Newspaper Page Text
2
ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
Take Aspirin only as told In each
package of genuine Bayer Tablets
>f Aspirin. Then you will be follow
ing the directions and dosage worked
out by physicians during 21 years,
and proved safe by millions. Take
ao chances with substitutes. If you
see the Bayer Cross on tablets, you
can take them without fear for Colds,
Headache. Neuralgia. Rheumatism,
Earache, Toothache, Lumbago ana
for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve
tablets cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger packages. Aspirin is the
' trade mark of Bayer Manufacture ot
, Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.
| (Advt.)
| The Best Cough Syrup §
is Home-made, §
8 Here’s an easy way to save $2, and 8
Q yet have the best cough remedy g
8 you ever tried, g
You’ve probably heard of this well
known plan of making cough syrup
at home. But have you ever used
it! Thousands of families, the world
over, feel that they could hardly keep
house without it. It’s simple and
cheap, but the way it takes hold of a
cough will scon earn it a permanent
place in your home.
(Into a pint bottle, pour 2% ounces
. of Pinex; then add plain granulated
sugar syrup to fill up the pint. Or,
if desired, use clarified molasses,
honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar
syrup. Either way, it tastes good,
never spoite, and gives you a full pint
of better cough remedy than you
could buy ready-made for three times
'. its cost. ~,
It is really wonderful how quickly
this home-made remedy conquers a
cough—usually in 24 hours or less.
It seems to penetrate through every
air passage, loosens a dry, hoarse or
tight cough, lifts the phlegm, heals
the membranes, and gives almost im
mediate relief. Splendid for throat
| tickle, hoarseness, croup, bronchitis
and bronchial asthma.
4 Pinex is a highly concentrated com-
pound of genuine Norway pine ex
tract, and has been used for genera
tions for throat and chest ailments.
To avoid disappointment ask your
druggist for “2% ounces of Pinex
with directions, and don’t accept any
thing else. Guaranteed to give abso
> lute satisfaction or money refunded.
I The Pinex Co.. Ft. Wayne. Ind.
Lungs Weak?
Generous Offer to Tuberculosis Suf
ferers of Trial of SANOSIN SANO
LEUM Embracing Europe’s Remark
able Expectorant, SANOSIN.
Noted medical scientists—Doctor* Da
nelitis, Sominerfield, Wolff, Noel, Gauthier,
- Essers—declare SANOSIN most valuable
treatment for Pulmonary ailments. Felix
Wolff. Court I'hysicain, Director of the San-
K itarium for Consumptives in Reiboldsgrun,
‘ ..Germany, highly recommends it. SANOSIN
has been officially recommended to the Ber
lin Medical Association. Dr. C. W. A. Es
sers, Amsterdam, Holland, declares it a
•’Moral obligation to make SANOSIN known
to the whole human race.” American suf-
X ferers. rich or poor, can use this remark
able home treatment that has met with such
I success in Europe. SANOSIN SANOLEUM
p. ’ it, designed to produce calm, restful sleep
without Morphiuin or similar deadening
rtruzs, and to bring almost immediate relief
1 • from coughing, blood spitting and night
fe sweats. SANOSIN SANOLEUM is an inex
< pepslve home treatment of genuine merit
Ji’ and i< proving a blessing to all suffering
from Tuberculosis, Bronchitis, Asthma, Ca-
E • tnrrhs, Whooping Cough, etc. Send for
'£ • FREE BOOKLET (with testimonials) ex-
E plaining this treatment and how a trial can
•>e made in yor.r own home at our risk. Ad
dress BANOSIN-SANOLEUM, 222 N. Wa
is bash Ave., Chicago, HL, Dept. 499.
SHOW THIS TO SOME UNFORTUNATE.
ACTRESS TELLS SECRET
Tells Sow to Darken Gray Hair With
a Home-Made Mixture
j Joicey Williams, the well-known
American actress, recently made the
' following statement about gray hair
ard how to darken it, with a home
made mixture:
“Anyone can prepare a 'simple mix
ture at home that will gradually
- darken gray, streaked or faded hair,
and make it soft and glossy. To a
half-pint of water add 1 ounce of
bay rum, a small box of Barbo Com
pound, and % ounce of glycerine.
These ingredients can be bought at
1 any drug store at very little cost.
Apply to the hair twice a week until
the desired shade is obtained. This
will make a gray-haired person look
twenty years younger. It does not
color the scalp, is not sticky or greasy
and does not rub off.”—(Advt.)
GUARANTEED
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I 111 J Amazing Low Prices
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1 1130x3 5.60 1.60 33x4ft 9.50 2.8(
W. If 30x3ft 6.50 1.75 84x4ft 10.00 8.0(
KHZ I fl32x3ft 7.00 2.00 35x4ft 11.00 8.11
DBS ■ Blxl 8.00 2.26 36x4ft 11.60 8.4(
I 32x4 825 2- 40 35x5 12.60 3.6(
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VUkz V. Jf Send your order today-run
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J Statesize,also whetherstraight
side or clincher. Remember,you
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end tire with free refiner, will be shipped same day.
MORTON TIRE & RUBBER CO.
39G1 Michigan Ave., Dept. 543 Chicago. IH,
Fse . If we send you free our treatment
MlTf* which has brought quick relief and
1 BIN happiness to thousands of patients,
|L lIW --will you use
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case or * *
what you have tried! Our re- TRI AL ff 4 FA A
markable treatment is gnaran- TREAT- f ICC
teed to bring results. Write M EN T
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Western Medical Ais'n,
902 E. 55th St., Div. 20, Chicago, Hl.
—A REAL CAMERA FREE
Made by the Eastman Kodak
Co. Takes snap shots or time
exposures 2 *4 * 3)4 on realnlm
Given for selling only 40 pack-
Garden Seeds at 10c each.
■ MjN Write quick.
WILSON SEED COMPANY
OfptMai Tyrone, r«.
THI3 NOVA-TONR
__ talking machine
/ X-Tx Cue M«hcg*fty ensraeJed R*rU
| •• OK>,:x to «<!*>«» cf ord«. exccller.
■j reproducer, enjoyment lor all Sell 1.
’ 1 > boxes Memho-Nova Sal»e, rest io
~~ burni * ‘ n<f ' iUenza ’ dc * R« tu:n
’“T f ~ 1 and the machine is youn. Guaranteed
'V .. ... . . . .Records free. Order today A '- !rc»
u. s. CO., Box *64,
- 11 — 34 Greenville. Pa.
A OrkWTkWILT Genuine. Name on
A r*l fV II V each Tablet. Five
111111 grains; 200 for
sl.lO Postpaid. Sent anywhere. 400 tablets
$2.00. FREE catalog. Nationally adver
tised.
MERIT CHEMICAL OO„
Box 058. Memphis, lean.
DRASTIC CUT IN
TAX THIS YEAR
IS IMPOSSIBLE
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.—Drastic
tax reduction will be impossible dur
ing the first year of the incoming ad
ministration, leading members of the
(house now believe.
The reason is that with a big
deficit hanging over the treasury, ap
propriation bills for the fiscal year
beginning July 1 thus far reported
from the house appropriations com
mittee show an increase over those
of the present year.
The total appropriations, perma
nent and annual for the next year,
cannot be cut to less than ?3,000,-
000,000, Republican Leader Mondell
and Representative Good, of lowa,
chairman of the apropriatlons com
mittee, agree.
Even should there be some unex
pected economy to take expenditures
below this, hope for taxation reduc
tion is slight, because the present
business depression probably will
decrease tax receipts.
Thus far seven bills have been re
ported from the appropriations com
mittee. Compared with the similar
appropriations for the present year
they show a net increase of $13,500,-
000. Mesrs. Mondell and Good, how
ever, are confident that the total ap
propriations will show a decrease,
but admit it will be only “a few hun
dred millions.”
Os the measures reported the post
office bill shows the largest increase,
569,000,000. The agricultural bill is
about $2,000,000 more than for the
current year, and the District of
Columbia bill, $1,500,000 greater. The
sundry civil bill shows a decrease of
$52,000,000; the legislative, execu
tive and judicial, $6,000,000; and the
Indian affairs, $1,000,000, while the
pension bill is virtually the same.
The decrease in the army bill prob
ably will not be so large as was ex
pected, because the army is now
225,000 strong, or 50,000 greater than
congress provided for in the current
appropriation bill, according to Rep
resentative Anthony, Kansas, in
charge of the measure. The amount
allowed this year was $368,000,000
and next year’s bill will carry in ex
cess of $300,000,000, it is estimated.
Although disarmament steps have
been urged in both houses, the v 3 -'
rious proposals have not reached a
stage where it Is possible to make a
drastic reduction in the naval ap
propriation bill, according to Rep
resentative Kelley, Michigan, in
charge of this measure. For this
year the appropriations were $407,-
000,000 of which $104,000,000 was
for naval construction. The allot
ment for construction, it now ap
pears, will not be greatly decreased.
Permanent annual appropriations,
such as the billion dollar interest
bill on the war debt, mut remain the
same for next year.
Cha PPEDmi
rough skin!
Takes away the
sting of exposure.
At the druggists’
or general store.
~>s.
/*• °” r % «i'u *y
jRy >O*CHXmO B0 * M J *'w.HAims u»»«\\
131 i tf’ / \»'X 'CrttStBROUGH MAnUFACTURMtGCOMPART j\
M*w'voy,U*SA JI
Vaseline
z keg. U.S. Pax. Off.’
CAMPHOR ICE
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
(Consolidated)
17 State St. New York
Cured His RUPTURE
I was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk
several years ago. Doctors said my only hope
of cure was an operation. Trusses did me
no good. Finally I got hold of something
that quickly and completely cured me. Years
have passed and the rupture has never re
turned, although I am doing hard work as
a carpenter. There was no operation, no
lost time, no trouble. I have nothing to sell,
but will give full information about how
you may find a complete cure without oper
ation, if you write to me. Eugene M. Pullen
Carpenter, 189-G Marcellus avenue, Manas
quan, N. J. Better cut out this notice and
show it to any others who are ruptured—
you may save a life or at least stop the
misery of rupture and the worry and danger
of an operation.—TAdvt.)
WATCH. TWO GOLD RINGS AND CHAIN
inrr-TL. GIVEN Omihlm Am»rU»»
Watch guaranteed maker
ffStWiSgEI and three Oeld Rl"r» .and
f Clialo all for selling 40 packets
r
K:
a 8 Write Quick.
W OwTaTuPV-a wiusoh iao oomfany
MSPfcsAgF Pep*. cl 4 Tyrene, Pa.
MOTH® raw
For Expectant Mothers
Used By Three Generations
puts roa BOOKLET os motherhood and baby, rars
Bradmeld Regulator Co. deft. b-d. Atlanta, ca
* Walking Doil Free
She can walk or run as fast as
you can. All you have to do is
to push her. Entirely new doll,
1 ft. tall. Be the first girl in
your town to have this fine walk
ing doll. Sent free, all charges
paid, for selling only 8 peks.
Novelty Post Cards at 15c. Jones Mfg. Co.,
Dept. 69, Attleboro, Mass.
-ASTHMA-
Cured Before You Fay.
t will send you a $1.25 bottle of LANE’S
Treatment on FREE TRIAL. When com
pletely cured send me the $1.25. Other
wise your report cancels charge. Address
D. J. LANE, 372 Lane Bldg,,
St. Marys, Kans.
HOW TO MAKE LOVE
(NEW BOOK)) Tells how to
-et Acquainted; How to Be
gagwgaSfegjNa u Courtship; How to Court
Bashful Girl; to Woo a
HD 7 ** PsK .Vidow; to win an Heiress;
10w to <atcll a Rich Bacli-
AiKrz JP -‘ !or; kow t 0 mana K e y° ur
,eau to make him propose;
how to make your fellow or
BmL /I girl love you; what to do be
fore and after the wedding.
BMgS&dT I Tells other things necessary
sw®®3n«»l~/ f ()r Lovers to know, sample
••opy n.v mail 10 cents. ROYAL BOOK CO ,
Box 1,81, Norwalk, Conn.
CURED HER FITS
Mrs. Paul Gram, who had suffered with
Fits or Epilepsy for over 14 years, reports
that she was cured with a medicine she
read about in the paper. She says that over
ten years have passed and the attacks have
not returned. Everyone suffering from Fits
should write R. P. Lepso, 13 Island Ave.,
Milwaukee, WiS., who will send them a
free bottle of the same kind of medicine
Mrs. Gram says cured her. Send him your
I .’ame today.— (Advt.)
WEDDING RING
I names of your neighbors and leu cents
to pay
Gem City Supply ll>X«
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
CHAMPION WOMAN SWIMMER
_____WlNS MANY DECORATIONS
i 111
rmH|
wKwiiOl
3 J 2 Mstt, -Xi.
If IO I \ b '
Brti ’ MslHsm <
I Rgfe
a
WORLD’S MOST DECORATED WOMAN —The most decorated
woman in this world is Miss Erna Murray, the champion woman
swimmer of Germany. She holds hundreds of cups, medals, ribbons
and prizes. She is shown here with just a few of her trophies.
STATE MAY SEND
SPECIAL TRAIN
TO INAUGURATION
A special train may go from Geor
gia to the inauguration of President
elect Harding in Washington March
4, as the result of Senator Harding’s
brief stop-over in Atlanta Friday
night on his way to Florida for a
vacation.
D. K. Roberts, secretary of the
Harding club of Georgia, met Sena
tor Harding at Rome with Walker T.
Lee, secretary to Mayor Key, and the
two accompanied him into Atlanta
on obard the Royal Palm.
Mr. Roberts said Saturday that,
among other things, he discussed
with the president-elect the possi
bility of sending a Georgia special
to the inauguration, and Senatpr
Harding told him he would consider
such an undertaking a sincere mani
festation of the great American spirit
of the people of Georgia rather than
a tribute to himself.
“At the same time,” Mr. Roberts
quoted Senator Harding as saying,
"nothing would make me happier
personally than to know there was a
large delegation of Georgians pres
ent at the inauguration.”
Mr. Roberts said that he and
Walker T. Lee are making plans al
ready for the special, and that it
will go over the Southern railroad.
Lee L. Estes, local passenger agent
of the Southern, has agreed to make
arrangements for the special to be
parked just outside Washington, so
the Georgians can live on it instead
of seeking hotels.
Mr. Roberts says he has already
received requests for reservations
on the special and so has Mr. Lee.
Other requests for reservations may
be sent to Mr. Roberts’ office. 325
Healey building.
VETERAN SOUTHERN CREW
RAN HARDING’S TRAIN
A veteran train crew of the South
ern railway took President-elect
Harding through Georgia Friday
From Chattanooga to Atlanta the
engineers were Arthur Corrie and
Guy Conley and the vonductor, D.
Williams, and all members of the
crew hold the Southern medal tor
twenty-five years' service.
From Atlanta to Jacksonville the
engineers were W. E. Jones and R.
F. Gardner and the conductor B. M.
Large. This crew also has the
Southern medal for twenty-five
years’ service.
Belgian Government
To Ask for Fixed Sum
Germany Must Pay
PARIS, Jan. 22. —The Belgian gov
ernment will urge the supreme coun
cil to fix a lump sum for German
reparations as soon as possible, ac
cording to the Brussels correspond
ent of the Echo De Paris.
A demand will be made that
many shall provide treasury bonds
which may be negotiated in America.
Belgium insists that her priority
share of the indemnity, amounting to
$2,500,000,000, is unchanged.
“The longer we temporize the long
er Germany will be able to opopse
er Germany will be able t oppose
moXs from now the United States
probably will conclude an indepen
dent agreement with Germany. Ou
task will be proportionately in
creased .” i .
One Man Is Killed
In Auction Holdup
By Daring Robbers
NEW YORK, Jan. 22.—-Five ban
dits held up a crowded auction room
in East Forty-Second street tonight.
shot and instantly killed Emil
Shields, auctioneer: seriously wound
ed Henry Young, his assistant, and
escaped in a waiting taxicab.
One of the bandits remained on
the outside as a lookout. The others
entered the store and ordered:
“All hands Yip.”
Shields and Young, who stood on
a raised platform behind the coun
ter. refused to obey and were felled
by a fusillade of shots. Shields died
in an ambulance on the way to a
hospital. Five bullets entered Young’s
body.
President Wilson to
Spend $4,000 m
Repairing New Home
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22. —Presi-
lent Wilson plans to spend $4,000 in
repairing the $150,000 home in the
fashionable Sheridan circle section
which he purchased recently as his
permanent residence after March 4.
permit for this amount of repairs be
ing issued today by the District of
Columbia government.
QUIZ
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 postage.
New Questions
1 — What city in the world has been
in existance longest?
2 How many childdren have the
king and queen of England?
3 "Who was the first hunger
striker?
4ln what language is the Bible
written so that the greatest num
ber of people will be able to read it?
5 Who wrote the first 'history
book?
6 Can Easter' lilies be grown
from seeds?
7 Why is one of the New Eng- (
land states called Rhode Island when
most of it is part of the mainland?
8— How much money has been col
lected by the bureau of internal reve
nue under the war revenue act of
1918?
9 Who invented the bicyole?
10— How many notables were
voted into the American Hall of
Fame in 1920?
1 — How is' President-elect Har
ding’s middle name pronounced and
what does it mean?
A. Gamaliel is pronounced ga-may
lee-el, and is a Hebrew word mean
ing “my rewarder is God.”
2 Can a man destroy or disfigure
his own money?
A. The treasury department says
that a person may do anything he
likes to his own money, but after it
has been punctured or defaced in
any way it cannot be placed in cir
culation again. That is, the hole
cannot be filled in and the coin again
used as lawful money.
3 I hear that Hudson’s Bay stores
in the far north are one of the great
est distributors of talking machines.
A. Trappers living at the edge
of the world are said to be one of
the greatest buyers of such ma
chines, because “canned music” helps
more than anything else to relieve
the loneliness of their lives. They
travel for days on sleds to exchange
ermine and mink for food and phono
graphs.
4 How fast does a canvasback
duck fly? Also the teal duck and
Canada goose?
jk. It is estimated that the speed
of the canvasback duck is 98 miles
per hour; the blue wing teal duck
89 miles; and the Canadian goose,
76 miles. The bureau of biological
survey says these speeds are prob
ably in excess of average flights.
5 What is the longest river in
the world, and what is the widest?
A. The longest river in the world
is the Mississippi-Missouri, 4,194
miles. The widest river is probably
the Amazon, its width being 50
miles at its main mouth.
6Do all diamonds have what is
termed a pinhole in the center of
the stone?
A. The geological survey says that
the culet point on the bottom of a
stone appears only on those cut in a
certain fashion. An uncut or table
cut diamond would not have It.
7 What is the source of the story
that George Washington threw a
silver coin across the Potorrfac river?
A. Weem's “Life of Washington”
contains the statement that Colonel
Willis, a kinsman of George Wash
ington, said that he had often seen
Washington, as a boy, throw a coin
across the Rappahannock at the low
er ferry opposite Fredericksburg
This is the probable origin of the
story, the “Potomac” being confused
with the “Rappahannock.”
8— What is the latest date that
Easter has come on, and how is the
date of Easter determined?
A. The latest date that Easter has
fallen on since 1800 was April 25,
1888. Easter is determined as th§.
first Sunday after the full moon af
ter the 21st of March. ,
9 Are any silkworms raised in
the United States?
A. Silkworms are raised on a small
scale in the southwestern part of
this country. •
10 — How does an automatic com
pare with a revolver and pistol in
regard to velocity?
A. The war department says that
an automatic and a revolver of the
same caliber have practically the
same velocity. A pistol has a little
more power because there is no
escape of gas in shooting.
1 000 Cases of Liquor
Disannear After Wreck
FORT MYERS. Fla., Jan. 22.—Ma
jor Williams, chief prohibition en
forcement officer of Tampa, is here
today investigating the whereabouts
of a quantity of whisky, said io be
1,000 cases, which mysteriously dis
appeared following the wreck of the
schooner Uralia. of British registry,
on the beach near Naples, this coun
ty, several days ago. The schooner
is reported to have sailed from Ha
vana with the cargo of liquor.
Up to a few weeks ago tlte ves
sel was known as the Prank M., of
Mobile, sailing under an American
register. It was said to be cwned
by three brothers named Delisle, two
of whom are under arrest.
GIRL REPORTER
DESCRIBES FLIGHT
IN AN AIRPLANE
BY MEDOEA FIELD
To get a free ride in an airplane
and be able to give one away at the
same time —with all the proper
stunts and frills —and thrills —Isn’t
possible for many of us, especially I
since flying still comes at the mod
erate figure of $1 per minute. But
that’s what happened Thursday aft
ernoon at Candler Field; I got the
first flight. I don’t know who gets
the other. Maybe you, if you hap
pened to find a ticket attached to a
toy balloon and dropped down some
where in the vicinity of Five Points
from an altitude of a thousand feet
or so. Wouldn’t it be too awful if
it happened to land on top of the
Fourth National Bank building?
You’d also have the honor of flying
with a very famous aviator, Lieu
tenant S. W. Crane, now an instruc
tor in the Ohio air school, but an ace
in the late war. with no less than
eight enemy planes to his credit.
More than that, he was himself shot
down while flying over the German
lines, but managed to land just in
side the safety limit.
After we took off from Candler
field and he started looping and ex
ecuting fancy turns, I’ll confess that
I got just a bit panicky. You see, 1
had very foolishly told him about last.
spring when I looped with Bob
Shank and got lost with the Flying
Parson —at an altitude of 15,000 feet,
traveling 110 miles per hour —hav-
ing a forced landing, and getting
back to Candler field three and a half
hours late. I was afraid Lieutenant
Crane was going to try to out-Hero,l
Herod. It certainly looked that way
at the moment. But the worst thing
that happened was scraping our
wings on the bank when we landed,
and I didn’t know about that until
someone told me, for Lieutenant
Crane is a marvelous pilot, and fly
ing with him is like being wafted
away on the wings of the morning,.
You can ask Miss Florence Cheney,
of 705 North Boulevard, who took her
first flight with him yesterday after
noon.
A certain young man exacted a
promise from Lieutenant Crane that
he wouldn’t loop with Miss Cheney—
but when they were just a small
speck in the distance and Lieutenant
Crane turned around and described a
circle with one hand, Miss Cheney
nodded very enthusiastically and the
next moment had the pleasure of
looking down at the blue sky be
neath her feet.
Lieutenant Crane is enthusiastic
over the possibilities of Atlanta as
an air center, and stated that the
development of the proposed new
landing field would undoubtedly do
much toward bringing many other
planes to the city and making it a
stop-over point. He saw his first cot
ton the other day, en route from
Chattanooga to Atlanta, when he
made a forced landing in a cotton
field just across the Chattahoochee
river. His plane is an “old reliable
ninety-horsepower Curtiss, and he
came to Atlanta under the auspices
of the Tappan Tire and Rubber com
pany, southern representatives of the
American Akron Tire company. He is
traveling 1 all over the United States,
making demonstration flights, in the
interest of this company. He will re
main in Atlanta until next Tuesday,
and each day will fly with someone
over the city for the purpose of
dropping one of the balloons with
free ticket attached.
GALLSTONE TROUBLES
A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad
dock, Box 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.)
Murder in Alps Is
Reported to Monks;
Is First in History
GENEVA, Jan. 22.— A story of
murder in the Alps mountains, a
thing unheard of before in Alpine
history, has been reported by the
Monks of the St. Bernard Hospice,
which stands at an elevation of 8,-
110 feet. The monks and their dogs
were aroused in the early morning of
Friday by revolver shots and went
to investigate. With the aid of the
dogs they found the bodies of three
well-to-do Italian Alpinists, named
Leten, Anseloin and Brignon, in the
deep snow.
Farmers’ Club Favors
Plan to Hold Fair
CARTERSVILLE, Ga., Jan. 22.
The Euharlee Farmers’ club, meet
ing at the country home of Mr. Fritz
W. Dent, at its last monthly meet
ing, unanimously Indorsed the plan
to hold a county fair in Cartersville
again this year. This organization
is made up of representative farm
ers, and will appear before the stock
holders’ meeting of the fair associa
tion, when it convenes January 28,
to urge that the annual event, which
has meant so much to the agricul
tural Interests of this section, be
continued on an even larger scale, if
possible.
Well! Here’s Our Old
Friend—Belled Buzzard
VALDOSTA. Ga., Jan. 22.—Ashley
Tucker, of Alapaha, reports having
seen the famous “belled buzzard”
several days ago. five miles north of
Alapaha, flying eastward. Mr. Tucker
heard the buzzard’s bell tinkling and,
looking up, he saw the bell tied to
the buzzard’s neck. The belled buz
zard has been seen at different times
in Georgia, Alabama and Florida
during the past thirty-odd years.
The bell is supposed to have been
tied to the buzzard by a Macon news
paper man back in the eighties.
Poultry Specialist to
Make Fulton Survey
W. F. Rue, extension poultry spe
cialist of the State College of Agri
culture, is expected to arrive in At
lanta January 26, where he wall make
a two-days poultry survey of Fulton
county. During his stay here he
will visit the schools and poultry
raisers and on January 27 at 3 o clock
in the afternoon a mass meeting win
be held on the ninth flo’or of the
courthouse to which all persons inter
ested in poultry raising are invitea.
De Valera in Control
Os Irish Affairs
DUBLIN, Jan. 22.—Eamonn de Val
era has now resumed active and com
plete Control of the Irish republican
government.
The Irish president is in daily con
ference with the more important
leaders of the Dail Eireann. He
keeps his helpers busy far into the
night on various subjects, including
compilation of the damage done
through British reprisals.
Greene County Railroad
Asks for $60,000 Loan
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22. —The
Greene County Railroad company, of
Georgia, today applied for a govern
ment loan of $60,000 for fifteen years,
to meet maturing
li sl ’i S'" s
llili|l m vs S a Bl
■Mt JiPIII 14 fRi yl
Bwc MIS I An Honest Serviceable 8000-Mile Tire—This casing is not sewed,
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Fattest Congressman
Weighs 300 Pounds
Za
S. E- WINSLOW
S. E. WINSLOW
HOPES TO PICK UP—The last
eight years have been lean ones for
the G. O. P., but Congressman S. E.
Winslow, Massachusetts Republican,
looks for better times under Harding.
He even hopes to put on a little
weight. While he’s the heaviest
member of the house, he says he
weighs “only 300”—a mere nothing.
HARDING STARTS
ON CRUISE OFF
FLORIDA COAST
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla., Jan. 22.
The houseboat, Victoria, containing
President-elect Harding and party of
fi lends, left here late today for a
leisurely fishing cruise down the east
coast of Florida, and at dusk tied
up for the night near Summerhaven,
twenty miles to the south.
With his departure from St. Au
gustine, the president-elect said
good-by to his cares and virtually
went into seclusion for two weeks of
rest and recreation. He expects to
come ashore at two or three points
to play golf, but during most of the
trip he intends to keep out of the
public eye and to forget the national
problems that must be solved before
Harch 4.
Mr. Harding reached St. Augus
tine from Marion shortly before
neen, made a short call at the hotel,
which will be his home for a month
after he returns from the fishing
trip on February 7, and played a
round of golf before going aboard
the Victox’ia. A crowd applauded
him whe he alighted from his train
and later a lot of persons gathered
at the pier to cheer him as the
houseboat started on her voyage.
The Victoria belongs to Senator
Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, of New
Jersey, whose guest Mr. Harding
will be during the fishing trip. Oth
ers in the party Include George B.
Christian, Jr., the president-elect’s
private secretary; Harry M. Daugh
erty, of Columbus; Senator A. B.
Fall, of New Mexico, and Henry P.
Fletcher, former ambassador to Mex
ico.
C-x her trip south, the Victoria, a
ninety-foot craft, will remain within
the Indi, i river, which is a land
locked arm of the Atlantic, extend
ing the length of the state. Al
though she looks more like a yacht
than a houseboat, the Victoria is not
powerful enough to go to sea and is
not equipped with lights suitable for
running at night.
New York Farmers Are
Looking for Cheaper
Labor This Spring
RIVERHEAD, N. Y„ Jan. 22.
Farm laborers will be so plentiful
next spring that they will be glad
to accept lower w.'tges, Samual Board,
representative of the federal employ
ment service, told the Suffolk Coun
ty Farm Bureau association here to
day.
Several farmers predicted that
wages farm help would be cut from
a half to a third. Married men in
this section are now receiving from
S9O to sllO a month in addition to
free rent, milk, vegetables and other
products. Single men receive S6O a
month, with board and lodging free.
5,300 Take Own Lives
In Hungary During 1920
BUDAPEST. Jan. 20. —Thirty-two
hundred women and 2,100 men com
mitted suicide in Hungary during
1920, police reports for the year
show. In addition, there were more
than 10,000 unsucceessful attempts
at suicide. This tremendous increase
is causing much worry, inasmuch
as the pre-war figures were from
50 to 60 suicides yearly. The situa
tion is attributed to the deteriora
tion in living conditions and the
fact that the war had the effect
of making human life much cheaper.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
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Signature
No One Need Buy
Cuticura Before Ke
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o«p. Ointment, Talcum, 25e everywhere Samples
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SW !
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if HUNT’S Salve falls in the
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TTrSu <JI RINGWORM, TETTER or
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TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1921.
AGED “WILD MAN,” |
WOMAN AND CHILD
FOUND IN SWAMPS
LAUREL, Miss., Jan. 22.—Authori
ties today were conducting investiga
tions in an effort to ascertain wheth
er the two-year-old child found with
Albert Parson, seventy-two-year-old
‘wild man,” and an apparently de
mented woman who he said was his
wife, had been kidnaped.
The trio, almost naked when found
yesterday in a remote section of the
Deaf river bottoms, were fed, clothed
and placed in the county poorhouse
at Ellisville. Their finding cleared
up frequent reports of a “wild man”
inhabiting the woods.
Parson, in good physical condition
despite his age and the hardships of
his life, told county authorities to
day he was in possession of home
stead rights to property adjoining
the tumbledown cabin which had
been the home of the couple for
years. The child, he declined to
discuss.
The woman, he said, he captured
in a bear trap twenty-three years ago
and made her his wife. Although in
coherent in her statements, the wom
an stated she thought she was about
fifty years old and remembered hav
ing been in a fight with a wild cat
some time ago. One of her eyes was
put out and her body badly scarred.
When found, the man’s clothes
were in tatters, the woman wore but
a single torn garment, and the child,
a girl, was naked. The child was
apparently in splendid health and
seemed to have been well fecL
Parson was aided in his primitive
farming by a blind horse, which he
said he captured. He was plowing
a sedgefield yesterday when found.
High water drove the trio from their
habitation close to the river and, ac
cording to Parson, brought them for
the first time in years close enough
to civilization to enable them to be
taken
In the meantime authorities an
nounced they were making efforts to
learn the identity of the child and
how the couple came into her posses
sion.
Cuts Burning Fuse
Os Bomb in Building
NEW YORK, Jan. 22.—A sputter
ing fuse, attached to a large square
bomb in the basement of a house in
process of reconstruction in Brook
lyn, was cut in the nick of time ear
ly today by the night watchman,
Tony Franko. The fuse was severed
two inches from the bomb.
Franko was so badly burned while
hacking at the fuse with a pocket
knife that he had to be taken to a
hospital, where his condition was
said to be serious. He told physi
cians that as he went into the cellar
he saw the dark forms of two men,
one of whom had just lighted a
match. When he shouted to them
they ran away after firing shots at
him.
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Military finish ’
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CI LBMEL LOSI fffi
CO SOUTH
Mr. Dodson, the “Liver
Tone” Man, Responsible
for Change for the Better j
Every druggist in town has noticed
a great falling off in the sale of cal
omel. They all give the same reason.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is taking its
place.
"Calomel is dangerous and people
know it.” Dodson’s Liver Tone is
personally guaranteed by every drug
gist who sells it. A large bottle
doesn’t cost very much but if it fails
to give easy relief in every case of
liver sluggishness and constipation,
just ask for your money back.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a pleasant
tasting, purely vegetable remedy,
harmless to both children and adults.
Take a spoonful at night and wake
up feeling fine; no biliousness, sick
headache, acid stomach or consti
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cause inconvenience all the next day
like violent calomel. Take a dose of
calomel today and tomorrow you will
feel weak, sick and nauseated. Don’t
lose a day.— (Advt.)
Dyspepsia
Spoils Beauty
A Good, Sharp Appetite and Ferfeot
Digestion Are the Surest Ways
to Attain and Keep Beauty.
Nothing will spoil the complexion,
dim the eyes, and cave in the cheeks
quicker than dyspepsia allowed to
go on without proper relief.
wp- f -qr
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Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets for Good
Digestion; Det Nature Do the Rest."
The poisonous by-products of fer
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blood and simply ruin the good looks.
A bad complexion, haggard appear
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from neglected indigestion. By tak
ing Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets the
distresses due do dyspepsia are
avoided and thus this menace t®
good looks and good digestion is re
moved.
Get R 60c package of Stuart’s Dys
pepsia Tablets at any drug store.
(Advt.)
kq fire—mo Waiting.,
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'Ka Instead of fussing with a smoke-
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You lose 10 to 20 per cent of your meat 'M
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A 75c bottle Smokes 200 pounds; SLSS \
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Gohranteed K. C. Liquid Meat
Smoko is guarenttod to be entirely eatle
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HOW TO HEAL LEG SORES
A new illustrated book sent free to read
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