The Athens daily herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1912-1923, January 30, 1914, Image 1

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i M, Mm TWICE AS MANY CARRIERS deliver The Herald into the hpmes of, Athens than deliver any other newspaper. Ap proximately TWICE AS MANY people in Athens read The Herald than any other newspaper. MR. MERCHANT, Herald readers read Herald ads and patronize Herald advertisers.! They will read your store news in The Herald; talk it over with you the next day in the store. SEND YOUR MESSAGE TOftHE HOMES OF ATHENS IN THE ATHENS HERALD local cotton THE ATHENS DAILY HERALD THE WEATHER Rain and colder. VOL. 2. NO. 139. ATHENS. GA„ FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY 30, 1914.. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. $5.00 PER YEAR WHEN SHIP he Old Dominion Liner Monroe ank Off Winter Quarters Near Norfolk This Morning the Result of a Collision With the Nantucket, of the Merchant and Miners Line. Forty-Nine Lives Were Lost. (By Associated Press.) Norfolk, Va., January 30.— rty-nino pcaple lost their o when the Old Dominion liner, »nroe, was rammed and sunk 'ff Winter Quarters at 2 o’clock lis morning by the Merchants nd Miners liner, Nantucket, .venty-five of those lost were l*.-pricers and twenty-four were embers of the Monroe's crew. The list of passengers lost or 'atvonnted for is as follows: MRS. W. L. BOLTON, Newark, W. C. CLAUSEN, Milwaukee, nnTENAk’T T„ B. CURTIS, m'rd States Army. F. f. DAVIS, Brooklyn. „ I HOWARD, United States F.D GORMAN, Philadelphia. MRS. D. GIBSON r -New York. .1. HASKELL, Cortlandt, New >rk. W. H. INGRAM, Sumter, S. C. K. P. LYONS, New York. I <>KAK AMATO, a Japanese. W. POOLE and wife, Gray, •1 F. RAY and wife, New York. MISS SNYDER, New York.~ 0. WAGNER, United States >Iarine Corps. WII.UA.MSON, New York. MRS. THOMAS R. HARRING- New York. n HAVILAND, MR. JO- MR. LEWIS, MR. VER- ON. MISS SEVILLE, all of tho a Theatrical Company. The Nantucket was badly dam- d. hut i« making her way back Norfolk today with eighty- ‘ rescued persons fiom the nroe. The vessels met in a •st* fog. It is believed that the moe sank in a short while, he carried fifty-four passen- u! a crew of seventy. The G expected to arrive at °rf<»lk this afternoon. revenue cutter Onondaga to the scene, but no work JUDGE PRICE GETS EMPHATIC ON DANGEROUS DRIVING, AND ESPECIALLY PASSING TROLLEYS Case Wherein a Reckless Negro Driver Came Very Near Col liding with People Getting on a Street Car at Corner College Avenue and Clayton Street. “Got to Stop/* Says the Re corder. When a street car stops to take on or let off passengers, all vehi cles near said street car at -the time, shall come tf^a complete stop and shall not pass said street car while it is stopping for said pur poses.—Section 9, Athens Traffic Ordinance. There is an old saying that Bill Shakespeare “never repeated.” Prob ably he didn’t, but Bill never had to write about cases in the Athens, Ga., police court concerning traffic ordi nance violations—no lamps lit on autos after the shades of night have fallen, driving on the wrong side of the street, etc., etc. Had he been writing about the auto and vehicle owners who continue to get fined by Judge Price, it is quite probable thgt Bill would have said something like this— Zounds! odds bodkins! Can’st not thou get that rule of ye road in thy brain; wilt thee continue to add thy coin to the coffers of tms goodly fity by fines on thee? ’Tis a goodly ordinance ye city fathers drew—follow it out to the letter, and above all keep to the right side in ye drive,, th»t ye $ may avoid Judge Price, and let your auto lights so shine that the copper may not cause a case to he writ on ye court docket against thee. Keep thy money in thy purse, not in a cash bond in the police station for appear ance at court next day for an al leged traffic violation. EECCS The Discourse Sounds Very Interesting \ The meeting at the Colonial opera house Sunday afternoon, that will be held by the Religious Committee of j Bank of Lyerly, a state institution, the Young .Men's Christian Associa- ' was robbed of $4,000 by burglars dur- tion, is to bo addressed by one of the | i n g tho night. They drew .the barbed most capable workers of the Young j wire, stationed sentinels about the bank and blew the vault. -Posses are searching for the yeggs. (By Associated Press.) Lyerly, Ga., January 30.—The xtra Specials at the DAMS MARKET Just Received Xew Irish Potatoes, Green bbajre, Celery, Lettuce, IS Plants, Green Beans, uash. Carrots, Spinach, ify, Beets, Turnip Salad Sauer Kraut. N \'ew Fresh Goods arriv- flaily. New crop Prunes, Peaches, Sun- Almost an Accident. Now, let’s get serious about this traffic ordinance. Recorder Price has especially asked that the Herald lay stress on the matter of that part of the ordinance as to passing street cars with other vehicles as Jold of above. He says he considers that sec tion of the traffic law the most im portant to be observed as it will by ob servance save accidents. The judge had an incentive to make the suggestion to the Herald man on j account of the case of one John Wa- I ters, colored, who drove a double horse team so near to a trolley car, taking on passengers at the corner of Col lege avenue and Clayton street, that eral persons getting on the trolley, he barely escaped running into sev- Ofticer Jeffry saw the wild drive and went after Waters. He got him, and the recorder placed a $5.50 fine on him today, and gave him a severe lec ture on the evils of fast driving. Men’s Christian Association in . the southland. The state secretary of Georgia and Florida Associations, Mr. J. V. Read, with headquarters in Atlanta, will be the speaker on this occasion. Read has chosen a most inter esting subject for discussion at this time. His theme is: “How Many Cents on the Dollar?” This sounds like a business subject, and, from the view point of religion being the chief business of life, it is, hut it is not a business subject from the view point of the common acceptance of the term. It deals with the worth of a man, and will be a study of a man and his value. Mr. Read is well remembered in Athens as being the one man who OSTRICH THRIVES IN ARIZONA. Chandler, Ariz., January 30.—There are now about 6,000 birds on the os trich farms of Arizona and the indus try is said to be but in its Infancy. The present status of the industry is marked by a departure from the custom first established of raising 1 as many birds as possible. Now the os trich owner is scientifically improving the quality* of his stock and of the feathers that are becoming more and more valuable. The Arizona ostrich growers have a state organization and they gather annually at a business meeting and , banquet. The meeting was held re gave a practical demonstration to our 'ccntly in Chahdler. There reports were made on some experimenting on the Harmon ranch in the Salt river valley. The results have satisfied ex perts that the best ostriches in the world can be produced here. MRS. W. K. VANDERBILT OPPOSED TO THE USE OF S0P0IFIC DRUGS POLICE FI 41 PINTS Mrs. William 1C. Vanderbilt, wife of land tbat one man bad assured him lifoi nia has come from her. The Old Do minion liner Hamilton, bound down from New York, it is be lieved may have been near the scene of the accident, and it is regarded as barely possible that she picked up some of the Mon roe’s passengers or crew. James O’Connell, vice president of the American Federation of la bor ,was a passenger on the Mon roe. She %vas on regular trip from Norfolk to New York and left here at 7 o’clock last night. NANTUCKET ARRIVES WITH city of her unused and undeveloped resources of human power. Mr. Road was the gencral-in-chief of the phen omenal campaign conducted by the Young Men’s Christian Association a little over a year ago for funds with which to develop a new plant. He bc- lioytd tb&L A^effl^cpuld raise $60,000 in fen days for the Association, and, with the cooperation of the local men he went to work and organized a com mittee of 150 men, divided into two companies of 75 each, with a com mander in charge of each company, being Mr. J. J. Wilkins, for the busi ness men, and Mr. Harry Hodgson for the young men. These companies were divided into seven teams of ten men each, with a captain. They did their work so well that at the end of ten days the total subscriptions in hand and in notes amounted to over $100,000. Then, for dessert two days more was given to the Young Wom en's Christian Association, and some $18,000 to $20,000 was raised for them. The committee makes the point that a man of such calibre, wrto first dem- sirated to Athens her power in unit-. ed effort, has something worth hear ing, and every business man and pro fessional man will do well to take ad vantage of this opportunity to go to the Colonial Sunday afternoon to hear the address by Mr. J. V. Read, state secretary of the Young Men’s Chris tian Association work for Georgia and Florida. Walter’s orchestra will open the service at 3:30 with a musical pro gram lasting half an hoiy, the address beginning at four. bihmStt THIS AFTERNOON FOR ARBITRATION TREATIES . _ the young host and the house was EIGHTY-SIX SURVIVORS j adorned with graceful ferns and pink . , Norfolk, Va., January 30.—The | f , owers e<l Apples, Navy Beans, | Nantucket with eighty-six survivors of i Thc table in tbc dj n j n( , r00m where tter Beans and-California 4 he Mon r°e arrived here at 1;30 o'clock! y° un >f guests enjoyed refresh- Wprameo full this afternoon. Many of those re»-! mon ts. after playing: srame.s, was pret- __ y » lull iliie OI cue( j were in f rom shock and expo- tily appointed. A big birthday cake sure. which stood on it, lit with nine bright- (By Associated Press.) Washington, D. C., January 30.— TH, senate foreign relations commit tee today voted to recommend the immediate ratification of the general arbitration treaties with Great Britain, Japan and twenty-three other nation,. This has been pending since last sum mer. MACON PASTOR IS KILLED BY FALLING REVOLVER AS HE BENDS TO KISS BABE. Macon, Ga., January 30.—Rev. G. E, Tidwell, pastor of the Bethel Bap tist church, was almost instantly killed at his home in East Macon yes terday when a pistol dropped from his pocket and exploded, as he was leaning down to kiss his 2-year-old baby goodby. The minister wa3 on his way to sec his widowed mother, his father having died last week. He carried the pistol to prevent hie young children playing with it. The bullet from the revolver en tered his brain and Tidwell died about an hour after the accident. RADIUM CHECKS HER CANCER. Baltimore, January 30.—Miss Mar garet Quayle, daughter of Bishop Quayle, of the Methodist Episcopal church, who is receiving radium treat ment here, is gaining in strength, ac cording to a statement made by her mother yesterday. No information could be. obtained as to Congressman Bremncr’s condition. Master Bannon Jones entertained “““■ — Friday afternoon with a very ioveiy; MO\ IE KING’S CHILD DIVORCED^ birthday party at the handsome Mil-’ Philadelphia,. Pa., January 30. ledge avenue home of his parents, Mr.' MEdith Lffbin Singhi, wife of Fer- and Mrs. W/.lter H. Jones. Idinand Singhi, and daughter of Sig- Tlie party was given in celebration j mun <l Lubin, the ‘ moving picture of the ninth birthday anniversary of king," was granted an absolute di- the richest of the present day Vander bilts, has begun a fight against the general sue and selling of poison dragar She is furnishing the sinews for a nation wide investigation of the whole subject preparatory to a cam paign for legislative and other action to restrain the evil. Mrs. Vanderbilt has directed Ernest K. Coulter to undertake a full inquiry into the evil and the means for stamping it out. “We havs not proceeded far with oar inquiry, 11 said Mr. Coultsr, “but the necessity of setion.' Mr. Coulter said he knew of a case in which nine hoys hsd been locked upt at one time for usin gdrugs, and that by morning they were nearly insane from the lack *of their stimu lant. He said it was common infor mation that various drugs were being peddled openly, even on the streets. he could get cocaine in thirty places. “When the facts were brought to thc attention of Mrs. Vanderbilt,” said Mr. Coulter, "she was horrified and directed me to ma|je a sweeping in vestigation on which we will have our fight for better conditions.' According to Mr. Coult(r, only 20 per cent of the heroin brought into this country is used legitimately for medicinal purposes, the other 80 per cent being used by the “fiends. r Heroin is qsed like cocaine by its slaves,- being sniffed up the nose in a has-been dona baa shown psMsmCsitoS*. *r injocted in the li quid. The supply comes from Ger many, where it is prepared by treat ing morphine with acetic acid. The result is a drug much cheaper than cocaine and at least as terrible. Its victims call it “happy dust.” It has real medicinal uses in cases of asth ma, whooping cough, and other spas modic affections. Forty-one pints of whiskey in a Wall street restaurant were found by Captain Seagraves and Officer Em- rick of the police font at an early hour this morning. Tha policemen had bean on their rounds and tried the door of the place of Mr. Robert Brooks on the east side of Wall atnet. There was a key in the lock, and .tha door was not locked. Going in the men of the law found two suit Cdsee full of pint bottles of whiskey. There was no one in, sight to claim the goods, no one connected with the restaurant could be found. The po lice seized the liquor and locked it up at the vault at headquarters. -They state that there may be several cases from the find—keeping whiskey In a place of business, state case; keeping more than the allowed quantity, four gallons and three quarts, federal case; and keeping it for the presumed purpose of illegal salt, city cue. ■ The place is kept by Mr. Robert Brooks who came to' Athens a few weeks ago from Madison county. . He rented the place recently and still latf er was granted a license to opdriitd a near beer saloon on Thomas' street; under the name of W. A:. Harris 6 Co., Mr. Harris being no longer can- nerted with the bufines* in *ny It is learned that the iwhlski’y'he- longa to a.party of men on their way from Madison to Greensboro^ N. C.,' and they had stopped at the restaur ant, and had intended taking the stuff away, but it was seized before they had a chance to do so. It is understood that a case will'be called against tho proprietor of the place tomorrow morning at police court * Governor SJaton Took Only Course Open to Him In Obear-Nash Matter (Special to The Herald.) Atlanta, January 30.—While there is a wide difference of opinion among military men in the state as to which authority is paramount—state or fed eral—in the row over W. G. Obear’s office as quartermaster general, both sides are agreed that Governor Slat on's recent action in passing on the matter was the only one he could pos sibly have taken under the circum stances. The governor simply decided that he had no executive right to set aside the action of the Georgia legiilature in creating the quartermaster gen eral’s office. If Governor Slaton had declared it void, all are agreed, he would have been exceeding his au thority. As it is the governor's ac tion leaves the question open, with out prejudice, to be passed on by the legislature itself when it meets in Jund. All agree that even if the war de partment has made the quartermut- er’s office supernumerary, as Adjutant Geeral Nash holds, the governor was right in declining to set aside an act of the legislature. Representative Edmonson Fightinq School Book Trust in Vigorous Way Deenes, Meats and Pro- c ’ 111 iaet everything that ?S K l " complete your menu orrakfast, dinner or sup- • ,. *’}’ us and become a ihiied customer. er nis, cash. PHONE 1118 ADA^s market orce from her husband thii week. Mrs. Singhi obtained her decree on the grounds of cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities. BREAKS LEG TURKEY TROTTING New York, January 30.—Henry Blossom, thc playwright, while turkey trotting in thc apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Shcrburn M. Becker last Friday, broke a leg. He_is confined to his room in the same building. Blossom was dancing wit!, Mrs. Becker, whose husband is the former “boy mayor” of Milwaukee. In Summit. N. .1.. yesterday. Miss | Beatrice Malcolm fell as she was per forming 'he hesitation wait; and he lleft leg was fractured. Thc children present were: Frances Arnold, Elizabeth Arnold, Frances , . . , ..... Hinton, Lou Price Hinton, Frances ly burnmg pmk candles, de'.ghted he | R H .rt C onw»y. J>ck Carlton, "children. P.nk roses were used as the ; Montjne v Martha ampbeI , lovely centerpiece, and at each child » ■ Geo ' Mortoni Cjr!ton Me „ p at place was a paper cap m br,ght-col- Me „ w M Mail, Hugh Stanley, Bur- ored popper. Each child was given stanlfyi H omer R, ynoIdt i^ferd, us a souvenir 3 little drum, top, or pl.-u. » « «•««• • . basket filled with candy. Chatl,e H0Op * r ,nd B,llle Phimz *' The principal game played was “pinning the hat on Foxy Grandpa," and thc children had lots of fun try ing to pin the hat on the old gentle- WANTED—By couple without chil- msr’s h“ad. The prize for th- one dren. three unfurnished rooms for ; ' h ' pinned the iiat on cor. e-tty v/aa a light housekeeping: place with small j "Foxy Grafu'na " The booby poultry ya:d preferred. Address J. D. jgrue was a box of candy. i 3L B, cars The Jerald. lip WANTED.-Unfurnished Atlanta, January 30.—Representa tive Grover C. Edmondson of Brooks county, is turning the searchlight of investigation upon the 3choo! book situation in Georgia. He has just is sued a statement arraigning the state school book commission and criticiz ing the last ession of the legislature for not taking action against what he characterizes as “the school book trust.” Mr. Edmondson calls attention to the resolution passed by the Farm ers' Union, condemning the surren der of the legislature to the school ■ ■ ■ n.. . .*£*•*'* book trust, and declares that the peo ple as a whole are just beginning to realize how the legislature up to now has failed in its duty in that regard. Mr. Edmondson expresses the ar dent hope that the next legislature state to have published as cheaply as possible a proper set of school books to be furnished at cost to the chil dren. Mr. Edmondson does not take, a pessimistic view of the future. He' declares that the last legislature did not literally surrender to the school ning prevented any useful action. MR. I. H. PITTARD L/ TO REST AT The last sad rites over tha remains of Mr. I. H. Fittard, whose demise waa announced in yesterday's Herald, ware conducted this morning at the - Winterville Methodist church, many sorrowing friends attending. The following friends of tha de ceased acted as pall-beartrs: Messrs. E. I. Smith, H. H. Linton, D. H. Win ter, F. K. Freeman, J. H. Dorsey, J. A. Pitner. There is nothing worse than betray ing a friend’s confidence. . ,. RENO AT THE Y. W. C. A.; RAPID FIRE MAGICIAN The school children are all asking When is ‘Reno’ coming;" “Where is the magician to be?” The answers are February 2nd at the Y. W. C. A. athletic building. Yes, this will be a treat fer the children and furthermore a special rate of half price will be made so thet they can all see the man who performs such wonderful tricks. This expert illusionist has travelid through many countries, including In dia. Syria and Egypt, everywhere gathering new ideae for his profes sion- One of the intereating things about Reno ie that he ia alwaya giv ing new tricks, not only those he has learned from these foreign places, but he has many wierd inventions of his •wn. All the time he is working hii won ders, flashes of wit and fun are fired at the audience, keeping everyone In a good humor from start to finish. Reno will start his performance at 8:jI0 promptly. , February 2nd, Monday, Y. W. C, A. itbUtic building. THE HOLLAND | lev/, Clayton St. (Upstairs) '. / The beat service for the baay business man or University stU' dent. No long wait for th* eats. The dining place of those who expect moot in service from a cafe. Here you se lect from a mean affording full choice of the season’s choicest viands—and each item is served In a manner most enticing and appetiz ing—that’s the WHY of its popalarity. i**, Completeaeaa of entaino and conrteey ta all ia the motto of tha HaUaad folks. Regular mealatSc. Breakfast T to t; Dianer 12 to 2iM;-S«p. per « to 7JS. Merchant'! Lunch, 1 to 2:30, 25c. THE HOLLAND Athena’ Ca