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Jacobs’ Liver Salt
*
Cures Headache Without Drugs
IS THERE a woman nerve-racking thumping,
who does not suffer fi&ddL. — >' > s a al K ,ial of distress
occasionally with a se- rJcoßsl T JI 110111 a deran * ed ‘"'Se
vere sick headache? But iHni Something has gone
how many realize that ; 'L|Y«ISAIJ ■ Fir 3 " ro, ’« w,th that w,,ndPl '
most of the headache pow rl ful 11111111111 machinery,
ders and tablets they E’SKXSST \hd 99 times out of 100
take contain dangerous 11 ls caused by conges-
drugs which affect the WegKgJMtl 'lon, a liver that slips a
heart, and sometimes, | I 1 movement, the waste
when the system happens .i I J/Dtj matter presses an d
io he in a rundown or --ji makes it sluggish, clogs
susceptible condition, will j the bowels and causes
cause verv serious re |j—"’••'J-*— | WAX constipation, and then
Milts? |j: aa zJzZ~"'*‘ !, liltfy fermentation, sour bile
Headache is not a dis I» MS' and K aß ’ indigestion, nau-
ease. Whether a dull. sea, nervous dyspepsia,
heavy pain, or that severe hysteria. Any or all of
this wreckage is back of that headache. Now. where is the reason in
taking a dangerous little powder that simply dulls the nerves and makes
you temporarily oblivious to the physical pain?
Your System Is Crying for a Bath
It Does Not Want Headache Dope
Jacobs’ Liver Salt Draws Water awav ,ho undigested, t.
«o Alimentary Tract and Wa.be. J-g* J-*J«
the poisonous acid that has accumulated from this waste. When the
thickening urates are expelled from the blood, circulation quickens, the
blood flows free and pure, and with the pressure of clogging waste mat
ter removed, liver and bowels resume normal activity, naturally and
Without forcing. And with pure blood, free circulation, active liver and
open bowels, you will have no more headaches.
Most Purgatives Force Activity fr ‘ ,in thf ' " ric ac,d 1111,1 is
" ,c S&S&tiS
confuse these with JACOBS' LIVER SALT, which acts upon the blood
as well as the liver. It makes a pleasant, bubbling drink, and acts
very quickly, but never forces, gripes nor nauseates. A splendid stim
ulant before breakfast, one that will give you a good appetite and a
cheerful day. Try it if you have been troubled with headaches. Don't
take a substitute because nothing else has the same uric acid solvent
action. Large Jar 25c at Druggists (by mail, postage 16c extra >. For
sale by druggists generally ami al) Jacobs' Stores.
Yz Lb-Jar 25 Cents at Druggists
By Mail, Postage 16 Cents Extra
Jacobs’ Pharmacy. Atlanta
’li 7; '-c 38 ® I
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L-U O W
The Security Offered by Our
Safe Deposit Vaults
el Y T F. give to patrons the advantages
W °f ncw an <l modern vaults rein
" ’ forced and Barricaded with Y ale
Deposit Locks.
I'he Yale system of locking is known
jffHl around the world as the most sturdy, the
JH most impregnate.
B very Box in our vault is protected by
a s P ec ’ a l guard mechanism and a double
set of tumblers.
Entrust your valuables to us, —they
** will be safe from fire as well as theft.
ATLANTA TRUST CO.
[Formerly Hillyer Trust Co.]
HENRY HILLYER 140 PEACHTREE ST.
President CAPITAL $500,000.00
THIS MUST CONVINCE YOU
111 ... -— (
No Matter How Skeptical of the
Grand Work That Is Being
Done by the Wonderful Qua
ker Extract and Oil of Balm.
The Health Teacher asks you how
long will you continue to see your
friends and neighbors being cured be
fore you realize what a wonderful rem
edy the Quaker Extract must be ' Now,
here are a few names with addresses
who have been relieved of untold mis
ery and restored to a life of sunshine
and happiness in a few days or weeks
after using the Quaker Hemedies.
MfeK'he remarkable wor„ was that of
the life of little Anna Honald-
HKb an eight-y ■ .i: -o h child not ~igei
than an ordinal.- • hild of fixe y ears.
This child has be en a . ••nstaiit w<»lt>
to the patent*, who residi at 7 Rich
ards street, coiner Tumlin street, ibis
1 itx The child has had many attacks
of lexer, biliousness, weak, tun-down
condition forth. past four years. Her
stomach would bloat, restless at night;
screaming out tn her sleep, foul breath,
especially In the morning; dizziness,
headaches, tired, languid feeling, and
the strange part was she most always
had a ravenous appetite; could eat a
big meal and In one hour was hungry
again The mother called at Coursey &
Munn's drug store, procured one bottle
of Quaker Extract, and th* 1 fourth day
the child expelled a monster 41-foot
tapeworm, head and all complete,
squirming and alive, and today is the
picture of health.
Another report; Mr. Charles IX Ow
ens 20 years of age. who resides at
East Point with his parents, has been
a sufferer with stomach trouble for the
past five y ears Has tried almost everv
treatment be ex el heard of without
< ven getting relief. Hi was advised
by friends to tty the Quaker Remedies.
He did, and after taking just six doses
expelled a monster and all complete
and alive. .Now. these worms are al
ways expelled by the Quaker Extract
if taken.
Heir is anotbei refayri Mi .1 S
'alii utt, of ... Wyman -tl> el who has
been a Sllffeict with stomach trouble
for yeais His stomach would bloat
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 1912.
CHAMBER IMG
IIP MANY PLANS
VITAL TO CITY
Boosters to Arrange for Cqrn
Show, Canal Conference and
Good Roads Meeting.
An extremely busy session confronts
the board of directors of the Atlanta
Chamber of Commerce tomorrow when
that body will deal with no less than
a dozen subjects, every one of them of
primary importance to Atlanta.
Chairman H. G. Hastings, of the corn
show committee, will report on the
status of the Georgia Corn show, which
just now presents some very interesting
problems. One of these is how to take
care of the hundreds of boys who are
anxious to come here for the show
either as exhibitors or as spectators.
Dr. William Bradford, of Cedartown,
agent for the northwestern district, re
ports that 250 to t3OO boys will be
here from his district. As there are
six districts in the state, it will he
apparent just what this means, if all
of them come up in like proportion.
Captain W. H. Leahy, just back from
south Georgia, says that Irwin county
wants to send approximately 100 boys.
The situation is assuming such propor
tions that steps have got to be taken
to see that all the boys who come are
provided with sleeping quarters, and
the directors will be called upon proba
bly to get out an active committee on
this subject.
To Report on Canal Meeting.
Chairman St. Elmo Massengale will
report as to the status of the coming
Panama canal conference. Invitations
have been mailed to railroad and
' steamship presidents, cotton mill men
and exporters, commercial bodies and
others in prominent positions, and most
of the replies indicate that hose asked
will be present.
Chairan W. T. Winn, of the commit
tee on arrangements for the Southern
Appalachian Gdod Roads conference,
will report as to automobiles obtained
sot giving the visitors a ride over the
county and upon the luncheon to be
tendered the 200 visiting delegates.
The directors will deal with the re
port of the city plan committee which
will report through Chairman Alex W.
Smith, recommending the inauguration
of a campaign for the pupose of getting
a city plan under an Atlanta improve
ment commission of 100 to be appoint
ed by the mayor and general council.
Report upon a poultry ordinance
agreeable to all parties will be made
by Chairman Mell R. Wilkinson.
Chairman .1. R. A. Hobson, of the
convention bureau committee, will re
port the budget of assessments agreed
upon for the maintenance of a conven
tion bureau. .More than half the fund
needed for this bureau has been as
sured.
To Study Public Works.
11. B. Wey, chairman of the horti
culture committee, will report inquiries
made of 50 Georgia nurserymen re
garding their views as to a horticul
tural show In Atlanta next year.
H. M. Willet, chairman of the anti
tuberculosis committee, will report
progress as to the fund of $3,000 to be
raised for the support of the Anti-
Tuberculosis association.
Chairman J. N. Hazlehurst, of the
engineering committee, will report a
plan for the study of Atlanta's public
works, with a practical engineer in
charge of each subject.
* hah man I*. J, Faxon, of the mu
nicipal research committee, has raised
$2,700 and hired two experts to begin
work this month on the public works
departmeht.
Several other important subjects are
scheduled for discussion, and arrange
ments will be made for the forthcoming
annual election.
Don't waste your monev buying
strengthening plasters. Chamberlain's
Liniment is cheaper and better. Damp
en a Piece of flannel with it and bind
it over the affected parts and it will
relieve the pain and soreness, For sale
by all dealers. (Advt )
HOW TO TELL.
Knptok lenses. These lenses have no
seams, no lines, nor edg. s in the lenses
Klill“T<>K means "hidden eve " The
near lense is actually hidden in the
distance lens, making a solid piec of
glass. Let John L. Moore & Sons show
you—42 N. Broad street. (Advt.)
and cause him much distress after eat
ing moderately . Has would arise, cause
palpitation of the heart, shortness of
breath, dizziness, kidneys bad, bowels
Irregular. For weeks at a time he was
unable to work. He called at the
Coursey & Munn drug store, procured
three bottles of Quaker Extract and
after taking It five days, reports he is
going back to work, and is feeling bet
ter than he has in years.
Now, my friends, the Health Teacher
wants every sufferer with rheumatism,
catarrh, kidney, liver, stomach, bladder
or blood trouble to call at once. Now
hundritis, yes. millions, of people to
day who suffer with indigestion, dys
pepsia. fits, catarrh of the stomach or
chronic constipation, that is the cause,
and how if you don’t "remove” the
cause? yjuaker Extract is a cure for
catarrh, no matter if it is in the head
the stomach, kidneys, bladder or any
part of tip- Inner system. It’.« a blood
germ disease ami there is only one way
it can be cured, and that is a systematic
treatment.
Call at Coursey w Munn s drug store.
29 Marietta street fol Quakei Extract
Three for >2 5u or six for *5.00. < >|)
of Halm 2.'.i. or tlvt for ll.oii. We pre
pay all expiiss charges on Oil orders
of *3.no oi ox er. < Advt.)
MRS. EGLESTON,
PIONEER, DEAD
Widow of Late Colonel Thos.
Egleston Came to Atlanta
Long Before War.
Mrs. Henrietta Egleston, widow of
Colonel Thomas Egleston, died last
night at midnight at her home, 759
Peachtree street. She had been ill
many months and her relatives in At
lanta were at the bedside when death
came.
Mrs. Egleston was 86 years old and
had lived 1n Atlanta for many years,
coming here long before the war and
joining in the work done by Southern
women immediately after the recon
struction period. She was Miss Hen
rietta Holmes, of Charleston, S. C., and
she claimed among the members of her
family on both sides some of the most
prominent leaders in Southern history.
Though Mrs. Egleston was essential
ly a mother and a woman of the home,
she possessed a powerful personality
and her influence was felt in many
homes. As a literary and art critic, she
was well known, while it was less than
a year ago that she presided over her
own table with all the ease and gra
ciousness that made her famous as a
hostess many years ago.
1 he relatives in Atlanta surviving her
are her son, Thomas Egleston; a neph
ew, Beverley Dubose; a cousin, Mrs.
W. W. Memminger.
The funeral arrangements will be an
nounced later.
MILLIONAIRE IS SENT
TO INSANE HOSPITAL
BOSTON. Nov. 6.—William N. Fisher,
a millionaire cigar manufacturer, was
taken to the Boston Hospital for the In
sane after being seized with the idea
that some one was trying to poison him.
Two years ago his daughter. Blanche,
eloped with. Attllfo Enrico Conti, chauf
feur for the late Godfrey Morse, and was
married. 3 his upset Mr. Fisher greatly.
Ixiter Mr. Fisher, who was a widower,
eloped with and married his housekeep
er, Elizabeth Gertrude Rann.
OYSTERS PRONOUNCED
A CURE FOR PHTHISIS
LONDON, Nov. 6.—Oysters are recom
mended as a tonic for tuberculosis pa
tients by no less an authority than The
Lancet. It has been known that the
drinking of a small quantity of sea water
before meals is of great benefit to suffer
ers from the white plague, but to most
of them it is distasteful. This difficulty,
rhe Lancet points out, may be overcome
by the use of oysters, and M. J. Carleu
and M. B. Laquet strongly recommend it.
UNIONS HEAR BARONESS
MAKE PLEA FOR PEACE
CHICAGO, Nov. 6.—Baroness Mon Sutt
ner. of I ienna, wtio is advocating the
abolition of war, addressed the Chicago
federation of Labor. No one class should
try to bring about universal peace, but
all classes should work to that end, she
said. The defense often given that be
cause one class commits violence an
other class should was condemned by the
baroness.
CONGRESS TO SPEND
$1,500,000 EACH DAY
M ASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—Reports on
the cost of running the government for
the year beginning July 1, 1913, which
have been prepared by heads of depart
ments for congress, and which arc now
In the hands of the government printer,
show congress will have to appropriate at
the rate of $1,500,000 a day.
“WIDOW DMBI7’’~DEAD
AT HOME IN INDIANA
VINCENNES, IND., Nov. 6. Mary Ann
Moorer- 93 years old. a real daughter of
the revolution and a widow of the war
of 1812, died here.
“THE GIRL IN THE TAXI" IS
DRAWING CROWDS TO LYRIC
"The Girl in the Taxi" Is being wel
comed b> old friends at the Lyric this
week. This farce seems to grow better
with age. and the production this season
is well staged and cleverly presented. It
can safely be said that “The Girl in the
Taxi" stands near the top of all plays
of its kind whose chief purpose Is to
amuse. The company, headed by Miss
Clara Joel in the title role, is an excel
lent one. Miss Joel is a very pretty and
charming woman, and she wears some
stunning gowns, Roy Sumner. IV. J.
Walsh and Anita Allen each score indi
vidual hits, and the singing of Sumner is
one of the features of the play.
There will be the usual Thursday and
Saturday matinees.
Why do they ah say. “As good as
Sauer's?” SAUER'S PURE FLAVOR
ING EXTRACTS have received thir
teen highest American and European
awards. (Advt.)
LOW RATE TO
WASHINGTON,
$19.35 round trip, on sale November Sth
to 14th. Full information at City Tick
et Office. SEABOARD. (Advt.)
EXQUISIFE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 11S0.
• Advertisement.)
“Broadway Jones,” a thrilling
story of “The Great White Way, ’ ’
based on George M. Cohan’s play
now running in New York, will
begin in Friday’s Georgian. It is
well worth reading.
Maddening skin diseases can’t exist if
Tetterlne is used because Tetterlne Is
scientifically prepared to remove the
CAUSE as well as the EFFECT
TETTERINE CURES
SKIN DISE AS E S
Jesse W Scott. Milledgeville, Ga.. writes:
I suffered with an eruption two
years and one box of Tetterlne cured
me and two of my friends It Is worth
it« weight In gold.
Tetterlne cures eczema, teller, around
it.li. erysipelas, itching piles and other
a.liuetiis. Get it today Tetterlne
50c at druggists or by mall.
SHITTRINE CO., SAVANNAH. GA.
1 lAdvt )
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
The Bottom of Atlanta’s
PIANO MARKET
Has Fallen Out in the Howard
Piano Company’s
CLOSING OUT SALE
■KLIBL ‘'if
9 Wlz
Everything must go regardless of price. Six-year lease on build
ing, office furniture and fixtures.
Pianos from $5 Up; Organs $1.50 Up
Easy Payments Accepted
But we frankly admit, we need the cash for which an additional discount will be
allowed.
Railroad Fares Paid to Out-of-Town Purchasers—write or Call
Special Bargains Ali Week
W. H. HOWARD PIANO CO.
Open Until © O’Ciock Every Evening
72 N. BROAD STREET PHONES: Ivy 3161; Atlanta 2352