Newspaper Page Text
O'
NDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1926.
THB BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS. GEORGIA.
“THE TEN COMMANDMENTS”
PALACE THEATRE SPECIAL
Return Showing Monday and Tuesday; Peto-Morri
son Western Strand Theatre Monday.
WANT AD RATES
2 Cents a Word „
Minimum Charge of 40 cents.
•LOO for three insertions. Sev
en times for the price of five
insertions.
AH discontinuances MUST
be made in person at the Ban
ner-Herald Office or by letter.
Telephone discontinuances are
not valid. 1
7£ WANT AD 7C
PHONE *^
Banner-herald want
ADS GET RESULTS.
LOST AND FOUND
.'.MRS. ARTHUR BUJtCH, 244 E.
Washington Street; Special Sale
of Sprang Hats for Saturday
and Monday.’ Good values at
<3.98 and $5.00. f22c
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
If you eoMfemplate entering
the life insurance business or
making a change in your pres
ent connection, the Illinois Life
Insurance Company has an un
usually attractivo general
agency contract for the Athens
territory.^ Address
W. O. PERRY, State Manager
Suite 727 Atlanta, Trust Co.
■ Bldg.
Atiatitr., Georgia.
i JMi ^ "’P
Racial Relations
Work In The South |
Becomes Worldwide!
ATLANTA.—UP)—Work la the
South for better relations between
the white and negro races Is at
tracting world-wide attention and
in several places the actual plan
FOR SALE—Shoe .hop, com-
pletely. equipped; well establish- th “"‘1°“, ‘‘, eIr °!* ,‘S
ed. No leue to ouume. Now in ~S ’. b
VonCanon bui.din*. Phone 1010. K^ndVrXlon" ££
here is only* a segment of a world
FOR SALE
FOR SALE—Pair mules, wagon w ide problem." said Benneth Mac
and harness. Armstrong & Lefanen secretary of the Mission.
Dobsb. f22p Ary Conference of Great Britain
‘ ” : • and Ireland, who has just made a
FOR SALE-r-JONQUILS; in any study of the Southern plan. "You
quantity; 76c per 100. Phone may feel encouraged, therefore, to
970. Mrs. L. N. Betts, 970 go forward with your efforts, see-
. South Lumpkin Street: f23c ing that they mean so much to mil
lion* in other lands."
Having met members of the in
terracial Commission, Composed of
leading white and negro cltisens
in the South, Mr. MacLennen learn
ed that the organisation, which
had its start here largely through
the efforts of the late John J.
Eagan, hud been extended Into
many Northern communities. Ap
proximately a thousand commit*
tees are at work promoting the
best Interests of the two races.
The basis of the plan Is consul-
SIMS Brad
GOOD Breed
WANTED
M S, S .. h l K J” U 5 1 ™ R S ci 2 ? 4 q n I i' I ta™ and cooperation'Conditions
W..ni n « nn * "id* Sale „ re d ; icHi , 0 a frankly and decl-
elona reached so that the leaden
63.98 and 45.00.
A 1 ?A™ r/foTOber?or: =1
objective.
MISCELLANEOUS
' e ",how! 1 n.^cianXrt d ta tn . d to building of a apeeial eity. known
showing spectal Interest la me » n „ MiII ' r „i;, 'i. —
Palace Spceial Monday and Tuesday
MENTS" PALACE MON
DAY AND TUESDAY
Facts about the migh^est of all
spectacles. "
"The Ten Cojnn.nndments” were
accepted as the theme of the
great production after a world
wide contest for ideas and sug
gestions had been carried on for
months. Eight different persons
out of 30,000 hit upon this sub
ject and were ^warded a propor-
portionate share of the first prize
money.
To bring before the people the
moving elements of the impelling
story of the Exodus required the
SEEDS! SEEDS!
Field and' Garden—All Varieties
Cabbage Plants and Onion Sets.
Phones 1066—1067
CITIZENS PHARMACY
m7c
ATHENS* LARGEST
{•' Victrola and
Record Dealers
New Records
Weekly
BERNSTEIN BROTHERS
m7e
HO STARTS 10 STORES work-:commission's work, safd Sherwood ™ Hoore.
ing far you bringing you steady VAAr . ot the Young .Men'. Christ- «**J3 «£* l^lVAirl
- weekly income. No selling, tan Association, who commended
260 Soldiers and 7 officers of
the U. S. Army from the 11th
Cavalry and the 76th Field Ar-
tillery from the Presido, Monte
rey, were used as chariot drivers.
The players in "The Ten Com
mandments" Palace Monday and
Tuesday:
Cast of Part One
Moses, the lawgiver, Theodore
Roberts.
Ramoses, the Magnificent,
Charles De Roche. |
Miriam, the Sister If Mows.
Estelle Taylor.
The wife of Pharaoh, Julia
Faye.
The son of Pharaoh, Terrence
woak for you. Write 636, Vann Similar ccmmlttes are being or*
Co., 25 Third Ave., New York, ganised hi British South Africa,
f21p he said.
GIRLIE, pretty, very wealthy, but'
so lonesome- League, Box 39,!
Oxford. Fla.«lp
CHARMING young lady worth
$50,000, will marry. Write Eva,
B-1022, Wichita, Kansas. f21p
ADDRESS post cards, clipping (
newspapers. No experience nec-i
cssary. Earn money at home. No 1
canvassing. Particulars free.
Dept. C-29, Home Sorv|c/B, 53
\W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago. f2ip
“GIVE IT A THOUGHT*
You can now have the Daily
Georgian delivered to your
home for only r.jc a month. Th<*
"South’s C re.; teat Newspaper.”
Lee C. Euwdcn, Phone 300.
ADDRESSING ENVELOPES—
Experience unnecessary; ambi
tious persons may earn |15*$45
weekly,during spare time at.
home. No "outfits" to buy;
everything furnished free. Pleas-!
»nt, dignified work for honest,
sincere persons. Franklyn Pro
ducts Corporation,
Richard F. Harris
Special Agent
New York Life Insurance Co.
announces a new policy with
increased benefits. 114 South
ern Mut. Bldg. Phone 228 m6-c
ling sand "dunes* To’this" fo<±tionV Adron, brother of Moses, Janies
were transported 2,500 men and M *j"*
women and children and 3,000 ani- ’Nathan, the d.seon^nted, Law*
mnls. !«<» Butt -
To reproduce the City of Ram- t The. Taskmaster, Ctarence Bur*
eses required 560,000 feet of j t0 £- *
lumbber, 300 tons of plaster, 25,-! The Brortze Man, Noble John-
000 lbs. of nails and 76 miles ofi s °n.
cable and wire. | Cast of Part Two
Four huge statues of the Pha*; Mrs. Martha McTayish, Edythe
raoh were 83 feet high each. To (Chapman.
build them called for 16 tons of
'todeling clay and 100 tons of
plaster. • -%
Two giant pumps raising 100
gallons of water per minute were
kept busy filling fou.* tanks of
18,000 g^llbns capacity each.
One hundred and twenty five
cookc and helpers ‘■'ere employed
<it.Uy.ta feed from 1,200 tq 2,600
John MacTavish, her son. Rich
ard Dix. ,
Dan MacTavish, her son, Rod
La Roque.
Mary Leigh, Leatrice Joy.
Saiiy Lung, an Eurasian, Nlta
Naldi.
Redding, an Inspector, Robert
) I'ETF, MORRISON WEST-
lERX STRAND MONDAY
One of the fiercest, most realis
tic man-to-man fights ever
Screened is seen in 'One Shot
Ranger,” the Western melodrama j
coming to the Strand on Monday.
In this picture Betty Goodwin In
the role of the heroine , is in-1
suited by a gang of bad cow*
punchers im the'town street. Pete
Morrison, riding through, tovVn
hears and sees. He leaps on the
leader of the gang, disarms him
and then proceeds to give him a
thorough thrashing. So realistic
was this fight that Pste!f antag
onist came out of the mill with
one eye closed, and Pete collected
a nose looking !!**’# rin* toma
to.
“A lElSS FOR C1NDERILLA"
PALACE WEDNESDAY
Of the varied assortment ol
film fare that is to be served up
to local moviegoers during the
coming week, none holds out
greater promise of genuine enter
tainment than Paramount** “A
Kiss for Cinderella,’’ which opens
at the Palace Wednesday.
This production brings togeth
er again the personalities that
skyrocketed ‘/Peter Pan” to touch
sensational success. Here,
again, we have the light, deli-
cately wrought f«nt**y and
whimsically humor of Jaipes M.
Barrie, the expert direction and
distinctive craftsmanship of Her
bert Brenon and the elfin charm
and sensitive Acting of Betty
Bronson.
But unlike “Peter Pan, “A
Kiss for Cinderella” is realistic
in theme and modern in setting
and background. The story cen
ters around a poor little London
slavey, whose unshakable belief
that some day she* will be invited
LAWNS
FOI^ BEST RESULTS
Cofer’s Evergreen Lawn
Grans for open lawns.
Kentucky Blue Grass
for shaded ones.
SOW THESE SEED DURING FEBRUARY OR 31 ARCH.
ui\
Phone 247
SEED COMPANY
269 North Lumpkin
u
NEW FLOOD OF IMMIGRATION
FROM ITALY IS SOURCE OF
CONCERN TO AUSTRALIA
BY A. W. V. KING
United Press 8taff Correspondent
8YDNEY. —(UP)— To increase
her population rapidly, yet at the'
same time preserve rigidly her
White Australia policy*, and, if
possible, keep the present high
proportion of 'British stock, Is a
mixed ambition cf Australia
frhqght with many tangled racial
problems.
Australians boast of having 98
per cent of British stock, and de
spite the comparative slowness
with which her empty spaces are
filling, the parliament* nnd P^opl*
to a magnificent ball, where a cf this country steadfastly refuse
Prince will choose her as his to encourage any immigrants ex.
Princess, helps hei to endure her cept those of British blood. In Its
people.
i «i The Outcast, Agnes Ayres.
ducts Corporation,.
Huron, Chicago, Ill.
PAINTING—Phone Lon -Parr -127
for your painting, inside work
a specialty; calsom'ning, hard
wood floors, mahegany, old
ivory. All work guaranteed. At
the best prices. f21p
“IT AINT NOTHING ELSE
BUT”
"The South’s Greatest Newspa
per." Sells at Newsstand* and
on the street* for 2c. Delivered
to your home for 60c a month.
MARRY—Business girl 27, worth
$73,000; widow, 48, $30,000;
girl, 19, $40,000. Descriptions
and photos free. Mrs. Warn,
8634 S. Figuoroa St., Lot An-
gelas. Cal'f.
FOR RENT
READ
BANNER-HERALD
WANT ADS.
, X—
Railroad Schedules
> I SEABOARD AIR UNE RY.
*i Arrlnl and Dtpirtur. ot Train.
" Athens, Ga,
To and From Sooth and Writ
ARRIVE DEPART
10:00 am Atlanta' 7.15 am
vi Atlknta-3*ham
- 1 - 2:45 pm Memphii 2:45 pm
6* 7:55 pm Atlanta 6:15 pm
J ‘ 1 11:19 pm 1 Atl’ta-B’h.m 5:29 nm
* To and From North and Emit
ii ARRIVE DEPART
3" New York-Wa.h,
p 6:29 am JUeh.-N'flk 2:45 pm FRUIT
•“ 7:15 am Abbeville 7.55 p
New York-Wash.
2:45 pm Rieh.-N’<lk 11:19 p
lu
MRS. ARTHUR BURCH, 244 E.
Washington street, Special Sale
of Sprin* Hits for Saturday
and Monday. Good values et
$3.98 and 55.00.f22c
FOR RENT—Fire room first
floor apartment, four room scc-
. ond floor apartment. Modern
conveniencea. Hancock Avenue.
A. E. Davison. . f23c
f21-28p BA-
Where the Sick Go To Get Well.
ALBERT H. TIMM
Pelmer Chiropractor -
27915 Lumpkin St. Phone 34S-J
m2c
FOR RENT—Apartment
with every conven
ience; 165 Wilcox and
Clovcrhurst Terrace,
facing park; near Mil-
ledge and Lumpkin car
lines; garage. Phone
1648. f23c
SALESMEN WAITED
6:15 pm; Monroe-Ham. 10:60 am
GEOR&fA RAILROAD
Arrive Depart
. 7:10pm Auiruata-Atlta 8:10pm
12:15pm Angueta-AU'ta 2:25pm
C.A'NESVILtE MIDLAND RY.
1 No. 2 leaves Athene for Gainea-
villa 8:10 n. ro.
No. 12 leaves Athena for Gainea-
■ villa 11:15 a. m.
No. 6 leavoe Athena for Galnes-
- villa 4 p. m.
>• Ko 5 arrives Athena from Gainea-
| rille 10:10 n, m.
Kr ,’aL". U arrives Athens
n GajrosvilJe 10:32 a. m.
from
uaioesviqo n. m.
'.A’o. 1 arrives Athens from Galn.L
• b ' villa 6:50 p. m.
1 z—Daily except Sunday.
•*' Schedules Nos. 6 and 6 ar« cov-
b ? mm Motor c,r No -
rrl ” -■ - .
r t j CENTRAL OP GEORGIA
t Depart for Macon 7:40 n. ro.,
-.4:45 p.m.
4 r Arrive from Macon 12:10 p. m.,
k 9:30 p. m,
f GEO. BEELAND, C. A-Phone 64
W. O. BOLTON, Aet, Phone 1661
. SOUTHERN RAILWAY
1 Depart jArrl'
(■
4:15 p.m. 8:65 Vi. l
GEO. B. MILLER, Com’I Kqi
Telephone 81. .1 1
TREE SALESMEN—
Profitable, pleasant, steady,
wqrk. Good tide line for fnrm-|
ers, teachers and others. Perms- j
nent Job for good workers.
OCONEE PRESSING CLUB
Corner College v and Clayton
Phone 9100
“BANCROFT-
HUNTER"
1 All Wool Suits
All ono pries
423.75
Spring Patterns Just
arrived. Every suit sold on
money-hack guarantee. Come
in and select yours esrly.
Write for terms. Concord Nurs
eries, Dept. 114, Concord, Ga..
’f23p
THE VETERINARY DIVISION
■Georgia State College ef
Agriculture
Will Respond to Calls for
VETERINARY SERVICE
A moderate charge will be made.
Fhona 767-J. Athens, Ga.
m3c
Read Banner-Herald
Want Ads.
NOTICE
I am now connected wit
the CITY TIRE SERVIC"
STATION, comer Washingto
and Jackson Streets, and wi 1
appreciate the continued pet
ronage of my frlenda.
GROVER PRESNELL
. m4c
Out of Ink? Phone 77-
Need New Pens? Phone 77
Rubber Bands Oyt? Phone 77—
Second Sheets? Phone 77—
It makes a “whale” of a difference
to have these little necessities handy.
The McGregor Company
Palace Special Monday and Tuetday
drab surroundings ai/J lighten her
menial tasks.
How the Cinderella story oi
her dreams becomes the real ro*
mance of her life is revealed, in
a series of pathetic,' comic and
dramatic situations in which
whimsy and reality are artfully
blended.
AT THE MOVIES THIS WEEK:
PALACE
Monday and Tuesday (Two
days) Cecil B. DeMilie’s produc
tion "The Ten Commandment^'*
Performances at 11 a. m. 1-3-5-
7 and 9 p. m. Admission children
16c; adults 40c.
Wednesday —-Betty Bronson,
Esther Ralston "A Kiss For Cin
derella’’ Pathe News Eventa.
Thursday and Friday (Special)
Corinne Griffith “Infatuation.”
Mack Sennett comedy “Mme.
Sans Jane.”
Saturday—Norma Shearer and
Lew Cody "His Secretary." Jim
mie Adams comedy “Fair, But
Foolish.”
STRAND
Monday—Peto 31orri*cn (Weat-
ern) “One Shot Ranger.” Pathe
Sport Reel.
Tuesday—Bruce Gordon (West
ern) “Stampedin’ Trouble.” Last
showing “Riders of The Plains,” 1
Wednesday—May McAvoy “The
Road to Glory." Comedy ‘Toy-
land.’’
Thursday—Huntly Gordon “The
Golden Cocoon."
Friday—(Two Big Westerns)
Bill Cody “The Fighting Smile.' 1
Ben Corbett “Hero of Pipe Rock.”
Saturday—Norman Kerry west-
rn “Under Western Skies.”
Skarlet Streak” Extra.
way. the White Australia edict,
banning colored races from these
shores, Is as great a social and
rolitical experiment as prohibition
is in America, but whereas pro
hibition splits the citizens of Am
erica, White Australia would find
barely one opponent In AaitnIUt
to 99 supporters.
With the dolo providing an eaay
way of living to tbQse classes lb
England upon whom Australia
chiefly relies for ’her Immigrants
the authorities of this country
have* found suitable migranta
creaaingly Bcarce. But other races
of Europe bend covetous eyes upon
the rfeb, fair land of the sputh.
Prominent among them are the
Italians, hardest hit by America's
Immigration lam. Since that came
Into force, there bis been an in
flux of Italians to Australia T .tal-
Ian colonies have been for* d on
the sugar cane fields of Northern
Queensland, and one district is
already known a* Little Italy.
The Italian influx theatens to
become a national problem. The
Queensland 8tate Government ap
pointed a commission of Investlga.
tlon which reported adversely on
the unrestricted entrance of Ital
ians. Possessing no legal right to
block white people entering the
country, providing they measure*
up to certain standards, the Fed
eral Government did the next best
thing—it raised the mental, physi
cal, and financial standards of
foreign immigrants to such an ex
tent that there was a perceptible
diminution of the flow.
The labor unions arc the great
est opponents of unrestricted for
eign immigration, since they fern-
wholesale settling of men from
the Mediterranean countries will
undermine standards of living, nm!
1 lower wages. Vetera ns of the
Wcrld War, too, have entered pro
tests. Civic officials responsible
for the health of communities also
view with disapproval the whole
sale coming of Southern Euto-
peans.
The outcry against the Italian in
fltut hat excited Interest in Italy,
where Mussolini is credited with n
desire ot seeing a large proportion
of that country's 300.000 annual
population surplus go to Australia.
Ev«ry batch of Italians arriving
here ta aamnponied by officials of
the Romo Government. The latent
to arrive ts Dr. Uostagno, Inspec
tor-General of Italian Migration
who Is hero to make a survey of
the situation, ns he has done In the
tUnted States, Paraguay, the Ar
gentine, Franco and Belgium, lie
says Italian emigrants are no long
er birds of passage as b«forn the
war. No longer the unemployed
but skilled workmen and agricul
turists. want to emigrate.
Meantime, dozens of Northern
Queensland townships have Ital
ian communities- Italian is heard
in every street of theso town*.
Italian shops and clubs have open
ed. and Italians nro establishing
themselves on the land as cane
farmers. Australia Is sure to face
very shortly the problem of asnl-
inulatlug ncn-Brltlsh ’settlers.
TAXNOTlCr
More Deadly Narcotics Displacing .
Opium As "Dope” For Chinese
BY BERT L. KUHN
United Prede Staff Corrwpondent
SHANGHAI, China. — (UP)—
Morphine, cocaine, heroin and
other of the nferc deadly narcot
ics arc gradually arsuminy n posi
tion which put. them on a par
with opium in the total of China')
illicit Imports.
Reports of huge importations of
Make your State and Countyldruy, are circulated here from
Tax Return, urly and avoid the
nnh.
J. H. DORSEY.
f24c. Tax Receiver.
READ
BANNER-HERALD
WANT ADS.
time to time, ahd In mnny in-
•tancea they eeem to have a «uh-
•tantlal foundation. Even a cure-
ory investigation by an untrained
observer .hows thst narcotics arc
on sale quite openly in many
sections of Shanghai, nnd the
purchasers .‘n rectntl yesrs ihows
n steady growth.
For the most part, those who
retail morphia illegally find their
ETHEL: ------ IdiotismiS
WE. PEAILV MEANT
WHM Wt ^AID-OUCH/
lastomers among the lower cla'scs
of the city. One establishment in
the northern section of Shanghai
la known to addicts as "The Shot-
in-the-Arm-” It has a boarded-up
thop-front like most of the small
er Chinese ' retail stores, and
while, nominally a cigarette shop,
•t In open for real, business only
at night-
The addict approaches the
shop-front and taps on one of the
blinds. The small square of wood
is shovad open from inside. No
words art* spoken. The addict
merely sticks his arm through the
and on unknown hand gives him
rn injection of morphine sulphate.
Thu increase in the morph'a
trade is due not so much to any
falling-off in the demand for
oelum as to the less bulky Ch«^*
acter of the more potent orug,
nnd the greater profits to be
reaped by trading in it. Smug
glers have been known to make
fortunes on a single trip.
Most of Chlitato drug * traff •
has its source in Europe, although
suspicions have attached to the
practice of trans-shipping nar
cotics from Japa nand on occas
ions accusaitons have been made
openly in this connection. The
general practice followed by the
importers Is to tend some relia
ble man or woman to Europe,
ostensibly as a tourist. At Fsris
or Geneva, a package is deliver
ed to him, and, after depositing
it among his personal effects in
his trunk he starts back to China.
In the case of an individual re* ,
garding whom they have no sus
picions, the Chinese Customs pay
tittle attention to personal bag
gage, and in this, manner consid
erable quantities of drugs *rp
smuggled in.
One American woman is re
ported to have been rewarded
with a “commission” of $20,000
by the smuggling ring after
making a single trip ta Europe.
Rarely, however, will any indi
vidual try it more than once, as
there is always the chance of
having one’s baggage inspected
when one arrives at Shanghai,
and, in the event that the smug
gler Is detected, he is Bubject to
i he criminal statutes of his owr.
country.
Use
Banner-Herald
Classified Cards.
They Pay.
Phone 75.
■
u\
>raa, ^4f-,*Ni