Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, February 28, 1913, Image 2
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY,' FEBRUARY ‘28, 1913.
TO KEEP YOUTH
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ulal
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B.
OR. PIERCE’S PLEASANT PELLETS
icgiiiate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
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,Si
HIS WIFE IS
Guest in Hotel Heard Some One Running From Room Be
fore Last Shot Was Fired-I nquest Is Held - Ambulance
. Man and Policeman Both Declare Shots Could Not Have
Been Fired by Appelbaum-
Mrs, Appelbaum Declares Husband Has Divorced Wife Liv
ing and Hints at Other Women to Whom He Was At
tentive-Letters Found in Her Hat Seem to Confirm Her
Story
From the undertaker’s establshment, where the inquest was held,
Mrs. Appelbaum was carried to the Tower in a cab. She was accom
panied by J. A. Branch, of her counsel, and Coroner’s Bailiff Bryant.
At the Tower she registered as Mrs. J. A. Appelbaum, aged thirty-
five years, and after sitting in the waiting room a few minutes, slig was
assigned to a room in the woman’s ward.
By a peculiar chance the room she drew was the one occupied so
song by Mrs. Daisy Grace, who was cleared of the charge of shooting
her husband by the same attorneys, Moore & Branch.
AVhle in the waiting room, Mrs. Appelbaum sobbed continuously
and spoke only once, when she astked the verdict of the coroner’s jury.
The womaq is held simply for investigation by the grand jury, but
the case involves murder, and as a result she can secure bond only
after a hearing before a judge of the superior court.
Attorney Branch, stated after a conference with his client, that no
move will be made in the case until the grand jury sets.
Sirs. Applebaum, it is> understood, wall not be permitted to make
any statement except through her attorneys.
A MYSTERIOUS MURDER was committed in the Hotel Dakota, down
town in Atlanta at the corner of Pryor and Houston streets, Tues-
, day morning at. 7 o’clock.
The victim of it. J. A. Appelbaum, a traveling, man representing
the A. L. Arundell company, of Chicago, was found gasping his last
breath upon the floor of the private bath adjoining the room occupied
by himself and Jiis reputed wife on the second floor of the hotel. He
died without making a statement, almost immediately after he was
found. The revolver, his own, which had beep used to shoot him, was
- -lying- beyond his reach in the hallway connecting the bed room and the
bath, and in such position with reference to the body as to indicate that
it could not have been dropped there by himself.
His supposed widow, Mrs. Appelbaum, was held by the coroner’s
jury for the grand jury. The verdict of the coroner’s jury was that
Mr. Appelbaum had come to his death from a gunshot bullet fired by
the hand of some unknown person. Mrs. Applebaum was carried to the
county jail. No bond was assessed for Mrs. Appelbaum at 2:30 o’clock.
Suspicion pointing to the supposed Mrs. Appelbaum, she was ar
rested by the olice. The clerk of the hotel had encountered her on the
. stairs as he started rushing up them to to answer the alarm from another
guest'that shots had been fired in the Appelbaum room. She was clad
in her night clothes and a kimono only, and was hysterical and inco
herent. Examined by the police she did not admit that she knew even
that her husband had been hurt, the detectives Anally informing her
that he was dead.
A number of letters were found in the hat which Mrs. Appelbaum
wore to police headquarters and to the inquest. Some of them were
signed “Blanche,” that being supposedly the name of Mr. Apelbaum’s
alleged former wife; and others were signed “Girlie.” All of them
were very loving and affectionate. They tended to support Mrs. Ap-
pelbaum’s sensational charge againBt her hushand that though she had
married him twice he had another wife living in Kansas City and was
engaged to marry a third wife, a woman physicihn, in Saginaw, Mich.,
ip May. The letters were not read before the jury, but were submitted
to the jury and were read by its members in closed session.
Dr. J. W. Hurt, county physician, testified that the shots were
fired not closer than two feet to the body of Mr. Appelbaum and that
the wounds could not have been self-inflicted.
HAD AS MANY
Full Story of Mrs, Callie Scott-
Henderson - Kelier - Appel-
baum's Matrimonial Career
f
Told in Dispatches
Developments on Wednesday in the
Dakota hotel’s sensational murder
mystery tend to show that the woman
accused of the killing has experi
enced as many matrimonial adven
tures as her dead husband.
She was a Miss Calle 3cott, it has
been learned, and came originally
from Brewton, a little town in Ala
bama. Her first husband is said to
have been a man narked Henderson,
whom she. divorced and by whom
she has u seventeen-year-old son, who
is attending the Montgomery high
school. j
Next she is said to have married
J. M. Keller, a Montgomery automo
bile dealer, who declares that he
spent $10,000 to get rid of her.
It Is charged that the woman, who
says that she “doesn’t believe she
shot her husband,” operated a dis
orderly house in Montgomery and
reaped a harvest of $30,000.
Records show that undoubtedly
she 1 married Appelbaum on July 1
of last year in Birmingham, despite
the fact that another wife secured
a divorce from him only last week.
Mrs. Appelbaum gives her age as
thirty-five years, and apparently she
was married to Henderson about
eighteen years ago. They were di
vorced and her marriage to Keller
followed. Lastly, several years after,
her second divorce was a matter of
record, she was united to the muchly
married Appelbaum by a hasty cere
mony performed by a Birmingham
probate judge.
HUSBAND’S CAREER.
Appelbaum’s first wife, a Salt Lake
City girl, was deserted by him soon
after their marriage, according to
dispatches, and she divorced him in
1908. Soon he married again, and
wife number two secured her divorce
in Kansas City only thirteen days
ago.
Except for her aged parents in
Brewton and her son, Mrs. Appel
baum is said to have no other blood
relatives.
Mrs. Appelbaum remains in the
Tower and Aven police officers are
denied admission to her .cell. There
is no probability of the grand jury
acting on her case before Friday, if
then, and her attorneys intimate that
no immediate attempt to secure bail
for the incarcerated woman is to be
expected.
The full story of Mrs, Appelbaum’s
career, is told by the following dis
patches from Montgomery and Bir
mingham:
Story of Woman’s Life
Told in Dispatches
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
MONTGOMERY, Ala., Feb. 26.—Callie
Scott,,alias Kathleen Keller, alias Cal
lie Henderson, supposed to be the “Mrs.
J. A. Appelbaum,” charged with the
murder of her husband in the Hotel Da
kota, Atlanta, is the former wife of
J. M. Keller, an automobile deader
of Montgomery.
Her photograph clipped frbm The At
lanta Journal could not be identified by
Keller Wednesday morning.
It is probly she,” declared Keller,
“but because of the peculiarly shaped
mouth and fleshy face I am unable to
say positively. But it is /just like Cal-
jL
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Clares C&iarrb.
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CITADEL CADETS MAY
NOT GO TO WASHINGTON
CHARLESTON, S. C., Feb. 26.—It Is
probable that the entire cadet corps of
the Citadel will not attend the inau
guration of President Wilson, as planned
on account of the legislature not making
the appropriation. A movement is, how
ever, on foot to have the military col
lege represented by company or two,
GOOD NATURED AGAIN
Good Humor Returns With
Change to Proper Food
“For many years I was a constant
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writes a Montana man.
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I coulcf not keep my books posted, nor
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“I liked the food from the very first,
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found that Grape-Nuts food was sup
plying brain and nerve force as nothing
in the drug line ever had done or could
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“It wasn’t long before I was restored
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my digestion has been restored, my
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Read the little book, “The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above’letter?
A new one appears from time
to time. They are genuine,
true, and full of human in
terest —(Advt.)
the cadets paying their own expenses.
This will be the only representation
in a military way of South Carolina at
the inauguration, since Governor Blease
forbade the departure of the national
guard, on account of negro troops from
northern states marching in the pa
rade.
JUDGE WITH HAMMER
PUTS THIEF TO ROUT
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
ATHENS. Ga., Feb. 26.—Judge Levi
Hamrick, of Princeton, Tuesday stepped
into his country home to find a burglar
ransacking the rooms. The burglar was
a colored convict who had escaped from
the camp a mile away.
. The negro had stolen Mr. Hamrick's
pistol and with it backed the owner
out of the room. The judge, with a
hammer he picked up in his retreat,
knocked the pistol from the hands of
the negro and took him prisoner.
The convict guard arrived at that
instant and in a disagreement over
the disposition of the quarry, it is said
the guard drew his rifle on the judge.
The matter was adjusted’ and the con
vict returned to camp.
TRADE BOARD FORMED
BY MADISON CITIZENS
MADISON, Ga., Feb. 26.—The cham
ber of commerce of Madison was formal
ly organized Tuesday night in the pres
ence of a large crowd of Madison citi
zens. The constitution and by-laws
were read and adopted, committees
were organized and will immediately
go to work.
Many enthusiastic speeches were made
and the citizens to a man are filled
with a determination to boost the city
until progress and prosperity are the
reward.
BLEASE PAROLES C0NVIVCT
ALLEGING MISTREATMENT
(By Associated Press.)
COLUMBIA, S. C., Feb. 26.—Govern
or Blease has sent to *the legislature
a message charging brutal treatment
of Simon Ellis, a negro convict, and
announcing that he had paroled the ne
gro. The governor’s charges resulted
in an order for an\investigation of the
charges.
The governor alleged that the negro
had been ill-treated because he had spo
ken to the governor while working in
the state house grounds. The senate
committee on penal institutions was or
dered to make the inquiry.
CONTAINS
NO TOBACCO
TRAM HAM
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lie, that is, to get mixed in an affair like
this.”
The woman came from a respectable
family of Brewton, Ala. She has a son
by her first husband attending a Mont
gomery school, and boarding in the city.
His name is Claud Henderson, seventeen
years old. After securing a divorce from
Henderson, the woman married Kel
ler.
“It cost me more than $10\000 to get
rid of her,” declar6d Keller Wednes
day, when shown the picture of the
woman. “Many a time she has thrown
a pistol in my face and threatened to
kill me. I believe she is’ insane, or if
not, she is a number one actress. She
can change her appearance and for this
reason I am unable to positively iden
tify that the photograph is of her.”
“IT SOUNDS LIIPS,. CALLIE.”
The woman’s statement that she
knows nothing about the death of Ap
pelbaum also convinced Keller that she
js his former wife.
“It sounds like Callie,” said he, “and
the fact that she declares' now that she
remembers nothing concerning the death
of the man convinces me that she is the
one whom I married several years
ago.”
Keller denied that the Scott woman
furnished the money for the opera
tion of his automobile business, but
instead stated that he was forded to
spend practically all of' his money to
get rid of her.
^ The Scott woman operated a disor
derly house at Hall and Eugene streets
for several years, but sold everything
and left Montgomery,, supposedly for the
west, between three and four years
ago.
Keller, in describing the woman’s pe-
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Low Round -'Trip Homeseekers* Fares in effect 1st
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Send the coupon, or a postal or letter to
E. C. LEEDY, Gen. Immigration Agt., Great Northern Railway
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NORTHWEST!
TUFT GOMES 10 GEORGIA
BAY AFTER
Leave Washington After
noon of Inauguration
Day
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Feb.. 26.—-Final r.r-'
rangements for the departure of Pres
ident and Mrs. Taft for August^, Ga.,
March 4, were completed today.
They will leave Washington in a pri
vate car and probably by special train
over the Atlantic Coast Line railway
shortly after 3 o’clock that day and
are due in Augusta early March 5. A
committee of Augusta citizens is ex
pected here to escort guests south.
Augusta will stand the expense of
Mr. Taft’s trip and he will be a guest
of the city at a winter resort hotel
for three weeks. Miss lielen Taft,
Mrs. Laughlin, Mrs. Taft’s sister, Sec
retary Killes and Mrs. Hilles probably
will be in the party. Mr. and Mrs.
Henry W. Taft, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Taft
and their daughter, Louise, and John
A. Hammond are, expected to join the
Tafts later at Augusta. Mr. Taft will
stfend most of his thre e weeks in Au
gusta resting and playing golf. From
Georgia he will go v north to New Ha
ven to take up his duties at Yale.
- ■ . ... ■ —, V !
ovneai
culiarities, declared that at times he
thought she was insane and at others a
firstclass actress.
THINKS HER INSANE.
“If I were put on the witness stand
now, J believe I would have to testify
that she was insane,” said Keller, “be
cause I canot see how a sane person
could act like she did in Montgomery.
I lived with her a year because I want
ed to convince my attorneys that it was
she and not me who was responsible for
the marital unhappiness.”
Keller denied that the woman used
intoxicating liquors and said this also
deepened the mystery about her ac-'
tiOhs.
When she left Montgomery it was
understood that she was going west, to
live with or marry a traveling sales
man. It is not known whether or not
the person was Appelbaum.
Since moving away the Scott woman
hag returned to this city several times
and spent a few days each time.
Married in Haste
Before Probate Judge
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.#
BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Feb. 26.—The
marriage ceremony of Mr. and Mrs. J.
A. Appelbaum was performed in Bir
mingham July 1, 1912, by Judge of
Probate J. P. Stiles. The license was
issued to Callie Scott Keller, residence
not given, and J. A. Appelbaum, of
New York, by Clerk of Probate Wool-
sey Morrow. The ages of the two were
given as thirty-seven and thirty-six re
spectively.
Mr. Morrow declares that the two
seemed very much agitated and wished
to have the ceremony over as quickly
as possible. Accordingly they were
rushed into the next room and Judge
Stiles took off enough time to pro
nounce the words that made them man
and wife.
> Judge Stiles does not remember any
thing of the affair.
The two were said to have gone to
the Mecca hotel immediately following
the ceremony, but no record of this can
be found. —— *
Other than the fact of their appear
ance in the court house rio further trace
of Mr. and Mrs. Appelbaum can be
found.
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like it—that’s where wo get even—it’s great advertising for us—that’s how it pays .
us to dress our Agents right. Send postal fe-)day to
COPAT CCMTDKI. TAB! ABIMft EHaa*. A ftHIAAfift. HJL 1
New Parce.1 Post Map and Chart
of Horse Remedies
We have just bought a large
number of New Four Leaf Charts,
which we are going to give with
The Semi-Weekly Journal. This
Chart contains a 1913 Calendar,
Pictures of our Presidents from
Washington to Wilson, a Chart of
Horse Ailments and Remedies,
giving Symptoms of Diseases and
How to Treat Them; a Parcel Post
Map of the United states, with
instructions; a large State Map of
your own state, besides oth^r in
formation and statistics, valuable
in every household. We are giv
ing a Chart to each person sending
us One Dollar for the following
papers: The Semi-Weekly Jour
nal 18 months, Farm Life 12
months, and Every Day Life 12
months. Use coupon below.
THE SEiVSI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, Atlanta, Ga.
Enclosed find One Dollar, for which send me The Semi-Weekly Journal
18 months, Farm Life 12 months, and Every Day Life 12 months, and mail
me absolutely free your NEW Ready Reference Parcel Post Chart.
NAME '.....
P. 0 R. F. D STATE