Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 26, 1912, FINAL, Page 7, Image 7

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TURKS GIVEN ONE DUE TO ACCEPT PEACETERMS Negotiations About To Be Broken Off Again and War Resumed. BERLIN, Nov. 26.—Emperor William has asked the Austrian government to submit to a European conference in the dispute between that country and Ser via. No answer yet has been received from Vienna, but the German govern ment is hopeful that Austria will ac quiesce in the proposal to arbitrate. VIENNA, Nov. 26.—Turkey has been given until tomorrow night to accept the peace terms of the Balkan allies, according to a dispatch from the Con stantinople correspondent of The New Erie Press totiay. Notice to this ef fect was served on Turkey by the Bul garian plenipotentiaries yesterday, he laid, and if the Turks do not accept, fighting will be resumed. M. Prochaska, the Austrian consul at Prisrend, who has been the cen tral figure of an international storm which is still threatening war between Austria and Servia. lias arrived at Uskub, and the Austrian government has been so notified, ac cording to a telegram received from Uskub this afternoon. LIEUT. COL. POSTELL OF STATE TROOPS RETIRES Captain John C. Postell, of Savannah, today was retired as a lieutenant colo nel of Georgia state troops, under a law which permits retirement, after a term of service, at the highest rank held during that term. Captain Postell was for a time a lieutenant colonel of the national guard. PRISONER ALLOWED TO VISIT HIS SICK WIFE Governor Brown today wired the iieriff of Mitchell county to permit Ben B. Cox, in Jail upon a misdemeanor charge, to visit, under proper guard, his wife, who was reported seriously ill and deliriously calling for her husband. SEABOARD ANNOUNCES LOW RATES TO WASHINGTON. Tickets to be~sold December 1, 2 and limit 15th. From Atlanta. $19.35; Athens, <18.15; Cedartown, $20.05; El berton. $17.15; proportionately iow rates from other points. Local Sleeping Car At lanta to Chattanooga, via SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Leaves Atlanta Terminal Station 8:20 P. M., Occupy at Chattanooga until 7 A. M. Chamberlin- JohnsonDußose Co. ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS Beautiful Dinner-Ware In the Bazaar The stocks of Dinner-ware in the Bazaar corne magnificently to your help these days! Because they cover the whole question of dinner services in a broad and very choice way. You can get here the very simple and inexpensive domestic sets or the rich, elegant sets that bear the names of the greatest makers of Europe—as instanced by a domestic porcelain set of tiny rosebud pattern at sl7.so—and it is a full set of one hun dred pieces—and by the English bone china, that never chips, from the Royal Doulton potteries, in the Indian tree and other designs. Also, here are the splendid sets of English earthenware, and the French china that every one likes for its fineness and deli cately-traced patterns—Haviland, Bernadaud, Pony at & Wil liam Guerin & Co. And all these sets are open stock—you may buy just those pieces that you want. Newly arrived service plates of French china are here for the Thanksgiving day dinner. One pattern after another to choose from and each one elegant, beautiful in itself—with gold incrustations, with little florals, with conventional pat terns. Also the flat silver you will want. The patterns are those of best taste—the plain Continental pattern, a poppy pattern, and the Rogers original 1847 pattern, the Fanueil. Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Co. Complete Collapse of Peace Plans Near CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov.- 26.—A complete collapse of the peace nego tiations between the Bulgarians and the Turks wae threatened today be cause of the demands of the Balkan plenipotentiaries for the surrender of Adrianople. It was admitted here that a resumption of hostilities was immi nent, as the armistice concluded by the belligerents making provision for such a contingency. In answer to the Turks' declaration that they would never surrender Adrianople, the Bulgars are reported to have answered that unless a satis factory answer was received by tomor row night the allies would resume the offensive. Believing r. resumption of fighting in evitable, Grand Vizier Kiamll Pasha and Nazim Pasha, the minister of war, are preparing for active operations in the field. There were indications to day that the Turks are contemplating an attack to recapture Salonika from the allies. Armed transports are being put In commission here for the move ment of an ary. However, it is unlike ly that a transport fleet will try- to run the blockade of a Greek war fleet, ex cept as a last desperate effort. General Savoff, the Bulgarian com mander-in-chief; General Nazim Pa sha, the Turkish commissioner, and their four sub-commanders met again today near Chatalja for a continuation of the negotiations. These took place in a pavilion about which was drawn a heavy guard of soldiers. Both Sides Shift Positions. Although neither side is ovlng rein forcements to the Chatalja zones, both Bulgars and Turks are shifting the positions of their armies. The Turks now have two square lines of defense between the Chatalja outer works and this city proper. The Bulgars have witdhdrawn from their old camps for the double purpose of escaping cholera and to gain strategic advantages. Couriers from the front said that there was no firing along the lines to day. The Porte is undoubtedly taking heart from various circumstances which arc militating in favor of Turkey. Os these the most important are the pos sibility of Austria declaring war on Servia and the outbreak of cholera in the Bulgarian lines. The setbeak of the Bulgars in the early fighting at Chatalja has also proved a factor upon which the Ottoman plenipotentiaries are basing arguments In the negotia tions. Th" flood of political arrests has been resumed following discovery of a bomb plot said to have been directed against Sultan ?>lohammed V and the grand vizier by radical Young Turks, who charge the government with betraying the country. EX-SAILOR SENTENCED TO 5 YEARS FOR HOLD-UP Hollis Haralson, a 19-year-old hold up man, was sentenced to five years in prison by superior court today, after a brief trial. Haralson held up R. O. Rivers, 3 Lakewood Heights dairyman, some time ago and got a small sum of money. He was caught and convicted of highway robbery. Haralson was for merly in the United States navy. rrfE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1912. Whisky and Evil Women VanAuken’s Downfall GIVES ADVICE IN HIS CELL “Young business men of Atlanta, if they would make a success and keep their heads above water, should shun evil women and whisky as they would a rattlesnake. It's a combination that can't be played to win. I’ve tried it, and I’ve lost. And if there’s a man in this world who could really hold the winning card in this game, I believe I'm that man. The player hasn’t the ghost of a show, and the only thing to do is to let it alone.” This advice today sifted through the bars of a police station cell. It came from Harry Ames VanAuken, a suave, jovial, well dressed young man, who gives his home address as New York city, and says he is president and gen eral manager of the Continental Coal Company, of Detroit. VanAuken, who has been stopping at the Piedmont ho tel and who was arrested in a fashion able downtown club by Detectives Ros ser and Pate, is awaiting the arrival of an officer to take him back to Michigan on the charge of passing a bad check. To detectives, VanAuken frankly at tributed his downfall to "whisky and women.” Spent Thousands on Both. “I have spent thousands of dollars on both, and they’ve put me on the rocky road,” he smilingly remarked to Chief Lanford. "I am particularly fond of women, and have always made it a point to pick out the prettiest and most stunning one I could And on whom to bestow my affection and lavish my money. I have made money, oodles of it. and have spent it freely. I have frequentlj- spent as much as SIOO in a night in my revels, parting ■with it as freely as though it had been but ten cents.” In a conversation with a Georgian (reporter today VanAuken, admitting BABY FOUND DEAD IN CRIB; MOTHER HAD PREMONITION Kept awake all night by a premonition that something was wrong with her baby, Mrs. Philip Hurter, of 102 West Baker street, dozed early this morning. When she awoke she found Charlie Hur ter, her Infant son, dead. The child, who was a year and a half old, had not been well for several days, and Sunday a doctor was called in. He did not consider the illness serious. Last night, though the boy apparently had recovered, Mrs. Hurter could not sleep. Throughout the night she went to his crib to see that all was well. Early In the morning, feeling, that her alarm was groundless, she dropped oft to sleep. She awoke about 4 o'clock and again went to the crib. The child was cold. She hurriedly telephoned a doctor. When he arrived he pronounced the baby dead. The body was taken to Bloomfield's chapel. The funeral will take place to morrow morning at 10 o'clock at Oak land cemetery. OLD RED LIGHTNING’ ASKS HOW TO VOTE WASHINGTON, NV. 26.—01 d Red Lightning, a Yankton, S. Dak., Indian, who tacked onto his signature "that’s me,” has appealed to the Indian bureau to tell him how to vote for president. The octogenarian said he was able to vote yet and was the man that spilled all the whisky that was brought to the Yankton agency fifty years ago. that he had been a high flyer, became serious, and it was then that he said he would like to sound through The Georgian a note of warning to other young business men. In doing this he stressed the point that he is not a crook. "Nature has endowed me with the gift of gab—a smooth tongue—and other qualifications of a good fellow, and I fear this has caused me to be re garded as a crook. I have made good use of my ability in a business way, al! right, but I’ve never had any crimi nal intentions. If I have ever passed a bad check, it was unintentional, and I have never failed to make it good. I regret to admit that I do get on period ical sprees, and this will get anybody in bad. Call and Disgrace the End. "Young men in the business world are too prone to be high flyers. They like to be known as good fellows, and, when once they hit the fast pace, the glitter and glamor of It all is too strong'for them and they can’t quit. If they would but stop a moment they could see their finish—a prison cell and disgrace. It'll come sooner or later, but surely. The chief food of the peni tentiaries today is the high flyer and the good fellow. If they want to es cape this miserable end, and, instead, make a success, they must avoid bad women and whisky.” VanAuken explained to officers that if he had passed any bad checks it was while he was Intoxicated, attributing all of his possible misdeeds to whisky and the high life. VanAuken further admits lhat he served four years in the Michigan re formatory on the charge of obtaining money under false pretenses, having been released on parole three years ago. AGED NEGRO KILLED FOR HIS COTTONJCROP MONEY ROME, GA., Nov. 26.—Officers are completely baffled over the mysterious slaying of Sam Young, an aged negro, near Rome. No clew that would lead to the apprehending of the slayer has been found. Young’s mutilated body was found in a cabin ten miles from this city. Near by was a blood-stained ax. Young's head had been hacked and there were gashes all over the body. The negro came to Rome and sold some cotton and that night he was killed and his money stolen. CHAMBERLIN-JOHNSON-DuBOSECO. ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS But Twice in a Year Does This Event Come The Semi-Annual Reduction Sale of Millinery The year runs its course and ■// II I I ill i~l I T I TTn brings but twice, once in the late zx spring and once in the late fall— // / 4Z2t2ZZ2_.2ZZ2Z22Z22 this opportunity. f JF+x Now, is any woman who finds Ui mH* - ZZZZZZZIZZZZZ. herself in need of a new hat going ~ ~"------ to miss this Reduction Sale? We hardly think so, for the hats are ■~Vv those that women want! ; I isilll""""" There are one hundred and sixty- :zzz zZ Z ZZZZ2 four included, and whereas a num- :Z ~ZZZZZ ZZZZZZZ ber have been reduced more than a :zzZZ ZZ 2Z ZZZ ZZp half, the very great majority are IZ ZZZ Z Z ZZZz Zz z now exactl y - Half Price :zzzzz3F y/ flu \ Vzi -~zzi Half price for hats from the ZZZZZjr \ \ shop of Estelle Mershon, of 20 :zzzhr \ East 46th Street, New York, that ZZZZJ M \ sends us only those styles most / 1 ' YYZZIZ2 favored by the fashionables of the "jf M A I /T ~~ ~ ~ metropolis. 2- To tell you just what they are £ . ... 1 l,v would be impossible, with one hundred and sixty-four hats, one different from another. You will find one, many, you will like and want. Large hats, small hats, tur bans, tarn o’sh inters; plush hats, velour hats, velvet hats; taupe hats, browm hats, red hats, black hats, white hats, hats for street wear, for evening wear, for every occasion At half price! It will be a wonderful sale in view of the real beauty of the hats it brings at these prices. Chamberlin Johnson =Du Bose Co. STEAMSHIP LIMPS INTO MOBILE PORT AFTER COLLISION MOBILE, ALA., Nov. 26.—With eleven members of the crew of the American schooner James Pierce on board and her bow severely crushed and saved from sinking by forward bullheads, the Nor wegian steamship Fram, from Barry, England, has limped into port here. Captain Grindham, of the Fram, re ports having been in collision on the morning of November 19, when off the Bahama islands, with the Pierce, ladened with 2,000 tons of coal, and bound from Philadelphia to Jabos, Porto Rico. Soon after the collision the Fram backed oft, taking the crew of the Pierce. The schooner was left awash. Collision bulkheads of the Fram saved the big steamer from foundering. She made port with four feet of water in her hold. JUDGE REFUSES VERDICT IN “WHITE SLAVE” CASE CHATTANOOGA, TENN., Nov. 26. The jury in the Cameron white slave case returning a verdict today, acquitting J. F. and A. T. Rourk. It was refused by the court, however, because of the fact that the jury was deadlocked in regard to R. T. Cameron, the principal defendant. The court held that as the three men were Jointly Indicted and tried, the jury must render a verdict on each one. TIMEIT! ANY SOUR. GUSSY. UPSET STOMACH CURED IN FIVE MINUTES Sour, gassy, upset stomach. Indigestion, heartburn, dyspepsia; when the food you eat ferments into gases and stubborn lumps; your head aches and you feel sick and miserable, that's when you realize the magic in Pape’s Dfapepsin. It makes such misery vanish In five minutes. If your stomach is in a continuous revolt—ls you can't get it regu lated, please, for your sake, try Diapepsln. It’s so needless to have a bad stomach—maJce your next meal a favorite food meal, then take a little Dia pepsin. There will not be any distress —eat without fear, fit’s because Pape's Dlapepsin "really does” regulajo weak, out-of-order stomachs that gives it its millions of sales annually. fl pape’s ‘ I DIAPEPSIN I rag Ml MAKES DISORDERED STOMACHS FEEL FINE IN FIVE MINUTE& / Ji CURES INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA. X /xlO K> A LARGE 50 CENT CASE—ANY DRUG STORE. J. P. MORGAN TO BE CALLED IN CONGRESS MONEY TRUST PROBE WASHINGTON, Nov. 26.—Members of the flrm of J. P. Morgan and offi cials of the United States Steel Com pany will be among the first witnesses called by the money trust investigators ta the beginning of their probe on De cember 9. This statement was made by a member of the committee today. Fear that witnesses under subpena will endeavor to avoid the committee is the reason why no preliminary no tice of those to be called has been Issued. It was stated today that the Pujo committee have encountered diffl r culty in locating men after they had let it be known publicly that the men were under subpena. RARE LUNG FIShTaUVE, IN NEW YORK MUSEUM NEW YORK, Nov. 26.—The second living specimen of a lungfish was re ceived at the Museum of Natural His tory from Gambia. West Africa. NEW BANK CHARTERED. The department of state today Issued a charter to the Bank of Kingsland, In Camden county, to ba capitalized at $25,000. FORMER REPRESENTATIVE DEAD. AMERICUS, GA., Nov. 26.—John T. Ferguson, former representative from Sumter county, is dead here of pneu monia. He was a wealthy planter and business man. “I Never Closed My Eyes Last Night” How often hare you been forced to say these very words. You evidently have never tried Tutt’s Pills which gently regulate your system and stir your liver to action. Sugar coated or plain —at your drurtfist. WATERY EYES CURED IN A DAY by taking Cheney’s Expectorant— ■ 1 also cures Consumption, Whooping ■ Cough, Croup, Trickling of the E Nose, Droppings in the Throat, I Bronchitis, ana all Throat and I Lung Troubles. Cheney’s Expec- |j | torant relieves at once. Thor- | : oughly tested for fifty years. I>, i > S WILTON JELLICO COAL $5.00 Per Ton The Jellico Coil Co. 82 Peachtree Street Both Phones 3668 7