Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, May 22, 1907, Image 5

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ‘AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 22. 1907. POPULAR PRICES PREVAIL AT PALA TIAL RESTAURANT l« but one word which adequately ...cribe, tlie Candler building on PeacUtreo word PALATIAL. And ns tlio Call ow Itostaurnnt, recently opened by the c irerman Catering Company on tlio first 5"V „t that building hns been constructed, worstad and equipped In complete hnr- with Its metropolitan appointments— 55t word, PALATIAL, properly nppllca to '{Sis modern restaurant. 1 “rhe rem, fit tor tho entertainment of Unas. fa entirely worthy of tho settings. ‘The picture, tit to be graced by queens, Is wholly worthy of tha # frame This modern restnurant la most easy of seeeaa There are three ways hy whleh It !tn be entered-by tile elovntor from the •treat door, ono door down: from North error street, through the eastern entrance •r the Candler building, turning to the stalr- mv to tha right, and by the Peachtree eu- ~aee to the building, the stairway being immediately to tho left. The moment one mtera upon the itreet door of the Candler fulldlngne Is In a palace. Polished marble nils around, exquisitely frescoed celling above, mosaic door of many-colored marble Interlaced under foot. iiown a grand mnrblo stairway of . . nicht. easy sweep—a stairway classic, with "triions ami griirlns sculptured In baa re- let upon tha solid mnrblo balnstrade-he roes—and passing between massive fluted marble entumna over n door which Id splen dor of environment duplicates the one from which, by gentle graduations, he has' ' "Tle'tnrns to the left, sod through a wide arched doorway enters the Candler Res taurant. ... The picture of tho only modern restaurei In Atlanta, or In tho South, Is before hit_. The apartment ie spacious. Above Is the laftv colling In superb fresco mellowed to the soft soronenesa of trno artistic beauty. Kroin It depend electric chandeliers of bur nished hrouse. Around the entire room ere tanenldcent mirrors framed In mnhognny, ranged above wainscots of blue end white srnle. * " ~ ‘ lunch counter the length of the re ,n«r. wldu-npart, Inviting seats. Iti the center stands n row of columns, useful and ornamental, through whow hollow Interior pnre air la ever puls ing upward nnd In tho restaurant, and Im- nare air rushing downward and out of the building. Tills row of columns Is flanked by stamis of putted plants and flowers, this floral column studded Hue relieving while It adorns the central apnea between the tables soil the counter. There are Inferiors not one whit more attractive to the eye In the Old World to which admission Is charged—simply to look. Some of course are well worth the fee, nnd there can bo no donbt that tourists from the other " ” "" ‘ spect the Certain ft Is that there la nothing compare Me to them In modern equipment In the Uld World—nothing that can surpass them la modern equipment in the New World- nothing that Is connmrnltlo to them In mod era equipment In the Southern. states. h»W bleu ill the form of alliteration. It I'm VHPPMHPpHMV The Hllvcrninu Caterlni Company, nt henry cost—ninny thnnMtinls dollnrs— has opened a real. Modern roa* -ned In pOTfect purity In refrlgern tors of the Intent nnd most mnrrelous pat tern. It In cooked by stennt nnd electricity In n kitchen where absolutely pure nlr Is In coaatant circulation,'nnd I* therefore free from soot, smoke, ashes, cinders, dust, dirt tml any nnd nil extraneous, deleterious tnnttcr. geruiH, etc. This food* In nennless. - Hence the best for the digestion, the. best for tho health. Tho corps of waitresses who serve this pure food nre so nlert, quick, courteous, expo* rieuccd nnd the method of cooklug ns n of covij^ri^ianccs the quickness of : lt You have wnjtod for wnffl^s ln Yohr time. Hut they nri» electric at the windleb-they come by thisbes. You con., got an Instnu* Mucous stow at tho Candler. The bow! or plate In which it Is made Is bollow- tho stoam Is In the hollow. You enn oft--, anything that's good to *t tho t'nmllM'—ydu can get It better nnd qulckor and at A lower nrlco than anywhere mta «§fbo feu" TO Columbus, Ohio, May J!.—The Pres byterians received and adopted a num ber of reports. Including those of the board of home missions and tho board of education, yoaterday. Tho assembly adopted a resolution declaring that 11,100,000 was the amount tho churches would bo asked to give to enable tho board to properly carry through Its work. A feature of tho afternoon session was the presentation to the assembly of the Rev. W. R. Evans, moderator of the Welsh Presbyterian 'church, who announced that a movement had been started In that body looking to a nnlon with tho Northern church. The an nouncement was received with pro longed applause. President Calls for $500,000 a Year for the Next Three Years. well, In this pa WM of Its sm-pitmlng ‘ndvntitngpx. all of Itn met r<>pj>lltnu appointment*, popular price* pra- In what at her aatablluhraent of like ele- pinre. of Hkn quality, of llK*’ up to tbe-Nee- modern eqwpnr ' | _ the puhlfp mt - .. I'lletl. all of their orders filled, nt ikinulur prices? The n ns wet .Is rjisj—^lowhere. • to 8:30 p. m. And at lunch between 11 and S dally scores Of iHiHlnesft men get steam-cooked, electric- lL y lunches for 20. 30, 40 and 60 cents thnt ran not be equaled for the money In the South—can not be excelled for the money in the world. 50000000000000000000000000 0 o 0 DEFENDANT IN BED O 2 TRIED BY COURT. O o : o 2 Hot Springs, Ark., May 22.— O 2 with :he defendant lying on a O 2 bed In the court room, the trial O 2 °f R. L. Williams,. former sheriff O 2 of Garland, county,- Arkansas, was O 2 begun htre today. Williams, who O 2 Is widely known throughout the O 2 country, Is charged with having O 2 permitted betting to be carried on O 2 at the recent race meeting In vlo- O 2 lotion of the Amis law. O 0 O OOOOOQ00000000000000000000 mayor busse wont CLOSE SUNDAY BARS Chlfngo, May 22.—"Bed slats applied to onrulr hoys will do mors than Sunday dot* •n* reform In Chicago," says Mayor Bu*se, •n l mo*t of tbs people do not want Sunday cloning." Thly was the mayor's answer to the dele* Frbm of the Sunday'Closing League. He ”1*1 he would order the saloons doaed on I'ni'lay If he wae commanded by the au- prime conrt to do so, but not otherwise. MAN IS MURDERED ONLONELYROAD Portland, Mich., May J*.—Edward Manning, keeper of a small restaurant * n ‘l tobacco store, was found murdered . * lonely portion of Deltt street this jnornlng. u e was evidently on his way home after closing hi* place of business, »njn he was approached from behind* •“'I -hot Just back of the left ear. Building New Laundry. iJv" 1 Alr *. 0»-, May St-A new steam jscn-lry for jfonnt Airy Is being pot up by Kiihnen. The building. Is completed end a- nui-blnery bee arrived. A building ">"trset„f of Areerirnt bee begna' the work 1 ‘‘•stalling the machinery. New York, May 22.—President J. W, Van Cleave, of the National Manufac turers, called for 11,600.000 to be ex pended In lighting “Industrial oppres sion” at the opening of the annual con vention here yesterday. President Van Cleave appointed a committee of thir ty-five manufacturers to And a way to raise the money. “We want to federate the mamlfac turers of this country to effectively fight out oppression. The president ought to have fully 1600,000 a year for the next three years. We should cer tainly provide ways and means to properly finance the association, to fed erate the employers of the country and to educate our manufacturers to < proper sense of their own duty, pa triotlsm and self-interests.” President Van Cleave then appointed a committee to confer with him as to ways of raising money. Among the members of the committee are: H. 8. Chamberlain, Tennessee; C. C. Hench and David N. Parry. Indiana; F. C. Nunemacher, Kentucky; W. B. Roper, Virginia; Ellison A. Smythc, South Carolina, and D. A. Tompkins, North Carolina. FORMER BANK TELLER ; IS LODGED IN JAIL J7 V ‘ * Charged With Taking Funds From Father’s Bank. Columbia, 8. C., May 42.—W. Her bert Ruff, Jr., former teller of the Bank of Ridgeway, was arrested In his room at the Columbia Inn here last night by a local detective. May 1, 1906, young Ruff resigned his position in the bank of Ridgeway, of which his father wits president, anil left for ports unknown. Subsequently to his dopartuje, It was discovered that ills accounts were short to the extent of from 620.000 to 126.000. It was stat- ed at the time that his father would make good the larger portion of the defalcation and the directors of the bank the remainder. The young man had been engaged In the brokerage business oufslde of his regular position In the bank and It was stated that his losses had arisen In transactions. Ruff was seen in Columbia and at dther places In the state, but as It was un derstood that his defalcation had been made good there was no attempt to prosecute him. However, one man who claims he lost money hy the defalca tion. had the warrant for Ruff’s arrest sworn out and while the latter was In his room last, night. It was served on him and he was locked up for the night. POLICEMAN FIRED FOLLOWING CHARGES Special to The Georgian. Augusts, Ga„ May 22.-A big sensation bus cropped out by a warrant charging lar ceny being swore out tgalnet ex-retrolmen J. W. Garnett. Garnett Is charged with having taken shoes from the store of one of the leading Arms In the city by tho bun drede, end when confronted with the sr russtfon by the chief of police admitted that he bad tieen taking things lyatematl- collv from tho Rice A O toniior Shoe Co. Ire meant of a maater key with which he “_.i .h. ,1m* nf tho ititro at lata hours We’ve sketched here five styles from the four hundred new arrivals in wash skirts. Immaculate white--summer’s own garments these-*-white as a fresh fall of snow. As new. • Makers of washable skirts have copied in these the smart styles of the • . * ... • ' , skirts in Panamas and Voiles. Copied in good tailoring as well as the styles, too. Who’d bother with the making with such help at hand? Add to the handiness, the economy, and you’ll realize how the business of ready-to-wear has triumphed THURSDAY MORNING AFTER 8:30 O’CLOCK IN THE READY-TO-WEAR. SECOND FLOOR. rally from ^tbe entcrwft* *° door""oiT"ihe store at late hours In the night. Several negroes, alleged to ha hla accomplices, are under survellftnce and quite a large quantity of the shoea has been recovered. The matter had tieen under In vestigation by the department for two weeks, and when Garnett became aware that he waa lielng tracked to earth he tendered hie resignation. It wee turned down end he was discharged, and a war- rant for hla artaat waa ordered. During the confusion In the pollco dspertmeut Osr nett made bts escape and hla whereabouti are unknown. diplomas are awarded TO FORTY-THREE GIRLS. Winston-Salem, N. C, May 22.—The one hundred nnd fifth annual com mencement exercises of Salem Female College were held yraterday. * The past session was the most successful In the history of the famous-Institution, tho | enrollment numbering more than 600. Diplomas were awarded to forty-three graduates In the college course and about twenty-five in music, art and other special studies. The literary addrees was delivered by Congressman John W. Small, of Washington, N. C. Style No. 1 A 31 full-plait skirt in French Linene, thor oughly shrunken. This skirt is made full 41-2 yards around. A regular 3.5,0 skirt, At 2.75 Style Ns. 2 One of the best styles of the season in white skirts that will be shown. Union linen thoroughly shrunken. A 3.50 skirt. Style No. 3 Another style in white French Rep; strictly tailor ed. Tailored with as much care as Panama or Voile skirts of 12.00 or 15.00. A regular 6.50 skirt Styls Ns. 4 Skirt in all pure (French) linen, thoroughly shrunken. This skirt ismadc extra full and grace ful, with 31 phfits. Trimmed as shown in cut with two wide folds of the material. Regular 8.75 skirt, At 7.50 Style No. 5 Skirt as shown in cut number five is one of the best values we’ve ever sold-in a wash skirt. Thor oughly shrunken linen. A 6.00 skirt. At 2.75 5.00 At 3.98 Chamberlm-Johnsoh-DuBose Co. M' A'