Newspaper Page Text
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JOHN A. MANGET
RESIGNS AS PRICE
COMMISSIONER
John A. Manget, fair price com
missioner of Georgia, has resigned
his position and has asked the as
sistant frir price comfnissioner, At
torney Ja,nes W. Austin, of Atlanta,
to serve for him until his successor
is appointed by the attorney general
at Washington.
Mr. Man get's resignation was
made known in a telegram he sent to
Atlanta Tuesday from Danville, Va„
tzhcre he was with twenty nieces
<nd nephews whom he has been es
corting o>. a pleasure trip through
Ihe east and middle west.
Mr. Manget gave his reason for
ros gning as the press of his own
i onai • usiness affairs which, he
states, he has had to neglect during
‘’s tenu - .s of office as fair price
commissioner. He declares that he
paid all bills as fair price com
missioner from his own funds, not
costing the government a single
penny, and that he can no longer af
ford to serve.
Commenting on his service as fair
price commissioner, he says:
“I have been forced to do and say
things against certain lines of busi
ness that have caused me pain, yet,
as God is my judge, they were done
and said with the hope of doing
good, and not with any desire to
hurt anyone.
“The job has been a thankless
one. The work in. Georgia has not
cost the government nor anybody
»else one cent. I have paid all bills
for everything myself.. I had no
hope of reward when this work was
taken up, wanted nothing and
would accept nothing. My sole aim
and hope was to try to render serv
ice to all Georgians coming under
the head of consumers, and at the
same time try to be just to those
worthy citizens who sell necessities
of life to our people.
• •sy pay has been criticism, abuse
. slander, yet I am giving up the
work with feelings of deep regret.
I have enjoyed it, and only wish 1
could carry it on longer, but can
not. I have asked my able assist
ant, J. W. Austin, to act as commis
sioner until Washington appoints my
successor.
“To Attorney General Palmer, As
sistant Attorney General Figg, to
the newspapers of Georgia and to
all Who have assisted and co-oper
ated in this great work, I feel most
grateful.” 4 .
Mr. Mangat’s acts as fair price
commissioner have been followed
with interest throughout the state
ever since his appointment. He has
held numerous hearings to fix the
cost on all sorts of articles, both
of food and clothing, and has re
peatedly sought to change prices
which he judged exorbitant or un
fair. ,
Mr. Manget «has been particular
ly active in fighting high rents. He
fostered a big anti-protest meeting
in Atlanta, attended by delegations
from many parts of Georgia and
widely advertised by Mr. Manget m
bulletins directed against "rent
hogs.” As a result of the meeting,
a bill is now pending in the legisla
ture directed against rent profiteer
ing. ■
Stock Market Has
Another Sharp Decline;
Wheat Drops Again
NEW YORK, July 27.—Country
ide credit strain and uhfavorable
■-ustrial conditions caused exten
"• vely liquidation in the stock mar
■?t here today. Leaders of the
••■'el. equipment, oil and motor
oups, as well as various miscel
'*• neous issues, were two
lints under yesterday s closing at
Much' of the selling was attributed
• the aggressions of professional
•ders, hut a large part of the of-
• • ngs probably resulted from weak-
'd speculative holdings. Rails
' -e the only shares to show rela
• e steadiness, but even in that
. ■■■rter moderate losses ruled.
Call money opened at 9 per cent,
t time accommodations were ex
->elv scarce on further reduction
- ■ local reserves of interior banks,
,ich continued to sertngthen their
ources to meet impending crop
V HEAT PRICES HAVE
SUSTAINED BREAK
CHICAGO. July 27.—Sensational
,ks in prices took place in the
• -'eat market today, and the finish
. f trading showed losses of 11 3-4 «>
14 cents a bushel in addition to> an
. xtreme drop yesterday of eight
e»nts The new crash today was
due chiefly to selling of a stopAoss
Miaracter by discouraged holders
March delivery closed at $2.3 <, as
against $2.51 last night.
Corn and oats weakened, but the
setbacks in these grains did not ex
ceed five cents. In provisions, the
finish was at substantial gains. Dif
f cultiel of financing and transpor
tation counted severely against the
maintenance of wheat values, and
to. toe did sharp lowering of bids
ny export interests.
Wheat closed semi-demoralized,
II 3-4 c to 14c, net lower.
Corn closed heavy, 4 to sc, net
lower.
SAY “DIAMOND DYES’’
Don’t streak or »uin your material in
a poor dye. Insist oh “Diamond
Dyet>. M Easy directions in package.
“FREEZONE"
Lift Off Corns! No Pain!
/X \ o
Doesn’t hurt a bit'- Drop a little
Freezone on an aching corn, in
stantly that corn stops hurting, then
shortly you lift it right off with fin
gers. Truly!
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle
of Freezone for a few cents, suf
ficient to remove every hard corn,
soft corn, or corn between the toes,
and the calluses, without soreness or
irritation. —(Advt.)
Government
Shoes
Genuine Russet Army Shoes, direct from
the GOVERNMENT WAREHOUSES, slightly
worn, which we are neatly repairing and
repolishing. Uppers guaranteed two years.
THE IDEAL WORK SHOE. Easily worth
sl2 wearing value. Our price, S2.!K). Mail
sl, balance on delivery. Satisfaction guar
anteed. Kingsley Army Shoe Co., 3850 Cot
tage Grove Ave., Chicago, 111.
666 quickly relieves Colds
and LaGrippe, Constipation,
Biliousness, Loss of Appetite
and Headaches.—(Advt.)
HE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
Governor Cox’s Personality
H ill Appeal to Women of
America More Than Issues
Writer Declares Popularity
of Democratic Nominee for
President Is Just Result of
a Clean Life
BY ZOE BECKLEY
COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 27.—There
are three kinds of men: The men that
men like (and women don’t), the
men women like (and men don’t) an I
the men who are liked by both men
and women—the kind of men a wom
an both likes and trusts.
I should say Governor James M.
Cox belongs in this third ciass,
which is the smallest class of all. 1
believe women will vote for him.
Women choose on personality
rather than on politics. Sometimes
they are laughed at for doing it.
But it is a good way.
As the great majority of us have
neither time' nor taste' to follow a
candidate’s whole record, we reau
what we can of him, listen to what
we hear of him, and, best of all—ls
we’re lucky—see him face to face
and "size him up” in our own way
“Sizing Him Up”
I have, as well as I could, "sized
up” Governor Jim for a week.
I’ve seen him greeting the folks
of Columbus on the state house
steps.
I have talked with him in his of-
I was present when he received the
suffragists. And when the four
lifers ’ from state’s prison asked
him to come and address them there
because they couldn’t come to him •
I have stood around while he talked
to twenty reporters. And, when there
s .?? body _ there at all and he
u-an t know I was standing around.
I have seen him in the fresh of
the morning. And in the evening
?’ as so tired he dldn ’t know
back” he WaS ° n f ° Ot ° r a * horse *
f . £ seen b,m on the street, on
n and St home with his
.. 1 bav ® - s ‘ en htm at lunch and at
the breakfast table. c
“Show Me I”
a PProached Mr. Cox with criti-
, He s a politician,” “He’s
Wilson s pawn on the league ques-
L.o’L'x s Y et ’” “ He ’ s Tammany’s
man still echoing in my ears.
I had fully adopted the famous
two-word motto of the Missourians
and was tnere to be shown.
It is not because, in greeting a
crowd of welcomers at the door of
the capitol, Cox grasped the hand of
a one-armed veteran in a two-fisted
saying quietly, "I’ll give you
both hands,” that I get him down
as a human being. Any tactful poli
tician might have done it. . . .
Nor is it because he is approach
able, cordial, unassuming. Nearly
all important men are like that now
adays. Nor that he is an ardent
suffragist.
I even listened placidly to his rec
ord on workmen’s benefits, school
improvements, child labor laws, bud
get systems and prison reforms.
“And he has done something about
it all,” people assured me. “Not
just talked about it and ‘approved.’ ”
This sounded good. I began to
think Cox was a doer. Not just a
comfortable rubber stamp.
“And you ought to have seen the
way ho adored his mother,” a wom
an suggested, who has known Gov
ernor Cox a dozen years. “Mother
Cox was a slip of a woman, mod
est and retiring but full of char
acter. Jimmie used to drag her ev
erywhere, in her mousie-gray silk
and old-fashioned bonnet, and intro
duce her to everybody. Lots of
times she’d , rather have stayed at
home. But the governor would coax
her Ko come along. He was proud
of her and wanted to show her off.”
I determined not to get senti
mental eveh over this, because most
men love their mothers. Still—l
liked him for it.
Now, no one of these things made
me “rave” over Governor Cox. But
putting them all together, they seem
ed to indicate that he was a pretty
good sort of man, a pretty good sort
of governor and might make a
pretty good sort of president.
Then I went for a talk with him.
The Business Man
As you know, he is a shade under
the average height, of sturdy build,
but without stockiness. His head is
well-shaped, with an adequate
thatch of brown hair untmged by
gray, short-cropped and neat. His
nose shows a suggestion of hump
at the bridge, his mouth is unusual-
Iv mobile and his smile unusually
nice. His face and hands are tan-
His clothes are good, with a hint
of smartness, and he knows how to
wear them. But there is nothing re
markable in his general appearance.
‘He is the well-groomed American
businessman.
It is only when he talks that the
arresting feature about him is ap
parent his eyes
From behind rimless glasses these
Former Soldier Is Banished for
Attack on His Young Wife
Earl Cobb, former soldier, was or
dered to leave Jeffersonville, Ky., by
Mayor Newton H. Myers, as a pun
ishment for alleged assault on his
wife, Madge Cobb, seventeen years
old.
Under protection of Patrolman
James Dovle, Cobb went to his home
to obtain his belongings. While this I
“Law Must Be Upheld,” Says Justice;
Fines Himself $1 in His Own Court
Justice of the Peace F. B. Bumgart
readjusted his spectacles, rapped for
silence, using his ink-well as a
gavel, and convened his court in
solemn session at Hays,, Kan.
“The first and only case on the
calendar” _. c ’announced, "is that of
the sf Kansas against F. B.
Bumgart, et al. The defendants—
eight of them —are charged With
failing to candle eggs as provided
for in the laws and statutes of the
state of Kansas. Wiiat have the
defendants to say for themselves?
Whereupon, F. B. Bumgart relin
quished his seat on the justice’s
bench and, to the amusement of the
Husband, She Asserts, Made Her Live in Attic;
Asking Separation, Wife Charges Cruelty
Charging that her husband, George
S. Schultz, compelled her to live in
the attic of his grandmother’s home
at Elmhurst for three months, and
alleging he had “wild nights on
Broadway,” Mrs. Grace N. Schultz,
twenty-eight, has sued for separa
tion through Louis Greenspan, of No.
320 Fulton street, Jamaica.
Schultz served three years in
France with the United States avia
tion corps and Red Cross ambulance
service. He returned after the war
and was married on March 8 last at
Greenwich, Conn. His wife alleges
his love cooled rapidly and that his
acts of alleged cruelty commenced
four days after the wedding.
Mrs. Schultz’s complaint contains
many more allegations besides th
attic and “wild nights” episodes, and
names Cecile Renard, a chorus girl,
as having had too great affection
from her husband.
Mrs. Schultz is residing at present
in an apartment in West One Hun
dred and Seventieth street. Manhat
tan, claiming in her coinplaint that
JAMES M. COX
eyes shoot a gaez uncannily keen
My first thought was “Good graci
ous, but you’d have to tell the truth
to this man!”
Perhaps it is because he is honest
and demanded honesty. I felt this as
I talked to him. I think most wom
en would feel it.
I think the suffragists felt it when
they came to ask Mr. Cox to push the
thirty-sixth state into the ratifica
tion column.
Now it is outside my province to
discuss politics and I will say noth
ing further than that I gathered the
governor is no fanatic on the League
of Nations issue. But that he will
work for what he believes will best
keep us out of wars and embroil
ments.
When I asked the governor the
momentous question concerning wet
ness, he laughed long and gaily.
About His “Wetness”
“The wettest thing in my cellar,"
said the governor, "is a swimming
pool. But lest you interpret that too
literally, I will remind you that I
have a pair of mules ‘with a kick.’
When J va, showing those mules to
a bunch of reporters, the other day,
we agreed to christen them ‘Seven
Per Cent,’ ” And he chuckled good
humoredly.
If you belong to the bone-dry pro
hibitionists you may be shocked at
this levity.
But you need be haunted by no
visions of a convivial executive’who
misuses the red juice of the grape or
countenances the corner saloon. The
governor has no wicked bottles on
his table. His mother didn’t know
what a cocktail was: His wife knows
what one is, but doesn’t drink them.
There i s nothing in the governor’s
booze views” to alarm anyone.
If you should hsk me, I liked the
governor’s being strictly “human”
on this question as on many others.
I think the average woman would
feel the same. . . .
Women’s Spheres
We talked of women, of women’s
intelligence, of women voting.
“Woman suffrage? I’ve always
been for it,” said Cox. "I know
nothing in Holy Writ or in man’s
laws that disapproves the fact that
women are people. And if women
are people, they ought to have their
share in a government that is by
the people and for the people.
“I’ve spoken at many a gather
ing when the men didn’t quite get
me some of the time. But the wom
en did. Those mothers didn’t miss
a single point.”
“Is motherhood an educator,
then?" I asked.
“It certainly is,” said the. gover
nor. "Motherhood and domestic
management are about the best’ ed
ucators I know. And after all, what
is government but the management
of a huge family? Women are nat
ural educators and trainers and
managers and economists. They
have to be.”
Nothing startling in that —but
there is a great deal in the way a
procedure was under way, a restrain
ing order was bejng issued in Clark
circuit court to prevent Cobb from
molesting his life, who has a divorce
suit pending. Cobb was given the
choice of .leaving Jeffersonville and
remaining away, or going to the state
farm.
"court fans,” delivered himself of
the following plea:
"I’m one of the defendants men
tioned in the complaint. My son-in
law is another; so is my bro,ther-in
law. Speaking for the three of us 1
plead guilty. I don’t know about the
other five, but I guess they are
guilty, too.
“I want it understood that even
a justice of the peace can’t escape
the penalty of the law in this court;
the law must be upheld no matter
whom it hits.”
Then, remounting the bench: "I
fine myself and each of the seven
other defendants $1 and costs each.
Court is adjourned.”
it is unsafe to live with her hus
band. Since March 12, she alleges,
he has repeatedly committed acts of
cruelty.
Mrs. Schultz says her husband
earns SIOO a week, and has in addi
tion ar. income from his father’s
estate at Kingston.
Attorney Greenspan says he will
apply at a special term of the Kings
county supreme"court next week for
alimony and counsel fees pending
the trial of the actioij.
Belton Cotton Mill
Increases Stock
COLUMBIA, S. C., July 27. —The
Belton Cotton mill, Anderson counn
ty. was permitted by the secretary
of state Monday to increase its capi
tal stock from $1,400,000 to $2,800,000.
This is the second increase for this
corporation recenly. It increased its
original capitalization of $350,000 to
$1,400,000.
person says a thing. I got the im
pression that the Democratic candi
date likes and believes in women
generally; that he doesn’t senti
mentalize over them, yet welcomes
them into the field of opportunity.
We talked of schools —something
every woman, mother or not, is in
terested in.
“The centralized school is one of
the four achievements I have been
prouciest of in my term of office,”
said Governor Cox, and goes on to
explain that those grand big build
ings you often see right out in the
Ohio cornfields are centralized
schools.
Four school districts join at a cer
tain spot. Upon this spot is built
a high school at the expense of those
four district's, financed by public
bonds. Conveyances are provided for
getting the pupils to the schools if
they live too far to walk.
Thus the- picturesque but inef
ficient "little red schoolhouse” is
done away with, and every country
boy and girl has a chance at a thor
ough, modern education.
“I know what it is,” says Governor
Cox, "to struggle for* an education.
Children ought not to have to fight
for their life equipment.’
Will every woiiian agree with that?
I’ll say she will.
The Other Three
Governor Cox goes on to tell of the
other three things he is proudest of
accomplishing, namely, prison re
forms, the workmen’s compensation
law and the abolition of child la
bor.
“The old prisons,” he said, “send
a man out' worse than when- he went
in. By trusting a man, educating
him and interesting him in some
thing decent, you can turn the most
hardened wrongdoer into a useful cit
izen.” . ,
Ohio’s recent history siiows in de
tail the benefits and satisfactions of
the workmen’s compensation law, the
abolishment of child labor, the wid
ow's pensions and the • state budget
system. These have not brought the
millennium, but they are fine things
and brighten the record of the man
who fathered them. They have gained
for Cox the respect of men and will
strengthen the trust of women.
“People say,” I remarked irrele
vantly, “that there was a flavor of
Tammany in your nomination—”
"There is no organization that has
ever tried, ar need ever try, to make
a pawn of’me,” he replied, “but 1
welcome the following of every bat
talion of voters in the United
States.”
Walking from the genial gover
nor’s office, I told myself: “Here is
no ‘super-being’ to wipe out all the
nation’s troubles at a sweep—but
assuredly a human human being with
the energetic, lively, youthful point
of view which gives what we classic
ally call “punch” to the character
and appeals as much to women as it
does to men.”
Turkish Nationalists
Score Peace Terms
ANGORA, Turkey. July 26.—(8y
the Associated Press.) —The Turkish
Nationalist congress here adopted a
resolution today denouncing the
peace terms accepted by the Constan
tinople government and declaring the
nationalists will oppose the terms
militarily to the bitter end.
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GEORGIA’S U. S.
1919 TAX BILL
$42,665,792.53
WASHINGTON, D. C.. July 27. —
The federal tax bill of Georgia for
the fiscal year ending June 30, last,
was $42,665,792.53. Os this amount,
$33,737,627.30 was paid in excess
profits and income taxes, and SB,-
928;165.23 came from miscellaneous
internal revenue taxes. Georgia
stands well up on the list of south
ern states, although North Carolina
and Texas lead all others as payers
of federal taxes.
Returns from the southern states
in round figures were as follows:
By collection districts: Maryland,
including Delaware and the District
of Columbia, $120,750,000; Alabama,
including Mississippi, $29,560,000;
Arkansas, $12,233,000; Florida, $15,-
336,000; Georgia, $42,665,000; Louis
iana. $50,984,000: North Carolina,
$169,206,000: Oklahoma, $25,600,000;
South Carolina, $26,650,000; Tennes
see, $36,138,000; Texas, $103,004,000:
Second Virginia district, $51,808,000;
Sixth Virginia district, $17,503,000.
Five and a Half Billion
The bureau of internal revenue an
nounced that the totals were taken
from field reports from all sections
of the country and are subject only
to minor corrections.
The total internal revenue taxes
collected and deposited during the
fiscal year ended June 30, amounted
to $5,410,284,874. According to com
pilation made by the bureau of in
ternal revenue from field reports just
received, this x is the greatest annual
tax collection made by the bureau
since its establishment in 1862. The
cost of collection will approximate
fifty-five cents for each SIOO rev
enues received from income and ex
cess profits taxes amounted to $3,-
944,55,737.93, and from miscellaneous
taxes $1,465,729,136.97.
North Carolina retains the lead as
the greatest contributor among south
ern states to federal coffers. This
is because of the large number of
cotton mills located in the state and
the immense revenues received be
cause of North Carolina’s tobacco
crop.
Winston-Salem, North Carolina,
clears more tobacco transactions than
any other.
The revenue office, New York, of
course, is far ahead of all states in
the amount of federal taxes paid.
The five collection districts cover
ing New York state, turned in a total
of approximately $1,416,934,000; Penn
sylvania supplied $555,725,087, and
Ohio collections totaled $372,319,548.
Other headliner taxpayers included
the following districts: Connecticut,
including Rhode Island, $151,318,761;
Illinois, $442,000,000; Massachusetts,
$350,928,000; Michigan, $284,000,000;
California, including Nevada, SIBO,-
000,000; Missouri, $148,000,000; New
Jersey, $153,000,000.
The Chicago district paid all but
$4,315,758 of the total Illinois taxes
of $442,233,070. Next following Illi
nois was Ohio, then Massachusetts.
North and South Dakota, both in
one collection district, were called
upon to pay only $9,541,683 from their
combined areas, and, with the excep
tion of the Philippine islands, were
at the foot of the list.
Report of Fatal Auto
Accident at Valdosta
Entirely Unfounded
WAYCROSS, Ga„ July 27. —The re
port issued from Valdosta Saturday
stating that two children of Mr. and
Mrs. A. K. Sessoms, of Cogdell, were
instantly killed Friday evening when
a car driven bv Mrs. Sessoms turn
ed turtle, is absolutely unfounded.
Mrs. Sessoms, wife of A. K. Sessoms,
president of the Waycross and West
ern railroad, while driving in a coun
try road early last week, hit a
stump, throwing one of the children
through the windshield, resulting in
minor bruises, and it is supposed
that the report resulted from this.
Lloyd George Forbids
Australian Archbishop
To Land in England
LONDON, July 27.—Archbishop
Daniel J. Mannix, of Melbourne,
Australia, will not be allowed to
land in England, because of his re
cent utterances, Premier Lloyd
George announced in the house of
commons today.
Ben Miller Killed;
John Penley Jailed
GRIFFIN, Ga., July 27.—Ben F.
Miller was shot five times and killed
Sunday morning about 2 o’clock by
John Penley. The killing, which took
place at the Kinkaid Mill, about a
mile from Griffin, was .said to be
caused by a poker game which had
been in progress during the night.
Immediately after the shooting,
Penley was arrested, and at the in
quest was bound over to the grand
jury and sent to jail. Mr. Miller is
survived by a mother and two broth
ers.
Widow Granted Increase
Os S2OO a Month
NEW YORK, July 26.—Justice
Cohalan today granted an increase
of S2OO monthly in the allowance
of Mrs. Marshall P. Levy, widow of
a wealthy New Orleans cotton brok
er, who had petitioned the court for
an increase on the ground $350
monthly was not sufficient to en
able a woman to live at the present
time.
scribed by physicians for over nineteen years.
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proper directions.
103,000,000 ARE
LIVING ON $2,000
YEARLY, OR LESS
WASHINGTON, July 27.—Approx
imately 103,000,000 persons are liv
ing on $2,000 a year or less, accord
ing to an analysis of income tax re
turns today.
The population of the United
States it unofficially estimated at
slightly more than 105,000,000.
The remaining 2,000,000 persons
paid the bulk of $5,410,284,874 in
federal income, excess profits and
miscellaneous taxes collected by the
federal government for the fiscal
year ended June 30 as announced
today.
The smaller group is estimated
to include about 20,000 persons in
the millionaire class or those with
incomes of $50,000 a year or more.
This figure is used because it rep
resents 5 per cent on $1,000,000. Ap
proximately 4,000,000 tax returns
were filed for the year, according
to an estimate today by C. B. Hurry,
assistant commissioner of internal
revenue. They indicate that the
average salary in the United States
is far below $2,000 a year.
Slightly less than 2,000,000 per
sons filed returns on incomes rang
ing from SI,OOO to $2,000, according
to the estimates. Two thousand
dollars a year, therefore, represents
the maximum income for approxi
mately 98 per cent of the popula
t °"ccording to a careful study made
by the labor department, not less
than $2,260 is needed to maintam in
‘‘decencv and comfort” a family o£
five in ’Washington. The study was
made one year ago. Price increases
since then probably have raised the
‘‘decency and comfort’ standard, of
ficials said today.
Maude Moore, on Eve
Os Second Trial for
Killing Harth, Gone
KNOXVILLE, Tenn., July 27.
Maude Moore, under sentence ot
twenty-one years’ imprisonment foi
the murder of Leroy D. Hartn,
wealthy automobile dealer here, dis
appeared on the eve of her second
trial, it was discovered Monday when
her mother called at the office of her
attorney and stated her daughter had
been gone several weeks.
Miss Moore was to have faced her
second jury in criminal court this
morning. . ,
A feature of the situation was
brought out when the mother an
nounced that Martin Hunter, a youth
indicted as an accomplice of Miss
Moore, had alsd disappeared. In a
recent letter received by Miss Moore,
the girl’s mother says, Hunter stated
he was “just sailing for Italy."
Hunter’s home is said - to be in In
diana Harbor, Ind.
Attorneys for the Harth family
announced a nation-wide search
would be started to apprehend the
couple
The Harth murder was one of the
most sensational that ever occurred
here. The shooting took place Sep
tember B,> last, eight miles outside
the city. Hhrth, in a dying statement,
declared robbery the motive, while
the girl alleged Harth attacked her.
Diamonds and money, valued at sev
eral thousand dollars, were on
Harth’s person when he died.
Los Angeles ’Quake
Rattles Windows and
Frightens Prisoners
LOS ANGELES, July 27.—A sharp
earthquake shock at 12:02 a. m. to
day rattled windows in downtown
buildings and awakened prisoners in
the county jail, who immediately set
up a howl to be released. Reports
from various parts of the city, how
ever, show that no damage was done.
Guests in some of the hotels were
alarmed, but were soon reassured.
MINOR DAMAGE IS CAUSED
BY SANTIAGO EARTHQUAKE
SANTIAGO, Chile, July 27.—Ad
vices received this afternoon from
various sections indicate that - this
morning’s earthquake had a vertical
movement, affecting the central prov
inces generally. The quake lasted
more than a rrtinute in the town of
Los Andes, at the foot of the main
Andean range, where it seemed more
intense than in any other section.
There were isolated cases of mi
nor damages but no reports of in
juries to have been received.
New Plan Considered
To Reduce Allied Debt
WASHINGTON, July 27.—Reduc
tion of thd allied debt to the United
States by the application to the debts
of . the various governments’ of
amounts awarded them on cliams
against this country growing out of
the war, was considered today by
the treasury department.
Payment of claims against the
United States will not be made in
cash or credit to debtor nations, ac
cording to present plans, but
amounts recovered from this country
will be charged off America’s bill.
Loss of Both Arms Will
Not Stop X-Ray Work
PARIS, France. —Prof. Charles In
froit, famous x-ray specialist, lost his
remaining arm in the twenty-fourth
operation since 1898. The noted sa
vant, who thus has sacrificed both
arms in the cause of science, an
nounced immediately after the op
eration that he will continue his ex
periments with artificial hands.
THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1920.
Army Transport Sails
With 2,427 Athletes
' HOBOKEN, N. J„ July 27.—The I
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there is nothing in my experience
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