Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, June 10, 1920, Page 3, Image 3

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ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine / A \ fw'L “Bayex’s Tablets of Aspirin” is gen mine Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only an un broken “Bayer package” which con tains proper directions to relieve Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neu ralgia, Rheumatism, Colds and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger “Bayer packages.” Aspirin is trade mark Bayer Manufacture Monoacetic acidester of Salicylicacid—(Advt.) “Cure Year Rupture Like I Cured Hine” Old Sea Captain Cured His Own Rupture After Doctors Said “Operate or Death.” His Remedy and Boek Sent Free. Captain Collings sailed the seas for many years; then he sustained a bad double rup ture that soon forced him to not only re gain ashore, but kept him bedridden for years. He tried doctor after doctor and truss after truss. No results! Finally, he pyas assured that he must either submit to i dangerous and abhorrent operation or die. He did neither! He cured himself Instead. 'Fellow Men and Women, You Don’t Have To Be Cut Up, and You Don’t Have To Be Tortured by Trusses.” Captain Collings made a study of himself, f his condition —and at last he was re yarded bv the finding of the method that o quickly made him a well, strong, vigor us and happy man. Anyone can use the same method; it’s impie, easy, safe and inexpensive. Every uptured person in the world should have he Captain Collings book, telling all about ow he cured himself, and how anyone may ollow the same treatment in their own ome without any trouble. The book and ledicine are FREE. They will be sent pre aid to any rupture sufferer who will fill ut the below coupon. But send It right way— n ow—before you put down this paper. FREE RUPTURE BOOK AND REMEDY COUPON Capt. W. A. Collings (Inc.) Box 147-D, Watertown, N. Y. Please send me your FREE Rupture Remedy and Book without any obliga tion on my part whatever. Name Address 666 quickly relieves Colds ind LaGrippe, Constipation, Biliousness, Loss of App2tite Ind Headaches.— ( Advt.) 6,000 M8 LES | Guaranteed ■ I 3\SEND NO MONEY i IHereistheabsolirtellmHlntire I loffers—never before such won* 1 Iderful values I Pay only when ] [convinced. Used standard | | makes rebuilt by our own ox | I ports to give 6,000 miles—or I I more. No comparison with I I double tread tires which are , I I sewed. I /Lowest Prices ‘/ Quick Delivery Size Tires Tubes'Size Tires Tubes 1 80x8 $ 6.45 31.75 82x414 $12.26 $2.70 80x854 7.25 1.95 33x414 12.50 2.85 82x354 8.75 2.15 84x454 12.90 3.00 ■ V ' /31x4 9.45 2.25 85x454 13.25 8.15 ■ Wy, \^_ < /82x4 9.90 2.40 36x454 18.90 3.40 ■ 83x4 11 - 25 2 - TO 36x5 14-90 3.50 H 84x4 11.90 2.60 37x5 16.90 8.75 F Send your order today while we have ■CCeaVn • big stock on band and can ship same Kj order is received. Send no money with order, just Kur name and address and size tire desired, whether ■incbar or straight side. ■ MITCHELL TIRE A RUBBER COMPANY ■IS K. 36th Street,, Dept. 183 Chicago PELLAGRA g CURED WITHOUT A p STARVATION DIET AT A SMALL COST ■ls you have this awful disease, and ■ want to be cured—to stay cured.—write ■ for E FREE BOOK. I giving the history of pellagra, symptoms, B results and how to treat. Sent in plain, B sealed envelope. A guaranteed treat fl ment that cures when all others fail. ■ Write for this book today. f CROWN MEDICINE COMPANY, B Dept. 85, Atlanta, Ga. H Tor S 5 $ thlnkof ft—twostand- B J ‘ B K make tires—practic- ■ ' • • •■■•'’'ally new— at less than ■ ratal! Cost Os one! The one big chance of the ■ year to lay in a big supply. Thousands of cns ■ tomera are getting full tire mileage because B tires were slightly used on demonstration cars fl only You can get 112000 MILES B out of these tires too. Don't delay—the sup fl p!y won't last long at there bargain prices— ■ mail your order at once. See special bargain fl list here: Nl!V) Ntw Sta« 1 Tin t Tim Tuba Siu 1 Tin t Tim Tuba B 80x3 $7.55 $11.30 $1.75 82x4 54 $12.75 sl9 10 $3.80 fl 30x854 8.85 18.30 2.05 83x454 14.05 21.10 8.40 fl 82x854 10.20 15.30 2.25 84x454 16.80 23.70 8.50 fl 81x4 11.00 16.50 2.75 85x4 54 16.35 24 50 8.75 ■ 82x4 18.25 19.90 3.05 36x4)4 16.75 25.10 885 fl 88x4 13.80 20.70 825 35x5 16.85 25.80 4.00 ■ 34x4 14.86 22.30 8.25 37x5 17.26 25.90 4.00 State Bile plainly whether 8. S Clincher, non-ekid M or smooth tread Send $1 deposit for each two tiro, ordered, balance C.O.D after examination, r .7 Special discount ot 6 per cent If full amount accompanies order ■ft**V € Ordet ToD **’ Eureka Tire & SB. J. 5-» Rubber Co. 1243 Michigan 80-If dh,0 *«° ? LAI E CURTAINS given for wiling S boxes of Prof. Smith’s ■KkIMM '! nn-1 Neural.ia Tab- 'Ms at '■futs n Cats iisgiie ot other premiums sent 'th goods. SMITH DRUG CO,, Dept. 57, oodboro, Md. THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, CONGRESS ACT ON DRY LAW IS HOPE OF WETS WASHINGTON, June B—Routed in the courts, wets today had one hope left in their fight to modify the eighteenth amendment and the Vol stead act enforcing it. This hope lies with congress. That it is slight and may be effectually cut off by later court action was claimed by the drys and rather sor rowfully admitted by wets. Yesterday’s supreme court decision upholding the dry amendment and Volstead law, apparently established that congress has the right to set’the alcoholic content of liquors which may be sold, wet attorneys said. With this in mind, they declared that later congresses might be able to set the alcoholic content at consid erably above the one half of one per cent limit set by the Volstead law. Congress might go as high as ten per cent, one wet attorney point ed out. Against this drys contended that the couit had said that the amend ment prohibited the sale, manufac ture or transportation of intoxicat ing liquor and that thosie words meant just what thev- said in every corner of the United States. Further more, the court had declared, drys pointed out, that the amendment au tomatically invalidates any legisla tivet act which “authorizes or sanc tions” what the amendment prohib its. Drys construed this as meaning that even if congress should allow liquors of a high alcoholic content they could be proved intoxicating in fact and therefore n-ohibited. Two justices evidently had this possibility in mind in opinions they read yesterday. Justice Mcßeynolds predicted future litigation over the dry question. Justice McKenna pre dicted, that finally dry enforcement laws would not set any alcoholic lim it but would prohibit liquors “intox icating in fact." - Drys declared that liquor forces could get little consolation from this, since a beverage of very low alcohol ic content would be intoxicating to some one, which, they declared, would be sufficient grounds for its prohibition. The political effect of the court., decision was a subject of specula tion here. Generally politicians here declared that the decision had weak ened any plans that might have been made for a wet plank in either Re publican or Democratic platforms. Saves Drowning Man; Crap Shooters Escape NEW YORK.—Patrolman Hoffman had his choice today of pursuing fleeing crap shooters or saving Rich ard Washington, colored, who was drowning in the East river. Hoffman jumped into the river and brought the man to shore. I LEMON JUICE | FOR FRECKLES | I Girls! Make beauty lotion * i for a few cents —Try it! | Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complex ion beautifier, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes dis appear and how clear, soft and rosy-white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless and never irritates. (Advt.) BUNIONS! Pain Stops Instantly— Hump Vanishes TRY IT AT MY RISK New, marvelous way to treat bun i ms. Stops pain instantly—banish es the ugly, -ZffyiyjA 7/\ hump and tired J/ achey, swollen, pi f rZjy burning condl- l’ > » tion. You can i wear a smaller / e&Zt shoe with com- U» S'fort. Test It at I i my risk. First I trial convinces. 1 ) JNo clumsy apparat- 1 g. J us, no rubber mould 1 • / or Protector, no un- comfortable leather lUlsCll'l shield or felt pad, no / I Plaster, nor mus s y / MY I salve or liquid. It is fnilLgAwn PEDODYNE, The ’ Willi Complete Bunion | >.wii Treatment . y ou X J say it is wonderful — amazing, so quick, so sure does it act. Don’t waste time and money on useless methods. Don’t suffer. Try PEDO DYNE at my risk. Write today be fore you do another thing. Just say “I want to try PEDODYNE.” Ad dress KAY LABORATORIES, Dept. S-340, 538 S. Dearborn St., Chicago, Illinois. RUPTURED? TRY THIS FREE New Invention Sent on 30 Days’ Trial With out Expense to You Simply send me your name and I will send you my new copyrighted rupture book and measurement blank. When you return the blank I will send you my new invention for rupture. When it arrives put It on and wear it. Put it to every test you can think of. The harder the test the better you will like It. You will wonder how you ever got along with the old style cruel spring truss es or belts with leg straps of torture. Your own good, common sense and your own doc tor will tell you it is the only way in which you can ever expect a cure. After wearing it 30 days, if it is not entirely satisfactory in every way—if it is not easy and com fortable—lf you cannot actually see your rupture getting better, and if not convinced that a cure is merely a question of time, just return it and you are out nothing. Any rupture appliance sent on 30 days’ trial with out expense to you is worth a trial. Tell your ruptured friends of this. EASYHOLD CO., 1005-E, Koch Bldg., Kansas City. Mo.— (Advt.) Cured His RUPTURE I was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk several years ago. Doctors said my only hope of cure was an operation. Trusses did me no good. Finally I got hold of some thing that quickly and completely cured me. Years have passed and the rupture has never returned, although I am doing hard work as ! » carpenter. There was no operation, no , lost time, no trouble. I have nothing to ! sell, but will give full information about how you may find a complete cure without operation, if you write to me. Eugene M. Pullen, Carpenter, 656-F Marcellus Avenue. Manasquan, N. J. Better cut out this no tice and show it to any others who are rup tured—you may save a life or at least stop the misery of rupture and the worry and danger of an operation.—(Advt.) kWUKSLjud 1 Money back without question JS \ I if HUNT’S Salve fails in the 11 treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, rfuf RINGWORM, TETTER or I ’LI li other itching skin diseases. Try a 25 cent nox at our risk. All druggists. KEYNOTE ADDRESS IS BITTER ATTACK CHICAGO, June B.—The country must drive President Wilson and his “dynasty” from power and defeat the League of Nations as he desires it. declared Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, temporary chairman of the Republic an national convention, in his key note address here today. Defending the senate’s opposition to the treaty of peace as a high and patriotic duty, the senator flung down tnis gauntlet: “We make the issue; we ask ap probation for what we have done. The people will now tell us w’aat they think of Mr. Wilson’s league and the sacrifice of America.” While emphasizing the point that around the league must be waged the 1920 presidential campaign, and de voting much of his speech to ar raignment of the Wilson administra tion, the senator found time to lay before the delegates the stand of the Republican party on other salient problems facing the nation. Chief among these was Mexico. Declaring it was time for the United States to take a firm hand in things Mexican and end the “disgraceful record” of the last seven years. Sen ator Lodge urged that this country let the Mexicans choose as their president some strong and upright man who is friendly to the United States and determined to establish order and then lend him a real ana cordial support. » “Mexico lies at our doors,” he de clared. “It is a primary duty for us to deal with it under the Monroe doctrine, but nothing has been done and yet we are asked to take a mandate for Armenia.” Salient Points Salient points made by Senator Lodge were: “Mr. Wilson and his dynasty, his heirs and assigns, or anybody that is his, anybody who with bent knees has served his purposes, must be driven from all control, from all in fluence upon the government of the United States. “They must be driven from office and power, not because they are Democrats, but because Mr. Wilson stands for a theory of administra tion and gveronment which is not American. “The return of the Democrats to power with Mr. Wilson or one of his disciples still the leader and master of a great party, which be fore his advent possessed both tradi tions and principles, would be a long step in the direction of the autocra cy for which Mr. Wilson yearns and a heavy blow to the continuance of free representative government as we have always conceived and ven erated it. “Mr. Wilson and the autocracy he represents, and all which those who believe in his doctrines and share his spirit represent, must be put aside and conclusively excluded from any future control. “The defeat of the present admin istration and all it means, transcends in importance every other question and all immediate and dominant Is sues are bound up with it. Without that defeat every chance of the right settlement of the mighty ques tions before us, so sorely needed now and no< later, will depart. “To maintain law and order and a stable government where justice rules and the right of all men, high and low, rich and poor, shall be pro tected, we must have a government of the people, duly chosen by the people, and never must there be per mitted any government by a single man or by a group of men, or by an organized minority. “Many vital economic measures and especially protective tariff legis lation to guard our industries, are impossible with a Demrocratic free trader of socialistic procliviities in the White House. To accomplish such measures as these, we must have, as we intend to have, a Republican pres ident, in sympathy with a Republican house and senate. “The rise of prices, the high cost of living which reach daily into every home, is the most pressing, as it is the most difficult and most es sential problem which confronts us. Some of the sources of this trouble can be reached by legislation, al though not all, but everything that can be affected by law should be done at once. “Profiteering, the charging of ex tortionate and unjustified prices, which is stupid as well as unlawful, are subject now to ample punitive laws. Those laws should be enforced others if necessary added, and the offenders both great and small should be pursued and punished. “The most essential remedy for high costs (of living) is to keep up and increase production and par ticularly should every effort be made' to advance the productivity of th* farms. Government Ownership "The phrase ‘government owner shit)’ means not only that the gov ernment shall own the railroads but also, it is to be feared, that those who run the railroads shall own the government. General government ownership under our political sys tem would inevitably bring about the mastery of the government by those who operate the machinery of transportation or of any other in dustries which come into govern ment possession. The rights of the general public, for whom all indus tries exist, would disappear under this scheme and nothing would be left to the people except the duty of paying taxes to support the roads “Over 600 Americans have been murdered in Mexico. Carranza in sulted the American government in every possible way and still nothing was done. We fell so low that when an American was seized by one of the many bands of brigands and held for ransom, all that the government of the United States would do, was to offer to be the channel for con veying the ransom of their citizens to the highwaymen who had seized them. “We have watched and waited long enough. We need a firm hand at the helm. The time has come to put an end to this Mexican situation, which is a shame to the United States and a disgrace to civilization. If we are to take part in pacifying and helping the world, let us begin here at home in Mexico. “Let the Mexicans choose as their president some strong and upright man who is friendly to the United States and determined to establish order and then let the United States give him a real and cordial support, and so strengthen and uphold him that he will be able to exterminate the bandits and put an end to the unceasing civil war. “When the armistice with Ger many was signed the course to be pursue dwas clear. . . . That course was to make the peace with Ger many at once and then take up for reasonable consideration the ques tion of establishing such future rela tions with our associates in the war as would make for the future peace of the world. This Mr. Wilson pre vented. He went to Europe. “He had apparently only one aim, to be the maker ot a league of which he should be the head. He was de termined that there should be a League of Nations then and there and in order to nullify the powers of the senate given by the constitution of the United States, he decided to make the league an integral part of the treaty of peace with Germany. Thus he presented to the senate, ana Intended to present, a dilemma from which he believed there was no escape. In order to have peace with Germany, he meant to compel the senate to accept with it the League of Nations. “The Republicans of the senate, perceiving the dangers of the league, determined to resist Mr. Wilson’s demand. The American people will never accept that alliance with for eign nations proposed by the presi dent. The president meantime has remained inflexible. He is deter mined to have that treaty as he brought it back or nothing, and to that imperious demand, the people will reply in tones which cannot be misunderstood. Becord of Party “We have stopped Mr. Wilson’s treaty and the question goes to the people. In 1916 Mr. Wilson won on the cry that ‘he had kept us out of war.' He now demands the ap- Doug and Mary Worry—Not! w - I Mw ; I|| SSHB w.?« fts ■ fiw fii A ® wsi ' LOS ANGELES.—In spite of threats of Nevada authorities to annul Mary Pickford’s divorce from Owen Moore, Mary and her new husband, Douglas Fairbanks, don’t appear to be worrying about it. They were snapped on the st’eps of Doug’s palatial residence. Speaking About Angels, Count Expects To Find One Living on Earth, “Perhaps’' If you’re looking for a delectable way of spending your vacation here’s a suggestion: Journey up to Provi dence, R. 1., and help Mayor Joseph H. Gainer pick up the most virtuous girl in town. How come? Back in March, 19’19, Count Paul Bainotti, of Turin, passed away, leav ing several million dollars which he disposed of in 150 beuests, in a will containing 30,000 words. The count bequeathed SIO,OOO to the city of Providence for the cre ation of a trust, the interest of which annually is to be given about July 17, to the girl in that city "who, being twenty years old, mar riageable, and a daughter of the com mon people, will best deserve it by her conduct and family virtues, in the opinion and by the unappealable decision of a commission appointed by the mayor of Providence, R. 1., and presided over by him.” Winner to Be Crowned With Roses The count further suggested that the winner be crowned with roses and be called "Rosiera.” State Senator Salvatore A. Cotjllo, attorney for Romolo Tritoni, royal Italian consul general at New York, who with him is to supervise the awards, communicated the n«<vs to Joseph H. Gainer, mayor of Provi dence. The mayor said he was tickled to death to think that Count Bainotti should have shown Providence such signal honor. Then he pondered, and in effect said: “Why pick on me?” Senator Cotillo explained that Mayor Gainer was in no worse fix than the mayor of Turin, Italy, upon whom a like burden had been im posed. The mayor of Providence said if he had known anything of this na ture was going to occur during his regime he would have given up all idea of embarking upon the mayoring business. “Who’s going to set the standard or block out the qualifications of Boy Lays Brutal Clubbing at Door of Policeman; Doctor Gives* List of Injuries His right arm in a sling and his body covered with bruises, thirteen year-old John Appelga<e limped into the West Side court and told a story of ,a brutal beating at the hands of Patrolman Michael Mullahy, of the West Thirty-seventh street sta tion, New York. The boy’s testimony, together with medical reports as to the extent of his injuries, caused Magistrate Le vine to hold the policeman in SI,OOO bail for the grand jury on a charge of felonious assault. Dr. W. Travis Gibbs, physician of the Children’s society, and Dr. Wil liam Miller, of Ninth avenue and Twenty-third street, reported that the boy had suffered the following injuries: 1. Broken right arm. 2. Contusions of the left arm and shoulder. 3. Sprains of both wrists. 4. Two acute contusions of both thighs. 5. Synovitis of the left knee, with fluid in the joints, due to injury. (Water on the knee.) “There is one thing certain,” Mag istrate Levine commented. “The boy didn’t get these bruises from the sky.” Dr. Gibbs in his reports said the injuries were caused by blows. An X-ray photograph taken at Bellevue hospital was exhibited in court to show the fracture of the boy’s arm and injuries to other bones. The boy told the court the injuries were inflicted by the policeman on proval of the American people for his party and his administration on the ground that he has kept us out of peace. “The league must be discussed in every district and in every state and we desire to have the verdict so clearly given that no man who seeks to represent the people in the sen ate, in the house or in any place or in any degree, can have the slight est doubt as to his duty. “We make the issue; we ask ap probation for what we have done. The people will now tell us what they think of Mr. Wilson’s league and its sacrifice of America. “They (the people) will tear aside the veil of woran woven to blind and deceive and come down to the essential and vital point—Mr. Wil son’s plan on one side and the in dependence and safety of the United States on the other. “All Americans must join togeth er in their own way and with their own arguments defeat Mr. Wilson’s league as he desires it, whether amended by him or in its pristine simplicity.” Senator Lodge charged the Dem ocratic party with responsibility for the “perilous conditions of the hour and said, if the Republican party fails to grapple it effectively, “the Russian descent into barbarism will begin to draw near.” A beginning had been made, he said, by a Republican congress in restoring economic conditions, “work ing under all the difficulties affd opposition imposed by a hostile exec utive.” He enumerated various bene ficial measures, adding that the esti mates had been reduced over $1,000.- 000,000. He advocated enforcement of the laws against profiteering and said it was possible to check the advance of prices by law, by pro viding for ‘the control of credits in such manner as to give prefer ence to the most essential products.” He described the railroad act “as a single great law which in any pe riod would be sufficient to distin guish a congress as one of high ac complishment.’ May 22. He said he and another boy, this paragon femalej” the mayor wanted to know. “That’s just the point,” said Sen ator Cotillo. The mayor said: “Really, you know.” Then he went back to Providence. Senator Cotillo looked beseeching ly in the direction of the royal Ital ian consul general, but saw no relief in that quarter. Signor Triton! was engaged in another matter at the time. It was clearly up to the senator. He sat down to his trustly type writer and evolved the fourteen points of maidenly virtue which he forthwith forwarded to the mayor of Providence for his guidance and in struction. These Are the Fourteen Points Here are the fourteen points which Senator Cotillo thinks the girl should possess who captures the prize for virtue. She must be: Strong, true, just, kind, humble, dutiful, amiable, prudent, faithful, patient, cheerful, decorous; and, if possible, discreet. Senator Cotillo submitted the four teen points to a reporter for The World and invited criticism. “Why not say for the first and the fourteenth points that she must be discreet and forget the other twelve?” asked the reporter. The senator said no, he liked his fourteen points a," maidenly virtue and intended to adhere to them. “But it’s tough on the girl,” plead ed tile reporter. “Remember, she is only twenty and marriageable.” The senator said he was sorry but that was his story and he was going to stick to it. He said he has sug gested to Mayor Gainer that he ap point a commission composed of women “who would probably not ob ject to the establishment of such rules in connection with the execu tion of the trust as would relieve him from all responsibility in naming the winner.” “We’ll wait and hear what the mayor thinks about it,” said the sen ator. John Farman, sixteen, went to Pier 67, North river and Twenty-seventh street, near their homes, to watch divers at work in the river. According .to the boy’s testimony, Patrolman Mullahy came running up and shouted, “You’re a couple of thieves. I’ll shoot you if you run.” According to his story the police man caught both the boys and struck them repeatedly with his club. He said the Farman boy was struck seven times, and he himself was struck more times than he could re member. William Nichols, an officer of the Children’s society, who appeared as complainant against the policeman, testified that the boy’s mother, Mrs. Margaret Appelgate, No. 445 West Twenty-eighth street, went to the West Thirty-seventh street station, where the lieutenant on duty replied to her complaint as follows: “I don’t believe any patrolman in this station ever struck your boy. What dime novel have you been reading?” Nichols said Mrs. Appelgate then took her son to the Children’s so ciety which had the policemap ar raigned on .May 25. Nichols pro duced a certificate from the princi pal of public school No. 17, saying the Appelgate boy was in grade 7-b, was one of the best students in the school, and bore an excellent char acter. Patrolman Mullahy in his testi mony denied striking the boys. He said he had gone to the pier in search of thieves on complaint of a boat captain. When the captain refused to complain against the boys, the policeman said, he merely took their names. Mullahy, forty years old, lives at No. 745 Ninth avenue. .He has been on th© force fourteen years. Since his arraignment on May 25 he has been free in custody of his captain. Sleep Sickness Kills “Guardian of Kings” PARlS.—Xavier Paoli, general secretary of the French prefecture of police, and known everywhere as “the guardian of kings” has just died of sleeping sickness at the age of 85. For the past fifty years Paoli had acted as bodyguard, guide and mentor to every royal visitor to France and had close personal re lations with practically every mon arch in the world during his lifetime. Many amusing stories are told of his experiences, one of the best be ing during the visit of Nasr-ed-Din, then Shah of Persia, to Paris. The Shah wanted to witness an execution and this was promptly arranged for him by Paoli. At the last moment, just as the condemned man was be ing strapped on the guillotine plat form, the Shah felt a sudden pity for him, and wanted to change the vic tim. “No, not that one—the other," he declared, pointing to the public ex ecutioner. Somewhat to his regret the execution proceeded "according to plan.” Paoli used to tell with great de light how King George, of Greece, during a private ramble with him. was mistaken for a porter by an old woman who made the monarch car ry her basket of vegetables and get her a ticket. Treasure Hunt for Rum MONTREAL, Can.—Treeenre seekers of The Pass. .Manitoba. Can., have organized an expedition to go in search of ten cases of rum which, tradition says, were buried a century and a half ago by a party of prospectors. The legend is that the rum was intended for the Indian trade and was concealed after the Hudson Bay people had forbidden its admittance into the country. GEORGIA NEGRO IS NEW REPUBLICAN COMMITTEEMAN CHICAGO, June 8. —Henry Lincoln Johnson, an Atlanta negro, who led the fight of the Lowden delegates before the Republican national com mittee. was today elected national committeeman from Georgia by the state delegation. The Wood delegates, headed by Roscoe Pickett, the defeated candi date for national committeeman, an nounced that they would carry their fight to the credentials committee of the convention. Johnson, at the hear ings, had told the national commit tee he would forego his hopes of be ing national committeeman if the Lowden delegates were seated. The white delegates, led by Pickett, were reported to have met with the negroes. The Johnson faction had a majority of the delegation placed on the temporary roll by the national committee. They were uninstructed but reported to favor Governor Low den. the Pickett group being pledged to General Wood. Considerable feel ing was said to have resulted today from numerous but ineffectual ef forts to get a vote on committee as signments. Johnson was chosen na tional committeeman at the state convention, but when pressing his case before the national committee he agreed to leave the place to some one else. Some of the Pickett faction today expressed fear that the present con troversy might result in the unseat ing of all Georgia delegates by the credentials committee. Georgia representatives named are: Chairman, Henry Lincoln John son; credentials, Colonel C.’P. Goree; permanent organization, E. R. Bel cher; rules, D. C. Cole; resolutions, B. J. Davis. Would Have All Men Wed by Time They Are 25 or Pay Penalty BATON ROUGE, June B.—Repre sentative F. O. Bolgiano introduced a bill in the house Monday night re quiring all young men to wed by the time they are twenty-five years of age, and fixing a penalty if they fail to do so. Abercrombie Heads Schools of Alabama MONTGOMERY, Ala., June B.—Dr. John W. Abercrombie, solicitor of the United States department of labor, former president of the University of Alabama, former state superinten dent of education and former con gressman-at-large from Alabama, was appointed state superintendent of education by Governor Kilby Mon day afternoon, succeeding Springht Dowell, who was elected president of the Alabama Polytechnic institute. Dr. Abercrombie will surrender his position in Washington and take up his new duties July 1. As soon as Mr. Dowell had accepted the presi dency of Auburn, Governor Kilby tendered the state superintendency to Dr. Abercrombie, and information was received during the afternoon that he had accepted. The term will end Jan ua ry 15, 1923. Champ Clark Addresses Louisiana Legislature NEW ORLEANS, June B.—Champ Clark, of Missouri, former speaker of the house of representatives, who is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Jamer M. Thomson, of this city, accepted an Invitation of the Louisiana legis lature and addressed a joint session of that body today. The subject of Mr. Clark’s address was “Why the Country Should Elect a Democratic President.” Scolded by Mother, Girl Commits Suicide NASHVILLE, Tenn.. June 9.—En raged because she had been scolded by her mother, Julia Webster, 11- year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Webster, fired a bullet through her breast early last night and died instantly. During the' evening meal she had quarreled with her brother over riding in the family automobile. Riots Occur in Vienna Over High Cost of Living VIENNA, June 8. —Violent demon trations occured here yesterday over the high cost of living. Police in tervened and several fights occup ied. seven persons being killed and twenty-three wounded. Many arrests v,ere made. Masked Bandits Loot Bank Near Pittsburg PITTSBURG, June B.—Masked bandits this morning entered the Hayes National bank, in Hayes, Pa ten miles from Pittsburg, and after locking the cashier in the vault, loot ed the bank. The bandit escaped in Woman Movie Producer PARIS, France.—Mme. Germaine Dulac, a French woman, devotes her time to adapt ing and producing motion pictures. She is said to be the only woman in the world engaged in this pursuit. ‘W i ■ —the hit that j saved the day. i The Coca-Cola Co. ATLANTA, GA. 1 ill THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1920. CONGRESS GONE, ALL IS QUIET ALONG POTOMAC (The Atlanta Journal News Bureau, 623 Biggs Building.) BY THEODOBE TILEEB WASHINGTON, June 8. —The na tional capital went on a short circuit and grounded as a news center today. quorum of congress assembled at Chicago, or starting to ward San Francisco, and the supreme court handing down its last batch of important decisions before the sum mer recess, Washington moves from front page to inside position. The capital can hardly believe, even yet, that congress is gone for six long months. The legislative body has not taken a real recess since early in the Taft administration. It has been in almost continuous ses sion since President Taft called an extra session to consider Canadian reciprocity and other matters. Many members of congress, who fifteen or twenty years ago were ac customed to spending a few months in Washington, only to return to their law practice or their farms during the summer months, have grown so used to continuous Wash ington residence that they have pur chased homes here. Up to the last day or so of the session, congress feared and believed the president would call that body back should it attempt to adjourn through the sum mer. ' Senator Underwood finally allay ed the uneasiness by saying the pres ident had no such intentions. Finally, about the hour of adjournment, the president himself, in a letter to the railroad brotherhood chiefs, explain ed why he would not reconvene con gress, and would permit it to go its way. In effectr the president declared that congress was doing nothing, any way, and there was no use to call it back to continue to do nothing. Pres ident Wilson said it had shown no disposition to take up various con structive measures urged by him and seemed more interested in polities than public service. Therefore, he said substantially, there is no good to be derived by calling in into extra session. Consequently, unless some “grave emergency” anises, congress is away from Washington until the first Mon day in December. It will be the longest rest in a decade. So long as the political conventions are on, Washington will be dead politically. There is hardly a corporal’s guard of public men remaining in the cap ital. Senators and representatives not interested in their party conven tions have hustled home to look after political fences, for defeats of sev eral men prominent in congress in recent primaries have frightened leg islators and convinced them this is an uncertain year. Two of the house veterans who have been defeated in recent pri maries are Representative Hubert Dent, of Alabama, former chairman of the military affairs committee, and Representative John H. Small, of North Carolina, former chairman of the house rivers and harbors com mittee. Such defeats put a scare into the hearts of the faithful and there has been a grand exodus from Washington to look over the situa tion “back home." New Foundland Sugar Price 30 Cents oPund ST. JOHNS. N. F., June B.—The New Foundland folad control board, in taking over control of all sugar sales in this colony, has fixed the price at thirty cents a pound. The price will be stabilized at this figure until the end of the year at least. 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