Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, September 14, 1920, Page 2, Image 2

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2 "DANDERINE" Stops Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. cxa 7 ' v<- A saw cents buys “Danderin*. ” After an application of “Danderlna” you can not find a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides every hair show* new life, vigor, brightness, more color and thickness.—(Advt.) ABLER JELfIJ /VO MONEY BN ADVANCE Organ Offer SgTYour Own Time to Pay My 30-Day Free Trial—No Money ■Ea Down Offer—Breaking All Records— ega Greatest Otter Ever Made Wa( The value of an AcfferOrgan in your ■■ own home can never be measured in ttA dollars and cents. Because I want VS every family to know the elevating power and the delights of sweet organ music, 1 have originated the wonderful VS Adler plan of selling organs which has WR made the “Adler” a household, word— w more than 100,000 of these famous organs Hi are in the homes of the people. Send wk today for big, handsomely illustrated wk Free Organ Catalog. Learn how you Easy x & can have the World’s Best Organ— I Small w?. wtnnerr of highest prize at St. Louis p '®L World' j Fair, also winners of Gold „ L lll Medal at National Conservation NO Burden vl Exposition at Knoxville, Tenn., No Interest vk 1913— sent to your home without No Collectors Xa paying a cent for a K&“dH.VREE 30-Day Trial tobuy.Thenpay " me at your con- Have it a month free—it it venience, small % does not prove all I claim amounts. if at the % last ship.it back tome-and end of a year the X. Foor trial docs not cost '•Adler' ’fails to make X V° u a sm « le Penny good on every claim, I will refund every dollar you have paid me. The Adler is the World’s Best A Organ a‘ the very « <j I ’ 1 A lowest price ever made before. 50- Year Guarantee. !ta /I ean and will save ' you $43.75 because I H aell direct from the ' H $1,000.000 Adler Or- jlitfwllrir ft?. iUfMO gan Factory (great- est in existence) at 3-iru‘-SgSSEs4JSii*a lowest wholesale sac- tory prices The Ad- aTspK®?’- AS ter Plan thorough ly wrecks all retail organ prices, ab- 11 Bolutely BpongingnF»-~- II out all ”in-be-y, 51 tween” profits. |EggaijS££.lsL Mail yH|j Coupon Today t H ! Adler. Pres. L jm • A -51 er Mis- Co, g 243 W Chestnut St., Louisville, hy j Ser.ame—FßEE—your wonderful Organ Book. I | NAME | I ADDRESS. ..**••,••” 1 We want you to see this beau dful drees. So do not send a 4? Riva sen'now— only the coupon—and ■ ' .U-J «•»«* W Your tT?e' D n d d X M’n.ES- M SIZ© Bon and try-on. Not the eHgbtest ■■>■;. :-S VlfcV risk on year part—if you are not satisfied X tnd delighted with ita smart style or if z /«- Dress Better than mere words, the > picture ehowe you the smart lines end bew itching style of this pretty :•. -4 e'S®' frock. Made of good quality durable serge in one piece, gath- zgf-Jg. ? e ■;.< xgt •red at waistline and encircled J by beautifully embroidered belt. gg&j®[> : O».S< A Waist part designed with panel 5Z 2S& front and veetee of contrasting material trimmed with dainty >...?.. <*?-8 pearl buttons. Bound collar handsomely trimmed until two- tone soutache braid. Sleeves finished with cuffs of tan cloth » to match vestce. Skirt has ih; 13 targe braid trimmed patch pock- jfS|fc3«St&S&S S eta. Colors, navy blue or green. gj.-a6g3JK.. : •: •: tadlea'si?.es.34 to 46 bust mean- g»>557 rd-J ure; length, about 40 inches. Misses' sizes, 8 2 to 38 bust SSBK;«ci&; W measure; length .about 8 8 fe jaEbyj’jK# %fg inches. The very latest, most u l fashionable model. SA'uf'- mar * Send Coupon NOW! X cent—coupon brings it. When Coupon : I to Show 1 i, an amazing barga.n and just V&K& ft Color , what you want return drees and beck vo,o > I gone your money to you. Put Xin 11 to Wanted show color wanted and give your size. g t k Dept. 7583 Chicago Send the pretty embroidered Sergo wa Dress indicated by X in square below. w When dress arrives I will pay S 5 95 and postage. If not satisfied after examination and try-on. I will return it and you will refund my money. Ladies’ Bust Size ii. Misses* Bust Size No. 8X846 f”lNo. 8X847 Navy Blue I—l Green Name AGENTS: $54 a Week fin 1 Reversible Raincoat side dress coat, other aide storm . Tailored scams, sewed and trapped. Two coats for the price fone. Brand new. First season. Not sold in stores. We control the entire output. Take orders front men ana women who, ob ject to paying present high prices. Guaranteed Waterproof or money back. Our men and women representatives having wonderful success. Right now is the big season. No experience or capital needed. You take the orders. We ship by parcel post and doall collecting. Commission q! paid same day you take orders. Ira H|»' >’ AWo ere puying thousands of doJterß U> Em 2®i -'I our agents taking orders for tbje new & ’ ' \z RevcrmUo Coat. Wo have aS of the latest and best styles of raincoats for \ men. women and children. Our new, big swatch book, 48 paxes, shows all new and distinct patterns. Write today for agency and ezmpls coat aud make some real money this seasun. Parker Mfg. Co., 508 Storm St., Dayton, Ohio © Send Ho Koney Snap this bargain up right now be •'x. t° re ** * 8 to ° 3ate. Only limited v | > .A quantity. Amazing underwear bar i "vMs gain. Greatest ever made. Two Tt: Guaranteed $4 Each, Wool Union- Jsuits $5.75. Save big money on your under. E ’it’ wear. Send postcard or letter to -4 ■ pjg day this very minute, for these s’ si h 2 beautiful perfect, fitting heavy B ' weight gray elastic rib union suits, g Full cut. Seams reinforced and t J overcast. SEND NO MONEY— pay T 7 only $5.75 on arrival, no more; we , E / < iay delivery charges. I I ? We Guarantee to £ _— your money F'.p i if you can match these 2 wonderful L® J wool unionsuits for SB.OO. Order tbis amazing bargain this minute before it is too late. Just give t ; c * f name, address and breast measure. }- M BERNARD • HEWITT S COMPANY oefU32sW.Van Buren St., Chicago fc-~— -'N. - M fin » b •!' n««. Sell 8 ocxez Mentho-Nov£ Salve at-25c. S Ce» tw CreenviTle, r THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. POUND ASKS FOR MORE TERRIW H HER PEACE TERMS WASHINGTON, Sept. 12.—Poland will ask for the extension or the Polish frontier 100 miles east of the Curzon line at the forthcoming peace negotiations between the Poles and the Bolshevik! at Riga, according to advices received in official circles The line, which was said to rep resent the maximum demand of the Poles, would follow the twenty-sixth parallel east from Vilna and pass through Pinsk and Baranovitch to East Galicia. Concessions to Poland east of the Curzon line in the regions of Bialys tok and Chelm already offered by the Bolsheviki, form but a fraction al part of the claim which Poland is expected to put forth. The Polish claim comprises about half of the territory occupied by the Polish armies at the p<ak of their success in June and apjAoximately one-third of the territory east of the Curzon line and the 1772 frontier of Poland, in this territory, it is claimed, one quarter of the population of 1,500,000 are Polish, one-quarter are said to be Jews and the remaining halt, white Ruthenians. Poland also was expected to in clude in her claim the raiiroad line from Vilna to Rowno for strategic reasons, with a further demand that discussions of the differences he* tween Lithuania and pol ?* ld frontiers fin’ll clearing up of th© ironticrs between Lithuania, Poland and Soviet be considered a necessary pre liminary to any peace settlement. GERMANY NOT TO PE MUNITIONS SHIPMENTS Sept 12.-——lnstructions have been given authorities in Charge of the Kiel canal not to all °w ® carrying munitions to a th t o the the canal from the North S e * 1 fA™ Baltic, according to a telegram fi Kiel It is stated these orders werj issued by the German government. The Vossische Zeitung says tha the German government has re T e cted the French embassy s request that the Danish steamer Dorrit, •with munitions for Poland, be allowed to proceed through the canal. T *' e sei it is declared, has turned back. SOVIET FORCES CLAIM VICTORY LEMBERG LONDON, Sept. 12.—The Russian soviet forces on the Crimean r °ut have occupied villages in the region of Oriekohv, says the official state ment received by wireless from Mos con Saturday. On the Lemberg front the Bolsheviki claim the capture ot two guns and one hundred prisoners. Atlantian Invents Coal Saving Heater; Is Tested at Tech When coal prices passed the twelve-dollar. a ton mark John S. Nichols, an Atlanta inventor, who lives at 141 Lee\street, made him self a new kind of heater, which would enable him to enjoy the cheeriness of an open Are, and at the same time save, as he claims, nearly 800 pounds of coal out of every ton. After trying out his invention to his own satisfaction he submitted it to a test at the experimental engi neering laboratory at Georgia Tech and the engineers out there agreed that the device not only saved coal but gave off more than twice as much heat as an ordinary grate fireplace. It is known as the Nic Heater and was been • patented. The heater is designed so that in appearance it is little more than a camouflaged open fire place. It is different from the well known stove in that it Is installed Inside the chimney or close up to the fireplace. The fire is made to pass through a sheet iron chamber which reflects the heat back into the room through the front wall of the heater, thus it is said, saving a great deal of the heat which usually goes up the chimney. At the same time the oc cupants of the room may enjoy the flickering fire in the open grate. The tests at Georgia Tech were made by Professor R. D. King, head of the experimental engineering de partment, assisted by Henry F. Harbig and Edward A. Ryder. They gave it a careful try-out, and re ported that the heater saved 38 per cent of a ton of coal, giving off at the same time 54 per cent more heat energy than an ordinary open grate. Writer Asks Help Os Thomas Jefferson, ‘Late State Secretary’ WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—Secre tary Colby received today from Bom bay, India, a letter addressed to “Thomas Jefferson, late secretary of state and master of patents." The writer desired information as to the precess of feeding "patrol” (pe trol) into an engine. A personal re p’y from Jefferson was requested. The letter was sent by’ Secretary Colby to President Wilson as a curi osity. Our big cut price catalog is free to every man and woman in America who really desires to dress stylishly and to save money. For 30 years we have been America’s greatest cut price bargain house; W regardless of conditions or what others may do, we will continue to sell dependable merchandise at prices \ lower than asked by any other establishment in the V 5 world.GetourlatestStyleßookandCutPrice n ft 1 .Wk Bargain Liat. See the big savings we offer. \Af ray unly L . Regardless of increased express rates we still deliverorders FREE. You pay only theprices t 1 j asked in our catalog. Noextras. No added postage. \y -Asked IB rw 13 Anythingyouorderfrom Tafnlnm /V’ -w. -3 «S4CS<L.M UB is} sent with the under . ■uaiaiug \x@®> standing, that if you are not satisfied for any reason at all, \ return it and we will return your money instantly. WORUJSBIG6EST f OVERALL OFFER X 1 .’ 11l 7 Mon! Look here if you want tosce VUKJk. ’ • ='xi; > B* E an overall bargain that beats the \ World—a chance to get the real 'N if-- -3 x HjKxjWWj wa * IB thing in quality at a money-sav- il-i i= ; il£Wl . »cl ing you can’t afford to miss. We’ll Ik "1. Ijjwj • rj' leave it to you when you Bee these j»4-z A iii ' J frGWEv-fllMlM wWnM overallstodecide. If notthemost STv ■ iVEnjiai xakEgglSS nr, tvrnrn Btunning bargain you have ever || : i(SO4 ■: DELIVERED seen, it’s vour money back. IP ’ FREE Made for Wear ■ 208FM345. Heavy, fast color blue denim, fnn+fliiALK made “PI 011 style, high back and railroad •i , SaSjk -traps. Two front swinging pockets. 1 rule M'S® ” pocket. 1 combination wateh and pencil ' Bj*! ° '? pocket and 2 back patch pockets. Continuous GrShch N L'-T* side facings and fly. Stayed crotch. Two buttons on the aide. « ''••♦raliitzaw iKBBfe :8 Two-seam leg. Triple stitched throughout. Double waistband. yLTKkyx : .MS Sizes 30 to 44 in. waist. 30 to 36 inseam. Be sure to give your 3!ue LemflT 3hkN fi? size - Price only $1.98. Delivered free. Don't put off ■ i . EZS IfJk IKJ until this offer is withdrawn and you have to pay more, l : g. l-vB Ordertoday. Norisk toyoa. Moneybackif notsatisfied. I 9 K Guaranteed Lowest Prices Tum CK&-1 pdrS EW • • Wo stand back of every price with our absolute Iwo a iT? 1 iSrin-Dxa guarantee to refund the difference in cash, if Ij ' 'anS fcf you find you have paid us a higher price than gWB B 3 :; asked by any other house for the same Rv Rl If L.ui;:' tSIP article. Our prices always the lowest. ■ feU Edfr* Hs?S Consider these: Dresses, $1.98 up; . '.jiV y .• .• F ’ ♦JS Suits, $14.98 up; Coats. $5.98 up; •• •• Trinlfl S.‘iU 'V-dsKa “ SiSsS Waists, 98c up; Skirts. $2.98 up; iripie Hats,Bßeup;Shoes.sl.9Bop;Chib •• .• tfeUiJWK Suits, $14.98 up; Boys’Suits, •• F-’ ■ r 'ey; ?5.98up; Alldelivered Free •' *•" •’* • *-3 —prepaid to your door. A’vJpl'-y V ‘ Can you beat it? AT LAST THE PAPER suit makes its appearance her. These suits sell at 60 cents each. They’re made in Germany and cut from Eng lish styles. ■■ t ■ vO ? ' 1.1 1 I ® |H f i' A 1 ' x ' ' • ;r ' W" : •• €■ • w ADVERTISING FOR STATE WILL BE EXPLAINED SOON Appreciation of th© value of ad vertising by other states was brought home to Georgia last week when the "Raisin Girl” from Cali fornia, heralded as one of the most beautiful women in the world, paid a visit to Atlanta and other cities, called upon the mayor and officially dubbed him Knight of the "Raisin” and grabbed several columns of pub licity which hammered the thought of California raisins into the public mind. Officials of the Advertise Georgia Enterprise pointed out that if the Georgia Fruit Growers’ association were to send a “Georgia Peach" around the country—and there are a thousand to pick from—the Cali fornia fruit wouldn’t be selling on trains and in sidewalk stands in Georgia, and the country would be demanding the Georgia fruit instead. The Advertise Georgia Enterprise is now at work on plans which will let the rest of the country hear about Georgia soon—and not only its peaches but of its farm lands, its ports, its timber, its climate and the opportunities it offers seekers of new homes. The plans of the Advertise Geor gia Enterprise will be explained in the next two weeks by Governor Dorsey, who is general chairman of the organization, and Fred E. Ham lin, its executive secretary, at a se ries of meetings to be held in every agricultural district in the state. It is proposed to raise a $300,000 fund to be invested in advertising the resources and advantages of Georgia and in following up inquir ies by home-seekers, putting them in touch with communities where land is for sale. Governor Dorsey’s tour will open Tuesday at Athens, an dthe follow ing schedule will be followed: Au gusta, Wednesday; Savannah, Thurs day; Waycross, Friday; Albany, Sat urday; Americus, Monday; Dublin, Tuesday; Macon, Wednesday; La- Grange, Thursday; Gainesville, Fri day; Rome, Saturday. October has been proclaimed “Ad vertise Georgia Month” by Govern or Dorsey, but the interest aroused among chambers of commerce, boards of county commissioners and various civic bodies has been such that it is-believed the fund will be raised by the end of September. Sev eral counties already have guaran teed their quotas. MACSWINEY’S END IS EXPECTED AT ANY MOMENT LONDON, Sept. 11.—(By the Asso ciated Press.)-j—The condition of Terence MacSwiney, lord mayor of Cork, who has been on a hunger strike in Brixton prison for a month, this afternoon was reported the gravest of any stage yet record ed by the bulletin of the Irish Self- Determination League reporting on his cage. He appeared to have com pletely collapsed and for the first time his mind seemed to be getting dull although his body has been vir tually “dead for several days,” one of the league officials remarked. Despite the fact that this is the thirtieth day of his hunger strike the mayor’s mind heretofore has been remarkably clear, although at numerous times he has sunk so low physically that he could not speak. It was said the mayor’s collapse, however, did not necessarily mean that the end might be expected im mediately. The members of the fam ily had not been summoned by the prison authorities as it is understood would be the case if it were believed he had reached his last hours. Some of Mayor MacSwiney’s rela tives are remaining with him most of the time. This morning his sister, Annie, visited him; this afternoon, his wife came, and his other sister, Mary, was expected later in the day. His brother, Sean, has been spending each night with the mayor. On leaving the prison this after noon Annie MacSwiney said her brother was yery much weaker. "He has reached his worst point,” she declared. “Today for the first time he was so weak I could not read to him and when I asked him a question he had to think a while before he could answer. His face has assumed the gray color of death.” Lord Mayor MacSwiney’s wife, when she left the prison late this afternoon, said the prison doctor had told her she might expect to be called to her husband’s bedside at any moment, as the end was very near. Mrs. MacSwiney said her hus band was delirious by spells, but oc casionally recognized her. Other wise his mind did not appear to be working. It was reported today that should the end come for the lord mayor, the prison officials planned to - withhold the announcement of his death until the body was safely away from the prison, in order to avoid any possible demonstration. Mrs. MacSwiney received numer ous telegrams today. Among them was one reading: “Corkmen in Dub lin extend sincere sympathy to you and family. If Terry dies we snail have vengeance.” One message of sympathy came from “The Rebel, Cork Benevolent Association of San Franqisco,” an other from “Demobilized Soldiers of Cork.” Still others were received from various Irish municipal bodies. DEBS CABLES HIS PROTEST TO SINN FEIN DUBLIN, Sept. 11.—Arthur Grif fith, founder of the Sinn Fein, has received a cablegram from Eugene V. Debs, the American Socialistic leader, who is serving a ten-year term in Atlanta prison for violation of the espionage act, condemning the treatment of Lord Mayor Mac- Swiney. Debs says in his message that “British labor should not halt at mere protest, but should cbmpel the mayor’s release.” Russian Children Begin Last Leg of Voyage to Petrograd NEW YORK, Sept. 11.—Beaming with smiles, 780 Russian refugee children began tonight the last sea leg of a round-the-world trip to their homes in Petrograd, sailing from New York aboard the steam ship Yomei Maru, chartered by the. American Red Cross. The refugees have been in New York since Au gust 20. They were sent out of Petrograd during the war days of 1918, and were taken in charge by the Red Cross at Vladivostok. Motor boats crowded with men whom police believed were radicals lately instrumental in having some of the children protest against re turning to their homes byway of France, plied up and down the har bor for hours this afternoon. Pa trolmen would not let them come near the piers, how’ever, and when a police boat appeared they quicklv moved upstream. Each of the refugee youngsters carried a new valise filled with clothes, all presented to them by local Russian societies. They reach ed the pier with shining faces, and their chaperones contrasted their appearance with that of two years ago, when 2,300 bars of soap were used on them the first day they were placed in charge of the Red Cross. The refugees will go to some Baltic port byway of Brest and eventually will be turned over to their parents in Petrograd. Cotton Factors File Suit Against A. B. & A. For Alleged Shortage Leigh Ellis & Co., cotton factors with headquarters in Austin, Tex, have filed suit in United States court against the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic railroad and Walter D. Hines, former director general of railroads, claiming damages in the sum of $9,326.54 for an alleged short age in weight of a large consignment of cotton which was shipped by the plaintiff company from Talladega, Ala., to the Revolution Cotton Mills, at Greensboro, N. C., in March, 1918. The plaintiffs allege that they hold the defendant railroad’s bill of lad ing for 300 bales of cotton weighing 149,025, but that when the cotton reached Greensboro, the total weight was found to be 122,186 pounds, or a loss in weight of 26,839 pounds. They claim that they settled in full for the cotton on a basis of 34 3-4 cents a pound, and seek in their suit to collect $9,326.54 from the railroad to cover their alleged loss. Plaintiffs are represented by Wat kins, Russell and Asbill, of Atlanta. The A., B. & A. railroad, through its general counsel, has filed a plea to the jurisdiction of the local federal court, claiming that the suit is not triable here and asking that it be dismissed. Immigrants Crowd Ellis Island Station NEW YORK, Sept. 11.- -Disrup tion of passenger schedules was said by steamship men to be threatened by the flood of immi grants flowing into New York so swiftly that Ellis Island cannot ac commodate them, making it neces sary for hundreds to remain in the steerage of vessels several days. More than twenty thousand aliens were brought in this week, but ten thousand of them have not yet been inspected because of inade quate facilities. Commissioner Wallis at Ellis Is land is firmly determined not to -peed up by making only superficial examinations. Too little caution in such matters has been the root of Bolshevism in America, he said to day. Savannah Launches Big Oil Tanker SAVANNAH, Ga., Sept. 11.—The launching of the Lilmae, a big oil tanker, at the yards of the Terry Shipbuilding corporation this morn ing was probably the most successful event the kind ever staged in the south. The big vessel was christened by Mrs. Maurice Frankel, wife of Mau rice Frankel, of New York, who is senior member of the firm of Frankel Bros., wealthy ship operators and coal and oil magnates. Later there was a dinner at the Hotel Savannah, where the mayor was one of the guests. DOES THIS GIVE YOU CHILLS? NEVER RATTI.ES “SNAKE MASTER” \ sot a his 1 h ■- • ' Shaw and his friend, the rattler, get on better terms. Above, a king snake. OAKLAND, Cal.—Ever since Moth er Eve had her encounter with the adder, the snake has been looked upon as man’s mortal enemy. Now comes Fred V. Shaw, assist ant curator of the Oakland museum, who says that the harmless reptile should be rated among man’s most valued companions. ) “Better keep a few snakes on your place than e dog,” says Shaw, who has handled and studied thousands and who fears reptiles less than two legged or four-legged creatures. "Os the 111 American varieties'only seventeen are poisonous. Learn the poisonous ones—they usually fight only in self-defense anyway—and FEDERAL RESERVE BANK WILL MOVE COTTON THIS FALL Assuring the cotton growers that the officials of the federal reserve bank inform him positively of their intention to give the same accommo dations on cotton collateral that the bank has given in the past, J. J. Brown, commissioner of agriculture, in a statement issued Saturday, urges the farmers not to sell a bale of cot ton for less than 40 cents a pound, which was the minimum fixed by the price committee of the American Cot ton association at its meeting ten days ago in Montgomery. Commissioner Brown’s statement is as follows: “I sincerely trust that no one in Georgia will sell a single bale of cotton for less than 40 cents a pound, the price fixed in Montgomery a few days ago. “Since the Montgomery meeting and in the last thirty days we have had one of the greatest crop de teriorations ever known. It has been so great in Texas that the authori ties have openly announced that Texas will hardly make 2,500,000 as against about 4,000,000 anticipated sixty days ago. As a result, Texas is figuring the cost of production at 46 cents a pound. “The deterioration in Georgia has been as great as that in Texas, and it would be unjust to every interest to even think of selling a pound of our cotton for less than 40 cents average for all grades. “I have received positive informa tion that the Sixth Federal Reserve bank stands absolutely ready to re discount for the farmers and mer chants of this territory an unlimited amount of cotton paper. lam sorry there is a misunderstanding, as I am informed, on the part of some of our Georgia banks to the contrary.. If they will look into the matter, l’feel sure they will find the federal re serve bank is ready to stand by our farmers just as in the past. “There is no ground whatever for any demand for deflation in cotton, because cotton has never been in flated. Every posted man in the cot ton belt knows well that it cost more to produce the 1920 crop than any other in the history of the south. "When the world knows the facts, it will be ready to accord our pro ducers a fair price for their cotton, which will pay them cost of produc tion plus a reasonable profit. "Information coming through thou sands of letters and telegrams from all over the cotton belt since the Montgomery meeting, Indicates that the farmers are determined, as never before, not to sell this crop below cost. Their disposition is to secure loans on bonded warehouse receipts and meet their obligations as prompt ly as possible, but under no circum stances to sell below cost. “Under the circumstances, I con fidently believe the banking and business interests stand ready to as sist the farmers in securing at least cost for this year’s crop. In fact, I feel absolutely sure of it. “The bear ’speculators may try to stampede the market on the basis of the reported shutting down or cur tailment on the part of the mills; but board contracts cannot be spun into cloth fabrics, and the manufacturer cannot shut down any longer than the farmer can hold. Let every man stand steadfast for a fair price, and we are bound to get it." Child Falls 4 Stories, Lands Unharmed in • A Baby Carriage NEW YORK, Sept. 11.—Charles Darwin, who said the struggle for ex istence results in the survival of the fittest, forgot one essential element —luck. Proof of this oversight was sup plied today by an infant member of New York’s East Side tenement dwellers. When Mrs. Joseph Veechioo, the baby’s mother, saw him fall from a fourth story fire escape last night, she ran out, panic-stricken, expect ing to see him crushed to death. Instead, however, she found her child happily gurgling in a cushion ed baby carriage into which he had 1 anded, unharmed. Packers Appeal for Better Car Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—Renre sensatives of the meat-packing indus try have appealed to the interstate commerce commission to alter sec tions of its priority regulations on coal car supply, on the ground that operation of packing plants is en dangered. Live stock producers’ or ganizations, stockyards and ethers connected with the industry have joined in the complaint. 111-Tempered Bull Protects Squirrels COLUMBUS, Ind.—Edward Jones, farmer, has an ill-tempered bul 1 pasturing in a grove where a large number of squirrels thrive. Hunters have had narrow escapes. J. H Hitchcock, justice of peace, played hide and seek around trees until help came .while James Newton dropped his gun and vaulted a fence, just in time. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1920. cultivate the friendship of the others. “In America $200,000,000 worth of grain is destroyed by rats every year. A gopher snake eats rats, squirrels and other rodents that attack grain and the roots of fruit trees. Every time you kill a gopher snake you might as well destroy 100 times his weight in grain. The same is true of a king snake.” Shaw says you can quickly learn to distinguish the poisonous from the harmless species. The venomous ones usually have flat heads and keel shaped scales. The rattler of the west, the copperhead and moccasins of the east are all marked thus. "Snakes are short-sighted,” he says. “Quick movements rouse and often anger them. Slow movements Black Hand Plot Foiled When Police Set Trap With Infernal Machine BRIDGEPORT, Conn. —Seven men who are accused by the police of being implicated in a black-hand plot to blackmail wealthy residents of this state, terrorizing them with bombs, are held in $15,000 bail each here on formal charges of breach of the peace. Their arr«st was com passed with the aid of a sort of “infernal machine” invented' for the occasion by a gunsmith. The police called in the gunsmith to help them trap the senders of threatening letters to Dwight C. Wheeler, president of the Acme Shear company. Two letters were received. One, demanding $15,000, came on August 11, and the other, calling for $20,003 and naming the spot in a vacant lot where it was to be placed, came on August 28. Mr. Wheeler was to have the money at the place indicated Monday night. Sunday a bomb exploded out side his factory, tearing a great hole in the sidewalk. The bomb, op erated by a time device, gave the Peru-Chilean Agreement On Boundary Dispute Is Officially Denied WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—No set tiemerit of the territorial controversy between Peru and Chile arising out of disposition of the provinces of Tacna and Arica, can be attained by a money payment to the former coun try, the Peruvian embassy asserted tonight in an official statement. The statement emphatically denied ac counts of an agreement to this effect, published in South America and classed them as “a new subtlety of Chilean diplomacy." “All the Chilean gold would not be sufficient to make Peru cede a single inch of her mutilated terri tory,” the statement asserted. “No Peruvian government, poor oj rich, would reach an agreement so great ly in contrast to patriotism and na tional dignity. It is contrary to the most elemental rights of nations.” Vendor, Asked Price Os Beans, Drops Dead MARTINS FERRY, Ohio. —Henry A Nervous Wreck BY DR. VALENTINE MOTT PIERCE How many busi == ness men feel fagged out, nervous, with a “soggy brain”— w °rn out completely before the day and t remen d° us tasks are half over? Try the right way! Clean 1 / the body first. That / IJi will help your nerves, your head and your circulation. Your doctor will tell you that anything from a head ache or a common cold to grippe or a serious illness may result from allowing food to ferment in the- in testines. Don’t give the body a chance to absorb the poisons. Remove the toxins from the system and give the tissues of the body aid to resist disease by taking a a occasional laxative such as castor oil, or a tiny pill made up of May-apple, aloin, jalap, and sold by most drug-j gists as Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. The kidneys and bladder suffer from the wear and tear, and we get chronic inflammations sometimes indi cated by backache, painful voiding of water —dull, heavy feelings. Perhaps the uric acid is stored up in the system in excessive amount, and consequently when the urate salts are deposited in muscles and joints one suffers from lumbago (pain in back), rheumatic pains, gout, etc. Nothing will act so nicely as Anuric (anti-uric acid), a recent discovery of Doctor Pierce’s which can be had at all drug stores. Anuric aids in cleaning the bladder and kidneys—consequently those suffering from rheumatism, lumbago and gout are benefited and the body is put in a cleaner, healthier state.—(Advt.) they can hardly distinguish. Al ways back away from a snake slow ly and then, if he’s a rattler, you can kill him. “But don’t kill snakes indiscrim inately. You are killing one of earth’s most gentle and harmless creatures, as a rule.” When going into the mountains, Shaw advises, it is better to take along a hypodermic anti-toxin or permanginate of potash kit to be had at any drug store. A rattlesnake bite is best cured by this, with strych nine pills to keep the heart pumping. Whisky Is bad, and cutting or biting the wound often kills by spreading the poison or by blood poisoning or bleeding to death. police an Idea, and they called in the gunsmith to elaborate upon it. He constructed a box that would spring open and emit a great flare of light the moment it was touched, and this contrivance the detectives planted in the field where the money was to be placed. They hid in the vicinity to await results. The flare came, disclosing the fig ure of a man, and the detectives rushed in and seized him. He said :l ue was Luigi Popiell. Accord ing to the police he had paper in his pocket similar to that on which the letters received by Mr. Wheeler were written and gave to them the names of four other men who were associated in the attempt. These’men were arrested. They said they were Pasquale and Albert di Pasquala, Joseph Capoziello, Ro sario and James di Proflo and Sa batino .Dortenzio. According to the police Pasquale di Pasquala stole the dynamite from which Sunday’s bomb was made, getting $lB for the job and the di Profio brothers made the bomb. New Louisiana Rates Are Ordered by I. C. C. WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—Louis iana intrastate rates on certain com modities applicable in that part of the state west of the Mississippi river were held to be discriminatory to Natchez, Miss., shippers today, by the interstate commerce commis sion which ordered new rates be put in force to remove the discrimina tion against Natchez. Louisiana shippers, practically as far distant from western Louisiana as is Natchez, were said by the com mission to have an advantage be cause of the intrastate rates. The commission ordered that the rates from Natchez into western Louisiana and between points west ern Louisiana be changed by the railroads by December 11, 1920, and specified rates on brick, coal, fer tilizer, potatoes, turnips, grain, flour, hay and straw, horses ano mules, ice, junk, petroleum, sand and gravel and well-boring outfits. Myers, sixty, vegetable vendor, fell dead beside his wagon when a woman asked him the price of lima beans. f/lzC "WIK llinol would help your poor complexion Does a poor complexion stand betweet you and popularity—good times—suc cess ? Resinol Ointment and Resina Soap do not work miracles, but they make red, rough, pimply skins, clearer a fresher, and more attract ive. Use them regularly for a few days and see hov your complexion improves Sold by all druggists. Delivery Free y^i r dress, no money. 1 will send . /I. \JFr«O ■ this fashionable embroid- ered serge skirt and band- ,0 Kfe I7W somely embroidered voile w />?’ waist to you prepaid, ftbrl qjgy >5 Pay the postmen $5.95 ' 'gfi when he deliver am. /i jm&lJ Just think, you save f F ILAjy: 1 Ij'Si $3.00 by ordering thia PH Yaffil ■- skirt and waist now. ? I'sSk jAT I H ' mi, i '•l'm' ir© ©Ji B JL ’ ® SraaH ’ Embroidered Skirt "-Walot 8 for $5.95 W' - * THE SKIRT is made of e wool mixed storm serge which will give an un- : limited amount of satis- factory wear. A hnnd- Boma fll-inch band of hand embroidery design encircles the entire skirt. Embroidery is in eolor to match cloth. The skirt is cut with a broad girdle belt, beneath which it is shirred. Colors Navy Blue or Black. Sizes J 22 to 36 waist measure, 88 to 40 length. THE WAIST is made of a »/ J'Swj " fine quality voile, hand- Bomcly emb-ofdered in front. Has a largo extra cellar. Color White only. Sizes 32 to 46. A wonderful money saving bargain. Just your name and address, no money. QCIHI When the skirt and waist arrive, pay the postman $5.95. We pay all delivery charges. If for any reason whatsoever, you are not perfectly pleased, return them and we will cheerfully refund your money at once. This isour risk, not yours. Be sure and give size and color. Order the 2 pieces by No. 45. Walter Field Co. 318«.Mi«hiMsav..,<:Meaao11 ' 'The Bargain Mail Order Houte" 'viCTiMS' RESCUED Kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles are most dangerous because of their insidious attacks. Heed the first warning they give that they need attention by taking COLD MEDAL V.XA-bi'A’r.,, The world’s standard remedy for these disorders, will often ward off these dis eases and strengthen the body against furtherattacks. Threesizes,all druggists. Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation GUARANTEED No Money s \ Positively greatest tire offer ftSfkg // V«X \ ever made I Sensational value MScll Wsßa 1 sweopaawayall competitions Il VeM 1 —6,000 miles— or more—front / (all 1 ourspecial reconstruction proc- SggK I I 1 obs oouble tread standard tires jHI> I Cl I —practically puncture proof. sb< ||| |Amazing Low Prices | |Size Tires Tubes Size Tires Tubes <JSL? I |2Bx3 $ 5.95 $1.50 34 x 4 $10.95 $2.85 ®S 1130x3 6.25 1.70 33x4M 11.15 2.M * SHC LB3Ox3H 6.95 1.95 34x4% 11.46 8.10 fl32x3S 7.85 2.15 35x414 12.85 8.25 -IBZ I . Ifc’32x4 9.95 2.65 35x5 18.45 8.45 WWJ Reliner FREE yW? v*'// with each tire \ Send your order today— VHt-v whilethese lowest prices last, j/ Statesize.alsowhetherstraight MuiLA— side or clincher Remember,you need send no money, just your name and address and tire with free reliner will be shipped same day. MORTON TIRE & RUBBER CO. •SOI Michigan Ave., Dept. 453 Chicago. ML iYOUR Free Suit r«A» fMs fln9 Mad»-to- Quality ams don’t and Fit us ona cont for It. jgJFtMonn. We want you to get one of our high- tS«4 class suits, absolutely eoyou.«W®»lMUw*. can shew it to your friends. It wifi boa big advertisement for us. If you have a little spare time, you can easily make from •35f0 ! and boaldoa that be the best dressed man in your town. It’s an opportunity you cannot afford to overlook. Don’t delay a minute. Wrtw for this Big Offtr at Drop ns a lino or send us your name yjO VKH on a postal card and we will send ttSa wjW yon absolutely rroo, our wonderful style book, containing dozens of earn pies and fashion plates to choose fro n. BBS HR write Now. Everything sent Fro* Rjf KD and postage prepaid. THE PKOQRKM TAILORING CO. K Oopb 40C f «gSSAL.t THESE FREE (» Gold p-ated Lavalllaee sn® ~~~~ dry Novelties at lo eu. OcoL *7* h»l lb* Beautiful Thin Wakb No - Guarantor ~ c. o. o. Down $12.85 HIGH GRADE GOLD FILLED „ Almost tine « SILVER DOLLAR it wears In th. eoek.t. Her. T* Snd bezzle, Mly tested and reKulatcd. Really it Is an aristocrat YliGH’dßATlEGOMlfilb-d Aialn to rn.tch with racfc fcLfSfc order. REMEMBER, this Special Offer is tor ahurb I RUE time only; rend your nam. and addr-ta today sad iLGINSUrPUCU,’,664 N. Carpeater St, Drat. 82 CUap.Ul < Fine H ke ' ele mahogany fln wga3Bß3R“u islied, four gut strings, brass frets and instruction book. All given for selling 25 Jewelry Novelties at 10c each. Eagle Watoh Co- Dept. 462 Eaet Boston, Mau.