Newspaper Page Text
the weather
♦
Forecast for Atlanta and Georgia;
pai today and tomorrow.
VOL. XL NO. 95.
SHOPKEEPER
SLUGGED AS
HE SERVES
BANDIT
Decatur Street Merchant’s Life
Is Saved by Passerby Who
Heard Him Fall.
NEGRO ROBBER FORCED
TO FLEE WITHOUT LOOT
Rescuers Find Assailant Ready
to Give His Unconscious
Victim Death-Blow.
R. A. Starnes, a merchant of 536 De
catur street, turned to a shelf in his
store today to get down some goods for
a prospective buyer. When he faced
aboui he was knocked unconscious by a
blow of a billy on his heat). ♦
Railroad men, on their way home
:'om work, heard Starnes fall as they
passed the store, and dashed in to find
a negro bending over the prostrate mer
chant. Hr apparently was about to de
i liver another blow, which might have
killed his victim.
Their arrival saved Starnes’ life and
the contents of his cash register. As
the robber saw them enter, ‘he fled
through h back door into the alley.
Slugger Escapes
In Maze of Alleys.
The rescuers gave chase, and were
joined by Police Captain Curry and Pa
iroimen Anderson and Watson. The
byrglar, hofvever, escaped them in a
maze of alleys.
Starnes was hurried to Grady hos
pital, where the wound on his head was
•-rested. He was able to return to his
More later in the day.
T had just opened the store and had
transferred my cash from the safe to
she cash register.” he said. “The rob
ber must have seen this, for he en
tered just at that time.
"He was a well dressed, seemingly
respectable negro. He gave his. order
and 1 turned to fill it. T had to walk
nearly to where the cash register was,
and I believe he was figuring On that
when he named his purchase.
Street Nearly Is
Deserted at Early Hours.
“As 1 turned to show him the goods, I
thought the roof had fallen in. I felt
blood gush on my face, and then I be
fame unconscious.”
faptain Curry said that, according to
thread men, the street virtually
as deserted at that hour, and had it
)(, en at a busy time they never would
have noticed Starnes’ fall. When they
heard him drop, one looked inside and
the negro bending over the mer
'hant. a blackjack still in his hand,
"hey dashed in, but the negro was too
Wick. He was out through a back door,
'■ an alley, and in a few seconds lost.
Kone of them had pistols, and when
th> police arrived, all trace of the rob
was gone.
DR. R. J. BIGHAM
QUITS METHODIST
CHURCH ENTIRELY
/AFtRoLLTON, GA.. Nov. 22.
1 disposition of the case of Dr. R.
■ Bigham, who bad been charged with
-unduct unbecoming a minister, was
at the morning session of the'
i Georgia Methodist conference to
■'hen he voluntarily surrendered
' ( h ntials as a minister and with
bom the membership of the
Dr. Bightim has been a man
"“teemed in this conference, ano
some of its most important
ntments. During recent years his
1 s completely failed.
■' ' irit of restlessness is evident
the preachers of the conference
■ag rhe appointments for another
definitely learned today that
t many changes are to be made
that sonie leading pulpits will be
Also It is learned for a cer
,!lat three new presiding elders
appointed. No statement is
to who these new elders will
Revs. J-:, f. Dempsey. J. P.
►p ' p - King, J. G. Logan and W.
mnicutt are being most promi
uentioned.
CLUBWOMAN makes
doubly sure to die
w : "' MICH.. N OV . 2L.—Mrs.
1 u Williams, a society leader
i a , - "man. killed herself here to
, “Wallowed a large quantity of
.. and 'hen shot- hers, if
i, ’ b • iy. Despondency over
aused her act. i
The Atlanta Georgian (rxfßf
Read For Profit—GEORGIAN WANT ADS—Use For Results. JlijL
‘Your Presence Is'Not
Wanted/ Hot Springs
Mayor Wires Schepps
Arkansans Resent Gangster s In
tention of Taking Up Resi
dence With Them.
HOT SPRINGS, ARK., Nov. 22.
j Mayor W. W. Waters sent the follow
’ ing telegram to Sam Schepps. New
i York,''in care of. District Attorney
Whitman:
“Having read in the newspaper dis
patches from New York that you con
template returning to Hot Springs im
mediately after your release from jail
in New York, I desire to notify you, as
mayor of Hot Springs, representing the
j best of the city, your presence here is
i not desired.”
; Mayor Waters stated he did not want
I Schepps to make Hot Springs his home
j and that he had been requested by
many citizens to warn Schepps to keep
1 away.
RESISTING ARREST,
NEGRO FIRES INTO
POSSE; 1 WOUNDED
y FORSYTH, GA.. Nov. 22.—Millie Mac
Maynard, one of the best known young
men of Monroe county, was shot in the
shoulder here last night by J. L. Mitch
ell, a negro photographer. The wound
is not serious, say the attending physi
cians. The negro' is in jail.
J. M. Cox, a local constable, attempt-,
ed to serve a legal paper on
who. cursing the officer, refused to take
the paper. Cox called on some one to
assist him in arresting the negro, when
Mitchell ran to his house. Officer Cox,
Mr. Maynard and several other young
men followed.
As the party enterd the house. Mitch
ell drew a big .44-caliber Colts and
threatened to kill the first man who
came toward him. Several of the men
made a rush upon Mitchell, and he was
overpowered, but not until he had fired
several times into the crowd. Mem
bers of tie poSse returned the fire. Both
Mr. Maynard and the negro were
wounded.
BRIDEGROOM WITHIN
HIS RIGHTS TO DRINK
BEFORE TAKING WIFE
MACON. GA., Nov. 22.—1 n the opin
ion of Judge Gus Daly, recorder of this
city, a man is warranted in taking a
1 few drinks just prior to a wedding cer
| emony. An aged negro was arraigned
j before the judge, charged with having
' been drunk. He pleaded that he had
> imbibed some “ni-beer” in anticipation
of his marriage, which had .been pre
vented by his arrest.
"Where's your license?” asked the
Judge. “Here it is," said the old negro,
"and yonder’s my gal.”
“Well, if you two will marry right
now, I'll perform the ceremony and dis
miss the case,” said the recorder, and he
was as good as his word.
However, there being some doubt in
th’eir minds as to the legality of a mar
ciage performed by him, the two ne
groes went to the ordinary and heard
the fateful words all over again.
CO EDUCATION FOR
NEW $150,000.00 HIGH
SCHOOL IN MACON
MACON; GA., Nov. 22.—Over the ob
jections of many parents, the Bibb
county hoard of education has adopted
| the co-educatlonal system for the new
$150,000 high school, on which work
will be started as soon as plans can b's
drawn. The school will be erected on
Orange street on the site of the present
Boys Hj£h school, and the present
Girls High school will be devoted in
the future to grammar grades.
Whether to combine the boy’s and
girls high school has been a mooted
question with the board for many
j months, and it was believed that sep-
I arate institutions would be maintained
I on account of the objections of many
I parents to the co-educational idea.
i
SON OF JOHN W. GATES
IS WRITING MEMOIRS OF:
“MISUNDERSTOOD MAN”
I COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO., Nov.;
| 22.—Charles G. Gates is here writing ;
• the life story of John W. Gates? his
father Probably it will be months be-
I fore the volume of memoirs Is ready
Ifor the printer.
Mt“ There never was a prominent man
j more misunderstood than my father,”
said Gates. “He was not the big
1 plunger that people pictured him. He
j had none of the small arts that char
i acterize many of the financial mag
; nates. His methods were direct. They
I puzzled Wall Street because he made a
i habit of telling the truth or else say-
I ing nothing.”
9 QUARANTINED ON
PULLMAN CAR WHEN
SMALLPOX APPEARS
DENVER. GOLD.. Nov. 22.—Eight pas
| sengers who arrived in Castle Rock on a
I Santa Fe Pullman car are hi quarantine
today, and, with the negro porter of the
! car, will be held for two weeks, as a
| result of the discovery of a • ase of small -
’ pox on the car.
The patient. R. C. Jones, boarded the
| car at Lajunta. Colo. The disease de
: veloped after he was aboard. State health
I officials ordered the ear cut from the
■ rain and fumigated. Jones was hurried
I by automobile to a pest house here.
HOT ATTACK
RENEWED ON
STUBBORN
TURKS
i ~ i ~~'
Peace Terms Rejected—-Bui
! gar Cannon Resume Shelling
Constantinople Defense.
MOSLEMS REINFORCED
DURING 24-HOUR TRUCE
Pestilence Among the Enemy
Leads Gen. Savoff to Shift
Point of Onslaught.
CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 22.—The
greatest battle of the Balkan war is
raging today along the Chatalja lines
between Bulgarian and Turkish artil
lery with savage fury, following the
rejection by the Porte the allies'
armistice terms. Taking advantage of
the 24-hour lull in the fighting, brought
about by the tentative negotiations be
tween General Savoff, the Bulgarian
commander-in-chief, and Nazim Pa
sha, the Turkish minister of war, all
the Ottoman reserve forces had been
moved to the front and the Turkish
positions were said by the government
to be stronger now than at any time
previous.
Biyuk Chekmeja, at the extreme
southern end of the Chatalja lines, is
the center of the battle and there the
heaviest fighting is going on.
Five batteries of the Bulgarians’
heaviest siege guns, wuich were for
merly’ used in bombarding the Otto
man defenses at Adrianople, have at
last reached the front and are concen
trated upon the Turkish works between
Chatalja and Biyuk Chekmeje.
General Savoff is evidently attempt
ing to'weaken the Turkish left wing for
a flank movement.
Artillery Roar
Starts Before Day.
Beginning an hour before daybreak,
the roar of artillery fire west of this
city gave evidence that a terrific en
gagement was in progress. Military
experts here believe that one of the
compelling motives which led General
Savoff tot concentrate his attack upon
the Turkish left was the prevalence of
cholera in the camp opposite the Turk
ish 'center.
Reports by Turkish scouts who made
a reconnoissance of the twenty-mlle
front of the Bulgarian army from
neighboring heights indicated that the
Bulgarians did not withdraw from the
offensive as had been reported, but the
movement of troops to the wings only
made it appear so.
It is Indicated by all accounts from
the front that only a few regiments of
infantry and artillery have been left to
guard the Bulgarian artillery at the
center. General Savoff not fearing an
infantry attack from the Turks in this
quarter.
Witnesses of conditions in the Turk
ish line say that the greatest hardships
are not caused by Bulgarian bullets
Cold rains have been falling at inter
vals for a week and many of the re
servists who are used to the warm cli
mate of Asia Minor are suffering In
tensely from illness thus brought on.
Soldier Shoots
Down Commander.
[ There is also a lack of discipline
i among the Turkish soldiers which
strikes observers as a most untoward
: factor in military affairs. A war cor
i respondent told of seeing a soldier
shoot down an officer because he was
angered at a command. Instead of be
ing punished, the soldier was allowed
to go free.
Breastworks have been erected all
along the eastern banks of the Lake of
Biyuk Chekmeje by* the Ottoman
troops and a telephone line has been
installed connecting the headquarters
there with the private railway car of
Nazim Pasha, which stands upon the
tracks of the Orient railway at Hadem
keui.
Two Turkish ironclads have been or
dered to Kalikratia, west of Biyuk
Chekmeje. to join in the cannonade on
the Bulgarian camp there.
Grand Vizier Kiamil Pasha an
: nouneed today that he had received
from the front word that Nhe Turks
were in a very favorable position and
that all was going well with them.
With the water pouring Into her hold
from several big holes beneath the wa
ter line, the Turkish battleship Mesiu
dyeh was towed in a sinking condition,
stern first, into the Golden Horn to
day.
Although government officials vouch
safed no information, it was believed
that tin battleship had been attacked
by a flotilla of Bulgarian torpedo boats.
ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1912.
RISKS DEATH
IN FIRE FOR
BRIDE'S
GOWN
Hilliard Spalding and Wife
Have Narrow Escape From
Blaze in New Home.
NEGRO JANITOR ROUSES I
SLEEPING OCCUPANTS
Trousseau Consumed by the
Flames and Wedding Pres
ents Are Destroyed.
Hilliard Spalding, prominent young
lawyer of 113 West Peachtree street,
and his bride of a few weeks are today
receiving the second congratulations of
their honeymoon. This time they are
being felicitated on the fact that they
were not burned to death in their homi (
—a big apartment house owned by the
bridegroom—which was partially de
stroyed at 11:30 o’clock last night. Mr.
and Mrs. Spalding escaped partly clad,
while other occupants of the house had
narrow escapes from death.
Julius Jones, a negro janitor of a
nearby apartment house, gave the
alarm, and not satisfied with this re
mained in the smoke-filled halls pound
ing on doors until the occupants, who
had refused to be alarmed, had risen
and he was assured of their safety.
Braves Fire For
Wife’s Clothes.
Mr. Spalding, when he had reached
the street and saw the scanty attire his
wife was we tain* in ihaj.«lcl n’ght Ue,
ran back in the burning building and
did not come out until he had com
fortable clothing for her. They' then
entered an automobile and were taken
to the home of Mr. Spalding's grand
father, Rev. A. T. Spalding, in Court
land street.
The apartment was occupied by three
families. A. P. Davis, employed tjy
John J. Woodside, on the first floor, and
the family' of Glover C. Else, a traveling
man, on the second floor, were awak
ened in time to dress, but the Spaldings
on the third floor had the narrow es»
capes.
Mrs. Spalding, who was Miss Stew
art, of Athens, lost her wedding pres
ents and her trousseau.
The fire originated in the furnace
room and the entire rear of the build
ing was burned. The damage was’’
heavy. TJie apartment building was
the property of Mr. Spalding.
CITY WANTS REFUND
FOR CONVICT LOCKED '
IN COUNTY JAIL CELL
DALTON, GA., Nov. 22.—Because of
the failure of the county to deliver Jshn
Stocks to the city when he was wanted
for street work, simply because no one
could work the combination lock on the
cell in which Stocks was confined. Re
corder Tarver has Instructed Police
Chief White to deduct from the sheriff's
bill $1 for each day Stocks was con- |
fined, amounting in all to $2.50, and to I
also refuse to pay his board bill. Re- ;
corder Tarver holds that the city pays
for the keep of its prisoners, but insists
that they be turned over to the city
when wanted.
In the absence of her husband, Mrs.
Gilbert, wife of the sheriff of Whitfield
county, insists that the city must pay i
the prisoner's board and deduct nothing 1
front the bill. “A city prisoner locked 1
him in, and the city must stand for it," '
she says.
Late yesterday afternoon the serv- !
Ices of a locksmith were procured and
the cell door, which had resisted al) ef
forts to unlock it, was opened, the lock
being broken as a last resort because I
the combination could not be worked, i
— - ■■—
SOCIETY GIRLS PLAN
THANKSGIVING FEAST |
FOR MEN IN STRIPES
DALTON. GA., Nov. 22.-e The two
young*daughters of Mr. and Mrs. T. N.
Peeples, prominent in Dalton society,
have taken it upon themselves to fur
nish Whitfield county convicts the deli
cacies of a Thanksgiving dinner
The appeals made to local people to ■
assist in making the day one of pleas- ’
ure to thtj "men in stripes" have met '
with a generous response, and the fund j
solicited by them has grown to large •
proportions—enough to insure a real j
Thanksgiving dinner for the men of th* I
county chaingang
A thorough canvass of the city has |
been made by them unassisted. With
the money secured, the delicacies to go
witli the two “porkers” promised by
Warden Forrester will be purchased,
and the convicts will be given a genu
ine feast I
An Interviewless Interview With Maude Adams
ONE ACTRESS WHO IS SHY
z ■ —/' 1
\\\ w ‘V
\\\ m
■ ■ ■ ■' , . ■
" iff i. ’
® . • ■ •—... - x --
" - —'
Miss Maudn Adams.
Modest Peter Pan Slirinks from Publicity and
Her Manager Diligently Shields Her.
“Yes, do come in. 1 just love re
porters. Don’t step on Hinky-Din
ky-Zoo, my pet Madagascar poodle.
He was given me by the Unighat
of Sissboomah after seeing me
dance the wools-woola. What is
my favorite color? Long green.
Oh, let me hurry on and answer
all the usual questions. I like my
eggs 'fried on the lower side; I
think kimonos are lovely; I'm a.
suffragette, but never broke a win
dow; my favorite jewel is a cluster
of solitaire diamonds, and I think
motoring is tine; I've never been
up in an airship, but here are some
' late photos of me sitting in one
and looking happy; yes, I'm glad
Wilson was elected, for I'm a
staunch Democrat when I’m on the
Southern tour; yes, I think South
ern women are the prettiest and th*
brightest and Atlanta is the great
est city I know, and I’d rather play
here than anywhere-—is that
enough?”
That’s the kind of an interview Miss
Maude Adams might have given out if
she had given any at all—but she didn't.
It is one of the traditions of Charles
Frohman's organization that Miss Ad
ams mustn’t be interviewed. It is the
principal duty of her manager, 'her
maid and the call boy to form a cordon
around her boudoir and see that she
isn’t interviewed.
One of the most common sights of a
Maude Adams tour is the horde of an
gry newspaper men and women, pushed
back to the curb by the mounted po
lice squad and weeping bitterly as they
are balked of their anticipated inter
views. There is a legend that one In
genuous reporter disguised himself as
a cup of tea and succeeded in gaining
entrance to her private dining room.
But There's the Manager!
"How many lumps, please?" asked
the waiter. "Three,” replied Mrss Ad
ams. Throwing off his disguise the
reporter rushed to catch the waiting
presses. Hut the manager seized him
as he ran and hissed into his ear:
“Dare to put Miss Adams’ statement in
quote marks and Mr. Frohman will
deny it and your paper will be ruined
and you east out to starve."
And the reporter didn’t. That hap
pened in Kansas City and afterward
In Louisville. Detroit ana Charlotte. N.
C'„ where the press agent was gettihg
an explosion from every cylinder and
the papers were easy marks.
The mysterious part of it is that no
body knows the reason why Miss Ad
ams will not be interviewed. Can it be
that her law yers—but no! Every day
in the life of Maude Adams since the
evening she made her stagg debut in a
soup plate in Halt Lake at the age
of nine months is known to the public.
There can be no fear of her dark and
mysterious past being divulged by care
less speech. No! The teason is Mr.
Frohman's orders. Manager Williams,
who has counted the cash for Miss
Adams for five seasons, merely shakes
his head and replies:
"Mr. Frohman has instruteed me to
say Miss Adams can not be interviewed.
That is all I can say. Upon advice of
counsel, 1 decline to answer. Thank
you. Good-morning.”
She Once Wrote About Her Work.
But once upon a time Maude Adams
wrote an article for a magazine and In
this sl,e expn ssed the revolutionary
and incendiary opinion that the public
really didn't care a continental about
what an actiess wore to breakfast or
how she fixed her hair, or whether her
summer farm was on Long Island or In
Breathitt county, Kentucky. Her opin
ion was that the public likes actresses
because they can act. She was willing
to write something about her plays and
which roles she liked best, but when it
came to the sad. sweet story of her in
ner life she begged to ring down the
curtain. And it may be that she is
right about it.
Perhaps there has never been a play,
er of the prominence of Maude Adams
about whom there has’been so little
said in the newspapers and magazines
beyond matters relating solely to her
work on the stage. Perhaps no other
actri ss of her popularity has so seldom
ben seen off stage by her admirers.
Did jou ever hear of Maudq Adams
taking tea with friends In Atlanta or
■>i ing seen : t the ball game, or taking
a ride in somebody's motor car?
Neither have we. She arrives in her
private ear, goes to her hotel apart
ments. app< .rs ar her performance and
goes back to the hotel.
Fears Being Lionized.
It sin goes driving for fresh air,
there's no brass batrtl leading the pro
cession and nobody knows it but herself
and her companions. And it doesn't
seem to be haughtiness, ('ould you
imagine Maude Adams being haughty?
The few who have really met her and
ehatted with her say It is rather shy
ness. She appears to be conscious of
being lionized and she doesn’t like it.
Manager Williams says the revival of
"Peter Pan” this season was made in
response to the public desire; that
eve rywhere Miss Adams went with
“What Every Woman Knows” the the
atergoers kept asking: “When is she
to play Peter Pan’ again? My little
girl is old enough to go to the theater
now. and I want her to see it.” And as
Mr. Barrie hadn't written anything else
this year, except a half-dozen one-act
plays. Mr. Frohman decided to put on
"Peter Pan” again, and found it just as
popular as in its first season. It has
been five years since “Peter” was seen
in Atlanta, and the audience last night,
the biggest the new theater hag ever
known, showed that the Barrie classic
was a popular choice, or perhaps the
same crowd would have been there if
Maude Adams had been playing a
dramatization of the state geological
report, for Maude Adams herself Is
enough, despite the remark of Mr.
Shakespeare that "The play's the
thing.” But Shakespeare died before
tile star system was in vogue.
2 CENTS EVERYWHERE
WAR TO HALT
CREMATORY
PLANS IS
GIVEN UP
Woodward Declares He Can
Do Nothing More Until He
Takes Mayor’s Chair.
RAZING OF OLD PLANT
IS BEGUN BY GILBERT
Health Board to Insist That
Demolition Be Completed
Within One Week.
With the order to destroy the old
crematory signed by Acting Mayor
Candler and work begun, James G.
Woodward remarked with resignation
as he sat In his office today that he
could do nothing else until he became
mayor.
“T think it is an outrage that they
have literally dumped thousands of tons
of gai huge into the laps of the people
of Atlanta by ordering that old plant
destroyed." he said. "But I have done
all I could as a citizen. I am nothing
more. After I am elected mayor, on
December 4, I can assume a different
attitude.”
Alderman John E. McClelland, who
fought hard for Mr. Woodward's prop
osition to save the old crematory at
the meeting of the aldermanic board
yesterday afternoon, intimated today
that he would resort to the courts to
block the razing of the plant. He said
he was not yet ready to announce his
plan.
Gilbert Says the
Work Has Been Begun.
Dr. W. L. Gilbert said today that
work had begun to raze the old plant
and that it would be completed as soon
as possible. The contract was let to
L. B. Storey. He is to receive the
wreckage as compensation. His bid
provides that he shall have 40 days to
do the work.
The board of health will insist that
he complete the work within a week, at.
least.
After a session of more than, two
hours, during which some of the
speeches were spiritedly bitter, the al
dermanic board yesterday afternoon
voted six to four against a reconsider
ation of the resolution ordering the
plant torn do An. Immediately ofter the
session Acting Mayor Candler signed
the order.
The vote was:
To destroy the plant—Candler, Mad
dox, Nutting. Spratling, Ragsdale and
Warren.
To save the plant—McClelland. Van
Dyke. Everett and Johntson.
Clashes Between
Speakers Frequent.
The speakers reviewed every phase
of the crematory wrangle since it be
gan more than two years ago. But the
members of the aldermanic board were
familiar with all the details and they
appeared little interested except during
some of the statements of Mr. Wood
ward and when there were clashes be
twen speakers.
“Pledgjng the city’s moral obligatioi.
for a $'276,000 crematory is the same
thing as issuing bonds," declared Mr.
Woodward. “Let's refer this whole
matter to the people on December 4
I will pay the cost of the tickets, ail',
it won’t cost he ciy a cen.”
Mr. Woodward inerpreted a reference
of Dr. Gilbert to his ‘Woodward's) “ten
day inspection tour of garbage plants'
as sarcastic.
"I think I learned more about cre
matories in those ten days than he
has learned in all of his,” Mr. Wood
ward jumped to his feet and declared.
George Spence, attorney for the De
structor Company, which has the con
tract for the new plant, said the light
to save the old plant was all a ffiluff.
He said the real motive was to break
the contract for the new plant.
Why Candler Voted
To Tear Down Plant.
When the vote was taken. Acting
Mayor Candler said he had written out
an explanation of his vote, to be sure
he would not be misunderstood. He said
he would vote to tear down the plant
because the city council had entered
Into a solemn contract with the De
structor Company to do it.
Aiderman Johnston explained his vote
with the statement that he had not had
i to write out an explanation, but that
the contract with Mr. Story was vague
and indefinite; that it gave him forty
days In which to do the work, and that
the board of health ought to have pro
ceeded in a more businesslike way t<:
get the plant torn down.
He -aid he was satisfied that the cits'
had contracted to pay $100,1)00 too much
for a new crematory, but he did no’
care to discuss that matter now. as it
was not the question before the board.