Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, June 03, 1920, Page 3, Image 3

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DIDN’T KNOW ’TWAS SO GOOD Texas Lady Storekeeper. Who Carries Black-Draught in Stock, Has Found It “Best Liver Medicine” Obtainable Barker, Texas—Relating her experi ence with Thedford’s Black-Draught, Mrs. A. L. Fromme. of this place, says: “I had for some time used . . . and other liver medicines, which would nauseate and make me feel bad. We have a store, and our customers called for Black-Draught so often I decided it must be good, so thought I would try it myself. “I began its use and found it just fitted my case. It neither griped nor nauseated me, was an easy laxative and not hard to take. "I had had headaches a great deal, no doubt from torpid liver. The Black-Draught would cure them. The best way I find to take Black- Draught is to take one or two good sized doses until the liver begins to act, then taper the doses to just a pinch after meals. “It will insure good digestion, do away with the gas or bad taste in the mouth, and is without doubt the best liver medicine in the market. I have found it so. I can recommend it to my friends, for I believe fit will do them good." Get a package of Thedford’s Black-Draught liver medicine today. Most dealers cary it in stock. (Advt.) ARE YOU SICK? If you are suffering from Blood or Nerve Disorders, Rheumatic Symp toms, Stomach or Bowel Trouble. Skin broken out or rough and sore. Sore Mouth or Tongue. Giddy-Head ed. Weak, Nervous, Loss of Appetite or a General Run-down condition of Health —you should write at once for the most valuable and reliable in formation that has yet been pub lished about the strange disease — PELLAGRA Many people have this disease and - do not know it until it is too late. Do not wait. 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We want to show everyone at our expense, that this new method is designed to erd nil difficult breathing, all wheezing, and nil those ter rible paroxysms at once. This free offer is too Important to neglect a single day. Write now and begiu the method at once. S’end no money. Simply mall coupon below. Do It Today. HIEE TRIAL COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room Ml K, Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo, N. Y. Send free trial of year method to: •••••••••••••••• (Advt.) PELLAGRA CURED WITHOUT A STARVATION DIET AT A SMALL COST If you have this awful disease, and want to be cured —to stay cured—write tor FREE BOOK. giving the history of pellagra, symptoms, results and bow to treat. Sent in A> laiD . sealed envelope. A guaranteed treat menr that cures when all others fail. Write for this book today. cdoWN MEDICINE COMPANY. Dept. 96, Atlanta, Ga. Rub-My-Tism is a powerful antiseptic; it kills the poison caused from infected cuts, cures old sores, tetter, etc.— (Advt.) THE ATLANTA TRI-WFEKLY JOURNAL. WILSON OFFERS TO HELP MEXICO FIGHT PLAGUE VERA CRUZ, June 1.—((By the Associated Press.) —President Wilson has offered to send hospital ships, nurses, doctors and medical ships, to Vera Cruz immediately to assist in combating the bubonic plague, which has made its appearance here, eleven authentic cases having devel oped to date and five deaths result ing. The history of the outbreak ap pears to date back to May 15, when the first case is believed.now to have developed. The victim in this case died on May and the second victim on May 24. Up to that time it had not been suspected that. the disease from which the deaths occurred was of the bubonic type. although the symptoms now described indicate this to have been the case. On May 27, another case of the same nature appeared and upon thorough exami nation it was found to be bubonic. Since that date there have been found the eleven proved cases noted, live of the eleven victims dying. Judging from the individuals at tacked and the location of their hbmes, it seems to be established that the local point of the outbreak is the warehouses of one of the dock ing companies. It is considered cer tain that rats transmitted the plague, as recently a number of dead rodents have been found near these warehouses. Vera Cruz already is completely cut off from the rest of the repub lic. Relief already has begun to ar rive from the outside, however, a train from Mexico City coming in tonight with representatives of the sanitary corps and material with wltich to fight the plague. In the opinion of the medical au thorities the plague has not yet at tained the character of an epidemic, and they believe it can easily be controlled by taking the proper measures to combat it. Fumigation of the freight warehouses already has been begun, as has the cleaning up of dwellings and the burning of wooden houses near the central point of the outbreak. GENERAL DIAZ READY TO GIVE UP FIGHTING MEXICO CITY. June 1. —General Felix Diazz, who has been carrying on a revolutionary movement in the state of Vera Cruz for some time, is willing to return to private life, now that the overthrow of the Caranza regime has been accomplished, ac cording to General Luis Medina Bar ron, who arrived here yesterday as envoy of General Diaz to confer with General Obregon and Adolfo de la Huerta, provisional president. Men who have been expatriated from Mexico will be invited to re turn and help build up the coun try, said Adolfo de la Huerta, pro visional president, today, but he added that those who had charges against them would have to face trial. An extraordinary session of congress will be called shortly, the provisional president declared. A thorough diag nosis of De la Huerta’s illness, which was declared this morning to be ap pendicitis, has shown his disease to be of a rather slight character. In his statement to the Associated Press, the provisional president de clared he would give guarantees to all political candidates and would make efforts to improve the condi tion of workers and to develop na tional resources. ADMINISTRATION OPPOSED TO POLICING OF MEXICO WASHINGTON, June 1. —Recom- mendations by the Fall senate com mittee that this country police Mex ico unless a stable government is established and Americans protected, will be tabled by administration of ficials, it was indicated today. Such a policy, officials believe, would be nothing* less than interven tion, a move which the Wilson admin istration has opposed. Some officials point out that the Fall report coming on the eve of political conventions would be re garded as a political move and pre dicted that the Republican Mexican plank would be written with the re port as a basis. One phase of the report—that the present de la Huerta government should not be recognized until it is evident that it had the support of the Mexican people—was agreed to by administration officials. Wilson and Judges Relieved of Income Tax on Salaries WASHINGTON, June I.—The su preme court today declared unconsti tutional provisions in the war reve nue act of 1919 requiring the presi dent of the United States and all federal judges, including members of the supreme court, to pay an income tax on their salaries. Congress Votes to Adjourn Session Saturday Afternoon WASHINGTON, June I.—Without a record vote, the house today adopt ed a resolution offered by Represen tative Mondell, of Wyoming, the Re publican leader, providing for a sine die adjournment of congress at 4 o’clock Saturday. Leavey Nominated as Brunswick Postmaster WASHINGTON, June I.—Louis J. Leavey, Jr., was nomited today to be postmaster at Brunswick, Ga., and Whitley L. Jarman, at Helena, Ark., both reappointments. Much Phosphate Shipped by Tampa TAMPA, Fla., June I.—Officials of* the Atlantic Coast Line railroad ter minals at Port Tampa today in point ing out the improvement in foreign trade conditions announced that 111,- 000 tons of phosphate were shipped from the terminals in May. It was the largest total ever forwarded in one month from that point. 400 Per Cent Dividend SPARTANBURG, S. C., June I. Announcement was made today that the directors of Inman Mills, here, have decided on a stock dividend of 400 per cent, 300 per cent to be in common stock and 100 per cent in preferred stock. A stockholders’ meeting has been called to ratify the action of the directors. The present capitalization of the mill is $350,000. "■ 1 Rheumatism A Home Cure Given By One Who Had It In the spring of 1893 I 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 pletely, 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 have used it and it has proven itself to be that long-looked-for means of curing your rheumatism, you may send tne price of It, one dollar, but understand, I do not want your money unless you are perfectly satisfied to send it. Isn’t that fair? Why suffer any longer when positive relief Is thus offered you free? Don’t delay. Write today. Mark H. Jackson, No. 243-F Gurney Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y. Mt. Jackson is responsible. Above statement true.—(Advt.) Widow of Capitalist Less Than 24 Hours, Became Bride of Naval Officer ' ■■ • ? J- 1 n. " V\ a / sum® MRS. HELEN GRIFFIN BASTEDO Less than twenty-four hours after the death of her husband, George Francis Griffin, Chicago capitalist, his widow, w’ho was Miss Helen Prindiville, was married to Lieuten ant-Commander Paul H. Bastedo, U. S. N., in San Diego, Cal. Attorneys in charge of the Griffin estate, which has been estimated to be worth as much as $9,000,000, said that her marriage to the naval officer would not affect her rights and that she and her two small children would inherit the entire estate. Mr. and Mrs. Griffin had been separated for several years and she had instituted an action for divorce which, how ever, was not pressed. RUSS TO OPEN, TRADE OFFICE IN ENGLAND LONDON, June I.—As the first result of yesterday’s meeting of Gregory Krassin, Russian bolshevik minister of trade and commerce, with Premier Lloyd George and members of the British cabinet, the soviet government has been granted per mission to open immediately a cen tral trading office in London, ac cording to the Evening Standard. At this office, the newspaper says, an endeavor will be made to organ ize an exchange of goods with Brit ish traders. Referendum Vote On Dry Amendment Is Held Invalid WASHINGTON, June I.—The su preme court held today that federal constitutional amendments cannot be submitted for ratification to a ref erendum vote in states having ref erendum prbvisions in their consti tutions. The court declared inoperative the Ohio state constitutional referendum amendment insofar as it affects rat ification of federal amendments. Ohio supreme court decrees dis missing injunction proceedings brought by George S. Hawke, of Cin cinnati, to prevent submission of the prohibition and women suffrage amendments to the voters were set aside by the court. The court failed again today to de cide the validity of the prohibition amendment and portions of the en forcement act and recessed until next Monday when the present term will close. 2 Widows Make Claim To Estate of C. M. Baker Two widows are claiming the estate of Charles M. Baker, a part ner in the American Burlesque as sociation, owning several burlesque and vaudeville companies. Mrs. Ber tha Baker, of 251 West Ninenty-sev enth street, New York, formerly a chorus girl, who married Baker in 1912 in Boston, applied to Surrogate Foley to revoke the letters of ad ministration issued to Mrs. Augusta Baker, of New Haven, who married Mr. Baker in 1893, of which union there was a daughter, now twenty five years old. Mr. Baker was killed in an auto mobile accident at Auburn, N. Y. Mrs. Baker No. 2, who was with him, is still suffering from injuries she re ceived. It is alleged in behalf of the second Mrs. Baker that Mr. Baker obtained a divorce from his first wife in Chicago in 1911. This state ment is disputed by the first Mrs. Baker, who asserts she knew noth ing about the Surrogate Foley postponed action until the second Mrs. Baker can pro duce a copy of the Illinois divorce decree and her own certificate of marriage. $30,000 Fire in Anniston Plant ANNISTON, Ala., June I.—The of fice building, pattern shop and main foundry of the Ornamental Foundry company here were destroyed by fire early Tuesday. A supplemental foundry building adjoining the plant was saved. The plant recently had resumed operations after a close down during which large additions were made. The burned portions of the plant will be rebuilt at once, it was announced. The loss is estimat ed at $30,000, practically covered by insurance. French Mothers of Large Families to Get Medals Motherhood at last comes into her rightful place in the list of French honors, according tb a decree pub lished today which provides for granting medals to mothers of large families. Five children will entitle a mother to a bronze medal; eight to a silver medal, and ten a gold medal, which will be called the medal of /the French family. Like the Le gidn of Honor medal, the bronze med al will be signified by a ribbon and rosettes will be the higher awards for Increasing the population. Son Shunned Her; Gets $1 JERSEY CITY. N. J.—ln her will Mrs. Catherine Burke left only $1 to Amos Blicker, her son by a for mer husband, “because of his con duct in remaining away from her twenty years.” Call Florida Pastor CUTHBERT, Ga., June 1. —The congregation of the Cuthbert Baptist church has called the Rev. J. W. Senterfitt, of Marianna, Fla., as pas tor. While no official acceptance of the call has been made, the local church is impressed that same will be accepted. The pulpit of this church has been vacant since the Rev. W. M. Sentell resigned to ac cept a call to an Atlanta church. POST IN SYMPATHY WITH MISTS. PAIMER DECLARES WASHINGTON. June I.—(By the Associated Press.) —Charging that Louis F. Post, assistant secretary of labor, had a “perverted sympathy” for the criminal anarchist, Attorney General Palmer told a house com mittee today that in dealing with at tempts of the government to rid the country of dangerous aliens Mr. Post had employed a “self-willed and au tocratic substitution of his own mis taken personal viewpoint for the ob ligations of the public law.” Mr. Palmer was testifying before the rules committee, which is inves tigating the official conduct of Mr. Post in deportation proceedings. "It has become perfectly apparent,” the attorney general said, “that Mr. Post’s course in all the deportation proceedings has been dictated by his own personal view that the depor tation law is wrong, rather than by any desire or intention to carry out the law as enacted by the congress By his self-willed and autocratic sub stitution of his mistaken personal viewpoint for the obligation of pub lic law; by his habitually tender so licitude for social revolutionists and perverted sympathy for the criminal anarchists of the country, he has consistently deprived the people of their day in court in the enforce ment of a law of vital Importance to their peace and safety. By his whole sale jail deliveries and his release of even self-confessed anarchists of the worst type, he has utterly nulli fied the purpose of the congress in passing the deportation statute and has set at large amongst the peo ple the very public enemies whom it was the desire and intention of the congress to be rid of. Defies Rules of Evidence “He has defied the rules of evi dence as laid down by our most re sponsible courts, has cancelled hun dreds of legal warrants issued by his department, entirely -without jus tification and in face of the facts, has flouted the judgment of •• •om mittee of the senate which has in vestigated one of the cases before him. has shown constant favors to violators of the law and their at torneys, refusing even common cour tesy to the department of justice, wihch is charged with the duty of enforcing the laws, and in order to distract public attention from his ob vious failure to perform his own du ties, has showered upon the depart ment of justice a mass of charges of misconduct in the hope that he could put this law-enforcing depart ment of the government on the de fensive in the place of those crimi nal enemies of the country from whose activities our department has sought to protect the government and the people.” Answers Charges in Detail The specific charges made before the committee by Mr. Post were an swered by the attorney general in detail. Mr. Palmer said he had hoped “it might never be necessary to indulge in any criticism of another govern ment official,” but that “outrageous and unconscionable falsehoods” laid before the committee by Mr. Post re quired definite answers. “It is not surprising,” he added, “that Mr. Post, when the opportunity has presented itself in an official way, to render a service to those who advocated force and violence, should employ it to the limit. He has always been sympathetic with that sort of thing.” Jjed Unconsciously In answering Mr. Post’s statements that he had cancelled deportation warrants “only where facts war ranted such action.” Mr. Palmer cited numerous individual cases which he claimed placed the assistant secre tary in a position of "passive tol erance and encouragement” of bol shevik literature and propaganda. He also submitted records of the depart ment showing the particular persons actively Identified with the spread of the doctrine of the dictatorship of the proletariat. Mr. Post continued to cancel the warrants, Mr. Palmer said, “even after we had produced evidence showing the individual to have been a member of the Com munist party which the secretary of labor had held to be unlawful.” Mr. Palmer declared that Mr. Post had “become a factor in the revolu tionary plan.” but he credited the assistant secretary with having been led into it. “unconsciously.” He said, however, that the attitude in which he had pictured the labor department official was one -which antedated Mr. Post’s service in the government. Here he quoted from editorials writ ten by Mr. Post when he was editor of “The Public,” a magazine which the attorney general called “very radical.” Regarding Mr. Post’s assertion that “with all of these sweeping /raids, '-only three pistols have been ' found,” Mr. Palmer declared that while the number of gunds found in no way indicated the potential dan ger of the aliens, department agents not only found “scores of them, but bombs and other implements of de struction as well.” Charges by Jackson H. Ralston, counsel for Mr. Post, that the de partment of justice had provocateur agents in service who were engaged in forming new communist local or ganizations against whic.i raids could be directed were characterized by the attorney general as “deliberate and unwarranted falsehoods.” He said that some of the department agents, in order to gain confidential information, had joined outlawed or ganizations, but he challenged “any body to show that any one of the department employes has ever or gah’zed or has been instrumental in carrying out the poll ■■ es or program of «ny radical organization.” THE TRUTH ABOUT GALI. STONES A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad dock, 3832 Brooklyn, Dept. SS, Kansas City, Mo., tells of improved method of treating catarrhal inflammation of the Gall Blad der and Bile Duets associated with Gall Stones, from which remarkable results are reported. Write • for booklet and free trial plan.— (Advt.) Says Socialism and Democracy Will Not Mix in Industry SAVANNAH. Ga., June I.—Dr. G. W. Dyer, professor of political econ omy at Vanderbilt university, speak ing before the sixteenth annual con vention of the Cottonseed Crushers’ Association of Georgia at its initial session Monday, roundly scored strikes, closed shop movements and all laws that seek to fix wages for laboring men as being tainted with Socialism. . The American principle of democ racy in industry, he said, allowed a man to work at whatever avo.-ition he desired and at whatever pay he considered just for his services. Un der this plan, he went on, wages are controlled by two great economic laws, the law of supply and demand, and the law of competition. Supply and demand, he stated, would play no part under the Socialistic plan, the wages being set and imriiovable. T. R. Lombard, Atlanta, spoke on “Safety First and First Aid.” Presi dent E. P. Chivers, of Atlanta, made an address reviewing the work oi the association of the past year. Four new members were elected, all of Atlanta: Smith & Reed Co., H. C. Bickmore, A. W. Chase and J. L. McCour. Officers will be elected by the crushers at the final day’s session of the convention today. Ex-German Empress Has Heart I rouble DOORN, Holland, June I.—There has been a recurrence of the former German empress’ heart affection, due to the emotions of moving from Amerongen. Dr. Haens, who is in at tendance, says there is no imminent danger, but has prescribed the ut most care and has given strict in structions that she be caried up ■ and down stairs in a litter. She’ll Marry You —For a $lO Fee g|l K . 1 &ev. Jlilia REV. JULIA BUDLONG. BERKELEY, Cal.- —How would you like a pretty young woman to marry you? No, this isn’t a leap year sug gestion. It’s an informal way of announcing that Miss, or to be more correct, Rev. Julia Budlong, will be open to engagements for the month of June in Kalamazoo, Mich., and will either marry, bap tize, christen or bury you. She has all the credentials from the Pacific Unitarian School of Religion here, from which she was the first girl to graduate into the ministry. Rev. Budlong got a bad start, and was robbed of her ticket the day before she started for her first pastorate, but she’s on her way now with several degrees to step into the pulpit of the First Uni tarian church at Kalamazoo. Daring Act of 18-Year- Old Girl Thrills Crowd Who Field Their Breath KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Miss Ethel Dare, an 18-year-old carnival per former who has been rehearsing an aerial act in Kansas City, climbed a rope ladder from one airplane to an other 1,500 feet over Swope Park. The accomplishment of the feat was possible after a week of trials un der adverse weather conditions. Standing on the upper wings of a Canadian Curtiss plane, piloted by G. 'V p armley, a partner in the act, she caught the lower rungs of a rope ladder dropped from the fuse lage of a second plane fifteen feet above, driven by E. L. Partridge, a third member of the team. Then she climbed safely to her seat behind the pilot of the upper plane. Walks Upper Wing in Stocking Feet lhe upper wing of Miss Dare’s machine was equipped with a small hand railing by the aid of which she drew herself up from the wing be low. A small rubber mat was fas tened on the plane to give her a bet ter foothold while she walked back and forth across the wing. She Per formed in her stocking feet. Before the actual climb up the ladder began Miss Dare seemed to have trouble in getting out of the front seat and past the terrific pro peller blast, which swept across the lower plane for several feet on either side of the fuselage. But she finally got past safely. Pilots in Practice for Weeks The two- pilots, Partridge and Parmely have practiced the necessary maneuvers for the change for sev eral weeks. To “jockey” the two ma chines into the necessary position for the change has required much practice. The upper machine must not ap proach the plane below, with the wajting girl standing upon its upper t°o fast. The ladder must be within her reach and yet the ma chines must . be kept far enough apart to avoid a collision. When Miss Dare left the machine upon which she had been standing and dangled on the end of the lad der, an audible sigh came from those who stood down below, wait ing for the change to take place, several women were among the spec tators. Russian Bolshevik Forces Retire After Battle With Poles LONDON, June I.—Russian Bol shevik forces fighting against the 1 oles and Ukrainians in the Tarasht cha region, south of Kiev, have re tired to new positions after “fighting 'Xi? superior enemy forces, says an official statement issued in Moscow yesterday and received here by wire less. Turkish nationalist forces and the superior command of French troops occupying Gilicia, Asia Minor, have concluded a twenty-day armistice, which at its expiration may be re newed. according to a Constantino ple dispatch to the Exchange Tele graph company. Woman Makes Living by Fainting, Is Arrested PITTSBURG, Pa.—After being fined $a m police court, Miss Minnie Kay announced her retirement as a pro fessional fainter. She told the mag istrate that though going about with a sign attached to her back had proved a good advertising “stunt” for her various employers, she had great ly increased her effectiveness by in troducing a realistic swoon. She was paid S4B a’week and had been follow ing this vocation for years. Os late she had been in the service of a motion picture house, carefully distributing her faints in widely sep arated parts of the city. On the night of her arrest she was working among the downtown throngs. A big crowd gathered and appreciatively perused the sign on her back when she did an artistic faint near Market street. A policeman helped revive her. An hour later Miss Kay fainted at Smithfield and Diamond streets. The same policeman chanced to be among those present. He eyed her icily and marched her to the station. Charge Lad With Cutting Babe’s Throat With Knife BRADFORD, Pa.—Supposedly in revenge for having been rebuked by Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Gemmel, of West Bradford, Leo Kelly, aged 16, took Ruby Gemmel, 10 months old, from her crib, and, according to the police, plunged the blade of his pocket knife into her throat. The| baby died before the arival of a I physician. The boy is held on a charge of murder. Kelly is an adopted son of James Gemmel of this city, a brother of Oliver Gemmel. He escaped a week ago from the State Institution for Feeble Minded in Polk and returned to his home here. He is said to have taken a horse and buggy from Oliver Gemmel’s stable without getting permission, for which act he was taken to task. Following the reprimand he enter ed the house and a few, minutes later Mr. and Mrs. Gemmel found the baby dying. Roosevelt Memorial WASHINGTON. June I.—Presi dent Wilson today signed the senate bill incorporating the Roosevelt me morial association. '■ THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1020. WILSON TO DIRECT CONVENTION FROM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON, June I.—While President Wilson will be unable to go to San Francisco, the extent to which he will make his influence felt tn the Democratic convention is daily becoming more apparent. Events of the last few days show clearly, the president’s friends say. that he will direct administration forces so far as any man can who is not actually* on the convention floor. Some of the convention prepara tions the president has made and in tends to make are: A direct wire will run from the convention hall to the White House. Arrangements will also be made for Mr. Wilson to jet stories of conven tion doings as reported by news paper men. Representing the president at the; convention will be Senator Carter ] Glass, who wrote the Virginia Demo- I cratic platform which Mr. Wilson has indorsed and indicated he be lieves shoufld be the basis for the national platform. Homer Cummings, chairman of the Democratic national committtee, is also one of the Wil son force. His keynote address was approved by Mr. Wilson yesterday at a con ference during which Mr. Wilson is understood to have outlined at length his view on the stand tfie convention should take on various matters. A number of cabinet officers, the only persons outside of Mr. Cum mings and the White House staff who have seen and talked with the presi dent lately, will also be at the con vention. Senator Hitchcock is also a delegate. All these men are familiar with Mr. Wilson’s views, and will be ready to present them to convention dele gates. French Officer to Investigate Slaying Os American Subject BERLIN, June I.—General Leon ard, chief of the French commission to upper Silesia, has been asked by the American mission to investigate the shooting of Arnold Heide, Ameri can lecturer who was killed by a French guard in Beuthen yesterday. The only information which the American mission has been able to obtain thus far concerning Heide and his presence in Beuthen was contain ed in a report from the French mis sion stating that they had vised an American passport jn Heide’s posses sion. The passport, they said, de scribed Heide as an American citizen, and was issued for a journey into up per Silesia. The mission said they had learned Heide left the United States only recently, and planned to conduct a campaign of propaganda through lecturers in upper Silesia. The American mission had no record of his presence in the country. The German foreign office claimed Heide was a citizen of France, but both American and French represen tatives agreed he was undoubtedly an American. The German foreign office had joined in the investigation. Only vague reports of the actual shooting have been obtainable. They said the French authorities stopped a tram car on which Heide was rid ing; that he was arrested, and while disputing with the soldiers was shot by one of the French guards. He died instantly. German Communists And Nationals Fight With Beer Glasses LONDON. June I.—Riotous disor ders are taking place in Germany as a result of the political campaign in that country, according to a Berlin dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph company. A meeting of the Demo cratic party in Berlin Sunday ended in a serious fight, it is said, commun ists attacking Nationals with sticks, beer glasses and chairs, and storming the speaker’s nlatform. At a meet ing held in Mecklenburg, Deputy von Graefe, conservative, received a bro ken arm and rib during a melee, while the secretary of another con servative meeting was badly mauled and was found unconscious after the gathering had adjourned. Everywhere in Germany there is great tension, the dispatch declares, and several landowners are said to have fled to Berlin to escape com munist violence. Man Carries Jug of Money MOONVILLE, N. Y.—One after noon this week Ira Shippey of the “Buckwheat” district, entered the Exchange Bank here carrying a two gallon jug. He removed the cork, turned the jug bottom-side up over the counter and a stream of pennies nickles, dimes and quarters ran out, Mr. Shippey piled up the coins in the different denominations and asked to open an account. It developed that Shippey, who is a farmer, had 1,100 pennies, 900 nickles, 1,700 dimes and 400 quar ters. He stated that the jug was gget ting heavy and that Mrs. Shippey suggested that they deposit the money in the bank. He said that he and his wife had been dropping the coins in the jug for nearly twenty years and that he had no idea that it contained $326, Mouse Saves Miner’s Life ST. LOUIS, Mo.—Frank Lucas of East St. Louis is feeding the mice in a mine. One of them saved his life and he is the friend of all mice from now on. Lucas was drowsing on a bench in the mine after eating his lunch. A mouse ran up his trouser leg to knee. He sprang up and for ward. clutching his trouser leg to keep the mouse from going higher. At the instant a “clod” fell from the roof, crushing the bench where Lu cas had sat. Later in the day another miner was about to kill a mouse. Lucas interceded. “Don’t kill it.” he said, “one of them saved my life.” Then he told what had happened. Cry of “Mad Dog” Routs Bogus Beggar; He Beats It MINNESOTA, Minn. Everybody knows that necessity is the mother of invention. But it remained for two police men to prove that necessity is also the mother of locomotion —and that they themselves were “miracle men.” Patrolmen Forman and Leighton came upon Roy Patterson, transient, pursuing a mendicant trade, his face tense with a show of suffering, and reaping a harvest of coins. “Mad dog!” they cried together. “Mad dog!” Patterson jumped to his feet and fled —fled with long and healthy strides. The policemen fled in pur suit. “Ninety days in the workhouse for begging on the streets.” was the de cision of Judge Montgomery in mu nicipal court. Mill j|RX GUARANTEED /R*7Lr\Send No Money ? /Ah\ \ Positively greateat tire offer WfjSy^V/ VSrt 1 ever made! 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REMOVE YOUR_WR>NKLESI “Beautiful Eyelashes and Eye brows, Beautiful Figure Merely a Question of Will ingness to Try.” Superfluous Hair, Pimples and Blackheads Disappear “Like Magic,” Say Letters : a This clever woman has perfected a method sim ple and yet “marvelous” in the opinion of hundieds of sister womcji, and the result has brought a won derful change m her facial charm. “In a single night,” says Helen Clare, "I have sensed the work ing of my method, and for removing wrinkles and developing the form, reports from nearly every state in the Union are even more pronounciid than my own—and rapid.” In an interview Helen Clare said: “I macle my self the woman that lam today. I brought about the wonderful change in my own appearance, and there are hundreds of my friends who know how I did it (in a secret, pleasant, quiet, yet harmless man ner). My complexion today is as clear and fair as that of a child. 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Silver-plated Tea spoons (fancy pattern) given fGr selling 8 boxes Prof. Smith's i ff ea< l aclle an(l Neuralgia Tnb. lets. 25c a box. Catalogue of other premiums sent with goods. SMITH DKUG CO., Box 2, Woodboro, Md. 3