Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1928,
| FUNERAL NOTICE |
PATTON.—Died at her home in
Oglethorpe county., Monday,
October 25th, at’ 1:00 p. m.,
Miss Saphionia Paiton. Miss
Patton was 89 years of age
‘and had been dll for several
weeks. She is survived by one
sister, Mrs. . 1.. "H. Hill® six
nephews, Sam, Milner, R. D.
and W. T. Patton -of :Ogle
. thorpe county; Jake and John
Patton of Campbell county; one
niece, Mrs. W. L. Munday of
Athens. Funeral services were
held today from her home in
Oglethorpe county at 11 a. m.
Rev. Marshall Nelms officiat
ing. Interment was in Patton
w:metery. Bernstein Brothers
- Tuneral Home in charge.
]
A TAUNT COSTS LIFE
. ORANGE, N. J.—Stanley Cysick,
12, taunted another boy—smaller |
than himself. He told him he was
lafraid to fight “fair fists.” But‘
the l'itle fellow got tired of being |
the goat and ene day he punche®
Stanley beh‘nqvthe ear, causing a
'cerebral hemorrhage and death.
'.,%g81G HALLOWE’EN NIGHT
it DINNER
* No such thing as “Choice Of”
on any of our Bills. Order what
¥ou want as often as you like
and all it taKes is the same old
: S
§I.OO. :
8 HOLMAN HOTEI,
@4 COFFEE SHOPPE
R 1::
© BANISH
O SS |
‘-NERV USNESS |
R St |
é%ndcll's Pills, Ambition Brand .
* For Run-Down Tired |
;g Out People. |
- |
r% you feel tited out. out of sorts |
Téspondent, mentally or physically de- |
.fif‘"d get a 60-cent hox of \Vcndell'a,
“ils, Ambition, Brand, at anv drug.
igt's today and take the first big ,klvp‘
oward feehng betier right away, |
I you work too hard. smoke too |
uch, or are nervous, Wendell's Pills,l
mbition Brand, will make. you feel
wiiter in three days or money back |
rom any. druggist on the first hox!
purchased, {
A« a 4 treatment for affections ¢f the
ervous system, constipation loss of |
phetite, sleeplessness, ox Nervous !n-‘
ligestion, get a‘box of Wendell’'s Pills |
mbition Brand, today on the money |
ack plan Adv, |
NOTICE
1928
STATE and COUNTY
TAXES
NOW DUE
A. M. BUREH, T. C.
FINAL SHOWING PALACE TONIGHT
SELDOM DO WE PRESENT A ROMANCE AS FINE AS THIS ONE
Roam the ‘Road of Romance
“STREET
ANGEL”
Biltmore Hotel Orchestra
TOTAL ECLIPSE OF MOON TO BE
VISIBLE OVER U. S. ON NOVEMBER 27
BY ROBERT H. BAKER '
(Professor of Astronomy,
University of Illinois.)
URBANA; IIL—(AP)—A tc
tal eclipse of the moon will oc
cur November 27 early in the
morning. It will be visible from
beginning to end everywhere in
the United States.
The moon will enter the earth s
shadow at 2:24 a. m. eastern
standard time. Total eclipse be
gins .at 3:33 and lasts until 14129
o'clock, when the moon begins to
emergs. - JAt 5:30 a: w. the
eclipse wlil be over. Central
times ar: one hour earlier, moun
tain times two hours, and Pacific
times three hours, .
Although the moon will be en
tirely within the 'shadow for
nearly an hour, it probably will
not disappear from view. The
reason is that considerable sun
light is not refracted into the
shadow through the ring of the
carth’s atmosphere around the
base of the shadow. |
The moon at that time will be
dim and noticeably red like the
setting sun. Usually dark
celipses accompany stormy condi
tions all around the shadow base.
The brightest ones occur whon
no clouds are there to stop the
light. Mixed conditions give a
spotted appearance to the eclips
d moon, S
While a lunar eclipse does not
much effect us on the earth, it
would be a serious matter if we
lived on the moon. Recent obser
vations of eclipses have showi
that the temperature of the
moon’s surface drops from 170
degrees Fahrenheit immediately
before the eclipse to 190 degrees
below zero during the totai
vhase.
A drop of 360 degrees in an
hour or two is a cold wave no cne
would care to observe at close
quarters. Of course, no one lives
on the moon, for it is airless and
entirely barren. ]
It is the basence of atmos
pheric protection that permits the
sudden change ,of temperature.
During the long lunar night the
cold is even more intense; a ther
mom-ter at the surface would
register not higher than 250 de
arees below zero.
The earth’s conical shadow
stretch:s nearly a million miles
into space. On a sereen placed
at the moon’s distance from us
the shadow would appear as a
dark circle 5,700 miles in diame
ter, whose diamcter is only 2,160
miles, S f
At intervals of 29% days the
meon, then at the full phase,
cvertakes the shadow; but it
nasses usually above or below and
no 4clipse results. Conditions
are_mow most favorable for
VITAPHONE VAUDEVILLE
eclipses at the times of full moon
near the middle and end of the
year.
The number of lunar eclipses
in a year varies from three to
none at all. Some of them are
only partial eclipses and not all
are visible from any point on
the earth. Astronomers are able
to predict the times and ecircum
stances of eclipses far in ad
vance.
FRENCH WIVES
ACQUIRE WORK
TO AID INCOME
PARIS.— (UP) —About forty
percent of French married women
go out to work for their living.
which explains why “detained at
the office” is no longer a purely
male privliege here.
With the depreciated franc, the
fact of the wife going to a job
each day has become more and
more acccpted, so that most girls
who marry in France do so with
the expectation that after the
honeymoon they will go back to
the office, workshop or factory.
That is necessary because the av
erage weekly salary of the young
Frenchman is about sixteen dol
lars and insufficient to keep two.
Therefore, the young wife who
wants to keep herself smartly
dressed must earn her “pin
meney.”
That is all very well as far as
it goes, but it is widely believed
that the domestic menage suffersi
from the new regime. It is said)
that, as the wife finds many in
tirests and companions apart'
from her husband who, in turn,
has not the responsibility of hur
rying home in case the little wo
man is lonely, so do young cou
ples drift apart. |
“The majority of young gir}sl
and boys married in Pairs don’tl
know what family life really is,”|
declare critics, “and there iz 20
doubt that many of these young
wives make the convenient ex
cuse of office work when they
want to spend an evening out in,
company other than their hus
band’s.”
It is certainly a fact that, be-)
cause of their separate ties and|
interests, many young husbands |
and wives see little of each othcr!
—perhaps less than before ma - |
riage. “Bachelor wives”. and|
“\:'fek‘-end spouses” . arve the de-;
scriptions which the humoronus!
reviews are applying to this new;
tyne of young woman. |
ODvBT T e Bt (B il g d Ii Ay
with
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTIONS
SNAPPY MUSICAL NOVELTY
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
DEPUTY REVENUE:
COLLECTOR HERE i
ON VIARCH 9. 10. 11
Sixteen Deputy Collectors will
continue their canvass of the state
until March. 15, for the purpose
of assisting Federal Income Tax
payers in preparing their returns
for the calendar year 1926, accord
ing to an announcement issued
Monday by J. T. Rose, Co'lector
of Internal Revenue for the Dis
trict of Georgia. :
“The duty of these deputies,”
said Collector Rose, “is not only
to see that taxpayers include in
their returns all taxable income
but to likewise safeguard the tax
payers’ interest by making sure
that they are given the benefit of
every exemption, credit and dedue
tion that the law allows. The fol
lowing points wi!l be visited on
dates indicated: :
Adel, Narch 7; Albany, March
5-15, incl.; Alma, March 7, A. M.;
(\thens, March 9, 10, 11; Bristol,
March 8, A. M.; Brunswick, Febru
ary 28, and March ! and 2; Ca
milla, March 2; Cedartown, March
2; Dallas, March 1, P. M.; Dalton,
February 28, and March 1; El~er
ton, March 8; Fairmount., March
2, A. M.: Fayetteville, February
28, A. M.; Fitzgerald, March 8 to
11, incl.; 'Folkston, March 5;
Gainesville, March 12, 14, 15; Gox
don. March 1.
Momarville, March 3,4; Jef
fersonville, February 28; La-
Grange, March 7,8: Lakeland,
February 28; Leesburg, March 3;
Manchester, March 10; Nahunta,
March 9; Nashville, March 5;
Pearson, March 2: Rome, Morch
3,4, 5+ Thomasville, February 28
and March 1;. Tifton, March 12, 14
and 15; Valdosta, March 1. 2, 3. 4;
Waycross, March 10 to 15, inel;
Waynesboro, March 1; West Point,
March 9; Willaccochee, Mar-h 1
Deputies will also be stationec
at the Internal Revenue offices a
Atlanta, Augusta, Macon and Sa
vannah from March 1 to 15, in
clusive.
NOW GET POP CORN -
GUARANTEED TO POP
Here at last is pop COM e
EE e s [
aod criep thet youll vote |HINILIg
ggmdr;é??o:ure to ask t = L\\},%Z?i\ ]
JoLry TiME |5
POPCORN (S
Guaranteed to Pop
" Because Hermetically Seoled inTin
r e SR -~
WA RN
i 128 e o
s 1 P,
L AR rG N g b
o e e
R o S
PR R R 3 g RRy
P e s
paEr e Y R
BRI e eke IR e FH
{r:; A PRt e o% % *
f\ o e &L*‘,’E:- iy A
oSy 5 3 .
{}R‘ SUERCHR, g e S N
SRS ; <
e L 9
o R s
R R . @ -
ssD LR e &n
CoanReIENEE T 4&:3'
R R £ sl f N g R
R e Q "oty g
o R Bad U
R g $ T ;§ Bl B
S UE e T
R < W B T Bin -SBB S 8
BRAEE . 0 A eY R
PRe A ¥
Geo e A
B OoAT S e o SRR
B sl e
Ml e¥ R
BRI O S o 3 Sy s
AR e S S :
RgNR R i L
p seS ET A e
PO TG S
gé‘«- B N -‘“‘.‘?Q"'.' A
S Gt R Sy ~:3
e eT RE e o
' '::tsi-?f" B ' pased ¥
\‘,n‘: » e, ‘ o‘ A &
WL e #
Mot o B a 0
e AR SO %
SRS oSt Bl
w SRR e o
- S M e iy S
b RIS
: P S LAy
bA AR IO R ANOISO B
: = ey
anet Gaynot i»' Strect Angel,
1 e [2; ~ 4 T
IOX ricture ?
L s “—-v-w-.-..‘:«\;\m /:.,2" /:'
SR R Ko e :
oT“' 4 H/,"'/v//,///_ oee, % \\~.\~ '{_L,_r,.? "".-—,i
--" 4 I A o LB AR oE TS RN \—-—i):f.yzfi.'-f—*"—’ b o
L ;’*h‘\‘{“’ SLNRS = Ty e
S R R . (NS A besy .~
Fohln e "%Efi{:a»‘:’iflfimfi:’-fi AT SB = -
R’S ey EOT ggfig‘\{;\gfi;fiififn? AT AT NN
oTLARY ——':~':‘= 1 I'-(& e AN sslmg
TN lAR N e rx'.’)v "* }l’e SR LLW
YRR | A T B Ig‘u\ /] AL X 3 R ARSI AL DL e
R i\\,\_\,&,‘ Ve R o %fl. “y‘:":“’"”""‘_"' = ,'EEE . __;«,,_,
2SNTR Ne QW 4”’? T ‘s’3{ ol et bl
eR N NP ERE IR ) e eN, i\l “H -YR LA “" e N
TSI TVe BLLR T e, ' P
; A "1_ !'ll,‘kfi,\ BN S ° 2 .’"& s SR -\ - 510 ;;(-’ = Lab AR, W
BRI L A e N A
Lo NS e GRS NSRRI () By
: U R s ARG i/e Vi
“‘firfl?:‘ «\‘\ N I, '\-“-T £RN
R E N 35N g T :
CrE e K b
Athens And Power—
Industrial And Financial
Three plants of the Georgia Power Company, located in and near Athens,
assure Athens industries of adequate, dependable electric power. ‘
High tension lines from North Georgia power developments furnish another
reliable source ‘of supply.
Convenient access to the Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky and Virginia coal
fields assures Athens of an unlimited supply of fuel. = .
And as to financial power, Athens is the home of the North Georgia branch
of the Citizens and Southern National—the largest National Bank in the
South and one vitally interested in Athens’ financial welfare.
ATHENS ATLANTA AUGUSTA
MACON SAVANNAH VALDOSTA
No Account too Large, None too Small
Charles Farrell
A Thing of Beauty Is a Joy Forever—“STßEET ANGEL” is a
picture of such exquisite beauty as only rarely emerges from
Hollywood. .
MOVIETONE NEWS
See AL SMITH
and
Janet Gaynor
ON HIS TRIP. WEST
PAGE FIVE