Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 21, 1912, EXTRA 2, Page 3, Image 3

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CAMERA TURNED ON WEST END'S HOSTS OF PRETTY CHILDREN I* :. ■ •> <9 ii i |r ■ MMfeOww ie* ■»■[ - 1A ' oBHEw : HuJe I BSCv w //K’s * IsS ’T' ’wT' ■ i ?1 ■*! /JHHL BbI Ee& IMF F B , A K3|.X ' Imoßt '• IS' ■ ®> ■' h&» / ' lußn Muib ' j * "'•Ok. i ' t.» wwSHßwl* • MW** i T / mV wHsM ir B - w JF * r «BMF >lu I ?i * a wW-. - ill aWw.**- " BHwHfet BHHBfr #1 If f -- ;? w*rwb J? - -wl|w >r"' IIIMIIIIf# . if ww yiw WTX. JhSMt »«*»<, . • f i’M aIBBBSw -a w-? J B- * >\ > ■ * "Wk/ WfajLial esssisf “WWa . w) ».' J . \ 4gu < ' < Louise Price, daughter of Mr \ V .Iks Ww *twoW A’ < i/ s ' -Luik's 11. Price, 400 >W. "’*' iH / ' & T n| w Ar/ MUy// which appears greatly interested ' 4 Jlfc ■* X 111 ’he camera man. / Cv) v - '< " W L //w/ f Jsscsss*?'" K, xjW&A. <■<<•<•■ ■ '■ •■•■ > a. / / // K<x! L^RjZ'- ? \ ' \ / / ,',x Jt*lSs I'Y*ZI i X \’K$P & : 's&v'‘-'i£ J Vt igi c ' > ■■s’■&*& ■■ Y 'Y- ■' ' LL„ *■ Y-’V ' ; - -’ ’ :> / / *» /jm J * \ \W'' "'■ '''GG' 'Kk. 7 , <t •la-\ Marion Rooker, clever-- 01 of Mr. and Mrs. -I. M. Rooker. \ | ’/ / / VyDtla) '■' <*ulelhorpe avenue. Master z- e; «- h *- -ylr^ —* •kick is quite a cyclist. i* - /' 4®c wz-sl\ - s MME PAGES SUBSTITUTED FOR {pi Theft of Money in Transit From Bank Mystifies Inves tigating Officials. f’LN’S Ai '< >1 ~\. FLA.. September 21. — theft from an L. and N. train rc t‘"i'ted yesteiday by officials is said to ' ' t<> have been in transit a package '"Gaining $55,0011 from the first Na '"rsl bank in this city to officials ot '-" l.<>tiis\ ille anti Nashville railroad at Idoioaton. Ala. The money was part of 3 shipment of $75,000 intended as a ' ■ mil. and was in bills of small de nominations. * • li"poits were current that the west bound Louisville and Nashville train. ■ ' im here Wednesday morning, had "'ll held up and robbed, but this is * mphatie.diy denied by railroad officials ' ' Private detectives and special ' a ''a- of the railroad and Southern i'-.\|i.i ,< Company are here investigat es the affair. I H' money was put in two .sealed ' icy-s at the bank, one containing -•" and the other $20,000. These hiio-s were delivered to the South- ■ -press Company and in turn de- 1 by them to the Louisville and x " L ' He pay car at Flomaton. to be '-’'l m paving off the men a< the car •nth to Pensacola. being opened hi the pay car. it Jl trie money package was found "main a roll of pages from a<»maga- ■ ‘ bi place of the money, The ex- ■ messengers, it is said, claim the "ii the packages were unbroken ";v tin- packages were in their care. Xl ‘ "port has been made by the de- * L " investigating the matter, and 1 I and express officials refuse t< ■> the disappearance of the money [DEATHS AND FUNERALS' Miss Bettie Pope. , dj of Mit-., Bettie Pope, riglit- ’ -old. who died near Douglas ,, • '-’as taken today to thi? Hapeville ist church, win re funeral serv I- " hold at fl:30 o’clock. Miss survived by her parents. Mr . "s. David H. Pope; four brothers, ’ * -John E., Lucien T. and Wil p ■’■•’>•'. and two sisters. Mrs. Lilia Hood and Miss Nettie Pope. Mrs. J. J. Mobley. ~ ! '. body of Mrs. .1. J. .Mobley, of Ga.. who died at an Atlanta 101 yesteiday. was taken to the aonie today for funeral and in- '' ! ! She is survived by her hUS Ind one .-on, at Osierfleld. FATE OF TROOPS WOOOFING 0.5. Mo News From Nicaragua Alarms Washington—Plan to Send Aid. 1 WASHINGTON, Sept. 21.- i'niess within the next 24 hours definite news reaches Washington concerning the outcome of tfie battle between th" American marines and tile rebel for- i s near Grenada, the state department will require that the Tenth infantry, now at Panama, be sent imniediatelv to Nicaragua tn suei-or the American troops. Government officials are thor oughlj. alarmed for the safety of the 900 marines, who left Managua to open a wav to Granada and who. it is feared, met with a vastly superior force qf rebels and may have been annihi lated. Less than a wek ago it was confi dently announced that the Anieficab forces in Nicaragua were amply able to take care of atjy continguency which might arise from the Latin-American republic and that the result was prac tically at an end. Today state depart ment officials fear that the t'nited States is facing the worst foreign prob lem it has met since the Spanish- American war, for the Nicaraguan rebels, unlike the majority of the Latin- American revolutionary forces, are w. 11 armed, disciplined and equipped with the latest word In ordnance. In order to capture Granada, where women are being assaulted and men baibarously tortured, the American force will have to storm and take Port San Erancisco. which is manned by General Mena’s trained gunners and which effectually guards all approaches to the town. As the marines have but three three inch field guns with them, this, it is thought, will be a most dangerous un dertaking, and that the dispatch of arm yerinforcements would be :i pol itic move. The infantry could reach Nicaragua in two days and would be of great aid in subduing the rebels. ARMY ORDERS | WASHINGTON. Sept 21— Army orders: Major Harry L- Pettus, quartermaster corps now at Bovce, Va.. to office chief quartermaster. Lieutenant Colonel Harry 1,. Hawthorne, coast artillery corps, to I-’l. Hancock. N. J., and assume command. Lieutenant Colonel Charles Grierson, from Tenth cavalry for general recruiting ser vice at l-t. McDowell. California. Lieu tenant Colonel Joseph A Gaston, cavalry assigned to Tenth cavarly. TTIE ATLANTA GEORG JAN ANT) NEWS SATERDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1912. STOP GOSSIPING TO BE BEAUTIFUL, WOMAN ABYSSES NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—" Paris wom en never have the sallow complexior , you see in this country,’’ declared Mrs ! Otto Weil, wife of the business manager! of the Metropolitan Opera house, win returned after four months- in Europe. “Parisians who have reached the age of fifty retain the grace and sluipelibes of twenty-four, and every one that 1 i asked for tire reason for the wonderful | preservation of youth told me to eat I sparingly, drink sparingly, walk consid erably. dream novel ami gossip pot a; all. “There are no beautiful Erench wom en who refuse to take < r.ercise' and their favorite daily recreation I: walk ing. You never see a Erench woman gorging herself at a midnight restau rant after the opera or theater. In stead she eats a little salad and drinks a llttie wine. She never drinks water’ SAILORS FORCED TO BURN RAMMED BRIG AT SEA; ASK $25,C00 SAVANNAH. GA.. Sept. 21.—Through the negligence of the steamer Roselands, the Brigantine Sceptre, in command of Captain Henry Burke, was rammed and danii ged to such an extent that it was necessary to set fire to her while at sea near Savannah. September 9. according to a libel suit Hied in the United States I court by Zwecker << Co., Ltd., owners | of the Sceptre, in which they ask for $25,000 damages. It is alleged in the libel that the Brigantine was showing proper lights, and used other signals, but that In spite of these precautions the Roselands bor<* down upon her and rammed her, hurting her so badly that it was necessary to sink her. The crew of the Brigantine was brought to Savannah on the Rosclands. Both were British vessels. “HELLO GIRL’’ SAVES TOWN AT PERIL OF HER OWN LIFE C<)SHOCTON. OHIO. Sept. 21. Eire 'threatened the de..‘-lruction of New t'us tlc, near here, last night. A it was the flames, which started in the store of G. W. Darling, spread to eight other buildings, causing a loss of s2s.o<m. That the destruction was not gn ap-r was due to the pluck of Mr.--. Dillon, thv village telephone operator, who re mained at her post, summoning lit ij from neighboring places, although het life was in danger and her own hmm was (hn-ate)H-d by the Haines. w ; SENATOR DIXON TELLS WHY HE LINES UP WITH i T. R.’S PROGRESSIVES By JOSEPH M. DIXON. | , Chairman of the Progressive National Committee. \ I'lW Y(>RK, Sept. 21. Hepubln ans and Democrat' often a-k me why I have allied myself with a “third party” which can not possibly elect a presi dent. I tell them that not only can the Progressive party elect a president, but it will i-Iret a president. And I tell them, further, that I .-hould ally my self with it whether it could elect a prr sident or not. Most of the thinking men of this < ount y- have recognized for years that a new party was a necessity. They have tried to vote with the old parties with a eleai- conscience, .and tin y have failed to do so. The result has b- en that they ha ve either shut tlu-ir eyes I v. lien they vot'd or stayed away from the polls. The reason is simple. The old par ties have promised th- tbifigs that the people have asked fol ; tliev have got tiie votes of the people in considera tion of those promises, but after they | have got the votes it has never occurred I to them for a minute that they had any duty to perform for the people that gavt them tin- votes. Lives Dedicated to Progress. We have no record of achieveineht that we admit. But we have in our party im-n whose liv< s are dedicated to progress, nn-n who can be trusted to cairy out progressive | iincipl<s if they are elected to office. < >nr i andidat'- for the presidency ha been a progressive, although for years In- was allied w ith the Heptiblican par ty. Our candidate for governor ba boon a progressive, although for years he was allied with the same party*. I do not think the enemies of either Theodor' Roosevelt or Oscar Straus can challenge that statement. Mr. Roosevelt, as president of th< I’nited States, made the Standard Oil Company his implacable foe. If any higher commendation can be given him thin that, I do not know what it is. He made the Guggenheirns his mortal enemies He caused Witham Loriim i Elizabeth Dent, of Mr. anti Mrs. 11. W. Dent, 207 AshJiv street, on left, anti Pauline Swain, tlanf>hter of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Swain. 203 Ashb\ street. Ito denounce him publicly. He aroused the enmity of the Beef trust, of the Tobacco trust, of every one of the com binations of capital whose greed is re sponsible for tin- pri st "t high cost ol living, which come-, more nearly to I being the real issue in this campaign than any other. Mr. Sir,-in-, in hi capaclly as minis ter to Turkey averted a very serious situation and probably saved this, coun try tin- hoi-rots of a war with Turkey. As secretary of the bureau-which he himself describes as the "bureau of hu manity.” he made a splendid record. A People’s Platform. it is not believable that a party which would enlist the sympathies and tile energies of two suyli men as this I is not a party whose purpose is to up lift tlie whole people. I have spoken in some detail of out platform, and I shall speak of it later in still moic detail. As 1 have said, it is a platform that comes from the people, a people’s platform, and the reason we are finding it welcomed everywhere is because it awakens a responsive chord in the breasts of all honest men. Progress nftei ill. is only an enun ciation of tlie principle. “Thou Shalt Not Steal.” The only thing we are seeking to do is to put thieves in jali to the end that they .-hail cease to intei sere with honest men and women. That we mean to do, and vve know that under th< constitution we have the power Io do so.. I’urilicr, we car write into the statute books our whole legislative program without constltu i ior a I amendment. PREACHER AT BURIAL OF SELF-SLAIN WIFE PHILADELPHIA. PA.. Sept. 21. Eu nr-ral servli es for Mrs. Henry <’. Stone, wife of the vicar of Holy Trinity Me. morin! chapel, who committed suiciih because of her anxiety over her hus band's health, were conducted by the here;, red elergyma u. ✓ FATHER MANAGER OF BALL NINE COMPOSED OF HIS ATHLETIC SONS • SAVANNAH. GA., Sept. 21.—Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Gilium, of Madison Mills, Va.. are the parents of the only- base-. I ball nine in the t'nited States, eom ; posed entirely of brothers. The young i est member of the team is fourteen . years of age and tlie oldest is 37. The ' combined ages; of the brothers and their father, who manages them, is 292 years. The elder Gillum is a wealthy planter and in ehunt. He personally encotn - l ages his hoys to play ball, and finances them when they are on the road. He was a member ot the first team ever organized in that section of Virginia. The team plays wherevei it can get dates throughout Virginia, and is said to be making money al the venture. The father and nine sons recently -cut Woodvow Wil-on a campaign eon- Hibution of $1 each and a picture of ' themselves in a group in uniform. They have since received a letter hi reply from the Democratic presidential nom . I nee. TO BE PUTNAM’S FIRST HANGING INJFIFTY YEARS EATONTON, GA.. Sept. 21.—Jake Crawford, a negro, was convicted in superior court here for the killing of ■ another negro John Henry Powell, at 1 Marshall’s store, in this county, last Mai eh, and was sentenced to hang on October 25. This will be ’lie lir-t hanging in Put nam county for nearly half a century. “TOUGHEST BOY” CARRIED TO PRISON IN CHAINS HAMMOND, IND., Sept. 21.—John Kalinowski, a 14-yeur-old West Ham i mond boy. Kvas hamleuffc-d and led by a chain to the Jeffersonville reformatory, for fear that he would escape from the deputy sheriffs. Kalinowski is known as the "toughest boy.” He escaped recently from the state reformatory and was captured in Chicago. He will be ' committed for eight years to prison. The housewives of this City are the most intelligent found anywhere—that’s why they refuse to pay more for other brands, when they can buy at moderate cost |BAK.INGPQWDERj the purest and most wholesome Baking Powder made. Sold by all good Grocer*. Insist on haring it. ALL MOTORCYCLE RECK BROKEN Crowds Watch Speeding Con testants in 24-Hour Race at Brighton All Night. NEW YORK. Sept. 21.—At it: 45 it was found that several of the riders in tlie motorcycle race were almost in a state «f collapse, and the referee or dered the race stopped. NEW YORK, Sept. 21. —All motorcy cle race records have been broken by the teams competing in the 24-hour race at. Brighton Beach motordrome, which will end at HI: 11 o’clock tonight. The field toejay had narrowed down to four seams. Five started last night. Harry Thomas and Ray Vedilse, both of Jliiladelphia had to withdraw after riding 289 miles. The four teams left in the race at 9 o clock today were: George Lockner and Bill' Shields, of Syracuse: Johnny <’o.x, of Brooklyn, and Jimmy McNeill, of Scotland; Arthur Chapple, of Brooklyn, and Charles Spencer, of Philadelphia; Billy Wray and William Vanderbury. At 9 o'clock, the eleventh hour, two teams were tied, at 732 miles, one lap. more than 276 miles ahead of the old record of 456 miles. The score at the twelfth hour, 10 i. m., was: Shields and Lockner, 87 miles 2 laps; Chapple and Spencer, 787 miles 2 laps; Cox and McNeill, 783 miles no laps; Wray and Vanderbury, 687 miles nn laps. Former record, 496 miles. lockner and Shields ste a high pace in the riding early today, having lost a number of precious miles. They whirled around the course at a 70-mile gait, with thrfr machines spurting out a suL phurous trail of gasoline smoke be hind. Men and women remained In the stands until daybreak watching the dare-devils speed demons. The night was an ideal one. with a clear sky and a brisk breeze. The motordrome is filled with tlie roar of the machines and the excitement from the intense speed. L. & N. WRECK HURTS 17. PARIS, KY., Sept. 21.—A southbound 1.. & N. passenger train ran into an open switch near Kaisertown late yesterday and crashed into a work train on a sid ing. No one was killed, but seventeen were injured. Most of the Injured are suffering from cuts and bruises, and none are thought to be fatally hurt. 3