Newspaper Page Text
si n0,000.00d
MK CAPITAL
15 VOTED DOffl
• 3 ; ? Decides Against Hitchcock
Pi.iii, and Turns to Method
of O'Gorman.
CAUCUS IS OPPOSED
•
K • and Hoke Smith Both Against
Making Party Measure of
Currency Bill.
WASHINGTON, Nov. I.—By a. vota
; -o 4, after an all-day discussion
cf the methods of providing capital
•tcrok fr>r th* regional banks, the Sen
ste Currency Committee this even
'ng voted down the Hitchcock plan
for a common capital stock of SIOO- I
000,000 under the control of the Fed
eral Reserve Board,
Two plans offered by Senator O'GO/,
fnan were then taken up, but not dis
used of One provides for half the
-jpltal stock to be ■uibscrlbed by the
bank" and half by the public. The other
eon’emplates offering the whole of the
«*r k to the public, the banks to un
derwrite any amount not thus taken.
Senator O'Gonnan prefers the former
b'an.
Concurrently with this phase of the
■ »stlon to-day there was an anl-
mat-tJ discussion over the subject of
: control of the regional banks.
Senator O'Gorman favors the selec
•■ -n of directors of the even
with public ownership of the stock
provided In the Glass bill, the banks
to elect si:; and the Federal board
to appoint three. Chairman Owen
also favors this plan.
Control of Regional Banks,
H >.v these regional banks shall be
vntrolled Is ..considered by the more
members of the committee as
he whole measure. It can
. ip.; on unquestioned authori*y
f the committee provides for
control as contemplated in th.*
there will be a strong tnl
r ' r port., and the bill will go to
Sen- I .te with the committee di-
■ 1 .’ and a minority determined o
the end against anything that
v-. any degree of bank control.
' notor Bristow, after the meeting
•d. protested against the
■■ n of this provision of the
II bill.
• we are attempting to do is
ijv people relief from *he
>n of those who now control
• . r..,l'trt of the country. If the
- ire given authority to elect the
>.<-•.« of these regional banks, they
i st’ll control credits and there will
b r no semblance of local public con
i' I wilt never agree to aracb a
provision."
Senator O’Gorman, on the other
• d. hold-, that with six directors
m by the banks there will be
i ,md more efP 'lent managem. it
regional banks. The interests
if the general public and of those
■ I'ng credits, he said, would be
nr ected by the Federal Reserve
IF, rd, which would have the power
nf removal of any board of directors
that discriminated against the public.
Senate Opposes Caucus.
Gossip from the neighborhood of
‘he White House to-day revived the
■alk of a caucus to pass upon the
p;ii. This will not be tolerated by
•he Senate. Senator Kern, chairman
of ihe Senate caucus, stated) spe-
• ally that there would be no cau
us on the currency bill. Senator
O'Gorman emphatically announced
■ha: no caucus would be necessary
and none would be held.
Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia,
was of the same opinion. If the
’’res-dent demands a caucus, unless
■he present temper of the Democrats
'>f the Senate changes materially, he
"111 fail In forcing his views upon
Democratic Senators,
Lauds Hampton and
Tuskegee Institutes
Have Aided Vocational Movement
Declares United States Bureau
of Education. •
That Hampton and Tuskegee are
valuable not merely as excellent
schools for the negro race, but for
their Important contribution to the
vocational education movement. Is the
'leclaretion of the United States Bu
“au of education. In a pamphlet,
*' ‘d "Education for Life," tribute
l aid to the work of Hampton In
’■!'ite, and particularly General
'■rnutrong. Its founder, who is looked
' r on by educators as a pioneer In the
fl' i'l of practical education.
"He foretold with extraordinary
prcf ision transitions which within the
ft 25 years have revolutionized the
■in :pies of education,” says the bu
reau.
w. 0, T. U?OF COLUMBUS
HONORS LEADING WORKER:
' Nov. I.—-Hereafter
has been known as the City W.
I’ U. of Columbus will he known
the Theresa Griffin W. C. T. U-,
change having been made bv the
members in honor of Mias Griffin,
has been one of the union’s
ingest workers. The meetings will
at the Kir»t Baptist Church
r ‘- ‘ M of St. Luke’s Methodist
nurch.
Dr. Bulls
COUGH SYRUP AMI
great children » rem-
r cough, croup and
Ping cough < d n he ZcfiClK
to the baby with-
ar, and acts quick- m-,
... No Morphine or Chloroform.
- ' r 'ts Most effective and
cough syrup mothers can |
Take No Substitute
v 8 Cf' 11 * 1 •° V, ’"P has b.en in
.J? 5 ft? 1 y fr " 26 ieara 1 never
"Hbout It."
V, 1 ■' ,,ner . ! '“' l Washington St..
Free .. A -c. M«wac<i. m«i>
u.n IMar . 8.1t1m.r., M<>.
‘lngine’ They Idolized Kills‘Papa’
4*® 4* •!•••>
2 Made Orphans by Griffin Wreck
*•*
Dead Engineer’s Children Sorrow
Little Son and Daughter of
Thomas H. Gay Cannot Under
stand Fatal Accident.
One train caused sorrow in* the
home of Thomas H. Gay when the big
locomotive of which he was pilot
rolled down an embankment near
Griffin, Giu, Friday afternoon. An
other train brought home the sorrow
the following day. and it was not un
til then that little Thomas Gay and
hie sister, Katherine, fully realized all
they had lost by that mysterious
U i jißi
Wil
if ‘ s
V.. f .wW
stroke of fate that cut the rails from *
under "papa’s engine.”
Even the Southern Railway officials
aren’t certain what caused the dis
aster. But the little boy and the lit
tle girl had never dreamed that "pa
pas engine,” which had carried him
so fast and so far in the days gone by,
ever would betray him like that.
The Engine His Idol.
It had been the pride of the little
boy among his mates —the big. fine
engine his father drove He was en
vied among the boys as he told them
of the times he had perched on the
fireman's seat in the cab and watch
ed his father direct the great machine
dsftly among the strings of cars and
the other engines—but none so fine as
father’s —In the yards at the end of
a run.
Auid (of course) Thomas could never
have dreamed, as he planned to grow
up and be an engineer “like papa,”
that one day that fine, great engine
would bring him the first and great
est sorrow of his life
If anything were needed to com
plete the sorrow of that little boy, it
would be the knowledge that at last
Just a Trifle Larger Than
The Picture It Makes
Size
111 21x31
PREMOETTE JR.
The Finest Little Camera
For 55.00 You Ever Saw
We also have a complete line
of EASTMAN KODAKS,
PREMOS, BROWNIE CAM
ERAS, and Kodak Supplies
LET GLENN’S SUPPLY YOU
Bring Is Your Flints for
QUALITY DEVELOPING
VELOX PRINTING
and
BROMIDE ENLARGING
“We’re Specialists”
GLENN PHOTO STOCK CO. ‘
EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY j
117 PEACHTREE
11
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 2, 1913.
,f Little Thotnos Gay and his
sister Katherine, whose father
was killed in a wreck on the
Southern Railway at Griffin.
e
the pride of his heart had played him
cruelly false.
Funeral Service To-day.
And now all that remains Is the
funeral service, at 2:30 o’clock Sun
day afternoon. In the home at No. 682
Washington street, so often the ucene
of tne happy little family reunions at
the end of the day's work and the
long run.
The Rev. L. O. Bricker, pastor so
th Firs' Christian Church, win con
duct the service. The interment will
be at Westview Cemetery.
The booy of E. C. Pearson wae
taken Saturday afternoon to his old
home near Coving-ton. Ga. Services
will be Held to-day.
CHICKERING PIANOS WEAR WELL
Florida Dealer’s Testimony to Durability of
Instrument—Sells Piano Over
67 Years Old.
ISpretal to The Music TbadesJ
BOSTON, Oct. 28.—Chickering & Sons
are in receipt of a letter from the Ludden &
Bates Southern Music House, of Jackson
ville, Fla., that speaks volumes for the du
rability of the piano products of old and cel
ebrated Boston house. The letter, which
follows speaks for itself:
JACKSONVILLE, FLA., Oct. 15, 1913
MESSRS. CHICKERING & SONS,
BOSTON, MASS.
DEAR SIRS: —One of our South Florida represen
tatives, A. B. Hullinger, of Bradentown, Fla., recent
ly reports sale of a Chickering, No. 7,093, and while
the amount shown as purchase price is nominal, yet
the mere fact that the piano is still in use speaks
volumes for the durability of Chickering pianos.
We understand this instrutnent was sold on Feb
ruary 26, 1846, to Stephen Childs, and after sixty
seven years of service is now again sold.
We are wondering what can stop this apparently
irressistible source of usefulness and service in this
Chickering piano. There is an initiatory aristocracy
to the possession of a Chickoring, as we all know, in
its earlier stages, but this democracy of consistet ser
vice throughout sixty-seven years, with Jhe end not
yet in sight, is something to compel admiration and
almost reverence.
As pianos ordinarily serve, we can safely imagine
that four generations have used this instrument, and
its present durability is such that another generation
will receive its musical education before the piano is
discarded as wotrhless. All of this, too, in a climate
that does not contribute what other sections of the
country do in helping along the life of a piano.
Do you know, gentlemen, of an American-made
piano as old as this one that is actually salable to-day
as a piano, not from its more worth as h curiosity or
being retained for sentimental reasons? With re
gards,
Yours truly,
LUDDEN BATES SOUTHERN MUSIC HOUSE.
‘BORAX’SMITH
DISCOVERSH
55,000,000 RED
Great Deposits Near San Ber
nardino, Cal,, May Restore
Prestige of Former “King.”
RANDSBURG, CAL., Nov. I.—That
"Borax” Smith has obtained new bo
rax deposits in the southern part of
California, .possibly more extensive
and valuable than th® present Death
Valley holdings, is disclosed In the
reported purchase of a mineral claim
by John Rjan, manager of Smith’s
property.
The value of the new deposits is
variously estimated at from $5,000,000
to $10,000,000. They axe located tn
Kern Coupty, near the San Bernar
dino line, about 25 miles south of
Randsburg. Tests on the location
have shown the bed to be 60 feet
thick and only 40 feet under the sur
face. The claim comprißQ? ICO acres
on th® edge of an old lake.
The new' deposit is within five
miles of railroad transport a Lion. The
feature in the new find of the most
interest in financial circles is just
what bearing this will have on the
present affairs of the former “bofax
king.”
To dipcover, locate and develop
metalliferous lands in the desert pare
of San Bernardino, . the American
Trona corporation of Wilmington,
Del., has filed article® of incorpora
tion at San Bernardino.
The authorized capital stork of the
company is $12,300,000, divided into
125,000 shares.
Opening of $250,000
Hospital Is Delayed
Failure of City to Provide Mainte
nance Fund Hampers Jack
sonville Institution.
I JACKSONVILLE, Nov. I.—Owing
| to the fa’lure of Council to provide
I ufflcient funds in the budget for
’ maintenance, the new $250,000 St.
i Luke’s Hospital did not open to-day,
as had ben planned, and probably w ill
remain closed for months.
While the hospital is owned by the
St. T.uke’s Hospital Association, a
private corporation. It has been re
ceiving city patients in its old build
ing. its charitable work costing the
association nearly $20,000. or about
twice as much as the hospital has
been accustomed to receive from the
city.
With the building of the new hos-
I pital on ground valued at $50,000 and
donated by the city, the running ex
penses will be heavier than ever be
fore.
The hospital has been in operation
for about 40 years.
1 JACKSONVILLE TO HAVE
HARBOR MEET DELEGATES
b
; JACKSONVILLE, Nov. I—Jack
-5 sonvllle will bs represented at the
t next annual National Rivers and Har
3 bors Congress, to be held in Washing
ton D. C„ December 3-5. The Board
. of Trade Is planning to send a live
j delegation.
The Atlantic Deeper "Waterways
Association meets here November 18-
j 21. and the Mississlppi-tO-Atlantic
! Inland Waterways Association in Pa
-5 latka November 17-18.
fflß MODISTE
■ 535, ODD
HEART BUM
Daughter’s Craze for Dress Brings
Rich Old Manufacturer
Under Charm,
YORK, Nov. I.—Extravagance,
It seems, breeds extravagance. The
family of William Hughes, a 65-year-old
retired manufacturer of Brooklyn, will
ghe testimony to that effect.
If Hughes three daughters had been
satisfied with the bountiful store of fall
gowns they already possessed, they
would not have called Miss Mary I, Me
Intyre, a fascinating dressmaker, Into
their home They would not have thus
given their father opportunity to meet
her. to fall a slave to her captivating
manners, and to be embroiled In a
breach of promise suit, from which litl-
Stion the pretty dressmaker emerged
e exultant possessor of $35,000. The
amount, granted by verdict of a Brook
lyn Supreme Court jury, Is one of the
largest awards ever made tn a breach
of promise case in this State.
The trial, notable because of the
large amount Involved and the large
grant made, is to-day one of the inter
esting topics of New York’s converts- *
tlon. It was marked by a number of
bon mots from the attorneys, particu
larly a sarcastic characterization of
Mies Mclntyre by Hughes’ counsel
''She came into this courtroom, he
declared, "with a handkerchief in one
hand and eome smelling salts In the
other, prepared to take off the old gen
tleman s money.”
The three daughters aged man
ufacturer testified In his behalf and the
rase occupied four days, most of which
time was laken up In the reading of the
many letters which passed between
Hughes and his youthful inamorata.
Washington Irving
Is Sued for Divorce
Wife Leaves Grand Nephew of Au
thor After 32 Years —Trip to
Europe Blamed.
SAN IGIAN'CISCO, Nov I.—Wash
ington Irving, a grand nephew of the
famous author of Rip Van Winkle,
well known In San Francisco business
circles as the coast representative of
a Tendon Insurance company, was
sued for divorce, yesterday in Oak
land by Mrs. Isabelle Irving after 32
years’ m irried life
A trip to Europe taken by Irving
six months ago Is alleged to have fur
nished the foundation for the suit.
REVENUE OFFICE’RS CATCH
MOONSHINERS ‘NAPPING’
ROXIE. Nov. 1. W. F. Grimes and
L. I. Norris, of Murray County, went
to sleep while brewing 85 gallons of
moonshine and were "caught nap
ping" by United States Deputy Col
lector J. F. Camp and Deputy Mar
shal W. A. Wardlaw. who brought
them to Rome. The men were bound
over to the Federal court.
r -e,
A November Suit Sale
At January Prices!
At Frohsin’s---
To-morrow---
VTOW, in the very height nf the season—To-morrow—von will be able to buy the prettiest,
■L most fashionable TAILORED SUITS—at price-reductions which generally arc not of
fered you till January! £ f
The reason for this exceptional sale is that our business has been so brisk that, at this
early time, we have already many broken lots. These we have grouped—and they aggregate
a large assortment for you to choose from.
While it is true that there are not all sizes in any individual lot. it is equally true that all
sizes are here in the combined assortments of these handsome Tailored Suits for Misses and
Ladies.
I These garments are of the usual high-grade Frohsin standard, iu all respects—and are of
all the fashionable materials, in black, colors and mixtures.
i
The schedule of price-reductions follows:
Suits that were CJ 1 Q “7
$23.75, $24.75 and $27.75, now .. . . »T> -» O» •
Suits that were A *7
I $29.75, $32.75 and $34.75, now / U
No Charge for Alterations
A £” FROHSIN’S ~
I-- - - ;
Bryan in Kilts If
He Accepts SB,OOO
Offer to Lecture
Band Manager Wants Secretary in ■
Half-Hose Costume—Will Take
Him Without.
MILWAUKEE, Nov. I.—Wil
liam Jennings Bryan was wired
an offer by T.
P. J. Power,
owner of the
"Kilties" band.
to fill a four />
weeks' lecture tpArTiwK
engagement at
a salary of
$2,000 a week.
The Secretary
of State is ask
ed to begin the
tour as Chi
cago Novem
her 17. when wf
the Canadian
band opens
—. Wlten asked
A M r ’
would be ex
pected to wear
' B a®”
,£ Ewjr' cepted, Mana-
v [ rCj I « ger Power
Iktnl yjg said: “We
Ah® should like to
have him. but
will not insist
yjof tfr If that Is his
1 only objection
eX*" to accepting
the offer."
Campaign Opens for
Clarke Commission
Voters Ratify Bill for Popular Elec
tion of County Board
Members.
ATHENS, Nov. 1. -W|th the rati
fication by the people of Clarke
County of the bill passed by the Last
General Assembly providing for the
election of County Commissioners by
the people instead nf the Grand Jury',
as heretofore, what promises to be a
warm campaign for the places now
held by J. M. Hodgson, J. T. Pittark
and W. 8. Holman has opened. The
e?jction by popular vote conies off the
first Wednesday in December.
Two who have announced are Mr.
Hodgson, of the preset board, and
Claude Tuck. There Will be several
other announcements next week.
CANE JUICE LATEST
SODA FOUNTAIN FAD
THOMASVILLE, Nov. I—" Cane
juice, please," is the reply constantly
heard at the soda founts here now
when the customer Is asked his choice
of a drink. The juice Is unusually
sweet this season and everybody Is
drinking it. Thomasville claims to be
the first town in this section to in
stitute the serving of cane juice as
a soft drink and the example has been
followed tn other sections where
sugarcane grows
BSTTLEON FOR
WEALTH UNDER
DEOS OF BIOS!
Government Maintains Oil and .
Gas Land Belongs to In-
dian Tribes.
MUSKOGEE, OKLA,, Nov. I.—Ths
right of ownership and control of the
< rrek an i Cherokee nations to the
beds of the Arkansas and < 'imarron
Rivers is to be contested to the last
ditch.
This was made known when It was
announced that the United States
[ District Attorney’s office had received
erdera to appeal the Philip Mackey
• case to the Circuit '*ourt of Appeals,
and to the United States Supreme
Court., if need be, to finally determine
• the Interest of the two Indian nations '
. in the river beds.
. Portions of the beds of the Arkan- 1
sas and Cimarron are underlaid with .
enormous deposits of oil and gas. I
i while the sand and gravel rights alone i
amount to thouHand* annually.
Disputes Haskell Lease.
In appealing the Mackey care, on l
behalf of th#* two tribe«, the Govern- ’
ment will assert the claim of th*> In
dian nations to these valuable rights,
as well as the first interest In the oil
and gas mining leases recently grant
ed to C. N. Haskell and others by
the State School Department,
by authority of the decision of Dis
trict Judge Ralph E. Campbell tha’
the title to the river beds passed tr< m
the tribes to the State at statehood.
Some time ago members of tin
Mackey family granted an oil lease to
Cyrus E. Avery and others on a small
atrip of ground near Tulsa, between
the meandering line and the water
, line of the Arkansas River by virtue
of lie right that he land bounded
the Mackey allotment and was v :th-
In the meandering lines of the rl’-er
Revera.l wells were drllbd, Minch
came In at big figures.
Few Wells Drilled.
Tt was then that the Government
filed suit aga’nst various members of I
the Mackey family.
Few wells have been drilled, hut
the Government hopes by quick ac
tion to prevent the drilling of as
many wells as possible before the
case is finally decided.
Oil men do not > esitatc in declar
ing that the nil rights involved
amount to millions of dollars.
JACKSONVILLE ROTARY
CLUB AIDS NEW ARMORY i
JACKSONVILLE, Nov L—Much)
enthusiasm has been aroused here in i
behalf of the project for securing a ,
new National Guard armory. The
Rotary Club has adopted resolutions)
i ibnding the members to lend theln]
i personal eff< rts to carry an election
> November 4 h.r a bond issue for ar
mory purposes.
5A
NEW FIGHT DN
TD GUMP LIO
ST SAWNNAH
Judge Charlton Orders inquiry
and Ministers Urge Changes
in Petit Jury Lists.
SAVANNAH, Nov. I.—What 1»
thought to be opening shot in a fight
to put the ltd nn Savannah wax
sounded this week when Superior
Judge Charlton charged the grand
jury to Investigate the liquor traffio
Hla charge was followed by emphatic
stand on the part of the Rev. T. D,
Ellis.
Four times since the prohibition act
went. Into effect the ministers and
Men and Religion forces have at
tempted to close the district and re
strict th esale of intoxicants to near
i beer. Such strong opposition to the
| fight developed on every hand that It
i was considered futile and the move
ment stopped without anything be
| Ing accomplished. Onlv recently, the
I ministers adopted a resolution favor
. Ing the abandonment of the antl
llquor fight.
To-morrow sermons vdll be preach
i ed from a number of pulpits and tt Is
| expected the campaign will he
I launched then.
FREE TO
ASTHMA SUFFERERS
A New Home Cure ''"'hat Anyone Can ?
? Uae Without Discomfort or Loss ’
of Tln»e.
We have a New Method that cures £
\ Asthma and we want you to try it >
'/ at our expense. No matter whether '
? jour case is of long standing or re- J
< cent developmonr. whether it is pres- S
j eni as occasional or chronic Asth- )
? ma. jou should sand for a frre trial {
( ->f our method <o matter in what $
climate you live, pc matter In what )
> our age or occupation. If you pre j
J ’ oubb d with aj thmp. our method (
\ should relieve you promptly >
(* We especially to send It to •'
' thesp apparently hopeless cases, (
' where all form- of Inhalers, douches, ?
/ plum preparations, fumes, "patent?
? smoke.'.” etc., have failed. We want (
( to show everyone at our own ex- \
> pense, that this ntw method is de- ,>
J; signed to end Rll difficult breatiiFrg. ’
j; all wheezing, and all those terrible S
} paroxyiams Rt once and for all tirr° {
/ 'I his free offer Is too important ’o ■
< neglect a single day Write now and J
\ then begin the method at one* £-■ nd '
)no money Simply mall coupon be- {
i low. Do it To-day
'—
free asthma coupon. ;
TOONTIER ASTHMA CO.. Room i
> SFO-H Niagara and Hud’ n Sts.. ?
R Buffalo N. Y. j
1 ( <
I / Send free trial of ycur method to; ?
I
; t