The Athens daily herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1912-1923, February 06, 1923, Image 1

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Athens Cotton: rnllLlXG •• — .. ., 88 S tKMOL'S CLOSE .. j WEATHER 2F5&S 1 The HOME NEWSPAPER Leader of Gre&t Thyssen Industries Says Occupa tion of Ruhr Valley to Accomplish Nothing. WAGES JUMP FOR ALL EMPLOYEES Goddeleau in Hesse Re ported Taken, and Ger mans Momentarily Ex pect ManneHiem Seizure. LONDON—A report tht^ the French have advanced 25 miles be- yoiid the frontier, occupying God- d’.le.iu, in Hesse, reached London t.-.day in an lessen despatch to the Times. The correspondent adds that the Hermans momentarily ex it-ct the occupation of Mannehiem. 66.000 WORK EPS ARE NOT AFEECTED. HAM BORN, Germany — (By the Associated Press) — Sixty-six thousand workmen employed in the various Thyssen plants at • ttaniffi.l lirnWfWBldm/PtiiSbdrragd Dinslaken are working fall time— three eight hour shifts a day— and have not been, affected either by the railroad strike or lack of fuel Locomotives are busy shunting cars in the immense railroad yard of the plants. They are built around seven pitheads and are ihus provided each day with suffi- ri.nt coal to supply the entire works with motive power. The French occupation has not y. t interfered with us” is the opinion expressed at tho Thyssen plants. “As a matter of fact It has helped us. We were having a lot o£ trouble with the Com- munist element among our work ers. but the French occupation and the arrest of Fritz Thyssen lined th* m un solid behind us.” Many industries in the Ruhr are in a similar situation, mining their •■oal within a few hundred yards nf the works. The railroad . men. have remained faithful to their 'ob:; and tho plants are well stock ed with raw material. MR. AND MRS. O. W. WILSON KISSING FOR AN OFFICIAL, THE CHART BELOW SHOWS MRS. WILSON’S EVEN CALM REACTION (AT TOP) AND WIL SON’S JAGGED FLUCTATING REACTION RECORD (AT BOT TOM). MORSES FACE TRIAL Clean Living Is '• Plea of Y.M.C.A. Chief Gabriel Whitehorse, Suicide Because Married Woman Refused to Re turn Affection. HE SERVED IN THE WORLD WAR Big Store Thrown Into Panic When Shots Are Fired. Woman Says She “Kidded” Him. MACON, .Ga.—An appeal is be ing made through the y. M. C. A. of Georgia in annual conference here for clean speech, clean sport and clean living in the lives of boys and young men in Georgia. Atlanta and all other cities in the state are asked to < assist, in the cleaner living campaign.. Dr. John R. Mott, general sec retary, and Arthur Cotton of New York were on the program to speak Tuesday. The reading of the report of tho state committee and the for mulating of plans for the $18,000 campaign to meet the budget of IS FORECAST AFTER SEVERE COLD WAVE! jMemel Situation Is Said Adjusted Latest Report Is That If He Can Discuss Eco nomic Clause, Pasha May Yield: CAPITULATIONS CLAUSE SETTLED M. Bompard, Head of the French Delegation, Sees Conference in Session Within a Month. LONDON — Provisional com promise has been reached between the Lithunian government and the entente minister at Kovno for the regulation of *he situation in 'I Memel pending decision of that territory's future either by the am- j j bassador’s conference or by tbo j Blit Before the Mercury ' lea # ue of nations, says the uiplo- j Ottoman delegation at Lau — - - - - - - -matte correspondent of the tele- — — LONDON — (By the Asso ciated Press) — France has notified Great Britain that the R . » • /~* i,i ; utaut cuucopui 1 S e S Again, Colder I graph Tuesday. Weather Will Be Felt in'. aad *„ th ^ E£5J2 ,bIjr ~ , , .a neutral zone will be created. Georgia and Florida. ALA. IS WRAPPED IN CAKE OF ICE Virginia, Tennessee and the organization for 1923 were Mississippi Covered in' features of Monday s session. — _ — _ ! canne nas agreed to sign all the peace terms. SESSION HANDLES By GENE COHN BERKLEY, Cal. — The time worn theory, women are more emo tional than men, is bein« lucked away in moth balls. For the "truth machine,” that invincible recorder of tho slightest human emotion or reaction is re cording the contrary in a scries cr tests now being made-by Proton- 0. S. “ NEW YORK, — Benjdmin and Harry Morse, scheduled to go on trial in Washinptcn today with their father Charles W. Morse, their brother Ervin, and eight WILL GET NOTHING FROM OCCUPATION Ruhr militarily hut will never get anything worth out of it” said one of the *‘.*n directors. “Our work- ur. satised. We raised their i« s ninety per cent on Febru I and they now Tflraw 1,250 a an hour, or 10.000 marks for uht hour day. We shall raise wages again should the cost k'ing increase. V are doing everything we can roxnie food as cheaply as bio. There are now eighty a is jf foodstuff from the in i' «>f Germany at the Ober- ■ n yards. The shipment has delayed on account of the (Turn to Page Eight) sor John A Larson, University of other defendants ^or alleged war California criminologist and inven- I frauds were arrested by a depart- tor of the machine. ment ot Justice agent at the Pe n n- Larson Is a member of the fa- sylvania Terminal Tuesday morn- nous “Vollmer super-cops” of i ing. Berkley and recently was offered | a “scientic sleuthship” by Chica- j TRIAL TO BE HELD !;?“ IN WASHINGTON, go police. almo 8 n'ncunn7deX"'has'shown | WASHINGTON-The tint the male “emotion wave length” j trial growing out of the investi- to be considerably more "agitated" ; gallon of alleged “war frauds” by and "fluctuating” than that of tbo | a special grand jury Tuesday - UIIU uuhiuat o itJin criminal A1 in c, r\n of tho Til. female. * NEW YORK — Potters field be the final resting place of Chief Gabriel Whitehorse, full blooded Cherokee Indian and war veteran, who killed himself in a crowded, department store Monday for Ip 7? of a • young married woman, unless some of his old buddies raise funds to send his body back to his old home in Oklahoma. The body was unclaimed Tuesday in the city morgue. j Clippings from New Mexico pa- j pers found in his pocket showed [that he had served with the Cana dian and American forces In France and that he had been gass ed and twice wounded. When the chief, who was also known as Gabriel Hatting,.return ed from overseas, he obtained em ployment at various occupations here and finally became night- watchman in one of the largest department stores. He fell in love with Mrs. Norma Smith, cashier in the store lunchroom. Mrs. Smith admitted to the po- loce that she had exchanged love notes with him but said that she was only “kidding.” Some of her letters found on his body were ad dressed to “My Indian Prince’* “Rain-Iu-The-Face,” and “Thiin- der Cloud” most of them were sign ed “lovingly Indianmoon.” SAVANNAH—Savannah is now ready to receive . the American troops from Germany who will ar rive Wednesday eurnute aboard (the criminal division of the Dis I irict of Columbia supreme court ... llo a F (with Charles Morse, his three a Sum* ^ sons and eight others as defend- A K,S5 I ants. They are charged with Incidentally, there has been se-I conspiracy to defraud the United cured for the first time, a close-up States and the emergency fleet c “„,‘- kis8 , jt Is in the corporation through war time kissing that the first j shipping contracts involving ap- gen«o art or kissing mui I marte . I proximatcly $40,000,000. * emotion tests . ♦»,« ! The defendants besides Charles During the past two years t r are Ervin, Benjamin duties of the truth machine wer ^ Harry Morse . Colin H . L iv- PRESIDENT DELAYS DEBT MESSAGE TO A Washington —President Harfl- iiet i ie.i Tuesday to postpon® i-nnl Wednesday at least, his mes- Kuv t rongreBB asking for modln- ' ' r of the debt funding law to j" mit f nal approval of the fund- lr >^' settlement recently negotiated "ith r,rent Britain, h w;ts said at the White House no definite time had been mod for transmission of the P r es».lont’8 recommendations which ’ lily had been expected to .go ,0 rward Tuesday It was'lndlcat- Jj h °weve r that the message would J* *eat to the Capital as soon as un her conferences with leaders n th* senate* ard house had eS- • shod wliat form, of amendment l ,ll( ‘ law would be least likely 10 meet with serious opposition- confined to the trapping of crimi nals In lies by their pulse beats, heart throbs, blood pressure and other reactions recorded by the sensitive Invention. . . Recently Larson broadened the scope of Ws experimentsi to the entire field of human Emotions.. For the “kiss-emotion'' test the first subjects were O. W. Wilson. criminology student, and; W« bride’ Tests were made .early in the: honeymoon before the busi ness of kissing had become a per functory faihlly obligation. The‘“tri.tb machine" te harness ed: to a stabled- at the wri**' and arm. .Thtas the poise beats, heart throbs and blood pressure ar Through Extremely sensitive ap paratus Internal ««««,{£ stantly recorded drum. ingstone, former president of the Virginia Shipbuilding Corpora tion; G. M. Burditt, attorney for the Morse interests; N. P. Camp bell, of New York, assistant treasurer of the U. S. Transpor tation Company, Ipc.; Rupert M. Much, Augusta, Maine,* assistant treasurer of the Virginia Ship building Corporation; W. W. Scott, Washington attorney; Phillip Reinhardt, auditor for the U. S. Fleet Corporation, at Alexandria, Va.; Leonard Christie, treasurer of' the Virginia Shipbuilding Cor poration, and Robert O. White, assistant treasurer of the Groton Iron Works and president of the U. S. Transport Company, Inc. TWO INDICTMENTS WERE RETURNED NEW BOWLING RECORD Milwaukee, wia - itowllne tournament will be set the 1923 meeting or the American Bowling Congress here, accoramg , _ »| tjwigtrv. secretary of the or- ^diaTfon whh declared today that more then 1.500 teams have en- ♦#»rpd The tournament will stan March 10th and continue through April Entries will close next Fri- AU ihn 1 ooo champions have en- Prize monev io ho distrihut ed this year total $Gu,000. The Chief walked up to Mrs. Smith Monday said “goodbye” and then fired three shots at himself. The first two went wild, throwing th.e stores customers into confusi on but the third lodged in his heart. A number of notes to “My In dian Moon” were found in his lodging house. One said: “Man was made to take care of woman. Woman was made to drink bum booze and raise the devil.” There also was found a medal struck off for officers and men of the steamship Baltic, Florida, and Republic, after the sinking of the Republic, and the rescue of 1,500 survivors in 1909. The Chief had been employed in the wireless room on the Florida. Mrs. Smith who has been sep arated from her husband, said: “I met the Chief about January He kidded all of us girls. 1 liked him pretty well at first but it was nothing serious, you under stand. After the first two or three weeks, it was more of a kidding affair than anything else. I nev er thought he would take it seri ously.” The investigations were begun by the government in 1921 and later were conducted by the spe cial grand jury; Two indictments were returned, both covering identical charges and accusing the same person. One indictment charges a con spiracy- to defraud the United States and the other a conspir acy to commit an offense against the United States by defrauding the United States shipping hoard. The indictments involve con tracts, between . the emergency corporation. and the Groton Iron (Turn to Page Eight). * H READY TO GREET SOLDIERS F! Snow. S. C. Escapes Se vere Cold. ATLANTA — A drop of only a few degrees below freezing was dieted for Georgia, for. Tuesday by C. F. Von I^emgan, weathe^ fore caster here, x temperature of 28 degrees was expected. The severe weather expected to bring sleet and snow to Atlanta was warded off apparently by a storm to the South, Mr. Von Herr- man thinks. Such a freeze as oth er southern pities are experienc ing might have materially bene- 1 fitted the farmers by killing the Committees appearing before the county board of commissioners featured a 'long session of that body Tuesday in the first meeting of Februray. Col. C. M. Spelling and Dr. Jos. S. "Stewart of the University Summer school appear ed and asked for the usual appro priation of 1300.00 for the school^ The request was granted and the money will be appropriated. . uiwu i»***«j*o u muu, „„, H. H. Gordon, Jr., and Col. rive weanesaay enrouie auoaru boll weevils in their hibernation I a «° rennested the transport St Mihiel. All plans quarters. The weather man W. , th ® J' have been completed for a big de- |but tho present temperature can- ! that the appropriation of $300.00 to last year. Mr. Gordon read number of letters from' principals of schools over the county com mending the “Y” on the work that Mr. Weems Is d^ng in the rural schools. Action on the request was unfavorable and the amount remains at $300.00. monstration and monster welcome I c °t deal a death Mow’ to the pests.! *at organization no.increased over, to the last of .the American troops ] Farming experts assert that a from the Rhine from the time the i continued spell of cold weather vessel is sighted until she departs' would be the greatest hope for the from port here. i farmer under boll weevil condi- The ship is scheduled to reach tions, since the winter generally Savannah at seven o’clock in the bas been very mild so far morning is not expected to arrive I The cold wave which has blasted In port until nf* according | the north and practically all of to a radio message from the com- .tbe southern states extending ttq mander of the transDort. [mantle of snow, sleet and .ice.far There are aboard the St Mihiel ; Into the southeast and the Atlan- 908 enlisted men and officers. 74 j tic seaboard, is believed to have German wives and 24 children.»spent its force and milder weather About 500 of the . soldiers will Is promised in the worst affected disembark at Savannah to be dis- ' areas, charged here. The transport will i then leave for Charleston. S. C., i LOW TEMPERATURES expected to dock thero Thursday; ARE CONTINUING to land a number of officers and later proceed to New York. J Low temperatures are continuing Immediately after a barbecue over the entire section, however, for the soldiers, arranged by Sa- j and colder weather is predicted id vannah merchants here Wednes- 1 the forecasts as far south as een- day, a parade will be staged.' * ra l Florida and the Gulf coast narticipated by the troops and Tuesday. „„„„„ w ... — four hundred enlisted men will i A sudden drop in the mercury: April 1st and that this would be then entrain to Fort Screven, near experienced over central Geor I done the grading would be done. Savannah where they have been gi a Monday night but this section | Th© members of the board said assigned. ; RO * ar bas missed the sleet bar- j they were in sympathy with the I 1 ’ 3 *®’ ... . , . • work but that preiising needs of PROMINENT PEOPLE I C-radually rising temperatures, the forCes on the grading of the WILL PARTICIPATE V (’.TI®,,,,."";J" ’! Madison avenue MU and other pav- j sa i lnK projects of the county would Governor Hardwick, Mivor Sen- ; »*ere the blizzard apjreared I preyent any work belng done be _ brook, of Savannah, and others 1° be centered in the central A —„ ,, ,* — A committee composed of Chancellor Barrow, E. I*. Griggs and Harry Hodgson, also ap peared and requested the county to do the grading on Lucas Hill for the new John Miltedge dor mitory. Previous plans calling for an expenditure of approximately $15,000 had been revised so that the total grading requested now would cost only about $3,000.00. Mr. Hodgson stated that it was hoped to begin the building about PARIS, (By the Associated Press)—Advices received at Paris from Lausanne state that the Near Hast conference has not been term inated officially and that lsuxct Pasha is ready to, accept the Ai- liud treaty if the Turkish dele gates are permitted to discuss the economic. causes. Resumption of the conference fa another month, after lsmet has rc- , turned from Aagora is also said to have been suggested by the head of the Nationalist delegation, M. Bompard,. the French represen tative declared: tit is not rupture. The confer ence is interrupted” In a coxxversdtion with lsmet' Pasha before .leaving Lausanne, M. Bompard: is. said to. .haver tearg? f ed that the Turkish leader's -stands * ready to accept the capitulation clauses which proved one of the stumbling blocks at the -Sunday session. ✓ , LONDON — Rueter’s Lausanne correspondent was informed early Tuesday afternoon thta M. Bom pard, head of the French delega tion had intimated that there was. a posibility of the Near East treaty being signed almost immediately. prominent here and in the fitete j Smith. The heaviest snows in hood the general recention <om- years fell In Eastern Tennessee mittee to board the coast guard aiu ) “*e Northern half or Missis- cutter Yamaohaw and escort the siT ”- , . _ __ .. ,, St iMIhiel into port. 1 Birmingham and Northern. Ala- Members of the American legion / b«ma early Tuesday still felt the fore April. If it was attempted at and representatives of shipping 1 effects of parization from the interests aboard tugs, will also I thick coating of sleet, snow hnd greet the incoming transport out: Ice whipped into a froth by the from port. ; wintry gale. Every courtesy will be fhown i Four fatalities have been re- the vets while in Savannah by the' ported in the Southeast states ator merchants, public amusement com i ing the freeze. Near flood stage panies and local civic, patriotic . for the Mississippi river by the end fraternal organizations and a !«nd of the week is predicted in the full program of entertainment l as Memphis district been arranged. *“ Spend $16,000,000 On Rolling Stock WASHINGTON — plans of the; Baltimore and Ohio railroad to purchase 8,000 new freight cars and- 52 locomotives at an kpproxi mate cost of $16,000,000 were given Hundreds of visitors from many sections are here and the «“tv gayly decorated for a spontaneous recention from the time tho first shrill whistle is sounded. Travelers* Will , Initiate Class Virginia is emerging Tuesday under a mantle of snow and wes- ♦*»m North Carolina has three to five inches of snow. South Caro lina seems to have escaped the ’-orst part of the cold weather, though low temperatures are re ported. Rain has been general over wide pifteHnnft. 14.000 HEAD OF CATTLE FREEZE TO DEATH. *• In the K. p”hail' The Classic City Council num-^ ber 315. Commercial Travelers, will initiate a big class Saturday night The new member*! taken in will number 25 and following the initiation an oyster supper will be served. The meeting *vlll be held C.«C. which authorized *the railroad to issue and assume liabiliWes in payments of interest and principal of 813,875,000 in equipment trust certificates.' The sum , raised by the new equipment. The local council Is one of the 11 vest in the south and has a mem bership of over 200 traveling men hud .salesmen who make Athens eir headquarters. . All members of the. council and l&tors are‘invited to attend the iturday ‘night function. DALLAS, Tex.—bold weather that swept Texas for the past three days had lost Considerable intensity Tuesday, reports indicat ed, although early glances at the thermometer showed the state still more oi* less near the freezing point Tn Jefferson county, near the gulf, between 10,000 and 14.000 head of cattle- were estimated by a number of ranchers to have froz en to dc " The panhandle and the cotton Country accepted the weather i (Turn to page eight) all. Mr. White suggested that In stead of attempting to do the work that an appropriation of $3,0000. be made so that the Job could be let-out by contract but Chancellor BarroW requested that no hurried (Turn to page eight) LAUSANNE, (By the Associated Press.)—Riza Nyr Bey of the. Turkish delegation to the Near East conference said Tuesday that Turkey and the powers had reach ed an accord on the jurl&dicial capitulations but that there were scill important financial matters on which an agreement had not been affected. The >Turks announced that they would leave for Angora at six o’clock Wednesday morning. They said that offers had been. made, to eliminate from the treaty the economic clauses to which they had objected, leaving such ques tions to further negotiations. Riza Nur said Turkey believed the objectionable clauses could be eliminated or revised. The indi cations are that the Turks by fur ther procrastination, seek her con cessions from the Allies and that the ultimate fate of the Lausanne treaty rests not here but in. t)ie hands of the governments in Lon don, Paris and Rome. WANTS TO KNOW WHEN CHl?,D LEAVE8. IN APARTMENT WICHITA. Kans. — With three unidentified bodies recovered, flre- foen at daybreak Tuesday resumed their search of the ruins of the Getto apartment building here, which was destroyed, by fire early Monday morning. Eight persons were rescued most of them suffer ing from dangerous bums. Fire Chief A1 Brown well said as work was resumed, that he did not be lieve that more than four or possib ljr five poisons had been killed. Officials Monday'night said that 27 persons were missing bu$ a re- cjieck Tuesday showed most, of these accounted for. The building, a four-story stiruc lure, was completely demolished. The upper thrfce floors w?K© oc$q pied as apartments, and th© low er houses retail stores. * lsmet Pasha early Tuesday tele phoned the American delegtaion asking what time Richard Wash" . bum Child was departing, it was thought the Turkish foreign min ister deslred to leave the path fbt definite action open until the last moment. v ... 14 ■ Ambassador Child and Marquis DiGarroni. of Italy,*left for Rpme shortly after no^n. lsmet gaw them off at the station, but sub mitted no definite plan for a'set tlement. The members of the Ital ian • delegation said that 1 with the economic chapters of' the treaty reserved for future negotiaions there teeemed no reason why the Turks could not sign, but as botK* the English ard French delega tions nad departed the Turks were hesitating to'take formql action. The Italians expressed the hope that an 'amended treaty could be signed at Lausanne or- elsewhere later when ^hroiigh regular diplo matic channels, a definite under-* standing should have been reach ed. The Japanese delegation was to leave Tuesday nfaht under the im pression that nothing more can bo accomplished at X4(u8anne' at *bi- moment Rear Admiral Mark L, Bristol of the American delega- tionaWlS,- leaving • tonight for Constantinople Hs purpose beipg to catch the touring liner Homeric ’ (Turn to page eight)