Newspaper Page Text
TTTT ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS
Destructor Concern
To Insist That Citv
Test New Plant Now
Thf. arrival of VV.
ah-M representative
’ompany, of New
Tiesday, developed
I >est rue tor Company
city making * test
tor: .
In addition the <
E. Dowd. dr., the
of the Deetructor
York, In Atlanta
the fart that the
would Insist on the
>i the-new erernu-
LOCKER CLUBS
III OUT Li 5,
Steal Mule, You'll
Get 4 Years-Auto,
12 Months Is Limit
Commerce Head to Carry Out Old Note of Politics Creeps Into
Policies—Home Important
Meeting Place.
Oorr
ommerce tr
; B Wilkin
i u rad ay will
the At hint *
favor of his
•on. who was
zation at the
TY timer L.
quit the pro
Chamber of <
successor. Me
chosen to hea
recent election
Mr. Wilkinson was vice preside
snd has i*e*-n In frequent conferen
with Mr. Moore familiarizing hims(
with the details o
The new' presiden
that his first concern will be to carry I
out the projects already launched by j
the outgoing administration
sards the completion of the i
£or the member
important.
the high offl
has announce
Scien tific Address Before
Economic Section.
Continued From Page 1.
nittedU are essential to binding na-
lons together," he said, "and I tan
tot apprehend how they can he de-
eloped without that intimate inter-
ourse which results only from com-
nercinl relations. • • • In short, it
I is a community of interests above all
that • • «Ues for the pc
els»
of the
He
Of the
Mt
More Must Help Chamber.
• I believe that »h n tlie hulldlnK ’#
finished it will he a (treat factor in
stimulating the Inte est . f the mem
bers in the undertakings' of tlie or
ganization." he said. "\s it is now,
shere are a few men bearing Hie bur
dens The rank and file do not nft**n
find occasion •
W ith the neu
will have a Ji
their leisure
their noon
his
the
k i h
an 1
i h«
visit headquarter*,
nme completed, they
e to congregate us
hours. They can oat
luncheon: these ind talk
over business topics and toe enter
prises \v hich t he chamber has on too..
"Ever} member hiss got to put
shoulder to the whed dssring
coming tear. I hits sure Ihat '
e\s rvone working for the growth
P llS p, rily of Atlanta It will he
t'H liner twelve months In its 11 story."
Mr. O'Dell Comes .. ith Exhibits.
The visit of Ralph NT O'Dell to At
lanta under the auspices of the
< hamher of (,'ommeree will be of par
ticular Interest to persons engaged in
the cotton Industry Mr. (VDell will
arrive Thursday and wilt be the, guest
, r tlie chamber during his »tav here.
He !« a special agent for the Bureau
of K> reign and Domestic ( ommerce
and has made a thorough inveatlga-
Hon of trade conditions In South
America, with a view of ascertaining
exactl' what the Importers there want
in th. wav of cotton products He
Will speak 1n the Chamber of Com
merce rooms at noon Saturday.
He will have with him trunkfuls of
samples that will cover half a dozen
tables Ttiev will Illustrate the nature
,.f i he demand in other countries and
will furnish a basis on which Ameri
can manufacturers ma> pattern th- it
products.
K. R Gordon, president of the Col
ton Manufacturer" Association. i.i»
issued a special rail to the members
asking them to tie present at the
meeting
Mrs. Blake, Pioneer
Suffragette, Dies
ENGLEWOOD. N. J. Dec. 30.—-
Mrs. Lillie Devereux-Blake, one df the
pioneer Miffrugiats hi the United
Staten, died here to-day. aged 78. Mrs
Blake ha** been ill for several weeks.
She was president of the New York
Woman Suffrage Association foi
eleven years.
Tight Money Sends 2
N. Y. Stores to Wall
ir-
NEW YORK, l>ep 30.-W. A M
ble and John A Sheppard to-day w
appointed receivers by the Federal
Uourt for the Fourteenth Gtreet Storo
and the Simpaon-Urawford Company,
big department slor* a. which were
forced into receivership because if
the money stringency
Hunting a Wife by
Mail Has Its Perils
PATCHOGUE. N. Y . Dec. 30 A
woman who says she is of "colored na
tionality" has offered herself as wife of
1 ‘.forge H. Yale, who asked Justice
Green to get a male for him
1 world."
Would Train Salesman.
George Frederick Kunz. of Tiffany
A- Co., at Mie same meeting spoke on
"International Commerce and Inter
national Commercial Schools."
The value of a trained man Is in
estimable," he said. "He will know
1 what the foreign buyer wants; how
? best to sill • the goods; the moat di
ll ect or the chea rest lines both bv
water and by rail, through which to
I ship; the proper handling of custom
house business; how and when to
render bills.
"My plan would be to have a school
with two or three years’ course of
actual practice all the time, to he
followed by a year’s trip through va
rious countries."
School Saves Labor.
‘ A Program for Commercial Edu
cation" was the topic of Dr. John
Franklin Crowell, associate editor of
The Wall Street Journal:
"Whatever may lie said in favor of
the all-experience method of com
mercial training," he said, "it is at
least true that a properly organized,
fairly equipped and reasonably well-
managed school is a labor-saving ma
chine However good a teacher ex
perience mav he, j*he is slow, unsys
tematic and extremeh wasteful in
her methods. If commerce is to take
the test of efficiency standards both
time and money will he saved by de
voting a few years out of a lifetime to
the mastery of the facts, the princi
ples and the progressive methods so
that the entrant to the career m«>
have a fair survey of the market from
every essential standpoint.
"This is simply asking that thim
great branch or division of national
or international labor he approached
scientifically, so that the experience
of the past mav not be ignored in
preparing for the future. The one
who dose this, and does it as well as
it can he done with existing means at
hand, will stand an immensely better
chance In the competitive and co
operative services of the world s pur
chasing and producing and consum
ing communities than the one who.
other things being equal, ignore* the
wealth of the world s commercial ex
perience and relies on what he may
learn ns he goes along "
Other Sections in Session.
While the economic section
meeting at Tech the botanists and
geologists were holding their session I
at the .State Capitol. The zoologists
and the entomologists were at the At- |
lanta Medical College: the mathemat
ics and astronomy sections were at
Tech, also the physicists, the chem
ists. the mechanical scientists and the
anthropologist
Papers of from 1ft to 30 minutes
were read, there was open discussion,
presentation by lantern slides—all the
possible ways of Imparting informa
tion, divided among the 500 scientist*
who are striving to advance the com
mon good.
The social features of Tuesday be
gan at 1 o'clock when the Sigma Yi
delegates had their luncheon at the
Piedmont Hotel. From 5 to 7 o’clock
Governor Slaton and Mrs. Slaton are
to hold their reception at the Gov
ernor’s Mansion on Peachtree street,
and at 7 o'clock the annual dinner of
the Sigma Xi Society and their guest*
i* to he held at the Piedmont Driving
Club.
ompany will announce j
its readiness to bul d for $110,000 an,
electric power plant In conjunction with
the crematory capable of general ing
1.500 kilowats of electricity. Agents of
the company claim that the steam sup
ply from the burning garbage already
Is 13 per cent above the guarantee.
The> will ask the new finance com
mit fee t,. include In the budget $135.-
000 as a final payment on the cr«matoi>
ami $110,000 for the municipal electric
plant.
Mayor Woodward and Councilman
f"audt L. Ashley will continue to op
pose a test being made at this time.
Conference Likely
To Clear Way for
Howell Mill Bridge
At a meeting between President
Arkwright, of tlie Georgia Railway
end Power (’ompany. and a commit
tee of Howell Mil! road citizens to
be held Tuesday in President Ark
wright’s office the last points of dis
agreement are expected to be cleared
away from the proposition that the
Seaboard Air Line build a new bridge
over the Howell Mill road at the In
tersection—a bridge to take the place
of the present condemned structure
end strong enough to carry the heav
iest type of electric cars
The only difference at present is in
regard to the flooring of the bridge
and its preparation to carry street cat
tracks. The railway company declines
to do this on the ground that
An <aid discrimination in law be-
I tween the theft of a mule and wagon
j and the theft of an automobile was
i brought to light by Recorder Broyles
I Tuesday In Police Court in the case
of Henry .Matthews, a negro, charged
I with stealing a mule and wagon. He
The Georgia Anti-Saloon League, (was bound over on a $1,000 bond,
through its executive chairman, tlie j "You should have stolen an auto-
Rev. If. M. DuBo.se. made another mobile,” said th< Recorder. "The theft
pretest Tuesday against the con- ! of an 18,000 llmouslns is a mlsdemea-
tinued existence of the locker
which are claimed to be
l .« i nor and punishable by a sentence of
not over twelve months while the
defying the '
over twelve months while
stealing of a $40 mule and wagon Is
selling liquor to
ling to non - mom -
It is
strictly the work of the street rail
way company. It Is expected an
agreement will he reached.
East Atlanta to
Demand Share of
Citylmprovements
Fast Atlanta came out Tuesday
with tlie announcement that It had x
brand-new improvement association,
and that it proposed to gets its share
of the appropriations doled out by
Council.
The East Atlanta Improvement
Club had its origin at a meeting Mon-
day night in the Ninth Ward. The
officers arc: President, W. S. Loftls;
secretary. F .VI. Kirkpatrick, treas
ure:. J. L Carpenter.
A committee was named to go be
fore the stree t ra iway company and
ask for better schedules on the line
»o the Soldiers' Home Another com
mittee whs appointed to go before the
Finance Committee of Council and
ask for a new East Atlanta school-
house.
.Still other committees were named
to *eo that the streets ure cherted and
that an adequate sewerage system is
installed.
Record Shipment
Of 17 Carloads of
law as much by
members as by se
bers.
Dr. DuBose asserted that one of
the greatest evils of the locker clubs
was that young women w r ere in the
practice of visiting the clubs with
escorts and becoming shamefully in
toxicated.
Here is his formal statement, in
part:
"Atlanta enjoyed this year some
thing of a 'sane' Christmas. Law
breaking and crime were curtailed
one-half. The record is encouraging
This record is encouraging. The
conclusion is inevitable that, had
ALL the locker clubs of Atlanta
been dosed on Christmas Day. along
with their allies, the near-beer sa
loons, the record would have been
another 50 per cent better. Out of
experience comes Judgment. Atlanta
does not need locker clubs (as she
dues not need near-beer saloons).
They are the fly in her social oint
ment, and this I propose to make
plain.
Testimony Damning.
"The locker clubs have persistently
flouted the law of the sovereign State
of Georgia. Testimony as damning
as it is dismal may be had first hand.
A business man recently observed
two young women as they emerged
from a looker club in a skyscraper
and entered the elevator. Bo heavy
were the fumes of liquor on their
breath that doubt was impossible. A
young woman, late a servitress in a
locker club, is now reported in a
house of rescue. Another place is
alleged to be constantly frequented
by young women. Who are they?
They are daughters and sisters—and
there's the pity of it! These are hut
a few of the dozens of stories of like
tenor. Shame burn to cinder the
cheeks of men when such things can
be!
"The law of Georgia, forbids the
sale of Intoxicating liquors, absolute
ly. Judge Russell, whom nobody will
accuse of being a prohibitionist, de
clared In a recent high court decision
that IT IS AS UNLAWFUL FOR A
LOCKER CLUB TO SELL TO ITS
MEMBERS AS IT IS TO SELL TO
NON-MEMBERS. Yet every locker
club in Atlanta is selling whisky, and
there are those who would have these
conditions perpetuated.
Likened to Plague.
"There Is no mistaking the voice
of the street. And to what end? ‘For
the city's good for its commercial
well being, and for its name abroad.’
is the bold and factitious answer.
Locker clubs have wrought irrepar
able moral and commercial hurt to
several cities of Georgia. Every
where they have been a moral infec
tion and a commercial reproach. Good
for the city! If a shower of plague
a felony and makes you liable to
penitentiary sentence of four or five
years.”
The negro was charged with taking
the mule and wagon from before the
Temple Court Building to Jonesboro,
where he w r as arrested.
So Many Call on Him He Threat
ens to “Hide Out" to Finish
Message.
germs or a simoon of Chagres fever
A -I1 + net f rv Pn oo TJr»T*n i < ’ ould be counted Rood, then or.e might
XiULOo LU Idibo Xlt/I he Justified in appraising as good the
festering, polluting, damning work of
the average Georgia locker club.
"The demand made by the Chris
tian public of this city is distinct:
Let the City Council provide for the
automatic and irrevocable cancella
tion of the licenses of every near-
beer saloon and every locker club
whose managers or responsible agents
are convicted of violating the law.
Evidence of such violation is plen
tiful."
Typewriters rented 4 mos.,
S5 up. Am. Wtg. Mach. Co.
Humphreys Warns of
Aviator War Danger.
Should the United States become
involved in war with one of the great
world powers she would be at a terri
ble disadvantage in the use of that
most important adjunct of modern
warfare, the aeroplane, in tlie opinion
of \Y. J. Humphreys, head of the me
teorological department of the United
States Weather Bureau.
Mr. Humphreys is not an alarmist
He docs not anticipate war with any
of the other powerful nations. He
does not even know that there is a
fairly remote possibility of trouble,
but he believes In being prepared in
• very department.
A record shipment of automobiles
«.t i.iif make to » Southern city
enteen carloads—will pass through
Atlanta Tuesday night at 10 o’clock
en route to Jacksonville, Fla.
The local offices of the Georgia
Southern and Florida Railroad re
ceived advices of the sh^mient Tues
day and were requested to assist In
making it a record shipment also in
point of time. The seventeen cars
are filled "Ith Fords from the Detroit
factory for L. C. Oliver, a J
ville agent. They are niov
way of tlie Michigan Central and Big
Four to Cincinnati, the Louisville and
Nashville Cincinnati to Atlanta, the
Georgia Railroad from here to Ma
con, and the G. S. & F. the remainder
of the trip.
This is said to be the largest ship
ment of automobiles to any individual
in the South.
nnHv Negro Slayer Gets
Respite for 2 Weeks
Realty Trust Firm
The filing of a petition for divorce
in the Atlanta Superior Court Tues
day by .Mrs. Ella L. Aikens against
Samuel C. Aikens formed a sequel to
the appearance of the latter at police
headquarters Monday afternoon, bad
ly disfigured, and charging two of his
sons with assaulting him near his
wife’s home at No. 8 Mell avenue,
Edgewood, und also w ith kidnaping
his two youngest children.
In her petition Mrs. Aikens charges
her husband with having an ungov
ernable temper, with auuse of her
and her children, and with having
shot at one of his sons.
On July 12, 1908, the petition
charges, he went to Mrs. Aiken's
home and with a loaded revolver took
possession of the house, while the
family tied to the house of a neigh
bor; that he followed them, and,
threatening them with the revolver,
lined them up and "marched them
back home like so many prisoners."
Shortly afterward he packed his suit
case and left home.
He returned January 1, 1909. arid
"after a violent outbreak of temper
shot at one son."
Mrs. Aikens also charges that, he
coerced her into signing a warranty
deed giving him her interest in the
property at No. 8 Mel! avenue; that
she received no consideration for this,
but that he forced her to do it by
playing on her feeling* and by creat
ing anxiety for her children.
Aikens is said to possess property
worth from $5,000 to $7,000 and to
earn a salary of $200 per month. An
order was granted by Judge George
L. Bell restraining him from dispos
ing of any of his property or molest
ing Mrs. Aikens. A hearing on this
temporary injunction will be given
January 6.
Solution of Rosier
Mystery Near; Victim
Of Hold-up Revives
City detectives declared Tuesday
they were near a solution of the Ro
sier mystery. The confectioner who
was attacked and robbed Saturda\
was conscious Tuesday. He could not
talk, but wrote a question for the de
tectives:
"Did you get that cabman?"
Rosier had written the number of a
cab before, and the detectives ar
rested the negro driver, Ed Bowen.
Chances for Roster's recovery were
brighter Tuesday following opera
tions. His left eye was removed and
a broken Jawbone set.
.Mayor Woodward Tuesday threat
ened to hide out until he could write
his annual message and make up his
committees for the new Council be
cause of constant interruptions.
He held a conference Tuesday with
Alderman J. H. Harwell, Councilman
Claude L. Ashley, Councilman Charles
W. .Smith and Councilman A. R. Col-
(ord. Committee appointments were
discussed. It was pretty well under
stood what these men would get.
Harwell likely will be chairman of
the Board of Fire Masters; Ashley
will be leappointed chairman of the
Sanitary Committee; Colcord will be
renamed chairman of the Police Com
mittee. and Smith chairman of the
Tax Committee—that is, if the gossip
ran be relied upon.
Mayor Woodward is leaving all of
his friends more or less in the dark
about his appointments. He discusses
the matter with them and listens to
what they have to say, but what he
is going to do he keeps to himself.
Doubt has arisen over the appoint
ment of the chairman of the Finance
Committee. A few days ago it was a
foregone conclusion that Councilman
W. G. Humphrey would be renamed.
Now it is uncertain. The chances are
Mr. Humphrey will get the place, but
Alderman C. H. Kelley and Alderman
Harwell are being considered.
The fact is, if Mayor Woodward
should carry out his threat of going
into seclusion until the meeting of
the City Council Monday, when he
will deliver his message and make hie
appointments, the members of Coun
cil would not be left much more in
the dark than they are at present.
Jim Baxley, a negro slayer of an
other negro in Coweta County, has
been granted a two weeks' respite
from the hanging, the original date
having been set for next Friday.
The Governor acted on the recom
mendation of the trial judge and the
Tl/^ vnn Fli tti A n yx /I j Solicitor General, who stated that a
DCClciluO D1V lllBIIli certain conflict in the evidence left a
doubt as to the negro’s guilt. They
asked a commutation to life impris
onment. The Prison Commission will
investigate the case.
At a meeting of the board of trus
tees of the Realty Trust Company a
dividend of 6 per cent upon the capi
tal stock was declared, payable semi
annually. 3 per cent on January 1
and 3 per cent on July 1. 1914.
The board directed that the
hooks he closed December 26 and
main (dosed until the close of busl
ness December 31, and that the dlvi- I MACON, Dec. 30.—Judge Emory
drnd he paid to the registered stock- gp^er's recovery of health is taken to
holders as of noon December 26
Speer Hearing Seems
I Sure to Begin Jan. 19
Pennsylvania Line
Opens Bureau Here
For Georgia Traffic
Atlanta Is one of three Southern
points at which the Pennsylvania
Railroad System Is to open special
offices January 1 to care for the
growing volume of traffic originating
in this section.
William S. Franklin, Jr., has been
appointed Southern freight agent in
Atlanta. J. T. Wray, who has been
in Atlanta a number of years, will
become district freight solicitor. J.
G. Parnell will be traveling freight
solicitor. Both will have their head
quarters in Atlanta.
Charlotte, N. C., and Jacksonville
will be the other Southern points at
which the Pennsylvania will estab
lish agencies.
R. Alan Turner is to be district
freight solicitor at Charlotte, and W.
R. O’Hara will have the same office
in Jacksonville. All the newly ap
pointed officials are Southerners.
For 3d Time Turner
Seeks Salary Raise
City Electrician R. C. Turner will
have introduced at the meeting of Coun
cil Monday a new measure increasing
the salary of his office from $1,800 to
$2,400 a year. At the same meeting the
Council "graft" probe committee will
make its report on Electrician Turner.
Though nothing more severe than a
reprimand is expected from the probe
committee Mr. Turner wants complete
exoneration in an Increase in salary.
This has been twice refused by Coun
cil within the last two months.
HoosiersFormSociety
And Will Feast Jan.20
The first annual dinner of the Hoosier
Society will be held at Hotel Ansley,
January 20. More than 100 Indianians
answered the call for the formation of
the society Monday night.
The executive committee is composed
of W. ],. Halstead, chairman; F. W.
Greene. J. J. Lautey. J. R. MacEachern,
Frank R. Jameson. Byron Saunders. W.
H Harris. Joseph Brown, W. S. Kin
caid, Jr., Charles F. Reno, C. E. Shep
herd. George M Ryan and M. H. Swain.
These will meet at noon, January 12.
in Hotel Ansley.
Come to
Allen's To-morrow
No Goods Exchanged or Taken
Hack in This Sale
FINAL DECEMBER CLEAN UP SALE
OF ODDS AND ENDS
Ladies’ Fancy Silk and Pique Vests,
were $1.00 and $3.00, at 49c
Maline and Silk Ruffs, were $1.50 to
$3.50 $1.00
Boys’ Rough Rider and Scout Gloves,
were 50c 39c
Pearl and Fancy Hair Bands and Or
naments, were $1.00 to $5.00 50c
Odds and Ends of Jew r elry, worth up
to $1.00, at 10c
Net and Lace Plaiting, 35c to 65c
values, at 19c
Sterling Silver Novelties, 50c and 25c,
at One-half
./. P. Allen & Co.
’>I-)3 Whitehall S7.
4,000 Citizens Fail
To Make Tax Returns
Councilman Charles NY. Smith, chair
man >*f the Council tax committee, de
clared Tuesday that there were 4.000
citizens in Atlanta, a record number,
who had tailed t*> make any tax returns
and that special instructions would be
given immediately to the marshal's of
tire to collect personal taxes from these
people, charging the regular fee against
| defaulters
'.It probably will require special col
lectors. " said Mr. Smith "NVe will Issue
fi fas. and tr> to get what Is due the
city."
Fair and Warmer Is
Outlook for Atlanta
1 mean that on the scheduled date. Jan-
j uary 19, the subcommittee of the House
Judiciary Committee will begin the in
vestigation of the charges of official
misconduct now pending against him.
The committee will assemble in Macon
on that day, and sessions in Augusta,
Savannah. Albany and Valdosta are also
on the program
The committee's Inquiry will largely
determine whether the House will under
take impeachment proceedings
Duelist Must Leave
U. S. After 30 Days
Turkey's $15,000,000
For Brazil's Warship
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
FRANKFORT-ON-MAIN. GERMANY.
Dec 30. A Constantinople dispatch to
The Frankfurter Zeitung to-day states
that Turkey has concluded negotiations
for the purchase of the battleship Rio
De Janeiro from the Brazilian Govern
ment for $15,000,000
The warship is Brazil’s newest. It
carries fourteen 12-inch guns, lesser ar
maments and torpedo tubes and a com
plement of 1.100 men.
Augusta Southern
Re-elects Officers
AUGUSTA. Dec. 30.—At the annual
meeting of the stockholders of the Au
gusta Southern Railroad held here, di
rectors w’ere chosen who then re-elect
ed the following officers: President, A.
B. Andrews. Raleigh, N C.; treasurer.
N. B. Ansley, Washington. D. C\; as
sistant treasurer, E. F. Carham, Wash
ington, D. C.; auditor, A. H. Plant,
Washington. D C.; assistant auditor. J.
A. Scrivener. Augusta, superintendent,
J. A White. Augusta.
The directors are: A B. Andrews,
Raleigh: Hamilton McWhorter, Athens;
Frank R. Clark. Augusta. Thomas W.
Loyless. Augusta; W. J. Wren, Wrens;
J. W. P. Whitely. Gibson; E. B. Rogers.
Gibson: Macon Worthen. Worthen, and
NY A. McCarty. Sandersville.
The Kind You Have Always lias borne the signe.
ture of Clias. II. Fletcher, and lias been made under hie
persona) supervision for over JiO years. Allow ao one
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
•*./ust-as-good ” are but Experiments, and endanger
health of Children—Experience against Experiment
What is CASTOR IA
the
Onstoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Ft
Iforic. Drops and Soothing- Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nareotlc
substance. Its age is Us guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind
Colic. It relit Ves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Cln'dreu’s Panacett—The Mother’s Friend,
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
* * **
Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPAN/. TT MURRAY STRUT, NSW YORK Cl fV.
Buy This Pretty Home!
It Has Electric Lights and City Water
D ON’T RENT a house! You can just as easily BUY the hand
some home pictured above! We will SELL it to you on our
DIVIDED PAYMENT PLAN—$100 down and $25 a month. No
mortgage to assume.
This cozy Five-Room House is on a level lot, 100 by 130
feet. Has ELECTRIC LIGHTS anJ city water. Plenty of shade
trees. There’s a reception room, large dining room with bay win
dow and art glass, kitchen with swinging door, and two bed
rooms. Large veranda on front and side, and latticed porch in
hack of house. Good-sized china closet. Golden oak mantels and
tile.
This house is at CAPITOL VIEW, a nice residential section.
Inside of Atlanta’s city limits—only an 18-minute street car ride
from the postoffice!
We shall gladly give full
or call at our office!
particulars—if you will phone us
W. D. BEATIE, 207 Equitable Bldg.
Bell, Main 3520 Atlanta Phone 3520
Georgian
Want Ad.
Forecaster Von Herrmann quieted
apprehension of another cold wave
Tuesday by announcing there is none
in sight.
He admitted that it might be a lit
tle colder Tuesday night, but prom
ised fair and warmer weather for
Wednesday. Rains have been gen
eral in the eastern part of the cotton
belt The weather remains generally
cloudy over much of the count!*) east
of the Rockies.
WASHINGTON. Dec. 30—Emil
Zerkowitz, formerly Hungarian Com-
' missioner of immigration, who was
ordered deported by the board of spe
cial inquiry at Ellis Island because
he fought a duel in Budapest Decem
ber 2 with John Pirnitxei, nead of
the Trans-Atlantic Trust Company,
will be permitted to enter the United
f ( !:r,%^^ t , a t °,t n ^; n o f r 30 n<, dav, n Laborer Would Sell
Knights Groom ‘Goat';
For Use at Decatur |
The Knights of Pythias are bus> pre
paring for the ceremonial NVednesday I
attending the installation of a lodge at j
Decatur A picked team of Uniform
Lodge. No. 123. will have charge
The grand lodge of the order will be t
represented by H. M. Stanley, grand I
vice chancellor and John Davis, State
deputy for Georgia
Side Trip to Tuskegee
Via The NVest Point Route,
January 3d.
ties of ten or more i ravel-
$6
F
i Rjt
then. $6 30 round trip For
trip please register with Secre-
American Association for the
. n • m* :it of Science, at Piedmont
Grounded Ship With
Nordica Aboard Freed
Special Cabie to The Atlanta Georgian.
BRISBANE. AUSTRALIA. Dec 30 —
The Dutch liner Tasman, which went
ashore in the Gulf of Papua Sunday,
was hau’ed from the reef to-day by the
Japanese steamship Inaho Maru. Two
holes were torn in the hull, but the
pumps prevented the vessel from becom
ing completely waterlogged
Among the imssengers was Mine. Nor-
Children for $3,000
ST. LOUIS, Dec. 30.—Stephen
Godo. a laborer who earns $10 a weeK,
advertised that he would sell hi*
daughter. Margaret, aged 8. for $2,000.
and his son. Stephen, aged 6. for
$1,000. because he can not give them
the comforts he thinks they deserve
I .
XMAS RATES
Reduced over N.. C. & St.
L. Rv. and W. & A R. R.
Armlv anv Afent
**Correct Dress for Men"
Essig’s Special Hat Sale
About 150 splendid Hats in Soft and Derbies—Black and Colors-
out quickly—
At 95c Each
-to close
Regular $3.CO and $3.50 values,
son’s selling.
These are iust odds and ends left from a sea-
Essig Bros
Correct Dress for Men
26 Whitehall St.