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PAGE FOUR
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Published Every Evening Except Saturday and Sunda:
and on Sunzly Morning by Athens Pu{mfihing Co, .
R ———————— e
8. Braswell ..., Publisher and @General Manager
B . iiisiiesvaseneraswes,yospes Hdito
an C, Lumpkin ..........-++...~.Managing Editol
: National Advertising Representatives
H, Eddy Company, New York Park.-Lexington
| ding; Chicago, Wrigley Building; Boston Old South
; ?‘ J. B, Keough Rhodes-Haverty Building, At
janta
e
L Members Of the Assoclated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use
for .Ngnblicatlon of all news dispatches credited to it or
not otherwise credited in the paper, also to all local news
Ebllflé’hd therein, All rights of republication of special
tches also reserved.
#ull Leased Wire of the Associated Press with the Lead.
ing Features and Comics of the N. E. A.
bR o '
~ Helps The Memory |
L e BY BRUCE CATTON I
; Senator Borah may be a very annoying man,
sapécially to pertticians, but now and then he is a
very useful one.
. Conditcting 'a single-handed campaign in opposi
toéxoth Democratic and Republicin policies is
%nme‘gthat would occur to few people, but the
:Mtofimfi-nm Idaho. Even fewer people, having con
i.tm the idea, could do anything with it. But
‘Senator Borah is in a class by himself.
“No one can foretell the effect of his campaign.
'!h‘ country may vawn and look the other way, or it
may greet him with loud cheers; but whatever hap
‘pens, the senatar wirl ve useful, just as a bit of
string tied about one’s finger is useful.
. ‘He will keep us from getting something that might
_otherwise, in the flurry of a campaign year, gat
~overlooked. ]
“One of our biggest problems today is that while
“ are pretty well agreed on the goal we wa.ntl
to reach, we are not dt all agreed on the route we
want to use in getting there.
M. Roosevell has one route, or a blend of routes,
‘all mapped out; Mr. Fletcher, announcing that this
poute leads only to destruction, is working on an
‘other.
.~ Mpr. Borah's function right now seems to be to
‘remind us that neithey route will prove satisfactory |
unless we make dead certain that the little man—
the ordinary, undistinguished citizen who works
when he can get work, pays hig taxes and never gets
into the headlines—gets protected from the danger
of falling into the cogwheels.
_For Mr. Borah sees one fact very clearly. Our
emergence from the depression will mean very little
unless we find some way of checking the great trend
toward monopoly which has been a prime develop
_ment of the last generation. ¢
It may be that Mr. Borah is utterly mistaken in
his his belief that the New Deal program doesi not
constitute an effective check on that trend. Fine
words have been said to the little man by the ad
ministration, in the last year. Tt would be strange
indeed if those fine words were not accompanied
by protective government.’
But the decision on that point can be left to the
yoters, Mr. Borah’s job is to remind us constantly
that in one way or another such protection must be
had. His forthcoming campaign may be irritating,
but it ought to be very useful.
. The Fourth of July cannon cracker may still be a
nuisance, but it is not now the menace to public
safety that used to be. |
The recent Independence Day celebration took a
_ good many lives—we can't seem to conduct a holiday
in the United States, without killing ouselves—but
_only one or two of the deaths were due to fireworks,
~ For the contrast look at the records of the
~ American Medical Assciation, which show that in
the 1903 celebration, fireworks and gunpowder acci
~ dents took no fewer than 466 lives.
. Little by little, we seem o be getting sense. Pain
~ ful experience has taught us that the indiscriminate
use of fireworks is exceedingly dangerous. Is it
too much to hope that in another genemation we
may learn how to make a corresponding gain for
_ safety in our holiday auto traffic.
';?a’w'.,. rempmeefrmpas
~ Long ago, when the Frerich Revolution had brought
A its reign of terror, and revolutionary leaders
?f"'%v nselves began going to the seaffold, someone re
that Revolution always devours its own
A survey of the recent bloody events in Germany
- simply confirms this dictum.
~ Seizing power by violence almost invariably breeds
3 il more violence. Disagreements among men who
5 sovern a country are inevitable, under any kind of
@,:‘i and where these disagreements cannot be
L decided at the polls in a peaceful manner, they even
}:M ~ must get settled \in a violent mauner-—with
*# squad or the guillotine for the losers.
. The German Fascist revolution is simply following
the formula.
- HOLLYWOOD GOSSIP
o BY DAN THOMAS
3 NEA Servce Staff Correspondent
;WYWOOD—S&nme] Goldwyn’s decision to
drop production of “Barbary Coast.” during the pres
ent uproar against indecent and immoral pictures,
48 only part of a general abandonment of more or
less doubtful stories.
.jw‘mult will be that movie theater-goers will be
deprived of numerou:; pictures that alveady had been
planned by studio officials. Most of these pictures
‘would have been of a caliber which would only
My interest the vast majority, anywsay, so per
‘haps Hollywood’s rapidly changed plans for better
&cn for the be:it.
. But “Barbary Coast” being of a different type,
¥ n plans to hold the story or a couple of
%-1 sars believing that public sentiment then will per
‘mit iits making.
. Plans for numerous other films also are being
Efl el Ld or else altered to swmch extent that the
m as they stand today never would be recog
m And at least one picture, now nearing com
pletfon, has a very good chance of never being
shown except in the homes of a few film celebrities.
- It is “"The Green Hat”
'f’f is one star, however, who is riding higher
% ever as a result of the strenuoug censorship
. campaign. He is Harold Lloyd, who never vet has
~ had a single scene censored from one of his come
_ diesj for moral reasons. That's some record, con
dering that he has been in pictures f& more than
.;mntly his policy of clean entertainment has
"Peen a good one, as Harold's finances certainly are
”‘i' or today than those, of most of the movie
*,pl!lng the last two or three yearst Lloyvd possibly
eonld have made bigger box office hits had he in
l a litfle more sex into his films. However, he
| kefused to do this, feeling that his films had as
“M"‘ an appeal for voungsters as for adults.
‘“fim determined not to put anything on the
= &“ p that he wouldn’'t want his own children to
' Now with his latest, “The Cat's Paw,” just fin
‘“"’"’" stands right at the head of the pro
:‘:"‘u bom - for clean wholesome films. Adapted from
" Clarence Budington Kelland's novel of the same title,
«*’F:z' ‘one of Loyd’s best and funniest pictures.
,*fi' Por the first time in hig career, he has taken a
| fromt story and depended upon situations rather
shan gags for laughs. And the result is a production
‘sporth anyone’s time and money to see.
L
xn to be only a matter of days now until
« Bilers will be the proud mother of an heir.
says she is sure it will be a boy. because she
‘one so badly. Heres' hoping you get your wish
THE SOUTH’S RESOURCES
The natural resources of the south, and
especially in this state, are rapidly being
developed and their importance realized
!by advanced thinkers and those engaged
'in research work of the mineral and other
=resources, for so long a time left undevel
oped, and in a degree unknown. However,
since the success of the pine tree pulp for
the manufacture of newsprint, the tung
tree for the manufacture of tung oil is be
ing developed, which may result in the
south becoming the center of the nation
for the manufacture of paints and oils. In
a statement issued by Dr. C. C. Concannon,
chief of the chemical division of the United
States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic
Commerce, he said:
“It has been suggested that public Tunds
be allocated under some sort of subsistence
homestead plan or through some other set
up which will be sufficiently broad and
comprehensive to encompass the problem
as a whole, involving sections of Florida,
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana
and Texas in which tung oil can be pro
duced. Tung oil lends itself readily to such
a case because it is a non-competitive crop,
all our oil at present coming from China.
The return derived from creating a tung
oil industry would mean new wealth
amounting to many millions to the South
and at the same time bring benefit be
cause of having readily available adequate
quantities of pure and uniformly priced
tung oil.”
It is the opinion of government special
ists that a general decentralization should
be followed by a movement to the south
where raw materials, tung oil, rosin and
turpentine are available. With these de
velopments of natural resources in Geor
gia and other southern states, this section
of the country will come into its own and
become one of the richest and most invit
ing fields for investors of all sections of
the nation.
COMMITTEE ON WILD LIFE
President Roosevelt’s committee on Wild
Life has rendered a most excellent service
for the preservation of game in the drought
stricken sections of the west. An appropri
ation of $8,500,000 was turned over to the
committee for the purchase of unprofita
ble lands from the farmers; to give em
ployment to the unemployed and to restore
the resources of wild life, estimated to be
of value of over a half billion dollars. Em
ergency field survey crews, recruited from
the Bureau of Biological Survey, are at
work on a tract of land containing 179,000
acres. Of the original amount appropriated
for this work, $6,000,000 is for land
purchases and $2,500,000 for restoration
work.
Another appropriation that has been |
made affecting game conditions in all
states is for $25.000,000 for purchases of
(land and a similar amount for develop
ment work on refuge areas in every state.
A total of 404 projects. most of them sub
mitted by state fish and game departments
was included in the federal approoriations.
Some of this money, of course, will come to
Georgia, and be dispensed through the
game and fish commission.
It is encouraging to learn of the interest
the fedeial government is showing in the
preservation of game resources in this
country. For years, the game and fish de
partments of the states have not had suf
ficient funds with which to carry on in a
successful manner, but with the recent ap
propriations, the states will be enabled to
not only protect the resources of wild life
but to increase the multiplicity of both
game and fish.
ENDORSING ROOSEVELT
One of the best criterions on which to
judge the popularity of President Roose
velt and the “New Deal” is from those
who were not his supporters, but were
members of the opposing party in the elec
tion of 1982. In commenting on the Presi
dent and his policies, the Omaha World-
Herald has the following to say: |
“This néewspaper is among those who re
gard Mr. Roosevelt neither as a would-be
dictator nor as an apostle of socialism. Tt
regards him rather as one striving to free
the American people from the dictator
ship of the lords of high finance and the
private socialism of the industrial barons.
It believes that the’effort to insure a “more
abundant life” and a greater degree of
‘economic security for all the people is at
tended by a deep-seated desire thus to
preserve a free democratic system that rec
ognizezs the benefits of private property
and private enterprise. It joins in the con
viction that without genuine reform, with
out drastic eliminati%n of the abusres of the
capitalistic order, that order would be
doomed to fall, and in falling introduce for
more intense and perilous disorder than
may bc; expected from all Mr. Roosevelt’s
“experiments’ by even the worst critics.”
And, this from a Republican newspaper.
Not only have the Republican newspapers,
|in many instances spoken favorably of the
administration, but many of the leading
Republicans of this country have come out
in the open with their support. In fact, had
it not been for former Republicans voting
for Mr. Roosevelt in the last election. he
would have lost a number of states that
registered in the Democratic column.
When lost in the woods, a person walks
in circles to the right: the first circle is
large, the next one a bit smaller, and each
subsequent circle a bit smaller than the
one preceding it.
Face powder was used by Greek women
2,300 years ago.
The Bible is printed in 623 languages
and dialects.
England has fewer convictions for
drunkenness in 1932 than in ay of the pre
vious 30 years.
The Greenland whe lei« ane-third head
—_— ¢ 1 222 i
Female frogs do not sing, = _ . _
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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OCCURTOYOU - -
A Little of Everything,
Not Much of Anything
By HUGH ROWE
ee O A A A N RSR A S S SSO
Charles J. Haden, state
chairman of the Farm Debt
Adjustment Commission for
Georgia in connection with the
Federal Farm Credit Adminis
tration, spent yesterday after
noon and today here.
Mr. Haden’s visit here was for
the purpose of organizing the
Clarke County F¥Farm Debt Ad
justment Commission, which is
the first county in the state to be
organized. Mr. Haden has under
taken the work in_ this state
purely as a matter of service to
the farmers of Georgia, in whose
interests h 2 is vitally interested.
He is giving freely of his time
asd resources to the work of re
lieving and adjusting .conditions
for farmers in order that they
may have an opportunity of com
ing back and recovering from the
ill effects of the period of depres
sion.
Mr. Haden is one of Geor
gia’'s most outstanding citizens
and philanthropists. A retired
capitalist and a citizen of At
lanta, he has contributed
much to the upbuilding of that
oity.
In fact, he is a pioneer builder
of Atlanta and one of its most
valuable citizens. It was Mr. Ha
den who honored the memory of
William H. Crawford one of
Georgia’s most illustrious citizens,
by buying the lot on which is
buried the remains of this noted
statesman and citizen and having
it repaired and put in sightable
condition. He also gave in honor
of the imwemory of Mr. Crawford,
the marker erected at Crawford
which stands as a silent menu
ment to the memory of this great
Georgian.
When Atlanta was being
built into a great city, Mr.
Haden was one of the leading
spirits and motive powers be
hind the program and plans
for a Greater Atlanta.
Its successful building and ac
complishments are traceable, in a
great measure, to his untiring ef
forts and resources spent unself
ishly for the cause of enterprises
that has placed Atlanta in the
ranking bracket of the greatest
city in the South. Back: in the
earlier days of Atlanta's growth,
Mr. Haden never tired or shirked
a duty in the interest of his
adopted home city. Today, the
fruits of his work are being en
joyed by not only the people of
that city, but by the entire popu
lace of the state. As a moving
spirit of the Chamber of Com
merce, his record is outstanding
for conservatism and constructive
building of the city and for the
state of Georgia. 4
GOLFER—"“There goes lit
tle Binks and Miss Munny. |
thought she threw him over.”
PARTNER—"So she did. But
vou know how a girl throws.”"—
New York Sun.
The nudists’ colonies are
meeting with obstructions
from the law and officers, who
have awakened to the import
ance of driving out all such
organizations desecrating the
morals of the communities in
which they are located.
When the first nudists’ colonies
were organized, freakish human
beings flocked to them, paid the
exhorbitant price =of initiation
fees and Dbecame full fledged
members However, the people
have hecome aroused over these
immoral organizations and their
National Guards of
South Carclina and
Alabama Begin Work
COLUMBIA, -§. C. —(AP) '—
National guardsmen from South
Carolina and Alabama Monday had
settled down to the routine of
two weeks' training period at
camp Jackson near here.
The gunmen, numbering about,
1,800 men and comprising the
118th infantry of South Carolina
and the 117th artilery of Alabama
with its 106th ammunition train,
will drill and practice until July
22nd.
Two-Year-Old Boy
Will Try to Cut
Down on Smoking
WEST PATERSON, N. J—(#)—
Charles ‘Mickey” Norman, fair, fat
and nearly three, is trying to
break the habit of a lifetime—
smoking.
After two years as a cigar smok
er, “Mickey”’ hopes—because his
parents wish it—to be down to a
few puffs a day by his third birth
day, July 28.
It's not that they think smok
ing has done “Mickey” any harm.
He is healthy, lively and well-be
haved. His height is 37 inches,
his weight 35 pounds, The aver
age for his age is 37 inches and
32 to 25 pounds.
{But since the world first heard
a year ago that ‘Mickey” was a
smoker, letters of protest have
come by the hundred to the Nor
man home.
Then, too, since his first experi
ments with cigars, ‘“Mickey” has
broadened his activities to include
pipes and cigarettes. It is the
cigarettes that his parents object
to.
TOO MUCH BUSINESS
MANITOWISH, Wis.. —(AP) —
John Dillinger is too much of a
'dr'l.wmg card to suit Emil Wanat
ka.
| Emil and his little Bohemia re
sort shot onto the front pages last
April when Dillinger and his gang
used it as a hideout, kept Emil
a virtual prisoner two days and
then fled in a hail of bullets as the
mob shot it out with officers.
“Business here,” Emil said Mon
day, “is too good. I'm kept so busy
I'm getting tired of it. T want to
rest for a year or two.”
The little Bohemia, he said, has
seen almost boom days since the
' the Dillinger episode. '
| i
| STAY IS GRANTED
I MONTGOMERY, Ala. —(AP) —
' A stay of execution was granted
| Monday to Heywood Patterson
’and Clarence Norris, two of nine
| Negro defendants under sentence
|of death in the “‘Scottsboro case.
!hy the Alabama supreme court on
ireceipt of an application for re
{hearlpg for the condemned men.
- ————
l DENIED APPEAL
! BOSTON.—(#)—Charles Ponzi,
lwho swindled investors of several
millions of dollars in a get-rich
]quick scheme a dozen years ago,
| has been denied an appeal from
jan order of deportation by Secre
lmr_v of Labor Perkins, federal
iomcials announced Monday.
!stamp of disapproval has peen
!placed on the continuance of these
‘ infamous make-believe health
lgivlng outdoor indecent perform
; ances. How such a fad ever gain
|ed admission into selef-respecting
| communities, is bevond our con
!cepfion. but they have. However
ipopula,r sentiment has grown so
strong against such colonists, it is
lbelleved that the nudist fad will
| soon become an “ism” of the
M‘fi“’ hope so, at last.
VACATION POST CARDS
NEWS OF GEORGIA’S
e
Numerous letters have been re
ceived in the Game and Fish De
partment and in the Executive Of
fices endorsing the plan to make
the fish hatcheries now under con
struction self-supporting by the
‘adoption of a resident fishing Ili
i(‘enso of SI.OO to be required of all
resident fishermen over sixten
years of age.
A study of the license figures
on all the other states reveals the
following interesting information.
; There are only six states in the
nation without a resident fishing
license. Georgia is one of thess six.
Therer are no state without a non
resident fishing license and the li
cense fees run from $2.00 to $10.50
i\\'ith an average of $4.15, Georgia
is a little above this figure, since
kher non-resident license sells for
$5.25. The average resident license
‘ee -is $1.56, which makes Georgia’s
proposed fee 56 cents below the
average for the nation. It should
he said that the states operate
from none to 35 hatcheries ,with an
Iwverage of 9.4 hatcheries per state
Georgia’s present plan is a little
below this figure, for there are
only six hatcherieg planned in all.
iThe State of Washington, with 35
hatcheries, has a $3.00 resident
and a $5.00 non-resident fishing
license, and the fishing attracts
thousands of non-resident fisher
men who spend much money in
the state.
Zack Cravey
Governor Warns Not to
Eat Too Much Barbecue
ATLANTA. —(#A)—Barbecue is
mighty fine with polltlcs/ but don't
eat too much in this hot weather,
Governor Talmadge warned Mon
day. ;
~ The governor averred ‘that he
had a slight indispesition; from too
much barbecue and roasting ears
during the past week. He said,
however, he was looking forward
to the Dbarb2cue at Louisville
Thursday and others during the
campaign but that he had now
learned from eperience not to eat
too much barbecue or to many
roasting ears.
ki gl
NATIONAL GUARD KILLED
FORT MOULTRIE, S. C.—(&)—
Sergeani Herbert L. Ayres, jr., of
Wilmington, N. C., member of the
252nq coast artillery, North Caro-1
lina national guard, was shot and
killed here Monday by a regular
army sergeant who was on sentry
duty. }
it |
“MENACE” TO NATION \
NEW YORK.— (#) —Raymond |
Moley, magazine editor and “brain
truster,” Monday declared Nazi
propagandizing in the United
States constituted a ‘“‘menace” to
the nation. 4
\
EXTENSION GRANTED |
WASHINGTON.—(#)—The In
terstate Commerce Commission
Monday granted the Charleston
and Western Carolina company
and the Carolina, Cinchfield and
Ohio railway an extension of one
vear in time for constructing a
connecting track in Spartanburg
county, South Carolina.
MORE CONTRACTS |
ATLANTA —(AP) — Contracts
for approximately $850,000 worth
of paving, grading and bridge
work will- be awarded Thursday
by the state highway depa!‘tment.i
The projects include the grad
ing of the eight mile Georgia
stretch .of the Tri-State highway‘
which goes through Rabun coun
ty, connecting important North
and South Carolina highways,
Seats Reserved for
.
Women at Trial on
~ “Morals” Charges
LLOS ANGELES — (AP)—Court
room seats were reserved today for
representatives of the Women's
Christian Temperance union and
the Phebian society at the trial of
Dave Allen and Gloria Marsh on
morals charges entered its second
day.
The request for reserved seats
was ganted by Forrest Blaylock,
bailiff, who wasg pressed yesterday
to find space for the throng, mostly
women, which crowded into the
courtroom.
Allen formerly was head of the
Central Casting burefiu, Holly
wood agency which sends thous
ands of extrag to various motion
picture studios. Miss Marsh is a
film extra. They were indicted by
the county grand jury following
an _ allegedly ‘“‘wild party.”
Each of the prespective jurors
‘was asked by Defense Counsel Jer-
Ty Geisler whether he or she w“?
‘member of any group of organizd
‘tion now engaged in the nation
wide drive to improve the morals
‘of the films.
. Five men and seven women were
lin the jury box as court adjourned
yvesterday but they had gnot defi-
WHAT GASOLINE HAS [l SINCLAIR
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{ A DARRYL F. ZANUCK Production 8 20" |
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RELATIONS”
TOMORROW FOX NEWS
TODAY—THE NEW STAR!
FRANCIS LEDERER IN
“MAN OF TWO WORLDS” ‘
WITH ELISSA LANDI |
OZ % Z”‘?? 5
She's loveliness personified...a sos: \” %
cinating new star, = l“\
He tries to make her more beautiful .
...and then tries to make her: B
GIRLS! GIRLS! GIRLS! § =
* Everybody's Weakness...the most' o
beautiful in Hollywood =~ and film- G
dom's funniest comedians in the i m
goyest, giddiest, snappies} musical o T'
romance by the greatest of all f,
musical producers. v
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with
Charles Butterworth, Harry Long
don, Sid Silvers, Henry Travers
and Irene Bentley. A B, G. De-
Sylva Preduction. Directed by
David Butler.
—TODAY —
Claudette Colbert
in
“TORCH SINGER”
it ittt il
TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1934
nitely been selected as jurors.
Allen listened intensively from
hisz chair at the counsel table ~
the lengthy questioning.
m‘
7 s
Today’'s Big Value
—
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FCO ST My
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4 l 4 k~ Je
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Kellogg’s taste extra good in
summer. They’re crisp, cool
ing, delicious. And they’re the
big value in cereals.
| 9
* fl"yg ¥
7(
|
| FOR COOLNESS
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