The Post-search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1915-current, December 07, 1916, Image 10
Cheap nnd big canBakingPowdersdo not
save you money. Calumet does- it’sPurc
and far superior to bout milk and soda.
“Look Pa, How
b‘Bots-lt* * Works 1”
■I
fir lifts Your Corn Right 0£' ^
W Never Fails.
**■ "Bvcr In your llfr nr-o a corn come
out llko that? Look at the true Hkin
underneath—smooth as the palm of
your hand!
Well Now. Look at That! Off Comes That
Pesky Cora as SUck as • Whistle.
The enrth In blessed with the one,
simple, painless, never-failing rem-
•»<ly that maken millions of eorn-pes-
tered peoplo happy, and that's "GETS-
IT’. Apply it in 11 seconds. It dries.
Some PMpls Jab and <1 ik: at their
corns with knives and raaors—wrap
their toes In packages with ban
dages or sticky tape, make them red
nnd raw with salves. Nothing: liko
this wlth#"UET8-lT.** Your corn
loosens—you lift !t off. There's
nothing: to press on the corn, or hurt.
Angela couldn’t ask for more. Try it
tonight on any corn, callus or wart.
•'OkTSMT" !h sold and recom
mended by druggists everywhere. 25c
a bottle, or eent on receipt of pries
1u B. Lawrence A Os., Chicago, 111.
(Neglected Colds Grow
Worse
A cough that racks and irri
tates the throat may lead to a
serious chronic cough, if neg
lected. The healing pine bal
sams in Dr. Bell's Pine Tar
Honey—Nature’s own remedy-
will soothe and releive the irri
tation, breathing will be easier,
and the antiseptic properties will
kill the germ which retarded
healing, Have it handy for the
croup, sore throat and chronic
bronchial affections. Get a
bottle to-day. Pleasant to take.
At all Druggist, 25c. tl)
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•.'Si •s)B|33njp HI) Xq Plug
•o ‘op.'toj. -DO V A3N3HO T .J
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uo pooia i|Sno-lt(i Sion pun XqRuja)
-oj ua^u) »| aupipajq u.urj«,j s.iith
•aiiqna Xjrjon (1 »ag)
. Nosvano as y ssst a v
"jaquiaoaa jo X«p qi9 B|q» 'eauasajd Xtu
U| paqfij.qns put am ojojaq oj ujoMg
"AaKUHO r Mxvui a.xiDiaar*
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t>q jouuro )«q, qjj.jRj jo asta Xaaxa pua
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JO mns aq, XRtf |[i» uup p,ts jtq, pav
*PI««»jojr a,«,g put Xiunoo opaiox jo
■*>10 »m u| ssouiimq *u|op -oo y Aauaqo
r a J© tu-nj aq, jo jaujjRd joiuas s,
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£
COMPULSORY SCHOOL LAW
Section 1. Be it enacted bv
the General Assembly of the
| State of Georgia, that every
j parent, guardian or other person
! having charge and control of a
child between the ages of eight
and fourteen, who is not exempt
,ed or excused as hereinafter
j provided, shall cause the said
child to be enrolled in and to
attend continuously for four
months of each year a public
school of the district or of the
city or town in which the chi'd
resides; which period of attend
ance,shall commence at the be
ginning of the first term of said
school in the year. Such attend
ance at a public school shall not
be required where the child at
tends for the same period some
other school giving instruction
in the ordinary tranches of Eng
lish education, or has completed
the fourth grade of school work,
as prescribed by the State Board
Education, or where, because
of proverty. the services of the
child are necessary for the sup
port of a parent or other mem
ber of the childs family depend
ent on such services, or when
the parents or persons standing
in parental relation to the child
are unable to provide the neces
sary books and clothing for at
tending school and the same are
not otherwise provided, or where
the mental or physical condition
of the renders such attendance
impracticable or inepedient, or
where the child resides more
than three miles from the school
house by the nearest traveled
route, or where, for other good
reasons (the sufficiency of which
shall be determined by the bflard
of education of the county or of
the city or town in which the
child reside) the said board ex
cuses the child from such at
tendance, such boards being
authorized to take into considera
tion the seasons for agricultural
labor and the need for such
labor, in exercising their discre
tion as to the time for which
children in farming districts
shall be excused. Provided, that
no guardian shall be compelled
to send such child or children
to school out of any other than
the fund belonging to the wara
or wards. Temporary absence
of any child enrolled as a pupil
may be excused by the principal
or teacher in charge of the
school, because of bad weather,
sickness, death in the child’s
family or other reasonable cause.
Sec. 2. Be it further enacted,
That any parent, guardian or
other person who has charge
and control of a child between
the ages aforesaid, and who
wilfully fails to comply with the
foregoing requirements shall be
guilty of a misdemeanor and on
conviction thereof shall be puni
shed by a fine not to exceed ten
dollars (or the first offense, and
not to exceed twenty dollars for
each subsequent offense, said
lines to include all costs: but the
court trying the case may, in
its discretion, suspend enforce
ment of the punishment, if the
child be immediately placed in
attendance at a school as afore
said and may finally remit the
same if such attendance has con
tinued regularly for the number
of months hereinbefore prescrib
ed for attendance. School at
tendance may be proved by an
attested certificate of the princi
pal or teacher in charge of the
school- No person shall be
prosecuted for violation of the
foregoing requirements unless
the board of education of the
county or municipality in which
the person accused of such vio
lation resides shall have cause to
be St r^ed upon the accused, at
least ten days betore such pro
secution, a written notice of the
charge with the name of the
child to whom it refers. Any
person so notified, not previous
ly convicted of voilation of this
Act as to the child referred to
in said notice, may prevent
prosecution on the charge set
out therein, by giving, at any
time betore such prosecution is
instituted, a bond in the penal
sum of fifty dollars payable to
the ordinary of the county
with security to be approved by
the ordinary, conditioned that
the said person shall thenceforth
faithfully comply with the re
quirements of this Act as to the
said child. Each day’s wilful)
failure of a parent, guardian or
other person in charge and con
trol of a child as aforesaid,
alter the expiration of ten days
from such notice, to cause the
child to attend school, when such
attendance is required by this
Act, shall constitute a separate
offense. In prosecutions under
this Act the exemptions and ex
cuses herein provided for shall
be matters ot defense to be
established by the accused and
need not negatived in the in-
Atlanta, Ga.—December 7.—
That “dual personality” is not
entirely and imaginary pheno
menon confined to the fancy of.
playwrights and novelists, but is
actually of real life, as contended
by numerous scientists who have
lately made a study of the sub
ject, was demonstrated in a case
which has just turned up in the
Atlanta police circles.
B. V. Holland, a Mississippi,
expressed indignation and horror!
when informed of some of the
wild acts which he was accused
of ‘.having committee in the
course of a piratical voyage
throught various parts of the
city in a “seagoing car.”
According to the cabman, a
Holland jumped into to the cab,
shoved a gun in the negro’s ribs
and ordered him to “drive.”
At intervals he would poke the
muzzle of the gun a little deep
er into the frightened cabmr.u’s jl
ribs and instruct him to pr.t on !•
faster speed. Finally the negro ^
piloted his craft into the friendly j
harbor of the Treminal Station
plaza and sent up a distress)
signal which brought a police
on the run.
“Give me a mirror and let
me look at at the scoundrel who
would treat a good negro that
way,” exclaimed Holland, when
they told him at police station
what he had done. Although he
did not appear to be intoxicated
he professed to have no recollec
tion whatever ot the incidents
of his exciting cruise.
Mrs. W. M. Harrell will enter
tain the W. C. T. TJ. at the next
regular meeting, Dec. 7, at her
home on Shotwell street. A
cordial invitation is extended to
all members.
TRADE MARK
White Liniment
is a dependable and satisfactory
remedy for use where a good
family liniment is required.
Very penetrating. Sold only by
us, 25c, 50c and $1.00.
MILLS PHARMACY
Callahan Bldg. Bain bridge, Ga.
dictment or accusation.
Sec. 3. Be it further enacted,
That it shall be the duty of the
county and municipal board of
education to investigate as to
the attendance and non-attend
ance of children required by
this Act to attend the schools
under their supervision and it
shall also be their duty to insti
tute or cause to be instituted
prosecutions against persons vio
lating this act. It shall be the
duty of the principal or teacher
in charge of any public school
in which pupils between the
ages of eight and fourteen years
are instructed, to keep an ac
curate record of the attendance
of such pupils and at the end of
each month to make a written
report of the same to the board
of education having supervision
of the school and to note there
in excused absences and the
reasons therefor.
Sec. 4. Be it further enacted,
That all fines imposed hereunder
and all sums required to be paid
as penalties under bonds given
under this Act, shall, after pay
ment ot the costs of prosecution
and ot recovery thereof, be paid
into the county treasury and be
come a part of the school fund
of the county.
Sec. 5. Be it further enacted,
That the provisions of this Act
shall become operative on the
first day of January, in the year
nineteen hundred and seventeen.
Sec. 6. Be it further enacted,
That it shall be the duty of the
board of education of each
county, at least four weeks be
fore the first of January follow
ing the adoption of this Act, to
cause this Act to be published
in a newspaper of the county,
if there be one and to cause
copies of this Act to be posted
at the court house of the county
and at the public schools thereof.
Sec. 7. Be it further enacted.
That all laws and parts in con
flict with this Act be and the
same are hereby repealed.
Approved August 19, 1916.
N. E. Harris, Governor.
We Now Have In
...STORAGE..
More than 40,000 pounds of Decatur
County meat for curing under cold storage.
Our plant contains the most modern and
sanitary meat curing cold storage rooms to
be found any where in the South. ^We real
ized the necessity for providing this facility
for the farmers of Decatur county and spar
ed no expense.
Our rate for meat storage is lc per
pound for the first 30 days and l-2c per
pound per month after the first month.
We are prepared to to take care of all
the meat that is offered us.
Cambridge See Company
Telephone 152
BAINBRIDGE. •
GEORGIA.
f
Give Her
Korns Candies
For that Christmas Gift and you
will satisfy her as well as make her
happy. Not an expensive present but
one that will please her.
We will have for the holidays a
complete line of holiday candies put
up by this reliable concern and can
supply your needs. A magnificent line
of Toilet Articler willl be yours for the
asking at most reasonable prices.
Bainbridge Drug & Seed
Company
Bainbridge, Georgia.