The Montgomery monitor. (Mt. Vernon, Montgomery County, Ga.) 1886-current, December 09, 1920, Image 7
DODSON STOPS SALE OFCALOMEL ••Dodson’s Liver Tone” is Taking Place of Dangerous, Sickening Chemical, Say Druggists Every druggist in town has noticed a great falling off in the salt of calomel. They all give the same rea son. Dodson’s Liver Tone is taking Its place. “Calomel is dangerous and people know it.” Dodson's Liver Tone is per sonally guaranteed by every druggist who sells it. A large bottle doesn’t cost very much but if it fails to give easy relief in every case of liver slug gishness and constipation, just ask for your money back. A certain amount of ignorance is necessary to our enjoyment of our ex istence. We’ll say that, in poetry, if sorne- Jljing isn’t opalescent it's mauve. Dealers everywhere sell Overalls, Jumoers and Uniforms made of Stifel’s Indigo Cloth. We are makers of the cloth only. r J. L. STIFEL & SONS, Indigo Dyers and Printers^ Wheeling. W. Va. 260 Church Street. New York PINOCHLE GAME CAME FIRST Enthusiast Naturally Annoyed at Being Interrupted While Engaged in His Favorite Pastime. However deplorable the fact may fee, playing two-handed pinochle at 25 cents a Hand is one of the favorite diversions of commuters between this city, New York, Atlantic City, Cape May and other commercial outports of Philadelphia. One man. who carries his pleasure as well as his worries home from work, was playing pinochle in his library the other evening with a crony, when the butler entered and handed hint a telegram. He returned it unopened. “I’ll look at it later.” “But the messenger is waiting, sir,” the butler respectfully remonstrated. The financier read the telegram. It said: “Struck 8.000-barrel gusher to day. Everything fine.” “Confound you, Thomas, why did you spoil my game?” he cried. He didn’t care nearly so much about the fortune he had made, as about the 25 cents he was in danger of losing.— Philadelphia Public Ledger. Works Both Ways. Lowe —Statistics prove that mar riage is a preventive against suicide. Bowe—lt’s a poor rule that won’t work both ways. Statistics also prove that suicide is a preventive against marriage.—Cartoons Magazine. ■ lilllMlllllllMlllllllllllimillllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiDiiillllilinillllHiniUJUlliimimiiinMiiffTTT 1 X I Coffee Drinkers I are often annoyed by headaches, nervousness or other ills traceable to coffee drinking. | When coffee disagrees, the | thing to do is to quit coffee and drink Instant I I Postum ) 1 Ten days will tell whether 1 the change is beneficial. 1 "There's a Reason ” I Made by Postum Cereal Cosine, Battle Creek, Mich. Dodson’s Liver Tone is a pleasant tasting, purely vegetable remedy, harmless to botli children and adults. Take a spoonful at night and wake up feeling fine; no biliousness, sick head ache, acid stomach or constipated bowels. It doesn’t gripe or cause in convenience all the next day like vio lent calomel. Take a dose of calomel today and tomorrow you wall feel weak, sick and nauseated. Don't lose a day.—Adv. Scatter the golden coin of courtesy if you would travel over the road to success. The cat may have nine lives, hut for tunately it lias few biographers. The Mercenaries. Brander Matthews, the famous crit ic, discussed at a Columbia tea the American short story. * “The American short story would be better,” he said, “if the American short story writer were less mercel - I’d like him to think more of beauty and less of cash. “A short story writer read me one of his tales the other day. It wasn’t bad, and I told him so. “‘I like the thing,’ I said. ‘lt’s realistic.’ “The short story writer beamed. “ ‘Realistic,’ he cried. ‘That’s the word I want to hear. And how much, Mr. Matthews, do you think It will realize?’ ” The Bitter Truth. Joseph Hergesheimer, who enjoys an even greater literary reputation In England than at home, dined re cently with a friend at a New York restaurant. The novelist was condemning the prevalent commercial spirit in liter ature and said: “In true art money should neve/ be an object.” At this point in the conversation the waiter brought in his exorbitant bill and Mr. Hergesheimer, scanning the document, sighed and remarked: “It is true that in art money should be no object, but it should be no ob jection, either, in these times.” THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR, MT. VERNON, GEORGIA. POWERS IS GIVEN TERM OF 5 YEARS MAXIMUM PUNISHMENT UNDER LAW GIVEN TO ALLEGED SWINDLER STATE NEWSJF INTEREST Brief News Items Gathered Here and There From All Sections Os The State Atlanta.—When the jurors, who for two days had been trying Abe Pow ers on a charge of having swindled ! two wealthy farmers out of ten thou j sand dollars by means of a wire i tapping scheme, entered the superior j court room of Fulton county and an j nounced that they were ready to re turn a verdict, Powers proved his prowess as a prophet. Turning to the press table, he rais ed his hand and showed five extend ed fingers. When he did so he smil ed, though the smile was sickly. The next moment displayed his accuracy. The solicitor general read the verdict. It was that the jury had found him ggilty and that his maximum punish ment was five years, his minimum punishment was the same thing and then Powers closed his five fin gers. Still trying to smile and still chew ing gum, with a feverish energy that betrayed his emotion, he stood to re ceive his sentence. That delivered, he returned to prison and to his wife, still held in the tower o nsuspicion of being implicated with the alleged wire tappers. His counsel, Sam Hewlett and John McClelland, immediately announced that they would appeal the case on tile ground that the conviction had been on a charge of larceny after trust and that there had been no trust. In their arguments both ad mitted that there had probably been a simple larceny. The jury was then discharged. "I hope you'll find your families all well after your long absence,” said Judge Humphries. As the jurors filed out of the court room H. C. Holley, one of the alleged victims, stood at the door and thanked each man individ ually. Wade Lamar, the other man said to have been fleeced, was not in the room when the verdict was renedred. It took the jury less than a half hour to reach its conclusions. Dur ing that time Powers sat at a table immediately in front of the bench and talked glibly and volubly with cousnel, reporters, spectators or any body else that gathered within ear shot. He was palpably nervous. Sells Wife’s Farm And Leaves Abbeville.—Robert G. Guthrie, a well known farmer living in the Kra mer section of the county, sold his wife’s farm, put the money, several thousand dollars, in his pocket, and drove off in his wife’s automobile, according to a warrant whicli Mrs. Guthrie swore out for his arrest on a charge of desertion. She also swore out a warrant for Maggie No bles, a Fitzgerald woman, whom she alleged her husband took away with him. it is said that he left his wife and ten year old son practically pen niless. Savannah Plans For SHriners Savannah.—There will be a mass meeting of Savannah people to pass upon plans for making arrangements to entertain the national convention of Shriners here in 1921. All of the leading citizens of Savannah are lending their time to getting things in such shape that the Shriners can be accommodated. Mercer Plans Gr*at Movement Macon.—With the master plans now being drawn for a huge plant, the buildings of which will cover one hun dred acres, Mercer university is pow taking the first step toward becoming on eof the South’s largest denomina tional schools. An architect has been employed by President Weaver acting under instructions of the executive committee which met in Atlanta a few days ago. The plans will in clude administrative buildings, ath letic fields, a dining hall large enough to seat 1,000 students and other struc tures. Expect Spirited Fight For Bail Macon. —That Solicitor General Gar rett will be forced to produce his evi dence of guilt against the parties now under arrest in connection with the Shepard poisoning case at the hear ing for bail here, was the statement issued by attorneys for Mrs. F. Eu gene Elmer, former wife of Shep ard; Mrs. lona Henry, sister of Mrs. Elmer; Ernest Hopson, son of Mrs. Elmer by a former marriage and Mrs. Annie Cutts, wife of a prominent Fitz gerald attorney, all of whom are now under arrest on warrants charging murder. Paving Road Forsyth To Bolingbroke Juliette. —The work of grading and putting into condition for paving, jointly by Monroe county and the na tional government, the road between Forsyth and Bolingbroke, a part of the national highway, was started re cently by the Monroe county com missioners. It is probable that the paving will begin some time in Jan- j uary and ten miles of hard surfaced ! orad will be built. The cost will be j about SBO,OOO, of which th«- county i will furnish only SIO,OOO. Prison Food Takes Drop Atlanta. —If the Fulton county court house roof had suddenly shimmied and . jumped off to the street below, there could not have been much more as- I tonishment than that which electri fiec! the county commissioner at a re ? cent meeting. With finances all gone wrong, there came away of light, a gleam of hope, a shaft of sunshine. They are not going to cut the food of the prisoners themselves, they are not going to lessen the quality of the food which the prisoners have always praised, but the sheriff announces 1 that, owing to the recent drop in food prices he will he able to ration the inmates of the tower on 60 cents a day per prisoner, instead of 75 cents r he has been allowed durin gthe era -of ascendant prices. He told the board 1 it might cut the appropriation to meet - the reduced exigency. r Savannah Using Portable Schools Savannah. —Savanah is this week - using for the first time four of the 3 number of portable school houses re cently bought by the board of educa tion as an elastic and adaptable plan -of meeting the congestion of the - school buildings, which was not unl ; form one big building being some • times the worst crowded and the next • term another building in another part i of the city being the congested ones. - These houses, ready made when they i arrived, are not unpleasing in appear - ance, can be set up and then set down ■ almost anywhere, can be used for a crowded grammar school here or tho - crowded junior high school in an '■ other street. Plans For Sunday School Meeting . Macon.—The annual State Sunday i School convention will bo held in Ma- I con on April 19, 20 and 21 of next year. This announcement was made \ after a meeting held at the Hotel La- I nier at which twenty-five pastors, i Sunday school superintendents and I other workers were present. The ' Sunday school convention will bring • about eight hundred Sunday school ■ workers to Macon for these three days. It was announced also by R. D. Webb, general superintendent, that sixty or more of the leading Sunday school workers of the state, together ■ with a number of out of state speak ers would appear on the program. Henry County Man Suicides McDonough.-—Hobson Kelly, 22 years of age, shot and instantly killed him self in his father's back yard at ; Kelleytown, eight miles northeast of McDonough. He was the son of T. ■ C. Kelley, commissioner of roads and revenues of Henr ycounty, and a very popular young man. No cause for his action is known. Macon Girl’s Slayer Goes On Trial Macon. —Emmett I. Smith, slayer of Mrs. M. E. Marsh, better known as Ethel Kellley, “queen of Macon un derworld,” will go to trial in the Bibb superior court on a charge of murder. Smith’s case was postponed. While Smith will not piead guilty his counsel says his defense will be based on in sanity. Lawlessness Ceas e s In Dougherty Albany.—Disorders in the eastern part of Dougherty county which fol lowed the killing of a white farmer across the line in Worth county, have ceased, and negroes are returning to their homes, Sheriff Tarver says. Sev eral white men have been indicted by the grand jury, called to investi gate the situation, but their names an dthe number indicted has not been made public, penndig arrests. The roving bands of white men which harassed negro families and drovo many from their homes, was said to have come from another county. Roving Men Indicted For Murder Albany.—indictments charging sev eral white persons with assault with intent to murder and other offenses were returned by Dougherty county grand jury called into special seession by Judge Wilson to consider alleged depredations committed in the south eastern part of this county by roving bandsj of white men, who were search ing for Ophelia McKelvey, one of the negroes accused of shooting J. E. Ad ams, a white farmer, in Worth county. Ontomologists Wage War On Rot Macon. —Entomologists from the federal department of agriculture ar rived here recently to assist peach growers of middle Georgia in their efforts to overcome brown rot and worms which last season destroyed million fso dollars’ worth of fruit. The party is under the direction of O. I. Snapp, who has called a meeting of peach growers at which experts will outline their plans. Augusta's Negro Population Given. Washington.—The negro population of August a, Ga., was announced by the census bureau as 2 2,576, an in crease of 4,232, or 23.1 per cent. The white population was given as 29,891, an increase of 7,249, or 32.0 per cent Chinese, Indians and Japanesi iluio bered 78. Did Not Confess Larceny Macon. —George Chomsky of At lanta in pleading guilty to nine charges of larceny of automobiles in Bibb superior court, did not thereby admit that he had stolen the cars in question, it is explained by his at torney, Henry D. Russell. The attor ney told the court that his client ad mitted only handling stolen cars. This j made Chomsky guilty of technical lar I ceny and not actual larceny, he said. \ Chomsky received fines aggregating $5..000. which he paid. fr — r vt thankful nr nn y i did her Kg| FOR GOOD rt-mU-WM YEARS AGO Keeps the Medicine with Her for Safety Wmr ' Mrs. Carl Linder, R. K. Th No. 2, Box 44, gyf Dassel, Minnesota, writes: “I want to thank you for your kindness and the good your ■I .. remedy did mo years ago. lam perfectly ■ well and visiting in Spokane, Wash. Were it not for Pe-ru-na I would not have been able HRjpH to make this trip. 1 always take your medi- ■" ■-i eine with me for safety should 1 take cold. I Praiso to Pe-ru-na.” ■HR. CARL UNDER As an emergency remedy for everyday ills, R. f. •. Ns. I. In 44, Pe-ru-na has been in use tifty years. ; DasMi, Mtnntwu TABLETS OR LIQUID SOLD EVERYWHERE .JJ jj We Must Guard Jgk Our Girls ifo. Kjl I ** ** fUBaO On ihe threshold of womanhood jj|9|9j!fl '• IMBaJ comos the crisis which means x LJUHBk health or invalidism. Three gen- eralions ago an old southern doc | / tor wrote a prescription for the | / ills of women, which has become known to fame as ‘ Stella Vitae;” > has been the right thing at the nght time for thousands of S young girls, down to the present I An day. Try it for YOUlt daugh- ter. Money refunded if FIRST Uperation BOTTLE does not benefit. MR. W. F. NELSON, a merchant At yOUr drUg Btorß ■ Hixon, Tenn., says: That the daughter of one of his neighbors, Mr. James Roberts, was in such a condition with female trouble that an operation was aranw^M advißod, and the young lady was sent to Chattanooga for its performance. She drended the operation, and STELLA VITAE having been recommended, J J Bjj decided to try that first. She has taken as g S HJ Wlk six bottles and is happily on the road BS "1 JJiW to recovery. She is able to do her usual work and is in Irettor health thnn for | j L Jfs „ years before, but continues to use it. m H W * Sho writes: “STELLA VITAE will do 'jMmg all you claim.” Her father Hays “She began to improve at once, after taking THACHER MEDICINE CO. |‘ir < |jB * B 3 e/ore Meals y rpWO SPOONFULS of JACOBS’ a&ff* 1 K I LIVER SALT in n gloss of hot “*■ water before breakfast, keeps the r -OE^ v . ■ liver and kidneys active and the system re Wlr Vtß clear —makes ffou feel fit for a root L, fj i tel wwv_ tfIfIEKWITHS „, IIT ,. Feel Shaky I* (HILLTONIC You Up. For Malarial Fevers and a General Tonic If not sold by your druggist, write ARTHUR PETER & CO.. LOUISVILLE. KY. Always Obliging. Jud Tnnkins says Ik;’h perfectly will ing to be wrong sometimes, for the sake of not spellin' an Interestin’ ar gument. How’s This? HALL’B CATARRH MKDTCINE Will So what we claim for It—cure Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. We do not claim to cure any other disease. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is a liquid, taken internally, and acts through tpe blood upon the mucous surfaces of the system, thus reducing the Inflamma tion and restoring normal conditions. All Druggists. Circulars free. P. 3. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. So Did We. “Marry In haste and repent at leis ure.” “At leisure? I thought Reno got the divorce business.” Constipation generally Indicates disordered stomach, liver and bowels. Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills restore regularity without griping.—Adv. Obliging. •‘My wife will borrow trouble.” “Send her over here, then. We have plenty we can lend her.” • Kill That Cold With CASCARA E? QUININE FOR AND Colds, Conch* La Grippe Neglected Colds are Dangerous Take no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneeze. Breaks up a cold in 24 hours Relieves Grippe in 3 days—Excellent for Headache Quinine in this form does not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic Laxative—No Opiato in Hill’s. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT ■ ■ I MERE’S THE LATEST TOY OUT The Little "Kiddle Movie" Picture Machine MR Any-mid can operate No lights, nu d * n K' r 1 - reel’s ol amuse t pictures Willi aNo Ur or l<- day lor Christmas. By paxc<* post $! .50 complete. THEKIDDIEMOVIE Keys Nig. Ct.. East SI. Ltsls. Hi Write for Information How to Obtain llontr steu«l, atate and railroad lands; mlho Florida lanrlH direct from owner*. Beneflta agent* HomeneekeriT Inf. Bureau. Jacksonville, Fla MEM We guarantee to teach yon t.be Barber Trader, iTILaiY scholars complete in 4 weekx; income while, learning; we own *hot>«; paring ponllionM gaaran I teed. Jacksonville Barber College. Jacksonville, Fla. AHKNTH - JIFFIjKTK MAKE ANV lAH Kl'N five mllea further on every gallon fu* only ONES CENT! Make S4O to S2OO a week BIOOKBT BUCCKHB EVER. Try them »» our experiMe Writ*; quick. HEfIG’H BUI' PRY HOUSE. 471 Elm Ht., Buffalo. N. Y KK All "WORM) TO COMK, M 300 pp. 2&e General OUTLINE of the DIVINE I'LAN easily understood. Only definite explanation of Revelation and other Prophetic state mentii, extant. Bent on approval If pro ferred. Home Bible Btu*ly Club, Hudson, lit Htam inert fig ami Stuttering Positively Cured Atten*l no school. Cured fit home. BlagnoMr free. Elmer H. Farmer, Rocky Mount. N. C. rnrni/l TO WSmVILY RtMOVf Dby Dr. r n rlgl I f'*f k l«OlBtsa | t Your dru«*ifit or tr? 1 IflL "•••!.«&.%*• b" 0 k Dr. C. H. B*rrC ■ 11 Co., 2578 Michigan Avenue, Chicle*