Newspaper Page Text
CDTTOHLSUPREIVIAGY
OF 0. S. IN OIH,
MILL MEN WHEO
PROVIDENCE, R. 1., April 25
The supi'emacy of this country in
cotton production is threatened, said
W. L. Clayton, of Houston, Tex.,
in an address prepared for delivery
at the convention of the National
Association of Cotton Manufacturers
here today.
To maintain it, he asserted, the
essential things were elimination of
the present “dumping system”
whereby “a commodity is forced on
the market in five months which
can only be consumed in twelve
months,” effective control of the boll
weevil and the invention of a sim
ple, practical cotton picking ma
chine.
“Thirty-cent cotton,” he said, “is
a powerful stimulant to production
in other countries. If. during this
period of high prices, these other
countries succeed in getting their
production policies well under way,
it will not be easy for America to
compete.*’
Mistrial Is Declared
In Trial of Codman
SAVANNAH, Ga., April 24.
Shortly after 1 o’clock this after
noon, a mistrial was declared in the
case of W. C. Codman, Jr„ the plant
er tried yesterday in the federal
court for conspiracy. The jury could
reach no acuaement. The case may
be heard x this torn*, of court.
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WE'FKLY JOURNAL
iPRESIDENT'S STB |l
QUIETS MUCH 10
OF ME POLICIES
BY DAVID LAWRENCE
(Leased Wire Service to The Journal.)
‘ji’giiXdco)
NEW YORK, April 26.—President i
Harding has made American mem ;
Worship In the world c<jurt of inter- ■
national justice almost an assured
fact. The president won to his side j
enough Republican editors to keep
in line a sufficient number of Repub
lican senators, who, together with a
solid Democratic strength, will fur
nish the necessary two-thirds to rati
fy the protocol.
Mr. Harding did not reach out
for Democratic support—he had it
already. In fact, the Democrats
were prevented from greeting him
’ with excessive enthusiasm, for he
I took occasion to rap hard the idea
of American membership* in the
League of Nations and insisted the
United States under his administia
tion would not enter “by the side
door, the back door or the cellar
door,” a fling that made the Demo
crats frown but gave many Repub
licans the satisfying thrill which
they really wanted before making
up their minds to support the world
court.
The president was on trial before
the assembled editors of the Asso
ciated Press. It was not the world
court problem so much as Warren
Harding himself who was being
scrutinized. The corridors were
buzzing with political gossip all day.
Naturally when editors from all
parts of the United States get to
gether they talk about political cur-
I rents.
Doubly Interesting '
Mr. Harding’s candidacy for re
nomination in 1924 accentuated this
feeling and made the atmosphere
seem more like a plea to a bi-parti
san political convention if there ever •
could be such a thing, than an or- i
dinary speech to congress, for
though there was no political aisle
to emphasize division, as is the case I
in the house and senate, partisan
ship sat there just the same. It
was apparent in the applause and
it wad evident in the comments one
heard after the speech was over.
A good many Republican editors
who correspond more or less t'o the
“irreconcilable” group in the senate
were disappointed—they didn’t want
Mr. Harding to make an issue inside
the party. They think he is com
mitting political suicide. They are
unconvinced —this was apparent, for
example, in the leading editorial in
Frank Munsey’s New York Herald
today, which said of course Mr. 1
Harding was right in saying the
Republican party wanted a world
court, but not this world court, be
cause it was created by the League
of Nations, and that was a Demo- 1
cratic creation. It suggested that he
start a new world court.
To Force Party in Line
These editors will not be satisfied
to let Mr. Harding get the benefits of 1
such waves of sentiment as he got
here in New York at the newspaper
gathering. They will keep hapamer- i
ing away consistently as the "irrec
cqjcilable” group with the League of
Nations group did, until the whole
Republican party is won to its side.
The first line of issue will be to
take Mr. Harding’s own slam in his i
speech here when he said: "I would i
not have it thought that I hold this i
question paramount to all others con
fronting our government.” I
This gives opportunity for all :
sorts of proposals on Democratic is
sues which can be kept in the fore- 1
ground. The ship subsidy bill was
killed by such tactics. Mr. Harding :
will have a slim majority to work
with in the next congress. The rad- '
icals will have enough Democratic
measures to propose and discuss to <
keep the world court from\ coming
up and while the Democrats will 1
help on the final vote, it is - hardly l
to be expected that they*will assist 1
Mr. Harding in the troubles with i
his own party. I
Personality Wins Friends
The biggest benefit that will ac- (
crue from the speech so far as Mr. ,
Harding is concerned is the effect
on his own political fortunes. Many
editors had not heard him speak be
fore, many had the impression he
wag not given to definite statements
and was inclined to wabble on big
issues. They admired his positive
ness and commended the courage I
of his stand on the world court even
though they may not all have con
ceded his logic or argument. Mr.
Harding presented a picture of deep
earnestness, of conviction, of a man *
who was trying to do his duty as he J
saw it. This was important to those £
editors who hadn’t seen that side c
of him before.
On the whole it helped Mr. Har- j
ding to come here to talk to his fel- .
low-editors—and unless the minority j
in the next few months burrow from J
within the Republican party and ,
change the present aspect of things .
by intruding Democratic measures j
of supposedly more importance the (
ultimate victory of the world court £
proposal itself can be taken for £
granted. There always has been a j
two-thirds vote in the senate for in- ]
ternational co-operation.* Mr. Har- (
ding knows it because he wanted j
to enter the Leagu- of Nations him- ]
self with the Lodge reservations at- j
tached to the convenant. And had I
Mr. Wilson accepted the Lodge pro- 1
posals and urged his followers in 1
the senate to take them, America i
■would now be in the league with 1
the combined votes of the same two- !
thirds who probably will put the ;
, United States into the world court.
SOUNDING THE KEYNOTE FOR 1924
V zz?w 1 VHL
w/
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7 ■ . •’ o .
r .. . —-—-r m sskvkt! J
DRY OFFICE OPENS
PROBE OF SHOOTING
OFlimiH
Ike Warren, of Rice’s Station, an
alleged moonshiner, was at Grady
hospital Wednesday suffering from a '
critical wound in th© right lung. He
was shot Tuesday afternoon while,
it is alleged, he was fleeing from
Prohibition Enforcement Agents A.
C. Sowell and C. M. Forbes, both of
whom stated Wednesday that the
man’s wound is a mystery.
A thorough investigation of the
shooting will be made immediately,
Fred D. Dismuke, director of prohi
bition enforcement forces in Georgia,
said Wednesday.
Director D.smuke declared the
shooting to be accidental. Details,
however, could not be obtained from i
his department.
Agent Sowell when questioned con- I
cerning the shooting would not dis- i
cuss it. In reply to a question, he :
said: “I don’t care to talk to news
papers now. If I write out the de
tails myself they might appear cor
rectly in print.”
It is understood that Agents Sow
ell and Forbes headed a raiding par
ty of four, which went to Warren’s
place in search of a still, which was
reported to be there. Warren is said
to have fled across the field. Sev
eral shots were fired during the
chase, it is understood.
Warren, at the -hospital, declared
to reporters Wednesday morning
that he was shot by prohibition of
ficers who had it in for him. He
said he was arrested in 1920, and
that when his case was set for trial
recently he failed to Appear and his
bond was forfeited. He declared the
officers came back Tuesday to get
him.
NEWMETHOD
HEALS RUPTURE
Kansas City Doctor’s Discovery
Makes Truss or Operation
Unnecessary.
Kansas City, Mo., April 24. —A
new discovery which, experts agree,
has no equal for curative effects in
all rupture cases, is the latest ac
complishment of Dr. Andrews, the
well-known Hernia specialist of this
city. The extraordinary success of
this new method proves that it holds
and heals a rupture. It weighs only
a few ounces. Has no hard gouging
pads, no elastic belt, no leg straps,
no steel bands, and is as comfortable
as a light garment. It has enabled
hundreds of persons to throw away
trusses and declare their rupture
absolutely healed. Many of these had
serious double ruptures, from which
they had suffered for years. It is
Dr. Andrews’ ambition to have ev
ery ruptured person enjoy the quick
relief, comfort and healing power of
his discovery, and he will send it on
free trial to any reader of The
Journal who writes him at his of
fice, 832 Koch Bldg., Kansas City,
Mo. He wants one person in each
neighborhood to whom he can refer.
If you wish to be rid of rupture for
good, without an operation take ad
vantage of the doctor’s free offer.
Write him today.—(Advertisement.)
Two Bankers, Accused
In Huge Shortage,
Jailed at York, Pa.
YORK, Pa., April 25.—-Forged
notes, ranging in denomination from
SIOO up into the thousands, consti
tute the evidence of defalcation
against Thomas B. Baird, cashier,
and William H. Bolt, assistant cash
ier of the City Bank Os York, accord
ing to state banking officials, who
yesterday closed the doors of the
institution after they had discovered
a shortage estimated at nearly
$1,000,000- Both Baird and Bolt,
who are charged with embezzlement
of funds from the bank, are in jail
in default of SIOO,OOO bail each.
Charles H. Graff, second deputy
state banking commissioner, said to
day that Bolt had admitted forging
notes aggregating $122,000, but had
declined to say what he had done
with the money.
Graff said the operations of the
two apparently had extended over
many years, and that they had been
able to conceal them by hiding pages
from loose leaf ledgers when the !
state authorities made an examina- I
tion.
Both Baird and Bolt arc married
and have five children each. Baird’s
salary was $5,000 a year and Bolt’s
$3,500.
JLMM PROH I
AGENT RESIGNS:
BIMTSSEmON
BIRMINGHAM. Ala., April 26.
Conrad W. Austin, general federal
prohibition agent, Tuesday, tendered
his resignation to Commissioner Roy
Haynes, he announced Wednesday,
because he was not allowed to go to
the bottom of investigations of
charges lodged against federal pro
hibition enforcement officers in Ala
bama, South Carolina and Florida.
As a private citizen, Mr. Austin
said he would take up an investiga
tion of prohibitipn headquarters in
Alabama here at a point where he
was "called off” on March 26 by M.
, Overpeck, chief of the Eighth divi
sion, with offices in New Orleans,
and “if resignations are not forth
coming,” he will call a mass meet
ing of Alabama citizens to whom he
will present “evidence in hand.”
On March 22, Mr. Austin received
instructions from Mr. Overpeck, he
said, to confer with J. Bibb Mills,
superintendent of the Alabama ’anti
saloon league, and make “necessary
investigation and recommendations”
in regard to the Alabama situation.
He went to work on the case as in
structed, and on March 26, he re
ceived orders from Mr. Overpeck to
confine his inquiry to one $l2O-a
-month agent.
This brought Mr; Mills into action
again, and forthwith Wayne B.
Wheeler, general counsel of the Anti-
Saloon league, came to Alabama for
conference. Mr. Wheeler returned
to Washington and Mr. Austin was
called to Commissioner Haynes’ of
fice for conference. That conference
resulted in Mr. Austin being removed
entirely from the Birmingham case,
two agents from the treasury intel
ligence unit displacing him. Follow
ing their inquiry four suspensions
were announced.
Mr. Austin was formerly chief of
the Alabama law enforcement de
partment.
Youth Confesses
Slaying of Rabbi in
San Francisco Hotel
PROENIX, Ariz., April 26.—Glad
well G. Richardson, 19, confessed
this morning to the slaying of Rabbi
Alfred G. Lafee in a San Francsco
hotel on April 4, in a statement
made to Assistant County Attorney
Louis Hart.
Alleged Member of Allen
Gang Held on Prohi Charge
MARSHALL, N. C., April 25.—Al
vin Stanley, alleged to have been a
member of the notorious Allen gang
which shot up a courthouse in Vir
ginia several years ago, land who is
reported to have made the asser
tion that he would never be cap
tured alive, is now in the Madison
county jail. He was arrested Tues
day on a charge of violating prohi
bition laws by Sheriff Ramsey.
HAMBONE’S MEDITATIONS
By J. P. Alley
mistis' cook bin tendin’
PEIA EKPERT COOKIN'
PEM'STRAT|ONS’, UM-HUH’.
NEK'THING US KNOWS
she Gwine fool Roun’
HEAH EM MIX UP SUIAPM
WHUTLL KH-L SOMEBODY’!
w
( *..> rI»M. 1M« TS» Bell •jr.dh-.t.. (
THREE EIRE BRIDES
OF HOUSE OF HID
. TESTIFY JT PROBE
ST. JOSEPH, Mich., April 25.
(By the Associated Press.) —Three
girl brides from the Shiloh home of
“King” Benjamin Purnell, of the
House of David, and three youth
ful bridegrooms from other cottages
of the colony were 'called
to testify today by the state in its
investigation of charges of immoral
ity in the cult.
x Four of last week’s brides and
their young husbands already have
testified that they have violated the
Israelite sect’s virgin rule, which
forbids the ordinary relations of
married life between husband and
( wife. Twenty of the twenty-eight
young people who went through a
group marriage before a
woman justice of the peace last
week remain to be questioned by
Judge Harry Dingeman, the one
i man grand jury, and Attorney Gen
eral Daugherty, of Michigan.
Judge Dingeman announced last
night that if examination of the re
maining twenty brides and bride
grooms is completed by Friday
night, the investigation- probably
will be adjourned until next Tues
day. when additional members of
the colqny will be subpoenaed to ap
pear.
The grand jury wants explained
the discrepancies between the mar
riage license applications. Three of
the brides, the Drake sisters, have
testified that their mother can neith
er read nor write, yet what purports
to be the written signaure of their
mother, Louise Drake, appears on
affidavits as giving consent to the
marriages.
The time for “King” Benjamin
' Purnell to accept service on the ca
' piases issued in the two SIOO,OOO
1 damage suits brought against him
, by the Bamford sisters, expires to
day, but the whereabouts of the
House of David leader, who has been
missing since January, continues t-o
be a mystery. George Bridgeman,
sheriff of Berrien -county, has had
the writs for months, but declares
he is unable to find any trace of
Benjamin.
The Bamford sisters, both of
i whom allege they were forced to
marry men selected by Benjamin,
each are suing for SIOO,OOO, alleging
criminal mistreatment by the cult
leader.
Youth Must Produce
Fine Dog He Lost or
i Spend Time m Jail
CHICAGO, April 25.—Frank Wor
niak, starting a quest for a SIOO
Airdale pup, appealed to the world
today for assistance.
Failing to make good within a
week to produce the pup, Frank
faces a jail sentence. He has a col
lar and chain and is looking for a
dog whose neck fits the collaY.
Mrs. Ole C. Olsen obtained Woz
niak from a rescue mission a month
' ago to work around her home. She
sent him out for a stroll with her
SIOO dog Monday. Frank stopped in
at a soft drink parlor and while he
i soaked up a drink some one de
i tached the dog from the collar. At
j home he went to sleep and Mrs.
Olsen found him in a chair holding
the chain and empty collar.
Judge Burke set the dead line for
Wozniak to produce the dog at
one week from date of arraignment.
■ Rats Attack Infant
In His Crib; Nearly
Bite Baby to Death
: DENVER, Colo., April 25.—At
i tacked by a swarm of rats as he lay
i in his crib, Bresley Crestine, three
i months-old, was'in a critical condi
j tion at the county hospital today.
> The mother, attracted by screams,
rushed to the crib last night to find
the baby nearly covered with large
rats.
Neighbors, hearing the mother's
cries, called the police and the baby
was rushed to a hospital.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
n Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
! Signature of
TICK EMOICITION
ADVOCATES
TILT IN FLA. HOUSE
TALLAHASSEE, Fla., April 26.
Tick eradicationists won by a bare
majority of two in a test vote in
the house Wednesday. The vote
came over the introduction by Rep
resentative Hale, of Hernando, of
a resolution which would have
called upon the state live stock san
itary board for detailed and minute
information on the cost of eradica
tion in this state, how many years
it would take to free the state of
tick; and in conclusion would have
prevented consideration of any tick
measures by the lower body untiL
the information was furnished. It |
was immediately hailed as an effort I
to stifle tick eradication at this I
session.
As the debate waxed warm, the
lines were sharply drawn. Repre
sentative Weeks proclaiming him
self for tick eradication, shouting
“We may as well see where we
stand now.” No one objected to j
having the sanitary board furnish
the information, he declared, but
asked why the request had been
withheld until this \ late in the
session and provision made in the
resolution that the question could
not be considered until the infifrma
tion was furnished.
Representative Amos Lewis offer
ed an amendment* striking out the
provision preventing consideration
of tick eradication measures pending
receipts of the information, and the
test vote came on the motion to
table his amendment. The motion
was Jost 36 to 38, the house then
adopting his amendment and subse
quently the resolution calling for
the information, but not commit
ting itself to stand still while the
information was forthcoming.
The house Wednesday reconsid
ered and passed a bill that, as
amended overnight, would provide
for compulsory jail sentences in sec
ond violations of the prohibition
laws. The measure Tuesday carry
ing provisions for disfranchisement
of liquor law violators was voted
down. As passed Wednesday, it
was shorn of the disfranchisement
and also those making compulsory
jail sentences for first liquor law
violations.
The house then killed the last of
its temperance bills which would
have set up rewards for informers
against liquor law violators.
The senate Wednesday sustained
the governor’s veto of a measure
passed at the la§t session to provide
for an appropriation for the mainte
nance of Olustee monument.
The senate committee hearing the
charges on which the governor sus
pended A. W. Turner as sheriff of
Broward county several months ago
heard several witnesses including the
sheriff Wednesday and then ad
journed until a later date. Turner
was removed as the result of wire
tapping operations in his county.
The tcik eradication question, the
subject of conferences the past sev
eral days,, entered the senate yes
terday in* the shape of a bill intro
duced by Senator Wicker.. It would
kill the ticks bl establishment of
zones in some of which dipping vats
would operate while in others pas
ture rotation would do the work.
The bill was the finished product of
the eradicationistg, who had been
working with a view'to drawing up
a measure that would stand the best
chance of getting through.
-here at last!
I
/ . . .L
A Guaranteed 801 - Weevil Enemy!
WEE-V©
TRADE fV)z*Rr»j
It keeps them away; but if the Weevil insists on re
fusing to heed the warning then IT KILLS.
On such a guarantee are YOU solicited to buy
35 Gallon Barrels for $30.00
50 Gallon Barrels for $40.00
No charge for barrels and freight paid to any place
within 300 miles of Atlanta.
Less than 35 gallon lots are sold at 90c per gallon,
F. O. B. Atlanta.
Spray your plants by daylight —a gallop to the acre
does the work, and does it well. ■ .-
Send for our booklet. It gives testimonials from
farmers who made over a bale an acre in 1922, and that’s
a record for that year. ;
Agents Wanted—Liberal Commission
wee-v@ Poison Manufacturing Co?
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
298 MARIETTA STREET IVy 7246
SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1923.
POLITICAL IDEILISM
15 COMING BBCK.
WILSON DECLARES
BEAUFORT, N. C„ April 25.—"A
genuine and immediate renaissance
of the finest sort of political ideal
ism in this country” is looked for
by former President Wilson, he said
in a letter to Dr. D. W. Wynkoop,
of Beaufort. The former chief ex
ecutive also declared he believes thp
public opinion of the country “is es
sentially sound,” and “is obviously
swinging back to the high levels it
occupied during the war.”
Mr. Wilson’s letter, dated April
15, was in reply to a communication
from Dr. Wynkoop in w-hich the lat
ter asked, among other things, “Os
what use ’is intelligence to a presi
dent of this country if the prepon
derant balance of government is in
the hands of those obstinately unin
telligent?”
The former president’s letter fol
lows:
“My Dear Mr. Wynkoop: Your let
ter of April 11 gave me real pleasure
as coming from the heart of one of
my war comrades, and I thank you
for it with all my heart.
“I am sorry to find such a vein of
discouragement through your letter.
I see no real ground for dishearten
ment. I believe the public opinion of
the country is essentially sound, and
it is obviously swinging back to the
high levels it occupied during the
war. I look for a genuine and an im
mediate renaissance of the finest sort
of political idealism in this country.
“With warm appreciation and sin
cerest good wishes, faithfully yours,
“WOODROW WILSON.”
Dr. Wynkoop told Mr. Wilson that
the latter’s record had a direct in
fluence on his life spent to “its for
ty-fifth year,” when he volunteered
for service in the A. E. F.
“It is not fulsome praise to tell
you what every mother’s son of
us felt about you at that time, the
devotion to you as evidenced by ev
ery doughboy and officer of the rey
serve corps,” the physician wrote.
• “Next to yourself and America,
I Foch was the only one to whom de
' votion was genuinely shown.” |
In Despair Over Son’s
Health, Preacher Ends
Life by Taking Poison
DRESDEN, Tenn., April 25. —The
Rev. W. H. (Webb) Jackson, 62, one
bf the most widely beloved ministers
in this section and moderator of the
Weakley County Baptist association,
is dead, at his home, eight miles east
of here, as a result of taking poison.
The report reaching here is that
he came In from his barn lot yes
terday and informed his wife that
he had taken poison and was going
to end his troubles, his death fol
lowing a few hours later. Worry
over a son ill with tuberculosis,
whom he* was not able to send to
a hospital is reported to have prey
ed upon his mind, and is held re
sponsible for his act.
He had officiated at more funer
als than any other minister in the
county, frequently driving ten or
twelve miles to hold such services
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3