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VOL. 91, NO. 162
Associated Press Service
ATHENS, GA, TDBiDAY. AUGUST 21, 1923.
A. B. C. Paper
NVESTiem INTO
IROES OE LATHAM
miaifiT iimninn to
BANDITS STAGE I
WRING TRAIN RO
BBERY
GAINST HOWARD TO
Confession Expected From One
Of Men Held In Whipping Case\
Coal Crisis Result Rests With These Men
MIKE ESCAPE WITH
1EIUY PACKAGES
TART ON THURSDAY
ricvance Committee of
j 4 .a "p q~ ;
\£ ft ; .. •
• Jal few Jet ' 1 iwIIKhHi
Atlanta Bar Association Gasoline and Arm
I to Probe the Charges.
Against Newly Appoint-!
ed Judge of F u It o nj
Court.
Power Fight Gum
ATLANTA, Ga.— Investigation
Jof charges by Edgar Latham,
(prominent attorney* against .fudge
I (I. II. Howard, newly appointed,
■judge of the Fulton county court,
■will begin either Thursday or Fri-
Iday, it was announced here by
■ Robert P. Jones, chairman of the
■grievance committee of the At
lanta Bar Association.
The investigation will get un-
Ider way at a meeting of the griev-
lance commitee of the bar associa
tion, of vHiich Mr. Jones is chair-
I man. It is the result of adoption
| of a resolution by "a number of
I leading Atlanta lawyers” at «
meeting held Monday at the \ of-
I fice of James A. Branch, presi
dent of the bar association, call-
ing for a thorough probe of the
entire affair.
Mr. Branch stated that
sentiment of those attending the
meeting Monday was that the
charges were too serious to be
dropped and that in “fairness to
the people, the bar association, the
judiciary and Judge Howard" they
should be thoroughly investigated.
"Heretofore,” said Mr. Branch,
"we have had judges above sus
picion and the charges against tho
new judge are of too grave a na
ture to be ignored.”
"There was no desire on the
part of anyone attending the meet
ing Monday morning to pass upon
the truth of the charges against
(Turn to Page 81x.)
Chewing gum and movie
thrills evidently don’t go well
together.
Ask the scrub boy at the
Masonic building who Is as
sisting in getting the first
floor ready to be occupied by
a Oading furniture store
Tom Mix’s daring horuetir.ck
stunts, Bill Hart's tyro puns
and Pearl White’s train jumps
simply make ’em look for a
parking ground for the quid
opines the individual who dll
day Monday was scraping up
flattened out "pirmint’’ from
the floor that formerly was at
the receiving end of all of
thise footbeats at tense situa*
arose on the s*lv\.*rshent.
That is back in the days
when the Elite boasted cf the
"western thrillers” and fair
raising serials.
It required an entire day
and a gallon of gasoline to get
the place “ungummed.'
POLICE ON TRAIL ll“XJ
PLAIIED WHIPPINGS
Believe Hudson Brothers
Were Paid to Commit
Outrages. Confession Is
Near in Third Degree.
SPARTA, Ga.—Sheriff Jaa.
M. Jackson, of Hancock conn*
ty, who is ever on the alert for
evil-doers, especially of Ihe II*
quor-Kclling nnd moonahining
persuasion, was on the war
path Sunday night, and Henry
Wynn, an aged colored man,
was caught in the act. Wynn
is said to be an old offender
but has been sly enough to
keep out of the hands of the
law on most occasions.
A bystander touched a
match to the liquid, to teat IU
quality, and the entire outfit
went up in a blaze of blue
flame.
MACON.—Officials hero Tucs-
d ly were expecting to embark on
an oxtfnslv* bunt for other mem
bers of the bn ml which has btv-n
striking terror In this city for tho
past month by floggings, aiul due
to information obtained from tho
Hudson brothers, who were
captured Sunday In the net of
whipping two negroes, expected to
the gang fully rounded up by
nightfall.
During the last fortnight several
men have been whipped nnd order
ed to leave town within forty-eight
hours, and at Intervals during the
last six months scores of men have
been flogged. The climax In tho First OI Senes 01 Tests
disorders was reached early Sat
PILOT HOPS OFF ON
TWENTY-EIGHT HOUR
MI SERVICE TRIP
Tho threatened su.pcn.ion of anthracite mining September 1 may be averted by this conference
llaj’H llammond. ohainnnn of tho roll commission; Thos. It..Marshall, commission
Smith, commission ibepihor; (standing) E. E. Hunt, commission secretary; C. J. f
member; George Otis
nnutn. romtnisr.lon member; (standing) K. E. Hunt, commission secretary; C. J. Golden, president Dis
trict No. 9; Kinaldo Cappellinl, .president, District No. 1; Dr. C. I*. Neill, commission member. ’
HALL CRASHES MON.
jTwo Firemen Killed and
Forty Injured When
Plaza Hotel Collapses
Monday Night.
Judge Bradwell Passes
Sentence in Whiskey
Cases. One Case Is Can
celled on Insufficient
Evidence.
Four people plead guilty to hav
ing whiskey In city court Monday
^nd one case of the aamo char to
wag cancelled upon recommenda
tion of Solicitor Lamar C. n icker
on account of Insu-Mrlent evidence.
The appenranco docket wan call
ed Tueaday and Judgments taken
In several cases. Court will remain
otien for transaction of business
not requiring a Jury.
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK. — Two firemen
were killed when the roof and one
wall of the New Plaza Hotel in
Brooklyn collapsed during a spec
tacular fire Monday night, accord
ing to the casualty list compiled
by the police Tuesday morning.
First reports Jiad placed the
number oC dead At ten. The list
of the police cut this number
down to two, though there is a
possibility that more bodies will
be found. The injured * number
forty, most of them firemen, who
were caught when the walls col
lapsed.
Ambulances were rushed to the
scene from Brooklyn and Manhat*
tan bringing doctors and a corps
of nurses who assisted in the res-
ork. Four alarms of fire
brought additional firemen who
unlay when the police engaged In
a running pistol battle with alleged
(loggers after they had kidnapped
a man from In front of the rail
road station. Governor Walker has
threatened to place the city und*** -
martini law.
For Air Service Between I
San Francisco and New,I
York Begun.
Cash, Body Return
CLEVELAND, O.—Seeking
to avoid arrest after he rob
bed Mrs. George Brioci of $6.1
contained i;i a handbag, a
robber jumped into the Cuya
hoga river.
"He’s escaped,” said police.
"He’s drowned, and well
find tho money with his:
body,” replied Mrs. Brioci.
For three weeks, she and
her children kept watch.
Final 1 ” the body was seen.
The coroner was summoned
and took the b.nly from the
water. Still clutched in the
dead band was Mrs. Brloci’s
handbag—qnd her $03.
ATHENS NEEDS
PARK THEY
ASSERT
Athenians Point Out Rea
sons W h y T h i s City
Should Build Park
Now.
(By Associated »r*ss.)
SAN FRANCISCO. — Twenty-
eight hour mall service between
San Francisco nnd New York was
inaugurated Tuesday morning,
® s ss r
night that tho Humana and otnor . ..
niombora of tho Hogging band worn
paid moa. and that through tho
Hudaona thoy had learned they
were being financed by an organ
ization. A confession from on© of
the Hudaona. the police anld. waa
expected, and name* of thoao who
Jinvo been financing tho (loggera
would bo made public.
We expect to make other ar-
roata within forty-eight hours.”
anld Sheriff J. D. Hlckn, Jr. Tho
county official would not toll what
(Turn to Pay* Six)
Jamea Ealy. charged with hav- |„|, 0 assisted in tho work of res-
Ing whiskey. from recorder'© court, ; cue .
ing wnnKBj, irom idvuiwis vwi, jcue.
was dlsmlsaed on account of In- | The firemen had carried lines of
sufficient evidence. Helen Watson • hose into the structure and were
was fined $27.60 or ninety days J fighting the fire unde.* the glare
anon pleading guilty to having jof a half dozen powerful search-
whiskey. [lights. Without warning; the en-
John Vincent, a white man, was tire roof and one of the walls
fined $36.00 or ninety days for hav
ing whiskey after admitting the
charge. Sallle Mack plead guilty
having whiskey and was fined
36.76 cts ninety days nnd Albert
“hlrley plead guilty of having
(hlskey and was sentended to
5.00 fine or ninety days. Judge
D. Bradwell presided.
crashed, burying all of those
the building. A number of spec
tators close to the wall were be
lieved also to have been victims.
Dorsey Furniture Com
pany Moves Into New
Home. Woolworth Build
ing Remodeled and Other
Changes.
Work Is nearing completion on
several remodeling Jobs prepara
tory to the opening of business th's
city on his trip across the contin
ent.
Wilson, piloting a De Haviland
plane was carrying sixty four
pounds of first class mall, when he
took to the clouds.
The flight which begun Tuosday
morning, Is one of a series which
will bo conducted over a period of
five days to determine the per-
manecy of the schedule.
At the same time as Wilson hop
ped off, a plane was scheduled to
leave New York on a trip across
the continent to the Golden Gvto,
carrying about tho same amount of
mall. The two planes had prelvous*
ly been tested and stamped as be
ing In excellent condition for the
long trip.
This Is tho first active step In
the establishing of a twenty-eight
hour air mall service between the
two coasts.
Bulletins will be mado public, It
was stated, as to the progress of
the flyers and the conditions en
countered by the pilots.
. E. GA.
Prof. L. L. Hendren: Groups
of citizens should bo encourag
ed to establish small private-
ly ownea community parks
such ns our owned by a group
on rioverhurst Terrace. The
clly should Im asked by the
Chamber of if Commerce to aid
In such semi-public parks by
placing curbing, etc.
Will Have Florida Pro
duce Man Here Thurs
day to Confer With Pro
ducers At Curb Market.
Prof Alex Rhodes! By all
means, provide parks, recrea
tion grounds, for the people.
Efforts of the < haniber of Com
merce to find a market for sur
plus tomatoes Jn Jhls section bn*
resulted in an offer of n Florida
{ iroducc concern to take car** cf n
arge quantity of that vegetable
If properly graded nnd packed.
Secretary E. W. Carroll has re
ceived a wlie from James S.
Moody, of Tampa, Fla., In answer
i query nnd Mr. Moody states
he can handle a quantity of to
matoes.
The chamber of Commerce
Tuesday morning got In touch with
B Oglesbv, secretary of the.
Sweetwater Valley Truck Growers ]
Association who wired that the cn- |
(Turn to Pag# Six.) j
Or. 8 .E. Wasson: The
Chamber of Commerce should
work out a practical park plan
nnd a system of children's
playgrounds and then ask the
Council to submit the proposi
tion to the people In a bond
Issue.
Hsrry Hodgson: A central
park and playgrounds accessi
ble to the children, in my opin
ion, Is one of the greatest
needs of Athons at this time.
Own Car; Pen
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.—
Sentenced to the penitentiary
on a charge of stealing his
own automobile!
Edward Z. Linders waa
convicted in a St. Louis trial
court on a charge of stealing
a motor car. He appealed the
case.
Then he proved that he
owned the auto. The court
returned the car to him.
Recently, though, the state
supreme court affirmed the
two-year sentence imposed by
the St. Louis court, and or
dered him sent to prison.
Prison officials also declared
It was too late for the jud&e
IT
Outlaws Captured By A1
Spencer. Fireman Re
ceives Fractured Skull.
Passengers Not Molest
ed.
who sentenced Linder to take
any action.
E Ml TO
ADDRESS C.E. MEET
Rev._ James Barfield Will
Be One of Speakers At
Convention Which Takes
Place in October.
Dr. Linton Gsrdine: Glad to
sco tho chamber of Commerce
sponsoring the movomont to
ward getting parks and play
grounds for Athens. ,
Dr. T. H. McHatton: Tho
Chamber of Commerco has
nmtlo no mintage In starting
the movement for a municipal
(Turn to Pago Six)
Rev. James Barfield of Monroe
will bo one of tho speakers at tho
Northeast Georgia Christian En
deavor convention whicl meets Iti
Elberton October 6, 6, 7, a I*
Johnson, president, announces.
Rev. Barfield will deliver tho open
ing address Friday evening, using
as a topic, Friends or Christ In
j the Church.”
; A meeting will be held In Elher-
I ton August 26th to closo out the
work now underway. Representa
tives of the thro© churches, the
, Young Peoples’ Societies, civic or-
* aronloaflnH. ...lit , .LI a
AND STILL THEY SAY THAT THERE
IS NO REAL MONEY IN FARMING
Baron firemen wore on the roof ^Yien Dir.e» Furniture com- WARRENTpN, Va.-Thla I.
when the craah came. They were ".‘A, nl^dTmovlM lu Uock wlmt Amerlc V* “champion, farm
ing. Htween 26 and 50 firemen,I,, t d
fire .mcW. estimated. were in- ^“nThe
In# have been remodeled to take
} ark Boosters Meet
In One-Hour Forum
Session 8:30 C P. M.
Mell Will Preside
Meeting At Geor-
Hotel Tuesday
?ht. ) Limited to One
fur.
itlona point to a largo crowd
alod Athena people at tho
of Commerce forum meet,
day night which waa coll-
ildent llngh W. White to
! plana for building a park
foi tho city.
•ting will be hold In tho
assembly room be-
I 8:30 o'clock, and llmtled
i talked about building
I nark for yoara. It la rie-
park haa boon built
n> la underway. It la
Hah at laaat three
nr tho clly and two-
amount necessary bu
been mixed, but playgrounds, It Is
pointed out, will not take the place
of a pnblic park.
care of this firm’s business, which
opens there on September 1st.
The place for Woolworth’s
formerly the E. I. Smith Shoo com
mpany and II. J. Reid's, on Clay
ton street, Is also shaping up and
will be reudy for opening before
October first.
The old stand of Head and Me
Mahan's at the corner of Jackson
nnd Clayton Is being done over for
the new firm of Funkenstaln and
Lesser which will handle women’s
apt>arel. This firm will be ready
for the fall trade.
PLAYGROUNDS
FOR CHILDREN
Costa’s now place, next door to
the Southern Mutual Building, will
l>e completed In a few weeks and
(Playgrounds will lie used for the ready for early September open-
children of the city while a par’: ing. In the new building will be
can bo used for fair grounds In the (placed the delicatessen shop, now
fall and numerous other comrau-'next door to the soda fountain,
nlty events In tho year. Visitors to | and a quick lunch stand. An all
the city will also have a place to tile kitchen Is being built In the
go and enjoy themselves, It Is I rear of tho building and an en-
polnted out. {trance will connect the lunch
Unless Athens takes steps now-room with Costa's mala cafe. The
tt> build or begin a park system I candy and flower departments will
It will cost considerably more In | be moved to the present dellcates-
years to romp than now. those In- sen shop, which will also be repafr-
terested In the project declare. {ed and beautified.
The meeting Tuesday night Is These, with the changes already
open to men and women alike r.Lri j made by H. & Reid and the Smith
both will be given opportunity to {Shoe company, will be the main
give their views. The meeting will j business changes here this fall and
he presided over by T. S. Mell nr d t the expansions seen In these Im-
wilt be limited to one hour cndlog i provements Indicate a sound bt -
exactly st 9:30 o’clock. lief In Athens as a basinets center.
girl” has done:
8he started with a Shetland
pony, a gift from her mother when
sho was a baby cf three. And now
■he owns $10,000 worth of live
stock. Including a herd of nor®
bred Guernsey cattle, a heard ft
beef cattle, as well as 20 8hetlund
ponies, tw ohunters, 100 stanrard-
bred chickens and a score of ’h.te
colllef
“She earned It all herself,'* rays
her -mother. “She did It by bard
work, by saving her money an*J in
vesting It wisely.”
This farmerette marvel Is C tXJ
Keith, 16 years old.
Her title of “champion farm
girl” comes from the United States
department of agriculture, which
is promoting junior agricultural
clubs, now comprising 600,000 boys
and girts, all over the country.
"I started out to help mother
make the farm pay,” says Peggy “1
loved animals better than dolls, It
was wondorful play! And it still
Is—even the hard work. I suppose
thnts’ why I’ve had such great
luck."
Not a bit of luck about It,
says A. J. Bnmdngage, of the Con
necticut Agricultural College and
state leader of Connecticut agrl
cultural clubs, who came here to
Invite Peggy to the Eastern States
Exposition at Springfield. Mass.,
next month, where she will exhibit
her prize cattle and horses.
Peggy was raised on a 635-acre
farm near hero. She joined the ag
ricultural club when she was eight
and raised a small crop of pota-i
toes herself. The >next year she
raised sesd corn j-When she was 11
she put dp 24 quarts of pcfkles.
hatched a setting of eggs* nnd fed
ganlzatlons will attend this meet
ing and. various committees will
lie appointed to handle every de
tail of the convention. Mr. O. I*
Johnson, of Athens, Ga., who Is
president of the district will pre
side at the business session.
Miss Nancy Lowe Morton, Junior
superintendent or the district an
nounces a new playlet, “The Junior
Garden," which will be n feature
of the Sunday afternpon session.
This garden Is composqd of Junior
Endeavorers from 26 societies and
Jpveryone will bo dressed to rep-
. resent a flower, and in song, mu-
j sic, readings, etc., the play will
(By Associated Press.)
OKLAHOMA CITY. -
Five masked bandits loot
ed the mail express cars
!of the Missouri-Kansas
■and Texas passenger
train near Okesa, shortly
after midnight Tuesday
and escaped with twenty
packages of registered
mail and bundles, after
overpowering members of
the train crew.
Fireman Towers is in a
hospital here with a prob
able fracture of his skull,
where lie was hit with the
butt of a pistol by one of
the bandits Two mail
clerks were also beaten
severely while the train
was enroute from Kansas
City to Oklahoma City.
The passengers not dis
turbed nnd most of them slept
through the train robbery which
was conducted quietly and was one
of the most daring in recent years.
No estimate of the value of the
loot taken was given out Tuesday
though it it thought that it will
run very high, at the express cars
were carrying an extra heavy as
signment of registered packages.
Posset directed by the sheriff of
Osage county were scouring the
country nearby for tho bandits,
who, it is believed have not had
the opportunity of fleeing ^
far from the tceno of the robb„.
It it Relieved that the hand o
robbers number twelve, though
only five of them actually partic
ipated in the hold-up.
The robbery was staged in a
section which has long been the
haunt of a desperate band of rob-
Iwrs, captained by A1 Spencer,
the most notorious outlaw of the
present day in Oklahoma.
It it believed that- the bandits
boarded the train at Bartletsvillc,
riding the blind baggage until the
train reached tho scene of opera
tions.
The engine crew were forced, at
tho point of pistols, to uncouple
the engine and take It more than
a mile away, while the hold-up
was going on.
bo given. Miss Morton hns enjoy-
led much experience along this
illne and a worthwhile program Is
I oxnected.
The registration fee for tho con
jventlon has been sot for twenty-
[five cents and Elberton’s quota Is
j 160. while Northeast Georgia will
Five Americans
Are Killed When
Bus Wrecks Mon.
One Frenchman Also
Meets Death As Sight
seeing .Bus Plunges Over
100 Foot Precipice.
PEGGY* KEITH AN I) A PRIZE HUNTER.
two Shorthorn ateer calves.
At 12 she took a course In stock
Judging at Virginia Polytechnic In
atltate And at 13 won f.ret prize
at tho Virginia State Pair with a
Hereford calf ami iron on th. Vlr-
Inla team Hurt wan second 1 in the
Inter-atato Junior atock Judging
contest at tho Atlanta stock show.
Now, boaldea owning and caring
for her own stock, she in a partner
with her mother In selecting tha
animals for the borne farm, when
70 rows are milked dally and from
30 to 20 cattle are fattened every
J»ar.
(By Associated Proas.)
NIC E.—Five Americans nnd
one Frenchman were killed when
n motor sightseeing bus crashed
through a parapet on the high
way bewteen Nice and Evian late
Monday.
The bus plunged down a one
hundred foot precipice and into
the river below.
Fifteen were injured and it is
thought that several of that num
ber are protytbiy fatally hurt.
Eighteen of the twenty-two pas
sengers were Americana.
The injured include Mr. and
Mrs. Isaac Strayhom of Durham,
N. C.. and Mrs. W. A. Hocker of
Miami," Fla.
Poincare Dispatches Ans
wer to Recent British
Note. French Reply Is
Concilliatory, Stated.
(By Associated Press.)
PARIS.—France’s reply to the
recent British note was handed to
the British embassy Tuesday
morning.
There Is a feeling which, pre
vails in official circles that the
British will find the note concil
liatory nnd that It will prevent a
rupture In the entente.
It was stated that Premier
Poincare is unyielding in the es
sential points of the note but that
Great Britain will probably find
the note inconclusive.
Schedule Filed
(ny Associated Press.)
AUGUSTA. Ga.—The lia
bilities of Barrelt & Co. arc
given as 22,730.857 In a sched-
ule filed with the United
States Bankruptcy Referee.
No assets are given but It is
reported that they exceed th.
liabilities.
The schedule give* 651
creditors with Ihe lazes due
by the firm amounting to 217.-
fdj-l for Ihe local office and
22,071 for the Athena branch.