Newspaper Page Text
1 I 1 CRIFFIN first
I Invest your money, your tal-
1 ent > your time, your influ
ence in Griffin.
Member of Associated Press
EXPERIMENT STATION TO GET $35,000 BUILDI 1
SALVATION ARMY WILL BE EMPTY STOCKING FUND SANTA
WILL HELP
DISTRIBUTE
XMAS GIFTS
TO KIDDIES
The Salvation Army of Qriffin
will play Santa Claus for the
Empty Stocking Fund. The
Army workers will investigate
all names of kiddies submitted
to the fund and turn in reports
to' THE NEWS! ......
The Utility Club, composed of
young women of Griffin will aid
the fund by packing all Santa
Claus baskets. The baskets will
be packed according to the list
of names and every child will
get toys, friiit, nuts horns etc.
No child will be slighted and the
baskets will not be “skimpy.” 1
The Utility Club will have
charge of the Empty Stocking i \
Fund showrooms in the sample i
rooms of the Griffin hotel. This ;
headquarters will be opened
Tuesday and contributions will
be received there as well as at |
THE NEWS office.
In addition to playing Santa
Claus for the Empty Stocking |
Fund the Salvation Army will I
continue its practice of providing
baskets of food to needy fam
ilies. But not a dime from the
Empty Stocking Fund will go 1
'to pay for these baskets. Every
cent collected by the fund will j
be used to buy toys, etc., for the i
kiddies. :
The Empty Stocking Fund is !
first and last for the kiddies of j j
the city and does not attempt to
provide any of the necessities for
the older members of the family. ■
The Empty Stocking Fund
will be delivered into the homes
of the wee tots on Christmas Eve i
so that the mothers can actually
fill the kiddies stocking after ; I
youngsters have gone to bed.
Experience handling other i
Empty Stocking Funds,, leads 1
the editor of THE NEWS to
believe that the above arrange
ment is the best one that can i
be made.
Names Wanted.
To date the names of more
(, than 60 kiddies, who will not
have a Merry Christmas save
for the Empty Stocking Fund,
have been turned in. The Sal
vation Army has already Inves
- tlgated 26 of these names and
found them worthy.
But the Empty Stocking Fund
hopes to provide Santa Claus
for some 150 kiddles and any
reader of THE NEWS that
knows of any un-fortunate kid
dies are requested to send their
names in immediately.
Donations Needed.
In addition to needing addi
tional cash, to finance Santa
Claus, The Empty Stocking Fund |
will be glad to receive donations j
of fruit, candy, nuts, and clothes.
The Vaughn Woman’s Club set
a great example in the donation
they made yesterday.
The Fund To Date.
Previously acknowledged $257,73. 82.00 j 1
“Friend” ........... .50
Billy Helms .......
W. C. T- C......... 2.00
Jim “Nick” Price .. 1.00
Charlie White ..... 1.00
Mathews 1.00 1
J. M. ..... 1.00
Mrs. J. M. Mathews !
8266.23 1
Total
.
DR. CADMAN IS ON
UNIVERSITY PROGRAM
'
ATHENS, Ga„ Dec. 1.—Dr. S.
Parks Cadman, New York City,)
president of the Federal Counsel of
Churches of Christ in America, has
nccepted an invitation to address
the Religiou Welfare Conference to
be held at the University of Oeor
gia, April 18-19. Chancellor C. M.
Snelllng announces. |
Thomaston, j
J. C. Bridges, Jr., of
was in Griffln on business Wednes
day.
Mr. R. H. Kilgore 1
Confederate Vet
Goes To Reward
All Confederate veterans are
requested to meet at the resi
dence at 1:30 o’clock and attend
the funeral of Mr. Kilgore in a
body.
j H. R. Kilgore, 87, Confederate vet
; eran, died Thursday morning at 2:30
o'clock at his home on Searcy ave
! nue following an Ulnas of five weeks.
Mr. Kilgore was born December
20, 1839, in Kansas City, Mo., and
would have been 83 years old next
Tuesday. He had lived in this sec
tion for over 43 years and had been
of the most beloved residents
of East Griffin for many years. He
had a distinguished record during
the War Between the States.
Mr. Kilgore is survived by his wid
seven daughters, Mrs. J. M. j
Stanford, of Atlanta, Mrs. A. O. i
Stanford, Mrs. J. H. Richardson, {
Mrs. J. A. Grant, Mrs. W. C. But- j
ler. Mrs. -S. B. Corley, and Mrs. J.
C. Pelt, all of Griffin and two sons,
Roy Kilgore of Fairfax, Ala.; and
^
J. D. Kilgore, of Griffin.
Funeral services will be held to
morrow afternoon at 1:30 o’clock at
the Third Methodist church. The
fRev. Horace Smits the Rev. Wilson
Walker and the Rev. W. J. Tolbert
will officiate. Interment will be In
Oak Hill cemetery with Frank S.
Pittman funeral director in charge,
The six sons-in-law of Mr. Kil
gore, A. O. Stanford, J. H. Richard- ;
son, J. A. Grant, W. C. Butler, S. B.!
Corley and J. C. Pelt, wiU-web«*^*aB» j
bearers.
1928 Auto Ta?s
Are Now On Sale
ATLANTA, Ga., Dec. 15.—Though
everyone is busy, or should be, with
early Christmas shopping, it is not
amiss to remind automobile
that Georgia license tags now are
sale. The precedure of purchase
simple.
Any sheriff of automobile dealer
can supply , license blanks, , which
should be self-explanatory to most
citizens. The new law requires , a
statement on the weight of the ma
chine, since the tax is computed on
that basis, now, instead of according
horsepower. On important fea
ture of the new law is the fixing
the time limit one month earlier;
all vehicles must be registered
before the first of February.
The date announced should be
ample time for every motorist to
his application and dress up his
machine with a shiny new tag, yet
it is depressing certain that a
minute rush will burden the clerks
and officials at the capitol with un
work.
Of all forms of procrastination,
none is more persistent, or more un
reasonable, statehouse officials said,
than the careless delaying of this
imperative purchase. Here’s a sug
gestlon that comes from the capitol:
--
MEMORIAL TABLET
ITWVrn UIN V ElLEl/ Fn Ton I \JU A A I
This afternoon the beautiful tab
erected by the Memorial Com
mitee of the Club House
is being unveiled at the Club House
with appropriate exercises. The
names on this tablet have been
put there by loving relatives
friends to keep alive the
of these noble women.
The women so honored, all
t ?.nt factors in the unbuilding of
community, are Mrs. James S.
ton, Mrs. B. R. Blakely, Mrs. W.
Chapman, Mrs. T. J. Collier, Mrs.
Hepsie Sims Ellls-Drake, Mrs. M.
Daniel, Mrs. John I. Hall, Mrs
J- Kincaid. Mrs. Allen Little, Mrs.
William Marland, Mrs. R. P.
Williams, Mrs. Amanda Nelms, Mrs:
D. D. Peden, Mrs. R. J. Redding,
Mrs. R. F. Strickland.
’ a
] -
,1
GRIFFIN, 6A ., THUR SDAY, DECEMBER 15,
^p^E^cTIMS
IN
QUEBEC, Dec. 15.— (JP)— Eight
een bodies have been recovered to
'.day from the fire swept ruins of the
i Hospice Saint Charles Orphanage
with the probability that the death
list would mount.
j A check of the missing and in
jured lead firemen to believe that
least fifty lost their lives.
were unable to search the ruins
which were still smouldering,
i The bodies of 17 children and one
(woman recovered indicated that they
had died of suffocation rather than
j fire. The walls of the ancient struc
I ture collapsed, while the fire was at
: its height.
So rapidly did the flames spread
that despite every effort by the nuns
firemen, priests and citizens little
could be done to rescue the children,
piany of whom were so sleepy they
Vcould hardly realize what was going
on.
Rescuerers fearlessly entered the
burning building and returned with
children half asleep. Maiiy jumped
from windows and the older children
dragged younger children with them.
j The morgue was a pitiful sight,
The little bodies were all laid on
slabs and frantic mothers were there
in hundreds to try to identify them, j
Only two children had been inden
.titled up to 8 a.m.
The fire, which presumably start
ed from the explosion of a furnace, !
shot flames up a central flue, creat
a draft and carrying the fire
throught the whole building. Rescue
work was stopped when the walls |
collapsed. |
Many Prominent
SpGSKGfS . HI OOOke
i
„ Farm Mppfine .
rOF ^ r
✓
ATHENS, Ga., Dec. 15.—Already }
^ 4s indicated that the speakers at
t4le Twenty-First Farmers’ Week and 1
Marketing Conference to be held at!
the Georgia State College of Agri- 1
cu it ure Athens, Ga., January 23-28
will come from many sections of the
united States and bring to those in |
attendance the view points of many
0CCU p a ti OnSi although the program 1
has not been completed yet. j
Colonel T. L. Hutson, a pioneer
commercial vegetable grower of the
Georgia coast county will speak on
development of this new indus-,
try in the state ' Colonel Huston
formerly lived in Cuba and New
York City ’ although originally from
Cincinnatl and now located near
Darien ’ Ga
w E Mitche11 ' vice ' president and |
general manager of the Georgla
Power compan y w ill address the far- <
mers ^'conference on electric power
and tbe Georgia farrners
°’ M Zlmmerman ' presldent ' Am ‘
erlcan Society of Agricultural En
Bineers, Chicago, will speak about
the a!1 im P° rtant problem of lower-
4 n 8 costs in producing farm products
* hrought the use of improved ma- !
chinery Dr. Earl R. French of the ,
Food Marketing Research Council,,
^ ew York City, will take up the |
sup J ec t 01 forcasting prices, and Dr.
w R Matoon and Dr. J. A. Evans,
of the U. S. Department of a k
riculture, are on the program to dls
cuss the argicultural extension work
respectively.
HAYES NOT GUILTY
KILLING DAUGHTER IN LAW
--
BLAKELY, Ga., Dec. 15— (/P}~ 1
Harris Hayes, 60 year old Early
county fanner, was found not guilty
today, by a jury on the charge of
,murder of Gladys Hayes, his daugh
law. ‘
,ter in
__
THE WEATHER
-
, Cloudy with rain tonight and
j probably Friday, colder Friday
and In west tonight, fiwsh winds,
i ^oppi^l DAYS Tit-L.
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i
ome Christmas lights you had Iasi year
Have likely blown away.
You’d belter check them over and
Buy what you need today.
LITTLE MISS DORIS
PICKERING LAID
TO REST TODAY
Surrounded by her sorrowing
e j assrnates 0 f the first grade at the
Fourth Ward school, the grieving
family and a host of friends, the
body of little Doris Pickering was,
tenderly laid to rest Thursday af
ternoon at Oak Hill cemetery.
The lovely little girl, the six year
0 j^ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hardy
peering, died Wednesday morning
at the Grimn Hospital as the re
su ;t_ 0 f injuries she received about
two weeks ago when she was struck j
BfylTtftick as she attempted to cross
the street in front of the school to
go home. *i
i The Rev. O. K. Cull and the Rev.,
j L. M. Latimer were in charge funeral, of;
j the beautifully t impressive
services at the church. A group of,
I school mates of the little girl, one
j of the most beloved in Griffin, act
i ed as honorary pall bearers. Sweet
I tribute was paid to the little girl, the
only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pick- j
ering and a joy to everyone who
; had been her privileged all too brief to life know this her |
during on .
earth - !
The death ofi a little child is al- I
ways sad, but especially so at the
j christmas sea son, so the heart-felt
1 sympathy of in Griffin is
everyone
(j e j n g extended to Mr. knd Mrs.
Pickering in their loss that only
j time can heal.
Haisten Brothers were in charge
0 j the f unera i
j _
p. . r . nTr , 0 INllilH xrir , tr r r
AT HIGH SCHOOL i
j -
The Junior and Junior High
School Parent Teacher Asoclatlon |
wil hold "Daddies Night,” at the| ^
high school aurVtorlum tonight at
8 o’clock. This will be one of the,
j most interesting meetings of the 1
| year and the fathers of the children ,
in the two schools are urged to be ,
present. i
Miss Virginia McMichael will pro
sent some of the pupils in a most
a,ttractlve skit, a kitchen cabinet or
' chestra. They have been hard a t
work getting this up and -it prom
ises to be one of the cleverest things
ever glven in Griffln '
j There will be no admission charg
ed and a cordial invitation is given
to everyone to attend the meeting. .
- I
Methodist Stewards
To Meet Friday
- j
There will be a meeting of all the
stewards and lay leaders of the!
Methodist churches of Griffln and
Spalding county. Including the chur- j j
ches ofr the Griffln circuit, on Frl
d(ty afternoon, December 16; at 1:30
o’clock. The meeting will be for the'
t purpose of organizing a county as
sedation and for discussing plans
and of advancing the interests of
the Lord's Kingdom.
All the various pastors, together
with the presiding elder, are cordial
ly invited to attend and a full rep
j resentation Is expected. I
! As Spirit of St. Louis’ Left Washington " |
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MEXICANS GIVE LINDBERGH
OVATION SECOND ONLY TO
( TO ONE RECEIVED IN PARIS i
j
MEXICO CITY, Dec. 15.— (IP)
Cheeked by thousand that gath
ered as he passed, Col. Charles
A. Lindbergh today paid an of
ficial call on President Calles,
who again felicitated him upon
his brilliant flight from Wash
ington to Mexico City. Com
pletely rested after a 12 hour
sleep and looking fit and fine,
the American air hero made a
series of official visits with Am
bassador Dwight Morrow and
then went out to the Valbuenn
air field to see his beloved Spirit
of St. Louis, with which he has
gained such world wide faVne.
Among . the , places ,
wliich the
American aviator visited were
the foreign,office. Chapultepec
palace, and the national museum
at the latter place, inspecting , .... the
famous Altez calender stone.
Everywhere that he went, the
aviator was greeted joyfully by
Mexicd City citizens, into whose
hearts he had completely won
hiis way.
MEXICO CITY, Dec. 15
Wildly acclaimed as the greatest
of heroes, Colonel Charles A. Lind
bergh swept from the sky in his fa
mous Spirit of St. Louis Wednesday
afternoon and again conquered the!
heart of another nation.
Brilliantly completing his
stop good wUl flight from Washington
t0 Mexico City the hero of epoch
making New York to Paris flight,
on the Valbuena flying field
at 2:39 p. m„ just 27 hours and 101
minutes after he had made his
matic hop off from Bolling field.
It wag the same towsled haired
boyi S h aviator conqueror of the
hearts of France and so many other
nations, who settled to the air field
where a gfeat crowd of fu]]y 35 000 \
person including President Calles
and American Ambassador Dwight
\ V . Morrow who was wafting to
greet hlm
Great Demonstration.
perhaps there never has been
nessed such a delirious demonstra-
4 ( on of,joy by a Mexican multitude;
as that stag ed hero today, when af-
4er some three hours of
sion that m i S f 0 rtune had befallen
the ^ier. The Spirit of St. Louis
settled on the Valbuena Military
Flying Field, two and a half miles
from Mexico City, . Lindy and
plane were safe and sound;
was wrong except that a mlscal
culation of direction had carried the
in a great circle from Tampico
into the interior, instead of in a
(direct line to Mexico City.
< The lone eagle not only flew over
Mexico's mountains and deserts In
this first non-stop flight between
|two capitals, but he fieyi-'Straight
fnto the hearts of the Mcxicarr peo
pile—hearts already long attuned in
devotion to him by exploits of which
had read, hearts tom with fears
(for hours for his safety.
| And then-against the purple
l mountain ranges in the distance
appeared a little white speck. At
n Uiundred zv thousand—persons hmaM - ma, ** at y Val- °“
buena field and as many more ltn
ling the city streets awaiting the
'coming of the airman, began to
■ whisper: “Can it be Lindy?
Can it
be?
i- They-were afraid to-oh^er;
f were aImost afraid t0 *»«*■ Thelr
: nerves had been on as time
and tlme again false reports were
spread that the plane had been
’ sighted near at hand. At last gloom
;had ' conquered the crowd; silently
find somberly , , the ,, great A masses stood ,
'(tag (dejectedly, trying to hope, and find
it hard.
1 Then that white blot agyinst the
L (purple , ranges that ^ Cortez and his ,
|Bpanish adventurers mastered four
Centuries ago to conquer an empire
hnd open a new world.
i A new coinqueror was crossing
(those formidable purple ranges
fivhere the great snow-tipped volca
ho of Popocateptl towered against
azure sky—a new kind of adven
turer. a messenger of good will a
cavalier of the air doing deeds be
the wildest dreams of those
knights whom Cortez led.
"Can it be Lindy?” the multitude
Then while the escort j
Mexican army planes performed 1
circus stunts overhead there began
to circle of the field a graceful crea-;
(ture of the air, coming closer and
"Viva Lindy.” j
A roar that might have rooked,
those mighty mountains swept
throng—“thank God—it's Lindy. Vi
ya Lindy! Viva Lindy!” they cried.
No person In all that vast assem
Wage had been more disturbed over
Colonel Lindgerh’s delay, more ap
jirehensive or more excitedly over
jjoyed than President Calles himself
president with the American
.ambassador. Dwight W. Morrow, be
him. had been sitting since
early morning awaiting Lindy. As
noon approached and one report
after another had proved false, the
president plainly showed perturba
tion. He asked the Associated Press
to assist him in getting informa
it ion as to Colonel Lindbergh's au
thentic location, and ordered the
government telegraph services thru
the nation to make every effort
ascertain what had happened.
VRefreshments were brought into
this presidential stand Calles refus
?? w,nother^a manifestation^Iha^the^resl
certain Jot
dent Mexico was worried
tapped nervously on the floor with
walking stick. And then, as the
craning riielr nodes!
an aide whispered to the president:
"It is Lindbergh—It Is positively
Lindbergh this time.’
Calles^eaned**^ by” his^eet as if
convulsed an electric shock. He
V
CONTRACT T ■srt :
BE LET BEFi __
IM Ms
JANUARY IS’ -
’ f
Work on the new *35,000 adminis
tration building at the Georgia Ex
periment Station will start lmt
diately, it was announced today
P. Stuckey, director of the i
lion. The building will be of hr ■K
.will ■
steel, and concrete and be i
proof. It will be located Just In
of the present administrat
This building will be m
ed after the new building is cc
pleted. • ,
The new buidling will have 3 la
laboratories, a library and 6 offls
The building was designed by P
zier and Bod in. architects of Atl
ta. Several local firms are
on the contract which will be
before the first of the year,
Director Stuckey gives much
the credit for securing this build
to Judge J. J. Flynt, Spalding coi
py’s representative in the legislate
Mr stuC key sam in this connects
“This new building was made p
glble very largely by the efforts o
Spalding county man, J. J.
w . ‘ 10 represented .. this county in
legislature last summer,
“Even though as almost every i
employee knows. It is most dill
to get state aid towards the
public ... . buildings of #ny __. I
Judge Flyht succeeded ta gel
the appropriation by very hard '
_j hv y nn4flpd ronnPra tion on
of the 0riffln _ . 8pa _ .
of the Institution ta other parts
*h» *tAte This new building will
a fitting .. .. memorial . , f to the mwy #nv I» ta
® n< i hard fought battles J
Flynt has led for the
station.’'
- *
Valuable library, i*
■ ' W
riment SUu.cn fe one of the best I
ric ^ turKl ,lbrarteS *
Stftte8 ' ccllectin Slnce * 1880 agricultural th * * ta ' 10 " ^
I ure and the collection
^ tlW large#t and ° $
neriment per meni siauon station or or state college oP®
.
a k r iculture. xne library wtu ae aayi
cd ta the new fire proof adminte
tratlcn buldlng. ;«.
The e Georfeia Experiment___
. t a8 21 , . collcge Rra0U l
and 18 1x1 charge of Director tw>
key. who has been a t th e statml
for 20 years. He entered the ser
vxe M a horticulturist an tlf
was made director.
The Experiment Station haa m»
partments of agronomy, anlm^ 1W|
bandry> horticulture, botany, chw
tr Y* home economics and market
These departments work toge
^ aU matters obtain .....
M “
beat results. The work of the
tion is to study agricultural prob
and work out solutions.
-
The markeUnK d G»rtinent ji
now is makin « a special
peaches and cotton, with a view c
tmproving the grades s0 as “
tala the best pricef uossible
Thr anlma l husbandry
ment 18 devotlng much of lts tto *
to ““ * tudy of ‘ soft pork ' and Con
*
tageoua abortion The home econ
department in conjunction ,,,
0mjcs .
wlth the state coIlege ° { J 8 *™ 1 ®*
ture ’ 18 studyln * dlets of the ay ”*
P- ge Oeorgia farm home with * mm i |
of ‘ mproving vitamine
ot a11 menU8 1
The Georgia Experiment
Is a valuable addition to Griffin
its work la of interest to the entire
state. The addition of the new
bidding will enable the station to
facilitate its work. yy
The contract for the new building
wlU bl> let by the followlng mem ”
ot the board of ,rustees of tbe
station; J. W Andrews, Carnegie;
J. H. Mobley. Hamilton; and J. P.
Nichols, Oriffta
BENEFIT CHICKEN v>
SUPPER AT CHUR(
A benefit chickeiy/upper will I
held at Sunny Side tonight at T: 'M
for the Pomona Methodist chur
There will be plenty of chick*
every one. so Mr. Stanley state
they hope a groat many people
GMffln will come up, both to
the delicious supper and 'Dal
the benefit of the church.
■ gave one searching piercing glance
into the face of that aide. One felt
it wauld have gone hard with that
officer he had been mistaken in the
information pe gave to the presl
dent Then, completely accepting i
the information as genuine Calles’
face became transformed instantly
from soberness to positive radiance.
He glowed; he laughed aloud. For
: hours he had been decliniing food.
"Bring me a sandwich." he ord
ered. "Give me a drink.” I
He gulped and muched. and then
st °pped to cheer. Rarely If ever
& sss," “ “*
It demonstrated the depths to
which he had been moved during
those hours when he feared that
the gallant youth he had caused to
fly to Mexico by presidential in
vitation might have found tragedy
awaiting him somewhere behind
A few minutes later, after the
£ “SdenUal ^ » ^ md
ct oontent hlma f
shaking hands. The president gave
I ^ one Eag'e a full "embrazo”—
* a aroun'dl ^nll
arms around Lmdy indv’s s shoulders and
patting him affectionately.
Colonel Lindbergh looked a little
flustered. Ambassador Morrow
*®*”*«^ *s given Jiist to men about to be as in hapny this world. as It
X he crowd by this time was surg
ing by the thousands in front of
the presidential stand. They cheer
and yeI * ed louder than before, if
rrn, n Tn i>M.T»»i
_
f i0On?I3 , NPWSDJinPr |
I
>• ... W . .
1*1311 FIlCS POOK
- |
ATLANTA, Ga., Dec. IS.—George
Magruder Battey, Jr., native of
Rome, Ga., and former Atlanta'
newspapaer man, has written anoth-'
er book. The newest work, as an-I
nounced by the author from 117 E
19th street .New York, where he
now lives, has for Its subject ”Abra
ham Lincoln ta the Conspiracy Web
John Wilkes Booth and Ujej
‘Knights of the 8ock and Buskin,”’ |
previous books ”70.00 Miles oni 1
a Submarine Destroyer,” and “A ,
History of Rome.” attracted consid-|
erable attention some years ago.
Mr. Batthey’s latest book, or rath
er books—for the work appears In
two special library edition volumes—
is said to be an impartial presenta
tion by a Southerner now resid
ing in the north of the strangely
concatenation of circumstances lead
IngtotheassassinationofMr.Lln
coin ;throwing new light ‘through
the discovery of unpublished ma
tcrlal) on certain activities which
were obscured by the din of battle;.
nnticipating revelations which may
confidently be expected when the
10.000 documetns left to the library I
of congress by Robert T. Lincoln
ar e scrutinized in 1947; and helping
the student to a better understand
ing of the elements which have
enablp western Democracy to tri
umph over old WoMd autocracy.
Mrs J. G. Dawkins has gone to
Sherwood, Tenn., called there by hlr,e' the i
d(>ath of hfr nlece Miss j osep
Hoover. Mr. Dawkins will go to 8her
wood tomorrow.
--
Mrg T . a. Bell, of Bamesville, was
among those shopping to the city
Wednesday.
w»i, An f your u/utv
Established