Newspaper Page Text
rAMOUS 3T YVES
1S WAR COURIER
Former Marathon Runner Has
' .
Many Thrilling Adventures
in France.
. By H. S. WALES,
International News Service Staff Cor
respondent.
PARIS, Oct. 16 (by mail to New
York).—Henri Saint Yves, the former
marathon runner and now a dispatch
bearer in the French army, has re
turned to Paris for a special 24-hour
furlough, granted him because of a
particularly perilous mission which he
carried out in the course of his dutles
in the trenches in front.of Saint
Quentin,
While trying to carry orders from
the advanced French trench line to
a French machine gl\m crew whten
had established itself in a shell hole
in the middle of “No Man’s Land”
halfway between the opposing lines,
Saint Yves was “spotted” by two Ger
man machine gun crews, also holding
shell holes. *
They opened a cross fire on the for
mer long-distance runner and he
dropped into the nearest shell hole,
which was almost full of rain water.
Saint Yves remained in the water,
with just his head above the surface
to enable him to breathe, for five
hours, or until after darkness. Then
he crept out and made his way to the
French machine gun position, deliv
ered the orders to the lieutenant in
charge and made his way to the
trenches again.
In Hospital Ten Days.
Saint Yves had to go to a hospital
for ten days, however, as the shell
hole water in which he had been im
mersed so long was ‘“gassy,” having
assimilated the polsonous properties
of the gas shells from both sides
which had been rained down in “No
Man’s Land.” Several hours after
Saint Yves emerged from the shell
bole the poisonous water got in its ef
fect.
Saint Yves was wounded in the leg
last May, but has entirely recovered
from that, and asserts he will be able
to run as well as ever if the war ever
e¥ds and he gets back into civilian
life.
The marathon runner has applied
for a transfer to the aviation, and nis
superior officers have indorsed his re
nurst. He expects to be caleld to an ‘
aviation school to begin his training
at any time. Saint Yves will try to
be brevetted as a fighting pilot for.
flying in single-seater machines. ‘
“I hear that poor old Tom Longboat
has been killed with the Canadians up
near Lens,” said Saint Yves. “Well,
Tom was a wonderful runner, but no
man ever lived that can run as fast
a 8 the Boche bullets. .
“Our sector at the front—opposite
Saint Quentin, where the Germans re
treated to the Hindenburg line—is
supnosed to be quiet all the time, but
we had a little fieht up there a-few
weeks aro that was pretty lively 1
was assigned as a dispatch bearer,
carrving messages from the colonel up
to the lire, hecause the German bom
bardment had ploughed up all the
ground behind our first and second
line of trenches and torn up the tele
granh and telephone wires, and their
artierv had also wrecked a. lot of our
wireless,
Ceveral Close Shaves.
“F had several close shaves in
crossing out in the open. with the
Germsn snipers potting at me from
1,600 meters away. A couple of blg
shells dropned pretty near me, too. but
then you get used to shells. whereas
machine guns and rifles always annoy
rou,
. “Pretty soon I hope to be in the
wviation service and after 1 get bre
vetted as & pilot and have some expe
rience of flving at the front, I'm going
to apolv to be sent to America as an
instructor for United States army
aviators.”
The wife and family of Saint Yves
are now at Dienne. Contrarv to gen
eral belief. Saint Yves was never a
waiter in a Paris case., Born |ln
Rouen. he lived and worked there as a
bicvele renairman prior to going to
the United States eleht years ago as
a long-distance runner.
SMALLEST MAN IS REJECTED,
FUT.TON. MO, e . —Atley Waest.
of Mokane. 25 vears old. and probahly
the sm=alliest man in the Sonth. renorted
for examination and was rediected. Waat
Is 545; inches hieh and weighs 67%
pounds He passed all tests but weight
and height.
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Digestion of a Sailor if You
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Dyspepsia Tablets.
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Once you learn the remarkable action
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)
| Btreet . Vbes
Cityh ccoveve.or. State. cviiieerenes
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN e A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes el B ks, NUVENMEBER ‘- b
M'CORMACK’S ART |
TO AID RED CROSS!
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JOHN McCORMACK.
John MecCormack went rabbit
hunting near Atlanta Wednesday,
taking along a gun he prizes almost
as much as the costliest violin in his
collection, He emerged from his room'
at the Piedmont Hotel not long after
sun-up, testing his 33,000-a~nlght'
voice with a bit of “Mavis” whiohi
made the bellhops stop hopping for!
a moment. He consumed a man's-!
sized breakfast and came out to be:
interviewed on the Peachtree steps.
while photographers wound up their
cameras and took a few shots, ‘
Mr. McCormack was in high good
humor, a derby hat and golf trousers,
besides laced hunting boots and other |
things. Grady York, soda fountain,
magnate and local sportsman, was|
waiting with a rifle knowing nothing
of the speed of Georgia rabbits.'
Everybody was on tiptoe to get off.
But the reporters wanted to know |
about the report that the world‘sl
most famous concert tenor was to
sing for the Red Cross fund.
“Fifteen times,” said Mr. McCor
mack. “The first concert will be De
cember 16, in New York; then one in
Washington, when the President can
attend, and then a cross-continent
tour.
“Listen,” he said, “and tell other
artists to take notice. Every cent of
the ticket sales goes te the Red Cross.
‘Every cent. We pay our own travel
ing expenses, hotel bi'ls, everything.
The only reason I mention that is
that 1 don't want you to mix us up
with those benefit affairs where the
charity gets only what's left over.”
~ “But a tour like that will absolute- !
1y ruin your income for the year,"‘
suggested one of the reporters.
. McCormack’s blue eyes flashed and
‘the Irish brogue returned te his volce.
~ “And what are the boys in khaki
giving up?’ he returned. ‘“Hasn't
everyhody to give up something, large
or small, in war time? Answer me
that?”
~ He was asked about the recent re
port that he was going to France to
}sing for the boys at the front.
| “Wherever the President thinks I
'can do most,” he said. “But they
'say, ‘lf you could sing jn the front
trenches, where the men are lonely
and -in need of cheer, it would be
fine. but back of the front there is
plenty of amusement.’ But I will do
whatever the country wants.”
Mr. McCormack sang Monday night
{n Nashville to an audience which
overflowed the big Ryman Tabernacle
at $3 a seat. He laughed wher Dan
A. McGuirk, manager of the local en
gagement, told him the Auditorium
probably would be spld out, for he
remembered the size of the building
from last year’'s audierce.
“Mr, McCormack is in excellent
volce, never better,” said his man
ager, Charles L. Wagner. “The two
days’ rest in weather like this shoula
put him in great shape, and if the
audience is as responsive as it is
everywhere John will sing his head
off—anything the crowd wants.
“I do not think last year’s Atlanta
audience fully awoke to Mr. McCor
mack’s manner until the concert was
half finished. Atlanta had been ac
customed to opera, to singers whe
yell at the top of their voices. John
never vells, but sings perfectly nat
‘ural. and that makes a difference.”
Mr., McCormack’s concert is set for
Thursdey night, and the Tranksgiv
ing crowds probably will fill the Au~
ditorium, Fhe football teams and
hundreds of their rooters have taken
blocks of seats. Mr. McGuirk said
that all reservations not paid for and
ltakon up by Wednesday night would
|be resold Thursday.
If your millionaire
relatives wouldn't
even pay your $lO
--week board bill,
-would you do what
Patricia does in
Kathleen Norris’
new serial, “Birth
right,” starting in
December GOOD
HOUSEKEEPING?
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Georgia Land Owners to Holdl
Live Stock Rally in Mcln-
S—
tosh County. l
T i
The Georgia Landowners' r\bbokli\-i
tion will launch a campaign to re- |
establish the she¢p industry in Geor- !
gia, at a big live stock rally to be held |
at Townsend, in Mcintosh L‘.uum),]
December 7, 1918. 'The rally wili be
made the occasion for a cclehrzmnnl
of the release of fourteen additional
counties from State and Federal cat
tle tick quarantine.
J. A, Delfeiger, of Wyoming, one of
the most prominent leaders in thel
cattle and sheep industry in the
Northwest, will address the meeting
and hclp in the organization of the !
campaign.
The address of welcome is to be
‘delivercd by Governor H. C. Stuart, of
Virginia, on behalf of the chrgiu‘
Land and Live Stock Company, Lm(i]‘
' Governor Hugh M. Dorsey will be one
of the principal speakers. |
. Other prominent persons who will
‘attend are J. J. Brown, Georgia Com
missioner of Agriculture; Senator S.
C. Townsend, of St. Marys; Repre
sentative George B. Travis, of Dublin;
Representative W. T. Staten, of Val- ‘
.dosta, chairman of the tick comm:t.
tee of the Georgia Landowners' Asso
ciation; Dr. W, M. McKellar, inspector
in charge of tick eradication of the
United States Bureau of Cattle In
dustry; Dr. Peter F. Banhsen, State
Veterinarian; A. K. Semmons, promi
nent live stock grower of Cogdell; Da
vies Warfield, president of the South
ern Development Organization of Bal
timore; Hon., Gifford Pinchot, of
Pennsylvania; Mrs. Nellie Peters
Black, president of the Georgia Fed
'eration of Woman's Clubs.
Zooo Animals Observe
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—The eagle may
think he is the most patriotic form of
animal life, but he has nothing on the
bears and birds and things at Lincoln
Park.
The bears at Lincoin Park observe
meatless day. in fact, eatless day, ‘every,
Sunday and their Monday morning
grouch is most pronounced. Every day
is a wheatless day with the bruins. They
get nothing but rye loaves which have
been damaged in the- making.
‘““And the Government's making rules
about the feeding of seeds to %irds,"
said Cy DeVry, keeper of the animals.
““There isn’'t a bit of waste in our feed
ing system nowadays and if we cut
down the rations any more the animals
are going to begin to get thin and tem
peramental as Russian dancers.”
“When do the bears hibernate?” De-
Vry was asked.
DeVry replied, sadly and patiently, as
though the question and answer wecere
old stuff to him: *“Bears in captivity
never hibernate.”
Despite the curtailment of their ra
tions and the fact that all good bears
should be tucked away in a hollow tree
cuking their paws at this season of the
year, the Lincoln Park bruins gallop
around their cages like colts in spring
time, and when the bread cart comes
along and gives them four loaves of
rye bread each they holg a bear jubilee
Milledgeville Man
Made 2d Lieutenant
MILLEDGEVILLE, Nov.:+: 28-—ln
publishing the roster of Georgia young
men who were commisgioned at Fort
| Oglethorpe, the name of Hugh Ector
‘Andrvws, of Milledgeville, appears to
{have been left out. Mr. Andrews was
| commissioned as second lieutenant
'of field artillery, and ordered to re
iport at Camp Pike, Ark., December
15.
.
All Courts Adjourn
0 anksgivin
ver Thanksgiving
When the Fulton County courts—
Superior, City and Municipal—ad
journed Wednesday afternoon they -
were declared off duty until Friday
morning,
The desire of judges and others to
enjoy a Thanksgiving dinner with
nothing élse on their minds was the
cause. The courthouse offices will
ciose'at noon Thursday.
'sß
- For Palmer's Bureau
| 00l
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—A Mitch
ell Palmer, alien property custodian
announces lhe&; pointment of Movritz
‘Rosontlml. of Wew York, as general
counsel for this department. Rosen
}th?n formerly was a prominent mem
ber of the Chicago bar. He will be
'ass]stvd by a number of American
lawyers who have volunteered their
lservicus. Amoag them are James K.
McCloskey, of Pittsburg, and W. C,
tL‘ulemun, of Baltimore,
1 . . ‘
)All Saints’ Choir |
. .
- To Repeat Recital
So successful was the recital given
by All Saints choir a few weeks ago
that arrangements have been made by
Choirmaster W. E. Arnaud to repeat
the recital Sunday afternoon at 4
o'clock.
A different program, including an
thems dedicated to this celebrated
choir, will be sung. The public is in
vited to attend.
.
Republican Leader
Mann Is in Hospit
a spital
l BALTIMORE, MD., bv. 28.-—For
the purpose of subjecting himself to
Ia thorough examination, Representa
tive James R. Mann, of Illinois, Re
publican floor leader of the House of
Aepresentatives, entered as a pa
{ tient at the Johns Hopkins Hospital
| here today.
Carter Made Chief
Of Militia Bureau
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—Secre
tary Baker this afternoon appointed
Brigadier General Jesse Mcl. Carter
chief of the militia bureau of the War
Department, succeeding Major Gen
eral William A. Mann, who commands
the Rainbow Division of National
Guard troops in the overseas forces.
———?F-“~_-; I TIIO pmey|
@ G
8 cue A
¥ Soldiers e |
iF Photographs |
\\» We are making a l"
/R specialty of soldiers’ N
4y photographs. Hun- » !
,‘}‘T dreds of satisfied fi i
}‘;“"\ customers tell the ! !
i tale of satisfactory (s i
25l workmanship and B3EY |
£ moderate prices. Sit- i
) tings day or night. !‘.
i Phone Ivy 5941, ;( ;
AN }
Shihngrse §
k HAYNES BLDG T |
mmzmtaununa b [
ROy |
LORE O (G 4 A
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Deadlock in Congressional Race
Seems Hopeless—Wright
Will Not Enter.
COLUMBUS, Nov. 28.—The Fourth
Congresisonal District convention
seems hopelessly deadlocked. The
delegates profess to be determined to
nominate one of the five candidates
who ran in the primary.
The convention recessed at 12:30 to
day until 2:30 o'clock for dinner. Gar
land M. Jones, of Coweta County, se
cured 14 votes for filve consecutive
ballots.
Resoluttons for a recess, during
which the delegates were to secure
the permsision of the different candi
dates to vote as their judgment di
rected, were lost wice. The effort was
made so the delegates could “get to
gether,” but a majority of the conven
tion ruled against this action.
At the berinning of the session this
morning several of the delegates made
addresses denouncing the idea of
running in a dark horse,
W. €. Wright, of Coweta County,
who is being spoken of prominently
as a dark horse, took the floor and
stated that he had been sent to the
convention to vot efor Jones, and that
he did not desire the nomination, but
that if he had he would have made
the race in the primary.
The speeches against the entrance
of a dark horse were greeted with
thunderous applause, and the conven
tion seems determined to name one
' of the candidates, it makes no differ
ence how long it is in session
SeT eTI S A ,/) 2 7
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She doesnt know her
own sweetheart |
MPOSSIBLE, you say! But suppose a danger
ous criminal with a wonderful knowledge of
surgery, could so remodel another man's face
as to make it line for line, feature for feature, a
counterpart of the countenance of the man loved :
by you—
Would you be deceived?
This is what happens to Doris Whitney in the
amazing mystery serial
®
‘Ghe Hidden Hand
‘ The 4 Star Serial
Written by Arthur B. Reeve, celebrated as the author of the fa
* mous “*Craig Kennedy’’ detective stories, and by Chas. A. Logue.
In it PATHE features the beautiful
DORIS KENYON
SHELDON LEWIS, ARLINE PRETTY and MAHLON
HAMILTON It has been produced the PATHE way to please
3 you. The mystery will grip you with the very first episode. The
thrills will startle you. You will find it rare entertainment.
See the First Episode December 25th at the Alpha Theater
Hidden
J fian’d *
Jheßig
CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—'He won't eat
what I cook,” declared a women in the
Id‘our( of Domestic Relations, the other
ay.
““She won't cook what I eat,”” husband
reglic'd.
Ars. Julla McQuire, head of the com
plaint department, solved the Solomon
esque problem by ordering them to eat
In & restaurant.
Hold Specail Ser ice%
Special exercises will be held at
the Decatur Metho@ist Church
Thanksgiving morning under the
auspices of the Epworth League.
A musical program will be given
and a free-will offering will be taken
for the poor.
Three-Inch Crawfish
Closes Big Factory
WHEELING, W. VA, Nov. 28—An in
significant crawfish, measuring 3 inches
in length, that became lodged in the
meter, shut off the supply of water for
/the big Laßelle Iron Works here, and
caused the big plant to close down tem
porarily, making idle 3,000 workmen.
~ The crawfish had traveled from the
river, through the pump plant to the city
reservolir, and through the water mains,
a distance of more than 3,000 feet, be
irure reaching the meter.
| y '
38,742,000 Pennies
Made in 20 Days
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—After a
month of extraorrfiinnry effort, the three
Government mints have practically over.
come the coin shortage.
There is gtill a shortage of 400,000
l The leading Theatres show this J
| Big 4 Serial. It's a PATHE |
i masterpiece. Don't fail to see it. |
PATHE
pennies, but this will be met within
the next few days. During the first
twenty days of November the mints
turned out 38,742,000 pennies, 8,149,000
nickels, 14,200,000 dimes, 8,304,000 quar
ters and 2,150,000 half-dollars.
: O u ‘1"; A §
can not g ¢ %
afford oSG
have thel AJ
ee » 9
4 {3
- -4 2
B?- %{ 5 \
nings
=
NEWE
Discovery
for Couchs e Colds
makes it unnecessary for you
to be annoyed by that dragging
cold in the head. When your
eves begin to water, when you become
i\'.‘,.erich an‘gi:b.cnfiou bfii‘in to sneeze,
?::»k;r“!.[;:r.rtmgfy forfls'o y:::em
coughSive . Kingaow Diovers
| . M‘l(i: ;?t lucly‘;?x‘: idt:'um‘u‘l;um
An Active Liver Means Health
If you want good health, a clear
complexion and freedom from Dizzie
ness, Constipation, Biliousness, Head
aches and Indigestion, take Dr, King's
New Life Pills, They drive out fer
menting and undigested foods and
give quick relieve. 25c, all druggists.
9