Newspaper Page Text
Unhappy Mexico Again Torn by Strifeas Carranza Fights for Life
FRANCISCO VILLA, notorious Mexican rebel and outlaw, again breaks into the spotlight after a silence
_of nearly five years. Allied with General Felipe Angeles, he is attacking the Carranza Government at
Chihuahua, and is now in possession of most of it. Besides his three thousand well armed followers, it is
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Carranza Still Rules Mexico City, but With
Machine Guns Perched on the Housetops and
LLurking Around Street Corners.
WASHINGTON, June 14.—As Eu:r
rope subsides as a scene of interest
because of the return of peace, Mex
ico takes the “spotlight” through the
recurrence of bloodshed, revoit and|
plunder in that unhappy country.
Villa and General Felipe Angeles are‘
:lmcking the Government in Chihua«t
ua.
Foreigners are departing from
Mexico ity and invariably such an
exodus has béen the signal for the
spark that sets the bonfire raging
throughout the land.
Machine guns are perched on the
tops of the buildings and hidden ml
out of way streets and alleys. The!
railroad offices are crowded with peo
ple whose only anxiety is to leave
the country. Many Mexicans believe
the downfall of the Carranza Govern
ment is imminent.
Kach day sees a steady stream of
persons reaching the United States
by way of Eagle Pass, Laredo and El
Paso. Others are leaving by way of
Vera Cruz and Tampigo. The “grape
vine" route carries tridings of revolt
and the border—mindful of the Co-
Jumbus raid-—figuratively hitches up
its belt and sees to its pistols. |
The Furopean war taught Venusti
ano Carranza manmy things. None of
the lessons compared in value with
the knowledge that news, carefully
rurtured in a governmental ‘“hot
house,” and finally handed to corre
spondents, aware of the futility of
attempting to go behind the facts, is
the finest kind of propaganda.
CARRANZA LOOKS TO U. 8.
The President of Mexico now looks
to the United States for financial
support, This despite his confiscation
of oil lands, and the renunciation of
the Monroe Doctrine. What's more,
he believes he still retains the sup
=wort of President Wilson.
Although fires arg raging all around
him, Carranza still possesses the
capital, and possession is nine-tenths
of the law--as far as the administra
tion of the country is concerned.
The Presidential election in Mexico
will oecur in September, 1920, Car
vanza has announced he will not be
« ecandidate to succeed himself. His
friends have mentioned a half-dozen
or more generals as candidates.
The three major candidates are
General Pablo Gonzales, General Al-
Varado Obregon and General Salvador
\varado, all of whom, if reports are
true, have sufficient funds to provide
strong campaigns,
The minor candidates are General
Candido Aguilar, a son-in-law of Car
ranza, who may vigit the United
sStates; General Jesus Axun‘n Castro,
commander of the troops Juarez;
(jeneral Benjamin Hill, the com
mander of Mexico City, and General
Francisco Murgia, former military
ommander of Chihuahua.
ONE CIVILIAN CANDIDATE.
The lone elvillan candidate is Ag
uifre Berlanga, present Minister of
AT Interior,
Railroad conditions prohibit exten
sive travel and some of the candi
dutes may confine their major efforts
1o Mexico City, where machine guns
con maintain control,
Observers here believe that Car
runza, personally, is honest, but they
will not discuss some of his leading
aldes. Trains, filled with Americans,
under escort of the Mexican Govern
ment, have traveled oyer the govern
ment lines to view the results of
Carranza rule, Business men, news
puper correspondents and financiers
have been Invited to visit Mexico, but
to the shrewd observer of Mexican
events this procedure recalls an oc-‘
currence under Porfirio Déaz. ‘
r In 1910 Dw chartered a special
| train, 3 . was termed “El tren
| editorial,” filled it with American
| newspaper _cogrespondents, and took
ithu(l-.“n&-mnd of Mexico to the
other. His purpose was to convince
them the Mexican people stood be
hind him with all their strength. |
| The people cheered Diaz and ap
' plauded his speeches. Everything
looked peaceful and happy. Three
months later Madero overthrew Diaz,
Carranza has been extraordinarily
fortunate in nipping several revolu
tions against him in the bud. Last
IJanuazv Aurelio, Blanquet set forth
{in the night from New York harbor,
and some time later landed near Tam
pico. Carranza spon literally ex
hibited Blanquet’s 'head. .
DIAZ SPORADIC REBEL.
Felix Diaz has been maintaining
sporadic warfare in the south, though
his accomplishments are small.
It remained for Francisco Villa, in
characteristic fashion, to set the ball
a-rolling in the North. He is allied
with Felipe Angeles, a graduate uf‘
the military academy at Chapaultepec
known to Americans because of his
{two years' service in this country as
an inspector of munitions for the
French Government. Me is also
known as a skillful artillery com
mander. &
The strength of the Angeles-Villa
combination has already been demon
strated by the action of the State
Department in first granting permis
sion to Carranza to transport his
troops across Texas, Arizona and
New Mexico, and then rescinding its
decision when protests come in.
Angeles and Villa are in possession
of most, of Chihuahua. They have
32.000 well armed men or personal fol
lowers; they are reported to have bhe
tween 15,000 and 20,000 others, scat
tered throughout the country, await
ing only the word to mobilize.
Villa's mén are not conscripts, they
are volunteers. Moreover, the chief
tain has a grain of comraderie in His
system that appeals to the average
Mexican soldier, i
What has Villa been doing for the
past two years? Reliable reports to
Washington are to the effect that he
has been biding his time, collecting
large quantities of ammunition and
waiting for a favorable moment to
strike. He is said to have captured
I most of the 5,000 rifles and 2,000,000
rounds of ammunition, sent from the
U'nited States to the principal Car
ranza garrison in Chihuahua, Also,
he has replenished his fighting larder
with munitions smuggled across the
border,
® CAPITAL OBJECTIVE,
Villa and Angeles say that Car
ranza has been given his opportuniiy,
{and failed, They declare the country
was never so corrupt as today, and
they assert the President, while os
tensibly retiring from office at the
expiration of his term, is in reality
| paving the way for a continuation of
his power, / .
Last week Villa was reported to be
attacking Chihuahua City with a
| large force; next week may see him
| hundreds of miles away. With the
ealm, logical mind Jike that of
| Angeles directing the operations, a
| southern attack is expected. The
| rebels think their numbers will be in
@ereased the nearer they approach
{ Mexico City, which is their objective
, The big thing now, for the revolu
| tionists is to give Villa a clean bill of
| health. The memory of the Columbus
| disaster is still strong in the minds
{of the American people, and the State
| Department could hardly place the
Astamp of its approval, either openly
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or tacitly, on a revolutionary move
ment which numbers Villa as one of
its leaders.
Villa’'s supporters, therefore, are
preparing to submit documentary evi
dence that their chief was not at Co
lumbus, Indeed, they intend to say
hé was not within 250 miles of Co
lumbus and knew nothing of the mas
saere. They also intend to produce
proof along the same lines with re
gard to the Santa Ysabel massacre.
This, in short, is Mexico of today;
Felix Diaz, a rebel, to the south; Car
ranza and his generals in the middle;
Villa and Angeles to the north, with
a well trained farce and plenty of
ammunition,
.
Complaint of Laundry
Men Will Be Probed
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, June 14.-—The De.
partment of Labor was asked to take
action in belmlf of laundry workers
in Nashvlille, Tenn,, who have protest
ed the action of laundry owners in
posting notices informing employees
th@y must withdraw from membership
in unions or resign their jobs,
The workers allege that the union
was formed about six weeks ago and
that on June 1 many workers were
digcharged because of their member
ship, and other had ghit under pro
etst rgwr than give up their union
affiliations. The department assigned
Commissioner Willilam €. Liller to the
case, ‘
Blanton, of Texas, Saus
Somebody Shot at Him
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, June 14-—Repre
ntative Rlanton, of Texas, charged
the House this afternoon that an
attempt had been made last Sunday
to assassinate him,
“T was riding In an antomobile with
my wife and child Sunday, going
through Maryland to Pennsylvania, to
help get a soldler out of the army
when some one shot at me, The bul.
lot missed it mark, Blanton scored
organized labor, ax led by Samuel
(lompers, and sald “disloyalty to the
(jovernment was rife in Its ranks” °
sl
l NEW REPUBLICAN CLU'RB,
' My Intermational News Serviee,)
LINCOLN, NEBR, June 14 —Articles of
| ineorporation for the Roescvelt Republican
Club of Nebraska, for the purpose of “per.
petuation of the memory of the pelitieal
‘ denls of Theodore Roosevelt,” have beon
filed nt the office of the BSecretary of
State hore
Thirst for Immortality Proves We
Have Souls, Says Cardinal Gibbons
By CARDINAL GIBBONS,
Archbishop of Baltimore and an of the Roman Catholic Hierarchy in
merica.
HE soul is the prineiple by
I which we live and move
and have our being. It is
that which forms and perpetuates
our identity; for it makes us to be
the same yesterday, today and for
ever. The soul has intellectual con
ceptions and operations of reason
and judgment independent of ma
terial organs.
Our own experience clearty teach
es us this important peint, Our
mindas grasp what the senses cin
not reach, Such a principle being
independent of matter in its op
erations must needs be independent
of matter also in s own being.
It is, therefore, of ity nature sub-
Jeet to no corruption resulting from
matter, lits life, whieh is its being,
18 not extinguished &nd can not be
extingulshed with that of the body,
It is well known that there is a
constant waste going on in every
part of the human body which has
to be renovated by daily nutri
ment. So steady I 8 this exhaus
tion that, in the judgment of med
jewl science, an entire transformi
tion of the physical system occurs
every wseven or elght years. New
flesh and bone and tissues are sub
stituted for those you had before.
The hand with ‘which you write,
the hrain which yoan exercise in
thinking are composed of entirely
different materials, And yet you
comprehend today, what you
learned ten YOArs ago, you re
member and love those 'flz whom
you were then assoclated, How ix
this? You no longer use the iden
tical organic substance you then
ponsessed.
Does it not prove that the fac
ulty called the soul, by which you
think, remember and love, is dix
tinet from organie matter. that
while the body |mmny chang
ing the wsoul ns the sam¢
that it doey not share In the pro
cess of decomposition and renewal
through which the human frame is
passing and, therefore, that it i
a 8 spiritual substance?
said that he can mobilize at a moment’s notice, twenty thousand others. These pictures show the chief
tain and a part of his army. The horsemen at the left are typical troopers; an ammunition train is seen
at the right.
. We may find nations without
cities, without the arts and
sciences, without mechanical in
ventions or any of the refinements
of civilized life, but a nation with
out some presentiment of the ex
istence of a future state we shall
search for in vain.
Now, whence comes this uni
versal belief In man's immortality ?
Not from prejudice arising from
education; for we shall find this
conviction prevailing among rude
people who have ne education
whatever, amang hostile tribes and
among nations at the opposite
poles of the earth who have never
had intercourse with one an
other.
We must, therefore, conclude that
a sentiment so general and deep
rooted must have beon planted in
the human breast by Almighty God,
Just as He hay implanted in us an
instinctive love for truth and jus
tiee and an. inveterate abhorrence
of falsehood and injustice, Not
only has mankind a firm belief in
the immortalty of the ' soul, butl
there s Inborn in every human
breast a desire for perfect felicity
or happiness, This desire Is so
strong in man that it is the main.
spring of all his actions,
CRAVING NOT SATISFIED.
Now, God would never have
planted in the human heart this
craving after perfect happiness un
less He had intended that the de
sire should be fully sratified; for
He never designed that man should
be the sport of vain and barren
hopes, He never createy any
thing in vain; but He would have
created something to no purpose
if He had given us the thirst for
perfect bliss without imparting to
us the means of assusging it
It Is true that thisx desire never
ean be fully realized in the present
life. Can earthly goods adequately
satisfy the cravings of the human
heart and ill up the measure of its
desires? Experience proves the
contrary, Can honors fully grat-
My the longings of the soul? Neo,
The more brilliant and precious the
werown, the more heavily it presses
upon the brow that wears it,
Can earthly pleasures make one
80 happy as to leave nothing to be
desired? Assuredly not, The keen
edge of delight soon becomesg blunt
ed. We find great comfort in this
life in the soclety of loving friends,
but how frail is the thread that
binds friends together? Another
source of exquisite delight is found
in the pursuit of knowledge. The
higher we ascend the mount of
knowledge, the broader becomes our
view of the vast fields of science
that still remain uncultivated by us.
But the greatest consolation at
tainable in this life is found in the
pursuit and practice of virtue,
This conso'ation arises from the
well founded hope of future bliss
rather than the fulfillment of our
desires. Thus we see that neither
riches nor honors, nor pleasures,
nor knowledge, nor the endear
ment of social and family ties, nor
the pursult of virtue, can fully sat
isfy our aspirations after happi
ness, The more delicioug the eup,
the more bitter the thought that
death will dash it to pleces,
Now, If God has given us a de
sire for perfect happiness, which
He intends to one day fully grat
ify, and if this happiness, ay we
have seen can not be found In the
present life, it must be reserved
for the life to come. And as no in
telligent being can be contented
with any happiness, that Is finite
in duration, we must conclude it
will be eternal, and that, conse
quently, the soul Is Immortal. Life
that is not to be crowned with
immortality, the condition of man
“If a life of happiness,” says Cleero,
“Is to end, it can not be called a
happy life. Take away eternity,
and gupltor Is not better off than
Epleurus” Without the hope of
fmmortality, the condtion of man
I 8 less desirable than that of the
beast of the fleld.
Many may impFison and starve,
may wound and kill the body; but
the soul & bevond his reach, and
ix as impalpable to his touch ax the
sun's ray. The temple of the body
may be reduced to ashes, but the
spirit that animated the temple
can not be extinguished, The body,
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Secretary R, 8. Melone, of the Cot
ton Seed Crushers’ Assoclation of
Georgia, has announced the complete
program for the joint convention of
the Cotton Seed Crushers' Assocla®ion
of Geogia and the South Carolina Cot
ton SBeed Crushers' Association, which
is to be held .at the Savannah Hotel,
Savannah, Tuesday and \\wlnv.«lu\.‘
June 17 and 18, |
This is the first time In the history
of these two organizations that a
joint convention has been held, Ques
tions of mutual interest have made
it desirable that this arrangement be
made
On each of the convention days a
foint segsion will be held, at which
addresses of mutual interest will be
given, and at noon the joint session
will be adlourned and business meet- |
ir of eanch association will be held
separately \
WATKINS IN CHAIR, |
The joint session will be called to
order Tuesday morning by H. E. Walt.
k of Atlanta, president of the Cot
ton Seed Crushers’ Association of
Georglia, and following the invoeation
the ldress of welcome wil be delivs
ered by Murray Stewart, Mayor 6f
Savannah The response to the ad
dre of welcome will be made hy C.
Fitzeimmons, of Columbia, 8, O
John T. Dennis, Jr., of Elberton, will
PP AP AN
which is from man, man may take
LWALY but the soul, which s from
God, no man can destroy “The
dust shall return into its earth from
whence It was, and the spirit to
God who gave It."
As well might one born blind at
tempt to pleture to himself the
i uty of the landseape, as for the
eve of the soul to contemplate the
pernal blisy that awaits the
righteous lin what I 8 beautifully ;
called “the land of the living." |
present to the associations their serve
fee flags, representative of the men
from these associations who went into
service during the great war, -
Dr. John E. White, D, D., of Ander«
son, 8. C., will deliver an address om
“Victory.,"” Christie Benet, of Colume
bia, 8. C,, will ‘make a report before
the joint meeting of the linter come
mittee,
The two assoclation will tbe:l ade
journ for separate business meetings,
SPEAKERS OF TUESDAY.
Tuesday morning the joint session
will be addressed by C. E., Cotterilly
of Atlanta, on “Prafiic and Rate Mate
ters.” R. Goodwin Rhett, of Charles
ton, 8. (~ former president of the
United States Chamber of Commerce,
will deliver an address on ‘“Recons
Fstruetion and Co-operation.” Robert
Gregy, treasurer of the Atlantic Steel
Company, Atlanta, will talk on “Efs
ficiency,” to be followed by Willam
I, Punbar, manager, Southeastern
Underwriters' Assoclation, on “Insure
ance.” |
The assoclatlons will then separate
to hear the report of standing comse
mitiees and elect their individual ofe
ficers for the nsuing year,
The attendance from hoth Georgia
and South Carollna promises to be
unusually large at this jeint convens
tion, -
. »
Seek to Rid Missouri of
All I. W. W, Agitators
KANSAS CITY, MO, June 4=
When the Kansas Legislature cone
venes In speclal session at Topeks
Monday one of the first things to be
reanired of it, outside of a votg te
ratify nationn! suffrage for Vom
will be an appropriation to rid
sas of 1. W, W, agitators.
Richard J. Hopkins, Attorney A 5
eral, will present the request for &
fund, and Fred Robertson,
Hiates Distriet Attorney for
will ald him In soliciting votes for the
appropriation, o o
Those two officials are co-o ;
in planning with Sheriffs and b
ofMicinls of Central and Western
sas In efforts to prevent damage te
wheat and other property by }
during the harvest season, 'fih ;
begin in earnest next week. a 3
5A