Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 29, 1912, HOME, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Ciears Stuffed Up Head And Catarrh Disappears Breathe the Healing Air of the Eucalyptus Forests of Australia and Quickly Get Bid of Catarrh. Hyomei will banish catarrh if you your suffering and hawlHn- au. will breathe it a few times a day. It is the only remedy of Its kind before the people that can penetrate into every nook, corner, fold or crevice of the mu cus membrane and destroy the mi crobes. HYOMEI is squeezed from the green leaves of the Eucalyptus trees of in land Australia, where catarrh does not exist, and combined with Listerian an tiseptics. Pour a few drops into the inhaler and breathe this mighty germ destroying air: an air more healing than that of the pine-covered Notice how quickly that stuffed-tip head clears; keep at it a few days and —iw—■ THE MENTER CO. Big Reductions on Ladies’ Suits GET ONE TO-DAY ON A vSF CHARGE ACCOUNT Ci Down go the prices on I splendid stock of winter suits for vTJ ]U/J ladies, misses and girls. 4 0 iwHp Cj If you’re looking for bargains, | ’ come here. You will surely End them. Ci Pay down what you can con veniently, and divide the balance i into easy weekly payments. Jii Good Clothing for Men on the Bargain Counter THE MENTER CO. 71 1-2 Whitehall St. (Upstairs) First Stairway Below J. M. High Company. 1 Sensational DAY OFFER ®d f PBTS SALE / ,’ : 4*l t;. •■* SSSuMBHWtKfI SBWUM I !■■«■ / In'} ’ll li SftJa WIS d TOMORROW WfflHn ll If ONE DAY ONLY f/fflll **U® Genuine $5,56, $7 I //f V Pants Made to j I ? L_, . Order for clean-cut u *'*' lines «g in striped • Six thousand Mvnrufreds. ‘~ /W W ? ards of trouserings WQTSWub, ja wi]l bc tai]ore( j Into cassimeres an l s , „ B ,b the . ra,e . of *’- 37 -2 » le K“ an& SEATS FREE. cheviots It’s the greatest lot of trouserings that has 1 Hon bmueht into this town. Any man in any I~ld he proud “ built to order by expert tailors-and they re dirt cheap. The ' Peachtree Si. J IU 1 » vww opEN SATURDAY EVENINGS. « Copyright 1912. h-->' Sotman. rtwmW— — ■mw————^— 1 I —■— —■ WAY TO RENT YOUR ROOMS: USE THE GEORGIAN dtErOaULLETIN” •uxrawg ana nawklng and dls- ' large of obnoxious mucus will cease entirely. Then continue until every germ is destroyed; until the soreness and dryness in the throat have disap peared. HYOMEI Is guaranteed for ca l itrh, coughs, colds, sore throat, croup, dearness caused by catarrh or money 1 back. Complete outfit, which Includes inhaler, can be obtained for SI.OO at druggists everywhere. I o break up cold in head or chest in a few minutes, pour a scant tea spoonful of HYOMEI into a bowl of i boiling water, cover head and bowl with towel and breathe the vapor until > blessed relief comes in a few minutes. (Advt.) THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 29. 1912. Inspector McMichael Writes on Curing the Smoke Evil in Atlanta Nuisance Costs City $1,000,000 a Year, or $5 for Every Man, Woman and Child. An Inch- Thick Blanket of Soot. Written for The Atlanta Georgian By Paul McMichael City Smoke Inspector. ARTICLE I. Smoke is the exhalation, visible vapor, or material that escapes or is expelled from a burning sub stance during The word smoke is used especially to designate the volatlve matter given off when coal or wood is burned, together with the solid matter car ried off in suspension therein. It has been conservatively esti mated that over 500,000 short tons or 1,000,000,000 pounds of coal are used in Atlanta each year. Os this great tonnage the amount of hard coal (anthracite) is so Inconsider able as to be almost negligible. Any solution of the smoke nuisance in Atlanta which contemplates the general substitution of bituminous coal by anthracite, coke, oil or any other fuel is impractical. The sup ply of anthracite is limited, and the mines far distant, with consequent high freight rates; so that this coal costs approximately three times as much per ton delivered ae our best soft coals. Coke is more readily obtainable than anthracite and is cheaper, but the market for this product in the South is practically controlled by one company, which, It is reasonable to assume, would boost the price for all the traffic would bear as soon as we placed ourselves where we were depend ent upon coke. Must Depend on Soft Coal. The geographical location of At lanta is such that for fuel supplies we must depend upon the bitumi nous coal fields of Alabama, Ten nessee and West Virginia. In fact, our accessibility to this great area of soft coal deposits is one of the chief factors that has built up At lanta manufactures. There may be a few instances in which no other solution of’ the smoke problem is possible except the change In fuel, but these are comparatively few in number and will become proportionately fewer as all new plants will be properly designed before installation so as to use bintuminous coal without emitting dense smoke. No hysterica] outcry concerning damage to property or person by soft coal smoke should ever cause us to lose sight of the fact that soft coal is essential to Atlanta’s com mercial prosperity and any course of action looking to the abatement of the smoke nuisance must be WHITFIELD COUNTY BOYS COMING TO BIG CORN SHOW DALTON. GA., Nov. 29.—Members of the Whitfield County Boys Corn club are deeply interested in the approaching corn show in Atlanta, starting Decem ber 3, and will attend in large numbers, County School Superintendent Sapp and C. L. Foster, president of the County Farmers institute, to accompany them The following boys have signed up for the trip, and others probably will go: John Hackney, Earl Freeman, Fred Petty, Walter Miller, Walter Freeman. Carl Miller. Lee Jordan. Paul and Owen Henderson, Troy Saylors, Tom Manis, Eugene Teasley, Clarence Isbill, Rob ert Boyd. Jesse Montgomery and James Cannon. ILLINOIS TOWN GIVES CUPID LARGE CONTRACT CHICAGO. Nov 29. —A big contract for Cupid is being planned by Mrs. Lillian Davidson, manager of the Wom an's Exchange In Evanston, who pro poses to transform the large surplus of bachelors and spinsters of the suburb into staid married couples. Her proposition is to erect a new Woman’s Exchange building and res taurant, half the building for unmar ried men and half for unmarried wom en. The first floor will be equipped with pianos, cozy cornes, soft lights and other properties calculated to hasten matrimony. SHAKESPEARIAN READER BRANDS BRITONS SNOBS NEW YORK. Nov. 29.—Frank Harris Shakespearian lecturer, says all Briton ,n. snobs and the average Englishman's knees get weak when lie sees a lord. DOG WRECKS PRINTING PRESS DALTON. GA.. Nov. 29.-A small dog. belonging to Walter Clerk, wrecked a ■ j Under p'ess nt the Clark Publishing ' ,0.1 |,nb . and 'ost its lift u h .-n, ■ , - tiaclsu P> Lbv mulloj, pt tip pics-, tl li JI ' ininm—... wfe 4 predicated upon the continued use of bituminous coal in ever-increas ing quantities. Fortunately for our hopes of a clean Atlanta, it has been shown already by experiment and practi cal application that not only is It possible to burn soft coal without the emission of dense smoke, but profitable as well. Actual savings of from five per cent to as high as twenty per cent in some instances have been effected wnere, in efforts to obtain smokeless combustion, consumers of coal have devoted some attention to obtaining proper conditions under which the coal should be burned. Some Figures on Soot. The finely divided particles of carbon (soot) which are carried off in suspension by the gases resulting from soft coal combustion have been found to weigh less than one per cent of the actual weight of coal put into the furnace, and if we assume that one-half of one per cent of all coal used in Atlanta lx lost in this manner, we will arrive at a figure approximately correct. Although this loss of fuel to the consumer is quite small, it is this soot which is responsible for a damage to property that is con servatively estimated to amount to over $1,000,000 per year, or over $5 for every man, woman and child In Atlanta. The amount of soot emit ted from all the stacks and chim neys in Atlanta during one year would be sufficient to cover with a blanket almost one inch thick the area Included within a circle one mile in diameter. Such a circle drawn with Five Points as its cen ter would extend to Baker street on the north, Brotherton street on the south, Thurmond street on the west and Bell street on the east. While it is soot that causes the great damage to Atlanta citizens, the loss of fuel to the coal user in this manner is negligible. But the emission of dense smoke is indica tive of very great losses from the escape of valuable invisible gases, which, if combustion were com plete. would add materially to the amount of work done per pound of coal used. The gases lost consist mostly of hydrocarbons (com pounds of carbon and hydrogen), carbon monoxide and hydrogen, and some idea of the loss incurred may be gathered from the state ment that one pound of hydrogen contains over four times as many heat units as a pound of pure car bon. Wake Up! You Lazy Stomach! Make Yonr Stomach Cheerfully Do Its Work—Stuart’s Dys pepsia Tablets Digest Your Food and Assist the Stomach. Pecfple who complain they are worn to a fraxsle are nearly always dyspep tic and are recommended to use Stu art's Dyspepsia Tablets. The stomach gets lazy, food ferment* and sours. ga« belches up, there are symptoms of bloating, the b’.ood becomes thick and sluggish, the liver is blamed, the head Is heavy, the mind is blank and the dining room Is a chamber of horrors. One of the greatest evils of our mod em life is the quick lunch. To this evil, as much or more, than any other, may be traced the preponderance of the stomach troubles of our times. In stead of taking time to thoroughly mas ticate the food before swallowing it, the average person rushes through the meal, bolting the food, deglutition tak ing place while ft 1* only partially mix ed with saliva, and only half masti cated, thus leaving the stomach to do the work the teeth should have done. Stuarts Dyspepsia Tablets contain digestive elements, a single grain being capable of digesting 3,000 grains of food, Including meats, eggs, grain, veg etables, starches and mineral matters. They prepare every particle of food by thorough digestion for ready absorp tion and assimilation by the lacteal glands, which pass ft Into the blood, whence it is conducted to all parts of the system, rebuilding and revitaliz ing It. Every divggist has Stuart's Dyspep sia Tablets ii> stuck ,-md soil* thorn at ATLANTA NEW YORK FARIS —J By Advice of the Weather Man--- Warmer Underwear For Men and Boys Hole it. is. the right kind, that Hts without binding and in about all the different weights that different men require. For Men Cotton ribbed Shirts and Drawers, in medium and heavy weight, at 50c, 75c and SI.OO. Half wool and half cotton Shirts and Drawers, gray, at SI.OO. t 'otton ribbed Union Suits, at SI.OO and $1.50. Men's all-wool Shirts and Drawers that will never shrink; these in different weights, at $1.50 to $3.50. For Boys Cotton ribbed Shirtsand Drawers, and good ones, too, at 25c. t'otton ribbed Union Suits for 50c. Heavy lleece-lined Shirts and Drawers at 50c. Wool and cotton Shirts and Drawers at 75c. 1 Wool and cotton Union Suits, full of warmth, at SI.OO. * Fleecy Pajamas and Night Shirts They stand for comfort, being made of the outing that has that - heavy nap that trips to the laundry do not hurt. Outing Night Shirts, in medium and heavy weight, at 50c to $1.50, plain, trimmed with silk braids or with frogs. Outing Pajamas, neat stripes of blue, tan and grey—made plainly or with bindings and frogs of silk, according as thev are priced, from SI.OO to $2.00. CliamberlindohnsonDußose Co. ggg!SH—— J ! —!— ——. J! aMJimj 1. ■■ -■■■.. I .. Six I r \ The Globe Clothing Co OKS The Globe Clothing Co SEJSSig 5B "< J |® S There’s No Doubt About It » S s ( a ■ g x— v W THE GLOBE IS THE STORE FOR | 53 ~ Ik = g kq PRACTICAL ECONOMY 58 f/i •• v =— 58 5 /YvSd / k ¥ / / Boys’ Norfolk Suits gg V J / 1° 7 - Blue, Tan. Brown and gg gg L/fi \ I / Gray-Mixed Suits —$5, $7.50, $lO. ass \\ a ' i J —~ SS iii \ Double Breasted Suits ass (X- —// \y / aa ag Sizes 7to 18—$3, $4, $5, $6.50, $7.50 S g | , p sll> - ■ Russian Blouse Suits Sizes 2 1-2 to 6—s3, $4, $5. ' ■ mh? | A T In Bine or Brown Serge, Tan and Gray Mixed Sailor or SIS 'W, I Military collar. h SH W v I ' I S SB H ~ T*l Sizes fi to 9—Blue and Brown [l\ \ I Blouse Suits Serge—s3.so. $4. $5. ! *•« fl- / / ft\ } k 859 Sts I \ / \ Ift MM its \ L —rt [ ' \ T7.. , » n £ Sizes 21-2 to 6 —Red. Blue, Children s Reefers Tan $3, $5.. s’ti ZZ MO ■ I? L> I? J? OSffl 4 1 r 4 Sizes 3to 10—Brown aud Gray » 53 © Auto Coats $3.50. »5. ■ Wll li every gg - purchase in the Rnvc’ OvarrmiK Siz,s 7to ,7 — Gra .' and Tan Ml Boys’ Department boys uvercodts lnixed _ s3 . $5. $7.50, $lO. a beautiful hook men’s suits, overgoats, cravexettes— $10, dr. illustrated VH ’i’ lß - * 2o ’ * 25 - ;g 1 U ‘ U SPECIAL High Storm Collar Ulsters. 54 and 56 inch- mm es long, grav mixed Oxford Cloth. $lO. SB ' MfX PLAY SUITS Cow-Boy Suits SI.OO. Cow-Boy Chaps. SI.OO, $2. $2.50, $3. s.? Indian Suits. $1 00 $1.50 Sweaters. 50e, sl. $1.50, $2. $3. $4. $5. fit Squaw Suits. SI.OO. .. , ... .. .. rn Ml Cow Puncher Suits. $2.50. Underwear ,)oe, me. sl. sl.oo. mm Soldier Suits. SI.OO. Union Suits, sl. sl.-»0. $2. *•« r <5? MjX L__ I Shop early. Christmas novelties in fancy holiday boxes are ready. j, THE GLOBE CLOTHINGCO "J 89 Whitehall Street » < j iBL 6 , MIX Mik M»M <l» MIK MiK MIK MtK Mik MIX MiK MtK MU >l» MIX MIX Mik Mik Mik MIX MfK MIK Mik MX Mik Mik Mik MIX Mik MM MIX Mik Ai; .Ki&AmAUAi; .Xiiiz. A&iiHaskdEiiS d; 8; as w 9