Thursday, 27th November 1913: Gone Are The Days Of Oratory At The Bar, Says Pendleton, The Atlanta Constitution
The Atlanta Constitution,
Thursday, 27th November 1913,
PAGE 7, COLUMN 4.
Stick to facts.
Cut out the Fourth of July oratorical
fireworks.
State your case
before the jury tersely and briefly.
Such was the advice of Judge John T. Pendleton,
senior judge of the Fulton county superior court, as given by him Wednesday
afternoon in an address before the students of the Atlanta Law school. He
declared that the old days of flowery oratory at the bar are gone forever, and
that in the courts of today the forceful presentation of true facts alone is
necessary in successful law pleading.
Judge Pendletons was the third of a
series of addresses being delivered before the law school by prominent members
of the Atlanta bar. He was introduced by Hamilton Douglas, dean of the school,
who paid him high tribute as a foremost leader in his profession and the
highest type of true citizen.
PAGE 9, COLUMN 4
PROHIBITION
LEADERS
CONFER WITH BEAVERS
Reported That They Wanted to Know Why Blind Tiger-ism
Was Spreading Here.
Two of the states prohibition leaders
and a private detective conferred with Chief Beavers for an hour yesterday
afternoon and departed in mystery, refusing to divulge to reporters the object
of their meeting.
They were Rev. H. M. DuBose, an
official of the Georgia Anti-Saloon league, and Rev. J. B. Richards, secretary
of that organization. With them was J. W. Hewitt, head of a private detective
agency. It is said by responsible authority that the conference was over the
blind tiger situation, the visitors wanting to know why there was not more
activity on the part of the police.
The prohibition leaders, it is said,
were informed by both police heads that whatever ineffectiveness of the police
department in handling blind tigers was due entirely to the lack of funds for
this kind of work. Rev. DuBose said:
There is nothing definite to give out
regarding the conference. We were talking merely along general lines. There
will be no exceptional action as a result.
Chief Beavers, while refusing to talk
any whatever regarding the visit, intimates that an amount of evidence was
produced by Hewitt. The nature of this evidence, however, the chief would not
disclose. It is rumored that Hewitt had obtained evidence indicating a spread
of blind tigerism in Atlanta.