Newspaper Page Text
rUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1835
pr. Leila Mechlin, Direc
tor of Southern Art Pro
jects to Speak Here
pr. Leila Mechlin of Washing
‘t“:: D. C. direetor of Southern
1t Projects, is to be the distin
quished guest of the Athens Art
¥ ociation and the Fine Arts divi
4on of the University of Georgia
. an early date:
“pr. Mechlin needs no introduc
tion to the art world, either in
smerica O abroad. She started
nd for 23 years ea:ced The Amer
‘;}dn Magazine of Art, published
in Washington, D. C. She has been
Art Bditor: of The Evening Star ol
washington since 1900. She is a
poted art e_:riti(.: and lecturer and
jor years has contributed articles
on art to the leading magazines
AMr, Mechlin was one of the organi
sers of The American Federation
of Arts in 1909, and from that date
until her resignation in December,
1933 she served as its executive
gecretary.
“pr, Mechlin-- demonstrated the
potentialities of the traveling ex
pibition, and she invented the illus
trated circulating lectures. She
pas organzed several éxhibitions of
art to be shown abroad. She was
director of the Art Competitions
and Exhibtigns .in connection with
the 10th Olympic games held in
Los Angeles in 1932,
Athens and the University of
Georgia are especially indebted to
Dr. Mechlin for two outstanding
exhibitions of fine paintings shown
quring February in Memorial hall
of the university. Hundreds of
‘;mm nts, Athenans and visitors en
}_pym! these ¢xhibitions, made pos
<ible through the Carnegie Cor
j[ml‘:l!ilvn. with Dr. Mechlin as di
rector of Southern Art Projects.
The Athens public will have the
privilege of hearing Dr. Mechlin in
lectures on “The Value of Art Edu
cation,” and on ‘“Art from Cima
bue to Cezanna.” Art lovers who
wish to meet her in a social way
are cordially inviteg to do so.
Arrangements may be made through
the Athens Art Association,
Athens Places Hich |
.
In Rifle Matches;
’
3 Promotions Made
Three promotions were made
vesterday in the Athens High
school mmilitary unit, one promot
ing Louis “Peanut” Trousdale tul
a sergeant’s position from a pri-|
vate; another raising John Davis |
from a first sergeant to a second!
lieutenant, and ythe third promot-!
ing Tommy Gibson, formerly a pri
vate, to a corporal. {
Trousdale’ and Davis are both!
in the band, the first named being
drum-major, while Gibson is in
Company “B.” 1
It was also learned yesterday
that the Athens High school rifle
team placed 15th in the fourth
corps area matches, won by Rich
mond Academy of Augusta. All
schools that beat the Athénians
hoasted a much larger enrollment.
Results of the matches follow:
Academy of Richmond Co. ...3625
Lanier High (first team) .. ..3597
Boys High (Atlanta) .. .. ../3679
Oak Ridge Military Ins. .. ..3475
Tech High (Memphis) .. ....3411
Bailey Military Academy .. ..3409
Hume-Fogg High School ....3405
Russell High (East Point) ..3393
Castle Heights Mil. Acad. ..3368
Lanier High (2nd team) .. ..3361
Tech High (Atlanta) .. .. ..3350
Knoxville High School .. ...3348
Fulton High (Atlanta) .. ....3302
Central High (Memphis) ....3299
Athens High School .. .. ..3245
Columbia Military Academy ..323b
Montgomery High School ....3228
Riverside Academy .. .. .. ..3218
S. Side High (Memphis) .. ..3214
Tenn, Military Institute .. ..3202
Gordon Institute i i ds se 302
Birmingham High School .. ..3160
Georgia Military Academy ...3156
Chattanooga High School ....3126
Porter Military Academy .. ..3077
Central High (Chattanocoga) .3026
R. E., Lee Institute .. .. ....2885
L. C. Humes High (Memphis) 2822
Griffin High School .. we' ....2570
Messick High (Memphis) .. «.25667
_'A;“Hx':‘iu Military College .. .. 2811
Cream Puffs and Choco
late Eclairs, 3¢ each or
35¢ the dozen.
Hot Cross Buns, Special
for this W
Pecan Rolls, Only 20c.
Raisin Bread for Wed
nesday,
Home Made Bread every
day!
ARNOLD & ABNEY
Fresh Fish for Wednes
day and Thursday.
Drawn Trout, Ib. . . 20c
Drawn Mackerel, Ib. 20c¢
Buck Shad, Ib. . . . 25¢
Roe Shad, Ib. . . . . . 30c
_ARNOLD & ABNEY
SoF Saba sty TR e
TP,
A
=y
/ " &mmwm’
% Treatment which is brincl::
& amazing relief. Sold on
money-back guarantee.
—/ PRICELESS INFORMATION
L —for those suffering from
7/
398\ STOMACH OR DUODENAL
. \W-iét) ULCERS, POOR DIGES
—t TION, ACID DYSPEPSIA,
{ > NESS. HEARTRURN, CON
. STIPATION, BAD BREATH, e
; SLEEPLESSNESS OR HEAD- s
vt Ac’flu. DUE TO EXCESS AG!D.W s
or a of Wi "s Message. We
** Authorized Willard Deaters, o 8 i
: MOON-WINN DRUG Co. "
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b amily of nin¢, a south
labor needed because of the reduced acreage, in"th o Sha"ec_"‘)l)r)c" set - g \
ing to offer but their lab 9 in the cotton empire. Wit} ‘ . Sviotiy SNRIRE rar y ;
r labor; at starvat . g o ‘ or an i e
e no farm implements, the father e .
and his sons have noth-
This is the last of three stor
ies on the increasing acute
sharecropper situation in the
South, where 8,000,000 Ameri
cans are living in a condition
approaching peonage, Mr.
Frazer is a well-known newse
paper and magazine writer who
has been investigating that si
tuation with help of members
of the Memphis Press-Scimitar
stafs .
BY HUGH R. FRAZER |
(Written for NEA Service, Inc,)
Behind the smoke of the buttle!
between the southern sharecrop-l
per and the planter can be dis- |
tinguished certain fundamental
quetions,
They are:
1. How can the government
benfits for the cotton planter be
extended to the sharecropper?
2. How can the sharecropper,|
evicted from plantations for a.ny|
cause, be provided for other thau
by direct relief? l
" 3. What must be done to com-i
bat the greatest menance of all—
the sharecropper’'s utter lack of
education? I
All these questlons must be an:
swered in some way, and by somel
responsible agency, if nearly 8,-
000,000 people in the south are to
emerge from what economists say
is a condition of economic peonage,
Bankhead Comes to Aid |
So far only one voice of fare
reaching power has been heard in
answer to these guestions. That is
the voice of Senator John H. Bank
head of Alabama, co-author of the
Bankhead bill, a very wealthy man,
beholden to nobody, certainly not
to the great cotton interests. ’
Unlike most of the representa
tives of King Cotton in Congress,
Bankhead’s millions make it pos
sible for him, ang for his own ini
tiative he has taken up a plan for
the beneft of the inan at the bot
tom of the South’s economie strain
—the poor sharecropper.
' The sharecropper, Bankhead ad
mits, is without rights of any Kkind,
' Owning nothing but his own labor,
' he can enforce nothing.
His plan to help this vast and
uprotected class is as far-reaching
ay it is impressive.
Urges Federal Help
First, he would extend federal
aid. He would extend government
loans to worthy sharecroppers and
tenants to enable them to emerge
from their status by ownership of
small plots of land.
i The loans would be amortized
over a long period—say, 30 years.
A great loan agency, similar to
the Home Loan Corporation, would
be set up to handle the loans, and
careful investigation would be made
;of the financial responsibility and
tcharacter of the thousands =of
sharecroppers and small tenants
to whom. the loans would be made,
Such plan, the senator, believes.
‘[ would go more than any other one
| project to revitalize the cotton pro
duction outlook in the South. 1
| Frowned on by Union
The reaction of the union lead
| ors to Bankhead's proposal is not en
l thusiastic,
“We do not believe that ‘forty
acres and a mule’ is a thing to
supplant the present slave system,”
says H. L. Mitchell, executive secre
tary of the Farmers' Union. :
Mitchell believes that the answer
is community farms rather than in
dividual ownership.
The attitude of the great planters
—those who own thausands of
acres—is equaly critical.
I Hiram Norcross, one of the larg
est plantation owners in the South,
#ho has 270 families on his pro
perty, says:
“There is not one sharecropper in
len who, if given a farm tomorrow,
free of indebtedness could make a
go of it. In five years he would
no longer own it.”
4 Government Only Hope
. Vernon Paul of Parkin, Ark,
another great landowner, said that
since many of * the sharecroppers
‘could not even write, few of them
‘could ever manage a farm, # .
The one hope of the sharecrop
per, whether still on the land eking
out nothing but the barest of liv
ing or evicted and homeless, is the
government of the United States
Recently an ace government in
ers of the legal department of the
ansas district, seeing the situation
at first hand.
Mrs. Myers, formerly connected
with the department of justice, is
one of the ablest women lawyers in
the country. Red-haired, quiet
mannered, she witnessed evictions
taking place under her own eyes.
She talked with planters and
business men and lawyers. She at
tended court hearings of union
workers charged with soliciting
money under false pretense of ob
structing the streets and being
agents of Moscow. -
No Link With Ouster
Two -days after she returned to
Washington to submit hey report, her
immediate superior, Jerome A.
Frank, general counsel of the AAA,
was fired. Jerome Frank was
known as 4 liberal, and a close
friend of Secretary Wallace. (Oust
ed with him, ang also reputed to be
a. member of the brain trust group
in the AAA, was Fred Howe, con
sumer’s counsel.)
~ The cotton interests immediately
:sont out the report that the ousting
Los Frank was due to his reputed
readiness to defend the sharecrop-
Ipers and to prosecute the planters
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; U PR ‘35 g v
e '»:»i-;:&;;g;?.‘. Copyright 1085, ¥ v
— e e sSA SI s pr. - o -- - s m 4 oy ]
: - : 2 e e ._‘.4,:4-
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
for any violation of their contract
with the government, 1
However, Mrs. Myers had not
vet submitted her report, and she
had not breatheq a word to any
body of what was in it. g
Hoover More etadical
The truth is that Jerome Frank
and Fred Howe had long been out
of sympathy with Secretary Wal
lace's ideas, and-* the fact that
Howe was replaced by a man
known to be far more radical than
he was convinced the best Wash
ington observers that the arrival
of Mrs. Myers in Washington the
day Jerome Frank and Freq Howe
were ousted was only coincidence.
Certainly Howe’'s succéssor, Cal
vin B. Hoover, a professor at Duke
'university, has written more books
of a radical tendency .than either
lank or Howe ever dreameqd of.
{ Hoover is the author of a study
Inmdc for Wlallace on the effect of
the crop reduction program on the
sharecropper.
The sharecropper. knowing noth
ing of the meaning of the incident,
lcares less. He believes, and Dbe
]liv\'es deeply, that soonep .or later
the government will come to the
aiq of the union.
And. hig leaders never forget for
one moment that the only hand that
can some day lift the sharecropper
out of his status of economic peon
age is the hand of United States
government. /
THE END,
WASHINGTONIAN DIES
SAVANNAH, Ga, — ®) —B, K.
Martin, about 35, of Whashington,
D C., died at a hotel here Monday
following a heart- attack.
’ .
Den’t Get Up Nights
Use Juniper Oil, Buchu Leaves, Etc.
Flush out excesg acids and waste
matter. Get rid of bladder irrita
tion that causes waking up, fre
quent desire, scanty flow, burning
and backache. Make this 25c test.
Get juniper oil, buchu leaves, etc.,
in little green tablets called Bukets,
the bladder lexative. In four days
if not pleased your druggist will re
turn_your 25e, Citizens Pharmacy.
—-({Advertisement.)
Doctor Presents Detailed Description of |
Operation Upon Girl for Inverted Stomach|
(Editor’'s Note: The Associat
ed Press was represented in the
operating room of Alyce Jane
McHenry Monday by Dr. lago
Gladston, M.D. He is execu
tive secretary of the Medical
Information Bureau of the New |
York Academy of Medicine,
He attended the operation to 1
present, with the cooperation of
the medical profession, a com- |
plete and accurate account of
t¥e unusual operation,)
RY IAGC GLADSTON, M.D.
(Copyright, 1935, Associated Press)
rALL RIVER, Mass, — (#) —
The *“upside down- stomach ot
Alice Jane McHency Monday was
set right side up, and replaceq in
its normal position in the abdomin
wil eavity. Restating this in more
precise language, an operation for
the correction of her congenital
diaphragmatic hernia was per
formed.
The operation, which was begun
at 10:30 yesterday morning and
which was completed at approxi
matelvy 12:45 consisted in the mak
ing, first of an opening into the
chud’'s chest on the left side.
’ Four ribs were cut and lemoved,
Through this opening it was seen
that the chest space on the left
side contained not only the lung,
which is normally there, but algo
the stomach, the small intestines,
the appendix all the large intestines
including the appendix except for
'a distance of two feet the so-called
descending portion of the large in
testine. The spleen was also in the
Broad Street Is
Opened; Fast Auto
Drivers Warned
————————— e —————————
Broad street was opened for tra
ffic vesterday afternoon at 6
o’clock. The street, recently paved
from Hull to illedge, has been
closed for several months.
Chief of Police Weldorn Wood,
when told the street was open im
mediately asked the Banner-Her
ald to warn auto drivers that the
street woulg be especially patrolled
for the next few weeks, and cases
would be made for speeding on the
new pavement.
“Weé plan to keep Broad street
free of reckless driving, and the
orly way to qo it is to start right
now,” he said, “This time the
first ‘strike’ is out, and there will
be no warning,” he continued.
Police realize that the new pave
ment offers a beautiful s;{vedway,
but plan to keep fast drivers off
or make them pay. >
The paving, engineered by J. G.
~ Beacham, has been finished for
some time, but it would not stand
itrul‘l’h- because of . the inelement
weather, vntil it hal became “set.”
chest space. |
Becauze of the presence of thesel
abdonimal organs in the chest the
left lung was shiveled and collap-|
sed and the heart was shifted in
its position from the left over to-l
ward the right side.
The second phase of the opera-l
‘tion consisted in the reduetion of
‘the hernia, This meant, first,
freeing the space through which
‘the organs had entered the chest|
wall from the adhesions there for-{
'qned. Next, the other adhesions of
ithe small and large intéstines to
(the lung and the heart covering
were severed,
. The surgeon Dr. Philemon E,
Trusedale, was now in g position
to replace the displaceq organs in
the abdominal caviry, :
The third step of the operation
consisted in clearing the opening
in the diaphragm of all the sur
roundings adhesions. The opens
ling was then closed by stitching
ithe edges together along its entire
length.
[ This opening extended half
through the thickiess of the body,
I'rurmlng from the center to the
ichest wall on the left side. 'l‘he{
‘opening was five inches in length
and measureq three inches wide.
The nerve which controls the mo-l
tion of the left half of the diaph
ragm was paralyzed by the injec- |
tion of alcohol. This will limit the '
movements of the diaphragm and
should facilitate healing. This|
paralysis is not permanent. Its
effects may last for several weeks
or months, ‘
" GRIDIRON INITIATION
Nine seniors and four honorary
members will be initiated by Grid
iron, University of Georgia honor
society, Thursday night.
They are: John Dekle, Savannah;
Harold Hatcher, Mgcon; Ludwig
Pierce, Vicksbarg, Miss.; William
Buchanan, Athens; Wiley- Moore,
jr,, Atlanta; A. M. Bennett, Wash
ington; Wade Hoyt, Rome; Claude
B. Green, Clayton, and Tom A.
Dozier, Athéns, ang the following
kenorary members, all faculty
members: Frank E. Mitchell, C. D,
Turner, B. C. Kinney and D. D.
Jeter,
WOMAN JUDGE DIES :
MOBILE, Ala, — (# — Mrs
John McDuffie, wife of the former
congressman who was induced to
o federal judeship here Saturday,
died at her home Monday after a
lingering heart illness.
Make Your City Tax Returns
Now. m 5-7-10.
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colds, nervous strain, exposure or similar causes.
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PAGE FIVE
Weekly Calendar of
- . . -
University Events
e —————————————
Tuesday :
7:15 p. m.—Student Forum, Dr.
C. D. Turner, leader, -
7:30 p. m.—Forestry club meets .
ing. Talk on TVA by H. G. Lentz.
Forestry cabin,
8:00 p. m. — Socratic. Circle
meeting. Speaker, Joseph' Gittler,
“Individualism, the Basis:of Civile
ization.” Room 200, Commerces
Journalism building. . 4 .
8:15 p., m.-—Finalg Intramural
Basketball Tournament, Woodruft
hall, \
8:30 p. m.—Dance Club Concert.
Physical Education building,
Wednesday :
4:40 p. m.—Meeting of Math
club. Dr. Barrow's classroom.
4:45 p. m.—Chemistry Seminar,
Terrell hall.
7:30 p. m.—Poultry Science club
meeting. Poultry Administration
building. .
7:30 p. m.—Phi Kappa and
Demosthenian meetings in respecs
tive halls. ! £
8:00 p. m. — Junior Oration,
Demosthenian hall, ; )
8:00 p. m.—Sophomore debate.
Resolved: That Collective Bargain
ing Should Be Conduéted Through
Non-Union Companies Only. Phi
Kappa hall. s
Thursday
State High School basketball
tounnament.
7:15 p. m.—Y. M, €. A, Vess
per service. Y. rooms, Academie
| building . '
7:30 p. m.—Ag club meeting.
Conner hall. ‘
8:00 p. m.—Music Appreciation.
8:00 p, m.—Phi Beta Kappa
meeting. Speaker, Oscar M. Voor
hees, national historian. - Light re
freshments. Commerce library.
! 8:30 p. m. — Thalian-Black
friars play, “The Late Christopher
llkan‘” Seney-Stovall chapel.
(Friday . iy
‘ Qtate High School basketball
' tournament. D
3:30 p. m.—lntramural: swime
ming meet. Memorial hall..
4:30 p. m. Economics 'Seminar.
| M. H. Bryan, speaker. “The Gold
| Clause Decision.” Commerce ls
| brary. w ;
| 4:30 p. m.—Final girls" baskete
' ball game. Senior vs. Junplor Col
|loge. Physical Tducation building.
' 7:00 p. m.—Science club dinner,
lfolloWed by speech. Speaker, Dr.
Burton J. Kincer, government me=
teorologist, “Man and His Cli
mate.” Georgian hotel.
7:15 p. m.—Radio debate with
Davidson, “Intérnational Shipment
of Arms and Munitions.” Station
WTFI.
8:00 p. m.—Debate with Leland
atanford, “Collective Bargaining.”
Phi Kappa hall. :
%:30 p. m. — Thalian-Black
‘t’rlars play, “The Late Christopher
Bean.” Seney-Stovall’ chapel.