Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 09, 1912, FINAL 2, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

2 MEXICO HOLE TO HANOLEHEfIOWN ffl-MJDEBO President Resents Talk of In tervention—lnvasion Gossip Increases Here. Continued From Page One. Intervention may be the signal for an • nti-American uprising and massaci • throughout the southern republic. General Salazar at Border. General Salazar, leading the rebels in northern Mexico, is reported to be en camping half a mile south of the bor der near Culberson. Texas. He com mands 600 men, well armed, ammuni tioned and mounted, and It appears to be Ills intention to harass the I nlted States troops who are powerless to cross the border in pursuit of the in surrectos Brigadier General Stoever today re ported that the rebels attempted to crore the border at Lange-. Texas, yes terday, nut wire Intimidated by Lieu tenant Boone, of the Fourth 'cavalry, r.nd a detachment of American sol diers. I.ater In the day. General Sala zar conferred with Lieutenants Booone, Johnson and Wagner, across the bor der The rebel leader su’d he desired the friendship of the United Stati s government and he regretted the raid at Culberson’s ranch on Friday when the Amt "lean troop" w< re fired upon. Little credence is placed in this state ment, bra n;e of Salazar - repeated avowal that he intends to “fore- Wash ington to intervene at any cost Tales of Horror Told to Senators EL PASO. TEXAS. Sept 9. With I the Intention of forcing the I nlted | to intervene in Mexico, the reb els in Sonora are now confining their operations to besieging towns popu lated largely by Americans or are working on the United Slates border raiding into Arizona and New Mexico and generally conducting themselves so as to insult Americans in every possl-; hie way They declare they will con- | tlnue this policy The coming of United States Sena tors W'iinam A Smith and A H. Call tn investigate Hi.' Mexican situation will have ifs effect upoti the policy of Hie American government, It Is be ll x. d. in solving t“ give Washington iiitthr titles Information on true eundl; tlons in Mexico S mitor Smith spent Sunday taking testimony. mil today exp eased himself as shocked at the stories of the om rugi s told by Americans. Two Mm - im n gills told of the brutal minder of their tathe. by Mexicans while Hie fa tiler was trying to defend the d’nugli tel s' Julius Romner. president of the Mo - mon colonies, detailed the disarming of tie colonists and the looting of then I ome'. Mining men. plantation ow n > ranchmen and others are giving the committee i large list of abuse* ot Am : leans The American border is excited to day linausr a niy officers look to a general mobilization in a few ilty* Thee have considered for months l.a' lnt<" vention n Mexico was certain ami dci nie Ilia il should b< hurried. Cowboys Gather To Attack Rebels IkH’i;l.AS. ARIZ Sepi. 9. Cowboys fro i .1; neighborhood mound Liouglas tire gathering hen today, prepared to cross the mt. ; national .im into Mexi co and attack the i mi Pi.es that ar marching on Aguii I Tic. i. The leaders Os the cowboy volunteers say they cer tainlv will cross tiie line and drive away the JJi\i mi* if bullets fall in Douglas u< they ii d a 1 the last attack on Agua Prieta. An attack on the Mexican town, which virtually is a Mexican ex ten-ion of Douglas. is expected tomor row Geperal Inez Salazar is expected to .loin forces w ith ’ General I'umpa five miles south tonight. The town has a garrison of 150 men The cowboys say they will not <ie pend on the United States troops io defend tile place, but. forgetting rules of neutrality, will ,-ei io it that no harm emits to the American town from the attacking rebels NEGRO GRIP THIEF SHOT WHEN HE RESISTS ARREST J.. M. Toy Im. a negro, is m Grady hospital suffering from two pistol wound- as the result of an attempt last night to shoot Plain Clothes Officer J. W Bry.m. < iflii r Bryan was attempting to ar rest the neg o on tito charge of steal ing i grin from a visiting neg'o Odd I- ellow when Taylor pul)<'<l n pistol ami fired fsiint blank at be officer The bul let went wild and th' ofiii er returned On fin shooting In* assailant in the hip and leg Several grips had been misscii during tin afte.noon fiom a hall a' 42 Madison avenue, where the x sit ing odd Fellow* wer> registering. Tax lor is not a member of the order, but had gained entrance to Hie ba!'. ! The Atlanta Georgian—Premium Coupon Th s coupon will be accepted at our Premium Parlor. 20 East Alabama aC» ar partial payment for any o* the beautiful premium goods dieplayed thera. See Premiun Parlor Announcement on Another Page STEALSGEMSTD BEDECK WOMAN Son of Charlotte Merchant Is Arrested Here for $4,000 Theft—Jewels Recovered. His fondness foi a young woman atid his desire to b< d—k her with diamond* caused the undoing of W. Frank Whit aker. son of a prominent merchant of charlotte. N <’’, xx ho r,i« arrested here mid •.•.ill be takert back to Norfolk to night to insv.er to the ehmge of steal . ing money ami jewels to the amount of *4.000 from the home of a wealthy Nor | foil; woman on th" morning of July 4 Si xi ’al hundred dollais worth of the stolen diamond.*, sent to the young woman in Norfolk by young Wbitakei ■ after his arrival in Atlanta a few days 1 ago. furnished the clew that led to hi* [ arrest here. The recipient of the gem* is known in Norfolk as Patsy Gaynor. 1 Her Komi is said to be in Ohio She is being detained in jail in Norfolk as a material . itness against Whitaker The woman freely turned the jewels in r to the N'orfolk police. She is said Io h;i . < l,<>n ill at the time of the rob bery. and protests that she knew noth ing whatever concerning the Job. Local detectives have recovered dia monds to the amount of about SI.OOO, w hit h had been pawned here by Whita ker. l’"lic< Sergeant M. M. Freeman of Norfolk, arrived today and will take the prisoner back to that city . Whitaker expn ssed eagerness to get back Io Nor folk. and readily consented to go wtth ou a requisition BOUGHT 12 BARRELS OF LIQUOR FOR OWN USE.SAYS AIACONITE .—.— MACON. GA., Sept. 9.—Chief of Po- ; lici i hapman today delivered to P .1. | M< Neli», a saloon keeper, twelve bar- i . rels of high-grade whisky, valued at* ■ t.itih. which were seized by a policeman ‘ lon Frida.- night. McNeils claimed the’ liquor, declared lie had ordered it fhi his personal consumption and threat- j ened to contest the chief’s right to seize 1 and holxi it. The city attorney ruled ! that unless the chief had evidence of a sale or of the whisky having been kept in a place of business, the goods. | though possibly intended for an illegal | purpose, should be surrendered to the i claimant. A polii eman was going through an alley late at night when he stumbled on a dray loaded with tiie liquor. When the negro drive r fteil the polic cman took the liquor .to the police barracks and unloaded it. GIRL’S FATHER HELD I FORCRIMECHARGED TO LYNCHED NEGRO BLUEFIELD W VA.. Sept. 9. A laic warts threatened in Mercer coun ty as a result of tile allegation that Walter Johnson the negro lynched fol loxvlng an attack upon 16-y ear-old Nita White last week, was an innocent man Tiie giund jury begun an investigation today, Gordon Whit, father of the girl, who iv.ti* air -tel Saturday on a charge of murder, and spirited away to Charles | tun for fear of negro vengeance, was i I 'Hight back and arraigned before Jus tice of the Peace Dillard today White was held in SIO,OOO bail. On Viis way to ihe just h e’s offix'e White was surround • d by 600 while men. lil H friends anti sympathizers Negroes are making I li- i lls against w bites MOB THREATENS TO LYNCH MAN JAILED FOR KILLING FAMILY Dhl ATI R. ALA.. Sept. 9. Because a mob that gathered mound the jail a' Hiinisxiiie. Ala., last night threatened to lynx h W ill Laey, accused of the murder of Samuel Smith, Mrs. Smith and their four-year-old child, the pris , oner was removed to another county < today. A special guard was kept at the jail until the prisoner was taken away. The mob remained at the jaii until daylight. > ”" r ' DIVORCE SEEKER SAYS HIS W£FE CHOKED HIM i Alleging Mr* Daisy Irene Bogtick ■ choked him last tear and threatened . to kill him. and adding that he is "in .i (■ tv fear of dentil at her hands." R. 1' Bostick, a salesman, sued her for elver, e today in the superior court. 14 alter !' Elliott sued for a divorce' _ from Mr Willie EUtott because she I posed as a single woman and had her I photograph made tn company with an -1 other man - MACON "BOOSTER TRAIN” IS OFF ON ITS FIRST TRIP II Ai'iiN G \ Sept. 9 Macon's firs: i "booster special” -ft thia morn.ng for trip through middle and south Geor gi.i. T i tradi train carried represen i tativi * and exhibits from 70 local mer c ch.nits ..n.. professional firms or corpo iii itior- The tour will last five days li.-ivd 4" txiwns will be visits! The drum mil bugie , s and a quartet equipped .with special songs were also taken t laioitg Tiii' tram comprisx'd seven <ars, | u’l attractively decorated. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ANDREWS. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 9. 1912. Short Marriage Ends Reincarnated Romance LOVE 5.000 YRS. OLD DIES Z-' V ' I / x r ■■■•'' '■ ' ’■ ' ' - / s' y / / ... -i f r I a im w- ■ / / z - z / / • //U' 1 X > ' s ® /Z, 7 vL el Ralph Ott. artist, and his wife, formerly Miss -Jane Schauf- J fert. who now seek freedom from the matrimonial bonds. Mrs. Ott Charges Cruelty in Suit for Divorce Against Her Artist Husband. ST. LOUIS, Sept. fl. —The strangest' romance of modern times has gone the way of too many modern romances, i and Mrs Ralph Chesley Ott is suing for divorce from the artist whom she married a little more than two years ago and whom she said she had met ' and loved some 5,000 years before that in Egypt. In that far age she was the Princess Amneris and he was an artist in the employ of the haughty Pharaoh, her father. If was a case of love at first sight, according to Miss Jane Schauf fert, the reincarnated Amneris and an artist model. They met. but alas! They could not marry owing to difference of ■ rank. ' But in the year of grace 1910 out in Missouri tilings differed from the Egyp ' tiati order. I.et Ott describe the meet i ing between the Princess Amneris. now Miss Sehauffert. nnd himself. lie had returned from a commission to study the ancient architecture of i Egypt by E. G. Lewis, who desired its reproduction in University City, Mo., where he saw his bride-to-be. At the time of their marriage in St. Louis they described their unique sit uation. After speaking of the strange | day dreams of Egypt that had been his. Mt. Ott continued Met in Pyramid. '•Always there was the Princess Am neris. who is now my bride. We met in ' the queen's chamber of the great pyra. mid. That was the beginning of our , love, in the evenings I met her tn the palace gardens, and together we would wend our way to the river, where she would throw sweetmeats to the sacred crocodiles I recall a night that brought great tragedy to my life. Pharaoh discovered us. there were torches, and guards who ) seized mt. \fter tl:a mi impressions arc hazy. I can recall wandering about through a sandy waste with strange people—and that Is al:. And now, when I saw Jane Sehauffert enter the queen s chamber something inside me seemed to enap and I was back in un dent Egypt and in the presence of the s Princess Amneris. ! it was the same face, the same tig . tire as that of my dream princess—the j princess that I had loved in those days ' so long, long past, and when she told me of her strange impressions of a previous existence, 1 knew and know now that we did live together 5.000 I years ago " Thus Spoke the Bride. | Mrs. Ott was quite as firmly con- ' vimed of it. I I know as surely as I am alive ■on r lat 1 litre before thousands of tears ago in Egypt, sht said. "1 was •••••••••••••••••••••••••a •Facts in the World's • • Strangest Romance • a- a • Characters. a ' a Ralph Chesly Ott .- Artist a • Jane Sehauffert Model a • They first met. slip as Princess a • Amneris. ho as an artisan, in the a ! • great Pyramid, 3088 B. C. • ' • They loved, but were unable to • • wed, ow'ng to difference in rank, a a Reincarnated, they met again at • a University City, Missouri, in 1910 a • A. D. « • They were married on Feb. 5, a • 1910, sure of eternal happiness, a • after a 5,000-year wait. a • But 5,000 years of idealization a • were as nothing to TWO YEARS a • and SIX MONTHS of actual mar- a a riage— SO SHE SUES FOR DI- a • VORCE. « •••••••*eeaaeaaae«eseaeaaa the Princess Amneris. 1 have dreamed of my artist sweetheart thousands of times. I can remember distinctly how we used to go down to the river to gether to feed the crocodiles. I re member as though it were yesterday our first meeting in the great pyramid. "1 had accompanied my father on a tour of Inspection, twid as I looked into the queen’s chamber 1 saw the most handsome man in the world. I loved him at once and saw that he loved me. That evening he came to the palace garden, and our love that has lasted through the centuries began. "I. too. hate recollections of beauti ful nights upon the royal barge, and I recall quite vfv idly my father s anger w hen we were discovered together. All 1 know is that here my recollections break off sharply, and I always feel a heaviness of hear: Now I unde - stand it all. Isis, the ancient Egyptians great goddess, watched over us through the centuries, and brought us together at last." Mrs. Ott charges cruelty in her di vorce application. TART REMOVES TWO POSTMASTERS WHO SUPPORTED TEDDY MONTGOMERY. ALA.. Sept. A specia l to The Journal from Washing ton says: Because they supported Roosevelt in the national Republican convention at Chicago. Byron Trammell, postmaster at Dothan. Ala. and J. B. Daughtry, postmaster at Hartford, Ala., have been removed from office by President Taft. It is assured that Trammell will be suc ceeded by J. VV. Renfro, and that J. N. Chancey will replace Daughtry. Tram mell and Daughtry were the only two Alabama delegates to the Chi< -.go con vention who Stood by the Hull Moos. GIHLI SUICIDE; i: Birmingham Man’s Story Thais' He Met Typist Accidentally - Being Investigated. i, Roy D. W hitehead, an insurance man ' from Bli i.iinghaau. is held today in the | ' police station for examination follow- I ' ; ng ti: suicide pt Miss Cia'ra Cameron. 1 of Columbus, while w Ith Whitehead in I ' the Terminal'station. last night. The I g’rl drank a bottle of carbolic acid ini the corridor of the station last night | just aftei saying good-bye to White- j , head, who turned, caught her in his I arms, and aided in hurrying her to I Grady hospital, where she died a few I moments later. Whitehead told the polige today that Miss Cameron was a stenographer in his Birmingham office, tnat she had left eight days ago on a vacation trip; that he came to Atlanta on business i and met the girl by accident yesterday in the Tetminal station and talked > f shop affairs these. Whitehead says he had no intimation of anything w rong. W'hitejiead is the agent for the Standard Home Company at Birming ham. Ho is married and has one child. He appears to be about 25 years old. Girl Came Here Three Days Ago. The girl came to Atlanta three days 1 ago and .registered at the Terminal ho- ' tel. Employees there say sjte was quiet 1 and retiiing, spending most of her time in her room and having’ no callers. She registered as from Birmingham, but she 1 had hi her bag a card bearing the name 1 of E„ 11. Cameron. Columbus, Ga., and the police think Columbus is her home*. I Whitehead says he believes she came * from Columbus. i it is believed the girl was without 1 funds. She paid her bill of $6 at the > hotel yesterday afternoon, and when : her bag was opened after her death only 80 cents was found. The night matron at the Terminal i station savs she noticed Whitehead and the girl talking in the waiting room : and they seemed to be intimately ac- i quainted. i E. H. Cameron, brother of the dead 1 girl, arrived today from Columbus, and had the body of his sister removed to 1 the undertaking parlors of P. J. Bloom field. It Is probable that an inquest 1 will I* held in the chapel there late in the afternoon. Funeral arrangements ‘ have not been made. Girl Came From Boston. I’tILUMBUS. GA.. Sept. ■9. Miss Claire Cameron, who killed herself in Atlanta last night, lived in Columbus until two months ago going to Bir mingham with her father and mother. Her father, John A Cameron, was for merly superintendent of transportation of the Columbus Railroad Company. She has two brothers in Columbus. Earl H. Cameron, paymaster of the Eagle and Phenix mills, and Roy Cameron, of the Majestic theater. Miss Cameron was twenty years old and came to Columbus with her par ents ten years ago from Boston. She was held in high esteem by a large cir. I of friends. GEORGIA GIDEONS IN SESSION AT AUGUSTA; ATLANTANS PREACH AUGUSTA, GA . Sept. 9 The Gideons I of Georgia held their annual meeting in | Augusta yesterday. Leading Gideons con- i ducted the services In all of the promi nent churches here. At 5 o’clock yester day afternoon the Gideons had a busi ness meeting. At the St. John Methodist yesterday mornig C. F. Burge, of Atlanta, con ducted the service. At the St. lames Methodist /X. F. Todd, also of Atlanta, made the address of the occasion. W. \V. Williams, another Atlantan, was at the Second Baptist. The welcome address at the meeting vesterday afternoon was delivered by Dr. H. M. Dußose. of this city, and was re sponded to by Edgar Oliver, national vice of Atlanta Last night at St. John Methodist, the religious services were conducted by the visiting Gideons. CAVALRY GETS PERMIT TO ATTEND STATE FAIR MACON. GA., Sept. 9.—The war de partment has granted permission for Troop A of the Eleventh United States cavalry to appear at the Georgia State fair in Macon next month. The troop will “hike” from Fort Oglethorpe, at Chickamauga park, to Macon, leaving on October 1 and camping en route. They will spend two days in Atlanta. During the fair the cavalrymen will give daily maneuvers and exhibitions of horsemanship. They will he under the command of Captain E. M. Leary. Troop A is possibly the government's most famous cavalry command. CORN 82.1 PER CENT ON SEPT. 1. SAYS U.S. REPORT WASHINGTON. Sep;. 9 \ repot- issued today by the crop reporting board, xiepartment of agriculture, esti mates the condition of crops on Sep tember 1 ns follows: <'orn. 82.1: spring wheat. 9'>.S; fall wheat, 84.3; oats. 92.3; barley. 88.89. AND FUNERALS DEATHS AND FUNERALS W. R. Pylant. The funeral of W R. Py ant. 27 years old. who died at a .sanitarium yester day. was held at the Hoxveil Station residence this afternoon at 2 o’clock. Interment was at Sylvester.” He is sur vived by his widow and one child. Mrs. Francis Parker. The body of Mrs. Francis Parker 66 i veais old. xx ho died Saturday night, was buried at Oakland cemetery tlfis uft- 11. moon at the conclusion of funeral is rviees at Greenberg A- Bond’s chapel Mrs. Parker resided at 319 North I 1.11• ku-i*n st ro*'t • Six Miners Failed to • • Wear Union Buttons; •! • LOOO Go on Strike-i . . • POTTSVILLE. PA.. Sept. 9. • • One thousand miners went on • • ’’il; at the Lehigh Coal and Nav- • • igation Company’s No. 10 colliery • • at Coal Dale today because half a • ' • dozen mine workers failed to wear • ■ • a union button when the miners • • appealed for work. ' • ® This was button day at the col- • • liery, and the wearing of a button * • indicated that their dues had been o ' • paid for the quarter. • j NEGfiMEN INGONOTIDN Governor Brown Welcomes the Colored Odd Fellows of Na tion Gathered at Armory. The Grand United Order of Odd Fel lows of America, a negro organization, began its sixteenth annual convention today with welcome addresses by pub lic officials of Georgia and Atlanta and responses from their own delegates. The six days session opened at the Auditorium at 11 o'clock, with the wel come address by Governor Joseph M. Brown. Governor Brown talked of the impor tance of the national meeting and spoke of the work the lodge has done for the race. He extended a welcome to the delegates and wished them a successful meeting. E. H. Morris, of Chicago, re sponded to the address. Following the talks, Mayor Court laid S. Winn, representing the city, made an address of welcome. Others who spoke were W. R. Morris, of the supteme court of the lodge; welcome address in behaif of the Odd Fellows of Georgia, Dr. C. T. Walker; in of the households of the city, Lucile Den nis. Dr William F. Penn spoke for the Odd Fellows of Atlanta. Henry Lincoln Johnson, registrar of deeds of the District of Columbia, pre sided at today’s session, tilling the place of the grand master, E. H. Morris, of t hicago. Henry Lincoln Johnson is known to Atlanta people as one of the Republican leaders of Georgia. Several thousand delegates* are at tending the convention. Many of them arrived in Atlanta last night from the North. East and West, and today spe cial trains from various points in Georgia brought others. At the close of the convention an excursion train will carry the delegates to Tuskegee, Ala., where the large negro school is located. MRS. J. R. M’LEAN DIES DESPITE PHYSICIAN’S RACE TO HER BEDSIDE BAR HARBOR, MAINE. Sept. 9.—Mrs. I John R. McLean, w ife of the millionaire j Washington and Cincinnati publisher, died lat 5.15 o'clock today. She had been ill I for some time with pneumonia, and suf . fcred a sinking spell yesterday, from I which she failed to rally. The great race made to save Mrs. Mc- I Lean’s life by Dr. Llewellyn Barker, of Johns Hopkins university, who reached her bedside at 8:30 p. m., after traveling . 131 miles from the North Carolina woods in less than forty-one hours, was in vain. At her side when she passed away were her husband, their son. Edward B. Mc- Lean. and Mrs. McLean's sister. Mme. Bakhrnetoff. wife of the Russian ambas sador. Dr. Barker's journey from the South was undoubtedly one of the fastest, long est and most spectacular races against death ever known. The rail portion of the journey was made at an average of 72 miles an hour and shattered all records.for train speed along the Atlantic coast. It was such a journey as no physician ever had before undertaken. On the way Dr. Barker rode on three special trains, a mountain wag on, an automobile, a taxicab, a motorboat and a livery carriage. He’s Ruptured! | N r take any chance in getting vy ting that truss. Come to Jacobs’ Pharmacy, where we have experts to examine the child and to give you the best professional advice. On the sec ond Floor of our Main Store quiet and apart from the general business, we have Private Fitting Rooms with men and women attendants and every other convenience for your comfort. Jacobs’ PhartiXiey has the best equip ped Truss Departnn nt in the Southern States. We have the most extensive stock of all standard gr~ T russes \ Elastic Hosiery --pT*— Belts Bandages ! Abdominal Supporters Your physician feels safe with our titling, because he knows that Jacobs’ Pharmacy is the most dependable in I these critical cases. Furthermore, we I give you the lowest possible prices on tin s, goods. Why. then, take chances elsewhere? Jacobs’ Pharmacy Atlanta, Ca. EW5' UNION mODDM NEWS Georgia Man, Re-elected Presi dent. Declares Organization Is Rapidly Gaining Power. President Charles S. Barrett returned today from Chattanooga, where he pr - sided last week over the eleventh ar nual national convention of the Farn ers union. Mr 7 Barrett xvas elected to head the organization for the seventh consecu tive time, and before leaving so. hi., home in Atlanta entered actively into his new y ear’s work. President Barrett speaks modestlv of the directing part he played in the big convention just concluded, but he ta'l* most interestingly of the great organ ization he heads, its past and its tn ture. Under a wise and watchful admfrita. tration. the Farmers union has dex,’. oped into by far the most militant and aggressive organization the farmers of America ever have had. Its Chatta nooga convention was attended by del egates from every state in the Union.' Hard Class to Organize. Discussing the organization and work of the Farmers union. President Bar rett said: ’lt must be understood that the m ~' difficult class in America to organize and keep organized ie that class whi comprises the fanning population. Id all the stages of history the farmer h-.s in the very nature of his calling been more or less an Isolated and independ ent part of the people of all nations. "When the Farmers union was first organized in Texas, in 1902, it had to reckon with these circumstances. In addition’, the founders had to "ombat the distrust of all organiza tions of such character, because of trie many failures in the past. Such fail ures could be traced to several causes. Foremost among them, perhaps, un selfishness on the part of leaders, wlm were bent upon using the farmer to advance their own personal fortune-, whether running for governor, sheriff, congressman or even in the channel.', of commerce. Once such men had won what they were seeking, the organiza tion, which they had harmed rather than helped by their influence, speedily became a secondary factor in their lives. Efforts to organize the farmer had previously failed, too. because the members, encouraged by their short sighted leaders, went to pieces on the rocks of.partisan polities. Now Has 3,C00,000 Members. "We have in our present organiza tion. in the face of temptation and po litical bribes, steered clear of engaging directly in politics. Here and there we have found it necessary to formulate legislative programs, both state anil national. Where this has been done it lias been without reference to parties or party alignment, but simply and solely for the advancement of the farmer, irrespective of the political creed he might embrace. "We have approximately 3,000,000 members, and they include all class*- of farmers in this nation, from the poor cropper to the wealthiest owner of his oxvn acres, not to count the physicians tiie teachers, the editors and other* who an eligible to membership and who are giving us their financial and moral support. "I know. too. and this is an impor tant gauge, that from the standpoint of dues actually paid in tiie F'armei union is larger and more powerful than since its founding. "1 am convinced, from my personal observations taken in traveling ever: American state for several years in the service of these people, thift the Farmers union is the greatest anil most practical organization of farmers in history." ATLANTA THEATER SEATS NOW SELLING THE OLD HOMESTEAD Tues, and Wed.. Mat. Wed. Nights. 25c to $1; Mat.. 25c to 75 ' I ——— . „ LWc : i:\ GREAT SCENIC REVIVAL OF BARTLEY CAMPBELL S ROMANCE. THE WHITE SLAVE Complete Scenic Production. Hear the Famous Jubilee Singers. Seats now on sale. Calla Taxi PHONE BELLE ISLE — — Ivy SIQO Atlanta 1598 Touring cars and closed cars for all occasions DAY oi NIGHT. Any road. Anywhere. Any time Office: 4 Luckie St., Opp. Pied mont Hotel. Belle Isle Auto Rent Service