Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 13, 1913, Image 2

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n ; — ■ ’ ■ , p»—r i - > TTTK ATr. \NT \ GEORGIAN’ AND NEWS THE YODELERS 11 ill PROVE Iu crnkt:..nai Ni*** Serf!" r 00 l £ LA he yboo.9 ah le la he hee ; S OO l£ la AF ' AH LE LA He HEfL : Jury Convicts Millen Divorcee.! but Brings in Recommenda tion for Mercy. ”2) &■?- ifr>f 7hE £CHO Continued from Page 1. I -d a last kies upon her lip« and rose *o her feet, gazing calmly at the Jury. I am ready,’* »he aald. Still Expects Liberty. Silence fell over the crowded oourt- 00m ai the convicted woman was ed to the doors. The crowd outside, sensing the dramatic touch given to the trial was as silent as the grave while Mrs. Oodbee entered an auto- noblle that was waiting. She was followed to the jail by a number of her friends, many of them prominent in Millen society. As the gates langed behind her. her only words were: ‘Til be freed in the long run.' The daughter. Miss Sarah God bee, remained In the courtroom for sev eral moments before she recovered from the nervous terror into which rhe announcement of the verdict had thrown her. She was then taken from the courthouse by friends and to her home. The verdict was the climax of Jen kins county's most dramatic murder trial. A crowd of more than 1,000 persons gathered at the courthouse at 8:30 o'clock, drawhi by a rumor that the jury had reached a verdict during the night. It was disclosed, however, that the verdict was not ar rived at until the twelve men re turned to tho courthouse, one man naving held out all night Tor 11 lesser penalty. The Jury entered the courtroom at 9:15 o’clock. The crowd had been augmented until nearly 2,000 peoplo thronged the courthouse and the side walk outside. Within one minute after they took their seats, the fore man of the Jury rose and announced the verdict. Judge Hammond imme diately pronounced sentence. The verdict had been expected late I Iasi night, but the Jurors failed to come to an agreement. At 10 o’clock Judge H. C. Hammond told the ex- ; pectant crowd that filled every avail able foot of space in the courthouse ♦hat the Jury was hung and that there | would be no verdict, until later. Big Crowd Gathers Early. Disappointed, the hundreds of peo pie left the courthouse and the grounds and went to their homes. This morning the interest and ajixiety were exactly as keen. Early in the morning crowds began to congregate on the street and near the court house. At the regular time for con vening the little room was packed full again. Mrs. Godbee, seeming to feel little •f the weight of the accusation of killing her divorced husband, Judge Godbee, and his young wife, was hopeful through all the time she was awaiting the verdict. She talked • •heerfully with friends who came to her side to speak to her. “I shall be acquitted," she said con fidently. "1 shall be free before flat- irday night, and I shall be in church Sunday. The members of the Jury must see that I was justified In kill ing Judge Godbee. He had perse- uted me and threatened me. 1 was afraid when I saw him August 18 That he was going to carry out his threat to shoot me. Makes Self-Defense Plea. He called me a vile name and atarted toward me. In my terror and desperation 1 simply pulled the re volver which 1 carried for my pro tection and shot at him until the bullets were exhausted. T did not shoot at his young wife. I did not realize that I had hit her until after he horror of the thing had passed away a little. I did It all In eelf- uefenae and desperation. Surely that is not a crime.” An eloquent plea in behalf of the accused woman was made by Judge F. A. Saffold yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Godbee and scores of other women about the courtroom broke in to tears when her attorney dramat ically implored the jurors not to take his client away from her daughter, who would be left with no one to care for her. He pictured in bitter words the ai- eged conduct, of Judge Godbee to ward his former wife. He related in stances of persecution, of threats arid of vilification. He asked if there were any woman who would not have been goaded to desperation by such persistent humiliation and who would not have been in fear of her life in view of the constant threats that were made against her. Brands Judge as Greedy, baffold represented Judge Godbee as greedy and heartless, as a man who would stop at nothing for the sake of obtaining money and luxuries for himself. He pictured Mrs. Godbee as a lov- ng wife who had borne the judge’s persecutions for years and had given him possession of piece after piece of property in the hopes of keeping his love and making him independent The attorney declared that she went nack to him time after time after her .lusband had driven her from home by his ill-treatment, and that, finally, when ti had obtained all her money, ie iher off and married a young er woman. Godbee aspired to greed and Of \j < 0* IWk M 1 'Ilia ti II, 1 far, m lw s / / IF OtlAD WHEr FAY DA'/COMES t \ k. AROUND, A 2 | That they expected to put their | hands upon the man responsible for j 1 the big $72,000 robbery from the j Southern and Adams Express Com- j panies within a few hours was th*» j I confident statement this morning of General Manager J. B. Hockaday and i Harry Scott, of Atlanta. ; The finding of the missing way bill, they said, had given them the clew that they needed to uncover the dar ing thief. The way bill covered the shipment of the $72,000 from the Chase National Bank in New York ! to Savannah, Valdosta and Bruns wick banks. It had been myste riously missing after the disappear ance of the money was discovered. Its finding was the last thing to make the evidence complete. Net Tightening. Either the last man whose signa ture is on it or the one whose slg- J nature immediately preceded it must i account for the money, according to I Detective Scott and Manager Hocka- 1 day. The net is tightening around I the guilty man and the detectives are j prepared to make an arrest at any moment. Immediately upon the finding of the way bill, the company from its agency in Savannah sent a long dis patch to the officers at New York. Jersey City and Washington. The lightning is expected to strike at one of these three places. It is believed that the detectives know' exactly the man who took'the money, but are waiting for his arrest before disclosing his identity. Barry Believes Robbery I Occurred in Jersey City. / \\% :4, jj Robert E. Barrs', United States Postoffice Inspector, one of the best- known criminologists and efficient detectives in the Government ser vice, declared Saturday morning that it wa« his opinion that the $72,000 Southern Express robbery occurred in Jersey City. “Of course,” said Mr. Barry, "the money may have been stolen in tran sit, but I rather think that such is not the case. The yeggs w'ho pulled off the job without a doubt are pro fessionals and they evidently planned the crime some days ahead, waiting for the safe to be shipped. ‘ The thieves knew that the money would not be missed until the safe 370,000 Rail Men to Seek Wage Increase MILWAUKEE* Sept. 13.-—Officers of four labor unions, representing 370,000 railroad employees, will meet here about October 16 to plan ft gen eral move for higher wages and im proved working conditions. The unions are the Brotherhood of Loco motive Engineers, Brotherhood of Lo comotive Firemen, Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen and the Order of Railway Conductors. The meeting here will be prelimi nary to independent action by each organization Bakeshop Spooners’ Paradise, Employee Tells Police Judge Carolina Convict Scandal Unearthed Big Damage Verdict Returned in Chester CHESTER, S. C., Sept. 13.—Papers have been served on the Lancaster and Chester Railway in a suit for damages thought by the Savannah National Bank for $11,600, growing out of a shipment of cotton linters. The biggest award of damages ever made by a jury in the Lenoir section of the Carolinas was that in the case of E. C. Greeb against the Wautauga and Yadkin River Railroad, tried at Boone this week. A verdict for $10,- 000 was given Green. A rendezvous of kissers has been found that seems to be safe from the spying eyes of the "vice squad!" Victor Zakas, a baker of No. 14 Mills street, told Judge Broyles Sat urday morning that this spooners’ paradise is at No. 261 Peachtree street, where Andrew Zakas has a bakeshop. Zakas said the sweet hearts of the bakers, afraid to speak to their lovers on the streets, come to the bakeshop and “do so much hugging and kissing the bakers haven’t time to do much work." The story of the kisses came out during the trial of Zakas’ wife, Mrs. Janie Zakas. who berated her hus band in front of the bakery Friday night because she thought he was doing some of the kissing Judge Broyles fined her $15.75. RALEIGH, N. C., Sept. 18.—As the result of disclosures at a Wake County convict camp, S. L. Lee, camp supervisor, was indicted to-day for falling to provide proper quarters for his men and for cruelty to animals. W. L, Wiggs, general road supervisor, was indicted in connection with im proper quarters. J. M. Nipper and Jim Johnson, guards, were placed on trial Thurs day for assaulting convicts. The Grand Jury also took cognizance of the fact that the county allows prisoners only 20 cents a day in work ing out costs, and asked the County Commissioners to make a change. was opened by the parties to whom it was consigned. They figured that Savannah was a considerable dis tance from New York and that they • would have plenty of time to make their get-away. "Southern Express Company detec tives are most efficient and know' just what agents handled the safe, there fore by a process of elimination and deduction they can readily place un der suspicion the guilty man and if 1 the man or men have not made a clean get-away I am more than con fident that they vcill be apprehended j In a comparatively short time.” Toximeter’ Gauges Stage of Intoxication TO MANUFACTURE BENZOL. BIRMINGHAM. Sept. 13.—Benzol will be manufactured In the Birming ham District by the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company, subsid iary organization of the United States Steel Corporation, according to a statement made here to-dav ‘Wriggles’ Imperil U. S,, Says Princess Negro Saved From Kentucky Lynchers LEXINGTON, Sept. 13. A mob formed to-day at Nicholasville. Kv., to lynch Joseph Lewis, the alleged assailant of a prominent white worn an late yesterday. Lewis was brought to jail here for safe keeping. He denies his guilt. 27 DIVORCES IN 3 DAYS. CHARLESTON. MISS.. Sept. 13.— Chancellor M. E. Denton granted 27 divorces in three days’ session of court Six white and 21 negro cou ples were liberated from matrimonial bondage. money, Mrs. Godbee to love and hap piness. The two ambitions were dis astrously incompatible,” he said. Bullet Holes Tell Tale. "It was Just a question of the tw’o inimical natures that caused that af fair at the postofllce. The woman who was persecuted and oppressed slew the man who persecuted and oppressed her. And the bullet holes in his body tell the tale. They show’ he was shot In advancing upon her." Solicitor General Moore s closing address was a bitter attack upon the laxity of the courts in homicide cas^s where a woman is the defendant. H; demanded that Mrs Godbee be made to pay the penalty as though she were a man. He said that the law made no j distinction and that none should ex ist He described the killing as a brutal **id cold-blooded murder, and said that the punishment should be the same tor a woman as fur a man. 1 NEW YORK. Sept. 18.—“The tur key trot, the tango and the bunny hug constitute a great national men ace in the United States,” de clared Princess Lowenstein-YVorthein, daughter of the fourth Earl of Mex- borough, as she sailed to-day for home. “The so-called dances are de structive of young girls’ morals,” continued the prlncest*. The princess predicted that Con gress would soon turn from such tri vial things ;ws th'e tariff to American "wriggles.’’ CHICAGO, Sept. 13.—Now comes science with the only guaranteed method of determining w hether a man Is drunk. It is the ‘‘toximeter.’’ It is an invention of a German, Dr. Schweisheimer. With the new motor a scientist can tell not only whether on.- is drunk, but the degree of in toxication. The secret of the "toxi- meter" can be found in Dr. Schwei- iihelmer’s well-known work entitled “Her Alkeholgehalt des Blutes Unter Verschiedenen Bedingungen. A NERVE TONIC Hortfortf’i Aeld Phoiphate Recommended for relief of insomnia, impaired D«rre force and fatigue. Invigorates the entire system. Adv. Vesper Services to Be Held atY.W.C. A, THE ATLANTA Matinee To-day 2:30 To-night 8:15 A Real Winning Show The MERRY COUNTESS Matin** 25c to $1. Nlgtlt 25c to $1.50 Edison Told Never to Take Vacation Again WEST ORANGE, N. J . Sept. 13 — Thomas A. Edison, who i» ill at his home here, has been ordered by his physician never to take another vaca tion. He has been ordered to remain away from his laboratory two weeks to recuperate from his recent fort night in New England. it was Mr. Edison's first vacation in eight years, and according to the doc tor. the aged* inventor is more fa tigued from Ms holidays than he ever was from working twenty hours a day. Special vesper services will be held at 5 o’lcock Sunday afternoon at the new headquarters of the Atlanta Young Women’s Christian Associa tion, No. 16 East Ellis street. The Rev. A. M. Hughlett will make a short talk, and Miss Furlow Anderson, a graduate of the New York Conserva tory of Music, will sing Vesper services w r ill be held at the headquarters every Sunday afternoon. FORSYTH WORLD'S GREATEST TURKEY TROTTERS. Frank Ine* HALE and PATTERSON LYDIA BARRY Delmore and Lee; Doris Wilson and Company, and others. SHELL “LORGNONS” PARI SSTYLES DECREE A short-handled Lorgnette or “Ixtrgnon," the latest thing for shopping tours. In gold, silver and shell, at John L. Moore & Pons, 42 North Broad street. LYRIC Mats. Tueeday. Thursday, Saturday The Season’s Greatest Play THE CALL OF T HE HEART A Great Stage Production. Matinee Prices, 16c, 35c. Night Prices, 15c, 50c. Hill Will Be Host to 360 on 75th Birthday ST PAUL. MINN. Sept. 13 — James J. Hill will entertain 360 mem bers of the Veterans' Association of the Great Northern Railway at Gla cier Park. Mont., on his 75th birthday, September Ik Burlesque, Columbia Theater, Monday 7:30 p. m. j NEXT I VOIP MATINEES—TUES., WEEK Lll,,u THURS., SAT ARTHUR C. AISTON PRESENTS ESTHA WILLIAMS In Owen Davis' Startling Play “A MAN’S GAME 9f SAVANNAH BANK GETS FUNDS. SAVANNAH. Sept. 13. The Na tional Bank of Savannah to-day re ceived its first allotment. $150,000. of the Government crop moving fund. ETROIT 2 TRAINS DAILY LT.7:12AALSOIt£flL L N oo Over Circulation! J>Mnd®§ jffmerican cTo-motmw will contain more news and more exclusive features THAT WILL INTEREST and HELP YOU than any other Sunday Newspa per published in the South. mm <J>tmdaw Jfcmmoan offers a rare treat in its wonderful Comic Section, its superb Maga zine and its educational Editorial Section. HftgWi The best financial, commercial and real estate departments, a newsy and entertaining Society Section, and more exclusive local news than any other Sunday newspaper. Order Your Paper Now Over Circulation! ,> \