Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
.- THE
| OMNIBUS
‘|| A FREE RIDE FOR )
| + EVERYBODY 1
@"d-.fldor\ Opens
% - Hospital Here
Jfl},he apnouncement that Dr. W
_,‘s: i MecLendon is opening a veter-
Binary hospital in Athens will be
f‘kg’l"eelted with delight by many Ath
" enians, The new hospital is lo
%ca“d in the building formerly oc
cupied by Strain’s Hatchery on the
' Princeton road. Dr. McLendon has
cometo be something of a mentor
in matters that pertain to animals,
and up unil last June when the
hospital at the College of Agricul
ture was abolished by the Board
of Regents he had treated many
and varied animals for many and
varied disease and troubles. Fre
‘qufintly pet owners took their pets
- to'thim to be kept while they were
_out of town, and a sick animal was
" almost automatically taken to him.
. He has treated practically every
sory of animal from horses and
ecows to a heron which was
brought to him with a broken leg.
The leg mended and the heron was‘
returned to the young lady who
found him. 'The young lady then
let him fly away, with the pleasant
feeling of having done more than‘
her good turn for that day.
“Reely! Y’doan
S’y So, D'ye?”
The approaching debate between
the University of Georgia and
Cambridge which will take place
¥riday night reminds us of an in
ecident which occured here some
time back. The occasion was the
§vm of an Englishman to one of
‘the swankier families who put on
E:z no end, my dear! One young
lady asked to meet him was very
‘much impressed with his wierd
‘pronounciation of the word: *“High
ball’ He dropped the “h” and it
‘was quite alarming to hear him
speak about drinking *“ ighballs”
‘since it sounded exactly like “eye
‘palls.” This young lady went back
‘home and thought the remark
‘worthy of repeating. “Mama,” she
said, “do you know what that
funny Englishman said? He called
a ‘eock-tail’ a ‘cock-eye’”!
Remiscences Of A
Hallowe’'en Night
f-“jf" esday night brought back the
ugobd old days. The days when
_anybody under fifteen was a sissy
N ({’mdn‘t dress up and, carrying a
§; pk-o-lantern, run from house to
~ House, frequently stopping in at
those where the nicer folks asked
th ‘n‘fln for some candy and cake.
. This Hallewe’en found more chil
o ey
@mn on the streets than any year
?‘" ¢an remember in the last ten.
And were they active! One bunch
taok the air out of an automobile,
: i .'{,he radiator cap, and left all
ights burning. After they'd
done a pretty thorough job of that
~they connected the hose a forget
~ful lady had ler¢ in the yard, and
left the water streaming over her
~porch. Then, gleefully, they pro
_ceeded to hang every | bit of porch
_ furniture they could find over the
_ stop signs and telephone poles.
C%r that they smashed a street
~light or two, and called it a night
;; 8, to be a child again!
- Fire-Eaters Spare
~ Time In Athens
. That head isn't exactly right for
_ this paragraph, but it's ali we can
_ think of right now. It's apropos of
- a visit to Fire station No. 1 and
& trip through the battery room
_ there, which convinced us more
~ than ever that firemen do do
~ other things hesides play checkers
»f"fiplain “Slim"” Thompson showed
.u# around, and with the aid of
- faint (very fain!) memories of
~ physics courses we managed to
- cateh a little of what he was talk
- ing about. So we're passing it on
i teo you, since it might prove as in
teresting to some reader as it did
to us. The Jocal fire-alarms, it
seems, are all rin by a private
battery system located in station
house No. 1. Thus should any
thing go wrong with the power
lineg that won’'t keep Athens from
having fire-protection. There's a
special room with more simple
. batteries than we could count in
a 4 short time, and some of them
are in use at all times. In other
. words, one group is used for one
~ set of alarms, while another group
is being charged. Then they swap
: mund~ |
~ More About Batteries
~ And The Fire Alarms :
. .Of course there has to.be some
gort of power to charge the bat
teries with: that power is furnish
ed by a generator which is l()ciit-‘:*d:
the station house also. The
generator, run by power lines rrom‘
L; e outside, stores up enough elec
. ftricity in the batteries for the fire |
. gystem to function without outside
lp for forty-eight lhours. An
" @laborate instrument board tells
4 firemen when tree branches
:;w bothering the wires, “what cir
}‘w’ need charging, and other
it information. There’'s also a!
{ s¥etty bunch of shiny brass in
ge puments which are kept under a
| @laee case. We were told that this
" aparatus function when an alarm
1: was turned in. Exactly how or
“Wha¢ it did was a little beyond
“sur memory of physics, so we.
merely w«x tried to lookl
xf‘ (which usually takes up
_a lot of time). They're glad to]
hNv visitors at the fire station
an | it's a mighty interesting trip
R L e
ENORS. In SLOBES 16 TR %Y h
Back Home in
Smiling Mood
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The cheery smile that hag flashed
on a thousand screens greeted
rcameramen when Dorothy Gish
arrived in New York on the
Berengaria from a KEuropean
trip. Miss Gigh is shown above,
registering homecoming joy.
4 s
tGentry Bros. to
1 Be Here for Twe
‘ Shows Saturday
Animals when thrown together
often form odd attachments. No
where else is this more freguently
demonstrated than with a trained
animal show. Gentury Brothers
Dog and Pony Shows which, come
to Athens Saturday, Nov. 4 bring
nearly 100 trained animals that are
associated in one big family,
In the group is a pig that loves
}to mingle with the trained ponies.
|{He walks at will between theil
feet and none ever thinkg of kick
ing at him. In another case a mon
lkoy has taken a great fancy to a
collie dog. When both are free they
‘p]a_v like two kittens, or the dog
gets exercise racing at full speed
'wlth the monkey as a rider.
Suck a thing as a pig and a goat
;p!aying with each other is indeed
rare, Yet there i a porker tha!
’gets plenty fun wrestling with o
four year old goat that .is his
‘company mate' in the perform
ance. Thus it runs with scores of
cages of affinities between the ed
ucated creatures,
This is the second visit of Gen
try Brothers shows in as manv
years. They are the same as when
last here. Organized in 1888 as the
“children’'s shows” they present a
performance with special appeal tc
the little folk, !
Possibly the most famous dog
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‘ ETTER -
!m‘ Licgerr & MyErs Tosaces Ca. ,
'COTTON GINNING
SHOWS INCREASE
Clarke and Surrounding
Counties Produce 33,-
- 886 Bales This Season
Cotton ginning in Clarke county
up to October 18 this year shows
an increase of 1,314 bales over the
amount ginned during the samec
period last year. Increases in
neighboring counties are also re
ported by the Department of Com
merce which has just completed
the survey. A total increase in this
section of 33,886 bales is shown,
An increase of from 1,093 to 3,-
315 bales was noted idn Banks
county, while Barrow county’ gin
ned 6,982 bales this year to 5968
las; year. Franklin county showed
an increase from 7,937 to 11,180
bales; Greene an increase of from
2,684 to 4,100 bales: Gwinnett more
than a fifty per cent increase from
6,849 to 13,126, and Jackson county
with an increase from 6,673 to 17,-
948 bales. !
Madison ecounty ginned only 17,-
829 bales up to October 18 last
yvear as compared with 13,063 in the
game period this year, Morgan
county reports a\ increase of 2,-
344 with 6,751 bales ginned in the
1932 period and 9,195 in 1983. Oco
nee county’s increase is from 3,813
to 5,900; Oglethorpe's is from 3,978
to 7,593; and Walton aounty baled
14946 bales in the period ending
|October 18 last year as compared
with 15,691 in thé same ‘time this
year, . ¢
—————————pr
RADIO CHAIN QUITS
NEW YORK—(#)—Thd amalga
mated broadcasting system, from
which Ed Wynn, comedian, resign
ed a week ago, ceased operation
at midnight Wednesday night for
the time being. It had been on
the air a little more than a month
No statement was forthcoming
from officials of the network be
yvond the fact that “we did not re-.
sume broadcasting today.” Nelthe:
would they comment on the possi
bility of resuming program distri
bution.
According to German experts|
high-explosive shells are the wmos!
dangerous and gas shells the leasti
dangerous of the various forms of
alr attack. ‘
i AR
lu(‘tnr before-the public, since the
death of his father Rin Tin Tin, is
Kapitan is the added attraction
with the shows and like his fathex
he has made himself famous in
moving pictures,
The show will give two perform
ances on the ecircus grounds on
Hillerest avenue.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
HOLLYWOOD RUNS UP BIG WIG BILL
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You'd look as natural as though the hair were your own, if you
paid for your. toupee as much as Hollywood does for wigs that
make its actors or actresses older and younger. It's a big wig bill,
so to speak, when it runs up to $125,000 a year. Here, for in
stance, are three bewigged examples: tep left, Katharine Hep
burn; top right, Frances Dee, and below, Mary Duncan
By DAN THOMAS
NEA Service Staff Correspondent.
HOLLYWOOD, — Movieland’s
hair »ill is going. up. Last year
Hollywood spent approximately
SIOO,OOO on hair. This year . the
bill will run above $125,000. |
No, this has nothing to do with
the money spent for marcels and
fingerwaves by the" various cellu
loid celebrities. ~The money is
spent in purchase .of hair. In
other words, it's the wig bill,
It’s strange that Hollywood, wfi
its beautiful girls and handso
men, should have to spend to much
on wigs. But it does.
This may be attributed to sev
eral - things. . One is the current
vogue for having players grow old
| during the ' course of a picture.
Another is the costume picture
made from time to time. §till a
third is. the complex producers
thave for engaging a brunet to fill
a blond role and then making her
wear - a-wig.
Consequently, the wig business
runs into big money around the
studios, - mainly because all the
hair must be imported and the
| wigs must. be handmade. There
[ *vas a :time, not so many years
| ago, when wig makers could buy
|all the hair = they wanted right
| here in the United .States. Now
it -is - almest impdssible to. ebtain
hair for the market in this coun
try. :
The bob settled that. So it must
be obtained elsewhere at & cost
}which this year will exceed $125,-
]OOO, according to. Mel Berns, headl
of the makeup department for the
RKO studios. - l
Imported From Europe :
! “Our 'studio alone has spent’
‘more than $5 000 on wigs during
the lasy few months and I Kknow
‘that other studios. are spending
accordingly,” Berns declares.
“Most of the hair now comes from}
Europe. ' i
“Germany and Holland furnishl
most of the blond hair. Italy sup- |
plies the major portion of brunet‘
tresses, except when a particular
ly glistening blue-black shade is
Qesired./ That order usunally is
placed in Spain. ‘ J
“Red hair comes largely t‘rom}
France, as does the rich amber
blone shade.” :
Getting the haijr, however, is
oniy half the battle. The mgking
of the wigs is a painstaking job,!
requiring anywhere from one to|
ten days, depending upon the qual- |
ity of wig desired. And these |
headpieces range as high as s2so[
each in price. v
Each individual hair must’ be!
fastened to the wig’s base and the
wigs must be fashioned to suit
various characteristics of their
wearers. The color of the wig als
has considerable to do with its
price. Xitd l
White hair is the most expen-l
sive, coming to $26 an ounce. Nat
ural red or blond hair brings §ls
an ounce, and l}runet locks can be
bought for $5 an ounce.
Helps Players Get O!'d Fast
The two most general uses of |
wigs today awe for players who,
must age noticeably during the
course of their pictures and for
chorus girls in the elaborate dance |
numbers o§ musical films. ‘
For instance, one of the num
bers in Eddie Cantor’s new pic
ture, “Roman Scandals,” calls for |
all the girls to wear wigs. A num- |
ber in “Footlight Parade” does the[
same and so does a dance in “Fly
ing Down to Rio.” ¢ I
Helen Hayes proved to be a|
boon to the wig business by thel
way she aged in “The Sin of Mad- |
elon Claudet.” That stated the
ball rolling and since then a large
number of actors = and actresses
have gone through this evolution—
‘among them Irene Dunne, Norma
Shearer, Katharine Hepburn, Dor
othy Jordan, John Boles, Mary
Pickford, L.eslie Howard, Colleen
‘Moore, and Spencer Tracy.
It's when the women age that
there is a demand for costly wigs.'
Many of the men can get old sim-‘
ply by touching up their own hair,
But the women can't. l
TYPHOON HITS PHILLIPINE
MANILA, P. I.—(#)—A typhoon
spread death and destruction over
the southern Philippine islands
Thursday.
Six persens were killed and nine
injured in Oriental Negros province
on Visayas island, Governor Se
!gundo Gaston reported to the in--
terior department., Other governors
told of heavy damage and appeal
zed for Red Cross aid.
' Starting Friday
PENNEY’S
Over 300 Pairs
Ladies Shoes
BROKEN LOTS—YET NEARLY ALL SIZES.
PRICED TO SELL!
YOUR CHOICE
- ] 98
OXFORDS — TIES — STRAPS — PUMPS
SERVICEABLE STYLISH FOOTWEAR!
ALL PURCHASES FINAL!
NO EXCHANGES—NO REFUNDS.
PENNEY’S LEAD IN SHOE VALUES!
BE HERE FRIDAY!
].C.Penney Co.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1932
METCRAFT ARRE_O:;_;D
Approximately 12 gallong ol
liguor were found in a Brey roag.
ster belonging to J. Metcraft by
Officers 'Wood, Eidam, angd Cor.
nelison Tuesday afternoon on Clay.
ton street. Metcraft was takep intq
custody, and turned over tg the
couny police where he was releaseq
on bhond, 4