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.r,‘:‘";"}{]‘i\\‘ JULY 25, :39d%.
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2 el (otlen foboceod NEVER GET
ON THE NERVES...NEVER TIRE THE TASTE
WHOOPEE —— WHAT FUN!
THE GREATEST COMEDY EVER MADE—
GREATER THAN EVER—IT'S MARVELOUS!
DIOIE
C . —
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%/ ‘ %A
/? \/ / 4 /‘fi 4
2i07 < / Y
\N St o g
! ' . .
Corgeous \»\ : / ‘
Spectacle! @ S
e PLUS
Taxi Boys Comedy
1t TECHNICOLOR Krazy Kat Kartoon
ATURDAY @ PALACE
READ BANNER-HERALD WANT ADS
$32.75 $32.75
ld’ F ‘
World's Fair
AMERICAN EXPRESS EXPENSE TOUR TO
CENTURY OF PROGRESS, CHICAGO, ILL.
6:18 A. M.
, RATE INCLUDES
RAILROAD FARE—HOTEL AND 2 MEALS DAILY IN CHICA
GO—3 ADMISSION FARES—MOTOR TOUR OF CENTURY OF
PROCGRESS—BOAT TRIP ON'LAKE MICHIGAN.
Rate Does Not Include Meals on Train or Lunch in Chicago.
Pag"éangers Desiring to Remain in Chicago After Conducted Tour
Wiil Have Additional Days in Chicago on Return Ticket.
REGISTER BEFORE 5:00 P. M. FRIDAY, JULY 2lst.
For Full Information Apply Prof. M. D. Dunlap
—PHONE 1542-W—
--TOUR PERSONALLY CONDUCTED!
ACREAGE CUT
ONLY START OF
COTTON RELIEF
{ By RODNEY DUTCHER
; Banner-Herald Washington.
| Correspondent
i WASHINGTON —“Cully Cobb is
i as happy as a boy wearing his first
long pants,” remarked Secretary
of Agrieulture Henry Wallace,
So was Wallace and everyone
else in the agricultural adjustment
l:ldmfnistration. The campaign to
sign up farmers to take 3 000,000
!balos of cotton out of production
had succeeded after days of doub’
and nights of’ worry.
“Keystone of the whole recovery
iprogram!” exclaimed tired Cully
{Cobb, the Georgia farm journa!
editor who is chief of the A A, A,
cotton production section. Failure
would have been a disheartening
{blow to the administration, whicl
has (I-th'ioul{ios enough.
For days and nights Cobb sat at
his desk—like a presidential ecan
didate receiving election returns.
Telegrams streamed in from state
capitalst of ‘the cotton belt, an
nouncing latest totals.
Though victorious in his cam
paign for acreage reduction pledges
Uncle Sam’'s troubles with cotton
have only started. Careful check
must be made to see that these
|pr*omlsed reéductions are actually
(carried out, and moreover the
l.‘armers who make acreagel cute
are {o be compensated by tine gov
ernment for the sacrifice of a por
tion of *heir crop. There's still a
lot to be done hefore the cotton
relief job is finished.
Twenty-five thousand field work
érs were reaching 2,000,000 farm
€rs, nspecting land and estima‘ing
| crop possibilities, sometimes . check-
I‘lng gin records and frequently fill
ing contracts. - Nearlv. 1.000 tabu
lators, computers, editors, examin
ers, attorneys and review experts
|pl‘gged away on three daily eight
:ho r shifts with comptrollers
ichecking, adding and assorting
hundreds of thousands of contracts.
The campaign closed at mid
night, but it wasn't certain that it;
had gone oveér until late next day.,;
Then Cully Cobb went home to get;
some sleep. : I
One reason the drys make such
a poor showing in the repeal refer-‘
,enda is that their once mighty war‘
chest is now a mere cigar box.
They were able to raise only 8500‘
one hears, for their attempg to
save Towa. J
' New Statistics Chief
Dr. Isador Lubin, the economis*
!r-arefull,\' hand-picked by Sccretary
Perkins to become her commission
er of labor statis‘ics. has worked
with Democrats, Republicans and
Progressives in the shaping of leg
islation. _
- He was counsel for the Senate
Manufactures’ . Committee during
‘the LaFeollette -inquiry into nation
al planning and for Chairman Cou
zens and the Education and Labor
Committee. Then he worked with
Wagner of New York on the na
tional reeovery bhill and other labor
and relief measures.
Lubin now has a tremendous job
before him—furnishing up-to-date
and heretofore uncollected data to
guide the recovery, public works
mnd other emergency administra
tions. ;
He was one of Thornstein Veb
len’s students, but never hecame .a
technoerat. '
!‘ Co-administrator’ Charles J.
Brand of the A. A. A. presuma
l‘hl_v knows his farmers.
“Because of the proness of far-
YHE BANNER.HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
mers to misunderstand,” he says.
he hopes they will all be informed®
that they shouldn’'t plow under
any cotton until the government
has accepted their acreage reduc
tion contracts,”
The Postmasters’” New Deal
Roosevelt's desire to place all
postmasters under civil service—
which would add the most import
ant 15,000, to the classified lists—
is entitled to full praise but it
doesn't mean that Republicans
everywhere won't be dumped out
in favor of Democrats.
After examinations, Postmaster
General Farley can pick his man
from the highest ranking three.
Democrats will predominate in
those trios because many Repub
licans feel it's not worth while to
take the exams.
The Humorous, the
Tragic and the
Odd in the News
(By The Associated Prese)
BRU\\’NSV:\LM, Ya. —(AP)—
A. Mocorrow, manager of a groce
ry, approached a customers with
Lnat what-can-I-do-for-you, look.
The customer handed him a sl¢
bill saying:
“One ot your clerks gave me $lO
tco much in 1918 when I bought
a sack of clour.” ’ s
MUSIC HATH CHARMS
TOWANDA, Pa___. A. B, Dei
trich moved into a suppocedly de
serted houre and found an occu
pant—a rive-foot rattiesnake. He
killed it in the rarlcr and found
its mest in an ¢l pump organ.
Several sloughed skins indicated
the reptile haqa inade his home
there ;everal seasons.
THAT BET'S SETTLED
SAN DIGO, Calif— John Odom,
wharfinger at fisherman's pier,
walked the plank because Arkan
sas did not go wet 3 to 1. He had
bet Albert D. Olsen, who Ilike
Cdom comes from Arkansas, that
it would.
Odom, fully clothed and with a
huge ball marked 350 Ibs.” tied
to his neck, walked off a ten foot
piank and splathed to the water
50 feet below the steamer dock.
"he weight turned out to be an
inflated rubber ball. But Olsen
agreed that tuna clipped, by
pamping its bilges on the spot,
evened things up satisfactorily.
YES, THEY LIKE BANANAS
CHICAGO — A tip to New
Yorkers. If they would please the
Italian trans-Atlantic flyers, give
them bananas. A
Erik Dahlberg, Maitre D'}-lotel
at the Drake estimated they put
away 1,000 of them.
“They had them,” he said, “for
breakfast, lunch and dinner.
NO BANANAS, BUT—
NEW YORK— Throngs of wo
men around a hotel where Italy’s
aviators went to dine and rest
while General Balbo and- his of
ficers were being feted at the
Columbia Yacht club. Girls burst
from the crowd and kissed the
youths.
One young flier, however, was
not to be kissed, A scout girl,
meodishly dressed, slipped up be
hind him and threw her arms
around him. Whirling, he pushed
her away and held her at arm’'s
lenght until he was assured that
she would desist.
Augusta, Richmond
County Relief Body
Resignation Given
ATLANTA, Ga.—(AP)—The Au-
tgusta and Richmand county re
’liet administration. has telegraph
lled its resignation to Miss Gay B.
Shepperson, executvie secretary of
the Georgia Relief commission
nd Miss Shepperson says a new
§committee will be set up at an
early date.
Announcement of the resigna
tion of the Augusta and Richmond
county committee was made fol
lowing a meeting of the Georgia
Relief commission at which poli
cies and county and state budgets
were discussed. ¥
The Augusta and Richmond
county committee rendered “valua
ble service to Augusta and Rich
mond county in administering the
R. F. C. funds under the old
law,” Miss Shepperson said.
“The administration of federal
relief funds requires a different
form of local committee in this
instance and the Georgia Relief
committee expresses its apprecia
tion for the services rendered by
the members of the Augusta com
l_mlttee in the past and thanks
them for what they have done and
‘have their assurance of full co
operatlon'm“_continuing relief to
the destitute in that county.” :
Re-Employment In
Ga. to Be Directed
By Cator Woolford
~ WASHINGTON —(AP)-— C(aror
Woolford, of Atlanta, Ga, has been
appointed re-employment director
for Georgia to aid in placing un
emplcyed persons on jobs created
under the national industrial re
covery act.
1‘ The re-employment service wil
‘[laf't only five months, It is al
ready at work, Secretary Frances
Perkins s=aid in making public
names of the state directors, .
In announcing the pollefi"%fim the
new set up, Miss Perkins said
“opportunities for employment on
projects aythorized under its ad
ministratiof shall be eguitably
distributed among qualitied work
ers who are unemployed—not
among those who merely wish to
Trade Agreements to Be Legalized by
Farm Administraters Will Help the
Farmer Get Higher Prices for Crops
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is
anoiner of 2 ser.es of stories
by staff writers of the Associ
ated Press explaining how the
Roorsevelt legislation operates.
BY ROY F. HENDRICKSON
WASHINGTON —(AP)— To en
able the fdarmer to get more of the
money the consumer pays for his
food is an objective of trade agree
ments which administrators of ‘the
farm adjustment act are author
ized to legalize.
Producers, processors, distribu
tors and handlers of any farm pro
ducts from peanuts to prunes can
appy for an agreement,
In it they can fix minimum prices
to be paid the farmers as well as
the amount which the wholesaler,
the retailer and the consumer must
pay- -
They can agree to discontinue
price cutting and other competi
tive practices such as the payment
of rebates to favored customers,
the distribution of premiums and
the offering of discounts. They can
agree on standards for any pro
duect and limit the number of types
which may be sold.
After a public hearing, Secretary
Wallace is empowered to put the
agreement into effect and the in
dustry covered by it is exempted
from prohibitions of the anti-trust
laws. He can terminate it at any
time.
It is not necessary that all indi
viduals or concerns in the industry
favor the agreement. Wallace can
require that all observe it through
the power he has to grant or with
hold licenses to operate.
He has announced that th's will
be employed in fluid milk market
‘ng agreements, the first of which
he expects to approve soon. The
licensing is automatic, no applica
tion for a visible document will
be necessary.
"A proclamation will s‘'mply be
issued notifying the industry that
it is licensed.
Any concern violating the provis
dons of the agreement then can be
“unlicensed”” A concern operating
after it has been informed it no
longer is licensed is subject to a
f'ne of §I,OOO a day.
The authority to arrange agree
ments extends to foreign countries,
Negotiations are now underway
for a sugar agreement to which
representatives of Cuban producers
=nd distributors expect to be par
ties. Under this proposal, the Am
erican sugar market would be split
up among the chief sources of
supply, Cuba, Puerto Rico, the
Fhilippines, Hawaii, the Virgin Is
lands, and American cane and beet
sugar growing areas providing
eac¢h with a definite quota which
would ‘he sold in this country.
It*is possible under she act for
irdustries located in this country
to zone their marketing areas.
Packers, for instance, who now
TO PEOPLE WHO WANT SOMETHING FOR NOTHING '
There are some things we refuse to do to sell a car. We like sales,
but fair-dealing and the confidence of our customers are desirable, too. \
For one thing, we refuse to poison anyone's mind against another make -
~ aof car. We know what our car is and what it will do, and we are ready -
to tell you about that. But to imply defects in another car is not
our business.
We have done our utmost to encourage intelligent buying of motor cars
by showing purchasers how to protect their own interests. All that a good
producer asks is a customer who knows quality when he sees it. An s
intelligent purchaser will speedily conclude that only a bad product
requires bad sales methods. } : ;
: We refuse, also, to adopt the role of tricky trader—-that is, pre=
tending to offer you a larger trade-in allowance, and taking it away from =
you in some other way. Ford trade-in values are high, but we do not make
fictitious allowances in order to get a sale which may be otherwise
disadvantageous to the buyer. Our dealers take used cars upon a system
of values, not by haggling or barter.
In this world no one gets something for nothing, although there are »
‘many ways of making people think that they do. The sure way to get value
for value is, first, by being yourself willing to deal on that basis,
and second, by dealing with a concern that has no other policy. !
: We refuse to keep dinning in your ears that the Ford V-8 is the best,
most economical, lowest-priced car. That is claimed for several cars,
Obviously it cannot be true of all. There comes a point where claims and
adjectives and all advertising hysteria disappears in its own fog. Per-=
sonally, I prefer facts.
We say the new Ford V-8 is‘'the best car we have made. '
¥ We say that our g-cylinder car is as economical to operate as any
lower number of cylinders.
' We say that we have always been known as the makers of good cars and
that the many good, well-balanced qualities of our present car places it
at the head of our line to date.
Anyone wishing to do business with us on these principles will find
our word and the quality of our product to be A-l. What we say about ,
econony, operation and durability vill stand good anywhere.
: :
/luly 17th, 1933 M :
have salesmen covering similar
routes daily could agree that one
would have the exclusive right to
sell meats in one area, another in
other areas.
The theory of this authority is
that it would make possible a sharp
reduction in sales and distributior
costs, :
I A sea alrport school was recently
opened at Jamaica, N. Y.
Borrowed cars prove
Gulf-lube cuts oil costs 28'2%
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6 BORROWED CARS test four of America’s leading brands of 25¢ motor el e ook
oils—and every car brings in the verdict “Gulf-lube lasts longer!”’ N
- gy . »
America’s greatest
x e i s
'2s¢ motor oil
THE Contest Board of the American Auto
mobile Association recently put 4 famous
25c¢ oils “on the spot” : 3 5
¥ One after another,’these famous oils were
put in 6 borrowed cars—and tested for 4 days,
12 hours a day, on the Indianapolis Speedway.
7229 new?! GULF-LUBE™ voroncn
|
{ . ®
Semi-Finals to Be .
Pl Friday i
ayed Friday in
| C.
| ity Net Tourney
| Rain prevented playing of the
‘}quzn'tm'-flnuls in the city-wide ten
nis singles tournament here Wed-
Inesday, and the final matches werei
!pushed up to Saturday at‘ternoon‘
lon the University courts. |
| Miss Mary Wakefield was to
meet Roy Minor in the quarter
finals Thursday afternoon; Kugene
| Mallory was to play Joe V\'iokliffe:]
|Ed Hodgson was scheduled to play
When the figures were averaged, here was
the amazing result—Gulf-lube went 28%:% far
ther before a quart of oil had to be added. It beat
every oil in every car!
Switch to Gulf-lube! You'll buy less oil:
You’'ll pay less for repairs—for the oil that
lasts longer is a better lubricant. Get Gulf-lube
‘at any Gulf station! ‘
@ 1933, GULF REFINING CO., PITTSBURGH, PA,
[Mason Williams, and Gena Collier,
|was to battle Ed Southérland. =
Semi-finals will be played ¥rl«
day at 4 p. m. on the University
|courts, with the following match=
' es:
Winner of Wakeford-Minor match
|versus winner of Mallory-Wicklifte
’igame; winner of Hodgson-Wil
|liams match versus winner of Col
|ifer-Southerland match.
|| At an ea’rly age, giris of the
i['bangi trife, of Africa,, insert
| small wodoen dises in their lips
|and gradually increase the size of
| these dises until, at maturity, a
lprizp beauty .has lips a foot in
diameter.
PAGE FIVE