Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 17, 1912, HOME, Page 7, Image 7

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CHI. N’NHA JiLTEO UN STAND Mary Dye Is Expected to Make Good Threat to “Get Even” at Dynamite Trial. XDIA NAPOLIS. IND.. Oct. 17. Miss Mary Dye, of Pittsburg, sweet heart and confidential secretary to .1. J. McNamara for three years preceding appeared as a government wit ness today in the dynamite conspiracy !liH | Miss Dye’s testimony began mildly with the identification of iron v "Titers’ correspondence and signatures. At the time of McNamara's arrest there were many sensational stories of Mary Dye’s association with McNamara, one nf th a m to the effect that McNamara had jilted her. The girl Is supposed to possess knowledge of the inner work ings of the dynamite conspiracy. It is believed she ■ ill- be recalled by the government later and that she will give some of the most sensational evidence in this sensational case. Should Miss Dye tell her story for tli-* government, she will have made good her alleged threat, said to have In en made at the time of her split with McNamara, to the effect that some day trie would even up with him. Signatures Identified. r i'. Campbell, cashier of the Mer , iiants National bank at San Francis today identified the signature of the coast labor leader. Olaf A. Tveitmoe, t.i alleged incriminating letters he mate to J. J. McNamara and others of the alleged dynamite conspiracy now on trial in Federal court here. Thomas J. Hamilton, editor of The Labor Review. Minneapolis. Minn., iri nlified the signature of Defendant Charles M. Beum to alleged incriminat ing letters. Instant Relief From Eczema You van stop that awful itch from eczema and other skin troubles in two seconds. Seems 100 good to be true—but it is true, and we vouch -for it. lust a few drops of the simple, cool ing wash, the D.D.D. Prescription for eczema, and the itch stops instantly. We give you enough' to prove it for 50 cents, ,\‘ow if you have tried a great many ulii! \ x E : MF? : f '®' ’ ; - ■I lESS iii w Ask immfi to See the Latest Models CORSETS To Be Had Only at Kee !y ’s-SI.OO to $5.00 SPOONING BOARDERS CAUSE POLICE RAID; LANDLADY IS HELD Too much kissing on her porch and in the shadows of the trees on the side walk in front of her home by young women boarders caused plain clothes offi cers. who had been shadowing the place, to raid the home of Mrs. Georgia Palmer, 15 Garnett street, and resulted in her being under bond of SSOO today. Neighbors complained of the kissing and asked that an investigation tie made. Officers took up a silent vigil near by, and told Recorder Broyles of the promis cuous osculatory .disturbances In that vicinity. This, with other circumstances, caused the court to hold Mrs Palmer for trial before a jury. It was shown that two admirers of Mrs Palmer recently had two tights in their efforts to win her affection. Mrs. Palmer denied the kissing charges KEEPER OF DISORDERLY HOUSE IS SENT TO GANG COLUMBI'S. GA . Oct. 17. -P. W. Echols, charged with running a clisor derly house, was vonviffed in city court and given one year in the chain gang. Echols was running the house In the business section of the city. In passing sentence. Judge G. Y. Tigner, of the city court, severely reprimanded Echols and told him he would not have an opportunity to pay a fine, but must work it out. MISSIONARIES GATHER FOR CONVENTION SUNDAY Delegates to the Southern district con vention us the Christian and Missionary alliance will gather in Atlanta Sunday. Their sessions will last eight days. Meetings will be held at the temporary tabernacle, 79 Capitol avenue. The first service will be a prayer and j>faise meet ing at 10 o’clock. Seven or eight services will be held daily. DR. T. R. KENDALL HERE AGAIN Dr. T. R. Kendall, former pastor of Grace Methodist church, now pastor nf St. James church, Augusta, will preach to the members of his old charge to night. Dr Kendall recently returned to the Georgia conference after serving as pastor in a number of Kentucky cities. cures for eczema and have been disap pointed, do not make the mistake of re fusing to try this soothing wash. Ali ; other druggists keep this D.D.D. Pre scription—go to them if you can t come to us—but if you come to our store, we will gi e you the first dollar bottle on our positive no pay guarantee, that ■ D.D.D Will stop tiie itch at once. Jacobs' Pharmacy. 6-S Marietta St. (Advt.) THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS THURSDAY. OCTOBER 17. l’H2. DIXIE MINTS PICKING OFFICERS Selection of Next Meeting Place Also Taken Up at the Final Session Today. Much interest is manifested in the lead ership of the. Southern Wholesale Dry- Goods and Notion association tor the next year. The delegates are concluding today their session at the Piedmont hotel The present officers are: W. J. D. Bell, Lynchburg, president; E. W. King. Bris tol, first vice president and secretary and treasurer; A. T. Dosser. Knoxville, second vice president, and the executive com mittee. .1, C. freeman, Richmond, chair man; E. B. Sydnor, Richmond; H. A. Cal loway, Atlanta; .1 L. Deaver, Knoxville; Walter Pringle. Charleston. There also is considerable interest in the question of deciding what city shall have the 1913 convention, since the asso ciation represents about 75 per cent of all the jobbers in the South. The convention probably will adjourn at 2 p. m. The session today is executive and given over to the discussion of general topics. I. K. Orr. formerly president of the Southern Wholesale Shoe Dealers associa tion. addressed the gathering yesterday' as did President W. .1. D. Bell, of Lynch burg, Va.; J. C. Freeman, of Richmond. Va.; Norman H. Johnson, editor of The Merchants Journal of Commerce, of Lynchburg; W. A. Parker, vice president of the National Hardware association, of Atlanta. Opposes Parcels Post. One of the most important addresses was delivered by Norman H. Johnson, edi tor of The Merchants Journal of Com merce. of Lynchburg, Va., who declared that "the further operation of the par cels post law system as inaugurated by act of the last congress would be injuri ous to both retailers and consumers.” Continuing on this subject. Mr. Johnson said: "In its present form it will be the mak ing of great mail order and wholesale houses to the destruction of the small jobber, wholesaler and retailer and will be the ruination of business in small towns, if the government proposes to operate the parcels post at a loss it will certainly be advantageous rather than disadvantageous, but a general parcels post law operated under the present sys tem can not but be destructive to the commercial and industrial interests of the South, It will destroy the small town and merchant of the South to the ad vantage of the large mail order catalog houses.” in substantiation of these statements Mr. Johnson quoted the parcels post rates applicable from all Southern shipping points to every section of the South. Up and Dou)n Peachtree • Look Who’s Arrived In Fourteenth Street! There’s excitement today in West Fourteenth street. That once attrac tive thoroughfare which has been cut off from civilization for three months by a forgetful city government prom ises to become open to traffic again. The steam roller has arrived. For months past residents of the street, picking their way along the curb or skipping like mountain goats from crag to crag in the place where the street ought to be. have greeted each other with salutations like this. “Good morning. Job.” And back would come the answer: "Good morning. Job. " For the citizens of West Fourteenth have become veritable miracles of pa tience under long suffering. But to day they are rejoicing, yea, lilting up their voices in song. Ernest E. Dailis was the first to rise and see the arrival of the steam roller, come to finish that paving. He heard its whistle, he saw its smoke. And, raising his new autumn hat and bow ing low, he saluted: "Good morning. Eliiiu!" he quoth. Well Root for you. May you do as well as your namesake did at Chicago " And now the Fourteenth Streeters call the roller “Elihu." As they gather , on their veiandas they yodle it. "Eii eli-eii-iii-huu,” and the steam rollct snorts a gruti reply They’re talking about presenting it with a roving cup when the street is finished. Chairwarmers Now Without a home. I here is gloom in North Pryor street, where the first breezes of approaching winter whistle through thin trousers. Around the entrance to the Kimball house cluster a squad of veterans, and when the doors fly open a breath of steam heat wafts out a sample of what awaits with in But the chairwarmers' union is the victim of a lockout Effect travels rapidly upon th e heels of cause. A week ago Farmer Bill Zimmer sold his interest in the Kimball. Last night the two row of ancient arm chairs were removeci ii.'iti the lobby and stacked in the attic. ihe corridor is bare, ex cept for a few scattered cliairs against the walls, intended for the use of such guests as care to rest. The has-been's haven is abolished; the amen corner gone forever. Ever since the Farmers' alliance pros pered and Gus Bacon lucked his whis kers into his trousers, the Kimball lob by has been the incubator of politics be fore election day and the morgue for post mortems in the days after election old timers have sat there from early morn until the last trolleys ran. cussing Hoke Smith or Joe Brown, or both: criticising tiie conduct of national campaigns; ad justing the tariff to their own satisfac tion. Some of them have held certain chairs month after month by squatters right, and none but a vandal from—vutside the state would have dared to usurp a throne left empty for a moment But the chairs are gone now. and their for mer occupants must lean against a col umn or seek other quarters. There is a fine opportunity for some philanthropist to endow a Chairwarmers' club GIRL SHOOTS HERSELF: ACCIDENT. SAYS MOTHER SAVANNAH. GA.. Oct. 17.—Jose phine Bowman. 16 y ears old, is suffer ing from a self-inflicted bullet wound in the left arm. 'I he bullet passed through the fleshy part of the arm and was picked up off the floor. The girl was alone when the shot was filed. Her mother declares it was accidental. She was found in a fainting condition. Phy sicians stale that the injury is not se rious. Mrs. Bowman asserts that her daugh ter was searching an old trunk and found the revolver. She says the weap on was filed by accidentally striking the side of the trunk. HE GOT $50,000. BUT NO 0. K. TO HIS SCHEME NEW YORK. Oct. 17.—After a month spent in secret efforts to convince thi state department at Washington of his own availability as president of the Dominican republic, Ftederico Velas quez, former teasurer of that country, is on his way back to Santo Domingo. He sailed from New York after th state department promptly and vigor ously rejected the proposition of Senor Velasquez to use it to further his polit ical plans and ambitions. W hile in New York he induced some persons to subscribe to a "slush fund" of $50,000. COLUMBUS TO ADVERTISE ITS FAIR AT MACON SHOW COLUMBUS, GA., Oct. 17. October 22 will be Columbus day at the Geor gia stale fair in Macon, when about 200 boosters will go over from tills city l«> advertise the Georgia-Alabama fair No vember 27 to December 7 A chartered train will carry the boosters to Macon. They will be ac companied by a band and all will wear khaki helmets. They will go to Macon in an effort to interest visitors to that fair to come to Columbus to the lair to be held in this city. VETERANS OF ARMY OF CUMBERLAND IN REUNION CHATTANOOGA. TENN , t let 17 The Society of the Army of the t'uai berlantl is holding its fortieth annua! reunion here. Captain H S. Cham berlain. of this city, delivered the ad dress of welcome, while General Gales T Thurston, or Nashville, presided The first session was purely a business one, consisting <’f the treasure : opo: ; and t:ie selection of committees. About lUU are in attendance. YEAR IN PRISON REFORMS YOUTH Moss Garrison, Who Shot Up Whitehall Store. Declares He’s “a Man” Now. i A year of Georgia prison life has worked a transformation in Moss Gar rison. the sixteen-year-old youth who shot up J P. Allen's Whitehall street shop, wounding Allen anu two account ants, s. H. Hayles and C. E. Pollard. From the nervous, trembling youth who pleaded self-defense as justifica tion for his act to Judge Roan in crimi nal division of superior court, Garrison has changed to an aggressive, confident young chap sure of himself and his fu ture. "1 just came-in to tell you. sheriff, that I had finished my term.” said young Garrison as he walked into thi court house today after serving on? year in tile Fulton county gang. , "I am going to start ail over again, and there isn't a chance for me to gel into trouble. 1 want to thank you, though, for the fine treatment I got while in jail. It has made a man of me " Going to Work in Atlanta. Garrison -*ald that he expected to stay in Atlanta and go to work. He i said he had been offered two positions, but did not know which he would take, although he expected to be at work Monday, The shooting for which lhe boy served a year occurred in the shop of tiie 'J. P. Allen Company last fall. With tiie place crowded with women shop pers Garrison, who was being cross questioned by his employers in the of fice at the rear of the store, opened fire, wounding three men before he was overpowered. The boy maintained in court that Allen and the two accountants who were quizzing him had locked him in tiie office and were keeping him there against his will trying to force him to confess to a shortage in collection ac counts for which he was not responsi ble. JESUP BOARD OF TRADE FORMED TO BOOST CITY JESUP, GA.. Oct. 17.-At a mass meeting of the business men of this city last night at the county court house, the Jesup Board of Trade was organized. Officers elected are: R. T. Pickens, president. W. J Broadhurst, vice president; A. T. Ingram, secre tary. and H. J. Westberry, treasurer. The Board of Trade will begin at once a campaign of development and pro motion for the city. MAY IRWIN WILL STUMP NEW YORK FOR WILSON NEW YORK. Oct. 17. May It win. iftreFS, tills week will take the "stump** lor Wihon. Sh< will do her ■‘spell binding” art in and near ibis city. Ugly Pimples Have All Gone Face a Sight, But in a Short Time Stuart's Calcium Wafers Worked Wonders. wk*** yrw® Many an otherwise pretty girl is distracted with her appearance. Poor girl! She doesn't yet know that Stuart s '’alcium Wafers w ill quickly transform her intp a perfect dream of loveliness And many a young man with tender skin just growing a bristly beard is also a sigtit to behold. All the face creams In tiie world are nothing but masks. They do not overcome pimples, but merely allay surface irritation. Skin-health must come from within. Skin-tissue is made from the blood, and as it is a tendency of nature to throw off a good share of impurities through the skin, naturally impurities gather on tiie surface in the form of pimples blotches. blackheads and other erup lions. But Stuart's t'alcium Wafers have a remarkable activity in the blood which seeks tiie skin as an-ontlet for its Impurities These are thrown off in invisible mist or gas, are consumed in tiie oxygen of the air. and in a few days all imperfections of circulation and of ukin-health are overcome Ml blemishes disappear and tiie «kln becomes as clear and smooth as a baby’s Go to tiie drug stole today any druggist can supply them and get a box of Stuart's I’alclum Wafers for trial. They w ill cost you only 50 cents, hut are really worth many dollars to you if your face Is marred by ugly pim ples. blotches, blackheads, ele. Uon vince yourself by actual t<si ihat Stuart's i’alclum Waft's are the most effective blood and skin purifiers in the w o id. TO ENFORCE STATE GAME LAWS IN CHATHAM COUNTY SAVANNAH, GA., Oct. 17. —A vigor ous campaign against game law vio lators in Chatham county is to be pros ecuated by county game officials, ac cording to Deputy Warden Charles B. Westcott, who has received explicit in structions from the state game and fish commissioner, Jesse E. Mercer. Commissioner Mercer has appointed YY estcott s son, S. C. Westcott, as a deputy game and fish warden. This in creases the staff of game officials in Chatham county to four. K E E LY ' S W omens Dainty N eckwear In a Special Sale at One Price 50 Fifty Cents Oc % There are many alluring th inga in thia collection and the popular neckwear de partment here will he crowded Friday. Many charming and dainty conceits, exclu sive with us. are to he shown tomorrow. Detailed description is well nigh im possible. Such a modest price as we quote for these will make it impossible for any woman to pass them without feeling an ir resistible temptation to purchase—A few of the Leaders are Robespierre Collars This leading Fad will be shown in satin collars with jabots of Vais and Shadow Laces. * Standing Robespierres with high backs and La Fayette Rever Collars. New Medici and Richelieu Styles Every woman will want one as they are Lace, Han d Crocket Stock Collars. Rea/ Hand Crocket Dutch Collars. Combination Stocks and Jabots Either Cream or white of Baby Irish ’ Plauen Lace Dutch Collars also in cream or white • also Nobby Wash Stock Collars White foundations embroidered with Baby Bl ue, Black and Self 50c each KEELY'S Indianapolis p ORII I "| Chicago h I are most conveniently reached byway of ( incinnati or Louisville. Numerous II ; splendidly equipped trains afford ex tremely good service from these points every day, via I ' NewYorkfentral Lines | Big Four Route I | Parlor Cars, Case Dining Cars, Electric- I lighted Sleeping Cars, Day Coaches; I splendid road-bed and best of service, | assure aH the comforts and conveniences of modern travel. I 1 ickeu, reservations, time of trains and further C inloimaiion, gladly furnished by l|u|u| CZ3 E ' E SM,TH M iii f /id IPra* Traveling Passenger Agent ItßnL’ f I Atlanta, Ga. AMERICAN DUCHESS TO OPEN HOME FOR WOMEN I.ON DON. Oct. 17. —It was announced today that for ♦104,000 the Duchess of Marlborough has acquired Little Esher Place, in Esher, for the purpose of es tablishing a home for women clerks and typists. The preparation of the honut is now in progress and it is expected ta be opened soon. Little Eshei Place tar merly was occupied by Lady Ulrica Baring. “The Call of the Heart” all this week at the Lyric. KEELY'S 7