Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current, April 05, 1920, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

PAGE FOUR Department conducted by Mrs. R. C. Moran, residence 112 East Church Street; Phone 620. fi "" I | cus, while Mr. Stevens is from Chi- (O (rs Ti IS I $I ' caßo ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Stevens will ANGLIN-STEVENS. j gomery, Ala. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Anglin wish »• • to announce the marriage of their MISS LINGO HOSTESS Sister. Mi-s Irene Anglin, to Mr. Har- TO HER CLUB SATURDAY. ry Stevens on April 2, at 8 o’clock Miss Mary Alice Lingo was hostess p. m. Miss Anglin was of Ameri- on Saturday afternoon at her home MUSIC FOR THE SPRINGTIME L ' - » - - I - I - ■ - -J- T . CARUSO SINGS HIS OWN GREAT VERSION sk OF THE “AVE MARIA” f Makes Valuable Contribution to World’s Devotional Music— Other Great Victor Artists ; ' Give Notable Interpre tations for April 0 ARUSO not only id is a great singer >' but he has that >’ indispensable qual fl ity of a great ar -11 s t creative fl’< getiius. On a new Victor Record fl Caruso sings his >’ own Italian ver fl sion of the Latin ,’J “Ave Maria.” The fl melody, like a ,’j golden river of fl sound, is carried d along by the voice of the singer in & wro " y complete and glorious harmony With the voices of stringed and wood-wind instruments and the tones of bells and a harp- The bell-tones sometimes Sound as if remote and far; some times, again, as if clanged out high, clear and melodious from some un seen belfry overhead. The number ends w'ith a beautifully and fervently intoned "Amen,” the bells still pealing and still echoing their message among themselves. The music is such as to awaken and thrill the soul. It is a great contribution to the world’s de votional music. Frances Alda is a great singer of love songs. For her latest Victor Rec ord she has chosen "If You Could Care,” the love song from the musical comedy success, “As You Were.” The song, which is in a slow, delicious waltz time, has taken all Europe by storm and promises to meet with equal popularity on this side. Mme. Alda , sings it against low-crooning strings, silver bell notes and glittering harp tones. The effect is to make the hearer catch breath. A Gypsy serenade, as lovely as it is weird and capricious, is played by Fritz Kreisler on one of the Victor r ig) L'UPONrKBKBMI one or rne victor Records for April. The serenade is introduced by a brief orchestral passage and one wonders for a mo ment if the vio lin is that of Kreisler. Then the mighty tone of the master is heard, clear, in cisive and eager, as if the very aoul of the ser enader went forth into the voice of t h e instrument. Kreisler The ear is sur prised, delighted, and one feels like having lost a dear companion when the serenade ends. Two of the loveliest cradle songs imaginable are sung by Elsie Baker on a new Victor Record "Sweet and Low" has a rocking, lilting rhythm that haunts the memory. “A Southern Lul laby” has a refrain that Miss Baker hums in her warm, rich, flute like voice with the buzzing effect of the violincello. “Irene” and “Alice Blue Gown” represent the first Victor re cordings of Edith Day, the new Broad way idol. They are from the musical comedy “Irene,” in which Miss Day starred. Farrar and De Luca Sing a Delightful Duet "11 Bacio” (The Kiss) is a moment cf brightness in the dramatic storv of "Zaza,” Leoncavallo’s opera of love and ambition, hatred and jealousy. It is sung in the opera by Zaza, the con cert-hall singer, and Cascart, her part ner, behind the actual scenes of the opera. The baritone begs for a kiss, but is. playfully but firmly denied. The duet is so melodious that it is a won der it hasn’t already been whistled on the street. Miss Farrar and De Luca Sing it on a new Victor Record with such artistic finish as to make it a thing of immediate yet lingering de’ight. Generations yet to come will keep alive the old Gospel songs. Thev rep resent an inheritance of the sincere and simple religious faith of the peo ple, one of the noblest gifts of the human soul. For future generations, a' well as we of the present, Ernestine Schumann-Heink, great as a woman as she is great as an artist, has sung “In the Sweet Bye and Eye” on a new Victor Record. It is sung with the same perfection of utterance and fullness of heart that have made the singer beloved among mankind. Renato Zanelli has come into swift recognition as one of the creates hari- aa VUE > *r‘; ; .;$ H|v l jj[ Zone/h ■wirn ease i ne •truly amazing part of it is that he Jbolds the note strong true. • “Christ in i landers” and "There is no Death” are the titles of two songs written by Gordon Johnstone to the memory of the dead left b« our armies ' on the battlefields of France. They are nobly interpreted on a new Victor Record by Lambert Murphy. • • • ♦ McCormack Sings a New Love Song Frw singers can so truly interpret the spirit of a love song as John Mc- Cormack. For hit latest Victor re cording he has chosen “Your Eyes Have Told Me So,” a song with a tender and yet catching melody, sweet flowipg harmonies and a refrain in waltz tempo that is irresistible. Every note is as clear and beautiful as a bell tone, and the crowning high note, at the end, is possible only to a great tenor voice. Persons familiar with Massenet’# opera, “Herodiade,” will recall the pas sages of extraordinary beauty and sweetness in the aria, "Vision Fugi tive” (Fleeting Vision). It is in this aria that King lierod, in delerium, tells of his hopeless love for Salome. Reinaid Wcrrenrath, on a new Victor Record, sings the aria in away that seems to accentuate the charm of the music without sacrificing any of its dramatic fervor. Some of the passages are ushered in by a lovely clarionet phrase, and attended by softly-crooning strings and wood-winds. Back in the seventeenth century there was an old gentleman named Niccola Porpora who tried to become the greatest com- uic ut’itt- poser of his time. He didn't quite succeed, but in the proqess be came the most fa mous singing teacher in his tory. He wrote a wonderful minuet which Jascha Hei fetz has redis covered and played on a new Victor Record. The minuet has - a simple yet ec- ’ centric rhythm, but it serves to bring out the im mense strength m v. u t: an and brilliancy of Heifetz’s tone. Antonin Dvorak was the first mas ter-composer to reveal the full beauty of American negro music. His “Ameri can Quartet" was produced under the same deep and passionate inspiration as his great “New World Symphony.” The Flonzaleys have taken the F Major movement, the most beautiful of the quartet, for their latest Victor recording. This is a record that should be in every collection. To many persons, no kind of music possesses quite the same charm as men’s voices blended in chorus. Thes* persons will find much to delight them in a new Victor Record containing “Buddha,” sung by the Peerless Quar tet, and “Let Me Dream,” sung by the Sterling Trio. Billy Murray, who is well-known to Victor audiences, has discovered a spring in life’s bone-dry wilderness. It lies in Cuba, and he is going there —at least so he avers in a new song, "I’ll see you in C-U-B-A," sung on a new Victor Record. On the other side of the record he sings “That’s Worth While Waiting For.” * • • New Dance Music! of the Season A more original fox trot never wa» written, perhaps, than “80-La-Bo,” played by Paul Biese and his Novelty Orchestra. The melodies are weird and wild beyond description, and music never was arranged for a jazx prehestra in more recklessly original fashion. The other side of the record contains “Harem Life,” a fox trot written by Irving Berlin. It is sort of a medley of familiar tunes, but the dance rhythm never falters. The All-Star Trio usually may be counted upon to come through with some original or ingenious dance music “Venetian Moon,” a fox trot, and “Swanec,” a one-step, on a new Victor Record, are of such a character. The former combines all the “Jazz Spirit with the floating melody asso ciated v.it!; the gcndola. “Swanee” is reminiscent of ’Cid Folks at Home” The Mockin**-R;rd” and other old southern melodics. The sxxaphone, xylophone and piano are used for both dances. Another Victor dance record for April contain . In Your Arms,” a med ley fox trot, and “That Naughty Waltz. L._ former, a beautiful fox trot full of sentiment, is played by Sclvin s ?s . - t3y Orchestra. The waltz, played ly Joseph C. Smiths Orchestra, cont -is rnelcd’es which are • smooth, pure and beautiful. r It has been said that through music alone can be expressed emotions that : lie too deep for words. Whether this ; be true or not. it is a fact that music ( wdl carry a message of cheer, comfort, hope or inspiration tn natures that c main untouched by any other form of - appeal. Ihe power of music to five action and direction to human motives ' >s undisputable. It is especially im- - portant that children be kept under the ’ influence of the best music, ’the great- est music of all ages is brought right into the home by the Victrola. Per e sons not having a Victrola may enjoy • hearing their favorite music by vi*it uig any .dealer in Victor .products. '-'4 tnv Rrearcs: bari tones of the time. » On a Victor Rec r ord just out, j Zanelli displays the full power and beautv of his | voice through the ■ medium of an im petuous Spanish love song called **Los Ojos Ne #2Tos” (Black i Eyes). In the brilliant climax, his voice, while I reta’nme its bari- L\_tone quality, soars boldly into the do main ot the tenor, F reaching a high A •with ease The ■a*;.; -> ■ on Brannen avenue to the members ■ f her club. The membership of this club is composed of the girls of Am- i ericus High school who graduated ' from that institution two years ago, I and new life has been infused into ' it recently by a re-organization un i der the name of the Saturday After -1 neon club. The living rooms were bright with quantities of jonquils, and at the conclusion of the game cream with cake was served. The members are Miss Margery Brown, Miss Orlean Ansley, Miss Marguerite Everette, Miss Geraldine Payne, Miss Pauline Broadhurst, Miss Mary Sue Cham- I bliss and Miss Mary Alice Lingo. ■ MISS ELIZABETH COUNCIL ENTERTAINED SATURDAY. Miss Elizabeth Council entertain ed a number of her little friends at her home on Church street Saturday evening. The living rooms were at tractive with bright blossoms from the woods, and games amused the j guests for some time. At the con- : elusion of the evening’s fun sand-j wiches and punch were served. About | twenty-five were assembled upon this occasion, * » * EGG HUNT AT PLAYGROUNDS FRIDAY. The Easter egg hunt given at the playgrounds on F riday afternoon by the Woman’s club was an enjoy able affair for the guests Who were present. This was the initial enter tainment given at the lovely place, and the ladies are encouraged to re-| new their efforts to make it a pop- | ular place for entertainment of | every kind. The grounds are ideal j and the house roomy. PRETTY BIRTHDAY PARTY SATURDAY. Little Miss Mary Hogg was hon- j oree at a pretty birthday party giv-1 en at the home of her parents, Mr. , and Mrs. Bradley Hogg, on Lee : street Saturday afternoon. Despite j the rainy afternoon nearly all the . little guests appeared and were truly I repaid for their venture out into the weather because of the fun and frol ic they enjoyed. Assisting Mrs. Hogg in amusing and entertaining the little tots were Florence Fort, Thelma Hogg, Cordelia H joks and Martha Duncan. After the games had been en joyed, bright Easter eggs were se creted about the living rooms and the little guests searched until every one had been discovered. Foy Wallis and Nancy Hooks tied for the prize, which was, awarded Foy Wallis af ter drawing lots. The reward was a picture made from golden egg shells. The living rooms were bright with woodland flowers, and in the dining room, where the little folks were seated, the table had for its central ornamentation the large birthday cake from which gleamed the four lighted tapers and surrounded with I pink rosebuds. At each plate was placed an individual cake, and a rab bit stuffed with delicious candy, was ! the favor for each guest. A lighted taper burned at each ‘place, and the children enjoyed blowing out the in dividual candle. Cream was served with cake, and those invited were Nancy, Hooks, Margaret Hooks, Foy Wallis, Eliza beth Hogg, Charles Hudson, Marion Isler, Charles Isler, Virginia Clemens, Allene Murray, James Fort, James Walker, Charles Hogg, Marion Till man, Flora Duncan, Cornelia Ann Hill and Donnie McKay. MISS GIDDINGS ENTERTAINED. Miss Catherine Giddings was hon oree ala lovely luncheon in Atlanta Saturday given at the Piedmont Driv ing Club by Dr. and Mrs. Glenville Giddings. Miss Sarah Sheffield, who has been visiting Miss Giddings for a week, shared honors with the bride cleet. Those present were Miss Gid dings, Miss Sara Sheffield, Miss Mary Murpny, Miss Elizabeth Hawkins, Miss Emily Robinson, Miss Jean Ash craft, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Conquitt, Dr. and Mrs. Giddings, William G. ■ Caye, Mansel Owerbacher. Jack Lan- I ders, Robert Callahan, Eugene Kel -1 ley, William Pottinger. The wedding of Miss Giddings and ■ Mr. Caye will occur this evening at [ Atlanta in St. Luke’s church, and i will be a brilliant event. After a [ wedding journey of some length, Mr. } Caye will bring his bride to Ameri ( eus, and they will be with Mrs. Law- ren Stapleton at her home on Church street. Miss Giddings has been a frequent visitor in Americus as the guest of Miss Sara Sheffield, and has a wide circle of friends here who are pre pa: ing to give her a very cordial homecoming. COUNCIL OF SAFETY j CHAPTER TO MEET. The members of the Council of j Safety Chapter, D. A. R., are re quested to meet with Mrs. Chas. 1 Rogers for a short business session ,Tuesday morning at 10:30 at the ■ Windsor Hotel. AUXILIARY OF CALVARY I CHURCH MET WITH MRS. COBB. ; The ladies of the Auxiliary of Cal vary Episcopal church met this after ' noon at 4 o’clock with Mrs. John A. i Cobb at her home on Lee street. The ! business of the meeting was discuss- I ed, and the program given, after which the hostess poured tea for the members present. Miss Isabel Wheatley has returned from a visit of some weeks to Mrs. J. W. Hawkins at her home on ' Juniper street in Atlanta. , * • • Miss Mary Walker is spending sev- ■ eral days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Walker, at her home on I Lee street. Miss Walker is a stu j dent this year at Brenau. . » • i Miss Thelma Norris, of Thomaston, I is the guest of Mrs. E. J. Eldridge at her home on Lee street. Miss I Norris will receive many pretty so- THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER. cu.l attentions during her visit in Americus. • • • Mrs. Jamie Brown, of Spartanburg, S. C., and Miss Lillian Cochrane, of Bunnell, Fla., are the guests of Mrs. John Council at her home on Lee street. * » • Miss Margaret Edwards is in At lanta, where she will visit friends and relatives for two weeks. Miss Emma Love Fisher returned to her studies at Wesleyan College this morning after a week-end visit to Rev. and Mrs. Guyton Fisher at their home here. ' e» « < Miss Agnes Thomas, of Plains, was a visitor in Americus Sunday, and 1 gave several selections at the lovely choral service at First Baptist church Sunday m< ** * I Miss Su- ie Pryor, of near Ameri cus, is the guest of Mrs. R. L. May-' nard at he) home on Lee street. Engraved Visiting Cards—Thos. L. BELL, Jeweler and Optician.— 4-ts , . - ! Just received a shipment of bloom ing Easter lilies in pots, a most ideal gift. Carswell Drug Co.—l-ts a ■ Little Lamartine Christian has en- ' tirely recovered from her recent at tack of pneumonia, and is able to , play out in the open again. Her ( friends are greatly gratified over her rapid recovery. Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Robbins have taken an apartment with Mrs. Curry Pouncey on Church street), and are at home to their friends there. Mrs. J. I). Hooks has entirely re covered from her recent illness and is at home again on Lee street. A. B. Metz, of Cordele, was a visi tor in Americus Sunday. Lauren Chambliss, who is a stu dent this year at Auburn, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. ___ - " >lll-7 ■ i__ | MRU MF • “1 IWW W i BOW’S TOUR BLOOD? Pimples and Eruptions Mean Bad Blood People who have impure or impover ished blood should be careful to take only a temperance remedy made of wild roots and barks, such as Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is and has been for nearly 50 years. Ingredients printed on wrapper. The first clay yon start to take this reliable medicine, impure germs and accumulations begin to separate in the blood and are then expelled through the eliminative organs. In place of the impurities, the ar teries and veins gradually get fresh vitalized blood and the action of this good blood on the skiu means that pimples, boils, carbuncles, eczema, rash, acne and many skin blemishes will disappear. Then you must re member that when the blood is right, the liver, stomach, bowels and kidneys become healthy, active and vigorous and you will have no more trouble with indigestion, backache, headache. Get Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery to-day at any medicine deal ers, in tablet or liquid form, or send 10c. for trial package to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. New OkleaNS, La.—l could not eat anything greasy for it would make me so sick at my stomach that I could not do my work. It wouid make me dizzy, and I would have to sit down and wait until it passed away. Then there would be sour risings. 1 was told to take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, which I did, and I must say that it cured me. I have not felt any of this trouble ever since. 1 would recommend this remedy with all faith to all who have dysjiepsia.” .Ici.es Gesvais, No. Frcu<*.tuuat> -Street. Chambliss, at their home on Barlow street. He will return to his studies ! Wednesday. Mrs. J. 0. McArthur and family have moved into their recently pur chased residence on Church street known as the Elam home, and will be at home to their friends there for the future. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. H. McDonald will leave for their old home, Balti more, Md., the latter part of this month. Mrs. McDonald has never recovered from her accident last fall. Hollis Fort and T. O. Marshall at tended the opening of Superior Court at Preston today. DEATHS MISS ALICE NALL. A telegram received by Mrs. B. : L. Guerry today announces the death Sunday evening at Toledo, Ohio, of Miss Alice Nall, a former resident of ■ Americus. The funeral will be held this afternoon at Toledo. Miss Nall, who was 38 years of age, and had been reared in Americus, went to Toledo to reside with her brother J. J. Nall, a year ago. Details of her illness were not contained in the telegram conveying intelligence of 1 A PLAIN UNVARNISHED RECORD VERSUS RIDICULOUS ABUSE (An Editorial from The Atlanta Journal, March 31, 1920) N-0 Georgian to the manner born will be deceived by par tisan efforts to divert atten- I tion from the vital issues in | the Presidential primary through j ranting abuse of Senator Hoke j Smith. That robustious school of pol itics has torn passion to tatters all too often to draw more than a fatigued smile from the informed native pub- 1 lie. Late comers to the Common wealth, however, may be puzzled to account for the melodramatic stride, the air-sawing gesture, the peanut gallery gaze, the hoarsely bellowed ‘‘Curses on ye” that instantly be came the role in certain quarters j when Sentaor Smith entered the pri mary. If such bewildered’ onlook ers there are, we beg of them not to judge all Georgia, nor even the little company of players now stamping the stage, by this moment’s ' outburst. The State is in no wise hysterical; an-i after a while our vituperative friends themselves will lay aside the tragic mask and ad mit that although there was method in their madness, tiiey decidedly over-played the part. What the foes of the senior Sen ator may say against him or what his friends may say for him is not so important as what the record itself declares that indisputable' record of Georgia and American history whose aim it is, “nothing to extenuate, nor set down aught in malice.” Whoever caies to consult this impartial witness will find that Hoke Smith has done many a ser viceable deed for his Common wealth and his country. They will find him as a youth of twenty-one defending the integrity of the bal lot against carpet-bag invasion, de fying the bayonet rule under which the South then labored. They will find him as chairman of the Fulton Democratic Executive Committee, a leader in the hard, grim battles of Reconstruction, and later a pioneer in the larger fields of Southern edu cation. They will see him in 1893 called to the forefront of President Cleveland’s administration, young est Cabinet memuer ever known, save Alexander Hamilton, and then the first Georgian to be honored in that capacity since the breach between the States. They will see him as Secretary of the Interior putting an lend to Federal pension frauds that were costing the people millions, and at the same time fully protecting the interests of every rightful bene ficiary. Looking further, they will recog- I nize him as an outstanding expon ’ ent of liberal as opposed to reac i tionary thought in Georgia politics, I and will judge of his appeal to the I public mind by the fact that in the memorable Governor’s race in 1906 I he carried one hundred and twenty- I two of the one hundred and forty leight counties, carried them over | whelmingly against four of the most distinguished and personally popular j opponents that ever a candidate fac | ed. Two years later they see him 'defeated for re-election; but with the cooling lapse of still another two I years, they see him returned to the I Governor’s chair, his constructive 1 policies vindicated. Next they will i note his selection by a decisive j majority to fill the unexpired term of the lamented Senator Clay, and will observe that in his subsequent race before the people he was elect ed, receiving one hundred and thirty thousand votes—one of the most emphatic tributes in the state’s an nals. This is the man and this the rec | ord that insensate partisanship now i attacks as though he were guilty of I high ermies and misdemeanors. To I what specific act do the wagers of j this wild war against character and ' achievement refer? It is the Smith ’ Lever law, that monumental meas- I ure which has done more for the j agricultural interest of the South and 'of the common country than any I other one piece of legislation—is it I this that they so bitterly resent in Senator Smith’s record? Or is it the Smith-Hughes Vocational Educa tional law, or the Smrtn-Feares act for the rehabilitation of disabled sol diers, or the pending Smith-Towner bill, providing for a Secretary of Education in the President’s Cabinet and for a fund of $100,000,000 to promote public educational interests? Do they denounce the senior senator for his persistent and fruitful labors in behalf of Georgia schools, Geor gia farms and Georgia ports? Or are they bursting with indignation because as one of the leading fram- ' her death. Besides her brother, with whom she resided, Miss Nall ’®. S P' vived by a number of relatives hvi g in this community. , , . Previous to going to Toledo to re side Miss Nall, who wc- a stenogra pher of unusual ability, was emp oj ed by a number of Americus attor neys, and in addition gave instruction in stenography to a number of Amei icus young people, who attained pio ficiency under her direction. oi several months before leaving Amei icus, her health had been declining, and announcement of her death was not unexpected among her fnenr > here. MRS. T. M. GILL. Mrs. T. M. Gill, who had been criti cally ill during three weeks past, died Saturday at her home in New ui leans. With her when the end came was her daughter, Mrs. J. D - Ded man, of Americus, who was called to New Orleans when Mrs. Gill s tll -1 ness became serious to attend her I bedside. Mrs. Dedman will return to Americus Tuesday, the funeral and interment having occurred Sunday in New Orleans. WANTED—Fifteen or twenty p v -nds clean white rags. Will pay 5 cents per pound. Times ‘ Recorder office. —28-tf-dh ers of the Federal Reserve law he I stood out for amendments which made it possible for three regional banks to be established m the cotton ; states, whereas none might have been i here as the measure was originally proposed? Or are they incensed be : cause, largely through his endeavors i the Reserve Bank of the Sixth Lbs- I trict was allotted to Georgia instead of Alabama or Louisiana? Do they i consider it traitorous in Senator Smith to have saved Camp Gordon and Camp Benning from being blot : ted from the map as Republican par ; tisans of the House and Senate had designed and well nigh accomplished ; Can they deny for a moment that in ' all which pertains to the business, the agricultural and the educational I interests of Georgia, and of the com mon couuntry, he has been unfail ingly vigilant and constructive.’ Or can they pretend that work like this ■ deserves no better appreciation than ; headlong abuse? As to the senior senator’s war- ■ time services, the record again is the one fair court of appeal. Not 1 even his intensest political enemy can gainsay that in the winter of 1915- 1916 he urged immediate and full i sinewed preparation for the emer gency which broke upon us the fol i lowing spring, and that long ere this he pleaded for army and navy ex , pansion in spite of pronounced op ; position to that policy on the part of a number of other leaders. It can not be gainsaid that j he spoke and voted for the arming i of our merchant ships, his warmth of 'argument in that connection leading him almost into a p<-.- nal difficulty i with Senator La Follette, who op : posed the measu.e. Following the declaration of war, which he earn | estly supported, he exerted himself, I as a member of tne Senate Finance . Committee, in behalf of unstinted : appropriations and the speediest pos ' sible program for mobilizing the i country’s every fighting resource. He ; voted for the selective service bill and aggressively advocated it, at the ; very time when Democrats like Speaker Clark and Floor Leader I Kitchin were opposing it, and when lit seemed that supporters of the measure were hazarding their politi ! cal all. Is it for his record on these i vital war matters that Senator Smith is being denounced? The Food Control bill, the Fuel I Control bill, the Railroad Federaliza | tion bill and the Overman bill, all ; received his vote, and, in so far as j their basic principles were concerned, j his earnest advocacy, he stood ' for certain amendments to them on the ground that in their original form ■ they were either defective or were j needlessly inimical to common inter jests and common rights; and those amendments were adopted. Likewise i he supported the Merchants Marine | bill, not only when it was introduced ias a war emergency measure, but I also when it was first proposed, dur ; ing the earlier stages of the Euro- I pean conflict. How his colleagues re garded Senator Smith’s work and his i counsel in the critical tasks of win ning the war is seen in the fact that | they created an additional place on I the Military Affairs Committee for i the express purpose of assigning him I to it; and any informed Senator will i testify that after Mr. Smith took that ; post, friction between the committee | and the War Department ceased and i the situation in every respect grew ! more satisfactory these are not mat i ters of heresay; they are matters of undebatable record. How unjust ! then, and how ridiculous that politi cal feudists should seek to class a Senator who earnestly and ably sup ported the war program with those | who opposed it! I A V or his _ course in th e matter of the Peace Treaty, Senator Smith’s severest critics can not refute the ■ 1 a at the raotnent of crucial I thl 1 ’ Wht i n ]t Was a ffM est ion of saving i the great covenant with reservations or losing it by insistence upon re’ maining unmodified in word or let ter, he voted with the twenty-thr* Democrats who stood for the onlv form of ratification obtainable and who represented the best halanoaa Th O is g h t 3f A P’ erica and of the world This being the record, is it not sportsmanlike, is it not unjust is fi’ not ridiculous for political terma i P ants ;<? continue their abusT of • Georgia s senior senator? i . During his more than pio-h* in the Senate The Journal ha'dYZ ferec.with Mr. Smith on certain questions, both before and after the luJ’tasF may differ wath hin. again But justice is justice, service is ser' vice, and truth is truth to the end of the reckoning.— (adv.) aOl MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1920. SHIP ITCHING ECZEMA Penetrating, Antiseptic Zemo Will Help You w Never mind ’ dw often you have tried and failed, yot tan stop burning, itching eczema quickly by applying Zemo. Furnished by any druggist for 35c. Extra large bottle, SI.OO. Healing begins the moment Zemo is applied. In a short time usually every’ trace of eczema, tetter, pimples, rash, blackheads and similar skin diseases will be removed. For clearing the skin and making it vigorously healthy, al ways use Zemo, the penetrating, antiseptic liquid. It is not agreasvsalveanditdoesnotstain. When others'fail it is the one dependable treatment for skin troubles of all kindc • The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O. > Alcazar “today Paramount Pictuie BRYANT WASHBURN In “TOO MUCH JOHNSON 5 ’ and Sunshine Comedy PRIVATE HUSBAND” Tomorrow Fox Circus Day Dainty SHIRLEY MASON In “HER ELEPHANT MAN” KINOGRAM R Admission ..10c and 25c glllpg "ZIRON IS A GOOOMEDICINE” San Rock City, A’a, Gentleman, Aflei Having Given II Conscientious Trial. Zlron is a new scientific combination ol pure inorganic, official, U. S. P’mrmaco- P e ’ a ir ° n > with the hypophosphiiesof lime ana soda and other valuable tonic ingred- ,J S > recommended by the best medical authorities in the treatment of anemic conditions. helps to put iron into your blood and this helps to build strength for you, wf .en you are pale, weak, nervous, de pressed. r-,^ ea ? w^a t Mr. Sidney Fry, of Rock Uity, Ala., says, and then try Ziron. He m ?,c s the following statement: ‘Something over a week ago I used ctron for the first time. 1 was troubled with indigestion and had a spell of weak ness. Ziron helped both troubles. 1 felt stronger and my stomach quit hurting. I really feel that Ziron is a good medicine. It surely helped me.” >our druggist will sell you Ziron on a guarantee that if the first bottle does not benefit you, he will refund the money you paid him. Get a bottle of Ziron today! ZN 18 Blood Needs