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Members of Executive Commnt-I
tee to Plan Placing $57,504,-
080 in Georgia.
. Members of th eexecutive (wnmmll-i
‘Ai‘oe in the campaign for selling war
savings certificates were to meet
Wednesday afternoon at the Govern
‘or's Mansion for a confeernce with
Harry M. Lasker, of Washington, who
‘pame down to discuss details of the
*thrift” campaign. |
. Hugh Richardson, State director of
the campalgn, was compieting Wed
pesday his list of committees which
are expected to bring about the In
' vestment of Georglans In $57,604,080
worth of stamps and certificates, that
sum being the Georgia quota fixed
‘by the national headquarters, The
appointment is based on S2O per capita
in every State.
. Haynes C. McFadden has been ap
pointed chalrman o fthe State com
~mittes on banks and bankers, and will
‘place the certificates with Georgig
‘ banks,
District Leaders Named.
1 Director Richardson Wednesday
_announced the appointment of chalr
‘men in all the Congresstonal districts,
‘ng follows:
" Pirst District—General Peter W,
Meldrim, Savannah,
i Second District—John W, Callahan,
~ Bainbridge.
. Third District—P. A. YFenimore,
Americus.
j Fourth District—W, C. Bradley, Ce
~lumbus.
. Fifth District—J. M. B. Hoxey, At
‘lanta.
. Bixth District—Charles B, Lewis,
“Macon.
© Seventh District—Morgan L. Mec-
Neel, Marietta.
. Bighth District—J. F\. Tibbitts, Ath
~ens,
Ninth District—Samuel Tate, Tate.
Tenth District—Rufus H. Brown,
- Augusta.
~ Eleventh District—John T. Brant
~ley. Blackshear.
© Twelfth District—John F. Corker,
+ Dublin.
& Director Richardson has tele
‘graphed these chairmen to meet in
~ Atlanta next Friday morning at 10
“o'clock for a conference with him
“and the members of the executive
" gommittee at the Chamber of Com
§ Conference Planned. |
. Th egonference will be attended by
4 (joverndr Dorsey, Mayor Candler, Je-
S vome Jones, Fuller B. Callaway, of
" LaGrange: M. L. Brittain, Charles S,
Barrett. H. W, Miller, Forrest Adalr,
. Bawin F. Johnson, Bolling H. Jones
Jand Beaumont Davison, who consti-
L tute the executive committee for the
# State.
& At this important conference plans
* will be outlined for the sale of the
* certificates and the organization for
that purpose will be perfected. Each
®of the anpointees is giving of his time
cand his ability without any com
. pensation, but from a sense of pa
& triot duty. !
¢ Mr. Richardson is of the' opinion
‘that the sale of these certificates will
20 & long way in arousing a unani-
S mous interest in the country’s crisis,
‘Decause it is planned to sell stamps
~ and certificates of from 25 cents up
.to SIOO. The allotment for Georgia
is on the same basis as every other
- Stad in the Union which is S2O per
capita. The Government will sell a
¥ total of $2,000.000,000 worth of these
_ certificates, which will bear interest
N the rate of 4 per cent compounded
TR
White New Head of
. Commerce Chamber
.W. H. White, Jr, of the W. H.
. White Provision Company, has been
ielected president of the Atlanta
Chamber of Commerce for a one
“wear term to succeed van E. Allen.
The results were announced Tuesday
fternoon following the closing of the
“hallot boxes at 5 o'clock. .
S other new ofl:;:firs are: B P
. Mcßurney, first vicé president, two-
Ty term; J. Eppe Brown, second
vice president, two-year term; Henry
+W. Davis, treasurer, {wo-year term.
4 »_blflewrs for two-year terms are
P, 8. Arkwright, E. D. Duncan, L. D.
sicks, George D. McCutcheon, W. R.
. Prescott, Haynes McFadden, Allen F.
‘Johnson and E. M. Hudson.
-~ Directors to fil] unexperide terms of
one year each are Lec Ashcraft and
“W. D. Sllis, Jr.
T lnew officers will go in Jan-
COL, JORN FWY 1
‘* I 1 i
..
d |
ol TY"N'NE Y[AHS []u]y
s o
4 .
"Says Vito-Rex Is the Best Ap
oß - 2 :
- petizer and Stomach Tonic He
. Has Ever Used—Recommends
It to All oid People.
& e
y one in Atlanta knows Colonel
iohn F. Wynne, the inventor of the
“moted Perpetual Calendar, which is a
“patented product and is sold all over the
“globe by Colonel Wynne. Colonel
EWynne, seated in his offices at 1105
F Candler Bullding, a few days ago, re-
Snarked to a representative of the Vito
-4 Co.: “I am now in my sixty-ninth
" year, and am hale and hearty, except
for a little touch of eczema. which both
“ #re me occasionally. During my life I
Bave tried several proprietary medicines,
Sbut I can truthfully say that Vito-Rex
|is the best sppetizer, tonic and assim
s Hiator I have ever used. My advice to
- #Md people like myself, who need a gen
?&fl _;“,tanlc. is: Take Vito-Rex, It will
LR erfluved strength and energy.”
& ¥ito-Rex, the popular stomach tonic, is
L 80ld tn Atlanta by all leading druggists
A 1 co uh;: {mfi iron o‘r other mineral sub
stanc ut is purely a vegetable com
{lol _Avoid mhtrmtes with similar
inding names—get the genuine Vito
““,, $1 per bottle: & bottles for
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN @& e 4 Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes o %% “WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1917.
. . \
Vote Picket, Denied ‘
Courthouse, to Speak
-
In Labor Union Hall
CHATTANOOGA, Nov, 28
Maude Younger is to speak to
night in Chattanooga after a pre
iiminary refusal of the courthouse
auditorium, a HWeated meeting of
the City Commission and Intima
tions on the part of the pollce
head that the picketing suffragist
would not be tolesmted here, The
Central Labor Union has come to
the rescue. offering its hall, The
majority vote or tne city govern
ment has decreed that she is not
to be molested unless actually
violating the law or nreaxking the
peace. The Commissioner of Po-
Hee still remains silent and
threatening.
Miss Younger comes to this city
after an arduous tour through
Tennessee. Shut out at Nashville |
and Memphis and forced to speak |
in the open air at Knoxville
Tuesday night, the invasion of |
the Volunteer State seemed al
most hopeless, The only limita- |
tion here now is the small seat- |
ing capacity of the hall. Unless ‘
counter militant moves are made ‘
on the part of Police Commission -
er or Sheriff, no sensations arc |
expected. i
. .
Hinghaw Calls Wilson
‘Chief Brewer’ of U. S
Chief Brewer’ of U. 8.
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—President
Wilson was called the “chief brewer
of America” by Virgil G. Hinshaw,
chairman of the Prohibition party in
a statement condemning the Presi
dent’s decree that beer may contain
no more than 38 per cent of alcohol.
Hinshaw declared the President 1s
ten years behind Congress and twen
ty-five . years behind the American
people in considering beer a rela
tively harmless beverage.
“It is the evident alm of the ad
iministration,” sald Hinshaw, “to stem
the tide of prohibition. If the Presi
dent Lad givén the food administra
tion full sway national prohibition
would now obtain.”
. .
Prof. King Outlines
Engineering Course
A special course of engineering for
operating engineers of Atlanta was
outlined Tuesday night by Professor
R. 8. Xing, of the experimental de
artment of Georgla Tech, at a meet
rng of Atlanta stationary engineers
at No. 8 1-2 West Alabama street, The
meeting was called to discuss ways
of aiding the Fuel Administrator of
‘the Government in the conservation
‘o! coal.
Other speakers of the evening were
Oscar Mills, County Commissioner;
H. D, Cousins, of Newark, N. J.,
founder and first president of the
National Association of Stationary
Engineers, and T. W. Douglas, chief
engineer of the Loulsville and Nash
ville Joint Terminals.
Capital to Enforce
Drastic Liquor Law
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Nov, 28.—~0n the
eve of the assembling of Congress
the local authrities put into effect to
day drastic measures to keep whisky
out of Washington. Sixty-one Wash
ingtonians, including three women,
were arraigned in court today charg
ed with violating the law which pro
hibits the Interstate shipment of
liquors in unlabeled packages. All
were taken in raids made by the local
police and agents of the Department
of Justice on trains on the Washing
ton, Baltimore and Annapolis Electric
Rallway while they were en route
with their “packages” from Baltimore
to this city. This was the largest
number of prisoners ever arrested on
a liquor charge in this city.
To Band of Italians
(By International News Service.)
NEW YORK, Nov, 28.—FBight men
were held in New York and Brooklyn
today on information Ilven by Ralph
Danlell regarding 23 alleged murders
by members of a gang with head
quarters in Brooklyn. Eighteen of
the alleged murders have 'been veri
fleld, the police say.
~ Through Danlello’s story the work
ings of three alleged bands of erim
inals who have levied tribute and ex
acted vengeance in the Italian sec
tion of the city were revealed. They
include 10 bosses and about 60 gun
- men.
Presbyteri 1
Presbyterians Plan
; . "
~ For Union Service
A union service of all Presbyterian
churches of Atlanta will be held
Thanksgiving morning at 10:30
o'clock at the Central Presbyterian
Church. Dr. R. I\, Kirkpatrick, of the
| West End Presbyterfan Chureh, will
,de‘iver the address. A special of
fering to be taken will be divided be
tween the Nacoochee School in North
iGeorgia and the Thornwell Orphan
age, in South Carolina,
. All the Presbyterlan pastors are
urged to meet with Dr. Dunbar Og
lrion. pastor of the church, at 10:15
io'clock. to enter the church in a body
To Fix Gray Hairs |
e ——————]
Here's the simple, easy, safe way to
surely change gray or faded, lifeless
hair to. a uniform, dark, lustrous,
beautiful shade—perfectly natural in
appeargnce. Merely do as many thou
sands have done and apply Q-ban
Not a quick-acting dye, but defies de
tection. - Guaranteed harmiess—7sc a
large bottle. Sold hy Jacobs’ Phar
macy and all good drug stores. Try
Q-ban Hair Tonic; Q-bar Tiquid
Shampoo; Q-ban Soap. Also Q-ban
Depilatory
Qb A
Hair Color Restorer
Many From This City Get Com
missions From Fort Monroe
Training School.
Numerous Atlantans were among
the candidates receiving officers’ com
missions this week from the training
school at Fort Monroe, Hampton, Va.
The commissions were announced
Wednesday
Among the new first lieutenants are
Robert B Dillard, George W. Barn
well, Harleston J, Hall a son of the
late Dr. Lyman Hall, former presi
dent of Georgia Tech; Claiborne Van
C. Clover, Marcus Mcl. Clayton and
Jackson H. Dick, son-in-law of Har
ry M. Atkinson, All are in the coast
artillery.
Second lieutenants from Atlanta
were James L. Girardeau, son of
Warden Charles H. Girardeau; Wal
ter G. Miller, Allen H. Francis, Harry
L. Herrington, Walter Revnolds, Jr,
Richard Battle, John M. Slaton, son
of Willlam F. Slaton; Clyde F. Fox
and John 8, Hardin. All are in the
coast artillery.
In the signal corps, Welborne Hope
and Howard . MeQGregor were made
second litutenants, Samuel J. Orr, a
newspaper man of Atlanta and Sa
vannah, was made second lieutenant
in the artillery corps.
Georgians commissioned cavtains in
the coast artillery were Walton C
Clarke, Covington; Alexander Martin,
Cordele; Carville H, Carson, Savan
nah; John J, Meyer, Fort Screven.
The Georglans commissioned are:
Captains BSoast Artillery—Walton
C. Clarke, Covington; Alexander
Martin, Cordele; Carville H. Carson,
Egst Savannah; John J. Maer, Fort
Screven.
First Lieutenants Coast Artillerym‘
Redding Sims, Washington; Jackson
H. Dick, Atlanta; Robert C. Mizell,
Monroe; Robert B. Dillard, Atlanta;
Willilam H. Felton, Macon; Alphona
D. Schofield, Jr,, Macon; Frnest K.
Thomason, Fort McPherson; Homer
K. Nicholson, Athens; George W,
Barnwell, Atlanta; Benjamin 1. Se
gall, Glenwood; Harleston J. Hall, At
lanta; Marcus McL. Clayton, Atlanta.
Second ILieutenants Artillery Corps
~James L. Girardeau, Atlanta; Wal
ter G. Miller, Atlanta; Charles E.
Porter, Jr.,, Columbus; Charles A.
Gardener, Marietta; Allen H. Francis,
Atlanta ; Francis C. Gaines, Elberton;
Anderson B. Crmichael, Jr, Savan
nah; Joseph P, Fagan, Savannah;
Paul N. Johnson, Thomaston; Wil
liam B. Dunwoody, Jr., Macon; Sam
‘uel J. Orr, Savannah; Myers L. Schur,
‘Savannah; Frank A. Perkins, Augus
ta; Marcus A. Pharr, Jr., Washing
ton; Harry I. Herrington, Atlanta;
Walter Reynolds, Jr.,, Atlanta; Rich
ard Battel, Atlanta; John M. Slaton,
Jr., Atlanta; Clyde F. Fox, Atlanta;
Robert 1. Robinson, Augusta; John
P. Sutton, Decatur; James A. Low
ery, Jr.,, Dawson; John S. Hardin, At
lanta; Paul J. Ridgeworth, Royston.
First Lieutenant Signal Corps—
Willis Claxton, Montezuma.
Second Lieutenants Signal Corps—
Howard C. McGregor, Atlanta; Hen
ry H. Harris, Hampton;, Wellborne
Hope, Atlanta.
First mmepantn Ordnance—Wil
llam A. Markley, Atlanta; Samuel G.
Greene, Grey; James M. Moore, Jr,
Savannah.
Second Lieutenant Ordnance—Wil
lam A. Ware, Atlanta.
Captain at Gordon
~ Weds Griffin @irl
Miss Rebecca Brown, of Griffin,
and Captain Alfred Uhler, of Com
pany H, 326th Regiment, Camp Gor
don, were married Tuesday evening
by Dr. Harry C. Howard, of Emory
University, Captain Uhler was a
practicing attorney of Alexandria,
La., before entering the army. The
young couple for the timé being will
make their home in Atlanta,
DEATHS AND F'INERALS.
May Stansell Broadnax.
May Stansell Broadnax, 9 died Tues
day at the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. 8. E. Broadnax, No. 10 St
Augustine place, Atkins Park. Besides
her parents, she is survived by one sis
ter, Sarah Belle. The funeral services
were conducted privately Wodnoldnfi at
the Northview gfiauaoleum. with Rev.
L. O. Bricker off clatlnr H. M, Pat
terson & Son, funeral directors.
MISS EVA McNEAL.
The funeral of Miss Eva McNeal, 11,
was held Wednesday afternoon at the
residence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
G. L. McNeal, No. 118 East Fair street.
Harry G. Poole, funeral director.
MRS, L. M. WHITE.
The funeral of Mrs. L. M. White, 41,
who died Tueadg‘momlrx at the resi
dence, No. 47 t Thirteenth street
Will be held Wednesday afternoon at §
o'clock at the cha;el of Bucllr &
Brandon, the Rev. J. H. Elder officiat
ing, The body will be taken to Fort
Blaine, N. Y., for interment.
' MRS. MATTIE HORSLEY.
ALBANY, Nov. 28.—News has reach
‘od here of the death of Mrs. Mattle
'Horsley, of Arltn}gton, widow of the late
General W. J. Horsley. The deceased
was about 81 years old and was born In
Upson County, but had spent the major
portion of her life in Calhoun County,
near Arllnvon. She is survived by one
step-daughter, Mrs. J. L. Jay, of Ar
lington, and three nieces and three
nephews. The body was interred in
the Arlington Cemetery. |
MRS, KATE HOLTZCLAW. |
PERRY, GA., Nov. 28.—-Mrs. Kate
Holtzclaw, wife of Dr. H. M. Holtzclaw,
died at her home In Perry Monday
night. She was a dau%hter of the late
Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Gilbert and is sur~‘
vived by her husband and two daugh
ters, M{csu Katherine and Clifford; one |
sister, Mrs. R. N. Holtzclaw, and three
brothers, Captain C. E, H. T. and J.
W. QGilbert. The funeral services were
held in the Presbyterian Church, con
ducted by her pastor, the Rev. Mr. Irons,
JAMES ARTHUR HARRIS.
James Arthur Harris, 80, died Wed
nesday morning at the residence, No.
5 Hartford avenue, Capitol View, He‘
is survived b{‘ his wife, two daygh- |
ters, Mrs. M. Church and Mrs. &rl
Dolvin; three sons, James 8., Herman
N. and Robert F. Harris; two broth
ers, Dr. J, F. Harris, of l‘hilgol, Ky.,‘
and Wiliam H. Harris, of Chatham,
Va.; twenty-one grandchildren and six
frmtfi:rmmchndn»n. The funeral will
»e held Thursday afternoon at 2:30
o'clock at the residence, the Rev. A,
. Hendiey officiating. Irfiterment will
be at Westview, M. M. Patterson &
Son, funeral directors.
J. P. BRANNON.
J. P. Brannon, 87, died Wednesday
morning at his home on DeFores road,
near East Point. He is survived by
three sons, J. P. Brannon, Jr., S J.
and W. T. Brannon, and seven daugh
ters, Mrs. 1. C. Payton, Nirs. J. M,
Wallace, Mrs, W. D, Rhew. Mrs: B 4 C.
Fice, Mre, J.-FP Wood, M O C.
Mullins and Mrs. G. H, Austin. Funera!
services will be held at 11 o'cloek |
Thursday worning at the residence, In
terment will be in Northview Ceme- !
tery. Hunter & Hemperly have charse
Georgia Boys Rise From Ranks
. .
to Officers Posts in
Short Time.
It was Mr. Bonaparte, or some
other old dog of war who wanted to
cheer up his fighting men, who sald
every soldler of France carried a
field marshal's baton in his knap
sack—meaning that promotion would
come to thé man who degerved it.
But that state of affairs had noth
ing on the condition that exists in
Uncle Sam’'s new National Army,
where every selectman hag an oppor
tunity to rise | she can. As witness
the following examples at Camp Gor
don:
Tip Warren, formerly with The At.
lanta Georgian, was selected and
started as private September 5. He
was made a sergeant October 16 and
promoted to be sergeant major No
vember 16,
Robert E. Barinowski, of Augusta,
came to Camp Gordon September 21.
He was made a sergeant shortly af
terward, and promoted to sergeant
major later., He and Sérgeant War
ren are in the 319th Field Artillery.
George Hart, son of Judge John C.
Hart, State Tax Commissioner, was
promoted because of efficiency to be
supply sergeant of the 320th Machine
Gun Battalion. Esmond Bray, of At
alnta, was lifted from the ranks to
be regimental supply sergeant of the
319th Fleld Artillery.
Bob Smith, former advertising so
licitor on an Atlanta newspaper, was
promoted from private to a Ser- |
geantcy in the 828th Infantry, |
Herbert Kalser is another widely
known young Atlantan who has risen
steadily in the army through atten
tion to duty and faithful work. He
entered, as a voluntew:)re the
first draft, and has wo up from
the ranks to a sergeantcy. He now
is in Battery A, 315th Field Artillery,
Camp Gordon.
These are just a few instances that
have been brought to the attention
of The Georgilan. There are dozens
‘of others of which The Georgian has
no knowledge.
Film Censor Bans
Baby Clothes, Poker,
Statu ice
atues and Mic
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, Nov .Z2B—Here are
some things which Major Funk
houser, Chicago’s “one-man” film
censor, has insistéd on cutting
out of all movies shown here:
ll—Any women sewing baby
clothes.
2—Any nude statues or paint
ings.
3—Any character who twirls
his fingers before his nose,
4—All snakes, llzzards and
mice,
b—All dead bodies.
6~—Poker games, Apache and
hula-hula danches and boxing
matches, Roulette wheels are al- |
lowed, because “high-min@ed” cit
lzeng only usually play that haz
ard, |
7—Girls who “flip up” their
dresses,
B—Girls or men in one-piece
bathing suits, or underwear.
9—Bex pictures as far as pos
sible, “because,” says the major,
“women who are cooped up In
their homes are likely to lose their
minds by seeing such pictures.
Fire Sweeps Business
eps business
Section of Pearson
DOUGLAS, Nov, 28.—Pearson, the
county site of the new county of At
kinson, was visited by a fire which
destroyed the greater part of the main
business block of the city. The store
of 1. Passon, as well as the place of
the Pearson Drug Company, were to
tally destroyed, while the Pearson
Banking Company suffered damage
from fire and water.
There s no waterworks in Pearson,
and for a time !t appeared that the
town would be totally destroyed, but
the bucket brigade managed to check
the flames. Insufficient insurance was
carried to cover the losses sustained.
About 200 bales of Sea Isiind cot
ton was removed from the scene of
the fire in time to prevent damage.
NEEDED REST, PERHAPS.
CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—George Her
man, police chief, fire chief, superin
tendent of the water department, city
electrician, deputy sheriff, meter
reader, city repairman, janitor public
buildings, motorcycle cop, has resign-®
ed at Wheeling. He will open a gen
eral store.
1o Rex Beach admirers:
Your favorite author has
written another great
story of Alaska—"“The
Winds of Chance.”
You'll find it appearing
today in the December
issue of '
Hearst‘s
/Magazine
Red Cross Head Distributes 5,184
Woolen Warmers at Camp
McClellan. .
ANNISTON, ALA., Nov. 28.—Jude
Charles S. Leydon, who succeeded
Dr. Knowlton Mixer in the work of
the American Red Cross Society at
Anniston, has received instructions
authorizing the distribution of 5,184
sweaters that were sent here for the
soldiers at Camp McClellan.
These sweaters have been on hand
for some time, and have been held
at the base hospital pending instruc
tions. ,Judge Leyden took the mat
ter up with the divisional authori
ties and instructigns have ben given
that they be distributed in camp at
once. They will come at a very op
portune moment, as the temperature
at Camp McClellan has given the
boys a strong suggestion of real win
ter weather. The sweaters will sup
plement the large number of over
coats that were recently distributed
to the men in camp at the beginning
of the recent cold weather. The new
overcoats are different from the long
coats heretofore worn, and some of
the tall fellows make a very striking
appearance in their short wraps.
The local Red Cross has also re
ceived notice that twenty-five thou
ifiand Christmas packages will be sent
‘here for the boys at Camp McClel
lan.
‘ « ® .
Hundreds of enlisted men and non
commigisoned officers at Camp Mc-
Clellan are grooming themselves for
entry into the officers’ training school
which will open at Camp McClellan
January 5 and continue until April 5.
The prediction Is made here that a
good percentuge of commissions will
be won as a result of the examina
tions.
Lieutenant Robert McNally, of Or
‘ange, N. J,, who hag been the officer
of the day at the quarters of the
114th during the five-day period of
field training, was relieved of this
duty Sunday night at guard mount.
e b YUL o T WSR T M TR 5 556 S PR3 B 380 <
f
Messroom Waste and Deadi
' |
Horses at Columbia Cantonment i
All Being Utilized, }
\
COLUMBIA, 8. C,, Nov. 28.—Dispo
sal of the accumulations of garbage
at Camp Jackson is a matter of no
small consequence and Henry Knight
& Son, of Louisville, Ky, who have
the contract for this disposal, have a
comprehensive organization, designed
to produce economic results.
Each day from eight to ten tons of
garbage, both liquid and dry waste
{rom the mess rooms, is collected and
hauled to the assembling station,
where 1,100 Kentucky shoats and more
more than 500 Tennessee steers are |
thriving on the swill. The hogs weigh |
now about 100 pounds each and the{
steers would tip the scales close to
1,000 pounds. A light feed of cotton
seed hulls and meal is intermixed
for the steers, but the hogs are con
tent to eat wide swaths through the
heaps of provender—accumulations
of beans, potato peelings, soup, bread
crumbs, bones and dishwater, Plans
are to increase the number of hogs
to 1,6¢0 and the number of steers to
1,000 when the division is completed.
The consumption of the kitchen
waste at Camp Jackson in a thor
oughly useful maner is but a smal
part of the program involved. Knight
& Son also have the contract to bale
up the tin cans in which the food for
the division is received, instead of
throwing these into a corner to be
devoured by some stray goat in the
sand dunes. The tins are sold in
Philadelphia, where they are melted
down and remolded. Scraps of paper
are utilized in a similar manner, and
another important saving thus af
fected.
Another big project is the disposal,
of all the dead animals from the re
mount depot, from which place an
average of twenty dead horses have
been hauled daily recently in conse
quence of the big stampede and the
necessary heavy death rate from
pneumon a, caused by exposure. The
animals are all skinned and the hides
preserved for leather for harness,
shoes and boots to keep Uncle Sam’'s
armies in. the field. The flesh and
bones is a valuable ingredient in fer
tilizer. This is all cooked in the large
Union Thanksgivin
Services in gDalt .
DALTON, Nov. 28.—Special union
services at the First Methodist Churc),
at 10:30 o'clock tomorrow morning
will feature the observance of Thanks.
giving in this city. Business housecy
and manufacturing plants will clogs
for the day. At the religious services
the Rev. Josiah Crudup, pastor of the
First Baptist Church, willr deliver the
Thanksgiving sermon.
IL.W.W.Gets 10 Years
As Army Deserter
(By International News Service.)
CAMP DODGE, DES MOINES, 14,
Nov. 27.—Felix Thornton, 1. W. .
organizer, was sentenced to tem yeur
in the federal prison at Fort Leaver -
worth, after a court martial had foung
him guilty of desertion. He is ona
of four draft evaders arrested sev.
eral weeks ago near Devils Lake,
N Di
TG SAR AST 1 M NGAARRIAOOVL AS s
beiler at the plant, and the bodies
“ricked” for future shipment to fer
tilizer plants. . A battery of eight
trucks is necessary to keep the gar
bage and dead animals removed. The
whole is under the inspection of Gov
ernment officials.
B T R ot .AoWWM s o
- S
Lampkin’s Case
61 W.Mitchell St. Atlanta, Ga
CALL BELL PHONE MAIN 5258,
Special Thanksgiving Dinner 75¢.
November 29, 1917.
SOUP
Oyster
RELISHES
Mixed Pickles Queen Olives
Heart of Celery
ROASTS
Young Tennessee Turkey
Sage Dressing and Cranberry
Sauce !
Pork Ham Apple Sauce
VEGETABLES
Potatoes in Cream
Baked Navy Beans
Mashed Rutabaga Turnips
SALADS
Lettuce and Tomato
French Dressing
DESSERT
Pumpkin Pie Fruit Ambrosia
Assorted Cake
Coffee Tea Milk