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WARS IN IRELAND
ARE STILL RAGING
DESPITE AGREEMENT, SEVERAL
MEN ARE SHOT, INCLUDING
TWO POLICEMEN
INCENDIARY FIRES NUMEROUS
'Lister Citizens Express Fear That Sinn
Fein Army Along Border Can
not Be Controlled.
Belfast. Ii eland.—Despite the Irish |
peace agreement signed one night re
cently in Loudon, violence continues
in Ulster province. Four men, two
of them polio-men, were shot down
in the streets. Tremendous damage
was done by, a series of incendiary
fire jn the business district. One
bomb was thrown.
A member of the Ulster constahu- j
larv was killed and another wounded
when it detachment of Sinn Feiners,
armed with rifles and a machine gun,
ambushed and attacked a police patrol
at N’ewry. The attackers escaped.
Keitel troops of the Irish Republican ,
army held up a train near Newton- ■
Cunningham and burned a quantity of
. ays a dispatch fryrn London
derry.
Other rebelt- ejected loyal members -
of tlie Irish Republican army from
r barracks in Cardonagh and Mo
ville. The Swilloy hotel at Moville was
commandeered by the raiders.
News of the peace agreement was
received in Belfast with mixed senti
ments, the Unionists expressing doubt
as to whether troops of the Irish Re
publican army can be controlled along
the Ulster border.
SIAMESE TWINS DIE,
BAFFLING FAMOUS DOCTORS
One Sister Follows Other To Death
In Few Seconds—Operation
Was Refused.
Chicago. Josefa and Rosa Blasek,
the "Siamese twins,” died at a hospi
tal here. Jc-efa's death occured first
and was followed in a few seconds
by the death of tier sister. Physicians
declared that In the event of the death
of one of the sisters the other would
die quickly, as their brother, Frank
Blazck, hud refused to permit an op
eration which would sever their bod
ies.
The twins had been in the hospital ,
ten days. Josefa was ill with yellow !
jaundice, and that was followed by
pneumonia. Shortly before her death
Rosa was afflicted with bronchitis.
Preparations had been made for the
|
severing operation and the physicians
were ready to make every effort to J
safe the life of at least one of the
women.
Hope of saving the lift- of Josefa
was finally abandoned according to I>r.
li. 11. Kjp-ukstone, chief of the surgi
cal staff at the hospital.
"1 tried to get the consent of the
brother to operate to save the life of
Rosa, but he refused to give Ills per
mission.” the physician added.
Doctor Breakstone explained that a
delicate operation would have been
necessary. Before their death he had
expressed the opinlun that the physio
logical affinity of the twins was so
vital that if one should die the other
might also succumb before the band
of flesh and bone that joins them
could be severed.
British Miners Support U. S. Miners
London.—The British Miners' Union
is going to give its support to the
American miners In their national
strike, which begins April 1. The Brit
ish eoal miners, however, will not take
any action to stop the shipment of coal
to the United States unless the United
Mine Workers of America request it.
This information comes from Vernon
Hartshorn, M. P„ head of the South
Wales Miners’ Federation and a mem
ber of the executive committee of the
Miners' Federation of Qreat Britain.
Deficit In Income Tax Receipts Shown
Washington if the already immense
deficit in income tax receipts con
fronting the treasury keeps mounting.
Republican lenders admit that emi
gres may lie called on to provide ad
ditional new tax legislation before the
end of the present session.
Makes First Leg Os Ocean Flight
Lisbon. — Tin- Fairey hydro aeroplane
(a 400-horse power machine), which is
flying from Lisbon to Brazil, readied
the Canary islands. 1.000 miles from
here after a flight of eight hours, and
reported, "all well.” Two Portuguese
officers are making the flight. Pilot
Ooutinho and Captain Sea dura. After
examining their machine and repairing
any defects which may have developed
during the lirst it\g of the flight, they
are expected to take advantage of the
first favorable weather to go on to the
Cape Yerd** islands.
College May Get "Siamese Twins”
‘Tiicago. An investigation of the
deaths of Mrs Josefa Blazek and her
sister. Rosa, known as the "Siamese
twins." was started after their death
by Coroner Hoffman. Following a
conference with the doctors connect
ed with the case, however, the coro
ner abandoned bis plans for a post
mortem examination and authorized
the issuance of a death certificate.
Frank. Jr. luother of the twins, who
hau oeen joined since birth, indicated
that he would make arrangements for
giving the bodies to a medical college
TELLS OF LEAGUE’S ACTIVITY
Wide Ramifications Os League's Activ
ities Disclosed In Testimony Os j
Wayne B. Wheeler
Washington.—Testimony of Wayne
B. Wheeler, general counsel for the
Anti-Saloon leag\ie, before the house
j appropriations committee, made pub
lie, revealed that the organization had |
protested the nomination “of half a j
dozen or more federal Judges,” Mr.
i Wheeler added that he had never ask- j
ed for the transfer of a federal judge. ■
Asked by Representative Tinkham,
republican, Massachusetts, if he had j
I ever recommended the appointment of ;
a federal judge, Mr. Wheeler replied:
“We have protested the appoint
ment of some, and I think that when
some have come up 1 have sent across !
letters stating that such and such
men have made very effective, faithful
public officials and if they were ap-;
pointed to those places would doubt-:
less make the same kind of a record.
| Wo did not go into the question of i
‘ picking personalities.”
Pressed as to the number of Judge
ship nominations which he had pro
tested on behalf of the league, Mr.
Wheeler replied that it was done in
j the cases “of half a dozen or more
i federal Judges.”
Mr. Wheeler was questioned by Mr.
| Tinkham as to his dealings with gov
ernment officials in his general desire
to bring about rigid prohibition en
forcement.
“I now want to ask along these
lines and I think it is legitimate,”
| said Mr. Tinkham, "about your ap
proach to public officials—whether
you have approached them or not. Did
you approach the president in relation ,
to the appointment of a secretary of
the treasury—who should bo secretary
of the treasury.”
“I sent him a communication, I
think,” Mr. Wheeler replied, “asking
that no one lie placed in that position
who was hostile to the enforcement of
law, Inasmuch as he would have some
i thing to do with it. Wo did not take
J up witli him particularly the person
nel or anything else as 1 recall it.”
Mr. Wheeler said there were a num
ber of good officials now enforcing the.
law who did not believe in prohibition.
Touching on the question of the
league's activity in politics. Mr. Tink
ham introduced a statement signed by
Mr. Wheeler and filed with the clerk
of the house October 29, 1920, show
ing the expenditure of about $554.
Some of It in the Minnesota district
represented by Chairman Volstead, of
the house Judiciary Committee, author
of the Volstead law.
To Teach Short Story Writing
Macon. .Mrs. Helen Topping Mil
| ler, short story writer, who has a num
| her of stories published in The Satur
| day Evening Post and other maga
j zincs, lias accepted a posilion to teach
! short story writing at Mercer univer-
I slty and will meet her class for the j
' first time soon. Mrs. Miller is the au-j
thor of more than 250 short stories, j
She is a graduate of the A. & M. col
lege of Michigan and lias been writiiug
for several years.
Four Surrender On Liquor Charge
Macon. —Four alleged moonshiners
; who federal prohibition officers say j
j rigured in the raid near Adrian, Go., j
recently, in which F. Barwick, alleged
moonshiner, was killed and Ed F. |
Newberry, prohibition officer, was
wounded, surrendered here. They are *
charged in a federal warrant with |
manufacturing liquor. The man gave j
the names of George Hutchison, Man
ning Hutchison, Will Moore and Elijah j
S. Skinner.
Did Fishing Boat Fail To Heed Signal?
Miami. Fla.—The charges of Pilot
Robert Moore, sole survivor of the
Miss Miami, that a fishing boat failed
to heed his signals and passed tlie
wrecked plane, leaving Moore and his
five passengers To the nicrey of the
sea, will tie Investigated by the bu
reau of navigation of the department
of commerce, it is said here.
Woman Shoots Self; Turns On Gas
Scranton. Pa. -Believed to have been
mentaly unbalanced. Mrs. P. J. Mor
gan. 50. wife of a bunker here, and a
sister of Or. James G. Walsh, mem
ber of the Furdham University faculty,
attempted to end her life in her home
in North Scranton recently. She shot
herself and then turned on the grs.
Her condition is critical. She had
been ill a long time and had just re
turned from a sanitarium nt Buffalo.
N. Y.
Big Oil Well Gushes In Pittsburg City
Pittsburg. Pa.—Oil, said to be of an
unusually high grade. has been
brought In with a natural flow of
more than a hundred barrels a day,
from a well located on a one hundred
acre tract of land in the heart of the
Twenty-eighth ward of Pittsburg. The
well is claimed to be the strongest
ever tapped in this district, and is
also reported to be the first oil well to
he brought in within the city limits
of Pittsburg. On reliable authority,
it is stated that the flow is in big
paying quantity and quality.
Prisoner Wounded In Court Room
Fayetteville, Ga. —After being con
victed for burglary and sentenced in
open court room here. Genus Oofield
sprang suddenly upon Weyman Co
field, his nephew, whose sensational
confession had convicted him. plung
ing a dagger deep into his chesL And
through the tong night, the wounded
man hovered between life and death
and early the next morning physicians
declared tie could not recover. Judge
Searcy had just sentenced each of the
ruen to serve terms ranging from three
to five years in the penitentiary.
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR. MT. VERNON. GEORGIA.
SENATEASSENTSTO
NAVAL LIMITATION
BY LARGE VOTE SENATE RATIFIES
PACT RESTRICTING NAVIES
AND SUBMARINES
USE OF CHEMICALS BARRED
General Far Eastern Treaty Before
Senate, and Leaders Predict Its
Early Adoption
i
Washington.—The two arms confer
ence treaties limiting the navies of the
1 great powers and restricting the use
of submarines and poison gas were rat
ified in a landslide approbation by the
] senate.
To the naval limitation covenant, j
declaring a naval building holiday, and
; fixing a ratio of capital ship strength !
i for the United States, Great Britain,
Japan, France and Italy, the senate
gave its final assent by a vote of 74
to 1, and then almost without debate
it accepted, 71 to 0, the pact designed
to prevent submarine operations
against merchantmen and to outlaw
chemical warfare altogether. No
amendments or reservations were pro
posed to either.
The only negative vote was cast
against the naval treaty by Senator
France, Republican, of Maryland, who
said he regarded naval reduction as a
dangerous expedient under present
world conditions. Every other mem
ber of the "irreconcilable” treaty bloc
| who was present cast a vote in the at
| firmative, although Senator Borah, Re
publican, of Idaho, told the senate he
regarded the treaty as only a begin
ning, and Senator Johnson, Republi
can, of California, declared he accept
ed the fortifications “status quo” pro
visions for the Pacific with “grave
misgivings.”
A speech assailing the poison gas
articles of the submarine and gas 1
treaty was made on the senate floor
by Senator Wadsworth, Republican, of
New York, chairman of the military |
committee, but before the ratification j
roll call he left the chamber and did
not vote.
The New York senator disagreed j
with the statement in the treaty text
"justly hondemned in warfare had been
“jusly condemned by the general
opinion of the civilized world,” argued
that chemical warfare had not proved
actually more brutal than other ac- !
cepted methods of destruction, and ex
pressed a fear that the treaty pledges
would he violated in any emergency.
As soon as the two pacts had been
disposed of, administration leaders
brought formally before the senate
the general far eastern treaty. Debate
on it will begin shortly, witli the in
i dications pointing to opposition from \
a small group of senators who believe
I that China's interests were not suffi- j
| ciently protected. It is the hope of !
the leaders, however, that both this
pact and the Chinese tariff treaty, the
last remaining covenant of the con
ference, will be ratified during the
present session.
Nurse Collapses On Witness Stand
New York.—Olivia M. P. Stone, a
, graduate nurse, collapsed on the wit
ness stand at her trial on a charge
I of murdering Ellis Guy Kinkead, for
mer Cincinnati corporation counsel, in
| front of his Brooklyn home. Two state
alienists, after examining her. said it
would be Inhuman to question her fur
ther, and Supreme Court Justice As-
I pinall adjourned court until the next
! day.
I
Denies The Rumored Republican Split
Washington.—Congress and Presi- !
dent Harding are not at loggerheads,
despite the impression created by "cer
tain writers and certain newspapers,”
Representative Mondell, Wyoming.
Republican leader, declared in a state
ment which he said he had prepared )
■ for delivery as an address in the
house.
Burns Sees End Os The Crime Wave
Washington.—The peak of the post
war crime wave lias been reached and
a barely perceptible decrease lias be
gun. William J. Burns, chief investiga
tor for the department of justice,
stated, in reviewing the three years
of crime history in the wake of the
world war. It may take more than
three years more for the crime wave
to settle back to normalcy, he declares.
Bryan Is Upset By Near Auto Crash
Philadelphia William Jennings Rry
an. weak from colapse during an ad
dress at Bridgeton, N. J., stopped for
a short time in Philadelphia en route
to Baltimore. On the way to Bridge
ton the car in which Bryan was rid
ing narrowly missed being crashed in
to by a speeding motor truck. The in
cident upset all members of the party.
A few minutes after launching into lits
address the commoner became ill and
had to leave the platform. He return
ed ten minutes later looking pale and
worn, and continued his discourse.
Woman Fined For Contempt Os Court
Washington.—Mrs. Emma D. Berg- .
doll, mother of the arch-slacker, Gro
ver Cleveland Bergdoll, again expe
rienced difficulties with court proced
ure here, as a result of her violent
and heated interruptions of the trial
in the District of Columbia supreme
court, in which she is seeking to re
cover the property seized by the gov
ernment as belonging to her son. She
was fined SSO for contempt of court,
and the trial halted. Mrs Bergdoll
waxed too hot during a statement of
the government's attorney.
NORTH POLE TRIP PLANNED
I Explorers Will Talk Daily By Radio
From Ice-Locked Plains With
Washington, D. C.
New York. —As fascinating as a tale
by Jules Verne was the plan for
aerial exploration of the ‘‘roof of the
world,” sketched recently in full form
the first time by Capt. Roald Amund
send, discoverer of the South Pole.
Arriving from Norway on the Stav
l angerfjord, the explorer plunged at
j once into the work of organizing the
j expedition which sails June 1 from
Seattle to drift across the North Pole, !
i an expedition which Amundsen expects j
will revolutionize polar exploration
and provide a short cut to invaluable
scientific knowledge.
The expedition which sails this time
j for the North Pole will not be like
those which have preceded it, accord
ing to its leader.
Its vision will not be confined to
j a few miles on either side of the ship,
but from the air it will be able to j
take in at a glance objects two hun- |
dred miles away.
It will not be for years cut off from
touch with the outside world, leaving
friends and relatives to wonder if the j
northland had smashed in its icy fist 1
the hardy adventurers who encroached
on its fastnesses. Instead, it will talk
by radio four times a day with Wash
ington and when it returns in three
or five years, it will know what the civ
ilized world has been doiDg during its
absence.
It will not have spent years chart
ing merely a narrow strip, but with
the aid of aviation will be able to
chart 1,000,000 square miles, sketch
ing the currents of the air as well
as those of the sea. For centuries
scientists have believed that currents
of the North Pole have been respon
sible for climatic phenomena In the
part of the world in which civilized
man lives, and Amundsen hopes to
accomplish with his airplanes in a
five years’ voyage what would take
10 years, millions of dollars and many
lives if only a ship and dog sleds
were employed.
It is upon his airplanes—two in
number —that Amundsen pins his chief
hopes, and it was upon one of them
that he focused his attention as soon
! as he stepped ashore recently.
“Suspect" Held Job As Police Officer
Seattle, Wash. —While three of his
photographs graced the rogues’ gallery
in the central station here and detec-
I tives seeking him throughout the Pa-
S cific Northwest, Fred Trombly—want
ed as a suspect connected with rob
i beries—served six months on the lo
cal police force, investigators an
nounce. The erstwhile patrolman is
now doing time behind the bars await
ing trial. His “gallery card” credited
him with a term for grand larceny and
| escape from the state reformatory, a
six months sentence for larceny and a
; sentence of six to fifteen years in the
; state penitentiary for theft of dia
| monds.
New York Women Must Not Smoke!
New' York.—Effective March 27, all
: women of New York City were pro
! hibited from smoking in public places
■ anywhere in the city. This new city
ordinance, passed by the board of al
dermen and signed by Mayor Hylan,
on March 21, failed to become known
until patrons of gay cabarets, hotels
and restaurants on Broadway, in
Greenwich Village and the Bronx were
astounded to have the news brought
to them by details of uniformed po
lieement sent out to apprise proprie
tors of the new' lav; which the aider
men had enacted.
British May Form Irish Neutral Zone
London.—Dispatches from Ireland
reporing continued disorders on a
wide scale along the Ulster border I
! continued to pour into Londan, as- i
fording the house of lords opportun
ity for a vigorous debate on the Irish
bill in which the question of lawless-
I ness and civil war were frequently in
jected by both sides.
Order Issued Against N. C. Company
Washington.—The federal trade I
commission has issued an order to!
“cease and desist” against the Plant
ers’ Manufacturing company. Mt. Ol
ive, N. C. The order is directed against |
the action of the respondent in stimu
lating so closely as to cause confu
sion. the name of the "Planters Manu-!
f&ctlirlng Company of Portsmouth. Va.”
It forbids the use of the word “Plant- !
ers” as part of the corporate name of j
the respondent.
The "Rhine Army" May Be Sent South
Washington.—A tentative selection
of posts for troops returning to this
country - from Germany has been made
public by the war department. The 1
announcement shows that the eighth
infantry will debark at Charleston I
for Forts McPherson or Moultrie or
Screven. Georgia. Other posts to
receive detachments of the occupa- |
tional forces include Camp Meade.
Maryland; Camp Humphreys, Virginia;
Fort Sheridan. Illinois; Fort Hamilton,
New York, and Camp Vail, New Jer
| sey.
Federal Prisons Are Overcrowded
Washington.—Such has been in the
increase in federal offenses through- !
: out the country that all the govern
: ment penitentiaries are overcrowded,
i Not only have male prisoners increas-
I sd within the last year, but female
; prisoners as well have increased in
numbers so much that the government
I is urgently pressed for a solution of
I the housing problem. One state in-
I stitution —that located at Moundsville,
IVa. —able to take in women prisoners
within recent months, has now advis
ed that it can house no more.
FARMAND BUSINESS
OUTLOOK IS BETTER
LIVE STOCK PRODUCERS AND
FARMERS ARE MUCH MORE
CONFIDENT
INCREASE IN BANK DEPOSITS
Confidence Is Returning And Trend
Os Business Is Towards A Res
toration Os Normalcy
Washington.—Acting Director Davis
of the war finance corporation, in a
1 statement just issued, notes “marked
improvement in the condition of the
agricultural industry and a better out
look for business generally” on the
basis of April 1 reports from corpora
| tion agencies.
"Live stock producers and farmers
j generally,” the statement observes,
: “are reported much more confident,
because of improved market condi
| tions.
"Bank depositors have increased in
many agricultural communities and
the country banks are generally in a
stronger position than they have been
for a long time. Best of all, confi
dence is returning and, with it, the
trend of business is toward a restora
tion of more normal conditions all
along the line.”
Up to March 31, the statement fur
ther observes, the corporation had ap
proved loans aggregating $322,825,697,
of which $214,187,761 was to banks,
$58,387,816 to co-operatives and $50,-
250,120 for export business.
LAST DEAD WARRIOR IS
HONORED AS HERO SYMBOL I
Private Graves, Last Dead Soldier
Brought Home, Was Placed Upon
His Native Soil
New York. —Arrival of the last of
America’s 70,000 war dead was com
memorated in Brooklyn.
One body—that of Private Charles
W. Graves of Rome, Ga. —symbolized
for the time the bodies of the 1,065
soldiers which were returned from
France on the United States troop
ship Cambrai.
Amid the hushed vastness of an army
pier his 1,064 silent comrades, in long
unbroken ranks of flag-draped cas
kets, maintained the bivouac of the
dead, while sorrowing thousands of
high and low degree, paid the last re
spects of a grateful nation.
His body, enthroned in a gun cais
son, drawn by six horses, had been
borne through the ranks of silent mul
titudes. Stern general had saluted
the flag which wrapped him. Hundreds
of his comrades had marched beside
him. Guns had boomed in his honor,
statesmen had eulogized his deeds,
mothers had kept over him and “taps,”
the soldiers’ farewell, had given him
godspeed.
The body of Private Graves had been
chosen to receive the honors of the
day because he, of the 1,065 aboard
the troop ship, was the last to be
taken from the hold and placed on
his native soil.
Thus it was that he was the center
of a profoundly solemn demonstration
while his comrades waited in the echo
ing silence of the big terminal.
Special Rates For Grand Opera Season
Atlanta. —Special passenger rates
fcr the approaching grand opera sea
son have been announced by the
Southeastern Passenger Association,
comprising all the railroads entering
Atlanta and most of their connecting
lines in this territory. The rates of
fered are one and one-half fare for
the round trip. The rate will apply
from virtually every point in Geor
gia and from principal towns in ad
joining states. The Atlanta Music
Festival Association directors feel that
! this wil help to stimulate the attend
ance from outside the city, which the
1 advance ticket sale indicates will be
I well up to former seasons. The large
list of private homes which offer rooms
for opera visitors at reasonable rates
I this will help to stimulate the attend
ance. Prospective patrons can obtain
a list of such rooms by writing to the
! association. The sale of tickets for
separate operas began Monday morn
ing. April 3, at 9 o’clock at the store
I of the Cable Piano company.
Another Proposal Made For Shoals
Washington.—Use of nitrate plant
I No. 1 at Muscle Shoals, Ala., to es
tablish, by congressional assent “an
| important profitable Industry” in Ala
bama and Tennessee for the fixation
of nitrogen was proposed recently by
. Charles L. Parsons, a chemical engi
neer of this city, and former adviser
to the government on nitrogen produc
tion in time of war. This proposal |
| was transmitted to congress by Sec
retary Weeks without comment and
was referred to the house military
I committee for examination.
! Flappers. You Ought To Get This One
New York. —"The cause of the next
i war—the flapper—struts up Fifth ave
! nue and her sisters out on Main street
ape her.” This is the opinion ex
pressed by Rev. Dr. J. Frank Norris,
"Texas tornado.” who has come to
New York to save the city by a series
of revival meetings. “The flapper
will bring about this country’s down
fall just as surely as Delilah caused
Samson's," said Doctor Norris. “Every
great war has been traced to the de
pravity of women, and they never
were as bad as they are today.”
NOW DO MY
WORK WITH EASE
Because Lydia £. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound Re
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Homell, N. Y. —“I was in bad health
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11 uMMa&Ulil 11 I was tired out all
over anc * was an ef
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I was irritable and
W could not sleepnight3
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P? my bowels and at my
periods. It seemed
jj thatnearly everyone
II around me knew of
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" ■ wanted me to try it,
at last I took
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
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I do all my own work now except the
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winter and I try to get every one I know
to take your medicine to build them up.
You are welcome to use this letter as a
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Baker. 21 Spencer Ave., Hornell, N.Y.
In almost every neighborhood there
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“Vaseline” Carbolated
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Keep Stomach and Bowels Right
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ply you. \yjite or wire us for delivered prices.
Co., Dyersborg, Tennessee
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