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PAPERS YOU TOOK TO GeTj DID I \ Vm6AM,PA«? THE eXAMP.AT.~4 MARKING WK I £ JwesV MARK ? ' <
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TRYING /te, & KVUI 'Jwa'K.
on the wLnSrx fflli ar KiHW lEO7W; p///ir f/Af
police bVt? Man ® m wpEK -~-fF -- • Zvz® fW? Bn %
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BYBUDFISHEF •<"- I1 1 A fl/// W t I /MfflLlliH I///m& Wca!l 1 -»
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“Be Born a Twin,”
a
Is Advice Given
By One of Oldest
JACKSON. Mich. —“Don't worry
| and if possible be born a twin,”
I advice for a lons and happy
| life, given by Mrs. Lucy Anne
• Spencer ®nd Mrs. Mary Anne Case,
■ eighty-flve. They claim to be the
J oldest living twins in the United
i States.
I The two sisters boast a family
tree sprouting several twin
branches. Their grandmother was
a twin and she lived to be 100
years old. Her uncle was the fa
ther of twins, Mrs. Carrie Carr
i Burtless and Mrs. Kate Carr
: Thorn, both still living and in
good health. One brother. Caleb
f Carr, became the father of twins,
and their sister gave , birth to
■ triplets.
A tradition brought over from
England by the twin-mother.
BERLIN EXCITED
OVER RUMORS OF
KAISER’S RETURN
BERLIN. Jan. 18.—Berlin was ex
ited today over reports from The
Hague that the former German kai
ser had been requested to leave
Doorn because jot his part in an al
.eged monarchist plot to restore the
Elohenzoflerns to power.
Reports here said an official re
quest had been made'by The Nether
ands on the kaiser and the crown
arince to leave their asylums in Hol
land, but there was no indication
:hat preparations had been made to
obey what practically was an order
One version of the plots, which
vere said to have been developed in
Amsterdam with personal servants
of the royal family, was that tne
■;rown prince would make a surprise
jntry into Berlin at the head of
oyal monarchist soldiers. The loyal
ly of the men wa s said to have been
guaranteed by officiers.
Radical papers here apparently be
ieved the reports and commented on
:he formation of the royalist party
md other organizations favorable to
i monarchy.
Recent interviews by the crown
orince in which he described him
self as a simple family man, inter
ested only in the education of his
•hildren were looked upon by the
iberals as part of a “smoke screen”
'or the actual plotting.
Frederick ’.Vilhelm in a recent In
erview declared he was exceedingly
mor now, and that he was home
sick for Germany. He declared he
vanted to help the present regime
?>store his country to her - place in
he world.
"1 nave been forbidden to visit my
■arents at Doorn,” he declared. "Our
>ponents sti I believe us capable of
■ ting the world on fire ”
WARNING
Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are
aot getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for
21 years, and proved safe by millions. —Say “Bayer”!
[ $ •
SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an “unbroken package” of
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tions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu
matism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American!
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents —Larger packages.
Agplrln !■ the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldester of Sallcyllcacld
WET FEET BRING COUGHS AND COLDS
Until entirely rid of a cough or cold, look out They are a source of danger.
Just a few doses of Pe-ru-na I Oil M l*. ave
taken soon after exposure or I B 8 I gtalrii A PE-RU-NA and its astomsh
first manifestation of trouble I g I R g ln « in the relief of
will usually tireaa a cola or c ■ «ai E catarrhal diseases. The pro-
dissUrte in a hurry tha most f per medicine to have-on hand
persistent cough. | 111 Will KIIWO EfflirjMeyEoaeUy (or everyday ilia
TABLETS OR LIQUID ' SOLD EVERYWHERE
•S' KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE
BEAUTIFUL PREMIUMS EASILY EARNED
gfo, —Send no money—simply name and address.
Kg~Sl Merely give away FREE 12 beautiful art pic-
[e CA tures with 12 boxes of our famous White
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VL ..«/ Z^/tvia We will send you this Genuine American
KjflWS x>*-, ft: K Watdi, also Chain and Two Gold Shell Rings.
lAz-zlw ? according to offer in our premium catalog which
'Sggx z-~X V \Zzz Is you receive with the Salve. Millions are using
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t i P aiu « Be first in yo ur town—bi cash commission
®, 1 i THE *'<•'-nfj CHEMICAL CO.
IShr .I AEMafiA haSi w- Dept. i,. 225 Tyrone, Pa.
CywixoßrnwriwvwMMK-aXr«rvw«x.o ew- m [r
FARMERS BECOME AVIATORS
ON BIG MISSOURI TRACTS
i-.- : 7;;s v - W--. • l .... to. iZ --' > • ■s •
f-.f
Fx : -'X : >< Vi - j w ' • •;]
ii m i?' I
A farmers’ aero association, probably the first of its kind in the
world, has been formed at Sikeston, Mo. A colony of farmer-avia
tors, all with extensive tracts under cultivation, are using airplanes
to advantage in managing their big farms. There are a dozen or
more at''Sikeston with as many licensed farmer pilots. The photo
graph shotvs Leonard McMullin, one of the expert pilot farmers, with
his airplan'e and some of the farm products he transported in the
flying machine.
Knoxville Mills
Are Running Again
KNOXVILLE. Tenn., Jan. 18.—The
Knoxville cotton mills and Knoxville
Spinning company have resumed
work after being closed. Other tex
tile mills have more employes at
work, and officials report the future
looks more encouraging. ,
GIRL FROM ITALY
TRYING TO FIND
HER SWEETHEART
MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 18.—Last in a
strange land and among: strangers.
Signorina Bonino, a pretty maid, of
Genoa, Italy, besought the aid of
police and press in locating her
American lover, Arthur Kemp, who
met, wooed and won her heart
in sunny Italy.
Separated by a cruel fate when her
boat docked at Boston instead of
Baltimore, Signorina Bonino jour
neyed to Miami only to find no trace
of Kemp, who had left Italy a day
earlier on a government ship and is
supposed to have landed at Balti
more. She had expected to land at
Baltimore and find Kemp waiting
for her. They had planned to marry
at Baltimore, she said.
Search here was fruitless. No
trace of Kemp could be found by
police who took up the search at
the girl’s request.
“I thought Arthur’s home was
here,” said Signorina Bonino. “Btit
now, I’m not so certain —youn coun
try is so big, and 'there are so many
Miamis. Oh. what will I do?”
Tears filled her eyes as she talked.
The romance between the two, ac
cording to her story, dates back to
last summer when Kemp was sta
tioned at Genoa, with an American
detachment.
“He was so grand! I felp madly
in love with she said. ‘‘Sud
denly he was ordered to sail for
America.”
Kemp left Genoa on a government
ship December 6, and Signorina Bo-
I nino followed the next day on a pas
| senger boat which she thought would
dock at Baltimore, she said. In
stead, her ship put in at Boston.
‘‘The first night in your country
was a nightmare, I was so lonesome
• —I cried throughout the night,” she
said, as tears filled her childlike
eyes. Then, drying her eyes, she
added:
‘‘l love him —love him so much. I
hope you good men will help me find
him.”
Signorina Bonino, who is neatly
dressed, small of stature and very
pretty, said her parents in Genoa
were wealthy. She apparently is
well provided with fu.nds.
Mysterious Fire
In Newbern, N. C.
NEWBERN. N. C., Jan. 18. —Fire
j department officials here have asked
! the state insurance department to in
-1 vestigate a mysterious fire which ear
: ly today destroyed six residences and
i their contents here, entailing a loss
estimated at $25,000.
Man Makes Valuable
I
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
1 badly crippled natives completely
' cured by swallowing a little of this
i oil twice a day. Hundreds of let
ters from rheumatic sufferers have
been answered and oil sent them free
after he returned to America. Mr. P.
E. Wilkes, now spending the winter
at the Georgian Terrace hotel, Atlan
ta. Ga., can supply further informa
tion and some of the oil free.
(Advt.)
ami
Any Tri-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 postage.
New Questions
1— Do fish sleep?
2 How old is the world estimated
to be?
3 I have received a new series
of bonds fqr the third Liberty loan
and there was one coupon clipped off.
Will you tell me whether the bonds
were clipped by the government or
by the bank?
4 Has the use of cigarettes in
■reased since 1900?
5 How many hairs are there on a
uman head?
6 What are the love apples grown
n California?
7 What is the origin of the noun,
tip,” meaning a fee for service?
8— —Can you suggest an Indian name
for a suburban home. It stands on a
hill, overlooking the city?
9 What is meant by “The eye of
t. needle,” referred to in the New
Testament?
10— How many bushels of corn
.vere used for distilling before the
■ rohibition amendment, and since?
Questions Answered
1— Q. Could a balloon go up to a
height of 150 miles?
A. A balloon could be made which
could go up to about 150 miles
. here the atmosphere is mostly hy
'rogen. No instruments are now in
■xistence to measure this altitude.
2 Q. Is black the color of mourn
ing in all countries?
A. Black is not universally used
c.s a sign of mourning. South
Sea Islanders use black and white
.tripes, indicating sorrow and hope,
while in Ethiopia, a grayish brown,
ihe color of the earth, is worn. In
Persia, the mourning color is light
brown, and in Syria and Armenia,
sky blue, indicative of heaven. In
Turkey, it is violet, and in China,
white, as an emblem of hope.
3 Q. Why are the Appalachian
mountains called the "Folded Moun
tains?”
A. These mountains are so called
because they have been covered by
the plications or folds of th© rock
New “School of Crime’ f
Made Crooks of Children,
New York Police Say
NEW YORK. —A Fagin school o'
juvenile crime, with children trainee. 1
as'’narcotic salesmen and lookouts,
instead of pickpockets, was uncov
ered by the police recently, it is al
leged, in the campaign against the
drug evil now being waged by Spe
cial Deputy Commissioner Carlton
Simon.
Thomas Cusinino, nineten years
old, of 314 East Thirteenth street,
is accused of being at the head of
the newest juvenile school of crime.
He was arrested, charged with pos
sessing and selling narcotics. The
police also took in charge Joseph
Cusinino, twelve years old, a brother
of Thomas; Salvatore Cappedoro,
fourteen years old, of 356 East Thir
teenth street; Philip Tulotta, four
teen years old, of 223 First avenue;
Frank Salsille, fourteen years old, of
350 East Thirteenth street, and Sal
vator Jzodato, fifteen yeairs old, of
352 East Thirteenth street.
The younger Qusinino boy and Cap
pedoro are attending school. The
others are errand boys, it is said,
■ employed in various neighborhood es
tablishments.
The Cusinino boys are said to live
with their mother, who is now in the
hospital. Detectives Boylan, Moog,
Graham and Mooney, who made the
arrests, searched the Cusinino home,
and. it is said, found $2,000 worth
of drugs concealed in the davenport
and piano and various other places.
The drugs were in small bottles and
packages, selling for about sls each.
From confessions said to have been
TINIEST AUTO IN WORLD
RUNS LIKE REAL THING
No, it isn’t a toy that Miss Mary Sisk, of Los Angeles, is admir
ing. It is a miniature automobile, perfect in every detail, made by
i. A. Seefelder, of Los Angeles. Sure it runs!
layers which make up the crust of
the earth in this region. Some of
the strata or rock have been so
folded that they are practically on
end or upside down.
4 Q. We have a piece of wood
which produces a phosphorus glow.
What is the name of this wood?
A. Any wood which gives off a
phosphorescent glow when decaying
is known as fox-fire.
SQ. Is there a prophecy any
where in the Bible that the Jews will
yet inhabit Palestine?
A. The Old Testament contains
many prophecies which Jews con
strue to mean the final gathering
of the race in Palestine, such as
Jeremiah 11; Jeremiah 3:16-8; Hag
,gai 2:6-10; Malachi 3:1.
6Q. Are there any Confederate
soldiers buried at Arlington?
A. Both Confederate and Union
soldiers are buried at Arlington, the
national cemetery, and there is an
elaborate Confederate ‘ monument
there.
7Q. What does the census bu
reau mean by unmarried men or
women, that is, at what age are they
so called?
A. The bureau of census says that
when figures show the number of
single persons in the United States
these figures include persons over
fifteen years of age.
8— Q. Define and describe an alli
gator pear, which you mentioned
some time ago.
A. The alligator pear was orig
inally brought from Cuba, and it is
now largely cultivated in many of
the southern states. It is not a true
pear, but is a pear-shaped vegetable
or fruit, with a hard, shiny, dark
green rind, and contains a seed cavi
ty something like that of a melon;
which is filled with one large seed.
The pul(p of the pear is largely used
for salads.
9Q. Where- can I procure a copy
of the national blue sky law?
A. The federal trade commission
lays that there is no federal blue
sky law 1 . Such a law has been pro
posed, but has not been enacted.
Many states have legislation of this
kind.
10— Q. How did the term "kaiser”
originate?
A. Both "kaiser” and “czar” were
derived from the Latin name, Caesar.
Prayer Helped Win
• Seat in Congress,
Says Miss Robertson
NEW YORK. —Miss ’ Alice M.
Robertson, congresswoman-elect
from Oklahoma, mixed earnest
prayer with her campaign work
and her election was the result,
she told the Presbyterian Wom
en’s board of missions here.
As- a member of congress she
said she hoped to be able to give
considerable aid to the Indians,
among whom she labored for
years as a missionary. She re
iterated her political platform:
‘‘First, I am a Christian; sec
ond, an American, and, third, a
Republican.”
obtained from the boys, it was learn
ed, so the police say, that a fixed
scale of prices prevailed for nar
cotic sales and lookout work. For
direct sAles negotiated by the boys,
it is said, the youthful agents got 25
per cent of the money received by
the elder Cusinino. For lookout work,
it is said, the boys received 10 per
cent of the total sales. According
to the police the boys had been un
der suspicion for some time, but
were so effective in the matter of
lookout work that an arrest was
difficult.
The Tri-Weekly Journal's
HONOR COLUMN
A Department for People Who DO Things
■IF .B'S
- ~~7-- ’• i *' ■
i i 111
i ■ x
x• ' .*> : : i
Joe. F. Mikulac, perhaps the most
widely traveled man in the world, is
going back to his native Serbia, to
settle down. In 20 years’ constant
traveling, he has visited every civi
lized country in the world and many
uncivilized parts. He was snapped
Look Forward, Not Back,
Is New Year Advice to
Farmers of Georgia
The following timely, sensible
and constructive editorially is re
planted by The Tri-Weekly
Journal from the Market Bul
letin, published by the State Bu
reau of Markets, Georgia Depart
-1 ment of Agriculture:
Some farmers are like an oarsman
who, as he rows his boat, is ever
looking backward. Other farmers re
semble a canoeist who, z/s he paddles,
kaopa his eyes fixed on that which
1b altaad.
As we enter the new year let it be
in th© attitude of the canoeist and
not of the oarsman. For good or
for ilk the past is the past. Suppose
the drear 1920 has held disappoint-
failure and loss, it can do
no good to brood over its hard ex
periences. There is no use in crying
over spilt milk. If? on the other
hand, the year which is gone has
i held success and prosperity, do not
let the mind dwell too much upon
its triumphs, less too great content
ment paralyze future effort.
A great sculptor was asked on one
occasion: “What is your best stat
ute?” He replied: “My next one.”
That is the proper spirit. Every
farmer, if asked “What is your best
year on the farm?” should in like
manner return the prompt Answer,
“My next one.”
1 Henry van Dyke describes the
. right spirit in which to cross the
threshold of a new year when he
writes:
> "Let me live but my life from year
r to year,
, With forward face and unreluctant
soul,
; Not hurrying to nor turning from
the goal;
t Not mourning for the things that
: disappear ‘
3 In the dim past, rior holding back
in fear
From what Hie future veils; but
with a whole
And happy heart that pays its toll
To youth and age and travels on
with cheer.”
A story is told of an old lady who
looked into her barrel of apples
every day to see if she could find
one rotten apple, and the laws of
decay met her expectations. She
found her rotten apple daily, but
never enjoyed a single good one out
of the whole barrel. It is very large
ly true to life that we find what we
are looking for. If we expect fail
ure in the new year, we shall prob
ably not be disappointed. If we
are looking for success, the chances
are measurably better that we shall
succeed.
Every farmer should enter 1921
with a forward look, in quest of
larger and higher things. When
others retrench is the time for pro
gressive men to expand their under
takings. Financially the farmer
should resolve that his acres shaL
yield him a large profit. There may
be overhead charges which can be
cut down. More likely there are as
yet untried ways of making the
farm produce more. No farm has
yet reached its peak.
For the coming year the farmer
ought to plan something in the way
of improvement to his property. It
may be only a bit of paint, a few
shingles, a patch of cement, trees or
shrubs set out or water piped to
hand, but in some way or ot-ier let
the home be made more attractive
and at the same time the farm more
valuable.
Possibly the farmer may need
to take himself in hand. He may
I be getting rheumatism joints and
I stooped shoulders when he ought to
. be physically vigorous for years- yet.
His mind may need a trouncing to
wake it up. There may be develop
! ing a grouchiness of disposition
I which makes it hard for wife and
I children to get along with him and
i renders him a depressant rather than
| a stimulus to ihe community.
Together, let us enter the new
; in Washington on his way home. He
carries three books which he prizes
more than anything in the wor
1 Each weighs 50 pounds. They con
tain autographs from almost every
■ monarch and president on earth, and
r hundreds of prominent people from
I every nation.
year, turning the new leaves which
ought to be turned, launching the
Mayflower of new enterprise, faces
always toward the sunrise, and
hearts aglow with the faith that the
best is yet to be.
IH OJfUil 4 1 J
L'MpBEIS J i tH 1 !
Send Ho Money
'll Just send the Coupon below.
I! I’ll Send the Glasses
// at once.
M y lar S e size “True Vision”
gl asses w iH enable you to read the
smallest print, thread the finest
needle, see far or near. They will
protect your eyes, preventing eye
strain and headaches.
These Large size “True Vision” 10-karat gold-filled glasses,
are the finest and most durable spectacles and will give years
of satisfaction.
I Don’t Send a Penny, I Trust You
I I ask you to send no money, simply your name and ad- aS-ShaW
I dress. I know that these scientifically ground glasses *Mr
will'give you such “True Vision”
Wk and splendid satisfaction that I ln 'fe»- I zx'' w -* „ ♦
I on sending them on FREE ">* . ,1
TRIAL, so you can see what a re- V
markable bargain I offer. When Vz -zv~ ** K 'x
r-lj they arrive, put them on and see A\
with what ease and comfort they “'iJ!,
3“ nr will enable you to read, work and -A. w/ffljiilJKSHai
M \ 2'/ sew, see clearly at a distance or
'/ close up, by daylight or lamp tight. i||| t
Note how easily you can read the TB® ®
? Lne print in your Bible. Yon II be xL W; j/-J
ii - I amaze< l an d delighted. AkaMaMilaMilß]
Try them NOW—They are SENT FREE. Sit
right down this very minute and fill out the
coupon. Mail it at once. The glasses will I>-»“nt
J ztrtSlto you postage paid, without any charge whatever.
WE DO NOT MAKE SHI I‘MENTS C. O. D. All
3=, - Jajyl glasses sent on Free Tria 1 Only. You are to pay
IMKak—— for the glasses only after ya- Lave worn them 10
nays and have decided that YOU WAN TTO KEEP AND PAY FOR THEM. They
will come packed in a beautifully velveteen-lined, spring-back Pocket Book Spec
tacle case. Try them for 10 full day s at my risk and expense. Send the cou
pon now. SEND NO MONE V .
Chicago Spectacle House, Dept. A-453, 1462-64-66 W. Madison St., Chicago, 111.
CHICAGO SPECTACLE HOUSE, Dept. A-453, 1462-64-66 W.
Madison St., Chicago, Hl.
I enclose herewith this coupon, wh ieh entitles me, by mail, to a pair of your I
10-Karat Gold-filled Large Size "True Vision” Spectacles complete, also a fine I
leatherette, velveteen-lined, spring-back, pocketbook spectacle case, without a penny I
of cost to me. so I can try them out, under your own offer, of a full ten days’ I
actual test. This free trial is not to c ost me one cent. And if I like the glasses I
and keep them, I am to pay you $2.9 5 only. But if, for any reason whatsoever, I
I do not want to keep them land I a lone am to be the sole judge), I will re- I
turn them to you without paying you e single cent for them as you agreed. Do I
not fail to answer the following qnes tlons:
How old are you? How many years have you used glasses (if any)? |
Name I
Postoffice I
“Guide to Hell,”
/ Issued by Zionist,
Tells of Torments
ZION, Ill.—Residents of Zion
were given new light on the ter
rors of the infernal regions, when
Overseer Wilbur Glenn Voliva is
sued advance sheets on a “hand
book and guide to hell,” based on
\what he termed helligrams, he
’said he recently had received.
“Every sinner is going to' be
punished with an overdose of his
own sin,” Voliva declared. “A to
bacco smoker will be locked up in
a den full of tobacco smoke. A
chewer of the filthy weed will be
immersed to his neck in a vat of
tobacco juice. A drinker will pass
his term of purification in a nata
torium filled with beer, wine and
whisky.”
MEN SUSPECTED OF
ATLANTA HOLDUPS
ARE BEHIND BARS
Charged with having been impli
cated in the hold-up of I. Pries, a
furrier living at 238 Central avenue,
Sant J. Maynard, of 136 West Peach
tree street, and Ernest H. Moore, of
New Kensington, Pa., were brought
to Atlanta on Monday night from
Greenville, S. C., where they had been
arrested by Officer E. C. Stegall, of
the Atlanta police department.
Mrs. Sam T. Maynard, formerly
Miss Monteen Stover, one of the
principal witnesses in the famous
Leo Frank case, has been under ar
rest in connection with the case
since last Saturday. Mrs. Maynard
was placed under arrest by Detec
tives Austin and Mrs. J. C. Davis,
following a telephone conversation
which Mrs. Davis is alleged to have
overheard. /
The robbery of Pries occurred
about two weeks ago on Peachtree
road, where he had been lured by a
fake telephone call. He was relieved
of eeveral hundred dollars’ worth of
furs and jewelry. ,
Maynard and Moore deny all
knowledge of the crime, and insist
that they can prove an alibi. The
police declare that the two men have
been connected with several highway
robberies about Atlanta this
while Maynard is said to nave
“jumped” an appearance bond in the
state courts, after having been bound
over for alleged violation of the pro
hibition law, assault with Intent to
murder and larceny.