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LONDAY, MAY 8 1937
George 111 Lost American Colonies for Britain
But Won Subjects’ Esteem as Family Man
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iThe First Gentleman cf Eu
wope’” is the ironical title bestow -
ed on King George IV (at right in
hs coronation robes), for his con
duct toward Queen Caroiine
sbove) was a royal scandal that
alienated his subjects.
By MILTON BRONNER
NEA Service Staff Correspondent.
LONDON.—The reign of King
George 111 of England was of pa
iriarchal length, 60 years. It was
nade tragic by suffering, blind
ess, total deafness, madness. It
vas embittered and acquired vast
istoric importance by-the loss of
he American colonies.,
But it accomplished the down
gl of Natpioleon, thus eliminating
e createst menace to the life of
ritain - since the- Norman con=
jues
t saw the expansion and ag
| ement of the nation’s pow
nd wealth, the beginning of
he ion's greated destiny.
wnted the kingship of the
souse of Hanover and made this
iou uly British for the first
{ it showed the peaple of
he realm that a king could ‘be a
Jecent simple, home-loving,
i religious man—a tradition
¥ the fifth and sixth Georges
Ve )y eontinue.
George 111 was the first Han
werian king to be born in Eng
and He was the first to live a
ereng, family life,
ather Died Without
ttaing the ,Throne
worge was born June 4, 1738,
jon of Frederick, Prince of Wales
ind Augusta, 'who was a daughter
i Duke of - Saxe-Gotha. His
¢ died when he was 13 and
! 1 hecame heir to the
! 0 hig grandfather. He
eaArne f'rench and German, but
i h was bad and all his
¢ ild not spell correctly.
¢ i) in a world in which
reerage had all the
ower and was dissolute,
l immoral as it was
¢ George mounted the
! noral and a. pious man
( h he remained all his life—
i ¢ of simple tastes, 'who
Ve vise, his children, his
ireside. He liked to play at farm
f | 0 became Kknown as
¢ George
élin Love With Charlotte
! ih Correspondence
ell jn love with a letter
.
t. Hans Simens to
Speak on Wednesday
Simons, professor of
¢ at the New School
Research in New York,
) it the Institute of
at the University
; May 1,3 at 12:30 M
who has spent
tudyving and lectur
( will discuss the
olitiecal situation. He
6 staff of the German
tion in Versailles in
en part in many in
conferences dealing
problems, and was
the \ceademy for Po
ence in Berlin from 1924
ng is the last speaker
ht to the University by
) of Public. Affairs this
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B" %8 ousness associated
¢ o. F with periodic paing,
g 4 %/ you need the tonic
(fe effect of Dr. Pit:l‘(‘,_e'i
. Favorite Prescrip
\ tion. Read what
A Mrs. Nannie Murfi
; of 110 Third Ave,
1 by said: “When 1 was a young
ame delicate. Cramps and head.
cenHodically were very severe. 1 alsc
. ‘o backache associated with fune
fothe, Suthances and would feel all gone
Bave me Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Pre
Ming gr i iR I had taken two bottles, the
Lihdathes were relieved. 1 could cq
Buy ;) "“)' food, and 1 felt just fine,
New o % youe neifiborhood druggist,
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!written him by Princess Char
lotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz and
‘in 1761 married her, his proposal
letter inviting her to be “Queen
lof Great Britain, France and Ire
iland." This was probably the last
]time an English King clung to the
illusion thkat he still ruled over
lpart of France.
Their match was a happy one.
‘ They reared their 15 children. They
!danced long hours in simple fam
| :ly parties. George sat and. lis
ihsned while his Charlotte played
lon the spinet. He adored long
sermons and church music. His
'mother long ago had pronounced
!him a dull but good boy and in
his private life he remained ex
actly that.
| Regained for the Crown
{ Many Dormant Prerogatives
l in his public life he was not
quite so happy. He could not un
derstand great men. He dlsliked‘
statesmen like Fox and Chatham
and Burke, and warriors like
Nelson who shed lustre on his era.
He had exalted ideas of the pre- |
rogatives of the crown and
steadily and stubboraly resumed
powers which had been taken by}j
the cabinet. He seized much of
the patronage and a party of |
“King's friends” grew ur. He
used corruption both in elections
and in Parliament to gain his
ends and he did break the long
oligarchy of the Whig party.
He disliked the American colo
nists because of their growing in
dependence and was happiest
when he found a ministry sub
gervient to his ideas of crushing
them. From 1770 to 1782 he vir
tually directed affairs. He heart
ily favored the long wars with
Jrance which finally breke Napo
leon’s power, and he stubbornly
opposed emancipation of the Ro
man Catholics among his sub-
Jects.
The closing days of his life
were as black as those of some
protagonist in a stark Greek trag
edy. In 1765 he was mentally de
ranged for some time, but recov
ered. In 1788 this recurred and
the first bill was passed making
But as the years went on, the
. t
Investment Circles |
% |
Shies Bond Markets
|
NEW YORK —(®&)— Investmen[g
circles, awaiting the May 1 hike|
in exces§ reserve requirements by
[federal Reserve member banks,
ghid from the bong market last |
week and prices held about even. |
Orders were exceptionally lightl
throughout the period, even on |
Friday when a spirited rally (‘.'flk‘l
¢d up most of the holes punched |
during the downward movementl
' which had- held sway in the cor=
porate list since Monday. Govern- |
anm ponds were well supported‘
most of the week, while foreigneis,
lshmwd lower, i
Railroad bonds furnished rgost
'of the fireworks, drifting lower
tnrough Wednesday, falling sharp=
lly Thursday and rebounding Fri
!M,y to mma than wipe out enrller‘
| reverges, On Saturday movements!
| were narrow and trading light. |
| Tne decline Thursday careied the
|2O carrier bonds in the Associated
!1’1"953 averages off .6 of a point,
while the following day they raced
"lm .9 of a point, the widest rally
ladvance for a gingle group in
| weeks,
] (Mher corporate loans moved in
jeoncert with the rails for the most
part, although wiility issues were
lmmrt-wh:n* less resiFont,
i istg
DEATHS TO END DEATHS
,STATESVILLE, N. C.—P)—
Statesville's “death oak” ‘was
dead itself today, and will take
the lives of no more motorists.
Its last viectims were Lawrenge
Young, 24, and Miss Sue Parkpr,
26. Before them several had died
in dozens of accidents as auto
~ mobiles struck the tree. Their car
ei e INes, B 0 A e
his, eldest son; ‘the Pri..._ of
Wales, regent. Again he recover
ed.
But in 1809 he became blind
and in 1811, after the death of his
favorite daughter, Princess Ame
lia, he became hopelessly insane
and also deaf. He 'was a King in
total darkness and -isolation, a
King often in a straightjacket. He
died January 29, 1820. A
George |V Reverted to
Type of Earlier Georges
. He was succeeded by the son
who had been regent so long and
who now mounted the throne as
George IV, This king was born
at ' St. James’ Palace, London,
August 12, 1762, and five days la
ter was made Prince of ‘Wales by
his adoring father. ‘Among his
earliest toys were a sct of Indian
bhows and - arrows sent him from
New : York by ‘the still loyal sub
jects of the crown. '
He grew up a handsome lad,
with - quick brains for languages
and all kinds. of learning. He
played \the cello, sang pleasingly,
rode well,
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. et L Chdew g,j : o thing will! Here’s Al's comment: gé 4% " ;
- , - ¥ Working among ‘:l'gh l‘:"l““g." e N \ ‘
HOLLYWOOD CELEBRITIES *\& . " cables isn’t calculated to ;P_ AR T ! !
' - i : e S e& . ! e S
goto Eleanor Tennant for ten- : ! ‘e-’ e e BU”““"- B““” @ie d‘”"‘sn tgl e o o ! ; ! SR
nis instruction. Eleanor says: o ; AR me trouble. I smoke Camels with & i o
. 4',> Dy 3 : B o to : ¥ 505 i :"5552%35';53553:-755:-’;35~'51515Z.
"1 often light up (“n(n?l.b-t : :im‘“ my meals and after. Camels set ‘)"-*b,” \ : .
swoes.games. LEhty SO 18 | gt . 0 e righc!” Smoking Camels e 0 e
. . ”» ; Pr. B 3 . . e R ] S &
energy with a Camel. t e P f digestive b A, e
! ! i B | specds up the flow of diges e Nl L
LT 7 {*" G . : testive fui ' . R
4 1 H: j%i .:.f‘ { m@/ fluids — alkaline d]gestlvt fl\.llds : % b W —
ge p ;4,;5"’ £ e i hto our - & o ; }, /,/
iy § (o ; —that medn S 0 much €0 y ' o
< S R ' ~ 5 3 7 ""4 7
M g sense Us well-bclng. (,dm(ls are v i ,’
2 ,»;-‘:s.' 2 AR o 2 % . r»j.i?f;’f:fii i :.. 2
AR s so mild, they are better for ; ’9 G
::e : ! e
o ; steady smoking. And Camels are T S L
3)P 2 % 2
g i f 5 i : | gentle to your throat—always. . § 4 ; ‘ .
¢ o ;(:"' VR i?.’ A ? A 3 : 4 ! o f B ~ 2
eS ) AR v ! e T S gz b ; PReL. ‘ .
e . A }B e - kR o fotscs., ~_ g A Copyright, 1987, K. J. Reynolds, Tobacco Company, Winstoo-Salem, N. Qs
iMG ;:::; i o » COSTIIER : TOBACCOS Camels are made from finer, MORE
g §0 T & ] .
it TR | PRIZES HEALTHY NERVES. = ; EXPENSIVE TORCORS-Troms w 3
LS i oy A G A ik : g . § 3
“fio SRR, i . R St Fred Jacoby, Jr., Nat'l Out- L o Oil Domestic = than any other popular brand
b ST, g { board Champion, tells why : : vy j“‘ . T—m
G e T ¥ .&1 Camel is his cigarette."l've 7 ' ] i 7 & e,
g : i . ' 3 e g") * g N
v T || smoked Camels regularly, g e ) L N 9
[l UASK GANIE'S cOLLEAN" L . B Theynever geton mynerves. | B g aeew L,
S 2 “ college’'! A e R - 51.3 9 =R e/ o e iy
] Jack Oakie runs the ‘(‘llfi{fle" s e Camels are so mild. : i‘ % l,i 273 . Sey gI B )
8 Catchy music by Benny "”“‘d‘"m g W-~ 3 ® » L2y * PWV GM B BN O )
-. s . — O« s i - B ™ . B : . A A e L
% and Georgie Stoll! Hollywood o Koy AR ; 1 ‘ ! ; :Lit g ; RPN B g
medians! Judy Garland sings! Tues- §8 Z# ;/ ; bi 3 W f o g /i 4 .ST
: days—B:3o pm E.S.T, (9:30 pm. e i / # S e s g ORI e T e e & s
EDS.T.), 7:30 pm CS7o Sok, B 2 0 &%4 SNGR TPR S ~ . B 'O'v.?é
M.5.T.,5:30pm P.S.T.,WABC-CBS. o T e & L o 8 fg;-":awg‘ i‘”‘»: fzw Vo Mo s h' ,BE NS NP S
Se N R 089 5 FA RNS I - sI s - %' DG eSR RS e
g e & *‘% B - 8 TW L S S W &e e e SN B
3 S T e i f L S - v o eA s { vA R gZ § e L
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i L - 'w York Giants. His spe- . R e o 3 ot eS ) ~. £ W A& B O e )
i G?" -‘2 wf ER,S S~ 1 “Believe % ?,gfif,i:;' &s { 7 (4'6' gy )¢ ‘* N P B '3‘3:6-':l‘:?:3s‘s‘4
‘ » e o cialty—home-runs ; Rs A # Lo e LSSS =P M it W W
p G N ; S w ke m S e %‘W / o e & L R R
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s e LN N "Ko SRR S e e S N .iy 5 Ao S
fl' eo i W : | their rich flavor. RS e SOOI [t *:‘% gEs * G -:E:;:Er-:i':l,rz‘térfi}:{‘;‘-:i,'fif‘fik?iff‘{ffi’w
’ ke . ¥ 4‘ 3 N ness and . pres 735%’;,‘5.212:?:1;;”:?:1:-‘):;\,f; ,%?:ii?fé;‘: e o ‘ G M
| e i PR s wii SRR T i . T — o~
| R B L A T se e e - -
l oMW S ‘
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
good-looking lad became the red
!fa.ced, bloated man of the world
who cared more for the set of a
wig and the fit of a coat than for
{ anything serious. He was as dis
| solute as the rich patriicans of his
‘time, instead of moral, like his
i" father and mother. In the days
i when he was Regent for his mad
| father, he made the ‘“regency
ldays” famous, or infamous, ac
cording to the viewpoint. He
made of the seaside place of
Brighton a resort of fashion. He
‘be’came one of the most extrava
gant princes in England’s history.
He was cold and heartless and
heartless and not only dropped
one-time friends like the famous
i}"mau Brummel, but the dell wo
imen he for a time petted and
| adored, and the woman he mar
|'ried. He was constant only in his
i fnconstancy.
Married Mrs. Fitzherbert,
ICcvmn'n:mer. Then a Princess
! Thus, antedating the Duke of
Windsor in his love for a com
moner, he contracted a form of
| marriage with a Mrs. Fitzherbert
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Unlike the earlier Georges, King
George Il (left) proved to be a
devout and faithful family man
of modest tastes and moral hab
its, devoted to Queen OCharlotte
(above), who captivated his fancy
through correspondence.
in December, 1785, To get Par
liament to help with hig mounting
debts, he allowed an official denial
of his marriage. Again to secure
Parliamentary doles, he wed his
cousin, Caroline of Brunswick.
His conduct towards her was
cruel and callous to the extreme
and helped alienate the English.
After the birth of their daughter,
he deserted Caroline to climax his
abominable conduct towards\ her
and made attempts to secure a
divorce from her. It was this
roue, _this fop, this profligate 'who
was called a little over one hun
dred years ago— ' The First Gen
tleman of Europe.”
His reign was marked by great
events., 'While Regent, his Eng
land gave the mortal blow to Na
poleon and fought the war of
1812 with the United States. When
he was King, KEngland helped the
Greeks attain independence from
the Turks, and the long fight of
the Catholics to have full rights
of British citizenship was at lagt
won. George IV, regretted by fe&
died at Windsor, June 26, 1830.
Philosopher of “Potato Hill” Says
Young Men Should Try “Pioneering”
In Old Time Efficiency to Succeed
g By ALLEN MORRIS '
| MIAMI Fla. —() — Ed Howe, |
levelling a finger of reproof at hisl
i fellow men, accusingly said, “what
|nve~r is wrong with this world— |
you have assisted in it!"”
' “The people themselves need
| performing more than the wrongs
log which they complain. We sm'—‘
ifer from injustice because we m‘vg
| ourselves unjust,
i “Public affairs are unfairly :flull
{ extravagantly managed because |
;th- people "are unfair and vxn‘nvu—:
{gant. Quit your part of it, andi
fynu will have accomplished some- |
i thing.” |
" The Kansas apostle of wnnserva-l
Etism, 84 years old tomorrow (May
18), looked down on life—not from
{his beloved potato hill outside At
%chisnn bhut a penthouse in down
jtown Miami—and counseled:
|- “The only opportunity the aver-‘
sage man has to influence public
)affairs is with his small part in‘
public sentiment. He shouldq not|
cheer foolish or wrong things. |
“l have never been one of those|
severe critics who expect the peo
ple to be without faults. All 1
recommend {8 reasonable effort in
}gmting rid of the worst faults”
i Is In Good Health
Approach of his 86ith year found
Edgar Watson Howe, whose At
chison Globe was quoted national
ly at the turn of the century for
his ecrisp editorial paragraphs, in
as good health “as a man of my
age reasonably may expect”
| His sight restored by a cataraet
loppratlon two years ago, the “Sage
lof Potato Hill” pow again is able
jlu read, with spectacles, but cre
ative writing virtually has been
labandoned. Mt
Sparse figure with black string
,tie_ Howe struck clenched fist into
icupped hand with a resounding
smack as he expounded op his fa
vorite thesis of hard work as the
road to true success.
“We must have a foundation for
money, we have discovered, as we
have discovered there must be a
foundation for a government, a
|bank, a family, a business,” he
| said.
| *“This foundation is always as
lmuch character, industry, effec
tiveness, politeness, fairness as we
](‘an coax from our wild natures.
“Men are beginning to realize a
lfree man is an impossible thing;
|that the famous slave driver, the
'sun, which rises in the morning to
|see if we are at work, not only
y bunishes us if we are not, but re
wards us if we perform our du-‘
ties with reasonable zeal.”
Reasonableness is this corn
flower philosopher's credo,
For the young man of today,
Howe quoted his advice from one
of the collections of his pa.ra.gra,phst
lwritten many years ago: :
“Young men oftén say they
]haven‘t the chan~e now their fath
ers had, when the country was
lnower, There is pioneering young
]men may engage in now that will
pay them handsomely,
i “Let them pioneer ip the nldl
'time efficency; in the old time de
[votinon to their jobs. The old fel
l]ows have wandered away some
what from these virtues,
[ “They have too short hours; too
many live wire stunts, and belong
to too many clubs, Let their sons
bring them back to a realization of
these faults”
I Howe recalls, in the autobiogra
phy “Plain People”, hig father as
}“u, cross, dissatisfied man, (who)
(often whipped me, but conscience
whiping was worse; I was saved
{ from ruin not by a switch laig on
{by an angry, unreasonable father
|but my conscience-whipping..
Punished A-Plenty
“Let those I have wrongéd know
I have been punished, [ believe in
ginners brought to repentance by
worldly experience that sin does
not pay; our best people are sin
ners with sufficient experience o
realize that a sinner, first of all
is a fool.”
Trained as a printer, Howe roved
the west after the fashion then 0:&
tramp compositors, He settled i
Atchison in 1877, commencing pub
leation of the Globe with a font
of Broyler type and less than S2OO
in cash. ’
Howe made the Globe so well
known exchange editors the nation
over would no more have written
“Atchinson (Kansas) Globe” in
crediting reprinted than “Brooklyn
(New York) Bridge.”
He retired 20 years ago, turning
over the Globe to his sons. Ta
spread his thoughts in retirement,
Howe established E., W. Howe's
Monthly which he abandoneg three
vears ago because of his failing
eyesight,
Employment Higher
Than in 29 Says
NEW YORK.— (#) —A survey
of employment conditions by the
national industrial conference
board today said employment in
March in manufacturing, agricul
ture, the service industries, and
trade, distribution and finance
combined, topped the records of
1629, ‘
The board, which is a research
organization largely supported by
industry, estimated the number of
workers in these activities at 38,-
984,000 as compared ‘with a 1929
average of 38,116,000, This group,
the survey declared, normally af
ford employment to fr_o_m 80 per
cent to 85 percent of the total]
number of the country's workers.,
The largest gain was attr;l)uted!
to manufacturing with the num
ber of March workers placed at}
11,678,000 compared with 11,073,-
000 in 1929, as-increase of 5.5 per- |
cent. |
The board estimated employ
ment in all industries and occupa-l
tions in March was approximately
4 percent under the average |
monthly record of 1929, '
‘SELLING WAVES HIT
~ COTTON CAST WEEK
| Cotton Offers Feeble Re
| sistance to Selling Waves
! During Past Week
{ By EDWARD §. OHARA
| NEW YORK —(#)— Cotton fu
’lurvs offered feeble resistance to
i!lw succession of selling waves
{which broke over world security
[;md commodity markets last week.
| From the stary contracts were
|under the handicap of the changed
i,,pc-(-ulmive psychology whieh en-.
itered after President Roosevelt
%spoke in eriticism of the riss in
|durable goods prices, and which
l('.hl:']y('!‘lr-d under the more recent
lzossip and rumor regarding a low
jering of the gold buying price.
i Moreover, lack of support in the
{ market tended to foster bearish
appraisals of some features of the
\lr:ule picture, Cotton economistd
|pointed out aftention has been
|shifting from the favorable statis
ltiral position and record world
Iconsummi(m to the prospect of' a
Ilargely increased domestic acreage,
heavier fertilizer sales and grow
ing use of modern farm machin
ery, all of these were taken, in the
bearish mood in whichk the market
found jtself, as offering promige
of a considerable increase in pro
duction. o
In the week prices were forced
down trom $1.50 to nearly fi'}
Lale, The spot contract, May, tel?
to a level, markel observers re
ported, where the discount repre=
'Helllv(l the full cost of ecarrying
the staple to the next active de
livery, the first thmes in two years
in which such a condition existed,
it was said.
Textile selling agents reported
sales of goods by domestic mills
continued to run well below the. .
curent rate of production,
New York cotton gxchange sery
ice reporteq the week's forward-.
ings to domestic mills at 138,000
bales compared with 84,000 in the
like period lasy year, Rorwardings .
to mills abroad were £6,000 bales
against 110,000 in the correspond
ing week last year. ; . :
For the season to date, the
movement to domestic manufac
turerg totaleq 6,970,000 bales com
pared with 4,963,000 in the corre=-
sponding period of the previous
season. To mills abroad were
shipped 4,070,000 against 4,825,000, *
‘\ The futures market was not no
ticeably affected by the commod
‘ity credit corporation’s announce
ment its marketing program for
12-cent loan cotton would be coni
tinued wunder substantially tne -
same conditions which governed
earlier sales, Tor the last week of
April, it was revealed, the corpors
‘ation’s release amounted to only
23,312 bales. Cumulative sales, from
Feb. 1 to April 29, wepe 1,266,513
hales, leaving a balance unsold of
approximately 1,709,000 bales, ac
cording .to the figures reported to
the trade, ;
PAGE FIVE