Newspaper Page Text
lUNDAY, SEPTEMBER SO, 1928.
THE BANNER-HBRALD, ATITEN8, CEORC1A.
PAGE TV
“Little dick”
ANNOUNCES FOR
SPEAKERSHIP
Dillard, Chairman; J. W. Holcomb
Win. S. Brown; stata of music, W.
D. Meadow, chairman; Paul Cain,
C. W. Owen; Nomination commit,
tee, W. N. Allen, chairman; W. E.
Sanders, J. J, Bivtoughs.
Visitor* were present from
Banks, FTanklfn, Stephens. Clarke
and Oconee counties. •
Friday's meeting closed with a
song and prayer by Her. S. B.
Wingfield.
Saturday’s meeting opened with
the appointment of the new song
leaders, Logan Perkins B. L.
Ash, C. \V. Owens. Paul Cain, Cor
ps Keller, Johnnie Hlx.
Correspondents and visitors
were present from . Bowman,
Franklin, Hart and Elbert conn,
ties, in addition to those present
Friday.
Reports of various eommt*--*-
were retd and approved after
which the s'nging of special songs
occupied the time.
Salens Holcomb, aged 10, and
Watson Holcomb. a«e 7, appended
tbe the audience with their duet:
“I Am Not Alone".
The next meeting of the con.
ventlon' w’ll be held at Moon's
Grove Baptist church in 1029. The
session closed with Prayer by Rev.
Hendrix.
J. W. BROWN. President*
G. L. SAILORS, secretary.
Traffic Means Little In
Lives Of “Arty” Folk
Of Provincetown'
NEW LAUNDRY TO L u
BE OPENED HERE!
I back to the spot where tlio women
of tbe Maytlower party did their
first washing in the new world
he would see a strangely trans
formed coast. Art and near-art
ar* singularly Intermixed with
trade and near.trade, and tbe
crowds which greet the Dorothy
Bradford on the dock when Jt ar
rives from Boston show a blend
ing of people* from southern and
central Europe who bear no rpsdm.
blance 16 the Pilgrim stock.
WHAT? NO ANQORAI
CONSTANTINOPLE.—You
get your Angora. A frantlr »<
ij;* an Angora cal. to ho prest
11'» til'* queen <>f the K'm? of
hanistan as a feature of a r
tion, wan without avail utirl
royal couple journeyed on wl
an Angora.
A new laundry will aoon be open,
ed here in Uio buldlng formerly oc.
eupled by the Chero.Cola Company
on Hancock avenue.
Tbe .owner* ’ of tbe new concern
Newton Smith
PROVINCETOWN, Maaa.—OP)—
Traffic cop, have s hard job herd.
In* artlata so rix'dlng automobile,
may get through Provincetown'*
narrow main street without cas
ualties.
Puritan Father* may have been
good town planners In their day.
Uut when they put all the Inter-
est'-ng churches and houses along
one narrow road they didn't real-
lu that in 1928 hundreds of artists
and thousands of motorists would
be (locking to Cape Ood. '
Painters, young and old. men
and women, erect their cauls In
ATLANTA. Ga. —(AP) - Rep
resentative Ciehard B. Russell, Jr.
of Borrow county, speaker of the
m narrow counry, speaker or tnc
lower house of the state legisla
ture, Saturday, formally announc
ed his candidacy for re-election to
the post, claiming he hat. suffi-
• '•nt pledges to assure his reten-
sre Joe Bare, Jr.,
and R I-. Ruark. The- hulldtn* Is
now being remodeled especially for
(j The Plessent . Grave Rdpt'st
.church wss the scene of the 53rd
-*nnusl dinging convention of Mad
ison county, Pres. J. D. Brown
'Opened the convention with Pray-
(*r. ■■ f
^ Songs were led by C. F. Bur
roughs. C. \V7 Oweds, W. M. Mur-
phree, W. H.'Fountain. A. O. Dray.
<1. L. Sailors, 'Prdf. A. H. Purcell,
4. H. SherldeSfURWr. 8. B. Wing
field of lAthedns 1 preached the morn,
ling sermon. ’I'll' » .
I J. W. Brotrm Was re-elected
irardeiW; C. 1W. Owens, vice,
iresldent; Cf J/.' Sailors, secre.
try; O. P. WhilWorlh. assltant-
Ml. Vernon lodge P. A A. M. will
have n social meeting next Thurs
day night at 8 o'clock.-The oecas-
tion.
Mr. Russell, a son of Chief Jus
tice Richard B. Russell of the
Georgia supreme court, wss re-
! rominmted for the legislature in
the recent democratic primary in
which he polled '.500 of the 2,000
voice cast in hit coahty. He has
been a member of the asrer.bly
for ten years,
BEQUEST FOR PET
LONDON. —.The will of Col.
Herbert Dtvles-Evans, one time
High Sheriff of Cardiganshire,
provides .176 per year for the care
of a pet. “I desire my executor
to provide her with a warm and
comfortable homo and good food
during the term of her natural
Ilf*.”
tb* line of Prov'ncetown traffic.
Than Isn’t any other way to get
the proper view of many Inter
esting old houses which line the
British Trades Union
Congress Hails Era
Of Industrial Peace
ragged waterline.
Tne Provlncetowp Jltneye, which
are a Cap* Cod motor version of
a atago coach, and qnl’e 'unlike
Dtfefdlt products, are the only
means of regular transportation
through the picturesque town. The
ANNOUNCES
<£Mr. Ray Manning
SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE
will Present '
Commttteethdn appointed were:
rrangement 11 Committee. G. P.
Tittworth. chairman; L. n.,8her-
Ph P P OiiWidli.e!,* •
drivers of. the vehicles, which ran
every now and then, have learn
ed how fo dodge paints and sketch.
era. E.t —. --I-—r; ~tz
By FRANK HAVILAND KING
(Associated Preee Staff Writer)
LONDON. —<JP)— with British
“rads" routed at the noth Trade*
Unpn congress, which recently
adjourned at Swansae, Walea, an
erg of Industrial peace, good wUI
len, C. F. Iturmuahs; Commit,
eo of deceased (members. J. W.
.... But the role outsiders who
Invade the old flahlng vjllage In
honking .motor cars have little
appreciation of artistic sensibili
ties and aspect painters to make
way for-them.
lArt-walkors, or art-sltters, ore
In the class with ordinary jay
walkers to the rude foreign motor
ists who ''do". Provincetown In 20
minutes. Including a walk to the
top of the monument to the Pilgrim
Fathers who landed hero before
they honored Plymouth. ,
After Florence, Provincetown
probably has moro outdoor paint
ers in summer time than any other
•qeiAer. They <fom* in shoajs.
Teachers bring their entire schools
and artists from all over the
ANATtM-Wt&t
tHsrrrvnoN-
and cooperation Is haltered to be
dawning In this land which still
gttl.’etU economic Ills 'from the
great general strike of 1929.
Society Brand Clothes
New Fall and Winter Patterns
MADE TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL MEASURE
Monday and Tuesday i j
■ =
October i and 2
PAYCASH 1.
PAY L&3
NO BILLS'"t.
TO DISTRESS
Henceforth John Bull, In the role
of the well-fed. fa'rly prosperous
but somewhrft worried employer—
particularly harried s'nce the
World war—and "Old Bill" and
•bur. his easy-going but capable
hired help, declare thqr are going
“where tavingt are great* ft"
in.,! 164 East Clayton Street, Athens, Ga.
Smart Lines with the Snap
That Young , Fellows Favor
to bo friends, not enemies.
Momentous decisions for the fu.
tore of British organised labor
were made at Swansea. Both la
bor leaders and Industrialists are
busy'effecting them.
One of the first tasks Is the
eatabllshment of a national Ibdut-
trial council and Joint conciliation
board to investigate threatened
disputes. Thus will be created
the machinery for direct negatl-
at'on between employers and
trades unionists In an effort to
prevent strikes and lockouts.
YOU ARE INVITED TO CALL AND
INSPECT THESE NEW FABRICS ANp MODELS
If these efforts are successful
Orest Britain never will ee# an
other such upheaval am that of
May. 1929, which waa little short
of bloodleva civil war. For the
Trades Union congress and its at-
(illated unions, which control a
force of nearly four million organ-
Our line of Students’ Suits
is popular because these
I » -1- L..
lied workers, are now committed
to the principle of conciliation and
negotiation.
garments are built in ac- V." 1
cot dance with the young
fellow’s own ideas of what w
constitutes vigor; find ^
smartness of style, mum mm
And besides correct design and cut
right to strike. Nor' la lockout
denied employers. These wasp,
ons are to be preserved as last
resorts, but they have been sheath-
ed.
The Swansea congress, 940 dele-
gates representing 3.874,842 trades
unionists, approved by on over
whelming majority the action'of
tho council ot the trade* union
organisation in entering upon tho
so-called '"Mound conversation*.”
Ttvese were round . table discus
sions between leading British In-
duatr'atlsta, employers and trade*
union loader*.
The move wae inaugurated by
Lord Melchett, who until raised
to tho British pearsge a law
.. r<i. stfaaA XV/imt
If Miles Standi!
these Suits have the enduring quality
of service that enables them to stand
up under the wear that active fellows
give them at school or at business.
In view of quality of fabrics,
high standard of workman'
ship' and moderateness of
price these Students’ Suits re-
present exceptional values at—
MONDAY «»d TUESDAY
Extra P&hty to Match #3.98 and #4.98
Offered : in two-button, and three-
button; single-breasted model, with
notch or peak lapel. Cassimeres in
new shades of brown, grey, blue-grey
and bliir, in novelty weaves and dou
ble stripe and shadow stripe 'effects.
Members ot
", , the
IsUIUUlUUimt Assaagw “» •— j” , j
labor movement, are to be denied
future attendance. Tho T. U. C.
declined to take over a Labor
college fettered by Marxian com
plexes. ■ .
similarly denounced. --
tho ilMkvorlty Movement
Communist fringe of the
Young Fellows Are Keen on VALUES!
SE. Tbe T. U. c.
declined to take over a Labor
That’s Why\Our
nilrttliel.
Aviator Bridegrooms
Given Real “Showers"
WASHINGTON. Aerial
showers for aviator bridtrrooms
are becomln- popular. The “show,
or" ta all that lta name Implies
and conalata of a cascade of m*u.
tatnre parachutes to which are at-
t-ched dolls, old shoaa, tin cans,
' rTco and household utensils.
I The tiny parachutes ar* released
from planes that’clrcl* abor* Hi*
I house or church where th* wed-
ding Is to be. Attached to each
•art'cle dropped from the sk'ss la
a not* stating that tbe f'ndar will
be reimbursed by the bridegroom
If ho will take the artlcl* found
to the place whore the wedding
la to he.
font- Charles Slyer* wa* th*
latest rec'ptent ot an aortal show,
ar. It descended upon him from
four planes circling abova San An.
tonlo on tho occasion of his mar
riage to Mlaa Fhanabel Hull of
that c'ty. The flying formation
waa led by L'antanant Brookley.
who waa deluged th* aam* way
whan when he wa* married. The
shower cost him 914. aa 14 lladar*
brought him presents.
A Mfle-a-Minute Texas Ranger story with the screen’s
greatest exponent of the real West.
Are Styled to tfie Minute—»j
I Have Quality % Fabrics—
'Expert ^orkmanihip—«'
and 'Are ft)* Faced*
JACK DONOVAN
, , IN—' „ •
“The Bullet Mark”
Cka* ap the old home and
bring the folks out to dinner. Sre
cur bill of fare In this Issue.
Srrvrd from 12 (o 3 and from 6
to 9—Price $1.00.
, HOLMAN HOTEL
' COFFEE SHOPPE •
tr 1 . >• . • \ «»•».. \ A
' TKe 'double-breasted box model sketched fifl# SJJ Jjfe #93'"'^
in novelty .weaves and fancy overplaids.