Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 19, 1912, HOME, Page 9, Image 9

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J SHE KILLED IN RAID ON THIEVES Brought to Bay, Man Opens Fire, Then Slays Woman Companion and Self. XEW YORK, Nov. 19.—The death r „ resulting: from the battle fought ;&gt night at the Elsmere hotel between detectives and Henry Vogel was in creased to three today when Detective j o hn Allen died of his injuries. It was stated at the hospital that Martin Fay, a city detective, and Louie Mondscheim, proprietor of the hotel, wonM probably die before night. The other dead were Vogel, who shot umself when he saw capture was In evitable, and hi® woman companion, nnown as "Lottie,” whom Vogel shot to death before he turned his weapon upon himself. Two others lees seriously wounded nfere Luigi Garardl, a house detective, and William Butler, a waiter at the ho wl- rhe police have two steamer trunks, g valise, a dressing case and another »hich was taken by Vogel and the aoinan to the Elsmere hotel. Coroner Healy, of the Bronx, said he aould open the luggage today. The authorities expected that it would re veal the secret of many big robberies in this city which have baffled the po lka The cause® which led to last night’s fatal battle date back two months, when many wealthy families residing oil the West Side were robbed by a Jfchonest servant. Early this month detectives arrested an elghteen-year dd servant girl, who gave the name of sophie Beckendof. She was Indicted Ind confessed, charging Vogel with be ing a modern Fagin and revealing his inethods. According to the girl, Vogel /•rained young servant girls to steal / and acted as their "fence,” receiving / their loot. Vogel enjoyed a profitable business, securing places for servant girls, then receiving the plunder which the girls stole from the houses where they were employed, the police claim. Made No Protest at First. After getting their evidence against Vogel, the police started upon his trail. Vogel and the woman were traced to the Elsmere hotel, where detectives burst into their room. Vogel at first made no protect and upon being searched no weapon was found upon him. He asked permission to put on another shirt and as he passed the bed he quickly placed his hand beneath the pillow and drew forth an automatic pistol. Turning the weapon upon the miders, Vogel opened a fierce fusillade. After he had shot down the detectives snd their companions he turned the gun upon the woman, then upon himself. The police found a second pistol un der the mattress of the bed. RICHMOND COUNTY PLANS $200,000 ROAD BOND ISSUE AUGUSTA, GA.. Nov. 19.-The Rich, jmond county board of commissioners will have a special meeting this week to consider the recent recommendation of the grand jury that a $200,000 issue (of bonds be floated for road Improve ment. This county is now working between UO and 200 convicts on her public roads ■ and with an expenditure of $200,000 ad ditional will have among the best roads j In Georgia. ENGLISH SOCIETY GIVES MEDAL TO COL. GORGAS LONDON, Nov. 19. The Royal Society •f England has recognised the remarkable sanitary administration of the Panama <*nal by awarding its Buchanan medal to Colonel William C. Gorgas, United States “rmy, chief sanitary officer of the Pan ania> canal irone. CHILDREN HUTE MSTDB OIL, UGH! Delicious “Syrup of Figs” best for their little stom achs, liver and waste - dogged bowels. c.2'' o *'.at your childhood days, member the physic that mother Insis. Un-, ° n ~ c astor oil. calomel, cathartics, you hated them, how you fought taking them. nith our chlldren it , g dlffw . ellt- The r ,“ !1 Physic is over. We don’t hver and 30 feet of bowels dr- > J' e , 'oax them. We have no tn , a^ ter fleets. Mothers who cling 0 d form of physic simply don’t ftvnu ? hat they do - The children’s stnmo 8 well-founded. Their little l (y t ]^ a8 and tender bowels are injured sl/k 3 l? Ur ch,ld ls fretful, peevish, half Its uni macl> sour > breath feverish and rhooa e system full of cold; has dlar doesn't S ° re throat, stomach-ache; look o* ,E a * or rest well—remember— tongue, if coated, give a tea :" fu . ° f Syrup of Figs, then don’t 1 ’ bß !' ause you surely will have a s ' , mi nK child in a few hours. l’> ,t tiE , Figs being composed entire, dtr'- clous figs, senna and aromatics th. Lt lan n °t be harmful. It sweetens thr.r', i? n >o C "’ m akes the liver active and .i y cleanses the little one’s all aon'r ttowels. In a few hours ar. Ur , ;F’ un dlgested fermenting food >nSt ,)ated waste matter gently 'm e rt °. n and out of the system wlth nu ” ng or nausea. Ilsnr n » M for children of ali ages, 1 Ptu r kag° Wn ' UpS ’ p ' a,nly printed on i’onr .o', 1 m r al ‘ 8 K“t the genuine. Ask •f f° r I* l * full name “Syrup I" i; < an , d Elixir of Senna” prepared kat , ?V"’ ~r,n!l Fig Syrup Co. Ae nothing else. (Advt.j Battle Hill Folks Better Step Real Lively Now UNCLE HI BUYS AN AUTY If Uncle Hi Suggs had not heard the band playing as he drove his produce wagon past the Auditorium, he proba bly wouldn’t have seen the auto show. But he paused to listen, and a man who always stops at Uncle Hi’s farm for a drink of well water saw the old man. bought him a ticket and drew him through the door. "I don't know where I’m goin’, but as long as it don’t cost nothin' 1 mought as well take it in,” said Mr. Suggs. My. that band certainly is hittin’ up ‘Dixie.’ ’Minds me of a bugle player we had in '64. Jimmy Robbins was his name, and he blowed the bugle for the Third Gawgy reg’mint. Jimmy he went foragin’ one night and found a still housK He didn’t hev nothin’ else to tote licker in ceptin' his insides and his hawn, so he filled up both and starts for camp. He had his finger in the leetle end of the hawn, when he met up with the cun’l. The cun'l he says to Jimmie—” Just then somebody pressed the but ton of an electric horn and Its demoniac snort made the old man jump for safe ty. Uncle Hi Hates "Them Horns.” “Dad-burn them things!” said Mr. Suggs. "I'd jest as soon be run over as have one of them insultin’, screech in devils busted loose under my*feet. I swear if Gabrul’s trumpet makes a noise like that there’ll be a passel of country folks plowin' through the ground and bustin’ off coffin lids when it cuts loose on jedgment day.” That won’t happen again, Mr. Suggs, said an attendant, soothingly. "There's a rule against horns in the show, anyway.” "There ought to be a rule agin ’em on the road,” returned Uncle Hi, pee vishly. “Why can’t they tote a bell like my chicken waggin? Never heerd of me runnln’ over nobody, did you?” Mr. Suggs' friend and sponsor was quietly pointing out the old man to a salesman. Some Solid Comfort. “See the old farmer? He looks like a back number, but he’s got all kinds of coin. You can sell him a car if you go at him right, and don’t let him get started on the weather,” was the Atlanta man’s tip. The salesman woke up. If there’s anything Uncle Hi likes next to talking, it is listening to anoth er man talk, especially if he has a fine flow of language, and this motor sales man knew words Uncle Hi had never dreamed of. The old man bit off a fresh chew, offered the plug to the bystanders, accepted a cigar which he tucked into his vest pocket, and sat down on a fore wheel to listen. For 25 minutes the salesman discussed horsepower, differentials, electric start ers, clylnder bore, stroke and uphol stery. He lifted the hood and showed Uncle Hi where the gas went in. how It was exploded and what happened next. "If you’re thinking of buying a car, you couldn't do better than try this one,” he concluded at last. "Who, me?” returned the old man, in amazement. “Me buy one of them things? I’d look a sight cornin’ inter town with that there parlor on wheels all filled up with chickens and eggs and turnip greens, now wouldn’t I?” Hi Gets on His Favorite Subject. "Oh, you'd use this for a pleasure car,” explained the salesman, confi dently. "Os course, you could buy a light gas truck for marketing, or stick to your wagon. But this would be the thing for you and Mrs. Suggs to drive to town in and to drive round the coun try this pretty weather. We’re going to have the prettiest fail you ever saw. If you’ll let me take —” "Pretty fall, eh?” interrupted Uncle Hi. "Pretty fall? Why, son, you can’t tell your Uncle Hi nothing about weather. I been a studdyin’ the weath er sense the spring of ’63 and I ain’t never gone wrong yet. Now, you may know somethin' about autymobiles— anyway, you’ve got conversation enough about ’em —but when it comes to weather! Why, let me tell you, son, I'm the only man who predicted the big freeze of ’92. I'm the man —” But the salesman had surrendered. Pleading a date with a customer, he melted into the wilderness of carsVand Uncle Hi strolled on down the line. Looks Over the ‘‘Coops.” I The old man climbed Into an elec tric coupe and smeared mud on its whipcord lining. He put his finger on a spark plug In a cutaway engine and got a shock which made him swear. He tried every tire in the show to see if lie could squeeze a dent in It, great ly to his disappointment. He asked the price of everything from a tool box to a six-cylinder limousine. But none YOUNG FARMER TO STAND TRIAL IN KILLING CASE MACON. GA., Nov. 19.—L. W. Ma lone, a young Alabama farmer, who killed Emmett Hodges, proprietor of a club, here last spring, will be tried for his life In the Bibb superior court next week. Malone had been married only three days, and was In Macon on his honey moon. when the tragedy occurred. He went to the club with a friend and be came intoxicated. He says he was robbed of all his money, and, accusing Hodges, who was also a young man and recently married, he puMed a pistol and fired five times. Malone will plead self-defense. His father and brothers from Alabama are already here and will be with him dur ing the trial. FRESHMAN KILLED IN FALL PLAYING PRANK WASHINGTON, IND., Nov. 19. Philip M. Henry, a seventeen-year-old freshman at Georgetown university, was killed last night by falling from a ledge which runs around the- fourth floor of the Healy building. It is sup posed he was trying 1" walk the ledge to entei anvtli- i student's room in a I prank. His neck ..a.- broken. Ib-nty is the son of Percy Henry, of Louisville, THE ATLANTA GEOKG IAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1912. of the salesmen paid him more than passing attention. At last Uncle Hi strolled regretfully toward the door. The band had put up Its instruments and gone to the corner for beers, and the show had no more charm for the old man. But as he was leaving, the salesman of a low-priced car followed him quietly out of the door. "Where’s my wagon gone to?” asked Uncle Hi. in alarm. "I left my boy holdin’ old Beck and now they’re gone.” “Your boy said he was getting tired and hungry and was going home,” said the man at the door. “He said you never would come out as long as the band was playing.” Then the salesman who had followed Uncle Hi out of the door got in his fine work. Falls For the Speed Stuff. “Where do you live, Mr. Suggs'.’" he asked, easily.- “Out past Battle Hill, eh? Well, I’m going to rnn out that way in a little car just like that you were admiring a few minutes ago Climb in and we’ll pass'bld Beck and the boy half-way out.” He didn’t show up until after dark, and the other salesmen began guying him about his “demonstration.” But he flashed a roll of bills and laughed. “I’m satisfied,” he returned. ,“I took Uncle Hi out Gordon street, made the wrong turn on purpose and hit the Cas cade road. I took him up and down those hills in a jiffy, showed him how he could pass every farmer's wagon in the country, and at last landed him at home in time for the best country sup per I ever ate. The old man has a feed cutter and a cider mill out there, and I showed him how he could jack the car's hind wheels oft the ground, put on a belt and run his machinery by the gas engine. He dug the price of the car out of a sugar bowl on the top shelf, made me promise to come out and teach him how to run the car and was hardly willing to let me ride home in it. And I’ll bet he boosts a. dozen sales fore, bragging to his neighbors.” The deltcfoue flavors of the best fruit and more economical. SAUER’S EX TRACTS ALL FLAVORS. Thirteen highest awards and medals. (Advt.) B:hene:y’s 1 PECTORANT IRES IN A DAY is, Colds, Consumption, ft ping Cough, Croup, Trickling E j Nose, WaterySEyes, Drop- § In the Throat, Bronchitis, R ill Throat and Lung Trou- H Cheney’s Expectorant re- E at once. Thoroughly tested I !ty years. Z IUGGISTS 2BC AND SOC WILTON JELLICO COAL $5.00 Per Ton The Jellico Coal Co, 82 Peachtree Street Both Phones 3668 § Atlanta Phones Pave Way To Increases in Business Many enterprising mer chants have been installing Atlanta phones in every de partment of their store. They have found a large and immediate increase in the number of phone orders received. Do yon realize that among our thousands of subscrib ers. many use our service exclusively? Do you also know that routing traffic over our wires means a saving of from 20 to 50 per cent? Gan you afford to neglect such an opportunity for profits? Atlanta Telephone and Telegraph Co. A. B. CONKLIN, Gen. Mgr. COMMERCE CHAMBER VOTES ON DIRECTORS AND VICE PRESIDENTS Members of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce voted today for three vice presidents and four directors. The bal loting began at noon in the headquar ters of the chamber in the Empire building. The polls were scheduled to close at 5 o’clock. Following a time-honored custom, the nominations were made by a committee of former presidents of the chamber, including Rol—rt J. Lowry, J. G. Ogles, by, L. H. Beck, J. K. Orr, Robert F. Maddox and Frederic J. Paxon. The following officers were nominat ed: Third vice president, Brooks Mor fin; fourth vice president, Victor L. Smith; fifth vice president, W. L. Peel; directors. Lynn Fort, Thomas K. Glenn, John Morris, Sr., John W. Patterson. $6,000 REWARD OFFER FOR STOLEN CHILD RENEWED Attracted by an Atlanta dispatch in a New Orleans newspaper stating that a child had been located in Atlanta which was thought to have been the kidnaped four-year-old Robert Dunbar, Jr., of Opelousas, La., C. P. Dunbar, fa ther of the stolen child and resident agent at Opelousas of the Georgia Home Insurance Company of Colum bus, has written Chief of Police Janies L, Beavers a letter. Mr. Dunbar re news his reward offer of $6,000. Southern Suit & Skirt Co. j | 43-45 Whitehall Street Southern Suit & Skirt Co. 43-45 Whitehall Street / Stupendous Suit Purchase ? J By Our. New York Office If|; ) (4 Enables Us To Offer Owm. ? ( f tot 200 Beautiful Tailored I f _ Suits Tomorrow 1 glij 3 / Ms Os Our New York office has just consummated .% JRJRu one the largest suit purchases ever made /wv r v* n ew York City. Our share in this re- tO' 1 4 markable trade event is 200 lovely new suits. y | / They arrived this morning by express and 1 s T will k e on display in our windows tonight r C and tomorrow. First of all the styles are j it' I “ght anc * ever Y suit is perfectly tailored and f \ exquisitley lined—-otherwise they would not w| J 'lr be here at any price. The suits are of all- Jf i wool materials and are up to the same high O standard of suz/gua/z7i/that characterizes this / SWfe ?■ store’s dealings. 1 hey come in navy blue and P ' black serges, novelty cheviots, diaganols, bas- PlSil ket weaves and two-toned mixtures, grays, B * ftwH. browns, wine, blue mixtures and gray and j9M|9EH > white and black and white mixtures. None sent C. O. D. None sent on approval, and WSSBia / . BBPwScPfhk ere sie wa y va^ues range: 10 Suits Re suldr Value $16.50 \ All a s / Suits Regular Value $17.50 n • i ' Suits Regular Value $19.50 \ Line Price Y 40 Suits Regular Value $22.50 v jQ £ /\ Suits Regular Value $25.00 I / J / Ihe sizes run from a Misses’ I4up to a Woman’s size Grand Coat Special $12.50 and $15,00 C Jl A \ J . ’ nhrvi Coats, Tomorrow yv»OO /\I J k 5 L \lll BmrhOln W Along with the big suit sale we offer sixty '9l I warm, eomfortable coats in full length tan /Al ~ i"I9F 1 and gray Zibelines, an np-to-the-minute 9 f** )j| sci style, with biaud trimmed pockets and cuffs kLuJ • Iff 1 A * 11 I I and novelty back effect; also forty stunning I F m 11 I | navy blue Oxford storm eoats, with inverted l w | l|j ji 'kr-d.J, QE ,)0X ph’at and strap back effect—one of the OF* 'frl ' Mml f ? season's newest models and easily worth i'/\v s . ! l 999 F $15.Q0. Here tomorrow OZ p |<j fW f* | in this great sale OO : ' 1 - 4 | t* Southern Suit & Skirt Co. ? | “Atlanta's Exclusive Womans Apparel Store’ ’ 43-45 Whitehall Street ? AGED WOMAN DIES OF STARVATION IN CHILL. BARE ATLANTA SHACK After three weeks of virtual starva tion in a vacant shanty at 45 Electric avenue. Mrs. Anna Traub, 70 years of age. formerly a mendicant in the Ful ton County almshouse, Is dead today at the Grady hospital. Mrs. Traub was discovered in a pre carious condition yesterday afternoon by carpenters who came to make some improvements on her shack. The door was locked, but they forced their way in, and there lay the old in a corner on some sacks, all but dead. In another corner was the framework of a bed and some slats, but no bed cloth ing. The carpenters moved the old woman Into the sunlight and sent for the Grady hospital ambulance. At the hospital she was given nourishment and was able to tell in a weak voice of her predicament. She had been there three weeks, she said, with very little food Day Clerk Long, of Gratis , looked up the recalls of the institution and as certained that the same woman had been to the hospital from April 9 to April 17, 1911. tin this occasion she had been discovered helpless in a man hole in Western Heights, After her stay in the hospital, said Mr. Long, she was sent to the poorhouse. CONVICTS TO GIVE THANKS. DALTON. GA., Nov. 19.—The Whit- , field county convict gang is looking i forward to Thanksgiving, when a big i time will be had at the camp east of i STOMACH SOUR ANDFULLOFGAS? GOT liIGESTION? HERE’S H CURE Time it! In five minutes all stomach distress will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas, acid or eructations of undigested food, b no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or haadache. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs. It i is the surest, quickest and most certain remedy in the whole world, and be t sides, it is harmless. Millions of men and women now eat their favorite foods without fear— they know now it is needless to have a bad stomach. I si H . PAPE’S J' ’ iSSfei i DIAPEPSIN | EW) i MAKES DISORDERED STOMACHS .‘lli, * 3 FEEL FINE IN FIVE MINUTES. / CURES INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA. A VW SOURNESS, GAS, HEARTBURN./I . . ■ w ■ i—•—p » v' ,„ n ~..y SCARCE 50 CENT CASE—ANY DRUG STORE. ' ''' here. Religious services will be held during the morning, and a special din ner of roast pig will be given the pris oners. In the afternoon they will be given free rein io enjoy themselves. 9