Newspaper Page Text
1 PUNK HELD
GROWING ISSUE lit
POLITICAL CIRCLE
BT ROBERT T. SMALL
1921, by the Consolidated Press
Association —Special Leased Wire
to The Atlanta Journal.)
MIAMI BEACH, Fla., Jan. 26.
Politicians large and politicians
small are flocking to Florida for a
brief rest before the start of the
strenuous presidential campaign. In
the slack waters of this southern
extremity of the country they are
able, it seems, to get a better per
spective on the situation than when
they are in the midst of the swirling
rapids around Washington, New
York, Cleveland ttftd Chicago.
The outstanding impression which
one gains from numerous talks with
the politically wise is that the whole
question of taxation is to be thrashed,
out in the campaign and may have
a much greater bearing on the fi
nal result than many persons im-
AAgine.
the first place the positions
Taken by the congressional leaders
of the two old parties at Washing
ton on taxation are bound to have
a great effect on the campaign war
chests.
The Republicans apparently are
going to have a much larger fund
than the one raised in 1920 even
counting the nearly $2,000,000 def
icit which was incurred by the then
chairman of the Republican national
committee, Will H. Hays, in the con
duct of the campaign.
The Democrats apparently are go
ing to have the slimmest “pickings”
they have ever known, unless some
entirely unexpected source of cam
paign revenue should suddenly be
opened to them. Mr. McAdoo is
understood to have been assured of
financial backing in the event of
his nomination, but how his wealthy
friends and supporters will, regard
the “soak the rich” slogan of the
Democrats in congress is calculated
to cause no little worriment to the
gentleman from Southern California.
If the Democrats of the house and
senate adhere to their program of
relief for the surtax payers, with
the addition of a new excess profits
imposition, they are going to dry up
some,of the substantial well springs
of campaign contributions in the
past. This is not a surmise. Demo
cratic members of the ways and
means committee in the house and
of the finance committee in the sen
ate have been bluntly told so by
some of the most influential busi
ness men of their party. Democratic
senators and representatives have
been informed that their attitude on
the tax question is calculated to
alienate every business interest and
every business man from the party,
and is certain to shut off all cam
paign contributions from this class
of the citizenry.
The Democrats of congress, it is
claimed, are putting the members of
this national committee m the posi
tion of going to a business man or a
man of means and ’saying “please
give us a contribution to help us
out through our program of making
you pay more tax.”
Fine chance for a large contribu
tion there.
The Republicans on the other hand
are making a direct play to the busi
ness and financial interest in its
Mellon program to reduce surtaxes
in a manner which the secretary of
the treasury fully believes will put
more capital into industry and result
in greater prosperity to the United
States.
“Give us a contribution to help us
reduce your taxes,” is the Republic
an appeal to the business man, the
man able to give, and there can be
no question that if taxation is to be
the issue of the campaign the Re
publicans will get a whaling big pot
of gold to carry forward their ideas.
The Democratic appeal, of course,
is to the “common people.” They
say their tax fight is for the man
in the street, or in any event for
the man earning SIO,OOO a year or
under. This is not the class of
man, however, that gives largely
to any campaign fund. Such men
can not afford to give political con
tributions of any appreciable size
* unless their income is from political
sources and dependent upon party
success.
Will Hays in 1920 showed the fu
tility of attempting t finance an
aggressive presidential campaign on
yo-called popular contribution. He
/Mharted out to limit all contributions
to A maximum of SI,OOO. The result
was a huge deficit which has just
about been wiped out by three years
of untiring labor on the part of that
master of political finance, Fred Up
ham, of Chicago, treasurer of the
Republican national campaign. Fred
has announced to his friends that he
will never go through another ex
perience like that in 1920, so evident
ly there wil Ibe no limit placed on
the contributions this year. The
Coolidge position on taxation having
called out so much popular support,
especially among the well-to-do and
thrift, is likely to call out even great
er support when it comes time to
send in the checks and cash to the
Collidge fund.
The Democrats, lacking corpora
tion support as a rule, have been
compelled in the past to rely upon
a few wealthy men, true to the par
ty through thick and thin to fur
nish the bulk of support in its cam
paigns. Not a few of these men,
men who kept various headquarters
from being closed up by the sheriff
in the Cox campaign, have frankly
stated this year they will not give
, their money to a “soak the rich”
policy in Democratic councils.
The legitimate financing of a mod
ern presidential campaign, the
maintenance of headquarters in the
various sections of the country, the
hiring of speakers, advertising and
other means of education and promo
tion, requires a mint of money.
So it looks now as if the’ Demo
crats will go into the campaign un
der the handicap of having perhaps
the leanest purse in their history
against the most plethoric campaign
bag the G. O. P. has ever known.
State’s Largest Pecan Tree
Pays Taxes of Its Owner
SPARTA. Ga.. Jan. 26.—Hancock
county lays claim to the largest
pecan tree in Georgia. The tree is
located on the lands of Miss Neppie
Hunt, a few miles from Sparta. The
tree is a seedling, the nuts have
been brought here from Texas by a
r traveler t'Sout forty years ago. The
owner stnrbs that this one tree pays
more than the taxes on her lands
each year.
CHILDREN CRY FOR “CASTORIA"
Especially Prepared for Infants and Children of All Ages
Mother! Fletcher’s Castoria has I you have apvays bought bears sig
been in use for over 30 years as a I nature of
pleasant, harmless substitute for 1
Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething
Drops and Soothing Syrups. Con / Y./7. /
tains no narcotics. Proven directions i.
are on each package. Physicians
verywhere recommend it. The kind (Advertisement.)
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
ONLY WOMAN SKIPPER SAILS HER SHIP
INTO MANY PORTS OF THE SEVEN SEAS
1 ■ 'hi \AV
' UMMA ■ hV|! ■I- \\ V
WfcYlilWli mH hvhIII %If
I \ n n Jl■ li
1\ M } J m lU Ww
a MBR?' i : /i -4 ■lu HI IR
’> '< ' ; Hll Bill H'> U
J 1 S I sJbBIL afe
j. nnw ®
• oMt* I - ■ }
i Ik*
Above, masts and rigging of thd Jennie Crocker, the schooner over which the first woman skipper
will henceforth have compand. Below, Captain. Jennie Crocker “sighting” and at the wheel. Inset,
Captain Nelson Crocker.
00. WALTER RIGGS
HEAD OF CLEMSON,
IS LAIO TO REST
CLEMSON COLLEGE, S. C., Jan.
26.—Dr. Walter Merritt Riggs, pres
ident of Clemson college, was laid
to his final rest here Friday after
noon after impressive funeral serv
ices. Dr. Riggs died in Washington
Wednesday and his body had lain in
state here since its arrival.
The services were held in the col
lege chapel, which was packed with
a thousand students and several
hundred others, citizens of this com
munity, delegations of Clemson
alumni chapters, representatives of
practically every college in the state
and many others.
The casket rested at the foot of
the rostrum, the front of which was
banked with hundreds of beautiful
floral offerings. The boftrd of trus
tees, the directors of departments,
the faculty and many distinguished
visitors occupied the rostrum. The
student body occupied the main au
ditorium, except for certain reserved
seats near the casket for the fam
ily and close friends.
Rev. John McSween, pastor of the
local Presbyterian church, of which
Dr. Riggs was a member, and Dr.
W. H. Mills, a former pastor, as
sisted by the othe r college pastors,
Rev. J. D. Holler, Rev. George
Zachary, and Rev. J. H. Gibson, con
ducted the services, which consisted
simply of the singing of two of Dr.
Riggs' favorite hymns, “Rock of
Ages” and “Abide With Me,” appro
priate Scripture readings and pray
ers, after which the body was taken
to the grave in Woodland cemetery,
the procession passing through a
double line of the cadet corps, which
in turn marched to the cemetery
and formed a. huge circle with the
others present around the grave.
After the benediction was pronounc
ed, a company fired a salute of three
guns, and the buglers sounded taps
over the grave.
Members of the board of trustees
present and acting as honorary pall
bearers included Colonel Alan John
stone, Newberry; Richard 1. Man
ning, A. F. Lever, W. D. Barnett,
and I. M. Mauldin, Columbia: It. E.
Geer, Greenville; R. M. Cooper,
Wisacky; H. C. Tillman, Greenwood.
Directors of departments of the col
lege acting ns honorary pallbearers
m?luded Professors S. B. Earle. H.
W. Barre. D. H. Henry, C. S. Dog
gett, F. H. H. Calhoun. D. W. Dan
iel, R. N. Brackett, Major Madison
Pearson. '
The active pallbearers were eight
' cadets, Including presidents of the
foui' classes and close personal
friends of the family as follows: E.
H. Hall, prent Falls, senior class
president; M. S. Covin, McCormick,
president junior class; C. E. Haw
kins, Starr, sophomore class presi
dent, H. J. Hartzog, .Greenwood;
freshman class president; S. S. Ham
ilton, Dillon; R. O. Fortenbury, Gaff
ney; J. B. Owens, Marion; H. S.
< Singley. Prosperity.
Distinguished represetatives from
other colleges and organizations ores-
Jennie Crocker Shares Com
mand of Fore-and-After
With Her Husband—Skilled
in Salt Water Ways
BY JOSEPHINE VAN DE GRIFT
| PERTH AMBOY, N. J., Jan. 26.
The spell of the sea—it wove itself
into the hearts of a boy and girl
and set them looking’ out over the
horizon with nameless longings. It
took possession of the lives of a
man and a woman and called them I
'away from the hearth and kindred.
llt sent them adventuring into :
I strange ports to bargain with
j strange men. It broke them, it hurt '
I them, it tossed them, but still it j
| calls them. They the slaves, it the
, master until rhe last sail shall have
? been hauled in.
And that’s doubtless why tne cab
| in of the “Jennie Crocker” looks so
■ much like home. It’s the only home
’ that Captain Nelson Crocker and
Captain Jennie Crocker know.
Once they tried fixing up a little
home in Cliftondale, Mass. It was
a seven-room house and there was*
a place to raise chickens and a lit
tle bed for pansies. They tried it
six weeks and gave up.
Back to the Son
The sea called them hack. A for
rent sign appeared on the seven
' room house.
Now there are carpets on the floor
of the cabin of the “Jennie Crocker"
and draperies at the doors, a phono
graph is in the sorner and on the
table, screwed to the floor to keep
it from sliding,, is a grass basket
with a bit of embroidery.
■ For Captain Nelson Crocker and
. Captain Jennie Crocker have given
( up. They’re not going to leave the
i sea any more.
That’s why Captain Jennie Crock
i er took out the papers the other day
! that made her the only woman cap-
I tain on the seven seas.
Doubtless she could have taken
I 11 11 ■ " ■ ■
Friends Will-Erect
Monument to Hermit
On Top of Mountain
KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Jan. 26.—A
I monument t ca hermit will be erect
j ed by friends on top of Iron moun
j tains. For fifty years, Nicholas
; Grindstaff spent his life on top of
■ the mountain.
It is said that in early life Grind- j
staff met with several failures, both
financially and otherwise. This I
I caused him to lose confidence in
i not only himself but in humanity
generally. He sought a home on
' the summit of the grand old moun
; tain which extends from Damascus,
j Va., to near Elizabethton, Tenn.
' Here he built a small hut out of
poles, stopping the cracks with moss
A short distance from his crude
hut he erected a barn for his ox
whi ’ he used in tilling the soil.
, This ox and a dog were his only
i companions.
Friends visited the ascetic's home
recently and found him dead, his
faithful dog keeping mournful
watch over the body.
Friends from Johnson and Car-
I ter counties secured a casket and
the body was interred near his hum
ble home where he spent so many
lonely hours.
ent included hr. D. B. Johnson, Win
throp; Dr. W. P. Melton. University
of South Carolina: Dr. W. J. Mc-
Glothlin. Furman: Dr. S. J. Derrick.
Newberry college; Dr. J. E. White,
Anderson college: J. H. Hope, state
department of education, and com
mittees from the state senate and
house of representatives now in ses
sion in Columbia.
Practically all members of the
families of Dr. and Mrs. Riggs reach
ed here for the funeral these includ
ing. Arthur F. Riggs. Chicago; Miss
May Riggs, Orangeburg; Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Bell. Charleston; Miss
Agnes Riggs. Orangeburg; Mrs Har
ry Smith. Richmond; Mrs. J. W. Wil
lis. Alabama; Mrs. M. V. Moore. Ala
bama; Mr. John Moore, North Caro
| lina.
; them out most any time during the
| 20 years she was sailing as help
mate and chief mate with Captain
Nelson Crocker, her husband.
For once when they were coming
back from a little 12,000-mile expe
dition down to Africa there were 20
days when Captain Nelson Crocker
1 was delirious with fever. And dur
! ing all that time Jennie Crocker
navigated the ship, gave the courses,
took the sightings and doctored her
husband. At night time she re
i lieved the black man who was fan
ning him.
And once when they were com
■ ing back from Portugal a gale from
: the Azores drove them about help
j lessly for 52 hours. Jennie Crocker
| stayed down in the cabin that time
i but it was because her husband
| boarded her up and made her stay
there.
Yes, Jennie Crocker could have
taken out her papers most any time
and when she finally did take the
examination the other day, an ex
amination lasting a day and three:
quarters, grizzled veterans from the
customs house came over and beg
ged to shake her by the hand.
Her First Command
Now Captain Jennie Crocker Is
getting ready to command her first
expedition. It’s a little jaunt down
and around to gt. Joe, Fla., after
lumber. Nelson Crocker's going
along as chief mate.
But whether either of them goes
along as captain or as chief mate,
neither of them is going to leave the
sea any more.
“Maybe the sea has brought un
happiness to some, to us it has
brought only happiness,” says Cap
i tain Jepnie. “Nelson and I loved
i it when we were little children five
years old. We’ve loved it the 20
years we’ve been sailing together.
“The sea lifts you above petty
things and it makes you believe in
God. It teaches you teamwork and
sacrifice and dependence on one an
other. Those are the things that
make good sailors and those are
the things that make- happy mar
riages.”
Weeks Subjects Self
To Chlorine Gas Test
For Curing of Colds
V ASHINGTON, Jan. 26.—Callers
with overseas experience who were
admitted to Secretary Weeks’ office
today instinctively reached for gas
, masks. They caught a decided taint
I of chlorine gas in the air.
The secretary explained that he
I was submitting to a test of the gas
service devj.ee recently perfected to
; cure colds through mild concentra
tions of chlcrine gas. The plan was
worked out and the apparatus de
veloped by medical research officers
of the chemical welfare service at
Edgewood Arsenal. Maryland.
The apparatus has been tried on
some 900 cases of various kinds of
colds in the army, and the records
t Show complete cures in 756 of these
j <■ ises.
Apple Tragedy
ELGIN. Ill.—John Morris was
fatally hurt in a row with Henry
Tewson growing out of a. theft of
apples by one of Telson’s children.
NEW LAMP BURNS
94%A1R
Beats Electric or Gas
A new oil lamp that gives an amazing
ly brilliant, soft, white light, even better
than gas or electrictiy, has been tested by
the U. S. Government and 35 leading uni
versities and found to be superior to 10
ordinary oil lamps. It burns without odor,
smoke or noise—no pumping up, is simple.
• lean, safe. Burns 94% air and 6% com
: mon kerosene (coal oil.)
The Inventor. A. N. Johnson. 642 N.
Broad St., Philadelphia, is offering to
send a lamp on 10 days’ FREE trial, or
. even to give one FREE to the first user
in each locality who will help him intro
duce it. Write him today for full particu
lars. Also ask him to explain how you
can get the agency, and without experi
ence or money mak» $250 to 5500 per
month.—i Advertisement.)
STATE SEED BOOM
BEGUN WITH FIGHT
OH LEAGUE PLUffi
Declaring that both William G.
McAdoo and Senator Oscar Under
wood are “for the League of Nations
without reservation or equivocation,”
ten Democratic leaders in Georgia
Saturday issued an appeal for the
voters of this state to rally to the
support of Senator James A. Reed,
of Missouri, “as the man who has
done more than any other statesman
to keep the United States out of the
league.”
The statement predicts that the
popular majority of President Har
ding over Mr. Cox, amounting to
more than 7,000,000, will be doubled
in the forthcoming election if the
Democrats adopt a platform support
ing the league.
The statement was given out by
former State Senator James H. Boy
kin, of Lincolnton, editor of the Lin
coln Journal, and recognized as one
of the leaders of the Watson wing
of the Democratic party in Georgia.
Senator Boykin denied reports that
the organization supporting Senator
Reed would also put a ticket in the
field for state offices, declaring that
he was pledged to no candidate for
a state office, but is interested solely
in Senator Reed’s campaign at the
present time.
Those who signed the statement
were: Thc.aas W. Hardwick, former
United States senator and governor
o- Georgia; Ki.-hard B. Russell, chief
justice of the Georgia suprc.oe court;
Walter A. Smis, mayor of Atlanta;
Senator Boykin, Judge James J.
Flynt, of Griffin; Representative J.
B. Daniel, of Troup county; Judge B.
F. Walker, of Gibson, former state
senator; John I. Kelley, of Lawrence
ville; Benjamin M. Blackburn and
Geor > W. Seales, of Atlanta.
Formal Statement
The statement follows:
“The present situation, with re
spect to the presidential primary of
March 19, is so alarming, in one re
spect, as to be the occasion of deep
concern to all whi> believe in the
free and untrammeled expression of
the popular will.
“If no candidates, except the two
who are already suggested in Geor
gia, are to be entered, then more
than one hundred thousand Georgia
Democrats will be virtually disfran
chised, so far as this primary is
concerned, and left absolutely with
out an. opportunity to vote their
honest convictions. Thefte men are
real Democrats—of the old school—
and they constitute, according to the
election returns of four years ago,
a majority of our total vote. They
are Democrats who do not believe
in internationalism, and who reso
lutely oppose the control of our
government in the interest of inter
national bankers.
“They will be denied, in Georgia,
the opportunity to cast their votes
in accordance with their honest, con
victions, unless they arouse them
selves and insist that such an op
portunity be afforded.
“ ‘Eternal vigilance is the price of
libert y.’
“Four years ago the Democratic
national convention adopted a plat
form indorsing the Wilson adminis
tration and declaring for the League
of Nations. That convention nomi
nated a candidate for president, who
insisted on making the League of Na
tions the leading issue in the cam
paign.
League Decisively Beaten
“From a Democratic standpoint
the result, was most disastrous. The
Democratic party sustained the most
crushing defeat in its history. The
popular majority of Mr. Harding
over Mr. Cox was more than seven
million votes, and the Democratic
party did not carry a single state
in the north, east or west, and
even in the hitherto ‘solid south,’
Tennessee and Oklahoma, wont Re
publican. Practically the entire in
dependent vote of the country, and
many hundreds of thousands of
Democrats had refused to accept the
platform and candidate of the Dem
ocratic party.
“It would seem that so crushing
a defeat, so recent in its occurrence,
would have taught some wisdom to
Democratic leadership, but the evi
deuce is both abundant and multi
plying that such is not the case, at
least with a powerful faction in the
Democratic party.
“The recent past has afforded the
spectacle of Mr. Wilson denouncing
in the most vicious terms those of
his fellow citizens who do hot agree
with him, and demanding in no un
certain words that the United States
reverse its traditional policy in or
der to join the League of Nations.
“Only last week, Hon. Newton D.
Baker, of Ohio, secretary of war
in the Wilson cabinet, denying the
rumor that he was an aspirant for
the Democratic presidential nomina
tion, declared that he was devoting
himself to the task of inducing the
United States to join the League
of Nations.
Issue Means “Suicide”
“The two candidates for president
so far suggested for the support of
Democrats in Georgia are Mr. Mc-
Adoo and Senator Underwood. Both
of these gentlemen abe row and
have been all the time for the
League of Nations without reserva
tion and without equivocation. Mr.
McAdoo is the son-in-law of Mr,
Wilson, and he was secretary of the
treasury in the Wilson cabinet. In
at least a dozen public speeches
and public interviews he has de
clared himself emphatically for the
League of Nations. Senator Un
derwood is in the same boat. He
voted to ratify the treaty. Including
the league, w’ithout reservations,
and in several recent speeches and
interviews he has indicated that he
has had no change of heart on this
great question.
“For the Democratic party to
nominate »either of these gentlemen
with their views and declarations
on this question, would be political
suicide. The Republican majority
of seven million in 1920 would be
probably doubled in 1924. The Dem
ocratic party, led by such a nomi
nee, standing on such a platform,
would be ruined, and could not re
cover in fifty years.
"The American people will have
no internationalism. They will
never place another flag above the
American flag, and they wish no
other flag except the American flag.
They realize tnh-t ail that Europe
now desires of them, either in the
ieSgue or out of it, can be crystal
’zed into one sentence: “Forgive us
our debts.’
City League Failures
“Since the league has been func
tioning we have seen it fail signally
every time the opportunity presented
itself for it to ‘prevent war.' We
have seen it fail to even attempt to
exert a restraining influence to pre
xent the war-provoking and hate
producing situation in the Ruhr.
We have seen it flouted by Italy,
when its good offices were invoked
by little Greece in the controversy
b’tween those two countries.
“In th*=se circumstances, it is not
likely that any considerable number
cf the Ameiican people will forsake
TUESDAY,. JANUARY 29, 1924.
BOGUS EGYPTIAN ANTIQUES
FLOOD MARKET ON DEMAND
FOR RELICS OF KING “TUT”
First Rainfall in Many Years
Surprises Natives in Vai-”
ley of Kings Saturday Aft
ernoon
LUXOR, Egypt, Jan. 27.—(Ry the
Associated Press.) —The discoveries
in the Valley of Kings have given
a great Impetus to the trade- In
"antikas” as the Egyptians call
them, for which Luxor has been the
headquarters for many years.
The main source of supply of gen
uine antiques, which are far rarer
than the forgeries, lies in the peas
ants who often dig up interesting
and even valuable pieces m the
fields, and in the native diggers em
ployed by the foreign excavators
who, despite rigid supervision, are
able to do a certain amount of pil
fering during their work.
Any peasant finding an “antika”
is compelled by law to hand it over
to the local inspector of antiquities,
who will buy it, if he so desires, at
his own valuation, but in most cases
the peasants prefer to take their
chance with the Luxor dealers.
These dealers can only trade by
virtue of a license from the Egyp
tian government; consequently the
Gilbertian situation arises whereby
the authorit'es license the dealers
the doctrines and teachings of Wash
ington and Jefferson and the fath
ers, to go world adventuring. We
have fuily enough to do at home.
“Four years ago an overwhelming
majority of the people of Georgia
voiced and voted their objection Jo
this league of nations, and yet these
same people in Georgia are now
asked to support either one of two
candidates, both of whom ar© unre
pentent advocates of the league of
rations. The proposition is absurd.
To advance it is unmitigated gall.
“We suggest that Georgia Demo
crats, who love their country and
its oldtime principles, who are un
Willing to guarantee foreign bound
cry lines either with their blood or
treasure, who want none of entang
ling foreign alliances, and who still
believe in the doctrines of Washing-.
ton and the fathers, rally to the
support o fSenator James A. Reed,
of Missouri, -who bas never faltered
in his support of fundamental Amer
icanism, who has done more than
any one man in America, Democrat
or Republican, to keep this country
from joining the league, and who
as statesman, orator and patriot,
stands without a rival in either
Democratic or Republican ranks.
“He is the only Democrat who has
been able to carry the great pivotal
stats of Missouri against Republican
opposition in many years. He should
be nominated; and if nominated, he
in be elected.”
Send No Money
fIBSJSSft 20-SHOT
Best typo made with
AC ncw i ,n P rovef i model of
HNKBaBiI host blue steel, .lust like
BiWSEM * * you used over there. 32
f'-' (a L extra magazine
free $8.45 1
ingout Hand Ejecting Left Hand Wheeler
Revolver. None better made at any price. 32
Cal.. .$16.25« 38 Cal., $17;25. Brand-new latest I
models. Guaranteed Pon*»|no Imnortnrf.
Blue steel ,SBRS2ESBS32Z3SSSEE!2S®k
Army Automatic jMMBHIiIMMRMMP
.rh sa!'.’!
fool proof; not to
be compared with
inferior makes at \7 J&ofil
this price. A bar- C£
gain for only $8.75
Pocket Automatic. For depen da
construction and smoothness of action
this 25 Cal. automatic cannot, bo
beat. Special at $6.75
P P i;VAX ve,y SEND NO MONEY
Satisfaction ouaranteed or money promptly re
funded. UNIVERSAL SALES CO., Dept. 77, 259,
Broadway, New York City.
DI fiAR DISEASES—No Matter
W L VvM How Bad or Old the Case
or What’» the Cause send for FREE Booklet
about Or. Panter’s Treatment used success
fully tor over 25 yeari In the most severe and
chronic cases. Write now. Dr. Panter, 179
W Washington St.. Room 421. Chicago.
PEACH&APPLE
BEFORE BUYING
1 OUR PRICES
It will pey yoo. Direct to Plaotert In « S”* 11
Lot, by Exprett Freltht »» rwcel Poet, FBEE #8 1„•
CU.'OI, Feer, Plom. Cherry Berriee. Orepee Note
Bh.de end Ornemenud Tree*. VLnee end Shrob.
TZKH. MUISERT CO., Bn 2 1 CLEVELAND. TENR.
MOMrV WW T9V
l«Nt» NAM« AMO AO»F.MO
el Eviitnian (iMinenc take» laiic*-.
ureg; easy to opf-rat*. Your*
away 12 big beautiful art t>i<-
12 boxen we-U-known White |
1 Salve, which you sell at 25r m ,
ive one picture free. Magazine
>e year. 100 other prize oremi
'.e quick. Be fit«t in youi tow n
1 WILSON CHEM. CO.
O Tyrone,
ASTHMA
It’a e Shame To BuHer~ , ‘Now Feel
Fine All the Time'*—Say Thousands
SLEEP
LIKE A W 3
BABY Ms > nUN
up
hills
New Discovery Really Sent FREE
Ohl what a grand feeling. No more ehoking,
spasms, sleepless nights or painful, nerve-wreeking
seizures. O”er 100,000 people have found how to
BANISH ONCE FOR ALL dreadful chronic asthma.
No tablets, pills or smokes. Just a simple Home
prescription now blessed by thousands.
I will truly send you a big bottle of Leaven's Pre
scription—not one cent in advance—you don’t pay or
owe one cent unless after 10 days’use you are delighted
with results and freely want to pay the small price
of $1.25. Simply send me your name end address.
C. LEAVENGOOD, 1573 S. W. Blvd., Rosedale, Kao.
vegetable or flower seeds (mention
which' at ICe large pack. Handsome 81-- ‘J'fj'i
piece BlueßirdDinnerSetgivcnaccord- /J s’sS’-'
ing :o plan in catalog. Send no money. EWS/ :
American Seed Co., Lancaster, Pa. Jlkv
\\ I Trust
PELLAGRAS
to STAY CURED. GUARANTEED REM
EDY. Curca where others fail. FREE
BOOK on request. CROWN MEDICINE
COMPANY Dept. | Atlanta, Georgia
And FREE SUIT
i Full or spare time mon with 01
» amivu l r. ■ without experience can earn $S
i to $25 daily taking orders fo>
SJ : » world’s greatest values in made
set , “ to-measure suits at $lB and up
El. <. ftS.l All delivery charges prepaid
.Ai Ls Handsome assortment of woolen
and a brand new sample outfi'
that is a wonder. Free suit to
O ne man In each community
Mp 7 *' on easiest, most liberal offer ever
j made. Noexperience needed. W<
gy, J’S furnish full information aboul
w y- • I styles, prlces.agents’ootfit.etc.,—
; aft? simple, clear, interesting an
profitable. Write us —No obli
©or N.WStyle Ssmele gatiow— A nottcard wil> bn.ni
Ovtfltls a Dandy rep'V
tmericen Woolew Mills Co. 0»«<. Chicago. IH
to break the law, namely by pur
chasing antiques from th® peasants.
Tut Relics in Demand
At present the first demand of
every foreign tourist 1 3 for a relic
relating to Tutenkhamun. The de
mand so, far exceeds the supply that
even the forgers are unable to keep
up with It.
For a genuine Tutenkhamun
scarab as much as 100 pounds has
been realized by one Luxor dealer,
while a small, blue porcelain ring is
priced at 25 pounds.
These antiques probably come from
Tel-EI-Amarna, the site of the city es
tablished by Tut-Ankh-Amen’s pred
ecessor, Ak-Hen-Aton, the heretic,
where the early years of Tut-Ankh-
Amen’s reign were -spent, as the
strict supervision exercised by the
excavators at Tut-Ankh-Amen’s tomb
in the Valley of Kings excludes the
possibility of pilfering.
Some beautiful “Tut-Ankh-Amen
scarabs” are being turned out by a
local “antika” manufacturer, who
lives in a picturesque house within
the confines of the Valley of Kings,
and whose skill is such that his
scarabs are represented to have been
accepted repeatedly as genuine even
by Experts, and to have realized high
prices.
Rain Falls in Valley
This artist sometimes spends as
much as a month on a single scarab.
Certain characteristics of his work,
however, are beginning to be recog
nized. f
Denizens of the Valley of Kings
were astonished Saturday when a
sharp shower of rain fell, lasting ten
minutes.
It was the first rain the valley has
seen for several years, and the mem
bers of Howard Carter’s expedition
had to do some quick work to impro
vise a shelter for the trays stacked
nearby for transfer of objects from
the tomb.
The tomb was opened only for a
short time Saturday morning, to al
low the removal of the cornices
and top and bottom beams of the
doors of the second shrine. These
were carefully packed in trays to
be carried to the laboratory.
Mr. Carter did not appear.
IggKlElKifg fiR SB
11
I Will Not Accept* fl
®l - . VI Single Penny Until II
rl r Vou Are Satls,,ed - //
I guarantee a perfect fit or will make /J
x 110 c l* ar R 0 whatever. I have convinced /7 Flerj '■
over noo.ooo men and women that Gold Ft
(Sr niy large “True Vision” glasses, ■’Sows '
witll handsome shell rims, are / Not
the finest and most durable G.-- "' Moetie
spectacles to bo had. I want aara
to send you a pair at my own risk, without
SX one penny to advance. These splendid glasses
Beautiful »\\ Don’t Send a Penny will enable you to read smallst print, thread ths fta-
Shell Rims est needle, see fpr or near. They will protect your
Grace the * veil eyes, preventing feyo strain and headaches. All I ask
Face _J Oj--— ls that you send me your name, address and age.
1 know that these finely ground glasses will give you
—•> »An' u y??~ such “True Vision" and splendid satisfaction that I
RIVHOLZ SPECTACLE CO Dent A-« 34 insist 0,1 scndin « them 011 EBKE TRIA).. SO-JM>U
lan'i << rn w cl” rhiMio„ in < can Bpo wl >at a remarkable bargain I offer. When
1462-64-66 W. Madison St., Chicago, 111. thfly arrive> put Ulem on nn(i se9 with what eaR9
Send me a pair of your spectacles on 10- 1 and comfort they will enable you to read, work and
day FREE TRIAL. If 1 liko them I will , W!W - f,ca clearly at a distance or close up, fcy day
pay $3.08., If not, I will return them and I light or lamplight. ... . ..,
there will bo no char-o If after wearing them 10 days and nights you are
mere no cnarge. delighted wvlth them and think them equal to spw
y ani9 Age ' taeles selling elsewhere at $15.00, send only $3.98.
i otherwise return them and there will be no charge.
Postoffice Try them NOW—they are SENT FREE. They will com*
| packed in a beautiful gold-lettered spectacle case.
Street and No rj ry them for 10 full days at my risk and expense,
/t’nx NoR. E. DState| Send the coupon now. Send no money!
111 Ml im. Wrist Watch with Silk xMKF
W i'sS ■'
W W Given Free for selling only Vaf/
V V '/> / >-7?v '.WV x 2 cards of our easily-sold Drese
Snap Fasteners at IO cents per card (12 Snaps on a card) ami nonding us the $1.20, Order naw.
D. E. DALE MEG. CO,, Providence, R. I.
Rifle or Camera
T/ 7 given for selling only !
yx J packs off seeds /?'n 12 *
/ (vegetable or flower, mention I r \o 1
/ which) at 10 cents large pack, or fine H f
Watch, Chain, Signet tZL 4 ffiM '
Ring and P» n - a H four given g
ac . cor^' 1° °6f«r in our catalog. Earn I*
or Premiums. Get sample ■ > m/K i
SO! lot todav Send no money. WE TRUST 5
YOU with seeds until sold. ' \ vh Ng' i
AMERICAN SEED CO. J 1
Boxß-54 Lancaster, Pa.
QIVEN~ t
Send No Money and
iHr ill mil IM "L/ We Trust You Address NOW
ffl. 'lfl ' This highly polished mahogany fin-
I,bed large size violin and bow given
selling only 40 packets of our Superior Carden
xfl,: II and Flower Seeds at 10c each, postage paid. Neatly 100 other choice
V.iHr. iWlLJ...'nreriiiirns shown in catalog sent with order. Curtains, aluminum
lOiF IE pUn N.arlr thirty year. »r..
1 ml ! M. in. clvlnr. We ,r. r.ltobl.. Write huiek. Be Cir.t in rjiur lown. vvnoMf U*
...L- the wilsoh seep company, _prm J _L°Xa—
“Delighted—Send Two More”
“Trl-Weekly Journal,
Atlanta, Ga.
“The Three-fn-One Shopping Bag received th!«
morning. I think It la a wonderful bargain.
“In fact, I think The Tri-Weekly Journal would
be a bargain alone at 91.35 a year. I have taken ft
for many years and would not be without It for twice
the price.
“Two of my friends, after seeing my Shopping
Bag, asked me to send in their names for tha piper
for one year, with the Shopping Bag az premium. I
herein enclose check for $2.70 for which send your
offer to each the names.
“With best wishes for the dear old Journal,
“Yourz truly,
“MRS. M. C. RHODEN,
“Oct. 27, 1923. Blountstown, Fla,”
Tri-Weekly Journal, for one year, and Three-fn-
One Shopping Bag, delivered, postage pre-paid-
Only $1.35
Tri-Weekly Journal, for 18 months, and Threfe-in-
One Shopping Bag, delivered, postage pre-paid—
Only $1.50
JiPMI WESTS i
DISGRIMIMTIDN IN
IMMIGRATION Bill
. %
WASHINGTON, Jan. 25—Japan
has made another protest to the
government on discrimina
tion against Japanese in the United
States, it was learned here today.
Ambassador Hanlhara, Japanese
envoy here, has presented to the
state department a communication
making representations against the
clause in the immigration bill intro
duced In the house by Representa
tive Johnson, Washington, and in
the senate by Senator Lodge which
would bar all Japanese from the
United States. - I
fl
WRzwJ I
Children’s coughs
often become dangerous when
neglected. Give Dr. Bell’s Pine-
Tar Honey at once. It contains
just the medicines your doctor
prescribes to break up a c6ugh»
combined with the good ola-time
remedy—pine-tar honey. It loos
ens hard-packed phlegm, stops
coughing and reduces inflamma
tion. Children love the taste.
All druggists. Be sure to get
the genuine.
DR. BELL’S Pine'Tar Honey
3