Newspaper Page Text
1,,,-p spAY. AUGUST 17, 1933
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1/ICE LOOKS FOR
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Al
e
ir Minister Cot and Bor
deaux Mayor Suggested
As Leaders .
e
gy MORRIS GILBERT
VEA Service Writer.)
S With mounting taxes,
de, a grumbling popula-
E o chronic congestion of
ot Trance unconsciously
ving the way for a new
| Destiny.
: ssor, perhaps, to the role
ttle, serubby, unknown
] of artillery who turned
hed pets on . the Paris
| t 140 years hgo and pres
i me the Emperor Nabo
-1 rge of Xurope , . . Or a
: lern, French counterpart
! iany’s severe - visaged,
; justached dictator, Adolph
<iraneer things have happened.
~rvwhere except in France,
B . entation of human life for
) Lefit of the state is growing,
“ individual leaders have
b . and nationalism is para
| /10, though, might this Man
k 1 iny be? :
The Dictatorial Air
T only obvious name that
ol o mind now is Adrien
h| ot, mayor of Bordeaux. He
1 e makings of a dictator. He
quare-shouldered, strong
bo6 athletic, with eyes of brown
pack in Bordeaux, he already
ots like a dictator. They tell the
tory of a visit pald to Mayor
jarquet by a brother-socialist, a
eputy or congressman. The dep
v had gone to the city hall .to
s favor.
comrade,” he 'began, “I've
ome to ask you—"
\arquet banged the desk.
Don't ‘comrade’ me!” he shouted.
in this room there's a mayor and
eputy. You call me Mr. Mayor.
i call you Mr. Deputy. ‘Com
.de' is good enough for publie
heetings. It doesn’t go here!”
At the Paris Socialist conven
i where Marquet made an ap
for National-Socialism, wo
en delegates fell for him hard.
he dynamic young Bordelais got
its of mash notes. A friefd
arned him, “Don’t compromise
The majority Socialist crowd
bied to ‘“‘gang’” Marquet at the
onvention. ‘They tried to kill his
üblicity . When he spoke, no
tcnographers were present. No
bpies of his speech were ready
he press afterwards.
Straztegic Publicity Move
Marquet fooled them. He in
talled a multigraph - machine of
is own. Then he added a stroke
f his own. He got a sound-film
ompany to make a ‘“short” -of
i The “short” was a brief,
orcefulr appeal for National-So
ism. It is now being distribu
-1 through France:
Marquet and his crowd held
th in a sort of “American Bar”
ctween sessions of the conven
ion® They chose a table directly
pposite that of Leon Blum, high
bries of orthodox socialism.
Blum, dogmatic, mild—and very
ealthy, by the way—was hypno
ized, fascinated, terrorized.
If and when a wave of Fascism
light start here, the odds proba
y are against the mayor of Bor
caux riding its crest—llargely be
se he has risen too early in the
vement. But anybhow, he would
: membered as a pioneer, a
ohn the Baptist of the new cult.
Another figure looms in this
italogue of coming French states
g Pierre Cot, present Air
linister, Cot is young, not yet
olt In this country there is no
ecarning for youth in pelitics. The
outh movement” hasn't reached
rench statesmanship.
Cot’s Advantage
But he is eager, able, ambitious.
le has the great advantage of be
onzing to the Radical-Socialist
'y, which produced Herriot and
e present premier, Daladier. The
! liberal but far from radi
robably holds the allegiance
p! st Frenchmen.
Lot was a geood under-secretary
tate not long ago.. He was
i € successful as a French dele
b to the Disarmament Con-
B chce at Geneva last winter.
lis speeches are elogquent and
vrceful, And he recently did a
vell job. in combining the Big
r of French private' aviation
o one company, much against
e will of the company owners.
+ reduced the heavy expense of
Fibsidies to the government, put
viation thoroughly ~ under the
ontrol of the state.
Cot is reported to be “burned
U by the world-wide triumph of
fneral Balbo, Italian air minis
s n the recent Rome-Chicago
& "' and to be planning some
ing ¢ equally sensational for
fance. . He, . -like Balboa, has 'a
Iver’s ilicense of his own.
_Many - Frenchmen are cheering
vilional Soeialism, otherwise Fas
sin—the negation of personal
'cedom—as a way out of France's
"Oubles. At the knock-dewn-and-
Fiz-out convention ©of French
: .‘xlisls here, the Fascist cry of
tder, Authority, ' the -Nation!”
ttnding like anecho of a Hitler
beech, rang through the hall.
- Future of Fascism
flarquet and Deat got 752 votes
Ul of a possible 4,000 on their
iotion for abandoning the old So
st principles of international
“ln and setting up a strict, na
. ilistic, Hitlerian state instead.
s indicated how stronglv ihe
‘tus of Nazi-dom have taken hold
" France. And it is the second
larter . from which an appeal to
Fiscist methods has been made
‘ithin the last few weeks. Andre
lardien, old-line conservative,
rend of French- Big Business,
15 been touting a Fascist move
wnt. Recationaries are blamed
v having inecited French taxpay-
sar Village—W 's §
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One of New York’s most unique communities, not many minutes from Times Square, is the Box Car
Village in upper Manhattan where 50 men are living happily paying $3 a month rent or $6 a week
for board and shelter. The village, operated by two women, is shown in a general view above. The
interior of a typical box car, which is equipped to sleep four men, is pictured below. At left the vil
. lage chef, Frank Flaske, prepares supper for the inhabitants.
OMNIBUS COLUMN o FREEEIDEL
Athenian Holds Bag
By Helding Egg
A very serious-minded Athens
woman was left holding the egg
the other day. And by that lis
meant, “holding the egg”, not “the
bag.” It seems her young nephew
was visiting her and he'd been
showing her all sorts of tricks.
Finally he got an egg and told
her he was going to show her a
new one. He opened a door and
told his aunt to put her hangd
through the crack between the
door post and the door, on the side
vm'hfre ‘the hinges are, This crack
is- very small, and it's hard -for
even a small hand to squeeze
through. This woman’s hand bare
ly fitteq, but her fingers appeared
on the other side of the door. Then
the nephew placed the egg in that
hand and told her to ‘hold it
‘Which she did. Indefinitely. The
nephew just walked away and left
her there for a while. She could-,
n't take her hand back through
the crack without dropping the egg,
or breaking it in her hand, so she
just stayed there, calling for help
for fifteen or twenty minutes.
ers to strike not long ago. The
thought behind the strike was that
if taxpayers refused their taxes,
the government would fall, be
unable to pay its way. This could
only be followed the Tardi-n
vrowd argued, by a dictatorship.
Without attempting to be pro
phetic in such a complex matter
as French politics, Fascism at an
immediate stage, however, seems
unlikely. Even if it were the most
logical of all ways of ending
France's troubles, the training of
generations of Frenchmen has
been so individualistic as to make
Faseism abhorrent to most of
them. 2
France is the historic exponen?
of personal freedom and the
right to speak, think and do as
yvou please, so long as you don’t
infringe anybody else’'s equal
rights. For France to go Fasecist
would be the greatest politieal,
change since ‘the French Revolu
tion altered the ideas and rights
of most of civilized mankind.
MRS. FLOYD BENNETT LEARNING TO FLY
sel b Desemnssmnmy, o
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Widow of the famous aviator who flew to the North Pole with Commander Byrd, Mrs. Floyd Bennett
follows in the footsteps of her late husband. Her aeronautical careers is being aided by Captain Al Wil
liams (right) who is supplying her with Gulf Casoline and Motor °‘.", : 5
{Courtesy: Pictorial Press Photos) =
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Negro Arreste¢ on
Shooting Charge.
Charged with shooting a Negra
in Oglethorpe county about a year
ago, CGertrude Smith, Negro wo
man, was arrestedq here Wednesday
by Policemen Burpee and Hill. She
was turned over to Sheriff Paul,
‘of Lexington.
Scout Troops Meet
Thursday, Friday.
Troop 1 of the Boy Scouts of
America will meet Thursday night
at 7:30 o’clock in the Y. M. C. A.
Troop 4 will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in the Gulf Service sta
tion in.the 1700 bleck of 8. Lump
kin' street. Troop’ 6, ‘the Cub
troop, will meet with Troop 4.
Troop 5 will meet at Whitehall
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Troop 3
will meet at the First Methodist
church at 7:30 Friday night.
Eoy e
Rex Bates was arrested by Po
liceman Robertd here Wednesday
on charges of stealing fertilizer in
Oconee cuonty He was turned over
to Oconee county officers.
Is Toomer’s Bottoms
Haunted?
Tales of ghosts and other weird
stories are being recalled by a
group of Negroes down in “Toom
er's Bottoms.” on Hull street.
Strange noises that sometime re
semble pig’'s squeeling, chickens
wildly cackling, and other scared
animals and birdg invade the set
tlement two or three nights a week
when the Negroes have parties.
And there gre no pigs nor chick
ens near ‘the neighborhood. When
the sounds are investigated, they
cease, only to start up again when
the Negroes return to their houses
to resume their paties. As yet,
the sounds remain a mystery.
Power Cempany
Managers Meet
Abody 35 division managers and
salesmen of the Georgia Power
company, in northeast Georgia at
tended a meeting in the Georgian
hotel here today. The meeting
lasted 'all .day, and the visitors
were guests at a luncheon at noon.
| Recovery Sermon
To Be Repeated
Rev. T. W. Tippett, pastor of
the Prince Avenue Baptist church,
has been asked to repeat his ser
mon, “The Recovery of ‘America”,
which he delivered a few weeks
ago, The sermon, dealing with the
NRA program, will be given again
next Sunday night. Rev. Tippett,
who previously announced that he
would be out of town Sunday, will
|preach both the morning and night
| sermons, |
Athens Quartette |
Sings at Revival : 4
' The Ladies Quartette of the
Prince Avenue Baptist church will
ising at the revival services at Ap
ple .Valley church, Jackson county.
Thursday night at 8 o’clock. They!
‘were- also to sing at 4 o'clock this}
afternoon. Rev. T. W. Tippett is
eonducting the revival. The quar
ftette is composed of Mrs. W. N.
1 Cosby, Mrs. J. W. Chipley, jr.‘l
IMrs. L. C. Alexander, and Mrs.
‘[Fred Davis.
Church Orchestra
Has Theme Song
The Oconee Street Methodist
! church orchestra, eight-piece or
ganization which is nearly a year
old, uses “Take Time To Be Holy"
as its theme song.
Firemen on Vacation
Here
Lieutenant IL.. H. Guest, Fire
iman R. E. Breedlove, and Captain
PG A Hart, Athens firemen, are
lon their vacations.
IMONA LISA SMILE IN COURT
‘ In defending her attitude in de-‘
[clining to pay a well-known Pa
risian painter for a portrait of
herself, Mme. X. informed the
Civil Tribunal of the Seine, before
which she was being sued by the
artist, that she had rejected the
portrait because it had failed to
reproduce her smile which all her
friends had told her “is gexactly
like that of Leonardo da - Vinel's
‘Mona Lisa’ over in the Louvre.”
“But, Madame,” said the president
!“do you not realize that you re
quired the impossible—unless your
|friends are mistaken. As you have
not called them as witnesses, 1
must conclude that they are mis
|taken and so find for the plain
tiff, who appears to have done his
best.”
- .
Financing Conference Of
fers National Education
Program for People
NEW YORK.—An educational
charter, outlining a program ‘‘for
action by the American people”
essential for the financing of
school systems throughout the
country, was adopted by the Nat
ional Conference on the Financing
of Education, in session at Teach
ers college, Columbia university.
The charter will be distributed
to all state commissioners of edu
cation and school superintendentsi
of the nation. As ‘“essential planks;
for the furtherance of America's
public school system,” it lists uni
versal education for every child
and adult, a flexible tax system,
independent school boards, a safe
guarding of local management and
state and federal financial sup
port of edueation,
According to Professor John K,
Nor'ton of Teachers college, chair
man of the conference, which is
meeting under the auspices of the
Joint Commission on the Emer
gency in Education of the De
partments of Superintendents and
the National Education associa
tion, “these essentials must be
preserved if America is to re
cover prosperity and persist as a
democratic nation.”
Six Basic ldeas Offered
| Asserting that “the financing' of
schools is a matter of cardinal
public concern, basic to the pres
ent and future welfare of our dem
‘ocracy,” the charter offers six
main points for the reorganization
of the school system. They are:
“1. Educational opportunity.
Funds to provide every child and
youth a complete educational op
portunity from early childhood to
the age at which employment is
possible and socially desirable,
and educational opportunities at
public expense for every adult
whenever such opportunities are
required in the public interest.
This right to be preserved regard
less of residence, race or eco
nomic status and to constitute an
inalienable claim on the resources
of local, state and national gov
‘ernmems.
~ “2., Adequate revenues. For the
adequate support of all govern
mental activities, including the
schools, a stable, varied and flexi
ble tax system, providing for a
just and universal sharing of the
;cost of government by all mem
bers of the community. Accurate,
‘intelligible and frequent reports
to taxpayers and the public on
the management of the school
.money so that. complete under
;standlng and constructive atti
tudes with respect to school taxes
and, gervices may prevail.
- “3. Constructvie economy. In
every school system a board of
education responsibe to the will of
the whole people and free to adopt
and carry out truly efficient and
economical financial policies for
the schools, with a uniform and
continuous policy of honest, eco
nomical and productive spending
of all schooi moneys.
State Responsibility Stressed
“4, Local managements. In
every community trained educa
tional leadership and other ser
vices secured through a local unit
of school administration large
enough to make such services fi
nancially possible and desirable.
For every school district the right
to offer its children an educa
tion superior to state minimum
standards and to seek and de
velop new methods intended to
improve the work of the schools.
“5. State respongtbility. For
every school unit which cannot
maintain an acceptable program
on a fair lecal tax, state support
to make up the deficiency. Addi
tional state support for an ac
ceptable school program as needed
to allow for the reduction of local
property taxes. In every state a
long-time financial plan for public
education, comprehensive in scope,
based on experienced judgment
and objective data, cooperatively
‘developed, continually subjected to
’revision, and = reflecting faithfully
the broad educational policy of
the people.
“6. National interest. For every
child deprived of education by
emergency conditions beyond the
control of his own community and
state, immediate restoration of
these rights through assistance
from the federal government to
the state or community concern
ed. To protect the nation’s inter
est in securing an educated citi
zenship through an effective and
flexible public school system, fed
eral support for schools in the
several states without federal con
trol over state or local educa
tional authorities.”
'NRA Code [s Signed by
~ Winterville Merchants
' WINTERVILLE.—A list of the
merchants here who have signed
the NRA pledge and declared their
support of the nation’s economic
recovery program was announced
today by the postmaster.
The following are operating un
der the Blue Eagle: T. W. Mor
rison and Sons, general merchan-‘
dise; J. R. Dawson, groceries; P.
B. Spratlin, garage and repalrs;{
J. €. Coile, garage. :
TREASURY POSITION l
WASHINGTON.—(#)—The posi
tion of the treasury Augusg 15|
was: Receipts $1,176,677,5605.77; ex
pendlitures $678,199,920.17; balance
$1,252,723,100.80; customs duties
for the month $16,087,830.69.
Receipts for fiscal year (since
July 1, $269,254,057.78; expendi
tures $453,765,997.97 (including
$150,431,904.838; emergency expend
itures’ excess of expenditures
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R P e s A A 522 o
Goodyear Announces Application to New Harvesting
Units; Speeds Work and Lowers Cost ;
' Pneumatic tire efficiency pro
vided for tractors last year hast
now been extended to farm ma
chinery. |
For years farm machines have,
jolted slowly over rough fields,
limited in speed by the steel
wheels with which they were
equipped; but introduction of a
new combine harvester, which
cuts and threshes grain in one op
eration and designed for use with
Goodyear tires, forecasts a revolu
tion in farm machinery design.
The low pressure tires on which
the combine is mounted minimize
shocks to such an extent that the
old speed for harvesting machinery
is stepped up considerably and the
capacity of the ~machine is in
creased, according to engineers of
the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
In addition to increasing the speed
of the mag-hine. use of pneumatic
tires played an important part in
reducing its cost to a figure ap
preciably lower than that of larger
combines.
“This is an age of speed,” de
clared H. C. Merritt, manager of
the tractor division of the Allis-
Chalmers Mfg. C 0.,, producers of
the combine. “There is no reason
why the farm machinery industry
ghould sit back and allow develop
ments of present day engineering
to pass it by. We feel that we
should adopt new automotive ideas
in farm machinery, especially when
they not only reduce the cost but
also increase the output.”
Designed for lightness and ef
ficiency, the new combine weighs
bu¢ 2,400 pounds—a light load for
a tractor to pull' on pneumatic
tires—and is smaller and more
compact than previous large ma
chines. Due to the speed made
possible by the pneumatic tires,
however, it can do as much work
in a given length of time aglarger
combines. An innovation is in
creasing width of the threshing
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| FORD-CHEVROLET e e > 6‘o ‘°(:°\«\"':;6k°;&°§lo°*
; 4.50-21—56.30 | N e
FORD-CHEVROLET * 02 £° o eot (ot o
4.75.19—56.70 OV S v
FORD-CHEVROLET c 0 °(_‘6e\(°°t,\)f°":.;\°"';\\e‘>° s v
i 5.00-19—57.20 ('o“\:oto“: s,e\*‘;oo\ ‘leoi;o@” ‘
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5.00-20—%57.45 o
SPECIALS . =
4.40-21—%4.25 y
e built with TEMPERED RUBBER
30x312—%54.25
U. S. ROYAL TIRE STORE 62,625 y INDIA TIRE STORE
251 Broad Street, Athens, Ga.—Road Service All the Time—Phone 9292
—CO-OPERATIVE DEALERS—
City Tire Service Georgia Motors, Inc. Poss Service Station
Expert Vulcanizing Buick—Packard—Pontiac Expert Vulcanizing '
Corner Pulaski and Washington : l?bone 741—160 W B:oad Phone 9275—313 5. w‘nshinmf‘
cylinder to equal that of the cut
ter bar. The stalks of grain go di
rectly into the cylinder head first,
and the width of the straw stream
is always the same as the width of
the swath cut by the sickle—an
ideal long sought by all designers
of threshing machinery in use
since the flall. \
The smaller size of the combine
coupled with the decreased amount
of power required to operate the
cutting, threshing and cleaning
mechanism make it possible for
any two-plow power-take-off trac
tor to be used in its operation.
“Air tired tracts, which have
been in use for some months, and
now the air tired combine, set a
goal in the new era of farm ma
chinery design, the ultimate pur
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PAGE FIVE
Eighteen Y’ Camp
gßmy ake Part in
s Take P 1
oy W 'r °
60 Mile Canoe Trip
ATHENS “Y” CAMP—Eighteen
buyz{ returned to camp Tuesday
night following the annual three=
lakes caone trip up Lakes Rabun,
Seed and Burton, Monday and
Tuesday .
. A total of over o 0 miles was
covered on the trip. Portages are
made at the head of each lake
intg the next chain of lakes, from
which point the trip is continued.
To make the trip, campers and
leaders must pass a set of rigor
ous tests. A boy must be at least
17 years of age, have written con
sént from home to make the trip,
pass either “Junior or Senior Red
Cross life-saving tests, swim two
miles and pass a severe canoe
test. ; e
* The annual “Y"” camp banfi@@‘:
next Tuesday night will bring to
a close the activities of the 1933
camp, it has been announced,
Campers will return by train, bus
and motor car to their respective
homes Wednesday morning, '
ber i LR
Motion picture fiims influence
foreign trade; demands come for
American furniture, household
goods, clothing, etc.,. similar to
those seen in the movies. ..4
Horned toads are nottoads; they
are lizards. ¢ i
pose of which is the lowering of
crop production costs and a redue
tion of the farmer’'s investment in
equipment,” Merritt concluded. .
The combine, which will harvest
soy beans as well as wheat, oats
and other grains, has met with
wide praise following demonstra=
fiong before farmers, department
of agriculture officials, unlvel‘sfti
professors and farm machinery ex
perts, s