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'MAIN SHEET —-Part 11.§
Organized Labor Resents Attacks
of Former Governor and Declare
He Violated Law When He Sent
Troops to Augusta and Mines.
“Cheap Bid for Farmers’ Union
Votes,” Term Given Reference
to Agricultural Organization as
Superior to Other Unionists.
The reoly of the Georgia Federa
tion of Labor to former Governor Jo
seph M. Brown’s attack upon it fol
lows:
To the Peonle of Georgia:
As long as Ex-Governor Brown,
week after week, carried on his bit
ter attacks upon organized labor in
his newspapers articles, organized ia
bor did not think it worth while to
reply to his diatribes.
This is a free country, and the Ex-‘
Governor s entitled to his own par
ticular brand of views, if the news-}
papers will publish them |
But when he announces in nis plat- I
form, as practically his sole political |
plank, false and defamatory matter, |
and seeks to create .prejudice against
a large body of his feliow citizens in
order to be elected te the exalted{
office of United States Senator, we
feel bound to protest. ;
Nor do we desire to descend to hll‘
level of mere vulgdr abuse. ‘
The people of Georgia have twlce‘
honored him greatly. And, while |
peoples of sister States in periods of;
political aberration have heaped sim
ilar honors upon other men, whose
very names have become synonyms
of scorn and jest, ¢« and who have
brought no credit to such great Com
monwealths, and it does not, there
fore, follow that every man elacted
to the great office of (Governor must
necessarily be wise, and just, and pa
triotic, we prefer to reply to Ex-Gov
ernor Brown's attacks in far fairer
and more parliamentary terms than
ie found in his attacks upon organ
ized labor.
Indeed, organized labor truly con
tributed largely to “Little Joe's” first
election The vote-getting (but, as
afterward proved, specious) slogan of
“Brown and Bread,” won him thous
ands of votes: for to the wage
earners the world over, in all the
ages, the promigs of more bread by
patriot' or scheming demagogue, has
had an alluring effect. :
“Liked Unions Then.”
In those days, and later in the early
part of his incumbency, Governor
Joseph M. Brown thought vastly well
of labor unions. In stenographically
reported addresses to labor organiza
tions, he fairly bubbled over .with
words of praise, love, affection, for
the arganpized and “horny-handed
sons af toll.” 9
Did he not know as much about or
ganized labor then as now? It was
not until Governor Brown showed a
fatal bent of mind to place martial
laiwv above civil law—to substitute
Mausers apnd drumhead courtmar
tials for the orderly processes of clvil
tribupals that organized working
men and thousands of other citizens
sorrowfully parted political company
with him.
The Walker Coounty coal mine af
fair (the military uselessly Ttushed
there at the request of One of his
largest campaign contributors); the
Augusta street railway strike; the
Georgia Railroad strike; in all these
instances Governor BMwn, in his
military zeal, rode roughshod over
Federal and State Congtitutions and
grossly violated Georgia statutes;
and at Angusta innocent, inoffensive
citizens were outrageously shot down
by his militia
Was organized labor alone in pro
testing agzinst these acts of the Gov
ernor? No. Scores of newspapers
took him severly to task, and Thomas
F. Watson, whose home is near Au
gusta, and who closely investigated
the facts of that awful massacre, In
several issues of his Jeffersonian,
natably in those of July 3 and 10,
1913, excoriated him and his military
Continued on Page 4, Column 4.
New York Crowds Tango onSands
Bathing Suits Fast Fading Away
It's Very Different From Atlanta
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2 e BT
1 e ——————————
Apoplexy Threatens Park Board Here if Mem
bers Ever Take Trip East.
Some of the members of the Atlanta
Park Board ought to go to New York
and look over the adjacent beaches—
say Brighton or 'Long Beach. They
doubtless would see something inter
esting. And when they got back to
Atlanta, they probably would flee
twittering with embarrassment from
anyone who mentioned sleeves for
bathing and other little ideas which
some people are so unmannerly as to
call twaddle.
They are dancing the tango on the
New York beaches these days. The
women—or those of them whose pro
portiong Jjustify it—are wearing
basque bathing suits, with skirts that
might as well not be. And some of
them (ah, how the Park Boarders
‘would frizzle about the ears!) are
}wearlng half-hose instead of stock
ings—and are of the opinion that it'ls
Inot at all necessary that the same
Wife Made Husband's
Successor on Board
CHICAGO, July 18.—The Sethness
house is divided against itself in a
way which Mayor Harrison says suits
him. Charles O. Sethness was a mem
ber of the Board of Education who
voted against retention of Ella Flagg
Young as superintendent of schools,
and for that reason was dismissed
frcm the board
Now the Mayor will send to Council
the name of Mrs. Sethness to fill the
place made vacant by her husband.
Mrs, Sethness is a- partisan of Mrs.
Young, and in a purely political way
disagrees with her husband on cer
tain educational subjects,
— HEABRSTS —
AN e w\r"?_-—_rr——-——-
A AR e
- AT AU ISR Y -
' 'o') “":’) ¥ L 3}{‘\l‘\ |
’:ij fl““’,/i‘l i//‘ \\' \\ Qt‘r .
o 3 Ve ,““ 7y “W‘
should be wet,
Beach-dancing—short skirts—half.
hose—and.the pulpit rising in majes
tic wrath in denouncement that has
not had one particle of effect thus
far. Father John Belford, a famous
churchman of Brooklyn, went so far
as to say that “for things like this,
Sodom was destroyed by an angry
God. Are we {nviting Divife ven
geance? We certainly seem to chal
lenge the Creator.”
But the dancing goes on and seg
ments of the bathing suits continue
to come off; and if the Atlanta Park
Board is contemplating an’ educa
tional tour of Investigation, to see
what sort of regulations the Eastern
beaches have for their bathers, why,
the Atlanta Park Boarc would bet
ter make it pretty soon. Even now
the vista of that visit includes ner
vous prostrations and apoplexy.
HAMMOND, IND., July 18.—For
mer Mayor P. Reilly, of Ha.mmond.i
was viciously attacked last night by
John Quinn, a legless Chicagoan, who
is said to own a biock of houses in
Chicago and is a notorious beggar.f
Beggars are barred in Hammond. |
{ Quinn was begging on the streets.
Reilly, in citizen’s clothes, started to
arrest Quinn. Quinn struck Reilly on
the head with his crutches, which ne
{ used after the manner of a flall, and,
‘ifinurfid Reilly. A patrol wagon and a
| squad of police were necessary to get
| Quinn to Jail |
ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, JULY ‘l9, 191,
M.E.UNIERGITY
Hundred Acres on Chattahoochee
River Latest Offer Put Up to
Trustees.
METHODISTS GIVE THANKS
‘Planning for the great central uni
versity of Southern Methodlsm, which
will be established in Atlanta, will be
resumed Monday, following the fer
vent rejoicing and thanksgiving to
which Methodists of Atlanta have
dedicated Sunday.
One of the principal tasks of the ex
ecutive committee will be the selec
tion of a site; another, the selection
of a name.
As to the first .task, the committ=e
has four proffered sites from which, to
make a selection. One is the donation
of Edwin P. Ansley of 75 acres near
the Oglethorpe University site;, an
other is offered by Victor Kriegs
haber, and is located on the Cheshire
road: another by B. F. Burdette, be
tng 75 acres out Peachtree road in
DeKalb County, and the fourth by
Lowry Arnold and J. D. Robinson, for
the Riverside Land Company, of 100
acres on Chattahoochee River,
The fourth offer was made Satur
day. The land is in the plat of the
Riverside Land Company and is sit
uated {n the northern part of Fulton
County, toward which considerable
‘building has been done of late..
It gither of the sites is accepted, a‘
‘deed will be made to the newly elect
-led trustees. Until this is done there!
will be no further developments in the
task of perfecting plans finally.
The selection of a name will be an
interesting feature of the executive
committee's work. The preponder
ance of opinion is that the institution
will be named “Candler University,”
after Asa (. Candler, the generous
donor of $1,000,000 toward its estab
lishment. A number of letters have
been received by newspapers and by
the executive committee members
urging the adoption of the name of tie
university’'s benefactor.
WHOLE TOWN 1S VACCINATED.
LELAND, ILL., July 18.—John Sater
insisted on dolng his marketing, even
though his family is suffering from
smallpox and umder '}uarnmlne, For
that reason the 700 residents of the vil
lage were vaccinated. :
i . il N
Zionists in Atlanta
To Honor Dr. Herzl
Meémorial Service To-Day for Found
er'of Back-to-Palestine
Movement.
Dr. Theodore Herzl, founder of
modern Zionism, will-be honored by
Jews of Atlanta at a memorial meet*
ing Sunday afternoon at 4 o'cloek
in the Jewish Educational Alliance
Hall. Dr. Herzl, a statesman and
author, was principal factor in the
movement to establish a Jewish cen
ter in Palestine to which people of
his race may return for unobstructad
commercial and agricultural pursuitf.
More than 100,000 Jews have returned
‘to_the Palestine colonies under aus
pices of the movement, and the He
brew language has been rejuvenated.
. The Atlanta Zionist Society, under
\whosg auspices the memorial meeting
will be held, has arranged a program,
with the memorial address by Rabbi
Dr. H. Yood. The services will be
conducted by Cantor Rev. Solo H.
Goldstone. There will be music by
Oscar Gershon, and Miss Forman, of
San Francisco, and addresses by
Colonel Richard A. Friedson, Joel
Dorfan and Miss Ida Feldman. The
public s invited
. .
Does Big Business
.
Selling Young Foxes
KEOKUK, lOWA, July 18 —One of
the most peculiar lines of business ever
conducted in Keokuk is that which C.
B. Pinkerton has been making ‘a side
line. This business is that of buying
and selling live foxes, which are shipped
here - from many Western and Southern
States for hunting clubs and individuals
in Eastern and Southern States.
The demand for them is eaormous.
H. J. Nichols, of Garden City, Long
Island, N! Y.. has placed an order with
Pinkerton for 500 foxes, to be shipped
as soon as they can be secured. Nich
ols, a New York miillonaire, owns a
5,000-acre farm on Long Island, and
has fenced in the whole estate with a
wire fence that the animals can not get
through. Pinkerton says the greater
number of animals are sold in New
\ank, The prices range from $1 to $3.50.
Daughter Gets $l,OOO
0f $600,000 Estate
LOS ANGELES, July 18, —Cutting off
o daughter, Mrs. Minnie White, wife of
G. Earl White, with a bequest of $l,OOO,
'the will of George Albert Ralphs, a
wealthy grocer, has just been filed for
probate. -
The value of the estate is_ssoo,ooo.
The widow, Mrs. Wallula Ralphs; a son,
Albert T. Ralphs, 17 years pld, and a
daughter, Annabelle Ralphs, 11 years
| old, are the chief beneficiaries,
Local Branch of, Mothers’ Con
gress Begins Active Work
Monday.
HUNDRED TO BE CARED FOR
An active f-anl:\hp;;:fm' funds with
which to gare for the babies of At
lanta’'s poor during the remainder of
the simmer will be launched Monday
by the women composing the Fifth
Georgia Branch of the National Moth
ers’ Congress,
The campaign headquarters will be
in charge of Mrs. John Rowlett, man.
aging director, of No. 186 East Pine
streel, where contributions toward the
ald of the work will be received.
The present summer's campaign
will be similar to the cafvass made
in Atlanta last year for protection to
babies under 12 months old in fur
nishing fresh milk to the infants.
60 Cared for Last Year.
Last year 60 habies were cared for
by the local branch of the National
Mothers' Congress, and it is proposed
to increase the list of infants wno are
in need of pure milk and cereal food to
at least 100.
According to. City Warden Evans,
there are a number of families in the
city in need of such help for their
babies.
A number of committees have been
formed by Mrs. Rowlett, who ig chair
man of the central committee, and a
canvass of the business district, as
well as an appeal to the local women's
organizations, will be made for funds
with which to begin the work. -
i Donations Are Asked.
Merchants and grocers of the city
have been asked by the committees to
make donations of baby food or sup
plies of fresh milk to the central com
mittee headquarters, where the dona
tions will be distributed to the needy
cases,
A gift of $lO, according to the mem
bers, will take care of one baby for
the rest of the summer, and 10 cents
will secure fresh milk for one day.
The central committee i 8 composed
of Mrs, John Rowlett, chairman; Mrs.
A. M. Smith, Mrs. Thornwell Jacobs,
Mrs. Staples, Mrs. W. H. Wiggs, Mrs
S. W. McCallie, Mrs. Clem E. Wal
lraven. Miss Worms and Mrs. Charies
W. Davis,
THIS SECTION CONTAINS
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS
Bill for Negro Public
.
Bath Up to Council
Ordinance Establishing Place in First
Ward Church To Be Con
sidered Monday.
An ordinance which will attract
considerable attention in the City
Council Monday afternoon is that of
Councilman Wardlaw to appropriate
$2OO for a public bath for negroes of
the First Ward. It is proposed to in
stall the bath in the basement of one
of the negro churches. The measure
is sald to have the support of a num
ber of Aldermen.
With the ‘Hannah Cemetery ordi
nance in abeyance in the Finance
Committee, the meeting of Council
promises to be rather dull. The
Southeastern Fair ordinance, calling
upon the Ceuncil of 1915 to vote $75,-
000 for the establishment of the fair,
will be up for passage. The ordinance
to vote $750 for the survey of Lake
wood Park as the site of the South
eastern Fair as a permanent institu
tion also will be voted on.
Saloofiérfifijaifiz in
‘Nuisance' Campaign
CHATTANOOGA, July 18.—Attor
neys for the Lexington Brewing Com
pany and 24 other defendants, saloon
keepers and dealers in malt liquors in
Chattanooga, filed a bill in Chancery
to-day asking an injupction agalnst
Frank M. Thompson, Attorney Gea
eral of Tennessee, and W. B. Swaney,
John H. Early and W. G. M. Thomas,
special counsel appointed by Govern
or Hooper, seeking to enjoin them
from flling any more bllls of injunc
tion closing saloons and near-beer
stands under the new State nuisance
law. g
It is al‘gpd that the nuisance law
is in violation of the State and Unitad
States Constitutions, and that on a
question of fact the defendants have
not violated any law of the State, In
that they sell only ‘malt non-intoxi
cating liquors, and that the recent
nuisance law applles only to intoxi-
cants.
Three Bound Over
On Burglary Charges
J. H. Hall, of No. 428 Windsor
street; Henry Bone, of No. 21 Irwin
street, and Frank Gaines, of Birming
ham, Ala., were bound over to the
Grandg Jury under $5OO bond each on
charges of attempted burglary by the
Police Recorder Saturday afternoon.
They were caught Friday night at
tempting to enter a clothing store at
No. 22 Decatur street, according to
the police.
. .
Dairyman Is Fined
For Bacteria in Milk
5
W. C. Bheperd, a dairyman, on
Highland road, was fined $25 and
costs by Judge Preston Saturday aft
ernoon on the testimony of Dr.
Claude A. Smith, City Bacteriologist,
who stated that in two pints of milk
he had found 1,000,000 bacteria.,
Sheperd had been warned many
times, Dr. Smith said, but had per
sisted in disregarding warnings,
.
Thief Captured by
Dog Is Sentenced
t SAN FRANCISCO, July 18.—Marcello
Hernandez, captured by a dog Saturday,
has just been sentenced to six months
in the county jail. “Tos' is the name
of the collie dog that captured him.
Hernandez stole a rug from the
dog’s owner and ran. ‘‘Tos' saw him
and gave chase. He cornered Her
nandez and heid him until the police
arrived.
Georg_i‘a;-fé_r_fi_ifilifés' to
. .
Hold Joint Reunion
The annual reunfon of the descend
ants of the late Captain H. Cheshire
will be combined next Wednesday
with that of the Goodwin family
club and will be held at the old
[(‘rnuhno- home on the Johnson road.
About 250 persons are expected to
participate in the reunion A bas
ket dinner will be served at noon.
Calls Sand Fly a
.
Pellagra Carrier
I TOPEKA, July 18.—The sand iy
has been shown to be an agent for
the transmission of pellagra, Profes
sor 8. J. Hunter, of the University of
Kansas, announces.
Professor Hunter allowed a mon
key to be bitten by sand flies that
had bitten persons known to have
pellagra. The animal showed symp
toms of inoculation, he says.
,
Movies for Adults
Only Is Latest Plan
CHICAGO, July 18.—An ordinance
permitting the exhibition of certain mo
tion pictures to ‘adults only” was rec
ommended by the Judiciary Commitree
of the City Council. The measure was
advocated by Seecond Deputy Commis
sioner of Police Funkhouser, who has
lcharge of the censorship.
World-Famous Viennese Surgeon
Says Soft Beds Are Bad, Par~
ticularly for Adolescents—Best
Sleep Enjoyed on Firm Couchg
Pillow Should Be No Higher Than
the Breadth From Ear to Shoul«
der—Rest on Right Shouldes
Blade and Relieve the Heart,
By DR. ADOLF LORENZ.
In view of the notable discussions of*
the convention of the American medé '
cal Association and in the light of
discoveries R science announced
abroad, this article by the eminens -
medical authority is especially times:
ly. It will interest and inform every '
geader as well as the practitioner, I 8
is the first of a series of articles Dr,
Lorenz is to write expressly for tha
American.
VIENNA, July 15.—At first sight,
especially to the restless American,
it might seem ridiculous to speak
about lying down and quite useless
to bestow thought on it. Yet the
most superficial reflection will show
that the question of recumbence is
}hy no means an indifferent ons for
man.
We spend fully a third part of our
life recumbent, 2ven when we en
joy the advantage of constant health,
Those who are less fortunate in this
respect have to reckon on thus
spending a still bigger fraction of
their span.
Finally, in the case of all to whomy,
it is aliotted to die in their h«la.‘
the sublimest moment of existence—;
that of the great cmssing!——omi
takes them lying down. And to dle|
lving down is a far easier lot thmi
to have to sit crouched up, fighting;
death in the struggle for air while:
awaiting release.
Man Must Submit
All healthy men who have worked '
till exhausted, yearn for and delll’htij
in recumbence; it irks and dlsgusts:
them as soon as a refreshing sleep!
has rested them and brought fresh
elasticity to their tired Ilimbs. F\or‘
the sick man recumbence is the only |
possibility of existence; whether “i
sult him or not, he must submit to ite!
compulsion.
. No one can feel well who les oon
Hlnual!y. It is only the new-bormy!
%‘nvfani, in whom sleep and digestion |
| constitute its whole vital activity, |
}thm is restlessly happy recumbent;: !
tut this only until its arms and lege |
galn strength sufficient for the prim
itive and natural method of locomo
tion—creeping. As soon as its delight ‘
lfn motion awakens, the lying posture
‘ss only assumed under the compule
sion of fatigue. i
\ Fatigue forces the healthy adult te |
remain lying uniil the sensation has |
passed off. He values recumbence as |
an agreeable periodic break in his
activity, But his lying down brings!
its full blessing only with refreshing
sleep. !
We May Sleep Even Walking.
Not but that a man tired to exw
haustion is able to sleep in almost
sny positon. Even the automatic ao< 1
tion of walking does not preclude a
sort of half sleep. Indeed, to sleep
walking appears to be easier than to
sleep standing. Standing requires & !
continuous uniform activity of those
muscular energies which maintaimn
equilibrium, and this is far more dif« |
ficult for the sub-consclousiess to ex«
cite than is that automatic alternation
io{ muscular action in walking, which
can be carried on even during com
;plete absence of consciousness. More< |
ever, in the latter case the forward
}mminn facilitates the maintenance of
lthe equilibrium
A rider, tired to exhaustion, wil}
‘awake from sleep when threatened
i\\ith a fall from the saddle.
' An utterly fatigued man, who can |
rest himself horizontally, will not stop |
to examine the quality of his couch, |
:Tht} Chinese coolie sleefs on his card |
with his head hanging backward and |
' his mouth open, undistured by the |
flies using this passage into his in<!
terior unhindered. We see the brick« i
layer, during his short midday in«
terval, stretched full length on the!