Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 03, 1913, Image 4

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4 D IIE\n>T’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA., SUNDAY, AUGUST n, 19111. Girl to Forsake Society H[|[|| jfl H|J[fflL[ ALASKA AND Will Teach in Labrador ASIA TRACED MissionWorkLuresHerl LEAD PIPE USED III LATEST CUBE M me. GERVILLE- REACEE, the contral to, who declares her art career has not suffered through the bearing of children. Remains of Camel and Horse Found Along Yukon Region Strengthens Theory. EARLY HISTORY IS FOLLOWED North American Species Thought to Have Been Derived From Old World. WASHINGTON, Aug. 2—At th- time of the discovery of Amerio 1, horses and camels were entirely un known in the Western Hemisphere The Indiana had never seen a horse, and the nearest living American rep resentative -of the camel was the llama. It has long been known to zonl- ogiirts, however, that both horses and camels existed in North America In a geological age not very remot •. Within a year discoveries have been made which indicate that camels once Inhabltated the Yukon region »f Canada, and a skull of an Alaskan horse has also been found. In the summer of 1912, along the Yukon-Alaskan boundary, Copley Amory, Jr., obtained a small collection of foHOii bones of th. Pleistocene Age, or that immediately preceding the ag of man. These bones Includ** several parts of a mammoth, horse, bison and camel. Camel bones had never before been found In this region. Caals Once Abundant. It Is known that several large spe cies of camels were very abundant on this continent during both the Pli ocene and the Pleistocene periods, and the discovery df their remains in the Pleistocene deposits of the Alaskan peninsula was not altogether unlooked for, although their occurrence so fill* within the Arctic Circle was scarcely expected. It tends to support iht* supposition that milder climatic conditions pre vailed in Alaska during probably the greater part of the Pleistocene period. It also tends to support the theory j of the existence of a wide Asiatic- ' Alaskan land connection of compara tively recent date which for a great length of tlrrte served as a highway for the migration of mammals from the Old World to America. A not less interesting acquisition of the National Museum Is the fossil skull of a hor*e found by C. P. Sny der during mining operations near Tofty, Alaska. It is femarkably well preserved and retains Its original structure. Its importance Is enhanced by the fact that hitherto our knowledge of Alaskan horses 1w«h been based on very scant remains, such as single teeth, or a very few teeth associated together, and a few' bones or frag ments of them. Meager as they were, however, they allowed that at som' time in the past horses had been widely distributed in this apparently barren region. It is understood that the hors*s which lived In North America during the Pleistocene Age were probably derived from stock' which crossed over from Asia into Alaska and thru made their way over nearly th<* whole of both North and South Amer ica. Miss Mildred Armour, ol Chicago, who will teach a kindergarten class in the frozen solitudes of Battle Harbor. Bryan Remains Silent in Refer ence to Removal of American Consul at Juarez. Continued From Page 1. Mexican waters which gave Huerta tc understand he must act promptly in dealing with Americans and American j a f air \ The United States has no intention of withdrawing the Wheeling from th** East Coast of Mexico. While there is no further use for her at Frontera, she was ordered to-day to proceed to Progresro and Campeche and to re- rrnin on duty subject to the orders of Rear Admiral Fletcher at Vera Cruz. In the meantime the White House and the State Department will en deavor to prevent discussion of Mex ico in Congress*, certainly up to the national election. October 26. Bryan Keeps Silent. Secretary Bryan was not disposed to-day to dtocuHs the report that Am bassador Wilson has demanded ac ceptance of his Immediate resignation or accept his policies an to Mexico. The report was brought to Secre tary Bryan’s attention when It was stated that owing to the activity of Representative Smith of Texas and certain Mexican railway officials, the Administration is about to decapitate Consul Edwards at Juarez. It is alleged he has been sending out Inaccurate information, ha?* been too friendly with the rebels and has out lived his usefulness. Lost Corn and Leg; Now Sues for $50,000 Chiropodist Blamed for Amputation by Patient, Who Suffered From Blood Poisning. NEW YORK. Aug 2.- Barrel Ham burger went to a chiropodist to have a corn tuken off his left foot. The cure whs so radical, he says, that he had to have the foot amputated. Hamburger brought suit yesterday against Charles E. Levy to recover $50,000. He declares Levy, the chi ropodist, eaused blood poisoning by neglect. Levy denies the loss of the leg was due to his treatment. )r. Wilfred Grenfell's School in Frozen North Wills Recruit in Society Girl. BOSTON, Aug. 2. — Miss Mildred Armour, daughter of Mr and Mrs. M. Cochrane Armour, of No. 1608 Ridge avenue. Evanston, 111., who made her debut in Chicago society only two years ago, has forsaken social Joys to tench a kindergarten class in Dr. Wilfred On nfell’s mis sion at Battle Harbor, Labrador. Miss Armour, who was a Smith College student, is one of those aboard th** famous mission schooner George B. duett, which left here re cently. With Miss Armour as a fellow teacher is Miss Carolyn Woolley, a Hartford (Conn.) society girl, and a classmate at Smith College. Others on the little craft arc Dr. and Mrs. John Mason Little, Jr., and their year-old baby, John Mason Lit tle 111, known as “Snow Baby Lit tle,” because he was born in New foundland; Miss Louise Little, a sis ter of Dr. Little; Mis* Jessie Luther, of Providence, and a dozen other so ciety and professional folk. Miss Armour will teach a kinder garten class in the mission at Battle Harbor, which is attached to the big hospital Dr. Grenfell maintains there. The Cluett, it is said, will touch rirst at St. Anthonys, Newfoundland, where Baby Little was born, and then will proceed to Battle Harbor and Indian Harbor, In labrador. LIKE BLISTERS Spread HalfWay to Elbow. Itched and Burned Till Could Not Sleep. Couldn’t Do Work. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured. 004 Greenville Ave . Staunton. Va “I got my hand poisouiMl some way and it kept getting wor«e until my whole hand was in a raw sore. Every time 1 would put It in waterlt would break out with new pimple* like blisters and would spread about an Inch until it went half way to my elbow. It itched me »o I had to keep a cloth on It to keep from a Tatching It itrhod and burned me till I could not sleep. It had been all summer that I couldn't do my work. They said it was eczema “I saw the advertisement about Cuticura 8oap and Ointment and 1 got both. 1 did •ot use half of the Cuticura Soap and Oint ment till my hand and arm was cured en tirely and it has never broken out any nior* Kow my hand Is sound and well.'* (Signed Mr*. E. V. Decouraey. Sept. 30. 1912. TO REMOVE DANDRUFF Prevent dry. thin and falling hair allay itching and Irritation, and promote the crowth and beauty of hair. fr.-, ent •hampoos with CutlcuraM* p aasiste i t > •regional dressings witl^ 'ticura Oint ment. afford 1 'a most efTecti^^B^ Economical treatment Sold by drugg^L suid dealers •very where Liberal sample of each mail-G free with 32-p Skin Book. Address po-e 1 “Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston.” who shave and shampoo with Cu- will find it bust for akin and scalp Firemen’s Cat Kills Snake Found in Hose Reptile, Which Scares Engine Com pany, Believed to Have Been Drawn From Water Main. NEW YORK, Aug. 2— A snake four feet long invaded the home of Engine Company No. 3 last night. Captain Bourne looked suspiciously at Fire man Abbott when he reported is presence. Then he investigated. The snake dropped out of the nozzle of a hose that had been hung on the wall to dry. "Smoke,” the cat mascot of the company, grabbed it by the neck. Fireman Bowen tiled to snatch the cat away and was bitten by the snake. Then "Smoke” killed the rep tile. A “whisky bandage" was applied to Botsen and he is in no danger. It is believed the snake was drawn Into the hose from the water mains. Little Schoolgirl Is Garden Authority Cleveland Miss Has Won 100 Prizes and Keeps Family Supplied With Vegetables. CLEVELAND. Aug. 2. -Cleveland’s youngest champion gardener is Rhea Lyon. 14 years old Rhea began gardening at Willard School when (* years old, anil so successful has she been that to-day she is recognized as an authority. During the eight years she has re ceived more than 100 prizes in j-vhool garden festivals and received approx imately $300 from the sale of her products. In addition the girl h is supplied the family table with vegetables summer and w inttr. She works In her garden in sensible, roomy knee trousers. Women Plead Vision Told Them to Steal Members of ‘Church of the First Born’ Tell Police They Are Thieves by Command. LOS ANGELES. Aug 2 The po lice to-day are investigating the rec ords of three women arrested in a downtown department store on charges of shoplifting. The women are all related and claim to be mem bers of a religious cult. “The Church of the First I torn," and when ar rested said they had been command ed in a vision to steal. Mrs. Ruth Joseph and her sisters- In-law, Cora and Clara Joseph, were the names given. The women were detected stealing cloth in the Fifth street store. In their rooms was found $150 worth of merchandise. The authorities will have the wom en examined as to their sanity. ROSE BUSH HAS BEEN WITH FAMILY 80 YEARS MARYVILLE, Aug. 2.—A rose bush that has been in one family for SO years is owned by A. Souers, of this city The original sprout was brought from Pennsylvania to Ohio by Souers* grandmother. Then the family moved t*> Indiana and the old rose bush went along Mrs Souers recently wan; on a visit to Indiana and while there ] go* < sprout off the bush and brought 'j it h< The hush here is thriving • *»’• reached a height of ten feet. Preacher Is Named Warden of Prison Minister Believes That Drink and Laziness Are Responsible for Practically All Crimes. LANSING. KANS.. Aug 2.—At least four-fifths of the pri tuners in the Kansas State Penitentiary owe the loss or their liberty to liquor, in the opinion of the Rev. J. LX (Jerry) Bot kin. newly appointed warder, of the institution. The new warden will keep two tilings uppermost In his mind during his supervision of the in mates—to break up the drink habit and to teafh the men to like work. Warden Botkin declares there are but two answers to the question. “What’s he lr for?" Three are. he says. “He got drunk." or "He did not work." The new warden has been a minis ter 40 years, lie is a Democrat, and w as defeated for Governor of the State by w. R. Stubbs. JUDGE 0. K.’S REL’GIOUS “MOVIES” ON SABBATH MADISON. WIS.. Aug. 2.—Judge John C. Fehlandt, of the Municipal Court, ruled to-day that the motion picture theaters in Madison may re main open on Sundays without fear of arrest if pictures of a religious char acter or which the court might find morally uplifting are displayed and a percentage of the receipts is given to charity. Powers Amazed by U. S. Mexican Policy. By FREDERICK UPHAM ADAMS. NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—The policy of the United States toward Mexico in recent years has earned for us the deserved contempt of all Latin-Amer ica. Our succession of administra tive and diplomatic blunders has been watched with amazed interest by Great Brlta’n, Germany and other great world powers. A considerable portion of the press and the public gasped with indignant surprise when it was semi-officially announced that certain of these pow ers had reminded the United States of its obligation to enforce the Mon roe Doctrine or to abandon it. It is n lamentable fact that the United States has not progressed far enough on its path as a world power to realize the propriety and justice of anticipating the inevitable results of well-known conditions. We do not act because It Is logical and right that we should act, but, on the contrary, because our indecision and diplomatic cowardice eventually comers us into a position where we are forced to act. Spain Forced Nation’s Hand. Why did we go to war with Spain? Was it because Spain was oppressing and slaughtering the Cubans? Was it because of our instincts of hu- manlty? Was it because of a feeling of sympathy for "the under dog?" Was it because the lives and proper ty of thousands of Americans were imperiled in the semi-savage war fare between the relentless Weyler and the Cuban revolutionists? No. Any one of these considerations should have been enough to Interfere by force of arms and stop a strug gle which was a disgrace to civiliza tion. But we closed our eyes and stopped i*ur cars and let the sickening carnage go on for years, most at our doors. Why did we finally "interfere" in Cuba? Because of the blowing up of the Maine. That aroused our flaming anger and we proceeded to rescue Cu ba from anarchy, not because it was our duty, not because it was the just and logical step to take, but because we were mad. We did not know who destroyed the Maine and sacrificed the lives of Its officers and men, and we do not know now, but that the tragedy that shock ed the American public into a realiza tion of the fact that something was wrong in Cuba and a wave of frenzy forced the Government to take just the step which it should have taken long before. In the last two years more Ameri cans hnve been foully murdered In Mexico than gave up their lives on the Maine. They have been killed singly or in small groups in sections remote from communication. They were not participants in any of the numberless "revolutions” which have been waged for plunder from one end of Mexico to the other. They were ranchmen, cowboys, miners, engineers, railroad men and of other honest occupations. Most of them were killed while trying to de fend their lives and their property. Consuls Report Outrages. Day by day in all the awful months which have passed In Mexico the va rious consular representatives of the United States have forwarded to Am bassador Wilson the reports of out rages against our citizens and have furnished him with the names of the dead as far as known. Day by day Ambnssndor Wilson has forwarded to Washington cabled ot written reports of the loss of Ameri can life and the destruction of Amer ican property. Week after week Am bassador Wilson presented to Presi dent Madero. and later to Huerta, claims for the redress of these out rages. They did nothing. Washing ton did practically nothing to enforce Mexican attention to these just claims. Madero was President of Mexico, and the usual crop of murder and pil lage prevailed from the Rio Grande to Guatemala. It was given out at the White House when President Taft ordered thou sands of United States troops massed along the borders of the Rio Grande that this disposal of troops had no connection with Mexican affairs, but was peaceful army maneuvers. • This statement was a conventional diplomatic twisting of the facts. There was a brief subsidence of outrages against Americans In Mexico, but It soon became apparent to all of the warring factions that the United States was bluffing, and they pro ceeded with Jheir work of pillage and murder, regardless of the American troops massed along the border. Philadelphia Doctor Declares No Child’s Spine Need Be Bent. Two Healings Recorded. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 2.—"No child need ever again grow up hunch back." This statement was made to-night bv Dr. J. Torrance Hugh, of this city, who has saved two babies from be- ! ing crippled for life. Another child, two-year-old Joseph Kelley, is under going in his tenement home the first part of the Rugh treatment, with the, promise to his mother that his back will be made straight and strong for j the rest of his life by October. Little Trouble in Treatment. The new treatment can be given at home, with no more trouble to the mother than the ordinary care of a helpless baby would mean. Long and costly hospital treatment and months of agony for the littlo victims strapped to the neck In hot and expensive plaster casts are done away with. The apparatus used by Dr. Rugh is nothing but an oblong frame of four pieces of lead pipe. After the spinal column has straightened, a bone grafting operatior.. to supplant dis eased bones with ncalihy structures, | Is performed if necessary. Back Gradually Straightens. The secret of the treatment Is that the leaden sides of the frame bend as the back straightens, so that the baby takes a natural position and the back is kept perfectly straight. The pressure against the tendency to "hunch" is gradually Increased. This fall at the Methodist Epis copal Hospital, where Dr. Rugh has carried on his work, some bits of bone will be taken from legs of the Kelley youngster and put in his back in place of the tubercular vertebrae that threatened to cripple him for life, so he will be made as strong as he was at birth. Files Will Leaving Estate to Himself Widower Makes Novel Legal Move on Account of Instrument’s Being Made Jointly. DENVER, A up. 2.—Although hr is alive and enjoying the best of health, the will of Frederick • Oberkehr, No. 2572 River Drive, has bteu tiled for probate in the County Cour Accord ing to the terms of the will, Ober kehr will inherit his own estate, in addition to $1,000 worth of property bequeathed to him by his dead wife, Mr.s Be'ize Oberkehr. The instrument represented the Joint will of Oberkehr and wife, wihch was executed in 1909. To file his wife's wifi for probate it was neces sary for Oberkehr to present his own wifi, because of the fact that the two testaments were written on a single sheet of paper. Declares Operatic Sopranos Al ways Have Fewer Children Than the Contraltos. NEW YORK, August 2.—"Yes,” said Mme. Gerville-Reache, the cel ebrated contralto, in an interview with an American reporter, “I be lieve absolutely in marriage meaning maternity. Already I am the mother of a sturdy boy of three years, and soon expect to be a mother for the second time. You see,’’ she went on, smiling, ”1 am helping to perpetuate the tradition of married contraltos.’’ "What tradition is that?” asked ihe reporter. “Why, the rearing of large fam ilies. Look at Mme. Schumann- Heink. the proud parent of eight tall sons. Mme. Homer counts five beau tiful children in her home. Where can you find a parallel in the house holds of the soprano prima donna?” The reporter was silent. “Mme. Gadski Is the mother of a daughter—her only child; Mme. Mel ba has a lone son; Fremstad, Tetraz- zin, Sembrich—I could name a dozen other high-voiced singers, all of whom are childless. It is a curious fact and one to cause considerable wonder and comment. In my own case I can truthfully say that my 1 voice has never been in better con dition than it is at present; my ca reer has neither suffered nor has it been interfered with.” She stopped to call her little son to her, and patting his dark curls went on: "Just imagine, when my Paul was ‘but four weeks old I sang one of my most difficult, most trying roles.” "Do you expect to sing during the coming autumn?” asked the reporter. "To be sure I do,” she replied. “I have been specially engaged by Maestro Campanjni for a limited number of appearances with the Chi cago Opera Company. After that I may have another long concert tour similar to the one I recently finished. That took me all the way to Califor nia and the Northwest.” Mme. Gerville-Reache was one of the most important members of the Hammerstein forces at the Manhat tan Opera House. It was while she was appearing there as the principal contralto that the music world was surprised by the announcement of her secret marriage to Dr. George G. Rambaud, the head of the Pasteur In stitute in this city. '%■ y-v a ^ ' % , j' " I • > -A- ' ' Vj K»lUlllA Wheeled Baby From Boston to New York Parents Had Been Led to Leave Home by Swindler Who Got Belongings. NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—Trundling a baby carriage, in which lay their 2-year.-old daughter Irene, Mr. and Mrs. William Lockhard limped into New York yesterday, hungry and ' penniless. They had walked from Boston, sleeping by the roadside or in barns. Lockhard said a man whom he knew only as "James” induced him to leave his home at Bangor. Pa., and go to Boston, promising a place as a teamster and a nice little flat to live in. “James” checked the Lockhard baggage and with the baggage check3 went on ahead to prepare the flat. That was the last Lockhard saw of "James" or his trunks. The Salvation Army took care of them. Sister Thought Dead 40 Years Writes Him Brother Makes Discovery When She Advertises for Information About Their Father. COLORADO SPRINGS, Aug. 2.— After mourning his sister as dead for 40 years, Philo J. Heoox, of this city, has just received a letter from her. The sister, Mrs. Helen M. Richards, is 71 years old and lives at Cedar Falls, Iowa. The separation came about when both were in Iowa and the sister went to visit friends in Wisconsin. Her let ters home finally ceased and Hecox eventually came to Colorado Springs. Efforts on the part of Mrs. Richards to find her father through an adver tisement in the old home paper, which Hecox continued to receive in Colo rado Springs, led to the discovery that she was living. Conscience Puts Him In the Patrol Wagon Fugitive With $5,175 Stolen Money Begs To Be Arrested When He Sees Vehicle. PHILADELPHIA. Aug. 2—Con science stricken, and with $5.75 in funds of the American Express Com pany in his pockets, Alexander S. Woods, the embezzling express mes senger of East St. Louts, could not resist arrest to-day when he saw the police load a disorderly man In the patrol wagon. He begged the sergeant to send him to prison. Bartender Will Be Rich If He Keeps Job Uncle Leaves Him $250,000 Provided He Stays in Same Place Six Years. Sea Lion Captured After Street Battle Cambridge Teamsters Struggle With 200-Pound Monster and Finally Lasso It. Banker's Daughter Had Befriend ed Colorado Lad When She Was Belle of the Town. GRAND JUNCTION, COLO.. Aug. 2.—Miss Mary Middaugh, aged 23, once the belle of Rico and the daugh ter of Rico’s wealthiest citizen, died in a hovel on the outskirts of the city in which she and her mother ha-l been making their residence for the last few weeks, a home to which they had been forced by the loss of their wealth. The only mourner at the young woman’s bedside was Charles Was son, a blind playmate of the girl when she ruled the social world of Rico as the daughter of a banker and electric light plant owner. Wasson remained true when all friends had deseretd her. Unable to see for himself, he refused to believe that his first love was not the sweet-voiced maiden who was kind to him in her opulent days. History a Tragedy. The history of the Middaugh family for the last three or four years i3 filled with disaster. Frank Middaugh, until his death in 1908, was the leading citizen of Rico. He was wealthy and provided a luxurious home fro his wife and only daughter. The girl was educated at a fashionable academy near Den ver, and through her interest in the case of Charles Wasson, the poor blind boy, who, as the story books say, always live in the little house back of the rich man’s estate, she took up the study of optics, but she was never able to cure her friend. At the death of her father the fam ily fortunes wavered and bad invest ments ate up their wealth. They moved to Grand Junction, where they opened a fashionable home and lived in luxury for many months before the crash came. Became Addicted to Drugs. Mary Middaugh’s last days is a story of drugs, whisky and dissipa tion. Charles Wasson, who followed his benefactress to Grand Junction from Rico two years ago, has been making a living as dishwasher in a local res taurant. He has been guided back and forth to work by a large shepherd dog until yesterday, when someone fed the animal poison. This loss, coupled with the death of the girl, prostrated him. If the elder Middaugh woman will consent, Charles Wasson will endeav or to support her, even though she cared little for him when she was the social leader of Rico. BOSTON, Aug. 2.—Two teamsters, after battling for three hours with a big 200-pound sea lion in the streets of Cambridge this afternoon, finally captured the animal by lassoing it and tying it up in a waterproof can vas. The animal ripped the canvas twice with its sharp teeth, and once crash ed through a cellar window into a building. After being recaptured it broke away again, taking possession of a dry goods store into which it floundered. It was taken to the Boston Aqua rium, where it was found to be a California sea lion about three years old. LEAVE THEIR WEDDING RINGS. MOLINE, ILL., Aug. 2.—Four rot>- bers, grateful for the grace with which the household of E. H. Sleight submitted to being robbed of jewelry and silverware valued at $1,000, al lowed Mrs. Sleight and her daughter, recently the bride of Jay U. Barnard, to retain their wedding rings. FOUR WOMEN ON BODY TO FIX MINIMUM WAGE OLYMPIA. WASH., Aug. 2.—Four of the five members of the State In dustrial Welfare Commission, created by the State Legislature to carry into effect the minimum wage law for women and children, will be women. Under the new law the commission will hold hearings and set a fair min imum for women and children em ployed in each industry in regard to which complaint is made. PHILADELPHIA. Aug. 2.—Edward Musse, bartender at a prominent Del aware Water Gap hotel, has fallen heir to $250,000 from a German uncle “providing he stays continuously em ployed at the position he occupies when he learns that he is heir to my fortune.” To appease the nephew, who is now 24, the uncle provides he may receive $65,000 each year until he reaches the age of 30, when he gets the principal. A codicil provides if he marries “re spectably” before January 1, 1914. he is to receive an additional $14,000 from eac hof two aunts. To Keep Skin in Fine Condition in Summer (From The Family Physician.) It would be much better for the skin if little cream, powder or rouge were used during the heated term. Mixed with perspiration, dust and grime, these things are anything but beautifying. Ordinary mercolized wax will do more lor the complexion, and without giving an oily, shiny, streaked, spotted or pasty appearance. It is the ideal application for the sea son, as it not only keeps the pores clean, but daily removes particles of scarf skin which have been soiled bv d’rt or weather. By constantly keep ing the complexion clear, white and satiny, it does more toward perpetu ating a youthful countenance than any of the arts or artifices common ly employed. One ounce of mercol ized wax, obtainable at any drug store, will completely renovate the worst complexion. It is applied at night like cold cream and washed off ! in the morning. To keep the skin from sagging or wrinkling, or to overcome such con dition, there’s nothing better than a face bath made by dissolving 1 ounce powdered saxolite in % pint witch hazel. i DANGER IN EATING MEAT Statistics Show That People Who Eat Meat Are Suscep tible to Typhoid Fever. The death rate of Typhoid has been 10 per cent for many years. Even if the patient recovers, there is danger- weakened constitution, languidness, loss of energy, and other after effects. In a majority of cases tj phoid fever is directly traceable to an inactive liver which has left masses of meat particles undigested in the alimentary canal. This mass putrefies and sends out death dea 1 - ing poisons, to result in typhoid fever. JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is tne greatest known liver stimulant. Its action Is gen- tie, yet effective. It draws water to alimentary tract, flushes stomach bowels, washes away the nndige meat particles and removes the dai of fermentation. The hloorl is nur through the renewed activity of liver. JACOBS LIVER SALT does not r: nausea and vomiting; no dangerous' er-effects as with calomel. Don't, an inferior substitute: manv !m! the name but cannot produce the s natural, flushing action of the gen' JACOBS’ LIVER SALT. At alf ,h gists. 25c. If your druggist can not I ply you upon receipt of price ' size Jar mailed, postage free, \fade guaranteed by Jacobs' Pharmacy Atlanta.—(Advt.) "rmacy RIDLEY-WILLIAMSON-WYATT CO Wholesale Dry Goods and Notions ATLANTA, GA. Before buying see our specials in Ladies’ Coat Suits and Ladies’ and Children’s Cloaks. Also other special lines at prices that interest you. We name a few: Oilcloth at $1.50 and $1.65; Laces, broideries, Ribbons and many odd lots at on the dollar. would Em- 50c