Newspaper Page Text
2
Hunt for Dansey Boy
Changes to Search
for Slayer of Boy
HAMMONTON, N. J.. ' v. 22. '
-The search for Billy Dansey, v two-1
and-a-half-year-old “perfect baby,” I
who disappeared from his horn here |
October 8, was changed todaj to a j
hunt for his slayer. The boy’s naked I
skeleton was found by a hunter late i
yesterday In a swamp miles I
south of the home of his father, Her-1
cules Dansey. His clothes were scat-;
tered about the vicinity and officials [
expressed the belief he had been the ,
victim of a degenerate.
George Eckhart, attracted by the
baying of his dog, pushed his way
into a dense thicket and there found
Bede 25-lb «9.65» 30 lb. $10.95 . 35 lb. $11.95; 40-lb.
012.95 tWO 3-lb. oillow.ssl.ls All new.eathers best
ticking We bnveSl,ooo cash deposit in bank to guar- <
antae satisfaction o» money back. Mail order today '
or write for catalog which also contains bargains in
’bigs Curtains Counterpanes Blankets. Comforts etc. I
SAHITARY BEDDING CO..
Dept. 105. Charlotte. N. C. i
Write this minute for price-slashing catalog
• FEATHER FACTS and BEDDING BARGAINS," sent
FREE Every rut erammed with DIRECT FACTORY
OFFERS ondereclllng e’l middlemen. We sell C. O. D.
and atee ironclad MONKYB ACK GUARANTEE backed
by font banks. BEFORE you write Elsewhere, SEND
FOR THIS PURITY BOOK. q l9 OT.B. C.
WWH KOMNC COMPANY. K«amKkLTs&
FEATHER BED BARGAINS
Only $19.50 for'outfic
consisting of one High
G,adc 40 pojn ' l Ne,t
* Feather hen. pan ft-ib.
Now Feather Pillows,
one P** * u,i ® lr ® Doti
MH Bjl))}/// Btehkets and one tut! ei.-.o
J ' '' J Bed Spread, rejrul&r vaico
• for outfit $33 50
new clear, asnltarv Feathers encaeed In the beet S-ounce
tether-proof A U A Grains, direct from ©nr wnttwy fac
iO*ytoyou. ■"oubuy from oo the boat, cheapest and \»itb a
moaav-back g jixrantee of satiafaction. Mali money order cow
wrjito for iilnHtratadeircttiar
Crroiisa Bedding Co., Dept. 105 C-esadjoro, N. C.
ORDER A HYGIENIC BED
i;~ut this ail. Don’t wait; Absolutely
ns» risk- IVe hate $500.00 deposited with
geerrfties Savings Bank, charlotte, N. <'.,
to GUARANTEE satisfaction or
MONEY BACK. New feathers, best ticking.
Bed 25 U.S . $1(1.20; 30 !bs., $11.20; 35 lbs.,
$12.-13. PILLOWS. pair, 5-ib., $1.80; ti-’b.,
k 2.69. ORDER TODAY, or request catalog.
lIYGi'HMC LEU CO., Vent. —.
C A G.U i'fil. N. C.
JKBBOC Hull y° ur P eas
■^*3 without a hitch.
S* ■ Steel spikes, I
j %/jF threaded and
screwed info a
IX colid iron cylinder
cannot come out.
The seed is clean-
J ed and delivered
with minimum breakage.- Threshes any
kiml of peas, including velvet beans. Eith
er belt or band power. Shipment madeday (
j order received. Additional information up-
on request. Price 54t.00f.0-I>. Atlanta,
Wcddraft Mtrhiaery IHaadactoriiig Co.
Dept. f. Atlanta, Ca.
1 BMB RaJHT ® J( ft 1B ■ J|.
Jk JEST. ® H jf ®
%£>sß S F^^JbT ' . 'tii H $ ‘received ymir “Mbre |||l||l| ■'■
I? EAD the letters shown on this page and let them p E ®g»” T °* ic *»* found a pggj
WF-KM- i yjlM- tell you how Reefer’s “More Eggs” Tonic mhkes layers out of loafers, || WyaSmTs
doubles the egs yield—yes, trebles the egg yield, and sometimes quadruples m an d now lem itting SO per
?m the egg yield. How it makes champion layers out of the average backyard, || day.—Myrtle Ice, Boston, |£||||
WiWSM JU barn-yard hens-and'puts lots of money in your pocket. I, have picked the || Ky.
your next door neighbor among them. Read, let them teU their own story.
’ "’ <- ; rr
This winter eggs will probably go to SI.OO a The one thing necessary to assure a big egg
W//(f dozen. Last winter I predicted that eggs would go to sl.lO a yield is the feeding of Reefer’s “MORE EGGS” to your hens.
dozen and in New York and Philadelphia they went to $1.25 a You will be amazed and delighted with results.
5 dozen. The demand for eggs is greater today than it was a year This famous tonic has already been tried, test-
ago this titne P roven by.market quotations, and unless egg e< j an< j proven by 400,000 chicken raisers. It has
WK tesdng is spaded W, there woaft be eggs to be had anywhere for stoo<| tt f d -j acknO wtedged the O
l .’’ ,m L i fc '4f//oHihnV\WMOi. less than SI.OO a dozen. This means big profits for poultry . _ £ i _ j
;y" raisers. Now is the time to get all the eggs you can to sell at best and most successful egg producer on the mar-
hißhPriCM ' ket today. , g
■ Money Back I
Let the LETTERS of
400,000Osers
Convince Ton—READ!
“.Getting Mor* Eggs Than Ever
in My Life.”
I'eftr Mr. Reefe,-; f have been usina
y.u.e Egg Toni", amt it certainly has
siren good satisfaction. I am getting
imt <■ eggs than I have ever gotten in
mv life. -Mrs. B. i*. Goforth, Wilkins
s.
’•Results Are Fine.”
-eceived the package of More Egg
Ten—. ami the results are fine. 1 am
not failing to sneak a good word for tiie
More Egg Remedy.—Mrs. Bessie Judson.
Oianscbtirg, S. C.
“More Eggs” O. K.
I I Milk yo>:r Moro Egg Tonic is O. K.
I wasn't getting an egg until I com
iiunccd to give my hens More Egg
Togi?.—Martha Smith. Blountsville, Ala.
“More Eggs” Means Money.
i Your Mme Egg Tonic means money to
|m?. H. Relmforil. Niehblsou, Ga.
Did Hens So Much Good.
After using $1.(10 pkg. of your Moro
Egg Tonic, I find it did my liens s .
much good 1 want to try and be .vovr
agent here for your goods.—Mrs. F. Bre
land, Rincon, Ga.
‘‘More Than Pleased.”
I am pleased to state that Hie More
tigg Tonic which I bought from yon las;
Manter has proven very satisfactory, ami
Jc. , then pleased with results ob-
the skeleton, its bones stripped by
! birds and animals. The child’s sweat
j en and cap lay about 50 feet away.
! Between them and the skeleton was
I his rompers.
! It was obviously impossible for the
1 bOy to have wandered this far from
I his home alone, as the route h_ must
i have followed, crossed several high
I fences. The eflnite trail established
i by coupty detectives, through testi
i mony of several neighbors who said
; they saw the boy in company with
| two strangers, also led to this vi
cinity.
Searching parties organized a few
! minutes after the boy disappeared,
i worked straight eastward instead df
I southward of the thicket where the
' skeleton was discovered. Countless
I searches extending as far west as
Texas and the boy was reported as
having been seen almost daily in va
rious parts of the east. Cranks seized
the opportunity to write anonymous
letters, purporting to give informa
tion as to the boy’s abduction.
Mrs. Dansey, who suffered a nerv
ous breakdown when the boy disap
peared, was said to be in a serious
! condition today.
I COMPROMISE SEEN
ON PEACE TREATY
BY SENATOR SMITH
(Continued From Fage 1)
ator Hitchcock moved that the treaty
be referred back to the committee of
the whole, with directions to report
the same favorablj’ with reservations
practically covering these five propo
sitions. I voted for .this motion, and
all the Democrats who had been In
sisting' upon ratification without
reservations, voted for it.
Unreserved Ratification Impossible
“A resolution of ratification with
out reservations received only thirty
eight votes, when it required sixty
votes for ratification. A number of
Democrats voted against ratification
without reservations, or voted for
some of the reservations known aS
the Lodge reservations. Among them
were Senators Trammell, of Florida.
Thomas, of Colorado, Owens, of Okla
homa, Walsh, of Massachusetts.
Pomerene. of Ohio; Shields, of Ten
nessee; Gore, of Oklahoma; Myers, of
Montana; Chamberlin, of Oregon, and
even Senator Hitchcock voted for one
of the reservations.
‘‘lt is. therefore, apparent that
those who have opposed all reserva
tions are ready to accept the majority
of the Lodge reservations. I voted
for seven of the Lodge reservations,
' and against eight of them. We de
feated the two most objectioinable
nervations, and yet the remaining
1 odge reservations received only
f .Tty-two votes when they required
Ixty.
“There are a number of objectlon
ble features still in the Lodge res
rvations. I am sure we can obtain
it withdrawal. of the introductory
I resolution, which requires three of
our principal allies to agree to the
reservations before the treaty be
comes effective. We can obtain con
cessions modifying the Shantung and
Monroe doctrine reservations. All
‘hat is needed Is for the extremists
on each side, who really desire the
treaty ratified, to understand that the
treaty can not be ratified without
concessions.
“When newspapers stoji writing
about ratifying the treaty without
reservations, and stop insisting that
the Lodge reservations must be
adopted without change, • then we
can come together without passion
ai»d without pride. An agreement then
can cr silv be reached."
Gets Eggs When Neighbors
' Have None.
I bought one package of your More
Egg Tonic last winter, and was more
than pleased with it. I sold eggs all
The time while my neighbors were not
getting an egg.—W. T. Wanipee, Gads
den, Ala,, Boy IST.
More Eggs Than Ever Before
I am getting more eggs than I ever
cot before. I appreciate the More Egg
Tonic. — Mrs. H. E. Steiner, Bon Seconr,
Alabama.
Wasn't Getting an Egg—
Then 115!
i do not want, to ever be out of Keef
er's Egg Tonic; it is flue. Before
using I wasn’t getting an egg. and id
seven weeks that I have been using I
have gathered 115. —Lizzie E. Lewis,
Anne Maine, Aia.
One Package Does Wonders.
I have used cue package* of your More
Eggs, ami if as done wonders for my
liens. -Mrs. Neta Tom Jerry. Talladega,
Alabiana. .
Got 14 Eggs Instead of 7.
Inclosed please find sl, for which sen.!
me 1 package of More Egg Tonic. I
have used it with perfect success. Last
January a year ago I only would get 7
eggs a day. After I gave the tonic 1
got from 10 to 14 eggs daily? J am de-
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. ATLANTA, GA TUESDAY’. N'OVE.MBKR 25, t9ts>
HOT BODIES
I OF MEfflY-MAKERS I
TIKEMHES
VILLE PLATTE. La.—Fifty per- I
, sons are believed to have perished I
i in a fire here Saturday night, Ynost •
of thbm women and children, when
■ a building in which a dance was
; being held on the second floor
■ ' caught fire and a frantic stricken
1 crowd fought its way over the weak
er. Nineteen are known to be dead !
and the search for bodies continues. !
. The number of injured is mere ’
! guesswork as many of the people at '
, ' the dance were from the country. j
A narrow stairway leading from ;
t the dance hall became a deathtrap
I When it collapsed before half of the
i crowd hac fought their way down it
; —the ojily exit. Several of those
I who were cut off from escape by
the stairway perished when the
■ burning building collapsed, although
I some were rescued.
' i Explosion of an oil heater in Mar-
• i tin's dry goods store, on the first
: floor of the Deville building, started
1 the fire. The dancers, many of whom
' had come from the rural districts of
1 Evangeline Parish, were upstairs in
the building, but did not heed the
alarm until the dance floor- was in
danger. Ville Platte is about sixty
miles west of Baton Rouge and on
• the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific
■ railroad.
From - the Martin store, which was
in a far part of the building from
1 the dance hall, the flames ’spread
rapidly to a motion picture theater
1 a confectionery store and a restau
-1 rant.
’ When the crowd at the dance real
ized the danger, a mad rush for safe
’ ty jammed the stairway, and while
1 men, women and children screamed
, .and fought the stairway crumpled
, deneath many and hurled several vic
tims into the fire.
The majority 6Y the bodies had
•! not bepn removed from the burning
' j ruins of the building tonight and it
I is believed that most of these are of
girls and boys.
Judge Welborne Moore
Is Instantly Killed When
Automobile Hits Wagon
MACON, Ga.—Judge Welborne
1 Moore, former judge of the city
. court of Sparta, was instantly killed
' Thursday when his automobile turn
ed turtle about one' mile east of
Haddock, Ga. It is understood that
[ the car struck a wagon driven by a
[ negro, crashing into the ditch by the
. roadside.
. Miss Ocona Bradley, a young wom
> an claiming Macon as her home, was
in the car with Judge Moore at the
time of the accident, but escaped in
jury, She returned to Macon in an'
; other automobile and was placed in
a hospital after she ha‘d become hys
; terical and threatened to commit
; suicide.
i Judge Moore was forty-eight years
i old and had be i judge of the Sparta
city court for twelve years.
Customers Are Using Their
Fourth and Fifth Packages.
More Eggs is a sure, repeater, as 1
have some customers who are using their
fourth and fifth packages, and will not
be without it in their house.—o. J. Gar
rison, Birmingham, Ala.
Does Not Want to Be With
out It.
I have been using More Egg Tonic all
year and do not want to be without it.
for it has meant lots to me. —Mrs. Laura
Mullins, Elkwood, Ala
More Eggs Than Ever Before
I can Say truthfully that ’I have re
ceived more eggs since I began using •
your More Egg Tonic than i ever did
before. —Mrs. M. S. Finley. Greenville,
South Carolina.
Phenomenal Success With
“More Eggs.”
My success in using More Egg Tolib
is phenomenal and has come under the
notice of my neighbors, and I thiiil;.
rheretore, that I can dispose of ipfito a
little bit of your remedies without nr:- :>
trouble now.—Mrs. L. Lowry, ivrin.y’mi.
A labatna.
Greatest Remedy Have Ever
Used.
I have tried one p;icl.;i"e of yet r Mote
Egg Tonic, and I found it to bo tlm
greatest remedy that 1 have eve- .1
WETS TO ATTACK
J)RY AMENDMENT |
IN COURT BATTLE!
i - i
, WASHINGTON, Nov. 22. The.
i eighteenth amendment to the consti
i tution, establishing permanent prohi-,
; bition, will be attacked by the wets,
! it was learned 1 today from ttirneys
j participating in the supreme court
j arguments over the validity of war
time prohibition.
Constitutional prohibition "will be
fot-ght to the last ditch." it was
stated.
Already plans are being made tq
I attack the amendment about the time
! it becomes effective January 16.
i The first move probably will be
‘ mkde by the state of Rhode Island,
I which will ask the supreme co : for
j immunity from enforcement of the
j amendment on the ground that the
i state legislature has never ratified
i it. To fight the case the legislature
; has authorized the expenditure of
) $5,300, according to attorneys for the
I state who are here to g< pointers
i from the arguments on war-ti le p.j-
I hibltion. The suit, being that of a
state against the United States, will
be instituted in the supreme court,
thus assuring expedition.
Rhode Island, the state a neyg
here said, not only will -rive to re
main wet itself, but will seek to
knock out the amendment on the
grounds that it is a usurpation of
state police powers by the federal
government. It is realized that the
states can delegate these powers t >
the federal government, but at this
point the method of raticatlon • ill be
attacked. The position will be liken
that all acts of legislatures ar sub
ject to review by the people if de
manded and the powers c. n not be
handed over to the federal govern
ment until the people approve e
action of the legislature.
Soldiers Did Not Die
In Vain in Centralia,
Declares Judge Sibley
ROME, Ga. Speaking before
l the Rotary club • here Samuel
H. Sibley, the new judge of
federal court, declared that the three
American soldiers slain by the I. W.
W, in Washington, had accomplished
as much for their country hat*
the thousands killed in France. lie
said: “Their deaths had made it im
possible for any decent, right-think
ing American to ally himself with
the crusade to establish government
by direct action.*
Judge Sibley spoke in a serious
vein, directing the attention of his
hearers to two great problems of the
day, which he said were pressing for
solution and must be met by every
American. He said; “One of these
problems is that of property rights
and the other is that of the form of
government. There is a growing
sentiment” that after a certain point
has been reached, property should
not belong to the Individual, or £e
for the benefit of the individual, but
for the ppbllc. Tills idea mugt not
be carried to extremes, but it may
not be far wrong.
The earliest bicvole was introduced
in Paris in 1868, called a velocipede
or popularly “a boneshaker.’
Read the facsimile shown here of the
guarantee of a million dollar bank that “More Eggs” will produce results.
This million dollar bank guarantees to refund your money if you are not satisfied. You run,
no risk. More egg profits than you ever had, or it costs you nothing. So don’t delay. Every day
you wait you are losing money. Act NOW!
“Can’t Get Along Without it.” 1 neetl if badly tn help them through, si Gets Eggs When Neighbors
i ' l can Ret lots of eggs for Christmas. /w
A oil will find inclosed .s■> for your h. “* ” b order—Mrs F AV. Oet A one.
More Kftg Tonic. I have used your More Jones Burnsville Xia 1 siave keen using More Egg Tonic with
Egg Tonic almost, a year with good re- ’ ’ ’ my hen*, and an a consequence I have
suits. Can't get along without it—Mrs. Vouchee for Them ” heen R pttin S e ßgs when my other tielgh-
S. JI. carter, Howell, Gn. Aiaoania t oucnes 101 tut in. bors bave not. j ara accepting offer
. , , Having used your preparations for sev- No. 7 for 15 packages of More Eggs, for
Recommends IO Her .ACig llmrs. oral seasons, I can vouch for their work. which lam sending $5 and your check
I like your remedies so much I recam- 1 am now starting my incubators and for $5, which I am going Io sell my
mnd them to my neighbors. My hens will need a supply of Remedies.—Yours neighbors.—Mrs. 11. B. Wallace, Marion,
are moulting nml I am out of More Eggs. very truly, George J. Milsan, Evans. Ala. Alabama.
SEND COUPON!
Every day counts! Start your hens making money for you right away. Send the coupon to
day for a good size package of “More Eggs” Tonic, enough for a full season’s supply: A million
dollar bank will refund your inin y instantly if you are r'" satisfied. Just mail coupon with a dollar
bill today. Profit by the experan.: <>: a man who has hints; f de a fortune out of the poultry business
:ind is helping others do the su '<■. Sana for this g-uaran. cs'g and profit maker STOW.
I It.member —Reefer’s “More Ears’ Tonic is guaranteed by .* million dollar han't and must be satisfac
tory in everj way or on get < r lack. You are in- r.'T .nd only judge. Send at once.
fLef Poultry 1438 Reefer. JHdf.
Expert Kansas City, Mo.
ILSIMLL
iMDOFLEffIE
raiETfflTEh
! WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.—1 n the j I
absence of any official word from I <
the state department on the outcome I 1
of the treaty fight, diplomatic rep-'
resentatives of the entente and asso- j ,
; dated powers here have been com-J
municatlng to their governments
their own accounts of what happened
and the prospects for the future.
The department takes the ground ,
that technically the treaty is still
alive, not having been rejected in
Hie senate, and that therefore it still
subject to revival and further ac
ion.
No doubt is entertained by the va-i
■ ious entente embassies that without;
iwaiting' the further action by the i
United States, the four principal
powers which already have ratified it
.: and aJso Germany, will call in the
I several smaller states which also
; have given their ratifications, and
j will proceed to organize the League
’ of Nations immediately upon the
publication of the proces verbale,
. now set for amout December 1.
First Step by Wilson
J Yet, the first step in that direc*
11 tion, it is pointed out, must be made
, by President Wilson, who will find
' hinisalf in the postion of being ob-
I ligated to call the initial meeting of
, the league, although he may not par
’ ticipate in its deliberations. As the
i treaty remains unratifled by America
,! there is rio exact legal obligation
, i upon President Widson to convene
the league, but the other powers
’; have ratified the treaty with a prp
, vision included requiring the first
meeting to be called by the president
’ of the United States, and it is
thought here that he will perform
that function as a matter of inter
national courtesy, if not of obliga
tion.
In Japanese circles it is consid
ered the door is still held open to
China to recover Shantung and that
although riot one of the signatories
of the Versailles treaty. China’s first
step is to indicate to Japan her wil
lingness to begin negotiations.
Week cf Waiting
The peace treaty controversy ap
parently entered tonight upon a week
j of waiting while sentiment crystal- I
, lizes for a compromise or for a fin- j
ish fight in the 1920 political cam- |
‘ palgn.
Lever Act Applicable
To Big Coal Strike,
Says Author of Bill
‘ j MACON. Ga. —Asbury F. Lever. ;
of South Carolina, member ot!
1 the farm loan board and formei ,
' chairman of the house agriculture
committee, in Macon to address the
farmers’ 1 meeting, stated that the
Lever food control act. of which he!
was the author, was intended to ap- '
ply tn just such emergencies as the
: coal strike. This statement was
made in reply to claims set up by'
the miners' representatives at . the ;
recent hearing in Indianapolis on the '
“All claims' of the miners that :
> the Lever act. was not invaded to.
I government’s injunction.
MEXICO SENDS
‘DOPE’ HERE FOR
2,000,000 FIENDS
WASHINGTON* D. -Two mil- ,
lion men and women of the United |
States are “dope fiends.” i
They are paying $10,00P,000 a day |
for ,ine, heroin, morphine, opium, |
codeine and the hundred and one Oth- ;
er habit-forming n- cotics. t . ■ I
These are estimates given by fed- I
eral officers of the southern Califor
nia district, based upon y- of ex
perience in dealing with these unfor
tunate victims, in a region where
the drug smuggler and drug peddler
are unusually active because of the
proximity of Mexico.
And today Uncle Sam has under
way a. nation-wide campaign not
only to save drug addicts fr.m them
selves. restore them to normal ,a. 1
make them again fully useful mem
bers of society, but as a means of
reducing crime in which drugs re a
big factor.
This battle is being w.jed under
the direction of Daniel ■C. Roper,
commissioner of interna] revenue, ‘
Washington.
He has instructed every one of
the 65 internal revenue electors
over the country to work with local
agencies in establishing clinics where
addicts may be treated. h —sat
ment will cost them only the price
of the drug, a nominal figure.
Co-operating with government offi
cials are chambers of commerce,
county medical . societies, city and
state boards of health, women’s clubs
and various other remedial agencies.
Passage of the Harrison anti-nar
cotic law about five years ago was
the first step the federal government
took to cure the drug user.
Prior to that time “hop” was easy
to get, its peddlers were legion, a d
users were multiplying at an amaz
ingly rapid rate. The tenderlSin
sections of every big city e filled
with the pasty-faced “hop-heads.”
Drugs and drug derivative were
cheap and plentiful.
But the Harrison act, with its se
vere penalties, put the price up. And
it has been going up ever since un
til today the average prlc. from
coast to coast is in the no ' '-boyhood
of $4 to $5 a grain.
Use of narcotics has been steadi
ly increasing until today the de
| mand is unprecedented, and daring
i smugglers are reaping fortunes- —un*
i til they are arrested and put behind
i the bars.
| In Los Angeles recently a man giv
! ing the name of Albert Woelk t. Id in
: the federal court of a ring of smug
; glers who operated in southern Cali
| fornia, smuggling narcotics across
i the Mexican border.
He stated that opium and its deriv
atives could be had at Ensenada and
i other Mexican port cities for sl6 an
: ounce. This, in turn, was smuggled
: into Los Angeles and other cities and
! sold to retailers for SIOO an ounce
and they, in turn, sold it to addicts
for from S2OO to S3OO an ounce.
Raspberries in November •
' PERTH A—BOY. N. J. —Strawber-
:ias in November are really nothing
to brag about, according to Williaih
! C. Fugel, a farmer of'Mejucheu, but
’ fresh raspberries at this time of year
! are indeed a rarity. Nevertheless, he
‘picked a pint of raspberries in his
garden the other day, he said.
$200,000,000 DUE
FROM INCOME TAX !
DODGERS IN U. S.'
J
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22. —Income ;
tax dodgers will be forced to disgorge j
$260,000,000 within the next eight :
months under plans being rushed to |
completion today by federal officials, :
This stream of delinquent dollars
will result from the drive against
fraud and irregularities initiated by
Daniel Roper, internal revenue com
mission, he expects.
The drive is just getting under |
way. The sum treasury department
officials hope to collect in hitherto
unlisted taxable property may reach
$1,000,000,000 or one-fifth of the total
amount to be collected by the gov- I
ernment this fiscal year in the reg- j
ular way.
Although internal revenue bureau 1
agents have made no official an- >
nouncement of the exact amount col- ;
lected to date, a formal statement j
is expeetd within a fw days.
Bureau officials refer to tlie col- i
lections as the result of “special:
examinations.” They do not use the ■
phrase “tax dodgers.” This. they ;
: explain, does not fit the case ex-I
: acftly. Many taxpayers make mis- •
-takes in their returns, without intent
to defraud, the government. Special •
examinations of tax returns bring :
these “unconscious irregularities” to
light. And readjustments -are made
“gladly.” ,
But many/of the so-called “honest
; irregularities” are mixed in with de
j liberate attempts at fraud. All are
uncovered by the same force of
•‘special examiners."
The special examination force now
numbers hundreds. It includes a
small army of examiners at work
RU H H cctthese j
111
-U are sure of correct grading hieheetwicee and n square deal every , time. WE IB
MISSION. • Read these EXTRA HIGH PRICES we are paying if you ship your furs aS
shipping tag-cut it out—paste on heavy cardboard-and attach it to your eblpmont, F»
Georgia, North and South Carolina Furs $
....... . ..... ■ . .■■■—.*.
______ Unprimo or
tra Large I Large Medium Small Otherwise LJ
' Inferior : <1
*0 Park or Hee s».lso’to .5Z.25 i$7.W to $6.00 $5.50,t0 $4.30 $4.25 to $8.25 $4.23 to $ .00 $4
uj Bacoooi I
m Ordinary 7.25 to 6.00 6.00 to 5.01) 4,65 to 3.65 3.25 to 2.50 3.50 to .40 *5
Lark 12.e0 - t<~u>.oo y. 50 to 8.25 7.25 to 0.25 5.00 to 4.00 5',50 to .40
Stf Mink m
Ud Ordinary 9.00 to 7.50 7.00 to 0.00 5.75 to 4.75 4,00 to 3,00 4,50 to, .30 ~3
M Oposeum 2.50 t<> 2.00 1.40 to 1.55 1.30 to 1.03 .SO to .60 .00 to .05
Muskrat 4.00 to 3.40 8.10 to 2.75 2.30 to 2.00 1.00 to 1.40 I,Oil to .10 jS
jG ls yoa IiYO in .ny otbei-' acetion, ship us your furo and we Will pay you bigbeet martet prices. ~ M
FROM—. : g
I POSY OFFICE » H
aPgaSfi sfeilal jfsTlJKaaMi hSmbR
, jEiiasWiWi. . mUL
Resource* over $1.000,000.00
J TO ffHOM IT MAY COKOEBI:
I This 1» to certify that Mr. E. J. F.aafer
| has deposited in thia Bank Ten
r Dollar*. Out of thie special tkie .
| Bank is authorised and doos horoty guar-
ft antes to return to any of Mr. Foefor's
custoners the total amount of their pur* Ik
I chases from him, if the purchased !
are not entirely oatlefactory in every h
way or if Mr. Feeler fails to do as he y
i »«««»•• g’
-Very truly joure, f
i Mr
SE. J. Reefer, Poultry Expert, 1438 Reefer Bldg.. Kansas City, Mo.
tend mo one full-sized package of “More Eggs." Send thia with an
absolute Bank Guarantee that you refund my money if thia tonic is not
la satisfactory to "me in ovary way.
I enclose sl.'J. (A dollar bill, P. 0. money order or your private check—
as you please.)
Name •• •• ** >• ** Wyht *•
W w W •* «.
U. S. CONTROL OF !
MONEY AND RAILS
FARMERS’ PLAN
CHICAGO, Nov. 22. —Government
: control of finance, the railroads, tha
i packing industry and active partici
: pation in polities were the principal
i points in a co-operative program for
farmers and workers as adopted to
day at the final session of the con
ference of representatives of farm
and labor chiefly sponsored by the
farmers’ national council. A com
mittee was appointed to present the
i program to Sfee American Federa
tion of Labor and railway
hoods at their conference to be held
in Washington December 15.
Resolutions declaring the. confer
! ence would support “the best nitm
I for the office” regardless of l>atfty‘
: and non-partisan position in poll-;
i tics, and calling for a two-year ex-,
■ tension of federal control of the’
! railroads to provide for "a fair u-nd'
: American *plan” of ultimate solution
; of the problem, were adopted.
D’Annunzio Supporter
Is Elected at Fiume
FIUME. Lieutenant Comman-'
: der Luigi Rizzo has been elected to
! represent Fiume in the Italian cham
j ber of deputies, receiving 7,000 votes.
Commander Rizfeo, who- is well
I known for his daring exploit during
the war, which resulted in the sink
ing of two Austrian battleships off
the Dalmatian coast/ is one of the
supporters of Gabriele <l’Annunzio. '•
here. Other experts' are distributed
throughout internal bureau offices
over the country.
The work, as now organized, costs
between $6,000,000 and $7,000,000- a
year, it is understood.