Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 02, 1913, Image 1

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ALWAYS F R jT © © The SUNDA Y AMERICAN Order It NOW Both Phone* Main 100 The Atlanta Georgian Heed for Profit—GEORGIA!! WANT ADS—Use for Result! VOL. XII. NO. 26. ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1913. 2 CENTS. PAT NO MORE ' SEEK MISSING PENCIL FACTORY GIRL AFFINITYEARLE DENIES DECEIVING HIS WIFE Mrs. Helen T. S. Earle. Mrs. Hinkle Insists on Suing for Divorce POLICE FEAR Lillian Russell In Airship; Thinks It Helps Complexion PARIS Sept. 2.—Lillian Russell, who left Paris recently for Germany, telegraphs the following graphic ac count of her experiences in a Zeppe lin airship: Yes, I flew through the air over the City of Berlin to-day. Only one word describes the trip—won derful. I have often envied the birds as they flew through the air, but to day I flew faster than any bird. When the dirigible balloon is per fected there will be no more wars. There will be universal peace, and I shall be glad of it. From our commanding position to-day a whole army could have been de stroyed. I could not advise women with weak hearts to make this trip. But the wonderful air should be food for complexions. LILLIAN RUSSELL. THREE RAIL Race Suicide Lauded At Suffragist Meet NEW YORK, Sept. 2.—Suffragists at a noonday meeting were stunned when Charles Goldzier, a well-known attorney, uttered this sentiment: “Race suicide is a good thing for our country. It is one of the impor tant features of the reform movement for better conditions and a great re gard for human life. “When the time comes that w*» really valu# human .life, then it will I be time to bring children into the wbrTd. Until then it is better that no more children be born.” Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. PARIS. Sept. 2.—Ferdinand Pinney Earle, whose latest soul mate, Mrs. Helen Theodora Sidford Earle, an nounced .on August 11 In London that .-he had sued in the United States for divorce, has given out a state ment concerning thr affair. He says he is doing his utmost to stop the proceedings, which have been insti tuted mischievously. “Having seen the newspaper clip pings to which you refer, lam glad of the opportunity to correct the statement printed in several dailies, supposedly from Mrs. Earle in Ox- . ford, that at the time of our marriag2 J she was Ignorant of my history,” says Earle. Savs Pinna Have Record. If you will send to the town office of the Iff ley section of Oxford you mav obta ! n a oopv of the banns of our marriage, in which the record of my divorce is fully set forth. The^ banns were published for three days before the ceremony. “I must also contradict the publi cation that my motner called on Mrs Sidford, or was otherwise involved in the affair. She was opposed to the match. Her only activity in mv behalf in Oxford was to inspect <he rooms at No. 219‘IffMy road when ? was nearch’ng for quarters in order to attend the university “For the sake of my two girl babies” (children by the latest Mrs. F.arle) “1 am doing my utmost to revent this trouble from advancing {■< a final stage. As earfy as July, 1911, a certain clergyman tried tc eparate us on the alleged ground that ,i second marriage is illicit after a divorce. At present several persons if ‘religious’ tendencies are persistent THE WEATHER. Forecast for Atlanta and Georgia—Probably fair Tues- , day and Wednesday. Tries to Do Tango On Bell Buoy; Recovers LOS ANGELES, Sept. 2.—Accept ing a dare to dance a tango on tho swaying top of a bell buoy at Long Beach, Mrs. Katherine Call narrowly- escaped drowning. After swimming a quarter of a mile to the buoy she attempted to dan on its surface, but w-as hurled in’o the sea. Life guards rescued her. Build Vaterland as Sister to Imperator Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. HAMBURG. Sept. 2.—The keel of the Vaterland, building as a siscer ship to the Imperator, the largest ship In the w%»rld .recently aflre at her New Jersey dock, has been laid. MACON, Sept. 2.—Thus far efforts of mutual friends to bring about a reconciliation between Dr. A. B. Hin kle and his wife, Mrs. Nita Hinkle, who are estranged, have been un availing. and Mrs. Hinkle has reiter ated her intention of Immediately suing for divorce. She has placed the matter in the hand* of John R. L. Smith, her attorney and it is stated the suit will be filed as soon as he can prepare the papers. Dr. Hinkle declares that his ene mies are urging his wife to take this course. He says he still loves her and their children, and does not pro pose to do anything to bring further disgrace upon them. He declares ne intends to remain in Macon and prac tice his profession and in time con vince the public that he has been a true and loyal husband and father during his 25 years of marriec life. Scores Husband’s Conduct. Mrs. Hinkle, on the other hanl, charges that her husbiipd.’s conduct has been such as to cause her and the children to be ostracized by their former friends, and that she had fully determined to seek a legal separa tion. Mrs. Hinkle and the children have for the time being left the palatial Hinkle residence and are residing with Dr. and Mrs. J. D. Lanier in the Nevarn, Apartrrents. Dr. Hinkle and his 80-year-old mother, Mrs. Laura Hinkle, of New York, whose hip was broken in the family melee Saturday nirht. are occupying the 1 Hinkle home. Mrs Nita Hinkle rays | she will not molest her husband un- 1 til h's mother has Yecovered, but ne i must then leave. Tne aged Mrs. Hin- I kle is in a serious condition. The home and practica 1 ' all th“ •other property Dr. Hinkle has ac- ( cumulated was transferred to the wife some t'me ago, the combined value being ' estmated at $100,000. Tf she* succeeds in holding this property, an.] indications are that she will, Dr. Hin kle will be left a poor man. He savs his wearing appu* *1 and personal •rinkets are about all he has left. in their efforts to break up my home. Beyond this I have nothing to say.’ Information concerning Earle that seems to be reliable, is that in his present stay on the Continent no woman has become his affinity or even his comrade. He visited a F'rench family named D'Hautricourt and other friends n< <r Calais part of the time, and for the remainder of his stay has been entertained by the Wan- dterweidens, the family of an artist friend in America. Both these fann i’es are so observant of convent’ons that they are classed as “puritan” irt their communitiel. It is believed they would not tolerate conduct in Earle or any otlifer that would provoke a divorce suit against him or invoLve their names. ' Children Her Companions. LONDON, Sept. 2.—Mrs Hejen T S. Earle is extreme’ attached to her children, who are here with her, and that attachment is intensified be cause she regards them as her com panions in misfortune. Their father has never even seen his younger daughter, who closely resembles him. Mrs. Earle has no plans for the future, beyond obtaining a. divorce, but she will continue to live with her mother In England or may accom pany her to join her father, wh*o is building up a clientele as an archi tect in Canada. and tied one. Of the last dozen games they have won eleven. Now they are confronted by the Mobile GuTs, Mike Finn’s hard-hit ting bunch, with a three-game lead and a four-game series to play. Atlanta must win all four games of that series. Winning three and losing one, the Gulls would leave Atlanta leading by one game. Then Atlanta would have to win Saturday’s game from Chatta nooga while Mobile lost Saturday’s and Sunday’s games to New Orleans to finish in front. * Mobile is * not likely to lose two ! games to New Orleans. If {he Crackers can win four games in a row, however, the Gulls will be oneydown, and an even break iti the two New Orleans games would give the Crackers the pennant, even if they lost the final game to Chatta nooga Saturday. Every Proposition Possible. If the Crackers took the Mobile se ries straight. and then won the sin gle game with Chattanooga, the Gulls would be beaten, no matter how their games with New Orleans came out. And there is every proposition pos sible in the lajjt drive to the wire. But it all hinges on a very simple proposition— Atlanta must beat Mobile four games in a row. The club is in great shape for the Continued on Page 2, Column 5. “My Own Beauty Secrets" ANNA BV meld The Most Instructive and Highly Inter esting Series of Its Kind Ever Pre sented to Beauty- Seeking Girls anc Women, Superbly Illustrated by Spe cially Posed Photo graphs. BEGINS ON THE WOMAN’S MAGAZINE PAGE NEXT THURSDAY NEW HAVEN, CONN., Sept. 2 — From 10 to 25 persons were killed and 75 injured shortly before 7 o’clock this morning when the White Moun tain Express, southbound, on the New Haven Railroad crashed into the rear end of the Bar Harbor Express No. 91 at Talcott Crossing, a mile north of North Haven, Conn., eight miles from this city. The Bar Harbor Express had stopped at a banjo signal, which was set against it. In the dense fog che following train failed to see the train ahead and nlowed through five of the rear coaches, all of which were heav ily loaded. Coroner Mix, of this city, was im mediately notified and, with a corps of physicians and nurses, was soon on the scene. The dead and wounded were scattered along the tracks, and many of them were gathered together as quickly as possible and taken to New Haven-Wallli ord trolley line, not far distant, where they were started for the New Haven hospitals. This stretch of road Is being equipped at the present time with a new system of signals to replace the old-style banjo signals, which had been in use for many years. These cignals had been condemned following a wreck on the line of road between this city and Hartford, by the Connecticutt public utilities com mission. It was recently announced following the series of wrecks on the road that the signals system w'ould be changed. To-day is the first day of the ad ministration of President Howard N. ! Elliott, of the New Haven road, suc- | reeding President Charles N. Mellen, | whose resignation followed a series of 1 attacks on the administration of the road, augmented by a number of fatal ’ wrecks. j At the offices of the New' Haven road here it was stateed that the list of dead would not exceed fifteen. Early estimates exceeded this. It was said that the dead were still lying beside the wreck, nearly two hours after the crash and that many of the injured were being cared for there temporarily pending removal to hispitals. Ten Dead in Collision Of English Trains. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. DERBY, England. Sept. 2.—Ten persons were killed, ten were fatally hurt and many others injured in a rear-end collision between two fa mous North England express traiiu j on the Midland Railroad near Aisgiil ! today. B n th trains were en route i from Carlisle to London, when one overtook the other. The accident was due to a mistaken signal and fog. Several of the coaches on the for ward train w’ere telescoped and the wreckage caught fire. Iowa Wreck Fatal To Three Persons Probed. CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa, Sept. 2.— I Investigation was begun today of the wreck on the Decora branch of the Rock Island Railroad in which three persons were killed yesterday. The train was running thirty miles an hour when the engine left the rails ahd the entire train slid down a high embankment. Battleships to House Tubercular Children BUFFALO, N. Y.. Sept. 2.—Utiliza tion of the Instrument** of human de struction in saying t’e lives of tuber cular victims is planned i>y the fourth International Congress on School Hy giene, which, at Its closing business meeting, adopted a resolution asking the United States Government to con vert its discarded warship* and cruisers into open-air schools and tubercular sanitarium® for children and adults. Cadet, Refusing to ‘Squeal/ Waits Trial WASHINGTON, Sept. 3.—On infor mation that Benjamin Sloan Beverly, a cadet from South Carolina, was under arrest In West Point awaiting court martial for refusal to “squeal’’ on liazcrs. Representative Asbury F. Lever to-day ascertained from the War Department that such “squeal ing” was obligatory before a cadet could be graduated or go on fur lough. “It la an order of the War Depart ment,” said Lever, “and I regard such an order as a disgrace to the United States Army. And if Beverly be dis missed, I feel sure I will have no trouble to get a bill passed providing for his reinstantement.” Queen Mary Sends Back Gift Crucifix Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, Sept. 2.—Queen Mary’s extreme Protestantism has been out raged by a harmless gift. King Manuel’s bride-elect, Princess Victoria of Hohenzollern, lately be came the intimate friend of the Queen’s daughter, Princess Mary. During the Queen’s absence, Princes* Victoria presented Princess Mary with a gold crucifix. The Queen seized the gift and returned it. Divorce Lawyer in Good Standing Again RENO, NEV.. Sept. 2.—William H. Schneizer, former prominent divorce attorney of this city and known as the “father of the Reno divorce col ony.” vrho was disbarred from prac tising law in Nevada for six months following proceedings involving charges of improper practice in con nection with the now notable divorce cane in January. 1911, has been fully reinstated by order of the Supreme Court. Abruzzi Wins Prize As BestTango Dancer Special Cable %o The Atlanta Georgian. VENICE, Sept. 2.—An aristocratic dinner party given here by the Duke of Abruzzi was followed by a dance at which prizes were offered for couples who gave the best per formances in various classes in Ar gentine tango competition. The puke himself, with Miss Genia Lenie, as partner, won the first prize. Fire House Is Too Nice for Firemen ATLANTIC CITY. N. J., Sept. 2.— The I>epartment of Safety is in a quandary because the City Commis sioners have built a fire house so handsome that the firemen don’t want to occupy it. The two-story structure at Cali fornia and Atlantic avenues cost $100,000. What the firemen object to Is the great amount of metal In the interior. There is brass to be pol ished everywhere they look. Girl Throws $3000 In Ambergris Away PROVIDENCE, Sept. 2.—Not know ing what she had found. Helen A. Mofflt. daughter of Police Sergeant James H. Mofflt, threw about $3,000 worth of ambergris into the ocean off Pleasant View. A small piece which she recovered was analyzed and found to be worth $28 an ounce. ‘Me for the White Lights/ Says Gates LACROSSE. WIS., Sept. 2.—Charles G. Gates is en route from Minneapolis in a special train to New York to have more room to spend his money. “There’s not enough leeway up North,” he told a crew of railway men at lacrosse, pausing out imported cigars as he waited for a new loco motive on his special. “It’s me for the w hite lights, boys. Quit work and come along.” x f Young Woman When Last Seen Said She Was Going to Plant to Do Some Work. Fearing another Phagan mystery, detectives scoured Atlanta Tuesday In a search for pretty Miss Clara Bell Griffin, an employee of the National Pencil Company, who is not known to have been seen since she left home at 6:20 Monday morning bound for work, , A sinister coincidence is that Mon day was a holiday, as was the da.\ when Mary Phagan went to the fac tory and was foully slain. Louis A. Griffin, brother of the mysteriously missing girl, was at the factory Tuesday morning to demand what had become of his sister. "Yesterday was another holiday," he told the factory attaches, "and to day another girl Is missing. Whai has become of her?’’ Said She Was Going to Factory, Griffin, who left his work at the Gate City Coffee Company, where he is a machinist to take up the hunt for his sister, was assured by Fore man N. V. Darley that no one had been working at the factory yester day, on account of it’s being Labor Day, and that it was preposterous tc believe that Miss Grlirin had been there. The frantic brother, however, told a reporter for The Georgian, that his sister had told Mrs. Griffin, her moth er, that she had to be at the factory at 11 o’clock to do some work. Miss Griffin is 21 years old and lives with her mother and her brother. Louis A. Griffin, at No. 265 North Ashby street. Her relatives were dis tracted when she failed to come homt. from work Monday night. They im mediately began an inquiry at th* homes where she might have stayed all night. No one had seen her. An alarm was given the police department and detectives were sent out at once tc ascertain where she had last beer seen. The factory was visited to de termine if she had worked there Mon day. Acquaintances were interview ed; but none of them had seen her. Mother Knows Nothing of Her. A young man known to have paid her some attention in the past was found by the detectives. He said tha: he knew Miss Griffin well, but that hi had not seen her for several days. Miss Griffin has been employed ai the pencil factory for about three months. She w’orked on the fourth floor in the “heading” department, placing the rubbers in the pencils She Is said at the factory to have been an exceptionally good worke; and to have paid strict attention to the work on which she was engaged. It w’as reported Tuesday that she was refused permission at her home to attend a show during the day and that she told her people that she was going to run away and go in spite of their commands. This rumor was de nied by her brother Tuesday morn ing. He declared that no such in cident had occurred Memphis Buildings To Match New Gowns MEMPHIS. TENN.. Sept. 2.—Jn* Nineteenth Century Club of Women passed resolutions that will be pre sented to the city commission asking that an ordinance be passed com pelling business houses to adopt some scheme to match women’s gown*- when painting their building a >