Newspaper Page Text
YOU CAN’T KEEP WELL WHEN
YOU ARE CONSTIPATED
CONSTIPATION IS THE ROOT OF
NEARLY ALL DISEASE.
"Keep Your Bowels Open”—Doctors
Estimate That 75 Per Cent, of Sick-
ness Is Due to Torpid Liver.
I All food eaten has some undigestlble
waste, which the liver clears away day
by day. Now, a heavy or unusual diet,
or a change in water, may cause the
liver to leave a few particles, and the
next day its cleansing work is more
difficult. These particles press and
clog, and more are left over; and so
this waste accumulates, clogging stom
ach and intestinal canal and causing
Constipation.
This is not all. If this waste is
not eliminated, it ferments and gen
erates uric acid, a poison which gets
into the blood stream and is carried
along through the system to poison
It and develop disease.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT dissolves
the uric acid and passes it off in the
urine. It flushes and cleanses the
stomach and intestinal canal and re
lieves the liver from the pressure of
fermenting waste matter. The liver
then resumes its normal activity.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is much bet
ter than calomel. It causes no grip
ing, nausea or vomiting, because it
acts mildly and without force. It is
the mercurial force of calomel that
nauseates and salivates. JACOBS’
LIVER SALT is pleasaht and bubbling,
agreeable to everyone, and no other
liver medicine acts so 'quickly and so
gently. % lb. jar, 25e at your druggist
(by mail lGc extra postage). JacSbs’
Pharmacy, Atlanta, Ga. Large free
sample and interesting booklet for 2c
stamp.
CERTAINLY.
. J^OHL
^3?! /
3 mii y
The Philosopher—lt’s the man with
a pull that gets ahead.
The Politician —Yes; but it’s the
man with the head that gets a pull.
The Doghouse.
, ‘‘The doghouse!” shouted a bellman
at the Congress hotel to the key clerk
in asking for the key to the room to
which he was taking a convention
guest.
“Hold on ther^/ snapped the guest,
Henry Valkenstein of New York.
“What’s this ‘doghouse’ mean? Think I
am an animal?”
“That’s all right,” said Clerk John
Burke, soothingly. “It’s only a nick
name the boys have for the room I
gave you, which was K-9.”
“Oh, I see,” said the guest; “K-9—
canine; good joke on me, eh?”
If a woman can find the style of hat
Bhe wants, she can always adjust her
head to fit it.
Important it is that the blood be kept pure.
Garfield Tea is big enough for the job.
Helpmates and soulmates are not
always synonymous.
Whenever You
Use Your Back
SDoes a Sharp
Pain Hit You?
It’s a sign of
sick kidneys, es
pecially if the
kidney action is
disordered, too,
passages scanty
or too frequent
or off-color.
Do not neglect
any little kidney
ill for the slight
troubles run into
dropsy, gravel,
stone or Bright’s
cl i sease
Use Doan’s Kidney Pilis. This
good remedy cures bad kidneys.
A TYPICAL CASE—
T. M. Harley, 315 East Fifth Ave., Rome, Ga.,
savs: “Gravel nearly killed me: opiates were
my only relief. The kidney secretions were
scant and my back fairly throbbed with pain.
Doctors didn’t help me and finally J took
Doan's Kidney Pills. Eight boxes cured me
and the trouble never returned.”
* Get Doan’s at any Drug Store, 50c. a Box
Doan’s K jgflr|
DAISY FLY KILLER ES XT® S
flies- Keat, clean or
namental, convenient,
cheap ' l • 1 • a1 *
Reason. Made of
meta1 ’ can’t spill or tip
over; will not soli or
injure anything
Guaranteed effective
I Sold by dealers or
F ■ 6 sent prepaid for 81.
HAEOLD SOMERS. IDO Dtßalb Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y.
CAN CANCER BE CURED? IT CAN I
The record of the Kellam Hospital Is without parallel
In history, having cured to stay cured permanently,
without the use of the knife or X-Ray over 90 per
cent, of the many hundreds of sufferers from cancer
♦ which it has treated during the past fifteen years.
We have been endorsed by the Senate and Legis
lature of Virginia. We Guarantee Our Cures.
Phyelclana treated free.
KELLAM HOSPITAL
1817 W. Main Street, Richmond. Va.
Success -in
Soul Winning
By Rev. W. H. Pope,
Supeantendent of Men of Moody Bible Institute,
Chicago
Three Things to Remember.
I. Remember that the Son of man
came to seek and save that which was
lost. It was not
to found a church,
or to establish a
creed, or to teach
good morals. He
came to die for
men’s sins in or
der that they
might be saved.
Furthermore men
are just as com
pletely lost now
as-they were then.
Civilization has
done away with
some of the cruel
ty and barbarism
in the world, but
human nature is precisely the same to
day as it was 2,000 years ago. It is
thoroughly selfish and sinful, and
nothing but the grace of God can
make it otherwise. (John 3.18, 19; I
Cor. 2:14; Eph. 4:18.)
No matter how amiable and hon
orable and public-spirited a man may
be, without Christ he is lost and needs
to be saved. "He that hath the Son
hath life, and he that hath not the Son
of God hath not life;” that Is, he is
spiritually dead.
11. Remember that the Lord Jesus
will save some souls through you if
you will co-operate with him. Yon
have some gifts and more or less in
fluence. If you will consecrate your
gifts and influence to the service of
Christ, he will certainly use them to
win some of your friends to himself.
While Jesus was in the world he was
the light of the world, but now that he
has gone, “Ye are the light of the
world,” and your mission is to so
shine as to guide others out of dark
ness into the marvelous light of God.
111. Remember that Jesus will fur
nish all the equipment you need. Do
you lack wisdom? “I will give you a
mouth and wisuom which all your ad
versaries shall not be able to gainsay
or resist.” Do you lack courage? “Be
strong and of a good courage; be not
hfraid, neither be thou dismayed: for
the Lord thy God is with thee whith
ersoever thou goest.” (Josh. 1:9.) Do
you lack power? “All power is given
unto me in heaven and earth.” (Matt.
28:18.) Do you lack faith? “The
life which I now live in the Jlesh, I
live by she faith of the Soh of God,
who loved me, and gave himself for
me.” Jeremiah said, “Ah, Lord God!
behold, I cannot speak; for I am a
child.” But the Lord said unto him.
“Say not, I am a child, for thou shalt
go to all that I shall send thee, and
whatsoever I command thee thou
shalt speak.” Remember that all your
inexperience and inability amount to
nothing in the face of the Master’s
express command, “Follow me, and I
will make you fishers of men.”
Three Things to Do.
I. Set the winning of souls before
you as a definite aim in life.
An aimless life is generally a use
less life. The people who succeed are
usually those who set a definite object
before them and say, “This one thing
I will do, whatever the cost may be.”
The men who accumulate fortunes,
who secure political appointments, as
a rule, are people who have been
bending all their energies in one direc
tion for many years. Why should not
Christians set the winning of souls
before them as a definite purpose in
life? And who is there who could not
• succeed if he would put the same
amount of thought and interest into
it that he does into his business? No
one expects to succeed in business
without toil and patience and sacri
fice.
11. Cultivate a passion for souls.
David Brainerd, whose biography
ought to be read often by every Chris
tian worker, used to say: “I care not
where I go, nor what hardships I en
dure. if I can only see souls saved.
All I think of by day and dream of
by nighty is the conversion of men.”
Often he would go out into the for
est in mid-winter and kneel down in
the snow and wrestle in prayer until
his clothing was wet with perspiration.
Many a time he spent the whole night
in prayer for the poor Indians among
whom he labored, and in almost every
such instance, one will find in his
diary two or three days after some
such entry as this: “Today as I
preached the word, the power of God
came down upon those stolid, immov
able Indians, and melted and broke
their hearts, and swept them into the
kingdom by scores.”
111. Begin and continue all your
work with prayer. Pray for all men.
(I Tim. 2:1-4.) “I exhort, therefore,
that prayers, intercessions, and giving
of thanks be made for all men.” One
advantage for praying daily for each
man, woman and child on the face of
the earth is, that you never meet a
person whom you have not prayed for,
and many times.
It is a good plan to make a list of
half a dozen of more persons in whom
you are especially interested, and
make them an object of dally inter
cession, at. the same time looking for
their conversion. A Sunday school
teacher who began praying for his
class had the pleasure of seeing elev
en young men converted in a few
weeks.
SEVEN YEARS
OF MISERY
How Mrs. Bethune was Re
stored to Health by Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound.
Sikeston, /Mo. — “For seven years I
suffered everything. I was in bed for
four or five days at a
time every month,
and so weak I could
hardly walk. I had
cramps, backache
and headache, and
was so nervous and
weak that I dreaded
to see anyone or
have anyonewnove in
1 the room. The doc
| tors gave me medi
’ cine to ease me at
those times, and said that I ought to
have an operation. I would not listen to
that, and when a friend of my husband’s
told him about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound and what it had done
for his wife, I was willing to take it
Now I look the picture of health and feel
like it, too. I can do all my own house
work, work in the garden and entertain
company and enjoy them, and can walk
as far as any ordinary woman, any day
in the week. I wish I could talk to every
suffering woman and girl, and tell them
what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has done for me.”—Mrs.
Dema Bethune, Sikeston, Mo.
Remember, the remedy which did this
was Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
It has helped thousands of women who
have been troubled with displacements,
inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irreg
ularities, periodic pains, backache, that
bearing down feeling, indigestion, and
ervous prostration,after all other means
have failed. Why don’t you try it?
To cure costiveness the medicine must be
more than a purgative; it must contain tonic,
alterative and cathartic properties.
Tutt’s Pills
possess these qualities, and speedily restore
to the bowels their natural peristaltic motion,
so essential to 1 igulni ity . ~ ~
■w ■ | If you suffer with piles, send
B Jll name and address to DR. R. L.
ANDERSON, box 633, Fort
| Meade, Florida, for valuable
laaMKaß l information.
WAGGISH.
\|wi
jyv
Percy—What a sad dog you are.
Always short!
Reggy—Well, I'm no dachshund. I’ll
admiL
Where He Drew the Line.
An English earl, lately deceased,
who had no family, was notorious for
his hatred of children, and on one
occasion he engaged as lodge keeper
an army pensioner named McMicken.
Some few months later McMicken's
wife presented him with a son and
heir. On learning of the occurrence
his lordship rode down to the lodge in
a terrible rage.
"I hear,” said he to Mr. McMicken,
“that your wife has a son.”
“Yes, my lord,” said the man proud
ly.
“Well, now, look here, McMicken;
when I put you here, it was to open
and shut a gate, but by the Lord Har
ry, not to propagate.”
Stern Call of Duty.
Reform is not joyous, but griev
ous; no single man can reform him
self without stern suffering and stern
working; how much less can a nation
of men! —Carlyle.
Hope Eternal.
Every new day and night of joy
or sorrow is a new ground, a new con
secration, for the love that is nour
ished by memories as well as hopes.—
George Eliot.
And Prized Above All.
Other things may be seized by
might or purchased with money, but
knowledge is to be gained only by
effort. —Landor.
The way some women talk is
enough to make a bachelor feel bald
headed.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle.
Love may flndaa way—but it Isn’t
always able to pay the freight
Beoauaeof those ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Ueo “LA CREOLE" HAIR CRESSING. ? PRICE, SI.OO, retail.
WILLING TO SHARE PENNIES
Generous Act of Street Waif That
Gained Him a Friend in Great
Novelist
Charles Dickens, the creator of
many delightful child characters,
earned a million dollars during his
lifetime with his pen, but often walk
ed the streets of London in search of
material for his books without a pen
ny in his pocket.
One evening while doing this he
was accosted by a small boy who
asked! him for a penny. Dickens
searched his pockets, but they were
empty, and so he told the boy, who
was shivering in the cold.
“Poor man!” exclaimed the little
fellow, “we'll go hunks together!”
Dickens stood back in the shadow
pf the street to see what the outcome
would be. The lad continued to beg,
and finally gained two pennies. He
came dancing to Dickens with a jolly
ring In his voice.
“Now,” he said, “we’ll have two hot
buns apiece!”
Such a generous spirit under such
trying circumstances struck Dickens
so forcibly that he took the lad home
with him, and there he was fed and
clothed, and started on the road to a
better life.
Hardly the Sunday School Brand.
The young hopeful had secreted
some bright buttons in his pocket,
which came from the motor car show.
When Sunday school was well under
way, he took one out and pinned it on
his coat, feeling it an ornament. Un
fortunately, when the minister came
round to speak to the dear children,
his near sighted eyes were caught by
the color.
“Well, Richard, I see you are wear
ing some motto, my lad. What does
it say?” ,
“You read it, sir,” replied Richard,
hanging his head.
"But I cannot see. I haven’t my
glasses, son. Read it so we can all
hear you.”
Richard blushed. “It says, sir, ‘Ain’t
It to the poor?’ ” —Metropolitan
Magazine.
Springs in Their Brains.
Two Frenchmen, in visiting an art
gallery, stopped to admire a painting
by an American. The artist happened
to be in the gallery and in broken
English one of the Frenchmen asked:
“How did monsieur ever catch such a
wonderful picture?"
“O.” replied the artist, with a far
away look, “that painting was an off
spring of my brain.”
The other Frenchman was greatly
interested and asked his friend what
that American had said.
"I can hardly explain,” whispered
the first Frenchman excitedly; “he
said ze picture was one spring off of
his brain. Ees eet any wonder zat ze
Americans act queerly when they
have springs on their brains."
With the Lid Off.
“Mother,” asked Bob, with a hope
ful eye on the peppermint-jar, “have
I been a good boy this afternoon?”
“M-m-yes,” answered mother, dubi
ously, recalling a certain little rift
within the lute. The four-year-old dip
lomat looked anxious.
“’Please,” he begged, “say a wide
open yes!”—Harper’s Bazar.
Put It Up to the Cook Book.
“My dear Dolly," said a young hus
band, "honestly I cannot congratulate
you on your success with this pudding.
It is simply rank.”
"Charley!” exclaimed the little
wife, “how absurd! It is all imagina
tion! The cook book says it tastes
like ambrosia.”
Explanation.
Lottie —How dare you ask Mrs. Bul
lion to a one-course luncheon?
Hattie —She won’t know it. She’s a
Fletcherite, and by the time she has
finished she’ll have to move on to
some five o’clock tea. —Harper’s Bazar.
Well Defended.
He whose study is among the shad
ows and lights of nature has an un
suspected coat of mail defending him
among all the turmoil. —Mrs. Oliphant.
Standard of Sanity.
Shakespeare was asked if Hamlet
was sane.
“As sane as the Fourth of July,” he
replied.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it;
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria I
Two Indispensable Supports.
Os all the dispositions and habits
that lead to political prosperity, re
ligion and morality are indispensable I
supports. —George Washington.
ELIXIR BABEK STOPS CRILLS
and is the finest kind of tonic.
"Your 'Babek' acts like magic; I have
given it to numerous people in my pur- I
i Ish who were suffering with chills, ma
laria and fever. I recommend it to those
who are sufferers and In need of a good
tonic.”—Rev. S. Szymanowski. St.
Stephen’s Church, Perth Amboy. N. J.
Elixir Babek, 50 cents, all dr.uggists.
or Klocxewski & Co.. Washington. D. C.
After they reach the age of 40 wom
en laugh only when, they feel like it.
AN APT SCHOLAR.
ISoxe IU
Mrs. Beacon Streete—l’m glad your
uncle left you some money, but
please, Norah, don’t call it a legacy.
Say limbacy. It is very improper to
say leg; always say limb!
Norah —Yis, ma’am, an’ shall I
; warrum oop thot limb o’ mutton for
dinner, or will yez hov it cowld?
_______________
MORE HOSPITALS ARE NEEDED
Situation Improved, but Further Work
Is Needed to Stamp Out
Tuberculosis.
Only four states, Mississippi, Ne
vada, Utah and Wyoming, have no
beds whatever in special hospitals or
wards for consumptives. Eight years
ago when the National Association for
the Study and Prevention of Tubercu
losis was organized, .there were 26
states in which no hospital or sanito
rium provision for consumptives exist
ed, and the entire number of beds in
the United States was only 10,060.
"While these figures would indicate
a remarkable growth in anti-tubercu
losis activity,” says Dr. Livingston
Farrand, executive secretary of the
National ascociation, in commenting
on the subject, "there are still prac
tically ten indigent consumptives for
every one of the 30,000 beds, including
those for pay patients. In other words,
we have from 250,000 to 300,000 con
sumptives in this country too poor to
provide hospital care for themselves.
If tuberculosis is ever going to be
stamped out in the United States,
more hospital provision for these foc>
of infection must be provided.”
TERRIBLE ITCHING ON LIMBS
Glen Wilton, Va. —“Five years ago I
was in a terrible state of suffering
with blotches on my limbs, of the most
intense stinging and itching. I could
not rest day or night; the itching was
so severe that it waked me out of
sleep. I could never get a full night’s
rest. I actually scrubbed the very ■
flesh so severely that in a short time
the affected places were so sore I
could scarcely walk with any ease or
comfort. The places were a solid rais
ed up mass. I would scratch the parts
until they would bleed. I tried home
remedies but got no good; the itching
just kept on getting worse. I used
some salve which simply was no good
at all.
“I happened to see the Cuticura
Soap and Ointment advertisement and
wrote for a free sample. Almost like
magic I commenced getting relief. I
bought a 50c box of Cuticura Oint
ment and some Cuticura Soap and I
was entirely cured from a torment
that would be hard to describe.”
(Signed) W. P. Wood, Mar. 9, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
post-card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”
Cheerful Outlook.
“Father, dear,” said Amaranth,
"Willie Smithers is going to call at
your office this morning to ask you
for my hand. Isn’t there some little
hint I can give him before he goes
so as to make it easier for him?”
"Yes,” said Mr. Blinks, "tell him to
take ether before he comes. It will
save him much pain.”—Harper's
Weekly.
The reason a girl won’t let a young
man kiss her is because she wants
him to.
And would ye partake of harvest's
joys, the corn must be sown in spring.
—Carlyle.
TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA
AND BULB I P THE SYSTEM
i Tako the Od Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS
I CHILL WNIC. You know what you are taking.
, The formula is plainly printed on every bottle,
showing it is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless
i form, and the most effectual form. For grown
! pec plea nd chi Idren. 50 cents.
The candidate for office who "also
i ran” has to explain to his friends how
! it happened.
DOES VOVK HEAD ACHE ?
Try Hicks- CAPUDINE. It’s liquid—pleas*
; ant to take —effects immediate—pood to prevent
I Sick Headaches and Nervous Headaches also.
Your money back if not satisfied. 10c., 25e. and
Wc. at medicine stores.
It is only the very young man who
i wants to paint the town. An old man
1 is satisfied if he can fresco the cor- !
ners.
Wlteu In need of a good laxative give Gar- j
field Tea a trial and be convinced of its merits.
It is made entirely from pure herbs.
He who hesitates is lost—especially I
when he is found out
Her Unfortunate Error.
A literary lady at a society dinner 1
was given a seat next to a notedl
scientist whose views were very ma
terialistic, and at some remark he
made on the origin of mankind, the
lady found her temper tried beyondl
all bearing, so that she retorted: “B
really don’t care what you say. / be
lieve in the Bible, and there we are’
told that Adam was the father of all;
living.” ■
“I really think you are mistaken,'*'
he said with a smile, and so the sub
ject dropped.
A few days later the lady, writing’
to a bosom friend, told her of the oc
currence and added: “I am too morti
fied, for I hye looked the matter up
and it only says that Eve was the
mother of all living, and so I don't!
know whether to write to the profes
sor or not.”
Blessed Sympathy.
Sympathy with animals blesses and!
humanizes men and women. To get
into real relations with an animal 1b a
liberal education. It is something to
be really interested even in a plant
and to observe the working of life to
any sphere not our own. How much'
more when that life is directing a
personality which consciously looks:
up to us and will love us if we will
let it! —Christian Register.
Strictly Up to Date.
Alice —How oddly some men pro
pose. ,
Kate —I should say so. A gentle
man asked me last week if I felt fa
vorably disposed to a unification of in
terests.
The germ of suspicion is often fatal
to the microbe of love.
Q ANDWICHES! What’s
tastier than
| j^^Potted Ham
It’s exceptional in flavor
and doesn’t cost a bit more
than ordinary kinds.
At All Grocers S
Libby, M-Neill
& Libby
Chicago
DEFIANCE STIRCH-^^
—<»ther starches only 12 ounces—same price and
“DEFIANCE” IS SUPERIOR QUALITY*
' FOR SALE—2OO A. CATOOSA CO.. GA., NR.
Chattanooga. Tenn.; 100 a cult.; 3 four and
j two r. hs.. barn, outbldgs.. 25 a. orch.. canery,.
stock, mach., etc. MORGAN.Box 319,Chicago.
• FOR SALE—2OA. NR. YAMATO. BREVARD
Co.. Fla.. 13 a. cult.; 3 a. prod. 400 crates
pineapples; >2.000. BECK, Bx. 319, Chicago.
FOR SALE —100 A. PASCO CO.. FLA.; NR.
2 good towns: 60 a. cult.; 5 r. h., barn, sheds,
orchard, mach., etc. WALL. Bx. 319, Chicago.
FOR SALE—TO A. CITRUS CO./FLA., NR
' Istachatta: 30 a. cult.: 4 r. h.. barn, sheds,
; etc.; price. $2,500. PARISH. Box 319. Chicago.
FOR SALE—2OO A. UNION CO.. MISS.. NR
Myrtle; bvst in Co.: 90 a. cult.: 2 hs.. barn,
cribs, orchard, etc. GOOD. Box 319, Chicago.
W. N. U.. ATLANTA, NO. 28-1912.
—————■
Atlanta Directory
Iff 81 Aif High Grade
Va Finishing. Mafi
** orders given Spe*
“IM? ciai Attention. All kinds of Photo'
Supplies. Send for Catalogue. GLEMM
SZ? PSGTO STOCK CO. 117 Peachtree, Aharia. Ga.
RRAPSY I TREAT IT BY MAIL,
unuro! r>HOKTNESS of breath
relieved in 24 hours. Swelling usually
cone in one week. Write for symptom
blank and testimonials. Address DR.
' A. PATTERSON. Dropsy Specialist. 445^
aB Edge wood Avenue. Atlanta, Georgia
TYPEWRITERS
Edison Dictating Machines.
Standard Folding Typewriters.
H. M. ASHE CO, So. Dealers
Atlanta. Ga. Jacksonville. Fla.
£ swelling 15 days.
Shortness of breath relieved in 36 hours.
COLLL’M DROPSY REMEDY COMPANY
Dept. K, 512 Austell Bldg^ Vianta* Ga,
TYPEWRITERS RENTED
$5.00 FOR. THREE MONTHS
Everr machine guarantee! in fine working order
and wilt be kept so during term of rental. Initial
Davment to apply if purchased. Rebuilt machines
of all makes on which you can save 50 per cent, to 7^
pet cert. Year’s guarantee. Send for catalogue^
AMERICAN WRITING MACHINE CO^
AS North Pryor Street, Atlanta, Georgia
THE OLD RELIABLE
FRICK ENGINES
and the best Steel Wire Cable Saw Mill on
earth. Also large Engines and Boilers sup-
ZYX 4 plied very » -y,
promptly.
Circular 1 —
WyN) Saws, Engines and Mill
KJ? Repairs, all kinds of Patent
। Dogs, Steam Governors, Corn Mills, Feed
Mills, Grain Separators, Saw Teeth, Locks,!
■ Mill Supplies, and all kinds of machinery.!
। ■_ SEND FOR CATALOG 1
AVERY i CO., 61-53 S. Forsjth Si, Atlanta, 6a.
— —