Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
(Continued From Page One)
also voted for justiée 4in this dis
trict.
Carlisle Cobb, attorney * for
Judge Lumpkin, declared that if
the committee set aside the nomi- |
nation of Judge Lumpkin it would
be overruling the action of more
than 1,100 Democrats who vutedi
fer Lumpkin in the primary in‘
which areund 2200 Democrats
took part. He warned the commit
tee that if they set aside the nem
ination of Lumpkin they would, in
effect, he electing Councilman
Bennett and disregarding the will
of the Democrats who voted for
Judge Lumpkin. 1
Judge Lumpkin was nominated |
in the sanie primary in whichl
county officers were given thei
Democratic nomination last spring.
George A. Burpee and Judge |
Lumpkin were candidates for jus- |
tice of the peace. Attorney Cobh'
pointed out that Mr. Burpee did
not file a contest against the nom
ination of Judge Lumpkin within
the time limit prescribed by law.
Mr. Burpee, who attended the,
meeting Thursday, stated that he
dic not know that only three mem
bers of the committee called the|
primary, if he had known it he
would not have entered. ‘
Claims Call lllegal
Attorney Mell, in opening the
case in behalf of Councilman Ben
nett, said that in the absence of
riles to the contrary, a majority
would be necessary to makKe a
guorum for the committee and
that with only three members at
tending, the call for a primary was
not regular. Mr. Crane, chairman
of the committee at the time the
primary was called said he asked
Judge Lgmpkm, secretary of the
committee, to eall the meeting to
fix the primary rules and regula
tions and on the day the primary
was calléed he thought all of the
committee had been notified. A.
©O. Flanagan, of Georgia Factory,
who said he complained to Chair
man Grape and two other mem
bers of the committee after the
primary notice was published in
the papers, asked the committee--
men who were not notifled to
stand up. Al of the committee
stoog up, but later two members
said they were notified about a
meeting last January, but could
not attend and were not positive
it was the meeting ih question.
Upon examination by Henry H.
We:t, attorney for Judge Lump
kin, Chairman Crane said that
while he had a:rways notified the
mebers of a fortheoming meeting
himself, priar . te...the meeting in
question he was out of the city a
great deal at that time and asked
Judge Lumpkin to call it. Attorney
West brought out in this examina
tion that frequently, although no
‘tified, few of the committeemen
ever attended a meeting, and Mr.
Crane admitted that more than
onceé the primary rules were
a@lopted when only the chairman
and seeretary were present,
‘ln addre:sing the committee,
Attorney Cobb pointed out that
two present members of the com
gyittee, H. J: Rowe and Mr.
Crane were elected by the Demo
crats in the primary wherein |
Judge Lumpkin was nominated.
He declared that no one had ques
tioned the legality of their elec
tion, Two other members were
also elected at the same time, Mr.
Fianagan and J. H. Towns, both
of Georgia Factory district. Upon
testimony of Mr. Flanagan, it was
establiched that he ran under a
misapprehension, because their
term of office had not actually ex
pired.
; Certified Nomination
The defense aiso brought out
ghat after the primary last spring,
ghe committee certified the nomi
nation of all candidates who re
ceived the highest number of
votes, including Judge Lumpkin.
This brought the issue down to
the point at which Attorney Mell
began. He told the committee that
the question for them to decide
was whether the primary was le
wally called, in view of the pres
ence of only three members, and
the alleged failure of the secre
‘tary to notify all the members.
He sdid that by ruling the pri
mary illegal, ‘it w.ould not affect
“the other county, officers because
gince the primary they had been
‘elected in the general election.
The effect of the ruling would be
40 ditqualify Judge LumpKkin as
the Democratic nominee, but both
Judge Lumpkin and Councilman
Bennett would still be candidates
for justice of the peace, on the
gamé footing.
Mr. Rowe, chairman of the
committee, presided. Judge Lump
kin disqualified himself and J. P.
Nunnally was elected clerk. Those
attending the meeting included
Chairman Rowe, Mr. Nunnally, R.
I awane. J. T. Pittard, J. B
Towns, W. D. Amis, A. A. Flan
agan, H. R. Waters, Harris Thur
mond, L. P. Crawford, G. W.
James, K. A. Hill, Thomas F.
Green, jr., L. L. Lester,
Both Attorneys Mell and Cobb
spoke in behalf of the Democratic
primary system and its useful
ness,
A short discussion was hela at
-
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A"t |
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N¥e EEE
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. “The Best Part
T e 3%
' of the Meal
| TALMADCGE BROS. &
Distrhbutors i
'
'Roosevelt Settles Down
| To Program of Rest
{ .
| Planning Conferences
! T RN
I (Continuea irom Page One)
ian indication that the Democrats
would be disposed to deal lenient
ly with the Republican independ
ents who supported the Roosevelt
ticket in the re-organization that
will come in the seventy-third
congress. Several of them hold
important committee chairman
ships. j
For Friday the President-elect
promised himself a period of com
plete rest, broken only by a jour
ney down the hill from his %m
--tage to the hospital grounds for
a swim in the curative waters that
are considered to have played
such a prominent part in his fight
for recovery of his health. There
were no appointments on his call
ling list.
f Despite this, however, there ’was
much work to be done., Hundreds
of letters were accumulating that
must be answered, some from job
seekers, some from friends wish
ing him a happy administration,
and others from associates deal
ing with plans for the immediate
future, : |
First Job Hunter
The' first of the job seekers to
come to Warm Springs arrived
Thursday in the rain. The man,
striding through the mud of the
pine-fringed road leading up to
|the hospital grounds, said that he
had hitech-hiked for several hun
éred miles, hiking most of the
way, to. see the President-elect
and atk him for a job as assist
‘ant secretary to someone. He said
‘he had been a delegate to the Chi-
cago convention. ; ;
Mr. Roosevelt ate his Thanks-
giving dinner with the patients at
the institution which he was so
largely instrumental in founding.
In surroundings that were familiar
and in an atmosphere of infor
mality where every person was
called by his first name, the Pres
ident-elect ate turkey and cran
berry sauece and plum pudding.
Then he promised the patients
that he would come back to Warm
Springs each November while he
was In the White House, and as
many times between as congress
would permit.
A little later he shook hands
and chatted with several dozen
patients of the institution who
trundled past him in wheel chairs
or limped past on crutches. Many
of them were children, a little
awed by the handshake they were
having with the next President
of the United States, but all were
¢miling cheerfully.
the meeting on the justification of
a primary for justice of the peace.
Attorney Cobb said he ran in a
Democratic primary himself at
one time. Attorney Mell replied
that Howell C. Erwin, then chair
man of the committee recently
told him the primary was con
fined strictly to this district, how
ever. Attorney Cobb said he did
not recall definitely whether it did
or not, but did not question the
eontention of Attorney Mell.
bu Sy .
I'ma 30-mile-an-hour
driver... but I want
the 100-mile-an-hour oil!”
MAYBE YOU SAY, “Thirty miles-an
hour is fast enough for me. I don’t
speed and probably never will!” . ..
Yet the oil you use should be the 100-
mile-an-hour motor oil —GULF SUPREME!
Why? Because the oil that is good at 100
miles an hour is a far better, safer oil at
any speed— high or low!
It is better able to conquer engine heat!
Better able to halt wear! Better able to
forestall repairs and cut lu
brication bills!
4 ulf Supreme has proved
its ability to take super-pun
ishment! Proved it in two of
the most gruelling tests an
oil could get...
In a great testing labora
tory, Gulf Supreme success-
. » s ST |;“,r ~ | ip o
(GULF ) cuLF SUPREME MOTOR OIL =22
W R | ‘ , “%w g&\\\zl
3 2 n 2 3 ® weky /
’ “The 100-Mile-An-Hour Oil” \isf
.
'Two Bulldogs Injured
. As Team Departs For
. Annual Tech Batfle;
{ e |
(Continued From Page One) |
| showing of his varsity men in|
{the scrimmage, declared at the |
“‘(‘,:()SU that *“‘the boys left all of
[their football in Columbus,” Rain |
fond a slippery ball handicapped
i;thn workout. The coordination 0!‘;
| play and effective blocking shown
[in. the Auburn game was absent
against the Red Devils, |
f Practically the entire student !
| body, including the band, and a|
I]urge delegation of Athens fans/
!w;ll attend the game. A special
{train will leave here at 9 o'clock
_‘:Satunla,\' morning over the Sea-!
| board. Special busses will also be
run by the Georgia Motor lines
and special rates are offered by
the Queen City lines. |
HINDERED BY RAIN {
ATLANTA, Ga.— (AP) —Their
workouts Thursday interrupted by |
fogtball squads hoped for better |
weather Friday for their final|
Opening Tomorrow
DRESSES — MILLINERY — HOSIERY
100 ABSOLUTELY FREE'
Hundreds of Bzautiful Dresses, Styles, Values,
Colors—ln Fact You Must Attend the Opening
S el ¥
@A l:‘
o ) THAT
i R Th ing of Athens’ New
iß e opening o ens’ New
l est Ready-to-Wear Shop will
% assure the fairer sex of Ath
%“i’j ens of having the newest
ag;g%,;fi styles and up-to-the-minute
e values the market affords, as
J*; HERMENE'’S is directly con
;E nected with the New York
L market and nationally promi
e nent stylists and manufactur
. ers, who are interested in the
success of this store.
LOCATED AT 195 E. CLAYTON ST.
$;;bT§E We |l,:'rotphoe':.e thar\tNi:f HAetrheQZart! VALUES
Lisil:t;n in on Station WTFI Friday at 8:00 P.M.
For Our Radio Program,
WARNING!
« « « OIL that isn’t
good at high speeds,
isn’t good enough
at ANY speed!
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
light practice and signai drill.
Coaches Harry Mehre and Bi
Alexander planned only short sc
islons Friday in preparation f
[the 28th meeting of ‘the two un
[versities on the griditon here
' Saturday . o
| At Athens, Mehre ‘Was gloom;
‘Friday morning after an tnpleas
‘ing performance by his players
Thursday . o
~ “The score will be about the
same as last year,” he said, “only
this tirr‘:? the heavy end will be
on Tech/s: side of the ledger. Our
boys seern to have left | all’ " their
football at Ceolumbus last Satur
day.” Georgla Wwon a year ago, 35
to 6. . ;
John Heisman, who eoached
Tech years ago and started the
Yellow Jackets on the road to
football fame, was a visitor at the
Flats Thursday. He alto planned
to see Friday's drillss |/
Heisman, who finished his eoach
ing days here in 1919%—at which
time Bill Alexundf:x- was_ his as
sistant—is in Atlanta for the re
union of the 1917 Tech class which
comes Saturday in Qimfiectiun
with the annual battle with Geor
gia. Sl st
fully lubricated a roaring motor under
nearly twice the heat of the normal speed- |
ing engine for 14 solid hours! ¢
And on August 8, 1932, it amazed racing |
drivers by out-performing specially-made
“racing oils” on the famous Indianapolis 2
Speedway! Under Official AAA Super- -
vision, it lubricated a thundering Duesen
beré racer for a non-stop one-hour run—
at an average speed greater than 1 00 miles-
an-hour! A speed which fre
quently reached nearly two
miles a minute! :
Take this adviee. .. Switch
to Gulf Supreme! Prove its
ability to take super-punish.-
ment—tocutrepairand lubri
cation costs —in your moter!
© 1932, GULF REFINING €O., PIT‘TSEURGH, PA.
Market Slides Off
To Lowest Level in
Three Weeks Friday
By CLAUDE A, JAGGER
Associated Press Financial Editor
NEW. YORK.—(AP)—The stock
market slid off to the lowest lev
els in three weeks Friday, with
| heaviness of sterling exchange ahd
{ the wheat market, evidently con
[ tributing to the decline.
| Selling abated somewhta after
| midday, however, and a number of
{ issues that had lost 1 to 3 points
i recovered fr actionally. pßrokers
{sald the most encouraging aspent
lof the market was still the mod
| erate. ameount of selling.
¥ 'M'—
{ NEW YORK COTTON
Open High Low Close PO,
iDee, S 0 881 BHRe 5.71 576 6.90
{Jani & 888 692 571 b 5.84 596
Mch:. . 889 602 5.86 5.94 0,06
! ' ACTIVE TRADING
| NEW. ORLEANS. (AP)—Trad
{ing in @otton was quite active at
‘th«- start Friday, but quieted down
!runsiderably later. Prices showed
{2 moderate downward tendency.
I Open High Low Close P.C.
{Dec.’ &2 8JR8:5.84 570 5.76 586
!!.l;m. 087 ... 575 584 5O
'Meh ... 6.00 6.00 585 592 6.03
i S >
{ CHICAGO GRAIN
l High Law. Closé
; WHEAT—
iDec. MR 2% A 41% 42%
IMay (@ 0f ... 1% 46% ATH
{Julp .8% ATH ABR
| CORN#
tDecs g 7o .o 9% 93% 23
pMay el L, 29% . 29% 28%
JJuly . ao% 30% ¢ 904
i OATEN)
’l)ec. e .. 6% 1P 15%
i May. .. ey (17% 17% A%
!Jnly i Ee .8% JlB% OAB W
25 GREENIES SICK ’
BUT L. S. U. FAILS TO |
POSTPONE GCGAME|
NEW ORLEANS— (AP) —The
| traditional Louisiana State uni
f\'ul‘sity-Tulane university football
{ battle is on the schedule book for
| Saturday even though *an influ
| enza epidemic and injuries have
| left only 16 of the Greenies squad
of 41 available for the game.
{ The Tulane athletic council Fri
| day made plans to rustle up a
| team after Louigiana State Thurs
day night hal refused to grant
| their requested postponement of
| the elassic until December 3.
Six persans pleaded guilty to
'charges of possessing liquor, drink
ing, driving while drunk, and dis
orderly conduet, one was found
' guilty of being a ‘“peeping Tom,”
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yand another was being tried Fri
{day afternoon on a charge of as
!suun and battesy in City court.
| Ellie Matthews wa: found guilty
~pn one of four counts in the “peep
ing~Tom” case and was sentenced
[to serve 12 months at the state
Ifarm. The jury was out over three
lhours in the case. An attempt to
lcommit a misdemganor was the
‘count on which Matthews was con
‘victed, A chaingang sentence was
not imposed due to poor health.
~ Will Collins, Athens Negro, who
is seperated from his wife, was be
ing tried Friday afternoon on u
:/ch:n‘ge of assault and battery on
his daughter, Mary Lumpkin, who
[onight’s the Night
GALLANT-BELK COMPANY’S TOYLAND
OPENS AT 8:00 P. M. AND WE INVITE
N i
5,%) EVERY LITTLE BOY AND GIRL
e TO COME SEE THE SIGHTS!
: "-A ;,] yad .
P S Boys and Girls! Come Friday nght L b
R L Toytown! Come and see the year’s biggest
{} ) =X\ : treat! There are really hundreds of surprises
( P-\ Y = fwyou .. . toys . . towe . B still
e & ul more toys! Toys that whirl and wiggle and
it /% l walk . . . toys that go whizzing by . . .
b, 5 ), pretty dollies that talk .. . and, oh, ever so
’»"// \ many things! Bring Mother or Dad with you,
N & for there's a lot of things they haven't seen
) 4 ‘ either. Come early and stay late .. . you'll
L% iy have a wonderful time!
2e-~ i. ~ TOYLAND ON SECOND FLOOR
: i) " | L
SANTA CLAUS WILL BE HERE IN PERSON!
There are Hundreds of Big Values in Every Part of Our Store
Awaiting Your Choice for Thrifty Winter and Holiday Buying
For Yourself or Gifts. : \
GALLANT-BELK CO.
ATHENS NEWEST AND LARGEST DEPARTMENT STORE
See Our Windows for Special Bargains
CLAYTON STREET : WASHINGTON STREET
e S . L iR
is separated from her husband.
The quarrél grew out of differences:
about Collins keeping a 3-year ola
baby of Mary Lumpkin’s,
Emizah Pope, ‘Negro, pleadea
suilty to possessing a half gallon or
liquor and was sentenced to serve
6 months in the chaingang. He was
arrested on the Winterville road
Thursday afterncon by County
Folicemen Claude Kidd and Biii
McKinnon, Bailiff (eorge Nasn,
}and R.: Y Thomas, federal inves
jtigatur- ;
A. J. Ward plead guilty to driv
ing drunk ard of possessing liquor.
t“’ pay a fine -of $35 or, serve 0
menths, Paul Mize, r.ding with him,
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1932
pleaded guilty on a charge ¢ b
ing drunk and ofpossessing ligy i 3
He was senténced to serve 3 dqor.
in jail the sentence to t"rmin(r,'\t"
upon payment of jail costs and ;;x"
penses 01 ‘the Justice of l‘eau;
court. FiEEe
Rdll;g@ra} who pleaded gyjey
to possessing liquor at the May
term, ‘was sentenced so gepye &
months on Prebation.
~ Herdy Alexander pleaded gy,
to driving while drunk. He wil} 1,
sentenced Monday at 12 noon
iJudge Henry C, Tuck announceq
~ Jim Lavendar pleaded guilty t, a
lch:n‘gca of being drunk ang disop.
derly .