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FIVE CENTS)
A Clean Wholesome Paper ,
for Southern Homes |
VOL. XVII
GENERAL ST RIKE% DECLARED Iy *BEQRIZ(IN
GERMANS ASK TRIAL OF KAISER
BIG JAIL DELIVERY AT TOWER FAILS
A well-planned conspiracy on the
part of several prisoners in the Ful
ton County Tower, including a con
demned murderer, to saw their way to
freedom was thwarted Wednesday by
jailers, who unearthed numerous steel
saws. Two were taken from the death
cell of Joe Webb, who was sent here
for safe-keeping from Rome.
The discovery was made as a result
of an investigation led by Bob Hol
land, deputy sheriff stationed at the
Tower, upon information from an un
revealed quarter, evidently from fel
low prisoners of the plotters.
The investigation began when sus
picion fell upon a woman who visited
Webb frequently. The jailer's in
formant pointed to her as having part
in the plot, and she was searched
when she called at the Tower two
days ago. This search revealed noth
ing, but Deputy Holland was con
firmed in his suspicions, and took his
investigations to Webb's cell, which
is the fourth in the north tier of cells
for dangerous prisoners
Long search revealed two steel
saws beneath the prisoner’'s bunk
There were signs that Webb already
had been at work sawing the bars of
his cage, apparently cutting them
slightly each night for a week.
The investigation did not stop there
but was continued itno other cells of
the tier. In the cage of J. H. Buddie,
alias Willlam Newsome, and known
more familiarly among shady associ
ates 3s “New York,” two more saws
were found. It is believed they were
brought into the Tower by Buddie
hidden in the lining of his belt
The mysterious source of informa
tion leads denuties to believe that
other prisoners have likewise been
equipped, and that no less than two
dozen saws have been spirited into
the Tower, laying the ground for a
widespread jail delive Surveillance
has been increased, and the investiga
tion was being continued Wednes
day
» . . .
Bulgarian Atrocities in
. .
Serbia Come to Light
(By International News Service.)
PARIS, Nov. 27 ~Twenty-five
hundred Serbians, all the inhabitants
of the Serhian village of Vlassotinetzi,
were killed by the Bulgarians during
the Bulgar occupation of Serbian soll,
said a dispatch from Nish today,
All of the magistrates, priests and
school teachers in Southwestern Ser
bia were soht or hung by the Bulgars
in an effort to exterminate the Serb
race.
i
Mrs. Formby, Witness
.
In Frank Case, Dies
ROME, Nov. 27.—The career of Mrs.
Nina M. Formby, who testified sensa
tionally in the f.eo Frank case, comes
to an end when she will be buried here
Thursday. She had gone to France,
and it is stated died on shipboard en
route, or in France, from pneumonia,
Only Five Weeks |
Until Christmas. |
.3
You'll he happler If you do not put
off vour final gift selections until the
eleventh hour of the day, So will the
stores with the clerks who are not
too tired to enjoy Christmas with the
rest of us.
Shop Farly in the Day. ‘
|
1
Make Up Your Gift Lists From
Georglan-AmericanAdvertisements |
Full International News Service
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Crowds went wild with joy when they saw the rulers of Belgium triumphantly enter Bruges. The photograph at the top shows
King Albert and Queen Elizabeth having a ehat with the Governor and Burgomaster of Bruges. The.two latter have been in the recon
quered city ever since the Germans came. The photograph below shows King Albert, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Leopold on horse
back in front of the Statue of Breydel in the main square of Bruges. ;
Litutenants Charles . Montgom
ery, Jr., No, 115 Linwood avenue, and
Beverly D, Evans, Jr., son of Judge
Evansg, of the Federal Court for the
Southern District, have been killed in
action In France, according to news
in Atlanta. Both were widely known
and pepular young men, and members
of prominent families
Lieutenant Montgomery was killed
Qetober 15, in the Argonne, the mes
sage sald., No details have been
learned. He was a graduate of the
second oflicers’ training school at
Fort Oglethorpe, He went to France
lagt March with the Seventh Machine
Gun Battalion. In the St. Mihiel drive
he was transferred tg the Ninth Bat
talion, which had a shortage of of
flcers, Young Montgomery in eivil
life was practiing law with the firm
of Brown, Randolph & Parker. His
father, the only one left of the imme
: : THE
=L VIR
B ITR o e e |
¢ A L -~ AAR ALY -"
§7= Ul
TR Y LEADING NESeapea ot AL NS OF 7o . SOUTHEAST w)& oy
TR A LEADING NEWSPAPER ilne s 5%“3,—15—"—“— OUTHEAST ~ |74 W
diate family, is an elder in the Cen
tral Presbyterian Church.
News of the death of young Beverly
Evans came in a letter from Captain
Leaver Richardson to - his father,
Alonzo Richardson, as it had not been
carried in the casualty lists. No ur-\
ficial verification has been received
from Washington, Young Evans was
23 years old, a graduate of the Uni-|
versity of Georrla and the first offi
cers' school at Fort McPherson. He
was recently promoted to be first
lieutenant, He went overseas last’
August-with the Twentieth Machine
Gun Battalion,
Judge Evans, his father, formerly
was chief justice of the Georgla Su
preme Court, He was on that bench
with Judge Marcus Beck, whose nun‘
was killed In action while serving
with the marines.
Atlantan Honored by
National Contractors
T. T. Flagler, a well known hulldinfl
contractor of Atlanta, g:: been electe
one of the vice preside of the Con
tractors’ Assoctation of America, organ
ized last week in a big meeting at Ché-
CHEO,
u*he Atlanta delegation attending the
Chicago convention consisted of Mr,
Flagier, H. J. Carr, A. J. Krebs, Sr.
and Dan Carey.
ATLANTA, GA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1918
; ’
I -
|
Detalls of the settlement of lase
week's tie-up of traflic at the Atlanta
’.lumr Terminals, caused by disagree
‘ ments between the employees and the
| terminals company were reviewed
‘\\‘l*u“lh“\llu_\ by Val Fitzpatrick, presi
dent of the Brotherhood of Rallway
Trainmen, who stated that the trou
ble has been adjusted and steps taken
to prevent further disturbances
Mr. Fitzpatrick denied emphatical
1y reports that the trouble had been
settled by his appointment as tem
| porary superintendent of the termi
! nals to handle the situation
} “This announcement was absolutely
unwarranted,” he sald, “for 1 have no
connection with the terminals in any
shape, form or faghion, | merely came
to Atlanta to handle the men in my
capacity as a brotherhood official, and
to see that hasty and ill-advised steps
were not aken, My function was
advigory in nature, and not adminis
trative. 1 gave no orders affecting
(By International News Service.)
PARIS, Nov., 27.—Press sentiment
is erystallizing in favor of the small
est number of delegates at the peace
conference table. Some papers sug
gested today that the number of plen
ipotentiaries be limited to one to each
power, with Marshall Foch sitting in
an advisory capacity, in order to ex
{wwi::n the business.
* 1
Pope Will Not Have
Tovt : ) > ;
Voice in Peace Parley
| LONDON, Nov, 27—~Current re-
TT o e .
O S e M s R G e G e entd 1
SN N B %
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FEE: “ i 8
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SRS R &5 i 8
RRRRN SO L e
ports that the Vatican would be rep
resented at the peace conference were
set at rest today when it was learned
by the International News Service on
high authority that there is absojute
ly no chance of Pope Benediet having
any volce In the parley. ~ The Pope
will not be present personally nor has
any delegate from the Vatican been
invited to participate,
Pope To Be Forced
From Rome, Is Belief
(By International News Service,) *
LONDON, Nov., 271 t 1s rumor"‘d
among cmployees at the Vatican that
members of the Pope's entourage “are
convinced that the Pope will be com.
pelled to leave Rome within six
months after the conclusion of peace,”
¢ajd a dispatch to The Daily News
from Rome today. ’
SCOTCH STEAMER SUNK,
LONDON, Nov, 27.-~The Scotch
steamship Mercedes, 4,619 tons, has
been sunk by a mine in the North
Sea, with the loss of three lives,
Lloyds announced today. The ship
was bound from Rotterdam,
T ———————————————————— ‘
traffic In any way, and was here for
no other purpose than to help all par
tles to an understanding of mutual
obligations,” |
T WV Y
By J. BART CAMPBELL.
WASHINGTON, Nov, 27.—One of
the last of the acts of Secretary Mc-
Adoo before he resigned was to trans
mit a written suggestion to the other
members of the President’s ‘Cabinet,
and to the executives in their de
partments as well as into his own,
that they ask Congress for substan
tial increases in salaries and wages
“al along the line,” the House appro
priations ecommittee was informed to
day by Government officials.
" The McAdoo letter, a copy of which
‘lhu committee possesses, is reported
te have been written by the retiring
Secretary of the Treasury after he!
had conferred with President Wilson
on what he is said to have dnsrribwll
as a most urgent necessity for pro
viding Government heads and em
ployees with financial means suffi
cient to meet the high cost of livim:[
in Washington and elsewhere in the
country. It was at this f‘unfornm'o'
that he is believed to have discussed
with the Presideint his inability to
live on %is own salary—sl2,ooo a year
—which he afterward gave as his
reason for reskning. l
McAdoo's suggestion to the other
Cabinet members and their subordi
nates was that when they prepared
their respective estimates for the fis
cal year beginning July 1, 1919, they
did not include requests for salary or|
wage increases in them. but im'nrrl
porate such requests in sumx‘o*mvnlnl,
egtimates, !
These supplemental estimates were |
prepared in accordance with his sug- |
gestion and are now being (‘tlllfild“l"‘d!
by the House appropriations commit
tee, which is engaged in holding
hearings behind closed doors on the|
executive, legislative and judicial ap
propriations bill for the 1919-1920 fis
eca' vear. Congress must act on this
hill at the short session, which begins |
next Monday. !
Two weeks will probably c¢lapse,
hawever, hefore the House appropria- :
tions committee is able to report the|
bill 6ut, The regular estimates yuh-’
mitted for incorporation in the bill|
total approximately $121,000,000. Al
though this amount far exceeds that
allowed, the executive, legislative and
judicial branches of the Government
whout $80,000,000 for tne current
fiscal year-—it does not include the|
supplemental estimates. The total of
these the committee has not yet com- |
puted, :
Secretary of Labor Wilson sup.-r-[
vigsed the prepartion of those of the;
supplemental estimates, which effect
wage increases for employees in the
varfous Government departments He |
directed, at the request of the I‘rnsi-l
dent, the House appropriations com- |
mittee has been glven to nndr-rsh\n'l.!
that a eareful survey be made of lh~-‘
wages at present palid to such em-|
ployees, from the humble serub-|
woman and furnace man to the|
skilled mechanie and the u‘:nr[u-nlo-r!
Then he had their wages compared |
with those earned by men and women |
engaged In similar occupations nnt[
identifled with the Government serv- |
fce. In addition to that, he had the|
Federal wage seale compared with |
the increased cost of life's necessities |
in Washington and elsewhere-—a cost |
which has as yet shown no disposi- |
tion to decrease
Secretary Wilson’s action is =ald so!
have been taken after a meeting of
the President with his Cablnet
What occurred at that meeting, In
which Secretary MecAdoo was an ac
tive participant, is being reflected by
the testimony of CGovernment nf'!Ll
cialg and bureau chiefs who are tes.|
tiftving daily before the House appro {
priations committee, They are unwn-‘
fmous In declaring that neither the
Government executive nor the Gove
ernment gubordinate can live decent
ly on what Congress allowed them |
for the current flscal year
It is predicted the pressure of the
administration will be brought on
Congress at the approaching short
seasfon, at which the Demoeratic ma-
Jority will be In control hefore glving
way to thelr Republiean opponents
in the next Congress, to grant the
boosts In salarles and wages the ad
ministration desires l
1t is not unlikely that the majority
report of the committee will recom
mend the Inereases asked for by the
Continued on Page 3, Column 5,
_EDITION
lssued dally and entored as seeond-class matler ot
the pastoffice at Atlanta under act of March 3, 1879,
Georgia Land Scheme
.
Promoter Convicted of
Swindling Ministe
} (By International News Service.)
| CHICAGO, Nov. 27.—Edward C.
Woodell, a real estate and bond
salesman, accused of swindling the
Rev. F. W. Grossman, of the Pres
byterian ministry, of Indianapolis,
Ind., of SI,OOO through a Georgia
land scheme, was found guilty of
using the mails to defraud by a
qu in Federal Judge Landis’ court.
Woodell, who was a former Sun
day school pupil of the Rev. Gross
man, was charged with having ob
tained the money by purporting
that he would give the clergyman a
half interest in the title to 8,000
acres of land. Woodell lived at the
Congress Hotel and represented
himself as a man of means.
The Rev. Mr. Grossman paid
Woodell $750, which, it was claim
ed, was to be used in clearing the
title to the land and transferring it
to the pastor. Later on he gave
$250 more. It developed that
| Woodell has had a stormy expe
rience as a salesman, having been
~ arrested in St. Louis in connection
- with a farm loan transaction and
later jailed in Pueblo, Cal, for ob
taining money from a syndicate of
) investors.
l (By International News Service.)
NEW YPRK, Neov. 27—Two more
United States soldiers are under ar
rest at provost headquarters today as
the result of the second consecutive
‘nl;:ht battle between sailors and sol
‘diers and the police at meetings
where Bolshevism was applauded.
~ The latest disorder occurred last
night outside of the Palm Garden,
where a number of persons who ap
prove the Bolshevik course, held a
mass meeting under the auspices of
the Women's International League to
discuss President Wilson's fourteen
points, the censorship and Russia.
For three hours hundreds of sol
dlers and sallors, a few marines and
scores of other persons fought with
the police and provest guard in an
effort to get inside Palm Garden., The
disorder at times paralleled that of
Monday night at Madison Square
Garden, when score were Injured
by sticks and stones ind several sol
diers and SBocialists were arrested.
Six persons, one of them an on
looker, were;seriously injured in last
night's battling. The two soldiers
who were taken Into custody were
locked up as military prisoners and
probably will be given a hearing to
day.
.
‘Hobey’ Baker and Miss
Scott Break Engagement
(By International News Service.)
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 27.—N0
wedding bells will ring for “Hobey"
Baker, now Captain Hobart A, 8.
Eaker, aviator with the American ex
peditionary forces in France, accord
ing' to a cablegram made pobiie here
today, w
Official breaking of “Hobey's" en
gagement to Miss Miml Scott by mu- |
tual consent, was announced by Mrs,
George S, Scott, grandmother of Miss
Secott, Mrs, Scott stated that she had
no information further than the brief |
cable stating the engagement was |
broken, \
Captain Baker met Miss Scott in‘
France last June while she was work
ing there among destitute women and
children
.
Police Seek Men Who
Held Up Saloon Keeper
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, Nov. 27.—The police of
this city are today looking for four
bandits who yesterday held up An
drew Husek, a saloon keeper in Joliet,
while he was taking $12,600 from the
bank to be used to cash factory work
erst.pay checks. Having successfully
robhbed Husek, who was in an auto
mobile, the men fled In another car,
believed stolen, and were traced as
far as Blue Island, on the outskirts
of Chieago. Two suspects have al
r«yy been arrested,
A A N N
{ . -~
. Give An Hour To (,
5 » ‘'
! Prayer Meeting Tonight
It I 8 an hour for thought, an
hour In which to face prob
lems and find solution for §
difficulties,
Help comes through the quiet,
thy companionship and the
communion of good peopls
! with each other. Thg prayer
S meeting is an Infurm.’\l gath
) ering. You will not be a
$ stranger even ‘if you have
y never been in the church be
: fore, and you will come awny
{ feellng that you have found ?
? a friend--many friends, §
‘ Go to prayer meeting tonight,
, And go to Church Sunday. You
will find Church Pro_?um- printed
! every Saturday in The Georglan.
NO. 99
(By International News Service.)
LONDON, Nov, 27.—A general
strike has been declared at Berlin,
said a news agency, dispatch from Co
penhagen today.
(By International News Service.)
AMSTERDAM, Nov. 27—A mili
tary counter revolution is brewing in
Germany, according to reports re
ceived here today from the frontier.
General von Marwitz, who com
mands a big army near Treves, in
Western Prussia, is preparing for a
counter revolt, it is said,
(By International News Service.)
COPENHAGEN, Nov, 27—A de
mand that the former Kalser be
placed on trial was made at a Federal
conference in Berlin, according to ad
vices from that city today.
The same demand is being urged
by the Radiecal Socialists, whose an
| tagonism against the former war lord
{ has risen to a high pitch since the
| disclosures in Bavaria that the erst
| while Kalser and his Junker advisers
| brought on the war,
The extremists are Insisting upon a
tribunal to try not only the ex-Kaiser,
but the former Crown Prince, ex-
Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg
and two former Forelgn Secretaries,
Von Jagow and Zimmermann.
Officlals of the old “war regime” in
Berlln are making their way out of
L Ge rmany as rapidly as possible, fear
ing developments when the army
gets back to the capital,
All of the German governments
were represented at the federal con
| ference at Berlin. Various reports
| were made by the heads of the de
partments of the new Soclalist cen
tral government. Chancellor Ebert
talked on the general situation facing
the country, while Sols exposed the
ifnrvi;zn outlook, and Dr., Erzberger
reported on the armistice negotia
' fions and the peace situation. Before
adjournment the conference adopted
| “in principle” a resolution that a
%run»’ti!uvnl assembly should be con
| voked at Frankfort as soon as possi
| ble
| (The selection of Frankfort as the
!
meeting place of the new German as
| sembly ralsed a question as to wheth
er or not the German capital might
be removed from Berlin on acconnt of
| the unpleasant war associations con
lmw‘ln-l with that city.)
: There is keen hostility against Ber
lin and its typification of Prussianism
by other parts of Germany and ex
pression of this feeling is being shown
in the growth of the secessionfst)
movement, especially in Southern
Germany,
A remarkable feature of the whole
revolutionary situation is the repc
tion against the former Kalser,
A Lelpsic newspaper, The People's
Gazette, accuses the one-time war
lord of being no better than a robber,
Willlam Hohenzollern, said this pa
per, in fleeing to HoMand, took not
only his personal Dbelongings, but
much property of the nation, such as
gold, silver and securities.
The Berliner Tageblatt, formerly a
supporter of the ex-Kalser, brands as
‘gross hypocrisy” the pretense of Mr.
Hohenzollern that he shared the war
time sufferings of the people.
. 1 " 2
Dr. Sols Explains Why
’
He Adressed America
(By International News Service.)
BERNE, Nov. 27-Dr. Bolf, For
elgn Necretary in the new German
Government, announced at the na
tional conference which ended in Ber
lin vesterday, that he had sent pro
p s to the United States™for an
armistice.and peace because the par
ticipation of America in the war
proved the decisive factor, said a dis
pateh from the German capital today,
Kaiser's Son to Return
o ’
When ‘All Is Safe
(By International News Service.)
LONDON, Nov. 27.-~The former
German Crown Prince announces his
Continued on Page 3, Column€