Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 06, 1913, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

111 THE ATLANTA GEOKGIAN AND NEWS. HATIC APPEALS FOH U H DAY TO BE I PULP v reusing appeal In behalf of "Gu- o-Church Day,” even more general ai that delivered last veek from . . pulpits of Atlanta, will be made Sunday throughout the city. Pastor* who drged their eongrega- n last Sabbath to turn out in rec- -,1- i.reaking numbers, on the eventful v December 14—will be. even more , mphatic in their insistence this w. ek. The ministry of the city is awake to'the importance of the oc as: in and has signified its intention ,f overlooking no onoortunity to make il an epochal one in the re- cious history of Atlanta. The movement for a "Go-to-Churcn Day,” when every church in the city was to get out the maximum strength of :ts memoersnip, took people some what by surprise at its inception, but, quickly appreciating the great possi bilities it offered in the way of stimu. idling church attendance and inter est in religious work, the laity soon joined with the pastors in a concerted endeavor to bring about a tremendous outpouring of churchgoers whose numbers would set a record for other cities of Atlanta’s size to wonder at and strive for. Pastors Determined. Atlanta for years has enjoyed the reputation of being a churehgoin? city. The ministers have set to work to make a striking demonstration of this fact. The pastor of every church in the city has determined to fill his building to capacity at all services ot> December 14, and thus provide a stim ulus for a better attendance through out 1914 than he had in 1913. There will be no poaching on the preserves of another. There will he no rivalry aside from the friendly competition which may spring be- HOME FOR FRIENDLESS CHILDREN ARE CENTER OF INTEREST AT SHOW Left to right, Miss Marguerite Cantrell, two children of Home for Friendless under her charge, and Miss Elizabeth Gregg, head of Dependent Child Section in Welfare Exhibit. St. Paul’s Church to Mrs. Crawford Will Install New Officers At Sunday Service At St. Paul’s Methodist Church the newly elected officers for the ensuing year will be installed by the pastor Sunday morning. A special sermon w ill be preached by Dr. B. F. Fraser. Dr. Fraser, who returned to the city Saturday morning from Miami, Fla., where he assisted in a ten days’ re vival, will occupy his pulpit both Sun day morning and evening. St. Paul’s Church, the largest in point of congregation in the city, will begin the new year under the most favorable circumstances. The church is fre from debt, and has added, this year, to its roll more than 400 new members. The congregation, Dr. Fraser says, never has been more zealous. JUDGE HAMMOND TO SPEAK. AUGUSTA, Dec. 6.—To-morrow afternoon the annual lodge of sorrow of Augusta Elks will be held. Judge Henry C. Hammond will be the ora tor. Tell Her Own Story On Stand Monday Attorneys in the Crawford will case rested Saturday preparing for the last stretch in the famous suit, which is expected to come to an end next week. Monday’s hearing will be featured by the appearance of Mrs. Mary Belle Crawford, the accused, widow, upon the stand. Her attorneys had planned not to place her on the stand, but the demand of Mrs. Crawford that she be allowed to tell her story in court will be complied with. SELECT NOW J A pair of OPERA GLASSES, j Something all can use and noth- j ing more appreciated. Jno. L. ( Moore & Sons have their large as- > sortment of Demaire and other ( - good makes ready for your inspec- ) ( tion. Call and see them. 42 N. Broad street. A CML CA8APET U OGOV //AM MERCHANT/ (UNCH 40| ABIE D _ .__D-H s TEDINNEi2 Z Auburn A/* • SuNWty NlGHTf Rome Man Named Insurance Deputy ROME, Dec. 6.—It Is stated here that Comptroller General William A. Wright has tendered the position of Deputy Insurance Commissioner of Georgia, the practical head of the State Insurance Department, to Leon Porter, acting actuary of the State Mutual Life Insurance Company, of this city. Porter will accept, suc ceeding John Copeland, on January 1. Real Dog Days Now; City Pound Is Closed Frost having driven away dog days, City Clerk Walter Taylor has stop ped the dog wagon and closed up the pound. These are real dog days now, and they will frolic in peace until spring. Mr. Taylor said he never did find pleasure in sending the poor canines to the pound. DON’T WAIT For the freeze. Order your COAL TO-DAY and BE READY. No Long Waits When You Order; No Short Weight When You Get It. There’s a Yard Near You Randall Bros. MAIN OFFICE: PETERS BLDG. YARDS: Marietta street and North avenue, phonea 376; South Boulevard and Georgia Railroad, Bell phone &38, Atlanta 303: McDaniel street and Southern Railway, Bell Main 354. Atlanta 321; 64 Krogg street. Bell Ivy 4166. Atlanta 706: 152 South Pryor street, both phones 936 Woodward to Aid in Commission Fight COLUMBUS, Dec. 6.—The advo cates of commission government in Columbus have arranged a rally Mon day night to close the campaign for the election Wednesday. John R. Homady, of The Birming ham Ledger, and Mayor James G. Woodward, of Atlanta, have been in vited to speak. ATLANTA™-^,” 7 LAST TIME TO-NIGHT. Klaw & Erlanger’s Stupendous BEN-HUR Nights 50c to $2; Mats. 50c to $1.50 MON. TUES. WED. : : Matinee Wed. SEATS NOW SELLING Klaw & Erlanger present HILLIARD in the Great Detective Play, “THE ARGYLE CASE’’ Nights 25c to $2. Mat. 25c to $1.50 ATLANTA’S BUSIEST THEATER FORSYTH The Greatest Novelty In Vaudeville MISS ORFORD AND HER ELE PHANTS, Not a Circus Act, but Wonderful—Miss Norton and Paul Nicholson—Charles and Fannie Van —The Vivians—Ruth Roye—Ward and Weber—Klein, Abe and Nich olson. A Show That Will Pack the Forsyth. THIS WEEK LYRIC NEXT WEEK Bartley Campbell’s Great Play, THE WHITE SLAVE ELEANOR MONTELL In A BUTTERFLY on the WHEEL Matinees Tues., Thurs. and Sat’ tween churches well matched in size of memberships. Each church wi.l keep closely to its own members and to persons without church affiliations in its work to obtain capacity con gregations. The chief aim is to obtain the sum j total of people attending church in Atlanta on December 14. The idea of a contest to determine which chur h can get out the largest congregation is eliminated by the “Go-to-Chmvh Day” plans. The movement is for t h e benefit of all of the churches of At lanta and for the encouragement of the city’s religious growth-. Whple State Interested. Committees have been apooinied in many of the churches to review’ the membership rolls and to see that every person thereon receives a per sonal invitation to attend the serv ices on December 14. Some of the pastors have made the invitation al most a demand, and woe betide the thoughtless wight who forgets to be in his place on the day appointed. So popular a chord the "Go-to- Church Day” Idea has struck among the ministry that, without any spe cial effort to spread its observance outside of Atlanta this year, in many cities of the State the movement is being taken up enthusiastically, and the day w r ill be observed on the same date that it is in Atlanta. Prior to the “Go-to-Church Day” movement it never had appealed to the ministers as a possibility that on some certain Sunday in the year the entire churchgoing population of t ie State might join in a vast outpouring, and that on that day every churcii within Georgia’s borders might be packed to its utmost limits. Now’ such a possibility seems very close to realization. MRS. KEEFER IN Outlines Her Ideas of Reforms Necessary to Make Restau rants Fit Places to Eat. Having worked for four days a* dish washer in a Broad street restau rant, the first campaign of a strenu ous and extended warfare designed to expose the inner workings of the cul inary departments of local eating houses and hospital kitchens, Mrs. Grace Macey-Keefer. the wealthy di vorced wife of David H. Keefer, whose matrimonial troubles brought her sharply before the public eye recent ly, is overcome with horror at pre vailing conditions. “I have been told,” she said Satur day morning, as she balanced a plate on her forearm and deftly wiped it with a clean towel, “that I’m down here In this place raising hell. But I’m not. I’m elevating it. for in my humble opinion that’s the proper name for the average Atlanta res taurant.” Such being the case. Mrs. Keefer advances a number of reformative measures which she says will curb the activities of the microbe and thwart the purposes of the advancing army of cockroaches, which have a finger, speaking figuratively, in every pie cut in an Atlanta restaurant. Her Remedy for Evil. Here are a few things she says ought to be done: 1. Have a public restaurant inspec tor. 2. Put the men in jail who rent buildings for restaurant purposes that are not fit to be used as barns —and start with the man who owns the place where T wash dishes. 3. Legislate sanitation and hygiene into every restaurant. 4 Make people quit preparing food w’ith their hands. “I make no secret of the fact that I’m an uplifter,” she said, ‘but I’m not the ordinary uplifter. I'm trying to strike at the root of human happ - ness and ambition, and it lies in the stomach. If you’re going to uplift a man, you’ve got to uplift his stomach first, and you elevate his mind only when you elevate his stomach, for that Is the source of all our emo- tions. ,, _ May Stir Up Trouble. "I don't know whether I'm going to accomplish anything by working .n these restaurants, hut if I can ac complish what I'm after I’ll stir up a lot of trouble for the men who own those restaurant buildings. They arc the first people we must get after in the campaign for better kitchens. They rent buildings for restaurant purposes that are not fit t° he ren'ed as stables. The walls are filled w In nesting places for microbes ~nd in sects, and ideas of cleanliness appear to be almost unknown. There ought to be a law putting anv man in jail who rents such a building for eating purposes. 4 . “The right kind of a restaurant should have concrete walls and a con crete floor and concrete tables, where no insects and microbes can br ««u- The floors should be divided into se>- tions. with drains running through each section, so that portions of it can bo thoroughly cleaned at any t!m« without interfering with the ot ier sections. For Restaurant Inspector. "And afirr all the properly owners are put in jail and th» restaurant huildlngs are fitted properly for res taurants, we should have a publk res taurant inspector to see that they are kent clean. We have a Smoke In spector—though he doesn't seem to do much Inspecting, and a Fire Inspector and a Building Inspector, and an In spector for everything under the sun except the very thing that needs one. Mrs. Keefer says she has not for saken the ease and comfort of her mansion on Piedmont avenue for the sink and dish towel of the restau rant kitchen through anv desire for notoriety, but because she Is-a. gen uine reformer, and has a mission to fulfill.* Experts Praise Work of Atlanta Institutions as Nearly Ideal. Most everybody likes to watch little children at work or play. And maybe that's the reason why the fifteen little boys and girls from the Home for the Friendless are al ways the center of a. curious throng at the Child Welfare and Public Health Exhibit. They are of most importance in the Dependent Child Section of the show, which has a room to the left as you enter the building. And every one of the fifteen young sters—what time they are not chat tering and giggling with the exuber ance of childhood—are working, al though it doesn’t appear to be work. The average child, if it likes the task given it, can make almost any work seem like play—and the p/eople who train the children at the Home for the Friendless have the knack of teaching them to love their work— and therefore it is play. Panels Show Achievements. Probably no section of the show has attracted more attention than the Dependent Child Section. While, of course, the children are the center of attraction, there are other things in the exhibit w'hich make it worth while. There are panels illustrating the work of five of the well-known At lanta orphan asylums, two of them negro institutions. Photographs of children from the Home for the Friendless are shown on one panel, with statements of the work being done. On another panel the w’ork of the Decatur Orphan Home, which makes a specialty of the cottage plan of caring for its children, is shown, and on still another the Georgia Children's Home traces the progress of a child from lowly surroundings through the various stages of admission to the home and adoption into a childless home. And there are also panels showing what the Carrie Steele Home and the Leonard Street Home are doing for the negro children cast out into the world. Atlanta Institutions Praised. And on the other side of the room are panels showing conditions in an ideal orphan home, and a panel show ing scenes in a girls' training school. Then there is a “How to Help” panel, vividly telling the best ways to make up to the child for the loss of its home. And it is much to the credit of the Atlanta institutions to say that the experts declare they compare very favorably with the ideal institu tions told of on some of the panels. There is no orphan home that Is per fect. the experts say, but the Atlanta institutions appear to be doing a grea t deal of the work that is recommended for the ideal home. Look at the Word Dr, Loeb Has Found! A HIGH CLASS GIFT. A pair of genuine Kryptok lenses (invisible bifocals), In a solid gold < frame, presented in a handsome , sterling silver case. The correct lenses fitted after the holidays ' without extra charge. A. Iv. Hawkes Co.. Opticians, 14 White hall. MOVING PICTURE SHOWS NEW YORK. Dec. 6.—The title of a recent article in The Journal of the American Medical Association was “Triketohyurindennydrnte.” But Dd. Jacques Loeb, of the Rockefeller In stitute, knows a longer one, which is in full as follows: “Tetraethylammon- iumhydroxide.” Dr. Loeb wins, 27 to 23. Dr. I.oeb’s word may be found on four or five pages of any dictionary. ALAMO No. 1 Monday. Vitagraph, “Jerry’s Mother-In- Law;” Kalem, “The Fickle •Freak,” “Hypnotizing Mamie." Franklin Four. ‘Pape’s Diapepsin” Ends Stomach Distress in Five Minutes—Time It! If what you just ate is souring on your stomach or lies like a lump of lead, refusing to digest, or you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and stomach headache, you can get blessed relief in five minutes. Ask your pharmacist to show you the formula, plainly printed on these fifty- rent cases of Pape’s Diapepsin, then you will understand why dyspeptic troubles of all kinds must go. and why they re lieve sour, out-of-order stomachs or in digestion in five minutes. “Pape’s Dia pepsin’' is harmless: tastes like candy, though each dose will digest and pre pare for assimilation into the blood all Ihe food you eat; besides, It makes you go to the table with a healthy appe tite; but. what will please you most, is that you will feel that your stomach and Intestines are clean and fresh, and you will not need to resort to laxatives or liver pills for biliousness or constipa tion. This city will have many “Pape’s Dia pepsin” cranks, as some people will call them, but you will he enthusiastic about this splendid stomach preparation, too. If you ever take it for indigestion, gases, heartburn, sourness, dyspepsia, or any stomach misery. Get some now, this minute, and rid yourself of stomach trouble and indiges tion in fiy© minutee,—Advt, ALCAZAR THEATER Monday. Great Feature Pictures Are Shown at This Theater Every Day. The Program Has Not Been An nounced Yet, But the Pictures Will Please. SAVOY THEATER Monday. “Mike and Jake in the Wild West.” This Joker Comedy Will Delight You. “When Pierrot Met Perriette," a Two-Reel Eclair Drama. To the Voters of Fulton County: I hereby respectfully make this my formal announcement as candidate for Sheriff of Fulton County, Georgia, sub ject to the County Democratic primary of 1914. Should I be honored with elec tion to the office of Sheriff I hereby pledge that my administration shall he impartial as prescribed by law and in strict conformity with modern business methods. The deputies who will be associated with me in administering the duties of the office will be named later, as T do not wish at Ttils time to burden the public with a long, heated campaign. For the many assurances of cordial support of my candidacy given by peo ple from all sections of the County I desire to publicly express my grateful appreciation. \V. M. MAYO. —Advt. THE MONTGOMERY Monday. “The Padrone's Plot,” a Kalem Feature in Two Parts. That Ex poses the Padrone System Existing in This Country. This Is Really a Great General Film Company Pro duction. Good Orchestra; Good Singing. the: elite Monday. “A Son’s Devotion,” Two-Reel Eclair. “The Brothers,” a Great Western Drama. VAUDETTE Monday. “For Another’s Crime,” Special Two-Reel Reliance, Which Was Billed for Saturday, but Did Not Arrive in Time. “Race for a Bride,” a Thrilling Keystone Drama. The Steinway Four. I City Electrician R. C. Turner took Aldine Chambers’ bitter attack on him Saturday in a spirit of levity. He did not seem to he worried in the least because he had been called a liar, blackguard and grafter, but smilingly found solace in a quotation from Wil liam Jennings Bryan. “1 seein to have drawn Chambers’ fire at last,” ne said. “I am very well satisfied with the situation. “William Jennings Bryan says that every man In public life must stand a certain amount of criticism. I am willing to stand my share. “Mr. Chambers is unwilling, or un able to stand his, as he retired from public life at the last election.” Since Electrician Turner’s personal attack on him, Mr. Chambers, ex- Couneilman and attorney for the Cot ton States Electric Company, has dropped all mere Intimations of wrongdoing on the part of the City Electrlcan and boldly accused him of being a “blackguard, deliberate liar, slanderer and a grafter.” “I charge that he got $180 from the association of electrical contractors In November, 1912,” said Mr. Cham bers. “That was after his election, and could not have been a campaign contribution. “What did he get It for? “He admits having received a gold watch from the contractors “What did he get that for? “As to Mr. Turner's charge that I received campaign contributions from the Georgia Railway and Power Company, I answered that during an investigation by the General Council last year, which body denounced Tur ner as a deliberate liar and slanderer. “As to his intimation that a repre sentative of the Barber Asphalt Com pany paid to me and two officials of Atlanta a sum of money in New York In the summer of 1912, he knows that it is utterly false, and that he is a common blackguard and liar as well as a grafter.” Denver Paralyzed by 4 Feet of Snow; Many Missing; Food Scarce DENVER, Deo. 6.—Paralyzed com- pletely by the brow that covers the State to a depth of from three to eight feet, all of Colorado to-day awaited warmer weather In Denver, where the snowfall had stopped, the average depth was 45 Inches. In Denver no street cars have moved for nearly 48 hours. Every hotel is crowded to capacity. School- houses are filled with refugees who were caught away from their homes by the storm. The bread supply in Denver was exhausted to-day. Be cause of the strike which has been on in Southern Colorado for several week» a coal famine threatens. Ten shopgirls have not been heard from since they started home Thurs day night. Twenty-four miners are missing near Canon City. Two stage coaches are lost near Boulder and, one is missing near Buena Vista. It is feared that the drivers and occupants have been frozen to death. >nly One "BROMO QUININR,*ti»* k Laxative jjromo Quinine a Cold in One Day. CrJpin 2 Day t on koiu 25c NO TRACE OF SAFE BLOWERS DUBLIN. Dec. 6—So far no trace has been found of the robbers who blew the safe In the Bank of Dudley, about twelve miles from here, this week. TWO AND A HALF DOLLAR GOLD PIECE FOR A CHRISTMAS GIFT Atlanta’s Oldest Savings Bank Will Supply You. Why puzzle your brain about what to give for a Christmas present? Home people suffer a nervous break down, and almost go crazy in solv ing -this problem. The Georgia Savings Bank and Trust Company, the bank that makes saving easy by accepting deposits as small as $1.00, will give you a brand-new Two and a Half Dollar gold piece of the 1913 coinage for its equivalent In any other denomination. A passbook would also be a nice thing to put in the stocking. This bank pays 4 per cent interest, and would appreciate your savings account. GEORGE M. BROWN. President. JOHN W. GRANT. V. President. JOSEPH E. BOSTON. Sec. and Treas. Advt. Stop at Atlanta's Newest and Finest Hotel Winecoff ALAMO No. 2 Monday. Biograph “The Capturing of Da- vld Dunne ” Kalem, “The Strike;” Vitagraph, “Mid Kentucky HIM*.” Last week of AURIEMA. Blackstone of the South Is the Hotel IVinecoff YOU CAN HAVE IX REPAIRED JUST LIKE NEW AT A VERY MODERATE COST The Georgian’s Repair Directory gives alt the principal places where an article can be repaired, and should be preserved in every home ae a guide. THE PIPE HOSPITAL For all kinds of Pipe Repairing TUMLIN BROS 50 NORTH BROAD ST. ALL MAKES OP TYPEWRITERS Repaired and Re- Bu I It. Prompt ser vice. Thorough work. Reasonable charges. American Writing Machine Co. Phone Main 2528. 48 N. Pryor St. These Ads Bring Results. See Ad Man or Call Main 100. All Kinds of FURNACES Repaired. The Only Place to Get MONCRIER FURNACES Repaired. Prompt Attention. MONGRIEF FURNACE GO. Phones Main 285; Atlanta 2877. 139 South P r vor Street. SCISSORS AND KNIVES EXPERTS OF ALL KINDS SHARPENED BY MATTHEWS & LIVELY 21 E. Alabama St. Phones 311 ATLANTA. GA. STOVES Of Ail Ktiuto repaired THE ATLANTA ITOVE SUPPLY CS. 101 1C Foreytti 8t. Fhon* Ivy 1240 Stove Supplies of Every Kind.