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PRESIDENT HAS A
JOB FOR GOETHALS
WILSON WANTS GOETHALS TO
BUILD THE ALASKAN
ROAD.
DOES NOT WANT TO LOSE HIM
Colonel to Be Made Civil Governor of
Canal Zone—New York
Move Opposed.
Washington.—Col. George W. Goe¬
thals will be made civil governor of
the canal zone, and when he gets
through with his work there an effort
will be made to have him construct
the proposed Alaskan railway. This
was the opinion expressesd by several
persons close to the administration,
COL GEORGE W. GOETHALS
m »****$ & mt
As a reward for his service in Panama
it is reported Colonel Goethals will
be placed in charge of the construc¬
tion of the Alaskan railway.
commenting on reports that the chief
engineer eventually would become the
commissioner of police of New York
City.
Mayor Mitchell of New York is ex¬
pected here to speak at a banquet of
the University Club, and it is likely
that he will talk with President Wil¬
son on tiie same day about the status
of Colonel Goethals. It is believed
the president will tell Mayor Mitchell
that he is desirous of keeping Colonel
Goethals. that his engineering ability
may not lie lost to the United States
URGES SCHOOLS IN SUMMER
Commissioner Ciaxton So Urges—Prac¬
tice of Closing Termed Primitive.
Washington. — Characterizing the
practice of closing public schools in
summer as “primitive "and preposter¬
ous” and declaring the most "import¬
ant problem of today was to keep
city hoys from three months’ contam¬
ination in the streets.” P. P. Ciaxton,
commissioner of the United States bu¬
reau of education, approved a plan
which would mean continuous school
sessions and through which two mil¬
lion children might be enlisted in voca¬
tional work.
A program for summer vocational
work of public school children was
submitted to the . commissioner by
Clyde Alison Mann, secretary of the
American Society for Thrift.
“The teachers should teach nature
study and the principles of horticul¬
ture,” said Mr. Ciaxton,
“Public schools of the country
resent an investment in
grounds and equipment of nearly
billion dollars, and this
stands idle about one-quarter of
time for no other reason than
in primitive days both teachers
pupils were needed on the farms
or four months in the summer.
Duehay Will Inspect Federal
Washington.—Francis H. Duehay.
newly appointed superintendent
prisons, will shortly visit Atlanta,
to inspect the United States peniten
tiarv there. His appointment is a
sonal one of Attorney Genera!
nolds. and he does not have to
confirmed by the senate, so he
enter upon his new duties at once.
Duehay declined to make an
upon the charges of Julian
and others affecting the conduct
Warden Moyer.
GEORGIA.
GEN. LOUIS BOTHA
Genera! Botha, premier of the Union
of 8outh Africa, seems to be standing
firm against the labor agitators and
has proclaimed martial law In reply
to the order for a general strike.
JAPANESE MAKE PROTEST
JAPAN IS STILL GROWLING AT
THE UNITED STATES ABOUT
CALIFORNIA.
Japanese Foreign Minister Says Amer¬
ican Attitude on Alien Land Laws
Is Unsatisfactory.
Washington.—An address by Baron
Nobuaki Makino, the Japanese for¬
eign minister, to the parliament of
Japan, outlining the status of negotia¬
tions over the California alien land
legislation and declaring that the Jap¬
anese government “had come to - see
the necessity of considering some oth¬
er ways for solution of the question,"
because the replies of the United
States had not been found satisfactory,
was cabled in full from Tokio to the
Japanese embassy here.
Thc- address, which was not com¬
mented upon in official circles, an¬
nounced that flie third note of protest
presented to Secretary Bryan by Am¬
bassador Chinda on August 18 remain¬
ed unanswered. It also revealed the
fact that the ambassador, under in¬
structions from Tokio, saw President
Wilson on March 5, the day after the
president’s inauguration, and asked
that he make an effort to stop the
threatened legislation in California,
which since has been enacted. In
part he said:
“In the state legislature of Califor¬
nia the bills of anti-Japanese charac¬
ter regularly have been introduced at
its sessions for more than ten years
past. Thanks to the good offices
earnestly exercised by the United
States government and thanks also to
proper stops opportunely taken by the
people and government of Japan, noth¬
ing of serious moment did fortunately
occur, but at the fortieth session of
the legislature-which assembled last
year a bill known as the Webb bill,
aiming at prohibition of ownership of
real property by Japanese was passed
by an overwhelming majority.
HITS ‘‘PURER DEMOCRACY”
Former President Attacks “Impractical
Reformers" and "Demagogues.”
Philadelphia. — Former President
Taft called a halt in the movement
toward “purer democracy" and greater
social and individual freedom. In a
speech at the commencement exercis¬
es of a local business college he ar¬
raigned “impractical reformers” and
“demagogues” who seek to arouse
class consciousness. He took issue with
the tendency to inject more democ¬
racy into educational methods, and de
clarde the spread of "lubricity” in lit¬
erature and on the stage, and indi¬
rectly in education, was a danger to
young men and women of the coun¬
try.
Mr. Taft admitted the benefits of
many modern crusades, but added :
"The people are sufficiently aroused.
Now let common sense prevail to dis¬
tinguish between what is practical and
what is luring but deceitful in its prom¬
ise.”
Job Landed for Roberts.
Washington. 1 —Judge W. T. Roberts
of Douglas, Ga.. former solicitor gener¬
al of Tallapoosa circuit, has been nam¬
ed by Secretary of Commerce Redfield
as special attorney for the bureau
corporations. This important position
was lauded for Judge Roberts through
tlte influence of William J. Harris, di¬
rector of the census, who is very close
to the secretary of commerce. Mr.
Harris and Judge Roberts served in
the state senate together and occupied
adjoining seats. Judge Roberts
chairman of the judiciary
Gill REPORT
13,589,171 BALES GINNED PRIOR TO
JANUARY 16—INCLUDED WERE
97,034 ROUND BALES.
NINTH REPORT IS ISSUED
Half Million Bales Increase Over This
Time Last Year — Ginnings by
States and Comparisons.
Washington.—The ninth cotton gin
nnig report of the census bureau for
the season announced that 13,589,171
bales of cotton counting round as half
bales, of the growth of 1913 had been
ginnned prior to January 16, to which
date during the past seven years the
ginning average 97.5 per cent, of the
entire crop.
Ginnings prior to January 16 by
states with comparisons for last year
and other big crop years ginned prior
to the date in those years, follows:
States. Year, Giinnlngs.
Alabama.....1913 1,475,642
1912 1,307,738
1911 1,638,699
Arkansas . , . .1913 967,729
1912 741,282
1911 797,597
Florida.....1913 65,751
1912 57,32!
1911 ' 88,177
Georgia.....1913 2,316,304
1912 1,781,232
—19H 2,657,984
Louisiana . . , .1913 420,094
1912 369,076
1911 357,758
Mississippi . . .1913 1,176,626
1912 952,520
1911 1,061,859
North Carolina. .1913 784,402
1912 876,493
191t 696,988
Oklahoma . . . .1913 825,112
1911 1912 965,752 915,563 | !
South Carolina. .1913 1,369,434
1912 1.192,574
1911 1,536,085 358,297 ]
Tennessee . . . .1913 i
1912 252,890 i
1911 388,293
'kexas ... a* 1 .1913 3,718,725
1912 4,509,220
1911 3,964,620
Other States . .1913 11.052
1912 - 83,831
1911 114,176
The ginnings of sea island cotton,
prior to January 16, by states, fol
lows:
Years. Florida. Georgia. S. Car.
1913 . . . .25,356 42,650 8,170
1912 . . . .21,085 39,543 0,629
1911 . . . .39,340 65.577 4,950
1909 . . . .27,883 51,072 13,231
BANDITS ROB MAIL TRAINS
Three Amateurs Believed to Be Re¬
sponsible for Train Robbery.
Chattanooga, Tenn.—Three men, be¬
lieved to have been rank amateurs,
held up Southern railway train No.
41, local to Tuscumbia, at Facklers,
Ala., at about 8:20 at night. Ascord
ing to the best authority in this city,
there was nothing of value in either
express or baggage car, which were
looted, the robbers finding only per¬
ishable articles of food, a lot of trunks
and a pile of sacks containing second
class mail.
The train arrived at Facklers at 8:20
and while standing at the station was
boarded by three masked men. Two
miles west of that place two of the
men entered the express ear and took
possession of the pouches and safe.
At a given signal, or in consequence
of an understanding, he compelled the
engineer to stop the train while the
others uncoupled the two cars in the
front, one of which was a baggage
car containing federal pouch mail,
mostly newspapers, and then forced
the engineer to run twelve miles into
tive country.
Chicago.—With the assistance of two
reluctant hut badly scared porters, a
lone bandit held up four passengers
on the rear sleeper of the Michigan
Central passenger train dde here from
Detroit. The robber entered the train
at Jackson. Mich., and left it about
fifteen minutes later, when Lewis
Thombs, one of the porters, signaled
for the emergency brakes.
Mrs. Wilson Gives $1,000 to School.
Rome, Ga.—A feature of unusual In¬
terest at the celebration of the twelfth
anniversary of the famous Martha
Berry school here was the announce¬
ment of the endowment by Mrs. Wood
row Wilson of the Edward W. Ax
son scholarship of $1,000 from money
obtained from the sale of her pictures.
The scholarship was in honor of her
brother, who was drowned near Rome,
the old family home. Many alumni
from Georgia and Alabama attended
the exercises and most of them made
j interesting talks praising the school
BARONESS DE PALLANDT
Baroness May de Pallandt, once of
Chicago, Is being sued in London for
$20,000 by Dr. Ernest Villiers Appleby,
formerly connected with the Univer¬
sity of Minnesota, because she de¬
faulted In payment of notes given for
the purchase of pearls and indorsed
by him. The baroness was May Du
gus when she was mprried in 1893.
She was separated from her husband
in 1901, and two years later John D.
Kilpatrick, a wealthy New Yorker,
committed suicide because she refused
to get a divorce and marry him.
WILSON’S MESSAGE LAUDED
REPUBLICANS AND PROGRES¬
SIVES JOIN DEMOCRATS IN
ENDORSING WILSON.
O. P. Leader Mann and Senators
Kenyon and Gallinger Endorse
the Message.
Washington. — President Wilson’s
suggestion to congress in his trust
address that the government and busi¬
ness men are ready to meet each other
half way “in a common effort to square
business methods with both public
opinion and the law,” fell on atten
tive ears and struck a responsive
chord in representatives of differing
political parries.
The atmosphere of co-operation and
“accommodation” in the message; the
reforms proposed, expressed in terms
of conservatism, and the spirit of
friendliness to supersede antagonism
j in dealing with big business, which
dominated the president’s thoughts,
aroused expressions of approval from
all sides. Few discordant notes were
sounded in comments from members
of the congress w ho are to pass upon
legislation urged to prohibit monopoly
and hold men of business within the
law.
LORD STRATHC0NA IS DEAD
One of the Most Noted of the Build¬
ers of Canada Dies in London.
London, England.—Lord Stratheona
and Mount Royal, high commissioner
for Canada, died here.
Deatli was due to prostration, the
result of a severe attack of catarrh.
He had been ailing, however, since
j the death of his wife last November,
| which proved a great shock.
| Lord Strathcona’s life spanned near
! ly a century and his active career a
j ! full three-quarters. “The best way
to live to an old age," he explained,
! when found at his desk in London
j on his ninety-third birthday annlver
| sary on August 6, last, "is by not
] thinking about age at all, but just
| going on doing your work.”
j j Donald From Smith, his eighteenth a sturdy year, Scot, when, he sailed as
| for which Canada, would to have his ninety-fourth been year,
completed in
i next August, he lived up to his maxim
\ of work. For the past six years he
had been periodically reported as
! “about to resign" the post of high
commissioner for Canada, but it was
death and not his resignation that ter¬
minated his work.
Eugenic Law Declared Void
Milwaukee, Wis.—The Wisconsin
eugenic law, which provides for the
suance of marriage licenses only
a certificate of a clean bill of
was declared unconstitutional by
F. C. Esehweiler of the circuit
The case will go to the supreme
Judge Esehweiler held that the
genics law has unreasonable
limitations so far as physicians’
are concerned, and that it is an
reasonable and material impairment
the right of persons to enter into
“CASCARETS" FOR
LIVER; BOILS
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh
with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with
Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
Purgative Waters!
Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg¬
ulate the stomach, remove the sour
and fermenting food and foui gases,
take the excess bile from the liver
and carry out of the system all the
constipated waste matter and poisons
In the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will make you
feel great by morning. They work
while you sleep—never gripe, sicken
or cause any inconvenience, and cost
only 10 cents a box from your store.
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
have Headache, Biliousness, Coated
ToDgue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or
Constipation. Adv.
Safety First.
“I’ll bet that in days gone by men
] did not talk back to their wives in
the fashion that they do now-a-days’”
“The telephone is certainly a great
Invention.”
Important to Miothere
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of i
_ _
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
Dees Yours?
“Are you fond of moving pictures?”
“No, but my wife makes me do It
every Sunday whether I like it or
not.”
Laugh Av/ay the Clouds.
Mistakes are to be laughed at. If
one were to take seriously every little
mistake he made life would become a
burden to him. Laugh at your own lit¬
tle mistakes, and do not feel grieved
If others laugh^tl them. Laughing will
help you remember to avoid them an¬
other time quite as well as giving
away to serious regrets. Some peo¬
ple are forever taking themselves to
task for some shortcoming. They are
the over-conscientious ones. If we act
foolishly on the impulse of a moment,
it is no more fair to punish ourselves
than to punish a child for a little mis¬
take. It is right to look for the error
and acknowledge it. If one has
wronged another, he ought to confess
it and be more careful; then put it out
of mind. To grow morose and solemn
is to commit a second fault. No one
is doing any good to himself or others
by constantly earing the bread of peni¬
tence. The only time to remember a
mistake is when one is tempted again
to the same fault. Daily and hourly
keeping up self-reproach, one is worn
out. This does not mean never to
listen to the warnings of conscience,
but to see the fault, start afresb and
keep cheerful and hopeful.
FRIENDLY TIP.
Restored Hope and Confidence.
After several years of indigestion
and its attendant evil influence on the
mind, it is not very surprising that
one finally loses faith in things gen¬
erally.
A N. Y. woman writes an interesting
letter. She says:
“Three years ago I suffered from an
attack of peritonitis which left me in
a most miserable condition. For over
two years I suffered from nervousness,
weak heart, shortness of breath, could
not sleep, etc.
"Mv appetite was ravenous but I
felt starved all the time. I had plenty
of food but it did not nourish me be¬
cause of intestinal indigestion. Medi¬
cal treatment did not seem to help. I
got discouraged, stopped medicine and
did not care much whether I lived or
died.
“One day a friend asked me why I
didn’t try Grape-Nuts food, stop drink¬
ing coffee and use Postum. 1 had lost
faith in everything, but to please my
friend I began to use both and soon
became very fond of them.
“It wasn’t long before I got some
strength, felt a decided change in my
system, hope sprang up in my heart
and slowly but surely I got better. I
could sleep very well, the constant
craving for food ceased and I have
better health now than before the at¬
tack of peritonitis.
j “My husband and I are still using
Grape-Nuts and Postum.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road tc Yvell
ville,” in pkgs. “There’E a Reason.”
Ever read the above letter? A aea
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, tme, and full of hunuto
I Interest.