Newspaper Page Text
■ 111
ATLANTA 1910
20 PAGES
The Atlanta Georgian.
ATLANTA 1910
20 PAGES
VOL. I. NO. 92.
ATLANTA, GA., SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1906.
T>I> rpTT . fn Atlanta TWO CENT®.
A UIV^Lj. On Trains FIVE CENTS.
“MOST OF THOSE WHO PROTESTED
HAD BEEN DISCIPLINED AT HOME
FOR INFRACTION OF THE RULES
—DR. AMOS FOX.
Petition by Soldiers for
Investigation Creates
a Big Sensation.
NO ACTION TAKEN
YET BY THE HOUSE
The Georgian Recently
Made Private Investiga
tion of the Home.
"Mo*t of the men who signed tho
petition asking an Investigation of the
Soldiers' Home were Inmates who at
one time or another had been disc)
pllned for drunkenness or some other
Infraction of the rules," said Dr. Amos
Fox Saturday morning.
Further than that he would say
nothing regarding the reading In the
house of representatives Friday of the
petition drawn up by Inmates of the
soldiers' Home, tuiklng for an invest!
gatlon of the management of the Insti
tution and protesting against harsh
treatment. Insufficient food and other
alleged Ills which has caused consid
erable of a sensation all over the state.
The Soldiers' Home was built by tho
people of Georgia and was largely the
result of work by Henry W. Grady.
It has always been a cherished Insti
tution, and tfie charges of mismanage
ment brought out by some of the In
mates haa aroused a great deal of In
terest.
The appropriation of {7,500 for a new
hospital was passed by the house Fri
day, despite the fact that several In
mates of the home protested against
It as unnecessary..
During the discussion of this meas
ure In the house, Mr. Mill kin.
Wayne, read the petition from tw
of the Inmates of the home. No In
vestigating committee has as yet been
appointed.
THE G£ORGIAN~HAS MADE
INVESTIGATION OF HOME.
'Several* days ngo a representative' of
The Georgian, learning that complaints
had been made of conditions at the
home, paid a visit to that Institution
and mado a number of Inquiries os to
the treatment of the Inmates. Not only
was the superintendent Interviewed,
but direct questions were addressed to
the veteran's who are In the home, and
who should .have no object In conceal
ing conditions. No definite complaints
of present condition* were made,
though almoat every man made tome
reference to hit dlesatlefactlon under
the former superintendent, John A.
Thompaon. The present superintend
ent, Captain Robert I* Berry, hlmaelf
a veteran, gave every evidence of hdv*
Ing the Interest of the men at heart,;
though he admitted that he could not
provide everything desired from the
funds at his command.
"Superintendent Thompeon waa a
former police captain,” said one Inmate
of the home. "Hie training did not fit
him to care' for Invalid ana aged men,
such as were In his charge. We were
treated very harshly sometimes."
It was stated that one. man was
dismissed because he curled Amos
Fox. treasurer of the home, although
Dr. Fox waa not present at the time.
This man had subsequently been per
mitted to return to the Institution.
Complaints About Former Food.
Complaints of the quality of food
formerly served were made, and It was
stated that sometimes meat was pur
chased which was not In good condi
tion. No complaints as to the food
served at present were heard.
An Inspection of the home showed
that the rooms and corridors are kept
scrupulously clean. The rooms now
used for tha hospital are bright dnd
sunny, but are on the second floor,
where It would be difficult to remove
the patients should Are break out. They
are too small for tha accommodation
of the eight or ten patients usually
confined to their beds and the elck men
cannot have the privacy desirable. It
has been urged that the hospital can
be removed to the library room, but
this room appeared to be too smell and
Is not located In a desirable position.
Captain Barry talked freely of the
home and Its conditions. He etated
that he had taken charge on August 1
and had not had time thoroughly to
familiarise hlmaelf with details, but he
bellevsd the Inmstes were fairly satis-
“SHOULD INVESTIGATE,”
SAYS BUSH IN HOUSE
Mr. Bush, *of Miller county, brought up the Soldiers' Home matter
'In the house of representatives Saturday morning. In voting on the Gor
don statue measure, he catted attention to the fact that no attention had
been paid by the house to the petition presented by the inmates of the
home. v
"The house has discriminated against those veterans,” he said. "Wyto
.say they have been mistreated* I don't know Amos Fox, but I don't
wwj what Fox It is, I think we should listen to tho appeal of these old
"I AUDI7 ACCOUNTS,"
SA YS WM. S. THOMSON
William S. Thomson, vice president of the board of trustees of the
Soldiers' Home, etated Saturday that there waa no ground for the state
ment made In the petition that the treasurer's accounts were not audited.
"Every month Dr. Fox brings to ms the bills contracted during that
month and they are carefully gone over by me, as chairman of the finance
commlitee, and then at the quarterly meeting the committee as a whole
goes over them. As far as I have been able to Judge from on examination
of the goods purchased he gets far better value* for the money expended
than I could ns an Indlvidu&l.”
"Do you know anything of the personnel of the men who have signed
the petltioil, Mr. Thomson?"
"No, I am not familiar with .any of the names except that of Clarke.
He made a number of complaints aome time elnce, wh|ch, on Investiga
tion, we found to be groundless. I shall be very glad Indeed If the leg
islature will appoint an Investigating committee. W* have Investigated
matters out there several times and find everything aa well aa possibly
could be for the amount of money we have to spend. Dr. Fox has his
heart In the work, and being a veteran, Is devoted to the home, and Is
one of the beet friends that It has.
GAIN OF $4,038,400
FOR FULTON COUNTY
In the City Is $2,936,318 and For County
Districts $1,102,082—Last Year’s Gain
Not Quite Three Million Dollars.
A total gain in the valuation of taxable property in Fulton county for
the year 1006 of 94,038,400 Is shown by the annual report propnred by Tax
Receiver Armlstead and made public Saturday afternoon. This la a much
larger gain than usual and greatly In excess of the amount expected by
Mr. Armlstead. According a Igw i>*need laarmftMhe AtMMa XHfs Light
Company paid taxes on 8500,000 worth of property to the comptroller gen
eral. In past years this amount has been credited to the county tax
valuation., If the old law had remained in force the total amount of gain
would have been 84,538,400. The total gaIn of laet year waa not quite
three millions.
TAKE SHELTER
Loaded Cartridges Are
Fired Into Regu
lars.
Special to The Georgian.
Chattanooga, Tenn. Aug. II.—Dur
ing the sham battle at the Chlckamau-
ga maneuvers several load bullets were
fired by the soldier* either In the First
Georgia or Tw elfth o.valry, Into oppos
ing lines, and a private of the Sev
enteenth infantry was wou%ded by a
bullet in the arm.
Officers are investigating the mat
ter, but it is believed'that loaded shelhi
were placed In the guns by mistake.
Bullets whizzed Into the air thick and
fast, and the soldiers ran behind trees
and other objects t* ofedpe injury.
The First South ‘ h* llna regiment
has arrived at tho |.:irk. The Third
Tennessee will go Into camp this after
noon and a Mississippi battalion will
arrive soon.
HE USES TOWEL
TO KILL WOMAN
The official
Districts.
figures are os follows;
1806.
1800.
Gain.
Loss.
AdamavlIIe .. ..
174,170
118,025
15.245
Rattle Hill .. ..
128,715
188,450
dim
Blackball
608,555
666,425
. 01,870
Bryant*
108,6.25
/ 111,110 .
2.085
Buckhead ..' ..
218,065
241,665
1,600
College Park .. .
288,726
878,566
73,840
Collin*
428,816
554,125
127,290
Cooks
. .... .. .. 1,804,045
1,430,460
135.415
East Point
680,330
818.170
146,040
Edge wood
171,110
162,885
1.SS5
Hapevill^
Oak Grove .. ..
141,685
160,256
' 18,670
844,630
361,260
7,880
Peachtree
842,240
1,303,071
861,835
South Bend .. .
281,140
387,640
116,200
....
.City and county colored, 1805, 11,184,510.
City and county colored, 1*00, 11,108,156.
Gain of 1008. 121.855.
Total gain, country districts, white 11,084, 800.
Total gain, country districts, colored, 128,885.
Total gain, all districts, 11,108,665.
Total loss, country districts, 16,470.
Total gain, country white, end city and country schools, 11,102,012.
City whites. 1005, 155,210,740.
City whites, 1800, 161,160,051.
Gain, {2.810,118
Grand total gain for county, colored and white, city and country,
14.018.400.
Cheatham Is Asked To Resign
By the S. C. Cotton Growers
Special to The Georgian.
Greenville, 8. C_ Aug. 11.—At Spartanburg today the county cotton
growers are In session, and a phon* message from there says a resolu
tion has been passed calling on Secretary Richard Cheatham to resign.
fled under his management He said
he waa trying to tr«at them like gen
tlemen, not prisoners, was using per
suasion Instead of harshness and had
not had a moment's trouble wltb any
man,
"Left to Treasurer Fox.”
Captain Barry was'not certain Just
how much money was at his disposal
for the use of the home. These mat
ter* were left to Treasurer Amos Fox.
Dr. Fox doe* all tha buying. When-
aver we want anything we write an
order and he buys It and sends It out,”
said Captain Barry. No, he has not
refused us anything we asked for, that
I remember. I think he buys a good
quality of everything. I don’t know
anything about the accounts. He draws
the money and pays It out. I think
the home Is doing very well. Of course,
I have heard oomplalnt* sometime!, but
they are of ’ the kind that old men
naturally make. The old soldiers here
are living better than most of them
ever did at home.”
By I’rlv/itc Leased Wire,
New York, Aug. 11.—A tall, slender
man of dark complexion wee being
hunted everywhere In the city by the
police today In connection with the
myaterloua murder of Mrs. Marla Pea-
cora In her homo at So. 52 1-1 Charles
street. Jealousy l« believed to have
prompted the crime.
According to other occupants of the
house, this tnnn, snhl to bo a friend
f tho fiend wnmnn. enti i ed I .■] mom*
nd left nerretlt t .tent' ml llf.es I" f lie
she wns discovered Iting qn tier boil.
UMB.sdeii-Br^f' srrfj. m tiwli twwra
tightly around her throat,
Mrs. Perom v ■■ about 8a yen re old.
Her life l« shrouded In mystery. Whrit
she did for n lit Ing no one seems to
know, hut she nlways hud ’ plenty of
money, which she kept In the banks
while living In miserly fashion.
Her husband left her several years
ago. She hod two children In Chicago
and there she sent remittances to them
regularly.
OFF TO THE WOODS
ATLANTA IS GOING.
Jl
MRS. LONGWORTH INSULTED HOWELL CUES
BVTHE WI0OWOF WAGNER dittcd prpiy
HHHtohokesmith
Snubbed Because
America Flocked to
Hear “Parsifal.”
SCHUMANN-HEINK
GIVES A WELCOME
President’s Daughter -and
Husband Return. Satur
day from Eufopo.
By Prtrate Leased Wire.
New York, Aug. 11—Mr. end Mrs.
Nicholas Longworth are due from Ko
rop* this afternoon on the.American
liner 81. Paul. They will go at once
to Sagamore'Hill and spend aome time
with President Rooeevelt's family. Tha
Sylph, lha president's yacht, has gone
down the bay to meet them and take
them to Oyater Bay.
A cable dispatch from Berlin tells of
th* American colony thsr* being great
ly exercleed by the manner In which
Mrs. Longworth was snubbed by the
uncrowned csarlne of Bayreuth, Frau
Coslma Wagner, widow of the com
poser. It Is asserted positively that
President Roosevelt's daughter was
deliberately Insulted by Frau Wagner
that she might vent her spite on the
American people for patronising "Par
sifal” on their own aoll In opposition to
her wishes.
The treatment of the Imngworths In
nayreuth was most humiliating, nnd
compared strikingly to their reception
In Berlin and many of the greater Ger
man cities. Frau Coslma caused th*
command to go forth that the Long-
worth* should practically bo Ignored.
The only genuine welcome accorded
NICHOLA8 LONGWORTH.
He and hit bride, who was insult
ed by Frau Wagner, arrive
Saturday from Europe.
to President Roomvelt's daughter came
from Mme. Hchumann-Helnfc, who af
fronted Frau Wagner by rushing up
nnd effusively embracing the vlnltoMn
full view of a terrace full of music
lovers.
PL A Y BY JULIAN HARRIS
ACCEPTED AND WILL BE
PRODUCED HUS SEASON
Comes Back With
Card of Scorching
Invective.
DEMPSEY SUES
TO RECOVE It *sih)
Declares Hoke Smith
Not Give Him Bquar
Deni as Attorney.
I >i.l
The following card has been la-n.
by Albert Howell, Jr.. In t
Hoke Smith's Statement Issued Thor,
day:
Atlanta, an., Aug. in. 1808,
To Hie Public: •
1 notice In The Atlanta Jmirn.il. M
links Hmlth by the liberal use >r
lines and a characteristic profusion .
Innuendo, undertakes to shift from hi
own shoulders full responsibility r
the miserable part he line played in th
controversy between himself and Id
former client, Mr. H. D. Dempeey.
Personally 1 should have prrfnre
to have no connection with the matte
but when Mr. Dempsey cam* i" m
as an attorney at law, to protect hi
rights In a transaction In which h
convinced me that he had been foull
wronged by Mr. Hmlth, I ngrcl t. .1
and'1 shall not be driven h am id
When Mr. Dempi
were made public, I stated
flth would not undertake
ally deny them uniter oath,
f the public to it
. ■ has been fully
00000000000000000000000000
•'Me for the rhubarbs," soys the O
0 gent with the spottod shirt nnd O
U tnc checked britches as he hikes O
0 away from town and on to the 0
0 wilds of Llthla nnd other week- 0
0 end Joints. . . ,
0 But how foolish! 0
O For does not the weather man, O
Ith all the authority that his po- O
0 sltlon gives him, declare that there O
will be: O
Showers Saturday night and 0
O Sunday? O
0 Saturday Temperatures: 0
7 o'clork a. m 71 degrees O
_ 8 o’clpck a. m .75 degrees 0
0 9 o'clock a. 77 degrees 0
0 10 o'clock am. 78 degrees 0
0 11 o’clock a. m.
0 12 o'clock noon
O 1 o'clock p. in.
0 2 o’clock p. m.
O
OOOOOOOOOOO0OO0OO O0OOOOOOO ! My prominent In tha
..11 degrees 1
..88 degrees
..8f degrees
A piny by Julian Harris, of Atlanta.
i 1" HI Jiv. "po d Nison
mermad, the prominent theatric*
Mgers, nnd will In nil probability he
produced this fall. Its premier will he
given In tho South, possibly In Atlanta,
after which It will be taken East.
The play la a three-act farce com
edy, It la called "The Girl From
Keith's.”
Announcement of the arreptsnee nnd
preparation for the production Is made
In tho following statement Iseued Fri
day from Philadelphia:
Nixon A Zimmerman's attractions—
Henry B. Irving, eon of the late Kir
Henry, In his father's new plays,
Viola Allen, In Bhakeapearan revival*.
‘Twelfth Night," "Wlnter'e Tale,” and
"Cymbellne,;" Willard Spencer’s new
opera, "Rosalie;” Thomas 42. Sea, In
"Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde," 'The Olod-
lator," "Tho Bells," nnd standard plays;
the operatic extrevsganu, "Simple
Simon:" Miss Mary Kmersnn, In f'han-
nlng Pollock's 'Tha Utile oray Lady"
nnd "Ills Majesty and the Maid;" Por
ter J. White, In a big production of
E. H, Rothem’s 'The Proud Prince;”
Tom Walters, In his muslrnl play,
'King of Lnughland.” nnd Julian Har
ris' new comedy. 'The Girl From
Keith's." In reserve. "Blue Gras*" and
‘Spangles.”
Clean-Cut Comedy.
As to Julian Harris' play. It la a
clean-cut farce comedy, with no piuslc
nnd no horse play. It Is built on solid
principles, and there la In It none of
the blssrre, nothing of the extrava
gant. It depends on no one situation
or trick of slag* craft.
The machinery of 'The Olrl From
Keith's” Is that of mistaken Identity-
old a* the "Comedy of Errors," and as
new as a last season's' tucceaa. In
"The Olrl From Keith'*" th* mistaken
Identity Is raised to the third power
and worked oat by an entirely new
method. Abaurdly Impossible aa lha
plot may seem to be In th* abstract. It
Is developed III such msnner as to con
vince one not merely that It Is real,
but that It Is tha moet natural thing
In the world.
The lines are bright, epigrammatic
end not merely euperflclally smart, but
take a fling at aome of the questions of
the day. Social and political.
First Play From th* South.
Although the South has been vsrla-
llteratur* of
America for a hundred years, this sec
tion has been conspicuous by Its ab
sence from the department -of the
drama "The GlrL From Keith’*" ’ ls
probably the flrst play written by a
Southerner to be accepted and pro
duced by a large Eastern theatrical
Arm. Should Ihta play prove to be Ih*
success Messrs. Nixon A Zimmerman
believe It w(H be, the South will have
entered a wedge which will’make easier
the reception of Its dramatic efforts.
"The Olrl From Keith's" purports to
be nothing more than a .clean farce
comedy, but It will make the way tor
more serious and more substantial
work.
A* to the author—Julian Harris It
ons of the South's most widely known
newspaper men. At the age of to he
I* giving up Journalism for more se
rious and less ephemeral work. Be
tween the ages of 17 tod 8* he arose
from the position of humblest “cub
reporter" to that of a newspaper man
of rare equipment. At 24 he waa
made managing editor of The Atlanta
Constitution, and hul. th * distinction
•tiwi
of being the young*
ian In America
n*t the only victlr
grievance ngalnat
twelve montha I hai
the cowardly fn*fnc
attack* Mr. Hmlth hi
pelf and through hi*
me, for the *o!e r
f Jo
to hold *ucli
great da Hie*.
He le the •
Karri* and took to Journo
erature from Inatlnrt.
'The Olrl From Keith’s'
nit tod to
1898
The Dlvor
Grand Block
here.
And. like
lr a trunk full
tie first
rinager,
miner.