Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Oct 1919, p. 2

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Natd of A.F. of L teds Senator# War Is Only Excuse#-/.^ Curb Labor. flSL MEN ABUSE WORKERS >Uhft. Declares Union Employees Have Been "Dogged" by Detectives Who Tried ^ -k- "t».rF«fCe Strikes--Qjxen Shop. -. Wsnomei* %.v :: a \ • ; - * * Washington, Sept tetif# ft the nation wide steel strike was defined IV Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, as recognition of the right of employees "to be heard, to organize and to have seme voice In determining conditions under which they labor." Appearing as tabor's second witness la the senate labor committee's Investigation of the steel strike. President Gompers drew from his experiences as chairman of the first committee to organize the steel industry and traced the history of organized labor's efforts " to unionize the steel workers. f. When he finished the committee ad- ; Journed until next Wednesday, at which time E. H. Gary, chairman of the United States Steel corporation, V has promised to appear. "The right to be heard Is what the v steel workers are asking above all else," Gompers said. "The right to speak with their employers through • their own representatives, to have some voice in determining conditions r under which they work. "The right of workers to association has been denied, denied with all the power and influence and wealth -of the steel corporation, denied by brutal ' and unwarrantable means. r "It has been said that most of the myn taking part In this strike are of foreign birth and not naturalized clt- Isens. That may be and no doubt is true. The largest proportion of steel corporation employees are of foreign birth, but these men were brought here by the companies. "There was for years a systematic effort to bring In these gangs from Europe. There was a systematic effort to eliminate Americans. They have a harvest to reap now. These steel companies brought about the state of which they now complain. "Under the efforts of the steel corporation the hours of labor were alv ways abnormally long. They never seemed satisfied until they had their men toiling seven days a week, 385 days a year. When the shifts changed, from day to night, they got them workteg 24 hours a day. "The right of association, the attempt to organize met with the sternest opposition by the steel corporation. "The appeals coming to us from * their employees were for help in organizing, But most of the efforts were Slaughtered by the detectives and the agencies In the company pay. More than 60 per cent of all the private detective agency effort in this country has been devoted to spying on employees, in mines and mills. They have been used as agents provocateurs to induce men to commit some overt act; 1 to get them to strike too soon." "In the steel industry," he continued, "men were discharged for merely talklag of organization or for grumbling. "There Yiave been numbers of men watched so closely that when they rented a hall the proprietor was told to lock the doors against them. Their meetings on rented ground have been broken up. The men were run down, dispersed and some assaulted." ^Can you give Instances of that last practice?" asked Senator Sterling (Bep.) of South Dakota. "Yes, at McKeesport," Gompers responded. "Since this strike the offices of the Iron and steel workers there have been closed against them. "I suppose that has been done on the theory that collection of crowds would create disorder," Senator Sterling remarked. "I don't know the theory," Mr. Gompers said. "But I do know the purpose. It was to prevent the leaders from counseling with the men and • making the strike effective." 'Only In the event of war, the labor leader declared, should the rights of free speech and assembly be restricted. They should not be, be said, for a "privuteerlng corporation." "I know that many of the public authorities In districts of Pennsylvania are under the direct domination of the United States Steel corporation," the . .witness declared, pounding the table. "The whole conduct of the strike In - Pennsylvania shows," Mr. Gompers assilted, "that whatever helps the corporation against the workers will have the support of Pennsylvania authorl- _ v , ' Emma Goldman Is Unchanged !;/V ,Emma Goldman, agitator and social ' , fjwolutlonlst, has returned to thewerld after 20 months in the Missourt state penitentiary at Jefferson City, Mo., an anrepentant anarchist She will carry ^4 ,<MD her old propaganda. "ifcV : - ga&j-v" Magnates Off to World's SerleSi 'fat. :< Every boy in the United States wtTI ;.;s»lsh be owned a Texas oil well when learns that 106 millionaires of the •fexas oil fields left Dallas on a special . train for Cincinnati to attend the • fa; World's series games. NERVOUS WRECK President May Be Incapacitated m: ieivWeeks, and Recovery l» Being Discussed. C0IU1EIEKST IS ORDERED Ma? fee Necessary to Tafce lx*<ftitlve to Some Resort Where Climate and Seclusion «, Will Aid. ' TT«nhri||tiili. Sept. ao.--4"resident Wilson has returned from his Western tour suffering from a serious though not aiarming, nervous breakdown and unable to give attention to the greatest aggregation of domestic and foreign difficulties an American executive has confronted in many a decade. Mr. Wilson walked from his train to his motor with a weak step, lifting his hat with trembling hand, and smiling wanly at the greeting throng. After a.rest of several hours at the White House, the president was taken for a drive by Mrs. Wilson and Doctor Grayson. He was allowed to see no callers, and retired at an early hour. Complete unbroken rest the president must have, says Doctor Grayson, emphasizing the Intention to see that his patient gets It. Although the condition of the executive Is uot deemed alarming, recovery will be a matter of several weeks under the most favorable circumstances, and Admiral Grayson fears that unless it is possible to keep his mind off pressing public matters, it may be months before Mr. Wilson's shattered nerves resume their equilibrium. The physician hopes that he will be able to carry out his program of rest w:th the president remaining In the White House and eventually resuming his drives and his golf. But if this should not prove feasible, Doctor Grayson will take his patient to some resort where climate and seclusion will aid recovery. Secretary Tumulty found his office in receipt of requests from scores of officials and representatives of various Interests for conferences with the president upon pressing questions as soon as he should return. Senator Hitchcock and other administration leaders in the senate desire to inform the president of the bleak outlook in the League of Nations contest, with a majority of the senate committed to reservations of the sort Mr. Wilson says he will not tolerate.# They want his Instructions before the fight goes any further. Democratic leaders also want to know how far they are to go in pushing the Williams resolution for military and financial aid to Armenia, to which, inasmuch as It Is regarded as a preliminary step to the acceptance of an American mandate to govern Armenia, considerable opposition is developing. Then there are cablegrams from the American peace mission at Paris on the Fiume, Dalmatian, Thraclan, Silesian, and numerous other embarassing foreign questions on which the president's opinions are desired daily. If not hourly. The steel strike and the ejotlre problem of the future relations of capital and labor are matters to which it had been planned to have the president give immediate attention upon his return. Doctor Grayson now thinks it impossible for Mr. Wilson to partlcljate at all in the conference of the rtpif wr.tatives of capital and labor to meet here on October 6. A vast amount of administrative orders, correspondence, and other documents is piled up in the executive office awaiting the signature of the president whenever Doctor Grayson lets down the bars. Doctor Grayson told Secretary Tumqlty that he Is absolutely opposed to the president receiving any callers. *0 M 'mm INOIANAPOUS NSWa. Two Thousand Steel Workers Attack 300 Police and Special Deputies. YANKS HALT ITALIANS U. 8. MARINES STOP LATINS FROM • SEIZING PORT OF TRAU. Order From Allies Stops Italians From Annexing More Territory--Must Give Up Hum*, Paris, Sept. 27.--American naval forces have taken a hand in the swiftly- moving events along the eastern shore of the Adriatic, according to advices from Copenhagen. United States destroyers, appearing off the port of Trau, when .Italian soldiers attempted to force their way Into the town, brought the attack to a sudden stop, the Italians retreating hastily, It is said. One Italian armored car. with Its crew of an officer and three privates, fell into the hands of the Jugo-Slavs. who were defending the place, but the prisoners were taken over by the American marines and transferred to an Italian ship. Serbian troops arrived at Trau soon after the marines were put ashore, and the town was turned over to them by the marines who returned to their ships, according to report. Rome, Sept. 27.--Tomasso Tlttonl, foreign minister, declared during the meeting of the crown council that the peace conference would not permit Italy to annex Flume, because such action would authorize the Czechoslovaks to occupy Teschen: the Jugoslavs to move forces into Klagenfurt; the Greeks to claim Thrace and the Roumanians to annex Ranat. 231 ON WRECKED LINER WILL BE BUDGET WITNESSES Former President Taft and Two Governors Among Witnesses to Be Before Committee. Washington, Sept. 30.--Planning to close its hearings this week, the house budget committee has called among other witnesses William Howard Taft. former president, Governors Goodrich of Indiann and Harrington of Maryland. Secretary Glass and former See retary of War Ilenry L. Stlmsoj^, . First German to Get U. S. Vlaie Berlin, Sept. 30.--So far ss Berlin knows, Countess Montgelap, whose husband formerly was connected with the German embassy in Washington, Is the first German citizen to obtain an official vise to enter the United State*. Steamship Rosalind, Bound for New York From - St. Johns, Goes on Reef--Has Hole in Bow. Stanford. Conn., Sept. 2ft ---The steamship Rosalind of the Red Cross line, bound from St. Johns, N. F., to New York, with a crew of 90, and 141 passengers on board, many of them American tourists, ran on Cowe's reef off Shippan point in a heavy fog in the sound off here. A big hole was stove in the bow of the steamer. The passengers, It Is said, remained calm after the accident and the pumps were immediately set working and are keeping the ship afloat. $235,000 BLAZE IN TEXAS Fire Destroys Two Buildings in Business Center of Greenville--Dry Goods Firm Hit. Greenville, Tex., Sept. 28--After a stubborn fight firemen checked a serious fire in the business distflct here after It had destroyed two buildings occupied by the Hudspeth Dry Goods company, entailing a loss estimated at $235,000. FRENCH CLASH WITH HUNS Norway Gets Spitsbergen. Ptyrl?, fifept. 26^--The supreme council of the peace conference has approved the report of the commission ft), Spitzbergen granting to Norway Spolitlca! suzerainty over the Spitzbergen arehlpedago. Spanish Troops After RalsuN, . Tanglier, Morocco, Sept. 29.--Travelers returning from the interior bring accounts of the beginning of military operations by Spanish troops against the bandit, Raisuli, who Is reported to have been wounded. Many on Both 8ides Are Wounded In Encounter at Saarbrucken, f Berlin Reporta. Berlin, Sept. 26.--In an encounter at Saarbrucken between bourgeois and French soldiers many persons on both sides were wounded, according to a dispatch to the Lokal Anzeiger. One hundred Frenchmen participated in the conflict. BIG STRIKE SPREADS WALKOUT AT BETHLEHEM STEEL WORKS-^PLANT OPERATING Call for State Troops at Watikegan, ML, Refused--Resume Work at 8outh Chicago. Bethtehim, Pa., Sept. 29.--fftie Bethlehem plant of the Bethlehem Steel company was very little affected by the strike called for this morning. There was no semblance of disorder when the shifts changed this morning. Chicago, Sept. 27.--Two hundred deputy sheriffs were sworn In at Waukegan to be in readiness to quell further disorders among striking employees of the American Steel & Wire company. An appeal was made to Governor Lowden for state troops, but Adjutant General Dickson, after a vis- It to the city, decided that Sheriff Elmer J. Green could handle the situation by mustering a large force of deputies. He declined to call out the mllltla at present. All was quiet about the wire works during the morning. Another mill of the Illinois Steel company's South Chicago plant was placed In operation today and the actual manufacture of steel begun for the first time since the calling of the strike. Even union officials Admitted that the activity in the plant was no longer camouflage--for the characteristic glow of steel was In the sky all niglit and the extension of activities indicated an increasing operating force. The duplex mill was manned and reopened and preparations made to fan to flame the banked fires under two more furnaces. Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 27.--Interest in the steel strike situation In the Pittsburgh district centered today about the fight of the union for "the right of free speech and free assemblage" In Allegheny county, a question which has been prominent here for many months and which was brought to a head by the walkout of steel workers. According to unton representatives, authorities of certain cities and towns in the country have refused to grant permits for the holding of mass meetings, and have sanctioned the breaking up of such sessions by state troopers an<} local police in many Instances. According to union representatives, the sheriff has given them permission to hold indoor meetings within the county, and has promised protection for "orderly gatherings" of strikers in halls. MTU SIDES REPORT DUNS Union Men Claim Bethlehem Plant is Crippled, but Mill Owners Say Tfcp Are Not Affected by ^ ^ ^ Wautfegari, 111., Oct. 1 --TWO tMttsand striking steel workers with their wives and children rioted at Waukegan on Monday night. They attacked •800 police and special deputies, tore Qff their stars, bombarded them with bricks and stones and threatened to burn the home of one of their number. The trouble started when 300 nonunion men left the plant of the American Steel and Wire company for home. The strikers, with their families, were drawn up parallel to the electric line, but on the west side of Sheridan road. The police and deputies formed a line on the east side of Sheridan road, to protect the workers, who were still farther east, waiting to take the car. One striker tried to break through the police line to get at the workers. He was arrested, but the strikers threatened a igeneral battle and the police had to surrender him to his comrades. The strikers sent 500 of their number to board tfte cars at Twelfth street so the workers could not get out. The police called for a special car, which backed In, and the workers got away safely. Then Charles Bairstow, one of the special deputies, who In private life Is a coal merchant, became excited and let his auto plunge into the midst of the strikers. There was a wild scramble of women and children, but all escaped Injury. "Kill him! Kill him!" was the cry In an Instant... Bairstow sped away lh his car. Then the 2,000 leaped upon the officers, stoned them and tore the stars off some. The deputies plied Into their cars and sped away. The last ones had to draw their revolvers and force a passage. The strikers started for the city threatening to burn down Bairstow's house. The merchants of the cjty, fearing a general conflagration, called a meeting to demand that state troops be sent. Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. 1.--It was announced at headquarters of the steel strikers that the Bethlehem plant of the Bethlehem Steel company was completely crippled by the strike. Bethlehem, Pa., Oct. 1.--The Bethlehem plant of' the Bethlehem Steel company was very little affected by the strike!. There was no semblance of disorder when the shifts changed in the motning. Chicago, Oct. 1.--Both" strikers and steel companies In the Chicago district claim victory In a test of strength. The day was looked for as a crisis In the strike, and picket forces were tripled by the union heads in an effort to dissuade workers from returning to the plants which, it was believed, would attempt to resume operations on a general scale. Rioters Take Victim From Jail and Hang Him to Telegraph Pole. BATTLE LASTS NINE HOURS STOP U. S. SHIPS TO BRITAIN GOMPERS BACKS STRIKERS Hold Up Train; Take Meat : v Phi* Bluff. Ark., Sept. 29.--The crew of a Missouri Pacific freight train reported to the local police that their train was held up by four armed men west of here and robbed of a large quantity of meat Stops Sale of Postal Notes. Ottawa, Ont., Sept. 27.--Owing to the 1)1 gh rate of exchange on New York, the post office department Issued orders that no further postal notes jthouid he sohLiqt, . Attack Foster in 8enate. , Washington, Sept. 29.--W. Z. Footer. Secretary of the national committee for organizing the steel workers, was attacked In the senate by Senator Pomerene of Ohio as un "autocrat" whom laboring men should beware. Radicalism la Taboo. After wavering for weeks as to whether to turn to the political parties of the left or right for necessary support to Insure it a longer life, the German government has turned Its back upon extreme radicalism. Head of American Federation of Labor Approves Walkout of Men. Washington, Sept. 28,--Responsibility for the steel strike was placed squarely upon E. H. Gary, head .of the United States steel corporation, by Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, testifying before the senate interstate commerce committee. Mr. Gompers asserted that Mr. Gary's refusal to deal with the union heads left the worklngmen no alternative but to strike. Mr. Gompers gave his approval of the steel strike, but said he would have preferred to have had it postponed until after the conference between capital and labor 1n Washington next month. Fear British Coal Famine. There Is apprehension In Washing* ton that one result of the British railway strike will be a coal famine in Europe. There has been a coal shortage In many of the countries of Europe ever since the war started. United States.; •.n Lansing Issues Injunction. Chicago, Sept. 29.--The local steel strike became a federal matter when Judge Landis issued an injunction forbidding strikers to picket the plant of the Pollak Steel company at Ninetythird Street and Baltimore avenue. i Government to Sell Steel. Washington, Sept 29.--Approximate 11,000,000 pounds of finished and unfinished steel will be offered for sale by the war department through district ordnance officers at Boston and Philadelphia between October 1 ajtd 9. Austin Cotton Exports Doublft,. Cotton exports for August were almost double those of the same month last year, according to government sta tistics. The figures were 479,058 bales, as compared with 287,450 In 1918. Acquitted of Murdering Husband. Maude Hoovens-Mahaffey of Goshen thirty-five, on trial at Ogallal, Neb., on a charge of murdering her husband, Lawrence Mabaffey, fifty, was acquitted. the Jury deliberated 20 minutes. Cudahy Company Fined. Chicago, Sept. 29.--Federal Judge Evans fined the Cudahy Packing company $8,875 for collecting excessive damage claims from a railroad com- Cranberry Crop Nearly Doubled. Washington, Sept. 27.--This year's crop of cranberries, according to the September forecast of the department of agriculture, will be about 537,000 barrels, as against 350,000 barrels last year. Chief Flynn In Pittsburgh. Washington, Sept. 27.--Willlaju J, Flynn, chief of the bureau of investigation of the department of justice, is in Pittsburgh. It was said he prpbapany which *he packing company al-1 bly wouM lu^. Into, the teged had -improperly teed Mat qte 1 tie* Rall Strike Pufca Embargo on Ocean < straight and Passengers to c -- Avoid Congestion. £?:'fc:o rx Washington, Oct. 1.--All sailings to ports In Great Britain have been canceled by the shipping board because of the strike of railway workers there. The following instructions have been sent by the division of operations to operations officers at all ports: "To avoid congestion and bunkering difficulties as.a result of the impending British railway strike and in line with action likely to be taken by British owners, all sailings of shipping board vessels for United Kingdom ports are hereby suspended and vessels ordered held in port. Discontinue at once further bookings, loadings and clearances for United Kingdom ports." 2 NEGROES LYNCHED BY MOB Blacks 8hot to Death After They Al taafc Whlte Women gomery, Ala.' Montgomery, Ala., Oct.' 1.--Two negroes. Miles Phlfer and Robert Grosky, the latter a discharged soldier, were taken from county officials about five miles from Montgomery and shot to death by a mob of about twenty- five masked men on Monday. Both negroes were charged with having attacl^ ad white women. . i Girl Leaps to Death. "Davenport, la., Oct. 1. polntment In love Is attributed as the cause for the suicide of Katie Moeller. nineteen, a manicurist. She jumped from the government bridge spanning the Mississippi river and was drowned , 1 lltalloon Derby Is In Doubt. 1 fit. Louis. Oct. 1.--Ma J. A. B. Lambert, ranking official of the army-navy balloon race started here lost Friday announced that the army and nayy de partments have been requested to de clde the results of the derby. v • , Yankees Cinch Third Plaoe. g|g|p York, Oct. 1.--New York Yart kees clinched third place In the Ameircan league by defeating the Athletics 4 to 2 In the final American league game of the season. As a reMlt Detroit finished fourth. World's Mark to Imogene C. Quebec, Canada. Oct. 1.--A world' record for a five-mile harness race was set here when Imogene Constantlne, owned by I*. X. LeChance of Quebec Mayor Smith Seriously Injured When ^ |4f Attempted to Restore Orders- County Jail and Courthouee Damaged. Omaha, Neb--William Brown, a negro accused an attack on a white girl, was dragged from the fifth floor of' the county jail here at eleven o'clock Sunday night, hanged to an electric light pole, and bis body riddled with bullets. The lynching followed a sensational nine hour battle between a vast mob of white men and women and Omaha's entire police department, rejnforced by Sheriff Michael Clark of Douglas county and all his deputies. Hundreds of shots were fired. One man was shot and killed while leading a charge on the police, two men were seriously wounded, a score of other members of the mob were se verely bruised by police clubs, and dozens of negroes In all parts of the city were given terrific beatings by the mob, the women assisting In several attacks. During the early evening battle Mayor Ed P. Smith, with a pistol in his hand, appeared in the <Joor of the county building. "Give us the nigger," yelled the mob. "I can't do It boys," replied the mayor. Mayor Beaten by Mob. A'report quickly spread through the crowd that the mayor had shot the exsoldler, and several men hurled themselves at the official.1' He was hustled down Harney street to Sixteenth to a crossing traffic *block. Hang the mayor; he won't give us the nigger!" cried the mob. Twice a rope was thrown about his head,, fists beat his face till the blood streamed down, and he was about to be lynched when a squad of police charged the crowd, twice cut the rope, broke a few heads, and backed away with the unconscious official. Courthouse Is Fired. Douglas county's new $1,500,000 courthouse was set afire during the battle. The mob charged over the police at the door to fight their way to the fifth floor, where the county jail is located. Although the entire fire department, responded, the firemen were helpless, the mob slashing the hose In a score of places as quickly as It was laid. The sheriff then coupled up three lines of Interior fire hose and with his deputies and some police officers attempted to cow the crowd by turning the water on them. Instead of having that effect Is .brought a hall of stones and bricks. Window Panee Shattered. In ten minutes 50 windows had been broken on^ the south side of the courthouse and much other damage done. Thousands of shots were fired. The mob surged around the block on which the courthouse stands. Finally, about 7 o'clock in the evening, after securing fuel of kerosene and tar they managed to start a fire In the office of the county treasurer, which Is on the first floor and at the northeast corner. After more than two-thirds of the building had been destroyed and the flre was near the jail on the top floor, where the sheriff and prisoners had been finally forced to go, the sheriff waved a white flag from one of' the windows. The flag consisted of a piece of men's white underwear. The crowd roared. 8heriff Gives Up Negro. "Come and get him! He's yours!" they shouted from the jail. The mob dragged the negro down the stairway, partly through smoke and some flame, to the Harney street entrance. His clothing was stripped clean from his body. One of the mob climbed a pole and threw the rope over the cross arm. A score or more men pulled Brown's nude body into the air aud anchored the loose end of the rope. Hundreds of shots were fired into his body, many of the mob having secured shotguns and weapons of all kinds. The body was cut down almost as soon as he was dead. The crowd grabbed a big automobile which was parked near by, tied the body of the dead negro to it and started through the streets. "Take him up Into nigger town and show them what we will do to them all 1" yelled the crowd. At midnight thousands of the mob started for the north end of the city, where several ihousand negroes live In a settlement. The body of the dead negro was dragged along behind the leading automobile. • ------• -;s Volunteers to Curb Rl#* . Lnt( at night a volunteer force of members of the home guard of Lin coin and University place was mustered to go to Omaha on a special > ai.i, in chaige of a detail of Lincoln's fo'lcemen, but the order to nv.ke *he trip was later held 'n abeyance on advlceo thnt the lynching of the pejpo'had had the effect of qufei Ing the mob and that It was dispersing. Cl lef of Police Johnstone requested the guardsmen to hold themselves la ivartincps, however. or have helped eattr, a short XWilay H. K J M a t o y l t e d t b trouble, travel, dropv Bright'* disease. Boon'* * thousands. AaiffinoiiCM* Thomas Knight, retired Insurance agent. IM N. Ninth St., JBSast 8t. Louts, 1 It, says: "1 had pata across the small of mr back and the least exertion put me in misery. At one time. I had to keep pillows under the small of my back at night. The kidney secretions were scanty and 1 rEefdssftsft ney Pills, and as a reeuuTltJtUBm a different person." Get Deaafo «t A»r Sim, aOe a lea DOAN'S %'KIV F0STER40LBURN CO, BUFFALO. N.T. Mr- • & Acid-Stomach Makes 9 Out of ifj": i People Suffer Doctors declare tbat tnoro than ?• nonorganlo diseases can be traced t« Acid-. ' Stomach. Starting with indigestion, heart-: burn, belching, food-repeating, bloat, aonr. rassy Stomach, the entire system eventually wcomei affected, every vital organ Buffering , In some degree or other. Tou see these vie- ft ttms of Acid-Stomach everywhere--peoplo who are subject to nervousness, headache,, Insomnia, biliousness.--people whe suffer from rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica and aches aa&J * pains all over the body. It is safe to sajr ' that about 9 people out of 10 suffer to som*l extent from Acid-Stomach. If yon suffer from stomach treuble «r. 1 ••en If you do not feel any stomach distress,! yet are weak and ailing, feel tired and, dragged out, lack "pop" and enthusiasm and know that something is wrong although you. cannot locate the exact cause of your trouble-- you naturally want to get back your grip on health as quickly as possible. Then take F.ATONIC, the wonderful modern remedy that brings quick relief from pains of! - indigestion, belching, gassy bloat, etc. Keep ;rour stomach strong, clean and sweet, Se* ^low your general health Improves--how quickly the old-time rim, vigor and vitality . eemes back! Get * big 60c box of KATONIC from your druggist today. It la guaranteed to ploaaa you. If you are not satisfied your druggist will refund your money. Recalls Old lynching. The On-pha lynching was a counterpart of the Inst one in the eartv nlhetles. A white man wis legally hanged for murder. A negro wns conllnffd in the jnil charged with the same offense a* Brown was. A rumOr got about that the girl victim waR dead. The inO broke in. seized the prisoner, nnd Hanged him over a trolley wire in front of Boyd's theater, the audieife of which came out to witness the -Hided attraction. There were some arrests, but no one was pun- ; FRECKLES Positively Removed by Dr. Berry's Freckle Ointment Your Druggist or by Mail flSo--Send for Free Booklet Dr.C,H. BenyGk,2975 MfcUgao Ave. CMcaflo Great Convenience. 'I wish I knew what to do with all this broken crockery," said Mrs. Flatdweller. "There Isn't any place to throw It away, and--" 'I have It," cried Mr. Flatdweller, bis eyes aglow with the fires of genius. "Put 'em in the parcels post and mall 'em to some fictitluoe addr in the first zone." ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name "Bayer" is on Genuine .... Aspirin--say Bayer A ©AVIS® Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" In a "Bayer package," containing proper directions for Colds, Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes ef 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin Is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture ef Monoacetlcacidester of Sallcylicacld.--Adv. Airy Persiflage. "An aviator lives high." "Oh, I don't know; only one flight •• ••• , * Lift off Corns! Doesn't hurt a bit and Freeaone costs only a few cents. With your fingers I Ton cms lift off any hard corn, soft corn, or con between the toes, and the hard akia calluses from bottom of feet. A tiny bottle of "Freesone" tests little at any drug store; apply a few) drops upon the corn or callus. Instantly it stops hurting, then shortly you lift that bothersome corn or callus right off, root and all, without one bit of pain or soreness. Truly 1 lie fcuaafrufl Getting Together. "How do you meet the high cost of living?" "Tou are not supposed to meet it. It overtakes you." When In need of a good line ef talk; patronize a telephone company. «>» 1#^ Morning f KeepYbur Eyes X i) iS'S VM t o " ' - ?< . 9 ' • / ;• v '7\ ' J ; ^

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