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Song of The Twentieth Century
Christ in the Heart, and his love
in the nation, is the only cure for
the ills which threaten us today.
Ex-President Harrison.
“Christ in the heart and his love in
the nation’”
Stronger are these than the gun or
the sword;
Dawns the new day of our country’s
salvation,
Cleansed from her sins by the might
of the Lord.
Christ in the human heart,
Teach us the better part,
Save us from treachery, battle and
greed;
Love be the nation’s w T ord,
By every people heard,
Love for humanity in its great need,
Angels of Bethlehem, sound your glad
chorus,
Thrilling our souls by its message
divine;
Warfare and carnage no more shall
rule o’er us,
Turn to the Right, Atlantians
Is it not strange, past all compre
hension, that Atlanta pedestrians
have not learned the rule, prevalent
all large cities, to turn to the right,
in walking?
Os course, we see how we acquired
the habit of walking in a haram, scar
urn fashion, we native Atlantians.
We grew up in Atlanta when she was
a small town and had plenty of el-
LESS MEAT IF BACK
AND KIDNEYS HURT
Take a Glass of Salts to Flush Kidneys
if Bladder Bothers You—Drink
Dots of Water.
Eating meat regularly eventually
produces kidney trouble in some form
or other, says a well-known authority,
because the uric acid in meat excites
the kidneys, they become overworked;
get sluggish; clog up and cause all
sorts of distress, particularly back
ache and misery in the kidney region;
rheumatic twinges, severe headaches,
acid stomach, constipation, torpid
liver, sleeplessness, bladder and uri
nary irritation.
The moment your back hurts or
kidneys aren’t acting right, or if blad
der bothers you, get about four oun
ces of Jad Salts from any good phar
macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass
of water before breakfast for a few
days and your kidneys will then act
fine This famous salts is made from
the acid of grapes and lemon juice,
combined wdth lithia, and has been
used for generations to flush clogged
kidneys and stimulate them to nor
mal activity; also to neutralize the
acids in the urine so it no longer irri
tates, thus ending bladder disorders.
Jad Salts cannot injure anyone;
makes a delightful effervescent lithia
water drink which millions of men
and women take now and then to
keep the kidneys and urinary organs
clean, thus avoiding serious kidney
disease.
THE GOLDEN AGE FOR WEEK OF FEB. 5, 1914
THE HOUSEHOLD
▲ DEPARTMENT OF EXPRESSION FOR THOSE WHO FEEL AND THINK.
By Elizabeth Lloyd.
By Julia O’Keefe Nelson.
Brightly the star of our Saviour
shall shine.
Star of the Prince of Peace,
Bring to us swift release,
Let not our brothers their brothers
destroy;
Lead us to truly pray,
Show us the higher way,
Teach us that living for others is
joy.
Flag of our fathers, float on in thy
glory!
Always thy red stand for justice
and law,
Ever thy white tell the sweet gospel
story,
Never thy blue in its truth show a
flaw,
And every lustrous star,
Shine from thy folds afar.
Over a people united and free;
Guarding this flag above,
Keep us, O God of love,
Loyal to country, to manhood and
Thee.
bow room. It was all right then.
But we went up to fifty thousand,
passed that, then up to seventy-five
thousand, one hundred thousand, one
hundred and fifty thousand, two hun
dred thousand, and now are ranked at
two hundred and fifty thousand, and
still walk as if we lived in a little
grass-grown village.
I have wondered for years past why
some one did not call attention to this
strange inconsistency. I have won
dered why some of our interprising
northern or western citizens, accus
tomed to big cities, did not protest.
I have wondered, yet more, why our
own people did not. It must be no
ticeable to them, after their many vis
its to New York.
Atlanta is usually keen enough for
al 1 that concerns her prestige. She
beasts of her fine theaters, churches,
and office buildings, which would do
credit to any city. She has strict
laws for regulating her street cars
and automobiles. But her pedestri
ans are allowed to ramble along in
any old way.
I declare, it is often more difficult
to walk, with any comfort or speed,
on Whitehall and the business parts
of Peachtree, than it is on Broadway
or Fifth Avenue, New York, on a mat
inee afternoon. In New York the
people are massed so compactly that
it would be impossible to break
through them. One easily sees how
the country man, in New York, watch
ing the passing throng, asked a po_
liceman, “If that procession ever
would quit passing?”
But there is among all those pedes
trians one fixed rub, invariably fol
lowed, “turn to the right.”
past each other, all those individuals
This rule pilots, safety and quickly,
hurrying north and south, or east
and west.
But to try to walk, on the busy parts
of Whitehall and Peachtree, is like
be ng obliged to play “Fox and
Geese.’ when you are in a hurry and
would prefer to walk straight on.
Time and time again, I start out
with a grim determination to “turn
to the right,” regardless of what any
one else does.
Here comes a gentleman, hurrying
along to the left when he should be
to the right. I come up to him,
clearly evincing my determination to
keep to the right, where I belong and
he turns out, just in time to escape
a collision, but with an expression
which seems to defer to a lady’ll
whim, rather than as o/bidence to a
law for pedestrians.
My next vis-a-vis is a lady, coming
south, while I am going north. I
try to follow my path, “to the right.”
She views me with a killing stare,
which says: “I got here first and I
am going to stay here, too.”
I turn to the left, in despair of do
ing anything else.
This thing seems to me to have
passed the joking Sitage. I really
think it time that Atlanta learn to
“turn to the right.
We have three progressive newspa
pers, the Journal, Georgian and Con
stitution. If they will explain the
reason of this law, and preach it, and
keep preaching it, Atlantians in time
may learn to walk, “decently and
in order,” as people do in other big
cities.
Won’t you help, Mr. Editors?
THE “GREAT WATERS” THE
GRANDEST SIGHT OF ALL.
Dear Little Mother and H. H.
Well, how are you all this beautiful
morning? It looks here like a May
day up in Atlanta. I have been out
enjoying and seeing everything that
our Master bestowed upon the land of
flowers. I went down to Long Beach
the other day on a steamer; it is
about fifty or sixty miles from Tam
pa. We were four hours going. There
were about three hundred passengers.
I have been on the river steamers
and enjoyed them, but the ride on
the vast waters of the bay where we
could not see any land in sight, was
simply grand and I gave the Master
all the glory for permitting me to
live to enjoy such a trip, and and
view the grandeur of his creation. I
have seen many mountains but I
flunk the big waters are the grand
est of all.
Long Beach has the Gulf of Mex
ico on one side and Tampa Bay on
the other. I would like to own a
summer home there. I think it
would be delightful there. Could go
in bathing whenever one felt like it.
There is no undertow there and there
fore, it is not dangerous. There were
a great many in the surf bathing. I
was sorry that I did not carry my
bathing suit with me for I would have
enjoyed a plunge. It is a new place
and I think it will be the coming
beach of Florida. You can go out
and catch all the fish you want. But
the grandest sight of all, on our re
turn trip was seeing old sol got to
rest on the water. The waters had
every color of the rainbow. Where
the gulf stream flows into the bay
you can see the waters and tell it
is not the bay water, it is a beautiful
green. And where the sand bars are
the water has a yellow appearance.
Tampa is full of tourist, but they
tell me not near so many visit here
as there were last winter.
Tampa has plenty of picketpockets.
My Meals Don’t
Hurt a Bit
A Little Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablet
Will Aid Your Exhausted Stomach
to Digest Any Meal.
Isn’t it a real joy to see children
eat? There is almost a ridiculous hu
mor about it. The same joy that a
child feels at meal time should be ex
perienced by “grown ups” and would
be if they would only do as children
do.
The work, worries and woes of adult
life exhaust the digestive apparatus
and nature very often is not allowed
time or opportunity to renew or re
pair the exhausted organs and de
pleted digestive juices.
W jk
jKjgffgTyy » «.
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‘•V/tll Whata You Think o’ a Big Feed
Without Pain?”
A Stuart’s tablet goes into the stom
ach like food. It contains nothing
but natural digestive elements and
when at work in a weak stomach it
aids the worn-out gastric glands, sup
plies the right mixture of stomach
juices and under the action of the
stomach it thoroughly permeats all
the food. Thus when the stomach
work is done the meal goes into the
small intestines in better shape to be
assimilated by the* system.
One element of Stuart’s Dyspepsia
Tablets is so strong and efficient that
one grain of it will digest 3,000 grains
of mixed food such as meats, vege
tables, grains, fluids, etc.
The simple habit of eating a Stu
art’s Dyspepsia Tablet after each meal
will readjust your digestion in a very
short time so that you will no longer
need assistance.
Go to your druggist and obtain a
box today; price 50 cents.
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