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B, 101. No. 150.
THE
Washington
Lowdown
——
Rodney Dutcher °
The Real Secret |
gettled In Church i
Rages Anew |
ey DRI,
Eaflne"'Herald Washington I
Correspondent l
WASHIN( i TON.—There’s more
than a desire for rest and recrea-'
tion behind this ocean trip Of.
200sevelt’s '
ht’l‘;p president’s love f9r the ?eal
can’t possibly be minimized. But
those closest toO him k.now ?hat
several practical considerations
entered into his plans.
He will glad-hand Puerto Rico,
(he Virgin Islands, and Hawaii,
and in each case tell the islanders
gbout thelr share in the New
Deal. He will meet the presidents
of Panama, Colombia, and Haiti
and radiate the Roosevelt charm
through them to the rest of Latin
America. |
gome of his advisers privately
compare this trip .to Herbert
Hoovers pre-inauguration “good
will tour" to Central and South
America in 1928,
Administration commercial 1)01-]
icy now looks toward lLatin Amer- |
jca and Asia rather than Europe.}
You can bear in mind that Puerto
Rico. a Spanish country under ouf
flag, may be consieered our out
post in Latin America. ;
The Spanigh-speaking republics,
feeling a close bond, have always
kept an eye on the island and
watched our course of action there
—a fact always remembered in
this capital.
Roosevelt will promise a lot of
economic rehabilitation to Puerto
Rico From Hawaii—populated
largely by Japanese, Chinese and
Filipinos—he will make a bow to
the Orient,
And to politicians the tour
seems o stroke of sheer genius.
It gives F, D. the best possible ex
cuse for crossing the country—he
has to get back €0 Washington.
Returning from Hawaii, he will
make speeches and get out among
the people. Political intentions
are disclaimed—which wouldn’t be
so easy if Roosevelt merely went
crogs-country and back—but the
net effect will be a sales campaign
for the administration.
* - Ld
If you want to settle a strike—
take it to church.
Even before an archbishop had
been named as chief mediatop for
the Pacific longshoremen’s strike
and a priest assigned to the Mil
waukee street car walkout, Media
tor Frank (Bowen of the National
Labor Board had come back from
a packinghouse strike in OKklaho
ma with that recipe.
The striking butcher boys were
a hard-boiled lot and several folks
had been sent to hospitals’ Bovr
‘n had a settlement to offer, but
gxixi‘-illzlteell plenty of trouble ke=p-
Ing them quiet long enough to per
mit it to be explaineq, Moy
Other places being refused by
owners who feared for the furni
ture, the strikers were finally
gathered into a church.
Instead of rioting, the butchers
seemed awed. Some seemed to be
exploding with either wrath or to
bacco juice, but all listemed atten
tively
\\-11}?:{\,', a?ifi‘med the settlement
kel It’fl(‘lpl’flgle cuss word and
ihgl. ? an up after the meet
* . »
| ;ml,\.f]rd(;:;'“;'("“’}:’FS' Tugwell wrote a
Stat ('upiu\‘“:( ]a:nld oo Hsond phOto.
Food uu(.( l,)l‘:gl 92;’::;\'918 g e
He condoled 4 R -
over fail
foocd anq drug ¢ .=
the fight for A"{ ot 2 RS
When d‘unweel ‘\Vould be_renewed
Tugwell 5 di: 'lleconfzened.
;u]mmisr:m'un‘il S.a} +HO; DYt the
bill will pe f DAL fer i
effort lagt \'e:'?‘ strongep than its
will be eva“l \(\;;}n The measure
nal Tugwa) llllller P
theory thay m) .' it only on the
DUrposey of ‘uflllgin.,is needed for
Position, ading” with the op-
Senat ; x
Whose v)f:'ort:mt) " > S
ddn’t exofpe 00, DUI passed
miratjon \\‘on':tm) s e
the jr.h.”“\, ] be entrusted with
and ln‘llu. péaliual"y- s e
friends in lho()pge S e
believe will by mary e 1L Y
Meatwhile oD Shieion
ow fop. € Work hag begun on a
new “chambe,. f h "
Which the 'nhl\'L' s L
onstrate d;xadll l’ms;ratlon will dem-
Poisonous wwni‘é‘l: L -36 Sy
ent nle(”l'i]]g;; °8 ang ke pet
(Copvrio S
Pyright, 1934, NEA Service,
Inc.)
T ——————
S"'a':' Fortune Awaits
eirs of Late Couple
e ——
GRERNSE
tune of SII;?(}:)OI)Ga.‘(M——A e
( "I!(]!l(‘)’ I‘]'(\‘(:‘[]‘&‘ qto.‘i.nd .up in .
the heirs of, My -f“ . Is awaiting
[ P. Cofte - Mr. and Mrs. George
| Culvesp
| ”“Iladst{ fv‘::"ll(el‘- .diedllast Jan
‘"4 now Dp Ee (~hm widow died,
todian of SBSOO in. cash Lol e oea
n ao\'ernme;nt b:n;:Sh band .
him by & neighbor. /Ty ek o 8
oney and bonds was sou saic .
Culver home. p DA I the
Lamed adminu.;tra S _TUNRN . ws
tor of the estate.
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Full Associated Press Service
VON PAPEN WILL BE STRIPPED OF POSI,;
GERMANY IS STILL IN UNSETTLED STATE
JULY FOURTH DEATH
TOL A SOUTH 5
4 175 VER TN
By The Associated Press
Thirty-one lives were lost
throughout the South during the
celebration of the Fourth of July.
In Dixie alone, [fifteen persons
were drowned, that number being
the largest total of deaths attrib
uted to any one cause, eleven peo
ple “were killed in automobile acci
dents, and the other deaths were
laid to miscellaneous causes.
The United States as a whole
celebrated its 158th birthday anni
versary in the sanest manner in
recent years, with the lowest num
pber of deaths since 1929.
Death Toll 175
A total of 175 men, women and
children gave up their lives on the
anniversary of the signing of the
Declaration of Independence, a drop
of ten from last year and only
about one third of the number who
perished in 1931.
The sharpest decrease was in the
number who died as a result of the
use of fireworks. Only two persons
perished from this cause, as com
pared with seven in 1933. A five
yvear old Chinook, Mont., girl was
one of the victims. The other was
a Negress, killed in Minneapolis
}when a rocket skipped over the
ground and struck her in the
chest. : .
Thus the campaign for a “safe
and sane” fourth, started in 1907
bv James Keasley, then an elitor
of a Chicago newspaper, appeared
to be gaining ground.
Hundreds Treated
Hundreds of persons, however,
were treated for minor injuries
from fireworks. Among them 2,-
200 in New York city.
Keeley started his movemen® as
he sat at the bedside of his sick
daughter who was disturbed by
the barrage of shots that resound
ed around her room. He never
lived to see his movement bear
fruit, for he died the same year.
Thousands of others took up the
work, selling America the idea of
celebrating the day in less danger
ous pastimes.
Drowning was the principal
cause of vestardav’s fatalities with
a total of 70 in the nation. Auto
mobiles claimed 69 and for the
first time since 1931 were regpon
sible for fewer deaths than the
(Continued on P;xge. Seven)
MRS. ROOSEVELT
~ TOURING SOUTH
“First Lady” Not Due
. ‘
Back at Washington “‘for
Many a Day”
WASHINGTON.— (&) —Though
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt is on
an “off the record” vacation, there
is one thing “on the record”—she
isn’t due back in Washington for
many a day.
The White House is in such a
state of upheaval right now it
isn’t “home” to anyone.
Even Secretary Louis Howe, so
fond of his job he'd like to keep
his White House room all summer,
has gone home to Massachusetts:
andg Miss Marguerite LeHand, who
lives in the White House, too, has
gone to Europe.
Like the Roosevelts, they ex
pect to stay away until the eleva
tor is fixed and other repairs
made. P
Mrs. Roosevelt’s next scheduled
appearance is in Chicago July 9,
when she will make a radio
broadcast, anq visit her friends,
Slim Williams and his teath of
Alaskan huskies, at the World's
Fair.
After that she meets her hus
band, returning from his Hawaiian
cruise, at some west coast port,
perhaps Seattle.
LEAVE ASHEVILLE
ASHEVILLE, N. C.—~(£)—Mrs.
Franklin D. Roosevelt and her
two companions on a motor trip,
Miss Marion Dickerman and Miss
Nancy Cook, of Hyde Park, N. Y.,
left Asheville this morning after a
two-day visit to the mountain in
dustries of this section.
Mrs. Roosevelt said she would
drive on to Morristown, Tenn.,
then to Tazewell, Va., and would
inspect on to cthe Norris Dam on
the Tennessee river.
Commission Begins Job of Protecting Investors
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commem e T L R
The ' new securities and exchange commission, given the duty of protecting the investing public, 18
shown here at its first meeting in Washington, after appointment by President Roosevelt. Seated,
left to right, are Ferdinand Pecora, New York:; Joseph P. Kennedy, New York, chairman: and James
M. Landis, Cambridge, Mass, Standing, George C. Mathews, Wis,, left, and Robert E. Healy, Ben
nington, Vt
1. 5. A3KG SANE A
BRITISH PAYMENTS
'German Officials Say Oth
-1 er Countries Can Make
} Debt Agreement
WASHINGTON—(®)—The United
States will demand that Germany
give Americans an even break
with Britons in the payment of
debts.
This became known today asthe
officlal reaction to news that the
Reich has agreed to pay interest
for at least six months on Dawes
and Young loan bonds held by
British subjects. |
About $1,500,000,000 of German
obligations are held in this coun
try. Authoritative gources said a
new note asking equality may be
dispatched to the Reich. If no
note ig sent, diplomatic conversa
tiong to that end arg expected to
be pressed.
Britain’'s threat to seize German
commercial funds in England was
considered potent. But the United
States enjoye a ‘favorable” bal<
ance of trade with Germany, that
is, Germang buy more from Am
ericans than Americans buy from
Germans. :
" Any idea that the United States
could follow the British way of re
talita“on therefore died aborning
bhecause this country stood a chance
of coming off second best in any
trade war with Germany.
State department officlals point
ed out that the agreements under
which the bonds were issued call-’
ed for the same treatment for all
nations.
“THE SAME WAY”
BERLIN —(#)— A high Reichs
bank official said today in discuss
(Continued on page seven.) ~
Talmadge Will Not
Appear at Hearing
In Telephone Case
ATLANTA. —(#)—A petition of
three small telephone companies
that the Georgia Public Service
Commission be held In contempt
of court for allega2dly violating an
injunction against rate reduction
orders in Georgia was on the
docket of a three-judge federal
court today, with Governor Tal
madg® announcing he would not
appear in any capacity at the
hearing. .-
The governoy Was subpoenaed
as a witness in the case. He re
fused service on the papers and
then said he might be in court as
an attorney for the commissioners.
In Bainbridge yesterday, where he
began his campaign for re-election,
the governor said he would not be
in court today. 2 1,
The three companies, with seven
others, are requesting also that the
commission be enjoined from issu
ing orders for further rate cuts.
Attention was called by the com
panies to a previous federal court
injunction against rate reductions
and a warning that any violation
of the order would be held as con
tempt. They contended that later
hearings and orders issued by the
majority of instances set up the
same rates a 8 thosé previously en
joined and that such action consti
tuted contempt. 5
Athens, Ga., Thursday, July 5, 1934,
JOHNSON IS ILL AT
SARATOGA SPRINGS
WASHINGTON —{#®)—Hugh
S. Johnson, NRA adminigtrator,
ig reéported ill at Saratoga
Sprir_lgs, NAew York.
Johnson ‘was to have spoken
last night before the National
Hducation association here, but
William E. Sweet, former gov
ernor of Colorado and an NRA
official, was drafted as a
pinch-hitter.
Representative Snyder of
Pennsylvania, who introduced
Sweet, said Johnson wag ill at
Saratoga Springs. Johnson re
cently left a hospital here after
treatment for an abscess.
GUARDGMEN MAY BE
CMLLED IN STRIKE
California Governor s
Ready to Summon Sol
diers Along Waterfront
SAN FRANCISCO.~(/P)—Nat
fonal guardsmen were marshalled,
for a march onto San Francisco's
battle-ridden waterfront today lif
striking marine workers prevent
operation of the state-owned belt
line railroad.
Acting Governor Frank F. Mer
riam, coming to the scene from
Sacramento, announced that he
would call out the troops unless
the strikers permit operation of
the railroad to the besieged piers,
also owned by the state,
The executive’s ultimatum fol
lowed 18 hours of negotiations ‘be
tween members of the strike com
mittee and cfficials of the state
harbor commission, which ended
with a refusal of the strikers to
lift their picket blockade against
the railroad.
Adjutant General Howard of the
California. national guard said he
ig prepared to throw a force of
1,000 guardsmen onto the water
front at once and that he could
increase the number to 5000 with
in 24 hours. He said the troops
will be equipped with nausea pro
ducing gas. i
HANCOCK AVENUE
RESIDENTS TO ASK
STREET BE PAVED
At its regular meeting Friday
night, city council will be pre
sented a petition signed by resi
dents of Hancock avenue, between
Pulaski street and Milledge ave
nue, asking that the street be
paved. The petition is signed by
home owners who own large total
frontage on the street.
The petition sets out that no
curbing is asked and that the
street be paved with material and
according to plans and specifica
tions as approved by the city en
gineer.
The petitioners point out that
paving of the street will do much
to relieve congestion around the
High school when school opens
and closes each day, and will
lighten traffic at other important
points. Signers also stress the
fact that many of the homes on
the street have been repaired and
freshly painted with government
loans and that the dust, in a short
time, will do great damage to the
freshly painted houses, :
ROOSEVELT CONFERa
WITH HAITIAN CHIEF
President Has Good Luck
During Five Hours of
Fishing Yesterday
YABOARD U. 8. S. GILMER,
ACCOMPANYING PRESIDENT
ROOSEVELT.— (&) -—— President
Roosevelt cruised leisurely along
the mnerthern shore of ancient
Haiti to a rendezvous today with
President Stenio Vincent of the
island republic.
After a . successful Fourth of
July fishing on choppy Bahama
waters, President _Roosevelt was
scheduled to receive President
Vincent at noon aboard the crui
ser Houston.
President Vincent, who went to
Washington recently to visit Mr.
Roosevelt, planned to board the
cruiser off Cape Haitien, beneath
the Green Island mountains.
From there President Roosevelt
will proceed to Puerto Rico for
the first landing of his vacation
voyage tomorrow at Mayaguez. He
will ride overland into San Juan.
The President had a good haul
in his five hours of fishing on the
Fourth with his eons, Franklin D.,
jr.,, and John Roosevelt.
‘“The grandfather of all barra
cudas,” members of the party Said,
was pulled out by Mr. Roosevelt,
as well as two groupers each of
about 20 pounds. The barracuda
weighed 35 pounds,
- Rattlesnake Gets in
Bed With Atlanta Boy;
Sinks Fangs in Hand
ATLANTA, Ga—(P)—A rattle
snake crawled into bed with four
vear old John Hill Vickers while
the youngster was asleep and
sank its fangs into his left hand.
Quick action by the boy’s fath
er, awakened by the child's
screams, probably saved the life
of the child, physiciang said. The
father, John Hill Vickers, jr., ap
plied a tourniquet and rusheq to
a hospital with his son where an
ti-venom serum was administer
ed.
Mr. Vickers found the snake
coiled in a corner of the bedroom
last night, seized a rifie and Kkill
ed.
Doectors said the boy was recov
ering today from effects of poison
and the anti-venom serum.
LOCAL WEATHER
Rl i
e —————————————————————————————————
Generally fair tonight and
Friday except local thunder
showers Friday afternoon in
south portion.
The following weather re
port covers the 24-hour pe
riod ending at 8 a. m. today:
TEMPERATURE
Highest .... ss.c coes Jhid e
Tt . ... wiisl iaen eneslßo
B .. e veee e 820
DAL .. e eine 4.0 18.0
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours .. .. «. 20
Total since July 1 .. .. .. 80
Excess since July 1 .. .. .. .16
Total since January 1 .. ..30.22
Excess since Januaey 1 .... 3.14
MASONIC MEETING
TONIGHT 10 DRAW
MANY DELEGATIONS
Lodges in Seven Counties
To Be Represented at
.Conferring of Degrees
IMPORTANT MEETING
Organize Degree Team to
Confer Degrees Satur
day at Bogart
Many masons from all over the
Athens district are expected to at
tend a mecting at 8:30 tonight in
the rooms of Mt. Vernon Lodge
No. 22, F. & A. M, on Clayton
street, at which time the Master's
degree will be conferred on three
candidates,
Candidates to receive the degree
ar: John W. Henry, (Glen Harper
and H. A. Hogan and invitations
have been extended lodges in the
seven counties of the Athens dist
rict to send delegations.
‘Worshipful Master Jacob Brandt
Joel announced that plans will be
discussed and a team organized to
confer the Master Mason's degre2
on candidates from the Bogart
Lodge No. 507 Saturday.
The ceremony will be h2ld at
Bogart and the lodge there is
making plans for a large number
of visitors. A large barbecu= will
be prepared for those who attend.
Invitations to the meeting here
tonight have been sent out by W.
C. Thornton, secreary, to Arthur
Mosely, Danielsville; Walter
Whitehead, Carlton; Jess Daniel,
Bogart; Carey Williams, Greens
boro; Charley Hunters, LeXington;
W. E. Bray, Stephens; W. C. Ross,
Golbert; C. C. Parsons, Watkins
ville; J. M. Nix, Commerce; Jake
Leopard, Union Point; all Wor
shipful Masters of their respective
lodges, and Robert Ashford, past
Worshipful Master of Watkinsville
(Contilnued on page eight.)
“INTI-JAZL” HEAD:
OF COLLEGE STAYS
Attempt of Students to
QOust Arkansas School
President. Fails
MONTICELLO, Ark.—{(#)—Pres
ident Frank Horsfall, anti-jazz
president of Monticello Agricul
tural and Mechanical College,
whose ouster was sought by a ma
jority of the students who charged
among other things his chapel
talks on dancing contained ‘“crude
allusions to sex problems,” was
firmly =ntrenched in his position
today with the Dbacking of the
board of trustees. e
The board in a lengthy report on
its investigation of general charges
of “failing methods of administra
tion” at the colleg2 told Governor
Futrell that it found “no Just
cause for his dismissal at this
time in humiliation and shame.”
Horsfall has been head of the
school for the past 24 years.
An’ open investigation was con
ducted by the board at the sugges
tion of Governor Futrell to whom
the students several months agc
presented a petition in which a
score of charges were made
against President Horsfall and
John Richardson, of Warren, then
a member of the board of trustees.
Students testified at the open
hearing that President Horsfall in
his chapel talks declared mod=rn
dancing was nothing less than ‘a
sex orgy” and that those wha
danced ‘would go to hell.”
Horsfall on the stand denied
that the students had quot2ad him
exactly. .
New National Labor
Relations Board Plans
Quick Re-adjustment
WASHINGTON.—(#)—The new
national labor relations board was
reported today to be contemplat
ing a quick realignment of the
maze of exXisting labor boards.
The three-man tribunal, design
ed as a sort of supreme court for
capital-worker disputes, probably
will hold its first meeting within
ed it.
Because of the surge of strikes
and controversies its members
plan to be in action before Mon
day. The old national labor board
is abolished by presidential decree
on that date.
The new board—overseer of all
other existing boards—will find
what one of its authorities called
a “tangle” of about 35 such or
ganizations. Many are overlapping
and some have been declared in
efficient.
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—s¢ Sunday
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To head his .newly created
commission which will regu
late the communications indus
tries, President Roosevelt has
picked Eugene O. Sykes, above,
of Mississippi. Sykes, who has
been ¥chairman of the radio
commission, will serve a seven
year term in his new post.
SLAYER OF GENTRY
IS CAPTURED TODAY
Carl Church, Itinerant
Painter, Confesses to
Crime, Police Say
- JEFFERSON, Wis, —(#)— Carl
lChurch. captured as the slayer of
Barl Gentry, erstwhile bodyguard
to D. C. Stephenson, former Indi
ana Ku Klux Klan Ijeager, con
fessed the crime, the autnorities
said today shortv after he was ar
rested at Fort Atkinson near hara.
Sheriff Joseph T. Lange and Fort
Atkinson officers’ caught Church
last night as he lay asleep in a
vinery.
“l am not sorry in the least for
the act I committed as I feel that
I did a good deed for society when
1 killed Earl Gentry,” Church, an
itinerant painter also known as
George (Slim) King, was quoted
by Sheriff Lange as saying.
He committed the act, he said,
because Mrs. Carrie Gill, 59-year
old widow accused of plotting
with Church to bring about Gen
try's death, had been abused by
Gentry and because ‘‘she was kind
to me when I was sick.,” Mrs. Gill,
whose late husband was aewell to
do tavern keeper, is being held for
first degree murder and admitted,
the investigators said, that she
gave Church S6O to slay Gentry.
She is known locally as the “Sun
shine Lady” because of her acts
of charity and pleasant tempera
ment. )
Found Suncay
Gentry’s body, with a bullet
wound in his head, was found last
Sunday siamped in his automobile
which had been parked near tne
Gill residence, where he had made
‘his home for the past eight years.
Gentry formerly lived in Atlanta,
Ga., and his body was sent there
’. (Continued on page seven.)
Two Florida Youths
Sentenced to Death
For Bold Kidnaping
BONIFAY, Fla—(4)—First to
be convicted without a mercy rec
ommendation under Florida’s new
“Lindbergh Law,” two youths to
day faced death in the electric
chair for kidnaping and mistreat
ing Mrs. J. L. Phelps, 77-year
old widow.
Millard Keith, 18, and Bernard
Rutherford, 21, late _ yesterday
heard the verdict delivered by a
jury of Holmes county farmers.
No sign of emotion at the pro
nouncement was shown by the
pair, who earller in the- afternoon
had admitted beating the elderly
woman and taken her into the
woods to terrorize her in an effort
to make her turn over some money
to them.
Their principal defense was a
contention they had not received
any money, testimony contradicted
by the widow who said she had
given them SI.BO before she was
forced to accompany them in an
automobile. The law prescribes a
death penalty only if the kidnap
ing is for the purpose of obtain
ing money. 2
Both insisted they were aided
by a man named “Hunt” and not
by Dewey Keith, brother of Mil
lard, who must stand a separate
trial on a charge of participating
in the abduction.
MOVE INDICATED BY
FOREIGY BAANCH OF
NI PARTY TODAY
Vice - Chancellor Likely
Will Stay in Cabinet
As Commissioner
UNREST IS NOTICED
Cardinal Michael Faul
haber |s Reported
Held Prisoner ...
By A. D. STEFFERUD i
Copyright, 1934, By The Associated
Pross
BERLIN—Franz Von Papen, the
burr under the gaddle of the Naszi
regime, will be stripped of the vice
chancellory, the foreign depart~
ment of the Nazi party indicated
today, but he will be permitted
to remain in the cabinet as Sdar
commissioner. i
Thus, with the puzzling problem
of the vice chancenor’s disposition
for the first time gomewhat clari~
fied, reports indicating that the
Nazis have reopened a vigorous
anti-Jewish campaign in provineial
centers claimed major attention.
Along with these reports were
rumors that Cardinal Michael Faul~
haber, archbishop of Munich, was
being held prisoner.
These reports shared with oth
ers less well substantiated of &
growing unrest and dlssatisfaction
outside the capital, pointing to
growing dissension and fear.
Moves Furnishings
Vice Chancellor Von Papen's of
fice, next to that of Hitler, was
‘'stripped of its papers and furnish
ings from top to hottom, and all
‘his belongjns taken to his private
home, where his secretary said his
office henceforth will be. f
The Associated Press learned
from Frau Von Papen that their
‘Home, 100, Wis ‘\‘W'“finim
night, ey
Even the furniture was removed
from Von Papen’s old office. A
party spokesman said an entire
Nazi staff would replace Von
Papen’s men in the vice chancal
lory.
Von Papen himself declined to
be interviewed saying his position
would not be definitely fixed un«
(Continued on page eight)
. TWINS TO MARRY
One of Pair Seeks License
- Today from New York
Bureau
REFUSED LICENSE
NEW YORK.—-—(}P)—Unabl‘n;
to decide on the plural aspects
of the situation, perplexed au
thorities of the city marriage
license bureau today refused a
marriage license to one of the
much publicized “Slamese
Twins.” f
NEW YORK. — (&) — Marital
yearnings of the much publicized
Siamese ' twins shattered " ‘the
aplomb of the usually iron-nerved
marriage license b.ureau today. .
The twins — joined together
since birth—appeared at the' Mu
nicipal building today to get a le~
ense for one of them to marry.
Chief Clerk Julius Brossen listen
ed In bemused bewilderment to
the plural answers, and then
threw up his hands and asked for
a ruling on the sitvation from the
city corporation counsel. TR
Until the city’s legal ‘héads
mull over the unprecedented mat
ter and decide whether the license
is in the plural or the singular,
Dan Cupid must wait. t
The twins — Violet and Daisy
Hilton, 26 years old—wanted to
marry, or, rather—that is to say,
Violet wanted to marry—what is
meant is, that Violet and Daisy
wanted Violet to marry-— ;
The license was to have heen
taken out in Violet’s narhe, to
simplify things. oy
There was only one prospective
bridegroom named — Maurice L.
Lambert, 29-year-old orchestra
leader, who lives at the same
apartment building as the twins.
Daisy said she already had a
fiancee—Harry Mason, a pugilist,
who, she added, Is at present in
England.
They announced, before Clerk
Brosen bogged down in the intri
cacies, that they intended to have
Violet and Lambert married at
once by Deputy. City Clerk Philip
A. Hines. -
Lambert echoed their senti
ments. He said he was a widower,
born in Westernport, Md, the son
of William J. Lambert.
The twins gave Violet's occupa=
tion as an actress, said thw
four feet 11 inches tall,
196 pounds, and are jJoined physi
cally at the hips. e