The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, April 19, 1923, Image 1

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■ lnv«etlg»to Todayl T» Reaular 8ubterlb.ro THE banner-herald %i,ooo Acetetnt poncy rrse. THE BANNER-HERALD Dally and Sunday—10 Canta a Week. ■rtnbllshed 1832. Dally aai l-H U IM * Wee*. ATHENS COTTON; MIDDLING 28c PREBIOUS CLOSE .... 28 l-2t WEATHER: Continued Clear and Cooler. VOL. 91, NO. M Associated Prate Servica ATHENS, CA„ THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1923. N. E. A Servica Single Coplea I Carta DaCy, I Ceuta Sunday. Charging Skipwith With Plotting Both Morehouse Murders (By Aasociated Press) BASTROP.—Sheriff Carpenter early Thursday noti fied the fifteen defendants in the Morehouse Parish hooded band cases to surrender to him at the court house before noon Three others, charged with con •action with the crimes arc out Tthc sheriff's jurisdiction. The state charges ail defendants are Klansmen. Smith Stevenson, f red Higgin botham and New Gray sulTender- d Thursday morning. Captain Skipwith, exalted cyciops of the Morehouse Klan, telephoned the sheriff he would surrender Friday "paSTROP.—Captain J. K. Ship- uorth. exalted cyciops of the More house parish, Ku Klux Klan. will bo the storm cantor In the forth- remnlR triala ot Morehouse cltis- tns as a result of operations ot masked hands In the parish last .par (or which Governor Parker holds the klan responsible. Dis trict Attorney David I. Garrett ar rived here late Wednesday from Monroe with 30 bills of Informa tion prepared by Attorney General A V. Cneo, charging nearly a score Of persona with various offences. He Med them with James Dalton, clerk of the court Wednesday nght and Mr. Dalton exported Immedia tely to place In the hands of Sheriff Athens Rotary Club Elects Its 1923 Directors Mofton Hodgson Closes Successful Administra tion As President. Name New Officers Shortly. ’ Pred carpenter warrants for the Wednesday was election day with the Athena Rotary club and the following members were elect ed aa members of the board of directors for the ensuing year: Billups Phlnlxy, B. F. Hsrdeman. C. D. Flanlxen, H. H. Gordon. Jr., James White, D. W. Ryther and J. E. Talniodgc, Jr. The directors will meet within the next 1st days and eletfi a president, vice presi dent, secretary and treasurer. President Morton Hodges made a most Interesting talk reviewing irrest of the defendants. The most serious charge la that of conspiring to mnrder and two hills covorlng this crime,are di rected agalndl Captain Shfpworsfc One relates to the caae ot Watt Daniel, kidnapped by a band o( hooded men on August 24, while the other relates to that of T. P. Richard. Daniel's comnanlon. Two bodies Identified as those ot the ere found December 22 In Lake latourche. There are no oth er murder conspiracy Informations. SEVERAL MORE CHARGES what had been accompUahed c,tir ing the past year »nrf stated that over 200 visitors had been the guests of the club. He has made a most admirable president and many aecompllahmenta have been brought about under hia direction. Dr. J. c. Wilkinson announced tna coming or Roscoe Simmons, re puted to be the greatest leader of the negro race, frho will .ddress tllR nilhlld* ftlf. (Im'Unaa nit.llfnvliirta HIE 11 CAUSES “FLARE UP” Ilf CIII COUNCIL SESSION Alderman Culp Asks Why Agreement Failed to Ex tend Bright Lights to Hancock on College. Three Men, Nearly Dead From Starvation and Exposure, Wattle Elements For T<wo Days to Bring Help to Marooned Comrade$ (By* Associated Press*) potatoes w£re left and a horrible NORTHPORT.—Cold and ex- death seemed destined for the lit- SUGGESTS CITY . NOT PAY BILL Council Finally Decided to Adjust the Matter “Ami cably” With White Way Committee. The Athens white way, formally Installed on April 4. caused an oratorical ••flare up” In City Coun regular meeting Wednesday night when Alderman Henry Culp declared that the White Way com mittee was not carrying out Its contract in falling *o put the bright lights in front of the city hall on College avenue. The original contract or under standing with the committee, it was stated, called for the Installa tion of lights on Coilpse avenue In front of the ptstofflce and gov ernment building and an Increase of $2,000 in the city's electric bill for strqpt lights. hausted, nearer dead than alive from exposure, three men* almost- starved to death dragged them; selves into this town Wednesday* The men had battled their way through the slush and ice of the open water of Lake Michigan, brought news of the terrible strug gles of nine men and one woman, slowly starving to death, to keep the little spark of life glowing. The party went to Fox Island, eighteen miles fron* here, last fall to cut timber, carrying with them supplies sufficient for several months, but the prolonged winter weather did not enter into their calculations. A month ago the supplies had dwindled to almost nothinf. Two weeks ago only a very few frozen tie party After making two, unsuccessful attempts to get to the mainland and bring help to the little band the three men made another start last .Monday. It took them two days and nights to make the eighteen mite* which meant life to them, during which time two of the men nearly drowned. They finally reached their goal and as a result two army air planes. loaded with food supplies and mediicne with two doctors ard winging their way to the island, hoping against 'hope that the starving party will have been able to survive the terrific storm which •wept over the lake Wednesday night. FAIL IN RETURNS Law, Which Compels Re ceiver to “Double Tax” Will Be Carried Out in Clarke. MANY ATHENIANS. 60 Id addition to these. other bill, char,"' Captain Shipworih with rerrrlnx firearm, on the premlxee of another, with conspiring to com- pel a person to leave hie home, with conspiring to Moult » person, with conspiring to compel b per ms to leave an automobile and with conspiring to comnel a per- m to leave hla place of huelneH. Dr n. M. McKoln. former mayor ol Mer imuge, arrested In Belli more at the request of Governor Parker upon a charge of murder In connection with | the Daniel- diehard caae. also Is named In sev- rral Ilia, one chargee him with roaaplrln* to compel a person to leare Morehouse pariah, another with asaauB with a dangerous wraiain, and a third'With conspir ing to assault a person. Dr. Mc- Koln now In In Baltimore, a atu- fent at Johns Hopklna university, and it I. understood he atlll I* ,ni V'E is,ooo b.^tl in' connection a genuine celcDiiUon with dinner nt the agricultutal. college And A trip over the grounda to be fol lowed by the Georgia-Auburn game on Sanford field. Among the visiting guests were: Judge 8amuel H. Sibley, of the U. S. four*; Mr. Coleman, At Mil waukee; Dr. Silverman Manhelmer, of New York and Mr. Justin Law- »lth the case bill Is not under a murder charge. the public an, the’Moas auditorium on Friday evening. Every Rotarian was Invited to attend the lecture and. no doubt, there will be a large crowd of white citizens vresent. The big Inter-City meet which Is to be held In this city on the 11th of Maq will be attended by hundreds of Rotarlans from Geor gia and a portion of South Caro lina. The day will be given pverto a SpoHi.IhI. eelAh.altow „ItV .Mwwmw lie, director of music at tkfe i*e- vival being conducted at the First Methodist church. A GREAT PICTURE Alderman Culp declared ue fav ored refusal to pay tho elsdtrlc bill until the agreement was car ried out. This was the feeling of other aldermen, also. They were told, however, that the government bad refused to pay Its pro-rata share tor Inlstatlahfou ot the lights In front of the postoffice and rath er than have a "one way" light the committee had decided to abandon for the present, the plan ot plac ing the white way to Hancock on College. . Alderman J. H. Rucker said he saw no reason for comptstatl about extending the white way as (I would save the city money In elec tric Ills to hold oft Installing the lights In front of the postoftlce. Ttlewaucn wss also told tha* the committee plan to extend the white way to Hull on Clayton as soon aa possible. Finally, after- considerable diap cuaslon, and reference to tbe min utes ot tbe meeting when the white way agreement was made. It was decided to appoint a committee for f More Than Fifty Dele gates From Athens to Attend State Christian Endeavor Convention. When the CenSral of Georgia .vain leaves for (Macon Friday morning for the Eleventh Annual State Christian Endeavor Conven tion, more than CO delegates from Athena are expected to oe aboard the special which will convey to the "Central City” tbe Athena del egation. A telegram from Homer. Ga„ states thirteen delegates will arrive In Athens Friday morning to go down with tha Athena En deavor, re. All along the tine the train will take on delegates and by the time tha train arrives in Macon, pmc- tlcally one hundred will make up the party. Many of the Endeavor- era left Thursday' In automobiles These debates are being held to be sore they were In Macon tor at the Women's Instltutloln of the tbe opening session. .city to create more Interest and to Montdcello, the Northeast (Insure a larger attendance of col- Ocorgla delegation will serve n i (age students, light lunch, which each person la l.-ru* Senior debate between these expected to carry along. TQBEATLUCYCOBB BOOKS CLOSE ON MAY FIRST Women Also Told That jn Order to Vote Must Give in Poll Tax At Receiv er's Office. Clarke county clUaena who fall to give In their tax returns by May 1. will be double-taxed. It was an nounced Thursday by Tax Receiver H. Dorsey. Annual Clash Between Phi Kappa and Demos- thenian Societies to Be Saturday P. M. This action will not be taken on volition of tbe tax receiver bat he Is required by lew to doable tax any person who falls to make • T (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON.—Injunction proceedings to com pletely shut off trading in sugar futures were instituted in New York Thursday by the federal government. The government’s bill was pro Sanitary Dept. Fraud’ on Town Says Alderman J. H. Rucker, From Third Ward, Condemns “Inef ficiency” of Sanitary Department. The annual Freshman debate be tween ihe. Demosthenlas and Phi Kappa Literary SocleUes will be held In Ihe Lucy Cobb.Chapel at eight o'clock, Saturday night. The quesUon for debate la: Re solved that Inter-collegiate ath letics as now practiced Is for the best Interest ot education In the United States. The Demostheaian Freshmen H. D. Shatluck, Y. E. Ilargeaon and A. Levy will champion the af firmative while the negative will “A fraud on tha town,” Is tha way Alderman J. H. Rucker of tha Third Ward, described the City Sanitary DepaiKmenL m denounc ing what he called "its taoffl- return by May 1. and must comply ciency' in City Connell Wednesday with the provisions ot the law, lt, n fght. is pointed out The tax receiver is required to keep open hla books until Mav 1, when tha digest la turned over to the ux equalizers. The hooka were opened on February 1. At tbe same time women were notified that If thay want to vote they i must gtva In dhair poll tar at thf office of tha tax reealver or their' names will ha left off fie registration list and they cannot vote whother they pay Qte 81 ot not. Those not desiring. to vote do not have to pay tha poll Ux. 'The men who are working for rhat department are paying no more attenUon to' their duty than If.they had no job," said 49ie ald erman. "I have heard complalnU from one end ot town to the other about the Inefttcienty of tha Ssnl- tary Department, the refusal ot JU employees to haul' away trash The law which compels the -tax be defended , by B. Boley, Albert ] receiver to doule Ux persona fall- Dombla 2. Jr., and John Hoach of Ing to give In returns by May 1 the Phi Kappa society. nsectfg to carry, along. , . two soclaUes waa held at the Featuring tha convention will be state Norn) «| chapel during the. the street parade Saturday noonl lecond temi Is as tollowa: "If u person falls do make a re turn In whole or In part, .tr fails to affix a vain* to hla property, It la the duty'of the receiver to make Ihe valu'ilion and aaaass the tax ation thereon and la all other re- • tecta to me - ™ the return for the defaulting person from tha beat ta- Information he can obtain, and having don* so-be shall double the aider people have repeatedly call ed them,”’ be declared. "It la a freed on the town and I hope the newspaper representative present will put what I say Into the pap ers," the alderman declared. . Alderman Rucker's denunciation of the Sanitary Ddpartmeotfs "In efficiency” waa prompted by ob jection raised by Alderman Henry Culp,of the First Ward, who said be had begged to vain for the de partment, to move a idle of trash from behind hla home. "! have tried and tried to get this trash moved and they will not come after It," said Alderman Culp. VWby. only today l saw a negro trash wagon driver stand behind — with more than 10,000 folks of Mh- ( g musical selection will he glv- . tax la the last column of the digest con and Georgia In line staging L # b y F . c Mc ciure and "Sleepy" •Onward. Christian Soldiers,” and | Maddox 0( , he university, a dinner Saturday evening at ®e new Mercer University Dining Hall. Plates will be laid tor 104 delegates and tickets placed dn sale Friday morning. E. P. Oates, general secretary of the purpose of malng an “tml- the United Society of Christian cable settlement" with tbe commit- Endeavor, of Boston, Mass., win ha iftmj Col. Gantt Interviews W. S. Holman, Pioneer Cit izen and Booster of City and Clarke County. (By T. LARRY GANTT.) i no not know a man In our city luter Informed about Athens than , ■ *• 8. Holman. He moved hare “ortl.v attar the dole of the war 1 ' 1 ‘ n the states. Ha waa one . . vwive. lie wnn vtso I tile organizers of our Normal Mkool. promoters of the Boule- l>™ioct; of the Electric Rall- **r»t«t Power Co. He built a . svk »eraper In Athena; and «*• a leader in evqyy en- ,i,y ,e ,w the upbuilding of hla The nil,er day I asked Col. Hoi- uhiun ' Op f ,,0, > of lh « future pos- ■iWHtl,, of the city. He said that , h »a taken on Its greatest P»Mh in the past twenty-five » an . d he confidenUy believed mt! " ,ht next quarter of a cen- would make far greater l^anc,.. from today than we did Dartod of time. CoL Hcl- Notable Screen Stars Ap pear in Highly Enter taining Drama of Mod ern Social Lite. City Council Asked Not to Convert Building to Negro School. Referred to School Board. *• a like L.. eewsww wi iimo. vdl nut" * **>'# baa never for one poment lost faith In Athens and ,J u, " r « and hla Investment* on y limited by hla capita '™h He said bad tbo parties organized the Boulevard pro n<Jt rtnttree. 1.* a a "ot gotten cold feet, wher ana hut listened to him LfHfc ™ 10 these lota and not E nfkrd them, they would all »o- r. ”*ye been in fine clreumsian- NnJvISBStJ** proH,H ‘ on pc;™ ,lol, “*» cited the fact that t “weed thirty acres of land outskirts of Kansas «ty. ,'hcfore that place took on Its and sold It for a song. That Hy today la worth millions. (Turn to page eight) By JOHN S. OREWRY When auch screen notables si MiUon 8111s. Elliot Dexter. Theo- lore Koaloff, Anna Q. Nilsson, Pauline Gkron and Julia Fkye are featured In a plcturd. excellent entertainment may be expected. Such waa uhe- caae when “Adam's Rib." a Paramount production which ta being ahown at the Pal ace Theatre with great auccess, Thursday and Friday. The atory deals with an ultra-modern girl who with all her wealth and pop ularity la still human. Pauline Oar- on por.reys this part and Elliott Dexter la seen in the role of Prof. NkthaU Reade whom she meets at the Customs Inspection In New York on her return from a Europ ean tour. Milton Sills as Michael Ramsay. ,MJss Gsron's father, and Miss Nils son. his neglected wife, live their parts rather than act them. Theo dore Koaloff as usual Is the per fect villain ta the role of M. Jaro- mlr. the exlletf king of Morania. Clarence Burton is the cave man of the vision scenes that make Oils production an astounding work of. tion art. The picture, an the nsme Implies. I . s * l I Is not a atory of the Garden of /\UtO ACCluGIlt IS Eden, hut on the contrary. It is a production of' modem nodal life, excellently produced, excellently acted and with excellent .photo- tee, the mayor pointing out that the committee might have misun derstood the agreement. “I have found It Is best not to condemn tho pther fellow until you give him a hearing," he aald. The City Buard of Education the Baxter 8treet school Into a will bo requested not to convert nngro school when tho ■ Third Ward building Is completed, as a result of action taken by City Council Wednesday night. A petition signed by clUsens liv ing In the vicinity of the Baxter street hu|ldlng was presented and read to council which requested that dhe school not be converted Into a negro school as has been suggested. fount'll unanimous!, adopted a reSblution requesting the Board or Education to keep the Baxter su-eef among the nromlnent sneakers at the convention. He will ‘address Ihe delegation Friday afternoon at 4 o’clock. Carl Jackson Matthews. Field Sscretary for Florida and Georgia will conduct tbe staging. Allen Released On Auto Theft Charge Claiming thet be waa permanent ly Injured as a result of a fall whan bln leg waa caught ta an electric tight post hole. Asa Wler notified City CounMI Wednesday night that he waa preparing to aue the city and Athens Railway and Electric company Jointly for $2804. The petitioner declared b» w»s hurt while walking down Clayton street on the north side when he stepped Into a hole.where an elec- Me light pole formerly stood. Tbe accident happened on February 7, 1913. It was stated, and from the wrench received by the tall hr Ten new street lights will ha In- was Injured to the extent of 32SOO. stalled ta Athena during 1023. This the petitioner said. The suit waa waa the decision reached by City I brought Jointly agataqt the city Council Wednesday night jand Electric company. The matter Council allotted the same num- > was referred to the Flnece Com ber of lights ta 1923. The Street; mltteo for actloo. and Lights committee will have Charge of (testing an automobile wes dismissed against Scott Allen a white man In Superior Court Wedneday. Will Martin, a negro tried for stealing the tame auto mobile Allen was charged with stealing was released also. A Jury in Superior Court was en gaged Thursday morning ta trial of a case against Edgar Bell, ne gro youth'charged with stealing cigarettes from the sore of R. U. Bailey on Broad street. Asa Wier Claims He Was Permanently Injured By Fall Into Hole on Clay- ton Street. TEN 8TRECT LIGHTS charge of locating tho lights. MARKET SUPERINTENDENT J. William Firor, cdnnty agenr, Wednesday night waa elected su perintendent of the Athena Curb school for tho overflow ta tthe »'*rket by City council. Mr. Firor wbltfc school population. Mayor have general supervision of the Thomas stated that the city will pEed the Baxter street uildlng for a white school as a result) of tbs big Increase In the school poputa' graphy and scenic effects. YOUd SUNDAY OINNER - IS NO LONQSR A PROBLEM If you art sulded by grocery and moot odvortUomooto appear- leg In tho Uenntr. Harold dvory Friday •v«ninfl. TH* choicest odlhloo that tho markat affords oro offarad tho consumoro ovory Friday through tho modlum of tho ••nnor-Hor- •Id. Road tho droeory storo ond butetyr shop. offorlnga btfP r « placing your grd«f« f$r *** day dinner. You win find tho... boot aahl^i THE BANNE*«H^BA U > Serious to Negro Clayt Jackson, colored, is at St. Mary’s Hospital, where he was lary» Hospital, wnere ne sorted Wednesday following utomobile accident on the Mi automobile accident on the Mitch ell's Bridge road when he waa struck by a car driven by Ixtnnie Holmes, another negro. and shows that this old terriatial Johnson, it seems had alighted globe is stil] a fairly good place to from a buggy to. kill a snake he live ta. saw in the road and as he came! Wo smile when we see the “big around behind the buggy and Into j heartedneas” of the men in the Market while Mrs. Bessie Battey Troutman will be Market Master. NAME HITCHING GROUNDS against such 'defaulters after hpv- Ing placed the proper market value or specific return ta She - proper columh and for every year's ds- rdult the defaulter shall be taxed double until a return 'la made.” 2. Tax receivers are required to open their books for receiving tax returns of Ihe taxpayers of thair county dn the find day of Feb ruary of .each yaw. 3. Tax receivers are-required to closes, their hooka on tha tint day of May of each year. Harding Strongly En dorses Undertaking. All Southern States to Be Represented. ATLANTA.—Mr. Hollins N. Ran dolph, chairman of the Stone bonsa wut lata Ur wtothw negro aitahun Confederate (Memorial 1” but be woald Association^and Mr. Gutzon Ilorg- . ... . Hi m, the sculptor who will carve pot bant away the luting ta that nelghbol P. C. Morgan t< Speak Here At Big Conference GLEE CLUB OF LUCY Well Known Young Evan gelist and Bible Scholar to Deliver Ten Lectures At Octagon. Annual Performance Given At Seney-Stova , l Chaw" Thursday Night Violin Selection Feature. The first exercises of Lucy Cobb commencement begins at Senay- Stovall chapel Thursday tnlgh when the glee cldb gives Its an nual performance. The glee club thta year la ana of the benJ in the- history of tbe Institution, the voices and music Ians' being selected from the heat talent ta tbe school. 9 A distinct feature and one tbit Athena people will appreciate will City Counoll adopted e resolution bo the violin eelectlooa by Mias Wednesday night autnorizlng In-1 Margarethe Morris, the talented slillatlon ot hitching posts on tha (young daughter of Prof, and Mrs. south side of Hancock avenue in | John Morris, who won such high cenjnnrtlon »1lh the county. I honors at Ihe Chicago Conserve- A sign will be placed designating I tory of Music last, Teat. I Tabernacle ta Atlanta, and Dr. Q. the sooth aide of the street only us i The program for Thursday night | Campbell ' Morgan, great Bible the hitching grounds. It wss tie-1 la an follows: t ....... ... teacher, will deliver dally lectures elded. . . t Ood ta Natare-Beeihoven-Bar- , t the Conference. : _2 _jlow. ■ ,. . . The subject for the first week's A J /If, J Jn TV Jlr r> . . OnMusIcs V, Inga—Mendelssohn |»,.t arM o, Dr, P. C. Morgan will Accused of Murder andOn HtsWay Back to] 4 . TrouW . ^^...i symphony c " ” - Monday—The Introduction. Besides delivering a sermon eaeb evening, alternating with Dr. O. Campbell Morgan and Dr. Len o. Broughton, Dr. P. C. Morgan will give a series of dally lectures at tbe Athena BIbIs Conference wblch opens next Sunday and ends May 4. Recognised as oaatot tbs south's leading young -Bible scholars. Rev. P. C. Morgan Is a “chip off the old block” and holds hla audlancea with'hla powerful, Ineld and wall thought put sermons and lectures en the Bible and the Gospel. EVANGELIST OF POWER In hla evangelistic meetings be Injunction to Stop Trading in Futures in Sugar is Begun pared under the personal direction of, Attorney Genaral Daugherty after consultation with President Harding, and aska the court to permanently prevent tho New York Coffee Exchange from enter ing into or permitting any trans actions in sugar funleaa tho per son purporting to make such sale hat in hla possession or under his control a supply of sugar ade quate to meet the requirements of such transaction.” The action is requested by the government which , charges an M itptrw rtf gnopiilaHnn ‘ orgy of (peculation” which has driven up the price of sugar to the consumer and which during February enriched the pocketbooks of broken by 89MJ)00. . • Ml President Hard.ug la still wait ing for the preliminary report of tho United States tariff commis- sion or. sugar, which had been ex pected early this week. The pur pose of this investigation is to rind out what tnfluanee, if any, tho present tariff has had on the in crease in sugar prices. President Harding and fremtre of the tariff law have expressed confidence that it will not be found to blame. BEGIN WORK SOI ITL tho figures upou Stone Mountain, returned to the c|Cy .Monday trom Washington, where they went to 1 outer with tin- president, by ap- 1 .ointment, on Saturday last in re gard to the letter the president had, written to tbv committee strongly ’ endorsing this notable movement. Mr. Randolph states that Om president has not only written a letter heartily endorsing this nota ble project, buj designated at the conference on Saturday Col. C. O. Sherrill, his Chief Aid,, and who is the chief executive officer of the •Monuments and Parks Commis sion In Washington, as his personal representative to attend the ban quet which ip to be given at the Capital, City Club on Friday even ing nexL Mr. Randolph and Mr. Borglum uro enthusiastic with the results of Utelr trip and while la Wash ington also saw a number ot other very prominent men of tbe Nation, all of whom without exception, expressed themselves as very heqitlly In favor of this historic achievement. They also conferred With Mr. Vice-President Ceolidgc, who stated that he would gladly hav accepted their tavltation present at the banquet i Itatalt" Dr*°PerdTml 'Morgan"has (act fiMHv M ^ »* re » d F * apeaklng engage- meat ta Massachusetts scheduled for Ihe day following. evangelist of power, and hie dally Bible messages at the Conference will be attended by large crowds ot Northeast Georgia and Athena people. Dr. Psrelvsl Morgan's lectures will b« delivered at tha 9:30 o'elock hour tha first weede of the Con ference. which will be held at tbe Octagon on tbe University of Georgia campus. The second week' he will apeak at the 11 o'elock hour. Dr. Len O. Broughton, famoui di-.I prominent citiiens "took ”up"*'th» •vine and founder of the Baotfet work again last) summer and fall It will bo net,lied that the con-' ceptlon to carve upon the side of Stone Mountain this xreat memori - al commemorative of the valorous deeds of the soldiers of the Cun- federncy originated some six or seven years ago. Soon after Us In ception very considerable progress was made towards Its completion, but, tbe war coming on, th<- work had necessarily to be laid asid« during the war period. A group Trial and Possible Long Sentence, Indian.^Zmifm^Slo^^M^. Save Life of Man Who Was Sent After Him|cdHf^a*“ , *““^’ a ’^^ (aar.—By Gertruda Rosa. 1 Londonderry Air—arr.—By Llo (By Associated Press.) I accused of murder, instead of ■ nel Tee ls. ANCHORAGE—Every once in leavlrg tho helpless man to a cer-1 Mine Margarethe Moris, a while something happens in this tain death and making his escape,! Lullaby—CyriU Srott-Kramer. old World of ours, which strength-1 packed the man who was carrying! cigarette Girls Chorus (From ens the faith of men in other men. |him beck to face a possible sen- Ifarmen.)—Blze. -■“* * k -' * Ui " -'a •—tence of life imprisonment or may-1 — be even death, on his sled and ^ • F*1 * started for civilization lixeOfgia “laying the road was struck by the car that Holmes was driving. The ac cident happened about two miles beyond Mitchell’s bridge. Jackson was rushed to St- Mary’s hospital and la reported to be in a rather derions condition. <i A warrant Wat ewom out for Hointes who waa alone in the car charging' ■ asauft with Intent -to murder, and Is being held in jail. Great Northwest, in the movies, but here is a little story which Just sifted through the enow from what might make a good movie story,—and it’s true. While taking an Indian, .aecused of murder, from Fort Gibbons to Fairbanks recently, Deputy United States Marshall Webstar waa stricken with acute appendicitis. Hla prisoner, tbe msn who was Almost two hundred miles,, _ through the desolate waste of! In IfniInlP.HpRri*xt" snow this Indian mushed his way j 111 LfOUDie-neaaer without rest and delivered his man; to a ohspital, hung around thel. building untii the operation waa STARKVILLE, Miss. —Georgia University and iMississippi Aggies will meet here ta a double-header thw first officer he met. expl bar who he was and what- he waa wanted for. If you ware on tbe jury that triad the man accused of-.murdcr what would your -verdict -baT Thursday afternoon, tbs getllnr under way aft: S«. Georgia missed connections Wednesday and tho game scheduled for the aflat- noon ...i ld not be played. Tuesday—The ..Allegro Movement. The Pentateuch. Wednesday—Tha Andante Movement. Tha Historic and Proehetlc Beaks. Thursday—Tha Scherzo Movetnant. Tha New Revela tion throuoh Christ Friday—Tha Finals. Tha Book of Revelation. SUBJECT FOR SECOND WEEK ■ The subject' for the second wekk's lectures will he "evolutionary Hy potheses ta the Light of Biblical Revelation.” Monday—Facing tha Facta. —A study of tha situation. Tuesday—Tha Beginnings of Life—Tha Biological Aspects. Wednesday—M on key or Man?—Tha Anaromlcal As- Thueadayt-Lnis Age of Rock, er tha Rock of Ages—'The Geological AapacL ' amt have been actively at work upon It since and recently the ac tual carvlpg of tho designs and figures wet commenced hy Mr. Borglum, the notod sculptor who was engaged to do this u.n k -At the banquets at the Capital City Club on PYfday evening next all of the governors of the south erns states will he present or rep resented end a largo gathi rlng of Ihe nromlnent men und women of Iho south and Nation will also b.- present. It Is proiwseit at that time In announce tho definite plans . and tlw program of tho non and, as soon as possible, ect tho generals who will repre sent each of the southern In the memorial. OLGA PETROVA IS SUED ON PLAGIARISM CHARGE NEW YORK.—Olga Petrovja, actress, was made defendant in a Butt for $35,779.33, filed this week by William H. Roberts, who ‘har&e dshe made over hit play La.' Kuhia” Into -The White Pm* cock.' ’Robert* paid he granted JHrs petrovla ^xcltlfive righu* «r» produce his play on a percentage ha*{*? and aflk»d the amount for the alleged planarizing of hln drama.