Newspaper Page Text
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SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA, O' . SUNDAY. SEPTEMTIEE 7. 1913.
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Savannah Waycross
Brunswick Valdosta
I fS'l-C? /wpff)<S» OF Sflltf
LJ It W i v W &&./ O £/ Z .& & & ^ w ; C& &
Albany :-: Americas
Cordele :-: Thomasville
vnin i
lit E a
m lL
mnw
yy s U i^sL
Spalding County to
Build Good Roads
rs.
award i lams loijl:,;
IS Mis
van Dishwasher, Once Wife cf
-■ iionaire, Leaves Savannah
With Man Who Lured Her.
SAVANNAH, Sept,
you if you’ll be good u
Mi life Gottinlf- iund
wife of a millionaire
of New York, to her s
Til pr«. *. ah
me,” said Mrs.
•rman, former
lace merchant
cond husband,
Experienced Civil Engineer To Bo
Employed by Com
missioners.
GRIFFIN. Sept. H The Griffin and
Spalding County Board of Trad • is
* ru. riner upon a scheme of grood roads
building that might well be emulated
bv other counties throughout the
State.
One of the first movements .put
on foot by the new board is to so
improve all roar’s throughout the
county that it will b-* easier f >r pe*>-
plo desiring to trade to come here
than for them to go to other places.
With this idea in view, the board
will withing the next few days em
ploy a skilled and experienced civil
Sophie .Veltlrim, of Savanu
Peter W. Meldrim, w*
ter Yale football stt
daughter of General
marriage in Asheville to
a surriise to her friends.
Antone Gunderman, of Augusta, from
whom she ran away several weeks
ago, when he called her from her
work as dishwasher in a little res
taurant hen*. The reply of the hus
band was in an undertone, but it evi
dently pleas d the woman, for she
immediately quit her menial position
and left with him to take a train.
“I’m going to New York to live,”
she told other employees of the res
taurant.
Through the police and the Associ
ated Charities the Augusta husband
learned of her whereabouts. She had
left him without cause, he said, but
he wanted her back. He came here
to find her. Gunderman did not re
semble the dapper young musician
and engineer with whom the pretty
Mrs. Gotthelf < 1< pod. He was also
shabbily dress d. Time had worked
as great a change in his appearanc
;is in that of his wife. But he wanted
his wife bii.k, and he meant to do
everything he could to induce her to
return with him. He obtained his
wife’s address from the Associated
Charities.
“I’ll let you know if I find her.” he
promised. But he was apparently so
overjoyed when sh-- consented to re
turn to Augusta with him that he
forgot the promise. That was the
las; the Associated Charities heard of ■
At th< restaurant it was
; hat Mrs. Gunderman. under th<
rsne of Mrs. Sichel, had worked;
■but tl had left with a
came after her,” said
told us she was going
A rk with him. She
d she lived in New
her tell him that she
him if he would be
knew she had left
Ait she never told us
r knew that si
of a rich man
I h.*
' i * h
She
D
ecitie to us
±J
rinsen Railway
Capital Necessary for Improvements
Has Seen Raised—Work
Starts Soon.
SAVANNAH, Sept. « —The exten
sion of the Brinson Railway from its
present terminus will be carried to a
logical conclusion by the present
management.
Through the medium of capital de
rived from a refunding mortgage in
favor of the Equitable Trust Compa
ny of New York, covering a total is
sue of $5,000,000, the improvements
on the system will begin very short
ly, though it is officially announced
that for the present only $“.562,500
will be issued, the remainder to be
secured as may be necessary at a
later date.
Of the total amount which will he
secured at once $1,000,000 will be
■devoted to the retirement of bonds
carried under a previous mortgage
and $1,562,000 deposited with the
Equitable Trust Company to secure
an issue of $1,250,000 of two-year
notes, which bear
late of 6 per cent.
MEN II
OF BBSS 10
Government to Aid
Georgia Farmers in
Boll Weevil Fight
i s f g ft r
l (i! 9 I
indications Are That Ticket Will
Be Pul 0.it in Coming Mu
nicipal Election.
-IV
WAYCROSS, Sept,
merits this week indicat
i.< a possibility of the near-bt
Expert Farm Demonstration With
Headquarters at A bany To
Be Employed.
ALBANY. Sept 6 An expert farm
demonstrator for the counties of
Dougherty, Baker. Mitchell and Ear
ly, with headquarters in Albany, and
who will pay special attention lo tlie
farming under bo 1 weevil conditions,
is proposed by trie United Slates
Government, and the proposition will
at once be placed before the people
of the four coumies for their appro-
that there 1 val and support.
j The proposition was made by J. <\
Til it GREATEST
plop-
ad
vocates puiting out a ticket in the
fall primary. Investigation has shown
that the local act, prohibiting the
sale of near-beer in Ware County, is
void in view of the State law per*
mi-tting the sale of near-beer in
Georgia.
City Council has not 'placed a li
cense on the sale of near-beer in
Waycross since prohibition vent into
iff
eci
, and iht* gener
al in
ipression has ■
bt<
en
that the local
act
made it hu- ;
pO!
?sil
Lde for any one
lo e
ngage in th*
m;
XV-
beer business.
But
it is claimed *
t*r is cou
th e
engineer, who will have complete
oversight over the grading and wid
ening of every roadway in the county,
as well as the improvement of the
streets in the city limits.
| To House Convicts
In New Steel Cages
Spaidirig County Commissioners Pro
vide Better Quarters
for Wards.
now tjiai the sale of near-i
trolled entirely by Council.
A petition for a near-beer lie
will be delivered to Council at
next meeting and it is possible a rea
sonable license will bo named. In the
event Council decides lo put what
might be considered a prohibitory
license on the business, a court fight
is piedicted.
Waycross has been a prohibition
city for many years and it lias alwoys
been conceded that sentiment in tin
city as well as county is against tin-
sale of whisky and other intoxicants.
But in recent years the city has
gained several thousand new people,
nurtiy of tin in accustomed to getting
beer whenever they wanted it. In
fact, during the last ten years the
population of Waycross has more
than d milled, and of the increase It
is estimated that over 50 per cent
favor a mild form of a “wet town ”
It is reported that candidates who
are known to favor a reasonable
license on near-beer saloons, operated
under strict police regulation, will be
put in the field in the Second. Fourth
and Sixth wards, besides a candidate
for Mayor It is intimated that on-*
of the new men now mentioned as a
candidate for Mayor will favor li
censing near-beer saloons and that
one or two members of Council who
will hold over next year an* in sym-
Oliver, special agent for the United
States Department of Agriculture for
the Southwest Division of Georgia,
who i? also connected with the Geor
gia Agri ultural College at Athens. It
is to the effect that the Government
will establish the expert here if the
citizens of the counties named w II
raise $750 to pay part of his first
j ear's salary and expenses. It i- also
required hat he be furnished with
an automobile or motorcycle, so that
he may get about over his territory
frequently and keep in touch with the
people. He also will make lectin is on
agriculture in the various schools of
the four counties, if It i- so desired
by the school trustees.
Dairymen Object to
Discriminative Test
Valdosta Producers Insist Law
Should Apply to Milk Shippers
Into Their City.
Splendid Crops Guarantee Fine
Agricultural Exhibit, Say Pro
moters—Florida Interested.
VALDOSTA,
dairymen object
required by the
inspecting their
Sept 6.—Valdosta
to paying the fees
city ordinances for
rows fo>‘ tubeiculo-
until the shippers of milk and
cream into this city furnish ct-rtifl-
cuies showing that the loiters cows
are free of disease, a number of the
ice cream manufacturers hire use
cream shipped from other points and
the local dairymen contend that it is
unfair to make thorn ab.de by the
stringent regulations embodied in th>
city ordinances and not require the
same of their foreign competitors.
Representatives of the dairymen
appeared b* fore the City (V-uneil at
Its meeting yesterday evening and
made protest. It was suggested by
them that October 1 be fixed as the
date when the f e should be ooMect-
ible, and thru those who use shipped
cream l><* given until that time i<
ind
GRIFFIN. Sept. 6.—In keeping with
the wave of prison reform that is
sweeping the State, the County Com
missioners of Spalding County have
let the contract for three new steel
cages, in which it is planned to house
all convicts while on the roads at
work away from the main rfimp. By
this means the convicts will be allow
ed more comfortable sleeping quar
ters, and will not be chained together
during the night as heretofore.
Also the commissioners will this
cr>ming week let the contract for the
building of the new County Jail.
GRIFFIN PUBLIC SCHOOLS
SHOW RECORD ATTENDANCE
S. Guyt McLendon to
Investigate Rates
Employed by Valdosta Chamber of
Commerce as an
Expert.
GRIFFIN, Sept. 6.—The Griffin |
public schools have made a r^ r> ord ,
the first week of the session that far ,
exceeds that of any previous year in !
the matter of attendance. The first j
day’s opening showed 966 pupils pres-| M
ent while .01 the following day an, ' ALDOSTA, Sept. 6.—S. Guyt Me
additional fifty were enrolled, making London, of Atlanta, has been em-
the total more than a thousand. Each j pi 0 y ec i the Chamber of Commerce
lay Of the week has witnessed more | to aud , ( the freiBht rates lnto an d
oat of Valdosta, and will begin the
work immediately.
TTj
li
eel of Barges for
Lumber Company'
interest at the | additions.
Wealthy Young Man
Under $15,000 BondjrT
Th
First Arrives in'Savannah With Car
go of Coa!—Three-Masted
Schooner Type.
SAVANNAH, Sept. 6—The first of
a fieet. of eight barges, which the
Hilton-Dodge Lumber Company is
having built to handle its coastwise
lumber business, has arrived in port
laden with a cargo of coal.
The barge is the Alatamaha, and is
of the three-masted schooner-rigged
typo. It cost about $50,000, and was
built by the American Car and Foun
dry Company, of Wilmington, Del.
The barge was launched early in July.
A second barge, the Belfast, was
launched a few days ago. and will
probably reach Savannah in a short
time. The remaining six of the fieet
are now under course of construc
tion, and will be launched this fall.
THE CHAINGANG AWAITS
PISTOL “T0TERS’
J. Battle, of Moultrie, To Be Tried
For Assault With Intent
to Murder.
business men of Valdosta have
reasons for believing lhat
badly discriminated against
in both eastern and western rates,
and numbers of them have been ready
to admit for tome time that they
don’t know what the correct rate on
many commodities is or should be.
Few of them are competent to un-
. ravel the intricacies of a railroad tar-
MOULTRIE, Sept. 6.—J. J- »^ttie. | >0<) | c> an d tnis is no reflection on
who is under $15,000 bond for snoot- t j iem as business men, either. Mr.
ing Walter P. Brown, will be tried at ( McLendon is in the city going over
an adjourned term of Superior l ourt i t j ie situation, and was present at a
here next week. meeting of merchants and shippers at
Mr. Battle, who is one ol *“ e the Valdes Hotel Friday night.
wealthiest men in this part of the, ——-
g . te ts soon as the Grand Jury re-I
Li; : \kmd"'’i n „ient h:, t r o‘murdeT.; Saws of C-ins Claim
employed an imposing array of coun
el.
ALBANY MAYOR WOULD PUT
IDLE NEGROES TO WORK
Tarver
ALBANY. Sept. 6.—Mayor
says there are entirely ton many va
grant negroes around town for the cot-
t0 r,n“ this 5 week?'after police court
” IN WARE IJT ffieVknew of.™
„ ISM hIfe U’was'ret«orted
WAYCROSS, Sept. 6.—Owing to the ^ ^ WHre comparatively few he
tncrca number of murders if. Ims instructed that the few be arrested as
county, Judges of the City and Su- faat as found, so that vagrant cases
per:.,i ; Courts are going to be harder , cou id be made,
titan ever on pistol “toters” who may j
be brought before them.
Judge Parker believes the handy p;^-
toi is responsible for nine out of ev
ery ton murders, and intends to break ,
Fcr society news of the South,
see page 9, this section, and the
society section.
'p the practice
Stop That Whooping Cough
WITH THE McFAUL
Whoooing Cough Powders
Intlant K.«,f o,
Tor young babies chhoren or ^ uI ^j dren un J er two rears of ago
habit-forming drugs. VUien so mild that the whoop Is
physicians prescribe S
it is almost a specific, renderin
Prepared by a physician for physicians and
and recommend It.
Bv Mail 25 Cent., or .t Drujgr'i*.
The McFaul Medicine Company
431 Mariatla Street
Victims in Laurens
One Man Dead and Another Maimed
for Life—Two Others
Cut.
DUBLIN,Sept. 6. The record of the
week among cotton ginners in Ijau-
rens is one death and one man maim
ed for life', along with one widow and
several fatherless children.
H 1> Temples died from wounds
received when he was accidently
caught in the saws of a gin that h“
was operating on the farm of City
Court Sheriff U. M. Grier, a few
miles from Dublin.
The first accident happened Mon
day aftelnonn, when \V. R. Arnold,
superintendent of the Empire Cotton
Oil Mill, had his arm cut off by a
gill that ho was repairing white it
was in motion.
At the same mill where Mr. Ar
nold lost his arm. two negroes were
injured.
BIG CONSIGNMENT OF
PHONE POLES FOR CUBA
Dublin Puts Ban on
Sunday Business
Council Ordinance Wou'd Close
Every Store on Sab
bath Day.
DUBLIN, Sf*pt. f>. The proposi
tion of closing down every business
house tight in the city of Dublin on
Sunday is still causing the people
of the city more or less loss of sleep,
and bringing on plenty of discussion
among the City Couricilmen.
At the regular meeting of the Coun
cil this week, the matter was brought
up again by an amendment to the
ordinance prohibiting and one from
carrying on any business on Sunday,
so that it would be a little less con
fusing. The amendment was not
strongly objected to, but the discus
sion that it provoked on the Sundey
closing in general was.
J. R. Walker at Home
With His Sick Wife
Congressman Says Democratic Party
Will Make Gocd on All Leg
islative Undertakings.
VALDOSTA, Sept. 0. Congressman
,J. R. Walker, of the Eleventh district,
accompanied by Mrs. Walker, who
has been very ill at a sanitarium in
Atlanta, reached tin* city this week.
Mr. Walker left Washington Monday
afternoon, taking advantage of the
lull In congressional affairs. He ex
pects to return to Washington Sat
urday. Mr. Walker says th*- Demo
cratic administration is making a
splendid record and that people in all
sections of the country are confident
the Democrats are going to make
good all of their legislative undertak
ings.
CONTRACT LET FOR ALBANY
COUNTRY CLUBHOUSE
ALBANY, Sept. 6.—A contract has
b**f*n let for the new club bouse of the
Albany Country Club, to be erected on
its grounds north of the city, and to
ost, when completed, about $8,000. The
pa thy with the movem in also. ) ascertain whether such milk
cream has hoop properly inspec ted.
South Geoigia Coin !}j e g roeg p ra y Hard
uliow Prlze Ijlst | When Meteor Shines
Attractive Premiums O f fered by
Tiftor Officials—Fire Ex
hibits Expected.
Tl ETON, Sept. ♦>. The second week
in November is the date for the hold
ing of the fair at Tifton. This year it
will be a South Georgia Corn Show,
with which will be combined live
stock, poultry and agricultural ex
hibits. Liberal prizes will be offer
ed for all exhibits. Five hundred dol
lars will be offered in premiums for
individual anti county exhibits by the
Boys’ Corn Club in South Georgia;
$100 for individual corn exhibits by
farmers not members of the Boys’
Corn Clubs; $100 to the Boys Corn
Clubs of Tift County; $100 to the
Girls’ Canning Clubs of South Geor
gia: $200 in premiums for agricul
tural exhibits from Tift County; $300
tor live stock and poultry exhibits,
open to all South Georgia.
VALDOSTA CITY TAX RATE
IS GIVEN BIG CUTTING
VALDOSTA. Sept 6.—Property own
ers in this city will pay 40 mills less
taxes on the dollar than they did last
year, tlie e<tv council at its meeting
last night fixing the rate for this year
at 1.1ft This is the same rate in effect
three years ago In 1012 an Increase of
40 mills was made neceasary by reason
of th*- appropriation made by the city
to the State Normal College. The col
lege obligation having been met, the
rate is lowered this year.
G.S.&F.SWITCHMAN SUFFERS
SECOND ACCIDENT IN MONTH
TIFTON. Sept. 6.—JusV two weeks
after he had recovered from one
accident in which he was severely
crushed, John Young, a young white
man employed as switchman in the
<;.. S. and F. yards at Tifton. had
his knee caught between the draw-
head of two cars last night and bad
ly crushed.
AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
OPENS TERM AT TIFTON
TIFTON. Sept. 6.—The Second
District Agricultural and Mechanical
School at Tifton will formally oflen
for the fall term Wednesday, Septem
ber 10. Monday will be registration
day and Tuesday classification day.
Over 40 applications have already
heeen received and prospects are g°')d
for a full attendance.
Flaming Heavenly Body With Enor
mous Head Illuminates the
Sky Around Cordele.
CORDELE. Sept. 6.—Consternation
.reigned among the neqro population
of Cordele at the apeparance of the
second meteor within the last few
days. Some of the superstitious
whites were also greatly afraid at the
sight on an immense luminous body
sweeping across the sky in the south
ern horizon at an altitude apparently
not more than 1.000 feet.
The meteor was traveling from east
to west and was so large and bril
liant that the entire southern horizon
was lighted. Its head appeared larger
than an ordinary cotton basket and
its tail more than twenty feet long.
PUBLIC MARKET WINS
SUPPORT OF UNIONISTS
WAYCROSS, Sept. 6.—Indications
are that the mass meeting to be held
in Waycross September 10 to take
final action on the city market prop
osition will be one of the best attend
ed meetings ever held in Waycross
Besides having the active interest of
the Farmers’ Union the market ques
tion has the support of the trade
unionists of Waycross.
VALDOSTA. Sept. <>. Exhibits for
the Georgia-Florida Fair to be hei 1
in this city from November 4 to S
are now being secured and the pro
moters are confident it will be one
of the best South Georgia has had In
a number of years.
The poultry exhibits will consist
of front Ton to 1,000 head of the 1 finest
chickens, du.*ks and turkeys ever
shown in the State. The live stock
exhibit will be one of the best evef
gathned at a fair in South Georgia,
and that the agricultural exhibit will
be a most unusual one. Certainly
finer crops have not often been made
in this section of the State. Agricul
tural displays will be made by a
number of South Georgia cojinti^s.
ns well as the border counties of
Florida. A first prize of $200 is of
fered for the best individual agricul
tural exhibit.
The former State Fair grounds in
this c’ty. Which were the scene of
two of the most successful fairs the
Georgia Stab Fair A s.-<iciation ever
held, are being overhauled and the
buildings put in shape for the No
vember fair. A large force is now
at work putting a new roof on th *
main building and also new floors.
The stables and stoak pens yrill be j
finished as ouicklv as possible, in or
der that hors- men may quarter th* i; I
herses here an t put th* m in trainin' i
before the fair opens. The racing it j
the fair will he one of the features !
Purs s aggregating $1,000 will he pul
up by the* filr association, and ♦he
indications are that manv of the fast
est horses in the State will be seen
on the track here.
Secretary J. M. Ashley is devoting
much time to the s'gn'ng up of con
cessionaires and to the selection of
the free attractions. It is proposed
to bring many entirely new free fea
tures to the fair Secretary Ashlov
appearer before the Citv Council and
urged the bodv to give the fair asso
ciation control of all tent shows and
outside exhibits in Valdosta during
the week of the fria. It is under- I
stood that one or more of the big
circuses are .arranging to appear her* 1
that week, but it is very probable
that the City Council will put a pro
hibitive tax on shows of any kind
wh'ch might detract from the attrac
tions at the fair grounds.
MISS FIEIDS NAMED TO
FILL SCHOOL VACANCY
WAYCROSS. Sept. 6—Miss May,
Fields, of this city, has been chosen i
to fill the vacancy in the corps of j
school teachers for the public schools j
caused by the resignation of Miss
Loula Hunter, of Johnson City, Tenn.
PETITION IN BANKRUPTCY.
BRUNSWICK. Sept. 6.— R. B. Gray,
of Pine Blomo, Ga.. has filed a vol
untary petition In bankruptcy before j
Judge A. J Crovntt, referee, show- '
ing liabilities of $118,000 and assets;
consisting largely of stock In the
Gray Lumber Company, of which he i
is president.
Duke Interests Are
Expected to Bid at
A., B. & A. R. R. Sale
If Successful a Line of Steamships
Would Be Run From Bruns
wick to Colon.
BRUNSWICK, Sept. 6.—A report
has reached this city to the effect
that the Carolina. Clinchfield and
Ohio Railway and the Greenville,
Spartanburg and Anderson Railway,
I controlled by the Dukes, will make
a bid for the Atlanta. Birmingham
and Atlantic when it is sold next
month.
The C., C. and Q. Railway extends
trom Spartanburg. S (’.. to Dante,
Va„ a distance of 242 miles, and the
C., S. and A. from Greenwood to
Greenville, 59 miles, leaving a stretch
of 20 miles between Greenville and
Spartanburg to be built in order to
connect the two lines.
The Dukes have already announced
that should the purchase of the A..
B. &A. be consummated, they will
organize*and operate a line of steam
ers from Brunswick to Colon.
Thomasville Makes
5-Mile Speed Limit
Trains Must Go Slow in Corporate
Limits—Many Narrow
Escapes.
THOMASVILLE Sept. 6. — The
Thomasville City Council adopted an
ordinance this week setting a speed
limit of live miles an hour for all
trains entering the city
There are several railroad crossings
in the city which are dangerous, es
pecially to automoblliste, and there
have been some narrow escapes by
the occupants of cars.
Owing to deep cuts or curves in
the road it is hard to see the trains
as they come up and the railroad and
the authorities have been requested
to put i warnings to give the signal
when a train is approaching.
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
BREAKS RECORD
TIFTON. Sept. 6.—ThP enrollment
at the fail term of Tifton Public
Schools, which opened Monday, has
broken all records. The attendance
at the end of the week was over 430.
Bia
HI
\ Now !• the Time to Get Rid of These
( Ugly Spot*.
There’s no longer the slightest need
> of feeling ashamed of your freckles, (
? a*' the prescription othlne—double
j strength—is guaranteed to remove (
these homely spots (
( Simply get an ounce of othlne—dou
ble strength- from Jacobs’ Pharmacy
> and apply a little of it night and
> morning and you should econ Hee that
\ even the worst freckles have begun
i to disappear, while the lighter ones
» have vanished entirely. It is seldom
that more than an ounce Is needed to
completely clear the ukin and gain a
beautiful clear complexion
Be sure to a»k for the double
i strength othlne as this Is sold under
guarantee of money back if it fails
to remove freckles.
“JACK THE RABBIT” FORCED
TO SAY ADIEU TO WAYCROSS
WAYCROSS. Sept. 6.—Falline to
break a well-known ne^tro whiaky
seller by Kan« sentenres anti fines,
Recorder Rerirtint? to-day imposed an
expulsion sentence on “.lark the Rab
bit.” bv which the nostro will have to
EXPOSURE TO
SUN DEMANDS
plans for the club house were prepared leave Waycross for good or serve .mi
by Charles Pklwln Choate, an Atlanta : days’ sentence on the gang for every
architect, and the contract for its erec- sa j e Q f whisky the city has proved
tion has been awarded to R. S. Smith, aKa j ns ^ him
of this city. ^ ‘
FIGHT TO KICK LID OFF 1BUILDJIMG INSPECTOR
IS ON IN MOULTRIE, GA.; CONDEMNS STRUCTURE
WAYCROSS. Sept.
1.000
1
i!*r.+a Georg?* &
i\ar.a.
viCk.
leiephon
iu The poles are
government line outside
it - i he first consignment
ousand to be shipped from
Th
-A govern- j
originally '
Brunswick. Sept. 6. The steamer
•k nfuegos now in port at the Atlanta, MOULTRIE, Sept. 6.--One of the most
r i.., m vilantic terminals, is 1 bitter municipal campaigns in the his-, .. „
hinrfham .i.ihj A..an _ to be I iory ot Moultrie is now on with full I tnent structure , „stlnn
be force The election does not come off J *40,001* was to-day condemned by
until October «. but the various eandi-j City Building Inspector L. B Boggs.
dates have been campaigning for some t was operated for several years as
time. Judge George It. Klir.e and |_ Jin experiment station for sugar cane
Falling to secure neces«ar>
’turn’s lo operate the plant caused its
abnrulfinni«tit
Klir.e and Col.
the first shipment I James Humphreys are in the rat e for ! ..
for Cuba whem t«d«-1 mayor. T h>-jb-ti, n ... dl dn. Mu w) . nr |,
r , . , t e jig njtallcu every- or not the ffiwl will be pulled oft in
bv tbe government.
CUTICURA
SOAP
And Cuticura Ointment. For heat rashes,
itchings, < hafings, sunburn, bites, stings
and redness and roughness of the face and
hands, Cuticura Soap and Ointment arc
most effective. They’promote and main
tain the beauty of the skin and ^;alp un
der most if not all conditions of exposure.
Cuttcur* Snap anil Ointment *<>M thro-.iirhoijt tM
wnHfj ].lt>er:il '•ample of m.ilic<l free, wltli
3? i> oon». Addr?** ■Cuticura.” I>cpt .V,. I’-ontou.
•rvirq mmjvio wltL Cutlcui*
wUl Sau ii Itui lur »klc at.a
Send for a Sample Bottle of
Newbro’s Herpicide
W<» want everyone to become acquainted with a hair preparation
that not only promises to do certain things, but does them. We want
every person having trouble with their hair to become familiar with
the merits of Newbro’s Herpicide. to experience its subtle but ex
quisite odor and to see the beautifying effect which it has upon
the hair.
There is a germ or microbe which lodges In the scalp and the
result is the scale-like accumulation we call dandruff. That dandruff
is due to a germ is no longer a theory, but a scientifically established
fact. The existence of tills germ was proven by M. Sabouraud, an
eminent French scientist, who inoculated a rabbit witli human
dandruff, causing the rabbit to become denuded of hair in six weeks.
A similar demonstration with a guinea pig was later made by Drs.
Lesser and Bishop in England. The fact that Xctcbro's Herpicide is
compounded in harmony with the germ theory of dandruff accounts
for its extraordinary success in the treatment of this ailment.
Thousands of users have found Herpicide most dependable for
the eradication of dandruff, to stop itching of the scalp and to pre-
vent falling hair. It receives the highest endorsements. The re
sults attending its intelligent use are a revelation and stamp New-
bru'H Herpicide as wonderfully reliable.
N etc hr o'a Herpicide Is always positive in its action. Every
promise made for it in the advertising, on the label or by the dealer
who sells it, is backed up by one hundred i>er cent of the most pleas
ing and satisfying efficiency.
To convince yourself of the wonderful hair-saving and beauti
fying qualities of this scalp prophylactic, send ten cents in postage
or silver, to cover cost of packing and mailing, to The Herpicide
Company, Dept. 72 B, Detroit, Michigan, for trial size bottle of
Herpicide, also a valuable Ixwklet on the care of the hair.
If you prefer to give it a more thorough test than you /P.
could from a sample, you can buy a large size bottle from c* 1
your dealer, who will personally guarantee it. If the first /Jry $
bottle used does not produce good results, he will /<$
refund your money.
Herpicide is dispensed in all the better
Barber Shops and Beauty Parlors.
Jacobs' Pharmacy
SPECIAL AGENTS