Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Roaring Rivers Rout Hundreds From Their Homes;[Today s Picture ©- ]
Death Adds to Ruin Left by Waters Raging Over Nearly Dozen States
~ Highway Crumbles in Flood Path
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In the floods raging across nearly a dozen states, taking toll of life
and causing extensive property loss, this was one of the scores of
paved roads washed out by the swirling torrents, Near this spot,
on Highway 31, outside Brownstown, Ind., one motorist was
drowned when the road crumbled and plunged his car into the
swollen waters of White river.
e S —————r—
- POWER, WATER, FLOOD
e
(Continued From Page One) I
i — )
- foot stage at Cincinnati, the |
worst fire in the city’s 143 yoar}
_history broke out anew, but was|
~ controlled by firemen. The city |
will receive but four hours utl
water daily on rations. Pu 'ps!
were out of operation. Electric |
_power was rationed also. H()H-l
pitals, police and fire depurlment-{
_weré first on the list. |
Portsmouth Hungry |
A rising river stage left fully
25,000 homeless and hungry at
Portsmouth, At Pomeroy, Ohio,
the 3,600 resldents were wmmutj
power or gas, Bellaire and Bridge
port were virtually isolated. (Gov-|
ernor Martin L. Davey called u!
special legisltaive session at Co- |
lumbus to appropriate $250,000 for
flood relief. Fully 4500 WPA/!
workmen already were on the job.
Fire also menaced Augusta, Ky.
a 8 un oil drum burst. The town
was almost deserted. l
Refugees streamed from Padu
cah as water rose through the
business area. From 15,000 to 20,»!
000 of the cit's 34,000 residents |
were expecteq to be evacuated by
nightfall,
Food Shortages
Covington and Newport, Ky., re-|
ported food shortages and virtual
- igolation.
- Memphis, Tenn., got word that
“three small gaps had been made
in the Mississippi river levee
above Hichman, Ky., where farm
ers stopped U. 8. army engineers
seeking to release the river into|
the Birds Point-New Madrid, Mo,
floodway.
The engineers sought in this
manner to relieve Cairo, 111., where
12,000 residents were endangered
as the river level reached 58.08[
feet on a 60 foot floodwall. Mayor |
August Bode warned women andl
children to flee. !
: Horner Cooperates }
Governor Henry Horner wenli
_into southern Illinois, where fully
20,000 were refugees in seven coun- |
ties. At Shawneetown, about two
thirds of the city's 1,500 popula
_tion was Dbeing carried out Wy
-boats,
- President Roosévelt ordered al
"@vailable government aid into the
~disaster zone after a Sunday
night conference, placing the army,
"navy, coast guard, Works Prog
_.ress Administration anq Civilian
‘Conservation Corps on a 24-hour
~basis to help the Red (Corss evac
uate refugees and aid thg home
less,
Phorvg Held Open
" The President personally advised
City Manager C. A. Dykstra of
Cincinnati that “the federal gov
ernment is standing behing (‘in-‘
cinnati and the entire Ohjo val-I
ley flood zones” and that his pri
. vate phone would be held open,
for any direct calls. 1
Cincinnati, with some 75,006
homeless, watched . the Ohio rlverl
still edge upward after reaching
79 feet this morning—seven feet
higher than any previous recorded]
Jevel and 27 feet above flood
stage.
Eighteen firemen were injured
fighting a $1.500,000 oil fire in the
industrial Mill Creek district. The
‘blaze continued today. A blazing |
250,000 gasoline storage tank drift-i
ed downstream from the city and |
police reported four others \\'ere]
adrift.. ©
Louisville restored city water fnr?
fire department use only by fur
nishing a flooded jump station
with power from a river boat. The
Ohio was at 54.2 feet, moro. than
feet above flood stage, ang an
ther two-foot rise was in pros
“pect. Louisville police were un
'Holds False Teeth
= Tighter and Longer/
. This mew delightful powder |
Xeeps false teeth from rocking.}
slipping or dropping. No pasty|
taste or feeling.' Gives perfect
confidence all day long. Get Fas
gantm Crow’s Cut-Rate Drug |,
Store or your druggist. Three
sizes, it ! (adv.) |
der orders to “shoot to kill” all
looters as food sapplies dwindled.
Worst Yet To Come
Downstream from the ravaged
Ohio - Indiana - Kentucky sector|
lrlver experts saiq the worst was
lvet to come.
] Director W. J, Moxom of the
government weather bureau’s flood
;for(-oustinz service said it might
'lbe 10 days or two weeks before
the Ohio’'s crest met the Missis
lnipm river at Sairo, 111. He said
| emergency flood conditions might
lcontlnue for a month and that if
lower Mississippi tributaries .reach
‘ed flood st a g e concidentally
i'“lhings \xuuld be pretty bad tor
‘the lowlands.”
The known flood dead by states:
l Arkansas 3; Illinois 3; Kentucky
9; Missouri 2; Mississippi a 1
{Ohio 9; Tennessee 9; West Vir
fghsm 7; Pennsylvanig 1-—total 44.
:'l‘hv Kentucky total dig not in
jclude the estimated number of
| prisoners dead in the Frankfor!
iriot, which would make the nation’s
{ total 59, Unconfirmed was an
‘other report that four persons were
dead at Lawrenceburg, Ind.
Calling The Roll in the Flood Belt
] ILLINOIS—The mayor of Cairo,
'bopulation 12,000, proclaimed thaf
all women, children and feeble shoul
len. children and feeble should
evacuate immediately. The river
stage was more than 58 feet, with
in two feet of the city's sea wall
level, Levee workers gave up try
ing to holq back the river at
Shawneetown and abandoned it to
the Ohip’s flood waters. The en
tire 1,200, population had takep to
"higher ground. The stite’s home
less totaled 20,000. |
PENNSYLVANIA AND WEST
VIRGINIA-—l. 8. Weather Obser
ver W. 'S. Brotzman said rains
which washed snow into tributa
ries of the Allegheny and Monon
gahela might push the confluence
stage at Pittsburgh back to the
133 feet of last week, when hun:
’dreds evacuated. Panic-stricken
residents of the Parkersburg, W.
;Va.. district continueq evacuation
)after a warning that the Ohic
might elimb to 60 feet. The rivei
lrose again in Wheeling toward the
46 foot stage which drove out
thousands last week.
TENNESSEE—Memphis expect
ed a 46 foot river stage. A central
relief depot was established for §,-
000 homeless. Workers began evac
uation of 800 flood-besiegeq resi:
dents of Black Island in the Mis
sigsippi ‘river. ~ Another 300 were
being taken off Island 35. Back
waters cut electrical and water
supplies and marooned 2,000 at
Tiptonville.
ARKANSAS — The St, Francis
river poured through a levee near
Trumann, flooding 90,000 acres
Floyd Sharp, WPA administrator
said. 8,000 families were in refu
lgee eamps . and 15,000 more on
their way. An ice storm caused
’:10.000,000 damage to timber and’
'3500,000 to highways.
' .
'Fritz Thompson With
| Relics Staff in Indiana
Fritz Thompson, well known!
Athenian who is southern fie]dl
representative of the American Red
Cross, has been assigned to the
relief staff at Evansville, Ind. Mr.
Thompson {is regarded as one of'
the most efficient members of the
Red Cross field staff and has been
‘designated to work in the floodl
area, with headquarters at Evans
‘v!]le. ‘
|
C. B. CARREKER !
DIES IN ATLANTA
(Continued From Page One) '
— ]‘
one daughter, Miss Martha Car-!
reker. Funeral services will be
held tomorrow gt Jackson, Ga, In
terment will be there. !
Pallbearers will include the fol- |
lowing; l
Carlton Mobley, former secretary |
of Talmadge; A. L. Crowe, mem- |
ber of the Revenue (‘ommlssion,’
Lindley. W. Camp, adjutant gen
€ral under Talmadge, M. M. Sims |
Gordon Kettles, Elmer Doyal, H.
G. Mitchell ang R. M. Knight |
Flood Refugees
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“Hugging” their 'still warm
stove, on the truck which car
ried their furniture from their
flooded Louisville, Ky.,
———-———-—*—”m
I b ,
Andrew Baldwin Stabbed
to Death; Several Acci
dents Last Night.
One negro was stabbed to death
and another seriously injuired
when hit by a thrown brick last
night.
Police are seeking Willie Mar-!
tin on charges of stabbing Andrew|
Baldwin through the heart on the
corner of Rock Springs and Broad
street, with an ice plck. Baldwin
was stabbed twice, both stabs
touching the heart.
Martin ig reported to have had|
both legs broken in a recent aci-|
dent and js still unable to walk
very well, :
Marshal Butler, an 88-year old
negro, suffered several broken ribs
when struck by a brick sald tao
have been thrown by a negress,
Sussie Varnum. Police said the
brick was thrown at two other
negro women, but struck 'Butler,
who was standing mear-by,
Oficers arrested the Varnum
woman and Zennie Toms, charged
temporarly with disorderly con
duct, and are seeking Mary Huff,
another negress.
Officerg made several reckless
driving caseg last night, as results
of accidents in the city.
One wreck on the corner of Hill
and Church streets between a Co
op Taxi cab and a private auto
mobile, resulted in slight injury tol
the driver of the private car, Two
cars colllided at the corner of Mil
ledge avenue and Prince Avenue,
but no one was injured.
Several other acidents were re
ported to the Banner-Herald, but
police had no record of them, and
no one wag carried to either hos-’
pital.
20 Persons Killed As
Bus Plunges in Canal
From Tamiana Trail
(Continued From Page One)
ldirt alongside the highway was
scrayed up for some distance indl
cating the bus had slid along on
its side before falling into the
water,
Tells Story
“About 75 people were lined up
beside the ecanal,” . he related
“There were thre men stripped
to the waist working desperately
|:lh<)\'p and below the water line
trying to get inside of the bus.
' “At five miutes intervals the
men brought up someone who had
been trapped in the bus. They
then tied a rope around the viec
tim and he was dragged ashore
by others,
“One old man, about 65 years of
age, had false teeth which were
"half way out of his mouth.” I
1‘ Singleton, who was sitting be
‘sid(- the driver, gave the following!
account,
“We were going along at a nor
[mal speed when suddenly something
{happened—l think it was the
| collapse of the front right wheel.
EThe bus lurched off the highway
|and as women screamed terribly
|and men shouted. It fell into the
canal in about 12 feet of water”
t Injured List i
MIAMI, FLA., —{(#)— Those in
|jured when a bus overturned in
'a canal alongside the Tamiami
| Trail today includea:
| Callie Little, 55, Enon Valley,
Pa., Shock.
’ Philyg Ashley, 45, Miami.
| Winifred Williams, 59.
. Edge Price, 65, Enterprise, Ala.,
Chest and leg injures.
~ Morris Senikoff, 32, Miami, head
injuries, '
~ Milton Fishbeing, 22, Miami
‘shoulder injuries.
——Evans,
Edward Lisk, serious head and
shoulder injuries. '
Bill Hammond, Tampa, the dri—g
v&r, lacerations, $
THE BANNER-HERALP. ATHEN!V,V GEORGIA
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_Fleeing from the flood raging down the Ohio river, wreaking havoc
in 'six states, these Louisville, Ky., residents moved out their house
hold goods just in time to keep them from being swept away With
their possessions piled at the water’s edge, they wait to be taken
to a warmer refuge. More than a hundred homes were abandoned
in the city’s lowlands.
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| 'Derailed when the surging waters of the Cumberiand river undermined the Louisville & Nashville |
railroad tracks near Palmyra, Tenn., 15 cars of this freight train were piled into the torrent causing |
heavy damage. The picture, taken from the air, shows the remainder of the train still on the rails and all |
| the surrounding area submerged. Service on the L. & N. main line from Bowling Green, Ky, to Memphis, |
| Tenn., was delayed by the disaster.
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l' One of the most devastating floods in years roaring *over nearly a dozen states drove moare than
100,000 people~from their homes, the scene above being duplicated hundreds of times as victims
i sought frantically to save their possessions. With the rising waters of the Ohio threatening disaster
| in Louisville, Ky., George Clabey is shown as he rowed a boatload of house furnishings to one of
! the relief docks established to sateguard belongings of the refugees.
Bl e isor AR set gt oTR st s L e L
D .
Home Demonstration
»
Council, 4-H Club
. :'
Girls Meet Tuesday
i
| e l
A joint meeting of the Clarke .
County Home Demonstration |
Council and 4-H club girls will be !
held Tuesday afternoon at 3:30|
o'clock at the courthouse. i
' The feature of the meeting will |
‘be the annual 4-H club rromotiuni
day. Ninety-three club girls will
R ———
'receive promotion cards. W, R.]
| Coile, county school superintend-i
i ent, will speak to hte group, !
| Dorothean Tyner, president of |
fthe 4-H club council, will make a |
, report on the activities and ac- |
complishments of the county 4-H’
‘clube during 1936. Silver pins and |
i gold medals will be given to win
. ners of such awards. I
! This will be the first couneil]
! meeting of the year. All home‘
demonstration council members |
and 4-H club girls are urged to !
be present. , E ‘
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Ravaged by previous disastrous floods, the section around Kennett, in the extreme southeastern part
of Missouri, again was swept by a deluge, the scene above showing a great gap torn in the levee
by the surging waters of St. Francis river. In the foreground is a railway line, barely above the
torrents, and a great stretch of fertile farmland was submerged. Hundreds of lowland residents
were driven from their homes and more than 2000 refugees were cared for in Kennett, a city of
: 2 3500 population, by reliet agencies.
T ——————————————— p—————
!
| GEORGIA NEWS
i
| BRIEFS
: (Continued From Page One)
| made to reopen the plants.”
| Gillman said the pickets, 300 in
{all, were instructed not to allow
|anyone to enter the plant.
| BAXLEY, Ga—UP—Bd Jarman. |
| 56, well known business man here
i dieq yesterday from effects of a
iatroke of apoplexy. J
1
MDIVANI ARRESTED
ON TREASON CHARGE
! (Continuea From Page One)
Ijailed together with more than a
{score of henchmen on charges
‘m‘ plotting to seperate Georgia—
| the home province of Joseph Stalin
| —from the Soviet union,
Official sources said there was
little doubt Mdivani and the others
would be tried soon and probably
sentenced to death,
(The American Chronology of
{the spectacular careers of serge,
{David and Alexis Mdivani contains
{no reference to a brother Bydy.|
; (Alexis, the former husband of‘
| Louise Astor Van Allen and Bar
{ bara Hutton, now Countess Huug-i
lwitzd{m‘finlluw. was killed in a
{ Spanish motro acident on Aug. 1.
{1935, g
| (Serge was killed on a Florida
ipolo field on March 15, 1936, a|
| month after he had maried hig for- |
limer sister-in-law M.ss Van Allen|
| He previousiy was married to l’o]a|
l;’\'egri and Mary McCormic. Davld.‘
who survives, is a former husband|
]of Mae Murray. A sister is Mrs
'Juse Maria Sert, wife of the paint
ler.)
lie T e
'AUTO WRECK FATAL ‘
. TO TWO COMER MEN
| e |
! (Céntinued From Page One) ‘
{ —d
{mie Kidd; a borther, Joe Kidd and
I‘t‘uur sisters, Mrs. Addie Coker,
ee e e
|You Can Trust “BC” To
| Relieve Your Neuralgia
L —————————
’ Headaches are never pleasantl
company, so let “BC” lend a help
‘!ing hand the next time you arq}
| annoyed with one. You'll like the
lway the quick-acting ingredients;
lin the “BC” formula function for |
[ the relief of tantalizing headaches,l
’neuralgia and similar pains of an‘
| inorganic character. |
! “BC" is a trustworthy, prescrip
tion-type remedy, of which mil-]
' lions of packages are sold every
i yvear. For more than 25 years peo-
PIGGLY-WIGGLY MARKET
PHONES 426—1641—1642
We are pleased to announce that MR. CHARLIE
BRIDGES will be with us in our Market. MR
BRIDGES has served the Athens public for more
than twenty years. He is an expetr in meats. He
will appreciate his friends coming to sec him.
“THE MEAT MAKES THE MEAL”
Swift’s, Cudahy and White’s Branded Meats.
T-Bone, Ib. .. .. 38¢c Pure Pork Sausage, Ib. 25¢
Sirloin, Ib. .. .. 38¢c Pork Roast, Ib. .. 22'2¢
Round, Ib. .. .. 30c Beef Liver, Ib. ... ..25¢
Club, Ib. ... .. 25¢ Fancy Roast, Ib. 15¢ & 20c
Stew Meats, Ib. . 15¢ Weiners, Star, Ib. .. 20¢
YOU WILL LIKE OUR SAUSAGE—It is All Pork.
No Beef or Veal Added.
FLOUR SPECIALS
24 Pounds Non-Pareil .. .... .... .... $1.09
ISP . ... 55
24 Pounds Red Band Flour . ... . ... .... $135
24 Pounds Snokist Flour ... .. .... .o SI.OO
12 Pounds Snokist Flour ... ol J
’ E\acake Flour .. 10c
. FANCY
Grapefruit, each . 5¢
MONDAY, JANUARY 25, 1037
.—_:-»—_\,
| PERKINS SUGGESTS
.'
| PEACE CONFERENCE
| IN U. S. CAPITAL
| (Continued From Page One)
.‘ e -
|
"hpnomp a mediator whenever ghe
‘i]w]ie\'s industrial pace so requires,
v] Some wrote officers of the Gen.
:I‘ernl Motors corporation, the United
iAutomnhile Workers and Lewis
' asking them to meet together in
i
"her office ‘“without condition of
;;I)l't'julli<'t-" to seek “plang and meth.
|ods of resuming the negotiations
:
| (Her unsuccessrul conferencey
f]:lst week’ were held first with one
|side and then the other)
{ Miss Perkins sald she previously
lhad suggested informaly that Sloan
::md L.ewis, whose committes 18
| backing the strike, meet together
|to seek peace, Lewis acceptd, shs
itold reporters, but General Mo.-
Iwrs rejectea the proposal.
| When Sloan left Washington af
‘ter the conferencesseolapsed last
| week, he said he would return it
the presidnt askd him.
Miss ‘Perkinsg’ invitation was
viewed in some quarters as a major
attempt to bring about negotiations
without drawing the president into
the situation,
1
‘ Mrs. Eva Roberts, Mrs. Eula
Jenkins and Mrs. Della Reynolds
all of Madison county.
L —
| rle have found “BC” to be of grate
| ifying value in the relief of heads
|
{ ache, neuralgia and muscular
{ aches; pain znd discomfort due
| to simple head colds; simple ners
| vousness, and for headache and
| backache due to functional dis
turbances. Try “BC” and see if it
- doesn’'t give you relief in just a
few minutes. Convenient 10c and
| 26c sizes, or by the dose at foul
tains. (adv.)
J——
PHILLIPS’
Tomato Soup, can 5¢
TALL CANS 5
Milk, 2 for .. .. .. 15¢