The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, December 26, 1906, Image 1

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The Atlanta Georgian, m VOL. 1. NO. 209. ATLANTA, GA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26,1906. Oo Train* KIVB CBXTSL Mrs. Fred Auld Lay in Field Two Hours. JAPS INCITE ISLAND FOLK LFRCH OP TRAIN THREW HER OFF Rule of United States to Be Over thrown. CONGRESSMEN SPEND HOLIDA Y 1NVESTIGA TING ON THE ISTHMUS Havana, Cuba. Dae, 26.—Sousa* tional reports relative to the five .Japanese found sketching the city fortifications have been made to' Brought to Presbyterian °S!iTn • . *\c< orcling to those reports the Hospital for Japanese are preparing to incite rebellions against the authority of Treatment. j the I'nited States simultaneously !>» t'uba, Hawaii and the Philip pines. February is said to be the At 4:40 p.m. Mrs. Auld was taken j time set for the imnVnirs from the operating room. It is thought I T ,, N i,,r„, ' ,' , thfl oaeration wn aueeaaaful i . r , *' iUfornmll m has been given , ' r ‘'! U rS ,on , by a Bovernment ifOcl.il named Pardlnos, who is re- ‘ ' overheard the Jap. the operation was successful. After being thrown from a Bout hern railway train two Miles beyond Mucli- *on. S. O., and lying for over two hours in the freexlng weather In nn uncon scious condition, Mrs. Fred \Y. Auld. "t Elberton, Is now lying In the Pres byterian Hospital In Atlanta sulTciittg from cuts, bruises and a fractured arm and at present the surgeons canont say whether or not she will live. Mrs. Auld and her husband were turning to their home Tuesday after visiting friends In Westminster, S. C.. and when near Madison, Mrs. Autd started from the coach In which she and her husband were riding for an other coach to see lu r brother. While on the platform between the two cars, a lurch >f the train threw her off and It waa not for some time that she waa missel. When her hue- band discovered ahe was not on the train, he got off at the next station and getting a horse at.d buggy he went back along the rallrou-J and two hours afterwards he found his wife prostrate and bleeding on the ground.' .She waa brought Into Atlanta on Wednesday afternoon and was taken tv the hcspltal In an ambulance. Her condition Is dangerous and she may dls. In addition <0 her Injuries Mrs. Auld Is suffering from the exposure. MM PLAN ported |» have nnese here discussing the project. The "Missouri spirit" permeates ths entire country, and it it for this resson, doubtless, that tho mem bers ef the national congrett, whoso pictures are here givon, have determined to spend thsir Christmas holidays in investigating tho conditions on tho Isthmus of Pansma. Reading from loft to right are: Senator Frank P. Flint and Representatives J. R. Knowland and D. E. McKinley, of California; James McKinney and F. S. Dick son. Illinois; Frank B. Fulksrson, Missouri; J. Howell, Utah; H. Steenorson, Minnesota; Zeno J. Rives, Illinois; M. R. Kinksid, Nebraska, and George W. Smith, Illinois. This sketch shows the district in which they will •pend five days. ATLANTA WOMAN CAST INTO A PRISON CELL ON CHARGE OF THEFT FIGHT FATAL DUEL AT HIDING CLUB One Man Is Blinded and Mutilated by Ad versary. New York, Dec. 26.—In the biiftenietit of the Hiding Club, the most exclu»lre orgnnl* cation devoted to eque»tiinnl*m In the United Htfltea. Thotua* Connelly and Jntne* Cnmildy buttered and ntabbed nt ench other today In a duel with pitchfork* until Con nally fell, mortally wounded, blinded and mutilated. Had blood over the division of tho Christ- mas money given to tho employees of tho club, which In nt No. 7 K. Fifty,-eighth street, canned the 'affair. Connelly taken to the Flower hospital In a dying condition, while Cassidy wn* locked up. Mrs. Jeanne Trautman Accused by New Yorker. SHE IS TO FIGHT CASE IN COURTS Declares No Respectable Woman Is Safe on the Streets of Gotham. GREEK LETTER DELEGATES BEGIN THEIR CONVENTION WITH BIG ATTENDANCE 00U090OO00OO00000000000009 0 NO ANSWER MADE O O TO POPE’S PROTEST. O o a O Paris, Doc. 28.—Tho foreign of- O O tlco toduy denies emphatically that O j O the French government has made O O nay reply to the vat Iran’s pro- O 0 test to the power against the ex- O 0 pulsion of Mgr. Montagnlnl. O V00C0000O00O 00 O0O00O0000OO Chicago, Dec. 28.—“You ought to be In prison and you will be before this Is over. We will protect the negroes they are as good as you." Cnarles Dold, ex-president of the Chicago Federation of Labor, In con cluding his direct examination In the ffhea trial today, declared the forego ing words were spoken by Attorney Levi Mayor, representing the employ er, In a conference called by tho Il linois State Board of Arbitration. Cold's testimony put Into the record a refusal ofTtlontgomery, Ward A Co to arbitrate. Witness also told of a hotel confer ence In which an attorney, whose name' *** not brought out, threatened to force every union teamster In the city on the streets by 8 o’clock the next day. IN DIFFERENT DOOMS •pedal to The Georgian. Jacksonville, Fla., Dec. 21.—The man found dead, unidentified, here was Oeorge Patterson, a cab driver. The *oman waa Alice Clark, keeper of the warding house where Patterson died. The coroner Is Investigating the death,. £o c ause la assigned for the deaths. The bodies were found In different fooms In the house. IS NAMED 8¥ FUSION PARTY havonnah, Oe.. Dec. 28.—Immediately f«er the declination of General P.- W. •eWrim to be the nominee of the Col- 1 ’'borne-Myers fusion faction, ha* om, the nomination and acceptance of 1 ,v »H*m Garrard, city attorney Jr 1 General Meidrtm’s law partner. II *HI oppose George W. Tledeman, nominee of the People’s Demo- :r V lr league. as the election takes place on Janu- JT ». It Is the Impression that Colonel ^•ftard will only hava a lighting against Mr. Tledeman. Col- L' a rrard’s friends will bold a rally anight. He Is In Asheville and will 101 r *'urn until tomorrow. ,0 uno man in Jail kwo., killing bar-tender. "t' 1 * 1 to Th. Georgian. Biistoj, xtrau Dec. 26.—The only !**«y In Bristol Christmas was the JSf'Mlot Ptekle Brown, a negro bar- Jd’-tr. by Oscar Leonard, white, aged si: „"' n dleu today. Leonard la in 1 -Z. claims the shooting was an But Brown stated on his death I?‘h*t Leonard fired upon him dellb- * T an d without cause. Tired Prisoner Surrenders. 'hctnrictl, o„ Dec. 26.—Tired of be- ■v nun:'-'! like a wild animal. Edward • ,• . '*1*h e!*ht other prisoners. , s " ' f 'om the Hamilton court?' tall ,y ' hi4t, surrendered hlmaelf to* nh he of the olher prisoner* uus "h captured. Veteran Members of S. A. E. Are Herp. 00000000000000000000000000 O CONVENTION sentiment, o O W. C. LEVERE, E. S. A. 0 o 0 o o Sigma Alpha Epsilon! SAYS THAT “THIRD DEGREE” CAUSED IVINS TO SWEAR HE HAD MURDERED WOMAN Her past—a glorious one. , 0 ten thousand youths attest. O Ifer future—a benediction * O untold thousands set to come. O Her work—tu weave together 0 O all over our broad land by . her Q O chords of eternal love, a brother- O O hood that will exult In noble man- 0 O hood. O O All hall Sigma Alpha Epsilon! O 000000000000000^0000000000 Tho semi-centennial convention the Blgnta Alpha Epsilon fraternity was called to order Wednesday morn Ing In the convention hall of the Pied mont by George P. Harrison, of Opeli ka, Ala., a charter member of the third chapter organised at the old Georgia Military Academy at Marietta, and the youngest brigadier general In tho Con federate army. About 1(0 members of the fraternity gathered In the hall to witness the pro ceedlngs of the first business meeting of the session. William C. Levere, Evanston, III., eminent supreme archon. sent a special Invitation to Mr. Har rison to be present and open the semi centennial convention as a mark of re spect to his long service and loyalty to the S. A. E. fraternity. The S. A. E-’s began to gather early Wednesday morning and by 9 o'clock the lobby and reading room of the Piedmont were swarming with the host* of college men shaking hands and renewing old acquaintances. Dele gates had come from the four quarters m . 1 Ifnliio ll’aalt. of the United States—Maine, Wash ington. California and Florida—and oy the time the convention was called to order everybody knew everybody else. Billy Lever, a Heavyweight. William Levere. known familiarly as Billy.” the biggest 8. A. E. man In the world, was on hand. He weighs over 200 pounds. Mr. Levere Is the ex ecutive head of the 8. A. E. fraternity. He Is also a member of the Illinois house of representatives and holds n high position In the afTalrs of his state. Immediately after the registration hooks were opened Mr. Levere appoint ed the committee on credentials. It was composed of W. R. F. Dunn, chair man; George D. Kimball, Clarence W. Stoweil, A. N. Bennett anil W. E. Lang. As the delegates registered they were given badge* and sleeve cuffs bearing the Greek letters 8. A. E. The business senslons will be field twice dally, beginning at 9 o’clock even* morning, and after a noon rece<n will begin again at 2 o’clock every artemoon. The meetings will be ex ecutive and will continue through Sat urday. The convention has many Im portant matters to consider and the delegates will be forced to work hard to flntsh up In the limited time. Surviving Founder. The last surviving founder. John Rudolph, of Pleasant Hill. Ala., who went With DeVotle, Is the center of at traction and admiration at the con vention. Mr. Rudolph was In Atlanta only once before. That was In 1861. when he was wounded and was brought to a hospital In this city. ••I remember very well my last visit to Atlanta.” said Mr. Rudolph Wednes day morning. ”1 was wounded out here somewhere In the hill* Mid they brought me Into the city to a hospital. I spent three very pleasant weeks then before I was sent home. I was with General Johnston's army. Atlanta has arown a Utile bit since then, hasn’t ItT n .. ontiul in Inltf Innrpr. Harvard Professor Declares Man Was Hypno tized and Then Hanged For Crime He Never Committed. SIX ITALIANS SLAIN , IN BLOODY MASSACRE ON CHRISTMAS NIGHT Murdered in House Mafia-Society Is Suspected. New York. Dec. 26.—Professor Hugo Mun-sterberg, of Harvard University, the famous psychologist, today star tled the police departments of every large city In the country by the publi cation, after an exhaustive investiga tion, of the statement that the great state of Illinois had hanged a man In Chicago for a murder of which he was absolutely innocent. The terrible “third degree,” declares Professor Mun- sterberg, was responsible for the pro duction of a hypnotic state In tho mlifd of Richard Ivins, who confessed to the killing of Mrs. Frank C. Hollister, a woman he had never seen. Professor Munsterberg's remarkable assertion, with all his proofs, as print ed In The Times Magaslne, Is as fol lows: ly PROF. HUGO MUN8TERBERG. On January 12, 1906, a young mar ried woman waa brutally murdered In Chicago. Her body was found by the unfortunate defendant lying face down, ward In n barn yard. The barn was about half a block distant from Id* home. He had to go there to attend to his father's horses. When he observed the body, he at once reported the mat ter to his father at the house and the father notified the police. The officers who Inspected the premises found the woman's hat at her feet, but could dis cover no evidence whatsoever of a scuffle having taken place. Purse, shopping bag, and muff were gone. Around her neck was a hard-drawn copper wire, the ends being twisted to gether. The young man looked os If he had not slept during the night, und the of ficers suspected him. The testimony showed that, he was everywhere re garded as thoughtful, obliging and of exceptionally good disposition, but oft en exhibiting marked stupidity. He never sought the company of women. All of his friends thought him decided, ly trusting and credulous and absent- minded. The police began to press him and more and more Impressively to suggest to him his guilt. Suddenly he began to confess, and he was quite willing to repeat his confession again and ngnin. Every time It became richer In de tail. On this basis he was condemned to death. So the matter stood when my opinion was asked for, as above report-' ed. 1 could npt help becoming con vinced that all the external signs spoke against the Interpretation of the Jury. The young man’s alibi proof, brought forw ard by his friends, seemed to point to the fact that the woman was mur dered by an unknown person at anoth er place, and that her body was drag- RACES Mr Rudolph wonted to talk longer, hut a 8. A. E. man came up and in sisted that he co up to the convention Continued on Psg* Five. wire colled around other street to the barn yard. Tfie so-called "confessloni” them selves seemed absurd and contradicto ry. and exactly like the Involuntary elaboration of a suggestion put Into hi* mind. His whole life history and ex pression of hfa face were In fullest ac cordance with the suspicion that tits mind was In a state of dlsaaaoclatlon when he began his confessions. It seemed to me a typical case of that large borderland region In which a neurotic mind develops an Illusory memory as to Its own doings in the past. After most careful scrutiny, as far as the printed material allowed, I wrote thus In June In my much abused letter that the confessions must be un true and that the condemned man had really nothing to do with the crime. I added at once, ’it is nn Interesting case of disassorlation and nuto-suggestlnn; it would need careful treatment to build up his dleRKsoelmed mind again and NEW ORLEANS. New Orleans, Dec. 26.—Tho-races to day resulted us follows: FIRST RACE—Toy Boy. 9 to 2, won iSpton, 7 to 5, second: Dockluw, 5 to 2, third. Time, 1:07 1-C. SECOND RACE—Rusk, 14 to 5, won; Alencon, 13 to 10. second: Ralbert, 2 to I, third. Time, 1:14. THIRD RACE—Debar, 1 to 2, won; Halloway. 4 to 5, second: Nutwood, 4 to 5, third. Time, 1:44 3-6. FOURTH RACE—Toboggan, 4 to 1. won: Meadowbreexe, 5 to 2. second: De Oro, 6 to 2, third. Time, 1:06 4-S. FIFTH RACE—Morales. 7 to 4, won; Sir Toddlngton, 3 to 4, second; Oo Id Circle, out, third. Time, 1:13 4-S. SIXTH RACE—Henry Watteraot). 5 to I. won; Abe Meyer, even, second; Gold Coin, 3 to 2, third. Time, 1:40 4-6. Entries For Thursday. FIRST RACE—Six furlongs: Lady Vimont 108, Impertinence 107, Royal Bond 104, Malta 104. Mnggie O’Neil 101, Eastern 06, chase 107, Dlclc Greene 101, Captain DcDonaltl 106, Kalserhoff 100. .Billy Vertress 106. Mnlaca 104. SECOND RACE—Five and a half furlongs, Selling: Mullins 104, Oosls 108, Posing 112, Babe B. 101, Tlchlmln go 108, Great 112, Gold Bearer 106, Abjure 106, Miss Ferris 101, Come On Sam 112, Hocus Focus 103, French Nun 101. THIRD RACE—Seven furlongs, New Year Preliminary, purse: Lucy Marie 102, Tudor 103, Beau Bruinmell 10:. Judge Post 102, De Ora 106. Voting 102. Pompadour'102, Paragon 105. FOURTH RACE—Milo handicap Pride of Woodstock 84. Missouri laid 107, Minnie Adams 113,- Juggler 111, Orbicular 101, St. Valentine 114. Debar 96. FIFTH RACE—Six furlongs, purse Calabash 106 , Woodsaw 106, Paul Clifford 111, Frontenae 109. Gentian 105. Phil Finch HI. Lady Vashtl 106. Trepan 111, Mafablu 111. Belle Strome "’ Sidney F. 107, Jucord 111, Fenian 106. ■SIXTH RACE—Mile: Merry Pioneer 109, Rosalie 103, Monte 105. King Ells worth 111, Relllndfan 106 Orly II 112, Terns Rod 108, Huntington 101. Foot lights Favorite 103, lola 102, Beecher 112. Bulwark 111, Sanction 104. Lemon Girl 106, Antimony 103, Red Light 109. Now Orleans, La., Dec. 26.—Six Ital ians were found murdered in a tene ment house In . Domains street early today. Some of them had been burned to death and there Is no doubt that the mon were victims of the Malta, which has been working secretly In New Or leans for many years, and lias broken out at Intervals, when revolting crimes have been committed. Not since the lynching of Italians by the wholesale, several years ugo, has the such a high btate of excitement. Following the discovery of the mur ders. the excitement grew to such bounds that the entire police depart ment was hurried to the tenement house. The police could not cope with the situation and a call was sent for every able-bodied llreuian In the de partment to hurry to the scene. The murders are believed to have O00O0O0O00000000000000000O O O NOBEL PRIZE PAPERS 0 ARRIVE FOR PRESIDENT. O New York, Dec. 28.—The Dan- 0 Ish steamer United Stntes, which 0 arrived today from Copenhag'n, 0 brought the documents awarding 0 the Nobel prise to President 0 Roosevelt. 00000000000000000000000009 The strange caae of Mary Carr la one which is now puaxllng the police. It up und put It umong the unsi mysteries or turn It over to Sherlock Holmes at El Dorado. Monday night a girl, giving her name as Mary Carr, ugecl 18 years, naked permission to sleep at police headquar ters. She said she had been living with a West End family and was treated ao badly she had to leave. ■ ,Ji She slept In the matron’s ward, but undoubtedly been 1 early Tuesday morning ahe told the planned ahead. That ho screums were I matron ahe had to go to the Terminal SHAH OF PERSIA London. Deo. 2G.—Advice* received here from Terehan, Persia, ray that the shah lx dying. heard from the murdered men lend* to the'theory that many men were on gaged In the slaughter and that th* victims were set upon nt a given slg nul and struck down before any them could make an outcry. The bodies of.the dead men were literally hacked to pieces and those that were burned bad evidently been set on fire after being put to death. The murderers are said not to have left a clew to their Identity. If they ure known the Italian* are the only ones who can enlighten the police, and up to this time they have refused to tulk. The police are of the opinion that the murders were committed by one of the muny secret societies and that the six men who were slain were marked for death by their own countrymen. At the time of the New Orleans Mafia lynchlngs. following the murder of the chief of police and other promi nent New Orleans men. It was brought out that there were many dangerous secret societies among Italians in the city and that men who offended one of these societies 1 were marked for death and men were selected to carry out the murder. Such I* the excitement of Italians that It would not surprise the police If other crimes were committed. MADAME GOULD MUST PAY BILL Itont. sail which, coniitc*. Tin* delivery of rrrixla Jewel* by SI. Ilnrlig wo. proved, and Mine. Gould Is held Ilshte for half the summit, fount Until to psy the other half. BAKER GROUND TO DEATH IN A CAKE MIXER 'olumbus, O.. Dec. 28.—H. 1). Van- klrk, a baker In the employ of the Bliss t>aker>', fell Into a cake mixer and his body wus so badly crushed that he died shortly after being taken out. 00000900000000000000000000 0 O O WINDOWS SHATTERED 0 O BY CONCUSSION FROM O O SALUTE BY ARTILLERY. O O . 0 O Special to The Georgian. 0 O Charlotte. N. C., Dec. 26.— 0 0 While members of the Charlotte O O artillery were celebrating with a 0 0 Howltxer at 1 o'clock yesterdoy 0 0 morning, and were saluting the O O "Man from Nowhere” Theatrical O O Company, leaving for Richmond, a O O double charge of powder shatter- 0 0 ed every glass In the Soutnerr. 0 0 railway’s handsome new station O 0 The city was thoroughly aroused O O and many people thought that O 0 there had been a catastrophe. station to meet a young man who was -olng to marry her. Again Tuesday night she showed up nt headquarters, •aid the young man didn't show up and •pent nnother night In tbe house of trouble. Wednesday morning she left, saying she wus * and she , The police believe she Is half-witted and they don't know whether or not to believe her stories Were hallucinations. AT GOTHAM FIRE New York, Dec. 28.—Five persons, one a baby, were overcome In a Are which for a time threatened to destroy the four-story tenement house at 13 Carmine street. Thrown into a panic by the stiff Ing clouds of smoke, many women with babies In their arms at tempted to Jbmp from the Are escape and nothing but the quick action of the firemen prevented fatal accidents. Mrs. Bessie Maggl, a live-month*: old baby nnd Mrs. Lilly Sartor! are In a eerlous condition. EXPLOSION IN STORE DESTROYS BUILDING; OWNERS ARE BURNED New York, Dec. 26.—Mrs. Jeanne Trautman, wife of Dr. Alexander Trautman, a prominent physician, will go the limit to not only prove that she Is Innocent of the charge of being a common thief, preferred against her by Petor J. Hogan, a stenographer, hut she declares that she will make such an example of her accuser that Inno cent and respectable women can walk the streets In future In safety. Hogan said that he had Identified Mrs. Trautman as tbe woman who ac costed him on the street, led him to a hallway and robbed him of 313, Husband is.Angry. Mrs. Trautman. who Is said to have lived In Atlanta, Go., declared today: “Respectable women walking along tho streets of New York have abso lutely no protection from arrest and •uhsequent humiliation In cases of thin kind, provided the police accept the* word of Irresponsible persons, as they did In my case.” Dr. Trautman Is equally determined that the arrest of his wife shall he made a lesson to man bringing charges against women whose characters ari as unimpeachable as he thinks his wife’s Is. Dr. Trautman Is not only Indignant, but he Is mad through and through. He said: Friends Flook to Hsr Aid. "This town won't be big enough to Hold that man Hogan and mo If I gi t my handi on him. unless he 1st Insane" From every side friends, all persons of prominence, have llocked to Mrs. Troutman’s old. Edward F. Sroffel of 181 West Twenty-tint street, whoso wife went on Mr*. Trautman'* hall aft er her arrest and conffnement In a cell In the West Thirtieth street station, said.* ’’It Isn't Mra. Trautman, but overv respectable woman In New York who Is on trial. If such things are allow ed to pass unnoticed no woman will he safe on the streets without an osenrt. What Is to prevent any man from grabblnr the Arst woman he sees, an l accusing her of a crime? “I Know Charge is False.” I might add that one of the most prominent attorneys In New York has notltlcd Dr. Trautman that be will de fend Mrs. Trautman In the Interests • f all respectable women.” . Friends of Mrs. Trautman cteclare she has established a perfect alibi. One alibi, which they declare proves her Innocence beyond doubt, will be made by Kate Nevlns, maid for Mrs. Traut man, who says: "I know ths charge to be false, for I waited on Mrs. Trautman when she waa III In bed last Saturday night she was In bed and I waa attending to her when this man says he waa robbed by the woman In Fifth avenue. Mrs. Trautman'a character la beyond re proach.” Trautmans Attend Party. Although Mrs. Trautman was un- 1 Special to Tbe Georgian. New Orleans, La., Dec. 26.—An explo. elon took place shortly before 2 o'clock this morning In a grocery kept by two brothers named Fernandes, at the cor ner of St. Ann and Prleur streets, re sulting In the burning of the store and severely Injuring both the owner*, who are now In a hospital. The explo sion la believed to be of tbe black hand origin, similar to the one which oc curred at the corner of Julia and Camp streets, about three weeks ago. No clew to the Incendiaries hoe yet been discovered. COMMANDER OF GEORGIA EXAMINING THE RIVER SjieelnI to The tieorafnn. Savannah, Go., Dec. 26.—Lieutenant Commander Stanford B. Moses, Navi gating officer of the battleship Georgia, Is here today visiting relatives. He Is O conducting an examination of the river Editor Menaced By Death. Topeka. Kan., Dec. 28-—Genera] Jo seph K. Hudson, a well known editor, thus to awake In him a clear’memory *• s *° *’* w,,, ‘ pefltonltle and acute In- 0 0 to sec If the Georgia can come up to of his real experiences.” . digestion that his recovery Is doubtful. 00009000000000000000000000 the city on February 22. strung when she appeared In Jefferson Market police court yesterday, when the cose was set for tomorrow, she completely regained her composure and last night she and hsr husband attend ed a party given by August Janseen at. his country home, In Great Neck, L. I. The Trautmans went In a big touting car. Mrs. Trautman appeared to b« perfectly self-possessed, and It was ilaln that ahe Is certain aho will be lonorably acquitted. Desk Sergeant McCarthy Is the M- fleer who caused Mrs. Trautmoji to he locked up on the mere word of the complainant. It was to this sergeant that Mra. Trautman told her name and address, which could easily have been verlAed. Locked in Prison Celt. While the sergeant, under the strict rules of the police department, was obliged to lock the woman up. Mr*-. Trautman’s friends say that her reAned and cultured appearance should have at least gained for her the matron'e rare, Instead of a cell In which a num ber of drunken women were condned. The alnglng and talk of these prison ers were enough to make any respect able woman blush, without being com pelled to remain In th* same atmos phere. To Avenge Insult. Mrs. Trautman'a maiden name Is said to be Jeanne Davis. She le a daughter of ex-Judge Davis, of At lanta. Her relatives live near Atlanta. Her brother. Frank Davis, Is a travel ing salesman and on athlete. He is •old to be coming here to avenge the Insult. - Thinks She Hit Double. Captain Bcblottman. of the tenderloin station, after a complete Investigation Into tbe circumstances surrounding the Trautman coo*, declared that he was convinced Mrs. Trautman was lonocen’. of the charges against her. I don't believe she le guilty, it u simply Impossible that a woman of her position and social standing could ha\« stoopod to ouch a thing.” said he. ”1 am convinced that Mrs. Troutman has a double. Acting on this theory. ( have four men out looking f.;r ihit double, and If she Is any way strikf-n. in appearance as Mr*. Trautman. M,« ought to be found within a very short time.” King's Condition Unchanged. Stockholm, Dec. 26.—Tbe kins *. cos ■Htlon remains unchanged.