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Vol. 100. No. 266,
ROOSEVELT MAPS PLAN FOR HOOVER MEETING
Brtish Awiatrix Conquers
Penls Of Sahara In Flight
From London to Cape Town
CAPE TOWN, Union of South
Africa. — '(AP)- — Amy Johnson
landed here at 1:30 p. m. Green
wich time (8:30 a. m, BE. 8. T.)
Friday, beating the speed record
for a flight from I.ondon estab
lished by her husband, J. A, "*Mol
lison.
Last March :Captain Mollison
made the trip in 4 days, 17 hours
and 19 minutes. His wife’s ap
proximate time was 4 days, 6
nours and 65 minutes, or 10 hours
and 24 minutes faster than the
record . i
She brought her small mono
plane, “Desert Cloud,” down to a
¢killful landing to the accompani
ment of shrieking motor horns
and the cheers of 2,000 persons
waiting to greet her,
Miss Johnson covered the 6,250
miles from England with only
four stops. The first was at Oran
in Algeria, whence she flew 1,500
miles across the Sahara Desert to
Gao in Portuguese West Africa.
Then she followed the coastline
to Benguela, Jlanded there and at!
Mossamedes, her last stop hefore |
reaching here. '
She was very tired. When Mol
lison made the flight the strain
was so great that he cracked up
at the finish. He explained later
that he had so little sleep during
the flight that in the last landing
he misjudged his distance. He
was not hurt and the plane was
not badly damaged.
Between Benguela and Mossa
medes Thursday Miss Johnson’s
plane developed trouble in the oil
Jine and it looked . for awhile as
though she would ‘have to quit.
She adjusted the feed line, how
ever, at Mossamedes and 'lost only
a little time. :
It is a dangerous flight down/
the whole length® of Afriea, with
stretches of jungle where a forced
landing might be fatal.
When Mollison came down here
nearly eight monthe ago Miss
Johnson was one of those who
welcomed him,
“I think you're wonderful,” shel
told him then, and four months
later they were married. Two,
months after that Mollison made
the first solo flight from east to
west across the north Atlantie.
Plan Is Suggested
For Collection of
Debts Owed to U.S.
ebts Uwed to U.D.
By F. A. RESCH l
(Accociated Press Staff Writer.) ’
URBANA, IIL.—(AP)—A ' pro-|
posed solution of the natfon’s for- |
tign debt problem—by a plan he!
contends would be not only 'prac- |
tical but ‘eventually profitable for
the United States — was outlined
Friday by Prof. Ivan Wright of
the Department of FEconomies at|
the University of Illinois. ‘
Instead of éancellation or repu
diation, or eontinued aceumulation
of inter-aillied debts, Dr. Wright
suggested a “praetical solution”
hised on re-investment of the
brincipal and interest of the debts
I private and public securities 01’}
the debtor countries. |
This form of adjustment, he be
lieves, would relieve «the world's
money, market, permit debtor
‘ountries to accumulate gold, Sta
bilize their currencies and permit
them again to engage im some
ting approaching ~normal trade |
Wit the United States. ‘
Why notbauthorize the United
States Tresuary, Dr. Wright asks,
0 invest the prineipal of these |
lebts—and such part of the in-|
ltrest sas may seem wise—in se-
Curities, stocks and bonds Of'
lebtor countries as these debts
(ali due from year to year. '
“Then when the market becom2s
“tisfactory,” he erplains, “the |
Treasury at its discretion ceuld
‘esell these securities to American
nd foreign investors through Am
‘rican investment hankers.
‘By this means we could in
tase foreign investmenrs of lhol
United States and the ' Treasury
Would receive payment of its
loreign joans with which to pay
ff the Liberty bonds.”
Discuss Ellis Health
Law Tonight at Eight
A round table discussion on the
"5 licalth Act in regird ‘to so-
Ciui diseases will be held in the Su
berior Court Room tonight at 8 p.
', sponsered by Soliciters Henry
West and Carlisle Cobb.
The eounty and ecity health offi-
Cials, physicians of Athens, the
Uity Coureil, and County Commiss.
‘oners have been asked to take pare
in the discussion. The meeting 1s
‘ben to the publie, and all those in.
lerested are urged to attend.
FULL Associated Press Service,
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. CAPfTOVt:N
Amy Johnson, Britain's premier
woman pilot, Friday morning land
ed in Cape Town, South Africa
after a flight from London. She
broke the record set by her hus-
Hand, J. A. Moellison. Mollison re
cently made the first east-west
¥olo flight across the north At
lantic. The woman’s flight was
fraught with peril throughout. Be
«ow is shown the route she flew.
WISDOM ELECTED
AUDITOR’S HEAD
RICHMOND VA.—(#)— The as
sociation of State Treasurers, Au
ditors and Comptrollers had ad
journed its annual session here to
day to meet next September in Chi.
cago with Tom Wisdom, Georgia
state auditor as president,
Mr. Wisdom was elected at the
convention’s closing session yester.
ézy. The association went on record
as opposing the federal tax on
gasoline.
Pch Believes D
¢u believes Dry ‘
Law Modification
Will Arrive Soon}
WASHlNGTON,—(®)—Chairman
Pou of the house rules committee
today expressed to newspPapermen
the “Hope that we can get modifl
- of the Volstead act behind us
at the short session.”
As head of the powerful commit.
tee which has so much to say as to
what the house will act on, the
North Carolina Democrat is in a
strategic position in the house.
To newspapermen, he said he
“realized the difficulty of getting
important measures througn con.
gress during a short session” and
added:
“I will he glad to cooperate in
carrying out the pledges of the De
mocratic platform.”
Ppu, the Democratic dean of the
house voted against the 18th
amendment and the Volstead act
although he was an advocate of
prohibition in Neorth Carolina,
HILL IS RELEASED
UNDER SSOO BOND
George N. Hill, charged with as
soult with intent to murder in
connection with the shooting ol
John S. Hunter here a few weeks
ago, has been reieased from the
Clarke county jail under SSOO
Lond.
Hill ‘was arrested following the
shooting of Hunter in a downtown
billiard parlor. He contends he
shot Hunter thinking the latter
was Rip Ridley. No reason was
advanced as to why he wanted to
<hoot Ridley. Hill waived prelim
inary trial before Judge Milton|
Thomas. |
THE BANNER-HERALD
W DIRECTORS OF
ATHENS. CHAMBER
IREELECTED
| Seven directors were elected by
‘tho Athens Chamber of Commerce
at the annual membership meeting
at the Y. W. C. A. Thursday night,
The members met at a banquet
|over which Joseph Costa, jr., head
lof the organization presided.
‘ The directors elecetd for a two
yeéar term are: Mr. Costa, M. N,
| Tutwiler, Sam "H. Nickerson, J.-C
MHutchins, jr., W. R. Bedgood, Rob-
Yert R. Gunn, and Tate Wright. The
Mirectors whose terms do not ex
pire until next years arg:. G.. A
Booth, L. S. Davis, 'B. R. Blood
worth, T. A. Gibson, Robert Han
ma, J. K. Patrick, L. O. Price, The
|'board will meet next Tuesdoy at
110 o’clock to, elect offlcens and a
new secretary to succeed the late
C. D. Terrell,
i President -Costa’s report, the
]'(*l9('tinn of the new directors and
,\.m address by Hughes Spalding,
| Atlanta, chairman of the Board of
jßegents of the University of Geor
lgin System were the prineipal
!t\'ents on the program. Mr, Spald
i"mg was introduced by . -Judge
[Thomas F. Green, a member of the
| board of regents,
! Sees Lower Revenue ‘
{ Mr. Spalding predicted that the
[state’s revenue next year will be
(dower than thig year and. declared
Ethut it will be impossible for the
| state to continue operation of
twenty-four separate institutions
in the university system if the
|state‘s finances are reduced. He
jfaid economies can be effected by
jelimination of overlapping. He de
tlared there are eleven colleges in
lxhe system which give degrees, in
his opinion too large a number. He
also said that the six high schools
mow in the university system
[ehould be taken out. “We may
|have needed those high schools
]when they were authorized but
ithere iz no need for them now in
{the university system,” he as.
|serted. 2 ;
| Paving Contracts :
Mr, Costa, in his annual report
pointed out that “quite a few pav.
ing contracts on roads leading in
to Athens were let during the year
by the state highway department
With the completion of the Royston
Danielsville highway paving, all ot
route 29 will hafe been completea,
he said.
Paving lin Ogethorpe <ounty is
underway now and this will com.
plete the Lexington-Washington
road, he explained. “The contraci
has been let from Watkinsville to
Madison, and a 7-mile section 1s
under construction on the Elberton
road. The Athens-Commerce road
has been included -as a part of the
state highway system and the
chamber of commerce has put forth
every effort to assist in getting the
above projects through.”
COther items in the report were
the cooperation of the Athens
chamber with the national cham.
ber of commerce in sponsoring a
health program in Athens the past
vear, a playground program whichn
had a well trained supervisor, ob.
servance of fire prevention week,
and efforts made to defeat tne
amendment to classify intangibles.
Mr. Costa paid tribute to the late
C.D. Terrell and commended his
efforts as secretary of the chamber
the past three and a half years.
Aims Of Board
i “The Board of Regents,” Mr.,
‘Sp:llding said, “wants to give the
'most education for a dollar, 1t
'wants excellence in education, ana
it wants a diploma from a Georgia
college to. mean more.”, The inte
gration of the Universty of Georgia,
| the State College of Agriculture
lemd Mechanic arts, and the Geor
gia State Teachers college here 1s
a long and forward step towara
this end, Some people perhaps crl
i tiized us for the undertaking, but
we couldn't worry about feelings
when, we have a higher perspective
in view,”
The university at Athens was in
tended to be the only institution of
{ higher learning in the state when
| (Continued op Pdge Three) ‘
i AR |
i,Re_veal Attempt on 1
} Life of Von Papen
s
’ BERLIN.—(AP)—An attémpt on‘
the life of Chancellor Von Papen
on Tuesday was disclosed Friday'
‘when Mrs. Paula Budde was sen- |
tence dby a special cocrt to three
months imprisonment for carrying
a dageger.
She was arrested in the c‘nan-‘
cellory on Tuesay when she
sought an interview with Colonel
Von Papen. The chancellor's sec
retary became suspicious and tele
phoned the police who said they
found a dagger a foot long con
cealed in her dress.
The woman's husband testified
that she told him she wanted to
give the chancellor a memoran
dum in the hope that he would
change his political policies.
News -of the arrect was sup
pressed at the time. 5
Athens, Ca., Friday, November 18. 1932
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- - Snip "unfortunately failed to watch his diet, Therefore when he
chased a cat through a narrow apperture between two buildings in the
Bronx, New York, he became wedged in about a foot from the street.
He regretted a number of bones he had picked clean during the past
few months. Finally rescuers, as seen abeve, had to dig through a 12-
inch wall to release him. The .cat, of course, had gotten away,
REAGH AGSEEMENT
N AVITION FIGHT
Financiers Cord and Cohu
Compromise in Ameri
can Airways Battle
NEW YORK.—(AP)-—The spee~
tacular fight for control of the
Aviation Corp. of Delaware and
its operating subsidiary, Ameorican
Airways, has ended in an ’gree
ment,
| After days of charges and coun
iter charges, which threw Wall
!.street and the financial commun
ity into two sharply opposing
I‘bflmps, it was announced last
night that the opposing factions,
one led by the youthful E. L. Cord,
wand the other by ILa Motte T.
Cohu, president, had reached a
compromise.
The agreement provides that the
board of directors shall be reduced
to 15, that five shall he selected
by Cord and hig group, five by
the present board, which Cord is
seeking to control, and the re
maining five chosen by mutual
Lxlagreemem between the two sac-
Htions.
‘Cord, newly risen automotive
‘financier, and a heavy stockholder
in the Awviation Corp. had sought
to oust the corporation’s present
management., The quarrel follow:
ed a plan of the board of direc
tors to buy the asests of North
{AAmerican Aviation through a
\stock issue.
Second Cold Wave
Due by Night, Is
Warning of Bureau
| NEW ORLEANS.—(#)—Thrown
for a loss yesterday W'Ea heavy
cloud banks halted the advance of
a spreading cold whve in Lixie,
winter pulled a reverse play on the
,SOuth today with a secondary at
‘tack that promised to bring near
freezing temperatures 'to = mid
south coasts by nightfall.
With generally wet conditions
making c¢hill northwest winds
more penetrating, Greenville, Miss.,
reported the first snow of the
winter in north Mississippi with
the temperature at 85. The flakes
were mixed with sleet.
Snow also fell in Memphis,
where a steadily dropping ther
mometer registered 35 at 9 a. m
Cold rains were reported in rearly
all southern states,
Woman Said to be 107
Years Old Dies in Ga.
SPARTA, Ga—(P)—Eisie Wynn
an ante-bellum “mammy,” said t 0
he 107 wyears old, is dead here.
“Aunt” Elsie was brought here
from Mississippi as a slave “befor
de wah,” and was owned by the
late George White.
She nursed the children of
White and their - deseendanis.
She was frugal and had purche
ased a home and a small farm
just obutside the eity limits.
BAPTIST MEETINGS
~ FIGHT DIRY REPEAL
Conventions. in 5 South
ern States to Oppose
Any Prohi Changes
ATLANTA, Ga.~- (AP) = The
Baptist conventions of five south
ern states have voiced opposition,
to any change in the prohibition
laws and.movements to legalize
heer drew fire from other sources
Friday.
State oonventions of Georgia,
South Carolina, Arkansas and
Tennessee Baptists Thursday went
on record formally as opposed to
modification or repeal of prohibi
tion and Alabama Baptists called
a statewide meeting for December
6, the date of the opening of con
gress, to orgamize to combat re
vision of state or national dry
laws. ;
Meanwhile at the Alabama con
ference of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, Soutl, at Troy, Bishop
W. N. Ainsworth of Birmingham
called attention to the ‘“curious
spectacle” of persons urging the
sale of beer to end the depression
while others ‘‘are crying for
bread.,” “The church does not pro
pose to retire -unto a theological
heaven and let this precent day
world alone,” he added.
At Union City, Tenn,, W. D. Up
shaw, ~who was the Presidential
candidate of the Pr~hibition par
iy, sent a telegram to the Mem
phis conference of the Methodist
Episcopal Church, South, saying if
congress passes a beer bill he
will fight it to the Supreme court.
TO STUDY MERGER
. MACON, Ga— (AP) —Georgia
Baptists Friday embarked on a
new year of endeavor opposed teo
any changes in the prohibition
laws and depiction of erime and
immorality in the movies, follow
ing conclusion of their 111th an
nual convention here Thursday.
The conventiox adopted the an
nual report us the soclal :service
comittee, embodying those policies
together with the belief in greater
governmental regulation of busi
ness for the benefit of the poor,
just before final adjournment.
During the year a committee of
seven . will study a proposal to
merge. Bessie Tift college and
Mercer university along with a
survey of the entire educational
program of the denomination with
a view of making recommenda
tions to the 1933 convention. The
Bessie Tift-Mercer consolidation
plan ‘when presented to the con
vention earlier had been the sub
ject of extended debate,
RATS DESTROYED
BY ORIENTAL BULB
BOISE, Idaho—(AP)—An Orien
tal flower bulb has been found
thiat will destroy rats and hLarm
nothing else.
Such is the report of the Biolog
ical survey statlon here, where the
Lulb, known as Red Squiil, has
come as a boon and a relief fron
worry. It was not the discovery
of this statlon of thé survey, how
every but presumably of the Den
ver bureau, where officers here
said it hed been given a thorough
WAR DEBTS, BUDGET
HOLS ATTENTON
OF WHITE g
WASHINGTON. - (AP) — A
medley of official talk and con
ferences Friday encompassed the
pressing issues of war debts and
a balanced budget, subjects of
two momentows VWhite House con
ferences next week .
At the first, President Hoover
and President-elect Rosoevelt will
discuss informally on Tuesday
afternoon these and other matters
of vital national interest. An ad
visor, Secretary Mills ‘in the Pres
ident’s case, will attend each.
The second, scheduled for the
next morning, will giye the Chief
Executive an oppoi‘t\fim,\' to sur
vey the foreign debt problem with
congressional directors of finan
cial legislation. This parlexy will
include the three ranking Demo
cratic and Republican members of
the house ways and means com
mittee and the senate finance com
mittee,
. These plans were announced by
the White House Thursday after
a telephone converfsation between
Mr. Hoover and Mr, Roosevelt,
and during a series of conferences
in budget matters hetween the
President and :uch aides as Sec
retary Hurley, Postmaster Gen
leral Brown, and J. Clawson Roop,
| director of the budget.
| Available for the President’s
"fis«-ul studies were latest Treasury
figures sghowing a deficit exceeding |
25709,000,00(1 on November 15. Also‘
at hand were tax data showing
that despite improvement in Qcto
ber, collections for the first four
months of the 1933 fiscal year
were only $358,108,065 as compared
with $455,144,328 in the same per
iod a ycar ago.
Activity on Clapitol . Hill was
paralleling the Wirite Housek“con
sideration of debt and budget
matters. The house appropria-‘
tion: committee started on its an
rual job of trimming down budget
figures. Spurred by Chairman
Byrns' forecast as the first sup
ply measuré was tackled that thxs(
year's allowance for the Treasury
and Postoffice department would
drop “contdderably” below last
year's of $1,066,000,000.
Also, the legislator continued to
express determined views on the
request of Belgium, England and
France for a further moratorium
while their vast debts are re-ex
amined. Representative Rainey,
the Democratic leader, who imme
diately accepted Mr. Hoover's in
vitation to confer Wednesday,
questioned whether a moratorium
propotal would get “a single wvote
from the present house”
Othér examples of congressional
expressions on debts included:
Senator Bingham (R, Conn.):
“I am absolutely opposed to ldying
a further burden on American
taxpayers.”
Representative Britten (R., 111):
“If the ten principal European
nations cannot jointly pay us the
insignificant sum of $123,641,398
on December 15, then we should
hold them in default until they do
pay.” S hue
Besides Rainey, those summon
ed to the Wednesday conference
include Sgnators Smoot of Utah,
Watson of Indiana, Reed of Penn
sylvania, Republicans; and Harri
son of Mississippi, King of Utah,
and George of Georgia, Demo
crats.
Important Conference l
To Be Held Friday at
-
‘ Oconee St. Methodist
| rPE T
The Oconge Street Methodist
church wil(’flféfili‘”s most import
ant conference of the year whenj
it meets Friday might at 8§ o’clock.
to elect officers for the new year,
,va. H. O. Green, pastor, an
nounces,
' Reports from the various de
partments of the church will be
made at this time. Rev. J. W.
Veatch, presiding elder of the
Athens-Elberton distriet, will be
in charge of the meeting. All
present officials are urged to at
tend the meeting. |
One Man Killed and
| Four Hurt in Wreck
i
| SANDERSVILLE, Ga— (AP) —
William B. Peeler, 26, Deepstep,
iGa., was killed and four other per
' sons were injured, one critically
‘wken an automobile crashed into
'a_truck parked on the roadwuay
here last night.
| - Corwin Avant, 19, son of Mr.
l&and Wws, Will Awvant of Deepstep..
land star second baseman last year
lon the Georgia Military college
| haseball team, suffered a erushed
e that necessitated amputation.
{Others injured were James Palmer,
{SO, Tennille, Ga., farmer; Mrs.
‘PJohn Henry West, and Miss Flor
ence Barwick of Sandersville. -
Peeler and Avant were repair
ing a tire when the crash octur-
M‘ e -\."l4‘& tk
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—s¢ Sunday,
MONEY WAR ENDS
B wm o
‘
: -Tz?jj g‘ _
Errett L. Cord, and LaMotte T,
Cohu, finanicers Friday ironed out
differences and reached acompro
mise in their fight to control the
Aviation Corporation of Deleware
and its subsidiary, American Air
'ways. The fight had disturbed
Wall street quite a bit. Cord is
shown at the top, Cohu at the bot-}
tom,
TODAY'S BEST
HUMAN INTEREST
STORY
By DALE HARRISON
NEW YORK—(AP)—Horse
shoes sang through the Long
Island university air today as
youth finally had its fling.
In other years the brute
strength of the student hus
kies was loosed upon the grid
iron.
The faculty, in saying foot
ball must stop, acted with so
licitude for the shinbones of
its strapping striplings. It felt
that collegians should have
good clean sports, but that
football was perhaps too rough.
In place of the pig skin there
flew today the horseshoe. In
a way, it amountel merely to
the transfer of allegiance from
one animal to @another. There
was for precedent the recent
political swapping of the Ele
phant for the Donkey.
There moy have been, as
some diehards of the campus
bitterly complained t o d a ¥,
more kick te football; but
horgeshoe pitching also has Its
points, And if one gets enough
of the peinis one wins.
Clair Bee, a football coach=
deprived of football, has
adapted himself to the chang
ing timies ahd is now head
coach of the horseshoe. pitch
ers.
“My boys, some of whom
may ‘actually have ridden
horses to, the hounds so far
as I know, are enthusgiastic.
They think honseshoes, sleep
horseshoes, and I was almost
ready to say eat horseshoes.
“Now, if in their competi
tion they c¢an only wear horse
shoes, it will be @ horse on
their opponents.”
The matter of cheerleaders,
water boys, stadium ushers,
and vietory balls for the var
sity horseshoers has not as yet
been discussed.
Second Man Dies in
: Shooting in Atlanta
ATLANTA—(®)—Grady Crawford
died in a hosplial today from a
bullet wound police sgaid was self
inflicted after he shot and killed
G. B. Harris here yesterday.
Police said they had failed to
uncover a motive for the shoot
ing which occurred at 14th and
Spring streets.
Questioned at the hospital Har
ris said the cause would be found
in his overcoat pocket. The pocket
contained a bill of sale for a smail
automobile to S, H. Crawford with
a receipt for S3O cash.
COLUMBIA EXPERT
ON ECONIMICS 70
ICT IS ADVISOR. -
ALBANY, N. Y. — (AP) = Hi#
plans complete for visiting Presis
dent Hoover at Washington mext
Tuesday, Franklin D. Rogsevelt
has summoned to the evecutive
mansion Raymond Moley, the Co=
lumbla university professor wheo
will go te thg White House cali=
ference on war debts and ecther
matters as Mr. Roosevelt’s only
adviser, LA
Prof. Moley arrived in Am
late last night,’ several s
after he had been named by the
President-elect. as his cougué_gg
for the meeting with tbe Presis
dent, 4 »
He went direct to the executive
mansion, where he planned to sea
Mr. Koosevelt today. i po v
Prof. Moley, Columbia. univers
sity’s soft-spoken professor of
public ¥aw, has been one of Roose=
velt's frequent advisers, and dur«
ing the Presidential campaign: he
was often at the candidate’s side.
Hg helped Roosevelt prepare his
acceptance speech and other ime
portant utterances in the cam
paign it which he dealt with gove
ernmental problems, € ¢ 0o n o mie
questiong and other similar ‘mats
ters on which the professor. is
considered an authority. o
At Capitol .
Today the plans of the presie
dent-elect, who is fully recovered
from the mild attack of influenza
which confined him to the execu
tive mansion since last ¥riday,
took him to the state Capitol for
one of the few remaining oceaske
ons in which he expects to sit in
the executive chair. A
| Leaving tomorrow for ' Hyde
| Park, he will go on to New York
IMonday evening, and the Tllpv.-
llng morning will begin a trip te
Georgia for a two weeks vacation,
stopping over in Washington to
confer with Mr. Hoover. gt
The governor said yesterday he
@ld not yet know with which
congressional members he ' will
confer at Warm Springs, oljhmfigh
Speaker John N. Garner and Sen
ator Joseph T. Robinson, the, Dem
ocratic senate leader, are twi» who
are expected to consult him there,
Two Frat Houses
Are Burglarized;
Cars Are Stolen
Two automobiles and three n
sical instruments were atoleor:?f??fi@
students of the University of
Georgia here Thursday night, ac
cording to city police.® s
A 1929 model Buick sedan ‘Wwas
'stélen from the Phi Delta Theta
fraternity house, ‘at 524 Prince
avenue. A Ford coach, 1931 model,
was stolen from Charles Méthvin,
Atlanta, at the Kappa Sigma fra
ternity house, 320 North Milledge
avenue. ises
A saxophone, a cornet and a
clarinet were stolen from an.auto
mobile in front of the Kappa: Sig
ma fraternity house Thursday
night, according to Loring E.
Gilmore, manager of the Georgia
‘Bulldogs grchestra. FRAS
Eugene Hill and Roy Bronner,
‘Negroes, were bound over under
S3OO bond each on charges of
burglary by Judge Milton Thomas
at a hearing Thursday. Hill
pleaded guilty to entering Wor~
tham’s grocery store recently and
stealing groceries and 80 cents in
cash, and told police where: to
find the stolen goods. Bailiff Jack
Lester found the goods under a
haystack in Brooklyn. Bronner
was bound over in the same case.
.
Recovers Sanity and
Faces Trial for Murder
COLUMBUS, Ga. —(AP)— Six
years Jago R. L. Shepherd was
saved from a murdér trial by in
sanity but now allenists say he 18
sane and he has been brought here
'from the asylum to, facle gourt
next week on a charge of cutting
off his wife's head. g2t
She was slain in the northern
sedtior: of the city about seven
years ago. Shepherd was charged
with murder but at arraignment
he pleaded insfnity and was com=
mitted to the state asylum at Mils
ledgeville, o
LOCAL WEATHER
Rain and colder tonight,"Sat="
urday geherally fair and colder, .
TEMBERATURE . i
Bighest ... ..o 2ivi Lmfi
Lowest ..ev siiv viee imadSEEEL
MOAR .... 4ive sres eaone RN
Normial ... ol e o ~.M§
RAINFALL R
Sirlila g
Inches last 24 hours .. .. 00
Total 'since Nov.:l & .& .2 b
Deficiency since’ Nov. 1 & 148 -
Average Nov. rainfall ~ ~ 288 =
Total since Jan. 1 .. .. ..4808
Deficiency since Jan. 1 i