Newspaper Page Text
6
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2BY BUD FISHER WW B| TSrtl!
Sinking the Lusitania in
The Sea of Georgia Politics
Or “Read ’Em and IVeep”
~ Amazing Inconsistency
•'"-THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN: The
Atlanta Constitution has been mak
?l«Z much of Senator Hoke Smith’s
.’alleged declaration that the sinking
-”tff the Lusitania was not a sufficient
’reason for a declaration of war
Germany, although the sena,
tpr ; denies the words the Constitution
jigrsistently puts into his mouth. In
reified, ihe senator goes so far as to
say that if some responsible party
make affidavit to the statement
Slat the senator used, anywhere, at
.any time, the words the Constitution j
DontSend
a Penny
Send only the eoapon
MM and we will rend
> ou theee three
elegant shirts
<’««"3fca?^Sß^. Sencl no mon
Made ol
'UgfSg&f bea u 11 f o
wfl<Shf!s‘ gKte-iriSMWnisterial.eul
/&*, S&E nSrlwon latest mo-
Elegant
UKftF gSffSfag; Stt style
r tom-bacb
TSDZgT./JSjuWCTiffs. Richest.
'Jxtlla fani newest color
Bgglst ml iSf cor " i> ' nnt,ona ' n
iSi i^rS ßmar test pat-
S s terns. Colors
JBK«Sg guaranteed fast.
MKaEg lali I f you don’t find
W 7’«ZwM thcm the biggest
■w iZlta..w» > value you
saw. send
them back. No
; to you at oil.
"JsHHsglj -gSi o obligation.
- A. 9enri f bc
'HfeWfefc fc £ '-tf-tST: coupon—now
Swwff while this
■S'. r *s '-£?» r -' ff ’' r is on.
Don't let this
gay.' jg/.-y tih KX euchsbirtewhen
e' S■> here you get all
three for only
WESSS Wlr/ F Af-i®» s -* s ’ And re
greMfc fgay/ sE -^EWmember. all sub-
tSsVS&sSfc haai£j&. ajMjec t to your
■F°lß^E£JEM|^^yWMHfcawMrnn r r > v ß l No re
s’' : '¥"'' SIBES®*~&THi , ’ erencee reguirwi
.' Your simple re-
{rK-BPsgggjffii ae3t on tbe
.IKlßftZ&Sslltv, coupon in all
sEßsMlJkW^^^>3?^S^ you need to
Zfa. semi Keep
ffffW. £ W3K von r iwnei
•ijßKt'M: the shirta
ffiOwWwWf You
iObJMgat'-g Get
■ All
sHKrnBOMf Three
WWwWfW* Shirts
’ " w ’°P° a brings
three of these
Shirts.
WSgjffW&: # lffiraahW* Exam i n e them
i§2j?3sWi3i®®3a^SS^£:®®^i^B car<:fu!l; ' C o m
nrc with any
vou sre of '
anywhere.
WWWW^? Keep them only if
11 f 'factory in
W3y - Cbtier
rta one - half size
„ ‘ban collar yon
>y Ko. C4JI Mail eoapon today.
Leonard-Morton & Co.
Oept. 6056 Chicago
Send the three Lea-Mort Shirts No. C4OI. I Wil
OMS SS-AS for shirts on arrival, and examine their
tarefnlly. If lam not satisfied, will send them back
and yon will ref and my money.
50M..... J
. .. (One-half alee less than collar yoo wear;
Name
Address
6000 wiles
GUARANTEE
—National GOOD-WEAR Double-Tread Re
'joEQ|L constructed Tires represent quality, valae,
Jtsrt*'ia service and satisfaction, and are guaran-
ASf A\ teed for 6,000 miles. Our tires do away
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VOr f° r the wearing qualities and enduring
DOT bB powers of National GOOD-WEAR Tires
XX> and Tubes
pQr Wl Raliner FREE with Every Tire.
Xsc |e Tubes Guaranteed Freeh Steck.
ncS ißj Size Tires Tubes Rae Tires Tubes
DO IB 30x3....„|5.M (1.60 Mat (8.76 (2.00
>QC EgH 30x3M- 6.50 1.75 3«x41f... tO.OO 8.00
X?< f® 31X3K... 6,75 IJS 3x456... 11.00 3.15
OQC EE 82X8J5... 7.00 ?•« 30x4)6... H-60 3.40
DOC rE 31x4 8 - w 3 *»*- >2.60 3.50
SQO fE 32x4 BSS «’4> W’A...„. 12.75 3.06
82X4 ’ 8 “° 57x5....„ 12.75 3.75
/ Send 12 demit -*»»*each tirs and tl for
V g <n'h tube cTSadia bslaiwc C. 0. D. Tires
%Si> S chipped snbj’e-c to your examination.
State whet*u tj S. CAL. (Q. D.). plain
or N. S. is dOsfred. AH same price.
MTtSOOD-WEAR TIRE & W CO.
1118’WMhington Blvd., Dept, 43. Chicago, 111.
mNEiONTHITOW
Immediate nossession on ourW* y- —jLsaw
liberal Easy Monthly Psyment
plan—the most liberal terms ever -,aF iinry
offered on a high grade bicycle. 1 AaK^r(
FACTORY TO RIDER prices
save you money. We make our jKMfjti ''jKJ
bicycles in our own now model 7>i Alli
factory and sell direct to you. We WR{l®| -
Mtree) quality in them and our
bicycles must satisfy you. !'Jg»S Si S@l
44 STYLES, colors, and sizes KwPSffiijMfreVJ’ in
to ehooee from in our famous T\~gSsfi*lin. ut/ra
RANGER line. Send for big, lij®
beautiful catalog. Jr., ?w lIwJ&S 65,
Msmy parents advance the l .tIKK MIS . ,X'. «S
first payment and energetic boys j
by odd jdbe—paperroutes, deliv- - ■MT 'V, IS
ery for Stores, etc., make the bicycle earn U > ;
money to meet the small Payments. \\v( H I]U
MLIVERED FREE on Approval and 30 X& \7JF
DAYS TRIAL. • Select the bicycle you want
ar.d_terms that soil you—cash or easy paymentiT
TPlßEß wheels and parts for all bicycles—at half
I'SliCw usual prices. SEND NO MONEY but write
today for the big new catalog, prices and terms.
M gr a CYCLE COMPANY
|<S Dapt b-180 Chicago
HBSgsggSSSSS all POST
- X THESE F n&E
This Victory lied Persian Ivory
'SfxyjP' Pendant and Neck Chain, 30 inches
a'l '7 long; these 4 Gohl plated Rings
■MF 1 * K« . \£/. _ and this lovely Gohl plated Laval- '4MM tJW|B IMli,J ,Ujf MM
Here and Neck Chain will ALL he
■" '' Given FREE by us to anyone sell- ' , '""<nh' a z < , o/IMs\wA'
inr only 12 pieces of Jewelry at 10 cents each. Victory Red is all the rage.
-. B. D. MEAD MFC. CO., Providence, R. I. ' <
TffiK TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
attributes to him, he will endeavor
“to put such party in the peniten
tiary for false swearing.” Rather
strong words, but we suppose the
senator means them. Anyway, the
affidavit has not been forthcoming.
But let’s see what the Constitu
tion’s attitude with respect to the
sinking of the Lusitania was.
On Sunday, May 9, 1915. the At
lanta Constitution said editorially:
Shocked as we are in common
with the rest of the world over
the horror of the appalling loss
of life on the X>usitanla—now,
i more than ever, our country
I should keep cool and be guided
by judgment rather than by amo
tion.
We may admit everything that
may be charged in connection
with this horrible disaster in
which there is involved, the add
ed guilt of premeditation. We
may condemn the wanton disre
gard of the lives of neutrals, not
to speak of those of non-com
batants. We may protest CHr
many's ignoring our warning
that for loss of American Ufa
in her submarine operations she
rj would be held to “strict aceount-
« ability.” AMD, AMT* AXX. XS
•• SAID, WE MUST STTLD—GO
£ SLOW, EXCEPT AS TO MAK-
i!
tl - —
< Statement of the ownership, management,
e ‘irculation. etc., required by the act of con
k cress of August t4 r 1912, of The Atlanta
i-Tri-Weekly Journal, published daily and Sun-
Jday at Atlanta, Ga., for April 1, 1920.
b STATE CF GEORGIA—County of Fulton, ss: !
:. Before me, a nptary public in and for the i
dstate and county aforesaid, personally ap- 1
tpeared Chas. D. Atkinson, who, having been!
J duly sworn according to law, deposes and I
0 -ays that he is the business manager of The
; Atlanta Tri-Weekly Journal, and that the I
. following is, to the best of his knowledge
e and belief, a true statement of the owner- j
J ship, management (and if a daily paper, the ,
’circulation), etc., of the aforesaid publication :
a for the date shown in the atiove caption, iv- 1
•. quired by the act of August 24. 1912, em-1
9 bodied in section 443. Postal Laws and Reg- |
J ulatlons, printed on the reverse of this form, i
J to-wit:
j 1. That the names and addresses of the I
• publisher, editor, managing editor, and busi- |
• ness managers are:
r Publisher. The Atlanta Journal Company, I
• Atlanta, Ga. |
; Editor. John S. Cohen, Atlanta, Ga.
, Managing editor, James R. Gray, Jr., At- i
I’anta, Ga. ’
> Business managers, Chas. D. Atkinson. (
J business manager: John A. Brice, secretary j
’and treasurer, Atlanta. Ga.
2. That the owners are: (Give names and
addresses of individual owners, or. if a cor- :
poration. give its name anil the name and i
addresses of stockholders owning or holding
1 per cent or more of the total amount of I
stock).
Names and Addresses of Stockholders of The i
Atlanta Journal Company. Holding One
Per Cent or More of the Total
J - Amount of Stock April Ist, 1920.
, Common. Preferred,
) Mrs. Jas. R. Gray. Atlan-
’ ta. Ga. 334’ 7« 1-3
: Tames Richard Grav, Jr.,
• Atlanta, Ga. ...'. ft 29 1.313
I’nman pray, Atlanta, Ga. 829 1-2 24 1-6
, Tennte Gray Pearce, At-
■ la ?t»- <*«• 604 1-2 11 i 2 1-6
. r ordeba’. .-Gray. Brumby, <-■• >■•
Marietta.- Ga. .;. <504 172 911’1-6
[ ’Tattie Fannie Gallogly,
, Atlanta, Ga6o4 1-2 ■■■. 9
Jreasu.ry Stock (See
Note) 10J9 2_5
Estate of Morton Smith,
Atlanta. Ga S4l 1-3 1 2-5
John S. Cohen, Atlanta,
1 Ga. ....;. 500
1 ?• rt and
■ Philip Dexter. Boston.
1 Mass. 4Qg
Airs. Harriot P. Brandon’.
Atlanta. Ga 334 11-18 53
H. H. Schaul, Atlanta,
Ge. 250 5
John D. Simmons, Atlan-
T !’• G ?‘ •-•:,••••••. 201 30
John A. Brice, Atlanta
_ f ’» 150
Estate of L. DeGive. At-
lanta Go i S j. s 140
A g« C ’ K nff ’ AUanta ’
Chas T». Atkinson, Atlan- lo ° S
fa - Ga 7 - s 3
The remaining stock is owned bv divers
persons, none of whom own as mneh as -<no,
,? stock of the company
has no voting power, being a 6 per cent
stock, the dividends n f which must he ns id
before any are paid on the com
stock Wfuch ,s th ® vot 'n* «r controlling
Total common stock. 5,759 shares
Total preferred . stock. 2.450 shares
NOTE-These I.IWI 2-5 shares o? pre
-rim« ,0 * k y ere ho '” T, ’ t with earnings of
Atlanta Journal Company and thev are
held m the; treasury of the company as re
tired securities.
3. That the known bondholders, mort
-1 and other security holders owning
, or holding 1 pa- cent or more of total
1 nTl ’9" nt bonds, mortgages, nr other «e
--’ rn lL'. 9r ® : there arc none sn state.)
1 This company lias no bonds, mortgages nr
’ sarnrlties other than preferred stock as
indicated.
-4. That the two paragraphs next ahom.
• giving the names of the owners, stockhnld
' er °Y a ? <l holders, if any. contain
not only the list of stockholders and seenr
‘ itv holders ns thev appear upon the hooks
nf the company, hut also, tn cases where
the stockholder nr security holder annnnrs
upon the books nf the comnnnv as-trustee
or in any other fiduciary relation the nam»
of the person or corporation for whom such
, trustee is acting, is given: <ils< that the
said two paragraphs contain statements em
bracing affiant’s full knowledge and belief
as to the circumstances nnd eonditiOnlOnn
■ der which Rtockholders and «een>-itv hoTde-s
/who do not appear upon the honks of ti’»
company as trustees, hold stock and securi
ties in n capacity ntlm- than that nf a bona
•co owner: and this affiant has no reason to
■inhere that any other person, association, or
corporation has anv fntereaf. dtreet nr in.
direct, in the said stock, bonds or other
securities than as so stated liv him.
5. That the nv.irage number nf enpies of
L cnoli issno of this puhlioatinn sold nr dis- 1
L trihnted. through the mails nr otherwise, to.
I navi subscribers during the sir months pre-’
I ceding the date shewn »L. >,« is • '.
' 86,007
(This infortpation is required from daily
publications only.)
CHAS. D. ATKINSON,
Business Manager.
■ Sworn to snd subscribed before me this :
10th day of April, 1920.
I (Seal.) B. F. BENNETT.
My commission expires March 20th, 1924.
ING CX.EAB OUB PBOTIST
AND THE FACT THAT MPA
BATXON WH.D BE DEMAND
ED.
G-exanMiy is making war, seri
ously, intensely. She grave the
world due warning: of her pur
pose to make undersea attacks
on English commerce. More than
that, prior to the sailing of the
Lusitania, duo warning was
given of the attempt that would
be made. Advertisements over
the signature of the German em
bassy in Washington forewarned
those sailing upon the glan~„
Cunarder as to what they might
expect. But all that does not ex
cuse the brutality of the Lusi
tania horror!
Our protest made to the Ger
man government at the begin
ning of the undersea campaign
was right: we should repeat it
now, following the Dusitania.
horror, in language, if possible,
even more emphatic; we should
give Germany to understand be
yond all question that we will
demand a reckoning and enforce
that demand.
BUT THAT DOES WOT MEC
ESSABILT MEAN WAB.
THE PEOPLE OF THE
UNITED STATES DO NOT
WANT A WAB; THEY HAVE
NO DESIB.E TO BECOME EM
BBOXDED IN THIS EUBOPEAN
UPHEAVAL, and conservative
America will congratulate her
self that there is at the head
of the government a man who
has demonstrated his capability
in dealing coolly, calmly ana
dispassionately with each indi
vidual incident that has brought
us into contact with the quar
rel across the Atlantic.
Xt is this same dispassionate
coolness that is needed now more
than ever, and we do not doubt
that President Wilson will he
equal to this occasion, as ho has
shown himself to be to others.
As long as there is an honorable
way for the United States to
avoid hostilities, not alone with
Germany, but with any of the
warring nations, it is the course
for us to pursue. IN NO SIN
GLE INCIDENT YET HAVE
WE SUFFERED ABRASION OF
OUB NATIONAL HONOB; NOB
XS THEBE ANY BEASON TO
BELIEVE THAT, IN ABSTAIN
ING FBOM HYSTERICAL
HASTE, WE WIDE DO SO IN
THIS INSTANCE.
There are in the ports of this
conn try some W 0,000,000 worth of
German ships, interned here for
the war. Herein may be found
Germany's bond for the satisfy
ing of American demands; and
that we will see to it that those
demands are enforced to the let
ter cannot be doubted.
Oh Tuesday, May 11, 191a, die
Constitution said editorially:
In a month or two we will be
able to view in the same light
the present German incident; WE
WEED BE ABXiE TO SEE CLEAN
LY THAT THE MOST UNFOB
TUNATE STEF THAT COUI>D
HAVE BEEN TAKEN WOULD
HAVE BEEN" A DECLABATION
OF WAB. Tlie Constitution has
not the desire to see this country
get Itself into a situation whicn
it, would regret upon the very
threshold of it; we therefore
counselled cool-headed judgment
and dispassionate reasoning as
preliminary to action.
SUPPOSE WE SJOUI.D DEC
CLARE WAB UPON GEBMANY
NOW, WHAT COULD WE DO?
NOTHING’ LESS THAN NOTH-
would amount to
without action, at least without
present action, and we wouli
have on our hands *
difficult situation than that which
now confronts ns. We could not
send an army against
that would be out of the ques
tion- There is nothing against
which we could send our navy.
thebe
AND ONE THING ONEY THA x
WOULD BE
SEIIUBZ ’£2IPS
WQBTH OP GEBMAN SHIFS
"vo’w twtsrntd mr
CAMP 0 * vTWAiar
ANYHOW—HEBE TO
UNTIL THE END Or
WAB THEY STAND AN AB
SOLUTE GUARANTEE OF GER
MAN
HI! TTWTF TO ACT W MJBlff
MACYHAS EXHAUSTED it
self AND
FUSED TO BECOGttISE OUB
BIGHT TO EXACT IT.
if hostilities must comth. let them
come as the result of Germany s
declaration, not of c n ”’ +H ere
But we do not h«ll«y®
will be occasion for it. We shall
take It for granted, until met
refusal, that Germany will
recognize our right to
reY>aration; perhaps she has al
reaty discounted that in her war
program. We can at least await
her answer, and doing that we
can gather renewed assurance
that there is no occasion for oui
plunging in the European con-
So it seem s * that the Constitution
was in agreement with the President.
Senator Smith and practically
ery responsible official m M ashing
ton, at the time of the sinking of the
Lusitania. .
The incident was not held sui
ficient for a declaration of war
the President, nor by the Congress.
It was two years later that America
entered the war —and the sinking ot
the Lusitania was not then cited
as the direct reason for the declara
tlOßut the . Constitution was not enr
gaged in May. 1915, in weaking
vengeance upon its ancient enemy,
Hoke Smith. . 1
It was not then, as it appears to be
today, so much concerned with hu
miliating Senator Smith and so lit
tle concerned with the manner and
means of doing it.
If the Constitution was sincere in
its utterances following the sinking
of- the Lusitania —when it said and
insisted that the Incident was not a
cause for war—then the Constitu
tion should be brave enough and
manly enough and fair enough to
praise Senator Smith today, and not
damn him by news items, cartoons
and editorials daily, vicously and
wickedly.
The Constitution in its hatred of
Senator Smith is beside Itself.
It is eating its own words of so
berness arid common sense in its
present frenzy against Senator Smith.
The Constitution is making an In
decent spectacle of itself, and is ut
terly discrediting much of its own
honorable history.
NAVAL STORES
SAVANNAH, April 14. —Turpentine, dull.
$2.20; no sales, receipts, none; shipments,
9; stock, 1,294.
Rosin, firm; sales. 399; receipts, nonee;
shipments, 11; stock, 15,872. Quote: B,
$15.00; I), E. F. G, 11, T, 817.25; K, 818.00;
M, $18.25: N, 818.75; window glass, $19.00;
water white, $19.25,
COTTON
NEW YORK. April 14.—The cotton mar
ket showed renewed irregularity a
somewhat smaller volume of busings dur
ing today's early trading. Liverpool was
relatively weak and after opening un
changed to 15 points lower prices here
soon sold some 17 to 28 points below last
night’s final figures with May touching
41.38 and October 35.00. Reports of un
seasonably low temperatures in eastern belt
sections led to some buying and prices
steadied up shortly after the call on cov
ering, active months recovering all but
5 or 6 points of the opening losses. If
anything, however, the weather map was
better than expected and prices eased off
again after its publication.
Fluctuations were irregular later in the
morning, with trading comparatively quiet.
Bulges met considerable realizing on liqui
dation and were not fully maintained, but
the weekly report of the weather bureau
was fully as bullish as anticipated and
must of the active mopths made new high
for the day right after its publication. May
sold up to 41.60 c and October to 35.33 c, or
about 5 to 6 points above last night’s final
figures. The continued firmness of the
stock market was also a factor on the mid
day bulge, although demand failed, to broaden
materially and the advance met renewed
profit-takings.
Fluctuations were irregular during the
early afternoon. May sold off from 41.60 to
41.40, and October from 35.35 to 35.05,
but there was trade buying on the decline
and prices held steady later with active
months ruling from 90 to 10 points net
lower.
NEW YORK COTTON
The following were the ruling prices in
the exchange today:
Tone, steady; middling, 43c, quiet.
Last Fre»
Open. High. Low. Sale. Close. Cl«s*
Jan. .. 33.20 33.39 33.05 33.05 33.05 33.20
Meh. . 32.35 32.35 32.25 32.25
May .. 41.45 41.60 41.31 41.46 41.40 31.05
July .. 30.10 39.25 38.95 39.04 39.02 39.25
Oct. .. 35.15 35.33 35.00 35.11 35.11 35.28
Dec. .. 34.18 34.28 33.95 34.03 34.00 34.22
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
The following were the ruling prices in the
exchange today:
Tone, steady; middling, 41.50 c, steady.
Last Pre»
Open. High. Low. Sale. Close. Close.
Jan. .. 33.05 33.18 32.93 33.00 33.00 33.10
Meh. . 32.33 32.40 32.33 32.40 32.35
May .. 40.67 40.72 40.50 40.50 40.50 40.80
July .. 8.35 38.80 38.48 38.65 38.63 38.68
Oct. .. 34.95 35.16 34.84 34.96 34.93 35.08
Dec. .. 34.00 34.12 33.83 33.92 33.90 34.07
NEW ORLEANS SPOT COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, April 14.—Spot cotton,
steady and unchanged; sales on the spot,
1,568; to arrive, 537; low midling, 33.25;
middling, 41.50; good mididing, 45.00; re
ceipts, 6,390; stock, 351,108.
LIVERPOOL COTTON
Tone, quiet; sales. 3,000; good middling,
29.396.
Pwv.
Open. Close. Close.
January 22.80 22.71 22.64
February 22.51 22.4-1
March .... .. 22.30 22.24
April 25.77 25.54 25.73
May 25.63 25.42 25.56
June 25.19 25.34
July 25.20 24.96 25.10
August 24.71 24.80
September 24.33 24.31 24.28
October 23.95 23.81 23.74
November .. .. 23.34 23.26
December 22.81 22.91 22.84
SPOT COTTON MAKEET
Atlanta, steady, 43.50 c.
New York, quiet, 43c.
New Orleans, steady, 41.50 c.
Philadelphia, steady, 43.25 c.
Galveston, steady. 43.50 c.
Montgomery, steady, 41c.
Norfolk, steady. 40c.
Savanah, steady, 41.50 c.
St. Louis, steady, 41.50 c.
Houston, steady, 43c.
Memphis, steady, 41.50 c.
Augusta, steady, 41c.
Little Rock, steady, 43c.
Dallas, steady, 43.90 c.
Jiobile, steady, 40.75 c.
Charleston, steady, 40.50<-.
Wilmington, steady, 40c,
Boston, «steady, 43c.
ATLANTA SPOT COTTON
Atlanta spot c0tt0n..43.50c
Receipts '. 1,017
Shipments 805
Stocks 29,956
AMERICAN COTTON AND
GRAIN EXCHANGE
COTTON QUOTATIONS
The following wore the opening, highest,
lowest, close and previous close quota
tions on the American Cotton and Grail
Exchange of New York:
Prev,
Open. High, Low, Close. Close.
Jan. .. 33.21 33.30 33.00
May ... 41.35 41.60 41.35 41.45 41.50
July ... 39.10 39.25 38.85 30.02 39,20
Oct. ... 35.15 35.27 35.02 35.10 35.25
Dec. ... 34.17 34.24 23.95 34.00 34.20
COTTONSEED OIL MARKET
NEW i'ORK, April 14.—The cottonseed
oil market closed steady; prime summer yel
low, 18.50; April, 18.00; May, 18.43; June.
18.50; July, 18.75; August, 18.80; Septem
ber, 18.75; October, 18.00; November, 17.002
sales, 11,100.
Liberty Bond Market
NEW YORK, April 14. —Final prices o’
Liberty bonds today were:
31/2S, 95.00.
First 4s, 90:56.
Second 4s, 87.50.
First 4%5, 90.60.
Second 4%5, 87.44.
Third 4%5, 91.60.
Fourth 4'4s, 87.54.
Victory 3%5, 96.48. •
Victory 4%5, 96.50.
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j GRAIN
CHICAGO, April 14.—Bullish sentiment
predominated in the corn market today,
and prices advanced to moderate extent.
Opening corn prices, which ranged from
%c off to ?4c advance, were followed by
gains all around.
In oats, as well as in corn, offerings
were light.
Higher quotations on hogs helped to lift
provisions.
CHICAGO QUOTATIONS
The following were the ruling prices 11
the exchange todsy:
Prev
Open. High. Low. Close. Close.
‘ CORN—
•May ... - 167V> 16S 166? s 167% 166%
July ... 160% 161% 159% 160% 160
Sept. ... 155% 156% 154% 155% -55%
OATS—
May .... 95 96 93% 95% 94%
July 85% 86% 85% 86% 85%
LARD—
Mav ... 36.95 37.00 36.70 86.70 36.50
July ... 37.50 37.50 37.15 37.15 37.12
i-ORIi
Mav ... 19.50 19.65 19.42 19.42 19.42
Julv ... 20.30 20.42 20.22 20.25 20.20
RIBS—
May ... 18.G0 18.32 18.12 1,8.12 18.22
July ... 1§.90 18.90 18.70 18.70 18.75
CHICAGO CASH QUOTATIONS
CHICAGO. April 14.—Cash wheat, No. 1
northern spring, $2.75; No. 2 northern spring,
$2.75,
Corn, No. 2 mixed. $1.68: No. 3 yellow,
$1.68.
Oats. JNo. 2, $1.01@1.01%: No. 3 white,
99%c@51.00%.
Rye, not quoted.
Barley, $1.72.
Timothy seed, $9.00@12.00.
Clover seed, $40.00@ 53.00.
| Pork, nominal.
i Ribs; $17.500182)5.
CHICAGO PRODUCE MARKET
' CHICAGO. April 14.—Butter, creamery
extras, 62%c; creamery standards. 61%c;
firsts. 35<d>61c; seconds. 46@50c.
Eggs, ordinaries, 37@38c; tirsts, 40%@
41 %c.
Cheese, twins, 29%c; Young Americas.
31 %c.
Live poultry, fowls, 41%c; ducks. 38c;
geese, 22c; springs 40c; turkeys. 35c.
Potatoes, ears, 10; Wisconsin (per 100
lbs.) and Minnesota (per 100 lbs.). $6.85@
Money and Exchange
NEW YORK, April 14.—Mercantile paper.
G%@7; exchange strong; sterling, 60-day
bills7 3.91%: commercial, 60-day bills on
banks, 3.91%: commercial, 60-day bills,
3.91%; demand, 3.95%; cables. 3.96%;
francs," demand, 16.17: cables, 16.15;
gial francs, demand, 15.10; cables, 15.08;
guilders, -demand, 37%; cables, 37%; lire,
demand, 21.97; cables. 21.95; marks, de
mand, 1.74; cables, 1.74.
Government bonds, weak.
Railroad bonds, weak.
Time loans, strong; 60 .days. 90 days and
six months, 6. .
Call money, strong: ruling rate, <•
Bank acceptances, 6.
How to Heal Leg Sores
A WONDERFUL treatment that
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MANY VOTES WON
BY SENATOR SMITH
IN AUGUSTA SPEECH
(Continued from Page I.)
the members of the house and sen
ate from this state, and among othei
things they insisted that the sena
tors should vote for the League or
Nations, as they wanted the peace
treaty to be disposed of.
Senator Changed Him
“After hearing Senator Smith’s
reasons for supporting reservations, ’
said Mr. Lee, “I decided he was right,
and had rendered a great service to
his state for which he deserved our
lasting gratitude, even if he never
did anything but prevent the ratifi
cation of the treaty without substan
tial reservations. There are several
things in the treaty that I cannot in
dorse, and I feel certain your opinion
will be the same after you have
heard him.”
This little forecast proved consid
erably more accurate than the Chron
icle's editorial forecasting that the
senator would be “wasting nis
breath” upon any audience that
might hear him in Augusta.
Senator Smith led off with a state
ment of his reasons for entering the
Georgia presidential primary. His
purpose, he said, was to prevent a
vote of censure being passed upon
his record in the senate without a
public hearing of his side of the case,
and to prevent a delegation being
sent from Georgia to San b r ® 1 n *
cisco convention to inuorse the
League of Nations without reserva
tions, thereby committing the pai t.,
to a suicidal program in the next
'' a "Th^ S logical candidate for the par
tv to nominate on that platform,
said Senator Smith in this connec
tion “would be Woodrow Wilson. 1
am unalterably opposed to a third
term for him or any other man.
This statement was greeted with
thunderous applause.
president’s Silence
“The president.” continued the sen
ator “has refused to commit himself
with a single syllable against a thii’d
term His Jackson day letter was
looked upon in many quarters as an
(announcement of his candidacy f° r
the nomination.on the League of Na
tions, for in that letter he declared
that the .only solution of the contro
versy would be a ‘solemn referen
dum* to the American people. When
bis name was placed on - the ballot
of the Georgia presidential primary,
he took no steps it from
Staying on the ballot. Were it not
for; the fact that, some of the signers
of the petition were induced to with
draw their signatures, you would be
voting next Tuesday on Woodrow
Wilson for a third-term nomina
tion.”
The senator then paid his respects
in good-natured vein to the Augusta
.Chronicle.
“I had hoped,” said he, “that when
the new editor took charge of the
paper, a wiser and better policy
would ‘prevail in its editorial col
umns. But apparently the ‘old lady’
is the same today without any
change'
The audience laughed uproariously.
“The Chroinicle. accuses me of tak
ing Camp Hancock away from you
in order to save Camp Benning at
Columbus. As a matter of fact,
Camp Benning had no relation what
ever to Camp Hancock or any other
camp. Benning is not a camp for
! quartering troops, but a training
school for officers, a post-graduate
j branch of West Point. It will be
the greatest school of its kind in the
world. It was started before the
armistice. The site was selected by
a board of army engineers. They
selected it because the land presents
the greatest variety of terrain to be
found anywhere in the United States
My first fight for Benning was to
get the government to pay the far
mers for their land after they had
been dispossessed, and I succeeded.
Benning Won on Merit
“Then it was a contest between
Camp Benning, Camp Bragg and Eort
Sill, and Benning won on its merits.
Whether Benning was kept where it
was. or abandoned entirely, or moved
to some other location had nothing
on earth to do with Camp Hancock, in
Augusta; Camp Wheeler, in Macon,
or Camp Gordon, in Atlanta. It be
longs in a category totally different
from the category of cantonments and
encampments. How the Chronicle
was able to reach, the conclusion
that Benning competed with Han
cock is beyond my comprehension.”
This explanation seemed to clear
up entirely the Camp Hancock ques
tion, which has been discussed a good
deal in Auusta since the Chronicle’s
editorial last Sunday, accusing Sen
ator Smith of trading off Hancock
in favor of Benning.
'“The Chronicle also charges that
my conduct prior to our entrance
into the war was ‘pro-Prussian,’ ” the
senator continued, “and it bases its
charge on the efforts 1 made to get
; our cotton shipped to the neutral
j ports of northern Europe.”
Here the senator recited briefly the
history of that matter, which is so
familiar to the farmers ,of Georgia,
and one of the most effective and
important pieces of work ever done in
behalf of an agricultural constitu
ency.
“If T was ‘pro-Prussian,’ ” said the
senator, concluding this point, “then
President Wilson must also be charg
ed with being ‘pro-Prussian,* for he
supported the position of myself and
other southern senators with a note
to Great Britain protesting vig
orously against the illegal embargo
upon shipments of cotton to neutral
ports. He closed with the statement
that the blockade was 'an invasion
of the most sacred rights of the
American people.’
Senator on the Aggressive
There was nothing defensive in
Senator Smith’s recital of the facts
in this matter. On the contrary,'
he was on the aggressive through
out.
“I knew I was being criticized at
home by some people who eared very
little about the low price of cotton,”
said he. “The question was whether
I should lie down in fear of being
charged with opposing- the allies, or
should fight for the interests of my
people and take the consequences. I
decided to fight, and I fought to the
utmost of my ability, and I am proud
of what I My efforts helped to
raise the price of cotton to ten cents
and better. If I had the same road
to travel again, my course again
would be identical with my course
before. I make no apology for what
I did. Everyone of you must re
member the complete demoralization
of business on account of the low
price of cotton. Whether the Chron
icle thinks so or not, my efforts to
help the people who were writing
me heart-broking letters from every
I np.rt of Georgia are entitled to praise
! Instead of censure, and I have every
; reason to believe that the farmers
■of Georgia, who were paying the
price ~and suffering the privation,
agree that I was right.”
Then the senator replied briefly
to the Chronicle’s claim that he is
not a “real candidate,” which is the
same refrain being sounded in the
editorial columns of all the papers
of the opposition.
“I am going to begin by carrying
Georgia,” said Senator Smith, smil
ing broadly while the audience smil
ed. “That will give me a fine start
on Mr. Palmer, who carried Michi
gan at the tail-end of the ticket. And
then I am going to Pennsylvania and
make some speeches. against Mr.
Palmer, and when the smoke clears
away in that state I will have more
delegates than he will.
Palmer Boom Punctured.
“The Philadelphia Record, which
is the leading Democratic newspa
per of Pennsylvania, states editorial
ly that Mr. Palmer’s candidacy is not
taken seriously there. The New
York "World remarked after the
Michigan primary that ‘this puts an
end to the Palmer boom.’ The chair
man of the Democratic state execu
tive committee of Pennsylvania ad
vises me that the Palmer delegates
in Pennsylvania will be beaten 40,-
000 votes in the Democratic primary
in that state.
“And why won’t he carry Pennsyl
vania? Well, he was nominated for
the senate four years ago and ran
true to form by tailing the ticket.
Republican and Bull Moose oppo
nents only defeated him about 600,-
000 votes. Then two years ago he
tried to have his friend, Mr. Guffey,
nominated as the Democratic candi
i OUT 0’ LUCK I
II I
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21 429 E. Sixteenth St., New York, N. X,
THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1920
date for governor, and when he fail
ed he bolted the Democratic ticket.”
X*eag~a« of Nat long
Then the senator plunged into the
League of Nations and hammered its
objectionable provisions for forty
five minutes or more. If he had been
a lawyer arguing a case and his audi
ence had been a jury, they would
have stayed out about ten minutes
and brought back a verdict in his fa
vor. He opened their eyes to things
in the league that they had nevei
heard before. All of the argumnt in
Georgia, editorially and otherwise,
has been the other way. Generally
speaking, the study of the league in
a public sense has been only casual.
But when Senator Smith gets the
searchlight of his knowledge regard
ing the covenant playing on it, and
opens fire with the heavy &uns of
his irresistible logic, the result is the
same everywhere he speaks. It was
the same last night with the Augus
ta audience as it was with the audi
ences in Savannah, Gainesville,
Dalton, Rome, Macon, Americus, At
lanta, Dublin and Waynesboro.
In the ten days of the campaign. 1
which will go on record as one of the;
shortest in Georgia political annals
the senator up-to-date has argued
the League of Nations before an ag
gregated jury of about 20,000 persons.
In that jury have been farmers, me—
chants, lawyers, doctors,, preachers,
newspapermen, all professions and
avocations, women keenly interested
in public questions in anticipation of
the early ratification of the suffrage
amendment. And invariably the
verdict has been the same. The peo
ple are against it without substantial
reservations.
Whoever thinks the League of Na
tions can stand under fire will
change his opinion before the finish
of the great controversy. If it can
not win in Georgia, where Wilson has
been admired with as much enthusi
asm as in any state of the union,
where the people are intensely Deni
ocratic, where they have been thor
oughly educatd by the press and
pulpit and other agencies of public
•opinion to swallow it whole without
so much as a reading of its pro
visions, what chance has it got in
the doubtful states?
Michigan furnished a conclusive
answer.
11 Classified Advertisements
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BOOK OF FLORIDA FACTS free only to
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WAXTED—MISCELLANEOUS
WOOE growers, write Athens'"Hide'~Cm7
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ttliy; they will mail prices quick.
CONSTITUTION REFUSED
TO PRINT AD SHOWING
PALMER’S BOLTING
(Continued from Page 1)
Democrat, Congressman Henry J.
Steel, of his own district, a Dem
ocrat; Congressman John J. Qa- r •’
sey, Twelfth district, Democrat;
and Judge S. E. Shull, of his
own county; Judge Charles D.
Copeland, Westmoreland county;
Judge John M. Garmen, Luzerne
county, all leading Democrats.”
Let it be borne in mind that .
Judge Bonniwell, who is sponusoe .
of this statement, was the Demo- -•
cratic nominee for governor in ”
1918 and that it was his nomina
tion that Palmer bolted.
Judge Samuel E. Shull is the i”
judge of the Forty-third judicial '
district and resides in Strouds
burg, Pa. This is the town iiio
which Mr. Palmer lives. Judge-
Shull is also a “fighting Quaker,?
but he does not indulge his -
■ fighting proclivities so far iff
fighting the nominees of his own,
the Democratic party. < W
In a letter to our headquarters
he says:
“We are opposing Palmer par
ticularly for the reason that
through an accident he got in
command of the state organiza
tion and has wrecked the party 4
in practically every county. He
himself never having a con
sistent Democrat and even since
he has been national committee
man, has openly opposed the
nominees of the party in the
state when they were not men of
his choice, with no other reason *
than the fact that they were not
in sympathy with his methods.
If he were asking for a mug
wump nomination, I would say it,
should be unanimous—but when
it comes to a Democratic nomi
nation, I cannot conceive what ' >
call he has on the support of the
party.”
This Is the record of Attorney
General Palmer on the subject <M
Democratic loyalty.
j HOKE SMITH CAMPAIGN COM
MITTEE.
MISCELLAXEOUS ..,. J.
I WOOL—Write Athens Hide Co., Athena,
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stating angonnt for sample first letter.
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