Newspaper Page Text
10 THE TAXPAYERS OF AMERICA:
0 YOU ful ize th: j i ;
b 11 'lylre:}hu that the continuance of oppressive war taxation, after war should
autil "T‘ ’;S d'iij‘]}' due to the private wars which Mr. Wilson is condueting without
ority irom Congress and which h intai :
: . gres: e maintains at the heav ense of the people of
the United States? avy expense of the peop
theirhrl'oformmlthtme& when this nation was more truly a republie, its citizéns more free and
POQ O QT " o ) O - : :
s p 1 (f entatives more courageous, a President would have heen impeached for such ar
rary assumption of dictatorial powers and for the imposition of such unwarranted bur
dens upon the citizenship, ,
& ;Fh;‘trl)ml"‘sed League of Nations, which Mr. Wilson has not dared to refer to the judg
flk‘“,tov ‘r}:e people of this country is merely a license for Mr. Wilson to continue, without au
thori Yy, the costly wars and dangerous entanglements with Kuropean intrigues which he
18 n‘%‘{‘_‘f‘”‘}’ Ing on without the sanction of Congress or the consent of the people.
Itis the primary purpose of you taxpayers to support and finance the imperial plans of
rORMER U, 5, AGENT
TELLS HOW CARRANZA
HAS STRIPPED MEXIG
WEW YORK, Aug. zo.—-uexxczf
has ceased to exist 4s a nation. Polif
ical éisintegration is complete: eco-’
nomi® deczy and social degeneracy
qrfe far advanced and many of the!
people have succumbed to gtarvation
and disease,” said Dr. Paul Bernado
Altendorf, who has lived in Mexico
since 1914, and who operated there
a 8 an agent of the military intelli
gence department of the United States.
for twenty months.
He is telling some of the things he
learned in that stricken land in a
series of Intergl_pwu arranged at his
request by the National Association
for the Protection of American Rights
in Mexico in the hope that he may
arouse the American people to a real
ization of the increasing peril south
of the Rio Grande. .
ONLY GERMANS SAFE.
“Since 1914 I have been in twenty
two of the twenty-seven States con«
stituting the former Mexican repub
lic, and in most of them in the last
two years, traveling almost continu
ously on foot, on mule back, in boats
and on the few trains that are stili
running,” continued Dr. Altendorf. |
“I traveled as a German; for no one
but ‘a German is safe in Mexico.
“Speaking from the fullness of
tirst-hand knowledge thus acquired,
it seems to me a joke to call Car
ranza’s administration a ‘govern
ment’ No real government exists
south of the Rio Grande, except such
authority as a thug with a gun ex
ercises over an unarmed victim. Mex«
ico i 8 nothing more than an aggloms
eration of @narchist gangs who kill}
and plunder with no reéstraint m
their own caprices.
“The so-called ‘rebels’ are no more
nor less than banditti. To discrimi
nate between Carranzistas and other
banditti is to make a distinction
without a difference. All alike live
by plunder.
“Of these rebels or banditti there
» ’
For Grace of Figure, for Good Health’s Sake
Callouses, runover heels, weak arches and all ordinary foot troubles that
;nlllions needlessly suffer from- malke the foot aches that put lines into your
ace.
You are always as tired as your feet.
In each of your feet there are twenty-six delicatey adjusted little bones.
Foot troubles come when some of these little bones get out of proper position
causing undue strain or pressure. y
But now you can walk, dance play golf, tenmis—enjoy a lively life with
comfortable feet. ¢
The principle of Thomas’ System of Foot Correction Is entirely different
from any other. !
BELL PHONE IVY 0467.
Chilblain Feet, Ingrown Nails Corne. Bunions, Callouses and all arch troubles
of the feet, Positively Cured or Money Refunded, ol
NEW METHODS,
.
Dr. Clifford W. Thomas
CHIROPODIST,
Specialist in Orthopraxy of the Feet, 18 Years' Experience.
Seclentific Treatment of the Feet with or without the use of Knife
A NEW DISCOVERY IN A CORN CURE,
‘Herndon’s Crystal Palace Barber Sh
66 Peachtree Street ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
C. A, Rauschenberg Jr. Howard Geldert 8. F. Couper
J. R. Rauschenberg L. J. Cassels A. 0. Andrews
It Will Pay Y
Let Us Handle Your Insurance.
Especial Attention Given Rates
and Proper Coverage
y Claims Adjusted and Paid from
This Office.
We've Lots of Satisfied Customers.
. A. Rauschenberg, Jr.
«SURE INSURANCE”
ATLANTA NATIONAL BANK BLDG.
Members Atlanta Insurance Exchange.
are 100,000 men operating in gangs of
40 to 4,000 under thirty-seven' known
leaders of importance who hunt in
definite territories. In addition there
is an unknown number of smaller fry
who operate independently at times
and again assert allegiance to some
large gang when they need protec
tion.
“Included in this 100,000 banditti
are about 58,000 men who part of the
time claim to be Carranzistas and
who actually 80 serve under his ban
ner when expedient. -
“But this is not all the story. Car
ranza's actual, dependable military
strength is 67,000 men. These men
are banditti like all other Mexicans
who own a gun. They kill and rob
just the same as any so-ealled ‘rebel.
In fact, that is the way most of them
get their supplies apd their pay. That
is also the way they make their offi
cers rich; and in this connection it
is well to remember that the Mexi
¢an army has a higher ratio of gen
erals and colonels and majors than
amy other military organization on
earth, Nearly all the robberies of
paymasters so frequent in the oil re
gion are committed by Carranzistas.
*“The point is that there are 167,009
armied men preying indiseriminately
upen natives and foreigners in Mex
ico.. The men at the top get the
largest share of the swag; make no
mistake about that.' Carranza is re
puted to have $15,000,000 on deposit in
Chilean banks. His son-in-law, Gen
eral Aguilar, has suddenly beeome
worth $4,000,000. Villa has cleaned
1 abm,‘ga.m,ooo, part of which he
lg&hufi' l'uxnance his raids and to
buy such ries as $3,000 bath tubs
and other things of that sort that a
‘%andlt uu&:eeds to maintain his
prestige. s rest is on deposit in
banks in Bl Paso, St. Louis, New
York and elsewhere, but none of it in
his own name.
“ceneral Pablo Gonzales, a Carran
za general and presidential candidate,
who was a railroad conductor prior to
1914, now a eandidate for the presi
dency, is reputed to be worth §6,000,-
000. He owns extensive properties in
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN —A N ewspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1919.
(!. C. Baggs, auto salesman,
candidate for Council.
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C. C. Baggé, who sells more Fords
in a year than there are good roads
to run them on, probably will be
helping make traffic and other or
dinances in Atlanta in 192€¢, if the
optimism of his friends in West
End is justified.
Mr. Baggs is a candidate for the
City Council to represent the Sev
enth Ward, and is making a lively
campaign. He is known as & good
business man and his supporters
say there never was a time when
busineds methods were more needed
in the city administration.
Since Mr, Baggs came to Atlamal
and entered the automobile business
séveral vears ago he has made
many influential friends and is
constantly receiving renewed assur
ances of support in his race for®
council.
| San Antonio, held under various
names. Géneral Enriquez, civil gov
ernor of Chihuahua, formerly a com
mon laborer, is now worth $500,000.
(Gieneral Carasea, in command at Ma
zatlan, a few years ago a porter earn
ing $1.50 week, is worth $500,000 now.
General Tturbide, a poor clerk a few
lyears ago, is now well to do.
PEDDLER NCW RICH,
“General Calles, former governor of’
Sonora, now in command of the troops
there and consequently the real ruler,
saved more than a million dollars in
two years out of a government salary.
His son, 21 years old, is alreaay a
colonel. General Manzo, recently a
basket peddler, is now worth several
hundred thousand dollars. General
Francisco Murguia, formerly a poor
farmer (a former dictator of Chihua
hua) is worth $1,500,000. Alvarado,
who cleaned out Yucatan, is a mil
lionaire,
“The minor bands pick up what
|ever they ecan, hesitating at no atroe
ity. Men have been murdered for an
'old straw hat in Mexico. In Aca
lponou.. Territory of Tepic, in April,
,1913. 1 saw the body of a poor man
who had been murdered for his new
}ntraw hat, costing $1.26. The two
Carranzists who shot him openly
boasted that the sole object of the
c¢rime was to get the hat. They were
not even arrested. A man suspected
of having a revolver is already con
demned to death; for a revolver s an
that is needed to set a Mexican up in
the bandit business; while a revolver
and a good Stetson nat together eon
gtitutes him a general,
TORTURE TO EXTORT MONEY.
“Torture |s often resorted to, some
times to extort money and sometimes
lout of pure fiendishness, In this con
nection I should like to mention that
a large proportion es Mexicans, offi
gers ag well as men, are dope flends.
hey smoke mariguana, which ln(
made from the leeo weed familiar
cattlemen in the Southwest, which
has an efftct like hasheesh. They
will not go into battle without a dore
of mariguana, which imparts a sort
of false courage. In fact, the march.
{ing song of the Carranzistas is “The
[ Tumblebug,” a free translation of the
first of the hundred verses of which
one s as ofllows:
%4 can not march longer
use there Is lacking
! riguana to smoke.,
I “The results of bandit rule are ap
ipalmm. . Meoxico s sunk to the ut
| termost depths of degradation and
|mlnvry. The greater number of the
stores in Mexico under the Diaz re
gime have been looted hare and now
stand emm" and deserted, with win
dowg bro and ‘ha buildings more
or l-,;u wregked. he same thing ap
plies to factories. Buch industries as
Mexico once had ave now irreparably
damaged, | Many manufacturing
plants have been destroyed; many
others are m‘ operated because Car
&
rranza or some other chieftain woulds
seize the product. One copper mine,
representing an investment of $1,500,-
000 near Chihuahua City, was wane«
tonly destroyed the present year. This
happens to be one of many instances
of destruction that came under my
personal observation,
“Kven the plants which might be
operated so far as other obstacles are
concerned cannot obtain labor. The
peons would rather join Carranzo's
army or some other bandit gang and|
take chances on getting a share of
the loot than to earn a living by
honest worß. Even the farmers do
not put in more than enough crops
to afford their families a bare ex
istence because of the certainty that
the whole would be confiscated.
DYING OF STARVATION.
“As a direct consequence of this
almost. complete stoppage of useful
labor, the annual death rateyfrom
starvation or from disease due to mol
nutrition is 100,000. 1 myself saw in
fourteen months or 1917-18 no fewer
than five thousand persons dead or
dying from starvation or from dis
eages they were too weak from lack
of féod to resist. On one occasion
while journeying in the State of Vera
iCruz i was ealled into a hovel in
which three elderly persons were dy
‘ylng of starvation. Next door seven
children lay on the floor too weak to
‘move, also dying of starvation. In
Tepie, especially, people are dylng‘
like flies from starvation. |
“Disease rages unchecked. Docmra‘
are few and far between. Drugs are
‘almost - unobtainable, and the people
have no money to buy them if they
were to be had. Paludismo claims its
victims by thousands. So, also, does
‘tuberculosis. Typhus and typhoid
'fever are very prevalent.
COUNTRY IS FILTHY.
“To say that the country from end
to end is filthy fails to convey an
adequate idea of its condition. Sani
tary conveniences are primitive in
the larger places. In the smaller
towns and villages - there are not
even outhouses. The streets are used
instead, and the streets are never
cleaned. So far as that is concerned
the streets of the capital itgelf are
rarely cleaned, and some of them
never are. The pavements in 1918
were broken up and are in ruins.
“In this welter of filth many people
live the yvear around. They never
sleep under a roof, but lie in heaps
in doorways in such rags as they
wear during the day. Vietims of the
most loathsome diseases squat along
the streets to peddle articles of food
and trifles. Beggars swarm every
where, clutching at the clothing of
passers-by and begging for the love
of the Holy Mary for a cent to save
them from starvation. Gaunt women,
almost naked, enter the restaurants
to beg for bones from the plates of
customers. Children, too, the smaller
ones totally naked, the larger ones
wearing a few rags, also roam
through dining rooms foraging for
seraps,
“?ll are indescribably filthy, for
the lower class Mexican never bathes,
nor even washes his hands. All are
simply alive with vermin. In street
cars you will see vermin. You can
not ride in ear or cab without get
ting vermin on you. You must pick
them off the bed before retiring. No
wonder typhus is rampant. T was
stricken with the disease nine days
after arriving in Mexico City.
EVERYTHING IN RUIN.
“Many churches are in ruins; the
priests have been klgod or expelled;
the nuns—heaven only knows what
their fate has been, Valuable paint
ings stolen from the churches have
been offered in little shops for a
trifle. Many of the churches were
turned into barracks or into stables
and defiled in such other ways as de
praved ingenuity suggested. In Me
rida, the capital of Yucatan, Alvarado
gave orders even to break the bells.
Yrurs EXPERT
Lady Attendant
Write for informatien.
JARRELL'S TRUSS STORE
141 ARCADE Bullding, Atlanta.
A. 0.& ROY DONEHOO
Funeral Directors
JOE A. DALY, Manager
PROMPT AMBULANCE
SERVICE
Phone Main 1847
Pariors, 81 Washington St
TAXI CABS
When you want a Taxi
Phone Ivy 385
Twin Six Packards, $3.00
per hour—why pay $4.007
Open Day and Night i
PACKARD
TAXI SERVICE
2 Auburn Ave.
foreign nations, if you are willing to pay to destroy democracy not only abroad but at home,
if you actually desire to reach the point of financial bankruptey and economie demoraliza
tion which European nations have reached, then you should accept the League of Nations
and re-elect Mr. Wilson to carry out its program of perpetual war and interminable taxation.
But if you, as patriotic American citizens, desire to adhere to the wise policies of the
farseeing founders of this republie, policies which have made this nation the greatest, the
richest and the happiest, nation in the world, then you should reject this foreign League of
Nations, continue the true and tried American policies of non-interference in foreign af
fairs, and elect a genuiné American President to end this exhausting participation in the
conflicts and complications of Europe and to conduct the government of the United States
in the interest of the people of the United States.
WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST.
S —
bNothing is left of venerable cathe-.
drals but the walls and these have
been punched full of holes. In Sonora
Governor Calles would not allow a
child to be baptized. He Jost no op
portunity so show his hatred of all
religion. He offered to rent a church
to be used as a market in Hermosillo
for 50 pesos a day.
“The railroads are in utter ruin.
There is only one line upon which
sleeping car service is maintained
regularly and these cars are generally 1
reserved for the use of army officers
between Mexico City and Monteroy.}
All upholstering has been torn off|
the seats of day coaches and the
wooden hulks swarm with vermin,
One must often wait for days to
board a train, and when at last the
train appears it takes a whole day
or more 1o cover a distance that
should be run in a few hours. |
“Judging from what has been pub
lished about Russia conditions can
hardly be worse there, if, indeed,
they are as bad as i Mexico. And it
must not be forgotten that Carrnnza‘
is the original bolshevist, |
“In Mexico, as in Russia, the sin
ister hand of Germany is found to |
be pulling the strings. Trotzky was
a very particular friend of Kurt
Jahnke, head of the (German secret
service in Mexico, and of Von Eck
hardt, the German sambassador to
Mexico, lln fact, there 4s a great
deal of circumstantial evidence to
show that Germany first instigated
bolshevism in Mexico to ruin the
country so all that was of value could
be bought in at nominal prices and
tge way thus paved for the establish
ment of kultur; and finding the plan
worked beyond expectations trans
planted the devilish virus to Russia.'"
Manget Brothers Begin
Work on New Warehouse
Work has begun on the new ware
‘house of Manget Brothers, at Earl
and Sampson sireets, adjoining the
Atlantic Compress Company, & hem
‘ber of the firm announcer Saturday.
‘ The warehouse \fill contain 65,000
'square feet, and will consist of three
stories, constructed with timber re
inforeed by masonry. It will have a
capacity of 5000 bales.
’ “In view of the dearth of* ware
house space,” he observed, “we have
decided to eonstruct o modern ware
house equipped in every way for the
convenience in handling cotton. Work
has already begun and the building
will \be completed in time for use
‘during. at least part of the present
season."”
| The bullding is being erected by the
‘Crlffin Construction Company,
‘Com;t Must Define
| . ‘Evangelical’ in Will
~ (By International News Service.)
~ MANSFIELD, Ohio, Aug., . ~-By the
terms of the will of Miss Susan M.
Sturges, who died in this city two years
ago, the bulk of her estate of over $100,.«
000 was left in trust to the Bvangelical
!"Ilurc'hr‘s of this ecity. The heirs are now
asking the court to define “Wyangelical ™
Different ministers are being called to
!thn witness stand to interpret the mean
ing. Miss Sturges did not deeignate the
‘t‘llllrl’h"fi, but specified each church was
’(n appoint seven members, none of whom
swear, use tobacco or intoxicants, The
seven members from each Evangelieal
Charch are to meet and eleet a hoard of
seven to administer the trust, The money
|ia to be used for philanthropie purposes,
i. —B—— Ter:n Jl'u;'nc—r‘(:;l“:;m~ _GfS:iiohnrdson Andrew Calhoun
. . .
209 Empire Building
Phone Ivy 33563
SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT
For the six months ending June 30, 1919, of the condition of the
- - -
United British Insurance Company, Ltd.
) OF LONDON, ENGLAND,
Organized under the laws of the Kingdom of Great Britain, made to the
governor of the State of (Georgla in pursuance of the laws of sald State
Principal U. 8. Fire Branch Office 10 ('linton street, Newark, N. J
I, CAPITAL STOCK,
Whole amount of depogit of capital stock C ae de vi ne 4NN
Amount pald up in cash g S in sstaE s DN IN
1. ASSETS,
Total assets of the company, actual eash market value 4 $1,188,757.69
11, LIABILITIES,
Fotal liabllities ’ $1.288. 7% .69
IV. INCOME DURING THE FIRST 81X MONTHS OF THE YEAR 1919,
Total income actually recelved during the first six months in
ORBR o 5 s o 0 . ~ $607,686.24
V. EXPENDITURES DURING THE FIRST SBIX MONTHS OF THE
YEAR 1919,
Total expenditures during the first six m mths of the vear In
RN oe sios ¢ o o 5 Ve 00 0o $609.814.92
Greatest amount insured in any one rl 4 Ske $50,000.00
Total amount of infsurance outstanding 8.761.570.00
A copy of the act of incorporation, duly certified, | of file in the office
of the insuranca comm ant
STATE OF NEW JERSEY —County of Essex
Personally appeared before the undersigned I 1.. Brokaw, who, being
duly sworn, deposes and syys thal he is the assistant treasurer of C, P,
Stewart & Co., 1. B, manage {1 that the foregoing statement is correct
and true, F. L. BROKAW,
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 2hth day of August, 1919,
WALTER PANKOPF,
Notary Publie, lssex County, New Jersey.
Name of State Agent HURT & QUIN.
Name of Agents at Atlanta -‘l T. CARSON & CO,
Seventeen Employees Are Drop
’ '
ped—County’s Finances
'
Strained.
The continued decreasc in the num-‘
ber of county convicts, that resulted
last week in the dropping of aevon«l
teen employees im the county public |
works department, as was announced
Saturday, has brought the number to
the lowest point reached In the last
thirty-five vears, it was made known
by Chairman Oscar Mills, of the coun
ty public works committee.
The county now has only about'3oo
convicts, The number formerly rang
ed around 700 and 800,
Represented among the seventeen
employees cut off by the county were
several who had been connected with
the public works department for as
long as fifteen years. In the event
“prohibition and prossperity” —the
causes ascribed by* Chairman Mills— |
continue to reduce the number of
convicts, a further reduction in the
foree of county employees was re=
garded as likely
Chairman Mills said that it was
with regret that the county had been
forced to put off the seventeen em
ployees, but that this action had becn
rendered necessary to prevent a
waste of county money in needless
overhead expense. This action, he ex
plained, had been deferred for some
time in hope that the situation might
Lecome such that the emplovees could
be retained, but that it finally was
found they would have to be let out.
The dropping of these men will
save the county $25,200 annually, it
was announc~d. Six of the employees
were road roller and steam shovel
engineers, whi''e the remainder were |
conviet guards and drivers, |
“The present strained financial con
dition of the county, due to the ab-|
normally heavy appropriations that it
has had to make to the city this year, |
has rendered it imperative that the
commission economize at every pos
ible point,” said Chairman Mills.
1 Part of Hi
Pastor Calls Part of His |
v L, & 3 ’
Flock ‘The Dirty Dozen
(By International News Service.)
KENTON, Ohlo, Aug. 30.-—Because ini
a sermon to his congregation in which
he called their attention to the faot that
he was not getting the proper support
from the members of the church, he is
alleged to have alluded to certaln mem
bers as the “dirty dozen,” the Rev. Leon
HI. Couch has been asked by a ‘‘speclal
committee” to make “‘a public acknowl.
edgment and ask forgiveness.'
Sailor Who Bought
Cow for Old Women's
Home Has Returned
Jack West is home again, with
his sailor outfit back in the trunk
®and a discharge in the inside pocket
of his new civvies. He said Sat
urday that he thought he had had
enough of the navy for a while,
having enlisted in 1914 and stick
ing through until this week.
Mr, West called around to in
quire about the health of Molly, the
new cow at the Old Woman’s Home
in West End. He feels a personal
interest in Molly, for if it hadn’t
been for him, Molly would be some
where else.
You see, the old cow at the home
died, and there was no money to
buy another, and The Georgian
published a piece about it. And
on board the U, 8. 8. destroyer
Maury, in Venice, Jack West read
the story in The Georgian his sis
ter had mailed him, and he got
right out of his hammock and went
up and down the boat with his cap.
He came back with SBO for a new
cow for the Old Woman's Home.
The money was sent over by the
eéxecutive officer, and that's how
~ Molly came to the home,
Mr, West was on the ecruiser
~ Seattle through most of the war,
- making eleven convoy trips aboard
~ her. He declared Saturday that he
\ had never had an adventure nor
seen a sul.
-
901 Flatiron Bldg. Atlanta, Ga.
SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT
For theesix months ending June 30, 1919, of the condition of the
- .
International Life Insurance Company
OF ST. LOUIS, MO.
Organized under the laws of the State of Missouri, made to the governor
of the State of Georgia in pursuance to the laws of said State.
Principal Office—722 Chestnut street, St. Louls, Mo.
I. CAPITAL STOCK.
Amount of capital stock Coe NRe Bk MR eeE Feeibek BB isx T
Amount of capiial stock paid up In cash ... .ey ese sss . 525,000.00
11. ASSETS.
DAL BBRILR < ulB oW +6% 2is sriasiv she ans 65 dne bk boe .D 0
1. LIABILITIES.
TORI DADINUOE 5.0 o vis toe ¥ i §SO it vesiitidcy i oo
IV. INCOME DURING THE FIRST 81X MONTHS OF THE YEAR 1919,
TUUAE IMOOINE oo Tui ivv cus bbdnns st sue deaitea i i T
V. DISBURSEMENTS DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THE
YEAR 1919,
TOLAL GIORNRNOIRRNTE . .o oo sii dsi oas snsibin duvites aii i T
Greatest amount insured in any one risk .. .. $50,000.00
Total amount of insurance outstanding .. .. 84,010,161,00
A copy of the act of incorporation, duly certified, is in the office of
the insurance commissioner,
STATE OF GEORGIA-—County of Fulton:
Personally appeared béfore the undersigned H, W. Campbell, who, be
ing duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the general agent of Interna
tional, and that the foregoing statement is correct and true,
H. W. CAMPBELL.
Sworn to and asubscribed before me, this 30th day of August, 1919,
H. W. BYNUM, Notary Public.
Fire, Automobile, Contractors, General and Elevator Liability
Insurance, Plate Glass, Accident and Health. P
Burglary and Surety Bonds. '
WE WOULD APPRECIATE SOME OF YOUR BUSINESS.
Manager City Department
Frank H. Reynolds & Co.
915 Candler Bidg.—Phone lvy 5277
SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT
For the six months ending June 30, 1919, of the condition of the
Rhode Island Insurance Company
OF PROVIDENCE,
Organized under the laws of the State of Rhode Isiand, made to the gov
ernor of the State of Georgla in pursuance of the laws of sald State.
Principal Office—l 7 Custom House street,
I, CAPITAL STOCK,
Whole amount of eapital stock g ek bst Ehde ekl T
Amount pald up in cash.... Fsssr@idosensuis shaupstssnsne «RN
11. ASSETS
Total assets of the company, actual cash market value ........32,465,545.89
1, LIABILITIES,
Total liabilities 4 R e o D e
IV. INCOME DURING THE FIRST SIX MONTHS OF THE YEAR 19%.
Total income actually received auring the first six months in
OBED . issnbiebibnstasininnntoshartohuraant enaV NN R “34.218.58
V. EXPENDITURES DURING THE FIRST 81X MONTHS OF THE
YEAR 1919,
Total expenditures during the first six months of the year in
ORI s.evessssontashisossviskbbeniihobdinens ivhyis (SRR 0l
Greatest amount insured in any one risk ....iiooo $50,000.00
Total amount of insuranc#® outstanding ......... 323,359,471.00
A copy of the act of Incorporation, duly certified, is of file in the office §
of the Insurance ¢ommissioner, A N
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND-—Count r of Providence: ity
Personally appeared before the undersigned Emil G. Pleper, who, .
ing duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the vice president and .
retary of Rhode Island Insurance Company, and that the foregolng States "
ment is correct and true, BMIL G. PIEPER,
Vice President and Secretaryi
Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 26th day of Auméufll i
JOHN ¥F. H TR
| Notary Publig.
Name of Special Agent GORDON WILLIAMS,
| Name of Agents at Atlanta—FßANK M, REYNOLDS & CO,
The rabbit breeders around Atlan
ta are planning a big show In eon
nection with the Southeastern Fair
Association, October 11-21.
A meeting of the majority of the
‘breeders held recently resulted in the
formation of the Georgia Breeders
and Fanciers’ Association, with the
following officers:
President, H. B. Newbury; vice
president, George C. Fife; secretary,
John 8. MeCreight; treasurer, C. M.
Kenimer,
The breeders hope to have Gibson
of Detroit judge the show, and if
they are successfu] this alone should
bring out an extra large entry, as
the judge is one of the best and most
popular men in the rabbit business
in America today.
Classification and entrance fees will
be announced next Sunday.
John S. McCreight, who has just
returned from France, will have his
old position as superintendent of the
poultry and pet stock department of
the Southeastern Fair, and this in
sures every one's birds and pets hav
ing the proper attention.
The poyltry and pet stock will be
shown this year in one of the new
fireproof concrete buildings, and the
outlook for a big show is very en
couraging.
11B