Newspaper Page Text
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It Builds
Strength
Jnst the remedy to aid
the system in throwing off
catarrhal wastes, help the
functional organs, restore’
digestion and bring back
the perfect balance.
Pe-ru-na meets the need
• which we all feel at this
season of the year.
Sold Everywhere
or 1 111
G^ig
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Safeguard babyshealth
'With, this safe and
harmless laxative/
When Baby is fretful and cross —
•specially when teething—somethin®
is nearly always wrong with* the lit
tle stomach, liver or bowels.
Mother, don’t experiment with
harsh laxatives or patent medicines.
Too often they injure and gripe. Just
give Dr. Moffett’s Teethina and see
ow quickly Baby is healthy and
smiling again.
Teethina is a Physician’s prescrip
tion. It thoroughly cleanses the liver,
stomach and bowels —without nausea
or griping. It aids digestion and
nourishment. It helps send purer
and healthier blood coursing through
rosy cheeks. Teethina costs only 30c,
yet millions of mothers know its
priceless value.
TroTHRT SEND FOR USEFUL
JU JLvJdJLx. Booklet About Babies
C J. MOFFITT CO„ COLUMBUS, GA.
TEETHINA
Builds Better Babiet
"^KCuticura
Loveliness
A Clear
V\ \ p. Healthy Skin
Al r\ Inaured by Everyday
1 l xi I \ Uee of Cuticura Soap
Investigating Mind
He —Why did you kiss that mirror?
She —I want to see myself as others
Bee me.
If you don't know a secret, no one
will accuse you of telling it when it
gets out.
Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills contain
only vegetable ingredients, which act gently
as a tonic laxative, by stimulation —not Irri
tation. 372 Pearl St.. N. Y. Adv.
He has enough who is content.
CORNS
Lift Off-No Pain!
fl
Doesn’t hurt one bit! Drop a little
"Freezone” on an aching corn, instant
ly that corn stops hurting, then short
ly you lift it right off with fingers.
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
“Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to
remove every hard corn, soft corn, oi
corn between the toes, and the foot
calluses, without soreness or Irritation
IMPORTANT NEWS
THE WORLD OVER
IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS
ANO OTHER NATIONS FOR
SEVEN DAYS GIVEN
THE NEWS jFIHE SOUTH
What la Taking Ptaea la TH South.
land Will Be Found la
Brief Paragraph*
Foreign—
A recent plot to assassinate Premier
Kato of Tokio and several members
of the Japanese cabinet was frustrated
and two men arrested and jailed.
Mrs. Harry Brown of Pittsburg is
leading Mrs. James Corrigan of New
York by a neck in the second six
months’ race for new honors in Brit
ish society. Mrs. Brown won a close
contest last year when she entertained
the prince of Wales at 5 a. m. after
an all-night party.
The London Times’ correspondent
at Tangiers is informed by members
of the family of Raisuli, the famous
Moroccan brigand, that Raisuli died
recently at Adjur. The date of the
bandit chief’s death is unknown, ac
cording to the dispatch, but it appar
ently occurred about a fortnight ago.
The striking transport employes
who ceased work in some section of
Paris recently, have decided to re
turn to work. The company agreed to
reinstate all men who quit their jobs
on May Day.
Jose Gabino Villaneuva was chosen
president of the republic of Bolivia in
the elections held recently. The count
of the ballots shows that Seno Villa
neuva polled 45,000 votes as the Re
publican candidate against 11,000 cast
for the defeated Coalition candidate,
Daniel Salamunca.
The Princess Royal Louise, who was
recently attacked with a gastric dis
order, is slowly recovering, London
newspapers announce.
Ottawa. Ont., dispatches say that a
terrific earthquake, believed to have
occcurred somewhere at sea, was re
cently indicated in two series of trem
ors. recorded at the Dominion observ
atory.
Leon Trotzky has returned to Mos
cow, Russia, according to the London
Daily Herald.
Premier Mussolini of Italy, having
assumed the portfolio of minister of
navy, his fifth portfolio, now has the
biggest job in the world.
The Socialist party of Germany has
protested the election of von Hinden
burg to the presidency on the ground
that there were certain irregularities
in the balloting.
Porto Rico was recently treated to
its first flying by airship. The United
States dirigible Los Angeles flew over
the Virgin Islands. Altogether the
airship was aloft eight hours. School
children over the islands were. given
recess to see the flight
Washington—
Secretary Wilburn has signed orders
establishing aviation courses at the
naval academy at Annapolis.
Lieuts. Leigh Wade and Leslie P.
Arnold, two of the army world fliers,
were recently decorated with the
cross of the legion of honor by Emile
Daeschner, French ambassador to the
United States.
President Coolidge is developing a
ravenous appetite for musical girl
shows. He liked a recent one so well
that he went to see the Ritz revue.
The last remaining conspiracy
charge against John L. Phillips, for
mer Republican committeeman from
Georgia, in the surplus war lumber
sales case in which he and several oth
ers were acquitted by a jury last sum
mer, was nolle prossed in the District
of Columbia supreme court. The
charge was not included in those on
which Phillips was brought to trial.
Rufus Grant, assistant adjutant gen
eral of South Carolina, held up street
traffic for 15 minutes at one of the
capital’s busiest corners recently. In
making a lefthand turn at Pennsylva
nia avenue and Fourteenth street, Mr.
Grant’s auttomobile ran into a street
ear. Both the street car and the auto
mobile were damaged and Grant was
shaken up, but not hurt seriously. He
received a ticket to traffic court.
After its leading delegates had in
sisted that there was no intention of
disseminating league of nations prop
aganda, the peace committee of the
International Council of Women adopt
ed a resolution urging all nations to
join the league of nations. The reso
lution declared that the league was the
single international agency /or world
peace.
More than three hundred of the pris
oners now In federal penitentiaries are
eligible for parole under the law en
titiing those sentenced for one year
and a day or longer to apply for pa
role after they have served one-third
of their terms.
Completing what is believed to have
been the farthest north airplane flight
in Alaska, Noel Weinecke, Fairbanks,
Alaska, pilot, returned after landing
two passengers, one of them a woman,
at Wiseman, 210 miles north of Fair
banks and 40 miles Inside the Arctic
circle
THE BULLETIN. IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
Investigation of the circumstance ■
surrounding the death of severs
Osage Indians in Oklahoma has bee
completed by department of Justin
agents and their report is in the hand’
of Attorney General Sargent.
Efforts to enact a co-operative mar
keting bill will be renewed at the next
session of congress, Senator Capper
Republican, Kansas, chairman of the
farm bloc, predicted after a recent
conference with President Coolidge.
Henry Ford has asked the interstate
commerce commission for authority to
turn over the Detroit, Toledo and Iron 1
ton railroad, to a new corporation, the
Detroit and Ironton, for the purpose
of “better financing its ownership and
operation.”
Domestic—
The diocese of Pennsylvania of the
Protestant Episcopal Church in Amer
ica has granted women the right to
hold jobs as vestrymen.
The Columbia Theological seminary,
moving from Columbia, S. C., to At
lanta, Ga., will retain the name, “Co
lumbia.”
Dr. R. R. McDaniel and Dr. R. J.
Barnett, Birmingham, Ala., played
cards in Doctor McDaniel’s office,
quarreled and Doctor McDaniel is dead
as a result.
Gordon Campbell, discoverer of the
Kevin-Sunburst oil field, Montana, the
man who employed Senator B. K.
Wheeler at SIO,OOO a year as his at
torney, was found guilty in the federal
court at Great Falls of using the mails
to defraud.
A new high monthly production to
tal of 420,373 cars was reached in the
United States during the month of
April.
The New York state grand lodge of
Masons has granted recognition to
masons of Spain and Argentine, as
well as approving a new grand lodge
in Leipsic, Germany.
W. S. Elders and a companion nam
ed Harrell, Rockmart, Ga., were killed
in an automobile accident near the
city limits of Rockmart recently.
In the Florida legislature the other
day a bill was introduced which would
inhibit the teaching of evolution in
the schools of that state.
The Chicago board of trade has au
thorized a probe into the recent con
tention that grain speculation was
being conducted on the exchange.
Samuel Valentine Cole, 74, president
of Wheaton college, died of bronchial
pneumonia the other day at Norton,
Mass. ,
The house of bishops of the Method
ist Episcopal Church, South, has ab
solved all delegates from obeying in
structions of local churches and con
ferences. This action gives each dele
gate the right to vote as he pleases
on any question coming before the
general conference.
Pola Negri, motion picture actress,
will leave for California with her cus
toms and contraband liquor disagree
ment still in the hands of the govern
ment.
A "lowering of the maximum surtax
rates and a radical reduction in rates
or the elimination of the federal es
tate tax” in all probability will be
recommended to the house ways and
means committee by the treasury next
fall, Secretary Mellon declared in an
address before members of the Mis
sissippi Bankers’ association.
Two men believed to be Joe Tanko
and Floyd Hall, escaped murderers
from San Quentin prison, held up the
United States mall stage between
North Bloomfield and Graniteville,
Calif. They drove the automobile at
high speed through the mountains,
passed through Nevada City and Grass
Valley and then abandoned the car.
William Davis of Memphis was elect
ed president of the Associated Cooper
age Industries of America at the ses
sion of the annual convention of the
organization at Memphis, Tenn. He
succeeds Walker L. Wellford of Mem
phis.
American business can successfully
compete with any nation of the earth,
in the opinion of Judge Elbert H. Gary,
chairman of the board of directors of
the United States Steel corporation,
expressed at Birmingham, Ala., in a
conference with newspaper men. Judge
Gary is optimistic concerning Amer
ican industry.
S. L. Cromwell, president of the
New York stock exchange, had the un
expected experience of being maroon
ed in an Eldora, Ark., hotel room
for a time while callers waited in the
lobby. Tailors and cleaners were try
ing to improve his dress and appear
ance.
Six Atlanta, Ga„ firemen were kill
ed when 150 bales of cotton crashed
down on them as they were fighting
a fire at the Stein Junkhouse compa
ny. Two other, pinned under the de
bris, were injured, and three other
firemen were hurt while fighting the
fire and recovering the bodies. The
financial loss is comparatively small.
Mrs. Julia M. Shepherd, held by a
Chicago coroner's jury as an accesso
ry to two murders with her husband,
surrendered to the criminal court af
ter a day in hiding.
Every reasonable precaution was
taken by Commander D. W. Fuller to
prevent smuggling of liquor aboard the
naval transport Beaufort, while in for
eign waters, officers testified before a
courtmartial at Norfolk, Va., trying
the ship’s commander on charges of
negligence resulting from the seizure
of about five hundred quarts of liquor
In Norfolk February 24.
Newsy Paragraphs
Os State Interest
Locust Grove. —Since the first of
September, the police of Henry county
have destroyed 92 stills and made 22
arrests: destroyed 800 gallons of li
quor, 2,800 gallons of beer and 450
gallons of "mobby.”
Columbus. —Miss Henrietta Lange,
about fifty years old, shot herself
through the temple with a revolver at
her home here and died an hour and
thirty minutes later. She had been in
ill health for two years.
Savannah. —Mrs. W. R. Dancy and
Mrs. A. J. Waring are the delegates
appointed by the Woman’s Auxiliary
to the Georgia Medical Society to the
annual state convention in Atlanta
May 13-15. Mrs. Harry Righton and
Mrs, Julian Quattlebaum are alter
nates.
Savannah. —The body of Miss Mary
Louis King, a well known Savannah
woman, who threw herself into - the
river at Bonaventure cemetery several
days ago, was found at Causten Bluff,
a short distance from where she jump
ed into the river.
Decatur. —A plot to hurl sulphuric
acid in the eyes of guards at the De-
Kalb county jail and to effect a whole
sale prison delivery while attaches
were blinded and disfigured by the
fiery fluid, was foiled when Sheriff
J. A. McCurdY was “tipped off” to the
diabolical scheme by a friendly pris
oner.
Moultrie. —Two closed automobiles
and 468 quarts of whisky and cham
pagne were seized by officers here.
A man who gave his name as E. J.
Lively, was said to have been the
driver of one of the automobiles, while
officers said a woman who said she
was Mrs. Lively was at the wheel of
the other. Officers quoted the man
and woman as saying that they were
en route from Jacksonville to Ameri
cus
Augusta.—The. police having ex- |
hausted every effort to find Jasper E. j
Jones, who disappeared from his home
here two months ago, MrsS Ailene
Jones, his wife, and mother of nine
children, has appealed to the news
papers to assist in the search. Mrs.
Jones said a strange man came to
their home late at night, called her
husband out to the street where his
automobile was standing with motor
running and the two drove away. She
believes he has met with foul play.
Macon. —John D. Walker, former
well known banker of Sparta, and at
one time president of a chain of
banks over Georgia, was indicted by
the United States grand jury here
on a charge of embezzling funds of
a national bank. Walker’s where
abouts are said to be unknown. Dr.
R. C. Wiley, aged member of the bond
commission of Sparta, of which Wal
ker was also a member, appeared be
fore the federal grand jury and told
of Walker’s alleged manipulations.
The other member is dead.
Emory University.—R. L. (Shorty) ,
Fagan of Fort Valley was elected pres- I
ident of the student body of the col
lege of liberal arts of Emory Univer
sity for 1925-26 at a meeting of next
year’s liberal arts council held here.
J. Q. Maxwell of Hogansville was
elected vice president and Jack Cleve
land of Elberton, secretary-treasurer.
Fagan’s election automatically makes
him president of the ’honor council
and chairman of the liberal arts coun
cil, the governing body of the college
of liberal arts.
Atlanta. —Requisitions for Confeder
ate Memorial half dollars, received
from banks in twelve cities of the
Southern states, totaling more than a
million coins, were recently announced
by Robert F. Maddox, chairman of
the Southern bankers’ committee, su
pervising the issuance of the memo
rial coins authorized by congress as
a tribute to the valor of the soldiers
of the South. Nation-wide release of
the memorial coins will be made on
July 3 to holders of coin certificates
sold through commercial banks and
by patriotic organizations prior to that
date.
Montezuma. —Miss Frances Robin
son, 14-year-old school girl, died here
from internal Injuries sustained dur
ing a recent afternoon, when she was
thrown from a truck in which she was
riding with a group of other girls. The
young girl never recovered from the
shock which she received in the fall.
Three other girls were also thrown
from the truck and suffered minor in
juries. They were Estelle Walker,
Minnie Fokes and Maria Forehand.
Miss Robinson died in three hours af
ter the accident.
Griffin. —Mrs. E. K. Domingos and
Mrs. K. H. Lamb of Griffin and Mrs.
George Freeman of Savannah had a
narrow escape from serious Injury
when they were In two different au
tomobile accidents in one day. The
first accident occurred at Orr’s Sta
tion, on the Dixie highway, when they
were en route from Griffin to Atlanta.
The car in wlfich they were driving
turned completely over, the driver los
ing control in a sand bed. They were
picked up by Mrs. C. C. Willis of
Atlanta and rushed to the Griffin hos
pital.
Children Cry FOR
।Il er A I
ir J 111 ■ I ZZx W
MOTHER:- Fletcher’s /
Castoria is especially pre-
pared to relieve Infants in /
arms and Children all ages X.
of Constipation, Flatulency,
Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising there
from, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the
assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of '
Absolutely Harmless -No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it.
Grow Hair on
Your Bald Head fkV
You have used many remedies ' V
to grow hair, that have failed? (K,, , n
Now try Forst's Original Bare- .
to-Hair, and grow hair on your VnßgK “ ■
bald head. I I
Drug Stores and Barber Shops.
W. H. Forst, Mfg. HR
SCOTTDALE, PA.
Correspondence Given Personal Attention
Preach not because you have to say Honesty is the best policy, but he
something, but because you have some- who acts on that principle is not an
thing to say. honest man.
i a AVERa y Ji
WASPIRIH
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST!
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Headache Neuralgia Colds Lumbago
Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism
Accept only “Bayer” package
/V / which contains proven directions.
IMd Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
/ Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of MonoaceUcaddeater of Sallcyllcadd
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। di '
Break Your Chains of Misery
Rheumatism, lumbago, kidney trouble and other such
ailments are like chains and shackles that bind you
down. They destroy your wage-earning power, make
you feel and act years older than you really are, and
keep you in misery. And these ailments grow steadily
worse. They finally become dangerous.
Yet you can break these chains of misery! Just
remember that these ills are caused by impure
blood—blood that does not contain enough iron.
Without iron, your blood cannot throw the poisons
out of your body. Instead, it keeps on gathering
and circulating these poisons through your system.
This is why you should begin at once to take Acid Iron
Mineral. This amazing iron tonic is Nature’s own
product. Physicians and scientists have been unable
to duplicate it. Unlike any other mineral iron—it is
quickly absorbed into your blood, and
gives it strength to throw off impurities a
which cause your bad health. Itisposi
tively guaranteed.
Get a bottle from your druggist today. With ’
it, ask for a box of A. I. M. pills. H
A-I-M Percolating Corp. [jg||sl|
SALEM, VIRGINIA
Piles Pan Be Cured
(Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding)
Many sufferers have been made very happy'
over the results obtained from the use of
PAZO OINTMENT—6Oc at any Drug Store.
(Follow the Directions Carefully.)