Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 24, 1913, Image 3

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS, 3 TIITRSDAY. APRIL 2-1, 1013. Trion Mills Head Gets Three Years S. Hamilton Sentenced for Embezzllng $200,000 of Million- Dollar Company's Funds. P.oMB. CA., April 24.—Albert S. ilamilton. former president of the nillion-dollar Trion Mills, at Trion, hattoopa County, to-day was sen- P nced by Judge Price Edwards to rve three years in the penitentiary f,, r embezzlement of $200,000 of the company's funds. He has filed notice of appeal. The company went into the hands of a receiver while Hamilton was 1 resident, and the failure was laid to ms misappropriations. Three charges of embezzlement were brought against him, only one being tried at this time. Hamilton was released under bond ,,f $5,000 in each of the three cases. Hot Is Pretty Girl's Plea to Charge of Bigamy v«-;- Asserts She Was Forced to Wed; Arrested Here State Secretary, Wilson Approv ing, Proposes an International Agreement to Delay War. ask your drug gist ABOUT IT There Is a New Remedy that Takes the Place of Calomel. Recommended and Guar anteed by the Druggists. Your elrug. store never sold a remedy that gave more complete satisfaction than Dodson’s Liver Tone—a mild vegetable remedy for constipation, sour stomach and lazy liver. Folks who have suffered for years rather than resort to dan gerous calomel have found after one trial that this pleasant-tast ing vegetable liquid gives them a long sought relief without bad after-effects. Dodson’s Liver Tone is guaran teed by all druggists to be a safe 1 liver stimulant and to be absolute ly harmless without bad after effects. You will find many per sons in this locality who have tried it and every user will sneak a good word for Dodson's Liver Tone. It livens up a torpid liver and makes you feel fresh, healthy and clean. The price of a large bottle is 50 cents—money back if not pleased. The success of Dodson's Liver Tone has brought many medicines into the field that imitate its claims, and some have name very similar and package same color, but remember Dodson's Liver Tone is guaranteed by your drug gist. who will give you back your monj^if you want it. WASHINGTON. April 24. —To an audience composed of the diplomatic! representatives of the nations of the earth, Secretary of State Bryan, with the approval of President Wilson, to-day submitted his proposal for in ternational agreements to delay war. Regarding his proposal, Mr. Bryan said: “The following statement embodies the principal points of an agreement, which the President of the United States is willing to enter into, with the consent ot the Senate, with all other nations. It does not attempt to go Into details, but is only intended to set forth the main proposition namely, that the President desires to enter into an agreement with §acb nation severally for the investigation of all questions whatever. “This agreement is intended tc supplement any arbitration treaty now in existence or any made here after. Arbitration treaties always except seme question from arbitra tion. The proposal by the President is intended to close the gap and leave no dispute that can become a cause of war. “The form in which the report is to be made Is left to be'agreed upon and it may be that the time will diffei In different cases, but any time, how ever short, furnishes an opportunity to investigate and deliberate, and it is hoped * the time for investigation and delibrration will be sufficient to secure a settlement without a resort to war. “It will be noticed that each party retains the right to act independ ently after the report is submitted 1 t it is not likely a nation will de clare war after it has had oppor tunity during investigation to confer with the opposing nation. But whether this proposed agreement ac complished as much as it is hoped for it is at least a step in the direction of universal peace.” «sJ U_l Our Own Make S450 Up A New Way to Enjoy the Oid Masters Is Afforded by the KIMBALL 88-NOTE PLAYER-PIANO You need not wait for the slow results of painstaking study and expensive training. IT REALIZES THE IDEAL of music-making and idealizes the actual accom plishments. The Kimball piano is the recog nized exponent of what can be accomplished in piano-building. Since its combination with the self-player, it has become the popular musical instrument among homes of refinement, comfort and intelligence. Complete library of music rolls offers every advantage to owners of Piano-Play ers, having full scale of 88 notes. Inquire about special library privileges. OR SHOULD YOUR CHOICE be a piano for hand or manual playing, our forty different styles afford the prospective buyer a wide variety as to ease designs. Price on uprights $200 to $500; on Grands $650 to $1,050. It is a positive protection to deal with the world’s largest manufacturers of Pianos and Player-Pianos through this Branch Store. By so doing, you save the dealer’s and agent’s profits, amounting to from $75 to $200. varying according to the price of the instrument purchased. Cash, or mvenient terms. W.W. KIMBALL CO. Atlanta Branch. 94 N. Pryor St. ii. R. CALEF, Mgr. m Young Woman Accuses Her Grandfatiier of Coercing Her to Marry. « MRS. MASHBURN’S MARRIAGE r PHILOSOPHY. . 1 go to the penitentiary he re I live with him (her first v -band). I love Jack (he r sec* end). And i won’t live with a ii n I don’t love. Marriage without love is h*ll, and I don’t want to live in hell. I said ‘no’ to the questions whether I would love and cherish him to the so-called marriage and I won’t. Declaring that sup was forced by Her wealthy grandfather to marry a man thirty years her senior, pretty Mrs. Jack Mashburn, IT years old, formerly Miss Gussie Harmon, of LaGrange, Ga., a bride of a week, to-day is a prisoner in the matron’s ward at police headquarters, accused of bigamy. Husband No. 2. Jack Mashburn, a you lg machinist with whom she Mrs. .lack Mashburn, 17, formerly Miss Gussii* llarmon, of l,a- Granpe, Ga., held bore as a bigamist. Shr declares she was forced to wed a man 47* years old. ** *■ eloped fiom the Doll’s Hospital on LuckStreet last Saturday after noon, was arrested also. Arraigned in Judge Ridley's court this afternoon, Mrs. Mashburn waived < xamination and was bound over to the grand jury on $700 bond. Jack Mashburn was released, since there was no evidence to show that he knew of the girl’s previous mar riage. Mrs. Mashburn was represented by Colonei E. A. Jones, of LaGiance. The father of the young girl.. Mr. B. B. Harmon, of LaGrange, together with Charles W. Smith, husband No. 1, were in the court room. Glancing at her first spouse. Mrs. Mashburn did not speak, but giggled. Mashburn and his bride were ar rested at a hotel on Broad Street this morning by Detective J. B. Howell, on information from LaGrange, Ga.. where it is alleged the girl was mar ried on January 23 to Charles W. Smith, 47 years old. Roth will be held to await the arrival of an officer to Smith, she says, she was living with her parents on a farm near La Grange. Smith is a farmer, living about 11 miles from LaGrange, re puted to be very wealthy. “He began paying me attentions in December." she snftl this morning “On December 4 I Accidentally shot myself in the shoulder while clean ing a gun, and was In bed for more than two weeks. “It was while I was sick that the old pest began banging around me. My grandfather encouraged him and wanted me to marry him. I told grandfather I hated him, and every time I saw him I was sicker than I was before. He kept coming and fin ally I had to ask the doctor to keep him out of the room. Then he would write me notes and slip them in by the nurse. The old fool! “When 1 got well he kept hanging around. Everywhere 1 went Smith would show up and torment me near ly to death. My grandfather kept asking me to marry him, and threat ened me if I didn’t. Said She Wouldn't Wed Him. I told him and told Smith that 1 would never marry him, because I would marry any man I didn't love. Then Smith let me alone for almost week. “On January 23 my grandfather asked me to go with him to LaGrange to do some shopping, and I went with him. 1 didn’t know what he was go ing to do. He took me lo the court house*, and there was Smith, hanging around. He put his hand on my shoul der and leered at me. and l screamed. Then he left. “My grandfather and I then went downtown, but in half an hour he said he had some more business at the court house, and l went back with him. He took me into the court room through a side entrance, and there were three or four hundred men in there and a man they called judge. My grandfather filled out some pa pers. and then told me I had to mar ry Smith and that now’ was the* best time to do it. 1 screamed and tried to get away, but the men grabbed me and held me. Alleged Forced Marriage. “They made me stand up by the side of old Smith, who grinned at me until I felt sick. Then tin* man they called judge began asking a lot of questions. lie asked me if I would love and cherish Smith, and I yelled ‘no’ as loud as I could. Then he went right on and I heard him ask Smith if he would love me. And the old fool said yes. “Then the judge asked me if I would stay with Smith during illness, and I yelled ‘no’ again, and told the judge 1 didn't want to marry that man, because I didn’t love him. They paid no attention to me. "My grandfather made me stand ip by Smith. Pretty soon I heard the judge say something about man and wife, an<l grandfather and Smith led me away Smith wanted to kiss me, and I slapped his face. The men in the court room laughed at me when cried.'' Left Him After Two Days. “I didn't want to live with Smith.” r*he continued, “but grandfather mad * me go home with him. For two nights I sat in a chair, with my clothes or crying, and Smith hung around trying to get me to say 1 loved him and was happy. I didn’t sleep during the two days and nights. Smith was always around, and I was afraid to close my eyes. Once I tried it and he tried to take off my shoes. “I stood it for two days and then 1 left him 1 went back to mamma, ana the old thing followed me. 1 came to Atlanta and tried to dodge him, but everywhere I went he showed up." BELGIAN STRIKERS TO RESUME WORK AT ONCE BRUSSELS, April 24.—By a three- fourths majority the delegates in the Socialist Congress this afternoon voted to resume work at once. This officially puts an end to the national manhood suffrage strike. SCHULTZ VS. BRESNAHAN. CANTON, <4.. April 24.—Battling Schultz will meet Tommy Bresnahan,' of Omaha, In a 10-round aftalr herej» to-morrow night. The boxers are to weigh in at 130 pounds at 3 p. m. of _ rhe day of the bout, which will take place in the Auditorium. The win-. 1 ner is to meet Young Shugrue, of New York. ^1 ALCOHOL 3EK CENT. AYegelable Preparation for As similatiiig the FoodamlRetjuta tin 1 ', Hit’ Stomachs and Dowels ot BBsiBiiroa emu For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature Promotes D i c\cs tto n Che erful ness a nd RestContain s neither Opmm.Morphir.e nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. JfrnpeofOhiDrXmUPmm. Unpha 5fcd~ Jbc.Smnn *■ BocMeMs- AiisrSecd * ttimSrrJ • ilanfkd Sumr • nbtrrfntnntmr. Aperferl Remedy forConsfipi tton, Sour Storjach.Diarrhoea Worms ,Convulsions.i''eveTish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Guaranic ed under 1 Copy of Wrapper. For Over, Thirty Years" emu Tut CCNTAUR COMPANY. NEW VOPIK CITY. ESTABLISHED 23 YEARS DR.E.G. GRIFFIN'S GATE CITY DENTAL ROOMS BEST WORK AT LOWEST PRICES All Work Guaranteed. Hours 8 to 6-Phone M. 1708-Sundays 9-1 24 ,/ -. Whitehall St. Over Brown A Allens ne- Irom LaGrange. Denies He Knew She Was Wed. The girl and young Mashburn were married by Justice of the Peace Girardeau last Saturday afternoon, and Mashburn declares that he did not know she had over been married before. He has known her for a t ear, he says. Last Friday afternoon she came to Atlanta and obtained board at the Doll's Hospital on Luckie Street. She disappeared Sat in day morning, and when she failed to return Saturday night the police, were notified and a search begun for her. The search va.s abandoned when it was t' irn <• *rat sht ahd burn were married. This morning tee girl told a re markable story to the police --a. story which, if true, may cause wholesale prosecution of prominent citizens o' West Point and LaGrange, including her grandfather, J. K. P. Harmon. “I was forced to marry Smith,” the girl' cried. ”1 never loved him. and I never will live with him. J hate ihe sight of the green old thing. I'll go to the penitentiary for life before I'll live with him. If 1 get a chance I'm going to shoot him. ' The green old countryman Is try ing to break ftp my romance. "I love Jack, and 1 won't five with a man 1 d n't love. Marriage with out love is hell, and 1 don’t propose to live in hell. And it makes me think of hell to even look at Smith.’’ Father Is Rich, She Says. The girl is the daughter of J. W. Harmon, of LaGrange. She says her father is worth more than yOO.ftftO. hut that he never had much use for her. At the time of her marriage Best For Frying The goodness and delicacy of fried foods depends upon the fat used for frying. * Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard may be heated to a high degree without scorching or discolor ing. This puts a delicate brown crisp crust on the food so quickly that it prevents its becoming grease soaked, and it enables you to use Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard many times for luL d frying before clarifying. Wednesday, April 30, at 3 P. 42 of Atlanta's Choicest Residence Lots in / PEACHTREE HEIGHTS WILL BE OFFERED AT / AUCTION Your last chance to secure a lot in this subdivision at these prices—the prices you make when they are put on the block. tug tes, pm- » a ii tc *c -It is economical, pure, efficient and /LI does not flavor the food cooked in Xit. Government inspected and ^passed; put up always in tight covered, new tin pails, 3 sizes. Ask Your Dealer for Silver-Leaf Swift & Company U. S. A. Peachtree is built up practically to this property. Twenty handsome homes have already been built here, others are going up this year. All essential home conveniences. The Terms are attractive. E. RIVERS REALTY CO. 8 West Alabama St. STEVE R. JOHNSTON, Auctioneer 5Man,BMisat: .TBifJ :>es 1C