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Dont Send a
WmWO Fenny
et us send theße stun*
si ping Hi-Cut Boots before
*’ ou pay a cent. Just your
VStfF name and address and eize you
i9HhbW?*Me«<l Cflar and we will •hip them
IwMßwßmKwSe<'‘':« an approval. Such a wonderful
feN bargain you must ••«• them.
«JS$ French laat. fine soft
blas'k kid finished leather. popu
®XZI weight fleaiblo leather soles.
' Sixes 2 1-2 to S. Wide widths.
Smartest Style
One of the season's most aria-
- the Kind you are
ffilAyMSWwggffi? proud to wear Compare them
with «hoea vou usually pay twice
»*• much foi Pay Qfl
lgB>; •■-■>•■ cur bargain price of
/SSVqj for shoes on arrival. Trv them
on. See for yourself their
style and quality and how
comfortable they arc. You
ft are the judge If not sat
isflad. send them back
wßSF'j£&to^yv and u ’ e U 'M refund your
eCtftfy 1 ? money. Ordar by No
' AXIOBO. Send now.
Stock is limited.
•■••A tEOKARD-MORTON
laK&X & COMPANY
W<y^Bmmbßß»X > , Dept. 6399
Order by
No. AXIOBO.
Be sure to give size
wanted. RUSH YOUR ORDER
The
/jtacts ch the
STOMA CH.
gj[ i. A
60WELS^^jPfSr\
jfJ
I ^ a
L Box.
Is Your Blood Starving
For Want of iron?
boa is Red-Blood Food Nuxated Iron Helps
Pat Roses Into the Cheeks of Women and
Gives Strength and Energy to Men
If you were to go without eating until you I
become weak, thin and emaciated, you could i
not do a more serious harm to yourself than ;
when you let your blood literally starve for ■
want of iron—iron that gives it strength and j
power to change food into living tissue,
muscle and brain. Without plenty of iron j
in the blood, no matter how much or what '
you eat, your food simply passes through you •
without doing you any good—you don’t get |
the strength out of it and instead of being |
filled with youthful strength and energy you
are weak, nervous and all run-down. If you I
are not strong or -well you owe it to yourself I
to make the following test: See how long .
you can work or how far you can walk .
without becoming tired. Next take two five
grain tablets of ordinary Nuxated Iron three
times per day after meals for' two weeks, ■
then test your strength again and see how j
much you have gained. Numbers. of nervous, i
run-down people who were ailing all the •
while have most astonishingly increased their .
strength and endurance simply by taking |
iron in the proper form. But don’t take the J
old kinds of iron simply to save a few cents, j
JTou must take iron in a form that can be
tgraly absorbed and assimilated like j
#t-d Iron if you want it to do you any good,
Jmerwise it mav prove worse than useless. :
v’-nr can procure Nuxated Iron from your ’
druggist on an absolute guarantee of satis- '
Action or vour money will be refunded.
IAGENTS WANTED
Sellourbig*lßottleßarsaparillaforonlyC9c. I
It* I Best Seller. Finest Medicinof nnoAp rn f 14 0
It 1 Complies with pure druglsw.lUU/v rruill j
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F.a. StFSSE.S2O9 L»ko Part Aw.. D»pi. 43 . CMcW |
Speedy Relief
From Habitual
Constipation
The liver is the largest and most. !
important organ in the body, and
when the liver refuses to act, it
causes constipation, biliousness,
headache, indigestion, gas, sour
stomach, bad breath. dysentery,
diarrhoea, pains in back and under
shoulder blades and under ribs on
right side. These symptoms lead to
colds, influenza or other serious
troubles unless corrected imme- |
diately.
An inactive liver places an extra
burden on the kidneys, which over
taxes them and causes the blood
absorb and carry into the system"
the impurities that the liver and
kidneys have failed to eliminate.
When you treat the liver alone,
you treat only a third of your
trouble, and that Is why you have;
to take purgatives every few I
nights. Calomel or other ordinary I
laxatives do not go far enough. If
you would treat your kidneys and
blood while treating the liver, you
would put your entire system In
order and freqent purgatives would
then be unnecessary.
Dr. W. L. Hitchcock many years
ago recognized these important
facts, and after much study and
research, compounded What is now
known as Dr. Hitchcock’s Liver, i
Kidifey and Blood Powders, three
medicines combined in one. This
was the Doctor’s favorite prescrip
tion for many years, being used by
his patients with marked success.
It is a harmless vegetable remedy
that will not make you sick, and
you may eat anything you like
while taking It.
Get a large tin box from your
druggist or dealer for 25c, under his
personal guarantee that it will give
relief, tone up the liver, stimulate
iiie kidneys to healthy action and
?herebj’ purify the blood. Keep It In
the home for ready use whenever
any member of the family begins
to feel “out of sorts.” It will
. prove a household friend and a val
uable remedy.— (Advt.)
60 Days’ Trial
If yon stiffer from Debility, Nervousness,
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Book telling all about th* genuine batdea
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THE HERCULEX CO., 1416 Broadway,
New York (Dept. M.).
Entirely New Book
■ m on Cancer. The most
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today and Learn the Truth about cancer.
MAKE $25 A DAY
' With the “Diamond Post
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Large Profits! Write for illus. circular,
FREE. International Metal & Ferro Co.,
Dept. 11A, Chicago.
in !,ne Doz. Silver-plated Tea-
~ spoons (fancy pattern) given
sot selling 8 boxes Prof. Smith's
Headache and Neuralgia Tab
if-ts. 25c a box. Catalogue of
other premiums sent with goods. SMITH
DRUG CO., Box 2, Woodboro, MO. ,
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
COMMITTEE TO
RELIEVE FREIGHT
TIE-UP IN WEST
CHICAGO, May 25. —Relief from
the present freight car shortage to
day was expected to follow a con
ference O'‘ a committee of three, ap
pointed by railroad executives of the
middle west, to determine steps to
end the transportation tie-up. The
committee will confer today and re
port Thursday to the railroad manag-
The first string of empty cars be
-1 gan arriving here last night. They
will be moved to the gram belt. Con
tinuous trains of empty freight cars
were expected here tor next week.
The United States railroad labor
board, hearing demands of rail work
ers for increases totalling one bil
lion dollars annually, will complete
its session here this week, boird
members explained. E. T. Whittier,
representing the railroad managers’
association, was to discuss the status
of railroad telegraphers before the
beard today.
Deaf Driver and 3
Little Girls Hurt in
Crossing Collision
COVINGTON, Ga„ May 25.—John
M. Dearing, well-known citizen of
the city received severe injuries
Monday when the eleven o’clock
eastbound Central of Georgia pas
senger train struck the automobile
in which he was driving three school
girls, Rosalie and Margie Hooten,
and Pauline Piper.
Mr. Dearing is totally deaf. He
had picked the little girls up on
their way from school and was ap
proaching the crossing without see
ing the train. Eye witnesses of the
accident say that the engineer, at
tracted by the waving of people
nearby slowed down to a very slow
rate and blew his whistle, but those
in the automobile did not seem to
see the train. The car almost cleared
the crossing before the rear was hit
by the engine, throwing the occu
pants high into the air. One little
girl was pulled from under the train
by the conductor before it had come
to a complete stop. Mr. Dearing
grabbed Pauline Piper and held to
her when he was thrown from the
car. She escaped entirely unhurt.
Mr. Dearing suffered sever bruises
all over his body, and one of the
little girls also was reported dan
gerously hurt.
Waycross Again
Has Wire Service
WAYCROSS, Ga„ May 25.—The
Southern Bell Telephone and Tele
graph operators’ strike has ended and
service has been restored. Waycross
was without telephone service for
more than three days as a result of
the strike. The operators returned
to work Monday afternoon late, sat
isfactory terms having been made
with the company officials.
Mobs Enter Virginia
Jail, Seeking Negro
ALEXANDRIA, Va„ May 25.—Two
mobs forced entrance Into the jail
here last night looking for William
M. Turner, negro slayer of Thomas
M Moore, but the accused man had
been secretly removed from the jail
a few hours previously. It was re
ported Turner was taken to R c';-
rr-ond.
The negro will be turned over to
federal authorities, as he was on a
government reservation when he
jumped on the running board of
Moore’s automobile to hold him up.
Purses for Widows
Os Slain Officers
COLUMBUS, Ga„ May 25.—Fami
lies of the two Columbus police of
ficers slain by a negro last week are
to be given a substantial purse by
Columbus people. A fund, started
yesterday, is nearing SSOO today, and
it is announced that at least SI,OOO
each will be given the widows, both
of whom have several small chil
dren to educate.
The search for the Maddox negro
continues, both officers and civilians
being still on the “war path” in this
section, scouring every nook and
corner of the land. Many wild ru
mors are being run down, but all
appear to be in vain.
White Pig Is Found
Alive 3 Miles at Sea
NEW YORK. May 25. —Dogfish,
catfish and sea robins are all famil
iar to Charles and Frederick Peter
son/ fishermen of Tottenville, Staten
Island, but when the brothers saw
something that looked like the snout
of a pig moving through the water
near their boat they were stumped.
“Sea turtle,” they said.
When captured they found the ani
mal was a pig, a little white one,
and as the Petersons were fishing
more than three miles off shore they
are convinced the porker was trying
to navigate the Atlantic after fall
ing off from some steamer.
They now plan to make the ambi
tious pig a hog.
Nail Friend’s Ear to
Wall as Joke, He Said
SHERIDAN, Wyo.—William Davis
declares it was only a joke, but the
court agreed with Walter Snow that
the joke was carried a trifle too far
and held Davis on a charge of as
sault and battery.
Davis, Snow and a party of
friends were attending a dance at
Dayton, near here, when it was de
cided to “throw a scare” into Snow.
According to the complaint, Snow
was playfully held against a wall
while Davis drove a nail through
his ear.
It is charged that Davis struck a
ten-penny nail a smart blow with a
hammer, the nail penetrating the
lobe of Snow’s ear and sinking near
ly a half Inch Into the wall. It was
necessary to use the claw of a ham
mer to release Snow.
What a Life for These Two!
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal—The sleuth
with the jelly glass proved to be
Edward McPhun employed by a lum
ber company, whose wife, Sadie Mc-
Phun, filed suit for divorce.
So jealous was McPhun of his son
in-law, she declares, that at night
after others had retired, he spread
jelly on the floor between the bed
rooms of the wife and the son-in
law in order to have Imprints of
their bare feet should they undertake
during the night to visit each other.
Mrs. McPhun further alleges her
husband would hide in closets for
hours at a time and jump out at her
when she chanced to open the closet
door.
They were married in 1898 and
separated ten days ago, she says. He
accuses her of intimacy with the
son-in-law and alleges he searched
the house for affinites with a search
light and recently broke two of her
fingers in a quarrel. She asks for
$65 a month alimony, the custody of
their two minor children and all of
the cortimdnity property.
DoitMitaff
Snap this bargain up now—while it lasts. No money
—just tell us size you wear and we send these
newest style Oxfords
prove that Leonard - M orton &
Co. irivo you the world’s ' ;
trreatoßt shoe values. If
not aati'ified in every ,vay. ■ ■‘S?'
return them and you are
not out a vent. No if’a ;
or and’® about thia *>•
offer. You decide
every th; ng
You must see these shoes to realize how splendid they are.
Ma«io of extra fine rejected, soft kid finished, glove fitting
leather. Light weight, flexible leather soles. Stylish new
1 1-4 in. walking heel. Choice of black or brown in this
fashionable model. Sizes 2 1-2 to 8. Wide widths. Order
Black by No. AXISB; Brown by No. AXIS 9. Pay only CO QQ
for shoes on arrival. If not all you expect return them *»**•«*«
and we refund your money. Don’t miss tMs. Send now.
LEONARU-MORTON & CO. Dept. 6397 Chicago
THE HONEYMOON SPECIAL
OF AN INDIAN MAHARAJAH
Z ,K
C ; == saßr •' ' &• “
Jv ■
- w j-™ W '
SZHVI4E
American men who sidetrack marriage because of the expense
i, incurs should take heart and become optimistic at this photo
graph. The bridegroom of India has far more to think of in getting
married than finding an apartment. Even if a family must live in
poverty for the rest of its existence marriage ceremonies in that
country must be celebrated elaborately and ornately. The time it
takes to contract a marriage is usually three weeks, during which
the expenditure amounts to more than half a year’s income. Instead
of the guests presenting gifts they receive them from the couple.
After profuse festivities for weeks the newly married pair start on
their honeymoon as shown in the photograph, which expense alone
almost ruins the exchequer of the flustered bridegroom.
“Ring Wearing Is Cover ned by Custom;” ’
Widows, Take Heed, Lest Ye Mistake
The wedding ring is worn first
after a bride is married, and then
the engagement ring. Just before
the marriage ceremony a bride who
wears an engagement ring removes
the ring and goes to the altar ring
less. The wedding ring Is placed on
the third finger of the left hand and
later the engagement ring is placed
next to the wedding ring. This is a
very sensible custom, because most
women wish to wear their wedding
ring all the time, whereas there may
be times when they do not wish to
wear the diamond or other engage
ment ring. Thus it can be slipped
on. and off without removing the
gold band.
There are, of course, -women who
are just as careful to wear the en
gagement ring as the wedding ring.
In fact, there are some women who
feel that some dire calamity must
be impending If for any reason the
engagement ring slips from their
linger or If the setting of the dia
mond loosens so that it must be
taken to the jeweler for repairs.
But more and more women feel free
to remove their engagement ring.
There are many women who are so
careful to keep the rule not to wear
diamonds in the morning that they
make this apply even to their en
gagement rings.
In certain Red Cross workrooms
where women of wealth and leisure
gathered regularly every morning
to work over knitting machines and
bandage rolling, it was apparent
that more than half of these women
felt that there was something inap
propriate about diamond-bedecked
fingers In work of this sort. At any
rate, more than half of these women,
even though they wore wedding
Orang-Outang Starts Panic tin
Ship, Bea st Attacks With Crowbar
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. —The swan
started something when it reached
forth and plucked a bag of tobacco
from the unsuspecting hand of the
quartermaster.
All in a cluster, the elephants be
gan to trumpet, the tigers to roar,
the monkeys to chatter, the snakes
to hiss, and above all their was
raised the clarion call of a giant
orang-outang, or whatever it is an
orang-outang does when it breaks
out of the reservation.
Fanio in Engine Boom
Many of the animals, freshly
plucked from the primeval forests of
India and therefore filled with jazz
and pepper, were entirely willing to
join the mutiny . The giant orang
outang chose the engine room to
present his act. His arrival there
was a signal for a grand hegira of
engineers, firemen, coal passers,
water tenders and other beavers who
toil in the bowels of a sea-going
steamship.
Let it be explain that all this hap
pened aboard the good ship Halea
kala while on its way to San Fran
cisco from Calcutta.
No sooner had the orang-outang
established himself as king of the
engine room than he began to experi-
Washington Monument; Some
Interest! ng Things Concerning It
Few persons who have seen the
Washington Monument, even those
who have lived within sight of it all
their lives, .have noticed that the
apex of the monument is surround
ed with parallel bands. Such Is the
fact, however, and moreover, the
hands are studded with golden
points. The bands are made of gold
plated Iron a foot wide, and the
points are spaced a foot from one
another.
According to the original plan of
the monument ' it was protected
from lightning by an aluminum tip
that was connected with the metal
framework of the elevator. . During
the very first summer after the
monument was completed, however,
it was struck twice and a piece of
stone was clipped from the top.
Experts from all the scientific
departments of the government were
Skeleton of Man
Found Near Bainbridge
BAINBRIDGE, Ga., May 25.—A
human skeleton of a white man was
discovered in an accumulation of
driftwood just north of here on the
Flint river banks Sunday. Tlk bones
were discolored and disarticulated.
There was no flesh and only some
shreds of clothing—apparently of a
dark serge—a belt and a pair of
shoes, size No. 7 with rubber heel?
in fairly good shape.
Dr. S. J. Chestnutt, the county
coroner, held an inquest and states
that it is the skeleton of a white
man who has been dead for about
ten months. The mouth of the man
shows that he had not finished cut
ting his wisdom teeth and was prob
ably a fairly young man. There were
no means of identification, and it is
believed that the remains were wash
ed upon the banks during the high
water of the Flint a month or so
ago.
$25 a Month, She Gives
“Friend Husband”
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. —Mrs. Ida
May Harp, of this city, established a
precedent in local divorce courts
when she filed suit against Arthur
E. Harp, an insurance adjuster, and
offered in her complain to pay him
$25 a month alimony.
Mrs. Harp charges that Harp has
been cruel to her. They were mar
ried in Napa in 1905 and separated
recently when says Mrs. Harp he told
her he was sorry he married her
and that he wished himself in the
“hot place” instead.
Harp also is jealous she says, and
refused to let her attend church,
saying if she did she might flirt with
the minister. He also was jealous of
tradesmen.
Mrs. Harp asks for a divorce and
the custody of their two children.
rings, did not wear their engagement
rings.
Sometimes widows, when they be
come engaged to marry a second
time, are a little undecided concern
ing the right use regarding the sec
ond engagement ring and second
wedding ring.,
The consensus of opinion seems to
be in favor of retaining the first
wedding ring on the so-called ring
finger of the left hand till the morn
ing of the second marriage. Then
the first w’edding ring is removed
and is not worn again. To wear it
on the right hand would be highly
inappropriate after having been mar
ried for the second time. During a
widow’s engagement should she wear
her second engagement ring on the
regular ring finger next to her first
wedding ring? Here there is differ
ence in usage, but the custom seems
to be for a widow to wear her second
engagement ring on her right hand.
After her marriage she should place
this engagement ring next her wed
ding ring on her ring finger. If she
wishes to wear the diamond con
tained in her first engagement ring
she should not crowd this on the
same finger. Perhaps It would be
more appropriate not to wear it in its
original setting.
As a matter of custom, brides al
most always do restrict themselves
to such jewelry as the bridegroom
has given them. The other day a
prominent English bride wore, be
fore the piece of jewelry the bride
groom had given her, a pearl neck
lace that the bridegroom’s father
had given hsr as a wedding present.
This was a very subtle and consid
erate mark of respect for her future
father-in-law and was in perfectly
good taste.
ment with electric switches and
such. In his enthusiasm the orang
outang touched two wires at one and
the same time, an act that caused
what is known as a short circuit.
The odor of singed hair filled the
air. To get even the orang-outang
’.inlimbered a crowbar and began to
lambast the electrical switches, a bit
of sabotage that caused the ship’s
officers to fire forty-six shots by
actual count. Their aim was per
fectly punk. Not a bullet registered.
In the meantime the orang-outang’s
monkeying with the electrical steer
ing gear caused the Haleakala to
back toward Honolulu, a port that
already had been visited.
After forty-six shpts had been
fired at the orang-outang the animal
i etreated to his cage and went to
sleep.
Elephant Dies Ahoardship
Other incidents combined to make
the voyage interesting, too. A bull
elephant, weighing three tons, died
and was derricked overboard, but
the carcass failed to sink in spite of
huge weights attached thereto.
Oh, yes, one thing more; a sailor
got too near one of the lion’s cages
and the king of the beasts removed
the southwest part of his trousers.
called on to contrive a plan for the
better protection of the shaft, and
they decided that copper bands,
studded with projecting points,
would accomplish the purpose.
Colonel Casey, who had charge of
the work, objected on the ground
that the copper would turn green
and that the verdigris would “run"
and spoil the appearance of the
monument; he also doubted that
the copper would have the necessary
tensile strength. So the men of
science agreed on a number of iron
bands, heavily galvanized and gold
plated so as to prevent rusting.
The bands are connected with the
aluminum point of the monument
and the framwork of the elfevator,
and at the base iron cables lead the
electricity into a deep well, where it
harmlessly expands its force. The
protection has proved to be perfect.
Five Are Killed in
Rome Demonstration
ROME, May 25. —Four policemen
and one civilian were killed and two
policemen and nine civilians, includ
ing two women, were seriously In
jured in a clash resulting frpm a
demonstration by students in con
nection with the celebration of the
anniversary of Italy’s entry into the
war.
The police attempted tv
the students, when some unknown
fired upon the authorities. The police
returned the fire and a srhall bat
tle ensued.
} Calomel is a dangerous drug. ft is
'y \ mercury—quicksilver—and attacks your
\ I \ bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel to-
V’ | 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
SOUTHERxN ROADS
REDUCE AMOUNT
OF RATES ASKED
WASHINGTON, May 25. —Increase
of 30.697 per cent In freight rates
for the southern railroads to meet
the 6 per cent government guarantee
return instead of 30.951 were asked
of the interstate commerce commis
sion today through amendments to
the original application filed by the
committee of which R. V. Fletcher is
chairman.
The amendments strike out the ap
plications for special commodity rate
increases and substitute a request
for a general rate increase ot 30.697
per cent. The former general increase
asked was 30.951 per cent. The prop
erty investment account of the south
ern division is reduced by $16,506,101
by the amendments.
Mr. Fletcher explained that the re
duction in the property investment
account was due to an error in com
putation and the reduction in the
rate increase asked followed from
the reduction in the book value of
the southern carriers.
League of Women
Voters Has Planks
For Both Platforms
WASHINGTON, May 25.—Plat
form planks favored by the National
League of Women voters are to be
submitted to both conventions, the
league announced here today.
These planks cover child welfare,
including prohibition of child labor
and a federal program for maternity
and infancy care; creation of a fed
eral department of education to de
crease illiteracy; increased federal
support for training in home eco
nomics and government supervision
of food marketing and distribution
to *reduce profiteering; laws to pro
tect women workers; appropriations
for prevention of disease; and legis
lation to prevent an American wom
an who marries a foreigner from
losing her citizenship.
A delegation of at least twelve,
headed by Mrs. Maude Wood Park,
chairman, will spend three days in
Chicago before the Republican cofi
vention and then will campaign all
the way to San Francisco with stops
In every state, to arouse the interest
of women in their planks. The
league is said to represent 2,500,000
voters.
Nine Appropriation
Measures Unpassed
Near End of Congress
WASHINGTON, May 25.—AVI th
only ten days remaining before the
proposed convention recess or ad
journment, nine of the 16 big appro
priation measures have not yet been
passed by congress. Three of the
measures have not been considered
by the senate.
House leaders today urged the sen
ate to speed up its work so the ses
sion may be virtually complete by
June 5. The appropriation measures
not passed are the rivers and har
bors, diplomatic and consular, agri
culture, naval, District of Columbia,
pension, army, sundry civil, and leg
islativeexecutive and judicial bills.
Authorities Groping
In Dark for Clew to
Grover C. Bergdoll
PHILADELPHIA. May 25. —Mili-
tary authorities, department of jus
tice agents and the local police, all
of whom are investigating the escape
of Grover C. Bergdoll from army
guards here last Friday, apparently
had made but little headway today,
so far as fixing responsibility or of
obtaining a clue to the fugitive’s
whereabouts are concerned.
Colonel Thomas Q. Donaldson, of
the inspecto? ge,neral’s department,
and Captain John J. O’Hare, of the
military intelligence department,
who have charge of the local angles
of the war department’s inquiry,
questioned D. Clarence Gibboney in
the office of United States Attorney
McAvoy last night, but what they
learned was not revealed. Mr. Mc-
Avoy, «in a statement later, said the
army officers are making the investi
gation .for army purposes only, and
that the matter is entirely in the
hands of the war department. “There
fore,” he adrted, ‘there will not be
anything for .publication until the
army authorities give permission.
Mr. Gibboney came to my office be
cause he was requested to do so.
He gave his version of the whole
matter, but he stated that he would
not at any. rime tell what he told the
army officers.’
Gibboney said that he had told all
he could about everything “which
led up to the plans for the commis
sion, the execution of the commission
and what I knew about the escape
of Bergdoll.”
Absolutely no trace of Bergdoll
has been found. Scores of supposed
clues as to his whereabouts have
been run down by federal and civil
agents without result. Rumors that
he had gotton out of the country
aboard a yacht also were investi
gated, but could not be confirmed.
Former Magistrate James E.
Romig was slated for examination
in the office of the district attorney
today in connection with Grover C.
Bergdoll’s escape from his federal
guards here last Friday.
Romig was in the room at the
Bergdoll home with the -guards, when
the convicted draft deserter made his
dash for liberty.
D. Clarence Gibboney, counsel for
Grover, was said to have been sub
jected to a grilling yesterday at the
district attorney’s office. the evi
dence taken, however, was not given
out. •
Mobile County “Tigers”
Arouse Federal Judge
MOBILE, Ala., May 25.—Judge
Robert T. Ervin, of the federal court,
in a special charge to the grand jury
on the question of evasion of liquor
laws, Monday said he was opposed
to giving such charges, but that the
situation in Mobile county demand
ed such action.
The judge stated that a commit
tee of citizens of Mobile county had
called on him and stated that half
of the people in their community
were engaged in the business of dis
tilling illicit liquors. So bold have
the lawbreakers become, the judge
charged, that they have begun to
threaten other members of the com
munity if they interfere with viola
tion of the law.
“It is high time that we act,” the
judge said in the charge, “no matter
what our views may be on the pro
hibition question. . . . It is the
law and as such it should be obeyed,
and whenever violators of the law
get so bad that they threaten those
who are informing on them, it is
time for all law-abiding men to get
together and see that it does stop.”
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.)
THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1920.
Mil EfiRNEST HILL
FEELS LIKE NEW MAN
Popular Officer Was In Such
Poor Health Before Tak
ing Tanlac He Was Not
Able To Report for Duty.
“I feel just like a new man since |
I began taking Tanlac and I am not i
only willing, but I am anxious to
tell other people what this medicine
has done for me,” said Captain
Earnest H. Hill, Portland, Me., re
cently.
Captain Hill is in command of the
Ben Hur plying between Portland
and Casco Bay. He has been in the
service for ten years and is held In
high regard as an officer and citizen
by all who know him.
“I have suffered from Indigestion
and stomach trouble for the past
eight years,” continued Captain Hill,
"and at the time I started taking
Tanlac I was in such a weakened
condition I could hardly stand up.
When I walked I would actually
stagger like a drunken man and, at
times, would have to hold cn to
.something to keep from falling.
After every meal I would simply
suffer torment. My food would sour
and I would swell up so with gas I
could hardly get my breath.
“I would also have awful smother
ing spells at night and sometimes I
would have to get up to get my
breath. Lots of times I would have
to open the windows and doors to
let in fresh air, or go out into the
open air in order to get my breath.
I could not find anything to do me
any good and along toward the last
I became so weak and nervous I
could not do my work.
“Five bottles of Tanlac have made
a wonderful change in my condition.
ft helped me from the very first dose
n glasses enrr
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and now I feel as good as I did when
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and ha’ / a fine appetite and just feel
like a .ew man in every way. I am
now able to be on deck every day
ready for duty.”
Tanlac is sold by all leading drug
gists.—(Advt.)
3