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About The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1933)
PAGE TEN ~ THE BANNER-HERALD Published Every Evening Except Saturday and Sunday and on Sunday Morning, by Athens Publishing Co, S S ———————————— Earl B, Braswell _ .., Publisher and General Mamager BR RO . et ihsissiasaeesstoinnen Egltor B MBI . ... . ... sos-20.... Manaping Editor . National Advertising Representatives Chas H, Eddy Company, New York, Park-Lexington Building; Chicego, Wrigley Building; Boston, Old South Buflding; J B Keough Rhodes-Haverty Building, At lanta, Ga, Members of the Assoclated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper also to all local news published therein, All rights of republication of special dispatches also reserved, Full Leased Wire of the Associated Press with the Lead-. ing Features and Comics of the N, E, A, THE NEW YORK SCENE By PAUL HARRISON NEW YORK.—The curtain having been lowered, L with appropriate shudders , on the late lambasted Broadway theatrcial season, statisticians of the stage are now offering corroboration for the con tention of the critics that it was the leanest dra matic period since the war. The magazine Variety lists 117 productions, out Yof which only nine were hits and 17 moderate suc cesses. But one of the so-called hits, the Jimmy Durante-Lupe Velez revue called “Strike Me Pink,” took the largest loss of the season, since it cost $150,000 to produce and garnered only $60,000 at the box office. “Take a Chance,” another “hit.” and , & better musical show, has scarcely made a dime of profit. Which gives you an idea of the financial hazards involved in stage gambling. . Within a few more days the rialto will have redched a new low in summer theater fare, with only four legitimate shows remaining. Some have moved out of town, but more than a hundred have gone into the gloomy limbo of Cain’'s warehouse. In fact, there's a story which has been told about practically every one of those dead dramas. It has to do with the producer who asks a friend ahat he thinks of the show. “Well,” Says the party of the second part, “I think you better polish up that third act, or even Cain won't take it.” Speaking of Cain, though, he and the warehouse he has conducted for 18 [years are only symbols of the theatrical undertaking business. For there are ~ other such storage places where the props and scenery of dreams-that-didn't-come-true are put away in the hope that some later use may be found for them. The Shuberts, Gilbert Miller and George M. Cohan have their own warehouses. The Metro politan Opera has four. Tons of drops and props from Ziegfeld's warehouse were burned after his death. The lares and penates of George White, Sam H. Harris and dozens of other managers are in the custody of Patsy Cain. But even some of these‘ are being carted away to oblivion. . ; Not all are destroyed, though. Up along the edge of t}xe Hudson, overlooked by Riverside Drive, some of this scenery is making a last drive stand. For _there, in an orderly row of patched-up shacks, is a _remnant of the first Bonus Army, 120 strong. The men have appropriated the more substantial sec tions of scenery to make roofs and walls and in _congruously decorative fronts for “Hoover City.” ~ One of the plays just closed, a revival from the j{f;’)tevious season, furnishes a happy chapter in the glitsz;;‘coess stories of two people. They are Rose Franken and Arthur Beckhard, the author and the %fioducer of “Another Language.” She is the young ‘and pretty wife of a dentist, and had no ddea o 1 ig%eing a writer until she came into ownership of a ?}é@:{i{pfimriter some years ago. While looking after her ;xg'!ouse. her husband, three sons, two dachshunds and ;{t cat, she turned out some short stories. Finally i;:flle decided to ‘do a play, which she accompliehsd in ~ six days flat, _ The Shuberts turned it down, as did Al Woods ~ and Arthur Hopkins. After they refused it, other . producers decided it must be terrible, and didn't _even want to read it. Beckhard did, though, and “fieing a concert manager and not a producer, he . thought it was pretty good. He plunged, with all ?-‘"his savings, in the hope the show would last three gm' four weeks and return his investment. It ran for ~ a year and then sold to the movies at a handsome ~figure. E‘g:” i e i s . For some time now there has been talk along %@;Bmadway of doing something for Fritzi Scheff. In . theatrical clubs and managers' offices and rialto %speakeasies, wherever old-timers meet, the conver gfi?;gation usually gets around to her: i, "Dear old Fritzi Scheff is broke, I hear. . . . ~ Yes; mortgaged her home up in Waterbury, Conn, ? and now they're even going to foreclose on that.” “What a pity! Why, I remember that Christmas night at the old Knickerbocker theater back in 1900, and—" . . . “So do 1. And when she stood there with Victor Herbert holding onto him and bowing and bowing to the wildest audence 1 ever saw, I couldn’t have believed that she'd ever be in Meed.” . . . “Well, I thbink there ought to be a mnt for her; one that would save her home, any way.” . . . “Yes, something certainly ought to be %fim.u . A\ ~ But somehow, nothing has been done. And may ihls is partly because, on seeing the Fritzi Scheff of 1983, it's so difficult to realize that she was “ musical comedy history nearly three decades “ Her hair is as red, her nose as impudently rned, and her manner as saucy as ever. She %fl gets about town—by what sacrificial economies ‘ . one knows—and sings at other people’s benefits. @i\dshe stili sings, by unanimous demand, the song that has beer: hers for all time: “Kiss Me Again.” ,;:_ghg_ still speaks with an accent that is a relic of her girlhood in Vienna, where she was discovered by Maurice Grau when he was scouting the conti ment for talent. She still -displays flashes of the temperament -that won her the title of “Le Petit Diable” when she first came here and joined the ‘Metropolitan Opera company. And around her still ngs an aura of ageless legend—of great triumphs and glittering romances, gala celebrations at Del _monico’s, champagne and orchids, entouarges big ‘enough for a traveling queen, milk baths and eight personal maids, luxury and adulation. jiliss Scheff now recalls that after she left the ‘Metropolitan to sing the operettas of Victor Herbert, ‘she shied away from ghe “Kiss Me Again” number in “Mile. Modiste” because of its difficult range and @teflla&s «It is impossible,” she told Herbert. “I Wot sing it; nobody can sing it. Do you think 1 ‘am a ’'cello?” But sing it she did, on that opening Christmas night in 1905. And sang it again and again as the ‘house went into a delirium of delight. Finally, ex ‘hausted and breathless, she just stood there beside Herbert and bowed and beamed and wept. Mile. Modiste” ran three years, a phenomenal ss for those times. Various minor triumphs lowed, but everything she did thereafter seemed ‘to suffer by comparison. {!‘oday the old street is sorrowfully reminding it _ self that Fritzi Scheff is broke . . . Going to lose ~her home in September, too, unless somethings _done. . . . The trouble is, though, benefits are gen erally given only for doddering old troupers; and f tzi_doesn’t dodder, nor does she want that kind "of aid. Only the other night at the Actor’s Dinner : where the big stars take urns entertaining for their jobless compatriots, Fritzi Scheff got up and " sang a song. It was a piece called “Kiss Me Again.” " Nocturnal notes: Roller-skating at the Village elub . . . Colored gal boxers at the Mayfair .. . Yo-yo tops at the Village Barn . . . Frank jnd Milt Britton smashing violins . . . Lindy Hop putests here and there . . . Jimmy Durante shing pianos everywhere he goes . . . All of pich make for strenuous evenings . . . The town's 5 f' My “Alpert’'s singing at the new senity Fair .. . And so help us there’s now a y Mouse g with a floor show by Thelma IR h dfohestry of Mickey Mouss Trabpecs, ¥ g . w‘w*,’;.; .gt.- ;" :;'r, ; % B R B e e PASSING OUT THE JOBS ' Since the adjournment of Congress, a large number of appointments have been made to government positions, and on and after July 1, Postmaster General Farley annournces that thousands of jobs will be dispensed to the Democratls of this coun try. Such is good news, no doubt, to those who are hoping and praying that their names are entered on the preferential list. Of course, there are not enough jobs to go round, but there will be enough to help relieve the unemployed Democrats, to say the least. With all the improvements that have been scheduled under the provisions of the reorganization bills, the unemployed situ ation should be relieved within the next few months. Those who are unemployed and have dependents should be the first to secure employment. Age should not be the paramount requisite in the employ-| ment of emergency helpers. There are] thousands of men in this state who are out‘ of work and have been for months, andi some for a period of over two years, yet the burden of caring for a family has not been relieved. All such cases should be given “first aid” and the heads of families, with dependent children, should be class ed as emergency cases and immediate em ployment provided for them. Through the reforestation camps, thous ands of young men have been employed; it is true th4t one of the requirements for appointment to forest service was an agreement on the part of these young men to pay to the members of their dependent families practically the entire amount of thein pay—thirty dollars the month, keep ing five dollars each month for their per son and incidental expenses. The plan is most commendable and one that will rueet with the approval of the tax payers of this country. INCOME TAX RETURNS Among the many pieces of new legisla tion enacted by the extra session of con gress, one of the most important was the| authorization delegatedto President Roose velt to give publicity to income tax returns. While many will object to this feature of authority under the new measure, feeling that suech publicity would be an intrusion upon their private affairs, yet if the Presi dent had the power to have done so, and had let it be known, the cases of “Morgan House” and other prominent institutions and individuals would not have created such an extensive interest. However, since the President has been delegated this power, it is expected that he will cause full reports to be made of all incomes filed with the government. Such a requirement is purely police regulations in that it causes financiers, bankers, brok ers and other money interests to practice care in making their returns. There is one feature of the present in some law that should be carefully investi gated and amended. The loop holes in the present law allow evasions that are not only unjust, but afford an avenue for dis crimination by the wealthy and the large interests of the country. That has been proved by the recent investigation by a congressional committee that was power less to reach dodgers of income tax right ly due the federal government. However, at the next session of congress, such de fects can be ironed out by amendments that will make them tight and easy to en force. THE SOUTH IS BETTER OFF The Progressive Farmer has compiled some interesting figures showing the out standing mortgage debts on the farms throughout the country. The west is the hardest hit, Illinois and ITowa, totaling sl,- 728,000,000 which is more than the entire mortgage debt of all the southern states. Discussing the farm mortgage and the various sections of the nation, the Progres sive Farmer, says: “The outstanding mortgage debt resting upon the farmers of the United States at] the end of 1932 is estimated at $8,500,- 000,000. The annual interest on this debt is estimated at $520,000,000. \ “The bureau of agricultural economics at Washington estimates in a recent report to congress that the average number of vears mortgaged farms remain under mort gage ranges by geographic divisions from 45 years in the West north central group of states, or corn belt, to an average of 23.1 years in the South. The avergae fig ure for the South—23.l years—compares with 29.6 years, the average for the entire United States. “Of the total mortgage debt of the na tion the 14 states of the South carry 18 [per cent, or $1,700,000,000. Showing, the comparative. as well as the exceedingly favorable position of the South, the figures show that the mortgage debt of lowa and Illinois, totaling $1,728,000,000, .is by ‘more than $27,000,000 greater than the mortgage debt of the entire South. To fur ther emphasize this point the farms of lowa alone carry a debt that is by $54,- 000,000 greater than of the 12 states of the southeast (Texas and Oklahoma ex cluded). ' < It is estimated that 60 per cent of the United States are free of mortgage debt while 70 per cent of the farms in the, south are free from mortgages. A most en couraging condition, espgcially in the face of a revival in business and an era of buy ing and selling which is bound to increase the income of the farmer, enabling those who are burdened with mortgages to pay them off and free themselves of incumber ances that have caused them no little con cern. , ——a Fresh water is found 200 miles at sea off the mouth of the Amazon river; the force of the current carries the fresh wates THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA™ ™~ DID IT EVER OCCURTO YOU - - A Little_of—_é—\-/;rything, Not Mugb _of_/-flnything Twenty-five per cent of the ten million dollars, allocated to the State of Georgia by the federal government for road building purposes, wiii be used for paving strets in munici palities, Athens, of course, is entitled to her quota which can be secured by the mayor and council making proper application. It is expected that no time will be lost in pre senting the claims of this city. The amount to be allocated to Athens is estimated to be sufficient to pave many oi the streets, and oth erwise improve those ‘that have been paved and are now almost impassable on account of the lack of upkeep. Besides such im provements will, in a great meas ure, aid in the relief of the unem ployment situation here, We are not informed as to the amount of the relief funds of the city and county, but we presume that these agencies are adequately provided with a sufficiency to care for deserv ing dependents, It is the purpose of the govern ment to provide food and raiment for the unemployed until the many agencies recently created by the government commences to func tioning and business conditions are improving. Then, of course, it is expected that the people will be able to secure employment and cease to be dependents. The relief organization fuq‘ds ghould not bhe considered as charity funds. Pres ident Roosevelt is not placing the relief work on a basis of charity, but as a responsibility this govern ‘ment owes to its people to take care of and protect them the ’same as is times of war or other calamities. Under the present set-up of the relief wonk in this and other states, local welfare com mittees are organized and given absolute authority to dispense government relief funds, Many of the counties in Georgia have taken advantage of this op portunity and organized such com mittees for relief work. Of course, if there are civic organlzations,l county and municipal authorltiesi‘ that are supplied with local funds sufficient to carry on the relief, work in their respective communi ties, it is net necessary to call on the governnfint. Bug if we are not mistaken, such funds for this city and county are running low. If ‘the burden of caring for the un emplored here grows beyond the jabilitvy f the county and municipal authorities, then a welfare com mittee should be organized and in co-operation with the state welfare committee, secure ample funds for relief work. - R There is no excuse for any one of the unemployed or those who ere helpless to suffer for the necessities of life. The gov ernment has caused safficient funds to be appropriated to provide such aid. In order to relieve any embars rassing situation here or in Clarke county, the organization of a wel fare committee as a part of the state welfare committee would re sult in government funds sufficient to relieve being available. We repeat, if the municipality or county funds are not sufficient to provide sufficient sustenance for the unemployed—then by all means let us organize a local welfare committee and under the direction and with the co-operation of the state welfare committee take ad vantage of that which is due the people and provided for them by the government. “What has become of Mesa Bill?” inquired the traveling salesman. Y “He's tourin’ the country,” an swered Cactus Joe. “Where is he now?" “Can't say. But Bill has one o them pernicious natures that jest naturally keep a man bein’ pul out o' one town after another’— Washington Star, THE CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION IN THE 10th (Sung to the Tune of Casey Jones) ! BY J. L. THOMASSON, Tignall, Georgia Come kind voters I'll sing you a song, Concerning the election, it woy't be long, There's a big bunch a runnin’, there were thirteen, The biggest bunch of candidates I ever have seen. CHORUS: \ o There's one in the lead, he's named Paul Brown, He's runnin’ in the courtry, he’s runnin' in the town, He's runnin’ like thunder you'll have to concede, He's comin’ out ahead with the dickens of a lead. He'll carry old Wilkes and Lincoln and Hart, I mention these three just merely as a start, There's Elbert and Franklin and Madi-s-o-n, He'll carry these three and he’s just begun. - He'll carry old Clarke and Oglethorpe, Just ain’t no tellin’ where he’ll ever stop, There’s Green and Morgan and Oc-o-f-ée, He'll carry the whole buneh, just wait and see There's Walton and Warren and old McDuff, That really looks like it ought to be eneugh, - ® He'll carry old Columbia and - “Tally Frery O, He may carry old Richmond for all I know, There's two fine ladies I'm sure in the race, They'll be defeated, but it’s no disgrace, S v My advice wou¥} be t¥% the other nine, - To do like Pitner and just resign. - if the other eleven candidates don’t mind what they’re about, " He's liable jusf to beat the whole lay-out, One thing about Paul, he's straight as a string, R S e ; i wi)"“f"*-*?" Many Girls Leave . Monday for Athens Y.W.CA. Camp A large group of Athens girls will leave Monday afternoon for the Y. W. C, A. camp, most of them staying for ten days or two weeks. There is still room for a few more girls during the first part of July, and registrations will be accepted until these are filled. The campers may report at camp at any time after four o’clock on Monday, which will give them time to be assigned to their shacks and get their things in order be fore the swimming period. Every camper is reminded that she must bring a helath certificate from her family physician unless she has already filed one at the Y. W, C. A pool. Dr. and Mrs. W. W, Brown will chaperone the girls who are attend ing camp at 'this time, and Miss Laura Powers will supervise the activities. She will be assisted by Misses Martha Evans, Grace Wil ’son, Gene Brooks, Mary Stark Davison, Dqrothy Kimbrell, and ‘Martha Carter Storey. Thursday evening and_ Sunday will continue to be gues( days at the Y. W, C. A. Camp, and visitors are always welcome at that time. A good supper {is always served on Thursday and Sl}nday dinner is also worth driving from town to join the eampers for these gpecial occassions. Visitors are permissa ble at any meal if reservations are made in advance. LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE The Banner-Herald, Athens, Georgia. If the papers quote Governor Eugene Talmadge correctly in re ferring to the present personnel of the forestry camps as ‘“bums and loafers” I wish to take issue with him and to say that I believe all fair-minded people will agree with me in saying that the Governor spoke too hastily in makjng this statement. Speaking as to the young men | who went from Clarke county, I can say there are a high type of fellows and come from some of our best homes and they do not deserve this stigma; true these families are of moderate means, some being reduced to dire cir cumstances in the present condi tions which confront our coun try. The home people of the com munities in which these boys lived never looked upon them as “bums ‘and loafers” but they were well ‘thought of by their neighbors and lfriends. These boys entered this service voluntarily, to do their bit toward pelieving the financial conditions i‘at home and they should be com mended instead of being criticized and called “bums and loafers.” A lot of these boys, I know, have worked up to a short while ago in our stores, mills and other places of Dbusiness, until conditions forced them out of emplyoment and when the opportunity offered ‘they accepted the work provided for them, although they only re 'ceive personally from $5.00 to $7.50 a month, the balance of their earnings being sent home to help conditions there. Would a “bum and a loafer” work for such wages? l If they are “bums and loafers” why did they join this service? Why did not they continue their life of ease? It was purely volun ’itary on their part, no one forced tthem to join. The very fact that they did join this army of work ers shows that the Governor was mistaken in his classification of them. . I am not related to any one in any of these camps but I have several friends who are in this work and I know that they are high-toned and honorable, willing and anxious to work and have never been looked upon as ‘“bums and loafers,” and I believe that a great majority of the young men who make up these camps will be found to be of the same type. Some day I hope the Governor will realize that he has done these boys an undeserved injustice and will be big enough to acknowl edge his mistake. Respectfully, A FRIEND OF THE BOYS. Hear J. L. Cartledge, candidate for Congress, speak over WTFI Monday, July 3, 8:00 to 8:15 p. m. A DAILY CARTOON _'.l2 i : A ( @ ”'fl /7 3 @ . fié&) i =1 7‘\ ,)’ ) G Y ¢ S |/ ‘., _{rjé’kfl,' ” . LE® jrorein " SASIRCEE Tl s 2 e SUARGE T . ISTATESMENy ¥4 &2 l{*fl’/ KL/ | R | ¢ RSN G (A /S 58 : ) moan ano |, N R AL HOLLE- @7‘# \\~‘¢, \%’K';' %;‘ 5 3 e - N S AN, / ] I B e e IR qF e N - i S e %:,_,__-_/ "f, el ,-" eS - ] —adl) -~ ErE £ey RN o ; i 8 2, * s 2 ‘fi‘& i: V, ! % : % bands , - ] A, - o ’ ‘ o A SR - =5 CoTTONS | %f G A Dingg i & ' : "., s .‘,‘t, -( | ;ll' \l\ “\k“ ) '/..’ > ANZ WHEATs ‘, ey 4"""'/.,?.1 lIN el B i | A NS s e Doy : L 1 DRERRR AR NS AL e . | ALY | R, -x:f“/,‘/r::’ s ; i “' G \ -'\(’ ' _.,\!{f"fl‘;‘?flf- ?“.f' - et P £/l i % T —_— ; fi}fifl' ' i wm:flf”' —— 23 . ‘ yapTArOga gy ¢ - # “"v / . sbt o T Miss Mcbley to Direct Music at + Jefferson School JEFFERSON—Miss Nixon Mob ley has been re-elected by the Board of Education as director of the music department of Martin institute for the coming year. Courses in public school musie, choral and glee club training, and piano, will be offered. Dr. E. M. McDonald, whose health has been slightly impaired for the past month left Thursday for Cleveland, Ohio, where he will undergo medical examination at the Crile Clinic, one of the most famous hospitals of the United States. After spending two weeks with relatives in Jefferson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dadisman have re turned to their home in Clevelana, Ohio. i Miss Ruth Sanders_of Commerce and Mr. D. H. Dickson were mar ried Saturday evening, June 17, the ceremony being performed at Glenn iMemorial church, Atlanta, by Rev. A. Lee Hale of Commerce. On Saturday, June 24, Miss Ruth Center and Mr. G. Lewis White were married, Judge W. W. Dick son performing the ceremony. + Mr. W. B. Bryant, of Jefferson, and Mrs. Jane Smith, of Hoschton, were also married on Saturday. Mr. J. P. Crocker and Miss Ethel Wood were married on Sunday, June 25, by Mr. M. F. Morrison. ! Rev. T. W. Gee united Mr. B. H. Gee and Miss Gladys Cooper in marriage, June 9. The wedding of Mr. Homer Gad dis and Miss Cornelia Roberts, both of Braselton, occurred in June, $ Organizations Are Aiding Campaign | For Georgia Hall The women’s organizations and clubs are cooperating wholeheart edly with the Georgia Hall Cam paign Committee in raising the balance for Clarke County’s part to build Georgia Hall, a memeorial building which is so badly needed at Warm Springs. The committee announces: “It is assured that the funds over the state will be raised for this worthy purpose amd we feel sure that the people of Clarke county do not want other counties to have to raise more than their quota to make up the deficiency. ‘“Wednesday, July sth is Tag Day” the receipts all contributed to build Georgia Hall, which is badly needed for children stricken with infantile paralysis and not able to rent a cottage at Warm Springs, ¢ “We all know how deeply Pre sident Roosevelt is interested in this charatable purpose and we feel that every man, woman and child who can do so, will gladly give their bit for Roosevelt and charaty, “Please do not fail us just when ;we can see over the top.” A total of 212 airports and land ing fields were in service in Mexico the first of May, 1933. The Salvation Army is known in more than 80 |countries and its funds and assets are said to be nearly $100,000,000. NOTICE I will appreciate my friends go ing to the polls on July bsth, next, and voting for my kinsman, Hon. Paul Brown, for Congress. It has never been my policy to take any active part in politics, but' I am asking this of my friends in this election as I have every confi {flénce in his ability and integrity. I know that he is energetic. and ‘will make this district an able Chant on Economic Nationalism! Purple dye of ancient times came from a small snzil found along the Mediterranean. Over 12,- 000 snails were needed to extract an ounce of dye and the cost was so prohibitive that only royalty could buy it. . A" New Deal” vacaTion AT THE GOR D O N U LR b Saviahe i Kgßls eT b e 1N O 5 YRTRT ZN By )G Y WRA eS R :{‘?Eé:‘v ¥ W o ook AR 1 r SAT N i SN DTN T N She eAL SRR BARN S A ot AR 5! S, G 4;'s"\“}! "S“’fl/ : T 0.. S UGO g A 2 rerithn BPASN ST e ey “ ! & AR Bk ol WL T ke g Gel e ‘ =) OR e Mot b GonRG Ay S P ARSI L S 3 i oW o D \)‘;‘;,.,.av,ti: ARN e g TIRS R Se R R e & B 0 LN A D SR L R ‘\‘i‘»,'vf't-‘“\:;“} A vacation 3,000 feet above the sea . .. where you can play golf on a “sweet” 18-hole course for 50 cents a round . .. fish in the Carolinas’ famous trout streams . . . ride a horse over miles of cleared bridle paths . . . play tennis on lively clay courts . . . swim the mountain lakes or‘the new Country Club pool . . . become breathless with the beauty of this mountain scenery . . . be cool and comfortable . . . in the happy company of gay, kindred spirits . . . that’s the summer enjoyment offered you by the Hotel Gordon, A hundred rooms of solid comfort. Three delicious Southern - cooked meals a day. At the surpris ingly low cost of from $3.50 to 85 per diem. Make your reservations now for your share of this fun. And bring the youngsters — there’s a thoroughly equipped playground for them at the GORDON. 4 . : s s ANGUS CRAFT . . MANAGER BAR BT O 08 b P S R P A4R 1T S LR e K e T e NG ig'%”' I ,‘”\a”»”, I L ;i;.f,:,_..-:-i"' EWAN N ESVILLEC NORTH CARDLINA The Coolest LEADS TO THE NORTH CAROLINA Exactly between the first tee and : ... eighteenth green of Blowing Rock's only go!f . course. .. highest 18-hole course east of the ; Rockies . , . the Green Park gives you the 4 ‘ niceties of a summer home combined with the W' .alam. convenience of country club facilities. i * Whether you're here two weeks or the % whole summer, you'll find a BLOWING ROCK ‘-*ijs‘:ssss'?ss’;’_'3 VACATION a real “pick-me-up” ... Make : reservations now for your share of gay, robust : - living in this unique resort . . . created for health, happiness and fun. Its beauty is in : spiring. The cool, comfortable climéie ‘dds . joy to the out-door recreation, indugesssgund : 3 sleep and develops a keen appetite. : . For schedule of ratés and T :4.'2: Uo'iu_:Arga illustrated booklet address A DELIGHTFUL » ROOM AND THREE el sl Ll ; DELICIOUS MEALS PAUL MCLDENHAUER Owner-Manager SUNDAY, JULY 2, 1833 A total of 18475 pilots and 7,004 aircraft held active U.'S. Depart ment of Commerce licenses on April 1 of this year. Friends of Roy V. Harris, can didate for Congress, will speak over WTFI at 8:30 p. m, July 4.