Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 21, 1912, EXTRA, Image 1

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THE WEATHER foiecast for Atlanta and Georgia: Cene' al| y fa ' r toda *' a;1c! tomorrow. VOL. XL NO. 94. TURKISH REFUGEES FLOCKING TO CONSTANTINOPLE - _ :• ■ , —. ■ . : . : * „.&WW« "I k - -3E ■<* ~~ “-•??* *-~ •’-3a W a w? ‘"•oSTsiwi 1A » I wto»* ' iL4 «HKh* ~ -■ ™ 'Tr.44*-. - IH< ~ . ITITvOr -T-a -. A*WMI 39 '' *«’.-ME. "i?l ’"LI »-« W .ii.<- 1 ,A*« > ' ’ " WrelwMi^'• ' frtl* Wjf A j ropynticxi xw-r MTIONS RUSH m SHIPS TO SYRIA Vessels Ordered to Haste to Protect Christians From Mohammedans. BLOODY MOSLEM WORK STARTED. SAYS REPORT I.oXDON, Nov. 21. —Warships of th'- nations were ordered to the Syrian "ust today to protect Christians who n reported in danger of massacre by liihn inniedans. Some dispatches indicate that the .'io.sietns have already begun their bloody work, but the British govern- ■ nt was without confirmation of these ri'ports today. ftussia, Austria, Wngland. Italy and 'lance have sent rush orders to their vessels to go to Jaffa and Beirut. Turks Announce A Great Victory .oNDON. Nov. 21.—A threat to con nin' the war against the Balkan al- - unless Bulgaria modifies the terms iln armistice is made In an inter- ' itb Grand Vizier Kiamil Pasha, a aphed to The Evening News from i-i ntinoph today. This quotes the d vizier as declaring that the Bul irian terms as they stand now are im -iide of acceptance by Turkey. ■ ’'NSTANTINOPDE, Nov. 21.—The u kish government announced today the Turks had won a great victory the last battle along the Chatalja in stating tiiat 8,000 of the attacking ! ' ilgarian army had been killed. 'l’ids in/licated that the Turkish gov- ■ miiem would use the repulse of the s as the basis for demands for bet r peace terms. According to the details of the three vs battle as announced by the gov mnent. many Servians and Bulga ria fell in the final assault upon the ’ty defenses. The right and left wings the attacking army lost heavily, par ularly the right, where shells from a i ui kish warship at the entrance of the I -H'. of Biyuk Chekmeje fell into an 1 munition train, which exploded, using terrific havoc. Vurkish warships at the Bulgarian I t aing at Lake Derkos also caused I I '.' looses, throwing their, shells into] Bulgarian camp. Servians to Front. Ihe Turks also claimed to have cap ed many guns from the Servians ’ 10 a-re fighting with the Bulgars, liming the eight-hour armistice ' i' ii was declared for the purpose of ‘■■O' mg burial of the dead Turks found n> membeis of the Fifty-fifth Ser in infjfntrj upon the field. Accord ing to the signs upon the battle field, 'lie Servians had been pushed to the front and for a time bore tile brunt ms the I urkish cannonade. 1 "legrams from Salonika, charging tin Greeks with outrages in the ghetto, 11 b< u.-i d by the Turkish government " offset ablations of barbarities’ bj ! ‘ i" Turkish soldiers in Albania and 1 "‘a • ■ According to the Salonika die ‘i'lies. tin- Greek soldiers burned *.'uagogues ami attacked many Jewish omen. I lor. ar< nun ::i;.(ioii Bulgarians In ' onika. most of tile Greek soldiers ving l>e, a withdrawn from ‘he city. The Atlanta Georgian ITXTRA Read For Profit—GEORGIAN WANT ADS—Use For Resu'ts £ il & CHINA READY TOSIRIKHT RUSSIA FOR I MONGOLIA Republic Party. Nation’s Lib erator, Opens Public Cam paign for War Funds. SIXTY THOUSAND TROOPS | ARE ALREADY MOBILIZED SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 21.—China-| town is in a ferment over the receipt of ' cablegrams that Chung Hwa republic is | preparing for a war with Russia for the , possession of the province of Mongolia, i The big secret societies which fostered i the revolutionary movement and led the campaign for funds through their ’ headquarters here have for the last week been interchanging cablegrams i with President Yuan Shi Kai and Gov ernor \Vu lion Man. of Quang Tung i province, concerning the situation in I I Mongolia. The climax was reached < ‘last night, when the Young China as j soclation, the society organized by Dr. Sun Yat Sen, China’s liberator, opened a public campaign for funds to sustain a war with Russia. Lecturers were sent through China town today bearing placards announc ing "Chinese-Russian war lectures.” At street corners they explained to the Chinese the situation, saying that war was imminent and that funds were nec essary to aid China. The situation parallels the action last September, when the Young China as sociation publicly opened the campaign for funds for the Chinese revolutionary movement. Dispatches have been received by Gook Har, secretary to Fung Chi J'ou, secretary of state of Yuan Shi Kai's cabinet, to the effect that an army of 60.000 has been mobilized in Pekin and that General Wong Hing, hero of the revolution, has been appointed its leader. COL. JOHN WOODSIDE BUYS SITE FOR HOME ON PEACHTREE ROAD ! ■ Colonel John J. Woodside s ion will I I begin the erection of a handsome sum- I I mer home on Peachtree road, corner ot j I Plaster Bridge road. lie has purchased I 'a tract 400 feet by l,““0 feet from W. | R. Turman, of Turman. Black A- Cal- ■ I houn, for $21,000. or a little more than I I SSO a front foot. The Georgian a pat intents, northeast i corner ot Ivy and Harris streets, has | been sold by Dr. Frank Edmondson to Isaac Schoen. L. J. Trounstlm. and V. H. Kriegshaber. This is three stories,' on a lot 60x101, and brought $38,134.32. The Georgia Land Company has boiigl t from Mrs. Elizabeth F. Butler eleven acres of land at the intersection of tin- Atlanta and West Point belt line and Seminole avenue, for $12,000, or at the rate of $1,090 an acre. A subdi vision has been made. The tract meas ures 59x723x390x328 feet. RUSHIN WINS SENATORSHIP. VIENNA, GA., Nov. 21.—1 n the state senatorial primary of Dooly comity, to choose a successor to J. I'. Heard, re cently deceased, itatliew E. Flushln. a prominent planter an<i business matt of this city, was successful, defeating Dr. W. B. Watt', of Byromville, and \\ V Harvard, "f Vienna. ATLANTA. GA.. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 21. 1912. zS? if K / Z Hilltiiles II ,>|| Hk ' ' ' ''' / Vy ,|| thir \ ;m In '■ ‘ ■ urn. a’ I 'ib |||| .ill.'.i'l' * »«W’” 4T “>J i-rowtloil will) tens nl' fl < Qj llntusnihls of llm sick. JjjA- woundeil aibi wL wlh > Ml & If N Wtti ’■WiHreg mKF WL '■EyBF ■L; 8 WO- .. X; »- Ji ! WHwfflFl ■ ¥ ■WHS’' uwlß IW ■>// In spile of the warlike character which he shares with his subjects. King Nicholas of Monte negro, as this photograph indicates, is no stranger to domestic sentiment. He is, in fact, very much a family man. He married in IS6O Milena Vucotitch, daughter of a Montenegrin senator, and they have nine children surviving—three sons and six daughters. Another daughter, who died in 1890, was the wife of King Peter of Servia. Os those living, one is Queen of Italv. Little Prince Michael, who is seen in the photograph on his grandfather's knee, is the eldest son of King Nicholas’s second son. Prince Mirko, who in 1902 married Nathalie ('onstantinovitch. Prince Michael was born in 1908. at Podgoritza, which lately attained world-wide fame as the headquarters of his grandfather's army against the Turks. This charming photograph of the venerable monarch in homelv surroundings forms a striking contrast to most of those recently published, in which he appears as leader of his army amid all the grim realities of war. It may be added that Prince Mirko has a younger son, Prince Paul, born at Podgoritza two years ago. STRIKE ADJUSTERS AWAIT RETURN OF JUDGE CHAMBERS Members of the board of arbitration in the Georgia railroad strike today awaited the arrival of Judge W. L. Chambers, the third arbitrator, from Washington, before resuming the heat ing at the Federal building. Judge Chambers wtr expected to l . aeh Atlanta at 11 o'clock. and it was then planned to begin bearing argu ments of counsel, both for the Order of | Railway Conductors and the Georgia I road. ' It was believed that this would con sume the entire day and there was no possibility of a decision being reached until tomorrow. PADUCAH STIRRED BY GAMBLING REPORTS: POLICE SUSPENDED PADUCAH. KY., Nov. 21.—The ar rest of Albert Berry, charged with em bezzling $3,800. was followed by the suspension of Chief of Police Henry Bailey, Night Sergeant William Bea vers and Detectives G. H. Scott and Henley Franklin. The action was taken by the board of fire and police commissioners aftei an investigation of the charges that tlmre had been wide-open gambling in Padue.'li ; nd Berry’s < ieitn that he had o“t mo- t of the money in these places. An Open Letter to the Board of Aldermen The question of the destruction of the old incinerating plant ‘i conns up before you today. Think ,over these things before you vote on it: ,i If the phinl is torn down, the city will be without means of : consuming garbage for a year. If the garbage has to be dumped. Atlanta will be reeking with tilth and disease in less than three months. You will be morally, if not legally, responsible for the sutler ing that is bound to follow. , i It the new building can not be erected on the property where 11 the old one stands and many persons have declared it can be I don't take it lor granted there is no other site where it can be built. Don 1 go out of office al the end of your term with the stigma of having been Responsible for the pestilence that is sure to come next summer if hundreds of tops of garbage lie rotting in the open I The matter is plainly up to you. It is not a question of factional politics. 11 is a question of the lives of every man, woman ami child who would be forced to breathe air filled with germs from decay ing garbage. CHILD BORN WITH FULL GROWTH OF GRAY HAIR 1 WHITESBURG. KT.. Not al. Pine! I <'r»**-k fanning community is agug I ■ th*-* Lil i of a baby boy with a ’nil « growth • r-iruy hair. Mrs. John II (’rat! ' . wjft '?i - farmer, in the mother. GAS ON LITTLE FARM MAKES FARMER RICH ! ST. i I.AIKSVII.IJI. OHIO. Nov .1. John Ihc.hgob was inahing a *ia> as |u mil’ll uh J gas was discovered on his - • • n'« < i -ucio farm N«»w his iTlroim* is , -ICC , ...... Wants Eloping Wife Who Left Him to Care For Seven Children’ ; Murray County Man Has Three of His Own and Four of Her A nity's to Manage. ‘ HATTANOOGA, TENN.. Nov. 21.—i |W. <'. Elrod, of Murray county, Georgia, appealed iii Chattanooga today ami re quested tlie officials and the police to aid him to find Ills wife who lie asserted had disappeared witli G. J. Dixon, of Murray county, a saw mill operator, on November 8. Mrs. Elrod left iltree children behind, I while Dixon, who is a widower, left j four. All seven are now on Elrod's i hands for support, so he states. A I warrant has been issued for Dixon in I Georgia, according to hje statement. MINERS, DESPERATE. COLLECT IN HILLS TO PREPARE FOR BATTLE j CHARLESTON. VV. VA„ Nov. 21. , Entire villages are being deserted by tin- striking coal miners and their fam ilies in tlie district now under martial law and the men are taking to tlie hills and preparing to fight. Anarchy ex ists at many points and conditions are so ominous that tlie authorities are to day conferring on tlie advisability of calling mi the Federal government for L'nited States soldiers to restore condi tions to nojmal there for once and all. Major James I. Bratt said today the situation is worse now than at any time since the troubles first began ear lier in the year. The soldiers slept on ! their guns last night. It is believed the miners, who are assembling on the hill sides. are being marshaled for an at tack. They are desperate and bloody civil war is imminent. EX SLAVE. NOW RICH FROM LIFE IN WEST, BACK AT OLD HOME ROME, GA., Nov. 21. —Life on the South Dakota plains has been success ful and profitable for George Daniel, an ex-slave, and he has returned to Floyd county after an absence of 47 years. Shortly after tlie close of tlie Civil war, Daniel left Rome and went West. He drifted from one place to another ami eventualy settled at White, S. Dak. He got in right and made money. Often the negro’s thoughts wandered i back to th< old “befo’ de war'' days, to tlie old plantation, to the watermelon on the vine ami to possums anil persim mons. He decided to give up his life lon the praiiii’S and come back to Geor gia. He ami his two sons have just ar rived. They are going to have a plan tation of their own. George is probably | tin richest negro in the county. ATLANTAN IS CHOSEN HEAD OF FEDERATED FRATERNITIES OF U. S. LOUISVILLE, KY„ Nov. 21.—The | Federated Fraternities of America, an | organization composed of national of ficers of fraternal insurance societies, at its meeting here elected the follow ing officers: President. W. A. Roane, Atlanta: vice president, Fred Silsbee, Chicago; sec retary, D. Adam Brown. Philadelphia; directors, Fred Gaston, Philadelphia; F. Nunnemaker, Chicago; N. J. Hein, Chi cago; George Lockwood, Lebanon, Kans. MAN SHOOTS CHAUFFEUR FOR KILLING HIS PET DOG ERIE, PA.. Nov. 21.—Mrs. William 11. Forster was in a critical condition today ami her husband and George | Kellar, aged 22. a chauffeur, were suf fering from gunshot wounds inflicted by Lloyd Pasiorius because an automobile > in which the Forsters were riding, ran ovei ami killed Pasto: ms' pet dog. Pas t"i Ins surrendered to the authorities. 2 CENTS EVERYWHERE p GREMM ! FAGTIONS IN DECISIVE CLASH Woodward and Gilbert Make Final Arguments Before the Aldermanic Board. I FIGHT ON TO HAVE ORDER FOR RAZING RESCINDED The crematory fight before the al dermanie board this afternoon may be the final clash, if the board fails to reconsider by a majority vote the res olution ordering the demolition of tie old plant. Acting Mayor Candler tvil approve the resolution and the crema tory will be in ruins by Sunday. If tlie aldermanic board rescinds it; order, however, the proposition to de stroy the old plant will be thrown back in c6uncil. and it would* be Impossi ble to get an order through council i» destroy tlie plant before James G Woodward becomes mayor. Mr. Woodward asserts that the ere mutory will never be torn down until new one is ready to begin operatloi. Woodward Has But Three of Ten Votes. Mr. Woodward and Dr. W. L Gil bert. president of the board of health will be the leading spokesmen for th' opposing propositions this afternoon. 1 will take a unanimous consent of th' members of tlie board for them ti -speak. It. is expected that this will b> granted. There are ten members ot the board Mr. Woodward only has throe certaii votes. It will take six votes for him *< carry his point. He said lie believed h would get the needed number. Dr. Gilbert gave out this writtet statement today: Two years ago the board of health, realizing that tlie present crematory was inadequate, appoint ed a committee for the purpose of Investigating and reporting on the l>est modern method of garbage dis posal for the city of Atlanta. The committee visited many cities of the North and East. Declares Old Plant Must Come Down. Siiecilications were issued, bids invited, and. upon the recommen dation m Dr. Rudolph Herring, w hom the city, had employed to advise it. and after a full discus sion by the board ot' health, tile city council, tlie board of aidermen and by tlie bond commission, with • the approval of the mayor and city attorney. Hie present contract with ■ tlie Destructor Company, of New York, was made. The entile question of installing the new crematory rests on tearing j down tlie old plant. It is absolute ly a physical impossibility to build the new plant on the eity's proper ty while the present furnace is tn . operation. There is no real objection to a tearing down the old plant. It is worn out. ami the expenditure ot $3,000 rejiorted necessary for re paiis would only put it In service* ible rendition temporarily.