Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 10, 1913, Image 6

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I Fine exercise for the arms and chest. Prices, $3.75, $4.50, $5, $6, $7.50, $15 and $20. Other Wheel Goods and Useful Toys Sidewalk Sulkies. .$2 to $6.50 Garden Wheelbarrows. .. .75c ( Miildren's Desks $4.50, $5.00, $6.00 Children’s ChKirs, 75c to $3.00 Shoohies $1.50 to $4.50 Coat Sulkies. $3.50 and $4.00 Farm Wagons with shafts $7.00 and $10.00 KING HARDWARE CO 53 Peachtree 87 Whitehall 85c to $3.00 $3, $3.50, $4 If >«*u: st»*Tnaeb is sour, gass; , up***t I • nd ^ftuckfuli-of-f***wfeeling uttd you { feel lTk« your food is all lumps and re* : t us**« io digest. lak*- a d**»e or two of l Tyner’* I>ysj>epsia liemedv. The diszi- I UAsat stops at one**, the puses are belehed out. you feel comfortable. \ <>ur * l<*inr»«d I.owoIk g»-t t*» working right. liat ad 1 * ou want Knj*»> your in* ala to taking 1 i.imv and then a liberal d«*,m , f Tyner's i ! »| sp.-pairt UeniiHt.\. Tlu ie > nothing j lik«* il on the market t. *du\ Made in J Atlanta for > ears i>> .Chin H Danieh If you lack an appetite, your tongue J i • bavt of a«»u'' and undigested food urt«1 exner - | •toe diRtre*8 after outing, von are suf- j fering from inuig<*«tion « • tick stomach, j To take Tyner’s l»\spcpsiu Item-J edv It is a ruly w.mderful nu-iv lie. I ..s if ;. '.p t|Ui* and helps you out <•! j ing. Sold by druggists for only 50 cent* j a large hot tie. Ad* : Every instrument sold is backed by our factory's guarantee of 56,000,000 capital and surplu. OPEN UNTIL 9 O’CLOCK EVERY EVENING Steel tires . Rubber tires When You Take Tyner s Dyspep sia Remedy—Drives Out the Oases from au Over loaded Stomach. Cures Indigestion—Cleans Out the Bowels. CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY EXCURSION FARES lie December 17 to _‘u. j o December 31, Un '.. 1914. AM ticket* 11 \i j ASK THE TICKET AGEN T < ENTRAI OF GEORGIA RAILWAY Railroad Fares Paid to Out-of-Town Purchasers WEATHERHOLT PIANO COMPANY 72 N. BROAD STREET Write for Our Price List THE ATLANTA OEOKGTAX AND NEWS r 16110 BOOKLETS WAR THAT CHHEO MERE Written in the vivid style that has 1 made thousand* read the newspaper i bulletins **f the Men and Religion Fort*ard Movement in Atlanta, lU.Ofiu | b«>oklet*i detailing the work accom plished by this organization here have , been printed and were* ready f<»i di»- j trlbution Wednesday. After discussing the various lints of work with some detail, the booklet | summarises the accomplishments <>f the Men and Religion Forward Move- j ment in Atlanta in these words: The churches of the Kvangeli- « al Ministers 'Association of At lanta have, through the executive < ommittee. accomplished these things in the past fifteen months: Tbs committee has been made s perm an f nt part of the churches, serving as an inter-church com mittee for social service. Bible School Established. The Daily Vacation Bible School has been established. The work has been duplicated 4 n other cities and towns. The segregated district has been closed in Atlanta and else where. Martha's Home has been estab lished. A school for wayward and de linquent girls inaugurated by the State. Scores of women have been helped. Many children have been saved. Probation has been written Into the law of Georgia. Stripes have been removed from first and second grade con victs. Sunday lias been saved as a day of rest in Atlanta. And war has begun on the li quor trade. A partial study of housing con ditions among the poor has been made, enough to show the need of radical changes necessary to *ave life and decency in Atlanta. Toll* of Closing Tenderloin. The wiping out of the segregated | district and the tight against the so cial evil are considered at length in ihe booklet and a graphic description Is given of the manner in which the subcommittee •>)» social service de stroyed a $700,000 annual traffic in Atlanta, established here for 50 years, by the use of $2,000 wortli ol news paper space in a four months* cam paign. “By spending less than one-third of one per cent of S7U0.000 and speak ing out in their pulpits.” says the re port. “the evangelical ministers put an end in Atlanta to the trade that mocks motherhood, sneers at virtue and makes the church, which by silence consents to the infamy, a thing of derision 1n every city where prostitution is tolerated unrebuked.” That the campaign did not cease at this point is Indicated by the subse quent paragraphs: The churches did not stop with the demand for law enforcement. When the houses were closed. $10,000 was in hand to provide help and shelter for every woman and girl willing to accept them. Home* Opened to Women. Committees consisting of a minister and a Christian woman went to every house again and again, and begged the inmate-* to I t ome with them out of their lives of shame. Many t ame Ministers of Christ opened their homes to the fallen. “Belle Sommers,” the keeper of I tbs l&rfMt house In the district, doubted, but came to the home of a Christian woman, whose mother gave up her room for her. Christ found her through the kindness of her hostess. She surrendered to Him. Her* was the $2,500 that start ed Martha's Home—a permanent refuge for fallen women and un ion unate girls. To-day she is learning by *tudy to tit herself to serve in any Meld to which her Saviour x-all* her. | Her life proves again that He • an save even to the uttermost. The fU - matron of Martha’s Eat AH Ycu Want Home was Miss Ivdilh Apple- yard. Work of the Home. To-day another devoted wom an. Mbs 1*:. A Ckixob, $ in charge *.f Martha'*-. Home Thir teen girls are there In her care at this time. The number rise* And falls. Since the doors opened 1L7H j cases hav* been handled. Seventy-five children depend ent upon fallen women have been handled. one hundred and thirty-nine women were known to be from recognized houses und hotels. Sixty-four of these were wom en married but re pa rated. Sixty diseased women have been treated. Fourteen were widows 52 un married. Forty-two « awes were due to drink or similar causes. one hundred and twelve have been sent home or to places of employment. Forty-nine have disappeared. Myron Whitney’s Singing Captivates A profound impression was made by Myron W. Whitney’s singing Tuesday night at Hotel Ansley, his finest work being done in the won derful “Damnation of Faust” aria. I To longed applause followed that number, and continued until Mr. Whitney sang as an encore “The Night Has a Thousand Kyes.' Miss Marguerite Valentine's piano solos also were much enjoyed, her se lection* being from Chopin, Grieg an 1 Poldlni. The concert was under the auspices of the Young Women’s < .’hrlstian Association. Policeman Osborne Retires on Pension To Have Good Time Wednesday morniiie’ “Urn 1* • Osborns transported home fro Chief Hanford's office two handgun Morris chairs, present* ! to him t- day before, when he retired on pension at the age of 6!*, after years of *- rvi* • on the poll «» for “Uncle Bob” replied to a < p*‘ M * Iter*.filer Broyles with the nnnour merit that he appreciate ness of the department, wan going to spend the Masons Leave City Pleased With Big Initiation Ceremony f Make The Children year* of his life having "Oh, I'm not too < asserted, confidently bucks won't ho able he klnrt-I I the' hr | ernulniiio ,o.l tim.'." ] for that," "Thr- young > hold a cam”- Damage Estimated, as Waters Re cede, at $25,000,000—Homes of Five Thousand Lost. o luatt Grand ms were elaving At-l •-►•lay morning after a in which three riVv. i constituted, representing > and the degree of Master inferred oti a number of can- ! if Gate City lodge, lain address of the evening, i inf;, of Havatinah. <• State Dodge. GA I.VKSTON, TEXAS, Dec. 10.— , With 230 persons counted as dead in J the great flood which covered 40,000 I squat- nllei* of territory in Central and South Texas, State official* to- Debt of Orphanage *»»»«• at f ••°°°*- Sixty-three titles, towns and vil lages have suffered from the high wa ter and 5,000 persons are homeless. The rice c Within the 'Baptists to Raise Notices calling upon the Baptists of Georgia not to ,forget “Ingathering Day,” December 14. for the bciiaflt of the Georgia Baptist Orphans' Home, are being sent throughout the tSute. A dept of $13,500 is handicapping the Institution and every effort is be ing made i*> clear it on this da; A 1 of the offerings will be sent to Dr. J. J. Bennett, in the Candler building. Kappa Alphas Get Call to a Smoker Kappa Alphas will gather at the University Club Thursday night and hold a smoker. Ben I-ee Crew, presi dent of the Atlanta Chapter of the Alumni Association, lies issued ths Call for the gathering. No program has been arranged, but a good time is promised, and every Kappa Alpha Is urged to be present. Climbs Mount to End Life‘Nearer Heaven' nearly ruined hours it is ex Elevator Builder Is Hurt While on Lift While working on the roof of an | ; elevator of the Morrow Transfer Com- | puny building. B. H. Dunn, an elevator coniiwtor, was badly injured when struck by a falling beam. Dunn suffered several serious lac erations <»f the head. It is feared that he m>„y have received internal Inju ries also. He. was taken to Grady | Hospital. will be failing j pet ted that, the at ail points. District* ore still isolated and wi:- communication will have to Lie estab lished before the full extent of the dis aster is known. Within the past 24 hours more than UK) bodies were re covered. INJURED DOCTOR IMPROVES. WAYf’HOSS. Dec. 10.—Dr. H. A Boyd, injured a week ago on a grade "crowing here, has been taken from the King's Daughter* Hospital to the home of'his brother. He is improv ing- GIRLS! GIRLS! YOU MUST TRY THIS! DOUBLES BEAUTY OF MIR HA!R Happy Christmas Buy Toys That Are Health-Giving and Stand the Wear and Tear of the Ameri can Girl or Boy. NUk. rour r P^n.w. ‘yZ chilTn’ lime you say. ROCKING HORSES. For 25 Cents You Can Make Your Hair Lustrous, Fluffy, and Abundant. Immediate? Yes! Certain.' that's the - —— j joy «>f it. Your hair becomes light, I'ASrfAJC X .1 Her 10 After ask- fluffy, abundant and appears as ' . ' _ , , I soft, lustrous ami beautiful an a young mg directions to the top of the Great j * fter a Danderlne hair cleanse. Nothie Mountain, explaining that he j .fust try this moisten a cloth with a wanted t<» get as near heaven an pos- * * f ‘ Dandcrlnc and carefully draw it .. . ” ... . .... through your hair, taking one small slble. Joseph Kick ter w**nt to the sum- j *trand at a firm This will cleanse the mit and killed himself by shooting. | hair of dust, dirt or excessive oil. and iii just a few moment* you have doubled the beauty of your hair. A delightful surprise awaits those whose hair has been neglected or is scraggy, faded, dry, brittle or thin. Besides beautifying tin: hair, I *anderlne dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and in vigorates the scalp, forever stopping itching and falling hair, hut what wi 1 jilease you most will he after a few weeks’ use, when you see new hair- line and downy at lirst -yes —but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair, and lots of it, surely get a 25-cent bottle of iCnowlton’s Danderine from any drug »t'«re or toilet counter and just try it. —A^vt. CHRISTMAS BARGAINS Player-Pianos are now going at $225.00 and up, including FREE USE of our 6,800 roll exchange library Look At Our Prices On New Pianos What could give the child more pleasure with safety X a i“L”r ,Ihe> $1.09 So $4.50 Bicycles A Bicycle is a gift that will not only delight, but will pay for itself in time saved. Prices range from £**> A $20 to Vtf" VELOCIPEDES A Special in a High Grade Velocipede SI.75 io $2.50 S4.0G to $5.00 Steel tire %-in. Rub ber tire . t/ 2 -in. Rubber tire, spring seat, adjustable S“ e bars ’ SS.80 Io SMO Tubular steel frame, %-inch rubber tires, ball-bearing in every part—the finest Velocipede manufactured. No. 1 Size, regular $12.50, Special No. 2 Size, regular $15.00, Special No. 3 Size, regular $17.53, Special $10.00 $12.50 $15.00 TRICYCLES FOOTBALLS %-inch rubber tires, plush seats ... %-inch rubber tires, leatherfiM n i < , seats, mud guards MU™$11 FINEST TRICYCLES MADE AT SPECIAL PRICES. Tubular steel frame, ball-bearing in every part. No. 1 Size, regular $15, Special. .. .$12.50 No. 2 Size, regular $17.50, Special. .$15.00 No. 3 Size, regular $20, Special. .. .$17.50 Watch Young America on Christmas morning when he gets a football. You will be as happy as he. Prices $1.00 to $5.00 AUTOMOBILES ROLLER SKATES They will p*uise any boy r/j n q.;» rs or girl; prices *)Ut IU JO.JU A wheel joy that every child wishes for and gets lots of pleasure from. We have an unusually fine line, and they are selling fast. Priced each, $4.50 to $35.00. IRISH MAILS OR HAND CARS BOYS’ WAGONS