Newspaper Page Text
2 CENTS
EVERYWHERE
PAY NO MORE
250,000 RUSSIANS ARE TRAPPED!
POLICE ASKED TO HUNT MISSING BUSINESS MAN
BULGARIA OPENS DOORS TO TEUTONS
Observers Says News Means Defi
nite Alliance of Balkan Na
tion With Central Powers.
LONDON, Sept. 20.—Bulgaria has
removed all restrictions on the pass
age of merchandise through that
country to Turkey, according to a
dispatch from Sofia, received here to
day.
This means, according to observers
of the Balkan situation, that Bulgaria
has definitely allied herself with Ger
many, Austria and Turkey.
. .
Bulgaria Will Ask
.
More From Allies|
(Exclusive War Dispatches of The
Atlanta Georgian and Lon- ]
don Daily Times.)
ROME, Sept. 20.—While no definite
decision has been reached, it is: be
lieved the Bulgarian Government will
reply to the Allies’ note saying the
concessions promised are not suffi
cient to bring about a complete unifi
cation of the Bulgarian nation.
The Buigarian authorities do not re
ject the concessions now offered, but
ask still further concessions,
'
Gibraltar Cholera
Report Is Squelched
(Erclusive War Digpatches of The
Atlanta Georgian and The
London Daily Times.)
MADRID, Sept. 20.—Germans and
the pro-German press give publicity
to a report that cholera is raging In
Gibraltar, with the idea of endeavor
ing to isolate that stronghold from
Spain and the foreign shipping.
The report has absolutely no foun
dation. With the exception of a few
isolated cases of typhoid among in
valided troops from the Dardanelles,
the town of G Itar is the healthiest
on the whole southern coast of Spain.
Japan to Pay for '
. . .
Russian Munitions
|
— 1
(Erclusive War Dispatches of The
Atlanta Georgian and The Lon- \
don Daily Times,) }
TOKIO, Sept. 20.—A week ago Rus
sia approached Japan on the question
of payment for war materials. As a
result of a consultation between the
Government and banks, a group head
ed by the Yokohama Specie Bank will
take up the treasury bilis
.
Hops Hop Over Line:
'
Will Hop Back Again
I.OS ANGELES, Sept 20 Hop Li,
Hop Leu and Hop Yet all made a griev
ous mistake and were sent to the coun
ty Jail, where they will remain until
the Federal immigration authorities find
time to send them back whence they
came. Down near Calexico, right along
the line, they decided to give an enter
tainment All three were rather adept
at juggling and soon a crowd eollected
beneath their torchlight Then when
the crowd was considered big enough
one by one the three Hops attempted
to slip away and across the line An
immigration inspector saw them and
took them to jall
CAR HITS NEGRO GIRL.
EfMle O'Nell, a negro girl, daughter
of Rev. 1. T. O'Nell, No. 303 Love
street, was struck by a street car at
the corner of East Georgia avenue
and Connally street Monday morning
Bhe was taken to Grady Hospital. Her
tujuries are likely to be fatal,
Wife SSOO t
I[4 0
Q . .
uit Him
|
GAFFNEY, S. C., Sept. 20.—After
Just two months and two weeks of
married life, the Rev. J. L. Ellis has
given his helpmeet, whom he swore
“to love, cherish and protect until
death do us part,” a check for SSOO
on condition that she relinquish all
claims upon him of whatsoever na
ture and leave the city within five
days never to return. Papers to this
effect, drawn by an attorney, have
been duly signed and witnessed.
Shortly after the death of his first
wife, the Rev. Mr. Ellis decided he
was in need of a second helpmeet to
soothe and comfort him in his declin
ing years. He expressed his views to
a young woman friend, who, being of
a benevolent disposition, wrote a let
ter of Introduction for the minister to
an elderly woman of her acquaintance
in Rock Hill, 8. C. The future Mrs.
Ellis answered with a letter direct to
‘the groom-to-be. Within a few days
the Rev. Mr. Ellis went to Rock Hill
to call, and, sitting on a grave slab
in the cemetery, in the moonlight, the
couple plighted their troth,
Three weeks after the introductory
!letters were exchanged the Rev. Mr.
Ellis made a second journey to Rock
iHiH. at which time the marriage took
place. The bride and bridegroom
were welcomed to Gaffney on the
wedding night bv one of the largest
crowds that ever assembled at the lo
cal railroad station upon any occasion.
At their home they were serenaded by
brass bands and by enthusiastic
friends firing pistols.
The god of love and the dove of
peace falled to take up their perma
nent abode in the Ellis home, how
ever. In a short time complications
developed and grew, assuming pro
portions of such consequence until the
family hearth was not : pleasant
place for eithier Mr. or Mrs. Ellis,
GREENHUT'S SISTER DIES.
l PEORIA, ILL., Sept. 20.—Mrs. Rosa
Hirsch, aged 68, a sister of J. B. Green
hut, of New York, is dead at her home
here.
And sti 5 '
~And still ano{h?'/
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:f’r THE GEORGIAN AND SUNDAY AMERICAN welcome |: || |
‘ the frequent reports of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. e|| |
3| This for TWO reasons:— ‘ ‘ l
S FIRST—BEING IDENTIFIED WITH THE KA. B. C, |/ :l |
:' GIVES PRESTIGE TO US—TO ANY NEWSPAPER. IT i |
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;’ CULATION FIGURES OF THE DAILY GEORGIAN AND :f?
3l| HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN STEADILY INCREASE, 5 !
ol For example—our figures for the second quarter show:— f;ii
o 5
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¢ £ 58 20 ' 5
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H 16,006 More Circulation Than The Constitution s
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lo
f: SUNUAY AMERIGAN £ 83;838
/ | 31,359 More Circulation "han The Journal 2
b 3 48,228 More Circulation Than The Constitution S
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7% Y LEADING NEWSFAPER 535 Ve L SOF THE SOUTHIAST AYEER
VOL. XIV. NO. 41.
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Lo S 1
Secretary to Wilmer Moore Not
Seen Since Saturday, When
He Was Called From Office.
L \
C. W. Martin, 35, secretary to \\'H-‘
mer L. Moore, of the Southern States
Life Insurance Company, was called
from his office in the Candler Build
ing Saturday morning. He put on
his coat and hat and went out into
the corridor
He has not been seen since, so far
as his relatives can ascertain.
.~ The police have been asked to in
vestigate.
i Mr. Martin i® well known in At
}]:mt.\ business circles as a talented
%\v‘unx: business man, Mr. Moore made
him an important factor in the oper
ation of his company, and he is well
regarded in every way. He has a wife
and two children, and lives at No. 185
Holderness street
This is the description given the po
lice
Age, 35 Height, 5 feet 10 inches.
Weight, 150 Hair, light Complex
ion, fair Blue eyes Saturday he
was wearing a blue serge suit, light
hat and black shoes
“This is a most baffling occur
rence,” said Mr. Moore Monday mern
ing. “I know of no reason or cause
that might account for Mr. Martin's
disappearance. We are doing all we
can to find him, but so far we are ab
| solutely without clews.’
ATLANTA, GA., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20. 1915
BTTe SP T R
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“Fritz” is the name the soldlers of the Allies have given to the latest
air creation of Germany. He is a big brute, anywhere between 80-foot
and 100-foot span, and driven by two Mercedes engines of 100 horse
power to 150 horsepower each. T hese engines are placed in two nar
row fuselages, while in the center is a nacelle which containg seats
for three men (two gunners and the pilot). The big machine remains
aloft on patrol duty for six hours, his engines throttled down to their
utmost limit, and thus economizing fuel. Should an enemy appear, the
great watcher, some 8,000 feet to 9,000 feet above the Allies’ trenches,
suddenly accelerates to full speed. From the ground the giant en
France Has Found Her
Soul, Says Kipling;
Nation a Unit in War
This is the final article in a nota
ble series by Rudyard Kipling, pub
lished in-The Georgian and The Sun
day American.
By RUDYARD KIPLING.
(Copyright In U. 8. A, by Rudyard
Kipling, 1915.)
LONDON, Sept. 19.—"“This is the
end of the line,” sald the staff of
ficer, and kindest and most patient of
chaperons. :
It buttressed itself on a fortress
among the hills. Beyond that the
silence was more awful than the
mixed noise of the business to the
westward,
In mileage on the map the line must
be between 400 and 500 miles. In
actual! trench work it is many times
that distance. It i{s too much to see
at full length.
The mind does not readily break
away from the obsession of its entire
ty nor grip Its detall. One visualizes
the thing afterward as a white-hot
gash worming all across France be
tween intolerable sounds and lights
under ceaselss blasts of whirled dirt.
Nor is it any relief to lose one's self
among wildernesses of piling, stoning,
timbering, concreting, wire work or
incalculable quantities of soll thrown
up raw to the light and cloaked by the
changing seasons as the unburied are
cloaked. Yet there are no words to
give the essential simplicity of it
| It is a rampart put up by man
Against the beast, precisely as in the
Stone Age. Ir It goes, all that keeps
us from the beast goes with it. One
ilul this at the front as clearly as
one sees the French villages behind
the German lince Sometimes *he
BIG TWIN PROPELLER BIPLANE NOW IN USE
people steal away from them and
bring word of what they endure,
Characten'stics in Fighting.
Where rifle and bayonet serve, men
use those tools along the front; where
the knife gives better resuylts, they go
in behind the hand grenades with the
naked 12-inch ) iife. * Each race !s
supposed to fight In its own way, but
this war has passed beyond all known
ways,
They say that the Belgians in the
north settle accounts with a certain
dry passion which nas varied very
little since their agony began. Some
sections of the English line have pro
duced a soft-volced, rather reserved
type, which does its work with its
mouth shut,
The French carry an edge to their
fighting, a precision and dreadful
knowledge coupled with an insensl
bility to shock unlike anything one
has imagined of mankind.
To be sure, there has never been a
like provocation, for never since the
Aesir went about to bind the Fenrls
wolf has all the world united to bind
the beast.
The last I saw of the front was Alan
Breck speeding back to his gun posi
tions among the mountains, and |
wondered what delight of what house.-
hold the lad must have been in the
old Jdays.
Then we had to work our way, de
partment by department, against the
tides of men behind the line. Sup
ports and thelr supports, reserves nnd
reserves of reserves, as well as masses
in training--they flooded towns and
villages. When we tried short cuts
we found them in every bylane,
‘ Have you seen mounted men read
i Continued »- P~ 2 Coalumn 4
Copyright, 1906,
By The Georgian Co.
gines can be heard as they suddenly roar into full power, and the enor
mous machirne can be seen literaliy to SwWoop across the gky. It carries
two machine guns able to fire in any direction. The Germans for a
model have taken the Itallan Caproni machine, and knowing that their
pllots (as man) have been beaten by the French and British aviators,
they have set themselves to improve the machine. In this they have
certainly succeeded, énd these bat tle-aeroplanes, as Germany calls
them, are very dangerous enemies, and have temporarily challenged
that superiority in the air that has for months been a noticeable fea
ture of the struggle of the west.
. .
‘Shiners’ Run ‘Still’
.
On Biltmore Place
ASHEVILLE, N. C., Sept. 20.—
Chancing detection by the rangers
who regularly patrol the Vanderbilt
estate at Biltmore, near here, “moon
shiners” have been engaged for the
last few weeks in making Illicit whis
ky in a secluded spot within sight of
the Vanderbilt mansion.
Revenue men on Sunday ralded the
still, destroying a large quantity of
beer and whisky and cutting the still
to pleces. Evidently it had been op
erated within 48 hours. The opera
tors had to work almost in the path
of the rangers who patrol the estate.
No arrests were made.
.
Arrest Is Made in
.
| Broad Street Fight
1
Investigations by the police result
ed 'n the arrest Monday of John Cir
prano in connection with a street fight
Saturday night in front of a fruit
stand at No. 18 South Broad street.
In the fight Pete Nicholas hit H. H
Minch, a printer, over the head with
an iron pipe. Ciprano Is a peddier,
and lives at a South Pryor street ho
| tel
Unusual Interest was attached to
the fight by the fact that a crowd of
several hundred men pursued Nicho
lag until he was rescued by the police
and taken to the police station,
Von Kluck Recovers;
Is Guest of Kaiser
' BERLIN (wireless via Tuckerton),
Sept. 20.-General Von Kluck has re
covered from his wound and recently
virited the Kailser at Pless General
Von Kluck will be given command of the
Sliesian landwehr. The Kalser has con.
lfcrr«l upon Field Marshal Ven Macken.
sen the Order of the Black Eagle, the
highest decoration In his gift, for his
Noteworthy attainments on the eastern
tront y
PAY No
MORE
L SN -
2 CENTS
l |
nnocent, Says
Archibald,
rchioald,
(By International News Service.)
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 —~James F
J. Archibald, the American corre
spondent whose passjorl was revoked
because he carried the letter which
resuited in the American demand for
the recall of Dr. Constantin Theodor
Dumba, Austrian Ambassador to the
United States, arrived here to-day on
the Holland-American liner Rotter
dam ‘
Federal officers went down the bay |
Lo meet Archibald at Quarantine, but |
he was permitted to stay on the an‘r.‘
despite previous reports that he would |
be arrested and hurried up the bay nn‘
atug |
‘I got into this thing unwittingly
and innocently, and hope to get out ufl
It the same way,” said Archibald on
shipboard When Archibald landed
he contented himself with this state
ment
“If any prosecution ls contemplated
against me, it will be most unjust, as
I am absolutely innocent. 1 unwit
tingly took a letter on my way over.
That caused all the trouble. 1 did not
know that the letter contained what
it did. When I learn the particulars
of my case | shall make a more ex
tensive and formal statement.”
The reporters who Interviewed Ar
chibald gained the impression that he
expected to profit by the sale of the
promised “extendsd and formal state
imm,l o
' e ——
THE WEATHER AT THE FAIR,
l BAN FFRANCIBCO, Sept. 20.--The
weather in San Francisco yestarday
was warm and clear Maximum tem-
AFTERNOON
EDITION
——
(By International News Service.)
. BERLIN, Sept. 20—While Beriln
gave itself up to rejoicing to-day over
the capture of the Russian strong
hold of Vilna, military experts pre
dicted the early capture of the Rus
slan army of a quarter of a million
men that . has been trapped by the
Teutonic forces in the railway trian
gle whose points are bounded by Vil
na, Lida and Molodetschno.
A complete German victory in that
region, together with the shattering
of the Russians' third line of defense,
Is declared to de only a matter of
days,
A decisive engagement—one of e
Ereatest battles yet fought in the east.
lern theater—is raging east of Vilna,
where the forces of General von Eich
horn, General von Scholtz and Gen
eral von Gallwitz are engaged. These
armies, part of the group of Field
Marshal von Hindenburg, are co-oper
ating with the army of Prince Leopold
of Bavaria.
Victory for Von Hindenburg east
of Vilna means not only another re
tirement for the Russians in Poland,
but also the separation of the Rus
sian armies from the southern forces.
. Although the Russians have
achieved some local successes in the »
Volhynian triangle, on the Gallelan
frontier, operations there are regard
ed as of secondary importance. An
~other great German victory in Poland
‘“HHM relleve the Russian pressure on
the Galiclan frontier, and already the
Russians on the Strypa River, in
Galicla, have been fought to a stand
still by the Austro-Hungarian forces.
Fall of Dvingk Expected.
The capture of Dvinsk and the re
tirement of the Russians from thelr
advanced positions on thelir third line,
to which they retired from the Bug,
Is expected to take place this week.
The mighty German offensive, which
in;m been under way sines the first of
| May, is now nearly twenty weeks old
!qnl still shows no signs of having
spent its force, With the eapture of
‘ln;rm.;\, two possibilities are opened
and the general staff may choose
ic ther one
| 1. A campaign to take Petrograd.
\ 2. The establishing of a German
front on the Dvind (Duna) River for
the winter,
Although the Russian forces of Gen
eral Ivanoff have receivad fresh sup
plies of ammunition and the re
formed ranks are dellvering furious
counter attacks from strongly pre
‘;mru-d positions, the German advance
‘u,nvlnnu successfully. North aad
south of Molodetschno, particularly in
the region west of Vileiki, the fighting
Is of the most sangulnary character,
with the Russians suffering enormous
);”s-m The Russians are trying to
plerce the German lines, but all thelr
eTorts have been fallures
Long Object of Drive
Vilna's strateg! importance was
first recognized by Napoleon on his
invasion of Russia. The city has
170,000 inhabitants and lles upon the
| great Warsaw-Petrograd Rallway.
’k,‘,, many weeks it has been the obe
| ject of a terrific offensive drive by
b Germans, Field Marshal von Hine
| enburg personally directing the op-
Icu'.n' mns
| Rallway lines from Kovne, to the
'.] rthwest, and Rovno, to the south,
ilno enter the city Viina has beon
l-. ¢ headquarters of the Governos
Genern! 5! Lithuania and s stronge
Iv fortified, although It was not cone