Newspaper Page Text
6
Men and Religion
Bulletin No. 32
THE LAW
“Yb Did It
Unto Me"
MARTHA'S HOME.
There are problems other than
houses.
Seventeen years ago a girl was
born in the mountains of Tennes
see.
Poverty and ignorance were her
lot.
She married.
Her husband brought her to At
lanta, deserted her and returned to
the mountains.
Her home was a hovel.
This forsaken child-wife, a sec
ond time charged with crime, was
brought into court.
A kindly judge and solicitor,
knowing the cruel uselessness of
punishment, asked us to try to save
her.
Her necessities should be re
lieved.
Strong women, who know and
understand, with love, should teach
her how to live.
Untaught children are not crimi
nals when they sin to get food and
clothes.
Martha’s Home is bitterly need
ed.
$5,000 will make it possible.
FLORENCE HOME.
In a side street, where negroes
live, is a cottage.
If the day is warm and clear, a
row of Anglo-Saxon baby faces
peer through the palings of the
gate which guards the steps leading
to the porch.
One tot has a broken whip.
Another a string, as a toy.
A little girl mothers a bottle for
• doll.
A baby boy has lost an eye.
But the unconquered bov spirit
so gleams in the remaining eye
that, looking into the merry up
turned face. one. who has a son,
can not bear the thouoht of the
difference the “bar sinister" may
one day make in this life.
Within the house, everywhere,
are diminutive beds, too many for
health.
Even in the kitchen is a crib.
This is the Florence Home for
children to whom no other homes
are open.
$3,000 must be obtained to move
it from its unsuitable location to
the land about the Florence Crit
tenton Home, where these babies
can get light, air and the joy of
child life to fortify them against
he dav when they will learn the
distinction men make between
them and your children.
■''LORENCE CRITTENDON HOME.
And $2,000 will fit the Florence
women when the houses were
Here, again, babies gurgle and
smile.
Only they and the new-found
hope of thei ■ mothers, together
with the kindly faithfulness of the
good women who manage it. make
this house livable.
Its dingy walls need paint.
There is no fire escape.
Fire would make death inevitable
‘or those who stav in the third
floor of this gaunt frame build
ing.
These things should not be
Those mothers out there offered
to give up their beds and sleep on
the floor to give shelter to the
women when the houses were
closed.
This week a worket was called
to a sordid hotel in the City.
The old story, a woman soon to
be a mother, left by the man.
The Florence Crittendon Home
v. ill take care of her.
We should take care of it.
THE PURPOSE
The SIO,OOO needed for these
works should he given today.
This woman, who has sinned and
suffered and knows the cost, has
shown us the way.
She has given her all.
Surely, we can sacrifice a little,
at the least an unneeded luxury, to
do this which is so greatly needed.
Some checks and promises have
already been received.
Is yours among them"
You can and should help.
Do it now.
THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
OF THE MEN AND RELIGION
FORWARD MOVEMENT.
DOUBLEGROSSIS
ALL NATION!) SIGN
The Anti-Tuberculosis Crusade
Badge Now Being Worn in
All Civilized Lands.
I 'What .- the origin of these little re I
| < Tonnes all th." children and many of
| :h<- grown-upa are wearing?" is a ques
tion hundreds of persons are asking.
There are few who are not farnlliu
I with the fact that the double red cross
'itself signifies enlistment in the cru
| ,-ade against tuberculosis, but what
■they do not know is how ii happen"!
to be chosen.
j The double red "tuss Is -ninila. in
j “ -I - to a cross used frequently in the
I Greek ehutcii, and is also like the Lor
; 'nine cross of France. It was first
.-uggested as the symbol of the Inter
national Anti-Tuberculosis association
at a meeting held in Berlin in October,
1902. by It G Serslron, of Paris, as
sociate -e etary of the French asso
ciation Tie meeting promptly adopt
'd the suggestion and took steps at
once to secun official recognition and
protection for the double red cross from
the governments of Europe.
The National Association for tin '
Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis
in the United States adopted the pro
portions of nine for the length of the
cross, to five for the width of the arms,
and has now used the symbol in this
country for more than four years.
hen the double red cross was first
adopted there were not more than a
half dozen associations for the preven
tion of tuberculosis, organized on a
wide basis In the United States. Today
such associations have been formed In
practically every civilized country in
the world. Even China is beginning to
take action ,along this line, while active
associations are at work in Turkey, In
dia. Japan, the Philippines, South Africa
and Iceland. There are 420 local or
ganizations in the United States.
MOTHER-IN-LAW'S SLAYER
TO PAY DEATH PENALTY
SAVANNAH, GA.. Nov. 15.—8 y a de
cision of the supreme court, upholding
the decision of Judge Walter G. Charl
ton, of the Chatham coup superior
court, in the case <>f Solomon Williams, a
negro, sentenced to hang for the murder
"f his mother-in-law, Annie Rivers, Wil
liams will be executed unless his attorneys’
can find some unexpected loophole.
The murder was committed on June 1,
of this year. Williams had been sep
arated from his wife. He went to the
place where she and her aged mother
were living and killed the latter and very
nearly killed his wife. He used a butcher
knife.
Williams will be resentenced shortly
EGGS WILL BE CHEAPER.
SAYS U. S. HEN EXPERT
I
WASHINGTON, Nov. IT— Eggs- will
be cheaper and more plentiful in a few
weeks, or ar soon as the hens get
through moulting, according to Dr, H.
M. I.anon, government hen expert.
PROVES SURE CURE
FOR RHEUMATISM
•
Quickly Eases Stiff, Sore, Swol
len Joints and Muscles—
Drives all Rheumatic
Pains Away.
It is needless to suffer any longer
with rheumatism, and be all crippled
1 up. and bent out of shape with its
■ heart-wrenching pains, when you can
| be quickly ami permanently cured,
I Rheumatism comes from weak, in
-1 active kidneys, that fail to filter from
I the blood, the poisonous waste matter
’and uric acid: and it is useless to rub
| on liniments or take ordinary remedies
jto relieve the pain. This only prolongs
’be misery and can t possibly cure you
The only, way to cure rheumatism is
;o remote tiie cause. The new discov
ery. Uroxone, positively does this. It
neutralises and dissolves all the poi
sonous substances and title acid that,
lodge in the joints ami muscle's, to
sorutch and irritate and cause rheuma
tism, and cleans out and strengthens
the stopped-up, inactive kidneys, so
they tilt' r all the poison from the blood,
, and drive it on and out of the. system.
Croxone is the most wonderful medi
cine ever made for curing chronic rheu
matism. kidney troubles, and bladder
disotd': s. You will find it different
from all other remedies. There Is noth
ing else on earth like it. It matters
; not how old yon un or bow long you
■ .iave suffered, it is practically impossl-
I oh to take it into l ie human system
ithout results. You will Had relief
from the first few doses, and you will
»*' surprised how quickly all your mis
ery and suffering will end.
An original package of t'roxom costs
but a trifle at any first-class drug store,
-itch as Jacobs' Pharmacy, who sells
lit on a positive money-back guarantee.
Thu. dos-es a day for a few days is
usual y all that is ever* needed to cure
th'- worst backache or overcome uri
nay disorders, t Adv t.t
OPEN A Ll. NIG H T
BOTH PHONES 461
21)r JbSIORI 5
I FORSYTH AND LUCKIE
THE ATLXNTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1912.
WIFE. DESERTED 3
HOURS AFTER SHE
WEDS. DIVORCED
JI.WX. GA. .Nov 15 Mrs Nellie
Cleppt-r Taylor has •■utire«i a divorce from
her husband. \V. T. Taylor, because he
-ieaerted he: ihr»*e hours after the wed
’lng ceremony. She testified in the hear
ng of her J’uii in t !$«- Bibb superior < >urt
that i •• told her. while she was still shak
ing the rice from her tresses, that he had
made a mistake, and then left her. Mrs.
Taylor is a pretty young matron, whose
story evidently aroused the sympathy of
the jury, because they gave her a verdict
without leaving their seats.
Mrs. Lillie B. Nash withdrew her suit
for divorce, which she filed in February,
the day after she caught her husband
kissing Mrs. Gussie Miller, with whom
they boarded. She said she and her hus
band, who is a jeweler, had “made up.”
U. S. MILLIONAIRES'
RANCH IS MENACED
BY MEXICAN REBELS
MEXICO PITY, Nov. 1.“., Iteliels are
again menacing Lob Cedros ranch in the
stat. of Zatecas the headquarters of 'rite
• ‘ontinentai Rubber company, an Ameri
can enterprise in which John l> Rocke
feller, J. P. Morgan and other noted mil
lionaires are interested. Americans and
other foreigners are fleecing from the
camp. The government promised the
United 1 States embassy that it would
send troops there for protection and yes
terday announced It had done so. I.iii It
develops that no soldiers wore de
spatched.
Zapatlsts ambushed-and killed 27 p‘..<i
eruls at Santa Maria, butchering the
families of the soldiers who were in camp
with them.
FATHER FINDS SON DEAD
IN GAS-FILLED ROOM
ST IZ.VIS. Nov. 15. When William
Ehrhardt, of East St. I-ouis, tried the bath
room door in his home this morning, lie
found It locked. Summoning a son. Wil
liam. -Jr . he broke down rhe door and
found another son. Fred, eighteen years
old. dead on file floor. The room was
tilled with gas from an open light jot.
Ehrhardt summoned Dr. R. A. Twitch
ed, who said the young man had been
dead for several hours He arranged at
once for an inquest.
ALLEN JURYMAN CUTS
THROAT FROM WORRY
RURAL, VA . Nov. 15. William Neff,
one. nf the jurors who sentenced a mem
ber of the Allen elan to long Imprison
ment, is dying today as a. result of
having attempted siiiicde by cutting his
throat. Worry is believed to be responsi
ble.
Our Big Offer j
IHlK||! ——— I
High=Grade Suits!
s l7- 95
IOwM *" I
SATURDAY and MONDAY |
$3’ 95 Down!
S m BALANCE $1 A WEEK I
? 1 Hi I
;’: ;I * I If you have not bought your Winter Suit ■
4*f’ 4 » 1
♦t; : • a you cannot afford to miss this “big offer.”
J F* ; | These Suits are snown in all the latest ■
|4l** » 1 e #
5 | fashions for your inspection. We want
I yOU tO come U P an< * ta^e a look at them.
‘ Fri I Then compare ours with what other
jit I stores offer you. There is no color, style
o»- fabric that is not represented in this
Hl / I line. Some are lined with Skinner Satin
—others with Pure Silk Peau de Cygne.
They are made in the new cutaway es sect
and have one large frog fastening.
Really we cannot begin to picture in your mind the great value H
we are offering in these Suits. PLEASE CALL EARLY.
Hue Over
■hMra-TiaEWWBi 14r - I
Mens Tea ■
Clothing Company
73«4 WHITEHALL STREET P
CALIFORNIA NOW
FDR ROOSEVELT
Defeated Woman Candidate
for Elector Charges Tam
pering With Ballots.
L(>S ANGELES. Nov. 15.—Theodore
Roost y "It had a plurality of 72 votes
over Woodrow Wilson in California
when the final count from all the pre
cincts in the state was completed. But
that did not settle the ease. Instead a
recount in I.os Angeles county is immi
nent.
Mary Foy, a Democratic candidate
for presidential elector, secured a writ
of mandamus in the district court of
appeals to compel the county board of
supervisors to give a fair and honest
count of the votes cast 1n the election
of November 5. It was alleged that the
ballots east in several Lus Angeles pre
cincts had been tampered with and the
return sheets abstracted. The writ is
FDR DANDRUFF, FALLING HMD DR
ITCHY SCALP-25 CENT DANDERINE
Save your hair! Danderine destroys dandruff and stops
falling hair at once—Grows hair, we prove it.
if you care for heavy hair, that glis
tens with beauty and is radiant with
life: has an incomparable softness and
is fluffy and lustrous, you must use
Danderine, because nothing else accom
plishes so much for the hair.
Just one application of Knowlton’s
Danderine will double the beauty
of your hair, be ides It imme
diately dissolves every particle of
dandruff: you can not have nice, heavy,
healthy hair if you have dandruff. This
destructive scurf robs the hair of its
luster, its strength and its very life, and
If not overcome It produces a fever
ishness and Itching of the scalp; the
hair roots famish, loosen and die; then
DEAD ENGINEER AND
RAILROAD BLAMED
FOR FATAL WRECK
BRIDGEPORT, CONN.. Nov. 15.—Coro-.
! ner John .1. Phelan today found Engineer
I George L. Clarke and the New York, New
j Haven and Hartford railroad jointly guilty
j of criminal negligence for the wreck of
.the Springfield express at Saugatuck on
the afternoon of October 3. in which seven
I persons were killed and 40 injured.
I The coroner found that the engineer,
who was killed in the wreck, is guilty for
having run the train over the cross-over
where the wreck occurred at a higher
rate of speed than allowed by the rules
of the road.
The railroad Itself is guilty, says the
coroner, for allowing passenger trains to
use a cross-over unsafe to trains.
BUFFALOES WRECK TRAIN:
TWO PASSENGERS KILLED
SINGAPORE, Nov. 15 —A herd of wild
buffaloes charged and derailed a train on
the Southern railroad at Kram, Siam.
Two passengers were killed and many in
jured.
U. S. ENGINEERS TO MOVE.
SAVANNAH. Ga., Nov. 15.-The Geor
headquarters of the government
drainage engineers, at present located st
Waycross, will, about the first of the
year, be moved to Savanna!'.. The engi
neers. at the instance of the government,
are interested in the reclamation of Geor-
the hair falls out fast.
If your hair has been neglected and
is thin, faded, dry, scraggy or too oily
don’t hesitate, but get a 25 cent bottle
of Knowlton’s Danderine at any drug
store or toilet counter: apply a little
as directed and ten minutes after you
will say this was the best investment
you ever made.
We sincerely believe, regardless of
everything else advertised, that if you
desire soft, lustrous, beautiful hair and
lots of it —no dandruff —no Itching
scalp and no more falling hair—you
must use Knowlton’s Danderine. If
eventually—why not now? A 25 cent
bottle will truly amaze you. (Advt.)
fa.-.. w
W Jr
g|||
WELL HERE I AM IN FULL
GRAND
OPENING
Tomorrow, Saturday, of
MIKE-WALSH
The Fashionable Tailor
PEACHTREE STREET I
To the Public in General: r
I have been on Broadway twenty years
and never made a suit or overcoat for less
than SSO. This means that when you get I
a suit or overcoat from me you get some
thing that is bound to please. In order to
get acquainted with the best trade, the
good, nobby, up-to-date dresser and the
people in general, and to get my immense /
workshop working at once, I am com
pelled to give you some large induce
ments to help me get my cutters, tailors ,
and fitters to working. In order to do r
this quickly I will make my price less
than half my regular price on my open
ing day tomorrow (Saturday).
1 Q For Any Suit or Overco at Q I
>111(1 inmyhouse JNiA
ILF MADE TO ORDER (|J ILF
Made just the same as if you paid me
my full price—same work, same trim
mings. In fact, I will not slight the gar
ments one penny, as I want your future
tailoring business, and the best ad that I
can give you is to show you what kind of
merchandise I can give you. Once a cus- /
tomer, always a customer, is my motto. I
aim to please you. NOTICE— AT J.
WHO COME TO MY STORE tomor
row and leave an order for a suit or
overcoat, SIB.OO is the price, and positive
ly for one day only.
Take advantage of this liberal offer.
Come in Saturday (tomorrow). Only I
one suit or overcoat to a customer—-no
more—as lam not making this sale for
any profit. I simply want to get ac
quainted, and show my fit and workman
ship and up-to-date cutting. Don’t forget
tomorrow is the opening day, with a
thousand styles at a single price—slß.oo.
Made to your measure and made to fit. No
extra charge for size tomorrow. Come
on you fat men, you six-foot, tall boys,
you hard-to-fit fellows, I can handle all
the tailoring business I can do.
MIKE-WALSH
The Fashionable Tailor, Cutter and Fitter
119 PEACHTREE ST., CANDLER BLDG.
NOT ICE! Opening Day Saturday
Those who want to leave
orders to be made and deliv- opening day. Mail orders ac-
M i i-a. > , cepted, with deposit accom-
ered late, can do so by reg.s- panying orders, only until
tering their names on my Monday’s first mail. We will 9
mail samples and self-meas
opening day at my sale price. uring blanks °n request. ■