Newspaper Page Text
When You Take Tyner b Dyapep
sia Remedy*—Drives Out the
Oases from an Over
loaded Stomach.
Cures Indigestion—Cleans Out
the Bowels.
If \om stomach Is sour ga*s\ . upset
• ml ■ nuckfull-of-food-fueling and you
feel like your food is all lumps and re
fuses 10 digest, take a dose or two of
Tyner’s Dyapepaia Remedy The dlaai-
ness stops ut once, the gases are belched
out. > ou feel comfortable, your clogged
bowels get to working right. ISat all
you want Enjoy your meals by taking
now and then a liberal dose of Tyner's
lusjiepsia itemedy There is nothing
like it on the market to-day Made in
.\tlanta for 'feats by John B Daniel
If you lack an appetite, your tongue
In r..rfted nerves on edge have risings
of sour and undigested food and experi
ence distress after eating, you are suf
fering from indigest ion or sick stomach.
To cure, take Tyner’s Dyspepsia Rem
edy It is a truly wonderful medicine
as it a» ts quickly ami helps you out of
all disagreeable feelings due to overeat,
ing Sold by druggists for only 50 cents
a large bottle. Advt
CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY
EXCURSION FARES
Railroad Fares
Paid to
Out-of-Town
Purchasers
WEATHERHOLT
PIANO COMPANY
72 N. BROAD STREET
Other Wheel Goods and Useful Toys
Sidewalk Sulkies. $2 to $6.50
Garden Wheelbarrows... 75c
Children’s
Desks* $4.50, $5.00, $6.00
Children’s Chairs, 75c to $3.00
Shooflies $1.50 to $4.50
Goat Sulkies. .$3.50 and $4.00
Farm Wagons with
shafts $7.00 and $10.00
KING HARDWARE CO
53 Peachtree 87 Whitehall
Ticket** on sale December 17 to 2.7
Inclusive.\ Also December 31. 191*1.
and January 1. 1914. All tickets lim
ited to expire rGdnight January 6
1914.
ASK THE TICKET AGENT
*L OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
Every instrument sold is backed by our factory's guarantee of $6,000,000 capital and surplus
OPEN UNTIL 9 O’CLOCK EVERY EVENING
Steel tires .
Rubber tires.
85c to $3.00
$3, $3.50, $4
Finet exercise for the arms and chest.
Prices* $3.75, $4.50, $5, $6, $7. 50, $15 and
$20.
Write for
Our
Price List
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
REFORMERS REVIEW
KLETS
; Policeman Osborne
Retires on Pension
To Have Good Time
Written in the vivid *tyla that ha* I
made thousands read the newspaper j
bulletins of the Men and Religion ,
Forward Movement in Atlanta. 1ft,000
booklets detailing the work accom
plished by this organization here have
been printed and were ready for dis- 1
trlbutlon Wednesday
After discussing the various lines
of work with some detail, fhe booklet
summarizes the accomplishments of
the Men and Religion Forward Move
ment In Atlanta in these words
The churches of the Kvangel
• hI Ministers ’Association of At
lanta have, through the executivei
ommittee accomplished these
things in the past fifteen months
The committee has been maxie
a permanent part of the churches
serving as an inter-church com
mi! tee for social service
Bible School Established
The Daily Vacation Bible
School has been established
The work has been duplicated
ill other cities and towns
The segregated district lias
been closed in Atlanta and else- j
where.
Martha's Home lias been estab
lished.
\ school for wayward and de
linquent girls inaugurated by the
State.
Scores of women have been
helped.
Many children have been saved
Home
yard.
Work of the Home.
To-day another devoted worn
an. Miss 1*;. A Claxon, is in
charge of Martha’s Home. Thir
teen girls are there in her care at
this time The number rises and
falls.
Since the doors opened 276
cases have been handled.
Seventy-five children depend
ent upon fallen women have been
handled.
One hundred and thirty-nine
women wete known to be from
recognized houses and hotels.
Sixty-four of these were wom
en married but reparated
Sixty diseased women have
been treated.
Fourteen were widows, 52 un
married.
Forty-two cases were due to
drink or similar causes
(>ne hundred and twelve have
been sent home or to places of
employment.
Forty-nine have disappeared.
Wednesday morning Fncle Bob’*
Osborne transported home from |
Chief Hanford's office two handsome
Morris chairs, presented to him tho
day before, when he retired on a
pension af the age of 69, after 17
years of service on the police for *».
“Uncle Bob" replied to a speech bv
I Recorder Broyles with the announce
ment that h»* appreciated the kind
ness of tiie department, and that he
I was going to spend the remaining
years of his life having “a good time."
"Oh, I’m not too old for that,” he
asserted, confidently. “The voting
bucks won’t be able to hold a candle
I to me w hen 1 get wound up.”
Masons Leave City
Pleased With Big
Initiation Ceremony
t
Damage Estimated, as Waters Re
cede, at $25,000,000—Homes
of Five Thousand Lost.
Visiting Masons were elaving At-1
lanta Wednesday morning after a
1 big night,” in which three new |
j lodges were constituted, representing i
i 250 Masons, and the degree of Master
j Mason conferred on a number of can
didates of Gate City lodge.
The main address of the evening,
follow ing the initiation, was by < 'olo- j
nel Robert Gee Golding, of Savannah, j
I Grand Master of the State Dodge.
Baptists to Raise
Debt of Orphanage
Notices calling upon the Baptists of
Georgia not to forget “Ingathering
Day." December 14. for the benefit of
th» Georgia Baptist Orphans’ Home,
are being sent throughout the tSate.
A dept of $ 1 3.500 is handicapping
the institution and every effort is be
ing made to clear it on this day. All
of the offerings will be sent to Dr.
.1 J, Bennett, In the Candler building
Kappa Alphas Get
Call to a Smoker
UAJ.ycXTON, TEXAS. Dec. 10
With 230 persons counted as dead in
the great flood which covered 40.000
square miles of territory in Central
and South Texas, State officials to
day estimated t> « damage at $25,000,-
000.
Sixty-three cities, towns and vil
lages have suffered from the high wa
ter and 5,000 persons are homeless.
The rice crop was nearly ruined.
Within the next 24 hours it is ex
pected that ihe we‘ -« will be falling
at all points.
Districts are still Isolated and wit.
communication will have to be estab
lished before the full extent of the dis-
Mtt - la know n. Within the pael 24
hours more than 100 bodies were re
covered.
INJURED DOCTOR IMPROVES.
W A VC ROSS, Dec. 10.—Dr. H. A
Boyd, injured a week ago on a grade
crossing here, has been taken from
the King's Daughters Hospital to the
home of his brother He is improv
ing.
Myron Whitney's
Singing Captivates
Probation lias been written into
the law of Otofgia.
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 tlie 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
save life and decency in Atlanta.
Tells of Closing Tenderloin.
The wiping out of the segregated
district and the fight against the so-
c.ial evil are considered at length in |
the booklet and a graphic description
is given of the manner in which, the
subcommittee '<n social service de
stroyed a $700,000 annual traffic in
Atlanta, «ajtnbli»hed here for 60 years,
h> the use nf $2,000 worth of news
paper space in a four months' cam
paign.
"By spending less than one-third
of one per cent of $700,000 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, sneer* nt virtue
and makes the church, which by
silence consents to the infamy, a
tiling of derision in 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 inmates to
< ome with them out of their lives
of shame.
Mam came Ministers of Christ
opened their homes to the fallen.
"Belle Sommers,” the keeper of
the largest 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
Hers was the $2,600 that start
ed Martha's Home a permanent
refuge for fallen women and un
fortunate girls
To-dav she is learning b>
study to fit herself to serve in
A profound Impression was made
by Myron W. Whitney’s singing
Tuesday night at Hotel Ansley. Ida
finest work being done in the Won
derful "Damnation of Faust” aria.
Prolonged applause followed that
number, and continued until Mr.
Whitney sang as an enfcore “The
Night Has a Thousand Eyes."
Miss Marguerite Valentine's piano
solos also were much enjoyed, her se
lections being from Chopin, Grieg and
Poldlni. The concert was under the
auspices of the Young Women's
Christian Association.
Kappa Alphas will gather af the ,
University Club Thursday night and I
hold a smoker. Ren Re** Crew, presi-
dent of tho Atlanta Chapter of the j
Alumni Association, has Issued the
call for the gathering.
No program has boon arranged, but
a good time 1h promised, and every
Kappa Alpha Is urged to be present.
GIRLS! EIBLS! Ill MOST Tilt IS!
DOUBLES REMIT! OF
Climbs Mount to End
Life ‘Nearer Heaven'
For 25 Cents You Can Make
Your Hair Lustrous, Fluffy,
and Abundant.
PASSAIC, N. J, Dec. 10 After ask
ing directions to the top of the Great
Nothic Mountain, explaining Gist he
wanted to get us near heaven as pos
sible, Joseph Richter went to the sum
mit and killed himself by shooting
immediate?—Yes! Certain'' that’s the
Joy of it. Your hair becomes light,
wavy, fluff \ abundant arid appears as
soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young
girl's after a Danderlne hair cleanse.
Just try this -moisten a cloth with a
little Danderlne and carefully draw it
through your hair, faking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse ihe
hair of dust, dirt or excessive oil, and
in just a few moments 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 the.
hair. I >anderine dissolves every particle
of dandruff: cleanses, purifies and in
vigorates the scalp, forever stopping
itching and falling hair, but what wi.l
please you most will be after a few
weeks' use, when you see new hair—
fine and downy at first—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
Knowlton’s Danderlne front any drug
store or toilet counter and just try it.
, - Advt.
any field to which Nrr Saviour
« alls her
Her life proves again that He
< an save even to the uttermost.
The first matron of Martha's
Eat All
You Want
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
Make T he Children
Happy Christmas
Elevator Builder Is
Hurt While on Lift i
Buy Toys That Are Health-Giving and
Stand the t Wear and Tear of the Ameri
can Girl c r Boy.
Make your purchase now , when the stock is complete. We will deliver at any
time you say.
ir purchase now , wnen me ~
Don’t wait unti I the last moment and disappoint your children.
While working on the roof of anil
elevator of the Morrow Transfer Com- (|
pany building. B. H. Dunn, an elevator
contractor, was badly injured when
struck by a falling beam.
Dunn suffered several serious lac
erations of the head. It is feared that |
he may have received internal inju
ries also. He was taken to Grady
Hospital.
ROCKING HO; RSES
BicycSes
What could give the child moi *e pleasure with safety
‘So H r' ,They $t.«# to $4.50
than a
range
A Bicycle is a gift that will not
only delight, but will pay for
itself in time saved.
Prices range from
$20 to
VELOCIPEDES
A Special in a High
Grade Velocipede
$1.75 io SE2.50
%-‘n. Rub- $ 4 00 |j <|,5.00
ber tire
i/ 2 -in. Rubber tire, spring seat, adjustable
handle bars, £5^ [()
each
TRICYCLES
Tubular steel frame, %-inch rubber tires,
ball-bearing in every part—the finest
Velocipede manufactured.
No. 1 Size, regular $12.50, Q (|Q
No. 2 Size, regular $15.00, 4) rn
Special
No. 3 Size, regular $17.50, fi»-« e
Special Ol««WU
FOOTBALLS
pful ch S eMs ber Wr ' ! ' S5.50 ;and $6.50
% -inch rubber tires, leather®->n i
seats, mud guards ELU 3)11
Watch Young America on Christmas
morning when he gets a football. You will
P e ri"s happyashe- ... $1.00 to $5.00
AUTOMOBILES
FINEST TRICYCLES M. \DE AT
SPECIAL PRICES 5.
Tubular steel frame, ball 1-bearing in
every part.
No. 1 Size, regular $15, Special. . $12.50
No. 2 Size, regular $17.50, Spncial. $15.00
No. 3 Size, regular $20, Special. $17.50
ROLLER SKATES
They will p.^ase any boy rn,, rn
or girl; prices IU
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 HAMID CARS
BOYS’ WAGONS