities on board were canceled and the passengers adopted a resolution of condolences, which they tendered to Rufus Gay nor. The male nurse who accompanied Mr. Gaynor to attend to his physical comforts, and who seldom left his patient’s side, said that the Mayor seemed to be suffering, but never complained. / Did Not Discuss Politics. The last words he is known to have spoken were addressed shortly before his death to a person who asked how he was feeling. "I am feeling very well; thank you,” replied Mr. Gaynor. Mayor Gaynor did not discuss poli tics on the voyage, saying time and again that his trip was for complete rest and that he did not intend to bother his mind about political af fairs or municipal problems for a fortnight. Many came to the conclusion that, in addition to taking the voyage for rest, Mayor Gaynor also took it as a means of getting a fortnight of semi seclusion In which he might think out his own course in the fall cam paign In New York, decide upon is sues and, in brief, settle all political questions upon which his mind had been in doubt. If the Mayor felt that his fnd was near he did not show it. He left no message for the world. Mrs. C. N. Williamson, the well- known writer, who was a passenger on the Baltic, said that Mayor Gaynor appeared in the best of health and I spirits. ‘‘He died with a smile upon his face and a look of perfect content in his eyes,” said Mrs Williamson. "His death was the most beautiful that one would ever see. His face was turned upward to the sun, his hands were clasped beneath a steamer rug. His j life on board had been very quiet. He j kept much to himself in his cabin Occasionally he walked the deck with his son. He became the chum of the little son of one of the passen gers and they spent some time to gether in the warm sunshine. Mr. Gaynor must have had a large fund of children’s stories, for he kept the tot interested every minute of their time together. Mr. Gaynor appre ciated music and attended the con certs regularly.” The plan of transferring the body to the liner Cedric on a tender was abandoned. A grim coincidence in this connection is that Mr. Gaynor had planned to return on the Cedric. There was a Miss Gaynor on the passenger list and a Mr. Whalen, but it was officially denied that the g woman was a relative of Mayor Gaynor. She just happened to be of the family name. The Gaynor party consisted of Mayor Gaynor, his LIVERPOOL, Sept. 12.—All plana PUZZLE DELAYING SALEOFA..B.&A. Division of Five-Million-Dollar Debt Depends on Report of Auditor October 7. Foreclosure sale of the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railroad, ordered by Judge Don A. Pardee, of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, is proving to be a compli cated undertaking V. L 8mith. spe cial master appointed to conduct the sale, has been forced to postpone un til October 7 determination of the proper allotment of receivers’ cer tificates. The receivers have assumed $6.- 000,000 indebtedness, for which they have issued certificates. The A. B. Si A. consists of three parcels of property, the railroad proper and two terminal corporations, the Georgia Terminal Company and the Alabama Terminal Company. What proportion of the $5,000,000 debt should be assumed by each of these three was to have been decided by the master this week, but, after two days of hearings, at which at torneys for the Old Colony Trust Company, of Boston, representing the bondholders, and attorneys for the holders of the receivers' certificates were present, it was found that vital data were lacking. The auditors’ office has been given until October 7 to prepare these nec essary figures. ODD FELLOWS AT ETON. DALTON, Sept. 12.—Hundreds of Odd Fellows have assembled at Eton, Murray County, to-day for the open ing session of the fall convention of the Eighteenth Division. Edwin Gould Plans To Fly to Florida NEW YORK, sept. 12. — Edwin Gould has purchased two hydro aeroplanes and is planning a flight along the coast from New London to Palm Beach. He has been spend ing seevral weeks in Chicago watch ing Harold McCormick’s airboat and perfecting his flying. The largest Gould airboat will carry six persons and will be the most lux urious in the world. The flight down the coast is to take place next month. ‘Bald’Jack Rose Hits Reform Hypocrites SOUTH NORWALK, CONN.. Sept. 12.—“The underworld will gradually die for lack of population, when the reformer® In our State reformatories learn to be living examples of what they preach and do not practice,” said Jack Rose, the former gambler and Rosenthal witness, in an addres.i here. Rose took the lecture platform for the benefit of the East Norwalk Epis copal Churcn All-Southern Auto Route Trail Blazer Reaches Calvert, Tex., in Downpour. ‘Women Are Losing Ability to Blush’ BALTIMORE. Sept. 12.—“Rouge is growing in popularity because women are losing the ability to blush,” de clared the Rt. Rev. J. S. Johnson Bishop of Western Texas, a guest of the Rev. Dr. Richard W. Hogue, of this city. "Women dress in these modern cos tumes. designed by men tailors of Paris, who meet rix months ahead of the season. Women in our land should rise up and throw off their bondage.” CALVERT, TEXAS. Sept. 12 — Pathfinder Ferguson and his party finished the lap of the all-Southern transcontinental highway that ends at Calvert to-day by covering several miles of road submerged in places by a foot or more of water. Despite the downpour between Cal vert and Hearne, Mayor J. W. Do- remus, E. J. McGuirk, editor of The Calvert Picayune; Guy Townsend and Tom Field motored nine miles to Hearne to meet Mr. Ferguson. A rousing though drenching reception was tendered the pathfinder and he was the honored guest at a chicken dinner after his arrival. Mr. Ferguson left Hempstead Thursday morning and stopped at Navasota College Station, Bryan and Hearne before reaching Calvert for the night and was given an enthusi astic reception at each place. At Bryan, near which the Agricul tural and Mechanical College is lo cated, the pathfinder met, besides County Judge J. L Maloney, Repre sentative J. L. Fountain, City Engi neer A. B. Carson and L. M. Howit, secretary of the Commercial Club, and R. J Pools, professor of highway engineering at the college. Atlanta Motorists On Pathfinder’s Trail. MOBILE, Sept. 12.—-Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Paquette, of Atlanta, who are following the all-Southern transcon tinental route being mapped out by H. L Ferguson, arrived here late last night. They left to-day for New Orleans via Gulfport. The Arrangements were made with the A local The first official honors were paid The Lord Mayor of Liverpool When A cordon of police will watch be- The United States Consul here will or's successor, met this forenoon to arrange for a public funeral to take place after the arrival here of the Mayor’s body aboard the steamer Lusitania, which sailed to-day from Liverpool and is due here next Fri day. Monday, September 22, has been suggested as a tentative date. There also were to oe meetings of the dead executive’s cabinet—com missioners of various city depart ments—and of the Board of Aider- men to pass appropriate resolutions on the death of the chief executive and to take in hand the city govern ment, confused by the Mayor’s sud den taking off. The recent resignation of John Purroy Mitchell, now candidate for Mayor, from the presidency of the Board of Aldermen, and the sudden elevation of Mr. Kline, vice chairman of the board, to the Mayor’s chair, has left that body without a head. The new Mayor, a Republican who will serve until a successor, to be chosen at the coming November elec tion, is inaugurated on January 1, In tends, he has announced, to carry out the policies of the Gaynor adminis tration. “in so far as I know’ them.” and to make no changes in appointive officials. None of these officials, : t was believed to-day. would hand in their resignations. Anna Held Against Stage for Daughter NEW YORK, Sept. 12.—Anna Held, who, with her daughter. Liane. ar rived recently from Europe, does not encourage the latter to follow her mother's footsteps. “No, I hope to keep her away from the stage,” said Miss Held, “and I will see to it that she sees as many sides as possible. There is good, but a good deal that is bad." Miss Held has grown thinner since the last time she visited America. Her figure is now svelte and girlish. FANATIC DEPORTED. NEW YORK. Sept. 12.-William Houghton, English, was deported here for persisting that he was the Mes siah. Photographs of the newest hats for fall and winter are given in The Sunday American. Just from Paris. Called “flapper” hats and “flopper” hats. Every woman will want to see them. Bank Re-elects Heads; Declares Dividend Duke of Manchester Is Sued as Bankrupt Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON. Sept. 12.—The Duke ot Manchester, husband of Helena Zim merman, of Cincinnati, is hopelessly in the tolls of the money lenders. A petition in bankruptcy, filed by one of them, will be heard in the Bank ruptcy Court. The Duke owns 70,000 acres and a magnificent gallery of old masters, but these are either entailed or heav ily mortgaged. Officers of the Georgia Savings Bank and Trust Company were re-elected Thursday at the annual meeting, and a semi-annual dividend of 4 per cent was declared, payable Monday. It is the oldest savings bank in Atlanta and has earned its dividend regularly for years. George M. Brown is president of the institution; John W. Grant, vice presi dent, and Joseph E. Brown is secretary- treasurer. Other directors are Joseph A. McCord, Arnold Broyles, John L Tye. Elijah A. Brown and Fred B. Law. A statement of the condition of the bank at close of business August 31 shows total resources $1,047,487.92; de posits, $632,756.22. 325TH FLYER KILLED. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. MUENSTER, GERMANY, Sept. 12. —Aviator Hans Lorenz was killed here to-day while making a flight. His death is the three hundred and twenty-fifth in an airship. Make It a “SCOTCH” Save $10 We have 117 stores. Swellest woolens come to us In carload lots—-direct from the mills. We save nearly 50%. That’s why we can make a regular $25 suit for $15. Suit or Overcoat NE7W YORK, Sept. 12.—New York J. Gaynor. uarters. the municipal building— fere draped in black. The Board of Estimate, called to- Tax for Bachelors And Childless Wives CINCINNATI, OHIO, Sept. 12 — Bachelors and chadless wives are to to be made a source of income for the State of Ohio if the plana ad vocated before the Woman’s Tax payers’ League are carried out. The plan Is to tax single men about 10 per cent. Married women who have been in that State for twenty years and are not mother j are to be taxed also, ac cording to the scheme. GOOD JOKE ON LOCAL SUPPLY COMPANY. Through the carelessness of their printers. 10,000 wholesale Catalogs of the 35 Per Cent Auto Supply Com- pany, No. 236 Peachtree street, which were intended for wholesale trade, were bound in the covers printed for their retail Catalogs, but as part of the issue was mailed before the er ror was discovered, the comijany de cided to stick by the prices until a new Catalog could be issued. It is stated that the printers who made the blunder are making good the losses rather than stand suit Meanwhile numerous automobile owners who have secured copies of this Catalog (No. 36) are profiting by the mistake and getting their tires and supplies at wholesale prices. Adv. Photographs of the newest hats for fall and winter are given in The Sunday American. Just from Paris. Called “flapper” hats and “flopper” hats. Every woman will want to see them. GOODYEAR RAINCOAT CO.- ‘From Maker to Wearer” FRED FREE! Waterproof School Bags and Waterproof Hats #c>.. SATURDAY snd MONDAY To-morrow and Monday. September 13th and 15th, with every purchase made at this store or by parcel post, we will give a waterproof school bag and waterproof hat for man, woman, girl or boy, ABSOLUTELY FREE Gigantic Bargains Saturday and Monday The supreme value-giving effort of our ca reer begins to-morrow morning at 8 o’clock. Most remarkable bargains in high-grade wa terproof garments for men, women and children ever offered bv a reputable concern. Read on. The prices tell the story. $5 English Slip-Ons Saturday and Monday at this ctore you can buy Regular $5 English Slip- Ons for men, women and children at the sensationally low price $1.99 $8.00 Slip-Ons at Styles for men and women in excel lent all-wool, double texture Cash- mere with regulation or Raglan shoulders. Notice the fine finish. Ab solutely waterproof, at $3.99 $12 Slip-Ons at Coats for both men and women, splen did styles of Ctshmere cloth In the pop ular tan or a rich shade of brown. An unheard of value, at $5.99 $18 Priestley Cravenette Of IViestley's cravenetted Scotch Tweeds and fine English mixtures tor men. You might pay more, but you couldn’t get a better coat'. At .. $8.99 IV^ade-to- Order Hers's the place to get the “big hit” styles and classiest "all wool’ ’ materials—and sa va a ‘‘ten spot” 107 Peachtree St. $25 Gabardines for men and women; elegant '-oats, all good colors, silk lined, convertible collars. For rain or shine $12.99 Boys’ and Girls’Slip-Ons The finest models of the sea son; sizes 6 to 16 years. Regu lar $4 values. Rale price $1.79 $2.50 Girls’ India-Stripe Rain Capes $1.29 mm 1 II nnnirnO Out-of-town folks may share In this wonderful raincoat sale. Select any rol U i S I !nlirn\ COat adver * ,8ed and we wm 8end b y Parcel Post the same day your |f | || 1UIIULIlU order Is received. We fit you as w ell as If ycu were here—the name "Good year” Is your protection. y ^RAINCOAD CCMMMY 35 Peachtree Street-—Next to Nunnally’s 1