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About The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 1933)
PAGE TWO ~ Mrs. J. D. Jackson .5 . . ~ Dies; Will Hold . Services Frid r rvices I'riday I Services for Mrs. J. D. Jack 1‘ son, 74, who died at the home of L her daughter in Bogart Wednes [ day night, will be held in the g Union Christian church in Oconee e county Friday at 11 a. m. Rev. John Wood, pastor of the | Winder Christian church, will & conduct the services. Interment & will be in the Union church ceme i tery. Pallbearers will be J. L. ' Daniel, jr., Herbert Daniel, T. W. y Daniel, Woodrow Fields, Carlton & Barnett, and James Wages. A native of Jackson county, Mrs. Jackson had spent most of ® her life in Jackson and Clarke | counties, with the exception of a I few months in Sewanee, Ga. She : returned to the home of her P daughter, Mrs. R. B. Wages, in Bogart, seven weeks ago. Before B her mrariage, she was Mary Fran | ceés Milligan, daughter of Mr. and I Mrs. Hugh Milligan of Jackson 1 . gounty. Mrs. Jackson was a mem | ber of the Christian church since childhood. She and her husband celebrated their fiftieth wedding h anniversary four years ago. . Surviving Mrs. Jackson are her | husband, J. D. Jackson, Bogart; . three daughters, Mrs. J. M. Aus [ tin, Atlanta; Mrs. W. P. John . son, Sewanee, and Mrs. R. B. i Wages, Bogart; son, W. G. Jack i son, Bogart; sister, Mrs. Will Sweat, Bethlehem, Ga.; eight I grandchildren, and nine great- E grandchildren. MecDorman-Bridges J: Funcx’:ll Home i 8 in charge. :1 B T - MEDIATORS BACKED kit ' BY NRA WILL SEEK . STRIKE SETTLEMENT . (Contlnued From Fage One) ;,t’zring around New York. The | union described the walkout as i Yone of the greatest on record in ,;T'file history of the industry.” . Deny Charges 2.'; - The National Dress Manufactur . ers association, a jobbers’ organ ' jzation, has denied as “misleading " and erroneous” any statement that | “we are denying to labor a satis j»fllctory return.” The Connecticut} ¢ Dress Manufacturers association, . composed largely of operamrs} T,n’._ whose plants work for jobbers on f a contract basis, blamed the jnh-l . bers. A representative of the as- Es Sociation said that until johbersl gf"{,:pay contractors more, contractors . e¢annot pay workmen more. E Joseph M. Tone, labor pnmmis-’ E.Alloner of Connecticut, said he E, hoped for ‘“‘complete ox‘f*rmin:l-' g tion” of the “sweatshop evil.” © Other strikes were in progress . in several localities. The Nation .al Labor Board at Washington ¢ gave attention yesterday to a ihlrt gtrike in Pottsville, Pa., a ¢ motion pictures strike in Holly ' wood, and a labor dispute affect . ing employes on the New Orleans j‘:,fb‘,rldge. e OIL LEADS WAY . = WASHINGTON.—(#)—OOiI today ” jed three other huge industries— ‘j:«'.» coal and automobiles—toward . positions favorable to NRA mem . mership. 1;0“ industry chiefs took to thel | office of Hugh S. Johnson, recov "l'.;. administrator, a discussion of ~ Spme unsettled points, understood .to deal with price and production s{%ulation‘ for their trade agree - ment, . Across the street from this i peeting, President Roosevelt in %‘ White House studied the same % pints of difference and considered . Steps for~ quickly bringing steel { and automobiles up to the ¢ Blue Eagle. : 3 5; . e '~ AGREEMENT REACHED WASHINGTON—(®)—An agree \» between the automobile in ’% stry and the NRA upon the open shop” provision of the in d code was reached today ’ spokesmen for the manufac ‘tures accepting a modification pro ‘posed by Robert W. Lea, deputy administrator. ~ The change, which officials ind ‘ ted represented the views of t Hugh 8. Johnson, the administra (tor, was the first modification of fthe “collective ‘bargaining® labor glause of the industrial act which has been written in in coopera tion with the NRA. . | i| £ - Extra Special for Friday —llce Cold Melons, each, o unkd - Shelled Peas, quart, 14c. Hard Green Cabbage, Ib, e . String Beans, gal., 14c. - 3-lbs. New llrish Pota toes, 19c. 5-lbs. Sweet Potatoes, 7C. 4 N - Old ‘Faslnon Pound Cake Home Mad- Cakes, each - ARNOLD & ABNEY Masonic Notice A- called communication of Mt. Vernon Lodge No. 22, F. & A. M, will be held this (Thurs day) evening at 8:30 o’clock. The degree of M. M. will be conferred. Visiting brothers cordially invited to meet win ‘us. By order of, W. A. CAPPS W. M. W. C. THORNTON, Secty. . - .. Moffett Grandchildren Inheri: Sea Tradition ’E, '?é A ; i e ; i % 2 ’ 8045 % §iriE FrTey b ; o R ity v ; o % 5 5 5 i § S e R S o Oe 2 o s S A S 4 27 % A S RR R b ¥ S O e % R R fzj:i;.,' Lk T T // B 3 *’W%mewi’%,% Gy 0 Aweeg R Wy s N CEAR Yy v R iy g e B, e W e o : P R e s R A A R R $ R BB s B i SRR e g R ¢ 3 N %"‘cfin e % O il R R 5 ; S R RN i R A /4»2“:9" i T A TR T s S Ly G g z S ol S e w&mfl R i CE T R e R % %%’5 A O I BRy G S s 3 R R o] g T e e T ) IR, e g ¥, Gy B, G 57 \///% B : A ,f.;,:;.;g_;;;;:{?,,’i?.’f’;:‘;fi'}: e B A 3 @ ¥ /-\fi ¢ A L O I s [ v«m i h G o B s B R Pk : R N g o 7 ’ e ] P i PW g G b ég( { R AR /AP 2 N 7gAy%;RR, . R S 1 A g e 2’ "»“‘;:;,;%9(?.;’»-* B RN ” ; % LB e G B % e QB A A A S e g E i e e S "”‘“ a 5 # Z i e 228 R s gk SR ..::;-:-:3:1.,.:4‘ R a Bl T B | L B e A i P iT, e G e g T R g i fia‘“‘:""?*-‘i RoseU el . 8 B L e B S s ”'"%*"””**fiszcz?ssssss" k 'a2 o 8 "Jfi:ff,,.;', e s - & R e o A e S R O s g BRI R I, .- o s g o, e i 3 R 3 R y e _:»f'»,f_e;;:szzszzz:szkch.fiféé::’:;; e B e R % w% e . . s eo e i R e B e B R R R bOeiks i O R s e e odlome e i Gea ooTe 0 oEm e i A s Bo S G B i R i G R R . L oo 2 2. BN 8 L T g e S R ] s o F RR it e A N b e g Sy ety . L i o e G e R o g oo o R R S R g R A "‘“W, B B i O i A o o R oo R 0 i e ,-,--:~::E:::E£ziésfzizizmr'-gir**.f 2 ietL R i o el B W e e Lo e M TR Te TR el ; s Tl e S A e s Their grandfather was the late Admiral William A.” Moffett, who died a seaman’s death in the Akron disaster. Their father, Lieut. Comm. E. M. Moore, served aboard the U. S. S. Arkansas, whose bulk may be seen in the background. Admiral Moffett once commanded the Arkansas, %00. ® So Mac, Juanita and Bill Moore had reason to be proud of the navy outfits. they wore as they waited for their = . father to take them aboard the Arkansas at €Catalina Island. FORMER HEAD O F CUBA TO RETURN (Continued From Page One) about commercial relations with the United States. Other problems facing “New Cuba” were presented by dock workers who continued their strike; congressmen, of whom so many have gone into hiding that a quorum cannot be obtained, and laborers among whom another [gmu-ru] strike may develop. Guarantees will be . given the }l'righu‘nml legirzlulnrs so they may return to the Sessions safely. | araeta NEW AMBASSADOR HAVANA. — (AP) — Marquez Sterling, former Cuban ambassa dor to Mexico, accepted appgint ment today as ambassador to the United States. Sterling, who_is now in Wash ington, cabled his acceptance to Provisiona] President de Cespedes. ’ Dr. Manuel Marguez - Sterling will succeed Oscar Vintas, weal thy son-in-law of the late Colonel Jose M. Tarafa, the sugar mag nate, at the Washington post. Cin tas was ambassador for enly about a year. .~ Dr. Sterling resigned as am bassador to Mexico August 6, 1932, He quit that post because, he ‘said, he was not in sympathy with the internal policies of the Macha do administration. He refused. to accept any other commission from the government. FUNERAL NOTICES —_—— (COLORED) GRAY..—Rev. John T. Gray, sr, of Winder, Ga., entered into hi;.-‘. final rest Tuesday, August 15th. Relatives and friemds are invited to attend his funeral Friday, August 18th at 3:00 o’clock p. m. from the White Oak Baptist church, Winder, Ga. He is sur vived by the following, his wife, Mrs. Alice Gray; sons, Messrs. Seth, Claud H., John T. jr., all of Winder, Ga, and Mr. Mark A. Gray of Boston, Mass.; daughters, Misses Lda Bell and . Mary Alice Gray of Winder;, Ga.; » two sisters, Mrs. Irean Durch of + Columbia, 8. C.,, and Mrs. Mary Carr of Evanston, Ill.; a bro ther, Mr. Henry Gray of Evans ton, lil., and the following bro thers and sisters-in-law, Mr, John Jorden of Athens, Mr. Hillie Jorden of Jefferson., Ga., Mr. Henry Jorden of Winder, Ga., Mrs. Emma Sibert of Chi cago, 111., and Miss Bertha Jor den, of Winder, Ga. The Rev. L. Moon of Gainesville, Ga,, -will officiate. Interment. will be in the Bush chapel cemetery. Peoples Undertaking Company 'in charge. ; | Stairs Made H Penalty of Excess Fat Although she has lost but 7 Ibs, of her overweight, this woman finds that 7 lbs. has made a remarkable difference to her. Her letter reads: “I am 53 years old and my height is 5 ft. Lasg year I weighed 154 Ibs, I have been tak ing a half-teaspoonful of Kruschen Salt:, making no change in my diet. Now I am less round the hips, and only weigh 147 Ilbs. dressed. But I feel lighter and can now run up stairs, which befare used to make me gasp for breath. Everyone says how well and fit I look,” —(Miss) 9. B Kruschen is an ideal blend of 6 seperate Salts which help body or gans to function properly and main tain a splendid degree of health—it \builds up energy and strength while | you're reducing to normal weight. Get ruschen Salts at Citizens Pharmacy or any other live drug gist in the world—a Jjar lasts 4 weeks and costs not more than 85 | cents.—Advertisement, Price Check Necessary, ¥ . Dr. Ogburn Declares in ' 8 . Resigning From Board (Continued From Page One) feeling that proper consumer rep resentation in NRA depended on a reorganization and a change of attitude among its officials, nev ertheless resigned. Johnson is now being urged to give him full power and call him back. Consumers, without organization or industrial wealth to support them, need more support than any other group, Ogburn says. He and his associates made re ports from the consumer stand point concerning the steel and oil codes, but they appeared to re ceive little attention. Price Check Needed The new economic system with its price-fixing features and its apparent monopolistic tendencies ‘produces a situation in which the only automatic check on prices will be recurring business depres sions, Ogburn says. Hence there must be statistics which will index prices and purchasing power, so that the two may balance. The lack of such balance has given NRA more nightmares than any other single factor. The consumers’ complaints should be competently studied, Ogburn says, and the whole NRA staff should be impressed by the need of giving some attention to the consumer’'s interests. Ogburn, 47, has taught econom ics and sociology at Princeton, Columbia and Chicago universi ties. He has been president of both the American Sociological \ , SOUTHEASTERN STAGES | (OWNED AND OPERATED BY GEORGIA CITIZENS) | Leave Athens 10:4C A. M. Arrive Atlanta 11:30 A. M. Leave Athens 3:05 P. M. Arrive Atlanta 3:55 P. M. ’ L.eave Athens 9:05 P. M. Arrive Atlanta 9:55 P. M. [ Direct connections to all points. ' Leave Ather's 9:55 A. M. Arrive Savannah 4:45 P. M. Columbia 4:50 P. M. ) Charleston 5:00 P. M. ' Jacksonville 8:00 P. M. ' Wilmington 10:20 P, M. Raleigh 10:30 P. M. ’ Washington 6:20 A, M. ) New York 4:00 P. M. Leave Athens 4:90 P. M. Arrive Savannah 11:00 P. M, ' . Aerive Columbia: 10116 P. M. ' Arrive Charleston 11:00 P. M. ' Arrive Jacksonville 7:00 A. M. Very. low excursion fares to all points for the Vacation Sea ’ son. Tickets good until used, no strings, no validations—Just ' ride and enjoy your full time. ' For reliable information and service, write— D | SOUTHEASTERN STAGES | Main Bus Terminal, 170 College Avenue ! Athens, Ga. Phone 626 THE NEW DEAL IN PICTURES—NO. 3 Text by John M. Gleissner—Sketches by Don Lavin e e S egl; F : % ! S SN s B 7 L etk " B u 1)IB i oT D L BIR ATE ——~ = LG 2 Ay A f g R WTy J*'-_?J o = pr At ok W Q N i‘ og A CLO TRS e i@ S > AR SSR s A R RS a 2, N [T e 778 ;‘fifl) R L % 4 %\ :,‘?...‘—.. oty g ,(Ei@w 3t AL & ] Y * o 17 R - T . / W A "?&‘!’{ XS B s \ e ¥ " ~\ ] % ! AL A . ) 4 ik At the request of President Roosevelt, Congress passed a law ‘permitting the manufacture and sale of beer of not more than 3.2 per cent alcohol by weight, THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA Society and the American Statis ltical association. He was with the War Labor Board, conducting hearings on strike situations and then becoming its statistical-eco nomic expert after an elaborate cost of living study. He directed Hoover’s Committee on Social Trends, supervising its monumen tal report. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) | \ Widow Wins in Suit | With Paris Model ) ‘ Just before being killed by a }motor car, Henry Ottmann, well ;known Paris portrait painter, pro duced two pictures, “Woman With ;the Necklace” and “Woman With 'a Mirror.” Bgth were posed for by ‘Mlle. Helene 8., who said that 'she had exhibited her head and bust only and who claimed the pictures after his death as her | property, as she had received no compensation for posing and, as she alleged, “They are portraitsi? The widow objected, and so the model appealed to the Civil Tribu 'nal of the Seine. Her lawyer con ltended that M. Ottmapn had lpainted the two pictures, not with the idea of selling them, but be cause he wanted to present his model with two portraits of her self. The widow's argumlnt was that they were not portraits. In this she was sustained by the court, whose judgment was that “compositions in which the nude plays an essential role and in which the features of the face only constitute an accessory ele ment, cannot be considered por traits.” . i; > » M-_———"?‘T'—‘V— y Y \\\ 3 (i 5 5 ,_,-\KJW\ gtf M D flO2 B ki WD ( @ ebl ’ £ ’53 & b § - T G & { & 3 2] . . : Q) 111 A el . : » Z 23 G 4 g»_" i & 3\ AL P = 1 7A\N &) 3 L Y “-" % ./ bt ; \\\!""——-‘ ‘.«% *',' e A 2. £ ‘: x = 5 77 ’ - R i 9 T .> N ~/§-\ The act provided for federal permit fees of SSO for whole salers and S2O for retailers, and imposed a tax of $5 a barrel to provide the federal treasury with revenue esti | mated at $125,000,000 yearly: = lCrime Wave Is Turned Into Cloudburst When l . . Poison Works Overtime (Continued From Yage One) few hours earlier he had been with another woman on a boating trip, I.\']n-. too, is to be questioned. l | It was a third woman, however,‘ who, awakened by chots, found him | dying. That was his wife. | ' A woman, too, is involved in thel | tripple murder mystery of Grundy.i Va. Officers said she admicted | having been in the ecar when thf:-l men shot. Fear of a woman has been given by Mark H, Shank as the reason tor the murder of four members of a family near Malvern, Ark. The woman, Shank said, had been “running arcund’ with Alvin Co]-l ley, and had demanded a sum of money under threat of telling Ak ron, O, authorities some things Shank didn’t want them to know, So, he confessed, he figured to kill i(‘olley to keep the woman from talking. Colley, his wife and two | Colley children died from the poisoned grapejuice. Seek Kidnappers | At Chicago the police and fed eral agents pushed forward with new determination today to erase the faux pas by which extortionlstsl slipped through their fingers -early in the week. Word of a thwarted kidnap plot against Guy Waggoner wealthy Fort Worth, Tex, oil op erator, was heard; and kidnap threats against August A. Busch, jr., St. Louis brewer, and = Henry weeed ““This certainly makes it easy “SaiGSt P“eESA';,, . :¥# Y : . to pick the best”’ : GOPEe ryply of @ qudyg‘:_f, ‘ : You get safety “.ls‘;,“"“ of Supeerl‘F“'t ':"n'es o i v » ‘ gire. Every p\dy ‘who sells G‘ood}’eare pun- - . ' e S f __and anyb© gupertw.lst stands (\l\l'[(:)re than § = 6 : e e ' can show g v ordinary cord-d to bead. E 3 : Be P - ‘,,\," ishmen[ than a‘ y‘_“ ns from: bea! ot ¥ Gst tl‘actio L e P - ' I n-f = . —f ... JOODVEAR " TRE T ore mile2deT 2 s‘::; Pa"emen:glsspoint' Tests B @ GOO DYEAfE"\eage is on ped core. on B 8 L W g ‘ ) § Secong be:to.% q""ckeer ,(,;,%"year £ v ] Oneof the ;figgt:z?dl;n’t guess, :‘;;j;t"{';': the Poorigy and 77 o botk an the § o gy;':g?? bus fleet'sl.e o they get- Here sore mileagle : joodyea e a.t In othe, :,l' than e} %0 & T wha:v;‘)‘out(;ood)’ea“—g‘z%m o : eet o i orasardy Voooh s _ ot au Of ay © i&=.;. 1} other tires—and less than et e ‘10“ \“G‘ L B . = ‘ Ev [/ N /"Q Y ‘ All-Weather Pathfinder ' i so SN VWVE { e 4.40-21 4.40-21 g G \‘i p{\ S / e 4.50-18 4.5(823 L : ULa e S e Sl T 7.9 6. .. /8 . w'\\ \ “\/"\V :(//TR TR \\ ' 4.75-19 a. 50-21 | - o AT RN 8.40 | 6.30 . : W ( ‘‘ ’ 5.00-19 4.75-19 : 8 L/ \\ : . 9!00 6-70 8 |fl : 5.25-18 5.00-19 : // N WA\ ‘) 4 ‘ 10.00 | 7.20 Brmg your car to us ¢ \ \\\\W / 5.50-19 5.00-20 for a thorough Lubri- “w , " [l\’ ’ * 11.50 | 7.45 . : ' e i 6.00-19 * 5.25-18 t : . ca u.:n Job by trained / ! !‘!3"*‘ }/‘ 13.05 8.10 White Mechanic— “““ 7 8 "\ ‘ "M‘ m 6.50-19 5.50-19 7 F /d! Bl Y ) ”l,‘ 'h.'\{‘ ‘l' LS g“" 16.05 9.40 c GOODYEAR ALL-WEATHER- .- T V] We use as many as CA SKE Y’S SER VICE STA T’ON cight different greas ] eson each job. WOCO - PEP— ——Open 6 AM. to 12 P.M. Corner Prince and P ulaski—Phone 1516 Chouteau, St. Louis capitalist, were made public. From an office in Washington a sweeping war on crime is being directed, In another office a mem ber of the Roosevelt ‘Brain trust’ is concentrating his talent in de vising ways to stamp out kidnap ers. A senate committee in New York listens to the catalogue of racket crimes, seeking ways to break up a form of crime which Senator Copeland of New York estimates drains ten to fifteen billion dol iars annually from Americans. The sprinkle of crime has turned, for the moment, into an ugly ecrim son cloudburst, GEORGIA POWER CO. SIGMS NRA CODE The Georgia Power Company has signed the NRA agreement. It is effective at once as to office workers and its operation will be ex tended tc cover all other employes of the Company within the next few days, according to Preston Arkwrig{lt' president of ‘the com pany, The latter will be done just as rcon as certain details can be worked ocut in cortormity with the modified code for the electric in dustry which has been approved by General Johnson, said Mr. Ark wright, who continued: “Before the NRA movement was started, the wages and hours of the great majority of Georgia Power Company workers were already within the mini~am wage and maximum hoeur limits which have row heen specified in the industry ccde, but we estimate that appli cation of the code to ouar business BEER COMES BACK AR, .. ;\;S i ,;A\} < ) mly o e ocrix < TAX RJ Y ¢ g e - { ’ 1 ) IREVEMUE {8 iy 72 ‘ . 18 A L% =t bl "'. Ao & SR _},‘&“"“ R ‘\\ o 2 S fl w 3 3 ’ 4_5 §~'&P{\‘*‘- _ fr-/\és AFwset TR L el SN (T "l ] Ty 23 S i.™ A S ¢4 B ’f-':,\fi, S L ] i Ll . ) STATES, @1 N (&flg A~ NN A ey Regulation of beer was left to the individual states with safeguards for those which remained dry. States, counties and cities were able to impose additional taxes. will lesult in an increase of ap proxmately SIOO,OOO in the Com pany’s annual payrcll “We are happy to cooperate with President \Roosevelt in ‘this great movement to restore procperity. ‘ln the spirit if the NRA, this Com jpany has recently added more than ,10 new employes with a resultant increase of approximately $70,000 ir annual payrolls, separate and lupart from additions to be made under the NRA code. This expan |sic-n of cur forces, the first since the arrival of hard times, was made in connection with an en larged sales program which we are planning to launch, bacause we believe that an increase in gen eral business activity is certain: to —_“‘\ £ \Q&“ §V¥£\ ® ‘\“'\\Qfi N\ \W\%\“&\‘\%\\ /é 5 - px\o *lo\\‘% Sp& f,m —M——k F : i sg§r:U RT M.Zi 0211;: OHNE& IN A ’}.‘_.4 3 Pd ;?EENJF;}::/EI : RYI S§ 0 gIT e ::M,'ON g R G SHEED ?’: i s it 23 Ty 5 S Eg] o : ) oy ARTICL,E Xviy 5 g; 1. Afte, one 00, from the raliflcahbn of & § =B9 this Artic], the manufaclure, sale, o, trapg. g -KR portah'on of inloxicaling quuon Withip the :rnponanbn chereaf into, Or the e_.lporlallon E 3 3 3 l/h-(cof' from the Uniteq States, and .p i ¥ | lemlory Subjoc, o the iurlidiclion thereoy / { for beverage purposes is he'!by proliibfled- ; 3 2, The Coagren and Severa) States shajy / : haye Ut reng Powe, , | enfc. thys rticle /) . sby approprialte legisla(ion. o i Thys Artic]e shajy be inoDeralive Unlegs 4 | " shajy hay, beep, Tatifjeq 35 an amcndlnenl 0 the Con:l:?ulion by the legislaturex of the s.everal.s@tt's, as Provide in the Qnm'lly tiop, w:{h:q Seven Years from the date of the subm:suon hercof 0 the Slateg by Con. Bress, 2 - -m.m"""—“"“‘;;‘:‘ - : Ga' SR ..M'w.«‘ ion: ub- Y e s tos t e-~ Inc.), ent men X ™ 933, NEA Servic o‘ the ”;::‘dm"d Se opyright, 1 request prohibit Formy 0 ooto 0 o "“"m Out the also repe : Congress uestion of NEXT; mit the q — to the states, THURSDAY. AUGUST 17, 1033 e R o v Y N L — result from various Movements \u(;v.’ bejnz ca_lrr‘ied £Q\\'ax'(l undep the leadership of the President, |, is the surest evidence of our faith 3 his ability to carry {he Natiop through to better times. . . TO USE AIRMAIL l WASHINGTON —(&)—4 bulletjp directing the head of eVery exeqy. tive agency in the EOvernment 4, luse the air ma.il for all phyt the most urgent government Messages IWas circulated today by authority let President Roosevelt's €Xecutiyg council.