Newspaper Page Text
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
VOLUME XXXII. NO. 42.
Downpours of Past Three Days
Begin to Slacken and Warn*
ings are Pulled Down By
Bureaus
AUGUSTA ESTABLISHES
PRECAUTIONARY
Situation, However, Would
Be Alarming Even if
nah River Should Reach Stage
of Fifty Feet.
Atlanta, Oct. 18. (IP )—The danger
of serious flood damage in the
diminished today as rains that
pelted down tor three days began
8
Rive™ in the Carolina*, Georgia
and Alabama were still swollen
additional rain was promised
sections but the torrential downpours
of the week-end appeared to be check¬
ed.
bama Black Warrior river in Ala¬
was reported at (50 feet. 14 feet
above flood stage, at one time dur¬
ing the week-end and a few homes in
isolated sections of Northport, Ala.,
were cut off by water. The Tennes¬
see, Coosa and Alabama rivers also
rose but observers said there was lit
rains^should S" additional heavy
Meteorologist Richard H.
of Columbia, S. C., issued flood
ings for sections of South Carolina
yesterday and warnings were posted
on two important highways in North
Carolina but the heavy rains of
week-end had faded into intermittent
showers. Sectional rainfall was
cast in North Carolina, South
ima Georgia and Tennessee today.'
A precautionary levee patrol
established at Augusta, Ga., following
the week-end downpoour but City
Engineer W. H. Wise said the
tion would not be alarming even if
the Savannah river there should
a stave of r ,0 c PP t
Weather bureau officials at Macon.
Ga.. said the Ocmulgee river was at 8
feet there, 10 feet below flood stage.
... ,.
___
Heavy Rainfall
has blocked all rail traffic, driven fam
iiies from their homes, damaged
crops and halted the operation of lex
North’cLroi’ina ‘ ***
vp2prd,J yesteiday v . . w™ between , T Ga^stonm c . , SmC . and V 100n
colnton, N. on the C. & N. W. Rail
t'owL tauba river Wvnvfl/Tl flooded i the tJ 16 tracks, i nea , rby , Ca "
■ J ,,
toThe S X aurr fe T' S ^ n S
ids at w High Shoa.s, u N. -
2Z2' eoeralions when water
pouied into t the plants In one
.>(>4 Looms were entirely covered.
t M ^ Ad yiI neal '' he ™v a m, T
W be’ Af of families m r’- living near the v banks
Catawba river were forced to
1 ' ei1 1omes-
1ST
CALIFORNIA ORGANIZATION IN¬
CREASE VOTING LIST BY
MORE THAN HALF MILLION
By RALPH H. HEPPE
(Copywright, 1982, By The Associated
San Francisco, Press)
Oct. .• •• 18. --- (IP - )—A - wave • -
of le .g Is tration that
cd li mfoi f last , , spring s presidential
mary and swept on for the
balloting has broken in full force for
the November election in President
Hoover’s home state of California, al
most but doubling as compared with 1928
the remaining nearly 400,000 under
Republican total.
Registration figures gathered by
The Associated Press from all but one
of the state’s 58 counties showed to¬
day the following totals for the two
major parties:
Republican, 1,539,560; Democratic,
1.147,414.
These figures represented an in
crease of 555,253 for the Democratic
party over the 1928 official registra
tion and 3,809 for the
The state total of 2,847,655 compared
with 2,313,816 for 1928 and again set
a record. Every county gave an in
crease over the 1928 registration,
that of the 1930 general state election
and that of the May and August pri
manes of this year.
M hile the Democratic tide was
sweeping in, an increasing number of
heretofore Republican counties were
caught in the undertow, so that for
November nine counties show larger
Democratic registration than Repub
iican.
In eight counties the Republicans
,r--.j. eased their registration over 1928,
and 1932 primaries.
*n President Hoover’s home coun¬
tv. Santa Clara. Republican registra¬
tion increased from 43,210 in 1928 to
41,965; Democratic increased from
13,498 to 28,404.
May Run In Missouri
X
i * . z, •
■
j
fud ( , D Par| f p , atte Cit ’
M( _ has been mentiolu , d as a , ike , y
1 successor to the late Franck M. Wil
„____ .■
* s ' 0 ''
SCRIBBL I0TE
j.Prominent an Then Massachusetts Leaps to Death Worn From
Thirty=First Floor of New
York Hotel.
_
New York, Oct. 18. UP) —Scribbling
favewc u note with a lipstick * a worn
an who , , ha(i , registered a few min¬
jutes earlier as Mrs. Charles J. Pres
of Norwood, Mass., jumped to
] le| . death today from a window on
.,, the 31st flaor of the Hotel New y , r , k
0, -
61 1™.
i lhe “Wf^ntly ,, about , , 00 28
i years old, had registered at the hotel
I ° nl y three-quarters of an hour before
h '' body Z fu ° nt< ? * ^f-story ex
i tcnslon , and ^he scarlet note, written
. ttLJiOiei -stationery,
;<m found fl nWH'E was
in her room.
The note, which was not addressed
“I don’t like you. This is the best
1 out. Make „.. the most of
;& i b m 0m en?” every
In a sma! l overnight bag police
fouild a Massachusetts automobile li
cense issued to Beatrice Prescott,
about $8, and several clippings refer
to friendship and loneliness.
The clippings were all from Atlanta,
I Ga., newspapers. One marked J’ pus*:
read: « “When Whp „ men mpn anH and women n
! )ose thci1 ' mates aftt ‘>' years of com
radeshi P they are dumfounded and
i they face a world of emptiness.” An
read; “ Everv person is entitled
t0 a certain amount of happiness 1 in
»
I in the bag there was also a gold
rim , with the inscription “C. J. P., Jr.,
Uo F . E Nov . 6 i 92 fi.” The first let
rer rer in in the second set of initials was
indistinct and police thought it might
be a *P” or a ‘B’ nstead of an ‘F.’
Prominent Woman
Norwood, Mass., Oct. 18. f/P)—Mrs.
Charles J. Prescott, Jr., who jumped
to her death from a New York hotel
today, was the former Beatrice Gar¬
diner, social registerite and member
of the Junior League, whose marriage
in November, 1926, was an outstand¬
ing social event in Boston Her hus
.... t-r„4 Hito <v»e e student in
the Harvard Graduate School of Bus¬
iness Administration.
Prescott is associated with his
father in a manufacturing business
■ in Cambridge. The elder Prescott.
sa ; d f,is daughter-in-law had been in
pool , health for some time,
j -----
j ________________ YOUNG GIRL SHOT
BY YOUTH BECAUSE
OF ARDENT LOVE
Hopkinsville, Ky., Oct. 18. UP)—
Louise Green, 16, who said her fath¬
er gave her in marriage three years
ago in a swap for a team of mules,
lay in a hospital with a wounded leg
today, while William Perrigo, 23, who
ishot her, avowed he ... would ________ marry ______,, her ____
! even if she were crippled, if he is not
j sent to prison.
Perriga was held pending the out
’come of the girl’s wounds. He sur
(rendered after the shooting, and po
• lice quoted him as saying he shot hei
“because I loved her and because I
j wanted to and I don’t care if I get 99
, years.”
Louise, daughter of Henry Gibbs,
ran away from her 45-year-old hus
band, Ed Green, to whom she claimed
to have been traded, and litigation
over the team of mules began, which
led to several physical encounters be
tween members of the families,
____
TREASURY RECEIPTS
Washington. Oct. 18. UP )—Treasury
receipt? for October 15 were $506,-
104.171.50; expenditures $338,199,
93; balance $9355,858,174.94. Customs
duties for 15 da vs of October were
$12,147,937.97.
BRUNSWICK, GA., TUESDAY, OCT. 18.
COURT UPHOLDS
Federal Statute of 1911 is De¬
clared Dead and Reapportion¬
ment in State Ruled as
Yalid
OTHER STATES WILL
ABIDE BY RULINGS
Reverses Decision of Chief
Justice Charles Hughes That
Present Law Was Invalid and
Void.
ing Washington, Oct. 18.
Mississippi’s redistricting law
day ,the supreme court said the fed¬
eral law of 1011 regulating the
mation of new congressional districts
was dead.
The state statute had been
invalid by a federal court in Missis¬
sippi because it violated provisions of
' the federal statute which required that
new districts should be contiguous,
compact and have as nearly as possi¬
ble the same number of inhabitants,
The state’s redistricting was made
necessary because it lost a represen¬
tative, under the reapportionment fol¬
lowing tile 19; 10 census, its member¬
ship being reduced from 8 to 7.
As a result of today’s decision,
there is a prospect now that redistrict¬
ing laws in Kentucky and Virginia,
declared void by state courts, will
take their place on the statute books.
These were thrown out on the basis
of the 1911 law. The opinion by Chief
Justice Hughes said the congress had
scrapped that law in its reapportion¬
ment statute of 1929.
A challenge to the Tennessee re¬
districting law is pending before the
court hut it does not directly involve
the legality of the redistricting act j
in that state.
Three states, Missouri, New York!
and Minnesota, have had their redis¬
tricting laws declared invalid, but
this was because their governors fail¬
ed to sign them.
Ordinarily the supreme court hands
down opinions only on Monday hut
Mississippi state officials had asked
that the case be decided before Oct.
22 to allow time for preparations for
the Nov. 8 election.
Jackson, Tbp , Miss., Oct. a . 18. 10 f/P)—The , nu
gressmen by districts. Previously!
plans had been made for all candi
dates to run from the state at largo i______]
in November. !
rr,, i he supreme court ruling .. fell , like
i a “ i
i____, bombshell , ,, m . the camps qt the state
at-large candidates who declined to
participate in the Democratic pri
of the fall and who have been
conducting statewide campaigns for
the congress sets under the belief
(that the redistricting act was uncon¬
stitutional. This groun includes Rep¬
resentative J. Will Collier, chairman
of the house ways and means commit¬
tee, and former Governor Theo G.
Bilbo.
Officials pointed out that since the
ruling automatically cancels state¬
wide candidacies, the state-at-large
aspirants would either have to with¬
draw from the race or file as inde¬
pendent candidates in their home dis¬
tricts, having their names placed on
the general election ballots by peti¬
tion.
AT PORTSMOUTH PEN
TROOPS CALLED LAST NIGHT TO
QUELL RIOT HAVE CONVICTS
UNDER CONTROL
Kingston, Ont., Oct. 18. UP )—Quiet
was restored today at Portsmouth
penitentiary, on the shore of Lake On¬
tario near here, where troops were
called last night to quell a riot of the
906 prisoners in the institution. The
riot , in threatened the course to of | pdeh fire to the prison pris¬
oners r !
buildings, was repo | to have begun
over a demand by th. men for eigaret
papers, more tobacco and longer rec¬
reation periods.
Two of the prisoners were injured.
The soldiers fired several volleys.
They finally withdrew after the pris¬
oners threatened to burn down the
buildings, including those in which
they had barricaded themselves, if the
troops remained.
Previously the prisoners had cap¬
tured Acting Warden Gilbert Smith
and held him for a brief period when
he entered the building in which they
were fortfiied to attempt to persuade
them to quiet down.
The last of them were finally per
suaded to abandon the attempt by an
other prison official, whose name was
withheld. He forced himself, after
the troops left, into the barricaded
mail bag room where the leaders of
the rebellion were, and after some dif
ficulty persuaded them to return to
their ceils.
Morgan In London
_J
J. I*. Morgan, noted international
banker, pictured recently as he
ed at his office in l.ondon.
POLITICAL ALLY
On His Campaign l our of Seven¬
teen States Which Started
Tnrfpv louay Hp nt Mops Eton's at ai Rnchpufer rcotnesier,
t() Boost Lehman.
__
By WALTER T BROWN
Convention Hall, Rochester, N.
Oct. 18. UP)—Governor
n 4 - •, ,• , •
r! K 000 m n ( , S1 Xnmaiirn trin lev to
lru gum i naioriai candidacy oi v, He mi
belt H. Lehman, ’ lieutenant-governor.
Mr. Roosevelt drove through
town . streets , packed with crowds on
bis - from the “Roosevelt .
way
to Convention Ha
ol< lan ’ ' pi ismis v\ .
crowded into the hall. Amplifiers car¬
ried the governor’s voice to what traf¬
fic officials estimated was a throng
of 60.000 op the streets outside.
Before heading into Pennsylvania
tonight, with a speech tomorrow at
Pittsburgh, Mr. Roosevelt will stop
at Buffalo to speak in behalf of bis
friend, Lieut.-Gov. Lehman,
for the governorship.
Although the governor has declined
to say what subjects he will
it has been reported hi 1 will speak on
the soldier bonus payment issue at
Pittsburgh.
“Why should I say what I am going
to talk about?” he asked, ‘Prt.si
dent Hoover doesn’t do it.”
Deputy Ends Lion
Hunt As His ‘Duty’;
I uses lefle iviacnine MQ/'hino uun
Commerce, Mo., Oct. 18. (A 1 ) —Dep¬
uty Sheriff Tom Hotchkiss, who kill¬
ed two young lionesses marooned on a
small island in the Mississippi river
with a sub-machine gun admitted he
didn’t get, much kick” out of the
shooting.
“Shucks,” Hotchkiss said, “it wasn’t
any trouble at all to shoot ’em. No
more than puttin’ a squirrel out on the
limb of a cottonwood. If this is lion
buntin’, then I’ll stick to possums and
coons, where a man can have some
excitement.”
Hotchkiss yesterday ended the long
planned “safari” of Denver Wright,
St. Louis manufacturer, by killing the
animals which Wright had released
on a “towhead” island, near here.
Hotchkiss went to the island
cretejy in a motorboat, killed the lions
by liririg two shots at each ol them,
then removed the carcasses. Later
Wright and his hunting party, which
had left the island to give the two
(jungle beasts time to accustom them
selves to their new freedom, returned
and began beating the bush for
j quarry. But they found no trace of
the lions.
Nonplussed, Wright and the other
( hunters returned to Commerce. had There killed
they learned that Hotchkiss
the beasts an hour and a half after
; they had been released from the cage
! ; in which they were transported from
j (Continued Ou Page 3)
FORD IS WEI
OF AN AIM EV
Nolice issued By His Company!
to Employes is Criticized!
From Many Angles By Lead¬
ers Today
EMPLOYES, MANY OUT i
OF WORK, NOT BE MISLED!
-- I
Michigan Leader Says It is an
Attempt to Influence or Coerce
Employes Into Voting Kepuh
lican Ticket.
Detroit, Oct. 18. (fP}~ -The state¬
ment issued yesterday by the Ford
Motor Company to its advocating! employes!
throughout the country Hoover!
reelect ion of President
brought outspoken criticism today!
lrom several Michigan Democratic
'I*ie statement said that President
Hoover’s “efforts to start the
try hack to work are beginning
show results,” and added that “we
convinced that any break in his pro-|
gram would hurt industry and eni
ployment.”
William A. Comstock, Democratic
candidate for governor, speaking at
last night, said “Henry Ford;
not always cooperated so welll
term! with the Republican address party.” Detroit He re-| |
to a recent at
. 'tary Ogden Mills. “Mr.
Mills,” „ j he u said, “told his audience the
same tiling the Republicans have been
telling you for two years, that pros¬
perity was only (10 days away. Ami
on that very same day Ford put
through his third wage cut.”
Alfred Deho, chairman of the Dem¬
ocratic state central committee, term¬
ed the statement “coercion at its
worst, a demagogic partisan appeal.”
Horatio .1. Abbott, of Ann Arbor,
Democratic national committeeman,
referred to the statement as an “an
attempt to influence or coerce em¬
ployes into voting the Republican
ticket. It worked well when the men
were employed, but will be absolutely
futile now Gf the near i y 100,000
former Ford employes, many of whom
were taken from the farms only in be
turned out into the cold world, but
v e '' y few 1>l preBent. employed by
‘ . h t other
“ company or any company.
Inc . Ton) statement disclaimed any
....................~ v ra “'“
tion w,lh 11 statement z,s::;r commenting ...............
,hp H(lwat V " f
ident Hoover bv the Ford Motor Gom
•
puny. Democratic .. . National .. Ghairman
Janies . A. . rarley ., , todav . made , public ...
lobomm , , i,iiinn r J. ,, in.,.,.,w* 1
«
and the Firestone Rubber
Company were ’intimidating’ employes
to secure their votes for Hoover.
E
IS BEING TRACED
CONTAINING AKSE
NATE OF LEAD IS FOUND
BY FEDERAL AUTHORITIES
-
Savannah, Ga., Oct. 18. (/P)—Fed
e,, al authorities today sought to Iraoo
shipments of cauliflower in Florida
following an analysis of samples of
the vegetable shipped from Colorado
in which J. J. McManus, of the United
States department, of agriculture,
said he found deposits of lead arse¬
nate.
Samples of approximately 150 cases
the vegetable were submitted to
, ht offlces of thP f00d an( | drutf ad _
| ministration here from Tampa, Fla.
Officials said like samples had been
submitted from Miami, Jacksonville
and Charlotte and Asheville, N. C.
McManus said the condition is not
general as all shipments do not con¬
tain the poison, which he said was
residue from a spray preparation
which had not been sufficiently re¬
moved from the vegetable before
shipment.
He said libels were being filed
against the product by the United
Sates attorneys iri each of the cities.
The purpose of the action, he ex¬
plained, is to protect the public health
and to impress upon Colorado grow K ,un¬
! ers the necessity of taking steps to
j isending remove traces the product of the spray before
to market,
j In Tampa produce merchants witii
the product from the market
jand steps were taken to trace 12 cases
I which had been reshipped before rte
; report, of the analysis was received.
McManus said only a small amount
; of lead arsenate is dangerous to the
(health of consumers.
--------------------------
KILLED BY ACCIDENT
j ( Jacksonville, Fla., Oct. 18. UP) —J.
Raleigh Johnson. 40. policeman, acci
dentally shot and killed himself at his
home late last, night while he
cleaning his revolver. Johnson for¬
merly worked for the Seaboard Air
Line Railway at Norfolk, Va. He
had been here about 15 years and was
a member of the force for the past
five years.
Fortune For Her
mm t§§
Authorities sav ’Mrs. Lueetta Gus
. a Cincinnati bookkeeper, is (he
heir to $10,000 in securities found
hidden in the home of her recluse
unt who died in Mukwanago, W is.
w "**
Jobless Party’s Presidential Can¬
didate Leaves Pace in Favor
of Governor Franklin Roose¬
velt.
Pittsburgh, Oct. IS. I/P! Rev. Jas.
I!. Cox today withdrew as the jobless
party’s presidential candidate and
urged his followers to vote for Frank¬
lin D. Roosevelt, the Democrat ic
standard bearer.
Father Cox, militant pastor of old
St. Patrick’s Catholic church, bitter¬
ly excoriated President Hoover for
what lie termed “neglect of means to
relieve suffering among the uticmploy
ed iu the last two years.’”
The ejection of the “bonus army”
from Washington he called “bar
baunus" and added:
“America must reject Herbert
Hoover and all that lie represents if
she means to continue as a demon
racy.”
Hoover, lather Cox said in his
statement of withdrawal, “stands for
special privilege” and “lias forgotten
the 120,(100,000 ordinary American
citizens."
He said “the opportunity to help
was presented to Mr. Hoover a thous¬
and times, lint never did he lift a
hand nor raise a voice to relieve the
suffering American people.”
Roosevelt, Cox said, “has pledged
himself to the protection of the inter¬
ests of the common man. lie has
been frank and courageous in advo¬
cating the repeal of the eighteenth
amendment, lie lias pledged himself
definitely to policies which will aid in
the economic recovery and the re crea¬
tion of work, lie has endorsed the
principle of large public construction
by the federal government in times of
depression.” Pittsburgh
The priest, known in as
“the shepherd of the poor” because
of his work among the poverty
stricken, made a tour of western
states several weeks ago after an¬
nouncing as the jobless party’s pres¬
idential candidate.
He said today that while “my cam¬
paign lias been a success ... it is so
arranged that Roosevelt or Hoover
must win” and that therefore he is
wil hd rawing.
BROTHERS SHOOT
IT OUT; BOTH ARE
SERIOUSLY HURT
Dothan, Ala., Oct. 18. (/P) Two
brothers, 1. I>. and Howie Barnhill,
were not expected to live today fol¬
lowing a shooting affray between
themselves.
Officers who investigated said they
were told the shooting took place last
night in a neighborhood grocery
store operated by i. D. Barnhill after
he accused his brother of [laying im¬
proper attentions to his wife.
Clarence Graves, negro, customer
who witnessed the affair, said flewie
opened fire with a pistol, shooting
iiis brother just below the heart. The
wounded man was reported then to
have procured a shotgun and fired a
charge into his brother’s face.
The two men were said by police to
have been drinking at the time of the
shooting.
WOMACK PROMOTED
Savannah, Ga., Oct. J8. (/P)—Lieu¬
tenant Colonel A. J. Womack of Ma
eon, Ga., has been appointed com
rounder of the eastern brigade of the
Georgia division of Confederate vet
erans. He succeeds Brigadier Gener
I appointment al Frank F. Colley of Colonel who died Womack recently.
1 was
j announced Harden, commander by Major General of the Georgia William
’
| division. ____
PRICE FIVE CENTS
DISH cm
Secretary of Dominions An¬
nounces in House of Commons
Thai Nation Had 'Abrogated
Treaty
STEPS BEING TAKEN
TO PREVENT DUMPING
'Sweated Goods' Being Thrown
Into Nation and Discontin¬
uance Means Better Canadian
Agreement.
London, Oct. 18. i/P)—J. H. Thomas,
secretary of dominions, announced in
the house wf commons today that
Croat Britain has abrogated its com¬
mercial treaty with soviet Russia.
Under article 21 of the tariff agree¬
ment reached at the recent Ottawa
imperial conference, he said, renun¬
ciation of the temporary commercial
agreement with Russia was made nec¬
essary.
This agreement was signed in April
1930. It gave Russia the privileges
ol most-favored treatment and therc
jorc, Mr. Thomas explained, it stands
in the way of trade prohibitions
which might lie necessitated by the
obligation undertaken at Ottawa.
In notifying the Russian charge
d affairs here that Great Britain is
serving six months notice of abroga¬
tion in accordance with the pact, the
soviet authorities were informed that
Great Britain is still anxious to in¬
crease its trade with Russia and is
ready to enter discussions with that
object in view tit the earliest possible
t ime.
Article 21 of the Ottawa agreement,
to which Mr. Thomas referred, stipu¬
lates that the whole arrangement with
file dominions is based on the express
condition t.lial if either party “is sat¬
isfied that ally preference granted on
any particular class of eorhmodities
are likely to be frustrated by reason
ot maintenance of prices for such
commodities through state action on
the part of a foreign country,” that,
government will exercise the powers
it has “to prohibit i lie entry from such
foreign country of such commodities
lor such time as may be necessary to
maintain the preferences” granted
at Ottawa.
Ganada and Australia were partic¬
ularly concerned during the negotia¬
tions at Ottawa that the British gov¬
ernment shofild adopt effective means
to prevent, resumption of Russian
dumping on the wiieat, market.
It was suggested at. the time that
abrogation of the British agreement
with Russia might be necessary to
make the Ottawa agreements effect¬
ive.
The government benches cheered
when Mr. Thomas declared today that
the government, having undertaken
an obligation to give preference with¬
in the British commonwealth, must
take all steps necessary to see that
“no country shall frustrate this obli¬
gation by dumping sweated goods in
Great Britain.”
STATE WIDE RALLY
Ft
ALL GEORGIANS WOULD PARTI¬
CIPATE IN WELCOME OF
ROOSEVELT IN ATLANTA
Atlanta, Ga., Oet. 18. UP) —Georgia,
part, time home of Governor Franklin
D. Roosevelt of New York, plans a
state-wide rally to greet the Demo¬
cratic presidential nominee when he
comes here to speak Monday night.
The Atlanta city council has set
aside the date as “Roosevelt Day” and
Chairman Hugh Howell of the state
Democratic executive committee has
announced [dans for a parade of
school children and civic organizations
in the nominee’s honor.
Loud speakers are to be provided at'
the city auditorium where the rally
will lie held in order to take care of
overflow crowds and Chairman How¬
ell said arangernents were being made
to accommodate one of the largest
gatherings in the hsit.ory of the state.
The rally here will open at 8:3t) p.
m. and Governor Roosevelt’s speech
will lie broadcast over two radio
chains beginning at 9:15 p. m. and
concluding at 10 p. m.
Chairman Howell said the Roosevelt
party was expected here Sunday
morning. It will be taken on to Warm
Springs, the New York governor’s
winter home. He will preside at a
meeting of the Warm Springs foun¬
dation, organization for the treatment
of infantile paralysis, in the afternoon
and meet neighbors and friends of
Meriwether county. A dinner is plan¬
ned in his honor.
The governor is to return to Atlan¬
ta Sunday night to stop at the Atlan
ta-Biltrnore hotel where an entire
floor has been reserved for his party.
Conferences with party leaders are
scheduled.
Dr. R. B. Gilbert, head of the origi*
nal Roosevelt for President Club, will
have charge of the Warm Springs
program along with John Whitley of
Troup county._____________j