Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 14, 1913, Image 3

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M IVY4372 MILLERS MINUTE MESSENGERS esa-mm; niUUlViUAi'li i\ 1 1 i/\i\ I /\ , Vf/V., i/rj^rjiuorjA w, umd. (V Virginia GirlWho Made White Way Gasp Is Dying j]L[jli||S IIP OF *•* +•* +•+ •>•+ +•+ Set Out at 17 to'See Life/at 24 She Has, and Quits PORTO RICO IS *S-»4- +•+ *\+ *•* Florence Schenck.Talk of Two Continents, Deserted Government Wil! Endeavor to Induce Patients to Take Treatment at Home, WEST RESENTS THE INFLUX Public Health Service Aims to Aid Both the Victims and Other Travelers, WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Drastic regulation of the transportation of victims of tuberculosis from State to State is contemplated by the Federal Government as a result of an investi gation now being conducted by the Public Health Service. The move will have the effect of curtailing to a great extent the mi gration of tuberculosis patients to the dry climate of the West and South west. The service will puncture the belief that a dry climate is necessary to the cure of the disease. Already the investigation has dis closed that Chicago harbors more transient consumptives than any other city in the country. Because 41 is the greatest railway center in the country and the gateway of the West thousands of victims of the white plague pass through it annually seek ing a salubrious climate. Change Cars in Chicago. These sufferers change cars in Chi cago, stopping a few hours in a rail road station generally. The condi tions under which these patients spend this waiting interval in Chi cago have been investigated during the ^aat fortnight by agents of the Public Health Service. The investi gators also counted the number of sufferers arriving and departing on all the lines. From Chicago the agents have pro ceeded to the Southwest, investigat ing the conditions under which pa tients travel and mingle with healthy passengers. The findings of the investigators will be embodied in a report setting forth exactly what danger the travel ing public runs of infection from tu berculosis passengers. It also will lay down a set of regulations for pre venting consumptives from coming into contact with healthy passengers both on trains and in railway sta tions. The demand for the investigation came originally from California, Ari zona, New Mexico, Colorado and oth er Western States which have been endeavoring for years to stem the tide of tubercular immigrants. Sufferers Unwelcome. In many Western communities “lungers,” as they commonly are known there, constitute a large part of the population. They are re garded as undesirable citizens by the natives, who complain that the suf ferers are a menace to public health. There is good ground for statipg that the report of the health seryy^e will recommend transportation regu lations which will tend to curtail the migration of consumptives. It is suggested that such regula tions might prohibit a consumptive from going far from his home un less he could give satisfactory assur ance that he would not become a public charge. But the main point the report will make is that it is unnecessary for consumptives to se*k the arid region in order to be cured. The national health officers take the position that such a migration furnishes the pa tient no treatment that can not be procured at home. Alfred Vanderbilt Said to Have Forced His Horse Trainer to Give Up the Woman. NEW YORK, Dec. 13.—Miss Flor- encc Rosser Schenck, the Virginia beauty who in seven years has run the whole course of the life that bub bles, is dying to-day in Miss Alston’s Sanitarium, No. 26 West Sixty-first street. She has been operated upon for a tumor under her heart, and the end of a career that was so rapid that even Broadway had to breathe in short gasps in qrder to keep up with it is expected at any moment. Miss Schenck is now just 24 years old. Her career began when she was 17. In Norfolk she lived in the house of her father, Dr. Powhatan S. Schenck, formerly a surgeon in the United States navy and one of the foremost medical men in the Virginia city. Her grandfather w r aa a Governor of Vlr- Miss Florence Schenk as she looked at 17, when she was called the * pret tiest girl in Vir ginia,’ and, be low. Miss Schenk to-day, after seven years. Chicago Mayor Says Free Lunch Must Go CHICAGO, Dec. 13.—Free lunch in saloons and the practice of “treating” ought to be done away with, in the opinion of Mayor Harrison. The combination of the two, he said, often induces a man to drink more than he ought. At the last meeting of the Council an order was passed directing the corporation counsel to draft an or dinance prohibiting the “setting up” of free lunch in saloons. RHEUMATISM My New Drafts are Relieving Thousands in Every Stage of This Cruel Disease Without Medicine. Send Postal for Dollar Trial FREE To everyone suffering with Rheu matism I make this unlimited offer: Send me your address and I’ll send you by return mail a Regular Dollar Pair of my New Foot Drafts to try free—fresh from my laboratory and ready to begin their sooth ing help the minute you pt*t them on. They are working won* ders in every stage of Rheumatism. whether Chronic or Acute. Mus cular, Sciatic, Lumba go, Gout, or other form —no matter where lo cated or how severe. Letters are coming on every mail, from all over the world, telling of cures by my Drafts In the most difficult ■ ases, even after 80 and 40 years’ suffering . and after the most expensive treatments had failed. No matter what your age or how many other attempts have failed. I want you to Try My Drafts Free without a cei t In advance. Then, afterwards. If you are fully satisfied with the benefit received, if you feel that you have at last .uuci the long sought cure, v< i can send me One Dollar. If not. simply write me so. and they oost you nothing. I take your word—I leave It all to you. You can see that 1 couldn't have such unbounded faith in my Drafts If I did not feel positive that they are more prompt tract mask / » and sure than ,f ang other rom- ^ - “ -4 liable illustrated l»ook on Rheumatism rome* with the Trial Drafts. Address Fredeijck Frederick Dyer ginia, and she had many admirers among the social set of Norfolk. She was then a perfect blonde, slender of figure, with clear-cut features, • big blue eyes and a wealth of beautiful golden hair. She was talked of as “the most beautiful girl in Virginia,” and she was. Then Alfred Vanderbilt’s private car, the Wayfarer, arrived in Norfolk for the horse show. With, it came Charles S. Wilson, trainer for the Vanderbilt stable of equine aristo crats. The pair met. When the Wayfarer left Norfolk, according to the story told by the beauty at the time, she went with it. She wanted to see life, and she said Wilson promised to show it to her. Whether he did or not is another question At any rate, she has seen it now, and, having seen it all, she is about to give it up. After her arrival in New York the news of the day began to sizzle with the doings of the little Virginia beau ty. The reports of her extravagances, her late suppers and her entertain ments were sensational reading. Marriage Rumor Denied. Then she and Wilson went abroad, and about the same time it was an nounced that she and the Vanderbilt trainer had been secretly married be fore she left Norfolk. This rumor was denied by the wife of Wilson, who was living in Orange, N. J. The reports from London of the beauty’s doings also created a stir in New York. Then Wilson and the girl came back on the same boat, and the city was treated to a fresh sensation even,' hour for several days. The girl said Wilson had married her in England, and that he deserted her at the steam ship dock here when she had but a half dollar in her purse. Bhe said he had beaten her and she exhibited bruises. Then newspaper men came to her rescue and provided her with money with which to taffe a room in an uptown hotel. About the same time the father and mother of the girl dis owned her and refused positively to come to her aid. Then Wilson went to Newport, and the woman who said she was his wife entered the chorus of a Broadway musical comedy. Once Miss Schenck entered suit against Wilson for breach of prom ise. Then she announced she would sue him for a divorce, and then she went abroad again. “What’s the Use?” She was next heard of in Paris where her excesses brought her into the limelight once more. Twice she was arrested for disputes with cab men, and then she began to crave those things which follow in the wake of a woman who has lived with her emotions always in the high gear. Friends tried to make her reform and sent her to sanitariums, but she did not appreciate the attention, escap ing from each of the hospitals where she was sent. She always reverted to her old ways, and, when asked why she didn’t behave, would reply: “What’s the use, anyway? My family doesn’t want me, though God knows I would crawl back to my mother and father on my hands and knees if they would receive me. No body cares for me. I’ll just go on The best I can, and the finish—well, it’ll be the finish, that’s all.” HI in Paris. While she was in Paris penniless, she became desperately ill, and it was believed she might die. She asked that her mother and father be noti fied. She wanted to be forgiven. But the parents, still living in the quiet Virginia city, refused to even ask if there was anything they could do to ease her pain. She had brought dis grace to their name, they said, and they were done with her forever. She was as one dead to them. Again she met Wilson in Paris, and again there was a disagreement, and they parted. It was said at the time that Vanderbilt told Wilson he would have to rid himself of Miss Schenck. It was believed, however, he came to her aid financially Being left alone in London, friend less and practically without money, again she attempted to kill herself with chloral, after writing a letter to Wilson, in which she said that in all the world he was for her the one ob ject of her life. She was in ill health from the ex cesses she had committed when some new T friends assisted her to get trans portation back to New York in the second cabin. That was last year. Seven Rapid Years. During the Madison Square Horse Show just over another chapter in the tangled romance was written when Wilson, who was exhibiting Vander bilt’s horses, was served with papers in an action begun in the Supreme Court here for $50,000 damages. Her attorneys made it clear that she was not suing for breach of promise, but for breach of contract, fraud and de ceit. She set forth in the papers that at the time she married the .Vanderbilt trainer she believed he had divorced his first wife, who was Elizabeth Ainge, Put she later learned that the decree had not been made final, so the horseman might have been arrested for bigamy. Attached to the com plaint was a certified copy of a cer tificate of marriage. As Wilson has denied the marriage many times, this paper, the lawyers decided, was to play a leading part in the suit. The suit has not come up for trial yet, and it is probably that it nev< r will, now t hovering at woman about to end her life in its prime because of seven years of rapid living. is probable t hat it neve r that the complainant is the door of <Vath—a young Fi Dyer. Dept. ML50, Jackson. Michigan. Send To- ‘Mislays’ Motor Car; Appeals to Police KANSAS CITY, MO.. Dec. 13.—To the list of men who misplace their hats and glasses is to be added the man who mislays his motor car. Such a man, a lawyer, accosted a Kansas City patrolman in the business dis trict. “I’ve mislaid my motor car,” he said. “I’m certain it has not been moved or stolen, because it is pad locked. Until this minute I thought 1 left it here.” Fifty Years Clerk In the Postoffice BOSTON, Dec. 13.—Thomas Downing, for nearly fifty years clerk In the foreign department of the postoffice, died Wed nesday at his home at No. 21 Woodrow avenue. Dorchester. He was nearly 67 years old. Down ing was the son of George T. Down ing the noted Newport, R. I., negro who held the hand of Charles Sumner when the latter died. In Prison 40 Years, Burglar to Reform SAN QUENTIN, CAL., Dec. 13.— Having spent more than 40 years of 67 years of his life in San Quentin and Folsom orisons, “Uncle Six," who says he was born a burglar, walked out of the penitentiary a free mao, having been paroled by the St a: Board of Prison Directors. “Uncle Six” says he will start life all over again and endeavor to make a man of himself. Rural Mail Left in Boxes at Schools WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Schools located on rural routes are to be con sidered patrons of these routes, ac cording to an announcement by Post master General Burleson. He has granted permission for me placing of mail boxes at these Institu tions where mail will be delivered for the pupils or teachers. DIFFICULT JIB Lack of Good Water and Sewe- age and Garbage Disposal Plants Presents Problem. WASHINGTON, Deo. 6.—While the sanitary system in Porto Rico is still in a crude state, judged fro mAmeri can standards, commendable progress has been made toward cleaning up the island, according to the annual report of Brigadier General Frank McIntyre, Chief of the Bureau of Insular Affairs, delivered to the Secretary of War to day. General McIntyre pointed out that the exports and imports of both Porto Rico and the Philippines hav* increased greatly during me past fiscal year. Among the difficulties to be over come in making Porto Rico sanitary, General McIntyre says, are a lack of good water supply, lack of sanitary markets, lack of hospital facilities, overcrowding and insanitary condi tion of municipal jails, some of which are used for the detention of violent ly insane persons; congestion in the homes of the laboring classes and contamination of milk supply. Philippine Trade Good. Regarding the commerce of the Philippines, the report says: “Trade returns for the year show’ a generally favorable condition. Im ports amounted to $56,327,583, an in crease of $1,777,603 over those of 1912, but the serious shortage in local rice production, which made rice imports an exceptionally large factor in the import trade of both years, was re lieved in the latter part of 1913 by abundant crops, and the elimination of this emergency element shows that whereas the net increase of 1912 over the previous year was $706,939 Lhe increase in the general import trade in 1913, inclusive of rice, was $4,406,- 695. “Exports were adversely affected as a result of crop conditions, but re duced production of some of the lead ing staples was more than offset by better prices and by the larger out put of others, and the export total of $53,683,326 exceeded by $3,363,490 the high record of 1912. “The value of American goods im ported shows an increase of $4,782,- 930, and amounted to $25,387,085, or 45 per cent Of the total, against 38 per cent in 1912. “Approximately three-fourths of the $7,975,811 cotton cloth trade for 1913 was of American manufacture, compared with 56 per cent in 1912, 50 per cent in 1911, 33 per cent in 1910, and 10 per cent in 1909, the last year prior to free trade. “Exports to the United States amounted to $19,848,885, and were 37 per cent of the total, as compared with 43 per cent in 1912. Sugar shipments, which were the leading factor in this decline, show a falling off approxi mating $5,000,000 irf value.” Porto Rican Commerce. With regard to the commerce of Porto Rico, General McIntyre has the following to say: “The foreign trade of the island for the fiscal year ending .June 30, 1913, aggregated $86,003,627 divided as follows: Imports, $36,900,062; exports, $49,003,565. This represents a de crease in value of imports of $6,026,- 411, and of exports, $601,848. “Although the shipments of sugar were 16,000 tons greater than during the preceding year, reaching a total of 383,000 tons, the average price re ceived—$16 less per ton- reduced the total value of the sugar shipments for the greater quantity by approximate ly $5,000,000. “The lower price of sugar is re flected in the curtailment of imports, and purchases in the United States decreased during the year $4,269,540 and from other countries $1,756,871.” Railroad Man Says That Was Plent, Even Though He Did Not Count ’Em. Quits Wife for Army; Patriot, Says Judge SPRINGFIELD, ILL., Dec. 13—A married man who leaves his wife to join the United States army is a patriot and not a wife deserter, ac cording to a ruling by Judge Creigh ton. in the Sangamon County Circuit Court, The opinion was expressed in a ruling by the court that Mrs. Alice Sidener must chance her bill of di vorce from William F. Sidener to say that Sidener “left” her to Join the army, instead of “deserted” her for that purpose. “A man can not be charged with desertion because he joins the army,” Judge Creighton observed. “That is a patriotic act.” Appeal Fails; Prison Faces Woman Doctor SEATTLE, Dec. 13.—Dr. Linda Burfield Perry Hazzard, the starva tion cure specialist convicted of con tributing to the death of an English girl patient in her sanatorium near this city, lias lost her last appeal to the State Supreme Court and must serve a term running from two to twenty years. Mrs. Hazzard came here from Min- neanolis several years ago. Her hus band is a graduate of Wesi Point, and was for many years a regular army officer. NEW YORK, Dec. 13.—Thomas H. Curtin, the passenger director on duty in the Pennsylvania Station, is an alert employee, whose duty it is to show strangers in New York to their trains, and to see to it that aged women and young girls are safe while they are waiting for trains in the Pennsylvania Station. Curtin was standing near the main entrance to the women’s waiting room yesterday when lie saw a little I black bag lyon the the concrete floor of the iUti ( ui near one of the en- trances leading to the train platform below. Curtin picked the bag up and saw that it was a jewel case. Sta tion Master William H. Egan came along just as Curtin picked the bag up, and Curtin turned It over to Egan, who carried it into his office and locked it in his safe. Limited Just Leaving. “It was then about 10:45 o’clock, and the announcer had just told the waiting passengers that the Penn sylvania Limited, which leaves for Chicago at 11:04 o’clock, was ready,” Curtin said later. “I felt certain that the bag belonged to • some woman passenger of that train, and so I watched for her appearance, for 1 knew she would come back as soon as she found that she had lost the bag. “I had not long to wait. I heard a scream, and, looking across the room, saw a woman standing at the top of the stairway on the eastern side of the station, near the steps leading to the Seventh avenue arcade. In her excitement she had run up the wrong steps and found the iron-grated exit door locked. She was weeping bit terly, and a maid who was with her was trying to keep her from attempt ing to climb up over the ironwork. I ran up, unlocked the door and ask ed her what was the matter. Owner Discovers Lose. “ ‘My hag, my jewels and my money,’ she cried, ‘have been lost or stolen.’ " ‘Oh, if that’s all, don’t worry', for I think I can take you to where the bag is, and I know you will find that nothing is missing from it,’ I told her. “I took her to Station Master Egan’s office, and that officer asked her to describe the contents of the bag.” Twenty one-thousand-dollar bills and diamond and other jewelry worth at least $100,000 were in the hag she told Egan. Egan opened the bag and in it found twenty new $1,000 bills and the jewelry as described by the passenger He then handed her the bag. “I thank you. Oh, how I thank you,” the happy woman cried as she took the bag from Egan. “Don’t thank me. madam. Thank that man,” Egan replied pointing to Curtin. Then It Happened. The woman looked at tiie young passenger director, and then she step ped quleklv forward, and before Cur tin knew what was going to happen she threw her arms around his nedk and kissed him several times. “How many times did she kiss you?” a man asked t’urtin yesterday. “I don’t know; I was too em barrassed to count ’em,” Curtin an swered. “Well, what did she give you in the way of a reward besides the kisses?” the reporter asked. “Nothing, that was enough,” Cur tin said. Houses All Concrete; Village Now‘Perfect’ NANTICOKE. PA.. Dec. 13— Every one of the twenty double houses in Concrete City, the model village of the Delaware, Lackawanna and West ern Coal Company, is now occupied, and with the completion of the park in the 300 by 410 feet square, which is surrounded by the houses, the set tlement will be perfect of its kind. The houses are two-story Struc tures, built of solid concrete, molded in one piece. Each house contains seven rooms. Girl Says Gallery Keeper Shot Himself She Had Let Go of Gun and He Had It When It Discharged, Says Miss Hause. PIEDMONT. ALA.. Dec. 13. Pearl , Hause, who was reported to have shot I accidentally Robert Cash Moore, j keeper of a shooting gallery, In a for mal statement declares the rifle was I in the man’s own hands at the time I of the tragedy. She explains: "The gun was not even in my hands, for he (Mr. Moore) had told me that my time^vas up, and that was all. Forgetting that I was due another gun, I turned to my sister and exclaimed. Oh, if I only had another one,’ thinking that if I did that I could shoot down us many birds as she had. Mr. Moore turned, and. handing Baxter Formby a gun with his right' hand, reached with his left hand and took my gun. Being somewhat taller than I, he pulled it straight to his head. When he took I hold of my gun I turned it loose and I dropped my hands to my side. As I I did so, the stock of the gun fell, hit I the board and was discharged. Then the boy fell. So I must state that the poor boy innocently and accidentally shot himself with his own Hands. The eyewitnesses can and will verify my statement.” Legless Man Leaps to Tree, Escaping Bull BIG LAUREL.. W. VA., Dec. 13 — 'Will Everett, of this town, despite the fart that he la legless, la one of the crack shots of the town hunt club. While out with his brother shooting squirrels they got into an ir,closure in which a bull was grazing. Will asked John to help him to (he middle of the pasture. They heard a roar, and turned to see the buy charging. John ran for his gun. He picked it up. and turning, ran toward his brother. His brother was gone. The bull was shaking its head and bellow ing. John finally saw his brother on the limb of a tree twelve feet above the ground. "I Just saw that bull come and got here, that’s all," said Will in explain ing his leap. Thief Gets Suit, but Leaves It and Bicycle HENRY, S. DAK., Dec. 13.—An un identified thief, through a peculiar oversight, lost the fruits of his pil- ferings and at the same time lost a bicycle which is believed to have been his individual property. The thief arrived in Henry after dark and succeeded in stealing a suit of clothes belonging to Elmer Kinkade, a busi ness man. The thief by mistake placed the stolen clothing and his bicycle in the auto of Marshall Johnson instead of in an auto which he had engaged for the purpose of leaving town. He did not return to the Johnson auto for ' the stolen suit and bicycle, but aban- | doned them and fled from town. Agent iu 15 Calls Finds Only Bad Luck HAMMOND, IND., Dec. 13— Scott Shattuck, of Brazil. Ind., an insurance collector, asserts this story is the rec ord of hard luck tales. He made fifteen calls recently and not one collection. He found, oi* his first call, the hus band sick in bed; second call, the wife and family sick In bed, with the hus band caring f«>r them; third, the hus band had just lost three fingers in an accident, fourth, crape on door; fifth, the stork had just come; sixth, child lost an eye in an accident; seventh, child dying from infantile paralysis; ninth, man had just dropped a barrel of oil on his foot. Stattuck reach'd the tenth home in time to help carry the husband into the house from an ambulance. He Works Years for Others to Pay Debts J AM ESTOWN, N. J ., Dec. 13.—“1 have yvorked for more than twelve years to be able to do this, said David Lyons, of Chicago, to his friends in Jamestown as he paid the last claim of the several hundred outstanding against thim when he left Jamestown for Chicago in 1901. “As far as I can find I have paid every dollar I owed. I did not want a friend to lose a cent and no one lias." Heir to Title, but Outcast, Dies inU.S. SALEM, IND., Dec. 13.—William Haz ard, aged 80, who died recently at the Washington County Infirmary, was a descendant of the nobility of England, and once was second in command of a regiment, stationed In India. Had he remained in England he would have been known as Sir William Haz ard. He married against the wishes of his family and was disowned. Wife to Get Pay as He Toils iu Jail JANESVILLE. WIS., Dec. 13.—Mrs. Edward Arneson has contracted with the Sheriff for the services of her hus band.. who is in jail on a year’s sen tence. She has contracted that he work at his trade of tailor, his employer paying the money to the Sheriff for Arneson, i and Mrs. Arneson draws the pay from 1 the Sheriff. She has sublet his services j to the tailor. * Traveler Remarks Striking Con trasts to Home Customs, and Says Labor Rules Country. NEW YORK, Dec. 13.—“There are too many people—there are too many that are working hard to earn a liv ing. Your big buildings are impres sive, but when I look at their banks of windows, 1 see only the swarms Inside that are toiling away, shut in. It is not pleasant to think of so many people having to work so hard to make a living.” That is an impression of New York from an antipodal standpoint, and it came yesterday from Mrs. F. J. Ray- ner. of Auckland, who is at. the Wol cott. Mrs. Raynor’s husband is a big landowner in New Zealand. “People don’t have to work so hard in New Zealand,” continued Mrs. Ray- ner. “Why, I have to give my laund ress a whole hour off at noon, and if she works a bit after 5 o’clock in the afternoon the factory Inspector comes around and fines me. Odd New Zealand Laws. “I have lived in New Zealand thir teen years, and have found some of the laws that a labor government has given us rather odd when one is used to customs in another country. For instance, if this hotel were in New Zealand and I were entertaining some friends, they would all have to be out of the building by 10 p. m. On Sun days a person who Is not staying in a hotel is not allowed to take a meal in the building, nor is it lawful for him to pay a call upon anybody in it. I suppose these restrictions were im posed originallv as a means of help ing regulate the liquor traffic. You see, at every election we vote on the subject of prohibition. It comes up every time. Women Vote There. “Do the women take, advantage of the right of suffrage? Well, the ma jority do. You see, we have had the right to vote down there so long that now we don’t think anything much of it—about as much, I fancy, as the average man. The wife usually votes the same way as her husband, and as for the unmarried—why, personal in fluence counts a lot. “Do you know. I ate New Zealand butter almost all the way to New York. All the hotels and the trains of the Canadian Pacific Railway serve it, and I found it tasted just as sweet in Winnepeg' as in Auckland. We shipped 13,000,000 pounds last year to Canada alone. You people have lost all the freight and passenger-carrying business between the Pacific coast and New Zealand through the laws your Congress has made which put the Spreckles line out of business. “Since the new’ tariff came to be as sured of adoption, there have been a great many Americans in New Zea land buying up wool. This has had an Immediate effect upon the price of land, sending it up. Land for dairying purposes ordinarily runs as high as $15 an acrt», while improved and fenced sheep-raising stations go as high as $55 an acre. “L don’t suppose It is generally- known here that New Zealand is be lieved to have the oldest vegetation of any part of the world. Our kauri trees are said to be from 6,000 to 8,000 years old.: They grow from 200 to 250 feet high, and are of the same diameter e* the top as at the bottom. They look like the columns in Egyptian temp4es. * “You Will , Smile” 1 when you see the appetite j returning, the digestion be-1 coming better, the liver working properly and the! regular. This means health. To bring about this condition you ahouid try HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bittersj It is a real safeguard against all ailments of the Stomach, j Liver and Bowels, and will' help you to maintain health and strength at all times. DON’T FAIL, TO TRY A BOTTLE. $5.00 A wonderful assortment of Portable Electric and Gas Lamps from $4 to $25. Brass and Iron Andirons from $3 to $55. Queen Mantel and Tile Co. 56 W. MITCHELL ST. You can walk comfortably fill day if you lure <3SB Clean as a whistle it roots out the corn. No sore or swelled toe, no pain. For corns, bunions and ten der callous spots, there’s nothing in the world like TANGO. TANGO is guaranteed to root out the core of the corn painlessly; If It does not, go to the drug sfore where you bought It and get your money back. 25c at All Druggists. Jacobs’ Pharmacy, Atlanta