Newspaper Page Text
2
DEMOBILIZATION PLANS RUSHED AT CAMP GORDON
JOB 5 FOR DISGHARGED MEN
BEING ARRANGED BY AGENT
By A. F. JOYNER. .
CQ.MP GORDON, Dec. 3.--Demobili
gation news has replaced the war news
in popularity at Camp Gordon, and the
infantrymen stationed here are asking
not where, but ‘“‘when dg we go from
here.”
Preparations for demobilizging the re
placement forces here are going forward
according to the plans of the War De
gnmeny but only a small number have
on diacharsod as yet
No Class C-1 or Class C-2 men, nor
men under treatment or physieal train
ing for the elimination of defects will be
discharged until the board of review
ecertifies that the maximum improvement
hag been obtained or that physical dis
abilities have not been exaggerated or
accentuated, it was announced Tuesday
morning. Intensive treatment and train
ing of men thus held will be immediately
undertaken and continued in order that
their cure or maximum improvement
and subsequent discharge may be accom
plished In the shortest poz-lble time,
All men except those inducted for spe
ecial and limited service only, whose
irecords are incomplete or for whom
there are no other available records in
camp showing physical condition at
time of induction Into the oerv:fie, are
10 be placed In Class A, for early dis
charge.
Men who have ua‘uind lower classi
fications due to thelr own misconduct
or acquimld certain diseases regarded
as incurable, will be discharged without
delay in order that there might be no
exposure of others to infection. All
others whose classifications wer,blowerod
because of misconduct will ‘be dis
charged as soon as their physical condi
tions permit.
A gpecial representative of the Depart
ment of Labor is here for the rurpoue of
obtaining positions in civil life for all
men discharged . Every man listed for
discharge is being examined as to his
qualificaions for employment in etvil in
ATTENTION!
.
-
SOLDIERS!
You can get GOOD WORK
AT HIGH WAGES on water
power construction in Geor
gia by applying at
2}/, Walton Street
(Upstairs)
Atlanta, Ga.
Georgia Railway
and Power Co.
The DIET
During
and After
The Old Reliable
Round Package
v PRy M'Lk
-, N m
“nrsgens |
mv:[vnmg. ~
" ) 9
4 Heah'sYo' ¢
2 . ik
'\ @¥ Luzianne, <=z=
R Conel” 2
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| APOT of steaming, stimulating ’ .
| Luzianne Coffee set before “a lor = \
| gentleman and a judge of fine coffee.” \ v .
A finer hot beverage than good, old SEE—
‘ Luzhrlm never existed. l!z-!jkn NE
; Luzianne tastes all the way down e@y
and you say “Set 'em up again.” ! 208 it
| Buy a can of Luzianne Coffee, If i ';i‘fi
; you can't honestly say that it's the e 2
best cup of coffee that ever passed T R Tavior &
your lips, tell your grocer you're not CRTL
| satisfied and he'll give you back your
| money on the spot,
Please try Luzianne. You'll like e
| it you will. In clean, air-tight tins, “When It
— \3 WY T Pours, It
ili !!E 2!] / WN\} E Reigns™
'a COFFEE /
dustries and will be offered an oppor
tunity by the Department of Labor rep
resentative to obtain employment in
some industry for which he is pest fit
'ed Tge large employers of labor are
co-operating with the Department of
Labor in this work, having listed calls
for men skilled in certain trades or un
gkilled as their needs dictated
A board of review was appointed
Tuesday morning by Major General
George H, Cameron, commandivg offi
cer of the camp, to gign discharge cer
tileates for all of wn' enlisted men who
are to be discharged from the camp, ex
cept those from the ecentral officers’
training school The board, as named
by General Cameron, consigts of Cap
tain Frederick H. Clark, personnel adju«
tant: Lieutenant Charles H. Lloyd, as
gistant camp personnel adjutant; Lieu
tenant Walter V. Ross, central officers’
training school, anfl Lieutenant Emmett
Merryman, of the Third Provisional
Regiment,
The new board took up itg dutles
Tuesday, and will begin Issulng dis
charge certificates as sgoon as authori
zation hag been given.
L - .
A bus service was placed in operation
between Camp Gordon and Atlanta by
the Camp Gordon Exchange in order to
provide auick transportation for the of
ficers and men of the camp at a reason
able rate. 9he price charged for the
one-way trip will be 35 cents, j
e ——— —— 4
’
Negra, Indicted for
. .
Slaying Boy Gives Bond
Judge Ben Hill, in the eriminal divi
gion of Superior Court, Monday allowed
| bond in the "sum of SSOO to Dave Rice,
the negro indicted Friday by (he Ful
ton Grand Jury on a cahrge of urder
as A result of the slaying a f2w weeks
ago of Abe Kingloff 4, in front of the
'IiHIn fellow’s home in Moore street.
This bond was allowed after a hr:lznu
on an application by Attorney THlou
Von Nunes, counsel for the negro.
The little Kingloff bov was shot and
killed during a pistol duel between two
Negroes He was sald to have run out
into the street directly in the line of
shots. Both negroes escaped at the
time. A negro who dled a few days agoe
in Grady Hospital of a mysterious pisto)
wound was belleved to have been one of
the two men. Rice was said to have
been the other,
———————————
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RUPTURE
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FITTED BY
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| 141 Peach Tree Arcade, ATLANTA
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Others Are Imitations
THE, ATLANTA GEORGIAN
WITH THE COLORS
Dwight 1. Cowdrey, sergeant of
Company A, 227th Infantry, who
writes his parents, Mr, and Mrs.
W. H. Cowdrey of No. 177 Wood
ward avenue, that he is in a hos
pital in Franece, recovering from
a shell wound in his left shoulder.
He enlisted before he was 16, leav
ing the Commercial High School
to join the Seventeenth Infantry
(n April, 1917. He was leading a
platoon in Argonne forest when he i
was wounded, !
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An example of the Bolshevik
propaganda leaflets which German
aviators dropped behind American
lines in France in an effort to lower
the moral of our troops before hos
tilities. ceased has been sent to At
lanta by Lieutenant K. H. Hubert,
of Company A, 543 d I‘lnnim:m's, in
a letter to George Rosser, of No, 156
West Sixteenth street, The little
handbill was intensely pacifist, but
to judge from Lieutenant Hubert's
accompanying letter, it fell far
shert of attaining its purpose. Here
is the insidious message:
“Are you a brave man or a cow
ard?
“It takes a brave man to stand
up for his principles. Cowards stand
behind leaders and die, imagining'
that by so doing they become he
roes.
“The motive of an act is its meas
ure. If you think that war is hell,
and that you, as a citizen of the
- United States of America, have no
business to be fighting in France
for England, you are a coward to |
stay with it. If you had the cour- |
age to face criticism, you would get
out and qver the gop in no time to
a place where there is some lige
lihood that you may sce home
again, |
“What business is this war “n |
Europe to you, anyhow? You don’t
want to annex anything, do ou?
You don't want®o give up your life
for the abstract thipg, humanity.
If you believe in humMnity and that |
life is precious save your own life
and dedicate it to the service of/
vour own country and the woman
who deserves it of you,
“Lots of vou fellows are staying
with it because you are too coward
1¥ to protest, to assert your own
wills. Your wills are the best judges
of what is best for you to do. Don't
ask anvone's opinion as what you
would better do. You know best
what is the right thing to do. Do
it and save your life, Germany
never did any harm to you: all the
newspaper tales of wrongs are
printed to inflame you to the fight
ing pitch; they were lies! You know
you can't believe what you read in
the papers.
“If you stay with the outfit; ten
chances to one all, vou will get out
of it will ba a tombstone in France,”
In his letter, Lieutenant Hubert
gays that this particular lenflet was
dropned by the Germans while their
country was negotiating for the ar
mistice.
e S R L
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For City Marshal,
TOM M. POOLE.
Vote Wednesday.
~ 4
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|
Continued From Page 1.
after President Wilson read his mes
sage yesterday has given Republi
cans time to think over the Presi
dent's statements, with the result
that some whp were expected to speak
vesteérday will not enter into the de
bate. Others wno wish to air parti
san views have come to the conclu
gion that not all the speeckh-making
ghould be done in one day. Today's
debate, therefore, will be only a
starter,
The Cummins resolution is before
the Senate foreign reldtions commit
tee today. Senator Hitchcock, chair
man of the committee, has promised
Senator Cummins that the committee
will make some kind of a report on
it, probably Wednesday.
Action |s Uncertain,
It is predicted that the foreign re
lations committee will simpiy.put the
resolutions up to ttr? Senate, report
ing on it neither vorably nor un
favorably. Senator Cummins said to
day he had not canvassed the com
mittee and was not prepared to pre
diet what the committee would do
“1 believe, however, that you will
find a majority of the Senate for this
proposal,” he added. “Some Senators
hold it would be undignified for a
Senate committee in Paris to wait at
the kitchen door of the peace com
missioners to find out what had oc
cdrred at the conference. Hewever,
I believe 1 can convince them that
there s nothing undignified about the
proceedings 1 propose.
“It goes without saying that I con
ferred with many Republican leaders
before 1 prepared my resolution. I
know that practically all prominent
Republicans are for it, and that a
good many Democratic leaders will
favor it."
Administration leaders in the Sen
ate, who have not caught the fever
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ln!i:.";:’f;;-’ "/ WL ‘:‘,‘f:n'j\ &s dilig \“ B R \l\ l
Lok ‘s’ ‘ |\Vsem 7 RHER A "" AR
She mised comthing w LR HONS A e \4 IR\ AR e
carefully, just as the cook At i‘,‘ u ( & il9 e \f‘ SRR L ?:\ X ;(@9":1.',5,,7:4,"‘
book said, and yet they |'L='§n;! \\ f 0 ‘l i To~ /,3\4 '/ff \N T ._y
were such horrid cabes] | RREN 3 | | HADN = CH R IANNRY e
i ||| =, MY T ’ ol RN N
' BT ML\ ——— B/, e §:‘2
s 2 AW\ o N 7/ 5
o — 3 b 4 / r/’
Then she learned how other wemen do it. She just added water to Aunt Jemima 14/
Pancake Flour, Such flufly, delicious cakes—he said he could eat two dozen! l‘ '_fi"““"“‘ ;i ‘.%
IR
’ '1);‘?,?),::;&.‘(\\ ‘\?
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Don't experiment -
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tart his d g’h“’
Don’t risk failures that disappoint your husband —
you can so easily give him the breakfast that other
men love! :
Surprise him tomorrow with a plate of hot Aunt
Jemima Pancakes— whose flavor last ‘year made 120
million breakfasts successful! How he will smile as :
’
he cuts the tender, golden-brown cakes !
Even the sweet milk has been added
An Aunt Jemima breakfast is so easy, so economical,
too! Everything is mixed in the flour—even pow
dered sweet milk! Breakfast is ready in no time—and s 1
: . I'se in town, Honey!
it costs only a third as much as meat or eggs.
Have Aunt Jemima Pancakes tomorrow. Make o
Aunt Jemima muffins and waflles— they're delicious. ‘ SN e
And for variety order Aunt Jemima Buckwheat ,“;;.,é_;“’, A
Flour—in the yellow package. Read on the top of f‘° "f{ Bl il
any Aunt Jemima box how to get the famous Rag -Fi «‘}; B
Dolls. Aunt Jemima Mills Company, St. Joseph, el YR R
Missour, il p "‘ ,:1'73.’ 4 34y
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*e e ---.j / o i’ ‘:
S (AUNT Temimal
's’:, S -’Z"v - :'. ~ .‘-—-‘.—#—" P> ’. m *v}v“tia
Dopyright lflg,f-.\n Jemima Mills Company. \‘Q“.. — "_‘.‘y e : i 1”5 =4
T — R Yy R.% ah ..
of rebelllon that is in evidence in
some’ Democratic quarters at the
Capitol, are a little concerned over the
' Cummins resolution. They believe it
will be voted down on its merits, but
at the game time thay will go out and
work actively against it i |
Pittman's Amendment. |
The amendment proposed by Sen
ator Pittman that the committee be
one of 96 members—the entire Senate
—ig not expected to receive serious
conslioratlon, Senator Pittman wil
urge it, however, in the hope of de
feating the whole proposition by mak
ing it appear ridiculous#in the eyes
of the country.
The Sherman resolution is drawn in
such form tr;ft it is evident its au
thor never expected it to receivt se
rious consideration by the Senate.
This is, similar to the Roddenburg
bill in the House, except that the
House resolution would have the
Vice &Eesident assume the office of
Chief ®Executive only during the ab
sence of President Wilson:’ .
The House has no interest in thi
Cummins resolution and there will be
no discussion of it in that body un
less the Senate committee on audit
and control finds there is insufficient’
funds in the contingent fund of the
Senate to meet the expenses of the
proposed junket. It is interested in
the Sherman-Roddenburg resolution,
however,
Republican leaders in the lower
body—Mann, Gillette, Mondell and
Longworth—have indicated their in
tention of inquiring, whenever a biH is
on the point of being passed, whether
it should actually be delivered into
the hands of the President or wheth
er, under the Constitution, delivery.
of the bill at the White House meets
the requirements.
May Cause Trouble.
This discussion may lead to more
serious developments than are now
expected after the President leaves
the country, if the passage of emer
gency legislation is necessary.
Notwithstanding their statements
to the contrary, President Wilson's
message was not a complete disap
pointment to Republican leaders of
the House and Senate. Most of them
hold to the wiew that the railroads
should be returned to private own
ership.
They were greatly pleased to find
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1918.
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Dec. 3.—A law to
permit price-fixing, under certain re
strictions, was urged upon Congress
by the Kederal trade commission to
day. Under the proposed law, if the
manufacturer of an articte produced
and sold under competitive conditions
Cesired to fix resale prices, 'he would
file with some agency to be desig
rated by Congress a description of
the article and the desired price
schedule. This agency, either upon
its own initiative or upon complaint
would be given the power to revise
this schedule.
There must be a common ground
the commission points out, wherein
the “rights of producer,- purchaser
and consumer may each be fully se
gured and equity done to all”
In its efforts in this direction, the
commission, it was stated, arrived at
these eonelusions:
1. That producers of Identified
goods should be protected in their in
tanigble property right or good will.
2. That the unlimited power both to
fix and to enforee and maintain a re
sale price may not be made lawful
with safety
3. That unrestrained price cutting
is not in the public interest.
Such legislation as that favored by
the commggsion, it is contended, would
be in accord with the spirit of the
times, in that it is designed “to pro
mote the efficiency of manufacturing
and cOmmercial interests and so to
serve the interests of the consuming
publie.”
that the President has an “open
mind” on this subject. They htd be
lieved he was firmly convinced of the
necéssity of permanent Government
operation. Public ownership men, on
the other hand, were bitterly disap
pointed by those sections/of the Pres
dinet's message dealing with the rail
roads.
MONEY IN PICKING SPUDS. |
HOULTON, Me,, Dec. 3/~Women and ‘
girls in the potato-growing sections of W
Aroostock County earned $6 to §8.50 a ||
day picking up potatoes at the rate of i
§ cents a barrel. Some of the ,;irlsvi
worked by the day for from $4.50 and $5 |
and board.
e e g A
Only One “BROMO QUININE”
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SHOES 13 Peachtree 1
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of a Job?
HY are you out of
a job?
There is a short
age of service everywhere.
The world is erying out
for men and women who
are willing to work.
And in no place in the
world is that demand
louder than right here in
Atlanta.
There is a shortage of
labor, and the price. has
gone up.
The highest priced com
modities today in the mar
ket are human hands and
brains.
There’s a place open for
you.
Thére’s somebody who
needs you, wants you and
will pay you well.
Your only problem is
how to find that somebody.
The\best, simplest and
surest way to find him is
through the Want Ad ecol
umns of The Georgian and
Amer’igan.
The best and most all
embracing employment
agency in Atlanta is the
Want Ad pages of these
newspapers, and it costs
you only a trifle, asks no
questions and involves no
red tape.
You have service to sell.
There’s something you can
do, and do well.
And there's somebody
wants what you have\to
offer. To attempt to find
him by just walking the
streets or going from of
fice to office, is like hunt
ing for a needle in a hx‘y‘
stack.
A
Besides, it’s back-break
ing and heart-breaking.
Better tal® a eopy of The
Daily Georgian or The
Sunday American, lock
yourself in your room, eut
out the Want Ad columns,
go over them systematical
ly and carefully map out
yvour plan of campaign.
Paste the ads that scem
good prospects in yonr
notebook. Arrange them
in order, so that vou will
save steps. Then go over
the ground in order, inter
viewing each one until you
find what you want,
Remember the essentials
for getting and holding a
job.
These are honesty, po
liteness, agreeableness, cap
ability and a willingness to
work,
No human being who has
these qualifications, in
even moderate degree,
need complain nowddays
of not having a chance to
work.
But no matter how wijl
ing dnd capable yon may
be you will have trouhle
unless yon go at the mat
ter in the right wav. And
the right way in Atlanta is
to follow the Want Ads in
The Georgian and Ameri
can,
Becanse these papers
reach practically everybody
in Atlanta,
They gather for yon the
wants of a great commun
ity, employing and em
ployed.
They are your best guide
to a job. _
(Copyright, 1818, Star Comnpany.)