Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
~ THEFT CHARGES
SAVANNAH, Ga. —(AP)—Fguur
former employves of the Liberty
National Bank & Trust Company
dere have now been arrested on
the charge of being implicated in
the theft of funds from the bank.
The four men who are held under
bond for the United States court
e J. J. Fiszutri('k. e P Mat-
X, J. Ed O'Brien and John F.
:Julli\'an. The arrests have been
thade at different times. Fitzpat
riegk was the first to be taken in
custody. Then O’Brien was ar-
rested, then Sullivan and Mattox.
. The arrests followed the dismis
sal of this quartet and one other
vmfioye following an ‘investigatio..
by the officials of the bank. Offi
% of the bank made a state
ment in the newspapers announc
x;that the bank was protected
from losses through the bonding
company which had stood secirity
tog‘ ghe employes.
A few days after the dismissal
fifile five, Fitzpatrick was arrest-
ed under a warrant issued hy a
United States commissioner. He
was placed in jail and remained
there several days. He then suc
geeded in giving bond and was re
eased.
x’r?'Brien had left the city follow
his dismissal but when it was
found he was wanted he advised
the Uaited States marshall that he
was prepared to come to Savan
nah and surrender. This he did.
E came back to the city on Sat
day night. He was allowed to
bfi on his own recognizance until
finday at noon when he appeared
vith a bondsman and was re
gsed. Sullivan made plans for a
jondsman before he *was formally
taken in custody and did not go
%o jail. Mattox was not so fortu
nate. He was held in the custody
of the marshal for some time in
an effort to give bonq.
Student Sets Up
‘Typing Record at
Opportunity School
Hazel Stokely, 17-year-old
daughter of J. B. Stokely, typed
78 words per minute for 15 min
autes, with only 10 mistakes, jn a
test at the Opportunity school this
wmorning. Miss Stokely took type
wriging for awhile at High school
‘" pefore entering the Opportunity
sgchool. Due to the limited time
students have for practice at the
Opportunity school, Mrs. R. Poole
Zachry, the principal, regards Miss
Stokely's féat as “marvelous.”
“ - Phe graduating exercises for the
% 3 rtunity school will ‘be held
b day night at 8:30 o'clock. The
3 ie is invited to attend. Speak
ars will be ‘announced later.
According to Boswell's “Life of
‘Johnson,” Samuel Johnson coined
the expression “Hell is paved with
_good intentions”; George Herbert
‘fs credited with “Hell is full of
‘good meanings and wishes”
't Chromium is the hardest of al
’fflmetals.
o
Now There’'s Much Joy
~ln Gloomyvillg—Dad’s
RHEUMATISM
«Cripples Him No More
fi Off to work went Father—vaulting
" the, fence with one hand—mother
1 'h\?hs with joy—the kids are happy
. and no wonder,
.. . Three weeks ago he was nearly a
SRS R yoet e L o SRR CD A T T =
5 “cfipple—-the piercing rheumatic pains
' ‘almost drove him mad-—then came a
i 1 ‘bettle of Allenru—a present from a
. meighbor. In 2 days the ageny left__
£ wst like magic—no wonder gloom
i ged to joy in that modest home,
* Within 24 hours after you begin to
i,‘w Allenru for rheumatic pains,
;;v‘,'niilfltls or lumbago the excess uric,
o starts to leave your hody——in 48
1 rs the terrible agony is gone—if
" does not happen Moon-Winn Drug
. .+ Citizens Pharmacy or. any lead
é«‘ druggist anywhere will return
id ' purchase price—-an 8 ooz, bottle
. BBc—Advertisement,
¢++l. THE VITAL SPOTS
:‘ & '
Y S ’
7 <
/ s,
S
% A
%0y pont
g 4 U PON
ON'T neglect your home
: this spring! Look carefully
to see if it needs paint. At least,
check the vital spots—under the
eaves . . . around spouting ; ; : at
the base of porch pillars...under
window sills. Protect these weak
spots now by using du Pont
House Paint. Its durability is
proved. Its colors are lasting.
JOHN K. DAVIS & SON
Phone 1877—232 E. Broad St.
PAINTS - VARNISHES
"ENAMELS - DUCO
Lec Bowden Begins
Twentieth Year in
Georgian Work Here
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LEE BOWDEN
Lee C. Bowden began his twen
tieth year as Athens representa
tive of the Atlanta Georgian and
Sunday American Sunday.
Mr. Bowden, who was president
of the Young People's Nix-for-
Governor club of Clarke county
last wear, is proprietor of the
Georgian qus stand. He has
served under Charles Coleman,
circulation director of the Geor
gian, for nineteen year, and with
B, K. Neal, country circulation
director, for ten years. Seventeen
persons are employed by Mr.
Bowden in Athens.
TO SPREAD STATE
DEPOSITS WIDELY
IS TREASURY PLAN
ATLANTA, Ga—(AP)—A state
wide program oi spreading de
posits over the entire state, in
an effort to broaden credit facili
ties, was announced Thursday by
George B. Hamilton, state treas
urer,
“In line with a campaign pledge
which I'feel was indorsed by the
popular vote of the people of
Georgia last fall, I am initiating a
state-wide program of spreading
deposits of state funds over the
entire state of Georgia, so far as
practieable,” Mr. Hamilton said.
“This program will serve a dual
purpose in that it will not only be
of great aid and assistance to the
faymers of this ' state through
helping the local banks that serve
them, but it will ecarry out in a
tdngible way the program of the
national administration at Wash
ington. The program I am start
ing will accomplish an inflation of
credit for the rural communities
in that it will place at the dis
posal of the clients of local banks
cash to add to the working capi
tal of the cmomunity. One of the
soundest means of inflation is in
flation of credit.”
He said the above policy does
not in any sense mean a discrim
ination against the banks of the
larger communities, and added
that *“of course, ample ' require
ments as to collateral against de
posits will be enforced.”
Treasurer Hamilton said depos
its of such funds were restricted
to towns designated by the state
legislature, and to banks in these
towns appointed as depositories
+y the governor.
Charges Revenue
Bureau Examined
Mitchell Returns
NEW YORK —(#)— Charles E.
Mitchell's 1929 income tax return,
in which the government claims it
was défrauded of half a million
dollars, was examined by the in
ternal révenue bureau a year after
it was filed, Max D.Steuer brought
out at the trial today, and no fault
was found with it. .
But the prosecution countered
this with testimony that the agent
®*ho made the examination, Ambrose
Hussey, was transferred from the
downtown to the uptown district
in 1928 and that at the same time
Mitchell started filing his return
from his Fifth avenue home, in the
uptown district, instead of from
Lis Wall Street office as he for
merly had done.
Another .contention United States
Attorney George Z. Medalie made
was that although Mitchel? did
not report. the receipt of $666,676.67
from the National City Company
management fund payment in 1930
The defense claims the $666,667.67
was not income, but an advance on
expected profits to be repaid if
they failed to materialize. The
profits were not realized, but the
government says Mitchell kept the
money. -
The testimony regarding Hus
sey's examination of Mitchell’s re
turn was given to Frank W. Black,
former vice president of the Chase
National bank and tax expert who
for years made out Mitchell’s re
turns.
Hay Fever, NOW!
A s. S ———
Relief guaranteed even if climate, doctors and all
other remedies bave failed. The most obstinate
oases yield promptly to Hoover's I ved Asthma
Remx; Attacks may be \-aw;p'boy this trest
ment. It remedies the eomf{i'bm which render you
subjest to attacks. Relief from sneesing, echoki
whsu:gnfl difficult breathing, or your money (81»33
refunded. If mot obtainable at ordet
direct from Geo. D. Hoover, ME‘D- Ia
Free trisl on request. Sold by
| CITIZENS PHARMACY
Out of 45 State
Legislatures 35
Voted More Taxes
NEW YORK.—(AP)--Forty-five
state legislatures met this year
35 of them imposed new taxes or
substantially increased old ones.
The additional taxes will exceed
a quarter of a billion dollars in
one year,
Eleven of the legislatures,
though debating new taxes, either
failed to impose any or had their
actions nullified by the courts.
Eight relied enly upon beer and
wine for new revenue, i
Seven states adopted inconle
taxes for the first time; seven
others raised existing taxes on
income. A total of 20 states now
have this form of taxation.
Three states levied on gross in
comes. 5
_ Six adopted taxes on retail
sales.
Twenty-one legalized beer and
wine and imposed taxes upon
both.
Two states defeated sales tax
proposals and the courts of two
others voided sales tax laws. Two
rejected income tax proposals.
New taxes and expected addi
tional annual yield in various
states include:
Alabama — Foreign securities;
$360,000.
California — Raised state bank
tax from 4 percent to 6 percent,
$1,000,000, Increased levies on gas,
electric and telephone utilities,
$3,000,000 (estimated at $6,000,000
biennially). Gross receipts, truck
ing companies, $250,000. People to
vote on several other new tax
proposals June 27,
Georgia—Only a minor change
in a fish tax.
Idaho—Virtually doubled exist
ing income tax by lowering ex
emptiqus; additional $200,000.
Chain stores, $150,000,
Illinois—Beer and wine; not es
timated. Three percent sales tax
held unconstitutiodal.
Indiana—Gross income, 1-4th of
1 percent on' manufacturers and
wholesalers, 1 percent on all other
persons, firms, corporations or
partnerships; exemption of SI,OOO
allowed regardless of status, $12,-
000,000 to $14,000,000. Drivers’ lic
enses, $600,000. General intangi
bles, not estimated. Building and
loan, not estimated. Bank and
trust, not estimated. Beer, wine
and medicinal whiskey, not esti
mated. Store license fees raised,
additional SIOO,OOO.
lowa—Beer and wine, not esti
mated. Others reduced approxi
mately $25,000,000 a year.
Kansas—lncome, 2 percent on
corporations, graduated rate of
from 1 percent to 4 percent on
net earnings of individuals; single
exemption® $750, dependents S2OO
‘each; $2,000,000. (Repealed poll
tax, abolished property tax pen
alties) .
Louisiana—Beer, not estimated.
Massachusetts—No new taxes.
Salls levy proposal pending.
Michigan—No new taxes. Gen
eral sales levy under considera
tion. : .
Nebraska—Beer, not estimated.
Occupation tax no property and
credits used by foreign corpora
tions, not estimated. (Defeated
income, sales, chain store, tobacco
and stock sales taxes).
New York—Gross sales, $30,000,-
‘OOO (during its life of 14 months).
Beer and wine, $12,000,000. Gross
‘income, 1 percent, $39,000,000. Low
ered exemptions no existing in
come, $9,000,000.
North Carolina—General sales 3
percent, $8,160,000. (Inheritance,
income, franchise and license lev
jes defeated). Beer, $500,000.
Chio—Beer, $4,500,000. (Other
measures under consideration).
. Pennsylvanja—Heer ‘and 'wines
$10,000,000 (two years); money at
interest, $8,000,000 (two years).
South Carolina -— Intangible on
dividends and interest, $893,000.
License fee on “true value” of
public utilities, $906,000. Beer,
$400,000. (Income tax increased).
Tennessea—Beer, not estimateld,
Texas—oil, $7,000,060. Intangible
assets of pipe lines, $4,000,0600 to
$6,000,000. (Income tax defeated).
wRS. ROOSEVELT’S
SUGGESTION LEAD
TO NEW CAMPS
(Contlnued@ from page one.)
istration of the state of New York
is conducting an important exper
iment with federal funds furnish
ed by Harry L. Hopkins, Federal
Emergency Administrator.
“It is the establishment, at the
suggestion of Mrs. Franklin D.
Roosevelt, of an experimental
camp for young unmarried -women,
now out of work through no fault
of their own.
. “The purpose of the camp is to
pravide helpful employment and
useful instruction, amid whole
some surroundings, for needy
young women now entirely unem
ployed and without resources of
their own.
“The camp which will be in op
eration by the end of the week
will accomodate 300 women at the
nominal cost of $5 per person per
'week. The vanguard now arriv
ing will be rapidly augmented in
‘number. By the end of the month
it is expected the full quota will
‘be reached. Then the plan is to
lestablish a second camp nearby
with accommodations for 150 wo
men.
“In addition to the routine du
ties of camp life, vocational work
and occupational training includ
ing dressmaking, embroidering,
weaving and other handicraft will
IN MEMOR.AM
This is the anniversary of the
death of our darling boy, John Ed
ward Epps, who died June , Ist
1932. His memory will ever bhe
precious to us. i
MR. AND MRS. BEN EPPS
_ Athens. Ga. kol
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
AMERICANS ADVISED TO WATCH CHAMBERLAIN AT PARLEY
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ki ke B
et Be s f e e R
Britain’s representatives, Stane e e W
R k i oy :
Z S g R g & { T 3
ley Baldwin, Jest, and Neville i . Y’ & 3
3 N bz 5f e F | 5
Fb A i & 7 :
Chamberlain, ;/#,- o R R,
4y i @ '. : RGP SR
; i " 5 2 S
By MILTON BRONNER
European Manager, NEA Service
LONDON, — Neville Chamber
lain, British chancellor of the ex-
Chequer, is the man the American
delegation will have to watch when
the World Economic Conference
meets here June 12 to seek ways
to revive. international trade and
restore stability.
iPrime Minister Ramsay Mac-
Donald will preside over the con
ference, Stanley Baldwin, lord pre
sident of the council in MacDon
ald’s cabinet, will be influential
in the deliberations. Both these
men are fairly well known. to Am
erican statesmen.
Baldwin went to America some
years ago to settle the question of
war debt payments, MacDonald
visited America to confer with
both President Hoover and Roose’
velt and on his recent trip met
Secretary of' State Cordell Hull,
who will head the American dele
gation, and they exchanged views,
Chamberlain remains the un
known quantity. And next to Bald
win he is the most powerful figure
in the Tory party, which gives the
main numerical support to the
present National government,
For Two Reasons
Chamberlain is especially inter
esting to Americans for two réa-
Ssons, i
: First, making up the British
budget recently, he made no pro
vision for any further payment‘s"’_bn
Two-Thirds of Quota for Fourth Corps
Area Conservation Camp Now Signed
FORT McPHERSON, Ga.—(AP)
—Approximately 25,000 of the 38,-
000 men for the civilian conser-
vation corps -allotted the Four,th
Corps Area of the U. S. Army
have been enrolled, and Major
General Edward L. King, corps
area commander, expects the full
quota to be completed Shortly.
A total of 36 forestry camps of
the 66 allotted the corps area have
been established,, and new camps
are being added to the list daily.
Every effort is heing' made to meet
President Roosevelt’s request that
all men be enrolled and in camp
before June 7.
Officers in charge of the exist
ing camps say they have encoun
tered little trouble with the men,
and that onrly 14 have been dis~
charged for disciplinary reasons.
In the entire corps area only .002
percent -have been absent withouf
permission.
General King says a fine lot of
young men have been enrolled,
“and are doing their best in co
bperating with the army officers
placed over them.”
The list of camps already estab-
occupy the time of the women
during working hours. .
~ Recreational Facilities
* “Recreational facilities will be
providéd as a part ‘of the daily
program.
“Establishment of .this experi
mental camp- for unemployed wo
men is in line with the adminis
tration’s campaign to provide im
mediate relief for those in dis
tress. .
“Other camps will be considered’
in other states if the local state
relief organizations -maké appro
priate plans and applications to
the Federal Emergency Adminis
trator.”
Miss Perkins said the New
York camps were not to be on a
wage basis, but that such arrange
ment might eventually worked out
if some product could be found
that would not. be in competition
with regular labor. 4
The recruits ah:ady in the
Bear Mountain, she said, are em
gaged in building the camp, clean
ing off the grounds, cooking, fish
ing, and making their own gar
ments.
It has been estimated that she
popuiation of ~the United States
will reach 150,000,000 by 1960. - -
TLe 69-inch telescope of the
Perking Observatory in Delaware
is the third largest jn the world.
the British war debt to the United
States,
Second, in a speech to Ame:ican
correspondents he firmly indicated
that England did not intend to re
turn to the gold standard until she
found it to her interest to do so,
True, the American government
has banned discussion of war debts
at the forthcoming gonference, but
they figure largely in the inter
national economie picture. And the
matter of the gold standard, fluc
tnating currencies, and attacks by
one nation on the currencies of an
other, will be leading subjects lin
the discussionns,
The British “Equalization Fund,”
with which it is charged Britain
seeks to manipulate international
exchange to her own advantage,
has come in for sharp attack in
America, and has been credited
with influencing that country to
go off the gold standard.
Tall, dark, withcoal-black hair
@and mystach, promjnent teetp,
a plain blunt way of speaking both
in conveérsation and in parliamen
tary debate. Chamberlain is one of
the strongest men in British pub
lic life.
A Family Affair
Family political dynastics oc
cur in England to an extent un
known in the United States, and
the Chamberlain families is one of
the most striking examples of
this.. .
lished in the Fourth Corps Area
include:
Georgia: Wimblemill, Lumpkin
county; Robertstown, White coun
ty; west of Dillard at Tree, Ra
bun county; east of Clayton, Ra
bun county; Margaret, Fannin
county; near Hinesville, Liberty
county.
~ ¥lorida: Juniper Springs, Mar-
Won county; Niceville, Oklasooso
county; near Callahan-Dinsmore,
Duvall county.
Alabama: South of Moulton,
Lawrence county; west of Piney
Grove, Lawrence county; near Mt,
.Olive, Winston county.
South Carolina: 15 miles west
of Walhalla, Oconee county.
NEW SCHEDULES
ATLANTA, Ga—(AP)—Sched
ules for enrollment of additional
young men in the civilian forest
army were announced Thursday at
the office of Herman DeLaPer
riere, director of the Feorgia Re
lief Administration.
Saturday 478 men will be re
eruited at Atlanta and 274 will be
taken in at Rome Sunday and 218
there Monday.
LETTER OF HIGHWAY
BOARD TO TALMADGE
SHOWS NO RETREAT
(Continued From Page One)
amount of which you have ap
proved, no concession is made by
the Highway board as to the legal
ify of your action in undertaking
to strike the names of these five
men who are in.the employment of
the Highway board from the bud
get.”
Charges Evasion
~ The governor in his reply said
in part that ‘“the only logical con
clusion from your letter and your
requisition is that you intend to
keep these five men on the job
ihandung the state’'s affairs, and
approving. work that runs intd
millions of dollars. This is noth
ing but an evasion”
In another part he said.
“I cannot approve any requisi
tion for funds to the Highway de
partment until I am satisfied that
the directing engineers who have
to approve expenses are competent,
efficient and economical.”
Hé mlsd said the department was
showing it intended to “defy the
budget law” and that he was hold
ing the requisition ‘unpaid until he
had receivea written commmunica
tion from the board that the five
engineers involyed wer\ no longer
‘with the department,
~ be governor made public a let:
' Neville Chamberlaiys father,
Joseph ,a successful manufactur
er, became the reform mayor of
Birmingham in 1873. A radical in
polities, he made over the city, es
tablishing an art gallery, a pub
lic library and recreation grounds,
clearing out slums, and making
other improvements.
Later he was elected to Parlia-‘
ment and became a prominent
figure. At 51 he was sent to
America to negotiate a fishing
rights treaty and met at the White
‘House Miss Mary Endicott, daugh
ter of President Cleveland’'s secre
tary of war. They were married.
Later the father was colonial
secretary in the Tory cabinet, and
an imperialist. He advocated a
protective tariff, with special
.rights for the dominions and the
colonies. His son Neville finally
'was lead to his country to adopt
this policy many. years later.
| Austin, a son by the first wife,
lom‘ly went into politics and held
numerous cabinet posts, among
them the one now held by his half- ‘
brother .Neville. |
Neville went into business. But
at Jast the political bug bit him,
land he was elected mayor of Bir
'mingham, becoming in turn post
master general, ‘minister of health
and fihally chancellor of the ex
chequer. It was the first time in
history that two brothers had held
this post.
ter which he said tended to prove
inefficiency. :
The latter was to W. D. Hor
ten, chairman of the Telfair coun
ty board ‘of commissioners, and
was from B, P. McWhorter, chief
engineer of the Highway depart
ment,
The letter was dated April 26
the envelope was postmarked May
27, and enclosed was a copy of a
resolution passed by the highway
board on March 29,
The resolution was in effeet that
the Highway board had voted to
limit* contracts to fifty per cent ot
allotments, \
The governor said the contract
was made with Telfair county of
ficials on April 5, after adoption of
the resolution by the board, ané
that the change in plans would
cost the county from ' SIO,OOO to
$20,000. A 3
Publigshed reports were to the ef
fect that the board, two of whose
members—Chairman Barnett and
W. C. Vereen—have refused to ac
cede to the governor’'s demand that
five engineers be stricken from the
payroll, in the new proposal sug
gested the immediate payment of
all employes with the exception of
the engineers leaving their names
on the list of employes without
pay until the controversy over
their status could be settled by
court action, : '
Standing “Pat”
The governor has said repeated
ly that other than the five engi
neers whose names he struek from
the budget, could have been paid
at anytime since he approved the
revised budget during -the latter
part of April, provided no requisi
tions were made for the pay .of
the engineers designated to be
dropped. : .
Governor Ta.lymadg'e has said
that the failure to pay other em
ployes of the department since
April 1 is chargeable to the High~|
way board and not to him.
All three members of the High-l
way board, Chairman Barnett, Ve
reen and Jud P. Wilhoit, the lat
ter having previcusly approved the
governor's stand, were reported te ]
have agreed to the new propositionl
awaiting the governor's action.
The five engineers whose dismis-l
sal was demanded by the governor
are: B. ‘P. McWhorter, highway
engineer; 8. B. Black, bridge engi
neer; E. N. Seymour, office engi
neer; L. B. Ackerman, bituminous
engineer and H. J. Friedman, Way-{
cross division engineer,
Jumbo, an elephant ence ownedl
by Barnum and Bailey's -circus,:
weighed 15,000 pounds. l
Australia’s harvest month is|
Janvaty. . i
el Sk coniinlive madomeg
Finance Markets
Have Firm Tone
On Wall Street
BY VICTOR EUBANK
NEW YORK —(AF)— The fin
ancial markets - lstepped ‘h'to ‘the
new month with a generally firm
trend Thursday, although scatter
ed profit-taking tended to impede
the speedy progress in some sec
tions.
‘While business and industrial
forces continued to Ppresent a
bright appearance, one of the most
heartening was another advance
in spot copper to 8§ cents a pound
%0 the highest level since 1931.
Other commodities were slightly
mixed, however. Wheat and corf
sagged a bhit and cotton was slight
ly lower. Bonds moved irregularly.
COTTON RALLIES
NEW YORK —(AP)— A 1 early
decline in cotton under realizing
promoted by relatively easy Liver
pool cables, and a favorable view
of the weather and crop news, was
followed by rallies o 3 a renewal. of
the recent buying movement which
was evidently encouraged by the
action of the stock market.
New York Table
Open High Low Close P.C.
Ju1y..... 9.12 9.28 9.06 9.18 9.20
Octs, . .v. 9.37 9.64 9.30 9.41 9.46
Dee-0... 90.58 0.70-9.47 9.56 9.62
LESS ACTIVE
NEW ORLEANS —(AP)— Cot
ton was slightly less active Thurs
day, but price fluctuations were
fairly broad and futures showed
tendency to recover after an initial
dif}.
New Orleans Table
Open High Low Ciose P.C.
July...:. 9.12 9:24 0.02 9.18 9.4}
0ct..... 9.37 9.49 9.26 9.36 9.40
Dec..... 9.560 9.66 9.42 9.50 9.56
CHICAGO GRAIN
High Low Close
WHEAT—
IO Vs issies 738, .T 2 .73%
Bept oo aah s SeR s T 14%
v, O R [
CORN—
July i e WabSs T SENe T A
Septici. il TR 408 4T%
Do . ol B 0 A 0 80 JBUM
OATS—
R e R | .24y, - .24%
Bépt b rovi sl o PENe LGO .25%
Dec it L% »eO% 21 %
M—
l
e e
MACON.—(AP)—Peacn growel‘sl
of Georgia were to meet represen
tatives of steamship compames}
here Thursday to discuss the mar- |
keting of part of the Georgia
crop in European nations. |
\
MACON.— (AP) —The H. B.|
Nelson Construction od'immny has}
announced all labor it employs on
the postoffice annex will be Macon%
residents with the exception of
“key” men. The nnnouncement}
was made after Mayor G. Glen|
Toole protested the use of out-|
side labor by a suh-(‘ontract(n‘i
who agreed to employ 50 perce“nt\
local persons. : ‘
MACON.—(AP)—Dr. J. M. Sig
‘man has notified 10,000 patients
who he estimated owe him $50,000,
their, bills have been vaid in full
as. his contribution to overcoming
the depression. The accounts
ranging from $2 to SSOO have been
accumulating [since the World
war.
- ATLANTA. — (AP) — Colonel
Royal K. Greene, instructor of the
organized reserve in Atlanta, died
here Wednesday night. .
Holiday Notice
Saturday, June 3, 1933, being a Legal Holi
day (Jefferson Davis’ Birthday), the Ath
ens Clearing House Banks will not be open.
NATIONAL BANK OF ATHENS
THE CITIZENS & SOUTHERN
NATIONAL BANK
TODAY (June 1, 1933.)
—1 begin my 20th year as Athens Representative of The
Atlanta Georgian and Sunday American. | want to thank
all of my subscribers, from Mr. Andrew C. Erwin f"‘d
Mr. Grady Crawford, (who gave me their cubscriptions
nineteen years ago), to Mr. G, V. McCarson, Agent Texas
Oil Co., who moved to Athens today and subscribed today
{ior their patronage.
—II want to thank the Georgian Co., Mr. Charles Celeman,
Circulation Director, under whom | have worked for
nineteen ycars and Mr. B. K. Neal, Country Circulation
Director, under whom | have worked ten years, for ey
help and cooperation. They have been good to me.
—More than 1000 copies of The Daily Georgian and "‘°”j
than 1200 copies of The Sunday American are d'ehver:(.
in Athens daily. Georgian-American circulation in Al
ens has increased 90 per cent since 1929, (Depression
period). Seventeen persons are employed in Athens.
STREET SALE COPIES ON SALE AT: il
MARBUT NEWS CO.—STAR NEWS CO.—CODY DAo‘é
INC. — PRINCE AVENUE PHARMACY — MILLEqU’
PARK PHARMACY — GEORGIAN NEWS STANE
HOLMAN NEWS STAND
! .
Single Sunday Copies Delivered
_ Phone 9290
. - i .
LEE C. BOWDEN—PHONE 2020-|
THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1933
e ———
\ .
Mrs. Culp Dies
»
[ Thursday Afte,
| Short [l
Mrs. Elizabeth Dunawsy
|S!, one of Clarke count o 3
’(:i:ize'ls, died at hep home gp
‘Prin(‘eton road near Athens Th
fday at 12:15 P. m. followipg an
]ness of eight weeks.
‘ The funeral will pe held ip
| Bernstein Chapel Saturqs, m
’ing at 11 o'clock. Rey. B C. 3
pastor of the Princeton Metlg
church, will conduct the sepy
fnnd interment will fojjow in
| Oconee Hill cemetery,
; Suryiving Mrs. Culp, wha
llhe widow of the late Rube
’(‘.uln, 8T.,, are two daughters
|W. L. Smith and M Will
| Stephens; son, R. H. Culp, jr.
lfifteen grandchildren. pg,.,
{Green county, Mra. Cuip haq |
|in: Clarke county for 70 -, o
lhad always taken a oront dea
tinterest in church wo'l,
} McGRAW IS MANAGER
{ NEwW Y()HK‘(/P’*"JHE.‘H Me(y
Ifm*m&r manager of the Ney
|Giants, Thursday was tapg
and accepted the managergh!
the all-star team, which will
resent the National leagne
game with an ali-star geje,
from the American leagye at
cago, July 6.
, McGraw, who retired from ae
baseball last year, was the un
lmous choice of the eight Nati
league eclubs.
S S L
There are 20,000 Salvation
Imy bands in Great Britain.
.
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