Newspaper Page Text
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SECTION
VOL XV,
U. S. MUST WIN NAVAL SUPREMACY, ADMIRAL SAYS
Belgian King and Queen Likely to Visit America Next Year
CHRISTMAS DAWN DREARY
. WITH EMPTY STOCKING
e T i
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It ak‘c\rf a { o o “_;_',p.e‘
lot of faith ¢ T A AR, g
¥ e . \
to forget a i @é\;f S TN
jolt like this, g R ai.% T R
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Soßy saseeeß & eSS MR S S eT S SR B TR e T .
TH® spirit of the L\tlle Boy has
come again 1o bless the Empty
Stocking Fund and_make it a holy
and tender thing.
Yoy don’t know about the Little
Boy? -
Here is the story, reprinted from
The Georgian of December 15, 1917,
when ~it appeared In the Saturday
Evening columnwof James B, Nevimn:
A LITTLE BOY. pe
Along about this time every year
there comes \u The Georgian ofMice »
letter containing a cashier's check far
$lO, and a slip upon which is written,
“In memory of u little boy.” ~
The check is for the Empty Stock
ing Fund, and the name of the sender
is not known to any person In The
Georgian office, ’ s
Somehow we have comé to center
pretty much the whole spirit of the
Empty Stocking Pund about this an
nukl remembrance, It seemis.to carry
within itself alone just about all thers
is to be said in behalf of the work.
The money is assembled entirety
and wholly for the sake of little boys
and girls—that they may Know some
thing of Santa Claus. We search out
the very, very poor— generally speak .
ing, the homes we enter with this
sunshine and Christmas cheer ar
homes that otherwise would know
nothing of the same,
You see little hoys and little girls
uare pretty. much the same the worlo
over. The little-boy pf the poor lo
Just a little boy the £ame as the little
Full International News Service.
boy of the rich: enjoys the same
Tlngs and plays in the same way.
He wants o grow up and be a big
man like his daddy the same as the
little rioh boy wn.n}}n to grow up and
be &bi an like HIS daddy. Inm the,
eyes of all little boys their very own
daddies are the best and most won
derful daddies to be found pnywhere,
Tye Way 1y Should Be.
That'y one of'the fine and dandy
things the very own daddies of this
world have ‘the privilege and oppor
tunity of being proud of,
If you had had a little boy’ a véry
little "boy, possibly with bright brue
eyes, and maybe curly hair—and one
day he passed away and left yeou
wondering why, all unable to under.
stand, yvou would miss hix preclous
little presence along aboit Christmas
time more_than you ever.had, per
haps. And when you saw other little
boys, bright-eyed and, haphy, romp
ing and making themselves rackety
and noisy all over creation, it would
raise a* mighty -big Unmnp in vyour
throat when vou recalled your OWN
little boy of the long axo and hagp.v
vesterday. 'rn#« wolild be an added
and emphasized geief in your heart of
hearts—a private and intimate grief
kept Quite:to yourself for the most
pdrt, for you couldn’'t make anybody
really understand, anyway :
But maybhe it wouldn't be quite o
bad, &0 heartbreaking, if, in the phyms
fcal absence of the dear, dead little
one of vour very own vou uq“r ones
more recall his sweet spirit o yoyr
: : e P — j‘ ' = ";‘."""“":'“‘""'_T_" v
: o BTR e Y, AE Ry -
\ - ) R
ey LEADING RS e SAUL) OF THE SOUTHEAST FY[7 v
gide and have him contemplate with
yot in silence the joy a litle bit of
thu%hlnx we call “money* had pro
duced for a lot of little boys here on
earth, ¢
; ‘Whose Boy? o
I'do not know whose dear little boy
it was that W called (8 memary
through our Emptyx Stocking Funa
every year so tenderly, but I am sure
he was a sweet and precious little
boy, and I know hik mother and his
father loved him very, very much and
are sacd and lonely without him to
day.
< But I ‘fl.fln feel that the I;\.\' will be
made brighter for them in the knowl.
edge that the bit of money they in
trusted to our care “in memory of a
Tittle h?" will be very tenderly-and
very carefully placed where it will
make old Santa Claus a reality, a joy
and undisputed fact,
.~ To this lonely mother and father-~
‘somewhere in Atlanta”—The Ggor
gian giyes assurance that their littls
memory boy's spivit, in all of ity qual.
ity of brightness and gladness, shall
be roaming among the very poor lit.
tle echildren on Christ's birthday to
make that .day bAghter and more
joyful for them. 'l'ho,v may he sure,
of that.
It's the best work The Georgian
does of the three nundred and sixty
five duys of the vear ~the very best
this: Emphy Stocking Fund
And It )5 pretty well all done “in
memory of a little hoy whose namné
we du not even know, " |
ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1918
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By JOMN T. PARKERSON,
Staff Correspondent of the I. N. §
LONDON, Dee. . 13— America may
be visited by King Albert and Queen
Plizabe‘n, of Belgium, next wear
While no’ definit> arrange.nents hawve
been made, i* is expected that if
President Wilson vyisits Brussels,
which Belgiams are takigg for grant.
ed, formal announcément will be mavle
that the Belgian rulers will return
the visit,
King Albert is hnmown to be desir
ous of personally (\prrmm‘o: hig grat- ¢
itude for Awaerica’s aid. He Hfif‘lll
refers to his visit to America® as 2|
reporter, befor: asvending the throne, |
as one of the most pleasant events of |
his life, & ‘
Both King Albert end Queen Eliza- |
!
beth are keenly interested in Ameri- |
can activities, They are familiar |
with the literature of the country and
enjoy reading American nr‘wspn[u‘r-'
and magazines. —_— |
The entire time of the kmg now is
taken up with preblems jof recon- |
|
struction, to which he has devoted
special study, even while leading hlt«'
. |
armies during the latter days of “Wi
war. ; . i
. |
Hotel Men to Meetgn |
A
Atlanta Next bummerl
COLUMBUS, Dec; 13.—A decigion |
Thold the midsummer session at Atlanta,
but no agreement as to the next annual |
meeting place, altheugh Americus, Ma- |
con and Gainesville sent m\'lmlwns.;
were outstanding features of the n-s/i
ston of the Georgia iotel Men's Assoeia- |
tion, which closed late yesterday. The |
following committees were appointed |
Legislative, T. W. Hooks, of Macon,|
chairman; J. L.ee Barnes, Atianta; L. J.
Durken, Atlanta; J. W Andrews, La- |
Grange; J. A. Hobbs, Gainesville Ex-!
ecutive, C. A. Creiglfton, of Atlanta,
chairman; G. Kuhn, Atlanta Homer |
Geiger, Savannah: O. W Donnell, Co- |
lumbus; 8. J. Newtomb, Augusta; E.-P. |
Powell, Macon |
- - ——— —— — :
\ |
v Y
Grant Buys Connally 1
¥
Property on Broad St.|
Ownership of the entire bleck pounded |
by Alabamp, Broad and Whikehall streets |
and the rallgoad, with the exception ol
|
three puildings, has been obtained by .lnmvl
W. Grant through his purchase of the half |
interest of Mrs. Mary V. Connglly in the|
property at Nos. 2 and 4 South Hgoad, |
was announced Friday The three cpcep-!
tions are the buildings occupied Ly Wyel i
worth's store, the Liggett Drug Store, .m'l|
the Linen Store l
Mr. Grant paid $2,000 a front foot for
the Broad street properiy, or a total of |
$56,000 He gave as part payment a lot}
in Peachtree road, valued at $7,000 T'he |
sale was made by Thomas W. Connally, |
acting for his mother ’
> )
Caleb Ridley, the Poel, |
» v . . 7
They're Calling Him Now |
Dr, Caleb Alford Ridley, pastor of the |
Central Baptist Church; is being hailed |
by the members of his congregation .nm'
other friends as a first-class poet as |
well as a first-class preacher '
Dr. Ridley has just issued a little]
bookKlet of higs poems, which are de- |
signed primarily as Christmas hv}w'l:’l‘
for his numerous friends, but some uf#
them have been placed on sale ad|
Miller's Book Store, as he expresses it |
‘to _help pay the printer j
“Weiting verses ig the onl vacation |
I ever have says Dr, ‘Ridley. but at!
that ! is a fairly satisfying vacaudon, |
a 8 he has placed several of them with |
legding magazine
LY v
Dr. J. Sprole Lyons Gels'
’ vy - 4
G;ood News From France
Dr. and Mrs. J. Sprole Lyons had re
ceived pleasing information Friday con
cerning their two sgons in Kurope, to
the effect that Chaplain J. Sprole Lyons,
Ir., of the 115th Infantry, has been dig
harged from the American base hep
pital in lLondon, and soor will start
home, and that Second Lieutenant Wil
Ham Whallace Livons has been promoted
to*a first lHeuetnancy
Liewetnant Lyons graduated from the
first officer training schix at Fort
McPherson, and has been overseas for
Jhe past ony He has seen much a
tive sorvice as ha also Chaplain
L.yons
v
Brown Declares Cotlon |
v . g ’
Estimate Too lllgh{
' The Government estimate fixing
the South's cotton crep for 10818 at!
11,700,000 bales I 8 too high, in the |
cpinion of J. J Brown, who ddclares |
that the crop will not run nrore than|
11.500,000 bales As head of the ot
ton States Advisory Marketing Board
Mr. Brown has had ample opportunity
to get inside information on every
phase of the cotton hdustry
y L »
Work of Dismantling
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Camp W heeler Is Begun
MACON, Ded : Work of disman
thing Camp Wheelar mder way, Ma
of the soldier " engaged n tearing
out he imbing ! belr ‘
picked freight ' indd . will B
hipped to. n contral point. | "
e sow tha W th Witkding will |}
auctioned off at public sale .
America FIRST and All the Time,
Is Stand Taken by W. R. Hearst
NEW YORK, Dec. Y3~The Eventng Journal to
day prints the following letier : '
: December 12, 1918, -
DEAR MR. BRISBANE: g
You have nqti('nd, of course, that some {el
egrams of mine have bheen published by a
United States Sona¢ Committee:
I haave no objection to thy telograms of
struetiqn to editors being printéd; in faet, I am
glad to have them printed. There is never a
telegram of instruction to n'yy of my newspa
pers or to any editor that can not be given the
fullest publicity. They are all Lased on a sin
ele hqd sincere desire to conduet my newspa;
p_orn‘in the interest of the Ameriean people. 1
do not feel under abligation to consider the in
terest of any other people, especially whert
those interests seem to me to conflief with the
interest of the American people. :
~ There is a large Tory clement in this ecouh
try which seems to titink now was it thought in
the days of the Revolutionary War—that the
only way to be pro-American is to be pro-Eng
lish: .
I do not think so, and, in fagt, the American
histories that 1 have read in my school an,d col
lege colirses and sinee that time clearly demon s
strate' that the best way to be pro:American is
sometimes to bhe anti-Engliah‘ !
This is notably the esase during the Revolu
tionary War, during the war of 1812 and dur
_ihg the Civil War, , J
If our Ameriean histories are wrong in giv
ing the impression that the selfish interests of
England have at certain crises in our history
very strongly conflicted with the best interests
of the United States then these American his
‘tories should be burned and English histories
substituted in their place in the schools;of our
country. s .
The English history teaches that England is
always right, and the Englishmen has pride and
patriotism enough to believe it. 1 admire that
quality in the Englishman.+ I am>sorry “that
some of our American citizens have not a sim
ilar-lgyalty to and a similar confidence in their
own country.
Before America entered into this war, I tvas,
as | have frequently said in my instructions to
t2e editors of my papers, neither pyo-English
nop pro-German. My attitude was that of Mer
cutio—"*A plague o’ both your houses.”’ |
could see nothing but an attempt on the part
of both Englpnd and Germany to inxlv.- the
United States in the war and to use the United
States as a cat 's-paw to pull their echestnuts out
of the fire. ; -
,Under these circumstances, my policy of
America FIRST and ONLY and ALL THE
TIME led me to gtrive to keep America out of
the war on the side of either belligerent, and
to endeavor to hring about a league of neutral
nations to protect. the interests of neutrals
against the aggressions of hoth of the bellig
erent groups,
In the pursuance of this policy I sometimes
wrote against the aggressions of England
against American interests and sometimes
against the depredations and outrages of Gar.
many, i 7
It therefore, only certal instruetions to ed- |
itors ave printed, I might seem to be pro-Eng
lith. If only eertain other instructions are
printed, | might seem to be pro-German. But if
ALL instruetions are printedjt would bé clear,
as | say, that 1 am not and never was either
pro-English or pro-German, but merely pro-
Afnerican,
Since the entrance of America into the war
Y have unquestioningly scquieseed in the wis.
lom of the decision of our Government to make
war on the side of the Allies, and T have given
the Allies almost a 8 utter and Igreserved sup
a6rt as | have given our own, country,
This I have done because that eourse during
wartime has seemed to me the best eourse and
in fact, the only course to be pursued In the in<
torests of our United States of America. ~
Having once embarked on war, it was absos
lutely necessary that the war should be won
and that all dissension or diversian of opinion
should e suppressed until after the war was
won
When peace is finally deelared, T assume my
righits o opinion and to expression’ of
opinion independent of the wish or advantage
of any foreign country and subservient only to -
the interests of hy own people and my own
conntry,
As [ur as the opposition to the espionage law
Tasued Daily and Entered as Second-(lass Matter 3¢ *
¢ the PostoMee at Atlanta Under Act of March 3, 1879
is eancerned, T wonld like my papers to repeat
ant] to reiterate odr opposition. to that law,
which 1 consider now, just as I considered it
when it was first presenfed, to be unwise, un.
Necossary, und®mocratie and unconst.itl‘lli'onal.
, Isaid at the time of its first introduection that
it was ad unrighteous and un-American as the
align and sedition laws passed by the Federalist
party; and that the attempt to suppress free
speech and a }rm: press in this country’ wonld
he a& disasirous to the Demoeratie party as the
similar attempt in the alien and sedition laws
had béen to the Federalist party., =
That propheey is coming true. | .
The National Demoeratic -p(l;fy was over
whelmingly defeated in the late' Congressional
eleetions. It lost hoth the House and Senate;
and il sustained this astonishing defeat at the
very moment when the United States had con
\ultylml under 4his Democratic administration
a Successful war. o . .
If the Demoeratic party eould not at that
propitious time carry thé country, what is’ it
going to be able to do_at a less favorabie timed
"“The only places where the Demoeratie party
inereased_its representation in the late Con
gressional eclections were WHE[}E THE
HEARST PAPERS WERE PRINTED- and
where the genuine demoeracy of the Hearst pa
v, : .
pers, and their support of the Deinocratie party
on genuinely demoeratic Ilin®® offset the Dem
oeratic party’s own antoeratic record.
As l say in one of the instructions to editors
published by t})«* Seénate Committe::
- “'lt wotlld 'be a remarkable thing if the
only hope of democracy in this country
should lie in the Republican party.”’
The country did return to the Republican
party,. not beeause, as I believe: through any
great confidéhee in the Republican party, but
because the Republican party was the one in
strument through which it could express its dis
proval of the Tack of democracy'in the Demo
cratie party. :
- But, as 1 say, where the*Hearst papers were
printed, and where they carried high their ban
ner of true demeocracy, 0( true freegom, of true
patriotism, voiced in their motto of “AMERI
CA FIRST,”’ THE DEMOCRATI? PARTY
WON OVERWHELMINGLY, and INCREAS.
ED its representation in Congress, while the
nest of the country was going unitedly against
the Democratic party: - %
In New York City, where my New York
American and Ney York Evening Journal are
published, the largest majority ever given a
Democratic candidate was registered in the vote
for governor. .
In Boston: where my Boston American and
Boston Advertiser are published, the city was
carried overwhelmingly for the democraey, and
David 1 Walsh, a Democratic Senator was sent
to Washington to take the plaee of John W,
Weeks, the Republican Senator. ;
The eity of Chicago, where my Chicago Her
ald and Examiner and Kvening American are
published, went overwhelmingly Demoeratic hy
one of the largest votes ever registered, while
the Southern part of lllinois, which is served
by the St. Louis papers and not by the Hearst
Chicago papers, went overwhelmingly Repub
lican, + . ‘
In Atlanta and in San Frageisco and in Los
Anm-fis. the Demoeratiec Congressional delega
tions incrensed or held their own.
Everywhere that the Hearst papers were pub.
lished Democraey triumphed on traly demo
eratic lines, "
What proper eriticism, therefore, is there of
the democracy @r the Americanism of the
Hearst papers? \ \
They have been vindieated by tha people to
whom they appeal and to whose voice the Dem.
ocratic representatives in Congress should lis
ten with self-interested attention.
[t is not for me or for the Hearst papers to
make any defense, and | 'do not make any.
It is for the Democrage majority in Congress
to mypke a defense. 1t has been indicted. [t
has been repudiated. Its policies have been
impugned and rejected, ’
~Aml] if the, Democratic party is not dis
tinetl and definitely democratic it will have
no cause for continuanee, and will go forever
out of existence as the Federalist party did
after tha passage by that party of its oppreg
give and restriative un-American legislation’
one hundred and eighteen years ago.
Sincerely vours, ' S
' WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST.
[ SECOND]
SECTION)
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! WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Peabe 8
'm' League of Nations or none, the
' American navy should be built np
| unt it i ccond to none in the world,
! Rear Admiral Charles J. Badger,
chairman.of tlfe general board of the
navy, told the House committee dn
naval affairs yesterday, 3
"The general (hoard believes that
nnder the present world conditions
znd the gonditions likely to' obtain in
the future,” Admiral Badger said, “the
'>. . .
11 m,(”l States navy alm:nld. steadily
cofilinue to increase. Ultimately it
should\ be equal to the most powerful
maintained by any other, nation of
the world Year by year dewelop
ment should he made donsistent with
the facilities of the country, but the
limit' above defined shonld bhe at
tained not later than 1925,
Navy Must Support League.
“Navies must be the principal sup
port of a league ofsnations, and the
United States, from its wealth, infin
ence and power, will be called upon
to contribute a large share of the in
ternational police force to render
suwh v league effective.”
The duty of the navy in the future,
the admiral said, will be not only to,
guard the country against invasiom
but to protect as W(‘lf(hit great mer
chant marine now being built. §
‘wea power will always remain. a
! factor of vast importance in interna
| tional relations,” Admiral Badger de
"l.“'ol', ““The great naval iessoh of
the war has Leen that the nation pos
sessing the most powerful navy was
'.:Mn- in a few weeks to drive the Ger
man merchant Tlag from the seas and
to keep open her own trade routes,
and vet, when the war commenced,
{Gormnny possessed the'secand 'best
navy in the world. It proved tg be
Inu[ good enough. The . blockide,
' which she was not ahle to break, was
'llm greatest contributing cause t
L her ultimate collapse.
Completion of the three-year build
Ing program authorized in 1916, &
which was halted to build anti-sub-
Im.n'nu craft, was recommended by
I.—\vhnu:nl Badger. Work has not yet
been started on six- battleships, six
i!mll!r cruisers, two scout ecruisers,
[ntnu- fleet submarines, two destroyer
tenders and one fleet submarine ten
| der, he said l.ack of ships of this
type, he declared, would have Wbeen
fatal to the United States if it had
been fighting the war alone
Yo Keep Pace With England.
Admiral Badger said that befo
the armistice “was signed reuulrirq
Germany to surrende™ the greate
spart of itg navy the general board had
recommended a 9ix-year building pro
gram fn include twelve superdread
naughts and sixteen battie eruisers,
but added that immediate necessities
would be met by thethree-year build
ing program recomménded. This prog
gram will add six battle cruisers o
the ix already authorized, heJ’d
and at the same rate of authorizstion
would "'make a total of rineteen by
1925, Great Britain now has thirteen
of these vessels built or building, he
sard, and it is estimated she will have
nineteen or twenty by 1925,
Admiral Badger said that type for
“"American battleships .qorapares In
power with those of any other nation,
ointing out that the six battleships
to be laid down are designed for a
digblacement ,of 43,000 tons of 28
Knot peed, a mmin battery of twelve
16-mch gung- and are heavily ars
mored. They will be the most power.
ful vessels in the world, he said,
Admiral Badger stated that provi
on for 108 destroyers is made in the
1920 three.vear program, There are
now 342 either butit or heing built, he
ggid, and in 1927 will be therefore &
total of 450, compared with Eneland’s
)16 at present
The submarine program calls for £1
fleet snbmarines, 146 & type, 24 anti
submarine and 42 mine lavers, he
gaid. “There are now built, bullding
or authorized a total of 169 /coast
submarines and twelve fleaet subma
rines The general board estimates
that a total .of 294 S type boats are
required and recommends that 76 be
withorized now The British navy
has now built 6 lvnhhnf 228 subma -
rines. of which about 78 are of large
wr fleet type.' :
Germany's Surrendered Fleet,
Disposition of the ships surrendered
hy Germany rests with the peace con-,
forence. Admiral Badger stated in
response to questions at the close of ‘
the meetifig as to whether or not he
theught these vessels should' be de
atroved returned or distributed
imong Lhe Allles ol
If ¥oneland gets the lion's share of
these hi asked Rapreaenuflvz‘
Kelley, of Michigan, Republican, 46 =
vou stil nk weo should bulld to the
point ' o Nould have & DBAvVE
equnl ! ’ z
The necessi he United Stntss
navy being equasl to the most powers =
ful maintained wny other nation =
n the world hy A h Ix ax reat now
. t has ever heen '\ replied the ads
mirs! This n ned be 1 dihid
109% 10 the Cermatt shilts B
utea in large numbe o taly
bere, Bvt we ghonld o tn prer el
possible
NO, 113