The bulletin. (Irwinton, Wilkinson County, Ga.) 191?-19??, September 06, 1912, Image 1
VOLUME I. LEIPSIG’S GREAT BATTLE MONUMENT , JES i JH k jwMphgk H g|||fiSgES^^ Xm jllll^I wf «|JHB||l U L rMw^waJEw v >*< .a. „r..miM * T^t IBrwm^^ \v : .r-x : '■ •: ’ V tmSßSfyp ' / THIS magnificent monument which Is now nearing completion, is being erected in the city of Leipsig, Germany, in commemoration of the one hundredth anniversary of the battle of Leipsig, which will be celebrated in October. The monument is built on massive lines, and the figures around the dome are of huge dimensions. When completed, this battle monument will have cost $1,500,000. .REBEL'SHIXEDARMY How Zapata Recruited His Fol lowers in Mexico. Every Outlaw and Fugitive From Jus tice Was Enlisted ,by “The At- tila of Republic.” as Peons Call Bandit. Mexico City.—When. Zapata first re cruited his followers they told me he had drawn to himself every outlaw and fugitive from justice who up to that time had been hiding in the More los hills or in the vast underground caves of Cacahuimilpa, near Cuerna vaca. Later, when Zapata and his men took Cuernavaca, Zapata opened the jail and penitentiary, and, putting a good rifle and a handful of cartridges into each convict’s hands, he bade them help themselves to horses wher ever they could find them. As there are several horse ranches and rich haciendas with celebrated racing studs in the immediate vicinity of Cuernavaca, it did not take long be fore all those new recruits went mounted on the best of horses, as was here to be seen. After the great review of Zapata’s bandit forces, Senor Madero commit ted the colossal blunder, as it turned out to be, of paying off all of Zapata’s men for their alleged services in the Madero revolution, without putting an armed guard over them to sea that they actually turned in their rifles and cartridges before returning to their homes. AUTOS AND SHOE LEATHER What the Modern Luxury Will Cost the Poor of All Countries in Foot Wear. New York. —The tremendous growth of the motor car Industry is produc ing a scarcity of leather so great that in a little over four years, according to the leading authority in the New England shoe trade, the price has ad vanced 72 per cent., the Toronto Globe notes. This advance, he stated, must inevitably result in an increase of 20 per cent. In the cost of shoes all over the world. The interde pendence not only of nations in mat ters of trade and commerce, but of the rich and poor, is strikingly illus trated by the statement of the New England expert. Poor folk in the re motest corners of civilization, who rarely see a motor car, will be forced to spend a larger part of their scanty income upon, shoes, a necessity of ex istence, because rich people are pour ing out money upon a new luxury. NUMBER 7. I The result of this was that Emiliano Zapata simply drew’ the sum of 50,000 pesos set aside' for himself and his followers, without bothering to turn in more than a few stacks of arms, after which he announced that he and ■ his men would not give any more arms unless they received twice the amount of the originally stipulated sum. After this the misunderstanding ' between the newly constituted gov ernment authorities and the Zapata brothers grew apace. Zapata was summoned to the capital. He came defiantly, surrounded by an armed bodyguard. In his brief stay at one of the principal hotels In Mexico City he livened things up by shooting out all the windows of the cantina because they would not serve him with drinks after 3 in the morning. On the following day he and bls companions commandeered some half dozen city taxicabs and rode back to Cuernavaca, about 75 miles away. After this Zapata and his men in Morelos became quite unmanageable so far as the newly constituted au thorities were concerned. Francisco de la Barra, Mexico’s president ad In terim, tried to temporize with the Zapata brothers for a while, after which Senor Madero, in his capacity as leader of the revolution, pending his election as constitutional presi dent. made a special trip to Morelos to "smooth down” the enraged Zapat ists. But the "smoothing down” did not last, for within a week Zapata’s fol lowers were "shooting up” the col umns of regular soldiers who had been sent to garrison the most im portant towns of Morelos, in response to the frantic appeals of the bandit harried inhabitants of that state. From this time forth the campaign 1 MAN SEEKS “STANDARD^ WIFE| Doctor Who Says He Is a “Standard" Man Appeals.to Preacher Who Vol unteered as Matchmaker. i Minneapolis, Minn. —in a sermon re . cently Rev. G. L. Morrill of this city offers to aid bashful men to get wives. ' Now he is seeking a “standard” wo man for a "standard" man, the latter having written him a letter in which 1 he describes just the kind of a woman he wants to make his home a para ' dise. The "standard" man is a Janes i ville (Wis.) physician, and declared • he, as a "standard" man, is one-tenth above the female sex. ' The letter in part follows: "I have just read your marriage of fer. I lost my wife last winter, leav ing a lonely void in my home. Am just past forty and have no children. Have a fine home. I have no Infirmi ties and no bad habits. "Now, if you have any lady bache lor from twenty-five to thirty-five that would like a first-class home, with a ©hr Ittllrth IRWINTON, WILKINSON COUNTY, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1912. between Zapata’s bandit hordes and various expeditions of government forces has been in full swing. All this so-called "campaign" on »he part of the Zapatists, was marked by acts of unbridled murder, arson and. rapine. When the government forces re sorted to savage reprisals, such as burning down villages, imprisoning women and children and hanging or shooting all men believed to be in league with Zapata, the warfare in these unhappy districts of Mexico naturally took a turn for the worse, and the whole region become almost uninhabitable. The railway traffic between the cap ital and Morelos has been brought to a standstill since the recent hold-up and massacre of railway passengers and their escort of armed soldiers half way between the City of Mexico and Cuernavaca, when forty persons were killed. Since this event several of the rail way stations and bridges along that line have been burned down by the Zapatists, only a few hours from the City of Mexico, so that the railway service between the capital and the states of Morelos and Guerrero has had to be suspended altogether. SEEK PAN-AMERICAN CODE Two United States Delegates Are En couraged by Work of Rio Janeiro Conference. Washington, D. C. —Henry L. James and Frederick Van Dyne, two dele gates from the United States to the International conference for the codi fication of public and private interna tional law, which recently finished its work at Rio Janeiro," Brazil, have re turned to this country. Mr. James, who is assistant chief of the Latin- American division of the state depart ment, reported that the delegates from this country are convinced that a substantial foundation has been laid in the Rio Janeiro conference for the development of a form of pro ceeding which will insure uniformity of laws and practice in American in ternational relations. While the task is a monumental one, owing to the difficulty of recon ciling and unifying practices based i on principles so widely variant as tb£ i J Latin code and the British and Ameri ! can common law, it is expected that tangible results will come from work to be performed by a number of sub ' committees. To these committees ‘ have been assigned some of the most ! vexatious problems of international relations which will be considered at meetings to be held in the following . six capitals: Montevideo. Lima. San ‘ tiago de Chile. Rio Janeiro. Buenos Aires and Washington, at dates to be determined by the chairmen. What the conference hopes to make , a reality is a common code to be ad- ; ministered by a great International I supreme court. CLAM GETS PICNICKER’S $5 How Louis Ludden of Winsted, Conn., ' Lost a Gold Piece and Found It in a Shell. Winsted, Conn.. Aug. 15.—Louis Lud den, member of a clambake party here, stood beside a barrel of clams which was partly covered. In taking some j matches from his trousers pocket, he j pulled out a $5 gold piece, which | dropped into the barrel. The barrel was emptied, but no coin was to be found. In due course of time the clams, after being washed, were placed in a 1 steamer with other sea food. When I the man who lost the gold piece got i his portion of clams, he found his lost coin reposing in a shell with a steamed clam. Aged Artist to Wed. New York.—-John C. Gillet, an art ist. aged seventy-seveu. told his friends that he is soon to marry Mrs. Rachael Kendall, four years his junior. large, fine garden, one that will come near physical standard and has good ■ health, you may give her my address A standard woman in stature is 5 feet 4 to 5 inches. When arms are ex tended the measure from tip to tip of fingers would be equal to height. She should have chest measurement near 35 inches and weigh near 130 pounds. Must not have shoulder blades promi nent like wings or have short legs from knee down. Must not have pug nose or thick lips. Upper lip must not be short with upper teeth projecting. "She must not have lop-ears. Rather fine bair and fine features preferred, and a well developed chin. Good cooks and good nurses are generally preferable and make best wives." The name ot Dr. A. P. Burns, Janes ville, Wis.. appeared on the envelope "Is this a good town?" “Naw, rotten! 1 had t’ree jobs of- ' sered me in one day." THE W. S. MYRICK CO. MILLEDGEVILLE, GA. Our buyer, Mr. W. S. Myrick, is now in New York, and has picked up quite a bargain in ladies’ one-piece dresses in light weight serges in all of the staple colors. We would advise you to call in at your earliest conveni= ence and look them over. We are also showing advance styles in MENS CLOTHING. Norfolk Suits for Men will be especially strong this season And we would like you to see our line NEW GOODS Are arriving daily in all departments And we would like for you to look them over The W. S. Myrick Co. (INCORPORATED) MILLEDGEVILLE, GA. Everything for Everyone to Wear SI.OO A YEAR.