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GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT,
BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxury
iaitt and Remove Dandruff—Real
~ ''Surprise
for You.
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf¬
fy, abundant and appears as soft, lufc
trous and beautiful as a young girl’s
after a "Danderine hair cleanse.” Just
try this—moisten a cloth with a little
Danderine and carefully draw It
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and in just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at once,
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff; cleanses, purifies and Invig¬
orates the scalp, forever stopping itch¬
ing and falling hair.
But what please you most will
be after a few weeks’ use when you
will actually see new hair—fine and
downy at first—yes—but really new
hair—growing all over the scalp. If
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of It, surely get a 25 cent bottle of
Knowlton’s Danderine from any store
and just try It. Adv.
Receipted.
Down in a southeast Kansas town,
relate® the Kansas) City Star, lives a
rather simple-minded youth by the
name of Bill Beasley, whose facility In
contracting small debts at the local
stores is only equaled by his success in
evading their payment. One day re¬
cently, however, Bill made the mistake
of showing some money before one of
his creditors, and after the hard fought
argument which followed the money
was handed over to the storekeeper.
"Now,” said Bill, sadly, ‘‘we’re square,
and I want a receipt. Make it legal, so
you won’t be after me again.”
FRUIT LAXATIVE
FOR SICK CHILD
"California Syrup of Figs” can’t
harm tender stomach,
li ver and bowels.
Every mother realize^, after giving
her children "California Syrup of
Figs” that this is their ideal laxative,
because they love its pleasant taste
and it thoroughly cleanses the tender
little stomach, liver and bowels with¬
out griping.
When cross, irritable, feverish or
breath is bad, stomach sour, look at
the tongue, mother! If coated, give a
teaepoonful of this harmless) "fruit
laxRtlve,” and In a few hours all the
foul, constipated waste, sour bile and
undigested food passes out of the bow¬
els, and you have a well, playful child
again. When its little system is full
of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache,
diarrhoea, indigestion, colic—remem¬
ber, a good "inside cleaning” should
always be the first treatment given.
Millions of mothers keep "California
Syrup of Figs" handy; they know a
teaspoonful today saves a sick child
tomorrow. Ask at the store for a 50
cent bottle of "California Syrup of
Figs," which has directions for babies,
children of all ages and grown-up*
printed on the bottle. Adv.
Efficient
“Helen,” asked her mother, "who
loves you best, Jack or Harry?”
“Well, they're both awfully good at
It, mother."
Any girl can make a name for her¬
self—if she can induce some man to
face the parson with her.
No woman ever looks at matrimony
from a man’s point of view.
To Cleanse
and Heal
Deep Cuts
Fails
Hoot it on hand
HANFORD’S
Balsam ofMyrrh
For Cuts, Bums,
Strains, Bruises, Sprains,
Stiff Neck,
Chilblains, Old Lame Wounds," Back,
And Sores, Open
all Externa] Injuries
Made Since 1846.
Price 25c, 50c and $1.00
All Dealers
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
TRE BLUE SKI LAW
GOES INTO EFFECT
MANY INQUIRIES ARE MADE IN
REGARD TO THE OPERATION
OF THE NEW LAW.
TO BE RIGIDLY ENFORCED
Hereafter Promotions Will Operate
Under Strict Supervision of the
Secretary of State.
—Atlanta.
Secretary of State Phil Cook has
been in receipt of dally Inquiries as
to the terms of the "Georgia Blue
Sky Law,” which is In effect. After
the first of January, the way of sales¬
men with doubtful or crooked schemes
to promote is going to be so hard
that they will scarcely make an effort
to carry on business In Georgia.
The law requires that everyone hav¬
ing stocks, bonds, debentures and oth¬
er securities for sale shall first make
a statement with the secretary of
Btate showing the name and princi¬
pal place of business of such dealer,
and the names, residences and busi¬
ness addresses of all persons Interest¬
ed in such securities as principals, of¬
ficers, directors or trustees, Including
the name, residence and business ad¬
dress of an agent residing in the state,
if any.
Where such dealer is a non-resident
he is required by the terns of the
act to file with the secretary of state a
designation or power of attorney duly
signed and sealed, appointing and
authorizing some person who shall be
a resident of this state, to acknowl¬
edge or receive service of process, and
upon whom process may be served for
and in behalf of such dealer in all
proceedings that may be instigated
against such dealer in any court of
this state or of the United States. Any
dealer who shall fail or neglect to ap¬
point and maintain in this state such
an agent shall forfeit the right to do
or continue business in this state.
The secretary of state may require
such dealer, whenever he shall offer
any securities In this state except to
other dealers or to banks, to file with
him a statement showing the security
or securities so offered, and the secre¬
tary of state may require such dealer
to mail to him as soon as any copies
are so mailed or shown to any pros¬
pective purchaser In this state, a
copy of all printed or otherwise redu¬
plicated circulars of any security or
securities the dealer shall offer for
sale in this state, including a copy of
all advertisements thereof.
The secretary of state may also re¬
quire the dealer to file with him evi¬
dence, including an official statement
of assets and earnings, copy of deal¬
er’s contract showing his compensa¬
tion, or other information in relation
to any security the dealer is offering
for sale or inviting offers for except
to other dealers or banks. For every
report so filed the secretary of state
shall be paid a fee of $5 at the time
of filing the same. Unless such evi¬
dence is filed and is sufficient, the
secretary of state may order a dealer
not to offer the security for sale or
otherwise advertise it in publications
or circularize It in this state.
Frank Received Many Gifts.
Although the general public seem¬
ed to forget Leo M. Frank during the
holidays, his friends didn't. One of
the marvelous things about the whole
Frank case has been the unswerving
and almost blind loyalty of the many
friends who have refused even in the
face of the count's verdict to believe
him guilty.
The season, which is supposed to be
saddest because of past memories, to
those within prison walls, was not
a particularly unhappy one for Leo
Frank. Every day friends came to see
him and spent hours in the cell or
I at the cell door. According to some
| | of the them, Frank is very will confident Judge that
supreme court reverse
Roan’s refusal to grant a new trial.
Frank consulted and worked with
the lawyers in preparing the brief, and
showed remarkable knowledge of the
law. He is said to beSieve that the
most hopeful grounds on which a new
trial can be looked for He in the
statement by Judge L. S. Roan, pre¬
siding judge, that after all was said
and done, he himself was not con¬
vinced of the prisoner’s guilt
Out $50 on Joy Ride.
W. F. Williams, a tailor, who went
joy riding with two pretty married
women, lost his purse containing $50
and had the women arrested. The trio
were taken to police headquarters,
where the women nearly died of hys¬
terics and fright They said they had
not taken the pocketbook, and that
they were sorry they had taken the
ride; and that if their husbands found
It out, they would certainly kill the
tailor. Cases were docketed just the
same.
Wants Repeal of Bankruptcy Law.
The repeal of the present national
bankrupcty act will be strongly ad¬
vocated by Hon. Grover C. Edmond¬
son of Brooks county, In the event he
finally decides to run for congress in
the Eleventh district.
Mr. Edmondson is already strongly
committed to the principal and if he
announces, as politicians here say he
is practically certain of doing, the re¬
peal of that act will be a prominent
plank in his platform.
Mr. Edmondson views the bankrupt¬
cy act from the standpoint of the busi¬
ness men and merchants of the coun¬
try. He feels that the law should
be changed so as to afford better pro¬
tection to those who extend credit.
Under the bankruptcy law as It now
stands, a man can take out a bank¬
ruptcy petition every six years. Mr.
Edmondson contends that this law,
perhaps necessary when it was enact¬
ed, now gives too much latitude.
Mr. Edmondson is now the repre¬
sentative of Brooks county in the
general assembly, and is known as
‘‘the baby of the legislature" because
he is its youngest member.
Scientists Hold Meeting.
The ninth annual meeting of the
Southern Society for Philosophy and
Psychology, in affiliation with the
American Association for the Ad¬
vancement of Science, which closed
here, was in many respects the most
notable in the history of the two
great organizations.
One of the memorable events of
the session was the address by Dr.
H. J. Pearce of Brenau, president of
the former association, whose sub¬
ject was "The Limitations of Knowl¬
edge.” His treatment of the great
psychological problem was original,
and his conclusions, according to the
comment of leading psychologists,
who heard him, will have a definite
bearing on all further research along
similar lines.
The joint convention brought to At¬
lanta most of the 'leading scientists
and psychologists in the United
States, and practically every large in¬
stitution of research and learning was
represented.
Among the southern Institutions
which had representation were Tu
lane University, Johns Hopkins, Bre¬
nau, Mercer, University of Virginia,
University Card|jS, University of
South University of North
Carolina Anmjfftiera.
Was No “Empty Stockings."
The "empty stocking” myth was
pretty well exploded in Atlanta this
year. Though the papers printed
pages and pictures about the poor lit¬
tle boys and girls who would wake up
Christmas morning and find that San¬
ta Claus had forgotten them, not a
single authentic instance was discov¬
ered, even among the poorest people,
where this actually happened.
This doesn’t mean that there wasn't
plenty of opportunity for charity.
There were hundreds of homes where
coal and even food were scarce, and
where fathers and mothers shivered
in the cold on Chlrstmas morning and
lacked the bare necessaries of life,
but the poorest of them found some¬
thing to put in the baby’s stocking.
Many of them deny themselves actual
food to purchase a simple doll or toy;
others begged the toys, and some very
probably had to resort to even mere
desperate methods. But the Associat¬
ed Charities and Salvation Army,
which found plenty of misery, and
plenty of families in dire need did not
find a single child whose Christmas
stocking was absolutely empty. So
much the better for the world.
Shriners to Get Low Rates.
For a few days this spring Geor¬
gia is going to be the railroad center
of the United States, so far as the
passenger department is concerned.
All the available rolling stock of ev¬
ery railroad between the Atlantic and
Pacific coast will be rolling toward
Atlanta. And here is the reason
why; tra it is going to require every ex- J
passenger car, every extra engine, j
every Pullman that the roads can pos¬
sibly put into commission, to bring '
the national gathering of Shriners
to Atlanta in May. There will be
enough of ’em to found another city.
The number of Shriners who come to
Atlanta will be larger than the total
population of any Georgia city except
Atlanta. It will be something new
for convention crowds in the South.
Forest Adair, potentate of the local
Shriners’ temple, and leader of the i
movement which brought this big con- ;
vention to Atlanta, has received for¬
mal notice of the tariff just issued by
the Southeastern Passenger Associa- j
tion, giving special rates to the Im- j
perial Council over all lines south of
the Ohio and Potomac rivers and
east of the Mississippi.
Mr. Adair has been informed* that
the Central Passenger Association,
and ' the Transcontinental lines will i
issue special tariff orders within the |
next few days.
The rates will be lower than winter
round trip tourist rates, and tickets
to Atlanta will be on sale from ev¬
ery point in the United States and
Canada.
In This Climate
No Home Can Afford to Be Without
French Market Coffee!
In the coffee growing countries, good coffee, roasted
like French Market Coffee, is regarded as a necessity a
healthful stimulant to aid digestion. Hot climates create a
desire for stimulants, and the one great healthful, stimulating
drink is coffee—not the ordinary roasts of coffee, but the
rich roasts which contain no heavy oils and though superbly
Stimulating, will not irritate the most tender stomach.
You will find coffee like French Market Coffee served
In Paris, Vienna, Rio de Janerio, Bogota and Mexico, but
in none of these cities will you find coffee like the ordinary
American roasts.
Think what it means to be able to secure the genuine
French Market Coffee at your grocer’s.
FRENCH MARKET MILLS
(New Orleans Coffee Co.. U4. t Proprietors)
NEW ORLEANS
DIRECTIONS - W« recommend
that you make French Market CoSes
in your usual way. II you find it too
strong, reduce quantity until strength
and flavor are satisfactory. French
£o f f coffee Market thereby to reducing makes the ponnd more yonr than cups other coffee of brands, bill. good
FOR
MALARIA -sr TONIC
If not sold by your druggist, will be sent b; iy Parcels
receipt of price. Arthur Peter Sc Co. Louisville, Ky.
Indiscreet Professor.
Mrs. Nextdore—Professor Adagio
called at our house yesterday, and
my daughter played the piano for him.
He just raved over her playing.
Mrs. Pepry—How rude. Why could
he not conceal his feelings, the way
the rest of us do?
“GASCARET5” FOR
LIVER, ROWELS
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a lfi-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh
with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with
Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
Purgative Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg¬
ulate the stomach, remove the sour
and fermenting food and foul gases,
take the excess bile from the liver
and carry out of the system all the
constipated waste matter and poisons
In the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will make you
feel great by morning. They work
while you sleep—never gripe, sicken
or cause any inconvenience, and cost
only 10 cents a box from your store.
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
have Headache, Biliousness, Coated
Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or
Constipation. Adv.
Unusual.
"Anything unusual about this suicide
case?” asked the city editor.
“Yes. There were bichloride of mer¬
cury tablets In the house,” replied the
reporter.
"Nothing unusual about that,” snap¬
ped the city editor.
"Yes, there is," retorted the report¬
er. ‘‘This fellow was so old-fashioned
he hanged himself.”—Detroit Free
Press.
„ Examine Important carefully to Mothers
every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
Beers the
Signature of u u
In Use For Over SO Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Caatoria
The Proper One.
"Lady wants to know what kind of
a bath she ought to take."
"What’s the lady’s business?”
"She’s a dressmaker.”
"Then give her a needle hath."
COLDS & LaGRIPPE
5 or 6 doses 666 will break any case
of Chills & Fever, Colds & LaGrippe;
It acts on the liver better than Calo¬
mel and does not gripe or sicken.
Price 25c.—Adv.
Familiarity.
“Does he know her very veil?”
“He must. I overheard him telling
her that she Is getting fat.”
Like Effects.
"How did the lawyer manage to pin
the witness down?”
“By his needle-like penetration.”
Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children
Relieve Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething
Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and
are a pleasant remedy for Worms. Used by
Mothers for 24 years. They are so pleasant to
take, children like them. They never fail At
all Druggists, 85c. Sample FREE. Address,
A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y« Adv.
It is not necessarily an act of hos¬
pitality to make a guest feel at home.
Stubborn Throat troubles are easily re¬
lieved by Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops.
They act like magic—5c at $11 Druggists.
Self-love is not only blind, but it's
Incurable.
Mrs.Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion,allays pain,cures wind colic,26c a bottle.Mr
We admire any woman who has the
cheek to discard paint and powder.
••••••••*«•«
More!
^ mules Make give your horses work, ami
A you more
2 your chickens cows more milk, your
more eggs, your
• hogs more meat and fat,
V by miking a small dose of
Bee Dee
STOCK & POULTRY MEDICINE
f with This their tonic regular medicine feed. im- £
dh A
Z 2 proves the appetite, diges- 2 a
J tion, and general health, of •
farm animals and fowls, #
V and its regular use will
multiply your profits. 41
m Price 25c. 50c and $1.00 per can. £
ML “We gave Bee Dee Stock Medicine to JA
two cows and their flow of milk was w
doubled.”—3. L. Cole, Ooin, Tenn. “
P. A. 10
HAIR STAIN
“Walnutta”
For Cray. Streaked, Bleached and Red Hair oe
Moustache. Matches Shade rui — Light off. Brown Sold by to
Black. Does not tooth nor
your Druggist. Regular eixe, 60 cents.
I I 2208 aad Sod jet Clark a to FREE Howard Av,. $i. Trial Nichob, Loui*. Bottfe. Mo Free I
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS. BLOW
IIyou feel ‘OUT OF SORTS’ RUM DOWH'ot’GOT GO THE
SUFVK* SUITS* from from KIDNEY, SIDNEY, BLADDER. BLADD1 NERVOUS VOI DISEASES*
OKRONIC KICWSAKRESSESrU WEAKNESSES, ULCERS RS.5KXN SEW ••■noN&.piL2a,
.
writ* for my FRSE book. SE 1 HOST 1HSTRUCTIVK IHSTRUl
ttSmCAL BOOK EVER WRITTEN.IT rrs: TEL LS ALL about tb»
‘ ‘ ----------LBLI
..... - - ------------ ailment. ^—“—id Don't send a cent.
;p’circulars. Dr LEClERC
PSIKAD, DONDON.E-NO.
FOR SALE —32 A. IN RICHMOND CO., GA.;
25 a. cul l, 8 r. house, tenant bouse, outbldgs..
complete hennery, 600 white Leghorns, ma¬
chinery, Hadel Poultry Farm, Augusta, Ca
I Beet Couch Syrup. Tastes Good, ?flk
in time. Sold by Dronrisis.