Newspaper Page Text
IS SOMEBODY BURNING
MILLIONAIRES’ HOMES?
This Interesting Mystery Is
Discussed in
The Sunday American
SHRINERS ELECT F. R. SMITH IMPERIAL POTENTATE
Visitor Is Killed by Mistake for Burglar
SCENES AT SHRINERS COMPETITIVE DRILL AT PIEDMONT PARK
o 1 Ills 2 ark Wednesday
7 iPR S oRe R s big hits wi s thp ratehing thae drills at Piedmont Park W sday.
i osadingty P, TR it din ot iNysl ot doc eo o skl o Two of the patrols that made big hits with the throng watehing th é : e e
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V. H. Smith, a barber of Calhoun,
Ga.. was shot and killed early Wed
nesday by J. J. Edwards, president uf’
the Edwards Furniture Company, of
No. 215 Marietta street, when he was
found in the reception hall of Ed
vards’ home at No. 279 Luckie street.
Edwards fired one shot, the bullet
striking Smith in the temple. ‘
Smith's body was removed to the|
undertaking 1 of A. O. and RA-\i
Donehoo, and probably will be
shipped to Calhoun W en the police
have ompleted their investigation ‘
Statements by men who have
known Smith for a number of yvears
and the fact that he is known (O
have heen d 1 nking during the even
ing. have led the police to believe
that he had no intentions of burglary
at Edward’'s home A souvenir Shrin
cre cap was found Iving In the vard,
ind it is supposed to \ave been’worn
by the Calhcun man, as no hat could
\, found, It is suppose¢ d that Smith,
having been celebrating during the
evening, lost his waj and climbed
into the wrong house |
Girl Awakened by Intruder.
Miss Keron Baker, wio lives with
» Edwards fam was awakened
shiortly before avbreak by 1 noise
on thg front por ind saw the form
f a man outline gains er win
low, Lly g raise the sasi she
ran to MT, Edward s ro na
kno d on his d« te o him that
a burglar was trying t ot into the
house
Mr. Edwar arose, secured ‘his re
volver, and tepped autiously into
the hallway, intending to go 0 Itsice
and come upon the man from tae
rear.
Whjle Miss Baker was giving the
alarm, however, Smi left the win
#io whare he twas fiest heard ar
walked down the.iength of the porc:
to the window of the receptlior hall
“wutine * an Page 12, Column 3.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
VOL. XII. NO. 244.
.
By WILLIAM NELSON TAFT.
WASHINGTON, May 13. Huf'rlu‘
must go President Wilson is de-!
termined that the dictator must be
eliminated from the Mexican situa-|
tion. He has taken that position ever
sin®e the Mexican crisis arose. and
his opinion has been strengthened, it
became known to-day, as a resutt of
the information given him by Charge
d’Affaires . O'Shaughnessy at their
conference last night.
That drastic action will be taken by
Secretary of War Garrison if it
should be clearly proven that Orderly
Samuel Parks, of the Twenty-eiglith
Infantry, had been ruthlessly mur
dered and tortured by Mexican mf-:
diers near Tejeria was indicated to
day by Mr. Garrison. No action will
be taken, however, until an investiga
tion now being made clearly proves,
that Parks was not in the wrong in
going into the enemy’s line |
If polite jeecnt measures fall”
Mr. Garrigon said, “then we Will take
the next step. If he was tortured, |
wae an act of barbarism whether war
was on or not.” |
No Vessels to Tampico. |
rtalaek A meri v Hves re ‘,‘,._‘
dized or Americans or foreigner
murcered, no Americal ! 1
£ the Navy Daniels to-day |
ause of the
tionalists ar ederals i t neigh
tion of the Administration t
th Huert
Tt canitulation of Tampico seems
to be imminent, Admiral Mayo report
ed to the Na Department to-da
‘ ynalists have advised Adi
the city to-day.
Folk and Mcßeynolds
At Loggerheads Over
New Haven Probe
WASHINGTON, May 13.—Attorney
General Mcßeynolds and ex-Governor
Joseph L. Folk, chief ecounsel of the
Interstate Commerce Commission, have
finally broken on the matter of the
New Haven investigation. The confer
ence to-day between the two, Commis
sioner McChord and Senators Norris and
Kern, ended in a disagreement, follow
ing which Governor Folk and Mr. Mc-
Chord were asked to withdraw from the
conference.
Governor Folk will no longer accepnt
suggestions from the Attorney General,
1t is said, and has announced that he
positively will place Charles S. Mellen,
former New Haven president, on the
stand in the New Haven inquiry to
mMoOrrow morning.
Mellen was examined privately by
Folk, in the Commerce Commission's
probe of the system, at a hearing at the
Shoreham Hotel lasting from midnight
until nearly daylight to-day. Folk de
clined to announce the result of the ex
amination
Judge Roan Not to
'
Go Before Primary
Judge L. S. Roan will not be a
candidate for the remainder of the
unexpired term on the Court of Ap
peals bench to which he was appoint
ed in Februarq. Appointed to suc
ceed Judge J. R. Pottle, resigned,
Judge Roan will hold office until the
first primary, which falls in Augus!
It was generully expected he wouid
go before the people then for election
to the seat, but now comeg the an
nouncement that because of poor
health he does not feel equal to the
physical labor involved in the con
test. Nash R. Broyles, Atlanta’s City
Recorder, is the only candidate so
far announced for the unexpired
term.
¢ AL e
Strikebreakers Are
Barred by U.S. Troops
WASHINGTON, May 13.—Strike
breakers will not be permitied to go
into the Colorado coal mining dis
tricts. where Federal soldiers are ad
ministering affairs ":U.T"v'.r_Y.- of War
Garrison state to-day Notwith
standing the advertisement by the
coal companies which seek to em
ploy miners in the luree affected Col
orado districts, all men responding
will be turned back by the troops.
ATLANTA, GA,, WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1914,
o . }
dle 13
N A N
U AI 5
Ly [ -G i
A crowd estimated as high as 35,000 persons packed the ter
races and the hills of Piedmont Park and spread around the rim
of the parade grounds Wednesday to witness the third great spee
tacle of the Shriners’ meeting, the divisional review of the patrol
and the exhibition drills. The ceremonies brought together the
greatdst body of uniformed men the South has seen since the mobi
lization days of the Spanish-American war.
. With their thousands of uni
forms of Oriental richness, bril
liant with all the colors of the
rainbow, the marching hosts of
the Shriners formed one of the
most magnificent spectacles At
lanta has ever secen as they
passed in review before the di
visional commanders, stepping to
the martial musi¢ of a dozen
bands.
So many records were broken that
it would be an impossible task to
enumerate them all. The 3,000 men
who marched around the great arena
wore uniforms whose total cost is
conservatively estimated at $1,560,-
000, being of costly silks and satins
and ornamented with rich jewels. One
thousand bandsmen; divided into
elght perfectly proportioned bands,
led the eight regiments as they filed
in company front past the reviewing
um"l rs
One Great Band.
After the paraace and while the
patrols were preparing for the ex
hibition drills, the eight bands were
massed into one great organization,
compriging more than one thousand
instruments, and the patrol and
P R e e
¢ THE WEATHER. ¢
;. Forecast for Atlanta and
Georgia—Partly cloudy and
' cooler Wednesday night and |
Thursday. ‘
S e S SR (SRR e
lcrnwd alike stond at attention and
lront the air with their cheers as the
great band, massed in front of the
reviewing stand, playing patrintir‘
Lairs. ('Dixle " +The Star-Spangled
Banner,” and “America”’ came from
the instruments of the thousand
“bandsmen in perfect unison, and put
ia fitting climax to the greatest re
view the Shriners ever have held. No
ihlo Fred Wedemeyer, of Yaarab
' Temple, himself one of the best
known band leaders of the South, led
the great band.
j The drills, which came after the‘
review, were marred by but one ac
gident. Dy, H. Q. Gabriel, 'of 'the
patrol of Aladdin Temple, Columbus,
Ohio, was overcome by the heat and
collapsed as his .company. went
through {ts intricfite meneuvers. He
wag carried from the field and taken
to the city in an ambulance.
Eighty-one patrols, the greatest
number ever assembled at a Shrine
meeting, took part in the review, di
vided into regiments of from ten to
twelve patrols each, and headed by
one of the eight Lands formed from
the thousand bandsmen, ‘
The review got under way prompt
ly at 10 o'clock, and twenty nliuuu"i
later the Jast of the patrols had pass
ed the reviewing stand. Captain J. H.‘
SKeamans, of the Yaarab Patrol, had
charge of the review, and the divi
gion wasg commanded by Colonel
Frank ¢ Roundy, of Medinah Tem
ple, Past Imperial Potentate of the
Mystic Shrine. Colonel Roundy and
his staff rode at the head of the great
Continued on Page 2, Column 3.
Copyright, 1900,
Ry The Georglan Co.
§ ;
i To-day's Program 3
E 9 a. m, to 1:30 p. m.—Exhibition ¢
} drills by visiting patrols. Pied- §
2 !
% mont Park, ¢
11 a. m.—Organ recital at Audi- |
§ torium. ;
) 2:30 p. m.—Motordrome races. Im- |
g perial Council Sweepstakes.
f 4:30 p. m.—Garden party tendered '
visiting ladies by Mrs. John M. |
Slaton, Peachtree road. 2
8 p. m—Banquet at Piedmont |
¢ Driving Club. Complimentary |
§ to newly elected imperial po- |
§ tentate and members of Im- )
perial Council. {
é 8 p. m.—Motordrome races, {
{9 p. m.—Grand reception and ball 3
9 of Yaarab Patrol, in honor of ‘s
visiting patrois and Nobles, ¢
) 5
: : S
Bishop Is Opposed
. .
To Color Line in
.
Episcopal Church
ALBANY, May 13.—1 n the report of
the Right Rev, F. F. Reese, Bishop of
Georgla, delivered at the diocesan
eonvention in this city to-day, he
heartily opposes the proposed separi
tion of the colored Episcopal church
from the white in the South and the:
creation of a separate diocese for
them.
Bishop heese states that the hope
of the negro lies in some kind of a
sympathetic relation with the white
people, and it would be as foolhardy
to set up for them separate States
in the South as it would be to create
for them a diocese with its negro
bishop.
Bostonians Shy at
$1 Bill for 30 Cents
BOSTON, Mav 13 \ genuine one
dollar bill marked down to 90 cents re
mained in a store window for 22 hours
efore it was purchased
Hundre« ated to accept the bar-
Lahorer Finds $l5O
’ Tr! 1
Gem in His Tobacco
SUSSEX, N. J May 13.—Edward
(‘asteriin, a laborer wing tobacco,
struck something hard |
It was a diamond worth $l5O,
PAY NO
MORE.
2 CENTS
Seattle won the opening round of the fight with San Francisce
for the 1915 meeting of the Shrine. At the afternoon session of
the Imperial Couneil, the committee on time and place will present
its report favoring the Washington city for the coveted honor.
There is little doubt that the report will be unanimous, in spits
of the fact that E. [. Alderman, the committee chairman, has been
for three years a resident of Los Angeles, whose temple is fighting
strongly in behalf of San Fran
cisco. Alderman has intimated
that he will vote with the others
of the committea, and will not
offer a minority report.
The other members of the com
mittee, all of them ardently for
Seattle's claims, are Frank A.
(‘hase, El Katif, Spokane;
(harles H. Boden, Kosair, Louis
ville; E. H. Merritt, Mizpah, Fort
Wayne, Ind.; C. V. Dunbar, Palestine,
Providence, R. I.
Presentztion of the committee’s re
port, however, does not mean the end
of the fignt. San Francisco and its
adherents are determined. A plan of
warfare to the last ditch has been
perfected,
Real Fight to Come.
The final battle will be precipitated
whea “Mot” Flint, past potentate of
Al Malaikah Temple, l.os Angeles,
will ask the assembly to substitute
Sun Francisco for Seattle in the re
port,
The Imperial Council promoted the
highest officers in accordance with
iong established custom.
As a result of the accession, Dr.
Frederick R. Smith, imperial deputy
potentate, of Rochester, N, Y., {s now
the imperial potentate of the great
order, William W. Irwin joining the
ranks of the past imperials.
Through tne unexpected resigna
tion of William J, Matthews, of New
York, the imperial marshal, two
piaces became vacant, and Ernest A.
Cutts, of Savannah, imperial captain]
HOME
EDITION
of the guard and James 8. McCand
less, imperial outer guard, of Hono
lulu, advanced two berths instead of
one.
Jack Jones Honored,
Jack T. Jones, of India Temple,
Oklahoma City, was elected captaln
of the guard, the next lowest office of
the Imperial Divan. Thus Noble Jones
is placed in line for succession to the
highest office of the Shrine.
The election came after a hot fight,
in which the other candidate wase
Conrad V. Byckman, Kismet Temple,
'Brooklyn, On the second and decid
ing ballot the vote was: Jones, 230;
Byckman, 193. On the first ballot the
candidates were Jones, Byckman, W,
H. Passchen, Oriental Temple, Troy;
Joel C. Clore, Syria Temple, Cincine
nati, and Daniel Charles O'Flaherty,
Acca Temple, Richmond.
Jones is a real estate and oil man
of Oklahoma City, and one of the
most popular Shriners of the Mid
dle West. The band of India Tem-=
ple, anticipating his election, was sta<
tioned outside the hall, and upon the
annpuncement burst into triumphal
strains.
Byckman, defeated for captain of
the guard, was nominute@ for im=-
perial outer guard by Billy Bristol,
Al Kader Tempel, Portland, Oreg., who
himself was nominated, wut withdrew,
The other candidate for the lowest of«
fice is Andrew Snyder, Salaam Tem
ple, Newark. Indications point to
Byckman's election.
The struggle for the next meeting
of the Shrine is waxing hot, and lob
bying in progress about the Lyrig