Newspaper Page Text
. cOTTON MARKET
MIDOLING R e
bol 101, No. 283.
Five Nations Stirred by Political Disturbances
| |
IGANIZED RING |sl
1 .
USPH}TEU [": HEI.Pi
A ,
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clegraphic Report Ap-|
parently Bares Fear of
More Violations.
INVESTIGATION SEEN l
reasury Officials S|lenti
on Reported Price
News “‘Leak.” 1
WASHINGTON.—(AP)—A tele- *
whic report @isclosed Monday
hat the United Stateg apparent-‘
y suspects an organized effort tol
sport gold in violation of presi
ont Roosevelt’'s monetary policy. ‘
A telegram to the customs bu
wau said the border patrol had co-‘
perated with Canadian officialsi
n activities to stop gold smug-{
ing which resulted in the arrest
- (anada of two Americans wit.hl
n.IOO-ounce gold bar, |
Customs officials declined to say
ow arge a god movement might'
. involved. Reports from Cana
-2 indicated a belief that $1,000,-|
) in gold has been smuggled
cross the border in the last half’
I'he justice department’s bu-l
eau of investigatfon said it \\dsl
vithout evidence of any large
ggling ring.
‘he smuggling inquiry coincided
pecai] efforts by acting se
{ Morgenthau to guard the
1 zold price against any pos
cauk prior to formal announce
t to the press: I
Price Is Same ‘
SHINGTON, . —(#)—The - ad
tion Monday renamed a
of 34.01 an ounce for rfc pur-]
newly mined gold, a figure |
s prevailed since Dec, 1. I
price was $1.21 an ounce in
s of the world gold price setl
it London for bar gold which ad-‘
4 6 pence to 127 shillingg an
bunce equivalent to $32.80 un'
in the meantme, the dollar dls-l
plaved a new weakness on the in-|
ternational market, opening at
§5.16 1-2 at London as compared‘
th $5.15 1-2 at Saturday’s clos
juotation, and later slumped
(Continued on Page Six)
i
AMERICAN FLAG IS
FLYING IN MOSCOW
TO GREET BULLITT
[OOSCOW. — (AP) — The Star
Spangled Banner flew officially
( Moscow Monday for the first
t in the history ©f the Soviet
iblic, honoring the arrival of
ted States Anrbassador Wil-
C. Bullitt.
The first thing that greeted him
he reached the National ho
vhere he wili make his head
quarters during his brief stay here
s a large, silken Old-Glory
fluttering on the staff over the ho
entrance.
Bullitt doffed his gray fedora to
flag as he alighted from the!
mobile which carried him from
€ station.
He was accompanied by his nine
-oold daughter, Anne; Joseph
Flack, first secretary of the Am
¢ n embassy in Berlin; Keith
rill, the State department’s
¢ 188 y construction expert, and
George Kennan, Russian speaking
eserving the silence he has
ntianed since 'leaving Wash
gton, as to the policies govern
! the new embassy in Moscow,
itt went directly to the hotel.
L¢ nnounced that his first of
ict will be to present his
lentials to President Michael
: nin at an official visit arrang-
I December 13.
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BUY SunisTuaz
Y&mm Aid The Empty Stocking Pund
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Full Associated Press Service
Alleged Killer Protected
As Rumor Of Mob Action
Follows Finding Of Body
Jack Wisdom Arrested on
Charge of Murdering
Pritchards. T
TWO BODIES FOUND
Governors of Kansas and
Oklahoma Move to
Forestall Mob.
EL: RENO, Okla.— (AP) — A
man’s body believed to be that of
Harry Pritchard, missing Wichi
ta, Kansas, merchant, was found
Monday along a graveled highway
three miles north and one mile
east of El Reno by two officers,
the sheriff's office here was noti
fied.
KINGFISHER, Okla— (AP) —
Hustled away in a tense atmos
phere of vague mob rumors and
amid the mobilization of troops,
Jack Wisdoms whose arrest barely
preceded discovery Sunday of the
body of Mrs. Harry Pritchard, was
held Monday in the Kansas state
reformatory at Hutchinson, Kas.
The Kansas cowhand was
sought in conection with the dis
appearance November 23 of the
Mr. and Mrs. Pritchard of Wich
ita, Kas. They disappeared after
allegedly having sought to collect
from Wisdom, under threat of
prosecution, for a no-fund check.
Oklahoma and Kansas officers,
meanwhile, moved to carry out in
a systematic way the search for
Pritchard’s body that spread over
the country south of here Sunday
night, when officers drove the
handcuffed Wisdom over side
roads, trying to follow his con
fuged directions as to where the
body was hidden.
Officers seized the swarthy little
cowboy = beforé dawn in:a hide
away nestled in the lonely eastern
Oklahoma hills south of Jay, rush
ed him hundreds of miles to King
fisher. and, spurred . by discovery
of Mrs. Pritchard’s body under a
culvert near Bison, a few miles
north of here, started the search
for the body of Pritchard.
~ Governor Alf M. Landon of
Kansas announced at Topeka that
ihe would call out the mnational
guard if it became necessary to
protect Wisdom.
“I intend to maintain law and
order in Kansas,” Governor Lan
don said.
The governor and . Brigadier
General Milton R. McLean were
keeping in close touch with the
situation and had national guards
men in readiness for immediate
mobilization if it became evident
mob action was imminent.
National guard batteries had
been mobilized at Enid and King
fisher, Okla., Sunday night upon
orders of Governor W, H. Mur
ray of OKklahoma fater vague re
ray so Oklahoma fater vague re
was forming in an effort to seize
‘Wisdom. \ R
; ;I‘he Oklahoma governor had in
structed the troops to “shoot to
kill” if necessary.
N. S. Wiggins, superintendent
of the Kansas state reformatory,
said extra guards had been thrown
around the institution.
TO BACK F. D. R.
CHICAGO -— () — Edward A.
O’'Neal, president of the Americar
Farm Bureau federation, predict
ed Monday as the organization
opened its annual convention that
delegates would vote .ta suppori
President Roosevelt’s monetary
program,
Records Tell Story of Success in Fight
On Tuberculosis Among Athens Children
How a number of Athens school |
children with tubercular infection
were taken in charge by the local |-
health department, under the spon- |-
sorship of the Clarke County Tu- |
percular Association, and in eight ‘
| months are so improved ‘that they]
are ready to be dismissed, is thc)
graphic story of the records of Dr. '
Wedford W. Brown, health com-i
missioner. ‘
Last spring the Clarke County |
Tubercular Association furnished |
financial aid for the development |
of an experimen; with undernovr
ished children. Of 20 children se
lected for this work, eight were
found to be two plus tubercular.l
The children were given thomugh’
physical examinations, and the fi- |
nal rating was based upon x-raysi
of each individual child, Under |
the supervision of the health de-’
partment, each child was furnish- |
ed one quart of milk each day and ;
was required to take a (-erta,ini
amount of rest in bed each day,|
as well as being instructed in the |
]princlples -of hygilenic living and‘
health conservation.
l Each chiid under the care of the[
DUDLEY SEES LITTLE
LIKELIHOOD OF LEGAL
LIQUOR SALES HERE
There ig little possibility
‘that liquor will be legalized in
Athens, Mayor A. G. Dudley
stated at his office in City hall
Monday, as an outgrowth of
action by Augusta in licensing,
liquor.
Mayor Dudley explained that
he had not made any authori
tative statement on the coun
cil's stand, but ‘he felt that if
any action Wwere taken, it
would materially concur with
his opinion. :
The .mayor doubted whether
any such proposal would be
brought up in council.
“It is inconceivable that any
such resolutie;, will even be
brought before the council,” he
ended up.
AUGUSTA LIGENGING
DEFENDED. FLAYED
Councilman Says Action
Combats Evil of 200
Speakeasies in City.
AUGUSTA, Ga. —(®)— A state.
ment . charging there are 200
speakeasies in Augusta was made
by Councilman R. E. Allen, jr,
following a Sunday citizen’s mass
meeting which urged the city
eouncil ty reconsider its plan to
license liquor in the face of Geor
gia's bone dry laws.
“Phere are at least 200 speak
easies in Augusta and city coun
cil' does mot legalize whisky: but
recognizes and licenses conditions
which already exist,” said Allen.
He explained the council had no
police jurisdiction, which is vested
in a five man civil service com
mission, s
« The mass meeting condemned
the licensing ordinance as defiance
of national and state laws. One
of the speakers, the Rey. M. M.
McFerrin, pastor of the Green
Street Presbyterian church, said it
was a question of “whether we
shall be law abiding or defy, the
laws.” "~
A committee of three was named
by resolution to carry the meet
ing’s request before the city coun
cil.
“I do mnot know whether any
‘member of the council can be inti
midated by the professions of big
otry and intolerance, but I do not
believe they will,” Councilman
Allen said in commenting ‘on the
resolution and request.
“As a matter of fact, I believe
that with the exception of one or
two councilmen who are swayed
by political op ulterior motives,
the vast majority of city council
is in favor of the l{egulation of the
whisky evil as it now exists in Au.
gusta and they will overwhelming
ly indorse the previous action in
licensing sale of liquor.”
Allen added there wasan abund
ang supply of all kinds of liquors
in Augusta from $1.50 a gallon for
the cheapest grade of ‘“corn” on
up to $3 a quart for fine liquors.
He was among the majority of the
(Continuéd on Page Six)
department was vigited once each
week and a record made of the
weight and general condition of
the child. At the time of the week
ly visit, the department nurse or
health officer gave instructions,
both specific and general, outlin
ing a program not only for the
‘child under observation, but for
other members of the family and
other residents of the community,
‘who became interested in their
iown hegflth and gathered each
week at the time of the health de
!panment vigit to ask for advice
regarding their own individual
' conditions. g
’ I; is expected that this rather
lsmall experiment will point the
way to a community wide health
geducafional program with a num
ber of other organizations partici
,pating under the supervision of
the health department.
| The association feels that this
;work among only a small group
'of tubercular children has shown |
iwonderful results, E. A. Lowe,
chairman of the Seal Sale, de
l (Continued on Page Six)
ca o LuiE e S e
Athens, Ga., Monday, December 11, 1933.
TUESDAY 15 LAST
DAY FOR Y. M.G. 1.
FINANGE CAMPAIGN
Workers Meet Monday,
Night For Another ‘
Conference.
$5.,025 IS NEEDED
Canvassers Work During
Week-End; Good Re
port Expected.
With only one more day to go"
in the annual drive for funds for
the Athens .Young Men'y Chris
tian association, workers will re
port for the reguiar supper confer
ence Monday night to chech up and
determine just how much morg
they need to reach the goal of
SB.OOO. |
Through Friday night workers
“had reported a total of 221 sub
scriptions, netting $2,975. ‘This
~amount ig $5,025 short of the goal
~of SB,OOO, which is deemed neces
‘sary for association to run through
the year. Of the amount needed,
$6,000 will go for current expenses,
while the remaining $2,000 is to be
used for the annual curtailment of
SI,OOO on the building mortgage,
plus $960 interest.
The Monday night supper will
be prepared and served by the Y,
M. C. A. auxiliary, under the di
rection of Mrs. W. T. Forbes. The
suppers last week were served by
the ladies of the various churches,
a different church having charge
each night.
The conference tonight is ex
pected to produce a large number
of new subscriptions, since the
workers have had the entire week
end to gee prospective donors.
Attendance Night
Monday is Attendance Night
and all workers are urged to be
present at this meeting. Those who
can are invited to come early and
take part in the fellership prayer
service, held in the office of Secre
tary W, T. Forbes each night at
6:10. These meeting have been real
insprational affairs.
Workers are expected to finish
with their prospect cardg by Mon
day night, and Tuesday the field
will be thrown open to the group to
get subscriptions from any source
possible.
This year’s finance drive began
officially last Monday night with
the first supper conference. At this
time the workerg were assigned to
their respective divisions, and
were gven a number of cards bear
ing the names of the citizens they
were to see. Teams of two or three
memberg were also formed to work
together in some cases.
Tuesday morning the canvassers
got to work in earnest, and made
a favorable report that night at
'the supper. These suppers have
been held each night since, with the
exception of Saturday and Sunday.
DANCE MARATHON
ENDS IN TRAGEDY
Three Dead As Fire
Sweeps Building,\Driving
Dancers Into Storm.
HAMPDEN, Maine.—(AP)—The
gay and stormy history of Hamp
den’s marathon dancing contest
has ended in tragedy.
Fire, breaking out Sunday night
while a blizzard howled outside
the pavilion and the footsore con
testants rested in their cots, cost
the lives of at least three and
brought injuries to many more.
¥rom the blazing Paradise dance
hall, where they had plodded many
weary weeks amid the applause
and cheers of their supporters, the
thinly clad dancers fled into the
better glea. They forget the prizes
which they struggled as they
plunged knee-deep in snow drifts
piled high by a 30-hour storm.
Pajama clad young men and
women, barefoot and many of
them painfully hurned, milled
about in the driving snow and
near-zero temperature seeking
partners and friends. The charred
bodies of three were found in the
ruins early Monday,
The victims were tentatively
jdentified as: John Ryan of New
York city: Emile Pelletier of Wa
terville, Maine; , and Gertrude
Sowsa of Dracut, Mass.
Many of the survivors suffered
severe frost bites in addition to
their burns.
The origin of the blaze was un
certain, but several of the survi
vors believed the pavilion’s chim
ney had been toppled by the storm
(Continued on PFage Six)
~ESTABLISHED 1832—
It's To Be The White House’s Merriest
Christmas Since T-R.s Kids Held Sway
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(right) Dall a arrive unannounced at the Whit T
whit re waiting to make hi ite House is Santa Claus ug i N
ite-bearded old gentleman wi im welcome, and Mrs. Franklin D. R : uzzie” (left) and “Sistie”
with his work by frequent visits to W . h.ocsevelt (center) is helping the
a? ington toy shops.
Mail Planes Crash
On Mountain Side
In Raging Blizzard
PORTAGE, Pa.—(AP)—Braving
a raging storm to get the mails
through, two planes of the Trans
continental and Western Air Lines
crashed in the snow-swept Alle
gheny mountains early Monday,
the pilots bailing out safely.
‘Wings encrusted with ice under
a falling temperature, the two
mail ships, neither carrying pas
sengers, lost altitude\so rapidly’
that the pilots had to take to the
parachutes, over the treacherous
mountains during a blizzard.
One pilot, Gene Burford of cé
lumbus, Ohio, reported he was safe
shortly after he went over the
side of his east-bound plane near
Portage.
The other, Harold G. Andrews
of New York, pushing his way
eastward, phoned hours later that
he had reached the ground at
Roaring Springs, in Blair county,
fifty miles from Portage. Neither
ship had been located at that
time.
Stormy conditions had caused
discontinuance of all passenger
flights as early as 4 p. m.
Burfrod took some of the mail
over the side with him and deliv
ered it to the Portage postoffice.
Andrews flashed the word he
was bailing out about 3 a. m., but
it was not until after 6 a. m. that
he reported in from Roaring
Springs,
INFLATION RUMOR'
UPSETS KELLOGG
Former Secretary of State
Declares Need For Sta
ble Currency.
NEW YORK. —(®)— Frank B.
Kellogg, former secretavy of state,
and now the American judge in
the permanent court of interna
tional justice, returned from
Europe Monday considerably con
cerned about the prospects of
money inflation,
‘“What we need more than amy
thing else is a stable currency,”
he said. *“Of course that would
give an impetus to business, give
public confidence.”
The former secretary would not
discuss recognition of .Russia,
which he passed over when he was
an official in the Coolidge cabinet,
but he denied that it could have
any effect whatsoever upon the
famous Kellogg peace pact :of
which he was the moving spirit.
“It may be a stabilizing influ
ence in the far east,” he said.
“I don’t know.*
! “As 1 the Far Eastern situa
tion, he said, “that’s water over
the dam.”
“The thing I heard most about
in Burope was the fact that mil
lions, I might if T knew more say
hundreds of millions, were being
(Continned on Fage Six) °
Bustle of Preparation For
Holidays Already Heard
Throughout Mansion.
By NEA Service
WASHINGTON—A complete ol¢ -
fashioned Chrigtmas, including
Kris Kringle with -the pack of
gifts, such as the White House has
not seen since the days of another
Roosevelt—the great Theodore—is
now getting under way from cel
lar to attic in the historic man
sion.
Its inspiration and guiding spirit
is the gaiety of President Frank
lin Roosevelt. Both the Chief Ex
ecutive and his wife have confided
that they love Christmas, and that
their wish is. that everybody in
the land could be as happy on that
day as they always have been and
as they will be on December 25,
1933.
Children and young pegple, a
happy father and mother, a proud
grandmother, and a little official
family which is devoted to its
chief—here is the perfect human
material for the construction of a
merry Chrigtmas. ST
The air of excitement which al
ready pervades Sixteen Hundred
Pennsylvania Avenue hints boldly
of plans underfoot. A dozen gift
turkeys have already arrived.
Mrs. Roosevelt, laughing and
hurrying about, has been busy for
weeks, softing and marking and
wrapping her gifts—she buys them
throughout the year, but this year
has found tha; many last minute
trips to the shops were necessary
to remember this dear friend, that
new acquaintance, a child whose
Christmas would have been blank
without the intervention of the
First Lady, a boy whom she has
befriended and placed in a job.
“Johnnie” Roosevelt, the most
(Continued on Page Six)
Administration Tries to Disarm Dissenters
Before Attacks Begin in Coming Congress
By EDWARD J. RUFFV
Associated Press Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, —(£)— Mindful
of conflicts ahegd, ,the administra
tion has begun to point for the ap
proaching se&sioh of ‘congress with
a view to advancing . its program
and disarming dissenters as effec
tively as possible. "' "~ sy
Actual formation of recommen
dations starts this week, At the
front President Roosevélf has placed’
treasury policy, asking. his aidg for
conferences on what the federal
government must spend in the néxt’
fiscal year- and- how. to. raise.the
money. LR ey
Whatever is decided, it will pro
vide the hub for one of the many
controversies to resound in sen
ate and house. Involved {s the
whole public and civil works and
relief policy, liguor and income
taxation, budget balancing and the
necessity for protecting national
credit.
The part to be taken by the
monetary dispute depends pri
mary on whate happens between
ow and aJnuary 3, when congress
meets. For days the government
WI 0O OUR MY
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2¢—s¢ Sunday
KLANGMEN, POLICE
AT CHURCH SERVICE
Meeting Called in Atlanta
to Raise Funds For
Scottsboro Negroes.
ATLANTA-~(#)— Hooded mem
bes of the Ku Klux Klan and po
lice were present Sunday night at
Holsey temple, @ Negro church,
when sls was ralsed for the de
fense of the seven Negroes in the
“Scottsboro case *
The meeting was called to raise
funds for the Negoes with ad
dresses scheduled from represent
atives of the international labor
defense but simmered to a group
gathering that heard the Rev. J.
Raymond Henderson, a Negro
preacher, make a brief appeal for
money.
The “Scottsboro case” has at
tracted national attention. The
Negroes were charged with at
tacking two white women during a
railroad hobg trip more than two
yvears ago near Scottsboro, Ala.
The cases have been in court since
that time. Recently one 'of the
seven was sentenced to death for
the third time and another for the
second time.
Klansmen in full regalia dis
tributed handbills carrying in bold
type *“the Ku Klux Klan rides
again” and “Communism will not
be tolerated.” The distribution was
quiet.
The police went to the church
when a telephone call was re
ceived urging officers to be pres-
(Continu d on Page Six)
gold program has heen steadied,
but with no assurances of stabili
zation impending.
" The capitol debates appear like
ly to be colored |by presidential
railroad congolidation legislation,
stock market control some possible
alterationg in but not general re
vision of the securities act, express
federal control over liquor indus
try, ratification of the St. Law
rence treaty and confirmation of
William C. Bullitt as the first am
bassador to the Soviet,
‘ Realizing that enactment of this
program hingeg in great measure
on how decigively are offset the
challenges to what already has
been .done, recovery agencies are
heading up their work toward the
days 'when the leaders may be sum
moned before congressional com
mittees. One line of the strategy is
to order things so results can be
cited to justify the extraordinary
enactments of the extra session.
Indications at the moment are
for a less determined bulk of cppo
sition than appeared in prospect a
Rt
(Continued on Fage Six)
Total Known Dead in
Three-Day Fighting Set
Now At 85, =
MORE STRIFE FEARED
e g e & G "";.
Austria, Rumania, Cuba
and lreland Scenes
of Uprisings.
By The Associated Press = = °
Political disturbances attended
by violence, developed rapidly in
five nattons Monday. ’
In Spain, anarchists and syndi
calists combined to foment a na=
tion-wide strike and upset the
government. Authorities said they
had the situation in hand although ,
85 were dead and undetermined
hundreds. e
In Cuba, an agreement between
ithe government and its opposition
to restore peace and tranquillity
iwas predicted near, but there' was
'an outburst of shooting in mid«
town Hawvana. y e
In Rumania and in the Irish
Free state, the political disturb=-
ances partook of the nature of
jmanhunts. . pRES
3,500 Arrested :
|f Rumanian authorities were looka
ting for Corenelius Codreanu, lead
’or of the outlawer Fascisy iron
iguard, who escaped. Police arrest«
led 3500 of his followers. ‘
| Irish free state authorities sought
{ General Eoin O'Duffy, leader of
!the outlawed “blue shirt” moves«
{ment, in an attempy to break up
| the organization,
{ In Austria, a serles of bombs
iwere exploded throughout & the
| country despite Chancellor Dollf
| fuss’ suggestion of a “Christmas
l'l‘rn('e,” The bombings were as
seribed to Nazi party affiliates
| who are opposed by Dollfuss.
| Meanwhile, hostilities in South
| America and China continued.
ll«‘mm Asunction came official re
{ports of Paraguayan victories
E!l;{.’linfif Bolivia. In China the
il“ukis\n “peoples’ government” pre
| pared to maintain its territory and
| independent government against
| the authority of Peiping and
| Nanking, :
MADRID. — (&) — Government
troops, moving under a merciless
bharrage of gunfire, early Monday
charged and captured the Villa~
Neuva military barracks in which
rebel forces had held out against
a heavy bombardment for hours.
At least seven of the rebels were
slain.
These known dead brought &o
85, the number slain in the Ax-«
archist revolutionary movement
which broke out Friday and which
flared with new violence in cen
tral and northeastern Spain Sun
day. i .
Swarming over the walls of the
improvised barracks, which had
been the most bitterly contested
point in the more than three days’
scattered fighting. 3 s
Withstand Fire .
Throughout the night, the eivils
ijan defendents, under a refegade
army sergeant, withstood machine
gun fire. Finally two army planes
were ordered from Madrid to
bomb the barracks. But, when
dawn came and the planes had not
arrived, the colonel in charge of
the troops ordered the final
charge.
The extremists fell back from
their posts as the soldiers clam
bered over the walls. Seven bodies
of rebels were found, but none
of the survivors. Troops immedi
ately began a search of the hun
dredg of tiny cells. i g
Meanwhile, with the situation in
other parts of the revolt-affected
region remaining tense, the gove
ernment considered declaring J
tial law.
At Seville, syndicalists and soci«
(Continued on Page Six)
LOCAL WEATHER
_Ew'
Partly cloudy tonight and'
Tuesday, slightly colder in cen~
tral and north portion tonight
and in central and northeast
portions Tuesday.
TEMPERATURE
HigheSt ceee abss sdun: snn T
TWOOBL sive esin neonl baws .
MEBR «cns save Ao bins U
NOrmal sv.vs xsec sain: wol CO.
RAINFALL ¢
Inches last 24 hou§s oe Gann 0N
Total since Dec. o saek il
Deficiency since Dec. 1 siem 5%
Average Dec. rainfall .. o 4.3%
Total since Jan, 1 .¢ os we 02.49
Deficiency since Jan, 1 w.x.14.63