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New Shoes-Old Shoes-Tigbl Shoes
all feel the same if you
shake into them some
ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE
The Antiseptic, Healing Powder for the Feet
Takes the trtctlon from the shoe, freshens
the feet and gives new vigor. At night,
when your feet are tired, sore and swol¬
AI.TEN'S len from walking or dancing. Sprinkle
FOOT-EASE in the foot-bath
and enjoy the bllita ot feet without
an ache.
Over 1,000,000 Armjr ponndi of Powder for the Feet
were u»ed Djr oar and Navy daring the war. the Feet
A*k for ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE.
GOOD POSITIONS AT HOME
Ambitious men and women of good character can
earn big money in this vicinity
Write at once for particulars. First come, first served
THE T. H. SNYDER COMPANY
In Business Since 189H 12 E. Third St., Cincinnati. Ohia
Freed From
Torture
Eatonic Cleared Him
1 Up-Set Stomach
“The people who have seen me suf¬
fer tortures from neuralgia brought on
by an up-set stomach now see me per¬
fectly sound and well—absolutely due
to Eatonle,” writes It. Long.
Profit by Mr. Long’s experience, keep
your stomach in healthy condition,
fresh and cool, and avoid the ailments
that come from an acid condition.
Eatonle brings relief by taking up and
carrying out the excess acidity and
gases—does It quickly. Take an Eatonle
after eating and see how wonderfully
It helps you. Big box costs only a
trifle with your druggist’s guarantee.
Bobbinet Mosquito Nettings
Ifonquito nists for sing la bn,Is.
3x6x7 ft.......................|2.00
Mo»quit.o nets for doublet btnia:
6x6x7 ^............................$3.50
IteKUlation army pup tent linings,
approximately 7x7 ft................15.00
Postpaid anywhere in U. 3. A. |
GKO. MILLER
1222 IN oat rand Avenue, Brooklyn, New York
JUEARN ABOUT WONDERFUL SHAIION
l'KAS from Peru; how one farmer realized
$15,000 frotn 3 Mi acres. Grows pods 3 feet
long, 3,000 peas per vine. Also Marvel Maize,
California's Wonder Corn; yields 20,000 to
30,000 ears per acre, FARMERS SEED CO..
CLARKSVILLE, TENNESSEE.
UAOIK8—SAVE 85c ON EVEItV DOLLAR
MPKNT for an article used dally iri most
every home. Valuable secret mailed for $1.
Address F. BURGENER. OLNEY. ILLINOIS.
FINAL TRIUMPH FOR MAURICE
Small Boy Endured Much, but in the
E/id H«i, Mad* String* Point
Over Rivals.
Teh-year-old Maurice was In love
With the pretty new teacher mu] did
everything In his power to get ahead
of the others in winning her affection.
Monday morning he was distinctly out
of humor when In walked .lolm and
gave the teacher a ticket. “It’s to the
entertainment at our church,” he said
proudly. ”1 bought this ticket for you
Ho lliat you could come and hear me
sing.”
A few days later he was more pro¬
voked when in came Helen hearing
a ticket. "It’s to our dancing class
party. 1 want you to come and see
me dance." she smiled.
He scowled and scowled. But Inter
In the week his turn came to smile
above all the rest. He, too, bore a
ticket to teacher, but his speech was
different. "Here's a ticket for you,
Miss G„” he smiled, “It’s to the Ma¬
sons' supper, and I want you to come
and eat-with me, not watch me eat.”
In Greenwich Village.
She—Don't you think that was a
pretty good dinner for 85 cents?
Her- Yes; let's have another.—From
Life.
Tastes Fine, and
Better for Health
Postum Cereal
is a pure, wholesome
cereal beverage, contain¬
ing nothing harmful to
nerves or digestion. I
It should he boiled at |
!
least twenty minutes. Then
Postum Cereal will reveal
a true coffee-like richness
• of color and flavor. M
“There's Sold by a grocers Reason PB •CEREAL 1 *
everywhere. ft j
Postum Cereal Hade by Company, --L£ e ' ERa qe u
Inc.
Battle Creek,Michigan. /
V
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
THEIR ESTIMATES TOO LOW
Proof That Engineers Have Erred in
Their Figures Concerning the
Weight of Crowds.
Interesting experiments were made
some time ago at Harvard university !
which seem to demonstrate that en- :
gineers usually underestimate the I
maximum loading caused by dense
crowds on bridges, floors and plat¬
forms. Forty men averaging 163
pounds in weight placed in a box six
feet square caused an average pres¬
sure of 181 pounds to the square foot
on the floor.
An engineer has estimated the
weight per square foot of the densest
crowds on the New York elevated rail¬
ways at only 45 pounds, but since the
Harvard experiments the opinion has
been expressed that the maximum
loading on the elevated cars and plat¬
forms may be neyrer 181 than 45
pounds. This applies to other dose
packed crowds.
IF YOUR CORNS PAIN YOU
Apply Vacher-Balin, it relieves at once.
Keep it handy for any other pain.
Buy it locally. E. W. Vueher, Inc.,
New Orleans.—Adv.
MERELY CHANGE THEIR TUNE
Members of Great and Noble Army of
Croakers Are Never Permanently
Discouraged.
Orville Wright was talking at a Day
ton dinner about the new Capronl bi¬
plane which carries 100 passengers.
“What will the scientists say now?"
her laughed. “Wise* my brother :unl 1
were trying to fly the scientists proved
time after time that flight was impos¬
sible to man. Afterward, when flying
was actually accomplished, they proved
that airplanes would never be more
than dangerous toys—big, stable ones
couldn’t lie made—they'd he too heavy
to rise.
“Those scientists were like the old
lady who was taken to see Hie first
trolley car to start in her village. She
looked at the car and sniffed:
“ ‘It’ll never go.’
"But the car did go. It went beauti¬
fully. Then the old lady, staring after
it shrieked:
“‘It’ll never stop!’"
Stevenson’s Unpublished Play.
There was recently produced In Ed¬
inburgh a play by .1. W. McLaren,
“Heir of Hermtston." adapted from
Robert Louis Stevenson’s novel. Mr,
McLaren has received a letter from
Sir James Barrie congratulating him
on the great success of the play. “I
wonder,” adds Sir James, “whether
you know that It. L. S. himself wrote
a long play on the subject called ‘The
Hanging Judge.’ which was never pub¬
lished, though l read It In manuscript
long ago.”—Christian Science Monitor.
THE WEEK’S EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATE, NA
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND ABOUTJHE WORLD!
A Condensad Record Of Happenings
Of Intereat From All Points
Of The World
Foreign— , ^>4* 1
En route to Birstol from Cardiff re¬
cently the prince of Wales was sur¬
rounded by hundreds of girls, all of
whom demanded the right to shake his i
hand. Now he is congratulating him¬
self that he escaped with his life.
Dr. Victor Panchte, eminent Paris
surgeon, described, in a talk recently
made in London, how a woman had
lived forty-two years without a stom
ache. She was sufering from severe
gastric ulcer. The whole stomach was
removed and the tube leading from the
gullet was sewn directly to the duode¬
nal canal, thus conveying food direct I
to the intestines.
Propaganda is being issued from
London that a corner in the world’s i
flax supply, in Russia the for murder each Sinn of English- Feiner j
men
executed rifles from and the smuggling Ireland, of 50,000 j j
Russia into are
features of an alleged treaty which j
London newspaper men say has been
entered Into between the Russian So¬
viet and Irish “Republican” govern¬
ments.
Great Britain is urging on France
the insufficiency of the neutral zone j
In tipper Silesia and the necessity of 1
re-establishment of the authority of)
the control commission throughout |
the entire area.
Dublin streets were swept with bul¬
lets for twenty minutes one morning
recently following bo’mbs an attack with re- j
volvers and on a police lorry, i
Five English constables wore wounded j
during the attack and some civilians j
also were wounded.
A simple white cross over the grave
Gen. Fernando Viseaino served as a
warning recently to anti-government
plotters. The general was seized at j
his home and found guilty. He dis- j
dained a blindfold and coolly smoked
a cigarette as the squad marched into
the prison court.
Five pound sterling—and no more— j
to be the price of a wife, according j
to a recently ratified convention be- j
the governments of Great Brit-1
and Liberia. Women’s rights are i
to be recognized, and no woma& will !
be compelled to return to a chptnant j
against her will.
The Cologne Gazette says two Amer j
ican soldiers have been killed by a
German civilian near Aubernach, a
revolver being the weapon uspd for
slaying, A search for the mur¬
ts being made, the newspaper
says.
Mrs. Kate O'Connor’s blue ribbbon
“hot dogs,” the finest ever bred by i
the Hoboken sausage factories, are in
wrong with the town of Cedar Grove, j
N. J . and maybe their “kennel," Mrs.
O’Connor’s “dog stand” on the main
street will be torn down about their
heads.
Washington—
A paraphrase of the note of May 27
of the United States government to j
the Netherlands protesting the policy j
ot that government with respect to the
exploitation of the Ojambi oil fields of
the Dutch East Indies, has been made I
public at the state department, it |
does not vary substantially from pre¬
viously published summaries of the
communication.
Maj. Gen. Menoher. chief of the !
army air service and Brig. Gen. Mitch¬
ell, assistant chief, have been advised
by Secretary connection Weeks with that their finan- pub-1 j
cial the company
lishing the “U. S. Air Service," a mag¬
azine, are not, in view of their offi¬
cial position, deemed to be to the best j
interests of the army.
Eastern financiers would join with
western banks in providing loans to
cattle raisers under the plan being
worked out by the treasury for fur¬
nishing needed credit relief without
governmental participation in the situa¬
tion.
Burial of the body of unknown Unit¬
ed States soldier who died on the battle
fields of France, in the crypt of the
capitol building just north of the ro
tuuda is to be urged at the meeting
of the executive committee of the
American Legion at Indianapolis.
The marine strike was recently dis¬
cussed by Fresident Harding and Sec
rotary of Labor Davis and representa
tives of the strikers. The secretary
of labor will make a statement later,
he said.
Investigation of the recent speech
in London by Rear Admiral William
S. Sims touching on Irish sympathiz¬
ers in this country has been ordered
by the senate without a record vote.
World economic conditions during
May pointed to no immediate general
business re'ival, according to the
monthly summaries from its foreign
representatives recently issued by the
bureau of foreign and domestic com¬
merce.
Herbert Hoover has declined the in¬
vitation to address the United States
chamber of commerce in Buenos Ayres,
Argentina, on the ground that he is too
busy to get away from the capitol
until September at least Unlike the
preachers. Hoo'er will take no vaca¬
tion.
The marine strike has proved utter¬
ly ineffectual so far as tying up Ameri¬
can shipping is concerned, Herbert
Hoover, secretary of commerce, ob¬
serves.
A complete survey of the Colarod
river is contemplated in the near fu¬
ture by the United States coast and
geodetic survey.
Bankers of the live stock growing
states have been invited to attend a
meeting in Chicago to be held in the
near future to consider means for fi¬
nancing the live stock industry through
the season of depression. Secretary of
the Terasury Mellon announces.
Rear Admiral Sims’ leave of absence
in England has been revoked by Sec¬
retary of the Navy Denby.
Because the cantaloupe crop in Cali¬
fornia is ready to move, the interstate
commerce commission has ordered a
reduction in melon freight rates, effect¬
ive at once. Apples are not affected.
Adimral Wiliam S. Sims, wiring the
navy department, says his speech in
London recently has been incorrectly
reported, and that the statements he
actually made are substantially those
made in public addresses in the United
States and in his book, “The Victory
at Sea.”
Very’ soon the house Republicans will
confer on reapportionment of congres- j
sional representation on the basis of
the 1920 census. Southern representa- j
tion will be threshed from beginning to ;
end, it is hinted in reports emanating
from certain sections of the country.
General Wood, speaking to 300 Ro
tarians in Manila, says the time has
come “when the Centurion’s caution
against mistreatment of Paul—‘Have
a care; he is a Roman’—applies to cit¬
izens of the United States abroad."
Lieut. W. B. Brown of Boise, Idaho,
the marine corps, was either killed
or drowned when the marine corps
plane he was flying crashed at Colo¬
nial Beach, Maryland, near Washing¬
ton, on the Potomac river.
The senate commerce committee
would be authorized to inquire into
every phase of the marine strike, in¬
cluding the alleged Influence of for¬
eign interests on American shipping,
in a resolution recently introduced by
Senator LaFollette in the senate.
The speech of Rear Admiral William
S. Sims, commander of the American
naval forces overseas during the world
war, has created a situation of “great
delicacy," in the opinion of Secretary
the Navy Denby.
The United States recently proposed
the Mexican people that the two na
enter into a treaty of commerce j
and amity such as will stabilize their
relations and terminate the protracted
of mutual distrust. The treaty,
the subject of negotiations be
Domestic
An atrocious crime was recently re¬
in Moorestown. N. J., when the
police announced the finding of the
badly mutilated body of 7-year-old Ma¬
Russo, who had been missing sev¬
eral days. Search is being made for
Lewis Lively, a 35-year-old negro,
with the crime.
The signature of more than six hun¬
dred Princeton undergraduates who
recently signed the platform of the
Woodrow Wilson Society of Princeton,
was recently presented to the former
president In his Washington home.
Oil men’s associations in Oklahoma,
Kansas, Texas and Louisiana recently
joined in a telegraphic protest to Sec¬
retary Hughes against the United
States formally objecting to the new
Mexican export tax on crude oil. It is
stated that 80% of Mexican oil is com¬
ing into the United States duty free.
Roy Gardner, mail car bandit, being
taken to the federal prison at McNeil |
Island from San Francisco, escaped |
from federal officers at Castle Rock, !
Ore., after holding up the officers at j
the cealed point in of his a pistol, shirt, which and taking he had their con- |
weapons and $200 in cash
Twenty-seven is the average age of
persons seeking to improve their ma
terial condition by night school edu¬
cation, according to a Knights of Co¬
lumbus survey of the ___ United _______ States. ________
C, S. Shaw, in jail at Mobile, Ala.. !
with another man for attempting to
dynamite the postoffice safe at Jack- j
son, Ala., admits that he is Robert Frank j
Chambers, alias Walter Murray. Shor-1
Shaw, C. F. Shaw- and Missourty
ty, wanted by Memphis. Tenn., author- j I
ities.
Approximately thirty thousand men
employed in the Chicago building |
trades have returned to work. Appar
ently the union won out on every con¬
tention.
Prof, E. O. Excell, one of the most
widely known publishers and compos- j |
ers of evangelistic music, died recently
in Chicago. :
Frank Brossard. recently purchased
an old landmark at Flushing, N. Y., and
found a secret door in the wall. When j
it sprang open 55 bottles of a brand ] j
of whisky popular many years ago
were revealed. He is not sure he can i
be arrested for purchasing whisky. j
A million dollar mire, 25 injured, two
dead, is the result of a recent oil fire
at Salt Lake City.
Two armed bandits entered the bank
at Addin. Washington, recently, scoop¬
ed up all the money in sight, kidnap¬
ped the’cashier and fled in an auto¬
mobile.
Sub chaser No. 205, recently purchas¬
ed from the navy department by E. H.
Sulzer of Brooklyn, was towed into
port at Miami. Fla., recently, the crew
bringing a story of an attack at sea
during wiheh it was fired upon by the
sub-chaser TEC. which, without any
warning, put a shot across the bow
and ordered it to halt.
A large posse of armed citizens are
scouring a swamp a short distance
from Hamilton. Ala., to apprehend two
bandits who recently held up and rob¬
bed the Marion County Banking com¬
pany of $2,097.
PEACE RESOLUTION
ADOPTED BY HOUSE
MOVE TO INJECT DISARMAMENT
DEFEATED—SIMPLY SAYS
PEACE EXISTS
HARDING MAY INTERVENE
Substitute Resolution For Knox Motion
Repealing Declaration Of War
Passed By Senate
Washington.—Peace with Germany
was brought one step nearer when
the house adopted the resolution of
Representative Porter, chairman of the
committee on foreign relations.
The Porter resolution, declaring
simply that peace exists, was substi¬
tuted by the lower chamber for the
Knox resolution, which the senate had
passed. The Knox resolution repeal¬
ed the declaration of war.
Delegations of the two chambers will
now confer in an attempt to compro¬
mise the differences in the measures,
Trouble is threatened, for senate lead
ers say they will insist that the Knox
resolution be substituted for the Por¬
ter resolution, in conference and sent
bac kto the house. House leaders are
equally insistent that the Knox reso
lution must be shelved.
On the final vote on the Porter reso
lution in the house ail but three of the
Georgia congressmen voted for the res
olution, although, in the words of one
of the delegation, “it was just be¬
cause it was the best we could do."
Congressmen Lee. Ball and Wright
voted against the resolution.
On the motion to recommti the res¬
olution the entire delegation voted
“aye,” the vote of the house against
recommitment was 254 to 112, the split
being practically on party lines. Con
gressman W. D. Upshaw spoke briefly
in behalf of the Flood resolution ask¬
ing that the president proceed in an
orderly way to effect peace through
treaty rather than by congressional
resolution. Speaker Gillett ruled the
admittance of the resolution out of
order and later Mr. Flood made the
motion to recommit the measure. At
ter the motion to recommit had been
lost many of the Democratic represen
tatives who had voted for recommit
ment voted in favor of the resolution.
t *' < ’ fina ' being 305 to 61. These
representatives placed themselves on
record as favorin gthe Porter resolu
tion, butonly after they had made.ev
ery effort to have it recommitted.
It was simply a question of “take
this or nothing” presented to the Dem
ocratic wing by the Republicans, and
rather than vote against any legisla
tion purporting to effect pea.ee. even
though it be a meaningless resolution
in so far as results are concerned,
many of the Democrats joined with the
iepublicans in voting for it.
Possibility of a situation arising in
which presidential interference may
he necessary is seen-in some quarters,
senators sugest that in event of a dead¬
lock, President Harding may find it
necessary to establish peace by execu
tive proclamation, instead of by reso
lution.
Buys Homestead, Finds Liquor Stock
Flushing, N. Y.— Frank Brossard.
who recently purchased the Hicks
homestead, one of the landmarks of
this Long Island suburb, was Convin¬
ced recently that prohibition in Amer¬
ica was anticipated years ago. The
Hicks house was built two centuries
a go. Mr. Brossard had carpenters
a nd painters renovating the building
an< j they came upon a secret door in
the wall. It sprang open, revealing
55 bottle of a brand of whiskey that
0 nce was popular. Mr. Brossard was
not sure whether he could be arrested
for purchasing liquor.
15-Year-Oid Youth Is Given Ten Years
Memphis, Tenn.—Isaac Shivers, 15
year-old youth charged with the kill
ing of T. M. Parr, a storekeeper at
Raliegh, a suburb of this city, was
found guilty recently of voluntary
manslaughter and his punishment
fixed at ten years’ imprisonment in
the reform school.
_
U. S. Citizens To Have Protetciors
Manila, Manila, P. P. I.—General I.- Wood, speak
ing to 300 Rotarians here, said: “The
time has come when the Centurion’s
caution against mistreatment of Paul—
‘Have a care; he is a Roman —applies
to Americans abroad.”
Former United States Senator Dies
Franklin. La.—Murphy J. Foster,
former United States senator and
former governor, and for years o
dominant figure in Louisiana political
life, died at his home recently. The
funeral services were held at the
Franklin Methodist church.
30,000 Workers Return To Work
Chicago.—Approximately thirty thou¬
sand men employed in the building
trades went back to work and con¬
struction valued at $100,000,000 is un¬
der way.
Cause Of Tragedy Is Laid To Jealousy
Ringgold, Ga.—Near the body- of
Otto Smitherman, his head almost sev
ered by the slashes of a razor, sw ung
the corpse of Earl Williams, hanging
from the limb of a tree. The dual
tragedy was discovered about three
miles south of Ringgold at a late hour
on the night of June 12. Jealousy
aroused by the attentions of a young
woman to Smitherman, it is stated, was
the occasion of the killing. The coro
ner’s jury returned a verdict that Wil
liams killed Smitherman and then
hanged himself.
FROM REMOTEST
PARTS OF GLOBE
Tanlac Elements Come From
Many Lands Far Away
From Here.
The ingredients from which the cele¬
brated medicine Tanlac is made, come
from remote sections of the earth,
and are transported thousands of
miles over land and sea to the great
Tanlac Laboratories at Dayton, Ohio,
and Walkersville, Canada.
The Alps, Appenines, Pyrenees, Rus¬
sian Asia, Brazil, West Indies, Rocky
Mountains, Asia Minor, Persia, India,
Mexico, Columbia and Peru are
among the far away points from which
the principal properties of this re¬
markable preparation are obtained.
What is said to be the largest phar¬
maceutical laboratory in the United
States has been completed at Dayton,
Ohio, for the manufacture of Tanlac,
which, according to recent reports, Is
now having the largest sale of any
medicine of its kind in the world,
over 20,(XX),000 bottles having been
sold in six years.
The new plant occupies 60,000
square feet of floor space and has a
daily capacity of 50,000 bottles. Uni¬
form quality is guaranteed by a series
of careful inspections by expert chem¬
ists from the time the roots, herbs,
barks and flowers are received in their
rough state from all parts of the globe,
until their medicinal properties have
been extracted by the most approved
processes. The finished medicine is
then bottled, labeled and shipped out
to tens of thousands of druggists
throughout the United States and
Canada, to supply a demand never
: before equalled by this or any other
medicine.
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
everywhere.—Advertisement.
A mosquito has 21 teeth, all of
which may be seen through a mi¬
croscope.
; SUFFERED ALL
A WOMAN COULD
; Mrs. Meyer Finally Found
I
i Relief and Health in Lydia E.
j Pinkham’s Vegetable
I Compound
I
Orange, Cal. —“I always feel very
; grateful to you, as some twenty years
]
1
j
j
i
j
i
to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s until Vegetable
Compound, and I took it I was
cured and saved from the operation. wonderful I
have told women of your
medicine times without number, and I
am willing that you should use these
facts and my name if you like. I also
used your Compound during the Change,
and I can do all my own work but the
heavy part, and can walk miles every
day as 1 help my husband in the office.
—Mrs. J. H. Meyer, 412 South Orange
St., Orange, California. troubles
It is quite true that such as
Mrs. Meyer had may reach a stage where
an operation i3 the only resource. On
the other hand, a great many women E.
have been restored to health by Lydia
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain¬
ed and improved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
Ckildrta’* Htntlets, partly re*aiable, 1 Blasts’____ U4
Gatraateed Remitter, femaia o* every label.
n*«-marc© tie, naa-alcafcaiic.
MRS.WINSiOW’5 SYRUP
Tie burnt*’ t ni Cki.dre* * Remitter
:
j
! ;
;
] j
I had to have a
operation. I
a tumor, and ul¬
which would
and break. I
displacement so
that I could
sit down at
and it seemed
if I suffered every
that a woman
suffer. Then
one advised me