Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by the University of Georgia Libraries.
About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1934)
PAGE TWO NEW YORK STOCKS NEW YORK—(AP)— The fol lowing is the close of bonds quota tions on the New York Stock Ex change today. ; ; i s e Al Chem .and Dye............ 130 Ay BREREE L L, .y, 96 Am Rnd S P01w............ 8 Ash Pawy Bnß Lt........ .... % AN N . . ... 18% Am BISIE and R...... ...... #41% AR T B rsies e 018 AN TR L i s eiaaes TBME Al T .. L s TR AUBCOBMREG 6 .04 2o sooo olvs MK BUMEEBEREE & a s i AR i . e 22%‘ AVIE TR e . . ia.e. ain BN —B— L E SR I s Ses mien e 14%{ B . ol i A SRR .. . e R —C— RS DB 810.... ... .0, 00K ORERIs . ... ... ..., .. 1% BRI . . i IR ORI O, .00 ciiess +o MBS EIEPIIER. 0556 sk cicens av BRES OB 0 I HE, .. % cisvesves 1008 EEO RN s i ivs asnena s RLR KOO B BROM. oo svii avavs B ] T T e R RSR R e | R Y . i s eas et BUNET — G TT R S R 1 | B R.. . e e D B ROR . .., oo cosssrnthißO% BEEOTI e L vibe i e e NG B MR o s cies o asve 2R BRAVARE. ... i, ..o Besiey DO e | B TOL. .o v oviad G A 91/2‘ Sellans B . i e AR AL TIRCRRNERY. ... ..vs ceese. 32N BNE NI B . ... o ivicianssie 88% BEE A . i viiees eans 30% g JOhnS MENV. ... .... 90 oo blig waiCa RS . L e 21%‘ L 146 O GNaas. ... .. v voad 0% L'}ig Bl My 8.... .. 0% BEIR LLk ciiiis scriesassy IROR LN L e % W B Rl . ... o sa.. . 8% SN B RO, .., -.. .. ... 0% Biy e siaees TR R e I B Lt .. el 10 RN o s Y B NE nd M. e Tt R R i aoeae. IR B T 2 P | B L Yy I . e By B T B Ie i« ciy eses o ashas 29%1 RN Y . . mg‘ DD BERNL BN ... ois s senena BB B oA i | a 0 e P I | 1 TR B ..t L Y : : g BB DML, ... e 8T &i‘rl"!toeb...... s bl o IR B WD o woox doke soes 1% B . % B L %bmds Vs o td G and Ei...... ... ... 0% O O .. .. 885 gg:‘on_rz’s Sa e RN d‘ébakér.‘....?.... e A ... B I e . Cli. B I e IR Upjt COPR. . oot coioinsr vons b IR RS TWD...... «ivs .o IDW IR TR AOO. .+, ... .haneei. 80% gs T e e | . . —We— Warner P1et...... cooop 00.. BY% Re .. e Ty ORI . . v casa ne e 49N COTTON GINNERS OF REGION SET PRICE MRALEIGH, N. C. —(AP)— Cot ton ginners of the Alabama-Georgia Florida-South Cdrolina area at a meeting here decided that the maximum for ginning seed cotton in the area should be no more than 36 cents per hundred pounds. A state committee will deter mine the average cost of bagging and ties. A charge of 385 cents a bale for storing each bale of cot ton &t the ginning plant, for the first month after ginning, and one and one half cents peér bale each day there after, was agreed upon by the ginners. . o o Five Alleged Members Of Counterfeit Ring Arrested in Augusta ¥ et AUGUSTA, Ga—(f)—Five per sons charged with being members of a counterfeit ring operating in Georgia were arrested in a hotel room here by secret service agents and local officers who found burg lar too& safe blowing equipment. sawed-¢ shotguns and a blood stained blackjack in their posses gion. An automobile stolen from an fAtlanta Ypoliceman also was re covered with the arrest of the five. Three men and two women were placed under bond of SIO,OOO éach. @George Broadnax, head of the e service of Atlanta, today gtcred,lt for the arrests to local detectives and said the three men all bad crifiinal records. He said officers found $490 in $lO yunterfeit notes of the Federal Mbank of New York, but ng the seal of the Philadel fiifi{efl@t?&! bank, in possessiop f group. SOIL EROSION OFFICE FORCE Miss Gertrude Bramlett, Wash ington, who has been working in Athens for some time, is now con nectéd with the Sandy Creek Sofl | Erosinn project as stenographer mhyhm operator. I ' Juce’s Daughter ‘ seeing London | B 7 , : O g i f ko e 8 YV ;@?&%fl” ’? / M g v e2w Bl G % i&'}; A R ) L L G ¥ ' i, By : g London is entertaining a dis tinguished guest —the daugh ter of Benito Mussolini, dictator of Ttaly. Sheé is the Countess Ciano and is shown here as she starts from the Italian embassy for a promenade in the British capital, Many Restraining Influ ences Combine to Keep Stock Market Dull BY VICTOR EUBANK NEW YORK —(AP)— The heat, the humidity, the Fourth of July holiday and various other restrain ing influenceg combined Tuesday to hold the stock market in a nar row and extremely dull trading range. The majority of speculators who might have been active gave the boardrooms a wide berth and }fluor members accounted for the ‘Fgrvulcr part of the scattered deal ings. A few issues showed firming tendencieg, but the list, as a whole, was in a slumberous mood. | Sentiment showed some im ‘prm’omont when wheat rallied a cent or more a bushel. Corn and oats, however, were hesitant. Cot ‘tnn got back some of its yester day's losses, and rubber futures rallieu. Silver lagged. Bonds were la trific better in spots. The dol llur was a shade lower in terms of European gold currencies. % Shares of U. S. Smelting, ex dividend, got up 2 points, and Serro De Pasco, Howe Sound and American Smelting were moder ately higher. Reynolds Tobacco ,“B" drew a small following for a gain of a point, as did DuPont. ’(‘:ro:n Western Sugar, Sears-Roe ihuvk, Montgomery Ward, Chrysler, ! Case, N. Y. Central and Uhion il'm-iri(' steadied. Such issues as U. S. Steel, American Telephone, J\\\»\-u-rn Union, Goodyear, Consol idated Gas, Santa Fe, General Motors, Pennsylvania, Standard ' Oils of New Jersey and California, lAHiml Chemical and Columbian ! Carbon were unchanged to slightly { lower. I e ———— —————— ' MARKET RECOVERS | NEW YORK —(AP)— The cot lton market Tuesday recovered a | good part of Monday's losses on covering or rebuying by recent sellevs_combined with a moderate trade or commission house de mand. “The failure of the weather news lto show more general or heavier lprecipltation in the southwest was !disappointlng to recent sellers, while sentiment was influenced by wrelatively steady Liverpool ca bles and firmness in grain. New York Table I Open High Low Close P, C. July . 11.96 12.05 11.95 12.07 11.90 Oct.’; 12.38 12.81 12.18 12.28 12.11 Dec. . 12.31 12.46 12.31 12.43 12.28 ! Jan. . 12.37 12.50 12.37 12.48 12.31 Mch. . 12.47 12.61 12.47 12.58 12.39 ! May . 12.56 12.68 12.56 12.67 12.50 , COTTON MARKET QUIET { NEW ORLEANS —(AP)— The cotton market was quiet Tuesday and felt pre-holiday infifuences. Prices improved in sympathy with better Liverpool cables than due, helped by map indications that Monday’s! rains in Texas were in- Isufficient, and by firmer wheat. i New Orleans Table t Open High Low Close P. C. July . 11.98 12,09 11.97 12.08 11.92 iOct. . 12.17 12:20 12.17 12:24°12.11 tDe¢c. . 12.83 12,42 1232 3239 12. 0% Jan. . 1245 12.45 '12.45 12.44 12.31 Moh. . 12.49 12.56°12.49 12.53 12.4] ’ May . 12.61 12.61 12.61 12.62 12.50 CHICAGO GRAIN High Low Close WHEAT— QUIY ... 5y s 3% TR BTS B.vo % B B PoR . . 2 s 1N 00 HO% | CORN— SR i i s o DR BT NI AR o 080 BB 9% TR, ovs v oa B 0 BN .WD OATS— LY ..o 0 .o 838 2% 02 Sept cooo 00 .. 44 A 43% .48% DOC . .os ih a. AT AR 443 BRYANS DUTIES N TREASURY DEFINED University of Georglal Economics Professor Is! Aiding in Survey Malecolm H. Bryan, associate professor of economics at the Uni versity of Georgia, is one of four- ! teen economists called to the trea- | sury, Washington, for the summeri to conduct surveys in currency, banking, taxation and revenue. The fourteen economists are di vided into two groaps, one to study the currency and credit situation in the United States and the other to examine and report on the Fe deral tax system. The purpose of th 2 surveys is to furnish data on which to base recommendation for legislation by Congress next year, Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau in announcing th=2 two groups, said he had placed no restrictions on the matters to be taken up by them. They will work under the direction of Dr. Jacob Viner, economic adviser to the treasury, ""The group assigned to wstudy revenue and taxation will conslder the “neéed for administrative revi sion and simplification, the dis tribution of tax burdens, the re lationship between the federal, state and local revenue systems and the possibility of making use offl revenue provisions as a‘ busi ness stabilizing devise.” iR | Those named to study taxation and revenue problems are Mal colra Bryan of the University of Georgia, Roy G. Blakey of the Uni versity of Minnesota, Revis Cox, Louis Shere and Dr. Carl Shoup of Columbia university, Richard A. Lester of Princeton, Henry F. Wal radt of Ohio State University and K. M. Williamson of Waesleyan college. The group studying bank ing came from twne University of Chicago University of Toronto, Harvard university, Brookings In stitute and Lawrence colleg=. Secretary Morgenthau said the objectives of these studies was ‘‘to open up the Treasury and take a look from the inside, to review all our policies and satisfy ourselves whether the course we are follow ing is to the best interest of all concerned and if not to say so,” “The lid is off and I have given these men carte-blanche authority to approach these problems as they see fit;”” Morgenthau said. “These people have been recom mended to me as being intellectu ally honest and that is all I re quired. : No restrictions have been placed on them. “My attitude is that Jjust be cause the treasury atways has been doing a certain. thing in a certain way does not make it right. Ever since 1 came to the treasury I have wanted to do this, but we are just catching up with the situation and this is the first opportunity I have had.” z - The men will complete their re ports by September 20, 1 B B s B B R RB B S S R o S EnE S R GRea s 8 B e | aUDREEE RS D O Eedsressa s aERE s eet taitt el b s e i ee R R R BRe R R B AR e o RO B ’%\ BLo R i i KRRty SR R B SRR 2 SR RN g © R sy B SRR RS STy . R g AR B SRR e RR3 L e RSB, SRR 'Z\, R - R 8 % B Ry ) E IR e RO R B R R 5 e SRR PRt R JRgee R ORI B e R S T B A B R 2 BB : RN PR - R R 2 RS R AR r el e A 3 PR RN R R s R R B SR R SRR oo L O : RO R R FERIEER b & e R R PSSRk R URTR o T S R Rl R : BSR SRR R NG R R By SR SR R N . R et oad SRS < R B 2 7. A o R e X 2 R By S SaE SRR R SRS s R R AR B it 3 B R R RS TR ] : % 3 B 3 e L e o R i R R S 5 R SR ,_f;;‘:;‘?i""»~:-;1fl.-.’,::\.5'f"'w e S ~\.:\‘t{',;?::;:‘c’ £ R = AR 3 R ERR S WL 3 = Ee3 S R RN T AR N X : SRR > R Lo TR X R B L e S B 3 ! ; BB A 3 g ; ik 3 B S Smoke a Camel —and notice its “energizing effect” . Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS — Turkish and Domestic —than any other popular brand. ;l\ C l L with a ame.l : THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA In New York with Paul Harrison By PAUL HARRISON NEW YORK — Tiny plots of Manhattan real estate sometimes loom, in importance. as large as quarter=gection tracts. In frgnt of a cigar store at Sev enth avenue and Christophér gtreets 48 a 20-inc¢h triangle work ed in tile into the sidewalk. The lettering says: “Property of the Hess Estate which has never been donated for public purposes.” The estate, now administered for the benefit of a gr&t many heirs, reg vlarly pays taxes on the piece and could, {f it chose, put a fence around it . . . There's a similer sidewalk marker on & couple of aquare feet of property down near the Bowery. Chances are one in a million that it ever can be put to commereial use, but it might prove handy in case of argument about property lines. No Trespassing Downtown, in front of the Irving Trust Building, is another triangle plot. Set into the sidewalk are two tablete, one on the Wall Street, one on the Broadway side of the corner. They read. sternly: “Prop erty line of One Wall Street Real ty Corporation . . . Crossing by permision only . . . Permission revokable at will.” *housands tread on the tablets every day, and the realtv outfit had better be glad they don’t all come in to get an OK. . ¢ : His Error The smallest flaw in a survey or a deed, Is likely to prove cost ly. Not long ago one of the Mrs. Vanderbilts decided to buy some property on East TFifty-seventh street. On the strip were five brownstone houses, built in the 'seventies by a Harvey Dennis. Vanderbilt agents began an in vestigation to be sure title wonld be clear. They discovered that when one of the houses was sold in 1872 the deed had described the lot as bheing 57 feet, 6 inches deep instead of 57 feet, 7 inches. Thus Dennig had kept a 1-inch strip of the property, without even knowing it himseif. Since the lot was 18 feet wide, the area of the strip was only 1 1-2 square feet. Nevertheless, it was important, Expensive lawyers began search ing for the Dennis heirs. They wrote something like 300 lstters, and after several months tracked them down. ‘Then an agent vi%; ited the six heira telling each of them that he owned exactly 36 inches of Manhattan real estate for which Mrs. Vanderbilt was willing to pay S2OO. They sold. Question of Size The recommissioned Leviathan steamed home the other day with a few hundred pzssengers and a lot of headaches for her owners, who can’t figure how to make her pay operating costs. But New Yorkers are sentimental about the Leviathan, most of them being proudly of the opinion that she §till s the largest ship in the ENJOY THIS WAY OF INCREASING YOUR ENERGY With the pleasure of Camel’s distinctive flavor comes an added benefit—an actual increase in your flow of natural energy. That exhausted, “dragged out” feeling slips away...your “pep” comes flood- ing back. This discovery, confirmed by a famous New York research laboratory, means that by smok ing Camels it is possible to restore the flow of . Aged Widow Tells ‘ : . Story of Abduction Before Court Today BONIFAY, Fla—(#)—Mrs. J. J. Phelps, 77-year-old widow, told a vivig story from the witness stand here today at the kidnaping trial of Millard Keith and Ber nard Retherford, charged with abducting her from her home on May 12, last. Mrs. Phelps related to the 12 farmers comprising the jury, how two men came to her home that night and got her out by telling her that her daughter-in-law was dead. “When 1 opened the door,” she said, “one of the men grabbedq my arm and the ' other slapped his hand over my mouth. ““We've come after your money and we are going to get it or kill you, Mrs. Phelps,” 'she 4quoted one of them as saying. She said they beat her and she gave them SI.BO. “They said, ‘that’s not all you have. We want it all or we are going to kill you'.” She said they took her to a woods and again beat and threat ened her until when she despair ed of her life she promised them more money if they would take her back home. Court was re cessed for lunch before she finish ed her testimony. PERMANENT MARKERS WASIIINGTON. —(/P)—Captain R. S. Patton, director of the U. 8. Coast and Geodetic Survey, said Monday federal surveyors throughout the northern half of the nation were pressing forward with their geodetic triangulation to establish permanent geographi cal markers. world—pending, at least, the de buts of the super-liners of Eng land and France, Talking to' a marine expert, though, I find that America hasn't got the' biggest vessel after all, though it's a close race between th 2 Leviathan and England’s Maljestic. The latter is eight feet the long=r, and the Levi is two inches wider. That extra width «s important be cause it adds a lot of cubic f2et to the interior; and interior space, converted into tonnage, is what determines the size of a ship. - W=ll, on that basts, the Leviathan is the largest. But there are some ‘catches in the problem. For one ’thing, “gross tonnage,” a term you ‘often see, has nothing to do with ‘weight. This kind of a ton is 100 cubic feet. Still another techni cality is that not all the inside of a ship is classed by government and insurance inspectors as ‘“interior.” ! Wheelhoues, bakeries, skylight idomes, glassed-in promenade decks and certain othey joints of the ship ‘don’t count. “Net tonnage” is gross ?tnnnage minus all the space that 'can’t be used for paying cargo or ‘passengers, - So in one way und another the experts have calculated that the Majestic is larger than the Levia than, and in Lloyd’s Registry the difference is nearly 7,000 tons. But New Yorkers, as I said, do their measuring with a sentimen :tal eye. So they’ll keep on point ing out the Levi as the largest 'ship in the world. . e e T B . B . . O e A e RR S sAU SL S B e e B R e S 2 Bet o S S eAR S e AL Ao RO sos ,zg////' S ee S SR oo e s R v v v R i Re R B e eSO R R S B R L S B eoe S R e e e o Y o s e - e S oSS B R R R RSO B e B S R L A s SRR R e Rt B L R e i LeRB B g L e g O eSS R R 2 B O R RS R S R B B e : R Se e e e S e Ve B B i 000 7 R RR e s T R s AR S ‘::_~,~.-.-:,5:1:1:::‘»3:-:":~v:~-.t,1..:-:1:13.-:52-':&%?1 /-;‘:2'l:'-:'»:':» B S -.- . ) Be e O eT s B R s R e By B A S R A S S AR R I . A e e eS e SRS e i}’n R O Se e S e e e e s e SRR o s e e L T N NG - LR e e e S a 0 Ty NS Enmame Rl ee e sel BL S i e e R e e A s A B R S B s A SRR R E . B s ASR R RAR 53 ... B R S S B . e et i e s Be R R w-.-:-#.’:/ 7 G R R e sAo A o s -‘-:1:1:‘;:{::? R s B R B S e s 2 Be S R s R el e s B R ODO )/ S .T:E:?_ti.;g" B e Be e Os s T R O R R Be 2 S e R oRLL LN Rt SS SR o ;:»:-:-:;.;.,;.,._.;:,:;.;-;2:;,?:4%-3"-{/:-'%’;;2}‘:13:’,‘»""~ SRR eoS : B S sl 3 R K 0 e 3 e G eSR 30 se R 4 RO B B A e L e s e N g R 222 :? R Z 2K B R B Re S oot - eNt B s 22 e P R 5 e g SRR R A L A e e e e R e R R 3 R R Aot o e gl s R B s SRR o s Esien B S A SRR RR e e :,-I:Er'-:-55ziz55':55z21‘.2335553:2:3:5“:,5;5;55%35;3ziz:-‘~:';1-.:_:;:. T SR Rnes s s e RS -\::-::-:;.;-af*ét%;ie‘.;5:z:ir}:5;Effz3zi‘izi2:2:5:‘»:25£;¢§;':r*;;éf,.-u s . i ee RS R e e e e B 3 3 s e S o b : s e R A S s e e e s : | TS R e se e s s : s SRR o . 5 e e RS :15'5311:':i:'Ei'i?fi:13355'5:-:s_:l,2':'3's‘-5‘35‘:":'3:"1'.?:3:"5‘:-.5':'":1515135:‘51" S R i BRSO B R SRt A S s R E 154 S B R e R e Bt O .. A RS e g ORI 2 B % B R . 2 D S et i BRS ,g R s S % '"3%:::2;‘42'2:1:1‘3:7:-:1:-:' S e s e e S g ; i e e R e R s S SOOI s A e e e R 2% e S s BOS PR 0 e N R B s S b R R SRS .;s;s;s:3;};s:?;:??'i'vj""":gz.';:’g::_:g' B P e \ R ';:-,:;,“.5 R SR A e R A BA AR 2 ~Ot S R e B S R B g OR SO A » o O R e - A I g s o R - B o RAR R e -.;:;:;:_/é_é:;- B i g O R RS SR A L B R e s R R R SRy S 5 e >3 e R R R B B 4 B 2BSSB o A e R B RR AR S ,f.;:;:;:-,.;'.;:;q::;;g«,:gg('.-_:;:;‘,;:»';:4‘.};.; g e Ril R S 2 R B R R S “_.;:;:_:;.%w. R e g SR SR R K & Ry A B e SRS 5 R BROi is gl g o o S v B S S SRR 3 %‘:2_:}:;:{:2:E:?:{:;:;:fi;;‘:;:;3?:;;‘:3;333;5;;;:-: S 2 B e e B PO S r SRR sTy o e e e g R e R B O B R R B eSR A -‘:Liggigé;i;l_E;E;EjE;Z;:::_:s:{:s;}{3;Z'.':2: R B G - e :~:f':s:s7:.s‘.l‘£:':E RR R R B e BRook i R o R RS B S SR R s e O B R RRS R R e 3 N 0% gB B R B B e A m e e e R e L e il eol " i eR R RS S GNP P . n;“’;o’/fl"i«fw R R S g SL B S S D o B s S IRy SRR RIS Re SR S SRR R R S Rty S B oAT oe e S’Z 5 y figaney &ge72 Sc s B e;ifl’fi,* B, ms 5 S F g »:E:52515:‘;'5-11:52}:}5'5 R 555552555?5‘:5??35?55 SOPB o & L s g 5 5 Aty Loy 53% 3 PRy g R ¥& o 2&BE B O R TR R 2B& Oo S e—— Wy e 5 RSB SRR e o BST 45 BSR Go SR o s R T 4 B an Vas S B e e A e oo SR B 0 ee R g R A A O R S Ao X L NAVAL OFFICER BEING TRIED WHILE AT SEA WASHINGTON —(AP) — Coast guard headquarters said today Lieutenant John 8. Cole, jir., deck officer of the Cutter Yama craw was being tried by court mar tial aboard the vessell today on the charge of “scandalous conduct tending to the destruction of good morals."” The Yamacraw is near Savan nah, Ga. Findings of the _ court martial will be forwarded to Wash ington for approval. Democratic Voters In Oklahoma Sweat Over 2-Foot Ballot OKLAHOMA CITY.— () — A great rush of voters swamped the primary election machinery throughout Oklahoma today. Democrats sweated over ballots two feet long. Behind mounting stacks of bal lots, precinet officials looked for ward to long hours of counting tonight and tomorrow. In Oklahoma City, the Times said outside indications were that Governor “Alfalfa Bill” Murray and his ticket, including Speaker Tom Anglin for governor, were having hard sledding and that Congressman E. W. Marland ap peared a favorite, with former Governor Jack Walton, and Lieu tenant Governor Robert Burns picking up many votes. Federal Roads Burecau Chief Not Decided on Whitley Proposition WASHINGTON. —(&)—Thomas H. MacDonald, federal roads bu reau chief, said today the bureau had not determined whether Whit ley Construction company of La- Grange, Ga., would be permitted to bid in the future on federal aid road construction jobs. The company recently was found by the NRA compliance div ision to have violated the con struction code in work on state financed highway projects. Informed a bureau official had been quoted as stating Whitley would be barred from bidding on $1,000,000 in Georgia highway work July 12, MacDonald said no official but himself had authority to speak for the bureau, and that he was not ready to say what the policy would be with relation to the Whitley company. STRIKE IN SYMPATHY GASTONIA, N. C. — (AP) — Quietly, except for a bit of hair pulling among women operators, approximately 4400 workers at the Dunn and Armstrong textile mills struck here Monday in sympathy with strikers at the Clara mill. DENIED REHEARING LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—(Z)—The Arkansas supreme court Monday denied Mark H. Shank, AKron, Ohio, attorney under sentence of death for a quadruple murder, a rehearing of his case. The court's mandate will be delivered Friday to Governor Futrell, who will set a new date for Shank’s execution. your natural energy— quickly— delightfully—and without jangling your nerves. For no matter how often you choose to “'get a lift with a ‘Camel,” Camel’s finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS never get on your nerves! AR y oy Ry ) ¥ 4 o S 3 i\\:- \\.\ & \\% %W X ¥ 5, Conm ¢ £ 22, gl N Al otits, Nk Baldwin Tells House Of Serious Condition . LONDON —(AP) — Stanley Baldwin, lord president of hte council, told the house of com mons today that international pol itical conditions are so serious that it is imperative for the 1935 naval conference to “achieve some end.” Baldwin spoke as acting prime minister in the absence of Ramsey Mac Donala and as acting head of the British naval delegation. He evaded all questions from the opposition regarding Great Brit ain’s maximum naval demands as presented recently too theAmerican delegation. ORDERS HEARING WASHINGTON—(A)—The Public Works Power Board of Review to day notified representatives of Greenwood county, South Caro lina, te appear before it next week on the protest of Duke Power com pany against a $2,767,000 PWA al lotment to the county for con struction of a publicly owned hy dro-electric plant. + RECEIVE DIVIDENDS SAVANNAH, Ga. — (AP) — Stockholders of the Citizens and Southern National Bank Monday were in receipt of quarterly divi dend checks, accompanied by a statement from Willlam Murphy, president, that “putting idle money to work is our most immediate problem.” It was the 148th consecutive di vidend of the banks. F s Jow SOTh. eleeees ERabab o B 0 - - . _# 181 Times. sile "‘,‘:?"‘_ fi%%!x?i Dossesaion, & of § room hw y an o ous, | mithed spartment, East Side. for ¢ ot § 'mf:"( SPATath | mopths. Miss Byon, BUtterfieud 8.1308 apietely equipped ROOME, ™ 3 months, “ § Side. “ree M;,’,d. Soltchs | gponsibls party. BOWiln en_9-5150 J=Living Moving, Truckigt'@orage ot ron g 7 DAILY TiPARY = & Baitmors, Washingtonllf Philiiante, oo stangs; boaded mo PRiog, any re. oW rates; 1 decn, 159 Prics. Watkine §, 1% 00% [ireproof speTage; e 554 y A thousand, §l4O average minje e month _fresll moviog st sotics. 3-5560ff1pr tmmediatiighlepbons te. S % \ lorgd oce m.mlu o te Wa LoD, oslon, \ Q pagded v‘m.. onal y = S o, - - - - Mbus 5-1460. JJOrH, ad WERT e M BORR) {flvu s =l OF MOV Tl ost desirable, newly Aunmbshed 4-and 3 prom EhlD B var’ [oom gultes it serving pantries. rotrigerds Wedison Ave at 8 319 Brway.” COL_SSB3O, Tiom, Bovel service. alss unfuraished 08 f % 5 lease. B. W. Niles, masager. . 1 E FaTH, 315 WEBT_Newly decorated apart- B ment, —furnished with distinction and | po charm; Yeasonable. . FITH BT, 60 WEBT. P LIVE I¥ FORT WITH RCO) R ; - UOTEL BARK FLAZK: S Biowt ideai Toeal aif “blotk i 2 %o B Park, opposite conven . and betwgen twg ays: o 3 - 9 @ ey 53846, i aniten, bath, full service, = R LIYO tfon no_dg 4 Do a 3 | ;‘5 WE raciig 7 ok mome. . | apartmaent: ki tte, 3 Fer, 31 weakly b gsate twe, o i ONTHLY n;irl: BT, 255 WEF B OFF e7H AV, Kitdhenette, ' £ 30 Ra @ HA WASHINGTON. HOTE!, ¥ e v Hotal for Women,* Are you inl fluier, comtortadle roome. Ritchenettie. T, $7 ween. dally, 3186 meluded: 31 . 6! weekiy, aniiy 3. | 1y auraht;’ reasonable prices. |, Twe roo . T -LFXINGTON AV s Hom: coov ] 3 ITEL FUTLEDGE. {31280 weel 4 7 alside rooms, runm:“ln"lt"\ [y F ok private bath, e’ &14 *’ 7 xith. * TB, LExington -2y | PARK M BT, 17 FAST. 1 et ol p ¢LK M. RQUIS | iing &, d a the Cantre of Ukngei ' B . ive nd bundlike rooms RIVER y s v B <. vitn ban 31056 but K )L2 Bath, sl3 waekiy; men 'y o 7 80, 521 And up week iy H A Knott Hotel. ; i 1 f) —Luxuriously fur 8 g s §5; doubie. SB. { ’ STH AV.) 5 : ORD. q 5 p WKLY, OP. 4 ol o &wx'f.t. o ud ~m 1500 LY RATES, Lexington 3 2 Sunn: WTH, ive double room, | St e kiteh . ted; elevator; §% w sunny outside roomil r‘_“ e o Quain nßwar ,pludm single roof meodarn | s 128 T T tooms, §2l per week. ate 4 pel | “kitches w z ———— Dougtes L. ;vruamhle ¥ / % B i THE ESPLANADE. o=y STE T T ’ West End Av. at 74th 6C e 3 Attractive tale | 57TH, 19 EA i [ogms, furnished or unfurnished ot |to responai 3 im- | " path, elevator fenty Kitcheaettes and gas . | provemmnis LWY sud- | ressonadle onl LAY, M. @ b - JITH, 138 EA Toom e BRLAY. M. S 0 = 4TH 220. bath; aleo sin) It e fereges. artavenls - MODE] OO LEVATOR BLDG, &TH BT., AT ON AV ,;; e - w et | Atrect Ponaiating 81 exception: . and charming. BRyai . --2 3 /5 m"l m"nr;’m:: HOTEL SHELTON, i§TH BT~ Yhres rooms, cod bly Hur- | revised 5 A charming hotal to Tis tn. Spestal nished, *win bed and Sup utytest |Ty - Sith), Fai monthiy rate as _low as 345, Guests are couch, acoommodating four: frigera- § leckrol @I | privileged to usy The Sheiton Switming g‘d Yion: radio: Jeass; responaitf rty oaty; | (E% naaralans tt. | ADd Eymoßsium st B 0 XU a;&; . goermain. BAciay 7-8138. peßsreistie f"”uw sl. Featuring Shep Fiald's sire. B 3 - tur, jJeit; $lO- { Cugiinantal mmaic e CAMEL'S Tobaccos TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1934, | Annual Pineywoods f Golf Championship | Set For Tomorroy I BY ALBERT RILEY, JR. THOMASVILLE, Ga.——yyi, the Pineywoods championship Wwith theiy objective, the finest amateyr golfers of South Georgia and Nortp Florida will celebrate the nation's birthday tomorrow by firing away in the qualifying round of the Glen Arven county club’s 16th annyg) 4th of July invitation tournament, | In Glen Arven event is Georgiu'S oldest invitation vourney and the Pineywoods title is symbolic of thg ]golfing supremacy of this regiop, l Indications are that a muyey tlarger and stronger field than that iOf last year will compete for the ‘title now held by Robert Parker of }Tallahassee. Parker will . defenq ]his crown. | e e L | TO ASSIST SHIPPING { LONDON-—(A)—The government !announced today its intention t, |assist British shipping with a $lO,- 1000,000 subsidy to be applied as 4 “defensive’ measure. I The subsidy, it was announced, {\vm be confined to yessels carry. ing tramp cargoes under trump conditions. ‘ FIRST LADY VACATIONS I PINEVILLE, Ky. — () — Mrs, Franklin D. Roosevelt passed through here today on her “off the record” vacation which she started in Washington yesterday after the president had sailed for his sea vacation, After a short talk hers she left for Jenkins and Whites | burg, Ky. Copyright, 1934, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company “Camels give me a refreshing ‘lift’ in energy when I feel tired out. And they don't inter fere with my nerves.” HELENE MADISON OLYMPIC AND WORLD'S CHAMPION SWIMMER )<°'°° B Eo = .