Newspaper Page Text
the weather
Forecast: Fair tonight and Tues,
day. Temperatures: 8 a. m., 74; 10
a . m., 81: 12 m., 85: 2p. m„ 87. •
VOL. XL NO. 37.
BOYCE SLAIN
FOR PLANS
TOELOPE
AGAIN
Jaiiker Sneed to Plead That
He Shot to Save Wife From
New Escapade.
FOUND LETTER TELLING
OF PROPOSED FLIGHT
Reconciled. Husband Arranged
to Start Anew, When He
Made Discovery.
AMARILLO. TEXAS. Sept. 16. —That
ht killed Al G. Boyce to prevent him
from taking his wife from him again
i. be tile defense of John Beal Sneed,
rich Amarillo banker, in his trial
fo> the murder.
s n eed will claim that he and his wife
had become reconciled about two
months ago and had planned to re
move to Mississippi and start life
anew when he came upon evidence of a
pirn of hi- wife and Boyce to elope
-.gain. This plan, he will claim, he
Mund in a letter from Boyce to his
vio tilling that he had left Canada
. ini . omc to Ajnarlllo ami outlining a
plan for her to leave her husband and
(let with him a second time.
Young Bojce had been offered the
management of an immense cattle
ram it in Argentine Republic.
Th'- Potter county grand jury in spe-
i vial session took up the killing today.
An indictment is efcpected during the
da- and a torneys for Sneed are ex
pected tomorrow to institute habeas
corpus proceedings to secure the release
us their client from jail.
A feature of the inquiry before the
grand iury was whether Sneed had an
ei'implice in the killing, ft has been
-uiblishcd that two men. one answer
■: i- tl>> i't -cription of Sneed, rented a
. oltagi next door to the Methodist
.hi!.-i. in front of which the tragedy
• iiurrcd. The second man has disap-
Mrs. Sneed has also left her
home.
No Armed Outbreak
Between Families.
I •cvclopment • today indicated that
tiw lav would be allowed to take its
i "ii -e and that there would be no
r n d conflict between members and
friend* of the Boyce and Sneed fami-
\ t'i 'iigh the Boyces ami Sneeds
went about armed today, there was no
"p-n outbreak. The Sneeds are wait
ng foi the Box ces to make the next
nm e. according to lite ’’code" in feud
'a t. irt. an I the Boyces are deterred
i'-'..ii.-i of the critical illness of Mrs. A
G. finer-, superinduced by the shock of
th- killing of her son.
Mis. Boyce was one of the first to
t<a h her son Saturday. As he lay in
thr streel his mother rushed to him
■ lie. kneeling beside him. took his head
n I'l-r lap and willed the blood from
hi- face.
"How much more of lliis must 1
-land ." he exclaimed.
Later she went to her home, where
collapsed. It is feared she max not
-iirviv. the shock.
"'ill Boy< e. brother of Al. was al
""M in time to avenge the killing Sat-
''iay. it was. learned today. With a
repeating shotgun in his hand, he rush -
■ I" the scene, reaching there only a
inute after officers had taken Sneed
tiway.
Slew Eloper In
Front of Church.
'need, slayer of Captain A. S. Boyce
principal in the Boyce-Sneed feud,
a -' Saturday shot and instantly killed
' Royce, who eloped with Sneed's wife
■' s January. The killing took place in
' ! " nt of the Methodist church here.
Sneed, disguised as a hunter, wearing
o.- rails and a false beard, lay in wait
Boyce behind a corner of the
He carried his gun in a long
red box. Hr fired one charge at
‘ ose range.
Bo.'cc died a few moments later and
wers easily .captured Sneed and coin.
•1 him to jail. Sneed for a week
o rented a small shantv near the
church.
■irs. Boyce, mother of the victim, is
f itrated and max die.
a few weeks ago Mrs. Lena
' ’ and her husband had become
ricilcd and were supposed to be liv
eably in Georgetown, Texas. It
not known that he was in the city.
' ' killing of Boyce is the latest
incident in a long list of trage
"hich higan last January when
, 4 Lena Sneed ran awax with Box co
■nitarium in Eorl Worth, whore
'ad been placed be her husband for
°u troubles.
'/‘"■o b'"l the young man' father in I
Uorth and killed him in a quarrel i
the elopement >
The Atlanta Georgian
Read For Profit—GEORGIAN WANT ADS—Use For Resu'ts.
—' ■- - ' —— ■ ' >
BROWN SJYS
HUM HEAD
HOLOSJOB
TILL JUNE
Governor Will Refuse to Issue
Commission Until After the
Legislature Meets,
HE QUOTES STATE LAW IN
SETTLING VEXED PROBLEM
:
i Means That Price Won't Serve
"Short Term" and Displace •
Commissioner Connor.
| Governor Joseph M. Brown author
ized the announcement today that he
'would hold that Commissioner of Agri
culture Connor, holding office under
appointment to the unexpired term of
Commissioner Thomas G. Hudson, can
not be displaced before the legislature
' meets next June, canvasses the gen
eral election returns and formally de
t-lares the person duly chosen by the
people to succeed to the office.
The governor bases his opinion upon
section 94 of .he code, which prescribes
the manner n which the governor,
treasurer, comptroller general, attorney
general and commissioner of agricul
ture shall be elected, and which spe-.
cifically recites that the stipulations
laid down shall apply to all.
rhe legislature is required to can
vass the returns in the governor’s case
and declare the result before the elec
tion is complete, and no person may
qualify for governor whose election has
not bebn so declared.
No Commission Before
Legislature Meets.
The governor, therefore, will hold
that he has no authority to commis
sion any one whose election has not
been accomplished in the manner laid
down; and it would be impossible that
any person other than Connor, under
that ruling, could qualify before next
June, save in the remote contingency of
a special session of the legislature be
ing called in the meantime.
The governor authorizes the state
ment that he will commission no one
before the legislature meets, no mat
ter xx hat the state executive committee
may do in the matter of filling an im
aginary vacancy to occur in October or
November, and regardless of what may
happen in the regular October election,
in the matter of electing a commission
er of agriculture to begin his term of
service in advance of the assembling of
the legislature next June.
Unquestionably, the governor's an
nounced attitude will go far toward
clearing up a situation that has been
very much obscured in the public mind
of late.
Connor To Hold
On to His Office.
James D. Price was nominated by
the Macon convention to a full and
regular term in the office of commis
sioner of agriculture. That term will
begin about July 1, after the legisla
ture has formally declared Price's elec,
tion.
A question arose in the minds of
some lawyers, however, as to whether
there w ould not. as a matter of fact, be
an existing vacancy in the commission
ership immediately following the Octo
ber election, and if it would not be pos
sible for some one, other than a Demo,
crat, to have his name placed on the
regular state ticket in October, and. in
the event of his receiving a number of
votes, legally demand the office under
the law.
Because of the difference of opinion
among lawyers as to when the unex
pired term of Hudson -the present term
of Connor—expires, Chairman William
J. Harris decided to have James D.
Price's name placed on the ticket in
the October election as the Democratic
nominee, merely as a precautionary
measure, and in order to have a Demo
crat ready to qualify for the office in
the event a vacancy were held to ex
ist.
Governor Brown’s declaration that
he will not commission Price, or any
body else, before the legislature has met
and declared a result, definitely closes
the matter.
Connor will not he displaced before
the June meeting of the legislature, aft
er which Price will be commissioned.
The governor states that the law is
very clear in iiis mind, and that he
would be compelled to refuse a com
mission to any person, as commission
er of agriculture, unless that, person
came to him certified h\ the legisla
ture.
i mix in the event of resignation, re
moval or death would the governor be
authorized to name a successir to Con.
nor before next June, unless the legis
lature in extraordinary session in the
rm antimt should declare ailothi r eleit-
I i'd to the ollie- All of these eontln-
Igi ii' ".- :ir<’ o i moi- of • our • , ’ sat
ithc.x need not bt taken into considers-
Mermaids’ Skill Astonishes Society Folk at East Lake Meet
AT HOME IN POND AS ON DANCE FLOOR
! /all l :,s> y ; • .-Wx
jlik r I x
9 ® J - rn.
Mil
b/’
a- f I w /x(
A i WW fw Gm
W, lIMRsls I cliff ' ! /
V £jx^' ;; ' ; ' : 'x J iiMF/
~ \ Jud-1V y /
\<?—lx
x MISS HELEN thorn.
j/ 1 — N
MISS LIDA NASH.
Miss Nash Wins Swimming
Event, and Miss Rambo’s
Driving Stunts Astonish.
Three Atlanta society mermaids are
beong congratulated today on winning
new laurels. In the lake at the Ath
letic club's country home they proved
themselves as much at home in the wa
ter as on the links or the dancing floor.
Swimming is coming into its own this
year.
Miss Lida Nash and Miss Helen
Thorne were the two young women
who entered the long distance swim
ming competition, and despite the chop
py water, which made swimming diffi
cult. Miss Nash made the distance from
boathouse to dam in 20 minutes 55 sec
onds. Miss Thorn was a close second.
Miss Regina Rambo, sponsor for the
recent Confederate reunion at Mariet
ta. was the only entrant in the fancy
diving contest. Her daring dive from
the 20-foot tower won her a round of
applause.
The club plans holding a water car
nival every summer in future, and ex
pects to have a dozen girl entrants by
next season Atlanta boasts sis some
excellent swimmers for an inland city.
Miss Lida Nash was considered one of
the best at Wrightsville Beach this
season and both Miss I horn and Miss
Rambo are superb athletes.
Walter Hubard won the featute
events, taking two first prizes and one
second tn his three contests. He de
feated Crane in the long distance men’s
race, swimming to the dam and return
in 18 minutes 25 seconds. He also won
the diving contest. Crane finished first
in the 50-yard dash, with Hubard sec
ond. Karl Brittain did some spectacu
lar high diving.
TAFT ELECTORS OF
KANSAS LOSE AGAIN
IN INJUNCTION WAR
DENVER. COLO., Sept. 16. By
unanimous decision the judges of the
United States circuit court of appeals,
sitting in Denver, today refused to
grant an injunction asked by the Taft
faction of the Republicans of Kansas
to prevent the secretary of state of
Kansas from placing the names of
Roosevelt electors on the official ballot
under the Republican emblem.
Appeal will bo taken by the Taft fa<*-
tion to the supreme court of the I'nited
States. The court held that the ease is
not one of which ,i court of equity may
take cognizance. Xpplfeation tor the
injunction wa- ordered liimniwiil, the
cost to b boine by titosi who brought
tlte action
ATLANTA. GA.. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 16. 1912.
MISS REGINA RAMBO.
|
CURTIS IS INDICTED
FOR SLAYING MAN
WHO SLURRED WIFE
W. H. Curtis, brother of Dr. A. Lee
Curtis, of Atlanta, who shot and killed
J. H. Helton, a stationer, in Jackson.
Miss., a week ago. pleading self-de
fense, is being held in Jail following in
dictment by the Hinds county grand
jury.
The jury found a true bill against
Curtis on Saturday. He will be placed
on trial at the regular term of court in
December. According to Dr. Curtis, his
brother has not asked for bond on the
theory that the offense is not bailable
under Mississippi statutes.
The younger Curtis will adhere to his
plea of self-defense and maintain in
court that Helton had a pistol in his
hand when he entered the office, of Dr.
Applewhite, where the shooting oc
curred. (
“ GOING FOR-THE MAIL ”
CHURCH DODGERS KICK
ON SUNDAY SHUT DOWN
Notwithstanding the fact that a hu<
and cry went up when the postal de
partment cut out the distribution of the
Sunday mail at Jhe At'anta postoffice,
prominent business men are of the ,
Opinion that trade conditions have not
been affected.
i Postmaster McKee says he has re
ceived but few protests on the new a
- and these largely from men
who used the going- to-t he-postoffice
excuse to dodge church services. A
canvass of business houses develops the
fact that Atlanta concerns long ago
had nearly abandoned the idea of look
ing over mail on Sunday.
■Virtually the only objections to the
new rule come from traveling sales
men, who find it difficult to get impor
tant mail sent to them to hotels. This
situation, it is believed, will bad to an
increase in the use of the special de
livery system.
WOULD BAR NAME
OF JACK JOHNSON
FROM DIXIE PAPERS
NEW ORLEANS, Sept, 16 A Nash '
ville, Tenn., editor has stalled a move
merit to bar the name of Jack Johnson
the pugilist, from Southern new pa pet ■.
and today every editor in this ■ ity re
ceived a letter from Nashville bearing
such request
The Nashville editor de'lai.-s that nil
marrying the white woman who i'-I
cent I.t killed Im isi 1' .lop a .ip ntfei i ~i, 1
aftioiit to every white woman in th-l
land
WOMAN LAWYER HAS
NEW SCHEME TO GET
PERMIT IN GEORGIA
Mrs. Virginia Mclntire Weaver, who
has for the last year fought in vain for
the right to practice law in Georgia;
has hit upon a unique scheme to carry
her point, declare her friends.
She has gone back to West Virginia,
her former home, and is preparing to
stand her‘examinations and be admit
ted to the bar there. West Virginia
admits women lawyers. Once admit
ted to the bar in West Virginia, Mrs.
Weaver believes that when she returns
to Georgia she will have to be granted
the same privileges here as would any
other lawyer from another state who
produces the proper credentials saying
he had been admitted to practice in
his native state.
Mrs. Weaver is a graduate of the At
lanta Law school and when she found
that Georgia laws barred any woman
I from playing the, part of Portia, she
1 tried to have the legislature change the
! law, but failed.
She is now in Morgantown. W. Va„
and as soon as possible intends to re
turn to Georgia and take up the prac
tice of law, if she be allowed to do so.
SLAYER SPENCER TO
DIE IN CHAIR TONIGHT;
CHEERY AS END NEARS
BOSTON s»ept. 16.-Bertram G.
Spencer will be electrocuted In the
Charlestown prison shortly after mid
night tonight. He will pax- the penalty
fol the murder of Miss Martha B.
Blackstone, a Spiingfield, Mass., school
teacher. The woman was shot down
w hile encountering a burglar.
Both Governor Eoss and President
Taft have refused the pitiful pleas of
his mother, Mrs. Kate* E. Spencer, for
commutation.
In Christian Science, Sp'iner lias
found strength and so titude as the end
approach! s and the guards at the pris
on today said he is the best behaved
and most cheerful of the fifteen men
who hat! been confined in the death
c It a in her.
SEVEN PRISONERS
SAW OUT OF JAIL;
WIFE OF ONE HELD
1 H ILLI' ■' >TH E, i )H!i >, spi |u
Si ten prison' r- of th ■ county pail made
lh"l w .ipi heie early today by sawing
the bare of their cells
Ml- William Wolfe, wifi of om of
lln i aped pri -om r-, Was arrested thlr
morning i hing'd with complicity In
th' is. ape of the num Five whit. and
two , d nun. of ii'uhh ......
I 4 iil - ■ d Mi’i buijfldiij linn <.* -
| ■ ape.
LIGHT CONTRACT
TO GO THROUGH
k
Expected That It Will Be Finally
Recommended to Atlanta
Council Today.
>
When the council committee on elec
i trie Sights met this afternoon it was
. expected that the city’s pending con
tract for street lights with the Georgia
i Railway and Power Company would be
I finally recommended to council,
Alderman John E. McClelland said
i he favored asking for new bids. City
; Electrician Turner said that Atlanta
should have as low rates as Macon. But
the contract has already been approved
by Mr. Turner and the committee and
unless the Central Georgia Power Com
pany or some other company expresses!
a desire to bid on the city contract, the
majority of the committee and of coun
cil will approve the contract with the
Georgia Railway and Power Company.
Mr. Turner returned today from Ma
con, where he Investigated the cheap
light rates. He says he is convinced
the reason Atlanta can not get such
rates by competition is that there is an
agreement between the Georgia Rail
way am| Power Company and the Cen
tral Georgia Power Company not to bld
againsl each other.
Ihe Central Georgja Power Com
pany. of Macon, has constructed a line
to Atlanta. Preston Arkwright,* pre'si •
dent of the Geo-gin Railway and Power!
Company, declared that there, is no
agreement between the two company
not to bid against each other. He said,
though, on account of the delays in th?
Tallulah Calls power plant develop
ment. Ids company had contracted with
the Central Georgia Power Company* to
use some of its current.
MASKED MENI TRY TO
KIDNAP WOMAN FROM :
HOME: FLEE IN FRIGHT
SAVANNAH GA , Sept 16 Mrs Marie
I. Jones, daughter of David C Foreman,
Is In a hysterical condition at her home
as the result of an attempt to kid
nap her last night
Mrs lores was attacked by two masked
I men. who hound and gagged her and
carried her from her bed room to the
rear of Hie house on the lower floor 1
There they deserted her when discovery
was Imminent. According to Mrs Jones
there w i a third man stationed on the
outside, perhaps as a lookout
l> was the shrill whlHtli ~f ibis man
Unit v.lined her captors of dangei
Mi- Clarein-e Stewart heard her Mister
ici'ianing and I<hi;iil her l.oimd and gagged
and wrapped In >i sluet 'fhe family
I!• unable ■' ;< .s ign nnv motive I'.o i| n
l iio mi-i. lod'i.iping
t'H.i aim w.i ,i.-i<o|. 1,. i| le e |,j,
|"l Mt - Junta was not disturbed, |
TiOMT
IPITiQH
2 CENTS EVERYWHERE, P M
SMMEHURD
FORCED TO
UESCINO
ACTION
Backs Down in Its Attempt to
Modify Regulations of the
City Council.
OPEN WAR TO COMPEL
i ABOLITION OF NUISANCE
Still Considering Move to Wipe
Out Commission—Fight to
Go to Council. /
Forced to back down by widespread
criticism of Its attempt to modify
council’s smoke regulations. Chairman
i R. M. Harwell, of the smoke ■ commis
sion, has called a meeting r>f the rules
committee of the commission to rescind
its action.
j The committee at the same time will
I frame a new set of regulations fior the
guidance of the commission itself,
which will he submitted to the.board.
The board's action In modifying the
already light regulation’ as council
governing the emission of smoke of
varying density was denounced as a
I usurpation of authority by many coun
oilmen and by City Attorney Mayson.
■ Abolition of the smoke board, which
'as declared to be standing in the way
f reform, was seriously urged
War to Enforce
Smoke Ordinance.
I Councilman Charles W. Smith, fath
er of the smoke ordinance, said today
that while he had not decided whether
|he would Introduce an ordinance to
I abolish the smoke commission at the
j meeting of council this afternoon he
, would begin his fight to see that the
original smoke ordinance Is enforced.
f hairman Harwell declared that
Councilman Smith was too hasty in
I criticising the smoke commission. He
said that he was opposed to the act'on
of the commission In amending the city
smoke ordinance and that he informed
the other members that such action was
illegal. He added that the commission
did not want to hinder the movement
to abate the smoke nuisance.
" e came into office inexperienced.”
he said. “We are dealing with a com
plex problem. We must proceed de
liberately at first.”
Councilman Smith’held a conference
with < "ity Attorney Mayson today to
determine the exact legal status of the
smoke law.
The commission has changed radi- ”
(ally the law of council. City Attor
ney Mayson has ruled that its action
was Illegal. Council Smith intends to
get council to take a definite stand on
the matter this afternoon.
Mason Also Would
Abolish Commission.
Councilman Claude C. Mason, In an
Interview today, joined Councilman
Smith in his plan to abolish the smoke
commission if the commission does not
see fit to enforce the smoke ordinance.
Ihe original smoke ordinance did
not contemplate a smoke board.” he
•said. "The board was added as a. com.
promise, and it xvas given exceptionally
wide authority. It seems to me to have
proved a failure.”
Oscar Elsas, a wealthy manufacturer
and one of the members of the smoke
commission who voted to amend coun
cil's smoke ordinance, called on several
members of council today and request
ed them to give him a hearing before
| abolishing the smoke commission. He
was promised that council would refer
the matter to a committee and give
everx one an opportunity to express
their opinions before taking final ac
tion.
Mr. Elsas said that he intended to
comply with the smoke ordinance at
once with his own plant, the Fulton
■ Bag and Cotton mills. He said he had
(already employed an expert to tell him
I just what was needed to consume tha
' smoke generated by his furnaces.
WIFE, SELF-POISONED.
NEAR DEATH BEFORE
TELLING KIN OF DEED
SAVANNAH, GA. Sept 16.—As <l
result of taking rat poison FTida.x nigh'.
Mis Glare Hutu died last night at
Park View sanitarium
Mis. Hunt suffered from the poison
for ii number of hours before advising
her family of the trouble and getting
medical asslgtanie.
Mi- Hunt sir <■ veais old and a
iiHtlxe Os Aroo-look cotinix Maim Her
mnlh.-i Mrs Saimol It Russell. >f
LoSIOII ,'l XlXi., as doc;, iivi iiu.rban I
j Hid uli< suit.