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About The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1933)
COTTON s ol MIDDLING w 0 .. o 0 ve oo 9 1-4¢ pm.vlous €LOBE .. .... 9 1-8¢ | 101. No. 138. GOV. IS ORDERED INTO COURT i [TALIAN - FLANES IGHT To° CHIGAGO ir Minister and 100 . Crack Fliers to Take Off - At Daylight on Long journey to U. S. iLIGHT TO PROCEED THROUGH EASY HOPS . taborate Preparations for occan Hop by Greatest Air Fleet ORBETELLO, Italy—(®P)—After a hnal satisfactory ‘take-off = driil riday morning which lasted thirty five minutes, War Minister Itale Balho pronounced his trans-Atlan i squadron of 25 seaplanes ready i take off at dawn Saturday on e first leg of a 6,100 mile flight ds the sub-polar regions to Chi ago. Weather conditions over the Alp: how are reported good and grow ne more favorable. High Fascist officials, including eneral Emilio De- Beno, former ipreme chief of the Fascistt army witnessed the final drill of the Armada. The air minister and 100 crack Fascisy fliers composing the expe iition will spend the night at the high seas aerial navigation school here. They will rise at about 4 .m. prepared to gtt away sot Amsterdam with the coming of daylight Simple Departure Thousandg of applications _ for hermits to witness the dgparture lave been turned down in keeping with Balbo's wish for a minimum of ceremony. Passes have been issued only teo newspapermen and a few govern ment officials. = \lthongh no stops are contem plated on the 870 mile flight ta Amsterdam, landings can be made fnecessary almost anywhere along the route If things go well the 26 planes will descend at the Dutch metro plis six hours after leaving Orbe: tello, which ig 60 miles from Rome Following a night’s repose at Am sterdam the expedition will con tnie on to Londonderry, northern Indiana, a distance of 630 miles. Only 24 planes will- make the en fire flight, one stopping at Reyk vk, Iceland. No pains have been spared to as fire the success of the cruise Flahorate preparations have been nade for keeping the fliers sup- Iled with meterological data and "oughout the trip the squadron nothing goes wrong with its ra (o contacts, will be in communi talion with land bases. Crews of Four A crew of four is assigned t¢ fich ship—two milots, a mechanic il a radioist-navigator. Several i to carry an extra man. The s have +we motors and twin liat tettorned cakins. Four light prvisers, two other ""s. two submarines and sia “nted British whalers have been ;"""“"MI along the route to wire s weather reports and go ‘o the :fl f any plane forced down al from Londonderry the route is 1w r"““\‘-',\‘f L"“”‘i"va‘rrv to Reykjavik, Tce d—93o miles. Revkiavik to Cartwright, Labra fr—lsoo miles. Cirtwright +o Shediac—Boo miles Shtdiac, to Montreal—soo miles. dontreal to Chelago—B7o miles _'"® members of the expedition % heen put through a year and " 121 of Intense training. Prac- Yy all of them are on the ful side of 35, . most being Found 39 Afer a brief sten at Chicago and % 1o a few other points, prob " ncluding New York, the "dron will ‘aigain brave the At ‘. They plan to return ovet | "utherly route. eorgia Press Hears Taik by Hugh Howell | "OME, GA. __(#—Hugh Howell. nan of the state Democratic ““Cutive committee told Georgia baper editors Friday the | “'" chief problems were cost of |, S'hment, high taxes and failure “ns to vote: b Howell saia 1t was not the k nlll ctate tax on property .‘.'. is “crucifying’” the people but | taxation because Georgia has : iny counties. He said any b to consolidate the counties, er, would bring a hot politi k ¢ with the advocates of mer- M rclegated to the back ‘seat, FULL Assuciated Press Service. HOME LOAN HEAD ~ B Dy SRR i o : . e e e, i BRIt oo Bl o T e ' LR & CAPPET 1 g X A SR f 3 o Y 5 2 & - s 5 A ER .. ¥ : il i . y N ‘ il ¥ : ‘ By o o % { - R T 1 By L e e (% .'r‘"‘- | s J ‘&e’ i,, T . 4 — " ¢ LS. o & g ot 1l gy 7 3 : sl 7 e e [ - g & . e o e 4 s A R - A ) ST BT Lo A f s L B . L e il A 5 Rt L o 3 e VNSRS aari i o 3 LS A - g ; L g 1 A w 3 & & % et e J SR 2 I.l_Jf.? Sy e o 4 PR s B on amde PR, B g Bl il o 3 B i et s s 5 b ¢ W ———— O mmnRUR S - Frank A. Holden, former Athenian, who has been ap pointed manager of the Geor gia branch cf the Federa! Home . Owners Lodan corpora tion. ’Frank A. Holden Is Ap ' . f pointe® Federal Repre + sentative in Georgia i Many AtHens home owners are ;‘awamng with interest opening of Ithe Georgia Branch of the Home Owners Loan Corporation, to file application for leans to ease their ! mortgage troubles. } Frank A. Holden, a former Ath enian, yesterday was appointed |managers of the Georgia branch and will take up his duties at once. lA(cording to news despatches from IWashingU)n, the central office ex ;[)ocfs to be ready to handle appli- cations within the next month. Appraisers and attornéys will be selected for many of the counties in the state to assicting in valua tion of property &nd investigating titles, Mr. Holden is an alumnus of the University of Georgia and is a former asistant attorney general of Georgia. Since his removal from Athens he has been associated with his father, Judge Horace M. Holden, in law practice in Atlanta He was at one time member of the legistature from Clarke county and was a candidate for congress a few years ago in a race with the late Congressman C., H. Brand. losing by a small margin of votes. It is reported that there are many Athens home owners with loans in insurance ecompanies and mortgage companies who desire to take advantage of the federal loans in order to reduce mortgage pay ments and extend the time of their loans. THREE OFFICES WASHINGTON, —i{(/P)—The fed eral Home Loan Bank Board an nounced Friday that headquarters for the home owners’ loan corpo ration in Georgia would be in At lanta with branches in Macon and Savannah. 800 ON STRIKE ROCK HILL, S. C.—(AP)—The night shift of the Rock Hill Print ing and Finishing company stracic early Friday and a few hours la ter the day force failed to return to work. With 800 operatives idle, the mill machinery was stopped . The plant is Rock Hill's largest industry. Fleaching, coloring an€d dpeing is done at the mill. Science Explains Women'’s Imaginary Headaches; Why Men Get the “Bighead” l By HOMER McCOY g Ascociated Press Staff Writer ’ CHICAGO, —™}\— Complaining | ahout headaches that don't exist is | women’s ordained lot, the Ameri-l can Association for the Advance ment of Science was told ‘Friday. I Man's lot is to swagger aboutl the house with inflated ideas about his own importance. The reason: } Life is that way. MThe observations were re-1 ported by Dr. Mandel Sherman ofl the University of Chicago as the result of extensive studies that he | gaid indfcated the existence of a | direct relationship between cul tural ‘background and the abnor - mal ,mental symptoms of persons. Parying kinds of metal twists, Dr. Sherman also declared, were found among abnormal persons of different religious faiths. He placed no interpretation on the findings. in gathering statistics to sup port this theory, he studied pa tients in three Chicago and one St. Louis Psyeopathic hospitals, THE BANNER-HERALD LONDON CONFERENGE LONDON GO WILNOT ADJOURN f e ’ IDINALD AGSERTS ‘ ’ a B ' British Premier Says U.S. . Stand on Stabilization ~ Cleared Way for Further ¢ Progress PARLEY PRESIDENT IS NOW OPTIMISTIC “Rumor Persists Roosevelt . May Be Called to Lon don at any Minute - LONDON —(&)— Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald as president of the World economic conference declared in a statemcnt to the press Friday afternoon that the conference was not going to ad journ but was continuing its | work. “l am entering the third week with a very buoyant and hopeful ! heart,” he added. Despite Thursday's Franco-Am erican rapprochement, which at least temporarily ended the cur i rency stabilization crisis that | threatened to wreck the conference, Ethe question of adjournment was | again raised in the steering com- Imittee Friday morning. Z ‘ | The British Prime Minister re-} ‘vs aled this in his talk with the | press With a sweep of his hand Ilhe added dramatically: “But it was | laughed off.” ! Mr MacDonald said in substance !that Thursday’s developments had | ¢leated the air \nd paved the way Ifor further progress. He assert |ed that suceess of the conference idepended on the stabilization of currencies, bug - pointed out that !.American difficulties in stabilizing {the dolar are very teal 1 Is Determined { In any event currency uncertain i ties are not going to be allowed Im block the conference, the Prime | Minister made clear, and “all .the !work that can go on is going on'. | It was a new MacDonald who ifacod the press. For days he had | been fighting to save the confer ence from collapse over the stabi llization issue. All of his knack of ! bringing warring men together | had been exerted, and when the LINDBERGH HOME TO BECOME CHILD WELFARE CENTER I JERSEY CITY, N. J—(AP)— l'l‘hc Hopewell thome of Colonel {and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh, tfrom which their first born son { was kidnaped in March, 1932, wi'l 'become a childrens’ welfare cen {ter. 4 I Tricorporation papers for “High | 1inl?" the cogpcration which will ioperate the property, ' were filed %Friday with County Clerk Gustav ißnch. i James M Phelan was listed as | statutory arent and the statutory |otlice was stated as 149 Highwood i avenue, Weehawken. i Regsitered trusiees are C(_)lonel land Mrs. Lindbergh, Dr. Abram | #lexntr, Colonel Henry Brecken | ridge and Owen R. Lovejoy: ! The object of “High Field” is ! stated as “to prvoide for the wel !t‘are of children, including their | education, = training, hospitaliza- Stion, or other allied purposes, iwithout discrimination in regavd { to race or creed.” considering their sex, religion, na- | tionality, occupation, economic‘ status and enviromental ba.ck~| ground. . Dr. Sherman excluded thosei whose abnormalities arose from iph_vsi(al disorders. ‘ l Comparing the symptoms in thei mental disease among the three _main groupe of religious s:tmia.-“ ~ tion—Catholic, protestant and Jewish, Dr. Sherman said: | } “Of the hallueinations in tha iProtestant group. 57 per cent per-{ tained to religicu. In the Catholic 'group only 27 per cent pertained 'to religion, whereas none was found in the Jewish group. i “Of the total number of grand jose delurions (abnormally high ' self esteem, the percentage distri 'bution was as follows: Protestant, | 55: Catholic, 39; Jewish 6. | “of the somatlec delusions | (wherein the patient imagines | himself diseased), the percentage : ———— { (Continued on Page Six) Athens, Ga., Friday, June 23, 1933. LONDON-BOUND BEARING ROOSEVELT’S MESSAGE SR - §:¢ 2 | TR R PR BRRR R RRIR T inieelh i & 3 B e AR & B R B R UL S S & B SRt BB % A ; .7\ . 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RN SR B s R 5 8.5 e If:::':.:i'i‘?f»", S 5 '\)" BAR v LR %o vRN g T rE E R BRP L o R AR PR e e o S e 0% SR R % Coeonatia B B o 8 & R 3 g e 4 5;;:,2:‘%_5:& - : ol s ; L A S R P R b : B W e R S BR R B e o g B oy R R 3 R §WA o o B S eah IR 6 S N T <R 5 ';x;"’% i R B 0 '%"q\)*b?w” BRI - b e, BPR ?iv % .~<:::;;.-'_9‘$% ¥ B g £ P :g p . NA R S R s % R 3 L R N’&\ 5 35\“&’ Sy G i g SRR R S g X .:E.{.:;_Aff: 3 §-§ fé}"(f\« ""4;;'\4:\”-::"":";":::‘1:5 R R S R SRR S oc 5 b RRS - R o R Bearing important instructions from President Roosevelt to the Ameriein delegation at the World Eoonomic Conference, Raymond Moley, Assistant Secetary of State and head of the celebrated “brain trust,” is shown (left) as he sailed from New York for London with Herbert Bayard Swope (right), former New York publisher. BOARD OF REGENTS i Talmadge Silent on Re -3 - port He Is Opposing Re election of Campbell ATLANTA —(#)— The Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia, which in the past few months has re-shaped the entire university set-up In Georgia, ‘was in ‘session Friday for its annual meeting, with the organization of the state agricultural extension service as one of the chief items of business. Re-election of Earle Cocke as gsecretary-treasurer of the board was regarded as_ a foreogne con clusion, and it was expected that Hughes Spalding, prominent At lanta attorney, under whose guid ance much of the reorganization work has taken place, would be the board’'s choice for re-election as chairman, if he wants the post for another year. The session was executive. In political circles there have been reports that Governm" Eugene Talmadge, one of the members of the board, would oppose the re election of Dr. J. Phil Campbell ag director of the agricultural exten sion service but the chief executive has maintained a strict silence and has waved aside qustions concern ing his reported opposition te Campbell. Dr. Campbell comes up for re. election Saturday. Make No Change* The faculty for the new Abra ham Baldwin Agricultural college at Tifton, already nominated, is expected to be elected without change. Staffs for the experiment (Continued on Page Six) FARMERS WARNED NOT TO PLOW UP COTTON AT ONCE No farmer in Georgia is to plow up any cotton until di rected to do so by some agri cultural agency of the govern ment, Director J. Phil Camp bell of the State University Extension service, has warn ed. Mr. Campbell said he felt it was necessary to issue this warning since it is now appar ent that plans for cotton acre age redifction in Georgia will be enthusiastically received. In seven of the eight dis trict meetings held in the state Thursday betwden exten sion workers and representa tive farmers, the vote was unanimous for the adoption of the Wallace plan for reduc tion of cotton acreage and the cash benefits to result. Mr. Campbell said govern ment contracts are now in the hands of the agricultural agents and will be available to the farmers at the series of meetings to be held -in each community during the first three days of next. Signing of the contracts is up to the in dividual farmer. COMMODITY PRICES *CONTINUE ADVACE 'Pointing to Roosevelt ’ Goal of High Level to Re store Prosperity y i WASHINGTON.— (AP) —Amer ican commodity prices have out stripped the fall of the dollar and *ure pointing for President Roose velt’'s goal of a level high enough 'to bring the country some pros iperit_v. ' . For the first time since the; lstock markets and the commodity ’indexes started their climb, an 'official analysis has now indicated \the spread between the true price 'rise and the dollar’s depreciation }as a consequence of gold standard labandonment. } The Federal Reserve bhoard's 'monthly review is out Friday with |the statement that by the end of lMay———just before the latest de jcline began—the dollar was down {ls percent in terms of French |francs, the leading gold standard |currency. The British pound had élost two percent in the same time. } Six basic commodities, said the Il)uard. had by the end of May jjumped 60 percent since February. One-half of the rise corresponded ;m a general world rise, and ‘the remaining thirty per i(’vnt rapresented dollar depre \ciation plus catuai domsetic rise. | The commodities discussed were 'were cotton, lard, silver, copper, "in and rubber. i There is still a long way to go [to reach the 1926 average which ;is regarded as the Roosevelt goal, land pending which the dollar sta |bilization plans are being held off. "'l‘hv Department of Labor placed |the June 17 index for all commod tities at 64.5 against 100 for 1926. !Th(- course was charted steadily ]upward through the past several ! weeks; May 20 it was 63.0, ind | the succeeding wecks 63.3, 63.5, 64.0 and now 64.5. | { With this clearcut evidence of {a mounting tide went also th(-'i | better business pointer of-growing tax collectons. Beer led the pa-i ’rade in May, surpassing expecta tions to turn in more than sll,- | 1500, plus several hundred thous land in special associated levies.i iAt that rate it may yield $280,- {OOO.OOO a year instead of the c;nl-! jculated §150,000. : | Stock market activity spurtedi {the yield from security transfer |taxes 'to 34,704,000, more tlnn‘ ;double that for April. | May receipts in all classes fwr! the first time ‘were sufficient to ‘hring collections for the fiscal ]year past the receipts of the pre | vious year. The eleven months of {fiscal 1933 yielded $1,368,238,226 |agmmt $1,350,734,652 for 1932's ;eleven. " !Wales Spenfls Quict ; I 39th Birthday Friday | LONDON -—(#)— The Prince of | Walcs varied the routine of his | busy life but little Friday in cele i bration of his 39th birthday. . He spent them morning at his | Fort Belvedere home, and motored ;to York ouse to read hundreds of lgreetings from all parts of the world. Then he visited Bucking }hnm palace to receive the congrat ulations of his royal parents, U.S. Judge Underwood Orders Talmadge Appearance June 30 Before 3 Federal Judges ralmadge Tears Up Netice of Damage Suit for $25,000 ATLANTA —(®)—Governor /Tal madge tore up papers be.ng served on him in a $25,000 damage suit to day while attending a luncheon tossed them at the deputy making the service and had him and a companion officer placed under ar rest by his military aide, The governor went to the lunch ton accompanied by Adjutant Gen eral Lindley Camp. A short time later a depu'y handed the pape: tr the executive who rose to his feet and demanded: “What is this, what is this, what is this?” On being informed ano‘her dep uty was suing him for having the officer placed under arrest in serv ing papers in an injunction suit in which the governor was named Governor Talmadge promptly tore the paper into bhits and threw them at the retreating deputy. Adjutant General Camp placed both deputies under arrest and es corted them to his cffices near the capitol. The highway department and most of the capitol are under mil itary control following a proclama tion by the governor n a dispute ‘with the highway department. FILES SUIT ATLANTA , Ga~—(AP)--Gover nor Talmadge's orders {o Adjutant General Lindley Camp to escort a deputy sheviff from the Capitol building while attempting to serve the governor with a court papev has resulted in a $25,000 damage suit. ; Deputy Sheriff Sidney C. Woo ‘ten of Fulton (Atlanta) county, Friday filed suit against the gov ernor and General Camp for $25,- 000 damages claiming that hiy arrest by General Camp on the lorder of the governor was illegal ‘l:md that he was falsely imprison ied for an hour in the governor's office. Wooten was seeking to serve a court order for a temporary in junction granted Captain Barnett, |then chairman of the Highway board, and W. C, Vereen against the governor, State Treasurer George B. Hamilton and Comp troller Williaan B. Harrison, to i prevent the withdrawal of more | than $2,500,,00 of Highway funds {in the st te treasury. Immediate;y after the injunction suit was filed in Fulton Superior court the governor declarde mar tial law «(ver the Highway de partment and certain offices in | the Capitol. The governor's office in- the Capitol building was under military rule when Wooten sought to serve tl:¢ injunction The deputy was escorted back to the courthouse. Caused A rest The Wooten damage suit set out that the deputy sheriff, while in the performance of his offi lal {duties, served the governor with s | copy of the Supericr court order, {and that the governor “wilful's, I-leliheratvl_\'. arbitrarily. capricious ily and criminally: and in the u:- ! (Continued on Page Six.) Hoover Works on Secrets of History That Must Not Be Revealed for Years I By KATHERINE BEEBE ‘ Associated Press Staff Writer. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal —(AP)—In tha cloistered calm of campus surroundings, former Pres | ident Herbert C. Hoover will soon i set quietly to work at a new task {—the preservation for posterity lof history that never has been !told. ’ I New shelves are going up in the {archives of the Stanford library gand a “work room” is taking fshape in a wing of the building iwhere the man who was directing ta nation a few months ago will | pore over documents in many lan !guages and map out research pro icedure for assistants. i Mr. Hoover will he"dovotins { himself to an old hobby in his new irole. The Hoover war library— | the largest collection of its kind— |was founded in 1919 with funds | provided by him. Ever since, he ‘has talked to university associates of the day when he could find Itimc to outline to librarians the A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—s¢ Sunday, Governor Acknowledges Service For Himself And Adjutant General Camp- ATLANTA — (AP)— Governor Talmadge Fri day was ordered into Federal Court June 30 to show. cause why he should control the State Highway de partment under martial law. ; Federal Court jJudge E. Marvin Underwood Friday set the date for a hearing on an injunction sought-by ousted members of the Highway board and signed a rule nisi ordering the governor’s appearance at the hearing. ; A threc-judge court will sit on the case. Judge Underwood announced the other two jurists as Sam uel H. Sibiey of the Circuit Court of Appegals and Judge William I. Grubb of Birmingham. Governor Talmadge was not immediately served with the papers but arrangements were being made for service during the day. CONGDON DELIVERS POLITICAL SPEECH OVER WTFI, 8 PM,, William P. Congdon, Augusta attorney, will bring his campaign for congress into Clarke county tonight when he delivers a speech over radio station WTFI at § o'clock. Mr, Congdon is one of the best known young prefessional men of Richmond county and is regarded as one of the most vigorous and colorful political speakers in the state; « Mr. Congdon's address will be the fourth delivered by a Rich mond county candidate since the campaign opened. Roy B. Harris, James L. Cartledge of Richmond have already spoken in Athens, A bitter struggle is underway in Richmond for the big vote in that county, which is expected to be conviderably split on account of six candidates being in the race from that county, SAVANNAH RIVER TO BE DEEPENED UP TO AUGUSTA WASHINGTON, — (#) — Con struction of a dam at New Savy annah Bluff on the Savannah was recommended Friday by Major Gen eral Lytle Brown, chief of army enginers, to provid a six foot chan nel 130 feet wide in the river below Augusta, Ga, The c¢ost was estimated at $470,- 000 which, added to the expense of ~ mnavigation improvement pro ject existing there, would bring the total to $1,775,000. In approving t*his plan, brown rejected a proposal that the chan nel be made nine feet deep and that a lock and dam be built nine miles below Augusta at Rifle Cut. New Savannah Bluff is 12 miles below Augusta. scope of ‘the material awaiting classification. Some of the material probably will be edited for publication un der his direction, librarians said. Much of it, however, is secret and sealed, not to be made public for many years. Men must die before some of the documents are read. Governments must fall, or pass into other hands. Historical treasures to make a bibliophile’s eyes glint are stowed away in prosaic boxes and shelves. The secrets of thrones and revo ultions, heroes and rogues, lie buried there, Among the several million items now included in the growing col lection are documents dealinz with war negotiations of almost all the countries in the world. During the Armistice, Mr. . Hoo ver, as food relief administrator, was in intimate touch with all the governments of Europe, and Ithen obtained many of the do: - Lmentaz. : i > : The petition asking Judge Un derwood to set a hearing betor%fi%*f" three-judge bench oa the injunc- . tion was filed several days ago in the name of J. W. Barnett, de posed chairman, and W. C. Ve reen, member of the board. Judge Underwood delayed ordering tho'?' governor's appearance and setiing the date, however, until he could get two other judges not busy im court at the time, to wserve with him. ; Governor Talmadge issued a proclamation late Monday declar ing martial law over the entire Highway = departmant, including the main building here and all machinery and divisional ofl!n,“, throughout the state. Lt Adjutant General Lindley Camp personally escorted Chairman Barnett from his offices ' and Commissioner Vereen who wn%‘:{; his home in Moultrie, was notified by telegram that his post ‘had been vacated. Jud P. Wilhoit, the: third mmeber of the bgard whe has continually sided with tha governor in his controversy with the board dating from April'ly was put in charge of the departe ment. e The governor, under mlw rule, notified the five engineers he had ordered discharged which 'met the refusal of the board resulting in the present dispute, that;they were out and the followingsiday hégan to pay employes who+hal received no money since thew‘,{ troversy began. WEAY | Btill Guarded = . Military guards still paceQ”flg 'Highway board offices and the ofe !flces of the state treasurer, compa ‘troller general and governor | ‘the Capitol building. Theyfl ' been ordered to ward off all proe ' cess servers, but Capitol om |said the governor would recélv@ the federal official bearing th@® rule nisl papers. 3 | The 521 convicts who were turpe ied back to the State Prison scomss |mission on June 15 will be¥ioe |turned to the State Highwa#.@- {p:n‘tment for road work nex# | Monday morning, it was announs | ced by Prison Commi | George Johns. The commissicn |said that the arrangements=fof ,t.he transfer had been completed | with the new organization in.‘vm { Highway department. i E The convicts were turned bachk on the state as the result of the | controversy between the governof land the majority of the Highwag 'board at the time all mflwsg |funds were tied up. GOV“M RS 3 o { «Continued or Page Slx;r;;N LOCAL WEATHER Showers Friday - night and Saturday, et i t"‘l‘s@‘g TEMPERATURE "Sii#. Higheßt ieus'vein ciwaini oAOIE LOWESt ..ov Nves wriil cil 2;3 Mean .... ciee seis cet... 868 Normal ... 0 Wil viti G RAINFALL . SR e Inches last 24 hours .. «.es 00 Total sinee Jume 1 .. . H'=Ng Deficiency since June 1 ~.. 230 Average June rainfall .. .. 410 Total since January 1 .. <ll9B Deficiency since January ;;! i iit et ESAo e O 2 3 oh SR ke L S R