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ATHENS COTTON3}
MIDDLING .. .. <, .. .ue 19¢
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VOL. 96, NO. 243
REED, BLAINE ATTACK HOOVER “MYTH”
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!
GEAN FLYER i
: 3
PLYMOUTH, England.—(UP)—'i
A wholly unconfirmed mumor that |
a fishing vessel had landed quut.l
Commanger H. C. MacDonald, who
is believed to have.been lost in
a‘tempting to fly the Atlantic ‘at
Newlyn, Corwall, was circulated
here Satdrday night,
Pol‘ce’ and coastguard authori
t'es at Newlyn, St. Ives and Pen
zance denied the report and naval |
officers here discredited it. ;
B i e
iy
TO OPEN FOR.
BUSINESS SAT.
TIFTON., Ga. — (AP) — The
Bank of Cooke County at Adel,
near here failed to open for busi-|
ness Saturday ,and a notice posted}
on ity doors said it was in the;
hards of ~he state superintendent’
of ‘banks. ‘
B
18
SAN FRANCISCO — (AP) —,
University of California medicalJ
authorities after - performing . a
post mortem on the body -of Wil-J
liam Edward Hickman, have an
nounced that so far as they could
determine there was no constitu
tional evidence cf insanity. ‘
Hickman was hanged for mur
der at San Quentin Prison Friday.
The report of the examiners in
dicated that there was nothing ab
normal about the endocrine glands
—the internal organs of secretion
—which are held by scientists to
contribute towards mental il'ness.
The brain was {ecund to be unus
vally large.
e e
Upshaw Heckied
In Natchez Speech
NATCHEZ, Miss —Ex.Congress
man W. Upshaw, of Georgia, cam
paigning the state for Hoover and
the Republicans, was heckled and
interrupted continuously in a speech
here Friday night.
“Governor Bilbo,” he shouted in
the midst of the heckling, “has
called me a ‘lame duck.” I say I
would rather be a dead duck than
back Smith and his party.”
Governor Smith Turns
Towards East For The
LLast Days Of Campaign
Nominee Pays Visit to
His Friend, Tom Tag
gart, Il in Hospital.
Great Ovation Is Given
Him At Indianapolis.
B e |
“YQU AIN'T SEEN
,+NOTHING YET
ABOARD SMITH SPECIAL,
EN ROUTE TO ALBANY, N.
Y.—(UP)—Governor Alfred K.
Smith told newsgpapermen who
complained of fatigue aboard
his ecastward bound special |
train Saturday—“Walit, as Al
Jolson says. you &'n't seen ‘
nothing yet". |
With only two days of rest,
the democratic presidential |
nominee gaid he would swing
into his intensive final cam
paign in the east, speaking
Wadnesday night at Boston and
moving directly from there to
New York, All the time be
twoen . now and election day
will be. spent in the big elec
toral - tarritory which the
lominee must win if he is to
be elected two weeks from next
Tuesday.
Tl Sl it
ABOARD SMITH SPECIAL, EN
ROUTE TO ALBANY, ~ ¥V —(UP)
The brown derby has been waved
for the last time in this campaign
to a mid-western crowd and Al
fred B, Smith was homeward
bound Saturday night for & few
days of rest before embarking
Daily and Sunday—l 3 Cents a Week.
Associated Press Service. United Press Dispatches.
Be Democrats Or Sever
; ag= 5
Party Affiliations, Ga.
_ Bolters Are Told By
! 7 <0 -
l s State Committee
& i Lk
} §9I‘LANTA, Ga. — (AP) — Democratic nominees
'« « members of the- executive committees of the
& rty who are actively opposing the democratic na
fiional ticket were asked to resign and given notice
Ithat they might be excluded from future democratic
| primaries, in a resolution adopted at the first meet
'ing of the new democratic state executive committee
here Saturday.
|
DIES OF INJURIES
| v
ATLANTA, Ga— (UP)— George
C. Duke, 37, died at a hospital here
Saturday night, from injuries said
to have been received when one of
the main gates to the Georgia Tech
football stadium was thrown over
for the Tornado-Notre Dame foot
bull game Saturday.
Duke was pushed dwn when the
crowd which had been waiting for
the gate to open, surged in, and was
trampled upon, according to a re
lport filed by police. ,
e eR P
I COST IT $3,963
I Thirty-eight persons were giv
en free treatment at Clarke coun
ty’s tuberculosis sanitarium-—
Fairhaven—during the first 11
months of its operation, it was
announced yesterday.
These 38 patients were given
free treatment by the sanitarium
itself, and do not include thosc
whose treatment was financed by
charitable organizations or indi
viduals, it was pointed out.
The number of patient days
spent by the thirty-eight free pa
tients totalled 2,433. Some of the
patients were at Fairhaven for
only a few days, others for a week
and others remained a month or
more.
This charity work cost the sani
tarium a total of $3,963, or one
third of the amount appropriated
for maintenance of the sanitarium
by the county.
vpon his final drive for the presi
dency,
The democratic nominee ‘n In
dianapolis Saturday, bid farewell
to his friends west of the (Alle
ghanies. Here, as in Chicago, St.
Louis and other places, he was
paraded through the cily to be
welcomed by the cry of “Hello,
Al”,
While the nominee’s visit to the
Indiana city was of little more
than an hour’s duration, he found
time to do many things, a visit to
Tom Taggart, veteran democratic
chiefta'n in the state, who is now
undergoing treatment in a hospit
al as well as a parade and a
speech,
The governor, who apparently
has gone thronugh the strenuous
‘western trip with bhug little fatigue
found time, however, for all this as
well as opportunity to shake hand«
with scores of persons who pressed
around him during hi stay in the
city.
On his way heie he was ereeted
at stations en route and at those
places where the train made what
were described as “railroad opera
tions stops”, shook hands with
many people and waved the derby
again and again.
. Saturday morn‘ng, shortly after
leaving Chicago, the governor held
a conference with press corre
spondents in the club car. “How
are you all?”
“Tired”, somebody answered.
“Why,” said the nominee, “you
should not be tired after a little
rpinllike thin™ . o o T
THE BANNER-HERALD
“Be it resolved’”, the resolution,
which was unanimously adopted
by the forty three comm‘ttee mem
bers present, read,
“l. That the act’on of every per
son claiming to be the nominec
of the democratic party for any
office and of every member of the
party executive committee, state
or county, in actively opposing the
democratic nat'onal ticket, is here
by condemned and we hereby call
upon. each and all of them to re
sign such nominations or official
party positions.”
“2. That this committee reserves
the right and hereby puts every
one on notice thereof, to adopt the
policy of excluding from future
democratie nrimaries all active op
ponents of the party.”
, The resolution was introduced
by G. Ed Maddox of Rome, chair
man of the committee and was
prefaced by the following state
ment:
“For the past twenty years ’t
‘has been the policy of the demo
cratic party of Georgia to permit
all white electors, regardless of
‘their mational political affiliat'ons
o participate in party rznfll"e |
tfm‘d d’fir%?:fl thdt'flinéfl spncfi
ing the privilege thus granted,
there has been no organized or
gserious effort put forth to defeat
any of our nominees, either state
or national”. .
“Because of this long-established.
custom, all white voters were per
m‘tted to participate in the state
primary of September 12, last, ex.
cepting such voters to refrain from
active opposition to our party
(Turn to Page Four)
Willian Allen W hite, Historian,
Refutes Bill White, Politician
On Tammany And Gov: Al Smith
While writing history of American political lead
ers, which posterity will use to judge his critical
faculties and his ability to appraise individuals hon
estly and dispassionately, Bill White employs differ
ent scales of values, as the following parallel will
show :
INDEPENDENCE, {Kas,—(&)—
Renewing his charges that Gover
nor |Alfred E. Smith was subse
vient to Tammany hall, while a
member of the New York legis
lature, William Allen White, Kan
sas author and edor; took the
stump here and declared the ex
planations given by Smith of his
votes on saloon legislation were
“all specious, and all twisted with
the Tammany viewpoint.”
“In his defense of his record
more than in the record itself”
White asserted. “Governor Smith
today by his shift'ng, undemocratic
explanation of that record reveals
himself the eprfect flower of Tam
many who does not dare, bhecause
he cannot, appeal to the American
conscience.”
“Young Al Smith always gave
his vote on the liquor guestion to
Tammany,' White declared. *lf
Tammany has a good saloon rec
ord then Young Al Smith should
have been a Methodist b'shop.”
White in a statement issued to
New York some weeks ago detail.
ed Smith’'s votes as a assembly
man on various bills affecting sa
loons and drew =a heated reply
from the New York executive.
(Charges by White at that time that
Smi‘th’s votes in the legislature
had been cast for the protection
of Prohibition and gambling later
were withdrawn by the editor.
In his address at a rally under
the auspices of the Republican
state ceniral committee, White de
clared that the “Fammany oligar.-
chy” was the real issue of the
presidential campaign and he said
the Democratic presidential nom
inee typified ithe “Tammany
mind.”
- Hoover, “Ildealist”
In contrast; White said, “Her
bert Hoover, idealist, humanitarian
a farm boy consecrated to public
(Turn to Page Five)
ATHENS, GA., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1928.
SWEENEY IS HELD
FOR DISPOSING OF
STOLEN GOODS
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. —(AP)
—Edward J. Sweeney, 35, of Long
Becch, Indiana, was arrested Sat
urday and held ¢ » Chicago author
ities who suspect him of handling
thousands of dollars worth of stol
en bonds.
Detectives and state a.torneys
from Chicago were expected Sat
urday to quiz Sweenev concerning
certain bonds stolen from compan
ies in Baltimore, Cleveland and
Chicago. State insurance inspec
tors found “he londs among the
assets of the Guaranty Life Com
pany and the Cosmopolitan Insur
ance Company and officials said
they traced part of the bonds to
Sweeney’s bond irokerage house
in Chicago.
B
LITTLE ROCK, Ark: —{(AP)—
The third day of his self-im
posed fast as a pro est against
Arkansas anti-atheist laws Sat
urday found Char'es Smith, presi
dent of the American Association
tfor Advancement of Atheism still
determined agains' eating in his
cell in the city jail here.
Smith entered upon a hunger
strike Thursday, a day after he
hud voluntarily gonue to jail to
serve out a fine of $25 and court
costs imposed for violation of a
city ordinance against distributing
printed material “calé¢u’ated to
provoke a breach of peace.”
He was arrested as result of his
activities agains® a proposed anti
‘evolution to act to be vo.ed on in
‘the general! election next month.
OLDEST CONSULAI
MEMBER DIES AT
NICE, FRANCE
NICE, France —(AP)—Captain
John Frisbie, oldest retired mem
ber of the American consular ser
vice, died Friday night at the age
of 91 years. He was born in Hils
dale, Michigan, and served az con
sul et Brazil.
By DAN MAGILL
I know of no more honest-m’nd
ed American than Will‘am Allen
White and I am willing for him to
hojler “time out” during political
campaigns, when he can show the
country the onery side of Bill
White, the biased, partisan side
of a fearless, independent and
broadminded editor and publicist.
And BEill White ought to holler
“t'me out” now, while he is lam
basting Al Smith because it was
Al Smith's luck to be born in a
poor, crowded tenement section of
New York's KEast Side, and Al
Smith's destny to grow up in
Tammany Hall, as a member of
Tammany, subject to the rules of
Tammany, but who, Bill Wh'te ad
mits in Ris less partigan mo
ments, has outgrown Tammany,
whose reach of mind stretches be.
vond the Tammany environs.
Outside of politics, and when he
isn’t #n the midst of a political
campaign Bill White will go out
of his way to be fair, but like
the rest of us, when it comes 1o
politics we yell “time out”, in the
hope that we won't be judged
later on for what we do when
the battle is at the hottest.
Bill White, Historian.
When Willlam Allen White was
writing, “Masks In A Pageant”,
recently published by the Mac-
Millan Company, he was as far
away from politics as he could
get. He wanted to bhe fagir, he
realized he was writing h'story,
and he sought to give the men
he was writing about decent treat
ment. He wasn't writing political
propaganda, He was writing
something that men will use in the
future in judging William [Allen
‘White’s ability to appraise men
and women and write critically
and dispassionately of their times.
1f ever a fair-minded man had
(Turn to Page Four)
Established 1833,
REPUBLICAN AND ANTI-SMITH
COALITION HOLDS FIRST RALLY
AT COLONIAL MONDAY, 8 O'CLOCK
James W. Morton 13l
Clarke Anti-Smith
Chairman. Wright and
Covington to Speak. i
' f
Eighth district regular Republi
cans and “Anti-Smith Democrats”
Monday night will hold the first
meeting here to rally workers in
‘he coalition they have formed to
defeat ‘Governor Alfred E. Smith's
candidacy for the clectoral vote of
Georgia in his campaign as the
Democratic nominee for the presi
dencv. The mecting will be held
at the Colonial Theatre at 3
o’clock. |
Judge W. A. Coving on, of Moul.
trie, and Barry Wright, of Rome,‘
will be the principal visiting
speakers. Mr. Wright is leader
of the “Anti-Smith Democrats” in
this state. > ‘
Judge Covingion will go from
Athens to Augusta to address a
meeting there designed to boost
the candidacy of Herbert Hoover,
in Richmond county. 1
Morton Chairman. |
Organization of the “Anti-Smith
Demeccratic Committee” for Clarke
county has been effected with
James W. Mourton, prominent,
Clarke county farmer, who is well’
known in agricultural and church
circles throughout ‘he state, as
county chairman. Claude W. Tuck
another well known Clarke county
citizen is vice chairman; Mrs. W,
P. King, Athens, W. €. T. U,, lead
er, vice chairman; C. A. Row
land, prominent Athens wholesale
merehant and a !cader in laymen’s
-aetivities ~in° the " “Preshyierian
Moore, Athens, secretary, and
Rev. C. B. Harbour, student pas
tor for the Georgia M. E. confer
enee¢ at the University of Georgia,
chairman of ‘he mempership com
mittee.
Cornett District Leader.
Arrangements for a complete
organization of Hoover-Curtis sup
porters in Clarke coun’y and
throughout this district are being
carried forward, Judge Walter G.
Cornett, chairman of the Eighth
District Hoover-Curiis organiza
tion announced Saturday. Judge
Cornett last week was made vice
president for Georgia of the Hoov
er-Curtis National Lawyers Asso
ciation of which Elihu Root is
honorary chairman and Charles
Evans Hughes is chairman of the
executive committee.
The “Anti-Smith Democrats” in
Clarke and this aistrict are co-op
erating with the regular Repub
lican organization in the district
and county in hehalf of the Re
publican national ticket, Judge
Cornet stated.
Tuck to reside.
Mr. Tuck will be chairman of
the meeting Mcrday night, Dr.
S. J. Cartledge, pastor of the
Central Presbyterian church wiil
introduce the speakers. The" in
vocation will be delivered by Dr.
Stanley K. Grubb, pastor of the
First Christian church, and Dr. W
J . King, pastor of the Firs:
Me'hodist church, will pronounce
ike ‘enediction. |
Announcement is made that se
iccted voices from the choirs in all
of the Protestant churches in the
city will lead the singing. The
meeting will be ¢pened with sing
ing of “The Star Spangled Ban
ner.”
The Program.
The program for the meeting
fellows:
Claude Tuck, vice president.
naster of ceremonies.
Star Spangled Banner.
Invocation by Dr. Stanley R
Grubh.
Song—*America,” by the audi
ence,y led by city choirs.
In'roduction of Speakers by Dr.
S. J. Cartledge.
Speech by Bariy Wright.
Speech by Judze W, A. Coving
ton.
wong—“Onward Christian Sol
diers ”
Benediction by Dr. W. P. King.
The young ladies composing the
choirs are invited to occupy the
boxes at the right and left of the
stage.
S —
Colonel Grayson
.
Announces His
|
Personal Staff
SAVANNAH, Ga, — (AP) —
Colonel W. L. Grayson, comman
der-in-chief of the United Spanish
War Vetarans, announced the fol
lowing staff appointments Satur-i
day: ;
Stephen N. Harris, Adjutant
General;, Lacev D. Mell, assistant
Adjutant General; Wildener N.
Erisken, personal aide-de-camp to
the commander-in-chief, @ |
Daily and Sunday—lß Cents a Week.
i
3
1 5
i
{ IR R
| LOS ANGELES — (AP) — A
i cloud of public indignation hover
lvd over the Los Angeles police
| e mmissien Saturday, the outcome
inf' i's investigaiion into the hold
| ing of Mrs. Christine Collins in
| the city psychopathic ward for ten
' days recently because she doubted
the identity of a boy who police
| had insited was her son.
| While the mother prepared to
prosecute a $508,300 damage suit
against the city, a group of Wo- |
men, a grand jury, a city public
| welfare committee, and another|
| “and of citizens star.ed efforts to-‘
i'.\ards a public airing of the case.
i Young Collins disappeared from}
j his home here last spring. Subse-'
'quent‘,y a boy was found at De-‘
| Kalb, Illinois, and returned here
iby police as the missing youth. :
i
ie Y i
| : {
| {
1 \
; {
MEXICO CITY, Mexico. '_-%AP)
—-The trial of Jose De Leon Toral
and Mcther Conception on charges
growing ‘out of the assassination
of President-elect Obregon, is ex
pected to be opened shortly, pos
sizly as soon as early November,
The newspaper Excelsior said
that the formn%) charges asKing the
death penalty for Toral as the as
sagsin of Obregon and twenty
yvears in prison for Mother Con
ception as the “intellectual auth
or of the . assassanation,” will
shor:ly be sent to tne court of
l§an Angel where the trial will be
weld.
PRINCETON THUMP
LEHIGH BY SGOR:
OF 47-0 SATURDAY
PRINCETON, N. Jl." —(UP)—
Dazzling forward passes and long
runs enabled Princeton to over
whelm Lehigh at Palmer Stadium
Saturday 47 to 0.
Requard: and Dennett starred
for Princeton, making repeated
'rne gain through the lighter Le
high team.
Agricultural College Judging Teams Are
Heavy Winners At National Dairy Show
No Southern Institution
Has Ever Before An
nexed Seo Imposing ~ a
List of Awards. :
The teams representing the
Georgia State College of Agricul
ture have just returned from the
National Dairy Show with med
als, loving cuns, ‘rophies,. prizes,
honors and national- recognition
never efore attained by .any
Southern institution since the es
tablishment of this show nearly a
quar.er of & century ago.
Georgia won first in judging
Jersey cattle among the twenty
seven teams competing, which
came from all over the United
States and Canada. They defeat
ed such teams as the one repre
senting Nebraska, which the week
Fefore won the Dairy Congress
Contest held at Waterloo, lowa,
as well as teams coming from such
institutions as Cornell, University
of Wisconsin, Illinois, lowa, On
tario, and many other institutions
located in states where dairying
has long been well established,
Won Jersey Loving Cup
Among other prizes won was
the Jersey Loving cup for.the
A. B. C. Paper. Single Copies 2 Cents. 5 Cents Sm ;
. -
Americans Invited
. .
To Aid China In
» \
Reconstruction
o !
SHANGHAI, China —(AP)—
The newly organized nationalist
government state council headed
Ly General Chiang Kai Shek which
is seeking to bolster the nation
wide government’s China-wide re
construction program, has decided
to ask five prominen{ American®
1o act as ‘honorary economic ad
visers to the nationalist govern
ment.”
The Americans selected for the
invitationwere Henry Ford; Owen,
D. Young; Robert Harper, Wash
ingion banker: Edward Seligman
and Jeremiah Jenks, economist. |
e—— —— e
LONDON —(AP)— The London
papers Saturday afternoon had
practical'y dropped reference to
the fate of Lieut. Commander H.
C. MacDonald who disappeared in
a fli~ht from Newfoundland, car
rying but brief paragraphs say
ing there ha besn no news of him.
Despite *“he general fear that
Ma¢Donald’s name must be added‘
to the list of those who have died
in'trans-Atlantic oir tragedies, hisi
brave young wifv refuses to aban
don hope and Saturday still ex-l
pressed the conviction that = her
husband was safe. l
e e R—— e e
DEMANDS RASKOB;‘
OF GOV. BILBO -
. |
MEMPHIS, Tenn.«-— (AP) ~=,
[‘Wfl?fil’fL\WelJ,fnrd, chairmian of {
-the - Non-Partisan #oover ~Club
here Saturday wired John J. Ras
kob, democraiic mnational chair
man, agking that “in the spirit of
fairness!” he repudiate the “dis
graceful charges” made by Gover
nor Theo G. Bilbo of Mississippi,
that the republican presidential
nuominee had danced with a negro
woman at Mound Bayou, Mississ
ippi.
Aged Couple Die
2 In Death Pact;
Finances Blamed
VIENNA, Austria — (AP) —
Rear Admiral Baron Arthur Vour
uicon-Saumberg and his wife have
chosen death trather than attempt
longer to eke out an existence on
a meagre government pension.
Unmployment, rising prices and
hard times generally made their
struggle more and more difficult
in the face of their advancing
years. They made a pact to de
stroy themselves and took poison.
POISON CASE MAY
CAUSE EXTRA
COURT TERM
CLAXTON, Ga. —(AP)— Judge
J. Saxton Daniels planned a frip
to Ludowici Saturday afternoon to
determine whether an extra term
of Long county superior court
should be called to investigale a
poisoning case whnicih nas caused
considerable. comment in that
county.
e e e eee et ettt ee e
lteam from the south for the high
score in judging Jersey cattle, The
!cup must be ‘won three times be
fore l{)te\vomixjg: the permanent
property of ‘any institution. A
smaller cup was awarded as the
permanent property for winning
one time, and the Grand Trophy
I open tfi) America, including Canada
as well as all states in the Union.
This Mrophy will be held by the
Georgla State College of Agricul
ture yntil the next National Con
test.
In addition to this, membens of
the team won six gold medals. In
the entire contest, Jersey, Guern
50y, }{olstein and Ayrshire cattle’
[nre indeed. Some of the hresds:
~are practically unknown in the
dodth. e is wnereiore nacural that
the Georgia students would have
teen more familiar with Jerseys,
'though their rank in placing all |
breeds was an honor to the ins:i-i
’tution they represent. The fol
lowing list in the order in which
the team stood on &!l breeds indi- !
cates the strong competition that
was met: '
1. University of Illinois. 2. Wis
consin. 3. lowa. 4. New York.}
1. Ontario. Canada. 6. New Hamp- i
shire 7. Texas. 8. Georgia State
o, (TR 10 Pag EOUR) e |
THE WEATHER:
y Tk
Fair Sunday; Monday p&fln
'cloudy and slightly Wl};‘fi'fli}/
4 b L 9
| et
FOLLOWS SEY, REER
i L el
i 5 Hod e by
T BT
- MADISON, Wis.—
(AP)—Senator James A.
Reed of Missouri, m,fi
,first speech he has made
in behalf of the candi~
tdacy of Governor Alfred
Smith put the democratic
microscope on the career
of Herbert Hoover here
Saturday night. o
The republican presidential nom
iree’s long residence in for,e@.
countries, his record as food ad
ministrator during the world war
and his past political alignments
drew the fire of the senate veter
an whose address was broadeast
over a network of mid-west sta--
tions. : .
A speech by United States Sens
- uator John {J. Blaine, republican.
of Wisconsin, who recently an
' nounced that he would support
' Governor Smith, also was broagd
l cast from the saine meeting. =
. “Mr, Hoover Las long posed as
the savior of Belgium with* the
| »esult that many peopie almost be
| lieve that out of his owp pi'im
fortune and by his Bzwrg ndividual
| efforts he fed tha Belgians during
}me war,” declared Senator Reed.
] “That myth may as well ié ex
ploded now. In feeding the¢ Bels
| ians Mr. Hoover was, inifact, e
Tto“w" ‘an mfl# . servig ;,}; o @
; British and Freneh covernments.
| for hoth courtries realized anfi;
| the Belgian people were not fed
the morale es the Belgian army
would be broken.”
Senator Reed charged Mr. Hoo
ver with coming to the United
States as food administrator,
“with the purpose IAI his he”f;: of
fixing a price upon American farm
products for the benefit of Eng
land and France and E iy
Before he left England, My, "Hoo
ver ‘“rigged” the market for the
purpose of beating down the price
of American farm products, the
senator declared. :
“Mr. Hoover’s eulogists do not
tell of how he bought vast guan
tities of provisions and supplies,
and having acumulated them,
wou'd suddenly harl them “upon
the market, break the price and
then buy in at low prices upon the
breken market,” ‘he continuggl.: ¥ |
Senator Blaine declaved = that
Wisconsin is for Gov. Smith heé
cause he stands “four square on
paramount igsuas.” He said that.
the “corruption, ‘oribery and de
{ Pauchery” of the last seven ‘years
‘ touch every member of the cabinef
whenever it touched the cabinet.”
l e et et 'y
o Fod
|
- .“ 1;
; o i
Lo S
| CALHOUN, Ky—(AP)=iKen=
ltucky paused Saturday to h??:
the first American soldier Kiled™in
luctinn in France—James Bethel
[ Gresham—in whose memory -the
lh;mdsome new memorial bridge
juver the Green river in. McLean
| county, was ready for dedication.
l Hudreds of former comrades:in
armg and friends were augmented
t by many leading citizens of the
[mnm_v and state to take partin
| the ceremonies. 1
i e e e |
| -
i 3 3
SIENS TORN DOWA
i ak "
! i ey
! PRINCETON, N, J. ~(APY—_NX
protest against being barred from
| voting in the coming national
elections, 1.500 undereradustes off
Princeon University Friday nighd
paraded through downtown. streets
' and tore down two politicalibane
' ners, one a Smith and one & Hoo«
ver emblem. s
f Police charged the ecrowd, ate
{empting to arrest those. . whd
tore down the henners, but 'werg.
1.,. w £Turn to Page l:om.u:’