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e NEW 'Bmsmf DA,‘!LY‘ HERALI‘),‘&.‘HU‘RSD:;Y, MA#CH 20, 1925, NOTHING URE -3 0 T WORLD RN S e STORE CLOSED —at— Marion, 11, March 29.—(By Asso- lated Press)—Cross examination of o M. Ewing, a, Chicago news- paperman who was the only reporter at Herrin, I, when the riot last June ‘Ancident' to the coal strike claimed a toll re than 20 non.-union work- remained to be finished to- . d&y Wt the mecond murder trial grow- % hw of the disorders; X N, Qne of two witnesses yester- for the second time identified Bert Grace, one of the six defendants, &8 the man who, pointing a gun, kept Ewing from' glving water to one of the riot victims lying fatally wound- . €d In'the street after he had been . ted to five other non-union men and shot down, X Ewing testified that in a dispatch ‘distributed’ by the Associated Press, « for which he then was a - staff' cor- respondent, he had said the bodies of the six men he saw in the street had GRANDMOTHER KNEW Gently massage Musterolein with the -tips. See how quickly itbringsre- -how speedily the pain disappears. ‘Try Musterole for sore throat, brons chitis, tonsilitis, - croup, stiff neck, 5 conges~ S fmtmst ey 0 no'_ 81y STr, s> Moy R RUB RHEUMATISM PAIN FROM SORE - ACHING JONTS ‘What is rheumatism? Pain only, St. Jacobs Oil will stop any pain so quit drugging. Not one case in fifty requires inter- nal treatment. Rub soothing, pene- trating St. Jacobs Oil directly upon the tender spot and relief comes in- stantly. St. Jacobs Oil is a harmless rheumatism and sciatica liniment, which never disappoints and can not burn the skin. Limber up! Quit complaining! Get & small trial bottle from your drug- gist, and in just a moment you'll be free from rheumatic and sciatica pain, soreness, stffness and swelling. Don’t suffer! Relief awaits you., Old, honest 8t. Jacobs Oil has cured millions of cheumatism suferers in the last half century, and is just as good for sciati- ca, neuralgia, lumbago, backache, sprains and swellings. Y tht be rised to know that the ?Mm&ina yo:l“?n use, for a severe gough, is & remedy which is easily pre- ared st home l"]m a few momenta. t's ch but for prompt results it beats anything else you ever tried. Usu- slly stops the ordinary cough or chest i¢old in 24 hours. Tastes pleasant, too— ehildren like it—and it is pure and good. Pour 215 ‘ounces of ‘Pinex in a piné then fill it up with plain granu- ted IIIR:I' syrup. Or use e::rifled Mmolasses, honey, or corn , instead red. Thus you of onau;ufiymp. if desi make int—a family supply—but £ 1o’ iore smail bottle of G00D FRIDAYDAY OFSOLEWN WORSHP Sured Servce. ad Ceromone in All Local Churches Tomorrow Good Friday will be marked by special’ services throughout this city in practically all the local churches. Many of the leading Protestant churches heve joined in a serles of union services being held every even- ing .this week, but which wil! termi- nate with a 'Good Friday service in the First Congregational. church in charge of Rev. G. H. Schenck. Last evening Rev. Henry W. Maler spoke in the First Baptist church and this evening Rev. John L. Davis will administer communion in the South Congregational church, At the Salvation Army special Good T'riday services will be held tomor- evening at 8 o'clock and by the young people’s soclety on Saturday evening at 8 o'clock. Maundy Thursday services will be held this evening in BSt. Mathew's German Lutheran church at 7:45. Holy communion will be observed in that church tomorrow at 10:30 a. m., with a preparatory service preceding it at 9:45 o’clock. Holy communion has been adminis- tered in the St. Mark's Eplscopal chugch every morning this week at 9:30 ¢'clock. On Tuesday at 7 a. m. and this ‘morning at 7 o’clock also. Last evening there was an evening prayer service and sermon. Tomorrow morning will be morning prayer and ante-communion at 10 o'clock. From 12 o'clock, noon, until 8 p. m. the rector, Rev. Samuel C. Suteliffe will conduct three hour worship and at 7:456 p. ) will be ner's “Crucifixion.” Bu'i“he sacrament of baptism will be observed at 4:30 o'clock Saturday af- rnoon. ‘eSpecln\ Holy Week services were held in the A. M. E. Zion church last evening which included solos by Mrs. Thomas Blasingame, Mrs. G. L. Mar- tin and J. C. Baker. This evening at special services Mrs, Hollet -Green, Ezekiel Johnson and Mrs. Blasingame will sing. There will be a sermon by the pastor, Rev. I. B. Walters, also. Tomorrow evening Mrs. Blasingame, Mr. Baker and Mrs. Eva Gillespie will sing. The pastor will administer communion. Saturday evening Mrs. Blasifigame and Mrs. Gillespie will sing; “The Old Rugged Cross,” and “Alone in the Garden.” Rev. Mr. Walters = will preach. All services start at 8 o’clock. Good Friday services will be held at the First Lutheran church tomor- row morning at 10:30 o'clock. Special Lenten services were held at the Reformation Lutheran church- es last evening and Good Friday serv- ices will be held tomorrow morning at 10:45 o’clock. A special day or prayer and fast- ing will be observed in the Emmanuel Gospel church tomorrow with serv- ices in the evening. A solemn high mass was celebrated at 8 o'clock this morning in 8t Mary’s church in’observance of Holy Thursday. Following the mass a procession of the blessed sacrament was held in which little girls and boys, whose ages average from four to even years, strewed flowers before the blessed sacrament. The older children carried Easter lilies. To- morrow, Good Friday, the mass will be at 8 o'clock and the children will march but with baskets empty. In the afternoon there will be stations of the cross at 3 o'clock. The cere- mony of kissing the cross will take place after the mass and the crucifix will be placed at the foot of the altar for the balance of the day. +In comimemoration of the passion of Christ the statues have been draped in purple and will remain so until Sunday morning. The paschal candle will be blessed on Holy Sat- urday and kept burning on the altar until Easter Sunday. Mob Attacks Virginian , Accused by Young Girl Baltimofe, March: 29—Patrolman Howard Swope yesterday saved Har- old Crofford, 24 years old, of Mount Vernon, Va,, charged with enticing an 11-year-old girl into a woods at Cur- tls Bay, from violence at the hands of a mob. Crofford was surrounded by a g¢rowd of a hundred, while Andrew Jarson of Curtis Bay pummeled him. He attacked Crofford when he heard cries for help from his sister Frances. | Stoties and clubs were flung at Crof- ford and he was saved from severe treatment only by the arrival of the, policeman. | CHILDHOOD SWEETHEARTS WED Pasadena, Cal, March 29.—Lester J, Norris, cartoonist of Chicago and his bride, Dellora Angell heiress to the $40,000,000 estate of the late John W. Gates today were on thelr honeymoon after having been married at the home of the bride's father, R. F. Angell, here ygsterday. It was sald they would pass their honeymoon on‘,' a motor trip through California b U | 12 0’CLOCK NOON The Great Fruit Medicine “Fruit-a-tives' are unlikeany other remedy in the world. ?eymm. from the juloes of apples, oranges, figs and prunes, and tonics, by & secret process which produces s compound as unique in composition a8 it is famous for its medicinal value. Mr. R. B, O'Flynn of 80 North Union 8t., Rochester; 'N.Y. says, “For what “Fruit-a-tives” have done for me, T belieyp they are the best 8 Liverand Bladder Medicino that the world has ever produced’’. B0¢. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 250, At dealers or from Frulf-a-tives Limited, Ogdensburg; N.X, MEN ARE WEARY OF LIBERTY NOWADAYS Mussolni Declares That Liberal| ism Is Not Popalar London, March 29.—“The truth 1is evident to all who are unblinded by dogmatism that men nowadays are tired of liberty,” says Premier Musso- lini of Italy in an article contributed to the April number of the ascist Review Gerarchia. o The Rome correspondent of the Times who sends extracts or the ar- ticle says it was written to confute recent expressions of liberalisin in Corriere della Sera,, The premier contends that liberalism is not the last word in or' of government and that if it was good for the people of the last century it does not follow that it is equally convenient for those of the present. “The great experiences of the ‘after- the-war’ period mark the defeat of liberalism,” Mussolini writes, *“Both in Russia and Italy it has been dem- onstrated that it is possible tq gov- ern outside, above and against all lib- eral ideas. Neither communism nor fascism has anything to do with lib- erty.” The premier thinks liberty is . not an end but a means, and therefore must be controlled and dominated. Contending that no government ever existed solely by the consent of the people without the employment : of force, he say: “If any government is deprived of force and left with only its principle, it will be at the mercy of the first group organized and determined to overthrow fit. “Liberty is mo longer a chaste, se- vere maiden for Whom generations in the first half of the last ocentury fought and died. For the intrepid, restless youth who are now in the dawn of a new history, other words exercise a greater fascination, name- ly, order, hierarchy and discipline.” COURT SKYES CEMRTERY | Orders Oil Prospectors to Remain Oft Properties Rich in Ofl; Leasc Held by Company. company of Enid from drilling fn the Prairie View church yard, in’ the trict court at New Kirk Tuesday night by Judge Claude Duval. | to enter or in any way interfere with thé church yard and cemetery.” The church yard and cemeétery are sald to be rich in ofl deposits. The Knox Oil company obtained a lease on a half acre of the church yard from the state organization of the United Brethren church. Mem- the possible encroachment of oil prospectors, and when C. E. Knox, president of the company, went with Des, his attorney to mark out-a d Lol site in the church yard he was driven| off the property. Since then guards| have been stationed in the Banea 01y, LOKin, INELIA0: 5o yara to prevent all men from tres- Boston DONNELLY-MULLEN CO. ity FRIDAY SPECIAL Lace Bertha Collars, embroidered o ncl Py g3 Ladies’ Fine Quality Ha}ndkerchigfs with colored border. or Friday Special ... 4 250 Realb Genuine‘| '?I:cslt:n Overnight Py Specat o $1.19 Rubber Household Aprons, assorted checks and patterns. Friday Special ........... 250 25 Dozen of Men’s Silk and Knitted Ties, in a large assortment of neat patterns, value 65c¢. Friday Special ........ mh29c Men’s Blue Chambray Work Shirts, cut full size, all double stitched; value to $1.25. Friday Special ........ .each69c Burson Hose for women in brown, grey and camel hair, heather mix- tures and drop-stitched, val. 3 3 69c pair. Friday Special, pr. C Weaver gave himself up. asked if he had shot Kaser, he re- i plied, “I don’t know.” church| to jail without ball. pecl R N S — Ladies’ Porch Dresses, made of fine quality gingham and chambray, neat- ly trimmed with pique and organdy. Special $1.39 Sample Lot of Ladies’ Camisoles of crepe de chine and tub silk, in a va- riety of pretty patterns, in flesh, white and navy blue, regular $2.50 Shohl e toreerseen: B8C Another lot of Infants’ Short Dresses of white muslin with fancy embroidered yokes; reg. 35 98c. Friday Special ...... (o O ——— 89¢ All Linen Dish Toweling, 18 inches wide. » Morning Special .......... 250 Mv’!‘ubl‘e Dmuk, good heavy quality. Sp‘:dgl Yard49c Linen Huck Towels, size 18x36. Morning Special .. 250 “ll"ull;iiu Bleached Sheets. Stand- ;ioangeémcial $l »29 ‘When He was sent order restraining the C."E.'Knox Oil | passing. here. MAKES PHI BETA KAPPA AT 14 New York, March 29.—Edward Roche Hardy, Columbia university's Tonkawa oil field, was issued in dis- MAN SHOT AFTER DEMANDING 14 year old prodigy became a mem- ber of Phi Beta Kappa yesterday. He is belleved to be the youngest stu- It “forever forbids the oil company THAT FARMER PAY MORTGAGE dent ever admitted fo the Greek: let- ter fraternity entrance to which is Egg Harbor Businessman Had Neck based solely on scholarship. Broken By Bullet—Hold Assail- ant Without Bail. Egg Harbor City, N. J., March 29.— bers of the Prairle View Cemetery|Foreclosure of a mortgage is belleved Assoclation then organized to prevent|, y..e bheen responsible shooting of H. Clark Kaser, proprie- tor of a local hardware store. bullet is alleged to have been fired by ol Otto Weaver, a farmér of Weekstown, a small community five miles Kaser is in the Atlantic City hospital, where it is belleved he will BETTER THAN CALOMEL | Thousands Have Discovered | Dr. Edwards® Olive Tablets area Harmless Substitute Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—thesube stitute for calomel—are a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver is almostinstantaneous. Theselittleolive- colored tablets are the result of Dr. Edwards’ determination not to. treat liver and bowel complaints with calomel. the The from als 4!l)c White Table Oil Cloth; first jquality. Mornjng Special . .... Yard 25¢ —— Bosco Linenized Table Cloth, pretty patterns, B! $l ;59 Morning Special . ... stitched, pretty patterns. ‘ favd b L S e e Imported Damask Napkins, lmn-] Morning Special . V\Qz}‘e Voile Curtains, ruffle edge : lfi:}nin:swciai ... 31 79]) P — i All Linen Tray Cloths, size 18x27, hemstitched. 79 c Morning Special ...... All Wool Canton Crepe; brown and navy. black, Morning Special 90 Crepe de Chine, all colors, extra fine cloth, 48 inches wide. Morning Special 69c Bleached Sheeting, 2!} yards s‘fi&nmmmg Yard49c $1.69 Chronic Constipation Relieved Without the Use of Lazatives Nujol is a lubricant~not a medicine or laxative—socan- not gripe. When you are con- stipated, not enough of Na- ture’s lubricating liquid is producedintheboweltokeep the food waste soft and mov- ing. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natu- ral lubricant and thussecures regular bowel movements by Nature’s own method— [ lubrication. Try it today. die, as his neck was broken. According to the story told the po- lice, Kaser held a mortgage on Weav- er's property and last week fore- closed it. Yesterday he put some men to work in the orchard and when Weaver saw them there he sent for Kaser. Kaser came out in an auto- mobile with his wife and told the men to go on with their work. It is alleged that Weaver drew a revolver and shot Kaser in the jaw, the bullet entering his neck. The workmen, hearing the shot, ran away in fright and Mrs. Kaser put her hus- band in the machine and drove him into town. ‘The pleasant little tablets do the good that does, but have no bad after effects. They don't injure the.teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take hold o the trouble and quickly correct | it. Why cure the liver at the expense of the teeth? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gums. So do stronfz liquids. It is best not to take calomel. Let Dr. Edwards” Olive Tablets take ml-fl:dm'dm. “‘dullness” and that I a and that lazy feeling come from constipation and a disordered liver. Take Edwards’ Olive Tablets when youfeel ““logy ” and “heavy.” They “clear” clouded brain and “perk up " the spirits, 15¢ and 30c. = © With DOROTHY GISH The Big 9 Reel Drama " THIS STORE, WILL CLOSE AT NOON TOMORROW, GOOD FRIDAY. DO YOUR EASTER SHOPPING IN THE MORNING Finding the Style of Shoe, Peculiarly yours Is like finding The right girl— Doesn’t have to be Done over azain, Perhaps your Intended is THE PARKWAY OXFORDS $9 SHOES $10 VOGUE £ HOE SHOP 236 MAIN STREET Opposite Monument > "",'4/(‘45 r/*:v/ foaprng Center = o 1o 386 Muipsl g v s d (tore for [ve whody Rt