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BRIEF NOWS NOTES
Wtot Has Occurred During the Week
Tbreughent This Country
and Abroad.
EVENTS OMMPORTANCE
Gathered From All Part* of
Globe and Told In Short
Paragrapha.
Mexican News
In a fight with a band of Villa fol¬
lowers at Corralttos, close to the Du¬
rango line, the forces of General Do¬
mingo Arrieta took 18 prisoners, Who
were immediately tried by a drum¬
head courtmartlal and shot.
The body of the notorious bandit,
Ferniza, found among the rebels slain
in the battle at Corralitos, was taken
into the town of Matamoros and hung
up in the plaza as an object lesson to
Villa sympathizers.
None of the prisoners taken in the
last fight of the Mexicans with the
bandits are able to say whether Villa
is dead or alive.
The town of Satevo, Mexico, has
been captured by Villa rebels. The
outlaws surrounded the town, which
is only fifty miles south of Chihuahua
City, and, after a six hours’ battle,
the garrison, 200 or more, being with¬
out ammunition, was forced to evacu¬
ate.
An El Paso, Texas, dispatch says
Manuel Ochoa, the Villa general who
surrender Juarez to the Constitutional¬
ists under a grant of amnesty, has
been captured. Later he escaped af¬
ter killing one of his guards. Ochoa
had been a political refugee in El
Paso for several months. He, with
five followers, crossed the Rio Grande
about thirty miles below El Paso, In¬
tending to join the revolutionist, Mari¬
ano Tames. His plans were complete¬
ly frustrated.
Domestic
A conspiracy has been unearthed In
St. Anthony, Idaho, in which it Is al¬
leged that an attempt was to have
been made to kidnap the 16-year-old
son of the late E. H. Harriman, rail¬
road magnate, and hold him for $ 100 ,
000 ransom. The threatened railroad
strike kept the Hardmans in Utah,
however, and the plan fell flat, the
would-be kidnapers caught and Jailed.
The '‘prohibition special" car, car¬
rying the presidential and vice pres¬
idential nominees of that party is on
its way, and will make stops at six
hundred or more towns in the itiner¬
ary in the interest of nation-wide pro¬
hibition.
In the Texas primary run-off, Sen¬
ator Culberson defeated ex-Goveroor
Colquitt for the United States senate.
Colqult ran on anti-Wilson platform.
Daily improvement in the condition
of the infantile paralysis epidemic in
New York City is noted. It is predict¬
ed, however, that twenty-five hundred
children will be left so badly crippled
that they will have to wear braces all
their lives.
Victor Carlstrom, flying a twin mo¬
tor combination land and water ma¬
chine around Newport News, Va., set
a world’s record for distance in one
day, carrying one passenger. He made
661 miles in eight hours and forty min¬
utes. Carlstrom will receive a prize
of 17,000 for his flight.
A collector of ancient curios in Kan¬
sas City, resenting attempts to eject
him from his apartment, shot and kill¬
ed two policemen, fatally wounded two
other policemen and slightly wounded
Mrs. Maude EchorU, living in a nearby
apartment. Larkin was killed.
A carload of food and clothing was
shipped to the Mud river valley. West
Virginia, following the receipt of ad¬
vices that more than one hundred
families were in destitute circum¬
stances as a result of the recent flood.
More than thirty negroes taken to
Wyandotte, Mich., from Alabama have
been told they cannot remain in that
city, and were given twenty-four hours
to make their get away.
Receiver for the Boston and Maine
railroad has been applied for In the
federal court at Boston.
Eight persons were killed and a
number of others are reported missing
as the result of an explosion at Jack
son, Tenn., at the plant of the Har¬
lan Morris Stove company. The boil¬
ers gave way and the shock was felt
throughout the city.
European War
It Is rumored that Greece will very
shortly enter the war on the side of
entent allies.
Fifty thousand Greeks joining a
popular demonstration to Venizelos.
August 27. The former premier ad¬
vised that a committee he sent to
King Constantine to warn him not
to use his influence in the forthcom¬
ing general election.
The entrance of Roumania into the
war was received with popular rejoic¬
ing throughout France. For the first
time In many months the newspapers
were permitted to publish extras an¬
nouncing the incident.
Roumania has thrown In her lot
■with the entente allies by declaring
war on Austria-Hungary, and almost
simultaneously Germany announced
that she was at war with Roumania
The general belief in the countries
of the entente allies is that Rouma
ilia's entrance into the war will ma
♦erially shorten the struggle, and it is
freely predicted that Turkey will he
crushed in six months or less.
Roumania's strategic advantages in
geographical position renders it much
easier for the Russians to attack the
Bulgarian armies on the north and
south.
Two or three raiders flew over the
eastern coeat of England and dropped
over thirty bombs, with no casualties
or damage.
A German raider attempting to ap¬
proach an English seaport town, waa
heavily fired on by anti-aircraft guns,
and had to drop his bombs in the sea
and flee for his life.
An airship which visited the south¬
east coast of England was compelled
to unload her cargo of bombs In the
sea; no damage.
The outskirts of London were raid¬
ed by German aeroplanes, and several
casualties occurred among the civilian
population. Several fires were started
by the explosion, but were promptly
extinguished without appreciable dam¬
age.
An officer of the British merchant
marine, arriving In New York, says
the submarine Bremen, another Ger¬
man undersea merchantman on he/
way to the United States, was caught
in a steel net in the straits of Do¬
ver, her crew taken prisoners and two
members of her crew being killed.
German admirers of Captain Koenig
of the Deutschland and his crew have
raised nearly one hundred thousand
marks as a token of admiration for
the daring shown In taking the sub¬
marine from Germany to the United
States and back again without any un¬
pleasant incident to mar the voyage.
The Swiss government has been re¬
quested by Italy to Inform the German
government that Italy considers her¬
self at war with Germany from and
after August 28.
Italy and Germany have been drift¬
ing steadily toward war for several
months. In fact, Italy’s formal decla¬
ration amounts to nothing more than
official recognition of a state of af¬
fairs which already existed.
Declaration of war by Italy upon
Germany became Inevitable when It¬
aly recently sent troops to Saloniki
to co-operate in the campaign on the
Macedonian front, as Germany Is di¬
recting the opposite forces, and has
troops on this battle line.
Despite bad weather there has been
considerable fighting and a renewal
of mine warfare along the British
front in France.
London reports the capture of 200
yards of a German trench north of
Bazentin-le-Petit and a further gain
northwest of Glnchy.
Berlin says that British attacks to
the south of Thiepval, northwest of
Pozleres, and north of Bazentin-le-Pe
tit have been without success.
The Russians, for some time inact¬
ive In the Riga region, again have
started an offensive.
In the Carpathians Petrograd chron¬
icles a fresh advance on Koverla
mountain, near the Hungarian bor¬
der.
A dispatch to London from Stock
German warships, into the Swedish
port of Gotland, owmg to shortage of
coal, has been ordered to quit the ves¬
sel, as it has been decided the Temis
was illegally taken.
Washington
In reply to President Wilson’s re¬
quest to European nations that care
be taken in sending food to the strick¬
en and starving people of Poland, Czar
Nicholas says he will co-operate in
such a move.
A review of wliat the Wilson ad¬
ministration has done for the navy is
given in a long letter from Secretary
Daniels to Representative William
Elza Williams, Democrat, of Illinois,
made public by the navy department.
Representative Williams wrote to the
secretary recently asking a series of
questions in which he said his constit¬
uents were particularly interested.
As to how and when the navy lost
rank among the greater fleets of the
world Secretary Daniels quotes the
general board saying that, based on
displacement of ships built, the United
States advanced to second place in
1907 and lost it to Germany in 1911.
The way had been paved in 1905, he
says, when President Roosevelt and
Secretary Bonaparte recommended the
construction of only one capital ship.
He directs attention to the fact that
in 1903 and thereafter the general
board recommended three battleships,
and says these reports always were
pigeon-holed until he gave them to
the public by attaching them to his
report.
In personnel the anvy advanced to
second place in 190S, dropped to third
in 1911, to fourth in 1913 and to sixth
in 1916 after the European belliger¬
ents increased their personnel to war
footing.
Secretay Lansing announces that
Secretary of the Interior Lane, Judge
George Gray of Wilmington, Del., and
Dr. John R. Mott of New York City
will compose the joint commission to
settle the differences of this country
with Mexico.
The story of a Villa chief with his
own hands cutting off the ears of 20
prisoners, who later were shot, is told
by a rescued prisoner in El Demo¬
crats of Chihuahua City, Mexico, cop¬
ies of which have been forwarded to
Washington.
The United States has sent repre¬
sentations to the Turkish porte ask¬
ing that the Turkish amy be more
considerate with the Armenians, and
that useless taking of life he dispensed
with.
The railroad problem brought on by
the 8 -hour demand of railroad employ¬
ees is considered here the most im¬
portant question ever presented in the
industrial history of the country.
In personnel the navy advanced to
ate to stop the upward tendency in
the price of pript paper. The plan is
to tax all paper that sells above $40
a ton.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND. GEORGIA.
FUNDS FOR STATE
TROOPSCUT OFF
Giorgia Legislature Fails To Provide
The Militia With Money For
Military Activities
SOLDIERS ARE_ HARD MIT
Officers Figuring On Ways And
Means Of Overcoming The Sit¬
uation Confronting Them
Camp Harris—
Officers of the National Guard are
figuring on ways and means to over¬
come the situation put squarely be¬
fore them in general orders No. 12,
of the military department of the state
of Georgia, in whicli the department,
facing the failure of the legislature
to provide funds sufficient to finance
it guard, reluctantly announces that
the quarterly allowances heretofore
provided for the state militia, termi¬
nated with the last payment made—
for the first quarter of 1916.
This order applies to all the Nation¬
al Guard units in the state. The At¬
lanta companies, for instance, have
been receiving a quarterly allowance
of $60 per company—in itself a mod¬
est sum considering the many expen¬
ditures which have been necessary
to maintain the organization on a
basis of efficiency. This expense of
recruiting, of entertainment for en¬
listed men, of transportation and food
on practice marches—all of this and
much more haB made the quarterly
check a necessity. Many companies
in the state use rented armories,
nearly all of them provide some slight
compensation for quartermasters and
company clerks.
While the present service In camp
of all the Georgia troops except the
Third separate battalions and the
coast artillery corps relieve the state
of some of this burden, in that the
war department pays the troops, it
leaves no provision for the expenses
of the home stations.
Should the guard be mustered out,
It would come back to Its homes in a
condition of pauperism which would
he difficult to overcome.
Wurm Thrown In River While Alive
Atlanta—
That John Wum, the young time¬
keeper of the Atlantic Steel company,
whose dead body was found In the
Chattahoochee river some weeks ago,
was thrown into the water while alive
was demonstrated to the satisfaction
the body for traces of poison reported
that none had been found.
At Solicitor Williams’ orders, they
had the body exhumed from its grave
in Oakland cemetery, and a painstak¬
ing autopsy was held. No possible
trace of poison was found, the vague
theory that the young man had been
killed by drug, then thrown into the
river being thus exploded.
Federal Game Warden For State
Atlanta—
A. E. Binder, deputy game warden
of Fulton county, has received an ap¬
pointment from the federal govern¬
ment as federal migratory game war¬
den for the stale of Georgia.
Mr. Binder has been connected with
the administration and enforcement
of the Georgia game laws in Fulton
county for the last five years, and
has successfully prosecuted many
cases for the violation of the state
law.
The federal appointment comes to
him as a measure of recognition of
the service he has rendered.
Claim New Highway Law O. K.
Atlanta—
The members of the state prison
commission who, under the recently
enacted law, are, with two others, the
state high way department, hold, in
a card issued, that all claim of ques¬
tionable effect of the new Georgia law
in compliance with the federal act is
unfounded. The commission’s card
analyzes the Georgia highway depart¬
ment act, drawn by Henry J. Full
bright and introduced by Messrs.
Heath and Adams, to show that all de¬
mands of the federal act are fully
met.
County Asks Early Arbitration
Atlanta—
Grady county was added to the list
of those counties demanding arbitra¬
tion of their tax assessments, which
were increased by order of the state
tax commissioner. This makes four
counties out of ten raised which have
asked for arbitration, the others being
Bulloch, Hart and Jeff Davis. Judge
Hart was notified that W. D. Rodden
berry of Cairo had been selected to
act as arbitrator for Grady county. C.
T. Tillman of Quitman, chosen by
Judge Hart in the other cases, will
act for the state.
Military Organization Good
Camp Harris—
The work of the camp is in better
shape than that of any organization
in Georgia. It is now up-to-date.
Brigade headquarters has issued,
for information, the recommendations
of Capt. F. S. Young, U. S. A., di¬
vision quartermaster, now at El Paso,
Texas, concerning requisitions for car¬
penters’ tools. Each company is ex¬
pected to arm itself with a pair each
of saws, hammers and hatchets, with
one steel square.
ATLANTA POLICE ARE
WARNING THE “TIGERS”
Dealers Had Plan By Which They
Made Quick Delivery At Any
Point Of Liquors
Atlanta—
As a result of the activities of the
police in running down the agents of
out-of-state liquor houses who were
supplying the trade with liquor, At¬
lantans, who feel an occasional need
for a drink will probably be dry for
a few days until the flurry has sub¬
sided.
Of course, they will not entirely
famish, since the state prohibition
law permits an individual to order
two quarts of whiskey within a period
of thirty days until the flurry has
of thirty days, but ordering in com¬
pliance with the terms and condi¬
tions of the state prohibition law Is
not an altogether satisfactory method
of securing one’s self a drink.
One must present himself in per¬
son at the express office. Identify
himself, make an affidavit that he in'
21 years of age and a person of
temperate habits, and swear that he
has not ordered two quarts of whisky
within the last thirty days. After
going thus into detail concerning his
identity, habits, personal history,
etc., he secures his little shipment
and goes his way, but a record of
the transaction forthwith goes to the
ordinary’s office and becomes the
property of the public.
Hence the average man would
much prefer to get his liquor by
some other method whenever possi¬
ble and that is precisely what they
are doing in Atlanta.
Now that the police have rudely
interfered, at least for the present,
with the efficient little system per¬
fected by the agents—who got the
liquor into the city and delivered it.
direct to customers, using negroes to
order it and sign for it at the ex¬
press office — moonshine corn bids
fair to become even more popular
than It is already. This product,
made in the mountains of North
Georgia and transported to Atlanta
in wagons and automobiles, escapes
the red tape wrapped around ship¬
ments from out of the state, and be¬
cause of the greater ease quite a much
used drink.
Wild Land Put On Tax Books
Atlanta—
Judge Hart’s recent order to ten
of the counties of the state to make
certain Increases in the tax values of
those counties, to bring them nearer
a state equalization, has put on the
tax books of one county between for¬
ty thousand and fifty thousand acres
of wild land never heretofore return¬
ed for taxation. Information comes
Judge Hart’s order, discovered that
much untaxed wild land.
One more county was added, how¬
ever, to the list of objectors to the re¬
cent order, when Grady filed its pro¬
test with Judge Hart, and named W.
B. Roddenbery as arbitrator for the
county. The state, in this instance,
as in that of Emanuel, Hart and Jeff
Davis counties, which have protested,
will be represented by C. T. Tillnvan
of Quitman. The two arbitrators, in
each case, will select a third to sit
with them, but, if they fail to agree
on a third man within fixed time,
the umpire is to be appointed by the
comptroller general.
The increase in Grady county, un¬
der the order, is about 20 per cent,
that county now returning its lands
at $5.08 an acre.
Six of the tea counties to whom the
order was issued appear to be satis¬
fied, inasmuch as the last day for fil¬
ing protests has passed, and only the
four cited have been heard from.
Confer Thl* Week On Boll Weevil
Atlanta—
Special boll weevil conferences were
held this week in Stewart, Webster,
Marion, Chattahoochee and Muscogee
counties under the direction of the
state board of entomology and the
state commissioner of agriculture.
While ibe boll weevil experts are
stressing various methods of combat¬
ting the pest and furnishing instruc¬
tion to the farmers along this line.
Commissioner Price is emphasizing
the value of diversified crops, not
only in combatting the boll weevil,
but in improving general conditions
on the farm. By combining scientific
methods of fighting, the boll weevil
with a “live at home” program, farm¬
ers in sections of the South a. ready
invaded by the boll weevil have
found it possible to secure profitable
yields in spite of the “great destroy¬
er.”
Work Begun On Monument
Atlanta—
Preliminary work has begun on the
carving of the monument to the he¬
roes of the Confederacy on the face
of Stone Mountain, for which the
Daughters of jthe Confederacy and
other patriotic organizations have
been working for several years.
Gets Nine Years For Forgery
Greenville.—John M. Birchmore en¬
tered pleas of guilty in Meriwether su¬
perior court to the charge of embez¬
zlement and forgery. He was cash¬
ier of the Bank of Gay, and was ac¬
cused of being fifteen thousand dol¬
lars short.
He came originally from. Comm¬
and belongs to a prominent family
residing there. He has a wife and
two small children. He was sentene
ed to serve nine years in the peniten
i tiary under the pleas of guilty.
Ingenious Mr. Smith.
When Mr. Smith—your
friend Smith—awoke the other morn¬
ing he was greeted by his wife with
this;
“My sweet boy, do you know you
came home late last night, and that
you talked in your sleep?”
“Great Scott! No, did I?” said Smith,
badly agitated. “What did I say? Tell
me."
“I just couldn't make It all out, but
it ended like ante-up-jackpot stake.”
“Oh, yes, yes, my dear, I was recit¬
ing a little Esperanto that a friend was
teaching me; I intended to tell it to
you when I came home. It means
‘How is my darling girl tonight?’ ”
SOAP IS STRONGLY ALKALINE
and constant use will burn out the
scalp. Cleanse the scalp by shampoo¬
ing with “La Creole” Hair Dressing,
and darken, in the natural way, those
ugly, grizzly hairs. Price. $1.00.—Adv.
David Guessferd, thirty years
mourned as dead, recently returned to
his parental home in Townsend, Ind.
Before some preachers condemn a
sin they investigate its financial stand¬
ing.
What is Castoria
l ASTORIA is & harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium,
Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It
destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It
assimilates the Food, regulates tbs Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and
natural sleep. The children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over
80 years, has born the signature of Chas. EL Fletcher, and has been made under
his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive yuu in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good” are but Experiments that
trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and
Children—Experience against Experiment.
Genuine Castoria always bears the signature oft
SOMETHING FLY COULDN’T 00
Robbie Was Able to Point Out Its
Limitations When Called Upon
to Admire Insect.
In the opinion of some persons, the
new teacher was going almost too far
in her attention to nature study. How¬
ever, the children appeared to enjoy
It all, and, so far, no parents had made
open objection to the little talks on
birds, insects, and flowers with which
the teacher diversified the routine of
school work. So all went along quite
comfortably until the afternoon when
the fly and the flea were up for con¬
sideration.
Following the teacher’s lead, the
children had all grown enthusiastic
iishing acrobatic abilities
Except Robbie May, who
for some time had been staring mood¬
ily at his desk, casting only occasional
glances at the teacher, and those un¬
mistakably sullen.
It became so noticeable by the time
they were all admiring the fact that
the fly can walk on the ceiling, that
the teacher paused and turned to the
hoy.
“What is the trouble, Robbie?” she
Inquired. “Arent’ you listening?
Aren't you interested in the talk?”
“Ye-es,” granted Robbie, reluctantly
polite. Then, warming up, “hut I bet
a fly can't hang by its knees, and
every boy in school can do it, all 'cept
Laurie Lee, and lie’s had the dipthery!”
—Youth's Companion.
What She Wanted.
Lydia Virginia was having her fifth
birthday prepared for her. Grandma
bnked her birthday cake and made her
x little sample cake. Lydia Virginia,
on breaking the sample apart, ex¬
claimed: “Why, grandma, this is not
the kind of a cake 1 want.” Ques¬
tioned what kind she wanted, she an¬
swered: “Why, I want my cake when
you cut a piece of it to look like a
spotted cat.” Her grandma baked a
marble cake and when cut Lydia Vir¬
ginia was delighted, and said; “This
is it, grandma; this is the kind of a
cake I wanted.”—Cleveland Leader.
To Fortify the System Against
Summer Heat
Many users of Grove'* Tasteless Chill
Tonic make it a practice to take this old
standard remedy regularly to fortify the
system against the depressing effect of
summer heat, as those who are strong
withstand the beat of summer better than
those who are weak. Price 50 c.
Something in His Favor.
“There’s one tiling I will say for
that fellow whose mistakes cause so
much trouble.”
“What is it?"
“He doesn’t claim that his inten¬
tions were good, anyhow."—Detroit
Free Press.
A bore is a person who has nothing
to do but sit around and visit.
Sties, Granulated Eyelids, Sore and Inflamed
Eyes healed promptly by the use of KOM AN'
EYE BALSAM.-Adr.
You might do worse than exaggerate
the goodness of your friends. 1
Certain-teed Buy materials that last
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respe nubility at reasonable price*
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It! Iwiih usiu«pai, W l t- sS UirMt lurruHm ChKuS
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MR. WEGE RECOMMENDS
LUNG-VITA
Mr. Leo D. Nashville, Wege, manager of the Ideal
Laundry of wrote: “I cannot
speak too I highly of used Lung-Vita myself, and of its
results. never it but I
bought four bottles of you to give to dif¬
ferent parties, and the results are remark¬
able. One case of asthma waa entirely
cured. If they will take the medicine as
directed and stick to it, they will never
regret it.” Take whooping Lung-Vita for consump¬
tion, /asthma, bronchial cough, > colds,
coughs, and troubles. If your
dealer cannot supply today. you, send $1.75 tor a
thirty-day Dept. treatment B, Nashville, Nashville Tenn. Med¬
icine Co., Adv.
Got What He Was Looking For.
Jack—Mr. Benedict is married.
Belle—Do you mean it? Why, he
used to say he would never marry un¬
less the girl was just so and so.
Jack—Well, lie struck one who
sewed him up all right.—Judge.
A flirt usually begins to lose inter¬
est in a man after she gets him to ad¬
mit that he loves her.
Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills have stood
the test of time. Test them yourself now. Send
for sample to 372 Pearl street, N. Y.—-Adv.
Comparatively little work can con¬
vince a man that he needs a rest.
Most Profitable “Ad.”
Do you know what was the largest
harvest ever reaped from an adver¬
tisement?
It was the settlement in Pennsylva¬
nia of 100,000 German colonists.
We know that at Germantown, this
city, was made the first German settle¬
ment In America. We also know that
in fifty years double that many thou¬
sand Germans came to William Penn’s
colony.
Furthermore, history tells us that
wars and religious persecutions in
Germany caused this then unparalleled
exodus of men and women.
But what brought them to Pennsyl¬
vania and so made of this the German
commonwealth? An advertisement
written by William Penn himself and
distributed among the Germans along
the Rhine who had been stricken by a
thirty-years’ war.—-Philadelphia Public
Ledger.
“Lickers” Worth While.
“My papa can lick your papa,”
boasted Johnny, aged six.”
“I don’t care, my mamma can lick
your mamma,” came back Johnny.
“Both of you make me tired,” chimed
in Sammy. “My papa and my mamma
can both lick me, and the worst part
of it is they take turns about doin' it.”
—Indianapolis News.
COVETED BY ALL
but possessed by few—a beautiful
head of hair. If yours is streaked with
gray, or 1 b harsh and stiff, you can re¬
store It to its former beauty and lus¬
ter by using “La Creole” Hair Dress¬
ing. Pries $1.00.—AdT.
Some people go to church for the
purpose of obtaining a new supply of
gossip.
Shnners
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seller; agents wanted; liberal commission.
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