Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 28, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2

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2 LITTLE FRESH-AIR~ENTHUSIASTS OF WEST PEACHTREE ST L»\ /z zfT~C\ CT 7 --WB \B4 I zq \ w» 1 PWkXzSk.., ■ 7' i \? »yw l/w < \w& ». fIMKiLw «*■? vß*J|w / - -\I \ z\ "v- \ W *=>- iMksvls <' » J^BB^P X^k-- i -^JL' w TZ7' , 7st \ . *■ X**®® I l& * X / " Bk . ( w 4b / < 1 V « y» / ' W, iWk I Zw / / K r - - t W' Awwß&fcw. twSMkV w l > 17 / ■* \\ 'jS fi/ JL x \\ r K -1 B '\ 7 i ' wi t \\ ” HF / • ’ ■ x t *&■«£ wKJFjw • wmp M \w - V xA I^JBCTkj. . a /SBK /1 ■ < ♦ J&k > \ f ■x. s ;- i nr \ > Z/V X ; x | 1 \ B MUL. .Bl \ < / /\* X i / I \ { \ / |> \S jJK* V Q Z I I \ Z X i iMr | WwOMwy A \;-'’*LX /■ •* • x< / ~AI )1 . 1 •>. \\ % • V i7/r ■■ * I A / * Z Xl, \\ A X'// Eugenia llalir. niece of Mr. and Mrs franklin. 3(>.‘> \V< si Peachtree, who exercises on her eyrie. NO END DFB DEADLOCK SEEN ( ( Turk Envoys Present Maximum Proposal. Differing Far From Demands. i LoN'DirN, Dev. 28. The deadlock in , the Turko-Balkan peace conference re mains unbroken. After a session of an , hour and 4a minutes in St. James pal ace today the envoys adjourned until Monday without any progress having , been made. A dark outlook prevalle when lite delegates resumed their session after a four-day recess. Reehld Pasha, of the ottoman delegation, who presided at the meeting, submitted Turkey's maxi mum proposals to offset the maximum demands of the allies The margin of difference between the two notes was so great as to cause much doubt whether the deadlock would be broken soon. Allies Stand Firm. The allies are standing firm upon their contention tli.it Tuikrj shall not be allowed to retain more than a foot hold on Europe, whereas the ottoman plenipotentiaries ridicule this proposi tion, saying "that Turkey should not be deprived of territory site was valiant ly defending when tin armistlc. put an end to hostilities." Representatives oft! . allies se. . to feel assured that the powers will sup port them in their demands Hut while this view lends hope to tin Balkan envoys, they do not minimize the stiff ness of the struggh ahead. One of the Balkan envois is quoted as saving that "it may be three weeks before a compromise is i cached." So far as can be learned, the Ottoman en voj s had not reached an agi cement upon any point at issue up to the hour of tin- meeting al noon Imlay Austria Arising Again. Interest was divided hen between the pi|o' conference and the present attitude of the Austrian government. According to Vienna initios. the ten sion between Austria and Servin is again tightening ami Austria has ceased demobilizing. Austria is still maintain ing a big armed force on the Servian frontier and has gin n assurances to 'tic other powers that site will continue •<> keep an arm) there until guarantees are given by Senia that the \driatlc port of Duiazzo w ill be relinquished. CHAUFFEUR AND RICH GIRL-WIFE SEPARATED EAST LIVERPOOL, onio. I Mrs. Helen Peach Costello, daughter ..f a wealthy porcelain manufacturer, has been granted a divorce frojn W illiam Costello, who was her father's chauffeur. I lie pair eio|>ed in June, :'-i_ she left her husband Immediately afterward, and lai sued her parents tot damages for ? iotie',’,; .' i,ff< He ro oved S3OO L a .<i e v ns h.,t Aged Widow Is Robbed of Her Little Hoard THIEF’S VICTIM IN WANT Robbed of sl3. every cent she had, i while she watched a neighbor's chil dren preparing for Santa Claus on Christmas Eve, Mis. Kate Kelley. 320 Woodward avenue, widow of Richard I’’. Kelley, former city fireman and de tective. today faces starvation. Airs. Kelley is 67 tears old. childless, and has no relatives in Atlanta. She is unable to work, and her sole income of $6 a month from the rental of a part of tile little house her husband left her lias been insufficient to sustain her. Christmas Eve, which was the sec ond anniversary of het husband's death, two women gave het $s as a Christmas present. This, with $5 which she had saved from many months’ rent paid by the family occupying a part of her house, was placed in a bureau drawer. Little Hoard Is Gone. Early in the same evening she went to a neighbor's to see the children hang up their stockings for Santa Claus. When she returned to het roonf she found hyt money gon.-, the bureau and cupboard titled and a part of her cloth ing stolen. An open window, pried up by the burglar, told the only story of the robbery Since that night Mr.-. Kelley lias mu had a penny to buy food or oil for her lan p Yesterday her s< ant supply of CANTATA TO BE REPEATED AT FIRST M. E. CHURCH Tip cantata. “The Stat of Promise." which was endeted at the i'irst Meth odist chinch last Sunday, will by> re peated tomorrow evening at 7:30. with 25 in tin chorus. Eyaturing the morning program will be organ prelude and postltnle, the anthem, "They Wert* Shepherds." and the offertory. "Oh. Holy Sight." anti in tin evening the organist. Miss Maine Lee Bea'ilett. will eon dipt the cantata. The organ will render “The March of tlm Magi Kings." and Mr. Bickford ami I chorus will sing "Behold. For Zion's Sake." others assisting in the cantata will b< Miss Spritz, Miss DeFor. Misses Ma tlm and Daisy Bearden ami Mr. Name. JILTED GIRL GETS $4,000: WON’T BELIEVE ANOTHER ST Lol iS. Dec. 28. Miss Lydia \ L Stot ckt I. of 2716 Burd avenue, who won a verdict of $4,000 for breach of promise from a jury in Judge Grimm's court, says she'll never look at another man. She says her faith in the male species i> entirely shattered, ami that she’d never believe a man again if he stood on a • stack <>f Bibles and held both hands to heaven TO TRY SPECIAL TAX AGAIN. \ \ U. \ I . g flic y having failed with its special sanitary .ix ordinance, det Jared last week by Judge Coleman to be unconstitutional, will trv at.other of a similar character to it crease tiir revenut <of the cit\ The io w •rthnrr<»- will be prepared by Judge •I J Arnold, now serving the city as he.i 1 ativistt who will trx to make il t»ot- ' THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.SATI'RDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1912. Dorothy and Marion Perkins. dau<rht< r.s of .Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Perkins. 342 West Peach tree, enjoying bracing winter ozone. c6al ran out and she wa.- f avii to b. row from neighbors. . Her supply of food is low. and aside from nuts a <i cai.dy given her by children of the neighborhood, she lias had only one ] loaf of bread ami a small pice, o! me al since Wednesday. Iler next rent mom :y I- ,nm due rut: th.- middle of January, ami until then, unless some one extends aid. she wie he without money ami food. «'it Walden Evans has promised to fu.nis'.i her with a small quantity of coal. Nearly Prostrate From Grief. Mrs. Kelley wi\s marly prostrat from grief when a Georgian report. ~ visited her yesterday. "I don't know what I am going to do." she said. "The Associate ! <"na:i ties used to help me, but they h:r>< ! quit because I own my own litlie Imus . Now 1 am without a cent of mom and I haven't any relatives woo ..n help me. "I used to get along on Hie money received from the rent of a part of my little house, although 1 had to pay tin' wale- bills, buy oil for my lamp an food and clothing. Since my money ; was stolen I have been sick from grit I don't know what is to come of im . | but 1 trust Hie dear Lord will see ill. I do not starve." “SIAMESE" TWINS IN CONTINUAL QUARREL HOLYOKE, MASS. Dm ;.‘s. The extreme sympathetic unity that is the rul. between even ordinary twins has not put in its appearance in th. . i- of tile seven-months-old "Siamese twin' daughters of Mr amt Mis. John R. Gibbs. Mealtime is proving an inevi- j table bom* of contention between the | united babies, for when on. is clamor ing for the bottle the other refuses to i touch it. and even tries to push her : sister s meal out of the crib. Also, j ' when one twin is sleepy the oil’ r is al- : ways witle awake, ami this sort of thing ' has put the loud parents in a state of ! perplexity. The twins at. fastened to gether at the hips, but otherwise ai" perfectly normal, GIRL OF 12 TEACHES OWN MOTHER TO STEAL ST Lot IS. Dee 28 V remarkable' story of how her 12-y ear-old daught. . taught Iler to steal and led li. • daily shoplifting tours during the last thr. > weeks, in which time they gathered sso<- worth of loot from department stores. was] tohi by Mrs. l.m-v Laser, of 4115 Harris I avenue, who wa« arrested with her daugh ter. Ann.e PRINCESS. NAPOLEON'S KIN. to BE AMERICAN SEATTLE. WASH. I'.. ys Pin. < Estelle Ga'i-ielle Elonapai <■ 8ar..:.-.- 1.,- Moin DeLeon, grandnug:i'< : . ' I’rine. Jo seph A'ex.’mler Boiapnr'. bl. . > lativ, , of the Emperor Na pole, n , 1 the Count LeMoin DeLeon, has Tied I to the Feedral court for tl . i„ -.-.iry : papers permitting live ty l. . zen of the t niteil sta.y s JK IS SUITED FDD FOSMTEII Senator Smith Said to Have Picked Old Aid for the Big Atlanta Plum. * !’-• Ih |'< -t ih.i i• i- of Atlanta under I’H Wiiso’i. B«rl ing li. Jones ♦.t ins i-I b the best bet nowadays. True, Mr Jones lias been a good bet for many days, ami has been ’ promi nently mentioned” more times than a few However, the tin seemingly comes straight from \\ at last, that: Jems really is to land the big plum.: :ind tho tip is inure or less guaranteed bj thoso who 'piak by the card for St natm Smith. il is com t'ded that the Atlanta post mastership is to be Sen .tor Smith's af fair ilom-. Custom gives the senators and rep«'<•.' ntaiivcs of the dominant par \ in Washington tin right to name ’-heir Jo* i or hmno postmasters. Dnder that ai rangement, it lias been a fore gum* conclusion that the Atlanta post i r.ll most likely w ould lu some one very clo> to Georgia's junior senator. Mi. Jones and Senator Smith !ong a\« been \ . y mtiift.atcly associated l-olitii alb. During tar senatoi’s first campaign for Hie governorship. Mr Jones was one of iii.s most persistent ami active advoe.ites. Indeed, as a rep resentative of the Atlanta stove inter ests and pre ident of tin Atlanta freight bureau. Im generally wa> held to be tin “man b-hind" the famous ‘port rate is' ae." which cut such a figure in that campaign. Mi .ban is nac of All *ntci's most r.ihstam .al an; prominent citizens. lh is a Virginian h\ birth, but lias lived [in Atlanta !•'. ts. p;;.-t twenty years. *1 Uimoughix idea itied with At i.yiita Das' !<•>•- .nd social life, and is J’b’ 1 s \".,is oid. \s postmaster of Atlania he w il v. salary of Sti.OOti per .innum. AD .i im s is t; .>i ilugiily populat in Atlanta, and his appointment to the ■p<..-tii tSy' i.-'iip will give gcmn-al sfttis i faction. GETS LICENSE TO WED GIRL HIS WIFE NAMED ST ' is - -I*” A murnag** license ivas .ssu» d to i: a Grossman and Miss r .' : • son. Miss Sampson was men- I Pored s. vend tmms m a diary kept by I w ile ihe diary being offered .in eVidribT las' S ptvnibvr when Cross man's SU tor tl.vorrc was heard Mrs. Cricsnun tiled a cross bill HOBOES DEMAND HOWE GIVE UP HIS FORTUNE ST LOI'IS. Mo.. De 2X The stan.l -r.« .' ' - L. ■ I!..«. • i | ..h., i as been i itiifhi Into question by the Broth crl:o. I >. kag .. . which lie foundetl I 1 I ; ‘ ls 11 ' 'uucp . p li,m io give ‘ . v organiza- tion I. pt'.Ve in • uy, ’ 111 SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS B/ JAMES B. NEVIN. In a modest ami entirely non-.'pec- 1 taeular suit of way, E. Lee Worsham, i the state entomologist, is doing a great | f. - work for Georgia. Mr. Worsham. , besides being an expert bugologist —which is near- English for the other word—is a genuine Luther Burbank in his own peculiar way. ami moves niys teriously now and then his wonders to perform. The state ento mologist's latest achievement is ot great importance to Georgia, anil is : I suie to be far J reaching in eon- . st qttence. He has succeeded in devel • I oping a strain of cotton that will meet I the ra.pidly approaching boll weevil conditions by comparatively early ma turity and immunity from black root and tin wilt disease. This strain of cotton, developed suc [|cessfully after months of patient ex periment by Mr. Worsham, promises to be the most valuable stiain in the world. In undertaking to prepare Georgia for the coming of the boll weevil, sev - era! varieties of early maturing cotton i might have been advised, were it not , ; for the fact that practically every i known vatiety is subject to attacks of the wilt disease. In seeking to over- ( come this objection. M , Worsham un | dertook to cross long staple Egyptian i cotton with an early "Dixie," and the I experiment was a complete success. The engaging thing about the new , cotton, too, is that it may be grown j anywhere in the South, has a very long staple', and ought to sell around twenty cents pet pound. i The department has only < ultivated one acre of the new cotton this year, . and the seed for distribution will be limited. However, .Mr. Worsham has arranged to try it out in 25 south Geor- | gia counties next season, among the . I more progressive iarme: s. The Georgia legislature builded wiser . than it knew when it set up the state t department of entomology. It is esti . | mated conservatively that the depart 'ment is saving the farmers of the state ■ I j now from $25,000,000 to $30,000,000 each ' j year, and it will make an even liner . I record as time runs on. It has been i able to show the farmers of the state many ways- to destroy and eradicate | destructive insects, and no.w it has , | found one way. at least, to combat the boll weevil successfully. One most commendable thing about the department of entomology is the fact that it has been kept out of poll |tiis i’nder the wise and cot'- . s rvativc direction oi M Worsham it Alton Biiiiiiigni tiii'i'. itthielic young sou of Mr. anti Mrs. JI. I'. Baumgartner, 342 West Peachtree, taking his constitutional lias progiT-sed splendidly ami effect ively. The state should be —and is— proud of the department and its able head. Elected president of the Southern Conservation congress in Atlanta In 1910, Mi. Wo sliani since'has been hon ored by appointment to the executive conutiitte ■ of the National l'ons*erva tion congress, on account of hi- inter est and efforts in behalf of conserva tion. particularly along agricultural ami h‘ rtieultura; lines, hot only in Georgia but throughout the South. Di. it. 1 . Rudicil, of Chattooga eoun. ty. a former representative ami senator in th, state legislature, who passed away at his home 11 ar Summerville a lew da.vs ago, was m.e o1 the veterans of Georgia polities, ami was genuinely mid universally beloved by the hun dreds of colleagues with whom, from time to time, he was associat' d in tile state's servit < . Dr. Rudici was, besides being a wise and able legislator, a physician of the old school, and possessed of all those arts of gentleness and refinement char acterizing that class of citizens. He generally was sent to the legislature w ithout opp isitfcm, whenever he could be preVai.cd upon to run, and on more than one occasion was the compro mis ■ candidate upon whom warring factions united in order to keep the peace of the community intact. He was in many ways Chattooga county's "grand old man," and his death, after many years of conspicu ous usefulness, will occasion much sor row throughout Georgia. Dr. Rudicil was the father-in-law of former Judge W. M. Henry, of the Rome circuit. gam< la« s of Geoigia glorify the old-time fishermen, content to sit upon the bank, at the right seasons of the year, and practice the noble art pisca torial in truly due and ancient Torm. outside of a few restrictions as to netting, keeping off prescribed terri tory. and retn* inhering the Sabbath day to keep il holy, there are few “don'ts" attaching to the fish laws. i'nder the present order of tilings, the fish liar, therefore, seems to have an advantage over the limit liar. With Game Warden Jesse Mercer on the wan ath, there isn’t much chance for the latter to put things over—but un der the fish law. the fisherman still may tell how tile biggest one got away, and other astonishing cii cmnstam es re late. th,- while be smiles, and smiles, and remains a villain .-till! There, isn't much showing now adays for th< huntei jho ”g< te '< m a-gwine and a-eomln'." but for the fisherman who pulls off startling stunts and amazing performances, the field of en deavor still is wide and alluring. Jesse Mercer's opinion to the contrary noth withstanding! Congressman William Sehlex How ard wars "that smile." 11 •« :i ■! Hi 1 .■r> ii . ...1 \i WILSON SMOKED ONCE: MOTHER ASKED HIM TO I TRENTON, N. J., Dec. 28.—The arrival of a gold-mounted, amber-stemmed meet schaum pipe at the state house from one of Governor Wilson’s Princeton friends in Vicksburg, Miss., brought from the president-elect the confession that once in his life, and only once, did he smoke. “It was this way,” he said. “In , father's leisure hours my mother took ad vantage of his cigar habit and employee him to blow the pungent smoke over he. 1 rose bushes to kill insects. One da; 1 when he was not at home, she suggested ■ th it I try it on her favorite plants, ami I obliged somewhat proudly. In a little . while, however, I had had quite enough THE ATLANTA TON ,!° HI MATINEE TODAY IDA ST. LEON In a New Comedy Drama, "FINISHING FANNY” Nights, 25c to $1.50. Mat., 25c to ?l. GSSANn KtITH Mat. Tadi,- 2:>) ’ . I'Zt/fIEUILte loniaht . 3A> DINKELSPIEL'S CHRISTMAS SY GEORGE V. HOBART Empire Comedy Four—Lew Hawkins. | Miss Robbie Gordone and Others. ! ■ 4 FORSYTH Little Emma Bunting And FORSYTH PLAYERS “The Little Gray Lady." LYRIC TH,S Mats. Tues.. WEEK Wed., Thurs . Sat. The Big Musical Revue THE FROLICS OF 1912 Next Week—“BAßY MINE CONCERT BY Cornell University Glee, Banjo and Mandolin Clubs WESLEY MEMORIAL HALL. DECEMBER 28th, SEAT SALE CABLE PIANO COMPANY. Prices. $1.50, SI.OO. 60c Seats On Sale Friday Morninr. GRIFFITH SCHOOL OF MUSIC" 78 Forrest Avenue Special attention given to prep a ’ Ing students for Mandolin. Banjo and Guitar Giee Clubs.