Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 14, 1913, Image 8

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8 D UKAliST’S SUNDAY AM ERIC AX. ATLANTA. C,A U’ND AY DECEMBER 14. 19K FREE / YEARS A HIKING 1*110TCH3KAI*11 <»t < 'otniuodor'* AllM d K. Ironn swimmini' tin* Gulin- Luke. lit* r.ovi*i«*il tin* ivwu- 1\ iiHir miles in tut hv hours ami «i hair. He wniiHiJ to sw im flu* length of tin r,n :il. hut Colonel Hoethals <le<*fiinil to have the lock irates opened 8E BUILT FOR h=->^r^ S i i liII * R V ’ Wilson Smile. Laid in Pyramids, to Beam | Foi tli Again in 2013 Convicted Policeman Becomes, Leader in Huge Store While Papers Accumulate Dust. BITTER REMARK OPENS CASE Chicago Aroused and Busy With Attempt to Get Pardon for Man of Proved Worth. ■ .'lilOAGO, J>e< . 13.- -Joshua 7V * | :ord has be*n hunted down. Although the .State failed t<> > \ i *t J : ts pound of flesli. anti although in j ■ he years of aoeidental frvt-iL-m | ie pushed his way ahead of hit*.7°!- j iov. s and ranched a position of **<■- j -pert, trust and responsibility, h*- uu. j found- To-day when he kissed liis wife I good-bye she had tears in her eyev She knew his story. The long f *x- 1 •prted and feared blow had fallen, j Th#* law, lax fit time# is alwnj- re entleas. It had traced him. nnd h*» Was whirled about to face a term of) five years’ imprisonment in the Joliet **nitent iary. Although he was point- I rl out by one of Chicago’s most j prominent business men as a. man 'be trusted und believed, be mu*i eventually join tiie silent army »-i i t. e lockstep unless Governor Ed .ard F. Dunne puts out a detaining band and paints a different finale t- 1 the story- A number of Ted ford s iut son il friends are negotiating to get a par- ; • Ion for the man that he imi> go < a \ ih his climb to success. Blames Burglar’s Mother. To-day the man made a saoi , -..atemcnt of the ease in which b<* was convicted, Il< blamed William, Hickey, who was a burglar, and j Hickey’s mother. He had arrested Hickey, and in connection with to’ >u»e he was convicted. This Is wn.it he said: 'I was convicted on perjured test!- } mony of liickey and his mother. You ! know what a mother will do when h°- ! on m in trouble Well, she came her* 1 and told of her boy having reformed. | 13ut Htckey ha<! not reformed, for h»* ) was killed down in New York as » burglar while my ease was pending in he Supreme f’ourt. That. I though ••nded. or ought to have ended, it at \ Hengt.' Was a Policeman. Tedford was convicted in 1904 of conspiracy to defeat Justice. He w is a policeman. It had to do with send ing a State's witness away. Judge j Brent a no sentenced him to serve from ' «»ne to five years In the penitentiary. I The cast whs trier! by ('tilef Justice! • if the .Municipal Court Harry Olson, hen an assistant State’s Attorney , under Charles S. Daneen. The' case buffeted the legal channels until the State Supreme Court affirmed th • \erdict of Judge Brcntano. The m m- j «iaie was returned. The clerk wh«# j received the mandate ordering Tod- 'ord'.-* incarceration pigeonholed in- j stead of filing the document. Days, weeks, months and finally ears passed and dust gathered upon 'he papers which t<» Ted ford meant, probably five years of living dentil Accident Reopens Case. \ bitter remark by a disappointed ! attorney, by a queer coincidence in the j <*ourt of Justice Olson, pried open a j number of memory storehouses and j he case of Joshua Ted ford was re- I vlved and the law was again on his Trail. Although it had slept for seven | yearn, the hunt for facts was relent- esaly tuken up. It was said that , Ted ford was not to blame because the | aw did not exact its dues. But the ! penalty must be paid even now. The city directory told the story < .* what Tedford had been doing with the ime which belonged to the State. This was the entry: * ‘ Joshua Tedford, supt., -39 Souiii I State street, residence 6024 (’hamplaii I avenue.” In his seven years of liberty he had tmade his way from house detect- five at one of the largest iikii'k fur nishing .stores iu the world to auper- 'tntendent of the entire establishment. ! George Lytton. tiead of the store, to day declared that he improved faster Than his father or he could promote the ex-policeman. To-day,” he said, "we trust him i with everything He is absoliP !y pate gold.” Too Busy to Worry. This strange victim of circuai- i stances was found to-day absorbed In rhe duties of his position at the store, kiln attitude was that of a man too busy with important things of the moment to worry himself and others with his own private affairs. He was Mi the midst of a fire drill on the thir< ! floor of the store. Hundreds of em ployees. carrying fire extinguish*!?, pike poles, robes and fire buckets, dashed hither and thither under hi • j e-harp eye. Finally he smiled and jshouted. "All right, boys '* and th*: ' drill ended. After some hesitation, he issued h short statement and then turned aiwaj with Mr. Lytton. and then w nf , into the latter’s office for a confer 1 ♦*nce. He presented lie appearance of t ie j prosperous business man. He is over six feet tall, large, blond and hand some. His shoulders are square and his head is erect. He went about nis work apparently oblivious of the fact ihat what he had so carefully budded seemed about to tumble. i Hotel Containing 1,800 Rooms To ; Be Part of Exposition, Charg ing Reasonable Rates ‘LITTLE Lilt' Richard K. Powers, Aged 103. Cousin of Girl, Says Animal Was a Twin. special Movie Film Records Posterity's Benefit Facial Ex pressions of President. for jesus pass NE YORK. Dec cial mov- SA.N FRANCISCO. I). . 1 hotel, "The Inside Inn,” J.800 rooms and' equlpi ed modern lwxur.\ anil Vonve.i be .reeled within t‘i<* grounds. The rat* tel will b€ ill be bu " to be charge from $1 to $3 it. and man % this r.f-r h >- It; d by priv i but the c* terms of t voice in t rged. vhh finally d the dlrecte Exposition. hi Women to Run for Office in Northwest WHITE SALMON, WASH.. Dec. IS For the first time in history wom en have been nominated for municipal offices. At a uncus held last nigln at the. Opera House George Read, M. J. Yuri Voost and Mrs. Pearl Jewett, the wife of Dr. George H. Jewett, were nom inated for City Treasure! North Dakota Law Against Snuff Valid BISMARCK. X. DAK. I*c. 13 I North Dakota's law prohibiting the, sale of snuff is constitutional under the decision of the Supreme Court. 1 In its decision the Supreme ('ourt i ' F ■L."" - ■’ '■" Smoked Cigarettes For 22 Years Habit Was Rulnlixj Him, But Kf Ccnquertd II in Three Days, Easily says the law in question grants equal protection to alt persons and that it deprives n.* person of personal lib erty or right, as maintained by the prosecution. w parties as h concessloi posLiion directors, by tii concession, will have i fixing of the rates to be This mammoth hotel elded upon yesterday b; of the* Panama-Pacific Fair Treatment Assured. This hotel is San Francisco's guar antee -and the guarantee of the Pan- arm. Pacific directors—thai Hie thou sands of guests who will crowd into, this city exposition will be accorded fair treatment in th. matter of hotel accommodations and rates. Already 186 conventions ar- booked to come to San Francisco during the year 1915. The officials having these conventions in charge already are seeking reservations and demanding to know in advance the rates to charged. The exposition direct ora, after three months of negotiations witlj-the hotel managers of Sun Fran cisco, have been unable to come h> any agreement as to reservations nd the rates to be charged during 1915 by the hotels in this tUy. Decide on Drestic Step. Failing In their efforts to reach an agreement by which they could guar antee reasonable rates to visitors to Han Francisco in 1915, the exposition directors decided to take the drastic step already outlined by providing for the erection of a magnificent hotel, which will at least provide accommo dations for the delegates to the 18*» conventions already booked for this city during the exposition year. In providing for the erection of this hotel the exposition directors believe that they have removed the one and only obstacle that threatened the suc cess of the exposition. Wanted Decision on Rates. As long ago as last August a. joint meeting of the exposition dire - tors and hotel men was held. The exposition directors al tint time requested that the hotel men decide upon the rates to bo charged to exposition visitors, and also to guarantee that a certain percentage id the rooms would bo reserved for the use of the delegates to the many con ventions that had accepted the city’s invitation to attend conventions m San Francisco in 1915. The hotel men refused to come to any agreement. (Po.Ssed i I birthday, man livlr | or Mary, | is the w mode in 'Mary imortal b; i ha •Th time tile t started t. lamb wa younge Iamb v l. h ard K. Povv- ass.. has just lred and third, bably the onb ■ Mary’s lamb, 1 at matter. This ; tells tin* story j ba of doggerel. 1 my cousin. She! than I, and is borp she! of twins, born in March, 3 814. on Sawyer’s farm The ewe didn't like the Idea of twins, and di?owned thi^ particular Jamb. ing picture film was presented to the .Modern Historical Records Association, which gives a complete record of the racial expression of the President, con cluding with hi? broadest smile. Dupli cate films were sealed up In airtight, watertight and fireproof containers, and one of them is locked up in the society's vaults in the New York Public Li brary. The other rests in the apart ment set aside for the association’s records ill the pyramid of (.'hoops, in Egypt. ' One hundred years from now the con- alner wllr 1." opened and the film ex- Idbiied to ->ur descendants. At the same time phonograph records of hte voice of Edison talking and the singing oi several grand opera stars of to-day will be run through. Kx-President Taft is honorary presi dent of the association, and Herbert W. Bridgetnan is president. Woman Forest Guard Watches for Fires Sulzberger Thinks They Would Be j Cincinnati Man Offers to Give in Danger of Deportation ; $4,000 for Life Commitment as Weak Mipded. I to Lunatic Asylum. Mary begged her have it a pet. and she brought it father to let He gave it to u«> by hand. her, - Saw Animal Scrubbed. •'Tve seen her .spend half the morn ing washing it soaping its fleece and rinsing it and drying it as carefully as if it was a baby. She used to tie ribbons round its neck —mostly pink. Naturaly, the lamb liked her, and used to trot around after her Just like a dog, and bleat if she left it alone. ‘‘The fall after the lamb- was born Mary started to school. Her two brothers took her to the schoolhouse, and of course they never thought of the lamb. They got to school early, and there the lamb caught up with them.* "Well, first the> tried to send it home, but it wouldn’t go any more SACRAMENTO, Dec. 18.—A worn in has been put in charge of the her i Eddy’s Gulch forest service lookout, 1 a lonely station situated on one of i the lofty peaks of the Salmon sum mit. This modern Joan of Arc. to whose watchful eye and alertness is com mitted the task of sighting and re porting the fires which occur on the Salmon River watershed, is Miss Hu!- lie M. Daggert. She is the first wom an forest guard within the history of the service, Swiss Girls Refuse To Wed; Demand Fare ALBANY, GREG., Dec. 13.—For eighteen days Cecil© Diethelm and Hulda Kraner, the two Swiss girls who refused to marry Kaspar Wirz than a clog. Then tin* Sawyer boys j and Herman Young, the Albany men .-;«Id: ‘Ei*r<t let’s sneak it. into the j they came 7,000 miles to wed, have schoolhouse. Teacher hasn’t come been in this city. y< ‘- The girls demand $300 each to pay Put Lamb in Mary's Desk. ! their way to Lucerne and to reim- ”Half the school helped. Mary was j burse them for their expenses, a new student, so they put it in her The men offered to provide, trans big, box-like desk, and told her to! portation' back to Switzerland, say- hold the lid down. I sat near and I ing that they were ready to marry could hear it *^;inbling around in them and carry out their part of the the desk when the t- ucher came in. : agreement. "It went to sleep for a while. I reckon. But about the middle of the j morning then- came c scramble ind j Mo PCTfro fnv PlMOfiriPV IN U 1UI. I I ibUllui popped the lamb. Mary was scared , * , -r-T ■ n m -j d At Prices of To-day had to go outdoors. It waited outside,) boa-ins oil day. till Mary went home] NORTH YAKIMA, WASH., Dec. after school, and then it trotted along. 33.—F, a. Marshall, brought hack Harvard Man Author. + from Eugene, Oreg.. to face a charge Ti er was a young Harvard fel-j of grand larceny, is so ill with heart lov\. John Roulston, Jr.„ a. freshman, 1 trouble that his physiGian hies pre visiting the teacher at tin*, time. He j scribed a diet of toast and eggs, heard the story, and it tickled him so Sheriff' Metzger >-ays there will be That, he wrote that verse about It. I’ve j no eggs served while they are at their got a copy of it, just as he wrote it.” ; preaent figure. NEW YORK. Doc. 12. Opening •* conference on immigration before the People’s Institute at Cooper I'nion Cyrus L. Sulzberger amused the big audience with stories or* some of the reasons given by the LllL Island au thorities for deporting newly arrived aliens. Eugenics, said Mr. Sulzber ger, was one of the strong arguments? of the immigration restriction]#!. “A Russian woman arriving on Oc tober 8,” he said, “was certified to as feeble-minded at Ellis Island and or dered deported. £iie was examined by a physician at Bellevue, who declared she was not feeble-minded at all. "Then the Federal inspectors exam ined her again and said that while she was perfectly sane she seemed t»> be weak in her abstract conceptions. ‘ They Slid that she had no idea, although she was a seamstress, of what a yard or an inch were, forget ting that outside of this country and England the terms are never used. Given Jigsaw Puzzle. “Another woman, 48 years old, was given a jig.-aw puzzle to put together. She worked oyer it for awhile and then saki: ‘This is for children; let me bake or cook to show what I can do.’ She was pronounced feeble minded. Then the decision was re versed and finally she was admitted. “A man was asked; If a man should offer to give you all the money you wanted what day in the week would you select for the gift'” Here was the answer, ’Why ’should a strange man give me money?’ “That strikes me as being a pretty pertinent reply. Still another man was asked: “‘Does God speak to you?’ and the answer—a noteworthy one, to my mind—was this: ‘J am not worthy that God should speak to me.’ Would Deport Christ. ‘ It seems to me that if Mosfes or Isaiah or Jesus or Mohamet should come to Ellis Island they would be likely to be deported as feeble minded. "There was an Irishman who came to the island and was asked how many legs a horse has. ‘Eight,’ he replied. ‘One at each corner and two on each side.’ “ ‘Don’t you think that is a foolish answer?’ he was asked. "The Irishman replied with more wisdom than is shown by the United States officials when he said: ‘A fool question deserves a fool answer. ’ ’’ Louis R. Marshall, speaking on “What the Immigrant Brings to Us,” made an eloquent plea for the immi grant, who, he said, brought new strength to the country. -J CINCINNATI, Dec. 13.—Former Congressman Herman P. Goebel, a director of Longview Hopital for the Insane, said that a former business man of Cincinnati offered to pay the county $4,000 in return fora life com mitment to Longview. “The man making the offer was perfectly sane,” declared Judge Goe bel. “but longed for the quiet of the asylum. He offered $4,000 for a life, residence at the Institution. He had sons and daughters, but they could not agree. He had the money in barik. "He had been an inmate of Long view for two years and was dis charged as (Hired several years ago. PERMANENT XMAS TREE. STAMFORD, CONN.. Dec. 13.- Stamford is to have a permanent mu nicipal Christmas tree, to be located in Central P.u*k. It is of Norwegian spruce. Be a Bell Telephone Operator TFie work is agreeable. TFie sur roundings are pleasant. You are paid a salary while learning. The oppor tunities for rapid advancement are excellent. Increased salary is assured if you prove efficient. There are several vacancies in our training school for young women who have a common school education and can furnish satisfactory' references. Appiy in person at the Bell Telephone Exchange II to 25, 1813 The portrait below is that of Mr. P. J. j Ellzagaiav. » welk^nown citizen of Livingston, .Montana, who knew that | Ids life was being ruined through the] pernicious habit of cigarette smoking. 1 vet could not find anything to stop it ■ ano solace tlu* nervous craving until he i got the remarkable book that . <n te v be obtained free. Five Full Quarts E. B. Gibson’s "5? $2 Celebrated Monogram Rye . . . ^ One Quart of Scsme Brand FREE Look At This BIG XMAS b'OFFFR*^^^ ■ ■ ■■■» Extra Qt.FREE No offer ever made by any liquor dealer that will equal this. Order five quarts of these brands and get one quart of the same FREE. Breaks Silence Vow: Free After 20 Years LEAVENWORTH. KAN’S . Dec 1>. Jasper \V. Rainey, who broke a s - lenoe of twenty years leoentlx when, on his bended knees, he begged Sam- uM Heaton, Governor Hodge’s pardon •lerk, to give him a parole, has left the prison. He will be free as long as he <•>)- serves the parole regulation*. Calls Rich Husband Stingy, and Sues Him HOCKFOHX* UA... Dec 13 M- JiOUgti he is heir t<* a $100,000 estate. Mrs. Lizzie Piper, of 8tepher»*on Coun • y in a suit for separate maintenance, barges that her husband, David Piper, ailed to provide for her an.; 1 :• she f Smoth, Velvety, Mellow, Rich EXPRESS PREPAID I 1913 * 1 j *“•»( H»i! ,5 L Jfeurf X«.°» j improving his health. QUIT TOBACCO. GAINED 35 LBS. ^hiske/J *' F-S. (M9SON ! *1 %H]SKE>i. | EJ3- Cibson .Too | ^H]SKE)^| SSL Cibsok ( (Quarts Seven Slates Whiskey. Quarts Blue Ribbon Peach Brandy 6.2. r > (Quarts Blue Ribbon Apple Brandy 6.2", Quarts Mocassin Club 5.00 Quarts Four Star Rye 5.00 Quarts Old Cob Com 5.00 Quarts Very Old Apple 5.00 Quarts Walnut Log 4.0(1 Quarts Red Crow Corn. 4.00 Quarts Old Lincoln 4.00 Quarts Monogram Rye Quarts Old Mountain Corn. Quarts Fine Old Apple Quarts Dixie Cabinet Quarts Sweet Mash Corn. . . i v:, One Quart of Same Brand FREE Quarts Imperial Apple Quarts White Com Quarts Yellow Corn Quarts Palmetto Gin Quarts Tom Gin Quarts Nubbin Corn Quarts Old Doyle Quarts Boot Leg Rye Quarts Fine Old Gin Quarts Apple Brandy Quarts Peach Brandy Quarts Duff Gordon Sherry... Quarts Offley Forrester Port.. Quarts Calit.ifnia Sherry... . Quarts California Pori 3.25 3.25 Sfc'snjS £3. diBsnii I V iMIfltl’Ijpj I cpwin | KJ3- diBso* ! BOOK GIVEN FREE. to overc imo AVo.hD, 534 s N Y . nrd h who writ, s anxious that craving for t amirs ilia.' quidkly. go. heart, kidi.f nerves irar* 41(i A. Now Y< it fm- lo am Five Full Quarts E. B. Gibson’s Sweet Mash Corn One Quart of Same Brand FREE A Rarity of Flavor and Quality EXPRESS PREPAID Send Double the Amount of Money for Ten Quarts and Get TWO QUARTS FREE This offer is good only at prices as above quoted, December 11th to December 25th, 1913. This offer positively not good on orders put up in jugs, pints or hall pints. You pay for only Five Quart*—I Send SIX QUARTS. ThefVlostRemarkahleOffer in History Cut this Ad out and mail with your order. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Every brand with an E. B. Gibson Label bears the as surance of purity and quality. You can depend upon my whiskey. I have a reputation to maintain. I lead; others follow. E. B. GIBSON, Distiller 1435 Market St., CHATTANOOGA, TENN. '*WN