Newspaper Page Text
the weather
Forecast for Atlanta and Georgia:
Loca l rains today and probably to
morrow.
■"vob. XI. NOJOS.
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JMEMO
SEES PLOT
Recorder Broyles Declares Ris
ley Is Innocent of Sloan’s
Slaying Charge.
FORCED TO HOLD HIM
ON PRISONER’S STORY
Wife and Children in Tearful
Reunion With Confessed
Participant in Crime.
A plot to sacrifice an innocent man’s
life on the charge that he had commit
ted a murder, was indirectly charged by-
Recorder Broyles in holding Robert L.
Sloan, of Roswell, and Frank Risley, of
Atlanta, for the slaying of William
Franklin, a peddler who was slugged to
death in his Decatur street home. The
two men are in the Fulton Tower today.
Sloan, in court, reiterated his partial
confession of a share in the crime, ad
mitting that he had witnessed the trag
edy and received some of the spoils. He
declared, however, that Risley was the
actual slayer, although Risley denied
having any part whatever in it.
Risley Innocent,
Declares Court.
Recorder Broyles declared that he did
not believe Risley had anything to do
with the killing and that he was con
vinced of his innocence. He said he
was forced to hold him, however, as
long as Sloan claimed to have seen him
commit the murder.
Sloan’s wife and children were at the
police station and took part in a tearful
and affecting reunion with the pris
oner. As Sloan was taken away by the
officers one of the youngster’s cried
out:
“Come on. papa. Go with us.”
Mrs. Sloan said she was too much
affected to be able to bear the ordeal of
the hearing and did not enter the court
room.
Miss Chloe Austin, the dressmaker
Involved, was freed. She admitted that
Sloan had brought her some clothes
and given her some money, but denied
any complicity in the crime.
ALL PEACE AGAIN IN
LONGWORTH FAMILY,
‘NICK’ INFORMS TAFT
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.—Represen
tative Longworth has assured the pres
ident that, although there will, be .1
Democrat in congress from the Long
worth district all is once
more peace in the Longworth family.
Mr. Longworth told the president that
Mrs. Longworth, who, as all the world
knows, was Miss Alice Roosevelt, took
a cool thousand dollars out of the Long
worth family treasury and bestowed it
on the Bull Moose party as a free gift.
While this was going on Mrs. Long
worth, the representative's mother, was
expessing an opinion of Mr. Long
t'orth's father-in-law. which was more
forcible than complimentary. In his
"ffort to keep on speaking terms with
""th branches of the family. Longworth
" ""t bow to campaign and lost his
district.
After the election, Mrs. Longworth,
i., was satisfied with Roosevelt’s de-
f “at. and Mrs. Longworth. Jr., was sat
'•'fied with a Taft defeat.
AUGUSTA HOLDS CORN
AND CANNING FESTIVAL
s I A, GA.. Dec. 4.—Augusta's
annual corn and canning testi
ng held this week. More than
VoJJQft i< r< Ik n' •
given away in premiums,
n to a grand piano, two bug
" s2<*o mule. Prominent ag
' xperts are here, including O.
itm. in charge of the corn club
'be United States; Dr. An
4oule, president of the State
'sriculture; Professor A. G.
-i.il harge of the corn club work
ln ,South Carolina.
Cl f, ~ '"oie than 200 boys, members
' b» »n Hancock, Baldwin, Put
" "nee counties, are here. To
day • 11 ,K ‘ "Girls Canning Club
BAN ycL GIVEN SEVE N
EARS AT HARD LABOR
J 'mW ‘ ! . X,>II,S ’ MICH - Dee. 4.
I i: • "'ben. former cashier of the
” : Kuiltv■ i'^L ba " k of Mani «ee. plead
'■" bezzii, ' ni,ed States court to
from tin Kiiiik .m<l
(.-■ t. .. ' ,y Ju<1 K e Sessions to
htiM.r a, id six months at
Port L< " ' ill ‘ bederal prison at
n "°rth, Ka tl9
The Atlanta Georgian
Read For Profit—GEORGIAN WANT ADS—Use For Results.
Girl, Thwarted in Her
Effort to Elope With
Actor, Shoots Herself
Miss Gussie Harmon Lies Dan
gerously Wounded at Lovett,
Ala., From Suicide Attempt.
WEST POINT. GA., Dec. 4.—Miss
Gussie Harmon lies critically wounded
in her home at Lanett, Ala., just across
the Chattahoochee river from West
Point, as the result of an attempt to
commit suicide. Thwarted in her at
tempt to elope with a stock company
actor who played here last week, she
sought to end her life.
Miss Harmon, an attractive sixteen
year-old girl, became infatuated with
the handsome young showman. He
was her matinee idol. The glare of
the footlights attracted her. He pro
posed that she elope with him.when
the troupe left town. She agreed. The
show folk had gotten as far as Ope
lika, Ala., when pursuing' relatives
overtook them and brought the girl
back to Lanett.
Hardly had Miss Harmon reached her
home before she went to her room, lock
ed the door and shot herself with a
,38-caliber pistol. The bullet entered
the left breast and came out under the
left shoulder, penetrating the left lung.
The shot attracted members of the fam
ily, who broke open the door, discov
ered what had taken place, and hur
riedly summoned physicians. While
the wound is dangerous, the doctors
believe she has a chance to recover.
GAS MEN DECIDE
TO MEET IN 1913
IN PHILADELPHIA
Visitors to the National Gas conven
tion spent today in looking over the ex
hibits in the auditorium, no business
meeting being scheduled. A. F. Kripp
ner. of St. Louis, will make an address
this afternoon on artificial gas for house
heating, and John S. Welch, of Phila
delphia, will taik on methods of develop
ing large consumers.
The next convention of the gas asso
ciation will be held next December in
Philadelphia, the delegates from that city
having won the 1913 meeting in a spirited
contest.
President C. L. Holman entertained a
number of guests last night at a dinner at
the Piedmont hotel, at which old “black
mammies” were the waitresses and a real
pickaninny played mascot. Mr. Holman
was presented with a handsome loving
cup by the directors.
St. Elmo Massengale, one of the best
known advertising men in the country,
will address the convention tomorrow.
There will be no official entertainment to
morrow night.
GOVERNMENT SEEKS
GAME WARDENS FOR
RESERVE IN GEORGIA
The government is in need of a num
ber of bright young foresters to act as
administrative assistants, in game pres
ervation, or, in other and simpler words,
game wardens, in the great 30,000-aere
reserve in north Georgia.
The reserve soon will be completed. It
is expected the government will stock it
with game. The salary of each man will
be $2,500, and he will be eligible only for
Georgia. The examinations will be held
at all civil service offices in the United
States.
The examination will be difficult, as
the place requires a man of education
and training and one who has made an
exhaustive study of importing foreign
birds, maintaining bird reservations, han
dling correspondence and preparing re
ports on game protection. The examina
tion will take place at the postoffice on
December 30.
HIS BOY SHALL HAVE
AS GOOD A COACH AS
JOHN D.’S GRANDSON
CHICAGO. Dec. 4.—When William
Barry, of Winnetka, learned that John
D. Rockefeller’s grandson. Fowler Mc-
Cormick. 15-year-old son of Harold F.
McCormick*, was being coached by Mor
decai Brown in the art of shooting "ins”
and "outs,” he announced that his son,
William Burry, Jr., prospective Har
vard student, would be put through his
paces Immediately, possibly as a pupil
of Christy Mathewson, the New York
Giants’ star twirler.
RECEIVER IS NAMED
FOR $33,500,000 FIRM
DENVER, COLO., Dee. 4.—The Cen
tral Power Company, the largest gen
erating concern in Colorado, capitalized
at $22,500,000 and bonded for $11,000,-
000, was placed iti the hands of a re
ceiver by Federal Judge Lewis on peti
tion of a New York trust company. The
petition states that the company lacks
$150,000 of having enough to pay in
terest charges and that officials have
permitted heavy liens to be filed
against the property.
SIOO,OOO RARE STAMPS
FOUND IN WASTE PAPER
PHILADELPHIA. Dec. 4.—EdwaJd
D. Hemingway, junk dealer, found more
than SIOO,OOO worth of rare stamps in $5
worth of waste papef. He has sold
them to a syndicate.
RED-HOT INGOT KILLS
BOY IN STEEL WORKS
GARY. IND., Dec 4. —John White,
sixteen years old, employed at the Gary
steel works, was instantly killed when
a red-hot ingot weighing two tonstop
pled over on him.
ATLANTA, GA., WEDNENESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1912.
BLEUSE SAYS
LYNCHERS
WILL GO
FREE
South Carolirra Executive to
Protect Avengers of As
saults on White Women.
NO SOLDIERS TO DEFEND
BLACK BRUTE FROM MOB
Defends Liberal Use of Pardon
Power That Has Character
ized His Administration.
RICHMOND, VA., Dec. 4.—While
Cole L. Blease is governor of South
Carolina he will permit lynchers of ne
groes who assault white women to go
scot free in that state. He made this
declaration before the fifth annual con
ference of governors, now in progress
here, when he delivered an address In
which he said he would not use the
militia of South Carolina to protect ne
gro assailants, would not punish lynch
ers and would continue to exercise the
pardoning power in the liberal manner
that has thus far characterized his ad
ministration.
Here is what he told his fellow gov
ernors:
“I have said all over the state of
South Carolina, and I say It again now,
that I will never order out the militia
to shoot down their neighbors and pro
tect a black brute who commits the
nameless crime against a white wom
an.
“Therefore, in South Carolina let it
be understood that when a negro as
saults a white woman, all that is need
ed is that they get the right man, and
they who get him will neither need nor
receive a trial.
Defends Use of
Pardon Power.
“I walked through the penitentiary
of South Carolina and found It a tuber
culosis incubator, where poor devils
were dying at their tasks, making
money for other people; poor devils
who had no choice but to stand and
work or take the lash.
“Just the other day. Jim Roberts, a
negro from Charleston, stopped me as
I was walking through and respectfully
asked permission to speak to me. He
told me that he had been kept in jail
for 22 years for stealing a $27 watch.
I said. ’lf you are telling me the truth,
you will eat your Christmas dinner with
your folks at home.' He said. ‘Gov
ernor, I have no folks.’ ’Then,’ I re
plied, 'you will eat it away from here.'
And he will.
“Another negro had served eleven
years and seven months for stealing $9;
a judge wrote to me that he had sen
tenced to death a man when he did not
believe the man had been convicted
beyond a reasonable doubt: another
wrote me that he sentenced to death a
man whom he did not believe should be
put to death —he did not believe it at
the time, nor does he believe it now.
“These are the errors of injustice I
am trying to right with my power to
pardon. lam proud of my record.”
Governors Enjoy
Oyster Roast.
Accompanied by Governor Mann, of
Virginia, and his entire staff, the 23
governors assembled here for the fifth
annual governors fconference, today vis
ited Norfolk to meet the National
Guard association, by whom they were
tendered an oyster roast at Cape Henry.
All official business was suspended
for the day, while state executives gave
themselves up to a thorough apprecia
tion of Old Dominion hospitality.
The governors and their wives will
return to Richmond tonight in time for
the evening session of the conference
when the report of the committee on
organization will be submitted and
plans for a permanent organization dis
cussed. The appointment of an execu
tive committee for the coming year will
also be made at this session and a large
amount of miscellaneous business at
tended to. / '
400-POUND TURTLE FOR
BANKERS' BANQUET SOUP
NEW YORK, Dec. 4. —A 400-pound
turtle that will go to make soup for the
American Bankers association banquet
was brought here today from Bermuda.
WANTS GIRL’S WEDDING
TO POOR MAN ANNULLED
BEVERLY. N. J., Dee. 4. —Because
she married Charles E. Roberts, a poor
machinist, the parents of Miss Albertine
Bidwell, society bud, have asked for an
annulment of the ceremony.
Mere Man’s Rhapsody on Pickle and Preserve Show
SUCH JAM! SUCH JELL! AH-UM!
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FEW VOTING IN
ELECTION TODAY
Not 1,000 Votes Expected To
Be Cast— : Mr. Taylor Sees
No Reason to Worry.
Polls were opened for the annual city
election this morning, but the managers
in charge of the boxes outnumbered the
voters so far. There is no promise of
excitement or fights and there will be
no election extras'. Yet, a mayor is be
ing named along with a number of
other city officials.
It is one time when bad weather
doesn't affect the vote.
James G. Woodward, the Democratic
nominee for mayor, remarked that the
activities of the Socialists made it un
pleasant for him because the Demo
crats were taking so little Interest in
the race. But Walter Taylor, the city
clerk who has charge of the election,
viewed with dignity the conduct of the
various polling places and remarked
that everything was going well.
The vote will be very small, not more
than 1,000. But it will be large enough
to make this formal election legal.
The one matter in which the people
will really make a decision will be
whether council shall have the right to
deed the Lakewood park property to an
exposition company for the purpose of
issuing $500,000 in bonds to prepare for
an annual fair there.
Mr. Woodward says he is opposed to
giving up the title to this property. The
general council favors the plan.
ELEVEN PASSENGERS
STEAMED TO DEATH IN
DEBRIS OF R. R. WRECK
ZANESVILLE. OHIO, Dec. 4
Three more victims died today as a
result of last night’s wreck on the
Pennsylvania lines ten miles east of
here, near Dresden, Ohio. The list of
dead now reaches eleven. The dead and
injured were brought here.
A passenger engine, westbound, on
the Zanesville division, plowed into the
rear coach of a train bound for Zanes
ville from the Cleveland division. The
engine and ear were telescoped. The
entire length of the car was piled on
top of the engine and extended from the
pilot to the tender.
Without a moment’s warning the
crash came. Passengers were hurled
from their seats, and every avenue of
escape cut off. They were literally
cooked alive from escaping steam from
the engine beneath them.
ALIENISTS EXAMINE
CONDEMNED SLAYER
AUGUSTA, GA.. Dec. 4.—Drs. J. W.
Mobley. E. M. Greene and N. P. Wal
ker, who were sent here from the state
sanitarium to examine into the mental
condition of J. Edward Brazell, who is
under sentence of death for the mur
der of Carrie Bell Duncan, have re
turned to Milledgeville. They will make
their report direct to Governor Brown.
It is believed here that the physicians
will report that Brazell is insane.
\ JW/
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Miss Lillian McElroy, of Fayetteville, Ga., one of the
nmg girl exhibitors at the Corn Show.
Georgia Girls Handiwork, Dis
played at Capitol, Makes
Optimists of Pessimists.
By a Mere Man
The boys com show in the capi
tal is most interesting and highly
creditable. Every Georgian must
be proud of the youngsters re
sponsible for that splendid exhibit,
and everybody who attends the
show applauds and approves the
same.
Nevertheless and notwithstand
ing, to my mind the girls pickles
and preserves show is even better.
It is more Immediately Interest
ing, anyway.
The pickles and preserves show
comes upon the visitor as more or
less of a surprise, for one thing.
He isn’t looking for anything of the
kind, for not much has been said
about It in the newspapers. Be
fore he knows it, he stumbles upon
it—and then his “ohs,” “ahs” and
“urns,” bursting from him involun
tarily and actually before he is well
aware the why, bespeak his ready
recognition of the beautiful and the
genuinely good.
Nothing Like It in the Stores.
No fancy grocery store In Atlan
ta today can, or does, show such
fine specimens of the pickling and
preserving art—an art that runs
the scale from sour to sweet and
back again—as this girls exhibit
shows In the state capital. It whets
the appetite to stroll through it.
The blackberry jam calls up vi
sions of “the good old days," when
battercakes were the solids of
which breakfasts inevitably were
built, and jam the cement with
which the glorious whole was held
together until the initial act of as
similation took place!
Shall such eating be provided for
mortals again in this world—shall
the tender grace of the jam that is
gone ever come back to me?
Like Grandma Used to Make.
Mayhap, and the girls pickles and
preserves show make that profound
and lasting impression upon visi
tors it surely should!
Such pickles—like grandma used
to make—you know! And every
thing that can be canfied, for that
girls show has been canned—to
matoes, wax beans, corn, butter
beans, all sorts of berries, beets,
even Irish potatoes. And pickles—
cucumbers, artichokes. peaches,
green tomatoes and cauliflower.
As for mixed things—one may be
puzzled to know what to call them,
but one knows they are ticklish to
the palate, all right!
There are fruit juices and jel
lies on display in the girls show
that would put to shame the ordi
nary' commercial articles. All the
way from the pale and delicate un
ferniented juice of the scupper
nong grape to the deep and royal
HARD UP, PACKERS
FORMED TRUST TO
NEGOTIATE LOAN
ST. LOUIS, Dec. 4.—That the pack
ing companies were hard up In 1902
and were forced to organize the Na
tional Packing Company in order to ne
gotiate a loan was the principal point
in the argument of Attorney Ralph
Crews, of the packers' counsel, in his
reply to the charges raised by Assist
ant Attorney General Revelle, of the
state of Missouri.
Crews, in his argument, declared that
in 1902 Charles Armour, Edward Mor
ris and Gustavus F. Swift, beads of
the three packing companies whose
Missouri owned concerns the state is
seeking to oust, were hard up and were
forced to negotiate a loan from Kuhn.
Loeb & Co., to meet an obligation of
$8,000,000 due the First National bank
of New York city. The National Pack
ing Company, which took In the St.
Louis Dressed Beef and Provision
Company and the Hammond Packing
Company of St. Joseph, was organized
by Armour, Morris and Swift as indi
viduals. the stock being held by them
and in their names. That the organ
ization of the National Packing Com
pany was necessary to secure the loaji
constituted the chief argument raised
by Mr. Crews.
SIDEWALK FIREWORKS
STANDS PUT UNDER BAN
MACON. GA., Dec. 4. —Co-operating
with the citizens who are conducting a
campaign here for “a quiet and a safe
and sane Christmas,” Mayor John T.
Moore has prohibited the operation of
sidewalk fireworks stands during the
approaching holidays, apd council has
forbidden the discharge of a cracker or
torpedo more than two inches tn length.
Plans have been perfected for a parade
of the public school and Sunday school
children through the streets on Christ
mas eve night.
purple of the Concord, the girls
pickles and preserves show has in
finite variety. ,
Conquest Is Complete.
My hat is off In admiration and
great respect for those splendid
girls!
It may be that 1, a mere man,
have been reached via a familiar
road —a sort of primrose path, as
it were—whereon womankind for
many moons has walked to con
quer. It matters not—the con
quest is complete and the victory
abiding!
The girls pickles and preserves
show is a wonderful thing to see—a
sight that turns pessimism into op
timism and doubt into a hope that
will not be denied.
One will do well to tal(e his
lunch with him if he expects to
linger long in the pickles and pie
serves show. It is sure to arouse
in the specattor a mighty and a
powerful desire to eat!
w
2 CENTS EVERYWHERE p m a or«°
COUNCIL O!
CERTAIN IF
SLATE IS
ADOPTED
> I
Chambers Faction Will Retail- ■
ate For Attempt of Woodward
Men to Corner Power.
SIDETRACKED MEMBERS
HOLD THE WHIP HAND
Mayor’s Hands Will Be Tied if
. Strife Disrupts Legis
lative Body. / ' ■
_________ p
Members of the Chambers faetthn of
the city council definitely planned today
to insurge against the Woodward ad
ministration if the slate of appoint
ments made up by Mr. WoodtvawTM
friends is accepted by him.
Confident that their slate will be ac
cepted by their chief, the Woodward
men expect to be in absolute control of
the council committees next year.
They believe that to the victor be
longs the spoils. But the move of tho
opposing faction promises the Irony of
fate. They are to be left off of the Im
portant places, but they have a consid
erable majority of the members of
council and they plan to disregard com
mittee recommendations or appoint
special committees to handle the more
important matters.
Council Holds /
The Whip Hand.
The laugh will then be decidedly on
the members 1 who think they are going
to be able to grab all the pie.
Moreover, the breach threatens to
become so serious that a majority of
the members of council will be hope
lessly antagonistic to Woodward from
the very first day of his administration.
Council holds the whip hand and the
power to tie the hands of the mayor. "
And the Woodward members In council
are planning to arouse the opposition
of the commanding majority of this
body.
The non-Woodward element Is called
the Chambers faction solely for want of
a better name. All the men who com
pose the element voted for Aldine
Chambers for the mayoralty nomina
tion against Mr. Woodward. The
Woodward men are basing their slats
on this alignment.
Do Not Expect Favors /
Os Woodward.
The non-Woodward men are the-meti
who hold the Important committee
chairmanships this year and have no
reason to expect any special favors
from Mr. Woodward. But they control
the general council, both the council
and the aldermanic board. They feel
that if they are left off of the Impor
tant places nevt year it will be personal
revenge. And they are prepared to
retaliate with a similar spirit, and
greater effectiveness.
Here are the members of the 1913
council who have been sidetracked ab
solutely by the Woodward slate, and
the places they hold this year:
John S. Candler, chairman of the
finance committee.
James R. Nutting, chairman of th<
tax committee.
Claude C. Mason, chairman of tho
waterworks committee.
Charles W. Smith, chairman of th«
ordinance committee.
F. J. Spratling, chairman of the com
mittee on hospitals and charities.
Others Sidetracked
By Slate-Makers.
Clarence Haverty, chairmah of th®
bureau on municipal research.
I. N. Ragsdale, chairman of the board
of firemasters.
George H. Boynton, chairman of the
committee on libraries.
Albert Thomson, chairman of the
committee on parks.
James W. Maddox, chairman of the
committee on buildings and grounds.
J. J. Greer, chairman of the commit
tee on bridges.
Jesse Wood! chairman of the com
mittee on claims.
A. H. Baskin, cahirman of the com
mittee on benevolences and pensions.
S. A. Wardlaw. chairman of the com
mittee on freight rates and transporta
tion.
Roy Abernathy, chairman of the
committee on minutes.
Also J, D. Sisson, W. D. White, J. T.
Kimbrough and Sam Shepard.
The following members of next year’s
council are those who voted for Mr.
Woodward for the mayoralty notnins
tion and the ones to whom the
ward slaters have confined tip'
committee appointments;
W. G. Humphrey, A. H<"
John E. McClelland, Janx" ,
J. B. Everett. C. D. K”
Hall. Claude L. AslU' A , he
J. H. Harwell anti A «
i But it is all quallfit. r
“if” being whether J. —*•
ward will approve the »