Newspaper Page Text
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The Atlanta Georgian.
VOL. L NO. 70.
ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1906
PHTpP, In Atlanta TWO rFNTS.
*-IVLV>.Ej. on Train* FIVE CENTS.
BIG SHIFT IS MADE
BY THE SOUTHERN
BrooksMorgan Resigns
to Enter Private Bus
iness in Atlanta.
JEROME C. BEAM
TO GO TO ST.'LOUIS
Change in Passenger Agents
Made Affecting Entire
Circuit South of
Washington.
IS JEROME THE MAN
THE SUN REFERS TO?
Smiles When Asked If He’ll Be Democratic
Candidate For Governor—and Next
• President.
Changes affecting the passenger de
partment of the Southern railway from
Washington to Jacksonville, from Co
lumbus to St. Louis, have been decided
on and will go Into effect August 1.
They are:
BROOKS MORGAN, assistant gen
eral passenger agent, In charge of the
Atlanta division, has resigned to enter
a manufacturing business In tills city.
JEROME C. BEAM, district passen
ger agent, with offices In Atlanta, goes
to Bt. Louis to succeed George B. Al
len. • '
GEORGE B. ALLEN, assistant gen
eral passenger agent. In charge of the
Bt. Louis division, will probably take
the position made vacant by Mr. Mor
gan's resignation.
J. C. LUSK, of Jacksonville, at pres
ent district passenger agent for Flor
ida, comes to Atlanta to succeed Mr.
Beam.
JAMES FREEMAN, traveling pas
senger agent, with headquarters at Ma.
con, will be transferred to Jacksonville
to succeed Mr. Lusk.
J. LAWRENCE HUNT, city ticket
and passenger agent at Columbus, goes
to Macon to succeed Mr. Freeman.
Slate Made Saturday.
The slate was made up at a confer
ence held In Atlanta last Saturday, at
which General Passenger Agent W. H.
Tayloe was present. The result of the
conference was kept very quiet and
news of It did not transpire until
Tuesday. y
Official confirmation cotild not be ob
tained Tuesday from any of the rail
way men In Atlanta, all declining to
talk for publication.
The news Is .straight, however.
The entire shake-up Is caused by
the retirement of Brooks Morgan, who
has, since the promotion of W. H. Tay
loe to the position of general passenger
agent, been In charge of the Atlanta
division.
Mr. Morgan will become a member
of the manufacturing firm, of the
Prank E. Block Company, making
crackers, cakes, candles, wholesale
groceries, etc. HIs success In the rail
road world baa been phenomenal, and
he Is perhaps the youngest railroad
man In the country, occupying a posi
tion of relative responsibility. He has
been particularly popular In Atlanta,
»nd has madb an enviable record.
As chief clerk and district passenger
sgent, Mr. Allen, of St. Louis, served
Atlanta several years, when Mr.
Hardwick was In charge of tho passen-
i'-r department here. He Is very well
tmnvn In Atlanta and Charleston,
"here he was for severil years a dl-
vlsion passenger agent.
Mr. Beam gets a big promotion ac
cording to the slate, going to St. Louts.
Mr. Lusk, Mr. Freeman and Mr. Hunt
* re *U well known In the passenger
urn-ice and have made good records.
By J. WIDEMAN LEE.
Warm Springs, Ga., July 17.—While
on the way down here yeaterday after
noon William Travers Jerome was
shown The New York Sun's now fa
mous political forecast that the next
governor of New York will be a Demo
crat and that the next governor of New
York will be tho next president of the
United States.
Mr. Jerome was standing on tho
front end of the sleeping car talking to
Mr. Garvan and Mr. Vandiver. He
looked, at the clipping and smiled, hut
said nothing, nor would he say any
thing on the subject.
Mr. Vandiver volunteered the sug
gestion that the reporter look at The
Issue of The Sun containing the edi
torial, which, by the way, was without
a heading, and double leaded, at the
top of the first column of the page.
Tho editorial of The Eagle discussed
at length, to the extent of a column
and a half, the significance of such on
editorial in The Sun, and the prophet
ic nature of the simple statementa
made so terse and to the point. It was
noted, too, that on the front page of
the same issue of The Sun appeared a
story to the effect that Hearst would
run on a ticket of nis own, whether
nominated by any party or not. This
feeler by The' Eagle, which was en
tirely noncommittal, by the way. In
ferred that The Sun meant nono other
than William Travers Jeryms, the dis
trict attorney of New York, who Is now
at Warm Springs, and will deliver an
address here Thursday morning before
the Georgia Bar Association.
Mr. Jerome's reticence as to himself
Brooklyn Eagle of the same day as the SuuJ his own political affairs is quite
noticeable. Despite his remarkable
race of the last campaign, he has little
to say of New York political conditions,
and his notice of‘The Sun editorial
was expressed merely In a smile.
HARGIS AND CALLAHAN
ARE ACQUITTED BY JURY
WITHIN HALF AN HOUR
By Private Leased Wire. *
Beattyvllle, Ky„ July 17.—Former
County Judge James Hargis and for
mer Sheriff Ed Callahan were acquitted
this morning of the charge of com
plicity in the murder of J. B. Marcum,
who was shot to death at tho court
house door In Jackson, Ky., in May,
1903.
Hargis and Callahan were accused
of having formed tho plot to kill Mar
cum and with .having persuaded Curtis
Jett, Hargis' nephew. ajuTTom White
to carry it out. Jett and White are
In the penitentiary for life for the
crime.
The Jury was out twenty-two min
utes. The case was given to the Jury
at 7:80 this morning. When the ver
dict was returned the Hargis hench
men around the court house set up a
shout of Joy and a few. pistol shots
emphasised their satisfaction, though
this was quickly stopped.
Mrs. Marcum, widow of the murdered
man, wept over the verdict. Bets \voro
freely made last night by friends of the
defendants that they would be acquit
ted In less than half an hour after the
Jury retired. This lent color to the
rumor that members of the Jury had
pledged themselves to acquit tho de
fendants no matter how strong the
evidence.
It was commented on that while
Beattyvllle Ik in-a Republican county,
every member of the jury’ wai ft Demo
crat and Jurge Itnrgl.K Ik n member of
the Democratic atatc central commit
tee.' A verdict ngalnat hue been con
sidered doubtful, however, since Curils
Jett, after a confession that Hargis
and Callahan persuaded him to kill
Marcum, went on the witness stand
drunk and asserted that he alone killed
Marcum for personal revenge.
VACATIONS ARE EXPENSIVE
BUT THE COMMON PEOPLE FOOT THE BILL!
RUSSIA IS RIVEN
BY CIVIL STRIFE
IN ALL SECTIONS
Mutiny and Riot An
Signs of Disinte
gration.
the
Iny. riot
tlnue in
CENTRAL SLAUGHTER PEN
NOW NEEDED IN ATLANTA,
SA YS CHIEF JNO. JENTZEN
“Can't Say," Says Morgan.
" hen asked Tuesday for a conflrm-
“ti jii or denial of the report of these
charge^ Mr. Morgan said he had noth
ing to say. "
g' l<:ii:, d000O00000000iJI0000O000
SPEEDIE8T RAIN °
FOR MANY MONTHS.
Atlanta had some rainfall
Tuesday morning, the heavens
opening upand pouring forth their
lament for the Little Rock team,
which was so badly mangled in
the fray Monday afternoon. In
twenty-five minutes over an Inch
fall was recorded, and about 1
0 "lock there came another
downpour, and the Instrument
registered a quarter of an Inch
In three minutes, which, Mr.
Marbury said, was raining some.
Between JO:J« o'clock and 1:30
[he precipitation amounted to a
little more than two Inches.
forecast:
Partly cloudy Tuesday night
and Wednesday;, probably
showers.
.Wednesday temperatures:
• o'clock a. m 78 degrees
* o'clock a. m 73 degrees
9 o'clock a. m ...75 degrees
JO o'clock a. m 80 degrees
]1 o'clock a. m..73 degrees
12 o'clock noon 79 degrees
1 o'clock p. m 70 degrees
2 o'clock p. m 71 degrees
Absolutely the best thing the city
could do Is to have a central slaughter
house and have all the cattle, killed'for
use In Atlanta, slaughtered there Under
the Inspection of city otflclals,” said
Chief Jentzen, of the health depart;
ment, Tuesday morning.
Chief Jentzen was asked what he
thought of the action of council ap
pointing a committee to Investigate the
condition of meats being sold in At
lanta.
"I don’t know the exact purpose of
the committee," said the chief, "but If
It will lead up to municipal control of
the slaughter houses, It will do a great
work.”
Chief Jentzen then explained how the
slaughtering was done outside of the
city, and, therefore, the animals could
not be Inspected by his tnen before the
animals were killed.
'T know soms horrible things are
dons, but I am powsrlsss to stop thsm."
He then mentioned the killing of cows
Just before they gave birth to calves
and selling both the cow and the calf In
the market; the Incident brought to
light In The Georgian and the one that
Is the foundation of the present cam
palgn In Atlanta.
He also gave numerous other In
stances as to the killing of cows while
they were dying of some disease, and
then selling the meat.
DENSON ELECTROCUTED
IN MYSTERIOUS MANNER
His body writhing with pain for a
fractional part of a minute, and with
out uttering a sound. Will J. Denson,
an employee of the Southern Spring
Bed Manufacturing Company, of Bell
street, was Instantly killed by elec
tricity at the plant of the company
Tuesday morning at 6 o’clock, shortly
after beginning his day’s labor. Jacob
Haas and R. 5. Davies were standing
cloze by the unfortunate man when the
accident happened, and they rushed to
his assistance, but were too late.
Just what caused the electrocution
has not yet been learned. The stricken
man was working over a piece of ma
chinery and touched an electric light
wire, being Instantly killed: As soon
as possible after the affair happened
the city electrician was summoned and
two others as well, but no faulty In
sulation or other causes could be lo
cated. 1
Denson was a married man and lived
at No. 390 Whitehall streeL He had
been employed by the same company
for the past fifteen years, and was con
sidered one of the best workmen about
the place. He had no children.
The body was taken to tha undertak
ing establishment of Harry Pools A
Co. as soon as It was learned that Ilfs
was extinct, sad later taken to the
home at No. 39(7 Whitehall streat. The
body >wlll be taken to Locust Grove,
Ga.,- on Wednesday morning for fu
neral and Intermeat.
THE CENTRAL AMERICAN SITUATION
UNCLE SAM PLANS
TO STOP FIGHTING
By Prtvote Lcooed Wire.
Oyster Bay. July 17.—As s result of
the conference between President
Roosevelt and Assistant Secretary Ba
con. definite steps are to be taken to
ward bringing about peace in Central
America. It Is understood that the
United States warship Marblehead will
go to the scene of negotiations, so that
Guatemala and Salvador will appoint
peace delegatea, and they will meet
with the Mexican and .the United
States ministers to the warring, repub
lics. These latter will act In the na
ture of arbitrator* though without
power except as adTlaom. It Is un-.
deratood that a truce will be declared
pending the beginning of formal nego
tiations. It Is not settlod whether or
not Honduras. Salvador's a!!?, will be
!fho*iiarbiehead already has sailed
GENERAL REGALDO
WAS ASSASSINATED
By Private Leased Wire.
City of Mexico, July 17.—Mexico will
act In conjunction with 'the United
States In bringing about peace between
Guatemala, Salvador and Honduras.
The sugestlon thattthe northern re
publics act together at a peace con
ference le well received here. The
news from the south Indicates that the
fighting between the warring republics
has been unusually severe end the
losses have been enormous.
One estimate places the Salvadorean
lied and 1,100 wounded,
and those of Guatemala at 2,300 killed
and 1,900 wounded. It Is renoried here
that Instead of being killed In battle.
General Ragaldo was assassinated by
Guatemalan emissaries.
HON. MADISON BELL.
■ 'n
Who finally won out with his child
labor bill.
CLAIM FOUL PLAY
WAS THE CAUSE
OP CENTRAL WRECK
Train Derailed and Three
Lives Are Lost As,
a Result.
CHILD LABOR BILL;
WHAT IT WILL MEAN
The child labor bill passed by the lower house Monday provides that
no child under ten years of age shall bo employed in any factory within
the state under nny clrcumstnnrci; that nftcr Jnnunry 1, 1907, no child df
twelve years shall be so employed unless rntrli child Is an orphan and line
no other means of support or unless n widowed mother or aged or dis
abled father Is dependent upon tho inbor of such child, In which event such
parent shnll file In the factory a certificate from the county ordinary. It
Is further provided that after January I, 190R. no child of under fourteen
years shall be employ' d In any fuctory between the hours of 7 p m. and
The compulsory education feotu
uflry I, 10a«, no elilkl under fourte
n factory unless lie or she enn Wrl
tended school for three months en
six weeks of school attendance to
of tbs law provides that after Jn
years or aae shall he employed
Simple sentences, and shnll have i
year until nftrr public school ni
consecutive. It provides Hint ci
I _ , ■■■
lives of the factories hiring such children as are under nge are llnhle for
penalties, as are parents or guardians who lih out • ).tl.liin vioiniiou
of the law.
By Private teased wire.
St. Petersburg, July 17.—Mi
id sign of disintegration ce
1 sections of the esar's emp
The trusted garrison at th
of St. Peter and St. Paul mutlnl-d when
two soldiers were threatened with ar
rest for refusing to obey orders. Ev
ery soldier In the went to the
support of the two. They were paci
fied by assurance that the grievances
would be Investigated.
Several battalions of Cos-acIts arc to
be disbanded beenus. they have grown
disorderly and demand to bo relieved of
police duty.
Representatives In parliament of the
various regions are uniting Irrespective
of party, for the ailvnnren
local Intoresta. Th# Arnv
tars, Georgians and Cossacks of tl
Caucasus have formed a group and tt
little Russians havo also united.
Tho Poles and. the members fro,
the Baltic provlncea were prevlonsl
organized. This movement show
plainly th# tendency toward dlalntegra
tlon of the vast empire should the K ri
of tho central authority be brnkon
In the village of Kunlknff joo house
havo boon burned In peasant rloto. Th
crown forest lands have been net o
fire In sixteen different places. Guard
are working night and day to put ou
tho llamos.
heir
GIRL IS DRUGGED
AND MISTKI-ATED
BY UNKNOWN MEN
DECISION INVOL VES
VOTE FOR GOVERNOR
Special to The Georgian.
Montezuma, Ga., July 17.—Three
lives were sacrificed In a frightful rail
road accident here yesterday evening,
A Central refrigerator train, loaded
with fruit, In charge of Conductor C.
Winn, had left town only a few
miles when the engine, for some un
known cause. Jumped the track, turned
over, carrying with It all of the loaded
fruit cars and the cab.'
Engineer Green, of Macon, and two
colored members of the crew were In
stantly killed.
FOUL PLAY IS CLAIMED
BY OFFICERS OF THE ROAD,
Special to The Georgian.'
Macon, Ga., July 17.—Officials of the
Central of Georgia railroad claim that
foul play was the cause of the wreck at
Montezuma, Ga., yesterday afternoon.
Superintendent H. D. Pollard, of the
southwestern division of the rood. In
which territory the wreck occurred,
spent yesterday evening at tbs scene.
The' dead are:
CHARLES GREEN, of Macon, Ga.,
engineer.
SAM KEDD, of Powersvllle, Ga., col
ored, fireman.
JIM REDDING, of Macon, Qa., col
ored, brakeman.
0OOO0OOO0O0OOO00OOOOOOO000
O
NO WORD SPOKEN 0
AT FATAL DUEL. 0
B °*>O0OO0000M^e<!05Si*000000* for Acajutla. Salvador, where It U uu- ter.
deratood the peace envoys will board
By Private Tossed Wire.
Geneva, Switzerland, July 17.
Two deaf mutes, whose sec-,
ends, were also deaf and dumb;
went to a secluded spot In an
auto and fought a duel, at which
not a single word was spoken,
amt one of them waa fatally
■hoL
00000000000000000000000000
Special to Tho Georgian.
Macon, Ga., July 17.—In a decision
todajftlnvolvlng the cltlsenshlp of a lit
igant In his court. Judge Hpeer ren
dered a decision that participation In a
whits Democratic primary does nut,
without additional proof, determine the
citizenship of a man. This decision
was' brought about by the plaintiffs In
a case trying to keep the defendant
from transferring the suit from tha
stats to the United States court.
The plaintiffs alleged that while the
defendant claimed cltlsenshlp In North
Carolina, he had participated In a
whits Democratic primary, sat on the
stand at a Hoks Bmlth meeting, In
Irwin county, and had whooped th'
up for that candidate Juat like a v...
sen of Georgia. Judge Hpeer thought
that the whooping up on that edifying
occasion, while It might have been
good politics,t|t did not constitute a
proof of cltlsenshlp. Ha also decided
that the primary was a selection, and
not an election.
The litigant was atlowsd to bring hU
case In the United Htatee court.
HARTJE LETTERS •
ARE FORGERIES,
DECLAIM EXPERTS
Different Persons Penned
the Famous Divorce
- Epistles.
By Private teased Wire.
Pittsburg, Pa., July 17.—Mrs. Hart-
Js’s attorneys opened the day by put
ting several mors handwriting experts
on the stand to aay the ‘‘Madlne" let
tars were not genuine.
John K. Duff, secretary and treasur
er of the Cltlsens’ National Bank, was
the first witness called. He waa shown
the forty famous letters, and asked his
opinion. •
My opinion Is that exhibits 10 and
14 were not written by the same per
son who wrote Nos. 1 to 9."
Then you think Nos. 10 to 14 were
all written by the same person T"
No; No. 14, the envelope, was writ
ten by a different hand than 10 to *5.”
James H. Orr, first paying teller of
the Mellon National Bank, came next.
He said No. (, the "Dear Susie" letter,
was not written by the person who
penned Noe. 1 to I. He examined the
lettere, he said, between 10 and 1
o’clock yesterday and at 5:30 to 10
p. m. last night.
J. H. Nicely, receiving teller of the
Mellon Bank, was called. The first
two bankers had been eaelly dealt with
' y the croee-examlners, hut Attorney
erguaon Balled Into Nicely and asked
a hundred questions about the forma
tion of characters Into writing. Nicely
was firm In his answers and remained
unshaken In his positive declaration
that the "Madlne" letters had been
written by different persons.
FLAGMAN SLEEPS
IS
Passenger Train Dashes In
to Freight, But No
One Is Killed. '
Special to The Georgian.
Oglethorpe, Ga., July 17.—Ths north
bound Central passenger train for Ma
con ran Into a freight train standing
on.the main line hare early this morn
ing, and both trains wars badly
wrecked. The flagman'on ths freight
train was asleep, It le claimed, and
failed to flag the passenger train.
Nobody waa esriouely hurt, but the
paasenger angina and several freight
By Privet# teased Wire.
Marion, InrL, July 17.—Min*
Minnie Miller, tho pretty 16-year-
old daughter of Mr. nml Mrs.
William Miller, of East Sherman
street, was seized, bound, drug
ged nnd assaulted by two un
known men Sunday night as she
\<'as returning from church about
!• o'clock. She was found in a
Held along tho river yesterday
about 8 o'clock by Mrs. llarrv'
Sheldon, a member of a searching 1
party who wag attracted to tho
body by the barking of her bird
dog, that accompanied her.
She snid tho men poured a Ii-
fptid into her mouth that para-
lysed her tongue so she could not
call for aid.
THREE AERONAUTS
LAM) /.V RIGGING
' OF FERRY SLOOP
' 'llfton,
death
By Private Leaeed Wire.
New York, July 17.—Leo
Charles terse and James 1
made a balloon ascension frui
H. I., yesterday, narrowly ssra
by drowning when the ball
wrecked by coming In con
ths mast of a,sloop In Flue
After crossing New York
high elevation, the seroneutK
ed over Flushing Bay end I
perimente with a sea nnrho
thus engaged their balloon u
against the mast of the me
sloop Adeline.
A hole was ripped In the li.
collapsed, leaving the three ir
Ing to the rigging, from a n
descended to the'deck of the
KILLS HER SISTER;
STARVES TO DEATH
Illy Prints Leered Wire.
Nebraska City, Nebr., July 17. After
killing her aleter to keep her from go
ing Insane, Lucy Lloyd starved herself
to death In the asylum at Lincoln,
[where she was taken Immediately fol-
wlng the tragedy two weeks ago.
The elatera lived alone on th- farm
left them by their father a f*w miles
Inorih of here. Lucy admitted »h«
■Igled her slater to death. She was
adjudged Insane, although protesting
she was not. There she absolutely re
fused to touch food.
cars were I
battered.
SLA YER OF WIFE
CHEATS GALLOWS
By Prime teased Wire.
Detroit, illch., July 17.—Christopher
Splndieman, wife murderer, facing the
gallows In the county jell at Sandwich,
Ont., across the river from Detroit,
committed suicide during Monday
night by hanging himself with hie shoe
lace. He was found dead by the Jailer
ueaday morning.
Splndieman killed his wife by shoot
ing her In ths head with a revolver last
Saturday night. He was drivsn Into a
trensy by drink and constant brooding
over the fart that he had been forced
Into deeding over his property to hit
wife. ,
Splndieman was* prevented from put
ting a bullet through hie own brain by
the prompt action of hU eldest son.
Five children survive.
WANTED TO WHIP
HIS SON IN COURT
By Privet# Leased Wire.
South Bend, Ind., July 17. Ar
chapter to the sensational "waitr
divorce case, In which Frnnkli
Griffiths Seybert, of Chl-ng.,,
defendant, was added to the fight ye
terday when D.-A. Griffiths, father
the defendant, threatened to horsewhip
Seybert In the court house. The threat
waa mads because Seybert refut-"<l the
plea of his wife to withdraw the
satlonsl charges against her an
allow her to get a divorce on a charg
or desertion.
Mrs. Seybert Is charged with
treme cruel treatment of hie two chil
dren. twins, aged 7 years, tho alieg:
being that sha tried the Filipino '
ter curs" upon them la gMNR
beating them until they were black
blue. i
Street Car Company Sued.
Carrie Wllaon flle-1 -nit In the
court Tuesday morning .igaln.-t
Georgia Railway and Kl'-irto r
pany, claiming 33,900 for Injurin'
leged to have been received «hi
passenger. Rhe alleges th»i a nm,
tor ej» ted her fr.uu th* car after
had "aid her f.,"- and treated he
roughly as to Injure her seriously.