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XX e NEW 1M Y
Being the Ncws of Each Day of the Week in Condensed Form Specially For the Busy Man and the Farmer
VOL. VI. NO. 23,
3¢ A MOMTH, 36c A YEAR
COL. ROOSEVELT'S FAMOUS GRIN
SURVIVES EVEN JUNGLE FEVER
One of the five boatloads of natives that upset in the rapids of the River Duvida, now the Rio
,Roosevelt, photographed by I.eo Miller, a naturalist in the Roosevelt party.
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Noted Wheelbarrow
.
Pedestrian Is Dead
I,A PLATA, MO., May 26—J. W.
Owen, known as “Old Kentucky,”
who attempted to push a wheelbar
row from here to Louisvilie before
the Kentucky homecoming in that
city several years ago dropped dead
here to-day. He was 77 years old,
He also attempted to push a wheel
barrow to the Democratic national
onvention in Baitimore in 1912, but
gla age forced him to turn back. '
&P ATLANTA, GA., WEEK ENDING MAY 26, 1914,
e Entered at the Atlanta Ga., Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter.
Boy Stabs Father
. .
Who Whipped Him
ALEXANDRIA, LA, May 26.—Al
len (Gates, 18, failed to attend Sunday
school last Sunday. Yesterday his
father, M. M. Gates, member of the
parish school board, administered a
whipping. The youth resented it by
wielding a pocketknife.
The father to-day i® in a hospital
guffering from probably a fatal wound
in his side,
.
Dawson Drives Car
.
At 94.7-Mile Speed
v et
INDIANAPOLIS, May 26,—Joe
Dawson in a Marmon nearly broke
the Speedway record during the elim
ination trials to-day for Saturday's
500-mile race by covering a lap, 2 1-2
miles in 1:835.
This was at the rate of 94.7 miles
per hour. The previous recofd was
made unofficially by George Boillot in
a Peugot car, who made the lap im
1:36 446, '
Published w.okts Ba
THE GEORGIAN COMPANY
20 E. Alabama-st.. Atlanta, Ga.
BEORGIA'3 CROPa
ARE HELD BAGK
BY NROUTH
Commissioner Price Says Rain
‘Would Mean $100.000,000 to
Farmers of State.
Commissioner of Agriculture Jamos
D. Price declares that in his opinion
a two days’ rainy season generally
distributed throughout (Gecrgia would
be worth not less than §100,000.000 o
the farmers at this time.
Georgia at present is In the mid:t
of one of the most prolonged and ag
gravating .drouths kuown to the
- of Agriculture. In addilien
to thul‘ circumstance, the spring
weather so far has been exceptionally
cool, and this has made the effects of
the drouth more marked.
Reports from all sections show ihal
these ‘conditions have prevailed in
Georgla generally, and that for neariy
two months deterioration of the
¢rops, both cotton and grain, has bueen
uniform,
Millions of Dollars at Stake.
The Commissioner states that (his
condition may be remedied later hiong
in one way onlv, and that is by the
et ek ad wandase of egl s -
ent situation to-get their crops thor
oughly plowed and worked, that the
rain, when it does come—if It comes--
may produce a maximum of beneficial
results.
“The approximate value of the i
ricultural products of Georgia 13
$400,000,000. I do not think it amiss
to state that in my judgment that
value this year will be cut down as
much as $100,000,000, unless weather
conditions improve,” said Mr. Price,
“I am no pessimist, and do not wish
to be quoted as saying that conditions
are hopeless, but it is a fact that the
crops are literally burning »n all oyer
the State, and that they are now .n
very bad condition.
Farmers Urged to Work Fields.
“Of course, the probability is that
the drouth must be broken soon—and
that is the feature of the matter that
the farmers must consider now. It
they will get their crops propery
plowed and worked—both cotton and
grain—then when the rain does come
it may serve to win back much of Ihe
lost ground. That the farmers do so
work their crops nowadays, diligently
and without lost motion, is the ear
nest adyice 1 give them,
“If present untoward conditions
should continue indefinitely, the re
sult eventually on the total value of
the agricultural products is absolutely
‘certain to be most depressing.
“It would take a two days' season
of rain, evenly distributed, and. that
followed by warm weather, to get
things in anything like good form in
Georgla again.”
.
Into $2,000,000 Fire
CLEVELAND, OHIO, May 26—
Flames still raged in the lumber dig
trict along the Cuyahoga River this
morning as the result of last night's
conflagration. Conservative estimates
to-day put the loss at $2,000,000,
One mar lost his life in the Blaze,
He became confused while police
vere clearing the endangered central
viaduct, and leaped from the bridge,
75 feet, into the heart of the raging
flames, .
The Central Viaduct was damaged
$150,000. Ringling Bros.' Circus,
which was showing in the flatg, suf
fered 3200,000 loss, 41 flat cars being
hurned.
.
Jail Sentences for
Painting Slashers
LONDON, May 26,—A sentence of
gix months was imposed to-day upon
Freda Graham, the militant suffra
gette who slashed five Venetian mas
terpieces in the National Gallery Fri.
day in retaliation for the arrest of
Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst This
was the severest sentence that could
be imposed under the law,
A sentence of seven months was
imposed also upon Mary Spencer, the
militant who slashed the painting
“Primavera” In the Royal Academy
last Friday.
A batch of unidentified suffragettes
were gentenced to four months each
for window smashing.