Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, December 04, 1920, Page 3, Image 3

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’ CASCARETS “They Work while you Sleep” Stop growling around like a cross bull pup. You are constipated, bilious, and what you need is Cascarets to night sure for your liver and bowels. Then you will wake up wondering what became of your nervousness, dizziness, sick headache, bad cold, or upset, gassy stomach. No griping— no inconvenience. Children love Cas carets, too. 10, 25. 50 cents. — (Advt.'i Just Think! Girl’s Winter Coat $595 ' ’W Send No Money! £■ ’ Jast eend vour name, i i address, size and color A and 1 wiU sene this !■ ’ ttirl’e heavy winter ><■ Jar : \ coattoyou Don tpay 1 one Penn? ontil the 4'l coat “ deliverec at zTSeHWay. < l&Xi. iww' \ yaor door oy the xZ 't- *V\ postman This :e a \ wonderful oppor tunity of saving about $4. Com ■ i»ss T*?/’ -■■’ Pare it with oth- j «r» and ,ee tor *&»>.. yourself VjlJ Save s 422 BW 1 K t-Jj?, This is really a ' jWl : iOsS l q wonderful coat, II which ordinarily r® I Bella for 110.00. L’Made of a heavy r<9> 'lk, >" : : Sa'Jraß I ,• J? ol ° wool velour P4* «i* <■ Hg awt I /'lined throughout t s 3R.< With eotton t ;K‘ss®■? Perge. Has large r ®Ks collar made of ? aS*- <sss§ ? ; >S Wl V Yy,Egyptian plush, LJWt Wt ; SS?SV> r Zytwo serviceable I S§SS iOw. /'lll pocketsand new I jjeag ' . Jr/ stylish cross ’ OTieT belt- Sizes S'to fit girls 0 to 14 Ajjr KS2» years old. no larger. Colors, djgjr brown, gray or blue. When XsSf \ ’’J ordering, be sure and give size mfiTSf \ 1 and color VI DELIVERY FREE I J td dQat send your nanle and ed’ 4 i S<yc* dress, no money Give size W® 7» ,* G * and color. When the coat is 6 TO ? 1 delivered at your door by the . - „ I • postman, pay him $5.95 for I* ■091’4 11 the coat. We have paid the 1 ® ■ sars » jyt delivery charges Let your X4J little girl wear the coat. If you don’t find it all you expect for any reason what soever, return it at our expense and we will cheer fully refund your money at once. Order bv No. 87. Walter Field Co. ma a. J lo2^e. w /I/SvA Oar special offer for \ these "SATISFAC fFGt 1 \ TORY’* reconstructed doable tread tires. KB 6000 MILE Hi TIRES gj! Ji Save One Half |3=C Eli of regular price simply |rw3 =l=| can’t be beat No such - ItWx efe bargain on the market. luJ'-*' =Bs Each tire separately GUARANTEED. Cut uMi fife price made possible only V Dy our special double w / tread retreading, durable yX.a\ / life-giving process. See Our Cut Prices Size % in *- Tub.. Six. Tires Tubes ioJs 5 S ?<? *1 KO 34x4 * 8.75 * 2 «> 80x3 1-2 650 ITS 34x4 1-2 10.00 3.00 -2 6175 1185 83x4 J’ 2 H.OO 3.15 82x31-2 7.00 2.00 86x41-2 11.50 8.40 81x4 8.00 2.25 85x5 12.50 8.50 . 82x4 8.25 2.40 86x5 12.75 8.66 88x4 8.50 2.50 87x5 12.75 3.75 Reliner Free With Every Tire Also a new Miller inner tube at factory price. State size, also whether straight side, clincher, plain or Non-skid. Send only 82.00 deposit for each tire, balance C. O. D., subject to examin. ation. Special 7 % discount for full cash witl order. Order shipped day received. Order NOW—TODAY to get these lowest S. '’>•'!<»’ tirea of high qnelity. e«^T , 5 FaCTOaY T,RE S’JBBER co. 2551 Indiana av. Pept.o3-D Chlcasa. 111. ffIEWIKTWIKGE I Get busy and relieve those pains with that handy bottle of Sloan’s Liniment WHAT Sloan’s does, it does thor oughly—penetrates without rub bing to the afflicted part and .'•romptly relieves most kinds of exter nal pains and aches. You’ll find it clean and non-skin-staining. Keep it handy for sciatica, lumbago, neuralgia, over-exerted muscles, stiff joints, back ache, pains, bruises, strains, sprains, bad weather after-effects., For 39 years Sloan’s Liniment has helped thousands the world over.- You aren’t likely to be an exception. It cer tainly does produce results. All druggists—3sc, 70c, $1.40. SloartS Liniment ra aßM^aßsaßrawaaasaE-^ssEE^bw—gfc RHEUMATISM 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 only those who have it know, for over three years. I tried remedy after remedy and doctor after doctor, but such relief as 1 received was only temporary. Finally, I found a treatment that cured me completely, and it has never returned. I have given it to a number who were terribly af flicted and even bedridden with rheu natism, some of them 70 to 80 years old, and results were the same as in my own case. I want every sufferer from such forms of rheumatic trouble to try this mar velous healing power. Don’t send a cent- simply mail your name and ad dress and I will send it free to try. After you have used it and It 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 understand, I do not want your money unless vou are perfectly satisfied to send it. Isn’t that fair? Why suffer any longer when relief is thus offered yon free. Don’t delay. Write today. Mark Fl. Jackson, No. 741 G Durston Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above statement true. —(Advt.) CUT THIS OUT—IT IS WORTH MONEY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Shef field Ave., Chicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package con taining Foley’s Honey and Tar Com pound, for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills for pain in sides and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a whole some atjd thoroughly cleansing ca thartic i'jr constipation, biliousnes headache, and sluggish bowels I Advt.) Soil'd Gold Birthstone Ring Forsellingonlyonedozen boxes White Cloverine Salve at 25c with Free pictures.* Write quick The WiUoa Chemical Co., Dept. R 352 Tyrone, Pa. A O T Genuine. Kauie odt AbrlKliN -u n:t 81.10 Postpaid. Sent anywhere. 400 tablets 82.00. FREE catalog. Nationally adver tised. MERIT CHEMICAL CO., Box 858. Memphis, Tenn. THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKTxY .TOTTRNATu Biggest Family at Nation ’sCapital Is Musical Flock of Canaries ! WASHINGTON. D. C.—The largest family in the national capital is that of Mr. and Mrs. Hartz Mountain, 233 Massachusetts avenue, northeast. ; Tlfis pair united in 1916, under the auspices of Mrs. Emily Fowler Thompson, and today there are 700 member of the family. In this canary bird family there is no race suicide. More than 300 members of this family are still living at home, and the others have all made good on Broadway in New York, or F or Ninth streets in Washington. They are a musical family and as singers they find no difficulty in reaching the top as entertainers in both the mov ies and on the legitimate stage, in vaudeville and on roof gardens. In nearly every show in New York some of the birds are assisting the orchestra. n Its Weight in Gold In fact, Mrs. Thompson, who makes around SSOO a year net profit raising canary birds on her back porch, says that the people of the nation’s greatest metropolis are so hungry for the song of a bird that she can sell all the yellow and green singers she can raise for them from $lO to sls apiece. A canary bird that can sing comes nearer being worth its weight” in gold than any Shooting and Hold-Up In New York Chinatown Threaten Tong War ' \ NEW YORK.—It requires provo cation to rouse Chinatown from its ennui, superinduced by all excess of pilgrims from the “sticks” who nightly rumble dc/wn In lantern-lit sight-seeing cars to the labyrinth of crooked, dingy streets to satisfy a yearning for the bizarre and an ap petite for chop suey. A young Chinaman with the white wife answered to the name of Leong Yung. He had the reputation of “sniffing the sugar off of buns,” which is Chinatown patois for a “snow bird,” which in turn means that he “sniffed.” And all that indi rect, subtle and elusive symbolism means in plain unvarnished English that young Leong Yung had been a cocaine fiend. As has been said, he got his ethics mixed and ran into somebody’s smoke iron, and as there happened i to be a lot of tourists in the neigh : borhood of the pool room in Doyers street when the shooting took place i there was intense excitement, and J word of it -was flashed from the Mc i Alpin to the Plaza and thence out across the country via Mr. Burle son’s justly famous system, and in the heat of debate somebody drop ped the remark that another Tong war had opened up. And that in turn caused a lot of reporters to invade Chinatown, and it caused the police to wrinkle their brows, look bored and detail a lot of plain clothes men to the neighbor hood of the chop suey and curio joints; and the cops said they didn’t believe it was going to be another Tong war and they didn’t know whether they did believe it and the reporters did not believe the cops, but said they did when the cops said “nothing to it.” And the Chinese looked bored and tired and indiffer ent, but said nothing, only tucked their long, crooked, yellow fingers tighter into the slaves of their black blouses —because it was cold in the narrow streets of Chinatown. Cold and raw and a Scotch mist had set in—and a Scotch mist wets a Chinaman through. To add to the general distrust and nervous tension of the place a lone Chinaman had meandered noiseless ly as a cat to the top floor of a tene ment at No. 49 Henry street and held up fifty Chinamen in fifty vary- and nicotine that ordinarily cling to ing stages of undress; and any one the pipe and make it foul., Dont Send a Peony A enoe bargain you must not miss. A manu- w facturer made up a lot of these splendid Work cSgsaShoes for a big concern. Thecrder was cancelled. W Our buyer snapped up the entire lot at way £W'<?<V ; S below the real value and while they last, we offer them « •’ HOI at wholesale price—big saving to you. Send nomor.ey 35 —only the coupon. It not satisfied, return them and yy youarenotoutapenny. Actquick—send coupon today. WMlmwlMeg Smasfcetf w 8 Selected brown barnyard leather. Tanned to be proof Yjiii against acids in manure, soil. etc. Soles are strongest, fViA best-wearing leather. Heels extra nailed—will not •'>;. come off. Stitching reinforced throughout keeps seatns from ripping. Modeled on a very comfortable, broad last with p'enty of too room. Wide bellows tongues keep out dirt, snow and water. Smooth leather insoles. A wonderful work shoe. Sizes 6 to 12, Wida widths. RiftQftf Sendno money—only coupon. When s3E v■ * w ** “ " shoes arrive pay only the low bargain :£. Price, $2.98, and postage. Compare with work is.' shoes that sell for $5 and fSelsewherc. If not satis- » ! Wk’ i JwF t S e ®’ s . retnrn shoes and we will refund your money. st* } Supply is limited, so orderquick. Give your size. V' LEOMARD-MCHTON & CO. -- Dept. 8175 Chicago, Illinois ''''■’doWSfcs Send Work Shoes No. AX 1826. I will pay BX2 mb ■ $2.93 and postage on arrival. If not Perfectly BRdotied 1 will return shoes fr 1 af><i y ° U Will refun d money. Ifea Name Pay Nothing Until Shoes Arrive SMASH! Go Prices! ] lam making the greatest price and quality drive of my I life, this year, right now. I have smashed feather bed and pillow prices way down. The profiteers all over the country are trying to keep up war-time prices and send them higher. I'm fighting them. This year I can save you more money than ever and give you better quality. I’ll make good my promise if you will send for my big new Free Bargain Book, filled with beautiful colored pictures of my ’ sanitary feather beds and pillows, all fully described. »ly FREE BOOK—Let’s Get Acquainted jest firm of our kind in the world and our Factory-to-Home prices yes. I have saved thousands of dollars for feather bed users all over ave you money. Let me prove it. I. guarantee satis loney back. You take no risk buying from us. That’s -J’t'x. r the way we do business Before buyipg any feather bed at any price, <S '\\ Idam about my high quality and low prices. Send your name and address \ \ on a post card or letter today for the free book, and sample pf feathers. V Agents wanted everywhere. AMERICAN FEATHER * PILLOW CO.. Desk 72 . Nashville. Tenn. A canary bird that can sing comes nearer bringing its weight in gold than any other commodity. other commodity. A canary bird weighs less than an ounce. But when it develops its full song it can com- i who does not believe that there are fifty stages of undress into which a Chinaman can wriggla, does not know Chinamen. The murder of the young laundry man, Leong Yung, is the first of its kind in seven years, and it was about as long ago that the On Leong Tongs and the Hip Sing and the Four Brothers society buried the hatchet and agreed to forget past differences. Therefore, when some one started the rumor that there was to be a re crudescence of the days of Mock Duck and Tom Lee, everybody’s nervous temperament became mani fest, including that of Chinatown it self. Assistant District Attorney P. Francis Marrow questioned several persons who were in the pool room when Leong Yung was killed, but like the three sacred monkeys, they saw nothing, heard nothing, said nothing. It was generally known that Leong Yung had been expelled from the Hip Sing Tongs last February, and Josie Meyers, Yung’s white wife, said that her spouse had been warn ed that he had better leave China town. The police have been trying to find out why Yung was expelled from the Hip Sing Tongs. The reason is clouded, the general belief being that Yung was suspected of disclosing their secrets. Also it was said Chi nese gamblers believed he was in league with the police. Chinatown does not believe that a tong war is pending, but if it is, like Patrick Henry, they say: “Let it come.’’ Method Is Found to Keep Pipe Clean LONDON. —Pipe smokers here have revived an ancient method of keep ing a pipe clean. They roll the to bacco into a pear-shaped “bomb” of rice paper, tear a tiny hole in the bottom of the “bomb” and drop it into the pipe bowl. Then they light the twist of paper at the top. The paper doesn’t burn except at the top and a rap of the hand at the finish of the smoke throws out paper and ashes and all the “gooey” creosote ; I pete with a violin for harmony, for it is claimed that a canary never I misses a note. PROPER COTTON STORAGE URGED UPON HOLDERS The dangers of damage to cottoh through improper storage have been brought to the attention of many , southern farmers through a circular Issued by W. W. Croxton, passenger traffic manager of the Atlanta, Birm ingham and Atlantic railway. He urges that especial care should be taken of baled cotton kept in stor age, and publishes the results of a recent investigation by the agents of the United States department of agriculture. The government officials tested a number of bales of cotton, some of which had been stored properly and others improperly. The report stated that the average loss on a bale of cotton exposed to the weath er through careless storing amount ed to about S7O. The loss on the average bale properly stored amount ed to less than that many cents. This applied to both seeded and un seeded cotton. The department of agriculture I says that the ideal wav to protect seed or baled cotton is to store it in | a dry, clean house or room, where it 1 would be protected from all forms | of damage. Where suitable cover is I not available, it is recommended that the cotton be placed under a shed if possible, but if stored in the open it should be placed on scant lings four to five inches thick so as to keep it off the ground. In that case the position of the bales should be reversed frequently, better daily, by turning them over so that he underside will be exposed to the air and sunshine, in order to prevent the cotton becoming damaged by moisture absorbed from the ground or from rains. If it is allowed to remain wet even for a short time the lint will staint and deteriorate and be involved to such an extent as will cause the buyer t 0 knock off several pounds per bale. Further more, the railroads, in order to pro tect themselves from claim for country damage, are forced to make notation on bills of lading when cot ton so damaged is offered for ship ment. Therefore, it behooves every one growing or handling cotton to take the proper care of it as long as it is in his possession, in order to get the best returns from his ef forts. A., B. & A. Railway Co. Files Claim With I. C. C. For $627,402.57 The Atlanta, Birmingham and At lantic Railway company has filed with the interstate commerce com mission a claim for $627,402.57, as a deficit occurring in operating reve nues in the period of six months from March to August, inclusive, of this year, protection against which was guaranteed the railroads under the Transportation act of 1920. The six-months’ period mentioned was considered as a readjustment pe riod in which the railroads, which had been operated by the federal gov ernment, were being turned back to their owners, with much incident in terruption of their operative affairs. New Com King Is Crowned at Show CHICAGO, Dec. 2.—Secretary of Agriculture E. T. Meredith today was a guest of the grain and hay show held in connection with the In ternational Live Stock Exposition here. The government is largely represented with exhibits. C. E. Troyer, of LaFontalne, Ind., was crowned the national 1920 “corn king’ at the grain and hay show He won with a ten ear sample of Johnson county white corn. Peter Lux, of Indiana, was declared “corn king’’ last year. The ten winning ears came from a seventeen-acre field with an offi cial yield of 109 bushels an acre. Still Operators Jump Into River THOMSON, Ga., Dec. 2.—Last night County Officers Lewis and Rus sell, with the assistance of federal officers, brought in two copper stills, whisky and beer. They captured one still in Wilkes county, but the op erators escaped. On Little river, in McDuffie, they captured a hundred gallon still, whisky, beer and sugar. Four men were operating this one, but two escaped by jumping in Lit tle River and swimming across. J. H. Kendrick and a negro, Jesse James Kendrick, were arrested. They ar ranged bond. Bats Are Predicting Very Mild Winter SPRINGFIELD, Mo.—lt’s to be a ' mild winter, according to the bats. Thousands of bats each fall hiber nate in the famous Marvel cave in the Ozarks. When the winter is to be severe, they wing their way far into the winding passages, where no j blizzard can send its icy breath. Balked at Bath And Lost $1,200 ROANOKE, Va.—When Wil liam Porter and Charles Carter, held here in conection with the robbery of the Glasgow, Va., bank i last Friday, refused to take baths : jail attendants became suspicious i and a. serch of their person re ■ suited in the finding of $1,200, the police announced. Seven SIOO bills were discov ered in a bandage on Porter’s abdomen. Another SIOO bill was found in the lining of Porter’s vest, and four SIOO bills in Car er’s underwear. DELEGATES FEAR LEAGUE WILL DIE WITHOUT AMERICA BY A. B. TIECKER (Special Cable to the Chicago Daily News Foreign Service, by Leased W’ire to The Atlanta Journal.) (Copyright, 1920.) GENEVA, Dec. 2.—That each na tion and each group of powers repre sented in the assembly sincerely de sire that the United States shall en ter the league is the belief of close observers here. Indeed, some of the delegates have gone so far as to tell me that the league cannot live with out the United States. The reasons are many and nearly all flattering to the American republic. The Scandi navian countries seem to be strong est in their desire to have the United States enter because they want an ideal league based upon broad and just lines. The great powers desire the United States to come in because political ri valry still Is so intense in Europe that each power fears that a greater war than ever is In preparation. They wish to preserve the status quo and reduce armaments before the finan cial disaster becomes greater. This is exemplified by Italy’s attitude to wards war expenditures and raw ma terials. England, France, Italy and Germany are no nearer together than they were before the War, and terri torial and economic readjustments are threatening their peace. This is illustrated by the Near East situation. It is useless to be lieve that the powers think more of the suffering Armenians than they do of their own welfare. However, the unsettled conditions promise to main tain the turmoil until Egypt and all of India and the Mediterranean coun tries are in an uproar. This anarchy is postponing the revival of trade in definitely and throwing more and more men out of work and promoting unrest. The three big powers would like to settle the eastern question alone, but they cannot trust each other. In the matter of dominating the Mediterranean and in controlling Gibraltar, Constantinople and the Suez canal they are jealous and fearful of one another. Thus the United States is the only disinterested power with suf ficient moral influence. The small central European states want the United States to guarantee their new found liberties against possible fu ture aggression by the larger na tions. The assembly was opened with the expressed hope that the United States would see her way clear to enter. Then the Canadian delegation pointed out that neither the United States nor Canada would consider the pooling of raw stuffs and the subject never was reopened. The international court of justice, was founded upon an American basis. The Armenian question was placed in American hands with the support of Spain and Brazil. Now the military, naval and air commission of the council proposes to invite American observation of the proceedings. No financial act is outlined without taking the United States into consideration, the cen tral powers holding that a financial congress is meaningless without the presence of that country. Through the Red Cross the United States will contribute supplies to policing expeditions such as that to Vilna. There is an American on the Aaland committee. The Spanish speaking countries desire the entrance of the United States because Spain herself now has a very friendly feeling for her former enemy and many of the south. American delegates have told the writer that they are “nephews of Uncle Sam.” Russia wants the United States to enter to prevent her own division. Germany would see In the American entry an opportunity to alleviate the burdens of the treaty of Versailles. France would see support against other groups. Many of the delegates say the United States has taken the covenant of the league too seriously. They say the United States is accus tomed to a written constitution which is to be followed to the let ter or be changed under great dif ficulties. The delegates insist that the covenant should be interpreted elastically. Arthur Balfour said that he “saw more danger from those who expect too much of the league than from those who think the league worthless.” Finally, in talking with -the dele gates, this correspondent obtained the impression that the United States could demand and obtain any conces sion in changing or deleting any ar ticle and could successfully urge the correction of certain injustices which threaten the peace of the world and the life of the league. Not a great deal, perhaps, has yet been accomplished by that body but statesmen declare that the establish ment accomplished by that body, but statesmen declare that the estab lishment of a forum for discussion is in itself sufficient to sanction its existence. Returns From War And Is Convicted on Old Moonshine Charge Sandy Preston Forester, of Gilmer county, went to war in the summer of 1918. A few days later —on July 3, to be exact —officers raided a “still” on his place and arrested his father, who was charged with vio lating the prohibition law. His fath er said Sandy “ran the still,’ so the case against him was dropped. But when Sandy came back from France two years later and got his discharge and returned merrily home again, he was met with a bench war rant. He was tried in the United States court Thursday with his fath er and mother testifying against him and, pleading guilty, was sen tenced to three months and SIOO fine by Judge Sibley. Kansas City Japanese Have Organized Club HONG KONG, China. —Japanese who formerly lived In Kansas City Mo., have formed a club here called the Kei Shi Kai. One of the active members is Mr. Kichi Harada, well known on the Kansas City board of trade. Practically all the 'members are business men, who have worked in Kansas City offices or stores. The club entertains visitors to the Orient from Kansas City, and holds social metings to talk over old times in America. Commits Suicide In Father’s Yard M’DONOUGH, Ga.. Dec. 2.—Hob son Kelly, twenty-two, shot and in stantly killed himself in his father’s back yard at Kellytown, eight miles from McDonough, early Wednesday morning. He was the son of T. C. Kelly, commissioner of roads and revenues of Henry county. No cause for his action has been dis covered. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 4, 1020. The Tri-Weekly Journal's HONOR COLUMN A Department for People Who DO Things S • .|||R I JI ROBERT TJURRRY Robert Murray, age 12, who sings a higher note than any other human voice has touched is the remarkable youngster appearing in The Tri- Weekly Journal’s Honor Column to day. He was discovered by Mme. Frances Alda. Murray sang for her a difficult coloratura of the kind Gal li-Curci and Tetrazzini alone can mas ter. Caruso, Harrold and other ar tists are ready to testify as to his musicianship when the time comes for his presentation to the public. He lives out in Tacoma, Washington. GREECE LOSES . HER PLACE AT LEAGUE TABLE GENEVA, Switzerland. When the Greek people voted Venizelos out of power they also kicked their country out of the council of the League of Nations. The league covenant provides for a council of nine. It provides that each of the five great powers shall always have one representative and that four places shall be reserved for smaller powers. Peneding the first meeting of the league assembly, the allied powers named Belgium, Brazil, Spain and Greece for these places. The pres ent assembly meeting will not only fixt methods of electing four small powers to this council but will choose them for the ensuing pe riod. It is generally conceded that Bel gium and Spain will again be chosen. The Latin-American block will re elect Brazil or another South Ameri can country, possibly Argentine. Greece, owing to the victory of the Constantine partisans in the recent national elections, stands no show of , being re-chosen to the council. The Balkan states and Italy never viewed favorably the territorial ag grandizement allowed Greece when the settlements were made. Greece undr Constantine kept out of the war and allowed Serbia to be almost an nihilated. Only when Venizelos got control did Greece aid the allies. Under skillful guidance of Veni zelos almost all the Greek aspira tions were granted including the ces sion of Thrace, Aegean Islands and the practical annexation of Smyrna with the Asia Minor hinterland. This was allowed by the allies in expec tation that Venizelos and a monarch favorable to them would continue in power. The prospect of Constantine re turning to the throne upsets all cal culations. The flrjt reaction will be the assembly’s defeat of Greece for a place on the league council. The northern European powers are already pressing the claim of Swed en and it is not unlikely that Swed en will land the place. The Scandinavian countries al ready show deep interest in the coun cil. They propose an amendment to the covenant which provides that the assembly after the first selection of four lesser powers, name a new state every year to serve for a period of four years and not be subject to re election for the following period. Football Player . Dances Off Team OWENSBORO, Ky.—-Roy Howlett, captain of the high school football team, was full of pep. He attended a dance and was stepping ’em off when the coach saw him. Result: Howlett lost his place on the team. Another Royal Suggestion I Griddle Cakes and Waffles | From the New Royal Cook Book | rpHERE id an art in 1 making flapjack pan- | cakes, griddle cakes or | wheats, call them what | you will. But it is an art very easily and j* fa quickly acquired if you Ro follow the right recipes. The secret, of course, S 3 is Royal Baking Row- H I Griddle Cakes g < U 1% cups flour i ffl % teaspoon salt . FS 3 teaspoons Royal Ela A iff T/ff* | oAilinlii 13 cups milk [a 1 tablespoon shortening u Mix and sift dry Ingredi- ITTfc IT ST 7 W"? □ ents; add beaten eggs, H milk and melted shorten- JU Xjw Jg jgf fl Jr JE.J JtvL [3 ing; mix well. Bake im- g| mediately on hot griddle. 5 waffi« Absolutely Pure 2 cups flour i 4 teaspoons Royal - S Baking Powder Made from Cream of Tartar, r ? % teaspoon salt derived from grape*. g 1% cups milk A 2 eggs | | 1 tablespoon melted f shortening r Sift flour, baking pow- > j | der and salt together; add e | milk to yolks of eggs; mix » ———————————————— » ? thoroughly and add to dry E*DE*C* J i ingredients; add melted I* IVtJE* » shortening and mix in n i n i ™ ». s beaten white, ot e E g, i ‘ Bake in well-greased hot other delightful recipes. Write waffle iron until brown. for it to-day. BOY AX BAKING POWDER 00. K 1 rup. It should take about * v v I.™* 0 ■ 1% minutes to bake each Ite Fulton btreet. New York Cite. g . waffle. L- . Buys $1 Trunk; Finds $395 in It PHILADELPHIA. —An old trunk, for which she paid $1 to a junk dealer in Scranton, Pa., before she moved from that city recently, has added $395 in gold to the capital of Mrs. Alfred Bitterlin, of Collingdale, Pa. Believing the trunk had outliv ed its usefulness. Mrs. Bitterlin started to burn it. A jingle at tracted her attention, the fire was extinguished and Mrs. Bitterlin extracted the gold pieces from the lining of the trunk. KAISER’S ANNUITY BITTERLY FOUGHT IN THE REICHSTAG BY GEORGE WITTE (Special Cable to the Chicago Daily News Foreign Service, by Leased Wire to The Atlanta Journal.) (Copyright, 1929.) BERLIN, Germany, Dec. 2.—“ The Prussian government seems to have decided to set an example of gener osity in the settlement of the kaiser claims such as is not recorded in history,” said Herr Hellmann in a speech before the reichstag. He was supporting the social democratic bill to transfer all the money and property belonging to the Hohenzol lerns to the republic of Prussia with out indemnifying them. “Does he deserve it?” continued the speaker. “His speeches and his ‘willy-nicky’ letters all bespeak too eloquently his incompetency during the twenty-nine years of his rule as German kaiser. From a legal as well as a political standpoint we do not owe the Hohenzollerns a red cent. We will see that the Hohenzollerns do not suffer from hunger but we will also see that no more of- the money we give them is used for mon archistic-propaganda as has been the case in the past.” In the course of his speech which opened the debate Herr Heilmann brought out the fact that the kais er's income in Holland during the past year was appraised at 33.000,000 marks (normally $8,250,000), which is 13,000,000 marks ($3,500,000) more than he received while still on the throne. “At present,” added Herr Heil mann, “Prussia is paying the mem bers of the Hohenzollern family nearly 50,000,000 marks ($12,500,000) annually although no members of the family with the exception of the kaiser and crown ~ prince ha«ve for mally abdicated. On the contrary they have assumed the role of pre tenders to the crown and have en gaged actively, in anti-government propaganda. No sensible person can expect a republican state to grant these unreasonable claims of the Ho henzollerns and to continue paying them at this rate. We shall be gen erous but not foolish.” Confession of Killing Os Henry T. Peirce Is Reported by Police PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 2.—ln a signed statement given out by the police early Thursday, Poster D. Treadway, one of the trio under ar rest here in connection with the kill ing of Henry T. Peirce, manufac turers’ agent, who was beaten to death in his apartment here’ Novem ber 22, is alleged to have admitted that he and “Al” Smith, also known as Marion Elliott, were the slayers. Treadway, in a verbal statement, ac cording to the police, assumed full responsibility for the killing and did not mention Smith as having taken any part in it. In both statements he absolved J. A. Moss and Marie (“Boots”) Phillips, the other two pris oners, from any blame, declaring they were only innocent witnesses to the killing. Thursday Treadway is quoted by the detectives as saying that Smith struck the blows which knocked Peirce to the floor. Smith is the only one of the four suspects not yet apprehended. Robbery was the motive, according to the alleged signed confession, which says that Treadway and Smith, unknown to Moss and the girl, formed a plot on tne night of the killing to hold up Peirce and that they suggested the “party” in his apartment for that purpose. Mother Can See Son Only at Intervals LONDON.—Randolph G. Wemyss here can’t have his mother visit him longer than a day and night. If he does he loses a lot of money. His fa ther divorced his mother, Lady Lil lian Wemyss, and married again. Then he died and left his castle and his money to his son with the stipu lation that his former wife must never live in the house. Son went to court to break the will. 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