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About The Montgomery monitor. (Mt. Vernon, Montgomery County, Ga.) 1886-current | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1920)
Sure Relief 6 Bell-ans 1 -?.J Hot water iCZj?' Sure Relief aELL-ANS FOR IN DIGESTION New Test for Dyes. Tin fading effect of light Tis«v» been standardized nnd is rninlo use of In h iicw Invention for tin* te'ding of col cirihi! iinxii' use of In textiles, will I l>.i|><•■- noil similar inat<'rials. A |*ow<*r ful Ihlllll Is made us** of with specially designed electrode? cnti?titiifc>g about 2,K*dt watts. Provision Is made for tost Inc about to samples at otio lime aid as tin* samples are being exposed n portion of otn li Is shielded for tin* purpose of comparison after tin* lost. "Diamond Dyes" j Tell You How j A Child can Follow Directions and get Perfect Results MSS ♦♦♦♦♦OMMHIO • SS • Kiioli piiekmto nt "I liaiiionil Dyes" | contains illroi'lion.s so simple that any ] woman onn illamoml-clyo a now, rich, fadeless color Into worn, shabby (jar- | men Is, draperies, coverings, whether i wool, silk, linen, eotton or mixed goods. Huy "111011101111 I lyes"- no other kind —then perfis-t results are guaranteed even If you have never dyed before. Dmintlit has color card. —Adv. Always Optimistic. lie I wear no tuna's collar. Sin- Well, that mixes a laundry ••111. * Don't think because a girl giggles pt every!bln* a man says that she lias a keen sense of humor. Clear Your Complexion y \ Thk ( 1 f J Remedy— 'vxVHancooc Sulphur Compound For pimple*. Mack head*, freckle*. Motclie*. andun.n* well as tor mores*r(ou* face, scalp and body eruption*. lilve*. ec«ema. etc., u*e thl* *clentltic compound of »u|phur. Asa to- | tiun. It Hiolhe* and heals; taken internally a lew drop* In a gt»*» of water “It aet*at the root of the trouble and purfic* the blood. PhytlcUnt agree that sulphur Is one of the most efleclive blood purlhcr* known Kc incmhei, a good complexion l*n t »kln deep -It'* health deop Be *ure to a.k (or HANCOCK SULPHUR COMPOUND. It has been used with satis factory result* (or over 25 yeais. 60c and $1.20 the bottle al your druggist'* l( he can't supply you, send hi* name and the price In stamp* *»d we will send you a bottle direct. HANCOCK LIQUIH SULPHUR » COMPANY Balmuorr. Mi f> « lUnmk S»tfh*r ON#- I mtnt *nJ **—/•' x urt the L > Ut*U OnrnfmiuL '\/-\ a* l‘ ‘ - - ■ . , - ■ Acid Stomach Makes the Body Sour Nine Out of Ten People Sutler From It It Heads its harmful acids and gases all *vcr the body, instead of health »sd |t ivngth. Day and night this ceaseless dam- J kge goes on. No matter how strong, its : victim cannot long withstand the health destroying effects of an acid stomach. Good news for millions of sufferers Chemists have found a sure remedy—one that takes the arid up and carries it out , of the body; of course, when the cause is removed, the sufferer gets well. Moating. indigestion, sour, acid, gassy stomach miseries all removed. This is proven hy over half a million ailing folks who have taken KATONIC xvith wonder* j ful Wnctits. It ran be obtained from any ■ druggist, who will chew fully refund its trilling cost if not entirely satisfactory* | Kveryonc should enjoy its benefits. Pre •pientlv the first tablet gives re’ief. lafeycctt+ctly < U KING PINH PLUG TOBACCO Known xis "that good kind” | c 7n/ it—and you will blow whit i v Hr* Pittsburgh Bible Institute l*r*p,srv» for lb# Ow*|**i ministry »n d for nil forma ofChrtMi.n work Tt-'ITION Is* FRKK Tli<• »iud«m of Itul# n.e*n* and even of n# mean*. is r»v*n an opportunity fdr tratntnc tMnd for It* Prospectus and free literature REV. C. H. PBIDOKON 1* ConffreftS St ru-aborgh. P# INVESTIGATION OF REASON FOR H. C. L. LABOR PUTS BLAME FOR HIGH PRICES ON PROFITS, NOT WAGES THREE-FOLD RELATIONSHIP Relation Exists “Between High Prices, Profiteering and Addition to Quota of Millionaires,” Lauck Says Washington. A study of profiteer ing In American industry, made under the auspice.- of the railway brother ! hoods, was presented to the railr'ad . labor board in support of the railway workers' demands for higher pay and to refute the charge that Increased labor costs are responsible for th<- high cost of living. Calling attention to the many war ; made millionaires, the study contends that a threefold’ relationship exists “betwe'en high prices, profiteering and the addition to the quota of mil lionaires," and that the increase in the wealth of the wealthy is an “un answerable” refutation of all attempts to charge labor with profiteering and ot'‘hold labor responsible for the high cost of living. “For, if invested wealth gets a larger return,"’ said the study, “a larger proportion of the national in | come than formerly, the man who j gives personal service of labor is bound to get a smaller proportion. I The menace of the future lies to the I probability that the vast profits which are still held in reserve will be I capitalized, in order that, under the pretext of a fair return on capital, those who own them may continue to take the larger proportion of nation al Income, even at the expense of very great suffering on the part of workers, when the over-stimulation of war has passed away.” Os the extraordinary increase in the price of sugar now amounting to 300 per cent, the study says the increase in labor cost paid by the consumer was less than 15 per cent. The result of advanced prices, according to the quoted reports of twelve companies producing over half of the sugar con sumed in tin* United Slates, was pic tured in 11 1 net profits of these con cerns which, it was said, rose from an average of $11,000,000 during the years 1913 to 1914 to $34,000,000 for the years 1917-1918. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE IS HIT BY LOUIS F. POST —-— j Charges Department Os Justice And Newspaper Men Are Trying To Create “Red’’ Scare” Washington. Charges that the de j pnrtiqent of justice, with the asslst > mice of certain “two-salarled newspa per men.’’ is trying "to create a ter rorist scare" throughout the country, were made before the house rules committee by Louis F. Post, assistant secretary of labor. He defended his action In freeing 1.293 aliens caught in the nation wide "Hod raids." Mr. l’ost, against whom impeach ment proceedings were started by Representative lloeh, Kansas, also at i tacked the house immigration comniit , too and the bureau of immigration of the department of justice. "Misleading and unjustified recom | mendations are found in the report of the house committee and I have often found that the memoranda of Anthony Caminetti. director general |of immigration, urging deportation are not backed by the evidence,” Mr. | Post claimed. Members of the rules committee called upon Mr. Post to name the two nowspaiMxr men, • "1 couldn't prove a single case,” ; said Mr. Post, “but 1 have heard such I reports.” "From November 1, 1919 to April ; 24. 6,350 warrants for the arrests of | aliens were issued," Mr. Post said. I "About 6,000 were arrested, of whom approximately 3,000 were immediate ly released. Os the remaining num ber, 762 have been ordered deported but only 22 have actually been sent out of the country. This is largely due to the fact that most of those, to be deported come from Russia, and it is Impossible to obtain entrance to ports of that country." ’ Landers Pays Penalty For Murder Commerce. Ga. Hollis Landers, convicted of the murder of Sheriff Cliff Harbor, was hanged at the Jack son county jail at Jefferson. A crowd gathered around the courthouse but , fi w witnessed the hanging. Landers, xx ho was braought here from Athens, stated that he hated to shoot Sheriff Harbor, but that lie would have liked .to have got Sheriff Crow, of Hall county. At the time of the murder, I binders xvas under charges of stealing an automobile and of being a slacker. Sixth Anthrax Victim In Chicago Chicago. Mike Vul+vich, an em ploye of the Chicago Curled Hair company, was in a hospital here be lieved to be the sixth victim of an thrax. Five persons have died here recently from anthrax, health authori ties announced in ordering the Chica go Curled Hair company’s factory closed. Three of the dead were em ployes of the factory. Vigorous steps to curb the spread of anthrax are to be taken by health authorities. They declare the disease Jias been imported from Russia or Argentina, THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR, MT. VERNON, GEORGIA. JUAREZ DESERTS CARRANZA Ey Defection Os Garrison Rebels Ge ' Control Os The Largest ■ State In Mexico j Washington.—The murder of two more Americans in Mexico, reported to the state department, accentuated the concern with which officials here are watching developments beyond the I border. There is nothing, however, j to indicate to xvhat extent the aiti | tude of the Washington government to- , ward the revolutionary movement might lie affected by the fact that the j incidents occurred in Carranza con trolled territory. Requests for additional warship pro- , lection at points on the east coast of Mexico already had been forwarded to j the navy by the state department. While this had no relation to the lat- j i st murders, it is said to indicate the • view of officials as to the unsettled conditions prevailing in that region, j ‘ nominaly at least, still held by Car ranza forces. On the border, the reported closure • of the port of Juarez was interpreted ■ as indicating defection of the federal I ; garrison under General Escobar to the • - rebel cause. Loss of this' entry port, i officials say, will lie a serious blow to the federals because of its revenue , producing capacity. They believe com- j [ plete rebel control of the state of Chi t hualiua will be the logical result. The murder of Eben Francis Green- j law and his young son by Mexicans ! ’ near El Oro, only 125 miles from Mex- j ico City, brought from the American ( embassy in Mexico City a prompt and ! ’ emphatic demand that the Mexican ’ government arrest and punish the mur derers. The American government contends that the Carranza authori -1 ties were responsible for the protec ' lion of the Creenluws because of the ‘ presence of Mexican troops in the im - mediate vicinity. 1 The date of the sailing of the fleet of destroyers to Mexican waters has not been made public, but the belief is , expressed that they xvill be sent at ; once. Destroyers are to be stationed at i Tampico. Tuxpan, Vera Cruz and Fron i tera, ready to take off any Americans i who may he in danger either from the . Mexican federal authorities or the rebels. ; CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST PARENTS ARE CHARGED WITH MANSLAUGHTER The Christian Church Heads Have Raised A Large Defense Fund And Will Stand By Them Newark, N. J. -Accusation that An drew Walker and his wife, Elizabeth, "with force and arms,” one Dorothy i Walker, in the peace of God, of this slate and the jurisdiction of this court, 1 then and there being, feloniously did kill and slay,” is the charge against the parents of a little girl who died ol diptlieria without medical attendance other than Christian Science practi tioners. The Walkers went on trial in the court of quarter session here on a direct charge of manslaughter, based on tho fact that they refused to call a physician for their 9-year-old daugh • ter. The case has aroused the atten tion not only of jurists and medical men, hut of tho Christian Science i church heads themselves, xvlio have ' raised a large defense fund, aided hy ' a contribution from the mother church j iti Boston. . I Dorothy died on May 4. a year ago. i ' Investigation hy Health Ofifcer C. V. j Cruster developed the fact that diph- - therm was the cause of death. The : father xvas suffering from the same 1 disease, and the little girl had been I ill for ten days. Doctor Craster de- ! I dared that the Walkers told him that ( it was at the girl's oxvn request that no regular physicians had been called iu. Opening the ense for the stale, As sistant Prosecutor John A. Bernhard ’ told the jury he would shoxv that par ents are under a Jegal duty to provide necessary medical care for their chil dren, and that if Dorothy had had such care, she would have lived. I Alligator And Booze Captured In Ca Atlanju, Ua. —Judged by its contents 1 a car from a wet country was captur ed here by officers, containing ten gal? ' lons of whiskey and an alligator near 1 ly two feet long. Glen Clayton, the driver of the car, was released on a ’ SSOO bond, and the imported alligator 1 was carried to the home of an offi i cer, xvhere it has become the play J ' thing for al Ithe boys living near the place. " Gen. Pershing Halted By Panama Mob • Panama.—-United States army offi f eers and soldiers were ordered not to : enter the city of Panama. The order ! I was issued hy Major General Kennedy, ! commander in the Panama canal zone, j as a result of the demonstration hold ' hy Panumans in protest against the ‘ United States acquiring part of Ta- ! ‘ go island for canal defense purposes, j 1 Several thousand pimple took part in the demonstration, an an automobile in • which General Pershing xvas driving j > to a hull ui his honor at ilie Union • ciub xvas halted by the procession. > Secret Wedding For Fannie Hurst New York. Fannie Hurst, the uu r thor. has niade public announcement ot' her secret marriage five years ago ' to Jacques S. Danielson, a pianist. Un • der a pre-nuptial agreement with her ' husband, she said, they had lived apart ' since their wedding so as not to inter r sere with each other's careers. She I said they made their apoiatuients for -' dinners and other engagements iu a > j purely formal ltfanner, "meeting as per inclination and not as duty." The>, i 1 intend to continue that plan, she ; »tided. REBELS CAPTURE PRES. CARRANZA BEFORE HIS FALL CARRANZA ! KILLS MANY PRISONERS—NO FIGHT AT CAPITAL CAPITOL CITY EASILY TAKEN The Report Is That General Obregon Will Spare Carranza’s Life—Villa Will Quit “Revoluting” Mexico City.—The report that Presi dent Carranza, fleeing from the capi , tal, was captured at Apisaco, is offi cially confirmed. General Obregon. heading the revo lutionary troops, entered the capital May 10. He hits guaranteed that Car- I ranza’s life shall he spared. Jen. Francisco Murgula Carranza. I military commander at Mexico City, be fore leaving the capital, which now is m complete possession of revolutin ary forces, carried out a wholesale ; slaughter of political prisoners at San- I Hugo, the military prison, according to a buletin issued at revolutionary, headquarters, Fifteen Mexican generate xvere among those reported slaughtered. "The city was shocked over this | blood epilogue for the Carranza re i gime,” the bulletin says. There are no details of the occupa ! tion. The report that President Car ranza had been arrested at Esperanza, I state of Vera Cruz, while fleeing from the capital city to Vera Cruz, is un confirmed. The report says his cap- , ture had been effected by Gen. Guad elqpe Kanchez. A bulletin issued at revolutionary headquarters here says members of the diplomatic corp representing the various foreign'nations, met at Mexi co City and requested President Car ranza not to combat revolutionary' forces marching on the capital. The bulletin gave Mexico City newspapers of May 4 as authority for the state ment. Gen. Reynaldo Garza, commander.of federal forces in the Nuevo Laredo military district, tea refugee on Unit 'd States soil. Following defeat of his troops and capture of Nuevo Laredo; hy revolutionists the Carranza offi? er arrived in Lerado and took refuge; in the Mexican consulate. General Garza, who ordered his troops to make a determined stand I against the rebel attack on Nuevo La redo at dawn, saw his defense crum pled after a short fight and, with his son. escaped in an automobile. Pur sued hy rebels, the general eventually made u ford of the Rio Grande five, miles west of Nuevo Laredo and ar rived on United States soil with his automobile perforated by bullets. It is reported that Francisco, noting the success oij the revolution, has agreed to quit fighting, and will lay down his arms. DYING, SHE KILLED HUBBY; HE WANTED TO MARRY ANOTHER Wife in Jail. Suffering With Tubercu losis, Smiles— She May Not Live Until Trial Elgin, ill. —Despite tire ravages of tu bereulosos, which has progressed so j far that her life tea nightmare that | may end at hny moment Mrs. Henry I i C. Fredericks continues to smile as j i she tosses on her bed in the city jail of Elgin. The xVoma.n deliberately pumped seven bullets into the body of her i wealthy husband as he entered her j home after she had spent a*month | practicing xvith her revolver to make | sure that her aim would be true. Knowing that the disease xvhich has ; claimed her would end her life with ! in a few weeks, ho, would not xvait for her to die, she told the police, and j had planned to marry another woman. ”1 have had my revenge and now I can die in peace,” she said. “I; would not give him up for any women, if he xvouid not xvait for me to die, as he knexv I would xvithin a month or two. I made up my mind to take, him with me. The thought that he has gone before me. and that maybe the other woman he had chosen to succeed me is now suffering as I have suffered, makes me tranquil and con tented.” Physicians say that Mrs. Frederick will never be brought to trial.- She xvas held to the grand jury without bail and between the coughs that rack her body on the slightest exer ; tion. she laughed at the injuest jury's ! decision. "It has come too late." she said; "they will never try me; I know 1 am dying.” ! Kiev is Captured By The Polish Army j Warsaw.—Polish cavalry entered the city of Kiev on the heels of the retreating Bolsheviki. The city has ' been evacuated by the Bolsheviki. The Polish infantry kept up its advance j toward Kiev, cavalry detachments keeping in contact with the infantry ■ forces. There was little fighting, ac j cording to reports, the cavalry going j into the city all day as the infantry ad : vani»d in a great semi-circle. A fexv ; machine gun shots were fired in the ! early morning, but this was quickly ' silenced and reports say that the evac uation of Kiev began shortly Nationwide Fight Against Bonus New York. — Nation-wide measures in opposition to the passage of a fed eral soldiers' bonus bill xvere urged at a mass meeting under the auspices of the City Post Club. American Le gion. and the committee for aid to dis abled veterans, at which Senator King of Utah and Representative Pell ot New York spoke'. It was voted to take steps to defeat the bonus plan and to demand that adequate provision be made for the care of disabled ex service men and the dependents of th( dead. WRIGLEYS Bright rosy cheeks yßk and red lips come from good y W/L digestion. f y I Wriglev's is a delicious ,r- / aid to the teeth, breath. \ / JSZ LsTTr'"’^ appetite and digestion. tISS WRIGLEYS^T^^g wtPERFECT CU M I j *BRT jg V CHEWING GUM s^SS^S TS^rmsssTsssssr - ™^' "" I GIVEN PRIVILEGE IN WAR Channel Islanders for Centuries Were Not Forced to Take Part in Britain's Conflicts. For over two centuries the - Channel Islands were allowed to remain neu-j| tral in any war that England might j undertake. This singular privilege was granted to them by Edward IV, and was not revoked till the reign of Wil-1 liani and Mary. It was granted as j a reward for the loyalty of the island- j (M’«. whose commerce with the neigh boring coasts of Brittany and Nor mandy was constantly being inter rupted by the numerous wars. Even the pope joined in enforcing the right, and by a bull dated 1453 Sextus IV threatened to excommunicate any one who violated the order. On the whole, it was fairly rigidly observed, and when a Guernsey vessel was taken in the j channel by a privateer of Morlaix, the islanders with their boat were re-j leased, but a few Englishmen on hoard, with their merchandise, were captured. The privilege does not j seem to have been of any great com- j mereial value, for when it was with- i drawp the islanders made* more j money than before by fitting their ves-; sels out as privateers. Her Method. “How did your wife ever get the j carpet man to come on time?” “She simply floored him with her talk and then nailed him down to a date.” High Finance. Mr. Sapp—They told me at the bank I’d never find any one to take thnt Golden (loose mine stock off my hands. Mr. Simp—They told me the same about my Dry Hole oil stock. Both —Let's swap. It's useless to waste sympathy on a man who has the toothache. If a gown becomes a woman she be comes anxious to show it off. ——, —: —V j A Food That Builds! Grape » Nuts A staunch food made of rgrgg-rrK i •wheat and malted barley, ready to eat .easily digested, -,_ | and full of sound nourishment "trirdrr- l A FOOD E For those who work with f brain or brawn there is no z^iFzzz. r~ » ! better breaklast or lunch than Grape-Nuts There's a Reason * Sold by Grocers Meie V Postum Cereal Co- Inc- Battle Creek. Michigan. The Reason. “I will never marry Kate now. i There is an insuperable bar to our , union.” j “Good gracious, Jack! What is it?” “She won’t have me.” j The occasional use of Roman Eye Bal- W sam at night upon retiring will prevent and relieve tired, watery eyes, and eye j strain. —Adv. NOVEL HOUSES OF WORSHIP One Missionary to Eskimos Made Use of Sealskins and Another Em ployed Only Snow. One of the queerest churches ever known was built by a missionary on Blackhead island, in Cumberland sound. Finding that the Eskimos had no place in which they could meet for religious services’, the missionary 1 started to build a church of the skins I of seals, no wood being available. The skins were sewn together ■ and stretched over “girders” of whalebone, j empty provision tins serving as seats. The cold at one time became so ! severe that for many days the Eski ! mos of Blncklead island were unalde : to procure food for themselves; or for | their animals. night dogs made ! their way to the strange church edi fice and began consuming it; with the result that when morning came there was not a skin left, the whalebone ribs alone remaining to show that there had ever been a church. Another missionary in charge of the spiritual welfare of the Eskimo tribe, htillt his church entirely of snow. Seat, pulpit, altar and interior equip ment were made of snow, and In the matter of warmth no stone-built church could heat it. Grotesque Nourishment. “There's a time for everything,” said the ready-made philosopher. “Fortunately,” rejoined Miss Cay enne. “I’d seldom enjoy my breakfast if they insisted on coloring eggs the year round as they do at Easter.”