Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 11, 1912, NIGHT, Page 5, Image 5

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■®[ DEMANDS I PLEASE CffiE Kill Sign Armistice Friday, HI Uniting Allies on Terms for Turkey. H. Greece has formally ■ .... -,..aee terms to be pre- at the London confer- \ ) here today by a Bul- ■' ’ , . official. Greece will . g! . general armistice on peace negotiations jnvoys may have a place r-n,'-. Bulgaria, Servin, Bk. Mout.-negro are now unite-* .. . millions to be presented to KS-v rke; leace Envoys Bleach London o> .r, ( .y Dec. 11—Peace delegates oik. l-art in the Turko-Balkan . began arriving in this Tl tirst delegation to reach the Montenegrins. The ■r ; ,;,.nfpotentiarie>' are ex- Miyuskovitch. M. Popoviteh, negrin minister to Tur „;l)f V.-yovlieh, chief of King <4aff. M ■. ...pi that Friday and Sat- ... will b-.' given to informal rhe that the h'l.' ::eT ' ill not begin until Mon- MjaT. During their stay here the pleni- ■ v.lt be rived In audience G- an<J some time dur ■lng the .-..line of the negotiations the H-1 mayo.- 11l probably give a state at Guild' hall. Near!' ail >f the state rooms of St. ■j.,,..- palace have been placed at the ■disposal of the delegates, except the M . which is reserved exclu- for lung’s us-' on state ocva- Queen Arnie’s room the armor.' ■ . n ,-. .s { other .apartments will lu- at the ■ tie -nvoys and their suites. M Th. '-nat sessions of the confer- ■ « will be held in the picture- gal- <- b.ip-.-itii walls adorned with die art works in England. [Greek and Turk ■ Fleets to Meet BB ATHENS. |>. . 11. A decisive naval between the fleets of .".mi Turkey Is imminent. The ■ Turkith tb- t Is pr. paring to put to ■ >’-i>n: th- Dardanelles, according to a ■ i-.!-:-! ;v.'d here today, and the vessels In the Aegean are undei f'.i !>.■• ■■ j -?i st'-um to sail against, the ■ A of -ip. available Turkish warships K..-. . moved tc. the western end of 88 1 i- -inr.- hu and are being held un- ■ -’».- it--m it Kalesultane. The decks ■ :av- been <i. for battle. Destroy- ■ o-gati .< reconnoissance this after- SB noon and ft Is believed the fleet will ■ ..al into the Aegean after dark- falls tonight. Turidsli forces in Epirus, who are H u.-riiig up the campaign against ■ '.r-c.. art burning all the Christian ■ uo--'- i, t i.-lr path. A dispatch from ■ fromwr today stated that the Turks j ayr. i..d j),, torch to over 30 villages the past 72 hours. ■ Many nmi-.-ombatants ami i Tiristians ■ at. fa.ii Hl victims to the fury of the soldiery, ■ - ■ I Starving Refugees ■ Throng Salonika ■ Washington, Dee. 11.—Forty ■ -oui-a.r, i destitute and starving refu- ■ is from th.. Balkans are crowded j.-To SAb'iiika and the city is threatened -'•th famine and plague, according to a r am received by the. state depart nt tod.-iy from John Kepi, American WoT .v Salonika. The International ; s board there has issued an -appeal for aid. le sanitary conditions resulting torn th<- influx of refugees are fully as -■- the lack of food and clothing. -tor/.. 111 ,' 1 ' tan Refl Cross is planning. <> rt 'J in response to this appeal. T WO YEARS IN PRISON FOR OF GAYNOR D «’. IL—Charles Hyde. | 1 Itmuborlaiu and forme-- law I " f Gaynor, today- was -lustier Golf to impeison u. " s - s than two years and -t-o-p ' ,iGill tilree uud u li.-i.if years ilfter imposition of the s released-on s2s,butt bail hr- v -‘rv " 1 ' " II u l lOn . ll >« appeal from 1 '.'± !rriet] 011 November 29. s'lpe'iim/o ! b,etl with chronic con f'l.-m,1,( "' ilJ iin<l Sentie effect of s rablets makes thfcm es- .11 ‘ to y°Uf cnse- For sale 11 rlv -‘l' > rs. (Advt.) B THR K! ll change at BONHA theater on THURSDAY ' h ' funnb-l'l I ', " r . Blilck one of m A-i n,. comedies ever seen v | 11 be presented for the '■Wilt m 1 .‘t at The Bonita '.'l'i- .’l v ' Jars,’’ another big Li-,. f s> ’’ "'ll take its place for Th. . "* the week. ' ■'"l’.f 'v K, nna Musical Comedy 111 H" famous “Aviation I'toving t„ |„. Hi,. inoMt 11 " ' 01 i. . \ ~[■ u,.,.|i i ~J.' |, ' ' Bonita don’t forg, 1 " new motion plot 111 vH ' every performancih RELATIVES TAKE BODY OF DR. J. W. MILLARD TO SHELBYVILLE, KY. Members of the immediate family left today with the remains of Dr. Junius W. Millard, pastor of the Jackson Hill Bap tist church, who died suddenly Sunday night, for Shelbyville, Ky„ where burial will be made. Funeral services, conducted by prom inent Atlanta ministers, were held at the Jackson Hili church yesterday aft ernoon. The church was filled to over flowing with friends of the dead pas tor and members of his former congre gations. The last rites were conducted by Dr. John E. White, pastor of the Second Baptist church and life-long friend of the deceased. Dr. White was assisted by Dr. John F. Purser, Dr. C. W. Daniel. Dr. A. H. Gordon. Dr. J. J, Bennett and Dr. A. T. Spalding. Telegrams of condolence* from North Carolina, Ken tucky and Maryland, where Dr. Millard had had charges, were received and read. SAVANNAHANS LINING UP FOR MAYORALTY CONTEST SAVANNAH, GA., Dec. Jl.—The first show-down in the municipal campaign will come next week, when the two con tending factions will hold big mass meet ings for the purpose of determining their relative strength. Captain George P. Walker will be formally notified of his 1 nomination as mayor at a rally at the Savannah theater Tuesday night. The Davant clubs of the city have en gaged the theater for the following night, when their candidate. Captain R. J. .Da vant, will also be formally notified. It is expected that the fight will wax fast and furious from this time on. Handsome Gifts for the Home Extremely Low Prices and Terms to Suit You House Furniture and Home Furnishings are the IDEAL Christmas Gifts. And consider ing the quality, you can’t buy these things in Atlanta at anything like the SPECIAL CHRIST MAS PRICES we are offering them for. We have facilities for buying at RO('K-BOTTOM PRICES, we are outside the high-rent district, and we do a large business on a small profit; that is WHY we are able to’offer yon DECIDEDLY’’ the best prices on EVERYTH I XU. And be sides this, we will be glad to charge what you buy, and will divide the payment TO SUIT YOU. We appreciate your business, and. therefore, offer you EVERY INDUCEMENT to trade here. W hen you SEE our goods and compare them with what you are offered elsewhere, you'll I’HEN realize how much you can save by buying from us. For ONE MORE WEEK we will give to every purchaser of $25.00 or 8f Ba him more, a 56-piece White and Gold Fine China Dinner Set. Mother Would Like j A Handsome Chifforobe a McDougall Cabinet For Father or Brother Bi iii 'Chit ’ universally acknowledged the ’V’ besi amt most complete Kitchen Cab inet ever made. It has removable drop flour bln; glass jars for sugar, coffee, la tea and spices; large drawers; cake and bread boxes; metal plated, dust- . .. ... , , . „ proof sliding biscuit board; extra top of values we give you , This chifforobe has 5 deep to prevent dust getting into drawers: drawers, large hat box, wide clothes closet for hold in fact, everything that goes to make ’"g 6 to <8 suits, and represents convenience in per- a Cabinet perfect is here. Solid oak SPFCI XI 1 I R 00 with 3-ply veneer back of seasoned ' ' J *** oak; $22 up. SPECIAL Kfl Other styles of Circassian walnut, golden oak, LEADERS for $25 and . I nwU mahogany and early English. ______ An Empire Range An Ea sy Kelly or »<*>■ the Morris Push-Button Chair Christmas Dinner i™. Fllhnf<lß* \ jfaML row mendous as- 1— ** 0 We guarantee this B ... * Range to use less soitmen' of I fuel and give better KEEL> and I . I r, isi’aci ion i han any mORR 1S I 1 twiiSi I ■' H Os 11< Range, rogard- CHAIRS at cut | I ’’Sa of size or price. v ftsT V'awSKg' 1 ' s k&Xi”’* -BN Q* « <. i prices, rltese R /Uy, -m'/iiSfiße I It is made of the best ■ I steel, and Ims the :lr,; 'finest I E ~ linesi steel trim- chairs ever I i I tilings.’ 14 to 20-inch built, and I W" % ovens. We will re- n ' lake elegant ?"L t - / j:'7" -T7si=-r=-Ag // » place worn parts any ... .. . . time v’thin tea®''". It is made especially for US, and we guarantee it in conforms to body. With or without push $29.60 "“XL $12.50 Up Our $5.00 Leather Rockers for $2.98, and our $6.00 Ladies' Writing Desks in all woods for $3.98 are the talk of the town. If you want one, you’d better HURRY. EMPIRE f cXZ y e 7^— j 129-131 Whitehall Street We WiUDMde Until Xmas I x ... , ., A A the Payments I Retiueen Mitcneli St. ana trinity Ave. THF2 ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. • DECEMBER . 1912. MOB TAKES RECORDS FROM TOWN AT NIGHT IN COUNTY SEAT WAR OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA., Dec. 11. —So bitter has the light of the resi dents of Delaware county become over the location of the county seat that an appeal war. sent to Governor Cruee to day to order a company of militia there to restore order. A mob from Old Jay marched to New Jay. tlie official county seat, during the night and took possession of all the county’ records, then cut the wires lead ing into the town. Before the wires went wrong, hotvever, a message said that the mob was preparing to carry the documents to Old Jay and set up the county seat there. The court house is at New Jay, and so is the county Jail. Leaders of the mob, before leaving Old Jay. threatened- to lock up all the county officials in the jail at New Jay, so that they’ could not Interfere in the removal of the documents. BURY ME DEEP, ECK SAYS, THEN SWALLOWS POISON RICO, COL., Dec. 11.—After telling his employer to see that he was burled deep, with plenty of rocks piled on his body. Carl Eck, aged 20, a cook working here In Hall’s restaurant, went to the kitchen and swallowed a large quantity of mor phine. He died soon afterward in con vulsions. His father lives in Ouray. PROHIBITION JUDGE LENIENT. ANNISTON. ALA., Dee. 11.—Judge W. H. Cooper, the new probate judge, who was elected as an ardent prohibitionist, disposed the first two cases coming before him for violation of the prohibition law yesterday by the imposition of very moderate fines—s2s each. Judge Cooper say’s it is his purpose to deal gently with parties on first offense, but he will not be lenient toward the repeater. WOMAN’S CELLAR IS DUG UP BY POLICE IN MURDER FARM HUNT LANSING, . MICH., Dee. 11.—Police today are digging tn the cellar of the boarding house conducted by Mrs. Mary Lucas here for traces of bodies of per sons believed to have died in a plot similar to that of Mrs. Belle Gunness, who conducted a “murder farm” near LaPorte, Ind. Mrs. Lucas confessed tin I She mur dered Mrs. Pauline Fingle, one of her boarders. The police learned of other mysterious disappearances. They be gan an excavation in the cellar of the woman’s home, searching for the body’ of Carl Miller, a contractor from Fort Scott, Kans., who paid atbuftion to the woman and then disappeared. They found some clothing and a "lot of quick lime." Mrs. Lucas and her husband practiced law here at one time. They left and went West. Later Mrs. Lucas came back, saying her husband had died sud denly. She became, through his death, owner of a considerable amount of property here. She murdered the Fingle woman, she said, because she was jealous of atten tions paid to her by John Borenz. PLAN CONCRETE HOUSES TO REPLACE “SHACKS” LOS ANGELES, CAI,., Dee. 11. Based upon the theory of “business philan throphy,” a corporation capitalized at $500,000 and managed by leading bankers and charity workers was launched here to build concrete houses for the poor and remove the shacks and "courts' that now thickly dot the slums. ' the store of the Christmas spirit I °s" M. RICH & BROS. CO.| —r z s | Mighty Outclearing of Suits January and February Prices in December jc Zjj —More than 400 suits now marked at outdearing prices. jZ* —Most of them are makers’ surplus stock and sample lines mi which we fes make a protit; the rest of them are our own good suits which we sacrifice because the gw season wanes. gjC —All the suits are a thinl to a half —and even less—than the prices you would have paid a month ago. All the suits are in perfect styles; the greater part have been in the house less than 30 days. All grouped under these three prices: Niar Half and Less Than Half Prices 3* i L ie P r^ce selected to move f \ JC *" \ J some 200 suits that earlier ® ’ i ■ B in the season would have JH; \ A \ S j i \ ’A i i S3O and s3s.’BmL ) / J) Some an* a maker’s can- /• < / Jp 11l celled orders of suits recently acquired, oth- 1/1 I IvJ ers are I>alt o< our ew York purchases W /: > JC which were on sale at $19.75; values $25 to /: ’ JJF Z are from regular ue . s ‘ cous i s ting chiefly of $25 suits. | ’ JK Styles and sizes for all in broadcloths, // [ mixtures, boucles, two-tone diagonals, serges. A gZ -£9 cheviots, etc. Straight cut and cutaway p Jp i I models, plain or with braid and frog and vei- \ ; L vet trimmings. All colors and plenty of the > JC II >’ staple black, navy and brown. Values to $35 i ■ S a1 SQE for Suits Formerly I SOE for Suits Formerly 3 I g Priced Up to $75 Priced Up to $45 Sj le cheapest '>uii in this lot is $45: a few More than 100 of these suits, whose prices JC* are $75; the greater part are SSO to $65. All have been clipped from $35. S4O and $45 to ga bear the original tickets, and the special sale x- i i p t.>- , collection is of peculiar interest to those 3ir price ticket o) $3.i —you can see exactly who desire exclusive and beautiful suits. *L “2 what the savings are There are fancy models in this lot that you will ■C, w ' find only in the exclusive Fifth Avenue shops; flt A tew imported models in the lot, and copies many others are plain with the severity only pos- j|£ of Poriet, Bernard and Amy Linker. Cutaway, sible to the best tailoring. ’ Empire, Directoire and severely tailored mannish The suits are all from our regular makers, and 3 s * PH coats. Styles as elaborate or as plain as you their duplicates have sold freely at $35 to $45. i please. In ultra fashionable materials as well as Every wanted material, style and color, we believe, 5* staple serges, diagonals and broadcloths. Leading is represented and nearly every woman can be I colors and black, navy and brown. suited. Choice $25. (Ready-to-Wear—Second Floor) JL* £ Wonderfully Good Coats at sls Gift of Hud- * Ir* -Y assem bla g e of | T> £ 3 5 coats that are the last word in style HUI S I dTIUITIG W. and material at sls. Styles and sizes , ti i v S? yi® suitable for the miss of 14 to 17 or the grown woman. '' Olila be a Ainas gilt ill- Choice just sls. deed! All of Hudnut’s fa- The styles and materials will please the nious preparations are now most exacting. There are-shaggy zibelines, soft, luxu- 011 display. Just now Hudnut JG rious camelshair, striking chinchilla and boucles, has a special demonstration in ' 'l® stunning black and white stripe and two-tone diago- our Center Aisle of all his toilet 5 rials and chinchillas, solid color serges, broadcloths preparalions and perfumes. ‘Many and diagonals, smart imported English coatings—in °f the articles are in charming short, every material that has been pronounced sash- Christmas containers. Us special gj;" ionable and right. Styles include belted ;yid plain interest fur Xmas gifts are: 3* coats, tailored coats and others with wide revers and Toilet V a _>s. 75c and $1.25: I collars of cloth, corduroy or velvet. Half lined with Sachet Bags, $1.50: Perfunx>. JJI. I satin or self materials, unlined and full lined. Every 50c to $5. I smm t color and combination. Center Aisle. (Center Aisle. Main Floor.) i IVs U Encore Sale of Xmas Silk Hose 3* ;<a Oliver IVI eS 11 • This sale was held last Friday, when it ' * Pt A Q ] rained “cats and dogs.” The sale is now re- e 03./A Ociie peated, in response to many requests. 155 Silver mesh bags of the right Ad»on £C*ii c>. i • 2i l style and quality are rather As 3 DOX OI Ollk btoCKingS, j scarce, so we’feel proud to offer 3 Pairs to Box, for $2.25 sc such a variety at these under- iaf" prices: Just to stimulate early Xmas buying, 4R for $2.50 (h rman sil- make this great offer for tomorrow onlv. Ji** The s to C kta gS are a perfect »1.00 grade. Made’of g . & 4*9 4 0 for $3 50 German sil- P ure th read silk. All have lisle heels, soles and toes to ver bags in the new insure wear. Choice of lisle or silk garter tops. High Armor unbreakable mesh. Plain and spliced heel. Usually SI.OO, sold in box of three (by g(7 ■SS eraboßsed 5 and ?‘ lnch frames - the box only) for $2.25. No phone or mail orders. ‘ it - fiQr* f° r mines’ $1 mesh bags •' * sl-25 Silk Stockings, 83c ■£ e-j l * qJfci*fczO ver mesh bags, kid We have been favored with a mill’s overplus ■42 •'S «tock of silk stockings known as ;‘rnn of the mill” < » tQQft for German silver grade This means that the stockings have not been qJD.x/O mesh bags wort h to thoroughly examined tor defects, ,and it is possible Jsa yjg $6.50. In the new Armor and unbreak- that one pair in ten may show a slight imperfection. S’ able mesh with wide ball fringe on () nr personal inspection shows the stockings to be ab- ■ w bottom. Six-inch frame utflined golutely perfect-look them over for yourself. ' gfe These stockings are made of a firm quality pure thread j n a f u ]]_ phimp weight. Full fashioned and finely finished. gg |i t | * • p Some have lisle feet and garter tops; others are all silk 00 fj 5? II fl of*Cll 1 P T's throughout. All have high spliced silk heels. Colors are wiww* VIIIV/ Ikj brown, tan, sky, pink, taupe, black and white. All sizes Bto laa Am Altimw (Zilirikio 10 - N ’°t a stocking in the lot is worth regularly less than $1; •C 0 ' J 'c ao ‘ e many are worth $1.50; the average is OO ■<. Almost a quarter of a million here, easlly $1 . 25 . choice O«SC «R* JMB 10c to $25. - Men > s 50c Silk Hose 29( . j ■ ■{* TT 11 Called “seconds,” but the hurts are hard to find. Kg 1 OVlariu For wearing or gift purposes they are as good as m j • n the “firsts.” ■C I oys ami Happiness TOT all. Great variety in solid colors and black and accordion and K S Tovland Annex. Main two tone effects—black and red, brown and blue, etc. All pure pi...,,. r thread silk with lisle soles and tops. A box of a half dozen J 1001. ueil. pairs would pleas,' him immensely. (Hosiery—Main Floor) gICH 8 tROS - c° MM A MMMM»c»icH t bros. .■■■: '-■■■■■-' ... . , _ EVERY lA/ANT Ah KAS A MEANING GEORGIAN B XM ALL ITS OWN BOTH TELEPHONES 8000 5