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So many skin troubles
only need a little
Resinol
io heal them for good
#or that itching patch of rash
■>' eutma, try Resinol Ointment,
before the trouble has a chance to
become serious. You will doubt
r less be. surprised to find how
j puickly it soothes and cools your
* irritated skin. Its harmless, gen
’ tie ingredients make it safe for the
tenderest skin. All druggists sell
Resinol.
Sood Advice
to a Dyspeptic
Give the Stomach Help to Digest
rood and to Offset the Tendency
to Acidity. Use Stuart's Dys
pepsia Tablets.
The wholesale advice to starve
your way to stomach health is mighty
poor judgment. Only the most ro
bust constitution can stand such a
OHL B
T7W Jfyj
strain. If you cannot eat, if what
you eat sours, if your indigestion
follows certain foods that cause
heartburn, sour stomach, or gassi
ness try Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets.
And if there is a feeling as if your
stomach had turned into concrete
these tablets help digest tl)e food
and thus bring relief. Many physi
cians write “Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tab
lets as directed’’ on a prescription
blank when patients are distressed
with frequent attacks of indigestion.
They furnish the alkaline effect to
offset acidity of the stomach and also
pancre'atin to aid intestinal digestion
of starchy foods.
Get a 60 cent box at any drug store,
eat what you enjoy, take a tablet or
two after meals and thus avoid the
distress due to indigestion or dys
pepsia—(Advt.)
Lungs Weak?
Generous Offer to Tuberculosis Suf
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markable Expectorant, SANOSIN
Noted medical scientists —Doctors Dane
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Essers—declare SANOSIN most valuable
treatment for Pulmonary ailments. Felix
Wolf*, Court Physician, Director of the
Sanitarian for Consumptives in Keibolds
grun, Germany, highly recommends it. SAN
t'SIN has been officially recommended to
the Berlin Medical Association. Dr. C. W.
A. Essers, Amsterdam, Holland, declares it
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known to the whole human race.’’ Amer
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suffering from Tuberculosis, Bronchitis,
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SHOW THIS TO SOME UNFORTUNATE.
' ftMade-to-Measurs
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■ p y° u can match those 2 wonderful
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’hK BERNARD HEWITT * COMPANY
>0 U3I9W. Van Buren St., Chic- *
trfured His RUPTURE
fl was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk
.leveral years ago. Doctors said my only hope
ol! cure was an operation. Trusses did me
nil good. Finally I got hold of something
tliiat quickly and completely cured me. Years
liAve passed and the rupture has never re
turned. although I am doing hard work as
a A carpenter. There was no operation, no
loi.t time, no trouble. I have nothing to sell,
butt will give full information about how
yup may find a complete cure without oper
ation, if you write to ine. Eugene M. Pullen.
Carpenter, 189-G Marcellus avenue, Manas
qulan, N. J. Better cut out this notice and
sl/ow it to any others who are ruptured—
yau may save a life or at least stop the
* mi sery of rupture and the worry and danger
1 of an operation. (Advt.)
’Tjg -L ALSLtheseFIVH
premiums given for A
$B decorated Zip
■ boxes Beautifying Face |/fj
■ SUT Cream at 25c. each. Write/VX
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yr T chem co. rr««. u«»t. x
LeZ^rjy—' Bridge-rater, C«u* • A
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i 4 SIH
j S ALLING SICKNESS
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For thirty years, thousands of sufferers have used W. H.
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNATis
1 CHATTOOGA FAIR
OPENS THURSDAY
AT SUMMERVILLE
BY D. C. SMITH
LYERLY, Ga., Oct. 20.-—The fif
teenth annual exhibit of the Chat
tooga County Fair association will
open at Summerville Thursday, and
indications point to one of the most
successful exhibitions in the M*-
tory of the organization, despite the
fact that practically all crops- in the
county are unusually short. Splen
did prizes have been offered in all
departments, and the prizes in the
agricultural and livestock depart
ments are unusually attracti.Ce.
The opening address will be de
livered Thursday morning at 10
o’clock by Wright Willingham, of
Rome. The program for the remain
der of the day consists of trotting
races, boys’ foot race. 100-yard dash;
fat men’s race, bicycle race, slow
mule race, automobile parade, gen
tleman’s driving contest, horse races,
etc.
Friday’s program will open with
an address by United States Sena
tor Hoke Smith, after which they
will be trotting races, school pa
rade, beauty contest, baby show', best
pair of mules shown to wagon, pe- v
riod parade, horse races, etc.
W. D. Gilkeson Is chairman of
the agricultural department. In this
department prizes are offered for
the following products: Best arrang
ed and most varied display of
corn; best dozen ears of corn, w'hite
or yellow; best ear df corn. any
kind; best stalk of corn, any kind;
best half dozen stalks of fruited
cotton, best single stalk of fruited
cotton, best half-bushel wheat, best
half-bushel oats, best half-bushel
Irish potatoes, best half-bushel
sw’eet potatoes, best half-bushel tur
nips. best half-bushel peanuts, best
half-bushel onions, best pumpkin,
best half-gallo.n sbrghum syrup, best
popcorn, best 'pound of butter, best
display of velvet beans, best display,,
of soy beans, best half-bushel ap
ples, best half-dozen heads of cab
bage, .best dozen tomatoes, best half
dozen beets, best dried peaches, best
dried apples.
In the livestock department, H.
M. Hawkins, chairman. Prizes are
offered as follows: best brood mare,
best mule colt under ohe year, best
display of pigs under six months
old, best calf under one year, best
brood sow, any breed; best grade
calf under one year, best beef heifer,
best milch cow, best pair of horses
shown in harness, best pair mules
showm to wagon.
Charles S. Kellett is chairman of
the poultry department. Prizes are
offered for the best trio of Ply
mouth rocks, best trio of Rhode Is
land reds, best trio of white wyan
dottes, best trio of brown leghorns
Mrs. L. H. Lamb is chairman of
the fancy work department. In
this department prizes are offered
for the best crochet centerpiece,
best table runner, best dresser scarf,
prettiest hand-made baby cap. pret
tiest piece of cut work, prettiest
sweater, best set chochet mats,
prettiest tufted spread, prettiest
appliqued quilt or spread, prettiest
crochet or knit spread, prettiest
hand-made pillow cases,, prettiest
embroidered center piece, prettiest
luncheon set, prettiest hand-made
handkerchief, prettiest baby dress,
prettiest teddies, prettiest camisole,
prettiest collar and cuff set.
Mrs. N. K. Bitting has charge of
the cake and bread department.
Prizes will be awarded the best
white loaf cake, best devil food
cake, best angel food cake, best
caromel cake, best pie. best custard,
best salt rising bread, best corn
light bread, best loaf bread, best
brown bread, best rolls.
Mrs. J. A. Wiley is chairman ot
the fruit and vegetables department.
Prizes are offered for the best col
lection of canned fruits, best dozen
glasses of jelly, best collection ot
pickles, best collection of canned
vegetables, best collection of dried
fruit, best collection of preserves,
best home-made grape juice.
Mrs. J. M. Bellah has charge of
the flower department, and prizes
will be awarded the best collection
of cut flowers, best collection f pot
plants, best specimen fern.
In the children’s department, of
which Mrs. B. W. Farrar Is chair
man. prizes are offered for the best
hand-carved wood, best made tat
ting, best made apron, best made
under garment, best made dress,
best dressed doll, best tea cakes,
best biscuit, best candy.
Mrs Scott is chairman of the rel
ive and curios department. Prizes
will be awarded the best collection
of relics and the oldest relic.
Mrs J H. Shumate is in charge
of the ladies’ department.
The fair will be held on the
streets of Summerville and every
thing is absolutely free.
Forrest Wheeler Is
Second Victim of
Duel at Mayfield
*SPARTA, Ga., Oct. 21. —Forrest
Wheeler, of Atlanta, one of the prin-
I eipals in the Wheeler-Humphrey pis-
I tol duel fought at Mayfield Tuesday
i night, when J. A. Humphrey was kill
: ed instantly and Wheeler was wound
;ed several time, died at an early hou r
J Wednesday night at the home of his
j mother, Mrs. Daniel Wheeler, in Maj
! ‘ e No person has come forward as an
eve-witness td the shooting, though
rumor has it that it was witnessed
bv a negro man who has thus far re
fused to make a statement.
Forrest Wheeler, who died follow
ing wounds sustained in a yevolver
! Riel with J. A. Humphrey, in Maj -
field. Ga.. Tuesday evening, resided
hit 143 South Forsyth street. Atlanta.
| He was related to the wife of r ire
Chief W. B. Cody, and was employed
i in the gas department of the Georgia
I Railway and Power company. He
: had been with the company for
! about four years, and had a good
| record.
ims ii com
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JgRITK TODAY AlM> OCT STARTED.
Rosebud Perfume Company, Box bi Woodsboro. Maryland
Little American Lassie
Sends Her Dolls And Toys
To Girl “Buried Alive”
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Polly Larimer and one of the dolls she gave up to brighten the
life of a little leper colony girl.
BY JACK MASON
•VLADIVOSTOK.—(By Mail.)—One
thousand miles north of Vladivostok,
.on the banks of the Amur river, is
a leper colony. Two years ago with
in the stockade surrounding their
buil<?ings was born, a girl baby. Her
name is Tanya Rosiloff. She is just
as. good as “buried alive.”
Tanya’s father and mother are
lepers and will never be permitted
to leave the place where little Tanya
was born.
About the middle of July I visit
ed the poor sick people. I had ci
garettes and tobacco for the grown
ups, but was unable to take even a
little remembrance to Tanya. She
is a little Russian girl and can talk
no English, but the Russian doctor
talked with her mother and at my
request asked what she had for toys,
what to play with. Had she a doll?
No, Tanya had nothing. ' No one
ever visits them. They never can
go to town, and they have no money,
so Tanya plays with a few pieces of
weed, and the cover of a baking
powder tin.
When I came back to Vladivostok
I told the story of Tanya to an
American girl. Polly Larimer.
Polly’s father is a captain in the
United States navy, and Polly has
every toy, and every doll she desires.
Bold Burglar of Gotham
Raids Famous City Hotel
NEW YORK. —A daring hotel
thief made his way. into four guest
rooms on the twelfth floor of the
Waldorf-Astoria, robbed their occu
pants and escaped. The robber had
to knock a girl floor clerk out of
his way and oiltspeed a night watch
man to get away.
Extraordinary efforts were made
by the hotel management and the
police to withhold the news. No in
formation, was sent out by the po
lice through the regular channels,
and although the robbery was con
sidered important enough for the
captain of the West 30th street sta
tion to make a personal visit to
the Waldorf to direct the investiga
tion, it was denied at this station
and at the detective bureau attached
to it that they had any report of
a burglary at the ‘Vyaldorf.
The hotel management at first re
fused to admit there had been a
robbery, but when Roy Carruthers,
manager of the hotel, was informed
last night ’hat the story was ru
mored, he admitted that a burglar
had been in the hotel. Mr. Carruth
ers declined to make public names
of the guests who had been robbed
or of the girl floor clerk who bat
tled with the robber.
An Employe?
• “I will not make these matters
public until the burglar has been
caught,” said Mr. Carruthers. “There
is little I can say except that there
was a burglary and some of the
people around the hotel think it may
have been done by an employe.”
In the presence of the police de
tectives the girl floor clerk, who
grappled with the robber, will see
if she can identify him among em
ployes of the hotel today. She was
unable to point him out among the
employes brought before her.
The girl said the robber was short,
stocky and apparently middle-aged,
because he had very little hair. One
report had it that he was in his
stocking feet, but another was that
he wore tan shoes.
Police detectives on the case dis
credit the theory that the burglar
was an employe of the hotel. They
think his work showed too much
profaasional skill.
Th™ method the robber used to en
ter the hotel has been pretty well
established. He climbed a fire escape
until he reached a ledge under
neath a window on the twelfth
floor. He then crept around the
ledge till he came to an open win
dow and saw the occupant of a room
sleeping.
According to information, one of
the rooms entered was occupied by
John R. Downing, of Kansas City,
aqd according to this information
Mr. Downing was robbed of S4OO.
At the hotel it was learned that
no John R. Downing was registered,
but that a C. S. Downing, of Kan
sas City, with his wife and daugh
ter, had checked out of the hotel
yesterday without leaving a for
wcreting address, but 'leaving word
to .-.void his mail.
One Guest I>ost S4OO
Thj hotel management would not
admit or deny that Mr. Downing
was c-e of the guests who were
robbed. It was admitted, however,
that one guest had been robbed of
S4OO. The management insisted that
the total amount of the loot ob
tained by the burglar was S6OO in
cash and that he had not obtained
any jewelry.
The girl flook clerk on the twelfth
floor did not see the burglar enter
the floor, but saw him leaving a
room. She ran down the corridor
after him and tried to stop him. He
had a woman’s fur coat under his
arm, but threw it down in order
to attack the girl. He is said t<
Before the story was finished Polly
asked if she might send something
to Tanya. Polly is also very sweet
and very pretty. Polly believes in
fairies, as you can see by her picture,
which was taken in Japan as Polly
with a favorite doll near by was
looking down into a pool of water
to see if anv fairies were there.
So Polly sewed for days and days,
a thing she does not often do. She
would not go out to play tennis un
t’l the dells for Tanya were finish
ed. Finally, all was ready, and a
big box, which older Americans in
Vladivostok generously adding to
Polly’s gifts filled to the very top.
The box will leave in a few days on
a Red Cross ship, and when Tanya
has it opened for her, she will find
lolls, and Teddy bears, and doll fur
niture, and dishes, and new, warm
clothes, and candy and everything
any little g’rl could wish for. It
will be very wonderful for Tanya.
And written in Russian, so her
mother can :t to her, will be a
note saying these gifts are chiefly
from a little American girl, who is
acting as the Fairy Dell-Mother.
No one can understand how much
pleasure it will mean to Tanya, and,
perhaps, from the day she receives
all those wcnderful tlrngs, she will
believe in fairies just as Polly now
does.
have knocked her down with a blow.
Her screams brought a night
watchman whose name was said to
be Donavan, but Donavan is said to
be rather old and feeble, and was
unable to catch the fugitive. The
robber ran down the corridor and
escaped in a manner puzzling to the
investigators. It is thought possible
he got away by the window ledge
and fire escape.
The fur coat was found where
the burglar had thrown it. The floor
clerk was not seriously injured by
the blow the robber dealt her.
Quail Plentiful
Around Moultrie
MOULTRIE, Ga., Oct. 20.—Sports
men around Moultrie are looking for
ward to the best hunting season
known in a number of years. Birds,
particularly quail, are said to be
more plentiful than they have been
in several years, due largely to the
fact weather conditions were bet
ter during the hatching season than
usual and to the further fact that
many owners kept their bird dogs,
which ordinarily break up hundreds
of nests, tied during the summer.
Girls Declare Strike
To See Football Game
NORTH BALTIMORE. O.—“ You
can’t see the game," faculty members
of high school announced to 150 stu
dents as local gridders were about
to stage a big contest. “We can,”
vowed twenty loyal girls. They did
—by declaring a strike and walking
out of school. The faculty didn’t
have the heart to spank ’em.
Once She Was a Salesgirl
Now She’s a Physician; Wants
To Go to Congress
BY FRED L, BOAIT
PORTLAND, Ore. —Dr. Esther Pohl
Lovejoy wants to go to congress
from the Third Oregon district to
succeed Congressman C. N. (“Pat”)
McArthur, who seeks his third re
election.
The contest will be watched out
i side of Oregon because:
; First, it’s man versus woman in
I the first year of women’s suffrage.
Then, Esther is “dry,” while “Pat”
lis "wet.” This would seem to give
Esther an edge, as Oregon went “dry”
long before the nation did.
On the other hand “Pat” is a Re
publican, and Oregon normally is a
Republican state. Esther is running
on the Democratic-Prohibition ticket
But organized labor is for Esther
’ and against "Pat,” if for no other
! reason than that “Pat” is frankly
“forninst” organized labor.
| Dr. Lovej»y is a remarkable wom
an. At seventeen she was earning
her living as a salesgirl in a Port
land department store. She worked
her way through the University of
Oregon medical college. Then jumped
into politics and was made health
officer of Portland.
Several years ago her only child
died, as she believes, from impure
dairy milk. She drafted and jammed
through a pure-milk ordinance which
serves as a model for other cities.
•Dr. Lovejoy spent three years in
the war zone with the Red Cross, and
is now executive head of the Amer
ican Women's Hospital Service in
Devastated Countries and president
of the Medical Women’s International
association, with headquarters in
New York.
i She has written a number of books,
I among them “The House of the
1 Friendly Neighbor,” for the second
and last edition of which Herbert
Fliers Take Tumble,
Land in Cemetery
BARBOURVILLE, Ky.—A for
mer ace in the -British air serv
ice and his mechanic escaped in
jury in a 1,000-foot fall in a
burning airplane at Corbin, Ky.
Captain Beavers, pilot, and L.
H. Connoly, mechanic, left here
for Lexington in a three-passen*
ger plane which caught fire.
The machine, though blazing,
was directed downward in a spiral
glide, both men jumping clear of
it just before it touched ground.
The plane hit the earth in a
cemetery a short distance from
where the men jumped and the
landing was accompanied by an
explosion of the gasoline tank.
Captain Beavers and Mr. Con
noly are members of the Barbour
ville Aero club.
BANKERS CHARGE
FEDERAL RESERVE
WITH UNFAIRNESS
WASHINGTON, Oct 21.—While a
survey of the financial policies of the
government, by Secretary Houston,
drew the attention of delegates Wed
nesday at the general session of the
American Bankers’ association con
vention, the bankers, in their section
meeting which followed, brought ad
ministration of the federal reserve
system under fire. They adopted res
olutions “condemning and deprecating
methods employed by the board” in
its relations with state banks whicV
are not members of the reserve sys
tem, although the board did not lack
defenders during the discussion.
Indignation against the board’s
regulation compelling the collection
of checks and remittance of the face
amount at par was freely expressed.
Governor Harding was styled as
“usurper” of authority and a commit
tee was named to seek amendment of
the reserve act so as to “guarantee
to all bankers the rights and priv
ileges of fixing a charge on the han
dling of checks drawn on all except
ing local abnks.
Speakers declared Governor Harding
had employed “force and coercion” by
enforcing the use of the par clear
ance system under which many state
banks were said to have been com
pered to enter the reserve system or
lose a certain class of business. This
was “not only unfair, but without
basis in law,” it was asserted.
Two Florida Men
Found Shot Dead
Near Macclenny
MacCLENNY, Fla., Oct. 21.
Though MacClenny was quiet today
after the finding late yesterday after
noon, six miles from here, of the
bodies of two white men, Frank H.
Conner and Frank Dooley, with their
bodies riddled with buckshot, feeling
was tense. Authorities are making
a full investigation of the double kill
ing and a coroner’s jury has been ap
pointed to make an exhaustive probe
of the tragedy. No arrests had'been
made this morning.
The killing of the two men follows
the lynching of three negroes here
on October 4, after the killing of
John Harvey, a white man, and the
finding of another negro dead on a
city street.
Charlie Miller, who was returning
to MacClenny from Sanderson, dis
covered the two bodies shortly before
sundown yesterday. Conner’s face
and forehead were almost torn away
by the charge, and Dooley’s body was
pierced in countless places by the
buckshot, tending to show that the
men had been shot from close range.
Ed Norton, also returnin g from
Sanderson, came upon the bodies in
the road, where they had been left
by their slayers. Both men wtre
dead, but were still bleeding, and it
is thought that the killing had taken
place only a short time before.
Lieut. R. C. Kirkpatrick
Wins 9,000-Mile Fly,
Nome - to - Mineola
MINEOLA, N. Y„ Oct. 20.—A rec
ord-breaking air trip of 9,000 miles
ended at 1:37 p. m. today, when army
plane No. <4 alighted here on its re
tur nfrom Nome. Alaska. Three oth
er plans participating in the flight
followed a few minutes after No.
4, which was piloted by Lieutenant
Ross C. Kirkpatrick.
Georgia to Care for
2,500 Armenians
John R. Voris, director of the
men’s business and fraternal organi
zations of the National Association
of lhe Near East Relief, of New
York, is making a conference tour
of the south, having just visited the
Near East relief office for Georgia,
at 409 Georgia Savings Bank build-
Mr. Voris stated to A. L. Terrell,
state director for Georgia, that the
Federations of Labor in Colorado,
lowa and Indiana, and in the two
largest cities in the country. New
York and Chicago, had just lined up
for the Near East relief.
The Georgia committee s work al
ready has been indorsed by many la
bor leaders throughout the state sev
eral of whom are members of the
Near East relief executive commit
tee for the state. It is stated here
that Georgia will care for 2,500 or
phans in Armenia during the coming
year. The cost of feeding an orphan,
many of whom are on the verge of
starvation, is $5 a month.
sbsk'.
M'W||L S
Dr Esther Boid lovejoy
Hoover wrote the foreword. The
royalties from the book go to the
hospital association.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1920.
Aged Widow 9 s Poverty
Is Transformed to Riches
When Fortune Arrives
The Tri-Weekly Journal’s
HOSOH COLUMN
A Department for
People Who DO Things
■
T.B. BUDGETT
The Tri-Weckly
Journal pins its
medal today upon
the well-known
coat of T. B. Bur
gett, energetic
citizen of the fine
little city of Gali
on. Ohio. Mr. Bur
gett is eighty-one
years young. And,
whether you can
believe it or
not, he has been
a * fire-fighter for
sixty - six long
years. Dispatches
III f iHlllllllllfllW
to The Journal say
that this hero of many a spectacu
lar is still as valuable a mem
ber of the fire department as the
youngest recruit. So it’s only due
him that his record be chronicled
far and wide. They say that Mr.
Burgett is the oldest fireman in
America. We’ll believe it until
somebody proves we’re mistaken.
Southwest Georgia
Farmers No Longer
To Board Corn Weevil
MOULTRIE, Ga., Oct. 20.—More
than a million bushels of corn pro
duced in the twelve counties making
up the Southwest Georgia Develop
ment association will be stored in
properly equipped barns and treated
with carbon bisulphide as a pre
ventive of damage by weevil, accord
ing to a statement made here by S. C.
Hood, field, manager of the organiza
tion.
Mr. Hood says that it has cost
the farmers of this section of the
state two million dollars a year for
a long time to board the corn wee
vil, and that this tremendous loss
can be stopped entirely by the con
struction of suitable barns and the
treating of corn with carbon bisul
phide. ,
For several months Mr. Hood, in
co-operation with county agents, has
been waging an active campaign
along this line and a survey which
he has just completed, reveals that
more than a million bushels of corn
will be so treated this fall.
In pointing out other leaks in the
farming industry in this territory,
Mr. Hood called attention to the
fact that the twelve counties in
the Southwest Georgia Development
association have been buying this
summer 4 two million pounds of dry
salt meat a month from the west
and that more than 75 per cent of
the beef sold in the territory comes
from the same source. The associa
tion plans to give much of its time
this fall and winter in an effort to
point out the great profit that can
be derived from the’ live stock in
dustry, with one of the biggest pack
ing houses in the southeast here in
Moultrie and a market for all of
the hogs and cattle that can be pro
duced.
Another Suit Is Filed
Against Willingham;
$215,000 Is Sought
MACON, Ga., Oct. 20.—The Ship
pers’ Compress company, the Bans
»f Marion, Va., and the National
Bank of Alamance, of Graham. N.
C., filed an involuntary petition in
bankruptcy Tuesday afternoon in
the office of the United States
clerk against the property of R. I*.
Willingham. The total claims of
the three companies amount to
8215,000.
According to the petition, the
Shippers’ Compress company claims
that Mr. Willingham is indebted to
it in the total sum of $205,0)0 in ten
promissory notes signed by the Wil
lingham warehouse and indorsed by
R. F. Willingham personally. The
National Bank of Alamance has
notes signed by the Willingham
warehouse totaling $5,000, according
to the petition, and the Bank of
Marion claims to hold notes for the
same amount, signed by the Wil
lingham warehouse.
In the petition the corporations
show that Mr. Willingham is in
solvent and claim that in June of
this year he transferred certain
portions of real estate in Macon to
Bertha E. Wolff, of New York. Ac
cording to the petition, thi s property
was transferred with the agree
ment that it would be held from the
records. Such a transfer, claim the
was to obtain for Bertha
Wolff a larger percentage of her
defat than the other creditors in the
Willingham case, and was a fraud.
Largest Bible Class
Has 2,200 Members
MOUNT VERNON. N. Y.. Oct. 20.
—The largest Bible class in the
world, with a membership of more
than 2,200, was claimed Wednesday
by the First Methodist church here,
The class was organized ten years
ago by Dr. Otto F. Bartholow, the
pastor, and is composed of represen
tatives of many denominations.’
Must Stay Dead to
Compete With Police
SAN FRANCISCO. —When cops
here heard that William Earp was
dead on the field of battle they offi
cially forgot his record of six ar
rests for alleged burglary. They
wiped the books clean. Earp show
ed up the other day. Not dead, only
seriously wounded. Cops re-wrote
the record.
Women Always Late
Wheeze Is Blasted
CINCINNATI.—The old joke about
women never being on time was shot
to pieces at the courthouse when
women jurors were summoned for
service. They were all there before
the men arrived.
On a little farm near Waverly,
Pike county, Ohio, Mrs. Mary Put
num Richardson, a widowed woman
seventy-four years of age. who has
been living on her Civil War pension 1
and on money derived from the sale
of eggs, as discovered that she i?
the long lost daughter of Henry W.
Putnam, a multi-millionaire, who
died in San Diego in 1915 and who
had made, his home in this state for
more than twenty yers, says the Los
Angeles Times.
Moreover, Mrs. Richardson has
discovered her brother, Henry W.
Putnam, of New York city, who will
soon visit her, and nieces and grand
nieces named Wllace, who formerly
lived at Redondo Beach, but now live
in Ohio, not far from Mrs. Richard
son’s home. The Wallace family,
too, Is surprised -to learn of the vast
fortune lent by Mr. Putnam, who,
during his testimony in a law suit in
San Diego in 1910, said that he could
not estimate within 510,000,000 what
his wealth might total. His for
tune was finally estimated as being
about $50,000,000.
The splitting up of the Putnam
family occurred in New Orleans in
1849. In that year Henry W. Put
nam found himself a widower with
three children, one a boy of six and
two girls, twins, four years old. Mrs.
Richardson was one of the twins and
the mother of Mrs. Gilbert Wallace,
formerly of Redondo, was the other.
The slx-year-old boy is now, the
multi-millionaire Henry W. Putnam,
•of New York, a man seventy-seven
years old.
When news of the discovery of
gold in California reached New Or
leans in 1849, the young widower
joined the rush. He came west by
way of the Panama Canal, stopping
P rst at San Diego, and later going
to San Francisco. With him he
brought his six-year-old son, but the
two daughters he left with relatives
in New Orleans.
The aunt who took charge of the
present Mrs. Richrdson soon tired of
the task. After a few months she
left the little girl at an orphanage tn
New Orleans, where she remained
two years. When six years old she
was taken from the orphanage by a
Mrs. Rebecca Lewis, who adopted
her, and with whom she lived until,
when she was twenty-two years old,
she married Henry Coon. The Lewis
family then moved north to Ohio.
In 1890 their adopted daughter was
married to James H. Richardson and
since then has lived on the little
farm which is now her home. Mr.
Richardson died there four years
ago.
Some time ago Mrs. Richardson
impelled by a desire to learn some
thing of her relatives of the Putnam
family, if any were living, placed
an advertisement in a Chicago news
paper. This advertisement finally
came to the notice of Mrs. Wallace,
who wrote that her mother had been
the other one of the twin girls left
in New Orleans seventy-one years
ago.
Through the Wallace family, Mrs.
Richardson has learned of her rela
tionship to Henry W. Putnam, the
rich New York brother who is soon
to visit her, and that she is the
daughter of the Henry W. Putnam,
multi-millionaire, who died at San
Diego five years ago at ninety years.
On reaching San Francisco in
1849, instead of joining the gold
rush, Putnam stayed the Bay City
and made a fortune manufacturing
soda water. In 1850 he went east
and married a Miss Hamlin, of
Cleveland, O.
For many years Putnam, who kept
his son with him, but lost track of
his daughters,' lived in Bennington,
Vt. When he left Bennington in
1895 to make his home in San> Die
go he gave the Vermont city the
costly waterworks there, of which he
was the sole owner. Later he built
and endowed an expensive: hospital
in Bennington.
, Though Mr. Putnam made a great
deal of money as one of the builders
of the elevated railroads in Brook
lyn, N. Y., most of his fortune was
amassed as a result of royalties and
sales of his inventions. For many
years he received a royalty of SI,OOO
a dav for the patent involved
in making barbed wire. His inven
tion of«a certain kind of safety pm,
and invention of the fire snappers
used on pop bottles and on fruit
jars were also enormously profita
ble.
“Playing Hanging”
Is Fatal to Boy
MEMPHIS, Tenn., Oct. 20.—“ Pla
ying hanging” proved fatal Monday
to Charles Weiss. 11-year-old son of
Sam Weiss, of Eudora, Ark., when
the rope placed under his arms by
several companions as part of a. game
of “cowboys and highwaymen’ slip
ped, caught under his chin and he
was strangled to death.
“Now you’ve got to hang me >
young Weiss, who had the role or
“highwayman,” is quoted as having
told his playmates when a chase end
ed in his capture. The “cowboys
raised him from the floor of the
Weiss barn by a rope attached to
a rafter, but did not notice that it
had slipped until the i child was
dead. . x
At the time the boy’s parents
were attending the funeral of a
friend. His body vYas brought to
Memphis for burial. ___
Loses $250 in Basket
Os Apples; Still Lost
ELKHART, Ind. —Howard Cong
don hid $250 in a basket of apples
when he drove to town. He sold
that basket and a score more, and
then thought of his money. Al
though be back-tracked and looked
at a lot of baskets he was not able
to find one containing the money.
Ginners Ignore Warnings
COLUMBIA. S. C.. Oct. 21.—Two
Clarendon county ginners have re
ported warnings received by mail
and signed the “Black Seventy-Five”
to close their gins, while a Sumter
county ginner found a notice posted
on his gin reading “run today and
burn tonight” None of the gins will
suspend operations, it is said, and a
guard has been placed at one of the
Clarendon plants.
PELLAGRA
CURED WITOUT A
STARVATION DIET
AT A SMALL COST
If you have this awful disease, and
want to be cured — to stay cured—
write for
FBEE BOOK
giving the history of pellagra, symp
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in plain, sealed envelope. A guar
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today.
CROWN MEDICINE COMPANY
Dept 93 Atlanta, Gt.
Greatest Bargain Y ouEver Saw
tarsntwa
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Almost tike a SILVER DOLLAR ft wears tn th. pocket. Did io
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DODSON SOUNDS
GSLOMEL'SOOOM
The “Liver Tone” ?<ian
Warns Folks Against the
Sickening, Salivating -
Drug
Ugh! Calomel makes you sieft. It’S
horrible! Take a dose of the danger
ous drug tonight and tomorrow you
lose a day.
Calomel is mercury! When it
comes in contact with sour bile, it
crashes into it, breaking it up. Then
is when you feel that awful nausea
and cramping. If you are sluggish,
if liver is torpid and bowels consti
pated or you have headache, dizzi
ness, coated tongue, if breath is bad
or stomach sour, just try a spoonful
of harmless Dodon’s Liver Tone to
night.
Here’s my guarantee—Go to any
drug store and get a bottle of Dod
son’s Liver Tone for a few cents.
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
“John, please take
uxa^ Iron and be
strongandwellagainT*
wyWMiR
Don’t
wait
until ZS' o
l ct‘ r \ bKwW 'i l l HHl.l 1 WhWIWI
the “ i|h || Ll » 1
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comet.
Build yourself up now by taking
RUPTURED?
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You will wonder how you ever got along with
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RHEUMATISMF”
A Remarkable Home Treatment
Given by One Who Had It
In the Spring of 1893 I was attacked
by Muscular and Sub-acute Rheumatism.
I suffered as or'y those who have it
know, for over Jaree years. I tried
remedy after remedy, and doctor after
doctor, but such relief as I received
was only temporary. Finally, I found
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my own case.
I want every sufferer from such forms
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After you have used it and it has proven
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any longer when relief is thus offered
you free. Don't delay. Write today.
Mark H. Jackson, No. 741 - Durston
Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above
statement true.—(Advt.)
FITS!
Let those that don’t believe write me, M eayg
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RHEUMATISM
RECIPE
I will gladly send any Rheumatism suf
ferer a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free
that Completely Cured me of a terrible at
tack of muscular and inflammatory Rheu
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It also relieves Sciatica promptly, as well
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Genuine Song-o-phone comet, solid metal, high'v
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3