Newspaper Page Text
6A
SEAT 111 SENATE
SEEMS SMITH'S
FOHTHEASKING
Foes Fail to Develop Any Serious
Opposition Against Atlantan
Up to Present Time.
JOE BROWN KEEPING QUIET
Governor Slaton Apparently Is
Satisfied With His Position.
Will Not Ask for Toga.
B. JAMES B. NEVIN.
and more firmly fixed throughout
Georgia that Senator Hoke Smith is
to have no opposition for re-election
to the United States Senate.
Certainly, if opposition is brewing,
it has been kept amazingly quiet so
far, and no authoritative hint of it
has escaped from any quarter direct
ly concerned.
To be sure, there are those in
Georgia, and quite a respectable com
pany of th*»m, who have not yet
learned to love Hoke Smith, and who
never may. are those wno
would enjoy nothing so much as aae
ing the junior Senator stripped of h«s
toga and relegated to the darkest
shades, or whatever it Is, of public
life
Whether they are destined to see
that performance enacted Is highly
problematical, however, and the
doubt in favor of the Senator is wax
ing bigger and more impressive every
day.
Friends Still Enthusiastic.
The Senator has his enemies
throughout Georgia, always has hi!
and always will have, perhaps. At
the same time his friends are appar
ently as numerous as ever, and quite
as enthusiastically for him.
Moreover, he is an undisputed load
er in the Senate as it is organised
to-day, and wields a far-reaching an 1
potent influence that can not be ra
tionally discounted
If the Impression prevailed at one
time that the Senator damaged him
self particularly in Georgia by reason
of the part he played in the reor
ganization of ths United States Sen
ate last spring, that impression seems
to have been thoroughly dissipated.
True enough, the Senator, In hand
ling the always delicate and vexing
question of Federal patronage, man
aged to “get in bad” with divers and
sundry political leaders of one sort
and another hither and yon through-
i ' 4 Mho.
Bf Al®
S/ i ■ When
WjIB Come I,
Here W
? for
Walk-Over
->.| SHOES >1
NLLj you get more wL
value than you
pay for.
It s in the
satis f a c t i o n
■ that gees with (1
the shoes we
h-;,,T y° u ; th®
quality of the
leather, the
ST workmanship; the 1 $
§ thoroughly careful
§ manner in which we fit $
$ you.
You’ll like WALK- |
ti OVER shoes, our ser
s vice, the values we give S
you.
Pt
1
I
T® \
$4.50 and $5.00 stanaara
prices. Others down to
$3.50 and up to $7.00---
real money's worth i n
every grade.
Waik-Over Shoe |
Shop
8 p e3chtree Street \
s
EVERY ATLANTA COLLEGE TO HAVE FINE YEAR
o -
■WWBt AR \\ L Sr* »
E7 C? ®SL>- A
/ ""x ■" mi ' 1/
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,*sr- i r x B • \
' ' Jr-’ ■ I I
' k. < w- - - • • WRBBMMr>-X
l 4L ,-iE i -V\
I HTSb.. SC ‘ m>. . /■.k.*'... <■ •>' ”,'3. .'WSMBI ■ ■'fe-sAX
\ HP 1 •.\si A, ■ “■' w»\
0 k atj*' x\ IL SPw
out Georgia, but it does not appear
that he has managed to “get in bad”
enough, at that, to encourage* his po
litcal opponents in the belief that
an avalanche might be started guar
anteed to overwhelm the Senator.
Opposition to Senator Smith pas
been antlclpat<d from two quarters,
If it developed at all.
Rumor has had it persistently
enough that former Governor Joseph
M. Brown cherishes Senatori.il am
bitions. And It is a fact that the
former <’hlef Magistrate has received
since his retirement from the execu
tive office hundreds of letters urg
ing him to make the ra< e against
Senator Smith.
Brown Boom Languishes.
But of late the Brown Senatorial
boom has seemed to languish. The
former Governor is taking life easily
and comfortable, dividing his time
unostentatiously betw.cn his home in
Marietta and his farm in Cherokee
County. If he is figuring upon the
Senatorial proposition from any an
gle, he In keeping his figures mighty
dark; if he is sawing much wood, he
also Is saying nothing
The Brown boom thus tentatively,
if not conclusively, disposed of. those
who still would see opposition to Sen
ator Smith have turned their eyes In
the direction of Governor Slaton.
There has not been much comfort
to them forthcoming from that quar
ter
Governor Slaton barely has got bls
gubernatorial bonne* on straight, an I
so far he likes the looks of it far
too well to let it be suspected that he
thinks a Senatorial t<»grt might be
even more becoming to his style of po
litical make-up.
Besides, under an unwritten and
rarely broken law of Democracy in
Georgia, the Governor is sure to be
awarded a second term in the Gov
ernorship, if he wishes it, without
opposition, and therefore John Mar
shal! Slaton should worry about
things Senatorial nowadays, of
course!
; "GETS-IT" Gets
Corns Sure as Fate
( If You’ve Had Corns for Months or ?
' Years, “GETS-IT” Will Remove
Them AU In a Few Days.
\ "Whew! hurt* way up to my >
j heart. I’ve tried almost every- ji
[ thing for corns!” ?
j Corn sufferers, cornless joy is at <
i hand. •*GETB-IT” is the only real ?
\SIC
ll '
‘‘l Don’t Wonder People Go Crazy- >
; Happy Over GETS-IT.’ It Gets '
Every Corn Sure and Quick!” >
J \
j enemy any corn ever had Put <
j “GETS-IT” on In 2 seconds, and
\ away they go, shrivel, vanish No •
' more cotton rings to make the J
\ corn sharper and more bulgy, no j
j more bandages to stop circulation (
\ and stick to the stocking, no more >
i? waives to turn the flesh raw and <
i{ make the corn "pull,” no more >
1 knives or razors with danger of <
bleeding and blood poisoning.
“GETS-IT” is painless, stops \
j*ain. and is absolutely harmless to >
healthy flesh. Warts and bunions s
; disappear. "GETS-IT” gives im- J
( mediate relief.
) “GETS-IT” is sold at druggists’ <
• at 25 rents a bottle, or sent on re- )
’ celpt of price to E Lawrence & <
j Co., Chicago.
T1 St -»1 \ SSJBBI
Scones at thb opening of Atlanta’s girls’ colleges. On the left is a group of Woodberry girls.
Reading from left to right, they are Misses Etta Lula Walton, Waycross; Marguerite Dyar, Cal
houn, ami Grace Shelverton, Austell. In the upper center picture, from left to right, are Misses
Helen Martin, Culloden, and Lucile McWhorter, Woodville, both students at Cox College. Below
them are three Agnes Scott girls giving their college yell. From left to right, they are Misses
Essie Roberts, Fairburn; Helen Brown, Chattanooga, and Louise McNulty, Dawson. On the right
Miss Ellen Smith, of Prattville, Ala., is making herself at home at Washingtoii Seminary.
HITS BODY IN
SITE IN CITY HULL
ThousandsLineStreets as Funeral
Cortege Proceeds From
Home in Brooklyn.
X i:\v YORK. Sent. 20. A brief and
simple funeral service which was at
tended only by members of the Gay
nor family and a few close friends
was held to-day at the Gaynor home
In Brooklyn before the body of Mayor
William J. Gaynor was removed to
City Hall, where it will lie in state
to-morrow.
The Rev. Frank Page, of Fairfax,
Va., former rector nf St. John’s Epis
copal Church, in Brooklyn, conducted
the service, which was a brief form
of the Episcopal ceremony. In def
erence to the expressed wish of Mrs.
Gaynor, there was no music and the
Rev. Mr Rage offered only a short
eulogy of the late Mayor as he had
known him when his rector and
friend.
A few minutes after 4 o’clock the
cotfln containing the body of the May
or was borne down the steps of the
Gaynor residence by ten members of
the fire and police departments. An
escort of 250 mounted policemen ac
'mpanied the body across Brooklyn
Bridge to City Hall. Over the entire
route throngs had gathered on either
side of the street and at the Man
hattan end of the bridge several
thousand persons awaited the arrival
t-f the motor hearse bearing the body.
T '-night the coffin rests on a ca
tafalque in the center of the rotunda
jin City Hall The flag of the Mayor
.of the city of New York covers the
| coffin, while massed around it are
j various floral offerings.
NEW BANK BUILDING IN
GADSDEN COSTS SIO,OOO
GADSDEN, Sept. 20.—Plans for a
new building for the Attalla Bank
j havr been placed in the hands of local
(contractors Rids will be opened on
■ Oc’ober 4 and the building is to be
' completed by March 1. It will cost
I SIO,OOO.
NEW MOTOR FOR ORGAN.
ANNISTON. Sept. 20.—A new elec
tric motor has been received and is
being installed to take the place of
the water power used heretofore in
i j era ting the organ at the Church of
St. Michael and All Angtls.
TtEARST S STA’DAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA. GA.. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1913.
Dainty Thumbs Are Struck, but Rooms Grow
Radiant With Students’ Advent.
A golden-haired girl tacked a long
| Georgia Tech pennant, as golden as
! her tresses, on the* wall, with many
a/t ‘‘Oh. bother,” as the gingerly
' swung hammer missed Its mark and
: pounded a pink thumb. Another girl
—her hair was brown —assembled
I with exi»ert air the pieces of a bat
: tered chafing dish. Roth paused in
their labor now and then to fall Into
I a chummy embrace and giggle over
reminiscences of the summer just
passed.
“And the next night he came to our
dance ”
“Was he cute?”
They were In a room in a dormi
tory of one of the girls’ schools In the
purlieus of Atlanta. It might have
been any one of the schools, because
everywhere there is the same per
formance. The schools and colleges
all opened with this last week, and
the brigade le assem
bled once more with serious talk of
student government and frats and
trigonometry, and talk less seriously
of the things that happened In the
lazy summer days.
The new session is the seventy-first
of Cox College, the institution in Col
lege Park The new session also blds
fair to be the most prosperous, with
a matriculation that Is easily up tn
| last ylear's of the same date. A large
number of new students makes nota
ble the matriculation at Cox College
The usual attendance is more than
j 200.
The big building out In College Park
Is resplendent with new stone steps
and a glow’ that comes with the fall
!■ P-R-I-N-T-O-R I-A-L-S SO
No. 252
THE ART PRESERVATIVE
3— meaning PRINTING—a preservative of EXPRESSION—of pictures and
decorations You see what a responsibility is involved in PRINTING.
The force and impressiveness of your expressions arui the beauty and
s effectiveness of your illustrations depend on GOOD PRlNTlNG—beauti
ful type faces, paper of high quality and harmonizing texture and fln
, I ish. Color schemes, too. of artistic delicacy or forceful "dash.” as the
plan max demand All
n these features must com- T -
e bine (u make printing the ■ 9 X ■ ■ ■
t “ART PRESERVATIVE fe■
in effect, as well as in ■ A je is M
name The BYRD organ- Jf H ■
ization. for instance, is a
criterion of this sort of
■ efficiency. Printing Co.
f _ 46-48-50 W. Alabama, _
’ ■ Phones M. 156042608-2614. Atlanta.
r '
renovation. The faculty assembling
for the new season reveals several
changes and additions, including G. C.
Kauffman, in the chair of mathemat
ics; Professor Alexander von Sklbfn
sky, in violin; Miss V. Filiingrim, in
music, and Mrs. Mamie Hollifield
Montgomery, in art.
At Agnes Scott the matriculation
for the twenty-fifth session was great
er than on the corresponding day of
last year's session, according to Pres
ident Gaines yesterday. A significant
change in the administration at Ag
nes Scott is the elimination of the
academy or preparatory department
and the operation only of the college
proper. Fears had • been expressed
that the showing tn attendance on
the institution would be impaired, but
Dr. Gaines said the increase in at
tendance has allayed these fears.
New members of the Agnes Scott
faculty are Dr J. Sam Guy, Johns
Hopkins, chemistry; Amy F. Preston,
Columbia, mathematics; S. G. Stukes,
Princeton, philosophy and Bible;
Mary C. deGarmo, Columbia, homeeco.
nomlcs; Elsie W. Helmrich. Colum
bia, German; Alice Lucile Alexander,
Columbia. French; Katharine Tor
rance. Chicago, Latin and Greek;
Edith Randolph West. Wellesley, his
tory. political economy and sociology;
Rose A. Newcomb. Syracuse, chemis
try and biology.
Washington Seminary and the
Woodberry School both look forward
to prosperous seasons, with a num
ber of new students, that Infallible
gauge of growing strength with
schools, enrolled in each instance. In
both schools material improvements
have been made to accommodate the
fall Influx of students.
REGENSTEBN’S REGENSTEIN’S
MONDAY—
Featuring New Silk Dresses
p Special! Vatflojies M
» sll2.®®, $115.00, sii§.oo
and $25.??
A great variety of fascinating
new styles of Women’s and
Misses’ Fall Dresses. Afternoon
and Street Dresses in all the
k pretty new Fall colors and
A black. Channeiise, crepe de
I chine and crepe meteor— the
1 1 best values we have ever offered
/ at the prices, $12.50, sls, $lB and
' $25.
New Fallll Suits
Best Styles in Women’s and
Misses’ Suits—All the New
y/i a m Shades and Blues and Black.
sls, $17.50, S2O and $25
FOR POPULAR PRICES
REGENSTEIN’S
FORTY WHITEHALL
4 s
iC
P*T ' i
.. v '.zz-v.* J I
Forrest Market
Wholesale and Retail
Groceries and Meats
OUR MOTTO—Quality and Service
117 North Pryor St.—Opp. Candler Bldg.
Fish, Oysters, Game in Season
PAN-AMERICAN
CONGRESSMEET
in DIXIE VITAL
Sessions at Mobile of Unusual
Importance Because Canal
Opening Is Close at Hand.
The Panama Canal and lt« affect on
Southern commerce, means of utiliz
ing opportunities the canal offers for
increasing Southern prosperity and
the closer relation of the South to the
Latin-American republics—all will be
considered by the Southern Commer
cial Congress, the organization born
in Atlanta five years ago, when it
meets in Mobile October 27, 28 and 29.
The Mobile meeting of the congress
will be the most important of its his
tory, it Is believed, with the canal’s
opening so near at band.
Because the situation is so signifi
cant the congress at this meeting
will have wider scope than ever be
fore. The Pan-American Commer
cial Congress, whose activities include
all republics of the American conti
nent, will meet with it. The meeting
of the Pan-American Congress has
been held up by its governing board
pending arrangements of the South
ern Commercial Congress, so that the
two can meet together.
Following the meeting of the con
gress a commercial expedition of 50
Southern merchants will go into tha
South American countries for three
months to study conditions with a
view to reciprocal trade. Another
party will leave Mobile for a tour of
the canal district.
The names of the nation’s most
prominent men are on the program
for the Mobile meeting, including
President Wilson. Secretaries Bryan
and Daniels, a number of Senators
and Governors.
RAINEY TO OPPOSE ~
CONGRESSMAN BURNETT
GADSDEN. Sept. 20.—CongTeaaman
John L Burnett will return from
Washington Sunday. Mr. Burnett will
spend about a month here and will
make preliminary arrangements for
his campaign for re-election. He wifi
probably be opposed in the coming
primary by L. B. Rainey, Solicitor of
the City Court of Gadsden.