The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934, April 30, 1909, Image 8
FEMININE NEWS NOTES. Emma Ooldman has been judicially declared an alien. The Czaritza will visit England, as the guest of the King and Queen, In an attempt to recover her health. Through an oversight the name of Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy was printed In a booklet of Calvary P. E. Church. Miss Meredith, daughter of George Meredith, has demonstrated In Eng land her ability to lead a municipal orchestra. Dr. Clara M. Moore, of Denver, has keen appointed physician of the woman’s department of the State Hospital for the Insane at Pueblo. Mrs. William Gould Brokaw, of New York City, in seeking alimony In her separation suit, asked that her husband’s property be sequestered. A club of little east side girls, New Tork City, whose funds were held up hy the treasurer’s mamma went to oourt and forced her to give up the money. Mme. Castro was much annoyed by the refusal of the Venezuelan of ficials to let her land at La Guayra and urged them “to make hay while the sun shines.” A jury decided that Aurel Batonyl, •of New York City, was entitled to a separation, and denied that his wife, who was Mrs. Burke-Roche, had gTound for a divorce. A jury in New York City awarded Miss Sophie Myers $7OOO damages against Carl Kaiser, who refused to marry her after cabling her a pro posal of marriage to Honolulu. French women have caused to be introduced in the Chamber of Depu ties a bill abrogating the clause in the ciyil code declaring that the wife owes obedience to her husband. NO V/ IS THE IDEAL TIME FOR TRAVEL o+o+o4o+o+o WINTER TOURIST TICKETS ARE ON SALE VIA SOUTHERN RAILWAY TO TOURIST POINTS IN> ALABAMA, COLORADO, CUBA, FLORIDA, GEORGIA, LOUSIANA, MEXICO, MISSISSIPPI, NEW MEXICO, NORTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA, TEXAS, TENNESSEE. Double Daily Service to Florida and through Pullman Service to and from important Cities of the East and West, Dining Car Service on all Through Trains. For complete information regard ing rates, schedules., write to, J. L. MEEK, G. R. PETIT, . A. G. P, A. T. P, A, ATLANTA, GA. MACON, GA. G. W. MORRIS, Pres. J. G. WARD, V-Pres. j. t. ROND, V-Pres. C. M. POWER, Cashier. BANK OF STOCKBRIDGE STOCKBRIDGE, GA. WE HAVE Fidelity Bonds A “Deposits Insured” Fire Insurance N In Reserve Fund Burglarly Insurance D of $250,000.00. Deposit Your Money With Us. STOCKBRIDGE WAREHOUSE CO. Will store your Cotton FREE for 30 Days. Insurance Rates : 10c. per month.”, Storage after 30 Days 25c. per month for four months; Balance of the Year J gm-SETiO US YOUR COTTON! Often The Kidneys Are Weakened by Over-Work. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. It used to be considered that only urinary and bladder troubles were to l>e f traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that nearly all diseases have their beginning in the disorder of these most important The kidneys filter and purify the blood— that is tlieir work. Therefore, when your kidneys are weak or out of order, you can understand how quickly your entire body is affected and how every organ seems to fail to do its duty. If you are sick or “ feel badly,” begin taking the great kidney remedy, Dr, Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, because as soon as your kidneys are well they will help all the other organs to health. A trial will convince anyone. If you are sick you can make no mis take by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases, and is sold on its merits by all druggists in fifty-cent gg and one-dollar size bottles. You may u have a sample bottle nom« of swamp-iioot. by mail free, also a pamphlet telling you how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing hamton, N Y. Don’t make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the ad dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. SULTAN SURRENDERS Realizing Hopelessness of Situa tion Turkish Ruler Yields. YOUNG TURKS IN CONTROL Unnumbered Thousands Have Been Massacred By Murderous Moslems. Constantinople is Quiet. Constantinople, Turkey.—The Yil diz garrison surrendered to the con stitutionalist forces. The command ers of these battalions began send ing in their submissioon to .vlalimoud Sohefket Pasha, and the whole of the troops protecting the palace gave their formal and unconditional surrender. Niaci Bey, who Is called the hero of the -July revolution, is now in com mand of the garrison. Sultan Abdul Hamtd has been per mitted to remain within the walls of the Yildiz Kiosk, where, in company with his ministers, he waited for the outcome of the struggle between his loyal troops and the army of invest ment, each hour bringing him word of a fresh disaster. It has been stated, since victory rested with the consti tutionalists, that the sultan himself gave orders to his men not to resist. Whether or not this is true, it can be safely said of the troops within the capital that they put up a stub born resistance at all points, and the losses on both sides are exceedingly heavy for the length of time the en gagement was in progress. A report of the commander-in-chief of the constitutionalist forces is au thority for saying that the sultan will he dealt with by the parliament, and that there will be an anedquate in quiry into the sovereign’s alleged complicity in the recent mutiny. Beirut, Turkey.—The situation in Asiatic Turkey is one of extreme gravity. How many thousands have been massacred cannot even be esti mated, because the disturbances have been so widespread that it is impos sible to obtain details of the happen ings during the past ten days. The latest estimates of the number killed in the villayet of Adana reaches ap proximately 25,000 and thousands have been killed in the towns of oth er districts. The state of seige,which several of the places are undergoing, has brought the inhabitants to the verge of starvation, and each day brings its tales of further atrocities and the depths of misery and despair to which the savagery of the fanatics has brought the people. Confirmation has been received of the burning of the Armenian village of Kessah. All the men and many women and children have been slain. The American property at Kessah was destroyed. Miss Chambers, an Amer ican missionary, is safe. There are five American women stationed here, including Miss Lam bert, who has been sending out ap peals for help, Miss Billings and Miss Bowman. The authorities have refus ed permission to Messrs. Lawson and Chambers, also American missiona ries, to go to their relief. Frantic ap peals for protection and for food are coming in from all sections. Washington, D. C. —While condi tions in the near east continue to be alarming and unsettled, the state department has been given assurance by Great Britain through the Ameri can embassy at London that her ships on the scene are adequate to protect Americans as well as English sub jects. The department has been assured by the embassy of the safety of two American women named Webb, about whom some inquiries had bedti made. Assurances are given that the am bassadors are leaving nothing undone in order to get relief to the distress, ed cities. Constantinople, Turkey.—The reign of Abdul Hamid II ended with his deposition and the accession of his brother, Mehemmed Reschad Effendi, as Mehemmed V., a variation of Ma homet, it being considered inappro priate to assume the precise name of the prophet. Mehemmed V is the thirty-fifth sov ereign of Turkey, in the male descent of the house of Osman, the founder of the empire. TO RETURN CONEtDERATE FLAGS. Captured Banners Will Be Delivered At Huntsville, Alaoama. Cincinnati, Ohio. —Details for the return of the confederate battle flags captured by the Fourth Ohio calvary at Selma, Ala., near the close of the civil war, are now' in the hands of Governor Comer of Alabama. It will take place at Huntsville ,May 12. Captain John A. Pitts of this city received a letter from Governor Har mon stating that the captured flags will be sent to this city, so that any of the old veterans who may care to view them may do so. SMOKE PLAGUE CONQUERED. Federal Experts Have Been Studying Problem for Years. Washington, D. C. —The smoke plague of American cities has been conquered by science, according to the statement of federal experts, who have been studying the problem for a number of years. They not only make the assertion that smoke prevention is possible, but stand ready to prove it by demonstration to any one inter ested, and are proving it every day at the United States geological survey experiment station at Pittsburg, Pa. The plant is being operated absolute ly without smoke, and the experts are burning a coal considered refuse by the trade. LATE NEWS HTES. General. According to the opinion of well posted farmers and cotton men, prac tically all the Mississippi cotton crop has been planted. There is plenty of seed this year, all the mills holding back good supplies. It is reported that Great Britain is withholding recognition of the new Congo State owing to the refusal of Belgium to communicate the reform plans she has decided upon. At the banquet of the New England Dry Goods association in Boston, -viass., Congressman Ranidell said the government should spend $500,- 000,000 on the waterways of the coun try to make them navigable. Editor Maxmillian Hardin of Berlin, Germany, was fined $l5O for libeling Count Von Moltke, former governor general of Berlin, in his newspaper. Loaves of bread in Rhode Island must weigh exactly two pounds a»d the price must be fixed at so much per pound, according to an act intro duced in the legislature of that state. E. H. Harriman will make a sum mer trip to Europe for an indefinite stay, on account of his health. He will sail about the middle of June. The Pacific Northwestern states are sending flour to the eastern mar kets, a situation almost unprecedent ed. The Paris police have arrested a Chinese student on the French cruis er Bornia, on the charge of stealing secret documents relating t. naval defense. He says he took the papers to serve China and that he did not intend to sell them. James A. Patten, “the wheat king,” left Chicago suddenly. The explana tion given at his office was that he had gone to look over the wheat sit uation in the we-st and southwest. Reports that Patten is ill were de nied absolutely. Colima, the big volcano in Mexico, is again in active' eruption, and ter ror has spread among the people. Many have deserted their homes. Vi olent ’quakes followed the eruption. N. Joseph Thomossin, a French journalist, and one of the three con testants for a jrize of $25,000, offered by the Royal Olympia society of Am sterdam in a £lobe-walking contest that requires a call at every country in the world, has arrived in Seattle, Wash. Thomassin has been thirty four months out of Calais, France, and has completed his walking in Eu rope, Asia and the northern countries of Africa. According to the condi tions of the contest he must walk 75,000 miles within eight years. Interest at the Niagara Falls ice jam centered in the huge mounds of ice at the Bridal Veil falls, where the body of a supposed suicide had been exposed partly by the drop in the water level and partly by the pounding of the ice, which is steadily sailing down the river and over the cataract. Attempts to recover the body were unsuccessful. Dynamite was used to break the jam. Mrs.' Elizabeth F. Noble of Mans field, Mass., whose will has just been made public, left SIO,OOO to the Mid night Mission of New York, and the same amount to build drinking founts for horses and dogs in the streets of New York. Washington. An interestinng addition to the mil itary records of the United States will be published by the government if a bill just introduced by Representative Hull of Tennessee becomes a law. This bill directs the secretary of war to prepare from the military records in his possession a roster of all the armies engaged in the service of the United States in all its wars, except the civil war. A roster has already, been issued of the men composing the armies of the civil war. Senator Taliaferro’s amendment to the census bill, which requires the collection of data bearing upon the naval stores industry, has been adopt ed in conference, \ and the opponents of the plan have practically abandon ed hope. President Taft has ordered an in vestigation by the government of practically all western railroads, .it being alleged against them that they have made discriminatory freight rates against all the mountain cities in the west, principally in Utafi. In a carefully prepared spec :h de livered in the senate Senator Stone of Missouri urged the withdrawal of the Philippine tariff bill, favored by President Taft. He said the Filipi nos wanted independence and should have it. The census appropriation bill, pro viding $10,000,000 for the expense in cident to the first two years of the collection of data for the thirteenth census, was introduced by Represen tative Tawney of Minnesota chair man of the appropriation committee. The total estimate of the expense for obtaining the census will be $14,- 000,000. The Hungarian cabinet has resign ed and Emperor Francis Joseph has asked Count Andrassy, minister of the interior, to form a new cabinet. The navy department has just is sued orders for the armored cruisers North Carolina and Montana, now at Guantanamo, and part of Rear Admi ral Arnold's fleet, to proceed with all dispatch to Alexandretta, Turkey, for the protection of American interests there. More than nine million pounds of dynamite will be required for wont on the Panama canal in the coming fiscal year, according to estimates of division engineers in charge of the excavation. Bids will be opened shortly for the purchase of this ex plosive, which, it is estimated, will cost about $1,000,000. R. 0. JACKSON, Attorney-at- Law, McDonough, ga. Office over Star Stores I e. n. sniTH, Attorney at Law, MC DONOtTQH, Ga. Offloe over Star Score, south side sq tiara. All work carefully and promptly attended to. Am premared to negotiate loans on real estate. Terms easy. laaaosaa^’Jitci'hgaLjLiaaaaaatiaß'jaßuriuaa CTTOaiES Coughs,Colds, CROUP, WhoopiigCough This remedy can always be depended upon and is pleasant to take. !t contains no opium or other harmful drug and may be given as confi dently to a baby as to an adult. Price 25 cents, large size 50 cents. Engines AND BOILERS •aw, Lath And Shingle Mills, Injectors, pumps And Fittings, Wood Saws, Splitters, •UAfts, Pulleys, Belting, Gasoline Engines. ““.r 1 LOMBARD, fmdjj, iuhiis and Boilar Works and Supply Start, AU4USTA. OA. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup Relieves Colds by working them out of the system through a copious and healthy action of the bowels. Relieves coughs by cleansing the mucous membranes of the throat, chest and bronchial tubes. "As pleasant to the taste as Maple Sugar" Children Like It* For BACKACHE-WEAK KIDNEYS Try DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills —Sura and Safi NEWSY GLEANINGS. A bitter discussion is aroused over the relations of Germany and Eng land. Emperor Nicholas repealed restric tions regarding the marriage of Rus , sian officers. President Taft has decided that the entire tariff question must be settled at once. James A. Patten advocated remov ing the duty on wheat, declaring it would not affect prices. The National Association of Mas ter Bakers protested to Congress against speculation in food products. It was stated in Washington, D. C., that a holt of Republicans in the Sen ate may result in the passage of an income tax bill. Several rheumatic patients in Roosevelt Hospital, New York City, were so greatly benefitted by the bee stinging treatment as to be able to go home. Expansion of its retail tobacco trade by one hundred to two hundred new shops in New York City was an nounced by the United Cigar Stores Company. The London Economist, in an arti cle on the wheat situation in Ameri ca, supports the view of J. J. Hill that the high price is due to the world’s demand. A decision to allow the Republicans to take entire charge of the tariff bill, thereby assuming full responsibility for the measure, was reached at a conference of Democratic Senators at Washington. D. C. At a conference with the labor leaders in Washington, D. C., the President announced that he would conduct an investigation all summer with a view to a revision of the Sher man Anti-Trust law. Behold the dreamer! He speaks of what he wants to do, and wonders why the others do not stop to won der and admire.