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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1935)
e e LOCAL COTTON | i — MIODLtNG (O PR AT pREVIOUS CLOSE.... ....11 1-8¢ B, 103, No. 247. phinx Club Te onor Athenian; ew Men Named oSS o N BT o s A 3 s B R ARt oo RS 2 e BR R AR R s R (V%( 7 i’/%f RSR L e Pres e B SR e 14 ‘ R 2 s s B R g S e # e S s ¥ R s 3 e ohR s e R o R A [ PR R SRR R s2P > R 3 5 N g # R "'“.’g‘.-g& %7 E: e E Sene . W‘%fi%’fi' R e R s :3-'3;*-‘:::".'*-5:??‘ P o o e bs% W e Vi R o b 'ggf%a;* PR, e B B i R P Lo, Ry 5 DR S R bR R R 4 e R L R f-;v"-‘;S»,;-:;':f::;:::::;';,; R RS R R R SIS R 3 e : : A o 2 ; R 48 G s " g ROBERT R. GUNN whert . Gunn, prominent Ath vas chosen today as a hon -1 member to Sphinx, highest Lnking non-scholastic organiza ion on the University of Georgia A PUS Three students were se ected to Join the ranks of the utstanding club which has been n existence since 1897 and in ludes 298 members. Winburn Rogers, Milledgeville: wn Bond. Toccoa, and Harry Ashburn, were the stu lents honored. Rogers is editor of the Red and lack, treasurer of the Kappa Ipha fraternity, vice-president of ). D. K., member of the Georgia thletic board, manager intra mural athletics, member of the ilee club, president of X club, resident Sigma Delta Chi, pro essional journalism fraternity, hnd member of IRC. Bond is co-captain of the foot all team, letterman in varsity rack, member of Sigma Nu social raternity, president of the ¥. M. . A., and belongs to Gridiron, ). D. K., Scabbard and Blade, ind Biftad. Baxter is the helder of @ Dem sthenian speaking key, editor of he Pandora, student yearbook; president of the freshman class 932-33, winner of the Charles A. Iravall scholarship 1934-35, win ier of the Bert Michael scholar ship 1935-36, freshman impromptu ebate and inter-collegiate de= ates, dean’s list student, member f Gridiron, member of X club, and ecretary-treasurer of 0. D, K. Fach year Sphinx selects the outstanding students for member s anad the organization is heid n the highest of regard. Initia ion began this morning when the ewly elected began wearing the luge “S” on their backs, Initia ion will continue for the under raduates during the week-end, ncluding a skit between -the alves of the Georgia-Alabama M Gunn, owner of Gunn’s len’s store, is most prominent in Continued on Page Six) USE LEAVES FOR FERTILIZER AND OBEY ATHENS LAW \thenians were admonished to i ot to sweep leaves and other 15h into the street, nor to burn . the pavement. Chief E. Weldon Wood cites a CILY ordinance which makes it un for any person or persons t throw, sweep or cause so b iced, thrown, or swept any “ grass,” limbs, leaves or rash, against the curbing ( nto any part of any street E t the city limits of Athens.” t of this ordinance may be ] d in recorder’'s court. Weeping up leaves the sug -5 nade that they be piled t-of -theway-place there . future wuse as fertilizer Rardens., h as Athenians are very ’ nterested in gdrdens, and ’ ng their places of resi the leaves should be util tead of being burned or VEDL into the sStreet to be carted Anyhow. the chief says it’s the law to sweep them £ street. Members of Athens | Employment Service | Attend Conference S ! : €e members of the Nationalz e ployment office staff here, ‘'l today for a one-day confer-E ’ ith other state Re-employ= | "Il service workers in Macon. | she meeting was called by W. | ‘- Abbott, aeting state director, | “19 18 for statisticians and man- | “B€rs of every branch office of thei “ice in Georgia. Several repre “Nlatives from Elberton will also! #end the conference, | Those giong from here are Lou- | tl¢ Johnson and Annie Bvans, l ATHENS BANNER-HERALD Full Associated Press Service Ethiopian Warriors Converge on Two Fronts Georigic: Piay; f{lai)a;na* in South’s F gat;wg G;‘id*D;tel LOCALS ARE. SLIGHT FAVORITES IN' GAME ERE 00 SHTIRDY iFour Dan;;zi;i Interest! | To Big Week-end at | | University i ' JOHNNY HAMP HERE | ESphinx Intiation And Von? t Gammon Memorial | | Exercises Slated ' By GUY TILLER, JR. One of the biggest week-ends in the history of the University of Georgia is under full steam. Elec~ tion of members to Sphinx, highest honorary organization on the came pus; Pan-Hellenic dances, with Johnny Hamp and his famous or= chestra furnishing the music; nam ing of new members of O. D. K., high ranking campus club; selec tion of sponsors for Georgia’'s foot ball games; many social functions planned by the fraternities, the unveiling of a tablet honoring Von Gammon, only Georgia football player to die from gridiron injuries and last, but by no means least, the Georgia -~ Alabama football game, are the features. Fans began pouring into the Classie City as early as this morn ing and it appears that the attend ance for the football game will soar above 20,000, Crisp weather and the cloudless sky furthered the intentions of many of making Athens their home for the week end. Last Preparations The Georgia football team will go through their last paces this afternoon in preparation for the Alabama contest. The Bulldogs will work out lightly on Sanford field today while the Crimson Tide is adding the finishing touches to ther attack in Atlanta. The Ala bama eleven will spend the night in Atlanta and will come over Sat urday just, before the game. Tonight a mammoth parade is planned by students, with another such demonstration and a bonfire slated for Saturday night should the unbeaten Bulldogs hand the Capstone crew a drubbing. Seniors will don cane and derby tomorrow morning for their annual parade. John Bond, co-captain of the Georgia Bulldogs, Winburn Rogers, editor of the Red and Black, uni versity weekly, and Harry Baxter, edithr of the Pandora, Georgia vear-book, were selected by Sphinx this morning. This trio is out- (Continued on Page Two) TODAY’S QUESTION ABOUT THE LEGION WHAT IS THE AMERICAN LEGION ENDOWMENT FUND? The American Legion Endow ment Fund is a fund of $5,000,000, contributed by members of the Legion and the Auxiliary and by the general public jointly in a cam paign conducted in 1925-1926. In come from the fund. which is held intact as to principal, is devoted exclusively to the Legion’s rehabil itation and child welfare work. The American Legion Endowment Tund Corporation holds the fund in trust and turns oyer the in come from it to the Legion to be used only for the two purposes named. STATE NEWS BRIEFS By The Associated Press RS L R S R I SAVANNAH —(#)— Mrs. Frank A. Dennis of Eatonton was elect i ed president of the Georgia divisi {on, United Daughters of the Con-| 'l‘edenacy, as the annual conven- | | tion closed yesterday. She had no’ [ opposition. | { Other officers elected are: Mrs | {Clyde ¥. Hunt of Thomson, firstl vice president; Mrs. C. T. Till man of Quitman, second vice| president; Mrs. Otis Chivers of | Dublin, third vice president; Mrs. Frank Leverett of Eatonton, cor~ responding secretary; Mrs, Marki A. Smith of Thmaston, recorder of | crosses of military service; Mrs.{ Harry Craig of Augusta, auditor, | land Mrs. A. Blemont Dennis of | ! Covington, editor. t | Miss Phoebe Elliott, Savannah; Mrs. J. H. Blount, Macon, and Mrs. Mattie Lyons, Marietta, wer? 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Miss Bland is from Lumpkin, Ga. Four dances will be social features of the week-end. Johnny Hamp and his famous orchestra wil| furnish the music. Release of Two Millions PWA Money For Georgia Announced !ANO;I'-'l_-IOER TROPICAL i RM iS MENACE JACKSONVILLE, Fla,~—~&)— Northeastern Nicaragua and Honduras were menaced to | day by a tropical storm which struck death-dealing blows at Jamaica and eastern Cuba earlier in the week. i The United States weather ! bureau office here said indi { cations were the storm would [ move inland during the next { few hours. | Winds at the eenter of the ‘ disturbance were said tc be of | near-hurricane force. | A | | i S ]Search for Assassin Inten ~ sified as Notorious Gang 1’ Leader Dies | BY B. GREGORY HEWLETT | NEWARK, N. J.— (#) —Newark !pu]ice held the wyoung widow of {Arthur (Dutch Schultz) Flegenhei !mer today in the hope she can sup- I ply some clue in a sweeping search | for the assassing of the gang chief !tain and three henchmen, | The 21-year-old woman, Mrs. | Frances Flegenheimer, was booked |as a material witness last night, jless than three hours after Schultz | died of the woundg inflicted by irival gang bullets. ! The racketeer himself, one of the |last of the bigtime underworld lead iers who became notorious during { the prohibition era, gave the police [no help. | He died at 8:15 p. m, yesterday lin city hospital. deliriously numbl ling words which those by his bed iside could not understand. | Bernard Rosenkrantz, Schultz’'s | chauffeur and one of the quartet mowed down in a case gun battle Wednesday night, died early to day. l Otto Berman and Abraham Land ! ————— i (Continued On Page Three) DALTON. — Mrs, Hemry W. Nevin, wife of the managing edi tor of the Dalton Citizen, was killed last night as a passenger train struck her automobile -at a! crossing on the N. C. and Bt, L. railroad. She was alone in the car when lthe crash occurred, Henry W. Nevin, her husband, | is a son of the late James B. Nevin. for many years editor of the At lanta Georgian. Ie has been con nected with the Dalton Citizen since 1932. Mre. Nevin's parents, tweoj ]da.ughters and a brother also sur~l | vive her. She was the former | | Miss Maurine Louise Denny of | Vandalia, Tl l JEFFERSON—Mrs. H, 1. Mob-‘ e | ]Clarke. County’s $9,015 ' Will Be Forthcoming ! i In This Payment | WASHINGTON —{(#) — Release lof $2,166,064 for Works Progress zadministration projects in. Georgia fwas announced here today. ! | The money will be forwarded tol { Miss Gay B. Shepperson, state ad ministrator, who will select the pro jects most adaptable to the speedy prosecution of her state program. | Savannah received a’large share | with allotments of $80,073 and $58.- !080 for two malaria control pro lgrams and $270,367 for a commun-l ity service program. Bloomingdale ! |in Chathary county, wag granted! [sloß/972 for a flood control r;rn-! | gram, | ' Improvement of city streets in‘ { Columbus costing $196,445 and rve- | | pairs on public highways in Mus icogee county costing $33,624 were‘ ]included in the list. | Construction of a new channel for Rocky Creek in Augusta drewi $145,200. Another allotment of, $108,717 was approved to repair’. schools in Richmond county and |5146,880 wag granted for a malaria control program. l . Clarke county received $9,015 to construct and improve scl;ools andl Macon was allotted $1,032 for al community service program. ‘ Road improvements in Crisp/ (Continued On Page Three) Jackie Coogan Will Gain Possession of Fortune Tomerrow HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — #) — Jackie Coogan becomes of age to morrow and iato his control will pass the vast fortune which grew from hig earnings as the greatest juvenile star of the silent motion picture era. ‘What the fortune amounts to, exactly, mno one knows, except Jackie, his mother and their busi ness manager. A movie colony concensus placed the figure at near- Iy a million dollars. The Cocgang have assiduously denied themselves to interviewers since their return from New York, and the business manager, Arthur Bernstein, flatly refused to discuss Jackie's financial status. “He’s going to be the target for every brand of shark, clip-artist and chiseler, anyway,” Bernstein said. “And I don’'t mind telling vou we're afraid of kidnapers. That’s all T can say about it.” Jackie himself, dodged the ques tion, replying, “I don’t have any idea how much I'm coming into. My mother and Mr. Bernstein handled everything.” He will receive his fortune in quarterly installments. Most of it is in real estate, with negotiable pbonds and actual cash composing part of it. His fortune was considerably en larged through life insurance pre miums, paid several months ago. after the death of his father, John Coogan, sr., in an automobile acci dent near San Diego. To the father is accredited the (Continued on Page Two) —~ESTABLISHED 1888 Athens, Ga., Friday, October 25, 1935. WALIBU BEACH FILM COLONY SAVED FROM. RUIN BY FIRE TODAY Back-Fire Turns Blaze in| Time to Save Many | Fine Homes 3 500 FIREMEN WORK Damage -Estimated at 8 Million Dollars Already | Done by Fire ; LOS ANGELES—(#)—The fam ed Malibu Beach film colofy was saved from destruction today as the worst blaze in southern Cali fornia’s protracted battle against raging brush fires was brought un der control, ‘Fire met fire to halt the roading advance of flames barely 100 feet away from the north end of the beach resort. 5 i Five hundred nearly exhausted fighters started a back-fire, herded llt back to meet the on-rolling wall lof flames, and with a spectacular lcla,sh of fire that leaped high in Ithe air against a billowing back ground of smoke, the menace to the Malibu colony was ended, at least temporarily. Fighters said unless a high wind ! developed to renew the fury of the flames, or lash hot embers over the beach section, the danger was over. Rages in Backwoods ‘Back in the Malibu mountains, several miles away, the blaze rag ed on through the powder-dry brush, yet its advance on the line to the south was believed stopped at Malibu Creclk, i Firefighters in this area said the i 5400.000 white, castle-like mansion |of Mrs. May K. Rindgé, was safe. Prominent members of the movie 'colony who have homes on the | (Continued on Page Two) ACGUSED SLAYER OF CIX REMAINS SILENT Leo Hall Resists Question ing; Is Implicated by Woman's Confession SEATTLE — (# — Defiant and close-liped, Leo Hall, 33, resisted questioning concerning a mass mur der mystery today after authorities said he ‘had bheen implicated in the crime by the confession of a wom an. . Sheriff Willlam B. Severyns said Mrs. Larry Foulis, 28-year-old beer parlor waitress, had signed a con fession accusing the former boxer and dry dock worker of slaying six persong at a gay house party on Erland’s Point in March, 1934. The alleged confession said Mrs. Poulos and Hall, masked and wear ing gloves, entered the Frank Flieder home in quest of “easy money,” and after the six people in the house were robbed the vic tims were killed so “they couldn’t talk.” : Through the night of question ing. Hall maintained his stoical at titude. “Hall seems to have a lot on his mind,” said Detective Captain Ernest Yoris of the Seattle homi cide squad. “We have a lot of corroborative evidence for Mrs. Poulos’ statement.” Earlier in the evening, O. K. (Continued on Fage Two) LOCAL WEATHER | Sy p 2| » s Ry 7 & Generally fair to-®§ 4 ‘.{ night and Satur- I“ ) day; possibly < $ ’ light frost in ex-|" “4 i\ posed places in 00, == the interior to- Zon night. l x ‘ FALR & TEMPERATURE HIRDeNE . v b s as ey 4100 L S NN (X BRI o o i ek a 8 I i i 000 RAINFALL Inches last 24 h0ur5........ 0.00 Tota] since Oectober 1...... .99 Deficit since October 1 .... 135 Average October rainfall... 2.91 Total since January 1......38.29 Deficit since January 1 ..., 4.54 Head Invasion By Alabama S - - G SR R 5 R A e:e e L R B SRR R e " %%;;fi'/\"ffi:-’;' P ol TR e B i ,7 7 i B L N RS =§“-” B P E v e i R R R X BB o o Eemaae owmEE o NGS i O e A /(/ R dnaE o - ' SR R GSN . yF.oo e g S B e s e R R S R e capT e e W SR S B ) s A SRR R _-::1:5::%' B B RS BBy e S e o 3 B BAy R ; T sey i . . - w i , L R & Ry 3 o PR R, AR B Y e L e s S e g oS eRe e R 3 e R S ke W o, 0 | TRSECE LL 8 A o ’ ;;::u‘ u-v:f: 3 i > v % ol 8 £ i RsU 3 i B R R ! R ?;g;.fv: S B e S ; e These two gentlemen will head the invasion of the Alabama Crim son Tide to Athons tomorrow fo-~ their engagement with Georgia’s Bulldogs. Coach Frank Thomas ig shown at left, while on the right is Cantzin Jimmy Walker, brilliant énd whose play in the Alabama line has been onc of the features of the Tide's two major victories this season. Talmadge Plans to Pay Million And Half on State Debts Jan. 1 Unpaid Appropriations to Be Only $300,000 by First of January ———— BY GLENN RAMSEY (Associated Press Staff Writer) ATLANTA — {#) — Governor Talmadge plans to pay approxim ately $1,500,000 on gtate debts by January 1. “Georgia’s outstanding unpaid appropriations will be only about $300,000 the first of the year,” the governor said today. These debts, created during for mer administrations when revenue was insufficient to cover sums ap propriated by the legislature, total ed more than $6,100,000 when Tal madge took office in 1933. Under a legislative act passed during the regime of Richard B. Russell, jr, now United States sen ator, the state thereafter was pro hibited from creating such debts. Georgia now must live within its revenue. | While the governor did not com l‘ent on plans to pay out a million sand a half dollars, his statement jconcerning the debt at the end of |the year was followed by the peru isal of the state’s finance sheet which showed $1,861,507 in unpaid appropriationg to date. Payment of $1,5600,000 would re duce this figure to $361,507, near the figure estimated by the gover nor to be the debt by the end of the year. It could not be learned from (Continued on Page Three) How Large Is Army Of Unemployed Now? You Take a Guess WASHINGTON — (#) — Govern ment reports telling oi sizeable in creases in the number of Americans who have jobs raised this question today: “How big is the army of the un employed now?” - To that there was no official an swer, for the government does not keep figures on the question, and private estimates disagree. - The American Federation of Lab or's estimate is frequently quoted. The latest A. F. of L. report was that there are 11,000,000 jobless, though this total includes those on government work reljef. The Works Progress administra tion’s latest estimate of the num mer working under the $4,000,000,- 000 work relief appropriation was 1,310,733 as of October 17. In addi tion, there were several hundred thousand working on other govern ment construction. Both public and private employ - ment are swinging upward with government spending and better business conditions. However, ex perts contend these gains do not necessarily spell corresponding re-{ ductions in the total of the unem- | vloyed, for the number of "em-l ployables” is increasing all the time as young people grow up. Secretary Perkins reported 350,000 workers had found jobs in manu facturing and non-manufacturing industries in September, bringing the factory employment index up to 83.6 per cent of the 1933-25 level. or the highest #t had reached othig gelre -o o ohs A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—sc Sunday JIMMY WALKER SAILS TODAY FOR AMERICA SOUTHAMPTON, Eng.—(®) A slender, energetic, little man moved slowly up a crowded gangplank of the liner Man hattan early today as the ship lay wrapped in a deep fog. " "No band played ““Will you love me in December as you did in May?” There were no cheers. No one cried, “So Long, Jimmy!” He was just another passen ger! James J. Waltker leay ing England on his way back to his native New York. CHIGOPEE WORKERS ASK FOR JOBS BACK Advertisement in Paper Seeks Names of Men | Who Flogged Officials ! GAINESVILLE, Ga.— (#) —Seek ing an end to violence which caus ed a shut down of the Chicopee cotton mill here Monday, throw ing 750 persons out of work, the jobless today published an adver tisement asking that names of five men who flogged a mill official be furnished to “proper authorities.” | Meanwhile, a meeting of “every loyal employe of Chicopee” has been lcalled for Saturday morning at the Chicopee gymmnasium. A committee of four workers arranged the meet !mg, and obtained consent of the I mill management to hold it at the gymnasium. , “Shall 1200 innocent people suf-, fer from the unlawful act of five ;men?" the advertisement asked, | referring to the recent abduction and flogging of M. T. Grimes, gen eral manager of the mill, by five masked men. The message, which bore the notation, “this advertisement paid for by employes of Chicopee,” said ’that families of the 750 workers had { “no prospect of getting employment lelsewhere," and were jobless be- (Continued on Page Thres) Foreich News ON THumBNAIL By The Associated Press ! Two Italian and two Ethiopian! !armie-s prepared for battles on the | northern and southern fronts which | may prove decisive. l Emperor Haile Selassie of Eth i iopia was reported more confident !of the ultimate success of his | arms. : ‘ | s ; King George, proroguing the British parliament, expressed his l“gravest concern” over the Italo- Ethiopian war. ’ Premier Mussolini put the next move up to Britain to promote peace and ease the European situ ation by withdrawing 15,000 troops from Libya. . -—-n-——-—-q - o British diplomats said nc bar HoYE]| FOUR ARMIES SEEM ABOUT 0 MEET IN TWE GREAT BATTLES Italians Are Confident of - Outcome of Fresh Drive * Into Interior e Il Duce Withdraws Some Of Troops From Libya; Diplomatic Move (By the Associated Press.) iy Uncounted thousands of Ethio pian warriors converged on two . fronts today to repel further ad vances by Italy’'s Pascist lzgions. Four armies seemed about to come to grips in two big battles which may decide the fate of Em peror Halile Selassie’'s desert and mountain empire. The fortress towns of Makale on the northern fgont and Gor rahei on the south were the ral lying points for major bodies of Ethiopians, Italian air scouts re ported. In the north, General Emilio De Bono had thrown his lines some where forward of Adigrat, Aduwa and Aksum, his three big columns totaling more than 100,000 men in the last advance. In the south, General Rudolfo Graziani straightened his front along a line from Walwal, site of the famous border incident, to Dolo, the first major point to fall on the Italian Somaliland front. sz o Doubte. . The methodical Ttalians appars ently entertained mo doubts as tae the outcome of the fresh offensive. whose ultimate objective is Harar, strategic crossroads of the Ethio pian empire. In the capital city. Addis Ababa, the Lion of Judah gave every evidence of renewed confidence that his armies ean withstand the assaults of the enemy. From Harar came word that 12,000 well-equipped Ethiopian in fantry, cavaley and anti-aircraft troops, the main body of the Harar regylars, had started for the southern front after a review by Ras Nasibu in Ethiopia's only walled city. 5 % The Ras, governor of Harar said Jijiga, eastward by 50 miles, would be one of the main points of defense on the southeastern front. A Reuters (British) News Agency dispatch from Harar re lated four Italian planes attacketf’ Gabradarre today, but their (Continued On Page Three) Industry Taking Up ;nus y 12 gglp Yl . Slack, F.DR. Says »' et ol | WASHINGTON, —(f— With &@ | ideclar.auon that private indus‘ | is now “taking up the slack™ w;:,, | unemployment but that . the nation | zevertheless should inecrease ,@‘3 | donationg to ° charity, President Roosevelt asked support for a pri | vate welfare drive that is in pre’e»»'% | eress throughout the country t?’;s% | day | In an optimistic address del’ive;«‘«‘i% ered by radio last night on the | opening program of the 183&*’% Mobilization for Human Needs. | the president stressed reports of ’E increased employment. o | He referred to a September em | ployment gain of 350,000 workers : in private industries which was ; reported to the department of = | labor. sl gain was being.struck with Mus solini in peace moves. ¥t i Paris heard revision of treaties was under consideration in both Berlin and London in favor d§ Germany ineident to the east Af rican war. ; @‘2 Britain awaited replies to an in= vitation to the world’s major pm@ ers — Italy among them — for & naval conference beginning De cember 2. o & e —————— e 2 ASMARA, Eritreat, —(#)— Count ‘Galeazzo Ciano gave a graphie demonstration Thursday of Italy’s "modern, aerial war }works against the more primitive, . eN R e