Newspaper Page Text
IJi K ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 29.
So Tired
It nay be from overwork, but
Um chance, are its from an In
active LIVER. —i
WHh a well conducted LIVER
one can do mountains o( labor
without fatigue.
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
AND YOUNG PEOPLE’S TOPIC
THE PERIL OF MISUSED STRENGTH
it add? a hundred per cent to j The International Sunday School Lesson For December
ones earning capacity.' j Jg, “The Death of Samson.” Judges 16: 21-31.
it can be kept In healthful action | . —
by. and only by
TntfsPills
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
CHANGES SCHEDULE
Effective December I. train No. 11
i from Brun.wlck and Jeckeonvllle will
arrive Atlanta 8:18 a. m„ and leave for
Chattanooga and Cincinnati at 6:45 a.
■ m. No. It from Cincinnati and Chatta
nooga will arrive Atlanta 11:30 mid
night and leave for Brunswick and
Jackeonrille 11:10 a. m. Effective aame
date, through deeper* between Chicago
and 8L Auguatine will be inaugurate'
■ <m three trains. No. 1( for Macon an
Brunswick will leave Atlanta 8:05 :
in. instead of 8:15 a. m.
JAMES FREEMAN,
Diatrlct Paaaenger Agent.
An Imitation Takes for Ita Pattern the
Real Artiola.
There wai never an Imitation made
of an Imitation.
Imitator, always counterfeit the gen.
■ ulne article. The genuine la what y.ou
- ask for. because genuine articles are
theadvertlsed onea. Imitations are not
advertlaed, but depend for their bull-
; neaa on the ability of the dealer to
•ell you something claimed to be “Just
aa good" when you ask for the genuine,
1 - because ha makes more profit on the
• Imitation.
• ' Why accept Imitations when you can
set the genuine by Insisting?
Rsfuss Imitations—Gst What You Ask
For.
By WILLIAM T.^LLIS.
hove perverted* tbrlr l-iwrr. Rrrsusc
strong have misused their strength, ruth
lessly rrushing wbsterer hindered their mad
struggles for wealth end power, the whole
continent hss ninutfested nu omluous rone
tlon. As Rhskespenre snys:
"Oh. it la escelleot
To hero a giant's strength; but It la
tyrannous
To use It like n giant."
There lie msny who would relate the old
as a warning to his race. Hainaou Is
In literature as a horrible .einaipk'. lie
represents the strong gone wrong. A man
of aacetlc vows, who should have been n
spiritual leader, he boroine n buffoon, n
player of boys' pranks, a Highly erncker of
jokes, s sensual voluptuary, disregarding
hit primary obligations of patriotism nnrl
piety.
Some Samsona Gono Wrong.
Th# public speaker who tickles men's
•art when he ought to stir their hearts; the
young men who aro addla-pated patron* of
manhood; the idle, favored classes who re-
S rd the world as a toy. rather than na a
»l: the children of nobte parents, and In
heritors of sacred vows, who render no hon
or to their forbesrs because they give no
service to their time; the irresponsible rich
who think that the public Is merely a mine
to be ruthlessly exploited, the politlelnn
nauoo; i
fpseiibl# 1
urea—all these are present day examples of
Samsona who have made themselves objects
olty was not the wise man's unbending, hut
the fool’s lack of a sense of fitness. The
mightiest man of his day, ha lent his
streufftb to the playing of childish pranks,
and finally permitted Tt to d*
him at the hands of a woman.
wonder that he seems to have had map;
boon companions, but no real friends, sou
that he Is the one caricature In the whole
gallery of Scriptural characters?’
Two Kings of Ramsons.
With all the force of tremendous recent
events liehiod It, the teaching of Samson'i
life should be driven home that “ndblesse
oblige" privilege carries obligations;' power
creates duties. "They that arc strong."
said the Great .Teacher, "ought to bear the
infirmities of tno weak, and not to please
themselves." This Western world, above
all other lands, needs to b# told. In prophet
tones, that power, be It financial power,
power,
orabl;
train
glTen Vitality and force to the ominous Ho-
cinKatie propaganda of the day. Deep In his
heart; the common man feels the injustice
of the possession *nf vast power by a com
paratlve few, who use their
sense of stewai
trlotlc duty. . ..• .
The lesson Is c|q*r for all men's reading
that |be aggregate of the weal au
used constitute In thomeslvcs anot.._.
son. to wham the Hncs of Milton may he
applied: y >'
"There Is a poor, hllnd Samson In this land.
Hliorn of his strength, ami bound with
bands of steel.
Who uiar, In some grim revel, raise his
hand.
And ahi
' west
The Philistines who fell beneath flic ruins
of festal hall which Mnmson wrecked, bad
•orned mid despised their prisoner. They
..jought themselves safe, and him ‘
One need not-lie considered an ala
say thni_yielr case Is n monition to our own
times.
The Old, Old Warning
"We’ve had no end of a lesson," wrote the
British poet, after the Boer war; but tbt
■ (tower with no
ahake the . pillars of the compion
PLAN OF GEORGIAN’S POPULAR
VOTING CONTEST.
The Georgian's popular voting contest Is
open to all respectable women tu Georgia
l*tw*en the years of 15 and 60.
Anyone can nominate a candidate. It la
not absolutely necessary to use the nominal
sending In votes, whether clipped from 'i
Georgian dally or upon paid-in-advance a
' mw" “ ** - * 1
Otlttfl
KS
coupons, printed dally In The Geor
gian, cooat for five votes the first week
sod on# vote after seven days. They should
he sent In promptly, t'srefnlly fill out eaoli
one with full name and address.
Every yearly pald-ln-afivaace NEW sub-
acriptlon cotints for 2.400 votes; OLD suh-
■ scriptlon 1.200 votes. Ever/ six months paid
XE'V .ub^rfkito».ro.u.t. .for
v coual
Every thw months, pnlii in nXrinro. ]
"JAW
IW T«m: UirU 3UIIITI IJMItMl iW TUIFI,
A NEW subscriber Is one who Is not now
change of name
i does not const!-
Vhere a subscrlp-
— PI —t member of the
family to another and the address remains
the same It Is not a new Rul>tcrll>er and
will not he accepted as such In this contest.
subscriber Is one who Is now a
to pay up past due subscriptions. A past
due subscription has to he |>nld up before
votes arc Issued on a paid-In-advance sub*
scriptlon to the same party.
New suiisorlptioti* count for twice
many votes os old subscriptions.
Tim city of Atlanta Is divided Into fifteen
districts, the suburbs luto five districts
and the state Into tcu districts.
There arc tour grand prises—11,009
largest number of votes bos her ehofee of
the grand nrlxes. The second one of the
second choice and so on for the third
and fourth highest contestants. i
One contestant can win only ons prise.
There ere ninety districts. Three prises
will I* awarded to each district. Irre
spective of the number of votes brought Id
from any other district.
The fourth contestant In diatrlct one may
get more votes than the firit contestant In
district 50. hut the contestant In district 30
wMI get first choice of the prises for dis
trict 30. In this way three prises will go
to esch district. The four successful con
testant* for the four grand prizes will not
receive any district prise*.
One prise only to each successful eon-
testa at
The district prises are: Ten Klngsherry
rlanos furnished by the Table liano Com
pany: 20 trips to Cuba, nil expenses paid
■■■■■■■■, frain time of 'tenvUtg home; thirty scholar-
No rotes are Issued on money brought In ! ships; fifteen diamond rings, and fifteen
An OLD subscriber Is one
euliecilber to The Georgian.
Ouc
T*r, 14.60; six months.
months. $1.25; one month, 45 cents.
Rofjucst for ballots must ho made at time
subscription |* paid.
Bubscrlptlons con be secured anywhere.
Contestants ore not restricted to their dis
trict In securing subscriptions.
The tnon*r must accompany all subscrip
tions for votes.
No commission Is allowed on voting sub-
script lout. Clubbing offers hot accepted as
voting subscrliitons. ,
Agents 'In state will Indicate whether
MUNYON
PRAISED!
GLOVES
WELL-KNOWN PEOPLE TES
TIFY FOE HIS REM-
EDIES.
Read What Mrs. Mellsop,
Mr. Canaan and Mrs.
Malloy Say.
• uere can be no longer any doubt Ww..
the curative qualities of Munyon's Reme
dies, Hundreds of reputable citiseus In all
•arts of the country are testifying that they,
isve been cured of different ailments.
Jverr person who suffers with rheumatism
hould write to Mrs. J. Mellsop. 37 Bases
street, Cambridge. Mass. Bbe will tell you
after taking all sorts of remedies and con
sulting many doctors, that she was cured by
Munyon's Rheumatism Itemed/.
We want every sufferer of Kidney aliment
to call on or write to ML Cannao, 1$ Ba
tavia street, Boston, lie will tell you on#
bottle of Munyon's Kidney Ilemedy made
him a well man. Then see or write to Mrs.
‘ Malloy, m Harrison avenue, Boston, •
We don't propose to add one word -to the
testimony of these people. We want you to
write to them or see them and know the
facts.
We do know that our 3X Rheumatism
Remedy cures obi chronic esses, that it is
Imberfng tip “ mm * jg
cures sharp,
positively. ■ ■ - . ■
We do know that Munyon’s Kidney Rem
edy Is making more cures than any remedy
ever compounded.
\Ve do know that w, c»n dll .this pspsr
foil of fsstlinouy from propls thxt hivo
been cured right In your own city. v
We do know that our Pile Ointment p<
lively cures plies; that our Dyspepsia Rf
edy cures all forms of stomach troubles.
We do know that our remedies are ab
lutely harmless, containing no morphine/
mine or other harmful drugs. *'
They are guaranteed under the Pure Food
Law.
8o|il by nil druggists.
FOR
Men. Women
an
a ch.id
ren
TRIBESMEN DEFY
REBELSJNCREASE
Entire Algerian Frontier
Will Soon Be Aflame Un
less Action Is Taken.
Th, voting coupon I, pnldlshnl dolly In
The fii’orslun. Flvo vot,» Brit week, one
vote tberriftcr. , <
Don't hi\ve to lie n subscriber to be n
All aubsrripUoui mint bsve name and
number of street or R. F. II. route plaluly
MMt opened Friday. November 1 . .
. i„ nud close, Hnturdny, midnight, Fell
runry J, IMA
Write or roll at The Georgian nfffce for
nny further pnrtlculsra and fur lilnnka.
Head nil Mihsrrlptlcitia. remlttnnces and
letter, to The Atlnntn Georgian Conical
Department, Atlnntn Georgia
Oran, Algeria, Nov. *8.—Heavy
French reinforcements have been
thrown into the field, and fierce fight-
Ing Is progressing today along the
frontier againet Beni Hansen and the
trlbearnen who, after capturing the
French otttpoat at Babelaeaa yesterday,
meeting with a -tioeequent repulse and
retreating acfpaa the border, have again
invaded Algeria and begun bunting vil
lages and defying all the force,. The
rebel strength la eteadlly growing and
the entfre frontier will aeon bc.atlanie,
unless tno revolt Is quickly suppressed.
A dfcUmltldn of hdly war Is constantly
expected^ ^ • ,.%JB
LivoWra Cauaea Suit.
Alleging that a live wire on Decs
tur street colled around hta leg and
shocked him into insensibility on April
22. Henry Miller Saturday filed suit
for damages In the turn of 82,000
against the Georgia Railway and Klee
trie Company. Negligence la alleged
on the part of the defendant because
the wlre’wss permitted to assume rucl
c. position ns to constitute a menace t
the safety of the public. Attorney
Robert U Rodgers Is attorney for the
plaintiff.
A Kirkcaldie flown
As a Christmas Suggestion
Where is the woman who would appreciate anything
more than a Kirkcaldie gown as a Christmas present!
It's a sensible, serviceable and lastinggift.
Commencing Tomorrow Kirkcaldie Will Book Xmas
Orders at Very Low and Special Prices.
Guaranteed deliver} 7 by December the Twenty-fifth. i
Gowns made at $25.00 and upwards.
See the stock, make selections and book orders at once.
KIRKCALDIE
73 1-2 Whitehall Street.
disheartening fact Is that the most obvious
lesNons seem the hardest to learn. There
never has been n teaeher, a philosopher, au
obfferver of life, from the earliest days of
human society, who has nof uttered wsrar
lug* against that mountrou* fylg feet wblctfl
we veil under the indite phrase, "the social
evil." Yet every large community, In our
own land and time, sees tueu planting their
feet In the way* that lead to this death.
Everybody lives as If nobody had ever
lived before. The latest /outh who calls a
routine life of respectable work and pure
(dcasqrc* "slow" and monotonous, thinks
considers
homo folks
rfSE
EXPERT DENTISTRY
At Prices With
in Reach of All
For worn off or broken down oonoi-
tivo tooth, have thorn built out with
ItlinOQT gold or porcelain.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Dr. D. B. Dawson, Manager. Graduate of University of Tennessee, 1889, and stood tho required examinations
to praotico dentistry in Georgia, Kentucky, Florida and Alabama.
ENTERPRISE PAINLESS DENTISTS
100 1-2 Whitehall St. Over Brannen & Anthony’s Drug Store.
Bell Phene 3211. Office hours 8 a. ro. to 19 p. m. H unday a, t a. nt. to 4 p. m. Open Evenings 10.
—PI. He
■PMH d
silt* "life" nud "excitement." Just ae.lf
that same folly bad not l>een commit!#
millions l»efore him. Including thia li
Ileiirew, Hnuisou. Whola nations have
to ruin by the path of scusuality: wuom
nations today lie shamed aud weaklings be.
fori* the face of stronger powers for the
selr-sauio reason. Whoever I* tempted by
nandertng deslres—and who Is not?~shonld
remember that every man who puts his
head in Italllab’a lap Is shorn of his
strength. Without any prudery, or false
modesty, let the t*mchrr* of men say so. In
stead of conjuring up a whole army of of
fenses ngnlnst ninnmade regulations. Their
failure to do so is one reason why many
strong men, who kuow real life, have no
time tor much of the day's religious teach
log-. -
Tha Ejc-Glave*a Strength,
simpering beauty thinks ah.
Is responsible for the pretty face with
. . . ke was born. Kr~ —* *“*—
takes credit to himself M
Kvery giant acts ua though he had made
his own rlqbes. Hninson, sported with. '
strength as though it were altogether
own, to do with as be pleased. Whereas,
the deep trtfth runs that we have, only be-
:iuse we have been given; abilities are only
talents," given to'custody by a kind Prpv
Jence; the hel(»ed arr the strong.
Old ••fuel# Billy," n Virginia ex-slave,
was telling me the simple, compelling story
of his own life. Of unknown age at pres
ent, he still chops all the firewood-cords
of it—for a large household that uses no
other fuel " 'Dead. I doesn't know how
I does it. Why, I has the rbeuuiatis so bad
that I i-an't hardly h'lst tny arm this high"
—painfully raising It a few Inches—••but f
right l»eslde me all the day. Ho say*,
vuii know, ‘Whithersoever ye may he, there
I am, too.* I know** It. *o I docs. Ami
some (In y"—here the wriukled old black
tace took on a new light—"He's gwlne to
gimme a mite what'll outshine the ann, out
shine the sun."
Is that, faith too simple, too childlike?
Nay. despite all Its Ignorances and misquo
tations, It Is the very faith for the times.
The old negro lias grasped the heart of the
truth of God’s fatherhood. He cares for
his own; he helps them. In matters small
as in matters great. It Is the spiritual
teaching which underlies the Samson story:
Samson, wms not strong in hitnseif; be was
made strong by Jehovah. When he got out
or right relations with Jehovah, he lost hta
strength.
Casy a* It was for Delilah to cut Samson's
locks. It Is equally easy for the secular
inirit to sap the secret strength of a t'hris-
ila-* ~ ' “ *“■* * ' **
linn's
Samson hail a careless Alarm
PI. ■ Inuri'C strength and sweetest
joy, should be guarded more zealously than,
life. For It may Ih> lost, even by the
strongest. No man Is too high in Christian
iwork and usefulness to be above the danger
l«f hTSlni^lahettrtN^e^jr^sur^Throjgh
and restore, even as He did Samson.
not to the old estate, The returned prodigal
.-tinny* lietirs tree**' of the far rodbtrv'ea
his spirit.
There s a complete
ness, a comprehensive-
ness, a satisfaction
about the C.-J.-DuB.
Glove Department that
has made it the mecca
of the majority of At
lanta gflove purchasers. The uniformly good quality, the un
failing good service, the unremitting attention to fashion s de
mands, that you find here have become practically proverbial.
And it hasn t kk just happened. We ve worked and^ striven to
bring this to pass and we enjoy the prestige we have won.
Here's a list which will he suggestive not only for your
Saturday s buying, hut emphatically useful for the Holiday
glove-buying that you 11 he doing right along now:
Ladies’ 16-button suede Gloves; black
and white $2.50
Ladies\ 12-button suede Gloves; black,
white, tan and gray $1-75
Ladies’ heavy double-lined silk Gloves,
Kayser make; black, navy and brown
$1.00
Ladies’ 16-button real kid glaee Gloves,
Trefousse make:
I?1 black; tan, cream, light blue, pink,
cardinal, navy, mode, slate, pearl, Nile
green, reseda green, Neptune green and
lavender Fair $3.50
Ladies’ 12-button real kid glace Gloves,
Trefousse make, in blacky white, tan,
brown and slate............ Pair $3.25
S'
Ladies’ 8-buttou real kid glace Gloves,
Trefousse make, in black, white and all
colors for street wear Pair $2.50
Ladies’ 2-clasp real kid glaee Gloves,
“Dorothy-Trefousse” make, in black,
white and all desirable colors Pair $2.00
Ladies’ 2-clasp pique kid Gloves, Tre
fousse make, in black, white, slate, tan,
brown and red Pair $2.00
Ladies' walking Gloves in a heavy cape
—Gloves with a smart, mannish air to
'them. Trefousse make. In all tail
shades Pair $2.00
Ladies* 16-button kid Gloves in glace.
Our special make, “Zettie.” In black,
white, tan and slate Pair $3.50
Ladies’ 12-button glace kid Gloves; our
special make, in-black, white, tan and
alate Pair $3.25
Ladies’ 2-elasp real kid Gloves, Navarre
brand;. black, white and all colors
Pair $1.50
Ladies’ 2-clasp pique street Gloves in
tan, gray aud red Pair $1.25
Ladies’ 1-clasp pique Gloves in black,
white, tan, brown, red and gray. Paris
Point stitched Pair $1.00
Misses’2-clasp kid Gloves, “Tampa,’’
in red, brown, tan, mode and white.
Paris Point stitched Pair $1.00
Ladies’ heavy cape driving Gloves,
gauntlet effect; tans Pair $2.25
Ladies’ heavy driving gauntlet Gloves,
in tans only Pair $1.75
Ladies’ golf Gloves; black and white;
fancy colors 50c
Children’s Mitts; light blue, pink,
white, navy, red, brown 25c
MEN'S GLOVES
Men's wool Gloves; black, navy, brown
50c
Men’s heavy driving Gloves; $1.75 to
Ladies’ 8-button heavy pique Gloves, in $3.50
tan only Pair $2.00 Men’s white dress Gloves Pair $2.00
Men’s pique kid Gloves, in tan.
Pair$1.50
Men’s dress kid Gloves, in tan.
the Paris Point stitching adds so much .. Pair $1.75
The “Solitaire”—in the glove world
it is known as the best dollar glove on
the market. It lias style aiid good fit—
to their smartness.
lu black, white and all the new colors
Price $1.00
Men’s silk Gloves; browns, tans, grays
and white; Kayser make. Pair $1.00
to $1.50
With all i\ ove purchases from $1.50 up we will give a
most attractive Cliristmae Glove Box, a dainty package in
which to encase your glove-gift.
Chamberlin-J ohnson-
DuBose Company