Newspaper Page Text
JOHN W. BALE IS
NAMED DEPUTY
BY COTTON MEN
John W. Bale, of Rome, has been
appointed district deputy of the
American Cotton association for the
Seventh congressional district. His
is the first appointment of this kind
for the approaching membership I
drive of the Georgia division of the
American Cotton association.
Mr. Bale returned to thefheadquar
ters of the cotton association in the
senate chamber of the state capitol
Wednesday after a tour of the north
ern part of the state, during which
he addressed an enthusiastic meet
ing of farmers of Barrow county
Monday at the courthouse at Win
; der, to gether with Judge H. *A.
* Boykin, the president of the Georgia
division.
At this meeting Mr. Bale stressed
the importance of cotton-raising in
the south; attributing the poverty
of the section in times past not to
the sac tha cotton was the principal
staple, but that the cotton producer
has never been able effectively to
market his crop to his own advan
tage.
No Further Changes
In Time Until Last
/ Sunday in October
There will be no further time
changes until the last Sunday in
October,’ according to a statement
made Tuesday from the attorney
• general’s office. Owing to confusion
over the Barnes bill and the daylight
saving act, many people have had
the idea that some sort of a time
change was due at midnight of Sep
tember 30. Nothing of the sort will
occur.
The Barnes act has been in effect
since September 1 and although its
provisions have not been accepted
generally throughout the state, it
establishes the old eastern time as
standard for the entire state of Geor
gia while the daylight saving law.
which has been repealed, sets all
clocks in the nation back one hour
or the last Sunday in October, which
Is the 27th day of the month.
The railroad administration ha®
announced that it will base its tram
schedules on the daylight saving law
and will disregard the Barnes law
-altogether. .
. CESSFULIV TOTED
♦
Wonderful Results Obtained
by Use of Baughn’s
Treatment
« ,
LAUREL, Miss. —Barrie Nicholas,
of this city, stated, "Seems to me if
1 had not obtained your treatment
when I did 1 would not have lived
much longer. I am glad you dis
covered this wonderful treatment for
Pellagra. When I began taking
Baughn’s Pellagra Treatment mv
weight was 60-odd pounds; now it is
90-odd. I would like to have this
published and sent to sufferers of
Pellagra.”
If vou suffer from Pellagra or know
of anyone who suffers from Pellagra,
it is your duty to consult the re
sourceful Baughn, who has fought
and conquered the dreaded malady
right in the Pellagra belt of Ala
bama. The symptoms —hands red
• like sunburn, skin peeling off, sore
mouth, the lips, throat and tongue a
flaming red with much mucous and
choking, indigestion and nausea;
either diarrhea or constipation.
There is hope if you have Pellagra.
You can be cured by Baughn’s Pel
lagra Treatment. Get a big free
book on Pellagra. Address Ameri
can Compounding Co., Box 587-L,
Jasper, Ala., remembering money is
refunded in any case where the treat
ment fails to cure. (Advt.)
USNESS- /*V
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THE BIVOUAC OF THE HEROES OF THE CONFEDERACY WHEN THEY GATHER IN ATLANTA FOR THEIR REUNION.
At the top is seen the site of the tented city that is rising out at Piedmont park, with hundreds of army tents, loaned by the govern
ment. in process of erection. Full camp equipment is also furnished by Uncle Sam. Below is Walter P. Andrews, general chairman
of t’e reunion committee, getting practical instruction in the exact science of tent pitching. His instructor is Major 13. F. Wimer,
cif Camp Gordon, who is directing the building of the camp.
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Nation-Wide Move >
For Better Stock Is
Launched at Capital
WOSHIN’GTON, Oct. I.—What is
declared to be the most extensive
organized movement in the history
of the world for the improvement
of livestock begins here today with ,
the inauguration of a crusade by the
United States department of agri
culture, state agricultural colleges
and co-operating organizations to ,
bring about-better breeding for all
classes of farm animals and poultry.
The movement is nation-wide and
reaches straight to the individual
livestock owner and breeder and def
initely pledges him to use only pure
bred sires. His females may be of
any breeding. It is planned to have
the machinery of the department of
agriculture and a majority of the
state agricultural colleges and nu
merous other agencies support those
who seek to improve thefir livestock
by this method.
They will have at their disposal
also'the services of. the county agri
cultural agent, farm bureaus, farm I
councils and livestock associations in 1
buying or obtaining the use of the
right kind of sires.
Every man who joins the crusade,
the experts declare, will not only
help himself but Will help make the
country a greater agricultural na
tion.
The administration of the cam
paign is in charge of a department
of agriculture committee headed by
Dr. John R. Mohler, chief of the
bureau of animal industry. Among
the agriculture college officials who !
already have enrolled their states in !
the campaign are the following:
Georgia—J. Phil Campbell, Ath- I
cns; Louisiana—W. R. Perkins, Uni
versity Station, Baton Rouge.
South Carolina—D. W. Watkins,
Clemson College; Virginia—J. R.
Hutcheson, Blacksburg.
Eibert County Farmer,
On Way to Cotton Gin,
Is Killed by Tram
ELBERTON, Ga., Sept. 30.—Mr.
John E. Johnson, one of Elbert coun
ty’s best-known citizens, was in
stantly killed by a Seaboard Air Line
train at a crossing just below the
city limits early this morning. Mr.
Johnson lived several miles from
Elberton and was bringing a bale of
cotton to Elberton to a gin. All the
gins in the country are crowded, and
he was trying to get here before
others got ahead of him.
No one can account for the acci
dent, as it occurred at a place where
the driver easily had a clear view of
the track for several hundred yards
in the direction from which the train
came. However, it was before day
break, and it is the general supposi
tion that Mr. Johnson had fallen
asleep while driving alone, and that
his mules walked into the track of
their own accord. People who live
near the scene claim the train blew
and all say the electric headlight was
burning on the engine.
Mr. Johnson was about fifty-five
years of age and is survived by a
large family.
leopWWot ”
CHANGE SPOTS
Mr. Dodson, the “Liver
Tone” Man, Tells the
Treachery of Calomel
Calomel loses you a day! You
know what Calomel is. It’s mercury;
quicksilver. Calomel is dangerous.
It Crashes into sour bile like dyna
mite, cramping and sickening you.
Calomel attacks the bones and should
never be put into your system.
When you feel bilious, sluggish,
constipated and all knocked out and
believe you'need a dose of dangerous
calomel just remember that your
druggist sells for a few cents a large
bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone, which
is entirely vegetable and pleasant to
take and is a perfect substitute for
calomel. It is guaranteed to start
your liver without stirring you up
inside, and can not salivate.
Don’t take calomel! It can not be
trusted any more than a leopard or a
wildcat. Take Dodson’s Liver Tone
which straightens you right up and
makes you feel fine. Give it to the
children because it is perfectly harm
less and doesn’t gripe.— (Advt.)
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1019.
Girl Mourned 23 Years as Flood Victim Heard
From in Far West Where Kidnaper Became ißch
Where the aid of mediums and
spiritualists failed him after spend
ing a fortune during his twenty
three years’ search for his daughter.
Tipton Childers, of Paintsville, Ky.,
ha sbeen rewarded by a few words
contained in the confession of a dy
ing rancher in New Mexico.
Last week he .left his home in
Johnson county to meet his child
long since mourned as dead.
Twenty-three years ago when the
big flood swept Johnson county and
the Big Sandy overflowed its banks
to the doorstep of the Childers’
home, Agnes Childers was three
years old.
The third day of the flood Chil
ders returned home to a distracted
mother and a house of mourning.
Agnes had been drowned. Left
alone ten minutes she had disap
peared. The waters were dragged in
vain for the body. “The current’s
too swift,” said the neighbors, but
Childers could not believe his daugh
ter was dead.
During the next two decades, the
father spent a small fortune seeking
the help of mediums and others of
supposedly supernatural powers, but
none could say that his daughter
had escaped the waters of the Big
Sandy.
Then came a letter, tl was ad
dressed in a feminine hand and bore
the postmark of a remote village in
New Mexico. The writer said her
■ father on his death bed had request
! ed her to send the enclosed sealed
I package to Tipton Childers and she
I was carrying out his last wishes.
The sealed package contained the
the confession of the rancher. He
told of seeing the baby Agnes on
i the door step. He told of the long
Youth and Age m Chicago University
‘r IS
PwwwWw' IIMO
.Ji
W
CAMBRIDGE. Mass. —Jhirteen and 71 mark the respective ages
of the oldest and the youngest students in Harvard university. Jacob
Shankman, of Chelsea, Mass., is the youngest. He spoke Hebrew at
the age cif seven and he is attending the Hebrew Rabbinical college
as well as Harvard. Colonel George Lyon, the oldest student, is a
graduate of the class of ’79, but is back to take a course of public
speaking.
lonely hours he spent as he was only
a “hobo” then.
The temptation was too great anad
as the waters of the Big Sandy
lapped the Childers’ doorstep he
thought how easy it would be to
steal the child and all would think
she had been drowned.
Then he wrote of the change that
came into his life with the “ray of
sunshine’ ’that belonged to another
man, and how happy he was despite
the pangs of conscience. H told how
he had amassed wealth in the new
country and as he was dying want
ed Tipton Childers to know his
daugh still lived.
Cotton Claims Must
Be Submitted Not
Later Than January
Claims for cotton cargoes seized
by the rßitish in 1915, while en
route from American ports to neutral
European ports, must be submitted
with bills of lading not later than
January 1, it has been announced by
the British consul at Savannah.
The following order has been is
sued:
“With reference to the cotton cargoes
taken over by the British authorities during
April and May, 1915, while en route from
United States ports to ports in neutral
European countries, and to the arrangement
for payment thereof made by the British
government with representatives of persons
interested in the shipment of such cargoes,
the British embassy announces that formal
notice has been given by the board of trade
in London that all outstanding claims under
that arrangement must be presented, togeth
er with bills of lading for the bales of cot
ton to which the claims relate, not later
than first of January, 1920.
"The claims should he presented to the
board of trade (purchases department), 1
Horse Guards avenue. London. S. IV. 1.”
Town Cost Government
$70,000,000; High Bid
For It Is $5,800,000
PHILADELPHIA. Oct. I.—Th re®
bids, the highest of which was ?5.-
800,000, have been submitted for the
purchase of the government-built
powder plant city of Nitro, West Vir
ginia. The city is said t» have cost
the government $70,000,000. Bids
were opened, after due advertising
in the office of the ordnance district
salvage board in this city and were
considered low. The bidders. of
whom stipulated that they desired
to make an industrial town of the
site, were Harris Brothers & Co.,
New York, $5,800,000; New Jersey
Machinery exchange, Newark; Theo
dore Friedeberg & John Eickeley, Jr.,
& Co., Pittsburg, joint bidders, $4,-
312,500, and the Dupont Chemical
company, Wilmington, Dela., $2,508,-
750. The bids will be submitted to
Washington for action.
Nitro, built ’to furnish the A. E
F. with high explosives, is Iscated
on the east bank of the Kanawha
river, in the foothills of the Appa
lachian mountains. It is a smoke
less powder manufacturing plant
and began production ten days before
the armistice was signed.
The city includes accommodations
for twenty thousand persons, with
hotels, boarding houses, dormitories,
clubhouses, stores, cafeterias, a 100-
bed hospital, a 24-room schoolhouse.
Y. M. C. A. building, and mess halls.
Triplets for Hen
LONDON. —A pullet at Broomfield
(Essex) laid an egg with three sep
arate and complete yolks.
gSf IL JL 1 A Lit (San, hl* WIA
o o nqo wj
Br ■ JjWFIMIiIr
l tfU' the . RI 'a
r of
% selected Norfolk, Va., as the
U logical location for a national
: [ mail-order house. The war m \ W
developed the superior advan« S'
tages of Norfolk’s natural har- v
VI bor, and today a larger percent- \
age of domestic trade passes .ri ;
: through there than any other If I
port, for New York is devoted /<f//
more and more to foreign com- s /W/z
merce, leaving Norfolk supreme i
as the greatest, cheapest and ij! J t
most practical freight thorough- (v cSs&Jr- -’Z
fare between manufacturing $ '
“““1 New England and the agricultural '
j|j-~ West and South.
This Means &ower Prices
DO YOU REALIZE that most of the merchandise you eating delivery systems, wholesalers’ rehandling and profits,
buy for your home and for family use is manufac- jobbers’ salesmen and other items added to the compara-
tured in New England and the East; is shipped by tively high cost the average merchant now pays for mer-
water or rail to Norfolk; then reshippedfoy rail to Chicago, chandise.
Pittsburgh, Kansas City, or other distributing center, and ,
then again reshipped by rail to you? Mail-order buying always has been and always will be
a money-saving system for the consumer. Mail-order mer-
Why should your merchandise be shipped back and chandising is a modem and scientific business development
forth by unnecessary middlemen at artificial jobbing cen- that cuts out all unnecessary expenses. Your only question
ters. Why not make Norfolk your distributing point? is, “Which mail-order house shall I patronize?/’
•. Yo “ sa , ve many miles of freight hauls and the outland p r j C es in our FALL AND WINTER SPECIAL will be a
ish cost of reshipping and rehandling by high-priced labor pleasant surprise to you when compared with what you
when you buy from The Southern Stores, Inc., Norfolk, Va. are paying. Remember that every article you purchase
The cost of living is undoubtedly increased by ordinary from The Southern Stores, Inc., carries with it a guarantee
wholesale and retail storekeeping, with that system’s faulty of complete satisfaction or your money back. You need
and indirect freight hauls, high rents, clerk hire, expensive have no doubt as to the value of any article listed in our
store fixtures, downtown taxes, costly lighting, high pres- catalog because the price is lower than you planned to
sure advertising, loss on credit accounts, telephones, money- • pay. Send for FALL AND WINTER SPECIAL today.
Tit® S@UTSIEW4 STOIES 9 Inc» NORTOLK,VA.
WOMEN’S Dresse J> Coats, Suits, Skirts, Waists—all in the latest styles, Our FALL AND WINTER SPECIAL, is a book
.. , rr . „ ot good materials, honestly made. See the savings on Ladies’ vnn < V niild bp willinff to nav for if VOU had to
Underwear, Hosiery, House Dresses, Children’s Wear and Notions in our under-oriced F Oll WoUia Willing IO pay 1U u you iiau to,
FALL AND WINTER SPECIAL. roughs in our unaer pncea feut we gend lt free an j postDa!Cl on request
MEN’S CLOTHING ° f ?" te ="1 Boys at t. irate prices a postand or just cut out, fill in and mail
. styles tnat will appeal to particular dressers, skillfully thiS coupon.
tailored and artistically finished in every detail.
BOOTS AKO SHOES e J I, Women and Children—every pair represents better / STfißabS, Tnc.
Z„ ♦ ? . , Va j ue for y ° ur money than y° u wou 'd expect nowadays and Dent 3
you get a straight guarantee of service that will satisfy and please you g 4 Norfolk, Va.
GOODS A n unusually satisfying showing of Ginghams, Silk and Cotton Piece m
Goods, Bed Sheets and Sheeting, Towels etc is listed in our FAI L Please send me
AND WINTER SPECIAL. Write to, it today ® etc., ,5 hated m our FALL
FIIRNITUPE Up-to-date styles m substantial furniture for Parlor, Living Room, Din- ■ SPECIAL
.. .. ,n £ R° orn > Bedroom and Kitchen, together with a fine showing of Stoves, ;
Washing Machines, Silverware, etc, . / Nan»
We cannot even mention here al) the articles illustrated and de- ,<i
v-Av 2An , scn t> ed *u our FA LL AND WINTER SPECIAL. It includes IW Address r _...
ramts, VaSmshes, Trunks, Bags, Blankets, Hardware, Jewelry, Candy and '
etc. You surely will want some of these at our special low prices. 'tMX Stats
Hunchback Caused Death of 500 Prisoners
And Tortured 5,000 Others in Hungary
Otto Corvin, a hunchback, was the
ringleader of the murder and torture
band that operated under Bela Kun
in Hungary, according to Lucien
Jones, writing to “The Daily News,”
of London, from Budapest. J odes
says of Corvin:
Had I not examined the police min
utes taken after the preliminary ex
amination of Corvin and his asso
ciates, and had I not questioned Cor
vin myself, I should not have be
lieved such fiendish practices to be
possible in the twentieth century. It
appears from the police minutes and
statements Corvin has made that he
himself was responsible for the death
of 500 political suspects and was an
active agent in torturing ten times
as many more.
Under his auspices an elaborate
torture chamber, with all modern and
ancient devices, was fitted out in
the cellars of the new parliament
buildings and in a basement under
the palace of Count Bakonye, which
is situated in the main thoroughfare
of Budapest. The luckless suspects
would be dragged out of their beds
and taken to one of the places at
dead of night.
One of the favorite methods of
torture was to fix a gag in the
mouth of the prisoner so that his
jaws remained wide open, while a
lighted match was held in his mouth
until the victim either confessed
knowledge of counter-revolutionary
plans or agreed to pay a large sum
of money.
A Dagger in the Throat
Another form of torture was to
thrust a dagger down the throat of
the prisoner until he assented to
their demands. The favorite meth
od, however, was to bring a pris
oner into a room where various
portions of the human body, such
as noses, eyes, lips, ears, which had
been Cut off previous victims, vyere
lying on a table. He was then given
a choice of a form’ of dismember
ment if no confession of money was
forthcoming.
lAany died under torture rather
than yield, and every night a cart
Alabama’s First State Pi g Club
Show Will Be Held at Birmingham
Alabama’s first State Pig Club
Show will be held at the State Fair
at Birmingham this year. Cash
prizes totaling more than $l,lOO will
be offered for pig club exhibits.
Classes have been provided for reg
istered Durocs, Poland-Chinas, Berh
shires and Hampshires and register
ed sows with litters of pigs; also
for individual fat barrows and car
lots of hard-fed meat hogs grown
by club members.
Twenty-nine prizes are provided
for each breed, five of them being
first prizes of $lO each and the
others ranging down to $3. In ad
dition the champion boar and sow
In each breed, except the Berkshire,
called around for corpses, which loose
ly strung together, were weighted
and slung into the Danube.
It is interesting to note that Cor
vin admits that as long as a year
ago plans for this terrorism were
laid in Moscow, with the active help
of Lenine and Trotzky.
Another of the leading terrorists
captured is Gahor Schon, formerly
a sub-lieutenant in the Chinese corps
formed by the Bolsheviki. He was
brought in to the police station this
morning from the country where he
had been founlf in hiding by peas
ants.
He had been terribly beaten and
disfigured. Nearly $15,000 in British
and French notes was found on him,
and a number of blank forms for the
immediate execution of any who were
politically suspected under the old
regime.
Schon was noted for his extreme
avarice, and confesses to a number
of cases in which, under his orders,
the gold-filled teeth of wealthy resi
dents of Budapest were pulled out
with pincers, and without an an
aesthetic. He is also presumed guil
ty of the death of twenty persons
by murder.
Accused of Murder
I have also examined the docu
ments relating to one Emery Haran
gozo, a pale-faced, evil-looking little
man, formerly a shoemaker, but un
der the Communist government chair
man of the executive committee of
Soviets at Nagy Gerencs, a few miles
from Budapest.
Harangozo is accused of the mur
der of four Roman Catholic priests.
Before they were shot Harangozo
tapped them on the shoulders and
said: “Give my greetings to your
White God.” Harangozo. like Schon,
was found hiding in a forest.
A large crowd is assembled out
side the police station and it is with
difficulty that the Bolshevist pris
oners are saved from being lynched.
So bitter is the feeling that one
might say a “White” terror.is slow
ly taking the place of the red terror,
though the police are taking active
steps to maintain order.
will get sls and the reserve cham
pion $lO. In all there are prizes for
153 registered animals, ranging from
$25 for first prize and champion com
bined down to $3.
First prize for a fat barrow is $lO,
and the prizes range down to $3.
For a fat car load the first prize
is SIOO. The club members who ex
hibit will be given free admission
to the fair if they attend.
Each member making an exhibit
will furnish feed for his pigs, but
J. C. Ford, state pig club -agent,
with others to assist him, will be
on the ground constantly to see that
the pigs are fed and properly look
ed after.
OMAHA ON EDGE;
TROOPS KEEPING
CITYJN ORDER
OMAHA, Neb., Sept. 30.—Domi
nated by federal troops, Omaha ex
perienced a comparatively peace
ful night. Fear of resumption of
Sunday’s lace riot was not borne
out.
The city today presented the ap
pearance of a fortified camp. Army
trucks, carrying machine girits, pa
trolled the streets, keeping the
crowds moving. A captive balloon
hovered over the city. During the
night a searchlight in the balloon
played on the negro district.
Additional troops arrived almost
hourly. Major General Leonard
V.' ood was expected early today to
assume conjimand of the military
forces.
Although the population was ex
tremely nervous late last night, no.
further serious outbreaks occurred.
Every one was “on edge."
A report that 1,000 negroes, heav
ily armed, w r ere marching on Omaha
from Ralston, caused Colonel Wuest,
in charge of the military forces,
to double all guards.
Occasional shots were heard dur
ing the night. The backfire of an
a rtomobile caused a crowd of 509
to gather in a few seconds.
Mayor Edward P. Smith, who
barely escaped lynching Sunday
night, was reported resting well at
Ford hospital. Threats on his life
caused the military commander to
place a detachment of soldiers
around the hospital.
Divorces Husband for
Not Talking to Her
Because for eleven years her hus
band refused to talk with her in the
evenings, declaring he preferred to
remain quiet, Mrs. H. P. Thomas, of
San Francisco, has filed suit for
divorce and SSO a month alimony.
She says that her husband is an
accountant, and that ever since they
have been married he has preferred,
silence to conversation, and that he
will not take her out anywhere.
WMlcGivcVoil
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Piles, ete Nearly everyone knows this old reliable
remedy Every jar guaranteed.
No Money Required ’ y n ou ad
ply of our remedies; you sei them for 30c each and
send the money to us For your work we give Vou
any of the articles shown in our new mammoth Illus
trated Catalog, which shows full lines of Furnituss.
Dishes. Wearing Apparel, Silverware. Jewelry, ant?
other household necessities. Many of these premiums
are given fofSis small a sale as 1 dozen. Or if you
prefer cash for your services in place of merchandise,
you keep $1.60 on each dozen and send $2.00 to us.
26 years’ honest dealing have made us the largest
house of the kind In the U. S. It pays to be out
•gent. Order today; no money required.
Remedies Co., 3633 m S. Racine flv„ Chicago
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