Newspaper Page Text
s § i
n
Armed Guards From Destroyer
: Used to Put Down
Trouble. ‘
S |
(By‘lnternafional News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Feb, 11.—The crew
of the United States Shipping Board
vessel Poughkeepsie have been placed
under arrest in Bermuda for mutiny,
the navy department was advised
today.
The arrests were made by the
commanding officer of the United
States steamship Sacramento.
The arrests were made at the re
quest of the United States consul at
Bermuda, and the men are to be re
turned to Hampton Roads for deliv
ery to federal officers, the command
ing officer of the Sacramento re
ported.
BLUEJACKETS ON GUARD.
mwsage received by the navy
de ent was as follows:
“At request of United States con
sul, Bermuda, am placing crew of
U. 8. S. B. Poughkeepsie under ar
restyfor mutiny for return to Hamp
ton Roads and delivery to federal
officers. Armed guards being fur
nished from destroyers and may de
lay return of men for some days.”
Details as to the cause of the mu
tiny ‘were lacking.
The Poughkeepsie is operated .by
the Cosmopolitan Shipping Company
of ‘42 Broadway, New York.
ACCIDENT ON VOYAGE.
The Poughkeepsie was considerably
delayed on her last trip to Europe
by an accident, it was learned at the
shipping board today, and it is pre
sumed that members of the crew at
tempted to leave the ship in Euro
pean waters. They were captured
and forced to bring the ship back to
the United States, and trouble devel
oped on the high seas, which forced
the captain to put in at Bermuda.
The shipping board is without a
def'nite report on the mutiny, but an
investigaiion has been ordered as
soon as the vessel reaches Hampton
Roads.
Negro Morticians Here
Charge Discrimination
Negro undertakers of Atlanta pre
gented a protest to the Board of
Police Commissioners Tuesday night
in which they alleged discrimination
on the part of members of the police
department in selecting J. M. Robin
gon, 12 Piedmont avenue, to receive
bodies of negroes meeting violent or
mysterious deaths. Coroner Paul
Denehoo, as attorney for the under
takers, presented the petition.
Cincinnati First City
To Complete Census
. (By International News Service.)
_* WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—Cincin
nati is the first large city to com
plete its census, with Washington a
close second, the Census Bureau an
nounced this afternoon. .
It is expeéted the population fig
ures of these two cities will be an
nounced within the next two weeks.
ASSISTANT FOREMAN
~ NOW FEELING FINE
Able to Eat Anything After Tak
ing Pomeroy’s Puratone—Ca
tarrh of Head and Other Trou
bles Overcome.
f veritable health drive is now in
progress in Atlanta, where Pomeroy’s
Puratone is being urgently called
upon by thousands of men and women
who have tried many other medicines
without success,And none, so far as
ean be learned, have been disap
pointed. Dyspeptics and rheumatics,
as well as those who have hopelessly
suffered with kidney, liver and blad
der troubles, are lougly proclaiming
that Puratone has restored them to
hér.lm. It does not matter how long
afiy man or woman has suffered, they
may try again to restore their health.
Those who wish to feel sure ' that
Puratone is a genuine relief have the
word of honest people of Atlanta
whom they know, to prove it is the
truth.
Harry T. McCollum, residing at 291
South Humphries street, assistant
foreman for the Swift Lard Company,
i 3 among the thousands in Atlanta
who have been greatly helped by this
medicine. He said: “I was miserable
géveral years with stomach trouble
and catarrh of the head. My nose
was nearly always either stopped up
br running, and my eyes used to burn
llke fire and I had splitting heads
aches. My throat felt raw and tender
NEVER GRIPE OR SICKEN
abeaheld
\ X ; .
A FOR LIVER AND BOWELS g
T}‘E\
A
Y WORK WHILE YOU SLEE ,( 4
= ] 'l\
> [/ "
P (LSS
SN YWS
A TRV S
tCascarets’’ act on Liver and Bowels without Griping or Shaking you
up—So Convenient! You wake up with your Head Clear, Complexion Rosy,
Breath and Stomach Sweet—No Biliousness, Headache or Constipation,
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN & .0 8 ‘A*Clean'Newspaper for Southern Homes = © © 2 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1920,
Lesson to Modern
America Shown in
Memory of Lincoln
:By THOMAS R. MARSHALL, T
Vice President of the United States.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—America
stands for something or for nothing.
I am one of those who believe it
stands for something.
It is the one land where the mys
tery of manhood may be fully re
vealed; where, at the last, nét race
nor cregd nor station, but character,
shall win and purposes shall be the
weights put in the balance of judg
ment. It is the land of hope and
not despair.
If T were asked to tell why thus
I think, I should say that what has
been may be. If 1 were called upon
to name one man who proved my
statement, I should answer, Abraham
Lincoln,
And with the name all doubt would
vanish and the babel of discordant
views become dumb. Before you
would arise his tall, majestic figure,
sharply silhouetted against a nine
teenth century sky, and you would
see passing before you the years
wherein he walked from the nation’s
poverty to the nation’s Pantheon.
He proved our country's right to
be, and our power to be right. Who
walks in his steps in public or in
private life will always be enrolled
in the army of constitutional lib
erty. 2
His is the one life in our history
we can not too often review nor too
sedulously emulate. We may forget
all others, but while we remember
him in the true sense of remembrance
we shall be safe. Too much can not
be said or sung of him. He can not
too often be recalled to the memory
of this people. The marble and the
bropze are enriched by his homely
face. The pigment takes on a_ richer
color as it traces his counterfeit pre
rentment. And when the poet sweeps
his strings in music to the greatness
and the goodness of this typical
American, his chords approach the
divine—-for it was given Lincoln to
die for a people.
By CHAMP CLARK,
Of Missouri.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—Abraham
Lincoln has been so much talked
about and written about that it is
utterly impossible to say anything
new about him. .
The lexicons of both praise and
blame have been exhausted in his
case.
He has become in a large sense a
myth or a legend. Even the artists
have so changed his pictures that
in a few years the people can know
how the man really looked only by
digging up old discarded portraits of
bhim: the same trick which they have
performed for Napoleon.
Of all things ever said of him, Sec
retary Stanton’s sentence was the
best—“He belongs to the Ages.”
By JULIUS KAHN,
Representative from California.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—What a
v enderful inspiration the life of Abe
Lintoln must be to the peopie of
America in these days.
A man of humble origin by his
ability, force of character and stead
fastness reached the highest position
within the gife of a free people.
When he became President he ap
pointed his cabinet, as his advis-re,
in determining the great questions
that confronted the nation, the men
and kept me clearing it of mucus day
and night. My ears would ring and
my breath had a very unpleasant
odor. :
“My appetite was poor.and 1 could
not eat such things as cabbage, beans
and tomatoes. In fact, there were
very few vegetables and little meats
I could eat. I was nervous, weak and
seemed to be losing weight and
strength every day. I tried all kinds
of medicines, but nothing seemed to
help me.
“Then I heard about Pomeroy's
Puratone and decided to try it. The
results were wonderful. I improved
from the very beginning. Not only
has the catarrah been relieved, but
my stomach trouble is a thing of the
past. My head has cleared up and I
feel great. I haven't a sign of a
trouble now, my strength has been in
creased wonderfully and I have gained
nine poungls. I have a splendid appe
tite and can eat anything I want>
such things as beans, cabbage, stew
meat and the like agree with me per
fectly and everything tastes so good.
This Puratone has certainly made a
well man of me in a very short time,
and I can not praise it too highly.
It's wonderful.”
Puratone is especially introduced
in Atlanta under the supervision of
the Puratone representative at the
main store of Jacobs’ Pharmacy. It
can also be obtained at any of the
Jacobs' stores. One leading druggist
in every town has the exclusive agency
for Puratone. Over thirty thousand:
bottles sold in Georgia alone in five
weeks.—Ady,
.who had been his strongest oppo.-
ets for the nomination of his party
for the ,residency. He courted their
advice, their suggestions. He knew
that tiey could serve their country
in wvarious administrative positions
They were not rubber stamp cabiret
officers.
We can not read his biography too
often, we can not read his wonder
ful second inaugural address or his
Gettysburg speech or his letter to
Mrs. Bixby on the loss of her five
sons in the Civil War too often.
Their eloquence lays bare the great
soul of our martyged President,
By SENATOR MILES POINDEXTER
(Of Washington.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—The
Americanism for which Lincoln
stood, and which we wish to pre
serve, not only includes the idea that
this should be a harmonious and in
dissoluble union of indestructible
States, but that this Union shall
likewise be an independent and sov
ereign nation, free from the con
trol of any foreign power or combi
nation of foreign powers.
Americanism also includes the pa
triotic devotion to our country in
preference to any other and willing
ness on the part of our citizens to
make sacrifices, if necessary in its
services, and to promote interests of
its people.
The. fundamental principle of
Americanism is the security of the
individual in his person and prop
erty rights against violence, whether
of private creed, or of the ambition
of a foreign power. It is based upon
the principle of self government
which in“turn, depneds upon a rule
by law and the willingness of every
citizen to submit to the lawul de
crees of government and the deci
sions of the courts, all of which under
our free constitution, are established,
mairntained and directed by the peo
ple themselves. We are now offered
a substitute for these time honored
principles whose wisdom has been
demonstrated by experience and by
thie happenings which our people have
attained as a nation. We are told
that in some mysterious way, by the
establishment of a new order of
things 4rd the abandonment of an
ancient policy of American states
men, the affairs of man kind will be
determined by universal agreement.
It is proposed to establish a council
and an assembly in which shall be
vested the powers of peace and war,
the supervision of our foreign trade,
the final judgment in verey foreign
d,spute in which we may become in
viived and the control of our army
zrd navy, however vital it may be
to our existence as a nation. The
¢ perience of our fathers has taught
us that the only safeguard of liberty
is to retain that power in the bands
of the people. The proposal to sur
render it to a combination of foreign
states is a betrayal f the Americax;
people.
By SENATOR THOMAS P. GORE,
Of Oklahoma.
WASHINGTON, Feb, 11.—The
career of Abraham Lincoln is one
of the finest fruits in American de
mocracy. From the depths of in
digence he rose to the summit of
political position. By common con
sent alike of friend and former foe,
he was the fittest man in America
for that high and representative
station. This proves the importance
of keeping wide open the door of
opportunity—like gate ajar. It also
points the difference between equal
ity of opportunity and equality of
talents. Men are endowed by na
ture with unequal talents! They
should be endowed by their goverr
ment with equal opportunities Men
of the most unequal talents shoula@
be afforded equal opportunities to
render the highest possible service
té their country and to their kind.
A contrary course is to squander
society’s richest inheritance. A con
trary course would have denied this
country the genius and the services
of Abraham Lincoln.
By SENATOR ATLEE POMERENE,
Of Ohio,
WASHINGTON, Feb, 11—As Lin
coln died, Secretary of State Stanton
utered the historiec phraise, “He be
longs to the ages,” and this is true.
But with all of his great virtues, none
shine out more distinctly than his
Americanism. Born of poverty, he
reached the presidencey, liberated a
race and reunited a divided country.
He was one of the rare characters
who could “walk with kings nor lose
the common touch.”
In this day when the anarchists
and Communists, the reds and the
1. W. W.s are threatening the over
throw of the government, were Lin
coln with us today he would say,
“I will hit hard.” Lincoln was a real
American, Let us profit by his ex
ample. ’
America will always be for Amer
jcans, native and -naturalized, and
Americans will always control it ‘
By SENATOR ARTHUR CAPPER,
Of Kansas.
WASHINGTON, Feb, 11.—We hear
these days a great deal of America
first. Some apparently held to the
belief that we can best serve Amer
jca first by relieving Europe of the
penalty of war with which she af
flicted the world.
Can anybody fancy Abraham Lin
coln, the savior of America in the
last generation, proposing that Amer
fca mortgage her whole future In
order to provide an easy way for
Europe to escape the consequences
of her misdeeds?
When Europe finds there is noth
—————————————————————————
Be Careful What You
Wash Your Hair With
Most soaps and prepared shampoos
contain too much alkali, which is
very injurious, asg it dries the scalp
and makeg the hair brittle, |
The best thing to use is Mulsified
cocoanut oil shampoo, for this is pure
and entirely greaseless. It's very‘
cheap and beats anything else all to
pieces. You can get thig at any drug
store, and a few ounces will last the
whole family for months.
Simply moisten the hair with water
and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is
all that is required. It makes an
abundance of rich, creamy lather,
cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out
easily. The hair dries quickly and
evenly, and is soft, fresh looking,
bright, fluffy, wavy, and easy to
handle. Besides, it loosens and takes
out every particle of dust, dirt and
dandruff,—Adv,
i
5 |
Additional subscriptions aggregat
ing more than $5,000 to the grand
opera guarantee fund were received
Tuesday. The total guarantee fund
amounts to $118,860. The following
are the latest guarantors enrolled
for the 1920 opera season:
He A COWMBGC.ipssannsesades-$ 100
IO L JODMAEE .5o kv vdnivis o 100
Mrs. R. D. Spalding «ceceeeeea. 150
Impenial Hotel .wesmmcosmemns 150
Anmiey Hatel .. .. covpimsumrniss. 1,000
Marion FHOtal . cocuemmimmamimipmns 2560
HL M, WIHHAMS wesveicoosns 100
AR WeIMOUES ::..ueisvomsis 200
B W THOPBION %.o ihacias e 100
Dr. Marion F. Benson ~.... 100
oA Hammend ... iivcke 100
DR 1oe: CIOW ; csvunss sibionr 250
B J 0 TR . iinneiio v 250
W W UNAE . e 100
W A AJmlght .l Biciae 100
JORD- M, (BUABON. .oo oin vissins 250
Frank Meaßor ..coeeovissdas 250
T B BOPIN iit s wisimi 200
GT, POK . commmsmesnicnisome 100
F, M. Kamean . eceeesomeess 100
A B TVURERE 000 i s ngiininny -30 D
Miss Lula Clark King€ eceeceees 100
Alex W. BiER: Br. . .oscscmdbe 100
LOWEE D, BIED. i vsyseteswm 100
Ernest L. Rhodes Company .. 200
JOM TERRENE .y il s i eoue 150
A W, COOQPIRE ... cotismisinet 100
SR TPUAN. il e ey 250
ing to be gaimed by passing the hat,
I predict it will go to work. We
can show it no greater kindness at
this time than to refuse to loan it
additional money with which to arm
and fight. I have not the slightest
doubt that if Abraham Lincoln were
alive to give us the benefit of ‘his
wonderous sagacity and great wis
dom, he would so advise that he
would say such a cause is the ebst
present method of serving America,
first and the world as well.
By GOVERNOR CALVIN COOLIDGE
Of Massachusetts,
BOSTON, Mass.,, Feb. 11.—In vis
dom great, but in humiliation greater,
in justice strong, but in compassion
stronger, Abraham Lincoln became a
leader of men by being.a follower
of the truth. His presence filled the
nation. His mortal frame has van
ished, but his spirit increases with
increasing years, the richest legacy
of the great country.
Men show by what they worship
what they are. It is no accident that
before the great example of Ameri
can manhood our people stand with
respect and reverence. And in ac
cordance with this sentiment our
laws have provided for a formal rec
ognition of the birthday of Abraham
Lincoln, for in him is revealed our
Tlme Atlanta National Banlc
The Oldest National Bank in the Cotton States
Agrlculture as a Basis of Prosperlty
Mr. A. W. Almand, who has for the
past two years given the patrons
of the Atlanta National Bank his
expert assistance in making up
Income Tax Returns, has been
again retained by this bank.
There will be no charge for his ser
vices, which will begin on Feb. 15.
s T
e
G p
75 >
/&g'g e‘ 3
P/ o ,L,""‘Qxy
vt
(s | ? oo diod S
g RN
il /e 3 ) 5 A
~’ r.'v,-'. & b
LEP s T~ v
e T NN
PR T (R
bj 2S e F l'
'y 7 2 o
2d i ‘»5 e | a{* 3
Py {,’ ,v_,\ , %fi“
7 LR " e M 5 Rl
LM, \'«l“{£‘;"
o AR | ALI
>V B EF R
BRI = SOl oty
s 1,
T L AEE
:“—é.};::”m‘.w'-»o-:;‘.,',"-.‘ v
1 ! et v % 151,
i o | 2113
SR LS
B AAETY
$ - < p K
|li : 2 PRI
s S Y {;, S
Wi i"‘ '..’_o' loA
. ) bt I‘ A i A
PR " o 143
ik Hod _,yfl;“,,,,:u{:ui:; 303
In the heart of Atlanta’s business
district—corner of Alabama and
Whitehall-with SAVINGS DE
PARTMENT on the street floor,
The Atlanta National is ol easy
access and offers exceptional con
veniehce to wsavings depositors.
Former Governor
Sees Hot Race for
) S :
Underwood'’s Seat
Paying a visit to Atlanta is the
next thing to visiting New York, in
the opinion of Charles Henderson,
former governor of Alabama, who is
in Atlanta on a pleasure trip and who
talked of political and business af
fairs in Alabama.
“We are expecting a hot race for
the United States SenatemAlabam&‘
and all the prellminary preparations
are in progress,” said the former
governor. ‘“United States Senator
Oscar Underwood is opposed for the
Democratic nomination by L. B. Mus
grove or Jasper and Samuel D. Weak
ley of Birmingham. All indications
point to a hot fight.*”
Mr. Henderson finished a four year
term as governor of Alabama Janu
‘ary, 1919, being succeeded by Thomas
’E. Kilby of Anniston. It was during
his administration that the famous
|"liquor raids” were made at Girard,
[just across the river from Columbus,
where more than $1,000,000 worth of
whisky was confiscated,
“I can’t compliment Atlanta too
much,” said the former executive. “I
always enjoy my visits to this city
and I must hand it to you”
Mr. Henderson was accompanied by
his wife, former head of the Alabama
[Smte Federation of Woman's Clubs.
They are at the Piedmont Hotel.
John Ashcraft, Brother
Of Lee Ashcraft, Is Dead
Word was reecived heer Tuesday
night by Lee Ashcraft, vice presi
dent of the Asheraft-Wilkinson Com
pany of the death of his brother,
John T. Asheraft, in Ell Paso, Tex.,
Monday afternoon. Mr. Ashcraft was
an attorney of Flomence, Ala., and
was in El Paso visiting his sister,
Mrs.' F. J. Rigney. Death was due
to pneumonia.
Mr. Ashcraft is survived by two
‘oflherr brothers, Cyrus Ashcraft of
Berlin, Germpany, and Fletcher Ash
craft of Florence; his widow, three
sons, and four daughters, all of Flor
ence, Ala.
The body is to be sent to Florence
Friday for funeral services and in
terment.
ii i i ANS
ideal, the hope of our country ful
filled.
By GOVERNOR T. W. BICKETT, ‘
Of North Carolina. |
RALEIGH, N. C., Feb. 11—Lincoln
once said: “Die when I may, I want
it said of me by those who knew me
best that I always plucked a thistle
and planted a flower where I thought |
a flower would grow.” ‘
It seems to me that this sentiment
ought to be emphasized in all Lin
voln celebrations at this time. If the
minds and hearts of our people could
be innoculated with this Lincoln
spirit much of the bitterness and
many of the troubles than now dis- |
tress and distract the nation would
disappear.
Atlanta National advertisements have fre
quently called attention to the stupendous
value of Georgia's agricultural products,
which last year amounted to $613,240,000,
exclusive of live stock.
In order to help you realize just how remark
able the growth has been, and to show you
how utterly impossible it is for the partial or
total failure of any one crop to seriously
cripple Georgia, we want to give a few fig
ures showing the value of some crops not
even considered “money crops” a very few
years ago., ‘ ,
Peanuts in 1916 yielded a crop worth
$1,500,000. The 1919 crop was worth
more than $15,000,000.
There were not enough velvet beans in 1916
for the government to make a report on, but
in 1919 the government reports gave Geor
gia's velvet bean crop a valuation of
$3,100,000.
Half the people in Atlanta don't realize that
tobacco can be grown, commercially, in
Georgia. But the actual cash value of the
1919 crop was $3,532,000 even with ad
verse weather conditions.
Zhe Atlanta National Bank
Depository of the City of Atlanta, the County of Fulton, the State of Georgia and the
United States Government.
Resources Over $35.000.000 80
M. D. Hodges of Marietta was
elected president of the Georgia Rex
all druggists at the final session of
the annual convention of the organi
zation Wednesday at the Piedmont
Hotel. Mr. Hodges succeeds O. A,
McDermed of QGainesville, retiring
president. |
It was decided to carry out all re
maining details of the program by 1
o'clock Wednesday and to bring the
session to a conclusion with a lunch
eon at the Piedmont Hotel. The din
ner planned for Wednesday night was
abandoned.
Officers named Wednesday were.M.
D. Hodges, Marietta, president; K.
S. Branch, Scriven, first vice presi
dent; Jabe Stamps, Thomaston, sec~
ond vice president; I. C. Waldrop,
Tallapoosa, third vice president, and
A. H. Denmark, Fitzgerald, secretary
Speakers who appeared on the pro
gram Wednesday were J. T. Roe, Ala
bama representative of the United
Drug Company, Boston; Dr. HE, 8.
Barker, manager pharmaceutical de
partment; B. W. Watkins, assistant
sales manager; T. E. Hutcheson, Bos
ton; T. V. Wooten, head of the Rex
all clubs department; 8. G. Athey,
New York, vice president of the Na
tional Cigar Stands; J. J. Quigley,
Boston, and J. E. Bost, Georgia rep
resentative of the United Drug Com
pany.
The session of the Rexall druggists
was successful in every feature, ac
cording to Mr. Wooten, who had
charge of the arrangements. The at
tendance was not as large as ex
pected because of the flu situation
and the employment situation, many
of the dealers being unable to leave
their business at this time.
Flu E pidemic at Crest
In State, Reports Show
With reports from the State to the
health department showing a slight
decreas ein the number of influenza
cases in Georgia this week from last
week’s mark, it is believed by Dr.
T. F. Abercrombie, State health of
ficer, that the influenza epidemic
has reached its crest.
While there is a slight reduction
in the number of new cases reported
Tuesday from other towns and cities
compared to the day 'before, the re
port from Savannah showed a slight
increase. 'This is no cause for alarm,
. - .
Violin Instruction
Private lessons, day er mnight, by
appointment, at Studio er your heme.
Phone Ivy 4028,
MUELLER VIOLIN SCHOOL AND
ORCHESTRA.
209 McKenzie Bldg.
Dr. Abercrombie said.
Atlanta and Savannah have report
ed the largest number of cases. In
addition to the influenza there is a
great deal of pneumonia over the
State, reports show., Apparently the
influenza has been of a much milder
type this winter than last, it was In
dicated.
T AT,
D . A
(f’ ST l K
SR BT
& W gB: e
i R
B W IR
An Unusual Opportunity
We have just received a delayed shipment of
hosiery*from one of the largest manufacturers in~
the country, which should have arrived some
three months ago. They were-purchased for
considerably less than present market prices.and
if bought today would cost more than our spe«
cial sale price. This hose is a pure:thread silk,
full-fashioned, lisle top-and feet, and ordinarily
sells for from $3.00 to $3.25. They maybe-had
in black, white and all the wanted shoe shades.
There are about 125 dozen in the lot and it -will
be advisable to purchase six or mare. pairs for -
your Summer needs at \&
PER § 2,39 PER
PAIR PAIR
Ist - lfi’ Ist
Floor ' e v Floor
-45 Whitehall St.
No one looked upon Oats as a cash crop
even three or four years ago. They were all
right as a by-product when some other crop
was to be planted, or to provide a little feed
for the animals on the farm. But Georgia
farmers sold some $12,000,000 worth of
oats last year. Many other crops increased
in about the same proportion. The Live
Stock valuation, for instance, showed an IN
CREASE in 1919 of more than $50,000,000
over the 1918 valuation. *
Georgia fruits in 1919 brought Georgia
farmers in cash more than $20,000,000.
The tremendous increase in acreage of all
crops, other than Cotton, the improved
methods of farming furnish the answer to
the question, *“Why the 801 l Weevil Didn't
Hurt Georgia,” and show why Georgia, the
Fifth agricultural State in the Union, and
Atlanta, the heart of Georgia, will continue
to enjoy a real and permanent prosperity.
The Atlanta National is proud of its past
record of assistance to Georgia farmers and
Georgia industries. A consistent record of
fifty-four years of service to our patrons has
demonstrated the value of the Atlanta
National Bank's co-operation—You are in
vited to share it.
licun o
Clear the Skin
5