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CTREEN MIRL HIRANIIRIILE
- HAIR STOPS FALLING
o —
*:&flfl Try This! Makes Hair Thick,
~ Glossy, Fluffy, Beautiful—No
- More lltching Scalp.
Within ten minutes after an appli
- _cation of Danderine you cannot find a
~ gingle trace of dandruff or falling hair
_and your scalp will not itch, but what
~ will please you most will be after a
- few weeks' use, when you see new
‘hair, fine and downy at first—yes—but
~ really new hair—growing all over the
A little Danderine immediately dou
bles the beauty of your hair. No dif
~ference how dull, faded, brittle and
scraggy, just moisten a cloth with.
Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. The effect is amaz
ing—your hair will be light, fluffy and
wavy, and have an appearance of
abundance; an incomparable luster,
softness ang luxuriance.
Qet a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any store, and prove
that your hair is as pretty and soft
as any—that it has been neglected or
injured by careless treatment—that's
all—you surely can have beautiful hair
and lots of it if you will just try a lit
tle Danderine. Adv.
God or Devil?
Commissioner Howell, chief of stafl
to General Bramwell Booth of the
Salvation Army, tells a story with
charming frankness against himself.
Traveling in a country district, he
had one night, with his secretary, to
accept the hospitality of a peasant
friend. She endeavored to make up
for the narrowness of the bed by plac
ing two boxes alongside, and on taking
her visitors Into the guest chamber,
showed that in her mind the primitive
condition of things was capable of
philosophic consideration, for she
pointedly remarked, “There you are.
1f you belong to God, you will be all
right, while, if you belong to the devil,
it is too good for you. Good night.”
ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED
R. F. D. No, 8 Maryville, Tenn—
“My baby, when three months old,
took eczema on his face and head.
His head and one side of his face
were almost in a solid sore. The ec
zema at first was kind of a rash and
then it broke out in water pimples
and they would burst and looked very
badly. It would itch and burn 8o bad
ly that he could not rest at all and
his hair just all fell out at once till
his head was perfectly bald. He could
not sleep-at night and was very cross.
“I tried remedies without any relief
at all; he only got worse all the time
until I used Cuticura Soap and Oint
ment, He had great relief the first
application. He was soon cured and
his hair began to grow back and now
he has just beautiful fine hair and
has no sign of eczema' (Signed)
Mrs. H. D. Clabough, Jan. 28, 1913.
Cutfcura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 82-p. Skin Book. Address post
card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv.
Theory and Practice,
Little Beatrice was taking piano les
sons and learning at the same time
something of theory. Like many oth
er children, she disliked practicing
her finger exercises. One day her
mother, who was working in an up
stairs room, noticed a sudden lull in
the playing. She looked down and
saw Beatrice sitting perfectly motion
fess,
%“Beatrice, why don’t you practice?”
she called down sharply.
“I am practicing, mother,” replied
the child with perfect self-assurance;
“Pm practicing my theory.”—New
York Evening Post.
Sometimes Apply It Lightly.
For cuts, burns, scalds, sores and
open wounds always apply Hanford’s
Balsam lightly, but be sure that it
covers and gets to the bottom of the
wound. A few light applications are
generally all that i{s needed to heal
this class of difficulties. Adv.
Deadly Insult
“You and Mr. Puffins don’t speak?”
“No. He referred to my automobile
as antique rolling stock.”
Pneumonia? Apply Hanford’s Bal
sam. Rub it on and rub it in thor
oughly, until the skin is irritated.
Adv.
Any lawyer will tell you that eome
people won’t take advice even when
they pay for it »
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion,allays pain,cures wind colic,2s¢ a bottle.Asy
A story always has a sad ending
when it lands in the waste basket.
For frostbites use Hanford's Bal
sam. Adv.
It is easy to see why a woman
thinks she has a pretty ankle.
NO ACT OF CHIEF EXECUTIVE
LATELY HAS MET WITH SUCH
WIDESPREAD APPROVAL.
URGED A CHANGE OF VENUE
Application of the Act of 1911 Is Ex
; pected to End Mob Law in
State of Georgia.
—Atlanta.
No act of a chief executive lately
has met with such widespread approv
al throughout the state, particularly
among members of the legal profes
sion, as has that of Governor Slaton
in urging a change of venue in the
case of the three Jefferson county ne
groes, confined in the tower here for
the murder of Mrs. Seth Irby. The
part played by Judge B. T. Rawlings
in ordering the trial transferred to
this county has come in for general
favorable comment.
The govenor was not only congrat
ulated by a large number of his
friends who were vigitors at the cap
itol, but was also in receipt of a
number of letters from people all over
the state assuring him of their hearty
approval in his course in the matter.
It is the opinion of many that the
application of the act of 1811 by the
judges of the superior court will prac
tically put an end to lynch law in
Georgla, and will also eliminate the
necessity of calling out the military
to protect the lives of prisoners on
trial.
Those who are familiar with the sit
uation in Jefferson county had assur
ed the governor that even if the
troops were called out to the number
of 200 to protect the lives of the ne
groes as the sheriff demanded, there
would still have been an attempt at
lynching which would almost cer
tainly have resulted in bloodshed.
This danger has been entirely ob
viated by the transfer of the trial to
Atlanta, where the accused have been
in confinement since their transfer
from the Richmond county jail. The
trial will, in all probability, take place
before Judge Ben Hill. If convicted,
the acctised can be sentenced to death
at the earliest date which the law will
allow and their execution will take
place in the tower. The law will have
been vindicated just as speedily as if
the trial had occurred in the county
where the crime was committed.
To Make Up Report.
Commissioner of Commerce and La
bor H. M. Stanley will place in the
mails here more than five thousand
letters containing blank forms to the
manufacturers all over Georgia.
These blanks are to be filled out
with detailed data at once and re
turned to Commissioner Stanley, who
uses the general facts in his annual
‘report, and files the blanks away for
future reference. Much of the infor
mation thus secured ig not, of course,
made public, but certain parts and
general data are uged to make up an
interesting report. Commigsioner
Stanley and his office force have been
busy for several weeks getting the
blanks ready to be mailed out prompt
ly on the first of the year.
The commissioner’s annual report
this year will be unusually interest
ing. He expects to give a history of
the general information concerning
the agricultural schools of the state
—matter not heretofore contained in
his report.
He will also give the history of the
first cotton mill established in the
state, with a very interesting account
of the growth of this industry. Oil
mills and other industrial enterprises
will be similarly treated.
Will Travel Rocky Road.
“The Czar of the Atlanta Police
Court,” Judge Nash R. Broyles, is go
ing to have a rocky road to travel
in his race for a seat on the court
of appeals bench. His enemies, and
they are by no means few, are al
ready industriously sharpening their
hatchets. The principal opposition in
Atlanta will come from a strong ele
ment in the white labor classes, who
maintain that the recorder has toadied
to the rich and influential in the con
duet of his court, while treating the
poor white man and woman unfortun
ate enough to be called as principal
or witness with but scant respect.
They say that when a society wom
an from Peachtree is called as a wit
ness for any reason, Judge Broyles is
the personification of polished courte
gy, but that if a poor woman is call
ed in the same circumstances she is
treated with a humiliating roughness.
Law May Be Enforced.
The near beer saloons in Atlanta
are on pins and needles this month,
uncertain as to whether they are go
ing to be permitted to continue the
sale of real beer, or whether the let
ter of the law will be enforcd against
them.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA.
business men and the Men and Re
ligion Bulletins is gradually resoly
ing itself into an expression of pub
lic disapproval of the extremes to
which Chief of Police Beavers has
carried various phases of the vice
war, and the possibility that the po
lice commission may select a new
chief of police. ’
The first definite step in this di
rection is the resolution introduced
by Councilman Jesse Lee, with' the
endorsement of business men and of
the mayor, rebuking certain policies
of Chief Beavers and abolishing the
“vice squad” returning the plaln
clothes men to regular uniformed
duty in the ranks.
“I realize that this is a bold step
to take,” says Councilman Lee, ‘“but
I believe it is for the good of the
city. I believe that the people will
approve more of adequate protection
from thugs, footpads, burglars, etc.,
than of a large vice squad. I think
the time is ripe for change, and 1 be
lieve council and the police commis
sion will uphold my views.”
The situation existing in Atlanta is
not altogether understood by people
outside Atlanta. The agitation now
on foot is not a movement for a wide
open town. Some of Chief Beavers’
sincerest enemies are men prominent
in church and civiec welfare. The trou
ble is, as they see it, that the vice
crusade has made conditions worse
than they were before in Atlanta by
simply scattering vice instead of re
stricting it to a limited district.
Annuity Building Nears ©ompletion.
The early part of this year will see
the completion of the remodeling of
the Masons’ Annuity building, at the
corner of Kdgewood and Ivy streets.
This splendid property, in which Ma
sons all over the South are interested,
has increased very materially in value
during the past few years. The remod
eling will make it one of the finest
office buildings of its kind in: the
South. In addition to improvements
throughout the building, a complete
new story hag been added.
The Masons’ Annuity building is the
home and headquarterd of the organi
zation which bears the same name.
This organization proteets and cares
for the widows and families of deceas
ed Masong on an annuity plan. The
scope of the work is increasing from
vear to year, and thousands of widows
and children who would otherwise be
in want are amply provided for.
To Make Auto Stealing Felony.
A Dbill will be introduced at this
year’s session of the legislature to
make auto stealing a felony. Atten
tion has been called to the glaring
inequality of the law which makes it
a felony to steal a horse which is
worth perhaps less than SIOO, while
the man who steals a $6,000 limou
sine can be prosecuted only for a
misdemeanor.
A case in point came up in a local
court. A man was arrested for horse
stealing. The horse was worth little,
but the man was bound over to the
higher court, and will probably get
six or seven years at least for his
crime. If instead of stealing the
horse, he had picked out the finest
automobile in Atlanta, the utmost
limit of sentence that could have been
imposed on him would have been 12
months,
Made Official Organ.
Frosgt’s Magazine, “The Call of the
South,” has been made the official
organ of the Georgia state chamber of
commerce, The publisher, Jonathan
B. Frost, prominent in financial and
literary circles throughout the South,
is going to lend his aid to the state
chamber work, and a series of inter
esting editorials will probably be run
on the subject.
All news matter relative to the op
eratiens of the state chamber of com
merce will be carried in “The Call
of the South!” The magazine, how
ever, will lose none of its general lit
erary character, but will' continue to
be representative of all lines of in
terest in the seation.
Spratt Is Made Major.
Three military commissions were
signed by Governor Slaton. They
were George Edwin Mallet of Jack
son, to be first lieutenant in the ord
nance department and aid to Brig.
Gen. W. A. Harris; Prof. Stedman
Vincent Stanford of Atlanta, who is
taken from the retired list and given
a commission as lieutenant colonel on
the governor's staff; Willlam Thom
as Spratt of Atlanta, captain assist
ing inspector of small arms practice
of the Fifth infantry, who is promot
ed to be a major in the ordnance de
partment and chief of ordnance. Cap
tain Spratt is well known
The Blue Sky Law.
This is going to be an unhealthy
year in Georgia for the gold-brick
artists, and the tribe of J. Rufus Wal
lingford.
The new blue sky law puts all ven
dors securities, bonds and other evi
dences of investments under the
strict scrutiny of the state, and the
slick gentlemen who waht to oper
ate in Georgia will have to fool the
gtate before they can have a chance
to fool any of its individual citi-
Zens,
LITTLE TTEMS OF GEORGIA CITIES
e e B
- Buena Vista.—Will Turner, a white
man under indictment for burglary,
escaped the county jail by making a
wooden key and unlocking the outer
door. At last accounts he had not
been captured.
Waycross. —— Announcements for
county offices began appearing be
fore the advent of the new year, and
since then have literally poured in.
Contests have already developed in
the race for county treasurer, clerk
of superior court and sheriff,
Toccoa.—Lieutenant James O. Gal
logly, in command of the army re
cruiting station of Atlanta, is making
arrangements to institute a recruit
ing station at Toccoa, as a branch of
the Atlanta office, It has not yet
been decided who will be in charge
of the Toccoa station,
Atlanta.—Governor Slaton declined
to name a lunacy commission of
three physicians to examine into the
sanity of I, B. Hall, a white man,
under sentence of death in Tift coun
ty on January 16th, for the murder of
Dennis W. Hall,
Macon.—C. R. Pendleton, one of
the best known editors in Dixie, who
has been at the head of the Macon
Telegraph for nearly twenty years,
and an editor in Georgia for nearly
half a century, is seriously ill at his
home here, from a nervous break
down. He has not been at hig desk
for three weeks.
Lyerly.—The six-year-old son of
Mr, and Mrs. John Clark of Dirttown
Valley, in the eastern part of the
county, was shot and instantly killed
by his eight-year-old brother. The
boys were playing with toy pistols
and the elder boy, not satisfled with
the toy, went to the mantel and se
cured a real gun and playfully point
ed the deadly weapon at his younger
brother and pulled the trigger. The
ball penetrated his eye and went
through his head, death being almost
instantaneous,
Clarkesville.—~Sheriff Paul F,
Qrant, for seven years at different
times Habersham county’s sheriff
and the former holder of other of
fices of trust in this county, is dead
as the result of a three weeks' ill
ness of typhoid-pneumonia and - com
plications, He was a man well
thought of hy all classes and was a
power in a political fight because of
his general popularity.
Milledgeville—~—Figures have been
compiled in detail showing the big
gest Christmas dinner enjoyed in
Georgia. 1t was that of state sanita
rium, where approximately 4,000 in
mates and attendants sat down at
one time to a festive table, The
enormous task of sgecuring the sup
plies devolves mainly on Mr. L. J.
Lamar, steward, who has gerved in
that capacity for over thirty years,
Just 137 turkeys were used, 502
chickens, 40 ducks, with a total
weight, dressed for table, of 3,042
pounds. In addition to this 70 boxes
of oranges, 65 barrels of apples, 1,000
pounds of dates, 600 cocoanuts, 1,400
pounds of raisins, 1,400 pounds of
nuts, 1,500 pounds of candy and 600
pounds of onions,
Atlanta.—Good roads occupied a
yery important position in the dis
cugsion before the sgocial and eco
nomic section of,the American Asso
ciation for the Advancement of Sci
ence, and as pointed out by Stanley
E. Bates, engineepr of highway publi
cations of the National Highways ag
gociation, the cause of good roads
has hecome to be a national concern
and indications point to the early es
tablishment of a national highway
commission. “The cause of good
roads in this country has come to be
a national concern,” said Mr. Bates.
“Ag a result of the great awakening
to the need of improved roads, indi
cations point clearly to the early es
tablishment of a national highway
commission, just as they did twenty
five years ago to state highway com
missions. It is beyond question that
in the very near future our national
government will undertake the con
struction of a system of national
highways throughout the country.
Dalton.—On October 18, 1902, and
again on Otober 8, 1909, earthqudke
shocks were distinctly felt through
out the northwestern part of Georgia
and the southeastern part of Tennes
gee, which were reported to the geo
logical survey at Baltimore, since
which time the cause of the shocks
has been sought, The report of the
investigators of the phenomena indi
cates that underneath the quiet val
ley, in which Dalton is built, exist
gubterranean lakes and caverns, and
that on the eastern slope of Rocky
Face mountain a fault trends north
and south, dipping to the east, and
that the disturbances were likely due
to a slip in this fault. At the time
the shocks occurred the rumbling
noise which accompanied them seem
ed to come from the mountains just
west of Dalton and the sensations of
the persons on the ground was as if
they were standing on a carpet and
the corners were sharply jerked.
The disturbances created much ex
citement at the times mentioned,
“Pape’s Diapepsin” fixes slok,
sour, gassy stomachs In
five minutes.
Time it! In five minutes all stomach
distress will go. No indigestion, hearts
burn, sourness or belching of gas, acid,
or eructations of undigested food, ne¢
~dizziness, bloating, or foul breath.
~ Pape’s Diapepsin is noted for {ts
‘speed in regulating upset stomachs.
It is the surest, quickest and most cer
tain indigestion remedy in the whole
~world, and besides it {s harmless.
~ Please for your sake, get a large
fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin
from any store and put your stomach
right. Don't keep on being miserable
—llife 18 too short—you are not here
long, so make your stay agreeablée.
BEat what you like and digest it; en
joy it, without dread of rebellion in
‘ the stomach,
Pape's Diapepsin belongs in your
home anyway. Should one of the fam
ily eat something which don't agree
with them, or in case of an attack of
indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or
stomach derangement at daytime or
during the night, it is handy to glve
the quickest rellef known. Adv.
Nelghbors,
Two little girls who were near
neighbors i school, the public school,
met one day last week in a large of
fice building. The mother of one of
the little girls is a famous editor, and
she {8 telling the etory to her friends.
“What are you doing down here?”
firgt little girl
| “I have come to bring my mamma
her lunch,” second little girl,
“My mamma works down here, too,” .
first little girl
“Oh, does she? What floor does
your mamma serub?”
I 8 EPILEPSY CONQUERED?
New Jersey Physiclan Said to Have
Many Cures to His Credit.
Red Bank, N, J. (Special) . —Advices
from every direction fully confirm
previous reports that the remarkable
treatment for epilepsy being admin
istered by Dr. Perkins of this city, 18
achlieving wonderful results. Old and
stubborn cases have been greatly
benefitted and many patients claim to
have been entirely cured.
Persons suffering from epilepsy
should write at once to Dr. H. W.
Perkins, Branch 49, Red Bank, N, J.
for a supply of the remedy which 18
being distributed gratuitously.—Adv.
Works Both Ways.
“Why 18 it that the man with the
squeaky shoes always comes in late?”
“I don’t know. Why is it that the
man who comes in late always wears
squeaky shoeg?”—Puck.
Many School Children Are Sickly.
Children who are delicate, feverish and cross
will get immediate relief from Mother Gray’s
Bweet Powders for Children. They cleanse the
stomach, act on the liver, and are recommended
for complaining children. A pleasant remedy
for worms. Used by Mothers for 24 years., At
all Druggists, 25¢, Sample FREE, Address,
A. B. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Adv,
' Old One.
‘ “Johnny, why did Washington cross
| the Delaware?”
I “Aw, why did de chicken cross de
street ?”
! Stop that cough, the source of Pneumonia
‘ etc. Prompt use of Dean’s qutholateii
Cough Drops gives relief—bc¢ at Druggists.
It is more diplomatic to sit on the
fence and let the other fellow have the
" honor of telling the whole truth.
| Putnam Fadeless Dyes color in cold
Iwater. Ady.
Most of the public benefactors you
read about are making money.
BTR LT B T B TAY& AT R RAM I ST ST A WSS SRS A
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