Newspaper Page Text
HAVE YOU THESE
SYMPTOMS?
If So, Commence Taking Glide’s
Pepto-Mangan and Get Back
to Good Health
Lack of vitality, a feeling of tired
ness, bad breath, pale lips, colorless
cheeks, loss of weight, flabby flesh,
lessened strength—all of these call for
the immediate use of Gude’s Pepto-
Mangan. It will positively produce
satisfactory results. Try taking it
with your meals for a few weeks and
be surprised with the improvement in
your condition. Gude's Pepto-Mangan
will help you back to strength during
convalescence from any Illness. It has
been prescribed successfully by phy
sicians everywhere for thirty years.
It is a recognized iron tonic of honest
merit. For sale in liquid and tablet
form by all druggists. Ask for it by
the full name, ‘‘Gude's Pepto-Man
gan.”—Advertisement.
The man who is always telling you
how much he does for others will
bear watching.
GUARD AGAINST COLDS AND
' INFLUENZA.
By keeping a little Vacher-Balm in
your nose.
It helps to prevent the germs enter
ing the system.
If you are taking cold, it makes you
feel better at once.
Nothing better for Aches and Pains.
Keep it handy this time of year.
Ask your druggist, jars or tubes, 30c.
E. W. Vaeher, Inc., New Orleans, La.
When the honeymoon is on the wane,
she begins to find him out —nearly
every night.
Thousands Have Kidney
Trouble and Never
Suspect It
-
Applicants for Insurance Often
Rejected.
Judging from reports from druggists
Who are constantly in direct touch with
the public, there is one preparation that
has been very successful in overcoming
these conditions. The mild and healing
influence of Dr. ‘Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is
soon realized. It stands the highest for
its remarkable record of success.
An examining physician for one of the
prominent Life Insurance Companies, in
an interview on the subject, made the as
tonishing statement that one reason why
so many applicants for insurance are re
jected is because kidney trouble is so
common to the American people, and the
large majority of those whose applica
tions are declined do not even suspect
that they have the disease.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root is on sale
at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes,
medium and large. However, if you wish
first to test this great preparation send
ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When
writing be sure and mention this paper.
Advertisement.
It is an easy matter for some real
estate dealers to make mountains of
molehills.
MOTHER! MOVE
CHILD’S BOWELS WITH
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP
Hurry, mother! Even a sick child
loves the ‘fruity” taste of “California
Fig Syrup” and it never fails to open
-he bowels. A teaspoonful today may
prevent a sick child tomorrow. If con
stipated, bilious, feverish, fretful, has
cold, colic, or if stomach is sour,
tongue coated, breath bad, remember a
good cleansing of the little bowels is
often all that is necessary.
Ask your druggist for genuine “Cali
fornia Fig Syrup” which has directions
for babies and children of all ages
pointed on bottle. Mother! You must
say “California’ or you may get an
Imitation fig syrup.—Advertisement.
Some folks just can’t foot a bill
without kicking.
ACOLDTODfIjMMNT DELAY
I in *£)cu/s\
¥ rA P *i‘!rl LOOM
OyQ Products
Baby Carriages & Furniture
Ask Your Local Dealer
Write Now
for 32-Page
The Lloyd Manufacturing Company
t Hey wood- Wakefield Co.)
Dept E
Menominee, Michigan (16)
■<rr ——
U. S. DEMAND PUT
UP TO DIPLOMATS
TO TAKE CLAIM AGAINST REPA |
RATIONS MONEY TO VARI
OUS GOVERNMENTS
DASH APPORTIONED POWERS
Ministers State They Act Under A
Treaty To Which America Is No
Longer A Party
Paris.—The allied finance ministers
signed an agreement for the distri
bution of the first billion fold marks
of German reparations. The agree
ment disregards the American claim
of priority for its expenses in connec
tion with occupation of the Rhine
land, so far as the actual sharing of
this money is concerned, but recog
nizes the claim by a special clause,
which states that all the agreements
on this question are subject to the
American rights as the various gov
ernments may establish them, the fi
nance ministers considering that they
do not have power to decide this ques- !
ticn.
The ministers decided, after long dis
cussion, that the discussion was not
for the reparations commission to de
cide, because that body was acting
| solely under the provisions of the
treaty of Versailles, to which the Unit
ed States no longer is a party. Con
sequently it has been decided that
the question is one for the various
governments concerned to settle.
The finance ministers also conclud
ed that it was impossible for them,
in any case, to reopen the long and
difficult deliberations which resulted
in the present agreement, so they
could only reserve the American right
and leave the question for diplomacy
to settle.
The agreement provides that the ex
penses of the armies of occupation af
ter May J., 1921, shall be divided as
follows: One hundred and two mil
lion Belgian francs to Belgium; 2,000,-
000 pounds to Great Britain and 460,-
000,000 French francs to France. The
distribution of deliveries in kind by
Germany in 1922 will be on the basis
of 65 per cent to France and 35 per
cent to the other allies. The Wiesba
den agreement will continue in force
for three years, with the reservation
that payments will not exceeid 350,-
000,000 gold marks’ worth of material
in 1922; 750,000,000 in 1923, and 750,-
000,000 in 1924. Other powers besides
France, under the agreements, are per
mitted to include arrangements with
Germany similar to the Wiesbaden
agreement, provided such agreements
do not call for deliveries in kind in ex
cess of the total amount fixed by the
present agreement.
None of the powers, the agreement
provides, will be compelled to turn
back any cash as a result of deliver
ies in kind in 1922.
The first billion marks paid cash
are to be distributed as follows:
(Leaving out of account the Ameri
can claim): Five hundred million
gold marks to Great Britain as par
tial reimbursement for the expenses
of her armies of occupation up to
May 1, 1921; 14,000,000 gold marks
to France, for the same purpose, and
the remainder to Belgium, with the
exception of 172,000,000 lire allotted
to Italy.
MANY ARE KILLED
IN LABOR WARFARE
IN SOUTH AFRICA
Johannesburg, South Africa. —Strik-
ing gold miners have practically sur
rounded Johannesburg, and are attack
ing desperately in an attempt to seize
the city before the arrival of reinforce
ments which are being rushed to the
aid of the besieged government volun
teers and troops.
The attack is being conducted by
strong forces which include not only
strikers, but discontented elements
from the mining district’s population.
Guerrilla warfare is underway on the
eastern and southern outskirts of the j
town.
Latest estimates of the casualties are \
100 killed and 500 wounded in the war- j
fare, added to the eighty already re
ported killed.
Government forces have succeeded in j
retaking Brakpan and Benoni in pitch
ed battles, but a continuance of the i
struggle is reported from Fordsburg.
Dier’s Assets Have Increased $325,000 ■
New York.—Assets of the brokerage !
firm of E. D. Dier & Co., which failed
in January, have been increased by [
$325,000 through contributions to the
general creditors’ fund, it is announc
ed here. Charles A. Stoneham, head
of the brokerage firm of Stoneham &
Co., and one of the owners of the New
York National League baseball club,
came forward with $200,000, while Col. ;
Henry D. Hughes and B. Franklin
j Shrimpton, formerly partners in the j
I collapsed house, have made up the re- I
I maining $125,000.
Crop Stabilization Commission Sought
Washington.—The house agricultu- !
ral committee has been asked for an
early hearing on the bill providing for
creating a crop stabilization commis
sion. with power to fix the prices of
the 1922 crops of wheat, corn and cot
ton. The commission would be com
posed of the secretaries of agriculture,
commerce and labor and prices so fix
ed could not be less than cost pro
duction. The measure would give the
commission authority to revive the
United States Grain Corporation and
to include other farm products.
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR VT VERNON. GEORGIA.
SEVEN ARE KILLED
IN A..8.U WRECK
CAR ON A., B. & A. RAILROAD
FALLS INTO CREEK NEAR
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
SIXTEEN ARE BADLY INJURED
Broken Wheel On Front End Os Last
Passenger Coach The Cause —
Funeral Party Included
4444444444 444444
+ 4
4 LIST OF DEAD 4
4 4
4 G. T. Elmore, cashier local 4
4 freight station, A. B. & A. rail- 4
4 way, Atlanta. 4
4 W. E. Mclntosh, Roanoke Ala. 4
4 B. C. Driver, Roanoke, Ala. 4
4 W. E. Johnson, section fore- 4
4 man, Birmingham division, A. 11. 4
4 & A. rialway company. 4
4 R. W. Lanier, operator. A., B. 4
4 & A. railway, Senoia, Ga. 4
4 Mrs. Dr. 1. H. Etheridge, At- 4
4 lanta, Ga. 4
4 W. M. Brooks, lineman West- 4
4 era Union Telegraph company, 4
4 Manchester, Ga. 4
4 4
4 4 44444444 *»■ 44444
Atlanta, Ga. —Seven persons, two
of them Atlantans, are dead, and six
teen others, nearly all Atlantans, are
iti hospitals from injuries, as a re
sult of the wreckage of one car of
an Atianta, Birmingham and Atlantic
tram which left here for Fitzgerald,
March 12, when it dropped thirty feet
from a trestle into Camp creek, thir
teen miles from Atlanta.
Several of those injured are in a
dying condition. They are: C. D.
Moore, Atlanta; Thomas W. Ethridge,
Atlanta; Mrs. T .W. Etheridge, Atlan
ta: Thomas Etheridge, Jr., baby, At
lanta; Miss Mittie Wall, Fitzgerald,
Ga.: Miss Estelle McNiece, Atlanta;
Miss Caroline Dunbar, Langdale, Ala,;
Mrs. A. B. McNiece, Talbotton, Ga.;
H. F. Hentz, McGee apartments, At
lanta; Miss Alive Sygirt, East Point,
Atlanta; C. A. Davis, Alvaton, Ga.;
Miss Mamy Whitlock, Atlanta; Mrs.
V .G McNeely, East Atlanta; Mrs. J.
I’. Murray, Atlanta; J. P. Murray, At
ianta; Willard Cope, Atlanta.
All of the dead, with the exception
of one, were men. Derailment of the
car, which plunged from the trestle,
was blamed by road officials on the
bursting of one of the car wheels. The
train was nearly at a standstill when
the coach left the trestle.
The train left Atlanta at 7:45 o’clock
in the morning, and it was barely 8:00
o'clock when the wreck occurred. The
trestle is located two miles from Ben
Hill and about four and a half miles
from Union City, where aid was first
sought by the engineer.
Col. B. L. Bugg, receiver for the A.,
B. & A. railroad, issued a state, in
which he declared that his investiga
tion had showed that the accident was
unpreventable and was caused by faul
ty equipment, which careful inspection
had failed to detect.
According to the road investigators,
a wheel of the front truck of the rear
car burst as the car reached a point
about one hundred yards from the tres
tle ever Camp creek. The train was
proceeding at a normal speed of about
thirty miles an hour, it is stated.
Survivors declare that in the fall,
of approximately thirty feet, the coach
turned over several times and landed,
upside down, in the shallow water, with
the greater part of the wrecked coach
lying alongside of the southern bank.
The train was in charge of Conduc
tor H. S. Dixon and Engineer P. R.
Bosworth. As soon as the engineer
look in the extent of the disaster, he
uncoupled the engine and opened his
throttle for a full speed ahead run to
Union City, four and a half miles away.
There he flashed the message of the
disaster to Atlanta, while railroad men
scurried about the little town calling
j every doctor and rescue worker avail
able.
Mrs. I. N. Etheridge, the only woman
J to meet death in the crash, in com
pany with her relatives, Thomas W.
j Etheridge and Mrs. Etheridge and their
I baby, was on her way to the funeral
of a relative at Woodbury, Ga., whith
ler they were taking the body. The
j body passed safely over the trestle on
| the baggage car. Every one of the
I Etheridge party was killed or injured.
\ Servants Are Held In Jewelry Robbery
Memphis, Tenn.—Diamonds and jew
j elry valued at twenty thousand dol-
I lars are missing from the home of
I Tiirseh Morris, local banker, and four
servants of the family are detained
by the police for investigation in con
nection with their disappearance.
Mrs. Morris told police the jewels,
wrapped in a handkerchief, were hid
den in a wardrobe. The robbery is one
| of the biggest sensations in the his
! tory of Memphis, and the detective
j and police forces are working night
I and day on the case. •
Underwood Leads Fight For Treaty
Washington.—The four-power Paci
| fie treaty, its purposes and possibili
ties and the manner of its negotiation,
passed through another spectacular
combat of argument and oratory on
the floor of the senate. Throughout
the battle of wits the burden' of de
fense was carried by Senator Under
wood of Alabama, the Democratic
floor member of the American delega
tion to the arms conference. The mi
nority leader stood for three hours
In his place in the center of the cham
ber and replied to parliamentary stabs.
yßjy
M ll ‘irtZ- \ < B
Buy Alabastine from your local dealer, white and a variety of tints,
ready to mix with cold water and apply with a suitable brush.
Each package has the cross and circle printed in red. By inter
mixing Alabastine tints you can accurately match draperies and
rugs and obtain individual treatment of each room.
i SSSSSSSSS —— Write for special suggestions and
jg£||J I latest color combinations hftfjLj) r ;%
ALABASTINE COMPANY \HT/ Sp
nu| 4 T iN* At*. Grind Rapid,, Mica.
Chesterfield
CIGARETTES
of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos— blended
Truth of the Situation.
“I hear,” said Margaret, “that Elsie
finished her education abroad.”
“No,” corrected Susan, “she didn’t
finish it until she married Harry
Hedges and had to live on SI,OOO a
year.”
“How was that?”
“It was not until then that she learnt
that money was needed to buy some
thing else besides feminine finery,
chocolates, theater tickets, phonograph
records and taxi fares.”
In the Hospital.
“The doctor says I have a benignant
tumor. What is the matter with you?”
“I have a kind-hearted carbuncle.”
—Baltimore American.
A man may gush over a woman or
vice versa, but the gushing is seldom
natural.
|f ever try Grape =Nuts O |f
gt With steWed prunes or peaches: IS
rag /TAHERE isn’t anything better for breakfast or
X lunch than a dish of Grape-Nuts, with cream , W
or milk, and stewed prunes or peaches. J Fv| -
gS This delicious combination gives you the ele-
ments of a well-balanced food. For it contains ~
jag not only the material needed to build tissue and
gS furnish energy, but it also supplies fruit acids, *6
mg that help keep the system in good order.
jljj Go to your grocer today and order a package
Kg of delicious Grape-Nuts. You will find that it la V
will digest more readily than most other cereals, ifk f; ' BKf? "
and it will “stay by" you longer—because it’s so * jfij’
I Grape =Nuts for Health
|§ ‘■There’s a Treason ”
These Days.
The dapper young man approached
the subject with halting embarrass
ment.
“It’s about your daughter Clarice,
sir,” he said. “I hardly know how to
begin, but 1 have here,” as he placed
his hand over his heart.
“For the love o’ Mike go on and take
her!” exclaimed the old man. “Marry
her and he happy!’’
“Not me!” said the visitor, drawing
a paper from Ids left-hand coal: pocket:
with the same hand. “What I’m telling
you Is I’m collecting for tin; place
where she’s running a charge account,
and It’s up to you!”—Richmond Tlmes-
Dispatch.
Much More.
“Old Mr. Gratdt holds his own, does
he?” “Yes, and as much of anybody
else’s as he cart get.”
I SAWS.
For Fofdron and up to 25M ft. They bold tfwir treth, and cut hard
and frotcn timber. Vtt only a file, for we keep the blade in ordtf
1 year free. We can arrange term*. Saw pay* YOU as YOU pay ua.
Three men are cutting 4M to 6M or 200 to 300 ties per day on 4
Fordson, clearing $35 to S6O per day, as the sawyer is the owner
CUT YOUR NEIGHBORS' TIMBER ON SHARES.
Three Electric Factories, a 24-hour terrier, any saw repaired
(except burned), returned tame or next day, made into same as a Hoc
AU repairs GUARANTEED, when we put saw in order.
Miner's latest Book or a Fordson STEEL Guide with any
$75 and up. 40 years la the business, ask your banker or any meet—*
ful miUma/v Book on Hammering, $2-50, Guide, SSXX).
J.H. WINER SAW MFGL CO., Inc.
MERIDIAN. MISS. COLUMBIA, a C SHREVEPORT. LA.
Good Luck Ring
Send No Monoy
Orient.«il sterling silver ring
fbringlng good luck to wear*
Bf or - complete with formula.
Send ring measuro (strip
of paper around finger)
* and I will send you thle
wonderful ring. Pay postman, when ring ar
rives; email, $1.67; large, $1.92. Also In solid
gold. Satisfaction or money back. Clc Bndza,
Box 27, Wash. Bridge P. 0., New York City.
"Km-Bett” “Gtrdlett” corset substitute, stay
less. no rubber. Dressmaker's Pat. Mfg. Agts.
wtd. Binma Bettinger Cassidy, Boonville, Ind.
GARDEN SEEDS, HALF PKICR
Postal brings you catalog. lIIONDKRSON
VI 1,1.10 SKtOI) CO.. Hendersonville, N. C.
CASH PAID FOB LINCOLN PENNIES
anl other coins. Price-lint 10c. OLD COIN
CO., 2627 Chess, PARSONS, KANSAS.
Agents AA anted for Indies' fancy silk and
cotton blouses. Also for bundles remnant
trimmings. You spend time taking ordersj
I deliver. Lillian Bridgewater, Vt.
1 I " ■ II ■
Tact.
Ten days after buying his new auto
Mr. Crnbb had the misfortune to con
nect with a trolley pole and shuttle
off this coil. It developed upon Dennis
to break the sad news to the widow.
“Well,” asked Ids friends, as he
came down the steps wiping the per
spiration from his brow, “how did
you make it?”
“Fine,” said Dennis. “I began easy,
tollin’ her that her husband was kilt
entirely and horrible mangled and
then I worked up to the climax, fellin’
her finally that dlvile a stick was
left of tire car.”—American Legion
Weekly.
The Courtship.
“Then she refused to smile upon
you ?”
"Yes, she gave me the laugh.”—
Louisville Courier-Journal.