Newspaper Page Text
6D
v '
Socialist Representative of Petro
grad Workers Seeking Regen
erated Free Mother Country,
BY GREGOR ALEXINSKY.
Gregor Alexinsky, Socialist represen«
tative of Petrograd in the duma,
and now .identified with the Union
for Regeneration of Russia, left
Bolshevik Russia in May,
“Comrades! English, French,
Americans, know ye all that under
the false title of communists the bol
shevik regime {is nothing but the
continuation of the autocratic czarist
rogime, and that the new Russia
wishes neither the restoration of the
Romanoff autocracy nor the triumph
of the autocracy of Lenin
“We want a regenerated; free and
eivilized mother country In the
name of this mother country all we
ask of you is not to hinder our strug
gle against bolshevism, which will
soon be defeated by the people’
armies pressing in on all sides
“It is in the name of freedom and
socialism that I address thig appeal
“The government of Nicholas 11
was unjust and anti-democratic, and
was hated by the people, but it exist-
I was badly ruptured while lifting a
trunk several years Aago Dooctors sald
my only hope of cure was an operation
Trusses did me no good Fina.ty I got
hold of something that quickly and con
pletely cured me Years ha passed and
the rupture has never returned vthough
1 am dolng hard work as" a carpenter
Ther Wit no operation, no lost t no
troubl I have nothing to wsell it will
give full information about how you ma)
find a complete cure without operation, If
you write to me Hugene M Pullen,
Carpenter, 64F Marcellus avenue, Manaos
quam, N J Better cut out this notice
and show it to any others who are rup
sured-——you may save u life or at least
®top the misery of rupture and the worry
and danger of an operation Adv ‘
“BAYER CROSS” ON
5 IC3)
BAY E[
[‘?:
R
C\&
*Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” to be
gepuine must be marked with the
safety “Bayer Cross.” Always buy an
unbroken Eayer package which con
tains proper directions to safely re
leve Headache, Toothache, Earache,
Neuralgia, Colds and pain. Handy tin
boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few
cents at drug stores—llarger packagesa
also. Aspirin is the trade mark of
Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticae
idester of Salicylicacid.—Adv.
———————————————————————————
y r b
Real Wonder-Worker
.
For Wrinkled Faces
Those who have tried all sorts of mo
called “wrinkle-removers” in a vain ef
fort to lose those unwelcome traces of
nge, lllness or worry, can scarcely find
words to express their delight with the
wonderful suxuquf- formula, once they
huave given it a trial. The success of this
method is due not alone to its marvel
- ous effectiveness —upon the deepest lines
and crowsfeet, as well as upon the very
fine ones—but also to its surprisingly
auick action and its entire harmlessness.
Its simplicity and its Inexpensiveness
are other commendable features, for one
need only dissolve an ounce of powdered
saxolite in a half pint of witch hazel,
and bathe the face in whis solution At
once a remarkable transformation is be
held.
It is not only the effect on wrinkles
and creases that is =0 noticeable, but
facial contour is remarkably improved
and the face looks much younger One
should be sure to ask the druggist for
the powderedq saxolite, The lotion, be
fng soo refreshing, is very grateful to
tirod, perspiry faces.-—Ady
et ——————————
Rheumatis
A HOME CURE GIVEN BY ONE WHO HAD 1T
In the spring of 1593 1 was at
tacked by Muscular and Intlammatery
Rhoumatism. 1 suffered as only thos
whoe have it know, for over throe
years I tried remedy after remody
and doctor after doctor, but such re
lel a 8 1 received was only tomporary
Finally, I found a remedy that cured
me completely, and It Lhas never res
turned. 1 have miven it to o number
who were terribly afflicted and even
bedridden with Rheunatism, and |t
effected & cure in every case
1 want every sufferer from any form
of Rhemmatic trouble to tiy this mar
velous healing power Don't send a
eent; simply mail your name and ade
dress and I will send it free to try.
After you have used it and it haa
proven itseif to he that long-lookeds
for means of curing your Nheumntism
you may send the price of it, one
doliar, but, understand, 1 do not want
your money unless you are perfectiy
satisfied to mend it. Isn't that fair?
Why suffer any longer when positive
relief is thus offered you free? Deon't
delay. Write today
Mark H. Jackson, No. 32+% Gurney
Bide Syracuse, N. Y
Me, Jackson is responsible Above
statement true
PELLAGRA CAN BE CURED TO STAY
BURED. When we say « i that s just
what we mean—C-U-R-F | erely checked
for a while to return wors an before. No
matter what you have us ' v many doc
tars have told you that y i not be cured
a!l we ask is just a char w you what
ARGALLEP wil do. Sy Yor name
and address. Without cost gation we
will send you *thfl"."- and prepald,
& ten days' supply of ARGALLEP. W are
confident that you will be amazed hghted
with the quick improvement in h AR.
QGALLEP has restored thousand 1 do
she same for you, Just try it and t avinced
[ that we are telling you the truth. Remember
the two weeks' supply of ARGALLEP « 51+ you
Absolutely nothing., Write for it toda)—sure,
co Dept. 114, CARBON
.- *y HILL, ALABAMDS
Nervousness
(rows as His
$2,000 Goes
(By Universal Service.)
HAMMOND, Ind., Aug. 23.
Tony Lecian had a nervous
breakdown that lasted a year.
He tried all the cures, but with
out avail Somebody recom
mended Madame Zingara fortune
teller.
“l can cure you for $2,000,” ghe
told Tony.
Tony says he gave her the
money and that she tried a num
ber of incantations, then told him
to return the following day.
He did, but found the Oriental
parlor closed and the madame
gone,
Tony's nervousness is more
noticeable.
ed just the same, and the public non
soclalist opinion congidered it its
duty to defend it. Certain Sociansts
in allied countries t‘re making a sim
flar mistake today, believing that in
ternational solidarity imposes on
them the duty to defend ILenin's gov
ernment. As the hour of downfall of
the present bolshevik regime in Rus
sla ls approaching rapidly these sim
ple-minded foreign comrades will
soon find themselves in the samc
painful position as did the defenders
of Nicholas II after the revolution of
March, 1917,
“From the economlc standpoint the'
bolshevik revolution has not brought |
any happiness to the Russian work- !
ing classes, The bolshevik govern
ment has nationalized the staple m-|
dustries and the big trades, but us
neither industry nor trade has been |
sufficiently déveloped to support this|
reorganization, the results from the|
proletarfan viewpoliit are entirery |
negative. Mést branches of industry |
have ceased working. In the autumn
of 1918 the Buperior Council of Nu
tional Economy was forced to close
all the textile mills about Moscow.
Other doncerns of the textile industry
have suffered the same fate and hun
dreds of thousands of textile workers
were left without work., So with the
chemical industry, then the paper,
then tobacco, ete. Mining industry
scarcely exists any longer. The bol
shevik government does all it can to
maintain the metaliurgical industry
necessary to carry on war, but the
results are disappeinting and such
factories are rapidly closing down.
“In order to make good its own
mistakes the, bolshevik government
poes from one extreme to another;
for the sake of increasing production,
which Is continually falling, it re
turns to the worst forms of capital
ist exploitation,
“C‘onsequently, all centers of in
dustrial hife have ceased to exist in
lussia. The labor population of
towns decreases terribly, Before the
boishevik revolution there were
counted 10,000,000 industrial work
men; today less than 2,000,000 re
main. Petrograd, whose proletarian
population I once had the honor to
represent in the second Duma, for
merly numbered 2,5004000; today this
martyr city does not count more than
600,000 to 700,000, Like their breth
ren in many other Russian industrial
centers, the workmen of Petrograd
have dspersed to all sides; some of
them lie buried in the common
trenches, killed by famine or civil war;
others abandoned their homes to seek
a better livelihvod anywhere else, |
“Without exaggeration it may be
said that the bolshevik regime hll‘!
ruined for a long time the basis of
the labor movement in Russia, |
“The material conditions of the
people’s existence are terrble; a
pound of black bread of rye flour
costs 40 roubles in Petrograd, a pound
of potatoes from 13 to 105 roubles, a
pound of tea 360 to 400 roubles, a|
pair of men's shoes 1,000 to 1,600 rou
bles, a box of matches 4 roubles, a
cigarette’ 1 rouble, a newspaper 1
rouble, In Moscow they sell openly
in the public market dog meat, for
which the prices are officially an
nounced in the bolshevik press at ©
to 7 roubles a pound. The mortality
is - enormous,
“But this great material misery is
nething compared with the moral
sufferings which devastates the pro
letariat of our country. The disillu
sioned workers turn against the bol
shevik government which gut- down
their discontent with the same bru
tality as did the czars, Qufte re
cently the great workmen's move
ments in Petrograd, Mescow, Briansk.
Tula, Yaroslavl and Sormovo were
strangled by ferocious repressive
moasures, The prisons are filled with
workmen and peasants, whose rl-ln{s
are suppressed by fire and iron. In
the Bejotsk district of the Tvor Prov
inco 17,000 peasants protested against
the bolshevik regime. The Lenin-
Trotsky regime sent a punitive expe
dition, who plundered the peasants,
gave them corporal punishment and
then shot them down.
“Not only is the bolshevik govern
mont a non-Soclalist and reactionary
regime from the economic and social
point of view, but also from the po
litienl. Lenin hasn't established a
dictatorship of the proletariat; he's
ostablished a dictatorship over the
proletariat, The independent press is
suppressed. All Socialist nom-bol
shevik organizations are declared
outlaw, Labor leaders must become
instruments of the government or ox
pose themselves to ignoble persecu
tion, Before my departure from Mos
cow, which 1 left May 3, 1919, 1 di
rected an important section of our
Gieneral Labor Confederation. lam
in a position to state the bol-hovlkl
poliey has wrought enormous preju
dice to the syndical movement of the
country, because, instead of being the
bulwark in the struggle for the in
terests of the labor mulni the syn
dicates transform themselves Into
simple bureaucratic chanceries which
serve the interests of the governing
cligue. ‘
“For the proletariat the final result
of bolshevism manifests itself by a
great recoll from all viewpointg—eco
nomie, soclal, polluc-l and moral
For this reason the best elements of
the politically educated labor class in
Russia will not bind thelr lot with
that of the bolsheviki, These ele
ments expect the politically educated
and organized labor of the world will
avold any action which might be in
ur%nud as a mfltm of solidarity
with un anti-social and barbarous re.
gime, hated by the people, condemned
by history and urudi on its way to
an imminent downfall" |
——————— |
CHICO, Gd.u Aur ereminh
O'Grady, whe \Mm olt
when her husband work
48 & scrubwoman in a lfl
10 upg h-n%l! and S
HEARST’'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, AUGUST 31,1919,
(Universal Service Special Corre
spondence.)
BERLIN, July 17 (by mial de
layed).-~A note of ironic bitterness
marks German press comnment on the
achievement of the British dirigible
R-34 in making the trans-Atlantic
round trip. Every German newspaper
emphasizes proudly taht the R-34 was
built on the basis of secrets of Ger
man alrship construction “culled” by
the British from Zeppelins they
brought down during the war., Some
call the big dirigible a “true copy” of
the German aerial cruisers of the “L”
type.
While generally giving the British
due credit for the feat, all the Ger
man commentators attach to their
left-handed compliments a few sar
castic remarks, and all point out that
the record for long-distance flights
still belongs to Germany, the “L.-53"
having made the round trip from Bul
garia to Africa in 1917. It covered
4,220 miles in ninety-five hours, at an
average speed of forty-three miles
an hour.
Much emphasis also is placed on
the distress in which the R-34 found
herself on her voyage to America,
German experts pointing with glee to
her many 8. O, 8. calls for help from
the American navy department,
The 1.-59 after her record trip had
fuel left for two and a half days, it
GIRLS! USE LEMONS
FOR SUNBURN, TAN
Try It! Miite thie lomen liion
to whiten your tanned or
freckled skin,
syueeze the juice of two lemovs
into ¢ bottle containing three ounces
of Orchard White, shake well, and
you have a quarter pint of the best
freckie, sunturn and tan lotion, and
complsxion whitener, at very, very
small cost,
Your grocer has tbe 'emons ard any
drug store or toilet courntcr will sup
ply three ounces of Orchard White
for n few cents. Massage this sweet.
ly frogrant lotion mto the face, nack,
arms and hands and see how quickly
the freckles, sunnurn, wirdburn and
tan disappear and how clear, soft and
white the skin becomes, Yes! It is
harmiess.—Adv,,
OUT-00-SITE
g 1 ALL-METAL
40 138
TR ALUMINUM
4 ¢} Y
i/« /4l SUSPENDERS
\;~ WA Will Last for Years. |
N AR Thousands in daily |
4 -t O use Small aluminum |
L support engages shirt |
peam, keeping pants up |
and shirt down. Need
no beit. Price, SI.OO. |
Can't tear silk -mn.i
SBend for detalls and
appreciative letters,
(Three Patents) LEONARD WoObD=
309 Hess-Culberson Bldz., St. Louls, Mo.
Jacobs F harmacy CO.
NINE STORES IN ATLANT A ey
~Jacobs' Pharmacy, 23 Whitehall ~Jacobs’ Pharmacy, 102 Whitehall
—sJacobs’ Pharmacy, 70 W. Mitchell —Jacobs’ Pharmacy, 152 Decatur
—Jacobs' Pharmacy, 423 Marietta ~Jacobs’ Pharmacy, 551 Peachtree
~~Jaccha' Pharmacy, 266 Peters ~Jacobs’ Pharmacy, Buckhead
Main Store, 6 Marietta St. (Five Points)
e o e PEiVAL® Branch Exchange, Ivy 1021
Drugs at Jacobs' Prices
000 HUIN . . cmve o cocnh oo st 0 b wvone shionrs . IOD
SI.OO Horlick’s Malted Milk ..............68¢c
SI.OO H. K. Wampole's Cod Liver Oil .....64c
60c Doan’s Kidney Pills weue.oeeeeece.... 420
P 8 ORIN'S TUOE . . oo o iviensosssovesons TP
60¢ Glyco-Thymoling ....cecemmesceccsss.B96
B RS o s s o v - osimelee os oo oans iOD
BTR 500000 0o s spanovadess od ¢ D
60c Sloan’s Liniment .....coccveivveeve .39
DS, DIDEOROE aais 000 s o s siaals sheties « o 5 « suin s» S 0
I N i s ccshm s sunasiein ol
$1.30 Lydia Pinkham’s Compound .........79¢
35¢ Fletcher’s Castoria ..............n5..22C
B R . ... o 5 oo caionaiesuisndne I
60c Califormia Fig Syrup .................36¢
I D eic o ot v s'sbssusnesinnss IO
DRI I DI . i< osinciehsnniineic i
100 Thompson’s Aspirin Tablets ..........49¢
_— —
Toilet Soaps
Ny . cunsunse D
Bo e s B
Grandpa’s Tar . . . . .Te
Packer’s Tar . . . . .18¢
4711 Rose Glyeerine..2l¢
Citron Cream . . . . 10¢c
Outionf® . . coo 04180
DR 5. oo sIB
Woodbury's Face. . .16¢
Tooth
Preparations
T N R
Pyrodento . « « +» . « 880
Myrrh and Roses . . 20¢
Lyon's Powder . . . 17¢
Okl .. +« «.i «20
Antiseptic Powder , .18¢
BORIE: . « s 0.0 ¢+ 30
. . . sIR
Pepsodent . . . . . .33¢
is pointed out, while the R-3{'s sup
ply was exhausted when she reached
her destination in America, 1
Some of the German commentators
make mysterious hints at. German
aerial surprises immediately after the
formal conclusgion of peace. Of this
the IFrankfurter Zeitung says:
“The English are mistaken if they
believe they have built the largest
aerial liner. They are due to ex
perience some surprises as soon as
we can live and fly again.
“It was the fear of German com
petition that inspired the British to
accomplisg a record-making feat as
long as we were still eut off from the
world, unable to show what we our
selves can do,
“It is interesting to watch the Brit.
ish go through the infantile sickness-
- - '
: Against Buying Second- @
4 2
? Hand Bicycles
|
" Harry Williams aided In the capture of a thief who had
stolen 13 bicycies and disposed of them by seiling to the inno
cent, which might have caused the PROSECUTION of THE
Bl BUYER in some cases. TAKE HEED if you have purchased a
second-hand bicycle from unreliable people, and report the same b
[ to detective headquarters, as it might save prosecution. If your
§ bicycle has been STOLEN, report to detective headquarters.
lam trying to give you the same co-operation toward re- %
storing your bicycle as | have many others. Be sure and know
the number of your bicycle.
Numbers of bicycles listed below have been stolen recently: ¢
K-22621, K 54033, J-54947, J-33283, K-15081, K-26826, K-10321,
K-26818, J-65311, K-47327, J-48662, "
BOYS’ FRIEND.
HARRY F. WILLIAMS
@ Agents for SEMINOLE and NIAGARA
120 Edgewood Ave. Phone lvy 5685 §
’ 4 L ' " TN T PN
7 Rl ’
72 It’s False Economy
77 3 ey 0
/B To Buy Inferior Glasses
e ;
S P To experiment is not only costly, but also unsafe. Leading
" ocullsts have accorded the highest praise for DUGGAN'S TORIC
WY LENSES because they are produced by expert workmen and ad
justed by a skilled optician. Duggan service is unique. I examine
your eyes, write the prescription, grind th» lenses and furnish the
glasses all for one reasonahle charge.
cromaws JCo DUGGAN owweun
653 WEST MITCHELL ST. (Near New Terminal Station.)
Toilet Waters
ARUSNS .. ..« 2D
Jacobs’ Violet . . . . 3B¢
Djer-Kiss . . . . . .$1.76
Hudnout's Violet See. SI.OO
Hudnut's Sweet
.. ... W
Azurea Vegetal . . .$042
Golden Bell
Cologne . Ts¢c and $1.50
* Melba, all odors . .SI.OO
R. & G. Violet de
T . ... .
Coty's L'Origan . .$56.00
Toilet Talcums
Mennen's Borated , . 17¢
Colgate's Daetylis ...17¢
Mary Garden . . . . 60c
Lady Mary . « . . . .800
T R
WHHER'S .. 50 00 siidß
Jacobs' Nursery . . . 2b¢c
Bam. . . ... B
Freeman's, pounds . .3b¢
Babeoek's Corylopsis. 19¢
es of aeronautics that we passed
through years ago.
“We can not but smile at the state
ment of the American commaider,
Read, the first to cross the ocean,
that he saw the time when (fliers
would reach a height of 60,000 feet
and make the round trip across the,
ocean in. one day. There is a limit to
the physical resources of man that
can not be overcome even by the
steady progress of technique.” i
2 ™ AEROPLANE |
SRS AN Boys, we have a real
=~ sNS ht' 87 Aeroplane for you. '
\\\\: ‘F___,_'.,g,/' Modeled after famous
AN R d war monoplanes, Cdlled the
~ »“.!X" AL, Eagle because of its long- |
O € e AN,
e e . soaring flights. The pow
‘\\ L 7 e erful motive power carries
RS2 ~ it right off the ground.
- Looks fine sailing In the
sky. Strongly bulit, will last long time. Length
28 Inches. Wing spread 21 inches. Free for selling |
20 packages Bingo Perfumed lirening Wax at 10
eaoch, Order today. Send no momey. |
Bingo Co., Dept. 713, Binghamton, N, Y. |
d’.‘:l\-COB!I‘
Yey f
=ll
=1
A 4 o
m’
‘/l
War Tax
MAIL ORDERS at Jacobs'
receive the same quick, cour
teous attention as do personal
purchases. Handled by ex
perts, your order leaves At.
lanta the day it is received.
In ordering always Include
sufficient to cover postage and
war tax, For war tax always
add 1 cent for each 25 cents
of value, or fraction thereof,
on all patent and proprietary
medicines and tollet articles
except soaps.
Rubber Goods
Majestie Crepe Toilet Pa
per, 6 rolls ........Boc
Avvad’'s Water Wings,
last shipment this sea.
Ml . v s D
Auto Goggles, smoked,
green and vellow
lens ......Tbc to $2.00
Take - a - Brace Shoulder
Brace, for men and
boys; special . . $1.50
J. B. L. CASCADE
Internal Bath, General
Health Idea, complete
. . .... 9w
Tryanlece Cream Soda
at Buckhead Sunday
It's a Meal in Itself
FINE FURNITURE
For Every Room in Your Home
Remember This Always—
“lT COSTS LESS AT STERCHI’S”
EXTRA SPECIAL MONDAY —
Brooms 29¢ més
e, i e =
Dozens of 67 AT ) Come In
I Beautiful Styles ({7O ifijy? — ‘
WS BR o -
(‘\ ("'?U\\:-' AR “g//‘,‘ @R
\Q\,—-—‘j SO\ (TG ol oindibludaagioh hog A ) /,) il 7{_,-;/;,[’ F
T =) A
! g;;\“j,};l ) We Are Headquarters for (o (Hdeidbedaned
‘z%! XN Beautiful Living Room Suites g % )
B T o e eM e e e ™ enis Sale Price
week our price saves you $65.00. szzs 00
—CASH MAIL ORDERS FILLED— .
Liberty Bonds Accepted As Cash At Full Face ~ £Sida
A_\ Vaiue On Any Purchase. ti. '!W.{@ f’,’
il "‘.a'w- & \r:»\\ 1 ; i
ol Vo i B IL;‘ ""‘x‘ml'u ;l”
B S S e - i il
By 2§ e_— ’—‘r{_" =l T ey U J‘l ‘..% ¥ |
() fi‘" fiRy TR 1
i \sg/ iA\ ’-”\"’z“"‘i Mo l " | 1 e M i
.J el ‘ i \'l A,” 1 | = 1“41.‘:’;;
Le —— R
PR TR
’!}__,_;/& -g P, ! flllé"' “
G e o
R L) o !o) o 7'——l."‘.’s—.
e g .Y
10-Piece William & Mary Dining Suite sake
Just as pictured. Choice of walout or mahogany. - Beautifully finished, has 42inch Price
china cabinet, 40-inch serving table,-8-foot, 54-inch exteusion table, one arm chair, and
5 straight chairs. Cane padel backs, leather upholstered seats. Our price saves you SIOO. 5550 00
—CASH MAIL ORDERS FILLED— e .
I lEVeDlnde ‘?fié% New Shi;lb)muelnu
ayments : "';; ~ e g~ Atrive Daily
— e T, e —Wr N B gB g
*‘u Lz ;"t’l;‘
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rl '-”/ ‘c ' 3<\ "‘\\- !\‘ .
!N‘ ) ~
10-Piece Queen Anne Dining Suite sae
Just as pictured here. Choice of walnut or mahogany. Has 604nch buffet, 8-foot, 54-n. Price
extension table, 50-inch china eabinet, 40-inch serving table, 1 arm chair, and § straight
chairs; leather upholstered seats. Our price saves you $100.0), 5475 oo
—CASH MAIL ORDERS FILLED— o
e
4 P, - ! iv_“ ).
. ‘ FUAE el
¥ & ® === ‘lm il
=N B=l <o L R L
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0 UL 1 ’-;"'-"' e : 3%
VR e { 1..*{3:‘4 i
R e 2 L R
D R @ . \
..‘ 5 4 3 Ifl%‘ /\
| L fala AP i b
Exira A\/ 5 10-Piece Italian
Special Renaissance I)l}ning Suite
Just as plctured. 1139 prettiest suite in ‘Mhnm.‘bflml:ul!y”finhhnd. 60-inch bu:fv!. 0- S.h
Be e set Dok s Dot =iy 155 Medoret moscus— TV
R 0125-?_0;:“" MAIL ORDERS FILLED— 5675.00
M
A\ &, [ o 4§D e { >
STV B b iTD, eS L (ESUNTTI A
) LY . ¥
2oupty STERCHI FURNITURE.& CARPET €O %1 a
7-9-11 EAST MITCHELL ST. ATLANTA, GA.
B
o e R A
\-r o parsay| oy |
A< 85 A
R l 8 ]
e G
g
Atlanta'’s Largest
Wholesalers and Retailers
of Trunks
Of All Kinds.
WARDROBE TRUNKS,
Priced $35.00 to $75.00.