Newspaper Page Text
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nV:\Lt LSE.. %'. f 53’22
800 Mo 93.
L ALIFORNIA PRIMARY NEXT ON LIST
B\bit Nix Not To Seek U. S. Senatorship
\ i ‘
g a L 1
JENIAN | B
i '
11007 CANDIDATE
U
‘ By DAN MAGILL
; bit N who has been insist.
y o urged by friends in all sec
<« of the state to ‘bécome a can.
? nited States Senator
©oeed the late iWm. J. Harris
4 ernorsiip, announced
P s definitely decided
. enter the seflatorial race.
S has: declined to
¥ enatorial candidate, Mr.
' that he may become a
f t indidate. Accord
to letters he has received from
| part f the state, Mr. Nix
b the way of being drafted for
: governorship. ' 1t is known that
econtatives of ‘yarjous grouns
‘ have written him point.
ut that it is his duty to be.
e a candidate for governor. In
tl essure, as shown by
o i telephone messages as
| ¢ nal /interviews, has
0 ute that friends here
feve M lix cannot turn down
is of the large number
(¢ s who are urging his
o nce to the governor’s race,
It helieved here that a defi
ouncement as to his pros.
tive hernatorial candida~y
1 be le by ~Mr. Nix this
.end. There is considerable
ivit 1 his behalf in all parts
the state and he is being press
-3 for an early decision.
ir. Nix’ friends here, as weli
in other parts of the state, feel
t his public career has reached
where he can be of in.
I ervice to the state ian
gover: office, or disappoint
large following 1f he declints
in. They have been in touch
Nix supportéers in various
ts of the state whe seéem 10,
d the same opinion. They hold
t the Athenian has beéén grow.
strength year ' after year
I that he today is confronted
possibly the n.est important
ision he has ever had to make
gard to his future as a pub
figure For this reason, it is
erally believed that he cannot
¥ turn down the demands of
oyal friends from all parts of
rgia that he become a guber.
il candidate,
.
o Cubans Killed
s Auto |Qverturns
.
At Sebastian, Fla.
SEBASTIAN, Fla, ~—(AP)—Two
bans were killed and five other
rsons injured when a. 16.cylinda?
tomobile, belonging to xa
ocolate Cuban ' prize fighter,
ned over near ‘here . late last
it while the party was enroute
m Havana to New York.
¢ party was driving: the car
'lO witness a fight By Choo.
&, now in New York.
The dead: Fermin Zaras, driver,
0 Rafael Rizera, both of Ha-
I Labrera Diosdado D@l Poso,
10 sa ¢ isa Cuban newspa.
nd one of those injured'.
i tccident oecurred when
< of e cars tires went flat.
fgentina’s Revolt
Head Dies in France
FARI (AP) '~ General Jose
a 0 Uriburu, 'leader of Ar
na’s 1930 revolution and its
JVlslonal president from that
"¢ until last February 20, died
v farly Firzay: at «the age of
Her an operation for stomach
: last Saturday,
pene Uriburuy, Argentina’s
' I,L” came -to France
t time ago to seek the
I itment he had negleect
] 'L press of governmen
ver 1,200 See Little lnternation‘alfiimw_fi
Livestock Show Here Thursday Night
: ' persons iattended the,
‘ al Little International |
1 10W, sponsored by the|
Sirloin club of thei
. te College of Agricul- |
k" Hardman hall 'l‘hursd.'l)"!
X, Hartwell, won th-‘-i
Pionship prize whichf
| SUVEr cup, The prize |
i L Snowy white dorsted!
-three animals, inolud.i
ght dogs, were entered‘
) vV and contested - for tho;
e '
) ldired Irigh setter, nwnPd%
: "CITY of Neorcross, won’
1 “Up over the other dog|
3 Saxon Hawkinsville, won'
; Up for having the best
THE BANNER-HERALD
Full Associated Press Service.
Here YOQ see the results of the Literary Digest poll on prohibition, one of the greatest unofficial expressions of pub.ic opinion ever record
ed in this country. Seventy-three voters in the poll out of 100 favored repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. Twenty-six voted for continu
ation. Only two states (shaded), Kansas and North Carolina, gave a majority for continuance. Kansas' dry majority was 397 out of g4-12°
bailots; that of North Carolina 68 out of 64,790 bailots. Nevada headed the wet column with 88 per cent of its vote wet. The Literary Digest,
having collected the figures, has given them to the public for the discussion they seem certain to evoke.
. Sl Sl e NRL es e
3 i
4 48';:;%:5 ) : : i 13 10877
L‘\"15.358 ,’ 1 Mon Tana NoxTH DAKOTA N & \_.;.( ) MAINE w
WS 19,995 [ - 2100¢ MmmT'Z Z ; ' " HAMPSHIKE
Oxgg £ » o 6810 wO6OB L fx.{/ et \ apmex
L so TR ‘Qv,sco;;‘,;%-” :‘3 ov | 4 6,620
, 11,44 {0 Bk P T ————...] SoUTH Duwr.v! L 110,528 / )M‘Cgs 5 I’J 2 BoOAT ' As.ngg?sxns
~— [ 10710 | Wmyne | 175.1115(? i 20,702 \41.335 o| e 39184
Pk LRI R e\ 0 Vs (X \a T
| Neyg, TT—<] 182 FOL el ey 3A22> A 18395 |.
o ] i Nesraska '\ 35%e i T om® | 333 V 3431
! 3;752 | U L“[‘--m-.... b 33,222 y TLLINOIS, o“‘o\} 280-‘3%97 el \ CONNECTICUT
X | Urag | = 19790 ey 228,972 10, 06,361 ) 1/ 60,959
: \ l" lozg | C?;gg;:o , . 53748 | 66,1 ;\_{ 7\;‘(37 u.;}se
I 4650 | y . A NEw JERSEY
: X / I 14,870 :IN;GAS : MisSOURI .Jf K:(;Z . 27 174,806
Cavir \ e i 42'25 106,519 53{) 1437 L 29,953
166,919 gT d 43890 o= e DeLawarg
A Ty ! S EE 32.
50,648 N Agrjyz, ‘ : e Sy, TENNESS! 32 429 6,425
ONA | New Mexico | | OKLAHOMA UARKANSASC/ %) 27,479 2442
7,027 i 4781 ! 30004 % 16,202 e Sfi'afi MAaRYLAND
el Nt 25026 | 14817 sts:] \ . 46,964
. i | l 15,305 | ALA. ‘\G‘?f;g : 14,318
i R TP 12047 : 204% % Tyioss %("io?gwm
N - B 7:’2‘2‘; !\Lz’gé} | 16,399 i West Vmorwia\ 3,009
s 33 : b T N 44,741
HOW THE STATES VOTED 024 e SRR 4471
IN THE LITERARY DIGEST POLL A, W
w 7 U. S. ToraL
FIRST FIGURE, WET 5 : 3431877
: 1,236,660
SECOND FIGURE, DRY - @
Progress is Believed Made
. But Little News is Given
. Out
HOPEWELL, N. J.—(AP)——Em-i
issaries continued to labor in se-|
cret Friday to get the kidnaped;
son of Colonel Charles A. Lind
bergh back, but concrete develop
ments were scarce. ]‘
Two Norfolk intermediaries ‘
were absent on unexplained mis-;
sions Thursday night, while a
third, Rear Admiral Guy H. Bur.’
rage, said at Norfolk. |
“I had a long distance tele_}
phone talk with Colonel Lindbergh
at Hopewell tonight.” ‘
He and his two colleagues, John
H. Curtis, boat builder, and Dean
H. Dobson-Peacock, have said
they have cleared away a number
of obstacles between them and,
thei robjective, which is return of
the baby. :
Farmers to Gather
Here Saturday for
Exchange and Sale
Farmers in this section who
have anything to exchfinge will
gather on the rear lawn of the
Clarke county courthouse Saturday
at 9 a. m. for the first Farmers'
Exchange in Athens, County Agent
L. S. Watson said today.
Second-hand farm equipment,
wagons, plows, feed, seed, harrows,
cows, pigs, etc. will be among the
‘items to be exchanged and soid
by the farmers.
The organization of the Farmers’
Exchange here is a result of the
idea. suggested to the Lions club
by W. T. Ray, Athens attorney.
The plan was sponsored by the
‘club and the Exchange will be su.
pervised by Mr. Watson. A similar
exchange has been conducted at
Jefferson for some time,
Guernsey, a bull and also the cup
for having the champion dairy
cow.
The best Jersey cow was exX.
kibited by B. S. Wilder, Muella;
J. F. McMullen, Hartwelll, had the
best Holstein, and J. C. Breedlove,
"VVatkinsville,'had the best beef
specimen, a Herford cow.
Mr. Knox won the sheep cham-
Jplonship with his white_faced dor.
sted lamb, G. W. Eberhardt, May
esville, won the hog ehampionship,
and T. J. Jones, Wales, won the
horse championship with a punch.
jon stallion.
All winners were awarded silver
cups. The awards were made bV
Dr. Andrew M, Soule, president of
5 g
(Continued on Page Five)
Cotton Dresses is
Rule For Graduates
Of Arkansas Schools
LITPTLE ROCK, Ark.—(APR)
Girls graduating from high
" schools in this county must
wear cotton dresses at their
graduation to recelve their di
plomas.
At the request of Parent.
Teacher associations, the Pu.
laski county board of education
passed a rule to this effect yes
terday.
Promotion of the use of cot.
ton and an attempt to pravent
a contrast between the dress.
es of children of wealthy par
ents and those of poor parents
were given as the reasou for
passage of the new regulation.
LOS ANGELES.—(AP)—A wo
man’s rage at the sound of a
neighbor’s lawn mower has caused
two deaths.
| wiss Ella May Thompson, 29,
shot and killed Paul Domnath, po
liceman, when he came to her
home to investigate her reported
attempt to shoot the lawn-mowing
neighbor, Mrs. Pauline Phol. In a
subsequent gun battle with police,
Miss Thompson, a mental case,
was Killed.
After shooting the officer, Miss
Thompson barricaded herself in
her home. She defied more than
50 officers, taking occasional shots
at them from the windows. A
| crowd looked on.
The police finally threw tear
bombs into the house. Screaming
the red-haired woman fled, firing!
a revolver. She fell mortally|
wounded under the fire of more!
than a dozen police guns.
! The woman clasped a photo
igraph of J. V., Baldwin, automo
bile dealer, who was sued for’
$125,000 for alienation of affec
tions last October by Luther Al
|ger, Miss Thompson's former hus
band. She formerly was secretary
to the dealer. |
Miss Thompson had been under
ithe care of a murse, whom she_l
{nad forced to leave the hoiise
ishortly before the police arrived.l
She had been suffering from a|
nervous breakdown, The pistolj
she used was the property of F.
A. Pilcher, Lincoln Heights jaller,,
lwho had been suspended by the
police department earlier in thei
day on charges of extortion,
Joseph Taylor, chief of detec-!
tves, said affectionate letters
[ from Pilcher to Miss Thompson
}were found in her home.
{ Y LT IR ]
iFlonda Star Leads |
g In Decathlon Points
| e
| PHILADELPHIA, Pa— (AP) —i
ljospph C. Hall, Univer‘sit_\' of F‘lur_|
‘jda all-around star, took the lead
|today over the three rivals in the
lfirst five events of the Decathlon,
fepening feature of thg Penn Relay
| Carnival.
| Hall amassed 37851765 points.
| George Munger, of Pennsylvania
lin second place had 3734.6805
points, 3
Athens, Ca., Friday, April 29, 1932,
|
: L)
\
\
1 e <
BONUS OPPONENTS
Holder of Congressional
Medal of Honor Wit
ness Against Payment
WASHINGTON,—(#)—An econo.
mist and a soldier joined today lni
opposing cash Redemption of the
soldiers bonus now. |
Before the house ways and means
committee, professor Irving Fisher,
Yale university economist, and
Richard W. O’Neill, of New York,
ia former state «hairman of the
Disabled American Veterans, as
‘sailed the Patman full payment
fplan. .
Fisher said it would be a blow to
business confidence, He joined in
the views previously expressed by
Secretary Mills and Eugene Meyer,
chairman of the Federal Reserve
board, that it was unsound "econo
fmically to inflate the currency by
two billion dollars to pay the
bonus, . |
Won Medal |
O’'Neil, a holder of the Congress
ional Medal of Honor, said needy
Neterans should be upheld but that
“the real veteran wants a job
with a living wage.”
O’Neil] told the committee in op
posing the Patman bill “I am ear
nestly and sincerely trying to re
present the interests of the vet
erans,”
“This committee could give ser
ious consideration to the relief of
wveterans in dire need,” O’Neill said.
“Of the total holding certificates
today, two-thiray don’t really need
the cash payment,
“If the bonus is paid now the
"vet«mns will be living practically
in a fool’s paradise for a couple of
Tnnmthh; then he will realize he
lhas spent his family’s only safe
lguard." ¢
‘ Ao
\ RUSSELL ELECTED ‘
ATLANTA—(AP)—Edward Rus.
sell, brother of Governor Richard
B. Russell, has been elected pres
ident of the student body of the
Columbia Theological Seminary for
’1932-33.
Oklahoma City Illegal Operations Put
Ostecpath in Jail; Surgeon is Hunted
OKLAHOMA CITY —(AP)— An
osteopath was in jail and a sur.
geon was sought as an investiga
tion continued. today into the
deaths of seven young women, al.
legedly from illegal operations.
Of the seven, two were Univer.
sity, of Oklahoma co-eds. They
died a few days ago. Incomplete
information on the death certifi.
catées caused Lewis R. Morris,
county attorney, to make an in.
quiry,
The osteopath, J. W. Eisiminger,
was held without bond on a mur
der charge in connection with the
death of Miss Virginia Lee Wyck.
off, 21, university student.
A wide search was pressel for
Dr. Richard E. Thacker, linked by
investigators with the death of
Mrs, Frank Lee, 17. year-old uniJ
Newspaper Accounts
Of Man’s Arrest is
. Basis for Sentence
"ATLANTA., —(AP)— Ia the
absence of pnosecuting offi.
cers, Judge Jesse M. Wood in™
city eriminal court today relied
on newspaper accounts of the
arrest of Tom Alken to sent
ence him to 12 months on the
chaingang for possession of
100 gallons of liquor.
Aiken pleaded guilty. The
officers who arrested him after
his car hurtled down a bank
into a creek were not in court.
“Were the newspaper ac.
counts of your case substanti.
ally correct?/ Judge Wood
asked,
“They were,” Aiken said, and
thereupon he was sentenced.
KILLED IN U. S.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. —(AP)— The
charge “unwise governmental lez
islation” has the cotton industry
“in the throes of strangulation”
was made today by D. W. Brooks
in his presidential address to the
convention of The American Cot.
ton Shippers association,
“It is not necessary for me in
this instance,” Brcoks said, “to di.
rect an attack upon the agricul
tural marketing act, or the Federal
Farm board, its Frankenstein, nor
upon the Hawley.Smoot tariff
which has resulted in the creation
of trade barriers inimical to the
interest of the American cotton
farmer.”
Terming the threat of foreign
competition a “bugabod”, Brooks
said *“the potential consumption of
cotton in Russia far exceeds her
ability to produee,” and Russia to.
day “is a potential market for
thousands of bales of American
cotton when and if the channels
of trade are cleared in that direc
tion.”
He charged that control of cot.
ton cooperative associations “hds
hbeen wrested from the hands of
the individual farmers.”
versity freshman and secret bride
of a university athlete.
Dr. Tracker has been missing
since Saturday, when he w&s
charged with murder as a resuli
of the death of Miss Robbie Lou
Thompson, 21, telegraph company
employe, upon whom he was al.
leged to have performed an illegal
operation,
Dr. Eisiininger pleaded not
guilty and his preliminary hearing
wais set for May 6.
Deaths of Mrs. F, 8. Roach, Mrs.
Isobel F. Ferguson, Ruth Hall and
Marie Epperson were others unler
scruuny.- e .
Morris said he was informed
fourc private nursing homes were
operated here to care for girle
upon whom illegal operations were
performead. S
HIGH JAP OFFICERS
-~ SERIOUSLY HURT;
' i | . ,
BOMB HURLED
By MORRIS J. HARRIS
Associated Press Staff
Correspondent
SHANGHAI, China—(AP)—Five
high ranking Japanese Army,
lNuvy and diplomatic officials were
critically wounded today when @
bomb burst among them as they
sat in a reviewing stand watching
a military parade in honor of the
hirthday of Em‘peror Hirohito,
All of themm were in serious cons
dition tonight, but the doctors
thought they had a chance to re.
cover,
‘ Japanese troops appeared in the
'streetz of the Hongkew district
?lmmedltnely, resuming the military
patrol which was withdrawn' after
the fighging in this area stopped
‘two months ago, No one knew
what the effect of this incident
would be on the long.drawn-put
peace parleys between the Chinesa2
and Japanese, but it appeared cer.
tain these negotiatons would suf
fer,
A mob of spectators swirled
about the man someone spotted as
the bomb thrower and beat him
severely before the police - broke
through and dragged him away.
Claim Confession
Later the military authoritiss
said they had wrung a confession’
from a Korean that he was the
man who threw the bomhb. 'Six
other men, sald to he Chinese, aiso
were under investigation,
The most seriously injured Jap.
anese official was Mamoru Shig.
emitsu, the Japanese minister o
China, who may lose one of his
legs. ‘
Kuramatsu Murai, the Japanese
consul-general, also was b:ndly%
hurt, his left leg shattered by a
fragment of the bomb. |
Another piece struck General
Yoshinori Shirakawa, the Japanese
commander.in.chlef, knocking! out
#ll his teeth, General Kenkichl
Uyeda, who was in command ot
the beginning of the) Shanghal bat-‘
tle, lost three toes and recelved
serious bhody wounds. Admiral
Kichisaburo Nomura, the naval
commander.in.chjef, lost an eye.
Scores of forelgn military offi
cers, including a number of Amer.
icans, had left the reviewing stand
a few minutes before the bomb
was thrown,
Government Wage
-
Slash is Pushed
.
By Rep. McDuffie
WASHINGTON. —(AP)—Chair
man McDuffie of the house econ
omy committee told newspaper
men Friday the hard hit omnibus
retrenchment bill “is not done for
by a long shot.”
Wiien “a lot of members of the
house began to realize that it
takes eighty bales of cotton or
five thousand bushels of wheat to
pay the salary of one $2,500 gov
ernment employe they are going
to look at this wage cut busi
ness in a different light,” he said.
“f am going to give them one
more chance to vote for the eleven
percent cut, exempting SI,OOO, be
fore the bill is passed by the
house.
“It will be a record vote and I
expect to see plenty of flip flops.
“The government employes are
going to have to take a bigger
cut later if they succeed in final
lyv knocking out the eleven per
cent plan.”
1
Two Massachusetts |
| Women are Burned
MT. DORA, Fla.—(AP)—Two el-l
derly Massachusetts women W(-?rel
fatally burned in a fire that de.|
stroved two residences and a ga-|
rage at Tangerine, Fla., near here,
yesterday.
Miss Tillie Kelley, 70, of Otter
River, Mass.,, died when she was
trapped in her® burning home, and
her cousin, Miss May Kelley, 68,
of Templeton, Mass.,, succumbed
today to severe burns. |
LOCAL WEATHER
E. S. SELL, Observer.
e e e et
Cloudy, foilowed by showers
in north and west portions
late tonight or Saturday.
The following is the local
weather for 24 hours ending
at 8 a. m. today:
TEMPERATURE ‘
Highest . . Wbey 5 5 s i 150
LOWEORt oo B 0 s it s v 800
Mokl . i Gicn i B S D
Normal .o nwiii ii 5 i . 988
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours .. .. .00
Total since April Ist .. .. 3.34
Deficiency since April 1 .. .00
Average April rainfall , .. 3.568
Total since Jan. 1 .. .., .1844
Deficiency since Jan. 1... .01
A. B. C. Paper—Sing!e Copies, 2c—s¢ Sunday
Another Crucial
Test Facing Gov.
Roosevelt There
LEWIS P. SKIDMORE
.. . S RAR x s
| 5 - e 3 ¢
1 . ,
i
: TS SR v i
: b
: Sod
¥ ST R S
TR R S S
Vi Lo RS Y B
& : R
3 )
3 ! 3
3 ; : : A ;
Mr, Skidmore will deliver an ad_
iress on “The Value of a Museum
to Community” at a banquet to
be given at the Georgian hotel at
6:30 o’clock Fridav to the South
tastern Art association. He is di.
rector of High Museuny, Atlanta,
Journal Employes WAI
Give Banquet in His
Honor Tonight ‘
ATLANTA.—(AP)—Major John
8. Cohen was given a warm wel.
come by his home people when he
returned to Atlanta today ,from
Washington where He took his
seat Wednesday as junior senator
from Georgia.
Every employee in the various
departments of The Atlanta Jour.
nal greeted the major today after
he came to the bullding to take
up his customary duties as presi
dent and edltor of the paper.
The ‘employes of the paper ar.
ranged " for a welcome banquet to!
the major tonight at the Capltali
City eclub, It will be striatly a
Journal party,
Many friends called to greet the
rew senator during the day. He
attended to business matters and
made arrangements to return o
Washington Sunday and be in his‘
seat Monday when the senate con.
venes. |
While he is away from Washing- |
ton Senator Cohen is paired with
Senator Townsend, Republican, of
Delaware, on all matters which |
come before the senate for de.
cision.
Tax Collector to
Be Named Saturda
At Electio e)l,'e
nH
‘ The called election Saturday to
elect a tax collector to fill the un
expired term of the late Arthur M.
'Burch will find Mrs, Burch, wife of
\tlw deceased collector, unopbosed.
[Th"' new tax collector will go 1nt0;
|office May 1, L |
i The poirs open at 7:230 a. m, and
lclose at 6:30 p. m, in ’.he.Clflrke“
county courthouse, with only one
ballot box. W. Milton Thomas and
J, H, Lumpkin, justices of the peace
are in charge. |
F Following is the list of mana-i
gers: Mrs, E, 8, Kirk, Mrs, Preston |
Almoni, Mrs. W. R. Bedgood, and |
‘Harry Kennebrew. '
Dr. McHatton and Miss Tessen Address
Art Association Convention Friday
Members of the Southeastern
Art association entered the second
day of a three-day convention
here Friday. Miss Annie May
Holliday, Athens, is presiding at.
the sessions, which opened Fri
day morning at 9:30 o'clock at
the Georgian hotel.
The convein.don ended its ses
sion -at the Georgian at 11 o’clock
and assembled at Dawson hall,
Georgia State College of Agricul
ture,, when Dr. T. H. McHatton,
professor .of horticulture at the
college, spoke -on . “Finishing
Touches for Gardens,” :
The- eonvention assembled at
the Georgian again at 3 o'clock
when Miss Eunice Welch presid
ed and Miss Louise Tessen, Chi
cago artist and vfltg‘f spoke on
culty in understanding the pres.
H 5K
EDITION
%
! LEADING PLACE
8y BYRON PRICE
WASHINMGTON.— (AP) —(Cali.
fornia, which tipped the electoral
balance to Woodrow Wilson with
a dramatic flourish sixteen years
ago, may now be destined to
write another unforgettable page
of Democratic history as arbiter
of the fortunes of Franklin D.
Roosgevelt,
Next Tuesday’s three.sided pri.
‘ mary comes just at the moment of
greatest suspense for the New
} York governor and his adversaries.
The Roosevelt parade is at its
first halt, Al Smith’s victory in
Massachusetts was far more
sweeping than - expected by the
Roosevelt followers, and the di«
vided vote in Pennsylvania dis
closed a strength which surprised
them. They desire, imperatively,
to get the bandwagon rolling
full speed again. :
Roosevelt faces both Smith and
Speaker John N. Garner in Cali
fornia. The campaign has been a
hammer and tongs chorus {or
weeks. Roosevelt has the advan
tage of having made the earliest
start, Smith has the advantaze of
the shove given him by his east
ern showing this week. For the
Garner supporters, it is a desper
ate battle to win for their candi
date his first convention votes
outside of Texas.
44 Delegates
The forty.four ' delegates alone
make a sizeable prize, but their
numerical strength does not tell
‘the whole story.
i If Roosevelt wins, he will have
'put psychology of victory again
on his side; reduced the stop-
Roosevelt bloc to a margin so
thin that it must depend on the
staying qualities of most of the
favorite son delegations for suc
cess; and brought the Garner
boom to such a state that Gare
ner may declde to get out, ¥
if Roosevelt loses in California
it 'will mean almost certainly that
his rush to foreclose the nomina
tion has failed, and that the ques
tion will be thrown into the con
vention itself, with results no one
can foresee. e
Altogether, expectancy over the
(Continued on Page Three.)
! -
'Georgia Debates
Carolina College
| g
' InChapel Tonight
Jack Harris, Athens, and. Bennie
Zeesman, Milan, will represent the
|Universlty of Georgia Friday night
|in a_debate against the College of
lCharleston (South Carolina.)
i The subject of the debate will
]be “Resolved that the eighteenth
|amendment sbould be , repealed.”
| The Georgians will uphold the
Enegative gide, .
| The debate will begin at 8 p.
{m. and will be held in thé Uni
| versity chapel. No decision will
|be rendered, The public is cordi.
lelly invited to attend.
| "Mr. Harris, a graduate of the
| Athens High school, is a junior
{in the School of Commerce, He
|has been active in literary and
| debate activities at the university
{the past three years. He is a
member of Demonsthenian Liter.
jary society.
| Mr. Zeesman is a student in the
Lumpkin Law school., He has also
| been active in literary and dgh_a.te
lactivities. A member of Demos=
[thenian Literary society, he repre.
| sented it in the annual anniversary
{day exercises held recently. He
{has also served as president of
{the society and has taken part
lin other intercollegiate debates.
“Creative Art in Foreign
Schools.” Miss Tessen spoke
Thursday on “Creative A::i&gd
Industry.” She said that “c Ve
art is am outward expressioa of
an inner emotion. This inner
emotion that is seeking an out.
ward expression is constantly
walking hand in hand with pres.
ent_day events. The circumstan
ces of today are constantly affect
ing the emotions. Those of us
who are not artists or engaged in
creating art effects, but *who are
interested in art, often have diffis
ent creations of our foremow
leaders. Their work is so differ
ent from anything we have ever
seen or are used to, so different
from all we have been taught to
(Continued on Page Three)