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cAL COTTON
s
FIDDLING «v o 0 o 13 3-4 e
DDLING «ccoo eoes 13 1-4¢
YLING coce eosene 12 3-4¢
l No. 296.
ol Children
. Guests At
At Palace
b, SAM WOODS
; housand school
: nd several hila
i ursday morning
tics of Mickkey
\ aurel and Hardy
b nnual Christmas
i <+ by the Athens
; { igh the c¢cropera
ws & JenKkikus. |
i ty is an :mnn:l”
' v and theater and|
on, local repre
i & Jenkins, who
; Rotary’'s .\'lln—j
anounced that
i iis_year on the
ine that of any
E al chairman of
i ommittee hand
party, said that
11 0f ekts have been
Idren. ‘
6 tart promptly at
I vill last at least
puring the children’s
‘A vdults, other than
2 and their wives,
dn 1 Parentg may
( y and walt for
1 vo hours are to
| the kiddies.
Rotary c¢lub will
1 | their wives will
It
1 of the show the
\ resent each child
\ will delight their
og weekly luncheon
iis weekk, only an
g ting will be held,
tiending for only a half
ad of the wusual length
day night Mr, and
r were hosts to
Rirmer at which time
ograms were discussed
pled so the first quar
i vear,
g the meeting were
andler, club secretary
on chairman; Lee Mor
ance; Tom Gray, inter-
Pau Chapman, classi=
P Mcßae, vocational;
1 h service; E. L., Se
e ns; Claude Chanee,
J. W. Jarrell, programs;
Mart Eommunity S aer
). Robertson, sunshine;
bh, extension, and B. M.
Pl nngi s a emm
.
sks Swift
Me o - n
ilitary Actio
& P China called
ita wction today to
eralissimo Chiang Kai
face of reports that
| rebellion had spread
lus Kansu Province.
! Hsueh-Chung, chair-
K u provincial gov
aved a sudden coup at
1 ipital, Lanchow,
k 1 ) 0 r t 8 reaching
ind declared in
Ly I Chang Hsueh--
f General Yu, former
0L the mutinous mar
y the reports said, raid
tean of public safety,
) ind ransacked the
S 0L the provincial pa
sioner.
R., TO GO
ON THURSDAY
IN P The Massa
{ eral Hospital an
{ ) that Franklin
evelt, - on of the
0 as been under
g sinus and
woulg leave
1 1 'i"t:,}\df{_\'.
ÜBERCULOSIS DEATH M'
e
LY
Sy
: | [
i YRR
L 1
1907 1936
ATHEN NOw
d te L 1, i
MAS" /Q-Jsh)
AL/
"‘\J SO
34 340 ffl
rate "‘tgz&. /
th‘rds .Af.‘\/\r.wf\l\fv'\l\
Bst 30 years
Nationa) Tuberculosis As
"s founded in 1904 the
110 m tuberculosis was 200
I The latest figures show
“eclined to 57 per 100,000.
lere gpe still 70,000 deaths
“Ulosis every year, most of
[T between the ages 14-45,
Ve years, Until tubercu
“Minated there can be no
¢ campaign to prevent this
urge,
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Mounting Death Toll Feared in Area
Of Destructive Quake in El Salvador
PEACE CONFERENCE
DELEGATES GATHE?
IN PLENARY SESSION
Final Approval Will Be
Placed on Measures
Of Friendship.
SESSION IN ACCORD
Secretary Hull Remains
Away to Prepare His
Wednesday Speech.
BUENOS AIRES. —(/)-—- Inter-
American neace conference dele
gates met in their final plenary
gession today to approve 37 meas
ures to strengthen bonds among
the American repuhblice and lib
eralize trade 1)01i0i€~s.
They stood silent forone minute
in memory of the victims of the
earthquake at San Vicente, EI
Salvador,
The conference quickly approved
a dozen propects, including a {en
tral American declaration for all-
American solidarity in the event
of war threa.s and several resolu
tions to Dbetter inter- American
trade.
Hull Prepares Speech
Secretary of State Cordell Hull,
chief of the Uniteq States dele
gation, did not attend the plenary
session held in the Argentine
chamber of deputies. Hull was
working on his speech to be made
at the final meeting of the three
week old parley, set for Wednes
day.
Jose Manuel Cortlna,{Cuban see
mtary of state, in ::zporting on
the economic and trade resolu
tions, declared:
“The conferemce has produced
peace imstrumsents W remove
ling the Amierican contingbrit’ to go
forward in economic recovery.”’
~ The parley’s action, he said, “al
‘though not pacifying the world
gives it an example to follow.”
A Delegates Satisfied
Delegates from the 21 partitipat«
ling nations expressed satisfaction
' over the consultative system set
lup earlier under which the Amer
jeap republics could meet and
'talk over any war anywhere in the
world. Loy
The Central Americas solidarity
‘dec]aration summarized objectives
lalready brought before consulta
| (Continue. on Page Seven)
.
Still No Trace of
2 Missing Plan
es
By The Adsociated Press
SALT LAKE CITY. —(P)— The
wintry west locked the fate Ofl
nine missing persons in its cold;
and snow today as officials, post
jing a SI,OOO reward, announced a
search *“on our own” for one of |
two planes seven days after it dis-l
appeared. l
Admitting “every clue exhaust
ed” Western Air Express officialsl
offered the reward, effective until
noon January 4, fofr discovery of
the Los Angeles-Salt Lake trans
port lost with five men and ‘wo
women sinCe Tuesday.
The ship, last reported over
Milford, in southwestern Utuah, is
gsought in that vicinity and north
ward and east central Navada.
idaho for Piot Joe Livermore cO
pilot A. A. Haid and their nortit
west airlines transport, missing
since ¥riday.
Five hundred miles northwest.|
Ranger M. T. Olmstead turned
the hunt to a new gector in north
Idaho for pilot Joe Livermore, ??-
Livermore made his last radio |
report over Elk river, Idaho.
bR
| Georgia News Briefs
S e
ATLANTA.— (&) —Mrs. Della
Monrotus, 70, mother of H. C.
Naylor, president of Lane's Drug
company, died at a private hos
pital yesterday after a long 11-
ness.
Mrs. Monrotus, & native of
Tennessee, came here three months
ago to visit her son. Prior 1o
that time she resided in TUnion
City, Tenn. g
' Survivors included another son,
Price Naylor, of St. Louis, Mo.,
and a daughter, Mrs. 0. L. Rey
neids, of Union City.
e —
WAYNESBORO, Ga .——(A:’)-—-Only i
blackened ruins remained of the |
First Methodist church today, after |
a fire destroyed the structure, val-i
uel unofficially between $50,000 and
$60,000.
The building, erected in 1998,
caught fire Saturday night from
an undetermined cause.
Full Associated Press Service
51 Frank Fi
Glenn Frank Fights Ouster Move
o =
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Two ot the nation’s leading liberals, both mentioned as 1940 presi
dential timber, clashed in the heated battle at the University of
Wisconsin in which the ouster of President Glenn Frank was de
manded, with Gov. Philip LaFollette heading the list of his oppo
nents. Frank is shown, above right, at a meeting of the board ot
regents. At the left is Harold M. Wilkie, Madison lawyer and head
of the board. who sided with LaFollette. Frank firmly refused so
resign and a student strike to uphold him threatened. Possibility
that the Republicans will run Frank for governor in 1938 added to
the keen interest in the clash.
French Aviatrix Held by Police
For Attack on Co-Pilot in Air
ZOEKILLEDIN
HICHWAY ACCIDENTS
Ceorgia Records 5 Deaths
During Week-end; Penn
sylvania Leads.
By The Associated Press
Highway accidents took more
than 120 lives in Georgia and the
nation Saturday, Sunday gand to
day.
Near Macon, twe Houston coun
ty men died early today after
their automobile collided with an
orange truck. The victims were
listeq as Grady Miller and Bob
Edmondson.
An accident on the Ellaville-
Americus highway last night cost
the life of one man, and serious
injuries to threg other persons, A
man listed as Charles' Chapman,
22, of Ellaville, was killed. The
injured were Tregistered at an
Americus hospital as Lewis Dyess,
Ellaville, broken right leg; Miss
Charlotte Jones and Miss Dolly
Ellis, both of Ellaville, severe
bruises and other injuries,
l Lamar Mathis, young son of Mr.
tand Mrs. Roscoe Mathis, of Al
| pany, Ga. received fatal injuries
when the pony he was riding ran
into g car. The other Georgia
death was that of an Atlanta ne
gro, killed in a truck-street car
crash. ‘
New York city reported 39 ac
cidents in whith one person was
killed and 45 injured within g few
hours during a severe rain and
windstorm. Pennsylvania led all
states for deaths, 17 being report
ed.
e
| UNUSUAL ACCIDNT
GORDON, Ala. — () — Moody
Sims; 26, and his brother, Grady
Sims, 18, both of Blakely, Ga.,
i i —
(Continued on Page Four)
R ————
MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga.—(P)—
The Georgia State College for
Women is now free of debt, State
Auditor Tom Wisdom advised Gov
ernor Bugene Talmadge,
The institution received $478,450
as income during the fiscal year
ended August 31, compared with
$464,480 last year.
SGERER SLEAE
ATLANTA .—(#f)—Colonel Sandy
Beaver, chief of Governor Tal
madge's military staff, has retired
with the rank of brigadier gen
eral.
Announcement of the retirement
was made at a dinner given the
outgoing governor by his staff
here Saturday night. °
ATLANTA. — (#) — Governor
Talmadge tomorrow will hear the
clemency applicztion. of Walter
n.mnms Bragg, serving a life ierm
——re—
| (Continued On Page Six)
Athens, Ga., Monday, December 21, 1936.
Pilot Manages to Land
Plane Despite Shot l
. Through Head. . ...
k| it |
SELSEY. Eng. —(AP) — Mme. |
"Marvie Schemeder, sought hyl
French police.for shooting her co
rilot during a flight over Vllla-}
coubly yesterday, was ordered held|
on a technical charge today after |
icrashing her plane in a Sussexl
field. i
Eritish authorities detained the!
woman flier, wife of a wealthy?
¥rench machine manufacturer, as- |
ter French police reported a war
rant for her arrest had been issued'
at Cersailles. !
Mme. Schemeder fled froml
France in the same plane in which
she was alleged to have shot
I'Pierre L’Allemant, her co-pilot |
during a flight Sunday morning. l
[ Several hours later, after t.c
trans-channel trip, she brought'
[ (Continued on Page Seven) |
DAY — BY — DAY
ON THE RADIO
By C. E, BUTTERFIELD
(Time Is Eastern Standard)
NEW YORK—(#)—The time was
short, so it took a hurried all
night conference involving a half
dozen coast to coast telephone calls
before all arrangements could be
completed for the replacement of
the Sunday night Good Will Court
on WEAF-NBC with the Amateur
theatrical feature, “So You Want
To Be An Actor”? One of the
calls listed an hour and a half.
Inasmuch as the new program
originates from Hollywood, where
it had been on the air for some
time, and the sponsors were in
New York all of this telephone
was necessary. It was not until
4 a. m, Saturday that everything
was cleared up for the program
time only 36 hours or so later.
Try these tonight (Monday):
Talks WJZ-NBC 10:30 Radio For
um, Sec. of Labor Frances Per
kins: WABC-CBS 10:30, New Dis
cussion series on “What Do You
Think”? first subject “Taxing La
bor Saving Machinery.”
WEAF-NBC -— 8 Fibber McGee
adn Molly; 8:30 Richard Crooks;
9 Warden Lawes; 9:30 Dick Him
ber and Ruth FEtting; 10 Chil
dren’s Christmas Party.
WABC-CBS —7:30 Goose Creek
Parson; 8 Heidt's Brigadiers; 8:30
Pick and Pat; 9 Dick Powell and
Joan Blondell in “Gold Diggers”.
' WJZ-NBC—B Helen Hayes; 9
Minstrels; 9:30 Jack Pearl; 10:15
Metropolitan Opera opening night;
11 Christmas Carols.
What to expect Tuesday: WEAF
NBC—2 p. m. Band Lesson; 4:15
Chick Webb Orchestra; 6 Science
In The News. WABC-CBS—2:IS
Christmas €arols by Scracuse
school children; 3:30 Walden
String Quartet; 4:30 Howarq Bar
low Pop Concert. WIZNBC—I:4S
Rochester Civic Orchestra; 3 U. S,
Marine Band; 5 Your Health.
~ESTABLISHED 1832
2P! i :
! U ' il
| L
i Bar Found Near Scene
| Of Accident Believed
| Used By Vandals.
. REWARD OFFERED
f sbk i
' Officials Cite Mistake;
| Believe Freight Train
| Wreck Intended.
! ::nmlx(:l‘li;;lh.“j;i:}.—4 JP) = A
i(ru\x}.;w sunplied the principal
g('lww today as authorities sought
i to expose a “deliberate plan” they
bhelieved was behind wrecking of
a Central of Georgis train Friday
. might with injury to /2 persovs.
i The bar was picked un near the
wreck scene.
'Deputy Sheriff L. H. Mason said
the find strengthened a theory that
“foul play” was responsible for
the derailing, 16 miles out of Bir
mingham 2s the train came in
irom Columbus, Ga. The two rear
coaches, filled largely with college
students and teachers going home
for the holiday, plunged down 4
30-foot embankment. The engine
and forward cars rémained up
right on the road bed.
- Mason said srikes and rail fas
tenings had been removed from
the track.
! He and fellow officers indicated
[severz',l persons might be ques
tioned soon.
I At the hospital here Where 20
: of Friday's wreck vietims gtill were
! patients attendants reported they
i\wxrn resting well.
! REWARD OFFERED
“.:1 COLUMBUS, Ga.—(#)—Officials
gdtl;e Central of Georgia Railway
f % voffered 2. rd 200
| el e B
i (Continued from Fage Four)
. FLASHES
i g
LIF-E
t DEATH AT CHRISTMAS
| WOODBURY, N. Y.—Mrs. Lena
Stoobe, 74, could not afford a
Christmas tree this year, for the
I,first time in her life. She she
lwent into the woods mnear her
home with a hatchet. i
More than 150 police and fire
men searched all night for her.
They found ‘her, dead of exhaus
|tion at daybreak, g small neatly
cut fir tree was in her arms.
THERE IS.,A SANTA
COLUMBIAVILLE, N, Y. —
Charles Henry Benedict intendsto
hang up his stocking for his 103rd
Christmas.
’ Said Benedict: “Jist because
iT’'ve never seen Santa Claus isno
|reason I should up and declare
[he’s a fake. 1 mnever saw Abe
ILincoln either, but I voted for
| him.”
i All he really wants in that
istocking, said the aged man, is
| “about a ton of pipe tobacco”.
' PUT HER ON THE FORCE
l LOS ANGELES — Embarrassed
‘policemen came home largely emp
'ty handed from their annual tur-
Ikey shoot.
{ fThe reason was Mrs. Bobby
Inutherford, a 2 housewife. Shooting
lin the men’s pistol event, she won
a turkey, a ham and three boxes
of candy.
Sergeant Ivan Johnson, crack
shot of the force, also won a tur
key—in g raffle.
LOCAL WEATHER
GEORGIA:
Partly cloudy
-% tonight and
‘ \\’, Tuesday, becom-
I, & ing unsettled
‘m Tuesday with
o(o B probably light
q* rains in north
f‘,\ west portion §n
"' - afternopn
2 or night,
S
TEMPERATURE
TRIBHORY <o a 0 i va on ik 4 000
FIOWBBE .. Gi iba v o Y
BEORY .. i e ve sk wailßE
WO is oivv on an o 250
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours .. ... .00
Total since December 1 ... 5.41
lixcess since December 1 , 2.58
Average December rainfall 4.38
Total sicne January 1 .. ..64.15
Excess since January 1 ...15.61
-
5
Actress, Brown Derby Chief Elope
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Fo L
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g i R S R
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U B s~ W
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e eSR W
o - . m % G ;‘Si’ci S
: : i > T LR e
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G . g e gsh &
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. L . “':: . i AR
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P | i ~ (voam
".»:5::..’: S ] ¢ ’8 pßais: '1'1" il gfi" : 2 :
R O B I vv P @‘ E T
Le R Te R S
A romance long a’favorite topi¢ of speculation in Hollywood’s film
colony blossomed into marriage with the elopement of Gail Patrick,
22. movie actress, and Robert Cobb, manager of the Brown Derby,
exclusive Hollywood case. The couple, shown above at the Brown
Derby, motored to Tiajuana, Mexico, for the ceremony... The bride,
after winning a contest, left the University of Alabama four years
ago to go to the screen.
Opponent of President Comez of
Cuba Seek Impeachment of Leader
'Anti-CGomez Forces Line
.~ Up Behind Colonel
"“ < % wl %M*i—pé(‘ g o
o - ‘u y 5
, HAVANA, -—-(#)—Political oppo
nents of President Miguel Maria~
no Gomez, seeking to oust him
lbecause of his fight against the
larmy-sponsored sugar tax bill, de
«lared today the chief executive’s
impeachment ig necessary “for the
iwelfare of the nation and to pre
llserve the constitution.”
| The anii-Gomez forces, lined up
E\behind Colonel Fulgencio Batista,
jcwlaimed control of 120 of the 169
| votes in the house of representa=-
tives, eight more than the two
third necessary to impeach thei
president.
. The house meémbers were Sum-‘
Imoned to an extradinary session
iat 5 p. .m today to hear the Im
|'peachment charges.
| Gomez, if impeached, would be
.tried before the senate sitting as
[a court, and a majority vote would
decide wheather he were gullty
lof the charge of “an act against
the free function of a legislative
| body.”
In this manner, political obser
verg felt, would the rinal chapter
be written in the governmental
ilife of President Gomez who crossed
| swords with Col. Batista, Cuba’s
{ “strong man.” Batista sought pas
sage of the sugar tax bill to ob
tain some $1,500,000 for mainten
ance of army-taught rural schools.
Gomez, in his opposition to the
bill, said he believed it would serve
only to educate young Cubans in
the “fascist manner’—an event
uality denied by Batista.
The bill wag passed by an over
whelming vote last week and now
awaites the President’s signature,
or veto, Throughout, Gomez assert
ed he would veto the bill, hence
the impeachment plans.
SANTA CAN'T FILL
ALL BABY ORDERS
i KANSAS CITY —(®)— The old
Iwoman in the shoe would cackle
!at this:
} Santa Claus has so many orders
for babies he doesn't know what
to do. y
! From many hospitals, foundling
jhomes and “cradles” of the na
ition came worg today the supply
{of adoptaktie infants on hand can't
'begin to satisfy the demands of
:thousands of coupies.
Typical of Santa's predicament
was a report from Mrs. Sam Giad
ney, superintendent of the Texas
ichildren’s home aiq society at
i Fort Worth. She has received 2,-
iOOO applications from woudl-be
Iparentn without being able to fill
a single one.
! Returning prosperity, and the
decling of the jazz age are amony
‘the explanations given for the up
'swing in adoptions.
| Mrs. Gladney’s theory is that
modern couples, weary of swing
. ——
l (Continued on Page Three)
A. B C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—s¢ Sunday
SPECILISTS DRDER
“QUIET FOR PIUS XI
Pope Will Not Live Unless
Strict Orders Are Obey
ed, Doctor Says.
VATICAN CITY —(AP) —Spe
cialists ordered absolute quiet for
Pope Plus XI today if the Holy
Father is to live. ‘
Well informed Vatican circles |
said the Potiff's physician and a|
specialists called in for an urgent
consultation, had laid down rigor-i
ous rules to ald his weakened
condition, brought on by the UIS‘
of old age and complicated by a
high fever ana possibly pneumonia. I
Attendants said there is noi
hope his holiness could go thr_ough
his usual Christmas ceremonles.‘
He must spend the holiday a bed,
or, at least, in a wheel chair. 1
The orders for a stricter re-gime“
were put into effect after the
I'cpe suffered a fainting spell as}
he lay in bped yesterday.
The attack was caused, doctors
szid, by his irregular heart action,
the result of circulatory stagna
tion.
The holy father’s personal phys
ician, Dr. Amanti Milani, hastened
to the Papal apartments early to
day to examine his patient's fever
chart, checking anxiously to see if
the epidamie of influenza in Rome
ha dadded the Pope to it¢ victims.
Major Issues Before Congress
THE FIRST OF FIVE ARTICLES
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The 75th
Congress, elected In the land
slide which returned President
Roosevelt to the White House,
eonvenes January 5. Guided
by recommendations of the
chief executive, this prepond
erantly Democratic legislature
will seek to interpret into law
public sentiment expressed at
the polls. In a series of five
stories by staff writers who
have specialized in their field,
the Washington Bureau of the
Associated Press will outline
some major issues awaiting
solution. The first story dis
cusses constitutional problems
raised by labor and farm de
mands on one side and Su
preme Court decisions on the
other).
By EDWARD J. DUFFY ;
WASHINGTON. — (&) — The
forthcoming congress is widely
expected to go down in history
either as an adept stepper within
HOME|
M. EDITION
b
e
; A g Bl
i s
e
San Vicente Hardest Hit; =
. . 2 ‘:
Only One Building =
Left Standing.
First Tremor Felt While
s A
People Are Sleeping =
Saturday Night. E
o
T
(By The Ascociated Press) . o
SAN SALVADOR, TL SALVA- =
'DOR — Officials expressed fears =
today o fa mounting death toll in' ==
the devastating . ezrthquake whic'b{
razed almost all San Vicente and &
killed at least 200 rersons over the =
week-end. i
Persons arriving in San Salvader
rom the stricken provincial eapis
al told stories of wholesale ruin, =
of shattered buildings and homes, *3;
nd of rescuers digging out somie =
) bodies in the first few hours'i{?{%
fter the quake. o ""-&7:
How high the deaths would fi
each no one would estimate, bat é
rovernment officials dizpatched all 3
lief available to the area. o
Mecager Reports o
| Accurrate reports were made in- 4
i«'l‘(‘:lsingly difficult to obtain be- "&S
i cause of the disputed communica- =
| tions between thé quake area and
I an Salvador. o
Telephone and telegraph Ilines
‘were ripped down b ythe quakes
and information could b had }«%m
from those who fled inland fro:a'y
the scene. B
The ¢uake which first struek
‘the sleeping city of San Vigente
Satwiday night, crashed in build |
ings and shook fthe earth in vils
lages pearby, eye-witnessed said. -
1 ; ;':%a’ge“' with their families and
“hotiseliold” befongings fled along
rural roads trying to recah
from the ever-mgnacing volcano
Sznta Rita, southeast of San Vi
cente which some refugees said
. was eruping.
Epidemic Feared =
Adding to the” fears of molten
lava poruing from the w\lcano
over the wreeked city was the
specter of epidemics, Much of
Szan Vicente's supply of drinking
water was foisoned by sulphur ap
parently exuding from the smolk
ing volcano after the ‘quake. =
Government officlals returning
last night from the disaster area
said the widespread wreckage was
impeding rescue work and making
virtually impossible any accurate
(Continued on Page Seven)
Senator Norbeck of
South Dakota, Dies
el .
REDFIELD, S. D. —(#— The
death of United States Senator
Peter Norleck, who rose from
penniless well-drille® to become
the first native born governor and
senator of his state, intensidied
political complications in South
Dakota today. i
The republican senator, who was
66 years oid, died at his home here
yvesterday of a heart disease com=
plicated by a cancerous condition
of the tongue and jaw. E
Prominently mentioned as a
possible suecessor was Gov. Thom
as Berry, democrat, who will re=
tire from office in two weeks.
Senator Norbeck was born Aug.
27, 1870, the son of an immigrant
Norwegian Lutheran minister,
the Constitution as it stands or
the proposer of an amendment to
enlarge federal powers. IR
In the political campaign, Pras
ident Roosevelt and his followers
rededicated themselves to NRA
and AAA objectives and promised
“action,” After running on a res
ord which showed a six to three
score against the adminlstnthpj{i;fl
in the Supreme Court, they have
interpreted the overwhelming vics "
tory as a mandate to carry om.
Barring changes on tue court
due to deaths, many here believe ;
some sort of showdown inevitable
between the New Deal and the
constitutional views written in the
NRA, Guffey and AAA decw
Demands since the election by ors
ganized labor and farmers’ spokess
men who supported Roosevetl re.
call the powers once exercin&»;;
those since outlawed agencies.
With the carital taking on the
bustle and suspense that heral fl?g
~ (Continued on Page Two)