Newspaper Page Text
Friday, April 11, 1941.
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Page Fifteen
SEASON’S GREETINGS
Avalon Apt. Hotel
B. ALLAN RICH. Mgr.
87 HARRIS STREET, N. W.
JAckson 8412
DEL ROGIA
MILLINERY
585 Peachtree MAin 4266
Mxs. Bell Smith, Mgr.
FRANKLY SPEAKING
Pat Frank-
iWashington
FOX
THEATRE
Extends Cordial Wishes
of the
SEASON
PARAMOUNT
THEATRE
Extends Cordial Wishes
of the
SEASON
SEASONS GREETINGS . . .
RIALTO THEATRE
SEASON'S GREETINGS
CAPITOL THEATRE
History that might have been:
Time, October 1, 1918, Place,
Paris.
General Pershing walked into
into Allied general headquarters,
shook hands with Marshal Foch
and General Haig and said: "My
first army has smashed through
and we’ll have Sedan in ten days.
In twenty more days we should be
at the Rhine and in a month we’ll
be in Berlin.”
“Of course we will halt the of
fensive when they ask for an arm
istice,” said Foch. .
Pershing shook his head. "I don’t
agree with that policy,” he said.
"We’ve come a long way to fight
this war, and we don’t want to end
it half way.
"Your people”—and here he
nedded to Foch—"have felt the
tread of an invader’s boots in your
streets. You know what war is.
The Germans have never seen the
soldiers of another nation taking
over their country. Until they feel
that, until they know Sherman’s
type of war, they’ll always be
ready to make war again.
“So I say, march to Berlin!”
“Very well,” said Foch and
Haig. "We march to Berlin.”
* * *
Time, 1923; Place, Munich.
"... a fanatic named Adolf Hit-
i ler was one of those killed when
i the police fired on the marchers,
i He threw himself to the ground to
| escape the bullets aimed at Luden-
j dorfT’s followers and broke his
! neck.”
SEASON’S GREETINGS
! GAY CLOTHING COMPANY !
i
i
j SEWELL CLOTHES
MEN’S FURNISHINGS I
I
Walter Powell — Hyman B. Morris — Sara W. Sterne
Williani-Oliver Building WAlnut 9436
Time, 1938; Place, Munich.
"We will never betray a small
nation,” Chamberlain told Hitler.
"We stand by Czechoslovakia.”
• • •
Time, 1938; Place, Berlin.
"Of course I’m going after other
territory after I get the Sudeten-
land,” said Adolf Hitler, after an
injection of truth serum. "Other
territorial ambitions in Europe?
Haw! Haw! The question is, after
we get Europe, how many other
continents do we want?”
* * •
Time, 1938; Place, Prague.
"It is better to fight than be
slaves,” said Benes. "I don’t trust
the Germans. First it will be the
Sudetenland and next the whole
country.”
* * *
Time, 1938; Place, Paris.
“I think you’re right, DeGaulle,”
need is an air force to match Ger
many’s.”
* * *
Time, 1939; Place, Washington.
“Obviously,” said Senator Bur
ton K. Wheeler, “the British fleet
in the Atlantic is our first line of
defense. It is also obvious that
Germany is bent on world con
quest. So let’s stop Germany at
the first line."
* ♦ *
Time, 1941; Place, Washington.
"In spite of Germany’s tremen
dous air force,” said Col. Charles
0ji9vii imirm
SEASON’S GREETINGS
MAIN STORE—1060 St. Charles Avenue, N. E.—VErnon 9676
92 Peachtree Place, N. E.—HEmlock 6805
16 East 17th St., N. E, (Between the Peachtrees) HEmlock 3496
123 East Ponce de Leon-Decatur—DEcatur 0267
BURNS SERVICE STATION
i
i
I DEarborn 9241
North Decatur and Oxford Road
I
TOM BURNS, Manager
Time, 1925; Place, Berlin.
“. . . The Allied Armistice Com
mission today refused to allow
Hermann Goering, morphine ad
dict who was one of the com
manders of the Richthofen Squad
ron, to form sporting pilots’ asso
ciations. The commission said:
"Sports, my eye!”
* * +
Time, 1921; Place, Washington.
“. . . The Senate might not have
i voted to join the League of Na-
J tions except for two "accidents.”
j Senator Borah, leaving his apart-
| ment house, stubbed his toe; and
Senator Hiram Johnson was in bed
| with a bad cold. Their votes and
influence might have killed rati
fication. . . ”
* * *
Time, 1928; Place, Washington.
“We’ve spent a lot of money on
our new battleships and battle
cruisers,” President Calvin Cool-
idge said today. “Why should we
sink them? Disarmament may be
all right, but we ought to have
the biggest fleet in the world so
long as Japan has a fleet at all.”
* * *
Time, 1931; Place, London.
“. . . Great Britain acted in ac
cord with the United States today
to halt Japan’s move into eastern
Asia. The British and American
fleets were steaming towards Sing
apore as a show of force which, it
was known, would prevent the
Japs from invading Manchuria."
* * *
Time, 1932; Place, Berlin.
. . arrested on orders of Pres-
j ident von Hindeburg, leaders of
(the Nazi party ere held in jail on
charges of plotting to end the con
stitution of the German Republic.”
* * *
Time, 1933: any European cap-
! ital.
“We’ve got to put a stop to this
persecution of the Jews in Ger
many,” the Prime Minister said.
“First it will be the Jews—and
I next it will be we.”
* * •
Time, 1934; Place, Paris.
“The Army was ordered to
march if Germany attempted a
I putsch in the Rhineland.
A. Lindbergh, "I refuse to believe
we’re licked before we start. I
have faith in Americas and the
Americas. When I flew the At
lantic, people said it couldn’t be
done. This job can’t be any more
hazardous and I personally am of
fering my services to my country
—as a pilot—a job I know.”
• • •
Pinch me, and wake me up!
EMPIRE THEATRE
(ALPHA FOWLER, Mgr.)
Your neighborhood Play
house at Georgia Avenue
and Crew St., S. W.
wishes you
A HAPPY HOLIDAY
SEASON’S GREETINGS
LEWIS SEED STORE
202 SYCAMORE STREET
DECATUR, GA.
DEarborn 3737
Trinity Furniture Shops, Inc.
Furniture Repairing and Refinishing — Call For Estimate
CRAFTSMEN OF PERIOD FURNITURE
363 BOULEVARD MAin 3681
JAMES OFFICE SERVICE
Multigraphing — Mimeographing — Addressing — Mailing
MRS. M. M. STANALAND, Manager
231 HEALEY BUILDING WAlnut 7607
PERDUE & EGLESTON, Inc.
GENERAL AGENTS
Hartford Fire Insurance Company
TRUST COMPANY OF GEORGIA BUILDING
JAckson 4430 B. M. DuBose
JOY’S ATLANTA THEATRE
ALWAYS A DOUBLE FEATURE
5c and 10c
25 Exchange Place, S. E. WAlnut 6899
Silver’s 5 & 10 Cent Company
117 WHITEHALL STREET
and
j F & W Grand 5-10 & 25c Stor, Inc.
97 WHITEHALL STREET
FULTON PLUMBING COMPANY
“Plumbing Contractors”
GRANT BUILDING
MAin 1456
GAS OIL LUBRICATING WASHING
J. E.MOORE SERVICE STATION
292 PONCE DE LEON AVE., N. E. VErnon 9273