Newspaper Page Text
USE SLOAN’S TO
WARD OFF PAIN
Tfou can Just tell by Its beiilthyg
stimulating odor, that It is
going to do you good
!*F I only had some Sloan's Lini-
I ment!” How often you've said
*■• that! And then when the rheu
matic twinge subsided—after hours of
suffering—you forgot it!
Don't do it again—get a bottle to
day and keep it handy for possible use
tonight! A sudden attack may come
en—sciatica, lumbago, sore muscles,
backache, stiff joints, neuralgia, the
pains and aches resulting from expos
ure. You’ll soon find, warmth and re
lief in Sloan’s, the liniment that pene
trates without rubtnnt . Clean, econom
ical. Three sites —35c, 70c, $1.40
Sloan'S
Liniment
Stomach Catarrh J
•ett ** tjuickly r 4 ur ly "i E
tarrh ©* lh Rlor#a’h **7*l#®^
fcv that common
jfiß&on all muootu linings.
•jjRSy-v, lieichin* k. **our /Urn
' > -/4ur ach, mum a.vm I ting.
1 cramp*, pain* in th# bdo
men, diarrhoea. coputipa-
Uon arM *ll •ymptomn of a
t jfl catarrhal condition n the
*yV{\ organs of digestion
] IJon’t sufftT another day.
11 ■ needle** and dnnger-
cm*. Two generation* have
Iy found Pe-ru-na juat the
■fiL&SjfcJFX I medicine needed for such
K ~ i disturbance*.
(Sold Everywhere
_ I Tablets or Liquid
W omen
Made Young
Bright eyes, a clear akin and a bcxl y
full of youth and health may be
yours if you will keep your system
in ortiw by regularly taking
COLD MEDAL
Th* wofM< #tanfard r*m*dy for kidn*y t
liv*t bUddet u'd uric acid troubles, tbs
•rmue# of liie end looks. In use sines
1696. All druggirts. three sizes.
Look fo* the name CoW Mslftl on irr k°>
•ad rjH uo ’ tiialM
RUN-DOWN, WEAK
Strasburg, Va.—"Bome year* ago 1
%a iu poor health, wan in a run
vtx down, weakened
condition. Our
w i borne doctor
:l\ . could do me no
Rood and I felt
'tm'ii&'f*'" iji M*** discouraged My
wj , ‘hu*band said to
St >1 me. Why don't
s- you do< tor
ing with these
doctors and try Dr Pierce's Favorite
Prescription?' I did so, with won
derful results before the first bottle
was finished. 1 used three bottles,
also the 'P;* -am Pel ets'. aud have
been healin' ever since. I can
highly recoin arm! ilex- medicines
to all wi.o Bleu !belli."-MRS. S. C
FEIiLY.
Send I<*c to Dt. Pierce's Invalids
Hotel in , \ y, ( or a tr i,
pactmiii oi Pit„"np.ioj Tablets
This Illustrated Free Book
'**Jshe Modem Method of “Decorating*
will be of great value to you and your decora*
in planning the interior decorations of your he
it contains instructive articles on art in the hon
color harmony, concrete information regarding
the artistic finishing of your walls and ceilings.
All suggestions and practical advice come from
experienced decorators. A great many color plates
designed by leading artists vividly show attractively
decorated rooms You can plan your home from these
illustrations said articles, from bathroom to parlor.
It also gives exact specifications for obtaining har
monious color effects with PEE CEE FLATKOATT,
tb s modem durable, sanitary flat oil finish. It comes in 24
rich, deep, velvety colors, which are easily combined
into the most charming color schemes.
. "■s .. ■
Ask us for Free Book or write direct to
Peaslee-Gaulbert Cos., Louisville, Ky.
HipawpmtTw
Lumpkin Hardware Cos.
JEPENDABLE HARDWARE
: roi* Fvoi’ij Purpose
Rockefeller Paid
$38,400,000 Income
Tax on March 15
New York. April 7.—Did you know
that two men in the United States con- j
(essed to the collector of Internal rev
enue. "Big Bill’' Edwards, that their
net personal incomes last year were
in excess of three million dollars?
Did you know that John D. Rockefel
ler not only had a personal Income of
sixty million dollars, but drew a check
for $38,400,000 and mailed It to the gov
ernment as his income tax contribu
tion?
Home amazing figures, running close
to the billion-dollar mark, are made
public by Edwards through official re
ports now in the hands of the commis
sioner of internal revenue at Washing
ton.
Twenty-eight gentlemen admitted, it
seems .having Incomes during 1920 of
$2,000,000 and up, while thirteen others j
said languidly they received between a j
million and ;l half and two millions. j
The late H. U Frick had $11,250,000
income, and out of it the government
got $7,160,000
Two other men frolicked about with
seven and a half, and each paid the
government $1,800,000. They were Geo. ,
P. Baker and William Rockefeller.
Edward H Darkness and J. Ogden
►Armour were taxed to the tune of $6,-
[250,000 They paid the government a
! flat four million each, while Henry
I Ford and W. K Vanderhile, as well as
' Edward H. R. Green, having each live
I million dollars on their hands during
! the year, disposed of $3,200,000 of It by
j sending it to the government in the'
| form of a certified check,
j These figures appear as personal in-
I comes and do' not, of course, represent
; the staggering' principals that yielded
' so golden a rtofw.
If, for example, Rockefeller's net In*
i come was sixty million dollars and
(this sum represented only 6 per cent in
terest on the principal, the principal
ltaell must liurc been one billion dol
lars. .
In like fashion Frick must have had
a capital of $187,500,000 to return him
$11,250,000 In interest.
The records announce that twenty
i eight of the richest taxpayers are scut
|tered.
About fourteen came from New York,
two from Delaware, one from Michigan,
one from Ohio, two from Pennsylvania,
one (rom Rhode island, two from Texas
and five from Massachusetts.
Vincent Astor's income amounted to
$3,750,000 during 1920. and he paid a
tax of $2,400,1*00.
James A. 8 : i man, president of tae
Natn '1 City in i k. a-* well as Thonv.s
F. Ryan, Daniel Guggenheim, Charles
M. Schwab, .1 .!>. Morgan and Joseph
Widener had an estimated income of
$.1,500,000. and paid approximately $2,-
400 0000 as an Income tax.
Henry Phipps, however, and James P.
Duke, like Jacob H. Schift and Pierre
8. dii Pont had inconi s slightly in ex
cess of $2,500,000, and were required to
pay over $1,500,000 Oas a result.
Of 178 who had net incomes of $500.-
000 to $1,000,000. 46 made from $750,000
to $1,000,000. and 132 correled between
SSOO 000 and $750,000.
The average tax paid by each person
in the country whqAvas subject lo tax
amounted to $254.85, anil the average
tax rate was S7OB.
To Cure a Cold, ir On n
lake LAXATIVE BROMO QUIN*, • A
-tops the Cough and Headache sue /* * n*
Veld. E.W. GROVE'S signature*... ■**.
THE TRIBUNE-NEWS, CARTERSVIULE. PA., APRIL 7. 1921.
Lucky
Strike
cigarette
/ItsN
Do You Fear Friday?
It’s Unluck for Some
And Lucky for Others
Are you afraid of Friday? Brides
consider it unlucky So do business
men, who dread it as a day for starting
important deals. The aversion to Fri
day is found in nearly all nations,
though Thursday is feared by Scandi
navians and Tuesday by the Spanish.
The canny Scotch also fly in the teeth
of popular superstition, nine-tenths of
Scotch weddings being crowded into
Friday.
To the Mohammedans alone is Friday
the lucky day. They celebrate it as the
birthday of the creation of man.
Sailors of all countries dread the
day. They talk in awed whispers about
Isaac Harvey's ship. Its keel was laid
on Friday by a captain who wanted to
kill the old superstition. The ship
foundered on Its first voyage.
Friday's reputation as a disastrous
day apparently originated in the early
days of the church, when Friday was
set as the date of the Crucifixion.
Business men's aversion to Friday is
traced to two Black Fridays on the
New York stock exchange. The panic
of 1873 started on Friday. It was on a
Friday in 1869 that Gould and Fisk cor
nered the gold market and shook Wall
street to its foundations.
But now comes a calendar sharp,
claiming that Friday's is America’s
lucky day. It was on Fridays, he point
ed out, that Columbus sailed for and
discovered America. The Mayflower
ported at Provincetown on Friday. It
was on Friday that Richard Henry Lee
introduced the resolution by which the
Thirteen Colonies declared their inde
pendence. The revolutionary war was
decided on an historical Friday, when
Cornwallis surrendered.
Woodrow Wilson claims 13 as his
lucky number. President Harding may
well claim Friday as his lucky day,
for it was on Friday that he was in
augurated president. Let’s hope that
i particular Friday proves as lucky for
j the nation as it did for Warren G.
I Harding.
CARTERSVILLE
WITNESSES
The Names of Cartersville Per
sons Familiar to All.
Who are the witnesses?
They ace Cartersville people--
Kes dents of Cartersville who have
I bad kidney backjiche, kidney ills, blal
<lei ills: who h've used Moan's Kidney
Fills Th s- witness • t :dorse Doan's.
On Cartersvlle resident who speaks
is J. C. Herring, West Ave. He says:
I have never hesitated to recommend
Doan's Kidney Pills to those 1 hear
complaining of kidney trouble. I can
say that they have proven benetioir,
to me and fully merit the confidence 1
have placed in them. I will gladly tell
anyone of my reasons for so highly
praising Doan'fc Kidney Pills. I never
feel any symptom of the old complaint
now.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply
ask for a kidney remedy— get Doan’s
Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Her
ring had. Foster-Milburn Cos., Mfrs.,
Buffalo, N. Y.—adv.
Colds & Headache
‘‘For years we have used Black-Draught in our family,
n , d I hav ? n^ er J 01 i n d any medicine that could take its
f v a “' h ;," te a s r - H - A - S ‘ acy . of Bradyville, Tenn. Mr. Sta-
n y ’ h . o , is a Rutherford County farmer, recommends Black
i ®s a medicine that should be kept in every house
jold for use in the prompt treatment of many little ills to pre
vent them from developing into serious troubles.
THEDFORD’S
BLACK-DRAUGHT
. .“h tow**? the liver and does the work,” Mr. Stacy
declared. It is one of the best medicines 1 ever saw for a
rwi .. headac h e ; 1do 1? t know what we would do in our
amily if it wasn t for Black-Draught It has saved us many
do j lars i• • * d ?h * see how any family can hardly go with
out it I know it is a reliable and splendid medicine to keen
!TJ^ e house I recommend Black-Draught highland am
never without it
At all druggists.
Accept No Imitations
| B
THE WHOLESALE SLAUGHTER OF
NEGROES IN JASPER COUNTY
Developments in the Jasper county
slav<ry and murder affair are:
Clyde Manning, negro "boss' for
John Williams, admits aiding in kill
ing eleven negro men held in peonage.
Six men, still alive, had weights tied
to their necks and were thrown into
Yellow river to drown.
Four negroes were killed by him in a
we*k, their heads being smashed with
an uxe, and the bodies buried in the
pasture.
Williams directed Manning, he says, j
to do all the killing.
Conference was held between Solici- J
tor Brand, the governor and federal
agents from the department of justice.
Brand knows how the todies got into
Newton county, despite the fact it is
up-stream from Jasper.
Other negroes are believed to have
been killed besides those enumerated
by Manning.
Farm was operated, according to Man
ning, as atrociously as slavery in Congo
Free State.
Governor Dorsey will probably direct
the attorney general to handle the pros
ecution for the state.
Department of justice may ask fed
eral government to take charge of that
entire district.
Bodies of negroes buried in Williams'
pasture, according to Manning, not yet
(exhumed.
John Williams, prineipaPin case, re- j
moved from Covington to Fulton coun-
ty jail in Atlanta for safe keeping.
The story told by Clyde Manning.
Jasper county negro, being held in
Fulton county jail for safe keeping, of
the horribly cold-blooded murders he
says were committed on the farm of
John Williams, not far from Monticello,
.tire more horribly inhuman than any
thing short of the Armenian atrocities;
they beggar comparison with anything
in the form of crime every before re
lated in this country. Eleven men, all
negroes, were deliberately knocked on
the heads with an axe like so many
beeves, or were shot to death nonchal
antly as birds are brought down by a
hunting party. These are the things
which Manning says have been going
on at the Williams farm the past sixty
days or so. He does not go back of
that time in his definite statements, but
there is every intimation that for years
the Williams farm has been operated
much like the Congo kingdom years
ugo, when the inhumanity there made
the Orange Free State a place of hor
ror all over the world.
Manning was one of the two or three
negroes "farm bosses” employed by
John Williams and his three sons. He
has now turned state's evidence, and
the Newton county authorities, into
whose hands he has fallen ei the un
raveling of a mystery of three dead
bodies taken from Yellow river, sent
him to the Fulton county jail for "safe"
keeping.
The following is an editorial com
ment from the Atlanta Constitution:
“A negro confined for safe-keepl ig'
In the Fulton county tower has uttered
a public confession of compounded,
cold-blooded murder that’s so astound
ing as to be almost unbelievable.
"He says that, at the orders of. and
I with the assistance of, his employer, he
j killed eleven members of his own race
who were held in peonage by his em
| ployer.
"Four of the negfocs, this selt-eon
| fessed murderer sftys, he knocked iri
i the head with an axe in one week and
j huried them in a pasture back of, Sir.
i Williams’ house.’
"isiX of them, he said, he and Ids em
ployer bound with ropes and weighted
them with rocks, threw them into the
river to drown, several of the bodies
having subsequently been discovered.
"It is an alleged statement of fact
that, in point of sheer fiendishness and
revolting brutality, rivals a Bluebeard
'romance.
"The white man. likewise in jail, who
4s implicated in this astounding con
fession, denies guilt, saying the negro's
gruesome recital is pure fabrication
from beginning to end.
"There can be no doubt, however, that
wholesale murder has been committed.
"Bodies that have been recovered
from the Yellow river afford irrefutable
proof of that fact.
"It is now for the courts to sift this
‘matter to the very bottom and ascer
tain exactly where the guilt lies.
"That established, Justice must be
'applied without hesitation; for the de
cent public sentiment of Georgia will
not permit a thing of this kind to go
unnoticed. It will insist that whoever
is guilty, either as principal or as ac
cessory, of such atrocious criminality
shall feel the full force of the law.
/ "The truth will, of course, be estab
lished in due time and by process of
law.
"Nothing should be left undone to
lihat end,’’
DR. (HAS. MAYSON
PASSED YEARS AGO,
AFTER ACTIVE LIFE
Sire of Kingston People
Enjoyed Confidence
and Esteem of
Community.
Kingston, Ga. t April 7.—(Special.)—
March 14 would have been the ninety
eighth birthday of the conspic
uous figures of the old regime in King
ston. Dr. Charles Newton Mayson, who
was laid to rest, but not forgotten, fif
teen years ago,
Tall and well favored, with the dig
nity of a grandee and the manners of
a Chesterfield, Dr. Mayson stood out
clearly from the background of early
comers to North Georgia. He was of
Scotch ancestry, though his grandfa
ther, Colonel James Mayson, a revolu
tionary officer, later judge in South
Carolina, who married Miss Hart,
daughter of the first rector of St. Mi
chael’s church in Charleston, places
him among the old colonial families.
Archibald, the oldest son of Colonel
and Mrs. Mayson, married Miss Eliza
beth Lowe and moved to Edgefield,
where Charles Newton was born in
1823. After the death of his father,
young Charles lived with his oldest sis
ter, Mrs. Elizabeth Thew, of Augusta,
Ga., where he studied medicine under
Dr. L. C. Ford, a kinsman, and also
graduated at the medical college in
that city.
He then returned to Edgefield and
practiced his profession for a short
time. There he, in 1844, married Miss
Frances E. Roper, sister of the late
Capt. Joel Roper, of this place. But
two years later he decided to return to
Georgia, so came to Cass county, now
Bartow, and purchased a plantation,
which he afterward sold to the late
Nelson H, Eddy, and settled in the
nearby town of Kingston, from which
for half a century his influence was felt,
not only as a source of healing, but so
cially and religiously, his face was set |
always toward the right.
As an instance of the esteem in which
he was held, Dr. Mayson was chosen
to manage the large estate left by Benp
jamin Reynolds "without any process
of law.” as one of the heirs, Mr. Patrick
Reynolds stated just two weeks before
h.s death, which occurred a few months
ago.
Dr. Mayson was not in the Confed
erate army. Instead, he was detailed to
serve in the civil capacity of physician
for seven counties, and was kept hard
at work, night and day, administering
to the sick in this wide territory. His
special talent lay in diagnosis, though !
of course study and experience made
him skilled in medicine and surgery. '•
and liis outside practice continued until ;
impaired health and advancing years
eallvd a halt, so he opened a drug store !
ir town from whence he ftontinued to
minister to the ailing, combining the j
ready sympathy of a tender heart with
tite sometimes severity of remedial
measures.
Dr. Mayson’s first, wife died shortly I
before the civil war. and after his re- j
turn from Boston. Thomas county,
where he and his children had refugeed, j
lie, in 1866. married Mrs. Adelaide Da- |
vis, nee Jackson, who survived him. for
a number of years.
In early manhood he united with the
Baptist church in his native state, and
was always a pillar of that faith in
this c mmunity, a responsibility which
he bequeathed to his descendants.
Dr. Mayson was the father of thir
teen children, but only four outlived
him: Air. Joe Mason, who lives near
Marietta; Mrs. J. C. Rollins and Miss
Susie Mayson, of Kingston, and Mrs.
Mary Hall, of Atlanta. There are also
a dozen grandchildren, all worthy off
spring of an honorable sire.
Crime Wave Laid
To Blind Tigers By
Judge M. C. Tarver
In sentencing Anthony Ozb\ q, a
negro, to twelve months on the a n
gang for violating the state prohibiton
law. Judge M. C. Tarver stated Friday
morning that blind tigers in this coun
try are largely responsible for the
wave of crime.
“The old-time mountaineer, who
manufactured whisky out of real corn
and had the belief that the government
! had no right to interfere, and sold it
for $2 a gallon has passed out. We
now have the profiteer who manufac
tures # concoction out of lye and other
ingredients and is selling it for corn
liquor. It is this concoction that is re
sponsible for the great number of
crimes that are being committed.
Gzburn was charged with having
ten gallons of whisky in his possession.
He claimed that it had been planted In
his yard and that he did not know
where it came from—Atlanta Journal.
a TONIC
Qrove’s Tasteless chill Tonic restores
Energy and Vitality by Purifying and
Enriching the Blood. When you feel its ■
strengthen n. 1 . invigorating effect, see how
it brings coles to the cheeks and how
it improves tb' oppetite, you will then j
appreciate its tr e foie value.
Grove's Tasteless dull Tonic is simply
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So
pleasant even children like it. The blood
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening. Invigor
ating Effect 60c.
WHY DO lITCHENS
GET HOT IN THE SHJIEI) TIME?
Is it because we don’t b PYREX; that
wonderful Glassware thi allows the
dish to be served piping h fln the tab te?
PRYEX IN USE. " i——__j
Dishes 95c to $2.4)
Or is it from not having th se
Labor Saving Knives
Winchester Butcher Knives,
high carbon, crucible' steel
makes; keen blade that stays ,
sharp. Handles of good design.
Winchester Cook’s Cnives,
the “Sabatier” shape blade a
wonderful useful knife n the
kitchen. Steel that holls its
cutting edge.
Or maybe a piece or two
of carefully selectel
Aluminum woula
solve the problem
fl i muii'ir r;
% 1..'. J
Beginning Friday, April Bth, we will
run “Special Yellow Tag” Sale on cer
tain pieces of Aluminum.
WE DO OUR BEST TO WIN THE
HOUSE-WIFE’S TRADE
\ J)EP‘ENDABL£ JlfEtlCtiAKD/SE—?
the fV/NCff£sT£R store
AUTO MOVIES
g.t.black accessory c?
AND WHOU IM) “
V
MR. PATCH does not wander smilingly up to you out
on the road and inquire if he can be of any as
sistance to you. He must be a guest on the trip or he
won’t help you a bit when the big blowout comes off.
|s ■