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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
PALMER'S GEORGIA
FRIENDS DECIDE ID
COPITIKCAMPAIGN
BY HARLLEE BRANCH
(Staff Correspondent of The Journal) .
MACON, Ga., March 27. —After a |
day of much speculation and con- I
slderable political pulling and haul- ,
ing Friday, the status of the presi-1
dential primary in Georgia this morn- ,
ing was as follows: Attorney Gen
eral A. Mitchell Palmer is a candi
date. Senator Hoke Smith is a candi
date. Senator James A. Reed is a
candidate. The name of Thomas E. j
Watson has been filed. Governor!
Hugh M. Dorsey has not entered the
race, and all indications now are j
that he will not do so.
It Is generally believed here that
Governor Dorsey will within the next
two or three days issue a statement
in which he will announce his pur
pose not to get into the race. In this
same statement it is expected the
governor will go on record as in
dorsing the candidacy of Mr. Palmer.
Some of those close to the governor
are authority for the statement
that he has definitely decided not to
be drawn into the presidential pri
mary. They say that he will give
a strong and active indorsement of
Mr. Palmer; that he feels that if he
were to get into the race now it
might jeopardize the cotton bank, to
which he has given so much time and
work to organize, and which is now
almost ready to apply for a charter,
and that the governor will hold him
self in position to enter the sena
torial race this fall.
The governor was in Macon last
night and held a long conference
with several friends to whom it is
said he outlined his position as set
forth above. To The Journal repre
sentative Saturday morning he said
that he had no statement to make
at this time.
Switch Not Favored
The Palmer committeemen who
met here Friday were greatly pleased
at Governor Dorsey’s reported atti
tude. They were deeply concerned
early in the day over efforts which
were being made in some quarters
to get the governor into the presi
dential primary, efforts which also
contemplated getting Mr. Palmer out
of the race and the switching of the
Palmer organization to the governor.
It was quickly developed at the
meeting of the Palmer committee
that the suggested switch could not
be consummated.
The following resolutions were
adopted by the committee after hav
ing been submitted by a sub-com
mittee including Hollins N. Ran
dolph, H. H. Dean, Aldine Chambers,
A. W. Evans and Blanton Fortson:
"Resolved by the Palmer campaign
committee in meeting assembled,
That we take this occasion to renew
and repeat our loyalty and allegiance
to the great and undying principles
of the Democratic party as illustrat
ed and recorded by the several Dem
ocratic administrations from the be
ginning until the present tjme, and
particularly as illustrated by the
glorious record of the party during
the present administration demon
strated by its many notable construc
tive achievements, which have re
sounded and which will continue to
resound to the permanent welfare,
happiness and prosperity of the peo
ple of our country.
“Resolved further, That we re
joice in, and point with pride to,
the great and significant part our
candidate, Hon A. Mitchell Palmer,
attorney general of the United
States, has uniformly taken in the
magnificent and constructive record
of the Democratic party in the pres
ent administration, and we hereby
and now renew our allegiance to him
in the pending presidential primary
and we adhere to our declared pur
pose to support his candidacy to ul
timate success. Basing our appeal
upon his unshakable Democracy, un
swerving Americanism, unflinching
devotion to duty and to the law, and
to his scorn and hatred of anarchy,
Bolshevism, illegal trusts and special
privilege, we commend him to our
fellow citizens for their support and
suffrage.
“Resolved further, That we here
by extend our hearty congratulations
to him for the enthusiastic.and suc
cessful support he has received in
this state since he personally en
tered his name in the primary of
. April 20; and we further extend cor
dial congratulations to him upon his
earnest, unvarying, fearless and un
questioned support of this country in
time of war.
“Resolved further, That we regard
him as the one great nation-wide
Democratic candidate who is best fit
ted and best qualified to lead the
Democratic hosts to victory in the
national campaign.”
DORSEY ASKS MORE
TIME FOR DECISION
MACON, Ga., March 27.—(8y As
sociated Press.) —Governor Hugh M.
Dorsey asked a delegation of friends
from all parts of Georgia who met
him here last night for more time in
which to consider his entry in the
preferential presidential primary.
Killed by Automobile
SAVANNAH, Ga., March 27.—J. J.
McClellan, an aged cabinet maker,
who was struck by the automobile of
Col. Shelby Myrick yesterday, died
this morning. No blame Is attached
to the chauffeur.
SWAMP-ROOT FOR -
KIDNEY AILMENTS
There is only one medicine that
really stands out pre-eminent as a
medicine for curable ailments of the
kidneys liver and bladder.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root stands
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needed in thousands upon thousands
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mild and immediate effect is soon
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Start treatment at once. Sold at
all drug stores, in bottles of two
sizes, medium, and large.
However, if you wish first to test
this great preparation send ten cents
to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton,
N. Y„ for a sample bottle. When
writing be sure to mention The At
lanta Tri-Weekly Journal.— (Advt.)
'!¥ DON’T SEND A PENNY
Wa ORDER BY MAIL—Pay Postmaster
■■>« Arrival of Shoes.
Shoes fig
fit--
BLACK’S
SHOE
STORE
WATERPROOF. Dept. J
S’ Toe and gua r Atlanta, Gd.
Cattle Made to Swim Ashore Because
Water. Is Too Shallow for Steamship
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Uncle Sam’s sailors see unusual sights during the winter cruises
in southern waters. This photograph was taken by a bluejacket
while his ship was at Bridgetown, Barbados, British West Indies.
The water is too shallow for large cattle steamers to reach shore.
Cattle are put overboard, tied to rowboats, and then guided to land.
The natives, not being over-ambitious, use the steers as motive power
whenever possible.
Charitable Institutions
Oj State Show Need of
Support, Says Speaker
Some interesting facts regarding
the investigation of children’s insti
tutions by the State Board of Public
Welfare were given in an address de
livered Friday by Miss Rhoda Kauf
man, assistant secretary of the board,
before the meeting of the League of
Georgia Women Voters.
Although the Investigators of the
board report that they have found
many instances where conditions far
from ideal evisted in various insti
tutions, Miss Kaufman stated, yet
they had found in most cases that
the institutions were willing to give
their co-operation and welcomed ad
vice from the board.
The board was created by the last
legislature for the purpose of in
vestigating the conditions existing at
all public and private institutions
caring for dependents, defectives and
delinquents and for the purpose of
encouraging all legitimate agencies
by advising them and by furnishing
them Information gained from the
study of other Institutions.
“Our agents have been in the field
only a month,” said Miss Kaufman,”
and yet the information and facts
gathered already are startling in the
extreme. We sit here and think that
we are living in a civilized state,
and while we sit here, tiny babies
three and four days old are being
sold and passed to any cruel, diseased
or careless hand that is held out
to take them. We found one tiny
new-born Infant that had been given
by an institution to a woman of the
streets; another four-day-old little
mite that had been placed in a dirty
hovel of diseased, tubercular, in
mates, and was luckily found by a
nurse and taken to a hospital; and
still other wee bits of humanity were
found who, if they live, will grow
up blind for life because of infection
hovel of diseased, tubercular in
stitution that is housing them. An
other so-called home takes the pub
lic’s funds and is housing dozens of
tiny tots all under six in a dirty
house with only two people to carq
for all their thousand baby wants.
Can you picture the criminal neglect?
New children are brought in without
examination and an unsuspected in
fectious disease admitted, means a
sweeping devastation. On the day our
inspector was there, nearly all the
children showed a skin disease, and
the matron, .taking it as a matter of
course, has not even called a doctor.
Children Begging
“In an institution housing older
children we found future little citi
zens going through the streets with
the heads of the institution begging
from clmt to door for the funds with
which to maintain themselves; those
children who had been placed there
to be made into self-respecting fu
ture citizens. In another part of the
state we found a jail where one child
under twelve and two under sixteen
were being held together with hard
ened men and women offenders, and
still another institution that was
sheltering under one roof small chil
dren and prostitutes from the
streets. We found men and women
together locked in jails with stairs
of wood and no fire extinguishhers
•(veritable fire traps), with vermin,
most of the inmates of these jails
being not yet convicted of crime, but
only awaiting trial.
“Next to the children, we would
certainly place the old and helpless
as the ones for whom we would
make things most pleasant, and yet
many of the almshouses we have vis
ited have been miserable little wood
en, vermin-ridden buildings, where
ventilation and bathing are practi
cally non-existent.
“But I would not have you think
that this gloomy side is all of the
picture, faV from it. Contrasted to
the children’s institutions just de
scribed, we found many that were
doing splendid work, surrounding the
children with all kinds of beautiful
influences, giving each child careful
individual attention and approximat
ing as near as they could the normal
family life in which each and every
child should be raised. A contrast
ing picture to the jails and alms
houses just mentioned were the jailts
fireproof in structure, with premises
clean and prisoners furnished with
good, wholesome food, and alms
houses attractively furnished with
separate quarters for the old men
and old women, where they were
given every attention when sick, pro
vided with wholesome food and given
the light employment and recreation
to make their last days as happy as
possible.
PENNSYLVANIA
DEMOCRATS TO
FIGHT PALMER
PHILADELPHIA, March 27.—The
executive committee of ’the Bonni
well-Shull organizaztion at a meet
ing at the Bellevue-Stratford today
made up a new slate with which the
old guard Democrats will make their
fight in the May state primaries
against the leadership of Attorney
General A. Mitchell Palmer.
A declaration of principles, draft
ed by the platform committee, was
adopted as the platform of the or
ganization. It is “wet” and decided
ly anti-Palmer.
“The state of Pennsylvania,” says
the platform, “does not present to
the 4,000,000 American lads who
fought for liberty in the world war
a candidate for thfe presidency who
shirked his opportunity to serve the
nation as secretary of war in 1916
on the ground that his religious con
victions prevented his assumption of
such duties and who now, in the
year 1920, has the effrontery to as
pire to th© office of commander-in
chief of the armies and navies of the
republic. We will not insult our
dead.
“We call upon all true Democrats,
mindful of the historic teachings and
traditions of Jefferson and Jackson,
to record in ringing tones their im
movable opposition to the candidacy
for the presidencj’ of the United
States of an attorney general whose
public career in relation to capital,
in relation to labor, in relation to
the high cost of living, have alike
betrayed his Incompetency as well
as his lack of statesman-like intel
ligence.”
Major John A. Farrell, of Chester
county, was slated for United States
senator; William N. McNair, of Pitts
burg, for auditor general, and Mat
thew Long, of Luzerne county, for
state treasurer.
Candidates agreed upon for con
gressmen-at-large were Thomas H.
Flynn, Allegheny, national organizz
er of the American Federation of
Labor; Michael Hartneady, president
District Mine Workers, No. 5, Car
bon county; William H. Long, York,
former member of the legislature,
and Joseph V. Mayne, Lehigh, also
former member of the legislature.
Judge Eugene C. Bonniwell, of the
Philadelphia municipal court, Dem
ocrat nominee for governor in 1918,
is a candidate for member of the na
tional committee in opposition to Jos
eph F. Guffey, of Pittsburg, a Pal
mer man.
Aviators Continue
Search for Missing
Flyer in Florida
ARCADIA, Fla., March 27.—Seven
teen army aviators, aided by Semi
nole Indians, continued their search
for Lieutenant Omar Niergrath, miss
ing since Tuesday, according to re
ports received at Carlston field here
early today.
Nlergarth, who left here Tuesday
for Fort Myers on a trial flight, is
believed to have been forced down
in some inaccessible spot in the
swamps of Lee county. The fleet of
seventeen airplanes were dispatched
from Carlstrom field yesterday to
aid in the search.
Illinois Women to
Vote in Primary
CHICAGO, March 27.—Illinois
women will be permitted to vote at
the presidential preferential primary
April 13, regardless of whether na
tional suffrage has been ratified by
thirty-sixstates prior to that time.
Attorney General Brundage today,
at the suggestion of Governor Frank
O. Lowden, reversed a previous rul
ing denying the women the vote.
WILSON iW MS
SIMK POLITICO
CIBIiyETARWRENCE
BY DAVID DAWTKBHCE
(Copyright, 1020. for The Atlanta Journal.)
WASHINGTON,’ March 27. —Near-
ly two months have passed since the
fateful days when Robert Lansing,
called the cabinet together to func
tion during the illness of President
Wilson, but though an official rebuke
for summoning the cabinet without
authority was issued at the time, no
meeting of the cabinet has been
called since by the president him
self.
Every Tuesday and Friday mem
bers of the cabinet, especially the
new ones, wait eagerly for the mystic
ring on the telephone from the op
erator at the White House switch
board telling them they are to ex
perience the thrill of their first cabi
net meeting. But many Tuesdays
and many Fridays have gone by and
not a word from the president. Mr.
Wilson appears well enough to take
motor rides in Rock Creek park and
the Virginia hills and to transact of
ficial business for an hour or so a
day, but the strain of a cabinet meet
ing evidently is too much for him yet.
The president has a brand-new
secretary of commerce, secretary of
agriculture, secretary of the interior
and secretary of state, and though
David F. Houston, sat in the agri
cultural chair before, he now will
move up closer to the throne and oc
cupy the chair of the secretary of
the treasury. Attorney General
Palmer, is really a newcomer. Only
the familiar faces of Newton D.
Baker, secretary of war; Josephus
Daniels, secretary of the navy; Wil
lia B. Wilson, secretary of labor; and
Postmaster Genaral Burleson re
main.
Strong Political Cabinet
It’s a strongly .political cabinet,
nevertheless, and the kind Mr. Wil
son has been anxious to call together
from the beginning. The president
likes men who can go out and make
good campaign speeches and prac
tically all of this cabinet are quali
fied for the stump.
Secretary Alexander, of the de
partment of commerce; Secretary
Wilson, of the department of labor;
and Postmaster General Burleson
campaigned actively before they be
came members of the house of rep
resentatives. Secretary Meredith
ran for governor of lowa on the
Democratic ticket and is out making
a few speeches now to advertising
clubs, chambers of commerce and
civic organizations. Secretary Dan
iels was the Democratic national
committeeman from North Carolina
for 20 years. Secretary Baker twice
was mayor of Cleveland and active
in Ohio politics. Attorney General
Palmer has been leader of the Dem
ocratic caucus in the house of repre
sentatives and was floor leader of
the Wilson forces at the Democratic
convention of 1912 in Baltimore. He
is an active and avowed candidate
for the Democratic nomination.
Bainbridge Colby is an excellent
speaker, probably the best of the
cabinet. He is an orator and spell
binder. His speeches nominating
Roosevelt in the progressive conven
tion in 1916 or condemning Roose
velt later on for betraying the party
are masterpieces of eloquence.
Only Secretary Houston, of the
treasury, and John Barton Payne, of
the interior department, can’t qual
ify as politicians. Eight of the ten
in the Wilson cabinet will be heard
from during the coming campaign.
They are expected to do the fight
ing for President Wilson’s policies.
Wilson Alumni Association
Some of the ex-members of the
cabinet probably will have their say,
too, though perhaps they may not all
b§ as enthusiastic about the Wilson
policies as they used to be. Will’am
Jennings Bryan, Thomas W. Gregory,
William G. McAdoo, Franklin K.
Lane, Lindley M. Garrison and Rob
ert Lansing constitute the Wilson
alumni association, though it looks
as if Mr. Lansing will divide honors
with Mr. Garrison in maintaining ab
solute silence about the administra
tion. Neither one satisfied the po
litical qualifications of a cabinet
member which Mr. Wilson seems to
think is vital. Neither one made
political speeches.
But with the battery of speakers
which now have been collected by
the president there will be enough
administration spokesmen to make up
for the president’s own inability to
resume the fight on the stump.
But there has been no session of
the Wilson cabinet yet to talk over
plans for the campaign or the mat
ters of government which the cabi
net members are supposed to be deal
ing with. Ever since last September
when Mr. Wilson took sick, the ex
ecutive branch of the government has
been decentralized.
Cohesion was confidently expected
when Mr. Wilson dismissed Mr.
but for some unexplained
reason, the situation hasn’t changed
a bit from the days when enforced
confinement inside the White House
kept the presfilent detached from his
cabinet.
Presidents differ however in their
estimate of the value of cabnets.
M-. Wilson never has leaned heavily
on his cabinet. He got accustomed
to the elimination of one cabinet
meeting very week during the war
and of course when he went abroad
he kept in touch in only the most
superficial way with the heads of the
different departments.
Looking back over nearly two
years, Mr. Wilson has seen very lit
tle of his cabinet either collectively
or individually and has established
thus far the record of holding no
cabinet meetings whatsoever for
more than seven months.
Mrs. Innes May Be
Brought Here Monday
MACON, Ga.. March 27.—Mrs. Ida
Mae Innes probably will be taken
to Atlanta, Monday, where she hopes
to give $3,000 bail fixed by United
States Commissioner Martin yester
day at a preliminary hearing on a
charge of using the mails to defraud.
The bond will be returnable at the
October term of the federal court
in Atlanta when Mrs. Innes will be
tried. The charge grew out of the
noted Nelms case wherein two At
lanta sisters disappeared, and whose
fate has never been learned.
The indictment also accuses her
husband, Victor Innes, who has four
years of a seven-year sentence to
serve at the state farm, of using
the mails to defraud by obtaining
money from Mrs. Eloise Nelms Den
niss, of Atlanta. Mrs. Innes was
arrested Tuesday when she complet
ed a three-year sentence at the farm.
She expects to go to Portland, Ore.,
to live with a son until her trial.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
IN USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS
Always bears
Signature of
TUESDAY, MARCH SO, IJJ2O.
SENATOR JOHNSON
SAYS LEAGUE IS
DOMINANT ISSUE
BUFFALO. N. Y., March 27.—Sen
ator Hiram Johnson, of California,
candidate for the Republican nomi
nation for president, opened his New
York state campaign with speeches
here last night in which he declared
that the League of Nations must be
the dominant issue in the coming
presidential contest.
“Between the president and those
of us who have been making this
fight in Washington there is just
this difference,” said Mr. Johnson at
a mass meeting tonight. “I would
not send a single American boy
across the sea to his death in a
boundary dispute between Rumania
and Serbia or any other countries
situated in Europe. If I had the
power I would sear in every man’s
mind, Article Ten of the League of
Nations. I would make you under
stand that under that article you
guarantee to preserve the territorial
integrity from external aggression
of every nation on the face of the
earth.”
“America is the only nation which
got nothing out of the war, said
Senator Johnson, reciting the terri
torial concessions made by the peace
conference to allied nations. He de
clared President Wilson was “bam
boozled” by Premiers Lloyd George
and Clemenceau' 4« Paris.
In an address this afternoon Sen
ator Johnson asserted that he, not
General Leonard Wood, had won the
presidential preferential primary in
Minnesota.
“I went into Minnesota, where the
state machine is for Wood,” he said.
“They repealed the presidential pref
erence law and then the machine
called a trick primary to be held in
the middle of winter between 7:30
and 8:30 o’clock in the evening and
with a lot of voting places not an
nounced. The conditions disenfran
chised the farmers. But I went into
Minneapolis and St. Paul and called
on the people to repudiate the ma
chine and they did.
“I have with me the figures of the
primary vote there and they show I
won. But the Associated Press "has
not sent out these figures and has
allowed the impression to prevail
that Wood carried Minnesota.”
Hoke Smith Club
Being Formed by
Voters of Putnam
EATONTON, Ga„ March 27.—The
announcement that Senator Hoke
Smith had consented to the use of
his name in the presidential primary
in Georgia has met with favorable
aproval by the people of Putnam
county, and it is thought that he
will easily carry this county by a
very large vote. A Hoke Smith club
is being formed by his friends here,
and already has a large number and
his supporters are active and -nthu
siastic. The senior senator has al
ways carried Putnam in his cam
paigns and present public sentiment
seems to be squarely behind him in
the fight that he is now making. A
large number of the people in Put
nam do not believe that the delega
tion from Georgia ought to go to
San Francisco throttled and they are
delighted that the senator has
thrown his hat into the ring on this
proposition; they believe that the
best man available ought to be nom
inated in the convention to carry the
Democratic banner, and that Georgia
ought not be bottled by the politi
cians. Unless sentiment changes.
Putnam will be found on the 2)th of
April in the Hqke Smith column.
Bandits Rob Clothing
Shop But Refuse to
Take Woman’s Money
PHILADELPHIA, March 27.
Three bandits, with a show of polite
ness, held up a clothing shop on the
second floor of a Chestnut street
building today, bound and gagged
four men and a girl, gathered to
gether nearly S4OO, four watches and
some clothing and escaped.
They refused to take the money of
a girl customer, saying they would
not rob a lady; returned to her escort
a dollar for car fare, and also let a
junk dealer who happened to be in
the store to buy waste paper, retain
his money. The bandits selected
new suits of clothing and spring
overcoats, and left the four men and
girl bound and gagged in the shop
One of the victims managed to
loosen himself and notified a traffic
policeman standing a few feet from
the store.
As Dead ajkthe Dodo
Every druggist in town—your druggist and everybody’s drug
gist has noticed a great falling off in the sale of calomel. They
all give the same reason. Dodson’s Liver Tone is taking its
place.
“Calomel is dangerous and people know it, while Dodson’s
Liver Tone is perfectly safe and gives better results,” said a
prominent local druggist.
Take “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Instead!
Dodson’s Liver Tone is personally
guaranteed by every druggist who
sells it. A large bottle costs but a
few cents, and if it fails to give easy
relief in every case of liver sluggish
ness and constipation, you have only
to ask for your money back.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a pleasant
tasting, - purely vegetable remedy,
harmless to both children and adults.
| Here it the newest creation in fine China making
“ a t >eaut ' fu ' 42-piece tet made of exquisite ware.
391 Each piece is full aixe. decorated with the popular
- • ——
Wlt * l In addition to these deco-
‘WLKv*- ®4tW rations each piece wilt be decorated ‘Ktllfsar'cf
Kl ’witbrocrpersoeilinitialapcreeold.orthe
eablea at any fnteraity. Masonic. Odd
—., - nr p e How», K. of P., Woodman. Elks, Moo«e. etc. *
TWf aecomplhhment It absolutely new In fine china making, and gives your art an added personal value—
and exdiMlra man heirloom. J tut think, we gi.oit Io yon aboolutely tree for tollies jour trlenda
' ■ KIBLER’S ALL ’ROUND OIL
J* perfect furniture polish, cleaner and brightener, rurt preventive and leather preserver. ■ ,
It a the national standby. Takes the drudgery out of deanlng—makes cleaning a pleasure in over two mil* . '
lion homes. It is so well known that it aclls on sight. To get thia beautiful dinner or eash commission Fwwwe
—simply order and sell 30 bottles of this wonderful oU at 50 cents each. Return efro 315.00 ooUected and lskr»«es
Lbe dmoor ask is jours. v t—j
JI? MON £ Y - W e I°® Bn<l uke hack if you cannot sell lu Order today, giving your toniewdu 8
nearert express office. Be the first to enjoy the luxury of these new. novel and beautiful dishes. n- inr |
nmKIBUR COMPANY. DEPT. A72 INDEANAPOUS, IND, S J
SPEEDY REPEAL OF
WAR-TIMELAWS
ISOBJECTSOW
WASHINGTON, Mar. 27.—With
the speedy repeal of restrictive war
time laws as their main aim, Repub
lican house leaders tonight had com
pleted plans for rushing through the
lower branch of congress next week
a joint resolution declaring peace be
tween the United States and Ger
many.
Confidence was expressed by Speak
er Gillett and Republican Leader
Mondell that sentiment for a straight
out peace resolution is so strong in
the house that it can be passed with
little delay. Close political friends
of President Wilson have not yet ap
proved the plan, and a fight rivaling
the peace treaty battles of the sen
ate may ensue. One plan which will
be considered is to fix April 6, the
third anniversary of America’s en
trance into the war, as the peace
date, while others favor allowing
the final enactment of the resolution
to fix the date. At present, the Re
publican leaders are making every
effort to bring up the resolution in
the house Tuesday. According to the
program outlined today by Mr. Mon
dell, the resolution, which has been
framed by prominent Republicans
of the house, will be submitted to
the foreign affairs committee Mon
day, where speedy approval will be
given, even if some administration
friends on the committee should ob
ject. The rules committee is ex
pected then to make it in order for
consideration Tuesday.
A preliminary poll of the house
by the party whips shows that the
resolution probabfly will oibtain a
majority, but as yet no one has ac
certained whether it will be approv
ed by a two-thirds vote needed to
enact it over a presidential veto.
Resolution Modified
Leaders now have shorn the reso
lution of several points that prob
ably would arouse antogonism. In
its present form it makes no men
tion of Germany carrying out the
peace treaty .or any international
policy, the position being taken that
all questions involving the treaty
should be left to the president and
the senate. In these particulars,
the measure differs from the Knox
resolution. Because of these
changes, house leaders have no
doubt of its constitutionality and ef
fectiveness in ending the war laws,
even if it should have to be passed
over a presidential veto. They point
out that congress always has the
power to repeal all measures that
aiiect conditions within the United
States through setting aside a veto,
if that action is necessary.
“Our plan is simply to make a
flat declaration of peace and fix a
date around which the expirations
of all restrictive war laws will piv
ot,” Mr. Mondell said. “I felt that in
this form the resolution would meet
with general approval, as the feel
ing exists that the continuance of
these laws for more than a year
after hostilities have ceased is de
laying the return of the country to
a normal basis.”
MantWho Escaped
From Penitentiary
in 1918 Surrenders
Alex Thomas, who, in 1918, was
sentenced to eight years in the state
penitentiary for burglary and who
escaped from the chaingang three
months after he began his sentence,
walked into the office of the state
prison comihisSlon Friday afternoon
and gave himself up. He was accom
panied by Attorney William Trawick,
of Cedartown. Ga., and declared that
he was ready to complete his prison
term.
Thomas told the commissioners
that he had been working in Fort
Worth, Tex., earning ?1 an hour as
a painter, but that he had been un
able to communicate with his wife
and three children in Cedartown for
fear that the authorities might trace
him through letters. He said he
preferred returning to Georgia to
serve the balance of his sentence
rather than remaining in hiding
where he could obtain no news of
his family.
Commissioner E. L. Rainey gave
Thomas money to pay his railroad
fare to Milledgeville and Thomas
left on a night train to report to
the warden at the state farm. He
escaped from the Habersham county
chaingang in June, 1918. after hav
ing been transferred to that gang
from the state penitentiary.
Take a spoonful at night and wake
up feeling fine; no biliousness, sick
headache, acid stomach or constipated
bowels. It doesn’t gripe or cause in
convenience all the next day like vio
lent calomel. Take a dose of calomel
today and tomorrow you will feel
weak, sick and nauseated. Don’t lose
a day’s work! Take Dodson’s Liver
Tone instead and feel fine, full of
vigor and ambition.
State That Wreck of
Royal Palm Train Was
Work of a Criminal
MACON, Ga., March 27.—The
wreck of the Royal Palm, fast pas
senger train on the Southern Rail
way, near here yesterday, resulting
in two deaths, was caused by some
one deliberately tampering with a
switch at Adams Park, F. P. Pelter,
general superintendent of the South
ern, today. Special agents of the
railway company are investigating
with a view to arresting the guilty
persons. E. A. Bond, engineer, and
H. E. Tidwell, fireman, were crush
ed to death when the engine struck
the switch and turned over. Bot
lived in Macon, and their funerals
will take place here tomorrow.
HAS WINTER
WH YOU
DOWN?
Sickness That Lingers, or
Strain of Caring for Oth
ers, Makes Spring
Days Dangerous
Get Back Your Strength
Red Blood Means Old-Time
Vigor, and Pepto-Mangan
Builds Rich, Red Blood
Perhaps you’ve been ill this ■win
ter —or others In the family have,
and you’ve worn yourself out witn
extra burdens. And now yo&f
strength is slow to return.
Week after week you’ve felt too
tired for anything, and have looked
it, too —color bad, eyes dull, and no
enthusiasm.
When you don’t feel well you are
not well. Probably what you need
right now is the good blood tonic,
Pepto-Mangan. Physicians every
where recommend Pepto-Mangan for
run-down, anemic people. Ask your
doctor about it. Pepto-Mangan sup
plies the things that blood-starved
people lack. It puts iron and vigor
in the blood. It paints the cheeks
in Nature’s way, and restores the
hearty appetite.
The blood is naturally sluggish in
the Spring and the whole family
would profit by taking Pepto-Man
gan, which tones up and builds up.
It Is pleasant-tasttng and soon makes
you feel better. Your own druggist
has it ready for your call, and in
both liquid and tablet form, just as
you prefer.
But to be certain that you get the
genuine Pepto-Mangan, ask for it by
the full name, “Gude’s Pepto-Man
gan.” Look for the name “Gude’s”
on the package.—(Advt.)
Order by Mail and Save
Spring and Summer
Merchandise
at Less than
Mill Prices
SHEETING, yard wide. Father George
brand, best quality, made in a 4-yard
sheeting. Very special, yard .....wo
APRON GINGHAMS, full standard
check ginghams, 27-inch wide, Amos
keag and Camperdown brands, brown,
blue and black check*. 35c value. Spe
cial 890
BLEACHING, yard wide, excellent
quality, beautiful finish. Very spe
cial rd-
LONGCLOTH, extra fine quality, sold in
10-yard bolt. Big value at ....Soo yd.
DRESS GINGHAM, beet quality, 27-
inch; Spring’s newest colors and pat
terns; less than mill prices ~..350 yd.
PAJAMA CHECKS, yard wide, very fine
quality; worth 40c. Big value at 300 yd.
LADLASSIE OLOTH, 27-lnch, beautiful
new Spring patterns, excellent quality;
worth 50c; short lengths ...... .35c yd*
CURTAIN SCRIM, excellent quality,
white with plain border. Big
value 15c yd.
PERCALES, 36-inch, excellent quality,
attractive light stripe, colorings for
Shirts and Dresses; big value at 45c.
Special 32% c
PAGEANT CREPE, 86-lneh wide, laven
der, flesh, extra fine quality, makes at
tractive dresses. Yard 18c
RAJAH SILKS, 32-lnch, all Spring’s
favorite shades; worth $2. Special $1.45
HICKORY SHIRTING, good quality,
blue and white, brown and white
stripes, at 29c yd.
FANCY FLOWERED Voiles, 27-inch,
big range of new patterns and colors,
at, yard 39c
FLOWERED FLAXON, 29-lnch, big va
riety of beautiful new Spring floral de
signs of many colorings. Big value,
yard only 42%0
DARK PERCALE, 36-inch wide, strictly
fast colors, big range of attractive
dress patterns. Very special, yard 39c
HUCK TOWELS, good standard size,
plain white, good quality ~..230 each
TURKISH TOWELS, 15x28, extra good
quality, good weight. Special .23c each
TURKISH TOWELS, 20x37, extra good
quality, heavy weight, worth 50c whole
sale. Very special 39cxeach
MEN’S WORK SHIRTS, best quality,
blue Chambray, cut very full, well sew
ed, sizes 14% to 17; market price $2.
Our low price $1.45
WOMEN’S “WUNDBRHOSE,” black
and white cotton hose; regular selling
price 50c; sizes 8% to 10. Special
price 290 pair
MEN’S MERCERIZED HALFHOSE,
black, navy, white and Palm Beach,
sizes 9% to 11%; 40c quality. Spe
! clal ...,25c pair
> MEN’S HALF HOSE, full mercerized,
I double heels and toes. Colors, black,
I white, navy, tan and Palm Beach; reg
-1 ular 60c sellers. Special 45c pair
■ CURTAIN SCRIM, cream and ecru, 36-
[ inch, 2-inch hemmed edge, excellent-
I quality. Very special 200
DIMITY CHECKS, extra sheer quality,
new Spring goods, 27-inch. Very special,
yard 200
MADRAS SHIRTING, 36-inch, extra fine
quality, big variety of nobby, attractive
colorings. Big value, yard 89c
MADRAS SHIRTING, 32-inch, excellent
quality, very attractive designs and col
! orings. A bargain, yard 65e
I MISSES’ HOSE, 7% to 9, black and
white. Big value, 2 pairs for 25c
BEACH CLOTH, about 36-inch, white,
tan, copen, and light blue; excellent
material for middy suits, skirts and
! children's garments. Special, yard ,59c
FLOWERED VOILES, 36-inch wide,
beautiful floral designs; many exquisite
I colorings; $1 value, at 85c yd.
EMBROIDERY CLOTH, 36-inch wide,
tin®, smooth finish, most desirable for
Middy suits, skirts and children’s -
dresses; 50c value. Special 35c
PEPPERELL SHEETING, one of the
most desirable grades made, guaranteed
for its wearing and laundering qualities.
It contains no filling and will prove ab
solutely dependable.
Pepperell, bleached, 10x4, at 99c
Pepperell, unbleached, 10x4, at 95c
Pepperell, bleached, 9x4, at 95c
Pepperell, unbleached, 9x4, at 89c
MEN’S KHAKI Overalls, good weight,
elastic back, well made, heavy denim.
Special $1.1|5
SILK POPLIN, full 36-in. wide, green,
navy, rose, light blue, purple; fine fin
ish; excellent quality; worth sl-W-
Special „ 98c.
Compare these prices with those you are
paying in your town.
HOBBS-HENDERSON CO..
Greenville, S. C., Box 202. 111
South’s Largest Mall Order
Selling Direct from Mills. 8919
Owing to our extremely low priffH'Twe
are compelled to charge customers par
cel post charges. Send 5c per dollar
with order; surplus refunded..l3 A
REFERENCE: ANY GRJSENWtM'E
BANK. MONEY REFUNDED. IF VNOT
SATISFACTORY. W «
3