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THE NEXT—
that’s jess. f- JMa.~j 'Wmßfe ImL p— ■|r3R niikSSffig!!
BY BUD FISHER ”%\A
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New Questions
1. Question —What salutation
should I use in writing * letter to
tny cousin?
2. Question —What/states did not
ratify the prohibition amendment to
the constitution?
3. Question —Does President Wil
son smoke, and did Roosevelt.
4. Question. —What is the origin
of the superstition that a four-leaf
iilover brings good luck to the
Under?
5. Question —Xvhat reason do you
assign for the marked similarity
existing in the writings of the poets,
Robert W. Service and Douglas
llalloch?
6. Question —Is Paderewski, the
great pianist, still premier of the
naw republic of Poland?
7. Question —What has been the
cause of the large number of cases
of poisoning due to olives?
8. Question —How old is John D.
Rockefeller?
9. Question —What is the distance
traveled by a needle in the playing
of a large size phonograph record?
v 10. Question —What did Judas do
with the thirty pieces of silver he
got for betraying Christ?
Questions Answered
1. Question —What is hte best
wajr to clean a porcelain tub?
L Answer—Wet a cloth with kero
sene and rub it thoroughly over the
bathtub. If the stains are
LIFT OFF CORNS!
* Apply few drops then lift sore, ■
touchy corns off with
fingers
\ g
Irak x
Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little
Freezone on an aching corn, instant- :
zly that corn stops hurting, then you I
lift it right out. Yes, magic!
A tiny bottle of Freezone costs|
but a few cents at any drug store,j
but is sufficient to remove every
hard corn, soft corn, or corn between
. e toes, and the calluses, without
sorenoss or irritation.
Freezone is the sensational discov
ery ot a Cincinnati genius. It is
wonderful.—(Advt.)
Classy
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or Money Baek. J
ar Seed at SBse for snappy Style Book
■ and m«- saramant blanks. You need
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Etoxnem «r,oe)yt2.ssfor p&ota.ex
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Ito ye or : adiri daal measurem rata.
Groat Money-Making Plan
I Find oct bew to earn 12500 to SBOOO
a year io year spare thoo. Oat yecr«lgg»lggggas%%to
I aww sail FRR dost to make'em WtMMBBMBMWKgg
ask whet •yoa rot It). USaßf nSgragf
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Ileeticß ewes woolen samples. 162 tfafca rSgffig
latest. r> wt sremsfrs style fashions— WEHn Et&af l
all winr. rs. Tboda Bara. Annette Kek HmJ
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f dsrinr r Ms, beantlfal eokra. Some R»
■ EzSi’K W a?
1/ Reßsbls Tailoring Co.
I 31* 9. M. Churro Zto. /ipjv.
la aacsto to oa as at srwtoto ■
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hers \
use
reysj
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For the
A Safe Old Fashioned s
Remedy for Worms IrrS ?
Seventy-five years con tin- JsTsiL ?
uous u»e is the best testi- rs Yt f
monk J FREY’S VERMIFUGE H
can cUer you. c \r’
Keep a bottle always on <— —. '!'
hand. It will help keep 2JEJ !f
the little ones happy and ipjf]
healthy. “4 iJi
fl 30fiabTttleatyoi|rdmggist'soX
| gen store; or if your dealer j jj
!] can’t Sipplyyou.sepdhisnanie V
3 and 3<>c in stamps and we’ll fjyriJ ;
J send "OU a bottle promptly. | <-
H E. & i FREY, Baltimore, Md.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
obstinate remove them with diluted
muriatic acid, (1 part acid to 10
parts water), applied without get
ting the solution on the hands.
2. Question —Is the United States
importing sugar from Europe?
2. Answer Nearly« 6,000,000
pounds of sugar were imported from
London during the first half of Jan
uary of the present year. These
consignments consisted of sugar
from Java and Mauritius and the
price paid was about' 15 cents a
pound.
3. Question —Is the United States
capitol at Washington insured?
3. Answer —The captiol at Wash
ington is not insured because the
government does not insure any of
its property, and because, in the
second place, it is regarded as ab
solutely fireproof.
4. Question —Has an American who
served in the British army lost his
citizenship?
4. Answer—ls an American-born
man served in the British army
and took the oath of allegiance to
the British flag he thereby lost his
American citizenship. Such a person
can be restored to citizenship by
taking the oath of allegiance to
the United States in any court with
power to naturalize aliens.
5. Question —How many miles of
telegraph wire are there in the
country?
5. Answer —There are 2,2141000
miles of telegraph wire in the Uni
ted States, and 20,248,327 miles of
telephone wire.
6. Question —What was the call
ing of Herbert Hoover’s father?
6. Answer —He was a blacksmith
in lowa and died before his son
was twelve years old.
7. Question —What is the greatest
depth a submarine has ever reach
ed?
7. Answer —The navy department
says that the greatest depth a Uni
ted States submarine ever sub
merged was 296 feet. This reoord
was made during the war, off the
coast of Ireland.
8. Question —How 'long is it nec
essary to live in Nevada before di
vorce proceedings can be instituted?
8. Answer—Six months’' residence
is necessary. The causes for divorce
in Nevada are: consanguinity,
cruelty, desertion one year, drunk
enness, -fraud, or force, felony, in
capacity, neglect, want of age and
adultery.
9. Question —Which is the larger,
the Grand Central station in New
York or the Union station in Wash
ington, D. C.?
9. Answer —The Grand Central
station is the largest railroad sta
tion in America and is also the
most expensive.
10. Question —Is basketball a
very old game?
'TO. Answer—The game was invent
ed in 1891, and during the past
quarter of a century has become
one of the most popular in the field
of sports. It was invented by James
Naismith, a physical instructor of
Springfield, Mass., at a single sit
ting*
The fifteen-year-old grandson of a
New York millionaire, the boy’s
mother says, needs $7,500 annually
for his support. That is a poor
crutch for a lad of his age.
/j.
What to do for
y Jyr
“Pape’s Diapepsln” by neutralizing
the acidity of the stomach, instantly
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
sln” bring relief almost as soon as
they reach the stomach. They help
regulate disordered stomach so fa
’-orite foods can be eaten withou*
distress—Costs so little at drug
Mores.— (Advt.)
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J. B. FERRIS, Mgr., 615 W. 43d St.
; Dept. 141 NEW YORK, N.Y.
NEWBERRY LIKELY
TO RESIGN, SAYS
DAVID LAWRENCE
BY DAVID lAW2ENCE
(Copyright, 1920, for The Atlanta Journal.)
WASHINGTON, March 25.—An
nouncement by Governor Sleeper, of
Michigan, that he would not ask any
officeholders to resign who were re
cently convicted in the federal
courts for violation of the
laws, has revived the inquiry here
not merely as to what the state of
Michigan would do, but what the
United States senate would say
about the retention by Truman H.
Newberry of his seat.
The question concerns not alone
Michigan politics and the reduction
of the Republican majority in the
United States senate to one vote—a
narow margin on which to do busi
ness—but it affects the opportunities
of the Socialists and radicals in the
next campaign. Already the Social
ists are drawing a parallel between
the expulsion of Victor Berger from
the house of representatives because
he had been convicted in a federal
court on a charge of violating the
espionage act, and the case of Senx
tor Newberry, who has been convict
ed ana sentenced to two years in the
penitentiary.
Both Mr. Berger and Mr. Newberry
have appealed their respective cases,
and each hopes to secure a reversal
even if it is necessary to carry the
fight to the supreme court of the
United States. But in the meantime
the house of representatives not only
refused to seat Mr. Berger, but when
he was re-elected by the people of
Wisconsin, who by their votes ga ?e
the Impression that they didn’t be
lieve him guilty of wrongdoing, the
house declined even then to accept
Mr. Berger into its membership.
Soap Box Arguments
All the soap-box orators are get
ting ready to point out that a So
cialist can't get a square deal from
the federal government and the New
berry case is the very ammunition
they say they have needed to drive
their point home. Berger’s -friends
claim his crime consisted merely in
expressing an opinion—in saying
the war was not for democracy, but
for commercial gain and rivalry.
Some of the very criticisms of
the war made by Mr. Berger during
the heat of the conflict later were
repeated in substance by President
Wilson himself on his western trip
in behalf of the League of Nations,
but, of course, the fighting was over
and there was no sharp scrutiny of
words or arguments in post-bellum
days. v
There are three ways by which
the problem developed by- the New
berry case can be solved. Mr. New
berry' can resign of his own volition
and spare his colleagues in the sen
ate any embarrassment. The senate
can by majority vote declare Mr.
Newberry’s seat vacant and ttie gov
ernoi’ of Michigan can make a tem
porary appointment and call a new
election. The state of Michigan can
have a new election before the sen
ate acts and say whether in view of
the federal court’s verdict, the peo
ple still want Mr. Newberry to rep
resent them in the senate.
Then the senate in the event that
the vote is favorable to Mr. New
berry, can vindicate its own posi
tion and reverse the principle adopt
ed In the house in the Berger case
and permit Mr. Newberry to remain
in the senate while his case is being
appealed.
Would Listen to Colleagues
The junio. senator from Michigan
has not yet returned to Washington.
Immediately after his conviction he
said he would consult his colleagues
in the senate before deciding wheth
er or not to resign.
Truman Newberry is the kind of
man who would not stay in the
senate a second longer than his col
leagues wanted him to do so. •
He would not engage in a contro
versy or fight for his seat as did
Senator Lorimer, of Illinois, if he
stays. It will be because his Repub
lican associates insist upon it, though
from the viewpoltn of political con
trol, the vacancy caused by a possi
ble resignation of Mr. Newberry
would be filled at once by the ap
pointment of another Republican as
the governor of Michigan is a Re
publican.
Personally Truman Newberry, is
well liked in the senate. He made
many friends here when he was as
sistant scretary of the navy and the
general impression given by his de
fenders is that he was the victim of
overzealous friends who spent larg'e
sums of money to defeat Henry Ford
and gave little concern to a possible
check-up.
As a matter of fact, although it is
unfortunate that Truman Newberry
alone should have been ordered pun
j ished for what so many office-hold-
I ers have gotten away with in past
j years without prosecution of any
I kind, the effect of the Michigan ver-
■ die already has been to put cam
paign managers on their guard and
■to promote a healthier regard for
federal and state corrupt practices
acts and election laws.
The upshot of the Newberry case,
i however, probably will be the volun
i tary resignation by Mr. Newberry of
! his seat in the senate.
General Wood Wins
South Dakota Primary
SIOUX FALLS. S. D., March 25.
: General Leonard Wood was the victor
in the Republican presidential pri
maries in South Dakota, today’s re
turns indicated. Precincts that have
not reported cannot change the final
| result of the election, it was be
! lieved. General Wood today led Gov
-1 ernor Lowden by 4,000 votes.’
Senator Hiram Johnson was third,
today’s results show. James W.
Gerard was the choice of the Demo
| crats. _
THE WILLY-NICKY LETTERS
(Copyright, 1920 by The Chicago
Daily News Foreign Service.)
One of the most remarkable of the
letters written by the German kaiser
to the Russian czar in their long
correspondence is dated February 21,
1905, when Russia was seething
with revolution. The kaiser sat
down apparently after a great deal
of thinking and informed “Nicky”
what the world was saying about
him and about Russia. A crisis had
been reaqhed in Russian affairs and
the kaiser may well have become
worried about the ultimate effect
of an upheaval on the autocracy to
the east, which could not fail to af
fect his own rule if it fell. “Nicky’s”
methods had been anything but tact
ful. Workers marching to address
the czar were mowed down by troops
on Red Sunday, January 22, 1905.
Demands for reforms and a consti
tution were answered by temporiz
ing. Schemes elaborated by the Rus
sian ministers were not yet ready
fc. announcement. In the far <ast
the army and navy suffered nothing
but reverses. The czar sat in Tsars
koe Selo and the people grumbled.
The kaiser does not write as if he
were giving advice on his own re
sponsibility but pretends that he is
repeating what is being said general
ly in Europe, and takes it for grant
ed that this news has not reached
the czar. This affords an unusual
insight into the way the kaiser work
ed. The letter discloses that the
kaiser himself was well informed
not only on events but the trend
of opinion in the world. Sec
ondly it is evident also that he was
anxious to have the czar preserve
the prerogatives of “divine rule”
and not yield too much to the popu
lar clamor.
He wants the czar rather than
the ministers to announce reforms
an- in commenting on how blame is
placed on a ruler makes the interest
ing remark that “in constitutional
nations it is not so dangerous, as the
king’s ministers have to mount the
breach and to defend his person”—
as so often happened in the kaiser’s
own experience. He suggests that the
czar lead his troops in person. He
points out how MJoscow became alien
ated because the holy war was not
proclaimed from the KremlinX The
kaiser believes that the masses will
adore a ruler who goes among them.
The letter conveys much information
on the kaiser’s understanding of af
fairs, his motives and his interest in
Nicky’s predicament. The actual re
forms suggested by the kaiser are
today of unusual historic interest—
no general legislative assembly, no
national convention, no liberty of
assembly or freedom of the press,
but an act of habeas corpus and
wider extension of the council of
the empire—which was purely ad
visory—and personal participation of
she ruler in public affairs.
The letters of the kaiser were
copied by Isaac Don Levine, staff
correspondent of the Daily News In
the soviet archives at Moscow.
Kaiser’s Letter of Advice
“Berlin, Feb. 21, 1905—Dearest
Nicky: Fritz Leopold (Prince Fred
erick Leopold) has just returned
with your kind wishes and compli
ments, deeply impressed by your ex
treme kindness affability as well as
by the handsome reception you gave
him. How glad I am to hear from
him that you are Well, calm, self
composed and hard at work, and that
dear Alix and the children are all
right. It is so much easier to work
at a difficult task when one knows
that those one loves are well. I am
glad I was able to meet your wishes
by sending Fr. Leop to Asia by sea!
Your railways are hereby left un
hampered! What terrible tidings
have come from Moscow! These
AMERICAN PEOPLE STUFF
THEMSELIES TOO FULL
OF FOOD. HF DECLARES
Pomeroy Says He Will
Have Hundreds of Liv
ing Advertisements of
His Remarkable Medi
cine Before He Leaves
the South.
John Pomeroy, the noted New
Zealand scientist, who has stirred up
every city he has visited, with his
theories and medicine, feels confident
that his success will be as great in
the South as it has been elsewhere.
His theory is that the human stom
ach is responsible for most ill
health, and that the American stom
ach is growing weak, and from'the
way -die is making sick people well
again, he seems to be right.
Recently he said: “American peo
ple have stuffed themselves with un
suitable food and taken little or no
exercise for so Jong that about half
of them are sick.- They don’t know
what is the matter with them. I am
told every day by many people that
they were suffering from nervous
break-down, or liver complaints, or
beasts of anarchists have perpetrated
a dark and dastardly deed.
(Grand Duke Sergius, uncle of the
czar, was assassinated at Moscow
February 17, 1905.) Poor Ella, what
a fearful blow it must have been
for her—may God grant her strength '
and devotion to bear it! It is very
hard for the fine old capital of Rus
sia, that her walls should have been
soiled by so foul a crime but surely
she harbors no true citizen drawing
a breath who can approve of it. I
cannot believe that these demons
have risen from the ranks of your
Muskovite subjects—they were prob
ably foreigners from Geneva. For
the great bulk of your pebple still
place their faith in their “Vaterchen”
(Little Father) the czar and worship
his hallowed person. I have gained
this conviction from my close ob
servation of the different phases of
the movement in Russia as far as
I was able from the news coming di
rectly from there and by the opin
ions expressed by observers, or some
times Russians, in the European
press.
Kaiser Gives European View
“The Russian movement is, as you
may well imagine, uppermost in all
conversations and correspondence not
o'nly in Russia but also without. The
whole European press is flooded with
articles about Russia, their opinions
depending on the standpoint of the
party they belong to.
“In this manner—so to say—Euro
pean point of view has emanated,
which seems fairly correct render
ing of the public opinion of our Con
tinent. Now I thought that it might
perhaps be of some interest to you—
in your solitude at Tsarskoe—to have
an idea of this European opinion, and
to hear how the events in your coun
try are judged by what one some
times calls the ‘civilized world’® in
general. I shall therefore in the fol
lowing lines try to draw a little
sketch for you of the ‘reflected Rus
sian picture’ as seen from outside
Os course as the people outside your
country are not initiated to the de
tails of the intricate questions at
Issue in Russia they often combine,
or infer from an effect they see—
without know its cause—and there
fore often a wrong combination will
lead to a wrong conclusion, because
their ignorance of the true facts have
left a breach. The foreign spectators
are often forced to ‘jump to con
clusions,’ but we must add: ‘Wo
die Begriffe fehlen, stellt oft ein
Wort zu rechter Zeit slch ein.’ (Where
judgments are lacking the right word
often comes at the right time.)
“Therefore I must ’avant tout’
(first of al,) beg your pardon for
writing to you things that you will
probably since long have learned
from your diplomats’ reports and
crave your kind forbearance and for
giveness if I—as a loyal, firm, and
devoted friend of your am obliged
to do—also must record opinions
which may seem to you harsh, un
generous, false or even hurt your
feelings. But Russia is in the act
of turning over a new leaf in her
history, and the development shows
a tendency to prepare the beginning
for a certain modernization.
Gives What Russians Think.
“Such a process .you will agree, in
a mighty nation like yours is bound
to command the most widespread in
terest in Europe, and ‘comme de
raison’ before all in the neighboring
country. The methods to be adopted,
the means whictj are to be used, and
the men who are to do the work have
a direct influence across your fron
tiers, upon the other nations. If I
said that the ‘opinion’ was a ‘Euro
pean’ one I must not omit the fact
that many Russians who have passed
through here in the last months, and
all those living all over Europe, es-
rheumatism or other diseases, too
numerous to mention, until they took
my medicine.
“As a matter of fact, the average
man or woman can not be sick if the
stomach is working properly. To be
sure there are diseases of a virulent
character, such as diabetes, cancer,
tuberculosis, etc., which are organic
and not traceable to the stomach, but
even fevers can, in nine cases out of
ten, be traced to something taken
into the stomach, although they must
run their course when once started.
“To sum the matter up—a sound
digestive apparatus that is doing its
full duty getting every particle of
vitality out of the food, above all
else, brings health. I shall prove
this to the thousands of people be
fore 1 leave this section. I shall
succeed in meeting these thousands
with very little trouble, for in a few
weeks I shall have hundreds of liv
ing advertisements in people who
have taken my medicine. It’s aston
ishing how much talking a man or
woman will do if you will get their
digestion in shape.”
The leading druggist in nearly ev
ery town sells Puratone or Pomeroy
& Company, Atlanta, Ga., will fill or
ders at $1.04 per bottle postpaid.
(Advt.)
SATURDAY, MARCH 2?, 1920.
pecially in Paris and France—have
also contributed to lend color to the
picture; so that the facts forming
the base for the ‘European opinion’
mostly are supplied by France, who
as ‘amle et alliee’ (‘friend and ally’)
is always the best informed about
Russia. The outcome of it isi this:
“On dit (it is said): "The regime
Mirski (Plehve’s successor as prime
ministers) too suddenly allowed the
press a greater liberty than before
and dropped the reins—so tightly
held by Plehve—too soon. Hence a
sudden flood of unheard of articles
and open letters addressed to the
ruler, a thing up to then thought im
possible in Russia; some of them
most insolent, calculated to diminish
the respect for the Autocratic rule.
This opportunity was seized upon by
the revolutionary party to get hold of
the unsuspecting workpeople, to work
them up into a state of ferment and
to make them demand things—they
were incapable of understanding—
in a peremptory, disrespectful man
ner accompanied by language and
acts which came very near looking
like revolution. This brought the
working class—l am sure against
their will—into direct opposition to
the government and into conflicts
with the authorities, who had to
maintain law and order. As these
misguided and ill informed bands,
mostly composed of men taught to
look at the Zar as their father and
to ‘tutoyer’ him as such (be on fa
miliar terms with him) were under
the impression that they Would be
ab’e to place their wishes before him
by coming before his palace, It is
suggested that it might have been
praeticdl if the Zar had received a
certain number of them—drawn up
on the square amid a cordon of
Made of Metal
\
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The Atlanta Tri-Weekly Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
troops—and had addressed them from
the balcony of the Winter palace,
where he would have been accompa
nied by the highest clergy and the
cross and his suite as a ‘father’
speaks to his children, before the
military had to act; it were perhaps
noq Impossible that In this manner
bloodshed might have quite been
avoided or at least diminished.
Pugilist Jess Willard has been se
cured to referee some Kansas boxing
exhibitions. As ‘‘the third man in
the ring” Jess will be comparatively
safe.
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1 * f Bin greatest bargain we have ever offered. Order all the tires you need now
S 1 liawt before prices go up. Orders will be filled as received as long as the supply lasts.
i FWv.} You take no chance whatever, bo order now.
I IjAA’ No. Tires c I7F TIRE TU3E No. Tires TIRE TUBE
5 IXV ForSalß Prices Prices For Sale i>u,c ’ Prices Prices
J hAA 222 30 x 3 $8.90 $2.35 25 33x4 $17.33 $3.60
i 330 30x3% 10.85 2.70 282 34x4 17.95 3.7 S
11 hfW 55 32 x 3% 12.90 2.85 20 34x4% 18.85 4.35
U SS I7 31x4 16.85 3.20 15 35x4% 19.65 4.45
xjXxb 47 3!2x2 16,95 3,35 7 35x5 19-85 545
rubes ausrenteed Strictly New, I'lMh Stock, standard Makes
Send No Money—See Before You Buy
Simply write us today rtatlng the number and sizea of tires and tubes wanted. We
will ship tires immediately Exproes C. O. D. with privilege of examination. You take no
chances. If you are not entirely eatiefied after inspection that this is the greeteet tira bargain ever
offered, return the tires to us at our expense. You cannot appreciate the wonderful bargain wa are
offering until you have seen these tires. We know you will be more than satisfied—our guarantee pro
tects you. Order now—You may take 6% discount from above prices if you send cash with order.
Gold Seal Tire & Tube Co* 3880 W. Lake Street, Chicago, 111.
Millerand to Be Asked
To Define French Position
PARIS, March —Pysxnler Mil
lerand will be asked in the chamber
of deputies today by Jean Barthou
to make a definite statement concern-,
ing the policy of France as to Ger
many, central Europe, the Turkish
and Russian situations, resumption
of diplomatic relations with the Vati
can and the situation created by ths
failure of the United States senate
to ratify the treaty of Versailles.