Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, December 16, 1919, Page 3, Image 3

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    > Insurance Man at
Savannah Kills His
Wife and Himself
SAVANNAH, Ga„ Dec. 13.—H. B.
Webb, an insurance solicitor em
ployed by the Insurance Company of
West Virginia, early tonight shot
and killed his wife and then killed
himself, in front of 114 President
street. East, where Mrs. Webb lived.
She and her husband had been sep
x arated. Tonight Webb took his po
sition in front of the house and
waited for Jier to come home. With
little warning, he fired at her, using
the contents of his revolver, except
one bullet. He then turned the
weapon on himself, snooting himself
under the chin. He and the woman
were both dead whgn they were car
ried into the Marine hospital, a half
block away. Mrs. Webb formerly
was Miss Nita Jones, of Statesboro.
They had been here but a short time.
good hem
vy 11 ih iy 1
it: i i li i H
ncv Dripii
tßqi ntftbn
Vigorous Health Only as Far
Away as the Use of Pep
to-Mangan
Creates Rich, Red Blood
Pepto-Mangan Obtainable in
• Liquid or Tablets—lnsist
on ‘"Gude’s,” the
Genuine
'There is really no reason why men
oi; women with thin, watery blood
and consequent poor health should
remain in that unfortunate condi
tion. Thin, nervous, run-down, tired
people never get much happiness out
cf life.
Men and women with the bloom
of health in their cheeks, a cheerful,
sunny disposition and an attractive
personality are the folks who get
most of life’s enjoyment, pleasure
and success.
Gude's Pepto-Mangan furnishes
thin, watery blood with the neces
sary nourishment to enrich it, en
abling it to supply energy, vitality,
and strength- to every part of the
body. *
Physicians recommend Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan to patients suffering
from anemia because its beneficial
and lasting qualities are well known
to the medical profession.
Gude’s Pepto-Mangan is obtainable
in either liquid er tablet form. Both
terms contain exactly the same
strength and medicinal properties.
When you buy Pepto-Mangan of
your druggist, be sure toe name
“Gude’s” is on the package. With
out “Gude’s” it is not Pepto-Man
gan.—(Advt.)
agmaiojwfflssra
IT.IK; VLace Curtain* will be ,?f f '
i EF&EF’“ rouniurt fondling out JX'*A V.tCl <
ifiwiSEii long-famous ROSESUD &£g-Jfah
8? “ ‘ i ALVE “' 2 £,‘i • tMAIKS '
Recommended for thir- 1?>/?■•
' ■ -V- V S'-' l * burcs. tetter,
pile., ■
come, buniont. etc. Everybody knows it. everybody buys.
We also rive watchet, jewehy, books, Bibles, toys, etc. rot (
salve. Ask today for eight boxes on credit; we trust
you until sold. Bia premium catalogue sent free with salve.
ROSEBUD PERFUME CO Box 253 Woodsboro. Ml
FEATHER BED BARGAINS
only sl9 .50 for outfit '
Ss. consisting of one High 1 1
Grade 40 pound New j s
j)l' /I)/),)/MfJsC Feather Bed. pair 6-lb. f
New Feather Pillows,
h one P 3lr u ‘* ®* z ® Bed | ’
vO)U))))))// *// Blankets and one full size I
BedSprcad. regular value
for outfit $33 50
Ail new clean, sanitary Feathers enecaed In the best 8-ounce
feather-proof A C A ticking, direct from our sanitary fac
tory to you. You buy from ns the best, cheapest and with »
money-back guarantee of satisfaction. MdII money order now
>r write for illustrated circular and order blanks. •
Carolina Bedding Co., Dept. 105 Greensboro, H. C.
ORDER ThYGIENIC BED
right from this ad. Don’t wait! Absolutely !
no risk. We have $500.00 deposited with
Securities Savings Bank, Charlotte, N. C.,
to GUARANTEE SATISFACTION OR
SIDNEY BACK. New feathers, best ticking. |
It'd 25 lbs.. $19.20; 30 lbs., 811.20: 35 lbs.,
$12.45. PILLOWS, pair, 5-lb., SI.SO; 6-lb., 1
S2.iio, ORDER TODAY, or request catalog.
HYGIENIC BED CO., Dent. —,
CHARLOTTE, N. C. I
ItOFMfiW
VE SIO.OO i
1 25-16. bed, 1 -pairslb.
pillows. I pr. bankets77
(full size), 1 counter
pane ( large size), all
for $15.95- retail j
value $25.00. Beds
2-5-lbe. $9.95; 3.1-lba.
$10.95; 35-lba. 811.95; >*<
40-lbs. $12.05. Two3-lb. I
pillowssl.7s. Newfeata- £
era, beet ticking. SI,OOO cash deposit m bank to g
guarantee satisfaction or money back. Mailorder!
today or write for new catalog.
SANITARY RECCING CO.. Dept 105 Chtrlotfe.N. C. |
I For $21,50 wo will ship you one first-slass 40-lb. S !
feather Bed, one pair 6-lb. feather Pillows, one I
pair full size Blankets, one full size Comfort, one [
full size Sheet and two Pillow Cases. All new
feathers; best ticking. Regular price of outfit j
$36.25, special sale price $21.50. Mail money order 1
today or write for new catalog and order blanks. I
Southern Feather 8 Pillow Co. • Cop!. 16 ■ .
Graensbcre, Mirth Carolina
W————■ I■ I > IWI I■■T IW TfTBI ■ll|| | 111 Jm HTI Tl .tilui ii I
FEATHER FACT-T 3PI 3 3
SAVES YOU MOST MONEY 1
!’ Write this minute for price-slashing catalog, ffla
FEATHER FACTS and BEDDING BARGAINS" H?J
' ? ‘ f r, ' e !° r thr ailkin !>- No other bedding book like BgS
il it. every page crammed with special offers under- &®
selling-ail mlrfWlemen. Why make dealers rich j§»
</ r h PURITY -r- when you can buy DIRECT
JePDIMGCO***”* FROM FACTORY and keep /T\
I 1 money in your own pockets. Lajww Qg
1 f 1 Offer to
WE GLADLY SHIP C. O. D. JI AgesU Iff
K Send for this PURITY book now. BEFORE you / I
HS write elsewhere. You can't afford to miss our bar- x* x—
w gain offers. Everything sold on MONEY-BACK F -"**• /J|
«g GUARANTEE backed by four hanks end thousands t , y,asga
9 of satisfied < nstomers. C. O. D. wrders filled. All V «_ _ 'Jr sFI
Jr shipments same day order Is received. -’’jy' 'wj
i PUOTY EEDSSNG COMPANY
Sp«ri4E3att Street Teneu
■ ” "3Z7 TUBERCULOSIS
11 was w,ien pfryst
wßSlgia clans said it was impos-
B,ble for J. M. Miller.
Ohl ° Druggist, to sur
vlvc the ravages of Tu-
F P* ’7 : beri - ulos,s - be b< -gan ex-
fk-jks*:? Hi-.-^. s ‘jr ' •5-%-V- perimenting on himself
■ f and discoxered the Hom"
/ ■'’■■'* iHS*. >■*%> }\ Treatment. known as
. ' '<> ■ . ,4 ”.7
bo Pounds 133 Pounds Lntcsi . .i»i» bercular tendency or Tu-
. berculosis, may use it
Send your name and. adch ess to under plain directions.
AD7HZ.TNE, I£4 Arced® SttildUnff, Colmubua, Ohio
Cuba May Become Monte Carlo
Os the Western Hemisphere
Is Cuba to become the Monte Car
lo of the western world? pro
hibition and the anti-gambling laws
to create a tremendous southward
exodus of thirsty and chance-loving
Americans.
In an effort to answer these ques
tions, the Rev. Dr. Guy S. Inman,
though wishing to say “no” to both,
cites the state department as au
thority for the statement that al
ready 86.000 Americans have asked
for passports to spend the winter
season on the island.
Leopold Dolz, Cuban consul gen
eral. when he learned that Dr. Ink
man was becoming alarmed at the
prospect of transportation lines to
his country becoming a sort of na
tional cocktail route for Americans,
hastened to deny that Cuba is about
to become the meca for the “lib
erty-loting" who want to regulate
their own habits.
Dr. Inman has appealed to the In
terchurch World Movement to enlist
church organizations in a campaign
to prevent'those who want to drink
and gamble finding a southern way
out.
“A definite attempt is being made
to make Cuba, particularly Havana,
the Monte Carlo of the western
world.” he said. “The winter season
in Cuba generally is ‘gay,’ but this
year efforts will be made to add new
‘attractions.’ Horse racing and other
Excess Profit Tax
Repeal Is Urged By
William B. Colver;
WASHINGTON, Dev. 14.—Repeal
of excess profits tax law was urged
today by William B. Colver, of the I
federal trade commission, as ouei
means of forcing down living costs.!
“It seems Qufte clear,” said Colver
in an interview, “that one of the
chief contributing causes to the high
cost of living is the excess profits
tax. Certainly it is both a burden;
and a temptation to business.
“In the beginning the tax, as I un
derstand it, is not a revenue device
at all. During the war when it be
came necessary to fix prices, it was
found that there was a wle range
in the cost of producing any given
commodity. One concern or a group
of concerns, it was found, could pro
duce the commodity at a price which
often left no profit at all to other
concerns or which made it impos
sible for them to operate. There
thus was a wide range be;ween high
cost operation and low cost opera
tion. So long as the theory of fixing
a single price was adhered to, '.t
was necessary to fix that price high
enough to bring into production the
needed output of high cost oper t
tion. The excess profits tax was
proposed as a means wheroy undue
profits which might accrue to low
cost operations could be brought
back into the treasury to provide
in part the money with which the
government could pay the high fixed
price.
“In the excess profits tax when
a concern has reached beyond what
is considered to be its normal in
profitableness, the surplus is par
tially taken from it by increasing
percentages. What follows’ Waste
and extravagance; or an? effort to
make as much profit with the e ccess
profits tax in operation as though
it were not in operation. That is
done by charging exeess profit tax I
charges to cost prices. It moans!
collection from all the people, v hen I
the 60 per cent excess profits tax I
rate has been reached, of a dollar, I
unnecessarily, in order that 40 per/
cent may be added to the divisible
profit.”
Microbes Run on Schedule
LONDON. —' Influenza microbes
have a regular program by which
they recur in cycles of thirty-three
weeks, according to the Medical Re
search Committee.
The next Call is expected in Jan
uary and February, it is said.
. s; ,\u.ir size am. jair us
Narse’s Comfort Shoes will arrive, POS
TAGE PREPAID. Soft leather uppers,
made on a pleas
nF—- ing lastl Cusl ’-
m ~ion inner soles,
X flexible outer
soles. and jnr-
X proof rubber heels,
fc.- H • aSKwi A shoe every worn
fl’, an will delight In
\ • ! 'fsg&M wearing. They are
\ ' a relief to tired,
\ \ / wSaEft*' 1 aching feet. VZE
GUARA N T E E
M *'that these shoes
xSjK&s Sw nre of s(> or $7
value. They Av ill
JSftpTT «’ve satisfac- ;
■Mr/- llon or yonr
money back. I
You n r e 1
ESjSSjjski ■ '’-afeti Judge: we .
F- ’tWA do not in- |
: ; SIErKSMi fluence you I
-'Op l :,ny :
I
On Arrival.
Hostage Free.
NAIL COUPOIT TODAY
THE EHOE MAILING lIOUSE
Dept. K-121.
Beach St., Boston, Mass.
Send Nurse's Comfort Shoos. I will j
-y $4.39 on arrival. My money back at j
cnee if I want. I RISK NOTHING. 1
; Warne Size
] 1 Address I
forms of gambling, and worse, will
go at full blast.
“As Christians we cannot get away
from our duty io intervene, llomt
mission boards of the churches of
the United States must act at once
to set up an evangelical center in
Havana to combat the evil. The bet
ter element of the island recognizes
the dangers of the winter reason a-,
planned, and English-speaking resi
dents are ready to contribute SIOO,-
000 to start a counter movement.”
Mr. Dolz denied that the island
was becoming a Monte Carlo. He
said no plans were on foot to legal
ize roulette or other games that fea
ture the lyionaca resort.
“Racing is attracting many Ameri
cans to Havana this season as
usual,” he said. “There is betting
on the horses, as there is in New-
York, with the difi'e.ence that in
Cuba the government protects the
bettors, while n New York the man
who wins has no redress if the per
son with whom he wagers fails to
jay. It is legal in Cuba to buy a
cocktail. In New York, according to
the papers, you sometimes can buy
a drink, but it is not legal.
“I have never heard of English
speaking residents of Cuba objecting
to racing and cocktails. If they
should raise a fund in this connec
tion, it would probably be for more
of the same.”
$250,000 Is Required
To Replace 22 Bridges
Destroyed in Fulton
Two bundled and fifty thousand
dollars is the estimated cost of re
placing the .twenty-two bridges in
Fulton county known to have been
swept away by the torrential down
pours early this week, according to
county officials. Oscar Mills, chair
man of the public works committee
of the Fulton county commission,
says it will be impossible to rebuild
the bridges at present and that it
will be several weeks before even
temporary bridges are installed.
The bridges.-' known to be down
are: Randall Mill bridge; Piedmont
Road bridge, over Peachtree creek;
Cheshire bridge, at Peaville creek,
Cheshire bridge, at Peachtree creek;
Moore's Mill bridge; Waterworks
bridge, on the waterworks road;
Bohler bridge; the Wieucha bridge,
over Crystal creek; Oglethorpe Ivive
bridge, over Crystal creek; Campbell
ton Road bridge, over Utoy creek;
Cascade Road bridge, over the Ctoy
creek; Forrest Road bridge, at ,South
rjver; Newnan Road bridge, near
Little’s mill; Biyant Road bridge;
Mount Olive Road bridge; Fairburn
Road bridge, at Camp creek; Long
Island Creek bridge; Johnson Road
bridge, at Proctor’s creek; Crooked
Road bridge, at Woodall creek; Cedar
street bridge, in Center Hill; Baker’s
Ferry Road bridge, at Camp Creek.
,The damage to the approaches to
the Mason’s and Turner’s and Gar
rett bridges has not yet been fully
ascertained.
Sweeping Deportation
Os Reds Asked in Bill
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Exten
sion of exclusion and deportation
laws to aliens affiliated with “any
organization which writes, prints or
distributes,” matter advocating the
overthrow of the government by
violence, sabotage or assassination
of public officials was proposed in
a bill introduced by Representative
Johnson, Republican, Washington,
chairman of the immigration com
committee. It would reach all alien
members of the Industrial Workers
of the World and like organizations,
he said, while mere membership un
der present laws does not constitute
ground for deportation.”
No “overt act” would be necessary
since all of the organizations against
which it is aimed print and circulate,
anarchistic literature, Representa
tive Johnson said.
U. S. Liberals Propose
New Political Party
£jT. LOUIS, Mo.—The national
conference of liberals, in session
here, will organize a new i olitieal
party if result s of the “post-card"
campaign indicate the people
it, delegates asserted last week.
The platform adopted is to
be printed on postcards and sen:
throughout the country, and if this
wins sufficient adherents insure
success to a new party it was said
a national convention would be call
ed before July 1 next, to nominate
candidates for the presidency and
vice presidency. At today’s session
the conference considered the report
of the committee on political pro
cedure, and it is expected the con
vention will end after acting on it
Distance No Obstacle to
This Danish Bride-to-Be
NEW YORK.—With 12.000 miles of I
ocean and mountains between *them. S
the love of a beautiful Danish girl I
and her fiance found away. The |
bride-to-be is \raveling 11,000 miles g
by ship from Christiania, Norway, r
to Buenos Aires, Argentina, while k
her lover is making a 1,000-mile trip j
on mule back over the Andes nioua- e
tains from Valparaiso, Chile, to !
Buenos Aires, where he w'll meet L
his sweetheart and where the mar- g
riage will be performed.
The girl is Miss Signe Petersen, f
daughter of L. Petersen, a professor |
in a university at Christiania, and |
her betrothed is Alex Dundh, consul g
for Norway at Valparaiso.
Miss Petersen arrived last week I
ar New York on the Thorwald Hal- I
xersen. wh’ch makes a triangular trip g
from Christiania to New York to |
Buenos Abes and back to Christiania. I
She is accompanied by her fiance’s I
aunt, Mrs. Hilda Lundh.
“Bought” North Pole to
Get Permanent ice Supply j
ST. PAUL.—Homer Hograth, a j
farmer of Minneapolis, Kan., has ar- [
plied for the arrest of a man who f
had obtained $20.,000 from him. He f
raid this person went through some I
surveying and astronomical calcula- I
t'.ons and then tried to buy the Ho- |
grath farm, failing in this, he of !
sered to let Hograth in on a scheme ►
That would make him a millionaire.
He said he had accompanied Pearv 5
to the North Pole, which was renl’v k
a pole of steel that proje ded from [ |
the center of the earth. It was the ; >
source of all electrical energy. Helf
had invented a mighty scoop, which S
would dip up thousands of tons of |
ice, and as the earth rotated the ice f
would be dumpted on Hograth's | g
farm. It could be sold at big profit. 1 j
Tije farmer backed him!
Demobilized Men
Get Free Fish •!
LONDO?S.—Two sons of nsh wer-' 1 I
giv a n away to families of dcmobillit- i s
ed soldiers and sailors, at Ber vond | f
sey, in one day. Hive hundred tons ; ’
of fish have been presented to dis ? i
ferent districts by the headquarter I 8
o* the Canadian army. >
1 IS IN 180 BURGLARIES
w fill
• J If
? ? Sx< '* s '
J
Matcl , lie-’c pictured, says she helped “Dutch Daiuwln
commit more than ICO robberies because she loved fine clothes and
jewelry. Baldwin (inset) declares that the woman is a drug-addict
and is “dreaming” the stories told to the police. He befriended her,
he says, because she had been deserted by her husband.
Runaway Mexican Lad., Saved From
Starving, Now Faces Deportation
Crumpled against a dobr in a dark
hallway on Second avenue, in Now
York City, a ragged Mexican youth
with a miisny patch of black hair de
cided to lie down, even should he
freeze to deafly Dressed in frayed
clothes, he was shaking from head
to foot. He said he had no money,
friends or food.
Along came McGowan.
He snuggled the bby under his over
coat. At the police station the boy
was identified as Job Santoscoy,
nineteen years old, who leaped from
a New York train on November 18,
to avoid deportation to Mexico.
Santoscoy told Magistrate McGee
han, in Harlem court, that no hoped*
never to see Mexico again. He said
this despite the fact that he hasn’t
had a square meal during the two
years he has been in the United
States. He is wearing the same
shoes he had when he cams. Fifty
cents is t the most money he has
had at one time.
Santascoy may be deported, as his
parents are in Mexico. <
“You’re the hungriest looking man
SI,OOO FOR READERS OF SEMI-WHKLY A JOURNAL
1
The Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal announces the most in- To take part in the Figure Puzzle. Game, you will not have to ask your
teresting game ever offered its readers. friends to subscribe for rhe Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal, though you may ask
r ,. t-, , a- . . , .. ~ . ... them to subscribe in order to increase the amount of your possible award, and
11 h Figure Puzzle Game is an interesting pastime in which a ] so f 0 gj ve them an opportunity or entering our Figure Puzzle Game.
every one can take part, and those who play the game will not All you will have to do "a play this interesting game according to the ruins,
only have many enjoyable hours, but* have an opportunity of send in the answer with your own subscription and you will have a splendid
being well paid for their time. chance to win part of that SI,OOO.
This Is a Game; Not a Contest Rail tb Ribs—folk at th Pzizs List-Start Today
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Copyright. 181», H. A. Wenlga.
I For Distribution of Prizes, Rules, Etc., Write
FIGURE PUZZLE EDITOR •
Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
I ever saw,” said the magistrate.
The boy was given his fill of food.
It .cost Santoscoy only 5 cents to
come to New York from Mexico.
He told Magistrate McGeehan that
he went to the Rio Grande, paid n
nickel to get across, and took a
freight train to New York.
He said he was his own boss in
this country, but in Mexico was
bossed by everybody.
“Do you know Villa?” he was ask
ed in court.
“Yes. He is a bad man.”
Santoscoy says he’s going to beg
the authorities to let him remain m
the United States.
Extreme Penally for
Wood Alcohol Tigers
WASHINGTON. Dec. 13?—Ex
treme penalties will be urged for
prohibition violators found guilty ’of
selling whisky containing wood al
cohol, the internal revenue bureau
warned today.
Brave V/ar Nurse Who Chlorotoimed
Germans Arrives in This Country
Wearing nil the decorations the j
each govern/nent can bestow for
bravery in military actions, Mlle.
Martha Gauthier, nurse with both the!
French and American armies, has ar
: rived in this country from Bordeaux. l
'Mlle. Gauthier was still suffering'
' from the many wounds she had re-!
I ceived in battle, and was assisted!
. down the gangplank by two Ameri- i
! cans who were at the pier to greet
i her. One formerly was a sailor and:
1 the other a soldier, and the nurse;
' called ‘.hem “her brothers.”
Mlle. Gauthier, who is twenty-nine
years old, offered her services to the
■ French at the beginning of the war.
and in April. 1916, while taking care
■ of the woundvd beyond the lines at
Vitryle-Francois, she was wounded
■ in the jaw by a machine gun bullet.
After recovering she resumed her
work with the wounded poilus, and
was taken prisoner near Mallncov.rt.
I after having been wounded in the
. thigh. She was placed in a prison
Congress Begins First
■ Discussion of Practical
i Recognition of Irish
| WASHINGTON. D. C. With |
"President Edward de , Valera, es
Ireland, ar.J several of hfs advisors
in the capital, -I>ut npt actively par
ticipating, congress Friday began dis
i mission of extending practical rec-"
' egntt on to the Irish “republic.”
' The discussion cline up before the I
! house foreign affairs committee.
I which had under consideration Rep
resentative Mascn’s bill rtppropr 1 -
! a ting $14,000 for the expenses oi
ministers and consuls of the so
called “republic.”
Passage of the bi’l will not force
the American government to recog
nize the independence of Ireland, Mts I
advocates admit, but they hone '
through it to obtain some expression I
of the sentiment of congress I
Advocates of freedom of Ireland j
headed by Justice John F. Cohalan !
of the Ne wYork supreme court. ;
■ have urged the passage of the
bill by Representative M| hon, Re-
! publican, of Illinois, to authorize ap- j
i pointment of diplomatic and consular I
! representatives to the Republic of
! Ireland.
! In the delegation were Frank P.
Walsh, of Kansas City; Bourke CoCk
ran, df New York, and others who ;
j have been active in seeking recogni- i
tion for the provisional government
j headed by Eamonn De Valera.
When the hearing opened George j
i L. Fox, of New Haven, Conn., asked |
i permission to present an argument i
against the hill, anti Chairman Per
ter said the oppo-tunity would 'be
given later:
Arguing in support of his meas
ure. Representative Mason said it
would not constitute a complete rec
ognition. but simply would show
passage of the bill would not be a
of war with Great Britain.
The palace of the ’former German
emperor in Berlin at one time
500 housemaids and 1,800 liveried
■ footmen in employment.
I camp in Alsace-Lorraine, and a Ger
man major, learning that she was a
French nurse, attempted to attack
I her. Before he could overpower her
she cut the arteries of her wrists,
' and was transferred to a hospital for
! treatment. After months in
i the hospital, she determined to es
! cape, and one night chloroformed
! twenty-two wounded Germans who
j were in the same room with her and
left the hospital. Crawling from
! shell hole to shell hole, she made her
way to the French line.
j Mlle. Gauthier was wounded twice
I after her escape, and for weeks hov
ered between life and death. Her par
ents were killed by a German bomb
dropped by r a Hun aviator, and her
only brother, a soldier in the French
army, died in her arms. Later, for
a year and a half, she served with
the American forces.
The French government gave Mlle.
.Gauthier the cross of the legion of
honor, the Medaille Militaire and
■ the Croix de Guerre.
Thomas Mott Osborne
' Starts Campaign to
Reform U.S. Prisons
| N-EVZ YORK, Dec. 17. —Thomas
Mott Osborne, prison reformer, re
| cently engaged In iutervlewir.g for
mer prisoners, guards and assistant
wardens in Joliet prison, palled by
' convicts the “No Man’s Land,” of Il
linois, with a view to ending alleged
abuses there, has started a nation
wide campaign to put each of the
fifty-nine state prisons and five fed
eral penitentiaries upon a “humane
basis,’ ‘it was announced here today.
The fortune of a wealthy ex-con
'Vict, “known from one end of the
country to the other,” a man of n
fluence in Washington, hut who for
J the present is mentioned only as the
I gray brother, is said to have been
1 placed at the disposal of Mr. Osborne
! to finaece his venture.
! Sixteen hundred former prison in
' mates now in New York City, all of
| whom are with reputable firms, and
i living “straight,” are devoting their
! attention to the crusade. Joliet is
j described by them as “the worst In
stitution in the country,” a'nd they
said It is known in the underworld
as a 10-to-l. place, meaning that the
chances are 10-to-l that if a convict
; conies out alive he will be so badly
j broken in health and spirit he will
| be unable to earn a living.
Problem for Courts
| LONDON. Eng —The courts have
j been called upon to unravel a knotty
matrimonial tangle. A wealthy gen
tleman in the early days of the War
married a pretty waitress. She died
some time ago of influenza. Shortly
afterwards an invalided soldier claim
ed her property—the generous gifts
of her wealthy admirer—on the
ground that he was her legal hus
band. The unofficial husband has
now died, and his executors are faced
, with as tangled a piece of litigation
| as ever came before the bench.
Mexican Reply on
Wallace Case Received
By State Department
WASHINGTON. D. C.—The Mexi
can governments reply in the
case of James Wallace, American
citizen, assassinated by a Mexican
federal soldier near Tampico a fort
night ago, has been received by
the state department. «
The Mexican explanation of Wal
lace’s murder was a reiteration of the
claim of Mexican Ambassador Bonil
las that Wallace while intoxicated,
failed to heed the order of a Car
ranza soldier to halt and that the
soldier shot Wallace believing him
an enemy.
DARTING, PIERCING
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I
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cleanliness, and the economy of
Sloan’s Liniment make it universally
preferred. 35c, 70c, $1.40.
(Advt.)
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