Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 13, 1912, FINAL, Page 4, Image 4

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4 WILSON'S LIFE IN CONSTANT PERIL Threatened by Many Cranks. Secret Service Will Guard President-Elect Carefully. WASHINGTON I »e< LT- Extraordi nary uiHions will b« taken by th* I States >«•. r. t sorvir** to guard the life of WiHMir-w Wflson when h* Im morn in a* nreshlent ..f tin United State* and thereafter » a. i ;»ny, presbu -ntn-elect have Im'< -n thnat i.-<. with death as often us he has b< « n. tb' ret’ore, th** secret serv ice will take ■ <•’ ,i. •> Sine- 1. < »l. . .. u. at- against the life of Mr. I ve been made by various n»n n •’ . Springs. N»*v York Hr aw N. u .... Many letters of a ntenavink I i> written to Mr Wil s.>!-. hj.y. p, .i, dCHlroyed as the product of cranks. Wilsons Prepare To Start Homeward HAMILTON. IIEKIII'I >.\. 1 13 IT. <<!•in-.-1... ' W i|«oi> m.d ld.s f.unil} Utrnt Hu gr ■ r part of the morning p ; up 11 .-I .u to leav! g fol 1 ■.!■ ■ : .rr..\. If., president —II will) ;;o <)lrr, : Pr i , loti. where 1'• will l>. -1 ; ‘ i r. I . 1a I i-.1l ..1 nil important 1. i 1., .t.iix. i 1...|. r>- the .Southern mo- I . in New Y..rk The I'llior loops | in.».r. -a result of his star here IIII'I s ' 1 . I. eb; lll.e. ACQUITTED OF KILLING SLAYER OF HIS MOTHER t;; I>l >1 \<:. «• A1... I >•■'-. 13 -Al ei ili.-t a. i; I li"? willlni.. <‘lenii npt of the . ■■ ■ : I'l. iei .m, William Uindls I a !»• I ... return'" <'L uejlts am. ,l.i If .It. . tin latter had kill- < i • . r. I>t a ■ K' the man be ta. i ' o.i lib. I'tont porcii after <'! . its' . . . ..nd an* "< 'nl.v tin- • ■ S lov. lful >■l ii.irtli on Mother's Gr. i< " Alt. als -initial Clement* tot t; 'I shui t i<i 1 did liio iob and I uin not >«*). EOOKER T. WASHINGTON'S WIFE WILL MAKE ADDRESS' Settlement work will be the theme of an I ludrcsa at S o'clock tonight at the At lanta Baptist ' college by the wife of Booker T Washington. She is president | i>f the National Federation of Women’s clubs The lecture will be. given under the auspices of the Neighborhood union, of which Eugenio Hope, is president. The Neighborhood union has been com mended by municipal bodies throughout the country. The proceeds of the lecture will be devoted to its work. An admis sion fee of LT> cents will be charged. I wW I A# '<Z& t | «tz// A v '? EWh'f feOlik ■ it Ir ; <-»y\jl BWB I ’Mj Santa Claus' Letter to the r ~™ I t " \§ Little Folks Hl' H I fe j. My Dear Children—l am here W ? ? /ff/k again. Happy to see yon all. I ■ Iff/A have brought lots and lots of pretty things for you. My head- , ( "k®* t ’ \AxTO quarters are at Duffy’s, comer '“' j VCVv* Forsyth and Mitchell. Come and - '\v see me. 1 p t n A \s. ■’••• ••• • W •♦«• •» *••***♦••» •*»•• »«•• M» «•• »»• t.ft* ■ t•• . \ •'*MASSHOES 'J E v^/VV^^ I | Shoe Bargains Shoe Bargains I For Ladies For Children B Fine Vici Kid Shoes; $1 1Q Vici and Box Calf Shoes; Cl ?C $2.50 value; now 'N.tV S2OO value; now Jl./3 m Fine Patent Colt, button Cl OS Vici and Box Calf Shoes; ei in or lace; $3.00 value <pl.”o $2.50 value; now sl.4“ H Fine Gun Metal, button ei w Vici and Box Calf Shoes; & or lace; $3.50 value. *X.4O $2.75 value; now, S r, t. . «,,, „ , x Vici and Box Calf Shoes; om no ■ ■ Fine Russia Calf, 16 but- fl-i io $3.00 value; now .. . .)l."0 ton long; $5.00 value <P-.40 Vlci and Box Calf ghoes; Fine House Shoes; in_ $3.25 value; now v-»VV ■ hear the pricel”V Vici and Box Calf Shoes; ei in . $3.50 value; now v-3” For Gentlemen .. . _ XXB A For the Little Tots Men s Satin Calf c 11(1 Blucher; $3.00 value Soft Kid Shoes; hard yr w en x Gu «o« eU SI 98 Soft Kid Shoes; solid 4Br Blucher; $3.50 value »I.TO leather; 75e value 49C Men’s Tan Russia Calf, C7 OS Soft Kicl Shoes; very 7C button and lace; $4.00 value. .. pretty; SI.OO value idC I Duffy’s The People's Trading Place Duffy’s I Corner Forsyth and Tr-iilw/ hiiMv Corner Forsyth and Mitchell Streets 11111/ Uully Mitcheil Streets Hundreds of Girls Lead Campaign for Open Air Schools SEAL SELLERS TO STORM CITY / fiKSMRSiff'.,: ’.. ..'. .V T |R« ' tHb \ HI W' ■9|| A* r ’ *‘W i T®* x n 25 BALtS OF COTTON BURN SAVANNAH, GA., Doc. 13 - Tw.mty flve bales of cotton were burned and 60 more \t. . ihtmngiil by water In a fit,. last night In the hold of the steamship Sophie Rickmers. which is loading at the Seaboard Ait Line terminal*. THE ATI.AMa GEUKG.LAN AND NEWS. I ItIDAY, DECh.MKEK 13. l:oi. Mrs. Phinizy Calhoun Red Cross Aids Will Throng Streets Tomorrow Offering Christmas Stamps. Atlanta'* streets will be thronged to morrow with hundreds of young wom en, striving, through tl , sale of little, penny ' 'hristmas Heals, to give the city an open air school system to flg.it the Inroads of the "white plague." Among the shopping crowd, along the ,’urblng.s. in banks, hi office buildings and stores these young women will vie with the “pitch-grlfters" and the side walk venders, who make the holiday streets picturesque with their Jtm ■rackery. Against the <vender's high-colored tale of the marvelous mechanism of a jumping toy or recital of the imagined beauties of a paper poinsettia, they will pit tlieir insistent story of little tene ment children lighting always with tiiis hidden enemy. Plan “Biggest Seal Day." And tlie curbstone “ballyhoos" will need all their fluent spiers to get the ear of the passing throng before the young women of Miss Woodberry’s school and the Girls High school, 'Hold ing aloft the red and green seals, have driven their arguments home and .-ashed them in good coin of the realm for the colters of Red Cross Christmas I seal committee. The econmittee'j plans for tomorrow - - »• \\ T ■• v ■> \ \ X ■, ■ \\ ■ aT ■ - A su. J B ' ’Y< / / >'WSHh // ■ : /■/ I -■y/Ci -2 00 X are elaborate and it is expected that it will be the biggest seal day in At lanta’s history. According to the young women who have promised to make the remainder of Atlanta allotment of 500,- 000 seals look slim, it will be a record I day in more than one respect. I Recently catne the news from Wash ington that Miss Alys Meyer, daughter |of Secretary of the Navy Meyer, es tablished an American record by sell ing 3,600 seals in a single day on the ' streets and in stores. Young Atlanta women believe that I Miss Meyer's record can be smashed, .»nd if their enthusiasm for their cause boa criterion, tomorrow night will see a new mark established. Miss Jenkins After Record. Miss Annie Lou Jenkins, who has been a "sealer” since the crusade took hold in Atlanta, already has set a mark of 1,800 seals in three hours, and Miss I Ruth Walraven is a close second, witb 1,500 in the same time. Miss Jenkins i Is sure she can more than double her sale in double the time, and Miss Wal raven asks for but a chance to demon strate that Atlanta can c-qual Wash ington and that Atlanta girls are sales women in a class by themselvet. During the week Atlanta's full quota of stamps, 500,000 of the 1,500,000 al | loted to Georgia, has been placed and the Christmas seal committee has sent to headquarters for more. Suburban drug store, corner groceries and all manner of places where the people may 'be drawn have been supplied with the stamps. They are everywhere one turns in quest of anything to buy, so there will be little or no excuse for the per son who complains that he- didn't know about the seals. I Stations have been established in the postoflice and at Cole’s book store, and others will be placed tomorrow at the Terminal station and in the Kimball and Piedmont hotels. Cordon of Femininity. From these stations the saleswomen II will work the downtown se, tlon, and it. will be an elusive individual who can slip by the cordon of the femininity - • - x = - 4% QnSavings ~ $ r f ir A Christmas Gift That Will Grow I XSTEAO of buying only toys and I 1 trinkets, give your child one present this Christmas that will increase in 1 ' -xs< v " iu *' "Uh the years. Start a Savings I \\ Account, and put the Hank Book, with I 1 ’’* s n:ll,le on !t , ,n the toe of his little ■V.I stocking. My. won’t h« be proud when 1 toys ure broken, the candy gone, the red wagons and dolls thrown aside or for gotten. I Where Are the Christmas Presents You I'l ul'Vj Gave Your Little Boy or Gir) Last Year.’ L THINK IT OVER ' Travelers Bank and Trust Co. NOTE IN BOTTLE’ CONFIRMS WM Pathetic Story of Lake Trag-I edy Is Told in Captain's , Floating Message. MILWAUKEE, Dec. 13.—A bottle that fiuate<l ashore ar Sheboygan, Wis., today confirmed the story of the winking <*f tb° Christmas tree schooner Roust Simmons. The bottle bore a message showing a record the vessel’s fight against the storm daj by day. It was signed by Captain Herman S. Schuenemann. The Simmons had a crew of eighteen men. The message was written on a torn sheet of paper, it was v»-ry briei. h read: “Friday Everybody good-bye. 1 guess we are all jh rough. washed off our deckload on Thursday. During the night the small boat was washed off. Leaking badly. “Engwald and Steve fell overboard Thursday. "God help us. (Signed» "HE RM A N S(' HUEN EM A NN. ’ ’ The stopper of the bottle was a bit of wood evidently whittled from the limb of a Christmas tree. INDICTMENT AGAINST ARCHBOLD IN TEXAS HELD INSUFFICIENT WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Attorney I»Jenera! Wickersham today telegraphed to District Attorney Atwell, at Dallas, Tex., that the indictments brought against John T». Archbold were insufficient, and that more proof of alleged overt acts irtust be ascertained before the case can be brought to trial. Two special agents of the bureau of investigation of the de partment <»f justice will leave tonight for St. Louis and Dallas to assist Mr. Atwell : in obtaining more evidence. Archbold is only one of several mem- I bers of the Standard OU Company named lin the indictments. No efforts will be l made to hale him before the Texas court I until Attorney General Wickersham is I s:: -fled that the government has a good ease. - ~ OLD SOLDIER EATS DISH OF CIGAR SALAD NEW YORK, Dee. 13.—“ Cigar salad" is the latest dessert dish. Those who attempt it risk police interference. At a restaurant in Jersey City an elderly man ordered a steak, coffee and two black cigars. Having eaten the steak, he broke the cigais into bits, poured coffee over the crushed leaves and de voured tlie dish with a relish. The waiter informed tlie proprietor that he | had caught a lunatic red handed, and the owner telephoned the police. “I ac quired my taste for tobacco in the trenches before A'ieksburg, and it is part of my daily diet,' said the veteran who showed a (1. A. R. button. He was not arrested. COURT VALUES HUSBAND. KILLED BY CAR. AT $2,200 ROME. GA., Dee. 13.—Alleging that a trolley car, recklessly driven, ran over and killed her husband last Janu ary, Mrs. Winfleld S. Lansdell sued the Rome Railway and Eight Company for slo,noo and got a verdict for $2,200. During the trial a witness testified that the motorman of the car that ran over Lansdell when accused by a su perior officer of the company of run ning too fast voluntarily resigned his position. Evidence showed that the ijio torman was violating the city speed ordinance when he ground Lansdell to death. GUILTY CONSCIENCE’gOADS SLAYER INTO CONFESSION HARRIMAN. TENN.. Dee. 13.—Worried by a guilty conscience, which he claims has given hint no peace since last spring. John Harmon, aged 20, of this place, con fessed to officers that early in May of this year he killed a negro, Harmon was placed In jail pending an investigation of his story. that will girdle Atlanta's bu.-lness sec tion. In the schools today will be a big day. The work here has gone on all week with marked success. One school alone sold 10,000 seals and has asked for more, for it is to the school chil dren, especially in the poorer sections, that the lesson of the seal is brought home. The Atlanta Committee expects to use the money raised by the sale of i seals as a nucleus of a fund for an | open air school system. Such a project is on foot all over the state, wherever the stamps are being sold. This school system will mean much to Atlanta and to Atlanta's children. It will mean playgroundsand sunshine for them, trees and flowers and ail manner of living and green things as a. fight ing chance against the Insidious plague. Az —W—\ " Cigar manufacturers cannot afford | IP' ®ft to over l° ok a selling capacity like £ ° UrS —bOOO,OOO cigars a day. m That’s why 3-for-a-quarter valuescan be BJ ' sola in our stores for Bi 5c 'v'xOW Benefactor cipar 1 C SW SBperiwS £ e I M Tunita Cigar v E Princfssa Size Imported Porto Rico I . T alma de Cuba «o« r ■ L s S Soe Havana and Porto Rico Blend i Ssi uk ARfavorites at this popular price, and all United JI f Cigars give smokers corresponding advantages. While these cigars are each the Y’- • v X'u «*nie price and equal hirh - bX/VA '■'VtfW value, «ach is a dis- BMaMManEXKMBMBKuKunew W ferent type and sp- | v -peale to different I Trz tL ; 'RW **“"• I Peachtree St. (Corner Auburn Ave.)46 Marietta St. (Corner Forsyth St.) 23 Peachtree St. Corner Decatur St.) —■■■ . ... —— _ _ - Extra Special! Woifsheimer & Co. I Pork I Our Own Slaughtered Tennessee Hogs Pork Shoulder 101 Porkchops I’7l ’ Pork Hams 1 C u P T u T' 15c a j. lOC b }l( ‘ k Bone at... * Lard (our own home | Pork Loins ir rendered, pure) ICC at i DC tens, at Lamb and Mutton Lamb Stew Lamb —Hii'id ir, atQuarter, at . . Lamb Shoulder Iri Mutton—Fore Q at l VC Quarter, at Lamb—Fore 1 Mutton —Hind 1 Ql il Quarter, at ... -I Quarter, at ..., * «2C Beef | eaks . 125ct020c BcFol2sc | a ß t°- st IDclolsc r,'"' v TJclolOc Hams and Bacon H '''""L.l3ac 19c Bacon—Rex. ' nt 21C Poultry ” e “ s 20c 'r s ’ 15cfc17Jc m SB 23c “ t uckß 22c Turkevs nr" at . . ZbC Butter and Eggs ?t“ e ..lßcto3l!c . 30cto40c Eggs—Fresh countrv, 00l at Groceries Peaches—Fancy California. Lemon OFI ding, in heavy syrup, at For cash only. Telephone orders and C. 0. D. orders are not considered as cash. Woifsheimer & COMPANY 114-16 WHITEHALL ST. GEORGIAN WANT ADS BRING RESULTS