Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 06, 1913, Image 13

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\ I - In a Safe - Place Fashion by Night v TT'SN MF ii Ml 1 —'S A Magrtificent Evening Gown Modeled by Paris Artistes < By BEATRICE FAIRFAX I This picture i shows one of Paris’s most sensational mod els in eve- Gold and silver trimmings and embroiderings give it an exceptionally rich appear ance. .Its unusual style and daring departures from old-time 4 (f VALUED «ii a girl a number of times," a young: man write*, “ami I found her very agreeable, and I admit 1 made love to her. 1 had no j ning gowns intention of being serious, and now find that she is desperately in love with ine. As I do not want to marry her, what can I do?" But that is the very thing you must do. A man so fascinating as your self, who ealls on a girl a few times, and lo. the mischief is done, must he safely eorraled within the bonds of mat rimony that this ‘needless slaughter of female hearts may cease. Safely married to a woman who real izes what a dangerous person you are to lie at large among weak, fluttering female hearts, you will never again have opportunity for making few passes at a girl with a wave of your hand, and re- | duee her to a state of paralytic adoration | -DCthOuS £1V6 it in doing it. So long as your wife lives, no girl will aguin lie desperately in love with you if she knows it. So long as you remain single this trail of women's hearts strewn crush ed and bleeding ill the path you have trod will continue to grow. For the sake of the women helpless before your all arms; fof the sake of a nation which can not prosper with all its womankind dying of love, you, must marry, and mar ry at once. Many Sacrifices. 1 admit that you will make many sac rifices. It Will be a hardship to a man cf your temperament, to confine all your lovemaking to one woman, anil many, many times you will be aghast at the sacrifice of limiting all your fascina tions to tl’.e four walls of your own home, but it must be done and I hope you are sensible to the necessity. Tt is your misfortune to be fascinating, but no »V.e will hold you to blame if you hold these powers Within some restraint. When holding to car strap, when en gaged in your daily occupation, if it lie that of interpreting the law or selling muslins; keep your‘mind on the task in hand and don’t raise your eyes to the face of any woman. Remember always your fatal power of rendering the wom en desperately in love with you. ami have mercy on my sex. If you are en gaged in an occupation that throws yo» in contact with the silly creatures. qui| it, and go to digging trenches where your living will depend on keeping those fascinating eyes on the ground. Some Simple Rules. Never leave the house in the even ing or on a Sunday without your wife h> your side, and when you feel that you can no longer exist without some display of your fascinating power, try j them on her. Make, love to her, though j you may not mean it: make eyes at her. squeeze her hand, and endeavor hy every art of which you are master to cause her to love you desperately. Having renewed the flame of her love to such hounds, she will double her . vigilance cfver you. and reduce to a : minimum the dangerous influence jou. may exert over other women. Perhaps you may argue that you In- | tend to murrv. hut would rather wait till you have made love to a girl seriously, j That, most irresistible of your rex. is - something you will never do. To he se- , nous in love is something beyond you. ; Murrv the girl who thought you were j serious, and in her hands entrust your: l IIS 1* one of the handsomest models produced from the Paris hops tills s* 18011. ■ foundation is “mole” ctuirmeuao. top of the bodice Is a fichu of guipure veiled by an “amethyst,*’ • s ilk muslin, which falls back in two long points. 'Hie long tunic is of gray silk muslin, richly embroidered in gold Mild silver and edged all around with a row of silver beads. crossing in front under j a girdle of draped ame thyst satin Mild a huge’ soiirubaeus of silver. The skirt, which is of mole charmeuse, is but Little Bobbie’s Pa A Glove Worth $2,000 By WILLIAM F. KIRK P ~ A brought a book hoam with him lust nlte * he was showing It to me. It was called HoW a Husband «Vr Wife «hud act to Avoid Quarto. It whs a big book, about a foot thick. This book Hobble, sed Pu, is tt book that, was wrote by a very wise guy. He* was married three times ft his first two wlfes left him beefoar lie reelissed that he was hard to git along with, ao wen I his tunic tightens he married fhe third time be made up the bust and the hips, Geek of the Forty faces By T. W. HANSHAW. Copyright by Doubleday, Page & Co. TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT. T* IT that alone.’’ si;-- a \ eiv ' ^ with a shud ’ r. “I ;iv s.ti : that I should under ordinary circumstances have thought he was merely training for the autumn sports —for, you see, he was in a running costume of white cotton stuff anu his legs wen- bare from the knees down — but as he shot past me in the moon- - Women who obstruct the view of people by wearing large hats are to be prohibited by law front buying a new hat for three years in tiie State of Te :as. if a bill just introduced In tin* I legislature there is par-sed. Senator TL W. Brelsford fourth his view ob- . . . .., luetetl in church. ;,ml brought forward !!*«•>* I «’«<>*»* -'Kbt >'* sonu-thing Ilk. .; j,jji at n seeks to make it ' ' huge splash of blood on hi 1 cloth: s, | r ;i! ■ wojrsan to wear and cotipjfcig fcnat Wit t rest i church or any public gathering any hat , nearly went out of my senses. It I or headdress having n crown of any | wasn't until long afterward I recoi-I ornament exceeding two inches *«■ j lec-ted that the badge of height, or a brim mere :*ian four inches Wide. At the end of three years the '-Render will be permitted to buy only. , „ . r — ” —- just then, that thing of gave his -shoulders an f Frenchified shrug, looked uj after the lr.namr of her own. men and let the rest of thfi go by default. “.Mad; ime " looked at him ' and ga \ • * * ‘ I * la v her litt! he ihdx an a and ci gr. icciul brow flirt. sort “Of a cer tainty, m* •lisieur r she said, sa y: with c har ming g i act *. ■* >*la m’esi pals.’ egal.” \m walked 1 w t> \ ith j step “S, reina rkabl> light in* . t <« nat kably my graceful fo r one of su •h \ se and me. gvnerou d mentions anim his mind to study the fair sex & find out what wud humor them. Tills book is the result of yeers of pa shunt watch ing At experiments on his purl, I'a sod. I think thut it might to keep yure Mr A- me from ewer having u other unkind word. Here is sum of the rules. Bob hie. ho wen you grow Up A v git a wife slightly draped and to . of yure own you will be abel to greet finished by a square, her right at all times & saiv quarto. Good Rules. Rule 1 The husband shud never be- cum angry at the salm time that the wife Is angry. One ungry person In s fambly is snuff at a time. Rule u—The wife shud newer stay angry after she has gone to sleep. Bhe might have a nitemare. Rule 3—When a husband is contra- dickted by a wife he shud smile sweetly & say, wen his wife gives him a chanst, " l dare say you are right.” That in the greatest sentence that was ewer invented for making matrimony pos- ilbal. Now, Bobble, sed Pa. there is a good point right thare. Let us go in the other room A I will ask you to notto how yure Ma acts wen 1 answer her that way. “I dare say you are right.” So we went in the living room Ma was thare. She was kind out of sorta about sunothing. I guess, beekaus she linked at l’a & me kind of cross wen we cairn ill. Well, 1 suppose you want yure supper. Sed Ma. Yes, deerest, ’sed Pa. It is a wonder that you & our son dldent fool around in the library until it was time for’ brekfust, sed Ma. The men nowadays, sed Ma, act for ail the wurld as if wimnien was made to wait on them & newer give anything else a thought. I dare say you are rite, sed Pa. Of course, 1 am rite, sed Ma. Now thare is .Missus Norris. She jest left a few minutes before you got hoam. She toald me that her husband reefused to buy her another frock until next month and then went to his club and lost four dollars bowling ten pins. Think of it, I sed Ma, unable to buy his little wife j another frock when she only had three, and then going and losing four dollars J bowling. That Is the man of it for you. How much was the frock? sed Pa. Very Cheap. Only sixty dollars, Ma sed* Tbay was i Ighty dollars last, but you know wim- men’s clothes liak went down a whole lot in price this season. Maybe he vuu afford to spend four dollars bowling & middent spend sixty dollars for a other frock, sed Pa. Thare you go. sed Ma, iTeefendlng him. Of course, man can do no wrong. The men want to be tile lords of cre- ashum. r dare say you are rite, sed Pa. How about dinner? It is on the table waiting for you. sed Ma. Oh, dear* it to the saim old story, Ma sed. (lit the dinner & then put away the dishes. A man’s work to from sun to -sun, a woman’s work is newer done. Pa sed “I dare say you are rite” wen I he had a peeoe of stalk In his mouth & I he nearly oh naked. Thar you go luffing at me, sed Ma, j you are a brute. Poor Pa, 1 guess he will have to read ; sum moar rules in liis new book. COFyv:CMT XOA-l bx SJtx JNfcWi' yi;j?VlCL' The jewelers in Paris are con tinually at work to produce nov elties which will appeal to the Parisian ladies as well as to rich Americans. The glove shown in the illustration is «*f pure gold and ornamented with jewels. Its value is about $2,000. “Womans Work Is Never Done” By VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DE WATER it M AX’S work lasts from sun to sun, But woman’s work is never done.” And one reason why it to never done is that she to not allowed to do it. Men can understand that other men have necessary work to perform; it is. however, hard for women of leisure to understand how busy a busy woman may be. And until they do understand this it will not be easy for any woman to labor as steadily and satisfactorily as does a man. A man who is hfi author said to me, • From the time that I go into my study after breakfast In the morning, until I ani ready to come out at luncheon, 1 am not disturbed.” I gasped with envy and also with a little incredulity, for I know that his study is in his apartment and that he has a wife and children. "I mean It,” he said. “If I would do good work, 1 must be left alone." "But your telephone?” I queried. That is right on your desk." Should Be Unmolested. Ho smiled in a superior kind of way. “Ah. yes, but that is only a switch from the instrument in the hall, and my wife or the maid answers the main phone. If I am asked for the reply is that I am ‘engaged and cannot be disturbed. I do insist that when the man has gone to business, and the children to school and college, when the orders have been given to the maids, the butcher, grocer, etc., that even a woman might have three or four hours each day in which she need not bo disturbed or, at least, that she might have her morn ings unmolested. "But she should explain to her friends." says someone. "They would understand and not call on her or tel ephone to her In the morning." Her friends! Does anyone fancy It to one’s close friends that disturb one? No, indeed! YVhp to it then who interrupts the woman and ignores the fact thut she is “engaged ?’’ First of all, it is next to impossible to make a maid understand that when a woman would write a story, paint u picture or give a music lesson she has in view any object except that of amus ing herself for a little while when she has nothing else on hand. Therefore, In spite of interdicts, she often interrupts any one of these occupations to deliver some message that could wait, without Injury, for a half day. But if she is so well trained that she does not do this, she seldom has strength of mind to say to those who would reach her mistress by telephone or In person that the busy- woman cannot, be disturbed. Wliat Is Another Way? I remember that when I battered my self that I had at last drilled one maid into doing this. I discovered thut her answer lor weeks had been the same, namely , that I was gone away ami that nobody knew when I would come back. A lien 1 learned of this and protested to her. explaining that her statement was an untruth, she said with a knowledge of human nature at which l could not sufficiently' wonder "Indade, ma’am, if 1 said you was engaged and couldn't see ’em, they'd not be satisfied. But if I say you’re away, sure what to there for their to do but lave you alone?" No, it is not one’s own friends win will not accept the "engaged" statement, for they love one enough to let her alon* during her golden morning hours. But there are a plenty of other people who -lo not love one Among them are the casual acquaintance, who wants to ask one to subscribe to a certain philantrop- io movement; the woman who tele phones to ask about a maid who was once in one's employ and who querist "must engage immediately if at all. and who talks for at least ten minutes about her past experiences with “help; 'lie book agent—for whom one cannot help being sorry -the former schoolmate who has not seen one far years, but who. in passing through the city, lias “looked one up.” and insists to the hes itating maid that she knows her mis tress will be displeased if this “friend of her girlhood” Is turned from the door: these are among the hundred-and- one people who would be wounded by thut “engaged.” Yet we are told that t is not honest to send word that one is. “not at home." Ik there not some way in which the members of society who do not have to be let alone to accomplish their work un be made to'understand that even a woman may’ need time and quiet in which to do the task laid to her hand? And yet, what woman calling on an '.cquaintance, does not feel rebuffed by the message that “Mrs. Blarfk is en gaged, and begs to be* excused?" sir,” said that the higher education of animals is a mistake. “1 have trained all sorts of beasts j from fleas to elephants. I’ve taught horses to dance on their hind legs, (jogs to act music-hall sketches, ele phants to play the barrel-organ and do all sorts of tricks; but not one of them showed such intelligence as my educated eel. Underground Trespassers Quaint Callers That Arc Found In the Depths of Coal Mines the County Winged Foot ol' Mercury brilliant scarlet embroid- a certain uniform toss than *2 type of hat costing ect€ j Club is the I wrought in I cry. To m< ! red was blood— my unci* 's blood— and I ran and ran and ran until I got | oaek here to the house and flew up ! the covered passage and burst into th* ; Round House. He was -fitting there j .-till—just as he had been sitting be- ! tore. But he didn’t call out to me this ! time; he didn’t reprove me for dis- Most races have ailments peculiar ly their own. and one of the very latest of workmen’s Complaints to be dtscov- , rd is the “conductor's thumb." This 9 fid ion is generated by the continual use of the s teel punch which is employ ed to mark the passenger's ticket. The pain, very slight at first, gradually In creases. and spreads to the palm of the , hand, bringing in its train a species -Und when I tiew to him 1 knew why. of cramp of the band, and Compelling *1® was -lose affected to handle their punches) , as if some x-y emserly- i i, in , ;in , : stains upon his clothes. That turbing him; didn't make one wngfi ' movement, utter one single sound. Lala Karim Dut. a Hindu barber who tod recently at Meerut, had for th* iust three years slept * very night with , wo pet pythons coiled up beside him rn his bed. Faust Spaghetti is made ! ii'fijfifi 0 ' THE WORKINGMAN'S FOOD. The man who toils hard all day heeds strengthening food. A lot of meat is not essential to nourish and sustain the system. A 10e package of Faust Spaghetti contains more nutrition than 1 IPs of beef from Durum Wheat, 'he cereal that overflows in gluten— the food-content that makes muscle, bone and flesh. Faust Spaghetti costs one-tenth the price of meat—contains more nutrition- is easier digested and maker a savory, appetizing dish. Write far free recipe book. S .d in ’• and li>< packages —at al -".o- cet • MAULL BROS St Louis. Mo. stone dead! The face and throat of him were torn and ivnr furious animal had mauled Tore were curious yellow Kept in His Besk A Private Talk. "Miss Renfrew," said p Io.,k. sins- ing his voice and looking? i lee straign; in the eyes, as soon as Mr*. Arin'roy had left thorn. "Miss Renfrew . tell .no ' ''nothing, pica so. Have,, you any suspicion togardini the purpose of tile derod your uncle?” "Not in the slighte* Of pourse, in the thoughts flew at on Druger, but I now set it is to think that such > tpe identity or person 'who mur- All , Headland, beginning my • to Fir Ral;>n 'ft 1 tc w absuf 1 hi at “I am not even hinting Ralph Droger,” interpone-d <’! . f people in the world hav uite ns strong ; any tha ft hin/J You, o >nfhK*nee in the of Mir. Charles “Tw a ‘motive might be assigned course, feel every * honor and integrity Drummond ?” ; i Mr. Headland, that’s all. I don’t know what I did n*>r where 1 wont from th< moment l rushed -hrieking from that room until I came ,u my >x»nses and found mysell' in this one with dear, kind Mrs. Armroyd here, bending over me and doing all in her power to soothe and to comfort me." “It Is Better.’’ “There, there, eherie, you shall not more distress yourself. It is of a hardness too great for the poor mind to bear." put in Mrs. Armroyd herself at this. bend4lig over the sofa as she spoke and softly smoothing the girl’s hair. "It is better she should b<* at little, ie it not. mun- "Yery much better, m iuaini re plied (’look, noting how sol‘t!\ h* 1 hand fell and how gracefully it moved over the soft hair and across the white forehead. "No doubt th major par; of what still r* mains to be told. \nq in • the goodness of your heart will supply ’ "Of a certainty , mons -ur. <>i a * r- tdint'.” “.Mr. Headland!" Gently, gently, please*! I merely wished to know ; f in you?- heart \ .- i had any secret doubt, air L your flar ing up like that has answered me. You see. one has in remember th.it the late Ai . Xosworth is .void to hu\* made a will in your favor. The stilt - - nmnt is correct, is it not?'" "To the best of tnv beliaf -yes." “Filed it with his solicitan'9 has he'.’" "That I can’t say . I thi jl< not. how ever. He was always **u Sclent unto himself and h;<<; a rooted o *j - fion to trusting anything of veltic#: o ;h* onr of any man living. Lvrjji his mo.-: important documents— p 6; v and foe- inula bf bis va rious inv<*ru4 >ns: even ; o very lease of this prop^-ty -have always been kept in t ive’ rSv-.k hi the ■•aborntory." 1 )icke<l him out of the water one and was attracted by his cute n orbs. He looked at me in a of friendly, knowin’ way, as if to j ‘Let's be friends, guv’nor—real > I picked him up and put him In pocket. Then a bright idea struck 1 would train him with the other ils and let him take part in my Was a Winner. "Talk of th** intelligence of animals. Thai eel simply beat the bunch. He guessed what I wanted him to do be fore I’d thought it out myself. He id tiie true spirit of the artist, too, !:c ’ad. He performed because lie loved to act. "The first tricks 1 taught him he ook to as mere child’s play. In a few days lie could put his tail into is mouth and roll round the room, pre ending to be a hoop. He would smile when I said ’Smile’ in ‘the cutest way, ind, what is more, he would often smile on his own without being told, as If tickled at the humors of this funny world. ‘Then I taught him to wiggle him- clf into l fie shape of letters. Soon he could twist hi’> If into every letter i the alphabet and spell words as easy as you please. r i his beats science,’ bought 1. when one day ho actually spelt my name; so I formed the idea of inviting some of the greatest scien tists in the country to witness the feats of my marvellous eel. “As the day of the private view drew near I put him regularly through- : s tricks, and that marvellous animal scorned to gues. exactly what was in store for him. He got nervous, exclt fi. and vain, too. If he had been a •acock I can just imagine him spread ing his tail. Hut he merely blinked Making Sure th* rate ki j He Broke Down. itri i-tn inc.v hi •■S R.*‘ "Not! chin kick* < Hi. 11. “Then all of ;ent began i<> ’owed signs »\vn. He too igh scared m** a tier mbling move 'll. the win * st way. excite- and he break- which *ed hint *1 to do him it weaker an* morning I riff a;:d stink T m.«, i do* AHKY were* on parade when tie Irish drill-sergeant stopped ‘lend in front of the newest re cruit and eyed him steadily from top to toe before he burst out: “Arrah! an' here’s a nice state of affairs. Mow dare ye come here and stand before a da cent man loike m**- self covered in dust from head to foot? Answer me when I spake co ye!” \\ ith knocking knees the now thor oughly wretched recruit endeavored to squeeze in a few well-chosen words of * xplanation, but his attempts wer * rudely overborne by a further torrent of words from the sergeant, who fair ly bellowed: “Ye would answer me, would ye7 Spake at your peril! Now, tell me, ye spalpeen, what have ye been doin’ to yer nice new uniform'.'”' Again the bewiiedered recruit opened a capacious mouth as a pre liminary to speech, but the violent voice of his superior broke in one * again: “Take care!” he shouted. "<)\ can hear ye. if ye anewor me when I spakes to ye, i’ll have ye arrested fo,* ineotom. An’ if ye don’t answer \ ii 1 spakes to ye. I’ll send ye m the guard room for disobedience. So mi find. I’ll have ye both ways." Distinctly Suspicious. 11 was when on maneuvers, and a s*.idler was being tried for the shooting of a chicken on prohibited ground. "Look here, my man," said the com manding officer to the farmer who brought the accusation, “are you quite certain this is the man who shot your bird? Will you swear to him?" "No. I won’t do that,” replied the canny yokel, “Dut I will say he’s the man I suspect o' doi'ij* <i." "That's not tm ugh to convict a nun;! " retorted the * . considerably ttettUd. "What raisfsi your suspi- ons'. " Wc uid -but. tor the present finishing th inn erupted ‘t i* : *. ~ti'i •» main one o n?s which must be askef only Mi** Renfrew btrrve A* ‘.hose 'are of a ;> ireiy p rsoinr! nature, ma U be (t.wiiiig loo inuc.i ltlllU i hci putt . ui irfi replied tie * slowly mopped h unc at mi. "It was < »n my property w*j sled tin- g.;n go off i the •. token into i. • ifir.'t seem nohuv* sturdy farmer, forehead with to way: I see . ' 1 • • hen I see im knapsack; to think th* Srinia Use After All. To Be Continued Vo,7*or. o. fruitlc •tfg : ' 1*0 1 III go* lor jf yer A FTER a colliery explosion at Llanbradach, Wales, one of the rescue parties made a surpris ing discovery. Perched on a tub in the mine was a robin! Now, must colliers regard the presence of bird", particularly those with white plum age, about pits as a “token," and the “lire’’ which had occurred was there fore attributed to the intrusion of the perky little stranger! Ruts are not uncommon about a pithead, and some of them reach the depths beneath, occasionally with fa tal haste. . One, during the process of rauitig down a j-'haft, acquired such momen tum by the time it reached the bottom that when it struck a collier there was a loud report as of an explosion, and the man was knocked to in * ground with great force. In warm mines, too, mice are nu merous. A few reach a new pit in the trusses of hav and bags <>! corn that are taken down it for the ponies, and these, notwithstanding th** strange ness of their environment, multiply >’•* rapidly that cats have to installed in the stables. It might be supposed that "mous- **rs," at any rate, would not take at a kindly to the subterranean world; but they soon become used to their sur roundings. In one mine a fine tabby used to i knock off with the men on Saturday | but. unlike them, sh* did not Kart ; again on Monday morning. Sh** was) always missing till Wednesday or J Thursday, when she returned from ; th" old and disused portions **f tfl j mine. Bed For Mice. A strike, however, p ays tar creator ; havoc with tin* mouse population of | pit than any number <»f cats, becaus* the food of the ponies and of the men [ and boy to is no longer available f< i j the unfortunate little creature;*. When, hy way of example, the D m ham colliers joined in the general; strike last year many of th.* pits b. that county were overrun with mi* and for some time after work was*! resumed not' on** was seen. Dogs also are among the animal ( tresoassers in mines. By 1 >me means a t* rrier entered a disused pit In j Swaledale, and for eight days if roam , ed about the workings, apparent! without anything to eat. More remarkable was a dog’s in trusion into a South Wales pit which has the reput a Moll of b* ing haunted The animal in question was s<*; ;i prowling about the working;, and. a-' it seemed to v tnto'n when an attemp f \ was made to catch it, a number o k, KODAKS kjl Tl*« BfrtFlnl .'lijiwil r*»'* r«- l-v* T it 0t;n Ba Produc-’-il ** i‘ •siii.ur. Ffi*n« mu! ■ >ip* I •<*»*•■ trtc> nniat^Ui' ffUKikit. j g*:ick met- Nfw: '-* ir •* «*u- • • ! Ffid for Crtslo in t Pr'ce colliers at unco “downed tocils” and went home. Some of them then consulted a lo cal wise woman, telling her of the “vision" they had sVen earlier in the day. whereupon she predicted a dis aster. As a result more than 200 men refused to go down the following morning, and, though the manager did his utmost to induce them to resume work, they obstinately determined to remain idle. And. what is more, ir. was not until Hire* days later that all th*- men were at work again. There were two curious sequels t»» this incident, one. which took place about a week afterward, was the prosecution and conviction of the for tune teller for causing the miners to absent themselves from work. A Gruesome Discovery. The other sequeal happened much more recently, and \\'da the discovery of the* skeleton of a dog —doubtless that whh h had been seen by some of the miners—in tlu* workings. The most singular trespassers in coal mines, perhaps, are workers from neighboring pits. A man or boy loses his way and, when his lamp goes out, wanders in pitchy darkness through tin* disused workings, ever listening for tiie sound of a pick, till he either sink;- exhausted or gets in touch with humanity again. A bloodhound was once taken down a pit to find a man who had disap peared. and in several cases lost miners have ultimately worked back to their starting point. Some years ago, for instance, a boy was lost in a Scotch colliery from Monday morning to Wednesday morning, notw ithstand ing he was searched for systemati rally the whole time, and in the end. when almost exhausted, he came upon hto futhei and uncle at the place where he had left them. Sometimes, however, miners be come trespassers —only in a technical a* ns* -i;irough "striking” a road communicating with another pit and following it up. What He Got. Visitor—Digging potatoes, eh? Farmer’s Boy—Yes. Visitor What do you get for digging potatoes? B .\ Nothin’. But 1 get something for riot (Jigging them. Visitor What do you get for not dig ging them? Boy Licked. EJg As Others Do, Take this time-tested—world proved—home remedy which suits and benefits most people. Tried for three generations, the best corrective and preventive of the numerous ailments caused by defective or irregular action of the organs of digestion and elimination has been proved to be BEECHAM’S PILLS (The Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World) If you have not tried this matchless family medicine, you do not know what it means to have better digestion, sounder sleep, brighter eyes, clearer complexion, which come after Beecham’s Pills have cleared the system of impurities. Try them now—and know. Always of the same excellence—in all’climates ; in every season—Beecham’s Pills are The Tried, Trusted Remedy Sold Everywhere. In boxes, 13c., 25c. Directions with every box are rery valuable, especially to women. vtSiiiii A. EL HAWH SIS 14 Whitehall , A KO:.l»C njrpq* i T HEU 23 YEARS IfiR.E.G. GRIFFIN’S ATE C!TY DENTflf. ROOMS BEET WORK AT LOWEST PRICES Ail Work Guaranteed. s S tc 6-Pfvne M. 170S-Surrrtays 9-1 '"n'tehull S Over Biowrt A Aliens