Newspaper Page Text
FR”\, AY. MAY 30. 1930. o
N i eßg (o o 1
Negro Trades ; { §{{
~ Exhibit Here! L
" Pleases Crowd
gßy M. L. ST. JOHN
| mpe general exhbiit of the Ath
aß Negro schools—which symbol
jyos the years work of, the Negro
pachers with -~ the loeal Negro
children _closed-at the ! Knox In
gimte building Thursday after
goon at & o’clock, after enjoying a
Jarge crowd of speetators.
Q}gpm_vs were given by.the Ath.
s High ~and Industrial, . New.
pwn, East Athens, West Athens,
ad Negro Night Schools;. Speci
pens of the children’s work in
duded drawing, peninanship,
pealth, dress-making, cooking,
nursp.il'hilling- carpentry, brick
aying, and literary subjects. :
Going through the display left
o right, one enters the first room
o find the walls covered with
pretty dresses. Exclamations of
wyren’t they preety, it looks like
Hplay of a downtown store,”
flrl I»HI next finds himself in
, oom which illustrates the his-
EXCURSION TO
HAVANA, CUBA
(atain Florida Points
aid to Brunswick, Cor
jde Tifton and Valdosta,
e 7th. Call on Sea
pard Ticket Agent.
] I\Vhll-‘flapptedmthequict,con—‘
WOLCOTT i emospicr of theHorel Wolcoe.
% comfortable rooms and an excel
§ e S
+ WEST 31st STREET . ot T -
W“‘IM? blocks warzy, and a few minutes fi::
oo YoRK CITYj g lobiter By
s==______—__===_-=="§ludhl two blocks. Rfilm
y buses pass the door
DAILY RATES—-NONE HIGHER
foeom® »s o & $2.00-2.50 for one s " Wz
foe two .o o 30035 fifimm,w... m‘
mm&dhfll » s o+ s S6OO-7.00 7
Reduction of One Day-on Weekly Rates
L thehducdpdveboakletandexpoleM\’
SRR, et e
o AL EeN
€ AT Jf‘f@'. Y e
' Be 1 e R "4‘l‘,4\ iy &Y
. : T e A T ]NS ey
; o A iAN O A g {.,f‘wx,.,\%: AEE ]
Ty (s ey iSR s s e
‘. " P &Wfi?fi; .
eae oS Ay igeds ,"’ A S A,y’:; ‘ Mi“".-.
MANY VACATIONS
~'ROLLED m'ro{ou:, ETA T =
AT GROVE PARK INN A ‘ ‘/ )
2T A BLD |
Here your Summertime VK ARWTIM W Y T
fancies may run the whole f‘ ‘ Pl 71| e
ws Scale of tfik‘bm Every .\Il?" --;;::,:;-'555. e
#% minute of the bracing, zest- WNEEESSEES { ( lauae
do, places to go. Cool nights
are bright with life . . . or still with a peace that soothes the
soul . « « just as you please. Breezes laden with the fragrance
of mountain blossoms waft away care as you golf on the
famous Asheville Country Club course, emerald front lawn
of Grove Park Inmn. At your bidding are tennis, riding,
swimming, canoeing, archery, motor rides over broad con
crete highways that wind through scenes of incomparable
grandeur in these mile-high, bloom-laden mountains. Bilt
more House, storied chatean of the Vanderbilts, now lays its
opulent treasures of art open to your gaze. Smart cosmopoli
tan company heightens the joy of brilliant social life. Genial,
festive hours in the Big Room will be cherished in your
memory, To this endless array of pleasure, add the luxuri
ous comfort of the Inn , . . so thoroughly in harmony with
its setting that it seems to grow from the living rock of
verdant Sunset Mountain. Flawless service by a world-famed
staff crowns its restful beauty. Southern cooks and French
chefs have joined a delightful conspiracy to make the
. cuisine unsurpassed. Open-handed hospitality reigns, but
never intrudes. Nights are cool; blankets are welcome over
your gheets of Oxford twill. The Inn is open throughout the
vear, American Plan. Reservations desired in advance,
5 T. B. HORNER, Resident Manager
-~ o & >
Gzt Sedvit Hotel in the Horld
'SUNSET MOUNTAIN ® ASHEVILLE, N. €.
A fistful of laughs! An eyeful of romance! An earful of lilting
love lyries! All merrily mixed together.
tory of the United States, and the
crops which are raised in this
country and South America. A cot
ton bloom, pasted on a map, near
where Athens is located, a picture
of a chicken near Atlanta, etc.,
picture the enterprises of Georgia
A map of South America is cover.
ed in the same manner, with
splashes of bright yellow paper
represeting good, and pictures of
the heads of monkeys, etc,, pasted
on it,
Raised maps of the TUnited
States and of Georgia, done in
paper pulp, were on digplay. Some
©of the smaller children made
health illustrations. In their sand
boxes was a graveyard with tomb
stones with the words, “typhoid
fever, tuberculosis, diphtheria and
‘bad - teeth,” written on them,
Above the play cemetery were the
words, “Here lie the bodies of bhoys
and girls who would not obey
health rules.” !
Tables, stools, bookcases, and
other carpentry work were exhih
ited by the larger boys. Bricklay
ing, by the boys, and a 4 NUrSe
training exhibit by the girls, were
among the features of the dis
plays. .
ISLAND SWIM MEET
HONOLULU.—The Hawaiian Is
lands will play host to two of the
United States’ crack swimming
teams when an inter-collegiate
swimming meet takes place here
July 17, 18 and 19. Teams from
Yale and the University of Sou
thern California will' compete
against Meiji Universit yof Japan,
and the University of Hawalii.
“HONEY”’
SONG - ROMANCE REVEL
Nancy Carroll
Starring
Miss Marsh Again
Dance Instructor
At Summer School
Miss Lucille Marsh will again
conduct classes in dancing during
summer school. Miss Marsh re
turns to Athens for the fourth
summer and every one acquainted
with her or her pageants will be
happy to again welcome her to
Athers.
Shkre will have the usual classes
in natural and folk dancing, both
for beginners and advanced stu
dents. She will also conduet a
children's class. This is an unus
ual opportunity for the girls and
boys of Athens. X
Miss Marsh will have social
dancing classes in the evening,
These classes will be held in the
Physical Education building on the
campuas of the Georgia State Col
lege of Agriculture. Those wish
ing further information will please
call 1431.
Club Gives An
Exhibition Of
: Fine Swimming
{ Tuesday evening, the Dolphin
[’club, at the Georgia State College
‘ot Agriculture, gave an informal
demonstration ‘in the swimming
I pool. v
The program included form
swimming, divingz, races and re
lays. Only those who have passed
the Senior Red Cross Life-Saving
test are eligible for membership
| in this swimming club,
The following students were in.
itiated Tuesday mnight: Mary Win
ston, Athens; Betty Bradberry,
Athens; Laura Bradberry, Athens;
Mary Delia- Upchurch, Athens;
Mary Hale, Atlanta; Gussie Cohen,
Albany; Mary Lou Lunsford, Al
bany; Margaret Saunders, Atlan
ta; Virginia Wilson, Duluth.
Miss Vera Hixson, Augusta, is
president-elect, and Miss Ruth
Norris, Atlanta, is secretary-treas
urer of the Dolphin Club for 1930-
1931.
Nancy Carroll “Sweeter
Than Sweet” in “Honey”
At the Palace Tonight
Remember it—the romantic mu
sical smash in which Naney Car
roll captured the hearts of count
iass legions of theatre-goers?
“Sweetie,” with its great song,
“Sweeter Than Sweet,” “He’s So
Unusual,” “Alma Mammy” and the
others. i #
Remember how ‘“Sweetie” made
you want to jump up and dance
Observers Abroad See Improvement
In American Films: Pictures Under
New Code On Screen By End of Year
Reports from the child welfare com
mittee of the League of Nations indi
cate that American motion pictures are
| finding increasing favor with social
| workers abroad because of their care
in treatment of sex themes and their
insistence that crime in screen plots be
followed by retribution.
| Dame ¥{achel4 Eleanore Crowdy,
chief of the sociological section of the
l League, has circulated amg%its mem
| bers the production code of the Ameri
| an motion picture industry, recently
{ announced by Will H. Hayl,Xroduc&’r
| nead, and dispatches to merican
| aewspapers state that it is being re
| ceived with favor.
| Meanwhile, reports of the Australian
{ censor boards state that less cutting
| is being done on American pictures than
| on those of any other nation.
| Dame Crowdy became associated
| with the League of Nations nine years
ago as an expert on social hygiene.
During the war she was principal com
| mandant of the British 60!untary Aid
i Department in France.
! '{"his vear's discussion at the child
| \welfare sessionsof the Leagueof Nations
| has been marked by a general admission
| of steady improvement in the moral
| and community value of American
| motion pictures. :
| ' Domestic praise for the Hays code
| thas also been general, and a survey
| 'made in New York revealed that nearly
| minety per cent of the editorial com
{ ‘ment throughout the country was
| Yavopeble, A o i
e
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
MANY FINE WAYS
; |
T 0 EAT ALL-BRAN
i
All Relieve Constipation and.
Add Food Iron |
There are literally scores of ways I
that Kellogg's ALL-BRAN can' be |
eaten and enjoyed. Whatever way |
you eat it, ALL-BRAN ig g»]ositively!
guaranteed to relieve both tempo
rary and recurring constipation or
your money will be refunded!
Many eat Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN
ag a cereal, It is delicious with milk
or cream. Another way is to use it
in soug(s and salads. The grnct;ce
of soaking it in fruit juice has
grown ver¥ p?ipular. Its'addition to
all cooked Tood is an appetizing and
healthful one.
When you eat Keiloog's ALL
BRAN regularly, you have the satis
faction of knowing that you are en
iloying one of the most healthful
abits on earth. It not only relieves
constip?tion, but adds iron to the
blood. In combination with milk or
fruit juices, it brings important
vitamins to the diet.
Every one should eat it to supply
the bulk needed to balance-the soft
foods eaten today. Include ALL
BRAN in all vreducing diets. anh"
['revent constipation and anemia.
Order a package of Kellogg's
ALL-BRAN. Your grocer has it.
Made by Kellogs in Battle Creek,
: Q‘
4( ALL-BRAN
Improved in Texture and Taste
with the jubilation and mirthful
ness of it all! “What a picture”
—eh? ! 1
Well, here comes the cuddle
some Miss Carroll, sweeter than
sweetheart, again makes success
a- honey! Stanley Smith, her
swaetheart, again makes success
ful love to her in this new and
tuneful musical romance. Then
there is the riotuos comedy fur
nished by Sk#ets Gallagher, Lil
lian Roth, Harry Green, ZaSu
Pitts, Mitzi Green, Jobyna How
land and Charles Sellon. : ‘
““Honey” is just about the sweet
est talking screen treat that the
Palace has ever dished up for a
pleasude-hungry public. You’ll
eat it up, I know. ¢ :
“Honey” is at the Palace tonight
showing for the last time, so don’t
miss the treat of treats!
NEW HATLINES
Off-the-air hats are very new.
They have shallow crowns and
are to be worn poised carefully
atop one’'s shining locks. g
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3 MR ?‘&“’W&" 3 e |
DAME CROWDY
Carl E. Milliken, secretary of the
producer organization, told the League
of American Penwomen in Washington
that support on the Coast,among studio
executives, writers, directors ans actors
has been unanimous and that many
studio meetings have been held for the
p&:rpose of putting its provisions into
effect.
~ The pictures of the winter of 1930
will virtually all have been viewed and
ews Picked [Jp
.--.'.\f'ii | Iv!.‘ (] ;
‘y /A\‘ [}
. The radio program of the Geor
gia State College "of Agriculture
for Saturday aftermoon at 1:30
o’clock is as follows: “Sumimary
Report of the Fourth Georgia Na
tional KEgg Laying Contest," by
Frank E. Mitchell, supervisor;
‘Mass Tennis Instruction,” by
Olga Richardson, adjunct profes
sor of physical education; “County
Agent Ccoperative Marketing Cot
ton,” by E. C. Mann, county
agent, Ashburn, Georgia; vocal
music by Hoyt Llewallyn; Ques
tions and ~ Answers; and Daily
Crop and Market Information.
Nancy Carroll, in “Honey,” is
showing at the Palace theatre to
day at 5:00, 6:30, 8:00 and 9:30
o'clock.
A new sign has been painted on
'the side of Benson’s Bakery.
The Athens Business Girls’ Club
is sponsoring a dance recital at
the Colonial theatre Saturday at
8:30 p. m.
The annual horse show at the
University -of Georgia will be
given on Herty Field Monday
afternoon. The public is invited. '
Hammond Johnson, lieutenant
governor of this division of the
Kiwanis clubs, with four Gaines
ville Kiwanians, made an official
visit to the local eclub Thursday
afternoon. Mr. Johnson addressed
the club,
A gray and blue tweed suit for
spectator sports has a tightly fit
ted jacket that flares into a pe
plum beow the waist. The skivt is
gored.
Brass buttons fasten the white
flannel skirt, the white cotton polo
ghirt and the blue flannel double
breasted coat of the latest yacht.
ing suit.
1t is smart to be rural this sum
‘mer;” The very latest garden suit
‘and beach togs are blue overalls,
worn with smart little organdie
or batiste short sleeved tuck-in
shirts.
produced In the light of the code. .
“The ridiculous cry of a few pro
fessional liberals that the code will
inhibit art,”” Mr. Milliken said, ‘“‘could
only have come from men who talk
about art instead of creating it.
Consclous care and self-discipline on
the ?‘-rt of the artist has never done
anything to art but increase its virility.
Death to art comes through the
hatchet, the scissors or the blue pencil,
Ipplied from outside.
~ "“John Milton, the historic Anglo-
Saxon apostle of freedom of expression,
‘won the right for himself and all who
followed him to write what the mind
’of the artist willed. Then his own
standards of the high purpose of art
’led him to turn out a product as not
‘able for wholesomeness as for beauty.
If that self-discipline killed the art of
1 Milton, a lot of people have been fooled.
The most restricted art form in the
world is the English sonnet. Poetic
‘genius, working within those restric
‘tions, self-applied, has achieved the
finest efforts of the language.
| “There is always a neurotic fringe,
sitting enviously outside the circle
where art is produced, which confuses
art and lack of standards. The Ameri
can people have no patience with such
| tcl:)rlreta and the artist finds them laugh
‘able. .
. “In the words of Glenn Frank,
}president of the University of Wiscon
sin, the screen intends to keep itself
[free from: domination by prof = Hnal
moralists and professional inmo: w.ists.”’
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‘Nancy Carroll, Stanley Smith
in the Paramount Picture
. “wHONEY"
She’s a honey in “Honey”!
Nancy Carroll carrolling
the new song hits.. Hear
her sing “My Little Hope
Chest”!
FITTED JACKET
YACHTING SUIT
BLUE OVERALLS
Business Review
Comments On
General Trend
! “Georgia business during April
| turned slightly upward, but is
&still below the levels of a year
ago”, the Georgia Busiress Re
view’s current issue states. The
Review is published by the School
of Commerce, University of Geor
‘gia, and the Citizens and South
tern Nation#l Bank. 4
The gereral business -eview in
the current issue follows:
General Business
“Georgia business during A-»il
turned slightly upward, but is
still below the levels of a yea
ago. Increases in Georgia dur
ing April over last year were
made by national advertisino
wholesale drug sales, men’s cloth
ing sales, vetail drug sales, and
denartment store sales: whereas
losses wefe shown ia eleztric
power consumption, post office
receipts, life insurance sales
wholesale grocery sales, freight
car loadings, retail hardware
sales, building contracts, cottor
consumption, bank clearings. re
tail furniture sales, and bank
debits. Increases in men’s eloth
ing sales and department store
sales are due to the fact that
Easter came in April this yea
whereas a ~—ear ago it came in
March.
“The Brookmire Economic Ser
vice at the close of April esti
mated that the Georgia money
incom2 during the next six
months would total $201.000,000,
a decline of 11 per,cent from the
same period of a vear earlier. On
the same comparison it is esti
mated that the_national income
will show a loss of 13 per cent.
“Busiress conditions through
out the nation are unsatisfactory
and the ‘prospects are that no
marked upward trend will be in
evidence before fall. Busiress
since November, 1929, so: the
country as a whole has been ap
proximately 6 per cent below nor
mal.
“After the stock market crash
of last fall the price of securities
rose more rapidly than general
business econditions warranted.
The advance of the stock market
was based on hopes for a spring
revival in business which failed to
materialize, and as a result stock
prices suffered a severe setback
during the first part of May. The
first quarter earnings reports
showed that the general business
depression was having a proioun.
ced effect upon profits—industri
al earnings being approximately
20 per cent below and railroad
v FREE!
3 2 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
A COMPLIMENTARY TICKET
S G WITH EACH PAID ADMISSION! '
é
. MITCHELL BRIDGE ROAD AT POSS’ PIG SANDWICH
'OPEN for pleasure and entertainment! You're off to the most
enjoyable game you’ve ever had at this course. It was made
for real fun with never a single detail to annoy you in spending
an hour or two in perfect jolity.
EVERYBODY’S “CRAZY” ABOUT THIS NEW TYPE OF
PLAY AND HERE’S THE COURSE TO VISIT
DAY OR EVENINGS!
SPECIAL TOURNAMENT STARTS MONDAY!
BE SURE TO ENTER THIS ROUND OF
GOLFING FESTIVITIES!
IVe Welcome You
Last and Only
~ Shoning
PALACE
Tonight
earnings 34 ‘per cent below the
first quarter of 1929, Imasmuch
as 'industrial produetion has now
reached its spring peak and will
probably decline until fall, total
earnings for the second and third
quarters dre expecetd to be even
less satisfactory than those so:
the first quarter.”
SHIN-BONE SKATES
LONDON.—Recent excavations
in Scandinavia, Northern Ger
many and the British Isles have
revealed what lis thought to be
the forerunner of the modern
skate, They are crude affairs,
made of the shinbones of animals.
By splitting the bones lengthwise,
a flat surface was*made for the
foot. The round surface was used
as the runner and leather thongs
strapped the skates to the feet.
HATES TO GET UP
“Now, Peter,” said the teacher
to him by way of a test, “what
do we find it easy to get into and
very difficult to get out of ?”
“Bed,” promptly replied Peter.
—lpswich Star, England.
Girlhood
The trying time in a young girl's life
[T A is reached
(8- when Nature
Y & leads her un=
* ertain steps
P L across the line
¥ & O whichdivides
g 1 B |girihood and
womanhood.
P N/ Neglect at
i Dlthis critical
period is largely responsible for much
of the misery of women, Often there
is need of some safe, strengthening
tonic to overcome the languor, nerv
ousness and distress girls commonly ex=
perience at this time. Dr. Pierce’s Fa
vorite Prescription soothes the nerves,
encourages the appetite and helps the
entire womanly organism, It is purely
herbal — contains no harmful ingredie
ent. Druggists. Tablets or liquid.
Send Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., 10¢
if you desire a trial pkg. of tablets,
BUS SERVICE S. A. L. STATION
Effective June Ist we will operate Bus about 40 minu.ck bolore
S. A. L. Trains leave. Leaving Georgian Hotel, out ince to
Teachers College, back via) Cobb, Milledge, Lumpkin *Streets,
Holman and Georgian Hotels, to station, same rouse aftér
trains. Fare 25 gents from any point to or from stafion,
YELLOW CAB COMPANY |
1
. .
PAGE ELEVEN
CRISP LETTUCE -
Lettuce keeps lonZer and stays
crisper if you wash it, roll it in a==
dampened e;oth-and place it in the =
refrigerator in an earthen bowl. &
e et i
STRONGER AFTER
TAKING CARDUI
S Ve
Oklahoma Lady’s Mother Insisted
That She Give the Medicine
A Good Trial. o
Oklahoma City, Okla.—*l hadgfi
been very weak and run-down
when 1 began taking Cardui,” says
Mrs. C, M. Sechrist, 23224 West
Fifteenth Street, North, this city.™
“It was hard for me to get around,
and standing on my feet hurt meyg
“T began taking Cardui, and al-"
most immediately T felt myself im= "
proving. When I had finished my
first bottle, I was ever so muchg
better, T
“My mother had told me about™
Cardui, and insisted that I give it
a fair trial. She had taken Car-—
dui and given it to my'sisters, and
}.\-he was confident it" would help;:cf;j
me. )a
“T was very much stronger aftee
I had taken it for several weeks. F
coutinued taking ("ar(flli for sev{*igf
eral months, as I felt I needed 55}
tonic to build me up. My appe~
‘tite improved and I was less ner
vous. Mv back quit aching, and‘ifi
1 was able to run my house Wl%é
less effort. 1 think Cardui is ‘&
fine medicine.” ! o
Thousands of other jwomen have
told how Cardui helpéd them, ==
fel I I 4
s Used iq:fl"*
® For Over 50 Years. @
A-companion medicing to Cardul—|
lThodford’a Black-Draught: for Con~{
atinatinn ™ Indicestion ' Rilloushnecs |
—(Advertisement,) &