Newspaper Page Text
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
VOLUME XXXII. NO. 36.
DIFFERENT TALES
TOLD JURORS !N
Three Conflicting Stories are
Recorded in Jacksonville
Court at Trial of Guards on
Murder Charges
WITNESSES DESCRIBE
SWEAT BOX AT
One Declares Guards at Camp
Endeavored to Treat Youth;
With Kindness Despite His 1
Escapes.
Jacksonville, Fla. Oct. 12. (£*)-—•
Conflicting testimony of defense wit- \
nesses about the locale ol the death
of Arthur Maillefert, young New Jer- ;
sey convict, was given the jury today
at the trial of two former guards for
murder.
Three successive witnesses describ¬
ed the floor plan of the sweat box at
Sunbeam Camp and each told a dif¬
ference story as to which of four
cells in the box the youth was found
1 lad, a chain about his neck and his
feet in stocks.
Along with his testimony there went
into the record further recitation how
Maillefert had threatened to commit
suicide rather than serve out his nine
year sentence for robbery and how
George W Courson one of the defend
ants, had tried to be kind to the hoy.
Herbert C. Romines, Manatee coun-j
ty farmer, who once had a fight with
Maillefert dy and belt, at the told camn the over jury some Captain can-|
Courson, who was in charge of Sun- j
beam at the time ol the box s death,:
tried to keep "Jersey’ (Maillefert s
nickname) by every means possible,:
hut that the youth was determined .
to escape.
Romines also said Maillefert told
( aptain Courson he planned to com
mit suicide.
The defense introduced five witness
es today in an effort to refute the
state s claim that Maillefert was niuv-;
tiered, and to prove that the youth
was incorrigible and committed sui
t itle.
Three convicts _ who were at the i
camp at the time of Mallefert’s death
gave the carving versions of the death
”
ceil.
Romines said Maillefert was in _ the
right, front cell, standing sideways, j
Clyde Hammond said the boy was in ;
the left front side of TVlP the four-com- fonr-pmn- :
partment box, and M. 1.. Dyess said
it was the right front cell.
All other witnesses, who, purported
to know, have agreed with Dyess re¬
garding the cell.
VETERAN TRAINER
OF FIGHTERS DIES
Long Branch, N. J., Oct. 11. t/P)—
Jimmy DeForest, one of the best
known itnown trainers t turners in m me the history History of ot pugi-; pugi-1
n ’ dled tod fy •* * om ?> Allan
t.c avenue and Liberty street.
. • ^Forest Details had oi his been illness til for were some not!
-^Forest ' nitvw' , urns i known to , mi lions of i
hght tans as the man who trained K,d
McOoy and who brought Jack Demp
sey along the championship trail to
the heavyweight title. One of his
A g P "-P?. {or h.s.
spectacular meteoric m - career in the Am
erican prize ring.
HOSPITAL ATTACHES j j
:
I
I
ATTENDANTS ARE ARRAIGNED j
IN CONNECTION WITH DEATH I
OF WAR VETERAN
Augusta, Ga., Oct. 12. (TP)—The
death of Charles K. Dickinson, a
Somerville, States Tenn., patient at United
veterans hospital No. 62, has
resulted in arraignment of three at
tendants before a United States com
mis.si oner on murder charges.
Warrants for arrest of' the
Austin Leroy Brown, Aaron E. Ott
and Walter E. Epps, bore the affida
vit of Col. R. W. Soper, medical offi
cer at the hospital. All three plead
ed innocence.
Col. Soper said other attendants at
the hospital had implicated the three
and that an autopsy performed by his
associates had aroused his suspicions,
Dickinson, the medical officer add
ed, had suffered two broken ribs, a
punctured first lung and bruises which' at
were believed to have been cans
ed by the patient, himself. Dickinson,
the colonel said, was “at times vio
lent, throwing himself against walls,
doors and jumping over tables.”
The patient died Saturday and a
death certificate gave the cause as
penumonia caused by an accidental
tall. At the arraignment, i* wa.
-i ‘barged Dickinson was beaten by the
defendants and died of his wounds.
A preliminary hearing will be giv
en the three as soon as District Attor
ney Walter W. Sheppard can come
here from Savannah.
FOURTEEN PACES
In Gotham Race
Lewis Pound, former slate treasur
^ " 0 ? ,inat wi as ,he
n t t . he
one-year term
mayor of New York City.
Woman Is Heroine
Of Fistic Combat
With Farm Pickets
' i\ no ka Minn {’ Oct ^ l'- 1 i/Pi -She
i} , hs w but h
Bwinga a l la mmer with dexterity and
gets results
x ht . woraan refen . e( | to is Mrs .
Margaret Heldt of Eagle Bend. Minn.,
who vvas being . haiM toda y as the
bero j ne of a lively hand-to-hand
fig . ht between 100 striking farm
pickets and the drivers of 15 trucks
on a highway near here last night,
Defying the 100 pickets she pushed
barricades of spiked planks and tim
from the highway. Shortly af
the trucks were run past the
picket, lines, when the truckers were
assisted bv Sheriff A. W. Olson of
Anoka county and his deputies,
j,. a Olson, Wadena farmer, who was
one Q f the truck drivers to go through
(, le picket lines, had nothing hut
praise for Mrs. Heldt.
“M < got her a hammer,” he said,
"and when the pickets attempted to
top the trucks she hammered their
o )e ••
v
Sheriff John Wall of Hennepin
county and three carloads of deputies
pj-om Minneapolis arrived early today
prepared to assist Sheriff Olson and
j,j s ........ me n 1 in ,-. ,v,njntnjninn> maintaining nn/Jo-o order.
Death Sentence
Is Commuted To
Life In Prison
Atlanta, Oct. 12. (/Rl— -Governor
Russell today commted to life im
tbc death .sentence of An
hony Williams, convicted in Burke
in November. 1929, of the mur-
1 Jin Scolt and U s wife, Lou
New evidence reported since the
£ j, ,al ' , thel . e was no opportunity
“ 1 ' , e 8ent it to a C0U1 . t> was given in
executive * i,,,. 0 ,. der as the principal
1h ., ,.„ mml ,iClo¬
x solicitor-general of the circuit
■ • .1 . a rl. .. ____
H (h( . “benefit of doubt”' raised
the new evidence. Similiar recom¬
mendation was made by the sheriff
the clerk of superior court,
The new evidence, the record show
was the story of an 11-year-old
boy that he had seen the Seotts cross
ing a cotton field in pursuit of Wil¬
and attempting to conceal them.
selves from him while doing so. The
boy said that when they were nearly
upon him Williams turned and shot
them both.
MAN-MADE PLACER
BEING MINED BY
NEEDY FAMILIES
St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 12. t/P) —Em
ployed and unemployed men and wo
ment mined “black gold” on a man
made placer today on the Mississippi
river bank.
ft was a coke rush and as it contii.
ued it was every “prospector” for
himself with a full bin for the winter
and reward for energetic wielding of
pick and shovel.
The “strike” was made at a point
on the river bank where a gas plant
of a nearby automobile assembly
plant discharged the waste from coal
after gas and tar had been extracted,
That started six year ago.
The other day a man. wanclsring
along the bank looking for Wood for a
stove, espied bits of coke cropping out
of the ground. An inspection led to
active operations and he filled his
bins before confiding the secret to a
friend.
Bui it soon became an open
with that friend whispering the
news to another friend until
' there’s a scramble to get there
digging.
BRUNSWICK, GA.. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 12, 1932.
VISIT 17 ms
ON LATEST
[Territory F Border States lo Include Under South Schedule and
Announced Today By Gov*
I ernor
WILL VISIT ATLANTA
OCTOBER TWENTY=THIRD
Itinerary of Second Long Cam¬
paign Trip Will Take Him to
Warm Springs For Meeting
With Directors.
By WALTER T. BROW N
Albany, N. Y., Oct. 12. (/P)—Gover¬
nor Roosevelt today announced a
campaign trip of 3,000 miles to take
him through 17 states, including the
south and the border states. The trip
j will start on October 18 at Albany
and end at New York city on October
20. Major speeches will be made at
Pittsburgh on October 10; St. Louis
on October 21 and Atlanta on Octo¬
ber 24.
The itinerary of the second long
campaign trip of the Democratic
presidential candidate follows:
Leave Albany at 0:30 a. m. (east¬
ern standard time) on October 18.
Arrive Rochester at 1:45 p. m. for
two hour and 15 minute stop; arrive
Buffalo at 5:30 p. m. for stop until
midnight.
Arrive Pittsburgh at 0 a. in., Oc¬
tober 19; motor to Wheeling West
Virginia, arriving there at 11:3 0 a. in.,
and remaining until 3 p. m., motoring
back to Pittsburgh, arriving there
5:15 p. m. and leaving Pittsburgh at
11:30 p. m.
Arrive Indianapolis 11 a. in. on Oc¬
tober 20 for 12 hour stop.
Arrive Springfield, 111., 10:30 a. in.
October 21 for four hour atop.
Arrive St. Louis at 5:30 p. m., re¬
maining until 2 a. ill. on October 22.
Arrive Louisville at 10 a. m. on Oc¬
tober 22 for two hour stop.
Arrive Atlanta over Louisville and
Nashville at 0:30 a. m. on October 23;
motor to Warm Springs for meeting
of trustees of Georgia Warm Springs
foundation, returning after lunch¬
eon.
Leave Atlanta over Southern at
10 p. m. on October 24.
Arrive Raleigh, N. C., over South¬
ern at 10:30 a. in. on October 25 foi¬
ls minute stop.
Arrive Richmond, Va., over Sea
board Air Line railroad at 2 p. in. on
October 25 for 15 minute stop.
Arrive Baltimore over R. F. and
P. at 6:10 p. m. for five hour and 50
minute stop.
Arrive in New York city at 8 a. m.
on October 26.
Mr. Roosevelt will add nine new
states and the District of Columbia
to the 26 states he has visited since
he received the presidential nomina¬
tion in July.
The governor, in announcing his
plans for the trip, pointed out that
while three of the speeches he will
make, those at Pittsburgh, St. Louis
and Atlanta, will be broadcast over
a national hook up and may he con¬
strued as major addresses, lie will
make several other talks.
“What will be the subjects of the
I major talks?” he was asked.
<‘1 “I can’t /,n n'( say just incf nnw now, we ll'n haven’t
prepared them,” he replied.
“Will the bonus be one of them?”
was another question.
“I can’t answer that either,” he
said, smiling.
The Atlanta meeting, Roosevelt
said, would be a gathering of dele¬
gation from several southern states,
including Georgia, Alabama, Missis¬
sippi. Florida, Tennessee and South
Carolina.
“How about Arkansas?” was a
question. “They’ll Louis. I imagine,”
he at St.
Mr. Roosevelt answered.
The same members of the Roose¬
velt family who made the western
swing last month likely will be on
the second trip. They are Mrs. Roose¬
velt, who will join the narty at Pitts¬
burgh: Mrs. Curtis Dal! and Mr. and
Mrs. James Roosevelt. The make up
of the remainder of the goveronr’s
immediate party has not been deter¬
mined.
PLAN LOCAL UTILITY
Macon, Ga., Oct. '2. ITh—The city
council last night adonted a resolution
pointing to the possibility of a mu¬
nicipally owned electric
system. Mayor Glen Toole was em¬
powered to contract with an engineer¬
ing firm for a survey of the Georgia
Power Company’s distributing system.
Information acouired in the survey
would be used by the city council in
determining the advisability of a mu
.nieipallv tern, owned power and light. sy,s
|
STORM WARNING
Washington, Oc-t. 12. (/ft-—The
weather bureau this morning issued
the following storm warnnig:
“No information concerning Mexi¬
can disturbance but prohablv central
not far front Frontera with decreased
intensity. No further advices this
[ disturbance.”
AS STRIKERS ARE
Headquarters of Miners Taken
By National Guardsmen
Between 600 and 700 are
Arrested
ACTION IS TAKEN TO
PREVENT DISORDERS
Six Hundred More Voluntarily
Place Themselves Under Ar¬
rest at Taylorville, Illinois,!
Today.
Taylorville, III., Oct. 12. i/Pi.....
Moving lo prevent possible disorders,
national guardsmen early today raid¬
ed the headquarters of the striking
miners and placed between 6011 and
700 of them under arrest.
The diggers had gathered at Tay¬
lorville for the observance of the an¬
niversary of the Virden, 111., massa¬
cre 34 years ago, and were jammed
in a second floor hall across the street j
front the Christian county court house ]
where 180 troopers, acting under or
ders of Capt. C. J. Meaeham, herded
the millers to the third floor of the I
courthouse. They were questioned in¬
dividually. Officials indicated those
who did not give satisfactory reasons I
for presence might be escorted out of
the city.
Capt. Meaeham expressed renewed
determination to carry out flic orders 1
of Sheriff Charles Wieneke against
any parade of miners this afternoon I
in commemoration of the Virden
"SP&**
voluntarily placed themselves under!
arrest shortly afterward, crowding!
the capacity of court house rooms to 1
more than 1,366.
They applied to the guardsmen
without disorder, for permission to
join the group taken in the raid
the miners’ hall. Each additional
group was greeted with cheers spit'-' by|
those inside, and with boos and
ting at the helmets of the guardsmen i
below*. i
Countv officials vacated their qtiar
ters, giving over all available space
to prisoners, as the guardsmen sallied
out, to arrest more strikers.
Howls of “When do we eat?"
. n .. ..
arrested ■ • hadn't • ■ ' had • 1 1 breakfast. ■ 1 i
Three more companies of the 130th ,
infantrv \v pvp ovdpi'ptl inltt Taylor- 1
ville bv Adjutant General Carlos
Black, increasing the guard here to
six companies.
______
Taylorville, , 111., Oct. _ 12. (AT Chris
tian in ponnt.v__Mn.Mnn^.T.uml county—No-Man's-Lantl nf of the \ lw. j
Tllin/tlC i • / i M ] IM I I Wipe * ton e lira o ||> lollny, 11., J
ed against possible disorders !
the anniversary of the Virden, III.,
mine massacre which occurred more
than 30 years ago. j
Pickets, nearly 2,500 ot them, main
l.v from out of the city, tramped |
streets under the watchful eyes of
200 militiamen stationed here for
weeks to protect working miners.
Vigilance was doubled by authori¬
ties after a hurried trip to nearby
Tovey last night where a shooting
was reported. No one could be found
who was injured. Authorities said
that in the midst of the Tovey acci¬
dent, telephone wives were cut, shut¬
ting oft* communication between To¬
vey and guard headquarters. Wieneke'
Sheriff Charles ordered !
that miners should not parade in com-1
memoration of the Virden affair of
1898 when hundreds had gathered to I
organize the first mine union in the i
state. Rioting started, and at its con
elusion 26 or more men lav dead. An
nually at Taylorville and' held'to ML Olive ! i
parades and services are com
memorate the anniversary.
Twice t • yesterday , , surging lines .. were
broken by bayonets as national j
guardsmen shoved strikers from mine
gates. Workers were given armed
protection to and from the pit -.
j
:
j
j
NEW RECRUIT FROM “INS!
GENTS” ATTACKS HOOVER
AND IMS ADMINISTRATION
........
Urbana, O., Oct. 12. t/Pr President j
11 Dover’s campaign for re-election,
and the Republican party were
der attack today from a new recruit
Congressman in the ranks of the “insurgents,” Ohio.! j
Charles Brand, of
In a formal statement issued at Id- .
home, here, last, night, the Republi- i
can congressman from the seventh
Ohio district, declared his party “de
serves ........... defeat .1 - v. . l and reorganization.” ... *....»: ”
! Brand praised Franklin D. Roose- |
velt, the Democratic presidential
• ] nominee, surplus as “favoring tariff benefits
on farm products," and said
the Republican party had failed to aid
the farmer.
Brand, heretofore regarded as a
“regular” Republican, wa. elected to
the house of representative.- in 1922.
He announced he would not be a
didate for re-election
FOURTEEN PAGES
Start Of Engagement Rumor
This photograph published in London and oiuuunun Stockholm kiuhvu started recent u-c-m.
Illinois that the engagement of Prince George of England and Princess
Ingrid of Sweden soon would lie annciinced. The two are shown together
at the races near Stockholm.
DEATH ENOS LIFE!
Cell al
ley, Ela., While Officers Pre¬
pared lo Take Him to Raiford
Prison. 1
Chipley, Ela., Oct. 12. t/P) Slash
his throat with a pen knife, J. T.
Hhickwc-ll. condemned murderer, emu
miUt . d suicide ' in his cell 7 here while.'
o|r , Z'hJ ti'S . , ■ .
to I .' • i f , ,
,. I'dTit t" .i.i. wcei " ° .
j "
roeu t ■ x Vnouln,
,,,. , < h .. J * :
m ,. 1; ;md dit ,, a 0 t inslanUy said '
She,-iff U *' ... I l.’mrulers . '•’* wlm w , K «Jtb . 1 . nili,.,.! 11 a,' |
officers was standing outside , - the . cell.
„.s
application r .. tor .. a commutation . .. oi „ , Ins* .
...... ....................
dea(h sen(to rif( , j m 1 prison humi f.
11 V Sho.7ir''C i ■ f,... ,• \! fU..........I,... r]«u .1 ! * *oV* , C*,l^'' i I. 1
9 of urns'
ou„ countv. He held because* in
Washington enmity jail here
ol lack ol lai'ilities m the < a houn 1
,. ()Untv jail at Bionntstow,,. I I
nav Officers said *. they . did ... not i know- .
" I | I I . | ,i , ... I
on!’..".'.. :
ami appeared before Governor Garl
ton the state pardon hoard to
committal ion of sentence for their
father. I
Wife Of American |
|
Slain By |
Bandits | !
—. . . - , — :
J* J JTl ^ ^ I
Harbin, Manchuria, Oct. 12. UP) -1
T. Woodruff, wife of ari offi
tda ‘ of lil '' Britisl.-Ai.ierican To| m ,- ,
hand Company, slie was aU,(*mpvi‘d shot (lead to today by [
as hs s.avo nor '
, lw / L so,ls ,mm , k,dni, , . , ' ,, . "*f
The r crime . was committed in broad
dil -V iftht "" one o the pnncipal |
ol Harbin and the whole city, j
wh, !' h ,at,d v *!«« »»'•«■" « fl'EV such
-
raid ' d lo hi h h
”’ was l ' a ,K “ a «
.
■
Mrs. Woodriin s chautfeur was ser
. ,ou sl . >' w <*« nd , ^> . h . "t , th6 ,, ch'ldren . ., . were
. I he bandits escaped.
'roiiHular! ,
On behalf of the foreign
George Hanson, the Anieri
consul-general, made renewed
representations to the Manehukuo
and o nil Japanese o rei iiii’-Ui authorities 4 lor greater
police protection. I he citizens of
Harbin, he said, are afraid to venture
into the streets.
— -----
GROVES DELIVERED
TO 1 ^ PPKON HFAFV
IS FACING i m r* nr DEATH ATLl
Milledgevillc, Ga., Oct, 12. I/P)
,)oc Groves, young white, man
to elect rocutiqn Friday for the mur
dcr of Deputy Sheriff H. A.
delivered to the state prison ye.
terday by Sheriff Gordon Davis and
deputies of Thomas county.
the sheriff said he was forced
resort to a threatened use of tear gas
before Groves would leave bis cell in
Thomas county jail. Groves, he
charged, threatened to kill anyone
who ... t tried to < . take t .. I -,. him t .:.. from r....... his L. i...... cell, 1 1
and tried to attack officers with
iron bar torn from bis cot.
A day and night guard whs posted
Giovo- cell until the elect locu¬
tion.
REED’S WIFE DIES
Kansu City, Oct. 12. bTV -Mrs.
James A. Reed, wife of the former
from Missouri, died at. a
pital here today after a brief
BEATEN TO
a,..I IteoKhter.
Widow s,are Dead and Two
Children are Near
From Wounds.
Conncllsville, I’a., Oct. 12 .t/P)
Mrs. Nellie Trcsslqr, 15, and
mother, Mrs. Amanda Hartman,
were found beaten to death at
Tressler home today. Both were wi
d<w *
'two, I ressler , children, Sadie, I
iUld Billy, s . wt ' 1 ' 1 - lia, U.V beaten.
"'«••<* taken lo the Uomiellsville
J vh “'T may die.
The H ' body ,,,d ’ V of ° Mrs, Tressler, D-essler, clad i
underdo! underelolliing, hing, was was found found in in the the
........ "
a !)(*(]. r <rr? IScsidf h(M* ™ vvas Sadie.
..... ■»*• ■ , .. . , .
" v s 1 ‘ unt ' l ’ nscw,UK
, 1 ,, ' room, I olicc sjiiH hi! jij)|)«ii~
,u,d b,J< * n stnj( * k (,own whi,< ‘ i,u
'“'j'l^nig t.' escape I,'o,n the assassin.
"T'' u’ ,l ' s, *"'anged and
floor.s n mid walls were .spattered with
1 ’ . " od . Odue ,» ,• . however, r lade, to .
tile .* IMStlUmOUl Will) which till* loUT
WCIO IXicllOn. ,
Detectives knew of no motive
'I he fuel that the death weapon
missing- led' to the belief that the
derer had been .commilted by an out
aider.
Billy revived several hours after
was found and told police:
"M,v mama did it. She hit
first and then me. She hit ns
a piece of iron.”
However police discredited the
statement. i o(/imon( Mrs. 1 \/I no Tressler's Iijim head liiuu
beaten out. of shape and
it would have been
for her to inflict the injuries
They are searching s< for a
whose identity they , did .......... not ...........
who has hoi'n atunuivn to Mrs. irons
let*.
TOADSTOOL STEW CTCU ,
SENDS DOZENS TO
CAPITAL
Washington, Oct. 12. UP) August
Magni ' ’ ' " * i i lias • ' • * * ' this v i . . I measure > f f - of eonsola- ............
tion he proved false the old story
that, toadstools slewing in a pot will
urn a silver quarter black.
August and his wife, Eva,
pej'hap.s the fare of their
bouse'might be enhanced by such
of-the-ordmary delicacies as
rooms.
Armed with a basket and aided
two hoarders, who said they could
U'H mushrooms from toadstools
'^ a ^ n ' K admitted they couldn’t
picked nearly a bushel.
The “mushrooms” simmered on
stove when August, to make sure t
were what he thought them to be.
served:
“If -diver turns black, we’ll
are toadstools!"
Into the pot be tossed a shiny, si
vet* quarter. It came out
hotter but just as shiny, so t lie
I rooms were eaten.
Shortly afterward, 12 of the
! went to the hospital for
i poisoning treatment, six to
overnight /. •. r, i i in in U'hul what doctors ilnnl t iv« said :i 111
“resting comfortable” stage.
—----?—*----*—
HOLIDAY ON MART
New Y'ork, Oct. 12. UP )—-The ma
chinery of Wall Street rested
in observance of Columbus Day.
New York Stock Exchange and
security and commodity exchanges
as well a- the banks and
corporation offices, were closed for
day _
PRICE FIVE CENTS
I
Slale Department Would Pre¬
vent Man Wanted in United
Slates From Entering Any
Other Country
| FUGITIVE WOULD BE
ASKED TO SURRENDER
I Believe He Will Be Isolated in
That Country If He Gives Up
Document When Demanded
i By Consulate.
' i
Washington, Oct. 12. (/p)__The
| state department Inis irfstructed trie
j American tile legation in Athens to take
:"P passport of Samuel lnsull, Sr.
The department this afternoon had
■ not received word whether lnsull was
j however. willing to surrender the document,
;
Without a passport, it would he im
I i .. , ,. -
I ,'Vunt r' " . " m " *" '' rtMy °
I Consequently, ., ... H , he surrenders the
document, . state department officials
believe he will he isolated in Greece.
Officials refused to discuss what
I further step will be taken in ease In¬
still refuses to yield his passport.
No reply was given to questions by
newspapermen whether the depart¬
ment would circulate an aiiiiouin e
niunt. that the Instill passport is in
! valid.
Under the system of "taking up” a
i passport, the American consulates
j event 1 '* Idle ld holder ,K talien refuses the to surrender time
’ "°" * up next
j lie applied for a renewal of his pass
: port at a consulate.
I j Athens, Oct. 12. t/P) Samuel In
anil, entirely free following his brief
] detention by the police, awoke today
in line spirits al the Petit Palais, a
leading hotel of Athens, and said he
! "'"""I" 1 the *<»>- glory that Greece.
enjoying was
Meaiiwliile, officials at the American
j I legation said the necessary warrant
was on the way to secure his delen
t ion again and that as soon as it ar
rived rived n a fight fight Would would begin begin in the
courts to take the erstwhile power
magnate back to the United States to
lace an indictment for embezzlement
in connection with the collapse of his
lit Hit ies empire.
Despite this prospect, after an au¬
tomobile ride Inst night with a pale
moon casting pleasant ghostly shall¬
ows across the ancient acropolis, be
said lie was very much pleased with
(I recce.
When he returned to the hotel,
which formerly was the residence of
.....j-,:
ing in a country with such a wonder
fill sky.
i He added that his health was good,
the climate suited him exactly, and
intended to stay here “for the
j presentvisiting Downed in ancient all Greek the history. places re
j Apparently the first process in the
extradition matter now will he the
| presentation of attested documents
I j t’ from IW 11,1 the I l,.. 17 United i.i 4 /,^l States. (JFtii ,*t f On k v% the 4 L,. Lncio basis
;
(Continued On Page tit
j| E
1
WILL NOT FLOURISH AMONG
SOUTHERN DARKIES IT IS
REPORTED BY OFFICIALS
j Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 12. UP )—A fa.il
ure of "I communism to flourish wi i. >|P among MOMU,^
j southern negroes was inter-racial reported today
j by the I'onnnission on cor
i poration along with the gains for the
! race in education, health, protection
by courts and political recognition,
1 The favorable trends, however, the
commission reported in its survey,
I have been offset to an extent by econ*
mnic losses attributable to the "gen
'era! economic breakdown.” The sil
! nation was reported as reducing the
number of negro land owners and
| ■ driving many tenant farmers and
wage hands to the city.
The commission added that econo
; rnic necessity iias forced group compe
; tition along racial lines with person-
1 a) competition and widespread re
placement of negroes by white work
: ers in some instances.
, Efforts of communists to project
j themselves into the situation, how
ever, have failed, the commission
j said. “Whatever their sympathy
j with the economic and social ideals of
, communism, negroes apparently have
• 1 little iff 1 n f faith u 11 L i in n the f Lin communist rvi lim'of techni¬ f anY\t\ \ _
que of violence and revolution and no
! disposition to seek help in that direc*
tion,” the report observed.
The commission said it had found
j that the principle of interracial coop
j eration was being widely included in
community chest budget and parti
cipating in chest campaigns. A gain
of five years in the health span of
the negro was cited as indicative off
j Health improvement.