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More Paris Births
FARlS.— Paris, in one respect at
any rate, is setting a good example
to other cities, for the birth rate is
rising rapidly. The present average
of births per day is 163, against 72
at the same period last year.
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
quo
NEW QUIZ QUESTIONS
1. Q. —What is the origin of the
name Pennsylvania?
2. Q. —Was a conclusion reached as
to placing the responsibility for the
sinking of the battleship Maine in
Havana harbor when the vessel was
finally raised and examined?
3. q. —who are the Christadel
phians?
4. Q. —What were the dying words
of Patrick Henry, the great American
orator and patriot?
5. Q. —How should .sore eyes of a
new-born baby be treated? «
6. q. —What motion picture star
makes the most money?
7. Q. —Did Napoleon’s brother, Je
rome, marry an American?
8. Q. —What is a good definition of
a friend?
9. Q. —How is the date of Easter
determined?
10. Q. —When and why was Wil
liam H. Taft sent to confer with the
pope?
QUESTIONS ANSWEBEE
1. Ques. —Was John Greenleaf
Whittier a bachelor?
1. Ans. —The poet Whittier was ■
one of a number of Americans who ,
achieved fame and never married. ,
In his long and active life as an edi- i
tor. author, legislator, reformer and i
poet, he seemed to give no thought;
to marriage.
2. Ques. —How many West Point
ers were overseas and how many
were killed in battle?
2. Ans.- —The war department i
says that there were 1,784 West I
Point officers in the A. E. F. Thir
ty-four were killed in battle.
3. Ques. —When were the first |
coins minted in the United . ’■'-es? ,
3. Ans.—The office of the direc- I
tor of the mint says that tl ear
liest coins were authorized by act
of congress of April 2, 1792.
4. Ques. —Can you tell how to re
move the squeak from shoes?
4. Ans. —To prevent shoes from
squeaking, saturate the soles with
linseed oil, sweet oil or melted lard,
—et the shoes stand in one of these
lubricants overnight.
5. Ques. —Who taught Lincoln i
how to read and write?
5. Ans. —His mother, Nancy j
Hanks, could read and write, a thing =
not common at the time among the j
poor people of Kentucky. She i
taught Lincoln his letters but she j
died when he was eight years old.;
Lincoln traversed the country for,
twenty years in every direction uu- (
til he finally found an itinerant!
preacher and induced him to coms)
to his mother’s grave to preach a
funeral sermon.
6. Ques. —What is the distance
from - Key West, Fla., to Havana, i
Cuba?
6. Ans.—lt is about ninety miles. ■
and the trip is made by boat in i
from six to seven hours. The fare j
is about S2O, which, on some boats,'
includes one meal.
7. Ques. —Has there ever been a i
law in this country regulating the i
length of women’s skirts?
7. Ans.—‘ln 1660 by an act of the |
general court of the Massachusetts
colony, the Puritans prohibited short
sleeves, and required that ladies'.
dresses should be made long enough !
to hide their shoe buckles. This act
also prohibited the ,wea,ring of “im
moderate great breeches, knots of
ribbon, broad shoulder bands, * silk ‘
roses, double ruffs and cuffs.”
S. Ques. —When did the custom of i
observing Lent begin?
8. Ans.—This custom flutes from
the early history of the CL holic
church. Before the third century
there is positive evidence of the sol
emn observance of the last two days
of Holy Week, and it gradually
spread to include the whole week.
Finally, in 325, the Council of Nicaea
recognized the period of forty days’
fasting in commemoration of the
! fasting of Christ as an established
; custom.
9. Ques. —What is the price of
butter in England?
LIFT OFF CORNS!
Apply few drops then lift sore,
touchy corns off with
fingers
> \'
I
XJJ*
i Doesn't hurt a bit’ Drop a little
' Ereezone on an aching corn, instant
ly that corn stops hurting, then you
i lift it right out. Yes, magic!
A tiny bottle of Freezone cost s |
| but a few cents at any drug store,
but is sufficient to remove every
| hard corn, soft corn, or corn between
i txie toes, and the calluses, without
! soreness or irritation.
Freezone is the sensational discov-
I cry of a Cincinnati genius. It is
i wonderful. —(Advt.)
9. Ans. —The price of butter in
England is regulated by the British
food controller, who recently allow
ed an increase of 3 cents per pound,
making the wholesale price 42 cents,
and the retail price 45 cents per
pound.
10. Ques. —Do soils necessarily
tv ear out?
10. Ans.—Certain soils in Europe
that have been -farmed for a thou
sand years are as good as the new
ground in America. There are ten
elements that are necessary to the
growth of crops. Os these, carbon,
hydrogen, oxygen, iron and sulphur
seem always present in the quanti
ties necessary and inexhaustible.
The five that may be exhausted are
jjotassium, magnesium, nitrates,
phosphorus and calcium. Soils
should be anaylzed to determine
which of these materials are needed
and the proper fertilizer or crop ro
tation used. Thus may the worst of
so-called worn-out soils be brought
up to standard.
SENATE RAPPED
BY BRITISH PAPER
FOR IRISH CLAUSE
Liverpool/ March 20.—The
Daily Post, commenting editorially
on the action of the Unite-d States
senate in adopting a new treaty res
ervation expressing sympathy for:
the aspirations of the Irish people
and declaring the hope that Ireland!
would have a government of its own '
choosing in the near future, sayjU !
“The American senate has surely j
overstepped the bounds of 'good ■
sense, to saj r nothing of good taste,'
in adopting a reservation to the ’
peace treaty on Ireland. It has as 1
much as said it will welcome the I
emergence of Ireland into full in-|
dependence. That is hardly neigh-;
bcrly. Moreover, it is an example of
international meddling which the'
senate professes to condemn in th i i
covenant of the League of Na
tions.
“All sensible Britons know, of
course, that such resolutions are not
to be taken quite seriously. They
are, in fact, mere concessions to the
Irish extremists in the United
States; the senate has long shown a
quick responsiveness to Irish ‘pull ’
Nonetheless, they have an undoubt
ed element of danger. Unhappily,
there are hysterical patriots among
us who may be easily worked up
by certain interested writers and
speakers bo resentment of .Ameri
can interference with purely Brit
ish affairs. This is a fact that the
senators would do well to remem
ber. especially at the moment when
it is of vital importance to the'
world that Anglo-American rela
tions should be most cordial.
HITCHCOCK THINKS
PEOPLE MAY GET
WINES AND BEER
(The Atlanta Jcurnal News Bureau)
C 23 H.ig'gs Building.
BY THEODORE TILLER
WASHINGTON, March 20.—Before
leaving tonight for Augusta, Ga.,
where he will take a vacation after
the treaty defeat, Senator Gilbert
M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska, amplified
his statement that the American peo
ple had a right to modify the Vol
stead prohibition act and permit the
manufacture of light wines and beer.
Senator Hitchcock, who is a can
didate foi* the presidency in Nebraska
and who recently defied William J.
Bryan on the “dry” issue raised by
the Commoner, replied to a criticism
of his position by Wayne B. Wheel
er, general counsel of the Anti-Sa
ioon league.
“I have noticed the criticism made
by Mr. Wheeler,” said Mr. Hitchcock,
“upon my position on the liquor
question. The best comment I can
make is to reiterate my position,
which he evidently does not fully un
derstand.
“First—l stand for an enforcement
of prohibition laws, including the
appropriation of all needed money to
enforce them.
“Second—l accept without reserva
tion the constiutional decision of the
people v.diich abolishes the American
saloon forever and with it strong in
toxicating liquors.
“Third—l believe, however, a law
ful way will be found and ought to
be found to permit the manufacture
and harmless use of light wines and
beers. The supreme court has opened
the way for this by holding that con
gress in its in forcemen t laws, may
decide what constitutes intoxicating
' liquor, and on this matter congress
I will naturally respond to the will and
I judgment of the American people
' when properly expressed.
j “Fourth—The American people can-
J not be denied the right to change
I their laws; within constitutional lim
its, and the Volstead act, like any
other law, may be changed within
those limits.”
President Asked to
Define Status of
Forces m Germany
WASHINGTON, March 20.—A res
lution calling upon the president to
inform congress of the exact status
of American forces now stationed in
Germany was introduced in the house
SENATOR HARRIS
EXPLAINS HIS VOTE
AGAINST TREATY
(The Atla-nta Toi'inei. News Bureau)
683 Riggs Building.
BY THEODORE TILLER
WASHINGTON, D. C., March 20.
Expressing the hope that some basis
of agreement may yet be reached
between the president and the sen
ate on the peace treaty, Senator Wil
liam J. Harris issued a statement
here late today explanatory of his
votes on the treaty. Senator Har
ris was one of the twenty Demo
crats who voted against ratification
of the treaty with Lodge reserva
tions and adhered to the president’s
view that they were nullifying.
Three other Democratic votes
against ratification are classed as
so-called “irreconcilables” who op
posed the treaty and league covenant
even in modified form.
The statement of Senator Harris
follows;
“Under the constitution the execu
tive is a part of the treaty-making
power. I voted for reservations
which I hoped two-thirds of the sen
ate would support, among these res
ervations being those . virtually
agreed upon by the bi-partisan con
ference composed of Democrats and
Republicans. I supported reserva
tion on Article X written by ex-
President Taft, which the acting
Democratic leader told Senator
Lodge would have the support of
thirty-two Democrats, but it was
refused by the Republicans, although
written by a former president jf
their own party.
"The reservations of the bi-parti
san conference which I supported
woiild have been adopted by the sen
ate if the Republicans who posed as
friends of the treaty had not col
lapsed under the ultimatum of the
irreconcilables who have not sup
ported the treaty in any form.
“The president has stated that if
the so-called Lodge reservation were
adopted that he would decline to ap
prove the treaty. Nothing would
I.— accomplished by voting for thg
treaty with the Lodge reservations
when it was definitely known that it
would be pigeonholed by the presi
dent. In the event of two-thirds of
the senate adopting the Lodge res
ervation it must be remembered
that Republican irreconcilables as
sisted in passing the Lodge reserva
tions which they voted against on
the ratification resolution, and with
out the “bitter-ender” vote the Lodge
reservations would not have been
adopted.
“The Republicans have played pol
itics with the treaty because it was
made by a Democratic president, and
they seemed more interested in try
ing to humiliate him than in ratify
ing the treaty.
“I am still hopeful that a basis of
agreement may be reached between
the senate and the executive by
which the treaty may be ratified.
THE TRUTH ABOUT GALL STONES
A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad
dock, Box 201-N, Kansas City, Mo., tells
of an improved method of treating the
Catarrhal inflammation of the Gall Bladder
and Bile Ducts associated with Gall Stones
from which remarkable results are being
reported. Write for booklet and free trial
plan.— (Advt.) «
Republicans Meeting
In Cartersville Split
Into Two Factions
CARTERSVILLE, Ga., March 20.
Republicans of the Seventh congres
sional district meeting here today
for their district convention, divided
into two factions. Each faction held
its own meeting and elected its own
delegate to the national convention
in Chicago.
One faction, presided over bj r Wal
ter Akerman, the holdover chairman
from the last election, indorsed Leon
ard Wood for president and elected
D. Cole, of Marietta, delegate to the
Chicago convention. Charles Adam
so,n of Cedartown, was named presi
dential elector and also chairman of
a committee to nominate a Republi
can candidate for congress from the
district.
The other faction, presided over by
Captain J. P. Dyar, of Adairsville,
nominated L. H. Crawford, of Dalton,
to run on a Republican platform
against Gordon Lee. Captain Dyar
was elected delegate to the national
convention. While no instructions
were given, the delegates seemed
about equally divided between Gov
ernor Lowden, of Illinois, and Sena
tor Warren Harding, of Ohio, for
the presidency.
4 More Coal Operators
Indicted by Jury,
Surrender to Officer
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. March 20.
Four more coal operators, indict
ed by a federal grand jury on
charges of conspiracy to violate the
Lever a_t by enhancing the price of
fuel and of defrauding the United
States government, surrendered
tl. .mselves to the United States
marshal at Indianapolis today. The
men are Edwin D. Logsdon, B. E.
Neal and W. H. Tobin, Indianapolis;
and William Zeeler, Brazil, Ind.
The men were released on SIO,OOO
bond each.
today by Chairman Kahn of the
house military committee.
Kahn asked the president to state
the extent of the authority exercised
over the American forces by Mar
shal Foch and how far their activi
ties may be directed without express
orders from the president.
THE WILLY-NICKY LETTERS
(Copyright, 1920, by the Chicago
Daily News Foreign Service.)
The year 1905 witnessed the out
break of the abortive Russian revo
lution which followed close on the
disasters suffered by Russia in the
war with Japan. The conciliatory
policy of Sergius Witte, minister of
finance, who had been trying to meet
the need of the peasants and indus
trial laborers by reforms, was re
placed by the oppressive ministry of
Von Plehve when Witte was dismiss
ed in August, 1903. Plehve was as
sassinated on July 28, 1904, and the
government replied with further re
pressive measures, directing these
particularly against the na
tionalities that soqght relief from
oppression. In November, 1904, the
zemstvos asked the czar for free
dom of speech, conscience, religion
and the press, in December, 1904, the
zemstvo presidents held a congress
in Petersburg and again appealed to
the czar. The latter issued a mani
festo promising reforms, but insist
ing on the ‘autocratic empire.’ The
discontent came to a head on Jan
uary 22, 1905, when Father Gapon
led a crowd of strikers to the win
ter palace in Petersburg to lay their
grievances before the czar in person.
Troops opened fire on them and sev
eral hundred were killed. This is
known as Red Sunday. It was fol
lowed by general strikes.
The kaiser comments on the unrest
in Russia and suggests the formation
of an imperial council with advisory
powers only. Events were marching
toward the calling of the first duma,
and later letters will show how Close
ly the kaiser kept watch on affairs
in Russia.
The original letters of the kaiser
to the czar were copied in the secret
archives of the Soviet government
in Moscow by Isaac Don Levine,
staff correspondent of the Dally
News.
Kaiser Asks Bata on Peace
“Berlin, Jan. 2, 1905.—Dearest
Nicky: Best thanks for your kind
letter and New Y'ear’s cards, which
are well executed. The Cossack
charge is most effective and one can-'
not help thinking what might have
happened if at Liaoyang General
Samsonoff had ridden a charge like
that with his 17,000 sabers and lances
against the Japan left wing. The
news of the fall of Port Arthur re
ceived here yesterday evening created
a very great sensation. We all here
feel deepest sympathy for the valiant
generals and the brave diminishing
band of heroes under their orders
Who strove to the utmost and last to
fulfill their duty toward their em
peror and their country; their defense
of Pert Arthur will become pro
verbial for all ages and be upheld as
an example to be enulated as lon gas
a soldier will exist, honor to them
forever! The imminence of the fall
of the doomed fortress had for some
time already set the diplomatical
tongues wagging in the different cap
itals of the world; many and dif
ferent were the rumors and news of
armistices and even peace arrange
ments which reached me from every
where. It being rather difficult to
discern truth from invention of
phantasy, I hope you won’t fancy
that I intrude upon your privacy
when I address myself to you to
beg you to tell me what your plans
for the future are, so that, if pos
sible, I may make myself useful to
you and be enabled to shape my
course of my policy. The more so
as Lambsdorff told Alversleben the
other day: ‘Que la France connait
deja nos Conditions.’ (That France
already knows our conditions.) Now,
I prefer being informed by yourself
directly, instead of a roundabout
way through other agencies, as I
have firmly stood to you and your
country from the first as your faith
ful friend.
“After a Jong spell of unusually
warm and foggy weatner, which en
abled us to ride up to Xmas nearly,
a very heavy gale suddenly burst
upon us, followed by sharp frost
and snow, and' w inter seems to have
set in in earnest; this makes me
thinlc of the conditions of life
through which the armies in Man
churia have to go now, remaining
stationary for so long time as the
months gone by. I am so glad that
you rewarded the bravery of my reg
iment, which has greatly distinguish
ed itself on the Sha-ho, by so many
decorations. I hope they also get a
.rood number of St. George’s crosses.
“Now that the program for the re
newal of your fleet has been pub
ished I hope you won’t forget to re
mind your authorities to remember
our great firms at Stettin, Kiel, etc.:
they will, I am sure, furnish fine
specimens of line of battle ships.
I am so glad that Ernie has again
become engaged and will go to his
wedding beginning of next month.
PELLASRA
CURED WITHOUT A
STARVATION DIET
AT A SMALL COST
II you have this awful disease, and
want to be cured—to stay cured.—write
for
TREE BOOK.
giving the history of pellagra, symptoms,
results and bow to treat. Sent in plain,
sealed envelope. A guaranteed treat
ment that cures when all others fail.,
Write for this book today.
CROWN MEDICINE COMPANY.
Dept. 93. Atlanta, Ga.
I hope you will kindly accept the
two vases for Xmas, which come
from our royal porcelain factory;
they are a symbol of my warmest
wishes for you and your family and
country for the coming year, in which
God may pieserve you all. Believe
me, ever your most affectionate cou
sin and friend, WILLY.”
Auks Personal Favor
“Berlin, Jan. 15, 1905.—Dearest
Nicky: The widow of old Prince An
toine Radzivill, Princess Maria, is go
ing to Petersburg to beg for your
approval of her late husband’s will.
Prince Antoine was not only a cher
ished and trusted servant of my de
ceased grandfather as his adjutant
and adjutant-general, but also a
faithful and beloved friend to him
as well as to my late beloved father
and to me. His winning ways and
his gay nature as well as his chiv
alrous character won him friends
wherever he was, and your grand
father and father have both always
cherished him. His wife was the
intimate long-life friend of my late
mother, and has been made testa
trix by her husband for his will.
The whole future of her children
and family •ests on the fact of your
kind approval of the will, and I ven
ture to plead her c».use to you and to
beg that you will bestow your kind
ness on her, as she is very sad and
roken down by her loss; this she
feels the more as her eldest son.is
hopeless idiot in an asylum, so
chat she must look after her grand
children, too. Your ambassador, Os
ten-Sacken, is in great anxiety on ac
count of his poor old wife. She has
nad a very serious operation made in
her back —without having been able
to use chloroform—and is unable to
'ie down but must spend her nights
sitting in a chair and suffering ter
rible pa ; n, so that considering her
age of eighty-four her life is feared
for Pooi old man, the suspense is
zery telling upon him, and I am
fraid that should she die he will
not be able to work as well as for
merly, and perhaps think of retiring.
Should a change once take place at
our embassy here, I would venture
quite privately to ask you to send
Isvolsky here. He is one of the best
men in your foreign service, and an
intimate friend of long standing of
.ourt Buelow’s, who would be over
pleased at having him here, as they
ormerly served together as diplo
sky much.
Census Count Gives
Selma, Alabama,
15,607 Population
WASHINGTON, March 20. —Cen-
sus figures given out today follow:
,Selma, Ala., 15,6)7, increase 1,958,
or 14.3 per cent.
Schenectady, N. Y., 88,723, an in
crease of 15,897, or 21.8 per cent of
1910.
Hamilton, 0., 39,675, Increase 4,-
396, or 12.5 per cent. . x
Selma was Alabama’s fifth city in
1910 with a population of 13,649,
having increased 4,936 or 56.7 per
cent in the ten years from 1900.
Its percentage increase for that dec
ade was larger than that of Mobile
and Montgomery.
The populations of Columbia, S. C.,
and Crowley, La., will be announced
Monday at 10:30 a. m., and will in
clude also Mayfield, Ky.
A
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J. 6. FERRIS, Mgr., 615 W. 43d St.
Dept, 141 NEW YORK, N. Y.
TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1920.
40 PER CENT DF PEOPLE
OF SOUTH HALF SICK
John Pomeroy, Noted New
Zealand Scientist, Declar
ing Americans Treat
Stomachs With Too Lit
tle Respect—Says Ninety
Per Cent All Illness Due
to Stomach Disorders.
Forty per cent of the people of
the south are half sick, and fully 90
per cent of these can attribute their
suffering to stomach troubles. Such
are the main points in Pomeroy’s
new theory which has so stirred At
lanta during the past few weeks.
“This is due to modern conditions,”
he explained at his headquarters.
“These people,” he went on, “have
run-down, overworked digestive or
gans, owing to too little exercise in
the fresh air and too much hastily
eaten food. It isn’t kidney trouble
or nervousness or liver complaint or
dozens of other diseases invented by
their imaginations.
“One man who called on me last
week started our conversation by
saying, ‘My stomach is on the bum.’
I could think of a more elegant way
to describe the condition of modern
A Woman Likes To Be Admired,
No Matter How Old She May Be
Nature undoubtedly
. inadacgv oman to be ad-
mired, and man to ad
mire her. No woman
/in ever S e * s s 0
slle d° esn ’t wan * adnii-
6 ration, and no man
\lf // ever b e Y° n d ad-
‘ i // miring her. Good looks
Jd * n woman do not de-
P en d u P on a £ e > but
fl upon health. A, wom-
an ’ s health depends
**** more upon the distinct-
k ‘ ly feminine organism
tlian u P on anything
else. Between that or
ganism and her beauty there is the closest connection. You
never see a good-looking woman who is weak, run-down, ir
ritable, out of sorts, fidgety and nervous. Headaches, back
aches, dragging-down pains, irregularities and troubles of that
sort are all destroyers of beauty. Men do not admire sick
ness.
It is within the reach of every woman to be well,
healthy and strong if she will take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre
scription. It is the safest woman’s tonic because it is made
entirely of roots and herbs, without alcohol. (Ingredients on
label.) It is 50 years old, and Hts age testifies to its goodness.
A medicine that has made sick women well for half a century
is surely good to take. Women from every part of America
testify to its merits.
1 Send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo,
N. Y., for a trial package and confidential medical advice,
or booklet.
ITCH-ECZEMA
(Also called Tetter, Salt Rhetxn, Pruritus, Mdk-Crust, Weeping Skin, etc.)
CCZSMA CAN BK CUBED TO STAY, and when I cured. I mean just what I ear—C-U-R-E-D, end not
merely patched up for awhile, to return wcrae than before. Now. Jdo not care what all you have used aor bow
many doctnre have told you that ynq could nnt be cured—all I aak la juat a chvnee to ahow you that 1 know what
lam talkiofr about. If you wll write me TODAY, I will rend you a FREE TRIAL of my mild, auarao
teed cure that will convince you more in a day than I or anyone e>ae could in a month’s time, ft you are disruetad
and discouraged. I dare yon to give me a chance to prove mv claitna. By writing me today you will enjoy more real
'3| comfort tbao you bad over thought thia world holds for you. Just try it, and you will tee lam telling you the truth.
D&. J. E. CANNADAY
| 1164 Psrk Square SEDALIA, MO.
M Reference*:: Th»r«J NHionat CmiM yee de a better art than te aend thia aotice to aeaaa
■W Bvnh. tatiaha, Mo. povr sufferer es Ecaemal
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Americans, but none more accurate
or expressive. .These half-sick peo
ple today have digestive organs that
are ‘on the bum.’ Some times when
I see on the street car or on the
street a tired looking man or woman
with dull eyes and a sallow complex
ion, I feel like saying: ‘Say, I know
what’s the matter with you. I can
help you if you will do as I tell
you.’
“A sound digestive apparatus that
is doing its full duty in getting ev
ery particle of vitality out of all
food is what makes good health.
Only keep the stomach in good con
dition and there is likely to be but
little sickness.
“It is the American tendency to
treat the stomach with little respect.
Most people stuff themselves too full
of food, and then when their diges
tive organs consequently get out of
order, are half sick all the time, and
don’t know what is the matter with
them. My medicine, Puratone, re
stores misused or ‘out of whack’
stomachs to and de
stroys chronic constipation. Thou
sands of people "say that this is the
reason for my big success, and ex
plains whj’ I am now attracting such
an unusual amount of attention In
the south."
The leading druggist in nearly ev
ery town sells Puratone, or Pom
eroy & Company, Atlanta, Ga., will
fill orders at $1.04 per bottle post
paid.—(Advt.)