Newspaper Page Text
’ COTTON
S i
MIDDLINR waisi v oo 6 3-8¢
PREVIOUS CLOSE .... .8 3-8
Vol. 100." No. 2§fi
EARLY AGREEMENT ON DISARMAMENT FORECAST
N. Y Mayor To Crusade Against mmany
IIKEE SOUNDS GALL
10 WAR AGAINGT
CITY ABUSES
py RAYMOND CROWLEY
NEW YORK.~— (AP) — Acting
Mayor Joseph V. McKee, breaking
openly with Tammany Hail, has
sounded 2 summons to a crusade
against what he calls waste, .ex
iravagance and abuses in the city
government.
pur: ting like a shell filled with
political T.' N. T., the Bronx
pemocrat’'s - denunciation of the
forces in control of the city gov
enment was discussed excitetfly
throughout the ecity Thursday.
Rising late Wednesday nigat
pefore bankers, = merchants and
pusiness men at a dinner, McKee,
who has advcoated a poliey of
sharp retrenchment, declared in a
wice trembling with emotion that
citizens are “sick and tired” of
present conditipns “and they. are
not going to allow ‘those things
to continue.” He did not, how
ever, mention Tammany by name.{
His speech, wholly unexpected,
wis reen by politieal - observers as
foreshadowing a possible titanic
struggle at next year’s . mayoral
election to ‘wrest the city govern
ment from Tammany and allies,
with McKee perhaps leading the
assault. |
McKee, who was professor oOf
Latin and Greek before he enter
ed politics, moved from the pres
ilency of the board of aldermen
to the mayoralty when James J.
Walker resigned. A non-Tammany
Democrat, he iy a member of the
Bronx organization headed by
Fdward J. Flynn, long an active
supporter wofivo@Governor Franklin
D. Roosevelt,
Was Outvoted
Almost from the outset, McKee
found himself = gutvoted .in the
hoard of (*:‘tin'l:lJE? on many ques
tioms by a bloe consisting largely
(Continued on Page Eight.)
- ATLANTA—(AP)—An augment
el force of 200 patrolmen, detec
tves and supernumeraries, 120 of
whom were volunteers, joined in
an intensive drive on crime here
list night to check a wave of ban
ditry, slayings, robbery and petty
thieving.
The volunteers came from ‘flle
ranks of regular police who uffer
el themselves for extra duty after
an emergency call by Acting-Chief
A Lamar Poole, The crime. situ
ation, he said, has created “an
tmergency in Atlanta.” :
The aecting chief gave instruc
tions to officers to exert eévery ef
fort to “apprehend the burglars
and holdups who have been oper
ating in the eity; and to this end
“very suspiecious person who can
ot give a good account of him
self should be arrested.”
Tuesday night the second vietim
of bandits within a few weeks
Wis slain and the emergency order
followed his. death. o 5
SIOO.OOO Endowment
Given Atlanta School
NEW YORK,—(#)— An endow
ment of SIOO,OOO to establish a pre
fessorship in the school of business
i Atlanta university was included
I the $5,256,000 gifts made to edu-
Citional institutions by the Carne
tle corporation for the fiscal year
fnding Sept. 30, 1932.
The report of the activities of the
Corporation was made public yes
frday by Frederick P, Keppel, pre-
Sident, Of the total gifts $873,000
went for library activities. . 4., |
Gunman Kills One Man, Kidnaps Woman
Companion of Another After Robbery
CHICAGO.— (AP) —A gunman,
Quick on the trigger, early Thurs
day kilied a salesman in the pres
“nce of his woman companion and
then, a half hour later, heid up
another couple and abducied the
gir], .
The escort of the abducted girl
“d the bandit boasted hé had
Just killed a man and warned
dcainst *sany funny business.”
The man killed in the first hold-
U) was ¥rank F. Jordan, 38, a
‘tlesman. YHis companion was not
diturbed by the gunman, who
lled immediately after the slaying.
The abducted girl was Miss Lil
i}*m Henry, 19. She had not been
Both ua: mmwtm kid-
A 4 >
FULL Associated Press Service.
FLASHES OF LIFE
VICTORIA, B. C. — (AP) — A
spanking for every round of suds
is Attorney General R. H. Poo
‘lley’s latest innovation to curb
‘beer drinking among British Co
}lumhia's younger bloods.
' And they will be spanked in the
iplsza provided hy nature for cor
poral correction—the woodshed.
' The. punishment, designed to
chasten beer-swallowing bovs
‘without confining them in jails
with common criminals, was de
vised by the attorney general
when called on to review the case
of two young:ters from Kamloops.
They considered it the smart
thing to do to take their girl
friends to a beer parlor in the
town of Chase. %
Because they were minors and
not entitled to enter beer parlors
under the law, the local magistrate
said they must pay S3OO apiece or
spend three months in jail, Mr,
Pooley said he would commute
the sefitence to a spanking if their
parents would do it under police
supervision just ta make sure it
hurt.
'BUT THE SECOND TIME? AH!
EVANSTON, lI.—(AP)-—Becom
ing curious about the Kkissing bus
iness, The Daily Northwestern,
student publication of Northwe:t
ern university, checked up on the
sitnation and found that most co
eds are pretty much agreed that
no man, no matter how fine a
chap he may be, deserves to have
a kiss on his first date with a
girl. g
HE BITES CATS FOR FUN!
RALEIGH, N. C.— (AP) —Leo
Hamilton bit off a cat's tail for
the fun of it, but found it wasn't
¢o much of a joke after all.
Magistrate L.,” M. Waring held
Hamilton for the superior court on
a charge of cruelty to animals.
FAINT HEARTS WIN BEAFR
QUEBEC, Quebec.—(AP)—Gas
ton Marquis went to a camp near
the Maine border to hunt moose.
No moose were to be found, so
with two companions he set out
listlessly for a walk through the
woods, armed only with revolvers.
A 475-pound bear also was out
for a yalk and the two parties
met. Marquis’ companions faint
ed. Marquis fired wild twice, hit
the bear with a third shot and
joined his friends in the faint.
‘When they came too, there was
the bear lying near them, very
dead.
i\Back-to-Farm Move
Started in Atlanta
‘ ATLANTA, —(&)— A movement
designed to place 1,000 Atlanta fam
iilies on abandoned farms yesterday
received the support of the For
'ward Georgia committee.
Roy Lecraw, chairman of the
committee, pointed out that 60
families already had been returnea
tc farms and that 52 of them wera
‘now self-supporting. He said thau
all had formerly been recelving ala
!from Atlanta charities,
Bankers Attacked in
Labor Division Report
CINCINNATI, O, —(#)— Bankers
are accused of dominating corpora
tions and determining labor policies
in a report considered today by the
convention of the metal trades de
partment of the American Federa.
'tion of Labor.
' The report, submitted by James
O'Connell, departmental presideny
|says in part:
“When bankers believe wages
shoula be reduced, the corporations
are practically compelled to agree,
When corporations believe the
wages should be advanced and the
hours of labor reduced, the bank.
er's consent must be secured before
the charges are made.
while they were scouring the
neighborhood in search of the
slayer. :
Jordan and Miss Emma Danke.
25, had stopped their car in front
of a friend’s home when the gun
man appaered. Opening the car
door on the side where Miss
‘Danke sat, the robbher covered the
couple with a revolver and de
manded money.
Jordan sprang out of the car
an started around to tackle the
robber. The gunman ran to meet
him, firing two shots as he round
ed the car. Both missed. The two
‘man appeared. Opening the car
another shof, killing Jordan, and
then fled. ‘
Later, as Miss Henry sat in an
L}aaqto in front of her home Wwith
booRE et g e Gt 3
THE BANNER-HERALD
More Than One Hundred Citizens
- Will Attend Banquet At Y.W.C.A
~ For Chamber of Commerce 8 P.M.
eRR S e
g S e
B e L
k: RAT R R R e
. st TR
e e B
R ORI R o
bR T e
P e
g
PR S
B ST
TR SR RS S T
s, OO
o e
; b A
g s A
L A
%
REIR, &
- More than one hunred persons
are expegted to attend the annual
meeting of the Athens Chamber
of Commerce at the Y. W. C. A,
at 8 o'clock Thursday night.
The banquet will be the first
that has been held by the cham
ber of commerce in several
months. Sale of tickets, 50 cents
each, was progressing Wednesday
and Thursday meorning at a grat
ifying rate, chamber of commerce
officials said. Although the ticket
sale is expected to be well beyond
one hundred by -night, arrange
ments .have been made to take
care of those who fail to obtain
their tickets by the hour of the
banquet, b
Hughes . Spalding, Atlanta law
ver, who is echairman of the
Board of Regents of the Univer
sity of Georgia System, will speak
on the relation of the university
te Athens. Joe Costa, presidéent
MARY ATHENIANG [N
“BLUE MOO GAST
First of Two Performances
At High School Audito
rium at 8:15
By TOM DOZIER |
i “Once in ‘a Blue Moon,” W. Al‘l
lan Royal’s romantic comedy
drama, with over 150 Athens peos
rle in the cast, will be presented
Thursday and Friddy nights al
Mell auditorium. The curtain will
rise both nights at 8:15.
_ Reserved 'tickets for the produc
tion went on sale Wednesday
Imorning at the Moon-Winn drug
{company and will continue through
Thursday and Friday. All seats,
must be reserved dx' * the Moon
'Winn Drug company. There will
[be no extra charge for reserved
| seats. '
i “Once In a Blue Moon™ will be
presented under the auspices of
the Athens Parent-Teachers as
sociation. Proceeds will go to-1
wards a reserve fund to be used
for the education of school chil
gren who would otherwise be un
able to attend school. 1
Eleven Athenians will have roles
in the principal portion of the
‘program, the actual play. They
are: . Miss Frances Clary, Miss
}Ruth Dillard, Mrs. R. M. Foster
Mrs. Rufus Snyder, Miss Mildred
lTeasley. Mrs. Walter Cornett, J.
C. Bell, Weaver Bridges, Dr., Al
bert Timm, (Clyde Basham, and.
“Red” Fitzpatrick.
A group of “tired business men”
will be portraved by 30 prominent
Athens merchants.
Famous characters (in the day’s
Jnews will be imitated by other |
| Athens men. John Elliot will be
ia “plushing bride”; O. J. To]naa‘
will give a characterization of
’Eddie Ccantor; B. M. Grier, super
intendent of Athens City schxfls,
| will be the “girl with the $1.98
’ JContinued on Page Eight.) i
LOCAL WEATHER
Cloudy, probably rain tonight
and Friday, slowly rising
temperature in west portion.
TEMPERATURE
Highest .... ..co «o-- . 2000
Lowest .. e 8 e
BERE i aae o Rk ..46.5
Normal .c.. c.oc fsess s R
RAINFALL ‘
Inches last 24 hours .... .. T.
Total since Nov. 1 .. .... 21
Deficiency since Nov. 1 ... 138
Average Nov. rainfall .... 2.89
Totelsien A 0 3Lo o iill
HUGHES SPALDING
Athens, Ca., Thursday, November 17. 1932.
. e Y
T A R v SO -:~‘-'<:-:~'~.".
B R e Sk Y
P 3 S R
BOR R R A TR %
B %
oo ":f",:"'fli"::..\ 3 b &
R e E
B R ki
B s ®
si R B
NB L o
R A %
s Ry
B O s k
RS 3
5 R =
B R
o R 3
e B
R % B i RS i
t-'::-:. R -:-:\-g,&,. RRS a s S R
B R e
SR R o -Z*'V.-.~.-?.'-;">:~:-;':.:Jai-:-:{'?fi"‘?.‘.:', e e
B o B N R e
SRS s
R Ry
o R o
SRR e R B
R o
s g 71353\‘.~;-\:153535355ififflé'.-:i:lE;fvf’:4?:3 i
PR s ARSI A
S R R RAR 0k
o e R o s
’3?"'"":-':1:1:5 SRR 5;:5:;:;:;:;::{:;?;}::;:-:;:_»:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::5:;’:;:}:1‘~
- e
R L R s
R ?\‘%S:1~i..:1:»:-:'<’<f§§:1:k1:1,
B R s 3
R
-:1:2:3:65:‘{ R R 4
e
T R 3
>‘.;§:st-:;‘-:-': R
e R o
e SRt - Y SRR
PRRSISIRRRN a BT
RIS . P - R
e
B s RS
NN R S
SR N R
B .R L e s
SR ey ~:_'c{:-:;.}:5:{:}:;:;:5;;'721{:;.;:i:;:i‘;::j.'}.’?:izf:i:f:;??;:?:;':-':}:
R R s §!> e
AR A B R R e
R RN
JOSEPH COSTA, JR.
of the chamber of commerce, will
make the annual -report of the or
ganization. Mr. Spalding will be
introduced by Judge Thomas F.
Green, member of ‘the board of re
gentii i
Tate Wright, chairman of the
progtam . committeg, announces
that the addresses of President
Costa and Mr. Spalding and the
iintl‘oducti.)ti by Judge Green will
be the only speeches on the pro
gram, :
The new directors of the organ
(Continued en Page Eight))
GEORGIA ESCAPES
PREDICTED FREEZE
Cold Wave in South Side
tracked by Low Pressure
Area
ATLANTA —(AP)—The south
east was all set today to shake
and shiver In temperatures of 20
{and 23, but the weather did a
mild double cross and modified
during the night. WORCRS ’,»*
The Weather bureau here said
a low pressure area pokuufig;
upset winter's plans to give this
section some real cold \Mfifl
| The.low reading here today was
20—which was 10 deMWI
than anticipat<d. .»’ : i,j’?fi;
‘Frost was Vheivy here and in
other sections of the Wi
. S i~ ) e
but newhere did the thermometer
drop to levels expected., ,‘r;m
| WEATHER MAP SROT' s?:j
(By the Associated Pressi] t%gn
The nation’s weather *g
as spotted Thursday as a-polkas
dot dress. Ve e
The wintry blast that moved
across the country ‘tromf&fiég yest
Wednesday appeared to be :pend
ing itself in a final burst otfi'iy
at scattered points .along th
eastern seaboard and in the _,Som;h"."f
While the Pacific northwest was
| welcoming surcease fromia stormy’
spell New York was awaiting a
‘chilly onslaught. .
| The snow was melting on the
prairies of eastern Kansas Thurs
day while Washington, D. C., was
faced with a prediction of *“much
colder” Thursday night.
Michigan was :till blanketed
with snow, but Oklahoma, which
(Continued on Page Eight,)
Speakership, Prize Post in House,
Will Be Subject of Lively Contest
By CECIL B. DICKSON
{Associated Press Staff Writer.)
WASHINGTON.— (AP) — The
speakership—prize post in the na
tional legislature—promises to be
the subject of a lively intra-party
contest at the outset of the new
Democratic congress.
Two candidates, Representatives
Rainey of Illinois, Democratic
floor leader, and Rankin of Missis
sippi, chainman of the wveterans
committee, already have formally
announced. : |
Other contenders expected DY
their friends to officially enter the
race soon are Representatives
Byrns of Tennessee, chairman of
the apprepriations committee; Mc-
Duffie of Alabama, the Democratic
Whip; B : Bi O = f%'bama’ l
cing Democrat on the rule!l
S e
—ESTABLISHED 1832
LANONT CALLS WAR
DEBTS JUST BUT
“IMPOSSIBLE”
i NEW YORK, —{f)—Two strang
lers of world trade, in the opinion
of Thomas* M. Lamont, are tariff
iers and an ‘upnatural stream’
of war debt payments. He called
the war ‘debts “perfectly just” hu
“impossiple.” i i
The f'nanciers declaration abou
,debts. coming at a time when the
!problem has once more leaped to
the fore at Washington, was greet
ed with much interest.
Lamont, partner in J. P. Morgan
and Co,, discussed yesterday ‘“some
}ot the major causes of present.
day conditions,” telling the confer.
.ence of universities that “the single
underlying world-gshaking cause”
was the world war and ‘“the unwis.
dom of man, who permitted tha:
;“’Bl‘," vk " .
After the armistice, he, said, the
war was transferred from the milr
tary to the ecenomic field.
“Here America lxis been ohe ot
?the leaders in the economic war”
he declared. “In the two drastic
tariff increises of 1922 and of 1930
she set standafds for the strangu
llution of trade which other weaker
nations felt compelled to emulate,
The “ALbi” of some Americans
that our troubes ‘were due to the
panic in foreign countries, he saiq,
was heard to sustain, since “Eu.
rope’s crisis in the bring of 1931
e¢ame 18 months after the American
collapse of October, 1929.”
Perfectly Just”
“Others,” he <continued, ‘have
found’ still a different scapgoat. It
is .congress, and behind congress
the American people, which for
yvears has insisted upon the foreign
governments paying us the perfect
ly just—perfectly just, I say impos
sible war debts.
“We have held to the idea thai
these great overseas payments, re
presenting in general nothing ex
cept exploded shot and shell, shall
be paid -every year—A quarter of a
billion dollars ‘each year-—an unna.
tural stream of payments, choking
the chanmels of world trade.”
Mr. Lamont held that the remedy
for present economec conditions
was in rebuilding the capitalistic
system and in seeking economlic as
(Continued on Page Eight.)
Ruth Elder Not to
Appear as Witness
In Apartment Fight
RENO, Nevada— (AP) —Ruth
Elder, aviatrix, divorced this week
from - Walter Camp, jr., will not
have io appear in police court
Thursday and perhaps mnot at all.
~ Police said she looked on while
Kendrick Johnson and M. T.
‘Holland fought after a Monday
w party in an apartment
?%@Each received a black eye
and ~ Holland = filed assault and
battery charges against Johnson,
;%%Mattomey. District Attorney
'A. P. Johnson said Thursday the
hearing had been “indefinitely
wed" to give the defendant
‘more time to recoyer.
mn was ar}ested after Hol
land complained the attorney
stfigck‘ihinl when he tried to stop
Johngon from beating Miss Elder.
\Miss Filder denied she -had been
beaten: = She said she “ducked”
.wheén hostilities began.
\ :g‘l';}\grosecutor said he doubted
if Holland would press charges
against Johnson, bparticularly be
cause two policemen who attend
ed the party have announced they
wifl;%fi'@tuy that Holland deliber
ately picked a fight and “got what
he asked fov.”
Miss Elder and Johnson have
appeared = together in public fre
quentiy 4
lcommlttee, and O'Connor of New
! York, alto a' member of the rules
| group.
| The speakership becomes vacant
| March 4 when John N. Garner of
‘| Texas, leaves the gavel in tie
‘thouse to preside over the secnate
|as Vice-President, The 313 Dem-
Locratic . members-elect of the new
|housé will eaucus behind clo:ed
| dcors before thelr first session to
select - their speakership nominee.
| The geographical location of
|the Democratic speakership candi
|dates already has begun to figure
in the contest. In annourcing his
candidacy Wednesday, Rainéy said
the middle-west fQu‘ . that since
| President-elect Roosevelt came
|from the northeast an@ Vice-Pres
! & ;:v W ."."?'i',lgs,
SRR e :
STORK VISITS HOME OF SON OF GOY.
ROOSEVELT; LEAVES 8-POUND SON
& W:'\':.NE"-:Q‘*%::;:‘&
RSB RN S
‘\%3\3*“;’{
ol :.4.»‘.:;«:;;-;:::&:E:.:;:E::«: g,f::g:};:‘:;:;x::3j-‘-:E;.’;:s:::i:;;i-:—;‘.::‘z‘:.z:;- ee .
- L i =*'»:;f§:.»:3;*.“-:1:;;;5;1:.\‘;2»i;#:i:":‘-?; \%”?
b A .“:\.&::‘:::::::::::Mi--" “‘-“lfi:{iz";y"""f~ S --,;5::;;:-,-':.‘.»::Z;:i;:5:?.‘>::i<3:?3%%;:2555:‘.}5?;’25:5;:-
RRRRRA NSR S X J;;g:f;,:{:};}:-;',‘ i:'.'i;“-fi'\:s33"-5:':f:::;;5::25‘.:::_::‘__."v-::s:...
s*et o " v;;i.,j;;--_:;';?f;_ =jzi"f;:':;s3:;;E::z:Et:txir-tz.:;?-;;s:g;;ég;_;;:} .
: t}%\\}\ t‘%\\ ::1:{1‘1:;,-5::5 SRR pmcon o 5 '-:E:Z::E:EE:EIS'ESz'g:_.\ &
e S \‘z\ S R ; bR "-.--;»j:-_f; :3;;5j§;::;;,:§;;' &“"?;.p(\
5 \“3&.\\'\*\%& KC‘@% ~.*{;_‘::'. R i Ij;;_;};i;:,»:;__::;:5:_;3_?:2;g i’\v%;é
\“‘ .o @* . . e s;s;\;:t;;;;:v;:s;%z:s;53;;;»;;::«-&:
\‘& \ 2 \fi\ b 5 v‘ *
b S -‘::.\r.:-L\':l:;»‘.\;-‘!fii%.*.:..;a_..;,;- SR £R R £ eR N Q;:'-‘;J;:.*,-:;»:fi:t.‘r?,&::"
N ':N:\>§'fl.£::!:~':s;:;\.:-~:~ -.;:%w"\%t-"?':}'\%i-:_;_.:;';v.;g.;::!;:-i S R 3 3 Av:.:"-"x::;..:i::g"l"*"5"1'5::’_;\.;:: ;:::2:::‘:::E:";::E;:::}éix:::
‘s\\qfi\‘}\{i\?‘\'ufl} i&},‘-\\ £R R : SRR AR B R :::::::'::::"{"::'fiizf
:E:EESE::'}'\:'::::"\*?E=:.. “;'-A:.::;::;-; BB R .15:55:52:;:?;3;;-_ R ':;:;;:;5;:5;53.1::5,\';3_::;:5;‘5',« .::E;.:;:5:5?::;:35::*;&5;5&--,
“\\v\i\:“\ se ; i ‘;.;,.-;?;r;r;ig:f‘:fzfsei;:_::,‘ i,‘fié;sis?;:;§s§§sffiz;§§§égsiiiiiifig;;;ggg 653’:
B .»:L‘Z.::%_.'E:EE:E:E SRR RSR i S F{E.is;fig;ii”‘fi;fifii'l:s:;3s;s;s3:s:;_. ::%EE%?; -
\\i\\%m‘ R ..-:fl..’i:;:;.;-j;::\ : i 35 S % ~*§<¢‘>\\‘,‘<°‘,“§{¢<{
::?.i::‘::;‘-&::&::—‘,—.:. \:%3%\\, S G R Y ‘r'~'~’;‘?>_x:-;::;::=;>‘;.;;5¥;;_a:__' o. .
J&\‘%\{i\\ i*““r R R T \ “-.::Z:,f:" S ) ~\\‘3,{4@ 8 ._.2 ‘-., 5 E?.Gf:g
.:‘__::!!-..:-.:.m.:-:;_ o e By A RN ey S \~«'~“-‘3:<.';,:;;._ eo " . ‘::.‘:
\\A:&\ {g\» A - -11:%!; "-:55“:5" $ *:@%“fi s S
M»\% T» oo I§§ ;%M;:
g & ”‘w oo = :g":?\% o
) V\V% “\3\ S ; «vlv’e’tqhfi?fi> 4 A
{'*{fi”" %}AE% R g “Rigc;%’é@% - .
2 ..‘f.\y.\_.:.-_ 8 \.:;:.\", o N g e B "'~l2;’::§,‘“‘:-\‘-';._,‘.‘:- e . v s
& S ‘%fi%‘? 9\%5?‘ S AR RN “g,wx\ § -
e S ii;”‘a‘@ v§ ‘?s§'s§".>9’{‘> e BbR ) -h%@}*a;-%*% SRR ‘»&@1“ 1
RIS R SRR R S RS _:;;:::::::fi,"\_::b WL" ‘- .
s}%§?& | ?@.{;\\g";" "111J:<,‘ ,:c::,:::-:;:i».:&‘; "‘ £ 3.{ ;‘!-‘ rs?:--’i'-,' ‘(:;:M:;la(.wi%’ “\fi
3 t i . ..:: :. & “‘.:::::.. 351:’*1' RPRbR B % -:_-:;gw;gn‘ R S
\Qx‘?&'«@ }2@**&'\\ SR : -.,i:-?:;g;f&,“:‘::‘ : 1 *)“’ : \!T{ ; “;‘.}““‘\‘ x'h():? .
Bfn \‘°")§\‘\\“ ey ;:.".‘,;;';.},;:1;;;}"‘:_“” &5% :o :
‘\gg:j\a .\.:. bgéfi\&fi hg,& R )"&! L% & ;&: :"\s‘%“zz(\?
b R ':;‘:*,;:.-1 L% R 3 RRBo NDR
SSR e R SRR !k‘? p RO 8R2% 3 " ;;j'.\"f::j--’:-)-.’l *"‘hx\f B
1%%&.?\& 4“‘ HIO 2 dm‘&&‘s’, % 3/"?4:,;‘ 1Y Sae "i’i;%fi:.
%fi&""}‘ 3So FE 8 § '{:!,r;‘:;:gy‘g‘?‘“ b" 9 \\v\\\
. ll‘fi{g{: J\" 3 m:i:::fii--'t&i_\: " Sehe &b 5% R .‘-\"-«,‘_ *).;. f:?g";i: o 5 b,xg)@y
.% . :‘.';i.\;%%g*??&-:%?‘ L a 8 ;-'E;ii?;’»i;,\d R Mg, e
s A SRR b eSe Ty S
3 ,-;..\',:::--:;5«:.\';;... B El:’?",‘fi-‘?{"-;‘i‘!\f:;.\»;n R 23 ¥ i i,:i_.\‘,:y: L IR %5 &
. % “&::'.'{:::;:{4s‘\"--3' RSR FRSE R FRNERE LR Wyl o
. \z) "?‘*'?3‘"‘%’, i £ A‘*s\ Pbl ¢
3SR X 2 'fii‘t::;:’!‘rf;:&::-,--"itf-‘?%i&fi:z-‘:!f:" Ny ‘.‘xg % ;-"‘( B :»-3-:::)'.'l‘3s3*;:;,_}*l» &s“' v ‘(.E:*(h( :
,Js"!;*&‘,\y%’k b 8 b S S K,“,‘b‘%“« b i “‘.‘:)(" :
3(’!";:;s33:&3"ls'4‘:"!}‘ii’f}.‘-§§-’§:¢£is’§ x.;gfi?l%i«‘; ; ‘«:; izizgsi:’zseg'gsfisrg; s e % ;\‘ i
o "1":“:\':""5 ST, BSSB R BRTE R S SR F R et £3O
SRR 2R Lo S e RRo B\! g «3* v s v ‘
g e}),x;t- RTR ;f:g:.*“a; ;sii‘if?;?:{s.?s;&;fifs;?z;;:z:z Pt ¥ -.:»:5;95;;:;-_:;;g;z;;;,‘»'/:.%;;.;::x 3 Rf e
% A'%:. -».--4;’}-‘g;-ji’fi:i‘i::'gz::iz'?_‘fs-_.:fxfif?fifii-fls.:\ ;_'L;‘;’.,.ii_»?’-ti:s:-fiiat_;ggig;:s_:!gi:\:-:-i‘{;;_{tfi*g-‘*, b 65 .
kr?b“:‘\\::c. o 0 ::.':it;'{:)\'"'?:%:- :::"';”?’?375';"“ ?.r-,-t,:*q!!*»t;:{i:{;’:: 8 .:%!:;‘“,.:‘*‘-?}::fl.:!.-.;.- i B
i&?‘fm’*fi"i"b*i‘:fisfi;ifiszszgf&a*f?%zfl g-,’is;-&g%i-?;.:-zr-# s:?;!:s;.:fgir- R Dot i
;.:;,._E;-u, R 8 \;;.:-;:,;; FEE !_";:;_:;l,:«.--g.;;;}t. BIR ';:1'::;3_-‘:;. £l ‘i:ggt..\‘.:- v “ %::
iLB L L R T
:‘&E%‘}“"ifi i :J}y’:’:\:* b o ale *ii*‘z:: & ,:fiz;a;;? B e
V:iz:{;l .; L :"::3--»“;;21.& ::5?“:":3155.31;::3., .E':{f;.:-‘ Be v ,;._.f}i:i:::f;.,.-: Sed o % “:;:1:‘3;51'-,‘- M ,;3{l:, g ':‘3'.-:'1':5,';':':2::;53?:
\! “' 3};;- ut!fi‘#‘\“:«*y"&,&a, ‘h’&.,;_ f.,k’ B 3 .“f; ’t %4 e E 28y
";"; *‘}' Ay ?i{’g"*;)y*‘st"l ’,'?»_‘, ,"*.( &N SR £ ;_';?(;Q:’*'.fit‘*@ ‘3l \‘E‘;::izi-‘f"fi'i . |
;-IE;-‘:.,,.';.;‘ s '.(,'.'\.3.'-. »i:*"}v::f lg §§{l:s- % ":3'_._: 3 3BSR B% B '__::{;‘,_ i ,;-_:}-I-;;_:‘_':;::E::,::_‘
G )v:o< %Ty ’x’«il#",flqu‘g"\*' soa ¥ ’?l,-;?-3‘.’ e lAy o o 7 s n -E:::.:'EEC::;575:5:3":-';;-1‘: |
e ¥ ’;‘"(r;fi%"'fiiflffit:;ih.‘,".-;.';, b ;"*jt,,- ..3':-;‘«, ot oSk ey
ißey R 509 SLBY o e i4l . |
& b 55.':1'5552255¥";:‘fi:555' ,;‘;v ‘_‘:&"‘l ‘Q, it *% ; {*"i‘&i :’? ‘ ;g : |
fi*" ‘*\”f&x bSR B e
fls‘ Mfl‘&}’,".t 3&‘4‘ !J’-?;"! y"i&‘! A i R % 5-355
& (W;: : \h“;g BB’\ % g*‘ B R bPR ,fftf}u;.,.:
$E ‘fi«?‘-\%fi'\{‘x BgR3 34% S N 3 B e __::-:,7:-5::",
il Sfl:fl%&;fl:fl? % "\f'i-: XSB ,-;-!‘--,‘l; oK gePOgk B ' 'j';A.i::'\'-' ek
5 %S B :;:%-;(g({_\ B A g 3 ¥(SN 5 % ,’-'!’{::i;?i',vf‘,."k
B N .-;:.?-:'.:;:».g.\ ‘Q’&‘:;,&gz--;’*, ] R e . ykwv
oe| S : Wl Mo Le .
f&;f.’?::\:a:.‘;-fi.‘u Rs e S o it v \\%:@’ |
:;::5:55‘;:5‘::' saudd ssoßlgs Wb o oA i}f)}*(‘x\"
3‘:::5;5;5-:5: ol RS s wEoR X L 5, ¥ oqfi‘-if?,‘il?.iirii::is'
\Z:\ B: i ‘4'3:,‘. ,’{’(j\ ,“ ('\-‘_" z" i °‘; 3P?." t.‘ :“@(?fiv’& |
\‘ B = :»..".,.;' oB e 2 RS ; H '»;x.\."?-v;(’iizéffiifi{{?}?f )
£Ex '7l:-.:-‘ Ry ¥y N § R SR s SRR o
S :»,5‘:3;«-( R oPRg e ; \:;‘:;Z&’%} )
&B f 7‘::._::-‘. ve ! SRR : 573 ’ o
&= »:v-:-‘:;.:- : S oAR fi_;,*.;;.w;.:‘ o
.'E;_A.;i '.-’EE:E; S ':3) :‘?‘ g o?,, w : R “ .{.-l;«/",_;.';;“.»: g ,;)g?\’“&\& ¢
\ l"‘t.’;':;.'y: . S b 505 P %“’-’,q& \;ljéf R VEA) §
L:::}":;:E::5-'5'15?;'-.;'.,»i:t:.:g_ o L o e e ;«:-"“;. IR, &
o e E o .y, Fgooe 4 M Hgh 3
e ::;:_I:'E‘EZ:E:'Z:: 3,-;:2;,:..-,,'3.*.‘_ da gßy 3 S *-:‘3..’5;.,‘ er S%‘ i
':5:-":-’2:?:3:3:_;;;:.»_:_;_.g B 3 e it s RFE _~.~=.‘<":;”_‘", e a Y»,}
G b e R PN RS, i
;:“:.-:-:.? RA,S SN -;w" 3 et .Q bßt& 03
% oR . s f»,,.‘;‘?‘“}e
i ik XgS Mg »n«' b 4“ 3 .
‘l.l.:?:“:;:;.‘:‘fl:“‘ PR e;w.o’""'i: oTI Sig RN W
?—,:3?5:-.;??5.4335;» ey 2% g o B _s:,‘,*3'_. ? 2
5‘;5553;::":;,::_.,7%‘ '-'(','» ,f“/‘tfigz})\? N % \»ff :;,I;'}2.‘;;_‘»: \?,}\‘g g
S ,*:.‘_ g‘w -v; !o }v \O?& l&
G R "\%{* S ’%"”?\?P*
%) i
&4 AR
K
NEW YORK.—~ (AP) —An
eight-pound son was born
Thursday to ~Mr. and Mrs.
Elliott Roosevelt: - The baby’s
father is the second son of
President-elect:: “Franklin D. }
Roosevelt, and this 1&¢ his l
fourth grandchild.
Mrs. Roosevelt, the baby's
grandmother, left Albany by
train at 3:26 a. m. and av
rived in New York shortly be
fore 7 o'clock to be with her
daughter-in-law, - .
After teaching school the
first three days -of the week,
Mrs. Rocsevelt had gone to
Albany Wednesday night to
be with the governor the rest
of the week,
The baby’s mother is the
former . Miss Betty Donner,
daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
ENTIRE GERMAN
CABINET UITS
S | |
President Von .Hinden
burg Accepts Resigna
tion of Members -
BERLIN—(AP)—The entire Ger
‘man cabinet resigned today and
{ the resignation was’ acecpted. by
i]’rwidont Von Hindenburg.
{ The resignation was not unex-
Elsectxe(l. All day reports circulated
;:hat the chancellor would step out,
| perhaps taking the whole cabinet
[ with him. ‘
g At the conélusion of a cablnetl
E‘meeting this morning it was saidi
| that no decision on %he advisabil
| ity of resigning had been reached,
! but early this afternoon the chan
| cellor called upon the Pre:idem]
land it was expected then. that he
| would indicate his willingness te
| retire, ’ L
! Opposition by all but two small
| parties in the Reichstag dictated
| the retirement of this government.
Cruger Westbrook Is
.
s Injured in Accident
[ sl e
| ALBANY, GA., —vs — Cruget
Westhrook, Dougherty county re
presentative, suffered a fracturee
| skull vesterday when his automnbile
‘collided with anether carrying de
ltegates to the South Georgia Meth.
looist Conference. . *
| B. A. Rowe and Zack Houser, the
[latter of Scott, Ga, occupants of
{the other car, as well as Will Star.
lings, driver, suffered minor In.
juries, R. J. Edgery, Albany con.
| tractor, occupant of
' 5 ffi!l’m ght injurfes. -
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—s¢ Sunday.
MRS. ELLIOTT ROOSEVELT
William H. Donner of Villa
Nova, Pa. Elliott Roosevelt is
engaged in the advertising
buslness in. New York city.
The- three other grandchil
dren of Governor and Mrs.
Roosevelt are: Anna Eleanor
and Curtis Roosevelt Dall,
children of their daughter and
con-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Cur
tis Dall, and Sarah Delano
Roosevelt, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James Roosevelt of
Cambridge, Mass. .
Anna Eleanor, . inown -as
“Sistie,” is five and a half
vears old and recently started
to school in'the private schoo!
in which her grandmother
teaches. ~ Curtis. Roosevelt
Dall, whose friends: call him
“Bruzzie,” is about’ 2, and lit
tle Sarah Delano Roosevelt is
eight months old., - »
AODSEVELT, HOOVER
“TOCONFER TUESDIY
Governor— Phones Pres_i-!
dent He Will Arrive at
| 3:30 in Afternoon. |
r WASHINGTON —(AP)— Presi
{dent-elect Roosevelt today In
jformed President Hoover by long
Jdistance telephone that he woula
larrive at 3:30 Tuesday afternoon
and would- go directly .to the White
‘House for a disqueslon_ of war debt
problems. : W
" The cdll from_Albany reached the
W hite House-about 12:45 p. m.
But a short while before, the
French- and Belgian ambassadors
bad been informed ‘at the State des
partment that .this government waa
rL. {Continued ~on page eight.)
Members of Ku Klux Breal: Up Alleged -
Meeting of Communists in California
. - =
.
LONG BEACH, Calif— (AP) —
Sixteén men were. arrested by the
police riot squad early today after
the men had forced théir way into
an alleged .meeting of Communists
and severely beaten three of them.
With handbills bearing the ane
mouncement, - “The Ku' Xlux Klan
Rides Again,” the sixteen men
planted a fiery. cross on the lawn
cos the home of Dave Milder, rush
ed the house, cowed (ts occupants
with drawn revolvers, beat them
with eclubs and sectiong of rubber
‘hose and attempted to kidnap
them, police reported. |
Police riot squads, summoned by
residents of the . neighborhood,
B ks p;&l‘imé% z> ; a,fl To 3 e ..»q ";;
H2ME
BRITHIN ADVOGATES
PUNTO SATSPY
CERMANPLEY
i GENEVA. —(AP)— The British-
Foreign Secretary, Sir John ng!flv
ipmposed to the world disarma-
W e
‘ment conference . today th&t%
{German demand for arms eqllém
Ibe satisfied by allowing the B‘Q;fc_i}w
’m have the same kind of armas«
{ments as other nationhs, r
The British government nfi&
proposed as a part of a ‘
to solve tha equality problem ‘that
|all the Eurvpean states jolnw‘fg:
solemr affirmation that undcl‘;% -
circumstances will they atm
to solve any present or mtm'g";}fli“}t{,l
ferences among them by force. ..
“The object of the disarm&l‘ nent
conference,” Sir John said, “is to
bring about the maximum of posi+
tive disarmament that can _be
agreed upon—not to authorize in
the name of equality increased
armed strength.” A
President Arthur Henderson
praised the suggestion, expressing
the hope Germany would 9’°°h:m».
join the conference. i
The French delegate, Rene Mas=.
sigli, then announced France Btood.
by its proposals of Monday. sos
conscript armies in Europe and an
equality, of basis in armaments.
Another Question
In acknowledging Germany's
right to the same kind of arma
ments as others have, Sir John
said he was speaking of kinds of"
arms and not amounts, for “this
Jatter question must be separately
and subsequentlf treated.” =
Norman Davis, the American
representative, recalled the long
months of the disarmament cons
ference and its scanty results.'He
lsmid the delegates were in Geneva
to reduce armaments and !nfl
‘merely to talk about them. Reeall
ing the economic depression and
‘the burden of debts, he u?gmd
that reduction in arms would® ge
far to relieve the crisis. £
He warned/that the condition of
the world was critical and further
delay was dangerous. R
~ The American said he regarded
the American, French and British
proposals as providing a suftici
ént bhase for an early agreemeiid
on a disarmament treaty. , &
Geologist Unable
To Find Traces of
&, Oil in Ga. Earth
ATLANTA, Ga.—(AP)—Sahiples
submitted to him from’ barings
sunk 700 feet in a well in Jeff
Davis county do not’ contain oil in
commercial quantities, Dr. §. W.
McCallie, state geologist, . said
Wednesday night. s
He said' he had so notified of<
ficials of the Altamaha Oil and
Gas company but added that-he
was not prepared to say definitely
there was no oil of oom??l
quantities in the field. The | is
located near the junction of the
Ocmulgee and Ogeechee rivers.
' “It may be that there is eil in
'the field,” Dr. McCallie said, “the
company said that ' the borings
‘had been sent down to a depth of
700 feet. At that level they shows
ed no indication of a large aw
of oil and I so informed the :
pany.” X
The Altamaha company Was
formed by a group of citizens of
Jeff Davis county and that dis=
triet, i e
Cardinal Shortstop :
Accidentally Shot
| CHAMBERBURG, PA., — :3. —
Charlie Gelbert, St. Louis Cardina}
‘shortstop. is in a hospital today
{with a bullet wound in the left leg
i:h a result of a hunting aacm
| Gelbert’s gun was accidonn,'b
|discharged whern he stripped wi
|gunning yesterday. His condlth:;%
Jm)t serious, s
A
—= 4 R
quired hospital “attention. OtHers
were less severely beaten. TPave
Milder was treated for scalp lac
erations;” his son, Sam, for a
broken shoulder, and Carl Kirch
ner, San Pedro, for severs cuts
and_bruises. S
Includéd in the Communists
group and said to have. . been
roughly handled by the raiders
were two young women, both for
mer students of the University of
California. They are Miss Navena
Goodwin and Mildred Watson. P
lice said both have been lnv@ ved
in varicus radical disturbances.
‘When the police arrive‘i-;"”-'
fiery cross was still burniag on
the lawn. The officers scid they
found Kirchner frussed with fopes
a»,‘\ . Tt