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THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
PAGE T1KCC
when
Foreign Blood in The United
States Is 1-3 of Population
Yemeni her
, ant ,o borrow money on
you WASHINGTON, n. C„ June 27.—While
am lv - much Is being said and written upon
vour improved farm on long j the su bject of Americanism, the Na-
nme that I can get it for you tional Geographic Society conies for-
,t Si* CCIlt interest. ^ ward with some figures concerning our
The contract Ctliry Wit foreign population and their sons and
them the privilege of paying daughterB t j, at are j, a rticuiariy timeiv
JlOO. Or tiny multiple t ere aM j authoratlve. They bring out son e
pi, Or of tlkinR up 6 I striking facts concerning the make p
l03H, OH tiny interest L,f our national body politic. The So-
ttithout bonus clety'a bulletin on the subject
j. J. HANESIEY f no *
**** I ainar Street “It is a fact not generally recognized
Georgia ' that the forel ^ population of the
United States together with sons and
Americas
UP JOHN A. DAMELS, ■. D.
Mirm-ry an# Ge**r«I Mfdlelse.
iiilii'e: IVliestlfJ Bldf.
Trlrphone Sfrrlcs,
. daughters of parents one or both of
] whom are or were of foreign birth con-
stitutes a third of the entire population
of the country.
their children totals 1.483.000 as com-
t ar* d with 57.1,000 for the native ele
ment.
"Montana haal99,000 i»eople of for
eign birth and foreign or mixed ances
tor)'. as against 162,000 of native ances-
tory. Wyoming gets into the same col
umn by about the same proportion. The
state of Washington has 390,000 more
of the foreign than of the native el«>
inent, while California practically
breaks even.
• Taking the statistics of the ma'e
population twenty-one years of age a id
upward for the entire country, it is
found that only 48.9 per cent of theu
are of straight, white ancestry. The
negro element adds 9.1 per cent to this,
and the remainder, 41.3 per cent
urn emit ns
ISSUEOI STtTENIENT
WASHINGTON, I). C., June 26.-
"V’e believe that we have heretofore
shown appreciation of our employe?!
ly just, even liberal treatment In the
matter of wages and conditions of
employment; we have met most of
their expectations and hope®, and, were
CZNEROWITZ STUBS
IN NEWS OF THE
WASHINGTON . 1). C., June 27. —
Czernowltz. In which the war news
reading public has had little interest
It possible, consistent with our whole
for many months, is again taking its
duty, we would be glad to do more, but
we submit that the projiosltlons em
braced in these denial.ds are without
reason and totally unjustifiable” de
clares Vice President and General
Manager F. H. Coapman in a letter j Geographic Society,
addressed to the employees of the ington, which says:
Southern Railway Company calling' With a population of nearly 90,000,
their attention to the position of the Czernowltz, the most easterly city
place In the headlines of the day, ow
ing to the Russian drive along the
Austrian east front. The Bukowlna
capital is the subject of today's war
geography bulletin of the National
Issued at Wash-
nnipany or the increased wage de-
. nands made by the four trainmen's ot-
uiKin# i'»r, *ot, wpod««i
OK T IIE WCXLD.
' In !
number of states the ueoule Df \ represented by the men of foreign birth • k'snizatlon
numotr oi states me peopu ji | e ' I In his letter Mr. Coapman declares
foreign birth or mixed parentage ex
ceed in numbers those of native birtli
■ the sons of foreign or mixed paren#-
... -i,l. tll4 !C«eu ill nuuiuers uiuee oi uaurc umim
|Tt«rtey BldV. Wlnitoor Axe. All Tfo- »»# parenuge. This condition obtain, "Taking tlis different state., we An I
I sovereigns Invited to meet with jin Massachusetts, where the foreign el-
J. M. TOBIN. C. C. | ement p,y birth or parentage is twice as
at |.eMASTER. Clerk. I m the e ] ement 0 ( un mixed native
he does not hesitate to appeal to the
F. ud A. ■.
great as
I lineage.
That state had, in 1910, 1,-
AMERICUS LODGH U 3,000 people
and A. tL m
bL F. and A. M. meets *t- 1
liflMr ery tecond and fourth
Friday night at 7
' « 1 .. o’clock.
a A. HAMMOND. W. M.
CLOYD BUCHANAN, Sec’y.
both of whose parent*
Southern's employees, knowing full
v.ell that their Interests and love for
r,me striking statistic*. In the propor-
. . I their road and their Inherent Idel of
tlon of foreign or foreign mixed ances-
2i 1 fairness and right will lead them to
ere born within the United States, as
| compared with 2,221,000 who were elth-
' er born abroad themselves, or bad one land Wisconsin third with 77.7 per cent,
or both parents born abroad. I “Approximately two-thirds of the
tory to native, among the men
... .. , . . *.. ! a Just conclusion on the matters ...
years and upward, North Dakota take,,
o s difference between this company aud
first rank among the states with 9.3
per cent belonging to the former clas i.
.Minnesota ranks next with 78 per rent.
The same condition prevails In
men in Massachusetts, Rhode Island.
Rhode Island. That state has a pop- Connecticut, New York and Utah arc
such organizations.'*
The substance of the demands made
by the men and the reply of the rail
roads is given In the letter, which con
cludes with the following statement:
“We leave this matter of your decis-
tthout further dlscussloon, kno'v-
14. B. COUNCIL
..LODGE, F, and A. 1L,
meets every First and
..Third Friday nightt.
Visiting brothers nr#
to attend.
H. B. MASHBURN, W. M.
NAT LeMASTER. Secretary.
ttnoae ibihuu. Hint state a ( . ion without further dlscussloon, know-
uiation of 159,821 of native ancestry J of grandsons of foreign lan s. .n , ^ )n your cons | derat | on „f the
against 372.671 of foreign birth or line- , Sew #««>’. Illinois. Michigan. Soul), - ™ t
" JSIIIMilON CAM1*, SO. IV
¥. U. S. OF A.
un Thurtuay nlghu. Wheat
Bulidiu*. st 7:S9 o'clock. All mem
, art urged to attend Visitor*
ceu.ed. E. F. WILDER, Preit
0. D. KEESE, Recording 6ecy.
MT I* MASTER, Financial Bac'y.
C. r. DAT18,
lleatal -urgrun.
Urduubmlla. I'yurrhes.
fidecce Phone 316 Office Phone 818
Allison Bldg.
he Union Central Lifcs’
educed rates and The Un-
pn Central Life’s liberal di-
idends offer you the best
asurance at a lower cost
ban you can buy it else
where.
Lee M. Hansford
Agent
oom 18 Planters Bank Bldg
Plume 715 Amerlcus. Ga.
' Air Line
ie Progressive Hallway ot the Soatft
Amerlcus lor Cordels, 71#
* 11# . Abbeville, Helena, Lyous, Col*
> Savaunah, Columbia, Richmond
rumoutb and points East and South
12:31 p ■
2:10 a ■
Amerlcus for Cordels. Abbe
*’• Helens and Intermediate point*
5:11 p. m.
Amerlcus for Richland, At*
L: * Birmingham. Hurtaboro, Moot
,u>r 7 and points West and North weal
3:0s p. m.
Amerlcus for Richland, Col*
•. LawHim, Albany and lnterm#
polots
10:00 a. m.
8«t,«rd Ruff at Parlor-SlasplDg C«1
1 Train, 13 ,j j, arriving Amsricui
““ 'S'annah 11:25 p. m„ and Isnv-
* Mnsrlcua for Savannah 2:20 a. -
**■*1 3g Car laintnw Divannih
D S car leaving for Savannah at
w *■ “. will be open for paseen*
1140 p. m.
* or further information apply to H.
^-'erett. Local Agent, Americua,
L c W. Small, Dir. Paaa. Agant.
urrab Qa. ; C . B. PfU, O. P. A^
«oik. va
IMPORTANT!
I 11 * U1 *>• to your lstarast to Invsstl-
f' wfc,< *• have In th* Freah Maal
M brwn Grocsry line. W# will glv,
r t,lu * received for your money.
*’• u, a
‘ trial. Yon- business will M
'Delated. l>eih Meats and OrocoP-
1 ll, «ys on hand. W# bars fresh
»r«at,;», eery day and trash Hah
iwialiy We ar* sanitary la svsry
"l*rt. and aaaura you of prompt
■ "n »hen you order from na.
nr -TRMT CASH MARKET
*** *99 Badsaa BtOdlaf
Dakota and Montana the proportioi
In Connecticut there Is a population of ranges from 61 per cent to per cenf.
native ancestor,- aggregating 395,000 "h'l* Nebnata. >'>'*#»• ^ashlng-
,ud of foreign birth or ancestry ag-|*on and California It I. slightly no-.
than half.
gregating 703,000.
In New York there is a population
of native ancestry reaching a total of
3.230,000. Against tills there Is a pop
ulation of foreign birth or foreign or
mixed ancestory amounting to 5,715-
000.
The balance in favor of the Jiopuln
th.n of foreign birth or foreign ance-
tory, in whole or in part, in Newjerscv
Is 425.000. the population of native an
cestry amounting to 1,010,000 ss
against 1.435,000 In the case of the for
eign element.
"Illinois also falls in the list of states
here the population of full native
stock Is smaller than that of foreign
birth or foreign or partly-forelgn ances
tty. Its population of native llneag?
amounts to 2,600,000. Against this there
1* a population wholly or partly foreign
by birth and ancestory of 2.925.000. a
difference of 325,000.
• Michigan also falls In this class with
1,560,000 wholly or partly of ofrelgn
birth and ancestory as compared wit t
j,224.000 of pure native lineage.
Minnesota has nearly three times as
many people born abroad or with one
ot both parents of foreign birth, as she
has of sons and daughters of native
stock. Her population of forelgna an i
"In Utah it falls to 48.8 per cent. In
Wyoming to 45.9 per cent, in Missouri
to 29.7 per eent, In Kansas to 30.8 per
ctnt and in Oregon to 40.4 per cent.”
ALBANY WOMAN SAW TWO
ARMIES DEPART FOR MEXICO
ATLANTA. Ga.. June 27.—Seventy
years ago a little 12-year-old girl stoo l
forth in front of a company of Ala
bama boys in the town of Eufaulm an 1
presented them with an American flag
to be taken to the Mexican war.
Today that name little girl, now a
wrrnan eighty-two years old, stood In
the railway station and saw the Fifth
regiment of the National Guard of this
city leave for mobilization headquar
ters of the Georgia Guard at Macon,
whence they expect to lie dispatched t»
Mexico within a very short time.
She Is Mrs. Frances Wellborn Hol
combe. of Albany. Ga.
aame you will consider your pas'
treatment; the relationship which has
always existed between you and this
irujortance in the Austro- Hungarian
empire, lies only a few miles weat of
the point where the boundary lines cf
the Austrian crownland of Iiukonwina.
kingdom of Roumanla, and the Rus
sian province of Bessarabia converge,
it is situated on an elevation, and tht
Russian province of Bessarabia con
verge. It is situated on an elevation
overlooking the Pruth River, which
rises in the Car|iathians and after a
course of 1,500 milea enters the lower
Danube near Galataz. The Pruth is
navigable only as far as Jassy, which
lc enarly two hundred miles below
Czernowitz.
“Czernowltz owes its present-day im-
tance to the severance of the province
of Bukowlna from Turkey and its in-
coporation as a part of Austria in 1775.
Up to that time the town was an unlnt
portant village, but when it became the
hich
ThisCoffee is Guaranteed good
In your search for the best and most economi
cal coflee, you take no chances when you buy
Luzianne. Each can carries this unqualified
guarantee: “After using the entire contents of
this can according to directions, if you are not
satisfied in every respect, your grocer will re
fund the money you paid for it." We also give
a money-back guarantee that you only have to
use one-half as much Luzianne as a cheaper
coflee. Write for premium catalog.
.... ijjmu
• ~ COFFEE
The Reily-Taylor Got New Orleans
company; your length of service; the j capital of the new crownl*nd.
h«rdshlp upon the other employees not: has an area about half aa large aa the
parties to this demand: tho interest if j state of New Jeraey. with a population
the public served by this railroad, for of three quarters of a million, its fu-
ahould you by your voluntary action
cripple the train service, many others
than those emplayed by the railroad
must suffer—above all who appeal tc
your sense of loyalty, Justice and
right.”
SUITE DIIDG USPECTOD
SUGGESTS CHANGE ID 11111
ture was assured. At the time of the
outbreak of the present war It was a
thriving commercial center with ajdeii-
did modern public buildings and wa.<
especially notable for the number and
variety of Its ecclesiastical structures,
the Greek Orthodox. Greek Catholic,
Roman Catholic, Armenian Catholic,
Armenian Orthodox Old Believers’, Or
thodox and Reform Jews, and Protes
tant faiths being represented.
"While the modernity cf the most
conapicuous edifices robs Czernowltz of
the quaint nee sand medieval atmos
phere possessed by many cltiea ol
central Europe, compensating grace is
to be found by the traveler In the won
derful picturesque costumes •
peasant on market Mondays, when tha
poles, Ruthenians, Roumanians, G«r
mans. Magyars. Jews, Armenians. Bul
garians Gypsies, Turks and Czecha ap
State Drug Inspector T. A. Cheat
ham has made the following sugges
tions to the legislature, soon to con
vene:
“Some provision ought to be mad*
for the sale of Insecticides and bug
deaths, in the stale, by general deni
trs and unlicensed druggists. It does
not seem Just to compel farmers, mar
ket gardeners and orcliardiaU to rlae' penr in the j r natural dress rivaling tie
•me Instances twenty miles in or-
ho is here on | lier to purchase these preparations
a visit to relatives and friends, and her | from a | ice , nge( i jruggiat. or have their
enjoyment of the spectacle of hurrying j cr0 p g an( j orchards destroyed by iu-
troops and flashing swords was not • gectB | have found the new federal
less keen today than it was on that day a ., t j. narro tic law to be of great sei-
“•) years ago. vice to me in the enforcement of the
*t*te anti-narcotic law, and while it
Is being frequently violated, in mary
Instances, it is due to misunderstand
ing of what the federal law demands.
I find the quality of drugs sold In
the various markets of the state to be
exceptionally good. I find the num
ber of violations for the year fewer
than the preceding year and a gen
eral disposition on part of all to com
ply with the law.”
TWOS
toMPAN/ m
ai\\ wG.en.eveivtG.erei- compejy fj§
HEW COUNTY BILLS
ARE READY IS OLD
ATLANTA Ga.. June 27.—The annual
crop of new county bills are ready and
waiting to be Introduced in the house
of representatives and the senate whej
rai .bow In the variety ot hues employ
ed. They astound the ear with ati
abating babble of tongues.
* Among the distinctive features ol
this city are ita ‘Houses' or clubs
which are the centers of the various
national Interests. Each house reflect!
the characteristics of Its members bo*.b
In the kind of entertainment and hos
pitality which it afTords and in ita dec
orations and architecture. When
steps over the threshold into his clu'i
the member, be he Pole, German, Rov-
i.tanlan or what-not, feels that this is
his own, his native land.*
“Before the war Czernowltz was en
gaged in the manufacture of machln
ery. Across the river, four mllee to th#
rorth. is the Jewish town of Sadagoria
famous for its cattle fairs.
"Czernowltz lies 165 miles by rail
southeast of the Galfcan stronghold of
Ijcmberg. miles east of Vienna, and
335 miles due north of the Roumanian
capital, Bucharest."
TamuulipaSf a Mexican State Is
Vert) Rich In Her Natural Gifts
WASHINGTON, D. C.. June 27 —Tne
prominence which the Mexican state 3f
Tamaullpas is occupying in the border
news of the day makes the following
bulletin. Issued by the .National Geo
graphic Society from Its Washington
headquarters of timely Interest:
Owing to teh border outrage com
mitted by bandits who have invaded
Texas at polnta opposite the Mexican
state of Tamaullpas, public Interest is
focused on this political dlclsior of the
sounthern republic which has im
mensely rich resources, both mineral
and agricultural, but which has not
been developed by Americans and Eu
ropean capital as have other sections of
the country.
Tamaullpas is about the size of
Maine, but with only about one-thDd
the population of the New England
commonwealth. Its gulf coastline, low
sandy, hot and moist, extends north
and aonth for 250 miles from the moutu
of the Rio Grande to the mouth of the
Panuco River, where is situated th
important seaport of Tampico with lb
eight months of the year but wh«a Ir
rigated is extremely fertile, pruJuris#
bountiful grain crops as well as was-
talnlng numerous herds of cattlsi The
southern and central sectiona pn
sugar cane, bananas, coffee and t
in the well-watered valleys. la (fee
mountainous regioi.8, back from the
coast, the state possesses Immense po
tential wealth In its undeveloped f»A4
silver, copper, marble, asphalt and sell
mines. Even the Tampico district (he
great underground reservoir* of pe
troleum have been tapped only wftfem
recent years.
“The mountains of TamaulijaaA
which boast a salubrious climate, law
with game, and sportsmen of Mesfae
City make annual excursion* to (Ms
region to hunt deer and the vast tecta
of wild-fowl which nest In th# life!
borhood of the numerous lakes tint
dot the state.
“Tamaullpas owes its rommercM
Importance largely to its ixtle fibre k*
dustry and to the great volume ef irate
passing through Tampico, which raata
m xt to Vera Cruz among Mexk-aa pT
fabulously rich oil fields. This coast Is ports. Its total commerce for 1913 i
Indented with many shallow lagoons
formed by the islands and candbars st
the mouths of the Rio Grande, Conchas,
Soto la Marina and Tamesl rivers. In
winter It Is swept by violent ‘northers*
which are exceedingly dangerous
to navigation and which cauae great
discomfort to the natives.
“That portion of the state bordering
on Texas Is flat and is very dry for
more than $63,000,000 while Vera
trade was $83,000,000. From Tj
to New Orleans by steamer la 705 ml
about the same distance as from P
aaelphia to Savannah. From Tamp
to Galveston la 450 miles. The cap
of the state, Gludad Victoria, ta
population of about 10,000 and is si
ated in the mining district, 856 ml
northwest of Tampico.**
REMOVAL NOTICE!
Have moved my office and Veterinary Hospital te
111 Hampton Sireet Phone 278
DR. PERCY W. HUDSON
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
• THE PROGRESSIVE RAILWAY OF THE SOITH"
Very low round trip rates to
BUFFALO, N. Y.
houses and preparing to enlist support
Ir. the cause. Macon and her allies are
getting ready to push their bill for tho
tl.e general assembly of Georgia cor. • J removal of the capltol from Atlanta to
venes tomorrow . that city.
Creating new countiea ha- become
the most popular civic and legislative
pastime in Georgia during recent years.
Nr* session of the legislature is without
them, or at least without attempts to
create them.
Advocates of compulsory education
are planning a concerted effort In be
half of their great movement. Be
lievers In woman suffrage are checking
up the lit* of their friends In both
Account Ancient Arabic Order, JNobles Mystic
Shrine
IMPERIAL COUNCIL
JULY 11-13, 1911
All steel equipment; electrically lighted throughout
Among o»her subjects to come before
the legislature are the creation of a
state highway commission, the creation
ot a state auditor and of a more effi
cient accounting system for the *tato‘a[
finances, the rotation of superior court (
Judges, the abolishment of the fee sys I
tem, exempting college endowment*^
from taxation, revision of the divorce
Free Reclining Chair Cars
Dining Car Service Unequale4
Call on nearest Seaboard agent for rates, dates of
sale, schedule, etc
laws and the establishment of a new
and simplified ayatem of land title#.
C. W. SMALL
Division Passenger Agent, Savannah Ga.