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RUiR Mo" wine V
S 5 2 & %0
" Red Cross Speaker
" On WTFI Wednesday
3 el
4 Through rerseverance and hard
‘ pounding the American Red Cross
B camprign “for a better America”
3 grhieves SUCCess, Mrs. M. R. Red
' wine, president of the Garden
4 Clubs of Georgia, said last night
. . ih a radio address over station
f WTEIL.
“ff would be hard to find a
B Sireet or a rural road in the
. Tinited States that workers in
‘ ¢his campaign have not passed
aver at some time during the past
3 year,”’ she declared.
; > Mrs. Redwine deseribed the
' program as a campaign against
B (iccase ond poor health conditions
; and said that its purbose is to
B yeduce the number of deaths from
: qecidents and to give relief to.
disaster sufferers
Practically every citizen of the
B United States 1S touched every
B vear some phase of Red Cross
\\..: ghe declared, pointing out
thot thousands of popular bathing
regorts are protected by Red Cross
life savers and guards.
“Every month an untold num
-3} bher of lives are being saved
; through knowledge of life saving
and first aid that has been spread
A by trained Red Cross instructors,”
E . Ars. Redwine said.
4 Three more Red Cross Roll Call
P gpeakers are scheduled to speak
aver station WTIFT before the
i apening date of the annual mem
: bership drive, held from Armistice
. day to Thanksgiving day.
8. A. Hale, chairman of the
. first aid committee, will speak
: Friday at 7 p. m. on a new phase
of Red Cross work, emergency
F first aid stations on thg highway.
Preston M. Aimand, chairman of
| the Roll Call, will speak Monday
. at the same time on the Junior
. Red Cross, and Abit Nix will end
; \the geries November 11 with an
b Armistice day address.
2 e e ——_ A g .
~ STATE NEWS
: (Continued from page one.)
7 pushing technique today in pre-
L paration for paying an_ election
bet. £ T
Hager = predicted - victory . for
' Governor: Alf M. ‘Landon, and
i Hugh Howell, immediate-past
i chairman of the Geopgizz Demo
~ eratic executive committee, was
. just as sure Roosevelt would. win.
2 The différehce of opinion led to
. the wagep, and at noon today
§* Hager 'afgghedulvd an appointment
[ with Howell 2t the Candler build
. ing. From there, down Peachtree
I and Whitehall streets, througli
Tive points, he was to ride Howell
L in a wheelbarrow ‘to the Atlanta
8 National bank building. :
- ATLANTA .—Governor-clect” 1.
é " D. Rivers, in & hospital here be
s cause ofin glight attack of influ
, enza, spant a ‘“good’” night last
’ night ‘and was reported. in “'geod
‘i}:&j_‘mndili(in”‘ early today. L
§ His flindss s not reerdedgas
fserious and his friends, expeet hin
to leaye the institution #at the
end of the week.
R el
. ATLANTA. — Th. hospital a
& awhich Clack Howpll,' sr., Atlant:
& ¥ Constitution editor, - 'is receivin;
. treatment following an operatior
reported his condition etriy toda;
'.« as fairly good. Howell underwen
£an operation Saturday.
ki : ; i
i ATLANTA .—Norman V. Collins |
; of Griffin, brother of School Slll)-;
erintendent M. D. Collins, r--nmin-%
8 ed in a seriotus condition attend- |
“ ants at o hospital reported 10-“.
‘3 day. Collins early Monday morn-
B ing was run over by a street car |
B and his vight leg practically was |
k gevered between the ankle :xn-ll;.
f knee. ‘
é
s *
¢ Council Orders Parking |
o .
. Signs Moved Out of |
E Streets in Athens
o i |
(Conitinued from page one.) ,
B Mrs. Cariton Noell. Mrs.. J. W.|
B Whester will he in charge in the
’ Y. Pf(tfll‘<l will be in chardge in the|
f fourth ward, and the voting place
‘*» will be fire station No. 2. TFifth|
B ward voters will ballot at Cody.
David’s and managers will be
B Harry Kinnebrew, Mrs. N. G.
B Slaughter, and Mrs, E. S. Sell
(‘,mun'-il voted {o place a street
light on thé corner of Barber and
I Barrow streets, another on the
corner of First street and Hillside,
§ and still another on the corner of
“ First street and Ridgeway.
*s' The Finaree committee recom
f mended that City Engineer J. G
& Beacham be _given nermission te
‘ n\"‘('hllfi“ a new truck for the
? waterworks department, and coun
g cil gav the mavor and finance
¢ commitiee power to aet on the
; question as to whether 5 heating
B plant should he installed at the
city stockads
Paving Ordinances
Three paving ordinances and
two to- curb and gutter streets
7 were passed. An ordinance to
§ pave Springdale betweep Milledg®
:f;h.and Bloomfield, was passed, as
‘ was ordinances providing for pave
ment -of . Bloomfield from Spring
i dale to Peabod: ind Hall between
B Bloomfield and the east boundry
J Of Mrs. R. T. Goodwyn's lot “on
£ Hall stree
J‘ Curbing and gutiering of Ruth
erford, from Castalin to Stanton
%‘ Way., and the north sid. of Stan
' ton Was fron Rutherford tc
.‘ Woodlawn, wr ordered done.
;" Abutting property owners or
"fi’f Morton avenue hetween Milledet
B and Pinecrest, were assessed so
paving receently. done on tha
£ street.
The Finance mmittee and Cit)
y Engmneer Bedcham WeT givel
r permission to sell certain machin
B ery at the old waterworks plant
B The monev from the s: le of thi
& machinery is to go to a fund®t
. ._purchage a 4 new pump,
s Negroes to |
. Play Macon Eieven
l Here Friday, 3:30
| e |
- The Atheng High and Industrial
i school football team will meet the
, strong Ballard Normail school tcam
lof Macon here Friday afternoon at
. the West End park.
| Neither team has been aefeated|
| this season, so a great game has |
! been forecast. All friends of the|
I school are invited to come out and!
lenjoy a good game, which starts at!
[3:30 o'clock. The admission will:
1 be 15 and 25 cents,
| e, |
Athenians to Attend |
- Hartwell WPA Meet |
. To Be Held on Friday
| Reveral from Athens will go 10‘
Hartwell Friday for the WPA|
I’l‘luinin;: Institute, local headquar—{
< ters announced thig morning, The!
| program will be as follows: l
9:3-49:40—O0Opening—Miss Strick- |
i land. i
9:40-10:30—Handicraft (Weaving?
Pockethbooks, ete.)—Miss Garrison. |
| 10:80-31:30 . Adult Recreatiaml
Program—Mr. Sheppard.
11:30-12:00—KRound Table Dis-l
cussion—Mrs, Parks, N. Y. A, sup-,
pervisor; Checking Equipment — |
Mr. Warwick, assg. resident (-n—'
! gineer,
[ 1:00-2:00—Discussion of Basket
ball Rules—Misg Miriam Atkinson.
{ 2:00-3:00—Hand Ball—Mr. Pat
terson; Ring Tennie—Mrs. Holden;
| Badminton—Miss Stricklanad,
' 3:00-4:00 — Rhythm Orchestras
“mul Community Singing,
Roosevelt Victo
ry |
- Means Barbecueto
. ) {
10 Cord Mill Men
¢ I
l: Yesterday C. D. Jones, superin- |
| | tendent of the Cord Mill was pay- |
‘ing an election bet by pushing = |
{ wheelbarrow and Roesévelt win-’
in«rs_ were riding one-half-mile’
i each at his expense, |
E But the fun is by no means over |
ius yet. When you are reading your |
| paper now ten men from the Cora |
i Mill are eating bharbecue, a dinner
i ; which they won from the same Mr.
1;.]01)(',3 who pushed ithe whee]bar-i
jrow, and Henry Touch, one of the |
" | posses in the mill. |
1! The ten men bet Roosevelt would |
tlwin while the other two backed|
" | Landon on their bet. After the bar- 5
5 becue, scheduled to be held at the|
- | Tavern at little Five Points, is over|
O}the group~will- be guests of theiri
Y | bosses at a movie here. !
! The winners were Bill Allen,‘
7 !Fl‘ank Huff, Ernest Couch, H. S.'
f;Oldham, Walt Haynmie, Joe Allen, |
1 Goleman Loyd, .Ja% . Landrum, |
1! Barl Crabb and Hiram Couch. !
1)
C ki T |
'Remodeling Completed |
At Citizens Pharmacy
1 i
’ Remodeling has recently been
‘t“completed at Citizens Pharmacy,
dlcorner Clayton and Jackson
~ E treets and the ftetajl section of]
:i“a»i:io store i 8 now much more spac
-71 jous than before,
® | In addition to freshening up the
| store, a partition which formerly
I separated the front part of thé
| gtore from the drug aepartment,
4 has been moved towards the rear
% of the store, moking more room for
1 customers and display of articles
V.| The changeg have evoked compli
' mentary remarks from customers.
. 1
Results of Minor |
- - 44
Elections in Various
-
Counties of the State
(Continuec from page one.)
Pike county, received 763 votesl
against 283 for his -independent
opponent, R. P. Smith, !
LAFAYETTE — Walker countyi
imx collector Claude Clements re
:mined his office by gaining an|
loverwhg]mlng majority over J. H.
‘ Bowman. The vote was 2,630 to
|l3B. - :
| GAINHSVILLE . —Unofficial re
| turns trickling in from Dawson
| county. without telephone or tele-l
'graph communications, indimtod|
| victory for Seymore McGeehee for‘
| the state house of representatives.
| The returns also indicated Presi- |
| dent Roosevelt. carried the county. |
1
|
'TWO REBEL PLANES i
'~ SHOT DOWN TODAY'
‘i (Continued from page one.) 1
{ i
| Jose Varela occupied a small hill,
| dominating Cuatro Vientos airport.i
iseven miles from the capital and
|within striking distance of thot
! government radio statior at Camp
| amento.
i Insurgent commarders at Avila I
{whose forces were reported within |
| four miles of the capital, declared
;!Fascist, batteries were ready to
| fire “some well-placed shells into
.| the center” of Madrid.
| Treop movements on. both sides
| were accompaniec by the booming
11 of Socialist and Fascist cannons
;‘engage_d in an artillery duel be
)!,\'nnd the city's outskirts.”
.|" With Getafe and Leganes, an
slother suburb, already captured, the
.!governmem counter-offcnsive cen
.| tered approximately seven miles
.| southwest of Madrid. ?
| ——
|
E Third. of Missouri
- .
g Quadruplets Dies
-\ Early This Morning
0 | est e
| “STEMPHIS. Tenn — (AP) —
n| Two-pound Ella Pearl Bridges
e! died early today and left her
r| equally tiny sister, Lee FEarl, as
t| the sole survivor of quadruplets
;!morn Monday in a storm-s Wept
¥ Missonri cabin.
n{ ‘Throughout the night a nurse at
.-; Baptist Hospital administered
4 ' oxygen to the infants as they lay
i< | in incubators.
o' Hope still held for the Lee Earl
attendants said. 3
Two Diphtheria Cases Here Are
Released From Quarantine Today
' Strict Adherence to Pre-!
' cautionary Measures Isi
Z Epidemic Preventive
{ s
| 7Two diphthéria patients were re
'ilp.-m.u irom gquarantine today leav
‘ljng' five cases in existence in the
| county, it was learned at the
l h~alth department.
! Six cases of diphtheria have been
| reported in the eity since October
| 26, and one at Whitehall. ~ This
| {8 not an unusual numbeér of cases
!uf this particular disease for this
Itime of the year but, of course,
| careful attention is being given
hy health department officials to
prevent its leaching epidemic stage.
Three cases of scarlet fever have
i:n}su heen reported to the health
} department in the last few daye,
il'“‘ no deaths either from diph
! theria or- scarlet fever have been
reported The health department
reports that eleven cases of diph
ineria have been recorded in the
county this yee® which is about
the normal number of cases since |
broadening of the public health |
service here in the last ten or
twelve years,
A comparativelyv large number
of children have bheéen given vac
cine to develop immunity from
diphtheria in the last few days,
demonstrating that parents are)
co-operating with the health . de
partment in ecarrying outits meas
ures to prevent spread of the dl-q
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WASH TUBBS
lease, None of the diphtheria cases |
{is of school age ar.’ school teach- |
'er:z as well as school nurses arv%
taking every possible precaution;
to prevent children attending |
gchool from being thrown into con- |
tact with incipient cases, ‘
One of the signs of diphtheria !
and scarlet fever is sore throat!
and for the last several days seven!
or eight children have been sent |
home from school daily for medl-'
¢al attention when their throat,sl
were examined by the schaoll
nurses and showed symptoms of
diphtheria. t
None of these children has de- |
veloped diphtheria but, in order to |
protect them and 'other chul‘jren;
in the school, teachers have,chil-;
dren examined by the school nurse
wherever the condition of the
child’s throat warrants such a
precautionary measure. In most |
instances parents of children :
showing such symptoms of this{
[_diseasd call in their physicians for |
prompt attention. !
, The diphtheria and scarlet fever
cases thus far reported in thei
county are scattered and upon
being reported to the healty de
partment the cases are promptly
quarantined, patients are isolated
and other necessary precautionary’
measures immediately mstimted;
in order to prevent spreading of
the disease. l
Scientists do not know why, but
FRENCH JOURNALIST |
. Wyt 5 A vl Ry
TO SPEAK HERE SOON;
| (Continued on Page Five) |
T
| Prague; with Barthou to Central |
| Burope and with Laval to Rome,!
E\\'h&-m- the famous Ttalo-France |
{agreement was made in January,!
11935, !
{ pertinax has visited America |
{s«\'vr:ll times—with Laval when|
lhe came to visit Hoover in 1929 |
ianc with Herriot when he cameto{
| confer with washington officials |
‘lmm'. |
i Often clagsed with Wickham
lStm-(L J. L. Garvin and Frank HI
Simonds, M. Geraud occupies an
‘impm‘tfmt nlace as Commentator!
!in international journalism. His!
‘writmgs have been credited with
|vxorcising an extraordinary influ-l
1 ence upoun governments and pub—l
!m- opinion for the last 25 years.
| fducated at the TUniversity o-fl
'Hm'dvnux where he took the de-g
egree of licencie-es-lettres with |
’spoci:il mention for history, hei
, went to Germany and, afterward,
isemod in London as correspond
l(n‘ of the “Echo de Paris”, the
lnewspaper he has now served for
| nearly 30 years.
l In 1912 he became diplomatic!
e
diphtheria is more prevalent in
'mm weather than in other seasons
!and in cold climates it is particu®
larly virulent. Parents are urged
‘m take immediate steps to get in
touch with p physician if children
lshow signs of developing this dis
ease.
Myra Gets Some Inside Info!
]%m Daily Tele-|
graph, and unprecedented appoint-
Iment for a Frenéhman to hold.|
ilt was at that time that M. G€F-|
la.ud became a well-known flgurel
lin the inner ring of the diploma
{tic world, due not only to the ac-‘
;curacy of his work but also to thel
{fact that he was known to enjoy
:the confidence of M. Paul Cam
;bon, the great A]-‘ren('h nmhassa-l
idor‘ of the period. I
I From 1914 to 1916, Andre Ger
jaud was mobilized and served on‘
;the western front as officer inter
| preter with an Indian Cavalry bri-‘
gga'de and then with a Scotch In
i fantry brigade.
} In 1917 he began to sign his pen
pame to daily explanations and
| comments upon international de
| velopments. Since that time, Per-/
i tinax has become an internation-l
!ally recognized journalistic sig-
Inature. ;
i Possessing a Nationalistic French |
I point of view, M. Geraud is noted
[for kis ruthless exposition of alll
| relevant facts with no regard
iwhate\'er to the official versions'
circulated, the concentration upon
essential points, and the criticism
of the ministers of the day when-‘
| ever he feels that their actions
[call for it. ;
| He is credited with having ex
lposed what he alleged to be the
intriguing of the French delega
tion on armaments at the ILeague
when every other correspondent
was said to have known the truth
but dared not print it.
Sl
Mr. Chandler O’Kelley, of Hull
is visiting friends in Athens,
Freck “ets a New Slant!
Complications!
Queer Goins on!
All Set to Stuff!
DEMOCRATS TO HAVE |
: : !
329 IN HOUSE AND ‘,
| 75 IN NEXT SENATE
TNty
' (Continued from page one,) ‘
|
ll‘uh]ic:ms. They are James H
fHu;:hcs of Delaware, Prentigss
|lslnwn of Michigan, Willlam 1y |
Smathers of New Jersey, Theodor
"l“r:mcis Green of Rhode Islang
iand H. H. Schwartz of Wyoming .
‘ One satisfactoin for the minor- i
ity was the victory of Henry Ca. |
gbot Lodge, jr., who Yeat Governog
i.]ames M. Curley, Democrat. fol
a senate seat from Massachy -
lsetts. MeNary of Oregon, Repub- |
lican, won a®ter a race that was |
‘in doubt for a time. Dickinson of !
Towa trailed.
l Old Guard Gone : |
I The Democratic congressional |
Ivictor_v, th efourth successive one |
at the polls, virtually had wiped
out the last traces of the famous |
senatorial “old guard” which onc.
dominated the senate chamber
under the chieftainship of sycp |
‘men as Watson, Reed and Smoot.
Morevoer, Tuesdyza's election
|made certain that, unless the solig
i south breaks up or a reformatiuni
‘iof party lines occurs, the Demo-
Icrats will have control of the
senate throughout President
Roosevelt’s second term, and prob
2bly until 1943. |
The size of the Democratic mu-f
jorities raised problems for lead- |
ers who will have to try to weld
them into an ejcient legislative
machine. Past experience has
taught that large majorities are
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