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THE BANNER-HERALD
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Established 1833
Dally and Sunday—10 Cents a Week. :
ATHENS COTTON;
Middling 2b.60
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THE WEATHER
Cloudy and Cooler,
VOL. 91—NO. 160
Associated Press Serrica
ATHENS, GA* 8UNDAY, AUGUST, 26, 1023
A. B. C. Paper
Slagle Copies 3 Cents Daily. S Ceuta Sunday.
TURKISH SOLDIERS FIRE ON U. S. FLAG
NOVEMBER 7, IS DATE
EXTRA SESSION OF
Formal Call For Extra
ordinary Assembly Is Is
sued By Governor Clif
ford M. Walker.
TWO SUBJECTS ONLY
TO BE CONSIDERED
Tax Reform and Free
School Books For Com
mon Schools Constitute
Problems. Session May
End Nov. 29.
(Special to Banner*Herald)
ATLANTA—November 7 is the
date for the meeting of the extra
ordinary session of the Georgia
Legislature as fixed by Governoi
Walker In a formul call for that
session.
Only two measures are to be con
sidered at this special session, It
Is indicated. They are, 1. Tho tax
Three Athens Colleges
Open In Septenber
State Normal School First to Begin Work on Septem
ber 4. Lucy Cobb Starts September 12, and
University of Georgia, Last to Commence
on Wednesday, September 19.
Next month will see the open
ing of ail of Athens' colleges anf
schools.
The Stato Normal School will
he the first of the higher educa
tional institutions to begin the
new term. The opening date Ir
September 4th and preparation's
are being mado for a full attend
ance. Last year 624 students werr
registered In the regular courses
501 in the Summer session and
272 in the Training and
School.
One hundred and twenty coun*
tics were represented In the regu
lar normal courses. There ran be
no more rtudents accommodated
this year than last because there
has not been any more dormitory
space added.
Only two changes Jn the faculty
have been announced thus far. The
two members are: Miss Ksthei
Waller and Miss Ruthr Kelist:
Mon*
new year will take place
day afternoon Fept. 2.
Wednesday. Scptmeber 12th. Ii
the opening date for Lucy Cobl'
Institute and Miss Mildred Moll
president of the school, antici
pates one of the largest attendance!
the school has had in several years
A large number of the students
who were in attendance last year
and didn't finish will be back to
graduate and pursue their studler
Ruraf* nnd many new students have ap
( plled for entrance.
Several changes have been mad<
In the faculty personnel, which wil
be up to the usual high standard.
reform' and 2. Free text book* , b°»h of these ladles will teach in
for the common schools of the j the Household Art Department
state. There were many requests
made on tho governor to bring up
additional aubjectfe at tho extra
session, but he declined all.
The governor cannot fix the lim
it of tho session, but ho intimate*?
that he would like for it to com
plete its work by November 2f
which would aliow tho lawmaker*
20 days In which to adopt u satis
factory tax law.
*****
EXTRA SESSION WA8
FORECAST AUG. 15.
The governor on August If
made It known that he would call
the extraordinary session, and
since that time hns been giving
attention to his message which it-
08 follows:
'^Whereas, futuro progress
Georgia along all industrial lines
depends upon the establishment of
a stabilized system of taxation
and,
“Whereas, experience has clearly
demonstrated that there can be
civic peace or harmony among th<
people of the state, and that tax
ation can not and will not he stab'
llized under the present so called
Tax Equalization Law in the pruc
tlcal operation of which tax ex
perts ostlmato that from one-third
to ono-half of the people and
third to one half of the taxable
property are being all the burden*
of taxation, while many of
cltlgena ot the state moat able
pay taxes, having large annual in
comes from salaries and other re
sources, are entirely escaping tax*
ation, and,
“Whereas, unrest nnd bltternest
increasing among the people
The State Normnl School is of
fering this yenr for the first time
In nddltion to tho two-year pro
fessional course above a four-yeai
high school, a four teacher’s col
lege course which will lead elthei
to an A. B. or B. S. In Educa
tion.
The length of the class period
will cl so be changed this year frorr
forty-five minutes in length to ooi
hour.
The first faculty meeting of thf
PACE REPEAL BILL
IS EXPLAINED BY
TAX COMMISSIONED
Bill Introduced By Sena
tor J. C. Davis Was Rec
ommended Favorably By
Senate Committee.
ADMINISTRATION
OPPOSED
IT
Convict Steps Into K K K
$250 a Month , n * n *
Position
Fullbright Says
Bill Repeals Present Law M„ c S'“e
But Does Not Leave the
State With No Machin
ery. ,
COLUMBUR—Butler R. Rtorke,
31. convicted Toledo forger, donnei
civilian elotnes preparatory „tc
stepping out of the Ohio peniten
tiary Into a position paying 3250
a month.
He was sentenced to serve twe
years, but after twenty one month*
was given n conditional pardon
the condition being thnt he follow
work instituted among his fellow
prisoners among whom more than
1,800 are now Interested.
Ktorke. a college graduate ori
ginated a correspondence schoo
for the education of convicts. Ills
position will be to try to Instnl'
, some plan among other inftltu-
DaVlS tions. the movement being finance*
Napoleon Hill, a New Yorl
editor.
E IS
E OF BIOT IN
111
Air Night Flight
Sets Record; Pilot
Finds Father AUve
Five Hundred Persons
Block Way of Marchers,
Traveling in Autos and
on Foot
ONE ROBED PERSON
DIES AFTER FIGHT
On Wednesday. September 19th
the 1023-23 session of the Univer
sity of Georgia will open with what
promises now to be the largest in
itial attendance of any term In
the University’s history. I-Mt yeai
1500 students/took the regular
collegiate courses nnd the applica
tions for entrance this year are o'
such numbers as to indicate an
increase over last year's atten*
dance.
Prior to the opening of schoo'
the football players will report foi
practice on September 10th and
put In ten days before they tnko up
their books. This date Is set by
the 8. I. C. and no teams In thf
conference can begin practice be
fore that date.
business is growing more unsettled
and tho large Industrial plant*
leaving the North nnd being legat
ed In other Southern Slates be
cause of the unstnbllized condition
of taxntlon In Georgia, and
‘'Whereas, the continuance nt
this unfair, unjust nnd unsettled
condition of affairs will work Ir
reparable loss and damage to th«
people of the state .and
INCOME NOT.
SUFFICIENT
"Whereas, the income of thf
state Is not sufficient to pay th«
existing obligations to the old Con
federate Veterans, equip and main
tain the common schools, the nor
mal schools, the colleges, the ele
mosynary and other Institutions o
the state to the point of efflclenc)
which will hold Georgia in Mn*
with the progressive states of the
Union, and,
“Whereas, the recent session ol
(Turn to Page Four)
EDUCATIONAL MEET
State Education Board
Inaugurates Plan to
Bring About Equal Edu
cational Advantages.
ATLANTA—A campaign to bring
about equal educational opportun
ity as nearly as this idea can. b<
accomplished In Georgia was to
be Inaugurated by the fttate De
partment of Education Saturday.
Aa a first step in the equaliza
tion plan. Superintendent o'
Schools Ballard will hold regiona’
conferences throughout the siate
Such a conference will be held In
Athena September 24 .and In At »r
I cue September 12, Way cross
Feptember 20, and Tifton, Septem
ber 21.
3 KLAIYSMEN PLEAD SUMMER SESSION
GUILTY IN OKLAHOMA CLOSES AFTER A
FLOCK CLEAN-UPr SUCCESSFUL RUN
(By Associated Press)
ATLANTA, Ga.—An explanation
of tho measure. to repeal the tax
equalization law nnd set up a new
system of ad vnlorem taxation. In
troduced in the Georgia senate this
summer ns a substitute for the
Pare repeal bill by Senator J. C
Davis, was given Saturday night
by Henry J. Fullbright. state tax
commissioner.
The Davis bill was recommendet'
favorably by tho senate finance
committee, but was oppose ! *y the
administration forces on the grouqd
it ro-enacted the tax equalization
law with stronger “teeth.” The
house passed the Sotvall bill j ro-
vldlng for the straight-out repeal
of tho law, but the senate com
mittee acted on it. Th* Pace Ml’
was similar to the house measure,
except that It provided for ;he re
enactment of the tax laws In ef
fect before tho equalization sinti-tf
became effective.
“Tho Davis substitute repeals
the present law 'hr toto," safit-tMr
Fullbright, “but does not leave th
state and coeijtlea without vpschiii'
Shots Arc Fired and Po
lice Rush to Scene From
I Pittsburg and Allegheny
p in Autos.
i (By Associated Press.)
E j PITTSBURG.—A force
of deputy sheriffs was
rushed to Carnegie, a su-
„ ,.,i TT~. , ..... Iburb, late Saturday night
Man Who Designed Bilt-: when a crowd of about
more VanderbUt .®' s * ;ate '|500 persons blockaded a
to Address Athenians on street and stopped a pa-
Monday. |rade of Ku Klux Klans-
. 'men. The parade was led
Warren II. Manning, dealgner of * - -
BUCHANAN, Mich. — Jock
Knight, veteran airman, flying
through the night won a race
against his unse«n competitor,
death, when he landed here Sat
urday morning after what h be
lleved to be the longest single ghv
flight in aviation history.
Racing from Cheyenne, Wyoming
nearly a thousand miles awa»
Knight reacC*- d here In time to
find his aged father alive.
Knight had been participating
In air mall teats. Upon his arriv
al In Cheyenne Friday night he
was handed a telegram aaylng that
his father was not expected to
live. Air mail officials gave him
permission to use the plane, h<
hopped off Immediately for Buch
anan, making only two atope ea
route. The flight consumed
proxlmately ten hours.
.‘.f.
MAN KILLED AND
WOMAN HURT IN
ATTACKED VESSEL
country entato In North Carolina. Klansmefl on foot Were
will deliver an address under nus- \ rpnnrlpH tn ovtonrl hnnlr
Jdcen of tho Chamber of rommerre li t d ,0rlea extend DSCK
»'* v * o u«u LUUiiiiiil »I ' Ulllllivrcf 1 ft ,«
Monday night on city planning nd!*Or IDOFe than B ITllIC.
parks. I
Mr. Manning In here on a visit ONE KOBE!)
to Dr. John M. Rcade, professor of . FIGURE SHOT
n'.’any and director of biological ’ After a momentary pause the
laboratories ot tho University of Traders broke through the crowd
Georgia. land continued to the town singing
The mcetiQg, nt which time Mr /'Onward Christian Soldiers.” A
Manning will speak, with he hold,'“'“‘'"of short* were fired and
In the Georgian hotel aaat mbl)-1 ? n< ! . m * n “ ri ‘ **• n r °ke
Attorneys
Their
For Mercy, Claiming
They Were “Dupes” of
Klan Officials.
Plead More Than 2,100 Students
Were in Attendance.
Every County and 17
Other States Represent
ed Thefe. t
TULSA, Okla.—Three pelf-con
fessed members of the Ku Klux
Klan face prison terms here as
the first definite result of Gov.
J. C. Walton's drive to uproot mob
violence In Tulsa county. The men
are Bon F. Sikes and Grover C.
Sikes, brothers, and Earl Sack,
all of flroken Arrow.
Confessing tholr participation In
the flogging of Pen Wagner, a
farmer living near Broken Arrow,
the klanamen pleaded guilty to
charges of -riot and. threw them
selves on the mercy of tho court.
The minimum sentence—two
> cars' Imprisonment—was pro
nounced by District Judge W. B.
Williams after n plea for leniency
hnd been made by Assistant Attor
ney General King and Ed Ctoss-
land. defense counsel.
Admitting that his clients had
(Turn to Pago Four)
The nine weeks course of the
1023 summer school, of the Uni
versity ot Georgia, closed Friday,
the general opinion being that It
hnd been the most successful In
the history of the University.
Over 2100 officially registered
for courses, and Included in thl*
number were representatives from
all but four counties in Georgia
Seventeen other states were repre
sented In the student body.
Over 100 teachers undertook the
work, which embraced that work
included in the curriculum ot the
Normal School, The Agricuturnl
College and the University, nil
three Institutions nnd their entire
plants being combined under one
management during the aummet
Kohooi. Nine hundred studenta pur
sued regular college ocurses
while the others were engaged In
(Turn to p«ga four)
cry for administering the adviloe
cm system of taxntlon, but on the
contrary .makes provision
new method of assessing
equalizing values.
“Instead of the present plan ol
county commissioners selecting the
three men and naming them foi
terms of six years, under the new
lnw, the grand jurifs will select
these board members for terms of
two years each.
"Under the proposed law. these
boards may meet at any time for
the purpose of inquiring Into
whether property subject to taxa
tion Is escaping, and Is given
the Inquisitorial powers of
coutr to compel the attendance of
witnesses and the production of
evidence, for\the purpose of deter
mining the ownership of property
as well as its value to the end that
all property may be taxed."
“These local boards are also re*
qulred to meet and review all re
turns made by the taxpayers, and
to equalize values as between the
several taxpayers of the county.
“When arbitration Is demanded
they have the right to request the
county commlaalonera to have the
county attorney attend the hear*
Ing and represent thf state and
county before the board of arbl'
(ration.
LOCAL BOARD
WOULD APPLY IT
‘When an increase Is ordered
by tho state tax . commissioner,
(Turn to Pago Four)
PROTEST VISCOUNTS
ATTACK ON WILSON
Would Prevent His Speak
ing Further, or Else
Would Warn Him What
Not to Say.
NEW YORK—Characterizing re
ference* to Woodrow Wilson made
by Viscount Brikenhead, formal
Lord Chancellor of England, in an
address at Wllllamstown Institute
of Politics Friday night as Impu
dent, Henry Breckenrldge, aaalatant
secretary ot war under Wilson'*
administration, Saturday protested
In a letter to John W. Day*, presi
dent of the American Bar Associa
tion, against the Vlacount being
permitted to apeak to the Associa
tion’s Annuel convention.
Breckenrldge urged that if II
proved necessary that tho Viscount
be allowed to make the address,
that it be Intimated to him that
expressions of opinions concerning
great American ntnteamen ere die*
tasteful, Intolerable tb a self re-
apencting American audience
room nt H*2ft nVlnrk Mr" Mnn- k h°WI1 to htVO been killed. _
Dins planned lo m AthTns^fe-I#* 0,,lc<! - ' hot
lerday for Cbap.1 1IIII. N. C..: J"* 1 - ... .
wbera he •!» working out plan. for wh|ch
beautifying tho campus al tho nl- .progm* more than an hour sfter
veraity of North Carolina. Ho wot the f ir>t out bre»k. The force of _______
urgod. however, to remain here .deputy sheriff, was reinforced bylaw cl .
and give an address oo city plan-i a || available Pittsburg policemen:Man OmUl On
nlng to Athenians Inasmuch as n' n nd Allegheny county detectives
movement Is now underway Iwr*(who were given the right of way
to establish park ad playrrounr* on city streets as they aped in au-
systom. tomobjles to Carnegie, tlx miles
Chamber of Coinmerco niombcrn I away,
and other citizens nnd visitors are I •
urged to attend tho mooting Martin Institute
It la probablo that Mr. Manning i
will moot wjth tho committee I
working out plans for the nark |
and playgrounds some time Mon- j
Opens Sept 3rd
day.
JEFFERSON, Ga—The fall term
i r.t the public ichoola of Martin
Institute will open Monday, Sep*
I tember 3. H la expected that a
| largo enrollment will be entered
on the day of opening.
Anti-Saloon
League Head
Here Sunday; following: ^
His Front Porch
Launch Sailing Under U.
S. Flag and Be?ring
Refugees Is Target of
Bold Attack.
NEW MONARCHY
IN GERMANY SEEN
Former Sec. of War Bak
er to Go to Democratic
Convention and Support
League of Nations. . . -1
ATHENS.—A telegram from the
Island of Imbros reports that the
Naptha launch flying the Ameri
can flag carrying ten refugees war
fired upon by Turkish soldiers M
Gallipoli. Oio man was killed and
one womi\n wftg.badly wounded. *
NEW MONARCHY FOR
GERMANY FORECAST
WASHINGTON—Restoration ol
a monarchy In Germany within a
year Is predicted by Representative
A swell. Democrat, Louislanna, whn
presented President Coolidgo Sat
urday with some observations Rain
ed on a recent trip to Europe
The situation In Germany, nnd for
that matter In all Europo is men
acing, he declared.
NEW YORK 1 —Newton D. Raker
secretary of war under President
Wilson, announced before sailluc
for Europe where he will place hb
daiiRhier in school, thnt he would
ro before the next Democratic Na
tional convention an ndvocate of
the Longue of Nations nnd the
World Court, two measures denr
to tho heart of tho former chief.
When askod If he would throw
his hat In tho presidential rlnx. he
replied crisply that he had no hat
Ho declared that he would go be*
fore tho convention with or with
out Its consent.
2 Dead, Many Hurt
In Flood Region
Dr. C. O. Jones, Superintendent , c - ™ O'Hear, general .uperin
of the Oeorgln Antl-S*!oon Le.gut | J* n |* enl l J*”- R-Osnlj»n,
n til preach nt the Flret Methodlat i J lJ achuol; 'Ml«» Ermor Hancock,
church Sunday morning at 11:15 | high school: Mrs. J. C. Bennett,
The subject, of Dr. Jnne.’ addrrui. seventh grads; Mrs. M. L. Mobley.
Ib Prohibition and Lnw Enforce-1 Jr., sixth grade; Mils Mary Irwtn
ment. , Smith, fifth grads; Mias Nell Me
On Septrmbrr 2. If and J« hr. K trants, fourth grade; Mias Irene
N. Parker, Dean of tho Thcologl-1 ttankln, third (isda; Mias Ernaa-
cal School nt Emory ttnlvcrnlty ; tine Dadlsman, second grade; Mias
will fill the pulpit nt tlio Klrsi j nianrh Jarrett, first grade; O. C
Methodist church. I Adnrhold, vocational agriculture.
Both of three men urr eloquent I The faculty Is comptote except
speakers and are preaching here fr' onn hlrh school teacher who will
tho absence of Dr. Wolion who I, ■ , MC |, prenrh.
away on hla vacation. |
Crop
Conditions
Reported
In This Section
Much Better Than
1923
Brother of Ty
Cobb Wounded
ATLANTA—.!- P. Cobb, *rd bro-
thf-re of Ty Cobb is in a local hos
pital with bullet wounds In htn
rhrst and left »*m. He is eald to
. have been cleaning a pistol when
j it dlecharged. He had taken I;
JEFFERSON, Ga. —Indlca-
tioaa are that crops will ho
very good in this section. Thu
cotton has suffered no lo«, by
the drought or bolt weevil am’
a splendid yield wilt be had
considering tho bad stand end
small stalk.
Early corn Is already mado
and I, very good, but the corn
planted late has suffered badly
from the recent drought. It in
the general opinion of all that
the farmer baa a chance at
making a good Income from
the present crops. \
THIRTY PERCENT
INCREASE HERE
MAYSV1LLE, Oa—A« com
pared tb la»t year, the cotton
acreage has been decreased
twenty per cent and the quan
tity of fertllliera used deoreax-
ed ten per cent. Ntnety-ftve
per cent of the farmer, have
used poison nnn ninety per
cent are attll using poison.
Twenty per cent of the farm
ers are still plowing cot
ton. The cotton plant has not
been materially damaged by
the weevil. If the present fav
orable condition, should con
tinue through the season the
cotton production In this vi
cinity will likely be thirty per
cent in excess of last year.
The acreage In corn haa been
decreased ten per cent. Com
In law land, la one hundred
per cent normal, while that on
upland, la net over thirty per
cent of an average. The early
upland corn has goffered bad
ly for rain.
FRANKLIN COUNTY
WILL RAISE MORE
LAVON1A. Op.—The fanners
of thl, section are continuing
the fight on the weevil nnd
with every reusing day they
are luat one day nearer suc
cess In thl, crucial year.
Information from various
sources indicates that there
there arc no more weevils In
this section now than, there
were a week ago. Some fann
ers have more ond some have
fewer. Three-fourths of the
cotton growers have the situa
tion thoroughly In hand and
have suffered practically no
loss from weevil Infestation.
Poisoning continues steadily
and regularly and successfully.
Also ploughing continues.
From present indications, con
siderably more cotton will be
grown In this section than last
year.
"FINEST IN STATE”
AROUND WINDER
WINDER, Ga.—Crops within
s radios of fifty mile, around
winder are the finest In the
state. Cotton is good and If
the boll weevil can be success
fully combatted for three
wegka longer Barrow and ad
jacent counties will make a
good crop of the fleecy staple.
Our farmers have worked man
fully this yoar, they have
fought tho boll weevil with de
termination, and they have
wr.n so far. Juki a few week,
more and the final victory will
be wtm.
Other crops aro good
throughout this section and
Barrow county ought to bo pet
ting on her feet again. The
cron of cotton bid, fair to bring
a good price nnd things will
begin to look up In Barrow
this fall.
We hope opr farmers will
bow a good acreage in wheat nnd
oats this fall and with another
determined fight against the
boll weevil next year as we
have waged this year, we will
begin to see prosperity com
ing back to this section.
I from hie wife who was cleaning
| it for him.
Savannah Red
Cross Does Good
SAVANNAH. Oa.—The report of
the Savannah chapter. American
Red rrnsa. for the month of July,
which haa juat been mads public,
stiowa that 203 war veterans ware
aided during the month. Ot that
number. JtO were white and 33
entered. Allotments, lost discharge
papers, locating men or relatives,
arrears of t»y. 'uneral claims,
headstones, victor; medals. Insur
ance, vocational training, nnd vo
cational tnlnlm dependency
claim, were a mo# the matters
hondled for the ex-aerricr man.
COLUMBUS HAS
65,175 INHABITANTS
COLUMBUS, Ga.—According to
the new cltv directory, advance
copies of which art now being de
livered to subscribers, the popula
tion of Colombo*, exclusive of
Fort Bennlng, Is 65,V7G, .
MOBILE, Ala.—Stephens Loss-
Ins. 66, wealthy wholesale oyster
krocer, was shot and killed whllt
he sat on the porch of hla horns
Friday. Tom W. Cleveland, II, It
held charged with murder. Hla
“‘ h ";J" hn °; «“"«> EL PASO.—The person, were
rammlra onsr of Mobile county and klllBdt , e „ n , 0Vere Iy Injured and
held In connection with the affray *J l n urt , '*
Tha killing la said to hava result- " h,cb ***, . ll *“**" t
*d from a fight with a grandson Ihojowhtnd^of the Jua
of Lowing. “ 1
rex aerosit tho Rio Grande here
rrldny night.
At Request of Govembr
of Pennsylvania Every
Effort Be Made to Keep
Mines Open This Week.
ATLANTIC CITT.—Miners union
officials and mlna operators ac
cepted Saturday the request of tha
governor of Pennsylvania for i
cooferetym at Harrisburg on Mon
day In an endeavor to axhauat
every meane of preventing n sua
pension of mining next week,
chlnevy was steadily at work upon
At tha same time the union ma
lls object of miking the ehut-dowt
effective and John L. Lewis, presi
dent of the United Mine Workers,
took occasion to repeat In em
phatic wards th* nnlon ultimatum,
that no arbitration offers now
would nerve to avert the conse
quences of a failure of the om-
pioyon In the Industry to grant
wage Increases and other demands
2.000.000 TONS
IN COAL BINS
fBy auKtiUd Pcs.)
NEW YORK—Thirty-two i
lion tana of hard coal in domestic
slasa will be In tha hlna of con
Burners or storage awaiting dlatrl
button by September 1, tho data of
the threatened euepenalon of min
ing, the Antitrade Bureau of In
formation estimated Saturday.
Mail Flyers Drop
Letters From Sky;
Tests Are Success
CHICAGO—One of the most se
vere aircraft tests In the history of
aviation was completed Saturday
when mall planes dropped out of
the sky at New York ond Son
Francisco and delivered their
burdens of letters after a cross
country test flight.
Pinchot Takes Step
To Prevent Coal
Strike September 1
HARRISBURG.—Invitation to
meet him at Harrisburg next Mon
day have been gent by Governor
pinchot to four reprHseutatives of
the anthracite miners and four
members of tho operators policy
commltteo who have been taking
part at recent negotiations..
As a first step the governor will
attempt to adjust differenees be
tween factions so as to avert a
suspension of work fn tho mines
September 1.
Sues Publisher of
Magazine Carrying
Her Nude Likeness
NEW YORK.—Mrs. Tbereaa
Lind, youthful art student, who re-
cnntly engaged counsel to bring
suit of $200,000 against her
former Instructor, A. Stirling Cal-
der, sculptor, because of the al
leged exhibition of a nude figure
having a cemposito likeness to her
head, after her husband had l«-ft
her, has begun suit In the supreme
court for $50,000 against tin* pub
lisher of Vogue, fashion magazine.
Publication fn February of photo
graphs of the sculptured figure, the
plaintiff declared, was a contribut
ing caus* of her husband’s separa
tion and held bed up to ridicule and
humiliation.
Last Trial Mail
Flight Finished
HEMPSTEAD, N. Y.~The last
easthound flight of the present
transcontinental relay mail test
was completed when Pilot Ames
arrived from Cleveland. The en
tire' distance from San Francisco
vrOM covered la 26 hours, 17 min
utes, or three minutes behind tho
record established Friday. __