Newspaper Page Text
THE WEATHER
Forecast: Fair tonight and'Tues.
a.-,. Temperatures: 8 a. m„ 58 de
gr-es; 10 a. m., 62 degrees; 12 noon,
, agrees: 2 p. m., 70 degrees.
VOL. XI. NO. 73.
fill SHOWS
sms
WILSON
worn
Georgian’s Thorough Canvass
of Nation Indicates Walk
over for Democrats.
TAFT AND ROOSEVELT !
RUNNING NECK AND NECK
President Appears To Be Lead- I
ing Mooser in Popular Vote |
by Narrow Margin.
The election of Wilson and .Marshall
'o the presidency and vice presidency
of the United States on November 5 has
eng been conceded by affiliations. Just
how sweeping- the victory of the Demo
cratic candidates may be and exactly
the relative strength of President Taft
and Colonel Roosevelt before the peo
ple are the only two questions that
have furnished food for political argu
ment.
These questions The Georgian and its
Billed newspapers have endeavored,
through a conscientious search of po
etical conditions throughout the forty
eight states, to determine. In this ef
fort the best political minds of all
■arties in all states have been con
sulted. The consensus of opinion is
that Governor Wilson and Governor
L> -ball will be swept into office by
■h: largest majority in the electoral
college any men have received since
the Civil war.
The canvass of Georgia shows th*
tote in this state probably will be:
Wilson 77,000, Roosevelt 20.000. and
Taft 19,000.
Demoted Their Time
To the Big States.
President Taft seemingly will re
ceive only thirty-nine electoral voter,
and if California throws her strength
to Wilson and Marshall they will re
ceive the balance of the electoral
college, for in no state, at the moment,
does Colonel Roosevelt look like an
easy winner.
It early was foreseen by the poli
ticians that the big states of New York.
Pennsylvania, Ohio. Indiana and Illi
.nois would be the battleground, and the
attention of all parties was given to
these commonwealths. As the cam
paign progressed, public sentimen*
swung so heavily toward Governor Wil
son that today those states can be
eliminated and still the Jersey gov
ernor will win a majority of the elec
toral vote, as the following table will
show:
Solid South and South Dakota. .119
Delaware 3
Idaho 4
Maine 6
Maryland 9
Missouri 18
Montana 3
New M xico 3
M'isconsin 13
Arizona 3
'■dorado 6
Kansas 10
Kentucky 18
Minne.'ota 12
Nebraska 8
Nevada 3
North Dakota 5
Oklahoma 10 j
Tennessee 12 I
'Vest Virginia 8
Total 267
Necessary, ?«6. Total. 531.
T ti t.u table of indicated results it
' ■ ‘ be seen that Governor Wilson is
'"inised a tremendous popular ma
''’ >ty and that Republican strength
most equally divided, with Presi
' ! ’t Taft leading Colonel Roosevelt
'bout fifty thousand votes. It is ,
■ division of the Republican vote;
' :, i makes the indicated electoral vote I
the Democratic ticket so t emen-|
It may be said that the politicians
Ml parties at the moment are at (
• as t<T the result In the state of,
York. The Democrats are con-
1 ' illy claiming- it without having an.v
' finite knowledge of the intentions of
voters.
New York a Bone of
Contention on All Sides.
e independent canvass of th--1
’ -atlon in New York made for The i
"orgiau would show these results:
'• ’ ing aside the scattering votes foi
' Socialists and others four years
the total vote of the state was
1 •'•3B. Tile natural increase, as sug-
1 d by pa st experience and present .
I 'kistration. would indicate the total!
Continued on Psge Twe.
The Atlanta Georgian
l\ead For Profit—GEORGIAN IVA/VT ADS —Use io r Results.
EP Wi
B, SLOGAI
INCLOB
FIGHT
Efforts Are Centered on Pro-,
hibiiing Serving of Drinks
on Sabbath.
(WOODWARD’S ATTITUDE
IS AWAITED ANXIOUSLY
■ His Election Commonly Be-
I Sieved to Mean People Want
I
More Liberal Regulations.
Backers of the locker club reform
movement, encouraged by the success
they have already won. declared today
that they would center their efforts on
the establishment of a permanent dry
Sunday in Atlanta.
With the license of every club, in
cluding the powerful Capital City, held
up by the veto of Acting Mayor Candler
and the subsequent action of council, a
handful of organizations seem certain
of losing their permits, but the real
fight will be waged about the question
of a closed Sunday. Atlanta was dry
yesterday.
Alderman John S. Candler, who. as
acting mayor, vetoed the permits of all
locker clubs on the grounds that all ;
were illegal, has since declared that the j
most Important point in the enforce- l
ment of the locker club law was to stop i
the serving of drinks on Suntjp.y. He
said such a system made a club crimi
nal as a tippling house.
Chambers’ Law
Goes to Committee.
Councilman Aldine Chambers has had
referred to the police committee of j
council an ordinance prohibiting the I
sale of drinks on Sunday in all clubs. ‘
It has developed that the upshot of >
the whole locker club probe now in I
progress will b» a fight to stop the serv ■ |
ing of drinks on Sunday. A number of
clubs will be closed, of course, as was
originally intended. But the most seri
ous probable effect on the real social
clubs will be the banning of Sunday
drinks.
Tb.e law is already reasonably clear |
on the subject, but council has been si
lent. Council may or may not decide to
much noise in making the decision,
noise in making the decision.
Aiderman Candler said he had re
ceived many letters from citizens liv
ing in nearby towns congratulating
him on his veto of locker club permits
and urging him to stop the sale of
drinks in Atlanta on Sunday.
Come to Atlanta
Sunday to Drink.
H* said that these citizens com
plained that their young men came to
Atlanta to spend Sunday and drink.
Aiderman Candler said he felt that At
lanta owed it to her smaller neighbors
to stop the dispensing of intoxicating
drinks on Sunday.
However, the nomination of James G.
Woodward for mayor was considered a
plea from the vqters for a more liberal
town. Ti er* is argument that a real
locker chib ha ; ; as much right to serve
drinks on Sunday as on any other day. ,
Also, it Is pointed out. there are many |
citizens In Atlanta whose religious doc- j
trine does not designate Sunday as the
■.-acred day of the week.
j Council is divided on the subject by
* two very positive opinions.
The police committee has not seen fit
to recommend any such action so far.
Chairman W. G. Humphrey «as dis
pleased by the veto of his committee's
report by Acting Mayor Candler. It is
probable that he police committee will
stand pat on its report and allow the
• dry" Sunday light to develop in coun
cil.'
ELECTION POSTPONES
SUPREME COURT CALL
1 Announcement was made at the capi
-1 tol today that, because of the national
■ Meetion on Tuesday. November 5, the
I call of the .supreme court set for No
vember 5 will be postponed until No
vember 6, and that the call of the court
of appeals set for Monday. November 4
’ will be postponed to Monday, Novem
| her 11.
-
DOG CATCHER IN JAIL:
THEFT OF PUP CHARGED
MACON. GA Oct. 28.—Dewitt C.
Harp, the city dog catcher, was ar
rested today on a warran. sworn out
Iby Cornelius O’Connell, charging him
with the theft of a pointer pup. Un-|
able to five bond, he 1 Q now in jail.
AT’LANTA, GA.. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1912.
With 2,000 High Class Pedigreed Fowls on Exhibition
[GEORGIA POULTRY SHOW IS ON
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I
IL S, Naval Captain
Vidor in Clash With
Testy Mexican Admiral
American s Threat to Sink Feder
al Fleet Saves Vera Cruz
From Shelling.
MEXICO CITY, Oct. 2S.—Details of
a clash between Captain Hughes, com
mander of the United States cruiser
Des Moines, and Admiral Azuiate, of
the fleet of Mexican gunboats in the
Vera Cruz harbor, while lighting be
tween federate and insurgents was go
ing on in Vera Cruz lust week, reached
the capital today. When Captain
Hughes saw that fighting was inevita
ble he sent word to the Mexican ad
miral that lie must respect the neutral
ity zone.
"If you fire a shot into the city which
injures a foreigner or a foreign proper
ty. or if you shoot into a foreign ship
in this harbor, I will sink your fleet,”
was the warning sent by the American.
"What if I should sink the Des
Moines?" was the messr;*' sent buck,
by Azuiate.
“That is up to a better man." re
sponded Hughes. The Mexican gun
boats did not tire a shot.
During the fighting in Vera
Des Moines occupied a position between
the Mexican fleet and the shore with
her 22 guns trained on the Mexican
gunboats.
SENATOR PENROSE IS
TO BE CALLED NEXT
BY “SLUSH” PROBERS
WASHINGTON, Oct. 2S.—Chairman
Clapp, of the campaign funds investi
gating committee, today left AV ashing
ton for Minnesota, where he will remain
until after the election. Senator Pom
eron**, of Ohio, ami Senator Paynter,
of Kentucky, the two Democrats on the
committee, left Washington on Satur
day.
Before going, Senator Clapp said that
among the firm witnesses to be called
after th, election will be. Senator Pen
rose, of Pennsylvania.
Despite their belief ‘hat the "polit
ical world is growing better,” members
of the committee. It is said, are unani
mously in favor of Federal legislation
to control the giving of money foi
presidential and other campaigns.
Democrats on the committee express
themselves as desiring first regulating
the contributions of individuals affil
iated with big corporations, it was de
clared by one member of the , ommit
tee that Colonel 1100 •■W'lt's theory that
J individual contributions ate ail right is
a technical evasion of the issue.
Atlanta Has Opportunity to See
the Finest Birds Ever Shown
in the South.
With the finest collection of nigh-1
grade chickens that was ever house' I
under one roof, the ninth annual exhi
bition of the Georgia Poultry assocla- *
tion opened its doors today.
It is announced that the p’ice of ad- |
mission for its show this week will be
a dime. This is an unusually low price.
It is a fact beyond all chance of con
tradiction that no fii si-class show iri
America, outside of Atlanta, ever threw
its doors open at any such price. The
usual rates for admission to first-class
chicken shows i un from 25 cents to .$1
The express companies unloaded two
thousand of America's finest fowlj at
the Auditorium-Armory yesterday, and
over 500 more were delivered by vehicle
and by hand at the Auditorium this;
morning.
Superintendent Frank Coll and his i
gang of helpers were on hand all day
fSpnttay and early this morning, and by j
work ii whs' possible to get all j
twite uncrated and placed before ih*
M>is wore fo-tnttlly thrown open,
•t’jfcl! Sunday th** Auditorium vat
with people who were out tc
gtt a fflhppse of the birds as they were
placed in their exhibition quarters. Es
pecial interest was felt in the miniature
pond and the inclosed pen of Asa G.
Candler, Jr.'s, exhibition on the stage,
out none of the fancy stock was placed
! there until today.
It did not take long afte • the birds
began to arrive to determine just the
amazing amount of class that this show
possesses.
Owens Farm to Show.
For one thing, the Owen Farm, of
Vineyard Haven, Mass., is represented.
To anybody who knows a Brahma from
a Bantam this means that America’s
greatest poultry farm is exhibiting.
And that they arc exhibiting in most
impressive fashion is evident from the
fact that they have sent 64 birds. under
the personal charge of M. F. Delano, to
the local show.
The Owen Farm exhibit consists of
Buff and White Orpingtons, White Wy
andottes, Barred Flymouth Rocks
White Plymouth Kocks and Single and
Rose Comb Reds. These birds have
been shown at the Nashville and Mem
phis shows, where they picked up 51
first prize. .
To those who follow, national poultry
shows, it will be recalled that last year
the Owen Farm made the most amaz
ing «weep in the classes it entered in
the national show ewr known in poul
try .-'no. history. '♦ ! ook 27 fir.-i. on. '
•>f 49 plant•• *, and din it in the < las. e*
jwlieic the competition is always ex
Continued on Page Two.
M. )•’. Deiano, manager of Owen
Fanns, Vineyard Haven, Mass.,
critically examining one of his
White Orpingtons. At the left,
M. F. Morris, one of Georgia’s
leading fanciers.
Georgian Story Gets
‘Blue-Eyed Husband*
Back to Longing Wife
Head of Family. For Whom $25
Reward Was Offered, Found
in Florida,.
Mi.- Virginia Barker Jone* of Rut
ledge, offered a reward of $25 last
AVedn- day for the return of her ‘‘neatly
dressed, blue-eyed husband." Charles F.
Jones, and her offer was published on
the first page of The Georgian. The
; story found the missing husband, and
; within a day or two he will he back
J with his family.
Jones was locate*) at Spray. Fla.,
where he was working for the Dundee
j Naval Stores Company, under the as
| sumefi nanb of J. A. Castleberry. A
reader of The Georgian recognized him
from tl:** description, notified Jones' fa
ther-in-law, A. A. Barker, and commu
nication between Jones and his family
was reopened. He says he is willing to
go home, resume his real name and
work to pay his debts.
There was never any charge of mis
conduct against Jones, but he had b«
come involved in •*. heavy load of debt,
and a short time ago disappeared. He
says he wanted io get away from asso
ciates and earn enough money to pay
off his debts. He was trying to do this
when he was located In Florida.
KNAPP AND NEILL
TO NAME ARBITER
OF GA. RY. STRIKE
Judge Martin A. Knapp, presiding of
ficial of the I'tilted States commerce
court, lias been notified by Charles A.
Wlcke sham, president of the Atlanta
& West Point railroad, and F. A. Bur
gess, of the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers, two of the three arbitrators
in the Georgia railroad strike, that they
have been unable to agree on a third
arbitrator, and it is now up to Judge
Knapp and Dr. <T>arles P. Neill, United
States commissioner, to choose the
third iniut.
Mr. Wicketsham and .Mr. Burges*
realized yesteiduj morning that they
could not agree, the choice of one of a
cozen o: c o •• <ar hint* s having nar
ito ed down to if * H'.ii i* ami Reuben
It. Arnold. \ tt'.<-u am ..as accordingly
I sent to Judge Knapy. :>ml an is
expected al any time
BOARDER IN PRISON FOR
R. R. WRECK AS WIDOW
PLANS SUIT FDR WOO
Southern Railway Has Edward Ren
froe, Friend of Costners, Arrested,
Charging Him With Crash Which
Cost Atlanta Engineer’s Life.
Prisoner Calls It a Plot Concocted by De
tectives-- -Neighbors Tell of Row at Home.
Accused Says He Was on a Spree at the
Tune of theWreck—Boy Held as Confederate.
< 'ii-ip'-p d 'viili wrecking- Southern Fast .Mail No. 43 on the
morning of October I. which resulted in the death of Jacob
Costner, th engineer—Edward Renfroe, for years an intimate
friend of Costner and his wife, is held in the Habersham county
jiiii at Clarkesville today. He was arrested in Atlanta by spe
cial agents of the Southern railway upon information that he
had been seen in the vicinity of the wreck for several days before
the <•:. a roplie. and he admits that he was there, though deny
ing any complicity in wrecking the train.
Tom Tankersley, a country boy, is also held on the same
charge, and it i« said he confessed that he, with a party of oth
ers, opened the switch while on a drinking spree. He has not
implicated Renfroe in the crime, according to the officers.
It has been reported to officers
of the railway that Renfroe, who
had lived at the Costner home,
403 Gordon street, had quarreled
with Jacob Costner before the
wreck. R froe stated today, in
his cell in the Clarkesville jail,
that he left the Costner home on
Tuesday, several days before the
wreck, because he was drinking.
Mrs. Costner Plans
Suit For $50,000.
Mrs. Minnie Costner, widow of the
engineer who was killed, has retained
Moore & Branch as attorneys in her
proposed civil suit against the South
ern railway, and they expect to file a
suit for $50,000 damages, br.eed upon
Costner's earning power of more than
S2OO a month, and on the ground that
the wreck resulted from spreading rails
or imperfect machinery, and not by the
deliberate act of a criminal. In the lat
ter case no recovery could be had, as
the road would not be liable. It is,
therefore, to the interest of the railroad
to prove the wreck was caused by the
act of criminals and to Mrs. Costner
to establish that it was caused by im
perfect rails or machinery.
The fact that Renfroe, a former rail
road man, had lived at the Costner
home for several years and had long
been on Intimate terms with the fami
ly, and that he was seen in the vicinity
where the wreck occurred without a
reason satisfactory to the officers of the
road led to his arrest. They look upon
It as a significant coincidence. J. AV.
Connolly, chief special agent of the
.Southern, has been working on the
case for several weeks, and C. W.
Burke, the local special agent, has had
I charge of the case in Atlanta.
Renfroe Brands
Charges All False.
Interviewed in his cell at Clarkes
ville today, Renfroe said:
"The charge that 1 helped wreck the
train or was implicated in any plot to
wreck it is absolutely false and with
out the slightest foundation. It is a
charge hatched up by the railroad de
tective.*.
"It is true that I have boarded with
the Costners. I boarded with Mrs. Cost
ner before she married Jake, who was
her second husband. She was Mrs. M.
W. Logan then, and conducted a board
ing house at Greenville, S. C„ where
railroad men stayed. Logan died of
Brights disease on May 13, 1910, and
his widow married Costner In Decem
ber, 1910. They moved to Atlanta In
January, 1911, and took the home at
403 Gordon street. I came to Atlanta
when they did, and took a job in the
yards there. I had boarded with Mrs
Costner's mother-in-law, Mrs. R. S. Lo
gan, In Greenville, years ago. before
Mrs, Costner took charge of the house.
"I left their house on Tuesday and
gut on a spree. The wreck occurred
on Friday morning.
Renfroe Is described by a man who
knows him as a rather* rough man, of
about 45 years, who was frequently out
of work, and who was given odd jobs
of carpentry around the Costners’ home
in Gordon street.
The Costners are well-to-do, having
a handsome home in the best street ol
West End, and owning several auto
mobiles. One, a fine blue roadster, is
said to have been purchased very re
cently. Mrs. Costner was driving her
husband to his work at the Tormina
station about a year ago when h"r car
• truck u negro in Whitehall street and
j killed him. Tlie courts found the ac
cident an unavoidable on?
HOHL
EDITION
2 CENTS EVERYWHERE p^ c
FRIENDS PfiY FINE
FOR JUDGE FITE
Cherokee Jurist. Held in Con
tempt of Appellate Court,
Doesn’t Know Donors.
Dr. R. B. Harris, of Cartersville a
lifelong friend of Judge Augustus W.
Fite, of the Cherokee circuit, patd ttf
I,ogan Bleckley, cleric of the court of
appeals, shortly after noon today, SSOO
in the settlement of the fine assessed
against Judge Fite in the famous con
tempt case.
Dr. Harris said that the fine had been
made up among the friends of the judge
throughout the Cherokee circuit, and
that the judge himself did not know!
the names of the subscribers.
Judge Fite accompanied Dr. Harris
to the capitol, but did not go to Mr.
Bleckley's office. He waited In the of
fice of the state treasurer until Dr.
Harris returned with the official re»»
cel pt.
Discussing the incident after the pay
ment of the fine. Judge Fite said;
"Yes. some of the good people of th*
Cherokee circuit have paid tny fine, and
no doubt many others would have con
tributed thereto if they had known oi
the movement, and had an opportunity
to do so.
"At first I protested against theM
payment of the fine, but finally con
sented for them to pay it. feeling that
it was my duty to them as well as to
myself, to do so, as it shows their ap
proval of what I have done.
"I may not know much taw, but f
do know that I am not In contempt
of court.
"However, my case Is no.w in the
hands of the good people of Georgia,
an<| they will take care of me and my
reputation.”
CONVENTION BUREAU,
RECENTLY LAUNCHED,
BEGINS ACTIVE WORK
The new convention bureau will meet
at the Chamber of Commerce this aft
ernoon at 3:30 o'clock, and at that time
the first steps toward making Atlanta
the "Convention City" will be taken.
Though no organized work has ever
been done toward bringing conventions
to this city, the records for this year
show that more than 100 conventions
will have been held by the end of the
year.
PREACHER GOES TO JAIL
FOR SERMON MATERIAL
HALEDON, N. J., Oct. 28. -To get ma
terial for a sermon. “Behind the Bars.”
which, he delivered yesterday. Kev. War
ren A. Coon, of the Cedar Cliff M B.
church, spent a night in jail.
ZOO BEAR SUICIDE WHEN
HE LOSES FAVORITE PERCH
.xr.tC YORK. ■> :. 2s.—Yogi, a valuable
ilitii.ilayan bear, drowned liinixeif in the
Bronx zoo bee; i-a he was prevented from
I'xiglug »n hie favorite perch.