Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 27, 1913, Image 3

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! I nil'. A LLAM A ULUKULAJS AM) MAN S. PRETTY SOCIETY GIRL AT FROM COLLEGE FOR Miss Louise Jones, a popular member of the college set. who It as College, Nashville, 1o spend the holidays at home. HOME HOLIDAYS returned from Wnrd-Belmnnt Cooks Quit Kitchens To Discuss Atlanta's ‘Emancipation’ Day New Sewage System New Buildings Ready Soon After January 1, but Leases on Broad Street Houses Continue. dozen—maybe thirteen -produce rms ;iro to move off South Broad .street soon after the first of the year, nd there is a good deal of wonder a* to what sort of district that busy sen- tion will develop next, after the pro duce men have taken up their new stations along Produce row, between Washington street and Central ave nue. 'Hie sixteen buildings -three sto ries. elevators, done in concrete— won t be ready by January 1, it seems. But they will be ready as* soon there- j after as possible, and when they are > ready the produce men will have to j start paying rent on their reserva tions, whether they move in or not. That rather complicates things. Some of the leases on the present stands run eight months into 1914. > Some of them run longer. Some of ! the produce men have leases that will j run two or three years Hard to Sublet Stores. Just now they are trying to subl*t the stores. "But it’s a tough job." one produce dealer said Saturday. "These buildings are not in good shape. 1 don’t see what sort of business aside from ours could be carried on in them." There is an idea, fairly prevalent, | that the owners o f the present pro duce stands will eventually put up handsome and substantial buildings and strive to make South Broad street a big retail thoroughfare, on the Whitehall street plan. But whether they will start .his work before the present leases expire—-that is anoth- er question, and one the owners are not disposed to discuss freely. The produce men are engagfed just now in trying to settle on a date when they could move In a body. Large Firms Involved. "I understand the new ‘row’ won't ; be ready for occupancy before March I." said one dealer. "My idea is that 1 ! the boys ought to go together: there’s no system in splitting up the • territory, as would be the case if they ! moved a few at a time. Personally, j Id rather pay rent at the new plate ifter it is ready and stay on here until the bunch goes. My lease runs until next fall.” % The produce men involved in the prospective move are McCullough Bros., tlie Williams-Thompson Com pany, Bell Bros., Baisden & Co., the Gailmand-Cheves Company, the Barnes-Fain Company, the Fidelity Fruit and Produce Company, A. Fu- gazzi, the Southern Produce Compa ny. Wigt. Davis & Co., the McMillan Produce Company, Conley & Ennis, Porter Bros, and West Bros. Among the property owners are Frank Coker. Mrs. John Brooinhead, the Murphy estate, John Dickey, Jr., Alverson Bros, and the Gftis Ryan es tate. And So Five Will Have Charge of Sunday School at the Cen tral Baptist. The church can no longer be run by women, children ami faddists, li must have the sympathetic co-opera- lion of the business men or it will gradual h fail it will go into bank ruptcy. J he Sunday school is an institu tion not only for the children, but for meii, and men of ability. Systematic newspaper advertising for a church is the best method for increasing the scope of it<* influence In these words the Rev. Dr «'aleb A. Ridley, pastor or the Central Bap- 11st Church, epitomized his experi ence of fifteen years as a minister He was discussing the selection of five business men to he in charge of the Central Baptist Sunday school. These were J. \\ Autrey of the Barclay «& Brandon »’o superintend - en *; J. « Harrison a traveling man. H. D. Sorrells, an insurance man; K I^ # howler, of : ite -Index Publishing 1 ompany, and F L. Irwin, of the J. M. High < \, . heads of the hoy > and girls departments, respectively. They are all busines* men.” said Dr. Ridley, "and 1 am glad of it. be cause the work of t)ie business men in the church or Sunday school is the work that produces results More men of this caliber ?hoti!<i realize that they have a vitai part to plav qn the uplift or dow nfall of the church. If they stand by it, it will rise to tin- heights. -if they neglect it. it wil sink to the fjeoLu.nr and disintegrate. Pile a.\ne methods of business employed by the bank or any other biiHiness institution are applicable to the Sunday school, and if news paper advertising does a hank good it will aid the Sunda\ school. i heartily favor its use "Owing to business methods my church has grown from 127V members in the Iasi seventeen months to 92o. and our Sunday school now has 5 On members where it formerlx had less I than loo." Millionaire Leases Farm to Train Dogs COM M BI S. Dec. 27. -C. c |> ar . sons, millionaire dog fancier of Ww Torl>, Who is interested in kennels at Rutherford Ala., near Columbus has procured of X. W l.ong a ten- year hunting right on his farm of 7.500 acres. Mr. Parsons will reserve i he game on the lands for training If}* thoroughbred dogs for field trials The kennel is in charge of .lake Bishop, a well-known dog trainer. With Moyer Gone, Peace Will Conte Quickly, Following Dis aster. Is Belief. | THOM AS V III .17, Do, 27 The housekeeper in Thomasville who can boast of having a servant in the 1 kitchen on the first day of January ] will be an object of envy to her less I I fortunate sisters, since all the negro I cooks and servants generally will abdicate for that one day to partici pate in a general celebration of; i ’Mancipation Day It will he the biggest celebration; ; of the kind ever held here, and all i aorta of preparations are going on i for the fiftieth anniversary of Presi dent Lincoln’s emancipation procla- - malion. t’hief of ( ’(instruction R. M. Clay ton and hie first assistant, W. A. Hansel, have accepted invitations to address the engineering branch of the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science, which meets in Atlanta Monday, on Atlanta's new sewage disposal system. The system, first used in this coun try in Atlanta, has attracted interna tional attention, and both Captain Clayton and Mr. Hansel have become experts on it Hundreds of city offi cials from other American cities have been here to look it over. Friday the Mayor of Montclair, N. J.. visited the plants, and was very much pleased with them. CAM’MKT. Mh’H. L». , :7 Pis ns for peace u the troubled «'..!;inei copper mining district wen: forwaYd to-day following the departure of Charles H Moyer, president of i lie Western Fedeialion of Miner.-. > **,* was HHcoiiec ■ ; of . <>pj)er conn try by a comm .;of the citizens Alliance The citizens believed that with Mover away Hie famtl.es of to* strik ing miners who loin children, wives or father.*- in me Christina* Lve (lis as'. iar, wh • - ai cept Hie %.' . 11 - n • -•P'vcfibed to relieve the stricken surv vdrs, Moyer had .i long ‘ohfefence vvitii representatives of the citizens or ganization las; evening. He refused to retract wh<c he uad said about bis belief that a member of the Al- liap' e had caused-the panic by shout ing "Fire" in the Italian ball while the miners' children were receiving their present s about n giant Christ mas tree. T’iie citizen- committee escorted him to Houghton ami plated him on board a train. If was thought Moyer went to Chicago Davie,Boy Broker Who Stole $500,000, Free BOSTON. Dev. 27.—Robert K Da- vie. the “boy brpker,” serving flv< ! years for misappropriating JoOO.IMtn ; from customer* has been pardoned i by the Governor and Council. He had served two and a ha'fj vea rs. Invades Convent to See His Sweetheart Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. BARCELONA. Dee. -7. A youth, named Duesto. diaguiseri as a woman,} entered a convent here so that lie might be near his sweetheart, whose i parents had sent Her to the convent I school to stop Duesro's wooing After severaJ hours the youth wusj discovered and arrested. For Tax Receiver DNLY ONE ••Bromo Quinine*' that la Laxative Quinine Cure* a Cold in 1 Day, Crip in 2 Day* on box. 4'rxrv\ mt , 2J« curesatoid in 1 Hay, W. F. WESLEY, Who announces his candidacy for Tax Receiver of Fulton Count} To the Voters of Fulton County—I hereby announce as a can didate for Tax Receiver of Fulton County, Subject to the Demo cratic Primary. I will announce my assistant later. Respectfully, W. F. WESLEY. What Will Happen In 1914 Forecasts of events whirl) we may look for during the next year made by the best known prophets of Europe and America, including Raphael and Zadkiel, of Lon don; Mme. DeThebes, of Paris, and Professor Sot linos Loti Her, this newspaper’s own special forecaster, will appear in To-morrow’s Sunday American I nriden tally t hat newspaper will, in tin* coining year, double its already great <-ir<-illation and advertising power. And it does not take a prophet to forecast this. There will be other great features in the coming issue. Look at these- What Is a Broken Heart Worth? The Baroness Ursula demands $2,500,000 from St. Louis millionaire for hers, but the record price fora heart is $250,000, which Daisy Markham got, and the high est price ever paid for a whole life is only $60,000. What Probably Happened to Dorothy Arnold Why the police believe that in the case of pretty little Susie Ferraro, who was seized by four men and hurried off into shameful bondage, they have an exact du plicate, of tin* mysterious disappearance of the New York heiress—except thal Miss Arnold, less fortunate than the Ferraro girl, was probably killed by her captors t<> avoid discovery. Where Bunyan Got His “Pilgrim's Progress" A very curious literary discovery which shows that Bunnva culled the ideas for what is, next to the Bible, the best selling book in the world, from a curious old French work. Outcaults Page of Fun for Old and Young Everybody who remembers the famous “Buster Brown" will welcome the new comic pictures which are presented in this newspaper by Buster Brown’s creator every Sunday. There Are Dozens of Other Interesting Things In It Order from your dealer, or by phone t<> Main 100. "Within the Law” Closes To-night. The Atlanta public has but two more chances to see the smashing big j hit, "Within the Law.” it will be | given at a matinee this afternoon while the last performance will be olayed to-night. The matinee is at 2:30 o’clock. The play has more thrills th- any presented here in many years and all Atlanta is ap plauding it. "The Blue Bird” Next Week. The new theater production of Mae terlinck's "The Blue Bird," a treat that has been long expected, will be the holiday offering at the Atlanta Thursday (New Year's Day* and Sat urday. The theme of the play is the pursuit of happiness, tvoipfied by lit tle Tyltyl and Mytyl’s search for the elusive Blue Bird. The poet carries the boy and through many splen did scenes, through regions of despair and up to th very gate of Heaven it self, till returning - last they find the object of their search in their cottage home. A performance of ex traordinary arHeMc* merit an d charm is said 19 be • «ured. ‘'Slave of the Mill.” It is promised that the biggest suc cess of the stock season will be put t*n next week at the Bijou by the Jewell Kellev Stock Company, when "A Slave in the Mill” will be given its first performance at this house. While strongly dramatic and sensational in some of its features, the characters df the play are such as one would meet in everyday life, and the story so human in the telling that one is said almost to forget that it is only <*n the stage. Eat All When You Take Tyner 's Dyspep sia Remedy—Drives Out the Gas from an Over loaded Stomach. Cures Indigestion—Cleans Out the Bowels. If your stomach is sour, gassy, upset and chuckfull-of-food feeling and you feel like your food is all lumps and re fuses to digest, take a dose or two of Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy. The dizzi ness stops at once, the gases are belched ••ut, you feel comfortable, your clogged bowels get to working right. Eat all you want. Enjoy your meals by taking tow and then a liberal dose of Tyner’s Dygpesla Remedy. There is nothing like t on the market to-day. Made in At lanta for years by John B Daniel. If you lack an appetite, your tongue s coated, nerves on edge, have risings of sour and undigested food and experi ence distress after eating, you are suf fering from indigestion or sick stomach. To cure, take Tyner's Dyspepsia Rem edy. Ft is a truly wonderful medicine as it acts quickly and helps you out of all disagreeable feelings due to overeat ing. Sold by druggists for only 50 cents 1 large bottle- Advl. hu.iUXVTSOlT' 250 FROM MILLS Poor Children Are Guests of Little Folks at the First Methodist Church. To-day 250 poor children of At lanta are wondering if tHe "white Christmas" given to them Friday by | the children of the First Methodist Church was a dream. But then they have toys and other gifts to testify to its reality. The First Methodist children are correspondingly happy over the suc cess of their novel entertainment, which was the first -of its kind in At lanta. Each child was a "personal Santa” to some less_ fortunate little brother or sister from the mill dis trict, and they enjoyed their roles as much as their guests. The "white Christmas" is symboli cal of an ancient legend in which all the people bring white gifts to the King or Chfist Child. The lecture, room of the church, in which the en- I tertainment was given carried out the idea, being decorated in cotton, which gave a snowy effect. Several Christinas trees were cov- | ered with silver tinsel. Incandescent lights among the decorations made the scene brilliant. The children from the Sheltering} Arms, the Atlanta Woolen Mills and the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills oc cupied chairs, while the Sunday school children sat on the floor. All joined in carols, after- which “The Story of Christ” was read by Dr. \Y. W. Mem- - minger, pastor of All Saints Church. The little hosts and hostesses then distributed well-filled stockings to the poor children and served them with refreshments’. The "w hite Christmas’ lasted from I 3 o’clock to 5. ! Tries to Shoot Clerk Who Refuses Credit OXFORD, Dec. 27.—Tuck Hendrix, I a negro, attempted to kill Kwell Far mer, a clerk, when the negro asked Farmer to extend credit and was told Jhat he owed a small account and that no further credit could be ex tended. As soon as he shot, the negro fled. The store was crowded, but the shot went astray. vou HAVE IT REPAIRED JUST LIKE NEW AT A VERY MODERATE COST The Georgian’s Reoair Directory gives all the principal places where an article can be repaired, and should be preserved in every home as a guide. THE PIPE HOSPITAL For all kinds of Pipe Repairing TUMLIN BROS, 50 NORTH BROAD S7. ALL MAKES OF TYPEWRITERS Repaired and Re- Built. Prompt «er. vice. Thorough work. Reasonable charges. American Writing Machine Co. Phone Main 2525. 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 MONCRIE FURNACES Repaired. Prompt Attention. MONCBIEF FURNACE CO, Phones Main 285; Atlanta 2877 139 South P r vor Street. SCISSORS AND KNIVES OF ALL KINDS SHARPENED BY EXPERTS MATTHEWS & LIVELY 21 E. Alabama St. Phones 311 ATLANTA, GA. STOVES of All Kinds REPAIRED THE ATLANTA STOVE SUPPLY CO. 10L N Forsyth St. Phone Ivy 1240 Stove Supplies of Every Kind THE PLAYS THIS WEEK