Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 29, 1912, HOME, Page 8, Image 8

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8 FM EXPERTS ' TO MEET HERE' Two National Conventions for Uplift of Agriculture Convene in Atlanta in November. i Two national annual conventions of the , leading agricultural worker in the United States will take place ;n Atlanta next , month, one ending the day the other be gins. The seventeenth annual meeting of the American Assoiiation of Farmers Institute Workers will begin on Novem ber 11 and end November 13, while thc| twenty-sixth annual convention of the; Association of Ann rican Agricultural Col- j . leges and Ivxperinient Stations begins No- | , vember 13 and ends November 13. I . Every state in the union will be re;. ' ■ resented at the opening session of the ; Institute workers. and ever l phase of in stitute v >rk will be discussed before the ; convention ends M"-t of those in at- i tendar.ee will attend the college and ex- < periment s'.tt on convention. The. rela- j tion of .-c cati. t: to agriculture will be ; ti.e priiti ’iul tl co..' developed during the I second convention dore than two hun dred ;.i- i are i:. pec ted to attend. Seek Organization Unit. Among the most important topics which , will bi ■:■.-( isst-i b\ ti e institute workers will be :.e m ..f i.rgatiization ia funn els' i;.-tit work: tin- relation of the ' instituf* 1 ■ ag . m.’tmai college and < « , l . . ' ■ ■I < sot ‘ ,1. C : . j , y. • . <r. i t.; best methods ot j, y 'i.u rg up lit . preparing ami sell- ( j. .arm .>ro.lue.-, und co-operation in P I •.■b'im. mrm labor. I'l , . . , . for education in , o | lie tea tunes .. ... in.ii:--.- of the Special (■, .| ... •■f i. • m.l cspt ritoeutal fat . lessons in tlie public I ,rn 'I ■ ■■■ O| -P ■ ial .rains as a tn eu' ■ .t c t . .on t< a < <■< *■ g will also 1 . ; T! ' prii.cipul point . ii' s.-ed wdi be ed oath m ( Mmy p vmir.ent socakers. \II ,: g ;.t principal speakers who w ill •mm,os id . Institute workers will i u I -fl afuyette. Ind.: W p OHn. i ■ •. hlaliti; P. H. Kolfs. of Ga r.e-ville. t 1. . a. 1.. Ellsworth, of Boh tom Alass.i W ll Ingling. Freehold, N. J. ind oilier.-. rhe • fibers who will be present are Franklin Dye, president, of Trenton, N. .1.: F. 11. Rankin. vice president, of Ur bana 111.: lulm Hamilton, secretary treasurer. of Washington, I>. C., and t\. J. Black, ot Winnipeg, Canada. President W. E. Stone, of Prirdue uni versity Indiana, will open the speaking at the general session of the college and experiment station workers, and will be followed by Philander I’. Claxton, the United States commissioner of education. Other important speakers will be Dr. A. C. True, of the department of agriculture; Dr. H. C. White, of Georgia; F. B. Jenks, land grant specialist for the United States, and many other of the most famous agri cultural education experts in_the country LA GRANGE VOTES WATER. GAS AND SCHOOL BONDS DA GRANGE, GA., Oct. 29. -Citizens of LaGrange voted unanimously yes terday for bonds to build a $150,000 waterworks plant, carried a $40,000 gas plant bond issue with only 1!' opposing votes, and $40,000 additional public schools bonds with only 21 votes against. The total vote was 349 out of a registration of 3X3. The bonds will be issued shortly nlie validation by Judge It W. Freeman, "f the Troup superior ! court. The passagi of these bond issues means that laiGiange v ill build wate. ■works and gas plants fin a city, of BO.Otio pe sons, and public schools to take care <d' the populace for the next twenty a:.-. GULPS QUART OF WHISKY TO WIN WAGER: IS DEAD NEW V< >RK. < >et 29. l-'.ri ward Kane, a liriV' r. drink a <;u >rt of whisky, win ning a bet, smiled, walked home and then died. John Mann, who held the Othe end of the wager, has been ar rested. SWALLOWS MOOSE PIN: TAFT DOCTOR CALLED IOWA FALLS. lOVVA. Oct. 28.—The . three-yt ar-old son of Robert O. Fowler I today swallowed his father's Bull Moose I pin. The attending physician, although a Taft standpatter, said he did not think an operation necessary . WE WILL. MAIL YOU $1 for each set of old False Tcth sent us. Highest price paid for obi Gold, Silver, old Walcla . Broken Jewelry and Precious Stones. Money Sent Bv Return Mail. Phila. Smelting <md Refining Co.. i Established 20 Years. 863 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia, Pa TO DENTISTS We will buy your Goli! Tilings. Gold Scrap and Platinum. Highest prices paid WILTON JELLICO COAL $5.00 Per Ton The Jellico Goal Go. 82 Peachtree Street Eoth Phones 3661 PENNSYLVANIA ROAD SAID TO HAVE EYE ON ATLANTIC COAST LINE WAYCROSS. GA., Oct. 29.—Unoffi cial but , insistent reports coining here from Savannah state that there is a strong possibility of the Pennsylvania railroad getting control of the Atlantic Coast Line in a short time. In fact, it is reported that the juestion may be ■■Hied at a meeting of the Coast Line directors in November. , Rumors of negotiations between the two big systems have been current foi re.lll s and a year ago Baltimore linali eial circles apparently held the news officially. The Penn-ylvania is seek ing outlets on the South Atlantic and Gulf coasts which the Coast Line con trols at present. WOMAN WORTH $35,000 STARVES FOR 18 DAYS ST. LOUIS. Oct. 29.—Police broke into the home of Mrs. Johanna F. Bier at Alton after she had isolated herself for eighteen days, and found her almost starved to death. Mrs. Bier is 33 years and is sep arated from her husband Although Mrs. Bier is said to be worth. »15.000, owning several farms at Pana. 111., there was nothing but a stove, one chair and the sofa in the house. The police are seeking her husband, to urge him to have her sanity inquired into. FAREWELL TO PASTOR. COLUM BL'y, GA.. Oct. 29.—A fare well service was held at Rose Hill Bap tist church of Columbus for the retiring l iistor. Rev. R. U. Granberry, who re cently rtsigned to accept the pastorate of the Tattnall Hqtiure Baptist church in Macon. Mr. Granberry will leave W ednesday for Macon. He is succeed ed n‘- pastor of the Rose Hill church by Iley .1. <'. Wilkinson. LAND COMPANY ASKS CHARTER. BRUNSWICK, GA Oct. 29.-A peti tion tor elini t' has been asked of Me in! mil superior court by the Mclntosh County Land and Improvement Com pany. with a capital stock of slo,(ma. Tile incorporators are W. G. Tyson. J. I’. Thompson and Charles M. Ty son, ..11 of Da ieu. Dandruff Goes Falling Hair Ceases, Scalp Itch Vanishes, New Hair Grows Profusely and Becomes Fascinating. Money Back If It Doesn’t Don't say, “I've read all that before" —just go to your dealer right away, lay down 50c and say, "I want a bottle of that PARISIAN SAGE that so many sensible people are using.” Then take it homo and use it as directed and then if you are not satisfied that it is just as advertised take back the empty bottle and your money will be refunded, "Vri tty risky offer," you’ll say; not at ers know just what Parisian SAGE will do and h ive the promise of the American makers, the Giroux Mfg Co. of Buffalo. N. Y., that they will back him up in his strong guarantee. Pretty fair and square offer, isn’t it? Mrs. J. G. Franklin, Fulton, Mo., writes: SAGE eradicates dandruff, cleans the scalp and makes the iipir fluffy and beautiful; also is a good hair grower. 1 shall continue to use it as long as it gives such perfect satisfaction." Ask for PARISIAN SAGE Hair Tonic and firmly refuse substi; utes. The girl with the atiburn hair Is on every pack age. and your druggist will tell you that Parisati Sage Is a splendid hail- dress ing. free from poisonous lead or other dangerous ingredients. (Advt.l THE BON-TON 94 WHITEHALL STREET New Fall Coat Suits, SIO.OO Stylish Women's and Misses' Coat Suits. Serges and fancy mixtures, in blues, black and mixtures. Coats full sarin lined. All sizes. CIA A A Worth $15.00. Choice WEDNESDAY <pIV.UU All Alterations Free New Fall Tailored Suits, $15.00 A large variety of stylish Women's ami Misses' Coat Suits. Pretty serges, cheviots, diagonals and basket weaves. Blues, black and mixtures. Extra qualitv satin linings. Suits worth S2O. 0? 1 C A A Choice WEDNESDAY. .... . All Alterations Free Silk Petticoats, $1.98 Mes>aline and taffeta silk Petticoats in black and all colors. 1 QO Several stylesand worth 54.00. Choice WEDNESDAY New Waists, SI.OO Lingerie, cotton voile and linene, Whitewash Waists. A great AA variety of styles, worth up to $2.00 Choice WEDNESDAY ipi»vv WAISTS COATS New Fall Waists, in black and colors.. N-’west long ,-oats for ladies and miss es m all the best materials. $7.00, $lO Silk and chiffons —$2.50 and up. $12.50. • FINE TRIMMED HATS Lot 1-$3.50 Lot 2-$5.00 Values to $5.00 Values to J 10.00 ALL HATS AND TRIMMINGS BOUGHT HERE WEDNESDAY, TRIMMED FREE OF CHARGE THE BON-TON 94 WHITEHALL STREET HIE ATLANTA GEOKGJAA AND NEWS.TVY. OCTOBEK 29. lFn< RACING GAS BAGS HEADED FOR SEA Twelve Balloons. Including One of Uncle Sam’s. Still Aloft in International Air Race. STUTTGART. GERMANY. Oct. 29. Twelve balloons, im hiding one Ameri can entry, .-till wore aloft this after noon in the contest for the international • up. which began here Sunday, The seven balloons which had come down were; Million Population. America, John Berry, pilot, landed at Gramby, 420 miles from starting point. Graf Zeppelin, Denmark, Captain Seidelln, pilot, landed at Hostin, 255 miles from starting point. Azurea, Switzerland, R. O. Mueller, pilot, landed at Lembachshoff, 140 miles from starting point. The Busley, Austria, landed 615 miles from the starting point. The Astarte, Austria, and the Libia, Italy, covered only short distances. The Helvetia landed 457 miles from Stuttgart. The remaining entry from the United States, the. Uncle Sam, still is in the air. The balloons still up are being car ried toward the Baltic sea. Fears that some of the balloons may descend in the sea have caused notices to be sent to shipping agencies to have tlieir steamers watch for contesting gas bags. Nothing had been heard up to noon from tlie Dusseldorf 11. an onoftieial en try, manned by Americans who were in charge of tlie Kansas City 11. which burst jus as the race was starting. John Watts, of Kansas City, Mo., is piloting the Dusseldorf 11. HOME MAKING The first step in buying or building a home is the Savings Account. Every one should have a home of his own. A savings account with this bank, with regular, deposits from the income, will provide the money - for the first payment upon one. The .sooner you begin, the sooner you will live in your own home. AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK ATLANTA, GA. Under Government Supervision WEALTHY WOMAN NOW LEARNS SHE MAY BE CHANGELING | ST. LOUIS. Oct. 29.—Mrs. Daisy Auer < 'gden, who for thirty-one y ears supposed she was the daughter of wealthy Mr. and Mrs. “Andy" Auer, has learned through court testimony in iter suit to obtain a share in the SIOO,OOO Auer estate that she may be a changeling, the daughter of a servant in the Auer household. The woman who Mrs. Ogden thinks may have been her mother appeared as a wit ness and told of the strange manner in which the baby had been found in tlie house the morning after Mrs. Auer's baby was supposed to have died. COSTLY TO SQUEEZE ARM: WOMAN RECEIVES SI,OOO TEXARKANA, TEX.. Oct. 29.—The Bowie county court, upon the verdict of a jury, has ordered the Texas & Pacific Railroad Company to pay dam ages in the amount of SI,OOO to Mrs. G. W. Brewer, because a brakeman in the road's employment squeezed her arm. The brakeman admitted the squeez ing, but claimed he had meant no of- | sense and that he only wanted to be | friendly. Mrs. Brewer is young and handsome. Obtain New Life. Howells’ Lymphine TABLETS THE SUPREME TONIC AX'D VITALIZE!! Restores the lost nerve force and exhausted vital ity by r*»plu<-lng Hie dead nerve and brain tissues. A remedy fol Nervous Prostration. Neurasthenia. Paralysis and all vitiated or weakened conditions of the system In men or women. A positive remetlv for Dyspepsia und Indigestion. Guaranteed tree , from narcotic drugs. Every inch of Improvement 1 comes to stay. Write sot our next I>ook. Each j package containing FELL : DAYS' TREATMENT, by mail. sl. < 11. St.. New York City. For sale at all Jacobs’ Pharmat-v Crt.’s nine stores in Atlanta: Brown & Allen. 24 Wxitehall St.. At lanta. and leading druggists. Men and Religion Bulletin No. 27 THE LAW “On These Two Commandments The Whole Law Hangeth” A lawyer asked “Master, which is the great commandment in the law?’’ Jesus answered: _ “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy mind. “This is the great and first commandment. “And a second like unto it is this, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. “On these two commandments the whole law hangeth.’’ Love is more than feeling. It is action—conduct. Jesus best defined it when He said: “All things, therefore, whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, even so do ye also unto them.” THIS IS THE BASIS OF ALL OF OUR LAWS. Man is a mixture of good and evil; in him generosity and kindness are mingled with selfishness, lust and greed; at times the evil predominates, and, if uncontrolled works havoc by causing one to do to another that which he would not have others do to himself. For this reason, in moments of sane deliberation, unswayed by passion, fanati cism, lust, or greed, civilized men recognizing the nature of men, frame and adopt laws to insure both to the weakest and to the strongest members of society the jus tice and mercy which every man would have others give to him—to compel men, re gardless of their desires, to deal rightly with one another. And those qualities, which make necessary the enactment of laws, render it un wise to leave to the discretion of public officials their enforcement or non-enforce raent. Therefore, men elected or appointed to office are required to swear that they will enforce the law, not as they think it should be, but as it is written. To all, this is the guarantee of justice and mercy. To betray men’s daughters for money is neither just nor merciful Nor is the maintenance of public market places for the purchase and sale of women. Nor is it for able-bodied men to live upon the shame of women. Hence our laws and ordinances, which make impossible the return to our Midst of the Houses. Builded and maintained by the degradation, sorrow, and suffering of women, they neither meet a need, nor bring prosperity and happiness to a great city. And while breeding and spreading the most malignant and deadly diseases to in nocent women and children, they serve only to fill the pockets of the most debased and depraved of criminals. These evils are wholly unnecessary and undesired in Atlanta. BUT THE ETERNAL LAW UNDERLYING THESE TRUTHS DEMANDS MORE THAN MERE PROHIBITION. Children must be taught the vital facts of life. A living wage should be paid to women and girls who labor. Their hours of toil made reasonable. Miss Jane Addams says: “I have seen many young girls lose out in the struggle to live honestly upon wages too meager and intermittent to support them.” In a distant city, day after day. three times a day, with other prayers, working girls prayed. "O God, our Father, you who are generous, who said, ‘Ask and ye shall receive,’ we your children humbly beseech you to grant that we may re ceive enough wages to clothe and feed our bodies, and just a little leisure, O Lord, to give our souls a chance to grow. “O Christ, Thou, who waited through the long night in the Garden of Gethsemane for one of Your followers, who was to betray You, who in agony for us didst say to Your disciples, ‘Will thou not watch one hour with me?’ give strength to those who are now on picket duty, not to feel too bitterly when those who promised to stand with us in our strug gle betray us. “O Lord, who knowest the sparrow’s fall, won't you help us to re sist when the modern devil who has charge of our work takes advantage of our poverty to lead us astray? Sometimes, O Lord, it.is hard. Hunger and cold are terrible things and they make us weak. We want to do rignt. Help us to be strong. “We ask this. Lord, for the sake of the little children, helpless and suffering; for the girls who some day may be mothers of children, and for those girls who dislike sin, but are forced into it through poverty." Consider these things. Then answer: What motive have the churches in trying to protect the purity of girls? What has led the churches of Atlanta, since the Houses were closed, to gather sixty of the unfortunate women, some of whom they have carried home to parents: some of whom they have placed in homes here and elsewhere and provided with ways to support themselves? Why, now, day by day, are the churches seeking these poor people, not to per secute, i|ot to prosecute, but to give them aid? And answer: Wnat object have the men in view who oppose the churches in their work? The object of the churches is to fulfill the Law of life and love given by God They stand for it; they proclaim it; and when necessary, they fight for it. AND NEVER WILL THEY BE CONFINED TO A LIMITED AND IMAGINARY FIELD, APART FROM BUSINESS, PUBLIC QUESTIONS, AND THE ACTIVITIES OF MEN, A FIELD WHERE ONLY NEUROTIC WOMEN AND EFFEMINATE MEN COULD FIND COMFORT. Wherever men and women live, wherever they struggle and labor, wherever they sin, sorrow and suffer, wherever they find pleasure and joy. and children learn, laugh and play, the churches of the living God will bear His Light, the Law of life and love, of justice and mercy. Yea, and day after day they will bring its beams into the depths of the Under world, to cal Iback to light and life God’s children, who have lost their way. And at the very mouth of the Pit, will they plant and rally to the Cross of Christ Under this standard and in His Name, they strive, not for self, but to save and serve those for whom Jesus died. You, with us, are among these. Come with the churches and do a man's work in return. Obey the Law, upon which all law depends. THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE MEN AND RELIGION FORWARD MOVEMENT.