Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
DRIFT IN
- LOWER CHANNELS
E i i
‘ oo :
Pri fic i pal Commodity
. Markets Inclined to Sag
- Somewhat. |
Rl ne 1
.By VICTOR EUBANK |
' NEW YORK.— (AP) — Stocks
“dfifted irregulgrly lower in h(-si-J
‘trading Monday, as w:-(-k-ond"
WB failed to provide fresh stim- |
L ulus either in business or finan- |
Eefial developments. Principal com- |
!fi!odlty markets were inclined to I
gm a little in the early dealings, |
' but wheat soon recovered. |
. President Roosevelt’s refusal to
lac_cept the farm state gn\'é‘rnomjl
price fixing program as impracti- |
eable encourarged inflationists in |
Wall street, since they felt that |
agitation for more drastic mone- {
tary measures would result.
COTTON EASIER
NEW YORK. — (AP) — Cotton |
was quiet and easier Monday un- '
der further scattering Iliquidation |
in preparation for the holiday |
Tuesday, and the government crop |
report scheduled for publicutiun{
on Wednesday.
Open High Low Close P.C. ,
Dec. . 9.50 9.50 9.35 9.35 9.971
Jan. . 9.65 9.66 9.41 941 9.63
e . 9.71 9.11 9.57 9567 .9.79
AWAIT ESTIMATE
NEW ORLEANS.— (AP) —Cot
ton was very quiet Monday, trad
ers appearing to be unwilling to
operate in advance of the Neéw
York election day holiday and the
government crop estimate due
Wednesday morning. Prices drift
ed moderately lower. 2
' Open High Low Close P.C.
Pec. . 9.44 9.44 9,30 9.32 9.60
Jan, . 9.54 9.54 9.38 940 9.60
Moh, . 9.65 9.67° 9.53 0363 '9.74
} CHICAGO GRAIN
3 High Low Close
| . WHEAT—
Efee. .. .. .. 81% .85% .85%
8.. .. ... 800%. 87% 88
By ... ... 88 85% .85%
. CORN—
RO, .. . ... ATH . ABY% - 46%
Edy .. .. ... 82% .51% 52
Bl .. .. . 4% . 884 03N
. OATS—
., 36 .85% . .33%
BN i s 88 36% 36%
RJuly ... ... 36% 36% .36% |
& i .
Five People Injured l
- Enorute to Georgia- |
. Florida Game Sat.i
E; WAYCROSS, Ga.— (AP) —Five |
- persons Monday were suffering
' from injuries received when an
:?,%au'tbmobile enroute to Jacksonville!
~for the Georgia-Florida football
. game overturned near Racepond.
"9 A, M. Knight, insurance man‘
E“ut Waycross, was believed serious- i
1y hurt and Mrs. Knight sustained |
i a leg injury, bruises and severe
" shock. Marshall O'Rear, member[
_of the coaching staff of the Way
s eross High school, suffered a brok- [
"en pelvis and broken wrist. Henry |
" Knight, High school student, and
_ Jock Watt received minor injur
. jes
IR
- Kentucky Governor
~ Asks U. S. to Take
Over Relief Work
¥ LOUISVILLE, Ky. —(P)— Ken
" tucky’'s relief problems were or
~the doorstep of the federal gov-
Lernment Monday, with a reques’
m{ Gov. Ruby Laffoon that th«
_United States take over relie:
_:-o in the state and an an
“nouncement that Harper Gatton
L state relief director, had resigne
|effective November 15.
- Condemned Kidnaper
E Asks Life Sentence
- KANSAS ClTY.—{&)—Friends o
" Walter McGee, condemned leader
"of the kidnapers of Miss Mary Me- |
_Elroy were hopeful Monday tha'
i the life sentence given late Sat-
Surday night to his brother, George
- would be helpful in getting com-
L mutation of the death sentenct
Sgiven Walter. |
. George McGee, 22, was convioct
i d by a circuit court jury of par
* ticipating in the $30,000 kidnaping
£of the 25-year-old daughter of
‘g ity Manager Henry F. McElroy
# His attorney has 10 days in which
" file motion for new trial. Wial
* McGee already has filed notice
& intention to appeal, automati
eally staying execution of sent
. ence,
Ly
PRISONER SUICIDE
§ HARTFORD, CONN,—(&)— Dr.
arold N. Guilfoyle, Hartford vet
»rinary surgeon serving life sen
‘ ence for second degrec murder in
»nnection with the shooting of
Mrs. Clare Kavanaugh Gaudet here
Bin January, 1928, committed suicide
BMonday in the presence of guards
gby leaping fifty feet from the top
of the main cell block at the
@eic’'s prison at Weathersfield.
SHIPPING LINES MERGE
MLONDON, —(P)— The world's
eatest shipping combination is
fexpected to result from the amal
jamation of the Cunard and White
_ Line, negotiations for which
oritatively were remorted near
jonclusion Monday,
|~ DOLLAR SKIDS
¢ WASHINGTON, —(#)—The ad
ministration watched the dollar
b‘ a new low level Monday
; give no hint whether its
old buying activities abroad were
inkeq to she skidding exchange
Jem e H. Jones, chairman of the
feconstruction corporation, said it
o far has purchased $2,800,000 of
gold in the London market,
s St i
..Gold Luré Revived in Old West
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New life stirs in ghost towns of the old west and pick and pan
play a tinkling tune along hundreds of “Watervcourses and on hill
sides of Pacifiec coast and Rocky mouptain states. . Thousands
-are hunting gold, =inee higher prices came by Roosevelt edict.
Above is shown a typical sluicing operation. "‘The gravel comes
down the flume, which is ‘‘riffled’”’ to hold the sparkling particles.
Legionnaires Seek
& A&‘lendmént of Civil l
| Service Statutes
l ATLANTA —(#)— The executlvel
committee of the Georgia depart
ment, American Legion, ha s
{ adopted a resolution seeking tc
have civil service lawg amendedi
for the benefiy of war veterans,
At a meeting of the commiftoel
here Sunday .the rgsolution was}
passed, proposing an :lmendmen';
iwuuld would prevent veterans from |
]hein;:‘ declared surplus (-mployml
as long as there were non-veter
|uns on the active clvil service list'
The resclution proposed that the |
’am(-mln-mn[ permit a veteran, wid '
{ow or wife of an injured veterar |
to be igiven 90 days to qualif:‘
\(or a position in any other clas |
tof employment hefore being plucm‘
lon the surplus liss. ‘
| State Commander Sidney Camry |
of Newnan forecast for the com
ing year the greatest activity in
'l,fl:ion history. He reported 1,757
members already paid up for 1934
and 'reported the establishmeng o!|
three new posts,
The following appointments
were approved by the committee:
Mark Stevenson, Decatur, chair
man rehabilitation committee;
Usher Winslett, Macon, naticna’
member of the child welfare com
mittee; Harvey Kennedy, Barnes
ville, department judge advocate;
Basil - Stockbridge, - Atlanta, mem
ber finance committee; DeLacy
Allen, Scott Candler and Qulmb,\'!
Melton, members publication com:
mittee,
FIREMEN ANSWER
TWO CALLS MONDAY
The fire department had a busy
morning with twp 'whdely pgepa
ratel. calls coming within ten
minutes of each other.
The first was at 9:38 to Law
’rence Closta’'s automobile on Mil
ledge Circle. 'The car was dam
|aged slightly. The second cal
came in ten minuteg later to a
‘thouse on Washington. street nex
to the Curb market. The roof wa:
1 destroved.
Ride Graf Safely; Crash in. Auto
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NEA s B F s ;
A queer prank of Fate sent two prominent Europeans to a hospi
tal following an auto crash on a Chi¢ago bouievard after they had
traveled thousands of miles in safety on the Graf Zeppelin, Their
three-wheeled car, shown at top, was wrecked as they rushed to
catch a plané for Akron to board the Zeppelin on its retdrn voy
age."* Col. William Forbes-Sempill, left below, of Scotland, and
Charles Dollfuss, right, of Paris, were injured seriously, and their
driver, F. C. Turner of Birmingham, center, was killed in the wreck.
Dublin Jury Has Not
i x i 5 .
Reached Verdict in
Post Office Slaying
DUBLIN, Ga.—(#)— Deadlocked
since Friday morning at 9:301
o'clock, the jury trying Mrs, Sam
Wynn for the murder of Mrs. J.
E. Burns had not reached a ver
dict Monday, Judge J. L. Kent
has given no indication how long
he will permit thgm to continue
’dtalilwm!inns but when they sen"
’wm'd Saturday that they werd
hopelesgily deadlocked, the court
|dvciinml to dlsmiss them and re-!
marked: “We've got plenty ox’\
time” . |
‘ Mrs. Wynn shot and Kkilled Mrs‘
Burns in the Postoffice at Dexter.
!She claimed self defense and rt(i)ldl
’of an attack Mrs. Burne made on
Ihm‘ a month prior to the slaying.:
'Tho state contended Mrs. Wynn
and Burns were friendly and this
!Iled t 0 the shooting.
Cartoonist Floored
In Hollywood Club
HOLLYWOOD, — (&) — Peter
'Arno, New York cartoonist, was
knocked out in an exchange of fis
ticuffs in the fashionablbe Em
bassy cub eary Monday.
The argument allegedly was with
Drexel Biddle Steele, actor and
member of a prominent Philadel
phia family, but Steele said the
knockout blow was struck by his
business manager, Gordon Butler.
Sally O’Neill, film actress who
accompanied Arno to the club and
was reported to ve the unwitting
cause of the fight, was said by
some witnesges to have ended the
altercation by rapping Stele over
the head with a chair, Miss O'Neil,
however, denied she had any part
in the fight.
The highway from Ft. Kent, Me.,,
to Key West, Fla., U. 8,1, is paved
over its entire length, a distance
[of 2330 miles,
| A new -aviation device transmits
‘tho sound of the oropeller through
microphones to the airport, caus
‘mg a ligh{ to, flash on a ground
map and revealing the exact loga—
tion of the plane.
Women Shun Shine
From College Girl
In Chicago’s Loop
CHICAGO.—(AP)—A college girl
is putting a practical touch to the
oold rule about “where there’s a
iwill there's a way.”
. She is shining shoes for a lv
‘ing in Chicago’s Loop and doesn’t
‘mind the job!
- She’s Ruth Benton, 20, but that's
not her real name. She assumed
the name after coming from the
East, where she said she attended
college.
~ Ruth isn’t shining shoes for ex
perience, but is doing the job to
earn he, board and room rent and
/thus far has averaged a dollar a
}day. :
. Women, she told a reporter, ap
parently are shunning Ruth’s
shining stand.
~ “One woman,” she said, “came
up to me and asked me a lot of
'questions. She said she was a
psychologist and asked me if T was
_doing this for experience. I said I
‘was doing it for a living. She
‘said, ‘how interesting.’
“Apparéntly she was too inter
ested to get a shine.”
But Ruth isn't discouraged. Her
ery, “Shine ’em up; shine ’em up,”
continues to ring in a cheerful
voice.
Students Vote Upon
Kind of Team Wanted
At N. Y. University
NEW YORK.—(AP)—The stu
dents of Neéw - York University
Monday began balloting on wheth
er they desired a. “de-emphasized
purely amateur football team” or a
“high pressure, fully subsidized
football team.”
The vote is being taken by the
Washington Square College Bulle
tin and the Commerce Bulletin,
rival student publications, as the
two papers are divided on the
subjéct, Tne W. S. C. Bulletin
wants a return to the practices of
several years ago — recruiting of
players, athletic scholarships, ete.,
—for the advertising and increased
endowments from enthusiastic
alumni it believes a winning sea
son would bring. The Commerce
Bulletin beleives a football team
is incidental in the life of the
university.
The balloting will continue
through Thursday and the results
‘will be announced Friday.
TODAY’S BEST
HUMAN INTEREST
STORY
‘CANTON, China. — (AP) — A
wedding in which a pretty Can
tonese girl married a rooster was
solemnized Tuesday,
Although her fiance, S h i h
Kwang Tung, was living in Singa
pore, the girl’s parents decided her
marriage must be performed while
they were still alive.
Accordingly, a graceful appear
ing bird from a neighboring poul
try farm was’ selected to act as
the bridegroom.
All of the elaborate ritual ac
companying an old-fashioned Chi
nese marriage was observed while
ithe beautiful bride, 18 years old
received the congratulations of
friends, and the rooster must re
main her “husband”.
Postmaster General
To Play Santa Claus
To Needy Unemployed
WASHINGTON—(#)— Postmast
er General Farley will play Santa
§Claus to the. needy unemployed
especialy those with families, in
distributing 1933 Christmas rush
mail jobs.
| [Postmasters ware directed Mon
‘day to cooperate with relief agen
‘éleg and veteran otganizations ir
selecting. this temporary help.
Carrier deliveries and window
ls‘et‘vfce will be suspended on Sun
day December 24 and Christmas
‘day, December 25. This will leave
only special delivery and perisha
ble mail on Christmas and the day
hefore,
e s
Borah Says “Buy Now”
Campaign Is Failing
PARMA, Idaho —(®)— The ad
ministration’s “buy now” cam
paign “is not progressing at all;
it is receding,” asserts Senato:
William E. Borah of Idaho. And
to stop a “brazen program of ex
ploitation” ‘through high prices
he has gone on record for restora
tion and enforcement of the anti
trust laws.
“We. are gathering the fruits, ir
a large measure, of the mistaken
act in suspending the anti-trust
laws last winter,” the independent
republican told a rural western
Idaho audience here.
GERMAN MINISTER
CONFERS IN ROME
ROME,—«(&)—Hermann Wilhelm
Goering, @erman minister without
portfolio, arrived here here by air
plane Tuesday afternoon to confer
with Premier Mussolini.
Goering was accompanied by the
Prince of Hesse, stn-in-law of king
Victor Emmanuel. The party was
Iwelcmnod by Fulvio Suvich, under
secretary of foreign affairs, the
’new undersecretary for air, Gen
}eral Valle, and the Germap am
ibassador. The Group drove to the
- home of the Prince of Hesse, where
Goering will stay.
The municipality of Chicoutimi
Que., has received donations of
considerable sums of money from
Campette, a professional beggar in
Quebec; Campette owns a block of
houses in the FréncH quarter of
the latter city and claims Chicou-
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1933