Newspaper Page Text
2
If You Need a Medicine
You Should Have the Best
Have you ever stopped to reason
why It is that so many products
are extensively advertised, all
*■’* a» once drop out of sight and are
wen forgotten? The reason is plain
c i-_the article did not* fulfil the prom
ises of the manufacturer. This
' applies more particularly to a med
■ ; A medicinal preparation that
'fias real curative value almost sells
itself, as like an endless chain sys
tem the remedy is recommended
”, by those who have been benefited,
to those who are in need of it.
A prominent druggist says “Take
“for example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp
-7 Hoot. a preparation I have sold for
~».giany years and never hesitate to
recommend, for in almost every case
it shows excellent results, as many
of my customers testify. No other
remedy has so large a sale.’’
.According to sworn statements
and verified testimony of thousands
who have used the preparation, the
success of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-
Root is due to the fact, so many
people claim, that it fulfils almost
every wish in overcoming kidney,
liver and bladder ailments, corrects
a urinary troubles and neutralizes the
• uric acid which causes rheumatism.
You may receive a sample bottle
Swamp-Root by Parcels Post.
Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents;
' also mention the Atlanta Tri-Week
ly Journal. Large and medium size
■ bottles for sale at all drug stories.
(Advt.)
Resinol
will soothe that
itching skin
The first application of Resinol usu
ally takes the itch and burn right out of
eczema and similar skin-affections.
~ This gentle, healing ointment seems to
get right at the root bf the. trouble,
r restoring the skin to health in a sur
- ’ prising iy short time.
All druggists sell Resinol Ointment and Resinol
Scap. For free sample, write Dept. 6-R, Resinol,
Baltimore, Md.
Sore Eyes
Lavoptik
‘There is nothing better for sore,
' weak or inflamed eyes than common
, witch hazel, camphor, hydrastis,
-J- etc., as mixed in Lavoptik eye wash.
The camphor and witch hazel soothe
-and relieve the inflammation; the
hydrastis and other ingredients have
tonic and antiseptic properties.
Mrs. Wm. Morris, Roosevelt Minn.,
writes: “After hundreds of dollars
being spent Lavoptik is the first to
any good.”
~ If your druggist does not have La-’
voptik, send sixty-three (63c) for
full seven-ounce bottle and we will
include a pure aluminum eye cup
FREE. We guarantee Lavoptik to
help ANY CASE sore, weak or in
flamed eyes or money gladly re
funded. LAVOPTIK COMPANY,
Dept. D, St. Paul, Minn.—(Advt.)
PELLAGRA
Is Being Conquered Under Our Guar
anteed Treatment.
The Dr. W. J. McCrary Home
’treatment for Pellagra has been
tried, proved and acknowledged the
safest, surest and most permanent of
any. It Is guaranteed to give satis
faction or money refunded with 8 per
' cent interest. Over 8,000 persons
have taken this treatment, all per
fectly satisfied. The treatment is
taken in the privacy of the Rome un
der the direction of a licensed physl
’ clan, who treats each case individu
ally. Before you lake any treatment
for Pellagra, write for our free book
let, which explains the cause of and
-f treatment for it. The booklet is sent
• in plain, sealed envelope.
Symptoms of Pellagra.
.)• Tired, sleepy, depressed, indolent
1 feeling; constipation or bowels run—
• ning off; headaches; indigestion;
• rough, inflamed, sore or erupted skin;.
' hands red like sunburn; mouth and
i throat sore; lips and tongue red;
mind affected. If you have even one
>7 of these symptoms write for our
booklet and Free Diagnosis blank.
I>B W. J. McCBAHY, Inc.,
Dept. G-2, Carbon Hill, Ala.
„ —-CAdvt.)
Cured His RUPTURE
I was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk
several years ago. Doctors said my only
hope of cure was aa operation. Trusses did
me no good. Finally I got hold of some
thing that quickly and completely cured me.
. Years have passed and the rupture has never
returned, although I am doing hard work as
a carpenter. There was no operation, no
/*■- lost time, no trouble. I have nothing tc
sell, but will give full Information about
how you may find a complete cure without
“• operation, if yon write to me, Eugene M.
Fallen, Carpenter, 656-F Marcellus Avenue;
-rauasquan, N. J. Setter cut out this not
*' tice and show it to any others who are rup
tured—yon may save a life or at least stop
■' the misery of rupture and the worry and
danger of an operation.— (Advt.) •
These two pair
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Lace Cur tains will be r ;7|!*ij
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T 77 •etliog salve. Ask today for eight boxes on credit; we trust
• you until sold. Big premium catalogue sent free with salve.
T < ROSEBUD PERFUME CO Box 253 Woo4rf>oro.MdL
lio ace Curtains,Rogen
I riSWr^ ilver Sets> fine Lockets,
ISjff LaValliersand many other
1 valuable presents for Beil-
•••»ng our Leautiful Art & Re
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pictures,when sold send the
$2.00 and choose premium wanted, according to big list.
KAY ABT CO., Dept* 34 CHIC ABO,ILL.
/O WEST CLOX‘POCKET
’ JSL BEN ’ S3 * so c ’ °* D *
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5 j, w. JACKSON,
Dept. A, 98 Randolph St., Columbus, 0.
Guaranteed Timekeeper.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
NOTED EDUCATOR MAY BE
FIRST WOMAN IN CABINET
BY RALPH BENJAMIN
(N. E. A. Correspondent.)
OLYMPIA. Wash.—Will Mrs. Jose
phine Corliss Preston be the first
woman member of the president’s
cabinet?
It’s not Improbable if the next
president is Republican.
(Mrs.. Preston, beside being presi
dent of the National Education asso
ciation, is also superintendent of pub
lic Instruction of the state of Wash
ington, serving her second term.
During the war, Mrs. Preston
served on the ,• national committee
for emergency war training of sol
diers and sailors, and now Chairman
Will H. Hays, of the G. O. P. na
tional committe'e, has picked her as
one of the nine women Republican
executive committee. She is vice
chairman of that committee for the
west.
And, what’s all this got to do with
placing her In the president’s cabi
net? Here's how her friends say It
may happen:
Congress is considering a bill to
take the education department away
from the secretary of the interior
and establish the office of secretary
of education on equal footing with
the secretary of war, and the other
cabinet members. This bill has the
backing of nearly All America’s edu
cators. It is expected to pass.
And, if a Republican president is
elected, Mrs. Preston’s backers say
she is sure to be the first secretary
of education; the first woman In the
president’s cabinet.
Mrs. Preston was born in Min
neapolis in 1873. She is a graduate
of Whitman college, Walla Walla,
Wash. She started teaching school
in a little frame building in North
field, Minn. In 1910 she was super
intendent of Walla Walla county
schools in Washington, a post she
held for three terms. In 1912 she
was appointed by the governor to be
a member of the state board of edu
cation, and was the same year elect
ed by an overwhelming vote as state
superintendent of public instruction.
Her rise has been rapid since she
Savannah Woman, 107,
Fought by Husband
In War of the Sixties
SAVANNAH, Ga., March 16.
“Hold your head up and die hard.”
This is the philosophy of Mrs. Lucy
Matilda Kenney, 1111 Montgomery
street, who claims to be 107 years
old. She is probably Savannah’s old
est inhabitant, site is a remarkable
person, and has had an equally re
markable life. She served through
the war betwen the states as a sol
dier by the side of her first hus
band, Bryant Gauss.
She was born in Bladen county,
North Carolina, November 21, 1812.
The death of her father left her
mother with six young children, and
to help affairs along, Mrs. Kenney,
then Miss Lucy Matilda Thompson,
started In to do a man’s work on
the farm. This she did, doing every
thing expected of an able-bodied farm
hand.
When the war came along and
her husband went off to join the
Confederate colors, she donned a
soldier’s uniform and went with him.
Even now she bears a scar on her
forehead, the result of a wound in
action.
Despite her years she is very act
ive, and wants to go swimming. She
would like to find some one her age
or a few years younger with whom
she might have a “rastling” match.
Her youngest brother, Mr. Barney
Thompson, aged ninety, is coming
soon to visit his sister.
Census of Tallahassee
And Other Towns Is
Announced Tuesday
WASHINGTON, March 16.—Popu
lation statistics for 1920 announced
today by the census bureau included:
Tallahassee, Fla., 5,637, increase,
619, or 12.3 per cent.
Amarillo, Tex., 15,494, an increase
of 5,537, or 55.6 per cent over 1910,
Stevens Point, Wis., 11,370, in
crease, 2,678, or 30.8 per cent.
Eldorado, Kans’., 10,995, increase,
7,866, or 251.4 per cent.
n glasses rnrr
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Dept. A-105, 3302-04 W. 12th Street, Chicago, Illinois
MAIL COUf’ON NOW SEND NO MONEY
l^—r ———nTWTrwmrr-mrrmi "n i rwi i ,iiihm,ii——
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'Mrs. Josephine CPresiari.
entered politics. Today she not only
heads the association of American
educators known as the National Ed
ucation association, but is one of
the trusted members of the inner
circle of the Republican national
party committee. .
Marshall Asked to
Let His Name Go on
State Primary Ballot
MACON, Ga., March 16.—One hun
dred qualified voters of Macon have
signed a petition requesting the state
Democratic executive committee to
place the name of Vice Pres
ident Marshall on the Geor
gia preferential primary bal-
lot, and J. L. Lawton, who initiated
the Marshall movement here, has
written the vice president asking his
approval for the filing of the peti
tion with the committee’s secretary.
Mr. Marshall’s recent statement to
the effect that he wants a platform
written at San Francisco that will
emphasize the old-fashioned tenets of
the Democratic party, disregarding
many of the “isms” of the present
day, has won him many admirers in
Georgia, his friends say, and they
are anxious for the voters to have an
opportunity to express themselves ac
cordingly.
Former Congressman Charles L.
Bartlett, W. T. Anderson, editor of
the Macon Telegraph, and other Dem
ocrats well known in Macon and the
state generally are among the sign
ers bf the petition.
City Editor, Jailed for
Contempt, Out on Stay
CHICAGO, March 16.—Hector El
well, city editor of the Chicago Eve
ning American, was at liberty today
under a stay from a jail sentence and
a fine of SSOO imposed by Federal
Judge Carpenter for refusing to re
ply to questions asked by a federal
grand jury. Judge Carpenter entered
an order yesterday finding Elwell
guilty of contempt of court and sen
tenced him to the county jail until
he expressed readiness to answer the
jurors.
A stay order for ten days was ob
tained by attorneys for Elwell, who
said: “We consider the point in
volved so important to newspapers
In general that we intend to carry
this case to the highest court.”
Elwell refused to disclose the
source of a news story concerning
action against W. H. Sage, head of
the Chicago bureau charged with en
forcement of the anti-narcotic law.
IREPUBLIQWSSEEK
TOOBTHINVOTEffI
TREATY THURSDAY
t
WASHINGTON, March 16.—R e .
publican leaders in the senate decid
ed today to ask for an agreement
to vote on treaty ratification Thurs
day. They also decided to call up
the Knox resolution declaring ppace
if the treaty fails. They have more
than enough votes to pass it, they
said today.
There is a possibility, it was learn
ed. that if the treaty is rejected,
some Democratic senators may move
reconsideration, and may then vote
to ratify.
Some Democrats who want to rati
fy feel they must stand by President
Wilson as long as it is possible. But,
they said, if they voted against rati
fication with the Lodge reservations,
and the treaty failed, they would
then feel they had fulfilled their
party obligation and vote to ratify.
It was considered doubtful that there
are enough such Democrats to change
an adverse vote by the senate un
less the vote is closer than now ap
pears likely.
The senate today resumed discus
sion of Senator Owens’ reservation
on Egypt.
Attitude of Democrats
The senate has once more kept the
United State# out of the League of
Nations, according to the construc
tion administration senators placed
today on adoption of the Lodge res
ervation to article ten.
Even if the senate, should now rati
fy, President Wilson would refuse
to deposit notice of ratification and
the treaty would fail, these senators
said.
The president has definitely re
jected the reservation which fifty-six
senators, including fourteen Demo
crats, voted into the resolution of
ratification.
The question now uppermost in
the minds of senators is: How many
Democrats will bolt the president’s
leadership on the final vote, and ac
cept the Lodge reservations, as
means of getting rid of the treaty?
Estimates of Leaders
Twenty-six Democrats voted
against the Lodge reservation on ar
ticle ten. Os these, it was estimated
today from four to seven will vote
for ratification.
Various estimates were made of
the number of Republican votes for
ratification. Senator Curtis, Repub
lican whip, said careful canvasses
indicated to him that the treaty
would lack from three to eight votes
of enough to ratify. Senator Borah,
leader of the “irreconcilables,’’ esti
mated that there would be thirty
eight votes against ratification, five
more than necefesary to beat the
treaty.
Among them will be Senators Sim
mons, King, Kirby and Chamberlain,
according to Democrats leading a
movement to disregard the presi
dent’s wishes and ratify the treaty
with the reservations to which .he
objects.
Senator Lodge feels certain, he has
told his friends, that the treaty will
fall. Senator Hitchcock is equally
certain he said today.
Senator King, who, with Senator
Simmons, is working to get the
treaty ratified whether the president
will accept it or not, said there
would be thirty-two Democratic
votes for ratification. This, with
thirty-four Republican votes, would
give two more than necessary for
ratification. But Senator King’s fig
ures were discounted by every other
canvass.
Some senators are not telling how
they ..will vote. This silent vote,
which is being counted by various
canvassers, may upset some calcula
tions at the last minute. Nobody can
tell with precision what the vote will
be until it has been taken, senators
agreed after looking over the vari
ous forecasts.
Senator Lodge and other leaders
hope to reach the final vote on Thurs
day or Friday. No attempt has been
made yet to set the time, but this
may be done today.
Johnson Returning
Senator Hiram Johnson, one of the
“irreconcilable” leaders, is hurrying
back for the vote. Senator Penrose
has wired a request that he be paired
against ratification. Senators LaFol
lette and Poindexter are back and
Senator Fall, of New Mexico, has
been paired.
The senate today took up odds
and ends of reservations, hoping to
get them all disposed of by night
and perhaps get the resolution of
ratification drawn up by voting upon
the form of the preamble or resolv
ing clause.
Leaders worked today for an agree
ment to vote on ratification of the
peace treaty this week, so that the
pact might be sent to President Wil
son or laid aside to permit consid
eration of other business.
If the ratification fails of the nec
essary two-thirds majority, a mo
tion to reconsider is expected imme
diately, probably by majority lead
ers, in the hope of stampeding some
of the opposition into changing their
votes. It was admitted the situation
held many possibilities, in view of
the urgent representations that have
been made for ratifying the treaty to
stabilize world conditions. .
Adoption yesterday of the substi
tute reservation to article ten by a
vote of 56 to 26, removed the last ob
stacle to a vote on the treaty itself,
although a number of other ques
tions remain to be settled first. Four
teen Democrats voted with the ma
jority, but that number was less j
than half of the strength which ar- i
dent ratificationlsts have promised I
to deliver.
Administration leaders seemed
without fear that their forces would
crumble sufficiently to enable the
Republicans to ratify the pact with
the reservation to article ten.
Congress Is Asked to
Extend Billion Dollar
Credit to Germany
WASHINGTON, March 16.—A bill
proposing that the United States ex
tend a credit of $1,000,000,000 io
Germany was introduced in the
house today by Representative
Thomas B. Smith, Democrat, New
York.
Export business of the United
States has dropped 70 per cent in
the last three months, Smith said,
in declaring it was to the interest
of this country to develop trade with
Germany. «
Smith proposed rhe credit h e ex *
tended by the war. finance corpora
tion and pointed out it could be e
cured by German property in this
country, now held by the alien prop
erty custodian. The guarantees,
however, wculd be approved by the
reparations commission of the peace
conference under the Smith bill.
The result of the plan would be
that Germany by means of the cred
it could buy food <>id raw materials
in this country, he baid.
PRESIDENT’S NIECE CLEVER IN POLITICS
veuf £ .Jrv- 7/
C
C7 g
ALBANY. —The Democratic women’s state convention held
here may have been unofficial in name, .but it was official enough
in tactics and political strategy. Miss Margaret Vale (right), a
niece of President Wilson, waged a vigorous fight against a nominee
for delegate-at-large and succeeded in electing her candiate, Mrs.
Clarice Baright (left).
COURT’S RULING
HITS DEFENSE IN
NEWBERRY CASE
gVaND RAPIDS, Mich., March 16.
The oratorical battle in the Newberry
elections trial was continued today.
Defense attorneys expected to oc
cupy the entire day in presenting ar
guments to the jury in behalf of
United States Senator Truman H.
iNewberlty and eighty-four of his as
sociates on trial on election fraud
charges.
The defense was apparently taken
off its feet by the interpretation late
yesterday by Judge Clarence W. Ses
sions of the Michigan law governing
the amount which, a candidate for
United States senator may spend.
The judge announced he would in
struct the jury that if Senator New
berry participated actively in any
thing that caused expenditure o<f a
sum in excess of $3,750 allowed by
the Michigan statutes .it should be
held as a violation of the law.
One Senator Was Busy
Monday-—Working on
Income Tax Return
(The Atlanta Jcurnal News Bureau)
623 Riggs Building.
BY THEODORE TILLER
WASHINGTON, March 16.—Be
cause he waited until the proverbial
eleventh hour to make out his income
tax returns, Senator Howard Suther
land, of West Virginia, was the busi
est and probably most worried man in
the senate Monday afternoon.
While the Senate debated tiie peace
treaty and had eleven roll calls, Sen
ator Sutherland sat at his desk and
scribbled on a “work sheet” income
tax form. He spent most of the aft
ernoon at the job, puckering his
brows, reading the instructions,
scowling at the columns and making
erasures now and thefi. The debate
didn’t concern the West Virginia
solon at all, but he interrupted his
income tax work long enough to vote
with the Republicans on all treaty
questions.
The galleries took quite an interest
in the mental gymnastics of Senator
Sutherland, and he was an object of
more or less sympathy. About 4 J
o’clock in the afternoon he appeared j
to have his income tax report in fair- i
ly presentable shape, and it was I
ready for the mail last night.
Cost of Running
For Office Raised
In Glynn County
BRUNSWICK, Ga., March 16.
Rules and regulations governing the
county primary which is to be held
April 20 have been given out by mem
bers of the executive committee se
lected by the chairman. The cost
of running for office in Glynn coun
ty is somewhat higher than former
ly, but the candidates are not com
plaining, nine of them having an
nounced for various places and quali
t fied. The incumbents in the offices
of clerk of court, ordinary and sher
iff are unopposed, so far, and it Is
Said they will not likely have opposi
tion.
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THURSDAy, MARCH 18, 1920.
6,000 Longshoremen
Os Coastwise Lines
Strike in New York
NEW YORK, March 16.—Strike of
the 6,000 longshoremen employed on
piers of coastwise steamship lines
here continued today when ship own
ers refused to grant compromise de
mands of the workers.
Teamsters and lightermen have
joined the longshoremen in refusal
to move cargo at the piers on strike.
Hotel Blaze Causes Panic
PROVIDENCE, R. I.—Three known
dead and thirty-two others missing
was the official police checking of
the unaccounted-for guests at the
Lorraine hotel here, which was swept
by a four-alarm fire.
There was a total of 106 guests
registered, and of these the authori
ties have found seventy-one.
The missing are practically all
Massachusetts and New York people.
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TRUCK IS USED BY
MACON BURGLARS
FOR HAULING LOOT
MACON. Ga., March 16.—Using
motor trucks to haul away stolen
goods, a band of burglars has brok
en into nearly every large wholesale
grocery here recently, and so far
has escaped detection. Goods val
ued at thousands of dollars have been
stolen in the last few weeks. For
a time the band operated near the
Terminal station, beyond which there
is little police protection.
The burglars calmly went about
their business as if in no fear of
arrest. In every case they knocked
the lock from the front door, piled
what goods they wanted on the
pavement in front and loaded them
on a motor truck. The thefts occur
red in such rapid succession that in
surance companies cancelled burglar
policies held by grocers in that part
of the city.
The store of Outz, Mitchell &
Whaley has been entered by thieves
five times in the last nine weeks and
each time a truck load of groceries
was carried away. Recently a car
standing on a side track near the
store was broken open and seed val
ued at several hundred dollars tak
en. The store of Ruan & Co., near
by, was entered and several hundred
dollars’ worth of goods taken. Akin
& Co.’s store, in the same part of
town, also was broken into and SSOO
worth of food stolen.
In each case the methods used
were the same, and it was evident
the same band was responsible. Mer
chants in that part of the city band
ed together for detection and a spe
cial policeman was detailed there.
Then the thieves became bolder. Op
erating under the glare of an arc
light almost in the heart of the city
they broke into the wholesale store
of the feigg Grocery company last
night and trucked away with several
hundred dollars’ worth of groceries.
The detectives followed the tracks
left by the truck, but they were soon
lost on the paved streets. No clue
as to the identity of the thieves or
the -'spositlon made of. the stolen
goods has been <ound.
Many Refuse to Sign
Palmer Petitions
GAINESVILLE, Ga., March 16.
Petitions are still being circulated
here asking Mr. Palmer to make his
first speech in Georgia here. But the
signers are very cautious to make
sure that by signing the petition
they do not indorse Mr. Palmer, nor
nullify their signature on Mr.
Hoover’s petition. Many absolutely
refuse to sign at all on account of
the unwarranted charge of the Con
stitution that the Hoover signers
ha dturned over to Mr.- Palmer.
That has been favorably known and used
by millions of Americans in the past 50
years is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
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which were known and used by the Amer-
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root, sacred bark, cherry
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?Y., and without alcohol.
‘if you want pure, rich, red
blood ask at the nearest
r drug store for Dl Pierce’s
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' ery in either tablet or li
-1 quid form- You will soon
| feel the energizing effect
and your blood will be
-surchaged with vim, vig-
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