Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 16, 1912, HOME, Page 5, Image 5

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CHIEF EAGER FOB! SKUTK FDR POLICE Beavers. Head of Police, De clares Idea Can Be Put Into Effect With Little Cost. Mlalita can establish two or three t sub-stations in. sections where are most needed practically with out cost to the city, according to Chief I I. Beavers, who agrees heartily with The Georgian’s recent editorial point ing out the urgent need of sub- i stations He showed today just where ihese could be located, how much they would do to relieve the present situa tion and how trifling would be the ex pense. "All we would need for a sub-station would be a small brick building, say 20 i,v 30 feet, with a desk for the sergeant, .. place for a call officer to sit, a tele .iione and two or three steel cells, and e have the cells ready now,” said the . :<f. ' Three such stations would help enormously in covering Atlanta with our present force. Fire Stations Suggested. ■ 1 suggestion that the city five , , . s might be used as sub-stations good from our standpoint, but • noise of an all-night station might ■ ;..rf. ■•■ with the firemen who must ■.p in their engine houses,” he con nu, 1 But there are- several engine ,which do not cover all the land ~ r they are situated, and it would bm ,t trifle to erect small separate b iiiint- for the police stations. This ! ue of the Seventh ward station at; w . ...nd Oak streets, where there; p . 0,-. i,,t. This would make a fine . . . sub-station. It is also true of I . ofir, .muse at DeKalb and ?.fore . vi-mus. another section where a , . . ■■ could be established. tint .v.-u if them places are not | r. i. o •. the city might rent small | ■hidings, vacant stores or other ■ nd fit them up as’ police . ii We have a number of steel j ■ i , .>m the old exposition station > i be used again. ' -u< . a sub-station need.- would I si-rip -tit in charge, one call officer! j ■ lay and two at night. It would' be an improvement, oven if all these j men ■. <-n taken from our regular force,) it: .>ut additional expense. The pay; of ' sergeant is only $lO a month merc i thru a patrolman’s. Could Walk Prisoners. All the patrolmen detailed o that portion of the city would report on and "I’' nt the sub-station and come to headquarters only when thee had cases try or for other business. Prisoners '.iiiji bi held at the sub-stations over : igl-t or until the patrol auto could call tfo" them and transfer them to head- j quarters. The sub-stations would save) i:.\ ml! < of patrol wagon driving, fori i.siiinly a policeman could ‘walk’ pits- j iiers to a nearby station without call- ■ ing the patrol. . A prisoner arrested for some ‘rivm.l itter ot un-der circumstances i>t I irranting arrest, would be assured : re fair treatment at a sub-station t ..in h’ ihe central station unde, pres ongested conditions. As it is now is such a rush at the window that tb office: In charge can not take the ' time to investigate a case or to jue. ’ion a prisoner closely, and it often m opens that a man is locked up when v miin have been released had a suf- i ■■m time been taken to Investigate l; ; s case. This can not be helped with only one station. Many Locations Feasible. The best locations for such stations would be: One a: North avenue and Marietta This would take care of all the h’ifth ward, out to the mill district, a ■■'ige part of the Eighth ward and the '-rritory clear out to Piedmont park. 'One at a point near Peters and Vhlteha street, which would cover the I 'd ■ y from Peters street clear out Oakland City, Pittsburg. Battle Hill an.i over into a partxof the Second ward. One near the Georgia railroad, say opposite the Fulton Bag and Cotton i is. which would cover the big terri ■’t'y in the Ninth ward, the Inman Park and all that side of the city. With those three stations we could ' 'ipruvc the service greatly without a<l -1 cost to the taxpayers. Os we need more men. We have '"vs needed more men. but I think "an get on with but comparatively b-w more." Don t waste your money buying ■ tv'l ning plasters. Chamberlain’s .miini-nt is cheaper and better. Damp- a of flannel with it and bind "'• i the affected parts and it will , uc'" the pain and soreness. For sale I -v all dealers. (Advt.) — SPORTSMAN'S GOGGLES. ■‘" i- 1 shapes. for hunting, golf and ' with large field of vision ■" in tinted or white glass, to pre- | v , -mi gh.ii. Si... John 1.. Moore <!t •■splay at 42 N. Broad street. (Advt.) ECZEMA * Tetter ' Salt Rheum. Pruritus, FCZEMa keeping Skin, Etc.) vl,,^, A , CAN BE CURED TO STAY, *!• m l r v <lire <l I mean just what -l -lt-E-D —and not merely „. '• ip for a while, to return worse Remember, [ make this Jatement after putting ton years 1,11 t * lls " ne disease and han n the mean time a quarter of a mil ”*!k dreadful disease. Now. "mat all you have used, nor doctors have told you that you . be cured—all I ask is just a ■ talking. l k" you *hat I know what I dny “t K , a ,n Out ' * f y° u "'ll write me ~ ' I,'' 111 s, ' n 'l y<m a FREE TRIAL ' will . „ s o'»li’'m’. guaranteed cure ' .i> . ', n, ' e • Vou more In a day than '■ ’’ '.'lse could In a month’s time. • .r<- ' ‘Sgusted and discouraged, I '".g* v e me a chano; to prove •t j i,,' ~ iv writing me tu.fi, you will ’ ' • Um , rea , ■ c,,r nfort than you had 'iv h V llß worl< ’ h «bls for you. " nil ,yotl Will see I am tell- C j p truth. E Csnnaday. 2137 Park Square. > ....... ~ ..Sedalia. Mo. I bird National Bank. Seda 1 Ita. Mo. ‘ ‘ a better act than to send c.i 1., some poor sufferer of Eczema? (Advt.) JOSEPH PULITZER’S WILL IS PROBATED IN GEORGIA COURT l»Rl NSV ICK, GA.. Nov. 16.—'rhe will of the late Joseph Pulitzer, who •lied last year while on his way to Jekyl island aboard his private yacht in Charleston harbor, has just been Hied in in the Glynn county court house, and is one of the most voluminous ever put on record in this county, covering 60 ledger pages. In his will the late publisher of The New York World leaves his Georgia possessions, which consist of shares in the Jekyl Island club and all ills Jekvl island property, to his sons, Ralph and Joseph Pulitzer. Mr. Pulitzer also be queathed $20,000 to his executors to be divided among the faithful employees of The World, and $25,000 for the erec tion of a statue to Thomas Jefferson in New York city. Provision is also made in the will for the Pulitzer scholarships and school of journalism at Columbia university. The amount is $250,000, with SI,OOO annually for a number of years for the best ex ample of a reporter’s work which ac complishes public good and commands public attention and respect. The will is dated April 16,1904, and contains a number of codicils, dated from then until a short time before the publisher’s death. MAN FALLS 16 STORIES BLAZING LIKE A METEOR PHILADELPHIA, PA.. Nov. 16. \A itli his clothing ablaze from the flames of a small charcoal furnace he was carrying, Harry Leonard, an ap prentice coppersmith, fell sixteen sto ries through an airshaft to his death, from the dome of the Bellevue-Strat ford hotel. He struck against a win dow on the ninth floor and fell on the skylight of the stenographer’s room, creating a panic among the girls who were in the room. SUIT OVER NOSE WON BY FATHER AND SON ST. LOUIS, Nov. 16—The suit of Dr. J. T. Pinkstafi, beauty specialist, against Christian Brinkop, Jr., and his father, who Is president of the board of assessors, for the price of an opera tion he performed in removing the Brim.up lump’ front the younger Brink", n m was decided In favor of the Brink, j-.: by Justice Walker. The justice held the operation, j>er formed for minor, was an unneces sary one. WOMAN TRIES TO DIE BY CAR AND STRING CHICAGO, Nov. 16.—Arrested for trying to kill herself, Mrs. Phenle Win chester attempted to hang herself by a shoe lace In the Fiftieth street po lice station early. At West Fifty-third street and Wentworth avenue she leap ed tn front of a car. Arthur Krug dragged her off the track. She became hysterical and was arrested. Mrs. Win chester was despondent over the death of her husband. WOMAN STABS BANDIT WITH A SHARP HATPIN CHICAGO, Nov. 16.- Mrs. E. B. Bro man, 3729 Seminary avenue, attacked a robber with her hatpin when he stop ped her at Graceland and Kenmore avenues, and, although robbed of her purse, she stabbed him several times in the face. The police suspect the robber is the same who has held up several women tn that district recently. ATTACKED BY AN ANGRY BOAR. YOUTH MAY DIE STERLING, ILL., Nov. 16.—Thomas Davis, eighteen years old, of Rochelle, was injured In a tight with a mad dened boar, which had escaped from a pen and attacked him. ■ BIRMINGHAM CHATTANOOGA SAVANNAH MACON ATLANTA JACKSONVILLE 1 I ESTABLISHED 23 YEARS I DR. E. G. GRIFFIN'S I GATE CITY DENTAL ROOMS I I BELL PHONE 1 245 Whitehall Street r Lady I s 1 HOURS, 8A.M.T07 P. M. SUNDAYS, 9A.MTO 1P M Attenda " t | Plates Mails aiu! Delivered Same Day I Al i Aß . W Trrn lam doing the Best Dental Work, using the GIIAKANIttu Best Materials, working Graduates of long Ex Gnld Crowns S 3 00 perience, men of ability—a Specialist in each viuiu V ~ branch, consequently you are bound to get the best. Bridge Work $4.00 I guarantee that. lam doing one of the Largest 1J Ct 1 Art Dental practices in the South; it’s because I give Gold riliings ZpI.UU up the Best for the least money. I can afford it be- Silver Fillings SOc up cause lam doin s volume of business. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 1912. DR.M’NAUGHTON AGAIN GRANTED RESPITE Governor Stays Execution of Emanuel County Physician Until Last of February. Determined that Dr. W. J. McNaugh ton shall not hang until Mrs. Fred Flanders, accused as his accomplice in the poisoning of her husband three years ago. is tried, Governor Brown today stayed the execution of the Emanuel county physician until the last day of February. Failure of the superior court of ■Emanuel to try Mrs. Flanders at the last term, despite the governor's re peated declaration that he would not permit McNaughton to go to the gal lows until the whole truth in this Geor gia mystery is known, made the order for respite necessary. Say Trial Will Clear McNaughton. Friends of the physician have con stantly declared that the trial of .Mrs, Flanders will mean not only that Mc- Naughton will escape the gallows, but that his name will be entirely cleared. It is said that the governor had in formation that Judge Rawlings, of the Ematfuel court, would force the trial of the woman at the next sitting in Swainsboro, which is scheduled during the January term. In the meantime McNaughton re mains in the Chatham county jail, where he has been with the exception of the time of his trial, since the day when he was apprehended a fugitive when the body of his farmer friend had been exhumed and traces of poison had been found in his stomach by experts. Maintains Innocence of Mr s . Flanders. The physician has maintained con- I stantly, in face of the adverse deci sions of the Georgia supreme court and the supreme court of the United States, that he would never hang. He has just as firmly maintained the innocence of the woman, for whose love he is charg ed with having poisoned her husband, i while they were both guests in her ' home. Influence of the Inlanders family in I the politics of Emanuel county is said ■ to have kept Mrs. Flanders from tidal i up to this time, but it is believed that with both governor and presiding judge demanding immediate trial that the fa mous case will be brought to an end when Judge Rawlings next holds court • in Swainsboro. I ' Constipation and i Sluggish Liver Don’t take chances. Get CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS right now. They ■ever fail to make the liver do its duty. They cun constipation, banish tndiges. tioa, drive out biliousness and FX i the blues, stop dizziness, clear the complexion, pul j/xOnfi i , a healthy glow on the 'U/'* cheek and sparkle in the eye. The.re are many imitations. Be sure and get CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. The pill is im. il, dose is small, price is small, but results are ;reat. The GElNJlhk must bear signature: SLAYER SENTENCED THIRD TIME TO PAY PENALTY WITH LIFE AUGUSTA, GA.. Nov. 16. —For the third time J. Edward Brazell has been sentenced to die for the murder of Car rie Belle Duncan, a young girl whom Brazell shot more than a year ago. Judge Henry C. Hammond fixed .De cember 6 as the day for the education. Brazell had an invalid wife who was being waited upon by Miss Duncan, the girl living in the same house with the Brazells, but in another apartment. One morning as Miss Duncan carried breakfast to the sick woman Brazell shot her with a shotgun. The dying girl fell across the bed occupied by the Invalid wife. Officers soon arrived and placed Bra zell under arrest. He was in a drunk en rage from jealousy. Miss Duncan had repulsed his attention. Brazell no tified her before the shooting that he would kill her. BEAN BAKERY IS BURNED: HUNDREDS OUT OF WORK INDIANAPOLIS, IND.. Nov. 16. Fire early today destroyed the main building of the Immense plant of the Van Camp Packing Company at Ken tucky avenue and White river. The loss was $350,000. * Several hundred men, women and children are thrown out of work. The origin of the fire is a mystery, as steam heat was used throughout the plant. Tfle flames had gained considerable headway when discovered by a night watchman. RAISING RED CROSS FUND. BRUNSWICK. GA., Nov. 16. —The Greeks of Brunswick have started a fund for their countrymen now engaged in war with the Balkan allies against the Turks. The money is being raised for the Red Cross society of Greece to aid the sick and wounded. CENTRAL BANK S TKLST CORPORATION ASA G. CANDLER, • - President CANDLER BUILDING Branch: Corner Mitchell and Forsyth Sts. ASKSCOURT TO VOID IGF MERGER Creditor Also Requests a Re ceiver for Company Taken Over by the Atlantic. Asserting that the merger of the At lanta Ice and Coal Company with the Atlantic Ice and Coal Corporation in 1910 defeated the creditors of the for mer from collecting debts and court judgments. W. F. Reeves filed suit in superior court today asking that a re ceiver be appointed for the Atlanta Company and that the merger of the two be set aside as illegal. Reeves told the court that he had ob tained a judgment against the Atlanta Ice and Coal Company for $305.45 and $22.45 costs in March, 1910. While Ills suit was pending the Atlanta Company merged with the Atlantic, and the sl,-’ 952,500 worth of stock of the former company was absorbed. When he attempted to collect the judgment, he said he was informed that the Atlanta Ice and Coal Company hud ceased to exist, and he found that there was no one responsible for the amount of the judgment. Under the law, lie maintained today, he had no redress except through a court of equity. Ho asked that a re ceiver, empowered to take charge of the books and papers of the Atlanta com pany, be named by the court, and that, if necessary to satisfy creditors, the merger of the two companies be set aside as illegal and fraudulent. LORIMER OPERATED ON SUCCESSFULLY FOR APPENDICITIS CHICAGO, Nov. 16.—William Lori mer, former United States senator, was successfully operated on for appen dicitis early today at the Presbyterian hospital. Dr. DeVan performed the operation. He was assisted by Drs. Herrick and S. R. Slaymaker. Mr. Lorimer was in the operating room an hour and a half. After being removed his doctors expressed him selves as perfectly satisfied with the patient’s condition and declared no fear was entertained of any bad results. ARMY AVIATION TESTS AT AUGUSTA START MONDAY Al GUSTA, GA., Nov. 16.—A special train will bring the United States army aviation school to Augusta on Monday. Captain Chandler, with six other avia tors, all of whom are commissioned of ficers, and 22 enlisted men will come and six Wright and Curtiss biplanes and a Molsant monoplane will be brought along. The aviation school will be located one-half mile from the city limits on the Barnes farm, where it was situated last year. The experi ments will continue for four months. THE CURE OF CHRONIC DISEASES BY EXTRACTS AND SERUMS IN nothing has the advance in scientific medicine been more lorcihly expressed, and cures been more vividly evident than the advance in our knowledge of the treatment of disease bv various serums. I’he development of this is very recent and only dates back about twenty years, and indeed we are at pres- DR. WM. M. BAIRD, 56 Marietta St. Atlanta, Ga. When Brown-Sequard launched his Elixir of Life in 1889 as a specific for pre-senile conditions, it soon sank out of sight, but it was only a crude development of the use of extracts made from various organs and today some of the most marked results in cur ing disease is to be had with these extracts. Take, for instance, Bright’s Disease. Years ago Solis-Cohen pointed out I hat the use of a certain animal extract was beneficial in certain forms of Bright’s, hut it fell into disuse for the reason that the average doctor failed to realize that the essential thing was the correct diagnosis, and when to use it in order to get good results, and only recently has it been brought out that probably in certain forms of Bright’s Disease we have a specific in this ex tract. We know how Obesity can be relieved positively by their use. and we know that in skin affections, like Eczema, Psoriasis, etc.. we have extracts that give most wonderful results. Tn diseases peculiar to the female sex the use of serums and extracts have been found to cure, where a decade Ago we would have thought that nothing but the knife was to be thought of. Very many of the Chronic diseases that ten years ago were thought incurable are today readily amenable to treatment, but probably nowhere has the benefit been more marked than in the various organic nervous affections, and in neurasthenia certain serums are almost true specifics. Those who read my various articles know 1 give great stress to diagnosis, and one reason why so many Doctors condemn these extracts and serums is that they fajl to understand when to give in order to get the best results, given indiscriminately they often do more harm than good. Then, too, in diagnosis the Laboratory methods are today revolutionizing medicine by giving us a better knowledge of the existing pathological conditions. That diagnosis is essential is shown by the following instance: A gentleman was under the treatment by a pair of those quack doctors, who decry advertising, but who really get a lot of free advertising fyy writing articles for proprietary preparations, laud ing them as a cure, so that the house will reprint their articles and send them out free, they bad been giving their pet vaccine or serum until the patient who was getting steadily worse by the advice of a friend consulted ine. Any one but a free advertiser would have known the vaccine was not indicated, and a proper examination showed a trifling ulceration of a sensitive portion of the anatomy, which was promptly relieved under proper methods, and very naturally the relief was superlatively ‘‘spectacular,” so the doctor who enters this field must not forget that precision and attention to details are important as well as to know what will cure when the exact condition is once known. This whole subject has been one of especial interest to me for over twenty years, and though I have been steadily in the work for over thirty-five years, 1 am candid enough to admit that there is much yet to learn. Those interested in this line of work, or those interested in difficult chronic diseases, 1 will be pleased to have call for an examination and consultation, which will be free of charge. Write for Essays on Health. Office hours, 8 to 7 daily; Sundays and holidays, 10 to 1. Brown-Randolph Building, 56 Marietta Street, Atlanta, Ga. MAN KILLS WIFE AND SELF BROODING OVER DEFEAT IN PRIMARIES .MOUNT VERNON, OHIO. Nov. 16. Having brooded himself insane over his defeat for nomination as county treas urer in the primaries last spring, Wil liam B. Magill, 47, a school teacher, early today shot and killed his wife with a shotgtm and then shot himself. He will probably die. The woman’s head was nearly blown from her body. ATTENTION. O. R. C., Division 180. You are re quested to meet at the hall, No. 8 1-2 West Alabama street, Sunday after noon at 2 o’clock, to attend the fu neral of Brother S. P. Landrum, from Barclay & Brandon’s chapel, at 2:30 o’clock. The following gentlemen will please act as pallbearers and meet at Bar clay & Brandon’s. 101 Marietta street, at 2:30 o’clock: S. L. Vandiver, A. W. Hill, J. H. Dyer, C. S. Baldwin, J. O. Hargis, W. C. Stradley. Interment at Oakland cemetery. There will be a special car to take friends to the cemetery. By order. W. C. STRADLEY, Chief Conductor. ent only beginning to see the daylight regard ing its exact value. Beginning with the researches of Ogata and Jasuhara (two Japanese), we can trace its development down through the work of Behring and Kitasato. mingled with that of Pasteur. Metchinkoff. Schwann, Jenner, Roux, Bechner. and a score of others until medical literature today is rich in indicating its steady advance, and it seems that we are just on the eve of still greater advances. Much has been done that has reference to preventing disease and much more in helping to cure many conditions that had been thought incurable, or at the best only cured by the knife and the risks that attend the best of surgical skill. 5