PAGE EIGHT
| Make Your
State and Ceunty
Tax Returns Now
Avoid the Penalties Prescribed
By Law.
W. M. BRYANT
Tax Receiver
Clarke County, the Court House
Time Is Limited
T
“E food val oy
nergy food value r T
g | )
B handsome con- - R
tainer promptecl my " 3
i 1" /m R
selection. LA
-«-Miss Decker . . N
7 DONITAN
Because it restores in a most appe- 4
tizingz ‘'way the calories used upl in &‘L §3fil§y? \"
everyday exercise, Miss Decker se- g A
lects Bonita Syrup in the new, b ey sl 1
kbeautiful table-convenient glass i ey |
ccntainer-—-and recommends it for f ”’M} ':fl?@“
men, women and children as the (Bt 1l '(‘”" »‘,‘_“f
ideal quick energy food. [ ,‘[' 1 mi; r.}‘;&_r’i:h !
eP A S
I T D AR
N AAR EURD Rv/
O lm @%,f
. s U l .AT _GOOD
T : GROCERS
'he Quick Energy Food
ERIRD BYRUY CO. ATLANTA, QM,
‘&)fifk&
over oom / /'(‘-./« \
0 § (A
B u e l
tt r The use of Armour’s Full Cream
i Cloverbloom Butter in Rogers’
5 Cooking Schools i a mark of
AT O . superior quality. The BEST
— - = was selected, -
— =g 32
ARMOY @%@-‘1 14
R'S - . ! 0
| Fugvetbloom | » 45}
CRE " ’ ' i
=M Dutt <\
LT T Y ARMOy er / / i
e ncamlmu.fla{- % .
LT ~ ""““Cls,umo / »
@ : L
You know it's fresh—and good—if it’s Armour’s Cloverbloom Butter!
Full Cream with ail the richness of eight half pints of pure table
cream in every pound. It comes to you from spotless Armour
Creameries—fresh from the churn—pure, gooc, delicious. And, best
of all, this finer butter costs no more.
ARMOUR’S
Delicately flavored, tender and tempting, for lunches,
for party sandwiches and the “unexpected guest.”
An ideal serving for any season—every occasion.
Reasonably priced, too. :
ARMOUR'S
Anotler delicious Armour product—-Veribest Brains.
High in food value, economical and tasty, it’s a
faverite in the south,
ARMOUR'S
. Delicious, wholesome meat, temptingly seasoned and
vacuum sealed to protect quality and flavor. For
__luncheons, sandwiches or a delicious quick dinner,
/ou’ll thoroughly enjoy Veribest Potted Meats when
ervea either hot or cold. Ask for them by name—
= “Armcur’s Veribest Potted Meats.” L
. These GOOD
T ~
- ARMOUR PRODUCTS
will be demonstrated and featured by Miss Decker at ‘
ROGERS COOKING SCHOOL
| Taxpayers League
.~ Holds Meeting; New
{ Members Reported
I‘ An enthusiastic meeting of the
| Clarke County Taxpayers league
9;’\\‘:l\ held at the Georgian hotel
A’l'n-««fu\ night. The groups con-
I\v!u«vm:!, a canvass for new mem
!ln':‘.\‘ reported good results, the
! highest pair turning in 268 nw\\j
I'mmlwl.fl. ’
TALES OF CODES AND INTERNATIONAL
INTRIGUE CAUSED ‘CENSORSHIP’ BILL
| BY RODNEY DUTCHER
| 2 :
| NEA Service Writer
| WASHINGTON — Just tell the
IHUUse of Representatives to pass a
bill and it's sure to act promptly
}whmhe-r it knows what’s it's doing
!m‘ not.
! The idiotic tale of the *“official
Es«-orots bill” proved that the poor
old house functions these days al
‘must automatically. But in this
case there was a large backwash
!of angry squawks, fantastic rum
[m's, dark susipcions and embar
rassed regrets.
: It is well understood that the
| State Department sold the Judici
-9;.l;\' Committee on the necessity of
!pl‘t-\'vlllin[,’, publication of one little
| book, but it's still undetermned
‘mhn tried to put over a fast one
|by jamming through a measure
| which wotild have given the ad
rhinistration dietatorial powers
over the press, Some congress
men profess to believe that the
{ White House itself was interested
‘hut the evidence is entirely uncon
vincing and President Roosevelt
was prompt to digelaim any
knowledge or sympathy.
Instead of a measure to protect
l;diplmnutic codes and secrets, the
]ming the House passed might have
| been used to inflict 10 years’ im
| prisonment and SIO,OOO fine on
| anyone who published, official
; documents without permission
lfrom “competent authority.”
l Hardly anyone was in the press
gallery at the time, but one news
'papermnn there found himself
llistening to the bill as read and
said to another: °
“What are they trying to do—
lput us all in jail?”
And they rushed down to the
lobby to call congressmen from the
floor and try to find out.
Happy Revisien
Some congressmen protested, but
the bill passed by a 10 tol vote,
Rumors were flying fast on the
oaryl A/ TIU TR
fi: T R3S
S o/ RIS
S| o Ready o Serve
,' /./
;_/e/,/"/’ :,S"ELE’CL’/
Sl -LY R
'
N T
S B
¥ \y, el
-
R
BT
S AR
3 AMoyg aey compANY, .
A -::twmm.cnw
See these Armour products demon-
Strated at the Rogers’ Cooking Schooli
then try them in your own home.
You'll find them wonderfully good and
on sale at ALL Rogers’ Stores,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, CGEORGIA
e ¥ e M ————————
B
GE e
s 2
e T
Bt e 5 i
:,;‘;:/ S g g
gre ;
S : A
s > B
B s e B
| B A
S i B
By S G T
A e
R & -
s g
eo e S
b . R sxS
| TR g R
e R e
| B e AR
e R
& & § ‘éé
e Y S
R 3 i s s
| " Bes. oo ~v-,_{'}:-?;'::-;;:::::-:'
Be A o
R 2 B
sERa G g
S m v RPSI s S
g B R
BSR s L R
% B 5{:%4:’:?:;:5:3: A g
BLI B R
? B e -;"i.ip’:n-pg»:cis‘d
S B R g et
1 % QRBs ii:":j':fi::._i:;:_‘t 3ar)
i e e
i o
sk: E B
T g
e LB
e % i
B R —_— ———
[ HERBERT O. YARDLEY l
ifloor. Members were told that il
!the thing wasn't passed we'd
«!probably get into war with Japan.}
A subordinate legal officer in the
!St:llt‘ Department had tald the
]Judiciary Committee that Majon
Herbert O. Yardley—a former in
telligence officer who once wrote
“The American Black Chamber”
and described how secret messages
of other nations had been decoded
here during and after the war—
!h:ul written another book which
'mmtained some hot stuff and was
sure to make trouble,
And the bill itself apparently
had been prepared ‘in the State De.
partment, with aid from the Jus
tice and ’other ,departments. No
copies of the brief committee re.
port on it were available in the
document room.
After the White House and
State Departments had made
statements, Chairman Hatton W.
fHumners of the committee wenjt
through the rather startling per
formance of revising the bill to re
‘move its objectionable features
and then informing the propei
senators, in effect, that this was
the measure the House would have
passed if it had been in its right
mind. ek
] The net effect was to revive war
talk, to make a lot of people sus
picious of each other and to call
@ttention to the rather dirty game
of espionage and secret-stealing
which the great powers seem “to
keep playing with each other. N
We're Slow, It Seems e
Yardley's story was soon recall
ed. Even yet, it is commonly sup
posed, our military and naval in
telligence services—which main
tain such espionage systems as we
have—contifue to decode secret
messages of foreign nations when
they can get hold so them.
Possibly some confirmation of
,Yurdley’s insistence that we don’t
t 8o in enough or well enough for
coding and decodinz was offered
on the floor by Congressman Ham-.
ilton Fish of New York, the fa
mous investigator of Communists.
Fish said he had subpoenaed about
3000 coded telegrams which had
passed between the Amtorg Trad
ing Corporation in New York and
Soviet Russia. .
“I was informed by both the
Navy Department and the War
Department that they had decod
ing experts who could decode any
telegram in code that was ever
'sent by any country in the
’wm'ld." he revealed. . |
| "I presented a large part of
'those telegrams to the War De-kj
'pnrtmqm and the Navy Depart.
ment without result. Not one ex
| pert—and they had from six
months to a year—succeeded in de
coding a single word of those ea
blegrams.”
' Fish hoped that funds would be
| voted so that there might be
greater efficiency angd capacity in
decoding cablegrams.
His revelation was especially in
‘terosting because the Army and
Navy have always veiled their
coding and decoding operations
with complete secrecy. They simp
!ly won't discuss the subject at all.
' “Exßlack Chamber” ’
The U. 8. adistrict attorney in
New York recently seized the man
uscript of Yardley's new book. It
I 8 supposed to contain startling
information about secret negotia
tions and messages around the
'tlme of 1521.22, Yardley's story
of how he and his asseciates
“broke” the Japanese code at that
]time was one of the high spots of
his earlier book. He complained
‘l)itterly that Secretary Stimson had
abolished the *“Black Chambep”—
twhlch he said was the crytographie
bureau of the State Department—
in 1929, leaving us unable to com
pete in internatonal espionage and
' intrigue.
When Yardley's book was trans.
lated into Japanese it created con
!siderable anti-American sentiment.
‘There was, for instance, the. al
leged revelation that this govern- |
ment had been aware of the Jaym.|
[neso armament proposals ‘ggx
‘before their presentation 1o t@ |
conference. ik
~ The State Department never did
Lk SRS TS oL UE 3SR
ON APRIL 20-21st
Athens Public schools will ob
serve spring holidays April 20 dnd
21 during the sessions of the Geor
gia lEducation Association st Sa
vannah. The holidays were de
2lared to give teachers an oppor-
Aunity to attend the convention.
Complete figures on the atten
lance of parents at schools during
‘Visitors Week” last week have
9een obtained by Superintendent
3 .M. Grier, who stdtes that 3,293
varents visited the schools,
Superintendent Grier announced
Tuesday that Oconee, Barrow, Col
lege -avenue and Chase street
schools reported 100 per cent a
endance of parents last week anc
“hilds street and High school »
most attained the 100 percent goal.
Three schools report 100 percent
perfect teeth among students. Th'ey
wre College avenue, Barrow an¢
Oconee street schools. The re
maining schools in the system are
2Xpected to reach the 100 percent
70al this week.
Teachers at College avenue:
-school have visited homes of stu
dents 100 percent. Some time dur
.ng the year te:chers of that school
“ave visited the homes of every
'hild in their rooms.
NOTICE
DEFARTMENT OF JUSTICE—
Office of Deputy Prohibition Ad
ministrator, 315 Georgia Casualty
Juilding, Macon, Ceorgia, April 4,
'933. Notice is hereby yiven that
m March 10, 1938, sne Ford Se
dan automobile, Motor No. T
-13707063, was seized near Canon,
ieorgia, for violation of the Inter.
nal Revenue Laws; Section 3258-
3281 and 3450, United States Re
sised Statutes; any person claim
ing said automobile must appear
at my office on or before May §
1933, and make such claim arad
zive bond for costs for transfer of
forfeiture proceedings to the Unit.
ad States District Court, or it will
bhe sold as provided in Section
3460,, United States Revised Stat
utes. F. D. Dismukes, Deputy
Administrator. a4p
_ /’w\\ |
* B f\% &‘%
./ l,_ / T l S
‘ { : e RY TH
iAR LE :
i GREAT DRINK.
WITH THESE GOOD FOODS
~ll’
YOURL LIRE 1T . . .
WITH A BAKED HAM SANDWICH AT LUNCH
WITH CHEESE CRACKERS OR COOKIES AT A BRIDGE PARTY
WITH A “YHOT DOG” AT THE COUNTY FAIR °
~ Coca-Cola Bottling Co. E/ ///”/’%fl’fi
Prince Avenue _ I,Drillk
| —PHONE 263— i;
Ctols
. DELICIOUS AND REFRESHING
S [t e |
I£ BEING USER AT .
y . ENGERS COOKING SCHOOL
* S SOLD IN ALL ROGERS STORES
: - , & / / & | fi;@%fi
T & & : ‘v’.‘ ‘ B ¥ '
! .iy SIGNATURE-YOUR PROTECTIOZS O
T M’H m:];nna [ '"I il'mn:mx:l' AT ;::Nwl‘..,‘izd!‘!‘,F:?lT”iNlUEii{‘:H T ey
P=g “miu'lfi‘\“’z‘%ufilfl?M\*?flmlm\?fi\h"mWfi‘” =3
: D?W T ol e
‘N GRAPEFRUIT JUICE
3 ‘.~ ~ \ : fm (PURE CANE SUGAR ADDED)
&Rz\\vfi‘lgg;;::‘?i ) fsk Your Doctor
QEDPTE" M ADE FROM TREE RIPE FRUIT —
. *. e . v
Ty flakier
el sl o 8 O Bl
¥t d ) AND MORE b N £
& flavorful [sesaass
Sunshine Krispy Crackers are changing eating habits. S e Gl
These dainty, slightly salted squares have grown G
so popular they are found on the table all through el
meals. No wonder! They're flakier. And more : e
flavorful. They’re made by the famous Full Grain o o
P tof Sunshine baking. That's why! e T
rocess—a secret of Sunshine baking, Ihat's why i :2@%
Sunshine ot B
ToS e o v gmo
T oA
2. S ~«fi“;?gg'
CRACKERS
TUESDAY, APRIL 11, Igs,
& 10c
= 19¢