Newspaper Page Text
Check that Cold and
Set Bid of that Cough,
It la dangeroo* to tot them run^
A tonic laxative of direct and
positive the action •
upon mu
ous 'trten>
branoe la^
wbat yoo^
need. ___
Fori
Two
^Seaerationj
the Pe-ni-nahaa reliable treatment proved ] I
, for ridding the [
of all catarrhal system
It aids digestion, poisons. I
etimu
Utee the liver and bowel |
action, enriches the blood,
tones up the nervous ays- I
tem and soothes the in flam- I
ed and congested mucous j
linings.
Honest and dependable I
in the verdict of thousands.
Wd Evorywfcm
Tablets or Liquid |
Awful
With Gas
Emtmn/c Brings
“I have been awful sick with gas,"
writes Mrs. W. H. Person, “and
Katonlc Is all X can get to give
relief."
Acidity and gas on the stomach
quickly taken up and carried out by
Katonlc, then appetite and strength
come back. And many other bodily
miseries disappear when the stomach
Is right. Don’t let sourness, belching,
bloating, Indigestion and other stom¬
ach tils go on. Take Eatonic tablets
after you eat—see how much better
you feel. Big box costs only a trifle
with your druggist’s guarantee.
To Be Touched.
“Burroughs must make a lot
dress so well.”
“He does—about three new
quaintances a week.”—Boston
script.
If You Have a Pain
try Vacber-Bulm. Keep it handy,
avoid Imitations.—Adv.
Rare, Indeed.
Pew persons who have admired
common “rose quartz” realize
very rare Is the crystallized
Only two specimens are known.
STRIKE
"it's toasted"
Cigarette
No cigarette has
the same delicious
flavor as Lucky
Strike. Because
Lucky Strike is the
toasted cigarette.
(g)
“ ~
MAN’S
BEST
A man is as old as his organs;
can be as vigorous and healthy
70 as at 35 if he aids his organs
performing their functions.
your vital organs healthy
COLD MEDAL
The world’s standard remedy for
liver, bladder and uric acid troubles
1696; corrects disorders; stimulates
organs. All druggists, three sizes.
I lor the name Gold Medal on every
and accept no imitation
Renew your health
by purifying your
system with
Quick and delightful re¬
lief for biliousness, colds,
constipation, headaches,
and stomacn, liver and
blood troubles.
The genuine are sold
only in 35c package*.
Avoid imitation*.
IMPORTANT NEWS
THE WORLD OVER
IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS
AND OTHER NATIONS FOR
SEVEN DAYS GIVEN
THE NEWS THE SOUTH
What Is Taking Place <n The South,
land Will Be Found In
Brief Paragraphs
Foreign
Germany has sent a note to the al¬
lied reparations commission offering
to start immediately with the recon
struction of the devastated regions of
France.
Lord Mayor O’Neill of Dublin, Ire
laud, and R. A. Anderson, secretary of
the Irish Agricultural society, have
sailed for the United States to inform
the American committees of the Irish
white cross on the constitution and
aims of that organization as it is now
operating in Ireland,
The Japanese cabinet has decided
there is no reason to alter Japan’s pol¬
icy on the Yap mandate, and will stand
“pat.”
Guarantees against a return to the
Hungarian throne of former Emperor
Charles are being prepared by Jugo¬
slavia and Czeeho-SIovakia and Rou
mariia and will be presented to the
Budapest government in the near fu¬
ture.
Reports show that the French mili¬
tary class of 1921, called to the colors
during April, lias yielded 210,000 men,
which is more than 75 per cent of
youths twenty years of age who are
subject to military service.
Former Emperor Wilhelm recently
suffered a severe nervous attack, ca¬
blegrams say. Members of the house¬
hold were up most of a recent night
In attendance upon him.
Battling fiercely in a darkened bar
room at Castle Connel, county Limer¬
ick, Ireland, two groups of British sol¬
diers recently killed three men and
wounded several more before discover¬
ing neither side was Sinn Fein.
Occupation of more German terri¬
tory by French forces should the Ger¬
mans fall to meet the allied demands
for the payment of 12 billion gold
marks by May 1, may go beyond the
Ruhr district and Include at least a
part of the Industrial section of West¬
phalia.
The question of reparations evident¬
ly Is giving the German cabinet great
trouble, correspondents in Berlin say.
No official statement has been made
concerning the matter, but two pro¬
posals are being favored.
Doctors of Avila, Spain, have gone
ou strike because the town and pro¬
vincial authorities have declined to
Increase the allowances for attendance
upon the poor.
A military and civil general staff
will soon meet In Paris to determine
the precise manner of action in the
Ruhr district in the event of occupation
after May 1.
Ratification of the treaty of peace
between Poland. Russia and Ukrainia
has been voted by the Polish diet.
Washington—
Postmaster General Hays lias called
a conference of the presidents and
others officers of the seven unions con¬
nected with the postal service with the
object, he says, of “humanizing” the
service.
A general investigation of the rail¬
road situation has been ordered by the
senate, a resolution offered by the
chairman of the interstate commerce
committee having been adopted with¬
out debate or division.
Experts of the treasury department
and customs court recently discussed
the anti-dumping and American valua¬
tion sections of the Young emergency
tariff bill before the senate finance
committee.
Preliminary application of a South¬
ern bank for an advance to assist in
financing the exportation of 6.000 bales
of . _ low-grade cotton Germany
to was
recently approved by the war finance
corporation.
Army engineers have made an uu
favorable report on the proposal for
a navigable waterway between the
Flint and Ocmulgee rivers in Georgia.
A resolution to investigate the es
cape of Grover Cleveland Bergdoll. the
notorious rich I’hiladelphia draft evad
er, has beeu reported out by the
ules committee, and some “tall doings'
are promised.
A dispatch by way of San Francisco,
says that Dr. Sun Yat Sen. president
ct the Chinese republic, will resign,
cause he feels the Chinese people
erally are not in sympathy with
I form of government.
I Forty million dollars of 5% 20
federal land bank bonds have
offered for subscription at par
investment bankers over the country.
Final vote in the house on the
porary immigration bill, iwth
tions of its passage by a large
ity was in prospect after the
had recently voted down, with
important exception, numerous
ments. The bill limits aliens
admission to 3 per cent of each
tionality registered by the 1910
sus, and would be effective for
months.
David H. Blair of Winston-Salem,
C., has been nominated by the
dent to be commissioner of
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA,
Provision for a regular army of 166,
000, as against the 156,000 agreed upon
by the last congress, is contained in
the redraft of the army appropriation
bill.
Exports of cotton seed oil for the
month of March totaled 3S.3SS.821
pounds.
Japan and France are understood to
have accepted the American princiulea
of distribution of the former German
Atlantic and Pacific cables, at a ses¬
sion of the international communica¬
tions conference held at the state de¬
partment.
The American government has re¬
fused an urgent request of the Ger¬
man government that President Hard¬
ing mediate the question of repara¬
tions .between Germany and the allies
and fix the sum Germany is to pay.
Resources of the national banks
showed a reduction of $1,060,148,000 in
February, compared with December,
and a reduction of $1,554,889,000, eom
i pared with February of last year.
Ex-Senator Kirby of Arkansas is bo
ing urged upon President Harding for a
place on the tariff commission.
The Colombian treaty growing out
of the partitioning of Panama has been
ratified by the senate. It provides for
the payment by the United States of
$25,000,000 to the South American re¬
public, but has yet to be approved by
the Colombian assembly. The vot» on
ratification was 69 to 19, or eleven
more than the necessary two-thirds ma¬
jority.
Following the release by the state
department of the curt and rather sen¬
sational note of Japan to the United
States in which the former not only
refuses to yield the island of Yap, but
defies the United States government,
is the semi-official announcement that
as soon as the Yap issue is settled, if
it is settled. President Harding expects
to immediately revive also the issue
of the gift of Shantung to Japan, and
to request that a definite day of evac¬
uating be set. This announcement is
sensational in the extreme when taken
in conjunction with the differences
with Japan over the island of Yap.
General tightening of conscription
laws by Japan, including extension for
the first time of application of univer¬
sal training to Japanese residents In
the Philippine islands, East India and
the South Sea islands has been report¬
ed to Washington official circles in in¬
formation received from those local!
ties.
Following the national conferences
of the Federation of Farm Bureaus and
the People Reconstruction League,
the latter composed mostly of radi¬
cal elements from farm and labor or¬
ganizations, the National Farmers’ Un¬
ion will begin a general conference in
Washington soon with Charles S. Bar¬
rett of Georgia at the helm.
Domestic—
Selection of a jury to try QeWitt
Garrett, the first of thirty alleged
night riders to be placed on trial in
the criminal court at Jonesboro, Ark.,
was resumed with three jurors accept¬
ed, and the defense holding the right
to exercise only one more peremptory
challenge and the state eight.
Harry St. George Tucker of Lexing¬
ton. Va., in a statement at Lynchburg,
Va„ announced that he is willing to
meet Stale Senator E. Lee Trinkle of
WytheviUe, his opponent for the Dem¬
ocratic nomination for governor, in a
foot race of two hundred yards and
let the winner of the race take the
nomination.
The annual convention of the Bir¬
mingham, New Orleans and Atlanta
districts of the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers will convene at
Mobile, Ala., at an early date.
Mary Garden, prima donna and di¬
rector of the Chicago grand opera com¬
pany, has been elected a member of
the French legion of honor, according
to advices received Harold F. McCor¬
mick, one of the principal backers of
Chicago grand opera.
Henry Anthony Marsh, son of Hen¬
ry Field of Chicago, and Peggy Marsh
is not entitled to Inheritance of the
Marshall Field millions, the Supreme
court decided in ruling that Marshall
Field’s will specifically exempts from
inheritance any Illegitimate offspring.
Josephus Daniels, former secretary
of the navy, in Nashville, Tenn., in
I connection with the Methodist educa
| ° n l!lmpaign ’ says therf ’ sh(nlld
! nn no temporizing lhmnnri7imr with with Japan Tunon nmii- over the
| Yap situation.
A well-dressed, blue-eyed, light-haired
! Chicago girl of seventeen has been ar¬
rested and charged with being the girl
(the “flapper bandit”) who has par¬
ticipated in several highway robberies
, * n Chicago recently,
j The republics of North and South
1 America joined hands across the Car¬
ibbean April 19 in two notable histori
cal events commemorating their he
! roes who showed each continent the
road to liberty. Amid the roar of
cannon and the plaudits of a distin¬
guished gathering. President Harding,
i at the bronze equestrian statue of St
■ ition Bolivar, unveiled in Centra! Park,
j ! New damentals York, t.f proclaimed the anew the fan
Monroe doctrine and
| cited ly together the desirability ior service of standing firm¬
both to the new
j and the old world.
The trial of nine Alabama national
j guardsmen, charged with the murder
| of William Baird, miner, will be held
in Marion county, according to decision
j of the Alabama supreme court. The
| lynching of Baird occurred near Jas
j per. in Walker county, and efforts
i were made by the state to have the
| trial held in the county where the
! crime was committed.
Five youthful bandits in an auto
; mobile held up John Amberg. vice
j president of a Chicago real estate firm,
and escaped with $25,000 he was ear
j rying to a downtown bank.
CONFIDENCE FELT
IN FARMER RANKS
BARRETT SAYS GOVERNMENT
WILL DO EVERYTHING POSSI¬
BLE TO MEET DEMANDS
BARRETT WANTS CONFERENCE
Thinks Congress Will Act Promptly
On A Number Of Bills That Will
Help The Farmer
Washington.—Satisfied that the pres¬
ident will take such steps as will re¬
sult in a reduction of frfeight rates
and that congress will get busy toward
passing farmer legislation, more than
| j three Washington hundred farmers who have been
in for several days attend¬
ing the convention of the National
Farmers’ Union, left the city for their
homes,
Charles S. Barrett, president of the
organization, who left for Georgia,
said everthying indicated that the gov¬
ernment would do all possible to meet
the demands of agriculture for freight
reductions. He said that in congress
there was a particularly friendly feel¬
ing; that he had talked with scores
of men in both branches of the nation¬
al legislature and found a very gen
eral desire to do something substan¬
tial to relieve the present situation.
“I have reason to feel that con¬
gress will act promptly on a number
of bills now before it and I feel that
the president, the interstate commerce
commission and other agencies will
take up the question of a reduction
in freight rates and bring about some¬
thing substantial in that direction,”
Baid Mr. Barrett. “We have asked the
government to act quickly and give us
such temporary relief as will justify
the country in entertaining the hope
that a permanent adjustment will very
sp ’edily follow.
“1 have talked to scores of men in
both branches of congress and I have
found not one who was indiffferent to
the problems now before that country.
All professed a dep interest in agri¬
culture and none refused to admit that
on a satisfactory settlement of this
question depends the future prosperity
of the nation.
“There seems to be a disposition
in congress to ignore party lines. All
our friends on both sides of the two
houses appear to want to act in con¬
cert. 1 hope I have correctly read
this disposition ar.d accuraterly inter
preted the desires of the statesmen
with whom 1 have conversed on this
subject,”
Mr. Barrett said he hoped that the
preside tnwould see his way dear to
fail a conference of spokesmen for
ail the great interests, including la¬
bor. if this conference is cull >d, the
farm union labor leader su'd he was
sure, at least, that a basis for the
settlement of questions now irritat¬
ing ^te country would be found.
Congressman Campbell, chairman of
the rules committee of the house, said
he had information which inclined him
to believe that the president would
submit the farmer memorial to the
cabinet, Mr. Campbell said he was
sure that the president was impressed
by the showing fnade by the farmers,
and that the matter suggest-d would
be earnestly considered.
Mr, Barrett said he had every reason
to believe that the grain men and the
cotton men would work together for
the purpose of eliminating evils that
both branches of the farm industry had
long complained of. He said the bill
of L. B. Jackson, making it a felony
to sell cotton unless the actual staple
is in sight, would receive the support
of grain farmers everywhere.
Funds Available For Carolina Camp
Washington.—Under a decision by
Comptroller of the Treasury War
wick made public recently $50,000 is
made available for the remodeling and
extension of the public health service
hospital at Camp Sevier. South Car
olina. Secretary Mellon had
the comptroller whether funds appro
printed under the sundry civil bill on
March 4 could be applied to this pur¬
pose and the comptroller held that
| funds up to the amount of $50,u00
might be used.
■ Presidents Acts At Cornerstone Layini
Washington.—President Harding re
| cently turned the first spadeful of eartl
I | for the national Baptist memorial t<
be erected here in honor of Roger Wil
I Rams and his fight for religious liberty
Rush Immigration Measure In Senat,
Washington.—The immigration re
j striction bill passed recently by tlr
j house is to be pressed through the sen
ate, under plans of senate leaders
j tion Chairman committee Colt of said the senate immigra
; the committei
! would meet soon to consider tin
house bill and also a similar senat
! measure. He added that it was pos
j j sible cepted that without the house bill would be ac
any change. Senato
| King bill of exclude Utah will offer his substitut<
- to all immigrants for on
i year.
Leslie-Judge Files Condition Statem
New York.—A schedule showing
bilities of ll.542.75S and assets
$583,617 was filed in federal court
cently by attorneys for the Les
Judge company, publishers, for wt
a receiver was recently named. Sau
Myers, counsel for the receiver
many of the creditors, informed
court he understood the company 1
preparing a settlement with credit
on the basis of 25 cents on the dol
A meeting of creditors, he said, wc
be held within a few days to const
the proposition.
f 61, GAINS 25 PflUNUS
Declares She Would Like
To Put a Bottle Of Tan
lac In The Hands Of
Every Sick Man, Woman
and Child In This Coun¬
try — Never Saw Its
Equal.
—
“I am sixty-seven years of age, but
In all my experience I have never;
known a medicine like Tanlac. Think :
of it: At my age to gain twenty-five just! j
pounds in weight, but that is
what I have done,' said Mrs. Emma
Reifenstein, of No. 337 Webster ave¬
nue, Syracuse, N. Y.
“If I had it in my power," she con-;
tinued, “I would put a bottle of Tan- :
lac in the home of every sick man, !
woman and child in this country, for!
I know what this wonderful medicine
would do for them. For almost two
years I was almost a nervous wreck.
I did not dare to leave the house or
even go up town unless my husband
went with me. I was afraid to even
cross the street and had a feeling of
dread all of the time.
“My stomach was weak and easily
upset. For days at a time I would go
without solid food. I could not rest
at night to do any good and felt tired
and worn out all of the time. Some
days I could hardly drag myself
across the room and was so weak and i
miserable I was ready to give up. !
“My health is fine now and I eat
anything I want and never have a
touch of indigestion. I have never slept j
better than I do now. My recovery is ;
the talk of our neighborhood, as it was
generally believed I could not last
but a few weeks longer. This grand
j Not S
j r^ERSMlTHv B P g .arir r
! * u t Ma
i i CmillTonic c *H5fc 1 Mi2 B K* T
WARDS OFF MALARIA AND RESTORES STRENGTH. TRY IT.
j if not »oid by your dru egret, writ* Arthur Pater Sc Co., louiirilie, Ky.
; PUTTING IT UP TO DADDY
Small Girl Evidently of Opinion That
the “Laborer Is Worthy
I of H*3 Hire.”
The girl temporarily hired to help
mit during mother's illness had just ;
left. During iier stay five-year-old
Clara absorbed with interest many of
the details of housework; in fact, had
been of material assis,unce in such
ways as setting the laixe, helping with
the dishes, etc.
When Mary quit unexpectedly the
housework got behind and little Clara
j voluntarily set about to straighten
things out, and that night met father
at the door when he came home from
i work, saying:
“Come right on out to the tahie,
daddy; everything's all ready. Moth¬
j er’s feeling better an’ you must eat
the supper i gos for you.”
After viewing the bread cut at a 45
: degree angle, cold potatoes from the
previous night, and other things which ;
Clara had gathered for the royal re¬
; past. father said: |
"Well, my little girl is right on the
I job, eh? We'll never miss Mary, will ]
we? That's just tine, honey; daddy
knows you will look out for him. all
right, won’t you?”
“Oh, yes.” said Clara, then coyly.
“Dad, how much do you think you
j ought to pay tne?"
:
' Influenza and Consumption. i
! Dr. Charles H. Marcy of Pittsburgh, |
stated before tbe medical society of
j Pennsylvania, that he had studied 583 !
j cases of tuberculosis, the onset of j
whose symptoms was referred to an
attack of influenza. The i
number of ;
j patients known to have had tuber¬
culosis prior to the onset of influenza j
was comparatively small. In the ma¬
jority of these cases the influenza had
reactivated old quiescent lesions. In
34.3 per cent of the series studied tbe
onset of tuberculosis dated from the
influenza.
If time were a woman, would It wait
for a man?
There s More Than Flavor
Many foods,while pleasing to taste,
contain but little nourishment.
Grape=Nuts
combines with its rich, sweet flavor the
full nutriment of wheat and malted barley
which makes it an ideal food.
It has been the favorite ready-to-eat
cereal for a quarter of a century:
‘There's a Reason”
MRS. EMMA REIFENSTEIN,
337 Webzter Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.
has brought me health and
and I just can’t say enough
its praise."
Mr. J. Reifenstein, iu commenting
his wife's statement, said: “Yes,
recovery has been a happy sur¬
to us all. A few weeks ago I
no idea she would be able to pull
but now she is in better
than I have ever seen her and
credit is due to Tanlac. \Ve have
married fifty-two years today
I don't believe f have ever seen
looking any better."
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
everywhere.-—Adv.
Wow.
“Out of sight, out of mind.”
“Who?"
"The crazy man in the padded celL"
Cafarrh Can Be Cured
Catarrh ts a local disease greatly influ¬
enced by constitutional conditions It
therefore requires constitutional treat¬
ment, HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE
is taken internally and acts through
tbe Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of
the System. HALL’S CATARRH
MEDICINE destroys the foundation of
the disease, gives the patient strength by
improving the general health and assists
nature in doing its work.
All Druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio.
NOT TO BE MADE TO ORDER
Songs and Emblems That Live in the
Heart of a People Must Have
Foundation.
To wait for tt state flower or a
state song to discover itself and make
itself appropriate might lie an inter
miuable and disappointing vigil. Cen¬
turies could intervene. It is not mere
restlessness that asks for a flower to
he chosen or a song to be written
ready to hand, declares the St. Louis
Globe-Demoerat. Posterity may find
substitutes that are better, the fruit
of happy circumstances, tiut we in
our day may have at least our ready¬
made symbols to feed the romance in
our souls.
Ancient people acquired these spir¬
itual emblems anil patriotic lyrics
through a long and at times painful
history. Something stirring has to
happen to give them birth. Then our
soldiers wlui were in the great war
find the poppy the all-significant floral
insignia of their heroic days and have
adopted it as the vis-ible reminder of
them. Ten million silken poppies are
to be worn in America on Decoration
day.
No Wedding Bells for Him.
“And when you asked her to wed,
she declined." “Yes, she dismissed me
without ceremony."
The theatrical deadhead is both
passed and present.