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RANGERS INVADE MEXICO AND GET VERGARA’S BODY
VOGUE OF TANGO IN
U. S. SHOCKS PAVLOWA
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4 ean
Famous Dancer Declares the Tur
key Trot and Similar Steps
Are Qutrageous.
Anna Paviowa, the wonderfui
dancer, in Atlanta with the Russian
tmperial ballet, declared Monday that
the ordinary tango is an idiocy of the
moment and that she was astounded
that Americans could look with favor
on the turkey trot and like dance
stepa. '
She said .she could not understand
the craze for such dances and that
she herself shuddered to think of at
tempting such steps. Why, the Rus
sian Czar himself had forbidden the
tango, fishwalk, etc., to be indulged in
by the artists of the Imperial Danc
ing School at St. Petersburg!
Pavlowa admitted, however, there
were certain steps in the tango which,
when danced along correct lines, were
decidedly graceful. When the turkey
trot and similar steps were mentioned
ghe had nothing but expressions of
utter contempt for them, .t
“American people,” she asserted, “I
find behind other nations in creating |
new dances, and seem satisfled (o
hold to the old dances originated
vears ago. They are not originators
in dancing and surely there is a big
field in . selecting - graceful, clean
dances from practiced dancers.”
OF MA‘uummmpuu-mmab
DTS O N el e s
w;:-:.%m 14 fine "?..“h-‘ » lnegy
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THE GEORGIAN’S NEWS BRIEFS
ANNA PAVLOWA.
Milledgeville Plan
geville Plant
Destroyed by Flames
MILLEDGEVILE, GA., March 8.--One
of the largest fires occurring in this city
in years to-day destroyed the plant of
the Oconee Milling Company, situated
on the river here.
The building also houses the hydro
plant of the local electric system, which,
however, was only an auxiliary to the
main electric plant.
The milling company was one of the
largest of its kind in the South, and the
total loss will approximate $50,000.
DEMAND THE BALLOT,
VIENNA, March 8-—Hundreds of
women's mass meetings in favor of
woman suffrage were held to-day
thrdughout Austria. At all resolutions
were adopted declaring it was the
general demand of Austrian women
for the vote in Parliamentary and
local elections. The mass meetings
were organized by the Socialist party,
USE KNIFE ON JULIA MARLOWE.
BALTIMORE, March B.—Julia Mar
lowe, the actress, was operated on
tc-day for appendicitis at a hospital
here, according to a report from a
reliable source. Her condition was
said to be serious. Miss Marlowe is
known to have received medical at
tention from a Baltimore specialist
while playing in this city recently,
ARMADA FOR CANAL,
WASHINGTON, March 6.—The
greatest armada ever assembléd, one
hundred and twenty-five men-of-war,
including some of the greatest bat
tleships afloat, will gather in Carib-.
awn ‘water for the ‘opening :of ‘the
anama Canal rinamaan Al
MILITANT WOMEN
FIGHT THE POLIGE
Battlefield Was Trafalgar Square.
Sylvia Pankhurst and Seven
Other Women Arrested.
[.LONDON, March B.—Militant suf
fragettes fought the police to-day on
their favorite battlefield—Trafalgar
Sauare—and in a pouring rain. The
arrest of Sylvia Pankhurst for the
sixth time under the “cat-and
mouse” law precipitated the conflict.
Seven other women and three men
were arrested.
One of those taken into custody was
Miss Zelie I¥merson, of Jackson,
Mich. Miss Emerson has been ar
rested several times for participa
tion in suffragette demonstrations,
and recently there were rumors that
the British Government was prepar
ing to expel her from the country as
an undesirable alien, Replying Feb
ruary 6 to a question put in the
House of Commons as to whether this
report was true, Reginald McKenna,
‘Home Secretary, declared no such
steps were being taken. He added,
however:
“If hoiss Emerson again commits an
offense bringing her within the pro
visions of the aliens act, the question
of applying to the court for a recom
mendation for her expulsion will be
considered.” '
Arrested Sylvia Pankhurst,
Several hundred women and men
late to-day had marched in proces
sion to thé square to attend a meet
ing of the Men's Federation for Wom -
an Suffrage. Sylvia Pankhurst, who
had been hiding, arrived in a taxicab
to deliver a speech, hut detectives
surrounded the cab'and started it for
Holloway Jail before the militants
realized what was happening.
When it was discovered that Miss
Pankhurst had Wbeen abducted, the
chairman, Miss Patterson, who
later was among those arrested,
shouted to her supporters, “Follow the
flag and see if we can't find some
thing to do!"”
The militants then surged toward
the Government buildings in White«
hall, with the suffrage banner borne
aloft, but a cordon of mounted police
barred their way.” Some of the wom
en assailed the police with short
sticks, but <the marchers soon were
TORTURE aIGNS
ARE DISCOVERED
. .
Americans Meet With No Oppo-
Yo . .
sition—Raid Stirs the Whole
Border.
LAREDO, TEXAS, March B.—Texas
rangers, who secretly crossed into
Mexico last night, to-day brought to
the American side the mutilated body
iof Clemente Vergara, Texas ranch
im:m, and established the fact of his
execution after he was seized by Mex
ican Federals.
. The rangers were not opposed, ac
complishing their search witnout the
lsliuh!vst violence, taking the body
‘frum a grave in Hidalgo (Cemetery,
almost within sight of the Texas bor
der.
No Complications.
The seizure was divested of possi
bly grave aspects in international
‘u-mpli«‘zuimu by reason of the fact
' that the rangers were practically
;m:ukiug use of permission granted of
ficially by Mexican Federal authori
ties several davs agzo for recovery of
the body. This permission had been
given to United States Consul Gar
rett at Nuevo Laredo, but he did not
get the body because of what he re
ported as dangers attending search
ing for it in the immediate vicinity
of Hidalgo.
Signs of Torture.
Vergara was shot twice through the
head and once through the neck, his
skull was crushed as by a blow from
a rifle butt, and the charred fingers
of the left hand indieated that he had
been tortured before being put to
death,
Identification was made by the dead
‘man’'s fon and by numerous friends,
Many of whom were in the party of
90, led by the State border patrol,
which made the grim journey to the
Hidalgo Cemetery during the carly
morning hours to-day. The body was
‘\nm badly decomposegd, despite its
three weeks’ burial, and in addition to
recognizing the features, young Ver
gara took a bit of cloth from the
trousers which inclosed the body ancé
matched it to the coat which his
father had on the day he crossed ths
Rio Grunde.
| Body Guarded.
. The hody was brought into the
United States at a point 45 miles
‘northwest of Laredo, opposite Hidal
go and near the Vergara ranch.
American Consul Garrett, of Nuevo
Laredo, deputy sheritfs and other au
thorities were waiting to receive it,
and pending the arrival of an under
taker from Laredo, an armed force
stood guard over the body.
Recovery of the body was made by
a force of Texans, largely friends of
the dead man, acting with the troops
of Texas Rangers, under Captain
Sanders, who have been investigat
ing the circumstances of Vergara's
seizure hy Federals for Governor {ol
quitt. A secret investigatiqn., in
which many Mexicans had been ques
tioned, is understood to have preced
ad the trip intoe Mexico. Leacding ihe
force was 2 man who claimed to have
been a witness to both the execution
and burial of Vergara,
NO COMMENT MADE.
WASHINGTON, March B.—No offi
cial advices had reached here at
either the State or War Departments
about the recovery of the bhody of
Clemente Vergara. Secretary Bryan
was en route from Springfield, Mass.,
where he addressed a Young Men's
Christian Association meeting to-day,
and was not expected here until early
to-morrow.
While official comment on the in
cident was lacking, the fact that per
mission had been given by the Mexi
can Federal authorities for recovery
of the body was believed to remove
the possibility of international com
plications.
The evidence gathered by the Texas
authorities as to Vergara's execution
will be used by the State Department
in renewing its representations to the
Huerta Government for punishment of
the offenders, G
VILLA WON'T KILL PRISONER.
EL PASO, TEXAS, March 8.-—Failure
to pay the ransom demanded for Luis
Terrazas, Jr., will not result in the pris
oner's execution, according to a tele
gram received heer to-night from Gen
eral Villa at Chihuahua. *
News of the tolc‘);‘ram came from rebel
agents to-night. 'he agents declared,
however, that General Villa certainly
would expose Terrazas to the enemy’s
fire at Torreon unless the prisoner's
father, General Luis Terrazas, refrains
from political activity.
The younger Luis, it 5 asserted, al
ways has been held principally as a
hostage, to control, if possible his fath
er's efforts in behalf of General Huerta,
Kven after repeated warnings, it is de
clared the elder Terrazas has alded the
Mexican Gevernment with men and
money, until a week ago when General
Villa declared that his patience was at
an end.
Villa's decision to waive the matter
of rangem came through representations
made by General Carranza and his
agents,
KILLED IN AUTO CRASH.
SANTANDER, SPAIN, March 8-
Count Morlana, brother of the Duke of
Santo Manuro, grand master of the
ueen's household, was killed in a col
flxlon between his automobile and a
wagon.
ALABAMA GIRL FINDS.
EUFAULA, ALA., March B.—A pearl,
valued at $BO, was found in an oyster
to-day by Miss Pearl Jones, among a
qguart that had been purchased by ""3
flmlly. It i 3 a beautiful specimen, an
will be moupted in a ring by the finder.
7