Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
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More Cash Made Available for Athenians
TALMADGE CLUB IN |
STATEMENT REPLIES |
" TO PITTMAN CHARGE |
g (Continued From i’age One) ‘
greeted him cordially and extend-i‘
ed to him every courtesy that he |
is entitled to as a candidate for!
governor. I
Our people were surprised undg
‘shocked, however, when they reudl
in the Banncr-Herald of August |
31st the interview given out by |
Judge Pittman reflocseng upoh the |
citizens of this county, and espec
dally upon the men and women who
compose the faculty of the Univer- |
‘sity of Georgia. He abused our |
courtesy by issuing such a state-l
‘ment and at the same time demon- |
strated his unfitness for the high
position of governor. i
In this intervicw Judge Pittman i
said: “Anyone can see that the!
ohject of the “House of Talmadge® i
in forcing the heaq of the Univer- |
sity of Georgia to help him carry |
Clarke county for him, is to cu:rc«l
the members of the faculty of tls
University into support eof an ul'-'
ficial whom they know only too !
well has not the slightest regard
for their self respcet and for the
true aims of education,”
“Statement Untrue” I
This statement is as tritemper
ate as it is untrue. It is simply the 1
statement of a politician who is |
willing to get down to a low level '
for the purpose of advancing his{
candidacy. 4 '
This statement, as anybody can |
see, is a scathing arraignment uf{
the men and women, who compose
the faculty of the university. It
is not only a reflection upon their
intelligence, but is a reflection upon
their geurage and honesty. In the
hundred years of its ¢xistence, no
such charge has ever heen brought
before againsg these splendid edu
cators who have taught the youth
of this country at the university.
Here in Athens and all over the
state these men and womep have
been honored and revered for their
culture, their educational attain
ments and for their high charact
er. Thousands ~f the youth an
over Georgia and other states hold
the names of these professors, who
have taught them, in reverence,
and have taken them as models {n
shaping' their conduct in lfe, Yer,
Judge Pittman, for npolitical pur
poses, published to the world that
these men and women are unfitted
to be connected with. the univer
sily; that they are weaklings with
out principle and without honor.
Thousands of the students now gt
the University, if they believe these
statements of Judge Pittman,
would have no respect so, their
teachers, and their influence over
the youth of the country would
be destroyed. |
: Distinguishoad Men |
~ The heads of the Unlversity of
Georgia have always been (‘on-l
sidered the most distingulshed men
in the state, and rightly so. Presl-1
dent Sanford has succecded a long |
line of great heads of the univer-‘
sity and he is regardeq today as‘
one of the foremost men in the
south, and one of th> greatest edu
cators. His faculty is devoted to
him and are cooperating with him
i his great work. If he should
eve, attempt to use the methods‘\
of “coercion” in politics as charged |
'hyv Judge Pittman, he would lose
the respect of every man and wom- ‘
an in his faculty, and every ecitizen
of the state. and no one knows this
better than Presidert Sanford.
Because, ns presideny of the Uni
versity of Georgia, he 1s the most
distinguished man in the state, the
Talmadge club invited him to in
troduce the governor, who had been
invited to deliver an address in
Athens. President Sanford for
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Eleven-year-old Robert Turner (photo No. 2) of Muncie, Ind., won the
national championship, four years in college, and the plaudits of 60,000
watchers, as he flashed (photo No. 1) across the finish line at Dayton, Ohio,
in the first annual All-American Soap Box Derby, sponsored by 34 leading
American newspapers and the Chevrolet Motor Company. Part of the huge
crowd is pictured in No. 3. Graham McNamee, famous NBC sports an
nouncer, who described the Derby on a nationwide radio hook-up, is shown
vears has been called upon to in
troduce every distinguished man
who comes to Athens to speak, ana
nothing eve, gives him more plea
sure than to introduce a distin
guished alumnus who has made a
success, It is simply a courtesy due |
to any distinguished visitor. His‘
introduction has no political signi-’
ficance, The governor of the state|
of Georgia, by virtue.of his high
office, is entitled to every courtesyi
when he visits Athens, the city
wherein is located his Alma Mater.
The governor and the president
have been strong friends for many
vears.
The mere fact that President
Sanford is the heaq of the Univer
sity of Georgia should not, and
does not, deprive him of any of the
rights of a citizen. His position
does not disfranchise him, nor pre
vent him from voting as he pleases,
and expressing himself freely on
political issues, |
Nicholas Murray Butler, although
president of ColumWa university.
has never been depiived of free
speech, and is recognized as one of
the great political .eaders of the
nation. : I
The, Talmadge club has conduct- |
ed a campaign for tae endm‘sem(fl'\t]
of Governor Talmadge upon a hich
Federal Housing Board
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CARRUTH — The relatives and
fggends of Mr. and Mrs. D, A.
Carruth, Athens, Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs., J. A. Carruth, Charlotte,
N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Set
tle, Point Peter, Ga.; Mrs. M. T.
Payne, Comer, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lon ‘Carruth and Mr,. C. "P.
Carruth, Stephens, Ga.:; and Mr.
and Mrs. W. T, Power, Elber
ton, Ga.: are invited to attend
the funeral of Mr. D. A, Car
ruth Sunday wmorning, September
2, 1934, at ten (10:00) o’clock,
from MecDorman-Bridges chapel.
Rev. Newt Saye, pastor of the
Ilast Athens Baptist church, will
officiate. Mr. E. L. Hanson,
Mr. Mark Scoggins, Mr. F. T.
Rivers, Mr. Walter Noell, Mr.
Jesse Avery, Mr. Willie Dickson,
Mr. Gus Hammond and Mr. M.
D. Watson will serve as pall
bearers and will please meet at
McDorman-Bridges chapel at
9:45 o’clock. Interment will be
in Antioch cemetery, Elbert
county Ga. McDorman-Bridges.
plane. Trere has been no criticism
cf Judge Pittman, nor of his sup-!
iorterse We tking it fair to say!
that none of the members of the |
faculty of the University of Geor~i
gia are members of the Talmadge
club. None of them have ever at-!
tended its meetings. ‘This inde- !
pendent class of voters have al
ways voted in Athens without in
terference, No candidate, or no
friends of candidates. have Pverf’
invaded these academic halls try- !
ing to influence this vote. This i
has been almost the ‘“unwritten
luw” in Athens. They vote as they
please withoug fear or favor, They
will always do so. l
Th> methods which are heing‘
employed, and this interview Of’
Judge Pittman. will not gain him
iny strength among the fair and
intelligeng voters of thls state.
This charge of “coercion” made
by candidate Pittman 1s a famnr
sample of the malicious and un
‘ounded charges. which he is mak
ng over the state against Gover
or Talmadge and his supporters,
vhom he delights to call “hench
nen.”
Clarke County Talmadge Club,
' By W. W. Scott; president,
UNCLE SAM INVITES YOU TO USE HIS MONEY
FOR NEEDED IMPROVEMENTS |
(No. 4) as he broadcast while traveling down the graded course in a typical
soap box racer. Jack Furstenberg, 15, of Omaha, won the E. V. Rickenbacker
trophy for the fastest heat, and the Charles F. Kettering cup for the best con
structed racer (No. 5). This was the only “closed job” entered in this year’s
event, in which 34 champions from as many cities were selected by time trials
from more than 20,000 boys who built and raced their own creations.
BODY CONDEMNS
BANKING PRACTICES
{ (Continuea ¥rrom Fage One)
in conducting the inquiry. Large
portions of the report on banking
were understood to have been writ
!te‘n by John T. Flynn, a prolific
;writer on economic subjects, with
| other parts drafted by Max Low
lenthal and Julius Silver.
!\ Most of the practices denouncea
are now prohibited by laws enact
led since the investigation, notably
the Glass-Steagall wlt of 1933,
which directed that banks givorce
‘their investment affiliates, pro
i hibited loans to officers and specu
!-lation by them in shares of their
!bank, and brought private bank
iers. such as J, P. Morgan an@-
{ company, under federal! regulation.
I Investment affiliates were cor
porations formed by the officers of
a bank for the purpose of dealing in |
stocks and bonds, a practice prohl
:bited by law so far as the banks‘
i themselves were concerned. Of
{ them the report said, under the
!heading “ecircumvention of the |
| law:” 1
; “Admittedly, the investment as
! filiates were organized at the In
| stance of the banking institutions
im énable the banks to engage in
Ihllsiness and operations that were
doan I .“ FREE SERVICE
B R T W. GUY TILLER
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eI SOt : N " Bioaay
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e 1716 PSR C Wey
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
E Col. Roscoe Turner
i Sets New Flight Record
i From Coast to Coast
‘ (Continued From Page One)
the Union Air terminal at Bur
’hank Saturday morning at 3:03 a.
m. (Pacific standard- time). Two
]hours and 45 iniautes later ne
‘came down at Albuquerque, N. M.,
replenished his fuel supply in
| cight minutes and winged away
§to Wichita, Kans. He stopped four
'minutes there, five minutes in St.
iLouis and ten minutes at Cleve
land.
i Rainstorms harrassed him all
':1long the route, which he figured
at 2,512 miles compared to 2,520
miles he traveleg to set the last
| record. ‘
prohibited to such banks.” And
again:
“The creation of investment af
fililates by commercial banks was
| undersirable not only because of
’these affiliates circumvented the
law, but because these affiliates
[created conditions and situations
which were detrimental both to the
investing publie anq to the bank
ing institutions.
200—2 YEAR
LONG WEAVES WEB
ABOUT WALMSLEY
(Continuea rrom Page One)
would not be eligible to succeed
himself,
Long. who has the power of a
Caesar in Louisiana, has indicat
ed that he will call another spec
ial session of the state legislature
probably within a week at which
he will attempt to oust Mayor
Walmsley and Judge Nat W. Bond
and Judge Walte, Gleason, eivil
districy court judges of New Or
-I:ans, who have rendered decislons
adversely to the Long political in
trests.
At the last special session of the
legislature Long held a decided
two-thirds majority in the senate
and occasionally commandad a two
thirds in the house. Some of the
old time politicians say fhey do
not see how Mayor Walmsley can
withstand the latest onslaught of
“Kingfish” Long, who can prevent
Walmsley from offering any de
fense or even appearing before his
I accusers,
i 'The hearing Saturday, one of the
| strangest performances of its kina
{ ever held in the United States,
l brought out testimony of witness
es who claimed to know of pay
ments {rom lottery operators ag
gregating SI,OOO weekly to Mayor
] Walmsley and S7OO weekly to Po
'lice Superintendent George Reyer
{ and lesser amounts to police cap
tains.
' The testimony was taken behind
| closed doors with a Long hand
| picked audiesnce, with all news
papermen barred but with a radio
broadcasting set-up. The com
! mittee room and environs fairly
' bristled with troops. They barred
all entrances and patrolled the cor
'ridors and rough-handled anyone
attempting to pass.
They escorted Huey Long to and
from the committee room, a squad
of eight forming a half moon
around the “Kingfish” as he walk
led_ against the wall of the corri
!t dors,
MANY BUILDING
PERMITS ARE ISSUED
HERE SINCE JANUARY
(Continuea From Page Une)
1
Permits are required for repair- i
ing roofs if the estimate amounts |
to as much as $lO, although not
tax is levied. The permit is re
quired in order to enforce the or-I
dinance. The ordinance was passed |
to obtain a lower insurance rate. I
During the month of January,
nine permits were issued, estimat- {
ed at $6,938.75, with sl3 being
paid to the city. Turing February.'
12 permits were issuet, being es- i
timated at $6,357, and bringing thel
city $12,95 for taxes.
Sixteen permits were issued
during March, but the total esti- |
mate was only $4,562, and the city j
being paid sls. March had the
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Hom E F \ | ; —And there is a PEE
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For your furniture and bathroom see our variety of colors in enam
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and estimates on application.
COMPLETE LINE OF BUILDERS’ HARDWARE
Norris Hardware Co.
lowest total estimate of . any
month, : grids
Seventeen permits were issued
by Mr. Beacham during May, es
timated at $5,503. and ° bringing
sl7 cost of the permits. g
May, which = was ¢ the * sef;ohd
largest month for issumg' pern‘\lts
of the year, saw 29 permits issued,
with $19,051,85 total estimate, and
NI P
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Bl || ST
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PAINTS
VARNISHES
ENAMELS :
L e —Let us help you in your
VALDURA ALuminum Plans and estimates on
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oiLS
GLASS
ETC. :
—PAINTS AND SUPPLIES—
onn N. vavis on
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
Phone 1877 Athens, Ga. 233 E. Broad
DURA BLE!
SUNDAY, BEPTEMBER , -y
—.—-—__\_\
New Law Will B¢ Aim
Labor and Gener,|
Business Also
$36.10 taxes being paid.
Twenty-eight permits Were |g.
sued duiing June, estimated g
$8,096.70, with S2B belng paid by
the recéivers of the Permits,
Twenty-eight permits were algo,
issued during the month of Aug.
ust, - estimated at 315517, and
bringing in $32.75 for cost of th‘
perinits.
New Plumbing
(Complete)
OLD PLUMBING
MODERNIZED,
HEATING SYSTEMS,
INSTALLED
Under Re-Condition
ing Clause of Nation
al Housing Act.
3 Years at 5%,
——
Heating and
Plumbing Repairs
Guaranteed!
— ) e
PHONE 1716
W. GUY TILLER