Newspaper Page Text
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‘MIDDL!NG,... 6%0
PREV. CLOSE.... ss:c» v e
B, 100. No. 38.
linn
IiED ASKED 10
Al
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[THIRAW BY REP
i ‘IUJ{H‘ :
t
niinAl
L fit
", CHe
| PWEisE
cader of Garner Forces
Wires Georgia Judge
From Washington
OWARD CONTINUES
PRIMARY CAMPAIGN
imilac Situation Will
Arise in California in
Near Future
b
WASHINGTON — (AP) — The
WAS
antry was treated today to the
atradictive spectacle of Speaker
or'g strongest supporters for
. presidency pleading against
eorts to sectureiifor him ‘the
oroln delegation to the Demo
ot national comvention.
Representative Sam Rayburn of
exas, chosen leader of the pro
rner forces and intimate friend
4 speaker, wired Judge G.\ a,
sward of Atlanta & request that
. withdraw = his Garner-proxy
~dldacy in the Georgla primary.
m ‘:»u,,_,.:r was coupled witlh the
.+ assertion that the speaker wag
bt candidate and would not
v( in any state primary. Never
oless word ‘from = Georgia was
Tndee Howard would continue
LTy,,» Garner would not go inte
hv primaries requiring consent
irect or Indirect, of the candidats
imself, was a foregone conclusion
b view the speaker's determined
nd to have nothing to do with
ment ‘on his behalf. The
svhurn move may be interpreted
s ff y protect the speaker
n wppearance of tacit con
{ to t proxy race. It might
b 2 1 to prevent a decisive
i gince the state’'s vote has
eey ngidered to be in the
t of Governor Roosevelt of
Y 10TK
Some observers saw it in a dis
-1 connection between
Garner hoom and the fameod
Stop-R-osevelt” drive, and fore
st t the efforts on behalf of
1o speaker henceforth would be
onfined most entirely to devel
pment such enthusiasm u'.l‘
ver the country as to make him
10 likeliest choice in cdse of a
0 tion deadlock. ‘
Substantially the same issue will
e g i California’s primarwl
here 4 Garner slate of candi
-1 the making; along with
17 Roesevelt and Alfred
Smith. It remains to be seen
bether Ravburn and the other
arnerites will eeek to squelch
hat movement also.
Y |
CONTINUES WORK
ATLANTA—(AP)—Judge G. FH.
Howard’s campaign manager, L.
homas Gillen, says the Atlanta
urist has entered the Georgia
residential preferential primary,
loL as a proxy but merely to per
1L voters to express sentiment sot
peaker John Garner.
Answering a - telegram urging
41t Judge Howard refrain from
ntering the- Georgia primary
eitier as a proxy or in any other
ense as a representative of Mr,
arner” Gillen wired the sender
fpresentative Sam Rayburn of
fXas in Washington, that he was
misinformed about the Georgia
The congressman sald the tele
" was sent as a friend of the
Peaker's and = “speaking for his
08t of friends.’”
Judge Howard's ¢ampaign man
-Ber replied that “nefther Judge
(Continued on Page Two.)
NNOUNCE FIGURES l
4
ON “JOBLESS” WAR
W \,ism{-—(AP)———Hoadquar— '
- Of the e (g depresslon"'
J ~announced the following
oo Tor 5o s ohiained in
“n - stat~s © BHving the %4
-, chded at noon yesterday,
k. ima. (441) Tuscalposa S.I
L alisas (295) Texarkana -9, Geor- !
~ '%49) Macon *B9, Dalton 18,
gl (751) 'Breaux Bridze
g ' oc¥andria 10, New Orleans
le 5. Mississippi (521)
= :_.‘ Tennessee (149) Cam
o Erwine 30, Nashville 15.
L ‘N parenthesis represent
to date.
‘Alfalta Bil¥? Murray, “Fighting Mad”,
Plans Georgia Speaking Tour in March
By MILBURN p. AKERS
(Associateq Press Staff Writer.)
GARY, Ind.—(AP)—Willlam H.
[ lfalfa Biy) Murray, says he is
Litin’ mad” spile ig going to
ke a run down to Georgia to
L. (1® Deople there about the
| Uldudggery ygeq o keep me
vOf the preferential primary in
- The Oklahoma governor, an as.
L ant for the Democratic Presi
[éntia] flomination, speaks at Fort
o e and Indianapolis Thursday,
o “ling his Indiana tour. He
b, P 4 here Wednesday night.
0T leaving fop Fort Wayne he
a 2 Word - Ehat B eadii s
we (AMUS Georgia offielals to put
vy 1 2€ ol the ballot, Prevous.
enir. 24 been informed that his
i, VS received too late for
b ' Was: fthisre ae plenty of
Hme,” the Oklahoman said. *“That
o U was thepa unless the maii
Full Associated Press Service
Doughboys Man Foreign Defenses
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snapped behind their sandbag barricades at the border of the International Settlement, Much of their work
to date has conslsted of building and strengthening these barricades, which are the only defense of thz
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MRS. ORA HART
AVERY DIES IN
RICHMOND, VA.
Mrs. Ora Hart Avery, former
Athenian, died at her home in
Richmond, Va., Wednesday night.
Mrs. Avery was supervisor of
home economics for the state
board of education in Virginia at
tha time of ha: death. She held
the office for eleven years., Before
going to Richmord gshe was a
member of the home economics
faculty of the Athens High
school.
Mrs. Avery was a native of
Union Point. She attended Lucy
Cobb Institute, the Georgia Nor
mal and Industrial school, now
the Georgia State College for
Women at Milledgeville, and the
University of Georgia, She taught
home economics in a number of
Georgia high schools and in the
University of Virginia Summer
school.
Mrs. Avery is survived by her
mother, Mrs. James F. Hart of
Athens; a daughter, DMiss Nella
Avery of Richmond, and two bro
thers, L. C. Hart of Richmond,
and John Hart of Dublin, Ga.
Funeral services will be conduct
ed from the home o Milledge ave
nue at 3 o'clock Friday afternoon
by Dr. G. I. Hiller and Dr. E. L.
Hill. Burial will VYe in. Oconee
cemetery. The pallbearers will be
Major Hunter Harris, Hart Sibley,
E. E. Lamkin, E. R. Hodgson, Dr.
R. P. Stephens, and Dr. L. L. Hen-.
dren.
Mrs, Avery was Dorn September
22, 1884, the daughter of the late
Captain Hart and- Mrs. Hart, She
has been {ll for some time.
system has broken down, like lots
of other things. They knew I'd
beat Roosevelt in that state just
like Il beat him in North Da
kota.. ~That’s why they don’t
want me in that primary.
“All right, I'll fix 'em. I'm go
ing down there just as soon as I
fill my North Dakota speaking
dates. T'll tell my friends there
about the skullduggery and get
them to scratch Roosevelt’s name
off as a protest if they can't write
mine in.”
Murray said he would go to
Georgla early in March.
The governor reiterated his
statement that he would refuse
to accept a Vice-Presidential nom
ination, “I don’t want ii"” be
said. “Do you think I would want
to be in that office if the ld
blows off? I don’t want .to’ be
shot. But the Presidency is dif
ferent. . If I get that job I can
keep the lid ‘on.” '
THE BANNER-HERALD
TALLADEGA, Ala.—(AP)—
Regardless of ‘whéther the
anti-hoarding drive had any
thing to "de : with, another
theusand dollars was in circu
lation today.
An old Negro shuffled up to
the cashier’'s window of the
First National bank of Talla
dega Tuesday and inquired if
“Dis is de place to repolish
some money.”
After receiving favorable re
ply the Negro unfolded a tat
tered saddle blanket in which
reposed 100 ten dollar bills.
The money was deposited to
his credit in a savings ac
count.
| Prodigies Sought
For Northwestern
| .
University Rells
By JOHN W, STAHR
EVANSTON, ILL., —(&)—Ap
parently there’s a lot more precoci.
ty in America than even a universi.
ty president wouid imagine,
| More than 100 applications had
heen received today, ten days after
President Walter DIl Scott of
Northwestern university announced
that his school would like to admit
next fall, a half dozen 13 to 15-
vear-old prodigies.
| And this before any of the school
principals, to whom President Scott
made his only direct appeal, had
responded with any nominations!
! The applications recelved, made
in surprising number by the
'chlldren themselves from various
parts of the nation, were inspifed
[‘solely by brief notices carried on,
‘press wires, -
| In the face of this veaction, Pre.
sident Scott would not venture to
forecast today what the “Harvest”
will be when the scores of educa-l
tors have nominated the mental!
‘marvel who have <ome under their
observation. l
CARDOZO APPROVED
WITHIN 10 SECONDS
f WASHINGTON ~(AP)—The ex
pected unanimous approval to the
nomination of Judge Benjamin N.
(Cardozo of New York as associa‘e
ljustice of the Supreme court was
’given by the senate without any
!more than the bang of a gavel
l 1t took ten seconds at the close
|of yesterday’'s - sesgion to ratify
| President Hoover's choice of a sug.
‘rcessor to the . wvenorable Oliver
Wendell Holmes,- who retired un
der the weight of great age.
- Justice Cardozo, is not expected
to, take his place on the highest
bench unt!l Mareh 14,
TODAY’S BEST
HUMAN INTEREST
STORY
Athens, Ca., Thursday, February 25, 1932
MRS. HOOVER IN
CHARLESTON ON
SOUTHERN TOUR
CHARLESTON, 8. C,—~(#)—Mrs.
Herbert Hoover mate Trumbull’s
famous portrait of George Wash-‘
ington in the city hall the first stop
of a sight seeing trip today upon
her arrival here on a vacation trip
to the south, ]
The President”’s wife arrived with
a group of friends on a overnight
train from Washington. She was
greeted at the railway station by
city officials and immediately ex
pressed a desire to see the Wash
ington portrait,
John Trumbull, one of the most
famous American painters, paintea
the portrait in appreciation of
Wahington’s visit here in 1791. The
Prigeless painting is owned by the
city, :
After the visit to the city hall,
Mrs. Hoover left for Magnolia and
Middleton Place gardens, In her
party are Mrs. Edgar Pickard, o
New York, Mrs. Stark McMillan,
lof Calltomia, Mrs, Mark Sumvzml
of Washington, Captain Jool T.|
Boone, the White House physlcinns,]
and Mrs, Boone,
Later in the day they will board
.the Sequeca, a motorship owned by
the Department of Commerce and
[go to Mlami, Fla,
STORY ELECTED -
| ASHBURN, Ga— (AP) —Alex|
Story was nominated sherifft Wed- |
nesday- by Turner courty Demo- |
crats by an overwhelming major
ity. R. H. Johnson was nominat- |
ed tax commissioner, and Miss |
Nina Cox was selected school sup-l
erintendent.
Winnie Ruth Judd is Transferred to
Arizona State Prison; Awaits Noose
. ARIZONA STATE PRISON,
FLORENCE, Arizona.— (AP) —
Sentenced to hang May 11, Mrs.
Winnie = Ruth Judd, ceavicted
“trunk” murderess, Thursday o<-
cupied a cell in condemned row,
‘nopeful her attorneys may yet
save her from the gallows. .
~ Mrs. Judd was brougbt to the
state prison from Phoenix Ilate
Wednesday night, having left
Phoenix a few hours after Supe
rior Judge Howard C. Speakman
denied her a new trial and sen
tenced her to death.
. Although the execution date was
set for May 11, state authorities
said it was not iikely she would
be hanged for at least 15 months.
Under Arizona law, an appeal
to the state supreme court is man
datory in all* cases where the
death penalty is set. If the de
fense does not make an appeal;
the state must ask for a review
of the evidence. Because this ap
peal must be made the execution
cannot take place for more than ai
SERES - L Satats R
LEGION'S BAMPAIGN;
FOR UNENPLOYED 15
OPENED IV ATLANTA
Local Campaign to Begin
Next Week ; Jobs for .
5,000 Atlanta Goal
TWO |JOB FAKERS
ARE SOUGHT HERF
Legion Warns Citizens o’
Two Painters Claiming
~ Post Sponsorship
. ATLANTA,—(#)—Atlantans went
Fhuntlng “within their own borders
‘today for 5,000 jobs for the unem-’
ploved.”
| Beginning Atlanta’s sharve of the
Ameriean” Legion’s nationwide cam-
Paign to put 1,000,000 persons back
'to work;“a systematic canvass of
}’byel'}' business and househclder in
?‘wwn was »'undertaken by cam
palgnerfl‘f‘;‘om the Legion, orga
nizeg labor, and civic clubs.
| Two armies were employed in the
drive against the depression here.
The first, divided into four regi
>nts, each under a colonel, was
assigned the task of contacting
business houses ang seeking a 10
Fper cent employment Increase ;here.
‘The women campaigners worked
the residetia]l districts for “made
jobs” such as cleaing, painting and
E.ropairing.
. Final intruction to the canvass
tors were given at a meeting last
night,
l Can e Done
’ Basil Stockbridge, member of the
(teorgia Legion committee on un
}empluyment, told the workers that
‘i“ln~ the World ‘'war we Americans
found that the Hindenburg line
was pénetrable by steady hammer.
ing, taking short gains and consoli.
diating them, until finally the
whole structure toppled. In the
shme way the Hindenburg line of
unemployment is vulnerable, We
gre up against o job of the first
magnitude, the principal strength
of which lies in a state of mind.
People have become accustomed to
thinking pessimisticaily. We have
got to banish that, create jobs and
gobothe wheels -of industry to mov
w again,”
" He suid the drive was “the great.
est humanitarian effort of the gen
eration,”
T. K. Qenn, banker, paid tribute
to the legion as “the one organi
(Continued on Page Two.) .
County Primary
List Closes; Two
New Candidates
[ Time for entering the Clarke
:'County Democratic primary expired
Thursday at noon with only two
new candidates entering, C. B.
Chandler for county surveyor, an
office he held several years ago and
Harold T. Tuck for tax receiver,
the office now held by W. M,
Bryant, who is a candidate to suc
ceed himself. Mr, Tuck is a former
councilman, noble grand of tne
1. . O. F. and past chancellor of
the Junior Order.
[ Walter E. Jackson is unopposed
for sheriff; E. J. Crawford is. the
only candidate for clerk of courts;
R. C, Orr is unopposed for ordi
;nary; W. R, Coile is unopposed for
superintendent of schools and E. L
Smith is unopposed for tredsurer,
! J. F. Shepherd, Young Davis and
Willlam H. Akins are candidates
for coroner: Arthur M, Burch and
"A. E. Davison are candidates for tax
collector; J. H. @Lumpkin and
George T. Burpee, candidates for
Jjustice of the. peace,
The primary will be held March
26. All eitizens, otherwise eligible
to vote in the primary, who have
paid 1930 taxes and registereg by
March 10, may vote in the primary.
Hugh J. Rowe and R. 8, Crane
are candidates for membership on
the executive committee from the
county-at-large, Two are to be el
ected,
Sherift J. R. McFadden, who
accompanied Mrs. Judd to the
prison from Phoenix, said the
convicted woman was in “very
jovial spirits” on the trip, singing
several Spanish songs. Mrs. Judd
learned Spanish while living in
Mexico severel years ago.
McFadden said he questioned
Mis. Judd during the automobile
trip about details of the killings
of Mrs. Agnes Anne Leßoi and
Miss Hedvig Samuelson, but that
she declined to answer most of
his questions.
In answer to the query, “did
you have an accomplice?” the
sheriff said Mrs. Judd replied:
“Yes, I had an accomplice.” She
refused, however, to name her
purported accomplice. In court
Wednesday when she was sen
tenced, Mrs. Judd denied author
ship of a letter said by her hus
band, Dr. William C. Judd, te
have been written by her, in
man aileged accomplice was
Chinese Withstand Heavy |
Shelling, Stage Counter-
Attack, Regain Positions
CORPORATIONS AN
NOT PRAGTICE LW
JSTATE, 15 RULING
Supreme Court Rules on
Atlanta Title And
Trust Co. Case
ATLANTA.—(AP-—The Georgia
SRupreme court today reaffirmed
its ruling that a corporation can
not practice law in Georgia, in sus.
taining the fight of Selicitor Gen
eral John A. Boykin against a
charter being granted to “Lega’
Rervices, Incorporated.”
The charter was sought in Ful.
<on superior court by Joseph G.
i\ ‘opkins and Frank C. Crawley.
Atlanta lawyers, and Solicitor Gen
eral Boykin asked that the Issu
ance of the charter be enjoined.
Judge Virlyn Moore refused to
grant the injunction, but the Bu
preme court reversed his ruling.
Officers and attorneys for tho
Atlanta Bar assoczation jolned
Fplicitor Gieneral Boykin in his ap
peal.
i Court Ruling
“The decision of this court in
the case of the Atlanta Title and
Trust company against Boykin,
solicitor general, did not author
ize the proposition that Superior
rourts can grant cnarters to cor.
worations “o practice law in Cfor
gia,” the Supreme court ruled.
“The practice of law embracas
more than the concuct of. litiga
tion. A greater, more responsible
and more delicate part of .a .law;
vers work is in otner ‘directions.
The practice of law, according to
the laws and customs of the courts,
is giving advice or rendering ser
vice of any sort-which requires the
usa . of , legal knowledge or skill”
JUDGE RULES KEY
RECALL PETITION
PUBLIC PROPERTY
ATLANTA, Ga.—(AP)—Any cit
izen who desires to do so may
soothe list of signatures on pe
titions to recall Mayor James L.
Key, Judge E. E. Pomeroy ruled
Thursday in denying an injunc
‘ion to prevent publication of the
list.
Labor leaders had sought to
keep the signatures secret until
after the list is certified by city
council for a recall election. :
The petitions shows 5,283 names
of registered voters, City Clerk
J. Henson Tatum, has reported.
From that number there had been
45 withdrawals Wednesday, leav
ing 5,238.
Henry A. Beaman, attorney for
the labor leaders, in arguing be
fore Judge Pomeroy for the in.
junction Wednesday, said the pe
titions were in many ways simi
lar to ballots and should come
under the laws designed to pre
serve the secrecy of the ballot.
He contended the plan to publish
the names was designed to in
timidate signers.
City Attorney James L. Mayson
answered that the city clerk re
ceived the petitions for the city
as public documents, and that no
citizen could be denied access to
them,
“1t would be a monstrous law,”
he said, “which would say that
any public official may withhold
records which any citizen may
see,”
‘He said the only damage feared
by those seeking the injunction
was political, “and a court of
equity is not interested in poli
tics but lets the politicians fight
it out.”
KITCHENS SHERIFF
GIBSON, Ga.—(AP)—Glascock
county Democrats have nominated
J. L. Kitchens for sherift and T.
A. Walden for clerk of superior
court. .
LOCAL WEATHER
E. S. SELL, Observer
Cloudy, possibly rain in ex
treme south portion; slightly
warmer in extreme northwest
portion tonight; Friday partly
cloudy, warmer in central and
north portions. Gentle to
moderate northeast winds be
coming variable,
The foliowing is the- local
weather for the 24 hours @nd
ing 8 a. m. today.
TEMPERATURE
Bighest <... vid ieisinis 90
Towest s.o s i baki e 0
MERAR civ s visi an. D
Normal ... tuvinie 510
RAINTFALL
Inbhide ... Jvve g T 00
Total since Feb. 1 .: ~.. 546
Excess since Feb. 1 .. ~ 114
Average Feb. rainfall .. .. 5.09
Total since Jan. 1.. . ..10.60
Excess since Jan. 1 .. .. 1.68
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—sc¢ Sunday.
WET TEETOTALER
SEhENaae i B AR i MR N
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7~
UNEAL. il
NEA Fo.. wourth Bureau
Mrs., lda. M. Darden, above,
Democrat, of Fort Worth, Texas
says she doesn’t know the differ,
ence between a highball and a gin
fizz, and wouldn’t drink either if
she dfl, but che's a candidate for
Congress on a platform with only
one plank répeal of the 18th
amendment, “Cilizens are tired oi
listening to prohibition hypo
crites who defend the dry laws in
one breath and use the next to
brag about their home brew,” she
said.
WET 3 A FORCE
VITE OM DRY LAW
House Wets File Petition
Making Vote Mandatory
If 145 Sign :
WASHINGTON—(AP)— Resort
ing to extreme parliamentary tac
tics to secure consideration of a
state-control prohinition amend
ment, the house wet blocs today
filed a discharge petition making
a vote mandatory if signßd by 145
members.
Representative Linthicum, of
Maryland, chairman of the Demo.
cratic wets, presented the petifion.
*f the 145 signatures are obtalned,
the house will vote on whether the
home rule constitutlonal amenl
ment sponsored by the organ'zed
democratic and Republican wets,
but rejected by the judiclary com
. mittée 14 to 9, shall be consid
ered on the floor.
Upon the announcement that the
petition was pending, Representa
| tive (R., N. Y.), said:
“Come on; let’s sign it"”
Amid congiderable confusion
half a hundred representatives in
cluding two women members, rep
‘resentatlves Pratt of New York.
and Kahn of California, republi-
I'cans, filed down intg the well of
{the house and begin to sign the
lpetmon. .
SHOCKS INMATES
JOLIET, IH.-——Warden Hill of the
gtate penitentiary lined up all the
inmates and sald: “One of you is
a thief” This came as a bomb
ghell to the murderers, hijackers
gangsters and crooks.
The warden said somebody had
stolen the prison’s football and two
football suits. If the low person
who did it fails to return the ar.
ticles, there will be no more foot
ball.
Georgians Pay Over $16,000,000 Taxes |
For Support of Cemmon Schools Annually
ATLANTA. —(AP)— Georglans
are taxed more than $16.000,000 an
!nualy in support of the common
‘schools. ; S , .
' The largest portion of the $15.-
231,574.77 paid in 1936, flzures for
1931 not being available, came ri
rect from the state by legisiative
appropriation or allocated funds
totaling $6,154,796.05.
County-wide taxation brought
$4,657,888.23 for the schools; muni
cipal taxes totaled $4,511,783.01
and the district tax $907,107.48, ah
being used in' the operation and
maintenance of the schools.
Receipts of $483,019.46 came to
the schools for tuition and inei-|
dental fees also used for schnoli
operation costs but not direct tax
atjon. ‘
Total receipts of the schools, un-!
der State Superintendent M. b.r
Dugan in 1930 . from all sources
were $23,987,799.68, including fuf\{isf
from independent systems, the
Smith -Eflx}!q:’ quhd.qy ‘Rosenwald
fund, General Education ~‘boary,
H2ME
@b &5 EDITION il
COMMERTS ON OPEN
OOOR XOTE OF U
& s
Changed Conditions Show
Treaty Revision Need, -
Japanese Declares * =
dy MORRIS J. HARRIS
Associated Press Staff =
Correspondent. 5 B
SHANGHAJ —(AP)—Hammerel
111 day long by a terrific Japan.
'se bombardment, the Chinese
rmy in the Kiangwan sector
.warmed out of {its trenches
Thursday night, launched a-sur
orising counter.attack, and won
yack nearly all the ground it had
o3t during the day. %
in the afternoon the Japanese
hrew their full force on the
I.andful of defenders northwest of -
Kiangwan village, beat back the
Chinese first line and drove it in.
to a disorderly retreat.
The attack swept forward
around the village;—_—ripped
through the line and virtually
surrounded the Kiangwan garri
son. The artillery pounded the
Chinese second line and a fleet of
forty Japanese planes rained 260
pound bombs on the defenses.
Then the attack halted for a
time while the heavy guns con
tinued their withering fire on the
Chinese rear.
The counter-attack appeared to
have taken the Japanese by sur. .
prigse, for it carried the Chinese
back across the shell-torn ground
and Thursday night . Kiangwan
wag still in their hands.
There were: reports that two so
three Japanese divisions were due
Friday or Saturday and that &
big Japanese drive would begin
early next week.
| , GIVES OPINION
TOKYO.—(AP)—A high Foreign
office official after reading press
dispatches quoting excerpts from
Secretary of Staté Henry L. Stim
son's letter to Senator Berah on
the Sino-Japanese situation Thurs
day questioned the validity of
Secretary Stimson’s = assumption
that America’s naval concessiong
in the Washington - treaty were
predicated on guarantees embod.
ied in the nine-power pact.. 3
The terms of the naval agree
ment, he said, actually were com:
pleted at the Washington confer.
ence before the powers began &
real consideration of Chinese
problems and Japan rhad agreed
to the naval terms, leaving many
problems of the most importanee
to her for settlement in later
stages of the eonference.
Japan, he asserted, accepted a
60 percent battleship ratio early
in the conference, thereby leaving
the Japanese delegation open to a
charge of having laid all their
trump cards down early {a the
game, Had Japan wished to bars
(Continued on Page Twe.)
Sam Aiken Wins Plea
For Review of Case
ATLANTA —(AP)—The 600!"?»
Supreme court has granted Sam
Ailzen the right to appeal from:the
veraict that sentenced him to
death for murder. He was to have
died Friday. "
The court granted a mandamus
that automatically stayed the exe
cntion. It compels Judge John B.
Humphries of Fulton superior
court to sign a blll of exceptions,
which will enable the court to ree
view the case.
Ajken recently was captured in
Houston, Texas, after he escaped
from jail hera.
Jeanes fund, Slater fund, endow.
ments and the sale of property and
insurance adjustments. iR
Operation of the white schools
cost $21.071.045.45 of the total re
| coipts, the remainder going to the
Negro schools. W
There were 385,252 enrolled in
ithe lower grades of the. white
isohools in 1930 and 236,322 in the
INm:rn schools; 471,821 ltudwilvhl
{the high schools fer white chil
ldren and 8,719 in the Negro high
schools, SRI
! The average annual salary paid
teachers in the elementary.grades
}or‘ white schools was $§501.06 to
imen and $622.39 tos women; in tha
f?\'ny:m elementary schools $276.25
;fnr men and $239.13 for women
{teachers. The salaries in the high
'schools for hoth white and Ne«
sf:r(‘.f-s‘ were somewhat higher.
' The averags teacher in the white
fnlemmtsry schools taught 37.39
children and in the high sechools
2519 students. The average was
higher in the Negro %‘g&