[ COTTON
i
wovuuu
pREV CLOSE
u. 101, No. 80.
fover Company Official Brands Tennessee Valley Plan ‘Sheer Waste’
ME REFINANCING PLAN REVEALED
cer lssue Interest In Georgia Intensified As States Legalize Brew:
IE
I
§ U
GION PLAN
i j
m7iG ANNOUNGES
s Members Sign Agree.
at Within 24 Hqurs
fter Letters Are Mailed
wm Athens
RIFFIN PUBLISHER
ANTS [REFERENDUM
oor Leader Roy Harris
oins Epting in Urging
egislators to Act
brompt to the legisla
-2 efinite plan under
( o Talmadge is re
tod 0S to call a session
Fiy o to legalize beer
e reported T day by Repre
biative Bugene Epting of Clarke.
was not sub
¢ ers of the leg-
I Wednesday by mail,
b | Thursday and
E ereement to vote for
’ I mited to twelve
2 entative Epting said.
; signed up
" e, Bibb; Charles
S \ ( E£. S. Settles,
( iv Moore, Clay
) ee had not ex
-88 ¢ on the special
Thursday, Epting
) Leader Roy V.
] told Epting on
g ephone Thursday
it he ¢ ; out letters at
ce ur members to sign
i wal to the governor,
) Epting .from Athens.
URGES REFERENDUM
R ( P) A sugges
question be put
[ of the state
| m has been
tt to Governor Eu
e ' v Major Quimby
r d publisher of
{ n Daily News.
ture into extra
B measure putting
{ up to the people
{ eferendum,” the
1 “Do not let the
4 eer, for their
| vay they wote,
But if the peo
' * given a chance
” decision will
£ ou agree with
at v to settle any
s to let the
[ believe firm
do, too, in a
S of government
which is to Ilet
s themselves,
to be acted on
to a referen
)ssible limit the
b € may remain in
tle this hig'ly
E n, which is
tter unless it is
of the people.
vhich. way the
ind do not be
does, despite
nti-beer and
But. surely the
vV to settle this
' Page Two)
’angements‘\afimpleta to Take Care of
Recruits to Roosevelt Forestry Camps
A\rmy ¥ourth
ere Thursday
( of arrange
uits to Pres
i estry conser
ditioning ana
ents will bring 1.-
N, ©: 2508 to
Ga 3,000 to
and 1,000 to
: under the
vV be changed
S 500 men are
't McPherson,
L * not been de
o dnnouncement
1 isized that no
uld be given
mps. They will
‘ ised and paid
_‘ S available, and
. from recruiting
k. 0 UL putting them
Py Y 4,1 S to help them
o Sirength and mor
~ 0 going inte the forestry
THE BANNER-HERALD
Nm
FULL Associated Press Service,
Gerard Slatéd as|
Py . Si
-Envoy Again
' , : |
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e QR i o R SRRSO ’
= ” hs :A_:::,‘.-‘__ ~._:..‘:,\ % |
eT - |
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el |
RS s ‘ st |
Brames v oS |
f fif’; i
James W. Gerard, above, war
time ambassador to Germany,
is expected to be President
Roosevelt's choice as ambas
sador to Argentina, i
SOVIET CONFESSION
: |
Reveals OI d Scheme
Worked to Secure Ad
o .l
missions of Espionage
By STANLEY P. RICHARDSON
MOSCOW, U. 8. S. R—(&P)—Wil
liam H. MacDonald, British engi
neer who pleaded guilty Wednes
day to espionage, sabotage and
bribery charges, produced a sen
sation Thursday by testifying to
a hostile court room that he made
damaging confessions at the time
of his arrest “because of the cir
cumstances of the investigation”
by the Russian secret police.
Five other British engineers and
a dozen Russians, inclhding a
woman, are being tried on similar
charges. MacDonald was the only
one of the British group who
pleaded guilty and the only one
held without bail continuously
since the arrests a month ago.
“T was affected by the testimony
of Thornton (1. C. Thornton, one
of the Englishmen) in which he
said he had used me to collect in
formation and I considered it use-|
less on my part to deny it,”” Mac-
Donald testified. ‘
Thus he disclosed that the mvth-}
od of investigation had included
the showing of each of the six
(Continued on Page Two) |
Mother of Secretary
Woodin Dies Thursday
NEW YORK.—(AP)—Mrs. C. R.
Woodin, mother of Secretary of
the ’l‘rou.s-'l,u-y'Wi]li;un H. Wocdin,
died early Thursday morning at
the Woodin home at 32 East 64th
street.
Mrs. Woodin was in her 86th
svear. Funeral services to be at
tended by members of the family
will be held Friday afternoon.
There will also be services at the
First Methodist church, Berwick,
Pat., at 3 o'clock Saturday after
noon. Interment will be in the
famiiy mausoleum at Berwick.
camps as provided in the new bl
recently approved by congress.
While in the army camps the
men will be formed into compan
ies of from 150 to 200 members
and will be taught to carry on
thetr own affairs with the view of
making them self-sustaining units.
It is planned to take from their
own ranks men capable of acting
as cooks and performing other
necessary services.
Welfare organizations will be in
vited to cooperate with army au
thorities in providing entertain
ment for the men, who later will
be turned over to the Labor de
partment to take up the various
types of forestry work.
Major General Edward L. King.
commandant of the Fourth Corps
area stressed the fact that the
army is no¢ recruiting men for the
camps. Their selection is entirely
up to the Department of Labor and
cooperating agencies. No one will
ee g S
ATHENS Y MUST
1 ‘ f
|
[ 1
| | |
(OBTAIN FINANCIAL
| ;
|
I )
-~ HELP OR CLOSE (P
| 1
|
| R
{
Association Has Slashed
. Budget Annually, Cut
. Salaries, In Effort to
1-- . -
- Continue Activities
NOW FACES ACTUAL
CLOSING OF DOORS
Membership Campaign to
-
| End Friday. Must Then
| Decide on Course
i e
| Athens will soon be without a
| Young Men's Christian association
junless funds required for its main-
Eit-nan«-v are provided by the pres
jent membership and subscription
|campaign or by some other means,
tit was learned Thursday.
| TFor fifty years the Athens “Y*
| has given the community the par
;li('lll;ll' service for which it was
| organized, and possibly never be
| fore has it faced actual suspension
lof activities, as it does today.
| Several years ago, enterprising
and community-building citizens,
,obtained subscriptions to erect the
|present building, provide furnish
lin;.;'s and facilities for the *“Y"’s
| present home, but the doors of the
s:.ssutliation face closing today. un
lless its membership is increased,
l:‘n‘l $1,681 in: immediate cash i
fuh’minod. The::. anoney -the ' *¥”
i needs today -is not for salaries, the
!nm‘sonnol of the staff having
[n{_:‘ro(‘d voluntarily some time ago
to be paid as the association gets
!th(- money, and although working
jon a fixed salary basgis, they fur
ither agreed to waive all claim to
jthat part of their salaries rémain
finf: unpaid at the end of the year
{ Th» *Y' needs money today to
,‘puy $490 interest on ‘the mortgage
|covering the building, and to pay
!p:lst due bills to Athens meérch
fants. Secretary W. T. Forbes said
g"l‘hu!sdny that Athens, merchants
“whr) have accounts against the
{“Y” have been very generous and‘i
| patient with the association, but
§tl~.m- need the money on the ac-‘
| counts which they are due and th9|
| association cannot continue to putl
fthem off. The association’s ob-|
(jective in the membership cam
'naign is 320 mew members, and;
)[]c-.\‘s than 100 of that goal have
|been enrolled, in addition to less
;thn.n S4OO in subscriptions. |
{ The Athenians who are canvass- |
|ing the community to obtain new
inwml.m-s will meet again Thurs“E
lday at 6:30 for reports and the:
J:(-:mm;ni;:n officially rcloses Friday |
|at the same hour. Between now,
rand Friday night, the funds im-j
fpm'uti\'el.\' needed for the associa- |
{tion to keep open its doors musli‘
‘ (Continued on Page Two) |
FACULTY MEMBERS
WILL LOSE P
b dbisnt
ATLANTA, GA., —(#)— Notice
of dismissal has Voen given to all
employed of the State Universi
ty System, some £,OOO men and
women Hughes Spalding chair
‘man of the stat board of regents
!suid here Thursday,
. 7The notices state that the pre
';.vnnt term of employment will end
on July 1, the close of the school
i_\(':n‘. but Mr. Spalding - saidmany
' would be reemployed under reor
|sanization plans which the board
%l.;r under way.
; The dismissal notices are some
z\-\h;n technical, he said, in order
[to meet requirements of existing
| contracts, which call for 90 days
;nulivo on dizmissal. But there are
| neces arily a number of teach
:(l':4. professors and other employ
‘es who must necessarily be
' dropped if proposed plans geo
!lhruugh.
_ The hoard of regents meets here
| i'riday and Saturday, and decision
:m::y then be reached in the cas~
{nt‘ some instructors, Mr. Spalding
i said, merging of numerous activi
ties of the various schools and col
!lngos making up the university
}system will be discussed also,
| Representatives of ‘three cities,
lßowdpn, Caroliton and Powder
i.\‘prin;.:.\" have requested permis.
' sion to appear betore the board to
|l‘resent bide for the new West
Georgia Teachers college which
iis to represent the merged activi
ties of district A. and M. schools
An A. and M. school is now 10~
cated in each of the three places.
Hach has heen allotted 40 minutes
in which to preseat its case.
Athens, Ga., Thursday, April 13, 1933,
|
~ ATTAGK PROPOGAL
i
| ma s
E. A. Yates, Vice Presi
.
| dent of Six Southern
~ Power Companies Ap
. pears as Foe of Program
| e .
'IDEA “SHEER WASTE
. OF MONEY,” HE SAYS
i P RS
Y .
“Not Protesting”” Roose
. velt Plan But Suggesting
\ ege . >
| Modification, Asserts
' e e
| WASHINGTON.— (AP) ‘—Con:
‘::“'u"“““ of power transmission
lines as provided in the Roosevéli
ITennessee valley program was
assailed as a ‘“sheer waste of
money” in testimony before the
house military committee Thurs
day by E. A. Yates, vice-presi
ident of the Commonwealth and
| Southern corporation, 1
’ Yates, also vice-president of the
{six southern companies of the
lComnwnwealth group, said the
power companies have a system
of lines ample to absorb all elec
trical eénergy produced at Muscle
Shoals or at the Cove Creek dam
which would be constructed by
the Tennessee Valley Authority
created in the administration bill.
{ He said the six power companies
.iuh'(-;ul,\' have a surplus capacity
:uf 1,000,000,000 kilowatt hours 4
jyear in excess of the present de
!mand.
| The six companies discussed by
| Yates included the Tennessee Pow
{er company, the Alabama Power
| company, the Georgia Power com
| pany, the Mississippi Power com
{ pany, the South Carolina ‘Powet
| company and the Gulf Power com=
jpuny in Florida. M ‘
| “Not Protesting”
| Before Yates began his testi-l
imony, he was introduced by W. L.
| Willkie, president of the Common-i
;wculth and Southern corporation.
| Willkie said he was ‘‘not protest-]
;ing” the administration plan for
"utilizing the government Muscle
Shoals property to begin a,vasti
!Tennlrxssee basin development but
lthat his witnesses would suggestl
{ modification. ‘
| Yates discussed the formutionl
[of the six companies, all of which
jare linked by transmission lines. |
!He said they serve 1,678 cummunl-'
Ities in 196,000 square miles or 66’
| percent of the area of the six|
|states. He said the companies |
Ehavv 430,000 electric customers. !
|- He said there were 78 munici- |
'pal power operations with 50,000 |
Justomers in the same arca und;
'that 58 of them purchased their |
§powor from the power companies |
lin the last decade, Yates said the
' power companies have purchased{
307 municipal operations. |
| “The average monthly Dbill to]
customers by these municipal op- |
|eration was $3.35 for 25 kilowatt
| hours,” Yates testified. “Since |
| their acquisition by the powcr;
| companies, the same amount nft
| jower has cost $2.22."
| He said the area was served by |
136,000 miles of transmission untl!
| distribution lines. |
| “There is a provision in the
ibill for a transmission line be
‘;t\\'t'cn Muscle Shoals and Cove
| Creek,” Yates said. “It is esti
| mated it will. cost $6,000,000 to
{build. The operation of Cove
|Creek in coordination with the
bower company would obviate en
\m'vl,\' the necessity of building
:thal line.
| “3heer Waste”
| “We feel there is no need of
| building any tranmission line. To
| my mind it would be a sheer waste
iof money. Auy line built in this
}tcrritory is simply a duplication
Jof existing facilities.”
| Yates said 'the send-out of
i S
: (Continued on Page Two)
' LOCAL WEATHER
.M
i Mostly clpudy Thursday and
! F'riday; showers Friday; some
| what warmer Thursday.
; TEMPERATURE
Highest 000 "B cais 14,780
‘ LOWeSt . v i i v A
E MERR i il ey 2080
{ Noplahl "00 i S <SOOO
] RAINFALL
i Inches last 24 hours .... .. .00
"otal since April 1 .. .... 101
' Deficiency since April 1 .. .43
I Average April rainfall .. .. 3.58
Tdétal since January 1 .. ..12.70
| Deficiency since January 1. 3.91
As Sister Ship of Akron Prepared for Flight
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A
These are the men who have ’“} ;
P been placed in ecommand of the .
M : s Macon, sister:ship of the lost .
BT Akron. Below, left, is Coms- AT RN e §
. A o mander H. H. Dresel, in charge A 4
E i % M of the ship. At the right is T
po B R Lieut, Com. B. J. Rodgers. "g_ TR e ?
o G 1 Above, left to right, are Lieut. Fo sSR
Mk S. E. Peck, Lieut. C. M. 80l- %0 Gk . §
Yo -& ster, Lieut. Com. J. C. Arnold, M e
R b Lieut. G. W. Campbell, Chief i e 5
h___@ Boatswain W, A. Buckley and “"M\ v
T @ Lieut. C. 'W. Roland. s 3{
... .
S ——————————— [ ———————— N R
.fi 7 3 f’,_‘; : :
MAIDEN FLIGHT OF
} I
i 19 DELAYED
i Mm i B
'Unsuitable Weather Con
l g .
i ditions Brings Postpone
' ment of Flight
AKRON, O.—{(#)—The first test
flight es the U. 8. S. Dirigible Ma
con to determine whether the Navy
}will accept her was definitely post
poned at noon Thursday by Lieut.
Commander Alger H. Dresel, after
he had studied weather conditions.
A heavy rain Tuesday drenched
‘the field outside the airdock where
the 785-fooy Macon was built and
it was doubtful if the ground
would support the 130-foo¢t mobile
‘Lmooring mast used to leal the
‘Zeppelin from the dock.
Clear skies and soft winds also
are essential for the first trial
flights, which include six runs for
4 total of about 84 hours to de
ln-rmine the .$2,450,000 vessel’s
power, speed, climbing ability, en
'durance and other factors.
| The first of the six runs prob
lably will be short. It will be
jmude primarily to watch perform
|ance, study propeilor arrangement,
land gain an idea of the ship’s
|speed possibilities and probable
fuel consumption.
The contract under which the
Macon was built specified a maxi
mum speed of at least 80 miles an
hour and a cruising radius of ap
proximately 10,000 miles without
|refueling. This speed is somewhat
‘;;rea.ter than that of the late Akron
{due to improvements which en
[lbled engineers to ‘lighten the
lmass of duralumin, aluminum
lcoated fabriec and eight Maybach
l;:asuline engines which are capa
{ble of developing 4,480 horsepower.
| Hundreds of workers took 15
|mouths to build her.
I A crew of seventy officers and
men was assigned to make the
| initial - flight together with Rear
| Admiral George C. Day. chief, and
| cther members of the Naval board.
! WILL NOT ACCEPT
| CHlCAGO—(®)—Patrick A. Nash,
|7O year old Democratic county
{leader, said Thursday he would
| not aecept the mayorship of Chi
|cago which was formally offered
lhim, last Tuesday by the city
council committee on committees.
Nash explained that his age and
health were the important factors
in his decision, 3
HORSE THROWS MRS.
ROOSEVELT; UNHURT
—————— ‘
WASHINGTON. — (AP) —
Mrs. Franklin 1. Roosevelt
was thrown into a mud puddle
in Potomac FPark early Thurs
day when her horse slipped
down.
The wife of the President
was uninjure;i and remounted
and continued her morning
ride in mud-spattered cos
tume.
The horse, traveling along a
stippery ‘coarse, fell to its
knees and, as Mrs. Roosevelt
described it later:
“1 slid off very gracefully
right into the mud.” ’
NEW ENGLAND IS |
BOSTON—(®)—A heavy easterly
storm buried large sections of
New England and New York un
ger snow Thursday that ranged in
depth up to 28 - inches, disabled
hundreds of miles of telephone. and‘
telegraph wires, felled trees and
poles, broke power lines, delayed'
transportation and washed out
railrrad track=
;ne outoirobiie traffic death.l
that of William Ahern of New
Britain, Conn. was attributed to
the blinding snow. ‘
Thousands of scnool children
sained an unexpected holiday as
a result of general closings of
schools,
Farmers in sectiong of Connecti
cut, where e¢rops had begun to
sprout, feared that serious dam
age might result.
The on-shore gale piled up high
tides and surf along the coast,
The most serious damage to
wires was caused in a belt run
ning across southern New Hamp
ghire, southern Vermont and Mas
sachusetts, westward into New
York.
28 Inches of Snow
At Laconia, N. H., 28 inches of
snow had fallen during the fore
noon and the storm continued. Tel
egraph service was paralyzed,
schools closed, and a large manu
facturing plant closed because of
the failure of power lines.
Rhode llsland experienced preci
pitation of 2.6 inches of snow, rain
and sleet, accompanied by a roar:
ing gale. Highway travel was
made dangerous,
Maine generally felt the storm
(Continued on Pagy Two)
AB G Paper—-éffigle Copies, 2c—>s¢c Sunday.
l“BIB STICK” WAVED
1
OVER MINY. SOLONS
’ e 4
Olson Threatens to De-l
clare Martial Law to Get
.
Unemployed Relief |
ST. PAUL —(AP)— State fiena-|
tors gave varied reactions 'l‘hllrs-‘
day to Gov. F. B. Olson’s threat
to invoke martial law am seizure
of wealth to provide relief for the
unemployed and residents he de
seribed as “tax burdened.” .‘
The farmer.labor party governor,
speaking to a group of relief |
marchers gathered on ' the state
‘house steps Wednesday, said the
legislature, particularly the senaw.i
had been delaying measures to al-|
leviate suffering. If the lawmak- |
ers did net provide sufficient re-
Jief, Gov.\Olson said he would “11\-}
voke the powers that I hold and |
declare martial law.” I
Senator C. N. Orr, St. Paul,
'said the senate was “‘cooly and‘
trlrmly proceeding to protect the
rights of its citizens so far as pos- |
lsihlo” and had refused to be “stam
peded into premature and danger
ous steps.”
I Senator Charles Hausler, St.
Paul, an administration leader, de
seribed Gov. Olson’s address ‘“as
‘une of the most outstanding state
imoms ever made by a governor
\ of this country.”
| The marchers, representing the
{ Minnesota bonus expeditionary
ifur(-v, and the “state committee of
| action,” présented a petition ask
ing the legislature for unemploy
}n](‘llt insurance, moratoriums on
| foreclosures and evictions, tax ex
?vmminn for unemployed and imn
ipovvrishwl farmers, and an income
{tax.
xei e i
! - »
| Chinese Bandits Ask
f Cash for Missionary
| PEIPING, China— (AP) —The
| United States legation was in=
;fm-nmr' Thursday that Chinese
| bandits who kidnaped Dr. Niels
‘l\'i(-lsun, American wmedical mis~
isionary, south of Mukden, Man
lechuria, Wednesday, are holding’
Ehim for one-half million Mexican
| dollars (about $100,000) ransom.
{ The legation made representations
!'to the Japanese authorities here
and to United States Consul Gen
leral Myers in Mukden to effect
negotiations for Nielsen's release.
HOME
WOULD CREATE . 5.
10 LEND ON HOMES
Federal Savings and Loan
. .
Associations With $2,-
000,000 Emergency Cor
poration Asked
WOULD REFINANCE
HOME MORTGAGES
Home Owner Would
Amortize Debt in 15
Years at 5% Interest
WASHINGTON —(P)— President
Roosevclt added to his emergeney
program on Capitol Hill Thursday
the proposal to refinance ~the
mortgages -on small homes,
In another special message to
congress, he asked for legislation
to permit readjustment of existing
mortgage debts together with a
postnonement of both interesi and
prinecipal payments in cases of
“extreme need.” ‘
He suggested action aiong the
same lines as the refinancing of
agricultural mortgages now before
congress with a bond issue to meet
the needs. #
He told congress the plan of set
tlement “will provide a standard
which should put an end to pres
ent uncertain and chaotic condi
itions that create fear and degpair
‘flmong both home owners and in
vestors.”
Bills were introduced in senate
and house at onece to carry out
bhis recommendations.
| “Safeguards Homes”
~ Mr. Roosevelt emphasized he
regards ‘the legislation a declara«
ltion of national policy requiring
that “special safeguards should be:
t!hrown around home ownership
'as a guarantee of social and econs
‘omic stability.”
’ The bills proposed creation of a
permanent system of federal 'save
ings and loan associations as well
as an emergency $2,000,000,000 cors«
‘poration to refinance home morts
gages would be authorized under
the bifl as recommended to cons
gress Thursday by Presiden<
Roosevelt,
The bill would authorize ’sufi
scciption of $100,000,000 by the
government for setting up a pers
manent system ‘of federal, associa
tions “to provide mutual thrift ine
stitutions in which people may
place their savings and Invest
their funds, and in order to pro=
vide for the financing of homes."
These Ingtitations would be“in
tte nature of building and lodn
yscociations, but the bill provides
theyv should not be established in
«ny community unless the Home
Bank hoard feels such community
“is insufficently served by local
(Continued on Page Two)
e e e
-*--——-———-_~«
WASHINGTON—(®)—If vou are
hard pressed to meet morigage
payments on your home, and it
doesn't exceed ten thousand dollars
in value, this is the way the
Roosevelt plan for refinancing
would operate: g
Insurance company holds a “,"c
000 mortgage—for example — on
owner's home now valued at $9,-
000, on which the interest rate is
«ix per cent or above but owner
is unable to pay.
Either the, insurance company or
the owner has to approach the
“Home Owners corporation” offi
ces for refinancing.
The insuance company will acs
cept in exchange for the mort<
gage, bonds issued by the cor
noration ona which the gOVerm
guarantees 4 per cent interest. In
return for the sure interest the
company may agree to mark
down the debt to $5,000.
The corporation then gives the
owner 4 new mortgage with a face
value of $5,000 payable in 15 years
at 5 per cent interest. b
In addition the corporation mg
advance him cash for payment of
taxes and necessary repairs and
cover it in the mortgage. .
* In the discretion of the Home
Loan Bank board, the owner may
be given a threé year moratorium
on his debt. The owner could
make his p' yments monthly, quars
terly, sem/ annually, or annually,