Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, July 06, 1920, Page 3, Image 3

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CZ.OWN MEDICINE COMPANY. Dept. 95, Atlanta, Ga. Entirely New Book g on Cancer. The most L -.ini IB V. FT? H comprehensive ex planation of cancer ‘fl and its successful treat- 3 ment without the knife B > A J ever published. The Book "" is FREE. Send for a copy O. A. JOHNSON. M. D., Suite 462. 132-1 Main St.. Kansas City. Mo. ' today and Learn the Truth about cancer. THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. THREE CONFESS TO ROBBING TRAIN OF MARINES’ PAYROLL AUGUSTA, July 3.—At a late hour Saturday night officers who have been working on the daring train robbery here last Wednesday morning, when $59,725 was stolen from the express car of a Charleston and Western North Carolina train, announced that three men involved in the hold-up and robbery had been taken into cus tody; that a confession had been made by all of them, and that $17,- 000 of the stolen booty had been re covered. The men arrested are Milledge Der rick, express messenger; Ernest N, Hart, local taxicab driver; J. W. Quattlebaum, operator of a jitney line. According to the confessions, Hart was the hold-up man, who en tered the express car and with drawn revolver ordered Derrick to bind and gag W. M. Roberts, the guard, who was later chloroformed. Hart then shoved the 300-pound safe, containing the money, from the train, and it was picked up by Quattlebaum, who was waiting with an automobile, and carted off to the swamps, where, later in the day, Quattlebaum and Hart divided the spoils. Derrick, who, according to the frame-up, was to receive one-third of the money, failed to receive his portion. He was the first to confess, implicating the other two, who, however, were al ready under arrest, and when con fronted by Derrick’s confession also admitted their guilt. * Freeman Long Denied Clemency; Convicted of Killing Man in 1871 MONTGOMERY, Ala., July 3. Freeman Long, alias John Thomas, of Elmore county, whose criminal record reads like a fiction story, and who has been convicted and sen tenced to life imprisonment by courts in both Georgia and Ala bama, must continue to serve his term in the Alabama penitentiary, the state board of pardons Saturday declining to recommend clemency. Long was convicted in 1912 of the murder of John A. Berry, which was committed December 18, 1871, six years after the close of the civil war. He was arrested at Palmetto, Ga., and brought to Alabama after a man hunt which had continued from the moment the body of Berry was found in a swamp in Elmore county until he was located while living quietly at Palmetto, after having be.en par doned by the governor of Georgia for the offense of murder for which he had first been sentenced to death, the sentence having been commuted to life imprisonment. Berry and his son, M. F. Berry, started to Montgomery In their one horse wagon the morning of Decem ber 18, 1871. Reaching the swamp they camped for the day while the elder Berry went into the swamp for duck. The next afternoon the body was found in the swamp with gun holes in the head, a large amount of money -• from the pockets. Freeman Long was arrested but the case was postponed. He mys teriously disappeared from the jail. The slain man’s wife died believing , that Freeman Long had been given the extreme punishment for the crime. Os the forty or more who appeared as witnesses at the pre liminary trial in 1871, only four could be found to testify when the real trial began forty-one years later. Division of German Indemnity Is Decided Upon, It Is Reported BRUSSELS, July 3. Premiers Lloyd George and Millerand and the Italian foreign minister, Count Sfor za, have tentatively decided upon a division of the German indemnity, it was learned semi-officially today, following the morning session of the allied leaders in conference here. Under this agreement France would get 52 per cent of the indem nity; England 22; Belgium 14, and the remaining parts would be divid ed between Italy aifd the other allies having claims. It was still undecided whether the total Indemnity should' be divided into 100 or 110 parts. Italy was reported to have agreed to the division. Belgium was under stood to have decided to abandon her prior claim on the German in demnity provided she received a large proportion of the total sum collected from Germany. The Bel gium claim for 14 parts of the total presents with which the most serious problems with which ‘the confer ence had to deal. Thv. conferees also agreed to» de mand 6,000,000,000 pounds from Ger many. During the first five years Germany must pay 150,000,000 pounds annually and thereafter 250,000,000 pounds annually until her entire obligation is discharged. Election of Harding Would Be Binding Tie WASHINGTON, Pa„ July 3.—ls Warren G. Harding is elected presi dent of the United States, this pretty little university city in the hills of western Pennsylvania will be bound up closer than ever with the White House, for not only did Senator Harding’s ancestors live here, but the father of President Wilson also was a resident of Washington. Senator Harding’s great-grandfa ther, William Van Kirk, was one of the early settlers of Franklin town ship, and he and his wife are buried in the family graveyard on the Charles Van’Kirk farm, near Point' Lookout. Senator Harding is hon orary president of the Van Kirk fam ily society and frequently has at tended the annual reunion here. President Wilson’s father, Rev. Joseph Ruggles Wilson, was born at Steubenville, Ohio, not far from here, and in 1848 became paStor of the Hills Presbyterian church at Canons burg. near Washington. Here the family remained until their removal to Virginia, where the president was born a short time afterward. Alfred Dupont Sells His Wilmington Paper WILMINGTON, Del., July 3.—Al fred I. Dupont has disposed of the Wilmington Morning News to a syn-' dicate headed by Robert H. Rich ards, of this city, marking, it is thought, the ending of the Dupont family’s fight that has kept the Re publican party in this state divided for the past ten to fifteen years. j Young Girl Sentenced For Killing Stepfather ST. LOUIS, July 3—Ursula Brod erick, sixteen years old, exonerated slayer of her father in 1916, today was under sentence of ten years in the penitentiary for the killing of her stepfather, Joseph Woodlock, in April, 1919. She filed notice of ap peal and was released on SIO,OOO bail. She has maintained she shot Woodlock in defense of her honor. GALLSTONE TROUBLES A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad clock, 3832 Brooklyn, Dept. 58, Kansas City, Mo., tells of improved method of treating catarrhal inflammation of the Gall Blad der and Bile Ducts associated with Gall Stones, from which remarkable results, are reported. Write for booklet and free trial plan.— (Advt. > You Tell Him, Kank, He’s on the “Fritz” GENEVA. — Here’s a chap who deesn’t know who won the war. Americans say the Yonks and the British say the Tommies, while the French vote solid for the Pollus, bt the ex-king of Bavaria still thinks Fritz won it. He has been taken back to Ger many in charge of a mental expert. IS THIS WHY PARIS HAS DICTATED STYLES SO LONG? At JU iBl /wl NEW FORK.—Mme. Deschanel, wife of the president of France, wouldn’t take the finest hat ever built in the’ new world—worth $5,000 —as a gift because she felt it a duty to stand by Parisian mil liners, but hundreds of American women pay hard American dollars for Paris headgear. Which may explain why Paris has held first place in the fashion world so long—French makers and buyers etick together even when it’s the president’s wife and the highest-priced hat in the world. This sample of French millinery art was worn by Miss Lorando Batchelder when she arrived recently on the S. S. La France. Actor, Athlete, 20, Objects t oHugs; Kansan, Aged 44, 'ls Still Unkissed NEW YORK.—Here Is a chap— John H. Esquirol, of Brooklyn—who has reached the mature age of twen ty, completed his four years at New York university, been manager of the varsity track team and star ball player, but he has never kissed a girl, never “held hands” longer than a mere handshake, and never slipped his arm around a girl's waist when passing through a shady park. “I don’t believe In kissing, but please don’t put me down as an old maid or a sissy,” laughed young Es quirol. "I think that the moment a chap and a girl kiss they lose all the real comradeship of youth,” declares Es quirol. “You see, once they start to kissing there Is no end. They lose all that good companionship, they forget to talk about the things worth whole, books, current’events, the very things which attracted them at first are forgotten and henceforth there is nothing but spooning and baby talk and ‘Do you love me?’ ” “How about holding hands?” “No, I don’t think It wise,” said Esquiro], considering the matter se riously. "Personaly, I don’t Intend to kiss a girl until she has given me her con sent to wed me. I know a number of girls, I have a particular pal whom 1 call ‘my girl,’ but until I am In a position to propose and make a girl my jvlfe I shall not expect her to kiss me. I want to have a comrade ship of my girl friends and I don’t want them to feel that they have to entertain me with kisses.” Kirby Mcßill arrived in Evanston, Baby Hangs From Fourt h-Story Window; Police Save Child From Death Patrolman Edward Hattendorf, of the West Forty-seventh street police station, New York, and Probation Officer Hickey were walking in Eighth avenue between Forty-sixth avenue and Forty-seventh street, when they acme upon a crowd of people staring up at the fourth floor window of an apartment on. the fourth floor of 758 Eighth avenue. The policemen saw a four-year-old boy sitting on a window sash, with one leg dangling outside the building, staring with interest at the strange sights in the street below. “Get back inside, sonny,” yelled the patrolman. The boy heard him, and while sev eral hundred persons watched to see what he would do he slowly lifted his leg over the sash and fell back into the room. Hattendorf and Hickey then decided to enter the house and fix the window so the boy couldn’t climb up again. It was apparent that the grown person was home with the child. But they had not reached the fourth floor when they heard the crowd in the street shouting, and they guessed the boy had again climbed to the window sash. Hattendorf and Hickey hurried to the apartment and broke in the Cannibalism Still Prevails in Borneo, Say Travelers, Dish Not Very Savory American scientists who seek specimens and experience in fthe wilds of the Far East will have thelr desires fully gratified, according to W. F. Alder and Edward Laemmle, who have arrived in San Francisco after one year’s travel in Japan, China, India, the Straits Settlements and Borneo for the Southern Cali fornia Academy of Science and Ex plorations. As an indication of what may be expected, the Los Angeles men recounted the following experi ences: The skipper of a small Dutch trad ing schooner became intoxicated ana wrecked the craft on a reef, com pelling the Americans to make their way ashore on the north side of Bor neo in the ship’s dingy. Upon landing the travelers were surroundiil by Kia Kias, a tribe of head hunters, and secured respect by knocking out the chief and eight of his -warriors by punching them on the point of the chin. As a token of respect the ship wrecked scientists were then pre sented with a strange dish, which they did not relish, and, therefore, Held Up by Two Men N ear Home; Called For Help, Three More Assault Him Two hold-ups, two of them at Bath. Beach, N. Y., were reported to the police recently. In one the vic tim was so severely beaten that he is not expected to recover, and in another a traveling salesman was robbed of $520. The police of the Bath Beach station arrested two men. Philip Poser, of 1736 Madison ave nue; reported that he was held ui» late Saturday night a short distance from Spring Valley, N. Y. Poser told the police that he was driving his car with Alexander Rubenstein, or the same address, when an automo bile stopped in front of Poser’s ma chine and unloaded three masked men. who held up Poser and his com panion with revolvers and took $520 from them. The state police are look ing for the car, following- a descrip tion given by Poser. Charles Basco, of 148 Bay Twen- a suburb of Chicago, the other day. That in itself was some event, for Kirby had walked 527 miles. But no one paid any attention to the dusty, sunburned, perspiring arrival until he blurted right out loud that he hadn’t been kissed in forty years. "Yes, sir, I just naturally never been kissed ,and what’s more I haven’t ever kissed a girl,” he said. “And I’m forty-four years ol‘d. I got to thinking about it the other day out intfTopeka, Kan. " ‘Kirby,’ I says to myself, ‘you’re an old fool. You ought to ‘a got ■hitched up long ago.’ "Then I picked up a newspaper and read where Judge Samuel Har rison out here in Evanston had half a dozen young women just weeping for husbands. Had their qualifica tions, descriptions, and everything, but nary a line about their names and addresses. “ ‘Kirby,’ f says, ‘let’s go.’ So I picked up toothbrush and a change of socks and started out. I like to walk. I averaged about sev enty miles a day, walking eighteen hours a day. “Here I am. Lead me to Judge Harrison. I want to find out if one of these girls won’t stroll back with me. If she insists on riding the cars I’ve got the fare—-don’t worry about that!—but I’d rather walk.” "The' judge is out of town and won’t be back for a week,” he was told. “Well, well,” panted Kirby, sitting down for the first time. “I can’t wait that long. I must be getting back. I’ll drop in again some day.” kitchen door with their shouders. They ran into the front roorp, and there saw that the boy had climbed back to the sash. But this time ne had got both legs over, and then he had slipped, so that when the police men came in he was hanging by his hands. It was only a question of a few minutes before his slight strength would be gone and he would fall. Hickfey slipped forward and seized the boy’s right hand. He was just in time, because no sooner had ne grasped the child’s wrist than the other hand relaxed. Hickey then was reaching over the sash, holding the child with one hand. Hattendorf quickly grasped the other hand and together they drew the little boy into the room, while the crowd in the street set up a cheer. The boy told the police his name was Eugene Flarity. In the apart ment "with him were his brother, Obert, 3, and his sister, Virginia, 10 months. Hickey and Hattendorf took them to police station, where thlTy were claimed by their mother, who said she had left them alone while she went to hunt for some of her other children. ate but little, and were then present ed with a score of human heads, one of which was from a girl who hart suffered the supreme sacrifice a few days previously. The adventurers then proceeded to film a tiger hunt, and one of the huge beasts broke through the jun gle and attacked Adler, who placed two well directed shots before the animal struck the camera. The ma chine was smashed. Aider’s leg was beneath the tiger, and the episode was registered by the second camera operated by Laemmle. The eating of human flesh is still in vogue ’among the Kia Kias of Borneo, and every effort to stamp out the habit has failed of success. The Europeans are practically sate, however, because the natives fear reprisals if they attack the whites. The daughter of one of the chiefs took a fancy to Laemmle, and the old fellow suggested that as a son-in-law he would do nicely. The scientists expressed regrets and got away with their loot.—De troit News. ty-sixth street, Bath Beach, sold an automobile on Saturday for SSOO. Last night in the hallway of his home he was attacked by two men. His cries brought Police Corporal Thomas Reilly, of the Bath Beach station, who arrested George Norton, of 10 Downing street, Manhattan. A man who said he was Anthony Mor row, of 52 1-2 Carmine street, Man hattan. attempted to escape, running along the elevated tracks and climb ing down a pillar to the street, but he was captured after a short chase Both men were held without bail in the Coney Island court on a charge of assault. Max Rosen, of 18 Kings Place, was held up by two men on the streer near his home. He called for help, but the three to whom he appealed joined the other two in their assault on Rosen, who was robbed of his watch and $42. Rosen’s skulL-wat fractured and he suffered internal in juries. He is now at the Coney Island hospital. Convention Opens With Brass Bands and Progresses ToßrassKnucks, Says Cobb Prohibitionist Loses Cork and Finds "Wet” Goods on Hip Are Wet'lndeed —Geo. Creel Gets Too Much Plat form BY IKVIN S. COBB SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., July 3. Friday the convention opened with brass bands and progressed rapidly to brass knucks. About the time when one life-long advocate of uni versal disarmament from Kentucky, in a little informal discussion over | the peace plank, was getting a five- I inch spring-back dirk knife out of i his pocket, being actuated in the in- I terest of harmony within the party ! by an almost irresistible desire to i carve the palpitating giblets out of a Pennsylvania Quaker who nervous- I ly fumbled a loaded cane, a thing I happened outside the convention hall which yet had a bearing upon what went on within it. At the very moment she honorary pallbearers, headed by Chief Mourn er Carter Glass, were bringing the remains of the majority report of the committee on resolutions, George Creel, softly gibbering in un dertones, was being put to bed in his room at a local hotel with ice on his pulsing temples. They had to fetch in a miniature of Josephus Daniels and let him look at it be fore he became coherently calm. At the hour of penning these words the patient is resting quietly with every prospect ultimately of recovering unless some thoughtless person should carelessly mention the name of Admiral Sims in his presence. As may be recalled Mr. Creel was formerly at the head of the bureau of public information. Through the war he occupied the top drawer of the bureau, only resigning because he got so far behind with his hating. Privately Mr. Creel»is one of the most lovable and loving of our dis tinguished American literatusses. But in his visible aspects as a pub licist, he is a professional hater. He takes in hating for a living, do ing hating with a high gloss or with the dull domestic finish as desired. Mainly he hates Republicanism in Massachusetts, but he also quite a few individual names on his hate list. A Literary Job Well, George, having caught up wiQi his spring and summer hating, and having a few weeks to spare before the fall season opens, was brought out here to impart a proper artistic flavor to the platform. It was his job to pass on the literary merits of the various planks as offer ed by Democracy’s volunteer life savers. Serving in this capacity he read ninety running miles of manuscripts, he read dry planks which were wet with the sweat of the brows of their composers and he read wet planks which belied themselves by being most remarkable dry reading. He read Irish planks by gentlemen who so hate everything English that they commit mayhew upon the popular language of that name, every time they take pen in hand. He read suf frage planks written by lady dele gates in violet ink on cream laid stationery and tied up in yellow rib bons. While reading the suffrage planks Mr. Creel suffered from a severe headache brought on by inhaling-so much sachet powder. He read a plank tendered by an elder statesman with a white goatee hailing from a section where the r is silent as in “No’th Ca’linah,” which called upon the convention to pay a tribute to our heroic Confederate dead. He read a plank by a patriot from northern California putting the party on rec ord as unqualifiedly denouncing the hellish action of the census bureau in giving Lojs Angeles a larger popu lation than it gave San Francisco, and he read a counter plank by a delegate from the southern end or the state, a prominent real estate dealer in his own vicinity, heartily indorsing the census bureau for so doing. Some Heavy Beading Differing as they did in all other respects both these planks came out strongly on behalf of the California climate. In all he read four thousand and seventy-eight planks, he culled and picked, discarded and chose, adopted and adopted until reason tot tered on her throne. He put split infinitives in splints and reduced many compound fractures of the parts of speech. He set gram mar to music and he rescued syn tax from the fate which threatened her. He argued with determined gents who started out by saying that from the position they had taken on this or that issue they would not abate one jot or tittle, but who were finally willing to \compromise by throwing off several of the smaller jots and few medium-length tittles. Thanks be to a strong constitution and frame, strengthened by daily health exercises, such as fifteen min utes of steady hating upon arising and twice a week throwing the six teen-pound shot at a picture of Col onel George W. Harvey, Mr. Creel had been out until an early hour this morning when collapse came. Lately, George, as we call him, has been conducting a memory system institute in New York. As soon as he is able to travel he is going back home to take his own course back wards so as to forget this week of his life in San Francisco. While applauding the Bryan or bonehead or dry plank this morning, a well-known leader of the prohibi tion forces of a certain eastern state suffered a severe personal bereave ment. His heart was in the right place, but his stopper played him false, as in the excess of his fervor he leaped up and down upon the floor of the convention, a treacherous cork was jostled out. The first in timation to him of his great loss was a damp feeling in the vicinity of his flank pocket. Pausing, he twisted his head about and glanced down, real ized the worst and knew that if a rattlesnake or a blue-gummed Re publican should happen to bite him during the present trip he would be doomed. The best thing about this incident is that it is not a flight of fancy on my part. It’s a fact. There are thousands of us prohibitionists these days who don’t letyour left hand know what our right hip is doing, but one and all we may be depended upon to cheer the eighteenth amendment for hours on a stretch. I do not believe that ever before in the history of national conven tions were so many good looking women assembled under one roof as sat today in the big hall as specta tors. In the matter of producing fe male beauty, San Francisco is un doubtedly the Paducah (Ky.) of the west. (Copyright, 1920. Bell Syndicate, Inc.) - Hookworm Campaign Is Beneficial in Jamaica KINGSTON, Jamaica, July 3. —Ef- fects of the campaign against the hookworm conducted by the govern ment and an expert for the Rocke feller Foundation already are felt. In Vere, one of the largest sugar centers of the colony, the laborers now work six days a week, whereas formerly'They were able to work but three. On account of their improved phys ical condition large numbers of these workers are leaving Jamaica to work in the cane fields in Cuba. Governor Probyn is sanguine that with the as sistance of the Rockefeller commis sion the hookworm will be eradicated from the island. Movies of Pope Net Sum of $200,000 ROME.—Eight movie men were permit- I ted to make pictures of the canonization of I Joan d’ Arc, showing Pope Benedict XV, I and they paid §200,000 for the privilege. I 18 REPORTED DEAD IN SMASHUP OF 3 ELECTRIC CARS SCRANTON, Pa., July 3.—ln a : collision between three cars on the Lackawanna and Wyoming Valley railroad near South Pittston station at 7:30 o’clock tonight, eighteen peo ple are reported killed and 100 in jured. The accident occurred near South Pittston when lightning struck a telegraph pole along the line of the track and the pole fell over on the tracks in front of a car bound for Scranton. A moment later a limited car crashed into the rear of the car that struck the pole, and a third car telescoped the second car. All three cars were piled in a heap. Many of those kllledzand injured had attended the annual games of the Caledonian clubs of Scranton and Pittston at Valley View park this afternoon. Most of the injured have been taken to the state hospital at Pitts ton. Physicians at the Pittston hospital declared at midnight that eighteen amputations of arms and legs of the injured had been made at that hour. The surgeons also stated that there were but few slightly injured. Ten of the dead have been identi fied. Little Rock, 64,997; . Houston, 138,076; Greensboro, 19,746 WASHINGTON, July 3.—The cen sus bureau tonight announced the following figures: Houston, Tex., 138,076; increase 59- 276 or 75.2 per cent. Little Rock, Ark., 64,997, increase 19,056 or 41.5 per cent. Greensboro, N. C., 19,746, increase 3,851 or 24.2 per cent. North Little Rock, 14,048, increase 2,910 or 26.1 per cent. Revised figures of St. Louis popu lation announced tonight reduced the previously announced total by 103, making that city’s population 772,- 897. The census bureau today an nounced the 1920 population results so rthe following places: West Tampa, Fla., 8,463; Wadley, Ga., 1,423; Kentwood, La., 3,059; Mangum, Okla., 3,405. Increases since 19 0: West Tampa, 205, or 2.5 per cent; Wadley, 551, or 63.2. Decreases since 1910: Kentwood, La., 550, or 15.2; Mangum, 26’, or 7.1. 23 Are Indicted for Killings in Matewan WILLIAMSON, W. Va., July 3. Seven indictments charging murder j in each case were returned against I “Sid” Hatfield, chief of police at i Matewan, W. Va., and twenty j two others, today, by the special I grand jury investigating the battle between authorities and citizens of ! Matewan and Baldwin-Felts detect ; ives May 19. in which seven of the | latter, the mayor, a miner and a ■ boy were killed. War Risk Insurance Bureau Rules Again On Lapsed Policies WASHINGTON. July 3.—A ruling defining new conditions under which lapsed or canceled war risk insurance policies may be reinstated by former service men and women has been I issued by the war risk insurance bureau. Under the ruling application for reinstatement made within eighteen months of discharge and prior to January 1, 1921, need only be accom panied by two months’ premiums and a statement that the applicant is in as good health as on the date of discharge T>r resignation. No medical examination is required. After January 1, 1921, in cases where insurance lapsed or which can celled prior to July 1, 1920, regard less of length of time since dis charge, the applicant must forward two months’ premiums and also the report of a full medical examination made by a licensed physician at the applicant’s expense. Insurance lapsing or canceled after July 1, 1920, may be reinstated on statement of physical condition with in three months after and vwthin six months, after the application for re in s t a t ement. Wife Mauls 3 Bandits; Saves Hubby’s Jewels "I’ll teach you to snatch my hus band’s scarfpin! Take that! And this one for luck!” So saying, Mrs. B. P. Neuman, a Chicago woman, jiut to rout three armed stickup men who hoped to pick up a little easy jewelry. They’ll think twice before they pick on her again. Mr. and Neuman were just entering their home when three huskie_s appeared and accosted them. One of them pressed a revolver against Mr. Neuman’s side and be gan to relieve him of money and jewelry. The othea two tried to hold Mrs. Neuman. She slapped the first one a couple of fine swats for a beginning, and clawed the second until he screamed. Shj scratched both of them, and kicked their shins, and played a merry tattoo on their faces when they stepped within reach. Her cries for help and the yowls of the bandits called Policeman Samuel Urban to her assistance. After an exchange of shots and a close race, he captured one of the trio. "I’m Michael Depsa,” hg said at the station. “I ain’t goin’ to give no address. But I’m not a robber.” . The Neumans, however, feel dif ferently. “He is one of them,” they say. “Besides, look at that scratch on his face.” Falls Fifteen Stories In New York Yale Club NEW YORK, July 3.—John Stuart McKaig was killed early today In a fall of fifteen stories from a window in th< Yale club here. McKaig, home is in Montclair, N. J., was spending the night at the club. The room assigned to him faced an ajr shaft! His body was found by passers-by in the street, indicat ing, authorities said, that he had fal len from a corridor window. Physicians said he was killed in stantly. Bolsheviki Repulsed At Several Points WARSAW, July 3.—The Bolshe viki, according to an official state ment issued today by army head quarters. have been repulsed n small actions at a number of points Along the line of the River Übort, where the enemy Buffered heavy losses, the Bolsheviki brought up fresh forces. In the Korzoe and Szipiectovka region the fighting in continuing with indecisive results, the state ment says. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. n Use For Over 30 years Always bears the .sidSlC 7 / jP Signature of TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1920 Is Bs lbs i u \ Calomel is a dangerous drug. ft is I V \ mercury—quicksilver —and attacks your \ 1 \ bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel to- V] I day' and you will feel weak, sick and nau- \ seated tomorrow. Don’t lose a day’s work. \ Take “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Instead! Heres iny 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 Spectacles ON TRIAL v ■ Jr I ff Don’t Send Me A Penny If Just Mat! The Coupon Below. | —I could fill up a big book with | Zgk.. ' testimonials and words of praise I have S received from the thousands of spectacle- j wearers all over the United States who tell me about the splendid eyesight they are again enjoying since they began using my large-size “Perfect Vision” spec tacles. But you know the old saying, “seeing is believing,” and that is the reason why I am making you this very remarkable offer. I This fs all I ask you to do: Just fill out the coupon at the bottom of this advertisement and send it to me without a cent qf money, and I will immediately mail you a pair of my handsome 10-karat gold-filled, large-size “Perfect Vision” spectacles with .the improved soft-flexible bows (which will not hurt the most tender ears) to try in your own home fully ten days without a psnny in advance or even a reference. As soon as you get them I want you to put them on your eyes when you come In from your day’s work out on the field or factory, and you’ll be agreeably surprised to discover that with these large- f A size "Perfect Vision” spectacles of mine you I tu-ax y 7 \ can again read the finest print in your Bible; xhVxttA A you will find that the smallest type in your 1 newspaper or magazine looks just as sharp -H ’■ 'SM 4 and as clear to you as it ever did in your younger days. If you are fond of sewing, by 7 hand or machine, you will be happy to notice 'Wy 7 that you can again thread your needle as /it? -- V easily as if it were as large-eyed as the iiitiiiilW' needle held by the lady in the picture ailong side hereof; they will enable you to do the finest kind of embroidery and crochet-work, W with as much easo and comfort as you ever I did in your life. • They Will Help You To Read The Finest Print Thread A Small-Eyed Needle Or Shoot A Bird Off A Tree. n WH!"* «•' ■ ’■*’ '7 I j I CT A / ? v x. If you go hunting occasionally or follow 0 # f other out-of-door sports, just put on this % f P air large-size "Perfect Vision" spec- Vay y * taeles of mine, shoulder your gun one of ’lk J '* r 'l l these bright sunshiny morningsf and you S will find you can again sight your gun as clearly as ever, take perfect alrtt a at your game, and bring down n sparrow just as if it were as big as the hen- >5 hawk shown on the tree in this picture; and in the evening when the g shadows -re gathering in the dusk, you will have no trouble to distin- jj guish your horses from cows and other livestock away out in the pasture 1 and as far as the eye can reach with the aid of a pair of my large-size j! "Perfect Vision” distance spectacles. a / Don’t Want You To Send Me A Cent So You Have Nothing To Lose. b Sit down right now, this very minute, and fill out the below coupon at p once; let Uncle Sam deliver into your own hands, at your own door, a % pair of my handsome 10-karat gold-filled, improved soft-flexible bow, ft large-size "Perfect Vision” spectacles in a velteen-lined spring-back, I a pocket-book spectacle case, for you to try on your own \ s eyes in your own home fully ten days absolutely free ot % charge. Fill in this coupon, cut it out and mail it ut once without a Of money. St. louis Spectacle House, St. louis, Me. Out This Coupon On This r ST. LOUIS SPECTACLE HOUSE. Room ST. LOUIS, MO. | I herewith enclose this coupon, which entitles me, by return mail, to a I p«,ir of vour 10-karat, gold-filled, large size "Perfect Vision” spectacles, with | the improved soft-flexible bows (like the ones shown in this advertisement), 9 • also a fine velteen-lined, spring-back, pocket-book spectacle case, with out cost to me, so I can trv them out, under your own offer, of a full ten days' actual test—Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sundav, and three days more. This free trial is not to cost me one pennv, and if I like the glasses and keep them, I am to .pay you $2.45 only —no more and no less. But if. for any reason whatsoever, I don't'wish to keep them (and I. myself, am to be the sole judge), I will return them to you without paving vou a single cent for them, as you agreed in the above’ ad vertisement to send them on ten days’ absolute free trial. With this under standing. I mail vou this certificate, and it is agreed that you will stick to your word and I will stick to mine. Don’t fail to answer the following quea tions * How old are; you? How many years have you used glasses (if any)?.’.... Name Post Office A . Rural Route..'.’.A ßox NoState......j Relief for Torpid Livers And 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, headaches. indigestion, gas, sour stomach, bad breath, dysentery, diarrhoea, pains in back and under shoulder blades and under ribs on right sixle. These symptoms lead to colds, influenza or other serious troubles unless corrected immedi ately. An inactive liver places an extra burden on the kidneys, which over taxes them and causes the blood to absorb and carry into the sys tem the impurities that the liver and kidneys have failed to elimin ate. 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 nights. Calomel or other ordinary 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 frequent 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, Kidney 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 If you suffer from Pellagra, ■ get this remarkable free book on Pel lagra. A Good Clear Discussion of this fearful disease, written so any one can understand it. Tells how a big-hearted man has successfully treated ' Pellagra after it baffled science fgr 200 years. Describes all the symptoms and complications. Shows how Pellagra can be checked in early stages. Tells of the cures American Compounding Co., Box 587-L, Jasper, Ala. money. s 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.) PELLAGRA GET THIS BOOKLET FREE of many southern people, rich and poor alike, after thousands had been carried away by Pellagra. Pellagra can be cured. It you doubt, this book will convince you. And it will show you the way to a personal cure. If you are a Pellagra sufferer, or if you know of a Pella gra sufferer, then for humanity’s sake, let this book bring new courage and valuable knowledge. It will be sent Free for the asking. ’ • SI 1 ; || 11| PREPARED BY ■ HITCHCOCK MEDICINE CO. fa 3 Atlanta. Ga. wiz druggist or dealer for 25c, under his personal guarantee that it will give relief, tone up the liver, stimulate the kidneys to healthy action and thereby purify the blood. Keep it in the home for ready use whenever anj’ member of the family begins to feel "out of sorts.” It will prove a household friend .and a val uable remedy.— (Advt.) 3