Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 14, 1912, EXTRA, Page 7, Image 7

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ELDERLY FOLKS! CALOMEL, SALTS ffl CATHARTICS AREN’T FOR YOU Harmless, gentle “Syrup of Figs” is best to cleanse your stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels of sour bile, decaying food, gases and clogged-up waste. You old people. Syrup of Figs Is particularly for you. You who don’t exercise as much as you need to, who th ,. easy chair. You whose steps ‘ v.' «iow and whose muscles are less 8 ‘ You must realize that your fiver and ten yards of bowels have also become less active. Don’t regard Syrup of Figs as hvsie It stimulates the liver and howel« iust as exercise would do if you • nek enough of It. It Is not harsh like "r cathartics. The help which a" of Figs gives to a torpid liver pna weak, sluggish bowels is harmless, natural and gentle. When eves grow dim, you help them. Do the same with your liver and bow tu when age makes them less active. There i< nothing more important. Cos tivo .’logged-up bowels mean that de caying fermenting food is clogged there and the pores or ducts in these develop your bust 3 TO 5 INCHES IN 30 DAYo | sOc PACKAGE FREE TO ANY WOMAN WHO WANTS A BEAUTIFUL FIGURE I R SO I WHa SMB I fc’Ws- WB I NR ' A-. MRa / I a 3%wOijarr / A Ws ■ WWwiJr / \ SSr 4 JML . jjl These pictures show the Improvement that may be made by using Dr. Kelly's Form Developer. Bust full and plump. Wrinkles gone. Complexion beautiful. A full. beautifully developed bosom is a woman's charm that makes her more at tractive than bright eyes, regular features or flowing hair. Women who are thin, flat-chested and undeveloped always feel humiliated and embarrassed when out in ths society of the more fortunate mem bers who possess the beautiful curves of a perfect figure. A discovery that is of vital interest to all thin women, to all who wish perfect and full development, is offered to read ers of this paper absolutely free for intro ductory purposes. This scientific treat ment ts the result of long study and in vestigation by one of the leading physi cians in New York state, who in seeking to overcame the defects in her own figure without the use of pads or forms, discov ered a happy combination of tissue-build ing elements that increased her bust some four inches, made her arms round and shapely and her neck and shoulders plump and symmetrical. This prescription of Dr. Catherine Kelly’s is a real discovery on far different lines from ordinary form development treatments, and this explains its almost uniform success. A peculiar feature of her prescription which makes ft especially valuable in the present styles of dress is ihat it has no effect upon hips, and it simply makes the bosom full and firm, does away with the scrawny, skinny neck and gives plump, symmetrical arms. tier treatment is absolutely harmless ami has been tested with almost unbellev aWe results by many leading society women. Read a few extracts from those who are thankful to Dr. Catherine Kelly n»r their beautiful figure: MRS. M. HAYWOOD says: "Please send me another package of your Form Developer. I can see a vast change in myself and feel so much bet ter. It certainly is one great remedy.” RUTH BILLINGTON says: "I write to tell you that I have fin ished with your treatment and find it all you recommend it to be; excellent for the complexion, for nerves and for de- “A TIZ Bath, My Boy” Can't Be Beat for Corns, Bunions and Aching Feet Send for FREE Trial Package of TIZ Today. /A r. 'W “Sure! 1 U»e TIZ Every Tune r ny f° ot "^ rou ‘ > *** /EE_ // zg -~ ’ I —"~ ? Ulin ' our '*ei arc ho tired they feel 1 irt wL’!. I*"' 1 *"' wh «i they ache ho that the.' shm nt. \. "P *f‘ >’ ollr heart, when von ks tlionirh ~Un T*'"* * l '’"* unil *’ " e ®ir*9 •to M.itß.l , H '*■ hilHe.rt you mu’ had T|/ n y°ur feet, look at the happy Tt, ' ‘. ,l "' t'appj-footiui jiiHt the huiiio n ‘A u*rd IIZ and now tie hue no ~ "liner. raw, . hufe<|, bllHi.red. awol buri!.,),, leet, ioiiih, eullouaes or thirty feet of bowels suck this decat ing waste and poisons into the blood. You will never get feeling right until this is corrected —but do it gently. Don’t have a bowel wash-day: don't use a bowel irritant. For your sake, please use only gentle, effective Syrup of Figs. Then' you are not drugging yourself, for Syrup of Figs is composed of only' luscious figs, senna and aro matics which can not injure. A teaspoonful tonigljt will gently, but thoroughly, move on and out of your system by morning all the sour bile, poisonous fermenting food and clogged up waste matter without gripe, nausea or weakness: But get the genuine. Ask your drug gist for the full name, "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna." Refuse, with contempt, any other Fig Syrup unless it hears the name —prepared by the California Fig Syrup Company. Read the label. (Advt.) veloping the bust. You may use this j letter if you wish.” MRS. C. KOEHLER says: "I am so well pleased with your Form Developer that 1 have recommended it to one of my friends, and she wishes to try it. I herewith inclose money order, for which please send me another treat ment. Thanking you for the results your remedy has brought me.’* KATHERINE HEIMES says: , “Your treatmejit is fine. I feel and loot; much better. The wrinkles in my face are gone, my appetite is better and I feel just fine all over. Many thanks to you.” MRS. L. H. CARSON says: ‘ I have used your Form Developer and liked it so much that two of my friends want me to order it for them. Inclosed find the money for two, com plete treatments. Please pack m one box.” Dr. Kelly not only gained a beautiful form by her own prescription, but used it successfully with many of her patients. Women, this is a personal message from a physician of your own sex, and all we ask is to prove to you without a penny’s expense on your part that Dr. Kelly's form developer will give you a perfect ' figure, beautiful complexion and improve the general health. Attach the coupon below to your letter and send it with 10c to help pay distribution expense, and a 50c treatment will be mailed at once in plain package, \\rite us today. Dr. Kelly Medical Company, Dept. 322-LA, Buffalo, N. Y. FREE TREATMENT COUPON. This coupon with 10c to help pay distribution expense, entitles any reader of The Atlanta Georgian to one 50c treatment of Dr. Kelly’s Form De veloper, postage paid, mailed in plain wrapper. DR KFDLY MEDICAL COMPANY, Dept. 322-LA, Buffalo, N. Y. I \n hoqii hh you put 'our tort in a TIZ hath, you feel the iuipplneHH winking In Nothing elae hut TIZ can give you thia I happy foot feeling I ion t accept any RlllmtltiiteM. lienuilid TIZ TIZ, cent* •• box. rold al all drug Htorer depallnieii .Hid geneiul ntotis I Write lodio to Waller l.ulhet I lodge ,y t'o . lll.'H Hoiilh Wab.i«l< avenue, I'bh i«o 111 , for ttie trial inn I .ape of TIZ mni . n jot real fool lel es THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1912 Buy f ° r Buy at Cash Rogers’ Where MheiP* Where Prices Qualities Are Are Lowest Highest All Records Must Go. Since the first day of January we have ridden on the top wave of the most prosperous business in our history, passing through the summer months (which to many are dull) with an enormous gain over our best previous record. With this wonderful record up to now, you can get an idea what our ambitions are for the remaining months of the year. It is our intention to create sales that will draw to our stores, by their value, a throng of new and old buyers eager to take advantage of our MONEY SAVING PRICES. Three Solid Carloads Extra Fine, Large, Smooth Irish Potatoes The Kind that Cook Mealy 23c a Peck Half Peck 12c / Fancy, thin- Delicious skin Indian Sweet River Florida Grape Fruit Orang es 14c Very Fine, Large Rutabaga Turnips, pound c Standard Granulated Sugar 25 Pounds for $1.25 With Cach purchase of 3 pounds i Rogers’ Fresh Roasted Coffee Royal Blend Java Blend _ _ Pound 4uC Pound 30c Regal Blend Santos Blend Pound OOC Pound 25c • Fancy Red Western Onion, Peck 29c Half Peck 15c 2-quarts 8c New Santa Clara 4 New Evaporated 4ft Prunes, pound I C.2U Apples, package. .. lUw New Evaporated Qi Fancy London Laye 4 Q Peaches, pound ... QjG Raisins, pound| New Evaporated Art- New Shredded Apricots, pound. CUC Cocoanut, pound. CUC New Sauer Kraut, r- Fresh Cocoanuts 4 pound OC Large Bc, 5ma11.... 4C Two More* Carloads Fancy Georgia Yams Friday and Saturday -fl Peck .... IOC Piedmont Hotel Brand Corn The tender, juicy kernels of the finest Indiana pure white sweet corn, fully matured, placed in cans without bleaching or artificial sweetening, and brought to your table, fresh, milky, “green corn.” 15c a can, Dozen cans $1.20 Buy by the dozen ROGERS’ 36 PURE FOOD STORES (Advt.) There’s No Place For The Pharisee ' In Our Midst To the Editor of The Georgian: M.v fervent desire in writing of the methods which the "Men and Religion Move ment adopted to correct certain social evils, which beset all communities in common, was to stop, by earnest suggestion, the publication of salacious articles, which I con sidered hurtful to relined standards, and offensive to delicate firesides. In that article I said not one word against the main object said to be in view, that oi moral uplift and social betterment, but confined my argument to the great wrong that had been done Atlanta, by a thoughtless campaign of indecent publicity, which ad vertised our great and beloved city as a Sodoma of filth. In that article T deplored such publicity, on account of the expressed opinion that such methods would hurt the material growth of Atlanta, and corrupt, by lascivious sug gestion. the minds of twenty innocent girls, before reclaiming one fallen woman. Phis was a serious, well-considered fear that 1 felt, as a citizen, and as a home lover. I would have been untrue to the standards of the home, false to the higher duty of moral citizenship, derelict in my better service to God. had 1 suppressed the view, and withheld its kind and earnest presentation. I did not desire a controversy. I had no idea that any man. whose love for Atlanta was such as to cause him to re sent the imputation that she was steeped in moral filth, and therefore, deserved a special dispensation, before she could show her fair face in comparative array with other cities, could or would take issue with the suggestion that I intended to impress. It was my wish and hope that these men of a doubtful movement, would see their error, and determine to discontinue the issuance of hurtful bulletins, through which was being flaunted to friendly rivals in civic growth, the shame of a great city, that deserved better at the hands of her own children, whom she had made to grow and to prosper. My surprise was great, therefore, when I received a rude letter from a minister of the gospel of Christ, condemning me by such false and vulgar innuendo as should form sufficient ground for his expulsion from th? ministry—and for no other reason than I had committed the unpardonable offense of presenting to the higher thought of Atlanta, in this twentieth century of enlightened progress, views on propriety at variance with those held by this pulpit bigot. I present the letter as written, spelling, punctuation and grammar, with the exception ol one sentence that carries with it a suggestion too vulgar to spread before a decent public. The reader might overlook the pitiable ignorance of the reverend author, were it not for his low. brutal intolerance. Read his letter: “Dear sir: The men and religion movement are offering & care for the poor delud ed girls. Atlanta is a tough town and you know il Where is the man that has daugh ters that does not fear for them here if Atlanta wants to escape the penalty that came to Sodom she had better reform-—Do you own some of the houses used for immorality Are you a white slave traficer Who are you anyway. * * • • (This sentence was too vulgar *4O reproduce.) Rev. G. D. Stone was the writer of the above beautiful emanation of Jove and charity. He is the pastor of Payne Memorial Church. He belongs to the period of the Inquisition, or to the early days of Puritanism in America —full of that intolerance which would crucify me before the bar of public opinion, for no other reason than my mind does not accord with his narrow demand. While it showed the author to be lacking in correct appreciation of the softer stand ards of religion and gentility, so essential to the pulpit, a better defined view of the man would be, to think of him as a harmless harlequin, a kind of merry-andrew of the pulpit, who needs but the cap-and bells to make the buffoon complete. \ Why should I be thus condemned? I had not offended religion. I had not defended t immorality. I had spoken for the pure. My letter was in line with ethical discussion of a question, the adjustment of which demands the most earnest and forbearing consid eration of every element of lofty thought. My confidence in the home-life of Atlanta was of that high order as to lead me to opine, there was not one-tenth part of our population that knew, except by report, there was any such quarter in our city as a segregated district. When, therefore, a few misguided crusaders began to spread before the old and young of both sexes, detailed definitions of the location, surroundings and doings of the underworld, I felt that it was timely some pen of righteous indignation be invoked against the work of ruin, which was hidden in the mad campaigning that thoughtlessly placed such information within the reach of the young and the pure, and to condemn the injustice done Atlanta, by an hysterical treatment of common-place conditions, exist ent in all cities alike. My letter was a normal treatment of natural conditions, intended to arrest the at tention of thoughtful men. . The words of approval, by mouth and letter, received from hundreds of the best peo ple of Atlanta, convinces me that the thinking people of our city commend the course which I took in behalf of the home-circle, but which I can not continue without co-op eration from those who feel the same interest in correcting the evil done by fanatical propagandists, as that which forms the incentive of this and other articles that may be considered necessary. I do not intend to surrender the pen that has been drawn in ethical defense of At lanta. at the behest of the Stones of the pulpit. Nor will unchristian criticism swerve me one hair breadth from the course directed by a mind and heart that live in a superior atmosphere to that which germinates ignorant ‘and polluted polemics, to feed the licensed pen of the Pharisee. As I recall, the “mne and religion movement " made no recommendation as to closing the segregated district in their vice, report to council, and it was denied that Chief Beav ers was advised by them to issue his order of closing—an order which many of the best people of Atlanta think was a mistake, on account of the fear that these women, being compelled to have shelter, would move into resident districts. These are of the opinion that the wrong end of the stream has been selected for the corrective starting point emphasizing the theory that were home-training invoked, the fountain would be kept pure and the stream undefiled; whereas, if the stream is dammed, the hackwater will be sure to inundate, with its accumulated filth, districts of respectability, carrying moral devastation in its wake. About this phase of the question T did not write. I was will in that the future decide as to the wisdom or the folly of Chief Beavers’ course. After the closing order was issued and the heroism of the act dramatically adver tised. the “men and religion movement’' resolved to sustain the chief of police, stating that reputable homes for a great number of these people, had been offered, and that every thing was ready to carry the unfortunate from the district of shame, into the moral atmos phere of unpolluted home-life, at a bound. Without any feeling than one of kind sympathy for the fallen, who doubtless pos sess many of the virtues of charity. I thought, and still think, this was a move of moral hazard. I felt that the man who would ask his wife to take one of these under the roof that covers a mother's honor and a child’s devotion, is a fool—whether a knave. I felt that the woman who would consent to so horrible a plan of elevation, would stand before the world a pitiable impersonation of that fanatical acquiescence, which deserved to be protected by a word of caution. I felt that it would be a horrible, hideous, heinous riak—an advisory step that should cause men to beware! I felt that behind the thin veil of such religious obeisance sleeps the demon Jealousy —which, when aroused, will divest herself of the robe of sweet and loving gentleness: rudely cast to the winds of despair the fragrance of a mother’s love: and, with a shriek of horror, dismantle that glowing structure .of the home.—woman's devoted self-sacri fice. 1 did not think that any firesirk* of Atlanta should be subjected to this awful risk. In the name of God, I did not see how any man could become so swayed bv religious zeal that he would ask the wife of the home to take h venture into paths beset with such domestic thorns. 1 felt that the plan proposed was pregnant with evil—one which no sane man would adopt or advocate. 1 hen. too. I felt that a great injustice had been done those merchants and manu facturers who employ girls as saleswomen and seamstresses as well as the girls themselves, by advocating better wages, on the basis of a questionable comparison of conditions in Atlanta, with the sweat shopa and attendant evils, in the congested centers of a distinct ly different civilization. For thus defending Atlanta, and for thus inveighing against indelicate discussion ami offensive comparisons, to the detriment of our biiiness, working ami jovial commun ity. I have been made the victim of vulgar ignorance and malignant intolerance. So be it. 1 will not surrender my ,>en to the maledictions <»f organized hysteria. BENJAMIN’ M. BhA( KBGKN. 7