Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 03, 1912, HOME, Page 6, Image 6

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6 MS UNITE IN SANITATION MOVE National Association Outlines Campaign for Cleaner Shops and Methods of Delivery. LOUISVILLE. KY. Sept. X. Th executive body of th. Mastet Bake’s iai on of the United State’s lias adopted the following standard of sani tation for the bakeries of the t nited Sial. - First Building welt lighted with nat- • Ural light anti thoroughly ventilated; . nit supply free from contamination by | surface dust S- ond - Floors. walls and ceilings of impervious materials with smooth sur fne<- and kept < lean rooms free from rmin and screened against tiles. Third Plumbing, drainage, etc., am ple to removi waste and prevent damp, liens, sanitary toilets shut off entirely from haki shops and storage room. Fourth Plentiful supply of pure wa t-r, convenient and adequate wash siands ami supplies, and their use coin pulsoi t To Bar Diseased Workers. Fifth Garbage, refuse, etc,, stored in lightly covered tans and disposed of nuiukly. Sixth Machinery, tools and olhet <■ iiifpment so made, installed and used . m. to facilitate cleanliness ami | safety. | S. south Stables to be disinfe. l< d | I nd so |o ated that odors from them | • in not r. iich the halo-hops 01 storage I room. ' Eighth .Method of distribution such I a- io protect bakeiw products from mi: lamination between the m-n .md I one Ninth A health certifh ati show in • fi eedom of all employees from skin • i eases and contagious diseases S|m t.ng and use of tobacco in the bit. prohibited. Tenth- Employees of bakeries to b clothed in clean, sanitarv clothing. DAUGHTER OF MORGAN SAYS HE DIED IN 18991 _ _ GUTHRIE. IIKI.A Sept 3. Claim ing that she is a daughter of General’ John II Morgan, the noted t'onfederati e.iialiy leadei and head of "Morgan's i.. • . rs," Mrs i, l.ahrm of Chero kee. In addressing a reunion of old soldiers, told them that Geneini Mor pan. living under the name of Dr John 'I cole, died in old Indian Territory I i i ami is burled ne.ll Vian, Okla, i ar iiistori relates that Genera) ot san was killed at New Greeneville. ’ im . on September 3 1864. after a liotial io ape from the Ohio pen i riti.irt. HAPPY GIBBS AN!) THE E EAUTY CHORUS MAKE GOOD WITII NEW SONG | • " the most populai song • th- -•.o'lin. Al! \i»o;i!<l l-'oi Itiaii is I) ing sung al Ihe Bonita ’ Peachtree street this w • I! < i-i < libbs j nd ihe fainou> P it\ < *h<c u>.' appearing in "The 1 . < which i< being produced h\ • ' ■! - A!’* i.t lon* s Musical <'om < ■ ‘ npan\. Th* ong is one of the most succos*- in wI I be sung In ail the >i- m uses ihis wint <r. !<’• !/unalir" is a smaiii from start i" liu -h Don't miss it BIRMINGHAM EXCUR SION Via SEABOARD L»a\< old depot Ka. m Tuesda' t i -ptemlu ) 17. round trip «'its 1 <k« • • fl i- i . s\ p< .o hti v . PARENTS KEEP IN TOUCH WITH THEIR CHILDREN THROUGH THE ATLANTA PHONE’ This is bccaust' the At lan-I la phone is installed in every graded public school | in the city. |.*> in all. As a result. e\ er\ A t lanta ! ■phone suhscrilter is kept 1 thin di reel | ters< ma I ' • ich wit h all At lama ■ i'i|;'i s <1 urniy every hour f\ . re in school. In addil ion to the great I • i. ciiience, this means in- • >i communication in anv no of emergency . Our phone in your home i '■ S and 1-3 cents per day place< this opportunity v. it hin readi of every i »a rent. Atlanta Telephone and Telegraph Co. A. B. CONKLIN, hen. »lgr. JOKES JUDGE, BUT IS FREED OF COURT CONTEMPT CHARGE DENVER. COL.. Sefri. S— Harry If. I'ammoi. on. of rhe owner? of Th* 1 Denver Po~t, charged with cAnterhpt of urt by District Judge Shattuck.foi trticles printed in The Po«t. was dls ! arget). much to everybody's astonlsh tuent. as Proset utor chiles declares the publisher's answer b> t he charge was far more contempt nous than th- alleged • ■• iginal offense. When the court began talking about • ■ constitution Tammen interrupted uid said: No. judge, don't kid me about the constitution, this is a man to-man proposition, and sometimes I think it is a dog tight. I suppose you will give me a penitentiary sentence." After further sallies back and forth. • Judge Shattuck discharged Tammen. ; the same offense of which Tammen ! was acquitted F G. Bonflls. his f>art ner. was fined J 5.000 and sentenced to -Ixty days in jail The supreme court interfered with this sentence. ’ SHIRT SLEEVES IN VOGUE IN JUDGE PARKS' COURT MADISON. GA.. Sept. 3. yVhen Judge James B. Park convened the fall term of Morgan superior court he an nounced from the bench that all per sons tn attendence were .at liberty, to remove their coats and roll up fheir sleeves, because of the excessive heat. Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co. Four More Days of the Linen Sale Table Damask, Napkins and Sets Linens, from the Rhineland that are <-haraetefisti< ally staunch. Qual ities that are superb, patterns that are choice, beautiful. Prices that arc yvoiiderlill yvhen y allies are considered. Read the folloyving list, but co.me ami personally examine the beautiful Linens, and the pricing yvill take on a neyv mi'amtig. Damask * 111 ' I" 1 '" i'h';i •h’.<i I l.t iiiiisk ; a hill iissorhnefii potul'lnr pHtterns; 70 inches m i<|e specuil nt (>!»<• vhhl. ' R ' 'V 71 inch, all linen Damask in must desirable patterns: special at 79c yard. /•.’inch Damask, irl a variety of b^jiitiflll.' pal t.erjvs: special al 97e yard. beajitifnl. heavy satin Damask of extra tine quality; full assortment of choice pat t'T’i- inches wide. Priced here regularly at $1.3.') for this sale at $1.09 card. 'b i • ri cd Damask, lull bleached 72 inches yvide, special for this sale at s()c y ard. Finished Cloths l.eauiiiiil Satin Damask Cloths, bordered all round; size 71x72 inches an assortment "I '-hoiee patterns. Priced al $2.2."> each. Satin Damask Cloths of excellent quality. 2x2,1 2-yard size, a variety of favorite pat terns; priced at $2.65 each. ‘ •'• ■> s 2x'>yard size. $3.25. . ■ * • Double Satin Damas]. Cloths. 2x2 1 2 yard size, priced at $3.25 each. 2x3-yard size. $3.55 each. Beautiful .Damask Sets A Cloth and One Dozen Napkins 72x72-ineh doth of beautiful Satin Damask, uilh 22-.nieh napkins, manv choice pat terns. Priced at $5.75 set. 72x90-iuch Sa.l u*. Dnmiisk Cloth, with 22-inch napkins. Priced at $7.00 set. i2xlos inch doth of line Satin Damask, with 22-jiidi napkins. Priced at $7.50. $S and $lO set. Napkins IS inch bleached Damask Xapkuis of union linen. They are hemmed ready for use. Special at $1.35 dozen 20-inch, all linen Napkins, of excellent quality. A variety of popular patterns to choose from. Priced at sl.(>s dozen. inch, all linen Damask Napkins of befliOrl'nl lintsh iand design, at s•_> and $2.50 dozen. 2! im h Damask Napkins in all desirable patterns; priced at $2.75. $3.25. s3.sit. $4 and S 5 dozen. Hemstitched Napkins \ complete and varied assorlilienl of popuiat' patterns. hemstitched: then are sev eral grades priced al $2. $2.50. $2.75. $3. $3.50 and $5 dozen. Silence Cloths tthiilted, round cloths, or oblong (doths The' folloyving sizes and prices: 54 inch, round. $1.50. 54xS1-im-h size. $2.50. i>3-inch. round. $2.00. 54x99-inch size. $2.75. 72 inch, round. $3.00. ' olxlOS-ineli size. $3.00. 54x63 inch size. $2.00 63x72-ineh size. $2.50. , ... . . , t»3xSl inch size. $2.75. • >■4 X .size. a, » i . b>x9o-inch <i/«\ $3.00. Important Announcement <bn Carpet and Drapery Department, which has been temporarily located at 47-49 South Brofid street, has been removed to its new and permanent quarters in our main store tlit- new section EIFTII FLOOR. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWK TUESDAY, SERI EMBER 3. 1912. 39N0WKN0WN DEAD IN FLOOD J Hundreds of Families Home- • less —Loss Will Reach Into Many Millions. PITTSBI RG, Sept.- 3, persons now are known to have been drowned yesterday In floods resulting from cloudbursts that swept valleys in western Pennsylvania. Ohio and West Virginia, causing property' loss estimated high in the millions. The death toll may mount higher Hun dred" of families are homeless and shivering on the damp hillsides. Rail road traffic is materially impeded and many cities were in total darkness, both .electric and gas plants being flooded. ( Among the towns which suffered principally from the rise of water were yvashington. Beaver Burgettstown. Canonsburg, and many smaller places throughout the Chartiers. Cherry and Beaver valleys, while in West Virginia, Colliers and surrounding territory suf fered principally. The dead at various thus far ascertained number: At Hollidays Cove, 6: at Colliers, 9; at Cherry Valley. 13; at flurfp>ttstown. (STREET CAR TRACKS 12 FEET APART FOR YEARS ARE JOINED The trolley company has a force of men at work today joining two street car tracks which have been in twelve feet of each other tor years but un connected. They are at Park and Lee streets. West End. The Whitehall- West End lines and the Ashby street line are being joined by new rails. There will be no change in the rout ing of cars except in emergencies, but In case of a prolonged block on either line in the future its ears can be divert ed to the other route and West End, College Park and Hapeville residents carried in ot out without delay. The new tracks will enable work cars laden with long rails to reach West End without passing through the railroad underpass, rather close quarters for the big cars. How’s This? We offer Cine Iltindre<l Dollars Reward for any ease of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's f'atarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. We. the undersigned, have known F. J Cheney for the last 15 years, am) believe him perfectly honorable iu all business transactions and financially able to cart’ out any obligations made bv his firm. WALDING. KIN'NAN & MARVIN. Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. Ball's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation GIRL’S SPIRIT TELLS WIFE OF HER HUSBAND’S DEATH CLEVELAND. OHIO, Sept. 3—Twice the "spirit" of Margaret Coughenour. who died six years ago, gave warning that her father. Albert L. Coughenour. faced death. The third time the "spirit” brought word to the mother that Coughe nour was dead. An hour later came news by telegraph that Coughenour, Penn sylvania engineer, had been killed with three others in a wreck at Conway, Pa. Riggs Disease If your teeth are loose and sensitive aqd the gums receding and bleeding, vou .Riggs Disease, and are in danger of losing all your teeth. I sd Call’s Anti-Riggs, and it will give quick relief and a complete cure It is a pleasant and economical tretment used and recommended by leading min isters, lawyers and theatrical people who appreciate the need of perfect teeth Get a > u . b ?.v tle of Calr . s Anti-Riggs from Jacobs I harmacy, with their guarantee to refund the money if it fails to do all that is claimed for it. It is invaluable m relieving sore mouth due to plate pressure. Circular free. PALL'S ANTT RIGGS CO.. 23 Williams st., Elmira. ,V V MEN AND RELIGION BULLETIN NO. 16 “The Houses in Our Midst’’ City Crime Culture Hate did not kill Rosenthal. Nor did graft. The automobile before Hotel Metropole, the call for Rosenthal, the death-spitting automatics, the dead man silenced for forgetting his underworld creed —that police officials with properly greased palms can unmake laws—the creed itself came from the breaking of law by officials whose duty it was to enforce it. Regardless of motive, the men who substituted and maintained police-framed rules for the regulation of vice in place of the law for its suppression, killed the gambler. Their lawlessness opened the gates. The entrance of white slavery, harlotry, graft, thievery, gambling and murder was inevitable. • Crime walking unwhipped in the streets taught the underworld to believe police authority supreme. Becker, “Lefty Louie,’’ “Bridgey” Webber, “Dago’’ Frank and Sam Schepps deserve sympathy. They were misled. Too late they learn of an enraged public and an honest official that law is above the policeman, the detective and the mayor. Atlanta should stop and. think I * The purpose of her officials may be the purest. Their integrity may be the highest. The facts remain. Conditions are not yet as they are in New York. But police officials hold open the gates. The houses are in our midst. Ordinances forbid them. It is the legal duty of the police to suppress them. The law gives them no choice. Yet, assuming a power greater than that of Council, officials have defined certain districts for the commission of this crime against both the city and the state. Had they by the enforcement of law produced results distaste ful to others, the fault would not be theirs. But they are responsible for the consequences of their disregard of law. Some of these are only too evident. Two men and a woman are known to have been killed in the houses this year. Two of these met death in the block next to police headquar ters. None can tell the disease that has been spread—what girls pro cured. But thirteen little girls under ten years of age in Grady Hos pital last year are eloquent evidence of an infinitesimal part of the trail of the germ. And today in the houses there is more than one girl who came to board in the boarding house at 96 South Pryor street before the arrest of the procuress, Mrs. Barrett. This woman was sent to the stockade last week. But others like her are in the city. Others will take her place. For none has heard of notice being served on the owner of the houses she supplied with girls. And the demand for them continues. “It is not lawful.’’ Atlanta should and will close the Houses in our Midst. THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE MEN AND RELIGION FORWARD MOVEMENT. ELECTION FRAUD ARREST MADE AT ANDERSON. S. C. ANDERSON. S. <Sept. 3. —An ar rest was made here today in connec tion with election frauds. This is the first step in the prosecution of those charged with illegal voting in the re cent gubernatorial primary. Fibre Covered Trunks Lor wear—the hard, grilling wear of continuous travel —they are guaranteed. Made in Atlanta. $15.00 and up. LiEBERMAN’S The House of Guaranteed Baggage. 92 Whitehall. ARMY DESERTER ARRESTED. CUMMING, GA.. Sept. 3.—Dolphus L •lames, private of Battery D. Fourth lie! ' artillery, who deserted at Fort D \ Russell. Wyo . on May s. wa , arreste, here today by Sheriff TV TV. Re i< of E, . syth county He will be taken to Atlam - and surrendered to army officers at F., r - McPherson, .lames lived here before er listing. He arrived in town todav ar > was immediately placed under arrest