Newspaper Page Text
NOVEMBER Id, 1920.
IRISH BISHOPS NAMED
BY CARDINAL LOGUE TO
DISCUSS IRISH
Washington.—A delegation of
bishops, to he selected by
Logue has been asked to appear
soon to testify as to conditions in
land before the American
Ireland, the commission announces
ter a preliminary conference.
It has been decided to begin
public hearings November 17, the
nouncement says, and, in addtiion
cabling Cardinal Logue asking
appointment of the bishops, the
mission expects to hear mayors of
eral Irish cities and other Irish
nesses as well as Americans'who
recently visited Ireland.
MIMSTRY OF HYGIENE
WOULD RAISE BIRTH
RATE OF THE
Paris.—France’s efforts to raise
birthrate and lower the death
by means of the new ministry of
giene, are too recent to be judged
comprehensive statistics. The
ance of the problem, however, is
en pessimistic prominence anew
publication of the labor ministry's
tistics for 1919.
There were three deaths to
births last year. In only one
ment, Finisterre, did births
deaths. In a number deaths were
ble and even nearly treble the
ber of births.
Ruling On Shipment Of
Washington.—Exporting of cotton
grown in El Paso county. Texas,
der quarantine against the pink
Orleans, and the interstate movement
to Northern points for consumption
Louisiana cotton linters which have
been in storage will be permitted un¬
der quqarantine against the pink boll
worn in Louisiana and Texas an¬
nounced recently by (he department
of agriculture. The new regulations
became effective November 1.
Island Of Cuba Voting For
Havana, Cuba.—Cuba voted for a
new president and the outcome is be
ing awaited with considerable appro
hension. The end of the campaign,
regarded as the most bitter since the
island gained the right to govern it¬
self, found old party lines broken,
with a right-about shift in leadership
Platform issues apparently were for¬
gotten in the fight for control of the
government by Jose Miguel Gomez
Liberal nominee, and Dr. Alfredo Za
yas, candidate of the old Conservator
or Coalition, party.
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CAMPAIGN TO TELL
OF GEORGIA
-
INTENSE DRIVE TO RAISE
TON'S $40,000 FOR BIG “ADVER¬
TISE GEORGIA” MOVEMENT
STATE NEWS OF
Brief !^:ws Items Gathered Here
There From All Sections
Of The State
-
Atlanta.— Members of the
Advertising club and other
interested in the raising of forty
sand dollars, Fulton county’s quota
the Advertise Georgia movement,
“snap into it and bend every
toward accomplishment of their part
the campaign.
Approximately four thousand
have been mailed out to
tive Atlantans from Enterprise
quarters in the rotunda of the
capitol, urging that the recipients
in their subscriptions as early as
sible and assist in the movement
lanta is making to help Georgia
form the world about her
ties in a three hundred thousand
vertising campaign through the
widely circulated of the nation’s
riodicals.
There will be a luncheon session
more than a hundred of Atlanta's
ing citizens at which detailed plans
intensive action during the next
days will he finally threshed out.
lowing this session, the rest of
week ending November 6 will be
ed by other events and action
in the opinion of those
should put Atlanta's quota at its
before the end of that week.
Hundreds of replies are being
ed to tlie letters which have
been mailed out to the
of foreign manufacturing and
cial interests in Atlanta, asking their
co-opertaion in the movement.
Chairman Goodhart of the Fulton
county committee, will present the
matter to the general council and
mayor at the next meeting of that
\ body. This arrangement Tins been
made through Mayor Key, who has
announced his hearty support of the
movement, and it is expected that the
co,,nci11 "i’ 1 P^fte the move an ap-
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COPELAND’S PHARMACY
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA
propriation. The next meeting of
Fulton county commissioners will
(he matter presented to that body, and
the sentiment of the members
expressed indicates that that body
men will give aid to the
program.
The need for such an advertising
program, or rather the benefit which
may be expected from it, can be
ly gleaned from the following letter
received by Governor Dorsey from a
citizen of Milwaukee, Wis.:
“Hugh M. Dorsey, Governor, Atlan¬
ta, Ga. Dear Sir: For a long time I
wanted to know various things about
Georgia, and since you are governor
of that state 1 thought you would be
in position to inform me.
l want to know about the climate,
people, industries, vegetation, animal
life and all things of importance. Is
it swampy? Is it true that there are
a great many snakes down there, and
are they poisonous? Does the ‘water
melon sugar' prove successful?
“I am mostly interested in the Key
stone pecan orchards of Calhoun and
Dougherty counties and would like to
hear all you can tell me of them.
“Thanking you in advance, I am,
"Respectfully yours.
“MRS. LILLIAN SEYFERT.
“495 Thirty-Eighth Street,
“Milwaukee, Wis.”
U Baby Lodge At Macon Chartered
Macon.-Among the new charters
for Masonic lodges granted at the ses¬
sion of the grand lodge of Georgia,
was a charter for the Marshall A. Weir
lodge, No. 448. This is the “baby”
lodge of Macon and has been working
under a special dispensation since
May 10, during which time it has plac¬
ed itself among the leading lodges of
the city. The lodge was named for
the late Marshall A. Weir, one of the
host known Masons of Georgia at the
time' of his death. He was a 33d°
Mason and secretary of the Scottish
rite body for a number of years.
Fourteen Wholesale Grocers Indicted
Houston, Tex.—The Sugarland In-,
dustries and fourteen wholesale gro
eery concerns scattered over Texas
have been indicted by the federal
• grand jury here, which has been in
vestigating alleged violations of the
Lever anti-profiteering act.
THREE CARS A MINUTE.
(From Grand Rapids Press.)
Sometimes an astonishing piece of
news comes in so brief and matter of
fact form that a person is apt to give
it but fleetingt notice despite its im¬
mense possibilities. Such is a ten
line item from Detroit stating that
the Ford motor plant on Oct. 26
turned out 4,688 cars in a single day
and but thirty-three less than 100,
000 in the month.
Every owner of an automobile
knows that there are hundreds of
parts in it, large and small. Every
one of those parts has to be handled
,
separately, placed in its proper po¬
sition and securely attached. Before
they are so placed they have to be
manufactured. The majority of them
now are made in the home plant, of
metal chemically tested before it is
used. In the early days of automobile
manufacture only a few hundred cars
were made in a year by any one con¬
cern. When one finally produced a
thousand it was the wonder of the
trade.
Now one plant turns out nearly
five times that many in a single day.
It has produced at the rate of a com¬
plete automobile every eighteen and
a half seconds, three in a minute and
about one hundred and fifty in an i
hour. And it is primarily due to the
Water your business with a little printer’s
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organizing and inventive genius of
one man who happened to have a lik¬
ing- for that particular work. His crit¬
ics have said that the success of his
company was due to his associates
rather than to him. But in the last
three years -his old associates have
left him literally by hundreds. Yet
the plant proceeds to greater ac¬
complishments than ever.
It requires a combination of tem¬
perament and genius to make a suc¬
cess of anything. The greatest genius
in the world is worthless without the
temperament to go ahead and utilize
it.
—o
WOODROW WILSON
Men that today are belittling
Woodrow Wilson in his broken con¬
dition of health will live to look upon
their language with shame in a few
years. Worn with having borne the
heaviest burdens of any man since
the days of Christ, he may have let
a bolt slip here and a nut come loose
there, but it stands to reason that
the test of time will show that he is
head and shoulders above any man
that ever criticised him. No man on
earth, be who he may, could have
carried the burdens that he has. His
tory will place Wilson in an ever
lasting and undying niche of fame
PAGE THREE
and glory, while the swash-buckters
that were not fit to latch his shoes,
will be long forgotten. We know that
he has made mistakes. BUT we do
know that he has made a helluva
sight less than his critics would have
made under the same pressure. God
is good to America. Think what would
have happened if Lodge, Johnson,
Reed, Taft or some of that gang had
been president during the war. Think
of it and shudder, you bull-rushing
critics. Bainbridge Post-Search
•O'
FARM BOOKKEEPING
Farmers, as a rule, are highly in¬
in their methods, and
business conditions vary widely.
ready-made systems of
accounts seldom bring out all
facts that the farmer ought to
Systems must be developed to
each man’s requirements, and ef¬
to shape one’s needs according
a prepared system not based pri¬
on these needs will almost in¬
result in failure. Write the
States Department of Agri¬
Washington, D. C., for
Bulletin 511, containing an
of the principles of simple
bookkeeping.