Newspaper Page Text
000 FARMERG 'WATCH BIG
CTEAM MULES’ PLOW SDIL
.. MACON, March 13.—Good weather
prevailed for the third day of the
Pixie National Power Farming dem
onstration, and more than 100 trac
dors of various makes gave an exhi
bition in plowing and cultivating at
the farm of John T. Moore on the
Houston road, 4 miles south of Ma
con,
The first demonstration was given
yesterday afternoon. It was a clear,
00l afternocon and fully 5000 specta
tors were on hand, The soil was a
little wet, but served well for demon
stration purposes Moviug picture
operators and photographers were to
be reen cverywhere A. E. Hilde
‘rand, of Bloomington, director, su
pervised the demonstration.
Many of the spectators witnessed
tractor disk plowing and cultivation
by power farming for the first time.
The machines moved across the tract
dn every direction all the afternoon.
¥very tractor representative that had
a tractor and farm machinery set up
was permitted to show what his ma
chine could do. Several women were
present and apparently tcok as much
Interest in the proceedings as the
men.
Big Tests Today.
The main demonstrations are the
ones that are taking place this after
noon, and the others scheduled for
+'riday a!ternuqn. It is possibie that
J
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Emphasis should be placed upon
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15 used regularly by max:L, right
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For the delicate child or adult,
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UNCLE
SAM
BREAD
Slices,
Butters,
Toats,
Tastes,
Keeps Well
Schlesinger-Meyer Baking Co
Reduce Weight
Many Are Losing Several
Pounds a Month.
Fat persons, particularly those from
ten to sixty pounds above normal
Weight, will be interested to learn
that they may reduce their weight
without starvation diet or tiresome
exercise
This can best be done by getting
plenty of fresh air, by breathing
deeply and by taking a few drops of
oil of korein four times a day, also
in following the other simple rules
that come with the box,
oil of korein may be obtained from
and good druggist in capsult form.
Kven a few days' treatment is likely
to show a pleasing reduction in
weight. The step becomes lighter, the
flesh more firm, the skin smoother in
appearance; work seems easier and a
more buoyant feeling takes posses
sion of the whole body and mind as
superfluous, unhealthy fat disappears,
If you are overstout and have tried
various methods of fat reduction in
vain you may now be very thankful
at having found a genuine gystem. It
fa safe, pleasant and healthful.--Adyv,
-
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
.
- The purified calomel tab«
lets that are entirely free
. .
of all sickening and sali.
.
vating effects.
Medicinal virtues vastly improved.
Guaranteed by your draggist. Sold
~ saly in sealed packages. Price 35
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN @© @ A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes ~® ® © THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1919,
there will be another Saturday. The
tractor men are anxious to plow every
foot of land possible and thoroughly
demonstrate their machines, as it
means so much for power farming in
Georgia.
Thursday was “club” day, and
thousands of club members from
Georgia and other Southern States
were present. The demonstration this
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afternoon was especially for the club“
members. The entire morning was
devoted to individual demonstrations,
About 350 acres will be plowed this
afternoon.
The Fordson Tractor Company has
offered one of the tractors and com
plete outfit of field implements to the
club member who registers at the
demonstration grounds and exhibits
How ToGet Relief When Head
and Nose are Stuffed Up.
‘
\
i
Count fifty! Your cold in head or
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your head will clear and you can
breathe freely. No more snuffling,
hawking, mucous discharge, dryness
or headache; no struggling for breath
at night.
Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream
Balm from vour druggist and apply a
little of this fragrant antiseptic cream
in your nostrils. It penetrates through
every air passage of the head, sooth
ing and healing the swollen or in
flamed mucous membrane, giving you
instant relief. Head colds and ca
tarrh yield like magic. Don't stay
stuffed-up and miserable. Relief is
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Why go limping around with aching,
puffed-up feet--feet so tired, chafed,
sore and swollen you can hardly get
your shoes on or off? Why don't you
get a 26-cent box of “Tiz"” from the
drug store now and gladden your tor
tured feet?
“Tiz" makes your feet glow with
comfort; takes down swellings and
draws the soreness and misery right
out of feet that chafe, smart and
burn, “Tiz” instantly stops pain In
corns, calluges and bunions, “Tiz" is
glorious for tired, aching, sore feet
No more shoe tightness-——-no more foot
torture.—Advertisement.
Miller's Antiseptic 011, Known ns
Wil Positively Relieve Pain in 8 Few
Minntes,
Don't suffer from the tortures of rheu
matism when it s easy to be relleved and
enjoy life In the old way. Miller's Antisepe
tie Ol (ecommonly known as Snake Oil)
penetrates into the aching joints and bones
almost instantly, drives away the pain and
limbers you up In wonderful manner
Theie I 8 nothing better than Snake Ofl
for pains of all kinds; lumbago, neuralgin
sore throat, pains in the chest and sides
outs, hurns, bruises, corns, bunions, ehil
blaing: in suet, pains of every description
Take & bottle home today--it's a fine thing
10 have in the house, In three sizes, 30¢,
| 80c and §I.OO. Your money back if you are
not satisfled. For sale by Jacobs' 9 Drug
\lfluru wAdvertisement \
Four Held in Raid
On Bslshevik Office
NTW YORK, March 13,—Four prison
eérs were held today on a charge of
“advocating the overthrow of the United
States government as the result of a
raid on what the police termed Bolshe
vik headquarters at Neo. 133 Bast Fif
teenth street,
More than 156 others taken in the raid
were released after they had begn ques
tioned for hours. The four helq are:
Mollie Steimer, the good-looking young
Russian woman who was recéntly sen
tenced to fiften years in Federal prison
on a charge of sedition, She was freed
on $15,000 bail pending an appeal; Mar
{cus Ordowski, who described himself
las the manager of a Russian newspaper;
Peter Bianca, secretary of the Union
of Russian Peasant Workers, and Ar
thur Ketezes, a printer,
The authorities confiscateq all books
and papers found in the s)hwr-. and now
have the names of hundreds of *Bol
sheviks'' through the United States,
the best sow and four plgs at the
Georgia State Fair next October. This
offer attracted hundreds of club mem
bers to the demonstration. Professor
James Downing, State pig club agent,
had charge of registering club mem
bers. i 1
| Hotels Are Overflowing.
~ There are so many different tractor
manufacturers and designers harei
that it is impossible for Macon ho
tels to accommodate all of them.
There is hardly a tractor company in
the Usited States that is not repre
sented. Scores of orders have bheen
placed with Georgia farmers for ma
chines.
~ Arnold P. Yerkes, editor of the In
ternational Harvester Company's
farm journal, “Tractor Farming,” is
among the visitors in Macon. Mr,
‘Yerkr-s was connected with the Unit
ed States Departmernt of Agriculture
in the farm management department
for fifteen vears before gouing with
the International Harvester. ‘
Dr. A. M. Soule, president of the
State College of Agriculture; J. Phil
Campbell, director of farm extension
work in Georgia, and J. J. Brown,
state commissioner of agriculture, at
tended the demonstration this aher-‘
noon, |
Among the companies represented
on the field today were Bissell, disc
harrow; J. L. Case, tractors plows and
roller harrows; Moline universal trac
tors grain drills slated mold board!
plows, orchard cultivators, disc har
rows and plows: Parrett, tractor;
Cleveland, caterpillar type tractors;
Avery, tractors; Hart-Puarr, tfactors;
Frick, tractors; Advance-Rumley,
tractors; Huber, light “4" tractors;,
Power, tractors; the Lauson tmctor,‘
distributed by W. J. Dabney, of At
lanta; Beeman, cultivator lmomn;‘
Oliver, tractor; LaCrosse, tractor;
Russell, kerosene tractors; National,
tractors; R. and P, tractors; Oliver,
turn plows, harrows, cultivators; Juhn‘
Decre, kerosene tractors and plows;
Fordson, tractors pulling American
seeding machines and Oliver plows.
Plan Experimental Farm
Plans are being made for the es
tablishment of an experimental farm
tor tractors, according to George D,
Jones, sales engineer of the ('lfiv(‘]:llnl‘
Tractor Company, and the farm will
be located in Macon and vicinity, ]!\'l
means of the experimental farm the
tractor manufacturers will be better
able to give the results of their ex
periments to the farmer in such form
that he can follow them with Fflli'.‘
“We shall be better able to advise
the farmer on the implements” nni-i‘
Mr. Jones, “that are suitable for his !
work, and advise him on better seed
and preparation. We shall also be
prepared to take an analysis of the
soll and give him the result with ad
vice ag to how to work it.” |
Willlam J. Oliver, president of the
Olver Tractor Company, and of the
Knoxville and Severville Rallround,
left in his private car today for Knox
ville, He praised Macon warmly for
the ‘success of the tractor show, and
sald he regretted that he had to leave
before it was over. |
. v
Quick, Watson! Find
Y.
More “Stenogs” for U. S.
A large number of calls for women
workers, some of them very urgent, have
been recelved during the past few days
at the office of the Uniteq States Em
‘.‘n,\‘nn-m Service, Woman's Division, 222
*eachtree Arcade. Those most urgent
are for experienced stenographers and
dictaphone operators. ‘There are also
many calls for apprentices, power ma.
chine operators, hotel malds, pantry wo
men and domestic help, Experienced
women, not now employved, are invited
to register at this oMee for the work
m;; wish to do
irme wishing to take advertage of
this free service can communlcate by
phone, Main 688, and list thelr require
ments,
is the BEST protection
ugninst
Influenza, Colds, Croup, Whoop
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Hoarseness, sore throat and head colds
are dungerous if not checked, Cheney's
Expectorant quickly relleves thege
trouble Pleasart to the tuste—chil
dren ll&n it, .
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS,
Posse After Men Who
. .
Tried te Kidnap Girls
(By International News Servico.)
DANVILLE, ILL, Manch 18.—A posse
of more than 100 armed citizens and
deputies searched today for three men
who late last night attempted to kidnap
Esther and Elsie Schwartz, sisters
According to Esther, the oldest sister,
the men attempted to flirt with them.
They ignored the advances and say two
of the men jumped from the automobile
and, lifting them into the machine,
started to drive from the city. Esther
was thrown from the machine Her
right leg was broken. She also suffered
a fractured jaw.
Elsle escaped by jumping from the
machine when it became mired in the
‘mud on the outskirts of the city. ,
Gloomy predictions for Georgia’s next
cotton crop were presented by J. J.
Brown, commissioner of agriculture, fol
lowing his return Wednesday frvn Bi
hert County, where he addresed a meet
ing of 500 farmers, In his talk there,
Mr. Brown pleaded in favor of lifting
the embargo on cotton shipments into
the central empires.
Excessive rains since November have
set all crops, particularly cotton, back
about thirty days, Mr. Brown reported,
On account of the boll weevil danger,
it is customary to plant sea island cot
ton about March 16, which comes on
next Monday, but Mr. Brown pointed
out that this wiil be imposible, as the
ground is saturated, Short staple, which
should be pianted by April 1, also will
be delayed, he said.
“We have had a very warm winter,”
he said, “and therefore the boll weevil
probably will be more active than in
the past, consequently we must turm
our attention more to food crops. Grain
crops all over the State appear to be In
a thriving condition, but cotton, and
vegetables still are too far behind for
us to have any reports on them.”
Deplore Vulgarity of
(By International News Service.)
LONDON (by mail).—~New York's
howl against the Beautiful Young
Foolish who insists on wearing her
new gown as if were about to spill
out of it, backward, has Its exact
echo right here in London, where the
stald women are throwing up their
hands at the vulgarity of the new |
gowns.
With no hesitation, a London vicar
protests against the “immodesty of |
the evening gown of 1816, and his
cry has been taken up stoutly by the
mothers of Mayfair. |
“1 can asure you,” sald one of them
discussing what she termed the very
dangerous situation of the young
women going out into public scarcely
half dressed: "I have seen very soant
garments at a so-called quiet dance
Jast week. When | went to a dress
maker to buy my two girls pretty
gowns for their coming out, she
showed me skirts that were mere
fringes to hide the limbs from the
knees downward, Vapor gauze, she
described them, and that describes
the thickneas of these immodest dance
garments, shown as suitable for giris
of eighteen and ninetesn.'”
“1 am shocked myself,” sald a dress
maker, by the two fashions. One is
that of huv!l:f the front of a ball
gown high an vnvtlr‘ully no back at
all, as It is cut V.shaped right to the
walst, The second is that of four V.
pleces to form the bodice, leaving no
muaterial under the arms. 1 strongly
resent such fashion, but the demand
is great.”
80, you seo, It is not the poor 4resa.
maker, who wants to sell all her
gowns, but the wenrers themselves
and with the cost of everything going
up #o tremendously, some do not
blame them for esonomizing on ma
terial,
Installs Young Arsenal
s vy
To Protect His Still
BEVERETT, WABH,, March Y. With his
“moonshine mtill” protected by dynamite
mines and a system of electrio wires that
gave immediate warning of the approsch
of “visitors,” EA Newsome, a giant moons
shiner,” was placed under arrest hers do
apite hin wellsguarded rendegvous. Heo Ia
charged in a Fedoral warrant with mane
ufacturing whisky Newsome malftained
a “young arsenal” internal revenus offi.
eors declared They said alsc that the
#titl operated by him was the |argest sver
dipcoverad fn the Northwoest. Highteen bhars
rels, each contalning fifty-two galions of
whisky, were selzed Government agents
sy the prisoner told then Lo had orders
for more whisky than he eould Alstill at'
s£26 n wallon, i
Governor Dorsey
Driving a Tractor
At Macon Show
By ALFRED G, ANDERSEN.
(Copyright 1019, By The I. N, 8.)
BERLIN, March 12--VIA COPEN
'HAGEN AND LONDON, Mdrch 18.—
The archives of the foreign office con
clullvel{ prove that Germany was re
s&onslbo for the war, This informa
tlon comes from no less a pemlufo
than Kafil Kautsky, under secretary for
foreign affairs in the cabinet set up by
l'hlllP Scheidemann and Frederick Eb
ert immediately after the revolution.
Dr. Kautsky was eslwchlly assigned
for Forelgn Secretary Hugo Haase and
Scheidemann to examine all of the ree
ords in the archives of the foreign office
and he continued this work after Dr.
Haase left the ministry. |
} A report has been compiled and the
documentas will be ready for publica
tlon before the end of this month, if
the rf"wmm'm is able to print them, |
I first went to see Dr. Kautsky at his
home in Charlottenburg Satarday, but
‘he told me he had been sworn to secre
-o{, However, when 1 asked him point
blank what the archives proved, he ad-|
mitted the diplomatic correspondence
between July 1 and August 4, 1914, defi- |
nitely established who had caused the
‘wu, adding that his opinion held before
he entered the foreign office had been
confirmed. \
“What was that opinion?’ he was
‘uked, 1
. “That men holding high places in the
German government were responsible for
the war,” Dr. Kaut-kfi answered, |
\ Talked With Rantzau,
Dr."Kautsky sald he had an ?‘p?n!nt-‘
‘ment with Count von Brockdorff-Runt
zau, (or Dr, Rantzau, as he prefers to
call himself now) the present foreign
secretary, the following day (Sunday)
with the object of discussing the docu
ment in question ]
Sunday night I called at the foreign
office and requesteq to see the foreign
secretary, making it known that 1 was
cognizant of the conference between Dr,
Rantzau and Dr. Kautsky., A s:-rrMury‘
told me it was impossble to see Dr.
Rantzau then, but to oall agan Monday
morning.
The next day I called agaln, but an
other secretary informed me it would
take considerable time before Dr. Rant
zau would consent to discuss the sub-
Jeot.
In his conversations with me on war
responsibility, Dr. Kautsky excused
Von Hlndi-nburg and Ludendorff on the
ground that !r‘ were soldlers and
merely entered the confliot after war
had been declared,
Questioned whether he considered the
ex-Kaiser a dangerous person and intol
erable in Germany, €l, wautsky salds
“The former Kalser and the ex-Crown
Prince are both harmless and they are
unpopular.”
Poasiblifty of Revolt.
Asked about the government outlook
and the possibility of another revolu
tion, Dr, Kautsky answered:
Ylt the majority Boclalist ghvernment
makes too many mistakes Germany may
experience a sucessful monarchist revo
lution, but the Hohen#zolierns will not
be restored. ft {8 more likely that In
that even the crown would be offered to
Von Hindenburg'
The “guilt book,” if published, will
fill two volumer of 500 to 600 pages, |
Dr. Kautsky thinks the war office
records have a varuable bearing on the
question of war responsibliitly; but many
of these had apaprently been removed
or destroyed,
When Pr. Kautsky in®brmed Count
von llornnwr& former German Ambas
sador to the Ited Htates, that the reo
ords of the foreign office established
Germany's war gullt, Bernstorff ls re«
poried to have exclaimed
“I have rr‘u-n(mll)‘ sugeesied that the
old archives be hurned and that we start
A new slate under a new form of gove
efnment,”
Cops Don Hobble Skirts
To Nab Male Mashers
(By International News Service.) ‘
CHICAGO, March ¥ ~They are m«.i
riously considering in Summerdale
the camouflaging of the polics to trap
mashers, ‘
It poems the mashers have been un«
duly active in Summerdale and the
mttractive young ladies could not ven
ture from home without belng an
noyed by these peste. 8o the chief of
police figured it all out and decided to
go deeper into this “camyflag stuft”
before adding it to the regulntions, at
the sume tima smiling broadly as he
mentally pletured Nike Hogan, hefty
250. pounder, all dosed up in an ac
oordion skirt and Plelding & wicked
powder puff.
!
| By J. BART CAMPBELL,
\ Staff Correspondent of I. N. S.
WASHINGTON, March 13.—A final
0, K." was to be placed today by the
'Republican committee of committees
‘of the House on the make-up of the
‘House standing committees of the
next Republican-controlled Congress.
The situation at the Capital, so far
as the House was concerned, was re
garded as likely to remain at a stand
still, once the committee on commit
tees has applied the finishing touches
to the program of Representative
James R. Mann, of Illinois, until the
Republican Representatives again as
semble in a caucus shortly before the
next Congress convenes.
Representative Nicholas Longworth
of Ohio was expected, however, to {s
sue before the end of the day his
promised statement regarding the
success of Mann in forcing the se
niority rule upon those who elected
Representative Frederick H. Gillett,
of Massachusetts, Speaker of the next
‘House. Longworth also threatened to
renew his fight against Mann at to
’dny'l wind-up of the committee on
icommlttou.
_Mann's lieutenants declared that
‘the Mann program would be adopted
by the Republican Representatives
‘when they meet in caucus, and that
any opposition that Longworth or
other Mann opponents might seek to
develop to that cavcus would be in
vain. They asserted that Longworth
stood virtually alone in his oppaosi
tion.
The Mann-controlled steering com
mittee is scheduled to meet tomor
row to map out a program of its own.
Longworth was named a minority
member of that committee in the ex
pectation, Mann adherents explained,
that his selection for such member
ship might placate him., Longworth:
intimated today, however, that he
might decline to serve on the commit
tee,
Fight Over, Says Moore.
Representative J. Hampton Moore,
of Pennsylvania, one of Mann's prin
cipal lleutenants, today expressed the
belief that the “fight was over” and
that the distribution of standing com
mittee chairmanships and other as
signments “would prove astisfactory
to everybody." Although all but four
of the twenty-eight Pennsylvania Re
publican representatives who will sit
In the next Congress voted for Gil
lett for Speaker, Moore, as a member
of the committee on committees was
able to cast twenty-eight votes—the
total of the Pennsylvania delegation
~in a solid block for the Mann pro
gram under the rule which Mann, by
an unforeseen coup, had adopted at
the same Republican caucus at which
Gillett was elected Speaker,
Moore addressed a letter today to
each of the twenty-seven Republican
representatives who, besides himself,
will represent Pennsylvania in the
next House, in which he emphasized
the statement that “Pennsyvania
fared well; in fact, better than In a
quarter of a century,” in the distribu
tion by Mann of committee chair
manships and other assignments.
Other Mann members of the commit
tee on committees planned to send
similar communications to the Re
publican members of their delegn
tions. In this way Mann and his lieu
tenants were confident that they
would be able to control the Repub
lican caucus which must approve or
indorse the Mann program.
Pennsylvania Well Represented.
As Penneylvania will have the larg
est delegation of Republicans in the
next House, tha list of committee
chairmanships and memberships as
signments, as approved by Mann,
which the Pennsylvanians had allot
ted them, was regarded as a striking
{llustration of Mann's policy.
Senate Republicans have refused to
follow the example of Republican
members of the House in attacking
the problem of committee chairman
ships at the present time. A plan
adopted today will put this trouble
some problem over until three days
bhefore the prospective extra session
opens,
The fight on Senator Penrose, tem
porarily forgotten in the league of
nations furore, soon will break out
with renewed vigor, unless some com
promise between the conservatives
and progressives, whereby the Penn
sylvania Senator will receive the
chairmanship of some committee oth
er than the committee on finance, is
reached,
Senatof Borah, before departing for
his anti-league of nations tour, re
iterated previous statements that the
fight “was still on,” with the ranks of
the Progressives holding firm,
Lod% to Lead in Senate,
Senator enry Cabot Lodge, of
Massachusetts, of course, will be the
Republican floor leader and the chalr.
man of the committee on forelgn re
lations. There is no fight agalnst the
Massachusetts Senator.
There was a renewal today of the
report that Senator Lafollette would
announce himeelf as a candidate for
the finance committee chalrmanship,
In substitute for Senator Penrose, Un
der the seniority rule he has no clalm
on this chairmanship, but he has the
powerful weapon of threatening to
vote with the Democrats on organi.
zation If his wishes are not oon
sulted,
Senator Borah will become the
chairman of the eommittee on labor,
which I 8 expected to be one of the
most important committees of the
new Congroess,
In nadition to the fight agalnst Sen
ator Penrose, which Progressives say
they are waging for “the benefit of
the party” in 1920, several other Im
portant contests are expected to de
velop before the awards are made,
i!' !’“J‘E;'H Hit R EEE RR H TH RS BRR RRS R =
e :
¥ For Appearance Sake use K.D.X. |§
it Your Business and Social Associations demand 5
i , that you look your best, h
| N Thin, scrgely baic and shoulders powdered with daguf |
KDXI scales, is übmely unnecessary. It should not be permited. HE
y ;.;'“c’ { K. D. X. will correct this condition quickly and effectively. !; .
[oy ' ¢ i
"'M':v'nl l The Treatment is Simple }g:l
LN | sttt seil [l
i | orated and produce lusuriant growih, g 'f 1
v ik Sold on & Money-back guaraotee if mot satished. ii |
! [§; D. X o gold overy where by FREE Sample of Kobarco 3
rugmiete ;Tul your treatment We will send you & generons sample of Kobares,
tonight. o delightul shampoo ia con cotraied form. Lo
A close 10 conts in slamps or coin to cover packing.
& KOKEN LABORATORIES S
i | l.‘l:c Bottla St Lowis, Mo . "
3 1.00 Addrees - -
vu. o N Tows Srate
BOHAT IAT L4t T P AT ey PIARRY e 11T
WASHINGTON, March 13.—“ Among
many other calumnies regarding con
ditions in Russia, one of the most re
volting is the recent testtmony of
Colonel Raymond Robins before the
Senate committee in the matter of the
Czecho-Slovaks, thelr stay in Rusala
and their fighting against the Bol
sheviki,” asserted Catherine Bresh
kovsky, the “grandmother” of the
Russian revolution, In a letter to Sen-i
ator Overman, chalrman of the com
mittee Investigating lawless propa
ganda in this country, which has
made public.
The Russian woman took strong
exception to Robins' testimony about
alleged Czecho-Slovak atrocities in
Russia, Robins having declared be
fore the Overman committee that the
Czecho-Slovak troops In Russia had
engaged in the killing of Bolsheviki.
She added (hat ghe had never heard
any complaint against the (zecho-
Slovak troops, “never a wtro‘nlory‘
remark, even by those envied
their valor.” ‘
She accused the Bolsheviki of hav-
Ing “opened their ranks not only to
criminals, but aiso to many psycho
logical, abnormal, almost insane ele
ments.
——————
Deaths and Funerals
*MISS E. C. BELLAN.
Misse E. C, Bellah died Wednesday at
her rvesidence, No. 76 Hast Pine street.
Funeral services will be held Thursday
At 3:30 o'clock at the residence, the Rev,
Marvin Willlams officlating, and inter
ment will be ‘rnvn(e in Westview, with
Awtry & Lowndes in charge
WALTER E, SUMMERS,
The bod_‘ of Walter E. Summers, 62,
who died Tuesday night at his residence,
No. 614 Peachtree street, was removed
to the chapel of Awtry & Lowndes and
sent to Pennsyivania Wednesday nrur-l
noon for funeral and Interment. He is
suryvived by one son, Walter E Bunumers,
Jr., of New York City
‘ ROBERT 1. KEYNOLDS,
- The body as Hobert Lawrence Reynolds,
Infant son of Mr. and Mrs. I. A. Reynolds,
who died Wednesday, was removed to the
chupel of Harry G. Poole, and sent to
Newnan for funeral snd interment.
DR, I'RED B. PALMER.
Dr. ¥Fred Hrainerd Palmer, 80, died
Wednesday night, and the funeral will be
conducted Friday Dr. Palmer was born
in Athens He Was graduated In medi
cine from the old Atlanta Medical Col
lege and afterward from Tulane Univer
-Bity. He was a veteran of the Civil War,
‘Al(er the war his business life was spent
with Dr. James A. Taylor and Walter
Taylor, who were succeeded by the Ja
cobs' Pharmaey (‘omglny.
‘ MKS. MARY MILNER. .
Funeral services of Mrs. Mary Milner,
who died Wednesday morning at her res
fdence, No. 202 Pulliam street, were to
be heid Thursday at £ o'clock ut Pleasant
Grove Church, and interment was in the
churchyard, Huu-rdy G. Poole in charge, Mr,
Milner is survived by two sons, G. A. and
J. F. Miiner v
NINA GRANT,
Nina. the infant daughter of Mr. and
Mra. Willlam D. Grant, died at St
Joseph's Infirmary at an eanrly hour
Thursday morning. The funeral was con
ducted privately Thursday afternoon, only
the immediate family being Krmm. The
decensed was the granddaughter of L. C.
Hopkins and John W. Grant.
CHARLES D. HARRIS,
Charles D. Harris, 41, died 'mum-{
at a private sanitatium. The funeral wiil
be conducted Friday at 10 o'clock at the
residence, No. 116 Jefferson street, with
interment at Northview Cemotery. He is
survived by his wife and three children;
Oharles D., Jimmie and Annie; and two
sisters and four brothers.
MARK W. JOHNSON,
Mark W. Johunson, 82, djed Wednesday
night at a private hospital. He is sur
vived by two daughters, Miss Lena John
son and Mrs. Hivea A. Tirown; three
sons, Mark W. Jr.; Blake H., of Ha
vannah, and Palmer Johnson. Funeral
services will be held ¥riday at 3 o'clock
at Bt. Marks Methodist Church, and in
terment will be in Oakiand, with M. M.
Patterson & Son in oharge
JAY RICHARD DAVIS,
Jay Richard Davig, infant sen of Mr.
and Mrs. T. J. Davis, died Wndnanflnr
night at 11 o'clock at & private hospital,
Besides his parents, he s survived by one
sister, Elizaheth, and two brothers,
Thomas J. Davis, Jr., and Blair Wil
son Davis. The body is at the chapel of
H. M. Patterson & Ron,
EDWARD HEARD,
Edward Heard, 71, dled Thursday morn
ing at a rr!vu'n hospital. He is survived
by hia wife, one sister, Mv- B Heard; one
hrother, Wilson Heard, of Covington, and
one daughter, Miss Hyda Heard, The
body was romoved te the chapel of H. M.
f‘nl{rrmn & Bon and sent to Covington
Thursday at 11:46 e'clock for funeral and
interment,
Slang Users Ahead of
.
Their Time, Says Poet
(By International News Service.)
PHILADELPHIA, PA., March 12
There are hopes for the siang wlelders.
The "bird” or “Jane” who lets go a
“wise” line of “echatter” Is no longer of
budkward class, bt rather far ahead of |
her or his time. They ure speaking the
coming language, ne, not Erperanto, but
everyday Amorican, Huch 18 the elaim
made by Louls Untermyer, the poet, in an
address here before the Philomusian Club,
He cladmed that within the next 26 years
there will be a distinctive American lan
gunge, and pointed to Walt Whitiman as
the first to see beauty In slang.
Let Me
Demonstrate
| To you my ability
¥ to examine your
y eyes and fit them
solentifioally with a
palr of glasses that
will satisfy, at a
rasonable cost,
Opvvus Since 1808,
U p-to-date
J. CC.DUGGAN Zrdedabs,
53 WEST MITCHELL ST,
(Newr New Torminal Station),
INSURANCE
CALL, UB ANY TIMR
S Yrneed L are
ERNEST HOWARD
SRIRARCS Agiicr
w,y.’o'“v:\‘.',.';‘”m ul--,-v.m ‘» ‘::u J
7
ADVERTISEMENT. ?
‘- e A
“ ’ »
DEAR FOLKS:
| J HAVE written you four lets
l ters thus far. You surely un
derstand by this time what T
jam aiming to get into your
iminda and hearts about the
Wilson & Company busin
| Chieago. Tn my first letter I m
|you why I intended to reveal to
|you the heart of a big business,
i In my second letter T immducefi
!tn you the man who heads this
(big business. In my third letter
I gave you a glimpse into the.
hearts of the men's employment .
|bureau. In my fourth letter I
‘gnve you a look into the heart
'of the women's employment
!hnronu.
lNow let me get it into your
minds that what | am telling you
about Wilson & Company in this
series of letters represents the
opinions that eame to me per
sonally from the mouths and
hearts of the workers, and they
do not, in any sense, represent
the opinions of Mr. Wilson per
sonally, or those of any member
of his official family. T am the
spokesman for these happy
workers. They revealed to me
their innermost thoughts. They
talked to me frankly and unre
servedly. They told me what
they really and truly feel about
working for this eompany.
lAnd please remember that the
Wilson & Company business, or
anga other business, represents
the length and shadow of one
man. He may have in his official
family and as heads of depart
ments some of the best men in
the world, but after all, it is one
man who must shape the poliey
and lead and inspire his assoei
ate workers.
T must give yon the sincere and
honest expressions of these
workers if T am to truly repre
sent them, and in doing se. it
will be necessary to refer fre
quently to Mr. Wilson in a very
complimentary way. The work
ers insisted on telling me what
they think of him and why they
are so proud to work under his
leadership and why they are so
determined to make a suecess of
the Wilson & Company business.
| Please bear in mind, also, that
this is the first time in the his
tory of business that a Big Insti
tution has shown a willingness
to go to the public with the opin
ions of its workers and to rest
its ease with the people, so far
as good will and patronage is
concerned, on what they think of
it. .
This is #o unusual that it {s bound
to make as much of an impression
on you as it did on me. You are cen
tain to think, as I do, that ¢ business
is sure to bhe all right in all particu
lary when the workers in the ranks
are anxious to go on record in paye
ing tribute to the man and the lusth
tution they work for, ,
'A worker in the beef department
told me one day that Wilson &
Company had given him a new idea
}nn to the meaning of the words “&
Company” In a firm name. He gaid:
“Mr. Wilson has made us workers
feel that we are the ‘& Company®
‘ A great many of us have heen taken
into the business as partners. We
‘are encouraged to save our momey
and to buy stock iln the company
‘with our savings. We make enough
‘money to save some, Mr. Wilson
will be pleased when we all become
his partners, but not any more so
than we will be,
“Mr. Wilgon's just treatmoent of ng
and his conslstent kindness inspires
us all to do our work well. We have
our hearts in our work. We know
the business will grow becanse we
are doing the right thing by the
hoss. He i 8 prond of us and oug
work and talls us so, He treats ug
as personal friends. T think we do
more work tn a day than any crew
of workers in the United States. The
conditions under which we work are
very happy. :
“Leading us by kindness is the reas
won for our happiness and enthusi
asm fn our work. We lke kind words
and appreciation the same as otheg
folks and we get both, Why shouldn's
this business succeed when we sre
all working together so contemtediy
and so proudly?”
Another workman, speaking enthuste
astically of the Wilson & Cmm‘i
environment, got off his Dbit
philosophy to me: |
“If a tellow wakes up tn the mown«
ing and says to himself, ‘Oh, I hata
to go to work,’ he had better not go
to work. He'd better get anothey
Job, He'd better work for a eoms
pany that puts pep into him and
makes him want to work,
“Say, boss, one of the happtest parts
of my day 18 when I wake up tn tha
morning and think about going to
my work., 1 know that I am going
to enjoy the whole day. I get a lot
of pleasure out of my dafly worl
for Wilson & Comrpany, 1 am one
of the family, you know, and th
other workers feel the same wn;‘
about it that I d 0.,”
I satd to myself: “It must be fine
go to one’s dally toll with lhn
spirit.”
In my next letter I will tell
about several tncidents that gave
a new anglo on what a big workeh
ean accomplish when the HE
it Is prompted by the HEART%%‘
Sincerely, William C. Frumln'
131 K. 23rd Bt., New York City,
e AANOP L il