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BRITISH TROOPS MUTINY AND JOIN ULSTER
Q 4 e AR b a o
Soldiers Throw Down Their Guns
When Orderzd to Bear Arms
Pgainst Countrymen,
. Inieg ©1 i s
Throw Down Arms.
te ng forward th mmanding
v I 1 more nome re:2
: ' ¢ . fied all of
ers t hey deciare their
; n twelve ours The
T vithin twelve hours is prac
{ 1 6ath of allegiance. It means
5 ¢ i shis v Uister is alive with
e y y They t only for the
y mile square of 3~
' ¢ ‘ men ready
Leaders’ Homes Fortified.
re ween marched
: mer nd guns
Z Ei¢ t D 3
.
v
May Ask Legislature
al
To Prohe Lacy Charge
.
MONTGOMERY, March 21,—Thal
Goversor O'Nezl will probably cail
the General Assembly in extra ses
sion soon after the Alabama Demo
cratic primary, was indicated to-day
when he conferred with several lead
ing legislators,
The Legislature, if called, will make
a thorough investigation of the con
viet department scandal and of the
charge by Theodore Lacy that in 1911
he gave Goverpor O'Neal the $27,5060
wlleged {0 have been turned over to
Lim by James (3. Oakley, former
president of the State Convict Board.
Judge Armistead Brown, of the Mont.
gomery City C'ourt, to-day, at the re
quest of the Governor, ordered the
Montgorrery County Grand Jury to
reconvene Tuesday to probe Lacy's
charge
DEAD ON DOORSTEP.
CALHOUN, March 21.—0Ona ¢f the
darkest and most sinister raysteries
of this section’s history has devel
cped about the murder of Sil (Chap
man, the voung Gerdon Codnty farm
er. Mrs=, Lizzie Starnes, his sister,
and her daughter, Mrs. Charles
Chapman, who are lodged in jail.here
vharged with knowledge of the crime
if not with its actual commission,
stoutly maintain their innocence, and
a dozen conflicting theories have
made an unintelligible puzzle of the
tragedy.
Chaprmuan was found dead in the
door of his sister's home, where he
boarded, euarly to-day, a gunshot
wound in his left breast. His sister
and her daughter were the only other
oecupanis of the housge at the time,
although thev declare in their own
defense that thev heard no shot nor
sound of s'ruggle during the night
They and their friends contend that
Chapman was killed elsewhere, and
that his hody wasg brought to his owr
doorstep
WOULDN'T GIVE TO FAMILY.
NEW YORK, March 20.—Charles ™
Tyler, arrested on a charge of non
support, admitted to the court that
he killed and ate a six-pound chicisen
without giving his family any.
THE GEORGIAN'S NEVWS BRIEFS
WHBLE U. 5. ASKED TO
HELP FIND THIS BOY
Warren McCarrick, of Philadelphia. 8-vear-old boy who has dis
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plsappearance ol liattle Wairren MceCarrick
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Rivals (tharlie Ross Case in Mvstery.
Atlanta police have been askea 10
‘juin the country-wide search that is
heing made for $-yvear-old Warien
| McCarrick, a Philadelphia boy who
| is the central figure in a kidnaping
| that is excelled in mystery and in
| terest only by the famous disappear
’am‘e of Charlie Ross, which has nev
er been solved, and of little Billy
; Whitla, who was restored to the arms
{ of his father upon payment of a ran
som of $lO,OOO,
Photographs and descriptions of
the missing boy have been received
{ by Chief of Police Beavers and lo
| cal officers have bren asked to keep
| @ sharp lookout for the child. Citizens
of Atlanta and of every city and
town in the United States have been
appealed to by the parents of the boy
to aid them in the gearchs A reward
of $6,000 has been offered for infor
mation that will lead to his return
home, >
| Little Warren is the sole heir of his
6zr:mdmolhsr. Mrs. Anna McCar
| rick, a wealthy woman of Philadel-
ADD 3 TO ARMY FUND. 3
WASHINGTON, March 21.—T0
muake good actual needs c¢f the mili
tury establishment denied by the
House, the Senate Committee on Mil
ftary Affairs was compelled to add
$7.579,428 to the army appropriation
bill, reported to the Senate late this
afternoon As it passed the House, .t
carried $9¢,190,577.
Major General Wood told the com
mittee the appropriation allowed by
the House to pay officers and enlist
ed men actually would not pay the
men now in the service, much less
provide for recruits,
‘ SECRETARY WILSON ILL.
WASHINGTON, March 21.—Secre
tary of Labor Wilson is confined to
his home with an attack of the grip.
Secretary Wilson atténded the Cabi
net meeting vesterday, but was
obliged to go home shortly after re
turning to his departiven!.
phia, and the son of James McCar
rick, who is connected with the of
fice of the City Recorder of Deeds of
the Pennsylvania city. He has been
missing since last Thursday afternoon
at 4 o'clock. A few minutes before
that he was romping and playing in
the vard of his home. Then he van
ished, as suddenly as though he had
evaporated into thin air., JFor 24
hours his parents, thinking perhaps
he had gone to the home 'of a friend,
conducted a private, but fruitless
search, 'Then the police were called
in, but, although they have left no
stone unturned, they have been un
able to find any tangible clew. Rumors
that the boy was seen with a woman
dressed in black and heavily veiled
bave becn investigated without result,
as have rumors that the boy was seen
on a wagon with a man, crying bitter
lv. Every clew possessed by the
Philadelphia police has been wired to
police officials all over the country,
and the search for the boy extends
from the Atlantic to the Pacific,
SEES BETTER BUSINESS.
LIVERPOOI, March 21.—Among
the passengers sailing on the lusita
nia to-day was ('. K. G. Billings. M@
Biliings said:
“1 belleve actual business ever:c
where iz slowly but surely on the
upgrade. 1 do not want to give the
impression of predicting a boom, On
the contrary, 1 believe a boom to oo
the worst thing that could strike the
United States, What I mean is tha!
the tone of worid-wide busines:z s
improving, and it is this kind of im
provement which makes for prosper
iy
6,500-MILE WIRELESS MESSAGE.
BERLIN, March 20.-—Operators at
the Nauen wireless station report the
transmission of a message from there
to Windhuk, German Southwest Af
rica, a distance of 6500 miles, the
aerial route lying almost entirely
over land., ' ¥ L ‘
Decision of Tennessee Supreme
' ' '
Court Regarding University Is
4 ‘
Likely to Cause Split,
i ving the decision of the Su
treme Court of Tennessee Saturday
taking the control of Vanderbilt Uni
versity from the College of Bishops
f the Methodist Episcopal Church
South and vesting it in the Universi
ty Board of Trust, Dr. H. M. Dußose,
pastor of the IYirst Methodist Church,
£ A nta, and prominently identi
fied with the fight since it was
brought to a climax by the offer of
Andrew Carnegie to endow the school
$1.000.000, issued a statement
Saturday night in which he charac
terized tne decision of the courts as
an “injustles scarcely paralleled in
history.”
Dr. Dußose declared that the ef
fect of the decision will be the with
irawal of the church from the uni
versity; the removal of all proper
ties of the Southern Methodists, in
cluding the great publishing house
and similar enterprises, frony Nash
ville to a “more hospitable Yocality ;"
the separation of the theological
school from the university proper,
and a radical and momentous change
in the educational policies of the
Southern Meihodist Church. Dr. Du-
Bose exnressed the opinion that ac
ticn looking to these radical move
ments will be made at the meeting
of the general conference of the
church at Oklahoma City in May,
when it is expected that the decision
of the courts, which he declared to be
the most momentous event in the
history of the church, will be the
principal subject of discussion and
action.
Interest in the situation centers in
the probable action of the College of
Eishops and the next move they will
make in the fight. Bishop Warren A,
C‘andler, of Atlanta, refused to dis
cnss the decision Saturday night, and
dispatches from Nashville state shat
in the absence of Bishop E. E. Hoss,
rcgarded as the spokesman of the
college and leader in the fight against
the Board of Trust, no statement will
Le issued, though it is intimated by
some that the effect of the decision
will be that predicted by Dr. Dußose.
It is generaliy conceded among
Methodists that the decision* com
pletely ousts the Bishops from any
semblance of conirol of the univer
sity, one of ils provisions being that
hereiafter the general conference of
the church will have only the right
to confirm the appointments made by
the Board of Trust
Members of the board stated in
Nashville Saturday night that they
will move along uninterrupted by the
decision, and the three new members,
Judge Claud Waller and R. I, Jack
son, of Nashville, and A. H. Robbins,
of McKenzie, Tenn.,, whose appoint
ment by the board was ignored by
the conference, will hold their seats
without question,
The decision of the Tennessee court
removes thie last obstacle in the way
of uccepting the million-dollar en
dowment offered by Andrew Carne
gie, who conditioned his gift upon the
separation of the university from the
church. Jt was Mr. Carnegie's offer
that brought tne fight to a climax,
though it had been in the courts for
several years, court decisions hereto
fore having been favorable to the
(‘ollege of Bishops.
\ Dr. Dußose's predictions as to the
effects of the decision, and his ob
servations upon it, are undoubtediy
| Authoritative. Prior to c¢oming to
Atlanta, he lived for twelve years in
|.\'.|<.‘l\'i!lo_ where he had intimate as
sociation with the university and be
came closely identified with the
Bishops in their tight teo retain con
i',lu! of the school,
| ASKS IMPEACHMENT.
j WASHINGTON, Mareh 21.-—lm
peachment charges against Dantel
Thew Wright, of the District of Co
lumbia Supreme (ourt, were filed in
| the House to-day by Representative
| Park, of Ceorgia. The House Judijcia
vy Committee accepted the charges
for investigation. Representative
Park was asked for affidavits to sus
'tain the allegations.
| Mir. Park charges Justice Wright
' with “being morally and temperi
| mentally unfit to hold judicial office.”
MARRY Many rich, congenial and anx
lous for corupanions, Interesting pare
iculars and photo free. The Mcssenger,
Jacksonville, Fla
MARRY RICH--Matrimonial paper of
highest character, conteining hundreds
of nnotos and descriptions of mar fage
able people with means Mailed free
Sealed. Either sex. Writa to-day. One
may be vouar idea!l Address Standard
Cor. Club, Box 607, Grayslake. I]l
HUSTLING man or woman representa
tive wanted in cach locality: part or
full time; $3O to 500 a month; every
customer secured glves you a steady
monthly income; experience i 8 not re
quired: only one appointment in each
tocality —hurry and be the first to apply.
Write the 1-1.-17, 1274, Covington, Ky
SALESMEN WANTED.
SELL TREES~-Fruit trees, Pecan
trees, Shade trees, Ornamentals and
Roses, Easy to sell, Big profits,. Write
to-day. SMITH BROS,, Dept. 39, Con
cord, Ga,
AGENTS - Imperial Self-Heating lrons;
fustest seller vet. Hig profits. Write
fyr free oatalogie M., Box %, Mem
phiz. Tenn.