Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
OMNIBUS
A FREE RIDE FOR ‘
EVERYBODY
The Blue Eagle ' |
And the Bible }
. The belief that John the Baptist
in his Book of Revelations was‘
Yeferring to the “Blue Eagle” of
the National Recovery program ofl
our country is gaining wide prom
fnence among some Athenians.
They quote verses 16 and 17 of
Revelations which are as follows:
“And he causes all, both small
and great, rich and poor, free and
pond to receive a mark in their
right hand, or in their foréheads:
“And thag no man might buy of
soll, save he had the mark, or the
name of the beast, or the number
of his name.” ;
Student Courses
At Sunday School
Rev. John Tate, student pastor
of he IMirst Methodist church, an
nounces the following courses to
begin soon in the young people’s
Sunday school department: “Deoes
Seience Leave Room for God?”
taught by Dr. G. H. Boyd, pro
fessor of zoology at the Univer
sity of Georgia; “How Jesus Met
Life's Problems,” by E. H. pixon.{
associate professor of physics at
the University; “International Les
gons,” by Mrs. Pope HHI; “Living
Creatively,” by Rev. 'Tate; local
class s Weaver Bridges; and
“Phe College Student Thinking It
Through,” by Mrs, John Tate. ]
PRI S L e A »
On the Omnibus— 1
I have often wondered if Fredl
Birchmore, sr., the children’s Sun-‘
‘day school teacher, knew just how
powerful he was years ago when '
he stopped his sons from fighting
or quarreling—For the boys were,
prospective boxers and attorneys—
“Billy,’ the eldest son, was one
of the best lightweight boxers the
University of Georgia team had
when he was in college, and he is
‘now practicing law here—l'red, jr.,
a senior ‘in the Lumpkin Law
‘school, is classed as a “yeteran”
‘on the Georgia boxing team, ahd
won more bouts than any other
‘member of the team last year.
Claude Phillips, superintendent of
“Watkinsville schools, will ‘drive
‘miles to attend an all-day singing
with dinner on the grounds. While
hotels have long complaihed about
‘missing towels, ete, Athens soft
drink emporiums ' have recently
‘heen missing spoons and glasses
from their curb service trays—A
‘new adventurous spirit among the
young swains and belles has set
‘them 'to trying o see who can
‘gnitch the most curb service sou
!;;ienirs. Even without Bremau col
lege, Gainesville has become one
‘of the most popular out-of-~town
‘dating places for Athens boys—
throughout the summer when the
famous girls college was closed
~and the Hall county clity had only
_its local blendes and brunettes as
_attractions, a regular caravan of
- Athenians journey to Gainesville
‘on Sundays. Bob Reynolds, whose
%«: ‘Southern style and gossip of
‘the pre-Civil war period long ago
won him the nickname of “Colonel
Boh,” is now being called “Big
Chief Cherokee”—and the students
‘who stay in his Cherokee hotel
¢ull their home “The Wigwam."”
’,ifincoton Church
8. S. Attendance
- An unusually large number of
persons attended the Princeton
Methodis¢ church Sunday sehool
wyesterday. There were a total o 1
2060, while the women's Bible class
had 28 present, and the men had
53. : :
Weiner Roast For
Young Men
A weiner roast will be given by
the Athens Young Business Men’s
club Tuesday night at the- Albert
Davison place, on the Tallassee
road.
Athens Sunday School
?flthm:o, Booms
* The reopening of colléges here
brought forth the largest Sunday
school attendances here in months
vesterday. “A total of about 3,000
persons attended all the Sunday
!.s + The First Methodist
‘ehurch had 689 present; First
Baptist, 644; Prince Avenue Bap
tist, 458; First Christian, 218;
%::mg' Harris Methodist, 200;
Ocenee Street Methodist, 163; Kast
%Athens Bpatist, 158; and West
End Baptist, 125.
Attendance Incresaes ’
In Men, Women Classes
Attendances in the men's and
;;n__mnen’s Bible classes here Sun
day, the various churches reported
; follows: First Baptist, women
Q} and men 98; First Methedist,
?;pmon 79 and men 81; Prince
Avenue Baptist, women 52 and
men 73; Basi Athens Baptist, wo-
~meén 38 and men 26; PFirst Chris
- tian, women 34 and men 19; Oco
_nee Street Methodist, women 20
“and men 29, and West End Bap
" tist, women 16 and men 19.
Contagious Diseases :
Reported Here : :
Three cases of whooping cough,
case of tuberculosis, 1 case of
ent’s' angina, 1 case of meas
, and 1 case of scarlet fever
Wwere reported to the Athens
Eth department during the past
. Dr. Hill Will Read
Church Nominations
\J..';E. L. Hill, pastor of thec
Pirst Presbyterian church will at
end the Synod of Georgia in Grif
in on October 10 and will read
‘the nominations on the afternoon
' Five-year-old whiskey in large
quantities can be made available
1 n six months afier repeal, ae
eording to estimates.
Legend of the Ages Is Shattered As 'raa's “assvrians' now
. 5 » . ARE I AN MINORI
‘Unchanging” East at Last Changes wwo Ove on FRONTIENS
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T — - sv * ,‘gh’ iy s
King Ghazi lof Iraq, at ri ; eA LR
ing (-hgu of Iraq, at right, new sovereign of the glamorous 4 EPUSAL‘EMIMVQ‘. NBAGDAD —
Arabian Nights country. .. . Contrasts of Bagdad are shown *CAIRO \'"‘Mf‘%;hh Oy P
in the photo above, with Ghazi at Jest as crown prince, and his %4 i "‘*‘L“H ”y cati B
father Feisal saluting. - Between them, in flowing desert robes, u,,’ gt k!( mg‘ 6
stands the chief of: the Trag aiv service. . The strategic loca- b ‘{4 & i) g
tion of Bagdad and Traq at the crossroads of east and west. v \"6:\ ~ \
is shown on the map. LR e \
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WASHINGTON, D. C.—O n c e
more, as in the days when Heze
kiah® ruled in Jerusalem, the As
gyrians crop up in the news, When,
under Senmacherib, king of Nine
vah, “the Assyrians came down
like a wolf on the fold,” the He
brew bribes of gold and sliver,
jewels and dancing girls were not
enough to halt the invader. But a
plague broke out among Senna
cherib’s cohorts, all “g{eum!ng in
purple and gold,” and he return
ed to Ninevah, whose ruined walls
can bhe seen across the river Ti
gris from modern Mosul. Dis
patches report an uprising of As
gyrians in Iraq, s Y
“Poday the ‘Assyrians’ of Iraq
are a Christian minority livihg a
precarious existence along the
frontiers of Turkey, Syria and
Iraff. They are isolated, like their
neighbors, the Armenians, by re
ligion from the Kurds, Turks and
‘Tragis among whom they live”
gays Dr. Maynard Owen Williams
in a communication to the Wash
ington, D. C., headquarters of the
National Geographic Society.
Called “Chaldeans”
“In Baghdad they are called
‘Chaldeans’ and play the part of
rivermen in that Tigris~split cap
ital of the new kingdom of Iraq,
where business is in the hands of
the Jews, and land transport is
borne on the backs of Kurdish
porters. - 2
“During the World war, the As
syrians, hedged about age-old ene
mies, helped the Allies, only to
have the Turkish tide sweep back
Friendship With Roosevelt, Began At
Warm Springs, Lands Ex-Patient Job
CHICAGO.—(#)—When employes
of the Department of Internal
Revenue returned to their desks in
the federal building: Monday there
wis a néw assistant cashier in
their midst—a woman.
No¢ that in most instances that
would have made any ditference,
But in this it did for the woman
was Mrs. Lillian Keating Dono
van and she owed her job, the
first she ever had that paid a
salary, to a friendshipr of three
yvears' standing with President
Roosevelt.
It was just that long ago that
Mrs, -Donovan, .a cripple for 20
years from infantile paralysis, mei
the President and his family at
Warm: Springs, Ga., where : they
have a home. He was governol
of New York then. i :
For a dozen years Mrs. Donovan
had been unable to walk at all and
three years before going to Warm
Springs she said she wrote Mr,
Roosevelt asking him about the
cure there. He replied advising
her to try it, :
“They made me head of the
Polio Crusaders, - an organization
among the patients at the sanitar
ium, whieh raises funds to help
\P-those who can’t afford the treat:
ment,” she sald, “So I was often
at the Roosevelt cottage.” ;
. Then she recalled how she used
{0 be invited to sit in on press
The Fire department was called
to 243 Barrett street Sunday, aft
ernoon to put out a fire in a barn
belonging to Mr. Roadheaver. The
call came at 5:15 o'clock, and the
trucks ' reached the scene in time
to keep the barn from burning
completely up.
The “OM Burng Church” rat
Jacksonboro, South Carclina, was
erected 200 years ago.
California. has- 24,780 registered
beauty experts or cosmetologists,
From three to five tons of old
worn and' soiled eurreney is de
stroyed by the Treasury Departs
meng every day.
A bat, with its cyes covered by;
tape, can still catch inseets in
mid-air. A
. Human hairs ars said to have
an average lfé of 4 to §5 years
to inevitable reprisals. Now Eng
land, whose protege Iraq has heen
views fresh uprising north of the
Mosul oil field with alarm. Even
yet the boundary betwgen Iraq
and Syria has not been defined,
and a local sguable or punitive
action between irregulars may
have grave consequences. Natur
ally people living under mandates
are watching with interest the
levo!ution of Iraq, recently made
independent, and a full-fledged
member of the League of Nations.
“Deep in the heart of Central
Asia the Citroen-Hardt Expedition
found caves at Bazaklik in which
Fuddhist rubber-stamp art had
been superimposed upon Uighur
inscriptions in an' alphabet de
rived from the Syriac, still used
by the Assyrians’ and the parent
'm‘rint for the Mongols and Man
| chus of later years.
Frist Christians
“How Syria’s Churgh of the East
extended its ‘Ynfluencei to’ Merv
and Sinkiang is still a mystery,
l'hut Christianity and Mohamme-
Aanlamnw: awant sactward AOTOSR
danism swept eastward across
Asia almost simultaneously, and
the Nestorian tablet discovered in
Sian, Shensi, shows that by 781
|A. D. Nestorian Christianity, of
| ficially recognized by Imperial De
¢ree in 638, had spread far and
wide through China. One can well
imagine the surprise of Jesuit
| missionaris when they found that
a form of Christianity had pre
ceded them into China by more
than a thousand years.
conferences and the notes she re
celved from President and Mrs.
Roosevelt in answer to her letter
of congratulation after the elec
tion. 3 {
One of her greatest thrills, aside
from.going to ‘work for the’ first
time Monday, came she said when
'she led 30 patients from the san
itarium to the inauguration. Al
‘had cards to a White House re
ception afterwards.
' Mrs. Donovan’s acquaintances
Yn the administration are not lim
ited to the I[President. She met
‘Secretary Woodin once but under
cireumstances that almost swept
her off her feet.
It was while she was p¢ the
sanitarium that she encountered
him registéring at the desk and
promptly buttonholed him for <2
donation, not know_ing-his idenmy
Her surprise when he handed her
a SIOO bill was second only to her
amazement she said when she
learned his identity.
For it seems that he was one
of the directors of the institution
and also one of its generous fi
nanecial patrons. -
Whip whipping créam when cold
to get better results.
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
{ “In the region vghere Kurdigtan
ibreaks away' towat‘fl the Tigris
‘Valley military operations are
‘very difficult and qu&jsh tribes
‘were appealed to réééntly by
speeches in their own tongue
broadecast from ‘loud Speakers in
low-flying planes. A joint force
of British and Iraqi planes saved
an army column trapped & near
Birisia during a campaign against
the Kurdish Sheik, Armed of
Barzan. The whole region is one
conductive to guerilla warfare and
irregular engagements, i
‘When, in the land of Schehera
zade, an Arab king boards the
modern flying carpet to = escape
the terrific heat, or airplanes are
are used .to bombard Kurdish
tribesmen; - indomitable fightes
gince the days of Xenophon, with
radio threats and pleas, it is evi
dent that the ‘unchanged Tast} is
changing. But the lot @of the
Christian minorities along the up
per reaches of the Tigris remains
a problem.
~ “The Assyrian name has persis
ted, although changed in meaning
until it now applies to a small
group of Nestorian Christians, re
lated perhaps to that semi-fabul
ous ‘Prester John' so famous in the
chronicles of medieval travelers.
The modern Assyrians are so lit
tle known that visitors to Asia
are unable to learn in what way
this small group, now threatened
by massacre, has continued its
life and identity among so many
'enemies,” L
Meat Curing School
To Be Held Monday
In Macon Auditorium
MACON, Ga.—The fifth annual
Meat Curing school will be held in
the Municipal auditorium at Ma
con, on. October 11, 9:30 to 4:30.
This school is held annually undér
the auspiceés of ‘the Georgia Ice
Manufacturers association, work
ing in connection with the Georgia
State Agricultural college, and
state and county demonstrators
throughout the state. There is no
charge. :
The meeting will open with an
address by John Cumbee on “The
Proper Handling and Curing of
Meat by Refrigeration,” followed
by an address on “Suggestions as
to the Proper Pork Production,”
delivered by - Dr. J. M. Sutton,
state veterinarian. After this the
floor will be opened for discussion.
H. W. Caldwell, who operates
several meat curing plants in con
nection with the ice industry in
different sections of the South, is
chairmar of the meeting. Other
inforr atien about the school may
be secured from Willshire Riley,
711 Glenn street, Atlanta. z
You are a little taller when yon
arise in the morning than you are
when you go to bed at night., =
. FOU i
i o Y |
{ . )
;Aufo Mishaps Account
| for 8 of 14 Deaths in
| South Over Week-end.
l et f
| ATLANTA "~ {#) - Automobile |
{mi:\thaps accountea for eight of the|
i fourteen accidental deaths mpm-t-j
@ml in the south over the week-end. |
: Georgia’s death lis¢ included ()r-f
;mndo J. Wilson, Sparta, garagel
lm;’m. killed in an automobile col- |
lision, a Negro killed by an auto
lmnhila here, and Robert Buck, 14
|and Otis Easley, 9, drowned in the|
iSnv:mnah river at Augusta. Ster- '
lling Jackson Ellison, 40,.died after
i w p
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it
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#si ‘RSB T & el i s W :
2 .4 oo S N . 3 Rforeneread N SO, SR - R ek .
““No more of the old kind for me PT A & P’ o S B &?0 R
R PR o Rl R ooy R PR SR
y bE b M oSO R s 3 N
.. . after owning a Plymouth . P iz e X | G g
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S e e T @
Nl NETY-FIVE news-stands w'ant eagerly “RAIN OR SHINE, "says Joe Preher, “I've got tobe “] HAD A LO®of:biake trouble omy oid cor.
for Joe Preher to come rushing around on time! And I make at least 600 stops a day!” But not any more. Hydraulic brakes are great!"
every timea new edition hits the street. He’s TrETOTEE MT e )
got to make time...keep a split-second Pt o e T e s, W 0
schedule...slam on brakes 600 times a day. Biimoaw i e eSO o Spne Ww ioo
Working his brakes so hard on his former fivg\q BEa .0N ey 2 i ?\p A e
car cost him plenty for adjustments and re- Eor SRR 8 b 2 i SR e g s RO
s 2 2 ¥ o Rsß 8 . o A% gomn 5 e b 33 s’;; S N e
lining. But with Plymouth’s hydraulic g:fr-:f'r-:ir-'-'-;.:::;:,a._;;;:, i R IR SISy RS
brakes, it's a far different story. They're al- R h Eas % 7 b
waysequalized.And brakeliningslastlonger! 2 o o RGN Re e . %| B
Brakes are not the only thing that must £ ?‘ : ff‘i 3’};4 oI e We s
stand up on Joe Preher’s cars. For he puts eRS R S ~'.'§,:§f\" o SR Eol F T
50,000 miles a year on the speedometer. 'c? °§<§ e eey g
His car is still “tightasa drum™acl2,ooo | = g 4 A S o SRR
miles. Floating Power engine mountings G s i kT
helped do that. It stands to reason, too, o E TN . P R
i = P % b R RR e e 2 s Ps o 7
you’ll avoid rattles with a welded safety- . & g{;z.;;';i_; ;’/ & IO S R
steel body that has no joints to loosen. G -0b =4 oj‘ P e
Look at the things that make a car stand by . E --tf:;_.":’ 53?2 A e o B
up when you look at ‘“all three’’ low-priced o T »A% o) ; T S
cars—and we think you’ll pick a Plymouth. ém,j b mvfl,( . < § 3 TR v
i e e D g . S e
STANDARD MODELS priced from $445 to s§slo; DeLuxe G p : . R g R S ey
Models, $495 to $595. Prices are subject tochange with- *‘l GO PLACES in a hurry, but I've never had an 9Cdd°°t': : Remmn
out notice. All prices F. O. B. Factory, Detroit, Mich. If T do, I'm protected plenty by this safety-steel body! R ”_"I:
] FLOATING POWER 5 o
CANDIUP FO.B FACTQRY, DETROIT 1
w @ SAFETY-STEEL BODY {
¥ -~
4 HYDRAULIC BRAKES :
WE DO OUR PMART . p
BG TO-YOU, /
Both Old and New Subscribers May Get
The Libertys: § With
Great ' “{‘é’ ; WOMAN’S
‘pF/ e
American _"" ) WORL. D
e o |
Weekly | = \1 1 year each
Here's How [oinel ok, The BumnerHerid and both magasines devere
ready be one of our readers, simply authorize us to continue delivery of The Banner-Heraldl‘t an
other 12 months in combination with the magazines. For the 2 magazines and The Banner-Herald
you pay 60 cents down and 55 cents a month to the carrier boy for 12 months. Simple, isn’t it?
Here’'s What You Get!
LIBERTY (Weekly) .... .12 Months 2 ALL THREE
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he was found injured on the rail
road track near Columbus.
| James Brock, 8, died Sunday
’rrom injuries received near Phenix
'City, Ala,, Saturday. :
i In Florida a posse gought the
|driver of an automobile which kill
|ed Miss Mahel Laing, 20, and Miss
Ernestine Laing, 22, sisters, as
they walked along a highway neai
'Havanu Saturday night. |
| —_— 1
g More twins are now being born.]
| Biologists, studying the -causes for|
| multiple births, believe that in a
| |
,few hundred years twin births wil)
ibe quite common, :
| et
l Sportsmen are usiné kites thal!
woar and dip like birds to trainl
.';their dogs to retrieve fallen game.
HENRY SUZZALO DIES r
SEATTLE— (Ar) —Dr. Henry‘l
Suzzai., president of the Carnegie's
Foundation for Advancement otl
Teaching and a férmer president !
of the University of Washington, |
died at the Seattle General hos-1
| pital Monday from a heart attack. ]
He was 38 years old. i
Scrub wicker chairs with warm!
water and soap. t
|
Gl i
|
Remember that the proper use |
of Thedford’s Black-Draught
for constipation, tends to !
leave the bowels acting regularly. l
A fine, old reliable medicine Not |
expensive, Insist on THEDFORD’S. I
“
THE BANNER-HERALD.
ATHENS, GA.
I hereby agree to subscribe to, or extend my present subseription for
The Banner-Herald for twelve months from this date, and also for the
following 2 magazines:
LIBERTY (Week1y)......... .1 year
’
WOMAN’S WORLD. . . .. .. ..1 year
I am now paying 60 cents and agree to pay your regular carrier 55
cents per month for twelve months. I fully understand that this con
tract cannot be cancelled without immediate discontinuance of the mag
azine subscriptions.
e BRI R I RMEPEIR. ot isaane
APEADL, NO-ov.iciiiorar il MOWB. . oi. iovmeisivnnis s Btte ... oi.ob.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1933
L T LRMBER 28,
The sale of 700,000,000
bees netted Alabama bee prog
$250,000 this year, -
—_—
Eases Headache
- In 3 Minutes
also neuralgia, muscular acheg
iand pains, toothache, earache,
periodical and other pains dya
to inorganic causes. No nar.
!cotics. 10c and 25c packages,