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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1934)
MONDALMAROH 26, 1934 ..., The Best Salesman Yoiu Can Hire Is A Banner-Herald Want Ad :-: ADVERTISING FOR CLASSIFIED Daily Rate Fer Word for Consecutive Insertions One Day. per wordl. ... AR Minimum Charge......... .40 Three Insertions f0r...... 1.00 NO ADVERTISEMENT will be taken for less tnan 40c. Ad vertisements ordered for lir regular insertions take the one-time rate. Name and ad dress must be counted in the pody of. the advertisement. [F AN ERROR Ig made, The gßanner-Herald is responsible tor only one incorrect Inser ton. The advertiser should notity immediately ‘if Any cor rection 18 needed. ALL dscontinuances must be made in pergon at THE BAN NER-HERALD O FFICE, or py letter. Phone discontinu ances are NOT valid. ALL WANT ADS are payable {n advance. - 75 VANE -#8 - Business Service 1 S sttt s oSS G IMPROVE YOUR BEAUTY with our special facials that produce real charm, prices $1 to $1.50. Jdeal Beauty Shop, ,Basement Sou. Mutual: Bldg., Phone 661, LOOK AT YOUR HAT — Others see it. Have it cleaned and re blocked like new for 65c (NRA price). New-Way Dry Cleaners, 197 Prince, Phone*l7Bl. ol il Bl S wooD AND COAL — Dry wood and best grade coal at money saving prices. Crawford Mat tress & Coal Works, 446 Hoyt Street, Phone 157. ______...—————-———-——,"'-_-——"———" AWNINGS — Properlgy installed awnings arve an asset to your business and the appearance and comfort of your home, Star Mat tress and Awning Co., 547 Madi son avenue, Phone 9147, e Wanted: Miscellaneous 5‘ BOOKS FOR CHILDREN — We constantly receive new books for younger folks. Come in and make selections while @ stock is large. The McGregor Co. Special Notices 4 WANTED—Sewing, dressmaking;' satisfaction guaranteed; prices reasonable. Mrs. Sué Franks,‘ 11:30 Boulevard. Automobile Service 7! USED TIRES—See us -before you buy. We sure have the bargains in nearly all sizes. Stop around at Athess Battery Co., Clayton and Thomas streets. ot l EMPLOYMENT Male or Female Eelp\ 14 WANTED—Two soda jerkers and two waitresses, with some ex perience. Apply Costa’s. - FOR SALE —LD T Miscellaneoug for Sale 14 ——— i TRV R FOUR-WHEEL trailer .. for sale, With good tires. Apply T. W. Chesnutt, at Pete Petropol's store. —_— FOR 'SALE—Gantt Cotton Plant ers and Fertilizer Distributors, are best by test; wuse Gantt Planter for better stands with fewer seed; saves chopping also. ihristian Hardware Eroad AS_t__.___ FOR SALE — Sherwin-Williams Paints are cheaper, they go far ther, last longer, ook better longer than ordinax ~gtém.g We still have large mfiia sought op before the advance and can give 4 nice saving on your Paints, Brushes, Oils and Calsomines. Christian" Hardware, Broad St. ——_7an Hardyare, Broad Bt. Miscellaneous for Sale 14 ——e o OTERUE TR FIRST EDITION of “An Old Fash boned Girl,” by Louise Alcott. fésk to see this one. Payne Book 0. — e FOR SALE—Barbeeue stand, best location in town.™® Other business 'ason for selling, Apply Colon: 4l Bar-B-Q, Thomas and Wash ngton streets, et ————————————— SEE THE NEW Pull-egelosed gear' ‘No, 7 McCormick-Deering Mower. SBS Qelivers it. Get full Iformation from Jos Shepherd, Purina Feed Store, 383 Kast _ Washington . y FOR RENT 5 — TV . Furnished Roomg 17 iy TSNS TR "00MS FOR RENT at Miss Bla ksheay's home, 165 Willcox Street. Phone 1648 at night or %1 Extension 49 in daytime. —_°liSion 49 in daytime, FoR RENT—Apartment, 3 rooms. km'hf-n-.no and bath. 721 South Milleagea Avenue, Phone 18-W. l ~~_"F TiVenite, ‘Phome 18-W,. FOR RENT _yy home, 695 Bou| levarg Apply Fowler's Garage, X Phone 9295, B, 0. Fowler. For RENT-4Sis room house, 1147 Prinee Avenue. Mrs. B. A. Crane, Phone 582, e PHONE 491 | For Quick Service! Wlring - Momrgg,?]ifl Lamps - u%fiit : - 133 N, Jackson St. ; NOTICE We will not pay any check drawn on us and signed' by H. A. (Hulan A.) Snyder. NEW WAY DRY CLEANERS Athens, Ga., March 23, 1934, eil T TR A 1934 LICENSE . TAG .WILL SAVE YOUR DOG FROM THE CITY POUND. 5 WANTED Highest Price Paid For Old Gold and Silver J. BUSH, Jeweler ° 165 E. Clayton Street By Authority of U. S. Treasury. DR. T. E. JAGO Veterinarian Cffice at Moore’s Stable 163 West Clayton Street Treats All Domestic Animals Home at Mrs. Fred Whitohead’s, 185 Hull Street, Phone 1038. " COTY'’S Combination’s Here! Face Powder and Perfume 98¢ REID DRUG CO. MILLEDGE PHARMACY DR. W. F. McLENDON VETERINARIAN Office and Hospital on Princeton Road at City Limits Accommodations for All Animals . —~PHONES— / Office, 251 Residence, 194-W Cabbage Plants and Onion Plants — 100, 15¢ Garden and Flower Sceds All Kinds Phone 1066 CITIZENS PHARMACY ATTENTION! Bring Your Next Hat to MASTER HAT . CLEANERS 156 Colege Avenlue Next to Blue Ribbon Barber Shop MONEY TO LOAN! Let Us Refinance, Repair or Build You a New Home MUTUAL BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION SPECIALS 50c Spearmint Tooth . Paste for only 10c 10c Jergens Soap for 5¢ MOON-WINN DRUG Co. WIND DAMAGE PROTECTION . COSTS VERY LITTLE JESTER DR. W. M. BURSON VETERINARIAN 1302 Oconee St.—Phone 831 Residence Phone 1674 READ BANNER-HERALD WANT ADS. SUNDAY AMERICAN, DAILY GEORGIAN, COSMOPOLITAN, GOOD HOUSEKEEPING—AII Dzlivered for only 23c a week. Pay the Carrier Weekly. THINK OF IT—These two great Magazines cost you on|y 3 cents a week. No Advance Payment. LEE C. BOWDEN—PHONE 2020-}. ¢ . SCATTER SUNSHINE WITH » GREETING CARDS SEE OUR LINE OF BIBLE AND HYMNALS SUITABLE FOR EASTER GIFTS THE McGREGOR CO. TAKE A TRIP THROUGH NATURE’S WONDERLAND! LOWEST FARES IN HISTORY! MAGNOLIA AND CYPRES CARDENS NOW IN BLOOM AND MORE BEAUTIFUL THAN EVER BEFORE! Call or Write for Information SOUTHEASTERN STAGES, Inc. W. T. Sullivan, Dist. Pass. Agent 170 College Avenue—Phone 626 GOLFERG AEADY FOR PINEHURST TOURNE Leaders in Augusta Meet Begin Play in North and South Open Tuesday. PINEHURST, N. C.—{(®)—Folf's touring brigade of professionals trooped into Pinehurst trooped into Pinehurst today' for the last big stand of the winter campaign, the North and South Open to be play ed tomerrow, Wiednesday anad Thursday . ’ s With a few exceptions, all the leading figures of golf in this country will participate in the tournament, 3 n Bobby Jones will be here, but not as a competitor. The Tformet worl’'s champion was expected to play in an exhibition match with Horton Smith, winner at Augusta vesterday as the: Masters’ tourna ment there ended, and Tommy Ar mour, of Chicago. The exhibition will be a test of the new golf ball with a hypoder mic injection designed to give ad ditional distance. Two of the usual figures in this toutnament, Joe Kirkwood and Gene Sarazen, will be missing. Kirkwood won the North and South last year with a record breaking 276, but this spring he and the P, G. A. champion are off en a South American jaunt, The tournament beging with 18 holes tomorrow. A second 18 will he plaved Wednesday and 36 on Thursday . Most of the players in the An onsta tournament, including Craie Woed. of Deal. N. J.. who finished second. and Billv Burke, of Cleve and. and Paul Runyan. of Whits Plains, N. Y.. who tied for third are entered in the North and South. A few got in last nizht from the Georgia city and others arrived today. 3 NEW HATS—-MAYBE! ORLANDO, Fla.—(f)—Treasurer Joe “Gilleadeau's latest scheme to pep up the Brooklyn Dodgers may run into money before the fall. He's promised every member of the seam a new hat every. time they® beat their hated rivals, the New York Giants. 1 R i O /° } ° OQ.@‘ i ° eQ"./o T ok, S gy T B , o 7 | NS A OH > & Q £ “:v .'.’?QQ ‘ od /I@2& . .".. °$ ¢° i&° .0..0- . & P L e 4\6 q\"t"oe"cQ’%:'.g-"\“"q @. @-}&‘s&\’? Q'qq"q@"‘ S P 8 et & RS A "# ® e & 7 o £ B QY > @ \* A & « 72 {‘o o & S & r/o“v"-@ > 20 & v N/ & 585 * /O &/ &9 W ® THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA WHAT AMAN! . . . W/ "WALTER J, 4 % : h\ : 7 . w RABBIT” B Y VRS @1" .'.‘;' i g BEGINS HIS TWENTVI ~THIRD by «i,a/ PP YEAR IN MAJOR BASEBALL. AT-TiE e v KEYSTONE SACK FoR THE ‘}7 i AT 43, HERE ARE FEW BETER , SO |NFIELDERS IN THE OLDER CIRCUIT..» .\\\ HE 1S HITIING AS WELL AS ENER ; AND HiS FIELDING STEADIES THE e *\ YOUNESTERS ARDUND HIM, ?'éxl*; \ %}\ ; <f¢%fi’? w‘i}&x@; 3 z { .)/"‘ D// K 7 G | &7 \\ 4 LT R Z i “" b e/% //;//// ; Ll ok - \ 2P — Pas WAS A MEMBER &7 \> — / > ' *fi OF THe OLD ‘;, B =T \fifi BOSTON BRAVE SRR, ZA_ MIRACLE %I’4 RS e g R G N | S R 20 KRaz @ Horton Smith’s 284 Wins Augusta Golf Tournament Bobby Jones Is Tied for 13th Place, 10 Strokes Behind Pace-Setter. By ALAN GOULD : Associated Press Sports Editor AUGUSTA, Ga. —(®— Now that it's all over and the great Robert Tyré Jones, jr., "knows “ what _ it feels like to come back axxd‘tta'kg it squarely on his golfing chim, the explanation is quite qléalt today why the renowned Georgian trailed an even dozen professionals’ in competition for the first time in his career, finishing with a 294,l ten strokes behind the winner, Horton Smith, in the $5,000 first annual Masters' Invitation tournament. ; Jones not only mislaid “Calamity Jane,” the putter with which he stroked his way through the great est golf championship = winning streak of all time, but he lost his putting touch along with it. Analysis of Jones' four rounds shows a striking reversal in put ting form, even though he was in consistent to the lasi. Whereas he took 36 and 38 putts, for his first Itwo rounds of 76 and 74, he used up only 30 and 32 putts on his closing two reounds, on each of which he carded V 2. On this basis, he wasted enough strokes on the greens during the first 36 hole' to have wiped out the ten-stroké margin by whien he trailed Horton Smith. YAy v From tee to green, Jones was the shot making eguai of any player in the tburnament and the superior of most with the wood or long iron. Horton Smith’s victory was#as popular as anything ocould have been with the strongly partisan galleries, short of the hoped-for conquest by their idol, Jones. It was especially dramatic, not only because Horton set the pace from the start but because the Missouri an was the last to beat Jones in open competition. Smith won - a sensational scoring battle from Jones exactly four vyears ago at Savannah. . : Enjoy Spoils The professionals here enjoyed the spoils of their biggest victory over the Georgian. The last time he even came close to being‘so de cisively defeated was in the Na tional Open at Oakmont in 1927, where he wound up in 11th place Smith’s winning 284, made up of consistent rounds of 70-72-70-72, was worth $1,500, on® of the big- gest cash awards of the winter. Horton avoided the possibility of a tie with Craig Wood of Deal N. J., by sinking a 10-foot putt for a birdie on the 17th hole of the final round, played Sunday in cold wea thér. Wood fipished with 71-74- 69-71—285, and collected SBOO. Tied for third place were Bil Burke of Cleveland, former Open champion, and@ young Paul Runyan of White Plains, N. Y, the tour nament favorite. ¥ach had 286 and won $550 apiece. Others 'who finished in @ the money, all just ahead of Jones, were: fifth, Ed Dudley, Augusta, 288, $400; sixth, Willie MacFarlane Tuckahoe, N. Y., 201 $300; tieo for seventh, Harold McSpaden of |Kansas City, Al Espinosa of ‘Akron | Ohio, Jimmie Hines s& Bimber Poinf,r N. X. and MacDonald Smith of Nashville, each 292 and $175: tied for eleventh, Mortie Du | tra, Detroit, anqd Al Watrous, Bir mingham, Mich., each 2§2 and SIOO. % - . By Art Krenz BASEBALL GOSSIP FROM BIG LEAGUE TRAINING CAMPS "~ BILOXI,; Miss.”— (P == Ossle Bluege has scoped up from the ground and snatched out from ‘the air some new arguments to con vince Joe Cronin why a veteran is better third base protection for the Nats. Yougg Cecil Travis, who was an nounced by -Cronin as the Wash iagtonv Senators’ third baseman for the duration of the training. season, watched Sunday from the bench while Bluege showed in agile fashion what years of exper ience have done for him. : Bluege, who now wears Spec tacles, gave his show during the Nats’ exhibition game with the Biloxi Browns; a 17 to 0 affair for Griffith’s boys. JEWISH STAR FOUND MIAMI BEACH, Fla—(&)—New York baseball teams have beer seeking a star Jewish player for wears and the world champion Giants think they've got one now. He's Phil Wientraub, 25-year-old woungster - who clc?lts the ‘ball TRADE LOOKS BETTER TAMPA, Fla—(#)-—Some of the home town fans looked aghast when the Cincinnati Reds sent Red Lucas to the Pirates for Adam Comorosky and Tony Piet. Now it is becoming more evi dent the trade was one of the best ever pulled off by Cincinnati. Sunday when the Reds trounced the Athletics, 5 to 1, Comorsoky got three clean blows in four trips to the plate, and Piet scored two of the runs. A 7 ROOKIES' [ @ YANK ROOK HURLER COMES UP WITH GOOD RECORD (By NEA Service.) When they notified Harry Smythe of the Martinez, Ga., Smythes, that the Yanks had w . bought him for R R their pitching : m)\ staff, he threat s B cned to shoot G M his informant : if the news S wasn’t true. ,S:,v-,‘;,,:.:;. ;i,:‘ But he didn't e e Rdo any shooting, i . W for he's now in iA4 it h e Yankees A WO 4. e ..f:f‘:‘i'_«;:::' camp, shooting e *MV over _high, fast '”,'3 ones, Wwith his gk o left arm. The o o southpaw comes h; ; h up <« from Balti : Smythe more, in the In ternational loop, where he established quite a rec ord in 1933. He turped in 'a form sheet showing 21 wins against only eight losses, . and - that record makes . Joe McCarthy' think he has a winning pitcher in Harry— who I 8 rather old for a rookie, being 30. MAX BAER PREPARES FOR CARNERA FIGHT Challenger Cets Down to Serious BusSiness, Far | From Night Clubs. ' GLOBIN'S LAKE TAHOE, Cillif.“ | —(P)—TFar from night clubs and bright lights, Max Baer started ‘Monday the serious business of preparing for his heavyweight title bout with Primo Carnera. The curly-haired . Califernian, |4wh'o will meet the giant Italian in New York June 14, opened his lungs to the crisp mountain air, tramped knee deep through snow and whacked away:at pine trees’ with an axe. Baer will stay here two weeks 1o preparve to train. There will be ino boxing, but lots of mountain | weighs 236 pounds, 30 more than when he knocked out Max Schmeling st year. - His handlers said intensive training - will start in the Rast, ‘probably at Atlantic City, by May 1, | BABE CLOUTING BALL ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.—(P)— Babe Ruth continues to amaze the experts with his hitting exploits in the Grapefruit league. He has cracked out six home runs in seven games, driven in 16 runs and scored ten. He is batting at better than a .390 eclip. | et vooek vt SNSRI 0 g SURS TITON ' | =\ A e e N N STRICKEN AQ) ) : ie N "::f“'m R % m&?%i’:@ l;:t;:";; iy R 06 o\ W e R e T R T (TN R e R e b T R N R N _‘ eSN Ts v e R R e )S5 ) ) S S e T 4 | Wen oe sy (ol > - N - | ’ iy, 13 . . @ » O ) : ’ — ) ) v ) ) ) - Tuesday March 27--5%% - Tuesday Marc -12 ML > SHOWING FOR FIRST TIME! ) - “THE BIG DRIVE” D . Official Covernment War Films they dared not let you see until » now! See the first actual hand to hand trench fighting scenes , ever shown! You’re there with the official cameraman! | A complete record of the World War on every front. Eight na | tions helped to make this picture—official cameramen died at | their posts to film it—the unforgettable, actual record of Glory | and Hell! ! 5 0, s | m | Tl Presented in Athens under Allen Vi & ~ R. Fleming Post Auspices and } N/ L e ™ Proceeds go to Playground Fund 3 .‘, L to Complete Public Park for Ath- NS ens’ Kiddies.and Grown-ups! ‘ ~" 4,‘5.-”‘ p - . -———-——-———-—-——-——— : x Z ‘,. > Yo] %, - AL NS * A NN = : - l"-"" DY : ; Nk :V » ‘ 3 ‘ j < A := — ‘ Nt ‘ g 4 M I L 2D 7! N :MW’ ' * e ciapy CHILDREN 15¢ - Ad . | MISSION-ApuLTS 35¢ ? oy i™| Y . o i | M:'—Pg @ fim TN \ | T SS~TABLE TENNIS Aty i i Ll * 4 foo HERE ARE PRIMARY RULES OF GAME BY JIMMY DONAHUE T NEA Service Sports Writer \’3 Did you know that; i All tablg tennis serves must be made behind the end of these ” eourt-~in- other words, the paddle must strike the ball at some point’ before it crosses end line of the table, and bounce on the server's side = before clearing the net? . If the ball fails to strike or be struck by the server’s paddle in any = i *u, —‘-----.-.Ns ,‘ S \. - - G b & - -, o j‘ s\\ - ~'~~~ ; A 1;; { e Bot Mo L I ‘s T acknowledged attempt at serving a p‘oim i§ scored for the oppo \ Any player touching the net with his body or anything he whilg the ball is in play loses a point; if he moves the playfhg surface of the table while the ball is in play he drops a marker, and if' he touches the table with his free hand while the ball i§ in play he j a point to his opponent? : L These are three points not generally ~ known to casual p f’”: Knowledge of them will save you the loss of points in matches with more experienced paddle pushers. o Above is the improper way to serve—the ball is hit when " the paddle has passed over the end of the table; below is the” proper way—the ball is hit behind the end of the table, 3 BROWNS LOOK GOOD WEST PALM BEACH. Fla—(#) —Having swept the New York Giants for three victories in a five game ‘series, the St. Louis Browns PAGE SEVEN took on Buffalo at Fort Lauders_ dale Monday. Tuesday, % the Browns have been excuséd from their daily workout. i