Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current, August 07, 1934, Home Edition, Image 1
I cOTTON MARKET {DDLING P REV CLOSE.. .. +l+: e IOI' 102- NO. ]79‘ . TB Washington Lowdown —— Rodney Dutcher eair and Firm | To Protect Public ; Searching Quiz : e ki fifth of a series | : slol¢ by Rodney Dutcher ",V\ “ 1d and NE A , t\ : n (ul'['espplldefl[. : 4 :“4 with the more impor- ‘ t’ ';, aw governmental agencies ;“\\J.m.;wm their aims, and ! ‘\\.\‘;\lm‘nn’i'm\' — A J‘-’l} fOff s reform and regulation -of | ephones, te {;;H{ph. a!ld bl'Oa,d-i «ing—has been taken over by '-hfil w Federal Communications mmission : - ;f The mOSt sensational part Of. its mediate duties will be invesuga-| 1 of the $5,000,000,000 telephonei mopoly prior to recommenda-i wn to Congress for a ngulatlng! «tem expected to reduce tele-| one rates. | The two chief phases of FCC'SI v“'l;' tagk are: : 1. To administer the l‘egulatlory‘ wers over the communications, qustries formerly held by the; deral Radlo Cfommission. Inter- | Lo Commerce Commission, b’tate; Al\.,-q-”,ni_ and Post Office DL‘-] sudy the industries and) commend regulatory and co-or-] hating legislation to Congress b Fepruary 1, FCC will adminis-l ¢ such laws when they are pass- | The second phase ig g 0 hugel at for the next Z<ew monthg thni mmission will be primarly a| vd of inquiry. There are no gen-i ses on the commission and its | sults will be achieved by plenty | ard work. Its first job will be | educate itself, ' The old Federa]l] RadioCommis- | bn whose duties and staff FCC | sorbed, smelled violently of pols I ics and seemed a paradise for’ bbyists. The new (:ommissiun's* wdeasting division should be atched carefully . i Eugene Octave Sykes, member °fi e old FRC since 1927, ig chalir- | an., He is a fair, judicially mind-i lississippian who never made nemies—even among the l()b-l rists who, headed by Bob Jack-! on and Arthur Mulen, had manyt IRC cases. He knowg a log abouti The “strong man” on FCC prob ly will be Paul A. Walker, who! hairman of the Oklahoma Pub e Utilities Commission forced astic reduction in. electricity, gasl I cotton gin rates and ably en yreed the gtate ofl pro-rata law. ‘ He heads FOC's telephone divi- I 1 and is grimly set on complete | estigation and striet regulation ' )r the American Telephone andl elegrapn company. i So far as I'm concerned,” “’al-l I says the commission's only b is to protect the public. ’Thel tilitiex are fully prepared to take e of themselves and nome more | than the Bell telephone system.” Herbert 1.. Pettey' is' the com n's secretarv. Ag the young presentative of Jim - Farley and 01. Louis M. Howe, he was cred- | d- with dominating - -the radioi Pmmission when he was gecretary ere, under Syvkes His friend, Paul D. Spearman, a| FCCs general. unsel. Spearman was once as-| stance general coungel for ™RC, | r juit to tak2> up lobbying. | ‘he A, T. and T. investigation 4 been brewing g long time. fnator Clarence Dill, a sponsor f the communication act, gave up 'S resolution for a gpecial con “lona] inquiry only on promise RO Ild undertake it. v telephone and telegraph com ¢ been ordered to sub 't Teports on their corporate set . .oings, interlocking ,director- | s rale structures. | Among the telephone monopoly’s | o 0 be investigated are: E ) of rates during the e tecline. Large write- ! hareo. | 2uons and depreciation sEB sulting in highex" ;”_.H; ¢ lees collected by A. : b om gubsidiaries avery- O olding company abuses. 5 Subjects of inquiry will be miee 4 Ltween the Bell com : - and T., and their 2 b all equipment from the | : : stern Electric Com- | ed fancy prices. Re- | o loye wages ‘\'hi]el n salaries were main- | b Istance rates. Pro- i o - lelegraph division, un-| R/ n Irvin Stewart, ( “late Department, muSti ‘otect the old line r ¥ in the face of radio, ~ o tompetition from A,l ¢ robably will recnm-‘ ‘ ! the Western Union ! ng ¢ ms, now parallel- | Co. d losing money. 1 With radio tele- | ture expansion | ther than expen- | re to be e‘.\'r\m'tnd,] e yeeific ,;]}.\- di“‘(‘f(_’d 1 | report on pro- | f ,: L spicific bloke . nels “for educational, Other non-profit roaden o TK is under the : > sion, headed by Then. ‘l;‘:‘.p_qrm Gary, W staei . vailable space for nor o Aod recommendations n i wave o i cxv:nsi\'el'l'gitlf;iatllgzy . ATHENS BANNER-HERALD Full Associated Press Service New Deal Faces Test At Polls Today Guard Fires at Snooper; Another Discharges Accidental Shot NO DAMAGE IS DONE Militiamen and Policemen Continue to Hold - . Own Positions COURT POSTPOINED NEW ORLEANS—(#)--Court action to force tha state to de mobilize -the natimal guard called out in th>» titter fac tional dispute between Senator Huey P. Long and Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley, wns block ed further today threouch con tinued inability of the civil sheriff -to serve Adjutant-Gen a court summons. Hearing in injunction pro ceedings brought by members of the Walmsley factjon, sche duled for today. was continued August -14. Senator long, who had been served in the demobilization suit and who has been “miss ing” for thre days did not ap pear in the court rcom, but his adversary, Mayor Walmsley was on hand with a battery of attorneys to press the injunc tion action. : District Judge Nat W. Bond, however, said that the hearing would not proceed until Ad jutant-General . Fleming had been served, g NEW ORLEANS.— () — The first gunfire of the Huey P. Long- Mayor T. Semmes Wamsley polit ical mobilization . sounded today when..a . guardsman. .at Jackson Barracks, where. the militia is un der arms,. fired twice at an uni dentifieq. snooper and a militiaman later .accidentally discharged his pistol at the city voting registra tion office, breaking a plate glass window in city hall annex and throwing the city hall area into confusion. There was plenty of excitement, but no casualties, in both instan ces. : Adjacent streets were crowded with citizens on their way to work when the pistol shot crashed out of the registration office in the city hall annex, seized by the state militia more than a week ago and since held by force of arms. e , Theé bullet passed through a big window facing” what has come to be known'as ‘no man’s land,” a narrow street’ separating the mili tia-filled ' registration office from city .- hall ' proper, where Mayor Walmsley's opposing police force is concentrated. - It appeared to richoehet: - off inte the air without striking- anything else. . The sentry at Jackson Barracks, headquarters of Senator Huey P. Long's national guardsmen, fired twice at an unidentified man he said was attempting to sneak into the barracks. The sentry said . that when he spied. the man behind some bushes he ordered him to halt, but he jumped up and sped away instead. He fired two shots, neither of which is believed to have taken effect. Senator Long’s guardsmen were ;still stationed in the registration (Continued on Page Five) Adams Given Credit For Victory in Tilt With Gov. Talmadge ATLANTA, Ga.—(#)—Commis sioner of Agriculture G. C. Adams today can boast of an unusual ac complishment—a. victory of a state official against Governor Tal madge. Many have tried it, only to lose in the end. Ousteq officials have gone to the courts and lost. The governor late yesterday ap proved a requisition for $9,000 for the payment of past due salaries to agriculture department em ployes whose checks were held up while the commissioner and gover nor fired away at each other over the right of the s:;)mmissioner to discharge State Chemist C. Rey nolds Clark and four assistants. Adams fired Clark and the as sistarts by leaving their names off the quarterly budget. The gover nor ordered them back, refusing to give the department any money until they Were restored to the payroll. Adams held his ground. Clark and his assistants resign ed their posts after the controver sy began. State Auditor Tom Wisdom said Adams has $41,000 remaining on his appropriation to be used this year. The commissioner said the third quarter budget will call for $29,000, leaving only $12.000 for ‘the department to operate on dur ing the last quarter. s s . 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' R R s g o y S i : - ted nest. i i * water b Dtt'Q hea d Yvonne all sleep peace fully as their mother, Mrs, Oliva D ionneg, watches over their a ii& " V 0 Marie, Emelie, Cecile, A nnette an This story, accompanied by a full page of hitherto yhpub lished pictures on page 3, is the first of two appearing exclu sively in the Banner-Herald and other NEA Service news-. PRESIDENT VIEWS DROUGHT SECTION Promises to Make “Every Drop of Water Falling in Northwest Count’” * BY FRANCIS M. STEPHENSON Enroute with President Roove velt to Washington-— (#) —Presi dent Roosevelt brought his drought inspection trip into North Dakota: today with the announced re‘olve to make “every ounce of water”! fafling in the norstawest “count Le fore it makes tis way down (0 Ihe Gulf of Mexico.” : . Amid the steamshovels -and dredges on the newly commenced Fort Peck, Montana, dam in the: Missouri River the president voic ed this purpose late yesterday to a crowd of woikers anl citizens of these parched fie:ds ¥ : This morning was *¢i aside by. the president for a visit at Devils Talko, North Dakota, and a tour of the surrounding regions - Senator M:e, Republican, of Nortn bLoakota, accompanied him frem Fsrt Peck. Also on the Presidential Special are Senator Shipstead, farmer la bor, and . Representative Hoidale Democrat, rival candidates so, the Minnesota sehate election this fall. Arthur Mullen, of Nebraska, formet vice chairman of the Democratic National committee, also accom panied Mr. Roosevelt tcday, re porting severe drought in his state (Continued on Fage Two) s et Last Body Recovered From Mine Explosion DERBY. Va. —(AP)— The all night vigil at the Stonega Coke Coal company’s number three mine ended at 6:20 o'clock thist morning when rescue workers brought out the body of the last of the seven teen victims of yesterday's explo sion. As had been anticipated the bod jes of nine.workers who perished in a lateral gallery of the mine were found with a comparatively small area and their condition indi cated they were nearer the center of the blast than were the eight whose bhodies were found Monday within a few hours after the ex plosion oceurred. . ... . Athens, Ca., Tuesday, . August 7, 1934, papers, revealing what goes on behind the scenes in the Ontar io home.of the famous Dionne quintuplets. The second story, in. tomorrow’s Banner-Herald will. tell the amazing “life - - - Religious Riots : Between Arabs, Jews - Seem Dying Out e ——— T ———— -~ R T CONSTANTINE, Algeria —(AP) —Religious riots between Arabs and Jews, which have cost an es timated 100 lives, appeared to be dying out today. Authorities poured troops into the city and claimed the situation is well in hand. Forty personc are under arrest and will be tried sum marily. - All but three of the identified 25 dead were Jews. The eXact num ber of victims is impossible to as certain at present, as the rioters carried off a number of dead and wounded. .| . Minneapolis Truck L . Drivers on Strike ’ * . Ask Public Boycott MINNEAPOLIS —(AP)— Strik ing truck drivers called for a con sumers boyvcott today, as the Rev. PFrancis Haas, federal madiator, renewed his efforts to ' end “the most’ involved and complicated controversy.. I have ever encoun tered.” The boycott, as urged at a mass meeting last night by William Brown, president of the Truck Drivers union, ‘would be levelled against all business firms that refuse to sign the “Haas-Dunni gan « agreement.” Truck owners subscribing to the Haas-Dunnigan plan agree to pay a specific wage and to reinstats employes without discrimination— terms which the Empoyers’ Advis ory committee have rejected as de terminedly asi the strikers have in sisted on them. The advisory committe, offered settlement provided they could re instate employes by making selec tions from a “preferred” list to be made up by the employers. Strike leaders say this ignores the strik ers’ demand for seniority rights in re-employment. With the military controlling the streets, the 22-day strike moved toward anohter climax Wednesday when the United Statesf district court will be asked to rule on the legality of Governor Olson’s mar tial rule. story” of the babies, accom panied by another array of new pictures. (Copyright, 1934, by NEA Service) CORBEIL, Ont—Oliva Dionne | Hi .l ~ FUNERAL OF HERD | Final Rites for ‘Belovedl ' German Leader Marked | By Impressive Ceremonyi | | TANNENBERG, Germany.—(/P) | —Germany gave a hero’s funeral |on heroes’ ground to its late | President Paul Von Hindenburg f;soday. . The grateful natlon gave him | rest in one of the eight impres sive tcwers of the Tanneénberg war *monument, where twenty yvears | 280 Von Hindenburg beat back | eight units of an invading Rus isian army. Here his wars were lover. | Adolf Hitler, the German chan { cellor and Von Hindenburg’s suc | cassor, deliverea the funeral ora- Irion and said that the late presi { dent “opened the door” to Nazi {lsm. | The requiiem was the stirring ! song, “I Had a Comrade,” a nat ;ional hymn sung to the tramp of marching feet. | The oration was given by the | whole German people, speaking through Hitler., | Von Hindenburg's way to the | tomb was through a dramatic and breath-taking military display. His resting place looks out over the Bast Prussian fields which he loved so well and which now "are green and gold with the harvest. The funeral ceremony opened ‘ (Continued on page seven.) B S | ——————————————————————————S— | e ' LOCAL WEATHER ——— Fair tonight, Wednesday 5 partly cloudy; probably show | ers in extremg south portion. ] TEMPERATURE B SNI . i i 80,0 Lowest. .. B s a 0 MERB S . W sk .ee.80.0 i Normal.. s ias s O 0 | RAINFALL { Inches last 24 h0ur5........ 0.00 Total since August 1...... .43 { Deficiency since August 1.. .87 | Average August rainfall... 4.68 | “Tetal since January 1......35.84 | Excesg since January 1.... 3.44 settles himself into the bugsgy, lshakes the reins and is on his way to Callander. : It is early morning, but Dionne’s house is already a-bustle, full of a purposeful and efficient stirring. . 5 . Historic Battleficld . z . Final Resting Place of : 29 ¢ Germany’s War Hero [ e ———————————————— e A et 1 (By The Associated Press) Tannenberg, historic battlefield, | scene of Marshai Paul Von Hin denburg's greatest victory and site of a national memorial, became the president’s last pesting place today Cut off from main Germany by Pomorze, Tannenberg lies in East Prussia, near Hohenstein and 60 { miles from the Von Hindenburg home at Neudeck. Here German troops met the Russians from August 26 to 30, 1914, repulsed them and gained g i decisive vietory at the very outset ‘ of the world war. 'W.S. Vare, Form ' W.D. Vare, Former . % Republican Leader, . . . » ' Dies This Morning | ATLANTIC ClTY—®)—William | 8. Vare, former political leader of Philadelphia, died at his summer | home here today, Vare, Republican National com mitteeman and for yvears the color ful leader of the Republican or ganization in Philadelphia, died suddently at 11:30 a. m. In ill, health for the last six yvears, the s6-year-old former con i igressmavn suffered a relapse about la week ago from the heat. This was revealed last night by his son-in-law, Dr. Johx ¢ Shaw, who said earlier today he had shown improvement. Vare suffered a heart attack and passed away in twenty minutes. Vare, who was elected to the { United States senate tn 1926 and | was refused a seat after a three | year fight op charges of excessive | campaign expendluxres, was strik en with a paralytic stroke in Aug | ust, 1928. For many days his con dition was critical but he rallied to continue his fight for the seat ‘iin the senate, ' Despite his illness he continued | his political activities n Pennsyl | vania until recently when he was Edepos@d as the leader of the Re i publcan organization in Ppila.dgl ‘lphia.. : o B A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—sc Sunday Dionne has to meet the morning train at Callander—it is bringing him a consignment. Dionne ig the father of the most famous babies in the world, the (Continued on Page Two) Would Be Modeled After This Year's Cotton and Corn Loan Plans : (Copyright, 1934, by the Associated - Press.) WASHINGTON.—{/P)—A gigan tic crop loan plan which® would leave control of 1935 supplies in the hands of farmers who grow them is hatching in the farm ad mitdistration. Modeled after this year's corn and cotton loans, the plan will call for government loans on a wide range of other crops. There will be a stipulation that supplies must be sold when prices rise to a certain point. Last year the government ad vanced farmers 10 cents a pound on stored cotton, and 45 cents a bushel on corn sealed in cribs or warehouses. This pegged prices at those levels .and officials say t/e plan was a success. As prices advanced beyond those levels recently farmers began selling crops, paying off loans and making a profit for themselves. The farmer was continuously as sured of at least those prices and the government was sure of recoup ing its investment as long.as the price. stuyed at’ or above the loan value. ! In the case of cotton, the plan said it must be sold when the price reached 15 cents. This, offi (Continued on page seven.) Two More Members of Nazi Party Sentenced VIENNA —(AP)— Court-martial today¥ sentenced two members of the Nazi putsch against the gov ernment of Chancellor Dollfuss to be hanged. One death sentencg was pro nounced at Klagenfut against Karl Kostelnig. The other wag ordered is Vienna against Erst Feicke, a regular army soldier and the first such to be brought to trial in con nection with the putsch. When the death sentence was pronounced, Feicke raised his arm in a Nazi salute and cried: “Heil Hitler!” H, wag pulled back to his bench by a guard. : H2LE] ‘ e ¥ West Virginia, Kansas, And Missouri People Make Choices - NO VIRGINIA RACES Backers of Roosevelt and - Opposition Engaging .. In Hot Fight (By the Associated Press) Today's elections: . West Virginia — selects party nominees for U, S. senator and six house geats. ; Missouri ~— selects nominees for U. 8. Senator and 13 house seats. Kansas — gelects nominees for governor and seven house seats. Verdicts on the Rooseveltaign “New Deal’ and on “bossism” go into ballot boxes in West Virginia and Missouri today. Kansas picks nominees for gowvernor and con gress. win President Rooseveit's progra.ui is at isgsue in West Virginia , whers lSenator Henry D. Hatfield, out . spoken foe of administration poli ‘cies, is opposed by four candidates, Nine Seek Office 5 ‘ Nine seek the West Virinia Democratic ncmination for the senate. Clem Shaver, former nas tional chairman of the party; W. E. Chilton, Charleston publisher and former senator, and Rush D- Holt, a 29-vear old legislator, hayve conducted aggressive campa‘gns. { Each of the nine democrats has pledged support of the “New Deal”, Thus, if Hatfield is the republican choice, the Roosevelt administras tion will be a clean-cut igsue iu the general election. Charge of “bossism” and “ma chine control” figure in Missouri's three--cornered senatorial fray. “Big -Tom” Pendergast, Kansa¥ City Democratic “Boss,” favors IHtrry 8. Truman. The St. Louls !Democratic organization is for John J. Cochran. The third lead ing contender is Jacob L. Milli. gan for whom Senator Bennett Champ Clark has campaigned. Cochran and Milligan are present congressmen. No Opposition Senator Roscoe Patterson has no opposition for the Missouri repubs lican nomination. ’ Kansas' interest centers in the gubernatorial derby. Governor Alf M. Landon is op posed by Dr. John Drinkley, of “(3oat Gland” fame, ,for the Repub. ‘]ican nomination. A half dozen want the Democratic position, lAmong them are Mayor Omas D. | Ketchum of Topeka: Thurman Hill " of Wichita and Kirk Prather, for- Imer prison warden. ‘ Virginia had a primary schedul led for today, but it isn’t necessary ‘for selection of democratic nomine | ees for the senate and house. Sen { ator Harry Byrd and the nine | house members are unopposed for i renomination. i EDUCATOR DIES e ; COLUMBIA, Mo. —(AP)— Dr. | William Benjamin Smith, 83, for | mer member of the facuties of | Clentral College at Fayette and the University of Missori, and profes sor emeritus of Tulane university, New Orleans, died here last n:igh’t. State Labor Leader . & Again Flays Talmadge For Low Wage Stand ATLANTA — (AP) — President J. Bid Tiller of the Georgia Feder ation of Labor Tuesday fired an other broadside in labor’s contro versy with Governor Talmadge, charging the governor's low wage policy has been of benefit only to “chiseling contractors.” i Tiller's statement was occasion ed, he said, by the governor's Dal ton speech last week defending his position on wages and the national recovery program. Tiller said the governor “again mistakes the facts and we are forced to the conclu ‘sion that he i doing so deliberately in an attempt to create a feeling of prejudice between the farmers and hte workers of Georgia.” : Tiller said labor did not request * a 40 cent an hour minimum wage on highway construction but the NRA scale of 30 cents an hour for unskilled and 40 cents an hour for skilled labor. 'Tiller said the 30 cents an hour secale, working 30 hours weekly as provided by the recovery program, would give workers only $9 a week ; The union labor chief said “every thinking Georgian knows that the expenditure of these (federal high way) funds in accordance with the president's recovery program has been beneficial to all classes.”