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FIFTEEN YEARS
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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
WILSON CRITICIZED
BRITISH ffl? IN
ffIMOTIONS
WASHINGTON. May 11.—Presi
dent Wilson’s hitherto unpublished
war instructions to the officers of the
Atlantic fleet, given in person on the
quarter deck of the flagship Pennsyl
vania on August 11, 1917, and bid
ding them "throw tradition to the
wind,” strike the word prudent from
their vocabularies and "do the thing
that is audacious to the utmost point
of risk and daring,” were made pub
lic here today by Secretary Daniels.
The president spoke as commapder
in-chief of the navy and at a time
when the German submarine menace
was uncurbed. In laying the text of
his remarks before the senate naval
investigating committee, Secretary
Daniels said they showed the “bold
and vigorous” policy the president
had outlined for the navy.
"Do not stop to think what is pru
dent for a moment,” the president
said. “You will win by the audacity
of method when you cannot win by
circumspection and prudence.
“I think that there are willing ears
to hear this in the American navy
and the American army because that
is the kind of folks we are.
“There will have to come a new
tradition into a service which does
not do new and audacious and suc
cessful things.”
The president also expressed his
dissatisfaction with progress then
being made toward crushing the sub
marine campaign.
"We are hunting hornets all over
the farm and letting the nest alone,”
he said. “I am willing for my part,
and I know that you are willing be
cause 1 know the stuff you are made
of—l am willing to sacrifice half the
navy Great Britain and we together
have to crush that nest because if
we crush it, the war is won.”
The British admiralty had met
American suggestions with what
amounted to statements that “it
never had been done,” the president
said, adding:
Doing Nothing System
“And I felt like saying .well, noth
ing was ever done so systematically
as nothing is being done now.’ ’’
In opening his address to the offi
cers, Mr. Wilson said in part;
“I have not come here with malice
prepense to make a speech, but I
have come here to have a look at you
and to say some things that perhaps
may be intimately said and, even
though the company is large, said in
confidence.
“This is an unprecedented war and,
therefore, it is a war in one sense
for amateurs. Nobody ever before
conducted a war like this and. there
fore, nobody can pretend to be a pro
fessional in a war like this. Here are
two great navies—not to speak of
the others associated with us—our
own and the British, outnumbering
by a very great margin the navy to
which we are opposed and yet cast
ing about for away in which to use
our superiority and our strength.
“Now, somebody has got to think
this war out. Somebody has got to
think out the way not only to fight
the submarine but to do something
different from what we are doing.
“I wish that I could think and had
the brains to think in the terms of
marine warfare, because I would feel
then that I was figuring out the fu
ture history of the political freedom
of mankind. I do not see how any
man can look at the flag of the Unit
ed States and fail having his mind
crowded with reminiscences of the
number of unselfish men, seeking no
object of their own, the advantage
of dynasty, the advantage of no
group of privileged people, but the
advantage of his fellow men, who
have died under the folds of that
beautiful emblem. I wonder if men
who do die under it realize the dis
tinction they have.
Regrets Role
“There is distinction in the priv
ilege and I for my part am sorry to
play so peaceful a part in the busi
ness as I myself am obliged to play,
and I conceive it a privilege to come
and look at you who have the other
thing to do and ask you to come and
tell me or tell anybody you want to
how this thing can be better done;
and we will thank God that we have
got men of originative brains among
us.
“We have got to throw tradition
to the wind.
“There is no other way to win, and
the whole principle of this war is the
kind of thing that ought to hearten
and stimulate America. America is
the prize amateur nation of the
world. Germany is the prize pro
fessional nation of the world. Now,
when it comes to doing new things
and doing them very well, I will back
the amateur against the professional
every time. He knows so little about
it that he is fool enough to try the
right thing. The men that do not
know the danger are the rashest men.
“Please leave out of your vocabu
lary altogether the word ’prudent.’
Do not stop to think about what is
prudent for a moment. Do the thing
that is audacious to the utmost point
of risk and daring, because that is
exactly the thing that the other side
does not understand, and you will
win by the audacity of method when
you cannot win by circumspection
and prudence.”
Sims Opposed Barrage
A counter-charge that establish
ment of the North sea mine barrage
was delayed six months because of
the opposition of Hear Admiral Sims
and the British admiralty, was made
before the committee by Secretary
Daniels in presenting the second
part of his reply to the officer’s
charge that the navy department had
unnecessarily prolonged the war
through failure to co-operate fully at
first with allied naval forces. The
barrage. Mr. Daniels added, was the
most effective measure that could
have been taken to check the sub
marines and was wholly an Ameri
can idea.
The secretary also charged that
Admiral Sims had attempted in his
testimony to rob the navy of credit
for this project and to give it to the
British. <
The plan was conceived, he said,
in the bureau or ordnance at the
navy department and urged on the
British admiralty for six months be
fore it was accepted. During this
time Admiral Sims constantly dis
couraged and opposed the idea, he
added, and when Admiral Mayo was
sent abroad and finally convinced
the admiralty of the worth of the
scheme and the necessity for adopt
ing it. Admiral Sims attempted to
convey the impression that the pro
ject had Jjeen delayed while the Brit
ish attempted to get the American
navy department’s approval.
Tried to Rob U. S. of Credit
“Admiral Sims attempted to rob
America and the United States navy
of the credit for initiating this great
achievement and to give you the im
pression that it was a British plan
which our navy merely assisted in
carrying out, though it originated in
the navy department, was proposed
and urged by us for half a year be
fore we could induce the British ad-
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HELEN,
A romance that “bloomed through
the mail,” according to Mrs. Helen
Gallatin Welsh, will result in her
marriage to Count Jean von Zenuek
ens, in Paris next July. The count
is a Belgian whorh the bride-to-be
met In Paris five years ago. Mrs.
Welsh has been divorced twice.
OBREGON ELUDES
FEDERAL GUARDS
WEARING DISGUISE
MEXICO CITY, May 10.—(By As
sociated Press.) —General Obregon
told American guests today that he
have taken Mexico City a week
earlier, but preferred to wait and give
President Carranza a chance to re
sign and avoid all disorder and blood
shed. Throughout the entire rebel
movement, he said, there had been
virtually no bloodshed and disorder
in any part of the country.
On April 11, when Obregon became
convinced that President Carranza
was menacing his personal liberty,
Green and Howard said the general
told them, he decided to escape. An
attempt was being made, he is quot
ed as saying, to involve him through .
forged documents and proceedings
against the rebel leader Roberto Ce
judo. Eluding police agents, who
surrounded his home on the night of
•April 14, he journeyed to Iguala dis
guised as a brakeman with the aid
of a conductor. Carranza’s private
car was on the train.
At Iguala Obregon met Governor ;
Figueroa and General Maycotte, his
followers. After a conference be
tween the three, according to the
Americans’ narrative, the revolu
tionary movement immediately be-,
gan to gain ground, sweeping tri
umphantly to Seacatecas, Michoacan,
Tabasco, Guerrero, Morelos, Puebla, .
Chiapas and Oaxaca and virtually
every state in the republic has be- I]
come affected, entirely or in part.
Ruins Yields $10,500
As Man Quits Prison
When Herman Coopersmith was
released from the penitentiary at
Caldwell, N. J., where he had served |
six months for distilling potent and |
illicit applejack on his chicken farm, ;
near Ridgewood, he went straight to |
the farm.
He found the house merely an
ash-filled pit. It had burned three I
months after his conviction, neigh- I
bors told him, and his wife and two I
sons had moved to Passaic. It was ■
dark when Coopersmith reached Pas- I
saic. His wife told him she had
kept the burning of their home from
him for fear the misfortune would
be more than he could bear. All the 1
chickens perished, she said.
Coopersmith scarcely waited for her
to finish her explanations. Then he
said he wasn’t interested in the fate
of the chickens, but what of the
safe?
“Oh, that rusty iron box?” exclaim
ed the wife. “I suppose it’s some
where in the ruins.”
Bright and early yesterday Coop jr
smith was digging in the ashes of
his former home. The safe came to
light, and its combination yielded to
his touch. He extracted twenty-one i
new SSOO bills and an insurance pol
icy on the burned house, and went
back to break the news to Mrs.
Coopersmith.
Bride Goes to Jail
To Be With Husband
PHILADELPHIA. A bride of
of four days refused to leave her
husband, a paroled convict whom
she married to reform, and went to
jail with him.
Before her marriage the young
wife was Miss Julia Myers, Long
Island City, New York.
The husband is Frederick Van
Coleman, a vaudeville actor, New
York city. He is being held in S6OO I
bail for alleged theft of a fur neck
piece for his bride.
“I told my folks what a fine fel
low Fred is, and I can not discredit I
him by deserting him. I’d rather!
stay here and work and be near him
and wait for him to get out of jail,” j
she said.
Magistrate Oswald tried to per-1
suade her to take the chance he of- !
sered.
“No, sir,” she repeated. And so I
she, too, was held in S6OO bail as an i
accomplice in the alleged theft.
Husband and wife climbed into the I
motor patrol to be taken to jail. She
snuggled confidingly into his arms
and he wiped her tears away.
miralty to approve it and although
four-fifth of it was composed of
American mines designed and con
structed. in America and transport
ed 3,400 miles overseas and laid by
[American vessels,” Mr. Daniels told
the committee.
The secretary said close comrade
ship had existed between the Amer
ican and British navies during the
war, despite Admiral Sims’ attempts
to create the impression that there
was lack of harmony and co-opera
tion.
Admiral Sims’ charges of unpre
paredness before the war were not
justified, Secretary Daniels assert
ed, declaring that in July, 1915, he
ordered the general board to study
and recommend plans for a “consist
ent and progressive development.” 1
As a result of this study the policy I
was evolved, he said, that the Unit- I
ed States must by 1925 have a navy I
equal to any other in the world. He
approved this policy and the direct
result was the five-year building pro- I
gram of 1916, the naval secretary |
said, an “epoch-making measure.” I
President Wilson fully approved the I
policy, the witness asserted.
"This is conclusive evidence that |
the navy department long before war I
was declared was alive to the im- |
portance of preparedness and vzas i
taking every step toward that end,"
he declared.
The vision of the president, Mr.
Daniels asserted, established the fact
that he was "in advance of some
. officers, vocal now but silent UudV’/i
G. 0. P. PEACE
MOTION CALLED
UP BY LODGE
WASHINGTON, May 11.—Opening
the fight against the Republican
plan to end the state of war by
joint resolution of congress, Senator
McCumber, of North Dakota, a Re
publican member of the senate for
eign relations committee, declared in
the senate today that such a step
would bring dishonor upon the na
tion as it would involve desertion of
America’s associates in the war.
The senator sad he could support
nether the house peace resoluton nor
the substitute of Senator Knox, Re
publican, Pennsylvania. He advo
cated instead his resolution propos
ing restoration of commercial rela
tions with Germany, but said he
realized that it would be useless to
press this measure, “where the lines
of division between the two factions
in this body have been cemented by
partisanship and set and hardened by
time.”
"The majority on this side of the
chamber,” he declared, “purpose to
force the acceptance of the reserva
tions adopted by the snate without
the hhange of a single word or let
ter.
“The majority on the other side,
in obediende to the will of the pres
ident, have resolved to make the
League of Nations a political issue.
“A Colossal Blunder”
“This administration has made
many mistakes, but all will become
insignificant compared with the co
lossal blunder of daking the presi
dent’s individual and autocratic
stand on the League of Nations a
political issue.
“If this were the only issue the
president would stand alone in his
determination to subvert the will of
the nation to his individual convic
tion on this important national ques
tion, and his support would be con
fined to those fe wstates where rev
erence for Democratic doctrines de
clared by the head of that party be
comes a religious tenet.
“But you cannot make the League
of Nations the real issue in this cam
paign. If it were the real and only
issue I would be greatly concerned
for the success of my own party.
“The thought of the people of this
country is engrossed with the com
plxities that surround us. We are
this moment surrounded by a thou
sand imminent dangers demanding
our immediate attention and solution.
We stand almost helpless while debts,
national, state, municipal and indus
trial, are piling mountain high. We
behold the hours of idleness of our
people ever increasing, production
dangerously decreasing, currency be
coming more and more inflated, the
yoke of taxation ever growing more
greater and more galling, the prices
of all necessities of life ever advanc
ing. We are living in the- midst of
strikes and threats of strikes.
Socialism Poisons Air
“The very atmosphere is poisoned
with Socialism’s infectious breath,
while anarchy, fevered by hate and
envy awaits only the opporthunity to
work a reign of hell which today is
consuming agonized Russia.
“The war is not the cause of this
threatening situation. The American
people, like the people of the great*jr
part of Europe .today are the victims
of the new system of purchasing po
litical support by enacting purely
class legislation.
“The American people are not blind
as to the source of our troubles. They
are looking for relief.”
Senator McCumber challenged
many of the contentions of Senator
Knox made in the former secretary
of state’s opening address last week
in support of the resolution. While
agreeing that congress has the power
to repeal resolutions declaring a state
of war, he denied vigorously that
peace actually existed. Only by a
treaty, he said, can questions arising
from the war be settled. •'
Senator McCumber said the peace
resolution would effectuate Senator
Knox’s purpose of separating the
League of Nations covenant from the
treaty of Versailles.
“There are others,” he continued,
“who see a political advantage in
passing a resolution they all know
will be vetoed by the president. They
say it will put him in a hole. Without
passing on the propriety of such a
purpose one may be justified in ask
ing: ‘Why waste all this time and
energy in attempting to deepen the
already bottomless hole?’ ”
Many great questions arising from
the war, including German property
and American claims, would be left
unsettled by a declaration of peace,
Senator McCumber declared, insisting
that America should stand by the al
lies in enforcing the armistice and
the treaty.
Youngest Girl to Face
Murder Trial in State
ST. LOUIS, May.—Ursula Brod
erick, 16, who killed her stepfather,
Joseph F. Woodlock, in their home
here April 14, 1919, was found guilty
of murder in the second degree by
a jury in Juvenile Court here and
her punishment fixed at 1) years’
in the Missouri penitentiary.
The Broderick girl shot and killed
her father. T. J. Broderick, in 1916,
but a coroner’s jury exonerated her
on the plea that she fired the shot
in defense of her mother.
The girl had always maintained
that Woodlock was annoying her
when she shot him. At the inquest
following his death, she testified
that he had attacked her the night
she killed him. She is the youngest
girl ever to face a murder charge
in this state.
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4 teaspoons Royal Baking ffijy W Wl Iffil T
Powder wk RS' Sift flour, salt and baking pow-
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% cup milk or half milk ana ___ __ . - _ - dry ingredients stirring until |
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Sift together flour, baking pow- Ps !Wi ™ board and roll out % inch thick. g
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POST CHALLENGES
PALMER TO BRING
ALIEN TO COURT
WASHINGTON, May 11.—Louis F.
Post, assistant secretary of labor, to
day challenged Attorney General Pal
mer to start criminal proceedings
against Roberto Elia, who, the de
partment of justice informed Post,
was “actively connected in the bomb
plot of June 2, 1919.”
In a memorandum designed for the
attorney general, Mr. Post said:
“If the alien was in fact actively
connected in the bomb plot there
must be laws under which he can
be indicted or held as a witness in
criminal proceedings or both, under
the direction of the attorney gen
eral.
“In such an important criminal
matter there ought to be no depor
tation of the alien until he has been
duly punished under our laws for his
crime. To deport him would be to
frustrate the operation of the crim
inal law. This department has no
other authority than to deport. It
can not lawfully hold any alien in
prison indefinitely. It must release
the innocent and deport the guilty.”
Elia is one of two alleged anar
chists arrested by the justice de
partment and held secretly for sev
eral weeks in secret service head
quarters in a New York office build
ing. The other alleged anarchist re
cently committed suicide by jump
ing from the fourteenth story of the
office building.
At the request of the justice de
partment Mr. Post today increased
the bail of Elia to $15,000. He warn
ed the justice department that the
increase would hold only temporarily
to give them time to start criminal
action as he suggested.
According to Mr. Post the deporta
tion warrant on which Elia was ar
rested was issued by the labor de
partment on February 26. Elia was
not turned over to the labor depart
ment, however, Mr. Post said, until
May 2, a few hours after Elia’s com
panion killed himself.
Paterson, N. J., Has
135,866 Population
In Census of 1920
WASHINGTON, May 11.—The cen
sus bureau announced following 1920
population results:
Paterson, N. J., 135,866; Hackensack,
N. J., (co-extensive with New Barba
does township), 17,667; Marlborough,
Mass., 15,017; Collingswood, N. J.,
8,714; Minis, Mass., 1,485; Medina, N.
Y„ 6,237; Walton, N. Y„ 5,425; Otta
wa, Kan., 9,018; Reidsville, N. C.,
5,333; Lumberton, N. C., 2,691; Mc-
Mechen, W. Va„ 3,356; Cameron, W.
Va„ 2,404; Chester, W. Va„ 3,283;
Berwick, Pa., by wards: Ward 1,
3,426; ward 2, 2,170; ward 3, 4,024;
ward 4, 2.561; total. 12,181.
Increases since 1910; Paterson,
10,266, or 8.2; Hackensack, 3,617, or
25;7; Marborough, 438, or 3.0;
Collingswood, 3,929, or 81.7; Mil
lis, 86, or 6.1; Medina, 554,
or 9.7; Walton, 337, or 6.6; Ottawa.
1,368, or 17.9; Reidsville. 505. or 10.5;
Lumbertan, 461, or 20.7; McMechen,
435, or 14.9; Cameron, 744, or 44.8;
Chester, 99, or 3.1.
The population of Jackson, Tenn.,
will be announced tomorrow at 10:30
a. m.
Feared ‘Dresden China’
Girl, So Married Early
The marriage of Miss Eugenia M.
Terry, daughter of Mrs. John D. Ter
ry, of 30) Central Park West, New
York, and Clifford R. Hendrix,
wealthy stock broker, took place re
cently. But it was held at the Cal
vary Baptist church instead of at
the home of the bride, and the cere
mony was performed at 5 o’clock in
stead of 6 o’clock.
Fearing that Maud Ceballos,
known on the musical comedy stage
as Mona Desmond, who brought a
SIOO,OOO breach of promise suit
against Mr. Hendrix, might try to
upset the plans, the family of the
bride resorted to a subterfuge.
Announcement was purposely
made in the newspapers that the
wedding would be at 6 o’clock at 300
Central Park West. But at 6 o’clock
Miss Terry had become Mrs. Clifford
R. Hendrix and had already started
on her honeymoon in a limousine. It
was said at the bride’s home that
the precautions were unnecessary,
as the “Dresden China Girl,” as
Miss Ceballos is ’known, did not pre
sent herself at the Terry apartment.
Mr. Hendrix drove up to the Ter
ry home shortly before 5 o’clock and
took Miss Terry and her mother to
the church, where the ceremony was
immediately performed by the Rev.
George Chalmers Richmond, of St.
Louis.
Stephens Farmers
Plow by Lamplight
TOCCOA, Ga„ May 11.—The latest
thing to be seen in Stephens county
is plowing by lamplight. The farm
ers have got so far behind until they
are obliged to plow at night. Since
the rains have held up, and the
ground got in condition to be plowed,
the farmers are putting in every
minute of the day and until near
midnight plowing. Several farmers
of Stephens county have pur<based
farm tractors equipped w’th lights,
and they can plow by night a’most as
well as by day. .They enjoy the nov
elty of it, aside “from the benefit they
derive from it in the way of catching
up with the work on the farm.
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1920.
OCCUPATION OF
CONSTANTINOPLE
PART OF TREATY
WASHINGTON, May 11. —(By the
Associated Press.) —Permanent occu
pation of Constantinople, which is
left under the sovereignty of the sul
tan, by a small international force
of allied troops, is provided for in
the treaty which was handed today
to the Turkish representatives at
Paris. An official summary of the
treaty baa been received in Wash
ington. ,
A similar international guard is
provided for the garrisoning of the
straits as a guarantee of free pas
sage through the Dardanelles and the
Sea of Marmora to ships of all na
tions.
An interallied commission of con
trol at Constantinople, consisting of
the representatives of the principal
allied powers, will exercise supervi
sion over the execution of the clauses
of the treaty and with the aid of the
interallied troops enforce its terms.
Although President Wilson sug
gested that part of northeastern
Thrace be given Bulgaria, Thrace in
its entirety is awarded Grece.
Smyrna and the hinterland, ex
tending approximately to a depth of
100 kilometers and a breadth of 200
kilometers, is given Greece under lim
ited soverignty. Greece must formu
late, in consulation with the League
of Nations, a plan for control of the
terirtory and at the end of two years
the population will decide by vote
whether this arrangement shall be
continued or whether the territory
shall be annexed by Greece.
Both France and Italy relinquish
claim to mandatory powers over Cili
cia and Adalia, reserving only spe
cial economic privileges.
Boundaries of Mesopotamia and
Palestine, the mandates over which
are awarded to Great Britain, and
Smyrna, ceded similarly to France,
are left to be determined by special
commissions.
The Armenian settlement is left
open for future negotiations and de
cision.
Radical Socialists
Demand Platform
With More “Pep”
NEW YORK May 11.—Demanding
limitations cf citizenship and dicta
torship of the laboring classes, the
Illinois delegation of the Socialist
party’s national convention today
opened an aggressive minority fight
for the “radical principles” of inter
national sovietism in the 1920 plat
form.
Struggling to defeat the “conserva
tive” forces of Morris Hillquit, four
Chicagoans—J. Louis Engdahl, Sam
uel H. Holland, William F. Kruse
and Irving St. John Tucker—battled
to substitute their program for that
given the convention yesterday by
Hilliquit and his platform commit
tee. The keynote of the Illinois sub
stitute platform was sounded in its
preamble, which read:
“The Socialist party summons all
who believe in this fundamental doc
trine to prepare for a complete reor
ganization of our social system,
based upon public ownership of pub
lic necessities, upon government by
representatives chosen from occupa
tional rather than solely from geo
graphical groups in harmony with
our industrial development, and with
citizenship based on service, that we
may end forever the exploitation of
class by class.”
New York won the election of
Algernon Lee to be chairman of the
convention for today. Lena Morrow
Lewis, of California, was elected vice
chairman.
When the question of the adoption
of a Socialist platform came up on
the floor Cameron H. King, of San
Francisco, moved to refer the Hill
quit document to a committee to
“put more pep in it.”
Bandits Battle Bank
Officials, One Killed
EAST ST. LOUIS. Ill.—(Associat
ed Press.) —Eight men held up and
robbed the Drovers National bank
here of $19,000. Officials of the
bank fired on the robbers, killing
one and capturing another.
The robbers were compelled to
abandon the money and a stolen au
tomobile they had used when the
bank officials fired on them. They
returned the fire, hitting nobody.
A posse pursued the robbers about
a mile and wounded two of them.
The men drove up to the bank and
six heavily armed, entered. The bank
employes and about a dozen cus
tomers were herded into a private
room. Two of the men covered them
with revolvers while four ransacked
the tellers’ cages. The other two
kept watch outside.
Willingham Buys
Toccoa Compress
TOCCOA, Ga„ May 11.—The old
Atlantic Compress and the one op
erated by E. Schaefer & Co. have been
sold to the Willingham Compress
company, of Macon. The Willingham
company is reported to be strong
financially and will operate both con
cerns.
The old Atlantic was purchased by
the Inman company, of Atlanta, some
two years ago, and closed down. It
threw quite a number of men out of
employment. The sale is received
with rejoicing throughout the town
and county. The purchase price was
not reported.
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