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M BENEFITS
BBITMW
Tolls or No Tolls, It Gives Much
New Business to English
Ship Builders.
LONDON, Aug 28.—1 f you talk to an
Englishman about the Panama canal
at present, in nine cases out of ten he
will flare up and denounce the perfidy
of Americans who have sunk so low
that they no longer respect their
pledged word. But aside from the
question of tolls or no tolls, it is gen
erally admitted that the canal, even
now, before its opening, has greatly
benefited English industry, as it is
hoped it will in time benefit English
shipping.
Progressive Englishmen realize that
with the opening of the canal the
peaceful struggle between England and
Germany for the world's markets will
enter into a new phase and to the fact
that British ship owners are preparing
to make a bold fight to present the
Panama canal traffic from falling into
German hands is due that English ship
builders have received more orders
than they can fill for two or three
years.
At Belfast the Royal Mail Steam
Packet Company has just placed orders
for four new vessels for this particular
traffic. Harland and Wolff will build
two of them and Workman, Clark &
Co. have been given the contracts for
the other two. The vessels will be
similar In design, and will be modeled
on the most up-to-date principles, as
they ere intended chiefly for first-class
passenger traffic. The full dimensions
of the ships have not been divulged,
but it is understood that they will be
about 650 feet long.
FIND GOLD WATCH
IN COVWS STOMACH
NEWBURGH, N. Y., Aug. 29. —In the
stomach of a tubercular cow killed here
State Veterinarian Fink found a gold
watch and chain lost by a summer
boarder. The discovery raises a com
plicated question of ownership—the
state, which paid for the careass; the
farmer, who bought the cow and pre
sumably her contents, or the loser of
the watch?
The Trials of a Traveler.
"I am a traveling salesman," writes
E. E. Youngs, E. Berkshire, Vt., "and
was often troubled with constipation
and Indigestion till I began to use Dr.
King’s New Life Pills, which I have
found an excellent remedy.” For all
stomach, liver or kidney troubles they
are unequaled. Only 25 cents at all
druggists. •*»
A guaranteed cure for
KIDNEY or BLADDER
Troubles, Diabetes, Eic.
Tak* STUART'S BUCHU AND JUNIPER COMPOUND.
» liquid preparation thoroughly tested for
year? by thaupands of cures, made after all
also failed. Scalding, dribbling, straining. or
too frequent passage of urine; the forehead and
the back-of-the hoa<l aches; the stitches and
pains in the back : the growing muscle weak
ness; spots before the eyes; yellow skin; slug
gish bowels; swollen eyelids or ankles; leg ■
cramps; unnatural short breath ; sleeplessness I
and despondency! STUART'S BUCHU AND JUKI- I
PER COMPOUND, bv its action on the Kidneys ■
and Bladder, quickly does away with the above ■
symptoms. We promise a prompt cure by tak- I
Ing this medicine or your money refunded. ■
K Druggists Si. per largo bottle. HAMP!.! FREE fl
■ by writing to Stuart Drug Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Does A
Your f
Pocket •
Pay
Interest B
Does it give yon the
self-respect and confi
dence in Iho future that
a gradually increasing fl
bank account does? v
Money in your pocket
goes to extravagances. ■
Money deposited here
draws 4 per cent interest.
Begin to save now. One
dollar will open a Sav
mgs Account here and ft jB
by adding to it regularly, >
you will soon have a
good substantial bank ac
count. E?
We open Saturday afternoons
from 4 to 6 in addition to morn
ing hours.
Georgia Savings Bank
and Trust Company
Atlanta's Oldest Savings Bank,
Grant Building.
WEDDED WHEN SHE WAS
HYPNOTIZED. HER CLAIM
CHICAGO, Aug. 29.—Henrietta Fro
lich has filed a bill in the circuit court
to annul her marriage to John Frolich,
who, she alleges, hypnotized her into
marrying him and then stole $550 of her
money. She avers that Frolich induced
her to go through a ceremony with him
on July 3, 1912, and then took her
money ostensibly to buy land and ab
sconded the day after the wedding. She
says she has not seen him since. She
asks to be allowed to resume her maid
en name, Henrietta Driesehner.
Have You Got Your RANGE Yet?
ta 72 We just take your old Stove or Range or Gas Range at a fair valua- ;_. ‘
UOnt tion, deliver you the new Range, and you can pay the balance at si.oo Don t Lost You a Penny
Cost a week. So the initial proceeding costs you no money at all. But re- t —■ —— I
yr member, this is the last week for this proposition. If you have been | ".'.'...1
IOU 3 considering an exchange of this kind or expect to need a new Range I • [l| J SFW’HW
Penny an Y time soon, it will pay you to come right up and make the trade I j K
while you can get a new Range for your old one.
MM == a = ■ c-v. .. ;
Special Sale of Leather Parlor Suits This Range $37.50 T
ij JEpzl ff
At $ 1.00 a Week L1 mvuG 1 I LL It
The Sanilary
Eagle Steel
11'556.50 '3 1
„ , , 1 lion. .Made of cold ehilled Steel. zsflM if ' !iRSSI
Our $.)<)..)() 3-PiPce Leather Parlor Suits have no equal in Atlanta. Made of ■•trie welded, even section im- J!jijli
dioicest Birch, which is one of the best and hardest cabinet woods, finished movablv in place. The high legs
in rich Mahogany, covered, with a fine grade of Genuine Leather. The con- the Flange up to a proper
struction of the steel springs is such that the seat can never get out of shape, TX"’ We’kJow ’ the JRL
each spring being separately secured in its proper place. You will like this EAGLE” will do tmir work Wf
Suit. Good enough for any home anywhere g? zS E’f'Y thoroughly, positively and .scion W //
SI.OO A WEEK AT'. tfIMVoJV tiiiciilly. And the f' j I /
= ~ ' 1— ~ price is only ? ■•WW M //
Davenports gLpJ Jlfea h IS
• i " st - iv " ° ne rrTWI B T»Fri?a|*l -i Mm
IS i separate (oiton L .;Vp
' Mattress. •; G t .\ ■ isSsi
The “One-Fold" is so named because you give just “Oiie-Pull” to make a | ; J I ; ‘
Bed from a Sofa. Servos two purposes admirably. A handsome Sofa. ea<v '|Bl \-?'■ ntn;nr-rjiili Mb
and comfortable, covered with best quality Chase Leather. Converted into
a fine, luxurious Bed by one pull. The Bed '*
has a separate National Spring and a (2? O fA
cotton nm 11 >1 jin ;t w ~( .- ~|i *|pO mV
Foi Outdoor Sleepers Lino- p nf || v ljK p £x Made throughout of SOLID QUARTERED OAK,
/fc BUNGALOW BED fN leUHIS G AdL II j LdKC vll I This mode of construction does away with all veneer- 1
| 1 With Fine Steel Spring $5.00 IN I ing, but still gives the beautiful flake grain fit ish. Besides, it embodies great
i si length and solidity to every piece in the set. The style is a Modernized Colonial,
* ,< ‘ sT effects— tile, giving artistic and graceful lines to the solid massive beauty of the colonial period,
hardwood, floral. The BITTET is 4 ft. 2 in. long, 22 in. deep and ”)5 in. high, with a French plate
oriental—all first mirror 44x12 in. The TABLE is 4’> in. across when closed. Opens in an oval shape
I IL.I quality, laid at 72x43 in., on a solid, quartered oak platform pedestal. The CHINA CABINET is
It® 2 fi, 3 in. wide, (>:> in. high and I<> in. deep, with rounded glass ends; 3 finishes; pol-
I •' ; I 75C YCI ished Golden Oak. Eumed Oak and Karly English—all ata uniform CiQC OCI
I ” price- $3 cash, $1() month, at ,t|gO»J.V/v7
$5.00 Sellers’ Kitcheneed
This is just one of our outdoor conveniences. We have half /i vFfflV b4] I nw*m | KALh
a hundred others. Steel Cots with Springs as low as $2.50 and This Kitchen <*abin>-t lias had ar« Zj}. ~p ' tL=g
a complete Steel Bed Spring and Mattress for SS.SO. See us for markable sale it. Atlanta, as wll as /(»»\ 'i ' "" , IkW
Duplex Mattresses Terms: Z? ' ; T - V 4 A A>|
11.00 a week XTZ’. -*■ - W \ f
P-—I T S. Bin Wide Suding Top. Ui TW 'i X P
terms are made to rounded corners; WMEjifeirT'' ‘" .-MH 1/ i n Ji 'n? fl
suit vot.r enven- absolutel v 1 Z" O X •'m-k. are all ,
sanitary -hoomghly sea- =
sotted and till- ‘
F ' - - = ~" ~~" ' —^—r =—— . = ly warranted ¥ GXF
o dafjAVo od, ? ? pIW
four Xfurniture/ K company ~, ,r ;i "'
four below is stretched a heavy canvas that ,','7 '' 11 . zc
divides tin- mattress into two equal parts. r« ■ „ -Sir —T —■"'.urirCT.' ~u" '_ ' L'_ ” '.'" 111 ?
n-^L.iiThA:- C1 n a ™ tewlr
,■■■,.i,. «i , U 103-5-7-9UI Whitehall Street, Corner Mitchel! X ?’sis
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THUK'SDAY. AUGUST 29. 1912.
RICH BUT BORED. QUITS
BABIES WITHOUT ADIEU
NEXV YORK. Aug. 29.—Refusing even
to bid good-bye to her two babies, Mrs.
Dorothy Marcus, the young woman
who is deserting her wealthy husband
because married life is "irksome,” to
day closed her handsome residence at
Montclair, N. J., and took her final de
parture. Mrs. Marcus also failed to
say good-bye to her husband and when
asked if the babies could be brought to
bid farewell forever to "their mother
she replied: "It can do no good."
BRIDAL PAIR RIDE ABOUT
TOWN IN CIRCUS WA6ON
FITTSBI'RG, PA., Aug. 29. —With
brass hands playing and 2,000 cheering
neighbors, friends and others following,
Harry Spohn, a well-to-do voting mer
chant, and his bride, who was Miss
Mary Brown, were driven through the
streets of Crafton, a suburb, caged and
ironed together in an iron-barred car
nival animal wagon.
Spohn and Miss Brown eloped to
Grove City. Pa., on Monday and were
married.
GERMAN OFFICERS PROBE
P. J. WESTHOFER’S DEATH
MONTGOMERY. ALA.. Aug. 29.
The German legation at Washington
and tin German consul at New Orleans
(hive stalled an investigation of the
killing of P. J. Westhofen at McGehees
Switch, near Montgomery, on July 22.
A letter from the dead man's father in
Gernninv. received by the Washington
legation, accuses a piomtnent Mont
gomery man-of the murder.
Sheriff Horace Hood, of Montgom
ery county, has been asked to furnish
all the information possible about the
case. The dead German resided here.
FINN’S HEAD CAUGHT FLIES
BECAUSE HE USED VARNISH
WINSTED. CONN.. Aug. 29.—Pat
rick !• inn, of Lake street, being in
formed that turpentine would remove
paint from his hair, applied part of the
contents of a bottle supposed to con
tain that liquid.
At church the flies made a bee line
for his head, and stuck there so that he
had no difficulty in swatting them.
When service was over Finn's head was
liberally dotted with dead flies. He
discovered he had used floor varnish
instead of turpentine.
Areyoi! discouraged?
Have you any REAL reason
to be? Probably not —ten to
one it ia your liver. You need
Tutt’s Pills
The effect is gentle, yet rarely
fails, even with the ordinary
dose as directed. Take no sub
stitute - rtcar coated or plain.
5