Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
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-Special Train To Go To
i Columbus F o r Annual
;f AT - i
" . Georgia-Auburn Game
ih BY \1\1.'("0 LYLE |
""" A short, snappy workout was the program for the
Geergia Bulldogs down on Sanford Field Monday
afternoon in the first practice sessien preparatory
to the annual game with the Auburn Tigers in Co
lumbus Saturday.
*»'V’Vl‘he Seaboat;d rail;oad annouc
es special rates from Athens to
Columbus for the annua' game. A
round-trip ticket can be obtained
for $7.07, while one-way lare can
be obtained for $3\54. The tickets
Arom ‘Athens will be good on any
prain. Friday and up until noon
torday. The return tickets will
» good on any wrain returning un
#FA2 o'clock Sundav night.
wiAdvices received states that
@olumbus is making extensive
;pr,?araticns for the annual game
‘and is expecting a large crowd for
?l?% week-end festivities. The bat
tle has been played in Co'umbus
A'wavs On Hand At
23 HARRM DRUG CO.
)
Pipe Hose
Fittings Shaft
Valves Pulle;
Jacks Saws ‘15;?0](:95
Aope Files ICKS
"gfia?fi Oilers Beltin~
Blocks Shovels Bolts
I Brams—Angle Iron—
Concrete Reinforcing Bars,
:fi}; ‘k‘inds machinery repaired.
Lombard Iron Works
ugusta, Georgia.
5 167 3]\ . .
Visitows welcome at our plant.
~ MONEY TC LOAN
« ON FARM AND CITY PROPERTY
... Fivc, Ten, Fifteen or Twenty Years.
Fet. ERNEST P. WEST
314 Southern .\hzt-:l P.uildi'n_;i Phone 228
- MEN!-FREE!
This Magnificent 24-K. GOLD-
Plated Genuine Gillette Razor ¢
- Palmolive Shavs?n‘;&C’::;;z—All for 35¢!
Go to the drug store. Put down 35c for a tube of Palmolive Shaving
Cream. Get this razor free. Strict limit one to a customer—dealers’
et stocks rigidly limited —come early
Gentlemen: '
Here is a gift offer which we believe
has no parallel in merchandising. An
offer made solely to attract men to a
fair trial of Palmolive Shaving Cream.
Qur experience proves that most
men who try Palmolive Shaving
Cream become regular users. Thus
our whole sales problem is to get
every man we can to TRY IT.
To solve that problem, we go to
great lengths. We occasionally make
an offer that no man can afford to
turn,down. This one, you'll agree, is
the greatest we have ever made—
the most remarkable, we are told, in
merchandising history.
"Go today to the drug store. Buy a
tuibe of Palmolive Shaving Cream at
‘fit regular price of 35c. The razor
~described above will be given you
with it FREE with blade—all for 35c¢.
But remember: Dealers’ stocks are
strictly limited. When your store is
out, it can get no more. Thys early.
ageeptance of this offer is necessary.
Lorrects the mistakes of old-time
shaving preparations
Palmolive Shaving Cream is a sci
entific creation. Men by the millions
are flocking to its use.
For Sale at the Following Dealers, Who Are Also Headquarters for Genuine Gillette Blades
CITIZENS PHARMACY
Clayton and Jackson Streets
HAMMETT'S PHARMACY
154 Clayten Street
HARRIS DRUG COMPANY
Samaritan Building
’.f()l‘ the past few years and there
| 18 aways a larg: crowd to witness
' the gala affair.
{ The Auburn students wiil be
. there enmasse, it is reported, and
l'a ~oodly number of Georgia boys
{ will no doubt be there, too. Fans
(from Auburn and Athens will ‘e
ion hand to -’ .increase the at- .
ftem!anc_e and to cheer their teams
“oen to vietory, -
i Scrimmage Tuesday. !
' The Red Devils were slated tc
| tatt’e the varsity reserves in the
| first serimmace of the week this
| afternoon. Coach Mehre will like
| ly let those who saw service in the
2Tuhme game rest until Wednes
| day. The freshmen will probably
| et their turn at the varsity, too,
{in the course of this afternoon’s
| workout. '
The workout for Monday after
noon was short and snapny. A
tew limbering up exercises to
gether w' punting and go
ing down under the punts was
about all on the program.
No injuries ave reported in the
Red and Black camp at present,
with the excention of Ike Boland,’
lwho was hurt in the game with)
| Furman. McCrary was not at’
\ wractice Monday, but he will be !
lalflght for the Saturday affair.
Harvey Hill was nursing a sore
hand from the game Saturday hut
lit did not interfere much with his
work. l
We started by asking 1000 men
what they most desired in a shaving
soap. Then met their exactments one
by one. It is different in formula,
action and effect from any other
shaving preparation known. It cor
rects the 5 mistakes of old-time shav
ing preparations. ‘
1. It multiplies itself in lather 250
times.
2. It softens the beard in one minute.
3. The lather maintains its creamy
fullness forten minutes on the face.
4. The extra strong bubbles support
the hairs for cutting, where weak
bubbles let them fall down.
5. The blend of palm and olive oils
brings fine after-effects.
Accept today
Now to win you over to a trial, we
make an offer which we believe is the
most remarkable any manufacturer
ever made to gain a fair trial for his
product.
In your interest and in ours, please
accept it today. Go now to the drug
store. You'll thank us for the gift to
day—and for many days—for the new
shaving comfort our creamoffers you.
KENNEDY’'S NORMAL
PHARMACY
1320 Prince Avenue
MILLEDGE PARK PHARMACY:
Milledge and Lumpkin Streets
ATHENS HIGH PLAYS
- FIRST LOCAL GAME
AGANST DECATR
. By M. L. 3T. JUHUNS
Decatur High, conquerors of the
strong Fulton High team by the
score of 26 to 13, will meet the un
defeated Athens High school foot
tall even on Sanford field Friday
afternoon in the first game play
od here this sezson by the loeals.
The anmual hattie will get under
way at 8315, «nd an ‘admission
price of 50 cents will be charged.
The Athens-llecatur games arc
always hard fought, and the re
sult is always doubtful. The De
catur bunch had a good team last
vear when they met defeat at the
hand of the state c} amps of Ath
ens, but this year ‘heir team is
very much imoroved and they are
coming to Athens with the“deter
mination of getiting revenge. The
Athens boys have their eyes fixe!
on the state championship goal
and they ave ready to fight to the
finish. .
The Athens lads have a clean
record, not having lost a gamc
this year. The Decatur team re
cently beat Fulton High 26-15
IPulton High always has a splen
d%d team, and in this game it
started for a comebeck in the lat
ter part of the con ¥st. when the
Decaur reserves were put in.
Monday the locals began tuning
up for this important game. They
had a moderate wractice. tovped
off 5y a well-balanced, hard
fought scrimmage.
THROUGH THE
SIFTER
BY
Valco Lyle
Even though the Georgia Bull
dogs will he playing in Columbus
Saturday, Athens football fans
will have a chance to see a good
game on Sanford field Friday af
ternoon. Athens High meets hey
old rivals, or one of her old rivals,
Decatur High.
A'though the local high school
team was hard hit by graduation
this year, Coach Wedford Brown
has moulded a team that has been
making a good showing in the
games so far this season. The Red
and White has won every game
played, and they are now headed
Aaes
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THE BANNER-HERAID, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
kntmht“‘;or#another state cham
pionship. !
Last year with Bill Me%hsl\fiitofi
Leathers, Ed Haniilton,” Chappell
Matthews and Joe Costa in the
lineup, thé Red and White war
riors fought their way through
the stiffest o nosition to win the
state high scnool championship.
The above mentioned boys are
lost” to the local! team this year;
all five of them are included in
Coach - Gene Smith's freshman
squad at the University of Geor
gia.
Several gocd players were
left hewever, atwer graduation
had taken its toll. Coach
Erown has two good ends in
Barreit and i.amelion, a wor
thv suhstitute in Crawford.
Sometimes one of the first
two msint oned is shifted so
the backticld, and Crawford
tnkes his niace. Barrett and
“l-milten have the Kknack of
plzy ng anywhere they are
pleced and they play - hard.
Roth are veterans and . rank
with the best in the state in
their ~csitions. Both of the
regular teckles of last season
are lost this yéar, but in
Morrehead and Dudley, both
shifted from the backfield,
Athens high can boast of two
good tackles.
Tne guard preposition is
filled with reserve material
cf last year. Bisiop and Car
neilison play at these posi
tions. 'and both come up to the
sverage. With Costa at cen
ter, Coach Brown has nething
te worrv about there. Costa
played there regularly last
vear and played well. He is
doing better this year than
last, it is reportad. :
Although hurt by the loss of
Me'l and Costa, the Red and White
backfield has some mighty goor
ball carriers. There is Maxwell,
Jones and Praither, veterans o:
two to three years, to carry on the
work. In addition to these, Coack
Brown has a new find in John
Brown who is playing at . full
Brown has never played any foot
“ull to amount to anything be
fore, but he came out for the team
this year and made —ood. He is ¢
hard working plaver and deserves
much eredit for the showing he
has made. 1 :
Maxwel! s one of the best brok
en field runners in high schoo
football. Once he gets started he
hard to ston. Local fans can res
assured that if he is right for the
game Friday he will give Deca
tur some trouble.
Jones is also another. runner
of great ability. Although light
he gets around with the 'best of
them. "ok ey
Praither has been out n&arly al’
season with an injured side. ~His
presence at half sgould strength
en the Red and White cause.
MOON-WINN DRUG CO.
197 Clayton Street
PATRICK’'S PHARMACY
175 Clayton Street
PRINCE AVE. PHARMACY
Prince Ave, and Hill St.' ¢
DEVIL'S ISLAND
i £ . . 1
~ WILL BE MADE
LESS HORRIBLE
¢ G
BY,RALPH HEINZEN
United Press Staff Correspondcnt
PARIS.— (UP) -—The Salva
tion Army is going to tidy up
Devil’s Island.” No spot on the
whole American continent knows
as much mise*y; as the peniten
tiary ecolony in QGuiana, with its
fever stricken swamps. No islans{j
anywhere in the world is blacken-,
ed with as much chamc as Devil’:
island. No men were ever more
unhapphy than ~th? “ha!-:nards"l
who are sent to the, ¢olonial pen- |
itentiary to live the rest of their
lives in bondage. ]
Phe recent escape from the
island of Doctor Bougrat, Mar
seilles physician, who was tak ‘a
here lgss than a year ago after
his conviction for the murder of
1 bank ecashier who visit'd him
in his office, again drew the at-!
tenton of the world to Guiana. i
The Salvation Army of France
has sent one of its young \'olun~)
seers, Ensign Pean, to the colony~
to study the field and to deter
mine just what the Army could,
lo to try to redeem for human
ity and eivilization the mora!l
wrecks cast there.
Pean found 3,000 former con-’
riets living in Guiana because
they were ashamed to come:
home. Marked with the stigma of|
Devil’s Island, they Lknew that
they ‘could never re-establish!
themselves in the life they knew
hefore their sentence to peniten
tiary. :
Sentences Dgubled
There are thousands of “doub
laras,” too, who check off one day|
on the calendar every time th 2
sun sets, dreaming of the distant;
lay when they will have doubled |
vhe length ‘of their sentence. It!
s French - law that prisoners
sentenced to the island peniten-i
iiary must serve double the
.ength of the sentence, first as ai
prison<r and then as a free man|
12ld in observation. A 20-year,
sentence is really 40 years in!
x:je and 40 years on Devil's Is
and generally means life.
Pean lived among the ‘bag
aards” and the “doublards,”
v:-rking ' with them on the long
road being built out from Cay
‘nne across the swamps of Guia
na. This road has been building
or 40 ycars and is not yet halt
‘inished. It would be hard to
sstimate the lives that have gone
nto every kilometre of roadway
suilt,
Under the p:nitentiary admin
stration, the prisoners are kept
msy to help them break the
menotony of confinement. They
are not locked up in cells except
at night, and during the days are
put tc road building, cane cut
ting, or hacking down the virgi
mal growths in the swamps.
It is the mlan of the Salvation
Avmy to rehabilitate” the prison
rs by educating them, by teach
ing them trades and preparing.
-hem tor their return to France
hy inculeating a respect for civ
ilization and its rules. . |
Many of the ‘“doublards” ar:
given added punishment by being
forbidden access to Cayenne and
the other communities. These
m:n are not allowed to pass a
deadline at the seven Kkilometre
post outside the town. Beyond
that line they are free, but they
are not tempted to work, for the
their labor. Without money, the
law forbids them -to be paid for
lawmakers b:lieved, these prison
ers could not escape.
Have Lost All Hope :
It is possible to do something
for these unfortunates without
taking anything from the sever
ity of their punishment,” Ensign
“enn declared in his report.
“They have lost all hope, they
have no incentive to be good or
to better 12:& position. Their
ptmishment really begins the day
of their liberation, for they have
learned nothing but hatred dut
ing their captivity and they be
come a menaeé tn o eivilization
when the--are utrned out by the
penitentiary. :
“Their caly dream is to escap:
One dav or another, they all try
it. They need only to swim the
Maroni, a wide river, to get into
Dutch Guina. If thev know a job,
have 1.200 {rancs in their pock
ets and behave decently, they
are-allowed to live in neace, but
otherwise they ar: turned over to
the penitentiary officials again
for punishment. That generally
conssits of solitary confinement
on Salvation Island, even worse
than Devil’s Island, in spite of
its name. °
“There are terrible currents
and only a few who try ever get
across in safety, While I was
there 22 men seeking to escape
in a small boat were all drown
ed in the swift current when the
bark overturned. Those who get
to Brazil or to Venezucla are
almost certain to avoid capture.
The government has authorized
the Army to erry on its plan.,”
SCHOLARS SEEK
TO PHOTOGRAPH
100,000 VASES
NEW YORK. —(UP)— Scholars
in a quest for a knowledge of the
past have wundertaken to photo
graph 100,000 antique vases scat
tered in museums and private col
lections throughout the world.
So extensive is the task that
none but the youngest of the col
laborators can hope to witness its
completion, according to a report
to the ‘American Council of Learn-
| ed Societies by Mortimer Graves,
~assistant secretary of the Counc'l.
. In_a work called “The Corpus
' Vasorum Antiquorum,” all existing
ancient : pottery vases, decorated
Lor pl_ai%,’; the product of Europe,
the Mediterranean region, or the
Near East, will be reproduced.
Since it ‘s ‘mpossible to bring
the vases together in a single mu.
seum, scliolarship seeks to provide
accurate photographic reproduc
ti'ns which may be placed side
by side for c¢omparison, Graves
savs. z
‘“‘Angient history is no longer
compiled from the writings of con
~temporary confessed historians,”
he points out. “For the historians
of an eari‘er day misapprehended
or ignored those phases of human
- activity that to us seem signifi
ccant, © Especially is this true in
~all that pertains to the history of
culture.
- “The antique wvase, though we
look for it in vain in the pages of
the classical authors, becomes, to
the modern stud2nt, a most impor
ten:, Listorical document With
out it -the history of _classical
painting is almest a closed book.
“Invaluable as such a record is
~for the history of decoration, It is
no less so for the broader fiela of
the history of general culture. For
no subject was too sublime, and
none too mean,¢ for the classical
artist’s brush. “
“The home, the market-place,
the temple, the hunt, the voyage,
the battle, come before us in the
black or red figures of an Attic
~vase with a vividness that the
words of the most consummate
‘ historian can only suggest.
“The famous Francois vase in
Florence, for instance, has been
called an illustrated Greek Bible.
Others more nearly approach the
intellectyal ideals of the modern
comic strip.”
The project is under the aus
pices of the International Un‘on
of Academies, and the director
general is M. Edmond Pottier, cur
ator of vases in the Museum of
the Louvre, Paris.
The territory under survey is
divided into eight areas: The
Near East; The Island of the
Eastern Mediterranean; Greece,
Italy, and Sicily, Spaii and North
Africa, Gaul, Germany and the
Danube Valley, Britain and Scand
inavia; Poland, Russia and their
neighbors,
m————-—-——————C——w—“fl’E
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WAR HERO AT
' LAST IN JAIL
" AND CONTENT
SHANGHAI —(UP)— George
H. Brewster. British subject, Great
War hero and Shanghai beachcom-
Ser, is a man who likes his com
fortasle cell in the Shanghai jail
George says so himself. He’s in
jai' today and will be there for
some time to come, all of which
makes him quife contented.
Five times did George essay tc
hreak into the local jail and five
times did a British judge refuse
to send him there, because of the
man’s remarkable war record.
On the oceasion of his fourth
appecrance befgre the British
court George pleaded to be sent
to jail. He argued that he was
unemiplcyed and hungry; that in
For = ;5;_,.j,:.,;g“
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Hallowe’en--- | § |
5 ‘ 7
T here’s B |
g B o 1
Nothing 3 !'
Finer o A
e ICH. creamy, not-too
\"\ sweet chocolates . . .
fi-—'—‘_—_'—'_“ golden brown nuts,
e chocolate covered . . . sweet,
sugary, dainty bon-bons . .
s what COULD be finer for
ONE DOLLAR Hallowe’en? Every Alex-
THE POUND ander Candy is irresistible!
ALEXANDERY
€AND 1 E S
On Sale at Kennedy’s Normal School Pharmacy
B. C. Rinney at Teachers’ College
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1928,
pricon. he had no work to do and
got three good :meals per day and
a place to sleep.. Riaek
The judge shook his head and
told George to go qtg sin no more,
The néxt day Geore armed him
self with a number g;f rocks. On
busy Nanking Road he amused
himse f by hurling vogks through
display windows. SR
“*eorge was arrested,’
He pleaded guilty in ‘court and
asked for a jai! term.’ The judge
was ooliging, Threg monts for
George. 7
“Thank you, sir,” was Geore’s
comment. 1124 y
BIG HALLOWE’EN NIGHT
4 " DINNER" '
No such thing as “Choice Of”
en any of cur Bills. "Order what
ypu want as often ‘as ‘you like
and all it takes is the same old
SI.OO. .
HOLMAN HOTEL
COFFEE SHOPPE