Newspaper Page Text
MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 21, 1924
ERWIHSFUNEMLTO
BE HELD IT ID
Former District Attorney’s Re
mains to Be Interred There
Wednesday
MACON, April 21. Funeral
services over the remains of Marion
Erwin, former United States Dis
trict attorney, for the past eight
years of the Southern district ot
Georgia, who died in Garden City,
Long Island, Saturday, will be
held here from the First Christion
church Wednesday afternoon.
bs.kieTpeel
45. DIEO LIST NIGHT
Death Comes to Estimable Ru
ral Resident After Illnes of
Single Day
Mrs. Bessie Dunbar Peel, 45
years of age, died at the family
residence near the Lee County line
on thee Lee street road unday night
at 10 o’clock, death following an ill
ness of one day.
Funeral services will be held
at 3 o’clock Wesdnesday after
noon from Anthony Chapel church.
Interment will be in the
church cemetery. Rev. J. P. Daugh
erty, assisted by Rev. C. T. Clark,
will conduct the obsequies.
The pallbearers will be G. R,
Simpson, Neon Buchanan, Dudley
Gatewood, T. M. Furlow, R. S.
Broadhurst, J. A. Davenport, Sam
Rodgers and George Walters.
Surviving are her husband, J. W.
Peel, five daughters, Mrs. W. P.
Phillips, of Putmar.’ county; Misses
Mary Elizabeth Peel, Bessie Ruth
Peel, Emily Peel, and Elsie Peel,
five sons, John Ed Peel, Henry Tim
Peel, Hoke Smith Peel, Charlie
Frank Peel; her mother, Mrs. Mag
gie Dunbar, of Barnesville; three
sisters, Mrs. J. P. Milner, Mrs. J.
W. Elliott, of Barnesville, and, Mrs.
A. M. Gillespy, of Macon; two
brothers, J A. Dunbar, of Macon,
and D. E. Durbar, of Atlanta.
Mrs. Peel was a member of the
Anthony Chaped church, was widely
beloved in her community life.
She was prominently connected by
birth and marriage in Sumter coun
ty and this section.
chilhwTt
MITE HOUSE TODAY
Grounds of Executive Mansion
Turned Over to Youngsters for
Easter Egg Hunt
WASHINGTON, April 21—To
day is being observed as Children’s
Day at the White House here.
From early this morning until eve
ning the ground about the execu
tive mansion will be given over to
thousands of boys and girls in the
capital, all bent on participation in
the good old custom of rolling af
ter Easter eggs.
President and Mrs. Coolidge have
planned to join the children for a
time during the festivities later to
day, and the president has planned
to have the United States Marir.e
Band play continuously during the
afternoon hours, so as to add to the
pleasure of the boys and girls en
gaged in the egg hunt.
The earth’s sensible atmosphere
extends more than 100 miles in
height. I
$5,000 TO LOAfF’
On Americus
Residence Property
Phone 830
LEWIS ELLIS
AUTO THIEVES AND FIRE
LOSS CANNOT MAKE
YOU FEAR, IF YOU
HAVE AUTO IN-
SURANCE
Let our Fire and Theft auto
insurance policy relieve you of
forebodings, ’t is real assur
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only from loss hut from
thoughts of loss, as well.
Ea™
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Tag’s Way of Thinking By Blosser
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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES— They’re Off >—By Martin
/BOOTS ALL i: wr<-M-.Nk4A,L >4<X /TMERt TOOK? , AW, MS A COUPIx , '■ FWk YY "A
YOU SURE lj T D H ' M ’ MI THLRt THEY ,OF PORTERS YOU'kt l>7 GOODBYE. bye -, 7 \ V\-.
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OUR BOARDING HOUSE ’ ’By Ahern
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'nfS.E 9'Jkl VJILL SUikJE BRIGHTER 'TbHORR’O’J
BMffl »F HOWARD
THEATER SUCCUMBS
j. Troup Howard, Atlanta Cot
ton Merchant, Dies In Balti
more Following Operation
BALTIMORE, Md., April 21.
Troup Howard, 55 years of age,
prominent cotton merchant of At
lanta, Ga., died at a hospital here
Sunday from bronchial pneumonia,
which developed following an oper
ation for gastric ulcer, Mr. Howard
came here last Tuesday for treat
ment of the ulcer from which he
had been suffering for a number
of years. An operation was per
formed last Thursday after which
the pneumonia set in.
The Jbody. accompanied by Mrs.
Howard, who had accompanied her
husba: d North left for Atlanta, this
afternoon.
MACON THEATRES
FORMERLY OWNED
MACON APRIL 21.—G. Troup
Howard, former cotton merchant
and former owner of Macon thea
ters, and who was reputed to have
made and lost several fortunes, re
gaining his losses after each mis
fortune, died yesterday morning at
9 o’clock at Union Memorial Hos
pital, Baltimore, after a major op
eration. He had been in the hospi
tal about ten days and was believed
to be recovering, but pneumonia de
eloped and that caused his death.
He was about 54 years of age.
Macon friends and relatives were
notified of the death of Mr. Howard
during yesterday. The body will
be taken to Atlanta where the fun
eral will -be held on Tuesday.
Mr. Howard is survived by hi»
, Hid.®*', who before hep jgarriage
was Miss Eugenia Bond, of Atlanta,
and three children, Troup Howard,
Jr., of Liverpool; Frances, aged 15,
and Hampton, aged 17-
Mr. Howard was known in this
country and in England as a cot
ton merchant. But several years
ago he became interested in the
movies and decided to build theaters,
here. He was or<e of the prime
movers in the building of the Capi
tol Theater. He disposed of his in
terests here and went to Atlanta,
Where he built the Howard, one of
the finest picture theaters in the
South.
BOISTEROUS MACONIANS
DISTURB TOURIST CAMP
MACON, April 21. —Following
an invasion of Macon’s tourist camp
by two drunker? men early Sunday
mjorning, and assaults upon two,
“Southern Mothers Suggested
This New Kind of Laxative”
>
Second of a Series of Three Interviews With W. L. Hand
“During the many years that I ran a drug store at Charlotte, it was
an every-day occurrence for women to ask me for something in liquid
. form to be given the children in place of calomel and castor oil.
t “I got to studying this problem
’ and found that if f could get a hap
■ py balance between certain vege-
• table ingredients, some of which
1 act on the liver and some on the
. bowels, I would be able to fill this
very universal and very definite
need.
“I employed scientific methods
‘ and tested one combination after
1 another unitl, finally, I hit upon a
1 formula which proved up exactly
. right.
Mothers Pleased.
“After that, I answere the daily
question by happing out a bottl? of
men and a woman, tOscar William
son, motorcycle officer, and J. L.
Stribling, street car motorman,
have been placed under arrest
charged with felonious assault and
drunkenness.
The victims of the assaults wen
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morrell, c.’
Kankakee, 111., and B. E. Parker,
82, of St. jLawrence, N. Y., who
went to the rescue of the Morrells
when he heard their cries for help
and saw tw 0 men beating them and
dragging : the<w-4pofflF=a tent at Cen
tral City park. T he victims were
taken to a hospital, Mrs. Morrell’s
feet were cut by being dragged on
the ground and her head was bruis
ed from Wows from a blunt instru
ment. Parker’s scalp was split open
and his head bruised. Morrell sus
tained two lacerations of the head
and body.
Liv-o-Lax, and the demand for it
grew so rapidly (from one mother
recommending Liv-o-Lax to anoth
er) that I finally had to give up the
■ drug store and start a factory.
Available To All Now
“Now I am able to tell this story
of Liv-o-Lax to every family
■ and to say that you can get Liv-o
--' at your own drug store.
i “If any one in the family is bil
' ious, constipated, stomach not do
ing its duty, or with a cold coming
on, get Liv-o-Lax and give it a try.
Really a Double Action
“I will guarantee that L‘ v -Q-Lax
THE OLD HOME TOWN ’ By Stanley,
■. .... ‘ Lt ‘ \
WL'AT WEE A-M. N 4 <HOME BRUhiOl
the- chickens S□□ r 23 i -/% . /
IB sTAf<rep-TMEN i H _
gl THE CLATTER, in I T| ]!> ■ /JET
g TH'
ft
pom) he. tovjel will U—
))S BLUE IN I———
for face
l )OUTRAGE 1 ‘\
illiF<, i getodtV ’
//ah'll unramei
jjpC
STANLCy (g) 2-J
a TTPDMMIEP FfvOM CHICAGO SLIPPED ON A CAKE CF n *
I SOAP AT THE CENTRAL HOTEL TODAY AND BECAM
1 HOPELESSLY ENTANGLED IN THE NE'AI ROLLER. -*> j/2
k TOWEL RECENTLY
WANTED
SECURITY SALES
MANAGER
A sales manager who has an or
ganization of salesmen to sell the
securities of one of the South’s
leading industrials (2nd largest in
U. S.)
. .Both prefem'd... and ..Conmipn
Stocks on dividend paying basis,
with assets of a million dollars
managed by prominent Bankers
and Business men of the South.
Unusual opportunity for th e right
man with an organization.
Write to "Sales Manager,” Box
385, Americus, Ga.
Originator
Sf'***'
W. L. HAND, Charlotte, N. C.
Who«e long-continued investiga
tions and < xperimen’s are re
counted in this interview.
will not only clear the bowels, but
relieve liver congestion as well, and
it is in this latter respect that so
many family laxatives fall short.
“I will be glad to send a sample
Write me.”
W. L. Hand, president W. L. Hand
Medicine company, Charlotte, N. C.
An Extraordinary
SALE of
MEN’S SHIRTS
l, Z 3
Values ’ r' g B
$1.50 to $3.50
» For Only
fiSW»
95c
You seldom have such an opportunity as this. These
Shirts are exquisitely tailored, made from fine
Count material and guaranteed absolutely fast
color. .
Buy Early and Buy
AU You Need <T? ▼ 7
PEARLMAN’S
‘The Best Goods at the Price ' V
No Matter What the Price” 1
PAGE FIVE