Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 14, 1912, HOME, Page 2, Image 2

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2 ALLIES UNITED IN DEMANDS.SAYS GREEWHOV “We Will Insist on Fruits ot Our Victory in Conference.” He Asserts. LOMjoN. Jug. 14 -An uiurnk.-n j front will be prcunted to the Turkish; peace dele gates by the rpj.re ntatlv* s< of the Balkan allb f v *n the T.i - <»• I Balkan conference hrginF In .e Mon* I day. P.-pHih. \’cni?.t lo?. « f 1 '• < <• j flpeaking for films ;f and th< oth»«i ' picn’pot* nt irti i< s. today that truu: ’ Is no ciiT* r»'n ».?f opinion >mong lh< i envoy* of the r.'Ued govern!;; l nis "I’nited Wf *tan' . <!‘v d» d W( a OU* mott" ” .• • >! the (J: -k • ini’ ”W( will unitedly • '•tiiu.i 1 at ::ii< '»«n ference t' « fruits of on.- vl< lory. J a x the t • I An. •> • < ov« oj f.'il • ph y if? known to the world, lot help U‘. j "Pt aeo mi: p' m tin to, f nu- gov- \ < iinn • i i. • ■ uhiid I ly th ecui .nd . >pnu nt of on old i andue \ << u . \\ < >ra h not d i a- --n • • f t ■)< P' ah' tJS . a*.ng i<■ allies | • by unf".. n • v t loi mrnts n i I. *a' Ti It will bo aft until lu;< ;j Alfuiugh t!i. hiv.,-. iefUM I to bv | <t'jo.cd on I <• 1! ilkuu d« n ins’s. H it ' bath.(l a.it th*' m< ?ud t st.riclion ••( v u: ,• ah Tn. o lo a Ihni’ed nifn, at Hilt. vltv ~| . ; ,1,, nt .( I T .. ' hi .'I;;' t itfHil i. favorably I POLICE CLOSE HOTEL . FOUND DISORDERLY; WAR ON VICE DENS I. H. l. i ..a* any niuii who pal lit i- J p;ii< - in fui .k in •• of vice in At-i la’ila .HI b< j>‘a(•< d in the same (lass; if t’;e women d.l.n fr.rn the tender- I L in. Police <’ to f l’< av« rs today served . official noli' on K. Snyder. proprie tor of the St. f’lilr hotel in Fornyth 1 street, to V’'- :’ie hi* hotel in fiv»- days. Thi? was the Mine notice s< rved by the j chief on prop’ietc s and Inmates when he closed I .!.■ ictognlz.-d district. The Snyder order followed the trial find conviction of the hotel man yester day in the city criminal • ->url. Judge Calhoun imposing a fine of 1150. “Any hotel man or proprietor of any other place who in convicted of con ducting a disorderly house will be giv« n five days to vacate,“ said Chief Beavers today. “A hotel run for such purpose s will be classed Just the same as a house in a recognized district, and will fare the same as did the houses in Atlanta's district. Vice in one place is Just as bad as another, and men must under stand that they will not be permitted to further vice any more than a bad w oman.” PEACHTREE REALTY UP 100 PER CENT IN SEVENTEEN MONTHS Nearly 100 per cent profit in 17 months w:is repre-. nte.l in the sale to day of a ,-i.uill parcel oi' Peachtre< real estate. This sale was of lot 2 of thi J. T. t'r.c-s subdivision, on the east side of Peaehlr.e Street. 22. S feet south of < 'nrrh r street. 20xHM feet, for $22,000, or $l,lOO a Itont foot It was bought In April. 1911, from .1 T t'rnss. for sll.Soh, o. $590 a front foot, and sold lieeent ber II to 11. A Altnan.i for $22,000. and Mr. Atmnn.i has transferred It to a client of the W 1.. & John ... Itttl'ree agency. The lot is 33 feel in the rear, oral runs Iriek to :.n ullev It will be held fur Investment purposes. There is much more activity in this reetion end more Interesting an t oiin. ements m e expected soon. I't op eity owners are watching for (he re grading and t epavlng of Ivv street, and expect vain - to jump til! higher. Deeds have be. n recorded In the sale of ten a< is .- on Virginia avenue sot $30.- 090. by \V. E. Worley to <l. A Itleh urds. This is in laittl lot 1 DR. E. D. ELLENWOOD TO PREACH ON “THE DEVIL” The Devil and His Kingdom” will be th< subject f Kcv. I'. Doan Bib n- * wood tomorrow morning at the F'irst ! (7ni versa list church. Dr. Eihmwood I will trace the developim nt of the pop- ( ular Christian belief In a "personal : devil ’ and show some of the practical j handicaps In th. progress of human ity’ which he declares have resulted from this belief. Tin* evening service will start at 7 4 > o’clock, and Dr. El lenwood’i subject will be “A Chris tian Gentleman." The morning sermon ’ is a continuation of a series on “Uni- I verbalism ami orthodoxy.” DE BERRY G. DUMAS TO HEAD MODERN WOODMEN The Modern Woodmen of America have elected officers for their camp for the ensuing year as> follows: Venerable consul. Deßerry G. Du mas; adviser. Howard Herron; banker, A. R. King, clerk. A. M. Crosby; es cort, W. H. Cheek; watchman. W. P. Holies, sentry, R. N. Daniels; past con sul, Shepard Bryan: medical examin ers. Dr S. R St on. an 1 Dr. Crank Esk ridge; managers. Erank E. Huse. W. L. Brady and M. R Duffey. Fourteen applications for membet ship were received and acted upon, showing actlsx- work for the camp. NEW COURT DISTRICT OPPOSED. VALDOSTA. GA. D< ■ . 14 Th grand Jury of th< United States dis trict court, which has just adjourned, passed resolutions expr.-sslng strong op)s>sitlon to th. creation f a new Federal dlstri t in G< "i-gi i which might affect the Southern district as now com posed Gus Edwards and Pretty Songbirds in Al Fresco Show for Christmas Fund ALL "FIVE POINTS" IS A STAGE_THIS AFTERNOON ■ v j ’“wWL v*lwi \ T VX r A .-df ■ / , i \ s. - -feNAVv ' y/ ■ Z = — : -u Here ar. the (Ins htlwartls girls who will entertain at Five Points this afternoon for 'Hie Georgian's Christmas fund for Atlanta’s poor kiddies. Some of the pi'ett young women will sell Georgians, and there 11 be no use trying to dodge them. Woe be to the “tightwaddos"’ this day! Don’t Forget to Toss a Coin Into the Barrel for Atlanta's Foor Kiddies. By Left Hook Come on, yqu guys Bo good sports, all of you. Kick In with a quarter or Iwo for the kids. You won’t miss the price of a white chip or a couple of smokes or more. Come <>n down Peachtree to Five Points and lamp the pretty girls sell ing papers. Ease up and slip one of th< m an iron man and don’t wait for tin change. If you're girl shy. slide over to the barrel and play it’s the kitty in a no-limit game. Feed it with a dollar bill, or a half, or a quarter. It's all foi a good cause. What’s a quarter to any of you good sports? There isn’t a one of you who wouldn’t slip that much of a tip to your barber or the hall boy, or the Greek who shine- your shoes in this before- Chiistmas time, Dig Deep This Time. Why not hand that much to some poor kid who hasn't had a taste of real candy or a regular square meal in a yeai ’.' It’s a cheap sport and a piker who'd make a stall in a ease like this. Dig. and dig deep as you can. This Is pa\ day, anyway. It doesn’t make any difference whether you’re Jew or Gentile, Protes tant or Catholic, or whether you have my religion at all. ’I his isn’t a ease of religion it’s brotherhood. You fel lows with the Elk pin on your lapels Catarrh, Rheumatism Scrofula, Eczema, Skin Diseases, Blood Poisons, Boils, Ulcers and All Eruptions, Bad Blood, Sciatica, Kidney and Liver Complaints, General Debility, That Tired Feeling, Loss of Ap petite. Stomach Troubles and other Diseases and Ailments arising from Impure or Low State of tjie Blood, have in very numerous eases been cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla Which in our opinion is the strongest and safest, the most thorough and most successful medicine before the people. It is a highly concentrated preparation of Roots, Barks, Herbs Including not only Sarsaparilla, but also those great Altera tives, Stillingia and Blue Flag; those ».-eat Anti-Bilious and Liver remedies. Mandrake and Dandelion; those great Kidney remedies, Uva T’rsi, Juniper Ber»es and Pipsissewa; those great Stomach Tonics, Gentian Root ami Wild Cherry Bark; and other curative agents harmoniously combined. Just those reme dies prescribed by the best physicians for the diseases and ailments for which this good medicine is recommended. Over 40,000 Testimonials Received in Two Years ’ C. I. HOOD CO., Lowell, Mass. I THE AT LANTA GEORGIA!. 7 AND NEWrt.SA l ( 1? 1 )AY. DECEMBER 14. 1912. or the Req Men’s button or the Shrin < r's emblem, or you who just belong to the general crow<l—you’re all in on this. If some poor little gill with her toes sticking out of the holes in her shoes came up to you at the cigar stand and told you she hadn't got a thing for • hristmas ami didn’t believe in Santa t'laus any more, you'd dig up the price mighty quick, wouldn’t you? If you didn’t I’ll bet my pay envelope against a beer cheek the cigar you bit off would taste like a rubber boot on lire. We’re Not the Real Hard Luck Kids. The Double with us fellows is that we can’t see other folks' troubles until we jam right up against them. We don’t ki*<>w what's going on just around the corner, r We think we’re in han! luck because we can’t afford a racing ear and have to take Milwaukee brew instead of bubble water. I heard a f iend of mine raising a long howl last night because he had to buy a ready-to-wear overcoat when he • wanted to have a tailor survey him for ■ a S6O kimono with fur around the edges. Hard luck, wasn’t It? I’d like to take that guy over across the tracks beyond the gas works and sl ow him some of the kiijs playing in the dirt and making believe a broken beer bottle wrapped in a rag was a sure enough doll with a "Pana" and ■ "Mamma” attachment on its insides. Why, you fellows don't know what hard ; luck is. This G°es For the Kiddos. ‘ Remember, this collection doesn’t go to buy hymn books for the Choctaws or flannel chest protectors for the Sa hara Arabs. It doesn't send any mis sionaries to Gool-a-Boola or teach Lat- • in and Greek to first-rate cotton field hands It goes, every cent of it, to till the stockings of a hundred or so poor kiddos with dolls and jumping jacks and toy steam engines and all that sort of truck that you used to think was all I there was to Christmas when you were kids. , ! The Georgian isn’t going to ask I win the: Johnnie or Susie go to Sunday 'school once a week or whether they I know tlie alphabet backward or for- I ward. It doesn't care a contfnental | Whether the kids have been good or ■ bad during the year. • All it asks is: “Is this little fellow I going to have toys and candy on Christ i mas day, or is he going to wake up and find nothing in sight, but an empty stocking with a hole In It and it mighty poor breakfast to start his Merry I Christmas on?” Join the Bia Brothers! | That would be a nice kind of Christ mas for a kid, now' wouldn't it? And it’s up to you to fix it the right way. , Chicago has a buneh of good sports called the Big Brothers. They’re club men and ofiicemen and fellows who work hard for their weekly pay' envel ope. Some of them are married and some of them just stags; some of them ar.- Sunday school superintendents and a lot of them take theirs straight and have a ringside seat at every tight, that’s pulled off. But they all get busy a week or two before Christmas and riase enough coin to give every poor kid they can find enough to eat and something to play with on Christmas | morning. And they don’t confine their enthusiasm to soliciting money from other folks. They dig most of It out of their own jeans. ■ Why not join the Big Brothers of Atlanta today? You don’t need a badge and there won't be any meetings. The dues are just a quarter or a half In the barrel at Five Points, where Gus Ed wards and his gills will give you some thing to amuse you. and the pass word is "Keep the Change.” Are you on? Don’t give me that stall about having little nephews and niece- of your own. Sure, you’ve got to send- them some [ thing. But you can rake off a quarter jor so from their outfit without their I missing it. It would surprise you to 'know how far the price of a couple of lorinks will go toward filling a stocking. No Limit on the Ante. I These kids in The Georgian's lie j don’t expect SO-cent candy and the | latest dolls from Paris. You could take what you’re going to spend on one of | your siste: s children and give a merrv | Christmas to a dozen youngsters I i know. Not that I'd advise you to cut out your own folks. Just split it two ways, that's all. Remember, it's at Five Points, this I afternoon, open to all comers and no I limit on tlie ante, if you’re going out of town or too busy to take a walk, slip note in an envelope, address it to the Christmas Editor of Tin Georgian and I drop it in the mail chute. You can put your name on it if you like, or you .needn't. That's up to you | But you can bank on it that every Hollar you chip in for the Empty Stocking will give you the biggest dol la 's worth of feeling right you • vc had in your life. • Take a chance and ste if I’m not light. CONTRIBUTIONS ■ I The contributions to date follow: W. R. Hearst SIOO.OO J. fvl. Slaton 25.00; F. J. Paxon . . ... 25.00 1 R. F. Maddox 25.00; Forrest Adair 25.00; J. W. English 25.00. John E. Murphy ■ 25.00- W. T. Gentry 25.00 j George Adair 25.00 Joei Hurt 25.00; W. H. Glenn 25.00 E. H. Inman 25.00 A friend 25.00 Harold S. Holmes 25.00 J. B. Cleveland 25.00 Mrs. J. B. Whitehead 25.00 George M. McKenzie 25.00 Lindsey Hopkins 25.00 H. C. Worthen 15.00 ' Scherer ‘Lunch 10.00 V/. L. Peel 10.00 James Lynch 10.00 John W. Grant 10.00; Henry Durand 10.00 Mrs. J. M. Slaton 10.00: Mrs. E. L. Connally 10.00 , Oscar Elsas 10.00; Charles C. Jones 10.00 Carlos Mason 10.00 A. G. Rhodes & Son 10.00 Mr. and Mrs. John F. Kiser ... 10.00; Morris Brandon 10.00 R. J. Guinn 5.00 E. P. Ansley 5.00 E. C. Peters 5.00 M. L, Thrower 5.00 S. B. Turrnan 5.00 Mrs. Robert Maddox 5.00 I. H. Oppenheim 5.00 Joseph A. Willingham 5.00 Mrs. J. M. High 5.00 Mrs. George McKenzie 5.00 Mrs. P. H. Alston 5.00 M. H. Wilensky 5.00 A friend 5.00 J. K. Ottley 5.00 J. S. Akers 5.00 Clifford L. Anderson 5.00 i Dr. E. G. Ballenger 5.00 Chief J. L. Beavers 5.00 Marion Jackson 5.00 A friend 5.00 Dr George Brown 5.00 J. P. Allen 5.00 Robert L. Cooney 5.00 Marion Cobh Bryan and Florence Jacksen Bryan. Jr 5.00 Reuben R. Arnold 5.00 Charles J. Haden 5.00 Howard Pattillo 5.00 J. K. Ottlev 5.00 Daniel W. Rountree 5.00 ' J. K. Orr 5.00 Charles C. Thorn 5.u0 W. E. Charin 5.00 C. E. Sciole 5.00 Spencer Wallace Boyd 5.00 WORKS 40 HOURS. BUT FAILS TO SAVE A LIFE I ST. LOI'IS, Dev. 14 —The efforts o f a doctor and a trained nurse who were • in attendance 40 hours failed to save the life of Frederick Lindman. who was t found unconscious in his room at Mu » piewood. Trie room was filled with gas. ; He died without making a statement. PLAYS WITH MATCHES. IS BURNED TO DEATH PEORIA. ILL., Dee. 14.—As the re sult of playing with matches while hei . parent* wet< away. Madeline Erring, four years Old. received burns from . w hich she db d at the Deaconess hos- I pital. N- ighb >rs hearing the child’s -■ reams rushed in just in time to saw l the Ilves of the two younger children. I who were seriously burned. t J. B. Hockaday 5.00 l James G. Woodward . . .f. . . . . 5.00 • Thomas C. Biggs (Vclic Motor ; Company) 5.00 ; Charles A. Smith 5.00 ; George S. Obear 5.00 I Shelby Smith 2.50 : Eugene R. Black 2.00 1 Dr. T. B. Hinman 2.00 ' Mrs. W. S. Elkin 2.00 ; Olive and Frances Marion 2.00 Anonymous 2.00 ' A friend 2.00 R. S. Wessels 2.00 A Friend 2.50 Mrs, Bolling Jones 1.00 i H. H, Cabaniss 1.00 ' Meyer Regenstein 1.00 ; Mrs. A. E. Thornton 1.00 ! Hortense Adams, Jr 1.00 Albert S. Adams 1.00 I Constance Adams .......... 1.00 ; A Friend 1.00 ; Miss Lucile LaHatte 1.00 : Mary S. Connally 1.00 ! Margaret Massengale 1.00 ; A Friend 1.00 i Ormond Massengale 1.00 I St. Elmo Massengale, Jr 1.00 ; Judge Broyles 1.00 I Merryman Cross .25 Total $904.75 ' D. N. McCullough, box Indian River o' - - ! anges. j Bell Bros., barrel of apples. zm hum— i um iibiim —p-—.. v .^aESRDWSESSEEffIffi^. - I 3- “On Guard” ,’®ii|i. ** you ave Sood health P*W|Wm " uar< l carefully. for it means everything to yon. Watch the appetite the digestion the bowels. A coated tongue and severe headaches indicate liver I : ''"' 1 ' I'" Always Keep a bottle | Kgl STOMACH; I Sb'™* HOSTETTER’S I 8 STOMACH BITTERS I t * ll ' ' IOUSP an< ’ ’ake >t at the I II A first sign of distress or weak- I II fci!ra ness. It is a splendid “safe- I I 11|tgit yTijitofeyrguard to health" and prevents E 11 Rrfe ra a *•• ? L Jh<; Poor Appetite Sick Headache KES' J ~ .. b Costiveness I BL Biliousness I W ■••■ ■'■ ••< j i ■ ■ an< * a * ar,a '. TH - c , ENI _. H<E sold only in I SB BOTTLES LIKE CUT. REFUSE K ■ «£ H SUBSTITUTES. I II WINE KING SHOT; 11. 5. DIVORCEE SUSPECTED Walter DeMumm Victim of Twg Bullets in Woman’s Apart ments —Jealousy Motive. PARIS, Dec. 14.—The Paris author 1 , ties today asked the London police to prevent Mrs. Marie Barnes, a beautiful young American divorcee, from leaving that city for the United States. M.s. Barnes is accused by the Paris police of shooting Walter DeMumm. the young millionaire sportsman and member of the celebrated champagne-making fam ily. who was seriously wounded in M w Barnes’ apartments at 48 Rv.e Des Belles Feuilies, a fashionable district ot Paris,. DeMumm. who is lying in a private hospital at Neuilly, took a turn for the worse today and physicians arc in con stant attendance on him. It is because of his serious condition that the Lon don police were notified. One bulb t (entered the stomach an<T the other 'Clashed through the right lung. Peri- Gonitis is feared. Woman Twice Divorced. • An investigation by the police of Ms. ■Barnes' past life revealed that she ha I : been twice divorced. Her first husband was David Barnes, of Baltimore. ME., and her second husband was George H. I Creel, Jr., a wealthy Chilian. After her I divorce- Com Creel, Mrs. Barnes re- I sained the name of Barnes. Mrs. Barnes i is a beautiful blonde, 25 years old, and .has lived considerable time in New ■ York. ■ Sensational reports followed the news Jes the shooting today. One was that the DeMumm family had appealed to i Police Prefect Lepine never to allow I Mrs. Barnes to set foot in Paris again lAnoths - report was that the wounded I man had become so low that his life j was despaired of. and an extradition i warrant for Mrs. Baines, charging 'murrler, had been sworn out. | , The police have established jealous'- las a motive for the shooting. Letters I were found in the woman's apartmen's I.showing she was madly infatuated with DeMumm and deeply resented his de termination to break their friendship. Couple Quarreled. The shooting occurred during a o.uar rel when DeMumm made his final cal! upon Mrs. Baines to tell her that they must not meet again. He told her that j his family resented-the gossip arising I from tbeir intimacy and that th.-ir i friendship would have to be seve:-e:l at once. A quarrel followed. The p.i --j lice refused to say whether there was a [thinl person presem during the qua • | rel and they have not divulged the • statement which they secured from D. ■ iMumm in the Neuilly hospital. Mrs. Barnes has been living in P i 's | since she was divorced from her second husband. She is rich and has taken a lending part in social life of one branei) lof the American colony. Woman Shot First, i Friends of Mrs. Barnes declared this afternoon that DeMumm had fired first |and that Barnes had been wounded |tw ice before DeMumm was shot. Mrs. ‘ Barnes went immediately to a private I hospital in Paris, where she was treat- I ed. • I This information added further com- I plications to the sensational affair and friends of the woman said that proba- I bly other information would be forth- I coming later, which would put a differ -1 ent light on the matter. 'NAME TRIPLETS THEODORE. | WOODROW AND WILLIAM H. ! NATCHEZ. MiSS.. Dec. 14.—Triplets. I born to Mrs. E. M. Floyd, have been | named Theodore. Woodrow and Wil | Ham How ard.