Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 26, 1912, HOME, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

6 PREACHER JAILS [ GIGGLING GIRLS Magistrate Releases Rome Young Women Who Had Disturbed Church Service. ROME. GA. Aug. 26.—Bee.i use they i giggled and talked too loud, the Rev \ Mr. Curtis. pastor of the Baptist church ■ in the North Carolina district, got in dignant and had two voting women ' daughters of 1.. .1 Walters, lodged in I Jail on a charge of disturbing public I w orship. The girls, the pastor claims, were at tending a servlet too nil’ at bis church, and during the meeting talked and laughed loudly. The preacher claims the a leged conduct of the young women was very annoying .lustice of I'm, < Anderson thought otherwise and dis-; charged the two girls. HERE'S IDEAL SITE FOR G. 0. P. TRAINING CAMP ALBANY. N Y . Aug. 2•» W«r wl<• h i St?v?ns <’arp?ntpr a magazine writer. * just returned from th? Canadian woods, h th» u r ’ji'!»> up North amus- them- ' br|\cc bv riding wild bull moose neat < r JL , ■ a OWtoBSwG t « BflMpMidißl s. * 11 Mr A FhirWinrniiii ' ■ .lHp wW -t ' * ;t '■ • -• < --Bk. •c 'Wf: W gOWr ' e- ■ WW- < B r pH aa. WW* A. Upt !v% wi f life ISE 11|1® b F® ijb mm j! J|L llßili. MM ■ 11 illa HB ® w ? M J Kww B?JW i KSIBIOS IMMM* • B i S » -JR ffihtJo. SRQ ; fIK-Q Mir* :fwSB MKjH| f 4 WHS o ~ "*a<5HS|HU> wA Jhfef y W2 t ff > ~^q| J ,,Bi FMto ■ 7 *W A- • *wl Htal jKgju^mHr^' B. Iw MH|||yy> AWwMb^A'-Jbfctw- -ww? d® *'*-•*■* >^Mr MBmuw.vA • olw .^jMW < T^* ’ j»- wK ■ JI / -r .WBBwF*//WssMT <:aa 5 ~ »-■ ;■ .- jr AWW &HB " ih < 13 jaßsHr* s . jB uS«L . Wr® ■ ■ !®w. - w -• t "’ mWK * y w Jl' aI SIIPWa. ' • « 4 ■ ?ips- Wfajftk HH 3 wfefa • ' lw t a] M wWg BUMIm; ■>... ■ . s'" ft Watw4% F;*»*W < - ■ \ l< j&sak '%& -\- 3PTO?K# wßffegrJMMß . *oWK? Vi -e Ej«w ■'■W. < > - W<>te.. I ■■? ® .«wifiwWW Snapshot of the crowd in attendance on the first Atlanta Manufacturers’ Exposition. The crush around the Shoe factory exhibit shows { he human interest in the manufacture of Shoes. Three thousand merchants and fifty thou sand folks, many of them for the first time, saw a Shoe Factory in operation. During the ter. days of the Exposition the factory made 1,200 pairs of Men’s Goodyear Welt RED SEAL Shoes right in the exhibit. REVOLT IN SUBURB OF PEKIN; RINGLEADERS QUICKLY EXECUTED PEKIN. Aug. 26. —Ring leaders of the uprising at. Tung Chaw, twelve I miles from this city. where foul teen prisons were slain yesterday by mu tinous troops, were arrested today and ■five of them executed without the for |mality of < ourtmartial. The suburb is undet martial law. A troop of loyal I republii an soldiers from this city is on guard th"t. X special corps of soldiers is convoying guard < ver the Lung Chow college, of which L. C. Porter, an American, is the head. -CUSSING” A PREACHER NO SIGN OF INSANITY ROME GA. Aug 2K That a man who <'iirs’-s a pifadici is not insane is th? opinion of a Eloyd county jury, pvhi'h do-lnud that Joe Mullin was not a fit sul>je< i for the Milledgeville sani tarium Rev E. <> Petty, pastor of < Metho dist church hei<, took offense at Mullin because hr pcisisted in talking about him and **< us*fng him out” before other | people. Th? parson linallx decided that | th? best wa\ to get rid of* Mullin was |to put him in an insane asylum. Th? scheme failed, and now Mullin threat en? to su< Petty for alleged damage to hL character. RECOUNT DENIED IN LOWNDES. VALDOSTA, GA.. Aug 26. J. F’. Passmore, urn «»f the defeated candi dates for oidinary of Lowndes <ount\ in the primary lasi Wednesday, lias asked for a recount of the votes cast In the Valdosta district, but h< waited too long to mike the demand and <’hairman ard has declined to grant hiw request. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. AUGUST 2G. 1912 , SECRET LffiG IN GW IS BARED New York Prosecutor. After Civilian, Compels Banks to Produce Deposit Books. NEW YORK. Aug. 26.—Evidence of la secret link br-tween Lieutenant (’has. I IA. Recker and police headquarter? by which Becker transferred $5,000 month ly t<» a civilian attache of the depart ment is alleged to be In the* possession of District Attorney Whitman today. The civilian attache is the same whose personality has figured frequent ly in the graft hunt, but whose' name lias not been revealed. It Is learned that Police (’ommis sioner Waldo ! s conducting a secret persona! investigation into the depart ment w hich he commands. Erlends of thr police c ommissioner declared he has decided to “stick to the ship” and that he is spending part of his private for tune to uneaith graft. No end of in quiry* is being neglected. Hollowing the release of the supposed | ■’<;> p lhe Blood" in Pike c ounty. Penn sylvania, yesterday, the authorities arc again c ompletely al sea over the where abouts of th? gun man. Although the offer of $5,000 reward for “Gyp the Blood" and "Lefty Louie" stimulates the search, no fresh cle w of impor tance have been found. The machinery used was furnished by the United Shoe Manufacturing Company, of Bos ton. and the operatives were the regular em ployees of the J K ORR RED SEAL Shoe Factory. Expositions of this kind will do much to stimulate other cities to show their own people what can be done at home. Mr. Orr is on record with a statement that: ‘Within the next few years the South w I! make its own Shoes. Ihe leasing system employed TURKS MASSACRE 490 SERVIANS, LOOT TOWN AND CARRY OFF GIRLS fONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 26.—Re | plying to protests of King Peter of Ser- Ivin and demands for an explanation of I the massacre of several hundred Ser vians at Senistza on Saturday by Turk , ish troops, the porte today replied tiiai an investigation will be made and the guilty persons punished. Senistza «, in southren Servia. Dis patches from there state that a heavy body of Turks entered the town Satur day and took posses-ion of the barracks and all public buildings. Soldiers inarched .through the* streets looting private property rind shooting down non-resisting inhabitants. Many girls were seized by the Turks, who tarried them into their camp, de manding ransom for their release. It is believed that nearly 400 persons, were put to death. 12 JUDGES REFUSE TO SIT IN SECOND TRIAL OF DARROW LOS ANGELES. Aug. 26. Twelve superior judges in Los Angeles county have refuse,! to preside at the trial of t'lai'encc S. Darrow for alleged jury bribery. ’ The at tion of the judges follows the announcement of Judge George 11. Hut- 1 ton. who heard the first trial of Darrow, that he would not preside at the second hearing. District Attorney John D. Fredericks is in a dilemma. He may demand that a special judge be ap- i pointed or may ask for a change of i venue to some other county. MB POSSE PURSUES HEMO Fugitive Has Killed One and Wounded Three—Dogs Are on His Trail. GADSDEN. ALA.. Aug. 26.—One man is dead and three wounded, and a posse I of 300 men have a negro who made lhe assault surrounded in the mountains around Colbert, DeKalb county, accord ing to a telephone message received here today. Saturday night an unknoyvn negro was caught in the act of entering a store at Collinsville. Oliver and Charles Pall tried tn arrest him. He opened fire, shooting one in the leg and the other in the foot. A posse was formed ami. led by dogs, started in pursuit. Today, while surrounded in the moun tains. the negro shot and killed a man named Murphey and wounded another. It is believed the negro is badly wound ed and will be captured in a few hours. If he is taken alive. h<- will probably be lynched. DECLINES GEORGIA CALL. KNOXVILLE. TENN., Aug. 26.—Dr. B. Cabel Hening. of this city, announces that he has declined the offer of su perintendent of the Baptist educational Work in the state of Georgia. FLORIDA SHERIFF SHOT DEAD IN JACKSONVILLE HOTEL WITH OWN GUN JACKSONVILLE. FLA. Aug. 26. IW. T. Andrews of Raiford, today is Jin the county jail charged yvlth the I death of John N. Langford, sheriff of Bradford county, who was shot an 1 j killed in the DuVal hotel here yester day afternoon. ■ The only witness to the shooting was John VV. Hatcher, of White Springs, a member of the Florida legislature. Hatcher told the police that all three men had been drinking heavily and that Andrews and Langford had been quarrelling all day. Langford was hit five times with his own gun, ,38-cali ber Colts automatic. MRS. BELMONT WILL TAKE STUMP FOR WOMEN’S VOTES MILWAUKEE, WIS.. Aug. 26—Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, New York suffragist, is to come to Wisconsin September 15 for three weeks touring by automobile, working for enfranchisement of Wis consin women. Mrs. Belmont will probably speak in Milwaukee, although she expressed a preference for small towns. BOY. 2, FALLS 2 STORIES: BRUISED: MOTHER FAINTS PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 26, —Landing upon an ash heap and thus breaking his fall from the second-story front room of his home, two-year-old Harry- Levinson. of 208 Mountain street, es caped with a few slight bruises yes terday morning. The boy’s mgther fainted as she saw him drop from the window. She was taken to Mt. Sinai hospital. by the tinted Shoe Manufacturing Comnany in placing the wonderful Goodyear Welt Machines, w hich were shown m this exhibit, makes it pos stole tor a Snoe manufacturer with surprisingly small capital to secure all the advantages in equipment of the largest manufacturers in the country The amount now sent out of the South ior . hoes wou.d, in five years, build a Shoe Fac tory in every city of the South ” I he example of the J. K. Orr Shoe Company will do much to hasten this day. MM TO SHOOT WiH OMERS Suspension of Constitutional Guarantees in Effect—Reb els Spurn Amnesty Offer. JUAREZ. Aug. 26. —Suspension of constitutional guarantees throughout the Mexican republic went into effect today. Prisoners of war may’ be shot without trial as long as the suspension continues. The suspension follows a special act of the Mexican congress. Amnesty’ was extended to rebels who chose to lay’ down their arms before the suspension order went into effect. Ac cording to reports at the rebel camps, not a single one of their number took advantage of the order. HORSEWHIPPED SWAIN AND SWEETHEART ELOPE ROME. GA., Aug, 26.—Although he was horsewhipped a month ago by Mrs. A. P. McGinnis and fined $25 in police court on the testimony of Mrs. Mc- Ginnis that he was annoying her with his attentions to her daughter. Brack Harless never once became discour aged in his determination to win pretty Miss Mary McGinnis, and last night slipped his sweetheart away and mar ried her.