The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1890-1908, August 21, 1908, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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T gAY, AUGUST 21 uiiLu.t f HEAD EHTJLK BALD Hair Began Falling Out After a Severe Illness—Consumed Several * Barbers Satisfaction friend Cured Same Trouble with Cuticura and Advised Its Use. J CUTICURA REMEDIES EFFECTED HIS CURE “ After a severe attack of sickness my hair fell out all over. One side of me head was completely bald. I waa frightened, not knowing what to do for it. I was almost "wild. I consulted (several barbers with no satisfaction. A friend of mine told me that his hair foil out in patches all over. Be had secured a set of Cuticura Soap, Cuti cura Ointment and Cuticura Resolvent which stopped hu hair falling out and made It grow again as thick as ever. He induced me to try the Cuticura Tlcmedieo. I began using them and in forty days, more or less, I noticed my hair ooming out ail over the bald spots. 1 was so glad I did not know how to praise the greatness of Cuticura. 1 used three cakes of Cutioora Soap, three boxes of Ointment and two bottles of Resolvent ms. I can prove bv numbers of per sons that I was hold before using the Cuticura Remedies, and you may use ray name as a guarantee of their wonderful core. George Simmons, 1030 80. Frauk- Hn St., New Orleans, La., October 10 and 22. 1607." SMXMFORT For Tortured, Disfigured Babies in Cuticura Remedies. , Itching, burning, disfiguring eczemas, ranfcm, inflammations, irritations and cbuflngs of iof ante and children am Instantly relieved, in the majority of cases, by warm bathe' with Cuticura Soap and gentle anointings with Cuticura. the great Skin Care. This pure, sweet -and economical treafc /ment permits seat and A sleep and points to a : speed v cure when ail * other remedies suitable i») ZA for driWron fail. Cuticura Retoecttm are guaranteed abeoftiwly pore, and may be used from the hour or birth. SoM tfee wwW Pott-r Brae A t— MRS. RAINS WILL TESIIF) IN CASE A She Promises to Give the Secret History of Hus band's Life. ' NEW YORK—Mrs. Claudia Libbcy Hains, wife of Captain Peter C. Hains, who with his brother is in the Queens county jail, charged with the murder of William E. Annis, declared today through her counsel that she would go on the’ witness stand during the trial and reveal the secret history of her husband’s life. Mrs. Hains’ counsel, Frederick L. Corton, of Boston, stated today that Mrs. Hains testimony against her hus-, band at the trial would concern the allegations of depravity tjjilch he has made in the answer to the divorce 1 to the suit brought by him in Mas sachusetts. He declared that these counter charges are to the effect that Captain Hains has been guilty of the grossest misconduct. Former Assistant District Attorney John F. Mclntyre, who has been re tained to defend Captain Hains and his brother, declared today, however, that the counter charges of Mrs. Mains have not become part of the divorce suit. This suit, which Mr. "Mclntyre declares to have been con templated by Mrs. Hains at the in stigation of Annis, has not been made a matter of court record, according to the Hains attorney. WHOLESALE BERTHS 111 Kit ST. PETERSBURG—Sevtn more sen tences of death were handed down Wed nesday. Yesterday 26 sentences of death were r«gist »•-*.! tin nugiioiu M e empire making a bloody record. The sentences were signed at Kharkov, two at Saratov, three nt Kiev, five at Warsaw, five Pltisk and ten at l/odz. • The condemned men at Saratov han been found guilty of pillaging tlie estate of an aristocrat and the fact that they had been sailors in the Russian navy did not help them at all. A second attempt was made to as sassinate the police chief at Pyatigorsk, ft. Von Ogllo. Three men ambuscaded fb* official and fired their revolvers nt him, but all missed. M Oglio returned the fire, killing one of the attacking party. READ HERALD WANTS. ONLY 4 MORE SUNDAY. 1 DOS SHIES LIFE IS PREIENIJR6EARI Body of Martin May’s Ter rier, “Tiny,” Found with Burglar's Finger Prints on its Throat. ATLANTA, Ga.—" Tiny" is the name, or rather was the name, of a wee terrier that weighed just one and three-quarter pounds and was valued at over SSOO. Late Tuesday night, in the dark ness of her master’s home, she died a heroine, choked to death by a burg lar she had attacked. This is how it happened: In leaving the city for his vacation, Tiny’s owner, Martin May, had left her and three fine, big bull terriers in the keeping of W. M. Lewis, 147 Courtland street. On Tuesday night Mr. Lewis, whose family had also left the city, was late returning home. He had locked Tiny in the house that morning. Between 10 and 11 o'clock the little dog heard a rattling at the window blinds. She was alone in the big, dark house. But on hearing the noise she set up a tierce barking. Pres ently the blinds opened. A strange man stepped into the room, and glanced sneakingiy “about him. Tiny grew furious. Her shrill voice rose and echoed throughout the block. In the yard outside her three big playmates sprang up from their nap. Among them was ” Hooligan," the famous bull dog, who stopped all the trolley cars on Whitehall street some months ago. Then all four dogs joined in a din that the sleepiest man in the neighborhood could not but hear. The strange man inside darted to ward Tiny doing his utmost to stamp upon her. She dodged hither and thither, barking louder every moment. Finally, he hemmed her in a corner. Reaching down he seised her by the throat. His hand almost enclosed her whole body, she was so small. And then the burglar crushed his fist to gether with all his strength. Tiny’s brave bark grew fainter and fainter; then ceased altogether. Half an hour later Mr. Lewis came home. He was surprised at not hear ing Tiny’s accustomed greeting when he stepped on the porch, for she had never failed to answer the slightest noise. He opened the door and whis tled to her. Still no response. “Something’s wrong," he said. But it was late, so he went to bed Early next morning a negro woman who lives iu an alley in the rear of the Lewis home called by. "Mr. Lewis, here’s your little dog.” she said, holding out a stiff handful of black and tan. "I found him over in the corner of my fence.” It was Tiny. The bones in her neck were broken. Investigation showed finger prints on the window blinds, and the chairs in the front room were kicked helter-skelter. People across the street told Mr. Lewis, furthermore, that between 10 and 11 o’clock they had been awak ened by a terrible barking of dogs which suddenly grew quiet. But not an article of value was missing from the house. Tiny had saved the prop erty with her life. It was plain that on becoming alarm ed the burglar had choked her lo death; and then waiting a while, had stolen out again, dropping into a fence corner as he ran .ue brave lit tle dog that had foiled him. MYSTERIOUS DEATH • OF BUSINESS Ml CHICAGO. 111. Kdward H. Bender, a wealthy business man, was found dead Wednesday In his office, sifter ids wife and daughters had wnited nil night for him to return home. Mystery attaches to the man's death, which whs at first believed by the police to have been th** work of robbers or of an enemy, but Mrs. Bender expressed the belief that he? husband was the victim of heart dis ease. The body was found on the floor, face upward, and there was a jagged wound In the • ’ «* r* . •«<) ca>«* liy the penetration of a splinter, apaprently from the floor. The police are nt in in vestigating, although they believe the wound was caused hy Bender's fall. JOHN FAR"WELL DEAD. CHICAGO. —John V. Farwell, Sr, for years one of Chicago’s best known men and head of the .1. V. Farwell company, wholesale dry goods, died lai-t night at his home in Lake For est, agod 83 years He had been ill a long time. His earliest American ancestor, Henry-Fa rwell, cam* to thM country early in the seventeenth cen tury and was one of the first set tlers at Concord, Mass , which war incorporated In 1633. QO TO TVBEE SUNDAV Central of Georgia Ry. Tony Pastor Tony Pnstor, tlie famous actor-manager, who has been seriously ill at his sumer home in Elmhurst, L. 1. SERIOUS NATURE OF QUESTION TOLDJEEN THE HAGUE—Members of the diplo matic circles here do not look upon the Holland-Venezuelan embrogllo as one 10 be setllfd by arbitration. It Is of such a nature. It is said, that flhc difficulty ha* rather taken on the quality of an af fair of Inter-national honor. A nine hour session of the cabinet was held yesterday, nt the conclusion of which lhe foreign minister. ,T. R. D. M. Van K.wln doren, called upon * the queen und ap prised her of the situation. NO BEARS OR*BERGS TO FACE. Harker—“l say, old man, what is the safest w*y to make a dash for the north pole?" Barker—“ Why, take a map and find the north pole; ihen make a dash with a lead pencil.” [ NtLLO BILL-WAITING FOr|L\ f CABS COST A\ \ fl SAY, CABBY, DRN^) A car. Z c6he on won />> but L W(WK) A.DWEtj TME y ™ “ /2 / Yts, I 77 IT’S Too" BAD - ALL I'VE X J 1 WAS AotUMp’ \ ""U SMOKE A Cl&Afc / / COT 15. Ait 100. BILL 1 . / \ // TO WOE WITM THAT Q ' 1 f) WITH YOU -HERE’S / / WOULD YOU MIND SQUARING / >, / L " h C * l ? e T It.*. .NOHN HtC AUGUSTA HERALD WIRELESS 'PHONE OFFICE IN TOWER NEW YORK Contracts were sign ed yesterday whereby n wireless tele I phone offiee is to be established on ; the 700-foot tower of the Metropolis ; tan Life Insurance company by the I Do Foresl Radio Telephone company. Dr. Lee De Forest, scientific director, declares that eventually 11 will bo possible to communicate by speech from the lofty pile In Madisou Square ! in the top of the Eifel Tower In Darla. He expects when the apparatus is installed to have wireless telephone I communication between New York and Philadelphia. Boston, Montreal, Chicago and Havana. Then he hopes to achieve the feat of talking to the French capital. WEST END LOCAL NEWS Mrs. Rosa Johnson, of Walker street, lias returned from Beraelia, where she weut to play the organ during the revival that was being held there. Mr. Clarence Baston's friends will regret that illness kept him from go ing to ills work today. Mr. and Mrs. Ephralna Montgom ery, of Gainesville, Ga.. visited Mr. and Mrs. Gaines on Walton Way yes terday’. They called on Rev. R. M. Dixon, who was his pastor when Mr. Dixou was located In Gainesville. Mr. Montgomery is first lieutenant of po lice and sanitary inspector of Gaines ville. They left for Atlanta on the early morning train and will be in the Queen City of the Mountains by Sunday. Mrs. Lybrand has gone to Columbia, S. C., to visit her sou, Mr. Joe Ly brand. Mrs. Robert Hughes, of Atlanta, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, of Telfair street.. Dr. J, W. Heidt paid s (lying visit to the city, stopping a few hours at the Bt. Luke parsonage. Miss Liilte Belle Ford, of upper Ellis street, has been very sick for some time, but is some better now. JUROR PRAYS FOR DIVINE GUIDANCE IN MURDER CASE ST. LOUIS, Mo. —Kneeling hoslflo their cols before retiring last night, each member of a Bt. Louis county jury at Clayton, whteh was deliberat ing In the ease of Wash Woods, chaired with murder, offered prayer asking Divine guidance In arriving at a verdict. On the first ballot taken Woods was acquitted The invocation fol lowed unßiiceessfjtl efforts by the jury to reach an agreement. GRAFTO THE MONK. Our Low Outs Must Be Sold! We Must Have Room for Fail Stock. Rice & O’Connor SHOE CO. 730 Broad St. JEROME ACTIVE IN THAW CASE Retains Prominent Law Firm to Help Prove Thaw Sane. PITTSBURG, Pa That District At torney Jerome, of New York, will leave nothing undone to thwart the move to have Harry K. Thaw declared save was made apparent when it be came known that the law firm ol Lyon, Hunter and Rurke, of which Congressman .lames Francis Burke h> a member, has been retained by Mr Jerome to represent him In this city. It had been reported that this firm Will Be Sold, Regardless of Cost. TWO STORES: PURYEAR PROMOTED BY C. AND W. C. R. R. Mr. Tom Puryear, well known In Augusta, has recoivnd a promotion In the offices of the C £ W. C. railroad, where ha has been employed for some time past His many friends will no doubt, he glad to iearn of Ills advancement In railroad circles. He has heretofore held the position of rate clerk, but now goes on as solicit ing agent of the road. Other changeH have been made In the office. Mr. 8. Garren going from the claim department to the rate de partment Mr K W Matthews, com mercial agent of the C & W. C„ be ing In charge of the general of fices. waH retained to represent Thaw crod Iters. Ft Is said thßt Mr, Jerome will come to Pittsburg for the hearing In the bankruptcy proceedings For the next ten days, all low cut shoes in our stock-including Pumps and Oxfords, for Ladies and Misses, Men and Children, AND WHITE CANVAS OXFORDS, PAGE SEVEN - 850 Broad St.. WOULD REMOVE TARIFF FROM WOOD PULP PHILADELPHIA, Pa—A rosolu tlon urging the members to oreat* public sentiment In favor of the re moval of the tariff from wood pulp mid other commodities entering into Hie manufacture of white paper waa paused unanimously at the closing session here of the convention of the National Association of Newspaper Publishers and St n tlon Sr s. Samuel Stratton, of Patterson, N. ,I„ and Fred Hevlfarth, of Brooklyn, were re elected president and secretary, re spectively. RATHER MUSICAL. Ht.iihh "Among other tilings found in ihe stomach of a 'human ostrich' was a coll of piano wire. Now, what do you suppose he swallowed that for?" Penn Why, to glee Ills stomach a tone." Train Leaves 7: a. m. City Time