Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 25, 1912, EXTRA 1, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

2 RESORT DISTRICT IS WED DDT BE POLICE ORDER Keepers of Houses Notified to Vacate Within Five Days or Be Prosecuted. Continued From Page One. terms of the law, however, it has been generally understood all along that illegal resorts were to be officially "winked at" and allowed to operate. That this has been done there is no question. The penalty provided by the law on occupants and owners of illegal houses is a fine of SIOO and 30 days' imprison ment. either or both. In the discretion of the recorder. Should any of those on whom notices have been served fail to i 10.-e their places and decide to fight in the courts they will be fined and their places then closed ns well. There is one quarter in which the move by Chief Beavers will bring ela tion—the ranks of the Men and Re ligion Forward Movement As is well known, the backers of this movement for reform in Atlanta have been wag ing a determined and ceaseless fight for months past against illegal houses and demanding that they be closed The campaign has been waged through glaring advertisements In the newspa pers and in other ways, and every weapon possible has been pressed into service in a battle for general and sweeping reform. Grand Juries, the city council and other officials have been appealed to, but none of them would ever attempt the r< form. Law Heretofore Has Been Winked At. As to what is to become of the objec tionable women after the illegal houses have been closed is not known. Pres ent indications are that there is but one thing I ft for them—leave the city. Should any of them move Into resl cience sect! ms th. y will promptly be ousted b< tin police and will be kept on the Jump until Atlanta's climate becomes too warm fur them. The law makes no provision at all as to their residence, it merely provides that the chief of police must permit no questionable resorts. The following is the official notice nerved by Chief Bouvets on the owners «tnd occupants of the houses: Dear Sit : The house you nnt at Is being run for Immoral pm p s s and It is Ic ing used as a house of ill fame, and you are hereby notified to discon tinue rt ntlng said premises for im- I ■ t moral purposes within five 15 > days fhom the date of this notice, or ymt will be proem d-d against In the re corder's court as the law directs. Very respectfully, •I. I- BEAVERS. Chief of Police. 2 RECEIVERS NAMED FOR DE LEON ESTATE BY FEDERAL COURT t seceT5 ece Ty ers w, ‘ re named today by x, '" man. of the United States district court, for the property or Moise Del.eon, the missing contrac t°r whose disappearance caused a sen sation in business circles. Ronald Ran som and H. 1.. Eraser were named as receivers under bonds of $2 000 each A petition that Dei,eon be declared bankrupt was tiled in the Federal court aftei It had been filed In tile state courts, and Judge Newman appointed • the same receivers as had been ap pointed by the state court. p n nd h »'bf re<litOrS Wh " the petition ere . , thPV Cll,lm ' iu <‘ them M n n : ° x "ftnan. $5,594; " hS,. " n " "• " “deaths and funerals'] , Lewis Cook. , Atlanta. w’ho r ork, will be brought to this citv" to .‘f'TH S"’"iees "111 be held residence of'r i/ '-'T al,, rnoon at the residence of R. H Caldwell, if.; Gordon street. The interment will beat West vtew. Mr. Cook was a Confederate vU eran and members of Camo \v ,liter will attend the funeral in a bodv He is survived by four sons. F. G„‘c. c Lewis. Jr., and Edgar Cook, and a daughter, Miss Belle Cook Mrs, W. C. Bishop. The funeral of Mrs. \v c Bishon ?'•> ?n !1 ° L ll ''.' 1 laFt n ‘Kht. will be he.d at . 30 <» < lock tomorrow afternoon at her reslden-. . 461 Pulliam street. The interment will be at Westview. She leaves her husband and a son C w Bishop. Mrs. Clara E. Mallard. Funeral arrangements have not been announced f or Mn ,. C j ara E Mal|ard ag.,l «6 who died yesterday at her X*? 11 .'.”' ,* 4 ‘ "oodward avenue.* Mrs. Mallar; had lived tn Atlanta since shortly aft. r the Civil war. She was a :| ' 'i" * ■ ■ ’’ ' I '■ ntral Presbyterinn 1 church. Surviving ho,- are her hus band. W. ,1 Mallard, two son. Dogan I. and Wallace H Mallard, and two daughters, Mrs Ralph D Scott an.' I Miss Leonora 1.. Mallard. Lewis Cook. "'d. a former At lantan and < onfe.lerat. veteran, died in bew A< rk at his family residence 109 Manhattan avenue. Sunday night Mr l oo), was well known by most of the older citizens <>t Atlanta, where he live., for ..(> years after the war. He re sided In Vest End for the greater part "‘ the lb leaves a wife and five 1 children, all of N.w Ymk city The, are Frank <1 e'eok. .'laud. Cook. Lewis Cook,' •Jr I.dgar 100 k and Miss Belle C-ok I lie remains will be b->mght to ytlanti and laid to -est in Westview Funeral ar- I rangements will be announced later The Atlanta Georgian—Premium Coupon This coupon will be accepted at our Premium Parlor, 20 East Alabama at a. partial payment for any of the beautiful premium good. displayed there, See Premiun Parlor Announcement on Another Page Chicken Pie, Barbecued Meats and Hot Biscuits Are Still First in the Hearts of Atlantans OLD-TIME SOUTHERN COOKING NOT ON WANE HERE — —— 0 WllffiHlM iii? r JtXPN IK; J VK WHMmHk i *** 1 11" tv Wfilli Wit / i 1 fe'WL K -Owl f 1 -iPfrh JimlL t ti /o' Hk: ' ' ■ si ■■ I - iS A Z/ > t W</ Capital City Case Women Find Two Pioneers, Snapbean and Cowpea, Forsaken. Despite the combined efforts of res taurants, Southern cooking is not on tiie wane in Atlanta. The importation of less succulent but more expensive foods, foisted in place of the old-fash iontd grub, has failed utterly to deaden Atlanta’s tooth for Dixie dishes. No less authority than the proprie tresses of the Capital City Case, mem bers of Habersham Chapter, D. A. IL. have given sanction to this view so strongly that further speculation on the vagaries of the public palate is un it ecessa ry. But the young women who are tempt ing masculine Atlanta within the por tals of the old Capital City club build ing have discovered something quite ar profound. Atlanta men eat far more than At lanta women; Atlanta men insist upon meat, and barbecued meat at that; while women run to salads and various things generally known as “sweets.” Atlanta men like highly seasoned food; Atlanta women the reverse. There you have a recipe for a suc cessful Atlanta restaurant, all but one thing—chicken pie Atlanta is mad on the subject of chicken pie. This the proprietresses of the Capital City Case have discovered, and Janie, the "black mammy” who generally superintends, bosses, oversees and runs the cuisine of the case, has abandoned the higher arts of cooking and spends her time concocting chick en pie. “They all like chicken pie.” said the chief proprietress, "We can’t seem to give them enough of it. I am not just sure where Its vogue originated, but I know now that you have to have it if you are to run a successful restau rant. "Even the women who go In for sal ads and the more ephemeral foods will desert the best Waldorf manufactured for our chicken pie. It Is really staple in Atlanta.” However, one old tradition has gone by the boards. Atlanta lias shaken the snapbean and the widely advertised turnip green—shaken them cold. There was a time, according to an cients. when the cowpea was relish that 1 never failed to evoke enthusiasm, but ! Atlanta lias gone through and beyond that day. Its more aristocratic kins man, the French pea. lias superseded It. The Capital City Case authorities say that Atlanta likes French peas and as paragus. "But Southern cooking is still appro, elated in Atlanta.' continued the wom 'an who was authorized to talk, "The | men especially like it. They want their meats barbecued and highly seasoned, i and they demand biscuits.” ■' - - ■**■' —— —■ —— .. DALTON PREPARING FOR FAIR. DALTON. GA, Sept. 24—The Whit field county fair grounds present a busy scene this week, for workmen are pre paring for the opening of the eleventh annual fair on October 7. Neu pad locks ai d concrete pens for hogs are being built. The main building has in > n overhauled and the woman’s building is being improved. A earnl i val company has been secured to fur nish amusement features. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. (w ) ' 777 2>CF' : 1 QUITS TOOLS TO SPREAD GOSPEL Seven-Year Pilgrimage Ends Temporarily as Evangel Gets Home. Continued From Page One. he maintains, constitutes the appeal in his teachings. "A man must purify his body before he can hope to And a clean soul." says Newbern. "For seven years I have lived simply, without thought of tomorrow, trusting that each day will provide my simple needs. I eat only what my body craves, and when I am hungry. This is the best rule. Perhaps it will bo fruit, perhaps sometimes sweets.” As he spoke, he was munching candj from a paper bag, which he said would make up his morning meal. Eats When He Feels Like It. “I may not eat again for ten hours. 1 may eat again in four. Whatever na ture tells me I will do. This is my rule. I have not varied from it in seven years, nor have I known sickness. “I sleep where 1 may, where night finds me. Sometimes it is under the stars or the roof of a friendly barn. It makes no difference to me. "During my travels in northern Eu rope, night often found me without shelter when the ground was deep with snow. I have slept many times in a simple bed of tarpaulin and blanket. Often I have bathed in the snow in the morning and found It beneficial. “Modern living is artificial. Men coddle themselves behind brick walls, warming themselves too much with steam heat. They eat highly seasoned foods, foods nature never intended man to eat. 1 have experimented with va rious foods and 1 find, strange as It may sound that a combination of chocolate and peanuts is a diet that will sustain me in excellent condition. It is cheap, and a man who lives as I do must con sider the expense of a diet." Wanders Over Europe. Newbern spoke at length upon his travels and the impulse that urged him to abandon his craft and take to the road. He left Atlanta at the age of IS with John Wiseman, an itinerant preacher. Together the pair journeyed over the Vnited States and finally w ent to Europe. After Europe they sought the Qricnt. but were forced to leave Turkey be cause of the hostilities between the Ottoman empire and Greece. In Pal estine the two wanderers conceived the idea of letting their hair grow long. They journeyed through the Holy Land and Arabia into India, preaching their gospel much as they preached in the streets of American cities. Newbern is a striking figure, even in his rather bizarre garb. He is a slen der man. not tall, and walks with elas tic step His face Is long and sharp his complexion clear, and his eye calm and blue. The most noticeable’feature of his physical makeup is a great mass of red hair, w hich hangs over his shoul ders. and a heavy beard of red. which covers his face. He expects to be in Atlanta for sev eral weeks, later going to his father’! farm near Broxton, Coffee county. Raps Fellow Countryman Who Criticised City EGYPTIAN LAUDSATLANTA And now comes E. G. Aggan, also an Egyptian student of pharmacy, who an swers the charge made yesterday by Henry Araman, of Egypt, that Atlan ta's thoroughfares are not to be com pared with the streets of that well known Cairo as amusement centers. Mr. Aggan begs leave to take issue with his compatriot. Mr. Araman. in an interview in The Georgian, criticised Atlanta for closing up everything on Sunday but the trol ley cars and Grant park. But Mr. Ag gan, also from Cairo, and much travel ed, writes today as follows: I oppose and openly object to all my friend and country fellow said about Atlanta. Being Egyptian and having seen different capitals of Europe and the East. I look at At lanta from another standpoint. This charming city has many advan tages, especially for the student. Young men in this splendid spot are not exposed to different obsta cles and various temptations as they are in Cairo, Paris, London, Rome and New York. We left our kind people and CHILD DUMPED FROM UNPAID-FOR WAGON; MERCHANT IS SUED Because an agent of the L. H. Hill Furniture Company unceremoniously dumped Ernest Fuss' little sister from a toy wagon and took the wagon back to the furniture house, claiming that $2 was still due on it, Fuss, through his father A. 1.. Fuss, has asked superior court for $2,000 damages. Fuss the elder and Fuss the younger both assert that their feelings have been injured to this extent, but admit that $2 was due on the wagon. How ever. they maintain they would have paid this sum if the furniture company agent had requested it. NEW MILL AT CEDARTOWN CEDARTOWN. GA., S( . pt . 24-The Wauleska mill is the name of a new enterprise just located here for the manufacture of underwear. The offi cers ate L. O. Benton, of Monticello, president, L. G. Ledbetter, vice presi dent, and O. M. Whitbeck, manager. SOUR STOMACH, I DIGESTION. GAS DR OrSPEFSIHAPE'S DIAPEPSIN This delightful stomach regulator brings relief in five minutes—Puts an end to Stomach trouble forever. "Really does" put bad stomachs in order—"really does" overcome indiges tion. dyspepsia, gas. heartburn and sourness in live minutes —that—Just that—makes Pape's Diapepsin the larg est selling stomach regulator in the wo Id. If what you eat ferments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid, head is dizzy and aches: breath foul; tongue coated; your insides tilled with bile and Indigestible waste, re member the moment Diapepsin comes in contact with the stomach all such A group of attractive young women helping to run the Habersham chapter restaurant at the old Capital City club. Top row. from left to right: Regina Rambo, Miss Ellis,'Louise Ripley, Emma Jordan, Lucy Stockard. Second row: Mrs. Tom Smith, Miss Shelley Curry. Bottom row: Rosabelle Chapman, Marion Perdue, Mainer Hardin. Tommie Perdue. Laura Ripley’ sweet home to concentrate on and charge our brains with the pros perity of the Americans and their sciences. I think the picture shows and theaters in this city are super fluous, for a student has only a few hours in a week for amusement after preparing his lessons. I do not believe the lack of sa loons makes my friend and country fellow vexed of our good and be loved refuge. I do believe wherever we go we can not find splendid colleges, kind professors and high education as we find in Atlanta. The executive officers of this city are trying to promote what is best in the life of this people, leaving evils in the background. Wherever the stranger turns his face he finds schools, colleges, churches and many beneficent in stitutions. In my opinion, Atlanta is the unique pearl in the crown of the South. t E. G. AGGAN. Egyptian Druggist. Student in the Southern College of Pharmacy. PUTS FLOWERS ON CASKET OF WOMAN KILLED BY HIS AUTO One of the prettiest floral offerings ever seen at a funeral in Atlanta was that which A. H. Shatford today placed upon the bier of Mrs. Emma Clifton, the aged woman whom he ran over and killed with his automobile last Satur day afternoon in Whitehall street. Shatford was exonerated in a police court investigation this morning, the testimony of witnesses showing that the accident was unavoidable and that he was running at a moderate speed. Mrs. Clifton's funeral was held at the home of her sister, Mrs. M. Bandy, 163 Whitehall street. Numbers of friends sent flowers as a testimony of theii love for her. She was buried at West view. distress vanishes. It's truly astonish ing—almost marvelous, and the jov is I its hartnlessneFs. A large 50-cent case of Pape's Dia pepsin will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction or your druggist hands you your money back. It's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stom achs regulated. It belongs in your home —should always be kept hands in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach dur ing the day or at night. It's the quick est. surest and most harmless stomach i doctor in the world. (Advt.i | POLICE GUARDING CARS IN AUGUSTA Strikebreakers Operate Lines in City—Aiken Interurban Is Still Tied Up. AUGUSTA, GA., Sept. 24. —The Au gusta-Aiken Railway and Electric Cor poration is running cars on its city di vision this afternoon under heavy guard. From three to five policemen are placed on each car, and, although large crowds of strike sympathizers gather at street corners and hoot and jeer the strike-breaking motormen and conductors, no attempt has been made to harm the men or take them off the cars. Trouble is expected tonight if an at tempt is made to operate cars, for strikers and sympathizers have threat ened to take off any "scab" motormen and conductors operating after dark. Mayor Thomas Barrett has promised the company ample protection. No Cars Before Noon. Up to noon today not a wheel had turned on the city lines or the Aiken interurban division since 11 o'clock yes terday morning, when conductors and motormen went on strike. There is absolutely no chance for | any of the Aiken cars to run, for Gov ernor Cole L. Blease will give no pro tection and the line passes through a South Carolina cotton mill district be tween here anil Aiken, where all of the sympathy is with the men. Sentiment here is divided, but all agree that it will be a duel to the finish between the strikers and the company. TO OBSERVE COLUMBUS DAY. MACON, GA., Sept. 24.—The Knights of < olmnbus Os Macon are planning an ehdiorate celebration of Columbus dav on October 12. Not the least feature of the occasion will be the initiation of 100 candidates, fully half of whom will come from Atlanta, Albany. Savannah and Au gusta. i imm _jx u -j—inj uiii-.i—_ ” 111 BJ| rtjC 10-Pound Pai! ■ Snowhite \ A fl ■■Mil COUNTRY EGGS 25C DOZ. LEMONS 25C DOZ. LIMES 71-2 C DOZ. SALMON, TALL CANS 8 1-3 C CASH GROCERY CO. 118-120 WHITEHALL, ! ROTE W R 51 : OWL «R[ IS WHILE I Georgia Senator Defends Bill as Upholding Our Honor. Hits Roosevelt. Senator Hoke Smith declared t . that the Panama canal bill, r. quF , all vessels in foreign trade to p av • T for passing through the canal, does n ,,- conflict with the treaty with Great Bi t aln. and he does not see how any S ' P ’ rlous complications with other , o,’ ln tries can arise from the recent pass T of the bill. The senator pays hi Ki praise to Congressman Adamson Ls Georgia, who was one of the writ. . . ~'f the canal bill. Senator Smith gave special attention to the Panama bill when it was befoL the senate as he had been requested bv Congressman Adamson, chairman of tt' commerce committee of the house t „ take charge of the bill in the senate and protect the valuable measures which the house had placed in the bill from the effort made by the sena - committee to defeat the Demo, ratio bill by senate amendments Senator Smith leaves today for the West, where he will engage in a speak, ing tour for Woodrow Wilson, in <’i<- cussing the Panama canal measure h e said: Can't See Serious Clash. “I do not see how any serious oir plications with Great Britain can grow out of the Panama canal bill as it final, ly passed. The original bill as it came from the house was largely the cr »- tion of Congressman Adamson, of mu own state, and he is entitled to great credit for his admirable work upon tills measure. "The bill requires all vessels engaged in foreign trade, whether Ameri,on owned or owned by citizens of other countries, to pay tolls for passing through the canal. It only permits United States coastwise vessoL to ] :iss through the canal free. Conceding that our treaty with Great Britain and with other countries required the sametrmt ment to citizens of other countries which is accorded to citizens of tin- I United States owning vessels pas ing through the canal. I consider that the i bill meets the requirements of our I treaties. I"The coastwise trade of the United I States is limited to vessels made in ':v | United States and owned by citizens f the United States. In this respect the policy of the United States does not differ from that of nearly all other countries. Coastwise trade is usually | regarded as a domestic propositi >n from which citizens of foreign coun tries owning vessels are excluded." Scores Taft and T. R. In discussing the national campMgn. Senator Smith scored both Taft m<i Roosevelt for what he termed their alignment with the special interests. He said: "My confidence in the election of Wilson is due to the strength of his cause. One-half of the Republican put ty is thoroughly tired of a rule which a combination of machine politicians and the agents of special interests have been giving the country, “President Taft, after promising re lief against the present excessive tariff taxation, approved the Payne-Aldrich bill, which was worse than the Dingley bill that preceded it. Hi- put above the interstate commerce commission u court whose action has been one con tinuous effort to suppress work by the interstate commission in behalf of tl people. "I don't believe President Taft can poll over one-half of the normal lie publican vote. Sees Failure For Teddy, "Colonel Roosevelt, on the other hand, h is not only sought to appeal t' dissatisfied Republicans, but to lead astray those Democrats he could rear i In this last effort he is doomed failure. The people of this country o still devoted to American institut They believe in the government •>( ' They know that Colonel Roosevelt I upon a constitutional form of goveri ment as so much red tape, to be ■■ aside whenever he desires it. “A study of Colonel RooseV'-u ’ , speeches shows that he is in fav r unlimited consolidation of indue and unlimited monopoly. George ' Perkins lias been a leading spin the formation of trusts and m chairman of Roosevelt's exoeutiv mlttee. “It has been plainly shown by S'r tor La Follette that under the i istration of Colonel Roosevelt growth of illegal trusts was gr- e’- r E far than during any other peri, ATLANTA THEATER TONIGHT 8:15 S Wednesday and Wednesday Mat AL G. FIELD GREATER MINSTRELS ; Nights 25c to sl. Matinee 25c IPDfiMH I Superb Keith Vai GRAND V HAZEL WESTON & Co. Present More Sinned Against Than Usual A Satire on Rural Meller-Dr.nmme _ / Frosin! —Elida Morris —3 P a ' re " J ' ters —Lavine Cimaron Trio —Th S rens—and Ferrell Bros. .„,uT'’i I ll YRIC this week ___ Mats. Tues., The Romantic Triumph THE GOOSE GIRL ? Original Cast and Product o' i; SALE NOW OPEN- I