Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 11, 1912, HOME, Page 3, Image 3

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I. R. MEN ATTACK WILSON AS SON OF SOUTH «We Northerners Bar Dixie Men From White House,” Says General Sickles, YORK. July 11.—Sixty repre sentatives of the provisional New York committee of the "Bull Moose" party met here today and wildly cheered Colonel Roosevelt as they fnade plans for the campaign In New York. General Daniel E. Sickles, the chief speaker, attacked Governor Wil- William H. Hotchkiss, chairman of the provisional committee, presided. The gathering started out with cheers for the colonel. Then General Sickles was introduced. He said: “The old parties are not satisfactory tn many respects. It 1s the first time dnce the war that a Southern man has been nominated for president. Mr. Wilson Is a nice man, he Is an honest man. and an affable 'man. However. Mr. Wilson was bom and reared in rebellion surroundings He was born and reared on the wrong side. “We Northerners are never disposed tn put a man who has been reared in the Confederacy, so to speak, whose people fought on the Confederate side, In the white house. “We wish no repetition of the seces sion movement. This nation is one and inseparable now and forever. That is the determination of the Progressive party." Cheers Approve Attack on Wilson. There came wild yells of approval as the general, who lost one of his legs in the Civil war. scored Governor WIJ-son. He added that he had voted for T/in eoln because he did not believe In the copperhead Democracy of the time, al though he had previously been a Dem ocrat and had voted for Buchanan. For 40 years, he went on, he had been a Republican. "I am now happy to be a supporter of my esteemed friend. Theodore Roosevelt,” he said, and the commit teemen cheered for five minutes. A man got a red bandanna and waved it and the cheering was renewed with still greater violence. The general paid ? high tribute to the colonel after the noise subsided and Chairman Hotchkiss addressed the committeemen as "breth ren of the Bull Moose." The chairman called the roll of coun ties to see who was on hand. Some 60 New Yorkers and one enthusiast from Hoboken answered the call. Among them wer» Regis N. Post, former gov ernor of Porto Rico: G. B. Van Wart, of Kings; Hamilton Fish. Jr., binder Bates, Jr.. Amos Pinchot, Ernest Har vier, Reuben Grebhill, General Daniel E. Sickles and M. L. Blakeley. After the roll call the. committee proceeded to lay plans for the opening n f the campaign. Tennessee T. R. Conference Called NASHVILLE, TENN.. July 11.—The formal call for a conference of pro gressive Republicans in this city on Saturday Is drawing leaders to the cap ita! for a big Roosevelt demonstration. State Treasurer Taylor, who signed the '’all for the Roosevelt national conven tion at Chicago in August, is behind the movement for the state meeting. He is a Republican leader of the fac ion opposed to Governor Hooper and Senator Sanders, Taft leaders In Ten- BODY OF GIRL (11) WHO SAID SHE WEDDED BOY OF 19 FOUND IN CANAL SYRACUSE. N. Y„ July 11.—The body of Mignon Lockerbie, eleven years n ti. >vho claims to have been married n 'William Colvin, nineteen years old. 8 Niagara Kails, six months ago. was 'Bken from the Oswego canal at Liver l”-,o!. two miles from this city, this Colvin told his parents that had never married this girl. Last ■' -in .' me gj r | came to a local new s “P1 ’ and announced her marriage. a,r ' that she and Colvin had mar ' t hut had kept it a secret. "Now ' ’ nl *o Hve together." she said. f ' ' ' did not. Colvin was driven own home because he refused p ''h the girl, his mother says, mi-ting. MRS. DECKER’S BODY W HL LIE IN STATE IN COLORADO’S CAPITOL ''HNver. i 010 July ]| K ,„. |ilP (>| 'hue in the history of Colorado, l’)' 1 nnr has asked that the ” "Oman be permitted to He in atr at 'ho capitol. The woman whose p 1 thus honored is Mrs. Sarah f>, ' l'er. former president of the im. l ederation of Women’s Clubs. r , ! »"iy arrived from San F’an "l!,J ;,n 'l the governor has sug •p 11 'I He at the capitol for at count' nffl ” ;■ ~rdered a " a " d “ dosed during the hours 'hf funeral services. Melt wedding rings IN RENO FOR “LUCK” n>“Th).*EV., July 11, Women bf the divorce colony have ’eddin? fd converting th* useless' Ar hitn Swastika pin us belter marital fortune. ' en.lox ing prosperous •mrp fad Started Woman in Love Can't Be Detective TIPS FOR GIRL SLEUTHS .■■•stgagfc-.. 7/ z W 5 - * *' / ■ IRWbaF* i i s Hl! / l 1 S / Ji M HBmI / ■HF Ik/ ilsSKi T L til Mrs. Hattie Barnett, Atlanta's woman detective, who says a girl sleuth must forswear affairs of the heart and learn to keep secrets. In this picture Mrs. Barnett is shown searching a hat for a clew to a criminal. She once traced a fugitive by the number on his hal band. Oh. Yes. and Female Sherlocks Must Be Able to Hold on to a Secret. Is it any wonder the woman detec tive is such a rarity? Mrs. Hattie Barnett. Atlanta's expert woman detective, and the only one in the South, declared in a most interest ing talk today that before a woman can be a real sleuth she must side track love and all of its attendant beauties and joys, relegate sweethearts to the dismal, blank realm of the for gotten. and be able to keep a secret. Mrs. Barnett declares she has proved she can do both. She's had 23 years’ experience as a detective. And Mis. Barnett adds that these two highly unromantic and unappeal ing essentials practically mean the elimination of woman from this some what spectacular means of livelihood. “There's not one woman in a million who can become a detective," she said. Must Learn to Keep Secrets. The barring of love and the keeping of secrets are not the only require ments for a woman detective, said Mrs. they form the combined uppercut that brings the knock-out. For instance, the detective instinct must be born in women. .Mrs. Barnett says. "I don't think there's any doubt but that many women have the natural born detective instinct, judging from their success in catching up with their husbands and finding out what is go ing on in the community all about them." said the detective. Asked how she managed to ovetcomc the love obstacle. Mrs. Harnett smiled and said: “Well, it's a very simple story. In the first place. I don't want yon to get the Idea that I have a stone heart and that I'm incapable of love Not at all. I have a big. warm heart, and there is in It ample room for affection. I simply have a sign over this affection com partment which reads. "CLOSED. " I have loved—l won't sax how many times -but I know that love and de tective business will not mix. "I fell in love —violently so—after I had bcm left a widow and had be come a detective, but I soon found that it was interfering with my business. I was not long in making a choice. I simply starved out my love.” She says that a woman who is sen timental and in love Is too easily In fluenced to work among criminals and : attempt to ferret crime, if a woman has a sweetheart, Mis. Barnett says, she will confide in him. give away her plans, and spoil her game Her mind wotlld he so full of mush, 100. that she 1 would be totally unable to think and calculate clearly and shrewdly. Must Have Lots of Nerve. "Outside of all these requirem o nts.” continued Mrs. Barnett, "a woman de tective must have unusual ability, a plentiful supply of good, common sense, i ear loads of nerve and tael, must h<> possessed of discernment, must possess a. big store of legal knowledge must he industrious, and. above all. must be refined I would lay special stress on the word 'industrious,' for it is out THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY. JULY 11. 1912. • Sidestep Cupid • : To Win Success • • • • To be a dectective a woman • • must sidetrack love, have no • • sweethearts, and be able to keep a • • secret. • • Therefore, not one woman in a • • million can become a real detec- • • tive. • • Women in love get their heads • • so full of mush they are unable to • • think and calculate clearly and • • shrewdly. • • The woman sleuth must possess • • a natural detective Instinct, car- • • loads of nerve and tact, and be in- • • dustrious. A lazy woman Is unfit • • for the job. • • Any woman can starve out love • • if she will. 1 found I could. • • The men are leading the women • • of this day In uprightness. • • —MRS HATTIE BARNETT, De- • • tectlve. • • • • ••••••••••••••••<»•••••••• of the question for a lazy woman to be a detective. She must be up and about all the whole.” Another important factor in the mak ing of the woman detective, as urged by Mrs. Barnett, is the confining of her work solely to one of the two sexes. She must either work exclusively for men or for women alone. Mrs. Barnett's specialty is men. In reply to a question as to her reasons for working solely for men, Mrs. Bar nett smiled significantly. "I have two mighty good reasons," she said. "For one thing, women are jH>of pay. In the next place, sleuthing for women is very unsatisfactory Nine times out of ten when you work up a case for a woman and show her the evidence, it'll be wholly different from what she expected, and she'll proceed to make things hot generally. She'll ho mean you. declare you are the cause of the whole trouble, order you away and refuse to pay you. I've been there.’’ Doesn't Work Divorce Cases. Mrs. Barnett is also "hands off" when it comes to working divorce cases. "It’s unpleasant work, and then I don’t believe In meddling in family troubles," she says. "I leave that sot someone else." As to her work, Mrs. Barnett said it had taken her from high society to the slums. On many occasions, she said, she had been forced to adopt dis guises. frequently appearing as an old woman, sometimes as a nurse and house maid, again as a book agent, and in a variety of other roles, Mrs. Barnett has worked in New York and several of the other big cities, and has brought numerous criminals to jus tice. Several years ago she ferreted a murder through the simple clew of a hat number. In his haste, the murder er dropped his hat. There was no name, nor initials nor other mark of Identification in the hat. but front the numbet on the band Mrs Barnett took her cue and solved the mystery. Summing up the results of her ex perience. Mrs. Barnett said: "Tlte men are leading the women In uprightness. Women are far more sin ful and are doing more injury to so ciety.” PROBATION BILL RECOMMENDED McElreath Measure Provides Minor Offenders Must Work for Benefit of Families. Representative McElreath's bill pro viding for a probation system today was recommended fb: passage by the bouse judiciary committee and will come up for a vote in a short time. M:. i McElreath and his associates believe It will do a great deal toward giving .drunkards and small offenders a chance to straighten up. and at the same tint w ill p: ovide for their families. The bill permits judges In the state courts to fix sentences so that the con victed man may serve his term out -side the prison or chain gang, remain ing at his home and working at what ever occupation he may find. Hi wages will be devoted to the support of his family, while under the present system the wife and children of a con victed man are frequently more harsh ly punished by the court than the of fender himself. The bill amounts jyractically to a probation system, though the term is not used. The judge in each county may appoint a probation officer to whom the man under suspended sen tence must report at stated intervals. BOY BURGLARS TELL POLICE THEY NEEDED “A LITTLE EASY COIN” "We just needed a little coin and thought this would be easy money." is the explanation given today by Press McKinney, eighteen years old. 715 East Fair street, and Seth Pharr, sixteen, 27 Harold avenue, as to wh? they turned burglars. The boys confessed that at an early hour this morning they attempted to break into the Park Pharmacy, 294 South Boulevard, and later broke open a slot machine in front of the store of J. J. Evans In South Boulevard. "We would have got in the drug store if we hadn’t been frightened away Just as we broke the lock," said the boys to Captain Poole. "We made a bum job of It, though, and now we’re in bazi.” The boys were caught by Policemen George Garner and Jeffares a few min utes after they had broken open the slot machine. They had prepared them selves as regulation burglars, skeleton keys and burglars' tools being foutrd in their pockets. They will be tried next Tuesday, FREIGHT RATES FOR MELONS FROM SOUTH NOT UNREASONABLE VI ASHINGTON. July 11.—Freight charge® on watermelons and cante loupes from producing points in South, eastern freight territory, over the At lantic Coast Line. Seaboard Air Line and seven other railroads to consum ing markets north of the-Potomac riv er and east of Pittsburg, were found not unreasonable by the interstate com merce commission today. The complaint was filed by J. H, Dah renburg Brothers & Company, of New York, who also sought to have deliv ery of melons made in New York city. The commission held the carrier was justified In changing delive, y from New York city to Jersey City. FOUR DIE IN MILL EXPLOSION. MAGDEBURG, GERMANY. July 11, Four men were killed and six fatally hurt in the destruction of the Nilde brandt flour mills by an explosion here today. Offers unrestricted choice of every Slimmer Shoe. White Boot, black, white, tan and fancy color Pump—tie or Colonial—at a reduced price—s3.7s, $3.25, $-2.45, $1.95 or 95c. This is a real bargain event, because the shoes are new and stylish. Our shoe department conducts a sweeping clearance sale twice each vear at the eml of fall and winter season, and at the end of spring and summer. Hence the Shoes are all new. clean, fresh, and in complete size range when the sales are started. Come in before 11 or 12 o’clock, if possible, for Allen's sales are genuine price reductions, ami we simply can not wait on yon properlv if every one comes in around 11:30 to 1 p. rn., .just as clerks go to lunch. JUSS.OO Shoes. $3.75 and $3.25; $4.00 Shoes, $3.25 and $2.!5; $3.00 Shoes, 2.45 and yy. $1.95. A few sizes left on the two special lots of IV \ $5,00 and QC / / - $4.00 Shoes And $3.00, $3.50 I He Close Saturday at 1 P.M. j $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 & Co. < * r »lo n ial. in black, and $2.45 n<l 51 Whitehall Street White- $3.25 and "Just Like the English"—Powers GLOOM DOLL IS NEW FAD W A L / A Thing of Gloom, and a Jov Forever. Famous Cartoonist. When 19ld of Invention, Says They Take Fun Seriously. NEW YORK, July 11. —"So they are getting out a Jolly old English ‘Gloom Doll.' eh. what?” said Tom Powers, the famous cartoonist, when he was told that a woman passenger on a French liner had brought in a manni kin pet with the conical cap and lugu brious black whiskers of iris creation. ”‘Awful amusin' little thing.' I sup pose they're saying to each other. 'A bally good spoof, eh, old top?’ “I know the English take their fun sadly. Probably they'd stare at a Joy Doll and wonder what the bloomin’ mischief it meant. Now. if T were go ing to get out a doll, it would be a Joy." “How do you think the Gloom Doll Will go in America?” the artist was asked. “It is said to be making a hit all over England and France and tak ing the place of the Teddy Bear and the Poodle Dog." ‘‘l think it might have a hard time here,” Powers said. "Imagine a man coming home with a joy package under his belt, and a Gloom Doll in his pocket for Ms wife. She’d probably hurl both him and the doll out. “Or imagine the real original Glooms out In the suburb where I live, being asked to buy them! They’d look too lifelike. We have grand Glooms up there. 1 owed one of them 75 cents for some repairs the other day. He sent me a bill which read ‘77 cents—re pairs. 75; use of postage stamp. 2.’ The Suburban Glooms certainly take care of the city Joys who go up there to Mve in the summer.” The interview, which was obtained by a Georgian correspondent who traveled all of 60 feet to see Mr. Pow ers in his sanctum, brought out the fact that the Joy is his favorite char acter. The Gloom’s whiskers remind him too much of his own, he said—and he's a Joy himself, anyway. The Gloom Doll brought in by the woman voyager the other day was dressed In a khaki suit and carried a stick. It was very British. Powers didn't see It, but he drew it from de scription. SNEEZES SO HARD HE RESTORES HEARING •MAYSVILLE, KY., July 11—S. E. Pollitt, of Minerva, Ky., hears clearly today for the first time In several years, the last few of which he was almost totally deaf. He was attacked by a severe fit of sneezing while in Maysville and that seemed “to loosen something" in his ears. CARELESS ABOUT APPENDICITIS IN ATLANTA ■Man.' Atlanta people have stomach or bowel trouble which is likely to turn into appendicitis. If you have consti pation. sour stomach or gas on the stomach, try simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as compounded in Adler i-ka. the new German appendicitis rem edy. The Jacobg’ Pharmacy Company states that A SINGLE DOSE of this simple remedy relieves bowel or stom ach trouble almost INSTANTLY. MILEAGE HEARiNG STILL UNFINISHED Railroads Present Their Argu ments to Force Exchange of Books at Depots. Before the state railroad commis sion today at 10 o'clock the appeal of commercial travelers for a. change in mileage book regulations was taken up again. All yesterday was spent in ar guing the question. Counsel for nearly a dozen roads were there to present their reasons for exchanging tickets for mileage coupons Instead of accepting these coupons on the trains, as the travelers ask. and It was Indicated that the hearing would continue far into the afternoon. The commission will take the case under Advisement and render its decision later. The travelers practically completed their case yesterday, presenting several witnesses for the Travelers Protective association, the United Commercial Travelers and the Georgia Travelers association. They demand that, the roads permit conductors to "pull” mile age on the trains or install separate mileage ticket windows and agents at all stations. The railroads insist that their only means of keeping a proper check on interchangeable mileage sold by one. road and used on a dozen is to have the coupons taken up by a bonded agent at the station. W. J. Craig, passenger traffic agent of the Atlantic Coast Line, took the stand ■ when the hearing opened today. He will be followed by counsel and offi cials of various roads operating in Georgia. BRICK MAKERS STRIKE TO GET PAY IN REAL MONEY CHATTANOOGA. TENN.. July 11.— All employees of the Southern Clay Manufacturing Company, at Robbins, Tenn., are on strike because the com pany has demanded that they take 50 per cent of their wages in checks on the commissary. Special officers have been sent from here to prevent violence. This is one of the largest brick manu facturing concerns in the South. LOSS OF APPETITE is the first sign of a tor pid liver. It is followed by coated tongue, bad taste in the mouth, sick headache and constipation. Tutt’s Pills restore the appetite by Sently regulating your liver, ugar coated or plain— at your druggist. Diseases of Men MY experience of 35 years has shown me that more human wrecks are caused by a chronic local disease than Bby any other. No disease needs more careful or scien tific attention to effect a cure. I also know there is no quick cure for specific blood poi son. Temporary removal of symp toms is not a cure. Experience, care ful attention to de tails and a thor ough knowledge of how and when to use the remedies known to be bene ficial in the treat ment of this dis ease, produce re- DR. wm. M. haiku suits Honest bus- Brown-Randolph Bldg.| neSf methods and Atlanta, u». conscientious treat ment are features of my office Exam inations free Office hours 3 to 7; Sun days and holidays, 10 to 1. My mono graphs free in plain, sealed wrapper. 3