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MONDAY, JULY 22 1838
T
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FOR SALE
e ——————————
—_—
§OR SALE—6V Crimp Galvanized
Metal Roofing, complete stock.
It you buy wrong lengths we wlll:l
exchange with you. This is a
convenience not offered by the
mail order houses. Christian
Hardware. £ ‘___-_‘__:_ 1o
QEROOF AND REPAINT NOW-. <
| §9 money, 3 yearg to pay, qulck[
| gervice, Flintkote Richard.aon-l
| Roefing and Sherwin-Williams
paints, make a good combinu—}
ton, Christian Hardware, Phone
1300 e e
JOR SALE CHEAP—One Leonard
Electric Refrigerator, 4% cubic
feet. Repossessed and is as good
as new. Cash $50.00. Phone
18-W after 7:30 p. m. l
e —
foh SALE —All-Wave Atwater- |
Kent Radio; original price $69.50.
Special $49.50. Easy Terms, Dur
den Music Co., Phone 1507.
L
FOR SALE—New brick, furnace
neated house, 3 bedrooms, fine |
jocation for few hundred cash. !
pilance $48.50 per month to buy !
it: priced right. Several good!
purchases in houseg and lots. See
Dave Paddock, « Lipscomb-Dear- ;
ing-Hutchins, Inc. Telephonel
5. |
o i
FOR SALE — Collie pups, thul'-i
oughbreds, beautifully marked. !
Six weeks old. See them at 470!
Yonah Avenue, Phone 339-W. I
FOR RENT |
FOR RENT—Upstairs unfurnish—'
ed apartment, to adults only.
One four-room house, large lul,E
L all conveniences; both in good'!
location. Rent reasonable. Phone
18-W after 7:30 p. m. i
OR RENT—First floor apartment, |
three rooms. bath and garage. !
Mrs, D. W. Meadow, 585 Prince |
Avenue, l
OR RENT—3 hedroom brick house
$36.50, with furnace, available
September Ist. ‘A 5-btdroom, |
steam heated brick house, ideal |
location at $55.00, now available. |
186 Boulevard, 3 stories, at $25. ll
49 Boulevard. 6 rooms, at $25. |
Lipscomb-Dearing-Hutchins, Ine.
'OR _RENT-—Furnished room inli
frivate home, near business !
section. Rent reasonable. Phone”
1520-W or apply 385 S. Jack-|
on, i
WANTED ; L
WE BUY OLD SCRAP GOLD
AND SILVER AND PAY HIGH
EST PRICE IN CASH
J. BUSH, Jeweier |
165 E. Clayton Street
By Authority of U. S. Treasury
s . EETD
SOOI . (O, |
MOVING — PACKING i
~ We Hau! Anything |
- 3
ocal and Long Distance
STORAGE ‘
DAMS TRANSFER CO.|
PHONE 656 |
’ . |
Railroad Schedules |
LEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY |
Arrival and Departure of Trains l
| Athens, Georgia d \
ave for Richmond, Washlngton.i‘
New York and Rast— ’
L 1 A.M. i
L 4 P.M. Alr Conditioned. I
$H PM, A Conditioned. :
&4Ve or Atlanta, South and West: |
4:16 AM, '
¥ AM. Al Conaitfoded. |
&30 P.M. Apr Conditioned, i
Ve for Riberton, Greenwood, |
Monroe, N. ¢. (Local).
10:55 AM. l
Ve for Winder, Lawrenceville,
Atlantg (Local), i
4:30 P.M.
GAINESVILLE-MIDLAND '
Leave Atheng ‘
0. 2 for Galnesville— 7:45 a.m.
“12 for Galnesville— 10:45 a.m.
Arrive Athens
> 11 from Gatnesville— 10:00 a.m.
%1 from Gainesville— 6:16 a.m.
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Un 61 Arrives Athens 7:46 a.m.
Daily Except Sunday '
Tain 59 Leaveg Athens 11:00 l.m-i
SOUTHERN RAILWAY !
Lula»—North—South
epart—. —-Arrlve!
“fia‘m' 11:20 a.m. |
I:3g P.m, 4:60 pm.!
L Cox, Assistant General |
Freight-Passenger Agent |
Telepheng 81 !
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA ‘
i Leave Athens i
¥ (except Sunday) 6:30 a.m
and 4:15 p.m, l‘
Y only 7igh gl U Bk
p.m. |
Arrive Athens Daily l 1
Wl ~ ot g2s g 3
POND’S FACE POWDER
~ Regular 55¢—Now 39¢
Cold and Vanishing
| CREAMS
~ Regular 55¢c—Now 39¢
Regular 35¢c—Now 25c¢
Cleaning Tissues
200 Sheets—2 pkgs., 25¢
CITIZENS PHARMACY
TOOTH PASTE SPECIALS
2 Tubes Dr. West .. 37c
.. .. ... .
Tapsodent ... .. .. 3he
Large Spearmint ... 10c
MOON-WINN DRUG Co.
SUN-BURNED?
Use
“GYPSY CREAM”
“It Soothes—lt Cools”
REID DRUG CG.
MILLEDGE PHARMACY
WIND DAMAGE
[IESTER
"PROTECTION
COSTS VERY LITTLE
If You Want Your BUILDING
PROBLEMS handled from Plan
te Lock and Key—
.
See W. A. Mathis
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~—PHONE 626— :
9-——%;\;\\ |
Ie TS B )
AT’% N @.;7'\}&"”*» B\ ißy
(g PSR~ AR e
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>
Corona Standard
COMPLETE WITH CARRYING CASE
$49.50
—PHONE 77—
THE McGREGOR CO.
ATHENS, GEORGIA
“SPEEDYY —
et ) [ I IV T § % \/ 2
I/ WeLL WELL, MR BUTTS } BUT MR BUTTS - HAVE You | . YOU MEAN T I say. you Y YOU BET L DO
/ ['VE BEEN TRYING 11| ANY OBIECTIONS TO SiT THERE AND PLELLH SEEM TO | AND THIS TIME ]
|7O SEE YOU FOR DAYS. /. \ THE USED CARS FROM SAY YgU My~ NO= " KNOW ALL |MY ANSWER 1S |
| 1 JUST SAW THIS {BOS USSELL HEARD Ofs? v THE YES - 1 wiLL
| Y Dow AND SAID | LIKE | TR FIRMS CARS? /I NEVER | ANSWERS | SUN BNEOFYOLR |
|XO MysSELE THERE | JO-0| =D HESB OF " DonT o/ Do ONEORYOUR |
NIS A FINE OPENING — \foU! 5 e ANY You., ( USED CARS BECAUSE|
TN ,rcpAu:m.fl\-Wf\ Amens OLOEST DEALET_ ... oflEfl;wns ."f I KNOW THEY ARE |
|| W e W weveß HEARD (F 257 o THeM,(| g RELIABLE AND /]
I 5.0 SHAKE! 550 )| ol GEIHEN. S % LR gl
- g N i g UN. 4
é v Al g "' o ' V./ L<& 4 : ‘("'OVN ’
| SN~ |GI Bs e, " = V > P !
e QL itk - e| B ~ >/i £
i ’ e =1 ] L e i iM Gt G 2'~
78 _”E%%g; = d A FEHE 411 g e 4 5 | & ‘{/ 4rq
V-8 Tudor Sedan .. &5 .. .. 33917
'3l Victoria Coupe .. .. .. $265
'8 Tudor 65+ -+ - V 92
Dodge Standard Six Sedan. . . .$97
'3l Buick 5edan......... :$337
Model A Ford Coupe. . . ....$225
C. A. Trussell Motor Co’s cars are all RELIABLE and are ECONOW
S Teuun pshee ol Sl ! OMICAL to run, for your SAVINGS
New Deal to Weather '36 Storms
Roosévelt Loses Strength,
But He'll Carry Nearly 40
States, Writer Predicts.
A world-famous writer has
been ‘“Listening to America.”
Traveling through 33 repre
surfiztive states on assignment
from The Ban ler-Herald and
NEA Service, Frazier Hunt
has heard and faithfully rec
orded the voice of the nation.
The twelve daily articles which
he has written for this news
paper afford an epic, enlight
ening word-picture of what
the greatest zind the humblest
Americansg everywhere are
thinking, saying and doing in
these tremendous times. Here
is the first article in this im
portant series.
By FRAZIER HUNT
Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Ine.
Roosevelt is in the bag for 1936.
He is not as strong as he was
GIFTS FOR
ALL OCCASIONS
Are Prized Most When
Bought From
J. BUSH, Reliable Jeweler,
20 Years in Business in
the Same Stand
165 EAST CLAYTON BT.
By " C. A. Trussell Motor Co.
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I’s a Mighty Voice - - - - | |
this voice of America. It speaks in varied accents, modulations, dialects and
jargons. It < soft, harsh, vibrant, querulous. optimistic, despairing.”
last fall at electiom ymime pur ne
will carry between 36. and 10
states.
Huey Long hasg lest two-thinds
of his _strength the past six
months,
3§ The magic that
= was Father
W e % Coughlin is great
g2 9 The threat or
by s g promise of a
R strong third party
B in ’36 is a myth
g ' The supreme
: * i Court decision
§ " ending the old
g e, NRAdid little
i | harm to B, D. R
X * Three guarters
L W P . ofthe farmorsaf
:/, a’}; fected by the crop
§ =aduection are for
_.'.-,' ': 3 :’,sf AAA.
ii— e average cit
' izen feels tho Re
publican party has neither a cause
nor a leader,
The unreasonable bitterness
against Hoover still largely per
sists.
Fullv 75 per cent of Northern
Negroes are for Roosevelt,
The ‘“Haves’ areturning against
Roosgevelt on account of the pros
pect of higher and higher taxes,
bu: the "“Have Nots” are uncon
cerned.
Labor feels that it has been sold
dewn the river on a boat called
Rl RBLR R S i
R wr———=
31 Studebaker 5edan......5235
Dodge Victory 6 5edan.....5145
'3O Chevrolet C0ach.......5165
31 Graham 4-D. Sedan. . . ..$245
"33 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery .$335
'3O Chevrolet Sedan Delivery . $177
. ~
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Recovery, but it only partly
blames the President. .
VETS ARE CALMER
Veterans® reséntment against
the bonus veto is already lessen- !
ing and probably by election time
will V]argely disappear. 3
Except for certain sections flf‘
the south and a few city areas the,
relief. has beer handled with little |
graft or inefficiency. i
The four billion eight hundrel
million Public Works and relie
fund creates, even with the best
of intentions, a great reservoir 01"3
political pressure. ‘
The advancing machine con
stantly checks the most determin
ed efforts to end unemployment.
~ America is faced with the per
manent problem of giving federal
and state work and aid to from
fth‘me to five million people.
~ For the great mass of common
citizeng Roosevelt no longer has
wings but they still look upon him
as the one man who is daring to
try to help them all |
THE VOICE OF AMERICA ;
That, in a few sentences, gives|
my impressions of what America |
is thinking, based on 14,000 miles |
of rambling by motor through 33i
states. I have talked to literally|
hundreds of people of every klnd'
and status, ranging from the|
President of the United States to
colored bootblacks. 1
In the articles to follow I will
try to give an accurate transcrip_;
tion of many of these informal in
terviews. In covering this vast
country T have done my best to
sink my own prejudices and pas
sions. I have been listening not
talking. i
It is a mighty voice—this voice
of America. It speaks in varied
aceents, modulations, -dialects ands
jargons. It is soft, harsh, vibrant
querulous, optimistic, despairing. ;
1 wnas just starting from Wash-;
ington: on this long trek when 1]
hai'ed ‘a friend in the Department ]
of Agriculture who had only that
day returned fom a study of thei
dust storm country. I asked” him |
how things really were. |
“The only real trouble with |
America is Washington itself.” _hf’
answered with a broad grin.
“Congress and all ‘the hangers-on
nere are worse than an old ladies
sewing eircle.”
I started westwand with tha!
particular voice ringing in my
eurs, . |
i — !
FAITH IN THE FUTURE E
At Morgantown, West Virginia |
an experienced social worker
deep in the tragedy of these sub
marginal coal lands, said to_me
with a look In ner eyes: “I have
great faith in America's future.
If we have the courage to make.
haste slowly, we can build here ai
beautiful new civilization that can
challenge all the dictatorships in'
the world.” |
At an ofl station in a m'osn‘
roails village on the Lincoln High-:
way in middle Ohio a bright young]
man about 25 said to me: "“A lot
of people even in this little town |
are still drawing relief but they’re’
making it harder for ‘em all the!
time. You otta hear 'em squawk.
. . . We don’t hear much about}
"Huey any more. And Father
'Co-ughlin has lost lots, too. . . .|
I'l‘imes is still plenty hard but 1
Idon’t know what more Rooaevelt!
‘can do. Reckon he'll carry this
lstate." |
' In western Indiana a storekeep
;er propounded his views: “Looks
‘to me as if Young Colonel Roose
velt would be the best man the
' Republicans could nominate, but
‘T don't guess it would do him
much good.. Way I size up the
situation is that only a miracle
ean wdefeat the President.”
A small employer of labor in
Chicago, who announced that he
was a Hoover man and proud of
it, declared: “The Democrats have
built up a great machine here and
with the relief and Public Works
money to work on they're invincl-i
ble. . . . Many big firms in Chica
go are beating the state sales tax
by ostensibly moving their offices
to Indiana. . . . There should be
federal supervision over minimum;
wages maximum hours and anti-{
child labor. Price-fixing never
did nor never can work.” ll
HOOVER TO ROOSEVELT ‘?
Thirty miles north of Madison,
Wicconsin, a Master Farmer said |
to me: “I voted for Hoover—and |
the LaFollettes—but 1 sort of |
think I'd vote for Roosevelt today.
He’s doing everything that he can
with a tough job.” I
In Minneapolis the editor of al
farm paper made this contribu- |
tion: “Governors more orless havel
to play along in order to get their |
chare of the federal money. . . &l
When ‘F. D. R. is off the air he/
js "like a preacher who stops)
preaching——the people stop believ- |
ing in him so ardently.” |
At Athes, lowa, a professor in|
the College of Agriculture, who |
goes about this pivotal state, said:|
“Right now 1 would say that 80]
percent of the farmers of lowa |
are behind the 3 A’'s and conse
quently tehind Roosevelt and
Wallace” ‘
In once bleeding Kansas the
sage of i.mporia, the mellow wu-|
liam Allen White, said to me: “If
the Republi~ins nominate an East-
Says Frazier Hunt
After U. S. Tour
rern conservative it will be just
labout the end of the party. Their
platform - must definitely state
[that the budget must be balanceid
and that the only way to do it is
by greatly inrceasing taxes.”
In fair Omaha Otto Swanson,
able business man, said: *“lLast
vear Nebraska had only about 10
percent of her normal corn crop,
jan(l this year we had dust storms,
'but watch this great state come
| back. You can't keep America
down.”
| 4n the Governor’s office at Lin
| coln, in what is probably the most
beautiful state building in Afneri
ica, Governor Roy Cochran told
| me: “People here still have a
i‘mystival faith in Roosevelt, It
| will re-eiect him hands down.”
i A ‘“Soaking” Promiser i
; In Oklahoma City a taxi driver
| with a Legion button in hig lapel,
Imade no attempt to hide his bit
terness when he said: “Don’t
| think for a minute that we're go
'mg to forget about Roosevelt ve
toing the bonus. We'll soak him
'when wo get a chance.” |
Up an fantastic Ponea City, gen
ail Lou Wentz, oil duke and the
‘fifth richest bachelor in the workd,:
caid: “There are five Have Nots
to every Have and they’ll always
outvote us. With a set-up likes
that, how can Roosevelt be defeat
ed?” :
Down in Huey's home town of
Shreveport, lLwouisiana, a young
woman stenographer shook her
fist when she said to me: “I can’t
think up enough bad things to say
'about that man. He's got every
| body with any property down here
iscared to death.”
| In Richfield, Utah, an old cod-
Iger getting his car fixed in the
| garage across the street from the
| hotel allowed with a chuckle: “Ifi
| we hadn't’a got rain this spring we
| was all ready to give the state!
| back to the Indians. . . . This is,
la Republican country but with
| that war chest Roosevelt’s got he
iis going to be hard to beat.” 1
| In the bright sunshine of Los
| Angeles an experienced politica”
lsoothsayer prophesied: “Roosevelt
will carry California by 200,000 as
}against 400,000 when he ran;
| against Hoover. Therere 500,000
Epics and Utoplansg here and most
of them w.ll vote for F. D. R.” |
Seven hundred miles northward|
at Bureka, California, a lmetblack,i
| who had served in France, said
las he swung his brushes: My
| people is all for Roosevelt. . We:
|was all Republicans but it's the!
| man who counts today—and he's
tT¢. . . .. Huey makes 100 much!
| noise. Maybe in 20 years he'll
lknvnw enough to be President, but‘;
' not now.” :
A LAWYER'S VIEW
In Spokane a distinguighed law
yer had this to say: “The Supreme
ourt deecision helpeil Roosevelt
because it relieved him of all the
mistakes and failures of the old
NRA. He can simply say that he
did his best and now it’s up % in
dustry and business, It will drive
the small business man and the
farmer into his arms. 1 don’t see
any way that we can be aefeat
ed.”
Government official, West Vir
ginia relief worker, Ohio gas sta
tion man, Indiana store Keeper,
Chicago employer, Wisconsin far
mer, Minneapolis editor, Towa
professor, Kansas sage, Nebraska
busineés man and a governor, Ok~
lJahoma taxi driver and a million
aire, Louisiana business women,
Utah citizen, California politician
and a bovtblack, Washington law- |
yer—all synchronize intoone greai
voice. There are discondant notes
and off-tones. but the swes2p of |
voice is elear and unmistakable: ]
Despite bewilderment and vast
uncertainty, poverty, unemploy -
ment and slow recovery, Roose
velt will again earry his party to
a tremendous victory in 1936. :
TOMORROW: Scott’s Run mdl
Arthurdale Homesteads, W. Va., a
study in social contrast. ’
\SIGMA NUS WILL
iFraternlty Members Will
. Make Pilgrimage to V.
. M. I. on August 25.
| ——————————
| LEXINGTON, Va—Several hun
' dred members of the Sigma Nu
Fraternity will make a Pilgrim
'age to the Virginia Military In
stitute on August 25 from their
convention at White Sulphur
Springs, W. Va., to take part in
the unveiling of a monument to
the founders of their college soo
- fraternity.
It wass sixty-six years ago that
three cadets in their third year in
the military school first held sec
ret meetings at night in the shad
ow of a limestone boulder on the
parade grounds, from which Sig
ma Nu, now with ninety-six col
legiate chaptfers in forfy-six states
and the Disfrict of Columbia had
its beginning, A bronze tablet de
picting theésé cadets in their mil
itary uniforms, James Frank Hop-!
¥ns and Greenfield Quarles of
Arkansas and James Mcllvaine
Riley of Missouri, will be unveiled
on a great limestone boulder taken
from the bed of the nearby North
river, and placed -on the edge of“
the parade grounds, near where
the famed old Rock of Sigma Nu
long stood, until it was blasted
twenty years age in the levelling
of the groumds.
Speakers and - speeial. guests for
this oceasion will include Major
General John. A. LeJeune, super
intendent .of the Virginia Military
Institute; President Francis P.
Gaines of Washington and Lee
University; .Frank. L. Yates of
Washington, D. C., national pres
ident of Sigma Nu and legal as
gistant to the Comptroller Guneral
of the United States; and early
members of Sigma Nu from V.
PAGE SEVEN
'FULL MACHINERY OF
| NAZI PRESS INVOKED
| IN GENERAL FIGHT
; (Continved From Page One)
‘uage of the press outside Berlin
was often stronger than in the
capital.
Lists were published of Aryan
girls accused of intimate relations
with Jews. Other editorials in
local newspapers were directed
against members of student fra
ternities and other ‘“reactionaries”,
Two more Roman Catholic priests
went to trial on charges of sSmug
gling money, TR
Wialter Koehler, premier of Ba
den, announced he was ready to
go “the iimit”. Baden Catholics
said they anticipated wholesale
arrests of both laymen and priests
The Cathelic church in general
adopted a policy of watchful
waiting, most of the priests,
knowing government agents were
listening, having confineq their
Sunday sermons to spiritual top
ics. ‘
In Baden and other distance
districts, however, the decree by
Frank Guertner, minister of jus
tice, directing prompt punlshmenf
for priests violating the injunction
of General Wilhelm Goering,
against “political Catholicism”,
was not published until today. ;
Catholics both at Baden and in
Bavaria regarded the situation as
especially grave.
MAN DROWNS WI:E:
HELD FOR MURDER
(Conmurd From Pageé One)
out the story of how Sherman
plotted for three days to Kkill his
wife, according to his confes
gion.
Sherman’s story as related by
MeceCarthy was:
That he planned a canoce ride
Thursday night but was unable
to hire a canoe. On Saturday he
obtained one and started out with
his wife. About 300 yards from
shore, he overturned the frail
craft and when his wife tried to
hold on to him to save herself
trom drewning, Sherman pushed
her away.
He swam around until he “saw
bubbles come up,” and then made
for shore, and a short time later
told of the “accident.”
State and Worcester police
found the body of Mrs. Sherman
later.
Sherman’s ancestors settled the
old New England town of Sut
ton, and his family reputedly
has large realty holdings here.
Sherman, will go before the
grand jury August 19, on a charge
f murder.
Masking whatever emotion he
may have felt, he tooK the stand
in district court today, pleaded
not guilt to first degree murder
and waived examination. Judge
Riley ordered him held without
bail.
RESTRICTION QUOTA
VOTED INTO BILL BY
COUNT OF 60 TO 17
(Centinuad From Page One)
tal July 17 was $60,066,000, Up
ham said. The city treasury’s
“idle” funds held about $43,0600,000,
the remainder of them being those
publicly owned,
The comptroler ecredited the
city’s improved standing to salary
and departmental economies, shown
in drastically reduced tax lévies.
The city's funded debt, $140.513. -
000 January 1, 1931, stood at $113,-
547,092 June 30 last. X
FINANCIAL “RALLY”
STAGED BY CHICAGO
(Continued From Page One)
derstood” in this connection.
The amendments follow: X
“No order shall be issued under
this act prohibiting, regulating, or
restricting the advertising of any
cemmodity or product covered
hereby, ncr shall any marketing
agreement contain any provision
prohibiting, regulating, or restrict
ing the advertising of any com
modity or product covered by such
marketing agreement.” And:
“Provided, that mno such tax
shall be levied upon the process
ing of any commodity into news
print.”
{M. I. .Robert W. Massie of
:Lynchburg, former president of
{ the Board of Visitors of V. M. L;
| former Governor Westmoreland
| Davis of Virginia; and Judge Dal
'las Flannagan of New Jersey; and
tl‘nited States Senator F’rederlfiffié
Steiwer of Oregon.
| Sigma Nu is holding its bmug
/nial convention at the Greenbrier
| Hotel, White Sulphur Springs,
I\Vf-st Virginia from August 23 mg
| 26, during which time this historie ’ifi
; pilgrimage will be made. The genf‘.{;é
"eral chairman for the day at Lex
lington is the Rev. Thomas H.
Wright, Rector of the Robert E.
Lee Memorial church at Lexing
| ton. Dinner will be served the =
lmembers of the fraternity nd
their guests in the V. M. I. din
[ing hall at noon on August ,;&
laster which the formal dedication
{of the monument will take ?;‘
| There will then be tours to vari
{ ous places of interest, the Found
ers’ rooWs in the barracks, the
'Lee Chapel on the Washingtos
,and Lee campus, the Washing on
i and Lee Sigma Nu House ir. which =
i the Alpha chapter chest is Kept, =
snow that the mother chapter of
the fraternity is no longer active.
Plans for the convention are 6
ilng made from the ‘
j national headquarters in Indiana
; polis, Indiana. General Secretary
Malcolm C. Sewell announces that
he expects the largest attendance
at White Sulphur of any Sigma
Nu convention because of the gen
eral interest in the historic tri
to Lexington, which will be an im
portant feature of the meeting. A