Newspaper Page Text
SQUEEZED
TO DEATH
When the body begins to stiffen
and movement becomes painful it
is usually an indication that the
kidneys are out of order. Keep
these organs healthy by taking
COLD MEDAL
The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric add troubles.
Famous since 1696. Take regularly and
keep in good health. In three sizes, all
druggists. Guaranteed as represented.
Look for the name Gold Medal on every box
and accept no imitation
DROPSY, lieved Short TREATED WEEK in breathing a few FREE houra; ONE re¬
few days; regulates the awelllng reduced stomach in c
and heart; purifies the liver, kidneys,
entire Write for blood, strengthens the
system. Free Trial Treatment.
CBILUM DROPSY REMEDY CO., DtpLE.O., ATLANTA. 6A.
Ladies Keep Your Skin
Clear, Sweet, Healthy
With Cuticura Soap
and Cuticura Talcum
Your Teeth That Are Fooling You”
accumulates I whh ---- fooled - mg— undetected for years. constantly anstai The The poison distrib¬ that "
vicious utes vicious itself throughout of the the the bod) body bodily and is the
cause crush of many many bodily troubles. troubles.
But we have, tinally discovered its antidote.
Have you heard of it? Our "LITTLE DU¬
PLEX RADIUM FUNDAMENT." Ousts you
only $5.00, postpaid. Lasts for years. You
Ju*t lay it against the gums for a few nights
while you sleep. how quickly it will
relievo pyorrhea, sore and lacerated gums,
diseased roots, aching teeth, coated tongue,
foul breath. Also observe how it will clean
and TIGHTEN the teeth. If you disbelieve,
write first and make us prove it. Every
person should Keep one just to prevent the
teeth from becoming diseased. The children
by all means should be considered. This is
humanity's boon. Write Immediately. The
N. & N. Co., Dept. K, 1135 North Hill Av«„
PASADENA. CALI FORN1 A.
Renew your health
by purifying your
system with
Quick and delightful re¬
lief for biliousness, headaches, colds,
constipation, and stomach, liver and
blood troubles.
The genuine are sold
only in 35c packages.
Avoid imitations.
WOULD YOU RISK $100
with a good chance of realising $5,000 ? We
are drilling for oil on our 8,000 acres. Sev¬
enteen Geologists have passed favorably on
this country. You can expect 100 for 1 if
we strike. Risk ten, twenty-live or one hun
dred dollars. Don’t wait; wait; send sen your check
aow. Full details will /ill be be for forwa rded.
W. M. OWEN
Box 50# - Pecos. Texas
WE ABE NOW SHIPPING BY INSURED
PREPAID PARCEL POST draws from 7.500
bushels certified corrosive sublimate-treated
Porto Ktco potatoes 1,000 for $2.80; 5,000
for $12. After May 15th, deduct 40c per 1,000.
Leading varieties Tomatoes, Peppers and
Egg Plants 30c dozen; 100 for 60c; 1,000 for
$2 50 Satisfaction guaranteed. DEALERS
WANTED WIRE OR WRITE. HAVANA
PLANT FARM, Midway. Gadsden Co., Fla.
A. Jewish Riels' club has been or¬
ganized in Shanghai, China.
The Sin in Cinema.
"Have you seen any of those color
*io vies?"
“A few off-color ones.”
Saw Both Sides.
I.lttle Roy doesn’t care for dancing
and at the party the other night he held
aloof as much as possible. His sister
said: "Itoy, don’t you realize that ev¬
ery time you don't dance there is some
little girl not having a good time?”
"Yes.” said Roy, "and don’t you
realize that every time 1 do dance
there Is ti little boy who isn’t having
a good time?”
His Views.
“A ‘zoo’ is a place to reflect on the
superiority of mankind," remarked the
bumptious citizen.
"I don't agree with you," answered
Mr. Grumpson, "I’ve never visited a
‘zoo’ but two or three times in my
life, but the thought that struck me
was that all the animals were attend¬
ing strictly to their own business and
If mankind had less curiosity and
more consideration for dumb creatures
none of them would have been there.”
—Birmingham Age-Herald.
KILL RATS TODAY
By Using
the Genuine
STEARNS’
'ELECTRIC PASTE
Tbe caar&ni4HM$“tineT*‘ for Rats.Mice.Cockroach**,
Acts and Waterbuos — the greatest known carriers
»f Stearns disease. Electric They destroy Paste both food those and property,
forces pests to run
from th<* building for water and fresh air.
BEADY FOR USE- BETTER THAN TRAPS
Directions in 15 Languages In every box.
Two »Ue», 86c and $150. Bnongk to kil 180 to «« rata.
U. S. Government buy* it,
W. N U., ATLANTA. NO. 20-1921.
SUFFERING OF I
“Words Can’t Express Gratitude
I Feel Toward Tanlac,”
Says Mrs. Burrington.
“From childhood until I got Tanlac,
l suffered from Indigestion and stom¬
ach trouble,” said Mrs. J. A. Harring¬
ton, 540 Stanford Ave., Los Angeles,
MRS. J. A. BURRINGTON
Lo« Angeles, Calif.
Calif., “and that's been a long time,
for I’m now In my sixty-eighth year.
“I remember when I was a child I
was kepi on a strict diet of lime
water and milk for weeks and 1 have
been In constant distress all these
years. I suffered terribly from bloat¬
ing and had to he very careful of what
l ate. I became so weak and nervous
1 could hardly go about my housework
and was in a miserable condition.
“About two years ago my husband
got such splendid results from Tanlac
he insisted on my taking it and the
medicine wasn’t but a little while in
ridding me of my troubles. It gave
me a splendid appetite, and I could
enjoy a good hearty meal, even tilings
1 hadn't dare touch before, without
any fear of it troubling me.
Tiien 1 hod* the influenza and lie
erfme <*kndtti% sick add walk, but
my stomach kept In good order and it
only took four bottles of Tanlac to
build me up again to where I’m now
feeling better than at any time 1 can
remember. I have gained eleven
pounds In weight, too, and words can't
express the gratitude I feel toward
Tanlac. I keep Tanlac in the house
all the lime now. for I know it Is a
medicine that can be depended upon.”
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
everywhere. — Adv.
Postponed.
"Then you don’t care for this fut¬
urist art.”
“No, let the people of the future
enjoy it.”
Cigarette
To seal in the
delicious Burley
tobacco flavor.
It’s T oasted
Baby Chicks
White Rocks Barred Rocks
Rhode Island Reds
White Leghorns
From high-laying flocks. At
reasonable prices, with safe
arrival guaranteed and all
charges prepaid to your door.
Free circular sent on request.
KY. HATCHERY, 340 West 4th Street,
LEXINGTON. KY.
AGENTS largest ir*r< non-alcoholic extract
manufacturers. 15 Profit. Send 10 cents
for two sample tubes. GLOBE EXTRACT
WORKS, 2541 Atlantic Ave . Brooklyn. N. Y.
Kill AM Flies! THEY SPREAD
DISEASE
Pla«J anywhere, DAISY FLY KILLER attract? and
kills all flies. Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient and
-^ cheap Lasts allsea*
Made of metal.
ran’t spin soil soil or tip in injure ov.r: jura
rill ill not not Guaranteed. or or
ythin^
FLY KILLER
XMlTTl i lnh i■ ■■■ ■ ■' - »St yOUT Q dealer or
5 by EXPRESS, prepaid, $1 25.
HAROLD SOMERS. 150 De Kalb Ave.. Brooklyn,N. Broo Y
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes D*naraff-Stop#HairFalllni
Restore* Color and
Beauty to and Gray $ and Proirs^sts. Faded Hair
#oc. 1.00 at
FUacox Chcm. t W kg. Pawtuxue. N. Y.
HINDERCORNS arm.™, c*™. cl
.'onset, etc., stops alt pala. ensure# comfort to the
feet, makes walking- ea*T. LNj. by ma.i or at L'vuc
gists. Hlseox Chemical Works. Latch K. T.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
THE WEEK'S EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATEjt&A
m
BRIEFLY TOLD «
-
ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD
Condensed Record Of Happenings
Of Interest From All Point %
Of The World
Foreign—
Military authorities at Camamiey,
Cuba, a railroad center, have beet} or¬
dered to establish a vigilance semee
over the property of the CubanSail
way lines which have been tied up
for ten days with a strike of thfLem
ployees. t
The transport workers of Loudon
recently Issued a manifesto foreigt^oal placfflfg a
ban on the handling of all
shipped to England.
It is announced from Berlin tSkt a
new cabinet will be formed shyftly.
German officers have asaumedSran- Xof
trol of the Kreuzburg district; 1 000
SSSrS .
by Poles who camped in front of Ro¬
senberg. anifias
Dr. William Mayer, German
sador to France, has been appointed
by President Ebert to form a newfab
inet for Germany.
Great Improvement in the Russian
situation is reported in the news dis
patches of the recent past. 4r
Dispatches during the recent pa*?re¬
port that while order has been restored
in Kattowitz and other towns, light
ing continues between Poles amLOer- coafiry,
mans in various parts of the
with allied troops preventing ’the
movement spreading.
Germany must be compelled eydjujpff ta dis¬
arm so France can take her
the frontier, Premier Lloyd Georgifre
cently told the house of commons.
The greatest significance is at# Is
ed to tlic meeting of Eamonn de Valera, .
president of the Irish "republic,” 4 and
Sir James Crang of the Ulster Union¬
ists, which recently took place with
least possible ostentation at Belfast,
It is known that the general ir^sh
situation, as affected by the new home
rule bill now effective, was thorough¬
ly discussed by the two men, and the
respective view' points of the two»sec
tions of Ireland were, for the first
time, exchanged hy the real leaders
of the warring groups, face to face.
The allied ultimatum issued to Ger
I many recently summons tier to reply
^categorically by May 12 at ihedatfcst
whether she will perform her unfill¬
ed obligations under the treaty of Ver
sailes, primarily as to the payment of
reparations to the allied powers.
Ninety Moros, followers of a relig¬
ious fanatic, were recently killed in
the Philippine islands by a detachment
of constabulary.
Washington
I nele Joe” Cannon, record holder
for service in congress, celebrated his
85th birthday on the 7th instant by
sticking to the job,
Changes in the commander-in-chief
of the Atlantic and Pacific divisions of
the United States navy are to be an
nouneed shortly by the navy depart
ineat.
Further consideration of the emerg¬
ency tariff bill by the senate is marked
by tlie Introduction of two additional
amendments and an attack on the
measure by Senator Harrison of Missis¬
sippi.
Representatives of the marine work¬
ers failed to meet with Secretary Da¬
vis to continue conferences looking to
a settlement of the shipping wage con¬
troversy which lias resulted in crews
of some American merchant craft
walking out. Mr. Davis said that the
conference would not be held and that
he did not know whether the meetings
would be resumed.
The budget bill was passed by t'ue
house but with some changes as adopt
j I ed Fly by swatters the senate. and
screens would be
j relegated to the junk pile if the Unit
j ed States department of agriculture
| finds merit in the fly killing prop
j erties from the claimed seed for of a Kentucky sappling grown
a coffee
tree by the late Prof. G. F. Holmes of
the University of Virginia. It is hoped
the seeds of the tree will exterminate
the pest.
The portions of Virginia. Tennessee,
North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and
Arkansas within the national forest
reservation would also become a game
and bird sanctuary under a resolution
presented by Senator Shields of
nessee.
Sir Auckland Geddes, British am
bassador to the state department, has
delivered to the state department the
formal invitation to the Unied States
from the allied powers to be repre
seated on the supreme council, the
reparations commission and the coun
cil of ambassadors. The invitation
was cabled from London.
The National Woman’s party has
i purchased the " Washington house”
opposite the east entrance of the eap
itol. and will establish headquarters
there.
Renewing changes of American bru¬
tality in Haiti, delegates of the “pa¬
triotic union of Haiti” have prepared
a memorial for presentation to
dent Harding, the department of state,
the foreign affairs committee of the
house and the foreign relations
mittee of the senate. It is stated that
American occupation is described as
"terrible military autocracy.”
Secretary of Commerce Hoover re
i cently appeared before the house ap
! propriatlon committee and urged an
appropriation of $000,000 for the exten¬
sion of the foreign trade activities of
his department.
The senate confirmed William M.
Steuart as director of the census and
Francis M. Goodwin as assistant sec¬
retary of the interior.
The senate finance committee has
postponed action on the nomination of
D. H. Blair of North Carolina to be
commissioner of internal revenue.
The special correspondent of the
Atlanta Constitution says that the Unit¬
ed States foreign status is back where
it was two years ago with the excep¬
tion that President Harding is now
creeping in at the back door of an
international alliance that the Republi¬
can party fiauntingly repudiated when
President Wilson urged the nation to
enter "with her war comrades" man¬
fully through the front.
Income and excess profits taxes col¬
lected by the government during the
month of March fell off by more than
$139,090,000, as compared with March
of iast year, it is announced by the
internal revenue bureau.
Prospects for an immediate settle¬
ment of the shipping wage controver-
8V are 8ai< * to k e anything but bright.
This announcement is made after a
of iMMzzsrs: the
shiping hoard and steamship
owners. Mr. Davis, however, has not
given up hope.
Income and excess profits taxes col¬
lected hy the government during March
fell off by more than $139,000,000 as
compared to March of last year.
A favorable report has been made
by the senate agricultural committee
on the resolution providing for an in¬
vestigation by the committee into the
conditions of the rice growers in Ar
kansas.
The senate recently passed the
emergency biil fixing admission of
aliens to 3% of each nationality resi¬
dent in the United States in 1910. The
hill is effective for 14 months begin¬
ning fifteen days after enactment.
The department of labor says that
employment in the automobile indus
try picked up nearly a third in March
as compared to February. The per¬
centage increase in March as com¬
pared to February was 32.2.
The bill requiring federal judges to
devote their entire time to the du¬
ties of their office has been reportd
favorably to the senate.
The department of labor says that
money paid to workers in March In¬
creased 44.7 per cent in automobile
plants and 25.7 per cent in woolens,
while this figure went down 10.3 in
steel in coal mining.
Establishment of local wage confer¬
ence or adjustment boards throughout
the country to prevent unnecessary
strikes and lockouts in the building
industry was urged in Cincinnati by
the executive council of the building
trades department of the American
Federation of Labor, In session there
recently.
The United Brotherhood of Mainte
nance of Way Employees and Railway
Shop Laborers, with its membership
of about two hundred thousand, can
not be reinstated in the American Fed
oration of Labor until it has turned
over to the building trades unions its
j members now engaged in station con
j Struction work.
The first trial trip of a new type
of burglar proof mail car. consisting
of nine sectional safe-like containers,
equipped with the most modern looking
devices, designed to combat the ef¬
forts of mail thieves, who got away
with more than one hundred million
dollars in 1920, was completed recently
when the car arrived in Chicago from
New York carrying 27,000 pounds of
maii and accompanied by a committee
of postal officials.
The large religious bodies of the
j j country armament, have and issued June an 5th appeal is the for day dis
set
i for the “drive.”
i At the closing session of the board
j ot Southern " missions Methodist in Nashville, church Tenn.. of the
resolutions
| calling for disarmament of all nations
i were passed.
! Robbers recently entered the Como,
j Miss., Planters’ bank and escaped with
! loot which it is impossible yet to es
I timate.
1 Officers and the drill team of the I
Sitka, Alaska, lodge, have started by !
li °S team on the first lap of their ;
j journey that will bring them to the!
| international convention of the Loyal i
Order of Moose at Toledo. Ohio, dur
j tng the week of June 26.
Ala Tvree. a child, living in a Lynch
I burg, Va.. suburb, went to church to
j rehearse for a mothers' day program,
j Arriving ahead of time, she sought to j
enter the church through a window, j
The sash fell and she was caught by
the neck and killed,
By order of the solicitor of the judi-!
ifial court at Anderson, S. C„ the body j
of Mrs. Sula Mulikin, of the Brushy
■ Creek community will be disinterred |
■ and physicians will conduct a post
mortem to ascertain if the woman died
from a blow on the head.
A request that the railroad labor I
board dismiss the case of nearly one I
hundred railroads which are seeking
wage reductions for their employees on
tbe grounds that the carriers have not
presented evidence warranting a lower j
rate of pay. was made recently by B. !
M. Jewell unions, representing Chicago, the railway la- j j
bor at in concluding
rebuttal testimony.
Jonas Kuppenheimer, for many j
years president and one of the found -1
ers of a Chicago dead. clothing firm bearing j
his name, is He was born in
1554 at Terra Haute, Ind. i
MALARIA IN CURED 7 DAYS
If This Remedy Fails--You Get Your Money Back
The Greatest Discovery of All Time!
mmm
USED SUCCESSFULY BY DOCTORS, DRUGGISTS,
MILL-OWNERS AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC.
Recommended For Both Children & Adults
In Capsules Absolutely Tasteless
MONEY BACK IN EVERY CASE
WHERE ANTIPLASMA
FAILS TO CURE
ANTIPLASMA Discovered During Boer War in Africa
—through the wcndeiful research wcik of Drs J. J. Rudolph and Kruger, the latter Chief
Medical Officer of the Boer Army Its employment resulted in not a single death In the
Boer Army from Malarial injprtton as compared to a mortality rate armng the English
soldiers that greatly exceeded the number of killed and wounded.
Contains No Alcohol, Narcotics, Quinine, Arsenic,
Mercury or Habit-Forming Drugs! Absolutely Tasteless
If Your Druggist Doesn’t Sell It, Mail
—$2 00 to the Vino Medical Co., 200 Weu Hatnton St., New York, N Y . aid one botti»
containing complete seven day cure will be sent you immediately postpaid.
Antiplasma is Malaria Insurance at a Cost of $2,03 Per Year
Undoubtedly.
Old Man—"And If you had $500 and
multiplied it by two, what would you
feet?” Little Boy—“A motor car.”
FRECKLES
Now U the Time to Get Rid of
Theee Ugly Spots.
There’* no longer the fllghtest need of
tig a*h c of 5 your freckles, as Othlne
uble ble sti strei ength—la guaranteed to remove !
these homely spots. j
.Simply get an ounce of Othlne—double
atreng th—from rom your your druggist, dr and apply a j
little of it night and morning mori and you
should .should soon soon see see that that even even the the worst worst freckles freckles
have begun to disappear, while the lighter \
ones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom j
that more than one ounce Is needed to com¬
pletely clear the akin and vain a beautiful
clear complexion.
Be sure to ask for the doable atrenrth
Otbtne, as thla Is sold under guarantee of
money back If It fells to remove freckles.
Kiss Their Money Good-By.
New York Paper—The Mongolians
do not know either the kiss of friend¬
ship or that of politeness. With them
the kiss is reserved to lovers, to
fiances or man and wife.
Shave With Cuticura Soap
And double your razor efficiency as
well as promote skin purity, skin com¬
fort and skin health. No mug, no
slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no
irritation even when shaved twice
dally. One soap for all uses—shaving,
bathing and shampooing.—Adv.
REALLY FLOWERS OF SPEECH
Sayings. Witty and Wise, That Are
Worth Being Preserved in
an Anthology.
Prof. Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch,
in the course of his lively lectures
“On the Art of Reading,” gives some
examples of Irish peasants' sayings
with the large simplicity, the cadence,
the accent of Scriptural speech. The
best is tiie benediction bestowed upon
one of the two authors of the Incom¬
parable “Irish R. M.” by an old wom¬
an in Skibbereen : “Sure ye’re always
laughing! That ye may laugh in the
sight of the glory of heaven!” The
writer once thought of making an an¬
thology of such wild flowers of way
side speech. He would have Included
in it some far-traveled sayings, such
as that of the freighter in the alkaline
districts of Alberta, who said, point¬
ing with his whip to an intensely blue
lake on the horizon, "Bitter as a dy¬
ing man's sweat is that same water.”
and the perfect definition of a ghost
implied in the words of a Newfound¬
land fisherman, "There I sees ’em
wanning themselves in the moon¬
light.”
In Hard Luck.
A few months ago, when writing a
letter to a girl I had recently met,
J placed it in the desk drawer un¬
sealed and later mailed it. About a
week after I received a formal note,
thanking me for a little file I had in¬
closed. and adding that really she saw
no reason why I should go to such
trouble when siie already had a com¬
plete ivory set. Apologies were in or¬
der. and I tried to be as diplomatic
as possible in explaining that in the
drawer I temporarily put the letter I
have any number of trinkets and, un¬
knowing to me, the file must have
slipped in.—Chicago Tribune.
here’s ^hy %
a Reason
Grape=Nuts
ma hes a helpful breakfast and a
profitable lunch for the worker who
must be awake and alert during’ the day
goodness Grape=Nuts of is the perfected
wheat and malted barley,
and is exceptionally rich in nourishment
It feeds body and brain without
tax upon the digestion.
"There's a Reason”
The movement for university ex¬
tension work started in Philadelphia
in 1890.
SWAMP-ROOT FOR
KIDNEY AILMENTS
There is only one medicine that really
stands out pre-eminent as a medicine for
curable ailments of the kidneys, liver and
bladder.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root stands the
highest for the reason that it has proven
to be just the remedy needed in thousands
upon thousands of distressing cases.
Swamp-Root makes friends quickly be¬
cause its mild and immediate effect is soon
realized in most cases. It is a gentle,
healing vegetable compound.
Start treatment at once. Sold at ail
drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medi¬
um and large.
However, if yon wish first to test this
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y., for a
sample bottie. When writing be sure and
mention this paper—Adv.
Decorative Splendors.
“Itiches have wings.”
“True," replied Miss Cayenne. "But
the effect depends on the intelligence
with which they are utilized. The
most beautiful ostrich feather is like¬
ly to look a trifle shabby on the orig¬
inal bird.”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle ot
OASTORIA, that famous old remedy
far Infants and mu children, muuruu, and uuu aw see that turn it ii
Bears the
Signature of j
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
BOBBY WANTED THAT AGATE
If Persistency Could Have Got It for
Him, We Must Admit He
Deserved It
The older boys were playing mar
bit's. Three-year-old Bobby wished
some agates like his brother had and
asked father for two cents to buy one
with. The money was given to him
and he immediately wished to go to
the store to make the purchase. So
persistent did he become that father
said:
“If you don't keep still about that
agate I will take those pennies away
from you.”
“What will you do with the pennies
if you take them away?” he asked.
“Why, i'll put them back in my
purse.”
"Will you take them uptown when
you go to the office?”
“Yes; I will.”
After a few moments' reflection,
Bobby came back with:
“And will you buy me an agate with
them?”
Frank.
“Well, he’s frank, even if he isn’t
tactful.”
“In what way?”
“He admits he wants all the money
he can make; he says in most matters
he thinks of himself and Ins own in¬
terest first and he doesn’t claim that he
was happier when he didn’t have a
dollar to his name."