Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 06, 1912, HOME, Page 6, Image 6

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6 KIRNIESS ACTORS PARADE TONIGHT Thousands to March in Down town Streets—Military Divi sion One of Features. Atlanta will get no breathing spell tonight. On the heels of the election night’s turbulence the Kinness players, aided by the military, will convert the downtown streets into carnival scene, the like of which never has been wit nessed in the city. The Kirmess parade will start at 8 o’clock and with the Seventeenth in fantry, the Fifth regiment, dill! squads of various fraternal orders and 750 cos tumed Kirmess performers, will march through the principal streets to the Au ditorium, where a dress rehearsal will ¥e held. The parade‘will tiaverse Edgewood, Peachtree, Whitehall. Mitchell. Broad, Marietta, Ellis and Courtland streets. The order of the procession will be a follows: Those in Line of March. Platoon of mounted police. Grand marshal of the day. Major .1. O. Seamans. Aids of the grand marshal of the day: Fjrst Division—Major E. N. Jones, commanding; commanding officer ami staff. Seventeenth infantry band. Sev enteenth infantry. Secorid Division —Lieutenant Colonel O. E. Hall, commanding; commanding officer and staff. Fifth infantry band, Fifth infantry. Governor's Horse Guard. Atlanta artillery. Patterson's ambulance. Third Division Majot F fl E Schmidt, commanding; commander and staff. Georgia Military academy band, Georgia Military academy cadets. Marist college cadets. D. <>. K. K. drum corps. Old Guild, Boy Scouts, Barclay * Brandon ambulant e. Fourth Division W . P Andrews, commanding; W P. Andi, ws ami aids. Red Men's drum corps, Red Men, John l>. Simmons, exalted rul r B. P. O. E. No. 78; officers B. P. O. E. No. 78. mem bers B. P. i.». E No. 78 and visiting brotliets. Greenberg & Bond ambulance. Fifth Division Dr. J A. Alloy, in charge; automobiles containing Kir mess participants. $19.35 WASHINGTON and RETURN Via SEABOARD On sale November Bth to 14th, limit December Ist. Full information at City Ticket Office, 88 Peachtree. (Advt.) WASHINGTON AND RE TURN—SI9.3S. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. On sale November 8-14. Re turn limit December 1. The ‘BEST PEOPLE ON EARTH” always do things on biggest scale. ELKS' GREAT CHARITY KIRMESS—7SO peo ple. Select performance. The most spectacular show of the kind ever pulled off in Atlanta. Audi torium, nights of November 7-8-9. Popular price matinee Saturday, November 9. Reserved seats and tickets on sale now at Lester Book Store, 60 Peachtree street. IMPORTANT NOTICE. B. P. 0. ELKS Meet at Auditorium at 6:45 this eve ning to turn out in Elks’ great charity Kirmess pa rade. All visiting Elks fra ternally invited to join us. ‘ Broadway Jones,” a thrilling story of "The Great White Way, ” based on George M. Cohan's play now running in New York, will begin in Friday 's Georgian. It is well worth reading. Best Fresh Creamery But ter in 1-pound cartons, the best, pure butter that comes to lanta; Thursday 1 pound Meadow Gold But ter and 1 pound of Good Coffee, both for, 4 Thursday Q3C 1 dozen Guaranteed Eggs and 1-pound box Kingan's Sliced Bacon, CQa both Thursday UwC Armour's Star Brand Sliced Bacon in OK** 1-pound boxes .... COG Crisco—2sc size 21c Instant Postum 24c Libby’s 50c, large size 2 1-2 A° u P ’r«su» 17'c Can Guaranteed Country Eggs. dozen 30c Guaranteed Storage Eggs. I dozen 25c CASH GROCERY CO. 110-120 Whitehall Si. CANDLER TO 0. K. 14CLUBPERNIIT5 Acting Mayor Says Council Has Complied With Request of Veto Message. Acting Mayor John S. Candler indi cated today that he would approve the locker club permits granted by council at its last meeting. He vetoed all these permits when council acted favorably on them before. He said that council complied with the request of his veto message. It had been charged on the floor of council that all the clubs were being run ille gally He asked the police committee to make a new and complete investiga tion of all the clubs and insisted that the law against the sale of drinks on Sunday be enforced. The committee made a new investigation and reported the following clubs favorably: Atlanta Athletic, Capital City, Pied mont Driving, Transportation, Elks, University, Standard, M. & M., Atlanta, Eagles, T. M. A.. Turn Verein, Owls and the Beavers. Other permits are in the hands of the police committee for further investigation. It is not expected that Mayor Winn will be able to return to his duties in time to act on the club permits. He was reported to be not so well today and still is confined to his home on Washington street. Acting Mayor Can dler probably will pass on the permits tomorrow. STRIKE ARBITRATION SESSIONS DELAYED TILL NEXT SATURDAY Letters to Charles A. Wickersham, representative of the tai I roads, and to Frederick A. Burgess, representing the unions in the Georgia strike arbitra tion, announced today that Hon. Wil liam L. Chambers, of Washington, named as the third arbitrator and um pire. would be unable to arrive in At lanta until Saturday morning. The arbitration session scheduled for tomorrow morning at tin Federal build ing accordingly has been postponed. The board will got together Saturday and probably will be In session several days*. Mr. Chambers is a Georgian, having been born In Columbus and educated at Emory college, Oxford. He formerly was president of the F'irst National Bank of Montgomery, headed the com pany which laid out and built Sheffield, Ala., and was American commissioner under the Berlin treaty of 1890 between England, Germany and the United States. SUPREME COURT SITS. The supreme court and the prison commission resumed their sitting in the capftol today. Both adjourned over yesterday, on account of the election. FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure That AnVone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case Is of long-standing or recent development, whether it is present us occasional or chronic Asthma, our method Is an abso lute cure No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or oc cupation, our method will certainly cure you right In your own home We especially want to send it to those apparent!; hopeless cases where all forms of Inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, 'patent smokes,” etc., have failed. We want to show every one at our own expense that this new method will end all difficult breathing, all wheez ing, and all those terrible paroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer Is too Important to neg lect a single day. Write now and begin the cure at once Send no money Sim ply mall coupon below. Do it today. FREE ASTHMA COUPON. FRONTIER ASTHMA CO.. Room 441-C Niagara and Hudson streets, Buffalo. N. Y : Send free trial of your method to WE WILL MAIL YOU »1 for each set of old False Teeth sent us Highest price paid for old Gold. Silver, old Watches, Broken Jewelry and Precious Stones. Money Sent By Return Mall. Phlla. Smelting and Refining Co.. Established 20 Tears. (63 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia, Pa. TO DENTISTS We will buy your Gold Filings, Gold Scrap and Platinum. Highest prices paid LETTER No. 2 Atlanta. Ga.. October sth, 1912. Dr. L. A. Hines. Care Hines Optical Company. Dear Doctor: It gives me great pleasure to say that the glasses fitted by you to my eyes are most satisfactory. I had little hopes when I went to you. of getting glasses that would give me relief as well as good vision, as I have spent so much with the leading oculists of this and other cit ies without results, that I was dis couraged. Your glasses have given me the siqht of my childhood and I want to thank you. Very truly yours. (Mrs.) ANNIE L. GEORGE. 263 Whitehall Street HINES OPTICAL CO. DR. I A. HINES IN CHARGE. 91 Peachtree St, Atlanta, Ga. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 6, 1912. PEACHTREE HOME JUMPS $40,000.00 IN VALUE IN 3 YEARS The remarkable increase in values of Atlanta realty again was demonstrated today in the purchase by Arnold Broyles, clerk of the superior court, from Robert Zahner, a well known lawyer, of the Zaliner residence, at Peachtree and Lin den streets. Mr. Broyles paid S9OO per front foot, or a total of $54,000. It was but Jhree years ago that Mr. Zahner bought the property for $14,000 from A. P. Malloy, a former Atlantan. The lot ia 60 by 140 feet. Mr. Broyles bought the property as an Investment, ahd has made no definite plans as to its improvement. Cathartic DOVERS-QUININE Breaks up a Cold the FIRST Night Without Nausea, Dizziness, Ringing or Noises in the Head First dose goes to the root of the cold; several doses bring com plete relief. Cathartic Dovers-Quinine is the quickest and most thorough remedy for Cold and Grippe. Take it at the first touch of cold or chill, and you will not have a severe cold this winter. Capsules or Tablets, 18c a Box AT ALL JACOBS’ STORES A Self-Evident Fact TH E better way of getting a start Financially is to limit your spending and save the bal ance, instead of limiting your sav ings and spending the balance. Open an account with this bank IWuWtl The r Latest J ' Thought Shoe-Making. 1 The Plaza— Muse's English -$5.00 It’s English—full strength. It takes your eye at once and pleases your feet with equal ease. Broad, flat heel, plain bal, cus tom eyelets all the way to the top—-a strong dash of style all the way through—from the trim welt edge to the leather “boot-slug” at the back. You want to wear this shoe. Ask for the Plaza. Geo. Muse Clothing Co. Is your husband cross? An irritable, fault-finding disposition is often due to a disordered stomach. A man with good digestion is nearly always good natured. A great many have been per manently cured of stomach trouble by taking Chamberlain’s Tablets. For sale by all dealers. (Advt.) IMPORTANT NOTICE. B. P. 0. ELKS—Meet at Auditorium at 6:45 this eve ning to turn out in Elks’ great charity Kirmess pa rade. All visiting Elks fra ternally invited to join us. Standards of Delicacy Should Obtain Alway In Our Midst To the Editor of The Georgian: The standard to which generations of our people have reverently bended the knee, .the cause of virtuous righteousness, is not being ele vated or strengthened by the broad, salacious suggestions that find their way, periodically, into the public prints of Atlanta, from the pen of a committee of zealots. Nor is material Atlanta being helped by this wave of madness, which advertises, in the extravagance of vice vernacular, sins, com mon to all cities in all lands, in such away as to make it appear, that a crusade against vice were needed, for ATLANTA’S special ele vation in the eyes of the decent world. There can be no discussion amongst any class of men, as to the binding obligation of the Law—the law ’gainst crime and immorality; the law ’gainst wrong and injustice; the law ’gainst hypocrisy and Pharisaical pretense. I would supplement this presentment by solemnly invoking a law—written and unwritten—for the protection of the firesides in our midst, ’gainst the moral miasma, that today arises to offend the at mosphere of discussion, on account of the thoughtless uncovering of the doings in the underworld, by a club of hysterical reformers. Why should this be? Must Atlanta adopt every fad of reform that is spawned in cities, made up largely of alien people, merely because some well salaried agitator, with sanctimonious tongue, comes into her midst, on an obtrusive campaign of publicity correction? Must the people of Atlanta be compelled to eat from every can of reform that is opened, however questionable the taste of its con tents? Whither are we drifting? These misguided men of the so-called “religion movement’’ have already advertised Atlanta to the world, as a city reeking in moral filth, and honey combed with hidden crime—injuring her status in moral estimate beyond compare, hurting her financial future to an incalculable degree; embarrassing her civic pride in an unspeakable sense. AND THEY TELL US THAT THEIR BULLETINS WILL CONTINUE. Why? Because a few well-meaning zealots, having nothing else to engage the doubtful chords which feed their brains, have deter mined, in an immature moment, upon an attempt to do that which has baffled the best thought of the ages: free Atlanta of a sociological condition that has existed under every method of suppression and correction known to the student, since society was organized. The universality of this particular sin was recognized by Christ, on that notable occasion when the Pharisees brought an unfortunate woman into the Temple to be by Him condemned. When, after looking into the self-righteous faces of those wait ing hypocrites, then upon the fear-stricken face of the poor condemn ed woman Christ said: “He that is without sin amongst you; let him first cast a stone at her,” it is declared that all the accusers left the Temple, and, further, that the oldest one in the gang led the proces sion. It was a crushing blow to persecution. It broke up an insidious conspiracy—and it presented a great les son of sanity and charity to unborn generations of men—WHO THINK. Under the scourge of that condemnation, the modern Pharisee must, today, turn his heels and join the procession that started two thousand years ago. Far be it from my purpose to accuse any man. I merely present the lesson which Christ, in His wisdom, gave to the world for the consideration of men who love Atlanta in a nor mal way. To them who have been so free with the pen of condemnation of men who differ as to the method of correction proposed, I commend another immortal saying of Christ: “Judge not, and ye shall not be judged; condemn not, and ye shall not be condemned; forgive, and ye shall be forgiven; with the same measure that ye mete, withal it shall be measured to you again.” Advertising the vice of Atlanta may give mistaken comfort to the conscience of the Puritan, but it does not correct the vice, and it surely does not strengthen purity to thus photograph vice to the inspection of the innocent. The law of suggestion is linked inseparably with the law of na ture; the more impressionable and unsuspecting the mind, the more dangerously near her fall is Innocence, fed daily upon the broad discussion of doings that belong to the underworld. “Vice is a monster of so frightful mien, As to be hated, is but to be seen; Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face, We first endure, then pity, then embrace.” The eyes see through the brain; the brain is impressed by what the eyes read; the soul is influenced by suggestions of the brain. That which can not be discussed about the fireside should not be served as the daily mental diet of the home. The result inevitable—moral jaundice. BENJAMIN M. BLACKBURN.