Newspaper Page Text
WE ARE
BUILDING
A CITY
HERE
Volume LII, Number 35
UEEN DISCUSSES
WELFARE WORK
IN SPEECH HERE
Mr. Braswell Deen, state director of
the Department of Public Welfare, at
a public meeting in the Peach county
court house Tuesday afternoon told
his audience that the welfare program
of the state was facing a crisis.
Mr. Deen stated that revenue is
necessary if the welfare program is
to continue. The legislature did not
provide sufficient money at the be¬
ginning of the program in July, 1937,
and in May of this year a 35 per cent
reduction in allotments to counties
was necessary.
This meant in Peach county that the
allotment was cut from $1,519 to $945
—making it necessary to suspend 51
cases who were receiving old age as
sistance. There are also 304 appli
cations pending in Peach county who
have never received any benefits.
The state Department of Public
Welfare includes the public assistance
program (aid to the needy aged, blind
and dependent children), the hospital
for the insane at Milledgeville, Cave
Springs school for the deaf, academy
for the blind in Macon, Gracewood
school for mental' defectives near Au¬
gusta and responsibility for certifica¬
tion to WPA, NYA, CCC and surplus
commodities. He clarified the neces¬
sity for these certifications by the
county department, as WPA would
be perpetuating itself if making its
own certifications.
He pictured the crowded and inade
quate facilities at the hospital for the
insane, the short term at Cave
Springs, the empty building at Grace
wood with a great number on await
ing list, all because of lack of state j
funds. j
He made it very clear that, as state ,
director, he had been warned by the
federal social security board that un- !
less Georgia allocated more funds by
October 1, federal aid will be with- j
drawn and Georgia wilLnb'lSHffier par- j
ticipate in social security benefits.
Since the only means of revenue is
through taxes, he stated, that after
careful study of the present situation
he advocated a 3 per cent sales tax,
1 per cent to be allocated to the
schools, 1 per cent to welfare and 1
per cent as reimbursement to coun- •
ties. By this method every one will
participate, thereby becoming con¬
scious of their responsibility as a citi¬
zen and taxpayer. I
He was aware, he said, of the hor¬
ror of many of a sales tax. However,
since 1929 we have paid a sales tax
on gasoline without regarding it as
such, but merely as the price of gas.
He stated that he advocated a revi
sion of ,. the ,, entire , tax system, , as the ,. i
nd , valorem , , tax was first levied m
1852, which I-, as out , of r date , . m oui
is
present time as the ,, ox cart , is ■ with
modern , transportation. , ... Speaking j. i ■ fur-j ..
ther on this subject he brought out
the fact that ad valorem tax often
brought a hardship on the owner who
was receiving no income whatsoever
from said property.
He made , it .. very clear , that .v . , he was
neither . . a candidate for r office ..... nor
pected to , be, but . , these were his views
as a citizen and , former - congressman.
Mr. Deen expressed his apprecia
tion of the vast amount of work being
done by the county departments of
public welfare and the generous serv
ices of the county boards who are a
non-political and non-partisan group I
serving without remuneration. ;
DRIVE ON DOGS
IS CONTINUED
regular monthly meeting ! [
At their
last Thursday night the mayor and
c.ty councl ordered the police de
partment to continue the drive against
dogs , noj. inoculated 1,1 against , rabies, , .
giving orders that all dogs not treat- ,
ed be taken up and disposed of. |
Chief G. W. Cochran states that
the names of the owners of all dogs
that have been or will be inoculated
in Fort Valley will be on a list held
by the police. Owners whose dogs
have been treated elsewhere should
furnish the police with a certificate.
The county agent ha^ made arrange¬
ments whereby dogs may be treated
for a nominal sum each Friday af
ternoon from 2 till 5 o’clock on the| j
vacant lot at the rear of Georgia
Grocery.
®Jte geafcer-® tribune
Read by thousands of people in progressive PEACH. Houston, Macon and Cran ford Counties, where Nature smiles her brightest.
COTTON CARDS
FOR 1939
Peach county farmers may call at
the office of R. P. Swan, county
agent, and get their 1939, cotton
keting cards. These cards
each farmer to sell the cotton
duced on the farm free of tax, pro¬
vided the cotton acreage
was not exceeded.
At the same time the cotton mar¬
keting cards are delivered, 1939 price
adjustment applications can be
by the producers.
FUNERAL FOR A.
B. YOUNG TODAY
Abner B. Young, 70, prominent
farmer and life-long resident of Craw
ford county, died at his home early
Wednesday morning after an illness of
several months.
Funeral services were held this af¬
ternoon at 2 o’clock at Wesley Chap¬
el, of which he had been a member
for many years. Rev. O. C. Cooper,
a former pastor, now pastor of the
Ashburn Methodist church, officiated.
Burial was in the church cemetery.
Suiwivors are his wife, the former
Miss Elizabeth Agnes Thames; four
sons, B. A. Young, A. B. Young, Jr.,
and V. H. Young, all of Fort Valley,
and T, R. Young of Byron; two daugh¬
ters, Mrs. J. A. Thornton, Rochelle,
and Mrs. Wallace Thames, Macon;
three brothers, P. A. and R. M. Young,
Macon, and J. W. Young, Fort Valley;
two sisters, Mrs. J. O. White, Ash
burn, and Mrs. T. O. Sapp, Greston,
Ga.; 23 grandchildren and four great
grandchildren,
-
Farmers in '“Plow-Up 9
Campaign of 1933 to
Get Option Paymenh g
Peach county farmers who plowed
up cotton in 1933 and took option on
it are entitled to receive an additional ‘
payment at the rate of one dollar pel
bale, provided they turn in certificates
f or redemption before September 30, ’
County Agent R. P. Swan said this
week.
The agent explained that the certifi
cate of redemption is a narrow brown
strip about four inches wide and 12
inches long and bears the following
printing in the upper left-hand cor¬
ner: Form No. c-5-1 (Revised) Cot
ton Pool, 1933.
Mr. Sw'an said farmers having these
certificates should take them to the
county offices and fill out the re
quired papers for payment.
“If farmers , have . misplaced . , , or de- ,
stroyed , the , certificates .... , it . will .... be nee
essary for , them ,, to execute affidavits, .... . ..
he i continued. , • ,
n ' " 1.4 * ITNEMPI UVYFI)
GEORGIANS , , r GI , .„ EN T , . T
V
JOBS DURING TUI " Y ’
__
A . total of 7,514 ’ placements , on jobs . T
„ unemployed . Georgia . residents ..
made during July T . by , ”, the Georgia State
^
Employment Service, . division .. . . of „ the
a
Bureau of Unemployment Compensa¬
tion, it was announced today. Of this
number, 4,786 placements were made
in private employment and 2,828 on
public works projects.
Both total and private plaeemetits
showed a slight decrease over the pre
ceding month but a substantial in¬
crease over the corresponding month
of 1938.
The 33 free public offices registered
13,494 unemployed persons seeking
employment during the month and
4^02 calls were made on private em
ployers by contact representatives of
the service to exp a.r, the services of
b X the local offiees and to ai ;’
quire information regarding
€<ni p] ovment nee( j s
July p i acements brought the
lative total for the year to 49,801, of
which 26,606 were made in private
Sincerity is the way of heaven; to
think how to be sincere is the way of
man.-—Mencius.
Under the 1939 crop insurance pro
gram, 163,000 wheat , . farmers - insured . ,
a P roductio11 of 000,000 bushels by
paying approximately 7,000,000 bush
els into the insurance reserve.
FORT VALLEY, PEACH COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1939
Misuse Marketing
Cards May Result
In Payment Loss
County Agent R. P. Swan advised
Peach county cotton farmers this
week that those who misused their
marketing cards in 1938 to help other
producers sell cotton in excess of farm
quotas, will lose both the conserve
tion payments and the cotton price
adjustment payments to which they
might otherwise be entitled under the
1939 farm program.
He said this recent ruling of the
Agricultural Adjustment Administra¬
tion is based on a provision of the
program that all or any part of a
farmer’s payments mav be withheld,
if he has adopted any practice which
tends to defeat any of the purposes of
the farm program.
“Under the marketing quota regu
jlations, the holder of a red marketing
card is required to pay a penalty on
that part of his cotton marketings in
excess of his quota,” Mr. Swan ex¬
plained. “The new ruling provides
that if a cotton producer who held a a
white marketing card, indicating
all his cotton was penalty free, ginned
or sold cotton for a farmer w'ho held a
red card,-and the county committee
determines that this action was con
trary to the cotton marketing quota
regulations, neither the white card
holder nor the red card holder will re
ceive conservation or price adjustment
payments in connection with the 1939
program.
The AAA found last year that, in
some cases, farmers with red market¬
ing cards managed to sell their excess
cotton through other farmers who held
white cards and whose cotton was not
| subject to penalty. As a result, rec
ords kept by ginners and buyers cred¬
ited the white card holders with
cotton than they actually produced,
and this erroneous data gave their
farms a higher yield per acre than
I that to which they were entitled.
The lpurpo.se of thu new regulation,
the county agent said, is to keep cot¬
ton producers from defeating the pur
pose of the program by having erron¬
eous yields established for their
farms. As conservation and price ad
-
justment payments are based on nor¬
mal yield, it would be possible for a
farmer to increase bis payments un¬
der future programs by having excess
cotton from other farms sold on his
i white card and credited to the yield
.of his farm, he pointed out.
// om e-( lorn ing Da y
Society Hill Sunday
Rev. Gideon , Horne, ,, one of , the ,.
states . . , oldest ,, . ministers ...... is to be spe¬
! 1
cial . , speaker , at , the ,, annual . , home-com
i. and , all-day .. , . . at , society „ . ,
mg ,2 singing
Hill church, , Crawford „ , county, on
■ ’
uixay, . ugust ‘ .
Tho morning session will begin at
Id o clock with Sacred Harp singing,
^ Sacred Harp singers are request
M to be present for the purpose of
’organizing • a class. Bring your books.
Prof. „ TT Hannah u and , choir, , • of . AT Macon,
iwill ... be , charge . of ,, . and . .
in music singing,
'A selected string band will render j a
Inumber of selections.
] Lunch will be served by the ladies.
j r The public is expected to bring lunch
—a well filled basket.
j Prof, Sutton and his Wesley Chapel
J ,class will sing in the afternoon. Miss
Louise Sutton will be at the piano.
Everyone is cordially invited.
187.92 PAID TO JOBLESS
; W WOKKLKh A R i/rno rii? UJ fA LUUiNI 1 TATTY I
Unemployed workers in Peach coun¬
ty were paid $87.92 in benefits by the
^ ^ ending Augus( .
12 ’ j t was announced this week. Num
|ber of payments x was reported at 18.
Total payments to Georgia work¬
j c ‘ t s amounted to $76,068.17, represen.
b Y 12,406 checks which went into
140 counties of the state,
Four hundred thirty payments for
$3,623.82 to workers in other states
who previously had established wage
credits in Georgia, swelled the total to
$79,691.99.
Number and amount of checks
mailed by the bureau ranged from one
chec]< fQr $2 80 jn Madison CO unty to
2>572 checkg for $] 9,080.24 in the At
] an ta area, which embraces Fulton and
'DeKalb counties.
BYRON SCHOOL
OPENS SEPT . 1
The Byron consolidated school will
,open Friday, Sept. 1, for registration,
classification, and the issuing of
text books,
Miss Dorothy Rountree, of Vidalia,
’
w j|j be at the school Monday, Sept,
4 th, for the purpose of organizing a
c i ass j„ piano,
I ___
| i \ Tji j r I P 11 I J ill UA/.rlfjO If I,' g 'll I 1 * /
JUDGE M’CLELLAN
MACON, Aug. 24.—Judge William
Alexander McClellan, of the Macon
judicial circuit, brilliant criminal law
>’ er an(4 one of the most popular men
ever to sit on the Macon judicial cir¬
cuit bench, died in a Macon hospital
at 5:15 yesterday afternoon after
.era! days serious illness.
,
I For the last week physicians had
! held little hope for his recovery,
1 Much of the time he was under an
[ ! ox he yg had en been tent and unconscious since Monday most of night the
4lme -
Funeral services were held at 4 p.
lm - today in Hart’s chapel. His pastor,
Dr. George Stoves of Mulberry Street
[Methodist former pastor, church, officiated and Dr. Ed and I'. burial Cook,
was in Riverside cemetery. Members
[of the bar formed an honorary escort,
Pallbearers were Charles II. Gar
rett, J. R. Hicks, Jr., Joe Ben Jack
son, Sid Simmons, Grady Gillon, Cub
bedge Snow, Emmett Barnes, Sr., and
T. Arnold Jacobs.
Judge. McClellan was noted for his
impartiality and consideration of both
bhe state and the accused, court offi
cias, jurors and witnesses.
Survivors include one son, William
A - McClellan, Jr., and one daughter,
\ Mrs. Thomas J. Porter, of Macon,
Farm Payments J to
Be Cut 10 Per Cent
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.—Govern¬
ment payments to more than 4,000,000
farmers who complied with the 1939
crop control program will be 10 per
cent lower than tentative estimates
announced last November.
Explaining the reduction, the Agri
cultural Adjustment Administration
said the $500,000,000 allotted for soil
conservation benefits would have to
be sliced into smaller individual shares
because more farmers participated in
the program than previously esti¬
mated. ,
The 10 per cent cut will apply to
some 2,oU0,000 cotton farmers, 2,000,
000 or more farmers who receive “soil
depleting crop” payments in 10 north
central states, and several hundred
thousand rice and air-cured tobacco
growers. It will not apply, however,
to corn, wheat and other tobaccos.
Growers of these crops will receive
the previously announced rates.
Under the terms of the farm act,
the AAA must apportion the $500,
000,000 fund to various crops and then
estimate rates of payment on a basis
of estimated participation. The law
permits a 10 per cent increase or de¬
crease in payment rates if participa¬
tion is smaller or larger.
Officials remind farmers that pay¬
ments were increased 10 per cent in
1937 and made as announced in 1938.
The reduced rates will not affect
“price adjustment” payments from a
separate $212,000,000 fund available
for this purpose.
Anticipating another increase in
participation 1940 by the wheat AAA farmers announced in tho
program,
that these benefits would be from 18
to 22 cents a bushel, instead of 28
cents paid this year.
The conservation checks will start
going out to farmers in about a month
and will continue for four or five
months. The price adjustment”
checks will follow.
Training School
Opens on Sept. 14
The Peach county training school
will open Thursday, Sept. 14. It is
hoped that as many pupils as can,
will register on the ,, opening * . & day , so
that full benefit of a whole term’s
work may be obtained by a large
number of boys and girls.
Burdens on Business
Ha ve Been Relieved ,
Says Stephen Pace
(From the Americus Tri-County News)
Many members of the Congress
“feel that the emergency period has
ended and that appropriations should
be adjusted to more normal condi¬
tions,” Stephen Pace, Third district
representative, stated recently.
Mr. Pace, accompanied by his sec¬
retaries, Sims Garrett and Mrs. Gar¬
rett, are now occupying offices on the
second floor of the Americus post
office building until January 1, unless
the President calls an extra session.
“Every person concerned about the
future of the nation is anxious to see
the day when the national budget will
be in balance—that is, when govern¬
mental expenditures will be no more
receipts, Mr. Pace states.
| “For the last eight years the bud
get has been out of balance, the excess
(expenditures having been made nec¬
essary by large appropriations for
work relief, social security, farm aid,
and national defense.
“I feel that this last Congress has
done a substantial contribution toJ
ward such recovery.
j “Business has been complaining bit
terly about the retarding effect of the
undistributed profits tax and that is
now repealed.
“Complaint was made about the
burden of increased social security
taxes and that situation has been
remedied.
“In addition a special committee
■
I has been appointed to work with the
Treasury Department during the ad
journment and prepare a complete re
vision of the federal tax structure
i |to the end that adequate will
revenues
be raised and at the same time with
out any restricting influence on re
covery.
“Many members of Congress feel
that the emergency period has ended
and , that appropriations should , .., bo ad- ,
justed to more normal conditions. No
one expects or desires repeal of tin
I great social reforms enacted into law
during the last several years, but
there is a strong feeling that the time
has come to put these reforms on a
! pay-as-you-go basis. The last Con¬
gress evidenced some determination to
j that end.
| “I believe that business will react
' favorably toward the conditions
new
and certainly we all hope most earn
ust 'y the falmer wiU now find a b f'
ter market lor his products and the
I large army of unemployed can be ab
jsorbed in the activities of private in¬
dustry, Mr. Pace concluded.
DEATH OE MRS.
W. J. Mil BURN
Funeral services for Mrs. Kate
, Reece Milburn, 51, who died at her
home near here last Thursday night,
were held at 11 o’clock Friday morn¬
ing at Mount Zion Methodist church
at Mitchell.
Mrs. Milburn, wife of W. J. Milburn,
Peach county farmer, was a native of
Mitchell and had been living near Fort
Valley for 17 years. She had been
ill for nine months.
Besides her husband, she is survived
by two sons, Albert and Charles Mil
jburn; her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth
iReece; four brothers, Jim and Claude
i Reece, Mitchell, and Will and Otis
! Reece of Gibson, Ga.; four sisters,
j Mrs. Ella Daniels, Gibson; Mrs. Sara
I Daniels, Dexter; Mrs. Nan Bell and
Mrs. Bessie Kelly, Gibson,
Rev. Charles Morgan officiated at
1 services and burial in the
the was
church cemetery. .
4-H Members at
Camp This Week
About twenty-eight members of
Peach county 4-H clubs left Monday
morning for Bowens mill near Fitz¬
gerald, for a four-day camp, under
direction of County Agent R. P. Swan.
While on the trip, the boys will at¬
tend the livestock field clay at the
Coastal Plains Experiment Station at
Tifton Wednesday.
The following boys were member s
of the party: * Johnnie Bass, Henry
Britt, Ralph , , Cannon, _ Marion ,, . Glaze,
Brjtt; Bob Johnson, Francis
Joyner, Bobby Jones, Edward Mullis,
Minyard, David Sammons,
STATE BANKERS
MEET AT EMORY
Georgia Bankers are going to study
banking at a three-day conference at
Emory University beginning Septem¬
ber 6.
Sponsored by the Georgia Bankers’
Association, of which H. Huckabee of
the Bank of Fort Valley is president,
the meeting will draw representatives
from virtually every bank in the state.
They will live on the university camp¬
us and attend “classes” each day from
9 to 5.
The “faculty” will comprise out¬
standing leaders “both inside and out¬
side” the banking profession.
Here’s the Faculty
Among these will be Fitzgerald
Hall, president of the N. C. & St. L.
railway; Frank A. Trotton, vice presi¬
dent of the Chase National Bank, New
York; Dr. Harold Stonier, executive
manager of the American Bankers’
Association; Dr. E. A. Kincaid, con¬
sulting economist of the Federal Re¬
serve Bank of Richmond; Alexander
Wall, secretary-treasurer of the Rob¬
ert Morris Associates, Philadelphia,
and E. A. Wooley, bank installation
director for the George S. May Com¬
pany, New York.
Others to be heard are Thomas J.
Kiphart, public relations director of
the Fifty-Third Union Trust Corn
pany, Cincinnati; Dr. J. S. Wittmeir,
president of the First National Bank,
Oneonta, Ala.; J. W. Speas, vice
president of the First National Bank
Atlanta; Lewis F. Gordon, assistant
vice president of the C. & S. National
Bank, Atlanta; H. Grady Huddleston,
secretary of the Tennessee Bankers’
Association, and Orville A. Park, gen¬
eral counsel for the state association.
The conference is described by Pres¬
ident Huckabee as “one of the most
forward steps ever taken by Georgia
banks.”
Outlining the purposes of the plan,
he said:
“People generally have little idea
of the intensive, which thinking banks and the
studied effort the of
Georgia are making to fit sound bank¬
ing to present conditions and to co¬
operate in every way possible for the
general improvement and advance¬
ment, of our state.
“This meeting is a fine example of
what is going on behind the scenes,
so to speak. The great majority of
the banks of Georgia will be engaged
in this conference. They will literally
to school to one another. They
exchange ideas and information
of benefit to the whole banking in¬
dustry of the state, and, of course |
through these banks, of benefit to the
and the communities they
serve.”
EXAMINATIONS CALLED
FOR GOVERNMENT JOBS
The U. S. Civil Service Commission
announced open competitive exam¬
for the positions listed below.
must be on file in the
office at Washington, D.
not later than September 18 if re¬
from states east of Colorado.
Junior engineer, $2,000 a year. Op¬
branches are aeronautical, and
architecture.
Junior marketing specialist, $2,000
year, various optional subjects, in
Agricultural Marketing Service
the Department of Agriculture.
Psychologist, $3,800 a year, associ¬
ate psychologist, $3,200 a year, and
psychologist, $2,000 a year.
in the Children’s Bureau,
Department of Labor, and U. S. Public
Health Service, Federal Security
Associate physical oceanographer,
a year, Treasury Department.
Employment in this position includes
at sea for about 5 months each
Completion of a 4-year college
including work in physics and
and professional experience
physical science are required. Cer¬
education may be substituted for
experience.
Full information may be obtained
G. L. Thames, secretary of the
S. Civil Service Board of Examin¬
at the post office.
Smith, Billy Smith, Bobby
David Anderson, Rudolph Can¬
Buford Cannon, Watson Hancock,
T. Hancock, Jerrell Strong, Hugh
James Smith, Daniel Walton,
Earle Jones, Rudolph Clapp, Hor¬
Davis and Calvin Jones.
51 YEARS OF
SERVICE
Only newspaper in the heart
of one of America’s
rich agricultural
sections.
$1.50 Per Year in Advance
Kiwanians Hear
Whipple Tell of ,
State’s Finances
President Homer J. ’A'vera opened
last Friday’s meeting of the Kiwanis
Club with a call for a minute of silent
prayer and then special prayer as a
tribute to J. E. Bledsoe, honored mem¬
ber of the club and prominent citizen
of Fort Valley, whose death had oc¬
curred last Thursday.
The regular weekly program was
presented by Jonas G. Hillyer, who
introduced L. A. Whipple, of Cochran,
former member of the State Board of
Education, also a member of the
house of representatives.
Mr. Whipple discussed the school
situation in Georgia; gave a keen anal¬
ysis of the state’s entire financial con¬
dition and its program of service and
possible methods of providing ade¬
quate support to carry on the ex¬
panded program.
It was a speech that was full of in¬
terest and information concerning tho
vital situation that exists in the state’s
affairs at the present time.
Hoyt Brown, division engineer of
the State Highway I) -partment, was a
guest of the club and was introduced
by Judge M. C. Mosley. Mr. Brown
spoke of the great benefits to be en¬
joyed upon completion of the proposed
highway between Reynolds and Fort
Valley.
Friday will be observed by the club
as “Roberta day”, when a group of
citizens from that town will be guests
of the club.
SUDDEN PASSING
OF J. E.BLEDSOE
The sudden death of James Ernest
Bledsoe, which occurred last Thursday
afternoon about 5 o’clock at St. Si¬
mons, was a shock to many friends
and relatives here. He had gone to I
St. Simons with his family the first
of the week, tor -rrew 1 j?-vy,s rest and
fishing. His death was the result of
a heart ailment from which he had
been suffering for about a year.
He had been one of Fort Valley’s
leading citizens and business men for
many years, He was a former mem
ber of city council, and at the time of
his death was president of the Geor¬
gia Basket and Lumber Co. and was a
steward of the Methodist church.
Funeral services were held in the
Methodist church Saturday afternoon
at 2:30 o’clock with the pastor, Rev.
J. E. Sampley, officiating, assisted by
| Rev. Silas Johnson, superintendent of
the Macon district. Interment was in
Oaklawn cemetery.
Pallbearers were John Vance, T. M.
Anthoine, F. E. Titus, E. L. Duke, Dr.
R. C. Smisson and Chester Wilson.
The board of stewards of the Meth¬
odist church were honorary pallbear
ers.
He is survived by his wife, who
was before her marriage Miss Emma
Anderson, of Fort Valley, and one
daughter, Miss Ernestine Bledsoe, who
was associated with her father in the
lumber business; one brother, G. H,
Bledsoe, of Mobile, Ala., and one sis¬
ter, Mrs. W. M. Marsh, of Jackson.
Clarke county is the smallest of
Georgia’s 159 counties.
PEACH
THEATRE
t
/ Saturday, August 26
BILL ELLIOTT in
“LAW COMES TO TEXAS”
JACK Owl Show— HOLT in •* 4 v
WHISPERING ENEMIES’
Monday, August 28 tf 1
JANE WITHERS in *
/ “BOY FRIEND” | H
Tuesday, August 29 t
GEORGE RAFT in »*«i
SPAWN OF THE NORTH’
Wednesday, August 30
MILLION DOLLAR LEGS’
Thursday and Friday i
August 31 and September 1
PAUL MUNI BETTE DAVIS, and
BRIAN AHERNE in
J4UREZ V> i