Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 20, 1912, FINAL 1, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

NEW REPUBLICAN LEAGUE OFFERS WILSON AID Randolph Spreckels Starts a Movement to Support Dem ocratic Nominee. COLUMBUS, OHIO, Sept. 20. —Re- publicans who are dissatisfied with Taft a i l( ] who do not believe in Roosevelt as the proper leader for the progressive movement of the country will find a banner around which to rally in the Wilson National Progressive Republi can league, to which Governor Wooci ro« Wilson today gave his indorse ment. Rudolph Spreckels, in New York city, organised the league and wired the governor here today about it. The Democratic nominee immediately wired his approval. The Spreckels telegram read: Governor Woodrow Wilson, Colum bus, Ohio: Eastern headquarters of the Wil son National Progressive Republi can league were today opened in the Metropolitan building. New York. Our league was founded by progressive Republicans who hope to save tlie progressive movement that was started some years ago in the Republican party, but which is now being betrayed by the. organi zation of Colonel Roosevelt 's third term party. Under these conditions you alone deserve the support of true progressives who place prinef p'es above partisanship. Our mem - ii] is wholly Republican, but Mt jut lifted in voting and wnridng for your election, since t: < candidate of the Republican . ty dots not represent the pro s ■ mt-j'rity in that party and Roost >< 1 enndidaey 's hopeless a: < serves to divide our pro- | t . >- ve forces. i • > RUDOLPH SJ RU' KIJ.S € Ktl, Bv Wilson. T ..- Governor Wilson replied: '■ :• .-.It;: am telling rm- (l s the ' >’ the National P'C- i r It: publican league gave : n t . v> aie.st so■ c-fact'or. and ent ■.-•.. rag mt nt. The action you ' your asociates are taking s- tr me to be truly patriotic. The progressive forces of the na tion ought y.et te i>? divided. N, ii - grim d.rnent to a party name I « .oubi no. separate men whose j l ::■] ■' sni convict km s an- united 1 f a common object. The form..-' | i. >1 t'ne ieagu ■ stems to me f the most reassuring indicn- ] of the temper of thoughtful |i May I not con vey to you my 1 , "t.g ituiation” on your own pa:; l ( ~ movement" < ■ W< a>l ,jt(i\'- WII SOX. >:■ wiison took this city by! si.'l'Ac tod;.y by arr!*ng three iw.i: ■■ j r:r."d ,-f iv.-' icheuitie. H wan g t."ily hiticu. :; after his Det ■dt speech. and ti ■■ . nge was ine.de niipw him to j ' ■ >. a.i'-Ii needed . i‘". The train;' a > > • :ps which were to have ■ ' .: stations between Toledo! ‘this-morning were can- | ; “dr Wil-on tool: an earlier! , [ : : 1 ■'!' ,nc- entire mp. He will . ■ p '■'J 'esses during the day i <:■ rith :i big meeting at 1 'l' " :a ; ' tonight.. Ty Cobb Calls On Gov. Wilson : 'I-TIl. MK 'H.. Sepi. 20.—Tyrus ' • -0. 1 t'ubb, idol of.the fan-, shook ' v. :ih Woodrow Wilson, leader of . I' .io. ;a at the Pontchartrain • last night, and turned a ne u one. 1 .'otii' ,iie next time we meet it will in the whim house.” said Ty. there- 11 I- using himself able to twirl con "t'sation with any “jollier” in the bunch l o'. • 1 • iien t seen you since I met you ' 'ourgla. •'returned Governor Wilson. 1 h awful!) glad to see you again.” I’on 1 ’on t refer to that,” remarked Mr. , °bl>. "i was playing in musical eom c.' I hen.” , 1 ''.'as while Ty Cobb was doing the ■in stunt in a revised edition of "The : ” f ge Widow" in Atlanta that Mr. '' 1 son met him first. It was a re- 1 minorative season, but Ty refuses to 81 about things dramatic. 1 "bo was too busy getting off his ‘ bull togs and into street clothes to Governor Wilson’s train, but he ' led to the hotel and into the pri- ' 1 dining room, where the presiden- 1 candidate was dining with a num- 1 ■f -Michigan Democratic leaders, •bb was invited to join the recep- ■ committee, but he dodged this "Hui gracefully by pleading that niod forbade his taking the spotlight, •eard Governor Wilson speak, but only one of the crowd. After that '' “d for a flashlight photograph in ~ 'up with the other celebrities. TENNESSEE OPENS WAR ON BREWER VIOLATORS V ASHVILLE. TENN., Sept. 20.—At nrv General Cates this morning '■ dissolution proceedings in the are epy court at Knoxville against the. vnoxviik Brewing Company to have barter annu.lled for violation oi 'late liquor laws. This is the first of ■< series to be brought against : “rations. A representative of the < -saloon league is named as re- < ‘•''er. • I Dainty Feet That Never Lag at Ball Are Weary Now “WAITRESSING"' TIRES ''BUDS” ’How It Feels To Be a Waitress’ j Eloquently Told by Society Girl Who Now Knows. “How does it feel to be a waitress?” The debutante, who had for tjwo hours *>* •-/ J Ww . BB - HHHE * X JIHPr been one of a scurrying throng of 30- e’ety birds serving at the tables of tin: <’aft; de D butante in tile old t'ai ital ('tty” club building, east an cloquem / ok around her. , It was shortly after 2 o’clock, Im hour when the luncheon time is at an end for the day. A eraslt of ehina came from the adjoining room, wherein by skillful African hands the dish washing process was being <airried on. Hero and there in the dining room sat a. belated customer, engaged in talk ing to his fair waitress rather titan in finishing the delicious meal for which be supposedly had come to the restau rant. The other waitresses, numbering among them some of tlie prettiest and most charming of Atlanta's daughters, sat around the dining room or grouped in little clusters in the corners, telling each other whom they had served artd what tl'is customer and that one had said. No waitress in a down-town restau rant who had been on her feet all the long day could hav< shown more real pleasure at, the relaxation that < tine when the luncheon time was over. Dainty feet tiial never tired at the long hours in the ball room were ready now for rest, and tjiere was only joy that the meals had been served fol the day and that Joseph Habersham chapter of the Daughters of the Amer ican Revolution would not require their services until next day. The debutante who was asked how it felt to be a waitress seemed to think that her look around the room and the sights that it pointed out had been sufficient to satisfy any queries. But the questioner waited. "How does it feel'.”’ she said again. •Why it feels like—like— why, just like this!" And she dropped into the near est chair. The evident pleasure at being ensconced in a comfortable chair told the story plainer than words could have expressed. Out-us-town visitors allied the wait resses today. Mrs. Eelton Jones, of Cartersville, assisted Airs. I. J. Ripley and M-s. John Smith in looking after the chaperoning end of the luncheon. Miss Regina Rambo, of Marietta, serv ed with the Atlanta waitresses, telling them that they could not know what real work was until they had tried to pin badges on some eight or nine hun dred Confederate veterans, as the Ma rietta girh Had done at the recent re union. Misses Liny Stockard, Helen Dykes, Erances Ansley, Laura and Louise Rip ley and Tommie and Marion Perdue were among the waitresses of tlie day. MEW CHINESE PREMIER. TIEN TSIN. Sept. 20. —President Yuan Shi Kai today appointed Chao Ping Chun to b> Chine <• premier, suc ceeding Tang San Yi. who resigned be cause of the inability of his country to borrow money to carry out reforms. TH?> AIL ANT A GEORGIAN \ND NEWS. ERIDA Y. SEPTEMBER 20. 1912. [. X-Ry ,y jEMyy- . JKyWff A. \ / / / / . \ N X, ssp z N X " - ' y/ x Y// Mp-s Lu<-;. Stockai’tl. one of the pretty society girl waitresses at the. old Capital City club. FORTIFIF D STRIKERS REFUSE TO RECEIVE . ENVOYS OF PEACE 1 BINGHAM, UTAH. Sept. 20.—Armed miners still waited quietly behind their trenches today at the entrance of the ‘ coppe: and silver mines near here, while Governor Spry and members of 1 the state board of conciliation and ar ' bitration considered with Sheriff Sharp 1 the next move that should be made in ' the strike which lias thrown 6,000 men into idleness. Tile militia may be ordered out by ■ night unless tin miners aie willing to 1 listen to the proposition to arbitrate. President Moyer, of tlie Western Eed eration of Miners, believes tile men will • listen to argument and that tlie diffi culties can be adjusted. Tlie miners, . however, have refused to'listen to Moy . er or to the officers of the union and , have not allowed any messenger to en ter their stronghold. Those who 'have . tried to make th ir way up to the can yon to the mine entrances have been stopped witli bullets. The strikers’ forces were augmented j today by 2.000 additional men from the Magna and Arthur mills, which closed down this morning. THREE HURT IN CHASE OF FLEEING THIEF IN NEW YORK STREETS! NEW YORK, S; pl. 20. After leaping from a window at poller' headquarters ; today in an effort to escape, William Mclnerny, an alleged burglar, was shot 1 three times ami several other persons ' were injured in the excitement which followed. A bystander was shot in the hand and anothc- man was. trampled 1 by a mob which started in pursuit of tlie fugitive. Mclnerny was taken to a hospital. Ai Inerny, when he leap.d through the window, l imled on Vincenzo Giro solo, who happened to be di recti.' under the window. As soon as he recovered his breath Vincenzo arose to his feet at\! witli a yell started to run after the fleeing man In the meantime the delicti'is had uslied to tlie wind' and th re - 1: volvers were popping A num- I her of w.pmeu and ehildrt n wi re knock led down' and trathpledl Three bulle' ' hi: Alelrterny's siioutder before h ■ dropped. COLUMBUS MAN WHO LEFT WIFE IS HELD AS BIGAMIST IN VIRGINIA LYNCHBI'RG, VA„ Sept. 20— E. H. Nunnally, arrested here on a charge of bigamy, has been held for the ac tion of the grand jury at the October term of the corporation court. Nunnal ly is now in jail as a result of bail be ing denied him. He is alleged to have married Miss Joe Hall in 1901 at Cordova, Ala. Mov ing later to Columbus. Ga., he left her two years ago, it is alleged, coming to Virginia. Last September he became acquaint ed with Miss Essie Maj Law. daughter of J. Q. Law, of this city, and they were married last March 5. When arraigned in court, Nunnally Admitted that he had been living with his first wife irregularly for some time before coming to Lynchburg. The second Mrs. Nunnally, a mere strip of a girl, declared that she most assuredly would not have married Nun nally had she known he had another • wife living. As she left court she hand ed him a bundle of clothing and with a smile kissed him good-bye. To ail appearances, she seems deter mined to stand by her husband, while her father is equally determined to prosecute him. Nunnally is a cotton mill worker. MANAGER OF DIVING ACT HELD FOR TRIAL AS FRAUD R. B. Brown, manager of a troupe of professional high divers, who borrowed ssot) fiom Mis. Alice Crumby, an At lanta boarding house keeper, some time ago, was bound over to the city crimi nal court today by Justice Charles Gi rardeau on a charge of cheating and swindling Brown was unable to put up the SOOO required. Brown is said to hav> hollowed the money on the pretense that he would use it to finance a vaudeville act. When he reached Cincinnati, Mrs. Crumby became apprehensive of losing her money and htid her former boarder ar rested and brought back to Atlanta. It's like getting money from home, for ft’s money easilv made bv reading, using and answering the Want Ads in The Georgian Few people realize the many opportunities offered them among the small ads. It's a good sign that if the peo ple did not get resufts from the Want Ads of The Georgian that there would not be :o many of then;, if. for nothing else, sit down and check ofl the ads that app-al to you. You •■•ill be astonished how many of them mean money to you. The Want Ad pages )ir e bargain counters In "Vdry line. The ad- arc o conveniently arranged that tl ey en be picked out verj easy. MEXICAN SOLONS' IN FIST BATTLES Name of Diaz Is Hissed and Cheered—Tumult Prevents Vote on War Fund. MEXICO CITY. Sept. 20.—The Mexi-I. can congress took a recess this morn- | ing after a riotous night session. The I proceedings were the most turbulent I ever witnessed here and the disorder | prevented the transaction of any busi ness. Members hissed and cheered the name of Diaz. The whole session was devoted to wrangling by the members, in which the crowded galleiies joined. Despite I a heavy guard kept on the floor by the I government, a number of fist fights j started after the lie had been passed by 1 the angry members. The galleries hooted the government deputies when they advocated the | passage of the measure granting Ma dero money t»> crush the various revolts and many of the- spectators were ; thrown out by the police. The disorder prevented any vote and It is not yet known whether the gov ernment will have a working majority. Thousands of persons unable to gain entrance into the galleries besieged the building, despite a heavy rain, and when the anti-Madero spokesmen left they were acclaimed. Orozco Tricks Federate Again EL PASO, TEXAS. Sept. 20.—Gener al Orozco has again tricked tile Mexi can federals and has led the remnant of his insurrecto army into Coahuila, according to a dispatch received here today from Mexico City. This mes sage further stated that the Mexican government is preparing with all haste to shift the scene of operations against Orozco from Sonora into Coahuila. A federal force was sent in pursuit of the wily insurgent Wednesday. The main body of General Huertas’ government force, which has been occupying Jua rez, departed westward today. WOMAN HELD AS AN EMBEZZLER PUTS ALL ONUS ON HER SPOUSE j ST. LOUIS, Sept. 20.—A touching story of a husband’s penchant for bor rowing money and neglecting to pay it, and the consequent misfortune that came to his family, was told in the prisoner's cage of the court of criminal correction by Mrs. Mamie O’Malley, 25 years old, I who is charged with embezzlement as an indirect result, she says, of her hus band's carelessness. Clad in a stylishly tailored tan suit, Mrs. O’Malley entered a plea of not guil ty when arraigned. “I was married five years ago,” she said to a reporter. "Shortly after my marriage I found out I was the wife of a man who had an unfortunate habit of borrowing money whenever he felt he needed, and then getting Into difficulty trying to pay it. He got a position and lost it when his wages were garnisheed by his creditors.” She said she separated from her hus band and secured a position with a brokerage firm. She did good work and was asked to go on the road. She con sented and was given $25 as first ex pense money. Then she sought her hus band and asked his advice. He did not like the idea of her traveling and she agreed not to go on the road. Then he borrowed the $25 and failed to pay it back. The brokerage firm had her ar rested as a result. DEATHS AND FUNERALS | Mrs. Melissie Haney. The funeral of Mrs. Melissie Haney, 7h .' ears old. who died yesterdaj, was held at the residence. 51 Powell street, this afternoon. Interment was in Greenwood cemetery. She is survived by two sons, W. S. and I. B. Haney. Miss Sallie Mewborn, The liody of Miss Sallie Mewborn, aged 21, who died at East Point last night, will be taken to Duluth, Ga„ to morrow at noon for funeral and intci •ment. She is survived by her father, M. C. Mewborn, of East'Point; three sisters and one brother. Zander Newman. Zander Newman, the eight-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Z. Newman, died at a private hospital here at 10 o'clock this morning. The funeral will be conducted from Bloomfield’s chapel tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock. The burial will be in Greenwood cemetery. I Mrs. Martha Jones. The funeral of Mrs. Martha E. Jones, who died last night at her home, 01 East Linden street, at the ago of 73 years, was eontlucted this afternoon at the residence of her daughter, Mrs, ('. N. Beardsley, 4SI Courtland street, Dr. Wiggins officiating. ! Mrs. Jones’ sons, Walter R. Jones, of Houston, Texas, and Wesley E. Jones, of Jacksonville, Ela., arrived several hours before their mother's death. Mrs. Jones is also survived by another son, Charles C. Jones, of Atlanta; a daugh ter, Mrs. C. B. Bcardslev: a grand daughter, Mrs. Oren Badger, and a’sis ter, Mrs. P. C. Johnson, of Piedmont, Ala. ' Mrs. Jones, who was the widow of Rev. W. E. Jones, was an old resident I of Atlanta, having moved here with her husband In ISSI. She was a mein ber of the Eirst Methodist church. Miss Sallie Newborn. The body of Mi: s Sallie Newborn, I aged 21. of East Point, who tiled last night al n local satiitai um. was taken to A. Hemperlej's funeral tstabli h-i ment and will be carried to Duluth for funeral and Interment. She loaves her fallte ■. M. <Newborn: two sisters and a brother. Miss Dettie Polk. Tie body of Miss Dettii Polk, agec eighteen, who died last night at the home of her parent-, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Polk, o!' Douglasville, will bo taken to Hapeville tomorrow i'oi func. al ami in- , terment. She also leaves two sisters ■ ,n.l tenth; r A 1| WEEK || WILL CLOTHE -M.YOU Says “DAY,” the Low-PriceKing This easy payment plan of Day’s is not a cheap, make-shift scheme—but an up-to-date, dignified, business proposition that appeals alike to poor and rich. . The clothes that we offer you are made of the best materials that the markets of this country afford, the styles are the very latest, and the prices are the lowest in the city. You select what you want, pay a small amount down and “I’ll trust you for the rest,” says Day. S3OO WEILER PIANO FREE RULES: You got fifty votes for every dollar.'s worth of goods bought on our easy payment plan, and an extra fifty votes for every dollar paid in, amounting to 100 votes for every dollar spent with us. Bring in a new customer and get 500 votes for such service. Votes deposited in a locked box, and the key is given to a local newspaper man. Three newspaper men to be the final judges. Contest closes on December 31, 1912, at 12 p. m. Party receiving largest number of votes is the winner. en Mpu’s and Youths’ suits, the eyWH very latest styles, for ■ « $9 to S3O Vp F t i (.’hildren's suits, iu r /M $2-5 ° to $7 - S0 SPECIAL— Blue Serge fall suits reiliicted to _jW $12.50 Men’s Hats (including Stet- M son's), Si S $1.50 to $5 \ / Vi Everything L‘ New and \rj Alterations rCC Women > M ILI,I ,\:EI{Y —A large pf stock of late, up-to-date, vM.'TW jSSf trimmed hats that were in lended for Iwo stores will be sacrificed for $1.50 to sls MH Ladies' one-piece and coat ' suits, i $9.98 to S4O I Special serve suits in all I colors, silk-lined and hand- I somelj trimmed, lor 1 sls 5