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BPLSON NEWS
Rabv 1o
DAy ( Omes
Tury the 1 of waiting
nto eage and :r.fu!(
%7 ¥ avold
i nand
pre
’ for
ming,
m and
lled
ips to
3 S i “n;fl‘
3 : TSR
he: refreshes and
3 ! I les. It
; 1 elastie,
‘ - nposed
2 o Pled—pure ang
o 1 tiul to
Murse. DY Users, nany
N Ses, Me-testaq for
Jusc D 2 Of bottleg sold,
ot sk ALy druggist
Hiend, e umdfi&.—ld&élo..
*s Fri
riend
B the Pain
and to send the proceeds from
their sale to the Tallulah Falls
sehool. The Woman's Club voted
‘t« hearty endorsement of the pro
ieCt.
Mrs. Joel Wier talked .of the
assistance rendered by the Wom
an's Club in getting together
equipment for the cooking school
heing conducted at Knox Institute
for unemployed servants in Ath
ens. She also announced that the
club was sponsoring the cooking
school for employed eooks to be
held every day next week by Miss
Roseman from 3:30 to 5:30 in the
eorgia Power Co. building, cor
ner Hancock and College avenue
Miss Minnie Cutler, accompan
ied by Mrs. J. W, Bailey, played
two beautiful violin soles,
The guests were invited into
Mrs. Cutler’s dining-room where
the tea-table was. -beautifully
adorned with centerpiece in blue
and silver. Mrs. W. D: Beacham
poured tea, while Mrs. M. P.
(rCallahan and Miss Minnie Cut
ler assisted the hostess in serving.
PERSONALS
Friends of Miss Catherine Bar
nett are glad to see her out after
a recent illness, o
.« s 9
Messrs. H./ H. Payne, Carol
(Chapman and Ralph Watson of
the University of Georgia spent
the week-end in Moultrie, with
Mr, Watson’'s parents. 2
e * =x
Mrs. N. J. Willilams of Orlando,
Fla., was a visitor in Athens Wed
nesday. :
s s @
The many friends of Miss Annie
Lee Sheriff regret to learn of her
illness at her home on Pulaski
street.
®x % .
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Barton
spent Tuesday in Elberton.
- . -
Mrs. W. A, Wall and Mrs. M.
E. Wall of Crawford, were visi
tors in Athens Wednesday.
- . - .
Mrs. W. J. England and Mrs.
J. E. House of Crawford, were
visitors in the city Wednesday:
- - -
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Eades and
Mrs, Albert Hulme of Elberton,
wer visitors in Athens Wednes
day.
. & .
The friends of Mrs. H. G. Beard
will regret tp learn of her ill-ness‘
at her home on Thomas street.
" oe ;
shopping in the city Wednesday.
ed home after a delightful visit
with relatives in Americus, Ga.
. - ;
Mr. and Mrs. Garn Smith and
Mrs. Elmer Smith of Neese, were
shopping in the city Uednesday.
- - .
Mrs. Lewis Henderson of Green
ville, S. C., was a visitor in Ath
ens Wednesday.
L ®
Mr. Homer Burton of the Univer
sity of Georgia, spent the week-end
in Bowman, with relatives.
* = ®
Mr. Emmett Moseley of Sea
graves Mill, was shopping in the
city Wiednesday.
.« * B
Miss Katherine Rogers of Miami,
I'la,, is the guest of Mrs. Bob Dil
lard and Mr, Woolsen Harris.
s + =%
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Mitchell of
Kings Port, Tenn., are visiting her
her mother, Mrs. J. €. MeClain,
* * *®
Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Pendley have
returned from Macon, where they
attended the meeting of the State
Association of Optometrists. Dr.
P’endley was chosele on .the execu
tive board of the association.
s = -
Friends of Miss Lillilan Bond
will*be glad to know she is im
proving rapidly at General hospit
a4l after an apvendiecitis operation
Sunday afternoon.
- s ®
I'riends of Miss Jewell Lee Cole
man will be sorry to learn she
will undergo an operation tomor
row,
. * .
Mrs. Grover Smith's friends will
be pleased to learn she is doing
nicely at Gengral hospital.
‘= 5 8
; Mr. and Mrs, W. H. Mills of
Sardis, announce the birth of a
' daughter, January 26th, who has
' been named Susan Malona. Mrs,
' Mills will be remembered as Miss
i()‘lzmdine Tolbert.
- - -
§ Miss Thelma Bowden has re
turned to Athens after a vicit with
| her parents, Rev. and Mrs. H. I
' Bowden, in Cedartown.
{* s »
| Mrs. Elizabeth Hood has return
|ed from a visit with her brother,
?l’rnf. B. P. Casteel of Atlanta.
; AN St S i
| RECOVERY OF RING
ATLANTA — (#) — Recovery of
a diamond ring valued at $1,400 and
held by Miss Mollie Evans was au
thorized Wednesday by the Georgia
court of appeals in a ttrover pro
ceeding by Dr. W. M. Odum of
Bruhswick,
Dr. Drum charged the ring was
held as security for a loan and that
Miss Evans refused to deliver the
'ing when the money was offered.
Miss Evans claimed that under
the contract the ring was to be-
Come her property if the loan was
not repaid within 12 meonths.
Dr. Drum testified he twice of
fered to “repay the $285 loan but
that both times, Miss Evang de
layed acceptance.
e e —————————————
PRESCRIPTIONS
Carqfilfly ~oMpounads ‘
PRACTICAL METHOD
TO PLACE TALMADGE
NAME IN HAT SOUGCHT
| (Continuea ¥rom Page One)
podge—without meating and with
out sense,)”
One Washington gource saw in
the small crowd an indication that
there will be no presidential pwe
ferential primary in Georgia this
spring. The source said a large
outpouring probably would have
led Talmadge to test his strength
in & primary but that now the
state committee—conrolled by the
governor—would name a delega
tion.
Political Observation
Such action, political observers
believe, would result in the selec
tion of another delegation by the
pro-Roosevelt faction, the two
groups to contest for recognition
at Philadelphia.
John Henry Kirby, wealthy Texas
lumberman, and co-sponsor with
Talmadge of the meeting, had pre
dicted an attendance of 10,000 while
associates on the southern comiait
tee to uphold the constitution had
forecast as many as 25,000, The
hall seats 3,600,
‘The organizers blamel overcast
skies and ¢ool weather for the
small crowd which wag composed
mostly of Georgians.
The program of speeches was
climaxed by Talmadge's Tesump
tion of repeated attacks on the
New Deal. He stressed states’
rights, the “scarcity” program of
the administration and praised the
late Senator Huey Long as a
“noble stateSman’” although he
denied he was a ‘‘share-our-weal
ther.”
The meeting adopted a platform
combining attacks on nearly all
phases of the present administra
tion policies with affirmations of
faith in the 1932 Democratic plat
form which, it said, has been repu
diated by a “Socialistic” and
“Communistic’” white house.
The Howell resolution endors
ing Governor Talmadge as a pres
idential choice was sprung sud
denly after the speeches and
brought an ovation from the hall.
It was approved by acclamation
with scattering protests from the
floor.
Not In Accord
! There was no official lists o
representatives from Georgia o 1
other states but it was known
some of the latter were not in ac
cord - with endorsement of Tal
madge.
Tuesday night C. H. Corn, of
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Franklin, Tenn., emerged from an
executive committee meeting and
said he and his friends had not
come to Georgia to endorse any
candidate, :
A parade of speakers denounc
ing the New Deal preceded .th¢
Talmadge endorsement.
Kirby led in laying down the
verbal barrage which included
praise of ‘the Supreme Court as
the “bulwark” of the constitution
al government. ‘
* Governor Talmadge told the
crowd that not all the opponents
of the New Deal are going to die
lu;fnn- next June 23, date of the
next national party convention.
“We lost Cutting (Reublican
senator from New Mexico), we lost
Schall (Republican senator from
Minnesota), we lost Long (Demo
cratic senator from Louisiana).and
only yesterday Governor 0. K.
Allen, of *Louisiana died,” Tal
madge said. '
“We little men are still here and
Jim Farley and those bureaucrats
are going to find that all of us are
not going to die and fall in air
planes before June 23.”
Sharring Burden
Turning to Gerald L. K. Smith
organized of Long’'s share-our
‘wealth - clubs, Talmadge said, *1
believe in staring' the burden but
I do want to take my hat off tc
that noble statesman, Huey Long.”
Talmadge drew more cheers than
the other speakers.
“Give it to him Gene” was heard
frequently from the audience as
the governor developed his criti;
cism of the nation’s chief execa
tive . =
Washington dispatches indicated
. members of the Georgia congress
{jonal delegation will not answer
lthe latest Talmadge attack.
Asked if he would deliver a re
ply from the house floor, Cox re
plied “certainly not—there’'s noth
ing to answer—he didn’t say any
| thing.” 5
ATTORNEY TURNS
TO LEOPOLD IN
INVESTIGATION
(Continuea From Page One)
resentative Leroy M. Green, house
minority leader, declared prison
conditions were “rotten” and
charged penal institutions were
used “for political patronage and
putting incompetents in control.”
The “China Clipper” carried
about 110,000 pieces of mail on its
first trans-Pacific trip.
W cure each tobacco in a Chesterfield
the way that is best for that tobacco
. « . another reason why Chesterfields are
- milder and taste better
When we say that a tobacco
is good enough for Chesterfield
cigarettes, we mean just this—
.. . TOBACCO that is ripened in
the sunshine, then picked, leaf by
leaf, when fully ripe.
... TOBACCO that is cured just
right by the farmer— flue-cured,
air-cured or sun-cured to seal in its
[lnteresting Sidelights
On Grass Roots Meet
’ At Macon Yesterday
(Continuea From rfage One)
his prepared text):
“Let’'s sort of offer a prayer that
the big boys will do like the farm
er S—take the government's checks
iand vote as they please.”
L_ “They (the national administra
]tior}) promised to cut expenses and
,I'educe the debt. When they forgot
| their promises to the Democratic
party, they are not Democrats.
They're stealing a name—cheating.”
| “The great thing to remember it
Ithat we've got men and women in
'this country who want to work for
a living—that don’t want anybody's
dole.”
“There’s a good deal of a racket
in the way they have been handling
Ithese AAA checks, too; don’t you
| forgets that,”
One Talmadge enthusiast, an aged
farmer, literally tore his shirt—
whooping things up for “Old €ene.”
He crawled up on the stage and
whenever Talmadge said things
that wleased him particularly, he
waved a chair over his head—some
what to the discomfiture of nearby
dignitaries. - Result: He tore his
shirt and coat sleeves, too.
| One Talmadge thrust that got a
big laugh was his reference to
“trained social workers.” _He said
Washington sent into Georgia to
tell Georgians about child rearing,
“women that never had a baby of
itheir own.” 4
RECEIVE MANY SCHOOLS
! 'The Armstrong Memorial Junior
college and the Waters Avenue
Elementary school, both in Sav
annah, are receiving many visits
{ this year from Georgia superin
| tendents are speakers, the Janu
ary issue of Current Items, Uni
versity of Georgia school monthly
says.
l “The 'junior college is new this
|year and is housed in one of the
Ifinest college buildingg in the
! country,” says the Current Items
]article. “A modern curriculum is
| being rapidly developed.
i “The Waters Avenue school is
imarked by a very advanced eurri
jculum which furnishes both an
|activity program and a good citi
| zenship program. ‘The school has
| attracted national attention.”
‘ Virginia ha® about 3,000 miles
| of navigable fishing waters,
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HIGH OFFICIALS READ
WITH INTEREST NEW
}; DEAL'S INDICTMENT
{ (Continuea rrom FPage Omne)
| ———
if'arfifal watched the kaleidoscopic
whirl of political events.
Republicans were gaying that
!Smith and Talmadge would deprive
President Rooseveit of many votes,
but Demoerats replied that many
;mm‘e would rally t. ¢he New Deal
Ist:mdanl, with the result that its
strength would increase,
Colonel Frank Knox of Chicago,
in a Cleveland speech in which he
said last night that the New Deal
’was hiding ‘“its socialistic skele
ton” behind a ‘“stolen” Democratic
cloak, added:
‘ “Roosevelt has retained control
of the radical element, but he has
loompletfly lost the conservative
jelement, a cataclysmie Aivision[
!exists in his party that will be|
;fatnl to success in November.”
{ But Senator Barkley, Demoerat,
‘Kemm-k,\‘, declared that “for every
jone that walks out with Smith,
{four will come in_through other
Edoors."
{ After studying the speech in
{which Governo L.andon declared
:that “clinching proof”’ of the New
| Deal’'s failure lies in the persist
’ence of large-scale ynemployment,
| Representative Snell of New York,
| Republican leader, said: “A good,
‘upstanding speech.”
{ Representative FKFerguson, Demo
ierat, Oklahoma, called the speech
{ “terrible” and Landon ‘‘just anoth
er fence straddling Kansas Repub
{lican,” while Senator Capper, Re
!]')ubli(‘zm. Kansas, said a program
!such as Landon's would *‘‘put the
;‘('uuntr.\' on the road of recovery.”
‘ Landon struck responsive chords
among anti-New Dealers by as- |
| sailing what he termed “political
wasters,’’ ‘“tax-eating bureacl'acy",t
{“half” baked legislation; “gross'
' ever-centralization of power” and
| “powerful forces trying to convince
. our people that the constitution is
'not their charter of liberties.”
| Bggs of aligators have no hard
shell. They are covered with a
yielding, transparent material that
| glves like rubber.
oo s e s L
. 9 |
forßaby’s Cola
| ) Proved best by two
| { generations of mothers.
IV ICKS
VR e S VAPORUB
good aroma and flavor.
. . . TOBACCO that is aged and
mellowed in hogsheads or bales for
two years or more until free from
harshness or bite.
That is the kind of tobacco we
use for Chesterfields— mild,
ripe tobacco, cured just right
and aged for flavor and taste. /
Wi
“8.C.” Relieves Your
Headache In 3 Minutes
Realizing that no one drug can
relieve all headaches, as they come
from so many causes, a registered
pharmacist has developed a com
bination of several ingredients, so
blended and proportioned as to re
lieve almost any headache in a few
minutes. You ean get thig formula
wherever drugs are sold under the
name “B. C.” 10c and 25¢ packages,
and when you have one of those
Have Your Shoes Ry
Shined as We Press
Your Suit—>s¢ : o, -
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PAGE THREE