Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 19, 1912, EXTRA 2, Page 8, Image 8

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8 Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Company Atlanta New York Paris Just Bargains We are very careful with the use of the word Bar gain. we never use it without good reason. So that when we do label merchandise as bargains we draw no line between our viewpoint and yours. You will quickly see that these values are bar gains. They will be found in Wash Goods Depart ment. Renaissance Squares and Scarfs ißxiß-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly 50c at 29c 32x32-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly SI.OO at 65c ißxs4-inch Renaissance Scarfs, formerly $1.25 at 69c ißxs4-inch Renaissance Scarfs, formerly $1.50 at 89c 30x30-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly $1.50 at sl.lO 30X30-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly $2.25 at $1 50 54x54-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly $4.50 at $3.75 Sheets and Pillow Cases They are at these prices because they will have to be laundered once before they will be as good as those at regular prices. 45x36-inch hemstitched Pillow Cases, formerly 22 i-2c at 19c 45x36-!nch hemstitched Pillow Cases, formerly 27 i-2c at 23c Bix9O-inch hemstitched Pepperell Sheets, formerly 95c at 79c 72XQ9-inch hemstitched .Anchor Sheets, formerly 90c at 79c Bixqo-inch hemstitched Pepperell Sheets, formerly 95c at 80c 90X99-inch hemstitched Pepperell Sheets, formerly $i at 85c Umbrellas and Fancy Parasols A little lot of colored silk—solid colors-umbrellas, with paragon frames should quickly disappear now that they are half price. Those that were $1.50 are 75c Those that were $3.00 are $1.50 Those that were $3.50 are $1.75 Those that were $5.00 are $2.50 I And black silk umbrellas with paragon frames and natural wood’ handles—often mounted with gold are converted into extraordinary bargains by these changes in prices. $2.50 Umbrellas are SI.OO - $5 00 Umbrellas are $3.00 $4.00 Umbrellas are $2.00 $6.50 Umbrellas are $3 50 $4.50 Umbrellas are $2.50 $7.50 Umbrellas are $3.75 All the richly colored and flowered and striped and and bordered parasols, with their beautifully stained carved wood handles—parasols that it would be wise to buy now and put away for next spring—are marked at exactly Half Price Chaiiibeiiin=Johnson=Dußose Co. FOR DINORUFF, FALLING HAIR DR ITCHY SCAIP-25 CENT DANDFRINE Save your hair! Danderine destroys dandruff and stops falling hair at once—Grows hair, we prove it. If you <HI ■ (H hewxx hair that glis- ! u i)y with Iw'tiij <n<. is radiant xxlth Hf«- h;i an incomparable and is fl utt x and 'usuou.-. •mi must uj»«- iv.tp inn aus» nothing »■!?♦ accom- plishes ni» mm j, tor the- -n.ili Just <m« applivaUoA <f Knowltons Dandrriim will double th« beaut \ ° f voui hi ir. b< Ides it iimiir *hai» di> •\. > e\» r\ part it h of danu uii 50 nm 1 a\« nice, heavy, health u if ou x , datidtulT ThU ‘b -t , n\ v . t .n f 1 ,)♦ hair <»t it* * sin-ngii. and ns very lit* an ’ >'■ I - urn | ..... H feX m mis- . .<»». n and di« 11 n c Adxeru the hair falls out fast. If your hair h •> be. n negle« ted and is thin faded dry. scraggy nr too oily, don’t hesitate, but wt .1 25 cent bottir of Knowlton s Danderine at anx drug store <»i ■ '!«t counter, applx a little ;rs Uit . ted ..nd t»-n minute? aliri you bl . *‘s\ in. ir \\ » Mllirh‘t> t.»- ie\ . . icgardlvs- of Vrl*\lhit)g is. ii<i Xe : t i.*»ed. lh.it if xmi desire soft. iMtro i> beautiful haii and lot? <»f it im dandruff no itching s alp hind no mo»r fulling hair void mu*t ii«. Knoxvlton* Dand»rim |f • > ent u. \ rod no ' A <rm ’ I’ ’ '• >tll irulx aiii.txt >ou. iMCimni » I THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. 1912. ANNOUNCEMENT Jno. L. Moore & Sons are just in receipt of their large import order of FTeM and Opera Glasses. You should see them. Prices that will astonish you. Call and let them show you. 42 North Broad St. (Advertisement.) THANK YOU F'or your Kodak business. If you are not getting satisfactory results, bring yout iihtis to us for development Wo use onh the best material Out-of. town oiTi. rs given prompt attention at Jno I- Moore X Sons. 42 X Broad St . Kodak headquarters. t Advertisement > -- LOST EXPRESSION <nirniiims ir>ultf» ftmn 111-tittlng y. It .- I AltH.it a Sens at. . I nr-'! nnd mdh lans I’o ‘.•nd » nf.ii f abb g I.lbring xotir m» •• nptions am • t h»*m s;lv< -.» i :hr * h»-m nt of • \p. rt t i • X ! i A Aux til iwrineni l CHAS. S. ROBERT. Candidate for Chief of Con- '■ str action. ■ Treat Wk I ■H'W ,'W At < * ! CHARLES S. ROBERT. The horrible condition of our .streets is known to every man. woman and child in this city. It is to improve these conditions that I appeal to the voters of Atlanta. No criticism or re flection is intended or cast against the present chief of construction, but against the conditions that exist under his administration. These conditions could not be worse, and almost any change would bring a measure of relit As a civil engineer with exceeding twenty years of experience, fourteen of which have been (thanks to your suf frage) as county surveyor—l am quali fied in every sense of the word for! the office foi which I offer. If elected.' I can and will improve present condi tions. and it is on this platform that I ask for your votes. Very respectfully. CHARLES S. ROBERT. (Advertisement.) AT THE BONITA w 1 f i LEON NORTON. An old Atlanta boy with the Carter Musical Comedy Company at the Boni ta this week. (Advertisement.) Believes This Will “Cure Lung Troubles” Consumption is a flattering disease— that is one of its chief dangers. Those who have it are rarely willing to acknowl edge the tact. If this trouble is present, it is no time for trifling. If a so-called “cold” has long if a cough is present that keeps you anxious, or any of the symptoms are present, such as fever or night sweats, weakness and loss of ■ appetite, and perhaps some raising of mucus—do the sensible thing: take Eck man’s Alterative—as Mr. Bettersworth did. Bowling Green, Ky., R. No. 4 “Gentlemen: I wish to say for your Alterative that I believe it to be a medi cine of unequaled value for all Bronchial and Lung trouble. The Spring of 1908. I had a severe for six months. I tried all the medicine that my doctors recommended to me. hut no results came I for the hotter. I had night sweats, and j would cough ano spit until 1 got so weak I could hardly do air. thing. But. at last, James Deering, of Glasgow Junction, in sisted that I try your medicine. In one week’s time there was quite a<i improve ment in my condition, and after 1 had taken several bottles. I felt as well as ever in my life. “1 desire the world 1<» know that 1 firm ly believe th.it your Eckman’s Alterative will cure any < ase of lung trouble if taken before the last stage. I will gladly writ? personally to any party warning informa tion in regard to your wonderful medi cine.” (Sworn affidavit.' A. U. BETTEKSWdHTII. Eckman’s Alterative is effective in Bronchitis. Asthma. Hay Fever; Throat and Lung Troubles and in unbuilding the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates or habit-forming drugs. For sale by all Jacobs' Drug Stores, ami other leading druggists Ask for booklet telling of re- ■ coveries. and write to Eckman Labora tory. Philadelphia, Pa for additional evi dence (Advertisement, i CASH GROCERY CO. THURSDAY GUARANTEED COUNTRY EGGS! Cents Dozen Limit 6 Dozen to a Customer, j THURSDAY ONLY. CASH GROCERY CO, i 118 120 Whitehall St, |l MEN AND RELIGION BULLETIN NO. 20 “The Houses In Our Midst” A CHOICE OF COMPANY But Not of Evils Right is common sense. Sodom suggests hideous vice. Capernaum was famous for its beauty, wealth and culture. Notwithstanding, Jesus said that, in the day of judgment, it would be more tolerable for Sodom than for Capernaum. The reason is common sense. Capernaum had had better opportunities to know what was right than Sodom had, and rejected them. Nicodemus, like many another so-called eminently respectable citi zen before and since, did not dare to come out openly for the right. After sunset, he sneaked through the shadows of Jerusalem’s streets to see Jesus. Much of that prominent citizen’s pride of position must have oozed away in the night, when he heard Jesus say: “This is the judgment, that the light is come into the world and men loved darkness rather than the light; for their works were evil.” Jesus voiced only common sense. Vice honestly viewed in the light can not live. Hence the desire of some for silence with reference to the social evil and the Houses in our Midst. Honest study, knowledge kills it and them. Apply sincere thought to the facts. Nothing more is asked or expected of you. Until they investigated, some of the members of this Executive Com mittee believed in segregation. Today, they are as one in asking the suppression of these houses ille gally protected by the police. The members of the Chicago Vice Commission were: Dean Walter T. Sumner, William Healy, M. D., Judge W. M. Phinekney, W. L. Baum. M. D., Mrs. Ellen M. Henrotin, Alexander Robertson, Blaustein. Rev. Abraham Hirshberg, Julius Rosenwald, Rev. J. F. Callaghan, Prof. Charles R. Henderson, Louis E. Schmidt, M D_ Anna Dwyer, iVi. u„ Rev. E. A. Kelly, Bishop C. T. Schaffer, W. A. Evans, M. D.. Rev. John G. Kircher, Hon. Edwin W. Sims, Rev. Albert Evert. Louis O. Katz, Edward M. Skinner. Rev. Dr. Frank Gunzaulus, P. J. O’Keefe, Prof. Graham Taylor, W. W. Hallman, Judge Harry Olson, Prof. Herbert L. Willett, Prof. William J. Thomas, Prof. Wm. I. Thomas. Abraham W. Harris, LL.D.. Hon. John L. Whitman. At the first, many of these believed in segregation. After investigation they were a unit in recommending the suppres sion of the houses. The members of the Minneapolis Vice Commission were: Rev. Marion D. Shutter, Prof. John H. Gray, Nicholas C. O’Connor, Eugene T. Lies. Prof. David H. Painter, Charles M. Way, Rev. Father James McLeary, Herbert O. Collins, M. D„ Gilbert L. Byron. Judge Edward F. Waite, Max P. Vander Horck. M. D., Stiles P. Jones, Edward J. Davenport, Mrs. Mabel S Ulrich, M. D., Mrs. Mary L. Starkweathe At the outset, the majority of these were opposed to trying to sup press the houses. The chairman, a minister, says in their report: “The chairman has yielded the theory which he had on becoming a member of this commission to the overwhelming evidence which he dis covered against it.” Like the Chicago Vice Commission, without a dissenting vote, they recommended the suppression of the houses, declaring the public houses of prostitution the center of the evil, the market place for the white slave trade, and “the source of most of the loathsome disease which afflicts so ciety.v New York’s Committee of Fifteen had the following members: Wm. H. Baldwin, Jr., Wm. J. O'Bryan, Jacob H. Schiff, Felix Adler, Alexander E. Orr, Andrew J. Smith. Joel B. Erhardt, . George Foster Peabody, Charles Spraoue Smith, Austin G. Fox, George Haven Putnam, Charles Stewart Smith, John S. Kennedy, J. Harren Rhodes, Edwin R. A. Seligman. They put the emphasis upon the enforcement of existing laws. They recommended the punishment not of the women,°but of the men higher up who live upon their shame. Many of the members of the Chicago, New York and Minneapolis Committees were and are men of more than national reputation. Their attitude before and after study is significant. But more so are developments in France, cited by many from hear say as a model for the scientific handling of the social evil. Scandals in connection with their systems caused the French Parlia ment to appoint an extra-parliamentary Commission of 75 members. Among them were legislators, doctors, prefects, mayors, publicists, and professors of political economy. Their sessions lasted three years. At the start, those in favor of abolishing the whole French system as a failure were in the minority. “The force of their arguments and the facts presented by them was such that at the end of their deliberations the Commission voted by a considerable majority that the entire system of regulation as practiced in France was so defective and on the whole so immoral that it ought to be entirely abandoned.” They recommended that all “tolerated and licensed houses” be pro hibited. Not yet has their report been adopted by the French Parliament. Like America, France is cursed with not a few politicians to whom protecting the virtue of girls and the health of their country is nothing in comparison with the importance of keeping their masters pleased. But “all the great chiefs of the medical faculties and all the import ant heads of hospitals have now become converted” to the views of the Commission. The adoption of their report in the end is inevitable. In America, the nation wide fight against men living by buving and selling women is being led by David Starr Jordan, President of the Le land Stanford University; His Eminence James Cardinal Gibbons, Very Reverend Dean Walter T. Sumner, Dr. Charles W. Eliot, President Emeritus of Harvard University; Julius Rosenwald, of Chicago; Miss Jane Addams, Dr. 0. Edward Janney, of Baltimore, and others who are officers and directors of the American Vigilance Association, the object of which is to Stamp out houses of prostitution and the white slave trade. Consider and choose! Such men and women on one side with God. On the other are the pimp, the procuress, the corrupt politician, the landlord and other criminals with Satan. Where do you belong? Atlanta should and will close the Houses in our Midst. THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Ot the Men and Religion Forward Movement.