The Daily times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1925, October 21, 1922, Image 1

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IATUNTA SUNDAY Commanding Officer of Gtor- . gia National Guard Killed to Auto Wreck Will Lie in State in CapJtoL-Govemor And Staff to Attend Funeral - (By Associated J’resi. Atlanta, Ga.. Oct. Oct. 21.-~Fuueral arrangements for Adjutant General'J. Van Holt Nash, commanding officer of the Georgia National Guard, and .Lieutenant II M. Butler, who ScUled last night when an automobile overturned near Griffis, Ga tag completed todny. The two bodies were brought here for burial. Major Chariea Cox, ot Atlanta, who suffered e broken qoilarbone, i three fractured riba, will tecovs.*. The body of Adjutant General Nash witt lie in state hr the Capitol tomor row. The funeral servicer will, ho, • conducted from the Capitol, and, inter ment will <be made in Weatrlew name tery. The Governor with hi* staff will New Brunswick. N. J., Oct 11—Sup ported by information in affidavit by witnesses to the Hall-Mills murder, the authorities today were confident the mystery soon would be solved with guards keeping the leading char acters in the drama- under surveil lance and no fsar tt fielt that the peeled pers&na might escape.; Working tagependenUy ot all other investigating forces. Prosecutor Strieker, of Middlesex county, prepar ed •'to question at least five persons in an effort to obtain sufficient evi dence to warrant a# arrest. A vestryman of the Rev. Hall's church, who is said to have been in the neighborhood ot the Philips' house in company with e young wo man member of the church on the night of the murder will be question I. Investigators Intimate that they t^ve established a motive, but fatlun to make arrests is due to the fact that some links ln : the chain of evidence have not been properly forged, MCCURTAIN RESIDENTS BURY MINE VICTIMS McCurtain. Okie, Oct. 21.—Thi Lmw i. MUiury Service. quiet little mining camp le lvng again * ” through the sorrow tuat befell thV Atlanta, Oct. 21^-J. Ven Holt J community In 1912, when 76 tnen lost Nash succeeded Adjt Gen. Obcar their Uvea In the San Bolt coal mine, throngh appointment by the late Gov. 1 for today McCurtaln Is burying the Joseph Terrell, end has jarred eight dead, who were killed In yeater- continuously since, except during an j d»y* B digester el the Progresaive coal intermission when he was In the - American non/ an a major daring the WoriMM Gen Mesh Mf he eldest son of Me j. /. Van Holi Nash, formerly of Norfolk, Va., of # family ol consider. aMp prominence in that state, and member of tho staff of Can. ffteyrart daring the War Be. tween the States rad one of Stewards close companion*. Mo mar educated Jfixst in the public schools of Augusta ♦nd later at Richmond Acads- - “ that city, where he found O military interest, an interest which followed him through Ms entire life. In fact Oen. Nash has been often referred toVr oorn soMietC^v/™ Gen. Nash’i father was manager to Atlanta of the ^Sobthern -division ol the American * Book Company, end had with Mm ‘'in that work two of his sons, f. Vih Holt end Stafford who, After die' father's death, werj made joint'managers of the concent. Gen. Nash was ratAd as a moat txcellent business min but devoted much of hit attention and time to military-duties and was one of the National Guard pioneers in the South He waa first a lieutenant in the-Old Atlanta Cadeta and, when volunteers . were called-for the Spanish.American War he Went Into that eervice as a captain. During the administration of Gev. Terrell he was tendered.the office of adjutant general of the State after j-rvice as a military aide-on the staff Of-two governors. He re. signed his connection with the b6ok concern to accept the statt_office rad continued hr'state service until the World War, when he wns relieved by (Continued on’ Page Eight) FISHING BOAT RACES. AT GLOUCESTER ARE ON (By Associated Press) Gloucester, Maas., Oct 21. — This was race day at Gloucest the fisher folk ot the North Atlantic with Blue Nose from Canada defend ing her international finbing vessel championship against Henry Ford, out of Gloucester MRS. PHILLIPS RESTS Hammer Murder Gaee Rest, Over Saturday and Princi pal Rests in Jail House. (By J a l,ua Angeles. Cal-. . Oct 21.—Mrs. Clara Phillips, accused of heating Mrs. Alberta Meadows to death with hammer, rested in a cell in the county jail after, the first day ot the trial. There was no session of the court today. EXECATIVE COMMITTEE STUDYING CONTEST IBy Associated Press) Atlanta, Ge., Oct. 11.—The State Democratic executive committee day was considering the content wag ed by J. I. Summerall, of Wfycross. rad W. J. Qulncey, of Douglas, to .de termine which of the two were legal ly nominated to be Jndge of the Hu perior court _ Woman Sentenced to Hang Under the Georgia Law for Killing Husband, Escapes The Gallows and WET Go To State Penitentiary. -\- • (By Associated Press* - . Atlanta, Ga.. , Oct 21.—Mrs. • Cora Lou Vinson, sentenced to dgath for killing her husband. Dr. W. D. Vinson, was granted a new trial by- Jndge Humphries in Ful- otn Superior Court, rad Immedi ately entered a plea of guilty, and was sentenced to s life term in the state prlsoa. Dr Vinson was shot to death in his drag store here Met March. Hie wife claimed the shooting re sulted from a seeffie between them over a revolver. 8be la the first women in many years to re ceive (he death penalty in Geor gia. (By AseoeUted Press) TURK NATIONALISTS SAY ENGLISH DIO NOT COMPEL THE ARMISTICE lan Francisco, Cal., Oct. 21.—Chari-1 T f rTTI t? , Bnckiey, electrician who, white in- Indications Point From Turk- toxicated, the police chided, ran teh Viewpoint to Conclusion and killed Marion Newton, aged That It was Merely a Desire 4 in bis automobile, offered to give For Peace That Catssed Sle- hls own child, Isabel, aged 6. to the VL* ^ K parents ot.the deed child. The offer! nature. refused, and.,Buckley is in the! city prison awaltiqg trial on charges! Angora, Oct. 21.—The Turkish Nat* ot manslaughter and driving eh auto* loyalists signed the Mudanla armis- (By Associated Press) mobile while I CHRISTIAN MEN MEET inkansas ;crry, today Kansas City, Mo.,'dct. 21.- ference of Christian business me »d’a two day session here today All business men Interested tu *v plying to th«ir business effelra. t& principles taught by issue Christ, were Invited to attend the conferee sessions. : T (By Associated Pres*) Effingham. Ill.. Oct. II—iUnless the -proposed, nqw - constitution limiting Cook county to one-fhilrd membership in the state Senate,4e adopted, it wll be but d few years until Chicago will LASKER RAPS DAUGHERTY FORPROHI RULING Chicago. ML, Oct. 2L—Acrora the banquet board. A. D. Lasker, chair of the United 8tates Shipping Board, told Attorney General Daugh erty and other baaqbeters that the Attorney General’s recent ruling that eq ahips- entering American waters must be "dry", was the greatest blow that could have happened to the Am erican merchant marine '1 can prove,” said Chairman Unless State Law Regulating State Senate by Population Is Changed, Fifty Per Cent Will Come From That City Declares Sherman. prove their peaceful intentions to the world, and not because of any pressure from the British, Yussuf Komal Bey, foreign minister, told the national assembly today, in reply Premier Lloyd George’s recent speech at Manchester, England. FRENCH TOWNS ASKED ABOUT RUSSIAN RECOGNITION Paris, Oct. 21.—One hundred and sixty chambers of commerce In the principal towns of France, are asked give their opinion as to the advls- ablllt yof resuming commercial rela tions with Russia. control the a former United ' man declared befc tfon here today of the state’s | | the entire state, j Senator Sher- f the Bar Associa- jtj-seven per cent i- lives in Chi- LLOYD ONE BIO UNIONPLAN REJECTED (By Associated Press) Rockford, III., Oct. 21.—A resolu in calling upon the American Feder ation or Labor to call the various in ternational unions Into conference for the purpose of arranging to amalga mate all nniona into one big union was voted down by the Illinois Fed eration. I GENERAL ELECTION IK ENRUND DISCUSSED BY PARTIES INTERESTED COURSE IN ADDRESS AT ■' LEEDS TODAY (By Associated Leeds, Eng., Oct. ,41.-Former pre fer Lloyd George, {speaking.'at-a great meeting of ttuj[ Conlition-Imper- fata here today, declared that the DEFENDS! DOMINICAN GOVERNMENT WILL GET UNITED STATES RECOGNITION o-ife" had been } meeting of the ■banner of party hoisted at the rec Conservative*, whli continuing the irted that Abe combination which bad achieved (victory in the lets war had been Attortwyffcnei* not-besause It-hedSfeased to serve el spoke before'tho Audit Bureau As- »he notion but because the party Hoclation and Its' guests, "that Mr. uot getting enough of it. Daugherty Is the greatest lawmaker ‘ Those who Were expecting i only made the Attorney General nf ail time. Rod Sea dry.” In', his addrei Daugherty sold: “I did not have tn« question before me as Attorney. Gen- ewl. That had been passed upon ‘by the .people and the Supreme Court, obliged to follow the law/ .The question wus a naked legal question. 1 ' Syrup Coits New Shipment Just|Ariived We Have AU Sizes •.« £ ^RiR- Pints, Quarts and GaIldj»vOoftfe(i? v Our Prices Are Right MASH-MILTON DRUG CO. : -a Good place ptupRstoswatam CHICAGO OFFICIAL DEMANDS INVESIGATION IBy Associated Pi mb) Chicago, 111., Oct. 21.—-’A thorough airing of ail charges against his of fice will be demanded, Charles. F. Clyne, United States district attorney >ald today after studying the report; by the special invesigators of affairs in the federal prosecutor’s office for Uio last three years. .. • ’ Clyne said he would make the de- maud in a formal motion, before Judge Carpenter, iri whose court the investigation started. Attorney Gen eral Daugherty, to whom the report made, declined' to comment. tional announcement from the retir ing premier were disappointed. There was no suggestion or the formatlou o' a new party, but ardent defense of the coalition. MRSriTNALLYFREED OF MURDER CHARGE (By Associated J'imJ Hammond, lndi, Oct. 2l.-r-Mrs. sol McNally, aged 26, was back lio in South Bend, today following 1 acquittal of the charge of murder j tarred by her husband l nthe “d baby" twins case -To# e*sc was ( missed when the prosecution failed prove that the twin bsbica had ei lived or died. Hammond, Ind., Oct. . 20.—Mrs. Hazel UcNaJly, alleged mother ot Hammond’s “doll baby" twins, was freed yesterday of the . charge of murdering the mysterious infanta when Judge Henry C. Cleveland ruled that the state had failed to prove''the infants are not still alive. The 26.year.old wife, .who has grinned and giggled through four days of* preliminary : hearing while witnesses attempted to fasten on her the charge of double murder, collaps ed and fell fainting to the floor with N. C. GUARDS GO HOME Wilson, x! Ct. Oct. 21.—Members of the Wilson national guard' who were placed on dnty at the Jail here last] the cheers of 150 women court night to prevent the possible lynch-;.fans applanding her acquittal, ring, ing ot three. negroeV arrested tn cm. |ing in her ears. ‘ .- qectlon With" tbs killing of Richard By a strahg paradox of the law, Lorain, wen ulowej to m to ihnir ;.wlnr “bom" to bn. McNoll, Uwtjr^r" “ ” " A ^rat oak hnmti lndi* Tho nlfht nsunxl nniet- IIo,m<Iuo mm oolw (.ootmoto mu I * (Iiy Associated Press) Washington,. D. C., Oct. 21.—Formal Installation of the provisional govern or the Dominican republic, be followed by the withdrawal of the American governor, in accordance with'the plun ot evacuation to b hy the provisional authorities occurred today In. announcing plans for evacuation Of the republic/ the State T)cpartment aid the provisional government would he headed by Juan Batista VJcinKBar- (oh. and the cablnst officers will be telected in accordance with the uation ugreement. Withdrawal of the American marjn- i will begin as soon as the provision al president has ratified the execu tive .orders and laws of the American administration In the island. buby clothes, won its victory because the state wus unable to prove that the mystery babies were not at the present moment living, (breathing hu man beings with actual flesh gnd blood. The missing corpus aolid, lawyers phraseology for the "body of the crime,” proved a stumbling block und because of It, the mys tery of the “McNally twins” whether they ever existed, whether they w< only dressed up dolls, or whether, the state contended, they were first real babies and. then dolls, remains unsolved. Sustaining the motion of Samuel Swartz, attorney for Mrs. McNally for dismissal of the charge, Judge Cleveland ruled that all legal decisions maintained that some proof that a dead body actually existed, that it came to its death by violence, rad that the person charged with the erime was in some way connected with it* commission was necessary be fore a charge of murder could he sup ported. Hundreds of women and a few en fouht, clawed and scratched their way up the dark stairs to Hammond’* City Council chamber an hoar before the door was thrown the final ehaptar in the “doll Ur. (Continued on Pago Bight) (By Associated Pros) ;“’ rv * London, Oct. 21.—AU poulfyftjr par ties welcome the prospect' Of an Im mediate general election. The Con servatives especially fe*I thar^r would greatly strengthen their Admin istration if they were able tq get ' definite mandate from the country. Moreover, the formaUon dt'a'new ministry now would entail about- fir- teen by elections.^ involvfoftviflfortj loss of time, with* the possible pros pect of a general election * in- 1 ear future, still confronting them. The' Conservative party meeting for the lection of Andrew Boner tatw, as •ader will be held Monday. This meeting will be followed, kdcofd))ifr best information, by announcement the dissolution of Parliament eitket Monday night or Tuesday. The future attitude of Austen Cham berlain and hl« followers, who voted' for the coalition 1s much debated. Leaders of this group met privately last night and discussed prospects, but different versions of the declqion taken at the meeting are given by the political writers In the morning ne^-k- LORD CURZON WILL REMAIN CHIEF OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS London, Oct. 21.—It Is generally ac cepted as definitely Nettled tbat Lord Curzon, wlU remain secretary, for for eign affairs in the new cabldet, and will represent Great Britain/, at the Turkish peace conference, f6t which he Is continuing to arrange the pre liminaries JUSTICE DAY TO ’ Associated Pres*) «> Washington, D. C., Oct. 21.—Asso- date Justice William R. -Day/.of the United States Supreme Court, 'has' d< elded definitely to resign, in. view < his duties as umpire in the German- American claims negotiations. He wll' formally present his resignation t< President early next week. . TRAINS FILLED WITH LEGIONNAIRES —— • Out ol New Orleans — * . After [on CbAvtntfon. (By Associated Press) New Orleans, La., Oct. 21.—Trains departing last night apd today loaded with returning delegates and visitors to the fourth annual conven tion of., tho American Legion, which closed yesterday with the election of officers, GLIDING RECORD BROKEN . . r Yoyk,^m ^N”decl.io. haa been reaebed fo the distribution to charity of aMft«ti*ateiy 1120.000 “-- proceeds ot thq much discussed in the WorfiJ Reties game between the Yankee* jj'Akjpjant*. it was an nounced today.' Commissioner Landis and officials of the two New York club* tre ex pected to confecfutac P*®r future ou allotment of- ttod-BMoey.' Several or ganizations, including the disabled Veteran's Association, have been men tioned as likely to receive the fund. INDICTED SURRENDER Minneapolis .Officials Look- m f °(--ta>Sl‘Aecu««l of Mag.lfe&erfes. MinueiipoUs! MinD^** Oet.’’"^.—Unit ed States marsh^Of. continued today their search Indicted by the federal graR4;jory. charged with violation of the pane) code in connec tion with the disposition of bonds stolen in matt truck robberies In New Yprk and Chicago. Nine of the twenty-six persons in dicted had surrendered rad the oth- era have Indicated that they would do so. - All of thoee taken in custody were released ontavft; New Haven, Conn., Oct. 21.—In Sliding competition, O. R. Olley, in Fokker biplane, broke the world’s r« ord for gliding with a passenger, r unlnlng in the air forty-nine minutes. FIFTEEN DROWN IN COSTA RICA .—ito Deteolt. Wfso Injured Animal Wiffi.Cv and Fail ed te Stgyljipgiir Cruelty D,lrolt, (B M4£^uSjJJ^Slc»i„, h. didn't stop -to ghq|.-^jd to. a dog in jured when sjruek. by .his automobile. Thomas McGrow*. «f«y. fined Gre.dol- lars in recorded* court on a charge of cruelty to animals ATLANTA BAM)fi§~ OET BIO PAYROLL AtUM^a»,"OiCtt-.T[i™. auto mobile bandit* held. up O. C. Long, head ot tb« -Lqug Construction Com pany, betweeff AUWta rad a detour, and beat hiat i»ta nnconsclousness, and then escaped with w. satchel con taining threa thoufraA.dqllsrs, being the company’s payroll. Long told the. police that the three robbers forced- tbelr car in front of him, compelling bint, to. atop.. .They San Jose, Costa Rica, Oct 21—Fif teen persons were drowned In floods which swept the Crotina district with ! then struck htia invar, tfca head with . great damage and hoary property dub. Long was j>tCk*d up by a pas* ,A “* ' ing motorist. Our - Stock Of Children’s Shoes Is Complete This Fall hyVMve‘di* Effnd thAt wrtil gtVw'resS lervke'to‘«oye-aa* Qlrfs gring U SchosL . They „kre. T 1 * - * • preparty and'win flt v tfie feht asthey should be Yltt»* while they, are gnowtag* thus avoiding »ll-*K*p** feet later on in life. '* ’ t ... t feet^sA^rtd -lwAfh-;pf>p»r atftMfow;»sbeuM be. carefully- Dttad,wtt)»- care. sbpfBd. be. Uk ; ybt eet too Wrb*. Aa'areAee (Ifttttag e)»lld^«p'^ ■ sheee »♦' e"greet- re- H *"'Ty:^We : Yi^rlffieKg* Brb^kapabt*bf*taklng‘4Me-rpfpeiwlbimy. Send your children U pe for ii will bs pWassd ^ ' f sad «re believe that you a i with kb# reelin*:- Smith^Hayley^Shoe Co, W, ar. jihravtn^ tM mart complete line of Ladlesf Glove* ever displayed -Mt*- * .. .12 kUtTON Klft-tlN iLAGK— BROWN — WHITE ((id strap wriet-.G^pets — i« w Louis Steyerman & Th, Step otQM^tr gv ; r t taAffn.Cpmp The Original HqcktofHttfc Sduffiy fc.Mm