Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, March 16, 1920, Page 7, Image 7

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Order one - half size Orlfef mailer than collar you by Ko. C4Ol _J_ Mail coupon today. Leonard-Morton & Co. Dept. 5Q3t Chicago Send the three Len-Mort Shirts No. C4OI. I wi! pay SE.9S for shirts on arrival, and examine them carefully. If lam not satisfied, will send them back and you will refund my money. Size. (One-half awe k-M than collar you wear) [ Name ] Address THE ATLANTA 1...-'.LEFKLY JOURNAL. Ex-Governor Jos. M. Brown Says Herbert Hoover’s Name Should Go on the Ballot He Will Not Vote for Either Palmer or Hoove; At tacks President and Ex ’ collates Labor Unions _____________ Kx-Governor Joseph M. Brown has I sent to The Journal a copy of his I reply to Chairman J. J. Flynt, of the I state Democratic executive commit tee, in which he casts his vote as a I committeeman in favor of placing Hoover’s name on the primary ballot, but announces that he will not sup port either Hoover or Palmer for the nomination. His letter to Chairman Flynt follows: Marietta, Ga„ March 11, 1920. Hon. J. J. Flynt, Chairman State 'Democratic Executive Qommittee, Griffin, Ga. Jly Dear Sir: Your favor of March I did not reach me till 9th inst., hav ing been missent by the postoffice : employes to Memphis, Tenn., and for j warded thence on March 7 to me as per your envelope address. Allow me to say that at the time • the subcommittee acted, its action > was certainly based upon correct gen i eral premises. But developments since your meeting, in my opinion, have undoubtedly called for second thought. Beasoning from the second thought, [ did not know until after the meet ing of the entire stat© committee that Mr. Hoover was reported in at least one newspaper to have voted I for President Wilson in 1916; and I ; now recall that Mr. Hoover strongly urged the return of a Democratic congress in 1918, these acts, to my mind, giving him a prima facie right to be considered a Democrat. But there is another complication which has a weighty, in fact, a vital, bearing in our state. This is the an nouncement by Attorney' General Palmer of his candidacy, based upon an indorsement of all of Pregident Wilson’s acts as president. No one can dispute that Mr. Palmer is a Democrat. But any Georgian who will vote for Mr. Palmer on his platform will log ically vote to indorse President Wil son’s course in promoting anarchy in Georgia, besides indorsing th© presi dent’s general course in bending to, if not positively favoring, an organ ization of men, composed largely of non-naturalized foreigners, which has set up inside the Unitfl£l States a government ■which President Wil son has, by his acts, conceded, is su perior in compelling power to the government which the constitution of the United States has ordained. That organization Is the American Federation of Labor, ehaded by Sam uel Gompers. Mr. Gompers has open ly declared that labor organizations will do their will, “law or no law.” He has openly told a senate commit tee that if congress enacted a cer tain law he would have no hesita tion in disobeying it. During th© war there were 6,029 strikes by laborers, of which the de partment of labor’s report indicate that more than ninety per cent were .by "organized labor.” In 4,201 of these strikes the above department shows that there were\ 2,386,285 strikers. Hence, there were probably more than 3,000,000 strikers In all the strikes. In other words, the American Fed eration of Labor matched every sol dier whom th© United States had, with a bayoneted gun, enduring hardships and perils in France, with a labor striker, with tools thrown down and war work suspended, in our country. And those who stayed at work forced the-ir work-day down to eight hours, while myriads of farmers and other patriots were working from twelve to fourteen hours per day. Yet President Wilson referred to labor unionists, who were conduct ing organized obstruction to our gov ernment with the words: “My Dear Mr. Gompers,—you and your fellow patriots,” and put them equal to the American soldier in claims upon the gratitude of our people! And after the mine workers’ branch of the Gompers’ federation agreed to return to work, following their attempt to coerce the public and the government by paralyzing the Industries of the country and freezing the people, President Wilson i instead of rebuking them for their I hostility to the public weal, asked their prresident to let him express his appreciation of their “patriotic action” in giving over their malevol ent desgn and returning to work. But, coming now to the state of Georgia: In 1916, the Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railroads of America, after pursuing for years a course stained by blood in other states, and in Augusta, in our own state, organized the street car employes in Atlanta, in clear de fiance of the law, as construed against labor unions in the Hitchman Coal and Coke company case, and brought about a strike lasting sev eral weeks, during which loyal mot ormen were shot at and one can was blown up, the dynamite tearing off a young lady’s foot, horribly mutilat ing her sister’s shoulder and shat tering a young man’s ankle, crip pling hi mfor life. A number of other acars were blown up, but none of them with such tragic results. The courts and other authorities, aided by public opinion, expelled this an archic organization from Atlanta. But in the spring of 1918 President Wilson virtually coerced the com pany to allow the same Amalgamat es association to organize its em ployes again, w’ith the result that they promptly brought on another 1 strike, to the great inconvenience of i the public and in violation of the law ’of the state. Later in 1918, it organized the ' street car employes in Columbus and . Savannah, and caused strikes which resulted in the wounding of passen gers, Including women and children ■in these two cities. I And now its members have again (paralyzed street oar service in At lanta. i As I said in a letter published to day, I have secured a liAt of more than forty cities in states from ocean to ocean in which this amal gamated association of street car employes has been tne cause of riots resulting in either property damage or in wounding or killing people, ■and in some cities all three of these .crimes. ’ Yet, this is the organization of 'anarchy and murder, which Presi ■ dent Woodrow Wilson has forced lagain upon our state capital, etc., rafter her courts and people nad ex ’pelled it. Within any month of any ■year our Georgia people are hence Jliable to be maimed or murdered by >the acts of this crime-committing J organization, soy all of which we ■must, of course, “thank” our Presi dent Woodrow Wilson. , In like manner President Wilson’s chosen associate, Samuel Gompers, rsaw to it that the textile workers ’in Columbus and Macon were or ganized. They promptly began riot ing in their attempts to force re luctant nonunion laborers to join their union. Firearms 'A’ere used in •Columbus, but the union men got the worst. of it. , In Macon, the union men and women invaded the home of a woman worker who had refused to strike and brutally whipped her and her daughter, under their own roof. They attempted to force their way Into another woman worker’s home that they might whip her and her five daughters, who (the six) worked in a factory and had refused to strike, but fled in disorder when she open ed fire upon them with a pistol. A striker also shot into a truck carry ing nonunion workers down astreet to the factory and wounded two women. Can the manhood of Geor gia imagine any attack more vitally shaking the very foundations of our civilization than this upon women in their homes or attempting by patient toil to earn an honest living? Yet. we have not had from Presi dent Wilson or from Samuel Gom pers one word of condemnation, re buke, or even remonstrance directed toward these doers of brutal violence against the women and children of Georgia. Why? Possibly, because President Wilson’s alliance with the shedding of the blood of Georgia women and children is a necessary factor in his plan “to make the world safe for democracy,” while his partner, Gompers, openly says his unions will do their will, “law or no law.” But in any case, these events are the logical result of President Wilsons alliance with the hydra of anarchy. Now, President Wilson is a man of ideals, some of them very im practicable ones, some quite disas trous to the public, as he works them out. For example, he proposes —don’t forget—to make the world safe for democracy, but, as I have just shown his process of doing so includes the making of the state of Georgia an exploiting for labor union, anarchy and murder. The Democratic party of Georgia, on the contrary, is not a party of Alvin YoritjZjennessee Sergeant Colonel V/ w W» ym Governors Staff A E . \ w M. Tennessee A - ■ ■ v® I Sißz ■ '’Us® IV- I ' iIR- ' -• ■'' ■ * -K '/ '-I a < * iMAAV ■ v aMRMp-I •• bbS ' laKAX ■' ■ ' cQPYRtGH? Alvin c. j ( yrt PALL MALL . TENN -' On October 8, 1918, Sergeant Alvin York and seven privates, advancing on a German position in the Argonne, faced an entire machine gun battalion. Official records show that York killed 20 Germans with his automatic pistol and rifle, captured 132 prisoners, and put 35 1 machine guns out of action. York received the highest American military decoration — the Congressional Medal of Honor. Upon his return from France, the Tennessee Legislature commissioned him a Colonel, for life, on the Governor’s staff. ■ A Blank-Draught Famih- ■ Ipß To a reporter, who visited the York home, Colonel g||| York authorized the publication of the following |||| |M statement: “My mother has used in our family for years, Thedford’s Black- Draught for torpid liver, stomach trouble, headache and other troubles. We certainly can recommend it and gladly do so. “We use it constantly and call it our family medicine. My mother doesn’t think she could get along without it,- and we, when children, dared WS not com ptai n unless we wanted to be dosed with 1 Thedford’s Bhck-Djmght | wHli J 4 J H 444 ideals. It Is not dwelling amid cor uscant clouds, feasting on ambrosia and sipping nectar: it does not spend its days with eyes directed afar try ing to “catch visions.” Nay, It is a party which .stands for principles drawn from the Ten Commandments, the Magna Charta and the Declara tion of Independence. These are based upon God-established facts and immutable rights which hold the poor man and the rich man on the same level of opportunity, obliga tion and protection if, and so long as. both are truthful, honest and just. I love the Democratic party. It Is the party of my father and of both my grandfathers. It honored my fa ther in Georgia as it has honored scarcely another man. It has honored me beyond what 1 would claim as my merits. Therefore, by the sacred bonds of gratitude I am held to the obligation to protect, to the limit of my powers and of my natural life, the fair fame and basic rights of our party, and iwth them the in herent rights of the people of our state, of which rights the chief is the right to live, the right to be protected from anarchy and murder. If I have appeared to dwell too long upon, certain tragic happenings in our common country and our state it is because, in taking issue with the titular head of our party and thereby with potent political and (misguided) moral thought in our state, it has been incumbent on me to make sure the fact that I stand on firm ground. Those who contest my judgment, therefore, must prove, first that I have not given the true record in Georgia of the Amalgated Associa tion of Street Car Employes, or of the unionized textile workers; or, second, that President Wilson has not had aught to do with bringing the said Amalgamated association b”ck into Georgia, or has rebuked Gompers and his labor union asso ciates for their acts of violence against the people of Georgia, in cluding as the chief sufferers their women and children; or, third, that encouragement or aid to forces of anarchy which have been shedding the blood of people of Georgia, while condemnable in any other man is right and highly commendable it done by President Woodrow Wilson. I distinctly assert the negative of each of these contingent proposi tions, and, even though I be attacked by those I would protect, I say: President Wilson has forfeited all cl im to our support by his course in making the law-abiding men, women and children of Georgia his sacrifice to the Gompers’ federa tion’s Minotaur. Therefore, as Attorney General Palmer is basing his candidacy upon an endorsement of all the official acts of President Wilson, I hold that the Democratic party of Georgia cannot afford to make him its choice in the presidential primary. In other words, it cannot afford to en dorse an administration which has made itself responsible for fastening upon our state certain anarchic or ganizations which have shed the blood of, I repeat, not only the men but also of the very women and chil dren of Georgia. And, while leaving all others to determine their moral responsibility, I will add that I would forfeit my self-respect if I did not at all times stand ready to protect at every hazard against even the president of the United States, in his self-chosen alliance with the forces of anarchy and murder, the weak and the feeble who are not only the dearest objects of our de votion. but are the very wards of the conscience of the manhood of our state. Let it never be said then that the voices of the blood of Geor gians are crying from the ground, against us who were recreant to our duty to protect them. Now, as to Mr. Hoover, let me say: Inasmuch as. since the sub committee made its ruling, condi tions have been found possible for the entrance as a candidate of one ■who indorses an administration which has promoted a process of bloodshed in our state, I cannot see my way clear to deny to any Dem ocrat who wishes to vote for the man who fed the starving people of Europe, the right to do so. It can at least be said for Mr. Hoover that his work was for one of the noblest objects which can inspire the practical man, viz: the feeding of the famishing whose miseries were due not to their improvidence but to the crimes of the wicked. I concede that this is not exact ly “regular;” but neither is it “reg- ular” for us to have admitted into our primary for choosing an officer to conduct government a candidate who indorses all the acts of one who has proven himself to have his hand in the glove of anarchy as he handles affairs affecting the lives of the people of Georgia. I have no idea of voting myself, for Mr. Hoover. On the contrary, shall reserve my vote for a Demo crat who stands for established democratic principles. But my deliberate judgment is that our convention should send to San Francisco a delegation of our ablest party men, that they should go uninstructed as to candidates, but obligated to judge among the can didates put before the convention there, at any stage of its proceed ings, that one deemed the mos’ fit and cast Georgia’s ballot for him. Yet, while I prefer that the dele gation vote as a unit, I am willing, if our state convention so wills, that each delegate be left free to vote individually. Very truly yours. JOSEPH M. BROWN, ’ N;ne-Year-01d Girl Is . Held as Witness in Mother’s Murder Case NEW YORK, March 13.—Little nine-year-old Conchetina Conti today was being held without bail as a material witness in connection with the shooting or ner mother, Mrs. Evangelina Conti here last Monday, for which Maria Tucci, the child’s aunt, has been indicted on a charge of murder. Miss Tucci, a twenty year-old Italian girl, surrendered to the police in Atlantic City last Wed nesday. Assistant District Attorney Joyce quizzed the child yesterday. He de clared that after a fit of weeping and hysteria she admitted that a pre vious statement in regard to her mother wishing her and her aunt to lead lives of shame was untrue. Ac cording to Mr. Joyce, she said her first story was one in which she had been coached bv her aunt. •IVUiBUaI, MAKCn 10, l»2O< FREMH WILL SEND ND INSTRUCTIONS ON WILSON CHARGE I PARIS. March 13.—The French I government has not and will not send I any instructions to Ambassador Jus . serand in Washington regarding President Wilson’s charge of mili tarise' Igalnst France, it was said at the foregn office this morning, A report was received that Ambassa dor-Jusserand stated that on his own irluiative he called upon Under Sec retary of State Polk and told him of tA* surprise and emotion caused in '■■Ei'Anoe by the president’s letter. Z ’BI'Ta ambassador added that he had I rna/le iro representations. 1 N°yconiment was obtainable in offi cial darcies with the exception of ex 'pressjxms of curiosity as to whether President Wilson would take the op portunity afforded by M. Jusserand’s call on Secretary Polk to correct the disagi?eable impression his assertions have made here. Carranza Troops Fire Into Factory Workers SAN ANTONIO. Tex., March 13. Carranza troops fired into a mob of clothing factory workers who were attempting ot storm the penitentiary at Puebla, Mexico, a few nights ago for the purpose of liberating three labor agitators, and several persons were killed, according to a report re ceived here today. The outbreak followed a mass meeting at the Hidalga theater, dur ing which there were many acclaims for “free Russia” and the Bolshevik. Following the outbreak, Governor Alfonso Cabrera, brother of the min ister of finance, issued a proclamation threatening the deportation of for eign laborers should the disorders continue. WILL THE INFLUENZA | RETURN? Public Health Authorities Predict its Recurrence / Guard Against it by Building Up the Blood Pepto-Mangan Creates Rich Red Blood and Increases Strength Surgeon General Blue, of the Unit ed States Public Health Service, in a recent statement frortt Washington, warns the public that the much dreaded influenza epidemic will prob ably return this fall and winter. All medical authorities agree that the weak, bloodless, run-down individual is more likely to contract this (aa well as any other infectious disease) than is the strong, robust, red-blood ed man or woman. In view of these facts, it is wise to use every effort to build up the blood and thus Increase the bodily resistahce to the invasion of the germs of the disease, Gude’s Pepto-Mangan is an absolutely .de pendable red-blood builder in all conditions of lowered vitality not due to serious disease of the vital organs. It improves the appetite, im-' parts color to the cheeks, and creates new hope and ambition in those who have become pale, weak, and listless. Physicians recommend Gude’s Pepto- Mangan. When you order, be sure the word “Gude's” is on the package. Without “Gude’s,” it is not Pepto- Mangan. Furnished in both liquid and tablet form. For sale by all druggists.—(Advt.) NEGLECTING THAT COLDORCOUGH? Why, when Dr. King’s New Discovery so promptly checks it IT’S natural you don't want to be careless and let that old cold or cough drag on or that new attack develop seriously. Not when you can get such a proved suc cessful remedy as Dr. King's New Discovery. Cold, cough, grippe, croup does not resist this standard reliever very long. Its quality is as high today as it always has been —and it’s been growing steadily in popularity for more than fifty years. 60c. and $1.20 a bottle at all druggists. Constipated? Here’s Relief Not that often harmful, always violent and temporary help that comes from harsh purgatives, but the comfortable, gratifying, correc tive regulation of stubbord bowels so pronounced in Dr. King's New Life< Pills. Tonic in action, they promote free bile flow, stir up the lazy, thorough ly but gently cleanse the system of waste matter and fermenting foods, and give you keen zest for hard work and healthful recreation. Al<s druggists—2sc.—(Advt.) * BUNIONS! Pain Stops Instantly— Hump Vanishes TRY IT AT MY RISK New, marvelous way to treat bunions. Stops pain almost instantly—banish j.-,es the ugly, hump an d tired, achey,' swollen, burning con- ' dition. You can wear WapSSjKL 1 a smaller shoe with ft vomfort. Test it at my > First trial con- Vinces. aßOgja No clumsy apparat us, no rubber mould or protector, no uncorn fortable leather shield or felt i )!l<s ’ 110 P laster nor .sSZl&uiSjl mussy salve or liquid. It WSaIS&W is PEDODYNE, for Bun ions. You will say it is 'HIWw/r wonderful—aniazing, so TZj quick, so sure does it y !ict - waste time : and money on useless methods. Don't suffer. WwlV 1 Try PEDODYNE at my yV risk - Write today be g Y fore you do another thing. Just say “1 want to try I’EDO- Address KAY LABORATORIES, Dept. A-340, 538 B. Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois. tfLTIE PRICES SMASHED. )CJ3 i.mt. OUR LOSS, YOUR *0 •, GA I N ' Elegantly en- Staved, double hunting c,r open face case, stem wind and set gold ' vatc l ) - Very fine full tl Yl jeweled movement, A E q GUARANTEED AC- l curate time I'• TWSSMWh’IM KEEPER. Send NO UafKSb■' MONEY. Special lim ited time offer. 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No comparison fQCx : o- with double tread tires which aris sewed. 1 Don’t Send a Penny Our offer must be sensational -Me when we can safely say, “Bon’t Send a Penny.” You nek noth- I ' ng - Eay only upon arrival, flt V if?/ a satisfied We assume all possible g risk Your absolute satisfaction iy-vF W-7 g positively guaranteed. Lowest Prices Tube Free Size Price Size Price 30x3 $ 7.65 32x41$ 12.55 32x3« 9.65 34x41i 14.85 31x4 10.75 25x4# 15.251 22x4 11.95 36x4)4 15.<H 33x4 12.85 35x5 15.65 34x4 14.65 37x5 15.95 SEND your order TODAY. Nomoney now—psyon arrival Examine tires and if not what you want, re turn them at our expense and we will at once refund your money. Fairest, squarest offer you ever heard of! Bigchancetocut your tire cost right in two! State size wanted and whether Clincher, Straight Side, Non-Skid or Plain. Write today Immediateshinment. MITCHELL TIRE & RUSHER COMPANY ‘ IIS E. 39th Street Ospt. 136 Chien** 7