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Bad BLOOD
“Before I began using Cascarets I had
a bad complexion, pimples on my face,
Kd my food was not digested as it should
ve been. Now lam entirely well, and
the pimples hare all disappeared from my
face. I can truthfully say that Cascareta
are just as advertised; I have taken only
two boxes of them.”
Clarence R. Griffin, Sheridan, Ind.
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe.
10c. 25c, 50c. Never soldin bulk. The genu
ine tablet stamped CC C. Guaranteed to
cure or your money back. 927
HU
For BURNS, MASHES and SORES.
The testimony of users is the best
advertising. We have hundreds of
letters like this one; they say no Sore,
Wound or Sprain is too desperate for
Mexican Mustang Liniment to cure.
Mr. A.C. Williams, Springfield, Mo., writes:
“For a good many years I have used Mex
ican Mustang Liniment on myself and horses.
For mashes, burns, cuts and sores it is the
best thing 1 know of. For horses and stock
generally I think it is unequalled. If
my experience with the good old Mexican
Mustang Liniment will be of any use you
are welcome to publish it. I am a blacksmith.”
25c. 50c, $1 a bottle at Drug A Gen’l Stores.
The Lummus Air^Hk
Blast Gin is a slmpli-
W fled, UNQUALIFIED W
K success. Guaranteed su-
K perior. Thousands in ser
vice. Built to la& a life time. B|
, ; Ask for list of users, sent U
■ free with catalogue.
■ UmMUS COTTON GIN CO. I
J |El Builders »I Air Blast and Brush Outfits jH
Ek COLUMBUS. GEORGIA J|
Box
t MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET
POWDERS FOR CHILDREN
Relieve Feverishness, Constipa
tion,Colds and correct disorders of
the stomach and bowels. Used by
Mothers for 22 years. At all Drusr-
Sfists 25c. Sample mailed FRFE.
XBADHMAKX. Address A. s. Olmstodg L« Roy, N. Y.
L—
Atlanta Directory
knnAK films developed free
ItVUHII Regular prices charged for prints.
Mall your roll and write for camera catalog Io The
College “Co-op,” Shelley Ivey, Mgr.,Atlanta
■ ACES Ai I Uniforms Wholesale to Teams
PM«GDALL Managers should write tor catalog
sf wholesale prices on Louisville slugger bats, mils,
Ite. TUK COLLEGE “CO-OP,” Shelley Ivey, hgr., AILAMS
stamps
promptly and properly made. Write
tor catalog showing styles, type, etc.
Trade checks a specialty.
Dixie Seal & Stamp Co., Atlanta
and High Grade ;
IKa Finishing. Mail j
Laumm "* orders given Spe-
IwJrR cial Attention. All kinds of Photo
Supplies. Send for Catalogue. GLENN
PHOTO STOCK CO., 117 Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga.
EVERYTHING FOTOGRAFIC
|>rofeß6ional finishing for amateurs by mail.
Agentsfor Kenyon PortableTake-Down Houses,
write today for literature. Aaba Bureau Fate
Advertising, Atlanta,Ga.and WriflhtsvlHeßeach.N. C.
for LIQUOR and
pMISS®® drug using
S*'A R I^l A scientific remedy
M fIOL which has been skill-
fully and successfully
administered by nj«K
8 M && ’W 1 cal special! sts fonthe
past 30 years. Bell
Phone Main 2795. Add.
KkELKY UHTITLTE, Woodward Are., Atlanta, Ga.
TYPEWRITERS
of any standard make at fac
tory prices. L. C. Smiths,
Underwoods, R e mingtons,
&gggfßy'S Smith Premiers, Olivers.
Agents for “Standard Folding
Typewriter" 5# lbs. Write for catalogue.
Atlanta Typewriter Exchange, Y.M.CA Bldg., Atlanta, Ga
WANTED
People now engaged in the press
ing business to send us their dye
ing and dry cleaning to be returned
ready for pressing. Write us for
prices. WE CLEAN and DYE
everything worn by men and
women; also household goods. We
pay express charges one way on
orders over $2.00.
SANITARY MY CUMING CO.
Main.Office and Works
24-28 Brotherton Street Atlanta, Georgia
MW HOTEL
Makes Success, and Another Will
Be Erected.
Public Likes Idea and New Hostelry
Will Be Largest in World —Con-
tains 1,000 Bedrooms and Has
Roof Garden.
London. —When Sir Joe Lyons, Eng
land's newest knight, opened a big
hotel on The Strand about 18 months
ago and announced that there would be
no tips in the new hostelry, most old
Londoners laughed. They predicted
that within a year either the servants
would be accepting tips in the time
honored way or the hotel would be
closed.
Neither has happened. The hotel has
not closed and the no-tlpping system
has proven such a success that the di
rectors are going to build the biggest
hotel in England and probably in the
world, where the same system will be
practiced. It will contain 1,000 bed
rooms, and its total dimensions will be
over 40,000 cubic feet. It will have a
large roof garden—an Innovation in
English hotels —fine smoking and bil
liard rooms, libraries, and, in fact,
every modern convenience.
What the exterior of the building Is
to look like has not been quite de
cided, but from a hint dropped by Mr.
Salmon it may be assumed that it
will be distinctly impressive in ap
pearance.
The site intended for the hotel is the
aid world neighborhood which lies be
tilnd Regent street and Piccadilly cir
cus. It is within a few seconds’ walk
of each, yet a quieter or more easily
Settable spot could hardly be imagined.
A number of very interesting old
buildings will have to be demolished
to make room for the hotel, and a
whole block of houses will have to
tome down. In one of the streets
which are going, the undertaker who
made Nelson’s Aboukir coffin had his
shop, and a number of ether venerable
rid business places will disappear. The
coat of the site has probably been
ligh, as a great many leases must have
been bought up.
The rates at the new hotel will be
six shillings a night ($1.50).
I asked about the success of the no
tipping system.
‘‘The system has been a complete
success,’’ said one of the directors.
“How do the public fall in with the
regulations?” I asked. ‘‘Do they ever
attempt to evade them?”
“They do occasionally," he replied.
‘But it’s only occasionally. As a rule
they fall in with the system at once.”
"And you find the servants just as
•eady to oblige as when they had
iepend on tips?”
“Quite,” was the answer.
The servants themselves seem to
jonsider the system a success from
.heir point of view, for Mr. Salmon
laid they preferred the regular wages
:o the uncertain earnings of the wait
sr who depends on tips.
Many people here are of the opinion
hat such places as their hotel are
juickly bringing about the death of the
warding house keeper. It stands to
eason that if for a price so low one
:an get all the high-class hotel com
orts not many are going to remain in
he boarding house.
BATHING IN HIS BED
_azy Persons May Take Advan
tage of Recent Invention.
ntended Primarily for Use in Sick
ness, It Is Available on All Oc-
casions—Bag Is Made Out
of Soft Rubber.
Chicago. — “Me bawth, Chawles,”
md one does not need to get out of
>ed, if one is so lazily inclined or if
me is ill or a confirmed invalid. Just
ake a bath in bed!
There has been invented and intro
luced in Chicago a bed bath in which
me may enjoy a plunge in six or eight
nches of water while in bed. The tub
s made entirely of soft rubber; it is
lx feet long and large enough propor
ionately to admit of its use by adults,
t is inflatable and collapsible and the
idministration of a bath to Mr. Lazy
dan or to an invalid requires no more
ime than for an ordinary bath.
Deflated, the tub is flat and may be
dipped under a person lying on a bed
iy a single attendant. Inflated, the tub,
vhich is oval, is a sheet of flat rub
ier the bottom hollow walls of rub
ier, ten inches high, which do not
tulge from the pressure of the water,
iven if the tub is filled to its ca
lacity.
The tub is inflated by means of a
ramp and a rubber tube connected
vith the walls, in the same manner in
vhich one would pump up a deflated
ilcycle tire. The operation of inflat
ng the tub requires about one minute,
he water is poured into or conveyed
o the tub by means of a hose and the
lather is in the enjoyment of his ab
utions without having left his bed.
de is not disturbed even when the
lath is terminated. The loosening
ind lowering of a rubber sleeve, un
-11 now attached to the top of the tub,
dlows the water to empty into a ves
:el or vessels, care being observed al
vays to have the tub at one side of the
>ed. Two cocks at the top of the
vail of the tub are unscrewed, the air
vhich has been supporting the walls
>f the tub rushes out and the tub de-
SENATOR TILLMAN’S DAUGHTER TO WED
W ASHINGTON.—Congressional circles are awaiting with interest the
wedding of Miss Lona Tillman, daughter of Senator Tillman of South
Carolina, to Mr. Charles Sumner Moore of Atlantic City. The engage
ment w’as announced not long ago and the ceremony will take place some
time this month. Miss Tillman is well known and popular both in Wash
ington and in her home state.
HIS APPETITE WAS AMAZING
Five Chickens, Eight Quarts of Dough
and Fifty Waffles Part of a
Hungry Man’s Feast.
Bloomsburg, Pa. — The crowning
achievement of the gourmandizing ca
reer of Hungry Sam Miller occurred
at a chicken and waffle supper at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kniss
of near Strawberry Ridge, even
though he long ago proved to the sat
isfaction of all comers that he is the
original human ostrich.
It was after 50 guests at the Kniss
home had partaken of the bounteous
provisions, with great quantities of
the delicacies remaining, that Hungry
Sam appeared. It was quickly ascer
tained that he was willing to do his
best to ^relieve the housewives of the
trouble of clearing the tables. He
started in with five whole chickens,
garnished with 50 waffles and two
cans of pickles. Three dozen small
cakes arid two large cakes followed.
This little entree served to take the
edge off his keen appetite. Five big
slates. This done the bather is dried,
the tub slipped from beneath him and
the bath is over.
This bed bath is the Invention of a
southern physician who designed it pri
marily for use in homes and hospitals
in the treatment of typhoid fever or
other diseases where the full or plunge
bath is indicated. In administering
the full bath in typhoid fever cases—
known to physicians as the Brand
treatment, and named in honor of the
man, now dead, who first prescribed it
—doctors dislike to remove their pa
tients from the bed to a movable or
stationary bathtub, fearing that the
lifting and carrying necessary under
the circumstances will induce hemor
rhage. It is asserted by physicians
that the rubber bed bath, which does
away .with this difficulty, will be hailed
as one of the greatest medical inven
tions of the age.
According to medical statistics, the
death rate from typhoid fever, which
has increased in the United States to
an alarming extent in the last few
years, has been reduced from 50 to 100
per cent, when the Brand treatment
was used, the only objection to the
Brand treatment being the necessity
of lifting the patient from his bed
and back to it. Now that can be dis
pensed with —and the lazy man also
may have his inning.
Photograph One’s Thought’s
Worcester, Mass. —Dr. Max 'Baff of
Clark college, discussing the discov
ery credited to Japanese scientists en
abling human thoughts to be photo
graphed, said:
“As a method of taking thought pho
tographs, a capital way would be to
expose the film in a vacuum tank, and
have the subjects, whose thought are
to be photographed, placed near the
tank, even with their heads against
it. Developing the film roll, after it
had been unwound in darkness, with
a pair of subjects thinking on a given
subject while is was being unrolled,
might show some extremely Interest
ing results.
“It Is a matter for close investiga
tion and demands a long series of
carefully conducted experiments.”
country pies came as dessert, but still
Sam’s capacity had not reached the
limit.
The combined waffle baking brigade
was again called into action, but their
services proved too slow for the great
gourmand, and he seized the eight
quart bucket brimming full of waf
fle dough and drained it to the bottom.
At this a halt was called, not because
Sam had reached the limit of endur
ance, but because the stock of edibles
had been exhausted.
KILL RABBITS BY WHOLESALE
s.
“Drive” In Oregon Disposes of 10,000
Little Pests Within Few Weeks—
Clubs Are Used.
Portland, Ore. —Killing rabbits by
wholesale is a favorite winter sport
in the Lakeview country in southeast
ern Oregon. No fewer than 10,000
rabbits have been killed off in this
way, it Is estimated, within the past
few weeks.
Hundreds of men and boys engage
in the rabbit drive. They form a line
extending across the prairie several
miles, while bunnies are driven in
one general direction until they find
themselves between two lines of
hunters, and the only escape is into a
pen, where they are killed with clubs.
No firearms are used in the hunt.
Were it not for this method of ex
terminating the rabbits, they would
destroy the crops of the farmer in
that district. Coyotes kill large num
bers of rabbits and between the t-wo
enemies the pests are kept down to
a comparatively small number.
A recently announced project was
to establish a rabbit cannery near
Lakeview and put the meat of the
slaughtered hares up in tins for sale
chiefly in foreign countries, where
rabbits are highly prized for food.
There is now a tremendous waste of
the meat, only a few of the killed rab
bits finding their way into the Port
land markets and practically all the
remainder are not used at all.
Every svinter when the farmers
have plenty of leisure time to kill the
rabbits, they are slaughtered in very
large numbers, and it appears that
the meat and skins could be put to
profitable use. The supply seems in
exhaustible.
PARALYSIS REMEDY IS NEAR
Dr. Simon Flexner Announces Cure
for Infantile Disease Will Soon
Prove to Be Success.
New York.—The Rockefeller insti
tute in this city believes that its
search for a cure for infantile paraly
sis is about to be rewarded. Within
six months, according* to Dr. Simon
Flexner, definite announcement of a
specific remedy may be expected.
“We have already discovered how
to prevent the disease,” says Dr.
Flexner, in a statement published
here the other day, “and the achieve
ment of a cure, I may conservatively
say, is not now far distant. We have
been working on this problem for a
long time and we have learned where
the germ resides, how the disease is
spread, how the germ enters the body,
the main source of infection and the
means of combating the disease.
"The germ is so excessively minute
that the most powerful microscope
fails to reveal it, yet there are accu
rate methods by which its nature and
presence have been determined.”
IN OBEDIENCE TO ORDERS
French Boy Caused Merriment by Tak
ing the Order of the Court Teo
Literally.
A droll incident is reported as hav
ing taken place in one of the pro
vincial appeal courts in France. A
bdy, about 14, was summoned to give
evidence, and his appearance was such
as to move the whole court to laughter.
He wore a long redingote, peculiar to
the Basque country, and immense
boots. His trousers, collar and hat
were unquestionably those of a man.
The court was. convulsed, and the
president asked the boy how he dared
to treat the court in such a manner.
The boy seemed as surprised as the
president, and taking out the citation
from his pocket, read the formula in
viting him, “Comparaitre dans les af
faires de son pere.” (To appear in
his father’s suit)
THE ALARMING PREVALENCE
OF ECZEMA
Finds Victims Among Every Race,
Age and Condition.
Os all the diseases of the skin and
scalp which torture and disfigure man
kind, three-fourths are eczematous.
Millions are born with eczema, and it
is the only thing other millions have
left when they die. Neglect in infancy
and childhood, irritating conditions af
fecting the skin, ignorance of its real
nature, improper remedies and many
other causes that might be mentioned
have created an eczema which, with
varying severity, has afflicted count
less numbers' during their entire lives.
Eczema is a skin disease. It is not re
garded as hereditary, nor contagious,
and is impartially distributed among
the rich and poor, the high and low.
The agonizing itching and burning of
the skin, causing loss of sleep, is usual
ly the most distressing symptom and is
caused by the bursting of little vesicles
filled with an acrid fluid, which burns
as with fire the denuded skin. New
vesicles form, fill and burst, scales
form upon scales, and crusts upon
crusts until disfigurement is added to
torture.
One of the most successful treat
ments for eczema, whether applied to
the youngest infant or the oldest per
son, is hot baths with Cuticura Soap,
and gentle anointings of Cuticura oint
ment. For more than a generation,
these pure, sweet and gentle emolli
ents have proved the most efficient
agents in the speedy and permanent
relief of all forms of eczemas, rashes,
itchings and irritations of the skin and
scalp. Although Cuticura soap and
ointment are sold by druggists and
dealers everywhere, in order that
those who have suffered long and
hopelessly and who have lost faith in
everything may make trial of them
without charge, a liberal sample of
each will be mailed free to any ad
dress, together with a 32-page pamph
let, giving a description and treatment
of the various forms of eczema, as
well as other affections of the skin,
scalp, hair and hands —send to.“Cuti
cura,” Dept. W, Boston.
The One Destination.
“Is there any field for new poets?”
“Yes, potter’s field.” —Lippincott’s
Magazine.
MILLIONS of FAMILIES^*
u^SYIUJP offlGS
EUXIRef SENNA ^^^i
FOR COLDS AND HEADACHES, INDIGESTION AND ^OUR j
STOMACH, GAS AND FERMENTATION, CONSTIPATION AND I
BILIOUSNESS,WITH MOST SATISFACTORY RESULTS. ‘
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUPCO.^^^ | I
IN THE CIRCLE | !g
ON EVERY PACKAGE OF THE GENUINE I |
THE WONDERFUL POPULARITY OF THE GENUINE SYRUP I r E
OF FIGS AND EUXIR OF SENNA HAS LED UNSCRUPULOUS | HJb
MANUFACTURERS TO OFFER IMITATIONS, IN ORDER TO jig
MAKE A LARGER PROFIT AT THE EXPENSE OF THEIR fl t i T S
CUSTOMERS. IF A DEALER ASKS WHICH SIZE YOU WISH, | ‘ j®
OR WHAT MAKE YOU WISH, WHEN YOU ASK FOR j (W
SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA, HE IS PREPAR- J
ING TO DECEIVE YOU TELL HIM THAT YOU WISH THE ce 2^o?^ lco’hol
GENUINE, MANUFACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA FIG ’ \
SYRUP CO ALL RELIABLE DRUGGISTS KNOW THAT ) I RS
THERE IS BUT ONE GENUINE AND THAT IT 13 MANU- ; ‘hmH™ COMSHMHOR ’
FACTORED BY THE CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO ONLY 5 M
y tUUIUI3,D*CItJ* DVWCL3. ’ j
NOTE THE NAME
cautorm^g'ot
PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS,NEAR THE BOTTOM. AND IN ! |
THE CIRCLE,NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKAGE,OF THE gSaadgMaSEaM
GENUINE ONE SIZE ONLY. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING MINIATURE PICTURE
DRUGGISTS REGULAR PRICE 50c PER BOTTLE. OF PACKAGE.
, -
SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA IS ESPECIALLY ADAPTED TO THE NEEDS OF
LADIES AND CHILDREN. AS IT IS MILD AND PLEASANT GENTLE AND EFFECTIVE, AND
ABSOLUTELY FREE FROM OBJECTIONABLE INGREDIENTS. IT IS EQUALLY BENEFICIAL
FOR WOMEN AND FOR MEN. YOUNG AND OLD FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTi
ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE.
California Fig Syrup Cq
FOR OLD AND YOUNG
Tutt’s Liver Pills act as kindly on the child,
the delicate female or infirm old age, as upon
the vigorous man. . _ _ —
Tutt s Pilis
give tone and strength to the weak stomach,
bowels, kidneys and bladder. sm
Kidney trouble preys
upon the mind, dlscour-
AND ages and lessens ambl
tion; beauty, vigor and
XXrOTVfF'XT cheerfulness soon dfsap
” w pear when the kidneys
are out of order or diseased. For good re
sults use Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root the
great kidney remedy. At druggists. Sam
ple bottle by mall free, also pamphlet
Address, Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y.
MY
DAUGHTER
WASCURED
By Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Baltimore, Md.—“l send you here,
with the picture of my fifteen year old
daughter Alice, who
was restored to
health by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound. Sha
was pale, with dark
circles under her
eyes, weak and irri
table. Two different
doctors treated her
and called it Green
Sickness, but site
grew worse all tha
time. Lydia E. Pink.
ham’s Vegetable Compound was rec
ommendea, and after taking three bot
tles she has regained her health, thanks
to your medicine. I can recommend it
for all female troubles.”—Mrs. L. A.
Cokkran, 1103 Rutland Street, Balti
more, Md.
Hundreds of such letters from moth
ers expressing their gratitude for what
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound has accomplished for them have
been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham
Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass.
Young Girls, Heed This Advice.
Girls who are troubled with painful
or irregular periods, backache, head
ache, dragging-down sensations, faint,
ing spells or indigestion, should take
immediate action and be restored to
health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound. Thousands have been
restored to health by its use.
Write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn,
Mass., for advice, free.
Hotel Cumberland
New York
Broadway at 54th Street
Near 50th St
Subway and
^2® 53rd St.
Elevated
H S Broadway can
Wfjgl jLW *J I jfrpjy from Grand
J S Central Depot
P ass door.
® I New,nd
llLMtlLi fireproof
_ tilSpil i2I ( Strictly
111E =9l 8 3 Sil 11 th First-Clan
^Reasonabl.
tie i ft ■ a maaiMl
$2.50
With Bath
and up
Send for
Booklet
« I 10 Minutes
X. 1 t<
• 20 Theatres
H. P. STIMSON
Formerly with Hotel Imperial
&K Sake ““s,
DAISY FLY KILLER
KODAKS
D pkintKo G
i Lvlilnuh Eastman, Anscoand Ensign 111 ms. Mailed
1 FuL'UiliL postpaid. Mailorders given prompt atten
। tlon. Any size roll film developed for 10c.
THE GIBSON KODAK STORE
24 W. Forsyth St.,Jacksonville,Fla.
| defTince starch-^z^
' —other starches only 12 ounces—same price and
■ “DEFIANCE” IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
> placed anywhere.ab
L tracts Al ills ai 1 flia
Neat, clean, ornameo
k tai,convenient,cheap
I Lasts All Season.
I Made of metal.can not
1 spill or tip over, will
3 not soil orinjure any*
■ thing. Guaranteed ef
| fective. Os al i dealers
I or sen t prepaid for2oc.
I HAROLD SOBERS
I 150 DeKalb Ave. i
* Brooklyn, New York