Newspaper Page Text
Mrs. Dull Will Conduct Cooking School Here On Mayv 12. 13 and 14
LOCAL COTTON
MIDDLING 7-8 .. «¢ v 0 o 0 .. A 1
PREV. GLOSE .. .. .« .. .. 11%
Vol. 104. No. 101,
r
nnual Mother s
|
Day Service Will
ay dervice Wil
BeHeldat Temple
i e e
\
The fourth annual Mothers' Day
service of Cangregation Children |
of Isrmel will take place on Fri
day evening, May 8, in the Temple.
The service is conducted by co
eds of the University of Georgia
during the regular Temple hour.
Those who remember the service
last year and the year before will
recall that it is one of the out
standing services of the year, -
Participating will be seven or
more young ladies who will read
the service, deliver the opening and
closing prayers, read special Moth
ers’ Day selections and deliver the
main address.
Arrangements for this program
are under the supervision of Rabbi
Lawrence A. Block and Misg Nolee
May Dunaway, instructor in mausic
at the University of Georgia, The
service begins promptly at elght
o’clock,
The program follows:
Organ prelude—" Meditation from
Thals”-—Massenet,
“Hymn to Mothers” — Binder -—
Choir.
invocation—Mildred Wllensky.
Sabbath Prayers—Annette Mol
dow.
Solo—"Veshomru”—Bchlesinger—
Mrs, Jake B. Joel.
Prayer: “Mothers of Israel” —
Annette Kandel. «
Reading of Scriptures — Bessie
Diamond,
Duet—“ May the Words''—Schles.
inger—Jean Peabody and Eulalis
Vaughan,
Sermon—Ruth Weintraub.
Solo—‘“Mother, My Dear”’—Tre«
harne—Violin Oblligato — ‘Eulalia
Vaughan and Minnie Cutler.
Concluding service—Adele Kunl
ansky.
Benediction—Cecil Michael,
Benediction Response: “Grant Us
Thy Peace”’—Dunaway.
Organ Postlude—Findle — Shep
pard.
Choir:
First Soprano -- Jean Peabody,
Libby Mevlin, Mmu«%cmm. 8
Second Soprano—Florence Moad
eng and Ruth Kruger.
Contralto—Eulalia Vaughan, Col
lette Smallwood,
Organist and director — Noles
May Dunaway.
Ushers:
Esther Haskins, Sara Harrls
Evelyn Pollock and Jane Bash.
CHIVALRY IN COUNCIL BLUFFS
COUNCIL BLUFFS, lowa--When
the wind blew Miss Rose Wind's
hat out the window of a street car,
Motorman Ossie Smith backed the
car 300 feet and got off to help
rer look for the bonnet. No pas
genger complained.
They found the hat.
b st b
S L A S S5~ AA S
—~—
GEORGIA: ‘,l\\‘. o
Fair Tonight ‘m
~ ‘b‘\
and Friday. q@
2
“FAIR
TEMPERATURE
HigWet. oo cien e avese BRI
LOWERE. .o iwn Youy Weves i BED
MO. os uiel bnisn davve D
WO, s o nvis Blan Vanvs 0
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 h0ur5........ 0.00
Total since May le.sessaties +l2
Deficit since May l.cesceee .72
Average May rainfa11.,..... 3.69
Total since January 1...,..35.42
Excess since January 1.....16.90
Pranksters Adorn Supreme Court
Building With Flag Of Communism
WASHINGTON ~— (#) — An am
azed capital awoke today to findl
the red flag of communism flying
over the huge marble temple ot |
the Supreme Court of the Unitedl
States, : i
Apparently raised in the night by’
a prankster, the fluttering emblem|
struck consternation into the ranksj
of the Supreme Court gaurd, pick
ed men assigned to protect the di
gnity of the nation’'s highest tribu
nal,
Frantically tue guard and a big]
detachment of metropolitan police
struggled for an hour and a half
to get the flaming emblem down,l
but without success,
Finally a fireman mounted a lofty
extension ladder. Swaying precar
iously, he touched the flag with a
gasoline torch tied to the end of a
iong poie.- The emblem burst into
flames and was destroyed. :
The government began a vldtl
bunt for the prankster who haa
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Athens Host to 3,000 For Various Attractions
PETITION AGAINST NEW MILL OPENING HERE IS TABLED BY CITY COUNCIL
BUCKER RULES CTY
HOT EMPOWERED 10
FORBID 175 OPENING
P
A petition from residents of
King avenue objecting to the Rog
ers Hosiery Mill, of Philadelphia,
Pa., locating in that vicinity was
tabled by the Athens eity council
last mnight, when City Attorney
Lamar Rucker ruled that coune!l
could not forbid “any legitimate
business from operating in the
city”.
H. B. Ritchie, jr., told councii
at the start of the meeting sign
ers did not wishp to present their
petition because the secretary of
the Chamber of Commerce and
Mr. Nix had said they would look
for another location”, but later in
the meeting Dr. E. L. Hlill, pas
tor of the First Presbyterian
church, asked council for permis
sion to speak, and the petition was
officially presented.
Dr. Hill said it was not fair for
council to allow a manufacturing
industry to located in ‘'the besl
re; ] L section in. the eity,”
'Mig i;lfl ‘it would amount to gw
same thing as destroying homes
these people had worked for years
to establish. .
“I have glways put three words
before me in my behavior, frank
ness, fairness and firmness”, Dr.
Hill said. “It js not fair to these
people to have their quiet home
life destroyed by a factory in their
backyard”, he said.
Opposes Location
Dr. Hill said he was not op
posed to the mill coming to Ath
ens, but was opposed to it locat
ing in that particular section. “If
‘this wasg the only place available
to locate the mill, then we woulll
gladly give up our homes, but i
is not the only place,” he said
“We gre early risers in that sec
tion, but we do not rise at §
o'clock in the morning, and the¢
mill operating this early would
disturb the people of this com:
munity”. .
Mrs. J. W. Bailey urged coun
cil to prevent this industry from
locating in the King avenue séc
tion. “We have numerous names
on our petition, and there are
many otherg who would like to
sign it, but are forced not to be
cause of business reasons. They
say this is a free country, but it
ig not, as I can prove by thig pe
tition”, Mrs. Bailey said- She re
ferred to people who wanted to
sign the petition but would not
because of business reasons, when
she said this wag not a free coun
try.
After all discussion on the mat
ter, Councilman E. L. Wier ask
ed Attorney Rucker what powel
council had in the matter, and he
said none whatever, “If the mill
is a - public nuisance, the residents
can go into court with a suit, but
council cannot prevent it from lo
ccating anywhere it can secure
a building gite,” Mr. Rucker said.
Another petition with many
(Continued on Page Two)
raised the banner bearing the ham- |
|mer and sickle during the night, |
Authoritieg suspected he might be|
| student from Harvard university.
] The first rays of morning light|:
had brought consternation to the|
‘police, for they revealed the revo
| lutionary flag fluttering atop the |
i long staff in front of the building |.
on Capitol Hill ‘
A stone had been attached to one|
of the haeyards and hoisted up thel
pole. It kept banging against the|
| metal staff, making a din like-a
large and very mournful bell
This attracted a crowd to the
lscene. EBarly morning passembyll
laughed and joked as the perspir- |
ing policemen struggled = with thei
ropes in vain. !
At the base of the pole wag found |
a copy of The Lampoon, Harvard|
university's bumorous magazine |
It contained -an -article entitled
% ———y NEN ~‘
~ (Continued on Page Two) |
Full Associated Press Service
G illas Expected to Annoy Italian Troops
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Organized resistance to the Italian invaders is virtuaily at an end in Ethiopia, with Addis Ababa
devastated and the emperor in flight, But Mussolini's legions will face guerrilla warfare with the
wild tribesmen of the type shown here as they straggled thruugh the capital on their way to battle.
Thousands of;these irregulars have fled to mountamn fastnesses, from which they will sally forth at
? intervals to attack isolated detachments of the foe.
- FLASHES
| ,o;|
| L-I-F-E
| By The Associated Press
B e~ e A A A PSS SIS
| (By the Associated Press)
L AN CAGAIN,-OUT AGAIN
FORT MYERS, Fla.—W, Asby
Joneg has caught 28 tarpoon but
he’d rather tell about the one that
caught itself and then escaped.
A silver king he estimated at 80
pounds jumped into his boat. Jones
and his guide scrambled for safety
as the big fellow thrashed around—
and finally flipped itself back into
the water,
NO SPINACH!
TAMPA, Fla—An unidentified
man came into a Tampa restaurant
and announced he was hungry.
~ He proved it by eating 17 steaks
and 34 rolls and drinking 14 bot
tles of beer ‘in two hours and a
half,
Heg told the waiter he didn’t care
for vegetables,
| SPRING IN MISSOURI
KANSAS CITY — Observed by
Joe Mitchell, who vowg he has ano
ther witness to support the story:
The other night a man ecarrying
a small black bag along a down
town street stopped, leaned against
a building and removed one shoe.
They thought he wanted to rest
the foot. Then he removed the
other shoe, shoved both up against
the building and strolled nonchal
antly on, in stocking feet.
| R
IDefucnency Measure of $2,-
364,229,712 Carries sl,-
425,000,000 for Relief
WASHINGTON — (#) — A 82,-‘
364,229,712 deficiency appropriation)
bill -carrying $1,425,000,000 for re
lief.- went to the house floor today '
for a show-down fight over WPA
poligies.
The big money bill was reported
|by the appropriations committee
!with $75,000,000 of the $1,500,000,000
]orlglnally asked by President Roo
| sevelt for continuing work relief
|activities shifted to the Civilian
| Conservation Corps. This made a
$308,000,000 total for that agency,
a fund designed to keep the auth
orized strength of the corps up to
350,000 and provide an average of
2,066 camps in the nine-month per
jod until March 31, 1937.
Other major itemg in the last
big measure to be cleared before
adjournment were $458,631,860 for
the social securitl program, $65,-
| 550,000 for public buildings and
339,900,000 for the Tennessee Val
ley authority.
| The relief money was allowed hy
'the committee subject to maxt
Imum limitations on specified class
|es of expenditures, but with a 15
| per ¢ent leaway permitted between
'claases. Republican members of
!the committee contended this nul
lified any actual efforts at limita
{tion and the minoriay raised a con
certed demand that WPA be dis
mantled and replaced with a sys
(Continued on Page Two)
Athens, Ga., Thursday, May 7, 1936,
Invite Housewives To Attend Mrs.
Dull’s Three-Day Cooking School
| Making her fourth appearance
in Athens, where she has couducb!
ed three unusually successful
eodiing “senools, Mps. SR, DAL
premier culinary expert in théj
South, will open her fourth schoel
at the Palace Theater Tuesday
morning.
The school, under sponsorship of
the Banner-Herald, will be con
ducted three days, May 12, 13 and
14 and the sessions will last from’|
9 to 11:30 o’clock. Cooperating in
the cooking school will be the
Georgia Publie Utlilitieg company
and the Atlantic lee and Coal com
pany. Cooking will be done by
gas with lice refrigeration being
used.
Best known director of cooking
schoolg in the South, Mrs. Dull
will be assisted by her daughter,
Mrs, Henrietta Duil Broach., At
each daily session, in addition to
the cooking demonstration, Mrs.
Dull will give a lecture. The first
Ethiopia’s Lone Railroad Is
Taken Over By ltalian Army
Fascist Italy’s army of occupa-|
tion was reported by the Stefani|
(Italian) news agency to have tak
en over the Addig Ababa-Djibouti
railroad in Ethiopia today—all the |.
way to the border of French Soma- |
liland.
By order of their military com
mander, troops took over all traf
fic on the narrow gauge line and
restored normal service, Stefa.nl‘
reported. i
The railroad is Ethiopia's only|
modern public carrier and the only
modern egress from Addis Ababa|
to the sea, i
Whether the seizure wag consid
ered permanent was not immed
iately made known. Only today,
the French government let it be|
known it would refuse at this time
to relinquish rights to the line.
Any transfer to Italian operatorsi
would necessitate a free conven-l
tion, negotiated by the French com
Georgia’s High School Students
Flock to Athens This Week-End
First 29th anfiual state meet
contests, spopsored by the Geor
gia High School Association, be
gan at the University of Georgia
this afternoon. One-act play com
petition; is now in progress and
piano contests will be held in the
chapel at 7:45 o'clock tonight.
Tomorrow Georgia Scholostic
Press Association delegates will
register at the Henry W. Grady
School of Journalism for a minth
annaal convention. Registration
wul begin at 9 o'clock. The morn
ing convention program will begin
at 10 o'clock in the chapel.
Chief speakers will be W. T.
Anderson, editor and publisher of
the Macon Telegraph; " Ernest
Rogers, head of the radio-news
deparyment -of the Atlanta Jour
nal; and Kyle T. Alfriend, editor
of the Georgia Education Journal.
Director John E. Drewry, of the
School of Journalism, will wel-
- morning she w.ll talk on “The Im
lpyrtance of Knowing - the "Art of
\hGoakms." The subject for the
" secbnd “morning will be Wiy
| Women Has Hate to Cook” and
| herfinal lecture will be “Sleight
{o’ Hand Cooking.
] Prizes well worth winning will
be given during each meorning ses
sion and at the conclusion of the
| three-day course, grand prizes will,
| be awarded in addition. The grand‘
prizes will be a gas range and a
refrigerator.
Mrs, Dull hag conducted schools
in all of the major cities in the
South and many of the smaller
ones. She had directed schoolg in
Alabama, Tennessee, South and
| North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland
Delaware and other states and has
’conducted scores of schools ln‘w
iGeorxla. ; v
As editor oy The Atlanta Jour-l
[ e ‘
(Continued on Page Two) |
pany which owng the line, Paris
officlais stated.
| Completg Subjugation
~ Simultaneously, Italy’s armies
all but completed the subjugation
of southern Ethiopia with the cap
‘ture of the important town of Jijiga
‘and pressed into service Halle Se
}lassle's own imperial police to
“mop up” riot-torn Addis Ababa.
~ Tota] annexation of Ethiopia, the
‘best informed sources in Rome sald
‘today, will be decreed Saturday
night by Italy's grand coancil of
faseism and by her cabinet minis
ters,
- I 1 Duce thereby will present to
‘the League of Nations council,
meeting at Geneva Monay, an ac
‘complished faet which Italians bes
leve will permit of no League dis+
cussion,
! King Vivtor Emmanuel today
\ (Continued on Page Two)
come the visitors.
At &:G. B, P. A. Juncheon
Chancellor 8. V. Sanford and
President . Harmon W. Caldwell,
of the University System and the
University, will be principal speak
ers. The afternoon will be given
to round table discussion of high
school journalism by the several
hundred editors and their faculty
advisers who will attend the cou
vention.
Assisting with the discussions
will be Edward C. Crouse, Law
rence W. Rember and Miss Mar
garet Woodward, all members of
the School of Journalism faculty.
* At least 500 persons will be In
Athens for the various events of
the state meet literary and ath
letlc competition. They will rep
resent alomst 100 schools of the
. ) ———
(Continwed on Page Two)
\
. . ‘
Last of Alvin Karpis Cang
Taken Without a Shot
Being Fired Today
IS SURPRISE RAID
Campbell’s Young Wife
And Minor Cangland
Figure Also Taken ‘
CLEVELAND — (®) — J. Edgar
Hoover, federal Bureau of Investi- |
gation chief, announced here that\
Harry Campbell, last of the Alvin
Karpis gang, a woman describea
as his wife, and Sam Cokar, a min
or gangland figure, were captured
by federal agents early today at]
Toledo, O, ‘
Hoover gsaid the capture was ef
fected without the firing of a shou
Campbell was taken to St, Paul,
Minn., by airplane to face charges
in the Edward Bremer kidnaping,
he said.
Campbell showed what Hooves
termed a ‘“little resistance” when
the agents apprehended him, Hoo
ver said.
Federal men surprised. Campbelll
and the woman in a Toledo apart
ment, ‘
On Camphell’'s person, the agents
found a .45 calibre révolver and
six clips of shells, Hoover said.
Girl Claimed Marriage
Agents _said the girl claimed, to
have married Campbell at Bowl
ing Green, Ohio, in 1936, She gave
her age as 19 years.
Hoover said that when Karpis
and other members of the former
Barker-Karpls gang escaped f{rom
a trap here in 1934 “they were
tipped off by two Cleveland politi
cians and we are now investigating
every detall of thig angle.”
The bureau chief sald members
of the Karpis gang had face lift
ing and finger prine operations per
formed by a Cleveland surgeon.
“That doctor probably is dead
now,” Hoover gaid. “We have rea
son to believe he was killed after
performing the operations, We
believe his body wag dumped lntu!
Lake Erie.”
Used Alibi ‘
Hoover said Campbell was mar
ried under the name of “Robert
Miller” and that his wife did not
know anything of his criminal car
eer, She probably will be released,‘
he said. |
Hoover flew to Toledo last night.
to take personal charge of the fed-‘
eral men. He sald he would fly
from Cleveland to New York late
today.
Hoover said Cokar probably will]
A e
| (Continued on Page Two) |
\
‘ \
» (
|
\
MILES OVER OCEAN
L SR |
Giant Zeppelin Flying at‘
Altitude of 800 Feet in
- Atlantic Crossing 1
! 800 MILES OUT
| NEW YORK -— (A.P.— The
r Hindenburg was reported 800
| miles out over the Atlantic at
. 10 a. m., Eastern Standard
Time by the Mackay Radio
company. Its altitude at that
time was 800 feet. |
BY LOUIS P, LOCHNER
(Copyright, 1936, Associated Pq
Aboard the Zeppelin Hindent
En Route to America—Germ:
gigantic new airship, The Hin™
Iburg, forged steadily west\
through clear skies today, he
aeross the North Atlantic on
first flight to the United Statc
The Zeppelin, bearing 107 °
sons, 3,300 pounds of freight ar
sacks of mail, headed on a ¢
over the English Channel, 3(3]
‘west to the Azores and then
to Lakehurst, N. J. 1
So favorable were conditions
this pioneer flight of the Hinn
;burg, opening a projected se
of regular voyages, that a rec
trip might be made. The Zepp
was expected originally to re
Lakehurst Saturday afternoon,
~ The luxurious 813-foot ship p,
)ceeded swiftly, smoothly, alm
noisessly on its journey after
delayed departure from Friedric
hafen last night at 9:30 p. m. (3
p. m, ES.T., e .
Dr. Hugo Eckener, command
o
(Continued on Page Two)
A.BC P x @igmgn 229 ;0’3'35, 2c—>s¢ Sunday
m——*f SRR D) 3 sttt
INewsman Risks
Life in Et 'bp'é!
ife in Ethiopia
— |
O S ]
sRA 5 l
P
Lo ;
N
" il |
W e I
E ‘&
T !
e G
l i
..__.,,:::.5;;\.; ‘:./-:-‘::l'— ._‘l_;i;:"" :
i ’f? o i e
( s ; : ;»"‘fi:"::ff‘-'}.‘y'-r;‘ '
|
Throngs of marauding, drunken |
bandits rioting in Addis Ababa |
| streets failed to prevent Ben |
| Ames, United Press corre- |
spondent, above, from keeping |
the outside world in touch with |
events in the Ethiopian capital. |
Though slashed by native |
sabers during an earlier mis
sion, Ames again braved the
mob to contact the Italian ad- |
‘ vance guard, near the city, ‘
| !
l
R e
Burson, Caldwell, Chap
| man Address Visitors
| Here for Livestock Day
.I st
| Bvery possible aid of the Uni
“verslty System of Georgia to
bullding the state’s livestock in
terests was pledged here today by
R. P. Burson, member of the
Board of Regents and Master
Farmer; Chancellor 8. V. San
ford, of the system; President
Harmon Caldwell, of the Univer
sity; and Dean Paul W. Chapman,
of the College of Agriculture.
They spoke to some 3,000 farm
ers and farm boys gathered at
| the College of Agricluture for
| annual Livestoek-Legume day,
Iwhlch will be featured this after
noon by a dog and pony show
)and tonight by the Sixteenth Lit
ltle International Livestock show.
“The people of Georgia are to=
day greatly Interested In sofl
erosion control and livestock,”
Dean Chapman said. “The two go
together. ‘The limiting factor in
both is production of feed crops.
| '“During the past five years
great progress has been made in
livestock production on Georgia
'farms. We have, for example, at
| least 10 counties that have doubled
| their cattle population in that
short space of time. It is inter
esting to note that in these coun
ties at least 60 percent of the
| land is devoted to growing corn,
}hay and other Ilivestock feeds—
, not counting pasture.
i “That we are changing our
| farming program very rapidly is
evidenced by the faect that last
'year we added one million acres
to our feed crop production. |
l Dean Chapman added that one
lohje(‘tivv of the College of Agri
culture is “to operate this farm
of 1,600 acres along lines that are
practical and that will be of some
value to the state as a demon-
I (Continued on Page Two) |
.‘ v oot svirxXtures!
Opporty-: *
g Assortment of Beautiful New Colors
Daytime and Evening!
Yard Dress Lengths---
pes! Rough Crepes!
summer Designs--- .98
e up to 3.50 ecach--
l;. E L : S
UL
» ii¥is
High School Athletic and
Literary Meets Also
Started Today
FRIDAY FULL DAY
o A
Georgia Scholastic Press
Association Convention
Convenes Tomorrow
Dt v mag et
A busy week at the University
of Georgia still has many attrac
tione.
The Sixteenth Little Internation
al Livestock show, the 2§th an
nual state high school Iliterary
and athletic meets and the ninth
annual convention of the Georgia
Scholastic Press association are
yvet on the calendar.
Other events include g, tennis
exhibition by Blill Tilden and his
troupe of stars at Woodruff hall
tomorrow night and a track meet
with Clemson college Saturday af
‘ternoon.
. The Little International jg set
lfor 7:30 o'clock tonight at. Hard
'man hall. The state meets ‘are
’now in progress, and schedules
'are given in other columns of thii
issue. The G. 8. P. A. conven
tion delegates will register at the
Henry W, Grady School of Jours
lnausm beginning at 9 o'clock to=
morrow mornin| .
Livmfck Show mby fi
l Climaxing one of the most sues
| cesstul days the University Col
|lege of Agriculture has ever had,
|students will present the livestock
| show tonight.
| Indications early this aftermoon
{were that many of the 3,000 per
-Isons here for Livestock-Legume
|day will remain to join Athenjans
|for the spectacle tonight.
| Saddle and Sirloin club, animal
| husbandry organizations, members
|and other students have fitted a
| record number of 76 of the col
|lege’s sheep, cattle, hogs and
_horses for the show. The best fit- :
ting in years is reported. .
Farmers and farm Dboys saw
‘much of the stock on parade this
' morning. Some of them went te®
\xhe Dog and Pony show thig af®
! (Continued on Page Two)
}“M
- .
’Wllham Mahan Taken
|
By Agents; Suspected
In Weyerhauser Case
i it g s
’M
WASHINGTON, —(AP)=— J.
Edgar Hoover announced today
the capture of William Mahan,
| called the remaining principal
| 'n the S2OOOOO Weyerhasuser =
| kidnaping. ;
l Hoover said Mahan was
| taken in San Francisco this
. noon. .
l He made the announcement
' upon returning to the capital
1 from the arrest at Tolfi
Dhio, of Harry Campbell, f
| of Alvin Karpis who was wanit-3
~ ed in connection with the Ed=-
. ward Bremer kidnaping and
| an Ohllp mail robbery. gk