Newspaper Page Text
2
ATHENS CITIZENS
HOPE GOV. DORSEY
WILL NOT RUN
ATHENS. Ga, July 28.—While not
unexpected, the announcement of
Senator Hoke Smith to succeed him
self in the senate, following the an
nouncement Sunday of Thomas E. I
Watson's intention to enter the race
has occasioned considerable political
gossip in Athens. It was thought
by the friends of the senator here
tail he would surely make the race
.c 'succeed himself, inasmuch as he
s closely associated with some ot
: ie outstanding measures pow pend
ng in congress fathered by the Dem
ocrat i.- administration, an<\ which
. ?,Ve for their purpose the exploita
ion of education, the bill to make
; i:c secretary of education a cabinet
• icmber and appropriate $100,000,000
■mually for national education in
particular. Senator Smith is one of
. >ie authors of this bill, and for that
. cason hundreds of Athens voters
will vote to return him to the senate.
As was stated by a former Palmer
man yesterday, a man prominent in
the business circles of the city and
who voted for Mr. Palmer in the
presidential primary, there will be
thousands of Georgia voters who will
vote for Senator Smith because they
believe that at this time .he is the
man to represent Georgia in the sen
ate. They take the view that Mr.
Watson is too bitter against the ad
ministration and the Democratic
platform and that should Governor
Dorsey enter he must either be for
the League of Nations without reser
vations or duplicate the position of
Senator Smith, and in that case it
would be evident that he has no pur
pose to run other than to represent
a political faction. It is believed by
scores of leading politicians in this*
district that Senator Smith will poll
a much larger vote than he has ever
done before because of his manly
tight in the preferential primary. A
prominent Athens lawer. a friend
and supporter of Governor Dorsey,
declared today: “I will vote lor Gov
ernor Dorsey if he runs, bi 1 hope
he stays out. I believe th. . if he
runs Watson will receive all of the
votes that would otherwise have gone
to the governor, as Watson practi
cally elected Dorsey in his first race
for governor.” Then, too, it is be
lieved by some that Governor Dor
sey’s entry would make it plainly
evident, as has been so persistently
charged by Mr. Watson, that in or
ganizing the Cotton bank, the gover
nor was “playing” for the farmer
vote and feathering his political
nest. His friends here are adverse
to his entering the race until he has
completed the organization of the
bank because they nelive he can ren
der a' greater service in that way
than in the senate, where it would
take him from one to two years to
•••et acquainted, which would be detri
mental to the interests of the state
should a Republican administration
be in power.
Life of Ga. School of
Technology Depends
i Upon Appropriation
The very life of Georgia Tech de
pends upon the $125,000 asked of
the legislature as a special appro
priation this year, according to an
appeal addressed to Tech alumni m
the state, urging support for the
passage of the bill. ~ .
Between 8,000 and 10,000 Tech
graduates in Georgia are asked ma
circular letter from President K- G.
Matheson to give direct and imme
diate help in getting the legislature s
approval of the appropriation.
Dr Matheson’s letter asserts that
the additional fiind covers impera
tive necessities only and that- dis
. ster threatens the institution when
he fall term opens unless the money
is given.
The emergency Tech faces, ac
cording to Dr. Matheson, arises
argely from heavy losses to the
..acuity through Inability to pay
salaries anything like commensurate
with the salaries offerd by other in
stitutions and industrial concerns,
orty instructors resigned this year,
sehtial departments are prac
ically crippled and a totally inade
uate ’ teaching staff will be con
.-onted wit han unprecedentedly
arge enrollment next September un
uss the apprpriation is granted, Dr.
Matheson says.
The situation, according to Dr.
Matheson, is desperate. He cites
.iow Tech struggled to make both
ends meet in 1915 with an enroll
ment of 714 regular students and a
SIOO,OOO appropriation. Last year,
he shows, the enrollment jumped to
1,745 regular students, while the ap
propriation at a time when the
value of a dollar is cut in half, in
creased only $25,000. ■ Tech’s es
sential needs this year, allowing
nothing whatever for expansion, call
for a minimum of $297,000, Dr.
Matheson states. The regular ap
propriation and the special appro
priation would give $250,000, while
tuition fees offer the hope of fur
nishing the difference.
Dr. Matheson’s letter points out
that the state’s revenue has increas
ed about $600,000 this year, and that
about 50 per cent of the requests for
funds by other state institutions are
for expansion.
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
Governor and Mrs. Cox Are.
Really “a t Home’ When One
Finds Them at “ T rail’s End”
I
<1! X ,1!
!SSr I ■ iii
ralr \ -I t
HP ./ i i
GOVERNOR AN 0 ' COX and baby, Anne; and “Trails End,” the beautiful Cox home four
miles outside Dayton. Ohio. <,IS
Mrs. Cox Says She Can
Never Be Happier in White
House Thah at Her Dayton
Country Place
DAYTON, O„ July 29.—“ Just tele
phone me when you get to Dayton
and I’ll come and bring you out to
Trailsend.”
This was Mrs. Cox’s invitation,
characteristically simple and full of
hospitality. e
To be sure, the governor's mansion
at Columbus is full of hospitality,
too. Mrs. Cox has given it the mag
ical touch of home. But it Is not
home in the sense that Trailsend is.
The house at Columbus is where
the Coxes stay. Trailsend, four
miles outside Dayton, is where they
live.
I realized this the moment the
bellhop announced “Lady waitin’ fer
yer outside” and I saw a little road
ster a,t the curb with a smiling girl
inside it.
For Mrs. Cox looked more the girl
than ever in her checked gingham
frock and sailor hat.
The slight hint of formality given
by the smart charmeuse gown and
plume-trimmed toque she had worn
in Columbus was vanished now.
Here she was just Margaretta Cox
who lived at Trailsend with her hus
band and baby and her big stepson,
Jim, Jr. t
Here she was just the mistress
of a delightful house which she
loved and managed personally, dash
ing in to Dayton in a Little old run
about with a cough in ts carburetor,
to do her marketing, to buy three
yards of lace for baby Anne’s tiny
petticoat, and to call for the visitor
who wanted to see her real home.
Eaby Anne Is Joy of Her Life
Mrs. 'Cox drives as if she had been
born upon the front seat of a car
with a steering wheel in her hand.
She cant’ even remember when she
learned.
“I don’t think I learned at all,”
she says. "I just sort of got it by
a process of absorption.”
“How is Baby Anne?”
“Wonderful! The perfect baby!
She’s the joy of my life!” said Anne’s
mother in away to kindle your
heart. “We came out from Columbus
the other day looking like a gypsy
caravan, with our bundles and bales
and boxes, and the baby’s bed and
all sorts of contraptions.
“A-h”— (Here a long breath)
“ —it’s so good to be home.”
It isn’t hard to see why Mrs. Cox
loves Trailsend. It is a place of
charm. The realization of any girl’s
dreams.
The countrj- on all sides rolls
away in hills and valleys. The
woods are thick and sweet.
Winding roads lead to the house
—a long, low, creamy structure with
a sleek, bowl-shaped lawn in front
and many flowers.
A wide, tiled terrace flanks one
end and runs the length behind,
with cosy scats and tables and a (
view over a big green valley.
The Indian trail which ends at
the house has been grassed over as
an ornamental walk for some dis
tance, finally narrowing down to a
footpath which follows the ridge for
miles.
When the house was built five
years ago workmen ran across ar
rowheads, broken pottery and other
traces of Red Men long gone to the
Happy Hunting Ground.
Organ That. Plays From Rolls
In the middle of the house is a
huge library lined with books, a
homey room with big tables and
fat chairs, lamps, magazines, pic
tures, framed photographs of “the
folks” and an organ upon which
those who have educated feet can
play music from rolls.
Across the wide and beautiful hall
is the dining room which gives you
the impression of eating in the
treetops, so close is it against the
out-of-doors. At the other end of
the house is a wonderful living
room, gay with a quaint combina
tion of bright-colored cushions and
black lacquered furniture. A dicky
bird sings in a cage.
Fool of Icy Water Below
Upstairs are half a doben bedrooms,
baths and big airy halls. Oh, yes,
and the nursery, of course. And
down in the subterranean regions is
a glorious swimming pool full of blue
spring water, cold as anything
—b-r-r—r! » . . ,
“Yes, it is delicious, isn t it I
smiled the young mistress of it all,
in response to my Ohs and Ahs.
"We’re never as happy as when we re
at Trailsend. Only Jim has to be
away so much,” she added wistfully.
“I just hate it when he’s away.
“I wonder if you’re happier here
than you would be in the White
House?”
She didn’t reply for a moment —
just stood quietly, glancing about,
thinking.’ Then the brown eyes turn
ed upon me. .. . T
“Yes —I am happier here than I
could be anywhere else in the world.
“I love mv garden and my neigh
bors and I love to ride horseback and
swim and drive a car.
“I like to go, sometimes, to the
Country club,- and play golf. I en
jov a bridge game—Jim hates to ad
mit it, but I’m a better player than
be is. I sew a little and see that
the currant jam and peach preserves
are made properly I read some and
keep up a fairly lively correspond
ence with my father and brothers and
friends. And I take care of my baby.
I do love that baby.
“Os course, I am ambitious for
Jim, and I want him to be president.
He would be a good president—he
has always been a good everything.
“As for me—why 1 don’t want any
thinv; else than this.
“I’m just,” insists Margaretta Cox,
‘the governor’s wife and the moth
er of Anne. That's everything life
means to me. It is,” she smiled,
“my ‘Trailsend.' ”
I f rying to Search Auto,
Officer Is Killed
| COBBTOWN. Ga., July 29.—An ut-
Gnrpt by Deputy Sheriff Wade •dole
rr.m, of this county, to search an
automobile in which tne Sikes Prath
ers and Kelly CMlins were driving,
near here, resulted in the death Tues
day i.ignc of Coleman and the seri
ous wounding of Ale Sikes. It is
said tnat Sikes grappled with Cole
man end that during the .’truggle
Co lins .fired three shots from a
•rifle, one of them < -h”!!:!ng Sikes
I in the thigh anil the cliitr two pass
ing through Coleiiiiih's need. It is
also alleged that after '.'ol<--.?an had
fallen a load of buclishct vzas fired
into tiis prostrate body by other
members of the party. The entire
natty was carried to the jail in
Reidsville.
Boy, 14, Confesses 28 Jewel Thefts;
Boy Scout Uniform Is Used
Williams Adams, fourteen years
old and small for hi s age, admitted
twenty-eight jewel thefts, according
to the police, when he was arrested
with his Boy Scout pack stuffed with
jewelry. Detectives of the Vernon
Avenue police station, Brooklyn, be
lieve that William or the master
thief who employe'd him. was im
plicated in more than thirty such
thefts, aggregating $12,000.
William insisted, the police said,
that he worked alone. No one was
with him when Patrolman Bode saw
him, dressed as a Boy Scout, enter
551 Bushwick avenue, Brooklyn, and
ascend to the roof. A little later
Bode saw the boy emerge from 549
Bushwick avenue.
The patrolman stopped him and
searched him. According to Bode a
lot of jewelry and two pounds of
sugar tumbled from the boy's pack
when it was opened. Mrs. Bessie
Bride-to-Be Waiting at the Church
But Groom-to-Be Fails to Show Up
The marriage of Miss Esther A.
Field, of South Plainfield, N. J., to
Stephen Hobert, of the same place,
was to have been a church affair,
with bridesmaids, flower girls* and a
soloist. ‘
The folks in South Plainfield are
saying now that Hobert always was
a shy, timid, sort of a chap. Maybe,
they say, the idea of walking up the
aisle before a. lot of people and all
the fuss and feathers just scared
him plumb to death. Then again, it
is whispered around Perth Amboy
and echoed in parts of Soqth Plain
field, that -the lagagy which Hobert
went to Perth Amboy to collect on
Monday night was not forthcoming
It’s all very mysterious and the
Field family refuses to talk about it
at all. Anyway:
The Hobert-Field wedding should
have taken place in the Church of
the Sacred Heart, which was all
decorated up with orange blossoms
and white lilies and carnations. The
Rev. Father Baldwin, who was to
have performed the- ceremony, was
all ready with his heartiest blessing.
Miss Mary Collins, the bridesmaid,
came from Roselle Park with a new
dress and bouquet almost as big as
Dying Mother Tries to Shield
Son Who Shot Her by Accident
The elaborate plan of Mrs. Anna
Cannella to save her nineteen-year
old son from the odium of having
shot his mother fell to pieces under
a police inquiry. The mother is dy
ing at the Holy Family Hospital in
Brooklyn, N.„Y. Alphonse Cannella,
the son, charged with felonious as
sault, is locked up in the Fifth ave
nue police station.
The boy, by the confession of the
three younger Cannellas, was clean
ing a revolved in the kitchen of his
home. He was preparing for a noisy
Fourth of July, and»he did not know
the revolver was loaded.
Mrs. Cannella was ironing. The
other little Cannelas, Frank, eleven,
and Mary, fourteen, were playing in
the sitting room, when the sound of
a revolver ahot filled the small kitch-
Woman and Two Guests
Detained by Police
For Shooting Lawyer
NEiv YORK, July 29.—Mrs. Carrie
Sidney and two of her guests at a
“midnight party” were detained by
police in connection %vith the shoot
ing of Peter Baumer, a young law
yer, early today.
According to the police, Baumer,
when taken to the hospital, charged
Mrs. Sidney with the shooting. Other
members of the party made contra
dictory statements, which resulted
in holding them, police said.
According to information given au
thorities, Mrs. Sidney, who said she
was the wife of (ieorge Sidney, an
actor now playing in Chicago, Invited
Baumer, Edward J. Brady and his
wife, Mrs. Ray Brady, an actress, to
her apartment. An argument while
the party was in progress was fol
lowed by the shooting.
A pistol was found in the court
yard and a hole in the screen pointed
to its having been thrown from a
window in the Sidney apartment.
Baumer was in a serious condition
at the Bellevue hospital.
Three Negroes Injured
By a Single Bullet
Three negroes were slightly in
jured Wednesday night when City
Detective Brown sought to arrest
Tom Hardin, colored, on Butler
street, on a charge of larceny. They
were taken to Grady hospital, where
they received medical treatment. The
injured negroes are said to have been
struck h’ a single bullet from the
officer’s sun.
Detective Brown claims he was
forced to fire at Hardin when the
i latter attempted to draw a weapon
i ir. resisting arrest. The bullet struck
I a negro man, who was standing near
i by, passing through his thigh and
[ striking a negro woman in the an
i k!q. .The bullet then glanced off and
struck a negro boy in the foot.
Dreamed He Saw His
Landlord; Shot His Wife
UNION HILL, N. J.. July 29.--
Daniel Ilelbig, when charged with
shooting his wife early today, told
police lie awakened during the night
and thought he saw his landlord, ac
companied by demons, coming
through the window. He fired at
them, he said.
The bullet passed through the
body of his wife and through the
window. Mrs. Helbig was taken to
the hospital, where it was not ex
pected she would recover.
Leiveltz, of 459 Bushwick avenue;
identified the jewelry as hers and
said it was worth S7OO. William
said he got the sugar because he was
going camping.
At the Vernon avenue police sta
tion the search was prosecuted fur
ther. William’s pockets yielded a
large wad of Russian rubles, his
leggings, two gold watches’, hi s hat,
a gold watch and thirty-one pawn
tickets. Most of the pawn tickets
were for pieces of jewelry, some of
which had been pledged for S4)O.
Mrs. H. U. Stickle, William’s moth
er, said the boy had disappeared
from her home, 27 Jefferson street,
Brooklyn, two weeks ago. William
was sent to the children’s society,
charged with juvenile delinquency.
The -police said he told them he
bought the Boy cout uniform a
week ago and it was “a fine dis
guise.”
herself, and Miss Katherine Wilson,
who was to sing “O Promise Me,”
had a box of throat lozenges handy.
The bride was charming and
flushed and excited, and the eride’s
mother was proud and just a little
bit tearful, and the bride’s father
was beaming on everybody and wor
rying a bit about a tight high collar,
and the best man, William S. Field,
a brother of the bride, was wonder
ing which pocket would be best to
keep the ring in, and getting in the
way generally. It was earmarked
for a most successful wedding.
Half an hour before the time for
the wedding the bridegroom hadn’t
shown up at the Field home. Half
an hour after the time set for the
wedding he hadn't shown up. The
painful fact is that he hasn’t shown
up yet.
The bride is naturally on the
verge of a nervous breakdown, and
the* rest of the wedding party is
occupied betwen exchanging theories
and shutting off reporters who want
to ask a lot of personal questions.
The police have been unable to find
any trace of Hobert, except that he
went to Perth Amboy Monday, pre
sumably to see about that legacy.
en, and Mrs. Cannella crumpled up
over her ironing board with a bullet
hole in her left side over her heart.
The dumfounded boy carried* his
mother to the bedroom, while Mary
telephoned for a nambulance. Rally
ing all her faculties In the face of
unconsciousness the mother called
her children around her and issued
instructions.
“Don’t tell the police that Alphie
shot me,” she told them. “They will
not believe it was accidental maybe
he will be arrested. Tell them
that a man did it. Don’t let them
know that Alphie did it. Alphie’s a
good boy. He didn’t mean it. Don’t
tell the police.”
This is what Mary did tell at first
to Patrolman Charley Gifford, who
arrived a moment or so later. An
unindentified man, she said, had
rushed up to her mother while she
was standing on the stoop and had
shot her. Then the man had run
away. Frank told the same story.
So did Alphonse.
But under a close cross-examina
tion Mary broke down and told the
whole truth. Alphonse was' arrested,
just as the mother had feared.
She in her hospital bed gowns
weaker every hour, but is satisfied
in her belief that she has saved her
son, for they have not told her that
her little story of the strange as
sailant has already collapsed.
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COX MUST LEAD
PARTY NOW, SAYS
GEORGE WHITE
WASHINGTON. July 29.—Gover
nor James M. Cox as Democratic
presidential nominee, must be con
sidered the new leader of his party,
George White said here today.
The new chairman of the Demo
cratic national committee also said
that he had made no arrangements
for a conference with President Wil
son during his two-day stay in Wash
ington, declaring he had come here
to take charge of party headquar
ters and meet Democratic leaders.
“I will, of course, call at the
White House and pay my respects,
but I have made no arrangements for
a conference with the president,” Mr.
White said. He added, however,
that he would see the president, if
invited to do so.
Mr. White’s statement concerning
party leadership was made in an
swer to questions about Republican
charges that Governor Cox is al
lowing President Wilson to dictate
his policy on the League of Nations.
“The governor will make clear his
position on that question in his
spech of acceptance,” Mr. White
said.
Unusual interest in Governor Cox’s
speech of acceptance is being shown
by hundreds of telegrams and letters
giving suggestions on various issues
that he has received.
Although virtually all the speec-i
will be completed by Saturday and
mailed to papers all over the coun
try, Governor Cox said that one of
the most important sections will noc
be revealed until the morning of no
tification day. He declines to indi
cate the .subject of the delayed sec
tion.
In response to a second telegram
from Parley P. Christensen, head of
the Farmer-Labor party, asking that
he join in a movement to secure the
release from the Atlanta federal
prison of Eugene «V. Debs, Socialist
candidate for president, Governor
Cox said that he would reply after
his notification speech is delivered.
It is generally believed the governor
will decline the request.
In anticipation of a large crowd
at notification, the committee bn ar
rangements has provided a voice am
plifier that will carry Governor Cox’s
voice a long distance from the
speaker’s stand, which will be the
judges’ box in the race trick.
Word was received today that in
addition to delegations from Ohio cit
ies, Democratic enthusiasts are com
ing in large numbers from New York,
Buffalo, Chicago, southern Illinois.
Indiana, Lexington and Louisville,
Ky., West Virginia and Missouri.
After a brisk walk this morning,
Governor Cox went to his library to
spend the day on his speech.
Hull of Mayflower
Discovered in England,
Newspaper Announces
LONDON, July 29.—Discovery of
the hull of the Mayflower, the ship
in which the pilgrim fathers sailed
to America, is claimed by Dr. Rendel
Harris, chairman of the English
speaking union according to the
Daily Mail. He will reveal details
of the secret at a conference to be
held at Plymouth in September.
In the meantime, however, the
paper learns that old timbers, in
cluding oaken beams supporting the
roof, found in a barn adjoining an
inn called Old Jordan’s Hostel, at
Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire,
are considered by Dr. Harris to
have originally formed part of the
hull and deck of the Mayflower.
Some of the beams, which are worn
and worm-eaten, bear marks indicat
ing they might formerly have held
ship’s rivets and tackle.
There is a local theory, the pa
per continues, that a Quaker former
ly lived in the neighborhood who
was a professional ship breaker, sell
ing ship timbers to farmers of the
surrounding country. It has been
suggested t,hat he broke up the
Mayflower ana sold the timbers to
the owner of Old Jordan’s Hostel.
No proof of this vague tradition is
offered by the Mail.
Florida’s Corrupt
Practices Law Is
Declared Invalid
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., July
29.—The Florida corrupt practices
law as pertaining to publication of
Information held to be detrimental
to a candidate for public office, was
declared unconstitutional in a de
cision by Judge E. B. Donnell here
Wednesday.
“I do not believe the legislature
can in such manner prohibit the
freedom of speech and press,” Judge
Donnell said, in ruling on a case in
which the issue was involved. The
law passed in 1913 makes illegal
publication of “detrimental” informa
tion during the eighteen days pre
vious to a primary election.
Republicans Ask
Tennessee to Ratify
Suffrage Amendment
NASHVILLE, Tenn,, July 29.
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, president
of the National American Woman’s
Suffrage association, today received
a telegram from Will H. Hays, chair
man of the Republican national com
mittee, saying that the executive of
ficers of the committee at a meeting
Wednesday by resolution called upon
Republican members of the Tennes
see legislature to vote for the suf
frage amendment in the extra ses
sion.
ALLEGES BAHNSEN
MADE SIO,OOO BY
SALE OF SERUM
Charges by H. C. Hutchens, a
veterinary surgeon and formerly as
sistant state veterinarian, that Dr.
Peter F. Bahnsen, state veterinarian,
made approximately SIO,OOO profit
annually from the sale of hog cholera
serum to the farmers of Georgia,
were made Wednesday afternoon be
fore the legislative committee inves
tigating Dr. Bahnsen’s conduct in of
fice. Several other witnesses, live
stock men from south Georgia, tes
tified that they had suffered financial
loss on account of Dr. Bahnsen’s al
leged failure to co-operate in making
tuberculin tests.
The investigating committee was
holding its third hearing in accord
ance with the joint resolution au
thorizing a probe of the affairs of
the state veterinarian’s office on ac
count of charges brought against Dr.
Bahnsen by Representative Green B
Williams, of Worth county, author of
the resolution, member of the inves
tigating committee and prosecutor of
the case against the state veterin
arian. Another session will be held
Thursday afternoon in the senate
chamber.
Dr. Hutchens, testifying before
the committee, declared that he had
been connected with the state veteri
narian’s office for more than two
years, severing his connection a. few
months ago. He asserted that he
knew of Dr. Bahnsen’s transactions
in hog cholera serum, that the state
veterinarian bought it with his own
funds and sold it to the farmers at
a profit to himself. Dr. Hutchens
admitted that he is now a salesman
for a hog cholera serum manufac
turer.
De declared that approximately
11,000 cubic centimeters of serum
and virus were disposed of by Dr.
Bahnsen in 1919 and that the state
veterinarian bought it at prices
ranging from 85 cents to $1 per hun
dred cubic centimeters, selling it at
from $1 to $1.25 per hundred.
James D. Weaver, of Dawson, Ga.;
R. F. Shedden, of Atlanta; T. F
Burnes, off Washington, Ga.; W. H.
Watts, of Thomasville, Ga., and H.
A. Petty, of Dawson, Ga., testified
that because of Dr. Bahnsen’s failure
to test their cattle for tuberculosis
at the time they were imported into
the state, they "were forced later to
slaughter the animals.
COX O.K.’S‘DOLLAR
DEMOCRACY’ DRIVE
INSOUTHCAROLINA
COLUMBIA. S. C., July 29.—The
“Dollar Democracy” campaign in
South Carolina has received the in
dorsement of James M. Cox, of
Ohio. Democratic candidate for the
presidency, in a letter to Joe Sparks,
financial director of the campaign to
raise a great popular fund.
Governor Cox In his letter con
gratulates South Carolina Democracy
upon its start.
“This is acknowledgement of your
letter of July 19. I am glad to
know that the Democrats ot South
Carolina have thus early started
with the militant spirit which will
win.
“Let me congratulate you upon
your slogan of ‘Dollar Democracy.’
We want the public to know where
every dollar of campaign fund comes
from and where it goes, and later
challenge comparison with the enemy
with a result not to his disadvantage.
“The use of a campaign fund
which comes from sources unknown
and in amounts so vast as to be un
believable, such as employed by our
adversary, is not good for American
institutions.”
The campaign in South Carolina to
raise funds for the support of the
national campaign in shaping up
rapidly. Money is being received
from many sections of the state. The
county Democratic chairmen have be
gun to appoint solicitors and it will
not be many days before several
hundred dollars will be 'received each
day. It is the plan to secure as
much as one dollar from each Dem
ocrat in South Carolina.
“The Dollar Campaign,” said Mr.
Sparks, “meets with the approval of
the national Democratic leader and
there should be no hesitancy in giv
ing on the part of the South Caro
lina Democracy.”
I. C. C. May Close All
Freight Depots 3 Days
A Week, Officials Say
WASHINGTON, July 29.—The in
terstate commerce commission is
considering the advisability of clos
ing all freight depots three days a
week, officials of the commission
said today.
A proposal that this be done, it
was learned, has come from big
shippers who say it would give them
a more equitable share of the car
supply. It is understood that rail
road executives favor the move.
Marne Exhibition to
Open on October 18
WASHINGTON, July 29.—Chair
man Benson, of .the shipping hoard,
will open the National Marine
League exhibition at Chicago Oc
tober 18. it was announced today.
The board will participate in ‘he ex
hibition. which will continue a week,
and will exhibit the largest has
relief map in the world, showing the
trade routes followed by govern
ment-owned merchant ships in all
parts of the w.orld; It is planned
to have a shipping board training
ship at Chicago during the exhibi
tion to show how crews for the mer
chant marine are trained.
SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1920.
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