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MUTT AND JEFF—Who But Jeff Would Ever Have Thought of This? —By Bud Fisher
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Woman and Burglar Ba ttle on
Edge of Roof While Crowd Watches
NEW YORK, N. Y.—“ Treat ’em
rough’’ is Mrs. Edith Sellinger’s way
of handling alleged burglars, as you
might have guessed if you had ob
served John Faber when he was ar
raigned in the Morrisania police
police court. Mrs. Sellinger lives in
the Bronx, and is the wife of Capt.
Michael Sellinger of Hook and Lad
der No. 5. About 500 persons saw
her defeat the man in a lively battle
on a roof.
- Mrs. Sellinger told the police that
when she was about to enter her
apartment on the second floor, she
heard a grating sound and then saw
a large man attempting to jimmy
open the door of a neighbor’s apart
ment.
“What are you doing?” Mrs. Sel
linger asked. The man looked uj> and
said, “That’s none of you d d bus
iness.”
When she started toward him, Mrs.
Sellinger said, the man ran up three
flights of stairs to the roof, closely
followed by her. The man grabbed
hold of her shoulders and a struggle
began.
Crowd Gathers in Street
Seeing the intruder was forcing
her to the edge of the roof, Mrs.
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aOjgaMnyJ|@Mg
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—when “delicious and re- I
freshing” mean the most. I
The Coca-Cola Company
ATLANTA, GA.
I 223 I
One’s Health Breaks Down Like the
Old One-Horse Chaise
7m
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they took a few of these Tablets. You can't afford to be sick
when it costs so little to get well. Men “with a wallop,” men with
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to be a wonderful tonic for the manufacture of red blood within
the body. For sale druggists in tablet or liquid form.
Augusta, Ga. —"Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is the best
medicine I have ever taken for nervous indigestion and stomach trouble,
an ailment I have been suffering with for about twenty years, during
which time I doctored and took medicine but did not get relief. At
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for a long time.”—Mrs. Mattie Hilton, No. 1810 Ellis Street.
*
THE ATLANTA TKI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
Sellinger screamed, attracting per
sons in the street. A crowd gathered
and when Mrs. Sellinger and heiXj
opponent reached the edge of the
roof, a call was sent for the police.
Detectives Myer, Webbenhouse and
Heghey were sent in an automobile
and a record dash to the roof was
made. When they reached it they
found Mrs. Sellinger gasping for
breath, but still holding on to the
intruder.
The detectives went to his street
address and in a room occupied by
Faber found two big suitcases in
which were clothing, furs and mono
grammed silverware. Mrs. Sellinger,
whose weight is T4O pounds, was
complimented by the detectives and
told that her bravery had resulted
in a "splendid catch.”
Halfbreeds and Purebred
After careful calculation W. T.
Kilby, a North Carolina live stock
owner, decided to sell two half-breed
bulls and to replace them with one
pure-bred. The United States de
partment of agriculture, which re
cently enrolled this farmer in the
“Better Sires—Better Stock” move
ment, approved his judgment.
You can get along in
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throwing it away through
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Strength comes from the
blood, and strong blood
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neglected. « The best and
safest way to be strong
and well is to take Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery Tablets. These
readily overcome anemia,
or thin blood. They put
a feeling of vim, vigor,
strength and renewed am
bition into those who take
(Q LJ) 0
New Questions
1 Q. —What is a curule chair?
2 Q. —How is the word derby pro
nounced?
3 Q. —How many women’s Greek
letter fraternities are there in the
United States.
4 is meant by S. A. E.
horse power rating?
' 5 Q. —Is there more than one re
ligion among the Chinese?
6 Q. —What caused Ralph Walddo
Emerson to resign his pastorate in
Boston?
7 Q. —Who is the youngest wom
an college president in this coun
try ?
8' Q. —Are funds placed in a fed
eral reserve bank absolutely safe
from loss?
9 Q. —A says that a tall brick
chimney sways at the top, while B,
says that it does not, which is right?
10 Q. —Is color blindness curable?
Questions Answered
1. Question. —What causes light
ning?
1. ' Answer—Lightning is a brill
iant flash of light between clouds or
between a cloud and the earth. Ben
jamin Franklin proved this to be an
enormous electrical discharge. The
length of such a flash may be seen
several miles. When the flashes are
between the lower clouds and the
earth, they are comparatively nar
row and brilliant and are accompa
nied by thunder. When they take
place in the upper cloud region, they
become more effuse and thunder is
rarely heard. Thunder is explained
by the fact that the electric dis
charge heats the air and the vapor
lying in its path to a high tenrpera
ture, causing a violent expansion. A
steep compression, wage or noise, fol
lows.
2. Question—Of the soldiers who
take up some kind of vocational
training, how many complete their
courses?
2. Answer —Statistics show that
only nine and two-thirds per cent of
our disabled soldiers discontinue the
training. Os these almost half stop
on account of recurrence of disability
or other illness.
3. Question—What Is an orl-
flamme?
3. Answer—This was the ancient
banner of St. Denis, and early French
kings were accustomed on setting ou*
for battle to receive it from the Ab
bot of St. Denis to be carried before
them as a sacred and royal ensign.
It is used, therefore, in literature as
a standard or ensign in battle.
4. Question —Can liquid air be
seen?
4. Answer—Liquid air is visible,
having the appearance of water with
a trace of blueing in it. It cannot be
kept longer - than a day or two, and
should be placed in a Dewer bulb
(thermos bottle) packed in heavy
felt or other poor-conducting mate-
Cat Remains in Tree Five Days; Its
Wailings Attract Attention
NEW YORK, N. Y.—A squirrel de
scended from a tall oak tree on a
vacant lot In Brooklyn. An anony
mous cat. meandering gloomily along,
caught sight of the squirrel just as
the squirrel saw the feline. The
squirrel paused for the briefest in
stant, and did what all squirrels do
in moments of stress. It assumed
a sitting posture.
Having arrived at the definite con
clusion that the onrushing Maltese
harbored malicious intent, the squir
rel chattered something that sounded
like: "This is no place for little
Willie,” and, turning tail, scampered
upward and onward into the wilder
ness of oak branches whence it had
come.
Cat in lively Pursuit
The cat, having by this time en
tered into the chase with great zest
and zeal, started up the tree
its quarry. It was. an unwise move,
but it was taken on the impulse of
the moment, and, as it transpired,
was not the result of the cat’s more
mature judgment.
The squirrel bounded nimbly up to
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Write lev epeleal aeoaey aiehißg Q
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I— ASTHMA —i
AND HAY
Cured Before You Pay
f will send you a $1.25 bottle of LANE'S
Treatment, on FREE TRIAL. When com
pletely cured send me $1.25. Otherwise,
your report cancels the charge. D. J.
Lane, 372 Lane Bldg., St. Marys, Kans.
666 has proven it will cure
Malaria, Chills and Fever, Bil
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"I TREAT ECZEMA FREE"
Just Io prove that my scientific discovery
actually benefits eczema stiffferers, I will
send you enough FREE to give you more
relief than you have had in years. Write me
today. DR. ADKISSON, Dept. W, Beaumont,
Texas.—(Advt.)
rial. Liquid air cannot be warmed in
the open, above a very low tempera
ture —its boiling point. As fast as
heat is supplied, the liquid air evap
orates and /become ordinary air again.
5. Question. Who said “These
are times that try men’s souls?”
5. Answer —This expression was
used by Tom Paine, and appeared in
the first of a series of pamphlets
which he wrote and published under
the caption “The Crisis.”
6. Question —Is the same prayer
offered each day at the opening of
the sessions of congress?
6. Answer—The prayers are ex
temporaneous and differ from day to
day, Rev. Henry N. Coudon is the
chaplain of the house and Rev. For
rest J. Prettyman is chaplain of the
senate. The prayer offered in the
senate on April 14 follows: Al
highty God, Thou has touched our
poor human life with an infinite pur
pose. Those who have desired to see
Thy glory have seen it not in the
work of Thy hands but in the per
fect life of Thy Son. Thou art the
God of the perfect life. We thank
Thee that the foundations of our civ
ilization are based upon the qualities
of life that He has revealed to us.
Our common law, our standard of
morals( our highest ideals are in
Him. Grant us this day so to con
strucj our loves as that we may be
patterned after the image of Thy
Son. For Christ’s sake. Amen.
7. Question —Why, in translat
ing "Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upsarsen,”
did Daniel fuse the word Peres in
stead of Urmarsin?
7. Answer—Peres Is the singular
form and Upharsin the plural.
8. Question —How was it possible
to refuse Victor Berger a seat in con
gress when he was duly elected?
8. Answer—The constitution pro
vides that “each house shall be the
of the elections, returns and
qualifications of its own members.”
9. Question —How does the supply
of oil in the United States compare
with the rest of the world?
9. Answer—The geological survey
states that of the “oil in sight”
which amounts to about sixty billion
barrels, forty-three billion barrels
may be regarded as definitely “in
sight” as’ shown by actual drilling
with successful results. Foreign
countries are using only half as
much petroleum as the United
States, but have seven times as much
oil in the ground.
10. Question —What is catgut?
10. Answer —This is a material
employed in the manufactureujf the
strings of violins, harps, guitars and
other musical instruments, and also
used for cords, carrying clock
weights, bows for archers, and for
whipcords. It is generally prepared
from the intestines of sheep, rarely
from those of the horse, ass or mule,
and never from those of the cat.
the topmost boughs of the tree,
where it paused on a swaying
branch long enough to chatter some
tiling in the squirrel language thnt
reflected strongly on the cat. Then,
with a graceful leap, the squirrel
vanished into ‘.he recesses of an ad
joining tree.
And the cat, claws outstretched,
stayed where it was on the topmost
bough of the oak, afraid to go back
and lacking the nerve to proceed.
There it swayed, out of place and
unhappy, wholly incapable of enjoy
ing the distinction its period of ele
vation had earned it as an integral
part of the wonderful skyline of
Brooklyn.
The afternoon wore away into eve
ning. As right descended the cat
registered w’ld, robust grief. It
howled all right, and in the morning
sleepy-eyed i.eighbors discovered the
cat’s plight.
Boys tried to climb the tree which
is about 109 feet high, got half way
up and abandoned the project. Boy
Scouts got on the job and found a
score of expedients unavailing. Day
aft?r day k’nd-hearted folk of the
neighborhood tried to evolve a feas
ible plan to rescue the cat. Then
the twilight would descend and the
cat would start to give expression
to the anguish that was convulsing
its being.
x , Dr. Walter Hopkins, principal of
the Boys’ High school, had been an
interested observer of the boys’ en
deavors to rescue the cat. He came
with a short ladder, which he propped
against the side of the tree. Then
he removed his coat. He climbed the
ladder to the top-most rung, twined
his legs around the tree, shinned up
twenty feet to the first bough and
made his way cautiously toward the
top.
Rescued by School Principal
Beneath the tree a’ group of boys
stood with an open blanket. Several
feet from the top of the tree Dr.
Hopkins shook the boughs. The cat
weak from its long vigil, was unable
to retain its grip on the bough on
which it had perched five days, let
go and crashed through lower
branches into the blanket.
'YvA 1 the , cat ’ s nerves had been
soothed and its tail had assumed its
normal dimensions it drank a lot of
milk and sauntered slowly away in
the direction whence it came, a far
wiser animal than it was five days
previous.
Husband Cuts Wife’s Nose
With Glancing Nail
PLATTVILLE, N. Y.—On a recent
morning Mrs. Hobart Quill asked her
husband to nail a board for her in
the kitchen. Mrs. Quill produced the
Doard, nails and hammer and led her
husband to the kitchen. The board
w as Placed in position, Mrs. Quill
holding one end of it, according to
a report of the affair.
Mr. Quill started a nail on its mis
sion and then informed his wife that
ne would show her how to drive the
nail with three blows of the hammer.
He hit the nail a crushing blow. It
!t ft the board struck Mrs. Quill on
the end of the nose, cutting a deep
gash.
Mrs. Quill’s nose is swollen to
twice its normal size, but it will be
all right in a few days, Dr. Sawyer
reports.
Shortest “Better Sires”
“Disposed of two cows and one
bull: reason, scrubs.”- —Statement of
L. S. Dryton, of North Carolina, to
United States department of agri
culture.
Egyptians of Thousand Years Ago
Found W ays to Punish Profiteers
The profiteer, brazen, shameless,
greedy and soulless, has a genealogy
that extends back forty or more gen
erations. The dust of the ages has
been brushed aside, and there is
found written the nefarious practices
of the ancient family of which there
is such a host of modern progeny.
The record was exhumed by Ralph A.
Graves, of the National Geographic
society, and" the story reveals that the
problem of 30-cent sugar is not with
out precedent.
The Nile was low in 967 A. D.,
says the record of an early profiteer’s
dynasty. The venerable stream did
not bring down its fertile deposits,
and in the next year there was a fam
ine that swept away 600,000 persons
in the vicinity of the city of Fustat.
G’awhar, a Mohammedan Joseph or
his time, founded a new city, the
Cairo of today, a short distance from
the stricken town, and immediately
organized relief measures. Many
ships laden with grain came to the
port, yet the price of bread still re
mained high.
But they had effective ways of do
ing things in those old days. G’awhar
lost his patience with persuasive
methods, and ordered his soldiers to
seize all the millers and grain deal
ers. In the market place the mer
chants were heartily flogged while
the people watched with a satisfac-
Negro Wandered 24 Years
In Africa; Has Returned
The wierd wanderings of Petet
Snow as he told them to immigra
tion officials at Ellis Island won him
admittance ito the United States as
a citizen. I
Having arrived as a cook on the
steamer’ Tuckanuck, he sought to
enter the country with the declara
tion that he was a native of Georgia.
He could not prove this, but nar
rated his tale of ocean and African
roamings in such good American
“Southern” dialect that without ma
terial proof of his citizenship he
was admitted.
Snow said that “something about
1895” he had shipped as a cook
from Savannah aboard the ship Ho
say, which carried negroes back to
Africa. He said he spent “about
twenty-four years in Africa,” he
landed in Monrovia, soon afterwards
he was robbed and “dead broke,” in
a land of black strangers, he began
wandering.
He worked intermittenly on “what
they called farms,” penetrating into
some of the “darkest corners ?of
Africa.” He said he “just missed”
Theodore Roosevelt when the latter
left a certain little town on one of
his African hunting expeditions.
Finally, Snow said, he was rescued
by British missionaries, for whom
he had worked four years.
Map Wears Tin Corset
NEW/YORK. —lnstead of setting
a new fashion in men’s attire, Ernest
Decuti, an upholsterer, was sent to
Bellevue for observation when he ap
peared in the special sessions court
decked out in a crude home-made
corset of wood and tin—mostly tin.
He was charged with violating the
anti-firearms act.
When the bulge around his waist
line was noticed he was ordered
searched and the wood and tin con
traption found.
Decuti told the court that he had
been threatened in blackmail letters
and that he had fashioned the corset
to p? otject himself.
Mrs. O’Hara Freed
WASHINGTON.—President Wilson
commuted to at once the sen
tence imposed on Mrs. Kate O'Hare.
St. Louis, who was sentenced April
14, .1919, to five years in the federal
penitentiary at Jefferson City, Mo.,
for a violation of the esponage act.
She was accused of having, in a
speech at Bowman, N. D., compared
mothers who allowed their sons to
become soldiers to “brood sows.”
Mrs. O’Hare was one of the pris
oners whose release was asked by
the recent Socialist national conven
tion at New York.
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THURSDAY, JUNE S, 1»SO.
tion that housewives of today can
understand.
Thereafter throughout the two
years of famine grain was sold from
centra] depots under the direction of
government inspectors.
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science for 200 years. Describes all gra sufferer, then for humanity’s
the symptoms and complications, sake, let this book bring new qourage
Shows how Pellagra can be checked and* valuable knowledge. It will be
in early stages. Tells of the curse sent Free for the asking.
American Compounding Co., Box 587-L, Jasper, Ala.
A THESE H* g<hi Em
This Victory Red Persian Ivory ‘
x Pendant und Neck Chain, 30 Indies
/C W 'KILy long; these 4 Gold plated Rings i
It — iln 'l this lovely Gold plated Laval- £
here and Neck Chain will ALL be
Given FREE by IIS to anyone sell- /////•, ...idi W
ing only 12 pieces of Jewelry sit 10 cents each. Victory Red is all the rage,
B. D. MEAD MEG. CO., Providence, R. I.
Adamson 8-Hour Law
Exceptions Pointed Out
WASHINGTON, June 2.—Supreme
court today decided that the Adam
son eight-hour law does not apply
to insolvent railroads w hose em
ployes have previous contracts call
ing for /a, day longer than eight
hours if the employes are willing
to abide by their contract.