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psMii
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Give the Stomach Help to Digest
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to Acidity. Use Stuart’s Dys
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The wholesale advice to starve
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w
I
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you eat sours, if your indigestion
y follows certain foods that cause 1
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ness try Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets.
And if there is a feeling as if your
stomach had turned into concrete
these tablets help digest the food
and thus bring relief. Many physi
cians write ‘‘Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tab- 1
lets as directed” on a prescription 1
blank when patients are distressed :
With frequent attacks of indigestion.
They furnish the alkaline effect to
offset acidity of the stomach and also 1
pancreatin to aid intestinal digestion 1
of starchy foods. 1
Get a 60 cent box at any drug store, '
eat -what you enjoy, take a tablet or i
two after meals and thus avoid the *
distress due to indigestion or dys
pepsia— (Advt.) J
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL*
I Home Brew Mixture
Kills Its Inventor
PADUCAH, Ky.—A mixture of
medicines, drugs and poisons ta
ken into his system constantly
I for weeks resulted in the death
here recently of Noah McLaugh
lin, railroad machinist.
Investigation revealed that Mc-
Laughlin had a mania for collect
ing physicians’ prescriptions and
after having them filled would
blend and compound them into
concoctions of his own blend.
He also is said to have experi
| mented extensively with denatured
alcohol in an effort to make it safe
for use as a beverage. McLaugh
lin died after drinking a drug
which chemical analysis proved
harmless, and physicians believe
the harmless drug, blended with
other drugs he previously had
I taken, caused his death.
LEAGUE IS MADE
EXCLUSIVE ISSUE
ON COX’S TOUR
KN ROUTE WITH GOVERNOR
CON, Oct. 19. —Into New England
Tuesday Governor Cox. of Ohio, car
ried his League of Nations fight.
The candidate, who concluded an ef
fort in northwestern New York last
night at Buffalo, opened a two days’
campaign with a. brief morrfing ad
dress at Worcester, Mass.
Governor Cox had three large "New
Hampshire meetings on his program
at Nashua, Manchester and Concord,
preceding a night meeting at Boston.
Varying weeks of campaigning on
his presidential train, arrangements
were made for motor trips from
Nashua to Manchester and thencet.to
Concord.
The governor also was to motor
to Boston, expecting to arrive in the
early evening.
The governor was prepared to
pofiind away upon the league Tues
day as the pre-eminent and very ex
clusive issue and to emphasize his
advocacy and the various positions
which, he alleges, his Republican op
ponent has taken.
COX ACCUSES HARDING
OF MORE “WIGGLING”
BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 19.—Preach
ing his League of Nations gospel
Monday in northwestern New York,
Governor Cox renewed assaults
against Senator Harding for alleged
“wiggling and wobbling” upon the
league issue.
To six large audiences at Syra
cuse, Rochester and Buffalo, and in
two rear platform addresses en route
the Democratic presidential candi
date carried his preachments upon
the league declaring that it was “in
spired by God” and a "pledge” to
American soldiers and .nothers.
At the Broadway auditorium and
at Genessee hall Governor Cox de
clared that Senator Harding had
made a "slip” in stating that he had
been approached “unofficially” by a
French representative regarding a
"world fraternity.”
“The French government,” said
Governor Cox, “very promptly and
properly denies that there have been
any official overtures of any kind.
I want to ask Senator Harding
whether it is not true that the ‘rep
resentative of France’ was not Mau
rice de Kobra, of Paris. If this is
true, and I have strong reasons for
believing that it is, w r e have an in
stance of the kind of counsel he will
seek in international affairs.”
Governor CpK said that Mr. De Ko
bra, a correspondent foi; the Paris
La Liberte, and who recently travel
ed with the governor before going to
accompany Senator Harding was an
author and humorist.
“Senator Harding’s slip occurred,”
Governor Cox continued, “in ore of
his back platform speeches. The re
straint imposed by the intellectual
guard that has been with him for
weeks, was for the moment with
drawn. The statement comes from
Marion that no'more extensive speak
ing tours will be made. Obviously,
the Republican party insists upon
being protected from the blunders of
its candidate. The circumstance
creates the question as to what pro
tection America can devise against
presidential blunders if Senator Har
ding should chance to be elected.”
Charges Harding With "Wiggling”
Governor Cox reiterated that Sen
ator Harding had taken thirteen va
riant league positions, and the Dem
ocratic nominee predicted that the
American people would not approve
an attempt to “wiggle into the pres
idency.” Governor Cox asked wheth
er, if elected, Senator Harding, in
carrying out his proposal for ‘‘plu
ral government” would consult with
the Johnson-Borah, or other groups.
Tht “a storm, a cyclone of protest
from Republican men and women,”
has followed Senator Harding's Les
Moines speech was asserted by •Gov
ernor Cox to all of his audiences.
“They’ve followed him until they
are dizzy and couldn’t any more,” the
governor declared.
Spartanburg Landlord
Makes 15 Per Cent Cut
SPARTANBURG, S. C., Oct. 19.—A
Spartanburg landlord, who owns a
number of houses an dapartments,
today notified his tenants of a cut
in rents amounting to about 15 per
cent. He said he felt that rents
should be reduced along with every
thing else. The only condition he
made with the reduction was that his
name should not be made public.
BREMLO
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It acts without assistance, tastes
nice, contains no quinine—Insist
upon Pape’s.— (Advt.)
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Bees Are His “Buddies”
ST. PAUL.—Bees never sting unless they have been offended.
This is the theory of Rev. Francis Jaeger, in charge of the bee work
at the Minnesota Agricultural college. To prove his theory, here’s
a picture of him with bees hovering all over his head and body—
and he wasn’t stung once. “Bees will let you alone if you treat
them right,” says Rev. Jaeger.
Policeman and Captive
Wage Duel to Death
At Edge of High Roof
NE5y YORK.—On the roof of a
five-stdry building at 989 Sixth ave
nue Patrolmdn Martin Matthew Gill,
of the West Forty-seventh Street
station, and an insane Santo Domin
go negro engaged in a death strug
le that lasted nearly a half hour.
Occupants of the Great Northern
hctel and other buildings nearby
watched the desperate fight as one
would follow the lurid action in an
exciting melodrama. They saw the
policeman grapple with his adver
sary; they saw Gill throw his man;
they saw the r.egro grab the officer’s
revolver and heard the report of the
pistol as the madman fired, but Gill
didn’t surrender. The bullet had
grazed the officer, but Gill fought
on. With the negro still in posses
sion of the gun, Dill grasped his
arm and held the weapon away from
Jiim. With his free hand he pum
meled the prisoner . Both men
sprawled on the roof and the police
man fought to regain his revolver.
Gill Mad been overseas with the
old Sixty-Ninth; he was twice deco
rated for bravery on the battlefield,
but no adventure in France equaled
this one.
Prisoner and policeman moved
closer to edge of the roof as
they battled furiously. Astonished
spectators in adjoining buildings
looked on, but were too amazed to
act.
Over the edge of the roof went
Gill. The negro, still sprawling,
looked down at him. Gill’s right hand
was holding the weapon, still clutch
ed by the negro. With his left hand
he clung to the coping.
Then, as if ushered in by Provi
dence, James McQueeney, of 102
Would Make Wives'
Read Newspapers
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.—“lf I
were making laws for this coun
try, I would make it a cause for
a divorce if the wife didn’t read
the newspapers.”
Thus spake Judge Horace Stern,
Philadelphia, in an address on
'Suffrage and the Women” before
the Council of Jewish Women,
who are holding their fipst gather
ing of the year here.
“It’s such a wonderful thing,”
continued Judge Stern, “to have
the news served up to you every
morning at the breakfast table,
news gathered from all over the
world, and it would seem to me
criminal irrfiifference to neglect
knowing the serious things going
on in the world.”
Georgia’s Tax Values
nCrease $ 198,000,000,
Complete Returns Show
Georgia’s taxable values for 1920
will show an increase of $198,000,000
over 1919. This is the figure shown
by the consolidated returns in the
office of Tax Commissioner H. J.
Fullbright, with all county arbitra
tions settled except Monroe county.
It is approximately the figure antici
pated by him in his estimate furnish
ed the (governor and comptroller sev
eral weeks ago.
This increase will give Georgia a
total of $1,326,194,316 'in 1920; and
a total revenue in round figures of
$6,000,000. It will take every dol
lar of this revenue to pay 1920 ap
propriations. While there will be
none left over, there probably will
be no carry-over of unpaid appro
priations in the form of a deflcti.
Wedding Is Solemnized
Aboard Street Car
BLUEFIELD, W. Va. —Because
they had secured a Virginia license,
it was necessary for Miss Lena May
Leffel and R. L. Griffin to be married
in that state. So the Appalachian
Street Railway company, for which
griffin works, ran a special car over
the state line, and the ceremony was
performed on the car, with all seats
occupied by wedding guests.
West Fifty-second street, formerly a
sailor in the navy, arrived on the
roof. He had seen the struggle from
below. He struck tjje negro with a
club, dazing him, theh dragged Gill
to safety.
Shot Twice, Attempts Flight
The policeman seized his revolver
and warded off another blow from
the madman, who had risen to re
sume the fight. Both men attempt
ed to check the ferocious of
the negro, but it was of no avail.
Gill took no more chances. He fired.
The bullet hit the prisoner in the
chest, but the mad man fought cn.
Gill fired again. This bullet lodged
in the prisoner’s stomach. In spite
of his wounds the negro ran. He at
tempted to jump to the roof of the
adjoining house and failed. Before
the startled gaze of his pursuers
he fell headlong t othe ground. He
was dead when Gill reached him.
The death struggle on the roof
was the culmination of an action
that had begun on one of the floors
below. An excited woman had asked
Gill to arrest the negro, asserting
that he had insulted her. Gill found
his man inside, but when he at
tempted to arrest him the negro fled
Officer Hurled Downstairs
The officer followed. At the head
of the stairway the men wrestled and
Gill was hurled down the steps. He
resumed the chase and followed the
man to the roof.
The dead man was identified as Ra
fael Cotin. He is said to have been
a dishwasher in a restaurantw-at Fif
ty-eighth street and Sixth avdnue. He
had come to New York from San
Domingo two weeks ago, the police
learned. Medical Examiner Charles
Ncrris said he was convinced that
Cotin was insane.
Attempt on Life
Os Prince Fails
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of
szrbja
SARAJEVO, Serbia. Prince
Alexander of Serbia was the in
tended victim of a bomb, thrown
under the prince’s train at Sara
jevo Two coaches were
wrecked, but the prince was unin
jured. Sarajevo was the scene of
the assassination of Francis Fer
dinand, crown prince of Austria-
Hungary, and his wife in June,
1914, by Cavio Prinzip. This ar
sassination precipitated the world
war. Alexander became heir ap
parent to the throne when his
elder brother, George, renounced
his rights as heir in 1909 because
of his unpopularity.
■**s
Loses Fine Cow
Due to Hydrophobia
FORT VALLEY, Ga... Oct. 19.—T0
lose a fine cow which gave four gal
lons of milk and two pounds of but
ter a day in these dwindling flesh
pot days is some misfortune.
j Dr. W. S White had a cow at his
■ home in Fort Valley which was reg
j istered under the name of “Austin’s
I Pet,” and a few days ago she became
ill. After a time it was discovered
she had hydrophobia and she was
penned so she could not hook those
who came about her.
Gives Blood Thrice
To Save His Mother
NEW YORK. —For the third
time in eight months, John Fink
beiner, a real estate operator of
962 Grant avenue, the Bronx, is
recovering from a blood transfu
sion operation to which he has
submitted in.an effort to prolong
his mother's life.
“I have done nothing remark
able,” Finkbeiner said. “I am
ready to give all the blood in my
body if it would prolong her life
just one day. It is the least that
I can do for her.”
At each operation the son had
given a quart of blood and
the drain has begun to tell on him
physically. But he insisted that
if a fourth operation becomes
necessary he will make the sacri
fice again. Mrs. Finkbeiner has
been ill since the death of her
husband two years ago.
WILLINGHAM’S
CREDITORS WILL
MEET OCTOBER 30
MACON, Ga., Oct. 19. —Creditors
in the Willingham Warehouse bank
ruptcy case will meet October 30
when trustees will be appointed, offi
cers in bankruptcy will be examined
and creditors will file their claims.
The meeting was called Monday by
Referee in Bankruptcy J. N. Talley.
Mr. Talley also announced that Bur
ney Brothers company had rented
four sweet potato storage ware
houses. the property of the R. F.
Willingham corporation, which is
also in bankruptcy.
Organization of a motorized field
hospital is under w r ay and when
completed it will give Macon its
fourth military company. With the
organization of this company, it will
also be necessary to organize a
headquarters company and a supply
company. The hospital outfit is be
ing formed by two Macon physi
cians. Dr. J. M. Hartley and Dr. M.
Klausman. They undertook the
work at the request of the adjutant
general of the state. Trucks and
ambulances will be furnished by the
war department as well as medicine
and surgical equipment.
With the diphtheria situation
growing more serious' here, the city
health department asked the finance
committee to meet today for the pur
pose of employing additional help. Dr.
T. W. Margerum says there are quite
a number of new cases of diphtheria
in the city, and should the situation
get much more acufe, quarantine will
be established in some sections of the
city. •
The Georgia Daughters of the Con
federacy received a telegram Mon
day from Admiral W. S. Benson, in
which he expressed his appreciation
for the gift of a sword made to him
at the recent convention here. Plans
for the presentation celebration will
be announced as soon as a commit
tee is named by Mrs. Frank Harrold,
of Americus, president of the divi
sion. ■
A large number of Presbyterians
from Macon went to Boston Tues
day to attend the one hundred and
twenty-eighth annual convention of
the Macon Presbytery. Among the
delegates who went from here wfere
Dr. J. H. Owens, Colonel J. J. Gail
lard, Dr. Rutherford E. Douglas and
Rev. J. E. Wallace.
Mrs. Wilson Gives
SIOO for League
NEW YORK. Mrs. Woodrow
Wilson has contributed SIOO, as
“one of a thdusand women.” to
preach the doctrine of the League
□f Nations. In a letter to the
women’s bureau of the Democrat
ic National committee, Mrs. Wil
son said:
“1 have just received your let
ter with its ringing appeal to ev
ery woman who'believes in the
lieague of Nations to assist in the
splendid efforts the women’s bu
reau is making to help spread
what the league means to us and
to every real American. I am
very happy to be one of the thou
sand women to respond and here
with inclose my check for $100.”
Girl’s Own Shinbone
Is Used Successfully
To Mend Broken Back
WOODBURY, N. J.—For three
months Olive Rhodes, nineteen,
whose back was broken in an auto
mobile accident on July 7, faced the
prospect of a life in a plaster cast.
Today, as the result of a remarkable
operation performed here in the Un
derwood hospital, she rejoices in the
possibility of being fit for skating or
dancing by New Year’s.
Miss Rhodes lives in Pitman and
is a stenographer in the Caniden of
fice of Cammpbell’s Soups concern.
She was riding in the automobile of
Edward James, of Pitman, along the
Woodbury road, when the machine
collided with a horse-driven cart,
throwing James and ,the girl to the
roadway. James was slightly in
jured. Miss Rhodes was brought to
Woodbury and placed in Underwood
hospital, her back broken.
Dr. T. T. Rugh, Philadelphia sur
geon, who has treated similar cases,
had her placed in a plaster cast pre
liminary to a grafting operation.
Last night the surgeqn, assisted by
Dr. J. Harris Underwood, Harry A.
Stout, H. Wilson Stout and Oram
Kline, removed the affected vertebrae
and transferred in their place a sec
tion of the girl’s shinbone.
The grafting process and the entire
operation took only an hour, in which
time the patient was under an an
aesthetic. No cortiplications have set
in and Miss Rhodes today said she
was feeling tnore comfortable and
cheerful than at any time since the
accident. k
She will continue in the plaster
cast about six weeks. In December
she is expected to be able to walk
and by the end of the month prob
ably will be able to display her
forrqer activity.
Harvey Denies Vincent
Was Asked to Pose as
“Major” in Loan Drive
Robert E. Harvey, who was chair
man for the Atlanta zone in all
Liberty loan drives during the war,
in a statement issued Monday, char
acterized as false pertain claims made
before Judge S. H. Sibley, of federal
court, last week by Ray E. Vincent,’
who was convicted of impersonating
an army major and using the uni
form to defraud. Mr. Harvey em
phatically denies Vincent’s statement
that Liberty loan officers requested
him to appear as a major to aid in
the sale .of bonds.
Mr. Harvey’s card follows:
“As chairman of the Atlanta zone
in the several campaigns for the sale
of Liberty bonds, I feel it my duty
to take official cognizance of the
charge made by a person known as
Ray Vincent in his statement to
Judge Sibley, of the United States
district court, last Wednesday, pre
ceding sentence to one year in the
federal penitentiary.
“The statement in question con
tained the charge that the Liberty
loan officials urged Vincent to ap
pear in the uniform of a major of the
U. S. army, and also to adorn him-
self with aH. the medals he could se
cure, to aid in the selling of Liberty
bonds. ,
“This charge is totally false.
“Vincent came to us representing
himself as a sergeant who had seen
service in France. He wore a ser
geant’s uniform and wound stripes
and exhibited medals and documents
which led us to believe that his
statements were true.
“He did not claim to be a major
and we never knew of such a claim
until charges were being prepared
against him in the federal court.”
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1920.
The Tri-Weekly Journal’s
HONOR COLUMN
A Department for
People Who DO Things
[
•' W’
V '• MBS#
J /
This fire-eating
• old warrior wins
The Tri-Weekly
rm. Journal's medal of
z- today for two rea-
\?- (—7'l Jw fjll sons: First, he’s
years old. Sec
rj Im ond, he is a vet-
eran of Napoleon
Bonaparte’s most
f am o u s campaign
r 3 VL J ' —^ le Russian in-
l B vasion. The “Lit-
J A tie Corporal” lost
_____ this, venture, but it
stands as one of
history’s most bril
liant failures. And
Monsieur Kraainaki, then a doughty
young Frenchman, went through it
all. This battered veteran is as full
of fire today,, as he was fourscore
years ago and the mere fact that he
lived through those stirring times is
enough Jo land him in the honor col
umn.
Palmer Orders Probe
Os Whisky Fest
At San Francisco
WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.—Attor
ney General Palmer Monday directed
'the United States district attorney
at San Francisco “to make a full
and complete fnvestigation” of re
ports that forty barrels of whisky
and gin were dithdrawn from bond
at San Francisco for the entertain
ment of the delegates to the Demo
cratic national convention.
At the same time Mr. Palmer in
a telegram to Acting Mayor Mc-
Learn, of San Francisco, called up
on that offlcal either to produce the
proof or publicly retract a state
ment attributed to him that Mr.
Palmer knew all about the whisky
transaction at the time.
Mr. Palmer’s message to the act
ing mayor was predicted upon spe
cial dispatches from San Francisco
appearing in newspapers in Wash
ington and other cities Sunday
morning. These dispatches said
facts as to the withdrawal of the
whisky had been disclosed by a grand
jury investigation.
Mr. Palmer’s telegram to Mayor
McLeran follows:
“My attention has just been call
ed to a dispatch from San Francisco
published in Sunday papers that
forty barrels of whisky and gin with
drawn from bond on order of Dr.
William C. Heffner, city health offi
cer, ostensibly for use in San Fran
sico municipal hospital, but actually
for entertainment of delegates to
Democratic national convention, ac
cording to facts revealed to the
grand jury. The dispatch further
states as follows:
“ ‘Acting Mayor Ralph McLaren
declared that Attorney General Pal
mer, who was attending the conven
tion as a delegate, knew all about
the transaction.’
‘lf you have been correctly quot
ed, I call upon you either to pro
duce the proof of your statement or
publicly retract it. I know nothing
about any liquor being withdrawn in
San Francisco for any purpose If
my name was used by any persons
withdrawing liquor it was entirely
without my knowledge or authority.
If you have any facts oj- information
upon which a statement was based
you should furnish them immediate
ly to the United States attorney
whom I have directed to make full
and complete investigation of this
matter.”
Escaping Boy Stands
In River All Night
LOUISVILLE, Ky.—Alvin Blaine,
,ten, escaped from the Kentucky Chil
dren’s home here and obtaining a
fiat boat started to float down the
river to his old home at Wickliffe,
Ky., where the Ohio and Mississippi
rivers meet. He passed the United
States coast guard undetected, but
his little craft caught in the swift
current, was wrecked as it passed
over the falls. Where he landed he
could touch bottom, but the water
was too‘rough for him to atempt to
swim to shore, so he stood there all
night, until rescued by a government
ii ?at tender.
Dog Brings Back
Money That Was Lost
ALEXANDRIA, Ind. —The old fam
ily dog of the Herman Harris family
gets an extra large bone these days,
and there’s a good reason. Mrs. Her
man lost a roll containing $lO5. She
thought she lost it out of her auto
mobile, and her surprise was great
when two day& later the dog turned
up with the money in his mouth.
Where he got ft is a mystery.
Father Runs Amuck
When Girl Is Announced
LONDON.—“It’s a girl,” said the
nurse. Then George Kenrick went
on a rampage. He imbibed spirits,
ran wild, and landed in jail. The
judge called it disappointment, men
tal torture and advised George to
sign the pledge.
Edison Ginnery Burned
EDISON, Ga., Oct. 19.—The cotton
ginnery here operated by the Citizens’
Mercantile company, was complete
ly destroyed by fire Saturday after
noon. The gin was in operation at
the time and two bales of cotton
only were burned. There is no sus
picion of incendiary origin, but it is
thought the ignition came from a
spark from the engine, or from a
match in the cotton being ginned.
The plant was partly covered by in
surance. The total loss will not
exceed $2,000. The grist mill con
nected with the ginnery was also
destroyed.
Waif Pays for Cure
By Routing Burglar
OMAHA. —Lawrence Westover,
sixteen-year-old Boy Scout, has
paid part of his debt of gratitude
to C. R. Jewell, whose family gave
him a home last year after he had
been found trudging along on a
country road near Omaha.
Returning from school yesteV- ■
day the boy found a burglar sack
ing the family silverware. Arm
ing himself with a knife he fought
and finally routed the intruder,
but not until he had been cut
twenty times.
None of his wounds, however, is
serious.
THINKS PRESENT
DEFLATION WILL
PROVE BLESSING
Editor The Atlanta Journal:
I write as a farmer. All my re
sources for living come out of the
soil. I have been watching the trend
of events in the commercial and in
dustrial world with much interest.
I realize as much as any one the
disastrous consequences which must
necessarily follow the inevitable de
flation which is upon us. But I can
not for the life of me see the good
judgment in the, propaganda that is
before the federal government today
purported to be in the interests of
the agricultural world. Any thinking
man, be he farmer or manufacturer,
could but know that such deflation
and such readjustment of prices
were bound to come sooner or later
as the after effect of the world war
inflation, and that no human agency
could regulate its coming or name
the interests which would be im
mune. The sure fact that this de
flation has come on us suddenly and
at a time when we are victims of
tl>e boll weevil and the peach wee
vil, is no reason why we should
place the responsibility upon the
United States treasury or the re
serve bank. The truth of the matter
is we became intoxicated with pros
perity and profiteering and forty
five cent cotton and the sobering
up is bringing out all our ugly
thoughts and feelings.
I am unable to see wherein the
position taken by Secretary Hous
ton is not sound financing. I am
opposed to paternalism and class
legislation at any time and in any
shape. In the face of all this propa
ganda about government help for
the farmer to hold his cotton, the
truth is any cotton grower in Geor
gia can store and insure his cotton
and obtain a loan through his local
bank from the reserve bank up to
80 per ceMt of its value. No action
or word of Secretary Houston has
brought about this deflation. It is
one of those inevitable results of a
top heavy inflation, over which no
human agency had control. We were
living and moving under conditions
which were unsafe and unhealthy
and we could not have lived much
longer under them. This deflation
is tough and sudden, but it may be
that such experience is necessary to
bring America and the world to their
senses‘and place the commercial and
industrial world upon a sound basis
again. Nothing save the greed, self
ishness and sin of human nature
has brought about conditions which
made the readjustment and recon
struction of values inevitable, and
but for the reserve banks there
would be a disastrous panic.
Perhaps the failure of the con
gress to settle our international re
lations has had much to do with
the situation, but my observation
has been that it Is difficult to get
any sane legislation in a presidential
year, when politics and not common
sense dominates and controls human
action. Much as may be deplored
this sudden deflation, and disastrous
as may be the consequences, sooner
or late rit will be realized that our
experience of today is the salvation
of ou rnation and a blessing in dis
guise. A little patience, a little
Christian charity, a little fellow feel
ing infused into our agricultural,
industrial and commercial activities
will bring us through the present
ordeal a better, more harmonious
and happier people.
A. O. MURPHEY.
Barnesville, Ga.
F. M. Martin Shot;
Baxley Man in Jail
BAXLEY, Ga., Oct. 19.—Sam
Hughes shot F. M. Martin in the
abdomen Sunday morning at 1
o’clock at the home of Sam Hughes
in the edge of Baxley. They are
both white men and have families.
Hughes is in jail, and as superior
court will be in session thisi week,
he will probably be tried.
Martin is in a sanitarium in Ha
zlehurst, and the doctors say he
cannot possibly live many more
hours. Hughes claims he was pro
tecting his home, claiming that Mar
tin and Marlon Weaver came to his
house late in the night, raising a
quarrel, and that It was necessary
to shoot to protect his home.
Travelers Pledge Aid
To Cotton Corporation
Resolutions pledging every mem
ber of the Fulton council, No. 505,
United Commercial Travelers, to aid
in selling stock in the proposed $lO,-.
000,000 cotton-holding corporation
were adopted at a meeting of the or
der Saturday night in the Forsyth
building. \
This action was taken by the coun
cil for the purpose of aiding the
American Cotton association in its
campaign to secure a better price for
cotton. Telegrams containing assur
ances of co-operation from other
councils in the Georgia-Florida di
vision of the order were read. Sever
al representatives of the grand coun
cil were present at the meeting.
Britain’s Interest on
Debt AArives in U. S.
NEW YORK, Oct. 19.—The steam
er St. Paul brought $8,300,000 in gold
here from England Monday to pay
Great Britain’s interest on war debt
in this country. It was consigned
to the Federal Reserve bank and
Kuhn, Loeb and company.
This was the St. Paul’s last trip as
a trans-Atlantic liner, it was said.
She will be entered in the West In
di es trade.
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DODSOIU SOUNDS
. MMM
The “Liver Tone” Man
Warns Folks Against the
Sickening, Salivating
Drug
Ugh! Calomel inakes you sick. It’s
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lose a day.
Calomel is mercury! When it
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is when you feel that awful nausea
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if liver is torpid and bowels consti
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night.
Here’s rnsj guarantee—Go to any
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Take a spoonful and if it doesn’t
straighten you right up and make
you feel fine and vigorous, go back
to the store and get your money.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying
the sale of calomel because it can
not salivate or make you sick.
(Advt.)
A Wife Knows Best
ft John, pl ease take
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Build yourself up now by taking
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3