The Golden age. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1906-1915, March 01, 1906, Page 16, Image 16
16
BETTER THAN SPANKING.
Spankiug does not cure children of bed wet
ting. If it did there would be few children that
would do it. There is a constitutional cause for
this. Mrs. M. Summers, Box 544, Notre Dame.
Ind., will send her home treatment to any
mother. She asks no money. Write her to-day
if your children trouble you in this way. Don’t
blame the child. The chances are it can’t help if
jAg "Manninghose”
Never mind, Sam, Mama
It/ 'xJYq I will buy you a pair of “Man
'U iMVvII J- II ninghosc” and then you will
'wPßr?l I look nice and warm and not
' / be ragged.”
r MANNINGHOSE wears well
/ »- MANUFACTURED BY
manning hosiery mill
Manning', S. C.
"The Old Reliable”
GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Elegantly Equipped
PASSENGER TRAINS BETWEEN
ALL POINTS.
Pullman Palace Cars be
tween Atlanta, Augusta and
Charleston, also between Au
gusta and St. Louis and
Charleston and Cincinnati.
Fast Freight Service
Between the West and
Augusta, Athens, Macon,
Charleston, Savannah and
all points in
SOUTHEASTERN AND
CAROLINA TERRITORY.
A. G. JACKSON
General Freight and Passenger Agt.,
Augusta, Ga.
» '
30 Years
Free Jr Guar-
Triai
Jr SPECIAL
karats fine. Best buggy in the
jjgrMade to your order. Guaranteed direct
our factory to you. Try before you buy.
Write and tell us what style vehicle you
need. Free 1906 Catalogue, 180
pages—now ready.
Ohio Carriage Mfg.
JUk Phelps, Pres.
MT Station ng
Cincinnati,
□Os/wlte
ORr Wnnllnv’c SENT EEEE t 0 815
Uli IlUUllUj o users of morphine,
daiui FQQ opium, laudanum,
elixir of opium,co-
Vfl 111 B B caine or whiskey,a
UIBB Hn large book of P ar *
ir 188 BWI ticularsonbomeor
I I 818 sanatorium treat
■ ■ ■ ment. Address, Dr.
AND B. M. WOOLLEY,
Whiskey Cure Atlanta, Georgia.
MF JSRv
MJpF From Pure s M
OLIVE OIL O
by a MISSION SOCIETY' * I
at the foot of MOUNT I
rt CARMEL. Palestine, where the olives grow, i I
< It is absolutely pure, keeps the skin soft '
V and smooth and is the only safe soap for I
# the Nursery, Toilet and Bath. Recommended $
by Physicians. Sold by Druggists and fist <
7, class Grocers, 10c. per cake. Sole Importers 7
b A. KLIPSTEIN & CO.,
$ 122 Pearl SC, New York. $
F SS“lea Set orToil&t SefF H E E
jjjrMy-', ) ljl| V/M|; -0 ForselllnsjonlySlbs. of our Imported Japan Tea, or if) cans of onrl’nreta 11 7 Vyl
r'-. Nfoy'Z ~~iF WI&iYJ OUI OK SALES as we give FREE to each of your customers a Colonial Bk\lr
JFwPattern Fruit Set of seven pieces, or a Handsome Pitcher and Six
tMEBeMb Glasses, or their choice of the large number of free presents shown in k -■
P 4 our Catalogue. We trust you with the Tea, Baking Powder and
Fy’z 1 \ Dishes. Send today for our Illustrated Catalogue, showing the Tea F
nzC’?'tWß /''l -a::..--—Sets, Dinner Sets, Toilet. Sets, Furniture, Skirts. Sewing Machines. l i
etc- ’ we give awa y FREE. \Ve Pay Liberal Cash Commission.
artMM Consumers Supply Co., Dep’t B. St. Louis, Mo.
“That Simple Life.”
What and why is the “ Simple Life?” Mr. Wagner has devoted more
time to describing it and giving reasons why than any one, and has written
a book, the sales of which have no doubt enable its author to more com
fortably live the simple life.
Investigation forces one to the conclusion that the simple existence is
within the reach of the rich only. It is a shame that they should have a mo
nopoly on even this. On the surface it would seem that wealth would pre
clude the simple life, but not so. A poor man can’t live it—he can’t afford
to. Picture a poor man in your own community starting out on this line.
If he works enough to keep himself decently clad and sufficiently fed, his life
will crowd close upon the strenuous. If he quits work or works only occa
sionally and casually, he will be ragged, out of credit and will be called lazy.
The simple life can not without reproach be lived by this class under the ex
isting vagrancy laws.
The man in the country with some twenty thousand dollars, and in the
city with one hundred thousand; with a wife whose tastes run to the simple
life; with the money placed in stable investments, can live upon his income
and not be criticised by the neighbors—and is close to the simple life; but
how dull it will be at times!
The tramp is your true simple liver. He toils not, neither does he spin;
and as to raiment, he is a close second to the lilies of the field.
The trouble about the simple life is that it requires so much attention to
smooth it up and polish it off properly that there is no time left for anything
else. Probably no existence is simpler or more placid than that of the oyster.
Personally the oyster is not socially inclined, though he is gregarious in his
habits, and is not inclined to roam about. Living, as he does, within sound
of the manifold voices of ocean, and being, as would be supposed, responsive
to its moods, now of mighty power and now of sunshiny calm, the oyster life
might well be one of earnest and active endeavor. But alas, the kindest de
scription applicable to his life is that of philosophic calm. When the tide is
in he opens up for business. If anything edible comes along- with the water,
he appropriates it. When the tide goes out, he puts up his shutters and
business is over. Open and absorb, close and assimilate. There we have the
short and simple annals of an oyster's life. In oysterland the simple life
finds its highest expression.
True, occasionally an oyster furnishes a pearl as his life work and as
an excuse for living; but is the pearl sufficient recompense for having lived
an oyster? The pearl may gleam among diamonds on beauty’s breast, but
the oyster doesn’t stop there.
As yet no man in active life has worked out a system of really simple
living. “Father”—a gentleman recently made prominent by a popular song,
comes nearest doing it. He is, from all accounts, a philosopher and idealist.
He is a smoker and cares not from his own fireside to roam. He is content
to let the naughty world go on in its devious ways while he trusts serenely in
the triumph of the fittest, and conserves his energy in his ingle-nook. Even
in his case his simplicity places his wife and daughter under the necessity
of performing certain manual labors connected with the renovation of apparel.
Many unkind things have been said of “Father.” His motives have been
impugned and his character assailed. Soon Father, the only simon pure liver
of the simple life, will have resumed the white man’s burden and returned
to mingle with his fellows in the rude pursuits of the work-a-day world. Soon
we will hear of him, in company with an inquisitely shaped pick-axe, delving
in the earth preparatory to laying gas-pipes, or perchance he will be placing
in position the hard, unfeeling cobble-stone. Alas, poor Father! Sic transit.
There is a lot of lost motion in this talk of the simple life—and when
you find a man living it, get him to show you his books. Figure up what it
costs to live it, and then just get the results. There’s nothing to it.
A. E. R.
It is our duty, with regard to temperance, to elect men that are known
to be in sympathy with our movement, to see to it that in the local elections
on the question of prohibition no place is lost, and to put into our county
offices men that will enforce the Watts and Ward Acts.—Biblical Recorder
(Raleigh, N. C.)
The Golden Age for March 1, 1906.
Why Gorge Yourself
with huge quantities of Mineial Water to get
the benefit of a ew grains ot Mineral? Use
Piedmont Concentrated Iron and Alum Water.
8 ozs. equals 25 gallons of Mineral Water. Less
expensive and more effective. Wonder ul cure
for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Blood Poison Skin
Dise ses and all Stomach, Bowei Kidney and
Bladder t.oubles. Ask your Druggist, or write
J. M. Echo s co., owners, Lynchburg, Va.
> IMPORTANT
* n Chicken Raising all
clearly explained in our
New 1906 Catalogue
YSF WHAT TO FEED
HOW TO FEED
About INCUBATORS
and brooders
The rearing of young chicks. How to
make Hens lay. We carry a large stock
of Poultry Supplies, Incubators and
Brooders and will quote lowest prices.
We own a broiler plant and breed S. C.
White Leghorns and Barred Plymouth
Rocks.
R. L. CANNON A COMPANY
F. O. BOX 563 BRISTOL, TENN.
Tooth
llfa Paste
Bk Differs from th
ordinary dent
1 frice in minimiz
| ing the causes of
| decay. Endorsed
i « by thousands of
b Dentists. It is deliciously
flavored, and a delightful
adjunct to the dental toilet.
r\l hor sale at best stores.
U 25c. per tube. Avoid snb-
CII BhHbß stitutes. Send for our free
* SL* book “Taking Care of the
Teeth,” which contains
valuable information concisely written.
DENTACURA COMPANY*
156 ALLING ST., NEWARK, N. J. 9 U. S. A
Increase Your
The
/ Os The Fields A
i J
L
L fe MB
■ depends upon the life-long study 9
■ and experience of the men who di-
■ J this business, and, who mix a ■
■ fertilizer which “makes three (often ■
Ig a dozen) blades of grassgrow, where
SI only one grew before.” The name ■
■ of it is
I Virginia-Carolina Fertilizer.
H ,By its very liberal use, a week or
two before, or at planting, as well
■ as second application, multitudes of
■ farmers in the South have “ in
fl creased their yields per acre,” and ■
H with the larger profits which these
increased yields brought, paid off
■ themortgageontheirfarms. Don’t B
■ be fooled by any dealer into buying B
■ a “cheap” substitute.
Virginia°Carolina Chemical Co.
■ Richmond, Va. Atlanta, Ga.
M Norfolk, Va. Savannah, Ga. B.
■ Durham, N. C. Montgomery, Ala. B
H Charleston, S. C. Memphis, Tenn.
■ Baltimore, Md. Shreveport, La.