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HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY. AUGUST 24, 1913.
Southern Drawl an Opera Asset
+•■!• +•+ +•+ y +•+
Alabama Singer Lauds Accent
+•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+
Sees Fame for Dixie Song Birds
HEAVY TOLL FOR! WHD STOLE ID
Hunnicutt Won in First Round
+•+ *•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +*+
Beat Bravo With Wooden Sword
Miss Neida Humphrey.
Government Bends Every Effort to
Speed Trial of Federal Immi
gration Commissioner’s Son on
the Charge of "White Slavery.”
Former California State Architect,
Facing Four to Twenty Years in
Prison,Plans Appeal—Compan
ion to Follow Suit if Convicted.
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. IS.—Su-
premely confident after the conviction
of Maury I. Differs, former State archi
tect, the United StAtee authorities,
prosecuting the famous “white slave’’
cases, which at one time threatened
to disrupt President Wilson's Cabi
net. are using every energy to speed
the trial and obtain a similar verdict
against Drew Camlnettl, who was
Diggs’ companion In the sensational
flight to Reno with Marsha Warring
ton and Lola Norris.
Diggs will be sentenced September
2. Under the verdict of the Jury, the
Judge can fix the penalty at from four
to twenty years, and owing to the
fact that virtually the same evidence
that was Introduced against Diggs
will be Introduced against Camlnettl,
leads the Government to bellevs that
conviction Is certain.
Diggs* attorneys have already an
nounced they will carry the case to
the highest court In the land. Should
Camlnettl he convicted, he, too, doubt
less would appeal.
Diggs Gives $20 000 Bail.
Ball In the sum of 120,000 was read
ily furnished by Diggs’ relatives when
the amount was fixed by the court
and was accepted by the United States
Commissioner.
The case was one of the most spec
tacular ever tried In California. Diggs
1s a former State architect. Camlnettl
Is a son of the United States Commis
sioner of immigration. Both men are
married and have families. Both are
of high social standing In Sacra
mento.
Both men are considerably older
that the girls with whom they eloped.
The undisputed evidence Irt the case
was that the Intimate relations be
tween Diggs and Miss Warrington and
Camlnettl and Miss Norris had be
come notorious in Sacramento. Fam
ilies of both the young men were pre
paring to start criminal action against
them to break these relations.
Then they and the girls disappeared.
They were traced to Reno, where the
twp couples were living as men and
wives in a rented bungalow. The men
were charged with violations of the
Mann anti-white slave act.
Blames Giris for Elopement.
Both Miss Warrington and Miss
Norris charged that the men had
threatened, cajoled and coerced them
Into making the trip to Reno. They
declared that they had promised to
obtain divorces from their wives In
order to wed them.
Diggs, In his defense, pleaded that
the girls were the persons responsible
for the flight, that they had Induced
them to fly to Reno.
It was this attitude of hiding behind
a woman’s skirt that caused the most
severe condemnation of Diggs. Great
-stress was laid on It by Theodore
Roche, attorney for the Government,
In his Anal appeal to the jury for con
viction.
“This defendant,’’ said Roche, “did
not deny on the stand the truth of the
essential facts we have shown. And
then he comes before you and asks
acquittal.
“Hides Behind Wife's Skirts.”
“The defendant in a criminal case
usually bases defense on the presump
tion of Innocence, but this defendant
relies on his own depravity. He comes
into court* covered with his own
shame and hider behind the skirt* of
his wife and child.
“When these girls went to Reno
their departure meant social ostra-
clzement. Marsha Warrington went
because she believed and trusted this
man. Sh© didn't desire money,
dresses or presents. Her parents gave
her these. But this man had prom
ised her marriage, as Camineiti had
. promised Lola Norris.
“Those promises wer© never In
tended to be kept. What was intend
ed was to abandon the girls in Reno.
They never could have returned to
Sacramento—and you know what that
meant. But the alluring promise of
marriage had been held out to them."
Scores Conduct in Home.
Attorney Roche was particularly
severe with Diggs for the misconduct
in his own home to which he testi
fied yesterday. He had not been con
tent. said Roche, with making an as
signation house out of his office, but
he was similarly to degrade the pri
vacy of a home he shared with a
virtuous and loving wife.
In seeking to establish that the trip
was not premeditated and that the
two girls had not been induced to
take it by threats of scandal on one
hand and promises of marriage on the
other, Diggs willingly testified to his
own misconduct and the embarrass
ments, domestic and busmes.'i, into
which it had led him.
His counsel in summing up the evi
dence did not palliate th*>se acts.
“Paint this defendant as you will—
a monster if you please," argued Rob
ert Devlin, his senior counsel, ‘but
tell me what motive h© would have
had in going out of the State for the
purpose of accomplishing those things
already accomplished.
“Counsel may characterize him as
they please, and 1 may not differ with
them. They say his act was shame
less. and 1 may feel the same way
about it. but it Isn’t white slavery."
This W’as the whole argumentative
substance of th© defense. There re
mained the rhetorical and the emo
tional appeals and. of course, they
not neglected. The girls were
id for tempting the men. They
ailed willing accomplices in
evil had been done, and the wis-
of trusting a woman scorned
when she bears witness against the
lover who has discharged her was
called into question.
Miss Neida Humphrey, of Huntsville, Blames
Laziness for Dearth of Divas.
HUNTSVILLE, ALA., Aug. 23.—
The soft, musical voice of Southern
women, which poets have raved
about, others have envied, and the
comic papers have made subject of
satire, has a value in dollars, and it
has an even greater value In the
world of art.
So thinks Miss Neida Humphrey,
of Huntsville, who has Just returned
home after a three-year course of
voice culture under Caruso In New
York.
Miss Humphrey, realizing the su
preme demand for American prlma
donnas on the operatic stage, not
only In this country, but in every
capital in Europe, thinks there is a
world of opportunity for the young
women of her own section In this
field.
“The Southern woman's voice,”
says Miss Humphrey, “possesses
more natural musical qualities than
the voices of any other women In the
world. With proper cultivation that
quality should make them the great
est opera stars. The world has long
known of this quality, hut the South
ern women of talent have Just refus
ed to grasp their opportunities.
Blames Indolence in Part.
“And I guess the laziness so gen
erally attributed to our people may
have a great deal to do with it. Sing
ing, I mean perlous singing, is the
hardest sort of work.
“There is hardly a girl ol’ social
position in Southland who has
not a smattering of musical educa
tion. The trouble Is It’s only a smat
tering. When they reached the point
where singing meant real work they
retired gracefully to other fields.
“But I belie* t? that the time is not
far off when the Southern girl of
talent will realize the life she Is over
looking and then I am certain thdt
there will be girls of Dixie whose
names will be Just as famous os
those of Farrar, Suzanne Adams and
Louise Homer, all American born.
Miss Humphrey is very young and
she is very, very pretty, but that is
not all. She has a voice of remark
able power and dramatic quality, but
withal she holds In it that soft sweet
ness that declares her home as plain
ly as it would be declared were she
to walk on the stage waving the
Stars and Bars.
Has Charmed the President.
She has already done things in
music and she Intends to dp more.
In New York she has sung before
the most critical audiences In concert
and has won their high approbation.
It was she who charmed President
Wilson and a distinguished gathering
In New York recently at a concert.
In Chattanooga last May, during
the reunion of the Confederate Vete
rans, she sang before the old soldiers
and was given an ovation.
Miss Humphrey intends to return
to New’ York in the fall to complete
her studies. She has already been
assured of an operatic engagement
and Huntsville believes that It will
soon boast an operatic celebrity.
Colonel Gailliard, of South Caro
lina, Breaks Down. Under
Tremendous Task.
More than any other section of
the country, the South is expected \
to realize in prosperity and develop
ment by the opening of the Panama
Canal. But the South is to pay its
toll and pay for It dearly.
Just when the canal was an as
sured fact, Senator John T. Morgan,
of Alabama, father of the Isthmian
Waterway idea, died as a result of
his years of ceaseless labor Impress
ing the necessity of rthe canal on
Congress.
Nok Lieutenant Colonel David Du
Bois Gailliard, of South Carolina, the
army engineer who dug the Culebra
Cut, has had to abandon the scene of
hls triumph and return to the United
States to give hls nervous system
shattered by his work, a rest which
It has needed for months.
And that is not all. From the zone
the advices come that Colonel Wil
liam L. Slbert, of Alabama, the army
engineer in charge of the work on
the great Gatun Dam, Is on the point
of a breakdown and it Is extremely
doubtful if he will be strong enough
to stay In the zone to see bis work
completed.
Careers of Two Similar.
Th© careers of Colonel Slbert and
Colonel Gailliard have been remark
ably similar. Gailliard was born in
South Carolina; Slbert, in Alabama.
They entered West Point the same
year and both graduated In 1884
among the first five men in their
class.
After their graduation, both were
sent to Wtllets Point and in 1908,
when the canal work was put in the
hands of the army engineers, Colonel
Goethals Immediately picked the two
Southerners as his chief aides. Slbert
was put tn charge of the work on
the Atlantic side, which Included the
building of the Gatun Dam, while
Gailliard was In charge of the work
In the Interior of the zone.
That Lieutenant Colonel Gaillard
had suffered a nervous breakdown
was known only to a few of his Inti
mate friends in the army. A few
weeks ago when his condition be
came serious the matter was brought
to the attention of General Bixby,
the chief engineer In Washington, ana
bv General Hixby called to the at
tention of Secretary of War Garrlst n,
who Immediately granted the strick
en engineer a long leave of absence.
Lieutenant Colonel Charles F. Ma
son, Medical Corps, U. 9. A., the di
rector of the Ancon Hospital, in the
Canal Zone; Mrs. Gaillard and Lieu
tenant Colonel Gaillard's young son
came with him and went with him to
Baltimore, where he will enter the
John Hopkins Hospital. There he
will b e under the care of some of the
most eminent specialists in nervous
disorders in this country.
Leave Did Not Aid Him.
Colonel Gaillard was in New York
less than two months ago after a six
weeks’ leave of absence that he had
taken in the hope that the rest would
Benefit his health to the extent that
he would be able to remain in the
Canal Zone. He sailed from New
York on June 27 last, again to take
charge of the work In the Central Di
vision.
Those who talked with him at that
time remember that he expressed a
desire to get away from the Isthmus
as soon as his work was finished, but,
he added, with a touch of sadness In
his soft Southern voice, "When I do
leave it will be with deep and sincere
regret."
Lieutenant Colonel Gaillard is the
first of the famous army engineers'
employed in the construction o' the
Detectives Shadowing Mail Thief
Believed to Have Cached $40,-
000 After Robbery.
- — — m ^ “ ■ ■
Ilf iCE 43 YEARS
KANSAS CITY. Aug. 23.—Charles
Savage, a nt^ro mall robber, released
from the penitentiary In Leavenworth,
Is being shadowed by three detectives.
He will be kept under watch con
stantly because somewhere Is hidden
$40,000 of the $50,000 In currency he
stole five years ago from a registered,
mall pouch, and nobody except Sav
age knows where It Is.
When Savage was released he was
met at the door by hls mother and a
young woman to whom he was en
gaged before he was sent to prison.
They cam© at once to Kansas City
to see an uncle, who is dying.
“They needn’t watch me," he said.
“If .they think I’m going to dig up
$40,000 they're mistaken. I wish I
knew where there was $40,000 buried.’’
“Isn’t It queer that $2,000 In $20
gold certificates of the same series
as stolen from the mall sack were
found blowing around In the wind
near* your mother’s home in South
Leaven worth this spring?” Savage
was asked.
“Yes, that’s queer. I don't under
stand,” lie answered. “I read about
that, and I figured It out that some
person who lived in South Leaven
worth had stolen that mail sack and
hidden the money there, and the rain
had washed away the dirt where i T
was burled, and the wind got at it and
blew it away.”
How Atlanta’s Broadsword Champion Worsted
French Fencing Master.
Employees’ Pension
Measure Approved
Pennsylvania Cities Are Permitted
to Establish Pund for Faithful
Municipal Workers.
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 23.—Under
the* provisions of an act passed by
the Legislature, which Governor Ton
er has approved, this city Is given au
thority to establish a municipal pen
sion fund for employees. The act ap
plies to all city employees who have
given twenty years of service to the
city.
The act provides that In the event
of the creating of the fund every em
ployee will be compelled to pay Into
the fund 1 per cent of hls yearly
salary.
The pension to be allowed the bene
ficiary will be equal to one-half of the
average yearly salary received by him
during the last two years before his
retirement.
Panama Canal to be stricken as
result of hls work. A few weeks
ago Colonel William M. Black, Corps
of Engineers, the chief of that branch
of the service In this part of the
United States, the officer who wa3
head of the engineering board which
solved the problem of raising the old
battleship Maine, was in Pam ma and
was Gaillard’s guest.
Close Friends for Yeats.
The two officers have been inti
mate friends for years. During his
stay at Empire, the headquarters of
Colonel Gaillard, Colonel Black noted
and realized that the builder of Cu-
lebra Cut needed a long and complete
rest.
“Gaillard,” said Colonel Black last
night, “is one of the most wonderful
organizers the army has developed.
Hls work in the Canal Zone has been
little short of marvelous. He laid out
his plans in such a way that he got
the maximum out of everything, es
pecially in the handling of the rail
road part of the work. He was also
able within a few months after he
took charge at Empire to double the
work accomplished In a specified
time. Some of the things that he
did experienced railroad men had
said were practically impossible.”
Dweller in Desert
Sees First Pine Tree
Full Grown Woman Is Mystified by
Foliage—Also Takes Moun
tain Snow Bath.
CHICO, CAL.. Aug. 23.—Miss Ilene
lyocey, of Visalia, cousin of Frank
M. Moore, of this city, a grown wom
an, saw her first pine tree when ahe
went with the Moores for an auto
Dip to the mountains.
Shu has resided long in the desert
southland, and was not only pleased
.but mystified at the foliage and the
fact that she could reach the snow
bound regions of the Sierra Nevadas
inside of an hour’s time.
The pariv left here especially to give
Miss Locey an id< a of the diversified
elimuie of the Sac ramento Valley and
a snow bath in the higher altitude.
Woman Given Job
Of Cleaning Up State
Success In Making Tacoma a Spot
less Town Causes Promotion
in Service.
College Professor
Seeks Laborer’s Pay
Unable to Make Both Ends Meet,
Teacher Resigns Chair In
University.
Time was when the prize fight was
not au fait, when In the best fami
lies, and even In the second best, and
maybe In the third, they frowned
down upon the pugilistic art as bru
tal and regenerate. Then It was that
the youn bloods turned to cockflght-
Ing and fencing for the gladiatorial
features of their lives, and were sat
isfied.
And that time -was not so very long
ago. Calvin W. Hunnicutt, who i*
Atlanta’s oldest citizen, revived them
In memory yesterday, when he fell to
the young bloods turned to cockflght-
between Charley White and Frank
Whitney, with the remark that things
were not like this of yore.
Of course, he had a dueling story
of his own to tell, and he told it—
of how he fought an arrogant French
fencing master In a combat with
wooden swords, and how all Atlanta
looked on and cheered him as its
champion.
It occurred before the war, when
all good things, It seems, occurred. It
occurred Just at the beginning of the
war, and had Its effect In keeping
Mr. Hunnicutt out of that conflict.
“There had been talk of war, war,
war pretty generally,” he said. The
trouble clouds were thick and black,
and we organized here In Atlanta a
cavalry troop that we called the Ful
ton Dragoons. Captain Wilson was
our officer, I was first lieutenant, and
C. B. Whaley, my best friend, was
first sergeant.
"All went well at first, and things
were pleasant. But after a w’hile
politics began to leak in, as Inevitably
it will with all volunteer military
bodies. Everybody kr. ows everybody
else so well, you see that very natur
ally jealousy comes in. Anyhow,
when the time came for the election
of a captain for a new term, Whaley
and I, backing Wilson, lost out, be
cause the other man promised horses
to all members of the troop. Then
dissatisfaction grew and the organiza
tion loosened.
“The new captain and hls great
ally, Second Lieutenant Williams,
were full of ideas as to how to run
a millatry organization, and began to
put these ideas into play. That made
more dissatisfaction for no volunteer
soldier likes to be driven by men who
were their friends and associates.
“One of their ideas was the im
portation of a fencing teacher to in
struct the men in broadsword use.
Now Whaley and I had practiced
considerably with the broadsword,
and were rather expert In its use, but
we said nothing of it to the captain
and hls friends.
"Well, the fencing master came, a
Frenchman from Mobile. He was a
flourishing, affected sort of fellow,
and considerable of a boaster. Not
long after he was here, he broke off
teaching and began to talk about his
own great skill and to show it off.
“One day he challenged all of us.
“ ‘Nobody here can touch me with
his sw'ord,’ he announced. ‘I don’t
fear to let any of you try.’ And he
flourished his sword.
“Whaley and I decided to take him
on, and I went to him. He laughed at
me. But I insisted, and the date was
set for our combat. That there should
be no bloodshed—because we were go
ing to do some furious fencing it
seemed—I put a negro of mine to
work making two wooden swords, or
sticks. These were to be our wea
pons.
“Somehow the tidings that there
was to be a fight got abroad. At
lanta was not as large as it is now,
but It was a right smart town even
then, and when the day for the fight
came, everybody turned out.
“We had planned to have the duel
In a theater, owned in the days of
old Atlanta by a man named Wil
liams. The place was packed, and
I began to be a little nervous over
the public nature of the affair.
“We squared off, and the erowd
settled back in the seats for a long
and interesting fight. But it wasn’t
for long. The Frenchman came at
mo with a flourish, and I had a flour
ish to match his. Thence I made a
thrust at him, the thrust that we
know technically as the point tierce.
It went through hls guard, and to hls
body. If we had been fighting with
real swords, my opponent would have
been run through.
“All Atlanta laughed. The French
man had pretty generally advertised
his ability to fight, and everybody
w’as there. However, there were one
or two persons w’ho didn’t like the
way the fight came out, particularly
the new captain of the dragoons and
hls ally. After the fight they be
gan working to get me to resign. The
duel, they claimed everywhere, might
have an effect in breaking up dis
cipline. And so, with their dissatis
faction showing plain, I resigned.
"The Frenchman we didn’t see aft
er the half minute duel. If the
dragoons learned broadsword fencing,
they learned It from somebody else.
“It’s a pity the art of fencing does
not survive in the popular fancy. It
is clean, beneficial and Interesting.
But this prize fighting ”
Miss Edith Randall, of Boston,
Expects to Find Corpse
Glacier at Foot Mt. Blanc,
on
BOSTON, An*. 23—Miss Edith Ran
dall, of this city, has gone to Cham
onix, Switzerland, one one of the
strangest errands known. She hopes
to find in the glacier there the body
of her father, who lost his life climb
ing on Mont Blano forty-three years
ago. Ten others were lost with him
in a snowstorm near the summit.
All told, two Americans, one Scotch
man and eight guides and porters
died.
Five of the bodies were recovered.
It Is expected by guides that the six
others will he delivered up by the
glacier this year.
Scientists are Interested as It may
supply evidence to prove their theo
ries on the speed cf the annual march
of glaciers toward the valleys.
Miss Randall's father, John Ran
dolph, a Boston banker, was fifty-four
when he lost hls life In 1870.
Last year Miss Randall came to
Chamonix, as the ice axe and several
small articles relonging to Mr. Ran
dall had been found by guides at the
foot of the Glacier des Bossons.
Many Americans and English Al
pinists, as well as guides, Joined In the
search for the body, but without re
sult. All hope for better luck this
summer.
Tents Only Shelter
For Toledo Families
City Is Growing So Rapidly That
Builders Can Not Construe
Houses Demanded.
TOLEDO, Aug. 23.—Because the city
has not enough houses to rent and build
ers are not able to construct houses as
rapidly as they are desired tents are
being used as homes In Toledo.
Two tent colonies have been estab
lished in the city. In both districts oc
cupants of the tents are owners of lots
on which the temporary homes have
been erected. The lots have been pur
chased as home sites and tents are
serving as temporary homes.
The tent homes constat of living
rooms, dining rooms t.nd k tchens. Each
has a flower and vegetable garden and
one is equipped with a chicken park, a
stable and outbuildings Living rooms
are convertible into bedrooms, and ham
mocks stretched in the open, are used
day and night.
TACOMA. Aug. 23.—Because of he./
successful efforts to transform Tacoma
into a “Spotless Town,” Miss Arizona
B. Wimple, food and market inspector,
is to be rewarded with a bigger job—
the cleaning up of the State of Wash
ington.
This w r as the advice received here to
day from the Governor's office in Olym
pia, w’here It is said Miss Wimple is to
be appointed State bakery ahd sanitary
inspector.
Her methods in cleaning up Tacoma
were simple and direct and included
publicity as an aid In bringing about the
desired reforms.
Frequent Inspections of bakeries and
other food dispensing establishments
were made and the score announced in
the newspapers.
Miss Wimple, who Is young and pret
ty. will receive $4,000 a year from the
State.
She Is a graduate of the University
of Michigan.
CANDLES BURNING AT
WAKE SET HOUSE AFIRE
CALGARY. ALBERTA. Aug 23.—A
Are w’hich started from candles set
j about a coffin at a wake, at the house
of J. Selar. here burned the hair and
eyebrows off the body of an aged wom
an. Dortlons of the face were charred.
^ Firemen extinguished the blaze.
BERKELEY, CAL., Aug. 23.—Un
able to make both ends meet on a
salary of $900 paid him by the Uni
versity of California, Paul Boehncke,
an Instructor In the German depart
ment, has withdrawn from the fac
ulty and Is seeking a position in
which he can support himself and
family of two children.
During the last few summers Boeh
ncke has managed to augment hls
meager salary by working as a plas
terer at from $5 to $7 a day, or near
ly twice the amount he was paid by
the university.
Apache War in ’80’s
Is Cause of Divorce
Husband Deserted Thirty Years Ago
by Wife Who Didn’t Like
Wild West.
CHICAGO. Aug. 23.—Geronlmo and
his wild hordes of Apaches, who ter
rorized New Mexico in the eighties,
were the direct cause of a divorce suit
which Allen L. Eaton begun yester
day in the Superior Court against
Zuma E. Eaton.
The Eatons were married In Silver
City, N. Mex., in 1886. when the
Apache uprising was on. Mrs. Eaton,
who hailed from Pittsburg, did not
enjoy the wild Western life her mar
ried life entailed, and she deserted
her husband.
Common Laborer
Strikes Big Gold Vein
Ore Will Run $60,000 to Ton and
Mine Is Largest in Southern
Oregon.
I
MEDFORD, OREG., Aug. 23 —What
is reported as the biggest gold strike
made in Southern Oregon has been
been reported- by Elmer Higginboth
am on the mine owned by him and
M. G. Womack on Kane's Creek. The
ore will run $60,000 to the ton, ac
cording to assays of samples made
here.
Higginbotham had been a common
laborer for many years until Womack
offered to “grub-stake” him on a
prospecting trip up Kane’s Creek.
BERI BERI CAUSED BY
RICE DIET, SAYS EXPERT
Special Cable to The American.
BERLIN, Aug. 23.—The Berlin Med
ical Association reports that the well-
known investigator of beri berl. Dr.
Max Moszkowski, finds, after a re
markable experiment, that the disease
Is caused by the use of rice.
Dr. Moszkowski for 138 days sub
sisted almost entirely upon rice. All
the symptoms of beri berl manifested
themselv es.
At ^he close of the experiment an
injection of serum containing an ex
tract of rice resulted in a complete
recovery. N
“Back on
the Job”
again and very quick
ly, too, if you will only
let Hostetter’s Stom
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digestion to become
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free from constipation.
These are absolutely
necessary in order to
maintain health. Try
it to-day but be sure it’s
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103-5-7-9-11 Whitehall Street, Corner Mitchell