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Exact Copy of Wrapper. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
DIAMOND WORN BY CARLOTTA
“Maximillian Stone,” With Unhappy
History, Is Now on Exhibition
at New York.
A great greenish-white diamond,
known as the "Maximillian stone,” is
on exhibition for the first time in this
country at New York. Like all large
gems, this stone has a history which
is not happy. It was found in Brazil
about 1850, and in its rough state
weighed nearly 50 carats. Ferdinand
Joseph Maximillian, then archduke of
Austria, traveled extensively in South
America. While lie was in Brazil he
bought the diamond, it is said, for a
price approximating $375,000.
The jewel today is in the same con¬
dition as it was when worn by (lie Em¬
press Marie Charlotte in Maxlmllliau’s
short reign in Mexico.
When Maximillian was executed a
commission was designated to sell the
diamond along with other gems that
had been part of the gorgeous court.
The stone was bought by an American.
As part of ids estate the diamond is
again to be sold.
Positive and Comparative.
During a recent business men's con¬
vention in Chicago, one man ap¬
proached another in the lobby of a
hotel and by way of introducing him¬
self, said:
“I’m Beck."
‘‘That’s good,” replied the man ad¬
dressed. taking the proffered hand,
“I’m more so.”
“You’re what?” asked the first
spea ker.
“I say that I am more so,” repeated
the other,
“What do you mean by that?”
“Why, you say you are Beck;”
“Yes, I am. My name is Beck.”
“Well, my name is Becker.”
It never pays to sow wild oats,
young man; there is po market for
them.
|
Will Ybu Have A'Lift’ | ;
;
If you have reason to Delieve, as I
many have, that a change from j ;
coffee or tea would be wise, try I
j
P0STUM CEREAL j
j
|
You’ll find what thousands of j
1
others have found—complete sat¬
isfaction to taste, and freedom !
from harm to nerves or digestion
When coffee or tea disturbs, it’s
with easy to Postum get
'Theres a Reason
Sold everywhere by grocers #9
;
Made by
Postum Cereal Co., Inc
Battle Creek,Mich.
Are Corns a Luxury?
When is a luxury tax? Representa¬
tive Aaron 8. Kreider tells this story:
A woman went into a restaurant and
ordered a plate of ice cream, and wlten
she came to pay, she had a check for
15 cents and 2 cents was added to it.
She asked : “What does that 2 cents
mean ?”
"Weil,” she was told, “15 cents for
your ice cream and 2 cents luxury
tax."
Siie paid it, and then she walked
across the street to the drug story and
asked for a eorri plaster, and she got
a check for 10 cents, and 1 Cent added.
She said: “What is the 1 cent for?”
“That is the luxury tax.”
“Weil,” she said, “this is the first
time i ever knew that corns were a
luxury."
Now that is the way it goes. There
are a great many tilings to be con¬
sidered in discussing tax propositions.
—From the Nation’s Business.
Fairy Tale.
“Once upon a time, as all good stories
begin, there was a Fairy, and the
Woodsman was cutting down a whale
of a tree when the Fairy came by and
said, waving her wand:
“Woodsman, spa re that tree and get
u regular job being President of your
country.”
And so the Woodsman moves to
Washington and one day the Fairy
called again and said, w. her w.:
"Is there anything more I can do
for you?”
And the President said:
"Yes, you little son-of-a-gun ! You
can take me hack where I came from
and hand me my ax, and beat it!”—
itichmond Time s-Dispatch.
Glass Workers Lose Sight.
Many of the workmen in the glass |
factories of Venice begin to lose (heir
sight after they have passed their for¬ i j
tieth year and soon become totally |
blind. The impairment of vision is
caused by the excessive heat and the i
glare from (he glass furnaces.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
THE WEEK’S EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEWS OF STATE, NA
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND AB0UT_THE WORLD
A Condensed Record Of Happenings
Of Interest From All Points
Of The World
FOREIGN^"
The bronze copy of Houdon’s marble
statue of George Washington, the orig¬
inal of which stands in the rotunda of
the Virginia statecapital at Richmond,
was recently unveiled in Trafalgar
square, London.
The Pall Mall Gazette and Globe
says the British cabinet has decided
upon renewal of the Anglo-Japanese
treaty, but that discussion is proceed¬
ing on certain modifications that have
been suggested.
Forces of the royal Irish constabula¬
ry are immediately to be quadrupled.
This means, saysa London dispatch,
increasing the number of men now in
the service from 12.00 to 50,000.
The demand of Deputy Anthe Ber
tlion of the Seine department, in the
French chamber of deputies, that he
he permitted to interpellate the cabi¬
net on pleasures to he taken against
General Boyer for having two lieuten¬
ants shot during the battle of Ver¬
dun has brought out one of the most
dramatic incidents of the war. The
general is accused of having the men
shot without process of trial.
United States Senator Joseph I.
France is in Russia to confer with the
Soviet government anent trade with
the United States.
The threatened strike of the British
engineering trades lias been averted,
is announced, by the engineers and
workers getting together.
Two hundred delegates from the
United States who attended the Rotary
convention in Edinburgh, Scotland, arc
in Paris, and are being entertained
elaborately. They will visit the battle¬
fields of France.
The Anglo-Japanese alliance is not
to lie renewed in its present form, it
has already been made abundantly
clear, although the discussion of the
treaty by the conference of British pre¬
miers has just begun.
WASHINGTON
Favorable report on the Norris bill
to create a $100,000,000 government
corporation to promote the transporta¬
tion of agricultural products has been
ordered by the senate agriculture com¬
mittee.
The cost of living in the United
States in May was 80.3 per cent higher
than in 1913.
The federal trade commission charg¬
es the Diamond Holfast Rubber com¬
pany of Atlanta, Ga., with unfairly rflar
keting its product^ in such a way as to
pass them off products of the Diamond
Rubber company, a subsidiary of the
Goodrich company.
With the Borah disarmament amend¬
ment approved, but practically all oth¬
er senate changes, particularly those
calling for increased appropriations, re¬
jected by the house, the naval appro¬
priation bill has been sent back to the
senate for final action.
Robert J. Mawbinney of Pennsylva¬
nia has been nominated by the presi
dent to be assistant secretary of the
treasury.
Hiram C. Todd of New York has
been nominated by the president to
be district attorney for tiie northern
district of New York.
The man who has no skeleton in his
closet and who might want one will
find it by turning to paragraph 1651
of the new tariff bill Introduced re¬
cently, that he may get it abroad with
out paying the duty. In putting skel
etons on the free list, the ways and
means committee has in mind also oth¬
er anatomical specimens.
President Harding sent a message to
congress strongly dissenting from pro
visions in the army appropriation bill
which require the army to be reduced
to 150,000 men by October 1. The
president announced his approval of
the bill, but warned congress that he
does not feel justified in asking the
secretary of war to enforce dismissal
of men prior to expiration of enlist
ment as would be necessary if the pro
visions of the measure are carried into
effect.
The nomination of former President
Taft was not confirmed without oppo¬
sition. It was in executive session and
a roll call was demanded. Ex-Presi¬
dent Taft enjoys a unique distinction
in having been president of the United
States and is now chief justice.
The interstate commerce commis¬
sion has fixed ,the tentative value of
the Gainesville Midland (Georgia) rail¬
road at $1,174,665; the Craddo and
Choctaw (Arkansas), $238,161.
Panama must accept forthwith the
White award in the boundary dispute
with Costa Rica, Secretary of State
Hughes recently told Foreign Minister
Garay of Panama.
The war department has ordered
Capt. Calvin DeWitt, Jr., of the Third
cavalry to proceed to Athens, Ga., to
assume duties as assistant professor
of military science and tactics at the
University of Georgia.
Nearly 200,000 reduction in freight
rates have been made by the railroads
in the last ten months in a campaign
to stimulate business.
The question of speeding up work
in congress and greater participation
in the activities of the house by new
members was recently discussed at
The l nited States shipping board
has decided definitely to dispose of
the 28, wooden ships of the emergency
fleet corporation. Bids will be opened
July 30.
Great Britain and Japan will leave
to the Lnited States the first step
toward disarmament.
The railroad situation is being dis¬
cussed by President Harding at nearly
all the weekly cabinet meetings,
a conference of about sixty representa¬
tives who are serving their first term.
They are chafing over the slow grind
of the law-making mill.
Plans of senate leaders to begin a
series of three days recesses to begin
the first week in July have been dis¬
rupted by the insistanee of advocates
of soldier bonus, maternity and agri¬
cultural relief bills that such measures
he disposed of before the senate tem¬
porarily stops work.
The attorney general recently an¬
nounced that civil proceedings charg¬
ing violation of the anti trust law will
be instituted in the federal court at
New' York against the Cement Manu¬
facturer Protective association and its
officers and members. He alleges that
members of the association produced
approximately 90 per cent of the total
Portland cement used in the northeast¬
ern section of the United States.
Investigation to determine whether
the armor plate of America’s modern
battleships is susceptible to penetra¬
tion by the shock of an aerial bomb ex¬
ploded nearby may be recorded as the
first result likely to follow the mock
attatek on the old battleship Iowa.
Naval experts says that as the back¬
bone of the fleet, the battleship still
reigns supreme.
Recommendations for favorable re¬
port on the Willis-Campbeil anti-medi¬
cal beer bill was voted by a senate
judiciary committee after several mi¬
nor changes hud been made in the
measure as it passed the house.
The estate left by Andrew Carnegie
has been appraised at $23,933,014.
The house recently voted to further
insist, on its disagreement to the sen¬
ate amendment authorizing an initial
appropriation of fifteen million dollars
toward the construction of two air¬
plane carriers.
Sharply conflicting views as to the
tax burden to be imposed on the Amer¬
ican people by the administration’s tar¬
iff bill is expressed by Republican
and Democratic leaders of the house,
DOMESTIC—
The Alabama supreme court, has de¬
clared unconstitutional an amendment
to the state constitution granting ex¬
emption from poll tax payments in the
state to soldiers ami sailors from Ala¬
bama who fought In the world war.
The only white man to make the pil¬
grimage to 88 ascred shrines of Kobo
Daishi on the Japanese island of Shi¬
koku, Dr. Frederick Starr, anthropol¬
ogist of the University of Chicago, lias
returned to the United States to com¬
pile what is expected to be the most
interesting data on Japanese life ever
gathered together.
Employees of Chicago grain eleva¬
tors have refused to accept the eleva¬
tor owners’ and operators' offer to ar¬
bitrate their differences anti a strike
will likely be called.
An arbitration agreement has been
signed by the union strikers at the
paper mills in this country and in Can¬
ada with the exception of the interna¬
tional paper company.
Sir Auckland Geddas, British ambas¬
sador, in an address before the grad¬
uating class of the University of Mich¬
igan. Ann Arbor, said the time will
probably come when wars will be no
more, but not yet.
Six men face the hangman's noose
at Amite, La., all for the same crime.
The conviction of the six for the mur¬
der, all with capita! punishment, is
believed to set a new national rec¬
ord.
Married women have been barred
from teaching in the public schools
of Warwick county, Va„ on the ground
that they ought to stay at home and
rear families.
Fire receutly almost, wiped out the
quaint old town of Aeomac, Va„ de¬
stroying practically all of the business
section, including a number of stores,
the postoffice, bank and hotel.
Cadet Forest Myers of Weatherford,
Texas, who had completed his train
ing and would have received a eorn
mission at an early date, was killed j
at Arcadia, Fla., when the plane in
which he was flying crashed to the j
ground. The cause of the accident has j
not been determined.
Big recently Four held passenger Covington, train No, Ind., 44 J
was near and safe pitch- j j
the messenger shot the
ed from the train. The train was rob- j
bed by two men, who boarded the ex- j
press car. as the trains started from j
Covington at 1:45 o’clock in the morn- J
ing. The robbers jumped off when the
t rain slowed up and made good their j
escape.
The schooner Sir Donald, recently
purchased by a Mobile, Ala., broker¬
age company, has been changed from
the British to the American flag and
her name changed to the,, Goldenrod.
Charged with the murder of his fa
ther, Caarl Murrell, 19 is on trial for
his life at Blountvilie, Tenn.
William Elmore Smith, Jr., 17, is
dead in Richmond, Va., as the result
of being hot by a pitched baseball in
a match game.
Announcement iu made at Enid. Ok¬
lahoma, of a merger of oil properties in
Oklahoma and Texas valued at approx¬
imately four millions of dollars.
Eighteen cotton mills in Spartan¬
burg county, South Carolina, will pay
out in dividends before the 10th of
July $557,130.
DODSON STOPS
SALE OF CALOMEL
“Dodson’s Liver Tone” is Taking Place of Dangerous,
Sickening Chemical, Say Druggists
Every druggist in town has noticed
a great falling off in the sale of
calomel. They all give the same rea¬
son. Dodson’s Liver Tone is taking
its place.
“Calomel is dangerous and people
know it.” Dodson’s Liver Tone Is per¬
sonally guaranteed by every druggist
who sells it. A large bottle doesn’t
cost very much but if it fails to give
easy relief in every case of liver slug¬
gishness and constipation, just ask
for your money back.
Unjust Teacher.
It was the infant class’s alphabet
lesson, and the teacher had pro¬
gressed as far as the letter “B,” when
she noticed that one little girl was
obviously “wool-gathering.”
Walking over to her/ and pointing
to the letter on the blackboard, she
asked:
"Now, Maggie, what letter is that?”
Maggie, of course, did not know, so
teacher, with a gentle shake explained:
“Letter B, letter B ”
“Please, teacher,” answered the
child, with one tearful eye on the
child next to her, "1 ain't touching
her i”
ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre¬
scribed by physicians for twenty-one
years and proved safe by millions.
Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer
package for Colds, Headache, Neural¬
gia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago and for Bain. Handy tin
boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As¬
pirin cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger packages. Aspirin is the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of Salicycacid.
Eliminate Worthless Pictures.
If pictures are worth framing tinve
them framed. Otherwise put them
away or throw them away. Don't let
the younger members of the family
pin pictures on the wall. The,edges
curl and they soon become unsightly
dust collectors. Small, fussy bric-a
brac should lie avoided for the same
reason.
FRECKLES
Now U the Time to Get Rid of
These U|ly Spots.
There’s no longer the slightest need ot
feeling ashamed of your frei freckles, as Othine
double ble strength—Is stre guaranteed to remove
theHe homely spots.
Simply get an ounce of Othine—double
strength—from druggist, - and ‘ apply
your _ morning a
little of it night rht and and yt
Hhould soon see ti that even the the worst worst freckl fre
have begun ,n to to disappear, disappear di while the lighter
ones have vanished vanished oh entirely. entii It is seldom
that that more more than than O! one one ounce ou is needed to com
pletely clear the e skin :in and gain a beautiful
clear complexlon. double
Be sure to ask for the strength
Othine, an this Is sold under guarantee of
money back If It falls to remove freckles.
Substituted.
“So you have taken to carrying
around a monkey ! This is going too
far!”
“Well, you never go anywhere
with me,” was Ins wife’s somewhat
ambiguous retort.
■ ■
MALARIAS ? days
If This Remedy Fails--You Get Your Money Back
The Greatest Discovery of All Time!
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 woik 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 inte:tiOn as cempire 1 to a mortality rate am^ng 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
—82.00 to the Vino Medical Co., 200 Wen H>u*t:»n St., New York. N. Y . aid one bottii
containing complete seven day cure will he sent you immsdiately postpaid.
Antiplasma is Malaria Insurance at a Cost of $2.09 Per Year
Dodson’s Liver Tone Is a pleasant
tasting, purely vegetable remedy,
harmless to both children and adults.
Take a spoonful at night and wake up
feeling fine; no biliousness, sick nead
nehe, acid stomach or constipated
bowels. It doesn’t gripe or cause In¬
convenience nil the next day like vio¬
lent calomel. Take n dose , f calomel
today and tomorrow you will fed
weak, sick and nauseated. Don’t lose
a day.
The Stage Today.
Alfred Noyes, who is conducting a
strong campaign for the • purification
of tin' drama, said in a recent address:
“In Fifth avenue the other day 1
saw a crowd assembled before a hair¬
dresser’s shop window. The window
contained a wax presentation, life size,
of a young lady about to enter her
bath. As I turned disgustedly‘away
I heard a young man say:
“ ‘Why, this hairdresser lias stolen
the plot of at least six of Broadway’s
forthcoming plays. He is bound to be *
sued right and left for plagiarism.’ ”
Be Sure Baby is Healthy
at Teething Time
els ICeepdigestionnaturai, thebow
open, give sufficient food and
MRS. WINSLOWS
SYRUP
The Infant*’ and Children’ i Regulator
Then the milk teeth never cause
trouble for you, or discomfort
for baby. Mrs. Winslow’s Syrup
in brings most remarkable results
the good health and comfort for
and baby. pleasant It’s pleasant to give
to take.
Harmless, purely vegetable. In¬
fants* and children’s regulator,
formula on every label. Guaran¬
teed non-narcotic* non-alcohollQ
Clear Your
Complexion
with This
Old Reliable
Remedy —
Hancock:
SulphurCohpound
For pimple*, black-head*, freckle*, blotche*.
and tan, a* well a* for more seriou* face, *calp
and body eruption*, hive*, eczema, etc.. u*«
thi* scientific compound heal*; of taken sulphur. internally— A* a lo¬
tion, It soothe* and the
a few drops in a fllas* of watei— it gets at
root of the trouble and purfiet the blood.
Physicians agree that sulphur is one of the
most effective blood purifiers known. Re¬
member, a good complexion Isn't *kln deep
—it’* health deep
Be sure to ask for HANCOCK SULPHUR
COMPOUND. It ha* been used with satis¬
factory results for over 25 year*.
60c and $1.20 the bottle
at your druggist's. If he can’t supply you.
tend his name and the price In stamps and
we will send you a bottle direct.
HANCOCK LIQUID SULPHUR
COMPANY
Baltimore. Md.
Ham til Sulphur Compound Oint
ment — 25c and 50c—for uuvAth tht
Liquid Compound. ^
taw >0* TUI 5
______ _
NOTICE THE DIFFERENCE —One pill at
night, oh how different you you feel in the niorn
ing. Kramer’s Kramer’s Herb Herb Pills act on Liver,
Stomach, Stom Kidneys and Bowels. Improve ap
petite, relieve constipation. No griping Iplni pain. atm.
Send 10c by mail for trial size Kramer Phar¬ lar
macy, Larchwood Ave. at 61st, Phil P*.