The Brunswick news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1906-2016, October 13, 1922, Image 1

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BRUNSWICK Has a landlocked harbor, tha best on the South Atlantic Coast. ......... 'VOLUME XXI. N0. 251 PROF. MOTON. WHO HEADS TUSKfGEE, IS COMING HERE Man Who Succeeded Booker T. Washington Leads Special Party on State Trip PROMINENT COLORED EDUCATORS ON TRIP Making a Trip of Principal Cities In Georgia and Will Leave Co lumbus' Visiting Many Places and Ends in Atlanta. The Parent-Teacher Association j -Jtisley school is using: every effort to complete arrangements for bringing to Brunswick in the near future, what is to be known as the Moton party. This party will he made up of fifteen or twenty prominent negro educators and ether leaders of con siderable influence among the col ored people. Dr. It. R. Moton, presi dent, of Tuskogee, who is perhaps the greatest exponent of the doctrine of thorough understanding and good jvill betwee n the races in the south, Wvill head the party. Among others who will accompany Dr. Moton are: Prof. G. W. Carver, who is in charge of the department of science in Tuskogee Institute and of the government experiment sta tion at Tuskogee, Ala. Prof. Carver Js rated by many competent judges 1 as one of the foremost agricultural chemists in the entire country. He i is the man who has made more than seventy products from the peanut, ranging fr'om milk to ink and includ ing breadstuffs for human consum ption and forage for stock. S. P. Campbell, a poineer in farm : demonstration w'ork among the col ored people and at present superin tendent of state work in AJabama, E. C. William, superintendent, of col ored farm demonstrators in Georgia, Dr. Harris, of Athens, Bishop Wil liams, of Augusta, Prof. Johnu Hope, president of the Morelvouse college in Atlanta, Prof. Henry Hurt, of Fore Valley and a large number of others equally as prominent will com pose the party. The tour of the state will be made in a special car, which will begi n at Columbus and will end in Atlanta. ! The tour will require six days and fifteen stops will be made, covering j every section of the state. The cost of the trip is to be furnished by the' cities visited' on a prorata basis. j Brunswick fares exceedingly well on the tentative program. The party I will arrive from Waycross at 12:30 1 and will depart at 5:10 for Savan- j nah, being her e an entire afternoon, j Whether or not Brunswick is to be put on the permanent itinery depends \ on the financial success that i s made I betwee n the present an d Tuesday. Many of th e smaller cities not in cluded are asking for any stop that might go begging. Those in charge have called a mass meeting for 7:30 o’clock Monday night at. the First Af rican Bapt'st church and every col ored citizen is urged to attend. RED CROSS SENDS DR. HILL TO CARRY HELP (By Associated Press.) Washington, Oct. 12.—Dr. Ross Hili left here tonight and will sail tomorrow to take charge of relief operations of the Red Cross i n the Near East, accompanied by Rear i Ad miral Sam McGowan, who will as-‘ sist him. MRS. DEBOUCHEL SAYS CANDLER MUST SPEAK (Bv Associated Press) Atlanta, Oct. 12. —Firm i n her in tention to “bring the kind of legal action against Asa G. Candler which will probably make him vidicate” her name, Mrs. Onezima Dsßouchel of New Orleans, whose engagement t o the Atlanta capitalist recently was terminated today was completing preparation to return with her at torney to her home in Louuisiana. Harry Gamble, New Orleans attor ney representing Mrs. Deßouchel, in timated that he may retur n to At lanta soo n to confer with local law THE BRUNSWICK NEWS THE NEWS IS A MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARGENTIN A IN AUG l RATES DOALVKAR, NEW PRES’DT (By Associated Press.) 'Buenos Aires, Oct. 12.—M. Carel T. Dealvear was inaugu rated the eighteenth president of Argentina today with imposing ceremonies before a distinguish ed gathering including diploma tise representatives °f foreign countries. GREEKS AGREE 10 810 THRACE ADIEU. ! ACCEPTING RESULT I I Will Humbly Abide Terms o i Document Which May Be Signed at Mudania REENTRY OFTURKS WAS REGARDED INEVIALABLE Adrianople, While Feeling Sad, Understood That This Would Be Final End—Withdrawe! of| Funds From Banks. ’ NEWS HUMBLY RECEIVED (By Associated Press) Paris, Oct. 12.dGreece has de cided to sign the Mudania armis tice convention and evacuate I Thrace, according to the condition stipulated in that document, the French foreign office was offical- I ly informed today. Andrianople, Oct. 12.—NeVvs of- the| conclusion of the armistice at Mu dania was received quietly here, on a large part of the population al ready regarded re-entry of the Turks into Eastern Thrace as inevitable. Talk of resistance is mainly confined to the army. Withdrawal of funds from the banks and liquidation of assets have been in progress for several days and w'll undoubtedly be accelerated by the knowledge that Turkish civil au thorities will be in charge forty-five days after the ai-mistice take s effect. More tha n a thousand families have left Adrianople Dor Greece within the last week, and the city is f : lled with refugees from the villages Already the people are leaving as rapidly as possible. Despite the presence of the Allied Mission sent here from Constanti nople the Christian population seems unwilling to believe that the Allies can carry out their guarantee of pro tection, and a repetition of the Smy rna massacres is feared by many. The majority of the civilians are armed, but it is hoped the Allied de tachments can prevent serious clash es until after the Turkish gendai-- merle i s fully installed. The Greek army officers still nxain tain their attitude of resistance and 1 their position ha s been somevtha-i | reinforced by the civilian movement, for an “autanamous Thrace,” but the continued exodus westward -’ndicates | that this movement has no over- I whelming popular support. SATISFACTION REIGNS HERE (By Associated Cross.* ' Moscow, Oct. 12.-—“ The Red army and navy have completed their first maneuver s and I am very much sat isfied,” Minister Urotzky Jtol'd ,the congress of textile made union work ers upon his retur n from the South. (Continued o n Page Eight) yers relative to legal proceedings against Candler, whom the Louisiana | divorcee alleged in statements pub ; lished here had broken his Engage ment to marry her because of alleged I receipt of information reflecting on her character. Other than one statement issued through his attarneys that he regret ted Mrs. Deßouched had sought pub-| lic-ity of a “private affair and that in formation in hi s possession made the njarriage with the divorcee impossi ble, Candler has refused to discuss the termination of the engagement for publicity. BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA. FRIDAY OCTOBER 13, 1922. OH, SAYS, CAN YOU SEE— Hi ’ ■, ns-v*- „ } ‘• . jSf pi Jfl "j ' ,<L i , ■J.iP'' -'.'-.■Ks;.. is VISITOR HEBE ■ , j An Old Brunswickian, now Post master at Tampa, is Back in That “Dear Old Home Town.” Edwin D. L-ambright, forme • Bruns wiekian, for many years editor of the Tampa Tribrse and n \v postmaster; of that city, is here for a few days on j route from Washington and New York i where, in the former city, he has been j .iieudmg the annual -...doting of then postmasters’ association. Mr. Lapibright is being cordially I greeted by a host of old friends and ' plans for a stay of a few days as the ( guest of his brother, J.E. Lambright. | He has not been in Brunswick in sev-j eral years and to the News represent ative he talked intersetingly of the many notable improvement now under! way in the city. He thinks, of course, j that the biggest and best move fo-r-j ward that has been made here in a generation is the conclusion to build that St. Simon highway which he is 1 | sure, will do much toward making ' Brunswick a greater city, i “It’s fine to come hack to my old town and find her building new j shools, constructing new permanent I streets and highways and making j other civic betterments that bespeak a commendable spirit of progress and 1 energy,” said Mr. Lambright. “Then again,” ontinued the speaker, “I find the people of Brunswick are united in a better spirit of understanding and j-re working with an eye single to Brunswick and Brunswick’s interest better : than hgs ever been the case ’’ in the past.” “The work you people ; pulled off in connection with that state ;ipori matter was simply admirable j and really did my heart good,” he said. I Mr. Lambright, like all visitors‘w ho i have just returned from New York, I believes that an era of real prosperity ' is in the offing and that the South is going to get her share of it SAYS WIFE TRIED TO SAW HIS HEAD OFF (By Associated Press) Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 12.—S. T. Pierce, -well known Stone Mountain citizen, filed suit today against his wife, charging that while asleep she attempted to saw his head off with a handsaw, iHe asks for a perma nent and absolute divorce. He sets up in his petition that he thought when he married in Ju\e, 1921, he was getting a June bride, but discovered instead that he got. a shrew. CLIFFORD HAYES, HELD ON MURDER NOW FREE AGAIN Friend Schneider Admits He Swore to Untruth; Youth is Given an Ovation When He Was Released. (By Associated Press.) New Brunswick, N. J., Oct. 12. The case against Clifford Hayes, by his friend, Raymond Schneider, in connection with the murder of Rev. Hall and Mrs. Mills, Mowed up today with a confession. Schneider said his story was all a lie. Haye s was released and return ed to his hom e and wa s greeted by thousands, while the parents of the youth were overjoyed. Mrs. Hall is now center of sus picion and authorities are ques tioning her apjain -land flaking th e tan coat she wore and since' dyed on the night of the mur der for an analysis to determine j if there was blo-cd stains ° n it. j J SCHNEIDER COLLAPSED Sommerville, N. J., Oct. 12.—Ray mond Schneider, detained as a ma-! tei'ial witness in the Hall-Mills mux’- i der case, today collapsed in the: Somerset county jail. A physician, who worked over him neax-ly half an hour before he was revived, stated that he wa s suffering from a severe nervous breakdown after the grilling to which he had been subjected. j It was Schneider’s accusation that Clifford Haye s had slain the couple . in mistake for another couple that j led to the ari’est of Hayes on a ; charge of murder. NEGRO BANDT ROBS 68 PULLMAN PASSENGERS (By Associated Press.) Chicago, Oct. 12.—Sixty-eight Chi cago bound passengers j n sleeping cars wer e nobbed by a negro bandit last night. The bandit boarded the Santa Fe road’s California Limited train out of Kansas City according to official railroad repoi't K received here. With hi s face covered the bandit boarded a sleeping car as the train pulled out °f the Kansas City sta tion the report said. He rapidly went through two cars, ordering the pas sengers out of their berths and rob bing all of them. PULATIONS FOB ! LIQUOR OB IPS American Ship Which Surrend ered Whiskey Cargoes Before October 14, Will be permitted to Take it Back. Washington, Oct. 12. —An order promulgating regulations for the en forcement of the new ship prohibition ruling was announced by the internal l-evenue department today and says that American ships which volun tarily suri-endered their stocks of liquor i n American ports would he peimitted to take it on board again provided sailing before October 14. I( rh stated howecer, that no sales of liquor on either American or foreign vessels within the territorial limit s will be permitted. IMPORTANT TEST CASES (By Associated Press.) New York, Oct. 12.—Two impor tant test ease s face the prohibition enforcement department. Federal Judge Hand today granted a restrain ing order enjoining the government from interfering with American ships Finland Ant and St. Paulu and also j another asking the government to show reason why the Injunction | should not be granted restraining in- j terferenee of liquor on board anchor ; and channel ships. FRANCE UNABLE TO PAY ANY PART OF HER DEBT FOR NEXT FOUR YEARS I <By Associated Press.) j Paris, Oct. 12—France will be , unable to meet any part of her debt i for the nex- four years, as all avail j able receipts for that period must jbe devoted to reconstruction of the ! devastated regions, according to the I Paris Herald, which quotes “one of the highest-authorities of the French ministry of finance.” The government, adds the news paper, i s doing it s utmost to find a : new formula for the settlement of j the European debts and reparations ; tangle, and will probably submit a j detailed scheme drawn up by M. ! Poincare w-hen the interallied fitxan- I cial congx-ess meets at Brussels. This plan calls for a revision of th e total of Germany’s indebtedness on a basis of actual reparations -only, the charges for pensions, war allow ances and the like being wiped from the state. This would reduce the French claim by nearly 25 per cent. ’ ► WINNER IN AERIAL RACE ► MADE 135 MILES HOUR (By Associated Press.) t Mount Clements, Mich., Oct. - 12:—An average of hundred, five ► and one-tenth miles an hour over a two hundred and forty k mile triangular course, Liuet. Harris, cf Chicago, piloted the ‘ Honeymoon Express” an aver of one hundred and thirty miles an hour and won the Detroit Av iation Club trophy. EXPORT RATE TO BE BIG TOPIC AT FIVE PORTS MEET South Atlantic Association is to Hold Annual Session in Wilmington, S. C. BRUNSWICK WILL ASK FOR NEXT CONVENTION Many Matters of Vital Interest to be Discussed by Represen tatives of Five Leading South Atlantic Ports. | The annual meet ins' of the South I Atlantic Ports Association, which I comprises the ports of Wilmington, Charleston, Savannha, Brunswick and Jacksonville, will be held Saturday, Oct. 14 in Wilmington. The port eit : es ai’e officially rep resented in the association by the five presidents and managing executives of their local commercial organiza tions, and assurance has already bee n given that nearly all of these will be in attendance at the meeting on | Saturday. Stephen N. Harris and E. | B. Walker are going from Savan | nah. Each year th e headquarters of j the body moves in alphabetical order j from port to port, in each case j head of the local chamber of com merce becoming president of the ports association. Jacksonville has been headquarters during 1922, with H. P. Adair, presi dent and A. V. Snell, manager of the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce, president and secretary, respectively, of the ports association. Albert J. Stowe, secretary of the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce, i s the organ ization’s publicity director and has handled this work for the last two or three years. According to rules of the association, Wilmingto n will be headquarters for the coming year, [and it is understood that President Lynch, of the Wilmington Chamber of Commerce, will head the organiza tion with Louis T. Moore, secretary of th e Wilmington chamber, its sec retary. The question of export rates from? the Middle West to South Atlantic poris is regarded by officials as one of the matter s which will be accord ed special attention at the meeting, particularly in view of vigorous North Atlantic influences which are j j bring brought to bear to secure al-. | terations to the disadvantage of both j j tire South Atlantic ports and the ; i Middle West shipping interests. \ j Study will also undoubtedly be made | in connection with progress being made towards completion of the [ South Atlantic coastal highway which j has been constantly fathered by the ports association. : 5 Port representat’'vc s who are ex pected to be in attendance at the (Continued o n Page Two) GREAT BRITAIN TO ISSUE CHECK FOR BIG AMOUNT (By Associated Press.) London, Oct. 12.—Checks for $50,- 000,000 are rare, even in these days of big finance, but a check for that amount will be turned over the the United States government Monday on account of Great Britain’s inter est on her war loan from the United States. This interesting slip of paper, which will probably be preserved as a historical relic after if, has served its purpose, will be drawn on the British treasury account, with J. P. Morgan & Company of New York. BRUNSWICK f Haa the loweat death rate of any city its size In the United States. PRICE FIVE CENTS GLYNNCQUNTYDAY AT BBANTLEY FAIR TO BE NEXT FRIDAY Congressman W. C. Langford Will Make an Address And Others Also JOHN R. COOPER WILL MAKE OPENING TALK This Will be on Monday, But There Will be Orators Each Day of Big Event—Many Brunswickians will Attend. Notice was received from Secre tary Kiky, of the Brantley County Pair Association, Hoboken, that Brunswick and Glynn County Day at the big event had been changed from Tuesday, October 17, to Friday, October 20 and the change will real ly suit the people of the city and ; county better than the original date j as many business men are always I engaged the first part of the week ; while Friday is generally regarded i as the days of less activity than any ! other of the entire seven. Hon. W. C. [ Langford, representative of this, the I Eleventh Congressional District, will be the principal speaker, but others will be Hon. W. W. Webb, Fred G. Warde, managing secretary of the Brunswick Board cf Trade and oth ers from this city. The speech-mak ing will be in the forenoon of the day. Friday has been changed from Tuesday, this day will be celebrated as Hoboken and Brantley county day and the people of this thriving lit tle town and the new county of Brantley will see the crowning of I their efforts with great success as reports say that visitors from every section of this state, as well as oth | ez-s in Georgia, will be present and | participate in making the event the ! greatest of the fair period—just as lit should be. Among the speakers |o n that day will be Judge J. I. Sum m'ei’all, of \7aycros s and Representa ‘ive Strickland, of Ware county. Hon. I John R. Cooper, well know n Macon attorney, candidate for the United ’ States senator, will make the open- | ing address on Monday morning. Wednesday will be Ware county day | and Thursday Pierce county day and hundreds of people fi-om each of these counties will be present. Among the irztez-esting features will be the old fiddlez-s convention and this event i s one which will re sist in mu h i maseni- lit People here vrill be more interest ed in the livestock, poultry and track display thazz all others combined and especially is this true as regards hogs and poultry. The latter is now occupying the attention of many in this county and it i s stated that som e fine bird s will be on exhibition. It is also said that pz-oducts of the gaz-den w'll be show n on a larger scale than has bee n the case in this part of the state in many; years. All in all, it will be interesting i n many ways. DISTRICT ATTORNEY GET READY VACATE OFFICE (By Associated Press) | Savannah, Ga., Oct. 12.—John W. | Bennett, United States district at torney, is here today. He came i down, he says to begi n arranging i for his leaving office. He i s to give ,up hi s place October 21st. Colonel Beimel t says he under ! stands Boatright of Oordele, is to re | place him. It will be made out in New York and signed for the British treasury by the Morgan Company. The check will be drawn in favor of the gen eral account of the treasurer of the United State s in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. In connection w :, ’i this payment it is said that the British treasury has for some time gradually been ac cumulating dollars, building up its dollar resources i the United States partly by shipments of gold from this country. Any dollars Great Brit ain secures otherwise are obtained by purchase in the exchange market.