Newspaper Page Text
2
CRISIS IS FOG
GERMAN REPUBLIC.
ELECTIONS NEAR
BY MAXIMILIAN HARDEN
Germany’s Foremost Publicist
(Leased Wire Service to The Journal.)
(Copyright, 1922.)
BERLIN, July 22.—The German
republic faces a mid-summer crisis.
The government is afraid to dissolve
the Reichstag and appeal to the peo
ple for .the fear that more national
ists would be returned. Every citi
zen, considering the government s
timidity, feels unsafe. The Ham
burg banker, Max Warburg, whose
brother is a partner in the Ameri
can banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb &
Co., a superlative patriotic Ger
man, who as a member of the first
German peace delegations started a
movement for the rejection of the
treaty, has been so threatened that
the police have ordered him not to
leave his house.
Another banker well known in the
United States, Herr Dernburg, form
er colonial minister, has decided
after repeated menaces to sell his
house in the Grunewald section
which has received a sinister repu
tation through the murder of Rath
' nau and the attack upon myself.
Two editors whose names figured on
the murder list found by the police
have fled from Berlin with false
passports, under police protection.
Strezemann, the monarchist lead
er, who favored unrestricted sub
marine warfare and annexation of
, Belgium, i gently requested police
protection because he saw suspicious
persons outside of his window. Still
'more dumbfounding, Stinnes him
self, who was the warmest nation
alist throughout the war and even
recently demonstrated his unchanged
opinions by baptizing ships Tirpitz,
Hindenberg and Ludendorff, this
fearless and nerveless man, has been
persuaded by insistent warnings to
leave his home at Mulheimander,
Ruhr, and, with his entire family,
• move to an isolated private house
in Berlin. Perhaps the fact that
he has French blood, has opposed
any rapid restoration of the mon
archy; favors an economic natente
? with ce; wants international
peace for business reasons and won’t
I ‘ supply money for a counter-revolu
•tion and a war of revenge is the
•reaso nhe is threatened. But it is
useless to seek motive. Millions of
Germans are persuaded that every
republican is a pacifist and every
Jew a traitor.
Secret Organization.
Thirty or forty thousand young
men, former officers, students and
high school boys have pledged them
selves in a secret organization
throughout the country blindly to
carry out whatever they are ordered
to do. They are pledged not to al
low themselves to fall alive into po-
F lice hands as witness the suicide of
the two men suspected of the slay
ing of Rathenau.
In carrying on the campaign of
assassination they are told they are
not murderers but are, in reality,
executioners of judgments of the se
cret “people’s court.” In such an
atmosphere preparations must be
made for a general election. While
the monarchists are marking ever}’
democratic leader for death the
government issue only paper men
aces of laws that cannot be enforced
without coercing Bavaria with a
coal blockade which it is afraid to
t put into force.
That today is Germany’s crisis
which must be understood' by the
world. It is a crisis for all human
ity if the infectious military mon
archism is to be fought with other
weapons than high flown speeches
i and paper threats.
The two youths ordered to slay me
first squandered 35,000 marks on
drinking and women, then received
other funds, and only acted when
this money was gone. Yet thousands
of people throughout Germany are
inclined to excuse them because
they supposedly acted for what
they thought patriotic motives.
Their arrangements were, as a mat
ter of fact, entirely business like.
The intermediary who received the
order from Munich telegraphed
them:
Financially Low
"If everything is in order you can
have more at your disposal. Other
wise not as we are financially em
barrassed. Get through with it and
we can breathe again. I consider
the present time —three days after
Rathenau’s assassination —particu-
larly favorable. Good luck.”
The principal criminal, Anker
•man, was a corps student lieuten
mt who had received the iron cross,
s first class, married. The police
supposed he had hidden among a
certain class in Berlin but neverthe
less immediately after the deed he
I went to the headquarters of the
'German national party and asked
for one Dryander, son of the im
perial court chaplain. Finding him
put he crudely told Count York, “I
have just killed Harden and must
’ get away quickly. I have come for
ihe necessary money.” York him
self informed the police of this.
Vmong the other conspirators are
Usemann and Mueldner, blood 'rela
tions of two gentlemen high in favor
of the two Wilhelms of Doorn and
sVieringen.
PELLAGRA
Many people have this disease and do not
•;now it until It Is too late. Don’t wait. You
aunot afford to take chances. No matter
what doctors or others have told you—no mat
ter if other treatments have tailed—we offer
I vou hope for permanent relief. Thousands of
Sufferers testify to the wonderful results ob
tained by using Dr. McCrary's pleasant home
treatment. Write at once for the most valuable
and reliable Information that has yet been
published about the strange disease PELLAGRA
50-Page Book Free
This remarkable book reveals the proven theory
ns to the cause of PELLAGRA, and tells
iiow the disease may be completely overcome
by a simple and safe home treatment. It con
phec (’graphs and letters from state and
county officials, bankers, ministers, doctors,
lawyers, farmers and others who tell their own
experience and the wonderful results from this
treatment
Look for These Symptoms
Tired and drowsy feelings accompanied by
headaches, depression or state of Indolence;
roughness of skin; breaking out or eruptions;
sore mouth, tongue, lips and throat flaming
red; much mucus and choking; Indigestion and
nausea; diarrhoea or constipation; mind af
fected and many others. Do not wait for al)
tbesa symptoms to appear. If you suffer from
one or more, write for your copy of the book
today. It is FREE, and mailed In plain sealed
wrapper.
DR. W. J. McCRARY, Ino.
Dept, 83, Carbon Hill, Alabama.
(Advertisement.)
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
EVERETT TRUE
BY CONDO
JOHNSON. I ’TH4T
IviWtV Jongs Hgr
MON GV, SO I HURRdeO OUT H<5R<S
tO A£W<S. I SOpPoSG, XoO
(S CUT TO SGCL HCK
OF Youß 0/1 CO CAT (MvesT- THAT’S
urlSi A FUm I W- —i
.J! L - Ur
IT*-s mighty 'Poor. Bus-
INCSSS 6KCCPT r
that .mVy tw \
AAW rc
1 1 iEWfeSSS®
In "w
r
KANSAS GOVERNOR TELLS
HOW COAL MINE STRIKE
IS HANDLED PEACEABLY
State Has 50 Per Cent of
Normal Production at the
Present Time and Is Lead
ing Way for Settlement
BY HENRY J. ALLEN
Governor of the State of Kansas.
TOPEKA, Kan., July 22.—1 n Kan
sas the Industrial Court act pro
vides for the protection of the pub
lic against the cessation of an es
sential industry. Coal mining is an
essential industry.
The industrial act provides an im
perial tribunal of three men whose
business it is to adjudicate contro
versies between operators and min
ers when the two parties can no
longer agree. The law also pro
vides as a last resort that the state
may take over the coal mines and
operate them in the public interest
for the purpose of protecting the
people against a famine in fuel. The
court has power to fix minimum
wage scales, to protect those who
are at work against interference in
any form either by violence, threats,
intimidation of so-called peaceful
picketing.
In Kansas immediately prior to
the cessation of mining on April 1
the court of industrial relations
made a temporary order permitting
the continuance of the old wage
scale and working conditions for a
period of 30 days to enable the op
erators and miners to begin and if
possible conclude negotiations for a
new contract. The operators did
not object to such order and of
fered to commence negotiations im
mediately. The mine leaders de
clined the benefits of such order.
The industrial court then directed
the operators to resume mining for
the purpose of meeting the Kansas
demand as it arose, guaranteeing
protection to the mines and to the
workers. The operations were re
sumed at once with the understand
ing that the mine owners should
keep a sufficient number of proper
ties operating to produce all the
coal needed for Kansas domestic and
industrial uses. If the operators
themselves failed in this, then the
state would take over the mines.
50 Per Cent Production
The operators have been very suc
cessful for many weeks and are now
producing over half of the normal
annual output at the mines. The
state guarantees that the men who
are working in the mines shall have
full protection from those who are
out and that an invasion of the
rights of any man who is at work
by a striker will be promptly pun
ished. It has been necessary to make
only a few arrests. Troops have not
been needed to protect the rights of
the men who are at work. Some
thing like 3b per cent of the normal
force is now producing over 50 per
cent of the normal output. As the
demand for coal increases, more
mines are opened and the number
of men willing to work grows every
day.
There has been in these opera
tions no controversy as to wages.
The operators and men now at work
have agreed to a rate of compen
sation which seems to be entirely
satisfactory to both sides. It has
been understood from the beginning
that if any complaint were made as
to compensation the industrial court
wpuld take the situation in hand
and determine the minimum wage.
The mere presence of this protec
tion to both sides has been all that
is necessary. When the operators
realized that the men would be
protected against an unfair wage
and the men realized that they could
depend upon the state for a just
adjudication, they have settled the
question for themselves without
coming to the court just as men in
other controversies settle their liti
gation out of court upon a basis of
what they know their legal rights
to be.
In my judgment every coal min
ing state could solve its by
the adoption of an industrial law
which would guarantee the public
against the cessation of the indus
try, guarantee the miners a fair and
just wage and the operators protec
tion against unjust We
have reached a point where two
things are perfectly apparent. First,
the strike is not a remedy and its
application to the situation is al
ways more ruinous to the public,
the laborers and the operators than
HftBDING WILL VETO
SOLDIER BONUS BILL
WASHINGTON, July 22.—Oppon
ents of the soldier bonus today
claimed to hp.ve positive assurance
from President Harding that he
would veto any bonus legislation
presented to him.
Acting on the strength of this as
surance, anti-bonus senators lined
up their colleagues under a pledge
to support a Harding veto of the
bill. This would give bonus sup
porters but a three-vote margin,
should it be necessary for them
to make the effort to override Har
ding.
The presidential promise to veto
the bill Was carried to senators by
three men who today were describ
ed as “prominent citizens.”
They, according to anti-bonus sen
ators, asked Mr. Harding to tell
them how he stood on the bonus.
The story is that Mr. Harding re
plied:
That he would unhesitatingly
veto any sort of bonus legislation
at this time.
That he would do this because the
treasury was not in condition nor
the taxpayers in any mood to stand
the drain the bonus would entail.
That he would tell this to anybody
who asked him the question, be the
inquirer senator or plain citizen.
Anti-bonus senators, therefore,
claimed tonight that the legislation
was dead. Supporters of the meas
sure received the news with smiles,
saying they would press the bill to
early passage the moment the tar
iff had been sent to conference,
which, it now is expected, will be
mid-August.
Mr. Harding has been variously
quoted on the bonus many times,
but its friends have maintained that
if congress passed the bill, Harding
would not veto it. If he did, two
tb'rds of both houses would over
ride him, the pro-bonus senators de
clared.
To do this, the votes of 64 sena
tors must be obtained. The votes
of 33 would sustain the veto. With
30 already pledged to this, anti-bon
us members were confident, they
said, that the other three would be
obtained.
it is helpful. Second, arbitration is
a failure because it at best leads
only to an unsatisfactory compro
mise. Those who sit on boards of ar
bitration are not judges but advo
cates of one side or the other.
Explains Industrial Court
An industrial court is an effort to
secure the composition of the con
troversy by impartial judges who
have no interest in the case except
the interest of justice.
Impartial judges have been able
in this country to secure justice in
relation to the most sacred rights.
They pass upon property, liberty,
life. They regulate the regulations
i of parent and child, of husband and
I wife. The most intimate and minute
rights of the citizen pass under the
survey of men chosen to guarantee
justice to all. If government may
guarantee to people justice in all
‘ these matters, it is rather un-Ameri
can to believe that government could
' not also guarantee justice to men
I in their controversy wnth their em
ployers.
The efforts which the federal gov
ernment thus far has made at legis
lation have stormed just where the
usefulness of such legislation might
begin. In the United States labor
I board an elaborate machinery has
1 been created for the survey of living
j conditions, the investigation of
i wages and working conditions. Every
j power has been given the board to
; arrive at all the facts and have in
, hand the means of reaching a just
, award. After creating this elaborate
i machinery the federal government
left out the engine. They gave it
no power of final decision. They
simply created an expensive debat
ing society which represents only
the longings of "'"’ernment with
none of its diernity and power.
The proposal that government
should create an i»-- tribunal
to pass upon wage controversies re
lates, of course, only to the essen
tial industries, which under the Kan
sas law are declared to be food, fuel,
clothing and transportation.
RUSS DELEGATION
FEUDS COMMUNISTS
BY EDWARD PRICE BELL
(Special Cable to The Atlanta Journal an.l
Chicago Daily News —Copyright, 1922.)
LONDON, July 22.—Krassin, Lit
vinov and other Bolshevist leaders
would move more rapidly toward the
point of view of western peoples if
they did not fear assassination. They
fear not only assassination but loss
of the influence of all such leaders
as themselves over the industrial
element. This situation, now fully
revealed to allied diplomats, is con
sidered one of the chief stumbling
blocks in all Russian negotiations.
Concerning the peasants these
leaders feel no anxiety. Through
out the rural districts there is a
strong feeling for private property.
Workers in the city, however, cling
to the doctrine of nationalization.
They still believe everything that
was instilled into them in the first
days of Leninism. Whoever advo
cates compromise with “capitalists”
the Russian city workers regard as
a traitor to the revolution and to
the cause of Communism in general.
For every such person the recog
nized penalty is assassination.
Krassinfi Litvinov and their as
sistants are not seeking martyrdom.
Moreover, they believe that Russia
must establish trading relations with
other countries. British statesmen
do not want these Russian leaders
assassinated. Lloyd George and his
advisers see no hope of bringing
Russia back into the community of
European nations within a measur
able time without the assistance of
those Russian leaders whom west
ern statesmen have finally brought
to acknowledge the soundness of
western social and political prin
ciples.
In this fact lies the explanation
of the patience shown by informed
non-Russian public men toward the
official pretentions of the Bolshevist
leaders.
It is known that these pretentions
are not to be taken at their face
value, and it is known that the Bol
shevist leaders are endeavoring by
easy stages to attract their indus
trial followers away from Communist
ideals to ideals compatible with a
resumption of friendly business and
Socialist relations between Russia
and the other nations of the world
The present leaders of republican
Germany are in much the same con
dition as are such Russians as Kras
sin and Litvinov. They pursue what
they believe to be sound policy in
, the face of the danger of the as
sassination. Dr. Rathenau. the late
foreign minister, had no doubt that
he would be assassinated. But ha
was resigned to that fate. Shortly
before he was shot down he had a
conversation with one of the high
er officials in London. There was a
hunted, fatalistic look in his eyes.
“They will kill me,” he said on
leaving at the end of the interview.
“Nevertheless I must do my duty.”
With this same British official
Krassin recently had a talk, and in
his eyes, I am told, was the same
hunted, fatalistic look.
“We have got our followers in
the cities in a mood that makes
settlement with the non-Russian
world impossible,” Krassin asserted.
“We must endeavor to change this
mood. Our difficulty is that we can
not make our people understand. If
we propose any practical course
they suspect us of disloyalty to the
revolution and for traitors to the
revolution they have only one law.”
Gallstone Troubles
Physician explains simple treatment for
inflamed gallbladder and bile ducts asso
ciated with gallstones of the liver. Free
book. Write today. Dr. Paddock, SS-201,
Kansas City, Mo.
“The Roarin’ Forties”
Furnish Mothers for
Little Italian Maria
NEW YORK, July 22.—Summer
heat sizzling on the pavements of
the drab edges of the bright theatri
cal district finds one child of the
thousands who live there happy to
day—little Maria, "The Luck of the
Roarin’ Forties.”
In winter Maria is motherless, but
when summer comes she has a hun
dred. She is one of the myriad
tragic comedies that go unnoticed
in the hurried life of the Roarin’
Forties —as the neighborhood of
cases, cabarets, and dance palaces
between Thirty-ninth street and Fif
tieth is called.
Several years ago, tired perhaps
from the strange, hurried cadence
of the new American life, Maria’s
Italian mother ended her life, leav
ing her baby and her husband alone
with his tiny flat and shoe box
shine parlor.
That winter and summer the shine
parlor had a new addition, a rather
ragged baby carriage from which
Maria cried and laughed at the pass
ing crowds. Every day, from early
in the morning until the last pros
pective customer has passe, Ma
ria’s father kept the carriage near
his stand.
“Girl acts,” singers, dancers, “re
fined comediennes,” coming in to
New York at the end of their season
to take up their furnished rooms
in the Forties, came to know the
little baby in the carriage at the
corner. Someone who knew Bret
Harte christened Maria “The Luck
of the Roarin’ Forties.”
And now, every summer, while
Maria’s father shines ’em up on the
corner, Maria finds a hundred moth
ers ready to give her an hour be
tween their rehearsals and trips to
the booking agents.
Mandate System
Now Approved by
League of Nations
LONDON, July 23.—(8y the As
sociated Press.)-—Final confirmation
was given the Palestine and Syrian
mandates Saturday by the council of
the league of nations.
This means that the mandate sys
tem of government becomes effect
ive throughout < e world almost im
mediately. There remains -or set
tlement only certain minor points
between France‘and Italy, respect
ing Italian schools, immigration and
some economic itures in Syria.
The Earl of Balfour, Rene Vivi
ani and Marquis Imperial!, respec
tively the delegates from England
France and Italy, will make declara
tio is the future
policy of their governments in the
mandate areas.
The manti. +e for Mesopotamia
automatically disappears with the
creation by Great Britai.i in an in
dependent state in that country.
There was no real divergence of
opinion regarding the Syrian man
date, but n article 14 of the Pales
tine document, 'efining the func
tions and powers of the commission
for the custody of the holy places,
there was some disagreement be
tween France, Italy and Great Brit
ain.
This article is now revised to meet
the wishes of all the parties and the
text will be announced Monday,
GOSSIP,
WSB Is Headliner
At “Radio Party”
Given in Missouri
WSB’s 10:45 p. m. concert, July
18, was the best of many programs
picked out of the air at a radio party
given by the Southeast Missouri
State Teachers’ college at Cape Gi
rardeau, Mo., when more than 500
people assembled on the college cam
pus to lisetn in, according to a news
paper clipping sent by Prof. E. H.
Thomas, head of the physics depart
ment of the college to The Journal
radio department.
A radio receiving set equipped with
a loud speaker was used, and Miss
Hazel Whitney’s rendition of “The
Rosary” was heard distinctly four
blocks away by a neighbor, as also
were all the announcements.
Other stations heard by the col
lege guests were the Post-Dispatch,
St. Louis, Mo.; Detroit Daily News,
Detroit, Mich.; Pacific General Hos
pital, Denver, Colo., and Richmond
Heights, Memphis, Tenn.
CAPPER SAF FORD
WILL WIN IN END
WASHINGTON July 22.—Though
the first skirmish in the battle to
accept the Ford offer for the Mus
cle Shoals power and nitrate plants
was lost “in the end Ford and the
people will win” Senator Arthur
Cappr Kansas, head of the strong
farm bloc in congrss, declared in a
statement today.
Senator Capper was one of the
two Republicans who voted with
southern Democrats of the senate
agriculture committee to report out
favorably the Ford offer. Final dis
position is now up to the senate.
“Losing a skirmish doesn’t mat
ter if you finally win the battle,”
Senator Capper said. “The senators
who are backing t! e Ford proposi
tion as the only really practical pro
posal for the development of Muscle
Shoals for service in time of war
and to furnish the farmers of the
country with cheap fertilizer in time
of peace, have a b' ; fight on their
hands and are in that fight for a
finish.
“As I see it it is Ford and the peo
ple on one side and the fertilizer
trust and the private water power
interests on the other. In the end
Ford and the people will win.”
“I believe tho’oughly in the sin
cerity of Ford and his ability to
smash the fertilizer trust.
“However, a great cry aro: > at
once that an effort was being made
to give Ford something for nothing;
that it was proposed to hand over
to the Detroit manufacturer the
country’s greatest water power for
a song.
“Forgotten entirely was the fact
that the government was sinking
annually great sums of money in
keeping up the abandoned project;
that +-> complete its development
and operation by the government
would mean an unbroken stream of
the tax-payers’ money pouring into
the project for yeahs and years to
come, and that at best Ford can not
make to exceed 8 per cent.”
Senator Capper claimed the men
who during the war, “inveighed
against government mismanagement
of railroads,” when the Ford offer
arose, “suddenly became champions
of government development and
operation of waterpowers and ni
trate plants.”
“It appears that hatred of Henry
Ford, or dislike for his political
views, is so great that many men
who detest government ownership
and operation of industry are will
ing to swallow even that bad
mouthful rather than see Ford get
Muscle Shoals.”
Senator Capper suggested that the
Ford plan be modified in some de
tails, and indicated that Ford would
accept any modification “within
reason.”
The draft of the minority report
on the Ford offer, in the hands of
Senator Ladd, North Dakota, is not
yet completed, but will be in shape
for presentation to the senate early
next week, it was announced today.
Harding Is Honorary
Indian Tribe Member
WASHINGTON. July 22.—Presi
dent Harding today accepted the in
vitation of the Flat Head Indians
of Montana to become an honorary
member of their tribe. He will be
adopted with elaborate ceremonies
during the next few days, according
to plans outlined by the Ronan,
Mont., Community club, which ex
tended the invitation to the presi
dent on behalf of the Indians.
President Harding, in his reply ot
acceptance, said he had no objec
tion to a proposal to have a moun
tain peak on the Indian reservation
named Mount Harding.
fiSPIRIN
I
Say “Bayer” and Insist!
f \
Unless you see the name “Bayer"
on package or cn tablets you are not
getting the genuine Bayer product
prescribed by physicians over twen
ty-two years and proved safe by mil
lions for
Colds Headache
Toothache Lumbago
Earache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proper directions.
Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost
few cents. Druggists also sell bot
tles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the
trade-mark of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.
(Advertisement.)
RADIO QUIZ
Queries addressed to the radio department
will be answered in this column whenever
they iir» of general Interest to our readers.
Answers will be given by letter cnly when
they are of such a natute that it Is im
practical to publish them. Replies to ques
tions are broadcast by WSB on Monday,
Wednesday and Friday afternoons as a fea
ture of the 5 o'clock broadcasting schedule.
Radio amateurs and novices are invited to
take advantage of this service In solving
their radio problems. There is no charge
for this service..
BY G. A. ILER
(Journal Radio Engineer)
“I—Will a four wire aerial 100
feet long receive better and strong
er than a one-wire aerial 100 feet
long? 2—Where is the best place
to take the lead-in from on a receiv
ing aerial? 3—Will an ordinary
piece of electric lighting wire drop
ped over the roof and down the side
of a thirty-story building serve as
an aerial?” —L. H. D., Atlanta, Ga.
Answer: I—A four-wire aerial
will not give any material increase
in the strength of signals, but will
gather up a great deal of interfer
ence that would otherwise go by un
heard with but a single wire aerial,
which is the best type of aerial for
receiving purposes. 2—The best
place for the lead-in wire is at the
end of the aerial nearest the receiv
ing set. 3 —Yes, you can use a wire
down the side of the building for an
aerial, but care should be taken to
comply with the fire underwriters’
regulations.
“What instruments in addition to
the following will I need to assem
ble a single tube regenerative set: a
variometer, a UV 200 vacuum tube
socket and rheostat mounted on a
common bakelite panel, a pair of 2,-
200 ohm phones and a phone con
denser?”—H. S. H., Macon, Ga.
Answer: You will need a good
aerial about 100 feet long and 40
feet high, a variometer and tickler
coil, a grid leak and condenser, a
22 1-2 volt ZB battery, a 6 volt stor
age battery, a lightning arrester and
a good ground clamp.
Italian Government x
Faces Many Troubles;
Ministry May Resign
BY MARIO BORSA
(Special Cable to The Atlanta Journal and
Chicago Daily News—Copyright. 1922.)
MILAN, Italy, July 22.—The diffi
culties of the Italian government are
growing at such a rate that it is
possible the ministry will be forced
to resign. Besides its many other
troubles it is evident that the gov
ernment is not able to cope success
fully with the serious internal strug
gles. The fascisti are still occupying
Cremona undisturbed as they al
ready occupy Bologna. Mostly with
out interference in Cremona they de
stroyed the labor exchange and the
co-operative offices and wrecked the
office of the Socialist newspaper and
the home of the Catholic deputy.
The towns of Novara. Rmiini,
Adria, Vitterbo and some others are
Make Y®ur Own Radio Set: jl
I from the factory. Satisfaction guaranteed or
I money refunded. Every part carefully tested
I ar| d inspected by radio experts.
Kj This is your opportunity to make your own, efficient
® wi radio receiving set at small cost. Send full payment with I gGt
order, or if you prefer, you may send deposit, and pay I R&i
afigi balance C. O. D.. and we will ship any of the following MM
radio parts at the bargain prices quoted:
Regular Special
Price Price
■■ rei Variometers 5.00 3.00
S ! H Vario Couplers 5.00 3.00
Transformers , 5.00 S.OO'
23-Plate Condensers 3.00 2.25
9 ■ 43-Plate Condensers 4.50 2.75
Vacuum Tube Sockets 1.00 .05
P Dials and Knob 1.00 .05 1
S ffiSSSnSBb 111 FBJIFF Wiring diagram and blue print with every
c! m IFIIItC order. This special bargain price offer is for
g! * a limited time only. Act at once! Remember—we guar
; antee satisfaction or refund your money. Circular mailed
I'”' request. i
Four Great Papers CO c
Six Months Each
Here’s an unparalleled chance to make a trifling sum go a tremen
dous distance!
Read the News!
The Tri-Weekly Journal \ Fo! U Fuii P Year
(3 Times a Week) j
The Southern Ruralist $2
(Twice a Month) \
) Special Price
The Alabama Times / For Limited Time
(Once a Week) L for
Home Circle Magazine 1 j-rx
(Once a Month) /
Use This Coupon! Mail It Today!
The Atlanta Tri-Weekly Journal, Atlanta, Ga., Gentlemen: Enclosed please
find Fifty Cents (50c) for which kindly send me the four papers printed above . -
six months each, as per your Special Offer.
Name
Postoffice R. F. D
TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1922.
Harbour Smoke House
Sends Testimonial
To WSB Radio Stars
A testimonial in the form of
enough fine ice cream to warrant a
regular party reached WSB’s studio
Friday night from G. A. Harbour,
of Harbour's Smoke House, in recog
nition of the splendid concert given
at 7 o’clock by the six Maurers —
Gertrude, Elizabeth, Oscar, Billy,
Leo and Walter.
Mr. Harbour’s welcome gift in the
sixth that unseen listeners have prof
fered as evidence of their apprecia
tion of The Journal’s artists and
transmission. Two watermelons,
another offering of ice cream, two
boxes of cigars and a supply of
dark fire Tennessee tobacco,/ make
up the list to date.
Rebellion Feared
Against Government
Os German Republic
BY GEORGE WITTE
(Special Cable to The Atlanta Journal and
Chicago Daily News—Copyright, 1922.)
BERLIN, July 22. —Hundreds of
machine guns, thousands of rifles
and scores of big caliber field guns
are being discovered daily in north
German cities such as Kiel and Ham
burg and in Bavaria. The interal
lied commission disarmament has
just made a report to London, Paris
and Rome on the gravity of the sit
uation and pointing out that the
spirit of opposition among former
army officers and soldiers is getting
stronger daily." This it attributes to
the present government’s failure to
suppress the reactionary movement
with a strong hand.
According to messages from
Bavaria troops there have come out
openly among the Berlin people. Sev
eral of the high officials have been
suspended and entirely whole divi
sions have been transferred to other
parts of the country.
2,000 Are Slain
In Chinese Battle
CANTON, China, July 22.—(8y the
Associated Pre^s.) —Sun Yat Sen’s
forces in northern Kwangtung are
short of ammunition, according to
advices from sources at Shiuchow
friendly to Chen Chiung-Ming, Sun’s
opponent in the struggle for control
of Canton.
Reports from the same quarter
also state the losses in the last three
days fighting around Shiuchow have
aggregated more than 2,000, with
the heavier casualties In the Sun
ranks.
Chen Chiung-Ming is rushing re
inforcements to the Shiuchow front
daily.
equally under the terrorism of fas
cisti bands.
CALOMEL IS 1-
DANGEROUS DRUG
Next Dose may Salivate
You, Loosen Teeth or .
Start Rheumatism ]
Calomel is mercury; quicksilver. It
crashes into sour bile like dynamite,
cramping and sickening you. Calo
mel attacks the bones and should
never be put into your system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, con
stipated and all knocked out just gr>
to your druggist and get a bottle
of Dodson’s Liver Tone for a few
cents which is a harmless vegetable
substitute for dangerous calomel.
Take a spoonful and if It doesn’t
start your liver and straighten you
up better and quicker than nasty
calomel and without making you
sick you just go back and get your
money.
Don’t take calomel! It makes you
sick the next day; it loses you a
day’s work. Dodson’s Liver Tone
straightens you right up and you
feel great. No salts necessary. Give
tc to the children because it is per
fectly harmless and can not saji
vate. — (Advertisement.)
libmi
I KEEPING WELL An N? Tablet
I (a vegetable aperient) taken at
night will help keep you well, by
toning and strengthening your di
gestion and elimination.
30
Gel a
Chips off the OW Block
|R JUNIORS Little |R«
One-third the regular does. Made
of the same ingredients, then candy
g coated. For children and adulte.
Free to Asthma and
Hay Fever Sufferers
Free Trial of Method That Anyone
Can Use Without Discomfort
or Loss of Time
We have a method for the control of
Asthma, and wc want you to try it at our
expense. No matter whether your case is of
long standing or recent development, wheth
er it is present as Chronic Asthma or Hay
Fever, you should send for a Free Trial
our method. No matter in what climate you
live, no matter what your age or occupa
tion, if you are troubled with Asthma or
Hay Fever, our method should relieve you
promptly. .11
We especially want to send it to those
apparently hopeless cases, where nil forms
of Inhalers, douches, opium preparations,
fumes, “patent smokes.” etc., have failed.
We want to show everyone nt our expense,
that our method is designed to end all diffi
cult breathing, all wheezing, and all those
terrible paroxysms.
This free offer is too Important tc neglect
a single day. Write now and begin the
method at once. Send no money. Simply
mail coupon belftw. Do it Today—you even
do not pay postage.
FREE TRIAL COUPON
FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room 956(1,'
Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo, N. Y.
Send free trial of your method to:
(Advertisement.)
Lumber Is Advancing
There is no better Engine or
Sawmill on the market today
than the Farquhar.
With lumber going up
you can make big
profits with thia out
fit. *
Farquhar
Slab Burner
WRITE FOR CATALOG AND PRICES .
Woodruff
Farquhar Doubla , ,
Belt Feed Sawmill Machinery Mfg. Co.
41 S. Forsyth St. Atlanta, Ga.