Newspaper Page Text
WEDNEEPAY, JANUARY 13, 1932,
WAR T/ ] s
WANT AD RATES
2 Cents 3 Word
75 WANT AD 75
PHONE
_Mirnaam cuarge of 40 cents.
SI.OO for three insertions. Seveu
iimes for the price ¢f five in
ert’ons. Payable Th advance.
_All discontinuances MUST be
nade in person at The Banner
Herzld office or .by letter,
felephone discontinuances are
ot valid. g
BANNER-HERALD WANT
ADS GET RESULTS
Typewriter Ribbons 75¢
Seccond Sheets, 60c per
loooi
Carbon Paper
trk
Gem Clfigp's‘: Etc.
W. A. PAYNE BOOK
COMPANY
FOB. SALE
"0, SALE — Galvanized V-Crimp
and Corrugated Roofing, Asphalt
Hexagon Shingles and Roll Roof
ing; Doors, Windows, and Win
dow Glass. Field and Garden:
rence; Barbed, Wire and Oak and|
Steel Posts. Christian Hardware
& Grocery, Broad Street. tlc!
‘OR SALE—I93I Ford Roadster,i
used only 38 months; bargain;
terms. Phone 942-W. jlsc
FOX RENT
"OR RENT—Apartment, either 4-
rooms, private Bath and private
entrance, or 2.rooms with con
necting bath, all conveniences,
walls and floors fresh. 677 South
Milledge, Phofig 1785. jl7c
OR RENT -= Nidely furnished
front room. With private bath.
217 Woodlawn 'Avenue, Photie
1182. Qg jise
'OR RENT—Two houses for rent
and one for sale.” Thos. A. Hol
brook, Winteryillegj“Ga. jl3p
e, se e e e
s |
'O RENT—House on Georgia
Depot street. = Phone 1850. .
wWANTED
VANTED—For occupancy January
15, furnished room in private
home. L. R. Rellings, general de
livery, Athens. Ga. jlde
VANTED—To borrow $1,300.00 on
good security. , Address “Loan,”
care Ranner-Herald. jl3p
WANTED — Fifteen or twenty
membership shares, M ut u al
Building & Loan Association.
State lowest bidder. Box 614.
jl3p
Ie S T
FURNITURE REPAIRED
IAVE YOUR FURNITURE RE
PAIRED, Upholstered, Refinish
ed and Chairs Rebottomed. C
J. Jones’ Cabinet Shop, 325 Oak
strect; Phone 449-J. jlde
STRAYED—From m& yard, one
Pointer dog puppy named “Big
Boy.” Mostly® all brown. Call
949-J.
House for Rent
ESTER
> 1
|
Phone 1036 or 437
i A S ey
2 : |
Railroad Schedules !
!
SEABOARD AIR LINE
Arrival and Departure of Trains |
Athens, Ga. ‘
To and From South and West "~
RRIVE— —DEPART
0:03 pm Birmingham 6:20 am
1:30 am Atlanta 4:10 am}
Atlanta ’ ‘
S:O3 pm B-ham-Mem. 2:20 pm
To and Frem North and South |
120 pm Rich,-Norfolk 3:03 pm
New York-Wash. |
10 a.m, Rich.-Norfolk «10:03 p.m.
New York-Wask,
20 am Richmond 1:30 air
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
TRAINS
Depart for Macon
Daily 8:00 a.m. apd 4:10 p.m.
Arrive from Macon
Dally 12:05 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.
GAINESVILLE MIDLAND
SCHEDULES
k Leaves Athens
fO. 2 Daily 7:45 an
0. 12 Daily ex. ‘Stinday 10:45 am
k Arrives Athens
‘O. 11 Daily exjjSunday 10:00 a.m.
= 3 Daily 4:55 p.m
GEORGIA RAILROAD
SCHEDULE
ffective Sundry, August 30, 193
g Arrive
. 51—Arrive 7:30.a.m. daily.
0. 53—Arrive 2:30 pm. ex. Sunda)
‘O. 53—Arrive -1:10 p.m. Sunday,
only,
L Leave
'O. 50—Leave 8:00 a.m. ex. Sunda)
V. 52—Leave 3:00 p.m. ex. Sunday
‘O. 54—Leave 8:30 a.m. Sunday!
! only,
0. 56—Leave 8:30 pm. Sundays
only,
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
’ Lula-North-South
L TART— —ARRIVE
§ o M. 10:30 a.m
%Y Pm 4:35 p.m
J. L. COX, Asst. Gen. Frt. Agent
Office: Passenger Station
Phone 81
E. EWELL YEARWOOD
Contractor and Builder
WILL BUILD AND FINANCE
YOU A HOME ON YOUR LOT
Residence Phone 5302
Office Phone 977
HINDS’ COMBINATION
PACKAGE
40c Cleansing Cream, 400 Texture
Cream, 40c Toning Cleanser, 50c
H. & A. Crzam
$1.19
CITIZENS PHARMACY
oM ;
b 4
1 -lm..
T P e
f’%h““ k l-;!” o
R e 7 ,No e
aO, oM E
MOVING—PACKING
Local and Long Distarce
Hauling
ADAMS TRANSFER
CO.
Phone 656—259 Hull St.
Plumbing and Heating
ANDERSON
PLUMBING CO.
Engineers and Contractors
Phone 1116 Athens, Ga.
140 West Clayton Street
%
¥ '.'
B oA, T )
PR TR T i
AN : S
+ CREECH
A, :
At e A
_yn_n TMARK. n_uglgv_uil_q
THE FLORENCE CO.
PHONE 1340
18 A WEEK BUYS THE
C THE DAILY GEORGIAN
AND SUNDAY AMERICAN
and Keeps up a $10,000.00 Acci
dent Insurance Policy. Phone
Lee C. Bowden for Details.
PROTECTED LOANS
S3OO OR LESS
Eligble Borrowers Receive
At No Additional Cost
FULL CANCELLATION
In Event of Death or In
jury of the Wage Earner.
No Outside Endorsers
Easy Monthly Payments
PHONE 1371
FRANKLIN PLAN
OF GEORGIA
146 East Clayton Street
AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE
. . We Write . .
LIABILITY
PROPERTY DAMAGE
FIRE
THEFT
SMITH & BOLEY
PHONE 279
268 N. Jackson St.
—GENERAL INSURANCE—
FIRE—SURETY—CASUALTY
W. ). PEEPLES INSURANCE AGENCY
MRS. W. J. PEEPLES, Manager
209 Shackelford Building—Telephone No. 3
l’ LIPSCOMB-DEARING-HUTCHINS, Inc.
Insurance Renting Real Estate
INE I T
| FUNERAL NOTICES |
| '
(COLORED)
GRIFFITH—The friends and rela
tives of Mrs, Lizzie Griffith, Mr
Will Bush, Mr. L. W. Griffith, of
Comer, Ga., Mrs. Rosa Brawner,
of Atlanta Ga., Mrs. Susie Grif
fith, Athens, Mrs., Minnie Bar
. hett, of Neese, Ga.; Mr. Georg:
Bush, of Berkley, Ga.; Charlie
Bush, Berkley Ga.; Mrs. Matilda
Maddox, Athens, Ga.; Mr. Willie
Bush,.of Chicago, Il1l.; Mrs. Irene
Mills of Chicago, Ill.; Mr. Ed
Bush, of Atlanta, Ga.; Mr, Will
Bush, of Atlanta, are invited to
attend the funeral of Mrs. Lizzie
Crffith Thursday, Jan. 14,°1932,
at Piney Grove church, Oglethorpe
county at one o’clock. Rev. L. S
Durham will officiate. Interment
in the church cemetery. Mack
& Payne Funeral Home in chrage.
CARRINGTON—The friends and
relatives of Mr. and Mrs., Chas.
Carrington, of Birmingham, Ala,
« Deacon and Mrs. G, H. Alexander
and Mrs., Fannie Smith of Ath
ens, are cordially invited to attend
th¢ funeral of the wife and sister
. Mrs. Sarah Horton Carrington,
today at IZbenezer Baptist church
at two o'clock. Rev. J. H. Horton
and Rev. J. F. Henry will offi
ciate. The pallbearers selected
from the deacons of the church
will piease meet at 1:30 at the
parlors. of Mack & Payne. Mrs.
Carrington died at her Home in
Birmingham, Friday the Bth.. She
will be remembered in Athens as
Mrs. Henry Horton, a former
deacon of Ebenezer. She leaves
to mourn her passing her hus
band, Mr. Chas. Carrington, of
Birmingham, Ala., the following
brothers and sisters Mrs. Janie
Sharp, Penfield; Mrs. Mattie Reed
of- Bairdstown; Mr. John Sag
gus, of Madison; Mr. Oscar Sag
gus of Bairdstown; Mrs, Fannie
Smith, Mrs. Minie L. Alexander,
of Athens; Mrs. Lula Saggus, of
Anderson, S. C., a number of
relatives and a host of friends.
Interment at Gospel Pilgrim
cemetery. Mack & Payne Fun
eral Home in charge.
SMITH—Mrs. Leila Smith entered
into her final rest Monday, Jan
uary 11th. Relatives and friends
are invited to attend her funerai
Thursday, January 14th, at twe
o'clock p. m. from Mount Sinai
Baptist church, Oconee Heights.
She is survived by her husband.
Mr. Clarence Smith and two
daughters, Miss Marie and Cora
Lee Smith of Athens; her moth
er, Mrs. Mollie Harris, of Craw
fordville, Ga.; one brother, Mr,
Benjamin_J#own of Athens; a
niece, Miss Mollie Bell, of Craw
fordville, Ga.; two aunts, Mrs.
Rosa Broughton of Crawfordville,
Ga., and Mathilda Anne Wood,
of Atlanta, Ga.; two uncles, Mr.
Henry Thomas, of Atlanta and
Mr. Chas. Brown of Wilkes coun
ty, Ga.; a sister-in-law, Mrs.
Mollie Brown, of Athens, a broth-*
er and sister-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. James Barnett of Oconee
Heights, an uncle and aunt, Rev,
and Mrs. Morgan Johnson, of
Winder, Ga.; an aunt, Mrs. Mar
garet Starkes of Winder, Ga.; a
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Smith, of Gtatham,
Gal; brother-and-sister-in-law,
Mr., Wagren Smith of Monroe, Ga
and Mrs. Lucy Jackson; sister:
in-law of Atlanta, Ga., a broth
er-in-law, Mr. Lee Smith, of Vir
ginia. - Rev. Slone Brown will of
ficinte. Interment will be in the
church cemetery. Peoples Un
dertaking Co. in charge. -
WHO’'S RIGHT
DETROIT — While 90 hunts.
men were killing 500 rabbits in the
first day’s drive against what res.
idents called “‘pest,” firemen by
heroic work were succeeding in
saving 1,00 of the creatures from
a burning animal store.
BUYS BOTH THE
DAILY GEORGIAN
AND THE DAILY
BANNER-HERALD
AT THE GEORGIAN
HOTEL NEWS AND
CIGAR STAND
. T 2 G
Is for AU'i'OS
All kinds and all age
You'll find them FOR
SALE
In the Classificd
_ Pages.
BANNER-HERALD
WANT-ADS
‘THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Here Are Some of
Famous Dissenting
Opinions of Supreme
Court Justice Holmes
(Contipued Yrom Page One)
try what it is, that many citizens
agree with the applicant’s bellel
and that I had not supposed hith
erto that we regretted our ina
bility to expel them because they
BRIEF SKETCH OF
JUSTICE HOLMES
Born March 8, 1841, in Bos
ton, the son of Dr. Oliver Wen
dell Holmes, the poet. Reared
in the atmosphere of the then
intellectual aristocracy of Amer-
Studied under Ralph Waldo
Emerson at Harvard, being
graduated with the class of
1861 as the Civil War broke
out.
Commissioner a first lieuten
ant in a Massachusetts infan
try regiment. Wounded in
three desperate Dbattles, at
Ball's Bluff, at Antietam, at
Fredericksburg. Brevated col
onel before he was 24, |
Entered law practice after
the war, became editor of the
American Law Review .in 1870.
Professor in Harvard Law
School in 1882, and also named '
to supreme court of Massachus
etts.
Appointed to supreme court
by President Roosevelt in 1902.
e et et
believe more than some of us 1o
in the teachings of the Sermon
cn the Mount.”,
In Defense of Free Speech
In Abrams vs. United States, a
case where five Russian-born per
sons in New York were sentenced
for distributing circulars protest
ing the American invasion ¢f
Russia in 1917, Justice Holmes
wrote: g
“But as against the dangers pe-'
culiar to war, as against others,
the principle of the rght to free
speech is always the same. It is
only the present danger ot i
jate evil or an attempt to bring it
about that warrants Congress in
setting 4 limit to the expression
of opinion where private rights
are not concerned. . . . When meén
have realized that time has up
set many fighting faiths, they
may come to believe even more
than they believe the foundations
of their own conduct that the ul-:
timate = good desired is betteri}
reached by free trade in ideas—{
that the best test of truth is the.
power of the thought to get Wt
accepted in the competition of the
market, and that truth is the oz
ground upon which their wishes
safely can be carried out. That
at any rate, is the theory of ofij,
Constitution., It is an experimenty
as all life is an experiment.”
~ In an opinion from the majorit‘“if
decision that New York state:ha
no right to pass a law limiting
work in bakeries to 10 hours a
day, Justice Holmes wrote:
. “A Constitution is not intended
{o embody a particular economic
theory, whether of paternalism
’and the organic relation of thsx
citizen to the stats or of laissex
faire. It is made for people of
3 sndamentally differing views. and
the accident of our findirneg aer
tain opinidns natura' and familiar
and novel and even shocking
ought not to conclude our judg
ment upon the question whether
statutes embodying them conflict
with the Constitution of the United
States.”
' When the Toledo News-Bee was
held in contempt in 1917 for chal
lenging the jurisdiction of a fed
eral judge in a street car rate
case and Chief Justice White and
a majority held that the newspa
per had attempted to intimate the
judge, Holmes dissented and
wrote: y
“When it is considered how con
trary it is to our practice and
ways of thinking for the same per
son to be accused and sole judge,
in a matter which, if he be sensi
gitive, may involve strong personal
feeling, I should expect the pow:r
to be limited by the necessities of
the case ‘to insure order and de
corum in their presénce’.”
Wire-Tapping Evidence
Ii the Olmstead wire-tapping
case Holmes disagreed with the
majority, as follows:
“I think, as Mr. Justice Brandeis
says, that apart from the Consti
tution the government ought not
to use evidence obtained by and
nly obtainable by a criminal act.
}lt is desirable that criminals
should be detected, and to that
Fend that all available evidence
‘should be used. It also is desira
ble that the government should
not itself foster and pay for othet
crimes, when they are the means
by which the evidence is to be
obtained.,” ;
Holding against a five to. four
majority that the child labor law
was valid, Justice Helmes assert
ed:
“If there is anything upon which
civilized countries have agreed—
far more unanimously than they
have with regard to intoxicants
and some other matters over which
this country is emotionally arouscd
—it is the evil of premature =and
excessive child Ilabor. I should
have thought that if we were to
introduce our own moral concep
tions where in my opinion they
do not belong, this was pre-emi
nently a case for upholding the
exercise of all its powers by the
United States. . . . It ;is net for
this court to pronounce when pro
hibition is necessary to regulation,
ilf it ever may be necessary—to
say that it is permissible as
fagainst the product of ruined
lives.”
Many of the Holmes dissentions
are fighting opinions, He was
three times wounded in the Civil
‘War, where he won a colenelcy.
They do say that he sometimes
fighis vigorously in conferences
with the others justiées. And 1t
was Mr. Justice %mes who once
expréssed an important pavt of
bis. puilosophy in. the, words:
“After all, the place for a_man
who is complete in all his powere
is in the fight” b e
The BANNER-HERALD has many features which:no
other Georgia newspaper has, and one of the best of these
is the “column on the left” on the editorial page wherein
Athenians give their opinions on current topics. =
The BANNER-HERALD began this column several
months age, and it has become one of the most popnlfir
departments in the paper. It is being improved umtfl
the time. Right now we are preparing to make it W
than ever. If you have missed reading these arhd“,
written by laymen and experts—all home peopk-—-ym
are depriving yourself of a great treat.
. Specialists in their field at the Georgia Staté Teachiers
college, the University of Georgia, and the Goorgnfiflhie
College of Agriculture have been bringing to Bannet-
Herald readers through this department the best thoqfit
on timely topics, all the way from bridge gamesto&e
world court, from Mussolini to the need for playgrounds
in Athens. L A
This ediforial department has been good. BUTIT'S
GOING TO BETTER THAN EVER— i
GET THE HABIT OF READING “THE COLUMNON
THE LEFT” of The BANNER-HERALD’S Editorial Page.
PAGE SEVEN