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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1933)
FMO NDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1933 DAY, OO OVER 200 PLEDGES sigma Nu Fraternity Leads Ot’h(‘rh W'fh TwentY' tWo P\J‘CW Pledges A aver 200 men students at. the Universi were pledged by 17 of T fraternities on the campus. ;4: v three of thi§ number are old oledg from last yeal',l who for 'lm_ reason -or another were not jnitiated: ! ¢ The Sigma Nu fraternity, of which Governor Talmadge is a member, topped the list with 22 new Dledges, with the S. A. E.s pledging 18 new men to hold down second place. “rhe total number of ' pledges this year - will be approximately the same as it was last year, it is xpected. ()‘Slgma Nu: Henry Tart, Pensa wola. Fla.; Oscar Tye, Edison; prantley Mew, Dexter; Dan Mor rell, Hartford, Conn.; Dick Kroal, mternaitonal ~ Falls, Minn.; Don Roper, Duluth, Minn.; Fred Cole man, Dublin; Leonard Todd, Green ville, S. C.;iCharles Coffin, Rich jand: John = Lovejoy, LaGrange; pred Smith, Mcßae; Tom J. Me- Rae, Mcßae; Kenneth Culpepper, Cordele; Mose Miller, Willis Miller and Vinson Shingler, all of Lake land; J. J. Mangham, jr., Bremen; Jim Cavan, John Gardner, Alf An derson, all’ of Decatur; Herbert Stacev, Hinesville; Wilton Howell,. Blakeley; and George Stewart, Atlanta. ; Sigma Alpha Epsilon: David Barrow, Savannah; Willie Beck am, Joe Hilsman, Tom Meadow, Shorter Rankin, Blanton Smith, Chan Smith, Croswell Smith, Rich ard Sterne, Charlie Motz, all- of Atlanta; Dean Covington, Graham Wright, both of Rome; Lone Tim mons, Louisville, Ky.; Corson Hil ton, Sylvania; Treville Lawrence, Rosser Little, both of Marietta; Tony Solms and Allen Tyson, both of Savannah. Phi Delta Theta: Addison Ayres, Jefferson; Jack Dorsey, Clayton; Jack Newman, Painsville; Jackl !1{1:11011. Tifton; . Jack Norman, r.\lunltx‘ie; Robert Law, W. A. Law,l Edward H. Blount, all of Waynes- Hmru; Miller Lyndon, Charles Har-, rold, both of Macon; McWhorter Davidson, Woodville; A. G. Fos ter, Madison; R. H. Randolph, Winder; C. M. Roberts, Athens; Reid Horne, Vienna; Marion Pugh, Lumpkin; :/J. B. Dolvin, Siloam; and Jimmie Kay, Macon. Pi Kappa Phi: Mathasis Kelly, Jacksonville, Fla.; Julian Denning Whiting, -Camilla; Wallace Ford Martin, Toecoa; J. Douglas Mac lary, Tobie Flatau, Arthur Lee Dabley, “Génton Frederick Cox, Eu gene House and Richard Coursey, ! all of Atlanta; Robert Edward Knox, Thomson; Herbert McGenty, Augusta; Oscar Mcßae, Athens; Julian Trapp Bryan, Thomson; Tdwin Augustus Bradshaw, Nor wood; Alva Hopkins, Jesup; Frank Harrington and Laymon Franklin, Statesboro. 2 Chi Phi: Harry Harmon, James Moore, George Brown, Charles Stokes, Dan Sage, all of Atlanta; Pratt Adams, Savannah; David Crow, Baltimore, Md.; James Bing ham, Muskogee, Okla.; Philip Mor gan,” Guyton; Bill Mc“'horter,‘ Lexingtong & Grier Monroe, Ash burn; James Coogler, Jonesboro; Albert Im, Rome; Fred Hardi—l son, Augusta; Charlie Pert, Rome; and Philip Jordan, Atlanta. ’ Sigma Chi: Joe Aycock, Monroe; W. E. Barber, Crenshaw Bonner, Gene Crawford, Bduce McGregor, Ed Rood, Albert Rooke,r all of At lanta; Tap Bennett, Athens; Britt Ellington, and Woffield Stamps, Thomaston; = Newton Whitworth, and Harry Willingham, Waycross; Walterr Wise, Fayetteville; and Sid Johnson, Elberton. ! Pi Kappa Alpha: Guy Tiller, jr.. Tom Abney, Johnny Bradberry and Pete Crawford, all of Athens; Horace McEver, Monroe; Saml Penland, Ellijay; Donald Leezurn, | Columbus; Paul Kenny, Atlanta,l James E. Dyal, jr., and Claude Mulling, jr., both of Baxley; and Everett Wright, ..orcross. A. T. O.: Oliver -Hill Kuhlke, Augusta; _Robert Taylor Anderson, John Paul’ Jones, Bernard B. Ram sey, all of Macon; Connie McCon nell Bird, Bowden; John B. Brown, Elberton;* " Willlam P. Harkan, Chan ( Ju«. /Blair, both of Moultrie; Paul H, Betts, Atlanta; Buford C. Joiner, Tennille; Edward Scott Sell, Athens; James Allen Stiles,‘ Louisville; Bdward Harrell, Tit‘-i ton; and Edward White, Vienna. Lambda Chi Alpha: Edison’ Smith, “"Manchester; Eugene Smith, Atlanta; Vincent O’Malley, Chica go, Il.; Jimmie Hyde, Green Bay,: Wis.; Wofferd Jackson, Manches ter; Edwing Stone, and Harold Fbps, both of Athens; C. A. Todd | and J, D. Moreland, both of Fi me; Oliver Hurt, Cordele; R. O. | Yinrher, Canton; and Julian E' Brown, Cartersville. A. L. T.: Eddie Edinfield, Sav- | d'imah; Gene Barnes, Decatur: .loe; Porterfield, Comer; Johnny Davi son, ~Chattanooga, ‘Tenn.; Johnl Yuice, Buford; Charlie Treadaway, homaston; Llewellyn Cordele,f Hartwell; B. €. . Hill, Winder; | Walker Hawes, Lincolnton; Frank | U‘.rrim:ton, Swainshoro; Steye {fiil. Claxton; and Jack Carroll, Jelterson, _Kappa Alpha:, Chadles A. Willis, | f""‘“'”'idgf‘: Clyde Spinks, A‘tlan-l J' John Newton, Madison; Roger‘ 2 Wson, Hawkinsville; Nat Har !‘ Forsyth; Thomas Milner, Al-! Uany; Frank Wilkerson and Wal-' g Benson, Atlanta; and Richard ,r\“”“’l”ll‘ ‘Bobby Hodgson, Billy \f‘l‘ = and George Crane, all of Athens, (‘Aipha Epsilon Pi: Arron Cohen,| lumbus; David Segall, and I,)an-‘ "l Nathan, Savannah: Sewadd 1 'f.{:wnin. Brooklyn, N. Y.; Lostel“ Jngler, Manhattan, N. Y.; Milton !:“*’fl']‘}‘lll\lfynr()e, N. Y.; Mac Lease, ..,‘i}l.:"' and Marvin Nathan, Delta Tau Delta: George Cobb, . CthaUO I{ 1 Off G : Y k A d Al o uris angsters 10Ke An o Now Fills Its Pri ells With Th 111§ ItS I'rison C& S Ith ugs N ' D S A nsooney | R o “\%&'fé‘\,\ e e RESRaR S TR | RERSahaeRE RN e OR . e 3 e £ P CRORRE] | SRR P 1*3"‘37, TSR i G TG| ST TR SRR e SR R S SRy SRR | S SRS A A 2 R LR | SRR 3 AR k- B e lelE RN | Dhma &é\*\\ i R R . s| B GRECRER TR S o o R RSN . 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Judge Philip Sullivan,’ o upper center, his successor as criminal courts chief jus )ff- tice, continued drive . . , Judge Joseph David, ‘upper & . s . right, threatened when he imvosed long terms . . ! : g Below, gangsters leaving court for jail after voundup. I Judge. Decrees War of , Extermination on I Hoodlums ; (This is the second of a se ries showing how the deter- - mined drive by the federal government against ‘gangsters has put crime on the run). | By ROBTRT TALLEY i ! NEA Service Staff Correspondent. It cost Uncle Sam four years of effort and $150,000 of expense to put Al Capone, emperor of Chica go's underworld, behind the bars‘ of the federal penitentiary at At-, lanta, but it seems so have heen: well worth the price. ! Today this ex-czar of crime who has toppled from the throne that he held for years, with bra zen arcvogance and death-dealing: power, is cobbling shoes in the} prisgn shoe shop. In these days‘ of unemployment Al at least has something to be thankful for, be cause he has a steady Jjob until! : December, 1938 — counting maxi mum time off for géod bhehavior. The conviction of Caponé® prob ably will go down as the most lsignificant in America's criminal history. It démonstrated the hith ‘ertu impossible-——that a gang chief entrenched in power by crooked politics and the guns of his hood lums could bhe snatched from his million-dollar-a-year throne and tosséd in jail like any ordinary felon. 4 : Gang Empire Crumbles | With the downfall of Capone, his gangland empire crumbled.. That lis not to say that gangsters ;and racketeers disappeared- entirely, ‘for Chicago is still Chicago and by no means has the millennium larrived. A { But as Capone’s iron grip loos lened and the old organization fell away, rival gangsters began fight ing among themselves for power. Lapression slashed the profits de rived from vice, gambling. liquor ard racleteering, The climax came with the. re turn of legal beer, which destroyed this bootlge industry and caused hundreds of petty gangsters to turn to holdups, burglary, and sim ilar crimes. Which brings us down to the. ‘1)1‘1‘-:‘ent—~and finds Chicago in the midst of the gretaest war on crime lin its history, and crime definitely !On the run. Since the present drive was be !gun on August 1 by Judge John | Prystalski, then chief justice of Chicago’s criminal courts, ,more ithan 300 criminals have been sentl ;Savann:xh: Wilder Smith, Way | nesboro; Foster Corwith, South lampton, Mass.; Malcolm Peterson,. Aiiey; Judge O’Connor, Mt. Ver !non; Jack Sealy, Cutbhert; Tay { lor "Hoynes, Savannah: Fields Whatley, Carrollton; and Ben Yow, | Athens. Chi Psi: Walter Cheatham, Ma {con: Roy Gatchell, Atlanta; Ben | Parham, Columbus; Ben Boulwal’e,l | Jacksonville, Fla.; Joe Smith, and Harold Cariton, Nashville. l Tau Epsilon Phi: Arthur E. Long, and Meyer Rosenstein, At- Ilanta; Joe Simon, Wilmington, N. IC.: Marvin Rauzin, Atlanta; Ber nard Freeman, New York, N. Y.: Samuel Siegel, Anderson, S. C.; and Daniel Katzoff, Savannah. , Phi Epsilon Pi: Myron Hirsch, Albany; Ralph Fineberg, Atlanta; ‘and Richard Joel, Athens. Alpha Gamma Rho: W, A. Mad dox, Warrenton; J. Hardy Corn well, Monticello;” John L. Conrger, ljr.. Penfield; Garth L. Webb, Ray City; Charles M. Smoke, Griffin; ‘Ernest W. Howard, Kennesaw; J. B. Hamrick, and Edward Lacy, Fairmount; and J. Donald White, Calhoun. .- : LA Phi Delta Theta announces the} initiation of Frank Lindsay, . to the penitentiary. The work is being continued by Judge Philip L. Sullivan, present chief justice. Judge Goes Into Action Back in August, with the city confronted by a new flood of vio lence, Justice Prystalski decided that stern measures should be taken. He announced a plan for speedy trial of all gunmen offend ers on the court calendar. Red tape was slashed and their cases were moved up from the in definite future to the immediate present. Call was made for six volunteer -judges whgg would forego their vacations to deal with this situation. They responded. | Pynishment was as stern as it was’ sure.+ Men guilty of offenses in which guns were used were given sentences of from one year to life. The “habitual criminal” law was..brought into play to send away’ old-time offenders. 4 Lives of Judges Periled “Yeah,” bitterly complained a prisoner to .a jailer, ‘“that old ‘judge goes into his drawer.every 'day before he goes on the bepch and takes out 200 years. Then he hands it around to the prisoners who come before him, because he has to get rid of the 200 years be fore he can call it-a day.” . Lives of judges . have heen threatened. Judge Joseph B. Da vid, one of the most active of the volunteer judges, received this anonymous letter: 5 . “You won’t send any more peo ple to prison when 1 get out. I will shoot you and a few more judges. I will shoot you right in ' the 'back or throw a bomb in your ‘car or your home. I don’t care ‘how much protection you have, I'll get you if it takes a year. g | “Don’t think this letter is from a crank. It is from a man who means what he says. I have 14 murders to my credit.” ) A valuable weapon in the hands of the courts is a new. vagrancy law by whieh known criminals czin; be sent up for six months solely on their criminal reputation. It is not necessary to prove a new ut-‘ sense. g | Public Enemies Routed : . To effectuate this law by pro viding grounds for arrest, Detec-] tive Chief Shoemaker proclaimed a list of 25 “public enemies.” Among them were the names of the remnants of Capone’s ¢ld gang —Murray Humphreys, who had for a time succeeded Capone in pow-‘ er; Frank Nitti, who had been Capone’s business manager; Frank Rio, who had heen Capone’s body guard; “Machine Gun” Jack Mec- Gurn, who had been Capone's Kill er; James Belcastro, “king of the bombers."” ‘ y o And so the war continues, for the other day Chicago sent up its 326th criminal since it began ac tion on August 1. 3 Before the federal government succeeded in convicting Al Capone, Chicago’s gangs had flouted the law and sneered at it. Supreme in his power, with ecrooked politic ians courting his election day fa,v-l ors and hired Killers at his com- | mand, this Napoleon of crime had tisen- from a cheap bawdy house ‘bouncer to an almost impregnable position as a gang czar by means of a series of bloody killings by l rivals. His profits from liquor vice, gambling and rackets ap-' proached the fabulous. ' Uncle Sam Gets Enough . In 1928, Uncle Sam got sick and | tired of it all. Under direction ofi Chief A. P. ‘Madden of the secret service branch of Chicago’'s U. \’ Internal Revenue Bureau, an in~i vestigation of Capone’s income tax was begun. Daring go\'m‘nmpnt! detectives actually joined his| gangs and learned all. about his| business. . . ~ In 1930 the govérnment hrou.uhtl to trial and convicted Ralph Ca-| pone, Al's brother; Jack Guzik.t Capone gambling manager; and THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA l Clarke Rural News eSS, I By RUBY THOMPSON i Home Demonstration Agent. 1! Little Mary BRBliss of Gaines' ICommunity, has been absent from '!sohnol for several days on account lof illness. } The many friends of Mr. George | O'Kelley of Winterville are de | lighted that he is rapidly improv »]mg. ; Spa—— | ‘ The Whitehall schoot is madb {up of.a bunch of happy boys aqp! ;i;:irls who are eager to get out Bt‘ recess and enjoy the large play | 1 ground. 4 | ;Farmers and gardeners are bus ilfy preparing their land for grain and gardens despite the fact that {the dry weather continues. Ed !.luhnson does not cover his gar- Iden seed when sowing in dry wea lther. : i The Oconee Heights Home Dem onstration. club - entertained for [ Mrs: Fleeman and Mrs. Tol Les ter, two of the club members, Wednesday afternoon. - The Hinton-Brown club met |\Vetin:>:~=day afternoon with twelve {members present. The demonstra ltion Wwas on Home Improvement, '.,Bertha' Burroughs of Madison county -was a visitor to some of lhel‘ former 4-H club friends in the coumy\ Friday. | l A great many of us use salt pork‘ jor “fat back” daily. Weekly reci |pes will ‘be given on its use. Try | ‘hem. > gt Spanish Rice ‘ . Chop about % pound of salt pork and fry until crisp. Slice two onions and brown them in the fat. Add one quart of canned or fresh tomatoes and 3 to 4 cups of cook ed rice. Season to taste with pep lper, -and salt if needed. | Home Beautification I Several in the county are con- | templating setting out “trees this | fall and winter. Follow these land scaping rules: ’ Use native trees, tall trees with |tall houses, spreading trees with | small houses. ’ Avoid trees that are short-lived, trashy, subject to disease or in sect pests, such a chinaberry, lom bardy poplar, muiberry and syca more. Quick-growing trees are short-lived. - Plant these only with determination to cut them out when desirable permanent trees attain fair size. | Do not plant trees in rows.{ Plant where shade is needed or al screen desired. Plant small trees‘ rather than large. Do not plant | too close. One large tree may | | spread over a quarter of an acre. ,Do not top trees. Do not fill around trees; both' cause death of trees. Avoid the “quack” tree sur-| geon. He takes the pay and loses the tree. Get expert advice and ‘follow it e e e | Sam Guzik, Capone liquor ma ‘-i ger. All went to LeavenWt;:h prison. - E The trial led to “the Big Fellow” himself. Al, indicted and arrested for income tax evasion, tried to plead guilty in return for a lighter sentence. This produced the fam-i ous dictum of Federal Judge | James H.®' Wilkerson: *“lt is’ ut terly impossible to bargain with a federal court.” - On October 17, 1931, a' jury found Capone guilty and he was sen tenced to 11 years. In May, 1932, his final appeal failed and he was taken to Atlanta, i X " “Three-Cornered Moon Features Claudette Col bert and Richara Arlen. Who among us ever would have thought the depression would be something to laugh at; something that would erase the worrtes from our tired brows; something that would delight us beyond words. Walk or run to the Palace where “Three-Cornoered Moon” is play ing today and fird out whag a gay, iamusing thing the depression freally is. Here is the most distinguished family that ever kept you laugh ing: Claudette - Celbert, Mary Bo land, Tom Brown, William Bake well and Wallace Ford. Then Rich ard \Arlen is the doctor-boarder, and Hardie Albright, the author-spong er; Lyda Roberti, the dumb maid; and Jecan Marsh, the girl who runs the boys ragged In all, a notable‘ ¢ast is in this production. ‘ - You'll forget you own troublesi in ycur enjoyment of the Rimp]e-{ gars' difficalties. It's the funniest screen comedy to reach this city‘ in a month of unfunny screen fare, It's from the New York stage suc- | ’cpss of the same title written by Gertrude Tonkonogy, ' ‘ The added attraction nresents‘ The Street Singer in a musical no- | velty “Peeping Tom” and the latest ;.news events. “DELUGE” and “TARZAN”" STRAND TONIGHT TOMORROW “Deluge”, a fantasic story pictur ing the end of Twentieth Century | civilization effected by a wuniversal debacle with Peggy Shannon, Sid ney Blackmer and Lois Wilson in[ this Picture of the Strand tonight} Theater, was written by S. Fowler Wright, and created a sensation in| America’anq British literary (‘ircles’l five years ago. l The adventures of ‘“Tarzan The | Fearless” will be the added atrac-i tions with a cartocn comedy “Hot| Or Cold” making an excellent pro- | gram at the Strand tonight to-| morrow, . ! JEAN HARLOW-LEE TRACY ‘ “BOMBSHELL” PALACE THURSDAY-FRIDAY , The first run Southern showing of Jean Harlow's latest picturel “Bombshell” will be presented at the Palace Thursday and Friday.! This feature is now playing at| Loew's Grand theater in Atlanta‘ and . is doing an.enormous husinesfl’ “Bombshell” ig not however a war| picture but ig the private life and | loves of .a screen siren of HO“Y~‘ wood and presents this dimpled | WHEELBASE fl E ssmas 5 5 NEW DODGE OWNERS | sl -7 Dodge Now First In Its e * b fi{’"oir , )g: . o L Makes Except the Three [ ng\, . Lowest Priced Cars! RT e e e BY s : i e new longer-wheelbase Dodge, sales [Sipemmaes o A e é“ig i : . iy - T R e have been steadily shooting up! : L 2”'6‘:\%»‘ i . ciacipamliscicres b oy s R rate than any other car ... and then: The New ge goes through the tortures of the ‘“Test- Pit’" in Detroit. » severalt'mon’t hvs aio,hp(:jdgedlfrtdal} with squeak-proof Oilite springs, price. And any car that doesn’t f:or;‘xpedx.tors .wag ]z IS anb.o " Dodge is unbelievably easy to have them is out-of-date—before : e oo . . . . smi .. : y a DIZEeT drive, quick to respond. you buy it! Prove it for yourself. mallr’gm R ' And as for comfort, Dodge gives Ask any Dodge dealer about the tS.beCaU§e American motorists you patented Floating Power en- “Show-Down” Plan—a simple, are wise .. . because anybody who o 0 mountings. That means easy way to compare cars. Shows compares. Dodge with the other o, hness; no annoying engine you how little it costs to run a carscanseeinaminute thatitoffers yjpration. Long wheelbase. Hy- Dodge, too! most for the money! draulic shock absorbers. Big, low- The value of your present car Speed? Dodge gives you all you pressure Air-wheel tires. gets less and less every day. Why want. More than you’d ever use. Safety, too — with safety-steel not trade it in right now-—when Performance? Well, figure it out pody, hydraulic brakes and sturdy it will probably make the full down for yourself .. . with frame that’s ten times more rigid payment on a new Dodge? You _& Free Wheeling and than ordinary frame construction, ¢an own thi§ Dpdge today for optional automatic and Duplate safety plate glass the lowest price in Dodge history clutch; with gears windshield. —on easy, convenient payments! wiwosmmn | quiet in all speeds, in- Not another car in the world X DODGE cluding reverse; with gives you all the features you get TOD AY'S PRICE : CORPORATION shock-proof steering; in this new Dodge Six at this low * 4 . MND B Gk SR v | oneer €9 £ s | WHEELBASE 54. - F. 0. B. Factory, “e".‘“‘"'?rr . S 2 cen. B : . o “‘flmut peuce. Coupe, $595; Two-Door Sedan, $630; Brougham, $660; Four-Door Sedan, $675; s“b‘ectto change Convertible Coupe, $695. All prices f. o. b. Factory, Detroit. . ‘ I‘ W J. SWANTON IVY, INC., 127 BROAD STREET o - . - - - r Their Dictatorship Plans Frustrated e—— ————————————————————— R sy Nk i < | Co SR RN P Wit ” R > s ‘....., &&§ % ’ Q R S LA ‘fi . e e SRR £ SEE RNI T B 3 § S 3 \ M.: % |. o S | e " “‘VW" ‘. f‘x%‘wa “ S&R A 2 @‘» ....§ AL L g e 4'3-13 e . % Nl ¥ st TS Ry §' B ? ev ol ey o R ™ iPR Y ) P %“ &Y RN 3 Y A v L R vhiof TG U 8w Bk i e SN, NER B e ‘i‘-fi;:; G B RS N 2 N R RR N o R SR R S SESEREURTNER. TEROEEE R % TR, $T TR i L e SRS R Y D Ty, 4 : Rg N R s 8 e a 8 s o™ ¥ OSSR NaeRE SR TR i } % : SRR WY TR R 2, b B 0 T e SRR B A Tadi } ToA S SRR SRR RS BN e ; SO W R BI I fi W i WPSRERIRS XA ong SR RO SRR R ot s | b -'2§%zfz§§s§:.eff'iz::;if;;’:*:.s;; g R SR %M&‘ L e RR R R e SRS R 3 SOTENRE T R @ O XA O S 3:.&‘5:.:' fvt R 80l % ; e g ARRh e SERSRET S S noed B b s2l & SRR SRR RN S ¢B S ’% R e ARI SRR B %, % . SRR B & “‘E R 3 AR R| & ’ 2 D Niveng sl L oaamt N B .5 e R RORRRE SUATGE TR TR B s i ensae g TS e 4 S G R SRRI e g BESRERCR U, R BRI TR ; g § e SRR RO SRR <b AR R T el : ) ot 5 Ay SRR BROE R i S P R, S e o e if‘E'E':i::-il\":’ SRR, ‘*\em% SRR “ % 3 AR \‘\s‘& Bt T ; - BeaE i SR e T e R R S RN Regen 2 &3 R A R 0 R soS ; S e © e ———————————. " ——— e ———————————————t. It was all in vain that members of the Kkaki Shirts lined up at Phila delphia as shown here, to hear their “Commander,” Art J. Smith (right) give them orders to march to Washington and set up the Presi dent as “dictator of the United States.” For, shortly after this pic ture was made, police raided Khaki Shirt headquarters, seized guns and ammunition, and arrested 21. The raid was made after authori ties learned of an alleged plot to steal weapons from the Third Regi ment Armory. DIRIGIBLE MACON COMPLETES TRIP . SUNNYVALE, Cal—(®)— Under cover at its new home port, the giant United States Navy Dirigible Macon here Monday after a 3-day cruise from Lakehurst, N, J. 'The 785-foot ship nosed into the mooring mast “cup” at 4:17 p. m: (Pacific standard time) Sunday, 70 pours and 17 minutes after leaving Lakehurst, It was then anchored and wheeled into the huge hangar ]:’;'c').:l‘ed for It g Commander Alger H. Dresel said the Macon met every test on the long: cruise and J'(;d;x" +hrough stcrms and rain without stress ot stramn. 1 platinum blonde in a comedy ro mance; Lee Tracy has a star part in the picture and Franchot Tone is Jean's new ' leading man. Japan’s Last League Representative Dies VICTORIA, B. C—(£)—Dr. Ina zo Nitobe, Japan's last league of Nation’s representative, died in a hospital here Sunday night. He was 71 years old. -He developed pneumonia. FORMS GLEE CLUB WATKINSVILLE, Ga.—Watkins ville High school will have a Glee club. A recent move to organize the club has resulted in the elec tion of Miss Carolyn Johnson as president and Miss Edith Farsons as secretary-treasurer. A WISE BIRD / ROYAL OAK, Mich.— (AP) — With shotguns roaring along the hunting front, a partridge flew in to the police station here and ap parently has settled down to stay for the danger season. Police Chief Alfred L. Reynolds was ocut hunt ing when the bird arrived. Di bered . ismembered Body In San Diego Ba ’ Found By Sail l SAN DIEGO, CAL-—~(&)—Find }ing of (he ‘dismembered body of 60-year-old Mrs. Laura Ella Straw "in two rope-lashed ' bags in ' San 'Diego bay sent police Monday on §:|11 extended search for Thomas ‘M. Hones, about 40, ~_Authorities sought to guestion ‘the man who had boarded wth the ‘woman more than’a year ago. He was last seen in the neighborhood of her home last Saturday after noon, about 24 hours before sailors found Mré, Straw’s body. ‘The woman's iegs had been hacked from /| her torso and then chopped into four pieces. Her head had been mashed in. Mty Idenfification was established thrcugh a string of inexpensive but distinctive beads the vmfi wore. 2 1o ke TO HEAD P.-T. A.ifie " ' BOGART, Ga.—Mrs. Charjes Tidwell has been elected president of the Bogart Consolidated P.-T. A. for the year. Mrs. J. D." ZMe ber; is vice-president, and Mss. Jack Malcolm is treasurer. . With these ladies leading the club,. prg gress is expected to be rapid. Miss Hattie Sue Daniel has bene seleet ed as president of the junior class of Bogart High school. Miss .Nell Griffeth was elected vice-presideént; Victor Malcolm, secretary;*'‘amd Miss Ruth Dickens, treasurer. .. rleie “8.C.” Relieves -U. NCIEVES - l‘ 3 M. ‘t.ev 's'” X Realizing that no one drug “€an relieve all headachee, as they come from so many causes, a North: Care lina pharmacist has developed “'a combination of several _ingredients, so blended and proportioned as to relieve almost any headache - in- a few minutes. You can get this for mula wherever drugs are sold un der the name “B. C." 10c and 2bc packages, and when you have onhe of those violent nerve.racking headaches, from inorganic causes, “B. C.” will give you soothing re. lief in three minutes. “B. C.” should also be used for the relief of mus cular aches and pains, common colds and neuralgia, reducing fever and for quieting a distressed ' ner. vous system without opiates nar cotics or such habit forming drugs. (Adv.) b PAGE FIVE