Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 14, 1913, Image 11

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11 A 10 CITIES WILL ilEAKST’S SUM1JAV AAliliKlCAJS, ATLAWTA, 0A,, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1913. Polaire Adds to Her Ugliness With Nose Ring *•* *•+ Famous French Actress to Wear It in Atlanta Mademoiselle Polaire, famous French actress, wearing her nose ring. She will appear | with this ornament when she plays in Atlanta this winter. Atlanta to Send 50 Delegates to Macon Meeting to Organize State Commercial Club. Korty Georgia cities will send dele- nations Tuesday to the meeting; at Macon which will organize the Geor gia Chamber of Commerce. Atlanta will send 50 repreaentative men in a special car. Waycross and Albany also will send specials. Indications are there will be 400 civic leaders at Macon to launch the ►Mate ( hamber of Commerce, which Is expected to do for Georgia what the Atlanta Chamber has done for the city. The meeting will be called to order at the Hotel Dempsey, Macon, at 10:30 o'clock Tuesday morning by C. J. Haden, chairman of the executive committee. Luncheon will be served at 1:30 o’clock at the hotel, with the Macon Chamber as host. An aft ernoon session will complete the de liberations. There are 70 such State-wide de velopment organisations in the United States. Texas has furnished the model for the proposed Georgia chamber. Officers are to be elected at the Macon meeting, including a president and about 50 vice presidents, repre senting all sections of Georgia. Speakers will Include Richard Ed monds, of the Manufacturers' Record; M. V. Richards, of the Southern Rail way, and MoLalne Tilton, secretary of the Alabama Bankers' Association. Many Cities to Take Part. The following cities will send rep resentatives: Albany, Americus, Athens, Atlanta, Baxley, Brunswick, Bainbridge, Barnesville, Olarkston, Crawfordville, College Park, Columbus, Dublin, Douglas, Dawsonville. Eatonton, Fitzgerald, Griffin, Kirkwood, La- Grange. Lithonia, McDonough. Ma- « on, Madison, Moultrie, Newnan, Ociila, Springfield, Swainsboro, Toc- ooa, Union City, Vienna, Waycross, Hawkinsville, Statesboro and Mount Pleasant. One hundred members of the live Macon Chamber of Commerce have been named on a special committee to greet and entertain the delegates. A number of the leaders in the in dustrial development of Georgia have been mentioned for the presidency of the State Chamber, but so far no one seems sure of the position. The executive committee is author ized to appoint a vice president for every county in the State and after careful consideration about 50 vice presidents have been selected. Other selections will be made during the next few days. The executive committee includes C. J. Haden. Atlanta, chairman; P. M. Atkinson. Madl«on; R. D. Cole, Newnan; J. 8. I)a via, Albany; G. W. Deen, Waycross. J. A. McCord, At lanta; W. H. Shippen, Ellijay; C. A. Wlckersham, College Park. DeKalb County To Be Well Represented. DeKalb County, headed by Kirk wood and Decatur, will send an en- h^siastic delegation to the State Chamber of Commerce meeting at Macon Tuesday, with the intention of playing an important part In the proceedings. The Kirkwood Cham ber of Commerce held a special meet ing to arouse zeal In behalf of the proposal, and the result was a list of formal pledges of members who will attend. They include R. F. Qilliem, John I. Armstrong. Dr. E. L. Daniel, William E. Saunders, Dr C. H. House, J. T. Viley, E. M. Willingham, John I^owe Smith. O O. Ray, H. C. Burr, J. A. Norman, R. C. Ozmer, J. P. Ellis, Joe Tillinghast and J. A. Earl. Decatur will send a party In auto mobiles. Lithonia and Clarkston will wend delegates, and. altogether, there probably will be 75 representatives from DeKalb at Macon. The Drum and Bugle Corps of De catur Troop, No. 1. Boy Scouts of America, will be in the party. "Borden Heiress to Pick Own College Will Solve Question That Parted Parents by Going to Vassar or Wellesley. NEW YORK, Sept. 13.—Miss Ra mona Borden. 18-year-old daughter of Gall Borden, the multi-millionaire condensed milk manufacturer, whose disappearance from a sanitarium In Ponponton Lake, N. J.. In April caused a nation-wide search to be made for her by her father, plans to enter either Wellesley or Vassar this fall. The failure of her parents to agree on a school for her is said to have led to their agreement to live apart. Now the girl has solved the problem her self. Because she has been the brunt of this family strife, Ramona has come to be known among her friends as the “poor little rich girl.” She has writ ten to her New York friends. "I have ceased to work and be troubled," she says. "Through this summer I have learned to laugh and be happy.” Inquisitorial Body Will in All Probability Take Dp Poison Case This Week. Grand jurors of Fulton County will this week In all probability begin their investigation of the death of the late Josua B. Crawford, wealthy Atlantan, whoae widow has been charged with poisoning him in order to get his riches barely a month aft er their marriage in 1900. In the meantime, Mrs. Mary Bello , Crawford, the widow, is at her Peach tree ntreet home, serenely confident that if the Grand Jury should indict 1 her she would be promptly acquitted ! by a trial Jury. She declares the bringing of the charge of poisoning agalnet her wan done merely ue a new move of the heirs of the aged real estate operator, who are fighting for the $350,000 fortune that wa* left to her. Poison PreSonoo Admitted. The report of Dr. H. F Harris that traces of morphine poisoning were found in the stomach of the deceas ed is not denied by Mrs. Crawford or her counsel. They simply contend that this drug wan prescribed for Crawford during hi* Inst illness, and declure that the attending physician will take the stand and testify that he administered the opiate to relieve the aged man's pain. The Crawford heir*, however, take an entirely different view of the mat ter. They charge a deep-laid con spiracy on the part of Mrs. Craw ford and Fred Lumh, a barber now in New York, and who is sought by the heirs as an accomplice. Their contention is that when J. B. Crawford, then in hia seventies, went to St. Augustine, Fla., in 1909 in search of health and took board with Mary Belle Bishop, the woman then and there planned to wed the old man and as soon as she could make him will her his property, poison him, and then wed Lumb. The contesting heirs are nieces and nephews of the man for whose wealth they are fighting, and though the will contest has been on practically since the death of Crawford, it was not until a few months ago that the poison charge was made and the body was exhumed for examination of the stomach. Sheriff leeuee Warrant. A Coroner’s Jury at Carrollton, the old home of the Crawfords, returned a verdict declaring that the deceased had come to his death from poison administered by his wife. It was then that the Sheriff of Carroll County mailed a warrant to the Sheriff of Fulton for the arrest. When officers went to serve it, Mrs. Crawford was not at her Atlanta home, but she afterward surrendered to the Sheriff here and promptly rur- nished the $6,000 bond required. In addition to the poison charge the nieces and nephews have alleged that undue influence was exercised by Mrs. Crawford to have herself made the chief beneficiary in the will and witnesses have been introduced at the will hearing to prove that at the time he uttered the instrument, Crawford was not only mentally un balanced through senility, but was constantly under the influence of alcohol. Every Section Joins South for Federal Protection Against River's Spring Floods. MEMPHIS, Sept. 18.—The Mayors of cities In more than half of the States of the Union have come out for Government aid in the protection of the Mississippi Valley States from floods. This sweeping indorsement of the Ransdoll-Humphreys bill, which provides $60,000,000 for levee* find comes up at the December »es«rton of ' 'ongresa, is one of the Interesting exhibits of the work the Mississippi River Levee Association is doing in the Interest of Government levees for the lower Misalaslppi River Out of the replies already received not one chief executive has expressed the slightest disapproval of the prop osition. The Mayor* of citleti in the far Western State#, in New England, in the Middle West, in the great northern section and from every Southern State have come out unani mously for the project. Each letter shows an unusual familiarity with the subject. The people of Califor nia, Massachusetts and Montana seem to have been studying the flood proposition with a* much Interest as tne residents of the State* imme diately affected by flood*. One of the most interesting letters Is one from the chief executive of Gallipoli*, Ohio, a city which almost was nacrifloed to the Ohio floods of 1913. Mayor Cadot, of that city, says in part "While our own valley suffers greatly from flood*. I believe the greater damage la done in the Mis sissippi Valley, and I earnestly hope you will succeed In securing the re quired appropriation from the Gov ernment, and be able to begin active operations at the earliest posslbl* moment. “In my opinion, the levee plan is the best remedy for overflow that has yet been proposed." The Mayor of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., writes in part: "I am heartily in favor of your work and believe that It Is fair and Just that the National Government should take up the burden and give you whatever aid is needed.” The Mayor of Indianapolis, Ind., writes: "I heartily concur in the views ex pressed in your communication re garding the spring floods of the lower Mississippi. I believe the Govern ment should lend every aid possible to protect the people of this vast ter ritory and that steps in this direction should be taken at the earliest possi ble moment." These are only a few of the nu merous letters that have been receiv ed. They illustrate, however, the sen timent toward the levee proposition and the wldeaperad interest in the mutter of floods. Commerce Chosen For Press Meeting Editors of Weeklies Hear Rival Towns' Claims for Honor of Entertaining Them. Commerce was selected as the next meeting place of the Georgia Weekly l*ress Association at a meeting of the executive committee of the organisa tion In the office of H. M. Stanley at the State Capitol Saturday. The claims of Covington were also pro- eented to the committee by a delega tion from that town. The committee waited until 2:30 o’clock for the dele gation from Madison, which wa« also After the 1914 meeting, but it failed to appear. The next gathering of the editors will be held July 14 and 15. The fol lowing officers were present at the meeting: P. T. McCutcheon. of Frank lin, president; C. E. Benns, of But ler, secretary; B. H. Hardy, Barnes- vllie; J. F. Shannon, Commerce; H. M. Stanley, and Rush V. Burton, La- vonla. The winning delegation from Commerce was headed by J. F. Shan non, of The Commerce News, and Paul T. Harber, of The Commerce Observer. New Cotton insists Black Root Disease State Entomologists Will Have 4,000 Bunhele of Its Seed Rksdy by Spring. Reports received by tIvr- Depart ment of Entomology at fhe State Capitol from Southwest Georgia are to the effect that the black root Is causing a great deal of damage. This cotton disease 1* costing the Georgia cotton planters hundreds of thousands of dollar* a year, and every effort is being made to check Us ravages. The Department of Entomology has developed a variety of cotton seed which is resistant to the black root and ret>orts from the planters who use this variety are to the effect that It is not Buffering from the blight. The department will have 4,000 bush els of this seed next spring for dis tribution. Bank Wrecker and Bigamist Is Turned Over to Mississoppi Au thorities by State of Georgia. Alkahest President Goes to Convention 8. Russell Bridges Is Off to Attend Annual National Lyceum Con vention in Chicago. S. Russell Bridges, president of the Alkahest Lyceum System, has gone to Chicago to particiintte in the an nual convention of the International Lyceum Association, which will meet at the Auditorium Hotel September 15-19. He waa accompanied by Mrs. Bridges and a number of prominent Southern Lyceum people The convention of the International Association la the one which prom ised to meet in Atlanta this year, and then changed to Chicago because a great many of the artists were unable to make the trip to the South. ALBANY, Sept. 13.—After five day* spent in hearing the habeas corpu* case of L. C. Harding, alias A. D. Oliver, the Climax bank wreckejN Judge Clayton Jones at 4:55 o’clock this afternoon turned the prisoner over to the officers from the State of Mississippi, who had a requisition properly signed by the Governor of: that State. Harding, iindes the alias of Olive* went to Climax, Ga., In December. 1908. claiming to be looking for o large tract of timber lajirl to pur chase. While there he waa attracted by the opportunities that presented themselves. In a remarkably short time he had established himself from a financial standpoint. He carried on his dealings In true Wallingford style until a bank that he secured control of failed. When the bank was on the verge of bankruptcy, he claima to have started to New' York to make more financial deals, but was ar rested. After much litigation, he was held on the ehntge of bigamy, he having; married in Climax while he had a liv ing wife In another State. He was sentenced for a term of years, which ended only five days ago When about to be released, the United States Gov ernment applied for the prisoner, as did the State of Mississippi. After consultation, the United States offi cers withdrew their request and the officers of Mississippi pressed their application Oliver claimed that he was not the man that had escaped from jail la Mississippi, but a twin brother that resembled him very' much. Pictures were procured from the State peni tentiary of Ohio, where Oliver also has been confined, and Bertlllior measurements were sent. While there was some slight variation in the measurements, the general stature was the same and the marks on the body were sufficient to convince the Judge that he was the man w'anted. Oliver had worked up one of the best stories that has ever been heard in a Georgia courtroom, and no doubt would have caused a Jury of tw’elve men to have stayed locked up for a long time, as he had gained the sym pathy of at least two-thirds of hia hearers. As »oon as Judge Jones ruled that he was the man-wanted In Mississip pi, the papers were signed promptly, and within five minutes he was In an automobile, handcuffed to a deputy sheriff from Aberdeen,, Miss., beinf taken from the State. SCHOOLBOYS’ CRAPS GAMES ARE UNDER BAN The shooting of craps under iho KMorla street bridge was halted Sat urday night by the police, who began an Investigation following a report that schoolboys were drinking and gambling there. Fascinating Artist Has No Hope That Ornament Will Be Gen erally Accepted Fad. Lesson in Scientific Complexion Renewing Mademoiselle Polaire, being by com mon consent the ugliest theatrical star alive and the most fascinating withal, ha6 an absolute right to wear what she pleases. It is only when a woman has an open pride in her lack of pulchritude that she has achieved a sort of free-will condition as re gards clothes and ornaments. And because she is an independent in matters of raiment the fascinat ing Polaire is going to show Atlanta something that will open the eyes of every man and woman within its limit*—she is coming to Atlanta, you know, with Gertrude Hoffman and Lady Constance "Itewart-Richardson, the dancers. Her particular innovation is a nose ring—a daring, unprecedented nose ring, suggestive of nothing so much as a Fiji Islander. But then the tur key trot Is hardly suggestive of the art of terpsicnore. so it is not an un believable thing that Mademoiselle Polaire’g nose ring will become—but no, American girls mean no harm by any of their fads, and even their crlt- tics vow that they have common sense enough and to spare. There will be no nose ring fad, however much the fascinating Po laire flaunts her badge of eccentric ity before their faces. Polaire, it is announced, never dreams that her own freak fashion will become the vogue. Perhaps that Is why she adopted it. At least, she will have something to herself. But Atlanta will have an opportu nity of Judging, and perhaps if it likes can place an order for early winter delivery. (From The Family Physician.) veryone has a beautiful skin unrier- :h the one exposed to view. Bear in mind ami it will be easier to erstand the correct principle In ac- ing a lovely complexion. Nature is .tartly shedding the top skin In flaky Icles like dandruff, only much small- i size In abnormal conditions, or in inclng age. these particles are not 1 as rapidly a* in robust youth. The er they remain the more soiled or d they become—that's the fmme- e cause of a "bad complexion.” has been discovered that ordinary eolized wax to be had of any drug e will absorb these worn-out parti- The absorption, while hastening ure's work, goes on gradually enough ause no ineonvenience. In a week wo the transformation is complete, fresh, healthy-hued. youthful under is then wholly in evidence. You are not satisfied with your ^om- ions should get an ounce of i.ierco- I wax and try this treatment T’se wax nightly, like cold '-ream, r/ash- i t oft morning*?.— Advt. St. Paul’s Church to Have Home-Coming Incident to Big Revival Services Under Rev. L. B. Bridges. Noted Evangelist. STATE'S LAST NARROW GAUGE RAILWAY TO GO Narrow gauge railroad equipment will disappear from Georgia shortly after September 24. when the Railroad Commission will grant to the Gaines ville Midland Railroad the right to issue $558,000 worth of bonds and notes for improvement*. INCORPORATE HOSPITAL FOfl CRIPPLED CHILDREN Application for a charter for the Crippled Children’s Hospital of Georgia was filed Saturday. Charter members are Governor John j M. Slaton, Clark Howell, Joseph Me- ( Cord, Frank M. Inman, Robert F. Mad- i dox, Phinizy Calhoun, Sinclair Jacobs, ; James S. Floyd. E. V. Carter, J. M Stephens, Walter M Rich and Charles ! H Black. ! B0YD-MANGHAM SUIT IN BANKRUPTCY IS SET Demurrers in the bankruptcy pro ceedings in the case of the Boyd- Mangham Manufacturing Companv will be heard during the week of Sep tember 29 on request of attorney*. The trustees claim the illegal divi dends are subject to recovery for th* payment of creditors of the corpo ration. THE SOUTHERN UNI- VERSITY OF MUSIC Makes a specialty of instruction for BEGINNERS, guaranteeing progress. Teachers of highest quality in the South. Examinations by the direct ors at regular Intervals Adv. SAVE YOUR WASTE PAPER AND RAGS Our Wagon Will Call and Pay You CASH Psr Ail Waarte Paper, Nwwaoapera, MafafiNi, Rape. Ot* Mat trsaaaa. QuOto, Bte. YOU MAY Aft WELL IAVI THIS MONBY AS THROW »T AWAY. CALL US. BELL PHONE MAIN Sill ATLANTIC SUPPLY COMPANY W. an* A. R. R. an* POUNDRY STREET. St. Paul’s Methodist Church of At lanta will hold a home-coming Sep tember 21 as an incident to the big revival services under the Rev. L. B. Bridges, the noted evangelist. Be sides the Invitation to the general public, a call will be made on all former members of the church to re turn to the fold for the one day. It Is expected that eight or ten clergymen will be in attendance on the home-coming. Rev. B. F. Fraser is present pastor of the church, un der whose pastorate remarkable de velopment has been achieved in the last year. THE MIRROR THE MIRROR GRAND SHOWING Fall Millinery Beginning Monday See the New Hats Beautiful Models in black and all the new colors. Y*- FALL SUITS, WAISTS, DRESSES, COATS, SKIRTS, PETTICOATS Most Pleasing Styles for Misses and Women . THE MIRROR 46-48 WHITEHALL CT/>e object of putting our | DOMINO I in a carton, is to protect it from flies, rodents, roaches and all forms of insect life and dirt Yoti know that in the Grocery Store each night rats hold revelry In the rice barrel. To guard against this unhappy condition, merely state DOMINOg on your grocery order 10c and 25c pacRa*es Book of Recipes on Application to HEW OIUAXI. LA tTI .LJj u :: 33ESS # • *>j