Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, August 22, 1907, Image 3

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY, AUOD8T 22, 1907. Established 1865 Eiseman Bros. HY not buy one of the famous “E. B.” Suits now while mid - sum mer prices are so attracti v e 1 y lessened, get two good solid months’ wear out of it; have it cleaned and pressed and laid away, spick and span for your first spring, 1908, suit, that will “go” you splendidly until the new crop of styles comes in ? There’s not going to be a rad ical departure from the present styles anyway. No fear of your being a whit less than a la mode. Our word as manu facturing tailors and clothiers is your criterion in this argu ment. For Instance Fancy mixed Worsted, and kindred weaves in pat terned effects, the 1907 nov elties, in single or double- breasted styles, the genuine EISEMAN BROS, make, every garment a “garment of individuality,” can be an nexed this month at the fol lowing figures: Suits that sold for $12.50 Now Being Sold For ... a ior $9.37 Suits that sold for $15.00 Now Being Sold For .. soia ior $io.uu $11.25 Suits that sold for $18.00 Now Being Sold For .. sold ior $JLB.UU $13.50 Straw Hats Suits that sold for $22.50 Now Being Sold For .. soia ior $zz.du $16.87 We are still sell ing the best makes' and styles of Men’s Straw and Panama Hats at exactly former prices. Baltimore, Md. Washington, D. C. The better quality you buy at the scale of reduction, the more you save in the transaction. Suits that sold for $30.00 Now Being Sold For .. SOIU 101 $ou.uu $22.50 Suits that sold for $35.00 Now Being Sold For .. soia tor $3&.uu $2625 Suits that sold for $40.00 Now Being Sold For .. $30.00 Eiseman Bros. 11-13-15-17 Whitehall Street ATLANTA mills brothers FORCED TO WALL NVw York, Auk. 22.—The failure la an- Bonnew nt tin 1 atoek exebange of Mill, tint. ? c .°- nt No. 71 wan etreer. It l» n ‘ f r.too.1 thru th« failure la n email oho. The Arm xvna nrcnnlrral Hoptemlaor 29. 1906. It la anlil that lla enihamiaaiiient la n ae- ■juel to tho failure of Jnnioa IV. Henning on Ortotior 22, 1906. Well Known Broker Dead. Babylon, N. Y.. Aug. 22.—Arthur A. Houaman, a member of the New York atock exchange and of the firm of A. A. Houaman & Company, bankera and brokera, of 20 Broad atreet. New York, died at hla home here yeaterday. Ho had been III only a few daya. BUY ELGIN BUTTER Made by the best creameries in the finest dairy .district in the United States. We buy direct through our expert and pay preeinium over the market price to obtain first choice—our price is always low compared to the same qual ity butter sold elsewhere. Our refrigerators are clean and sanitary and are used only for butter—orders for advanced delivery on specified days solicited. Price Per Pound 32 Cents Bell Phone .... .. 462 Bell Phone .... .. 565 Atlanta Phone .. .. 462 —75— Whitehall Street. “USURPATION OF POWER, IS ACTION OF JUDGE”—WATSON Continued from Page One. of Germany live so largely on dogs and horses? Decauso they are cheaper than mutton, beeftnnd pork: Decauso the useless* dog sold by fts vnor. or the dotr stolen by some thief, costs less than a sucep or a bullock. And why Is It that the common people of Germany ran not afford to make use of those food products which they. In common with tho whole civilized world, naturally prefer? Why Is It that Fhlo'mnat come to the supper table In sausage, and Dobbin be served up ns steak for breakfast? Decauso the German manufneturer and the German landlord have made the laws to suit themselves, and between these two mill stones the unprivileged millions of German toilers are being ground to pow ‘tr. The laws which give a monopoly of the market to the Germnn landlord. These two dosses, the manufacturers and the land lords, have tnken the trowel of legislation, and, out of the huge granite blocks of ape rial privilege, they have built a wall around the German empire; so that outside manu facturers and landlords can not come Inside ■nd sell their foreign products. There are gates set In these walls, and tollkeepers ore placed thereat; and whoso ever would pass Into the German markets to compete with the Ingenious men who built the wall must pay dearly for the priv “ego. Having paid tho toll, the stranger may pass tho gate; but when he offers his goods for sale In the German market, he must necessarily add on to bis old price the amount of toll he was made to pay when he entered the gate. Therefore, the German who burs the stranger's goods, pays the toll, at last. Oppression of Tariff, now does this wall which the msnufnctur ers and the landlord built around the Ger man empire put money Into their pockets? How does the toll which the stranger did nt the gate work auy benefit to *" len who built the wall? Just this—ns oil the world knows: The stranger has to add the toll to the nrice of his goods; and when the stranger fixes his price the men who built the wall can go to it. They can get as much for their stuff ns the stranger gets for his; and thus while nr toll at all. Therefore the man who brings goods In- Ids the* wall catches Hall Columbia all .round. If he buys from the stranger he refunds the toll which the stranger was it the gate. If he buys from Imllt tlie wall he gives them Just ns much ns though they had paid toll nt the gate. The net result to the builders of the wall Is this: If strnugers come In at the gate, paying toll, the government gets It Tom the strangers and the strangers get It back from the people; whereas, wheu the bulldera of the wall make a sale to their own people they get as much ns the toll amounts to, and the government doea not get a cent of the money. The government grows fat off the toll the stranger prays; the manufacturers and land lords grow fst off the tolls they did not pay; and the people, who pay what the gov ernment gets as well as whnt the wall builders get, grow excessively lean, and go to eating horses and dogs. God! What a situation In a Christian land. Using, no#, tho phraseology of the legis lator—the wall of which we have apokeu la tho Gorman tariff system; the toll gate* are the German customs houses; the tolls which are demanded of the stranger are the Import duties laid on foreign goods brought Into German market..and the wall bulldera and all they who nld the same are Germnn protectionists who believe It to be an unnatural thing for tne Inhabitants of the earth to freely exchange products with one nnotber. Have Changed Ideals. "Peace op earth and good will to men," these monsters of greed who build these tariff walls hare Inaugurated the fiercest strife throughout the commercial world, have set rivals In trade to throat-cutting methods all over Christendom, have turned peaceful pursuits Into desperate and deadly struggles for supremacy, have made com merce more fatal than war. and have so changed the standards and Ideals of the Hu- man race that the stern virtues of our fathers are fast becoming the subject of youthful scoffs and Jeers. The Hpartsn father hojted to make a sober man out of his bov by forcing his slaves to get drunk—so that the boy, seeing the disgusting sight of drunken men, would lie too proud to ever stoop to thnt level. From such teaching sprang the r.oldlers who died nt Thermopylae. Mt countrymen, let ua do something akin to this. Let ns look upon drunken Ger many and l»ecome sober. Delmuched on Class legislation, Germany reels with legis lative Intoxication—Is drunk on tariff nnd protection. Is feeding fortunes to tho privi leged few, and dogs to the unprivileged many. Let us look upon thnt shameful, horrible misuse of political power nnd turn to politi cal sobriety—for we ourselves have been made drunk on tho same strong wine of special privileges. Our ronaulnr reports make the proof against Germany; our statistical abstract makes the pn*of against ourselves. We have helped onr privileged few to build the highest tariff wall over seen on this earth. We charge the stranger the heaviest toll ever paid. We put up the most expensive customs house nt every seaport on the roast, nnd we build them also In cit ies hundreds of miles from the water. We have given our pampered pots of special privilege such profits ns were never before reaped In legitimate industry. We have made it possible for one man to amass riches until his wealth Is greater than that of King Holomon. We hnve been blindly voting to sup|M)rt a system which enables the poorest section of the Union to become the richest, while the richest section tn nat ural wealth has tieoome the poorest. We have gone like fools to the polls nnd held up with our Imllots s system which gives the one privileged corporation—the steel trust—greater net profits than can be earned by 10,000,000 workers ou 6,000,000 farms. 8lew Own Prosperity. We hare reeled In polttrcal drunkenness as we followed leaders who made us vote for s system which gives to the privileged few engaged tn manufacturing net profits every year of 8 per cent on the Inr—* * —* 82,000,000,000 besides; whereas, workers In agricultural pursnl “o net profits st all. • This, and much more of the same sort. Is disclosed by the government Itself In Its statistical abstract. What are you going to do shout It? You, whose year-round toll produces the food and the raiment of the world, live within a few days of destitution, nnd your children are often clad In tattered rags. Von who renlly produce the wealth of the Union are allowed to have enough to live on, and that's all. You haven’t got any •ursine. Many of yon are In debt You can’t school your children as you would Ike to do. Yon can't buy and pay for s wives and daughters ught to live, at , M and beauty at an age when they meant that a few about ___ and plunder the many. Nature baa no such law anywhere In all the myriad leaves of her great book. Bnch laws are made by HIGH’S HIGH’S HIGH’S Umbrella Sale ■MAtiu*) Tomorrow we’ll place on sale two hun dred Men’s and Women’s excellent 26 and 28 inch Umbrellas; paragon frames, covered with best twilled “Cravenette,” assorted, plain and fan cy handles. Most of them are salesmen’s samples, regular $1.50 umbrellas, On Sale Friday Morning; While They Last, CHOICE $1.00 , * Muslin Underwear Sale Friday Children’s Muslin Gowns Made of good material carefully cut and finished (up to 14 years), sell reg ularly at 50c to 59c a garment. Limited quantity to close tomorrow at Ladies’ Muslin Gowns, Drawers, Corset Covers and Chemise of excellent material, new est styles, lace and embroidery trim med, many.“sample” muslins in the lot. Values to 75c; tomorrow, your choice— $1.00 Muslins 75c Counter of beautiful Gowns, Draw ers, Corset Covers and White Skirts, also small lot of regular $1.25 lace trimmed Drawers,“samples;” tomor row, special V NEW FALL SKIRTS (THIRD FLOOR) Today’s Now York Express brought big ship ments of charming tailor-made Skirts, Fall models in new and beautiful styles, trimmed and untrimmed; also big special purchases of samijlc Skirts, about 300 garments in all, to go on sale at 1-4 to 1-3 less than regular selling prices. Beautiful |6.50 to $7.50 sample Skirts, in brown and black Chiffon Panama, many pleat ed styles; special $5.98 New Fall models regular $7.50 to $0.00 sam ple Skirts of fancy quality Chiffon Panama, in browns and black, charming styles L new_Fall models, spe cial $6.50 “Sample” Fall models fine black Voile Skirts, trimmed and untrimmed models, $12.50 and $15.00 styles; perfectly exquisite garments, spe cial $9.75 J. M. HIGH CO. Hard to quit COFFEE? Not if you use POSTUM FOOD COFFEE "There’s a Reason.” ’men—mm woo are craeplng and erael, mm who have no proper eenae of Jaetlee, man whoa* aelflahneaa know, no mla of rlxbt. man whoaa ii,«I la (told, man who would trample tba light nut of a million rottaaea ._ ..r. ■ ._ i K..........i v..—...... ... you." . . When I waa at arbool I anon learned that whoaa aelAahneaa know, no mla of right. If I didn’t want every hleaiod boy In the ' limu’h to ran over me I bud to do aorne lighting. Rule la Qenaral. Barb of you bad tho aama eiperlenee, to Illuminate a hundred Newport or New York palaeeat lint what nl«iut yon? Who ahull he aide to aunt np In word, the nmenrtty of your own folly! Von are the _ien who are to hlame for the Ox In whlrb yon Bnd youreelven. Yon are tba men wbnae ballot, did Ibe Imalneaa. Who killed fork Uoblnt Who elew yonr proaperlty? You did It. Y’nu did It liy your fanatlrvl devotion to party name.; yonr Idlnd adherenre to aeetlonal prejudice., your re final to nee your own eyre to aee actual facta, yoor houndleaa credulity In believing all that the political ieadera told you. Ilo you tell me that you can’t price raw cotton when you aell, nor manufactured cot ton when you liuy! My aiuwer la, ‘‘Nobody’, to Idamo hot / ->U unit tu« imuir CAUWI irmr, . _ What Is true of the hullvMu.il Is true of tbs class. A man who Is too weak to stand up for his own rights la not permitted to have any. A class that Is so unwise as to let every other Haas ex ploit It will go hungry and naked Into a permanent, hopeless degradation. To advance their class Interest, capital ists throughout the world are organised: and whenever the thing which organised capital wants Is In politics, orgsulxed cap ital goes Into politics after It. To sdrsnee the class Interest, labor throughout the world Is organised; and whenever the thing which labor wants Is In politics, labor goes Into politics after It. Tbo Federal government could never bring x 1 ,. « Itself to see the eight-hour law. helped to pass In 1»2. until San per*-the pure. able, patriotic Ini- went right Into Judith* with the Then, Unde Ham saw the la plainly; and went to enforcing it Aloug the lines of c!(is* Interest cultural millions bare gnntzed; and the agricultural class Is tin- beast Is that the of burden for sll the others. What better slaves could the exploiters of labor want than iho agricultural workers are? lam men of the farms, do you pro duce larger crops of cotton nnd corn than your slave "niggers" ever did? And you don t get much more out of It than the "niggers ' got. You. as a elu--. work for your victuals nnd dotbe*. And who exploit you docto Continued on Pago Seven*