Newspaper Page Text
FRIENDS NOTICED
IMPROVEMENT
Wonderful Retultsf rom Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound
Beioit, Wis.— "My female trouble was
brought on by overwork. I had worked
K - iniiiiiliii'linm - Btorcs snd had to
do heavier work than
my strength could
Htand, and had to be
on my feet most of
JRL. Ira the time. Finally I
|Sj had to give up this
fm 'IT]J work entirely and
pr iUH stay at home. Doc-
Ip? tors medicine did not
MSHpifewi* give me much relief,
JrW land my mother
M if & wanted me to take
—Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound. I took a couple of
bottles of it and thought it did not help me
as much as it should, so I gave it up to try
something else. Nothing I took helped
me much, so I finally decided to give the
Vegetable Compound another trial and
to take enougn of it to make sure
it would help me. I have taken it over
a year now and it has brought wonder
ful results. I have gained from 93 to
110 pounds and am keeping house now.
My friends all notice the cnange in my
health. 1 will be glad to answer all
letters that women write to me about
the Vegetable Compound.”—Mrs. W.
G. Monson, 1516 Park Ave., Beloit,Wis.
- Mrs. Monson is willing to write to any
woman suffering from such troubles.
Surgery 3,000 Years Ago.
Experts are now at work deciphering
i roll of papyrus 15 feet long. It
deals with the Egyptian methods of
?urgery and medicine as practiced
three thousand years ago.
CHILDREN CRY
FOR “CASTORIA"
Especially Prepared for Infants
and Children of All Ages „
Mother! Fletcher’s Cnstoria has
!>een in use for over 30 years to relieve
babies and children of Constipation,
Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea;
allaying Feverishness arising there
from, nnd, by regulating the Stomach
and Bowels, aids the assimilation of
Food; giving natural sleep without
splat es. The genuine bears signature
1 —
More Suitable.
“Taxi, sir?’’
“Call me a surtax!, ’’ directed the
nagnute briefly.—Judge.
! 11)
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It is a Reliable,
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EXB,HURT?
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r / HALLABUCKEL
147 Waverly Place Hew York
Malaria
Chills
and
Fever
Dengue
THE WEEK’S EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATE, NA
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND ABOUT_THE WORLD
A C«nd«naed Record Of Happenings
Of Interest From AH Points
• Of The World
Foreign—
The French forces seized 375,000,000
marks when they occupied the Lim
burg Reichsbank, it Is said, In semi*
offical German quarters.
After a spirited debate In the house
of commons on (the merits and de
merits of Singapore naval base, the
English government obtained a vic
torious vote carrying the naval esti
mates under closure by 217 to 130.
Premier Mussolini recently received
Prince Caetanl, Italian ambassador to
the United States, with whom he had
a long interesting conversation re
viewing the entire situation between
America and Italy, especially with
regard to the immigration problem.
The loading of Atlantic liners* at
Liverpol has been stopped in conse
quence of a series extension of the
dockers’ strike. Several thousand
men quit work after a demonstration
by strikers at Birkenhead, across the
Mersey. All coastal and cross chan
nel service also has been stopped.
Britain Bays that the Ruhr occupa
tion, besides being illegal, is not a
success. France says she could make
it a success If Britain would join her
in forcing Germany to cease resist
ance, and that she will make it a suc
cess anyhow if given time.
The draft of the British note to
Germany was completed and it is ex
pected that one sitting of the cabinet
council will suffice to obtain approval
of the ministries in which case the
note, with covering letter, will prob
ably be dispatched to the allied gov
ernments for their approval and to
Washington, not necessarily for com
ment, but as a matter of courtesy.
An agreement has been reached on
all the outstanding difficulties in the
near east conference, and nothing now
remains in the way of signature of
peace.
Washington—
Final action in Washington in con
nection with the incident in Manila,
which resulted in the resignation of
the Philippine cabifiet and council of
state in protest against the policies of
Governor General Wood, will await
the return of President Harding from
his Alaskan trip.
Asserting that insurance companies
have confiscated millions of dollars
because of lapsed payments by policy
holders, Representative Thomas,
Democrat, of announced
he would introduce a bill in the next
congress seeking to guarantee to the
public "the full benefits under all in
surance policy contracts." The money
held by the companies, Mr. Thomas
said, consists of funds which “right
fully belong to the estate of unfor
tunate persons who making a sum
dent number of annual premium pay
ments to give tjieir policies a paid
up or extended insurance value."
Senator Brookhart. Republican, of
lowa, returned to his office at Wash
ington after a trip to Russia and an
nounced that unless President Har
ding calls an extra session of con
gress to help the farmers the "in
dependents will see that the reaction
aries are relieved of control of com
mittees at the regular session" be
ginning in December.
Generally favorable conditions for
crops prevailed during the first half
of July and live stock is in good con
dition, semi-monthly reports to the
department of agriculture .indicate.
The farm labor shortage continues
general although the situation has
been satisfactorily handled in most
localities thus far.
The controversy over the question
of employment of negro physicians in
the Tuskegee, Ala., veterans’ hospital
is expected to be decided soon by
Director General Hines, of the veter
ans’ bureau, through a compromise
arrangement The settlement of this
question probably will provide for
the employment of pegro physicians
in the hospitals with a white man as
chief medical offficer. The hospital
would be directed by a joint white
negro board of control.
The Morse conspiracy trial took on
an added national significance when
it was announced that Attorney Gen
eral Harry M. Daugherty would be
summoned by the defense to tell what
he knew of the war-time transactions
of Charles W. Morse and the relations
of the Virginia Shipbuilding corpora
tion and the United States Shipping
Board.
HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY, McDONOUGH, GEORGIA.
Separation of the International Har
vester company into at least three
distinct corporations, with wholly sep
arate owners, stockholders and of'i
cials, is demanded by Attorney Gene
ral Daugherty in a petition filed in
the federal district court at St. Paul,
Minn. Such a step is necessary, the
attorney general’s petition declares,
because the dissolution decree origi
nally entered against the company in
1918 has proved "Inadequate” to break
up restraint of trade and restore com
petition in the production of harvest
ing machines and other farm iinpie*
ments.
Domestic—
Four members of the crew of a
freight train on the Pennsylvania rail
road were killed when the engine left
the track and went over an embank
ment, three miles northeast of Craw
fordsville, Ind.
Ten business buildings were among
the structures destroyed by fire which
swept through Kimbail, near Blue
field, W. Va.
A 13-year-old girl confessed to the
killing of little James .“Sonny") Mac-
Donald, four, who was drawned at
Baston under a wharf behind the
plant of the Texas Oil company.
Plans to introduce a bill jointly in
both houses of the Alabama legisla
ture providing for the abolition of the
convict lease system were announced
at Montgomery.
Mrs. Eula Thompson, employee in
a Kansas City, Mo., undertaking es
tablishment, and her employer, W.
M. McClure, were found dead in the
undertaking parlors. Circumstances
attending their deaths are baffling to
police.
Senator Robert M. La Follette, in a
statement issued in connection with
the election of Magnus Johnson as
United States senator to succeed the
late Knute Nelson over Governor J.
A. O. Preus, of Minnesota, declared
that "the old Lincoln spirit is again
sweeping the West.”
The crowing of a rooster every
morning was the cause of the shoot
ing to death of Eugene F. Griffith
at Sious Falls, S. D. The rooster will
crow no more. With its neck wrung
it was found beside the body of Grif
fith.
Superior Judge Leslie Howitt, Los
Angeles, Calif., awarded the custody
of five-year-old Julia Shested to her
aunt and foster mother, Mrs. Elsie
Shested, denying the habeas corpus
petition of the child’s mother, Mrs.
Lois Pell&ta.
Mrs. Arthur Mauzey complained to
the district attorneys office, Shreve
port, La., that her husband had traded
their 14-months-old son to an unidenti
fied man for a horse and buggy and
then sold the outfit for S2O. She ap
pealed tp the authorities to assist her
to recover the child.
W. M. Plunkett, of Waverly, shot
and killed his wife, mother-in-law,
Mrs. Tubbs, and sister-in-law, Janie
Tubbs, at the family home, according
to a telephone message received at
Sedalia, Mo.
The New England Unit of the
Shrine Hospital for Crippled Children
Is to be erected at Springfield, Mass.,
at a cost of $260,000.
Charges that Governor Small was
acquitted by a corrupted jury in his
trial in the Lake county, Illinois, cir
cuit court at Waukegan last June were
swept from the slate when the jury
hearing the trial of John B. Fields,
Edward Kaufman and Edward Court
ney returned a verdict of not guilty
for all three defendants. A thunder
of applause greeted the verdict, which
was reached in one hour and ten
minutes.
to Carl C. Magee, editor of the New
Mexico State Tribune, convicted on
the charge of criminal libel of Justice
F. W. Parker of the state supreme
court and of contempt of the fourth
judicial district court presided over by
Judge D. J. Leahy.
Twenty-two men were named in in
dictments returned by the Chicago
federal grand jury charged with con
spiracy to transport 1,000 cases of
whisky from the Old Grand Dade dis
tillery at Louisville, Ky., in September.
According to a statement made by the
United States district attorney tne
Indictments were returned by the June
grand jury, but were suppressed In
order to apprehend Sadler.
Piloting his plane low over tne
dense treetops, Mark Hubbard, avia
tor, told Wausaw, Wis., police he saw
noo signs of life in the swamp lands of
Mistnee, where Mary Lewando, 2U,
wanted for questioning in connection
with the mysterious assault on her
stepmother, Mrs. Walter Lewando, is
believed hiding.
Driven to desperation by anonymous
telephone calls saying her husband was
unfaithful, Mrs. Anna Nolte, wife of
the borough engineer of McKees
Rocks, Pa., committed suicide. The
"poison calls,” according to ainaa
vits filed with the deputy coroner,
came from both men and women.
They were received during the ab
sence of Nolte, and the family way
never able to trace them.
LEGISLATIVE PROCEEDINGS
Doings of Georgia Lawmakers
Gathered For The Benefit
Of Our Readers
Tax Equalization Repeal Passes
Atlanta. —After lengthy debates ana
filibuster the house of representatives
passed the Stovaii Dili repealing the
tax equalization act by a vote of 121
to 72.
• • •
For Restoration Of Pension Limits
By almost unanimous vote the house
wayß and mean committee voted to
recommend for passage the group of
bills introduced by Kempton, of Ful
ton, and Harris, of Jefferßon, which
would wipe out the new classes of
Confederate pensioners.
These bills, four in number, are de
signed to restore the old limits on
Veterans eligible for state pension.
They again limit pensions for widows
of Confederates to those who were
jnarried before 1870, instead of 1881,
as now, and restore the provision bar
ring pensions from those owning
property valued at $15,000 or more.
They place the pension rate at SIOO
per year, removing the graduated
peales of increases provided under the
acts of 1920.
* * *
Asks Amendments In Marriage Law
Favorable report by senate genera.
tudiciary committee No. 1 on the bill
>y Senator Stovall, of the Twenty
ninth district, providing for ameud
ment of the present marriage law so
as to require county ordinaries to
post names of prospective brides and
bridegrooms on a bulletin board in the
courthouse five days prior to issuance
of marriage licenses, was returned
when the measure came up for con
sideration. |
The amendment would restrain or
dinaries from issuing licenses until
both parties have filed a written re
port showing their age, residence,
whether either had been previously
married, whether divorced or separat
ed by annullment or by death, and
have furnished other general informa
tion. The application for license
would be posted in a conspicuous
place in the ordinary’s office and at
the expiration of five days the license
would be issued provided all require
ments were found to be as contained
in the record.
These provisions, it was pointed
out, would serve to check marriages
by minors and marriages in which
undivorced persons pose as single men
7r women.
* * #
Port Commission Repeal Adversed
A bill, introduced by Representa
tives Clark and New, of Laurens
county, to abolish the state port com
mission created in 1921, was adverse
ly reported by general agriculture
committee No. 1 of the house at a
meeting. This marks the first move
in the state port fight at this session
and is considered a victory for Sa
vannah over Brunswick.
• * *
Bills Introduced In Senate
The following bills were introduced
In the senate:
By Mundy, of the 38th—To hold
biennial session of the general as
sembly of 60 days, instead of 50, every
two years.
By Grantham, of the 46th—To au
thorize that employees of receivers
shall be subject to garnishments.
By Macon of the 30th —To author
ize the general assembly to classify
property for taxation.
By Adams, of the 47th—To author
ize counties to employ county agents,
home demonstrators, etc.
By Phillips, of the 18th—To amend
the code relative to the disposition of
unclaimed funds.
By Spence, of the Bth—To amend
code creating the city court of Ca
milla, providing an increase of $25 in
salary of judge.
* * *
Bills Introduced In House
The following bills were introduced
in the house:
227. By Milner, of Dodge, et. al.—
To levy a tax on dealers in cigars and
cigarettes; to appropriate the funds
to be used to build a tuberculosis
sanitorium. Ways and means.
228. By Gumming, of Richmond—
To license real estate brokers and
dealers and create a state real estate
commission. Gen. judy. 2.
229. By Miss Kempton, of Fulton
(by request)—To amend section 6068
of code of 1910, providing for sale of
property levied upon by due process
of law. Gen. judy. 1.
230. By Ennis, of Baldwin—To ap
propriate $239,864 as deficiency for
state sanitarium. Appropriations.
231. By Smith, of Lamar—To pro
hibit deregatory statements in regard
to insurance companies. Insurance.
232. By Steele of DeKalb—To pre
scribe and fix notice of pending litiga
tion affecting title to land. Gen.
judy. 2.
Sure Relief
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The
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Alright
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 30-1923.
MUSSELS TO BE CULTIVATED
Adequate Supply of Raw Material for
the Pearl-Button Industry Is
Object Sought.
An important step toward insuring
an adequate supply of raw material
for the pearl-button Industry is being
made by the United States bureau of
fisheries, which, for the first time in
history, is cultivating fresh-water mus
sels during the entire first year of their
growth. The activity of mussel cul
turists heretofore has been confined to
getting the young bivalves well start
ed in life, during the brief period when
they attach themselves to the gills and
fins of fish. Now, however, as a check
upon the effectiveness of their work,
the fish will De Kepi in large woodeu
troughs until the mussels drop off, af
ter which the latter will be retained
in the wooden tanks for a year, the
better to observe and facilitate their
growth. The mussels will then be
planted in their natural environment
to complete their life cycle.—Popular
Mechanics Magazine.
National Park Visitors.
Registration of motorists visiting the
national parks in 1922 shows that there
was an average of 3.45 persons'per car.
which permit of only two passengers,
As some of the vehicles were roadsters
it appears that the average automobile
on tour carried close to a capacity load.
Even the kindliest hand grows
weary of doing for others what they
ought to do for themselves.
Nervous ?
If Coffee
disagrees
Drink
Postum
There's a Reason "