Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 10, 1912, EXTRA 2, Page 8, Image 8

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8 DYNAMITE TRI JUDGE IS ANGRY Tells Senator Kern, Defense Attorney, That He Will Not Tolerate Delays. INDIANAPOLIS. IND.. Oct. 10 Judge Anderson sat down on the de fense in the dynamite conspiracy case in Federal court todaj because he be lieved Senat Kern was wasting the time of the court The defense cross-examined .it length witnesses introduced to show that cer tain telegrams could not be produced • in court because they have been de-j atroyed Judge Anderson asked the defense to waive this protracted examination be- < ause it simply w is preliminary evi dence to form the basis of direct evi dence This the defense refused to do. Senator Kern continued to make lengthy cross-examinations. Judge An derson repeatedly interrupted Senator Kern and urged him to be brief. Final ly In exasperation the court said: This is preliminary evidence that could just as well be dispensed with and I am not going to have much more time wasted on it." Telegram Missi ng. Telegraph company officials were on the witness stand to produce a tele, gram from F A. Clancy, at Boston, to Thomas Fahill. San Francisco, the d«\ after The Times explosion. suj'lnx. "•’lean house" They could not Ao duce the tel. gram This telegram is the one said to li»ve been sent by the defendant t'latfcj when, the government says, t’laney got stared something would be found in his office connecting him with the dyna miting. t'lanry is said to have deserted a fishing partv at Boston upon seeing an account of The Times explosion in tit. morning papers He is alleged Io have rushed that telegram out at once and to have follow < d it from Boston to the const nt once Judge Anderson instructed the Jury that it was not to infer that the al leged telegrams asked about over were in existence. The court explained that the evident e of the teb graph officials simplv is to surmount a te< hrm al point of law Message* Identified. P. L. Mounce, manager of the W est ern I nion office in Indianapolis, was called and questioned concerning tele grams transmitted by I;|< company for and to the defendants between 1905 and 1911 He identified telegtan* from .MeMan- Igal to his wife in Uliivttgo. telling bet when he would be home on a < nrt tin night. July 15. 1910 ' In addition to this, according to the government incriminating evidence against th.- defendants in the messages the\ contain, the telegrams now being identified by telegraph company em ployees are expected to help the gov ernment prove that certain defendants were at certain places at certain times Mr. Mounce Identified ,T numbei of telegrams from and to J. J McNamara. H. S Hockin <>. E. Mi Manigal and others of thr defendants in which they made requests for money and tolti ot their movements and proposed move ments and plans over the t'nited States TWELVE GIANTS FOR GOVERNOR WILSON NEW YORK Oct. 10 Right Welder «Ta' k Murray called at I democratic headquarters this ivcrk tn say that h*' and eleven other Giants had organized a Wil«on club. H« said that Marquard. Doyle. De vore. Robinson. Snodgrass. Shaefer. Hartley. Meyers. Merkle. Tesreau and <1 oh had been signed, that Mathewson ”aa hov< ting b< tw< en Taft and Wil son and that there were hopes of Me- < J ra v AFFLiCTED V/ITH ECZEM TEN FEARS It Was Scratch, Scratch, Scratch, and Burn, Burn, Burn. Scratching Brought Sores Which Scabbed. Couldn't Sleep. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured in 2 Weeks. • 1809 little Walsh S' . Baltimore. Md •*I was afflicted with eczema for about ten i lost tormenting and agonizing It was dry eczema all itching It was scratch, scratch scratch and bum, bum Guru By scratching I brought sores which scabbed t tried all reme dies which I knew or neard of. some gai e me temporary relief but none permanent i*nrP • f'ltiitin f frxr i’ear*. the ni< r ... <*. *. v . ' I cure, s roman t sleep lor scratching after which there was burn- j Ing. I saw the advertisement lor free 1 Maniples of (’uticura Soup and (’uticura '■ Ointment and wrote for then*. Thr\ did I me good immediately and I then bought a box of Cuticura Ointment and a cake of 1 < utioura Soap. I was cured jn two w«*ck* {Signed) George Wooden. Jan. 21. 1912 Not only are t.Uticura Soap and Ointment most valuable in the treatment of eczem x* and other distressing eruptions of tain and • alp. hut no other emollients do so much for pimples, blackheads, red. rough and oi'j *k»n«. itching, scaly scalps, dry. thin and falling hair. chapped hands and shape!?** nail*, nor do it so economically. A single rake of ( uticura Soap (25< ) and bni nt j 1 itk ira Ointment »iv are often aufflrirnt * itn all else has faded Sold throughout I *" d I4t»e?al sample of ?•< h mailed free « ;$2-p skin Rook. Address post- • ard ’ titlrura. I >rp» ’! Roston ** Fend*' fa* *<l m?n should use < uticura SLEUTH, COWHIDED BY WOMAN, FEARS LASHING IN COURT Mrs Lillian Petit, the young woman I who recently horsewhipped C. R 1 Reeves, who says he is a private de | tective. appeared in city criminal court I today and said that her defense would > be that Reeves was acting In ko illegal | capacity w hen he provoked her. I According to the young woman’s story. Reeves was employed iry her husband to get evidence against her upon which a divorce suit could be hinged. Under Georgia laws such an action is illegal. Reeves, it is understood, told his at torneys that he wanted an officer with him the entire time he was in court when the case is called tomorrow, be- : cause he feared a second whipping. HUSBANDSEAGED TD WIN FREEDOM And Court Says They Certainly Should Be Made to Pay Wives Alimony. "Why didn't you ask this court for alimony In this case?" said Judge W. D Ellis to Attorney Roy Dorsey in second division of superior court tn <:ay after Dorsey's client. Mrs. Masie Watkins Let. had obtained a divorce from Harry Joseph Lee, an automo bile salesman. "From the testimony given to this jury,” continued the judge, "it looks as though something ought to be done to this man. I am not much in favor of letting husbands go with mere free- j dom from their wives. That is exactly the thing they want " Mrs. Lee. who was restored her maiden name Watkins, had testified that l.ee admitted spending $250 a night in catousals. She asserted that her remonstrances went for naught. He refused to give up his gay life. Mrs. Isham Bryan. who told the court that she was married in Lim erick Ireland, seventeen years ago. took a first verdict on the grounds of cruel treatment. She said that she had been forced to leave her husband be cause he beat her with a broom stick. Mrs E F. Dwinnell, who got a ver dict against t'b.arlcs A. Dwinnell. said that Dwinnell wa- a habitual us-r of absinthe and whin under the influence of tin seductive French liquor spent his time in throwing electYic' light bulbs at her. BURIAL OF ASO-POUND MAN PROBLEM FOR UNDERTAKER PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 10.—William H Wclssner, a saloon keeper, who died yesterday, is so large that it has been necessary for his undertaker to order a specially made coffin sot him. Weiss ner weighs 450 pounds and Is six feet tall, and his death has presented a number of trying problems sot his fam ily and the undertaker No coffin large enough for the man will pass through the doors of his home, and It will be necessarv to move the body from the loom in which Weissner died on the second floor to the first floor. where it will be placed in the coffin tomorrow and then taken out through the double doors of the saloon. It may be necessary to lay the body out in the barroom itself. COURT OF APPEALS. Judgment* Affirmed. Kirby Planing Mill Company vs. Hughes; from city court of Thomasville Judge W. H Hammond .1 II Merrill, Roscoe Luke, for plaintiff In error. Theo dore Titus, contra. < Direction to write off $140.61 and interest I Wade vs Elliott cl al.; from citv court of Tifton Judge R. Eve R l> ’Smith, tor plaintiff in error It E Dinsmore, contra Roberts vs. Harris from city court of Sandersville Judge .lonian Evans A Evans, for plaintiff m error J J: Harris, contra City of Moultrie vs Cook; from city court of Moultrie Judge Thomas presid ing \\ F W av. J \ Wilkes, for plain tiff in error. I. 1. Moore. Shipp w Kline, cuntra First District Agricultural and Mechan ical School el al. vs. Reynolds; from dtv court of Statesboro- Judge Strange T. s Felder, attorney genera), Brannen A Booth, for plaintiffs Tn error Dean A Dean. Johnston * Cone, contra Edwards, sheriff, for use. etc . vs. I‘rice <t al from city court of Albany Judge Crosland I. I. Ford, for plaintiff in error E. R Jones. It .1 Bacon, contra St.wuit vs Mulligan, front city court of Fitzgerald Judge Wall Haygood A Cotts. M. B. Cannon, for plaintiff in error. McDonald A Grantham, contra W illiams A- Company vs United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company , from city court of Atlanta Judge Reid Green. Tilson A McKinney, for plaintiff m eit.e’ Smith. Hammond A Smith contra Springfield Metallic Casket Company vs I' nu et nl . front city court of Atlanta Judge Red Joseph 1' Greene. Dorsey. Brewster. Howell A- Hetman, sot plain tiff In error I E A I. F McClelland M Het zberg. contra Willis vs Centra! of Georgia Rallwav Company from city court of Savannah fudge Davis Freeman. Osborne A- law fence, sot plaintiff In error li w John son. Lawton A Cunningham, contra International Life Insurance t'.tumtni vs Nix from city court of Cat rollton [ Judge Beall Newell A- Fleldet fol plain tiff m error l<eon Hood > . ntta Cromer vs Evett; from Walke' superior I . urt Judge Maddox John W Bale. I' I Pope. sot plaintiff ;n ■ rror .1 F Rosser, contra Judgments Reverted • ook A Hon vs Htghtowet a Coinpan) tiom city court of Miller county Judge Ramie W illiam 1 Geer, for plaintiffs >n error Bush A Stapleton. contra Slaughter vs Manning, from city court of Leiina Judge La.-seter F l| Kirk land W V Harvard, lule Felton. for plaintiff in error D 1, Henderson contra I Fulton t» Graham from city court of I Savannah Judge Davis Freeman. its. borne A Lawrence, for plaintiff in error Anderson. Cann A Cann e.>ntra W illiams vs Stat< from Colquitt »up» flor court Judge Thoma* W v c,,v mgton lames Humphrey- sot rlamtiff in err.o I \ Wilkes s'-cu,,. general, Horsley vs Woodley from ,in < nurt of t'anson luitci M c Edwatd* W |i 'UH • M I v . .man, t; i; yt 4) . >,, r,,,- las ff i o re, H A WIkI n -n . U tra THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1912. MARTINGAEVIN ! UNDER MEES Staff Members at State Experi ment Station Allege Director Is Inefficient. i i EXPERIMENT. GA . <nt. 10.—Inef ficiency and other ehaiges against Mar tin Calvin, director o' the Georgia Agr icultural Experiment Station, will be I probed by a committee of the board of | directors, beginning November 7 The i investigation will be conducted here. | The investigatots w ill be J. J Flynt, of i Griffin; Felix Corput, of Cave Spring:-; IDr 1.. G. Hmdman. of Commerce; F. | R. Mann, of Jackson, and E 1.. Peek, of Conyers. The charges against Din-ctor Calvin were filed by members of the staff of the experiment station at the quarterly meeting of the board here yesterday. Announcement was made by Mr. Calvin that he would not seek re-election at the expiration of his present term, July 1, 1913 In addition to the hearing of these ( barges, a complete audit of the finan cial records of the station will be made by expert accountants under the direc tion of a committee composed of J. H. Mobley of Hamilton, and Messrs. Flynt and Corput. For some time there have been ru ntots of friction in the Experiment sta tion organization. These rumors had reached members of the board before yestei day's meeting. The charges against M’ Calvin were filed by H P Lykes, H I' Stuckey. J. <’ Temple and .1. M. Kimbrough, all actively engaged in the operation of the station. Director Calvin's Statement. I Mr Calvin today said of the charges: "On September 30 four members of the station staff, Messis. Lykes. Sttlikey, Temple and Kimbrough, wrote me a letter that unless 1 at once sent my resignation to the board of di rectors, to lake effect January 1. 1913, they would prefer charges against me. To this I replied that, being sconscious of duty faithfully performed. I did not fear an investigation and invited thorn to proceed to ctrry out their threatened action. I heard nothing further of the matter until two day- before the board meeting, when I learned the nature of the < barges that would be brought against me. "In the board milting yejterday, I invited a full investigation into my administration of the station. Incident ally I mentioned that l ist February or Ma’ch I wrote t'hancolloi Barrow that I would not offer for re-election when my present term expires. My deter mination to retire next summer, there fore. tan not be construed as a result of the action of the staff members yes terday." .1. J Connor, state commissioner of agriculture, presided over the board meeting yesterday and named the in vestigating commitices Gain 30 Pounds in 30 Days Prolone, the Remarkable New Flesh- Builder, Builds Up Flesh Fast and Makes You Plump and Strong. 50-Cent Package Free *•' -.H, ' A Before After Frotoiie Will Make You Nico and Plump* Thin people suffer a good deal of cm. barrassment and ridicule. As people poke fun at a bony horse, so are bony people the target for many humiliating "flings." The plump, well-formed man or woman is a magnet: Protone makes '.you plump, strong, well-formed, nor t tnal. puts color in your cheeks, a hap py twinkle in your rye. and a tine poise to your whole body. It keeps you that way. It is the most scientific and effective flesh and strength build- J er so far known, barring non,. i The regular SI.OO size of Protone is for sale by all druggists, or will be mailed direct, upon receipt of price, by The Protone Co., (Sit! Protone Bldg. Detroit, Mich FREE PROTONE COUPON It will cost you nothing to prove tlie remarkab'e effects of this treat ment. The Protone Company will , I send to any one a free srt< pack age of Protone, if they will fid out this coupon and inclose 10c In stamps or silver to help cover post age They will also send with H full Instructions and their book on Why You Are Thin " THE PROTONE COMPANY. 4850 Protone Bldg. Detroit, Mich. Name Street City State The tegular SI.OO size of Proton, ,s for sale tn Atlanta by Coursey ,y 1 Munn. 29 Marietta street. Bikin Drug Cotnparfy. 26 Peachtre, street. Jacobs' Pharmacy. 6 Marietta street (tight ■ stores' No free packages from druggists iAd\t i Would You Pay 50c to Be Cured of Eczema? Ye<. indeed ><»n would |,>v <»nt 'hundred time.* 50t be « ur?<l 4nd set man pri«f»n«» «un>"ing ten \ear* with • will t m.** * "f **»'.♦■ n«t ta \ • been t ured I < «0< pa« nf i*t(ri ae I'eltente ran be nad iuv •■fmic will b.» • »»nt er ir<* pi <>i ••til lu the Shu|- Irina Co . bu \ a nr.a Ga. ATLANTA AVE. GETS CITY WATER MAIN DESPITE PROTEST When the property owners on At lanta avenue, a street on which there are but few houses, petitioned tiie wa ter board yesterday afternoon for a main, Mayor Winn adrfionished the board that the city should not spend its money in laying pipe on vacant streets when many thickly settled streets still were without water con nections. It was called to the attention of the board that Atlanta avenue has sewers, curbing and sidewalks. These were buiit on the assessment plan. The bond ordinance also provides that water mains shall be laid in the street, so the board ordered the main laid. On the petition of the officers at Fort McPherson, the board promised to try to provide city water for the fort. PERKINS PRESENT AT FORMATION OF HARVESTER TRUST CHICAGO, Oct. 10. —When the gov ernment suit before Examiner Robert S Taylor resumed operations today Si las J. Llewellyn, formerly vice presi dent of the Plano Agricultural Imple ment Manufacturing Company, of West Pullman, was the first • w itness called. Mr. Llewellyn told of meeting George W. Perkins and Judge T. H. Gary, president of the United States Steel Corporation, and others in New York, where the merger of the Harvester in terests into one giant concern was dis cussed. Llewellyn declared he went to New York in response to a summons from Judge Gary, who arranged the meeting with Mr. Perkins. Chaniberlin=Johnson=Dußose Co. Atlanta New York Paris A Furniture Sale In Which You May Buy Odd Pieces of Hall, Bedroom and Dining Room Furniture at Tremendous Reductions > I he list below tells but part of the good fortune that may be yours tomorrow. All the prices are not mentioned—but you may judge that this movement means hundreds of dollars saved to the housekeepers of Atlanta. It is a putting-in-order of stocks—odd pieces, pieces that for one reason or another we can not or will not reorder, have had their prices rather recklessly reduced. Because it is a time when most people have to buy an odd piece or so, has not deterred us. It has rather spurred us on so as to making com ing here the only sensible and economic thing to do. And, what kind of furniture is it? It is the only kind that this store will sell— good furniture— the kind that is worth’ every penny of its former price. What an opportunity this is now! We have made no attempt at describing the manv pieces—we could not. But here are the exact former prices and the prices now: Hat Racks Odd Pieces and Sets <,s - Now. Was. Now. One Malioganv Colonial Hat Rack. - * > One Imitation Mahogany Hat Ra<’k.fe<HK> $14.50 Golden Oak Tabourettes $2.75 $1.75 w T *1 e j , One Early English Chairs3.oo $2.00 Hall Seats and Mirrors two Golden oak chairsss.oo $2.50 Was. Now. 0,1(1 Golden Oak Arm Chair $ 8.50 $ 3.50 Iwo Coldeii Oak Hall Mirrors $6.->0 $3.50 One Earlv English Chair 87 SO < V) One Golden Oak Hall Seat $10.50 $ 5.50 1 w,) Earl . v English Plant Stands ...$ 9.25 $ 3.50 (hu> (i<»l<!en ()ak Hall Seat $12.50 $6.50 () n e Imitation Mahogany Ann Chair $ 5.50 $3.50 One Golden Oak Hall Mirror $12.->0 $ 7.50 One Golden Oak Hall Mirror $12.50 $ 8.50 o,le Imitation Mahogany Settee ...$12.50 $8.50 One Mahogaux Hall Mirror $13.<5 $10.50 One Earlv English Settee.. .. SI4OO $8 50 One Earlv English Hall Mirror ....$14.50 $10.50 T • «?• One Golden Oak Hall Seat $15.50 $10.50 One Early English Settee.. $28.50 $16.50 II' 1 !' !!''!! s ''" *!!••’!? One Holden Oak Imitation Leather Ont' Golden Oak Hall t>eat $18.1)0 $12.50 Onu Mahogany Hall Seat $23.50 $14.50 Davenport 8ed554.00 $31.50 Om Golthm Oak Hall Mirror tVa-n ()ne imitation Mahogany,three-piece One Golden Oak Hall Mirror $28.00 $15.50 ‘ One Goldin Oak Hall Seat $31.00 $16.50 Library Suite, with genuine One Mahogany Hall Seat $26.50 518.50 leather seats and hackss92.so $57.50 One Imitation Mahoganv Seat ami * Mirror ’534.50 $25.50 One Imitation Mahogany Louis XV One Mahogany Hall Seat $56.00 $35.00 three-piece Parlor Suite $125.00 $78.50 Chamberlin JohnsoirDußose Co. BOTH CONFIDENT IN MAYOR BATTLE Chambers Promises to Raise Veil on Woodward’s Cam paigners Tonight. Confining their campaigns almost solely to vigorous attacks on each other through neyvspaper advertisements, both candidates for the mayoralty nom ination. James G. Woodward and Aldine Chambers, sat in their campaign head quarters today and claimed that they would be victorious at the polls next Tuesday. James G. Woodward said that the contest was a landslide. Many callers were in evidence around his head quarters. and he declared that he had seen more men who said that they voted for Chambers in the first pri mary but would vote for him now than he had seen Chambers supporters. Mr. Woodward said this election was too serious a matter for him to enter any mudslinging contest. "The issue is honest, popular gov ernment against incompetent, ring poli tics,” he said. Aldine Chambers said this morning that he would raise the veil that ob scures Woodward’s campaigners at a mass meeting at 291 Peters street to night. in the First ward. He said that he was going U» show where Mr. Wood ward’s campaign funds were coming from. | "Atlanta’s moral reputation is at stake,” he asserted. CRYING OF CHILD IN CHURCH AT MIDNIGHT MYSTIFIES OFFICERS —— \ The crying of a child in a church at 2 o’clock in the morning has furnished the police with a mystery which has them completely baffled. A resident in the Francis apartments at Peachtree and Ivy streets, saw a horse and buggy hitched outside of the Sacred Heart church shortly after mid night and his curiosity was aroused. Some time later lie heard a baby cry ing in the church and called up the po lice. Sergeant Luck and Patrolman Peek entered the church, but found nobody. They left the horse and buggy where it stood and two hours later it had dis appeared. The police are wondering what it was all about. SAVES MOTHER BY ATTACK WITH FORK DEN\ ER, COLO., Oct. 10.—Stabbing his mother's assailant in the leg with a fork, four-year-old Marcy Marks saved her from the attacks of a peddler. The peddler, entering the kitchen and find ing the mother alone with her baby in arms and one small child, attempted to embrace her. The boy, seeing his mother attacked, rushed behind the man and buried the tines of the fork in the man's thigh, then ran, scream ing, for help. The peddler escaped. U. S. WANTS TO SELL 100 OF ITS BIG GUNS WASHINGTON. Oct. 10.—More than 100 six and eight-inch guns and mounts of obsolete pattern now stored in seven government yards are soon to be offered for sale by the navy ord nance bureau. These guns. laid away in the Mare Island, Puget Sound, Washington. Philadelphia. Boston. New- York and Portsmouth yards are of de signs no longer in use. CONFESSED TAKER OF BRIBES TO “TELL ALL;’’ ACCUSED TREMBLING COLUMBUS, OHIO, Oct. 10—Con sternation reigned today in tine ranks of the legislators and lobbyists under in dictment in connection with the legis lature bribery cases. This came with the announcement by the state’s attor neys that a special session of the grand jury will be called next week to hear the confession of Dr. George B. Nve. Pike county representative, wdio has pleaded guilty; to one of the six in dictments charging him with solicit ing bribes while a member of the leg islature. Nye, who has been promised im munity if he tells al! he knows on the stand, is charged with having placed information in the hands of the state’s attorneys putting them in a position to make sure work of the prosecution of many o£ the legislators against whom charges are pending. He brings manv more persons, both officials and others, into the legislative bribery dragnet thrown out two years ago. -The new turn in the bribery probe is in the direction of men and big inter ests high up, who created the condi tions in the legislature to which the members fell victims. It is said these men will be hauled before the crim inal courts as well as the legislators whom they used as their tools. There is to be a. general accusation of the methods of big business to secure and prevent legislation at pleasure. A number of indictments are also be ing contemplated charging perjure against a number of witnesses who tes tified in the graft cases. Are you searching for a position" Then an ad in the "Situations Wanted" col umns of The Georgian will assist you greatly.