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PLOT SEEN IN Q—REEK WAR MOVE
British Loss First 9 Months of War, 250,000 Germans, 260,000 a Month
U.S. VIEWS OF BORDER WARFARE CLASH
Foremost Military Writer in Europe.
Professor Bellor here makes an in
®resting analusis of the German and
Avustrian losses dizcussed from a
different angle than in his formes
article, and based largely on reports
of the British losses. which he cxti
mates at 250000 in the first nine
month
The gene conclu of tae
Prench hig ymmand from cap
tured de ments, stories of prisin
ers, et mad n July 31 wa that
during the first five months f the
war the Germas; ranch of the Cen
tral A & A e w suffer .
manent losses at the rate :
& mont!
\\ Naleve 7), rate » " : . eer
maintained, f the struggle as, it
anything, increased in Intensity, take
ing t eastern and western f
combined The vigor Te e ir
Polan has n
the intermitt ¢ e
western oI
Was e
e fromt thers ‘
of ver hen ¢ {
in t P nor f Ar
s
of 3¢ '
ma
Satne ¢ .
Would Give Loss of 3,800,000
" th as na
. . ’ na
« ‘ ! ]
Fre o v :
. re .
tar of
Bs ' ! Al
-~
: . £V 1.
gone - ta
' ' ”
. give .
¢
$4
s .
f oa
e n
he
. .
e
Far More evere | Germang
Cant od an Paoe Lolyme §
Do you remember A MAN- AND HIS WIFE, the thrilling serial that enthralled thousands of Geofiréxan reagers?
A new story, WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE, by the same author, starts on the Magazine page to-day. Do not miss it
(By International News Service.)
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 26.—Cap
tain Franz von Papen, military at
tache of the German Embassy, said
to-day he did not mean to apply the
phrase “idiotic Yankees" to the peo
ple of the United States. He ex
plained that these two words found in
a letter carried by James F. J. Archi
bald, referred to the publishers of a
New York newspaper.
“The letter which has caused so
much discussion was airected to my
wife,” sald Von Papen. “Frankly, 1
think the action in making public the
letter of a man to his wife ig decided
ly bad form. The British authorities,
when they found the letters upon the
person of Mr. Archibald, pounced
upon those two words (idiotic Yan
kees) that have made all this trouble.
“They have published only an ex
cerpt of my letter, thus changing its
meaning entirely.
“My wife, or anyone else, reading
my letter from start to finish, would
have gathered that the expression
‘idiogic Yankees' refor-ed to the pub
livhers of a New York newspaper
The newspapers have been caling us
conspirators and other objéctionable
epithets. After certain of our private
papers had been stolen this newspa -
per grew extremely vehement. | dealt
with these publications when writing
to my wife, but the British did not
publish one word about those other
parts of my letter™
Hoosier Candidat
(By International News Service.)
HAMMOND, IND, Sept. 28.—A
change from baby kissing to fox trot«
ting is to be required henceforth of
candidates tor office in Indiana. Re
publicuns of Hammond, Whiting, East
Chicago and Indiana Harbor will give
2 barbecue and ball on the lake front
here to-mwrrow, and Senator L. Y
Sherman, of llinols, and former Vice
FPresident Fairbanks= are to speak. Al
State candidates are to be present
and are expected to fox trot with the
pretty girls at the South Bay Hotel
New Orleans Aerial
Race to Buenos Aires
NEW ORLEANS Sept. 28 Arnniad
Kruckman an & *yndicate will stage a
racre between New Oricans and Buesos
Nifew 1 the spring the start wing
made from here probably on Mard! Gras
day The purse will be for 10000, of
which New Orisans will put up 26,
609, the South Americans having guar
anteed the remt
The best long dlstance fiyers are ex
pected take part
“Dress Up’’ Week
Everyone will
“dress uptomake
Atlanta the best
dressed city in
America.
“Dress Up" Section of The
Sunday American
Out October Third.
— THE
I ARNITEA.. 2T ¢
e A o) A g B
A N Ae =l |
T | LEADING B/ SPAPER (oA iRN bes oo s -
SEWSPAPER TS/ VA WO J¢) OF YTHE SOUTHREAST Y& %
g i
VOL. XIV. NO. 46.
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Sept. 26.—A sharp
difference of opihion as to the re
sponsibility for the American border
situation which yesterday resulted in
the slaying of ardother American
trooper and the wounding of two
others, exists between the State and
War departments. The War Depart
ment very flatly asserts that all the
information in its possession Indicates
that much of the trouble is traceable
directly to Carranzista soldlers. mar y
of whom are uniformed The State
Department advices Indicate that
nuch of the trouble has been started
by Texans firing across the border
In this connection the Carranza agen
here to-day issued a calegorical
ienial that any Carranza troops wers
iXed up in yesterday's fighting at
Progres In e Brownsville distreicr
The feeling in army circles is so
tter that officials 1 not be sur
Prise 3 repr s be Allempied
Y BouNd £ the troobs mow on tha
: er ”
he IVE Are re of being used a
\rgets 1% A} Kers sald 1
eading army officer to-day
!.‘. ! m 1 e porder i al on
eral Felipe Angeles has deserted Villa
N T per 1 ] y Angele
N ste De; eceived .
. . f the Inter: nal Ne .
. 5 a 1 1) ersons Aere
in ! ' T e { ANAnes
1 . s Thur ‘ 1] tha
* .
Mexicans Train Guns
'
On American Border
By JOMN W. ROBERTS.
Sta¥f Correspondent of International
News Service
! NS LE TEXAS Sept
\ ¢ Mex . wi attacked the
\ I . ors & 3 grese yes
: ped a " o i irande
re kille e tain Anderson's
Neoar g 1 tie Tere sent out ¢
y : ' . in troog
. Kk part fghting s
. : s : ! » -
' eared nfter ¢
. el . s Sasy Three of
‘ w ' i These
. ' 2 B Bradenberg
and Ar and K
N \ At '.’
e
ey .
A ' ¢ ' es
Lorraine Cross for
Baker Girl of 14
's . «
- . i i t
] ‘ T " g
‘ .
. s As
ATLANTA, GA., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1915.
e e st B
Villa to Flee
With Loot, I
ith Loot, Is
(By International News Service.)
EL PASO, TEXAS, Sept. 26.—Car
ranza agents in El Paso informed the
International News Service to-day
they obtained evidence that General
Francisco Villa has made plans to
seek refuge in the United States with
great funds which he has acquired
during his mastery of Northern Mex
ico.
“Villa knows his cause Is lost,” said
one, “and I’r is now trying to get
into the United States with millions
of dollars which he has extorted from
Americans and Mexicans alike.”
The American Government will Le
asked to prevent Villa bringing his
alleged loot Into the United States.
The Carranza agents clalm to have a
complete list of banks where Villa has
been depositing funds for many
‘months.
} . T T ——
Edison Says Horse
.. . .
- Nears Elimination:
\ .
~ His Battery toDo It
| s
! WEST ORANGE, N, do Hept. (6.1
18 the beginning of the end of the
| horse. Horses In the near future wiil
only be used as ornaments Their com
mercial value will be nothing ™
Thomas A. Edison laughed at his
plant here as he surveyed anothe- of
his accomplishments—a storage battery
for delivery wagons Before half a
hundred experts he expiahed the
mechanism,
They stood Awestricken as the light
horseless wagon rolled around the yard
Edison has reached an agreement
with a vehicle company for the distri
bution of the wagons Before “tering
upon the agreement he stipulated that
the wagons must be sold at such
price as to place them within easy
reach of the tradesman who could t
supplant his horse and wagon with an
eXpensive automobile delivery wagon
Gen. Madero To Be
Prosecuted by U. 8.
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON Sept. 26 —~Confir
mation of the arrest near Marfa
Texas, by United States troopd «of
General Raoul Madero and half a
dozen of his staff was received by
General Scott, chief of staff of the
Army, to-day. The general wired in
structions that Madero and his ol
cers be turned over to the immigra
tion officials for prosecution for lle-
Bally entering the U'nited States
General Scott said reports that Gen
eral Felipe Angeles and his brother
Edward have deserted Villa are not
confirmed. His reports say they, with
half & dosen others. have been i §oe
pointed commissioners to the Mexi
can peace conference’
Felipe Angeles is in this city walt
ing to confer with Secretary of State
Lansing In his behalf the Viia
agency here to-day characterized the
report of his desertion as an “absurd
fabrication
.
Von Bernstorff Again
.
Predicts Settlement
(By 'nternational News Servies. )
NEW YORK, Sept. 24.--Count von
Bernstorft, German Ambascador to the
United States, belleves (he submarine
controversy between his country and
the Washington Government = L
settled very soon
*“I will go te Washington In a few
days and ho'd an interview with Se
retary of State Lansing.” sald the Ger
man Ambassador to-da I am able
1o Basure the American people h
matter will be arransed quickly and
satiafactorily for both sides I have
been in constant communication et
Beriin, and | regard It as & matier of
Yéry short time until the controversy
is ended Torever *
Charged with participation in a
conspiracy to kill Marion Kirby, 24,
& Government mwonshine informer,
who was shot in the back two weeks
ago with loads from a double-barreied
shotgun, Carthorn and Will Mulkey,
brothers, living In Gordon County,
four miles north of Oakland, were
odged Saturday in the Fulton Tower
in default of ball. W. D. Mulkey,
68 years old, father [ the Mulkey
rothers, and two other sons, Tom
and Willard, were let out on bond Fri«
Gay by United States Commissioner
T. W. Kellogg at Jasper Bud un'li
Gill allahan, brothers, living in the
same nelighd Iwod, also were put un.
ler band to await the action of the
United States District Court In At~
lanta
Will and Carthorn Mulkey were
_brought to the Tower by Deputy Mar
shal Ton irtis. of Canton, Cherokes
iy, w with Deputy J. H. Pen-
Art M ’ s admitied that
' od the tents of a shotgun
to K - sck after a sigh A
" ne K . tather
nue ) . It » " the Long
! . ) ' o 1 mar and
n were at ' ft 4
' ns « e story, whaer
s re enticed to the Mulkey home
e o =4 o wriade Wher
K Arr ¢ - 1 reed L. and
" he ' "W A =& ¢ disarmead
!~:' - » K 1
b jow e fromn e place
. tor g wed rd
‘e 2 ; >
’ - . efe ks
T. R. to Run on Moose
Ticket,Says Murdock
; { the Progress
A . - . ¢ o
‘ . . ’ f o
Merchant, Stricken
| N *
With Apoplexy, Dies
'“ & é
S ————
Coj ’l‘lfhl. 1008,
By ’lrh- eorglan Co.
m———————
Dr. Carrel’s Wife Wins
. War Cross for Bravery
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\\ & ———————— X . o
DR. AND MRS. ALEXIS CARREL
LONDON, Sept. 26.—T0 the wife of
Dr. Alexis Carrel has been awarded a
war cross for devoted nursing in the
Complegne Hoapital under shell fire
Mre. Carrel and Dr. Carrel ware
married in Paris In December, 1913,
She was Mme. de 1a Malrie, widow of
a French officer. Before her first
marriage she was Anve de la Motte,
daughter of the Countess de la Motte,
She and Dr. Carre! first met seven«
teen years ago in the Pasteur Insti
tute in Paris. Ehe was interested ,n‘
Red Cross work. Later she knew hin
in New York. and followed his 'O-1
searches in the Rockefeller Institute
there
Dr. Carrel also is & native of Fran ‘e,
He won a Nobel prize for medical re
search in 1912, Kince the war he has
been In milltary hospiials In France,
. .
Child Burns to Death
. .
Playing With Match
AFHEVILLE N, « Sept. 34
While hier father siept in an adjolning
room and her mothor was Just around
the house & few steps away, Willle
Hampton, the S.yvar-old child of Mr,
and Mre. W. K Hampton, of Liscester,
near heres, set fire o her dress with a
matel. and burned to death before
help could rench her
The child was plaving with some
matches, ore of them sMriking unex
pectedly Her father did not hear her
riew
Aviator Falls 1,000
Feet Into Water Tank
Mt .
By Internations! News Servies.)
OMAHA, SEBR. Sept. 26 ~Francis
Hoover. a Chicago aviator, was alive
to-day afier a miraculous escape from
donth. In & Aight at David Clty, Neb,
yesterday, Hoover fell 1000 feet with
““.‘:n’::zd in & big water tank,
.
and sscaped uninjured
2 CENTS P4{Y No
From Quoti
Gospel
The Court of Appeals held Satur
day that 1t was ‘na ropriate for a
Judge to cite the Gowpel as a criterior
in charging = ’ and that the
Arge » P ered was In error
In the atne aase, Braxiey ve the
tate, appe ed from Baldwin Coun
iy, the « " ! that the judge aiso
erred in admitting to testimony reves
ations of . efendant made to his |
rve stating that they were as |
sacre At those elween man and
wif
Hraxiey was ted with three
. A giar Milledgeville
Me . o A now tria
: 1
Wills Church School
.
Copyright Interest
RALD t \ aif |
' ' the i ) f her
‘ . ouent hed
v " " 5t her
" . tes tha . ot !
tor Missionary 8 i ]
st ! = !
- t . arary resuits
Miss Me ' " ? me to do
. aptist mission work Ine
Yool ’ ¢ ~n wnere » hatar
! 4 ¥ o 1 the ] ot ey
' snd the M n-Dilar
M g and Loan Fund of the Home
p it - 2 A ta The Wam
. s e ™ »n ety , the "'.!
Pantist . Raeigh a 8 alse re
e e e
FIRST
EDITION
cniindii y !
(By International News Service)
PARIS, Sept. 26.—Mobilization of
the Greek army has failed to reas<
sure French officialdom as to the Bal«
kan situation. Intimation ¢ hat &
coup d'etat is feared at Athens, by
which Greece will be enrolled among
the entente allies forces, were made in
SOMe quarters.
Georges Clemenceau, former Pre«
mier of France, is admittedly susple
clous of King Constantine, brother-ine
law of the Kaiser,
“What is King Constantine going e
do with his troops?” said Clemencean
to-day. “I fear Premier Venizelos
would find it very embarrassing to
answer this question. Information
has reached me from Athens that the
eminent statesman (Venlzelos) is ift
tle disposed to act. This perhaps is
the result of the check the King for
merly inflicted upon him. There Is
no reason to belleve that the King's
[pollry has changed.”
Greek King Warns
.
Ruler of Bulgaria
‘ LONDON, Sept. 26. —Diplomacy's
'm-nn:rt in the Balkans continues
| Though the Near East is an armed
lvrn;-. the Allies are mainta ning their
efforts to keep Bulgaria from Joining
| Germany According to latest re
ports, King Constantine of Greece has
sent a personal letter to King Ferdi
nand In Sofla, warning him that Bul-
Barias participation in the war on
the side of the Teutonic allles will
force Greece into the entente camp.
This letter, says a dispatch from
Bucharest, was sent from Athens aft.
er the Itallan Minlster to Greece had
conferred with Constantine and Pre
mier Venizelos. Telegrams have been
exchanged by Venizelos and Premier
Radoslavoff. There are unconfirmed
rumors that these relate to the ces
sion of Macedonia to the Bulgars, &
move which prooably would at least
Keep Bulgaria neutral
Reports of anti-Teuton outbreaks
at Bucharest reached here to-day.
There has never been any doubt as te
e attitude of the Roumanian people,
but the fallure of the Bucharest Gov
ernment to f« w ltaly into the war
has caused suspicions that Roumanis
Was leaning toward the Germans
e recent victories of the Russians
n Volhynia and Galicia may bave
their effect on Bucharest officialdom,
Owever
.
Attack on Serbia
. .
y
Called ‘Final Fight
(Spevial to The ,H:»mm ieorgion
and The London Dally Times.)
BERLIN, Sept. 2¢ The newspapere
are 4 of discussion regarding
he Halkan situation and “the offen~
sive against Serbla While the de
e . florts to compromise Bul-
Zaria nt &, the most interesting
ire those prociaiming the ime
& netior f the central
oy ¥t fTurkey
. : fHer a.r : agebiatt BAYY
. ¢ supposed that the first
ed the German artillery
e the Berbian frontier will have
' noted wit pacial Joy by oux
ol ally, Turkey They are a greet
£ fop the Turkish people and the
¢ Turkish arm
The Berlin correspondent of The
Hamburger Fremdenblatt, in a long
arth inder the hoad The Final
Fight hegine
The shelis which have been huried
seross the Da e Nty * the most
nportant ar . Ape Lhe ast chap.
ter of the was
After saying that attack will be
80 violent as t ery apeed
! - ' res. stance, the
Writer BPoces
But is ty Serbia's fate still tn
’ ' v tance Thers Ia
" et it is & matter
- e ! . A the Dardanelies
2 is ' er of Egypt and the final
‘ . the war Eve the victory
s recedes into the backeround
view the importance of the shots
Fre ' Day . ! lay marks
i & of the fight for the
stantinople.”