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Atlanta Directory
XS If ft IFO and High Grade
CM ft Eilll£Aftft Finishing. Mall
Bhmwir orders given Spe-
rMw cial Attention. All kinds of Photo
kßsssb Supplies. Send for Catalogue. GLENN
PHOTO STOCK, CO. 117 Peachtree Atlanta. 6a
CURED. QUICK
8 f SC S > BP*H RELIEF. Reduces
■ swelling 15 days.
Shortness of breath relieved in 36 hours.
COLLUM DROPSY REMEDY COMPANY
Dept. K» 512 Austell Bldg.* Atlanta. Ga.
HRHPQV ITREATITBYMAIL.
unuroi (SHORTNESS of breath
W/W relieved in 24 hours. Swelling usually
gone in one week. Write for symptom
blank and testimonials. Address DR.
PATTERSON. Dropsy Specialist, 446 M
wfctl Edgewood Avenue. Atlanta, Georgia
If you have two hands Prof. G.O.
W Browning will teach you. Only
* college in U'. S. with shops con-
nected ; S3O for cours^, tools and position at good;
wages. Commission paid for bringing students.
ATLANTA BARBER COLLEGE, 10 E. Mitchell 81.. Atlanta, Georgia
> 35^ L C. SMITH TYPEWRITERS
Edison Dictating Machines.
KsHKtfclgA Standard Folding Typewriters.
H. M. ASHE CO. So. Dealers
* bw ^t»S^ Atlanta, Ga. Jacksonville, Fla,
.
THE OLD RELIABLE
FRICK ENGINES
and the best Steel Wire Cable Saw Mill on
earth. Also large Engines and Boilers sup-
ZVX, 4_ * plied very _. . .
prom pll y.
Circular
~ S^ss) Saws, Engines and Mill
Cjz Repairs, all kinds of Patent
Dogs, Steam Governors, Com Mills, Feed
Mills, Grain Separators, Saw Teeth, Locks,
Mill Supplies, and all kinds of machinery.
SEND FOR CATALOG
AVERY & CO., 51-53 S. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
FCR SALE—24O A. .MOBILE CO.. ALA.. NR.
Citronelle; 30 a. cult.; 2 story h., barn. 4 out
bldgs., 150 pear trees. Etock, machinery, etc.;
going to Europe. PEDER, Box 319, Chicago.
SALESMEN WANTED—To sell of Maglo
wecdcre and hots, the king of garden tools,
to wholesale and retail stores; exceptional
opportunity; excellent side or exclusive line.
The A. H. Reichard Mtg. Co- Bangor. Venn.
Wanted to Know the Culprit.
The following story was told recent
ly by Austin Haines to a party of
friends he entertained at luncheon:
“Down in a little Florida town two
negro families live in shanties about
a stone’s throw apart. They obtain
their drinking water from a shallow
open well located midway between the
two houses. A fence which separates
the two yards is built up to the well
on both sides. Every evening after
her day’s work is done, it is the cus
tom of one of the negro mammies to
pick up buckets and go to the well for
water. One day the owner of the
property moved the fence back about
ten feet from where it originally stood.
That evening when Eliza started out
with her pail she fixed her eye on the
fence and made straight for it. Walk
ing hurriedly along the beaten path,
she plunged into the shallow well with
a splash. Her screams brought im
mediate assistance, and as she climb
ed out and spied the fence ten feet
away she indignantly exclaimed:
“ ‘Now, who done moved dat well?’ ”
Rather an Open Secret.
A very important citizen was drawn
on a jury, a week or two ago, and I
met him after he had been discharged.
He seemed to think that he was en
titled to be on the bench, at the very
least.
“ ‘What was your verdict in that
case?” I asked.
“ ‘The defendant was unanimously
acquitted cn the first ballot.’
‘“lndeed? And how did you vote?’
“ ‘That, sir, is one of the sacred se
crets of the juryroom.’ ” —Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
At the End of the Spat.
Hubby—You know, dearest, that you
are my star.
Wifey—Do you mean a sky star or
a stage star?
H übby—Oh-er-why ?
Wifey, because if you mean the lat
ter, I want to tell you that your star
doesn’t’ handle as much money as an
ordinary soubrette.
DUBIOUS
About What Her Husband Would Say.
A Mich, woman tried Postum bej
cause coffee disagreed with her ana
.her husband. Tea is just as harm
ful as coffee because it contains caf
feine —the same drug found in cof
fee. She writes:
“My husband was sick for three
years with catarrh of the bladder, and
palpitation of the heart, caused by
coffee. Was unable to work at all
and in bed part of the time.
“1 had stomach trouble, was weak
and fretful so I could not attend to
my housework —both of us using cof
fee all the time and not realizing it
was harmful.
"One morning the grocer’s w’ife
said she believed coffee was the cause
of our trouble and advised Postum. I
took it home rather dubious what my
hueband would say—he was fond of
coffee.
"But I took coffee right off the table
and we haven’t used a cup of it since.
You should have seen the change in
us, and now’ my husband,never com
plains of heart palpitation any more.
My stomach trouble went away in two
weeks after I began Postum. My chil
dren love it, and it does them good,
which can’t be said of coffee.
"A lady visited us who was usually
half sick. I told her I’d make her a
cup of Postum. She said it was taste
less stuff, but she watched me make
it, boiling it thoroughly for 15 minutes,
and when done, she said it was splen
did. Long boiling brings out the fla
vor and food quality.’’ Name given b;
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Look in pkgs, for the famous little
book, “The Road to Wellvllle.”
Ever read the above lettert A new
one appenra from time to time. The
are genuine, true, and full of human
Interest.
’ CHILDREN SOLD AS SLAVES
Annual Fair Is Held at Friedrichshafen
to Loan. Boys and Giris to (
Farmers.
Friedrichshafen. —A strange custom
prevails in the Tyrolese Alps. Land
less parents sell their children for the
summer season to the largest land
owner, the sales being effected at an
annual fair held at Friedrichshafen, on
the Lake of Constance, at Easter time. ■
This year 125 boys and 30 girls, be
tween the ages of eleven and sixteen
years, were offered. Purchasers were
not lacking, about 600 peasant farmers
from Baden, Wurttemberg, and Ba
yaria had come to get child-slaves to
work on their farms. The purchasers
1 ELuj. san « :
If ■ *
m Bf "• ‘ $
। Ancient Castle in the Tyrol.
behaved exactly as at the cattle mar
ket, scrutinizing the boys and girls,
, sometimes feeling their biceps, and
then making an offer to the person in
charge of the party.
Owing to the demand this year be
ing so much greater than the supply,
the prices ruled high, S6O being given
, for a sturdy lad of sixteen, big enough
to wield the hayfork or a scythe ef
fectively, while SSO was given for one
of .the older girls who looked as if
she could do a long day’s weeding in
the sun. One the other hand, sl2 was
considered enough for little, underfed
mites of eleven, who ought to have
been at school.
The money, of course, goes to the
children’s parents, landless men in the
remoter valleys of Tyrol, woodsmen
and the like, who. one would be glad
to believe, are driven by sheer desti
tution to send their children to work
for strangers in a foreign country.
The child slaves are sent home at the
end of October —all, that is, but some
who succumb to overwork, ill-treat
ment, and home-sickness. That the
children are not always well treated is
well known, but a black-list is kept,
and an offender has a poor chance of
making a purchase thereafter.
The whole business of the child
market, which is of great antiquity, is
now arranged by a clerical society,
the activity of which is violently at
tacked by part of the local press,
which demands its suppression.
NOTED LONDON CATHEDRAL
St Paul’s Has Been the Scene of
Many Notable Gatherings Since
It Was Built.
London. —The memorial service at
St. Paul’s cathedral in London in com
memoration of those who went down
with the Titanic was for a little while
the focus of the world’s greatest city.
The great downtown cathedral be
tween Fleet street and Cheapside has
been the scene of many a tremendous
gathering. It stands like a huge rock
i fair amid the seas of traffic that wash
up Ludgate Hili from the Strand and
■ JI
A
WrXiU-niLL* -4-'
ri
Beautiful Dome of St. Paul’s.
on the east to the Bank of England;
different from the Abbey which stands
remote at Westminster. St. Paul ?
was rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren
after the great fire of 1666. It is 51€
feet long and 219 feet wide; took
twenty-two years to build until th<
time of opening, and thirteen years
more for completion. St. Paul’s is
the tomb of many great men. Ovei
the north door is the inscription, "Lee
tor si monumentum requiris, circum
spice.” “Reader, if you seek his; l.hu»
ment. look about you.”
YOU ARE POISONING
YOURSELF WITH FOOD
PURE FOOD DOES NOT PREVENT
POISONOUS GASES.
All Could Be Methuselahs if We Did
Not Shorten Life by Self-Poisoning.
All food eaten has some waste, un
used particles left in the stomach un
digested. From this waste uric acid
generates, and when uric acid gets In
the blood stream it poisons the system.
This is termed autotoxemia. Indiges
tion, biliousness, dyspepsia, sick head
ache, languidness, loss of energy and a
weakened physical condition result
and make the system vulnerable to
. disease. Eliminate autotoxemia, and
we might live hundreds of years.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT flushes the
stomach and the bowels, dissolves the
uric acid and expels It with the undi
gested putrefying waste matter that
generates the poison.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is better
than calomel. It causes no vomiting,
nausea or after effect. Effervescent,
agreeable, mild, quick—no other liver
medicine is equal to It. Don’t take a
substitute. %-lb. jar 25c at your drug
gist (by mail 16c extra for postage).
Jacobs’ Pharmacy, Atlanta. Large free
sample and interesting booklet for 2c
stamp.
HOW IT LOOKED.
(ft
irS xl r
Gladys—The count .says Edith is
pure gold.
Jack —That means another gold ship
ment to Europe, I suppose.
Tetterine Cures Itching Piles.
Fort Scott. Kansas.
Again I am calling for the best salve I
ever used. Enclosed find (2.50. Send me
one-half dozen boxes of Tetterine.
N. J. Kipp.
Tetterine Cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring
Worm, Boils, Rough, Scaly Patches on the
Face, Old Itching Sores, Itching Piles,
Cankered Scalp, Chilblains, Corns, and
every form of Scalp and Skin Disease.
Tetterine, 50c. Tetterine Soap 25c. Your
druggist, or by mail from the manufac
turer. The Shuptrine Co.. Savannah, Ga.
With every mall order for Tetterine we
give a box of Shuptrine’s 10c Liver Pills
free.
Solid Ivory.
“Yes.” confessed Mr. Dorkins, "it
serves me right. I engaged the man
to move our goods, and I forgot to ask
him how much he was going to charge
me for the job. If ever I do such
a thing again, Maria, you can have
my head for a football.”
"It would be a good deal more profit
able, John,” said Mrs. Dorkins, “to
cut it up into billiard balls.” —Chicago
Tribune.
Suspicious.
“My father talked me into taking
this course in domestic science.”
“And ho-w do you like domestic sci
ence?”
“Well, it looks like ordinary kitchen
work to me. If my suspicions are con
firmed, I shall drop the course and
make father buy me a SSO hat.” —
Washington Herald.
Not Always.
"One reaps what one sows.”
“Allow me to differ with you.”
“How so?”
“When one sows wild oats one gen
erally reaps a crop of lemons.”
TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA
AND BUILD UP THE SYSTEM
Take the Old Standard GROVM'S TASTELESS
j CHILL TONIC. Von knot, what yon are taking.
The fonrnla la plainly printed on every bottle,
showing it is simply. Quinine and Iron in a tasteless
form, and the most effectual form. Kor grown
people and children; £0 cents
It’s easier for a mother to train up
her son in the way he should go than
it is for her to prevent him from go
ing some other woman’s way a few
few years later.
For SUMMER i/eADACHES
Hicks’ CAPUDINE is the best remedy—no
matter what causes them—whether from the
heat, sitting in draughts, feverish condition,
etc. 10c., 25c. and 50c. per bottle at medicine
stores.
If a man isn’t sufficiently original
to manufacture his own lies he should
stick to the truth.
It always makes good 1 What? Garfield
Tea. the Natural Laxative, composed entirely
of pure, wholesome and healthgiving herbs.
Every time a girl sees a handsome
young man she wonders whose sweet
heart he Is.
Garfield Tea, a laxative of superior qual
ity I For those suffering with constipation.
When a man’s conscience troubles
him he thinks he has indigestion.
And many a sober young man turns
out to be a gay old boy.
Death Lurks In A Weak Heart |
MENACE IN SPITTING EVIL
Allegation Is Made That the Habit Is
Responsible for 95 Per Cent
of Consumption Cases.
“Ninety-five per cent of our con
sumption,” says the North Carolina
state board of health, “comes from
careless spitting, coughing and sneez
ing,” particularly on the part of the
consumptive, but also from people
who are apparently healthy. "Spit is
frequently laden with deadly disease
gyms, particularly that of consump
tives.
“When one coughs, spits or
sneezes, a great multitude of tiny
drops of spittle are violently expelled
from the mouth and nose. The larg
est of these drops can be readily see*.
A large number of smaller droplets
can be found if a mirror or piece of
glass is held before the face when
coughing or sneezing. A tremendous
quantity of still smaller droplets are
discharged in the form of an invis
ible spray or mist, which floats about
in the air for some time. Scientists
have found that when a man coughs,
spits or sneezes in a. large hall or
room where the air is quiet, these
tiny, invisible germ-laden droplets
will float in the air for a distance of
25 to 100 feet. These tiny droplets,
in the form or mist or spray, may be
breathed in by other people, or they
may settle on objects with which
they come into intimate contact, such
food and clothing. Viewed in this
light, such conduct is at least impo
lite. Furthermore, it is dangerous
to the public at large to have careless
people actually coughing, sneezing
and spitting germ-laden matter into
their faces, even if it is invisible and
in the form of fine mist.”
Awful.
The president of the university had
dark circles under his eyes. His cheek
was pallid; his lips were trembling;
he wore a haunted expression. Every
now and then he turned and glanced
apprehensively behind him. •
“You look ill.” said his wife. “What
is wrong, dear?”
“Nothing much,” he replied. “But —
I—l had a fearful dream last night,
and I feel this morning as if —as if I
—” He hesitated and stammered. It
was evident that his nervous system
was shattered.
“What was the dream?” asked his
wife.
“I—l dreamed the trustees required
that —that I should —that I should
pass the freshman examination for
admission!” sighed the president.—
Youth’s Companion.
On Land and Sea.
“Circumstances alter cases even in
human nature.”
“Yes. Take Jerkins, for instance.
He's one es those grandiose Chester- •
fields who would give up his seat in
a lifeboate to a woman, and then
make an attempt to lead the saloon
orchestra in ‘Nearer, My God, to Thee'
as the ship sinks.”
“I see. On land, Jorkins is the fel
low at 6 o’clock who horns through
the women and children and gets a
window seat in his home-bound street ;
car.”
—,
A splendid and highly recommended
remedy for tired, weak, inflamed eyes,
and granulated eyelids, is Paxtine An
tiseptic, at druggists, 25c a box or sent
postpaid on receipt of price by The
Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass.
Here’s consolation for the married
man: When the suffragettes gain
their point, and an election doesn't
go his way, he can blame it on his
wife.
DOES TOUR HEAD ACHE ?
Try Hicks’ CAPUDINE. It’s liquid—pleas
ant to take—effects immediate —pood to prevent
Sick Headaches and Nervous Headaches also.
Your money back if not satisfied. 10c., 25c. and
50c. at medicine stores.
A jealous woman enables his
Satanic majesty to take a vacation
now and then.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing ryrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle.
The man who paddles his own canoe
today may own a steam yacht to
morrow.
Garfield Tea purifies the bl<>od and clears
the complexion. Drink before retiring.
Men may be born modest, but wom
en have to acquire all they get.
IWiiM 4 M ALARI A I
WI hTE RSMITHS gein e ral to IN Ic I
T (WillTonlc
Impractical on the Face of It.
"I understand." said Mr. Erastus
Pinkley, “dau dey has invented a
machine fob washin’ an’ ironin'
money.”
"Go ’long, man." replied Miss Mi
ami Brown. "You knows des as well
as 1 does dese white folks ain’ g'ineter
leave no clothes lines full o' two-dol
lar bills hangin' out in de yard."—
Washington Star.
A man is judged by the company
he keeps, and by the cigars he gives
away.
SIM
miiiimnmmm'M For Infants and Children,
u p ——————————
ifMjjjjllThe Kind You Have
Always Bought
K ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT *
l|* A\ege table Preparation for As- _ _ g
ig'maTO' Bears the ZzX
Signature /Am
ur । Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- £ W _
?j i ness and Rest Contains neither
l p ; Opium. Morphine nor Mineral v #l\. Ij
Not Narcotic
Old DrSAMl’Elim/fEK • Jy
। Pumpkin ’ A
I.y , IhtktUtStlb - I a
I MU a I M
& 7 A . W
WormStU- I 11 I 11 ■ iB
i Clar/itd Suyor 1 11 A
Winltryrttn Flavor * “
tJ'C A perfect Remedy for Constipa- £\T All II S R
v.T lion.SourStomach,Diarrhoea, | 1 1^
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- 1 11/ _
^8; ness and Loss OF Sleep \ U La k Ijirpr
Facsimile Signature of
1 Thirty Years
t&CASTORIA
Exact Copy of Wrapper. th. o.ht.u. oo««.«hv, »w »o« oitt.
NEW WOMAN’S REQUIREMENT.
*
rw'”W'
. Ella —Why did you break your en
gagement to Fred?
Stella —He objected to the use of
“obey” in bls part of the marriage
service.
When Your Eyes Need Care
Try Murine Eye Remedy. No Smarting—Feels i
Fine—Acts Quickly. Try it for Red, Weak, !
Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Ulus
j trated Book in each Package. Murine is
’ compounded by our Oculists —not a “Patent Med
! icine*’—but used in successful Physicians' Prac- -
tice for many years. Now dedicated to the Pub-
I lie and sold bv Druggists at 26c and Me per Bottle.
Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c and 50c.
Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago
The gossip of today may be the su- i
perstition of tomorrow.
U = ^ =3 I °
ii if
|§|||^^ I
O Road to Comfort O
A vanished thirst—a cool body and a refreshed one; the
sure way—th'e only way is via a glass or bottle of
Ideally delicious—pure as purity—crisp and sparkling as frost.
I?— Our new bocklet, telling of CoahCola
1 Tindiat-oa at Chattanooga, for the «rir>g. Whenerer
51-J Demand the Genuine a« made by /Jw/thiS
THE COCA-COLA CO., ATLAXTA, CA. of C«c»-C<>t».
!□;> CO
A Special Favor.
Customer —I want a ton of coal.
Dealer —Yes, sir. What size?
Customer —Well, if it’s not asking
too much. I'd lik« to have a 2,000-
pound ton. —Brooklyn Life.
The man who oas something to sell
is always an optimist.
Quality — quantity —is something to con
sider in purchasing a remedy for constipa
tion or as a laxative. How about Garfield Tea I
Many a man looks like a statesman
who is not guilty.
The Wretchedness
of Constipation ,
Can quickly be overcome by \
CARTER’S LITTLE JEfe. 1
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable
—act s’urelv and
gently on the
n'r 1 ’ ^ ure Hl VFR
Biliousness, ■
H ea d - | P l ^ s -
ache,
Dizzi- W
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
I
* *
A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.
Ie this age of research and experiment, all natut*
Is ransacked bythescieniiflcforthecomfortaDdb»p
pinessof man. Science has indeed made giantstrides*
|ln the past century, and among the—by no meana
least important—discoveries in medicine is that of
The rapion. which has been used with great succession
Frencn Hospitals and that it is worthy the attention*
of those who suffer from kidney, bladder, nervous
diseases, chronic weaknesses.ulcers,skin eruptions.
Files, Ac.. there is no doubt. In fact it seems evident
rom the big stir created amongst specialists, that
• TH EKAPION is destined to cast into oblivion all
those Questionable remedies that were formerly th*
I sole reliance of medical men. Jt is of course impos
sible to tell sufferers all we should like to tell them
I in this short article, but those who would like to
know mort about this remedy that has effected bo
manv—we might almost say. miraculous cum,
should send addressed envelope for FREE book to
> Dr. Le Clerc Med. Co.. Haverstock Road. Hampstead,
: London. Eng. and decide fortbemselvea whether the
New French Remedy “THERAPION* No. 1. No. 1
or No. 3 is what they require and have been seeking
in vain during a life of misery, suffering, ill health
and unhappiness. Therapion is soldby druggists or
mail fl.oo. Fougera Co., St Beekman Su, New York.
DEFIANCE STARCH curcheT ’cloche, ilcMb
DAISY FLY KILLER ££ XTSS *
files. Neat, -iean o«b
n * nJ «Dl* 1 t eonvvtUettfi
K J cheap. Lasts all
IKShffSQE^ >3 a I oa. Mad» oC
™«t*L can t spill oeW*
over; wIU not soil oe
Injure anything.
Guaranteed effective.
WfiWS^SsSfflW Sold by dealer* <*
• Mat nrrv.l4 roe B.
BABOLD SOMBBA IM D^U. in, BrnUja. ■• C‘
■a ■ I It you suffer with piles, send
I|| A A name and address to PR. B- L.
ANDERSON, boa 633, Fort
I lIUU Meade, Florid., for valuably!
Information.
- ■ =d
W. N. U M ATLANTA, NO. Z 7-1912. ]
— , .. .., ■ ■ -I" I