Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
Howard V. Harper
L S
Claimed by Death;
ey
Hold Rites Today
Howard Vessie Harper, 57, died
at his residence mnear Princeton,
Saturday morning at 8:15 o'clock
after an illness of one year.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at
Princeton Methodist church, Rev.
Jack Nichols, pastor of the church,
conducting. Assisting Rev. Nich
ols will be Rev. J. Ollin Watson,
Madison county pastor..
Interment will be in Princeton
cemetery, MeDorman Funera
Home in charge of arrangements.
Pallbearers will he members & the
local Woodmen of the World
Camp.
Surviving Mr. Harper are his
wife, Mrs. Cora Harper, Athens;
one son, Howard V. Harper, jr,
*Athens; four sisters, Mrs. F. M.
‘Price, Tampa, Fla.; Mrs. 8. J.
MecCoy, Brunswick, Ga.; Mrs. W.
C. Parker, Lumpkin, Ga.; Mrs.
C. W. Knapp. Ashtabula, Ohio,
two brothers, Luther D. Haryper,
Atlanta, and Ralph H. Harper,
New York city; step-mother, Mrs,
Hattie Harper, Atlanta.
Mr. Harper's father, two broth
ers and a sister preceded him in
death some years ago. He was a
native of Morgan county and had
lived in Athens for the past 18
years, during which time he made
hundreds of friends throughout
this section. He was a member ot
Erastus Christian church.
The body will remain at Me-
Dorman Funeral Home until 1:30
o'clock Sunday afternoon.
PRESIDENT PLEDGES ,
AMERICA TO PEACE
~ IN NEW STATEMENT
(Continuea trom Page One)
where fighting has continued bit- |
teriy and unceasingly since Thurs- |
day on the very border of Shang
hai’s international settlement.
Twelve mileg to the northwest
the battle surged about the key-‘
puint in the Chinese defenses,
with the roar clearly audible in
Shanghai.
Chinese dispatches reported the
departure of several trainloads ot |
Japanese troops from Tientsin,
headed eastword toward the coast.
ostensibly “going home after the}
vietory.” Chinese said these for
ces, withdrawp from Hopej Prov
ince fronts, actually would be
gent to Tsingtao, chief port of
Shantung Province,
One Japanese colump already
has invaded Shantung, advancing
from the north along the Tientsin-
Pukow railway to a peint 3¢ miles
north of Tsinan, the provincial
capital. ;
A Japanese army spokesman in
Peiping declared Japanese forces
in Shansi Province, southwest of
Teiping, “very soon”would begin a
gm,jor drive to capture Taiyuanfu,
_capital of the province.
A Chinese spokesman asserted
“the worst is now over and we
are confident of holding out in
definitely in Chapei,” the left flank
of the Chinese line where it is
protected by the neutrality of the
foreign areas of Shanghai,
‘While Japanese warplanes drop
ped bombsg on the stubbory de
fenders in Chapei, the opposed ar
mies battled hand-to-hand through
the native c¢ity's narrow, winding
streets and crooxed alleys.
Spirited engagements were
fought at Eight Character bridge
and Rokusan Gardens, once a fa
vorite meeting place for foreign
ers, it
Chinese authorities placed Jap
anese casualties on the Shanghai
front at 65,000 of which 24,200 were
killed .
A Japanese naval spokesman
announced the Nanking airdrome
had been bombed and one Chinese
plane destroyed. He also asserted
ths strategic railway points of
Hangchow, Soochow and Wushih
behind the Shanghai front had
been bombed and considerable
damage caused. *
Mrs. O’'Day Looks
Forward to Dinner
Here, She Says
(Contlauea rrom Tage One)
day afternoon.
Members of the Lions and Pilot
clubs wili attend the dinner in
stead of holding their regular
‘meetings this week and, in addi
tlon, tickets were purchased by
many others.
- Decorations for the dinner will
will be under direction of a com
_mittee of which Miss Van Cleve
RIDING ACADEMY
L. C. BROWDER,
INSTRUCTOR
= —PHONE 9111—
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Child’s Class
3:30 to 4:30 Daily
Adult Class
4:30 to 5:30 Daily
HOUR RIDES AT ALL
OTHER TIMES
—————————————————————————
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Ben ng hig head earnestly to the all-absorbing task of luring wily {ropical fish from their hidi E o
5-year-old Lonny Bliss, Miami. uses one of the giant lilv pds 1 Ast ,' ; ;l' B ARE Raaces,
> 3 11, B¢S ) 1 gla ads O Cas ~ s bR Ved e : i
up easily under the youthful fisherman’s weight nd he d 5 Fo he lily is so large it beais
J _ 1 3 welgnt, and e doesn t need a boat for the bést aneline.
Wilkins, 'widely known decorator,
is chairman.
A Banner-Herald reporter talked
with Mrs. O'Day at the Biltmore
hotel in Atlanta yesterday over
long distance telephone and was
told she does not plan to make a
formal speech at the dinner, bui
will give “intimate glimpses” of
her friened and political mentor,
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Mrs. O'Day was elected to con
gress from the state-at-large in
New York with the aid of Mrs.
Roosevelt, and is one of the most
colorful personalities in Ameri
can poititics, She will be accom
panied to Athens Monday by her
daughter,, Amelia.
The program for the dinner, as
gutlined by KEugene A, Epting,
chairman of the Young Demo
cratic club, and Mrs. Lamar Ruth
erford Lipscombd, who originated
the rlan to invite Mrs. O'Day te
Athens, will' begin promptly at 7
o'clock. Prof. Robert L. McWhor
ter will preside. Brief talks ‘will
be made by Mayor T. S. Mell and
Mr. Epting, and at the conclusion
of Mrs. O'Day’s talk Mrs. Lips
comb, as president of the Friends
of Roosevelt clubs in Georgia,
will give a brief talk.
The entertainment program in
cludes a demonstration of the “Big
Apple,’ the wunique dance that
has swept the country, which will
be given by students of the Uni
versity of Georgia.
ATLANTA.—(P)—Miss Ida M.
Sadler, former society reporter of
the Atlanta Journal, and Daniel
O'Day of Rye, N. Y., son of Rep
resentative Caroline O'Day (D.-
N. Y.), were married at the First
Presbyterian church here late Sat
uday . ;
Miss Sadler, a Deautii@l bru
nette, is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Gillespie Sadler of Atlanta.
Her father is surerintendent of
claims for a railway express com
pany .
The couple planned a honey
moon in Cuba and Mexico. They
will make their home in New
York. The bridegroom is associat
ed ‘with Phelps, Fenn and Com
pany.
MUTINY CHARGED TO
’
FREIGHTER’S CREW
(Continged from Page One) !
i ———
ship, presentde information on
which the warrants were bused.!
He asserted the men conspired to
‘deprive him of hig command in
Montevideo, Uruguay.
Squads of officers were at the
pier when U, 8. Marshall August
Klecka and 11 deputies boarded
the Algic and served the war
rants,
l The crew members, some oobvr
tuusly surprised at their arrest,
i trooped quietly into the patrol
- wagons,
The freighter’s captaiy confer
tmd with department of - justice
agents and representatives of the
federal maritime commission prior
to the issuance of the warrants.
t He previously had told of three
sit-down strikes, one slaying, a
drowning agd desertions on the
voyage.
The first sit-down wag at Bilti
more where crew members pro
. tested refusal of officers to join
unions the men advocated. They
returned to work on advice of
Patrick Whalen, leader of their
‘national maritime union, affiliate
of the committee for industrial or
ganization,
A second strike occurred at
| facksonville and the third in Mon
i tevideo in sympathy with a steve
!dores' strike there.
One man was slain in a water
‘tront tavern brawl at Jacksonville.|
Officers sald the death had no
connection with labor troubles.
Another drowned after jumping!
]shin with three others in Brazil.
! he federal bureau of naviga
tion and inspection turned the!
vessel's troubles over to the de
partment of justice yesterday af
ter an inquiry into labor difficul
ties, The bureau said the “grav
ity” of charges showed “probable
cause” for action on criminal
lehar¢u., i o
U. S. Peace Parley Delegation
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Intrusted-with the. delicate task of representing the United States
at the conference of nine-power pact signatories in Brussels, October
30, to discuss peaceful settlement of the Chinese-Japanese conflict,
white-haired Norman H. Davis, American ambassador-at-large,
conferred, above, with his advisory staff in Washington. Delega
tion members, left to right, seated: Dr. Stanley K. Hornbeck,
advisor; Ambassador Davis; Dr. Pierrepont Moffat, advisor. Stand
ing: Charles E. Bohlen, left, secretary; Robert T. Pell, press oificer
Flooding Excl With Ord
i'looding Exchange With Uraers
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Messengers scurry about at the A. E. Pierce and Company broker
age offices in New York, delivering to phone clerks the slips of
paper that swelled ‘the flood of securities sales. . The phone clerks,
in direct communication with the floors of the exchanges, trans
mitted 19,000 orders for execution by the firm’s trading members
Baliots Mailed in ]
Chamber Commerce
Directors Election
(Continuea from page one.) 1
e |
D. D. Quillian, €. A. Wrussell, M.
N. Tutwiler, J. C. Postell and E.
L. Wier.
The annual membership meet
ing, at which time members and
their famileis will enjoy a dinner
will be held at Civic Hall Tues
day night, November 2, at 7:00
o'clock. Dinner reservations wili
be fifty cents per plate.
Mr. .and Mrs. George Everitt,
and Edwin Everitt, of Decatur,
are spending the week-end with
Mr. and Mrs. D. B. St. Johm
coming down to attend th: Home
coming game with Mercor.
‘! PLANE CRASH KILLS TwWO
TACOMA, Wash. —(AP)— Two
persons were killed and eight in
jured in the wreck of a tri-motored
airplane Saturday at the Tacoma
aijrport. Those dead were Filot
Teenard Reynor, Kansas Sity, and
Fred W.liams, a passenger, of
lTawma,) o 8
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
ization. Taylor succeeds Lawse
rence Short of Warwick. :
. The Star Georgia Planter award
a $75 check and watch, went te
Tom Bell of Alpharetta.
Georgia Planter $75 check
awards went to Jim West, Sale
City, District 1; Horace Johnson,
Swainsboro, District 2 and 3; and
\E. P. Hearn, jr., Good Hope, Dis~
trict 4.
Dr. M. D. Collins, state sup
erintendent of scheools, awarded a
plaque for the best Georgia chap
ter to Moultrie.
Advisors of the following dis
trict chapter ‘winners were given
$75 cnecks: LaFayette, northwest;
Clarksville, nortaeast; Swainsboro
southeast; and Moultrie, south
west. :
Other state officers elected were
R. J. Mitchell, Marven; Mercer
Dalton, Baldwin, and Curles
Bishop, Fairburn, wvice-presidents;
E. P. Hearn, Good Hope, secre
tary; Robert Woods, LaFayette,
treasurer, and Raymond Hall
Pavo, reporter.
M. D. Mobley of Atlanta, was
re-elected advisor, and T. G.
Walters, also of Atlanta, execu
jive socreilnxy, . 0 o
Music Institute to
i M
Be Directed by Mrs.
W. D. Jackson Here
A two-day music institute will
be held in Athens, Monday and
Tuesday, October 25 and 26, with
Mrs. W. D. Jackson, a certified
key teacher of the Voco Study
plar for teaching wvolce in grour,
as director. She is from Wash
ington, D’ C.
Mrs. Jackson has specialjzed in
conducting music forums, classes
in communitp song leadfhg and
organization of community musgic.
The institute is being sponsored
by the Athens Playground Asso
ciation, with which the WPA is
cooperating, and the following
schedule 'will be filled:
Monday, October 25
8:45 a. m.—Mell Auditorium
(Athens High school).
9:45 a. m. — Oconee Street
school.
10:30 a. m.—Athens Vocational
school.
1:00 p. m. — College Avenue
school,
7:30 p. m.—Civic Hall.
Tuesday, October 25
9:00 a. m. — Lumpkin Street
school. § aEy
16:00 ‘a.” m. — Junior High
(Childs Street) .
1:00 p. m.—Chase Street school.
4:00 p. m.—Woman’'s club.
7:30 p. m.—Civie Hall.
The public is cordially qnvited.
et it
g
L 'NCH A BIG PUSH
(Continued fiv.u. r'aze One)
figures would be the basis for cal
culating troop withdrawals from
both - sides.
Count Dino Grandi, the Italian
representative, stated flatly Ttaly
would not agree in advance to ac
cept the figures, and the Russian
ambassador, Ivan Maisky, counter-
{ed that Russia would accept them
. but would not be bound by them.
! The statement of no further
f.cr;ncession’s from Rome today in
| dicated the Italian positionp would
| mot be altered and observers con
i sidered Maisky was unlikely to
]make any concessions at this
ipoint——particularly to Italy.
! NEW WAR THEATER
i HENDAYNE, Franco - Spanish
Frontier. —(&£)—lnsurgent General
!issimo Francisco Franco Saturday
! swung his strengthened army
iea.st to the Aragon front, next
, major theater of Spain’s civil war,
| for what his aides said’ would be
l_“the decisive offensive of the war,”
| Behind him Franco left a sit
ting force of Navarrese troops to
‘polico newly conquered areas ons
{ Oviedo province.
Teng of thousands of war-weary
Asturians surrendered arms to tue
insurgents following the fall of
(Gijon Thursday, military dispatch
es said, but the interest of Fran
es’s followers already had shifted
to the Aragon front.
Government dispatches announ
cell the Madrid-Valencia regime
was prepared to block the Insur
gents on all -sectors of the long
jine from the French frontier to
Ternel—a front stretching 300
miles south from the border.
Veteran Moorish troops with
Spanish foreign legion detach
ments began operations yesterday
southeast of Jaca, near the fron
tier. Insurgent dispatches from
Zaragoza said that. in a single
day-long battle the insurgents re
gained almost all the territory won
by. the government in recent
weeks, They reported finding 861
government dead at the end of the
pattle and admitted their own
losses were heavy,
Dispatches from Salamanca, seal:
of Franco's regime, said opinior
was divided on which of twe
points the new -affensive would be
based—the Teruel sector whers
the insurgents might strike to
ward Valencia in what military
observers said must be a swift
hard offensive, or Zaragoza from
which a drive would start for Cat
alonia, :
Renewed pressure was felt or
numerous fronts after the fail of
Gijon, governmeng Treports indi
cated. Fighting was particularly
severe in the Casa De Campto sec
tor outside Madrid where machine
guns and bombs keptupa 24-hour
din.
Pl KAPPA ALPHA
WINS BIFTAD CUP
‘' (Continued from rage Onel
victory, In front of the house
was a huge lighted sign, welcom
ing alumni of the Unievrsity back
6 sown. =
There was very little activity in
town last night, and at 11 o'clock
both the General hospital and po
lice headquarters reported there
had been mo accidnts. Only a fw
arrests had been made by officers
for drunkenness.
Taken as a whole, the Home
coming week-end ‘'was the quietest
in years. There weren't many
old grads here, there being less
than 5,000 people for the game.
Future Farmers of
Georgia Elect New
Officers at Session
MACON, Ga.—(}P)-—Emofy Tay
lor of Vidalia, was elected rresi
dent, and Sidney Folsom of Moul
trie, American Farmer, at the
closing session of the Georgia
Future Farmers of America assem
bly here Saturday.
These are the two l_:lthest hon
ors bestowed by the state organe
aki id to Need
Making Appeal for Aid to Needy
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With the statement that as prosperity is revived the federal gov
ernment would turn back to local agencies the care of the needy,
President Roosevelt broadcasts his appeal for generous contribu
tions to' Cornmunity Chest drives which will be conducted in 450
communities this' fall in co-operation with The Committee for
Mobilization of Human Needs.
FUNERAL NOTICES
SAR S VR S 48
(COLORED)
WYCHE—The friends and rela
tives of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Welzie Wyche Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Oliver, Mrs. Magnolia
Wyche, Mrs. Emily Wyche and
family, all of Athens; Rev. Sam
Wychie and family; Mrs. Rufus
Lowe and family of Clarke
county, are invited to attend the
funeral of Mr. Wesley Welzie
Wyche Sunday October, 24th,
1937, at 3 p.m., from the BSt.
Luke A.M.E. church on Lex
ington Road, Rev. W. T. Ty
rus will officiate. Interment in
the church cemetery. Mack &
Payne.
Card of Thanks
(COLORED) .
To our many friends we wish
to express our sincere thanks for
the kind expressions during the
shut-in period of our beloved sis
ter and mother, Mrs. Susie Camp
bell Brown.
Sincerely,
,Dr. Andrew M. Jones
Mrs. E. H. Long.
Farm land, often seems as stable
as the rock of Gibraltar. Yet,
within the memory of men now
living, land in Georgia has been
cleared, tilled, ruined by erosion,
and abandoned.
e e e e e SR
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4V el [| n)
WA A
IT’LL be a revelation to you how much faster,‘ v __/_7,,~/ / /‘/ y 5/
easier and more smoothly Safti-Flights stop your L, ,/_/ S 77/, ' % |
car .. . without side swerve or tailspin. Hundreds fl/,. " a,fil /
8E R ) |
of flexible, independent rubber cleats provide maxi- 7 e, S 4, ; /,f,/r [ |
/’/' 5 B iy . i ff,:/ ‘
mum traction and greater braking power on any _ —/ /t |
TN R 4 W/
type of road and under all climatic conditions. /,/ =N
g 8 /] -
Drive in today and examine this new tire, entirely /& il //// / ;
/ T . # /j;'l’ /,/ ] ‘/.‘/"'
different from all others. Ul // //// / N ] /",/»/,’/;,'/ -
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5 VS R B sel Y 1 i ‘
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WE MEET OR BEAT ALL CHAIN STORE OR ,:“’\l.. 8 i / / i ‘
MAIL ORDER HOUSE COMPETITION—COME IN /1 o e e i
AND SEE FOR YOURSELF! ee " e 4| V ‘
- gs e va/’/}?,";‘ ‘ v/
TST ; s Lol bGSAR SR BRI /{,,;l}, _"’l |
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CLARK TIRE COMPANY i ,1:;:; 1 X% 1
FISK TIRES 'kl §8- { |
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ) \hf;a } ‘
Corner Washington and Jackson Street—Phone 1726 1 ‘\; | }
WE SELL FOR LESS REGARDLESS OF PRICE! \\\\\‘:,fg( \‘?-,51';1-'lß' J
Nt ;‘)" T
N &
Black Is Due for
‘ First Opinion as
New Court Member
(Cuutingeq rom ™mge One)
if any—was decided at the con
ferences the past two Saturdays.
Among the petitions before the
justices at Saturday's conference
was one which, in the opinion of
some observers, might provide a
basis for a challenge against Black
if he participated in the action.
It was an appeal by Haywood
Patterson, a negro sentenced {o a
75-vear term for attacking a
white soman on a moving freight
train near Scottshoro, Ala., in
1931. Black once was a member
of the Ku Kilux Klan.
The Supreme Court twice has
ordered new trials for Pattersom
after -he had heen given death
sentences in Alabama courts. At
the third trial he received the 75~
year sentence.
HAVING EYE TROUBLE!
Consult
FICKETT’S
FOR A THOROUGH EXAMINATION
Classes Designed for Your Own Occupation
224 Clayton Street—Phone 200
"SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 193
_SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2
- 'Card of Thankg
We wish to thank each gng
ry one 'for their Kindnegg dun
the illness and deatn of oqup d
ing mnephew, Calvin Tallent
appreciate all the flowers th-;x,.n W
given. We thank the choir ¢
sang at Highview church We
8o thank Dr, Lord ang Rev, (v
Connell of Jefferson, Ga,, l:n\'-
. Smithof = Atlanta, Ca. '\
God Dless each and every otk
BT And Mrs. Chan, gy
and Family,
————
Card of Thanks
" We wish to express r gjna
thanks and appreciation t, :1114
friends for the many acts of ki
ness and expressions of SYmpg
which were shown ug at the j
of our dear wife anq Moty
Friends were always & SOurce
great pieasurg to her anqg she |
ed every one of you who Camg
see her. and she alwayg appy
ated your thoughtfulness.
J. F. Poland
i Lydia Tolana
! Dr. and Mrs. Rufug Snyg
J Card of Thanks
| 'We wish to thank each one
their kindness and loving thoug]
during the jllness and death of
dear brother, H. F. Silvey,
I« May God's richest l»l(‘ssing I
upon you.
| Mr, and Mrs. M. A Gl
| Mrs. Eva Swords
% and Children
| MY, U 4 Mrs. D. ¥ Silvey
i and Fomily
} Mr. and ms. T, W. Silve
i and Pamily
i Mr. J. W, Silvey
Announcements 3
FOR MAYOR
To the Voters of Athens:
I hereby announce myggt
candidate for Mayor of Atheng
succeed myself, subject to
Democratic primary. 1t is us
to give an endorsement to an of
cer who has done his duty,
I trust that my administrat
as Mayor has been such gg
commend me to the favorahls ¢
sideration of my fellow citige
T. 8. MELL]
FOR MAYOR
I hereby announce myself g
candidate for mayor of the ¢
of Athens, subject to the De
cratie primary to be held Nove
ber 23, subject to the rules
regulations of the Democratic
ecutive Committee.
A. G. DUDLEY
FOR ALDERMAN-—FIRST WA
I wish to announce my cay
dacy for re-election to city col
cil as aderman from the first w
subject to the rules and regu
tions of the city Democratic
mary to be held November 23,
ha ve iven my best efforts in
nterest of the citizens of the Fi
Aard and the city generally,
respectlully ask that you honor
with your vote and influence,
Signed,
W. H. “BUCK” PAUL