Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 05, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

2 "THE FINAL RALLY"BY T. E, POWERS Wil so nJ - L 7 k > x (a& /x x ' x /MurphiA z > A Wilson z A'Mx \k , —e- XAo k *) v< '-& ° -3' d —sr~—, - -_ ' . _-. SUCKS FILI JAIL AFTERWILD NIGHT Police Court Overflows With Darkies Who Celebrate Jack Johnson's Victory. Judge Broyles’ court room o'erflow «d today with denizens of Durktown who had celebrated lndependenc< Day with a too liberal absorption of pa triotism and beei "n the tlooi below the long rows of cell- bulged with slid slumbering victims of blind tlgei <otn. and irt Grad\ hospital, -i.mnid the cor ner. doctors and nurses were bust pit'- ting fresh bandages on long ami sho I slashes left by the deft n**’ of razors There wa- a bullet wound oi two to be probed, too. Rut the hospital "asn ' half »> busy as the police station. Surely, Parktown had enjoyed its Fourth . When the news reached Decatur street that one Arthur Johnson. col ored. had put the Indian sign on a husky Caucasian named Flynn, it was as though some philanthropist had an nounced that sixteen kegs of free b< ci had been tapped and were running to waste Darktown started in to drink the health of its champion- and it drank freely and often as the evening progressed By ’’ o'clock Decatur stl.'H was sa full Os negroes as a pienh watermelon time It looked like trou ble. and it "«•“ "Landed on" Detective netectivr B V Berry found that out when he tried to arrast a negro corn vendor near the Vendpnw hotel, a m • 1-0 resort in Ivy street. Just off De (alu .in the heart of Darktown. Some body- landed on the back of Petty s head with a pair of brass ’ knocks m a billy. , Then Policeman Alewine arrested bad man. who put up a fight. y White man telephoned to head Quarters, and the mounted squad, heal in reserve for trouble, dashed up Un st ft. With Chief Beavers in the lead Tn thre minutes it looked like bun da'." remarked a bystandei Hum darkies W- nt every wav al on. e Vxiep' up There wasn’t no more trouble af ter that, except s. altered So. I 'lon t think more'n a dozen cm run "vei. Io hurt.'’ _ . But though 'hr charge n mounted squad brok. UP the Decatur street disturbance there was Mattered trouble al! through the night Slashed Wife and Baby. Will Thomas, a negro who lives at 200 Orme street, "ent hmm from ilie celeb ation with a razm in his hand, and "hen he met hi- wife " the do,a with he-- baby In her a-ms h- ears both of them so free!' that they wi sent to the hospital Thmnas is locked up with a charge of assault to . mntm. murder registered against him "n- m two negroes were .-hot in gen.- i fi for-a'l mix-sips In the suburbs, and the doctors bad many caller* who walked In to have a head bandaged or a cut -ewed up Um 'l'' '■'noy physicians believ, none will die The Fourth "as singularly lucky so far as firework- we e concern, d There wasn’t ca.«*» nf fireworks in.iui) at Grady, nor a R--man < amlh* b'az» »»n thp hi p department lecord Tin nignt ambulance His at G’aUv \vcu <»ni> twelve, against 4'»o on the l'»»urth a vea a * Rut \\ ba I the celebration lacked in injuries it niad<‘ up in dis order. f'»r Fb < o det U s found I'l. c H cpv nn his p'dice d«»< !<♦* when h»- opened court. I' was fai in ' da . when he had sent up the last offendei fm thirtx da> in Hu stockmh and the afternoon session promi?«*»d t»» i» ( . equally ae lonr BAR CLERK DRINKS TACKS IN WATER: HE'S IN AGONY Pft I TSVII J.E, PA . July e Jam.-- McKeon, a bn - clerk’ at the Huck Run hotel, at St t'lai. io relieve a ihl'-t. . In tin- darkness of the night and rusher to the bathroom. w her< h s. izi-d a tumbler, filled it with walei and drank its contents- at a gulp. The g .-- - was paitly tilled with loose car ml 'a. as and a numbei of these were ■ d down into his -tomai h be- *' ■ di»<ov>- i-<l his mistake 1,0 c.-i II- ha', given him tempora ' c ' ’ " i« believed that the tacks mood without an opcr- H' -oft mng g eat agony. GECIRGIAN want ads. - FILL ALL WANTS, h BOTH PHONES 3000 Doctor’s Legs Broken As Engine Hits Auto 'T THBERT. GA., July Dr. F. R. Rogers a physician of Randolph coun ty. residing at Coleman, had both tegs broken yesterday while on a Fourth of July outing, when the engine on the Fort Gaines branch of the f'entra! road -truck his automobile. ft. <'. White, who wa.- with him. escaped injury by jumping. The automobile was wrecked The engine sustained a little damage and the engineer. Asa ('lark, was in jured -slightly. 2 Drownings Mark Fourth at Way cross W AYt'RORR. GA.. July 5. Two diownings marked the Fourthz’f July at Waycroas. I',liner E. Bunting, eleven-year-old son of Mrs. T. < >. Bunting, while wad ing in the Satilla river, stepped off a bar into a deep hole. It was sev eral hours before bis body was recov ered. Mrs Adkins. Wife of a Way cross barber, was drowned al the county bridge while bathing. Hei body has not been recovered. I'h, Bunting hoy was a member of a pnicnic party that had gone to the river. The place where he lost his life has claimed one or more victims each year for several years. E. W. Louth was drowned In the same hole on the Fourth of July four years ago. Lightning Kills 2 on Fourth Near Calhoun I’ALHi’I X. GA., July Lightning killed two and-seriously injured a third man on the Veach and Turner planta tion between this city and Adairsville yesterday afternoon. The dead are James Mayfield and Felton Jackson. The injured is H. J. Kilgore. The three men. with eight or ten others, had laken refuge from a thunder storm un der a peach shed. Kilgore, although paralyzed from lhe shock, is expected to recover. Mayfield leaves a wife and several children Jackson was single. NEGRO KILLS OFFICER TRYING TO ARREST HIM BIRMINGHAM. AI.A July Ar nold R< ske. special agent for the Tide water street railway line, was killed at Ensley by an unknown negro when he was attempting to arrest him on the Fourth Reske whs on the city patrol wagon assisting in answering a call, when lhe negro, leading a cow. was met. The officer dismounted from the patrol and approached the negro, who opened lire, inflicting a wound that caused death later. The negro escaped. FOUR GIVE THEIR CUTICLE TO MEND WOMAN'S SCALP I'RENTItN, N J , July .V To give a new -< alp lo Mrs Mary Deletsky. the young woman who was terribly in jured some time ago when her halt caught in machinery at a worsted mill, the doeto's at M< Kinley hospital at e performing a difficult operation that of grafting new skin to the top of het head. Her husband, sister and two broth ers have given skin from their bodies for lier. INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL IN COLUMBUS CHURCH FOU MRI'S GA . July 5. Early in September lhe Rose Hill Baptist church one of the strongest in Geor gia, wilt Introduce an innovation by operating n night -chool fm the purpose of giving instruction along industrial line- a competent i-orps of teachers has hl en secured ind all classes wIP be taught fre< In the church. Stenog raphy ind bookkeeping will be two of th. principal course.- given. Rev. R. Granbetty. pastot of tliv church, orig inated and tierfeitcd the plans for the school. COLUMBUS POWER CO. GETS PENSACOLA MAN << >1 I’.MBI S. GA July 5. R. M Herding, of Pensacola Fla , has been appointed general superintendent of Hie * 'olumbus- Railroad t 'ompsny ant. the Columbus Power Company, a new office creat-d >n ae, mint of the growth of the Stone and Webstet- interests in this city The stone and Webster peo ple have recent]' invested more than ,2.000.(100 in Improvements in and atound t'olttnibu' .’ml ii ha- be, ,me necessary to create a n*w offi, e to handle tin in t<.a. • -«.i i (fairs THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND FRIDAY. JULY 5. 1912. DR. M. L. TROUTMAN, OF ATHENS, FORMER ATLANTAN, IS DEAD ATHENS. GA., July s.—Dr. M. L. Troutman, paste, of the First Method ist church of Athens, and former pas tor of the Park Street Methodist church of Atlanta died here today, following an operation for appendicitis, perform ed early in the week F'uneral services will be conducted here this afternoon, and the body will be taken to Rom -, bls boyhood home, for interment. Dr. Troutman was one of the leading members of the Nortfi Georgia Method Ist conference. He served pastorates at Lyerly. Harmony Grove. Conyers Gainesville, Atlanta and Athens during his ministry. At the recent commencement of the Cniversity of Georgia, Dr. Troutman graduated In law and the university trustees conferred upon him the degree •>f doctor of laws and doctor of divin ity. He entered the university law school lwo y ears ago and was elected president of lhe class his Junior year. Dr, Troutman was about 55 years old. He is survived by his w idow. Mrs. Bes sic Battey Troutman. formerly of Rome; a dauglitei. Mrs. Robert Wil son. of Athens; three sons. Henry Troutman, a lawyer of Atlanta; Robert B. Troutman, of Athens, a student at ( 'olumbla -university layv school, and Baldwin Troutman, in business al <'hat tanooga, Tenn. A sister, Mis*-* Mary Troutman, also survives BOY BITTEN BY SNAKE HAS A CHANCE FOR LIFE HLOtLMSLILRG, PA.. July A cop rier head three and a half feet long, that had escaped the teeth of a mowing machine, sank its fangs into the bare leg of Karl Wenner, an eight-year-old .-■on of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Wenner, of Stillwater, today. The driver of the mowing machine came tojhe boy's res cue and killed the snake. The boy's leg began to swell, but a rural phone and an automobile enabled a physician to quickly reach the child ami adminis ter heroic treatment, which possibly wJH save his life FIVE CANDIDATES RUN WITH DOG TAX AS ISSUE < ALHOI'N, GA., July 5 in Gordon county there are five candidates for representative: Geoige A. Anderson tor re-election. S. G Pass. Ed B. Lew is, O. t'albeck and Prof. Ernest Neal. The chief issue is the dollar tax on dogs, the candidates being divided foi and against the law. Many of the vot ers are urging John Erwin, of Cal houn. to entei the race against I. t'. Milner for solleltoi general. PICNIC IS PLANNED FOR CALHOUN WRECK VICTIMS I'AL.HOFN GA . July 5.-- People in Dalton and Calhoun are planning to give a union picnic at I nton Springs, midway between the two elite-, tn those who were injured in th'e recent wreck of the Calhoun picnic train just as soon as all the Injured have recov ered sufficiently All those who we e on the 111-fated train and those who aided in the rescue work at Dalton will be invited. LOVERiND SWEETHEART TRY POISON AND PISTOL SCRANTON, PA.. July 5 —Discovery of a hectic love poem brought phys ical chastisement to sixteen-year-olii Kate Jeffrey last night and so deep ly humiliated was the girl that she drank carbolic acid. When nineteen - y efit-old Martin Wagneg. two blocks away heard of what Kale hail done, he visited the State hospital, where the girl was tak en, relumed to his home and shot him self. H, was an ardent admiiet of tn ' grit'l. CITY SAVINGS BANK PAYS ! INTEREST FROM JULY IST The City Savings Bank, at 15 East I Alabama street, is paying 4 per cent interest from July 1 to al! w ho open an account In the savings department be- ■ fore July JO, Why not begin the last lap of the year right by opening a sav- ; Ings account with this strong, pro grestslve and thriving Institution.' ”” Effective Sunday, July 7, Southern Railway train No. 6 will leave Atlanta for Ma con, Ga., at 12:20 noon, ar rice Macon 2:55 p. m. Re turning, No. 5 will leave Ma con at 1:25 p. nr, arrive At lanta 4 n. m. FIRST WOMAN WIRELESS OPERATOR GOES TO SEA SEATTLE. July 5.- Probably the first woman wireless telegraph operator afloat—certainly the first on the Pa- ■ elfle— will be Miss Mabelle Kelso, of Seattle. ; She has passed the examination, re- 1 si n 1 i g | The Globe Clothing Company The Globe Clothing Company | S -A Suit Sale., i Terse--Tempting- Timely a Don’t judge the values by the infinitesi 3 wuif l\ rnal quotations. Its our semi-annual clothes fj? t■ \ j /A {east. This time we’ve selected several him- [H||: I dred Suits, to be given to you at two prices--- /1 YS ’7.50 -’ll .501 w' ow ’ W" I .... = g f° r Men and Young Men | I T That would please the average man at their former prices. They /'"" " lift. f a,p £ o °d good material, serviceable, ueal qualities, or wr *’[ Y fl p t "ouid not stand sponsor for them. You get our assurance of sat- rep-. .-A&jß I -I WwllX isfaefion as to wear and value. There’s plenty good colors. Lots ||| > I different Weaves, all sizes. All they- need is your attention. 4>| WL t’ome and see for vourself. Choice of these Suits now Cm $7.50 i // 01 / 1 > Suitsatsll.soforMenandYoungMen | // F Wil / ® ‘^ s 0111 tr ' aQ d true salesman remarked to our /f E ' Wife “Ad” man: “Tell the trade to come expecting great values, for U 1 B arP ,1P1 ’ P These Suits al eleven dollars and fifty cents W M ‘ I I represent splendid Suits of Worsted. Cheviots and Vicunas. They I*; m 1 i'W"! maintain every good wearing feature to the “end of the SS W - • VW' chetpter. A matter of reduction of price does not prevent these gw Jf ; i Suits from bearing the “car marks” of their former worth. You H W w j : • ,1P i u< Jg p ai ’d .jury. Come and see these splendid values. Bring ’J* 0 ! \x7 your wife, or let her come and make the selection If you are ?’? ■ rat - 1 W no< P' ease( F hayk goes your money without argument. This B tJw / iW' sa ' P * S g°’ u F ou VP, V ni ' uu ' p - Choice of these Suits S|S I U $11.50 J I A Few Other Things Priced Right f Underwear—Shirts or Drawers 25c m ' Porosknit and B. V D 50c Soft Shirt, Collars to Match 75c 815 Silk Sox and Neckwear 25c S'? —— - Bathing Suits for Men and Boys 50c »!J I BOYS' KNEE TROUSER SUITS .<t c; Afi - 1 8 sis WITH EXTRA TROUSERS, SPECIAL <JaJ*VV - " ge ——s» Mg The Globe Clothing Co J EIGHTY-NINE WHITEHALL STREET ceived one of the highest marks given at the government's naval wireless training school at the Ptigei Sound navy yard and been assigned to the steamer Mariposa, sailing for Alaska July 1. ! The young woman is 25. good looking j and has been employed as a stenogra pher. LOVESICK GIRL SENDS BULLET THROUGH HEART ALLENTOWN. PA.. July 5.-Because her parents objected to the attentions of a young man w hom she loved. Beu lah Kline, aged eighteen, shot herself in the heart. She was found when her parents returned from Allentown, ly ing dead upon the kitchen floor in a pool of blood with the shotgun grasped in her hand. Miss Kline is described as an unusual. 1y pretty' girl. About a year ago while attending a Sunday school picnic she met a young man with whom she be. came infatuated. The young man. it 1* said, returned the affection, but the girl’s parents objected to their daugh ter receiving him at their home.