Newspaper Page Text
~ OCAL COTTON
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r;%s.ucfitoss.... LIE WS
o, 103, No. 200.
Woman Killed, 15 Injured In S.C. Strike
Fire P ti
b Athens Thi
Winter Started
fire Chief B. F. Lester is mak
g early preparations to control
res in Athens this winter.
Chief Lester today asked the
public to sive its cooperation for!
ontrol of fires, and right now iß|
he time to begin preventing them,
e said. 3
putters and alleys should be
ceaned now of all leaves and trash,
for 4 majority of the fires in the
winter originate in these places.
He also urged that furnaces be
eared, and ash pits be cleaned.l
act year we had numerous
fiies cavsed by trash and !saves
hing in the ' alleys and gutters,
nd although none of th:2m
qused any serious damage, ,neu-‘
s should take warning”, Chief}
ester said. :
After alleys, gutters and ash pits
ro cleaned, the owner should in
spect them thoroughly; or have a
fireman look over the job, Saidl
the chief.
The sooner this work . is done
bbout the home, the safer it will
be for owners of homes. It should
not be put off another day.
e A |
Nix Among Speakers %
For Woodmen Today
ATLANTA, Ga.— (&) —Modern
Woodmen of America from all
parts of Georgia assembled here
tiday for their annual convention.
Dr, Witherspoon Dodge was
listed for the principal address at
a banquet, and Abit Nix was to
address the opening business ses
sion. ‘
Max Wilk of Augusta, national
delegate, and President (G. J.
Whitaker of Franklin . also were
on the program.
SRR
.
James Lester, Fire
Prevention Expert,
Visiting in Athens
————
Mr. and Mrs. James Lester, of
Little Rock, Arkansas, are visiting
in Athens '
Mr. Lester is well known here,
h.a\’in: made Athens hig home un
il 1925, when he left to work in
Fiorida. Since that time he has
Worked in Texas and Arkansas,
and-at present is head of the
riting department of the Arkansas
Fire Prevention Bureau.
Mr. anq Mrs. Lester have been
attending a convention of fire pre
vention executives from all over
the United States, in Atlantie City.
They will be here for a week. Mr.
Lester Is the son of Fire Chief and
Mrs, E. F. Lester.
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Ove .with her. Read
this engaging romanece
In the new serial, “The
21 -
Tl»mc Door,” beginning
ODAY ON PAGE 2
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Full Associated Press Service
i
‘Hopes Held Storm May
Travel Narrow 90-Mile
i Channel Into Gulf.
| IS EAST OF HAVANA
l | e
|Preparations Made For
Hurricane Winds: Tidal
Wave Danger Noted.
l JACKSONVILLE, Fla.—(#)—Cuba
land Key West, Fla. today pinned
hopes of missing the full force of a
tropical storm moving westward
from the Bahamas on Weather
bureau observations which - indi
i cated the center of the disturbance
‘may pass into the Gulf of Mexico
i through the 90 miles of water sep
arating the two islands.
Even in that event, however,
both Key West and Havana pre
pared for hurricane winds. The
'Cuban capital also was warned to
watch out for tidal waves thrown
| back by the storm as it passes
through the chanel.
; The Weather bureau here placed
the center of the disturbance at
1!9:30 a. m., about 200 miles due
| east of Havana and said it was
Jmoving slowly westward attended
Iby shifting gales and probably by
| hurricane winds (more than 75
miles an hour), near the center.
The forecasters ordered mnorth
east storm warnings continued
from Miami on the Florida east
coast to Fort Myers on the west
coast.
The storm left only minor prep
erty damage but no loss of life or
injuries in the Bahamas island
group where it passed Saturday
night and early Sunday, reports to
the colonial government at Nas
san said. One fishing craft -was
lost but the crew was saved.
The second trepical storm cCross
ed the coast of Mexico south of
Vera Cruz late yesterday, sweep
ing the waterfront with violent
winds but apparently doing no
great damage. The New Orleans
Weather bureau, which described
the storm as a disturbance of mod
erate intensity. said it apparently
was losing most of its force as it
swept inland.
BARRICADES UP
MIAMI, Fla. —(&)— Florida’s ex
treme southern tip, parricaded be
hind storm shutters, today await
ed the assault of another of the
tropical storms that peripdically
lash the area.
Key West, the nation’s southern
——
(Continued On Page Seven)
’ —————
Many Attend Ceremony
At New $1,500,000
Prison Near Reidsville. |
_— {
By JACK BATES |
Associated Press Staff Writer.
LYONS, Ga.—{(f)—A large num-~ l
ber of state leaders moved in (m%
this section today for the corner- |
stone laying at the new $1,500,000
state prison now under construc
tion in Tattnall county, near
Reidsville.
{ Among first arrivals for the La-'
bor Day ceremonies, beginning“
with a breakfast ‘sponsored by the|
Lyons Kiwanis club, was Hugh |
Howell, of Atlanta, state chair- |
;man of the Democratic executivoi
committee. Howell appeared as |
!personal representative of (}nvm‘-l
‘ nor Talmadge. i
Other prominent speakers listed
on the program included Con- |
gressman Hush Peterson, of Ailey: |
| State Senator John Beasley, .ot*
Glenville; Chairman E. E. Rainey|
of the State Prison Commission:l
Judge G. A. Johns and Judge |
vivian L. Stanley, of the com- |
'mission; and Judge Max 1.. Mec-|
Rae, of the State Highway hoard. |
8. H. McClarity, Lyons news- |
| paper editor, was chairman of thel
I program committee. !
’ With Howell to deliver the m'in—s
| cipal talk, former Congressman |
IGeorge Lankford of Douglas W:ls!
slated to make the address of wel-l
!cmne for the people of this area.
‘ Some of the noted guests €x
lpected were Clark Howell, editor |
{ and president of the Atlanta Con
| ofitution: Herschel V. Jenkins,
!presidem and manager of the Sa
{ vannah Morning News and the
;Savfinnah Evening Press; and W.
;T. Anderson, president of the Ma
lcon Telegraph Publishing . com-|
pany.
i Finances for the new prison, a |
! (Continued On Page Eight) i
A SOLOMON NEEDED
TO SETTLE POSER
HANDED TO JURIST
CHARLSTON, W, VA, —(#)—'
Municipal Judge Cyrus or
dered a truck driver to get on
his truck and keep going.
Now tne judge has a letter
from the truck driver, posted at
Clifton Forge, Va.
“The truck burned up this
morning. What do I do now.?”
ORGANIZED [ABOR
]
Labor Day Brings Toll of
Cains, Probtem Discus
sions, and Play.
WASHIGNTON —(®#)—Organized
labor stopped work today to count
its gains and discuss its problems.
At Labor Day rallies throughout
the country, union workingmen
heard their leaders applaud en
actment of the Wagner labor dis
putes law, the Guffey bituminous
coal stabilization act, railroad pen
sion measures and the socjal se
curity program.
President Roosevelt and congress
were praised by some speakers.
In an address at Fairmont, W, Va,,
vesterday, John L. Lewis, presi
dent of the United Mine Workers
and a vice-president of the Amer
ican Federation of Labor, said the
'Roosevelt administration’s record
;was so good that “organized labor
'in the contest to come has no
\(‘hoioo but to support the Presi
dent.”
. Labor’s demand for a shorter
Ework week was again put forward
today with the federation's esti
' mate that 11,000,000 workers still
kare unemployed.
Labors Demands
“Labor demands a five day week,
a six hour day and a wage that
will enable a man and his family
to live in reasonable comfort,” said
Frank Morrison, A.F. of L., sec
retary, in his Labor day message.
Among labor’s’ problems were
listed probable court tests of all
the labor legislation enacted by
the just-adjourned congress. Lead
ers also pondered what success
they would have at the next ses
sion with proposed legislation to
esestablish NRA codes and to
write the 30-hour week into law
without a constitutional amend
ment.
Labor leaders were scattered
over the country to make their
speeches. Willlam Green, Federa
tion president, was at Canton, O,
and Morrison at Madison, Wis.
Secretary Perkins planned to dis
cuss the social security program
in a radio speech to be broadcast
from Boston on a coast-to-coast
hook-up.
GEORGIA CELEBRATES
(By the Associated Press)
With parades, public speeches,
contests and amusements of ‘var
jous kinds, Georgia celebrated La
bor Day today. .
A" group of prominent Georgians
met in Lyons and vicinity to attend
ceremonies in connection with the
laying of cornerstone of t)e new
state prison, in Tattnaall county.|
After a breakfast party in Lyons,
the group went to the prison for
exercises there.
In Atlanta, thousands of workers
marched in one of the most color
ful parades ever seen there on la
bor Day. United States Senator|
Richard B. Russell jr., was chief
speaker on the Atlanta Labor Day
program.
. The governor of Georgia, Eugene
Talmadge, was in Sioux Falls, S.
D, to make a speech there tonight.
Columbus held an all day cele
bration at the fair grounds there.
Athletics and novelty contests, pub
lic speeches, fireworks, a ball and
(Continued On Page Three) !
LOCAL WEATHER
e ————————————————————— ——————
e —————— S ———————
T
,_/‘-\ -~ ‘
cq‘i’ . Generally
fair
o tonight;
& Tuesday
: i showers.
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TEMPERATURE
Highoat .. i+ v % ¥ ..34.0
LOWeSt v ¢ sk sied 00 ..63.0
MY .. .. b v e 48 .- 138
Normal .. .. -s'se s & ..16.0
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours ~ .. .00
Total since Sept. 1 .... 00
Deficti sin(‘e. Bept. 1 Ly e 08
Average Sept. rainfall .... 3.50
motal since January 1 .. /.34.53
Deficit since January 1 ... 1.88
Athens, Ga., Monday, September 2, 1935
Where World’s Forlorn Hope for Peace 1 ‘ed
here World’s Forlorn Hope for Peace Is Centere
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LAVAL ALOISI PROF. JEZE HAVARIATH LITVINOV EDEN
| (France) (Ttaly) (For Ethiopia) (Ethiopia) (Russia) {(Gr. Britain)
With hope all but abandoned that war between Italy and Ethiopia can be averted, the whole world
turned its eves to the seat of the League of Nations in Geneva as these statesnien led their delegations
| to the league’s council meeting, Sept. 4, in a final effort to stave off the conflict which imperils world
peace At top is a general view in front of the League of Nations building as delegates arrived for a
~ recent conference. Cast in leading roles in the diplomatic conclave on which hangs not only the peace
of Europe, but possibly the life of the League ‘tself, are: Premier Pierre Laval of France; Baron Pom
peo Aloisi, Itaiian representative; Prof. Gaston Jeze of the Paris Sorbonne, representing Ethiopia; M.
' TTecle ‘Havariath, Ethiopian delegate; Maxim Litvinov, foreign commissar of the U. S.. 8. R. and presi
dent of the League Council; Capt. Anthony Eden, chief delegate of Great Britain. The League’s annual
| assembly, at which all nations-are represented, will follow five days after the council meeting.
Deanß.C.Wilson Returns to Athens;
Is Given High Educational Honor
Dean R. C. Wilson of the Uni
versity of Georgia School of Phar
macy has returned to Athens from
an 8,300-mile trip through the
western states during which time
he wag elected president of the
American Association of Colleges
of Pharmacy at Portland, Oregon.
- Dean Wilson was accompanied
on a tour of the west by Mrs. Wil
son and their son, Bobby. While
away they visited in St Louis, San
Francisco, Portland, and other
cities as well as places of interest
in Missouri, Colorado, Wyoming,
Montana, Lousslana, Washington,
Arizona New Mexico and Texas.
It ‘was at Portland, where he at
tended the annual conventions of
Colorado Springs Capitalist Disappears; .
Kidnaping Theory Held By Investigators
COLORADO SPRINGS.—(#)—
The strange disappearance of cap
italist Joseph W. Ady, jr., 53,
figuratively under the eyes of his
family, caused intense police ac
tivity here today and brought
some fear of kidnaping.
Ady vanished with his.car Fri
day night while his wife believed
he was dressing for dinner, she
told Police Inspector I. B. (Dad)
Bruce, nationally known crimin
ologist.
The search for Ady, a mining
engineer and = capitalist, spread
over an area 100 miles wide while
the officers puzzled over ‘the facty
he apparently had’ left the house
without his ° movements being
noted by anyone.
Mrs. Aly, who was the widow
of the mine wealthy James F.
Burns, told Bruce he returned
Fear Held That 3-Year Old Babe, Lost In
Missouri Woods, May Be Killed By Wolves
MEXICO, Mo. —(#)— There was
fear today that John Wesley Ken
non, lest. babe in the woods, might
never be found alive.
The 3-year old son of a widow
ed mother, Mrs. FErnest Kennon,
has been missing since 5 o'clock
Saturday afternoon in a rugged,
wooded area 16 miles southeast of
here. ;
Neighbors, national guardsmen
and CCC boys tramped disconso
lately to their homes late Sunday
after a fruitless search in a cold
rain. They reported no clues.
Some expressed the belief the
red-haired youngster, harefoot and
clad in rompers when he became
‘separated from two older brethers,
the American Pharmaceutical asso- |
ciation and the American Associa.-|
tion of Colleges of Pharmacy thatj
Dean Wilson was elected president!
of the latter organization. This is|
regarded as distinct honor to th(-|
University of Georgia particularly,|
in view of the fact that the School|
of Pharmacy here is one of thel
smaller institutions of itg kind in
the country. It is, however, widely‘
known for its high standards and
the success of its graduates.
High Standards
The University School of Phar
macy was the first tn the country
to adopt a four-year minimum
(Continued On Page Four) ‘
from the office at the usual lime{
Friday, talked briefly with her andi
went to his room. i
‘When dinner was announced'
about 6:30 p. m. Mrs. Ady called
to him and he said he would comel
downstairs shortly. [
Silence met a second call al-]
though Ady had not been seen at
the door of his room or descend
ing from the second floor of the
house.
After the small sedan he used
between hme and office was found
missing from its parking place
Ady’s room was inspected and his |
absence established.
A capitalist with varied inter
ests for two decades, Ady had |
curtailed his activity somewhat in
recent months, but he was known {
to be negotiating for granite quar- |
ries near Cotopaxi, to the south-|
west. i
imight have been killed by wolves.
i John, Robert, 7 and Ernest Lee,
f 10, were playing about a half mile
| from the farm home of Mr. and
| Mrs. Roy Coles, their uncle and
| aunt, with whom Mrs. Kennon
| and her children had made their
| home since the death of her hus
| band last spring.
| The older two hid from John,
| went through underbrush for some
| distance and then .returned to the
| spot where they left him. He was
| gone.
| A score of persons hunted through
ithe night. More than 150 persons
|aided - in yesterday's thorough
icomblnx of the woods.
| Mrs. Kennon became the mother
| of a boy two weeks ago.
Meetings to Be Held By
Salonia, Athens Chapters
Tonight and Tuesday.
Mrs. Marcia Jewett, Rossville,
Worthy Grand Matron of @ the
Eastern Stars of Georgia, will be
the guest of Salonia chapter, No.
227 tonight at 8:30 o’clock, when
the annual inspection is held. She
will meet with the Athens chap
ter No. 268 tomorrow night, at
the same time.
Mrs. Jewett is making her of
(Continued on Page Three)
Schoolboy Rowe Is
l Star AsyT' ers Win
i Morni l%} 6-1
i
orning Game, 0-
I ——— e
| DETROlT—(#)—Schoolboy Rowe
| allowed Chicago only five hits as
ithe Detroit Tigers won the morn
ing game of the Labor Day double
| header, 6-1. The Tiger pitcher hit
| a homr in the fourth with a man
! on base. ;
! GAMES POSTPONED
National: Philadelphia at New
York, both games postponed rain
| (two games‘tomorrow.)
1 RAIN INTERFERES
| American: New York at Phila
| delphia, postponed, rain. Two
‘g‘ames tomorrow.
E SIXTETNTH VICTORY
l CHICAGO.—(#)—Lon Warneke
“turned in his 16th victory of thé
!seasnn today as he outpitched
!Trmy Freitas and Leroy Herrmann
| to give the Chicago Cubs a3to 1
Idvcisinn over the Cineinnati Redsy
in the first game of today’s dou
iblo—headm'. played in a light rain.
l Boston at Brooklyn, both games
' postponed, rain.
E RED SOX WIN
i BOSTON.— (&) —Jack Wilson,
| Red Sox twirler. cracked out a
| home run in the lith inning to
| day to give his team a9to 8 vic
imrv over the Washnigton Sena -
[ tors in the first game of their
!dvmhlo-hoader. Manager Joe Cro
i nin of the Sox put one over the
| fence in the eighth with the hases
| loaded.
l, i
| BROWNS WIN
| CLEVELAND.— (&) —The St.
! Touis Browns upset Cleveland 4
{to 1 in the first game of their
| double-neader today, making good
‘;nn six hits while holding the In
| dians to five. g
A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—sc¢ Sunday
STREET CAR SHOOTS
WOMAN I[N THE HIP
AS IT PASSES HER
PHILADELPRIA—(#)—Mrs.
Edna Holdmann was shot in
she hip as a street car pased
her.
Police found an empty car
ridge on the street car track.
The theory is that the cartridge
was dropped on the track and
discharged when a wheel passed
over it,
oo
British Envoy Confers
With French Premier
Today in New Cirisis.
LONDON, —(#)— The Reu
ters correspondent at Diredawa,
Ethiopia, said today he had
.~ heard in unconfirmed report
that an advance guard of 1,000
Italian troops with 1,500 native
troops had crossed the Ethiop- ‘
jan frontier west of Assab. |
| The report was that the Ital
jan force had entered the Dam- |
akil country and that the na
|tives were abandoning their vil
lages.
LONDON ,—(#)—Anthony Eden,
British minister for League of
Nations affairs, flew to Paris to
day to confer with Premier Pierre
Laval in the hope of strengthen
ing opposition to the Italo-Ethio
pian war at the League council
meeting Wednesday.
i Eden will attempt to get
France's signature to the joint
report of the collapsed tri-power
conference which urged sanctions
against the aggressor in such a
| war.
\ Revelations of a $50,000,000 deal
negotiated by Francis M. Rickett,
Briton, which gawve an American
company a 75-year oil and min
eral concession over half of Ethio
pia, added complications to
Eden's formidable task of trying
to secure unqualified French sup
port at Geneva.®
Despite the hurried and almost
!unprecedented denial of the Brit
yish government that it was either
aware of or inveolved in the deal,
'offlcial circles here regarded the
developments: as most unfortu
nate.
l The British government is pur
’suing an investigation to ascer
|tain if any British men or money
were involved in Ethiopia’s oil
concession to the African Devel
opment and Exploration company.
Sir Sidney Barton, British minis
| ter to Kthiopia, lis expected to
Isubmit a report.
{ It is understood Sir Sidney has
been instructed to advise Emperor
iHalle Selassie to withhold the
concession,
SELASSIE BEAMS
By JAMES A. MILLS
ADDIS ABABA.—(#)—The Brit
ish, French and Italian ministers,
upon instructions trgm their gov
ernments, today .made represen
tations to Emperor Haile Selassie
concerning the concession of oil
and mineral resources to an Am
erican corporation.
The = African potentate only
beamed upon ,k them and said hec
had a right to do' as he pleased
within his own house.
Sir Sidney Barton, the British
minister, urged the Emperor to
recall the concession by the lat
ter only replied, ‘Peace be unto
you,” and reminded the British
minister one of his own country
men, Francis M. Rickett, who
negotiated the concession, was al
ready soaring over the African
mountains to Europe with a sign
ed and sealed charter in his
pocket.
The stupefaction caused in the
(Continued on Page Three)
STATE NEWS BRIEFS
By The Associated Press
‘ NEWNAN.—lnjured in a Sat
| urday . automobile accident in
| which ‘two women were killed, a
I’man listed on hospital records as
| Eldridge Garrett of Columbus, was
| reported in serious condition here
| last night.
| Mrs. R. H. Kelley of Foit Ben
| ning and a young woman listed
’as Miss Mary Helen Brasch of
Columbus were killed in the acei
| dent which occurred when thei
| automobile es Colonel and Mrs.
;Kelley and that of the other two
|.collided. Colonel Kelley was able
| to leave the Néwnan hospital yes
| terday. His wife’'s body was sent
ito Arlington for burial.
et '\
- DOERUN. — Announcement of
“the engagement of Miss Addie
Fincher of m&!w Otis
oL wg + r.’é‘th}a;" A....‘:’;’:“l
12 Companies of Guards
i men Leave At Once for .
| Trouble Center.
E OTHERS MAY DIE
\ T
\ . "
‘“State of Insurrection
Declared By Governor -
In Isolating Town.
PELZER, S. C.,—(#)—A woman
wag killed and at least fifteen
wounded in a short-lived but ter
rific gun battle at the strike torn
Pelzer manufacturing company
mills here early today as workers
attempted to break picket lines.
Two companies of national
guard troops, called out by Gover
nor Olin Johnston, left for the
scene immediately from Greenville
and Greenwood under command of
Major Frank H. Barnwell of
' Florence,
} Mrs. Bertha Kelly, 21, mother of
' two children, was the one slain
She was killed during the fighting
at the company’'s main plant sit
uated here on a slight hill.
2. P. McDougal, a watchmaker
taking his son to work, wag per
haps fatally wounded in a second
gun battle at the Wo. 4 plant, a
mile from the principal plant.
Witnesses said aproximately §OO
!pistol and rifle bullets screamed
through the air during the two
fights that lasted but- five minutes
All those shot were said to be
members of the group of strikers
and pickets that ringed the plants
shortly before opening time.
| Dynamite Exploded
i A half stick of dynamite was
‘exploded in front of the main
{plant but it did no damage. By
standers said it wag set off ap
\parently with no other intention
than to add to the confusion. i
Those wounded included Jim
Davis, Will Revis, Paul Mahaffey,
W. A. Alexander, Mrs. Larry Camp
bell, Mrs., J. M. Ford, Mrs. Florence
Sergeant, Clarence Dunlap, Alvin
McDougal, Lizzie Gambrell, Sadie
Alexander and Stilla Sargeant, all
at the No. 4 plant.
Injured at the No. 1 plant in
'cluded James Saxon, shot in the hip
iand shoulder. =
i McDougal, 50, was shot in the
head .He was rushed to a hospital’
at Grenville where it was said his
condition was critical. v
Dunlap, also in a Greenville hos
’pital, was said to be in a serious
‘condition.
Others of the wounded were be
'ing cared for at an emergency hos«
pital here.
Troops called out by the govers
| —_— .
| (Continued on Page Three) !
Belgrano Defends
b ot ‘»’;W:.uc
: - . %‘:!;‘
Demand of Legion
LITTLE ROCK, ARK., (@
National Commander Frank N. Bel
grano, r., today defended the Am
erican Legion’s fight for immed
iate cash payment of the bonus,
saying “this will remain an issue
on its own merits until it is de-'
finitely settled and disposed of By~
congress.” ey
In a prepared address intermin
gled with an appeal for world peace
Belgrano told the Arkansas depart
ment convention “what Amercia
needs is is an immediate and
thorough reawakening of the spirit
of Americanism. We do not antiei
pate sly revolution, but we are
mobjized to a man to combat and
drive out these un-American
groups.” ;
Touching on the Legion's bonus
payment bill Belgrano said It
is high time for the veterans to
tell their congressmen and sena
tors that they are tired of being
taken up blind alleys.” R
Crouch, jr., of Griffin was §
here yesterday. The marriage is
to be on October 17, at the home
of the bride. Teo el
Miss Fincher is the daughter of
Mrs. Joseph C. Fincher and the
late Mr. Fincher. Mr. Crouch
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Otis Crouch of Grifin. He ds &
popular ‘young business man in
Griffin. o ,?
< —_— e
CUMMING. — Dr. George B.
Brice, 74, for 51 years a pwfi;:
ing physciian in this section, and =
prominent as a ?nd owner - and.
civic leader, died at his me
here yesterday, e
| el ha
ATLANTA.—Representatives of