Newspaper Page Text
ATHENS COTTONI
MIDDLING .. .. .. ». 18 3-8
PREVIOUS CLOSE .. .. 18 3.8¢
VOL. 96, NO. 251
“FUN” SLAYERS INDICTED FOR MURDER®
TENTATIVE DATE 15
IFb AL F
“THILL SLAVERS
NOVEMBER 13 SET
ATLANTA, Ga.—(AP)
—The trial of George
. |
Harsh and Richard Gray
Gallogly, young college
men indicted for the mur-l
der of two store clerks
during a recent series of
4 |
hold-ups here, was set
tentatively Tuesday for
November 13, by the so
licitor general’s office..
They were removed Tuesday
morning from cells in the police
station where they had been held
since their arrvest Saturday, to the
Fulton county tower, to await for
mal arraignment,
During the transfer, Harsh, who
police say, has confessed the
crimes and implicated Gallogly as
the driver of the auvo in which he
executed his hold-up operations,
was permitted to go to a iarber
shop under guard for a _shave.
Their jailers said both youths had
been seduluas, in maintaining a
neat appearance,
Despite that Gallogly has aenied
the charges, the detective hureau
claims he has made a verbal state~l
ment contamin; &uificient evi
dence against him and the police
department announced Tuesday
that it was ready to go to tria!
at any tise.
“.\lganwhile,. the: police committee
meet Wednesday might officiallv
to award the SI,OOO reward of
fered by the stoie by which one of
the hold-up vietims was_employed
for the eapture of the slager. The|
detective chief snnounced that he|
wouid recomménd it be given to
Detoctive John J.owe, to whom
credit has been given for the ar
rest of Harsh and Galleg'y.
GRAF ZEPPELIN 15
MAKIN GOOD TINE
O RETURN JOURNEY
Dodging storm areas but aided
by strong tail winds, the home
ward bound German air liner,
Graf Zeppelin Tuesday was wing
ing over mid-Atlantic somewhere
a2long the northern steamship
route. fies
Although the huge ship appar
ently had been forced to abandon
@ directly eastern course towards
central Europe in favor of a more
northerly one which would carry
her on a normal stearmship ianc
from Cape Race, Newfoundland tc
Fastnet, in southern Ireland, there
was every indication that the pas
rage was beihg made much faster
than the trip to the United States
which took 111 hours and 38 min
utes, §
In suet, favoring tail winds
seem to be driving the great ship
along at a fast clip so that part
of the time she was averaging 70
miles an hour and sometimes Ger
man experts estimated at 100
miles an hour. Every hope exist
ed that the return voyage would
be made in between 70 and 80
hours and that the ship would
seach Friederichshafen, her home
rort, Wednesday afternoon
NOT SIGHTED
The German dirigible Graf Zep.
pelin had left Newfoundland be
hind Tuesday and apparently was
well out along the great circle
course on its second conquest of
the |Atlantic.
Despite the watch of sbips in
the north Atlantic, the great air
ship slipped through the night
unsighted, battling with wind and
rain on its flight to Germany.
The last definite word of ithe
airship came at 7 p. m. Monday
when the St. John’s correspond.
“ent of the London Daily News
reported that a radio operator at
Bonavista PBay had sighted the
alrghip as it crossed the north
east, coast,
Apparently Dr. Eckener, com.
mander of the Zeppelin, was not
clinging to any definite course,
but was jockeying his craft to meet
~weather conditions. At 4 a m.
~ the airship had beén in the air
/| 26 nours and § minutes, . .
Daily and Sunday—l 3 Cents a Week.
Associated Press Service. United Press Dispatches.
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WS S i T
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(NEA Mexico City Bureau)
Miss Leonor Llorente, a society
senorita of Mexico City, may be
come the bride of President Cal
les before he leaves office, ac
cording to rumor. - The announce
ment of her engagement has not
been made officially.
F ks ¥ b 5 Ll
I ;gh@fil%!i
Is Urged By Mrs,
Lamar C. Rucker
By NITA BLACK RUCKER
" *“The hand that rocks the
cradle rules the world.”
At last we see this pro
precy fulfilled in our own
country today for it is ad
mitted that more women are
going to the. polls on No
wvembey, 6, than ever before
and we will be a factor in the
Presidential campaign.
LOYALTY is a hidden vir
tue along with allegiance,
truthfulness and honor. They
s lare swamped by modern pro
paganda of self-assertion,
“changing color to the win
ner” and “dowyn with obedi
ence” to laws of Ged or
man.
Democracy has chosen as its
leader Al Smith.
Women are admittedly large
ly swayed by sentiment in all
things pertaining to law or
or government. Their senti
ment. says they want to see
prohibition enforced and or
der in the land. Has the Re
}xublicun party put it therve?
n Maryland the saloons are
wide open; in Pennsylvania,
the corruption is so brazenly
in the open that people laugh
‘at the play of party politics
for the Republicans are too
busy cherishing everr vote
they can get, good or had, to
even enforce the law.
Georgia boyz motoring to
Yale for the game several
weeks ago were accosted by po
licemen in aniform in the
state of New Jersey urging
them to get a drink, and even
showing them the bottle in
his hand. Have the republi
cans enforced the Voistead
act and will Hoover change
the present policics of the
powers that be?
LOYALTY to our fathers
who planted Democracy in our
touthland should be the main
force to take us, their daugh
ters, to whom has becn allot
ed a voice in that land for
whose freedom our fathers
fought, out in the open, fear
lessly to stand and vote for
Democracy and the {earless,
staiwart man chosen to be
onr next president —AL
SMITH.
FIRES ENTIRE BOARD
CLEVELAND, Ohio. —(AP)—
The entire Cuyahoga county elec
tion board was removed from of
fice Tuesday by Clarence J. Brown
secretary of stat?, and the duties
of the hoard . were taken over by
his office for aleged irregularities
in the August primary. election,
THE BANNER-HERALD
U. 3. DEPARTMENT
F EDUCATION
|5 URGED
MEMPHIS, Tenn.—(A P)—The
establishment of a federal depart
ment of education, represented by
a secretarv in the ~resident’s cab
inet, was advocated by Miss Charl
Williams, field secretary of the
National Eduecation Association’s
legislative division in an address
prepared for deliverey here Tues
day bhefore the opening of the Ten
nessess congrss of parents and
teachers convention.
Miss Williams said she, as an
officer of the Kducation Agsocia
tion and of the National Congress
of Parents and W'cachers, was con
vinced the proposa’ for a federal
devcriment was practical because
she said, it would “co-ordinate ex
isting interests now scattered
through varions departmentis of
the government.” ‘
aGROOL TEAGHER
FOUND BADLY
BURNED
CHICAGO —(AP)— freda Ka
naak, 29, former school teacher,
was found perhaps fatally burned
Tuesday in the hoiler room of the
rolice station xt Lake Bluff, a
surburb. Her clothing had %een
removed from her body and de
stroyed £nd her arms and legs
wsge badly burned. e i
_She was found by the police sta
ilS Fo Siriad T
fire the furnace. At Lake Forest
hospital, where she was taken,
phvsicians said Jlittle hone was
held for her recoverev, Muystery
surrounds how she wi§ ~buined
and she came to be in the base
ment of the police station. *
Georgia’s Red Devils
Play Here Saturday
The Red Devils,, the reserve
strength of the Georgia Bull
dog’s, will play the strong Dah
lonega eleven from the North
Georgia A. &M. College on
Sanford Field next Saturday.
The geme will start at 38:00
o’clock and the admission price
will be SI.OO.
The Red Devils will be com
posed of Tassapoulos and Up
church at center; Bennett, Ras
nake and MecLaughlin at guards;
Thornton, Jonts and Thompson
at tackles; Kelly and McTigue at
ends; M&tcheon, . quarterback;
Captain kens and Jackson and
Revell at halfback, and Gerdine
at fullback. : ¢
HOTEL AN SLAIN;
KILLER CONFESSES
NASHVILLE, Tenn = (AP)—
Walter L., Liggett, prominent
Nashville grain merchant, was
under arrest Monday dight
charged with the murder of Tur
ney Cunningham, manager of th 2
Andrew Jackson Hotel, followiny
a shooting affray in an alley in
the rear of the Cunningham
home. |
Cum"ingham, who reesived four
pistol wouvnds; died while being
taken Yo . hospital. Questioned
by.poifce, ALigeett steadfastly de
clined to reveal the motive for
the shpoting, although he told po
lice Cunmninghath ' fired the first
shot. - 3
Polick' answering a call by
neighbors * were told five or six
shots iwere “fired. Liggett wais
arrested near “the se¢ene of the
shmunt*.‘ A 2 ‘
Liggptt. who ‘was a member of
C. L. Liggett & Son, grain deal
ers, was well known in Nashville.
He i#*i member of the Nashville
Boosters’ Club,
Mr. Cunningham was born in
Lebanon and yas 40 years old.
He left for Texas when a boy and
received his education there. He
first went with the Southland, a
Dallas hotel, and from there to
St. Lounise, where he managed a
hotel.
Returning -to Dallas, Mr. Cun
pingham came .to Nashville and
was placed "in'ehaige of the Her
mitagé hotel ° shortly ” after . its
constrietivn, “"He remained with
that hotél™ 11 "years, bédoming
manager of ‘tHe ‘Andrew Jackson
three vears agd:i .= %) i
ATHENS, AG., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1928.
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' (MEA San Antonio Burcau)
ll Miss Margaret Lewis (above) of San Antonio, member of an old
Southern family, has become the bride of Henry Belin PDu Pont, Jr.
l (inset), treasurcr of the B I. Du Pont de Nemours Company, powder
l manufacturers. Young Du Pont. is the sen of Mrs. Henry Belin
Du Pont of Philadelphia and nephew of Alfred I. Du Pont and Pien'cl
|S. Pu Pont. The romance began last January when Du Pont went
to San Antonio to visit his cousin Alexis, student of aviation at Kellyl
| Field. Subsequently young Du Pont had a plane built and made |
! frequent flights to Texas to visit his sweetheart. :
JOE SAYS THEY DID
; FIND. IT—FINALLY!
Joe Myers was telling this
one at Costa’s Tuesday morn
mg—and telling it as only Joe
could:
“We were going to the Yale
game, and I mean we went too,
riding continuously for 26
hours bhetween nere and New
York. I was driving, and af
ter almost heading into the At
lantic Ocean from a Jersey
City pier, inquired of a Dago,
a %’og, a Jew, a Gentile, or a
whatnot, which was the way to
the Holland tunnel, and after
thinking for a moment the guy
replied:
““You just go that way as
for as you can, and then ask
someoedy else.”’
DEBT PACT MAY
BE ELEMINATED
PARIS— (AP) -Ratification
of the debt settlement with the
United States and Great Britain,
apparently has been eliminated
from th 2 French government’s
consideration of the reparations
quéestion, it was intimated Tues
day after the cabinet had dis
cussed at great length the latest
move for reparations revision.
M. Locheur, minister of labor,
declar:d that the question of sub
mitting the American and British
agreements to the chamber of
deputies “under any form what
soever” had not arvisen,
Y
. §
Witches Abroad
.
In Athens Tonight
Witches and all kinds of
strange looking, ugly animals
will be abroad in the land
toright—it’s Hallowe'tn,
At least, the Druids of old
thought Saman, the Evil One,
changed bad people into aw
ful looking animals at Hal-
Jowe’en and then let them
roam about at night and
frighten little chilluns’,
Tonight, the kids of Athens
will be the ones who will be
the “strange-looking animals,”
and they'll have the time as
their lives, - ringing bells,
tooting horns and making all
sorts of wierd noises,
Satablished 1338
FNVE KILLED WHEN
HEAWY BOILER
EXPLODES
ETHER, Miss.— (AP) --Five
men were killed when a heavy
steam boiler exploded and hurled
200 yards into a store building
here Tuesday. ‘
Apparently out of water, the
steam box at a planing mill
cracked open with a mighty roar,
destroyed the building in which
it was located and sailed through
space into a store across the
road, demolishing that building
and the postoffice next door. No
body was in the store when the
heavy iron mass crushed it.,
DISCUSS GEORGHA
3 TATE SCHOCL
BOOK SELEGTION
ATLANTA, Ga. —(AP)— With
the adeption of textbeoks for
state’ schools for the next two
years as their goal. the state “oard
of educaion went into sesion with
Governor Hardman'in the offices
of Superintendent of School, M.
L. Duggan Tuesday.” More than
forty were in attendance at the
meeting, while various bidders for
textbook contracts paced outside
in the corridors.
The board did not exvnect to
complete their choice of the text
books before Wednesday, it was
announced.
SEEKS DIVORCE
ATLANTA, Ga. — (AP)— Mrs.
Lei'a Legg Blackburn Tuesday fil
ed suit for divorece from Palmer
Blaekburn, former Atlanta stock
holder, now serving a term in the
state 'prison on charges of lar
ceny -after trust: and fargery
growing out of his financial: op
erations.
Dally and Sunday—l 3 Cents a Week.
FAIR 15 ENDORSED
JEITLY BERE 1T
NEETHE lELD T 0
DISCUSS MOVEMENT
4 . . l
Enthusiastic support ofl
Clarke County’s Agricul
tural and Industrial Fair
here November 13-17, was
expressed last night by
farm representatives and
others interested in the
promotion of indusiry
and agriculture in this
section.
Dr. H. M. Burson presided. The
banqguet was given by the Fair As
sociation ot 'the Georgian hotel and
tarm demonstration agents as well
as home economics agents 'an
nounced that several counties in
the district are becoming inter
ested in the fair and will have
representatives here with exhib
its. i ;
‘Thomas N. Gaines, superinten
dent of schools of Clarke county,
who is in charge of the school de
partment for the fair, declared
that plans are underway for each'
school in the county to put on an|
exhibit and:compete for the cash
»rizes offered for that department
by the Fair Association. !
T. J. Shackelford praised the:
promoters |of the fafr, dsclaring
that Athens should have a perma
rent fair (organization. He de-{
seribed the benafits uw be derived
Ly agriculture and ingustry byj
holdinghfairs and the ;demoimtgc
«pirit that is. creat arough the
’mingling‘of thfie&% sec
tion at a commubity guthering.
L. 8. Watson, county |farm dem-|
‘onstration agent of Clacke county
said that the boys ecorniand cotton:
clubs of Ch\rkg are “realy for the
gates to onen. i
Women to Help. g
Prof. H. M. Lowry, of 'the State
College of Agriculture, 'who will
have charge of the College Fair
exhibit, announéed that that insti
tution is anxidus to co-operate
with the fair association in nold-]
ing a creditafdle fair here this
year. 3
Miss Ruby Th(-m})son, home ecc
nomics agent for Clarke, who #% in
charge of the women’s departmient
for the fair, stated that the vari
oug community ‘womren’s counei’s
und the girls’ clubs will put on &x
--hibits at the fair and are very en
thusiastic.
Mrs. Leila Mize, state ‘agent for
Lome ‘economics at the State Col
lege of Agriculture, erdorsed the
fair and promised the) full sup
(Turn to page thivee,) :
MITH FLAYG KLAN
MONDAY - NIGHT 1N
BALTIMORE 'SPEECH
NEW YORK.—(UP)—Governor
Al Smith came back to his hsme
sidewalks Tnesday to carry on his
final intensive efforts for the pres
idency.
A week from tonight he will sk
in his hotel home here and re
ceive the election returns, Until
then he will be in constant confer.
ences with the democratic manag.
ers, taking time out for three
speeches, at Newark Weduusdn,v,{‘
Biooklyn Friday and Madison
Square Garden Saturday. l
His case before the jury is near.
ly complete. He fintsued *hn last
of the evidence at Pa!‘rior: Mon
day night, the last parade there
lMon?y afternoon. From now on
it will be a rebuttal, not a mm-I
ming up, but a real Smith finish.’
' The last of the evidemce was
charvacteristically Smith'an, de
‘nunciation of ths Anti.faloon
League and the Ku Klux' Klan.
“He sought to link both of /the or
wanizations' activities with the re
publican campaign. He |pointed
tothe League statement rppudiat
‘ing Senator George Noryis, Ne
braska, republ‘¢an, who c¢iime out
last week for Smith and 'who has
‘always had the support ‘o( even
extreme drys. A 7
He brought forth an advertisé
ment in a Long Branch, New Jer
gey, mentioning a Ku Kfex Klan
tally which was to be held “in
conjunction” with the republican
national eommittee. He declared
newspapers had told about. a pub
lisher of the anti. Catholic [Fellow.
ghip Forum, travelling vrith the
republican nominee Herbgrt Hoo
{Turn to Page Eixh&) Gl
A.B.C.Paper. -7 .e Copies 2 Cents. 5 Cents Sunda¥s
HARSH AND GALLOGLY GALMLY
HEAR NEWS OF INDIGTMENT
FOR TWO MURDERS; SLAYERS
TAKE PAINS WITH DRESSIAG
ATLANTA, Ga.—(UP)—George Harsh and Rich
ard Gray Gallogly, the Oglethorpe University stu
dents arrested for two “thrill slayings” here, faced
first degree murder indictments Tuesday and in the
formal course of justice will shortly be brought to
trial.
Governor Al Smith
On Prohibition As
A Religious Dogma
“Throughout the iength and
breadth of this land, the Anti
waloon league has been en
gaged in the propaganda in
tended to make God-fearing
men and women believe that
the Eighteenth amendment and
the Volstead Act are dogmas
of religion. 1 know. of no
church in this eocuntry that
makes Volsteadism or the
Tightcenth Amendment an ar
ticle of redigious: faith. It is
nathtipg more or.. less..than
lepiclation ratified through
the excitement of war and
| lobbied through ecngress by
~ means of coercion and threat
and ‘has no religious sancity
about jt. In fact, every re
ligion worthy of the name
teaches the value of temper
ance, of scbhrie’'y and the dan
- Ber of self-indulgence; and to
say the least about it, should
cshock the American idea of
right to attemdt to use the
great moral authoritv of the
churches te make sincere men
and women believe that if
they attempt to deal reson
ably and open-mindedly with
a great social preblem, they
are unfaithful to their reli
gion, or that they have of
fended against God.”
Clarke Demccrats
Urged To Aid In
- National Expense
- Clarke County Democrats are
invited to contribute to the fund
for the National Democratic cam
{mign. An intensive campaign is
~eing waged ali over the mnation
in behalf of Democracy and large
amounts of money are necessary
to keep the party activity going
cu. the radio hook-ups costing
neariy a million dolalrs.
Any -amount up from a dollar
is eppreciated, and may be for.
warded to the Banner-Herald.
Following are the contributions
to date:
{ Walter H. Jones .. .. .. ...SIO.OO
B o .. DR
KA BN L.y o G
F. A: Lipscomb .. .. .. .. 500
E. J. Crawford SN e
KoM RN e
. WO L e e
W. L. Piuee .. .. .. B
el 3 Rowe .. .. .o GG
Max Miehadl ..~ . .. .0 00 D 0
BE. GO .. e DS
& R mande’ .. .. L s BN
MRS Coste - .. .. [ {9OO H 0
Chancellor Snelling .. .. .. 5.00
Charles E: Martin ..... .. 8,00
B.C.lompkin .. .. .. ... &0
TORE L, as e R
(CUT OUT AND MAIL) : g
To THE DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN
ORGANIZATION e
Clayton Street, Athens, Ga. "
I will vote for Alfred E. Smith and Joseph T.
Robinson on November 6th. TR
NABR v ®, oS i
: e MO
ADDRESS ... ...i 0. &,
~ (An expression from you will be appreciated.):
2 g
ou With Showers Tu i
Night and Wednssday. =™ =
o e S
M e e
ATLANTA, Ga. —(UP)—Geo.
Harsh and Richard Gray Gallogli.
the Oglethorpe University stud
ents arrested for two “thril}tflag
ings” here, faced first degree mur
der indictments Tuesday and in
the formal course of justice will
shortly be brought to trial. . .
At the same time the two 19
year old youths—eaen “orn with
a silver spoon in his mouth
came defendants in suits totaliin
$150,000, v
Mrs. Mary Belle Smith, a widow
at 19, left pennmiless
young hushand was killed by
bullet allegedly firea by Harsh
during a drugstore hold-up,
brought svit a%fl‘
for SIOO,OOO, I. V. llis, groey
store manager, wounded at. thi
same timefi nlga, .H, Meeks,
was ;lain ‘;3' another hold-up,
suit for 000 . o T
Hardly forty-dfght hours afte
they were arresigd, Harsh alleg
old-ups et a thrill,” a Fultos
county rand &rm"f \ndiet
ments against them. BEach ok
the news calmly Moncay . night,
Gallogly, whose mother is a mem
'»‘ser of one of the most hffinm €
‘spected families here, reiterate
‘his innocence, o as
5 “QOral” Coafauiog@ é‘f%’
Detective Chief Lamar Poole
announced Tuesday that Gs ‘;“ Iy,
despite his assertion of inm ‘::
had “given us a_partially “ora
confession” that Poole consideres
proved that he drove the holdsup
car of the thrill hunters. '= &8
Harsh, when arrested named
Gallogly as his spree comps i
Harsh, a tall, self-contained ar
cold-eyed youth, admitted, police
said, that he was the slayer o
Hoth Meeks end Smith. His sin
g'e excuse was, “We were drmnk.”
The seven hold-ups, &gl
allegedly took part in, n ted but
SSOO to S6OO, it was = leammed.
Neither youth reeded the money.
Harsh was a spendthrift at schog]
and Gallogly, whose mother lives
on an exclusive Peachtree zomd,
ran around town in a bri ‘* s
low car that flit‘{,ere(}il with bright
korns, sirens aal other lced%
ies. fi‘%}
Warn Gallogly. %Je
Police Tuesday admitted =
during the last few months ‘ti
had to warn Galiogly that
his connection with a old south
family, if he did not cease t ;
in false fire alarms, he w be
haled into court, They 3‘
delighted to swerve his bright yel
low car along after the fire trueks,
The three “star” witnesses «
the prosecution in the 1 h
expected to be William M “é“;-(
son of a merchant tailor; F..Mor
gan Sutton, soa of a proniipent
Atlanta doctor, and J. Dp Wright,
finance corporation employee. 4.
Mahoney is said to have besh
with Gallogly and Harsh soom &f
--ter the hold-up on Octoberssit,
when Smith was slain. His fathes
told police, “My son has somé fn~
teresting information,” Sutton, it
is understood, was a{mealedftp‘;
Harsh to dress a bullet wound in
{fis thigh after the same hold»
t was throt;gh knowled»= of “this
wound that Harsh was finally ug
down. e 2ok €Fk
Wright, a friend of the twy
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