Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY
EDITION
VOL. XXVI, NO. 116
E. Y. Clarke Gets
o °
Into Limelight
New York World Names Him And
Woman In Klan Expose
ATLANTA, Sept. 19 Admitting
the charge that he and Mrs, Elizabeth
Tyler were arrested, but charging it
was frame up staged by his wife, E.
Y. Clarke today denied charges made
by the New York World in its ex
pose of the “Klu Klux Klan ” of which
Clarke is the “imperial Keagle.”
Mrs, Tyler long associated with Mr,
Clarke in publicity undertakings, is
connected with the Klan and publish
es its official newspaper,
Col, W, J. Simmons, imperial wiz
ard of the Klan, today expressed hijs
complete confidence ™n each of them,
The New York World has already
proven itself to be the biggest lia.ri
in America, Mr. Clarke said, \
The interference by the New York
World in regard to my personal char
acter is a malicious tie, Mrs, Tyler
said.
Mrs, Tyler Visibly Affected
Mrs, Tyler was visibly affected
when informed of the nature of the
World’s attack but refused to discuss
the incident in detail, Mr, Clarke also
at first refused to go into the matter,
saying the charges would all be an
swered later and would serve as the
basis of legal action against newspa
pers that have published the attacks,
but later gave explanation of the in
cident referred to in the World’s ar
ticle, Monday he admitted that he
and Mrs, Tyler were arrested at Mrs.
Tylers home in October 1919, and he
blamed his wife, from whom he said
he was separated, with having caused
the arrest in order to discredit him,
My wife and T had been separated
for three years before T ever met Mrs,
Tyler, Mrs, Tvler and T were first
associated as business partners in the
Southern Publicity Association = and
have been business partners in various
enterprises since then as well as the
work of the Klu Klux Klan,
How Arrest Occurred
“At the time of the incident referr
ed to by the World T was living at a
hotel and became ill with influenza,
threatened with phenumonia. Because
T was unable to receive proper atten
tion at the hotel during my illness
Mrs. Tyler had me removed to her
home where T remained until T re
covered,
My wife had the arrest staged and
the next morning filed suit for di
vorce against me, Since then my
enemies have frequently attempted to
use it to damage my reputation_ but
any influence from the arrest of im
moral conduct is wholly unwarranted,
Jersey Ku Klux Demand Dismissal of
Clarke and Mrs, Tyler from Klan
ATLANTA, Sept. 20—Two highly
sensational developments have come
this afternoon in the matter of the
controversy and alleged expose by
the New York World of the Ku Klux
Klan, and that paper’s publication on
yesterday of the charges against Ed
ward Young Clarke and Mrs, Eliza
beth Tyler, both officers of the or
ganiation, A telegram has been sent
from Newark, N. J, demanding the
removal of Mr. Clarke, who has issued
a statement repudiating an jnterview
given by him yesterday, in which he
admitted his arrest,
Mysteriously the records in the of
fice of the recorder of the city of At
lanta have been surreptitiously tam
pered with and the entire page in the
book showng the entry of the arrest
of Clarke and Mrs, Tyler has been
carefully cut from the book and has
dissappeared, The card index in the
office of the clerk to the city recorder
bas heen tampered with and that rec
ord has completely and surreptitiously
disappeared,
Both these mysteries are being in
vestigated, according to statements by
J. H, McKerley, clerk to the recorder
and W, L. McLean, record keeper.
Col William J. Simmons, “imperial
wizard” of the Ku Klux Klan, said,
this evening, he knew nothing of a
telegram said to have been sent him
from the New Jersey headquarters
of the Kian demznding ¢l:missal of
F.dward Young Clarke and Mrs. Eliz
abeth Tyler from the Klan for the in
terest of the organization,
“In the absence of the reported tel
egrain | cannot comment on the mat
ter” said Mr, Sijmmons,
A “dispatch trom Newark says A.
Donald Bate, Kleagle of that district
today sent the following telegram to
Wizard Simmons from the New Jer
sey headquarters at 837 Broad street,
and gave a copy of it to the New York
newspapers,
“Klans in New Jersey are surprised
that you have not forced Clarke and
Mrs, Tyler to sever connections with
the organization in view of what has
now hecome international knowledge,
We demand that said two be dijsmiss
ed at once, Remember this is not
time of hesitation and we must serve
the public if we are clean, Unless you
do so the entire house that you have
constructed will fall upon your head
and no one can be blamed for it ex-
THE FITZGERALD LEADER
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MISS VIRGINIA RAPPE
Motion picture “actress who died
llowing a party in Roscoe “Fatty”
rbuckle's rooms at a San Frane
isco_hotel. and which resulted i
8n indictment charging man
slaughter being seturned against
the comedian.
° *
Kidnapping Case Is
Opened In Atlanta
!Two Children and Fortune Figure In
- Court Fight Between Terminal
Ticket Agent And Wife
ATLANTA, Sept, 21—A kidnaping
case with many Inieresting features,
s ncw before th: Fut'an Superior
Court in Atlanta,
Mrs, R, E. Woodland charges that
her husband, a ticket agent at the
terminal station and a familiar figure
to the traveling public, is endeavor
ing to secure the custody of their two
children in order to obtain control of
$40,000 which has been settled on them
by an uncle,
Woodland, who is represented by
attorneys Reuben R, Arnold and Low
ry Arnold, Ed Hill and Herman Ev
ins, is now in pessesion of his two
vear-old son Jack and has in turn
filed habeascorpus proceedings against
his wife, for the custody of three-year
old Margaret, who is in Atlanta with
her mother Mrs, Woodland, it is stat
ed that she has been separated from
her husband for two years, having
left him she said because he failed to
support her while they were living in
Philadelphia,
A grand jury in Cape May N. J.
according to advices just received
here, has indicted Robert Emmett
Woodland, his brother Henry and
his sister-in-law Beulah for kidn
ing the two little children of Mr. and
Mrs, R, E. Woodland,
It is alleged by those in Cape May
who have been pushing the kidnapping
indictment that the children were
taken by Mr, and Mrs, Henry Wood
land in a boat across from Cape May
to Lewis Delaware, early in July—
after a nation-wide search, financed
by John Wilbraham, a wealthy uncle
of the children, was unsuccessful until
recenty* when was found by her mo
ther in a fishing fillage on the Vir
ginia coast, and Jack with his father
Atlanta, The exact evidence on which
the father of the children and his
brother and brother's wife were re
turned has not yet been fade public,
Woodland on the advice of his at
torneys has refused to make a state
ment concerning the case other than
that he himself secured the children.
turned the daughter over to his broth
~r and brought the son to Atlanta with
him,
Mrs, Woodland has not seen her
little Jack since the children’s appear
ance, and came to Atlanta immediately
after she heard the child was here.
Warrants Issued
. . °
Against R. R. Officials
CHICAGO, Sept. 20 Warrants
for the arrest of H, E, Bryam, presi
dent of the Chicago, Milwaukee and
St, Paul railroad and three other of
ficers of the line were issued Monday
by county judge Reigheimer charging
them with refusing to give employes
their statutatory two hours off on elec
tion day to permit them to vote,
In addjtion to the president, the
other defendants are Hurton Hansen,
general counsel, L, K, Silcooks, gen
eral superintendent of motive power,
and George T. Martin, assistant gen
eral superintendent of motive power.
The warrants charge that on June 6,
when the county election was held,
John E Turner, a machinist was de
nied his request for two hours off to
vote and that when he took the time
off without permission his pay was
deducted, in violation of the state
law,
Mrs, S, G, Bullington returned
home Friday from Macon where she
has been visiting.
cept yourself”,
Clarke this afternoon issued a state
ment denying he had yesterday in an
interview admitted he was at anytime
arrested,
FITZGERALD, BEN HILL COUNTY, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1921
° } :
Shrine Makes Plans
°
For Maay Hospitals
National Board Meets In Atlanta This
Week To Discuss Building Insti
tutions for Crippled Children
ATLANTA, Sept. 20,—That “great
oaks from little acorns grow’’ was
never more forcibly illustrated than
~in the plans now heing made it was
‘announced today, by the Ancient Ara
' bic Order, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine
to build a series of great hospitals
located in different sections of the
United States for the correction of de
formities of indigent crippled children,
Several years ago a railroad man
running into Atlanta broke his leg: he
was carried to a hospital for attention,
but after he was discharged a compli
cation set in that was in a fair way
to make him 3 cripple. He was a shrin
er, and while in the hospital again for
expert handling of his case he was vis
ited by Past Potentate Forest Adair,
While making this visit Noble Adair
met Dr, Mike Hoke and learned of
the wonderful work he was doing for
crippled children whose parents were
unable to pay a cent for medical and
surgical attention, the hospital bills
being paid by a committee of chari
table ladjes,
The Scottish Rite Bodies of Atlan
ta had been talking a great deal about
building a cathedral, and Noble Adair
who is a thirty-third degree Scottish
Rite Mason and chairman of the exec
utive committee of the Rite, conceiv
ed the idea that the money could be
put to better use in establishing a
hospital for crippled children, He had
but to suggest it to the executive com
mittee for its adoption, and the result
is the big institution in the suburbs
of Atlanta where several hundreds of
crippled children have been treated,
most of them cured, and all helped, in
the past few years, and which gave
rise to the movement started in.the
Shrine to make the curing and care
of indigent crippled children the one
big object of the Shrine in North Am
erica_
Statring with this year every Shrin
er pays $2 a year toward the fund tha‘
will build, equip and maintajn cripp
led children’s hospitals in various sec
tions of the United States. This
means that starting now with one mil
lion dollars, there being approximate:
Iy half a million Shriners at this date,
the huge sum wil be increased every
vear aslthe Shrine grows in numbers:
and with the Shrine of North America
having as one of its reasons for exist
ence the great hoon for humanity that
will come from the correction of de
formed and crippled children. it will
grow with greater rapidity than in the
past,
The Noard of trustees has at its dis
posal an appropriation of one million
dollars annually, to be used for this
great charity purpose and it is thought
that locations. for at east three of these
hositals will he agreed upon at the
Atlanta meeting, which is to be held
this week, The board of which Past
Potentate Forest Adair is a member,
will come here more particularly to
examine into the ooeration of the
Scottish Rijte hospital for crippled
children whi,ch is generally conceded
by the orthopedic surgeons of North
America to be a model intstitutio®
.
'Pnces Increase |
| 2.75 Per Cent
lFoods Lead in Advance With Increase
of 13,5 Per Cent In Wholesale
WASHINGTON—WhoIesaIe prices
increased 2,75 per cent in August
oddr July levels, wholesale * food
prices leading in the advance, with
an increase of 13.5 per cent according
to figures made public Monday by
the department of Labor
Farm products, including many
food articles were 2.5 per cent high
er in August than in July, the state
ment said, adding that there were de
cided advances in butter, milk, eggs,
rice, meats, sugar, fruits and potatoes,
Meat animals, including cattle and
hogs, also averaged higher in August
than in July, In all commodities
groups, except clothing, the statement
said there were decreases in prices
ranging from 1 per cent in the case
of building materials to 4 per cent for
metals. Cloths and clothing showed
no changes in the gencral price lev
els,
Since August last year farm prod
ucts have declined nearly 47 per cent,
cloths and clothing 40 per cent and
building materials 39 per cent, The
average decline in all wholesale com
mocdities prices since last August was
given at 39 per cent,
‘LOOKING FOR AUTO TOP,
FINDS EMBRIO STILL
Deputy J. B, Roberts found what
\is said to be a distilling outfit in po
fsession of Wilbur Alexander on the
Avemeyer farm, four miles west of the
city Monday, Roberts had a search
warrant to discover an auto top, said
to have been stolen and which was
thought to be on the premises, The
kop was not found.
ENTERPRISE AND PRESS
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ROSCOE “FATTY" ARBUCKLE
Famous screen comedian who
must face trisl m San Francisco
for ‘the death of Miss Virginia
Rappe, moving picture actress who
died following a party in his rooms
at a 2 San Framcisco hotel
Business In South
, °
Brighte:t In Years
Present and Future Conditions Are
Better Than Practically Any Other
Sectjon, Says Business Counsellor
ATLANTA, Sept. 21—Present and
future business conditions in the en
tire South are tinged with brighter
colors than practically any other sec
tion of the country, with the prospect
of a very prosperous season this fall,
is the belief of Joel Hunter, noted
business counsellor of Atlanta, who
has received reports from many sec
tions of the country.
Mr, Hunter is in intimate touch
with leading business concerns and
corporations throughout Georgia and
the South, supervising their audits,
and is perhaps one of the hest informed
men on business conditions in the
country,
Speaking of cotton as related to the
future business stabjlity of this sec
tion, Mr. Hunter showe that it is at
present a great asset for the South;
that during the past year or more,
there has been an extensive wear and
tear on goods manufactured from the
staple with a proportionately small
amount of replacement that now the
world is demanding cotton and the
mills are beginnig to operate to their
limit to take care of this situation, -
“ Tcan see nothing but prosperity
for the South berause it now seems
assured that the farmer will get a
good price for his cotton that the peo-‘
ple will buy in quantity to supply their
needs and that money being put intol
circulation in this manner, business
will be good for everybody” said Mr.,
Hunter
All Day Program
-
At Baptist Church
The women of the First Baptist
Church will meet Thursday the 22nd,
for a day of prayer for state missions,
The morning program will be in
charge of Mrs. J, B, Cox, and Circle
No, 3 and promises a spiritual feast
to all who attend, Tt will begin at
10:30 A, M with lunch at the church
and a fine inspirational service follow
ing,
The Sun Beams will feature a play
illustrating enlistment work, followed
by the Women’s Bible Class at its
usual hour,
The day will furnish an unusual op
portunity for prayer and discussion of
the needs at our door as well as a day
of social fellowship, The women ot
the church and congregation are es
pecially urged to unite in making it
a successful undertaking. Any woman
interested has a cordial welcome,
Mrs, E, J. Dorminey, Pres. W M,C,
War Vets Denounce
. .
New School Histories
Minneapolis, Minn —The annual
encampment of the United Spanish
War Veterans on. Wednesday discuss
ed the report of the resolutions com
mittee which charged that ‘“British
propaganda” was evident in revised
editions of a history used in the pub
lic schools,
The report stated that the book
omits historical facts, such as the Bos
ton Tea Party, battles of Legington
and Bunker Hill eulogized Benedict
Arnold and sacrifices historical facts
in favor of international relations be
tween the United States and Great
Britain,
A hand operated force feed system
has been invented for lubricating au
tomobile chassis without the use of
oil and grease cups.
The triple mirror on the top of a
new dressing table folds down to con
vert it imto a library table with an
apparently solid top,
* o i
Receipts For Cooking
Of The Sweet Potato
Winners Announced In Contest For
Receipts For Cookign Of Sweet
Potatoes
Mrs. H. M, Davis, 302 North Lee
Street.
Miss Iris Davenport, 613 West Cen
tral Avenue,
Mrs, T, N, Middlebrooks,
Mes | & Pittman 210 E. Lemon.
Mrs, W, L, Watson, 710 West Su
wance Street,
Mrs, Mattie Dill, Route 6.
. Mes oD Bishop, Route 2,
SWEET POTATO JOHHNY CAKE
—Take one pint of corn meal and sift
with half teaspoonful of salt; rub into
the meal a large table spoon of lard,
next add to it one pint of smoothly
mashed potatoes. If potatoes are
not very sweet add a table spoonful
of sugar; mix thoroughly to a rather
soft dough but not too soft to handle,
Have a middle stave of a barrel head
(oak wood) washed clean, rinse, leav
ing it wet and on this evenly spread
the dough not quite out to the edges
of the board, Dip a knife blade in
cold water and with it smooth the sur
face of the Johnny cake, and stick
with fork as you would biscuit.
| Set before the fire with a brick or
flat iron to support it: let it brown
nicely, then loosen it from the board
by means of a coarse thread passed
between the board and the cake, Turn
the board over and lay the brown side
of the cake down on it again setting
it before the fire to brown the other
side, When it is done cut it in three
inch wide pieces there will be about
five cf them, Butter well and serve
while hot, Be sure to cook by the
refleciion of the fire to have the ,Qr(‘n-1
uine Johnny Cgke taste. |
—MRS, H. M. DAVIS,
SWEET POTATO BISCUIT—Wash
|:m(| boil four medium sized potatoes
—mash—stir into a batter made with
one pint of corn meal one teacup of
buttermilk two tablespoonfuls of mel
{ted lard, one teaspoonfulllevel full of
salt, and the same of soda sifted and
beaten into the batter just before stir
lring in the pnt‘atovs_ Mold and bake
tuntil a rich brown,
! —MRS. H. M. DAVIS.
SWIEET POTATO® BISCUIT (No.
’2.)—\’\"3s}l and boil six small sweet
'potatocs with peeling on. When soft
'mkc them out, pecl and mash through
a coarse sieve, Sift one quart of
flour and with it one level teaspoon
ful of soda, add one pint of the pota
to, (to which has been added one lev
el teaspoonful of sugar), one kitchen
spoonful of lard, salt and butter to
make it stiff dough; mix thoroughly
mould and bake in a quick oven,
Serve hot, with butter, |
—MRS. H, M, DAVIS,
BAKED SWEET POTATOES—
Wash the potatoes, rub a little lard
over them and bake in oven with a
slow steady fire,
—MRS. H. M, DAVIS,
FRIED SWEET POTATOES—PeeI
slice and throw into cold salted water
for half an hour, Wipe dry, fry brown
in boiing lard, Do not have water
too salty,
—MRS. H, M, DAVIS,
Scoops Up Baby
. e
From Engine Pilot
RALEIGH, N.C, Sept, 19-—A mov
ie thriller was enacted in real life to
tlay near Kipling, N. C, when Eng
ineer J. H Furman, Norfolk Southern
Railway, climbed out on the pilot of
his engine and scooped up three-year
old Gertrude Collins, toddling up the
track in front of the oncoming eng
ine.
Furman was taking twenty-five
loaded freight cars to Fayetteville and
was rounding a curve down grade,
when he saw the little girl, He then
yanked the whistle cord and the emer
gency brake, The child was seven
tyv-five yards ahead, The weight of
the cars behind was sliding the big
engine forward when Furman climbed
out on the side of his engine to the
pilot and with the train moving at a
ten mile speed, pulled the little girl
to safety, Her worst injury was a
slight bruise on the head,
.
Concert Last Night
Was Well Attended
The concert given by Cecil Abbott
for the benefit of the foot ball team
was well attended and a neat sum was
netted for the team, Besides Master
Abbott’s delightful songs and ballads
the audience was entertained by some
well rendered violin solos by Miss
Gene Farmer and buck and wing
dancing by Master Hope Brown,
The evening was a decided success
from a standpoint of entertainment,
as well as finances.
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MRS. ROSCOE ARBUCKLE
... Mrs, Roscoe Arbuckie, who wa:
Hiving apart from the famous com
ndan, went immedistely to his as
sistance from her home in New
York. She says she will stand by
&im through his trial for the deatd
of Miss Vaugwmia Rappe.
. .
John W. Cain Dies }
In Cordele Sunday
Well-Known South Georgia News
paper Man Buried Monday
CORDELE, Sept, 19th—John W.
Cain pioneer newspaper man, was,
buried here at noon today, his death
having occurred yesterday morning
after a long illness.
e was a native of Whitfield coun
ty. He married Miss Amanda John
son, was editor of the Summerville
News a number of years and repre
sented Chatooga county in the Leg
islature, He moved to Quitman twen
ty years ago and hought the Quitman
Free Press, He and his son John
Cain, Jr., as joint owners, published
his paper up to about six years ago,‘
For the past two years he has been
in failing health, Since last sum
mer he has made his home in Cordele
fvith his son, John Cain, Jr, The end
came Sunday morning at 8 o’clock in
the, seventy second year of his age,
The funeral and interment took place
Monday morning at 10 oclock at Sun
nyside cemetery in Cordele, Rev, R,
L. Been, pastor of the Presbyterian
church of which he was a member,
officiating, assisted by Rev. Wallace
Ware of the Baptist Church, Sur
viving members of the family are:
Mrs. Roval Daniel and Miss Catherine
Cain, of Quitman, and Joh:
of Cordele
Hoover Sets Datej
o
For The Meeting
Unemployment Conference Will Begin
In Washjngton Next Monday
WASHINGTON, Sept 20—The na
tional unemployment conference will
meet here next Monday at 10:00 a, m,
Secretary Hoover announced monday,
The practically completed list of
conferces, Mr. Hoover said, would be
made public Monday night. The con
ference he said would consist of about
30 men who had been chosen as those
who would be most helpful in solving
the nation’s unemployment problem,
and at the same time represent geo
graphicaly the various sections of the
country, Sessions of the full confer
ence, he said would be made public
and it was probable that hearings
might be held by various committees,
Labor Board Rules
.
Against Open Shops
CHICAGO, Sept. 19~-The “open
shop” was dealt a smashing blow late
today when the United States Rail
road Labor Board ruled that the
Pennsylvania railroad would have to
deal with union representatjves in
matters of wage disputes,
The petition of the Pennsylvania to
treat directly with its own employes
was turned down,
The road in its petition, “insisted”
that the board decide in its favor,
° .
Hardwick To Decide
y
McNaughton’s Case‘
ATLANTA, Sept, 19—Governor
Hardwick has practically completed
his study of the record in the matter
of the application for commutation of
the life sentence of Dr, W.J. McNaugh
ton, for whom a parole is being sought
and made the statement today he will
hand down his order in the case about
noon tomorrow,
The Rawlins case will probably not
be passed upon for a week os more,
since there are some additional rec
ords which are to be supplied,
English manufacturers of gasoline
are planning to give each grade a dis
tinctive color so that it can be iden
tified at a glance.
PUBLISHED ON
MONDAY, WEDNESDAY
AND FRIDAY
Official Organ City Of Fitzgerald
CHAUTAUQUA OPENS
TONIGHT IN BIG TENI
First Program Opens Up With Len
zo Cavaliers, Musical Male
Quartette
PARADE WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Prizes To Be Awarded Children With
In Most Original Costumes
The big Brown tent which houses
the Community Chautauqua is now
erected on the vacant lot on west
Central Avenue just west of the Cath
olic church.
The first program begins Wednes
day 21st, at 8:30 P. M, with Lenzo
Cavaliers, Musical Male Quartette of
which Mr, Lucas one of the world’s
greatest accordian players is the lead
er., The evening program will be
entirely musical, Other programs
will be announced from the platform.
The Junior play leader Miss Bessie
Stanfield will have complete charge of
the Junior Work, She will teach the
children games and stories which will
‘long be remembered by them,
~ The Junior events will open with
‘the parade which will be composed
children of the city between the ages
of six and fourteen, A number of
prizes will be awarded to the ones
dressed in the most original costumes.
A large number of the business men
of the city will also fall in line with
automobiles,
The unsold tickets are being sold
t othe guarantors who will be busily
engaged in selling them, Also tick
ets on sale at the four leading drug
stores in the city. Let's fall in line
and make the Chautauqua one of the
biggest events of the year,
Below is the program for the six
days of the Chautauqua:
Wednesday:
7:00 Junior Chautauqua Events,
8:00 Grand Double Concert—Lenzo’s
Cavaliers, A quartet of Neapolitan
musicians featuring Frank Lucas,
| Thursday
“):()() Junior Chautauqua,
2:30 Melodies of Americy and Ireland
—Kerry singers,
8:00 Popular Prelude-—Kerry Sngers.
8:45 Illustrated Lecture: “Our Rela
tions South of the Rio Grande”—Pet
er McQueen,
Friday:
9:00 Junior Chautauqua,
2:30 Instrumental Concert—Cecillian
Trio,
8:00 Musical Prelude—Cecillian Trio,
8:30 Magic, Mind-Reading, Mirth,
(Children’s Night)—The Floyds.
Saturday:
9:00 Junior Chautauqua,
2:30 Double Orchestral Concert—the
Royal Fillipino String Band.
8:00 Popular Concert—Royal Fillipino
String Band,
8:45 Lecture: “A Celtic Pilgrim's
Progress”—Alexander Irvine.
Sunday: ‘
9:00 Junior Chautauqua,
2:30. Community Council—Conducted
by Shoreland F, Fannon,
8:00 Dramatic Production: “Her
Husband’s Wife” or “The sign of the
Cross,” with special scenery and se
lected cast of New York players,
Monday:
9:00 Junior Chautaqua,
2:30 Junior Pageant: “The Cruise of
the Jollity—Junior Boys and Girls.
3:00 Concert—Old Fashioned Girl's
Quartet,
8:00 Concert Prelude—Olld Fashioned
Girl's Quartet,
8:30 Dramatic Tnterpretation: “The
Lady of the Decoration” Special
Scenery and Costumes—Hetty Jane
Dunaway.
Hours subject to Change by Spe
cial Announcement
. L N
Union Heads Visit
Fitzgerald Tuesday
C. U, Larrisey, Grand Vice-Presi
dent of the Order of Railway Conduc
tors, J. B, Hogshed Grand Vice-pres
ident Railway Clerks and G, W, Mar
shall, Grand Officer of the Interna
tional Machinists were in the city
yesterday in consultation with the
striking employees of the A, B, & A.
o
Rebecca Boy Dies;
. .
Victim Of Tetanus
The ten year old son of Mr, and
Mrs, W, H Griffin of Rebecca died
at the local hospital Monday morning
due to lock jaw caused by a splinter
in his toe, The child was brought
to the hospital about 2 A, M, Monday
morning, but the disease had too far
advanced to give the little sufferer
any relieve,
\ To handle cargoes of grain at
’whatever port a ship may land in Eng.
land suction unloading apparatus has
been motnted on two railway cars,
Mrs. W, W. Hughes and sons Sam
wel and E, J, drove over to Americus
Sunday and spent the day with Mr,
L Hughes,