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pAILY AND SUNDAY-13 CENTS A WEEK
. B e
ag
F [IPR—
g)gmen Take About S6OO
om Coca-Cola’ Safe Here;
ndard Oil Attempt Fails
1
i ]
s Blov tandard Oil|
‘ » 2]
npan} Jase But Fal]!
e . 7 P
pnter. No Clues Left|
Ls |
Thieve
;
Saturday |
e vault of :lmi
i mpany on
Lol .
f ye approxi- |
e& . .
A ind checks.
biy $ |
i and other
£ ens High School |
o on Sunday by |
2 ], who camo
' ' | to the dis-
Y .‘; h
e company's
o ¢ en in order to
ks the papers.
the building
broak in a back
key in the
on : g
Al identity ot
!.,{ : found, according
ity D C. E. Seagraves,
4 he case. All
e ere carried
'p»:‘.r elonging to
0] ittered by the
s f v wav of the
n I [ost of the
t the company
efou t od about over
¢amy { in the building,
ding \ ams, presi.
" THIRD ATTEMPT
’'t { time in the last
eggmen attempt
by o the f f the Stand
0f any’s main office
Satuy yht. The Com
rece moved its office to
new n Barber and
gland Avenue The burglars
¢ [ id office on
iard eet and broke the
3 covering they
1 they went to
he mpany’s of
-4 open, but the
o p the- robbery
" ng away the
i fe they found
or hey had blown
Wy would still have
i t with a thied
i "I
T
ecenitly sert a
foors to the local
¢ tW( attemuts ha(i
n ek the old safe.
@ . =
hing ng in the of
of the ainy but it looked
if lone had passed
cjw"?‘ g
S —
dit Menace On :
r - |
ncrease, Expect
Foreigners Leave |
}
HANGHAI China.—(A P)—For- ;
‘ dispatches from Nanchang, {
ital of gsl province, Mon- |
sald nace of bandits |
nereasing and that a gvnomli
Cuation of foreigners was an- |
pated
ther tated that ser- |
on Nanchang-Kiukiang i
8y which afforded a means of 5
cuati I been interrupted
the 3 as not given, ,
ports from stijl another |
e said brigands were in con- |
0f the Kan river district from ‘
thow + 16 American mis
aries eseiged to Nan
g mi Ate travel most
gero .
HELD CAPTIVE
HA (UP)-=Miss N.
& \merican, and Mr.
Portpoun of
& B have been held
nese band.ts after
al nchow, .'u'CU[‘dinj;
! today,
ers at the China
the bandits looted
{ many shopkeep
! to death many
the Chinese pas
incipal of the
ultural Value Of Spanish
Language Told By Writers
» i 5 JAY HEATH i
ff Correspondent
] (UP)~— The |
: vorlde literature |
led “Don Quixote” |
! had the unfor- |
L of creating the im- |
: g the uninformed !
: n race has pro
y reat writer and |
@ Professor Henry |
professor of ro- |
lages of George !
r<ity here has
ndueting a sym
', s from some of
riters of America
. the litavayry and
f Sparish, .
L as well say that
produced only Shak- |
donte - CBUSe in some countries |
ard ¢ - the uninformed }mvel
i so other English writer,
THE BANNER-HERALD
Associated Press Service-~United Press Dispatches
THREE POWER PACT
FORESEEN N FVENT
OF 5 POWER FAILURE
LONDON.— (UP) —Great Bri
tain, Japan and the United States
will be ready to draft a three
power naval agreement within a
weck if a five-power treaty can
not be rezched, it became known
today after the five worried dele
gation leaders conferred at St.
James palace. .
From reliable sources, it was
learned that the reservations Ja-'
pan was reported as desiring on
the propesals submitted to Tokio |
will meet no objections from the
United States.
The Japanese will not be pre-;
vented, at the expiraticn of the'
projected three - power treaty,
from resubmitting their claims tol
a seventy percent ratio in cruis
ers carrying 8-inch guns. It is
also po'nted out at the same time
America may lay claim to the
right to withdraw from future
negotiations any concessions made
to Japan at the London confer
‘ence, i ¢ &
. Today's session of the »rincipal
delegates was brief, and concern
ed the suvbject for d'scussion at
next. Friday’s plenary session.
Another session will be held Wed
nesday. The complete agenda
was left for the secretary-general
to announce this afternoon.
Dino Grandi, Ttalian foreign
minister, appeared extremely
worr'ed as he arrived at St.
' James today, closely followed by
Henry L. Stimson, who had
walked all the way from the Ritz
Aristide Briand, Fremh!o!eign
minister, and Jaeques-Luios Dum
‘esnil, min'ster of marines, were
the last to arrive. They sat for
several minutes in their automo
bile in front of the gzte in earn
est conversation, The Japanese rve
!ply to the Anglo-American pro
{posals ig expected within _the
next few days and if the. five
power agreement is lost definitely
by that time experts declare the
{three-power pact can be com-
Inleted shortly thereafter. Secre
\tary Stimson hurried back to the
gßitz at noon for a general con
ference with the other members
lof his delegation.
TOKIO, Japan, —(®)— It war
understood here Monday that
Baron Shidehara, Foreign Min
ister, had completed a draft of
instruetions to the Japanese dele
gation at the London mnaval con
prohibition lobbying.
Terence, authorizing the accept.
ance of the Japanese-American
formula without material alter
ation of the figures involved but
seeking the assent of the other
powers to two or possibly three
reservations attached to Tokio’s
acceptance.
| BRITAIN ADAMANT
. LONDON.—(®)—A sharp re.
percussion was produced in
;French headouarters by the
statement issued by 2a British of
ficial spokesman Sunday in which
it was declaved absclutelv im
f (Turn To Page Three)
e st —
!Al Capone Expected
At Summer Home in
] Miami Beach Today
!
i o —
i MIAMI, Fla.—(AP)—Al Capone,
whose arrest by 20 Florida sher
iffs without warrant, was recently
barred by a federal court order, 18
expected to arrive at -his Palm
!Island home on Miami Beach
sometime Monday or Tuesday.
“Dr. Doyle said in making the re
sults of hig symposium known.
This is well brought our ac
cording to R. Doyle by Mrs. Dor
orthy Canfield Fisher, eminent
American novelist, whese contri
bution to the svmposium follows:
~ “Thotgh lam teld on good au
thority that there are a few Am
cricans even among those active
1y intercsted in education, who
Iconsider that the Spanish langu
age has only a commercial value
T can scarcely believe it. Can it
'be true that my countrymen, any
rof them, are sincerely = ignorant
‘of the magnificient riches of the
Spanish drama. one of the finest
lin any literature, both now and in
eenturies past?
“Have we somehow managed to
miseducate ourselves so that ary
| one of as thinks of Spenish pure
-7€ % Furn To Page Three)
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Above pictu | ' g
res show scenes R e
, T 8 ’ e at Missouri state t i : ey
::i(\)/:VlCt_!? mutinied in a movement for “more fOOd,”p;::‘i;e;t!arydathJ‘eflerson R £ o, ot 0
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. he dining half siers Wk et ospital after a clash with
SEMATE PREPARES
FOR FINAL DRNE;
AY END ON JUNE 1
WASHINGTON.— (UP) -—Sen- |
ate lenders wrepared today for a
final two-months drive to dispose
of the mass of urgent legislation
which has piled up behind the re
cently pasesd tar'ff bill.
They hope to adjourn by June 1.
Beginning with the Norris Mus
cle Shoals bill tomorrow after a
we_ek’s rest, the leaders planned to‘
bring up in rapid succession the
krem‘lar appropriation b'lls, the
Williamson bill to transfer prohibi
tion enforcement from the Treas
ury to Justice department, ax:fl
the bill to réorganize the feder
power -commission.
The program has been cut to
the bone so the session can be
ended early and 80 members of
congress seeking re-election can
return home to mend political
fences.
Two of the meagures on the
’program, the Muscle Shoals bill
land the Williamson b’ll, are ex
pected to stimvlate prolonged de
bate. The Muscle Shoals bill will
bring up with it the politically
imtent iscue ‘nvolving <Chairman
i Clandius Huston of the Republican
national committee and his hand
{line of funds for the Tennessee
lßiver Improvement Association.
| Senators hope to dispose of the
| Norr's bill before the end of the
week. Then prohibition probably
!will be the next major measure
Ibefore congress. It will provide
‘tho oppertunity for a long vent up
cenate debate on the prohibition
‘situaticn. The nomination of
t.]udp:o John J. Parker of North
{Carolina to the Supreme Court
{bench likewise awaits senate ac
ltion. A vigorous fight over his
{ confirmation is expected in view
{of organized labor’s opposition to
{him.,
| Meanwhile the lobby committee’s
|investigation was expected today
|to continoe through most of the
{rest of the session. Senator Rob
{inson of Indiana, a member of
{the committee, has announced
|that he will call John J. Raskob,
lchairman of the Democratic nat
lional committee, to testify about
{ -
‘State Democratic
= Heads To Decide
f Hoovercrat’s Fate
i ATLANTA —(UP)— Fate 'of
| Georgia'%® | Hoovercrats in -the
|forthcoming state primary to be
{held on the second Wednesday in
i September probably will be deter
imi‘ned at the State Democratic
Execut've Committee meeting %o
{be held April 11,
| No official announcement of the
| possible course to be followed has
!vet been made, although one of the
| committee, fspeaking unofficially,
{told the United Press it was his
'opinion the action of Alabama in
\volving Hoovercratic bolters would
'he duplicated by Georgia.
l -
LOCAL WEATHER !
" Furnished by the Government ‘
Bureau at the State Teachers |
. College, E. S. Sell, Observer, |
. for 24 hours previous to 1
| 8:00 A. M.
| !
TEMPERATURE
Highest ~ .4 .. -+ . e+ 800
LOWEBL: : & oo o tenipilbhirevißhl
MOAR.. . i et s i AN
NOPBAL o .G aviave b, Tol RN
RAINFALL
INOROE. (oo sk ke e OANO
Total since March 1........3.63
Deficiency since March 1 ~ 1.18
Average March rainfa11....5.05
Total since January 1......8.46
Deficlency since Jan. 1 .. 6.29
~-ESTABLISHED 1832--
CONGRESS TODAY, :
(By United Press.) .
HOUSE: Takes up minor. ¢al
endar bills, "Rules and steering
commitices meet to determine
procedure on tariff bil. |
SENATE: Not in sossion. ~
MIGS MARY TUCK,
TUCK HERE. DIES
I Miss Mary F. Tuck, well known
Crawford woman, a sister of Judge
Henry C. Tuck and Mr. W. R.
Tuck of Athens, died at the home
of her sister, Mrs, E. B, Carter,
in Crawford ear’y Sunday morn.
ing, following an illness of four
days. :
Puneral services vere held frem
the home in Crawford today at
11:00 o’'clock, Rev. W. W. Wat
kins, pastor of the Crawford
Methodist church, officiated. in.
terment was in the Robert Tuck
cemetery, on the Winterville road.
McDorman.Bridges had charge of
the funeral arrangements.
| Pallbearers werq Messrs. Ciaude
{Tuck, J. R. Tuck, W. D, Smith,
{J. P. Knowleg, L, Carter and J.
‘W. Morton.
| Miss Tuck was the daughter of
( the late Mr. and Ors. Robert
}'l‘uck, who years ago lived on the
| Winterville road, and who was one
[of the leading planters in this
section. She was a member of one
[ of the oldest families in the state,
l and leaves a wide circ’e of friends.
|She was born in Walton county
| and had lived in Crawford for the
| past seven months.
| Surviving her are two sisters,
| Mrs. A. L. Fambrough, Kirkwood,
]Ga., and Mrs. E. B. Carter, Craw
' ford; two brothers, Judge Henry
C. Tuck and Mr, W. R. Tuck,
both of Athens; and nineteen
| nieces and nephews.
Northern Chinese
Factions Break
With Nationals
PEIPING, China— (UP)-—Mili
tary and extremist leaders of
Northern China who have threat
ened civil war for months agreecd
today to a complete break with
the Nat‘onal government of Chi
ang-Kai-Ki-Shek.
Military activities in Honan
Province, with the object of cap
turing Hankow, were reported al
ready begun, although the decis
;ion to set up 2 new government
was said to await approval of cer
tain wilitary chieftains.
Leaders of the movement against
Ithe government at Nanking charg
icd that government leaders do not
represent, the party, whereas they
lcla"m the new government they
[would establish here actually is the
center of the party.
Census Workers Begin Here
Wednesday, Burson Announces
“The woman in the home” will |
be the most important member of
the household from the stand
point of the census when the enu
merators of the Fifteenth Decen
nial Census of the United States
knock at the front doors of ap
proximately - 30,000,000 homes.
said Dr. W. M, Burson, director
of the census of this district. The
census begins Wednesday. |
The point at which the census
bureau will come in contact with
the people to be enumerated will |
be on the front door wép. If the |
woman in the home and tiw cen- |
sus. enumerator meet in a spirit |
of whole-hearted cooperation, the.
success of the 1930 census will be
assured, declared Dr. Burson.
“Will she be prepared to an.
swer the census questions? Some.
ATHENS, GA., MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1930.
CAPTAIN BARNETT 10
® 1
ASSUME HIGHWAY
e- - |
ATLANTA —(UP)—- Capta’n'd.
W. Barnett, of Athens, new State
Highway commissioner, will take
over_his duties tomorrow, reliev
ing\‘Col‘ Sam Tate, retiring chair
ma
| I%:bts of the department are
pa‘d up and the new commissioner
will find a balance of $1,500,600
in“the bank to ‘carry on the work
on a “pay-as-you-go” basis.
~ Governor Hardman, who named
Barnett one month ago paid trib
vte to the retiring commissioner,
declaring Col. Tate’s br'ef tenure
of office resulted in “magnificent
pvark.” -
it vAy e
!l"our Lczal Persons
o
¢ Injured When Auto
~ Rams Back of Car
|
‘ ek
Twe Athens girls and two boys
iwere injured and the lives of
'elx,ht ‘were endangered last night
on the Jefferson road when an
automobile driven by a Negro,
said to have been drunk, crashed
into .the- rear of a parked auto
}containlng gix young boys and
gir’s, 'knocking it a distance of
about 35 feet.
Misses Ruby and Helen Hen
| dren, daughters of H. L. Hendren;
| Carlton Whitehead and Gus Bry
' ant were the youths injured. Ruby
| Hendren received a bad cut on the
| back of her head and a cut on her
| left leg. Helen, her younger sis
| ter, received a cut on the left leg.
| Carlton Whitehead received a bro
iken finger, and Gus Bryant re
| ceived two bad bruises on hip
{ head. All of the eight were in
! jured more or less from the shock.
' Ed Davenport, the Negro who
was driving the ecar, an Imperial
80 Chrysler, was arrested down
town by Policeman Smith, and
| pldced in the county jail. He is
{ being held on charges of driving
{ an autemobile while under the in
! fluence of whiskey, and violation
| of theGeorgia motor vehicle law.
| Two or three other Negroes are
| sald to have been in the car, but
i sscaped when the accident occur
red.
Ruby Hendren was treated at
| the General Hospital. The other
i three hurt were not carried to the
hospital.
! Jack Thomas, young sou of Mr.
and Mrs. H. E. Thomas, 245
| Norcoochee avenue, wag the driver
of the car in which the youths
had been riding. He escaped in
| juries. The automrobile, a Chevro
‘let touring, belongs to Mr. Tho-
Imas, It was an almost total
| wreck, the back end having been
smashed forward into the front
! ‘Turn To Page Five)
| readily enough, She knows her
{own age, and popular tradition
{and jokes to the contrary, she
| ean be relied on to give it accur
{ately in most cases. She knows
{also the ages of her husband,
| children, and other members of
!the family, and she kunows the
idate of her marriage. She knows
| whether or not the children are
| attending school.” .
i “Some of the questions which
| the women will probably not be
| able to answer,’ said Dr Burson,
lare: if the house is rented. what
{is. the monthly rent? If it is own
led._ what' s its annroximate
vaiue? The husbands skould tell
their “wives the answers to these
Guestions before the census enu
m WINIeS, o
.fi ). Burson stresses accuracy
Two Men Dead And One
Near Death As Result Of
Quarrels Over Week End
Importance Of Good Food Is
Stressed As Banner-Herald’s
Cooking School Opens Idere
School Opens At 3:30 To-!
morrow. Mrs. Margaret
McEntire of Westing
house Home Economics
Department Is Director.!
. |
Improvement in the economic |
efficiency and physical well be-‘
ing of Athenians is forecast as
one of the results of The Banner- ,
Herald Cooking School which
opens at Seney-Stovall chapel to-l
morrow aifternoon at 8:30 o’cleck. !
| Assisting The Banner - Herald |
in conduct.ng the Scheol will be |
' the Georgia Power Company here |
!and several local mercnants. |
Plans for the School have been !
completed w.th Mrs. Margaret’
Mchntire, home economist of the
| Westinghouse Electric and Manu-!
| facturitg Company as director.
]'l‘hu school is free. l
| A feature of the School will be !
the visit here of Mg Katrina |
von Televox, the mechan.cal,
{ woman servant, who will eook, |
| operate a vacyum cleaner and
| talk, demonstrating how an elec
i tric rarge can be operated econ
omicaily. ,
Miss Televox has created a sen
{ sation wherever ghe has gone and
| her visit to Athens is being look
ed forward to by -Athens women
‘interested in labor saving in the
home, 8 a o {
Opening Day
On the opening~ day of the
School members of missionary
societies -of Athsns churshes
will each be ‘gg:p; ten cents, and
friends they bring to the School
wiil also be given the same amount
for the use of the societies, Cards
for the nameg of society mem
bers, their guests and the name
of the organizations they repre
seut will be available for keeping
an accurate record to award the
prizes,
The Banner - Herald = Cooking
School is designed to further pro
mote good cooking in Athens in
the belief that properly planned
meals that are also well cooked
will be an important contribution.
The importance of good food
is being more and more stressed
bv physicians an d dieticians
whose studies have shown that
much of the ill-temner, impaired
eificiency and economic waste in
this country is due to bad food.
A writer in the current Scribrer’s
magazine, Dr, Tobey, rtresseg the
importance of well planned meais
and properly cooked food, declar
ine fnat the saving that the ‘fate
of nationg sometimes denends on
the digestion of the prime min
ister’ 1s an observation founded
on scientific fact. A well-nour
ished individual is far better able
to cope with the problems of a
complex civilization than one
who is under-nourished, he de
clares. :
5 Play Big Part
| Cooking Schools are playing a
| big part in changing cookery
| from drudgery to a science, one
|whi'ch requires intelligence, and
jexpertuess. A mother has not
{ fulfilled her duty to her child
when she has its tonsils removed,
lits eyes examined, bathes it reg
| ularly, has dental defects correct
;ed, and provides it with clean
i clothes, and sees to its exercise
[and recreation, , All of these
[things have a bearing on the
| child’s development, contribute to
iits standing in school, its ability
[to learn. But after all these
[things are attended to, the child
Imust still be properly fed—must
have food that is digestible, and
plenty of it—food that id nutriti
ous. Bad cobking ean spoil a well
i planned mean—«and the disposi
| tion of the person.who eats it as
!u*oll, dietary experts declare,
Lecture Subject
| The lecture subject. for the
{opening day will be “meats, oven
!dinners, vegetables” and the
| menus for the first day follows:
| Oven Dinner
| Stuffed Pork chops.
| Potatoes Augratin.
! Escalloped tomatoes and com.
| Apple crisp gudding.
| Stuffed Pork Chops
| In purchasing chops have the
butcher cut two chops in one and
ask him to make a pocket in the
center of each pieee for stuffing.
{ Fill with dressing made of the
| following ingredients:
{ 2 cups stale bread crumbs,
| 1.2 teaspoon salt.
| 1-4 teaspoon g‘epper.
| 4 tablespoons hutter,
| 1 teaspoon finelz chopped sage.
{> 2 teaspoons nely chopped
onion,
‘ Water to moisten,
| - Me't butter in fryirg gpan, add
{crvumbs and seasonings, mix all
| together thoroughly, stirring un.
1 i caf .(lum»“\ - m.‘:‘“fi“.
s i e SARSt £ T e
DAJILY AND SUNIAT-—<l3 CENTS A WEER
A. B. C. Paper.
COOKING EXPERT
, Mrs. Margiire® McEntire, of
the Home Etom-mics Depart
ment, Westivghouge FElectric
Company, who, wq'l direct The
Banner-Herale Cotking School,
which opens Jaeré, tomorrow at
3:30 o'clock ;at/ Eeney-Stovall
chapel. i
6 G e
e S ‘1‘.*';3(%1?.:
R 4 ’» e b‘. 030 e
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A 3 S g ¥ s
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.
. 4
ATTEMPT "GAG RULE
ON TRIFF MEASURE
'
. \
WASHINGTOIN. — (AP) — A‘
prediction that ‘repub’ican leaders
in the house would {force a *“‘gag
rule” whe}i the tariff bill is con
sidered, was made Monday by
Representative Ragon of Arkan
sas, a democratic member of the
ways and means committee.
' The Arkansas members de
clared that the republican wader
ship was “so saturated with
Grundyism that it has not the
proper sympathy with the inter
ests of the agricultural people of
the country.”
A ‘“gag ruke” was forced on the
house when the tariff was up for
consideration originally, he said.
SIGNS BILL
WASHINGTON.— (AP) —Pres
ident Hoover Monday signed the
Keyes-Eliott bill authorizing the
appropriation of = $230,000,000 for
public buildings.
Half of the amount authorized in
the new act is to be allotted to
public buiidings throughout the
country, the other half going to
the District of Columbia building
program. : i
Politics in Quaker
~ State Warm Up With
; “Combine” Charges
l bt s
. PHILADELPHIA. Pa. —(UP)—
Pennsylvania’s political situation
assumed added warmth today as
the public awaited reply to Sena
tor Grundy’s charge that W. W.
Atterbury, president of the Penn
sylvania railroad and republican
national committeeman had com
bined with William 8. Vare’s ma
chine to “grab control of the state
government.”
Ace of Gorman U-Boat Captaw
Is Peace Envoy on Training Ship.
NEW ORLEANS.—(UP)—The
amoke from a straw tipped Turk
ish ecigarette curled upward from
the mouth of Captain Lothar Von
Arnauld de la Periere, command
er of the German training cruiser
Emden, to twine itself about an
“asparagus stalk” on the walls of
his cabin.
And Captain Von Arnauld, af
fable and modest, explained to
guests who *visited his ship dur
ing Carnival week here just what
the “asparagus stalk” was.
“The periscope of the U-35, one
of my submarines during the
World War,” said the captain. He
added that the scarlet, black and
white battle flag draped aside
it. was the battleflag of the U
-85, The curved tip of the peris
cope was' ssing, That, the
capiallls expiais, Was snapped
sSingle Copies, 2 Cents—s Ceats Sunday
LOCAL WEATHER
Fair and not quite so ecold.
tenight. Fo'r. and warmed
Tuesday
T
ONE FATAL FIGHT
AT MONROE; OTHER
3 » 38
: It
IN MORGAN COUMEE
] eßy
| Reids
s o <V “\x’
Two white men are deasl'fl%*
another lies on the border«&?f
between life and death as the re
sult of a stabbing affray l&:f&{i"‘j
“hot supper” near Monroe and an
altercation over purchase of
whiskey near Madison. Both ax,..1
| fairs took place late Saturday
! night. ;e
The dead men are Cly/'- Me-
Dorald, 40, of Cordele, Ga.,, ‘am
employee of the state highway
department unit at Monr mfl
‘Arnold Mitchum, 27, whiteoe}arm-i‘fi
er of Morean county. The in%
| jured mai 13 Herman Cooper of
i Monroe, son of Mr, Scott Cooper
of that city. His condition is seris
ou: and the attending phvsicain
said there was doubt as to wheths
er he would live or die. = = &
The following details of = the
killing at Monrde were given by
Solicitor General Henry H.' West
|to the Banner-Herald . Monday
{ morning. Sheriff Shep Bald%y
| furnished the details of the kill="
ling near Madison. o
Gypsy Rooks, Negress, who
lives just off the Athens m‘
lnear Monroe told ojficers, at
{‘Cooper and McDonzld came to
' her home Saturday night about
’11:30 to get some water for fij
auto, According to the woman a
large crowd of Negroes W"‘m
the house and were gnqum a
“hot supper”. The @
said she heard the white men and
some of the Negro men eéxchange
| words: and heard a voice which'
| she thought belonged to Gai
Biges, Negro, say, “Let’s kill the
—— —— — 44 5
The Negress said. she Mgfi
in the house until after the fight
was over and then went'aut{’h’h%
| ask someholf‘ the Nfgrl?es ;om*
main with her until the oM .
arrived. skt
The woman said that Gom:&
staggered up to her in the yar g,‘
! and asked her to zet him to a
| doctor quickly. She and Coaper
walked to the home oval_wfl’;
Cofield, white man, who lives
nearbv and Cofield took Cooper
to the home of his father, Mz,
Scott Cooper, in Monroe, - .
| When Sheriff T M Riley near=
ed the sceme of the fight, the
lights on his car showed the body
of McDonald lying on the roads
side about 100 yards from the
’house. MeDonald was dead. ,’.‘.‘,f
| had been stabbed in the heart and.
| chest several times with pocke§
{ knives. o h
Sheriff Rile~ immediatels
‘started an inguest in the death" ’f
{ McDonald and Sunday afternoom
| called in Solicitor General e
|H, West from Athens. Selicitor
| West went 1o Monroe and the ife |
quest was resumed. N
! As a result of Solicitor 'Wegt'i
! investigation Sunday afternoon
| seven Negroos were lodged in "g
| charged with suspicion in connee®
! tion with the killing. The Sevent
lin jail are Gene Biggs, Roy Free
| man, June Thomas, Earn Culs’
! breath, John Baccus, Harry Cars
"ter and Harry Angley, afl!fiififli
oroes. Solicitor West is sefig?p\g
| ing for several other Negroes bes
lieved implicated in the murder.
Coroner Tom Brown mfi
| the inquest from Sunday” Gatit
| Monday afternoon at which fiz}“
further details will be presented
and it is probable that Hermen
| Cooper, who was so badly w‘m‘?
'ed as to be unable to give offisl
| cers any information, will -ha
| strong enough to give his version
| of the affair. Dr. H, B. Nunnally;
[ Monroe physician attending Coo~
| per, said that his condition while_
| serious, was not hoveless. Coops
i (Turn To Page Three) =
off when a torpedoed ship"‘nlg" ?‘:,;
on top of the U-85, e i
He did not go into much des
tail. Rather, he preferred to tallk ¢
of the Carnival, of social pleas®.
antries, and of the voyage of tha
Emden. Oae has to turn to ,f,‘.'
ell Thomas' book, “Raiders of the
Deep” to learn more about his
adventures below the sea. “{
In it, Captain ven Ama_uldn-fi‘- g
la Periere is Named the ace o %
U-boat commanders, both i
rumber of ships sunk and the
~poss tonnage ther representec %
Yet it was done without tha
“Schrerklichkeit,” the frightfuls &
ness, by which U-boat sinki o
were . described in war -deysie
Thomas credits him with “eours’
age. lilmin! and sportsmarship®
edited by Irie "*-‘i.;::z.t_"i"‘::%t oq.
:fle Tasn 19 Page Three) - 3