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vol. 102. No. 309
v TN
Washington
Lowdown
——
By Rodney Dutcher
nTreasury Censervative
upension Bill” Back
Sol Edges In Again
Qe
Banner-Herald Washington
Correspondent
WASHI:\'GTUN — The treasury
continues to be conservative, in
spite of everything.
gecretary ~ Henry Morgenthau
was asked what he considered the
outstanding thing in his annual
report.
apm told it's the dullest report
ever written in' the treasury,” he
replied. “But it isn't my fault. I
pad something in there to bright
en it up and the fellows around
here insisted on taking it out.”
of course, he was asked what
had been deleted.
«well” said Morgenthau, “I said
{hat if business didn’t get any
worse next year, it might get bet
ter. But they thought that state
ment was too reckless.”
genator-elect Joe Guffey and
genator Jim Davis of Pennsylvania
each of whom has had the dis
tinction of being indicted, walked
down the ‘Senate aisle arm in arm
tor Joe's swearing in. Their ap
parent attitude of friendship con
cealed a tale of guile and double
€ross.
« want you to be on hand to
escort me down the aisle,” Joe had
tlephoned Jim, who said he
would.
“Tell you what I'll wear so we
can wear the same things,” con
tinned Joe. “I'll wear g morning
coat and striped pants, but no
spats.”
“Okay,” said Jim, “no spats.”
Joe Guffey was the one who
wore the spats.
Quite a few veterans of the pre-
New Deal era remembered “Pene
sion Bill” Ashbrook of Ohio, who
entered the House in 1906, served
14 years, and was recently re
elected to his old seat after 14
years away from here.
Bill Ashbrook liked to be called
“Pension Bill,” because he had in
troduced more pension bills than
anybody else, although that wasn't
much help to him in the 1920
Harding landslide.
What astonished his old friends
as he walked into the House on
opening day, however, was the fact
that “Pension Bill” was very far
from being alone,
He was 54 years old when he
left the House and quite child
less. But now, trailing along be
hind him, were five of his own
boys and girls, ranging from 2 to
9 years. They all sat in the back
Tow,
“Pension Bill” wasn’t the . only
one to bring in the children, but
it was about that time folks out
sidle heard Head Dcorkeeper Joe
Sinnott loudly ordering: “No more
——— kids on thig floor!”
The hoys on Capifol Hill are all
froud of the speedy new eleva
lors—a bit modernistic, they are—
Which were installed throughout
the Capitol and its office buildings
between sessions. Though some of
the new congressmen suspect
graft,
in;l;g: llluminafed floor indieators
R ¥ i;‘nd ou.tslde the cars say SB,
' G, which means Sub-base
;nem, Basement, Floor and Gal-
Ce:;ito] The sub-basement of the.
R ‘:h the real basement,
e officially go-called
5 evenm is t;\e street floor, which
Rt a few feet above the
“";"gi;‘lffhtt get mixed up on this
ell you.
e ETessman John O'Connor saw
“hpae _ YMbol and grunted:
hat — 301 Bloogm gets
hig lame evervw o 9 g |
This was ywhere!
(‘onzrea:;' 4 pardonable error, as
of the Hxnlm Bloom is still one
grabberg (: O andiny SO
Noticeq .P;im n the opening day one
ting ins:r'ui'atrl,"”"h of the time, sit
-2t the feet ;,“%’I.V on the rostrum
Whom g e, LPoaker Joe Byrns,
sation, Was engaging in conver-
Anot 4
howtt-;};er w?:w- York congressman,
M3y o sime on o L
Sam Di(‘k‘tii on the opening day.
Ommitten 5., ChAirman of the
Bt actiohio, ohig
Promoting a;lo;fiow}.“.iCh Has been
Stead, waq her “red scare” in-
S Writing a three-page:
(Continued on Page Five)
\
Plan
Bs|r°" Roosevelt
i rogress; Will
¢ Informal Affair
Plane T
Bap ’:‘fp::r the Roosevelt Birthday
though r;(ath]-'r()gregsing today, al-
Teporteq 'S MW was definitely
The atpnz.. -
Tutt ha]lff“ei:h“tm be held in Wood-
Tchestra £y he Georgia Bulldogs
M Wi e LSRINg the musie,
™8 pointeq strictly informal, it
SR Qetail th oy L PONGHESTIY
Uow thas op “po Chis year wil
OVed suep o g 25t year which
eor ag 2 huge success: the
Same: g, mission will pe the
dentg, -, POT_couple, $1 for stu
ang sth the place, the mflf’ e |
1o Informaiiy estra,
g 25 decideq ¢, . ;
formg) 0 make the Ball
Dombl = that ”m 2
Y can Wil e
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Full Associated Press Service
Witness Claims
In Hopewell
JWIFT PASaAGE OF
ROOSEVELT BUDGET
FREELY PREDIGIED
WASHINGTON—(AP)— As con
gress went to work today on the
$8,5620,000,000 budget President
Roosevelt has submitted, democrat
ic leaders predicted his $4,000,000,-
000 plan to swing from the dole to
jobs would go through swiftly de
spite stirring of criticism in two
gectors.
There was still some talk today,
among some democratg as well as
republicans, that congress should
choose the specific projects on
which the money will be sp@nt in
stead of giving it to the president
in a lump sum to allot as he sees
fit.
There also were expressions of
belief from western progressives
that $4,000,000,000 wil] not be
enough and that “wages prevailing
in industry” should be paid to re
lief workerg instead of the presi
dent’s plan to pay less.
Express Approval.
But many democrats expressed
approval of the plan and with that
party’s majorities so huge, even
the bitterest opponents of the lump
sum idea agreed privately that it
would go through without major
change. {
Some routine tasks delayed until
Thursday the initial consideration
in the house of the thing President
Roosevelt wants first. This ig the
$880,000,000 for immediate relief
during the dole-to-job transition.
Leaders were seeking to get the
relief and works proposals out of
the way “before the pressure
starts.” Already some legislators
are receiving protests abocut the
plan to return 1,500,000 “unemploy
ables” to the care of the states.
WHAT CONGRESS
IS DOING
By The Associated Press
TODAY
SENATE
In adjournment till Thursday.
HOUSE
Meets at noon for routine busi
ness.
- Appropriations committee con-
S s
(Continued on Page Five)
. .
Georgian Is Given
.
Rhodes Scholarship
ATLANTA — (#) — Two stu
dents from Virginia, one from
North Caroling and one from Geor
gia today held the four coveted
(Rhodes scholarships awarded in
the third, or South district.
Twelve candidates—from Virgin
ia, North and South Carolina, Geor
gia, Florida anq Tennessee — were
examined by a committee of judges
here yesterday ame the judges last
night announced the following win
ners:
Duncan Chapin Lee of Chatham,
Va., student at Yale university;
Willam Starke Mundy, jr., of Lyn
chburg, Va., University of Virginia;
Henry A, Page, the third, of Aber
deen, N. C., Princeton university,
and Willard D. Lewis of Augusta,
Ga., Harvarag university. Each re
ceives a two-year scholarship to
Oxford. ;
Clarke Grand Jury Condemns
“Agitators’’ In Presentments
“Agitators, male and female,
from afar seeking to disorganize
the efficiency of our industries and
peace of our homes,” were con
demned in its presentments today
by the grand jury of the Januaryl
term of Glarke Superior court. |
The jurors declared: "We do not |
feel, at the present time, ‘that thisl
county is in grave danger but we
realize that if these agitators are
admitted to continue their organi
zations and their propaganda, it
will be but a short time when there
will arrive in our midst organizers
and individuals who will seek to
overthrow this government.”
The jurors declared that these
“agitators” through “pulpit and
press, these false prophets are
spreading their propaganda with
Hauptmann Pits Four Lawyers Against State’s Six
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Numerically, the legal odds in the Hauptmann trial are in favor of the state, six to four. The figures
represent the enumeration of attorneys who will meet in the courtroom battle, pictured heére enmasse
for the first time. At top are Bruno Hauptmann’s defenders; left to right, Lloyd Fisher, Edward Jay
Reilly, chief defense counsel; Fred Pope and Egbert Rosencrans. Below, tho prosecution’s strength is
revealed: seated, left to right, are- Anthony Hauck, Hunterdon County prosecutor; David T. Wilentz,
New Jersey Attorney General and generalissimo for the state; George K. Large, Joseph Lanigan; stand
ing, Richard Stockton and Harry Walsh.
ANNAL ELECTION OF
FORUM CLASS HELD
C. V. Ray Heads First Bap
tist Sunday School Group
For Next Term
BY SAM WOODS
The Forum class of the First
Baptist church, which is taught, by
Dr. J. C. Wilknson, nameq officers
for the coming year at the meeting
last Sunday at the church, The
duties of the officers will become
effective immediately. i
. V. Ray was named president
of the class, Joe Shepherd secre
tary, and C. D. Chandler and B. E.
Lumpkin, statiscians.
Members of the various commit
teds are as follows: R. L. Miller and
J. Fritz Thompson, welcome com
mittee; W. H. Benson, social com
mittee: A. W. Wier, sr., and Dr. J.
C¢. McKinney, memorial committee;
L. W. and J, H. Cooper, music
committee. s
M. D. Dunlap was' named presi
dent-elect, and will begin his dut
jes on July 1. He will succeed Mr.
Ray at that time as head of the
class. L. E. Hopper is the other
officer who will begin his term on
July- 1. He is secretary-¢lect of
the group.
Group captains were also elect
ed, and the men seléected as the
head of the ten groups are: E. A
(Continued on page three)
new and false teaching and are
coming into our locality and trying
to instill into the minds of our
yvouth, doctrines which, if accepted,
will be most dangerous.”
Pointing out that Solicitor Gen
eral John A. Boykin of the Fulton
Superior court “has had an oppor
tunity to obsérve this doctrine
within his jurisdiction,” the jurérs
declared that the solicitor is sup
porting a Lill to be introduced in
the next legislature designed to
“umrevent these agitators from
coming into our locality and form
ing organizations, cloaking their
real objectives of the organizers
in high-sounding names and
phrases and spreading doctrines
2 A i “
—ESTABLISHED 1832
Athens, Ca., Tuesday, January 8, 1935.
Hauptmann Trial Is
Likely to Run “Three
Or 4 Weeks Longer”
FLEMINGTON, N, J. — (® —
The Hauptmann trial probably will
run three to four weeks longer.
“I understand the prosecution will
require only two more weeks to
introduce something like 100 re
maining witnesses,” Defense Attor
ney Edward J. Reilly, said today.
“In that event we can go through
our fifty witnesses in about one
week.”
MACON HOST TO
ANTI-REPEALISTS
Caines Declares Referen
dum Vote Should Be on
County Unit Basis
MACON, Ga.—(#)—The county
unit plan of voting should be fol
lowed in any referendum on pro
hibhition in Georgia, W. W. Gaines,
of Atlanta chairman of the Consol
idated Prohibition forces in Geor
gia, said in a speech prepared for
delivery today before a rallg of
prohibition leaders.
Mr. Gaines said the county unit
plan was adopted to protect the
state from the domination of her
large cities. L
“Repeal should be on the county
unit basis. This is Georgia's adopt
ed political plan. Legislators are
based on the county unit idea. If
they were based on the population
basis Fulton county (Atlanta)
would have 30 members; she has
three. Bibb county (Macon) would
have ten; she has three; the
smallest county has one.”
He said one large city, formerly
noted as “perhaps the most moral”
had “slipped from that high estate
—Sunday theatres, Sunday base
ball, liquor establishments all over
town licensed in- open and avowed
defiance of the laws of the state.
. . . Well might the state, through
‘the county unit plan, protect it
\self from these city influences.
There is g different type of mo
rality obtaining in the large cities
from that of the rural and small
‘town districts”.
Declaring that all the state pro
hibition law needed to make it a
success was “genuine sympathetic
enforcement,” the speaker said in
one large city it is a “black mark”
on the record of an officer if he
arrests a person for drunkenness.
“Legalized liquor is an economic
loss to the country,” he said. *“Re
(Continued on Page Seven)
He
On
BEPORTS OF “NIGKT
RIDERS” RECEIVED
!Invest.igahon by Guards
~ men at Rossville Finds
- No Evidence, However
BY ROBERT BUNNELLE
(Associated Press Staff Writer)
ROSSVILLE, Ga, — (#) — Na
tional guardsmen patrolling the
Richmond Hosiery mill today re
ceived reports that night riders putl
in an appearance during the night
in this cotton textile center where
union workers are on strike.
A reconnoitering party sent out
by Colonel L. C. Pope, commander
of the troops, made a hasty investi
gation but failed to find any evi
dence of activity on the part of
the riders,
‘The crowd of 1,000 which har
rassed the gaurdsmen and resulted
in the arrest of 60 persons yester
day had dwindled to less than 100
this morning as the mills continu
eq taking on outside help in pre
paring to begin operations,
Colonel Pope advised the opera
tors to hire the outsiders and it
was estimated 400 workers were on
hand to begin the day with the
morning shift.
While the workmen entered the
mill under the watchful eyes of the
militiamen, the strikers announced
a meeting would be neld during the
day.
A quiet night was experienced
by the guardsmen with one arrest
marking their activity, The man
taken into custody was charged
with violating orders to keep away
from the mill anfi Colonel Pope said
he would be carrieq to Atlanta to
(Continued on Page Seven)
o usos
.#
e ie i bstacimaitbsostopes
LOCAL WEATHER
Occasional rain tonight and
possibly in extreme eas% por
tion Wednesday morning, fair
in west and central portions
Wednesday; somewhat colder
Wednesday and in west por
late tonight.
TEMPERATURE
BURTERE. ... sisy vy 3,080
BORE ... d. i S GO
AR sl. il wnit avitieasa B 8
T ... i s chaw aaniß D
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours.... .., .50
Total since January 1...... 1.54
Excess since January 1.... .26
Average January rainfall... 4.83
Saw
Day
Supreme Court Decision on
Oil Code May Spell Doom of
Other New Deal Legislation
Efforts Will Still Be Made
To Keep Federal Lid
On ‘“‘Hot Qil’”’
ADAMS EXPLAINS
Colorado Democrat Says
Ruling Expected on
Some Provisions
WASHINGTON —— (#) — The
New Deal, geprived of a portion of
NIRA which the supreme court
tossed out of the window as un
consttutienal, still strove today to
keep the federal lid on “hot oil.”
At the same time, the belief was
expressed in one quarter on Capitol
Hill that the high tribunal's act in
scrapping an oil control provision
in the National Industrial Recovery
act spelled the doom of some other
New Deal legislatton.
Senator Adams, Democrat, Colo
rado, said some of the laws behind
the government's agricultural pro
gram contained provisions similar
to the oil control features which
the supréeme court killed on the
ground congress had delegated too
much law-making power to the
president.
“We have gone the whole way in
‘these delegations,” said Adams. “It
can hardly be expected that the
courts will uphold all the delega
tions congress attempted, It in
evitably will affect some of the
agricultural agencles.”
The section scrapped by an 8
to 1 decision was 9 (C) undet
which the government has been
undertaking to bar from interstate
commerce oil produced in excess
of quotas fixed by state ' agencies,
‘this petroleum is known as “hot
oil.” y
Secretary Ickes, oil administra
tor, noted that the deecision “did
not rule on the oil code” embodied
in other parts of NIRA.
“We still have that code and will
continue to operate,” he declared.
“We will attempt to regulate hot
oil with every resource we have.”
SEES SIGNIFICANCE
TULSA, Okla. —(AF)—Midcon
tinent oil men grouped today so:
the full significance of the su
preme court ruling that invalidated
the oil control section of the Na
tion Industrial Recovery act.
At the same time they watched
apprehensively for the reaction
and wondered where it would be
felt first.
'Possible trouble was forecast in
the crude price structure and in
the refining branch of the industry,
already, unofficial reports had it,
that tank cars were being loaded
with “hot” oil in the east Texas!
area. |
GERA TERRACING
SCHOOL STARTED
Dean Paul W. Chapman
Is Opening Speaker at
Morning Session
Initiation by more than 20 coun
ties of terracing programs “is one
of the most constructive and hope
ful projects recently undertaken in
this state,” said Dean Paul W.
Chapman, of the Unversity College
of Agriculture, at the opening of a
Terracing school for GERA super
visors this morning.
Approximately 25 workers sup
plied to counties which have made
available power terracing equip
ment by GERA are attending the
schoeol sponsored by the College’s
department of agricultural engin
eering.
~ R. L. Vansant, GERA, rural re
habilitation director was to have
addresseq the group this morning
also, but pressure of business in
the Atlanta GERA office kept him
there. R. L. Bohanan, GERA ter
racing supervisor, said for Vansant
that the “control of soil erosion is
one of the malJor fundamentals of
rural rehabilitation.”
Been Wasteful
“Because the resources of our
country have been so vast, we
have been a wasteful people,” Dean
Chapman said, adding that, “Our
attitude has been thme of the pione
eer, We have let each day serve
its own ‘selfish interests and have
found that the polcy is not a wise
one to follow.”
He continued that in agriculture
the “soil is the basis of all produc
tion; in fact, it is the basic source
of all wealth.” In the light of the
present stuation. Dean Chapman
added, the first step in conservation
then, is terracing land. |
He declared further: |
“One belief which I have js that
the average farmer does not have
the equipment to do a first-class
job of terracng, and cannot afford
to buy it. i
. “Terracing is a county job. ’rhg%
e 1
(Continued on Page Eight) %
Hauptmann
Of Kidnaping
Go “Whole Way”
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—s¢ Sunday
Urges Markets
For Georgia
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PAUL BROWN
Representative in Congress from
the TentH district who has intro
duced a bill to establish farm mar
kets in several Georgia centers, in
cluding Athens.
BROWN INTRODUCES
BILL FOR MARKETS
Tenth District Congress
man Also Wins Impor
tant House Post
i According to a Washington dis
‘fiatch Congressman Paul Brown
iof the Tenth district has intro
- duced a bill in congress to estab
!lish a series of agricultural mar
kets in Georgia, one of which will
' be located in Athens.
~ In the same day's news, it is
learned that Congressman Brown
has been agreed upon for appoint
meant to the house banking and
currency committee. The dispatch
states that “the Georgia congress
man, now serving on four minor
committees which he will be re
quired to give up to accept the
major assignment, was one of
some 75 house members who had
been proposed for a place on the
important banking committee, His
former assignments included cen
sus, public buildings and grounds,
roads, and World war veterans'
legislation.
“In the light of the large num
ber of contenders for the place it
is obviously a tribute to the Geor
gia member that he was chosen
by house leaders over others for
the committee.”
The markets proposed in Con
gressman Brown’s bill are design
ed to facilitate the sale, exchange,
storage and processing of all agri
cultural produects. They would be
established by the United States
Department of Agriculture out of‘
new funds to be appropriated for
public works. 1
While the Georgia congressman
did not list the cities in the state
which would be beneficiaries of
the plan, passage of his bill would
undoubtedly result in the se]ectloni
(Jontinued on page three)
ForeieN News ON THumBNAIL
By The Associated Press
KARACHI, India.—Eleven native
soldiers were Kkilled and 11 serious
ly injured when an air force plane
crashed into g body of troops on
maneuvers. The pilot and an ob
server escaped with slight injur
ies.
MOSCOW.—The crash of two
express. trains south of Leningrad
Sunday killed 16 persons and in
jured 67. Soviet authorities are
investigating and those held re
sponsible for the mishap will be
executed.
SAARBRUEKEN.—Nazi leaders
laid down rigid rules for silence
and discipline for Hitlerites when
they vote in Sunday's plebiscite
HoME
B 7 - YEAR - OLD MA
PUT ON STAND BY
STATE 1S SURPRISE
Says He Saw Defendant
Pass in Automobile
With Ladder
MANY OBJECTIONS
Old Man Given Rigorous
; Cross-Examination
By Reilly
By WILLIAM KINNEY
(Copyright 1935 By The Associ
. ated Press) 3
FLEMINGTON, N. J. — Bruno
Richard Hauptmann was identiffed
in ecourt today as a man seen at
Hopewell, N. J., on the night of
March 1, 1932, when baby Charles
Augustus Lindbergh jr., was stolen
from his crib and slain. 4
Amandus Hockmuth, a nervouns
old man with. a Van Dyke beard,
said he saw Hauptmann in an au
tomobile in which he carried a
ladder. wea kv
The old man , pointed to &p
Bronx carpenter with a shaky
finger. s
“There he .is!” he said. Fe
Touches Hauptmann o
Attorney General David T. Wil
entz requested the grey-bearded
man to step down and place his
hand upon Hauptman’s shoulder.
Edward J. Reilly, defénse coun
sel objected, and before the point
could be argued, Hockmuth de
clared: A
“He’s the man between the d
trooper and the man in a vm
shirt,” e R
Nevertheless, he was allowed to
step down and make more positive
identification. He approached the
accused carpenter gingerly, placed
hig hand on his shoulder and
quickly withdrew it. :
Hauptmann shook his head in
short negative rolls,
Trembles Violently
The ¢ld man trembled violently
as he gave his testimony. His
shaky voice was almost inaudible,
but he managed to tell that he'saw
a car swing into the Lindbergh
lane at Hopewell on the might of
the kidnaping and stop briefly. .
“Do you remember the color of
the car?’ Wilentz asked him.
“Yes, a dirty green, he said. .
Reilly stalked over to the wit
ness and began hisg cross-examina
tion in a loud voice. L
Hockmuth was a surprise to the
whole court. = His name was not
distinctly called and few knew who
he was. He came to the stand, a
small, gray man dressed in a gray
suit. He was almost palsied in
his movements. Yo &
His eyes peered solemnly from
behind heavy gold-rimmed specta-
(Continued on Page Five)
Motorcade Through
Florida Is Planned
A meeting will be held at E’tflg«
ton Thursday at which time plans
for a motorcade into Florida to ad
vertise the Athens-Macon route
will be discussed. L, W. Nelson,
Abit Nx, Joel A. Wer ang .Tate
Wright of Athens will attenq the
meeting. The Eatonton Kiwanis
club will give a luncheon for those
attending the meeting. pris
A date for the proposed motor
cade will probably be set at the
meeting at Eatonton. The tentative
plans call for a motorcade from
Anderson, S, C., through Athens to
Macon and down the East coast of
Florida and return by the Waest
coast. The motorcade is being pro
posed for the purpose of adveértis
ng the route and to stimulate tour
ist traffic over rautes 129 from Ath
ens to Macon and U. S. Route 29 to
Washington, D, C,, which begins
here. e
in order to escape wholesale dis
qualification of wvoters. e
MEXICO.—The struggle between
church and state grew more bit
ter after the shooting of five mem
bers of the student-led throng
which demonstrated against the
radical Red Shirt organization,
members of which are charged
with the recent slaying of five
Catholics. \ G
BUCHAREST. - Many quarters
expressed confidence that the
Dowager Queen Marie, just return
ed from Yugoslavia, would sue
seed in her lengthy campaign to
persuade her son, King Carol, to
give up Madam Magda Lupescu
and return to Princess Helen,
X ]