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Butcher Fined $5,000
BRADFORD, Eng.—A fine of $5,-
JT9O for infringements of the Pigs Or
der was imposed on Arthur W. Mark
er, wholesale butcher. It was stat
ed that he had made an illegal prof
it on. sixty pigs of? 900.
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nriK ATLANTA TKI-WEEKI.Y JOUKNAI
President lf 7 ilson and
League of Nations Are
Scored by Senator Reed
Senator James A. Reed, of Mis
souri, one of the Democrats in the
senate who opposes the League of
Nations in any form, delivered an
attack upon the league covenant at
the Auditorium Monday night, being
introduced by Thomas W. Hardwick,
former senator from Georgia, and
being heard by an audience that
filled the parquet floor.
Mr. Hardwick’s introduction of
Senator Reed was a severe criticism
of President Wilson’s “autocracy."
He asserted that executive authority
in Washington has been “enhanced
at the expense of legislative and ju
dicial authority until there sits in
the White House an autocrat more
arbitrary and despotic than any mon
arch in Europe.” He asserted that
free opinion and free speech have
been all but destroyed; that the
Prussian system of compulsory mil
itary service in time of peace has
been proposed; that enormous reve
nues have been squandered in extrav
agance; that “visionary cranks, true
to no principle and steadfast to no
cause, have muddled the affairs of
men and nations until the very civ
ilization of the world is trembling
upon the brink lof chaos.”
Not since Cornwallis hauled down
the flag of Great Britain, declared
Mr. Hardwick, has such a victory
been won for American independence
as that in the senate last Friday
when the League of Nations was de- '
seated, and he introduced Senator ’
Reed as one of the heroes of that ‘
battle, as “a Democrat who does not ’
believe in the ‘new freedom,’ who
does not believe that Georgia should '
be governed, from Washington or the ’
United States from Geneva.”
Denounces League
Senator Reed confined himself
strictly to the League of Nations
and President Wilson. He did not 1
mention the presidential primary in ’
Georgia, or the Democratic conven- '
tion to bi. held in San Francisco, or
the stand to be ta,ken by the Demo
cratic party in'~the presidential cam- ’
paign. His treatment of his subject 1
was entirely individual —a defense of '
his reasons for opposing the League '
of Nations in any form —a defense of
the right of the senate to differ with ’
the president on the contents of a 1
treaty. He expressed his regret that 1
President Wilson is ill. “I would not •
mention him at all, he said, “but in ■
discussing the League of Nations I
am obliged to mention him.”
The League of Nations, Senator
Reed continued, undertakes to set
up a super-government superior to
the government of the United States,
whose control of its own army and
navy and its own right of self-de
fense will be surrendered to the
council of the league. For this rea
son, and because of this surrender
of our national sovereignty, he de
clared, the League of Nations is "a
league of treason to the United
States,” and anyone who urges us
to go into it knowing what it means
is “a traitor to this republic.”
Preaiclent’a Methods
But before going into the details
!of the covenant, Senator Reed de
■ livered an attack upon President Wil
-1 son’s methods in attempting to
! force the League of Nations through
I the senate. v
“We were told,” said he, “to shut
our eyes and open our mouths and
swallow this sovereign remedy for
war which Woodrow Wilson had per
fected at Paris. The tforeign rela-
I tlons, committees of the house and
| senate were given a dinner by the
| president, and a speech was read to
them by him, and Congress was com
manded not to discuss the league.
That was when the president made
his flying visit from Paris. The
Democratic national committee was
summoned to a dinner, and the pres
ident told them he would like- to see
senators who opposed the treaty
‘hanged on a gibbet as high as Heav
en, but pointed in the other direc
tion.’ That remark, of course, was
LIFT OFF CORNS! /
Apply few drops then lift sore,i
touchy corns off with
fingers
) \ V
Doesnjt hurt a bit! Drop a little
Freefone on an aching corn, instant
ly that corp stops hurting, then you
lift it right.out. Yes, magic!
A tiny bottle of Freezone costs
but a few cents at any drug store,
but is sufficient to remove every
hard corn, soft corn, or corn between
| t e toes, and the calluses, without
I soreness or irritation.
Freezone is the sensational discov
i ery of a Cincinnati genius. It is
| wonderful.— (Advt.)
in the interest of ‘free speech and
self-determination.’ In his New
York speech just prior to returning
to Paris he publicly announced that
he was going to twine the peace
treaty and the League of*Nations so
closely together that the senate could
not separate, them. In other words,
he was going to compel the senate
to adopt the covenant of the league
in order to make peace. That, of
course, was in the interest of free
exercise by the senate of its con
stitutional function.”
Within a few weeks after the guns
ceased firing on the western front,
Senator Reed continued, the victors
were busily dividing the spoils. Italy
extended her frontiers; France took
Alsace-Lorraine, the Sarre valley and
a large part of Africa; Japan was
given Shantung without the consent
of China, though China “entered the
war as our ally at our direct re
quest;” England took over three mil
lion square miles of territory and
sixty million people, including
“whose independence Eng
land had sworn, to protect, and whose
representatives were put in jail when
they came to Paris to make a pro
test.”
Amerloa’a Obligations
After thus dividing the spoils, con
tinued Senator Reed, “they wrote the
League of Nations, which in its last
analysis is an alliance of five powers
including the United States by which
the members of the alliance guaran
tee the spoils in perpetuity,”
At this point Senator Reed request
ed the overseas men in the audience
to stand up. Some fifty or more re
sponded. He then asked them the
question whether they favored an ob
ligation requiring' the United States
to send them, or their kinsmen, to
every war that may break out in Eu
rope or Asia, whether we consider
their participation justified or unjus
tified. None of tffe veteran? Voted in
the affirmative. After they had sat
down, one young man got up and said
he did not believe article ten of the
covenant would bjnd us to such an
obligation.
“I respect you and your views,”
replied Senator Reed. “I will under
take to convince you that article ten
does bind us to just that obligation,
and if I fail, then your vote will
stand against me. This is the first
time I have polled the soldiers in
any audience, but I am going to poll
them in every audience I address,
hereafter.”
Senator Reed then discussed the
assembly of the league, to be com
posed of thirty-two nations, includ
ing seventeen dark-skinned nations,
of whom fifteen are not equal in pop
ulation to New York city. He said
the audience could take either view
it pleased of the assembly’s author
ity. If It has any authority at all,
then the United States with one rep
resentative will be hopelessly out
voted; on the other hand, if it merely
be, as the president v claims, a “de
bating, society," then the real power
is lodged in thfe council of the league.
The council, he asserted, has power
to require the United States to em
ploy its military and naval forces in
any war anywhere in the world grow
ing out of any cause, and therein
the counbil is a super-government
superior to the government of the
United States, and therein the league
is “a league of treason against this
»epublic.”
Conflicting Policies «
In the council, declared the sena
tor, the United States will be one
of the five nations whose leadership
is expressly stipulated, while four
others may become members at the
pleasure of these five. The specified
five are England, France, Italy, Ja
pan and the United States. The op
tional four are Belgium, Greece,
Spain and Brazil. He undertook to
show that a majority of these are
obedient to to British influence for
various reasons, and that their in
terest may be relied upon to contra
dict the interest of the United
States.
The Lddge reservations, he de
clared, do not “Americanize” the
covenant, “but you cannot .Ameri
canize treason;” Article- X, he show
. ed, would obligate the United States
il to “preserve the territorial integrity
and existing boundaries” of all mem
bers of the league against external
aggression. This, he -argued at
'length, is a plain surrender of the
council of the right to employ our
Hrnly and navy in every , war. The
president, he claimed, so considers it
and has repeatedly made plain his
understanding of it. But even with
X reserved, or stricken out
entirely, there would still remain
three other articles that would bind
us hand and foot —these being the
article authorizing the council to in
terfere in any dispute; the article
authorizing the council to take "any
action deemed wise and effectual” to
prevent any war or threat .of war:
; the article requiring all members -o
go to war against any nation or na
| tions that refuse to abide the verdict
i of the council in any dispute. As to
11 th. requirement of a unanimous vote
' in the council, he ■••eplied that w rt
! would not vote in any matter in
• volving us as a party to a contro-
I versy. ,
i “According- to President Wilson’s
• view of the league,” he said, “there
: are to be no neutrals in future wars.
That is why we are asked to provi le
> a standing army of 576,000 men, and
, to establish universal training, and
' to appropriate nearly one billion dol
i lars for more battleships. General
: March on two occasions testified be
fore congressional committees that
• this immense armament was to
5 'make us ready to discharge our ob
ligations under the league.’ We are
QUIZ
New Questions
1. —Q. What is the best way to
clean a porcelain tub?
2. —Q. Is the United States import
ing sugar from Europe?
3. —Q. Is the United States capi
tol at Washington insured?
4. —Q. Has an American who serv
ed in the British army lost his cit
izenship?
5. —Q. How many miles of tele
graph wire are there in this coun
try?
6. —Q. What was thecalling of
Herbert Hoover’s father?
7. —Q. What is the greatest depth
a submarine ever reached?
8. —Q. How long is it necessary
to live in Nevada before divorce
proceedings can be instituted?
9. —q. Which iS the larfm-, the
Grand Central’station' in New w York,
or the Union station in Washing
ton, D. C?
10. —Q. Is basketball a very old
game?
QUIZ QUESTIONS ANSWERED
1 — Q. What is the origin of the
name of Pennsylvania? E. W. C.
I.—A. It is a combination of two
words, Penn and Sylvania. The first
part of the napne is in honor of Wil
liam Penn, the founder of the state.
Sylva is the Latin word for grove
or woods. The name means groves
of Penn, who in 1681 got a deed for
the state from King Charles 11, of
England, in settlement of a debt
which the British government owed
Penn’s father. The founder called
the country Sylvania, and the king
prefixed it with “Penn.”
2q. Was a conclusion reached as
to placing the responsibility for the
Sinking of the battleship Maine in
Havana harbor when that vessel was
finally raised and examined?
’ 2—A. The commitee which investi
gated the wreck of the Maine, after
it had been raised, confirmed the first
report that the explosion was caused
by a mine. The committee, however,
could not fix the responsibility op
any party or parties.
3Q. Who are the Christadel
phians?
3A. They are members of a re
ligious sect, which was organized by
John Thomas, an Englishman, in
1844. The Christadelphians reject
the doctrine of the Trinity, practice
immersion, but have no ordained
ministry.
4 Q. What were the dying words
of Patrick Henry, the American ora
tor and partiot?
4 A. Just before he breathed his
last, he said. “Here is a book (the
Bible) worth more than -all others
ever printed; yet it 1 is my misfor
tune never to have found time to
read it. It is now too late. I trust
in the mercy of God.”
SQ. How should sore eyes of
new-born babies be treated? Aj(L. K.
5 A. Sore eyes in new-born ba
bies can be prevented in practically
all cases by putting special drops
in the baby’s eyes immediately after
birth. These drops consist of 1 per
cent solution of silver nitrate. Many
cases of blindness result from neg
lecting the eyes of new-born babies.
6Q. What motion picture star
makes the most money? M. E. C.
6A. William S. Hart is said to
have made the most money in the
last two years. •
7 Q. Did Napoleon’s brother,
Jerome, marry an American?
7A. In 1803, Jerome* Bonaparte,
nineteen years of age, arrived in
New York, and soon afterward, while
visiting Baltimore, fell in love with
Elizabeth Patterson. They were
married with great ceremony by
the Catholic bishop of the Baltimore
diocese. In 1805 \he started for
France, leaving his wife to follow.
An order was issued prohibiting her
from entering France at any place,
and she saw her husband only once
after his departure. Napoleon had
the marriage of his brother annulled,
and forced -Jerome to marry the
daughter, of the King of Wurten
berg. Six days after the ceremony,
the young prince was made King of
Westphalia..
8— Q. What IM’ a good definition
of “a friend”? L. T,
B—A. “One truer man than I am
to myself,” “the essence of pure de
votion,” “the triple alliance of the
three great powers, love, sympathy
and help)”
fi~Q. How is. hhe date of Easter
determined? ;»•
9 A. Easter day is the first Sun
day after the paschal full moon—the
full moc-n which happens upon, or
following the 21st of March, which
is eoi’.s.dered tr.e beginning of the
ecclesiastical year. This year Easter
will fall on the 4th of April.
10 —Q. When and Why was Wii--
liam H. Taft sent to confer with'
the pope? ’.
10—A. Former President Taft wsfeq
sent by Ropsevelt in 1902 to confer ■
with Leo XIII, head of the RomaiiJ
Catholic church, concerning thP
purchase of agricultural lands of!
religious orders in the Philippine!
islands.
Big Whisky Leakage
EDINBURGH, Scotland.— At the
meeting of the North Britain railway!
commission the chairman said that
compensation cl 4r for goods lost:
or stolen numbered the last yu . 28,-'
144, as against 3,610 in 1913. They I
had recently been paying SSOO dally 1
for whisky stolen in transit.
to become parties to every war !
everywhere, whether we are, concern- i
ed or not, whether we wish' to be- ’
come a party or not. In return for |
our participation we get nothing but
the right to spend our resources, tax
our people and shed the blood of our
American boys.”
THE WILLY-NICKY LETTERS
Pleads for Brother-In-Law
“Lastly may I once more remind
you of your kind promise, twice giv
v and twice put off, that my broth
er-in-law, Frederic Leopold, could be
allowed to join your army? The
ast time in July all was arranged
and ready, when he was put off,
which placed him in a very difficult
position vis-a-vis to our army and of
ficers, he being as we say ‘blamirt’
(compromised), especially so when
Charles Hohenzollern left for Japan,
which was done because we thought
Fr. Leopold would leave for Muk
den, too. Now the people point at
Fr. Leopold and the poor fellow is
awfully crestfallen; he has bought
lots of clothes and things and made
every sort of preparations and even
learnt your language and will in no
way be of any hindrance to your gen
erals, as he is a quiet man; as the
army is large and powerful I think
that it does not matter if he goes,
So I venture again to ask whether
you can permit him to go?
“With excuse for bothering you
with Hl these matters, but they are
jetter arranged between ourselves
and best love to Alix, I remain, even
your most affectionate cousin and
friend. WILLY.”
Comments on Unrest in Russia
“Berlin, Feb. 6, 1905.—Dearest
Nicky: Your kind letter reached me
on the morning of my birthday so
early that your wishes were the first
1 received. Please accept my warm
est thanks for them and God grant
they may be fulfilled! Your letter
reached me in a moment of dire
anxiety, for just then my poor boy
was seriously ill and it was then a
matter of life and death! The whole
following week was a terrible trial
and my poor wife suffered agonies
watching near the bedside of the
patient; thanks to God that He heard
our prayer? and saved our boy’s life!
(The kaiser is believed to refer to
an illness of Prince Joachim, his
sixth son, then fourteen years old.)
“My brother-in-law is deeply grate
ful for your kind permission accord
ed to him that he may at last start
for the front. On hty w4y oiit he is
to report himself to you and give
•you these lines. His entourage has
been limited as you wished and he
is .instructed to keep quite in the
background, so as to in no way ham
per the commander-in-chief, and he
begs that the latter may take no
undue notice of him and not. to for
get that he is a simple spectator who
wants to learn the art of war earn
estly.
“You have been through serious
troubles from the effervescence and
agitation among the lower classes. I
am glad your soldiers showed them
selves reliable and their
sermon (oath?) to their emperor.
The reception x of the deputation of
workmen—who' seem to have been ill
advised and partially goaded into
striking by agitators—made a good
impression everywhere, as it showed
them that they could see in the face
of their ‘vaterchen’ (little father)
if they asked this honor in due
form! Many and most vague are the
plans for reform in your country—
as far as I ,can make out —but the
most sensible and best adapted to
its people and their customs seems,
to my humble notion, the formation
of a body of men chosen from the
best and ablest heads in the different
‘zemstvos.’ This body would be at
tached to the ‘imperial council’ and
to it could be given any question of
importance having a vital interest
for the whole of Russia to be worked
out and prepared for the ‘imperial
council;’ also men well versed with
the special theme under discussion
could be called upon to give their
advice, being chosen from every part
of the people ad hoc. And the com
ble (climax) would be if you from
time to time presided yourself so as
to be able to hear as many different
men as possible in order to be able
to form a correct judgment on the
question before them. Just like I did
in 1890, when I called in the great
committee for the elaboration of the
‘social laws’ for the working classes,
after the great strike and which 1
presided (over) for weeks. In this
manner this body would be able to
provide the ‘imperial council’ with
every information it wants, enabling
you in the same time to remain in
touch with the great bulk of the
lower classes; thereby insuring to
the latter every mestns to make
themselves heard in matters apper
taining to their welfare and thus
forming a direct canal of communi
cation between the simple folk' ana
■ their ‘emperor and father.’ Besides
you would b& able--on account of
your own information —to keep good
watch and’ control on your ‘imperial
council’.and the ‘committee of minis
ters’ to see the Wprk by them is
done as you. wish and your people
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THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1920.
want; this way insures the executive i
(underlined) once for all to the ‘au- i
tocratic czar’ (underlined) and not j
to a leading minister with a board i
Sis helpless colleagues blindly fol- |
owing his lead.
“On my birthday my tallest aide i
de camp—well known to you—H. V. j
Pluskoy—in Paris the ladies called j
him ‘Plus que Haut!’ (“more than |
high”) has been made colonel of I
your Alexander grenadiers; they |
gave the guard of honor for my ;
birthday ‘Razwood’ and looked
magnificent, as you will see on the
inclosed photos. In due time —when
things have calmed down and it
suits you—the new colonel will re
port himself to you.
“As I. heard that Serge had men
tioned that your authorities were an
noyed with Krupp for not 1 keeping
bis time to furnish the batteries or
dered by Russia 1 caused an in
mat.sts and as he cherishes isvol
quiry to be made at his works and
send you the copy of the report I re
ceived, showing that there is ni
grounds for the above mentioned
complaints. Inquiries made at the
offices of the Hamb-Ameri\ line
tHambug-American line) equal’v
show that the rumors to the effect
that they had taken guns and am
munition out in their ships for Ja
pan is totally unfounded; they have
not taken arms or stores of war of
any kind to or for Japan. It seems
that the clouds of French and Eng
lish agents besieging the admiralty
and war omces—angry at our firms
furnishing your government’ well and
better than theirs are able —are
starting no end of canards ‘au
detriment’ of the Germans; I ven
ture to suggest they should be less
believed and kicked into the Nava
besides.
“The Japs have just ordered four
line of battle ships in England; they
are to be copies of the newest type
in England, between 18,000-19,009
tons with 25 cm. gtlns as medium ar
tillery and 30 cm. guns as heavy ar
tillery. With best wishes for a bet
ter outlook for you and yovr coun
try and much love to Alix, I remain
ever , your most affectionate cousin
and friend, WILLY.
“P. S. —End of next month we shall
take our boy to the Mediterranean
and to Sicily.”
Herman Schneider Acquitted
AMERICUS. Ga., March 23.—Her
man Schneider was acquitted here
in city court Monday on a charge
of assault. He was accused of hav
ing attacked C. J. Clark upon the
streets here in 1918, Clark being bad
ly hurt in the encounter. Both men
are prominent in business and social
circles here. Testimony offered by
both sides differed only slightly, and
it was brought out that the alterca
tion between the two men resulted
through the action of Clark in ac
costing Schneider’s father upon the
street the previous day. In the
fight Clark fell to the pavement,
fracturing his leg at the hip.
411 ~>i
What to do for
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the acidity of the stomach, instatytiv
relieves the food souring and fer
mentation which causes the misery
making gasses, heartburn, flatu
lence, fullness or pain in stomach
and Intestines.
A few tablets of “Pape’s Diapep
sin” bring relief almost as soon as
they reach the stomach. They he\.
regulate disordered stomach so fa
vorite foods can be eaten without
distress—Costs so little at drug
stores. —(Advt.)
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J. B. FERRIS, Mgr., 615 W. 43d St.
Dept. 141 NEW YORK, N.Y.
SAYS CIVILIZEii MAN
LACKS COMMON SENSE
Scientist Told Well-Known
Southerner He Was Liv
ing Like a Fool as Far as
His Stomach Was Con
cerned.
John Ponleroy, the remarkable
New Zealander, who is now visiting
the South and attracting so much
attention by his novel theories,
thinks that civilized man lacks com
mon sense. Pomeroy claims that
most ill health is due to stomach dis
orders caused by improper living
and eating. When seen at his head
quarters, he said:
“If people thought half as much
of their stomachs as they do their
pocketbooks, there wouldn’t be so
much sickness here.
“If we would sit down quietly to
a plain common sense meal, eat
slowly, and then give it time to di
gest and be assimilated into the
blood to nourish the system, there
wouldn’t be so many ' complaining,
droopy, listless and fretful, men and
women. But we don't. W© expect
our stomachs to do the work our
teeth were intended for. In con
sequence, we are becoming a nation
of chronic dyspeptics and rheu
matics.
“The amount of half-phewed, has
tily eaten food the ja.verage person
A Woman Likes To Be Admired,
No Matter How Old She May Be
■NBiiL j#
IWK/
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v V
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It is within the reach of every woman to be well,
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scription. It is the safest woman’s, tonic because it is made
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label.) It is 50 years old, and its 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.
Send 10c to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo,
N. Y., for a trial package and confidential medical advice,
or booklet.
ITCH-ECZEMA S
(Also caned Tetter. Salt Rheum. Pruritus, Milk-Crust. Weepuig Skm. etc.)
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DR. J. E. CANNADAY
g 13.64 Park Square SEDALIA, RIO.
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stuffs into himself during the day
is positively wicked. Then, when he
feels dull and nervous he wonders
what’s the matter and imagines he
has h&art trouble, or insomnia, or
goodness knows what. There is just
one thing the matter with him. He
has abused the one organ of his body
which Is most essential to good
health—the stomach—and until the
gastric juices in his stomach per
form their functions as they should,
‘all the doctors and medicines in the
world will not make him well and
robust.
“The other day a man well known
ever this section came to me and
said: ‘From what a friend tells me
about your medicine, Puratone, I
think it will help me. At least lam
willing to give it a trial.! But, sup
posing it does get my stomach In
shape, how long will it last?’ I sim
ply said: ‘lf you-begin taking Pura
tone right now, at the end of a few
days your food should be digesting
perfectly once more. But if you
continue to act like a fool, so far
as what you eat and the way you
eat it is concerned, you Will be
right back where you arise now in
side of six months.’
“What I said to this man can be
applied to thousands just like him
all over the country.”
The leading druggist in nearly ev
ery town sells Puratone or Pomeroy
& Company, Atlanta, Ga., will fill
orders at $1.04 per bottle postpaid.
I- —(Advt.)
Nature undoubtedly
made woman to be ad
mired, and man to ad
mire her. No woman
ever gets so old that
she doesn’t- want admi
ration, and no - man
ever gets beyond ad
miring her. Good looks
in woman do not de
pend upon age, but
upon health. A wom
an’s health ' depends
more upon the distinct
ly feminine organism
than upon anything