Newspaper Page Text
NEW SENSATIONS
IN SNEAO THIAL
mm
‘Famous Texas Killing Case To
Be Heard Today -Feud
Outbreak Feared.
>
AMARILLO. TEXAS, N< 11. interest
tr the second trial • i l<»hn Beal Snead
for the killing <4 Captain Albert <» Boyce ■
on January 13 of this year, has been i
fanned to fever heat by Snead** recent ,
murder of young Al Boyce, with whom
his wife eloped lo New York and Wlnni- 1
pajf, Canada, on November b. 1911, and
the gathering of the Snead-Boyce < lans •
here today for the trial.
Thia trial I# scheduled to be called,
and it is expected that testimony
wll be adduced that will shake the |
Millionaire society of this city to its very <
foundations. Thia testimony, it was said j
oday. would be of such h sensational na~J
ture that a further outbreak of the fend !
■nlffht be expected to follow in ita wake.
There have alrta<h been live violent ■
• eatha directly attributable to the love of
he young Boyce for the beautiful wife of
ohu Snead, tin millionaire banker of this
1 ity. The first death occurred when <’ap
aln A. G Boyce, lather of young \1
! Joyce, and also a millionaire business
dan of this city, was shot down in a hotel
lobby b.v John Beal Snead, with whose
wife young Boyce bad eloped.
Snead's Father Slain.
This killing < ( curved on January 13
1912, and was quick!} followed by the
’□under of i'aptain J. T. Snead, father ut
John Beal Snead, l>y a former employ*** -
who was apparently demented. This man
R. <lßliiard. who committed tin
nurder on March f>. 1912. Just outside th*
Dostoffice and then turned the pistol on ,
himself with fatal effect. Hilliard left n
note stating, “that Snead began it,” and
that 1 ■ had set himself the task of aveng
ing the death of the elder Boyce.
The fourth death In the Snead-Boyce I
feud occurred on September 14. when
John Heal Snead, <iisgui>»d as a farmer,
waylaid Al Boyce, ills wife’s aeducer, neat ;
a church hi this city an<l emptied one i
I>arrei of a shotgun into the bod> of hi- |
enemy. Young Boyce died almost instant
ly and Snead Immediately surrendered
himself.
Thia ended the list of violent deaths
that accompanied the wooing m the beau
tiful Mrs. Lena B. Snead b.\ young Buyc<
us chronicled b> the ready weapons of
the feudists. Another and more sinlstti |
death, however, lias been recorded. Th If <
wa> the sudden death of Edward Throck- ■
morion, s,,n of i, former governor of '
Texan, an.l one of the stale's print ion) I
•witnesses In the trial of John Beal Smad. I
which occurred on February 1. Before lie .
passed out bis wile thut lie had
been "doped." No investigation was
made of the mutter, however, anil his
death still reniulriH i< mystery.
Behind thin shedding of blood lien the
k>ve of Mrs. Lena B. Snead ami Al Hox i e
with the alleged ill treatment o| Mr.
Knead as an incentive to Boyce to strive I
<ur the physical liberty of the woman of '
his choice, and the proud intolerance of '
. Snead for scandal to actuate him to do I
murder.
Goes Back to School Days,
To reach the verx root of the t hairy
between John Beal Snead ai d \1 Boyce
recalls the school days of the murdered
man and Ills jluyer. At thut time Leno
Snyder, later Mrs John Beal Snead, was
deeply in love with Boyce
• 4,s the years went by, however, she be.
came engaged to anil married Snead
Two children were born to this union and |
the home life of the Sneads was believed I
to be ideal by their friends.
In August of 1911, according to the tes- '
tlmony of Snead during his tlrsr trial for
the murder of the elder Boyce, his wife
fell 111 and it was then that he noticed
the attentions of young Boyce i'pon one
oceaaioti he said, he found Boyce holding
the hand of his wife at the side of Iter
sick bed
The upshot of the situation was that
Mrs. Snead was sent to a sanitarium at
Arlington Heights, supposedlx suffering
from a mental aberration. Here she re
ceived frequent letters from Boyce and
on November 8, 1911, while out walking
with a nurse, she met Boyce and they
eloped
Their first stopping place was New
York. Later they went to Winnipeg.
Canada Here Boyce fought a motion for
his extradition on the scorf of being an
undesirable, but found that mother love
was steadily dragging the affection of his
wife to Amarillo, where she hud left two
little ones.
Eloping Wife Returns.
: , Eventually Mrs. Snead returned to her
• h<nue. where sbe was promptly placed in
In unsylum through the influence of her
husband. This action was fought out in
the court however, and on January 13,
six days before she was declared sane
» by a Jury, Captain Boyce was shot by-
Snead.
During the trial of her husband Mrs.
Gnead. now uut of prison, did not take
j the stand in his defense, refusing offers
said to have totaled thousands of dol
lars offered by the rich relatives of Snead
and clinging tenacluual.x to her love for j
her affinity. The trial ended unsuccess- I
fully fur the state, and the second trial '
date was set for November 11.
In the meantime, Al Boyce had come j
back to Texas, and it was the written '
overtures of Boyce to Mrs. Snead that ;
are alleged tn have Jed Snead to seek his >
life. It is also these letters which are |
expected to provide a sensation when
the court convenes Sample* of the sen
timental correspondence that pass* <. be- 1
tween Boyce and Mrs Snead were pro
vided at the first trial of Snead.
One of these addressed to “My Darling
Girl” contained the followiug message
**Oh, precious, I do iniss you ho much
Please write me. darling, ami tell me
everything How long will It be before
you van obtain a divorce? Life holds
nothing for me, precious, but you. and I
without you It Is a weary, hideous drag
And when we are together again I so ;
want your two children with us. ’
WILSON'S DAUGHTER TO
LEAD IN Y. W. C. A. WORK
WASHINGTON. Nov. 11. Miss ’
sie Wilson, secund eldest daughter of >
th« president-elect, has made know n I
her intention* to the local branch of
the Young Worn in's Christian aasocia
tlofi hei • of assuming an active part In’ 2
the affairs of that oruanitatha whej, I'
lie ■ father etc* in* into the whlti house on I •
Mur h I mil
Caruso Comes Back to America With New Medals Galore
CARGO OF MELODY ON LINER
r v Wj|pl.
* ■ i >■ ;
<-■' ■ iMMi
W J
' ■' rahliiH* Farrar, the American
Add,nc < .f,!.•<■, 11n- dati>-.-r. who < pera singer, who is lim-k from
has rdiitned to tour Anieiicn. Europe, after an illness
WMJF
IMCIffIEFOII
misoimw
Seven Washington Congrega
tions Rivals For Nev; Pres
ident's Membership.
PRINCETt >N. N. J.,’ tl—Whi'P
Governor Wilson's secretary looked
over the list of requests for speaking
flutes today lie found if the president
elect granted them all lie would be
speaking continually until his inaugu
ration, March 4.
"I have not given a the tight to these
things," said the president-elect, "and
it is not likely that t will until I re
turn from my vacation the latter part
of November."
When told of the rivalry among the
seven Presbyterian churches In Wash
ington to acquire the membership of
his family, and that of Vice President
elect Marshall's. Governor Wilson said:
"I am glad there are enough Pres
byterian churches in Washington to
go around."
Governor Wilson said he had made
no choice of church at which he would
worship, but that he knew two of the
seven pastors who wanted him in their
flocks.
There were many callers at the Wil
son home on Sunday, and Charley
Guinn, liveryman, who has driven
Woodrow Wilson in his hacks for fif
teen years, through the prestige thus
given him has practically secured a
monopoly of the cab business and was
kept very busy.
FORGIVING WIFE MAY
PREVENT HIS WEDDING
ST. LOVIS MO. Nov. It.— A forgiv
ing disposition exhibited by his wife
may prevent Rev. W. T. Putin, former
pastor of the Dewey Avenue Methodist
church. of Granite City, and Miss Es
telle Massac, pretty jx-y ear-old mem
ber of his choir, carrying out a plan to
wed
Dunn and the girl, who recently were
arrested in Evansville. Ind., after they
were found living there as man and
wife, were arraigned hi Evansville on a
statutory charge. After his arraign
ment. Dunn declared he would marry
the gir] If Mrs. Dunn would obt'iin a
divorce Mrs. Dunn, who went to
Evansville with six of het nine children
to .seek her husband, declared she would
forglv< the ministeßhe intimated she
did not «ant a divorce.
TAUGHT CLASS AT 75.
t'oLI'MHI'S GA, Nov 11. M > M i
S Jones whose fun, 'al was held here |
yvste’s'ay v. ill, in,, mem in Pile Grovel
_met. Ph • -nix C ty. \ . although ,
' e i s • . taught a Smmav s< h >ol
ole - untl .< Week bit, "■ her c I
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MON DA V. NOVEMBER 11. 1912.
I
| Idii i 'ti (’artist*. who arrived in I
I America this week decorated
'p\ ith urnit\ new m• I i is. I
Geraldine Farrar, Too. Re-!
turns. Radiant With Health
and Spirits.
NEW YORK. Noy 11. -The greatest
array of operatic talent that ever reach
ed this city' at one tirtm arrived last
week aboard the steamer Kronprinz
Wilhelm.
With more decorations than his broad
chest could display, Enrico Garun came
smiling down the gangplank inquiring
the result pt th« election. When told
■ that Woodrow Wilson represented the
I people’s choice, he replied:
"It suits me. but 1 should have been
just as satisfied to see any one else
elected. What’s the difference to fin
artist? Polities and opera have noth
ing in common. ’’
Caruso would not talk of the law suit
which he won in Milan. The only top
ic that Interested him was the number
of decorations presented to him by
> European royalties.
During the summer he sang in Vien-
• n:i, Stuttgart. Munich Berlin and Hain-
I burg The German emperor, who heard
■ Caruso sing In one of Puccini's operas.
• sent for and decorated him with the
Order of the Red Eagle. A week later
the king of Wurb-mberg bestowed the
Art and Science medal, and a month
i later lie received the Order of St. Mich
ael from the Prince Regent of Bavaria.
i Geraldine Eartar, looking more
charming than ever, despite the fact
that she has been ill in Berlin, de
clared she was in better voice than
ever. The announcement of Scotti's en
gagement to Charlotte Ives was news
to her. she said, but Scotti has not for
a long time interested het. she added.
Mme. Emmy Dost inn and Leo Slezak.
the six and a half foot tenor, were
other ptfbsengers. Slezak was accom
panied by> his wife and son and daugh
ter Dinh Gllly. the Arabian baritone;
Adamo Didur, the basso; Carl Jorn.
tenor; Herman Weil, baritone and Rar
mi Marcoux, baritone, completed tin
Hi” of stars who come to join the Met
ropolitan's forces.
Adeline Genee. the celebrated dan
seuse, who will make a tour of this
country, assisted by a symphony or
chestra. was also mt board.
7 CHILDREN RESCUED
FROM LOUISVILLE FIRE
-....._.
LOiISVILLE. KY.. Nov. 11. Police
men plunged into n burning building at
Ninth and Jeff, Aon streets early this
| morning and rescued seven children
j from hurtling to death. The building
.which "i- ' npied by II >. CL, ,p, ,
is .i grocery nd dwelling, was m-
• stroyei I
MMS CHARGED
8? MIL UNIONS
Georgia Accused of “Firing”
Paschal Because He Asked
Raise For Conductors.
Letters alleged to have been written
by General Manager T. K. Scott, of the
Georgia railroad, tOycettain officials de
viating that Conductor J. T. Paschal
should be fired at any cost are looked
for in the evidence which the labor
union leaders will offer today before
the board of arbiters sitting in the Fed
eral building. The board reconvened
this morning at 10 o’clock.
According to the charge, Giese let
ters show that Pa-chal was not dis
charged for causing Engineer P. W.
Roberts to run a freight train longer
than sixteen hours, as prescribed by
Federal statute and the company’s or
de . but on account of his activity in
having wages increased for employees.
'1 he announcement of the labor leaders
that limy hail such letters earned quite
a sensation, sine, they gave hint of an
i ntir. ' new line of attack. The charge
also was made that the road had used
methods of intimi'dation for years.
In reply . Mr./Scott declares that he
welcomes the introduction of the let
ters. ami that he will be able to estab
lish that Paschal was tired because of
tit! violation of the rules and the law,
ami that there was no animus against
him. Both Cofiduetot Paschal and
Flagman Morgan were interested audi
tors at the session. Neither- has been
reinstall J. accor ding to officials of the
road, and the light is now over the
matte- of tla-i reinstatement, the em
ployees having gone back to work when
arbitration was assured.
If lite men are taken back they will
be allowed lull pay for time lost. The
road iiso is liable to suit by the Fed
eral government in the event that it is
shown that the conductor violated the
law. «
I A. Gregg, vice ptestdent of the Or
de> of K ilway Conductors, denied to
day that he had referred to Conductor
Paschal as a Socialist.
SPOUSE QUIT WORK WHEN !
SHE MADE SIOO A WEEK
ST. M<>.. Nov. 11.— Lawyers
and litigants "sat up and took notice"
I when Adelle l-’isst 11 in Judge
laylor - court that she yarned 1100 a
week, mostly from tips, while she was
employed as a check girl in the Con
gress hotel in Chicago.
M’s Bissell is suing to divorce Ed
watd Bissell, who, she said, quit Work
-oon ft. ■ their marriage aml lived off
he earnings Bissell, also a hotel em
-1 01.0. . , mad e s:,ir , month his wile said
DRUNKENNESS IS
INCREASING HERE
; Police Court Cases in 1912 Ex
pected To Exceed 16,000.
15,000 Last Year.
With returns in from all but two
months, the total number of police
court cases for the year 1912 is expect
ed to exceed 16,000. The 1911 record
was 10,013.
The total <iumber of cases tried to
date is 13,491.
Figuring the drunks for November
and December at the same ratio as is
shown by the month of October, the
number for the year will be
greater than the number of drunke for
last year. The 1911 drunks totalled
2,636. To the first of November the to
tal for this year Is 2,459. During Oc
tober 224 drunks were tried —the small
est monthly record of the year, with
the exception of January and February.
The disorderly conduct cases for
1911 totalled 8.802,' while to the first of
November this year the total is 7.507.
The greatest number ot disorderly con
duct cases for any one month this year
was 1,001 in August. Police officials
attribute this increase mainly to exten
sive violations of the fly screen ordi
nance. for which large numbers of
cases were made this summer and fail.
Raids on Tigers Boost Total.
Thit>, with the wholesale raids on
blind tigers by the police, is given as
the main factors for the big court
showing.
"Many tigers have bit the dust dur
ing the year," says Chief Beavers.
A comparison of the figures of this
year up to November, with the record
of last year, is shown by the following
table:
1911. 1912.
Disorderly Disorderly
Drunks. Conduct. Drunks. Conduct
Jan. ... 208 795 141 503
Feb. . . 244 634 179 569
March . 260 777 249 657
April .. 202 748 240 739
May .. 180 702 226 652
June .. 173 653 287 760
Julj- . . 234 844 278 995
Aug. . . 194 808 317 1,001
Sept. .. 214 835 318 879
Oct. .. 232 703 224 752
Nov. ..191 569
Dec. ..304 734 ... ...
Totals .2,636 8.802 .... • ....
“A NAGGING WIFE”
IS GIVEN OFFICIAL
“O. K.” BY COURT
CHICAGO, Nov. 11. —A "nagging”
wife is no excuse for wife desertion, ac
cording to a ruling today by Municipal
Judge Gemmill in the court of domes
tic relations.
James I’eklo, a barber, was arraigned
on complaint of his wife, Josephine.
She charged thut he had left her tw»
mouths ago without giving any excuse
and without any apparent reason.
"I was sitting on the bsick steps when
lie walked out the front way and didn't
show up any more.” she said. "He left
me with two children to support, and I
have' had to work since.”
"Your honor,” explained Pekio, “no
man could stand what I stood from that
woman. She talked from morning to
night, and even during the night she
wouldn’t let me "sleep. It was more than
any human being could stand. If she
would only stop talking, I would have
been willing to do anything.”
’ "That is no excuse,” ruled Judge
Gemmill.
I’eklo was ordered to pay his wife J 6
a week.
MAY NAME WANAMAKER
TO SUCCEED SHERMAN
NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—It was be
lieved at Republican national head
quarters today that when the Republi
can national committeemen meet in
Chicago tomorrow to select the run
ning mate who, with President Taft
will receive the votes that the Repub
licans will get in the electoral college,
they will name former Postmaster Gen
eral John Wanatnaker, of Philadelphia.
HERE IS A REAL
DYSPEPSIA CURE
“Pape’s DiapepsirT Settles
Sour. Upset Stomachs in
Five Minutes.
Do some foods you eat hit back
taste good, but work badly: ferment
into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,
sour, gassy stomach? Now. Mr. or
Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape’s
Diapepsin digests everything, leaving
nothing to sour and upset you. There
never was anything so safely quick, so
certainly effective. No difference how
badly your stomach is disordered, you
will get happy relief in five minutes,
but what pleases you most is that it
strengthens and regulates your stom
ach so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear.
Most remedies give you relief some
times—they are slow, but \riot sure.
Diapepsin is quick, positive and puts
your stomach in a healthy condition so
the misery won't come back.
You feel different as soon as Diapep
sin comes In contact with the stomach
—distress just vanishes—your stomach
gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no
eructations of undigested food, your
head clears and you feel fine.
Go now. make the best investment
you ever made by getting a large fifty,
cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any ,
drug store. You realize in five minutes
how needless it is to suffer from In
digestion, or any stomach
disorder. (Advt >
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
Senator Augustus Octavius Bacon is
one of the moat picturesque and inter
esting figures in the United States sen
ate, and Georgia
SB|S§ss?j
ought to be proud
of him —as, indeed,
of course, Georgia
is.
By reason of
the death of Vice
President Sher,
man, the senior
senator from
Georgia will pre
side over the fu
ture deliberations
the senate, as
president pro tem
pore, for the re
mainder of the
present congress.
He was chosen for
that distinguished
honor by a com-
bination of Democratic votes —he re
ceived all the Democratic votes of the
senate —and a coterie of Progressives.
Senator Bacon is universally esteem
ed and very highly respected, in the
senate as an authority on foreign rela
tions. As a matter of fact, he is ad
mittedly the foremost authority in the
senate on that subject, and the com
mittee on foreign relations, of which he
long has been a member, is his favorite
assignment.
In the make-up of the next senate, it
is an open secret thA Bacon will be
permitted to choose his chairmanship.
Anything he wishes In that line will be
conferred upon him by his colleagues—
and the senate always has made its
own committee assignments, regardless
of the wishes and desires of the presi
dent of the senate, who is the vice pres
ident of the United States.
Senator Bacon, it is said, can have a
cabinet portfolio, if he desires it, under
President Wilson; but those who know
the senator do not believe he would
exchange his senatorship for a cabinet
place—nor for any other place under
the presidency, even if opportunity
were offered him to do so.
While Senator Bacon will preside as
president pro tempore of the senate, he
will thereby lose none of his represen
tative capacity. His vote may be re
corded whenever he desires it. The vice
president is not permitted to vote in the
senate, save in the case of a tie.
Senator Bacon will enter upon his
fourth term on March 4 next. He is the
first and only senator eVer given a
fourth term by the state of Georgia.
Gee whiz and goshallhemlock!!
The sweet-tempered dispenser of
wisdom byway of this column of up
lift never for a minute intended start
ing anything in Rome when, on Sat
urday, he said there would be only two
candidates for the postmastershtp of
Rome under President Wilson, viz:
John M. Vandiver and "Jack” Mc-
Cartney.
It seems that-, besides Jack and John,
Leonard Todd, Nat Hoyt, and maybe
others will throw their hats' in the ring,
too!
Sidelights has been bombarded un
mercifully for undertaking to hold down
the fight to two—a measly two! —con-
testants.
The imaginary fact that there were
to be but two candidates for this fat
job seemed to carry a, large and un
usual element of news to the story
printed Saturday. That was the com
pelling cause of the item’s publication,
as it were.
However, one might’ have known that
was too good to be true!
A Georgia editor has been hearing
delightful things about the way domes-
UGH! NOT CALOMEL, OIL 00 SALTS,
BUT DELICIOUS “SYRUP Os FIGS"
I I
Give your stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels a thor
ough cleansing without gripe or nausea. Ends head
ache, biliousness, indigestion and constipation.
This wonderful fruit laxative acts as
a liver and bowel cleanser —tonic —
not as an irritant. Its action is natu
ral and gentle—no griping. It is de
licious no dreading. It is positive
and prompt—no waiting.
if your stomach is sour and filled
with vile gases, your head aches, or
you are bilious, nervous, dizzy, half
sick, your tongue coated, your thirty
feet of bowels clogged with waste not
properly carried off—don’t watt. Surely
take a teaspoonful of delicious Syrup
of Figs tonight, and in the morning
all constipated waste, sour bile, gases
and poisons will move on and out of
the system, gently but thoroughly-—no
griping—no nausea—no weakness. In
Hi STOPS FALLING, DINDBIIFF
DISAPPEARS-25 CENT DANDERINE
Save Your Hair! Beautify it! Invigorate your scalp!
Danderine grows hair and we can prove it.
Try as you will, after an application
of Danderlne. you can not find a single
trace of dandruff or a loose or falling
hair and your scalp will not itch, but
what will please you most will be after
a few weeks' use. when you will actual
ly see new hair, tine and downy at first
—yes —but realty new hair—growing all
over the scalpr
A little Danderlne now will Immedi
ately double the beauty of your hair.
No difference how dull, laded, brittle
and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with
Danderlne and carefully draw it
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
tic affairs will be conducted inside tin
white house after March 4 next.
He has been reading some mighty
fetching words recently uttered by
Mrs. Wilson, and particularly i s h
pleased with these;
“We have always had cooks from
the South, or those who were
Southern-born, and they know how
to cook chicken better than any
body in the world, the governor
thinks. He would rather have
chicken Southern style than a for
eign-cooked banquet. The govern
or’s idea of a fine dinner includes
chicken Southern style, rice and
candled sweet potatoes, with beans
and corn, fruit and a salad. Never
do we have a meal without rice."
Former Representative J. Lindsa
Johnson, one of Georgia's best know:
editors, evidently spoke right from tl
heart when, the day after the big vi,
tory, he exclaimed editorially, 'Hut
rah for Kllie Lou Axspn Wilson!”
The Hon. "Bart” Cox, of Gilmer
county, who played a star part in the
Morris-Patterson judicial hearing be
fore the state Democratic committee in
Atlanta a few weeks ago. and whose
grand, gloomy and peculiar political gy
rations were held in large measure re
sponsible for the big Morris near-vlc
tory in Gilmer, won out heavily over
his rivals in old Gilmer a few days ag.,,
when he and his entire following swept’
the county for the local offices.
The Hon. "Bart,” who for a good
many years has been clerk of the su
perior court of Gilmer, has just been
elected ordinary’, and all the way down
the line the county plum tree was shak.
en successfully for the Coxites.
The So-called "boss of Gilmer" still
is on the job in his vicinity, it would
seem— and it looks as if he may be
there to stay put indefinitely, more
over.
Even those who* dissent are admit
ting the logic and authoritativeness of
Chairman Murphey Candler's opinion,
handed down as part of the record in
the mileage “pulling" decision recently’
rendered by the railroad commission.
Mr. Candler is a very studious man.
and he went deeply into the subject in
hand, because he was particularly anx
ious to go upon the record clearly, and
with fairness to all parties to the hear
ing.
It is interesting, too, that the deci
sion leaves Mr. Candler and Governor
Brown on common ground with respect
to the disposition of the traveling men's
petition, for Mr. Candler was appointed
to the railroad commission by Govern
or Brown’s political opponent for so
many years, Hon. Hoke Smith.
Mr. Candler’s attitude is being cited
by his friends, however, as convincing
evidence of his Impartiality and rigi<
non-partisanship in matters coining be
fore the board. i '
It may be stated upon most excellent
authority that Judge Newt Morris Is to
be "taken care of” under the adminis
tration of President Woodrow Wilson.
Those very close to Mr. Wilson are
said to have interested themselves in
Judge Morris to such an extent that
the former judge of the Blue Ridgp
is to have something of a particularly
satisfactory sort —Indeed, It is said that ,
he is to have the position now held by
former Congressman Carter Tate (the
district attorneyship for north Geor
gia), in which event it is probable that
Hon. Hooper Alexander, who first was
slated for this job, Will be switched to
"something equally as good.”
That Morris surely is to "be taken
care of,” however, may be accepted as a
fact—that much has been decided upon.
the old days people let these matter
run until they needed a large dose of
physic, then they took something
severe, like costor oil, salts or. cathar
tics, that meant abuse to the bowels.
These are the days of the gentle and
natural—the days pf Syrup of Figs.
This way you are riot drugging your
self. Syrup of Figs being composed
entirely of luscious figs, senna and
aromatics can not cause Injury.
Ask your druggist for "Syrup o:
Figs and Elixir of Senna,” and look
for the name. California Fig Syrup
Company, on the label. This is the
genuine—old reliable. Any other so
called Fig Syrup is an imitation often
meant to deceive you. Refuse such
with contempt. (Advt.)
through your hair, taking one sma
strand at a time. The effect is imnn
diate and amazing—your hair will ‘
light, fluffy and wavy and have an a;
pearance of abundance: an incompa
able luster, softness and luxuriance,
beauty and shimmer of true hair dealt
Get a 25-cent bottle of Knowltot.
Danderine from any drug store or toil'
counter, and prove to yourself tonight
now—that your hair Is as pretty a:
soft as any—that it has been neglect'
or Injured by careless treatment —tha'
all. (Advt.)
2