Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 30, 1912, FINAL, Page 3, Image 3

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[WHO MINDS THE WINTRY WINDS? NOT THESE PRETTY CHILDREN!;' ■>■ / . A • JifelL /<** ’Bi cSli aypF / A <■"'•; •> > &A«3jl| "*•* k • -W/- ■>* ~ •Jsl£ ** -s* ; ®Ob& * ■.- JRMK'•^^ y '- z - W^ :<: j: .' : a> o 3&g|& \ JrajSaKk **' \ Z/ ; »•■’ ?• scfek. X W ■ ■ W k \ \ r - z3Kdi X / Wau O>S» \ m-k k / Jr ik *w» *s&//$/ \ r ~*S| \' sfi< > r . k ■ •»•> / f’’ • \ > * »M.' W- x 9 ''^o s mOwM ■ ■ 7 ; ' , * x '<w^7:s^ lte -.; t w « o JmBWP* \ ' \ - *V x ' \ ■•v / 73 E MK i S ®L ■ T'\,.[ -w! / t 7'A /g • 7>/ t '■•<■ 'wwt- fe&' ' 1 ■ \\li ( Vx-f “ z•? AJAW '"'Alt/I ' \ ; i i ■ ~ - * ? A' \ W- \ , fe,;;? \ ' t h\ x J b 1 w/Z;""Zk -\ ' fe,, "\- , . . !;< s jr/ ■/AssJ W"- \ ; - .£t»4 Cu. .'«. -■ r,-/wWw?' A L '-”:! ■ <. B- te. > > K*X yw. ft\i- **<: -;. ’ ;»A*teA ■ >// ■ - -iXm •’ tj <r ■>«*»- < 7XX • > ; .l . , .-’V? .'Tv < •<<>»• .■< M!n r. .mi, ■>; \Jr. m( ’li--. •! x diliiT. '.Gt» I'eMemrei . V?. H ./&>. ' X'< "' V ? - Zto>z "' ' '"' PUPILS TO JOIN IN GOON ME Boys High. Tech and Georgia! Academy Asked to Send Marching Delegations. ua\ e been made to increase r:. i.-daily the extent of the Georgia t\ 11 .-:h*w . ar : i< on Friday. December t. :-:id it promises to be one of the most jinj ..sing 'Atlanta has seen ii I :rs. Ail the boy scout organizations of ? C r uta and vicinity, are invited espe tb.iA by Captain W. 11. Leahy. grand l -.ha’, to participate in tills parade i. ... hail' <•'. dozen of these companies will be added to tile 700 Georgia Corn club buys who will be here for the show. Secretary Cooper, of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, has addressed a letter to Superintendent W. M. Slaton, Inviting him and the Boys High school to take part in tin parade, and similar invitations have been extended to tiie Tech students through President K. G Matheson and to the cadets of the Georgia Military academy through Colonel J. C. Woodward. Parade tv Start at 1 P M. With these organizations in line, in Addition to the governor and lib staff t nd the Fifth infantry, it will be a pa t? de well worth seeing. Ml organizations invited to take part I i tne parade are requested to report to til'? grand marshal, Captain Leahy, at tiie eapitol promptly at I o’clock on Friday. as the parade will move as soon t reafter as possible. Captain Leahy nis* has requested that nil scout mtiiie and the heads < f nil organizations which will participate 51 the parade, communicate xvitii him immediately at uis oflii-. in t :e Georg!:: Hailway and Power < ompaliy building. 5.i order that plans for the day may be fu ly perfected in adva ice. To Place Exhibits Monday. The corn show has brought about busy scenes at tiie Capitol. Many ex hibits already have arrived by express lA.id now are stored in tiie basement of the capitol, where precautions have beeh taken to protect them from ro dents. Carpenters are building the ta bles upon which the exhibits of the corn clubs and tiie girls canning clubs will be displayed, also the tables for tiie big dinner which the Chamber of Commerce will give the 700 corn boyr who are on the roll of honor. chairman H. G. Hastings, of tiie corn j-imu committee of the chamber, will have personal charge of the installation of the exhibits, which will be begun Monday, and will be assisted by th" district agents forth ■ box s or:i 'ubs. l, V. Cunninghan.. of Tifton; C M Janies, of Columbus; !.>:. William Bi * - f.. d. of Cedartown: J. Wa ■■■ H■ < aim, ■ •:' Sav nnah. and .1 K. G'u--. . f \rlanta. Agent c. 1! ill*- <■’A .. , .ist i. < unm be here on ac iutr * ‘1 -1 , r l **U - .i'P. ii* .i \ •• • k ’ t v ■ ♦ ♦ •r • • im . C. H HYDE, FORMER CITY CHAMBERLAIN OF NEW YORK. GUILTY NEW YORK, Nov. 3u. -Chari' S HI I Hyde, former < ity chamberlain. was I housed in the best room in tile Tombs today awaiting sentence folloving his I conviction last night of bribery 1n forc ling from Joseph G. Robin a loan of I $130,000 for the Carnegie T-ust Com ipany. He probably xvlb be sentenced |W< dnesday, but a certificate of reason- I ■ able doubt, which his lawyers obtained,! | will act as a stay and it wii: b* many] I months before the former city officialj . . nee. ■ The qu l .ten- to which Hyde was as-! signed are the same occupied bj Wil- 1 liam J. Cummins, who was in ti:.> Tombs through financial troubles. At that lime beta use Cummins was not placed in titier with tiie usual run of pris oners there was much criticism of tiie prison officials. The place where Hyde is confined wa used at one time as quarters for the late Warden Flynn. Later it be came a store room ami hospital. Tech nically the prison authorities are not required to keep Hyde in any particular part of the jail, as the commitment re quires that he be confined "in the Tombs.” Hyde today had his breakfast sent from a nearby restaurant. He wrote letters and then asked reporters to ex cuse him from seeing them, as he had nothing to say. IRISH POLICEMAN RESENTS REMARKS ABOUT HIS PRIEST MACON, GA., Nov. 30. Because Po liceman Jake Caraker made a remark , about a local Catholic* priest that Po liceman Pat Pierce thought was dis rspectfnl, ind because I*l*rce ques tioned Policeman Caraker’s integrity, these two members of the police force almost had a serious difficulty in the i barracks room in th. presence of their , superior officers. Two lieutenants sep i arated them just as Caraker drew his pistol. The matter will be investigated by the police committee of council. MINER DIVES 90 FEET IN SHAFT TO RESCUE MAN ‘ DENNISON, OHIO, Nov. 30 -When 1 Andy Ronald, aged 40. heard the body of Barlin Thomas, aged 32. miner, whizz down the shaft he dived after the form and landed 90 feet below In 10 feet of water and muck. Ronald pulled the other man to safety and both were hoist fto the surface. Both were injured i Thomas will not recover. SILKEN BLANKET AND BEST STATEROOM FOR CAT , BOSTON, Not. 3n.—The most xaiu ' alm' < v-r bro Ugh: to the United Stu.-. , ved on rl . teamship Cam -■bi i. ... Th- cut's name m I ">n l >ai tod *l it oe. Upled ' ■ A. 'tl b; ‘■i'.et 11: 'lie t ' i st. t oom ■' the : lip. Il is -. i hit - n ■ a ig,- ■ _.t.. ’ ... B:ig.J '■ i'HE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1912. ; r ' K. . — llutrii Lokey, Jr., and Boyce Lokey, sons of Dr. and ’dis. litioji Lokey. !>_* K.isi Eourtei-nlh street. 1 b'iorenee. daughter of Mi', and Mrs. S D. Hewlett. 810 Piedmont. (t Mr. IVilson, of Atlanta/ Fleeces New Tors rs NEW CONFIDENCE GAME ! ‘Mr. Wilson, of Atlanta,” is the op erating' nom de plume of a clever con -1 tidenci man who has infroduced New I York to a new and delightfully polite I way of getting easy money, according : to advices from the metropolis. This sht Air. Wilson." with a plain tive tale, has been picking up stray flve-dollar bills all up and down the big city. His first call a week ago upon a woman in West Ninety-sixth street proceeded, according to The New York Herald, as follows: “Won’t you please say, remarked he to the maid who came to the door, "that Air. Wilson, from Atlanta, wants to see Mr. Blank, and he ain't got much time'.'” Rings in "Old Chum.” Airs. Blank never had heard of Mr. Wilson, but when he sent word that her friend, Mrs. Bings, of Atlanta, es pecially desired that she see him there was a speedy welcome, for was not Mrs. Bings, of Atlanta, a girlhood chum of Airs. Blank, of New York? These preliminaries being settl'd, the shy and plaintive Air. Wilson explained his predicament. He was on his wa; MOTHER OF EAST POINT MAN FOUND DEAD IN BED JEFFERSONVILLE, GA Nov. 30. ■Mrs. Mary Ann Met oy. o>‘ this place, was found dead in lieu bi cer daughter, who went to the bed to wake her for breakfast. Whim 11. s M i oy had been In feeble health to some in"■ with i heart trouble, It w.<. not thought that her end was so near, a~- sh had been up and about the house, and si med to be as well as usual the night before. She i is survived by her son. A. J. .McCoy, of . East Point, Ga., and three daughters, Mrs. Thomas 11. Green and Airs ! Thomas A. Curry, both of Dublin, and • Miss Gertrude, of this p|aye. GIRL CLERKS FORM 10C CHRISTMAS GIFT PACT CINCINNATI, OHIO, Nov. 30.—The girl employees of a local department store have agreed that nong of them will give u Christmar present costing ■ more than ten cents SPOT WHERE SCHRANK FIRED TO BE MARKED MIiASAI KEE, No'. 30. Local Bull I Muost ii ■ ' • ■ movement to , marl; wth I onz>' ab! ■ Hi. .■ i | Wlu r. • ."■! 1"" '• Co'o- . ! Roo'..' k «• 1; from Alask ng > is sis- ter In Atlant: . He bad got ns fa aS New York when he discover was short .f3.su on bis fare. He telegraph' 1 to the bride-elect to send him somi mom " i; l his sister had just telephoned to him from At lanta that slie was ■'! ■>. but that the bank had clo. a i aru! it was too late to telegraph an> money at. all. It was then 4 o'clock and ills 'rain was to leave for the Sunny South at fi o’clock. Then, the Easy Money. What wa to be done'.’ A gurgle of discover; ami delight from the tele phone booth. Somebody had just passed the door of that booth down in Atlanta It was Mrs. Bings. "Oh, Airs. Bings! Do you know any body in New York'.’" asked sister "Cer tainly," answered -Mrs. Bings. "My dearest friend is Mrs. Blank, of Ninety sixth street.” Airs. Blank was only too glad. She gave $.7 to Air, Wilson, and .Mrs. Blank's mother gave $5 more. •Mr. Wilson called .••; other houses in the neighborhood. The others had the same experi' nee. MARQUARD ADMITS HE WILL MARRY ACTRESS ST. LOI It . M'Nov. 30.—Rube , Marquard, the famous fll.oOO pitcher of the New York Giants, admitted here today that he will marry Blossom See ley, his part no • In vaudeville, as soon as she can get a dixoree ftom her hus band. Joseph Kam. Kane .it ] -sent lias a 525.000 aliemi'ion suit ponding ' against Marquard in tie New York courts. .Marquard de. iareu that when Kane's ■ alienation ease ■ inie up, lie would b' able to prove that lie and Mis.-- Se'dex were not in an Atlantic City, N. J., ho tel together as her husband alleges . BOY. 11, iS CITY SLEUTH AT 25 CENTS PER DAY NEW YORK. Nov. 30. -Morris Schil ler, 11 years old, has been engaged to 1 do detective work for the city at. a ’ salary of 25 cents p day. 1 FORMER UNADILLA WOMAN DEAD. JEFFERSONVILLE. GA., Nov. 3" ) Mrs H H I'■ . ‘ inovii to thli t' a-'i ■ ith her family. 1 I froi : I nadilli'. is dean ,t hi .mm lit" • i | She had lit en an L t df"' al "..' 1. o Lit'' SI" ! ■ I ■ .. ' ' ■ O "I , 'I B' • • ■ TUIKIGIILES TOTRUCETEBMS Tentative Peace Arrangement Between Forces Reached, and Fighting Ceases. CONSTANTINOPLE. Nov. 30.—A tinlathe peace arrang'-rnent b tween Turkey and the Balkan allies lias been reached. The Turks armistice arrang ed by the plenipotentiaries and which will be sigend within 48 hours, accord ing to an official announcement, has been brought about to pave the way for final peace terms. The new armistice will be general and will bring about a cessation of hostilities throughout. European Tur key. Final peace negotiations will be car ried on upon the same basis as that of the armistice. The conclusion of the gem-ral armis tice will, it is believ'd, have a salu tory effect, upon the European situa tion Terms Please Turke. i Grain Viz r Kiamil Pasha. ting io, th uni'll ,f ministers, rnr .uwed th' armisti' > but h< did ii". reveal f the terms. He intimated, however, ' that they A.-r" much better than th* original t--. in > impose'' Bulgaria 1 upon Turk, i. X ide fr " ii: question f terriio -1 rial rights on.' of the ' hies iH"Visi"ti. I relates to the military fores. Ni Ither < I side x ill reinforce its armies at the I front so that the present positions will t be held by the belligerents during the forthcoming negotiations. . Osman Nizami Pasha, Turkish am bassador to Germany, who arrived at the zone of the negotiations yesterday, east the deciding vote for Turkey in the parley, t'pon ills recommendation ! Turkey accepted th* modified < ondl ' I tions of Czar Ferdinand envoi Adrianople a Factor. The eaptur of two divisions of Turk ish reserves of 38,000 mon. who xveri ’ on their xvay to succor Adrianople, is 1 believed to hax> b"en a trong force in bringing about the suspension of hos tilities. i. That Turkey would hasten the peace j negotiations before conditions In Ad rianople makes the suriender of that ' I Turkish stronghold imperative, Is thi "pinion among foreign diplomats h< r< . (Turkey <b -ires to retain Abrlanopi, ,i ■ a Turkish province, but this dwiiand ' would never be counteuatn d by Bui igm iu and ti* otli r . lb , i e. . • oli - fm. a ■■ lx ■ ■ ii". it. . !>• e. t" :■' RALPH PARLETTE IN HUMOROUS LECTURE, ON ALKAHEST COURSE I 'm . . .Monday evening, December |j 2. at tin Baptist Tabernacle, the Alka | ht t I <y< -urn t 1 p esent Ralph Park'll », of Chicago, m a humorous lec ture as the fifth number on the Alka hest Lv 'eum course. M~. Parlette Is 1 uniqm H* Is «o serious that he Is : funny. He deals In the every-day ex ! periences of life, but presents them In a manner that is entirely original, and when he is through you wish that he had n*t stopped so soon. i Mr. Parlette Is editor of Lyceum and i Ti ient. the lending iyeeum journal of i the country, but he is so popular as a i lecturer that he finds it necessary to edit th* magazine from the trains an he t travels. Some speak of him as being a - modern “Mark Twain." and as a lec -3 turcr has more return engagements r than any man on the platform . BURIED ALIVE AT BOTTOM OF WELL 60 FEET DEEP JEFFERSONVILLE, GA.. Nov 30 i Pleas Miller, a negro, while cleaning out an old well in Turkey Creek dls- - trict, Wilkinson county, was caugh' by -a cave-in and buried alive. His body - ha - not been recovered. Th* well xxas 80 feet deep, .Miller xvas at the bottom, filling a e bucket, as bis brother was drawing out i d th, dirt. Tii* brother on the outside I str.', a cloud of dust come from th* well. ) . He looked doxvn and saw that a great e quantity of dirt had fallen from the a side of the .veil. He could not see his brother, but he could hear him talk. . Ht ' uumioned help, and diggers work ed for hours before they found the r bod;'. They could not extricate it, as . It xias w*dged against the orbing, un ll di r t*u feet of dirt. He was dead. They .■ will probably get the body out today. t MEANEST HIGHWAYMEN STRIP MAN OF CLOTHES n SAN FRAN't ISC". Nov. 30. -Frank Luca:- has met the meanest footpads on earth. He was held up by two men - and robbed of al! his money s3o but '' th* thieves, not satisfied, took bis hut. slim s and trousers. Lucas got home through alleys. • BOSS FLINN REMAINS ARDENT BULL MOOSER , |'!I'TSI!I'Pj;. Nov 30. William " I'iinn - ''"turned fr. r, a trli to c'til " if.irnbi 'i ' lar.r ■■ l ' ' "! a:i tirden' ... h have DORMITORIES TAKE FIRE WHILE GUESTS AT DANCE ARE DINING WASHINGTON, Nov "0 -Fann*. I by « stitT northwest wind, fire last night de stroyed two dormitories of the Maryland Agricultural college a.t College Park, Md Several adjoining buildings were saved. " but only after a hard fight by the village fire department, and scores of cadets ana residents living in the vicinity. The .damage today was estimated a' from SIOO,OOO to 8150,000, covered by in surance Temporary quarters for the students, 'will he provided in Science hall and ©the: buildings While guests attending ». dance were at supper, fire broke out in the attic of th*- administration building The cause was reported to be crossed electric wires- SKIN DISEASE BEGAHONPLES" On Face, Neck and Hands. Tor* mented all the Time, Disfiguring. Got into Blisters. Cured by Cuti cura Soap and Ointment. Barthell, By.— ”1 had a skin disease os a>y face, neck and hands that tormented all the time and when I would get hot the places would burn so that I had to keep my , face wet tn cold water. It began as pimples and indeed it was disfiguring tor it would get In spots on my face and hands a* large as a quarter of ” dollar. It would get into blisters sometimes and I aure did suffer. My face burned all the time. It was this way so bad for about six years and I tried everything that I could hear of. but nothing did any good. One day I found the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment advertised and ordered some at once. I would wash my face good with the Cutlcura Soap and then apply the Cutlcura Ointment and they have cured me. It would take half a tablet to tell all I suffered in those six years." (.Signed) Mrs. Della Hill. Jan. 3. 191-’. Not only art Cutlcura Soap and Ointment most valuable in the treatment of eczemas •nd other distn ssing eruptions of skin and scalp, but no other emollients do so much for pimples, blackheads, red. rough skins. > Itching, scaly scalps, dry, thin and failing ‘ hair enapped hands and shapeless nails, nu do it to economically. * single set is often 1 r,’. Mold everywhere. Hampie of euch c riled f • . with >. '-kin Book. Addrc • pos -card ’ Cutie ..a, Dept. T, Hot, or.' Terd r. < id U re Susi -i- .. / < -i ■ -v.i. i■■ > 3