Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 02, 1913, Image 3

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* LU| BY MINISTERIAL ! S THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. |! PRETTY NURSE SMILES ON STAND »'[ BUT JUST MUST CRY AFTERWARD U ucle Josh” Crawford was not poisoned. mm to get Miss Kmily Townsend who testified the unanimous indorse- • Evangelical Ministers’ n ,.f Atlanta, the special -elected to complete ar- for “Go-to-Church Day” ih' 1 .1 program which may he u ..! hv the churches of the city, t an It? work Tuesday. nisters will have before . nsideration at their first ,« the suggestions that a • p\t he recommended tor . ors, that the musical part . [(. service he made one of the , • , r ... f the day, and that a prom pt member of each congregation p w ; to make a five-minute ad- . w one of the services on the Mrit of the day. I The twenty-seventh verse of the ■ f James already has Ip *• ,-csied is an admirable text I . employed by all the niniflters who wish to follow the :*neral program. Text Likely To Be Indorsed. pure religion and I w " . . \ sit the widows and fa te r affliction and to I lorld " | • :' that the committee indorse this. I The committee also will outline a L.si program which will be |wo .sendees. 1 Rev. H. M. DuBose, First Meth- I I onkling 1 , i Fnitarlan 1 i . \\ \V. Memminger, I - Kuiacopal Ohim-.i. the Ipv Richard nrmo Flinn, North Ave- \ m < Jhurch, a nd t he F. A. Line, llniversalist Ifturch. Close on the indorsement given the So-to-Fhurch Day” plan Monday v- the Evangelical Ministers’ Asso- n nr m emphatic resolution |f approval by the executive commit- > of the Men and Religion Forward I lonsider th* most important work [he organization has at hand. Will Try to Fill Churches. J The resolution was introduced by t R.*v, H M DuBose, of the First Methodist Church. Before subi lng his resolution, the Rear* Mr. Du bose raid? | ‘Every effort will he made to fill, r churches qn December 14, the date decided upon for tlte great 'Go to-Churoh Day.’ If the Lord gives us a good day on this date the suc cess of the Sunday is more than as sured. “This day presents a rare oppor tunity to throw the light on the true state of affairs in our city, and I sug gest that on this clay we shall confine ourselves, one and all. to a sermon on Atlanta.” The members of the executive committee characterized the "Go-to- Church” plan as right in the line of endeavor toward which a considera ble part of their endeavors had been directed. They pledged their qo-op- eratlon and extended their wishes for a record-breaking day. Movement To Be Permanent. With the action of the committee, the "Go-to-Church” plan now has the formal indorsement of the Men and Religion Forward Moveemnt, the Evangelical Ministers' Association, and the Baptist Ministerial Associa tion, besides the Individual indorse ment of every minister in the city who has expressed an opinion on the subject. That the movement will not die out with the “Go-to-Fhurch Day” of 1913 was made evident by the action of the Evangelical Ministers in author izing the appointment of a commit tee by each church to carry on the movement toward a larger church attendance throughout the year. There is no intention of letting the beneficial effects of “Go-to-Church Day” wan$. The committees to be appointed will be charged with see ing that the people who come to church December 14 are asked and urged to come again. Negroes to Observe Day. The negro churches of Atlanta have entered as enthusiastically Into the plans as the whites. The pastors of many of the churches already have placed the proposition before their congregations with an earnest plea for their attendance on the day named. The project will furnish a depend able idea of the strength of the col ored churches, and will swell Atlan ta's total church attendance by thou sands. At all of the churches the enumer ation will be made by persons spe- iall* designated by the pastor. Re turn postcards will be sent to every church, and upon thefte the minister will place the totals for morning and evening services and Immediately mail. \ Financier, in Capital to Aid Geor gia Senators, Discusses Amend ed Currency Measure. currency legislation, too, it is to be hoped that the President will not press his anti-trust program mo far Just now, particularly with the. n*»\v tariff law getting under way. Georgia Senators Confident. “The country realizes that some new experiments are being tried out in Washington, and it believes it wise now to make haste rather cautiously. The new currency law may be out of the way by January 1; if so, so much the better. It is necessary that hank ers know os soon as possible where they stand, or business can not move forward an It should. ”1 think Atlanta will he named for in ■jm ' - It 4 T ST** 1 :: * ,, ...v > r> A ‘ ■'•••v. i? i • S \ 1 - [demon S. Cuyler Silent on His Suit After a week’s shooting in Jones intv, Telemon Smith Cuyler came > Atlanta Monday night to spend two | *ks uvler discussed the currency bill, Mexican situation and local af- k but would not talk of his re- ■ sensational suit against his ber-in-law, Mrs. Isabelle T. Bar- for alienation of Mrs. Cuyler*s Chase Renewed When Bandit Kills Official LOS ANGELES, Dec. 2.—Efforts to capture the bandit who has been rob bing trains in Southern California were redoubled to-day following the killing last night of K. E. Montague, traveling passenger agent for the Southern Pacific Railroad. The robber was holding up passen gers on a westbound train when Montague attempted to disarm him The bandit shot the railroa’d official, and jumped off the train at El Monte. foils More Votes Than 2 Opponents Sir A. Gould Predicts Radium Cancer Cure ALHOl’.V Dec. 2.—In a three- | r;i .• for Mayor of Calhoun. A Hull was elected, polling nearly ice hs many ballots as the com- no'i vote of his two opponents, \V. Hughey and T. Cantrell. In -hr contests for Aldermen Henry :, ’l nnd M. Moss were the successful ■ B Erwin and W. S ‘i- hett were re-elected to the School f pubway Masher Is Threatened by Mob v Hi WASHINGTON, Dec. 2.—Robert Maddox, vice president of the Am lean National Bank of Atlanta, Washington representing the bank* of Atlanta in conference with Sena tors Bacon and Smith on pending currency legislation, believes Atlan ta’s chance to secure one of the pro posed regional reserve banks moat ex cellent. Mr Maddox feels certain that At lanta will secure one of these reserve hanks if the bill provides for twelve, and very confident of securing one even though the 1)111 may call for eight only. Mr Maddox states that the hanks of the South, so far as he has be«n ad via d, greatly prefpr the amended bill as approved by th«' Senate Dem ocrat* to the Glass bill as passed L*v the House. Banks Favor Senate Bill. If the Senate bill is enacted into law. the Atlanta hanker believe | banks generally throughout the na- l tlon will cordially comply with the provisions of the same. Otherwise, he is by no means so sure. ‘ The success or failure of the new currency legislation,” said Mr. Mad dox. ‘will depend In large measure, I think, upon the quality of the non the President names for the Federal reserve boards These men. who will act with the Secretary of the Treas- ! ury, should be men of the very highest and most approved type. “In connection with the proposed GainsBOPounds in 30 Days Every Thin Man or Woman Can Prove It for Themselves by Sending for a free 60c Package. Rural Schools to Have Mail Boxes WASHINGTON. Dec.- on rural routes are to be patrons of these route*. -Schools Save Life by Use Of Filtered Air BALTIMORE, MD„ Dec. 2.—With considered I 200 square inches of flesh burned cording to from his body, and his life despaired an announcement by Postmaster { of. Ilarry F. Stabler, after under- Oeneral Burleson. He has granted j going a treatment of chemically permission for the placing of mail treated air, is now able to walk about boxes at these institutions. the hospital courtyard. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, Dec. 2.—Sir Alfred Pearce Gould, the eminent surgeon, speaking on the use of radium, said: “Wo have sufficient to warrant us in saying the treatment of cancer by radium and emanations thereof is at tended by a brighter, truer and more confident hope than ever attended any remedy, except an operation, up to the •esent time. YORK, Dec. 2. A crowd of sry men at Broadway and Manhat- n slr eet to-day threatened to lynch ' wav "masher,” who said he was ; ; ,m Smith, of Cleveland, Ohio "'" ''men saved Smith from vio- A CE/IL CA6AIPETI! errm mm MERCHANT) |UNf H 'Mona Lisa” Evil, Says Kaines Smith Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian, LONDON. Dec. 2.—-The nhted painting, "Mona Lisa," is said to be actively evil by Kaines Smith, M. A , who lectured to an audience of wom en on beauty and morality. Holding up a reproduction of the stolen masterpiece. Smith said: “That portrait is the embodiment of all the evil the painter could think of.” American Free Meat -idu n4i - Sunday night' Tariff S tirs London Sixth Bank Opens for Famous Lightning Trade in Gainesville Calculator Dead GAINESVILLE, Deo. 2. Gainesville’s KANSAS CITY, MO.. Dec. 2. Sixth banking institution, tin; Farmers | Reuben |.- ie i<i, the widely-known and Citimns Hank, has opened for busl- . . ,..i ( ,„i„, nr „. i| 1P ] li nes., It is capitalized at sr.o.oon.• ; rapid < aloulator. Is dead at ine .1, . k The officers are V. A. Mitchell, presl- son County farm. Meld regarded dent: R. r. llatn, vice president, and .1. Ills mathematical powers as a gift A. Webb, cashier. of God that would be taken from j him if he turned It to worldly gain. Girl Drops 5 Stoi ies Texas Women Open In Safety Device Telegram Campaign NEW YORK, Dec. 2.—Miss Elsie i —— Sprague, 17, was twice lowered from SAX ANToNIO, TEXAS, Nov. 2.1 (ho top of the Jamaica. L. I., post- j Texas workers for woman suffrage office building, a five-storv structure, have begun a campaign of nightly to demonstrate the efficiency of a telegrams to the Texas delegation in | new safety device. Congress urging “votes for women ' I That an attractive woman who ap peared composed upon the witness stand and whose pleasant smile de cidedly cheered those In the court room should find it necessary to go to her home and have a big cry illus trate* that “a woman’s a woman for a’ that." This is true of Miss Emily Town send, the trained nurse who attended "Uncle Josh” Crawford during his last illness, and who took the stand Monday in behalf of Mrs. Mary Belle Crawford, his widow, who is charged with his death. Miss Townsend is attractive and her smile, which was caught un awares by a Georgian photographer, is of the kind that must serve as a wonderful tonic for her patients. "But I don't like to go on the wit ness stand: every time I do I have to go home and have a cry, and it upsets me for a day or two.” she said when asked how she liked to he a | witness. "No one relishes the idea of being ! haled into court. Then the way the j I lawyers look at you and ask you ques- ; tlons is enough to run a body crazy, j Every time I am called as a witness I have to go home afterwards and shut myself up in my room and just give way.” The testimony of Miss Townsend corroborated that of County Physi cian .! W. Hurt, who attended Mr. Crawford. She is quite positive that the wealthy aitd aged farmer* came to | his death through natural causes and not as the result of poisons, which I his relatives charge were administer ed to him. She told of him taking the cough medicine prescribed to relieve him of a very painful cough and of admin istering a hypodermic under the doc- t<'C , s instructions several hours be fore Mr. Crawford's death "He displayed absolutely no symp toms of poisoning,” was her declara tion. ‘‘I Vvoi.iJn't Look L.lke That Again for All the World.” Thin people suffer a good deal of ein- I barrussment and ridicule. The plump. well-formed man or j woman is a magnet; Protone make* you plump, strong, well-formec. norma!;! puts color in your cheeks, a happy twinkle in your eye and a fine poise to your whole body It keeps you that wav It is the most scientific nnd ef fective flesh and strength builder so far known, barring none The regular $1,00 size of Protone is I for sal* by all druggists, or will he mailed direct, upon receipt of price. A guarantee goes In every package. Your money back If not satisfied. The new Protone justifies ti*. from now on, in making this guarantee. The Protone Company, 5300 Prntone Bldg.. Detroit, Mich., will send to any one a free 50c package of Protone. |’f they will inclose lOe In stamp* or sil ver to help cover postage. They will also send with It full Instructions and their hook on “Why You Are Thin.” The regular 11.00 size of Protone in for sale in AtlantH by Jacobs' Ten Stores. No free packages from drug gists. ATLANTA T °re, HT | 'Week—Matinees Wed. and Sat. —^ 4 Efianger's Stupendous ben-hur 50c to $2; Mats. 50c to $1.50 l-dumb/a Burlesque Theater ‘ Central Avenue nees Da "y at 3, Nights at 7:30 'HE GIRL SHOW pA y t A he Sad Sea Waves EAGLE. BROILERS—20 lyric THIS m WEEK palmeesTues .Thur. and Sat. «‘K WMfSrSBffi.. T »e While Slave Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian, LONDON, Dec. 2.—Alarm is ex- ! pressed here over the effect of the | tariff opening the American ports to I free meat. The National Home Pro- I dure Association will consider the question. Eighteen thousand quarters of beef intended for English consumption has been sent to New York recently. Germany Leads in Trade Gain Is Claim NEW YORK, Dec. 2.—Count Bern- storff, German Ambassador, declares that since 1.891 Germany’s foreign trade has increased faster than that of any other nation, the gain ex ceeding even that registered by the United State*. The gain in foreign trade he fig ures at 208 per cent. Our coals will please you. Call us. CARROLL & HUNTER | : v IS Georgian and American “WANT ADS >» START THINGS They Start Sales and Profits To get the latter start the former by starting to use the “Want Ad" col umns and Real Estate Section of Hearst’s Sunday American and Daily Georgian Every ‘Want Ad’ an OPPORTUNITY &! %r G4■■ry; u; $ CHENEY'S EXPECTORANT Cures Whooping Cough, Croup Cold». ninrinjr of the no*e. sore throat, Cheney's Expectorant slightly «\«Uev Prevent* the whonp In whoopln* rough Children like Chenry’g and has beer on the market fifty year* Take the old. fried and true cough cure. Wc at drug Mora*.—(AUvt ) KODAKERS. Special Enlargement Offer 5x7 Art Mount . . . 25c 8x10 Art Mount . . . 30c By Mail 6c Extra s«l«ct TOfir fbvnrit# negatl*** and ha*« enlargement* made handsomely mounted a desirable Xmas gift. CONE’S —Two Stores—Atlanta, Ga. THE GEORGIAN TERRACE HOTEL Ts rmw conducted on both the American and European Plana, Rooms from gl.BO up. Restaurant (American plan), 840.00 monthly, $10.50 weekly, or without lunch (except Sundays), JUS.00 monthly, $9.00 weekly. Also « la Carte Service. Orchestra, C D cl 111 >iuxi tain (Si aAAoncAA if IS A MOST ACCEPTABLE CHRISTMAS OIPT FROM A GENTLEMAN TO A LADY ENGRAVED VISITING CARDS ARE EOUALLY APPROPRIATE SENO FOR OUR SAMPLES NOW J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO. SOCIETY STATIONERY ENGRAVERS ATLANTA. GEORGIA RIDLEY .& JAMES AUDITORS ATLANTA - - GEORGIA one of thf» reserve bank*, and tho Georgia Senator* and Reprewenta tlves are helping all they ran to bring thi* about. Thev^ire very confident of ouccesa ” >*T Ona "BROMO QumONE,** Laxative jjromo Quiniiy -uraa a Cold In Ona Day, CrfpLi 2 Day o Qui , Crf^n 2 on box 35c ,4 Law Bros, for Quality* X mas Gift, ForM en Tkat Are Appropriate and Useful From “Lau) Bros., the Man s Shop, IDiere You Can Mahe No Mistake in the Quality and Correct Details of Men’s Lilies and Dislikes “The Spirit of Christmas” is filliny our store— showcases, shelves and wardrobes arc packed With hand some, durable gifts. It is none loo early to make your selections. You can have them delivered now or later. The prices range from 50c to $12.50. Neckwear (Silk and Velvet), remarkable assortment, at 60c to $1.60 Silk Sox, all colors (boxed) per pair 50c to $1.50 Handsome Belts, with initial buckles, at $1.50 Men's Initial Linen Handkerchiefs (6 in box), per box $1.50 Men's Initial Cambric Handkerchiefs (6 in box) per box 75c Men's line Linen Handkerchiefs (6 in box), per box $2 and $3 Leather Collar Boxes, at $1, $1.50, $2, $2.50 and $3 Knitted Silk Searflers (in boxes), at $1.25 to $3.50 Men’s Handsome Umbrellas at $3.50 to $12.50 Men’s Lounging Robes at, $3.50 to $8 Men's Silk Lisle Sox (4 pairs in box), per Ik Men s Shirts at Men s White Silk Handkerchiefs at t $1.00 $1.00 to $5 75c to $1.50 COMBINATION SETS Lounging Robe and Slippers $6 to $10 Silk Sox, Tie and Handkerchief (in box) ... $1.50 and $2 Sox and Tie (in box) 75c, $1.00 and $1.50 Silk Sox, Tie and Reefer (Full Dress, in box) $3.50 and $5 Suspenders and Garters (in box) $1.00 Ladies pine LJmbrell Clip This Ad Out and Keep for Reference See Window Displays ■ N foCI large for Xmas J 3oxes as With ^Beautiful Handles of Gold, Pear), Etc., at $3.50 to $12.50