Newspaper Page Text
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BEL CHURCH SCHOOL
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Easte season is mnear
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Monday, April 13th
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N P ‘ AR BETTER SHOP—Second Floor
~SW® Michael s
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’Final Toll of 200 Is
e .
Feared; Rehabilitation
| May Take Ten Years
| e
| (Continued Frum Page One)
night which many sgpent in the
open.
Emergency hospitals cared for
the 800 less seriousty injured,
WIPA pick and shovel crews made
progress in rem.ving shatterea
bricks and timbers from the city
atreets.
Unmarred by the catastrophe
from 'which officials forecast it
would take the city ten years to
recover, a statue of a Confederate
veteran stood with rifle poised amid
the ruins of the square,
J. E. Palmour, city attorney, was
;named chairman of the genera] re
lief committee. '
“The Red Cross iv providing food,
clothing and shelter,” Palmour
said. “Supplies have been furn
ished by the WPA and the Red
Cross. Workers will pull dowu
dangerougly damaged buildings,
clear the streets and hunt addi
tional bodies today.”
Committee Miembers
Members: of the general relief
committee include Dr. W. A. Pal-
Jmour, mayor, Dr. C, J, Welhorn,
county health commissioner, Cash
R. Hammond, W. L. Norton and
Miss Margaret Dizney.
Three other committees were
named to speed rehantlitation.
W. C. Hunt, eastern division di
rector of the Red Cross, was nam
ed chairman of a committee on
food, clothing and housing. Mem
bers are A. W. Bell, Glenn Mec-
Connell and Bovd Holland, county
commissoners, R. W. Smith, ir,,
Hammond Johnson, Lester Hosch
and Dr. Cash R. Hammond.
‘Hedding the police and routing
committee is Adjustant General
Lindley Camp, head of the nation
al guard units detailed to the city.
Members are Col. Thomas Alex
ander of the national guard, Chief
of Police B. J. Hopkins, Blmer
Ward and W. C. Thomas,
R, E. Willilams, district WPA
engineer, was named head of the
wrecking and clearing committee.
Associated with him are H. W.
Morgan, C, M. Lyle, Parks Martin,
jr., and Richard Courtney. ’
* Damage of $15,000,000
Municipal authorities said pro
perty damage would total $15,000,-
000 in one of the south’s worst tor
nadoes. '
Thousands were homeless and
the Salvation Army alone fed more
than 1,000 victimg in two hours
last night with half a dozen other
relief units doing similar tasks of
mercy.
The tordano which struck with
little warning here about 8:30 yes-
Thos. H. Jackson of the West
ern Union Telegraph Co. has been
ddtailed #to Gaipesville, Ga., to
assist with the telegraphic mes
sages during the next few days.
5% “ RS
Miss Dorothy Davis returned
Monday afternoon from Forsyth,
following a week-end visit to Miss
Martha Bray, a student of Bessie
Tift college.
*s @ .
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Lamp-.
kin announces the birth of a boy
at the General hospital on April
3, who has been named Bobby
Gene. '
& & »
Try installing some bright
lights outside and away from the
screened-in front porch if you de
sire to keep insects away in sum-
PR ; ;
terday morning followed death
}dealing storms which cut a hap
‘hazard path across the mid-south
Sunday night, doing greatest dam
age at Tupelo, Miss.,, where nearly
200 died.
After inflicting heavy property
loss at Acworth and Lavonia in its
journey acress Georgia the wind
descended on Gainesville and then
struck’ again at Anderson, . C.
Just across the Georgia-Carolina
line where 30 were injured although
none was reported killed.
Lasting but three minutes here
the twister spread its pall through
out the business district and left
not a single structure that escaped
its fury in 14 solid blocks of brick
structures,
Homes Destroyed
Beautiful homes were a mass of
splinters, the Negro section was
levelled and in many places not
even the foundations were left to
show where buildings had been.
Rain and fire added to the misery
of the situation. Time and again
firemen had to change hoses to
take care of a new outbreak of
flames.
Throughout the day and night
Civilian Conservation Corps work
ers volunteers and national guards
men toiled to clear away brick and
huge timbers to reach bodies of
persons caught in the wreckage.
Fear that toflay’s search would
send the death list close to 200 was
expressed by G. J. Anderson, sup
erintendent of the Cooper Manu
facturing company, whose trousers
factory was one of the chief places
of horror,
Fire followed the wind's destruc
tion of the three-story plant ana
some 45 bodies, mostly those of
women, were removed from the
smouldering ruins yesterday. And
erson said that of 125 workers who
checked in yesterday morning only
three had been accounted for,
Boys Escape
Three boys escaped unhurt byl
squeezing out of the back of the,
second floor. The rest of the em
ployes, Anderson' said, apparentlyl
were trapped when they attempted!
escape by the front gtairway as the
storm hit, ‘
City authorities said several}
structures levelled in the main.
business section probably would
vield up other bodies as soon as
it was possible to get to them.
All that could be done for many
hours after the tornado had pa;ssed!
was to keep fires from spreading
and seek out the places where most
bodies could be found.
Few cities in Georgia have a
more beautiful setting than Gaines-’
ville. It nestles at the foot of the
Blue Ridge mountains. Here is!
located Brenau college, a nation-'
known institution which escaped
the storms fury except for losing
part of the roof and numerous
windows. None of the women stu-i
dents was killed. Riverside Mili
tary Academy also is located in the!
outskirts of the city but it escaped
damage.
Church is Mprgue
Just outside the tornado zone, the
first Methodist church was turned |
into a morgue and hoapital, at thel
same time acting as a clearing
house for the Red Cross,
As undertakers toiled through
the night the church reeked witn
formaldhyde as bodies hastily were
embalmed to prevent the spread of
pestilence.
When the injured were given
first aid treatment at the church
they also were given typhoid anti- |
toxin as the water supply was ex
hausted.
Severe damage was wrought at
the main mill of the Pacolet Manu
facturing company at New Holland |
AR IT TR SRS . |
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Athenians Tell of Death and Destruction
In Gainesville After Making Trips There
Following are several short in
terviews with well known Athen-
L.ans upon their return from torna
do-stricken Gainesville,
Chief of Folice E. Weldon Wood
said he had never seen a more
ghastly sight in his life, “If any
one had told me such a thing hap
pened I would not have believed
it. It's hard enough to believe it
even when you see it Chief Wood
said.
\ “I never dreamed anything likei
)this could have happened. When I
was fiest told that a tornado hit;
| Gainesville, and decided to go, I
’really expected to see all the treesE
|and power lines blown down, and |
ia few houses unroofed, but I didn't
{eXpect to see the entire business
[cection destroyed and people buried
lunder wreckage,” he said. :
Policeman Clarence Roberts, who
| spent all yesterday morning, and |
| part of the afternoon in Gainesville
‘!a[%'d who went back last night to‘
carry supplies, couldn’t find words
|to describe the catastrophe. “It was
horrible yesterday wren you couldl
' see what you were doing, but last
'ni.ght it was worse,” he said. “I had
to go to Alto for medical supplies
last night, and part of the time 1
|had to drive with my head out of
‘the window of the car to see where
‘{ was going, it was jraining so
‘hard. Just think what those people
{in Gainesville who didn't have any
homes to go to were sufferinf,
i “Last night,” Mr. Roberts con
tinued, “I saw little children wan
’dering about the streets with tears
‘dripping from their cheeks, looking
}for their mothers and fathers. 1
isaw men and women looking for
{their children, husbands and wives,
|and it was the most heart-breaking
ithing I have ever seen. I hope I
don’t have to go back up there, al
[though I will if there is anything I
ican do,” Policeman Roberts said.
" “It's the most horrible thing I
have ever seen,” said Police Com
| phoned A .D. Robertson, Athens
a mill village on the northern out
skirts of the city. Two stories of
the five story mill were torn from
the structure but the 500 workers
therein were huddled into a corner
of the building which was untouch
ad.
Five other mill buildings of the
Pacolet concern were unroofed and
otherwise damaged. A hundred of
the mill village houses were level
led. Four persons were killed there
and 30 injured, none serlously.
The Gainesville Manufacturing
company plant was outside tpe
storm area as was ne nuge Chico
pee mill of Johnson and Johnson
‘makers of wsurgical supplies.
| Stone J. Crane, Red Cross relief
‘supervisor said 630 residences were
lcounted before darkness as being
ldemolished and added “the count
'is mowhere near complete.” &
‘ Firemen with apparatus from a
dozen surrounding communities
and as far away as Atlanta, 60
‘miles to the southwest, fought
‘sporadic outbreaks of flame in {hg
idestroyed area throughout the day
and night. ¢
Despita the rair which treque&t
ly fell in torrents the firemen and
national guardsmen remained on
duty. The guardsmen were from
five Atlanta companies sent here
to aid in relief work and to keep
order. Adjutant General Lindley
Camp personally was in charge of
the militia.
During last night Atlanta police
men also on guard duty arrested
five youths for looting.
The adjutant general didn’t de
clare martial law but it existed in
fact.
Sirens of ambulances assembled
from many cities howled througn
the night as theydrovehutrohge..
the night as they drove through
the debries cluttered streets.
Two trainloads of the injured
were taken to Atlanta last night
and two their traoetaoinshrdlu..
and two other traing hurried to
Alto where the state's Sanitorium
for the tubercular is located.
Giant poles carrying electric
current and telegraph wires fell
into the streets. The city was in
darkneas except for kerosene lampg
and candles. l
PLEASE STAY AWAY
GAINESVILLE, Ga. — (# — An
appeal for sightseers to ‘realize the
seriousness of the gituation” and
to refrain from making any lim
mediate attempt to visit this tor=-
nado-devastated city was made by
national guard officers today.
Traffic was being detoured at
TLawrenceville, below Gainesville on
the main paved highway from At
lanta, in order to avoid if possible
another influx of automobiles such
as crowded the city yesterday.
_ Officials estimated that 3,000 cara
were parked about various areas at
one time during the day,
1 DEAD AT ANDERSON
ANDERSON, 8. C. — {# ~- This
thickly settled textile area today
counted its tornodo toll of one dead
and 30 injured, at least $500,000
damage to property, and 300 home
less.
The twister yesterday cut a patn
through the countryside west of
the city, across the mill villages of
Appleton and Anderson, and thenlz
turned to sweep through a section
of Anderson proper. |
PRESCRIPTIONS
Carefully Compounded
Telephones 88 - 89
PATRICK'S PHARMACY
FOR WINDSTORM INSURANCE
"ALL NICHOLSON - COMER CO.
PHONE 1000 OR 338
'mh»sioner J. H. BEpting. “I saw]
!them dragging bodies out of build-]
!im:s. bodies you could hardly tell
were formerly human beings, and|
‘1 tell you I was ready to leove af
‘ter a few hours,” he said.
| Abit Nix, who helped establish
{ Red Cross headquarters, said he
‘had never seen anything like it in.
'his life. “I was worried over my
|=4ster and her family until 1 found‘
ithey were not hurt, and then I made
{a complete survey of the injured
'and dead,” Mr. Nix sad . “It's the
!wm-st thing I have ever seen.” |
| Henry Rosenthal and Elmer
| Burns thought the devastated area
}& “terrible sight.” Both said they
icould not describe the scene as it
{affected them, but “it was horri
:ble."
| 'As soon as word of the tornado
ireached Atlanta, Lucas & Jenkins
representative, gending him to
Gainesville where the firm ‘operates
!t.hree theaters, the Royal, Ritz and
| State.
‘ The firm was not £o much con
cerned about damages to the the
‘a,ters as to possible loss of life
!among employes, Happily, no em
t ployves were killed, probably due to
the fact that at 8:45 few were at
'work. ™wo of the theaters, the
!Royal and Ritz were demolished,
and a third, the State, was dam
'a.ged. the roof being blown off and
furnishings damaged.
‘ Mr. Robertson said he had never
Iseen such complete devastation,
!even in war days. “And 1 never
|want to see anything like it again,”
lhe said.’
He arrived while things were still
‘ln a disorganized state and paid
| high compliment to Colonel Sandy
ißeaver's Riverside Military Acade
my cadets for their efforts to bring
order out of chaos.
“You can't say too much about
those boyvs. They were superb and
they handled their work like regu
lar army veterans.”
Former Athenian Owes
. - .
Life to Failure of City
Electric Current Early
(Continued ¥rom Page One)
ly saved, too, from probable
death . ]
Miss Jenkins wag trying to win
her mother’'s consgent to go to
‘school a few minutes hefore the
istorm struck. Already the heavens
were as dark as midnight, and
the anxious mother wag reluctant
ito permit her daughter to go to
school, despite the fact that ab
sence meant a ‘“zero.” And as the
dark clouds hovered over the lit
tle city, Mrs. Jenkins and her
daughter, aged 16, left their own
home to take refuge with a neigh
bor #who lived about one hundred
yards down the street.
Just as mother and daughter en
.tered the hallway of the neigh
}bor's house, the tronado struck. A
little later they returned to what
‘'was once their own home, now
almost in ruins itself.
Mr. Jenking said the walls in
‘shoe shop collapsed only on one
‘side, and he and his fellow-em
ployes were able to escape through
the door of the shop. He picked
his way through the debris which
littered the street to his own
home, or the remains of the house,
and could not find hig family. A
brief period of anriety, however,
soon ended with the re-union of
the little family.
Learning of the tornaco, Rob
ert Weatherly, a nephew of Mr.
Jenkins, of the Arnett’s Studio
and Vasco Hawkins went to
Gainesville and brought the Jen
kins family back to Athens, |
Strange Noise |
It was like a million alrp]anes\
falling from the skies,” ‘said Mr ‘
Jenkins, descriking the apm‘oach-‘
ing tornado. ‘I had just returnes
to the shop after buying a Coca-
Cola across the street. I saw the
clouds becoming darker and dark
er, and people were already com
ing outside into the street to take
a look at the clouds. 'I had been
ingside the shop only a minute or
two when, without warning, the
tornado struck. It might have
taken four minutes for it to gweep
through the town, put it had
struck our shop and moved on in
less than a minute.”
“The people of Gainesville need
everything that can be sent them
in the way of food and clothing/
Mr, Jenkins gaid.
PARENTS OF HIGH
SCHOOL STUDENTS
INVITED TO REVIEW
Mrs. W. 8. Beckwith, president
of the High School P.-T. A. today
announced that a special invitation
is given parents of all high school
students to attend the annual mili
tary review tosbe held on the school
drill field Wednesday morning at
11:30 o’clock.
The review has bheen postponed
and will be held tomorrow provid
once because of inclement weather
ing the weather permits. The ca
dets will be inspected by Major
Peyton of the military unit of the
niversity of Georgia.
i
CIRCLE MEETS
Circle No. 5 of the Prince Ave
nue Baptist church will meet Wed
nesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock at
the home of Mrs. J. H. Epting,
186 Grady avenue. Aill members
are asked to be present. : 1
DEATH TOLL IN
TORNADO AT TUPELQ
REACHES 200 TODAY
B ey
(Continuea rrom Page One) l
dents failed to suffer some per- |
sonal loss. . '
Estimates of the Tupelo injpred
rangea from 1,000 to 1,600. These
were divided into three classes.
Those criticalty injured were list
ed at 275. At least 500 were num
bered among the less seriously
hurt and another 500 were given
treatment for superficial wounds.
Emergency morgues dotted the
city. General O'Keefe issued or
ders calling for embalming of the
dead immediately. Thig done, he
said, to stamp out the possibility
of “n epidemic,
| The morgues, located for the
most part in vacant stores, were
visited continually by persons at
lnnmting to identify the unknown
dead.
WHAI CAUSES TURNADOES
WASHINGTON .— (#) —Torna
does, loose now on errands of
death and destruction in the
south, are created in the spring
time meeting of e¢old and warm
air currents.
Experts of the United States
weather bureau today cited rec
ords to show that spring bringg a
rush of c¢ola air jnto warm air
regions and setg up violent atmos
pheric disturbances.
A tornado is part of a larget
storm and follows its path, Wea
ther men said the one in the south
had an jdeal gsetting in the cyclone
of April sth which blew out of the
west to cover almost all of the
country east of the Mississippi.
The ‘“greatest of all tornadoes”
occurred on March 18, 1725, when
funnel-shaped fury lashed through
Missouri, Illinois and Indiana;
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Over a period of years, certain basic
advances have been made in the
selection and treatment of cigarette
tobaccosfor Lucky Strike Cigarettes.
They include preliminary analyses
of the tobacco selected; use of center
leaves; the higher heat treatment of
tobacco (‘“Toasting’’); consideration
Copyright 1926 ® °
The American Tobaceo Company
l Luckies are less acid l S
5 Excess of Acidity of Other Popular Brands Over Lucky Strike Cigarettes : %
Recent chemical tests show ° : ° + 2 3 3 o
that other popular brands S oyt : 1 o
' LUCK TR I ' T s %
have an excess of acidity : 5
: iR
over Lucky Strike of from 2 e ‘ ‘3 =
. Pl
537 to 1007 = = _ _ id ;|
BRAND D R i
- - " RS R R SN R S SRR RN
*RESULTS VERIFIED 8Y INDEPENDENT CHEMICAL LABORATORIES 215 RLSEARCH GROUPS
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Your throat protection — against irritation
Sn e et s 4*:‘ . B e
Spos eit L e (..?»:-» e | § ~»§)gw§s§?§g@ CaanTs
Athens Country Club
To Holds Its Annual
. -
Meeting Tonight at 7
G ST
The annual meeting of the mem
bers of the Athens Country Club
will be held tonight in the club
house, starting at 7 o’clock. Mem
bers will be guests at a dinner, as.
ter which the meeting will be held.
Several matters .Of importance
to both the club and its members
will be brought up at this meeting.
Election of officers for the new
vear will be held.
The United States has one au
tomobileg to every five persons.
leaving 685 dead, 2,027 injured, and
$16,500,000 of property destroyed.
l No other tornado ever traveled
a path as long or as wide in this
!mnntr,v. Usually a tornado is one
quarter mile in diameter and lasts
from one minute to six hours on
the earth's surface. It progresses
}3O mileg to 40 miles per hour but
the velocity of the whirlwind may
Ireach 400 to 00 miles an hour.
ELECTROLUX KEROSENE BURNING
REFRIGERATOR
This new air cooled refrigerator, for use in farm homes, furnishes
modern refrigeration service for a few cents daily. No noise. No
moving parts. A few counties available to live dealers, Wri@, ‘;
wire or phone for dealer proposition. ‘
HOPKINS EQUIPMENT COMPANY
418 W. PEACHTREE ST., ATLANTA, GA. §
of acid-alkaline balance, with conse«
quent definite improvement in flavor;
and controlled uniformity in the
finished product.
All these combine to produce a
superior cigarette—a modern ciga
rette, a cigarette made of rich, ripe
bodied tobaccos—A Light Smoke.
The state of Illinois has 200 ausy
tomobiles for each filling statie
according to an estimate. =
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Keep ithandy for |
Skin '1»
PAGE THREE