About The Fayetteville news. (Fayetteville, Ga.) 18??-???? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1920)
FAYETTEVILLE NEWS, FAYETTEVILLE, GEORGIA. Sure Relief -CQ^r BE.VL-NAS' FOR | IWGESTIOH) 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief 'AIMS INDEGESTION Harmless, purely vegetable, Infants* an A Children’* Regulator, formula on ercry label. Gaaranteed noc-nsrcotic, non-clcobolic. m. mews syrup The Infant*’ and Children’* Regulator Children grow healthy and free from colic, diarrhoea, flatulency, constipation and other trouble If given it at teething time. Safe, pleasant—always brings re markable and gratifying results. At All Drurrgitta t over half a century DR. TUTT’S LIVER PILLS have been sold for the Liver. Read the following from a woman of forty-eight: “I have used DR. TUTT’S PULLS for Bowel regula tion many years. 1! am now con vinced that they are also the best I known regulator for other retard- 1 cd female functions. I have told many of my friends and now none would be without them. A few [ days before, andyou are all right.” Money back without question if HUNT’S SALVE fails in the treatment of ITCH, ECZEMAi RING WORM,TETTER or other itching sldn diseases. Price 75c at druggists, or direct from A. B. Richards Medicine Co,,Sherman,Tei. SALESMAN New Patented Combination Broom and Mop. Sells at sight. Territory now open. Full particulars. Don’t delay— Write today. Economy Broom Co., Inc.; Louisville, Ky. A Real Test. “How can a man know who are Ills real friends?” “Very easily. They are the ones who lend him money.” I*I'B'«*H|U»||>|| UP ASM! Tomorrow will be clear and bright, if you take “Cascarets” tonight Feeling half-sick, bilious, consti pated? Ambition way below zero? Here is help! Take Cascarets tonight for your liver and bowels. You’ll wake up clear, rosy, and full of life. Cas carets act without griping or Incon venience. They never sicken you like Calomel, Salts, Oil or nasty, harsh pills. They cost so little too—Can- carets work while you sleep.—Adv. He Is Interested. “Did you swear off this year?” “Is that an academic question or have you got something?” A Lady of Distinction. Is recognized by the delicate fascinat ing influence of the perfume she uses. A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores, followed by a dusting with Cuticura Talcum Powder usually means a clear, sweet, healthy skin.—Adv. If we always prepare ourselves for the worst that may happen, we will never be disappointed. To abort a cold and prevent com plications, take The purified and refined calomel tablets that are nausealess, safe and sure. Medicinal virtues retain ed and improved. Sold only in sealed packages. Price 35c. 1*. NEWS BRIEFLYTOLD DI8PATCHE9 OF IMPORTANT HAP- * ‘PENINGS GATHERED FROM OVER THE WORLD. FOR THE ROSY READER The Occurrences Of Seven Days Given In An Epitomized Form For Quick Reading Foreign— She draft of the note to be sent to Another revolution has occurred in Vldaivostok, the Siberian port through which the American expeditionary forces are being returned home. Gen eral Graves said the crowds in the city were orderly and that the allied forces were patrolling the streets to protect innocent people and to pre vent looting. The revolution is re ported to have announced that no one would be molested unless he had committed an offense or crime, in which case he would be tried by the civil court. The uprising is in no way connected with the Bolsheviki. Marketing of cotton seed for plant ing purposes should be made a most highly specialized industry, and the term, “planting cotton seed,” should be Germany with the list of persons i made to represent a produce of in- wliose extradition is to be demanded ! finitely greater intrinsic and potential If You Need a Medicine You Should Have the Best by the allies was approved by the coun cil of ambassadors in Paris. The note and the list will be handed at once to the German representatives in Par is. It was decided by the council that neither the note nor the list should he made public. The total number of names on the extradition list the allies have pre sented to Germany is in the neighbor hood of eight hundred, and is divided into eight sections. The first is a common list, and the second includes names like Bethmann-Hollweg, Hin- denburg, Ludendorff, Maclcensen, the crown princes and other notables. Procedure necessary for the pos sible appointment and selection of a king is outlined in a general order by Admiral Mortliy, head of the new Hungarian army, published at Buda pest newspapers. San Bias Indians, in a sudden at tack on Panaman police and the res idents of a rubber gathering settle ment at Porvenir, about eighty miles to the east of Colon, killed seventeen persons and wounded many others, according to advices sent out from Panama. No whites were involved in the fight. A presidential decrdle suspending the constitutional guarantees for a period of sixty days, has been publish ed in an extra edition of the Official Gazette at Havana, Cuba." This ac tion followed a refusal of the striking dock workers to accept the plan of arbitration demanded by President Menocal and agreed to by the employ ers. The capture of Odessa by Ukrainian forces commanded by General Paw- lanko is announced. A committee of Ukrainian, Russian and Jewish citi zens succeeded in restoring order, and in improving the provisioning of the city. Difficulties of supply have probably stopped the advance of the Bolshevik troops along the trans-Siberian rail road west of Irkutsk, according to a dispatch to the British war office. All resistance seems to have disappeared. Latest reports se.em to show that relations between the Czecho-Slovaks and the new anti-Bolshevik govern ment, which succeeded that of Admi ral Kolchak, have become worse and that Bolshevism appears to be gain ing ground as a result of the arrival of red agents working in front of the Bolshevik army. On the eastern half of the Russian front the threatening red advance along the western shores of the Cas pian sea has been checked and thrown back. In the center General Deni- kine’s units have falen back. value than ordinary cotton seed, or the average planting cotton seed of today, the department of agriculture has concluded, after a thorough inves tigation of the subject. Delegates in attendance at the con gressional hearing of the St. Marys- St. Marks canal, together with inter ested business men met an:l organized the Atlantic-to-Mississippi Canal Asso ciation. The purpose of the Atlantic-to-Mis sissippi Canal association is to carry on a campaign of publicity and infor mation concerning the , project, as well as to crystallize sentiment ’in favor of the proposed canal. The United States treasury does not look with favor upon certain fea tures of the proposed international conference recently called by the co terie of nationally known financiers and commercial leaders in an effort to lead the world out of the financial and commercial chaos into which it was dragged by the war. Secretary Glass declares that such a conference would serve to “cause confusion and revive hopes, doomed to disappoint ment, of further government loans.” Domestic- Washington— A bill of sweeping nation-wide mili tary importance has been introduced by Senator Harris of Georgia. In a word it' provides for doubling the stu dent personnel at the West Point Mil itary academy, thereby doubling the output of young officers. With concluding arguments pre sented before the coal strike settle ment commission by spokesmen for the operators and mine workers in the central competitive field, the fate of the reiterated demands of the work ers for a 60 per cent increase in wages and a thirty-four hour week has been submitted to the final deci sion of the commission. Elimination of useless employees in non-productive business, the speeding up of all lines of industry commen surate with the present activity of the farmers and determination of retailers and jobbers to exact only a reasonable profit, are recommended as a solution for the high cost of living problem by Edwin T. Meredith, who took oath of office as secretary of agriculture, Feb ruary 2. Carter Glass, retiring secretary of the treasury, took the oath of office as senator from Virginia to succeed the late Senator Thomas S. Martin, February 2. Vice President Marshall administered the oath. A dispatch from McAilen, Texas, says two army aviators, Lieuts. E. F. Davis and G. E. Grimes, carrying a military message from Fort Brown, Texas, to Nogales, Ariz., were forced to make a landing in Mexico, thirty miles south of Zapata, Texas, and are being held by Mexicans. According to a message from the aviators they have been promised their freedom. Positive assertion that the British government does not plan to seek fur ther loans in the United States, but on the contrary, is desirous of reduc ing the obligations it already has in curred, is included in a statement from London transmitted to Secreary Glass hrough R. C. Lindsay, British charge .d’affaires, and made public in Wash ington. President Wilson has asked Secre tary Glass to make another appeal to congress for authority to lend one hun dred and fifty million dollars to Po land, Austria and Armenia to relieve their desperate food situafro. - - • - ■ • - I — Two trainmen are known to have been killed and fifteen to twenty- five negroes are believed dead in the wreck of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern passenger train, which plunged through an open drawbridge over the Tensas river, in Louisiana. Six children—two sets of triplets— within fifteen months, is the birth rec ord in the family of Mr. and Mrs. Po sey Livingstone of Albany, Ala. The second trio of children was born Feb ruary 2, and all are well. Damages running into the hundreds of thousands of dollars at St. Augus tine, Fla., have resulted from a tre mendous downpour of rainfall, which amounted to 14.55 inches in forty hours. The potato section around St. Au gustine, Fla., is under water, and the loss to that crop is estimated at .sev eral hundred thousand dollars. Announcement by the prosecution at Tombstone, Ariz., that dismissal oi the charges against three defendants because of absence of witnesses was being considered, was followed by ab rupt adjournment of court in the trial of 210 men charged with kidnaping in connection with the deporting of 1,186 striking copper miners and their sym pathizers at Bisbee, Ariz., in 1917. An outline of what the government expects to prove against Truman H. Newberry, United States senator, and hi^ 123 .associates, charged with con spiracy in connection with the 1918 senatorial campaign, was started in the federal district court at Grand Rapids, Mich., by Frank D. Dailey, special as sistant attorney general. Drastic reduction in the number ol national bank depositaries is being made by the treasury department, with the result that less than 400 of the 1,331 such institutions holding federal funds on .June 30, 1919, are expected to survive the pruning knife. Robert P. Hamilton, Jr., University of Virginia graduate, Charlottesville, Va.; Paul Robinson Norton, PrincetoD University graduate, Princeton, N. J„ and Theodore S. Wilder, Oberlin Col lege graduate, 1875 East Twenty- fourth street, Cleveland, Ohio, have been selected as the three Rhodes scholars at large allotted to the United States by the Rhodes trustees because of the unprecedented competition for the sixty-four scholarships filled last November. Lieuts. E. F. Davis and G. E. Grimes United States aviators, who have beer held by Mexican authorities ten days, after they made a forced landing near Guerrero, have been released at Nue vo Laredo, and have crossed the Rio Grande to Laredo, Texas. Gordon Fawcett Hamby, murderer, hank robber and train bandit, v 3 crime record reached from coast to coast and culminated in the murder of two Brooklyn bank employees in December, 1918, was electrocuted in Sing Sing prison. He maintained to the last the iron composure which marked his demeanor from the hour of his arrest. He refused the offer of the Portestant and Roman Catho lic chaplains to accompany him to the chair. Capt. Field E. Kindley, American ace and commander of the 94th aero squa dron, was instantly killed in aerial maneuvers at Kelly field No. 2, Cap tain Kindley’s home being at Gra- vette, Ark. The accident occurred while a group of planes were in prac tice formation preparing for an ex- hibtion scheduled in honor of Gen eral Pershing’s visit to San Antonio, Texas. Former service men may reinstate their war risk insurance at any time before July 1, 1920, under a new rul ing of the bureau of wjir risk insur ance. Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are ex tensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon forgotten? The reason is plain—the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain sj’stem the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are in need of it. ■ A prominent druggist says “Take for example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent re sults, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a sale.” According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is due to the fact, so many people claim, that it fulfills al most every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments; corrects uri nary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle or Swamp-Root by Parcels Post. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. t and enclose ten cents; also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores.—Adv. STATE NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD Looked Like ——! “We have heard a lot about the boys of the A. E. F, whose pay was a long time coining, and of course no one blames them for kicking,” said Senator Penrose, “but In justice to the military paymasters, it must, be said that they, too, had their troubles. Like the ease In Company B. “Beg pardon,” said the sergeant, “but what is your name?” “Name 1” echoed the private, who had just scrawled his cognomen on line 13 of the pay roll. “Don’t you see my name on that blank?” “Yes,” said the sergeant. “That Is what aroused my curiosity.” VERY WEAKLY North Carolina Lady Describes the Symptoms From Which She Suffered and Which She Says Cardul Relieved. Trap Hill, N. C.—Mrs. Eudora Hol brook, recently made this statement: “I was very weakly for three or four years with womanly troubles. I was much worse at special times. Every month I would have to lie in bed for three or four days. My chief suffering was in my back. I could not tell how badly it ached, but it seemed as if it could not pos sibly ache worse. Whenever I would get tired, or if I was much on my feet, it would ache. Cardui was all the medicine I took. I saw, with the first bottle, that I was being benefited, but I kept right on for five bottles regularly. By this time I was so I could do all my own work, which for some time I had not been able to do. That is the only time I ever took it regularly, hut I always have it on hand to use when I do not feel well and it always helps me.” With a successful record of over 40 years to its credit, Cardui has proven its merit in the treatment of many of the simple ailments peculiar to women. Try it. At your druggists.—Adv. Must Be a Fine School The six-year-old granddaughter of. Judge D. W. Henry of Terre Haute had started to school in the training school of the Indiana state normal.- William C. Ball, who lives across the street from the little girl, is trustee for the Indiana state normal and a great friend of the little girl. One morning, when her mother Was taking her to school,- she noticed Mr. Ball go ing up the steps to the main building. Looking up at her mother she said: “Gee, this must he a fine school if Mr. Ball goes to school here.”—Indianapo lis News. WOMEN WONDER AT HER MANY CLOTHES ‘Diamond Dyes” Make Faded, Shabby Garments New, Old, Don’t worry about perfect results. Use “Diamond Dyes,” guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods,—dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children’s coats, feathers—everything! Direction Book In package tells how to diamond dye over any color. To match any material, have dealer show you “Diamond Dye” Color Card*.—Adv. Back to the Old Home. He had just vacated one house on the street for another farther down. A few days later he came hurrying home, and when he came to the old place went in ns usual. Passing into Hie living room he sat down, but when he came to himself he was gazing at three total strangers. “Oh, I beg your pardon!” he exclaimed, to their amuse ment. He departed hastily, but the joke leaked out to his great embnr rassment. Macon.—Dr. A. R. Rozar of Macon was elected president of the Associa tion of Railway Surgeons of Georgia at an organization meeting held here, attended by seventy-five of the four hundred members of the association. Tliomasville.—The officers of the Georgia-Florida Field Trials associa tion elected for the ensuing year are John R. Archbold, president; Wilbur Parker, vice president; John Dallett, secretary and treasurer; L. S. Thomp son and Dr. Percy R. Bolton, executive committee. ** Atlanta.—While the upward trend to wholesale commodity prices con tinues, yet a somewhat easier feeling develope-d recently in numerous arti cles, there being 29 recessions in the quotations received, as compared with 24 advances. Although trade in dairy products was fairly active, increased receipts had a very weakened effect on butter and egg-s, but the changes in cheese were negligible. Macon.—Gladys Eugenia Hollings worth, aged four and a half years, was ■shot and killed here by Robert Da vis, aged seven v her first cousin. The shooting took place in. the yard in front of the store conducted by the little girl’s father, F. E. Hollingsworth. The bullet, which was fired from a .22 caliber rifle, entered the child’s nose and penetrated her brain, caus ing instant death. Metter.—J. L. Savage is in jail here with a broken scalp, as the result of an altercation on the streets several nights ago. Savage, it is charged, at tempted to. shoot J. D. Suddath, who struck him down with a walking cane. Savage fired at Suddath with a .'38 revolver, one of the shots taking ef fect, striking Suddath in the left ear and grazing his cheek, wounding him slightly. Brunswick.—Five bodies from the wreck of a vessel, unidentified, off Jekyll island, were found on the beach and brought here. Eforts to identify the bodies so far have failed. Near where the bodies were found was a piece of wreckage and a life preserver with the name “Fortune” on it, but no vessel of that name is known here. It is believed that the bodies may have come from a wrecked prawn boat or scow. Athens.-r-A committee representing farmers from all sections of Georgia who attended the “boll weevil school” at the state college of agriculture have to a set of resolutions drawn up and. adopted by them, drawn attention to a number of crying needs faced by the college, and recommending immediate attention to them. Among the chief, needs faced by the agricultural col lege enumerated in the resolutions are higher salaries to prevent the loss of services of expert professors, several of whom have left for other fields more lucrative; an agricultural build ing for women containing living and class accommodations; training for veterinary students and a college ca feteria. Brunswick.-—Local tugs returned here from near Dobey, where they went in Search of the Spanish schoon er, Sanfost, reported ashore off the island. The schooner was discovered ashore four miles north of Dobey light, and is rapidly going to pieces. The schooner had been ashore for two or three days. What has become of the crew of the schoner is a mys tery. Not a single one of the mem bers have been heard from. It is be lieved that they have all been lost. Ship’s papers were picked up on Rain bow island, indicating that the crew consisted of thirteen men. Pieces of wreckage were also strewn along the beach. A search along the island has been made, but nothing has been heard of any of the members of the crew. The schooner was lumber laden, and was bound from Jacksonville to Oporto. A LEOPARD CANNOT CHANGE ITS SPOTS Mr. Dodson, the “Liver Tone” Man, Tells the Treachery of Calomel. Calomel loses you a day! You know what calomel is. It’s mercury.; quick silver. Calomel is dangerous. It crashes- into sour bile like dynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be put into your system. When- you feel bilious, sluggish, con- 1 stipated and all knocked out and be lieve you need a dose of dangerous cttl-J omel just remember that your druggist sells for a few cents a large bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone., which is entirely*, vegetable and pleasant to take and is a perfect substitute for calomel. It. ist guaranteed to start your liver without stirring you up inside, and can not salivate. Don’t take calomel! It can not he trusted any more than a leopard or ai wild-cht. Take Dodson’s Liver Tone which straightens you right up and makes you feel fine. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harm less and doesn’t gripe.—Adv. Pen-ury. Said the almost philosopher: “It’s a mean man who will lead his little boy* to believe he is penniless when the- kid asks for one.” “CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP” IS CHILD’S LAXATIVE Look at tongue! Remove pcisonr from stomach, liver and Bov/els. Atlanta.—About six hundred people were present at the closing event held at the Soldiers’ club, 190 Peachtree street,-which concluded the activities of the war community service in At lanta. Present were the boys in khaki, mingling, perhaps for the last time, at this happy social center with new found friends in Atlanta, and enjoy ing the wholesome entertainment of fered under the supervised direction of the organization which lowered the final curtain. There was present also the returned soldier, members of the girls’ groups and hostesses, who serv ed as volunteers during the past months, and the fathers and moth ers of these young people. The spe cial feature of the evening was a se ries of tableaux, depicting the chief activities of the war camp community service, participated in by organized groups of girls under the direction of Miss Rose Speck, the girls’ recrea tion director for the war camp com munity service. Eastman.—Joe Roland confessed to the killing of James and Charles Can non at a country dance at the home of M. L. Bailey, near Gresham, accord ing to Sheriff C. N. Mullin. Reports received by the sheriff that a feel ing against the Roland boys might lead to an attack upon the Dodge county jail to lynch Joe Roland and his son, Charles, both of whom are charged with murder, caused the removal of both prisoners to another county for safekeeping. Sheriff Mullin would not state where the prisoners have been taken Accept “California” Syrup of Figs only—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harm less laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child’s dose on each bot tle. Give it without fear. Mother! You must say “California.” .—Adv. Nothing is made in vair. except the extremely fashionable girl—she is a maiden vain. j !»«'4 IGESTION ’Pape’s Diapepsin” at once fixes your Sour, Gassy, Acid Stojnach Undigested food! Lumps of pain; belching gas, acids and sourness. When your stomach is all upset, here is in stant relief—no waiting! The moment you eat a tablet or two of Pape’s Diapepsin all the indigestion pain and dyspepsia distress caused by acidity is relieved. Your disordered stomach will feel fine at once. These pleasant, harmless, tablets of Pape’s Diapepsin neutralize the harm ful acids in the stomach, and give al most instant relief; besides they cost so little at drug stores.—Adv. The forceps, or pincers, is an instru ment that dates back into the times of antiquity. A woman isn't necessarily shallow because her beauty is only skin deep. What is to be? A verb, of course. Weak and Miserable? Does the least exertion tire you out? Feel “blue” and worried and have daily backache, lameness, headache, dizziness, amt kidney irregularities? Sick kidneys are often to blame for this unhappy state. You must act quickly to pre vent more serious trouble. Use Doan's Kidney Fills, the remedy recommend ed everywhere by grateful users. Ask your neighbor! A Georgia Case Mrs. Bertie Waits, 1G0 Barnesville St., Tliomaston, Ga... says: “Kidney trouble and rheu- xtic pains had, me in miserable condition. My back $was lame and weak. ‘Sharp pains would Jdart up and down jmy back and my {sleep didn't seem to {refresh me and I •always felt run , down, tired out and listless. My kid neys didn’t act right. Different remedies failed to help me. 1 finally used Doan’s Kidney Pills and they quickly cured me.” Get Doen’e at Any Store. 60c a Box DOAN'S VS!S, r FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. fopPkturv WlsaStory^