Newspaper Page Text
2
BtACK-DRAUSHT
AS A PREVENTIVE
b
When You Begin Feeling Bad
With Feverishness, Head
ache, Cold, or Constipa
tion, Give Your Liver a
Tonic —Take Black-
Draught
Candler, N. C. —‘'I 'don't believe
there is a better medicine made than
Black-Draught; I have used It and
my mother's folks used it for colds,
feverishness, headache and deranged
liver.” This statement recently was
made by Mr. G. B. Trull, a well-known
farmer on Route 3, this place.
“I have, before now. begun feeling
dull, a headache would come on, and
I would feel all full of qpld, and take
a few doses of Black-Draught and
get all right." adds Mr. Trull.
‘‘Last year my brother had measles,
flu and pneumonia. They wired us;
I went to Camp Jackson to look him
up. Down there different ones were
using preventatives. I stayed with
him. The only thing I used was
Black-Draught. It kept my system
cleansed and I kept well and strong.”
By keeping your liver and stomach
tn good order, you stand in little dan
ger of catching serious ills that
occasionally spread through town and
country.
Get a package of Black-Draught
and have it ready for the first symp
tom of a disordered liver.
Most druggists sell Black-Draught, i
(Advt.) |
I
DoritSend
a Penny*
Send just your name ano
aajßHSygraffifc address Let us send for
.■WsgEaSfeigik. your approval this truly
gorgeous fancy flowered ,
Voile frock—a delight tc
every girl’s and woman’s
• F heart. Just the exqui-
Sj .Js' site, modish model
J; you’ve set your heart
on having. An exact
/T " duplicate of the expensive
shown in America’s i
j&RS’ \ most exclusive fashion
’ 'Wk shops. And the price
V£ we are able to Bet on ’*
SwiSR-® amazingly low —a
aKi'arlSi li bargain never ■
eSSFfi&ASk'''known in fash
aßf. gstsffio W, Sfc&Kw ion’s history.
gg- ’<■ You cannot
duplicate it
at double
f-CSSw twwtyfliflsw our price.
/Av Send only
your name
JbsSs a n d address.
i&S&fSi See yourself in
this stunning,new
»AS W’ frock. If not over-
joyed with its won-
f&Sr £'?¥£%'' Is ira derful lines and
wfe. quality, return it.
I The try-on will
f Cs cost you nothing.
wUIBB Latent
w MH jib Wj^°d e *
wOtolVoil e
wMEI Dress
Bargain
lIT
Jag exquisite new design
>3a» Suill flared tunic
ffjSWsEW wSsf W now the smartest
fashion See the
BHaK ii'jy-?-: smart white organdy
EIMKE
-ome pattern Val laoe.
Vestee trimmed with
Eii3ara»w: : ;aggl;Bßg fine bearl buttons.
»?§'•Sleeves % length. Full
w*~" skirt. Colors: Navy
Blue, Rose or Lavender, i
JgteSg Sizes, bust 34 to 46 Misses,
EM bust 32 to 38. Order by No.
8882 for Blue, 8883 for
rfgOl >3 Rooe > 8884 for Lavender.
Be sure to give size.
Don’t 1 RUSH yours before
TL vr ’* • dfc/jr" they are all gone. At our
wTO price they are sure to be
~Z ■ re® snapped up quickly Few
111 OU/ N 3 women can resist such an
' ,,r ’I unusual bargain. Send no
money—just your name and address—now Then pay
sur low price, $4.95 for dress on arrival. Examine and
try it on. If you think you can duplicate it at double
our price—if for any reason you do not wish to keep
■t—return it and we refund your money. _
LEONARD-MORTON& Co.,Dept 6343 Chicago
HOW TO DESTROY A
GOOD DISPOSITION
Bad digestion will ruin the best
disposition. If the world looks dark
and blue, if you feel as if you never
wanted to smile again, if you are
generally “out of sorts” and feel
gloomy, staffed up and uncomforta
ble, just take a Foley Cathartic Tab
let. Relieves mean headaches, bil
iousness. bloating, sour stomach, con
stipation and other ills that follow
disordered digestion. This fine and
wholesome physic Sweetens the stom
ach and invigorates the liver.
Cleanses the bowels without grip
ing or nausea. Sold everywhere.
(Advt.)’
Ji •Ji
V|jjTonight\
f Tbmorrow Alright \
Draws Like Bet
Flax-Seed Poultice
h£ax>s stubborn old sores
FROM BOTTOM UP.
Just like a tiot flaxseed poultice, Allen I
Ulceriue Salve draws out poisons and gertni
from boils, sores and wounds and heals their
from the bottom up. It heals in one-thirc
time that common salves and liniments take
Allen’s L'lceriiie salve is one of the oldest
remedies in America, and since 188 U has beet
known as the only salve powerful enough t<
reach chronic ulcers and old sores of lonj
standing. Because it draws out the poisom
mid heals from the bottom up it seldou
leaves a scar, and relief is usually perma
nent By mail G.’>c. Book free. J. P. Allei
Medicine Co.. Dept. 82. St. Paul, Minn.
;rn Davis, Avery, lex., writes: “1 uud ;
chronic sore on my foot for years and doctor
said it would never heal without scrapiui
the hone. One box of Allen's (Jlcerine Salv,
drew out pieces of b.uic and lots of pus, am
it healed up permanently."—<Advt.)
E<?l * Mink and Muskratfl
vyiltClS JT I SFB a in lard© numbers, with the
MKjaa 9 New foldln£< Galvanized
Steel V/ire Net. Catchca
tkem like a fly-trap catches flies. Mado in ell sizes.
Write for Price Lict. end FtvO Booklet on beet bait evci
discovered for attractingaH kinds of fish. Agents wanted,
W ALTOM SUPPLY CO, R-22. St. Uuit.Mtt.
THE ATLANTA TRI WEEKLY JOURNAL.
TIFTON’S TOBACCO
PLANT INTERESTS
A. B. & A. OFFICIALS
TIFTON, Ga.. May 15.—“1 was
surprised and delighted at the size
of the tobacco stemmery and re
drying plant at Tifton,” said Vice
President J. 1,. Edwards, of the At
lanta. Birmingham and Atlantic rail
way, this morning, after a visit to
the plant.
“Then, I was told that it was by
far tile smallest of such plants un
der the management of the Imperial
Tobacco company, and that It was
so designed that its capacity could ,
be doubled and even trebled. This |
shows that the tobacco people re
gard that industry here as assured '
of success and gives an idea of Its ;
immense possibilities. Your contrac
tors are making splendid progress
and I was surprised at the number
of men at work.”
A'bunch of live wires in the de
velopment of south Georgia and ,
especially the section traversed by I
tlie Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlan- j
tic. spent the day in Tifton, taking
a look at the big tobacco plant in
process of erection and other points
of interest about the city, especial
ly its industrial enterprises. In the
partv were J. D. Edwards, vice presi
dent’; W. W. Croxton. general pas
segei agent, and R. H. McKay, su
perintendent of transportation.
Discussing the closing down of
the packing plant at Tifton. Mr.
Croxton expressed concern at the
problem of having a reliable supply
of hogs to keep the market going
the year round.
“This can only be done with an
all-the-year-round pasturage,” he
said. "The best pasturage of this
kind that I have seen is in Thomas
county, and is the result of five,
years’ study and development. Tins
pasturage is not only luxuriant, but
keeps cattle and hogs fat for eight
months of the year, five of these
the months when hogs through here
must be fed from the barns. I wisn
every newspaper man and every live
stock man in this section could see
that pasture.
“Marketing hogs In the summer
is a new thing for this territory
Previously, they were not produced ]
for market in the spring and sum
mer because there was no market
here. Now that your packing plants
have supplied the market, the grow
ers will soon be supplying the hogs—
more than the present plants can
vse There are a few problems to
solve, but I believe that your peo
”le will work them out. and that
the dav is not far distant when your
l acking plants will not only have
■ill thev can do the year around,
lut they will have to enlarge to
take care of the live stock offered.
Sugar Dealers Would
Be Regulated Under
Measure in House
WASHINGTON. May 15.—Sugar
dealers would be required to sell
thair holdings according to unifo-’m
prices filed with the federal trade
commission or pay a tax of 2 cents a
pound on all sugar sold, under a bill
introduced in the house today by
Representative Steenerson, Minne
sota.
Champion Diver Dies
From Taxicab Injuries
NEW YORK, May 15. Arthur
McAleenan, champion diver, died to
day in Roosevelt hospital from in
juries sustained Monday in a taxicab
'accident.
McAleenan, a former Yale student
and inter-collegiate champion diver in
1913-14-14, was to have departed
shortly to take part in the Olympic
contests in Antwerp.
Kansas Is Hit by
May Snow Storm
" TOPEKA. Kans., May la,—Snow
and freezingfl temperatures w’ere
the weather conditions today in
northwestern Kansas. Goodland re
ported a temperature of 32 degrees
and snow falling, the weather bu
reau here announced.
MIELLOSK’
OUT IH SOUTH
I
Mr. Dodson, the “Liver
Tone” Man, Responsible
for Change for the
Better
Every druggist in town has noticed
a great falling off in the sale of calo
mel. They all give the same reason.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is taking its
place.
“Calomel is dangerous and people
know it.” Dodson’s Liver Tone is
personally guaranteed by every drug
gist who sells it. A large bottle
doesn’t cost very much but if it fails
to give easy relief in every case of
liver sluggishness and constipation,
just ask for your moriey back.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a pleasant
tasting, purely vegetable remedy,
harmless to both children and adults.
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.—(Advt.)
Summer Merchandise at
Less Than Mill Prices
MEN’S Overalls, good heavy blue
denim, well made; worth $2.65.
Special $1,95
LONGCLOTH, extra fine quality:
worth 32c at mills. Sold in 10-yard
bolt. Very special $2.98
SEA ISLAND unbleached 36-inch;
very fine quality; worth 35c. Spe
cial 25c
HICKORY SHIRTING, good quality,
blue and white, brown and white
stripes; worth 39c, at 29c
FRENCH TWILL, about 57incli
wide; suitable for shirts, middy or
suits, pillow eases and sheets; snow
white; biggest value of the season;
worth §7. Special 59c
PIQUE, 36-in.; very fine quality;
worth 59c. Special 49c
WOMEN’S Wunderhose, good service
able lisle hose, black and white;
worth 35c. Special 29c
HOBBS HENDERSON CO.,
Greenville, S. C., Box 202.
“South’s Largest Mail Order
House selling direct from Mills.”
Send 5c per dollar for parcel post
charges. Surplus refunded. Money
refunded if desired. SEND FOR
our SPECIAL SUMMER PRICE
LIST.
3 Rings and Bracelet FREE
S® ll Bboxes Rosebud Salve at 25c bcm
TUaUr Valuable preparation for burns, pores, Utter,
piles, catarrh, corns, bunions, etc. Return the IE
»and we will send these 4 beautiful gold plated
warranted, ot
choice from
lax sc catalog -
* salve today
wc trust
IgT** 2 YOU
Rosebud PerfumeCo.Box 102 Woodsboro.Md
Lace Curtains .Rogers
‘V Silver Sets, fne Lockets,
15 BrfME o>^s w LaValliersand.inany other
u val uable presents fer se 11 -
ing onr beautiful Art & Re
ligious pictures at lOcts. each.
Orde: 20 pictures.when sold sendtho
*2.00 and chooie premium wanted* according to big list.
MAY AMT CO., Dept. 3 * CHIOAOOjUs.
CAMPHOR LEAVES NOW HARVESTED
BY TRIMMING “REAPER”
A
\ lu, k
Si
-
Camphor Harvester
The next time you go to a drug
store to have your camphor bottle j
refilled refresh the memory with i
the fact that? this common household |
article grows on trees down in Flor- I
ida and other Gulf states. The |
leaves, twigs and small branches are
cut from the tree- at two or more
seasons of the year yvhen the main
growth has become dormant. The
green material is conveyed to a dis
tilling plant where the camphor is
extracted.
The camphor trees are cultivated!
in rows as you would any other
crop. Tillage is comparatively easy,
but, in harvesting the leaves an J
twigs the job is both a tedious and
expensive operation. Heretofore the
camphor-making material has been
clipped from the tree by hand, which
costly procedure doubtless is re
sponsible for the advancing price
of the product. Thanks, however, to
the inventive skill of a specialist
in the bureau of plant industry, U.
S. department of agriculture, a ma
chine has been perfected for strip
ping the camphor trees of their
leaves, twigs and small branches. >
This is accomplished without injury!
to the limbs or impairment of the,
productive capacity of the tree.
Early Ratification of
Suffrage Amendment
Seen by Id 7 . J. Bryan
ByWILLIAM JB NN INGS B3YM
Syndicate, Inc.)
It seems very probable that the
suffrage amendment will be ratiiied
by the necessary thirty-six states
before the conventions meet, but
even if ratification is not completed
before the conventions are held, it is
quite certain that it will be complet
ed before the election. But even it
national suffrage should fail to be
accomplished in time to admit all
the women of the country to partici
pate in the election, a con'ideratle
majority of them will vote this fall
by virtue of states constitution ors
state statutes, and the early enfran
chisement of women is as certain as
any future event can be.
Tennessee is quite sure to vote
for the national amendment next
winter although the state, because a
special session is not authorized by
the constitution, will be unable to
Wi its name upon the roll of hon
or now. Florida, too, is quite cer
tain to ratify although immediate
attention is prevented by a constitu
tional pro. siori which denies to the
rlejjsjatuye the., -..right to ratify a
measire, that'?i«»<’. x fiubniitted before
Hie legfarjattu'e was elected. Besides
these there are states which
are certain to ratify if special ses
sions are called.
Assuming,.’therefore, that univer
sal woman suffrage is a matter of
less than a year if not a matter of a
few’’ months,’ it worth while to
consider the effect of women’s en
trance in the arena of politics.
Many well-meaning men have
stoutly resisted the proposed en
franchisement of woman out of fear
that the exercise of suffrage might
in some way work t.O the injury of
the home. This argument lacks
force, first, because it is a prophecy
with nothing in history to support it,
and. second, because it is in line
with similar objections that have
been made to every advance step
taken by civilization. There was a
time when the education of the
masses was believed by sincere peo
ple to threaten the destruction of so
ciety. That was the aristocratic
notion that some had. They thought
the Lord intended only a few to be
educated —just enough to do the
thinking for the people while the
uneducated would devote their time
to the drugery of life. Now. univer
sal education is the ideal of civiliz
ed countries and we wonder how any
person could have broug himself
to the point of condemning a large
majority of his fellow men to the
ni~ht of ignorance.
The Strongest Argument
Even after the value of education
for men was admitted, some good
people were afraid to extend educa
tion to women for fear that it would
make them mannish —unsex them, as
•.t were. But now the young women
of America, on the average, carry
their school education to a higher
point than the young men. as any
one will realize who visits the high
schools. And who now doubts the
value of education for women?
When I visited Mexico some twenty
years ago. and noticed the girls in
school with the boys. I mentioned
the matter to President Diaz, and he
promptly replied, “It is more im
portant that the women shall be ed
ucated than that the men shall be,
because the mother is the child’s
first teacher.”
In like manner there are many
good people in Asia who really be
lieve that it -would demoralize society
if women did not veil their faces, al
though visitors to Oriental cities
soon begin to suspect that the thick
ness of the veil varies in inverse
proportidn to the woman’s beauty—*
the fairer the face, the thinne- the
veil. Even in Asia the women are
breaking away from this custom and
who, in this country at least, will
doubt that woman is better because
of her acquaintance with society and
that society is improved by her pres
ence? In no country can there be
found better mothers an.l wives than
in the '.'i '<-d States, an.: ncre we
come nearer to universal education,
and woman’s face is not concealed.
The strongest argument in favor of
suffrage is that it has been success
ful wherever tried. Four of our
states have had woman’s suffrage for
more than twenty-five years and in
none of these has there been a move
ment looking to a return to manhood
suffrage alone. Why? If suffrage
was a menace to the home would not
the fact be discovered in twenty-five
years of experience under that sys
tem? And if the test had shown
that the home suffered because of
woman’s political activity, would not
woman herself have been the. first
to ask for its abolition? It is a re
flection on the women in the suf
frage states to suggest that their
interest in politics so outweighs their
\ interest in the home as to make them
; indifferent to the harm done by wom
tin’s suffrage, if it really does harm,
i And the men in the suffrage states,
how can their silence be explained?
f-lavc they no interest in their houses?
If suffrage had actually injured the
home might we not expect the or
ganized husbands to protest against
. an institution destructive or domes
tic obligations?
The war question is one upon
which the women have a fixed opin
ion that is not likely to be changed
by party platforms or speeches of
candidates. None fight more strong
ly for their rights than women, but
they shrink from the tragedies of the
battlefield. They, rather than' the
rrten, have been the victims of war
j The man who dies upon the bactle-
I The camphor-tri mining mechan
! ism, consisting of six parts, is so
| complete that the leaves and twigs
; are not only whipped into the knives
iof the cutting apparatus but are
afterward deposited into burlap
bags. The operating machinery is
conveyed on a truck fitted with a
framework of iron, on which is
likewise located an internal-combus
tion engine. A cutting frame for
severing the leaves and branches
!• from the camphor trees is supported
by springs, thus minimizing vibra
tion. The cutter bar is held firm
ly at a proper angle for cutting the
twigs, a reel whipping the branches
into the cutting blades. Canvas
aprons convey the severed material
i into burlap sacks attached to the
rear of the truck.
Three men are required to operate
the device, which is drawn by two
mules. However, with the prospec
tive use of tractors, two men can
direct its workings. Already under
the system of hand-clipping the
profitable production of camphor in
1 Florida and other southern states
i had been threatened. Machinery will
| minimize considerably production
i costs.
field, dies gloriously; he suffered but
for a moment, and his name is writ
ten upon monuments, while the moth
er moves on to the grave with slow
and unsteady steps instead of being
supported by a stalwart son, and the
wife, because of the husband’s death,
assumes a double duty to the child
whom the soldier leaves dependent.
We are hoping that the lessons of
the awful war out of which the world
has just emerged will be sufficient to
shake even men out of warlike In
ch n a t i on.
Farmer Shot to Death
By 15-Year-Oldßoyin
Quarrel at Aberdeen
ABERDEEN, Ga., May 15. —One
man is dead and another seriously
wounded as a result of a heated ar
gument here late this afternoon be
tween Arthur Stinchcomb and Will
Brown, both prominent farmers of
this section. Brown is dead, the re
sult of gunshot wounds inflicted by
the fifteen-year-old son of Stinch
comb, while Stinchcomb is said to be
in a dying condition from two pistol
shots fired by Brown.
According to witnesses. Brown
was engaged in a heated argument
with a Mr. WhitlocK, also of this
community, when Stinchcomb. who
is the town marshal, attempted to
quiet the two men. Brown, it is
said, turned upon Stinchcomb and
fired his revolver twice into him,
inflicting wounds which may cause
his death.
Learning that his father had been
shot, the fifteen-year-old son of
Stinchcomb secured a Winchester
rifle and shot Brown through the
right breast, death being almost in
stantaneous. At a late hour Satur
day night no arrests had been made.
Fire Destroys 200 Bales
Os Linters at Chester, S. C.
CHESTER. S. C., May 15.—Fire,
believed tc have been caused by a
spark from a passing locomotive,
practically destroyed 200 bales of
linters at the Southern Cotton Seed
Oil company headquarters here, en
tailing a loss of $7,000. Seventy
bales belonged to the company, while
130 belonged to the government. The
company's was insured, and it is not
known whether the government’s was
or not. Effective work of the fire
men saved many other bales of
linters.
—I
Another Royal Suggestion I
1 MUFFINS and POPOVERS f
j From the New Royal Cook Book
fl TTREAKFAST is too “S «”d beat »»«! smooth. |
a ,, , Bake in greased muffin tins &•
s JLjP often eaten as a duty i n h ot oven 2 o t o 25 minutes. $
| rather than a joy. The sue- C om
| cess of the day may depend ~,p c 0„ meal
$ upon the spirit of break- i‘i cups flour A
| fast. The Royal Education- r
! al Department presents ’MSSSS'Lg.r
s some breakfast dishes that i cup milk &
will send the children to stabiwoons .bort.™,
I school with a hip hip hur- Sift together corn meal, flour, n
i rah and his majesty man baking powder, salt and su- g
r to his daily duties with the B ga ' ; add ® clted short - |
I -up and doing” feeling Qf | | I
which knows no discour- and drop two tablespoons of k
agement. P W WBf M S mixture into each. Bake about ■
Muffins 35 minutes in hot oven. H
h'XSZiw.iß.m DAlfTkir . . ! ’= r =" :s
Powder iTfc £> TT 2cupsflour
1 tablespoon sugar - Jll 18 H teaspoon salt 3)
% teaspoon salt 2 eggs
1 cup milk 2 CU P S j
ltablespoon shortening n K FTh T’O A Ro ” r and sa,t / i
Sift together floor, baking I
powder, sugar and salt; add JS. VW W V stif smooth< Pour Jnto
milk, well-beaten eggs and j lot g rcase( j g eni pans and
melted shortening; mix well. flags file bake 25 to S 5 minutes in a
| Grease* muffin tins and put Jr very hot oven. If taken out
9 two tablespoons of batter in- o f oven too soon they will
| to each. Bake in hot oven 20 f a y
® to 25 minutes. ' ■
Eggless Muffins SENT FREE
r?nvai Rnkini? New Royal Cook Book eon- g
Fl 4 teaspoons Royal Bak ng taining scores of delightful. g
Su ano-QT- economical recipes, many of ■
w? 2 tablespoons sugar them the most famous in B
K 1 use to d a y. Address &
S 2 tablespoons shortening ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. -;;
115 Tnlton Street g
Mix and sift dry ingredients, Sew York city
$ add milk and melted shorten- | —• —— |
| with Royal and be Sure }> |
,'L. —rAoar ' i Ri«MMgmwamwE3t.;maEMUMEn«»iißHW-Ti ■ i i n n—r- - iwa— ewi— ———————M
VICE PRESIDENT ■ |
EXPLAINS SPEECH
ON PROHIBITION
BY DAVID LAWRENCE
(Copyright, 1920, for The Atlanta Journal.)
WASHINGTON, May 15. Vice
President Thomas R. Marshall has
presided over the senate of the Unit
ed States for seven years and can be
therefore expected to know whereof
he speaks when he says that if pro
hibition had been submitted to a se
cret vote, it would not have gotten
twenty votes in the senate.
The writer asked the vice president
to amplify his statement, which was
originally before the Virginian bar
association.
“I want to be understood at the
outset,” said the vice president, “that
I believe in the enforcement of the
constitutional amendment on prohi
bition. It is here and is the law and
should be enforced. But I believe
that if the amendment had been voted
upon according to the individual con
victions of members of the senate it
would not have gotten twenty votes.
“Now I am not imputing motives
to anybody. I have never seen any
representatives of the brewers or
anti-saloon league around congress
and wouldn’t know them if they were
there. I believe that pie men who
voted for prohibition and for wom
an suffrage, for instance, thought the
people—a majority of their consti
tuents—wanted these amendments
passed. But that isn’t my theory of
representative government.
“As I told the lawyers at Rich
mond. the people of this country
didn’t intend in my judgment that
their representatives should be guided
by their constituents but that elected
representatives should act for them.
I don’t think when people hire a law
yer that they should ask him to do
what they want. Advice should not
come from the client to the lawyer
but from the lawyer to the client.
If the client doesn’t lie the advice,
he can get another lawyer.
“That’s the same with represen
tative government. The people in
my opinion, should trust their rep
resentatives to act for them. If
they dont like what their repre
sentatives do, they can select others
and thus repudiate what has been
done”.
“Then if you had been a member
of the senate, you would have voted
against the prohibition amendment”
the vice president was asked.
“Oh yes,” was the reply, “ —and
my views have been well known.
Mind you, I do not use liuor, never
serve it at my table, and I would
to God that no one else did, but I
object to the way prohibition has
been imposed. Though again. 1
must insist, now. that it is here,
that it must be enforced.
“As a matter of fact, irrespective
of the question of personal habits,
members of the senate whose views
about the police powers of the sev
eral states coincide with my own
surrendered their opinions when
they voted simply because they
thought it was the wish of the Peo
ple of their states. That isn’t
leadership nor representative gov
ernment in my conception of the
term.
“Indeed, lawyers, like statesmen,
are losing their influence because
they are not telling their clients
what is the law and what should be
done. Instead, lawyers, now-a-days
are listening to boards of directors
and trying to accomplish what those
boards want done —often against
the best judgement of the lawyers
themselves.”
The vice president was indorsed
bv the Virginia bar association for
the presidency—a compliment of the
occasion, no doubt, for Mr. Marshall
isn’t a candidate, active, passive,
receptive or even interested. May
be if he were he wouldn’t express
himself so frankly.
Augusta Cotton Men
Warn Against lax on
Stocks for Bonus
AUGUSTA, Ga., May 15.—The Au
gusta Cotton Exchange, at a meeting
Friday, passed esolutions warning
Georgia’s representatives in congress
that the proposed soldiers’ bonus
bill, with its provision that funds for
the purpose named be raised by a tax
upon transfers on securities, cotton,
grain, real estate and other commo
dities, will lead to a serious and far
reaching economic disturbance, and
urging Georgia senators and con
gressmen to use their influence to de
feat the measure.
The resolution, adopted by the Cot
ton Exchange, makes it plain that the
local cotton men are not lacking n
appreciation for the service render
ed by the men who went forth to bat
tle for the security of the republic,
yet they believe that the ex-service
men, themselves as has been indi
cated by the position of the Ameri
can Legion, are not in favor of the
passage of legislation that would
“plunge the nation into conditions
which may prove, if possible, worse
than war. by disrupting the very
foundations of the financial and in
dustrial prosperity of the country.”
It is recited in the resolution that,
in the opinion of local cotton men the
burden of taxation, recommended in
the bonus bill, to be put upon se
curity and commodity exchanges will
practically cause these exchanges to
cease to function, and that increased
revenue will not inure to the govern
ment, because the tax is so drastic
that dealings will be restricted to
nominal proportions, even if the ex
changes are not entirely put out of
business.
TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1920.
DISMISSAL ASKED
IN CASE AGAINST
CHAS. W. MORSE
WASHINGTON, May 15. (By the
Associated Press.) —Attorney General
Palmer was asked today by the ship
ping board to cause dismissal of the
indictment returned recently by a
federal grand jury at New York
charging Charles W. Mors© with a
conspiracy to violate the shipping act
through the alleged sale of the
steamer McCullough to La Societe
Generale De Houillen and Agglom
eres, a French corporation.
After considering the records in
the case, the board held that criminal
prosecution was not justified. It was
said. ! , at the board’s offices that the
indictment had shindered Mr. Morse
in his financial transactions that he
could not complete ships now' build
ing for the board at his plants, the
Groton Iron Works, Groton, Conn.,
and the Virginia Shipbuilding cor
poration, Alexandria, Va.
The operations of the two plants
are now being investigated by a con
gressional committee charged with
making a general inquiry into ship
ping board affairs.
Mr. Morse appeared before the
board yesterday to explain the ef
fect of the indictment on his af
fairs. He was said at board’s offices
to have asked that the board interest
itself in the matter, since he was its
agent for the execution of certain
contracts for building ships.
The McCullough is the ship for
which the board allowed Mr. Morse
3400,000 because of her destruction
by a submarine while in the service
of the array. She was requisitioned
from the United States Steamship
company, of Maine, of which Mr.
Morse is president, and before she
was taken over in 1917, the company
had entered into a contract for her
sale to the French corporation for
$500,000. This sum, the board said, it
had required the company to refund
through Brown Bros. & Co., New l.ork
bankers, when the $400,000 claim for
the ship’s destruction was paid.
The board’s announcement said
that it appeared from the contract
“that it was not the purpose to vio
late or evade the United States
statutes.”
It also was discussed that subse
quently the board decided to ask the
department of justice to prosecute
Morse in connection with the matter,
but later reconsidered this action at
the request of Bainbridge Colby, then
a member of the board and now sec
retaryof state.
How to Heal Leg Sores
A WONDERFUL treatment that
heals leg sores or Varicose Ulcers
without pain or knife is described in
a new book which the readers may
get free by writing a card or letter
to Dr. H. J. Whittier, Suite 229, 1100
Mcgee, Kansas City, Mo. —(Advt.)
Two Towns Increase
Thousand Per Cent
WASHINGTON, May 15.—The cen
sus bureau announced the following
population figures:
Waltham, Mass., 30,891, increase.
3,057, or 11.0 per cent. Dunmore, Pa.,
20,250, increase, 2,635, or 15.0 per
cent. Carbondale, Pa., 18,640. increase
I, or 9.4 per cent. Pembroke, N.
C., 329, increase 71, or 27.5 per cent.
Beaver Falls, Pa., 12,802, increase,
611, or 5.0 per cent. West Chester,
Pa., 11,717, decrease 50, or 0.4 per
cent. Old Forge, Pa., 12,237, Increase
913, or 8.1 per cent. Hamtramck,
Mich., 48,615, increase 45,056. or
1266.0 per cent. Highland Park.
Mich., 46,599, increase 42,479, or
1031.0 per cent. Dickson City, Pa.,
11, increase, 1,718, or .18.4 per
cent. Olyphant, Pa., 10,236, increase
1,731, or 20.4 per cent. Wyandotte,
Mich., 12,851, increase 4,564, or 55.1
per cent.
Neither Hamtramck nor Highland
Park, suburbs of Detroit, had more
than a few thousand inhabitants ten
years ago. Detroit’s automobile fac
tory workers sought the two towns
for homes and today the census bu
reau reported a population of 48,615
for Hamtramck and 46,599 for High
land Park.
Prior to today’s report Kenmore,
0., with an increase of 712.5 per
cent, held the record for population
growth. Kenmore, however, is
smaller than the two Michigan cities,
having - only 12,683 inhabitants.
Mobile Census Shows
60,124 Population or
16.7 Per Cent Increase
WASHINGTON, May 15.—Census
figures given out tonight were: Mo
bile, Ala., 60,124. Increase, 8,603 or
16.7 per cent. Raleigh, N. C., 24,418.
Increase 5,200 or 27.1 per cent. Suf
folk, Va., 9,123. Increase, 2,115 or
30.2 per cent.
Abilene. Texas. 10,274. Increase,
1,070 or 11.6 per cent.
Brownwood, Texas, 8,233. Increase,
1,256 or 18 per cent.
Seattle, Wash., 315,652. Increase.
78,458 or 33.1 per cent.
Lincoln, Neb., 54,935. Increase,
10,951 or 24.9 per cent.
Trenton. N. J.. 119,289. Increase,
22.474 or 23.8 per cent.
Cheltenham, Pa.. 11,015. Increase,
3.581 or 30 per cent.
"B'Fr
WHICH DO
IDO Oil?
Folks With Thin, Pale Blood
Hesitate —Feel Uncertain
SHOULD TAKE PEPTO
MANGAN
Red-Blooded Men and Wom
en Know What They Want
To Do and Do It
It may be you are just recovering
from a sick spell—or may be your
system is run down and your blood so
weak that you are in a poor shape to
resist infection—
But if you don’t feel and look ro
bust you are not robust. Such state
is often due to weak blood, not
enough red blood cells, a condition
known as anemia.
The best remedy for anemia (blood
lessness) with its low mental and
physical vigor is Gude’s Pepto-Man
gan.
Pepto-Mangan supplies the weak,
watery blood with the very elements
it needs to put new life into it. It
repairs, re-creates, and re-builds the
exhausted blood, the vital fluid of
health and life. Try Pepto-Mangan
if you are “rundown.” It cannot
harm you—it w’ill certainly help you
unless you have some deep-seated
chronic disease requiring the physi
cian’s care. Be sure the name
“Gude’s" Is on the package. Without
“Gude’s” it is not Pepto-Mangan. For
sale at all druggists.—(Advt.)
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RHEUMATISM
RECIPE
I will gladly send any Rheumatism suf
ferer a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free
that Completely Cured me of a terrible at
tack of muscular and inflammatory Rheu
matism of long standing after everything
else I tried had failed me. I have given
it to many sufferers who believed their
cases hopeless, yet they found relief from
their suffering by taking these simple herbs.
It also relieves Sciatica promptly as well as
Neuralgia, and is a wonderful blood puri
fier. You are also welcome to this Herb
Recipe if you will send for it at once. I
believe you will consider it a God Send
after you have put it to the test. There is
nothing injurious contained in it, and you
can see for yourself exactly what you are
taking. I will gladly send this Recipe—
absolutely free—to any sufferer who will
send name and address plainly written.
W. G. SUTTON, 2650 Magnolia Ave.
Los Angeles, California.
(Advt.)
MAN’S
BEST AGE
A man is as old as his organs; he
can be as vigorous and healthy at
70 as at 35 if he aids his organs in
performing their functions. Keep
your vital organs healthy with
The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric acid trouble*
since 1696; corrects disorders; stimulates
vital organs. All druggists, three sizes.
Look for the name Gold Medal on every
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I * have reduced engine prices. By in-
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If 90 Days Trial GUARANTEE I
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Rheumatism
A Home Cure Given By
One Who Had It
Tn the spring of 1893 T was attacked
by Muscular and Inflammatory Rheu
matism. I suffered" as only those who
have it know, for over three years. I
tried remedy after remedy, and doctor
after doctor, but such relief as I re
ceived was only temporary. Finally, I
found a remedy that cured me com
| plete.ly, and it has never returned. I
have given it to a number who were
terribly afflicted and even bedridden
with Rheumatism, and it effected a
cure in every case.
I want every sufferer from any form
of rheumatic trouble to try this mar
velous healing power. Don’t send a
cent; simply mail your name and ad
dress and I will send it free to try.
After you hare used it and it has
proven itself to be that long-looked-for
means of curing your rheumatism, you
may send the price of it, one dollar, but
understand, I do uot want your
unless you are perfectly satisfied to
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j| today.
Mark H. Jackson. No. 243 F Gurney ,
h Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above
statcment true.—(Advl.l