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1 101. No. 112,
IG LOANS BY MORGAN FIRW BARED
Nix Not A Candidate; Harris Opens Campaign Here Friday P M. |
|iminstration Will Start Drive For Quick Prohibition Repeal;
| DEMCCRATS T 0
R——
¢master General Says
.
ncreased Revenue Wnlll
liminate Proposed New
. o
. Levies to Give ]obs!
W YORK VOTES |
REPEAL 12 TO 1
. -
ouncil of Churches ln'
flanta Flays Key and
. -
¢er Voting Council l
I
VASHINGTON —(AP)— A full |
deed drive by the adminlstm-‘
pis under way to speed prohl-‘
on repedai.
mhe New York vote and thel
bsneet of eliminating the new]
eg for public works financing
bough revenue from liquor saies,
mbined to spur the Roosevelt
roes to action.
Postmaster General’ Farley. the
airman the Democratic nat
-1 committee, .is the spearheadi
the repeal campaign from the
He announced Tuesday night
k every Democratic
rker in the last election to turn[
for repeal.
Farlev, who neither drinks nort
okes carried this campaign imo!
w York state last week. He em
ved there the. Democratie ma
ine which had brought over
helmine victory to Franklin D.
“The Democratic party pledged
elf o repeal,” tays Farles.
resident Roosevelt endorsed it.
e proposition has been put up
the states. -We should work|
rit and we will. It means a new
wee of vevenue that will elimi- |
¢ the new levies about to be|
josed to provide new jObS." ‘
Mhe announcement _was regarded
improving prospects that the 36;
ites necessary for ratification
icht be in line before mext March ‘
L when the higher income taxesl
W )] I would become effec- |
i Y states have signified
tification of repeal-—Michigan,
i . Wvoming, New Jersey.
d and New York. The
| endment was submitted |
the es by congress last Ses-i
VOTES REPEAL i
ALBANY, N. Y. —(AP)~ New‘
prk, 1 12 to one vote, has ex
tself for repeal of the'
hibition amendment. i
n the city of New Y¥York 41 to!
£, the vote being: !
eal, 1,057,068; againstl
gure o the entire state with
: 3,837 districts reportedl
( 1, 1,478,607; against re-
A it of the ballot verdict,
{ tes pledged to repeal will
June 27 and execute the
f adding New York
I ¢ five others which
‘j ve committed them
o peal.
: al céounties with in
"v et turns showed .the vote
S ! to be overturned by
‘I ligures, but for the most part
i nities heretofore dry
e t majorities. Eleven
vere unreported early
o but of those from
ns were available only
ad voted against re-
Buffalo, Rochester,
‘ nd most of the smaller
ol vote was heavy for re
{ hluge majority was con
[ ove predictions mads
tL leaders in advance.
k nt status of the states
. led: Michigan, Rhode Island.
ratify in conventionst
§ _ June 5; New York,
w - Wyoming, May 25.
; dates set: = Delaware,
. . -evada, May 27; Illinois,
v, ‘Ndiana, June 6; Massa
. fune 13; Connecticut,
) lowa, June 20; New
: June 20; California,
West Virginia, June 27;
& fuly 18; Arkansas, July
k. “ssee, - July 395 ' LRNEON
e Washington, Aug. 29;
Sept. 5; Maine, Sept. 11;
Sept. 12; Minnesota,
%24 —
ftinued on Page Three)
THE BANNER-HERALD
FULL Asscciated Press Service.
IN RACE TO STAY
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RS, B’ [ R SR
Miles Collier, Madisen county
representative who denied in Ath
ens today that he is in the con
gressional race “temporarily.” .4l
am in the race to stay,” Mr. Collier
said. . .
NATIONAL GUARD
SENT TOVILLAGE
Alabama Mill Village Pa
trolled by Guardsmen as
Strike Spreads :
BLUE MOUNTAIN, Ala. —(#)—
Four companies of National
Guardsmen Wednesday patrolled
the mill village of Blue Mountain
to preserve order and prevent sab
otage by striking employes of the
American Net and Twine company.
The troopers, approximately 250
of them under the command of
Captain Joe Starnes, took charge
Tuesday night as the request ol
Sheriff A. H. Borders whose depu-
ties were defied when they tried
to escort Jack Carter, foreman,
into the plant to make repairs to
machinery.
Sheriff Borders said a band of
about forty strikers seized at Car
ter and tore his clothing and that
pickets were kept at the mill gates
to prevent anyone from entering.
Approximately 400 mill workers
walked out last week in protest
against installation of an “efficl
ency system.” H. F. Williamson
said the system would have meant
about the same wage for the aver
age worker with penalization of
those ' below standard and bonuses
for those above.
A strike also is underway at
the Utica Knitting company mills
at Anniston where 450 walked out
over decreasea pay. National
Guard troops from Gadsden, Gun
tersville, Albertyille and Jackson.
ville were brought here.
COL, MICHAEL IS
COLBERT SPEAKER
AGAIN AT SCHOOL
| It won't be long before di
plomas for graduates of Col
bert high school must bear the
signature of Col. M. G. Michael
’ cos Athens. welf
For the fifth consecutive
l year, Col. _Michael Tuesday
| night participated iy com
[ mencement exercises at Colbert
High. He delivered the diplo
mas. The literary address was
delivefed by E. D. Rivers,
speaker of the house of rep-
I' resentatives. Col. Michael for
four consecutive years deliver
l ed either the commencement
sermon or literary address at
the Colbert’ school. Last year
the was awarded a new de
gree, created by the school—
Bachelor of Friendship. He
also took part in the com
. mencement program Sunday,
. delivery the invocation.
; Delivering the diplomas
Tuesday night, Col Michael
gave an acrostical definition of .
a diploma: Diligence-Industri
ous-Pluck - Love - Optimism-
Morality-Alma Mater.
Col. Michael will deliver the
commencement a d d r & s a'at
Comer next Monday night.
COLLIER DECLARES
0 15 N MCE T 0
ED: WOMAN ENTERS
Nix Finally Yields to De
mands He “Remain in
Georgia.” Harris Speech
To Launch Campaign
HARRIS, COLLIER
IN ATHENS TODAY
Warren County Woman
Becomes Candidate. An
Anti-Prohibitionist
Temperature of the Tenth dis
trict congressional campaign rose
a few degrees today with the de.
claration of Abit Nix that he will
not be a candidate and statements
on their candidacies by Roy V.
Harris, Richmond and Miles Col
lier, Madison.
Harris announced he will open
hLis campaign in Athens Friday
night with a speech from the
Shackelford building on College
avenue and Collier declared em-~
phaticaly that he is in the race to
the finish, despite rumors that he
is a “stalking horse” for another
up-district candidate.
Nix’s decision will release his
friends throughout the district
who have been holding off in sup-
port of other candidates becauss
of the possibility that he might
make the race. Persistent in
quiries from Augusta, regarding
Nix's attitude, also has given
birth to the belief that his decision
would determine whether Augusta
is to have othgr candidates. An
effort is being made to induce
Henry Howard, Augusta lawyer,
and son of Wm. M. Howard, one
time congressman from this dis
trict to become a candidate.
Entrance of Mrs. A. R. Shivers
of Norwood, Warren county, Tues
day will give the voters an oppor
tunity to elect the first congress
woman from Georgia. She de
scribes herself as “a stateswoman,
an anti-prohibitionist, doctor ot
economics, a farmer, a mother, a
Roosevelt proponent, and I'm ash
amed of thnis, but a ‘defeated leg
islative candidate last year’.”
Wioman Entrant
l The list of entrants now includes
| Harris, Collier, Mrs. Shivers, Paul
|L. Brown, Elberton; James L.
Cartledge, Richmond; Mayor D.
iTalmadge Bowers, Canon; Wil
ilam P. I[Congdon, Augusta and
IDwight Deas, Augusta druggist.
Representatives Collier and Har
ris were in Athens Wednesday—
although not together—and Harris
!made his plans for the initial
speech of the campaign here Fri
day night at 8:30 o'clock. He
' promises to make an enlivening
| speech, touching on some questions
| which many believe will deveiop
into issues in the campaign. ‘
.. Ctollier, who is a prominent Mad-{
ison county business man and
,fa.rmer, said here today he feels
sure Athens people will look with
‘{avor upon his candidacy. “I am
|a graduate of the University, have
|two children there Row, and one
| was graduated last year and Is
inow in Medical college” he said.
|He pointed out that in his six
iyears in the Georgia legislature he
Iwas organizer of the first farm
Ibloc, was a member consistently of
[the agricultural committee and
committee on the University anad
its branches, and always support
ed measures for the welfare of the
university, as well as the common
;s'chools. |
Harris Address
i Harris, also a University grad
uate, will be introduced here Fri.
day night by Representative Eu
gene A. Epting of Clarke, an as
sociate in the legislature.
! In announcing his final decision
{which has been awaited for sev
leral days, Nix says he does not
llmow at the present time whether
’he will ever re-enter polities, but
{will “continue my interest in Geor
rgia, and its internal affairs”. He
ialso thanks his friends who have
iurged him to make the race for
| congress. Nix at firs¢ is reported
‘to have told friends he would not
|become a candidate. He later was
urged by so many persons in the
distriet to run while at the same
time receiving requests from with
in and without the district to hold
himself ready for “state duties”,
that his final decision was held up
ceveral days.
Many messages have been re.
ceived by Nix from all over the
| rep
(Continued on Page Six)
Athens, Ca., Wednesday,May 24, 1933.
U. S. Flag Flies in Menaced City
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Here is an unusual photograph of the American iegatl;n at Peiping,
ancient capital of China. Marines stationed there are shown carry
ing the American flag into the legation. Japanese troops are ad
- vancing toward the city.
Athens Assigned Ten
Advertising Route
Athens has been allotted ten cars
for the big motorcade June 16,
when U. S. Route 29—Main Street
of the South—will be formally
opened.
1.. W. Nelson, president of the
Georgia-Carolina Motorcade associ
ation, and general chairman of the
Athens committee promoting . this
city’s part of the program, has ap
pointed chairmen of committees to
arrange local plans, and announces
chairmen in other cities along the
route will be appointed, within the
next day or two.
A. W. Hartley, manager of the
Holman hotel here, is associate
general chairman of the Athens
committee. Mayor' A. (i. Dudley 1s
chairman of the reception commit
tee; Joel A. Wier, secretary cham
her of commerce, chairman of
transportation committee; A b it
Nix, chairman of welcoming com
mittee; Charles E. Martin, chair
man of entries committee; Dan
Magill, chairman of publicity; Mrs.
CIVILIAN GAMPS TC
AD SOUTH GREATLY
Government to Pay Off
$8,500,000 in South in
Next Six Months
By GLENN RAMSEY
Associated Press Staff Writer
ATLANTA, —(®)-—- PForty six
thousand youths and seasoned
woodmen will be paid approxi
mately $8,500,000 to plant trees in
forests of ten southern states
within six months.
More than $7,500,000 of the
money will be paid directly to de
pendent of the men under Presi
dent Roosevelt's plqn of re-fores
tation and relief for the unem
ployed. /
Because of the financial stringe
cy back home where whole fami
lies have been without work for
months, administrators believe the
entire seven millions will find its
way into.trade channels and fur
ther business gains,
The approximate $§500,000 re
maining will be sent to the men
in the forests to be spent as they
desire.
The majority of the youths are
in their late teens and early twen
ties. None of them are married but
they have been selected because
their homefolks are in greater fin
ancial stress than others in thelr
communities. Some experienced
woodsmen regardless of their age
or whether they are married, are
to go with them to aid in making
a success of the féderal program.
Already almost 22,000 youths are
in ariny posts undergoing condi
tioning under army supervision
or have left for field duty. Those
sent into the woods early have the
jub of preparing the many camps
selected in preparation for the ar
rival of the host of tree planters.
Home Payments
Bach youth is paid S3O a month
- (Continued on Page Six)
~ESTABLISHED 1832
Cars for Motorcade
29, To Be Held June 16
M. R. Redwine, chairman of wom
an's feception committee. She will
be _assisted by Mlm:sl Efiqisa
Smith, Mary Elizabeth e -
thy Dudley, Sidney Hunt, El'Eck
ler Ussery.
Chairman Martin will have
blanks in hand shortly which all
entrants will be required to sign.
These will then be forwarded ‘to
Alex McNeill, manager of the mo
torcade for the Atlanta Journal
sponsor. Tickets will be issued to
each entrant. The motorcade will
leave Atlanta on the morning of
June 16, and will end at Green
ville, 8. C.
Entertainment programs are be
ing arranged in the principal cities
along the route, and about 600 per
sons will make the trip.
The motorcade is being held for
the purpose of advertising the
Bankhead highway between At
lanta and Greenville, and to at
tract tourists over this route, one
of the most important in the south.
ARVEY GENTENCE
1S CUT 100 YEARS
Georgia’s Greatest Jail-
Breaker May Be Freed in
April, 1934
ATLANTA —(#)— Governor Tal
made Wednesday reduced by 100
yvears the prison sentences im
posed upon Leland Harvey, notor
ious Georgia convict, and thus
made it possible for him to be re
leased in April of next year.
The governor made the an
nouncement after a hearing in
which no opposition was express
ed to the applicatiom for clemen
cy. Five sentences of twenty
vears each for robbery in Bibb
county were removed from the
records urder the governor's or
ders.
The chief executive commented
on the numerous times Harvey has
escaped from prison since he was
gsentenced in 1928, and said con
finement in the death house at the
Milledgeville state prison, whery
he ahd been placed for safe keep
ing, “was enough to make him
want to escape.”
Harvey, during his criminal ca
(Continued on Page Six.)
A S T e e
LOCAL WEATHER
e e
Local thundershowers Wed
nesday night and Thursday.
. TEMPERATURE
L s ykes svie ks DR
RO . i e s RS
PR i i denn 1B
B L kil ey R 0
. RAINFALL
Inches last 24 h0ur5........ .00
Total since May 1.......... 2.0§
Deficieney since May 1.... .83
'~ Avergge May rainfall...... 3.69
Total since January 1......16.82
. Deficiency since January 14 g,
IVPEACHMENT OF
[OUDERBACK NEMR
VOTE N SEMATE:
Representative Browning
Demands Removal of
Federal ludge Before
Senate Jury
FIVE IMPEACHMENT
COUNTS CONSIDERED
Vote on Five Charges to
Come After Defense
Presents Arguments
WASHINGTON, —#(P)—Convic
tion of Federal Judge Harold
Louderback of California on im
peachment charges brought by the
house was demanded Wednesday
by Representative Browning (D-
Tenn) as a final decision ap
proached in the historic proceed
ings.
Browning addressed the senate.
sitting as a court of impeachment
on behalf of the house,
After Defense attorneys macde
their arguments, a vote on five im
peachment counts was scheduled
to start.
The impeachment action, Brown .
ing said,’ was not “punitive or
vendictive,” but a “defensive
measure guaranteed to the people
under the constitution” againsi
improper officials.
_ He added the Bar agsociation of
San ‘Francisco had-asked the in
vestigation that led to the im
peachment “beecause of the notor
iety” of Louderback's alleged ac
tions.
Turning to Louderback having
maintained a regidence in Contra
Costa county and voting there,
while living at the Fairmont hotel
in San Franciseéo, Browning said®
“He undertook to build up a
fictitious fly-by-night residence Lo
avoid a civil action in San Fran
cisco.”
W. 8. Leake, San . Francisco
healer and friend of the jurist,
Browing said, was “the man be
hind the curtains pulling the
string of this puppet of his
At another point in his argu
ment, Browning referred to “this
Siamese Twin relationship” ba
tween Louderback and Leake.
The house proesSecutor took un
the receivership cases involved in
the impeachment articles one * -
one and in the main reiterated th
substance of the house charges
that the judgé was guilty of fa
vortism, appointed | incompetent
men, was indifferent to litigants in
the cage, and allowed excessive
fees, :
Government Bonds
Will Be Purchased
By Reserve System
i WASHINGTON — (AP) — The
Federal Reserve system is in the
inpen market for government se
'curitles. launching on a first trial
of the controlled credit inflatigh
powers newly conferred on the
President by congress.
For the present the Reserve's
open market committee is pur
chasing $25,000,000 of such securi
ties. The law authorizes buying
up to three billions -to ease credit
and release currency. Though the
initial purchasing authorization
was small and the time over which
the buying would be spread was
not indicated, the action was ac
cepted as indicating the reserve
system is in full accord with the
President’s expansion policy.
Tiven more important, many ob
servers believed the step signified
that the administration has no
thought of issuing currency to
cause expansion unless the open
market operations prove inade
quate. The inflation law author
izes printing of three billions in
currency, and also makes possible
devaluation of the dollar down to
fifty per cent.
Once governments or securities
of government controlled corpora
tions are acquired by the reserve
they must be held ‘or a pre-deter
mined length of tirae unless the
Secretary of the Treasury permits
earl'er disposal. £
Inauguration of the policy was
taken as a forerunner of coming
security issues when the banks
may be called upon to take a large
aprt of the refinancing issues, and
new Bonds, =
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—s¢ Sunday,
BROWN DORMITORY
DEDICATION HERE
THURSDAY 10:30
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JUDGE SIBLEY
The new Joseph E. Brown dors
mitory at the University of Geor
gia will be dedicated at 10:30
Thursday morning with exercises
in the University Chapel followed
by an inspection of the building.
Judge Samuel H. Sibley of the
United State Ceourt of Appeals
will give an address, “Joseph E.
Brown and His Times."”
The exerciges will open with a
taculty procession in academic
costume, followed hy a musical
program in charge of Hugh Hodg
‘son, director of music at the Uni
versity. e
Members of the Brown family
will be guests o fthe University. .
The Joseph E. Brown dormitory
was completed last year to souse
140 students. It was erected with
funds lent by the Charles McDon
ald Brown fund and named in
honor of Joseph E. Brown, l!ate
governor of Georgia, United States
Senaior and University trustee for
more ‘han a quarter of a century.
He was donor of the Charles Mc-
Donald Brown fund.
Reimbursement For
Cotton Growers Is
Urged in Congress
WASHINGTON,—(®)—FuII re
imbursement for cotton growers
under the original agreement by
which they turned their cotton
over to marketing associations,
before the Farm board takes over
the staple from the American
Cotton Cooperative association,
has been asked of the board by
four Georgia congressmen,
The delegation which called on
Chairman Henry Morgenthau of
the Farm board Tuesday included
representatives Tarver, Ramspeck,
Cox and Owen.
Tarver said the growers turned
their cotton over to the coopera
tives with the understanding they
were to receive 90 per cent of its
value at the time of the agree
ment. i
The farm board, he said, gave
the national cooperative the full
9 per cent but he added that the
American association ‘‘doubtless
has squandered quite a lot of the
money,”
He said individual growers in
many instances received not more
than 40 to 50 per cent and ‘‘others
doubtless more than the 90 per
cent they were supposed to get.”
Tarver said Morgenthau pro
mised to consider the plea from
the moral viewpoint, as well as in
the light of a brief he is having
prepared on the legal aspects, &
reply from him is expected this
week.
NEW WAY CLEANERS
INCREASE SALARIES
OF EMPLOYES HERE
Another Athens business firm
has joined the movement to raise
salaries in accordance with Pre
sident Roosevelt's appeal.
The New Way Dry Cleaners has
increased the wages of its em
ployes 10 per cent, H. A. Snyder,
manager, announced Wednesday.
The New Way has nine em
ployes, The increase is in line with
the general inflation policy of the
government.
The New Way company is the
third Athens concern to raise sal
aries, Shiflett’s Grocery store and
Benson's Bakery having recently
hiked their wage scole.. :
iVirginia Senator Charac
| terizes Investigation as
“Inquisition’’ ; Morgan is
{ Again on Stand 4
LIST OF LOANS IS
~ PRESENTED PROBERS
‘Morgan Objects to Plac
~ing His Firm Under
Same Rules as Banks
! By NATHAN I;O—BERTSON
(Associated Press Staff Writer)
T Wasieatox —r,
day to the senate investigating
committee that although ‘he‘::
paid no income taxes in this
country in 1931 and 1932, he
did pay such a tax in Eng-
Jand. N
WASHINGTON —(AP) — Ob=
jectiom. by J. P. Morgan to the
placing ' of his giant private bank
ing firm ' under the same examina
tions now . required of commercial
banks were" recorded by him Tues«
day in a ligitthearted manner be
fore the senate investigating cm’g‘g{
mittee. \ Lighs ¥
He gave as the reason that “our
relations with ‘our clents are
much more confidential than the
relations betweert a commercial
bank -and its customers can he.”
. The committee swung into thig
’phase after making:. public a list
of recipjents of loanst by the Mor~
gan firm, which included formery
Vice President Charles G. Dawes,
Ambassador Norman' H. Davis,
Richard Whitney, president of the
New York Stock Fxchange;
Charles E. Mitchell, former head
of the National City bank now on
trial on charges of tax evasion,
and other prominent figures.,
As to the Mitchell loan, Which
the recipient has sald now s;aw;:
at some $6,000,000, Morgan e
the senators it was at -preséut -
“under-collateralized.”” L
Amounts loaned were not includ
ed on the list. The record showed -
that Dawes, former Vice President
and Taylor had paid off their
loans.
Asked about the loan to Nor«
man H. Davis, Morgan answered:
"I' c-z;.rvx'tfi say.' I'm- not familiar “”..
witht it.” o
George Whitney, a partner in thé
firm, commented that it was. &
“very small loan.” SR
Asked about details of othen
loans outetanding, Morgan re
plied, “I have to give wou the
same’ answer to all those ‘ques
tions about details of loans outs .
standing,” he said. ??:fif,
Laughs, Jokes » ;w%
The financier laughed and joked
with members of the committes:
as he testified, but throughout the
crowded and warm committed”
room there was an atmosphere o f
suspenseé.
Kvery seat around the blgm
mittee table was again ocawg,
and senators followed the testi
mony closely. i -»
‘Special police were posted about
the room. sl
There was some friction he<'*
cause of questions by Fem%
Pecora. of committee counsel, % o
concluded: : «wb"r;
“Why do you think your Wfin
tion with your customers are uu?dfi
confidential than the relations of
commercial banks with th
50 T 1 o AN
positors? e 'fiflg“i
' Morgan hesitated. He began &
sentence, paused, started ¢ ,‘;;"?:
pased again. LR
“Mr. Pecora he finally said,
“I'm not accustomed to this type
of question. That is why IWA
a little difficulty in replying® "'}
Senator Glass (D. Va.) _broke
in to ask. *'“%
“If the New York state afllfitfl”é
ties should regard the condet s&w
our bank as detrimental to the
public interest couldn't the assem
bly pass a law to investigate or
supervise ?”” 1 :fi_ffig
Morgan nodded and Glass ‘sadi,
“It looks to me that we are inclu=
ding New York state in this fiqfi
quisition.” v fi‘m
Morgan revealed to the commite
tee that his firm takes new«W;{
ners with requiring them tq(’qm“ffi
nish new capital. wh’g
As to putting private hank}g&% un
der the same legal regulation as |
commercial banks, Pecora 3r o
of Glass whether he had overlooks
(Continued on Page Qg ;