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5. MUNITIONS OUTPUT
REAGHES AMAZING FIGURES
(By internations! News Service.)
NEW YORK, Aprll 16.—Amazing
figures on the munitions supplies al
ready delivered to the United States
army and also contracted for were
glven out here by Celonel Samuel
Mcßoberts, chief of the procurement
division of the Ordnance Bureau
Here are some of the figures he
furnished to a startied audience at
tending o meeting of the National
Security League:
Contracts have been let for
2,600,000 rifles of the modified
Enfield design, and 1,060,000 have
been delivered on these contracts.
Springfield rifles are being pro
duced at the rate of 11,260 per
day. Six hundred thousand al
ready are on hand.
The United States is conduct-
Ing the greatest rifle manufac
ture ever known and there is now
an excess over immediate needs,
Contracts have been let for
§70,000,000 worth of shells of all
caliber.
Powder plants are turning out
650,000,000 pounds of explosives.
Smokeless powder is heing pro
duced by two plants at the rate
of 1,300,000 pounds a day.
« . Fve million shells were turned
High Medical Corps
Men Here Thursday
WASHINGTON, April 15.-—Camp
Greenleaf, ';t Fort Oglethorpe, Ga.,
Birmingham and Atlanta will be vis
ited by eminent authorities of the
Medical Reserve Corps thls week. In
the party will be Colonel George E.
Bushnell, department chief; Lieuten
ant Maxwell Moody, Medical Reserve
Corps; Colonel Charles U. Dercle, of
the French Medical Service; Major
Seale Harris, of the Medical Reserve
Corps of the army, and Colonel C.
K. Morgan, of the British Army Med
ical Service,
The party left here tonight and will
spend Tuesday at Camp Greenleaf,
will attend the patriotic meeting in
Birmingham Wednesday, and also the
meeting of the State Medical Soclety
of Alabama, and will go to Atlanta
next for the meeting of the Georgia
State Medical Society there Thursday.
All are on the program at Birming
ham and Atlanta, respectively.
R e .
MACCABEES TO MEET. :
Business of importance is an
nounced for the next review of Great
er Atlanta Tent, No. 10, the Macca-
Lees, Tuesday evening at 7:45 o'clock.
All sir knights of the tent have been
summoned by J, H. Kinman, com
mander, ‘and 8. W. Smith, record
keeper, for the occasion.
Artillery Recruiting Officer Gets
Many New Men During Past Week
John A Nichols Loudly Praises Dixie's Valiant Defenders
of Nation—Has Entirely Recovered From Illness—
Hopes to Soon Be Sent Overseas.
ROANOKE, VA, April 14.~John A.
Nichels, United States artillery, of the
army recruiting station in Roanoae,
is daily gathering recruits to the aid
of General Pershing, and is loud in his
praise of the pairictic spirit of the
voung men of this city, so many of
whom have volunteered their services
without waiting to be drafted.
Corporal Nichols is agaln in the
pink of condition, and hopes soon to
be sent oversea. He yesterday sald:
“I am feeling fine again. I was suf
fering from general debility ana was
badly run down. I had no appetite,
my blood was in r condition, I was
a 8 nervous as combo and could not
rest well at night,
“Fartunately, a druggist friena o 1
mine recommended that I take A-I-M,
ind consequentiy 1 am today as fit as
“ver, and have the same old ‘pep’ to
my step.
"I take pieasure in making this in
formation public for the ‘good of the
Wervice’—in that t may be the means
THFE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
out last month. This program,
however, is disappointing and is
due to shortage of fuel and steel.
One million three hundred and
fifty thousand automatic pistols
are being made.
Three billion two hundred and
fifty million rounds of small armse
ammunition have been contracted
for and 270,000,000 rounds were
delivered last month, The United
States already eclipses Great
Britain and France in small
arms ammunition manufacture,
Three hundred thousand ma
chine guns are contracted for.
Seventy-five thousand of these
guns are in the hands of the
American goldiers. By July 18,-
000 machine guns will be ,pro
duced manthly. The program
then wulfl&vo reached its desig
nated output. g .
More than $3,000,000,000 of con
tracts were let by the Ordnance
Department Jast year,
Colonel Mcßoberts told his audi
tors that there is no justice in the
attacks that have been made on (Jen
eral Crozier, chief of the Ordnance
Department.
“I want to say,” he declared, “that
General Crozier is the man who has
made the largest single contribution
of any man on the material side of
the war” .
Newton Farmers to
Raise Less Cotton
OXFORD, April 15.—Less cotton is
being planted in Newton County this
year than last, in spite of the pre
vailing high prices, and more food
stuffs will be raised. More pure
bred cattle and hogs afe being raised
and practically no sheep and goats.
All crops are being cultivated in
tenstvely.
No damage of consequence is ex
pected from the boli weevil, but a kind
of worm, destructive to cotton, has
been found. Farmers are at a disad
vantage in replanting their cold hurt
crops, on aceount of the scarcity of
seed. A great number of war gar
dens are to be seen throughout the
county,
.
‘Speedy’ Kimball, of
Atlanta, ‘Over There’
MACON, April 16.—Word has been
received here that “Speedy” Kim
ball, of Atlanta, known as the “Fight
ing Parson,” has arrived in France.
He was a private of the 1224 Infan
try. %
’or qualifying many young men whe
are anxious to do their bit, but who
are at present unfit physically.
~ “Aecid Iron Mineral is a wonderful
itonlc. I began to increase iln weight
and strength almost immediately, and
it has put good color back into my
cheeks again.”
~_ Corporil Nichols' statement is sim
ilar to that of thousands of other peo
ple throughout the country who, dur
ing the past thirty years, have testi
fed to the merits of this natural min
eral iron.
If you are run down, anaemic, worn
out, lack bodlly vigor, sleep poorly,
have no appetite or lack weight—go
to your regular druggist and get a
bottle of Acid Iron Mineral. Try it &
week or two, then, if it hasn't made a
new man of you return the battle anau
your money will be promptly refund.
ed.
- Or, better yet, ask the advice of
your family physician. See what be
lhas to say of A-I-M, and be guided
by he indgment -~ Advertisement
Letter to a Soldier
‘SomewhereinFrance’
By ALICE TWITCHELL CASWELL
M; Beloved:
our picture today looks like the pic
ture of a young god tramsfigured by a
eslestinl vision, hgsa, love, victory—
everything that js trlumphant shines in
your face. Have you caught a glimpse,
beloved, of the ultimate glory of the
end, when death and duty shall have
brought a wonderful resurrection of life
to this suffering world? How strange
it is to realize durlng this solemn pe
riod of history making that the battle
fields where you and ‘your comrades are
facing death and g&in ng glory will some
day, farther on, be the scene of pious
pllgrimages, undertaken by loyal hearts
from every corner of the globe, The
nameless graves of those who met the
great adventure with smiling hearts
upon those fields will recelve the hom
age of a million grateful hearts In years
to come—will be watered by tears of
tender gratitude. We are just begin
ning to realize over here what war
means and something of what it brings.
The honor roll in the dally paper is
growing each day, and the lists of
wounded are getting longer. So many
!rafodlen meet us on, evorf' side! And
it is the unexpected which se often
~assails us!
A family here in our village has two
sons! One enlisted last summer and is
walting now in a Southern camp for the
summons to go “over.” THNe other son
fs older, married, and with twe little
children, The parents’ hearts have been
torn with grief at the thought of the
f'ounger son and the danger he is fac
ng. While yesterdnfltcame word that
the older son-——thought to be so safe—
had died suddenly after two days’ ill
tfns. So does the s'rlm reaper gather
in his sheaves' So does the command
ing officer call hig recruits to the far
thest fromtier of all! So does death
wait upon us, not only on the battle
field, but in our peaceful homes. 4
In much that I am veading of the
war these days th-e.‘predomlnmlng note
seems to be the ace which religion
brings to the soldiers lacin? death, One
writer says that enemies of God do .ot]
E :
.
lSecond Retirement Is Compelled
in Renewal of German Attack
at Neuve Eglise.
Continued From Page 1.
From Messines through Wulver
ghem and Neuve Eglise, southeast of
Bailleuil, through Merris and west of
Merville, east of Locon, past Festu
bert and Givenchy rejoining the old
line at a point southwest of La bas
see,
The battle of Flanders continues to
be the center of the woerld's attention,
and for the time being almost a com
plete lull has set in along the south
ern flank of the German salient in
front of Amiens, where the French
are holding the line. There have been
intermittent artllelry duels there, but
no infantry activity to speak of.
The Germans have concentrated
heavy forces of reserves far north of
the Flanderg battle zone and there
were indications that a drive would
be launched at the Belgian army. In
the struggle between La Bassee Canal
and the Ypres-Comines Canal since
last Wednesday morning the Germans
have been concentrating their pres
sure in an effort to attain these im
mediate objectives:
Messines ridge, Bailleuil, Haze
'brouck. Lillers and Bethune,
Held on Charge of
-~
Passing Forged Order
VACON April 15.—Accused of
passing a forged money order at
Waycross and believed to be the man
that robbed the postoffice at Rock
ingham eighteen months ago, M. A.
Dunn hag been brought here by a
Deputy United States Marshal from
Greenville, 8. C. |
Dunn was out on bond, but it was
forfeited at the last term of United
States District Court at Valdosta.
' \
Macon’s Bond Quota
Nearly Third Raised
MACON, April 15. —lt is an
nounced that Macon has raised $570,-
000 on itg Third Liberty bond quota.
The allo&em for county and city
is 31,900,
A Clean Newspaper for Seuthern Homes
exist at the front. ‘The nearness of
death, I suppose, makes men as little
children, and they remember the God,
they prayed to at their mother’s knee!
But T do net believe it is the nearness
of death, or even the fear of it, tha§
makes man turn to God. Soldiers at
the front and civillans at the rear are
destined alike to die. The essentlal
thing is to realize it. Men's hearts turn
to God when they pause and think
Soldlers are forced to think of their des_
tiny with bullets whistling about them,
and so their minds instinctively revert
to the faith which has sustained the
aies and will not fail in fathful min
istry now.
Beloved, there is a big problem facing
our army of today. When you all come
back, covered with glory—with strange
medals for valiant deeds upon your
breasts, how are you going to live up
to the splendid re%«‘m] of bravery and
honor which you made for yourselves
on the battlefield? Will that imvinel
ble courage and self sacrifice and de
nial endure in a world of peace? With
you, yes: for you always had it; you al
ways will. It is part of you—inviolate—
but how about the others, wheo, from
pampered lives, or selfish lives, or may+
' be viclous lives, suddenly find them
selves heroes, Will they keep the loyal.
ty, the tolerance, the individual valor
in the democracy of peace which.they
- had in democracy of arms? If wi then
the world will rise to new and loftier
heights of nobility. The coming race
will be recreated in eourage and hero
ism and the thought of glory, with her
radiant face, will not be as alluring as
the graver face of duty. Glory'erowna
with jewels and sparkling lights, but the
rewards which duty gives are the things
which we ec¢an carry with us in oun
~ hands on that day when the resgoning
ts made.
| Soldier of duty, I salute you tonight,
- You are hhu‘lngl the trail for future gen
~ erations, and the memory of your cour
age and sacrifice will light the way for
, those coming after.
:' Good-night, beloved.
!Slayer of Elevator Man Yet at
Liberty—Both Whites and
Blacks Involved.
Detectives Monday had solved the
mystery of the slaying Sunday night
of a negro elevator operator in the
Calhoun Building, at Broad and Ala
bama streets. It developed that the
negro was shot to death as the out
growth of a rrap game ‘and liquor
drinking in an office on the third floor
of the building, which had been par
ticipated in by both whites and
blacks,
The arrest of the slayer was ex
pected within a few hours.
J. C. Humphries, a barber in the
Etowah barber shop on Alabama
street, and Lemmie Graham, a negro
bootblack in the shop, who were ar
rested shortly after the discovery of
the body of the slain negro, whose
cnly known name js “Mack,” Monday
still were held at the police station
pending further developments in the
investigation, which is being conduct
ed by Detective Sergeant Rullard.
Neither of these men is the slayer,
however, it was stated, but were held
as material witnesses.
The body of the negro was found in
the elevator on the first floor of the
building. The shooting. however, had
taken place in a third-floor office,
which, it was understood, had been
opened by the elevator man for the
dice game. The negro was said to
have heen shot after having made a
cons‘derable winning. 'The sum of
*44 25 was found in his pocket. It is
supposed that after receiving the fatal
wound he boarded ‘he elovator and
’mn it down to the first floor, in the
;hone of obtaining aid, but died befire
’being able to get out.
‘ At the Atianta,
‘ When the first motion pictures taken
under the direction of Sn committee
on public information by the S‘i‘gnal
}Cg.rgs. U. S. A, are shown next ed
nesday at the Atlanta Theater. the au
dienee will be astounded at the vast
ness of the enterrrise in which Uncle
’Sam is engaged simply for the purpose
of educating the American peopie as
to the work being done. “America at
War,” as presented by the United
‘States Government, through the divi
sfon of films, consists of seven reels.
The picture will be shown eight times
at the Atlanta Theater, starting with
next Wednesday matinee, and there
after twice daliy for the rest of the
}:o:‘lek' The reserved seat =ale bq-hn'
ay
.
War Department, in Weekly Re
’ . ' '
view, Says Situation Is Serious,
but Net Hopeless.
\
Continued From Page 1.
own infantry counter attacked and
drove off the remnants of the enemy
units. A number of prisoners were
taken. Our casualties were relatively
slight.
“The enemy also executed a minor
raid against one of our outposts in
the Woevre. Hostile artillery has
been active throughout the week,
both in the Woevre and along our po
sitions in the Meuse hills and in the
Vosges. Our counter battery work
was very efficient and we replied vig
orously to the hostile shelling.
Situation in East.
“While no events bearing directly
on the general military situation took
place in the east, it is to be noted that
the enemy operating in concert with
the Finnish White Guards is making
headway against the Red Guards.
German and Finnish forces have oc
cupied and passed beyond Tammer
fers,
“Hostile units are meving north
ward with the object of cutting the
Russian railway through Finland tu
Sweden. In the Ukraine the enemy is
still advancing unopposed. Kharkoff
has been occupied by the Germans,
assisted by the Ukrainian troops.
- “In the Caucasus the Turks ap
parently are still making headway.
They have occupied Vanad and are
tmoving west of Batoum.
“In Siberia the situation remains
obscure. The Japanese landing at
)Vladlvostok have been followed by
the landing of a British force. In the
‘Balkans there has been an increase
of hostile activity. The Bulgarians
have assumed a more aggressive at
titude and launched a number of raids
along the front. Bombardments were
frequent in the Vardar Valley and
Monastir sector.
~ “In Palestine there has been rela
tively no change in the situation
though the British still continue to
‘advance north of Jerusalem and
throughout the week extended their
line to a depth of a mile and half
along a frent of five miles.”
|
| TRAIN DERAILED.
CHESTER, 8. C., April 15—A fast
gssenger train of the Carolina and
orthwestern Railway left the rails at
Maiden, N. C. Engineer W. H. Braw
ley, of Chester, sustained painful lacer
ations on the head and other injuries.
The engine plowed a wheat field 50
feet, stopping in an_upright ition.
Over 100 passengers escaped lnf:rsr- A
broken flange on the engine's wheels
caused the derailment.
e
The Wonderful Music that Bursts Forth
When the Sterk Arrives.
PR TR e "»‘w-v-"v‘i“- f
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Who can forget that little brassy cry
that echoes the arrival of the new baby?
Before baby comes the mother should
get in conditiou to meet the crisis.
Thousands of women have used the
safe and reliable application, Mother's
Friend, during the waiting months, and
they relate how they entirely escaped
nausea, nervousness, bearing down and
stwtchingm?alns and many other debil
itating a disheartening experiences
which so illy fit the mother for the
greatest time in & woman's life,
Mother's Friend is a wonderful help to
nature in relieving strain and distress
broght about by exnnding muscles.
The mnerves, too, will calm, making
the pericd one of cheerful days and rest._
ful nights. The breasts are kept in
good condition and the abdominal mus
cles relax with ease when baby is born.
Mother's Friend makes it possible for
the expectant mother herself to actually
aid nature in the glorious work to be
{»erlormed. and no woman should neg
ect or fail to give nature a helping
hand. It will mean infinitely less pain
at the crisis.
Mother’'s Friend is for extema! use
only, is absolutely safe and wonderfully
effective. It is Erep‘red b{’the Brad
field Regulator ompany. 44 Lamar
Buudm!k Atlanta, Ga. Write them for
their ‘‘Motherhood Book,” so valuable
to_expectant mothers.
Procure a bottle of this famous rem
edy, which has been used by women
with the greatest success for over
half a century, from the druggist teday,
and thus fortify yourseif against palw
and discomfert —Advertisement
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Following .%(S T
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the sun with <0
Vision, for a moment, those far off ports
beyond the frackless seas —
From Arctic ice, to the torrid lands
beneath the Southern Cross — ‘
From towns tucked in the mountains, so
the busy river’s mouth —
WRIGLEYS is there! e
There, because men find e A,
comfort and refreshment in O Y
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its continued use. g WR RM’N A
Because of its benefits \«é/ 50 ‘,F_a o,,“"’,fi’ :
and because %{4/ ALY Y
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The Flavor ¥ i 0
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| @ Lasts! £, o\36\** g
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L “fiter Every Meal”, 2N ’°"/ s e _
Practically Everybody in Atlanta
Reads The Georgian
MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1918.