Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, December 16, 1920, Page 2, Image 2

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2 wwi Resinol heals itching skin troubles Resinol Ointment usually stops itch ing at once. It quickly and easily heals most cases of eczema, rash or similar distressing skin eruption, not due to serious internal conditions. Physicians prescribe Resinol Ointment regularly so you need not hesitate to try it B Resinol Soap should usually be used with Resinol Ointment tc prepare the skin to receive the Resinol medication. Resino Soap and Resinol Ointment art sold by all druggists. Genuine Army Flannel Shirts, V 2 Usual Price Manufactured by the factory that made many thousands of the regulation shirts for Uncle Sam’s boys. Army colors Khaki ■/i;' 1 "''" nnd Drab. These -Tv _ sil ' rts 11 iw usually sold \ y at $5-00. By purchas “ti XC . ing the entire factory _ stock we are able to txtl i ' offer you these shirts ,1 ’ ' for % usual price or ♦1: - $5.00 for two. Sin- I 4’* gle shirts $2.75 each. .! ■ ' We also purchased ”1 from this factory the T r f . entire Ibt of the grays *J; L—fc and blues, old pop- ; Tj F*"“ u ' 1 ' ular war colors. As • L t a matter of good faith Prt— fli-j iL mail us a deposit of t H lift" »* v — *I.OO on each shirt or t B 81-Ja dered, balance on de- N.I livery. State neck band 1 $2.75 each size and color desired. 1 Two for <B's nn We will ship color TWO ior wan t e d if possible, 1 but reserve the right to substitute other, colors, with the privilege on your part to return for exchange if unsatisfactory. Kingsley Army Shoe Company sX 8858 Cottage Grove Ave., Dept. M-206, Chicago, 111. Don’t Freeze r-Burn Wood—i You must burn coal or wood. Coal is scarce and high priced. Wood is plenti ful and cheap. Get a WITTE Drag Saw. flk Cut your wood for almost nothing. You can get delivery if you buy kAastrf now and the lowest price. W^ JE^« x * ,iS, TheWITTE IGESgf Arm Swing Saw\j§By* fe Lever Controlled. Yon Push to Start—Pull to stop. Any speed you want in starting or stopping. A fast cutting out. fit with high power 4-cycle engine. Cuts much faster than former rigs. Cash or Easy Payments. Sold on lifetime guarantee. WITTE TREE SAW EQUIPMENT Latest Out—Most Practical—Costs Uss Makes the Log Saw a Tree Saw. Quick change. *34.03 Extra. Cuts trees clear down. Only one rig to handle. Branch Buis Saw for saw ing top wood, only *23.30. Why Pay mare? Write far Log and Tree Saw Catalog FREE. Whte Engine Works 2652 Oakland Ave., Kansas City, Mo. 2652 Empire BuQj„ Pittsburgh. Pa. Let’s I Jhesurewqy to ist °6 eHnto<a FISH z BRAND i Reflex Slicker j 1 \ Then? isa FISH Ji| / /£' \ \/ H x for every kind of • j wel work or sport AJTOWER CO. ESTABLISHED 1634 *»’ . f [ BOSTON MASS. 1 S»s’* ° A O UYV IfTl Y ?kT Genuine. >ame on ZA >rl KI IM each Tablet. Five S grains; 200 for 81.10 Postpaid. Sent anywhere. 4<M) tablets <2.00. FREE catalog. Nationally adver tised. MERIT CHEMICAL CO., Box 558. Memphis, Tenn. An Important Letter TAMPA, FLA. —“My mother has always been a firm advocate of Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, as it has served many a good purpose in her experience with it. I, too, have used it grW i mo HraßAtw Wj&afe^S «»> ! >t»<\>S>^U^F^ r collected. All women, especially mothers, cannot make a mistake in using the ‘Favorite Prescription.’ ” —Mrs. LAVINA DEESON, 1307 Tampa Street. Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a remedy that any ailing woman can safely take because it is pre pared from roots, does not contain alcohol or narcotics. Its ingredients are printed on wrapper. Send 10 cents for trial package of Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription tablets to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel, !10. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.— (Advt.) factories "Positive!) only feathoi factory n -ountrv .ellinp direct Be wars . 'nutators Bwfrest savfnjcs guaranteed Anv »ffei delivered ;O 1) Moth JKgr^'^rvF. ,Jsh N *ng Dnwn--Not One Penny Satisfaction guaranteed ->i eon don oav jif V\ ac Quibbling Get voui cops >f out book today Why pay high prices v \ IL buy Inferioi thicken beds? Sleen on sanitary aealthfui odorless, new {B*ll I Pfl MM U- feather beds Save Money buy direct at factory prices from »nrlt« iffl’A-HJW Factories Hurrv write now for out BIG BOOK- -mailed Free S & taa JJSr wily Bedding Factories Dept. 319, Nashville, ienn?***w < SAY CONDITIONS IN KOREA ARE STILL CONTINUING BY JUNIUS B. WOOD (Special Cable to the Chicago Daily News Foreign Service, by Leased Wire to The Atlanta Journal.) (Copyright, 1920.) TOKIO, Dec. 14.—Representatives of several foreign governments in Tokio are Inclined to doubt the state ment of the Japanese foreign office that Colonel Mizumachi’s sensational letter to the Canadian Presbyterian missionaries “embodies merely his own personal views and opinions.” ■ According to information they have ■ received from their nationals in I Korea, conditions similar to those ; complained of are continuing. The Christian educational work there has been discussed semi-officially, though without the same military directness and lack of camouflage. During a conference between the director of education in Korea and Bishop Her bert Welch, of the Methodist church, several days prior 10 the publication of the Mizumachi letter, the same policy that the Christian schools support the Japanese political poli cies was proposed, much to Bishop Welch's surprise. Having been present at Lung Ching Tsun at the time the writer can de scribe the circumstances. Mizumachi. who was formerly Japanese military attache at Washington, called at the residence of the Rev. Dr. Foote, head of the Canadian missionaries in Chentao district, and presented him the letter, requesting a reply in writ ing. Thus far Dr. Foote has not replied, on account of the serious in ternational character of the letter. He is awaiting instructions from the of ficials of the church in Toronto and from the British consul general at Mukden, to whom copies of the let ter were sent. ■ British residents in Japan are piqued by the letter’s comparison of the Dyer Amritsar with the present Japanese expedition and by the sug gestion of Buddhist interference with British administration in India and the reference to disturbance in Ireland. The missionaries contend that the letter is an admission that Japanese soldiers killed innocent Ko reans and corroborates their charges of atrocities. e The following day Colonel Mizu machis’ commission visited Shogan do and obtained its first view of the results of the Japanese operations. Investigation on the spot was'con fined to establishing the fact through questions put to survivors that supporters of the Korean revo lution formerly lived in the village and did not refer to the acts of the soldiers on the occasion when half the male residents were killed and much property was burned. On subsequent days Colonel Mizu machi visited the excellent Canadian Presbyterian hospital at Lung Ching Tsun, leaving a letter addressed to Dr. Martin, superintendent in com mand of the work and containing a contribution of 100 yen (SSO). He also arranged a dinner with the Japanese consul at which eight Eu ropeans living in Lung Ching Tsun, some Chinese customs officials, two priests from the French Catholic missions in Korea were invited guests. These persons were includ ed in order that they might meet the Japanese civil and military offi cials and leading citizens. Colonel Mizumachi’s letter, which was accepted as reflecting the Jap anese view of missionary activities in Korea, was presented several weeks ago to the Rev. Dr. William R. Foote, head of the Canadian Presbyterian mission. After refer ring to the burning by the Japanese of schools and churches which he said had been used by Korean mal contents. the colonel said he be lieved the missionaries’ home gov ernment would hope and believe that they would not give’ aid to the mal contents and thereby disturb the friendly relations between their country and Japan. He referred to the Indian and Irish problems of Great Britain and concluded with a blunt warning that the success or failure of the Presbyterians work in Korea depended “solely on your willingness to co-operate with the Japanese government.” GALLSTONE TROUBLES A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad dock, Bos 55201, Kansas City, Mo., tells of improved method of treating catarrhal inflammation of the Gall Bladder and Bile Ducts associated with Gallstones from which remarkable results are, reported. Write for booklet and free trial plan.—(Advt.) May Pave Part of National Highway CORDELE, Ga„ Dec. 14.—Follow ing notice from the state highway department in Atlanta that it in tends taking over in its entirety the maintenance of the National High way from the northern boundary of Crisp county to the southern boun dary of Turner, Chairman Sam C. Bird, of the local county commission ers, has called a meeting of the county commissioners concerned to be held In Cordele on December 21 for the purpose of entering into co operation with the department in its purpose to take up maintenance of the highway. It may mean paving in the imme diate future. to the best of advan tage for woman’s trou bles, and when my own daughter reaches womanhood I will give it to her, so firm is my conviction of its many virtues. The purpose of my using it, was for irregularity. My physi cal condition was very much run-down did not care much to stir about or work. I took the medicine right along without missing a dose until my gen eral troubles were all THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. THIS PHOTOGRAPH WAS MADE THROUGH SHEET OF PURE GOLD fls BsIH fiS glffi I- SSil B l, M IS /W ■ CHICAGO. —Did you ever seen a sheet of gold so thin that it cost a dollar in labor to make it thin, yet worth only one cent as gold—a sheet of gold so thin that you can take a photograph through it? Gene Cour, Chicago, photographer, who takes movies for Kinogram, con ceived the idea of photographing through gold. He put a sheet of it over his camera lens and snapped this picture of Miss Mae Rasens. Take a look at it. It’s gold leaf, the kind you see on monogrammed stationery, on book edges, on signs and on domes of buildings. (The man who pounded the gold so thin is Edward S. Davidson, oldest gold beater In America. He has Why B eDiscourgaed ? Did You Know That— Cutting told a friend: “Oppor tunity is everywhere but men seem to be blind.” » • « • A boy in England had been run over by the cars, and the bright blood spurted from a severed ar tery. A crowd stood helpless watch ing him die. Another boy pushed his way to the sufferer’s side* took his handkerchief out and stopped the bleeding bv tying a hard knot just above the wound. The applause and praise he re ceived induced him to change his mind from being a cabinet maker to the study of surgery. Eight years later Astley Cooper became the foremost surgeon of Great Britain. • • • Hawthorne once dined with Long fellow, bringing a friend of his from Salem. After dinner the friend told Longfellow he had been trying to get Hawthorne to write a story based on a legend current in Acadia which dealt with a girl who, in the dispersion of the Acadians. was sep arated from her lover, and passed her life in waiting and seeking for him, only finding him later dying in a hospital when both were old. “Hawthorne replied to me,” said the friend, “thai the story was tame and unworthy of serious effort.” Thinking intently for a moment, Longfellow turned to the friend and DARING NEW YORK BANDITS USE NEW “MUFFLED GUN” NEW YORK.—The three business like bandits who found Bergen coun ty, N. J., easy picking in a series of hold-ups show no inclination to leave the town. Late one afternoon they held up the Ridgewood Country club despite the fact that every nook and corner of the county was being combed by deputy •sheriffs, motorcy cle policemen, town marshals and small boys armed with shotguns. Lights had just been switched on for the evening when a car drove up to the front of the clubhouse. Two pudgy young men walked up the front steps and were met at the door by Jess Bruen, the steward. Jess saw their revolvers first and their masks next and decided to take no chances. , While he stood with face to the wall the men went through the cash register, got S3O an ddeparted. Bruen Jail Search Shows Montgomery Suspect Wears Many Clothes MONTGOMERY.—HeId at the Montgomery county jail, at the order of Sheriff King Murphy, of Butler county, as Dr. Homer B. Knott, es caped convict from the state peni tentiary, where he was serving a life sentence for the murder of Emory Oakes at Wetumpka, *a man giving his name as Floyd Mitchell, was declared not to be the escaped felon by officials of the peniten tiary who made a thorough exam ination of the man. Mitchell, when stripped for exam ination removed three coats, two top shirts, a vest, one sweater, two suits of underwear, two pair of trousers and two pair of sox. He only had one pair of shoes, how ever. Disposition of the prisoner had not been determined upon. Sheriff Murphy having returned to Green ville, but previously the official had Stated that he would hold the man for Butler court on a charge of va grancy as he had been arrested after loitering about the town. Savannah Man Dies in Oil Tank SAVANNAH, Ga., Dec. 14. —Mr. John Brennah, aged twenty-one years, met death today in a verv peculiar manner: He was drowned in a partly fille doil tank of the Gulf Refining company on Hutchin son island. He went down into the tank to make some repairs and was overcome wit hthe gas it contained. He sank down into two feet of oil and was drowned when pulled out. The fire department was called and used a pulmotor in an effort to re suscitate him, but failed. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children n Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of just finished 50 years at the same job. Davidson says it is a remarkable fact that gold beating is done today by the same methods as in the days when King Solomon’s temple was given a coat of gold “wallpaper.” The sheet of gold through which the photograph was taken is one three-hundred-thousands of an inch thick, so filmy it will vanish if you rub it between your fingers. First it is rolled to one-four-thousandth of an inch thick and then pounded, with a 17-pound hammer at the rate of 12 blows per minute for seven hours. The thin gold plates under the hammer are enclosed in the only substance that will stand such ter rific blows—a pouch made of the oppendixes of 480 oxen. asked permission to weave the story into a poem. This was granted. Three months later Longfellow produced Evangeline, or the Exile of the Acadians. * * • The story of Shylock and his pound of flesh remained unknown and uninteresting until Shakes peare, thrilled by the moral of it, touched it with his magic pen and transformed it into a realistic drama known the entire world over. • * • For thousands of years people had known that any solid im mersed in a glass of water filled to the brim would cause the water to overflow. But they made no use of this knowledge until Archimedes saw it and perceived an easy method of finding the cubical contents of ob jects, however irregular in shape. He wrote an important book on the subject which is used to this day. • • * For a thousand years people had known there was such a thing as lightning. It had dazzled their eyes and the thunder had jarred their ears since the days of Adam in a vain at tempt to call their attention to the tremendous power of electricity, yet no one paid practical heed until Franklin, by a simple experiment of the lightning rod, proved that the strange heavenly light is but one manifestation of a resistless yet controllable force, as easily han dled as air or water. was alone in the clubhouse at the time. Some time later three men in an automobile held up and robbed the occupants of another car on Market street, a country road running from Hackensack to Paterson. Sheriff Kinzley, of Bergen county, was convinced that the five robberies of Saturday night and the two of Sunday, were committed by the same trio. Nearly every policeman and detective in Bergen county was being used in a search for the men, and a number of pos; %-■ which have been organized are com posed entirely of indignant citizens. The revolvers poked in the face of Jess Bruen at the Ridgewood Coun try club are the same revolvers, it is said, used by the men Saturday night—blue steel weapons equipped with Maxim silencers. Youth Kidnaps Himself But Fails to Get Reward HYDE PARK. VL—The demand on Mrs. Maude Laplant for S6OO ransom for the return of her missing seven teen-year-old son, Grover. three WQeks ago, was an invention of the youth himself, according to a con fession that he is alleged to have made to W. E. Tracy, state’s attor ney, of Lamoille county, and E. C. Brown, private detective. On November 20 Mrs. Laplant found on her doorstep a box con taining a note saying that if she wished to see her son. who had been on a visit in Richmond, she must place the ransom money in the box and leave it unguarded or ‘‘his body would be disposed of.” That same evening young Laplant was found apparently dazed and numb with cold ina sugar house not far from his home. He said that while walking home from the rail road station three men in a closed automobile seized him and knocked him senseless with a blow on the head. Later, he said, he escaped from a tree to which he had been tied, and wandered to the sugar house. After the boy had confessed to day to the state’s attorney that he wrote the note himself he was ad vised to go home and ask his mother’s forgiveness. He promised to do so. Boston School Seats Are Hard on Trousers BOSTON.—A mother’s letter com plaining that her young son had worn out three pairs of pants in three months on chairs in the pub lic schools was answered by Chair man Joseph P. Lomasney, of the schoolhouse commission, with the statement that $44,100 had been spent this year to keep the chairs and desks smooth. He said the boy’s chair had been' specially sand papered at the re quest of his father, who said the youngster was hard on pants. All things considered, the chairman said the boys afid not the chairs must be held responsible. TOM HARRISON IS HELD BY JURY FOR KILLING HIS WIFE GREENVILLE, S. C„ Dec. 14. — Startling disclosures were made in the testimony adduced Monday at the inquest over the body of Mrs. Tom (Gertrude) Harrison, who died Satur day night as a result of a pistol shot wound she received about 1 o’clock Friday morning at her home in a prominent residential section, when Arthur “Monk” Young also was shot four times, and Tom Harrison, wealthy former club owner, was ar rested in connection with the affair A local newspaper man deputized at the inquest Sunday to take the evi dence did not transcribe his copv and have the testimony available foi publication until Monday. Police of ficers who were called to the home on East Washington street said Mrs. Arthur Young, who admitted she had been in the house at the time of the shooting, and whom the police found lying on the street near the house, were the principal witnesses exam ined. Following the inquest, the cor oner’s jury returned a verdict in structing the officers to hold Tom ! Harrison for the kiling of his wife. Policeman Burroughs testified that .vhen officers went to the second floor )f the Harrison home they found Mrs. Harrison lying on the floor flat on her back with a trunk over her body. On the other side of the room, he said, they saw the body of Arthur Young. He said when they put Mrs. Harrison on the bed. her husband, who who was described as being “pretty drunk,” came to the bed, sat down and put his arm around Mrs. Harrison and said. “It was an acci dent, honey, wasn’t it? Tell them all about it.” She was quoted by the witness as having replied, “No, Tom, it wasn’t an accident." Several times while in the room with Mrs. Harri son Tom said, “Honey, it was an accident,” and she said once. “Tom, you didn’t catch any man in the room with me,” according to witness Bur roughs. Witness said Young had an un opened pocket knife near him. Mrs. Young said about 9 o clock Thursday night she received a tele phone call at her apartments, and that Mrs. Harrison, speaking, said, “Monk (Mrs, Young’s husband) is here. Can’t you come over? If you will I will come over and get you. She said she found Mr. Young and Mr Harrison eating supper, appar ently the best of friends. She said she and the others all took a few drinks of gin Young, reputed to be champion oilliard player of the southeast, still is in a critical condition and has about an even chance between death and recovery. Harrison, who has has retained counsel and is maintaining a policy of silence, has made no move to Obtain bail. Foreign Made Toys Being Replaced by ‘‘Made in America” WASHINGTON, Dec. 14.—Some idea of the extent to which foreign made toys have been replaced m America by the home-made article is given by the estimate of- the Amer ican Forestry association that close to 30,000,000 feet of lumber was used this year by American toy makers. By adding tlie millions of toys made from this wood to the enormous quantity made of other material, the Forestry association says some idea of the immensity of the industry will be gained. If the buying public will “look for the label,” it adds, the foreign toy will be eliminated. “The main consideration which holds wood in its place as toy ma terial is not cheapness," says the as sociation, “though that has some thing to do with it. Articles of large size would be too heavy If made ot metal, but many articles are made of wood because it is the best, irre spective of cost or weight. Sleds are a good example. Children are the arbiters of toy kinds and style. They imitate what they see around them and toymakers recognize this fact. The turer supplies what the child wants by making a class of objects which may be designated as educational. Another class, Imitating things seen in real life, is recognized as archi tectural. A third has to do with trades and the tools and machines for carrying them on. A well defined group is based on the use of musi cal instruments. Boats, rafts, cajioes, and such things as float and are use ful have been responsible for toys based on water craft. Children are familiar with furni ture and they easily recognize two classes, one for the kitchen and one for the living room, and these go under the list of furniture toys. Ani mals and birds and creeping things form another class grouped as nat ural history. Still another kind which Is very common belongs in the class of games and amusements. The waste problem In toy making Is not a serious one. says the Forestry association, because most of the pieces used are small and what does not ,do for one thing will, as a rule, do for something else. Baxter Woolridge Pardoned by Roberts NASHVILLE, Tenn., Dec. 14.—Bax ter Woolridge. Memphis insurance man, who ran down and killed two Memphis nurses and injured a third while driving his automobile in an alleged intoxicated condition, was pardoned Monday by Governor Rob- Woolridge was sentenced to six months in the Shelby county work house for voluntary manslaughter. His case was appealed to the su preme court, but Woolridge accepted the sentence before the court had given an opinion. The pardon was granted on the recommendation of the trial judge, eleven members of the jury, and the father of one of the dead nurses. It was stated that he had already paid $9,000 to rela tives of the dead women. Faces for the Movies ir Players Co., Has Place lor Every Age, Type and Nationality, may have some unrecognized talent which will enable you to :ome a movie actor perhaps win fame and fortune for you and place you in inks as a afar. The Popular Players Company are going to make a feature in the popular new love story “The Dominant Power. ” To eliminate the high y actors who have become established in stardom the cast is to be selected and descriptions of inexperienced persons. t &uu unaracters Necessary Fees Necessary I Wfe* The filming of this great story will require about Adaptability is the prime requisite. three hundred characters. It will be necessary to procure « wide Popular Players Company is absolutely sincere in variety of typesand many different nationalities as it is the desire its desire to secure new talent for their cast. We -'-'d °f Popular Players Company to make the production a film know that there is more excellent, undiscovered uKL- that will establish their reputation for high class pictures. talent than has ever been discovered and developed I R, -JC E , ec ;T iti V h . e ' iesir - e<>tlh ' !<: Tf any ±Smd , <i>r ; XA «high class production any inexperienced characters selected for y f the cast will be placed under training with an expert director, all __ —— _™ —™ __ Cup expenses paid, until they are competent to take part assigned them. ESiil EXZs BS& kSb HSQ 1.-uii® Eufal Util Eli. Wh Fascinating Work-Blj Pay I " A,L I —— ■ ■ ■ g POPULAR PLAYERS COMPANY Popular Players Company will arrange for the || 307 Kyan Building. Kansas city. Mo. careful accompanying and chaperoning of members of their Gentlemen: Pleasesendmeyourcharacterization blank /gpr /) cast. Characters selected will have all expences paid to this ■ 80 1 can enter my name for a place onjhe cast of you: £ UL city and to the mountains where the film is to be made. The g coming feature production “The Dominant Power.” mn jMWr experience, the costumes or the traveling will not cost you a tingle cent from the time you leave home. In fact every ■ *r_ TO _ An» member will be well paid for their time and work. rvurrie... siyc. Characters will be selected from photographs and characterization » . « blanks. The necessary blanks for entering your name for a place on the cast g naarestr...— of "The Dominant Power” will fie furnished free on receipt of this coupon ® properly filled out. If convenient send snapshot or photo with blank. jgj Lown.„.btdlC hmm ■ NOTICE —Co not fill In thl» blank unt.ao you are ■ ■ ■■ " ■ abooiutoly sincere in dealring to enter th* movhfc The Tri-Weekly Journal’s Him con A Department for People Who DO Things 1 bf. OJW!| fc' ' W 'LWSSZBACH. SEGUIN, Tex.—Harry McLeary Wurzbach is the first Republican elected to represent Texas in con gress for twenty-four years. In 1898 a Populist fusion broke the Democratic line, but only temporar ily. Wurzbach’s opponent was Carlos Bee, a brother-in-law of Postmaster Burleson. As county judge in Guade loupe county, Wurzbach points with pride to a reduction of the tax rate from sixty to twenty-five cents. WAR-TIME LAWS KILLED IN HOUSE, SENT TO SENATE W'ASHINGTON, Dec. 14.—Specula tion today as to its probable fate in the senate followed the passage in the house late yesterday without an opposition vote of the Volstead res olution repealing most of the war time legislation. The repeal measure was broadened at the last moment by the adoption of an amendment including the Leyer food control act. As it goes before the senate, the measure leaves for repeal only the trading with the enemy act, the war finance corporation act, measures dealing with issuance of Liberty and Victory bonds, and the District of Columbia rent act. The resolution declares “any act of congress that by its terms is in force only during the existence of a state of war and a limited time thereafter shall be construed and ad ministered on the date which this resolution becomes effective. The measure, as adopted, is practi cally identical with that passed by congress just before the adjourn ment of the last session and vetoed by President Wilson. The measure now goes to the seri ate, where its speedy passage is preL dicted. Its effect will be to take away from the president a number of extraordinary powers which were given him during the war and which permitted exercise of discretion in matters which before then had re quired consent of congress. Most of the laws setting up war-time ma chinery were to be repealed automat ically after peace was established. Theoretically the country is still at war, and the laws had remained in effect. The resolution wipes them off the books. Pensioners’ Money Will Be Delayed SUMMERVILLE, Ga„ Dec. 14. The pensioners of Chattooga county, as well as Georgia, as approved un der the law of 1919, to whom a pen sion of SIOO for 1930 will be paid will not receive their money before March 1, 1921, according to a let ter just received by Ordinary J. P. Johnston, of this county, from J. W. Lindsey, pension commissioner of Georgia. Mr. Lindsey stated in his letter to Ordinary Johnston that he had hoped earlier in the fall to make this payment to the pensioners by November 1, but that was before the reduction of the price of cotton and other products. Few seem to be paying their taxes for 1920 promptly, according to Com missioner Lindsey, and that is the only source from which the state derives its money. •of • foot« minute. ■Ji | Sonrfto'ftyforßlgSpeclalOfferudLo'' hwGiril E iree o Pr;c ? tJia CITAWA, tbo Ono- wheelbarrow. 4-Cycle Froot Proof En- Man Saw, the first made and sold direct cine has balanced crank shaft—pul Ja over _ from factory to user. Greatest labor eaver 4 H-P. Magneto equipued; tio batteries and money-maker ever Invented. Saws needed. Snrehf Clntch control!- OTTAWA CAW tootortond ttop BOW 2Z3; md other machinery. Pulley furnished. Cash or Easy Payments Shipped directs® ——— ■ from factory, E 30 Bays Trial o waiting—no delay. Lettno ■ —.- OTTAWAeawyonrloueandpay E for itself as you use It.- 10-YCAR OUARANTU. H Coo the OTTAWA at werk on your fam one ■ and you will never give it ep. Thouaanda la eao. ■ every owner • boceter. Oct-sawo any other on the ■ narket. Send today for FBEE BOOK and Special OSte. ■ TAWA MFG'CO.;BSS Wood St, Ottawa, Kan. | THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10. 1920. MORE BOOSTERS . VOICE SUPPORT OF WORLD FAIR The army of boosters for the pro posed world’s fair in Atlanta in 1925, is steadily growing, according to reports from M. D. Gleason, who Is working in co-operation with the world’s fair citizens committee head ed by Councilman R. A. Gordon. Mr. Gleason has appeared before a large number of civic and fraternal bod ies throughout the city, and has ob tained a practically unanimous voice of approval from representative At lantians in all walks of life. It is now proposed that the fair be held for six months, beginning in ; May, 1925, and that preparations be begun immediately for making It one of the most important events in the history of the city. The big fair is expected to accom plish a number of worthy objects which will affect not only the south, but the whole country. The last world exposition was held at San Francisco in 1915, and in 1925 it is expected that the time will be ripe for another great assembly. This may be in celebration of world peace following the great war, and can serve as a great agency in climax ing the reconstruction era in Amer ica, according to present plans. The necessity of further advertis ing the industrial and agricultural development of the south and for Im pressing upon outsiders the great possibility of future development, will also be an object of the Atlanta world’s fair. It is expected that such an enterprise will attract a large number of desirable settlers to the south, and that it will promote not only the industrial but the agricul tural welfare of Georgia and other states. It is believed also that the world exposition will mean a great deal toward the development of the Latin- American trade in the south, a trade for which Atlanta is one of the nat ural centers. The following organizations were visited by Mr. Gleason during the past week, all of them pledging unan imous moral suport of the world’s fair idea: Atlanta post No. 1, Amer ican Legion; Southern Fertilizer as sociation, Capital City club, Atlanta Hotel Men’s association, Atlanta branch No. 229, Grand fraternity; Fulton lodge No. 14, Daughters of Rebecca; East Atlanta council. Jun- Order United American Mechan ics, local union No. 2060, street car conductors and motormen. Order of Express Messengers and Clerks, Southeastern Passenger association, Brotherhood of Railway Clerks, At lanta Federation of Trades, Liberty tent No. 38, Knights of the Macca bees, executive committee eight lodges of Railway Clerks and Em ployes, Atlanta lodge No. 18, Loyal Order of Moose. Farmers Are Urged To Protect Cotton Against Weather J. J. Brown, commissioner of agri culture, Tuesday was preparing a let ter to the farmers through the state urging protection of cotton against weather damage. “Information has come to the de partment of agriculture from many sources,” said Comihissioner Brown, “that baled cotton is being left ex posed to the weather. . “After a farmer has toiled and sweated to produce cotton, it is the height of folloy to leave it exposed. Every time the rain falls on it. the grade of the cotton depreciates and the value goes down. We are earn estly urging our farmers, first, to place their cotton in warehouses ev erywhere, and preferably in bonded warehouses; second, if warehouse storage is not available, to protect the cotton on their premises.” Cotton can be fairly well protected, the commissioner said; by lifting: it off the ground, stacking it on end. etting a ditch arond it to trn th< water, and laying over it a shelter o! Giri’s Caller Shot By Her Brother BIRMINGHAM. Ala.. Dec. 14.—W. H. Alexander is in a critical condi tion in a hospital, Mrs. Jim Tyler is suffering from a fractured hip and Lon Tyler is in jail at Bessemer, near here, charged with shooting Alexander at Bluff Ridge Sunday aft ernoon. The shooting occurred at the home of the Tylers, when Alexander was calling on Miss Tyler. Her brother entered, and without warning, be gan firing at Alexander, according to arresting officers. Two bullets took effect, one in the lower abdomen, the other in the thigh. It is stated that after Alexander fell, Tyler beat him over the head with the pistol. Alex ander was not armed, it is said. Mrs. Tyler suffered her injury when she and her husband attempt ed to disarm their son. During the scuffle, Mrs. Tyler was thrown to the ground. (Advertisement.) MRS. ELLA LEFTWICK, another Kansas City woman whose remarkable restoration by Tanlac has astonished her neighbors, many of whom have begun taking the Master Medicine. “They all agree with me that it is the grandest medi cine on earth,” says Mrs. Leftwick. - /-I < “A number or my friends, after seeing the wonderful good Tanlac did me, began taking the medicine, and now they all agree with me that it is the grandest medicine on earth,•• said Mrs. Ella Leftwick, 722 Pile* St., Kawsas City, Kan. * “Tanlac completely restored my health,” she said, “and just seemed to give me a new lease on life. If I could talk personally with every woman suffering as I did, I would urge them to take this medicine. “For the first time in three years I am able to eat and enjoy three healthy meals every day and not suf fer in the least with indigestion aft- ♦ erwards. 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SPECIAL: Opening* for a few Warehouse Managers: $30.00 a day. Write for details . fl 3ril || f FALLING SICKNESS BUI sufferer* from Fits, Epilepsy, Fail Sickness or Nervous Troubles will be sent AB- 1 I SOLUTELY FREE a large bottle of W. H. Peeke’s Trsat- I I Went. For thirty years, thousands of sufferer* have used W.H. I I Peeke’s Treatment with excellent results. Give Ex pre** and P.O. | I Address, W. H. PEEKE, 9 Cedar Street, N. Y, | PEACH & APPLE AT BARGAIN PRICES I TO PLANTERS . Small or Large by Express. Freight.or Parcel P«,| Pear Plum. Cherry Bernes Grapes Nute Shade afiu Ornamental Trees Vines and Shrubs Catalog FREE. TENN. NURSERY CO. CLEVELAND. TENN