Newspaper Page Text
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Sheriff’s Force Preparing New
Business Ventures Before the i
Mangum Regime Ends.
|
Already deputies on the ticke! of
Sheriff Mangum, all of whom will go
out of office the first of the year, “are
beginning to prepare for the future
by obtaining new positions irito which
to step when they walk out of the
courthouse to make room for the
force of Sheriff-elect Lowry.
Chief Deputy John Owen, it was
announced Saturday, will return to
the Frank E. Rlock Company as city
salesman. Mr. Owen was with this
company in this capacity for fifteen
years before entering politics amd go
ing Into the Sheriff's office. He is one
of the most popular and widely
Enown members of the City Sales
faen’'s Assoclation.
George Brodnax already has left the
Sheriff's office, having Jjoined the
CGovernment secret service depart
ment some time ago
Although losing in the contest for
Sheriff, Deputies Lee Haygood and
l.on Burdett provided for themselves
in more successful later political ven
fures. Mr. Haygood simply will trans
fer himself the first of the year from
the courthouse to the City Hall,
wwhere he will be assoclated with the
uew Chief of Construction, Henry L.
Collter, Mr. Burdeti will g 6 to the
Capitol, having been on the ticket of
J. J. Brown, successful candidate for
Commissioner of Agriculture.
Walter Knight, one of the jallers at
Ihe Tower, will return to the farm.
Deputy J. T. Poindexter will open a
tin shop. Mr. Poindexter was in this
business before his election with the
Mangum ticket,
Dan Goodlin probably will go back
to the Municipal Court, with which
he was connected hefore entering the
Sheriff’s office. After the lnaugura
tion of Governor-elect Dorsey, it is
expected, he will be transferred to
the Capitol.
Bome of the other deputies have
vositions in view, but have not made
definite decisions.
A New Home Cure That Anyone Can
Use Without Discomfort or
Loss of Time.
We have A new method that cures
Asthma, and we want vou to try it at
our expense No matter whether your
case is of long-standing or recent deve,
opment, whether it Is present as occa-
II‘Z)nll or chronic Asthma, you should
send for a free trial of our method. No
matter In what cllmate vou ilve: no
matter what yvour age or occupation, if
30u are troubled with asthma, our meth
<d should retieve you prumme
We especially want to send It to those
apparently hopeiess cases where &l
forms of inhalers douches, oplum prepa
Tations, fumes, “patent smokes," ato.,
have falled. We want to show everyone
&t our own expense that this new meth
o4 is deslgned to end all difticult breath
ing, all wheezing and all those terrible
paroxysms at once and for all time.
This free offer I 8 teo Important to
neglect a single day Write now and
theén begin the method at once. Send no
runfiy Simply mail coupon below. Do
t Today
FREE ASTHMA COUPON,
FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room
835-A, Nlagara and Hudson Sts.,
Buffalo, N, Y.
Bend free trial of your method to:
RIIIIIIIIO Like -
| Cured Mine”
————
#l4 Bea Captain Cured His Own
. Rupture After Doctors Baid
"
“Operate or Death.
——
* His Remedy and Book Sent Free,
n Collings salled the seas for
Pn years; then he sustained a bad !
louble rupture that soon forced him to:
only remain uhorfil but kept him |
aflddm for xurl. e tried doctor
r doctor and truss after truss. No
resuits! Finally, he was assured that
fie must either submit to a dtnfierouo
:fi übhog:nt operation or dle. e did
cured himself instead. |
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*Follow Men and Women, You Don’t Have
Te Be Cut Up, and You Den't Have
To Be Tortured By Trusses.”
Captain Collings made a study of
aimself, of his condition—and at last he
Was Tewarded by the finding of the
method that so quickiy made him a well,
eurong, vigorous and happy man.
Aa}ono Can use the same method;
it's simple, u?’. safe and inexpensive
'v‘r‘y rupture (permn in the world
md have the Captain Collings book,
Ilngocll about how he cured himself,
nd W Anyone may follow the same
:uumom in_their own home without
#:‘{ \ioubh. The book and medicine are |
EE. They will be sent prepaid to
rupture sufferer who will fll out |
=h¢ helow ocoupon., But send 1t ri bt |
AWAY ~new - before you put down &uu
paper. |
FREE RUPTURE BOOK AND z
REMEDY COUPON. {
o.g W A, Oollings (Inc# !
X 15-AWatertown, N, Y. |
Please send me your FREN Rapture | |
Remedy and Book without aay obli- ‘
#B%on on wy part whatever. !
{
i
’GUNTEST IN ”l Slg
| .
: » 1
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iClvuhans Will Participate in Na-|
i tional Event for First Time at |
, Jacksonville. |
|
{ The personnel of the Géorgia Civil- |
lan Rifle Team, which will represent |
|the State at the Nuational Rifie Matc h |
:ir Jacksonville in October, was an
| nounced Yesterany, and shiows At '
lisnm larg:ly represented on the team.
{ The Morrow Rifle Club, of Atlanta,
{ will be represented by W, J. Nolan J.
|W, Hudson, E. T George, J. M. De- |
| Floer, Jr., Leonard Adamason, E. L. |
| Murphy, J. B DeFoor, T. A. Nolan, |
|Jdr., R. D. Hill and B. M. Gilbert. !“!"‘/l‘
[the Atlanta Rifie Club will go E, H |
{Elrod, F. L. Smith, L. O Grice, J, E.
| Oxford, A. Wright, W. E. Markel W.
|J. Stoddard, W, D. Hoffman, W. J.|
| Timmsg and W. C. Slocum. i
| Nolan, Hudson, Murphy, Elrod, Ox ‘
I[urn, Wright and Markel have attend ]
|
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ed national matches as members of
the Georgia National Guard team.
J. W. Hudson and E. H. Elrod have
both at times been rifle champion of
Georgia. L. O, Grice is holder of a
pistol expert medal A. Wright has
‘represented Georgla at national rifle
matches for fifteen vears,
This will be the first time civillans
have been eligible to participate in
United States Army matches.
.
Edmondson Resigns;
)
v
31 Years With W.&A.
John L. Edmondson, it was an
nounced ye ‘erday, has tendered his
resignation as law and stock agent
of the Western and Atlantic Railroad,
after a service of 31 vears, in order to
give his entire time and attention to
his persona! business.
Mr. Edmondson resigned in order to
glve his time to his Chero-Cola busi
nees in North eGorgia and Kast Ten
nessee. He is president of two com
panles, one at Rome and the other at
Chattanooga. ’
i ——————
By Train in Tunnel
CHATTANOOGA, Sept. 30 —Ralph
E. Wann, of Knoxville, a foreman on
the Cincinnati Southern Railway,
was killed at Oakdale today when he
was crushed between a box car and
the side of a turnel. The body wasg
brought to this city,
. to Colored
Women, Our
ree 1916 Styie Book
We are the
S largest man
l\’ \ B ufllxlui’cnlo(
T RN ol "fi WO~
1 EN men's hailr,
b R AR \ vq and In order |
TN Bto introduce t
" RIS our goods we
AN ~4 ; are sending
b i free our lat. I
N G Y est dook,
R showing
W W n{'l::d f:or
. N colo -
bTR L men, in the
G & latest halr
dressing
Every col
ored woman should have one. We
guarantee ovorl articie we sell or
money refunde All hair will post
tively stand combing and washing the
l u:xvo. as ym‘:r ?wn.
manufacture a STRAIGNTEN.
™G coOMB of .oIId brass, with ex
| tra hnv{ dack, absolutely the best
Jand _most serviceable made, fully
[ Suarantesd. With each combd we sell
AL the low price of §9 cents we give
. hmr cap free. Send your order
for this straightening combd today
S ee—— . ,_w
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ke iy T
L] Postpaid 897
‘A FULL *,INE of Halr Brushes,
Net and Toflet Articles is tlustrated
and can be bought for less than of
fered elsewhere.
Send two-cent stamp for book today
AQEXT:.A‘&&;E;:&M
181387 ;u-x RBow, New ynaei'
Department 121 S
FOR THROAT AND LUNGS
STUBBORN COUGHS AND CcoLDs
Alt r ti
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
- i gt s -
Elks Honor Georgia Members
| e e e dee ST a 6
| . :
Gordon Put on Big Committee
; Robert A. Gordon, of Atlanta, at top; below, left,. Robert O.
| Arnold, Mayor of Athens, and John F. Gleason, of Savannah.
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'Red Men to Plan
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For ‘Jeffries Night
Committee Meets Tuesday Night to
Prepare to Honor Thomas H.
Jeffries New Chief.
The executive committe of Red
Men preparing for the big celebra
tion of “Jeffries night” on October
31, in honor of the r-cent elevation
of Ordinary Thomas H. Jeffries to the
head of the Red Men in the United
States, will meet Tuesday night with
committecs from all tribes to com
plete further arrangements for the
ocecas'on,
Plarfs already have been moade for
a monster Red Men parade on “Jef
fries night,” with the usual red fire
and other pictur-sque incid ntals. The
parade will be under direc‘ion of the
committee on arrangements, of which
Fred Potterson is chairman.
An enthusiastic meeting was heid
last Tuesday night, attonded by del
egates from a number of out-of-town
tribes. At this time it was announced
that nearly 300 palefaces will be in
itiated on “Jeffries night” Past
Great Sachem Frank F. Smith, J. T.
(Sledge) Collier, and others deliv
ered,addresses,
ied P f
'Varied Program for
. Free Organ Recital
Charies A.. Sheldon, Jr., Atlanta’s
city organist, will present a varied
program in his free organ recital at
the Auditorium this afternoon. Th
feature will be Harvey B. Gaul's
“From the Southland,” a' selection
that is sure to make a wide appeal
to Atlanta's musical populations. The
composer has incorporated into it
themes from the old negro spirituals
or plantation revivai songs. ‘
Two transcriptions of popular or-I
chestral numbers will be Massenet's |
lovely “Meditation,” from “Thals,”
and the “Sextet,” from “Lucia.”
In addition to Mr. Sneldon's own
“Caprice.” the program will include
some of the lighter composjtions of
Nevin, McFarland, Kinder and Read.
4 pleasing group of younger American
wrietrs for the organ.
Brother of Burleson
Bri i
Brings Mexican Data
- (By Internaticnal News Service.)
LAREDO, TEXAS, Sept. 30,—~Rev.
Allen Rurieson, of Mexico City, an
Episcopal minister and cousin of
Postmaster General Burlesgon, passed
through here today en route to the
convention of the Episcopal Church
at St. lLouls,
Rev. Mr. Burleson, at the request
of American residents of the Mexlean
capital, will go to Washington after
the convention and lay before Presi
dent Wilson the exact conditions in
Mexico City and tell him the truth
regard'ng certain other matters which
have transpired there lately,
e ————"
POSTMASTER TURN A s
LAPORTE, IND., lept.' fo.i%a
son Turner, for many ‘“" rominent
fn the councils of the ml? 1‘..?..-. of
the Republican party and for nineteen
DA oo S itout i, ST
nterru n .-
vice, ’:!II become a Mubygarun minis
ter. The retiring postmaster will enter
the Maody Rible Tnastitute in Chicagn
And afte ordination to the ministry ox
nests 1/ woeen Wt ats
HEYRSTS T ORDAY " AMERRAN “ATLANTA®GA, SUNDAY, OCTOSER 1, 1916
While in Atlanta for a short stay a
few days ago, BEdward Rightor, of
New Orleans, grand exalted ruler of
the Elks of the United States, an
nounced the appointment of Robert A.
Gordon, vice president of the Ameri
can Furnishing Company, as a mem
ber of the Grand Lodge committee on
State assoclations,
This is one of the most important
committees of the order, and, as it
consists of only three of the most
prominent Elks taken from the whole
country, the selection of the Atlanta
man is regarded as quite 'a distine
tion by his friends. Other membeml
of the committee are Bruce Camp-‘
bell, of East St. Louis, and Dr. Ralph
Hagan, of Los Angeles,
While here Mr. Rightor also an
nounced the appointment of R. O, Ar
nold, Mayor of Athens, and John H.‘
Gleason, of Savannah, as district dep- 1
uties from North and South Georgia,
respectively.
This is the third time that Mr. Gor
don has been called upon to serve
on Grand Lodge committees, he hav
irg bern so honored in the years 1914
and 1915,
1
{ M A\(R‘s WONDERFUL REMEDY
| ./(-)r S l OMACHII'OHNQ
JONE DOSE ‘WILL CONVINCE
| Gali dlones, Cancer and Ulcers of the
| Stomach and Intestines, Ato-intoxica
{ tion, Yellow Jaundice, Appendicitis and
jother fatal ailments result from Stom
ach Trouble Thousands of Stomach
| Sufferers owe their complete recovery to
Mayr's Wonderful Remedy Unlike any
fother for Stomach Aiiments For sale
|by Jacobs' Pharmacy and druggists ev
] ervwhere. ‘
Taking plaln Calomel that makes
you sick and Cathartics that do not
touch the Liver at all, If your Liver
is Inactive and you suffer from Con
stipation or Clogged Bowels, sick
headache, Indigesiion, Foul Breath,
Sour Stomach, Dizziness, Billousness
in any form, or if you feel out of
sorts, Revil Liver Tablets is what you
need. One taken at bedtime stimu
lates your Liver and moves your Bow
els, thus throwing off all poisonous
matter in your Stomach and Bowels.
No Griping or Sickness Remember
he name-—Revil—Liver spell-d back -
ward., Large bottles at Drug Stores
at 25 conts or sent by malil. Sample
free. REVIL MEDICINE CO. Atlan- |
| ta, Ga.—Advertisement. |
El l
YOUR WEIGHT
t——
A SIMPLE, SAFE, RELIABLE WAY.
People who are overburdened with su
perfluous fat know omly too well the
discomfort and ridicule that overstout
people have to bear. .
If you are earrying around five or ten
pounds of unhealthy fat you are un
necessarily wukemngbyuur vital organs
and are carrying a burden which de
strovs the beauty of ?'nur figure.
There is no need of any one suffering
from superfluous fat. If you want to
reduce vour weight in a simyple, safe
and reliable way, without starvation diet
or tiresome exorcise, here is a test
worth trying. Spend as much time as
y¥ou can in the open air, breathe deeply
and get from Jacohs’ I‘lmrmncy or any
£ood druggist a box of ol korein cap
sules; take one after each meal and one
before retiring at night,
Welgh yourself once a week so as to
know just how fast you are losing
weight and don't leave off the treatment
or even skip a single dose until you are
‘down to normal.
- Ofl of korein is absolutely harmless, Is
‘Elenum to take. and. helps . digestion.
Even a few days' treatment has been
reported to show & noticeable reduc
tion in weight, footsteps decome light
ér, your work seems easier and a 'ight
er and more buoyant feeling takes pos
‘lu'*n of your whole being.
Wery person who suffurs from super.
flupus fat should Rive this treatment a
tein! A aw '
e L|- w " P sAk =
UEN JUE
'
Chamberlain-Johnson-Dußose Co.
' -t
~ Spend Fifty Years'in Same
.
1 Location.
|
|
|
; Atlanta is so accustomed to con
sider herself a new city that it will
!be rather surprised today to discover
| —Or remember—that at least one of
her big business institutions is cele
| brating its Golden Jubilee. The
Chamberlin-Johnson-Dußose store is
50 years old today.
Fifty years is a long life for a
busin®ss firm in these days of rapid
changes. But 50 years on one cor
ner, 50 years with one man in the
organization, 50 years of steady and
frequently rapid growth, is still more
unusual. But that is the record of
‘this staunch old firm,
It was on October 1, 1866, the year
after the great war, that the partner
ship of Chamberlin, Cole & Boynton
opened a little store at Hunter and
Whitehall streets. It was 100 feet
deep, with a frontage of 25 feet. One
of the clerks was a young man named
Henry 8. Johnson, who applied for
a 4 job and insisted that he be given
a trial whether they needed him or
not. He is the president of the com
pany today, and the only man re
mainiug of the original organization.
The little store grew in popularity,
for its goods were honest goods and
iis mcthods upright. - It built up the
| best retail business in the city, which
had begun to take on that remarka-
Ib’u growth which was to raise it from
'.'l country town to a YP(*I!'()[)UIIS.
{ Johnson Buys Interest.
I Young Johnson had made himself
valuable to the store from the first
day he unlocked its door and dusted
off the counters Within a year or
two Mr. Cole’s health forced him to
retire and Mr. Johnson was offered
an opportunity to buy an interest in
'lm' firm. Fle took advantage of it
and obligated himseif to pay for his
interest. Within three years the
store next door was leased, doors cut
through the wall and new lines added.
It was becoming the forerunner of the
‘dfl'n:rimem store of today.
i Not long after that the bullding
|ag lin proved too small for the busi
i n~ss, and an ell at the rear was added
{ In 1878 another young man who was
|to make his mark joined the force
|nt salesmen, His name was Edwin
'!T, Dußose. Years afterward, when
I.\‘l_ Boynton retired, Mr. Dußose be
came a partner and the firm name
was chonged to Chamberlin-Johnson
{ Company
j The “hard times” came now, with
nanics everywhere, but the store on
{ the corner kent sciling goods., Atlan
{ta recovored from the financial do
nression and the Atlanta Spirit was
born. One of th~ best indications of
that spirit was the building of a five
ADVERTISEMENT.
Nuxated Iron to Make New Age of
Beautiful Women and Vigorous Iron Men
Say Well-Known Physicians-;-Quickly Puts Roses Into the Cheeks of Women and Most
Astonishing Y outhful Power Into the Veins of Men—lt Often Increases the Strength and
Endurance of Delicate, Nervous, “Run-Down” Folks 200% in Two Weeks’ Time.
NEW YORK, N. Y.—Fince the re
markable discovery of organic iron,
Nuxated Iron or “Fer Nuxate,” as the
Frenech call it. has taken the country by
storm, it is conservatively estimated that
over five millicn persons daily are taking
ft in this country alone. Most aston
ishing results are reported from its use
by both physicians and layvmen. 8o
much so that well-known doctors pre
dict that we shall soon have a new age of
far more beautiful, rosy-cheeked women
and vigorous iron men.
Dr. King, a well-known New York
phys'clan and author, when interviewed
on the subject, said: ‘“‘There can be no
vigorous iron men without iron. Pallor
means anemia. Anemia means iron de
ficiency. The ekin of anemic men andl
women is pale. The flesh flabby. The
muscles lack tone; the brain fags and
the memory ‘ails and often they become‘
wpak, nervous, irritable, despondent
a!fd melancholy, When the iron goes
from the blood of women, the roses go
from their cheeks.
“In the most common foods of Ameri
ca, the starches, sugars, table syrups,
candles, polished rice, white bread, soda
crackers, hiscults, macaroni, !pa*h(-ll;.
tapioca, sago, farina, degerminated
cornmeal, no longer is iron to be fourd
Refning processes have removed the
iron of Mo her Earth from these impov
erigshed focds, and silly methods of home
cookery, by throwing down the waste
pipe the water in which our vegetables
are cooked, are responsible for another
grave iron loss.
. “Therefore, !f you wish to preserve
‘vour youthful vim and vigor to a ripe
old age, y'u must supply the iron defi
clency n vour food by using some form
of organic iron, just as yvou would use
‘l:;t when your food has not enough
salt."”
Dr. Sauer, one of the most widely.
known physiclan® in this country, who
has studied abroad In great E-vrogean
madical institutions, sald: “As 1 have
said a hundred times over, organic iron
is the Fruten of all strength buflders.
1f people would only throw away patent
medic'ne® and nauseous concoctions and
take s'mple nuxated iron, T am econ.
vinced that the llves of thousands of
persons might be saved who now dle
every vear from pneumonia, grippe,
consnmption, kidney, 'iver, heart trou
hle, ate, The real and true eause whivh!
«tarted their disease was nothing more!
nor less than a weakened econdition!
brought on by a lack of iron in the
blood
“Not long n'o A Man came to me who
was nea*'v half a con'vmyv o'd an? pelag
me *= give him a nreliminary pnrfln.
tion for life insurance. 1 was astonished
to ind him with a blood pressure of a
boy of twenty and as full of vsgs:, \-I".[
ard vi*tality ae & voune man: In fact, a
(ounc man he really was, notwithstand.
m his age. _The secrel, he said, was
ing fron—Nuxated Ir#n had fillad him
with renswed life At thirty he was in
bad bealth: at fortv-six he was care
warn and nearlv all in. Now at fifty o
miracls of yitality and hie face beamins
WL she hnvaner of vanth Teen in abd.
ruption business. ‘
Dußose’s Name Added. |
- In 1896 the firm was changed into
a corporation and the name of Mr
Dußose added to the sign above the
door. It was not long after this that
Mr. Chamberlin, founder of the old
firm, died. Henry S. Johnson, becom
ing president, was the only survivor
of the original organization.
i Six years ago the big department
store had grown unjl it became nec
‘essary to add a five-story furniture
department, and the structures mak
ing up the department house were
oddly shaped. There were two big
frontages on Whitehall street and a
wide connecting ell at their rear,
while between the frontages were
several other stores occupied by va
rious firms.
It is an odd situation that, after
exactly 50 years in one home, the
store should seek a new location. But
it is to move just next door. The ex
cavations have been begun for a new
and greater building adjoining the
furniture department of the present
store,
The men and women who have
worked with the Chamberlin-John-~
son store have been no less loyal
to it than the thousands of customers
who, through three generations, have
frequented its aisles. There are three
persons of the rolls who have been
there 36 years; two who have worked
there between 26 and 30 years, six
teen who have been with the house
between sixteen and twenty years,
and a long list of men and women
whose days have been spent under
'its roof for from five to fifteen years.
“Gets-It” N
els- ever
iis for Corns!
Fails for Corns!
There's Nothing on Earth Like It
For Corns and Callouses.
“Whenever you get corns and cal
louses, don't experiment—just use
“GETS-IT" and nothing else. Easiest
and simplest thing I know to use—just
a few drcps on in a few seconds—
Wear - Use
Shoes < “Gets-It”
That Fit 3 Tonight
/ Ve
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GETS-IT' does the rest.”” The old way
is to bundle up your toes in harnesses
and bandages. use salves that make toes
raw, cotton rings that make your corns
pop-eved, Kknives and “diggers”’ that
tear your heart out and leave the corn
in, No wonder they make you lintp and
wince, Forget all these—use “GETS
IT,” the simplest corn remedy in the
wor'd, easiest to use, never fails or
sticks, painless. Your corn loosens, then
you lift it off. You can wear smaller
shoes
‘GETS-IT” is sold and recommended
by druggists everywhere, 25¢ a bottle
or sent on receipt of price, by E. Law
rence & Co., Chicago, 111
' Ay A Wond ’
; 707 i erful Discovery Which B
I [IV;%!H P ; Mark a New Eia in Mccli‘i:cal:l:;c“,:lcscs to";f)l{l "
s R - [glar
sS@ e [
I ’:iv / 2 ;'»-,‘i—-,.i“ /“‘,!{‘fi i ?; e (;;.
[ ERF Ry e| A
| f@/\” ) 9' AT ATV
s(e ‘ E A 3, = by )
SN
- et : 4 r%\ Jo "/;
AT & d\ 7/ ,Q , — w 5 / {‘,;/’-
L[ ) N SN\ g
‘! 7/ io 5 @ ;77\ ./
lIx{; 5 ‘ ‘;'; °,,,,,,,.,MT' ki //,/’,/\ \ X ;‘ - '
3 Vo'l ¥ A ~/!, S i | <
= AN\ AT
‘ o| \c M (3" \\ b N\ fi !
/i %%*P" R I mul
) REEANNR
W O\
B P l/\\ /
l!olutoly necessary to erable your blooa
1o change food into living tissue. Without |
‘lt. no matter how much or what you eat,
your food merely passes through vou
without doing voun any good. Yeu don't
‘get the strength out of it, and as a con
e.,eqkue-nca you become weak, pale and
sickly looking, just like a plant trying to
grow in a soil deficient in iron. 'lf you
are not strong or well, (vou owe it to
yourse!f te make the following test:
See how lcng you can work or how far
{ou can waik wtlmu: becoming tired.
Next take two five-grain tablets of or
dinary nuxated Irl’zn three times per day
after meals for 0 weeks. Then test
your strength again and see how much
you have gaiped /T have seen dozens of
nervous, run-¢ people who were afl.
ing all the while Mouble thelr strength
and endure a ammg rid them
telves of 5? syriptoms dyspepsia,
liver and other trgubles in from ten to
fourteen days’ time simply by taking
irowr tnn the prpoer Yor And thie, after
Fields Batified as
"ields Ratified |
.
Senator in Decatur
The senatorial convention for the
thirty-fourth district, which met Sat
arday in Decatur formally nominated
Alonzo Fields, State Senator.
The meeting held in the Perry Ho
tel, was followed by a barbecue, par
ticipated in by delegates from the
roulgtles of Henry, Gwinnett and De-
Kalb.
w> NG i .°.-‘-"'."-'..‘:'... "‘:'.':'t't
\-' .T, ’ ':.:-."-' " 3
o P o G
It Makes Your Store
the Center of Buyers
With a Bell telephone in your
store it would be just as easy to
sell to customers at the other end of
town as to those who live next
door.
- A telephone will prove the'
main entrance to your store. It
not only increascs sales, but re
duces sales cost. If you are al
ready enjoying the profits produced
by Bell service, perhaps you need
more telephones to care for your
increased trade. "Ask for particus
lars. :
S. B. MATHEWSON, Mgr.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE \-‘
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY : '
,they had in some cases been doctoring
| for months without obtatnm’ any bene.
fit. But don't take the old forms of re
duced iron, iron acetate, or tinctute of
iron simply to save a few cents, The
iron demanded by Mother Nature for
the red coloring matter in the blood of
her children is, alas! not that kind of
iron. You must take iron in a form that
can be easily absorbed and ass'milated
to do you any good, otherwise {t may
prove worse than useless. Many an
athlete and prizefighter has won the day
simply because he knew the secret of
g*nt nren’?h and endurance and filled
is blood with iron hefore he went into
the nffu{: while many another has gone
down in inglorious defeat simply for the
lack of iron.”
‘Dr. Schuyler C. Jaques, another New
York physician, sald: *T have never be.
fore given out anv medical information
or advice for publication, as I ordinarile
4o not belleve in it. But In the case of
Nuxated lron | fee] 1 woyld he ramiss
Greatest Hosiery Mill
: y
Raises Wages of 3,000
DURHAM, N. C, Sept. 30.—Seven
and a half per cent increase in salary
for their 3,000 employees was an
nounced today by officials of the Dur
ham Hosiery Mills, the largest man
ufacturers of hosiery in the United
States. Increases will run the week
ly payroll of the company up from
§16,000 to more than SIB,OOO, The
company has plants in four cities be
sides Durham, and three here.
in my duty net te mention it. I hnva
taken it myself ard given it to mr pa
tients with most surpriging and satistiac
tory resulte. And those who wish quirkly
O nerease the'r strength, power and «o
durance will find it' a most remarkable
and wonderfully effective remedy.”
NOTE-—Nuxated Iron, which is preseriboc aod
recommended above phys<iclans in such Brew
variety of m.. s'fi -‘a'n:-r‘.‘t man‘o. 7;;;:(‘::
"‘.‘ . Xnown .
and whose iron uenta widely prescribec
h{ eminent mimm h‘?mfl:n America
Tnlike the uder inorganic tron tis castly
l-::gu-tad. dovs not Im the testh, make t(hew
black, nor upset the sto: :n&ommz,uh
;v’-uo well as 1 . -dt'un mm,x‘:;g"-
as A y ¢
e inanufacturers have & rdm i
un‘e.d iron thet offer tow 100.00 tu
any Charitable llfiquzmuu.u.'
TAD OF wOman un: 80 whe fron amd in
crease their mm per cent or over in sou
works' utfi they have no ssrious organt
trouble. ey also fln to refund r money if¢
Bt i e TLh "m’“%‘a‘“"- o
i . 1 3 AT DEII i ih v
dacets’ '*un«-v and W goad drusgists