Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 04, 1912, HOME, Page 7, Image 7

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ON TO BE HERE TILL CITY PUNT WORK BEGINS Mayor Declares Present Oppo sition to Crematory Will Amount Only to Delay. v.vocates of the new garbage dis plant were gratified today when Mayor Courtland S. Winn returned to : duties and announced that he would ,: 0 ;d) he could to make good the J276,- n crematory contract. He said that present opposition to the contract ,-ild at most amount only to a delay al;C i that tlie new crematory would be built. Mayor Winn arrived last night from Plninfield, N. J., where he has been 111 for about two weeks. Over the protest o f Mr-. Winn and the advice of his phy. aieians, he announced that he will stay rr, the city until the crematory matter ; closed and work Is begun on the new plant. After that it is expected he will 2 n to Florida for a rest. Mayor Winn said he was surprised Aiderman Arthur Van Dyke had taken the position that he would use his Mcermanic prerogative and hold up the ontract to tear down the old crema m.T in preparation for the new at the •;cxt meeting of the aldermanic board. He said Van Dyke was one of the most ■rtlent advocates of the crematory plan when it was adopted by council. Declaring that the $276,000 plant was not a waste of money, Mayor Winn said ;hat the SIOO,OOO electric power plant contemplated would be one of the best assets the city could possibly have. He - ■;,! it would be the nucleus for a com plete municipal power plant. Woodward Continues Fight. James G. Woodward today continued h> fight to prevent the aldermanic board from approving the contract to tear down the old crematory. He said - purpose was to prevent the tearing /own of the old crematory, for it would ieiwe the city tor a year without any u-ans of garbage disposal. Mr. Woodward has appealed to the muni'- board to delay action until he iti go North and investigate means of garbage disposal. He will visit Mil waukee and Staten Island, where the Destructor Company has built plants similar to Atlanta’s. The Milwaukee plant, though larger, many thousands less than the At ’.uitr plant will cost, but it is said it is rotiiing like so efficient as the proposed one. Tee Destructor Company took the moral obligation for all but $50,- 00 of the cost of the crematory. James ii. Woodward opened his attack by de claring the contract illegal. The main point in the fight that has developed is whether the city’s moral obligation con tract will be able to stand an attack or not. This matter seriously involves the city's credit and is more important than whether it is economical to build the $276,000 plant. MAN IN DOUBLE MURDER PLOT SENTENCED TO DIE SHREVEPORT, DA., Nov. 4.—Albert L. Watson has been sentenced to hang for the murder of A. C. Bailey. Watson confessed he killed Bailey and the slain man’s wife, Mrs. Bailey, confessed she murdered Mrs. Watson, ■wife of her husband's murderer, so sur viving spouses could wed. The woman's trial will be held this week. LETTER No. 2 Atlanta, Qa., October Bth, 1949. Dr. L. a. Hines, Care Hlnee Optical Company. Dear Doctor: It gives me great pleasure to say ’"at the glaesea fitted by you to my ryea are most satisfactory, ' had little bopea when I went to you, of getting glasses that would give me relief as well as good vision, aa I have spent so much with the eadlng oculists of this and other cit ies without results, that I was dis couraged. Your glasses have given me the sight of my childhood and I want to ♦hank yeu. Very truly yours, (Mre.) ANNIE L. GEORGE. Whitehall Street. HINES OPTICAL CO. OR. L. A. HINES IN CHARGE. 31 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga. GOOD DENTISTS AND GOOD EQUIPMENT MEANS more practice and LOWER PRICES. Hold Crowns $3.00 Bridge Work $3.00 s «t Teeth $5.00 411 .work mnranteert ATLANTA DENIAL PARLORS C A CONSTANTINE. Pro) £P*a.htr** and Decatur R-* ••r.c« l*»», F- C lew to Missing $500,000 Masterpiece Found in N. Y< SLEUTHS FIND 5 MONA LISAS MMKlinißl jar r ft III® - ;I. - |i ir> . i V , ft,. I l IPf I t ? W J Heft -eq a-. I wit ’ .wOoWi / tffß ftR ■ l -' ~' w " W?’ 'W®®tß 1 ■< Xr® ' ■ ) Qc; ;V Two‘photographs of Mrs. Herbert Farjeon, of New York. On the left is shown Mrs. Far jeon as her own beautiful self, while on the right she is posed as the sphinx-like mysterious “Mona Lisa.” Painting Stolen From Louvre Might Have Been in Bronx, But Wasn’t. ♦ NEW YORK, Nov. 4. —Secret service men and others for a time last week were on the trail of the missing "Mona Lisa," stolen from the, Louvre in Paris. They went out to find one "Mona Lisa,” and found five, four painted and one living. The tip that caused them to believe that the celebrated painting, estimated to be worth $500,000 and considered priceless by the French government, came in the form of an anonymous let ter, which read: The "Mona Lisa" stolen from the Paris Louvre is at No. 895 Kelly street, in the Bronx. Look for the name of Farjeon. I can not dis close my name until the proper time. No. 895 Kelly street Is an apartment house at the corner of Intervale ave nue. There lives Herbert Farjeon, a poet, with his mother and his wife, who was Miss Caroline Becker, an artist of the Pacific slope. Hist! the Sleuths Are on the Scent. Into the Bronx with nothing to guide them but the address and name and expense account went Customs In spectors Sullivan and Smedden. Mrs. Farjeon was found at home. The men talked to her and saw about them three copies of the "Mona Lisa Two were in black and white and one in oil. On the wall was a frame three by four feet, from which a canvas had been removed. The canvas was found behind a trunk. That was proof enough that there was something wrong about it, even if Mrs. Farjeon had not been so sincere in her protestations. Then Far jeon himself arrived. He showed them that the pictures, while copies of the one that formerly rested in the Louvre, were made with his wife posing. W ith the four "Mona Lisas” in black and white and color and the living one be fore them, the customs inspectors de cided that there was nothing to be done. Wife Resembles Real “Mona Lisa.” Farjeon said that he had been so impressed with Mrs. Farjeon’* resem blance to the original picture when he met her first he had induced her to paint the ones the police had uncov ered. Farjeon. in addition to being a poet, is also in the theatrical business, and a week ago. at the Grand opera house, he and his wife presented a sketch en titled "The Mona Lisa,”, written by James Clarence Harvey. as sailomheTances HERSELF INTO JAIL CELL NEW VoRK. Not. 4. "1 can't for the life of me see why 1 can’t wear trousers if Dr. Mary Walker can.” said Mrs. Florence Green, of No. 320 East Fifty - ninth street, when arraigned it court charged with disorderly conduct. When arrested by Detective Reagan in East Fifty-ninth street, Mrs. Green, togged out in a sailor's complete outfit, was dancing a hornpipe for a cheering crowd. THIEF IN CIGAR STORE MAKES SALE. RINGS IT UP NEW YORK, Nov. 4 A robber round .ltd gagged the lorn clerk in if ■ig;»r Moro la r. and ■■■ t"d to rob the ■ lll , , \ , o-'o ~■ . T '*■ bandit •,. ,t .o > *■ ■ ' ' ■■ > 11 1 * THE ATLANTA. GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 4. 1912. SCANDALOUS ABUSE ELECTED WOODWARD, DECLARES MINISTER Petty, partisan politics and mud slinging. declares Rev. E. Dean Ellen wood, of the First Unlversalist church, caused the defeat of Aldine Chambers for mayor and the rebuke by the city of the Men and Religion Forward Movement. Dr. Ellenwood made this statement in a sermon to a good-sized audience at the church last night. He took as iiis subject, ''Why Woodward Won." The result, declared the pastor, was due to the employment of “vitupera tion and abuse which bordered closely on the scandalous, and all in the name of religion." “Indeed,” he continued, “it seems not too much to say that in her repudia tion of the campaign methods of the Men and Religion Forward Movement Atlanta has given most encouraging evidence of her deep, underlying con sciousness of the eternal reality, and has vigorously voiced her protest against the cheap and flagrant profana tion of religion's sacred symbol.” fjj —iy—— . tfij Jr 0® lit 7 n (<ei) The Security Offered by Our Safe Deposit Vaults A X T E give to patrons the advantages w w ncw modern vaults rein- * forced and barricaded with Yale De p° sit Locks - The Yale system of locking is known around the world as the most sturdv, the most impregnate. Every box in our vault is protected by t 3 id a s P ec ial guard mechanism and a double r! set of tumblers. ["*.3? Entrust your valuables to us, —they L* will be safe from fire as well as theft. ATLANTA TRUST CO. [Formerly Hillyer Trust Co.] HENRY HILLYER 140 PEACHTREE ST. President • CAPITAL 5500.000.00 CLOCK STRIKES FIRST TIME IN 12 YEARS AS PASTOR IS PREACHING Twelve years ago the congregation of the North Avenue Presbyterian church completed their new ediby placing a wooden clock in the rear of the church, and yesterday for the first time the clock struck, while Rev. Rich ard Orme Flinn, the pastor, was in the midst of his sermon. The pastor's au ditors turned their heads in amaze ment. The clock struck, it was said, when the mufflers which had been placed over the clapper slipped off or wore off. Next Sunday, declares the sexton, the clock is going to behave. FUNERAL NOTICE. BATTEY—The friends of Mrs. Emily Verdery Battey and Colonel and Mrs. John S. Prather are invited to attend her funeral at Barclay & Brandon’s chapel. Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Father O. N. Jackson will conduct the services. The interment will be private. JODIES OF MARINES SLAIN IN NICARAGUA ARE BROUGHT HOME SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 4. With her lag at half mast, the Pacific mail learner San Juan arrived from Central American ports and Is in the harbor here today wltn the bodies of seven American seamen and marines who lost their lives when the United States in terceded to put down the Nicaraguan t bellion Frank L. Morse, a seaman of the sup >!y ship Glacier, told of the death of i. G. Morgan, of Dos Angeles, turret •aplain of the Colorado, who was “bo oed” by the rebels at Leon. "When the troops entered the city hots were fired upon them from the vindows,” said Morse. "One shot struck i man near Morgan sfnd he turned to go Into the house and ‘get’ thr man who had done it. .Morgan was not missed for several hours. He was found inside the house, horribly mutilated.” Morgan's body was one of the seven brought back to this country for burial. The others are those of Ralph B. Bob bett, Charles Durham, of Junction City, Ky.; Clarence H. McGill, of Portland. .Maine; Harry Pollard, of Medway, .Mass.; John Partell, of <'leveland, and E. H. Bougei s. of Boerne. Texas WOMEN HAVE TEA ROOM IN THE_U._S. TREASURY WASHINGTON, Nov. 4--Secretary of the Treasury MacVeagh lias officially recognized tea as one of the rights of women by authorizing the opening of a "tea room" in the treasury department, where 100 individual pots of tea keep up a merry song during the lunch hour. The new tea room is the only one under Uncle Sam's protection. SHOPPING PLACE FOR THE THRIFTY * A 22c Notion Package for Just 10c jc L* 1 aluininuiii thimble 2c Ironing wax with handle ... 2c 1 dozen safety pins 5c 1 CBrd darning eotton lc >• 1 box moulding ping lc BB B ' papei’ pins 2c J* 1 dozen hooks and eyes 2c 1 P acka ? e futlc y laee P ins ••• 50 JJP TH 1 box hair pins 2c Total. 22c for just 10c ~B» $3.50 and $4 Wool Blankets $2.98 jp 'l'he lower price comes because these are more or less i <45 soiled from display. All white with pink or blue border. Silk taped bound. 11-4 size. Comforters 75c I Blankets 50c a Pair 2 A heavy cotton comforter, coy Cott<>l) sheet t)lanl<ot H. tired with a cheap grade of silk oline. Stitched; 3-4 bed size. | 10-1 size: gray; only 50c a pair. £ $1.25 Wool Dress Goods Only 19c $3.98 Velvet What's wrong—the pattern. It's a small plaid crossed J-l a f® a fr Cl Qft 2- 2! with a large bar. Imported from France, and it didn't Uala <*l tOI>UO jj. -take" here. We have just a small lot. wool A f v{due in an J dress goods, and 4.> inches wide. Less than the price of trimmed velvet hat Nearlv cotton. Snap tor early corners. pvery sizp (|nd ghapp Oov . JT 15c Chailie 10c 121 -2c Percales 10c ered with good quality Yard-wide Persian chailie that Newest designs of 1912 per- black velvet. S will make the most charming ki- . , t monos and dressing sacques. cales in neat stripes and designs J £ 15c Ginghams 121-2 c for shlrt waists dresses etc. JI IO Sc £ Famous Bates ginghams in White grounds with colored fig- <7V g solid colors and seersucker ures jft stripes. yard wide. Very special purchase off J 39c Embroidery Flouncings 25c “(ta :>■ 27-ineh embroidery flouncings of swiss and cambric in Sftle today for the first JU ZW neat, open and eyelet patterns. time. Almost any style 15c Embroideries 10c 5c Laces 2c shape you want. None Jjp *■ 2to 10 inch embroidery edg- English Torchon cotton laces worth less than sl, raan y tg ings and insertings for all sorts and insertings from 1-2 to t 1-2 worth to $2. Choice 49c. of trimming purposes. inches wide. $3.50 Marseilles Bed Spreads $2.48 Buy Corsets 1 Genuine satin Marseilles bed spreads, fine and firm, and |jy Inch highly finished. Immense double bed size, 96x84-in. 5 A Clearance of odd 3 Pairs Women’s 19c Hose 25c J> *2 1 . . 1 ,L , ..nJ Women's fine 19c gauze lisle stockings for about Bc, be- 3a *" ,s ’ 'HOKCIi line. «1 cause they are “seconds” —they have slight imperfections Jp 5® discontinued models at which do no one any hurt Perfectly fashioned and finished, JBa ’ , , i . double heel, sole and toe. Rlack only, 3 pair for 26c. lc, 2c and 3c an meh. 3» 15c Towels 10c 15c Toilet Goods 10c If ' ° ” All-linen glass towels in pink iS C f ace pow der, 10c. =5 “ a and b,ue barß ’ 15c mentholated cream, 10c. WT • set. size 20, .. , . 15c Rose Liquid shampoo, 10c. x,*/ >/ b w hl 10c oan. ivapßins be |g c bottle perfume, 10c. W ' _ 4 . v ° ll 20c, Women’s sanitary napkins, 15c Antiseptic tooth wash, 10c. »/ ‘ ,Or °|‘. ca , c ’ each in individual box. Soft and e r cl__x_ /1 accordingly very absorbent. OOC DrieetS 49C aK vou se " . > r Heavy muslin sheets, with lin- Ja 11 f'" l ' 5 Hair Nets 10c en finish: deep hems; sizes 76x inch l,< ’c Invisible silk hair nets. Large 90 in. JL* 5 Wa 3c an “inch size, with or without rubbers. AH 25c Tic king 15c 'v\' i c< .. Heavy A. G- A. feather tick- ft* * Rrn ' . i,. 'b 3 Handkerchiefs 5c ing. in plain or with neat stripes; Mi ’SUV', t : e 1 31 in. wide. corsets for Ladies dainty cross-barred • o • o V'ill | . inerly sold Swiss handkerchiefs with hem- 12 1-2 CurtCLin oWISS 8c “ . 1 Tol ’° l S . LOO ‘ Htitched horde*- The well-known C. T. N. cur- •y . 1 Ln lbt '' a J" »o tain swiss at this little price be- Ki all of tor 12 1 han RSglVing cause ill m..t .engths of 2to .j XT1 € .Tnil ,ue [ s, !,s on Postal Cards 5c yards. But many pieces match, r ' it styles, good and there are plenty of the larger •CZ jp chiefly lot Very newest 1912 Thanksgiv- pieces. All white, lu neat cur- house wear. The 2c and 3c an ing views. Many novel subjects. t a ] n designs. i inch corsets are in fairly good Highly colored, etc. 12 for sc. sP models—low and medium bust, , f Curtain Ends 15c J"- long hips, etc, and 3 pair of hose Girls Dresses 49c ln full cur talns these ends supporters Former \|j sizes, f> to 14 —think of get- would be worth $2 to $3 a pair. prices were $1 to $2., Now 2c and ting; such size dresses for only But these are travelers' samples -MB 3c an inch, or about 40c to 60c 49 C Made of checked gingham, in lengths of 1 1-2 yards. Fine a corset. nea t patterns, high neck, long for odd windows, etc. Just a .MB , sleeves. Piped in solid colors. small lot to clean up at 15c each. 50c Petticoats 39c Boys’ 25c Blouses 19c *B Women's outing flannel petticoats in Made of stripe or check percales of solid solid colors with scalloped ruffle. Leading color chambrays. Neat styles, soft attached • colors. Also black spun glass pewcoats with collars and cuffs. Sizes (> to 12. Splendid Ml., rjj accordion pleated rufi'le. 2’>c blouse only 19c. M. RICH & BROS. CO. THESE HENS LAY ONLY ARE HIGH GRAND JUNCTION, COLO., Nov. 4. —Hens that lay eggs only in cold weather, when fresh eggs command high prices, promise to make David Mo. Pherson rich. Last December he hatch ed a Cozen in an Incubator. He was disgusted when summer came and they laid no eggs, but since the first cold spell all have been laying an egg apiece daily. SERVICE THAT WILL PLEASE It is our purpose to give to every patron of this Bank such service in the handling of his account as will prove entirely satisfactory to him. For the accomplishment of this we main tain the most complete equipment possible to secure. have also an adequate force of competent workers. We invite your business. Fourth National Bank DIVORCED AND THEN WED, ALL WITHIN 24 HOURS PHILADELPHIA, PA., Nov. 4 Mrs. Charlotte Marguerita Schweppe, daugh ter of a judge of Washington. D. C„ an-i a beautiful society matron of this city, who obtained a divorce from Ernest G. Schweppe, of Washington, in this city, was hastily married to Hamilton G. Jacobs, a New York advertising rnaiif within 24 hours after she had be«m freed from her matrimonial bonds. f 7