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Iron is Red-Blood Food Nuxated Iron Helps
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If you were to go without eating until you
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The liver is the largest and most I
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DRUG OQ., Box 2, Woodbore, iSG
THE ATLANTA TRI-W
i METHOD USED BY
BERGDOIITOGET
MEM)
(By Associated Press.)
PHILADELPHIA, May 22.—Tiie
method used by Grover Cleveland
I Bergdoll, convicted draft dodger, in
j escaping from his federal guard in
this city yesterday, was explained to
day by James E. Romig, a former
magistrate and friend of the Berg
doll family. Air. Romig has figured
in the Bergdoll case ever since the
latter became a deserter from the
army in 1917.
"On Thursday morning I was told
that Grover would arrive at the
..orth Philadelphia station at 8:42,"
said Mr. Romig. "I went to the sta
tion. Grover got off a New York
train with two guards. We all got in
a motor car and drove to Mrs. Berg
doll’s suburban residence. There we
left Grover and the guards.”
According to Mr. Romig’s story.
Grover went driving that afternoon
with his guards. In the evening he,
Grover and the two guards drove to
Philadelphia, returning home at mid
night. One guard slept with Grover
and the other in an adjoining room.
Yesterday morning the mechanician
was working on Grover’s car. Mr.
Romig understood it was being pre
pared for a journey. He was to ac
i company Grover, but he didn’t know
i where.
‘‘How about a search for? 150,000
| Grover is said to have buried in
Maryland?” he was asked.
"I do not know anything about
I that.”
Mr. Romig told the details of the
escape. "We were in the library,
Grover, the two guards and myself.”
he said. "Grover was reciting Shake
speare. Just when he had us all
laughing, the telephone bell rang.
Grover went into another room to
answer it. When the bell continued
to ring, one of the guards said, ‘He
didn’t answer that.’ The sergeants
looked for Grover. I joined in the
hunt, but no trace of him could be
fourd. We then found that Grover’s
car, which the mechanician had been
repairing in the garage, had disap
peared.
“ ‘My God,’ said one of the guards,
‘where has he gone?’
“I telephoned Gibboney, attorney
for the family, and he came ou.t at
once. He seemed greatly upset. Then
he telephoned to the police, to Wash
ington and to Major Hunt at Fort
Jay.”
ATLANTA OFFICER AIDED
IN ARREST OF BERGDOLL
Dispatchs reporting the sensation
al escape of Grover Cleveland Berg
doll, young Philadelphia millionaire
under sentence as a “slacker,” recall
the spectacular circumstances under
which he was arested last January
at the mansion of his mother by a
possee of government officers includ
ing A. J. Wismer, of Atlanta, a de
partment of justice a’gent on the staff
of Lewis J. Baley, superintendent of
this district.
Wismer, with a number of other
agents from the south, was in Phila
delphia to assist in the wholesale
"Red” raids staged in New York,
Philadelphia and other eastern cities
at that time. 'lt was determined to
make a concerted effort to find Berg
doll, then classed as a deserter
through failure to report for ar ly
service, and Mr. Wismer was one of
four officers to search the family
home, a veritable palace maintained
by the fugitive’s mother, ti-e widow
of a wealthy Philadelphia brewer.
-ne mother defied the government
men when they asked admission,
threatening to shoot the first officer
who attempted to enter. It became
necessary to break -down a rear door
and there was a sharp struggle be
fore the mother, who was armed with
a revolv.r, was disarmed. After a
search that lasted several hours, the
son was discovered by Mr. Wismer
hidden in a window seat. A rifle, a
shotgun, another revolver and may
rounds of ammunition were tound in
the mothen’s room and she was later
fined in the city police court on four
counts connected with the resistance
she had offei ■ ’
Sugar Hoarders to
Be Traced, Declares
Palmer’s Assistant
WASHINGTON, May 22.—Sugar
hoarders will be easily traced under
evidence to be turned over to the
justice department by importers,
Howard Figg, special assistant to
Attorney General Palmer, said to
day.
Importers agreed to supply the de
ps(rtment with- lists showing names
of purchasers of the 1920 crop and
the prices which the importers re
ceived.
"This evidence,” said Figg, ‘‘should
enable the justice department to lo
cate all big hoards of sugar and put
them on the market.
‘‘Candy manufacturers and soft
drink manufacturers are believed to
be responsible for the sugar short
age. They have bought up large
quantities of sugar for future use.
"With the evidence which we hope
to get from the importers, sugar
should be made available for domes
tic use during the canning season.
Sugar importations this year have
been the largest in history. It is true
that consumption per capita in the
United States now also is the great
est in history, but consumption has
not increased in equal proportion to
the imports.”
Reserve Board to
Censor Loans Made
To Sugar Hoarders
WASHINGTON, May 22. —Another
step designed to aid in driving down
prices of necessities, has been taken
by the Federal Reserve Board. Gov
ernor Harding is understood to have
intimated to Federal Reserve Bank
officials that they should scrutinize
carefully the paper they hold as se
curity for loans made" to tl\e sugar
trade to the end that more sugar
may be made available for domestic
consumption.
It was estimated that probably
$250,000,000 was tied up in "frozen
loans,” on the sugar stocks and it
was regarded as probable that the
banks would be able to locate any
sugar stocks held for speculative
purposes and force their distribution.
Reserve board officials would not
discuss Governor Harding’s action
further than to say that such a move
was entirely in line with the policy
to which the support of the bankers
was pledged at the conference here
last Tuesday, at which ways and
means of preventing hoarding for
speculative purposes were discuss
ed.
Baby Smothers in Cornmeal
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Her head
buried beneath five pounds of corn
meal, which an older sister accident
ally spilled. 8-months-old Lucy Lan
arko was smothered to death in her
home here.
The child’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Salvadore Lanarko, wdre in the store
in front of their home while little
Lucy and her 3-year-old sister Diane
were alone in the kitchen.
When Dianne tried to lift the bag
of meal from the table the bag broke
nd its contents fell over the young
er child. The parents found the babv
dead.
DiiflMitav
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LEONARU'MORTON & CO. Dept 6397 Chicago
EKLY JOURNAL.
THE VANDERVILTS HONEYMOONING
H jfak
if ?< »
hi: i> •
O 1
HOT SPRINGS. —There is something romantic about ‘‘‘ol’ Vir
gin’y.” Maybe that’s why Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr., of New York,
and his bride, formerly Miss Rachel Littleton, picked this sunny spot
in Virginia for their honeymoon. The groom was New York’s mil
lionaire newspaper reporter. Guests at their wedding partook of
the largest wedding cake ever made in this country. When the
photographer snapped them, out for a stroll, the “smile that won’t
come off” spread itself across their faces.
PLANS TO PUT
COTTON BODY ON
BUSINESS BASIS
(The Atlanta. Journal News Bureau,
623 Riggs Building.)
BY THEODORE TILLER,
WASHINGTON, May 22.—Plans
for putting the American Cotton as
sociation on a solid business basis
at the Atlanta meeting of the exec
utive and finance committee sched
uled to begin June 1, were announc
ed here today by J. S. Wannamaker,
of South Carolina, president of the
association.
Mr. Wannamaker is in Washington
for conferences with southern rep
resentatives in congress regarding
legislation for improved marketing
methods. In addition to the selec
tion of & vice president and general
manager, and other officials, the
Atlanta meeting will take action for
the immediate establishment of a
national publication which will have
a very large circulation from the be
ginning. Because of the energetic
organization work that is going on
in every state, it is expected that
the association will have a million
members, Mr. 'Wannamaker said.
Mr. Wannamaker, accompanied by
B. F. McLeod, of Charleston, and
other officials of the association, re
cently concluded a series of confer
ences with New York and Boston
business men as well as with rep
resentatives of English spinners,
with a view to securing their co
operation in establishing more mod
ern methods of handling the cot
ton crop. Under the present system
of handling and marketing there is
an enormous loss, amounting, Mr.
Wannamaker says, to $200,0(50,000
annually, or stated in another way,
practically one crop out of every
ten is a total loss.
At these conferences, it was con
ceded that immediate action should
be taken to eliminate great waste
resulting from antiquated methods
now obtaining in the cotton trade.
To this end pledges of support, fi
nancial and otherwise, were given to
Mr. Wannamaker and his associates.
The committe on insurance of the
association, of which F. H. McMaster
of Columbia, S. C., is chairman, now
has under consideration plans for
the establishment of mutual com
panies, with state decimals, such as
are in use by English and New Eng
land spinners, which, it is said, will
result in the savings of millions of
dollars to the producers.
Another important phase of the
association’s work is that of direct
marketing, which is in charge of a
special committee headed by D. S.
Murphy, of South Carolina, an ex
pert in the United States depart
ment of agriculture. This question
is being given careful study with
reference to both domestic and for
eign markets. Senator Smith, of
South Carolina, who is co-operating
with the association, has caused an
investigation to be begun by the
state department, through its con
sular officers abroad, for the pur
pose of obtaining data as to mar
ket conditions in foreign countries.
Women Will Vote in
Cairo City Primary
CAIRO, Ga., May 22. —Much inter
est is felt in the primary for the
city of Cairo which is to be held
June 8. An executive committee has
been recently created by an act of
the cbuncil and this will be the first
primary election ever held here.
Two things are mainly responsible
for the interest. The first is that
for the first time in the city’s his
tory, white women will be allowed
to vote. Although the legality of
the ordinance giving the women the
privilege of voting has been ques
tioned, several are making definite
plans to register and a woman’s can
didate may be entered in some of the
races. George J. Dnnn and W. H.
Searcy, Sr., have already announc
ed for clerk and treasurer and a spir
ited fight is considered inevitable.
Complete Outfit of
Silk Is Given Debs
NEW YORK, May 22.—Eugene V.
Debs, Socialist prisoner-candidate
for the presidency, has stepped into
the “silk stocking class,” it was
learned today with publication of a
letter from him accepting a gift of
a complete silk outfit sent him by
the Needle Trades Union of New
York. The outfit included hat, suit,
shirt, socks, slippers and underwear.
Writing from the federal prison
at Atlanta, where he is serving a
term for obstructing the govern
ment’s war activities. Debs said the
gift made K him feel “richer than John
D. Rockefeller.”
Sergeant Saves Life
Os Wood’s Daughter
CHICAGO, May 22.—Sergeant
Luther Beard, a veteran cavalryman,
yesterday saved Miss Louiseta Wood,
daughter of Major General Leonard
Wood from possible injury or death
when her horse bolted at Fort
Sheridan, it was learned today.
Miss Wood was riding Missouri
Shotgun, one of her father’s mounts.,
when the horse was frightened by
an automobile.
Sergeant Beard, her orderly, gal
loped alongside and leaped off. catch
ing the runaway’s bridle. He was
dragged several feet and severely
bruise.
POPULATION OF
TAMPA 51,252,
CENSUS SHOWS
WASHINGTON. May 22.—Census
bureau announced the following 1920
population results:
Jersey City, N. J., 297,864; Lowell,
Mass., 112,479; Wakefield, Mass., 13,-
010; Tampa, Fla, 51,252; Bridgetown,
N. J.. 14,323: Lawrence, Kan., 12,456:
Emporium, Pa.. 3,036; Pontiac town
ship, Mich., 1,216; Calaveras county,
Cal., 6,183; Colusa county. Cal., 9,290;
Del Norte county, Cal., *2,759; Crow
ley county, Colo., 6,383; Jackson
county, Colo., 1,340; Lake county.
Colo., 6,630; Pitkin county, Colo.,
2,707; Echols county, Ga., 3,313; Mil
ler county, Ga., 9,565.
Increases since 1910: Jersey City
30,085, or 11.2; Lowell, 6,185, or 5.8;
Wakefield, 1.606, or 14.1; Tampa,
13,470, or 35.7; Bridgetown, 114, or
O. Lawrence, 82, or 0.7; Emporium,
120. or 4.1; Pontiac township, 263. or
27.6; Colusa county, 1,558, or 20.2;
Del Norte county. 342, or 14.1; Jack
son county, 327, or 32.3; Echols
county, 4, no per cent; Miller county,
1,579, or 19.8.
Decreases since 1910: Calaveras
county, 2,988, or 32.6 per cent; Lake
county, 3,970, or 37.5; Pitkin county,
1,859, or 40.7.
No 1910 comparisons are available
for Crowley county, which was or
ganized in 1911. Census officials did
not compute the per cent of increase
for Echols county because it was
less than one-tenth per cent.
Tampa, which ranked as twenty
second city of the south in 1910, had
a smaller increase in growth in the
last decade than in that ending in
1910. The rate of increase in Tampa
has been exceeded by Knoxville,
twenty-fourth city in 1910. which
iow ranks above Tampa; by Jack
sonville, Roanoke, Charlotte, Shreve
port, Columbia, Winston-Salem,
Beaumont and Asheville, of the lar
ger southern cities. In the decade
ending v.’ith 1910, Tampa was one of
the twenty-two cities over 25,00,
which doubled their population. Os
.the southern cities whose 1920 popu
lation has been announced, Tampa
now ranks just below Macon and
just above Winston-Salem.
Right of Way May Be
Given to Bonus Bill
In House Next Week
WASHINGTON, May 22.—0 n a
strict party vote, the house rules com
mittee today ordered a favorable re
port of a resolution giving soldier
relief legislation the right of way
for house consideration. Chairman
Campbell said the rule would not be
presented to the house before Tues
day-
House opponents of soldier relief
legislation were concentrating their
forces today in an effort to prevent
consideration of the general bonus
bill next week under limitations pre
scribed by Republican leaders. They
were successful yesterday in pre
venting a vote today as had been
planned.
Republican leaders still maintain
ed the bill would eventually pass the
house and be sent to the senate
None predicted what ' disposition
would be made of it there.
Probe Is Started of ‘
Deaths at Matewan
MATEWAN, W. Va., May 22.—Of
ficial investigation of the battle here
Wednesday between citizens and pri
vate detectives which resulted in ten
deaths, was under way today, with
W. H. Bronson, prosecuting attorney
of Mingo county, in charge. Evidence
gathered by Mr. Bronson will be sub
mitted to Circuit Judge Damron, at
Williamson, next Monday.
Colonel Arnold, commander of the
state police, detailed a number of
his men to attend the funeral today
of Mayor Cabell Testerman, who was
killed Wednesday.
Colonel Arnold said early today
the situation was “very quiet” and
he did not expect a recurrence of the
disorders.
I ik \ Calomel is a dangerous drug. tt is
Y y \ mercury—quicksilver—and attacks your
\ \ \ bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel to-
1 day and you will feel weak, sick and nau-
\ seated tomorrow. Don’t lose a day’s
work.
Take “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Instead!
Here-s my guarantee! Ask your
druggist for a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone and take a spoonful to
night. If it doesn’t start your liver
and straighten you right up better
than calomel and without griping
or making you sick I want you to
go back to the store and get your
w.n. minus
MSTBMSTO
EX-SERVICE MEN
BY WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT
It is to be hoped that the Republi
cans of prominence who met to con
sider the platform in Washington
exercised ’a useful influence upon the
congressmen and senators, and made
them know how unwise is the plan
to vote a cash bonus to 4,000,000 of
ex-service men. There is substantial
ly no demand for the bonus except
from those who are to receive it,
and it is doubtful whether a majority
of them favor it. The pinch of the
high cost of living makes every one
else except the beneficiary of the
bonus impatient at the thought of
this very heavy additional burden to
be put upon the people.
The slumping government bonds,
the tenseness of the situation pro
duced by the obstruction to interstate
commerce, the tightness of money,
the continued high cost of living and
all the uncertainties due to threat
ened strikes should give our legisla
tors at Washington pause.
Right to Complain
Hundreds of thousands of men and
women were induced through the pa
triotic appeals to subscribe to gov
ernment bonds at an interest rate
much too low, and have been com
pelled to sell them at a heavy sacri
fice. They will certainly have a
right to complain if conditions now
are to be made worse for them in
the cost of living and greater taxa
tion by the bonus project. The times
are critical, and the voluntary as
sumption of this additional and un
necessary load is foolishness in the
extreme. It is politics gone mad.
The Republican party has been
most emphatic in denouncing waste
ful extravagances on the part of the
Democratic administration, and has"
urged the necessity for a change in
government in order to secure econ
omy and retrenchment. With what
sincerity can the party make this
appeal if it becomes responsible for
the unnecessary expenditure of ?1,-
500,000,000 or 82,000,000,000?
Hope for Veto
All but the ex-service men and a
great many of those will hope, if
the bill passes the two houses, that
the president will veto it, as he
ought. If we may judge from the
evidence of the secretary of the treas
ury, he wull advise the president to
do so.
Can it be that who were
pressing this bill are themselves
hoping that by pushing it through
they can secure the favor of the
beneficiaries, and then by the veto
can avoid its burden, putting the po
litical responsibility for its defeat
on the administration. Such poli
tics would be contemptible; such a
theory is incredible; but the Repub
licans who favor the bonus will ex
pose themselves to such a charge in
the face of the present financial and
business crisis. The majority party
in each house should do the right and
the just thing and let the bonus bill
■ die.
COMMITTEES ARE
APPOINTED FOR
PRESBYTERIANS
CHARLOTTE, N. C., May 22.—Re
ports from seventeen committees
featured the second day’s session of
the Southern Presbyterian General
assembly, in session here. The new
moderator, Rev. W. L. Lingle, D. D.,
also announced chairmen of all com
mittees for the following year: Bills
and overtures, chairman, A. M. Fras
er, retiring moderator; judicial
business, Thornton Whaling; foreign
correspondence, Russell Cecil; for
eign missions, C. M. Richards; home
missions, T. A. Wharton; Christian
education and ministerial relief, J.
D. Eglleston; publications and Sab
bath school work, D. H. Ogden; theo
logical seminaries, George Summey;
training school for lay workers, John
I. Armstrong; church societies, R. H.
McCarlin; narrative of state of re
ligion, J. S. Forter; systematic bene
ficencies, Ernest Thompson; . ible,
J. C. Shive; Sabbath and family re
ligion, R. F. Kirkpatrick; audits, B.
R. Lacy; mileage, J. J. Mclntosh;
of council of reformed churches, T.
S. McCallie; leave of absence, J. F.
McKinnon; devotional exercises, A.
)S. Johnson; thanks, Donald C. Mac-
Le d; synodical recorder, chairman
!for each of the seventeen synods in
‘ the general assembly year also ap-
■ pointed by the moderator.
Mrs. W. C. Winnsborough, for the
auxiliary, and Charles D’Au
ibigne, representing churches in Bel
j gium, were voted the privileges of
j the floor for twenty minutes.
Saturday the assembly will spend
the afternoon at Davidson college,
where President Wilson was a
student.
Members say that the real work of
: the assembly begins next week,
i After a brief routine morning ses
i sion, the Southern Presbyterian
General Assembly adjourned Satur
day for a picnic dinner furnished bv
the Presbyterian hospital on its
grounds. The assembly delegates
then went to Davidson college, twen
ty miles distant, where the afternoon
was spent and educational addresses
were delivered by leaders in the edu
cational movement in the church.
WILSON AGREES
TO FIX ARMENIAN
BOUNDARY LINES
PARIS, May 22. Ambassador
Wallace informed the council of am
bassadors today that President Wil
son had announced that the United
States would accept the role of ar
bitrator in fixing the boundaries of
Armenia.
The announcement of the presi
dent’s decision was received with
great satisfaction by the members
of the council.'
Postpone Action on
Harris’ Resolution
WASHINGTON, May 22. The
senate finance committee today con
sidered the joint resolution of Sena
tor Harris, Democrat of Georgia, di
recting the secretary of the treasury
to furnish the senate with informa
tion regarding the income and ex
cess profits received by corporations
in 1917 and 1918 as shown by their
returns to the internal revenue col
lector, but postponed final action
would not include the names of cor
until next week in order to secure
certain information regarding the
fulfillment of this request. Repre
sentatives of the commissioner of
internal revenue told the committee
that the compilation of the request
ed information which, however,
would not include the names of cor
_ porations, would require four or five
‘ months and cost approximately
5500.000.
• money.
Take a spoonful of harmless, vege
table Dodson’s Liver Tone tonight
and wake up feeling great. It’s per
fectly harmless, so give it to your
children any time. It can’t salivate,
so let them eat anything afterwards.
(Advt.)
TUESDAY, MAI 2»,
MRS. BARRETTE TELLS
OF SPLENDID RESULTS
Prominent New Hampshire
Woman Says Tanlac
Brough About a Won
derful Change In Her
Condition.
“Tanlac is a grand medicine, and I
think every suffering woman ought
to know about it,” was the statement
made recently by Mrs. Aurore Bar
rette, at her residence, 133 Second
street, Manchester, New Hampshire.
Mrs. Barrette is a well known and
highly respected resident of that
city.
"I have not felt at all well for
the past year or more,” she con
tinued, "I haven’t been sick enough
to be in bed, but I was far from
being a well woman. At times I
thought I had kidney trouble, I
suffered almost constantly from se
vere pains across my back, just over
the kidneys. Whenever I tried to do
any house work at all the dull pain
would be there, and if I attempted,
to stoop over it just felt as though
my back would break. I would get
so weak and wornout I would have
to sit down and rest several times
a day, and I felt tired all the time.
condition made me awfully
nervous, so that I rarely ever slept
well at night, and every now and
then I would jump in my sleep, as
if in a fright, and my was
really becoming serious.
"Only two bottles of Tanlac have
brought about a wonderful change in
my condition. In fact, the results 1
have received from this medicine
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TUBERCULOSIS
It was when phyal
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I:
Ofc
MRS. AURORE BARRETTE,
Os Manchester, New Hampshire .
have really surprised me. Those
terrible pains in my back which used
to trouble me every day have almost
disappeared, and I am going to keep
on taking Tanlac until they leave
me entirely. I have lots of energy
now, and am not only able to do my
house work, but I get through the
day without feeling the least bit
tired. I am no longer nervous like
I was, and I sleep well at nights.
"I shall always be thankful for
what Tanlac has done for me.”
Tanlac is sold by all leading drug
gists.—(Advt.)
3