Evening Star Newspaper, August 22, 1921, Page 5

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MARN FOUND. MURDERED. T'axi Driver Shct—Car Discovered Mile From Body. VILLE, Towa, August 22.— of the neck the lifeless 1 Iton, sixty, & iver, was found near here. The car s u mile from the bod Pelice are working on the theory that Hamilton was killed by members of a gang of bootleggers or gamblers to séal his Hps: A grand jury sub- poena was fotind in his pocket. GORED BY BULL; DIES. GREENVILLE, S. C. August William M. Cothran, young Greenville county farmer, died in a local hospital s a result of injuries he received when he was gored by a bull on his place near the city. PIONEERS 20 In the Art of —Painting We —Paperhanging Please —Upholstering For Quality Work at Moderate Cost Consult 1325 14th St. Main 4224-3 Geo. Piitt Co., Inc., FORTY-EIGHT YEARS -OF PROVEN SAFETY Behind the Safeguarded FIRST MORTGAGES offer- ed by this “House. Unusual demand for invest- ment capital in 1921 has en- abled us to offer SOUND FIRST MORTGAGES EARNING 8% They enjoy the same wide margin of security NOW that they did years ago when we made them at 5 per cent in- terest. i LIST UPON REQUEST The F. H. SMITH CO. Founded 1873 Investment Department 815 15th Street 48 Years Without Loss to Any Investor Graduate Eyes Examined McCormick Medical College Glasses Fitted DR. CLAUDE S.SEMONES o e, T ‘Now Located 400-410 McLachlen 10th and G Sts. N.W. ‘Phone Main TaL. BOYSINCAMPAGAIN AT RIFLE PRAGTICE Free to Shoot Thirty Rounds Each on Gallery Rapge. Dinner in Field. Special Dispateh to The Star. CAMP MEADE, Md., August 22.—For the second time since the training camp opened, the Washington boys, number- ing about 100, are spending the day on the rifie range. With the preliminary of rifle practice finished last Friday, the students are free today to shoot thirty rounds of ammunition aplece on the gallery range. For the benefit of relatives and | friends who may feel apprehensive con- cerning the safety of their Loys, it may be said that every precautionary meas- ure is being taken to prevert injury from rifle firing. The Red Cross main- tains a fully equipped ambulance serv- ice on the range, and both officers and a large corps of non-coms carefully inspect each rifle after it has been fired to see that no live ammunition remains in the chamber. March to Range. The Washington company left the barracks at 7 o'clock this morning, and marched in battalion formation to the range. Dinner will be served from a field kitchen, and the entire battalion will return to their barracks at 5:30 this evening. Privates Williams, Proctor and John- son have been appointed a committee of three to act as floor representatives of Company M at the grand military ball to be held Friday night in the Camp Meade gymnasium. This is the only large formal social function which the boys will have while at camp, and it is the purpose of the education and recreational bureau to make it a suc- cess. As Company M will be on the rifle range until next Thursday night, it will be impossible for the boys to par- ticipate in athletics. It was proposed to have at least three base ball gumes a week with teams representing other companies in the regiment, but the range is 8o far from the stadium that it would be impossible to return to the stadium in time for afternoon sports. R. 0. T. C. Men Back in Camp. _ More than 300 young officers attend- ing the R. O. T. C. here returned to camp early this morning after spend- ing the week end with relatives and triends of Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington. ,Instruc- tion will be given today [n heavy tractor and self-propelled artillery material, as well as in unilateral ob- servation cases. Col. John L. De Witt of the general staff will lecture this afternoon on “Supply.” whkile Lieut. Col. W. H. Waldron, also of the general staff, will discuss “Approach March and D_evelopmen(." This evening motion pictures will be shown at the Liberty Hut. A general conference on mili- tary science and tactics will be held tomorrow morning and in the after- noon demonstrations will be given in signal communications. THE WEATHER District of Columbia and Maryland —Fair tonight and tomorrow, little change in temperature; gentle north and northeast winds. Virginia—Fair tonight and tomor- row. little change in temperature: moderate to fresh northeast winds. West Virginia—Fair and slightly § THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1921 FROM.PRESS TO PRESIDENT BY AIRPLANE. Lieut. Seldon, naval aviator Srom the Sunday papers to Presi Tribute to A. E F. Great Assembly—Many Notables Pres- nt Harding nnd party on the Beach, where the aviator landed for lunch on the return to ALL LORRAINE PAYS HOMAGE AS YANKS UNVEIL MONUME Bolling Fleld, hington. NT is Dedicated Before ent as France Honors Americans. By the Associated Press. FLIREY, France, August 21.—Lor- raine’s monument to the American expeditionary forces, the dedication of which was one of the principal objects of the present visit of the American Legion delegation to France, was unveiled here today by. the legion’s representatives in the presence of the whole countryside. Marshal Foch, Louis Barthou, minis- ter for the liberated regions, and Am- bassador Herrick participated in the ceremonies. The people of Flirey were deeply affected by the memories the unveiling brought up, laughing and crying by turps as they changed greetings with thuir Ameri- can friends, and intently following the progress of the exerclses. The legionnaires came in automo- biles from Metz, stopping on the way while Maj. John G. Emery, national commander of the American Legion, who served in the 1st Division in the war, placed a wreath on the grav of Lieut, Jefferson Feigl, the first ofiicer of the lst Division killed in France. DMaj. Emery himself re- ceived from M. Barthou the inslgnia of commander of the Legion of Honor and from Marshal Foch the war cross with palr. in recognition of his having been wounded during the fighting in the Argonne and being cited in American Army orders. Mr. Harding Made Citizen. President Harding, Gen. Pershing, Ambassador _ Herrick, Emery, Marshal Foch and M. Barthou were created honorary citizens of Flirey. ex- | ple of Belgium to show their grati- tude toward the United States by ac- cording a national reception to the members of the American Legion when they visit Belgium August 28 and 29. Official receptions have been arranged in several towns, and the visitors in addition will visit the Belgian battlefields and cemeteries. Another function on the program today was a journey to Geroy, near Longway, on the Belgian frontier, with Marshal Foch, who will visit the grave of his only son, who was killed on August 22, 1914. The Americans planped to present condolences to | Marshal Foch, as well as to M. Vi- viani, former French premier, whose | son-in-law also was killed and buried on the same spot and date. BOOSTS Y. M. C. A. FUND. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Makes Pension Plan Assured Success. SILVER BAY, N. Y. August 22. Announcement ’that the directors of the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial will pledge $750,000 and that John D. Rockefeller, jr, will donate personally $250,000 toward the {Young Men's Christian Association retirement fund plan, providing the remainder of the $4.000,000 believed necessary is pledged by December 31, 1922, was made here at a meeting of leading laymen and other representa- tives of the Y. M. C. A. of North America and eighteen foreign coun- tries. The announcement was made through the reading of a letter from sailed down the river early yesterday morning aj ayflower. The photograph shows the plane at Colonial | the manufacturing plant, and leaped delivered CONEY ISLAND MYSTERY. . Clothing of Mrs. E. S. Cheatham Found in Bathhouse. NEW YORK, August 22.—The waters at Coney Island were searched today for the body of Mrs. E. S. Cheatham of Walls, Miss., mother of Mrs. Roy A. Mayo and maternal grandmother of little Charlotte Mayo, who has fig- ured in kidnapings at Walls, Mem- phis, Tenn., and New York, while mu- tual divorce proceedings have been pending between her parents. Mrs: Cheatham’s clothing was found at a locker in a bathhouse after all other bathers had gone. In a hand- bag was a letter addressed to her at her daughter's New York address by one Mrs. Ballard of Memphis. Mrs. Mayo said her mother left her yester:- day afternoon to go to Coney for a swim. Charlotte Mayo is understood to be i with her father, who is a New York broker. SEEK WAGE AGREEMENT. Glass Workers and Makers Hold Far-Reaching Conference. , Pa, August 22. eenam, president of the N: tional Window s Workers, today met the labor committee of the ) tional Association of Window Glass Manufacturers in an effort to decide upon a_ wage scale for the coming Factories affected by the de ion are known as “hand factorie and are widely scattered throughout the middle west. The mamufacturers asked a reduc- tion of 35 per cent and the union at a recent conference in Cleveland con- ceded 25 per cent. Leaders of both sides expressed the hope that a satis- | factory scale would be found between | the two extremes. —_— SWINDLERS JAKF $10,000. Four Newark Financiers Victims | of “Switched Envelope” Trick. NEW YORK, i August 22.—Police }lacerations. FOUR LIVES LOST AS HOTEL BURNS TMany Hurt Leaping to Street When Explosion Wrecks Brown House, Macon, Ga. By the Associated Press. MACON, Ga., August 22.—Four per- sons are known to have lost their lives in a fire which destroyed the Brown House, a frame h?(cl here, early today, and firemen expressed the bellef that the death list would be materially increased when the ruins of the burned structure hlld been ex- plored. e S John K. Hays, a former justice o the peace, who lived at the hotel, was one of those killed. The bodies of two men which were taken from the sec- ond floor of the building today have not been identified. Many Leap From Windows. . Harry Swansberg of Atlanta, engi- nerr of the Central of Georgia rallway, died at 11 b'clock this morning. He was with Hayes when he crawled from a second-story window to the roof of soon after he did. Fear Woman and Babe Lost. Two charred bodies have been taken from the second floor of the building. It is believed they are H. A. Turnip- mate, B. A. White of Melford, Ga. Both were flagmen employed by the Central of Georgia railway. It is believed there are at least eight other bodies in the ruins. Survivors told today of seeing a mother with a baby in her arms frantically screaming for help, but they were unable to reach her, and it is believed both per- ished in the flames. Clay Murphey, head of the company that owns the property, estimated the money loss at $150,000, and said it was | covered by insurance. i “Approximately twenty of the 150 guests of the hotel were injured in the fire which followed an explosion of chemicals in_an adjoining drug store. One whole side of the hotel was smashed, Many guests were cut off from the staircases by the first blast of flames, and the greater part of these had only from available windows. Spectators on the sidewalks saved some of them from injury by catching them in their arms. Destruction of the hotel register list of dead and injured. Inotel in the city and was located close The flames from the frame structure " !spread to adjoining buildings. burn- }ing practically half of the block from jPlum street to Poplar street. Ten Pernons in Hospitals. The explosion occurred at 1:30 o’clock and the fire was not brought undei control until several hours later. Th ruins were still smoldering today. Electric power lines in the downtown district were prostrated, and firemen worked by the light of the burning building, which illuminated the en- tire center of the city. Two other hotels near the Brown House were saved. were being treated in city hospitals today. Among the injured are: Austell building, Atlanta; right wrist, fractured fractured right leg. A. Tinsley, spine. Macon, injury to 5 second story window, said that the force of the explosion blew him out of bed. His face was badly burned. A dozen firemen who were trying to get at the seat of the fire through the store of the Brunner Drug Com- pany were almost trapped when the wills of that structure collapsed. Sergt. Oscar Knight, Columbus, Ga. Private Henry-Moore, Camp Upson, New York, and B. A. White, Melford, Ga., are reported missing. One of the charred bodies taken from the ruins this morning was partialy identified as that of H.*A. Turnipseed of Hampton, Ga. He was a flagman employed by the Central of Georgia railroad. ANOTHER HOTEL BURNED. INDIAN SPRINGS, Ga., August 22, —The Wigwam, a popular Georgis summer resort and said to be the largest wooden hotel in the state, was destroyed by fire which began here at midnight. All the guests, said to number about 200, escaped. The fire is thought to have started by sparks from a burn- ing residence nearby. The loss is es- timated at $100,000, with insurance of $48,000. The old Bryan house, but recently used as a residence, was also de- stroyed. Reports of incendlarism are being investigated by local authori- SPENCER BLAMES - *SPURNED WOMAN" Santa Rosa Preacher, Charg- ed With Murder of Wife, Says Spite Brought Accusation. | By the Associated Press. SAN JOSE, Calif., August 22—A ‘spurned woman” is blamed by the Rev. John A. Spencer, former Santa Rosa preacher, for causing his arrest on a warrant charging wife murder. Mr. Spencer, in advancing this theory. again asserted he was innocent of any attempt to do away with his wife. Mrs. Spencer was rep 1 drowned in Clear Lake, Lake county, July last. Thirty-six hours later her body was buried. There, after certain re- seed of Hampton, Ga., and his l'oom-] one means of egress—that of leaping | hampered the work of checking the ! The Brown House was the oldest | to the center of the business district., Ten injured persons from the fire! R. M. Smith, thirty-one, of No. ‘31{\1 ports and rumors reached Lake county authorities, the body was ex humed, and following an autopsy a warrant charging the former minis- ter with murder was issued. The Rev. Mr. Spencer named the “spurned womal He said he and a time in the home of this woman at Santa Rosa and quarreled with her concerning an account. Later, he said, the woman made overtures of affection, which he spurned. Dove Till Exhausted. Spencer insists Mrs. Spencer was drowned accidentally when she fell Ltive from their boat at night in Clear the administration of Pro-|Lake. He declares that in answer to 1" President de la Huerta sev-|her screams he plunged into the eral prohibition measures were in-|water and dove for her until ex- forced, but were eventually lifted|hausted. 2 jafter violent protests had been made| Upon coming gere, following the Dby liquor vendors and their thirsty|death of his wife? the accused preach- customers. er made arrangements to_purchase @ bungalow occupied by Mrs. E. D. Barber, and it was the plan of Mrs. PLAN ANNUAL RETREAT. Barber and himself, the minister The seventh annual retreat at ays, to take in roomers. Mrs. Barber today expressed a de- sire to sce the former minister be- Georgetown University will begin Friday evening at 6 o'clock, and last until Monday morning at 8 o'clock, fore he is returned to Santa Ros but, according to Sheriff Lyle of this according to an announcement made today by Joseph D. Sullivan; secre- ties. WANT MEXICO CITY DRY. ' MEXICO CITY, August 22.—There 1is a well defined movement here, whick is said® to have some official backing, to make the federal district which embraces Mexico City bone dry by September 1. It is proposed to close all saloons and cantinas and to stop the sale o(‘ all intoxicants, including pulque, the i 1 i drink. {county, this request will not be Property of the minister and his jtary of the committee in charge. wife was put in escrow at his wife university will be placed at the dis- | parcels of property in Santa Rosa, {posal of those making the retreat |amounting to half the entire joint |other arrangements may be had by | he said, and he retained a ranch near communicating with P. J. Haltigan, | here, which has a value of $5,000. 1813 4 V. i | granted. The buildings and grounds of the |request, Mr. Spencer said. Three Details as to room reservations and | property, was given to Mrs. Spencer, { presiden Calorama road. The ranch wa: These Magnetic Items Will Surely Attract Huge Crowds to Our N = | l A Sensational Sale of Crepe £ - veile: ay, | Mr. Rockefeller to thi 3 ° - warmer tonight: tomorrow partly| The monument unveiled today, er to the general secre-| % : | Henry Floyd, nineteen, of Nv. 210 S WpeS ; cloudy and warmer. PATHY| which is & blunt, obelisk-shaped {tary of the international committee | WeTe Searching today among the | BeRTY IOV niect, of Ny ZL0 e e, rgette, atin = s 5 shaft, bearing bas-reliefs of “two |Jjust before he sailed for China. 1.355 Katzes and 1,090 Kaplans, listed | cylturist; glass in feet. overstuffed _wing | Records for Twenty-Four Hours. suite i doughboys” with appropriate inserip- : The letter stated that the pension tions, stands beside the road, facing!sy: in the city directory, for two men | E. C./Walton, twent: em, known as the retirement Z -eight, store- broken left or 2 Aty Thermometer—4 p.m., 8 pm., velour. value .. Ving Chairs, Cushion Fires tapestry. ide Cl Main 3211 Don’t Make Costly PAINT EXPERIMENTS Experts with sears of experience are at your service. Estimates. Interior and Exterior Work. Consult Ferguson first. 1114 = K- FERGUSON, INC. 34, Painting Department, Ph. N. 231-232. DECKER BROS Upright Piano (Used) Good Old Name Extra Special at 155 Arthur Jordan Piano Co. G Street at 13th Homer L. Kitt, Sec.-Treas. v L A GENTLE WAY TO END CORNS The Modern Method, Scienti; Easy, Quick and Sure The old corn enders were harsh, | crudc ard uncertain. They came g into disrepute. . Then a worid-famed laboratory created a new method, and mil- lions have adopted it. I The new w is Blue-jay—| liquid or piaster. One applies it | by a touch. The pain stops In-| stantly. and soon the whole corn | ioosens and 15 | 4 the moment it | Ttemove it in this gentle | way. Watch one corn_go when Blue- jag is_applied. You will let dcal with all corns after that. Send to the drug store now. Liquid or Plaster Blue-jay Stops Pain Instantly Ends Corns Quickly ||| cause the singer 1s a communist. 68: 12 midnight, 61; 4 a.m., 57; 8 a.m., noon, 73. Barometer—4 p.m., 30.11; 30.14; 12 midnight, 30.15; 4 a.m. 8 am., 30.19; noon, 30.19. Highest temperature, 78, occurred at 3:15 p.m. yesterday. Lowest temperature, 56, occurred at am today. ) Temperature same date last year— Highest, 86; lowest, 68. Condition of the Water. Temperature and_ condition of the water at 8 am.—Great Falls—Tem- perature, 74; condition, 40. Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States coast and geodetic survey.) Today—Low tide, 4:43 a.m and 4:58 p.m.; high tide, 10319 a.m. and 10:41 8 pm., ., 30.16; p.m. w—Low tide, 5:24 a.m. and high tide, 10:57 a.m. and i The Sun and Moon. i Today—Sun rose, 5:27 a.m.; sun| | sets, 6:55 p.m. | i Tomorrow—Sun rises, 5:28 am.; | sun sets, 6:53 p.m. { Moon rises, §:49 p.m.; sets, 9:09 am. Automobile lamps to be lighted one-half hour after sunset. Up-River Waters { ,,HARPERS FERRY, W. Va.; August ! {22.—The Potomac and Shenandoah | rivers were both slightly cloudy this morning. Weather in Varijous Citles. E Temperature.® 3 : B3 swateor Stations. 3 5= weather. H 2 : » ] n y 3014 76 Baltimore .. 30.18 78 Bismarck 2084 92 Roste . 3016 70 . 30.26 23002 ‘3024 L.3020 Cleveland .. 30.26 Deaver ..... 20338 Detroit ... 30.30 . 29.98 30,04 30.02 00, . 30, 29, 30, $32 ORI ELRE P E B T LA T B P LY 00 . 30,18 New York. | Oklahoma 77 30.02 Philadelphia’ 30.16 Phoenix, Ariz Pittsburgh... 2 Portland, Me. 30.16 | Portland, ore 30.10 1 8. Lake City, jSan Antonlo. San_ D . 29.98 3002 29 FBIBINR 1 | RUSSIAN BASSO BARRED. England Refuses Admission to Singer Who Would Aid Relief. LONDON, August 21.—Theodore | Chaliapine, the noted Russian operatic | basso, who recently announced he was { coming to England to sing on behalf {of the Russian famine fund, has been | barred by the British forelgn office, which refused to vise his passport, ac- | cording to the Daily Herald. -This, the newspaper assumes, is be- STRIKE CLOSES PLANTS. By Cable to The Star and Chic Copyright, 192 TARIS, August 22.—More than 300 factories are idle in the textile re- gion in the north of France, includ- ing those in Lille, Roubaix and Tour- coing, because of a strike’ of work- men, who refuse to accept a wage re- duction under the application of the co-efficient rule fndicating a decrease in the cost of living. cago Dally News. a Jroom wooden shack which at present the village, between the village and the old fighting front. From the monument the trenches and en- tanglements of the former battle lnes are still visible. Flirey, itself, where every house was destroyed in the war, is now fully half rebuil In his address at the unveili Maj. Emery expressed the hope that the enemy il 1918 would always re- member three things: “First—We didn't'trust them in the past and won't let them trick us into impotency in the future; “Second—We know the victory is ours, notwithstanding they assume to_think otherwise; “Third—We must always be pre- pared to speak to them in a language they understand.”. Marshal Foch told the legionnaires: “We must be strong, and we can have strength- in peace only as we had it in war, through unity.” Besides the speakers many notable persons were present, including Am- ssador Jusserand, Maj. Gen. Henry ‘Allen, commander of the American ccs of occupation; Georze . Wickersham, Mrs. Douglas Robinson and Mrs. G. M. Minor, president gen- eral of the Daughters of the Amer- ican Revolution. Given President Harding's Pilcture. Smery brought the mayor of n antographed photograph of President Harding, inscribed: “To the povpio ot par ith cordial greet- ings from the United States to France.” This will hang in the one- fos serves Flirey as city hall, school, post office and telegraph office. ‘After the ceremony the represen- tatives of the legion went to Etain, the home of former President Poin- care, to dedicate a monument to the civilians there who were executed by the Germans. The ex-presidnt re- ceived them in person. The party returned to Metz for the night. Honor Verdun Defenders. VERDUN, France, August 22.— Members of the American Legion this morning dedicated a tablet to the de- fenders of Verdun in the city hall here. The ceremony was carried out in the presence of all the city ‘of- ficials. The tablet was erected to the men who during the terriffic German onslaught of February and March, 1916, stood before Verdun and held back the enemy. The tablet bears an inscription stating it was dedicated to the men who uttered the immortal words: “They shall not pass.” At the end of the ceremony Maj. John G. Em- ery, national commander of the American Leglon; Franklin d’Olier of Philadelphia, first.. national com- mander of the American Legion; Henry D. Lindsley of Dallas, past na- tlonal commander of the legion, and Col. Milton J. Foreman of Chicago :era glven the special medal of Ver- un. The party of legion men spent the afternoon visiting the Argonne, where services for the dead were held in the Romagne cemetery by two for- mer United States Army chaplains, the Rev. James J. Halligan and the Rev. William P. Little. BRUSSELS, August 21.—Minister of Defense Deveze has invited the peo- E 60@ a Delivered by Regular Carrier CALL: M and the service will start” AT- ONCE ng | vening & Sunday Star fund plan, had been carefully and scientifically devised and had received | the approval of the international and state committees and the boards of ;x];’c‘:tzrsdo‘rhrhcaleadlnx local associa- i nd that 3.649 secretaries h; !agreed to support it. A LEAVES FOR'LONG CRUISE. {98-Foot Power Yacht Sails From 1 1 New York on World Trip. | NEW YORK, August 22.—Horbor jeraft gave a noisy farewell to the i Speejacks, the ninety-eight-foot pow- jer yacht owned by A. Y. Gowen of i Cleveland, as it headed seaward yes- iterday on the first leg of a cruise around the world. Aboard as guests | of the owner and his wife were B. F. | Rogers jr., of Chicago and Ira-J. In- {graham, of New York. The crew of | §ix were under the command of F. T. lHog‘K.‘ former captain of the Prince- ton fooy ball team of 1916. - | The cruise is expected to take a vear and a half and will include stops |at Panama, the South Sea islands, Australia, China, Japan, Egypt, Cape Verde islands, and then home. | The yacht was built specially for ithe trip, which is intended to be the | first around the world by motor boat. {It is fitted with the latest scientific i apparatus, KILLS WIFE, TAKES POISON Husband After Returning From Western Trip Shoots Woman. STEUBENVILLE, Ohfo, August 22.— Mrs. Elizabeth Still was fatally shot in her home here and her divorced husband, Edward Still, aged forty-two years, is suffering at a hospital from the effects of poison, which the physi- clans sald was self-administered. W. S. Dunlavey of Empire, Ohio, who reported the tragedy to the police, is quoted by the authorities as saying that Still returned from a prolonged western trip today and after inducing his former wife to accompany him on a walk, followed her when she ran into her home and after battering down the door fired three shots at her and then swallowed a substance which rendered him uncogscious. Mrs. Still died before physiciany arrived. “RED LIQUOR” SEIZED. STATESBORO, Ga., August 22.—A big roadster auto loaded down with 360 quarts of “red liquor” was seized by officers here. The driver of the car, placed under arrest, gave the name of R. L. Herndon, 8t. Louis. The whisky is sald to have been en route from Savannah to Macon. —_— Probably the oldest woman druggist in the woyrlfl is Mrs. Mary Klump of Allentown, Pa., who recently passed her 100th birthday. Month AIN 5000 === who swindled four residents of New- ark, J., out of $10.000 by the an- cient “switched envelope” trick. The four capitalists were introduced to Messrs. “Katz” and “Kaplan,” first names not given, by a friend. who said they cpuld supply the Newark- ers with cértificates reprepresenting whisky in bonded warehouses. To prove their good faith the finan- ciers produced $10,000, which they permitted the dexterous Manhattan- ites to seal in envelopes pending de- keeper, Brown House; | ankle. 3 ! E. C. Crutchfield, twenty-two, Brown House, flagman; broken right lcg and burned left leg. C. J. Bailey, Y. M. C. A., minor in- juries. - Jesse Lee Jolly. megro, bruised and lacerated. Killed by Jnmp From Roof. J. K. Hays was fatally injured | when he leaped frem the top of the Collier Manufacturing Company's waiter, livery of the cortificates. When they ithe envelopes and found them filled with paper. or ill-fitting If you are this trouble rect you to our Specialist, with thoroughly understand wear. good-looking as wel The wonderful tachi bones, is an im, Service at our gladly offered—whe ther y or not. o grew tired of waiting they opened | vent crippled feet by fitting the correct foot- ! plant and fell head first on a pile of iron. He died on the way to Macon } Hos 1 pital. F. C. Claxton, who jumped from a Your Physician- or Chiropodist ILL tell you what improperly shaped shoes do to your feet. already suffering from chances are he will di- “Foot Comfort™ Department The business of this Department is grow- ing by “leaps and bounds”—] a lot of good. In charge of an expert Foot skilled because it is doing assistants ‘who how to relieve or pre- We have a large variety of specially de- signed comfort and Orthopedic shoes for the various types of feet. Shoes, however, that are 1 as healthful. And whether you are ready to buy or not, our ad- vice and service is always at your command. The- X-Ray * Foot-o-Scope™ ne that photographs your foot in the shoes, showing the exact position of the rtant adjunct to the “Fogt Comfort” 'th St. Store. This service is free and ou are a customer of ours and Lace Combination SILK DRESSES i And every one worth from $5 to $15 more ‘We closed our eyes to cost when we made up this lot of dresses, nd we amazed our salespeople when we told them the price we were utting on them. There are all sizes in the lot for misses and women. nd some extra sizes also. Be Here ly—No C. O. D.’s or Lay-Bys k, Tricolette Just 10 Dozen New|Just 10 Taffeta and|Jap Tri Voile Plaid Silk and Voile Waists [Skirts| Waists 59¢ | 238 | $1 Two pretty styvles—| These sold up to $7.9% Cleaning out some of one in white with em-Lyq include some black|the season’s accumula- brojdered §front: S0 d faney plaid ¢ much higher v taffetas an ancy plal tions of mu ] I R priced garments. Sizes to 44. Broken Lots of Women' 40 Boys’ Al-Wol o360t $4.50 Whit Blue Serge Suits Oxfords and Pump: 6.85 $1.95 Just a clearance of Boys’ All- wool Serge Suits that are guaran- teed fast color. Beautiful style coats and full-lined pants. Sizes 68¢ Double-Bed SHEETS, leached cotton, Worth 98¢ 29c Infants’ | Child’s Onxy | 32-in. Dress Scarfs, SHIRTS | SOCKS | Gingham | === *** 3 Centers 16c | 25¢ | 19¢ | 49, quality, in just all the desirable the patterns so | Yace tri@mel shades for much in demand. |gings “in squares,| resses, smocks round Fast _colors. or long. land guimpes. $1.50 Embroid SMOCKS 78¢|Longcoth] 2%2¢ Close woven, full bleached, fin. v styles of embroldery |ished soft, for women's and chil- ; in all sizes. al P! a i l | | | | { | | | | | . i i H White Sea Island Duck, Eve Cloth, Poplin and Canvas Pumps and Ox- fords with Cuban, Louis and low heels, rubber and leather soles. Sizes 23 to 8. Baby Dresses, Overalls and Rompers, 49¢ , All made of sturdy wearing, fast- color materials; dresses, sizes 1, 2 and 3; overalls and rompers up to 6 years. Rami LINEN 19¢ Yard wide, in Plain colors or in all i dren's dresses and underwear.

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