Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 28, 1912, HOME, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

2 EMANCIPATE YOURSELVES, T. R. TELLS MEN OF SOUTH “I will tell you—and I do not know whether you will quite like my saying this, or not—l am less engaged in pleading my cause than in pleading yours. I want you to emancipate yourselves so that you will feel free to vote just as your conscientious convictions incline you. “I want to try to get the parties so rearranged that the COLONEL INVADES GEORGIA; HERE TONIGHT Bull Moosers and Infidels Pre-1 pare to Give Roosevelt a Rousing Reception. Continued From Page One. the speaking will begin about s o’clock Those who desire seats will do well to go early. The former president entered Georgia at Columbus about noon today. He de livered a short address there, from the] rear platform of his train, and hill - i rfed on to Macon, where at 3 o’clock ini the afternoon he delivered another ad d rass From Macon at 4:50 p. m he conies' straight to Atlanta. After the speaking, the colonel will b® taken at once to the Georgian Ter race. where he will retire early Tomorrow he hopes to visit h's moth- . effs old home in Roswell, Cobb county. I Crowds Greet T. R. In Montgomery ■ I MONTGOMERY. ALA. Sept. ?S | "The men of the North and of the! South can join our party because it 's' founded on principles which al! can | support. You here in th< South can be | mote loyal to the memories of ’-our I giandfathers If you bravely «et your selves to face the problems of the f>i ture as they did rather than io look back into the part and adner. to <->:■! traditions ivith this statement, I'olone: Roose velt appealed to the peop > <.f X ahanu for support in an address here this morning Great ■ rowds greeted toe colone when he arrived in Montgomery. They cheered him at his hotel and troweled into the hostelry whiic he was his breakfast The .tain wa.s so gr<at ou side that it threat ened tv pash through the glass doors of the dining room Tile colone: was pleased with the in terest shown Speaks in Drizzle. In a drizzl ng air,. ('clone Roosevelt spoge to a throng of tt.OuO. renew ing his appeal to Democrats of th, South to join the Progressive party The huge crowd filled the entire street foi half a b ock In either direction n front of the Exchange hole , from the balconv of ■w hich the colonel spoke Co’one! Roosevelt spoke of his in tense pleasure at coming to the fits: ' capital of the Confederacy. He advert- I ed to the support of the Progressive cause of a number of Confederate sol- * dtere. DON'T FEAR SUNBURN Sxtf *%!&- nMJW ' ■•—■<! \K jf 1 \r-4 / v ” , ■'> < /V rC ’k; WxvOi^^v" CUTICURA SOAP And Cuticura Ointment will care for your skin. Xo other emollients do a o mu.h to clear the skin of sunburn, neat rashes, rednes and roughness, »nddo it so quickly and economically S'.r IM ~ 4 rhrnuthnut ir.« h*n>. »nr,r‘i> A s mat IM fr<» v I -Lo ******* <*t*eura o*rt X- R<wr.r. F m • * are T er • b * * n ’f'rt W ith C tdi •r ! niv.Bi fct .<?> L<oer& aa mple Miss and Mrs. Atlanta Resplendent in Autumn Garb IT’S HERE--THE NEW FALL HAT \\ \ \ _‘Sr ■ -- \\ i a \ qßßgsewU wWMBWw- ■' revise ■ #■-. A-..Xv I Jr •<** ■■ .. „ ft v •wto b» wW ’ •• ’’ ' L-MBk MIMIMekMS y W/ z <' H It Miss Helen Dykes, a poptilar society girl, wearing one of the new fall hats. Latest in Chapeaus Has Curl ing Plumage Fastened Under Smartly Curved Brim. X girl, quietly gowned in a dark blue -nit passes down Whitehall street and two young things, in white skirts and blazers, stop suduen'v and look after hi with r-agrrn'-s'-- Dov n the street a stout woman in panniers tin. mens to dlslocnf. lie neck, .is .-he van-li.-s the slim girl g.’ bv Xml a few -tops fa - ther anothei woman catches the rub berm, k c'az.e A mere nan. noting th< quiet costume, wonders vv at there is about th. gi: to attract so much atten tion from womankind. Il's the new tall hat The th st ot its kind to m.ike an ap pearance on. Whitehall street, for Miss and Mrs Atlanta ate < onset vatlve in their street gaib (speakin.:: of the "rial dressers.” tiot). and neve: follow the custom of the smart Pa lsienne who mat y loves he conitas'.s and wears tin hat of velvet and fui with the s!:eer.-st lingerie or linen gown. A man da-.snot weat Ids straw hat after Pop tembet I. but a woman wears her sum mer hap.au, no matter how faded o o.d it s until s' a <an v<‘mfo tably wear the autumn tailor-made .. the dark !• ha !viu> ! ' i<niion. It Is truo in»> m 1 net” ‘•hop*- nai.' di’p'nycd th« atos- sty’.rs. < in -’ < - u»n tavr : >ok ' upon them rind pondered ov<- them xnd nn> v 1 -»v« pu :ia«- : . b.am. >, a - „ a hraml '■ * (iM'tin. pul .n .n th' THE ATLAXT \ GEORGIAN ANT) XEWS.SATL KDA Y. SEPTEMBER 28. 1912. b and new style, which awaits the first 1 cool day to be worn. But the effect of a new hat, actually worn, in the open air, is something to gaze upon. That aigrette curling dovv nward toward the back, and fastened under the brim, is the hall mark of the season, as last year the prim bunch of feathers ad , justed directly in front and upstanding i was the co: reef thing That flat bow i of an odd shade of velvet is entirely . new and so bewitching to feminine ; i eves. The smartly i urved brim, not two , large not yet too small, reveals the die- I tales of tl’e mode. Ami every woman must see that these features are repro- I dmed in her new hut Nothing is more vital to a woman's style than the 'modish ami becoming" hat Is ft any .wonder tlrt lie gazt follows the new ehttpeuu as otig as it can be s .‘tt. bob- I lung above the heads of the pedestrians ! along V"hitehall " An.l Fat and Forty vv 11 go and buy one just like it. am] it would look just ''a- well on her as on the sweet-faced 1 i girl except that with the brand new ! | velvet au.l the brund new f. ath-r. she > | bus to vveii’" the same old face EXPERT DEFENDS CORSETS AND HIGH-HEELED SHOES DENVER. S- pi. ?s.— "If’ you knev whore to throw your weight, and if y<» i r •-ivv yourse'f correctly, you should n<»t be afraid to wear • orsets or high-heeled • M s E o oiH •• M< Elvain Pc. k. teach ;e nf physixa’ cxjltu’* and aesthetic an<’lng n S’ l.oui* think* that D . > I kruAr. ho • »nt ’> made ha • • • !'S ..f Hviiienc and D 1 mou'iph'. is ‘ lead wronu ‘ ATLANTAN, ONCE POOR STUDENT, AIDS NEEDY TECH PUPIL That the appeal of Professor G. Hol man Gardner, of Georgia Tech, for one or more Atlanta men to come forward and hefii send a poor boy through that institution was not in vain was shown this morning. -- A former student of Professor Gard ner saw his appeal in The Georgian and today volunteered to pay half of the young man's expenses. The man who did this was. only a few years ago, a poor country boy himself, trudging five miles daily to attend Donald Fra ser instil ite when Professor Gardner was head of that school. s He worked his way through school and took higb.t st honors. Today he is one of Atlanta's most successful busi- I nl '' n - Pr.ifes-oi Gardner now wimts anoth et Atlantan to pay the other half of the student's expenses. It will take $lO a month for nine months. •THOUSANDS FLEEING ISLAND SHAKEN BY VOLCANIC ERUPTION I ■ - PALERMO. ITALY. Sep? 29 -An earthquake ahock uas felt today on the Island of Stromboli. where Mount Strom boli. the volcano. Is in eruption. Several shiploads of refugees left the isltinc. \\ liile nuinx others from the in ;er’nr vunrd tl <■ fugitives ni"-n the < oas - The activity of the volcano increased io da> a»-d the snwk» and flames van be » n for mar.' miles Part .* tbp ; q n nd .nvpie.; tn th* • ’ ’■ • chi xa" 1 ’ -.-hr.- Manx vin*_>ar*ls have been burned man who believes in a cause, or in any public servant who for the moment represents and embodies that cause, shall feel free to support it, and will not feel obliged to vote against it for ancestral, traditionary reasons and thereby put himself and the nation in a position of rather comic impotence.”— Colonel Roosevelt’s Message to Dixie. SLEUTHSTDKEEP TAB ON RESORT FUGTOES Chief Beavers Determined Not to Let Vice Spread Through out Rsidence Districts. Continued From Page One. maining in the district. The record will be kept, and police and detectives given copies, in oi-der that they may know just what women have been or dered from the district The orders re quiring all inmates to leave the Tender loin by Monday, October 7, also were served on the women. Not Likely To Be Celebration Tonight. Tonight will mark the closing of the j Tenderloin, but it is likelv to be more , an evening of mourning than a night of celebration. The publicity given to the district by the chiefs order and its de , velopnients has served to keep away | the visitors, who fear a police raid or I the visits of reporters, and It is not be : iieved that the last night will be made a carnival. In nearly every church in Atlanta to morrow the ministers will pay a tribute to Chief Beavers and his courage in closing the houses. Many of them will preach special sermons on vice. Churches to Laud Beavers’ Crusade Throughout Atlanta the eiadication of "the houses in our midst” will be the theme for Sunday sermons. At lanta pastors, almost without excep tion, expect to refer at length in com mendation of Chief Beavers’ act if they do not make the now famous closing order the subject of their sermons. I)i. John E. White, pastor of the Sec ond Baptist church, is authority for the statement that 35 Baptist preachers in the city will either preach upon or re fer to the closing order. "The gratitude of Christian Atlanta will be voiced from pulpits tomorrow,” said Dr. \t hite. "Chief Beavers and the police department will be vigorous ly commended." Dr. White has chosen for the subject of his sermon Sunday night "Over coming the Gates of Hell in Atlanta.” "Can’t Escape the Subject." Dr. S. R. Belk, of the Park Street Methodist church, said that he consid ered it his duty to give thanks for the splendid action of the chief. "While I have Just returned to the city and have not chosen the subject of my Sunday sermons,” said the Rev. Richard Orme Flinn, of the North Av enue Presbyterian church. ”1 could not escape discussing the chief’s action if I wanted to. I shall refer to it at length. Atlanta ministers and Atlanta citizens as well should realize that the problem of reforming these women is the most important thing now.” \\ hen Dr. C. A. Ridley, of the Cen tral Baptist church, was asked what he thought of Chief Beavers' action he said: “In some respects it is the most cour ageous act I have ever known a police officer in like position to take. I shall have something further to say regard ing the chief and his heroic action on Sunday night. Every minister in At lanta, without effort at sensation, must give this subject consideration.” Calls It City's Moral Crisis. "Atlanta’s Moral Crisis” will be the subject of two sermons preached by Dr. D. II Orgden, of the Central Pres byterian church. The Rev. W M. Sen tell. of tin* Gordon Street Baptist 1 hutch, has chosen "Closing the Gates of Heil in Atlanta." He also will dis cuss the issues in the mayor's race. At the Central Congregational church Dr. G. 1.. HJknseom will preach on "The Houses in Our Midst and the Recent Action Against Them.” In speaking of the work of the Men and Religion For ward Movement, he said: "The mem bers of the Central Congregational church have been following the splen did work of th.e movement and indors ing all the advertising and actions taken on this vital subject, and now re joice in the final decision of our cour ageous officials.” The Rev E. Dean Ellen wood, of the t'niversalit»t church, will refer to the chief's action, commending the official lot the way in which he took the re sponsibility in wiping out th< restricted district. At. St. I.ukis Episcopal church Dr. C. H. Wilmer will discuss the closing or der at length at both morning and c-t filing services. Mr. W. S. Gunsalus, a farmer living “t. Fleming, Pa., says he has used Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Dia 1 - r.ioca Remedy in his family for four teen yea: s and that, he has found it to be an excellent remedy, and takes «in it'ciunmending it For sa .> ■ by all dealers. (Adv 1.1 See Nat Goodvzin in Oliver Twist at. th3 Forsyth. WOODWARD IS ACCUSED OF DRINKING; CHAMBERS CALLED BOSS OF “RING” With charges and counter charges by the Chambers and Woodwat < tions. the race for mayor gathered such momentum today that it wi’i „ ' called a quiet campaign for another minute between now and th o .- ° e of the ballot boxes Wednesday' night. 1 ostng Woodward is charged with being drunk this year. Woodward I • Chambers as being the boss of a dirty "ring” and denounces James i and others of his supporters as falsifiers. Dr. George Brown, also a candidate, said that the Chambers-Wane ward controversy was no affair of hi s. Campaign Statements Against Alderman Are Denounced as Slan derous Falsehoods. Branding James G. Woodward’s an nounced reformation as a fake, James L. Key. one of the Chambers leaders In the mayoralty campaign, declared at a Chambers meeting at the Orpheum theater last night that Woodward had been drunk twice this year. "About the first of the year Wood ward got drunk and used some of the vilest language that ever fell from hu man lipa to a fellow club member in one of the most prominent clubs in the city. It involved the honor of wife, child and mother. It is nothing but fair to say that the honorable gen tlemen in this club did not stand for it," said Mr. Key. "J will give you another instance upon the authority of M. B. Young, a gentleman of honor and integrity and a member of your park board. Says Chambers Is Slandered. "Last March Woodward came into Mr. Young’s office, which adjoins Woodward's office in the Empire build, ing. drunk. Woodward cursed and brandished a pistol, frightening the stenographer and clerks. Mr. Young got Woodward back into his (Wood ward’s) office and by feeding him liquor and ipecac got him so sick that sev eral persons were able to get him home by 1:30 o'clock in the morning." Mr. Key said that one thing that shamed this campaign was the quiet slander that had been carried on by some of Woodward's supporters against Aldine Chambers. He said that the source of one of these "lies” had been forced to make a written retraction, and that this case was typical of the viciousness of the whole system of at tack. He said that while Mr. Woodward posed as a business man his work con sisted in collecting rent from a few lit tle houses on a railroad right of way. He said that any real estate firm in At lanta would handle the matter for SSO a month, but that Mr. Woodward was given a big salary and a clerk to do the work. “Why?” he asked. Discusses Franchise Grant. He said that Woodward, instead of being the man who got $50,000 for the franchise across the Whitehall street viaduct, insisted that the company have it for $25,000. The franchise was worth $50,000 a year today, he declared. He said that when he was in council in 1906 fighting for lower electric light and power rates Woodward began to attack him and that he had to de nounce Woodward on the floor of coun cil as the most pliant tool the electric company ever had. He said that M oodward served the electric company in other ways, veto ing a franchise to the Macon Street Lar Company, which was passed by council over his veto. Because Captain Evan Howell had beaten Woodward for mayor and aroused his enmity, Mr. Key said that it oodward vetoed the purchase of Howell park in West End. Mr. Key was hissed several times by parties in the rear of the building. Chambers Defends Self. J. R. Smith spoke next and called on the people of Atlanta to support Chambers because he was a clean, moral and capable man. S. B. I'urman then Introduced Mr. Chambers. He said that the only basts foi the charge of .•< political ring was that the county and city officials har moniously were making improvements Mr. Chambers went over the record ot what has been accomplished since he came into council and outlined manv big improvements which are needed. He said that all the insidious attacks on his character were absolutely fal»e About 1,000 persons were present. Some ~f them left before the meeting was finished. LOOK YOUNG. Ihe double vision glasses worn bv ", oni , an ” f middle age look exa t.x like single vision glasses worn KRVPTfiK<a PeC i l>ir T lf ,he lense s KRI I r k. .ino, 1.. Moore d.- Sons make them. 12 X.„. th Broad M ,. eef fAdvtA See Nat Goodwin in Oliver Twist at the Forsyth. Short and Ugly Epithet Hurled at Key and Young, Who Charge Intemperance. In reply to James L. Key’s charges at the Orpheum last night, James G Woodward, candidate for mayor, gave out a written statement denouncing Mr. Key and M. B Young, an authori ty cited by Mr. Key, as absolute fahi flers. "I want to say with all the emphasis at my command that the charge of M. B. Young that I was drunk in my of flee last March Is an Infamous false hood, not to use a shorter and uglier word," declared Mr. Woodward. "I have not even drank so much a? a glass of beer during the entire year, and. God being my helper, I never ex pect to drink another glass. Denies Using Rough Langauge. "The statemnt of Mr. Key that I used horrible language about another mans family is also infamously false," he continued, "and I demand of him to produce the record proof or stand branded as a common falsifier.” Mr. Woodward said that he had not spoken to Mr. Key since ha "branded him as an infamous liar and scoundrel'' during his administration of 1906. He said that Mr. Key was in council and' a member of the police committee and accepted money front the whisky deal ers association. "The mere fact that Mr. Key was sei, 'ected to make these dirty attacks, shows the character of the man," sa:J Mr. Woodward. "It is but anothet sample of the ring politics of Atlanta, of which Aldine Chambers is the boss. Calls Both “Ringsters." "Key Is a member of the board cl, education, put there by the ringster?. Young is a member of the park board, put there by the same forces. A his tory of Mr. Young's private affaii around his office might interest ths. public. "All charges and intimations of Keys that I have received money from the electric company or have been influ enced by that company in any way are equally false." STRANGLES GARGLING HER THROAT; PARALYZED, DIES HANNIBAL, MO., Sept. 28.—Mrs. Ed ward Turner, who arrived here fror Parsons, Kans., with her husband Mon day. died suddenly from strangulation She was gargling her throat with pe roxide when she strangled and almost immediately was paralyzed. She live! but two hours. Mrs. Turner was in good health, ex cept for a slight throat affection. MY EYES HURT If they do, it’s safe to as-'OT* that you need glasses. The fits’ thing to do is to find out. A simple rest glar® ,na '„ relieve the whole trouble, o. you may need a glass for con stant wear. Our Opticians will make a very careful examination tir your eyes, and if glasses aie needed, will fit the lenses at a very moderate charge. If you are wearing g:.i,s>e' let us show you a pair big, lightweight Shell I.’b'a-. frames —great for comfort A. K. Hawkes Co OPTICIANS M WHITEHALL STREET