Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, December 04, 1920, Page 8, Image 8

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HHgU '"" '*'■ -' r ".' : - ‘ -Hf " E&xsS???GSf *■ W* ,; 'Jz CL- ~* Im >.,. . -Z/ZJI - - »s as “ . . t# -. • V - »» t^rir Movie Mob Gives London Big Scare LONDON. —What at first might have been mistaken for a genuine move upon the government build ings in Whitehall was made when a small crowd attempted to pass the barriers recently erected by the police at the entrances to Downing street and King Charles Street. The crowd, however, It developed, was made up of about 150 actors sent by a moving pic true company for photographic purposes only. The “mob,” whose attempt at the barricade was a mild one, was dispersed by the police, the camera men, meantime, crank ing vigorously. 34,249 AMERICAN SOLDIERS DIED IN WORLD WAR WASHINGTON, Dec. 1. —Final fig ures on army casualties in the world war are contained in the annual re port of Surgeon General Ireland made public last night, showing 34,249 kill ed and 224.089 wounded. The proportion of killed to wound ed is about the same as in the civil war, although mortality from gun shot wounds in the world war was only 8.26 per cent, as compared with 13.6 per cent in the civil war. The report said this indicated that im proved surgical and sanitary meth ods in the recent war had saved the lives of 5.34 per cent of all American soldiers wounded. Os every 1,000 men sent to France 110 were admitted to hospital ,as the result of battle casualties, the re port says, and nearly seven men out «• 1 <"-00 died as the result of wounds. <*ra'ntry losses were heaviest, 215.6 out of every 1,000 men of that arm being wounded and 12.77 killed. The signal corps was next, with 52.22 wounded, and 3.13 killed per thou sand. Death from wounds totalled 13,691, or slightly more than 6 per cent, while 158,585 of the wounded, or 70.7 per cent, were returned to duty, the remainder being invalided home for treatment or discharge. Shell wounds were by far the most deadly, the re port said, adding that no American soldier lost both arms and both legs in the world war, or both Ifegs or both arms and one other extremity. Eleven lost both legs at the thigh; one both legs at the knee; nine both legs below the knee; one both feet and three one arm above the elbow, with one leg at the thigh. More than 4,400 soldiers lost a part of one or more extremities. Sixty-six lost the sight of both eyes; 44 lost the par tial sight of both eyes and 644 lost one eye or the sight of one eye. Man Makes Valuable Find Among Savages Natives of the Cook Islands in the Pacific Ocean are reported by a trav eler returning from a voyage there to be taking a vegetable oil for rheu matism which is said to accomplish amazing results. He says he saw badly crippled natives completely cured by swallowing a little of this oil twice a day. Hundreds of letters from rheuipatic sufferers have been answered artd oil sent them free after he returned to America. Mr. P. E. Wilkes, now at the Georgian Terrace Hotel in Atlanta, Ga„ can supply those interested with further infor mation and a sample of the oil free. (Advt.) HOW TO “BE FIT” AT SIXTY BY DR. LEE HERBERT SMITH JB iffl ifW SSjFTWV I h?/ w HRM7 j i xa jßlw !ui 4 WtnO water, and occasionally cas tor oil or a pleasant laxative made up of May-apple, aloin, jalap, and sold by all druggists as Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. As Prof. Strauss says, “The excretion of uric acid we are able to effect by exciting diuresis.” Drink copi ously of soft rain or distilled water, six or eight glasses per day, hot water before meals, and obtain Anuric Tab lets, double strength, for 60 cts., at the nearest drug store and take them three times a day. If you want a trial package send 10 cents to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. “Anuric” (anti-uric-acid) is the recent discovery of Dr. Pierce and is much more potent than lithia, for it .will dissolve uric acid as hot tea dissolves sugar. (Advt.) THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. PRETTY BRIDE VANISHES ON WAY TO THE CHURCH 7~: ' ■•:•>• 1 ;.;• • • <<*. x: : x <;>:■■■ . ” 1 - ! ’ " n'lyAVi'w V-z ■■•••■.: 2L2Z.tJ&x' ' / - O - >*•.••■•:'•• •:• ' •••:. • ..<•:•.•> >•> _-4e<>»Q^wy rL - >4 ' % * z \ '''' - -■ "■ A ' 1 - • 1 .- ••• . ? } •; •■ : :. -=■ ■ ••/ •;■• \ f y< ™'-^'^.p. : : I ' "•-■ 'F:/J /• -"■- ■■-■■: ••••• . w •'.••■ • 1 s >sw Afw'--mf” W?S. DOROTHY' WCrtZ&S NEW YORK. —Prtice and detectives are combing New York for trace of Mrs. Dorothy K. Vackers, eighteen-year-old bride of four days, who vanished on the way from her home to confession at church, five blocks away. Police of other cities have been asked to aid in the search. “Key to Happiness*’ Held by Aged Couple Married 75 Years Ago BUFFALO, N. Y.—Have you been looking for the “key to happiness?” Well, Mr. and Mrs. George Mathew son have it. They live at Fredonia, a small town near here, where they have just celebrated tfieir seventieth wedding anniversary. They challeneg any one to equal their record of happi ness through all wedding anniver saries except the diamond. “Absolute frankness with one an other.” That’s the first notch in the “key?’ And “willingness to give in a little bit,” is another. Mrs. Mathewson is 88 years old and was born in Chautauqua county, New York. Her husband hails from Wayne county, New York, and is 91. "These days,” says Mr. Mathewson, “a couple who stay married ten years figure they are ‘just about it? But As our boys "came marching home,” they brought a certain red-blood ed doctrine, and showed us the glory of a perfect body. They will show us how to "keep fit,” even if we have passed middle life and are beyond the athletic stage. For the tired business man, the man who feels the daily grind and the nightly fag, has meager appetite, head aches, nerves unstrung, is gloomy, ending in a soggy brain, try the right way. Get out of bed, open the window, breathe deeply, exercise the army “setting up” exercise or use dumb bells, until in a warm glow. Before breakfast take hot that’s nothing. Mom and I cele brated our tenth anniversary a year before the civil war broke out. We had been hitched for eleven years when I went away with the Tenth Minnesota infantry, called the Ren ville Rangers.” . And she says: “It’s ridiculous haw people are get ting divorced nowadays. We’ve never had an argument that amounted to anything, and I still love him.” The wedding anniversaries they have celebrated (except the diamond) are: First—Cotton. Second —Paper. Third—Leather. Fifth—Wooden. Seventh—Woolen. Tenth—Tin. Twelfth—Silk and fine linen. Fifteenth—Crystal. Twentieth —China. Twenty-fifth—Silver. Thirtieth—Pearl. Fortieth —Ruby. Fiftieth—Golden. Seventy-fifth—Diamond; The owners of the “key to happi ness” are looking forward to the cel ebration of their diamond anniver sary, when they have been married seventy-five years. Women Outnumber Men in Augusta, 1920 Census Shows WASHINGTON, Dec. I.—A state ment of the white and colored popu lation of Augusta. Ga., was issued Tuesday by the census bureau. In addition the bureau shows that wom en considerably outnumber the men in Augusta. The population of Au gusta as announced previously is 52,548, of which 29,894 are white; 22,576 negro, and 78 all other per sons (Chinese, Japanese and In dians). The figures for 1910 were: White, 22,648; negro, 18,344, all other 48. The white population constituted 56.9 per cent of the total population in 1920 and 55.2 per cent in 1910, while the negro population consti tutes 43 per cent of the total popu lation in 1920 and 44.7 per cent in 1910. The increase in the white population from 1910 to 1920 was 7,- 246 or 32 per cent as compared with an increase of 1,735 or 8.3 per cent from 1900 to 1910. The negro popu lation showed an increase from 1910 to 1920 of 4,232 or 32.1 per cent as against a decrease of 143 or less than 1 per cent from 1900 to 1919. Os the total population of Augusta in 1920, there were 25,293 males or 48.1 jer cent and 27,255 females or 51.9 per cent. In 1910 there were 19,237 males or 46.9 per cent and 21,- 803 females or 53.1 per cent. The fe males exceed the males in 1920 as in 1910, the ratio of males to 100 fe males being 92.8 in 1920 and 1910. Less Cotton Ginned in Fulton in ’2O Than ’ 19 The official report on the arr:'*e» of cotton ginned in Fulton county in 1920 shows a marked decrease as compared to 1919. The figures for 1920, which include all cotton ginned prior to November 15, show a total number of 1,243 bales, while those of the previous year showed a total of 2,750 bales. (LJ) [] Any Trl-Weekly Journal reader can get the answer to any ques tion puzzling him by writing to The Atlanta Journal Information Bureau, Frederick J. Haskin, di rector, Washington, D. C., and in closing a two-cent stamp for re turn New Questions 1— Who do Eskimos bury their dead? 2 When were the first laws pass ed In this country for the better ment of roads? 3 How long have safety pins been used? 4 Where was the first toll road In this country? 5 Is a Sam Brown belt worn upon any occasion? 6 I have translated a French book Into English. Have I a right to publish it without infringing on the rights of the author? 7 Can you give me the recipe for old-fashioned electric cake? 8 — What is recorded in a ship’s log? 9Os what nationality was Maar tens? 10— Please give the program ren dered by Jenny Lind when Barnum introduced her to the American peo ple? Questions Answered 1. Q. —What is the largest flower in the world? 1. A. —The largest flower known is the rafflesia. It is a parasite on the roots of a species of wild vine found on the Island of Sumatra. There are no leaves, and the petals of the flower are a foot long, one fourth inch thick in the thinnest part, and three-fourths of an inch in the thickest. The entire flower measures about a yard, across and weighs about fifteen pounds, and is of a flesh-colored or yellow tint with mottlings of purple. 2. Q. —Who originated state fairs? 2. A.—Elkanah Watson, a pros perous merchant of Albany, N. Y., originated the idea of agricultural fairs, such as state and county fairs. Through his influence in 1819, the New York legislature appropriated SIO,OOO a year for six years for pre miums on agricultural products, and family manufactures. Since then such fairs have become quite gen eral. SENATORS MOVE TO SATISFY PLEAS OF THE FARMERS The Atlanta Journal News Bureau, 623 Riggs Building. BY THEODORE TILLER WASHINGTON, Dec. I.—lmpressed by the insistent demand of agricul ture that legislative relief be extend ed the farmers in the present era of falling prices for their products, members of the senate committee on agriculture who have arrived in Washington and held formal confer ences have agreed upon a tentative program. The senators attending the conferences decided to call in members of the house committee on agriculture and exchange views Thursday afternoon. Friday, there is to be a conference here pf repre sentatives of farmers’ organizations. It was said to be the consensus of opinion among the senators holding the meeting that four things at least are necessary to extricate the farmer from his present difficulties and open up the markets in this and other countries. The suggested program is as follows: Early establishment of peace; re establishment of the war finance cor poration, which has been inoperative for many .months; extension through the war finance corporation of some form of credit to foreign countries, so that they may make purchases of American farm products; supplemen tary credits legislation to broaden the present finance system and make possible, specifically, loans on accept table collateral instead of loans on land alone, which, it was suggested, are of no use to many farmers who are tenant or not large property owners. Senators Kenyon, Norris, Kellogg, Wadsworth, Kendrick and Harrison attended the informal meeting of the senate committee. The farm credits situation was discussed for an hour or more and these senators, fresh from their constituencies, exchanged first-hand reports of the discontent of the farming classes and their present financial embarrassment. It is probable that Secretary Hous ffAMBONE’S MEDITATIONS STO’-KEEPUH AX. ME E.F ] AH KNOWS DE DIFFUNCE Twix' A DIMMICRAT EN a 'publican t but dby A)N' 50 MUCH DIFFUNCE CEPN JES' 'Fo SECTION!/ f I *l/ /ft Ilbl jll Copyright. 1910 by M-iClvre Newspaper Syndicate. 3. Q. —How did Lynchburg, Va., get its name? 3. A. —Lynchburg was named after John Lynch, who founded the city in 1786. 4. Q. —How deep do divers go and how long do they stay? 4. A.—The navy department says that divers can reach the depth of 250 feet if equipped with the most modern apparatus, and can stay down about two hours. 5. Q. —What is the weight of 1,000,000 S2O bills? 5. A.—The treasury department says that 1,000,000 paper bills, wheth er $1 or S2O bills, would weigh about 3,000 pounds. 6. Q. —What are the names given to coin collectors and stamp collec tors? , 6. A.—A specialist In coins and medals is called a numismatist, while one who collects and studies postage stamps is known as a philatelist. 7. Q. —Why do planes use two blade propellers instead of four? 7. A.—The air service says that some aeroplanes have two-blade pro pellers, others have four. Two blades are usually considered more prac tical and efficient. 8. Q. —What does “Madonna” mean? 8. A.—Madonna is an Italian word signifying “My lady.” It is espe cially applied to the Virgin Mary and has become incorporated in other languages, particularly when used to describe the mother of Christ in works of art. 9. Q. —What is the origin of the expression, “A little bird told me so?” 9. A. —Probably the expression had its origin in a verse of the Bible. Ecclesiastes, chapter 10, contains the words, “ revile not the rich in thy bedchamber for a bird of the heavens shall carry carry thy voice, and that which hath wings shall tell the matter.” 10. Q. —Is it a fact that Revolution- ary mothers advocated woman suf frage? I 10. A.—lt is true that Abigail Adams wrote to her husband,, John Adams, afterwards president, at the time of the Revolution, saying, “If women are not represented in this new republic there will be another revolution.” ton will be called before the commit tee in connection with the proposal to re-establish the war finance cor poration and utilize its revolving fund for the encouragement of ex porting. At recent treasury depart ment conferences with representa tives of the National Farmers’ union and other organizations, Secretary Houston said he was opposed to the rejuvenation of the finance corpora tion. Among reasons given by him in opposition was one that the char acter of European securities which may be offered could not be accept able to the finance corporation. Furthermore, he said, this corpora tion was created to aid exporting in event of some unusual depression. He insisted that exporting was tak ing care of itself quite well, and that farm exports were increasing rather than diminishing. President Charles S. Barrett, of the Farmers’ union, and other farm as sociation heads, have announced their intention of going to the mat with the treasury department and congress over extension of rural credits. Head quarters have already been opened here in advance of the assembling of fongress and the actual drive will be in next week followinganother meet ing of farmer delegates on Friday Senators and representatives from the agricultural sections are expected to attend the Friday gathering. These same legislators intend cn Thursday to map out a fairly extensive legisla tive program and to submit their suggestions to the farmers’ spokes men. Meanwhile, the farm organiza tions are repeatedly advising produc ers not to sell below the cost of pro duction, and merchants and bankers are being told that it would be ruin ous to the industry should agricul ture attempt to meet its obligations at the present prices. The holding movement which followed the refusal of the federal reserve board and Sec retary Houston to extend emergency aid in financing of this year’s crop is declared to be growing stronger, and the farm organization chiefs say there will be no abatement until con gress acts, or there is an improve ment in present market conditions. The agitation now centering about the capitol building is entirely non political. Both Republican and Dem ocratic senators and representatives are exercised over the displeasure apparent in the farming communities and the financial embarrassments that have hit agriculture since the tumble in prices of farm products. The producers claim that their crops were made on government pleas to help feed the world, and that every thing entering into production, labor, materials and fertilizers, made the costs of their crops excessive, and they cannot be sold at the present market prices. Large Still Is Found In Police Station DENVER.—Sergeant Ustick found a twenty-five-gallon still In the basement of the South Denver police station. Nobody knows how it got there. Probe is following confisca tion. . Cackle! Cackle! Mr. Peck (to his wife) —Can you tell me why I’m like a hen? Mrs. Peck—No, dear, I can't. Mr. reck—Because I can seldom find any thing where I laid it yesterday. Gives Birth to 21st Child OTTAWA, Ontario.—Mr. and Mrs. Albert Selling, a French-Canadian couple, are being congratulated on the birth of their twenty first child. They have been married twenty six years. Walked 200,000 Miles LONDON, England.—After thirty-nine years’ service with the postoffice, Charles Denly, the Cobham postman, has retired. He is estimated to have walked during hi* em ployment 211,000 mile*. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1920. PARSON RUNS RESTAURANT WHEN KIOT IN PULPIT 11 ■f ~ ~MJ I JifF wqIWI ■»/ —■JbMjis'::? /HICAGO. —Feeding the body as weel as the soul is the new task of Rev. Emil Burk. He’s running a church 'and % restaurant. During two services Sunday and two nightly meetings a week the pastor-restaurateur helps his con gregation reduce the high fear of dying. The rest of the time, at his cafeteria downtown he helps his patrons reduce the high cost of liv ing. Used to Be a Chef Before he felt the call to the min istry he was a chef and resaurant manager. He quit that and is now pastor of the Auburn Park Taber nacle. Miss Margaret B. Marshall, a mem ber of his congregation, saved his idea from being just an idea. She bought out the Greenwood Kentucky Liquor Traffic Grows After Prohibition No epidemics of consequence have struck the United States during the year, and health departments con tinue to speak about the healthful ness of various communities. Yet more medicinal whisky is being used than was beverage whisky, figures of the internal revenue department in Kentucky show. Beginning in August, 1919, when all internal revenue districts of the state were consolidated, the with drawals for Kentucky show the fol lowing growth: , August 1919, 904 gallons were withdrawn; September, 669 gallons. October, 3,155: November, 7,056 and December, 12,608. The high tide of exportation was reached during De cember when 1,056.268 gallons were taken out of warehouses for expor tation. However, 1920 shows how whisky “improved” as a medicine. During January 40,094 gallons were with drawn; February, 131,483; March, 289,486; April. 153,040; May, 223,178; June. 483,617; July, 689,569; August, 601,609; September, 650,131 of a total of 3,217,209 gallons for nine months. According to a report issued In Washington, four times as much whisky was withdrawn in the whole country during 1920 than was with drawn during a similar period of 1919. , Th a large withdrawals have alarmed both the prohibition author ities and legitimate dealers of whisky. It is said that national as sociations of druggists, fearing that drastic measures might be taken by prohibition officials to prevent such enormous withdrawals, have signi fied their intention to assist enforce ment by reporting apparent viola tions. The prohibition forces have Here is The Offer That Broke raTTTI The Shoe Trust Market! Cgjga I j i J BOTH PAIRS for Price of ONE J®! s? Py \ I This Work Shoe—Tan, Boft toe, flexible up- I si P^ r 8» guaranteed double-strength, acid proof, a? c ® water proof, well-sewed genuine U. S. o f .= =*■ “i •; Army last for $2.34. i 5* ?= i Sounds impossible, and 5 ‘yet we do it, and you 3 ? sg-SS 55 «j; FnU, ? don’t send one cent to Jk&riL ’(T ' • w o2?v"g -S prove it. buying daily. u °f S £ i ■■ A This Dress Shoe, genuine calf, gun meta! finish—think of It— E K E -2 tl ST -Jl Zu ls - 64 - It's the biggest bargain in years—and yet with every pair Brace CnAAC go- • e 5 . V fc-B. of Dress Shoes sold we will sell a pair of Work Shoes for S2.i«. ■*•oss 911085 O H_ * g-J ! ;• (fcalß 13-3*-' A combination price that reads like a dream —but It's true. Dress Shoe—Black Abso K " g ■"■=.£ •• ’OS? A* a t 2£ u coßt of $7 - 98 > which Is less than the value of the lutely genuine calf, gun metal “ I-• a « •• Dress Shoe, you wll 1 have both pairs at once. finish. This shoe Is high qual- ■ •■’Sa. 1 I. Don’t Send One Cent—Not One Penny workmanship. 6 y Wide*’com* • E" £ £ aj ::■ B ~ Jyst pay your postman S7.M, plus postage fee. when the big package fortableeasy last. Easy heel. • §■=_,==- ■ :! femes. Open the package, see them and try them on. And if not sate Extra value; our price $564 !d : •; SESiSKMSRB* Ufled return them “d ”6 will at once refund your money, including Now sold only under this S j o S J a postage. $7.98 double pair offer. J a S ~ x-o a S E; W« Positively Cannot Sell Either Pair Separately. You can order different sizes if you wish. :® -S&»8. z £ & Brothers-Law Co. Dept. 20® 326 South Market Street, Chicago, Illinois. ........................«.S cafeteria, at 69 West Monroe street, and installed Rev. Burk as manager, his wife as cashier and his daugh ter, Miss Mae Burk, at the checker’s desk. The first thing the pastor restaurateur did was to cut prices. Trade boomed. t “Great,” Says Burk "It’s a great thing to look after wants of people other than spiritual,” says Rev. Burk. “At the restaurant I have come in contact with a great many more people than I could have met in church.” 4 Which, he asserts, has added great ly to his church membership. He finds a bit of missionary work not amiss as a side dish to a hearty lunch. And he is not above jumping in, when waitresses are rushed, and helping to serve his patrons with a yearned-for glass of water or another helping" of pie. found that much of the whisky has been used for beverage purposes, it is said. The following comparisons show the rate of increase in national with drawals: January, 1919, 912,676 gal lons; January, 1920, 2,183,750; Feb ruary. 1919, 862,314; February, 1920, 1,756,691; March, 1919, 932,604 gal lons; March, 1920, 4.106,983; April 1919, 1920, 3.647,726; May, 1919, 926,- 178; May, 1920, 4,083,384; June, 1919, 952,990; June, 1920, 3.480,493; July, 1919, 1,070,659. July, 1920, 4,072.029. The total for the first seven months of 1919 Is 6,522,547 gallons. The total for the same period of 1920 is 23,340,056 gallons. Abuses of liquor privileges and evasions and violations of the act will cause the national enforcement authorises to go before congress fq* - funds to extend their enforcement worko, and also to ask broadening of their powers, it is said. Discovery of Watch Clears Up Mystery SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich.—Dis covery of a npte and watch in a tree by Archie Barle,- of Flint, Mich., while he was hunting near Hulbert, virtually cleared up the mysterious disappearance of Arthur Kahler, of Marquette, Mich., in 1903. The attention of Barle was arrest ed by flashes of light from a metal object. Investigation proved this to be a watch hanging from a tree with the note inside, which read as fol lows: “I have been lost three days. I have shot three deer and placed the same note in every deer. Art Kahler." Can Tell Brand of Booze by Jag CHICAGO. —If you see a man swaying from side to side as he walks down the street, It lg safe to ask him where he got it, be cause it is the genuine stuff. But if in his perambulations he is imitating a top, then seek not to imitate him, for it’s moonshine. So says Dr. W. R. Goodsmith, for twenty-five years director of the Washingtonian home. Dr. Goldsmith has treated thou sands of alcoholics in all stages and his observation is that real whisky only gives a man the staggers, but moonshine spins him round and round, and its effects are much harder to lose. Scientist Weighs Kiss And Analyzes Reasons For Practicing Habit PARIS, France.—ln a thirty-three page treatise Prof. Edouard Male- . spine, one of France’s most learned \ savants, describes, analyzes and dis sects the kiss. He even weighs it. In the latter effort he arrives at the conclusion that persons kiss on t'he lips from habit. To excite the same sensations, he affirms, it is necessary to impress a kiss equal to the weight of two mil ligrams on the forehead, temples, nose and cheeks, three milligrams on the palm of the hand, five milligram* on the lips or eyelids and fifteen mil ligrams on the index finger. “In the white race,” he continues, "the kiss may be a sign of love or merely friendship. But with the yel low peoples the kiss is reserved to lovers or man and wife.” Kissing an Acquired Art Dr. Malespin says kissing is an ac quired art and unknown in many lands. He adds: “It is the union of two wKk simultaneously a myriad of settt'i ments and sensations—love, desire, fear, respect, purity, abandonment. “The centuries have modified and petrified the soul of man. Although in our day one judges a people's de gree of culture by their kissing and the kiss has become the mirror of society, it remains in the last analy sis plain, barbarous Nature seeking 1 to satisfy the brutality and violence of Its desires.” Dr. Malespine says “the kiss is the first manifestation of love; sim ply another and more advanced man ifestation of the sense of touch than the handshake. And it is from the sense of touch that all our other senses are derived. Must Be Served Hot According to the professor, a kiss can be very disagreeable if It is cold. One’s lips should be warm, he asserts, to get full value. After ten pages of learned discus sion on whether any one without * sense of taste could hope to derive pleasure from kissing, the savant says kissing is an acquired habit be cause no newly born baby under stands anything about It. “Despite all rules, despite all dan gers, the kiss will persist and form a part of our very nature," he con cludes. “Society models and modi fies it, but its source is profounder than, our being. It is one of those ■instinctive gestures, mysterious like our life and our soul. Woman Is Accused Os Smuggling Pistol Which Shot Sheriff MEMPHIS, Tenn., Dec. 2.—Ed ward B. Kelly, youngest of the trio of alleged highwaymen and bank robbers who escaped from the Shel by county jail here Tuesday after a pistol fight in which George Reeves, a jailer, was killed, Thurs day, confessed according to the po lice, that the pistol with which Reeves was shot to death was smuggled into the jail by a wom an. COLDS ■ 9|p Z /|\ X '/iiip'iiiv '/ip "Pape’s Cold Compound” is } Quickest Relief Known Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blow ing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” taken every two hours until- three doses are taken usually breaks any com right up. The very first dose opens clogged nostrils and the air passages of the head; stops nose running; relieves the \headache, dullness, feverishness. “Pape’s Cold Compound” coats “nly a few cents at arug stores. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, con tains no quinine—Insist upon Pape’s! (Advt.)