Newspaper Page Text
6A
Charles Edward Russell Declares World Labor
Will Win Its Fight—Must and Will Have
What It Desires.
By CHAS. E. RUSSELL.
Famous Awthor and Leading Writer on Civic Righteousness.
The greatest of all the signs of the
times is the sign that ls recelving
the least attention.
Run over a few basic facts and see
§f this is not so.
Modern eivilization rests upon la
®or. Labor ie the lengih and breadth
and bheight and depth of it, and on
Mabor it lives and has its being,
Whatever labor makos up its mind
it wants, 'whatever it unites for,
whatever it continues to demand, that
#it will have to have. It is the king-
Pin of the whole social machine.
This tremendous fact It had never
wnderstood until the war, It ls be
ginning to understand that fact now,
THREE DEMANDS. ,
Observe then: Three things the la.
bor of all the civilised world is de~
manding. On £ome other points in the
Jabor programs put forth in the vari
ous nations there are differences. On
these three points organized labor in
every country is unanimous:
A shorter workday. A larger share
™ the product and in the control of
tndustry. Better education for the
children of workers,
Of these the first two seem to strike
some sensitive or primitive minds as
sheer revolution. They are but asst
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A Diagram \‘\‘T\'wm"‘"\“"w"“ i \l‘{\m‘ : M""""/l/wa Note the
7' L .
§ 4 oab 3~
L\ s > A
N o OV il
i ; 4 [as &\*‘;
A A ";‘w\ . ! . X‘\‘?:S’“} Yl
; No«chhdhmrkmofnm Note its conical
shape. The cause the corn is pressure. And pres
sure makes it hurt. Thopoimorthncomhmuhcd
into the nerves. Applyil'\! a Blue-)ay plaster instantly
removes the pressure. Note the felt ring jA) in the
picture below. The ring gives barefoot ort in the
tightest shoe.
But that is temporary. One should not continue a
ring. The corn should be quickly ended.
The bit of B&B wax in the center of the ring does
that (marked B in illustration below). In two days,
usually, the whole corn disappears. It stops the pain,
then ends the corn. And it wraps the corn so the action
is undisturbed. 3
Then the action of the B&B wax is centered on the
corn. Held there by the rubber coated adhesive t}?e (C)
which wraps comfortably around the toe. calthy
tissue is not affected.
These are the reasons -:g millions of people have
adopted the Blue-jay method. Keeping corns is folly
when this easy way can end them. Treating them in
cruder ways is inexcusable.
For your own sake, convince yourself by applying
Blue-jay to one corn.
\'M
Bl : Stops Pain Instantly
% ue "ay Ende Corne Completely
The Scientific Corn Ender 25¢—At Druggists
BAUER & BLACK, Chicago, New York, Toronte
Mabasn o Stcabe Susgrcad Drossrr.gs and Alised Produc ts em)
vstuff compared with the possibilities
of the third. .
Because ¢ that third demand shall
be carriec out it will in the end
equal the great war in importance to
the human race, and make our famous
peace conference that we follow with
#0 much zeal look like the treaty of
Tllsit.
At the present time, the children
of the mass of the workers, who are
part of the great majority of the na
tion and under democracy must have
the whole future in their hand® are
not being educated at all. Many of
them are being schoolédd, more or less
—and chiefly less. Mighty few of them
are being educated.
Even of those that are allowed to
have a little schooling and gather
some rudimentary crumbs of knowl
edge, the number in our own country
falls far short of our hazy and beau
tiful dreams about it
Here is a truly amazing thing.
Consider It,
WAR HAS CHANGED TIME,
What was It that before the war we
used to say with such a rhurmlnj
complacency about our education
system?
“The American public school is the
best in the world, The American
worker is the most intelligent in the
world. - All is well with us and In
finitely better than with ur effete na
tions we have outstripped.”
That was about the tune, [ think;
grand, glorious and satisfying. And
along came the war with its ugly nnd<
relentless figures and knocked to bits
ull our fond imaginings about Amer
jcan education. For here was the
stunning fact thrust into our faces
that an average of one person in five
in this country can not read nor
write, |
One in flve—the assertion seemed
to many minds unimaginable, Twonty‘
per cent of illiteracy in the country
we had beiieved to be the most tntol-‘
per cent of illiteracy in the country
we had believed to be the most intel
ligent on earth! There must be some
error here. Such figures would put us
down among the old, slow, backward
looking nations like Bf.ln and Bul
garia, Blam and Mexico. It would
take us absolutely out of that fair
first rank where we believe ourselves
to belong if not to lead.
For against our 20 per cent of Il
SUMMER SUITINGS
MME
Finely Tallored for Particular
Men, SSO to §76
Newest patterng and colorings in ex
clusive wenves—~fine imported woolens
and summer fabrics, smartly cut and
built late & suit that will “sait you™
taitored under my personal supervision,
Yours fer service,
« wOxTH PRYOR ST,
*Five Polots™ is just & block away.
SAFETY BLADES
Himple dovioes, with single ball bearing, adst
shie for Ay bisde A SHARPENER 0 a
SUopper Halr 10l guaranieed Makes one
binde last ndefinitaly: newer gots oul of order
ANPONE OB Use Prise 25 oents, posipatd
AGENTS WANTED. New Big demand walting
Be the finst to get the cream. Working sample
and spectal terms, 25 ocenls Wm. Summerbell,
Patentes, 155 Polomae Bank Bidg., Washington,
0. C. Advertisement
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A NeWSpaPGI' lor reopie w 0 THINK — Quilal, Uuivu 4y, ddio.
o R TSRS T T e T A < e e S S S e ——————————————— e e e e e ————— o ——eeeetee e
| literacy see Denmark with 0.2, Bwitz.
erland with 0.3; New Zealand, 0.3;
ll'}mtl.'nml and Wales, 1.8: Scotland,
1.6; New South Wales at the other
| end of the earth, 2; South ~ustralia,
}l,n< Algeria, 13. The whote GGerman
Empire had in 1913 only 0.02. Cuba
| ranked almost a 8 high as the United
States.
l It demands that all labor of f'h“-1
'ulron under 18 years of age shall be
prohibited, that children between the
’w-ara of 16 and 18 shall not labor
more than 20 hours a week and
ghall have at least as many hours ’fl‘
#chool, and that the full power of the
nation shall be exerted to protect the
health and welfare of every child in
its immature years,
WHAT LABOR I 8 DEMANDING.
If every child in the United States
s to receive school training to its
elghteenth year, if all labor by chil
dren under the age of 16 years is
to be abglished, and if colleges and
universities are to be thrown open
generally to the children of the work
ers, you will see In another genera
tion ‘norn extraordinary evolutions
’hnra than are promised from the
peace conference,
~ And this Is what labor everywhere
18 demanding. What it demands it
will have to have. Is not this a fore
cast of tremendous changes”?
8o far as labor in the United States
is concerned, it has yet another de
mand that is likely to have a more
immediate effect upon visible condi
tions in this country of ours. It de
mands that all immigration to the
United States shall be for a time
prohibited by law.
It i& convinced the end of the war
will start a vast flood of Kuropean
Immigration, " and it believes that
labor in this country is in no condi
tion to stand that kind of inundation,
In this it is alleged by its enemies
to be merely seifish, and all good
people are invited to look with horror
upon its course.
EVERY MAN FOR HIMSELF.
Bven if the charges were true, I
don't know that it would cut much
ice. The essence of the existing sys
tem 1s every inan for himself. Labor
trying to shut out immigration that
wages may be kept up 18 no more
selfish than the employers that want
immigration that wages may be beat
en down
It I 8 easy for gentlemen of pleasing
and assured incomes to condemn the
horrible selfishness that causes labor
to want to keep its jobs and its wages
but the case is different when the
rent goes up 76 per cent at a clip,
butter is 80 cents a pound, and there
Is nothing between you and want for
the whole household but the single
plank of a wage that gets no larger,
However, in this case, the charge of
selfishness isn't altogether true, any
way you may look at it. There is
something else here besides merely
wage levels, .
The American worker has for him
self and his family a certain standard
of living. It would be fatal to the
American nation and the American
ml&-lon 0 have that standard low
ered.
We have just been looking at some
startling figures of illiteracy. Illit
eracy is a product of bad industrial
conditions. Let those conditions
Brow worse, a 8 they must under a
flood of immigration, and your illit
eracy figures, that are so bad now
they shock the nation, would short
ly become appalling.
There is also another point.
The war showed the patriotism of
organized labor in America to be in
tense, intelligent and high proof. From
first to last it never slackened in its
loyalty; its unswerving devotion to
duty made victory possible,
We had very few strikes in this
country while the conflict was on.
Sometimes, as in the case of the min
ers, the provocation to strike was
strong and the conditions of injustice
were almost intolerable, the workers
stuck them out to the end.
But the war also revealed to us
the presence in America of a large
element of hostiles or unfriendly
aliens,
The favorite old theory of ours that
we assimilate and Americanize for
eigners that come to us in great num
bers was ovgrwhelmed early in the
fray. We learned that too often we
don’t even begin to assimilate them,
that they remain as thoroughly for
eign as if they had never left their
native land,
We learned of whole colonjes of
such people that after twenty or thir
ty years of residence here knew not
one word of the American language,
knew and cared nothing about the
American institutions and ideas,
They had their own newspapers and
their own schools in their own tongue.
They maintained their alien manners,
customs and thinkings. In a time of
supreme peril to the nation they sym
pathized with the nation's enemies,
MANY OF FOREIGN BIRTH,
Unbelievable as this secemed, there
were some reasons to think that the
case was even worse than had been
represented-—that the illiteracy in the
United States was even greater than
20 per cent, .
The examination of 10552266 sel
diers in twenty-eight camps revealed
386,196 illiterates or 24.9 per cent,
On this basis the army of the Unit
ed States on November 11, 1919, 4.
y Y .
Pretty, Wavy, Curling
. e
Hair Without Hot Iron
lot me tell you of a simple method
which 18 a favorite of the belles of a
cortain exclusive social set I'm sure
vou would like te know of it, because it
will give your hair such a pretiy cur
ness and lustre and permit you to do
aWay with the rulnous waving iron for
ever
Just get from any dJdruggist a few
ounces of ordinary liguld silmerine, and
at nigt apply a little with a lear
tooth brush, drawing this down the ful]
length fth halr In the morning you
will have a real surpris the fascinadt
ing, fduny wiuvy effect will appear so
natural, and there will be n greasy
pummny treaky or other unpleasant
trace o his harmless | 1 You will
also find 1t “ plendid dre ing w
th alr Monn Morraw in Yhe (Mub
Woan Advertisement
PELLAGRA CAN BE CURED TO STAY
CURED. When we say cured that s jusi
what we mean—C U K E D=not merely checked
for a while to return worse than belore. No
matter what you bave used nor how many dog
tors have told you that vou could not be curcd
8l we ask Is just & chance to show you what
ARGALLEP v do. Sumply send your name
and address. Without cost or obligation we
will send vou absolutely free and prepaid,
a ten davs' supply of ARGALLEP., We are
confident that you will be amazed and delighted
with the quick improvement in bealth. AR
GALLEP bas restored thousands, Let it do
the same for you. Just try it and be convinced
that we are telling you the truth Remember
the two weeks supply of ARGALLEP costs vou
absolutely nothing. Write lor 1t today~9ure.
ARGALLEP CO., wvii. aiAsama
w HILL, ALABAMR
Ihoo,mm men, contained more than |
700,000 that could not read or write.
. At one of the camps the pdrcent
‘age was 41,'at another 37, at another
if‘.'.:. at another 31. The lowest per
centage was at (amp Lewis, Pacific
Northwest, 13. Camp Custer, which
represented the Middle West, was 15,
and Camp Devens, in prideful and
aesthetic Massachusetts, was 22,
It is quite true that many of the il
literates in the army were of foreiga f
birth, and many others were negroes |
from the South, but what gook the
breath of every thoughtful person was
the rate of illiteracy indicated among
‘white Americans,
Making every allowance also for
goldiers that for one reason and an
other feigned illiteracy and allowing
for possible errors by the recording
officers, the fact from which no one
could escape was that ignorance had
gained appallingly upon education,
The census for 1910 showed only 7.7
per cent,
No one had expected such develop
ment; no one had thought it possible.
Previous reports had not disclosed it;
the leaders In education had said
nothing apout it. Yet there was the
fact that the United States of Amer
ica after more than a hundred years
of the public school at least one per
son in five was illiterate.
About the same tiie the education
al bureau of the Department of Com
merce came in with a doc™ment that
not only confirmed the 25 per cent
estimate, but showed plainly what it
is to which we owe the most of this
condition,
INCREASE IN LIVING COST.
If found that one child in four “of
thase at work” could not sign its own
name, and that of 19,546 children to
whom it issued work certificates un
der the child labor act, 5,294 could not
read p'~‘n writing.
Ch' ren at work—there is one,
great root of the trouble,
The struggle for life, always grow
ing fiercer and flercer under the
steadily increasing price lists, had
reached a point where the children of
many workers must go to work them
selves inetead of going to school.
The cost of living had increased
faster than wages, and all the truancy
laws, compulsory education laws and
child labor laws were more or less
fragile before guch a necessity.
What we have begun, then, to build
is two classes, the well-to-do to be
highly educated and the workers not
to be educated at all, and there is no
ingenuity strong enough to devise a
way by which democracy gan survive
such conditions.
STARTLING SHOWING,
We have already started in the
frankest way to recognize the crea
tion of some such division. » Every
vear the educated are becoming more
and more of a separate caste.
In the war just over we had some
startling showings of the advance of
this great change. We even had a
deliberate attempt to limit all com
missions in the army to graduates of
universities, so that advancement in
gervice should be denied to all except
the Brahmins of our new social
structure,
Democracy means democracy in ed
ucation as much as in anything else.
If there is no democracy in educa
tion, there is no other democracy that
can last.
The greatest danger of an Indus
‘trial civijization such as we have been
developing in the last century is that
workers shall become mere automa
tons, cogs in a vast machine, without
joy, energy or ambition; and the sur
est way to bring them into that state
is to deprive them of education, in
which work we seem to have ad
vanced as far as 20 per cent.
The deadly peril of this kind of
thing, even to the fortunate and edu
cated, ought to be apparent from the
record of Russia. .
PERILS OF IGNORANCE.
In Petrograd and Moscow today
the most educated persons utflnlett
alive are engaged in cleaning | nes
and emptying cesspools under the
rifles of the Red Guards. 1 should
think one glance at their story would
be enough for anybody that hesitates
to believe that the perils of a general
ignorance are deadly.
The same tendency to drive children
into work and keep them from the
schools has been plainly seen in other
~ountries as much as in the United
States. It is the sure result of rising
prices and spreading industrialism,
In one of the countries affected the
steady protesting of labor has been
already heeded.
Great Britain has been compelled
by British organized labor to adopt
such sweeping educational reforms as
hAve not been known anywhere else
in the world. In a few years these
reforms will have made such radical
changes in the intellectual condition
of the masses of its pedple that the
ecountry will enter upon a new and
unprecedented era of development.
Other countries, under the same
prodding, will have to follow the same
course, for labor, master of the social
field, will not be satisfled with any
thing else.
PROGRAM OF LABOR,
On thig subject the reconstruction
program of the American Federation
of Labor contains these suggestive
sentences:
“}ducation must not be for a few,
but for all our people.
“It is essential that our system of
public education should offer the wage
earners’ children the opportunity for
the fullest possible development. To
attain this end State colleges and
universities should be developed.
“The industrial education which is
being fostered and developed should
have ofr its purpose not 8o much
training for efficiency in industry as
training for life in an industrial so
elety.
“The danger that eertain commer
eial and industrial interests may dom
inate the character of education must
be averted by insisting that the
workers shall have equal representa
tion on all boards of education or.
committees having control over vo
eational studies and training.”
NATION'S LIFE THREATENED.
Of course, this was not true of all
such peoples, nor of the bulk of them,
but It was true enough to make a
threat against the nation's life neo
| nation cowdd afford to overléok
| Moreover, we came upoh the aston-
Cishing (act thag sometimes the second
generation, though native to this soil,
grew up as allen as the first. We
I learned of thousands of caxes of men,
of the draft age that, born in this
country, could not speak a word of
ity lunguage and had oo knowledge
of s Government
We saw also extraordinary manifes.
tations of a spirit among men of alien
birth to hamstring the country that
had given them protection and oitis
zenship,
We saw elections in which colonies
of unassimilated aliens voted solidly
for candidates that in the war had
sought the country's defeat. |
We saw communities in which men
even of the third generation clung
together as a clan to vote on the
basgis of an allen ancestry and not as
citizens of the republie,
We saw in the West a man of alien
birth that denounced the war win
with allfen votes a seat in Congress.
1t is not only to keeph wages from
being battered down that organized
labor is asking Congress to shut the
gates, and' it is not only on that
UNION LEADERS SAY
STRIKE 1S STILL ON
virtually fighting for the same thing+
thay has been conceded to the elec- |
trice! workers, which includes the u-l-\
ephone workers, and if the order is tol
be confined to the telephone workerli
and not the telegraph workers it/
would be a case of creating one labor
policy for the telegraph companies
and another for the telephone com
panies under Government control,”
Mr. Konenkamp declared.
“The developments at Washington
will not change our situation, except
to lend added encouragement to those
now on strike.”
No Change in
Atlanta Situation
The news of the Burieson order
failed to cause any change in the
Atlanta situation last night.
Representatives of the Southern
Bell Telephone Company, who were
informed by The Sunday Am::rlcu.n
last night of the Burleson order, said
the company would have no statement
to make on the subject at this time.
It had not received official notice.
However, it is understood that the
Southern Bell, before it was under
Government control, did not recog
nize any representative of a union
who was not an employee of t he com
pany. It is possible that it will hold
that the Burleson order therefore
does not require this company to
deal with labor representatives not
employees of the company.
Interest in the announcement con
tained in telegraphic dispatches from
Washington to the effect that Post
master Gieneral Burleson has recog
niged the trades unions of the wire
workers and that the strike of elec
trical workers against the Southern
Bell Telephone and Telegraph Com
pany would be postponed was intense
among the strikers in Atlanta last
night.* The first accounts of the offi
cial statements attributed to the
Postmaster, General were received
without comment. Later and more
complete accounts of the order mys
tified the strike leaders greatly and
failed to clarify the situation.
| STRIKE WILL GO ON.
1 William Pollard, business agent of
Jocal No. 84 of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
declared at 10 o'clock that the strike
‘asamst the Southern Bell and allied
telephone companies would become
effective at 8 o'clock Monday morn
ing unless he received official orders
from the international officers of the
brotherhood. :
Possibilities of some results from
conferences to be held Sunday be
tween officials of the Southern Bell
and strike leaders were indicated. A
conference will be held Sunday morn
ing between the officials and strike
leaders and another Sunday after
noon by the executive boards of the
affected organizations. These con
ferences may possibly bring develop
ments that will materially alter the
situation and bring the local telephone
strike to a close, Strike leaders were
unwilling to make predictions as to
the outcome.
Saturday's developments included a
big demonstration parade of the
strikers through the business section
of the city and the official indorse
ment of the telegraph and telephone
strike by the executive board of the
Georgia Federation of Labor, called
into session here to consider the situ
ation,
The executive board of the Georgia
Federation remained in almost con
tinuous session at the Kimball House
Saturday, issuing two public docu
ments and transacting a large amount
of executive business. The first doc
ument was an official indorsement of
the strike and the second a condem
nation of the advertisements publish
ed 1n various papers in Géorgia cal
culat®d to convey the impression that
organized labor indorsed the methods
of the telephone company in dealing
with labor,
CONDEMN ADVERTISEMENTS.
The following resolutions eoncern
ing the advertisements were made
public by the executive board Satur
day night:
Whereas, the Southern Bell Tele
phone and Telegraph Company has
caused to be published as advertise-
A A A A AN AN
ground that intelligent Americans
yught to listen carefully to its plea.
A bill to shut out immigration for
the next four years will be intro
duced in Congress. Organized labor
is solidly behind the measure, Organ
ized labor is not now in a position to |
be ignored when it stands solidly be
hind anything. |
MEMBERSHIP GROWS. l
In the last three vears the member- |
ship of the American Federation of
Labor has increased nearly 6 |-er‘
cent. .In 1916 it was 2,045,793. Today |
it is about 3,500,000 By January 1|
next it is likely to be close to 4,000,- |
000. Here is the record for the last
eleven years:
Year. Membership.
3000 ...vuninnnnnssdusnne B OBRBI3 |
1810 L. ciiisitonie -RS |
BIR) sevossccbiiniishssia el EE |
SRIER ciooo i iaaiaeni s D ]
P 8 s cortuiitins et s RIS . |
T IR pe g B
FRED .. ovnenhbiicnns it DONONT
SDEB ..o cveilinirianrni R TR TN
BBET oo o vnvinaniisiams i a BTN '
BRRE oo i caannnibns bei SR REEEE
BPID v i vhn i TR ODE
Twelve years ago President Gom
pers, of the federatjion, was repeatedly |
denied a hearing by commitiees of
Congress, even on subjects most \'Ill"
1o labor's wellare.
In the session of 1907 he succeded !
by dogged persistancy in wr:-nlrm'
three minutes from the hostile com
mittee on lubor, He was at that time |
under sentence of lmprisonment tor !
upholding what he deemed to be an
inalienable right of free labor and
free men,
Toduy' he is president of the inter
national nbor commisgion created
by the peace conference, and when he |
speaks for the organized labar of
Ameriea, Congress and the country
pay respectful heed
Behold the shadow of the coming
change,
Atlanta’s CROWN Dentist
g $4 $5
g $6
$
E 35 1.2 Whitehall St.
rments in various Georgia newspapers
articles entitled “We are Our Broth
er's Keeper,” “Corporation With a
‘Heart” and similar articles purporting
to bear the official indorsement of
organized labor, and
Whereas, the articles in question
which were published as paid adver-
Msements and s 0 marked in the pro
ceedings booklet of certain labor
bodies never received the indorsement
of any organization, but were ingert
ed as advertisements by private par
ties who had the business of publish
ing the proceedings in hand, and
Whereas, these advertisements have
been reproduced and palmed off on
Ehe public as legitimate expression of
he organized labor movement to the
detriment of organized labor and to
the confusion of the public mind,
therefore be it
Resolved, by the gxecutive board of
the Georgia Federmon of Labor in
session assembled In Atlanta, Ga., this
14th day of Juhe, 1919, that the at
tempt of the Southern Bell Telephone
and Telexraph Company to palm off
these paid advertisements on the pub
lic as official expression of organizéd
labor be most emplatically condemn
ed by this board, and be it further,
Resolved, That the laudatory senti
ments contained in the reproduced
advertisements with reference to the
labor policy of the Southern Bell Tele
phone and Telegraph Company or by
us repudiated as diametrically op
posed to the official positign of the
organized labor movexm\{xt toward the
Southern Bell Telephoné and Tele
graph Company, and be it further
Resolved, That the executive board
of the Georgia Federation of Labor
place itself on record as most emphat
ically condemning the policy of the
Southern Bell Telephone and Tele
graph Company in forbidding its em
ployees the right to organize into, le
gitimate trade unions, and bargain
collectively, and in its attempts to
1
AFTER LONG AUTO |
RIDES USE SLOAN’S
|
—_— |
For ‘Auto Leg’ and All Other|
, |
Aches and Pains. |
It’'s when you climb out of the car,!
after hours at the steering wheel, that!
you realize how stiff and sore your
muscles and joints are. And when
Sloan’'s Liniment is along, you learn
what a boon it ? in “ironing out”|
the lame back, the cramped muscles, |
the joint-stiffness, ‘
Take a bottie with you on your va- |
cation. You will need it every day.|
Keep it handy for the bites and stings |
of insects and mosquitos. It relieves'
quickly, penetrates without rubbing,
won’'t stain the skin. Soothes the
afflicted part and promotes quick re-|
lief. All druggists, 30c, 60c, $1.20.!
’ .
Sloan's
Limment
Keep il handv'*
2:30 P. M.
In South Edgewood Addition Will Be Sold at
Regardless of Price, Let the Owner Make or Lose.
Mark this: Real Estate will never sell as cheap in Atlanta as it is selling
today. No doubt these lots will double in value in a little while. Just at
this time—with money plentiful—the country riding a most wonderful
wave of prosperity in all of its history and real estate on the eve of the
greatest boom ever Known, this property should appeal to every man
who ever expeets tv own a home or cares to make a safe and profitable
investment.
The inerease in Real Estate values in the past three vears exceeds the
output of all th‘ gold and silver mines in the country, It is greater than
the capital and™surplus of all banks. More than 85 per cent of the sue
cessful men have laid the foundations of their success by Real Eesate in
vestments, 4
Music Will Be Furnished by Our Own Concert Band. A Free Bag of
Gold and Silver Will Be Distributed Among Those Attending This Sale.
Take Fast Lake, Kirkwood of South Decatur car to Whitefoord avenue
or Clifton and walk one block to the property.
LADIES ARE ESPECIALLY INVITED
For further information call or see Bob Richardson, Sales Manager, at the
Hotel Scoville. '
Sale Conducted by ¥
UNITED REALTY AND AUCTION CO.
Of Gainesville, Georgia, Sale Promoters and Auctioneers,
lsubstimte charity in industry for jus
tice and real industrial democracy,
and be it further .
l Resolved, That copjes of these .res
lolutlons be sent by the secretary to
(all locals and central bodies through
luul the State and the press of the
State.
Ross Campbell, pregident; George
| A. Wimberly, Onie Oliver, C. McDan
{iel, W. P. Raoul, L. N. Carrington,
| vice presidents; J. A. McCann, sec
-letary-treasurer,
PARADE OF STRIKERS.
The parade of the striking tele
graph and telephone workers was
formed at the Capitol square with a
squad of mounted police in the lead.
Following were the international rep
resentatives and local leaders of the
strikers, after them coming the mem
bers of the executive board of the
Georgia+ Federation of Labor, with
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B W
JOE A. DALY, MANAGEH
A FUNERAL ARRANGEMENT
Once placed in our hands means attention to every detail, no matter
how seemingly unimportant.
Out-of-town calls given prompt attention day or night?
Auto Ambulance Service,
N
A. O. & ROY DONEHOO
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
No. 81 Washington St., Atlanta, Ga
Bell Phone Main 1847, Atlanta Phone 4100
Acting President G. F. Hanaey, of the
Atlanta Federation of Trades.
e e ———
Easily Conquered
A New Yorker of wide experience has
written a, book telling how the tobacco
or snuff habit may be easily and com
pletely banished in three days with de
lightful benefil The author, e,Edwm-d
J. Wood, TD-302, Station F, Néw York
City, will mail his book free on re
quest,
The health improves wonderfully after
the nicotine poison is out of the system,
Calmness, tranquil sleep, clear eyes,
normal appetite, good digestion, manly
vigor, strnnf memory “and a general
gain in efficiency are amon{g the many
benefits reported. Get rid of that nerve
ous feeling; no more need of pipey
cigar, cigarette, snuff or chewing to+"
bacco to pacify morbid- desire.~Adv.