The weekly Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1913-19??, June 23, 1914, Image 1

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*‘:_ - —— — O £ N 7 ':\ — " y _ WEEKLY-— % -GEO LN\ LY=o O 8 X NEW 20D Nly — && 5= gg’_}g,_ql_ij,‘;fgg_@:fi_'afb_nggf_t_’tfi}_’ggk in Condensed Form Specially For the Busy Man and the Farmer VOIs Vi NO. 2. e A MONTH, 36c A YEAR Proceedings Expected to Begin All Over as Result of Visit of Dr. Naon to Washington. By LAURENCE TOD. MEDIATION HEADQUARTERS, Niagar Falls, Ontario, June 22.—The possibility of beginning 1-ediation proceedings all over again with rep resentatives of the Constitutionalists present faced the mediators, the Huerta delegates and the American representatives to-day. Not one word had been disclosed by the three South American mediators up to the time set for the full con ference, the first to be held for nearly a week, as to the details of the new plam. for the settlement of the Mexi-‘ can problem. This"plan was origi-i nated by Dr. Naon, the Argentina en voy, after his conference with Secre- ‘ tary Bryan in Washington, and with Luis Cabrera, representative of Gen- ‘ eral Carranza. It has the approval of President Wilsen, Must Deal With Rebels. The only thing definitely known about the new plan was that it - ceded the necessity of deallng with the Mexican rebels, and this gave rise to the natural theory that the plan provides for an armistice. Two facts lend color to the belief that this proposed new plan alone has prevented the collapse’ of mediation.l The first is the sudden change from pessimism to optimism In the official tone of discussion of the whole sub ject. The second, the general dispo sition of both sides to talk to the pub lic. ’ It was the publication of the Mexi can delegation’s views of the policy fursued by the Americans that came within a hand’'s turn of breaking up the conference last week. Now the order has come from General Huerta in Mexico City: “Keep your lips closed.” . Believe Armistice Impossible. There are some here who hold the belief that General Carranza could not establish an armistice in North ern Mexico if he tried. Those who hold this view hold the opinion that Carranza will be formally asked to send representatives to Niagara Falls with no mention being made of a truce. Genzral Villa will continue his campaign under the circumstances against Zacatecas as a preliminary step to an attack on Mexico City. It is said that one reason for the reporfted split between Villa and Car ranza was the latter's inclination to favor an armistice and Villa’'s oppo gition to it, During the forenoon the Mexican delegates received a long message from Washington. and immediately adjourned to discuss its contents, The Mexicans emphatically denied that they had received any further in structions from Mexico City since the arrival of Dr. Naon from Washing ton, but admitted they had received a telegram of a “very personal na ture from General Huerta last night. Their position is unchanged, they said. Balloonists Missing Nearly a Week Safe PORTLAND, OREG., June 17.—Roy Donaldson, of Springfield, 111, pllot of the balloon Springfield, which par ticipated in the Aero Club of Amer cia race and which left here Thurs day, and Wilbur Henderson, a pas senger, are safe, according to advices received here to-day. A message received here to-day said that Donaldson and Henderson walked into a small settlement near Mount Hood this morning, and were now en route to Portland. Kansas Harvesters Work 18 Hours a Day TOPEKA, KANS, June 17.—Fair weather let the farmers into their fields again to-day for the harvest. Many have arranged for double shifts of men, and will work eighteen hours a day until the wheat is out. A bright sun i 8 straightening up the thousands of acres flattened out by five inches of rain Monday, so ‘all wil ba saved, @ ATLANTA, GA.,, WEEK ENDING JUNE 23, 1914, " FEntered at the Atlanta Ga., Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter. DEMANDS $lOO,OOO OF MILLIONAIRE SUITOR Miss ley Wareham, noted dog fancier and exhibitor, and Eu gene Zimmerman, the Cineinnati millionaire and the Duchess of Manchester's father, whom Miss Wareham has sued for $lOO,OOO for breach of promise to marry. She says she will produce numer ous ‘‘ardent’’ letters in conrt. . S B g, B 2 AT R X ey < &A 3 o '(‘. 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B ot P 4 o i A N ———— DR 2 \“& 3 '“"\ B -~ % e 0w b eet £ G “ Ip‘ % A % .;-, i G 3 i )‘5 5 ’ B oy | R SMZAADR: L % Pt i & s w 0 E’ * i.\';:f;:‘.:: b B LR N o ® 5 N i, 3 . SN © R 4 A /’ B\ ? i e By B LA N R ,/‘..’ytfi Nt e s 15 Cents Each for . Eggs in Mazatlan SAN DIESO, CAL. June 22.—Eggs are selling in Mazatlan at 15 cents apiece, milk at $1 a quart, cakes at 8 cents .nd tortillas at 60 cents a doz en, according to J. E. Page, marine superintendent of the Southern Pa sffic Rallroad, who has arrived here qrom the Sinaloa port. 181 Bodies Rescued From Canada Mine HILLCREST, ALBERTA, June 22.— Fifty lifeless forms were recovered to-day from mine No. 30 of the Hill crest Collierfes which was wrecked by an explosion Friday. The bodies re covered now ftotal 181, Jaght miners still are missing. Yesterday was a day of funerals. Services were conducted in every church in the town, while there was almost a continuous procession to the little cem etery. lighty men have worked for several days digging graves. . Wilson Threatens . Suit on New Haven WASHINGTON, June 22.—Presi dent Wilson to-day indicated to his callers that if the bill in the Massa chusetts Legislature providing for the separation of the New Haven road from the Boston and Maine should fail, the Department of Justice would have no other course than to sue for dissolution in the Federal Courts. Pubilshed Weekly B THE GEORGIAN CSMSANV 20 E. Alabama-st,, Atlanta. Ga. BIG WHEAT GROP PREDIGTED FOR GEORGIA Dr. H. E. Stockbridge Expects Greatest Yield in State Since \ the Civil War. 3 There {s no great reason why the bread that is served vou moruing, noon and night should not be made, partly at least, of Georgia flour, in the opinion of Dr. H. E. Stockbridge, editor of The Southern Ruralist and an expert on agriculture. Dr. Stock bridge said Monday he believes wheat will agsume this year its former glory as a significant crop in Georgia's agri cultural development, and that the State's greatest wheuat crop since the war between the States will be pro duced. “More wheat was planted this year than ever before in the memories of most of our farmers,” said Dr. Stock bridge. “We have always had wheat in the northern counties that fringe the cotton belt, as in Cherokee, Pick ens and Bartow. “But this year the grain was plant ed on thousands of acres south of At~ fanta, flourishing most extensively about a territory reaching east and wvest from a line approximateiy drawn .rom Jonesboro to Forsyth. Also in Clayton, Spalding and Pike Counties .here is much wheat. Crop Thrives, Too. “And it thrived, too. For the sake of the wheat, farmers should have velcomed the drouth that came in May, because a dry May brings a great wheat crop. That is an axiom. “In a great many centers in this newly-developed wheat belt there are mills which grind the grain for local use and Jor shipments in many cases. This industry should grow—in fact, it will grow, because the Georgia wheat, ground at home, produces the whole wheat flour that is many times moré nutritious than the flour that comes from Kansas, Nebraska and other Western places. “The great acreage devoted this vear to wheat is the result mainly of the educational! campaign for diversi fication of crops, as well as for the growing knowledge of the farmers that wheat can be made a money crop. Naturally, it displaces much cotton, but it displaces more oats, be cause it is a far more profitable grain.” The Georgia wheat has for years beeon ground in local water mills, Dr. Stockbridge explained. and these mills, scattered here and there in the wheat belt, were many times over loaded with orders for whole wheat flour, Room for Some Mills. With the increased wheat acreage there is the opportunity for more and larger mills, the editor hinted, for the production of flour from Ceorgia wheal. “Time was,” he explaryed, “when every farm and plantation in (Georgia produced everything needed for the sustenance of its owner and workers, from wheat to snoe leather. But those times passed with the lessened cost of manufactured articles, and with the growing profit to be had from cotton, so that many of our primitive hearthstone industries passed. “But with the need of diversifica tion upon us, and with the recogni tion tha: wheat in Georgia can be made to pay well, the wheat industry ia being revived. I could not hazard the approximate acreage next year, but it will be greater than for many vears before Trainer Killed b ‘ Heat-Crazed Lions CHICAGO, June 22.—Preparations were made to-day to ship Kast the body of Emerson D. Dietrich, lion tamer, Cora nell graduate and son of a Brooklyn mil« lionaire, who was killed by five heate cerazed and half-famished lions yestere day as he entered their cage in a freight car here. The lions were the property of Mme. Adgie Castillo, fiancee of Dietrich, whn has an ‘“‘animal act'' which was to show at a Chicago theater Dietrich was the manager of the company 20-POUND BOY BORN., PLACERVILLE, COLO. June 20 - The largest baby born in KEII Dorado County within the memory of the oldest inhabitant arrived in the home of H. H. Long, of Caldor, to-day. It weighed 20 pounds gt birth. Mother and sen are in excellent health,