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Miss Maude Olive Minahan of New
York City, who has been votéd by the
students at Wellesley college, Massa
chusetts, to be the most beautiful girl
at the college.
e e i
POLITICAL, ECONOMIC AND FI
NANCIAL LEGISLATION DUR
ING 1913 IMPORTANT.
New Era in Relations of Government
and Big Corporations—Foreign
Relations Eventful.
Washington.—Twelve months of
1913 wrought changes in. the Ameri
can government—political, = economic
and financial-—probably wmore far
reaching than any other year of the
last quarter ceutury-——this year was
apparent in a backward glance over
memorable events of the past year
in all branches of governmental ac
tivity.
A Democratic administration in na
tional affairs came to power in this
twelve months with a Democratic
president and a Democratic congress
at his back for the first time since
Grover Cleveland occupied the white
house,.
The first constitutional amendments
since 1870 were perfected, providing
twe radical changes in the funda
mentals of government-—an income
tax and the digect election of United
States senators.
BANKS ACCEPTING SYSTEM
in One Wiek 767 Banks Apply for
Admission.
Washington.—Seven hundred and
gixty-seven banking institutions, scat.
tered over forty-five states and having
an aggregate capital, exclusive of sur
plus, of approximately §300,000,000,
have informed the federal authorities
of their intention to enter the new cur
rency system. This was announced
by the treasury department a week
after the currency reform law was
enacted.
The department’s statement sald:
“Six hundred and ninety-five appli
cationg have been received from na
tional banks with an aggregate capital
of about $250,004,000 ,s 0 that up to thig
time national banks representing ap
proximately one-fourth of the total
national banking capital of the coun
try already have signified their In
tention to enter the system.
“oOf the national banks 69 have a
capital of $1,000,000 or more; 142
* have a capital of from $250,000 to $l
- 270 have a capital of from
SIOO,OOO to $250,000 and 214 have
a capital of less than SIOO,OOO.
$250,000 Ransom Will Be Paid.
Chihuahua.—Two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars in gold has Ybeen
agreed upon by General Villa, rebel
military chief, as the rangsom he will
accept for the release of Lujs Terra
zas, son of the wealthy Mexican land
owner. Terrazas has been imprison
ed here for five weeks on the charge
that he had supported the federal ad
ministration. The money is to be pald
by Luis Terarzas, Sr., who has been
negotiating from El Paso for his son’s
release. The prisoner is to be brought
to the border under safe conduct,
w,% HW T
‘Bt Is an Epldemlo Catarrhal Feven
% Caused by a Bacillus that Genere
llleham the Patient Weak
r the Acute Stage
Has Passed.
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Grip Patients Grateful to Peruna, the
Expectorant Tonic.
Do not make the error of regarding
grip as an exaggerated cold. There
is a big difference between the twe.
Grip is an epldemic disease that pol- t
sons the vital organs. When a per
son has grip, the air passages are
allve with millions of bacilli poison
ing the blood. The Infected person
feels tired and exhausted. l
Peruna is a Tonic Laxative. '
It requires a good tonic laxative to |
keep the body of the patient as strong I
a8 possible to counteract the effect of
the poisons created by the grip bacil
[ lus. An expectorant tonic with gome
laxative quallties is the safest rem
| edy. Such s Peruna. Beware es
peclally of coal tar powders or tablets
, because they lessen the vitality of the
patient.
| * There is no speclfle for the grip.
} Peruna has been used with good
| ®uccess in former grip epidemics. In
| dications point to the return of grip
| this winter,
| Do not fail to read the experience ‘
| of former grip patients with Peruna.
| Mrs. Gentry Gates, 8219 First Ave, |
| Bast Lake, Ala., writes: “I had a
| bad case of grip. I tried Peruna and ‘
| it cured me. I can safely say it is a |
| fine medictne” |
{ Mrs. Charles I, Wells, Sr, 230
! South St., Delaware, Ohio, writes: I
| “After a severe attack of la grippe I
l took Peruna and found it a good |
| tonic.” '
| Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruna
Lucky Day Almanac for 1914, 1
ARSI A PRI 750 A6 534 RO AN SOB 0 5 0 XTSI AMO 05
; Some Big Pecan Trese.
’ Like the Persian walnut the pecanl
long has been grown in this country,
| but its commercial possibilities werei
‘neglected. Some of the trees are of
' enormous size and known to be ver”yl
‘old. In Milledgevillee, Ga., an old pe~‘
lcan tree stands which is known to
i have been planted by the Indians over
l 100 years ago. The pwner values it
so highly that he has recently “taken
| out S3OO fire insurance on it because
lit has been so closely surrounded by
buildings that it i{s endangered. The
!largest pecan tree on record is near
| Little Falls, Okla. It has an a]titude‘
| of 130 feet, a spread of 110 feet and a
{trunk circumference of 23 feet
| taken four feet from the ground. In
;Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas and
| other sections pecan trees may bei
{ found in forests, reaching 170 feet in|
| height. 1
i o sot o e et
1
13 GAILD CROBS,
| y ‘
- FEVERISH, lOk
| et |
' Look, Mother! If tongue IS
; coated, give “California |
! Syrup of Figs.” |
| Children love this “fruit laxative,”
| and nothing else cleanses; the tender
§ stomach, liver and bowels so nicely,
} A child simply will not stop playing
| to empty the bowels, and the result s |
{ they become tightly clogged withl
iwaste, Hver gets sluggish, stomach]
| gours, then your little one becomes
| eross, half-sick, feverish, don’t eat.(
| sleep or act naturally, breath is bad,‘i
| system full of cold, has sore throat,
| stomach-ache ‘or diarrhoea. Listen, |
| Mother! See if tongue is coated, then
| glve a teaspoonful of “California
| Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all
fithe constipated waste, sour blle and
| undigested food passes out of the sys
| tem, and you have a well child again.
| Millions of mothers give “California
| Byrug of Figs” because it is perfectly
i harmless; children love it, and it ney
t er fails to act on the stomach, liver%
i and bowels. ‘
! Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle
| of “California Syrup of Figs,” whichi
| has full directions for babies, children 1
{ of all ages and for grown-ups plainlyl
{ printed on the bottle. Adv. goonpmes
A Bitter Experience. l
|- “Do you believe In telepathy, Mr.
f Plumly ?”
! “No, Miss Gadders. I have discov
{ ered that no matter how many thought
j waves a fellow sends a young woman,
!unless he happens to own an automo
ibfle they are shastered on the cold
1 shoulder of lndiflsrence.”
You Look Prematurely Old |
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA.
TAS GREEK UNDERSTANDS IT
Student’s Rendering of Shakespearean
" Phrase Somewhat Literal, But
‘He Had the ldea.
A young Greek merchant of Wash
ington, who has been taking lessons in
English from a private tutor, has so
far advanced that his teacher recently
introduced him to the beauties—and
perplexities—of Shaekespeare, He was
instructed to read a passage several
times until he had the ideas firmly
fixed in his mind and then, closing the
book, to put these ideas into his own
Engligh, following as closely as his
memory permitted the author’s text.
He had read over a soliloquy of
Othello’s several times and was re
producing the Moor’s somber thoughts
with pretty falr approximation to the
poet’s words, but when he reached the
last line: “Farewell, Othello’s occupa
tion’s gone!” he stopped short, utterly
at a loss. The original phrasing had
quite escaped him. However, he had
grasped the idea, for after afew sec
onds of frowning perplexity his brow
cleared.
“Ah, I has eet!” he exclaimed. “Het
ees this: ‘So long! Othello’s lost hees
jop!’ "——New York Hvening Post.
Was It Force of Habit?
An amused smile fluttered over the
features of Congressman Samuel J.
Tribble of Georgia the other night
when the talk topic in the lobby of a
Washington hotel turned to the won
derful sayings of the kiddies. He said
he was reminded of a recent incident.
A fond father was taking his little
six-year-old daughter to town in a mo
tor car, and on stopping in front of a
store he noticed that the drive against
the strong wind had made the young
ster's eyes water.
| “Just a minute, Jessie,” sair father,
wrapping a corner of hig handkerchief
around one finger and dabbing the lit
tle girl’s eye. “Let me wipe that tear
away.”
“Say,” was the rather amazing ex
clamation of Jessie, “what do you
think that is—a push button?”
SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR
| DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR
Look Years Younger! Try Grandma’s
Recipe of Sage and Sulphur
and Nobody Will Know.
‘ Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the halr when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years
ago the only way to get this mixture
was to make it at home, which is
mussy and troublesome, |
Nowadays we simply ask at any
drug store for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sul
| phur Hair Remedy.” You will get a
i large bottle for about 50 cents, HEvery
| body uses this old, famous recipe, be
]cause no one can possibly tell that
Iyou darkened your hair, as it does it
go naturally and evenly. You dampen
& sponge or Boft brush with it and
draw this through your hair, taking
one gmall strand at a time; by morn
ling the gray hair disappears, and
% after another application or two, your
| hair becomes beautifully dark, thick
' and glossy and you look years younger.
i ~AdV.
Labor Saving.
“Briggs is a great fellow for saving
labor.”
“Nes?" =
“Before leaving home on a trip he
rubber stamps ‘Having a good time’
on a score or more of postal cards and
then mailg ’em from time to time.”
Tetterine for Ring Worm and Bkin
‘ Disease.
Varnville, 8. C., July 17, 1908,
My wife uses your Tetterine for Rlnfi
lworm. also uses it in her family for all
kind of skin diseases, and she thinks ft |
a good medicine. There is no substitute,
, L. R. Dowlln%. |
Tetterine cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring
‘Worm, Old Itching Sores, Dandruff, Itch- ‘
ing Piles, Corns, Chilblains. and every
form of Bealp and Bkin Disease, Tetter~
llne boc; Tetterine Boap 2c. At drug
gists or by mail direct from The Shup
| trine Co., Bavannah, Ga.
! With every mail order for Tetterine we
lfive a box of SHuptrine’s 10c Liver Pllis
Tee, Adv,
Extravagant Diet.
“My, but that woman’s got money to
throw away!”
| “How do you know?”
| “Didn’t you just hear her order a
i soft-boiled egg?”’
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure your Rheumatism and ail
kinds of aches and pains—Neuralgia,
Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cute,
Old Bores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic
Anodyne. Price 25c.—Ady,
Our idea of a promoter ig a chap
who buys a gold brick at a bargain and
unloads it on some other chap at a
profit.
French Méu;Ket Coffee
is Southern Through
and Through!
Brought in shigs from the coffee
countries through warm summer
seas to the southern port of New
Orleans, no cold climates affect, in
juriously, the delicate coffee beans.
Roasted and blended by Southern
ers, it Is best adapted for use in the
Southern climate—no Northern roast
coffee can compete with it.
Sold to Southern merchants for
Southern trade—blended, roasted,
packed and shlpfed in the South—
Southern through and through. No
wonder it outsells all other brands
in the South.
Endorsed by the best judges in
New Orleans a hundred years ago,
and by coffee drinkers daily through
out the South. No wonder it has
&0 o &
ALRE R @
“.Q”"“
GBS 2
; b QT MToR ¢ ¢
. Crfeld
R R R O R R L A B
“relieves rheumatism quickly. It stimulates the circulation—in
stantly relieves stiffness and soreness of muscles and joints,
Don’t rub —it penetrates, '
Rheumatism Never Returned :
“I am a travelling man and about one year ago I was laid up with rhenmatism and
could not walk. A friend recommended Sloan's Liniment and the morning after I
used it my knee was all O.K. and it has never bothered me since. I always keep
v)ur};lpiment'in the house and carry it with me on the road,"-—Mr. Thomas S, Harter,
‘est Philadelphia, Pa.
Rh ti N Ig}
. Stiffness Vanished
“1 suffered with an awful stiffness in
m{*l)egs. That night 1 ane my legs a good
rubbing with Sloan's Liniment and believe P \
me, next morning Ipo;xld_jumpbogt.lofbed. ‘} \
X iavs bigo pppliec st s boia, o r Sl
Sprained Ankle Relieved “.‘ s /
*“I wasillfor along time with aseverely ™Y
sprained ankle. I gota bottle of Sloan’s \
Liniment and now [ am able to be about j
and can walk a great deal. 1 write this . erangroos
because I think you deserve a lot of ered- el R e g R N
it for putting such a fine Liniment on the 7%g TPR o
market and I ghall always take time to /| (ki cfi
recommend Dr, Sloan’s Liniment."—AMrs. i '\),\
Charles Rouse of Baltimers, Md. "mm \, 4 /
Sloan’s Liniment gives a grateful f?‘m'vs“ A /
sensation of comfort. Good for ‘W“/ i 0,/
sprains, neuralgia, sore throat and {/inEes M R T
toothache, Use it now. y;v Q‘ ‘///,'l D%
At all Dealers, 25c., 50c. and SI.OO / t =) i
Send for Sloan’s free book on horses, L g N :
Addresa ~ A S
(gl B
Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, Inc. ‘(57 \
BOSTON, MASS.
R T L | |
. Fite o p s
e R e Diversified Farming
&‘ % ."‘"1’,1\?3""1?4 ?g‘ ;‘ 2
e s B SR : ¥ ‘
LA R 'f‘:z A Planters are finding that it pays to
RO P e Totate crops. Comn, hay and cotton
s ;‘/‘,;:fi-"/.;’-.,:f,-’:f., gl {ollow cach other with a sure profit.
Y 8 I RSN A B L vy 00 el = ALt 2 z
’ : Besides raising diversified crops, more §
planters use fertilizers containing
. ! - b :
=—xl POTASH
ar . s
= PO enoughtobalance the phosphoricacid. §
e Enough Potash means at least as much
k\'z—- . pa 2 Potash as phosphoric acid. i
o I~ To get full value out of your fertilizer, in
: : o] gist on high-grade goods. If your dealer
e e, i ;..fi doesn’t carry such grades, buy Potash sepa- §
!R { __:1:;‘ Afim rately. Potash Pays. —
| ey B Ooy We will ssll you any amount from ons 200-Ib. bag up &
/y O B Ly A GERMAN KALI WORKS, Inc.
A i ;é" %” 42 Broadway, New York g
YN g @ Chilcago, MeCormick Block Savanosh, Bank & Trost Bldg.
o R * " New Orleans, Whitney Central Bank mi;n
; ,r"‘?“ 'fi_'!i ’}‘ Ban Prancisco, 25 California St. Atisnta, Emplre Bldg. [
R i
Out of Date. g
Muggins—BShe’s such an old-fash
foned girl.
Buggins—How do you mean old
fashioned? .
Muggins—She is positively effemi
nate. §
Paw Knows Everything.
Willie—Paw, what is the greatest
common devisor?
Paw—Divorce, my son.
been called the National Drink of
the South. g
There is a real treat in store for
those who have not yet tried French
Market Coffee. Buy a can today.
Try it. Be convinced of the ex
_cellence and quality of this brand.
Turn back over a hundred years
to the days of Andrew Jackson-—
French Market Coffee was even them
the most famous drink in America,'
Its history entwines itself with the
history of the old aristocracy of the
South. The Belles and Beaux of
New Orleans sipped it at midnight
for generations. To them no Mardi .
Gras Ball was complete without a
cup of French Market Coffee. Think
what it means to you to be able to
serve this identical blend on your
table daily —for your own grocer
now sells it—in air-tight cans.
FRENCH MARKET MILLS
(New Orleans Coffee Co., Ltd., Proprietors}
' NEW ORLEANS
DIRECTIONS—We recommend that you
make French Market Coffee in your usuat
way. If youfind it too strong, reduce quan
tity until strenilth and flavor are satisfac~
tory. French Market makes more cups
of good coffee to the pound than other '
brands, thereby reducing your coffee biil.
R T S T OSRTR TR
'READERS :f opr iine
| tised in Its columns should insist npon having what
i they ask for,refusing all substitutes or imitations,
| Atlanta Directory
l o R s SRR TAT
VICTROLAS AND GRAFONOLAS
‘Complete stock of Victor and Can
lambia Records. |, M. BAH&&
64 Peachtree st. Write for ca
’ —‘*‘__.__...'-:".:::::::::_.fi__—‘",___"*“*:-m‘m—*::wz::*““"""'
{ W.N. U, ATLANTA, NO. 2-1914.