Newspaper Page Text
2
SCHOOL FUND SHORTAGE MAY CUT TEACHERS RAISE
a3l 490 L 055 IN FUND
NEW BOARD EXPECTED
The hopes of Atlanta public school
teachers for a 30 per cent salary In
crease after the new school commis
sion assumes office in January, re
ceived a severe joit Thursday morn
ing when it was discovered that the
school appropriation will be less hy
$181,499.20 than the amount anticipat
ed In the program of school improve
ments outlined by the Atlanta School
Improvement Auoda?\on.
In a general estimate a recent pub-
Heation put the appropriation at
$1,065,088 and this figure was accept
ed as a working basis by the asso
clation. Under the legislative act di
voreing the schools from Council,
next year's appropriation must bear
the same relation to the city's reve
‘nue as did this year's expenditures,
which amounted to $920,088, This
was taken as the approximate amount
of the city's appropriations for the
schools in 19'9, and to It was added
the sum of $131,499.20, which is to be
appropriated by the State, making a
total of $1,052,088.20,
However, the City Attorney has
ruled that ‘the State appropriation
comes under the head of current
furds, and =o is Included in the reg
ular city appropriation, which means
that this amount must be deducted
from the estimated total of what the
echool commission will have with
which to maintain the schools in 1919,
Curtailment Necessary.
When thi sfact was called to the
attention of Edgar A. Neely, chalrman
of the School Improvement ARsocia
tion, Thursday, he expressed surprise
and said that it unguestionably would
necesitate a considerable curtaiiment
in the somewhat extensive program
of improvements planned by the asso
clation. He said that this State ap
propriatien had been counted on to
make up the major portion of the
salary increases for teachers,
The Atlanta Public School Teach
ers’ Association at a recent meeting
adopted resolutions calling upon .mo‘
new school commission for a general
80 per cent increase in the salarfes of
all teachers. The pay roll of the
teachers in 1918 amounted to $6489,500,
#0 that the lnonue,i asked would add
$200,850 to the pay tplls in the school
department. The gm.m of the
State fund would have gone far to
ward meeting this additional outlay.
The fact that it will not be avaliable
for the purpose probably will make‘:
altogether impossible to grant th
increase asked, according to Mr.
Sidney G. Glenn, Car
- .
Company Official, Dies
Signey G. Glenn, division superinten
dent of the Georgla Rallway and Power
Company, who llved at No. 130 East
Bighth street, died Thursday at noon at
& private hospital. Mr. Glenn was well
known and prominently connected in
A%lnta.
urviving are his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. F. dlenn; three brothers, T. K.
Glenn, president of the Atlantic Steel
Company; Willam H. Glenn, vice prest
d:tt. gecretary and operating manager
of the Gwrsu Raillway and Power Com
m. and John F. Glenn; two sisters,
Charles W, l,oody nfld Mrs. Hew
ard A. Candler. lis father is one of
the most prominent Methodist ministers
of Atlanta.
..'!'ho.body is at 'Pn.‘ e'hnpel lo( Green
r . pe uneral srrange
m-'u. m wll?dbo announced .ater,
Y e
New Officers Installed
By Gate City Lodge No. 2
Willlam G. Hastings, widely known
Atlanta ad man and prominent in frra
ternal eircles, has been installed as wor
-hlgul master of Gate cn{y Lodge, No,
;. the annual election of ofMcers held
y night in the Masonie Temple.
a.p‘ruvllu feature of the moetlni WHa
tion of a memorial in honor
of (il es D. llontgmurr. Jr., Atlanta
army cer killeq action In France,
and a er officer of this lo;i‘p. The
memorial! mc“lven to Mr. Montgom
ery’s father, arles D. “ontgomery.
~ who was elected lodge chaplain
gh. 'ul'tlru included the presentation
of a pletife of J. Leroy Duncan, former
past , who recently died of pneu
% ing ofMcers were also eleot
od ?‘l:llod: Arthur J. Stitt, senior
3 *u J. Johnson, junior war
-3 m , Wright, treasurer; J, Al
rt ley, ncrfla;‘y; Charles D,
Montgomery, chn(phln; orris M. Ewing,
or deacon; Charles R. Fox, junior
;i Thomas C. Burford, senlor
1 V!rffl BEmory Adams, {untor
w; Paul M. Hubbard, organist, and
allace Rhodes, tyler. =
‘ ; W. R. McGrath, who
AN for several years past
T W has been engaged as
vm R supérvisor of installa-
Y tions of plumbing and
e heating for the U. 8.
3 'fi . Government, has pur
| ‘ e, chased an interest in
R AIR Yarbrough Plumbing
/ B L S Company, and will
e S RSP act as general mana
' ger for this firm,
Mr. McGrath is an old Atlanta man, and is
well and favorably known to the owners of many
of Atlanta's buildings. To these l~Px‘operty owners
he needs no introduction. Mr, McGrath will be
pleased to serve his friends and the public, and in
vites a call. He says, ‘‘Let's get acquainted.’
Yarbrough Plumbing Co.
10 Equitable Place. ¢ Ivy 943.
1l ATLANTA GEORGIAN
‘Noely, but the teachers unquestion
ably will be given as much considera
tion in their demands as the finanefal
resources of the school commission
will permit,
According to Graham West, City
Comptroller, the State fund is paid
directly into the Treasury of the city
with the single provision that the
city's shecool appropriation shall not
he less than the sum received from
the State for schools, The city then
‘adds what additional wmmount is
deemed necessary for the proper
maintenance of the schools based on
the expenditures of the preceding
year,
School Fund Greater.
The $620,689 to be recelyed by the
schools next year is heavily in excess.
of school expenditures for past years,
In 1916 and 1916 the nnho} appro
priations were about $750,000 and in
1917 the appropriation was only about
$780.000. The approximate increase
of $200,000 in the expenditures of 1918
was due to the construction of several
new school buildings, However, even
with a 1919 appropraition equal to
the usually heavy expenditures of last
year, the school commision gill not
be able to carry out its program, Mr,
Neely believes,
This program constituted the plat
form on which the entire slate of
candidates for the school commission
was elected with the indorsement of
the School Improvement Association,
The increase in the teachers’ salaries
is one of the principal policles to
which the new Cemmissioners are
pledged, according to Mr. Neely, and
it is a policy which is to be carried
out if the money is in any way ob
talnable, However, the improvements
contemplated in the school buildings,
particularly at the Girls’ High School,
the money which #till must be ex
pended in the completion of the
Spring Street, Moreland Avenue and
Oakland City Schools, and the normal
increase in the cost of operation gen
erally, are expected to use up most of
the cfix‘l appropriation.
Mr. Neely said this unexpected cur
tailment of the schom department’s
resources for next year emphasized
the necessity for an immediate in
crease In the e|t¥ tax rate, a cam-.
paign for which already is being con
gidered by tho School Improvement
Association., He expressed the con
vietlon that a special school tax was
an inevitable development of the near
future,
Atlanta Returning to
.
Normal Health Conditions
According to the statistical mortality
report of the Federal Government, just
received for last week by Dr. J. P. Ken
nedy, cigy physician, Atlanta gradually
is returning to the normal eonditions
which prevailed prior to the visitation
of influenza, while nearly every other
section of ihe United States indleates
at least a partial return of the epidemlic.
The eity's death rate was lower than
that of any other Bouthern clty of its
size last 'oo\. and there were few cities
in the country which made a better
showing.
The‘: were 76 deaths g-om all causes
In Atlanta for the week, mskln{ the
mortality rate 196, In Kansas City the
death rate for the same week was §2.3;
in Birmingham It w;:’ls.l; in Nashville,
207; In_ Loulsville, 2, In_ Richmond,
M 7, and In New Orleans, 239, l"rogn
Rm‘embor to December there were 59
deaths from ilnfluenza and 328 from
Sneumonln, maknu‘ a total of 3856 deaths
ue to the epidemle.
Mayor and Prof. Culver
Are Back at City Hall
Mayor Asa G. Candler, who had been
econfined to his home with a severe cold
since last rturdly, and Charles A Cul
ver, acting Superintendent of schools, who
narrowly escaped pneumonia, both were
bhack at their Goaka’ in City Hall Thursday
morning. Mr. Candler has been (Il for
two weeks, but was able to be at his
office for a part of each day until last
weok.
SNUFF IS BURGLAR'S LOOT.
The police are looking for a thief
with a fondness for snuff, who
thought enough of that delectable and
pungent powder to carry off a dozen
boxes of it from the Rogers' store at
No. 240 Vine street, along with a sup
ply of groceries. The robber entered
through the front door, which was
opened with a “JSimmy."”
15-YEAR-OLD HEIR
~ TO $15,000,000.00
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© TNPERNANIONAL-
Miss Dellora F. Angell, the fiflewu\—ycur-ohl Chicago girl, who
; , y dvantnd . i -4 7ill 8f Mrs. John W. (s
is named as eventual legatee in the wi rs. John W. Gates,
her aunt and widow of the famous finaneier and plunger. Miss
Angell is heiress to the $15,000:000 estate left by Mrs. Gates. Un
til she is twenty-one she is to be maintained from the income of
oneshalf of the estate, the other half going to Edward J. Baker,
brother of the testator. On her twenty-first birthday Miss Angell
gets a quarter of the principal, another quarter when she is 25
and the remainder when she is 40. At Mr. Baker's death his share
goes to her.
Runaway Auto Hits
Three Other Cars;
)
Driver Is Fined SIOO
A runaway automobile gave spice
to the evening Wednesday, when Will
Porter, negro chauffeur, lost control of.
the car of Dr. K, L. Connally, which
he was driving, at Broad and Luckie
streot, and in two blocks crashed three
times into automobiles parked along
the street. He was fined §IOO or 30
dai‘s in the stockade Thursday in
Police Court by Amml Recorder J.
N. Renfroe, First Ward Councilman,
u&»‘on uunvfplion of running a car
while intoxicated.
0. R. Randall, of No. 817 Peachtree
street, whose auto was side-wiped
stopped his automobile, and leaped
upon the runningboard of the wild
ecar, bringing the negro to a stop at
w:lton m;&‘uroqd streets, just as he
crdshed in the front end of a 1918
Ford lwlon.lnf to J. L. Brannon, of
No. 137 Whitehall street, Mrs, Bran-
I non. who was in the car, was slightly
/hurt.
.a. L. Bell Isle, the taxi man, who
had been chasing the wild car for two
blocks on foot, came up on llho run
and held the negro unti! Policeman
Webb was called.
Travelers Aid Body
Seeks Membership Fees
Tlf you are in receipts of a letter re
‘quenln. a meburship subsoription to the
Travelers' Ald Assoclation, a prompt re
mittance may in the future prove a pléas
ant boomerung. On duty day and night
at all Atlanta stations, the agents of the
association meet all trains coming inte
the city and have made themselves ip
dispensable adjuncts te the Information
servics of strangers, let alone thelr in
valuable work in advising and essisting
travelers.
For seventeen years under the auspices
of the women of Atlanta the work has
[b«n carried, an being materially added to
| recently by the u\n-inoroum’ move
| ments ‘of troops and families of soldiers.
]Nudg girls or women are made welcone
at the rooms of the association at the
Buford Memerial Home and every as
sistance lent theéem in obtaining employ
ment, Financial support to a degree s
granted by the eity and ecounty railroads
and the War Camp Community Servioce,
but personal subscriptions are distinetly
’d‘alrvd Memberahip fear of §1 should he
| addressed to rMs. W, B. Mansfield, No. 130
Peeples street.
Mother of Kidnaped Girl
And Accomplice Fined
Folluw!rw: his convietion as an accom-
F‘"N‘ in the Kkidnaping of 10. year-old
‘onstance Hunnicutt from her Edge
' woed home, Charles Hasty was fined
1 S6OO in the DeKalb Bupearior Court Wed
{ nosday, the jury recommending that the
L offensge be comsidersd as a misdemeanor,
| Mrs. Emma Hunnicutt, the child's moth
‘rr; with whose connivance the Ana‘ed
[mh!rvu»« t 4 Mrs, W. E. Mansfield, No. 130
after entdring a plea of gullty.
| Vioalting a_decree of !h:{ DeKalb
[ court, Mre. Hunnicutt and Hasty last
| August took the child from La France
| atreet, Edgewood, her grandmother and
| custodian's home and carried her to Nor
| folk, Va., where they were apprehended
‘ln accordance with the wishes of the
~eourt the young girl has since been re
' stored to her grandmother's care. Mrs,
Hu‘r‘\a\lcun and her husband are sepa
rated,
S ——
Former Noted Actress
Is Dead at Age of 95
(a‘ International News Icrviu.?
NUTLEY, N. J. Dec. 12 -Mrs,
Euphemia PEmma Eliser, 85, the former
actress, who, with her hushand, owned
lg\o Euclid &:nuo Opera House at
leveland and mlrouT other theaters
in Pittsburg and Detroit, died here (o
day mtoruor re\.luemonj 30 yoars
TR W R
forson, and other stars,
A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes
Police Station Is
Draped in Black
For Chief Bullard
For the first time In .its history,
the police station Thursday was
draped in heavy mourning for
George C. Bullard, chief of the At
lanta Detective Bureau, who died
Wednesday morning of pneumonia
at the Georgia Baptist Hospital
An example of the general esteem
in which Chief Bullard was held
was shown by the action of a dele
gation of negroes, who called on
Acting Chief T. D. Shaw, at head
quarters Wednesday afternoon, to
ask if it would be all right for thém
to contribute a floral offering. They
were assured that it would be emi
nently proper in every way. ’
Funeral services were held
Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock at
the Baptist Tabernacle, the Rev.
John W. Ham in charge. Interment
was In Westview, with full Ma
sonic honors, Lebanon Lodge, F. &
A. M., No. 6565, taking charge of the
services.
Pallbearers selacted were J. C.
Little, Sergeant T, D, Shaw, Ser
geant W. P. Reed, Captain A, l.
Poole, Captain B, L. Jett and J. J.
Cowan. An honurnryn’ucart of 50
policemen, 20 of the mounted,
accompanied the body from Poole's.
Chief Bullard was 368 years old
and lived at No. 690 Capito]l avenue,
He was a native of Austell and ha
been on the local force for the past
twelve years, starting as a patrol
man in December, 1006,
Court Adjogrns -
To Honor Bullard
Judge Andy Calhoun adjourned the
City Criminal Court Thursday in re
gpect to the memory of the late George
. Bullard, ohief of the detective de-
Partment. and in order to permit de
ectives and policemen, who had cases
in court, to attend the funeral of the
dead chief,
In announcing the adkwmmem from
the bemch, Ju:’gs Calßoun also took
occasion to pay a wibute to Cr(lfl!f
Bullard, He said:
"ChlJt George . Bullard h?‘l been a
witnesk and prosecutor in this court
for many years,
“I have given leave of absence from
court to the members of the city de.
tective department who have much
to do today because of the chief's
death. His funeral Is to he a publle
affalr on aceount of his high |\t\;|vt|on
and hig standing fn our community,
“1 have known few officers wh)
were so falthful and consclentious,
and who so hl‘;hly regardad thelir duty
as did Chief Bullard, He was an or
nament to the department, and his un
timely death is keenly felt by the court
officials, police department and pub
lie generally.”
v
New $3,200,000 Loan .
Is Made to Belgium
By International News Servi
\&'_A\'sum(m\.\'. Dec. 12 *’\ 1’..:12«1
States has established an additional
eredit of $3,200,000 to Belgium, Secretary
of the Treasury McAdoo awnounced this
lflogx\mn This makes a_total crodt‘g;
of £213.320,008 extended to mnum. and
: %nd total to all the Allle® of $8,223,.
40,702,
Colds Cause Grip u\r Influenza
LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tab.
lets remove the cause. There is only
one “Bromo Quinine” E. W,
GROVE'S signature on the box. 30,
‘ ~Advertisement.
o I R e o
grial” (e it M
. | - Adv.
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, Dee. 12.—Dame Nature is
the world’'s greatest physigian, at least
when it comes to influenza and pneumo
nia, ’
This is the verdict of the American
Publie Heplth Association, following a
two-days’ discussion of preventive and
relief measures in cases of those dis
eases,
“We are nature’'s skilled assistants,”
explained Charles K. Hasting, president
of the organjzation, "It re(i,ulral a good
deal of knowledge to know how little we
know. A tremendous amount of damage
is done by Interfering with nature, when
nature would have done better if she had
sbeen let alone. After 20 years In prac
tice I felit like a disciple of Shakespeare
—‘throwing physic to the dogs.’ "
“We have very little power over pneu
monia. I am convinced that as many
patients have been killed by physicians
as have been cured. I did my share of
killing when | was in a hol{)ltal. giving
whisky, .strychnine, etc. f they had
beep let alone theywould have recovered.
During the last ten years I have let
my g‘atlonts alone,” said Dr, A, A, Gold
smith, one of the attending physicians.
e ————————————————
Influenza Is Fatal
T. Mayor of Girard, Ala.
COLUMBUS, Dec. 12.—Following
#ix days’ {llnesas of influenza, Mayor
Woodson Knowles, 68, of Girard, Ala.,
died yesterday. Mayor Knowles has
been especially prominent in eivic af
fairs and served as Alderman and
later as Mayor of Girard for years.
The Masonic, lodge will hold laa&rites
at his grave. He is survived his
wife; twe daughters, Mrs. Charles
Stephens, of West Poiht, and Mrs. M.
Jowers, of Girard, and two sons, John
Knowles, of West Point, and Clyde
Knowles, of Girard. 3
.
2,500 Soldiers Leave
W heeler in Three Days
MACON, Dec. I%—Twenty-flve hun
dred soldiers have been discharged from
Camp Wheeler during the last three
days. Less than 9000 soldiers now re
main, and by the end of the week this
number will be reduced to less than
5,000, it-1s sald. Several trainloads of
soldiers have left for New York. Forty
officers were discharged yesterday.
CARDINAL GIBBONS HONORED.
ROME, Dec. 12.—King Vietor Emman®
pel has named Cardinal Gibbons, of Bal
timore a chevalier of the Grand Cross
and has conferred upon him the Grand
Ribbon of the Crown of Italy, it was
learned today. %
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° *
The Farmer Receives More Than Five
s
Thousand Dollars a Minute From
®
Swift & Company
‘ This amount is paid to the farmer for live stock, by
- Swift & Company alone, during the trading hours- of every
business day.
. All this money is paid to the farmer through the open
market in competition with large and small packers, ship
pers, speculators and dealers.
The farmer, feeder, or shipper receives every cent of this money
($300,000 an hour, nearly $2,000,000 a day, $11,500,000 a week) in
“ cash, on the spot, as soon as the stock he has just sold is weighed up.
Some of the money paid to the farmer during a single day comes '
back to the company in a month from sale of products; much does |
not come back for sixty or ninety days or more. But the next day |
Swift & Company, to meet the demands made by its customers, |
must pay out another $2,000,000 or so, and at the present high |
price levels keeps over $250,000,000 continuously tied up in goods on |
the way to market and in bills owed to the company, |
This gives an idea of the volume of the Swift & Company busi
ness, and the requirements of financing it. Only by doing a large |
business can this company tum live stock into meat snd by-products |
at the lowest possible cost, prevent waste, operate refrigerator cars, ;
distribute to retailers in all parts of the country—and be recompensed |
with a profit of only a fraction of a cent a pound—a profit too small
to have any noticeable effect on the price of meat or live stock,
Swift & Company, U.S. A, .
~ Atlanta Local Branch, 70-72 E. Alabama Street
J. L. Thweatt, Manager
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1918,
.
Three More Ships Arrive
With Boys From Overseas
(By International News BServica.)
NEW YORK, Dee. 12.—The Santa
Anna, from Hrest, with 48 officers, 2}
men and 79 civilians on board, ar
rived here today. She was followed
by the DeKalb, with 44 officers and
1,020 men,
+ The United States hospital ship
Mercy, which arrived off Quarantine
last night with 398 wounded inen
from Fance, dockeg today. The Mer
cy was overdue and reported that she
had put into Bermuda on account of
rough weather.
Amonfd the returning officers and men
on the Mercy were First Licutenant A
L. Conover, of San Francisco, who lost
his right arm at Soissons; Captain E,
J. sgnckpoole. of Harrisburg, Pa., who
had been shot in the left leg; Lieutenant
Edward Smith, of LaSalle, N. Y., who
received a fractured arm in the Argonne
forest; Private Charles Combs, of f%n.mz
fleld, Ga., who was wounded in L left
hip by machine gun fire at Chateau
Thierry; Joseph F. Moffatt, of Spring.
field, 111., who ‘'was shot in both legs and
his shoulders in the Argonne fighting,
and Harry Kessen, of Birnwood, Wis,,
who was shot in the left hip at Solssons.
Pot or Percolator
Whatever your favorite method
of making coffee you can get
COFFEE
in the proper form—whole,
ground (steel cut), pulver
ized. All the same—always
the same.
CHEEK-NEAL COFFEE CO.
Nashville, Houston, Jacksomville, Richmond
o
-<
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS,
The Atlanta office of the civil service
commisison announces the following
competitive examinatidhs to fill vacan
cies in the different branches of the
service: Clerk to commercial attache,
examination January 14; pathologist in
eereal disease investigations, January
7; automatic scale expert, Jgnuar% 8;
laboratory aid in,chemistry and phys
ics, January 8; tf:pyist draftsman and
biological assistant January 7. '
——e e
For Indigestion, Constipation or
Biliousness
Just try one 50-cent bottle of TIAX
FOS WITH PEPSIN. A Liquid Di
gestive Laxative pleasant to take.
Now made and recommended by the
manufacturers of Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonie.—~Advertisement.
The Loftls 7-Di uster Ring, 4 gold,
::m.!:libm.u(-:‘.:u.:onl;:gl..‘e;odl week—in m’fle h‘fit:(ki
me 1 o o
a $l5O Saftatre Dizmond. 'fl?m"-“"h"r’u & Co, §
8. Breoad St.—Adv.
o Qo Ry
B WHOLLSALL;
\ FRIDAY: !
Small Pig Heads .....12V¢
Beef Stle!vol ¥ 540 599 s B IGD
Rump Koast ........1714c
Small Pig Sides ........20c
Pork Shoulders ........20¢c
Small Pig Hanls ........25¢
Pork Loin Roast .......28¢c
Backbone, Id. ..........20¢
Choice Round Steak ....256¢
Choice Loin Steak .....26c
Porterhouse Steak ......26¢c
Loin Pork Chops .......25¢
No. 10 PURE $
HOG LARD ... 2050
*
46 Walton 24 8, Broad
33 Edgewood 86 8. Broad
16 8. Pryor 20 N, Broad
7 E. Mitchell _6l N. Broad
Why Don't
You Fish
.
Fish Are?
INE-TENTHS of the
N art of fishing is in
knowing where the
fish ARE.
No matter how new and
lovely ‘your tackle, how
e_ue your hook and how
attractive your bait, you
won’t get a bite if there
are no fish in the pool
It’s the same way fishing
for anything, say a job, or
a customer, or a clerk, or a
maid.
If you want one, why in
time don’t you go where
they ARE?
The Georgian and Ameri
can reach practically every
newspaper reader in At
lanta. Through these news
papers you get in touch
¥ith whoever and whatever
you want.
An advertisement in The
Georgian and American is
like dropping your baited
hook into an ocean, where
the fish swarm,
®
If yon want a cook you
don’t apply at a bank, and
if you want a spade you
don’t go to a millinery
store. .
If yon want work, re
member that thousands of
employers scan the Want
columns of The Georgian
and American every day,
looking for workers,
o .
They are there—go to
them!
If you want someone to
do work, remember that the
multitude of workers buy
The Georgian and Ameri
can every day, that they
may find out where to ap
ply.
They are there — go to
them !
No other medium comeg
nearer reaching aj the
people in Atlanta than
The Georgian ana Ameri.
can,
The fish swarm in this
sea. If you want a bite,
cast your hook in where the
fish are,
Thousands of people get
something they want by
means of these newspapers
every day.
Why not you?
Som‘o\vhore in this great
ocean of human activity is
the thing or the opportuni.
ty that is yours. Your lone.
dy search for it might take
a lifetime.
Throngh The Georgian
and Ameriean Want Ads
you may get it tomorrow.
(Copyright, 1018, Star Compemy.)