Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 197%.
!
Jurist Declares He Will Limit Ar
guments to One Hour for
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Each Side. |
T !
Continued from Page 1. 5
ly boarded the train Lewis had left,
for she said she met two young wom
en and an older one. They got off
at _Sgtu ‘Aptonio. Her conversation
with them was ruled out, but when
shown photographs of the sisters she
was positive ‘in her identification. She
described the clothes they had worn.
‘Henry D. Satcher, a dairyman of
San Anionio, was next. He said he
had sold milk to tFe Williams family
at No. 120 Wilkins avenue before
they moved out early in June.
Mr. Arnold tried to develop the
fact that orders for milk at the bun
galow increased after this, in an ef
fort to prove that more eensumers
were in the house, but this was ruled
o:lxt. The dairyman had not seen the
girls.
0. C. Hayworth, of No. 200 Wil
kins 'mvenue, San Antonio, said he
passed the bungalow twice every day.
One evenjng in June he saw two
young women sitting on the front
steps. Shown photographs, he said
he had not seen one of them very
well, but positively identified the pic
ture of eßatrice Nelms as the other.
An elderly woman had come to the
door as he passed, witness said.
Asked to identify Mrs. Innes as that
woman, he left the stand and asked
Mrs. Innes to remove her veil. He
was not positive, saying the woman
had worn glasses. Mr. Arnold showed
him a photograph of Mrs. Innes in,
a different attire and Hayworth said:
“That's the same woman.”
New Letters Offered. .
Mr. Dorsey offered several new let
ters and documents in evidence.
They were admitted.
Marshall Nelms, brother of the
missing girls in the Innes case, Fri
day told on the witness stand how
Mrs. Innes, when she was arrested in
Qregon, denied knowing the twe
Nelms girls and all knowledge of their
disappearance.
Mr. Nelms also testified that the
family home was in Fulton County
and not at Smyrna, the State pvident
ly preparing to forestall an attempt to
quash the indictment because she al
leged crime did not occur in Fulten
County.
“The place in Smyrna is merely a
summer home,” said Mr, Nelms. “Wa
went there when Lois was in the
West, in 1912. Our home is No. 82
Gordon street, West End, Atlanta.”
Mr. Nelms said he had read 50 or
more letters from Innes to Mrs. Den-‘
nis. The letters had been lost, though
he had traveled 22,000 miles in search
of them and of other evidence,
“He referred to marirage frequent-
Increases strength of
$ delicate. n “vous,
X 0" rundown people 200
i Fer cent In ten days
RN in_many instanceas,
SIOO forfeit if it falls
as per full explana-
FORFEIT tion in large article
soon to appear in
this paper. Ask your
doctor or druggist about it
Ja:obl‘ Tharmacy always carries it ip
stock.
Saturday Only
S2O WARDROBE
TRUNK
E B 2
s et 0
~f |
; g’w LT M
$13.50
Limited Number
$7.50 Cowhide Bags
For $5
$7.50 COWHIDE
SUIT CASES
. For $5
Others Reduced in
Proportion
FOOTE’S
Trunk . and Bag Factory
19 E. Alabama St.
Shriners Bound for Homemfi
After a Record Session§
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ly,” he said. “I remember a letter
saying, ‘While I am net with you in
the body I am in the spirit. I hope
some day we will be married and
settled in the West.'”
Innes frequently referred to his pe
culiar Oriental religion, the witness
sajd, and urged #"' Dennis to read
certain books. eélms had seen het
reading them.
Nelms then described the arrest of
Innes and his wife in Oregon, ~to
which he was a witness.
“I talked with her, but not with
Innes,” he said. “She admitted being
in Atlanta in April and May, 1914, for
her health, she said, but did not give
any of the places she had stayed here.
She denied going to the place in
Smyrna.” .
Judge Hines objected to his quot
ing Mrs. Innes, but was overruled,
“She denled ever having seen my
sisters,” said Nelms. “I asked her it
they had not been to No. 120 Wilkins
avenue, San Antonlg, where the In
neses lived, and she declared: ‘That is
not true. Not a petticoat crossed that
threshold while Innes and I were
there.’
Nelms said Mrs. Innes admitted
going to Birmingham but denied be
ing with Beatrice Nelms on the train.
A witness Thursday had testified to
seeing them together.
Denies Visit to Bank. ¢
“When 1 asked her if she had
gone to the West End Bank with
Lols she said: ‘Mr. Nelms, it's a
lie,”” said the witness. “She also
denfed being at the Ransom Hotel
under the name of Elmore, living on
the Oregon farm under the name of
Harbaugh and living in an Atlanta
apartment under the name of Iville.”
Mrs. Mary Ellis, the dressmaker
whose statement several weeks ago,
that she discovered in Innes’ trunk
some clothing made by her for Mrs.
Dennis, caused such a furore, was
called to the stand, but the court rul
ing against the admission of murder
evidence prevented her story being
developed.
Mrs. Ellis idéhtifled Mrs. Innes as
the woman who caled at her home
in May, 1914, with Mrs. Dennis. The
latter called Mrs. Innes “Miss Mar
garet,” the witness said. She made
a dress and two waists for her and
a dress fore Mrs. Dennis. Witness
ils BT SAY otie v s
" e -"/flr .‘,‘“‘\\4. /T}A\---/)\/r'\{*
y : i k#la
s the “fievt-aid” to health. To keep [
| |HIVER [:ooroe oo
i PILLS | Corters Little Liver Pill éfi
Gonwine bears Signeture
T Tee TR T A S T TSR .-4,\.0
At top, the
Yaarab patrol
swinging down
Peachiree
street. Below,
at left, W.
Freeland Ken
drick, of Phil
adelphia, guest
of honor, and
Walter P. An
drews, poten
tate of Yaarab
Temple.
g Two Mrs. Infieses |
. . }
i Meet First Time; |
¢
~ Have Long Talk!
: bbb ¢
% HE two Mrs. Inneses mot 2
3 T Friday for the first Qimog
¢ and held a long confer- ¢
; ence behind closed doors. l
{ Mrs. Innes No. 3, under indict- 3
ment with her husband, expressed
a desire to talk to the New York 3
woman Mrs. Viola Sickles Innes, |
who has started a fight to regain f
possession of her son from Innes’ §
sister. ¢
Mrs Viola Sickles Innes also |
said she was anxious to talk to !
her successor, and Deputy Sheriff ?
Plennie Minor led her to the pri- g
vate office of the court stenogra- s
pher. Then he went to the court- !
room and took Mrs. Innes No. 3§
into the office. 7he two women |
were in conference for a long |
time. {
said she had scraps of cloth from
these garments as proof.
Judge Hines, on cross-examination,
asked questions tending to reflect on
the character of Mrs. Ellis. Asked
what kind of a house she had kept on
Whitehall street, Mrs. Eilis sald she
had moved away because some bad
characters had come in. She denied
she ever was arrasted,
J. C. Korn, cashier of the Smyrna
Bank, testified that Mrs. Dennis, on
June 10, 1914, drew a New York ex
change draft for $1,415. This, ten
dered in evidence, had been cashed
in New Orleans on June 13. An At
lanta exchange also had been drawn
by Mrs. Dennis and cashed. This was
for $1,125. '
Saw Innes on Road.
Dr. W. T. Pace, of Smyrna, said he
was driving his car past the Dennis
home at Smyrna one day and saw In-
THE ATLA. . EORGIAN-
.
nes by the roadside. He identified de
fendant as the same, and described
the clothes he wore on that date. He
was cross-examined closely, but stuck
by his identification. He had seen
the man only once, 35 feet away, and
while traveling at 10 miles an hour.
Earl Cox, soda water man at Broad
and Alabama streets, was recalled.
Mr. Dorsey asked if he knew La-
Vaux, the clairvoyant of East™“ Point,
at one time confused with Innes. Cox
said he did. Their complexions were
alike, but they were not the same, he
said.
C. M. Mion, who had offices in the
Candler Building in 1914, caused Mr.
Dorsey some confusion by saying he
couldn’'t swear he had ever seen the
Inneses before. He thought he had
seen Mrs. Innes, but not with the
Nelms girls.
“I have been misled and trapped,
{our honor,” said Mr. Dorsey, dismiss
ng the witness. “This man told me
he had seen the Inneses. Who has
been talking to you?”
“Nobody,” said Mion. He was ex
cused.
~ J. J. Jones said he had seen Mrs.
Innes in the office of Dr. H. M. S,
Adams in the Candler Building in
1914, He had seen Mrs. Innes with
two women, but couldn’t say they
were the Nelms girls, whom he did
not know.
Mrs. O. C. Hayworth, of San An
tonfo, who lived on Wilkins avenue,
sald that on the night of June 14, at
10:30 o'clock, an automobile stopped
in front of the bungalow where the
Inneses are said to have lived. It was
without lights and stopped under a
tree. The bungalow was the only
’ll‘hted house in the block at that
hour.
The defense objected to going fur
ther into the automobile incident and
the witness was withdrawn.
_Frank Williams, aged 14, of No. 225
Wilkins avenue, San Antonio, said
Innes had hired him to water the
lawn at No. 120 while he was away,
about a week. He had seen a woman
there, but he failed to identify Mrs.
Innes positively. ’
Made Formal Demand.
Attorney G. A. K. Stevens, of At
lanta, was put on the stand to testify
that he went to the jall as a repre
sentative of Mrs. Nelms and made
formal demand upon the Inneses for
a return of the money alleged to have
beeén obtained from Mrs, Dennis. His
testimony was ruled out, but the court
said he would Instruct the jury that
no such demand was necessary, |
Detective J. N. Starnes was called
and the jury was sent out while his
testimony was argued upon. Mr., Ar
nold desired to establish, he sald, that
Innes made an agreement to come to
Atlanta for trial provided tne murder
case were dropped, and after thntJ
agreement was made fought extradi
sl9°Down
Spring and SumméY Clothes
Tens of thousands of well dressed people
trade with us In our stores throughout the
United Btates. Read our terms We will
gladly sell you stylish Clothes on CANY DAy
ments, at as low a price as any store in the
clty
Men's Suits, $lO to $25, >
Women's Wash Suits, Dresses.
We Do As We Advertise
MENTER
71Y, Whitehall Street, Upstairs, Next to J. M. High Co
tion for nearly two years. Starnes
testified to this. He also said that on
the train to Atlanta Mr. and Mrs. In
nes conversed in some foreign lan
guage he could not understand.
.?lfdgg }ffil"g.\le% agalfist admitting
the evidence and Starnes was with
drawn. None of his testimony reached
the jury. .
B. W. Mitchell, a cousin of the
Nelms family; who*was in Oregon
when the Inneses were arrested, was
recalled to the stand. He said Innes
told him he never saw Beatrice in
his life and had seen Mrs. Dennis only
once, when he was her attorney in se
curing a divorée In Carson City.
Mitchell satd, upon questioning, he
had found newsp;urper clippings wlt‘h
pictures of t 1 agd rshall
léelm?‘hlgdenp?nga bqox in’ theMan.tlt:" of
the farmhouge where Inn liy and
was arflst@rf. ’mrs?was‘ Efuu’fi two
days’ search.
Judge Hines put Mitchell gn ;hs
grill. The witpesg gdmpitt e ha
gggn wc)tlrklr;g‘ fo;’ %e_tectf\‘rie ‘B\'. J.
urns In this case; shat he had been
arrested in Atlanta for misdemeanors,
and had been conyicted of conngction
Fred Geissler and his team of oxen,
with a safe-blowing case, though in
nocent, and charged with a burglary,
though acquitted of this, He had lived
in many cities in a few years.
Home Mission Board
Members Returning
Members of the Home Mission
Board of the Southern Baptist Con
vention were returning to their
homes Friday after having met here
in regular session for disposition of
yearly business before the board. -
The meeting was devoted prinei
pally to appropriations.
Federal Prison Paper
Has a Sport Section
A baseball supplement, with all the
latest scores, was a feature of the cur
rent issue of Good Words, the Federal
Prison weekly.
Part of the heading was printed in
red ink like the metropolitan newspa
pers Poetry, editorials, stories and
news articles completed the number.
m
$10.50 WRIGHTSVILLE
BEACH
And return on sale Saturdays. Re
turning leave Wrightsville second
Friday. SEABOARD.
Our Terms
On any :unhnfl of $lB
or less, SI.OO first pay.
ment gets the clothes;
then, pay as you wear,
$1 a week. Liberal
terms on larger pur
chases,
We gladly open ac
counts with people liv.
ing In East Point,
College Park, ch.—
ville, Kirkwood, Lake
wood, Decatur, Smyr.
na and Marletta, Ga.
N
Judge Pendleton Sets Action of
New York Woman for Satur
day Morning.
While fighting the chargeg against
himself in the Criminal Court, Victor
E,. Innes Friday also prepared to re
stst vigoroysly the effort of Mrs. Viola
Sickles Inmes, ¢f New York, his for
mer wife, to take from him his young
son, Jamqg Sickles Innes, whese cus
tody she is seeking to obtain through
habeas corpus proceedings. Judge
Joh'n o 158 _Pgndleton, in Superjor Court,
of the presentation of Mrs. Innes’ ap
plication, sigped an order setting the
cgse far a heg!ipg Saturday morning.
In the meantime the djsputed boy
will remain in the Tower in custody
of the Sheriff pending the declaiog of
Judge Pendleton.
The habeas corpus writ was di
rected to Mrs. Mary Sinclair, sistet ot
Vigctor Innes, wha has been caring for
the little fellow since the father has
been in jail in cenmection with the
di§ap_§earance of Eloise Nelms Dennis
and Beatrfce Nelms. Innés will not
appear at the hearinfi himself, for the
réason that his §wn trial was expect
ed still t 6 be In progress Saturday.
Mrs. Sinclair Friddy vigorously de
clared she would fight the New York
Mrs. Innes to the finish, and expressed
herself as satisfied that no court in
the Tand eyer would glve Mrs. Innes
custody of the boy. She asserted that
Mrs. Innes deserted the boy and has
no right tg him.
Mrs. Sinclair yrged that the father
is In cpntrol of the boy legally, for the
reaspn that the courts of Nevada
i \ Bop EAE
AR S A #
] y L) ' .
! " |Ve b |
za" BT ’5 \ 4
B Al Al |
g s ol k 3 :” i
- ,R}i N
} , WY ;".- 7
<R E b w" i
e o AN I >
M:/":" & B s'g
b S il
e et B
NI e . e wxmoé
placed him iln control at the time
Innes obtained his divorce in 1910 in
Carson City from Mrs. Innes.
Mrs. Innes, in her petition, attacked
the validity of this divorce action,
declaring it was obtained fraudulent
ly, and asked the Superior Court to
declare it null and void.
; ottt
’ Brooksey B. Teel. of No. 200 Jett
street, formerly of Fayetteville, will
‘be given a hearing Saturday morning
at 10 o'clock before United States
Commissioner Carter in the Federal
Building on the charge of misappro
?rhtln‘ funds intrusted to his care
or money orders. Teel formerly was
a rural mall carrler in Fayette
County, and it is charged that he
took farmers’ savings in small sums
to get money orders, did not buy the
orders at Fayetteville and kept the
money.
It is said Teel claims he had been
drinking and could not tell the agri
culturists’ money from his own.
Abcut sls in all was missing, and this
has been replaced. The offenses are
chargsd, in each of the months of
January, February, March and April,
8. B. Lewls, postmaster at Fayette
ville, will be a witness against Teel.
R s K‘ ) N
i e . i .
Tees @Qs
5. at C New Line of Pure Rubber® ,
@4 == = Bathing Caps in Late Designs yJ ,_
\'""fl . and Shap@s. ‘ ,'-f‘
Maroon, Red, Purple, Blue and Sea Foam with Kosettes.
- Pure Gum Rubber.
Others, including Hatw %pefith Brim to shade and
Streamers, up to $1.50.
Eleven Real Drug Stores ]
Godbee Pardon Case
To Go Over a Year
The petition for ampa.rdon for Mrts
n of i " rying U
smeqatgn((“glgttfi%e Stag[e‘lagrnr %Hidgé
ville, for the murder of 'her former
husband apd his bride, will not be
takeéßr up l?y the Prison Commission
until next spring. ’
It was at' the request of counsel
for the petitioner the board deferred
action. , There are court recor@s bears
lng on the case which counsel desires
to"search for aata before presetitify
the case. : 3
" 'The regular monthly session of the
board will begin Monday. "There al‘q
several hundred pétitions to be taken
up. g ¢
Seuthern Insuranee
- Heads Meet Here
Executive heads of life lngurflacq
comppanies Tn the South Wf.l‘fi meeting
at the Pledmont Hotel Friday for an
annual conterence looking toward t%e
gegeral improvement of healt?; stand
ards, bu?mggi systems and other mat
ters otr nterest to insprance fompa~
nies. hey met in executlve segsion.
Bdmungd Strudwick, pregqupt ot the
Atlantic Life Ingurance Company,
wif "bggdqlaners at Richmond, Btg
sided,"anq” A. L. Barksdale, secretary
of the 'Southeastern Tife Insu;qnca
Company, of Greensboro, N. C., acted
as secretary. J
Moo
4 -
Third of Cotton Grop
In Georgia Stunted
|
R — \
STATESBQRO, Jyng 2.—Rafe Sim
mons, thesg}uflm‘h County au}horitv
og cotton prospects and the afigest
buyer p? the staple in Southeast
Georgia, gay% that 33 per cept has
been styn e,g y the long qry weather
that prevailed recently, and that the
crop will be marketed later thig year
t£ n ever before.
?‘ge states that there ig not a bale
of pga,—ig‘)gnd cotton new held in Bul
-Igch (‘op‘{\_ty. fiad that there has been
greater diversificgtion In this cqounty
than ever before. ,
L Tn w
Py e 18, 1o
'\'i; ‘:*“J‘ 7:‘. P:u’*:"(:‘:q'u;l!_ .'...'r e i_._.!"-m 3 s(i 1 -
= LT DS
S Souibliinag, ¢ . b, ol SN :‘ ’
et b PRy ERPY [ {
4 ! L'_"!'l *gi."_,.’-w," "‘. _-. !'_ '_‘?" "
e A X e R gl BEERS
PRI e | X CCNN
—_— .
THE MARTINIQUE
s SRR e
ATLANTA, QA
M
d
The Kress)
}
Stores
—_—
- WILL CLOSE f
At 6 o’'Clock
DURING
JUNE, JULY and AUGUST
Get the habit, do your shopping
early on Saturdays
VIADUCT ARCADE
22 KRESS e
9 Whitehall St. 39 Whitehall St.
—ATLANTA, GA
Decree IsySiglgpd
Judge Newman, of the United
States Distrist Cgurt, Erlda,y signed
an order directing that the sentences
of hig court be carried out by the
paymepgt of $190,800 by the c*ty to the
New York Destructgr Cog;p ny for
the crematory, with interest 3{ 7 pen
cent from May 1.
““TRiS'IS the final Federal Court pro<
cedure in the matter.
SR LI e T
Court Continues °1
Suit Against City
o Geilt » s v O
The SIB,OOO Noll Construction Com -
pany breath of dispésal plant contrace’
suit against the city in the Unifed
States District Court Friday was con-,
tinued until Monday by order of Jugge
Newman.
The judge's order interrupted -,
ringing speech to the jury by Attor=
ney C. P. Goree, who repregenty g‘.lo
construction firm, and the jury mem
bers rushed to the marshal's a&é“
for theiv lunch money.
3 gy
5 fiu’i@rm&e&!& |
g Distressing and dangerous compli
-2 gtions may follow if ‘iou neflact l*
én go serigds a
reme&klbcv}mn’s )“Altemu%o‘qmy
brthg rellef. " For more shan twenty
yxrs it ?as been wide‘l'z gned in such
cases with bg‘xvxeflclal silits.
AN with afiy '“mem%atlon employed
in "l".ed‘m;\‘ble\hme uelttresult.:tfiu
obta en the patient pays \
a’i‘nfiefimgo Mt *afifl'unp'buuw'g% 4
rest apd fresh air.
Beeause of its e.%fily assimilable ¢
commt of cag:lul? ¢ %t\d. th&' 9; =
arat is gffective where ofiq
?'pbq?lder is indwut d. AS'a corfee- §
vée of night s 'dais it has gflfllfl
most useful. It thay be tried with
abgohute safety, mfir_ it gontains no ¢|
hapmful or habit-forming drugs as
My lml'y all Jacobs’ Drug Stores §
ap?io!iyhng cyru;;?sm € Shore :
. Eckman Laboratory, Philadelphia.
5