Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, September 25, 1920, Page 2, Image 2

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2 DDDSDK ■$ cm ms It’s Mercury! Attacks the Bones, Salivates and Makes You Sick There's no reason why a. person should take sickening, salivating cal omel when a few cents buys a jarge bottle of Dodson’s Diver Tone —a per fect substitute for calomel. It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid which will start your liver just as surely as calomel, but it doesn't make you sick and can not salivate. Children and grown folks can take Dodson’s Live<- Tone, because it is perfectly harmless. Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is mercu”y and attacks your bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel today and you will feel weak, sick and nauseated tomorrow. Don’t lose a day’s wopk. Take a spoonful of Dodson's Liver Tone Instead and you will wake up feeling great. No more biliousness, constipation, sluggish ness, headache, coated tongue or sour stomach. Your druggist says if you don’t find Dodson’s Liver Tone acts better than horrible calomel your moT**y is waiting for you.—(Advt.) DMtHiPtnv We want you to tee this stylish skirt for that is the only 7 ? n> roa will realize wbat a .bargain it is. U Yoadon’tpay apenny K when you order—at. 1 .-yS:. keep it only if you want it after examin ation. We ship entire- SegsKft ly on approval If ffi&gJSs&Gi.-;Mg£K£l you are not inatantly won by the beauty. shkss? "s- th.‘ •kirt return it. /wW&gg No fairer offer waaavartnade.No treater val u e XSj? ever offered. •? And you must act quickly for •’£<X4S& the stock will soon be eold. >: : <3 N o money coupon NOW ! •; Smart |g Serge Skirt Made •rod Berge. lined withrood :#<’« £ & tione; under ; part forma \v.:<;/Pvss^. : fexx- ft w 11 ; : S rows of a 11 - ■ ailk soutache anished with S;< throe small *3 tai* anl xo sics*. Order Blue by No. EX 1541. Black by No. 8X1543 your order now—only the coupon, no money. Pay only $8.98 for skirt. If not satisfied, we will refund your money. Put X in coupor showing color wanted and give sizes. Mail the coupon today. LEMArTmoR TO? &cb.7DepTisß6ChiMgo Sand sertre skirt indicated byiX in square below. Wben’re colvod I will pay $3.98 tor skirt. If not satisfied aftel examination, I will return it and you will refund my money No. 8X1541 l—l No. 8X1543 Blue LJ Black Length........i0. Waistln. Hipln. Kams Address RHEUMATISM A Remarkable Home Treatment Given by One Who Had It , In the Spring of 1593 I was attacked by Muscular and Inflammatory Rheuma tism. I suffered as only those who have it know for over three years. I tried remedy after remedy, and doctor after doctor, but such relief as I received was only temporary. Finally, I found a remedy that cured me completely, and It has never returned. I have given it to a number who were terribly afflicted and even bedridden with rheumatism, some of them 70 to 80 years old, and re sults were the same as in my own case. I want every sufferer from any form of rheumatic trouble to try this marvel ous healing power. Don’t send a cent; simply mail your name and address and I will send it free to try. After you have used it and i has proven itself to be that long-looked-for means of getting rid of your rheumatism, you may send the price of it, one dollar; but under stand, I do not want your money unless you are perfectly satisfied to send it. Isn’t that fair? Why suffer any longer when relief is thus offered you free. Don’t delay. Write today. Mark 11. Jackson, No. 741-G Durstbn bldg., Syracuse. N. Y. Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above state ment true. —S—IBIIU Mil 11 H B a—■■»■■—— TAKE NUXATED IRON TO HELP BUILD UP THEIR STREMGTH.EHERGY AND ENDURANCE ASK YOUR ORUGSIST YOUR Free Suit Take thia fine Made-so- £?x C«m» Meaner a Suit and don't andFll p*y ua one cent for It. S’ Guaran- We want you to get one of our high class suits, absolutely Frea, so you can show it to your friends. It will A baa big advertisement for us. If you have a little spare time, you can easily make from •nd bealeSoa that be the best dressed man in your town. It’s an opportunity you cannot afford to K’r'X-X'-, overtook. Don't delay a minute. >7 ,SB Write for this Big Offer st Once Drop us a line oraend ua your name rp-j on a postal card and we will send r f n yea absolutely ffraa. our wonderful tfajj style book, containing dozens of earn- TSa teSj plea and fashion plates to choose fro n. pH K# write Now. Everything cent Fra* |% Lj, and postage propaid. ESj THE FRO9MSS TAILORING CO. lA (Dept <OB f M I S iSq&riß GUARANTEE? No Money \ Positively greatest tire offc \ • verma^e - Sensational valr wßi* \ •weeps away all competitic; If 1 —6,000 miles—or more—fro\ / ilB 1 ourspecia) reconstruction proc I m 1 esßooubletread standard tire‘ 18 | 1 —practically puncture prooi <E< ]Amazing tow Price .SEX IgSize Tires Tubes Size 'Tires Tubs ■ I W- z I if''"’’ 3 * 5 95 ?1.50 3n:4 $10.85 S2.F * IgSOx.? 6.25 1.7i) ! 33x44$ 11.15 2,( ’ >OC 1130x314 6.K 1.55:34x414 11.46 8.1 IKZ 032x314 7.85 2.15!35x444 12.85 8.1 )®ES £S3lx4 8.95 2.45,00x114 13.C0 8.1 I >Sa32x4 9.95 2.05 35x5 13.45 S.< |T®> V ..J»S3x4, 10.45 2.75 37x6 13.05 8 < ' wWJ Keiiner YVa7 y&zf/ > with each the YK77 W2'”// - Send your order today—sere ' these lowest prices last v ' State size,»i’so wnethsrstraight side or clincher. Remember, yxa ieed 6'jt. l i»o money, just your name and adurr _• ma tire with free reliner, will be shipped Kam.- uav i WORTON Tir’E & P' ~CO | BSOI Michigan Ave., &cpt. THE ATIiANTA TRI-WEEKLT JOURNAL. Woman Is Rescued ; By One-Armed Man DOUISVILLE, Ky.—Mrs. Mag gie LaDuke, forty-three years old, | jumped into the canal at the foot of Twentieth street. She was res- 1 cued by J. J. Welsh, a one-armed man, foreman of a gang handling coal for the Louisville Railway company’s power plant. Welsh managed to keep the woman’s head above water until help ar rived. At the Fourth police district station Mrs. LaDuke said her mind is unbalanced, and that for some time she has been afraid lest harm befall her four chil dren. She lives at 2208 Columbia street. As the matron at the county jail was removing Mrs. LaDuke’s clothing, preparatory to putting dry garments on her, Mrs. La- Duke seized her belt, looped it around her neck in a vain ef fort to strangle herself. Her sanity will be investigated. HOUSTON PLANS TO ENTERTAIN U. C. V. OCT 5-8 HOUSTON, Tex., Sept. 24.— Plans for entertaining the estimated 75,- 000 visitors to Houston during the reunion of the United Confederate Veterans October 5 to 8 rapidly are nearing completion and a final drive for accomnrodations in private homes for some 50,300 of these visi tors now is under way. Pledges to care for thousands of the visitors al ready have been received and it is expected that -within a few days suf ficient accommodations, outside those to be provided by Houston ho tels and a ‘‘veterans camp,” will have been secured. Sons of Confederate Veterans, as usual, under the direction of their commander in chief, N. B. Forrest, are in charge of the preparations for the reunion, and within the last week Carl Hinton, adjutant-in-chief of the Sons of Veterans, has moved his headquarters from Denver, Colo., to Houston. Appointments of sponsorial staffs for two of the three army depart ments. Sponsorial staffs for the other department and for the gener al headquarters were announced some time ago, but none of the ap pointments for th© 17 divisions has been received. For the Army of North Virginia department, its commander, Lieuten ant General Julian S. Carr, of Dur ham, N. C., has appointed Mrs. Kate Patton Irvin, of Danville, Va., as sponsor. Maids, of honor will be: Miss Inez Jackson Austin, New York city; Mrs. Lindsay J. Clelland, Mrs. Mary Bond and Miss Mary Lyon, Co lumbia, S. C., and Mrs. Mary Austin Hall, New York city. The chaperon for the department will be Mrs. B. Mims, Winston-Salem, N. C., and the matron of honor Mrs. Lily Morehead Mebane, Spray, N. C. For the Army of Tennessee de partment, Lieutenant General Cal vin B. Vance, department com mander, hag made the following ap pointments. Sponsor, Miss Selene Roundtree, Birmingham, Ala.; maids of honor, Miss Lillian Rose, Tusca loosa, Ala.; Miss Camille Thompson, Memphis, Tenn.; Miss Adelaide Baum, Dublin, Ga.; chaperons, Mrs. Virginia Owen Lamb, Batesville, Miss.; and Mrs. Joseph E. Ander hold Anniston, Ala.; matron of hon or, Mrs. James Lewis Stinston, Mayfield, Ky. Many reports of large delegations which will come to the reunion are being received daily, many of which tell of the plans for bringing the veterans to Houston at little or no cost t 0 themselves. One of the most interesting reports came from Wic hita Falls, the oil city of northwest Texas, where, it wa a reported, a fund for paying all expenses of every veteran has been raised. In addition each old soldier will be pro vide with a new uniform free and will be attended by a Boy Scout during the entire trip, the expenses of the boys also to be paid out of the fund. A feature of the entertainment just announced will be an airplane exhibition by a fleet of eight planes owned by a Houston oil magnate. In connection with the exhibition, it was announced, a free ride in a racing plane will be given the old est and youngest of the veterans at the reunion. Potatoes and Shirts Destroyed by Storage Disease, Says Chemist NEW YORK, Sept. 23.—Americans must pay “for four sweet potatoes ev ery time two are delivered, and for an extra shirt they do not receive when ever they buy six,” because of dis ease that destroys important raw ma terials particularly foodstuffs in storage and transit, declared H. E. Howe, of the national research coun cil, who spoke at the chemical in dustries exhibition here. To reduce this costly waste and lower prices, he urged chemists to study destructive forces with a view to providing proper storage after food has been produced. Grinnell Jones, of the United States tariff commission, reported tlye production in the United States last year totaled 63,000,000 pounds, an 8 per cent increase over 1918. The average value, he said, was un changed—sl.o7 a pound. Her Youngest Was Three Score and Ten COLUMBIA, Ky.—When Mrs. Esther Dohoney died at the age of 102 years, four children, the young est of whom was seventy-two years old, were at her bedside. 2* only one of doz- ■' j «>• that we are offer- ’ * inn Absolutely Free. Wo - make this sacrifice just to Prove our “Wonder-Values” * n v pnu ‘ne tnaue-to-meaauxe E— 'AY 11" ilonng. f ■ Everything Free ‘i--. Latest style belt loops and Ti 'al! extras free. "No Extra wWgliz* Charges” for anything. wt SSO to $ 100 a Week Vzij J in your«naretimeand your clothes Y® f are FREE. Send us your name on Mj I a nostal —we will Bendy ou the “Big JKi J Money Making Outfit’’ with rich woolen Ai I samples to cbooee from. Everything KS?A sent FREE. I Spencer Mead Company, Whowrale Tailor* (( Oapt. 3CT 1 Chicago, Illinois | <><so Si!kTie !EME . i If I ‘r i I •MB Send No Money 2 Conu’ne Fine Count Shlrta—worth $3.50 each, .n<i a $1.50 silk Lio Fro« f $3.50 retail value, for only $4.39. postage pai l. Shirta are latest lavender, blus or black stripes on white background, (fast colors) very dressy, cut full, roomy armholes, coat front, soft French turrfback cofl's, pear) buttons, double stitched, finest workmanship, sizes 14 to 17k. Tie is generous size,pure silk four-in-hand, floral and atnpe patterns, n real Sl.oO retail tie. On!v ore order to reader -we make this slashing cut price bht bargain value, to introduce our catalog to thousands of new friends, hence, must limit each man to ono order. VUC* to refund money if not as represented ww fc. Lxvn<<niT ■ ■- l. Hn( j t)i<g3cst value you ever saw. Send no jnat name end address, colors preferred ana aiao, and v.-r sh’p al once, parcel post prepaid. P«» only $4.39 wheS received, no more. Order this minute. Don’t forffet neckband etea. BERNARD-HEWITT & COMPANY Dept. 900 W. Van Duren Str«ot f 6M«sgo» IIL CARPENTERS ON STRIKE SO SHE REBUILDS HER OWN HOME •****' • ~w . . - ••'***• • ; : k *~’’ ‘ " ” -r : ® - 7 - I .IWi-dilfwlHO.w j ikdtTiMlfflll q ■ K-to . . W-i BUTTE, Mont. —A fire partially de stroyed the home of Mrs. Sophia Coyle. Carpenters were on strike. g© - . r ; “I’ll repair my own home,” said she. And that’s just what she’s done. In side partitions had to be installed, shingling had to be done, painting was necessary, new plumbing was needed. So .Mrs. Coyle donned a >4 pair of overalls and set to work, with hammer, saw and paint brush. Now she has moved her two littl'd chil- V dren “back home,” and she is add ing th© finishing touches that will complete a mighty fine job. Picture ▼ shows Mrs. Coyle and her home. Two Cents a Pound for Tobacco Was Price in Colonial Days TOBACCO—Two col Feat WEEKLY Georgia tobacco growers, who have sold their leaf at excellent prices this year, may be interested to know that back in days before the Revolution ary war, colonial planters received as little as two and four cents a pound for the weed. A comparison of tobacco prices for the last 300 years shows that the height was reached in 1919. Scant information is at hand concerning the price of tobacco to growers before 1863. In the money of the time, the Jamestown tobacco sent to England in 1616-20 had a price of 54 3-4 cents a pound, but by 1639 the price had fallen to 6.08 cents, and by 1664 to 3.09 cents. A price of 1.52 cents is recorded for the Virginia and Mary land crop of 1730, of 4.2 cents for that of 1735, and from 2.3 to 4.55 cents thereafter for the colonial crops of various years to 1790. The producers’ average selling price of the tobacco of 1847 has been esti mated to have been 5 cents a pound; END OF H. C. L. IS PREDICTED BY U. S. OFFICIALS WASHINGTON, Sept. 23 —Gradual return to the law of supply and de mand as a governing influence over prices, and the end of “war charges” for necessary commodities was pre dicted by government officials in ex plaining the government’s attitude on credit extension. Secretary Houston declared re quests for credit could not be 'lis tened to where such aid might mean the preservation of high price levels. He added that many persons com plaining of what they term the re strictive board wish credit to en able them to hold their commodities until market conditions produce high er prices. Mr. Houston said the gov ernment could not lend its aid under such circumstances without becom ing a party to a conspiracy against the consumer. Credit for marketing of commodi ties may be had from the local banks, Governor Harding, of the board, has told the representatives of the cot ton and wool growers, stockmen and farm associations who have sought the influence of the board for the ex tension of credits. Disposal of their stocks as the demand will absorb them, Mr. Harding said, will enable producers to liquidate their holdings and ease a falling market. Prices on articles which have been under governmental control have broken sharply, according to How ard E. Figg, special assistant to the attorney general in charge of the campaign to lower living costs, who cited recent statements of the bureau of labor statistics as substantiating his claim. For the next two years, Mr. Figg said, the distribution of food, feeds and clothing will be gov erned by supply and demand with out the need for government super vision of prices. Merchants through out the country, he declared, are real izing prices must meet the demand for their goods and that the return to nearly normal or pre-war condi tions is not far distant. Hardwick’s Speaking Dates Announced Thomas W. Hardwick, who, on Thursday went to Cartersville to make his first speech of the run-over campaign, will speak in Athens Fri day night, in Washington Saturday afternoon, in Thomasville Monday afternoon and in Macon Tuesday night. In addition to these engagements, the Hardwick headquarters has an ’.ounced four dates for a joint speak ng by Jtlr. Hardwick and Thomas E. Watson. They will appear together n Columbus on the night of Wed lesday, September 29; in Waycross n the night of Thursday, September 0; in Valdosta on the afternoon of ’riday, October 1; in Bainbridge on ie morning of Saturday. October 2. Also, Mr. Hardwick will speak at '-fferson on October 4, at 11 o’clock i the morning, and in Augusta on he night of October 5, the day before he run-over primary. Poisoned Meal Brings Arrest of 5 Negroes GREENVILLE, Ala., Sept. 23. ive negroes, Joe Washington, Jesse cChontico and his wife. Texana Mc hontico; Katie Mae Sanders and ess Goldsmith, were arrested by heriff King Murphy last night and e held in the county jail on suspi :on of being; responsible for the oisoning of twenty-four guests at ’c Wilkinson hotel here Tuesday ight. An investigation was made as soon s' the guests of the hotel became 1, and it has ben determined that rsenic was in the biscuits served ft the evening meal. Joe Washing ?>n is a negro preacher of khe "Do light” denomination. A package of rat poison was found at the house of one of the negroes. A full inves tigation of the poisoning is under of 1849, 7 cents, and of 1853, 10 cents per pound. These facts are assem bled in an article contained in the Yearbook of the United States de partment of agriculture, recently is sued. The annual estimate of the pro ducer’ average price of tobacco by the bureau of crop estimates began in 1863 with 14.8 cents per pound in gold. In the decade 1865-74 the aver age was 9.5 cents, and low water mark since the Civil war was reached in 1895-1904, when the average was 7 cents. In one year—lß96—the price was as low as 6 cents. There after the upward movement of prices brought tobacco to 10.1 cents per pound in 1905-14, 14.7 cents in 1916, 24 cents in 1917, 28 cents in 1918 and 39 cents in 1919. Th© gain in price since 1896 may not have been entirely due to the diminishing pur chasing power of the dollar. There was increased cost of production, and producers have been stronger finan cially and more able to hold for a ATLANTIAN HEARS PHONOGRAPH AT SEA BY WIRELESS Somewhere out In the Atlantic ocean a phonograph played “Home Sweet Home” Wednesday night. And Thurston Hatcher, at his home in Decatur, heard it as plainly as though it were across the street. Mr. Hatcher is not a Munchausen, he is an amateur wireless operator, also a prominent Atlanta photogra ph r. “I was sitting alone in my observa tory, ‘listening in’ on the raido phone,” he says. “Often I’ve heard conversations among radio operators in this territory, but this is the first time I ever heard music in the At lantic. “Two operators began to talk ‘Hello.’ said one, ‘this is K-2-0, who is talking?’ The answer was, ‘This is I-X-B.’ I looked in the code book and identified them. K-2-0 is the American steamship Ontario. and I-X-B is the xvireless station at Green Harbor. Maine. “I listened to them talk for a while, then the man on the Ontario said, ‘Would you like to have some music?’ Green Harbor answered ‘yes.’ There was a moment’s pause, then I heard a violin solo as plain as though it was across the street. It was ‘Home. Sweet Home.’ “Os course, I do not know where the Ontario was, but presumably it was somewhere on the Atlantic, un less it was in the Great Lakes, or the Gulf.” President Wilson To Participate in Democratic Drive WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. —Presi- dent Wilson will actively participate in the Democratic presidential cam paign when “the proper time comes,’’ it was stated today at the White House. He probably will not make any speeches, said, but will confine himself to statements on campaign issues, particularly the League of Nations. The president is keeping in touch with the campaign through the newspapers and party leaders. While he has not received a formal invita tion from Democratic headquarters to take part in the campaign, 'White House officials said he considered <t his duty to do so as a member of the party. Agriculture College Needs More Room ATHENS, Ga., Sept. 23.—The Geor gia State college has opened with the largest and most representative student body in the history of the school. Students are registered from almost every county in the state of Georgia, and many states of the south and east are also well repre sented. According to Mr. Conner, chairman of the board of trustees, every class room is filled to capacity and some of the classes are so large that they have to meet in the auditorium. The school is sorely in need of more room and more equipment as the student body has been practically doubled in the last two years. Hoover Confers on European Children NEW YORK, Sept. 23.—Confer ences are in progress, it was an nounced here today, between Her bert Hoover, chairman of the Amer ican Relief administration, ani of ficials of tl.e Red Cross, Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, Y. M. C. A., the Y. W’. C. A., and various church bodies, both Catholic and Protestant, with a view to ‘joint and co-operative action in the effect- Official Army of Cats T.ONDON, Eng.—The Port of London thority is now spending over $2,500 a year on cats’ m n at to keep together the large nriny of felines now required to deal with the oven greater nrn;y of rats and mice. The ‘■■'i-ity new lies the largest cat-own - '’ y in London. Wage Moist Duel With Big Fire Hose SHANGHAI. —Two members of the French volunteer fire brigade here fought a duel with fire hose recently. The brigade is com posed largely of business men. Henri Numa and Georges Clergue quarrelled, a challenge was given and accepted. The principals had expressed their intention to meet on the field on honor with deadly weapons when they, were prevailed by of ficers of the brigade to use fire streams under high pressure, at a range of twenty feet. The com bat, which took place in the courr yard of the fire station, lasted about fifteen minutes, when Numa, after being slowly forced backward by the watery torrent, lost his helmet and went down as the big nozzle escaped from his clutch. WORLD WAR HERO REFUSES TO QUIT U. S. ARMY LIFE Wearing coveted military decora tions of two armies for exceptional gallantry in action on many battle fronts during the world war, Cor poral Harry Sawyer, United States army, now on duty in Atlanta with the army recruiting service, firmly refuses to quit the service until the expiration of his enlistment period, although he has repeatedly been of fered a discharge for physical dis ability. resulting from wounds re ceived while on the western front. Corporal Sawyer is a remarkable soldier, his superior officers say. He’s the most quiet, unassuming, modest chap in the recruiting office, not withstanding the fact that he was born in Chicago, 111. Atlanta doctors are now treating him daily, as he has never fully recovered from the effects of an overdose of the first wave of chlorine gas the Boche sent over on April 23, 1915. , But Corporal Sawyer refuses to return to the status of a mere civil ian. He loves the khaki uniform; he has suffered in it and now he de clares he will continue to wear it until the army forces him to take it off. . , A diminuitiv' chap of 114 pounds, and only twenty-four years old, Hit corporal always- loved the lite of a soldier. He wanted action. So he enlisted as a memmeber of the 110th Irish-Canadian infantry at the out break df the war, and was promptly assigned to the immortal “Princess Pat” regiment, the suvivors of which today number exactly eighteen. Was With Canadians Corporal Sawyer -is entitled to wear the Canadian class A service badge, having been a member of the expeditionary forces of 1914-15; this engagement badge was formerly known as the coveted “Marne Star,’ and has a medal attached; he is also a wearer of the British war medal, which is given for active service on all fronts; the Victory medal, given any soldier of the allied forces; two wound bars (the British use a silver bar instead of the coat chevron in their wound designations); one red coat chevron, for 1914 service, and three blue coat chevrons, showing that the wearer was in British serv ice on the front in 1915, 1916, 1917, respectively. The “Princess Pat” regiment pro ceeded overseas to the battle lines during the first weeks of the war, and as a member of it Corporal Saw yer saw service on the western front for many months while the war was at its heighth, and his unit was an important cog in the machine of the famous “British Contemptibles.” Speaking of that first gas attack (staged in the Polygon woods on the Ypres offensive), the corporal said: “When v*e saw the first elements ot the cloud arising in the distance near the Boche lines, we thought it was a natural cloud and did not dream it contained the stuff which would send most of us to Blighty, but as it grew closer we felt its ef fects and tried to shield ouorselves with handkerchiefs and hats, and as soon as the Red Cross people could prepare them —gauze pads soaked in ammonia (the ammonia was worse than the gas). We were absolutely at their mercy. The casualties were, as is a matter of history, countless.” Twice Wounded After coming out of the hospital he was assigned to the Fourth Ca nadian Mounted rifles. He saw serv ice with that regiment until Sep tember, 1918, when he was wounded in the Cambrai offensive. While manning a machine gun h© was wounded by a German machine gun ner, and a few minutes later was struck in the same side by frag ments of a high explosive shell, and lay upon the battle field in a state of coma from 9 o’clock in the morn ing till 2 p. m. In speaking of his wait for the stretcher to carry him off the field Sawyer said: “I re member going, into a sub-conscious state, and that Fritz was putting over a heavy barrage, so, fool that I was, I stuck my hands up in the air to keep.any pieces of shell from fall ing on me.” When he went to the hospital this second time he weighed 136 pounds, but in three weeks he weighed 96 pounds. Sawyer was sent back to Canada in February, 1919, and was dis charged from the British army in May of that year. On September 23, 1919, he enlisted in the American army and went over seas again, this time with the Sili cian expedition to Ochtendung, Ger many. When he saw that the cli mate of that country was affecting his weakened lungs, he had himself examined by the medical authori ties and was returned to this coun try February 25, 1920. Upon his being sent back to this country and re-examined he was of fered a disability discharge, but re fused to accept it, saying, that he had “signed up” for three full years and was going to "stick it out or die trying.’’ Wills Estate to State Sanitarium AUGUSTA, Ga., Sept. 23.—Because none of his family liked crazy people, AV. H. Strangman, an Augustan, who recently died at the state sanitarium at Milledgeville, where he had been an inmate for fifteen years, declined to leave his estate to any of his rel atives, but instead willed it to .ie state sanitarium. He is said to own property in Richmond county valued at $1,300. Mr. Strangman was known to have declared in one of his lucid moments, “I won’t leave my family a thing. They don’t like crazy people.” And, accordingly, he directed that his guardian draw up his will, making a Mrs. Farrell, of Hardwick, Ga., the sole beneficiary. However, he later changed his mind and a subse qeunt will named the state sani tarium as the beneficiary. Unfavorable Weather Hurts Pecan Crop DAWSON, Ga., Sept. 23.—The pe can crop in this section will be lighter than that of the past season, which was a heavy one. The light ness of the crop this year is due partly to the late, cool spring, which was also very wet. The summer fol lowing has been a wet one. A good many nuts have dropped off the trees from these causes, yet some of the grwoers report a good crop. Grow ing pecans is one of the big indus tries of this section and of south Georgia. More are being planted each year. Warehouse Bums At Social Circle SOCIAL CIRCLE, Ga., Sept. 23.—A cotton warehouse belonging to the Social Circle Manufacturing company was burned at 5 o’clock Wednesday morning. The origin of the fire is unknown, though it is supposed to have originated in a bale of cotton I that was placed in the warehouse | Tuesdav afternoon. The ■ loss was ' ’ $10,900, partly covered by in SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1920. CORPORAL HARRY SAW YER, hero of many battles, who insists on remaining in the military service regardless of physical disabilities. » ___________ I I I lllllwCvA' ■ ' ■' I , W* 1 I• ‘ .. . • ’ 4. :>? " Z ” % 1 '• Y s < -I f & ! - -M ' .. LAWSON IS GIVEN CONTRACT FOR 3 AIR MAIL ROUTES Announcement Is made by the post office department that contracts for carrying the United States mails by airplane over three routes have’been awarded to Alfred W. Lawson, of Milwaukee, the well-known designer and manufacturer of aeroplanes. One of Mr. Lawson’s contracts calls for transportation of 1,500 pounds of mail daily between New York and Atlanta via Raleigh, N. C., and Columbia, S. C. The Atlanta Chamber of Commerce and other or ganizations now are actively engaged in obtaining a suitable landing field her© and In completing all other necessary arrangements for the ar rival of th© first mail plane In At lanta. The other routes for which con tracts have been awarded to Mr. Lawson are: From Pittsburg to St. Louis, via Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis; from New York to Chi cago, via Harrisburg, Pittsburg and Fort Wajme. In accepting these contracts, Mr. Lawson becomes the first private air mall carrier in the world’s history. The routes to be covered by the Lawson Airline Service will touch almost every large city in the United States. Besides carrying 1,500 pounds of the United States mail daily over these routes, it is the intention of Mr. Lawson also to carry passengers and high-class express matter. The big Lawson airplanes of which Alfred W. Lawson is th© de signer, already have demonstrated their carrying'capacity for about 6,- 000 pounds of useful .weight, so that it. is quite likely that in addition to the mail, from ten to twenty pas sengers will be carried in each ship over the various routes daily. It is expected that regular daily service on the first of these routes will be opened about November 15, and the other two next spring. As a designer and manufacturer of aeroplanes, Mr. Lawson has met with unsusual success. as there never has yet been recorded against one of his ships a serious accident. Mr. Lawson is not only a designer and manufacturer of airplans, but he has been a pilot for several years, and w r as the navigator of the first Lawson airliner, which he designed and which made a successful pas senger-carrying trip between Mil waukee, New York, Washington and return last year, on which nearly all the world’s records for big air planes were broken. sa ft B E&ja awl yw Japura emroil ni ■ ftHEBi BRitK 1H 1 J L i HI E i i pi No Money m Just send the Coupon below. ij I’ll send the Glasses // at once fi // -waww’ k ' My large size ’‘True Vision” glasses M U ’ luHUfir enable you to read the smallest r nil littfufiy print, thread the finest needle, see far b! 11l Illi liuJljlWjlfr or near. They will protect your eyes, preventing eye strain and headaches. K These Dirge size “True Vision’’ 10- | karat gold-filled glasses are the finest and most durable spectacles and will give years of satisfaction. I DON’T SEND A PENNY 1 TRUST YOU fej I ask you to send no money, simply your name and ad- dress. I know that these scientifically ground glasses will give you sucn H t' “True Vision" and splen- <.* U \ di<l satisfaction that 1 'C- '* L—-4 V insist on sending them xXjrWSBu 3V on FREE TRIAL, so \tY # you can see what a re- ‘ - markable bargain I ’KSt ' l raff offer. When they ar- iA \ ‘ —l'”'/ rive, put them on and Jit jjt,\ x see with what ease . fay/ Jf-oR antl comfort they will xi? p® ! J' enable you to road, K-idwlr jj —,,~1 work and sew, see clearlj at a distance or close up, by daylight or lamplight. Note how easily you can read the fine print in y° nr Bible. You'll be amazed and delighted. Tr y Them NOW—They are SENT FREE. Sit right down this very minute and fill out ~ the coupon. Mall it at once. Your own , in, iiMiiim - -—~ii - postman will deliver the glasses to you post. a <. e prepaid, free of all cost. They Will come packed in a beautifully velveteen lined, spring-back Pocket Book Spectacle case. Try them for 10 full days at my risk and expense. Send the coupon now. SEND NO MONEY. —> CHICAGO SPECTACLE HOUSE Dept. A-2TC, 3302-04 W. 12th St., Chicago, 111. I enclose herewith this coupon, which entitles me, by mail, to a pair of your 810-Karat Gold-filled Large Size “True Vision” Spectacles complete, also a fine leatherette, velveteen-lined, spring-back, pocketbook spectacle case, without a penny of cost to me, so I can try them out, under your own offer, of a full ten B days’ actual test. This free trial is no tto cost me one cent. And if I like the glasses and keep them, I am to pay you $2.95 only. But if, for any reason whatsoever, I do not want to keep them (and I alone am to be the sole judge), JH I will return them to you without paying you a single cent for them as you Is agreed. Do not fail to answer the following questions: How old are you? How many years have you used glasses (if any)?.... h r gj Post Office p. p Box No Strife Fails in Search For Blonde Eskimo NOME, Alaska.—Captain Joe Bernard and A. Anderson have ar rived with their vessel, the Teddy Bear, afler four years spent in th© Arctic, during twenty-five months of which time they were ice-bound at Taylor Island tn Victoria Strait, near King Wil liam Island. Captain Bernard brought with him a native of the land of tSef ansson’s famous blond Eskimos, but declared that after two years’ search of that district, he was unable to locate any of the blond natives. He found sod houses evidvfitly of great age in East Carnation gulf, he said, and brought back pieces of old ivory and other curios uncovered in the ruins. SAYS BOLSHEVIK FIGHTING FORCE IS LED BY GERMANS KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 22.—“1t is a significant fact that the Bol sheviki army under the command of General Brusiloff is fully equipped with the latest instruments of war fare used by the Germans in the late war, and that the army is com manded by German officers, and that it employs typically German tactics.” •This statement was made by Dr. W. B. Beauchamp, director general of the Methodist centenary campaign and foreign secretary of the board of missions of the Methodist Epis copal church, south, who has just returned from Poland, Siberia and Belgium as a member of a delega tion of three sent by the board. “This is the problem that little Poland is facing today,” he added. "Poland is perhaps the most en thusiastically patriotic nation on earth. Its people are the keenest section of the Slav race. No other nation has ever done more remark able things in th© developing a great army in a snort while than this coun try. It is stated as a common fact by some leaders whom I met that the Polish army in the field, equip ped, amounted to 3,000,000 men. At present there are 1,000,000 in the fighting lines. "The purpose of the Bolshevikl is to wipe out completely the little buffer stat© of Poland so that they will be right on the borders of Germany which they expect will fall imme diately into their arms, for in Ger many, there are so many extreme Socialists of th© left wing who sub scribe to all the tenets of Sovietism. If the very democratic republic of Poland is completely Sovietized, then the Bolshevists will have secured the key to Europe and their westward march to the sea will be only a mat ter of time. And it must be remem bered that Poland alone cannot pre vent this. If the allies desire to prevent a debacle, they must stop this dangerous leak before it becomes an uncontrollable and all-consuming flood.” Dr. Beauchamp announced that in the suburbs of Warsaw a boy’s train ing school has been established by th© Methodist Episcopal church. Ar rangements have also been completed with the secretary of agriculture whereby the centenary will take over the estate of Remnow, and establish there a colony for children. The estate consists of 200 acres. U. S. Marines Enlist Young White Hope WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.—The enlistment of a fifteen-year-old lad in the marines was authorized by Major General John A. Le.Teune, when the Fort Wayne, Ind., recruit ing station reported that the son of Captain 41. A. Duemling, medical corps, U. S. army, hau white hope measurements. The tender age of sixteen, for apprentices to learn the drum and trumpet calls, is the min imum age for the sea-soldlers and according to all the medical and military experts a height of five feet four inches and a weight of 128 pounds is all that can be expected of these youthful warriors. As young Duemling came across with a height of five feet, ten inches and tipped the scole beam at 175 pounds, he not only broke the fifteen-year old record, but also several yards of red tape. The sea-soldiers at Fort Wayne predict a great future for their young Hoosier, who will be the youngest marine in the corps by fl margin of ten months. “FREEZONE”' Lift Off Corns I No Pain \ 2 1 . Ck Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little Freezone on an aching corn, in stantly that corn stops hurtifig, then shortly you lift it right off with fin gers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, suf ficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between th© toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation. — (Advt.) 30 Days Home Trial and Tvzo Years Time to Pay if you don’t want to pay cash. That’s the way you can buy a THIERY PARLOR ORGAN—Che real "muiomaker’* of all organs. Now’s the time to buy. too—prkta are gains v* —you’ll have to pay >15.00 to >25.00 mere six montka from now. Take your choice of Thiery Organs shown in the color* printed Thiery Organ Catalog—then take 30 days trial in your home to prove that it ’a the real Ek /' “music-maker’’ of a)) organa— then, after the trial, you can pay ity rwJe i.iT|n>y JTOCti JAa.. T| I 0811 ,n fuIJ boy on little nay- II | meats—two yearn credit if yam > Save $25 to SSO I ; Thiery Organ am quality LT 1 —compared with other LytfllVx A ZXvWtia I organs you easily save >25.00 jOJI V VXB j to >50.00. More than 50.000 E*t-—-'A:' -homes are now enjoying lPnL.ijo'i~-'VTL~r Tb*”"? Organa—all shipped I on trial—ail purchased ' WRITE TODAY Don’t wait for prices >» w w nl> farther. Buy now. 'H 'Tl'kfts Se “ d today for Catalogue Ij 'iWffTi* —--Trial Order Blanks and Dfc r* rect to Y®® Pric *®* Sc “* MM —Jii coupon below and full par- 4m 11 ’Y’JvXV titulars will be sort you by 1' --hjst'-j-’ -A AU- return mail postpaid. J. B. THlEßY%^?*Milwaukee,Wis. Sebdlu «m at no, postpaid. Frat end fantotioa regarJieg Thiery Orgeat, flwyMg Must JMmo adMrtiMd in AiUaia Joosaak Add?ts* HfI@EEE 'Saves You SSO on Your Drag Saw Big increase in my factory enables me to make lowest cash offer on a Drag Log Saw. Lever Control to Start or Stop Saw while engine runs. Arm Swing ffL and Force Feed for faet cutting. Poweful 4-cy- AN ■ W cle engine with ep»ed u ww regulator. 6-ft.Baw blade. 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Give age and explain case. Dr. C. M. Simpson, 1655 West 44th St., Cleveland, Ohio. * lioy's Air Rifla This -uue free for selling only 2(J ptß*" . pieces of our Jewelry at 10c each. Jewelry and Rifle sent prepaid. Eagle Watch Co.. Dept. 460. East Boston, Mass. FREfCfiBiOM Genuine Son'T-n-phone cornnt. jsnlM metal, high l ?