Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Demonstrations to Be Giv
en at Gaines School in
Morning and Afternoon
. A one-day canning institute, to
which the public is invited, will be
held tomorrow at Gaines school
building on the Lexington road by
Miss Willie Vie Dowdy, state Home
Improvement specialist, sponsored
by. Miss Ann Dolvin, county home
demonstration agent.
Two meetings will be held, one
at 10 o’clock Friday morning, the
other at 2:30 o'clock in the after
noon. The same demonstration will
be given fe both times.
These meetings have been plan
ned for the purpose of bringing to
the people of Clarke county the
newest and safest methods of can
ning. Similar institutes are being
conducted throughout the state by
the Agricultural Extension service
of the University. It has heen
demonstrated that all foods can be
safely canned if care is taken and
if scientifie principles are follow
ed, and the course tomorrow is to
familiarize the women of Clarke
county with these.
_ Miss Dowdy will can and pre
gerve fruits, and vegetables which
are in. season, and will discusg and
explain each step in the process.
The institute is in keeping with
the Agricultural Adjustment Ad
ministration’s live-at-home pro
gram. An adequate canned food
supply, it has been pointed out, is
a step toward better health andl
economic gecurity. |
A large crowd is expected to nt-;
tend both meetings tomorrow. |
Members of the various Home |
Demonstration clubg and 4-H ;.-m,c]
clubs ‘throughout the country, as;|
well as many who belong to]
neither have stated their intnn!lnn!
of attending. |
Canning and preserving dnmnn-i
strations have heen held by Migs'
Dolvin at meetings this month of |
the various clubs in Clarke county. |
and these lessonsg will :-nlminnlnl
with t}= Aemonstration tomerrow. |
.
Evidence Involves
Poderjay in Woman'’s
.
v % Disappearance
“ (Continued trom page one.)
Poderjay, held there in connection
with the disappearance of Miss
Agnes Tufverson, his bride.
Leroy has been sought since the
hody of Mrs. Katherine Jackson
was found stuffed in a trunk in a
New York express office in June,
1920, The trunk had been shipped
from a Detroit rooming house
where she and Leroy lived to
gether.
Police Superintendent John P.
Smith saiq there was some simi
lavity in the descriptions of Pod
erjay, 35, and Leroy, who now is
about 38.
2.
¢
£ '.‘7_..";{'?'\
FIGURE means A
so much to a Woman
?aou{éform enjoys the unique dis-
S AT Y tinction of being a
: figure-builder as well as bust-former. No other gar
ment so completely transforms the flat-chested and
full-bosomed figures into shapely loveliness as does
this scientifically designed Youthform brassiere. :
75c to 2.50
Sold EXCLUSIVELY Here
DRESS DEPARTMENT
PHONE 651 301 EAST CLAYTON ST.
L, 3 :_:‘;;-:-""“'-:,ii'lez;"zizé?:j-:~.'.:"'~::e': S
v T R
3 T ePR
5 R VR T
bo ’,/E jf P f‘\ o Sy 8
B oo i A G
aza:e«,z 4 LR %
- AR . R BTy
e e R &
. i SR W i
iR B g
"%’ : e g
//;,{ e i 3 %o Sgß
GRi & Y
,-4%,’/}',s-‘:,'-32::;::?‘ T A ey 4 o \3
% i‘%:"fiiii::‘;izfi % 2 e ST
o S :
i 3 o
‘s'zsié'?;:t';z-; 7 il
ie i o
G % Fa
%}'{t;zfi?f:: B e
v G ) il
S 4 e
G % [s e
i i R
/:// M 7 ke -z-;.f..fiz:sisz:s.e-z:s"=-er(§??¢:=:==
. w 7 3 e R
% 23
7 2 - Lo o
7’%’/’:5-'.:1; N g -
7 ; S ' B =
TIRED? Worn out? Light a Camel! It is now known that they
quickly turn on your flow of natural energy. Smoke all you want
++ - Camel’s costlier tobaccos never interfere with healthy nerves.
“Get a LITT with a Camel !”
eta Litfl with a Camel!
. .
Fight Between Mill
Workers in Anderson
Causes Near Riot
(Continued From ¥Fage One)
others to join them in a walk-out,
came when about 50 workers in
the picker room left their posts
and, picker sticks in hand, char
ged a group of union men at IImI
gates. I
The union men retaliated with
stones. Heads were cracked, eyes
blackened and faces battered dur
ing the short melee. The union
group, considerably outnumbered,
finally had to retreat. After the
outbreak, quiet was restored, and
the mill cortinued to operate.
As a safeguard against furthes
violence, Governor Ibra C. Black
wood ordered a group of 156 high
way patrolmen to concentrate in
the mill area when local authori
ties advised him that the situation
had grown too difficult for them
to handle alone.
SMITH SAYS BOARD
CAN BORROW MONEY
(Continued Iroin page one.)
Trustees, and performs the same
duties as it has for 150 years, al
though these duties have been ex
panded.
“We are offered this loan at four
percent interest. We pay no taxes
mand the loan can be amortized
over a period of thirty years. Not
Iby tht wildest flight of the imagi
nation can it be said that such a
loan is not self liquidating.”
Assistant Attorney General B.
D. Murphy, who with Attorney
General M. J. Yeomans is hand
ling the state's csae, Wednesday
told the supreme court that the
loan was unconstitutional in that
it illegally obligated the state as
well as the Board of Regents and
that the regents had no authority
to contract a loan which would be
amortized by the internal revenuec
of the state institutions of higher
learning.
The loan, if obtained, would be
used for new buildings and the
expansion of the present facili
ties of the institutions under the
charge of the Board of Regents.
NRA STRIKES BACK
TODAY WITH THREAT
OF REAL REPRISALS
(Continued from page one.)
protest said, “we can only feel that
the administration knowlingly and
intentionally deceived and misled
the said representatives of the
trade during the period in ques.
tion.”
Rosenblatt pointed to the pos
sibility of setting up fair practice
agreements in local areas. He said
that under a recent announcement
by NRA, such agreements could be
set up, on the approval of NRA, in
areas where 85 per cent of the es
tablishments agreed. A dozen ap
plicationsg for approval of such re
gional agreements are now pend
ing, he said.
i TR R RRRes
R RS R W RO
SR o R SRR
pR e e ROT SRR
SR g':_w s s BSt
SR S B SR
SRR 7T ORGSR
R P R, e
TR = gt PR iy PO R RRS
%‘2" R TR S
R SRR L R Be R
R R RN e T R R
SBg L R R
BN R ¥ B e
SRR A R R : LR
Ry e R
RsR e R e
SUERREENE gt S R R
..3:‘*.-';'.«_:;::::‘;:;.-,?.:.;: e R R i RR AR
SenmmOßEs RS T RS R e
A R R SRR RSR
‘-"p:“\"?} TR S R
SRR gw cameal . SCRRE R
SR gl A
. T R R R SR
R P BRI R SRR
b R SR %‘* -1:233:?:'-‘.:??- RO
's:3:'-5.‘2:3&" B B B R s
R . a
SR o R . 3 B
o AR R o 3
4 e R SN o
: h RS T e .
* R S <-°\ "“‘.\,sfi ; Bbsee
3 R g T
e EE e i,
R
SRR XU :75_:}f};t‘:'*:;:3:5:?:1:1:3:':f:T:E‘iri:itfzi_;g: S£ . s.:"l:I:I:fl- : |:ED R
FemE e e eel 3 filtTl::i..‘.', R S
R R RSR R S e E T RRRRCRR R
B R :s:;Js?zfsia.fl.fi;?aif;:ic:siiAv'l.- RA T L —
e R 3 S
B e o e iy
INPROVEBENT SIGN
SHOWN IV MARKETS
) . .
' Trading Dullness of Previ
ous Sessions Persists
However
I By VICTOR EUBANK
i NEW YORK.—(#)—Some of the
silver shares gleamed brighter to-
I\IH_V and stock market sentiment
I(-xhibitod signs of improvement,
| Wihile there was intermittent
| activity in some groups of equities,
{ the trading dullness of previous
lsossinns persisted in most depart
ments. Many operators were ad-
Imittodly out of the market for
| the time being, apparently waiting
| for some further motivation from
I(-(-onomi(‘ or political forces. Com
lmission houses, the majority of
which are *““in the red” becauseé of
lack of business, generally were
pictures of gloom.
That stocks generally showed re
sistance to the uually baleful in
fluence of declining grains was |
interpreted hopefully. Wheat dllOD
'ped more than a cent a bushel,
reflecting principally hedging pres
sure. Sugar futures developed
gtrength and cotton, rubber and
silver were firmer. Bonds were
slightly irregular. Foreign ex
changeg were fairly steady.
MARKET QUIET
NEW ORLEANS —(AP)— The
cotton market was’ rather quiet
Thursday and prices fluctuated
narrowly without définite tendeney.
New Orleans Table £l
Open High Low Close P. C.
July . 11.98 12.04 11.92 11.95 12.00
Oect, -, 12.22 12.28 12,15 12.17'12 .28
Deec. . 12.356 12.41 12.26 '12.29 12.36
Jan. . 12,40 12.40 12.40°12.33 12.41
Mch. . 12.56 12.56 12.44° 1244 12.50
May . 12.61 '12.64 12.58 12.54 12561
EARLY ADVANCE .. ....
NEW YORK —(AP)— Earfly ad
vances of somg 6 or 7 points on
the reported government purchase
plan and on overnight reports of
very high temperatures in the
southwest were followed by reac
tions in cotton Thursday under re
alizing and seattered selling. Oc
tober contracts after selling up to
12.31 or 7 points net higher, eased
off to 12.25 or within a point of
Wednesday’s f‘close. The market
steadied later on covering and
trade buying. The mid-afternoon
market showed net gains of 2 to 4
points with October selling at
12.26.
New York Table
Open High Low Close P. C.
July . 11,99-12.04-11.94 11.9811.91
Oe¢t. -, 12/37 12.81:12:19 12,231 12.84
Dec. . 12,88 12.42 12.30 12.32 12.36
Jan. . 12.44 12.46 12.35 12.36 12.42
Mch. . 12.54 12.57 12.44'12.49 12.52
May . 12.64 12.67 12.64 12,58 12.62
- i o
CHICAGO GRAIN
High Low Close
WHEAT—
Fuly 0 ve e B% 0 .88%- 8006
Sept .... .. .. .93 .893%, .89%
B 0 .. e e B 0 DTN Bl
OATS— ‘
IR TN 41 -
Bept .... .. o, 400 .40% .400
Ped v ARSI 42
Gordon Singleton to
Speak in University
Chapel Here Tonight
Gordon Singleton, director of in
formation and statistics in the
State department of education, will
speak at the University assemble
tonight at 7:30 in the chapel’
Mr, Singleton will speak on
“New Educational Program of the
State”, giving the kinds of prog
ress that have been madé in the
past year, and what is needed most
to bring Georgia up to normal in
educated people.
The speaker is giving courses in
leading seminars and curriculum
revision at the University summeéel
school, and is an authority on ed
ucation,
At the assembly next week Tues
day night E. P. Mallery will be
the speaker, and at the assembly
next Thursday night, J. T. Whee
ler, will speak.
MORTON AVE. PAVEMENT
Among the streets to be paved
under the baby bond issue passed
at a called meeting of City Couneil
Tuesday night was Morton avenue,
which will be paved from Milledge
to Finecrest.
THE BANNER-H
NEW YORK STOCKS
{1 NEW YORK—(Pp—Following is
the range of stocks ' quotations on
the New York Stock Hxchange to
day: :
s
[AI Chem and D...osofecossie 1893
!A,m CBR. vs iyt ssl G
Am'and For P0w............ 8%
'Am Pow Bnd Itit.. 2+staivic I
Am Rad Std.... +... +...0... 1838
Imn Smelt and R.....e« +.ov.. 415§
‘.—\m T alad Ti.iviv isfeony iIR
A TEOB :csovr cniner tebas i BRE
‘Am al W...ivo sien Suuiit TR
FANACDIAR s ... vic isias siie lIN
|At Ost Tille. .0, ol o 8
ARI . TR Ria
AVBNED v onoisiinns sopsse gBE
Avial Gofps.. .. L s n i
—B—
B AR, .. 0 iy wre vt DR
BN AWM. vions vabson phesind 15%
Bl sl .0 Gl
BOWS MIE:: soirii seenimriys 8
*c“
Edn D G A1e...... .oois i B
LUR Bapi. ity Aiiiars shrci sIR
Caah 0105 7 G vanns Vst
Ches aml ONIv: .. ....0 5. vivdig
L 0 Gand Bl fiee covairn it
ENEVBIBY . o 0400 v esi s R
o HelW ..., i iil g
Oom' an@ 501i.i..& ¢.hs Jins 296
a 0 GRE.....0 iiives shmosiira B
DO OBivs il virdis Jeve Sl
cont Cole.oece D--' cesens 19
DuFont.... E & vavaiti B
0l Pow and Lt. .. .< waiio Wy 086
*
et MICRARIO ... .\ .. is seed RO
LIS POOOSE i 40, iyowine saebin B 2
B MRS v e b R
BEftott .viy B L R
LIONETERIBR ... i i s ent BB
PoaYelr. .. s iy i
-Hi-
HUuGssH MOtoTy, . & ... i 11
s |
il LIRR S S
BAt Har. ... o 5 vioe usids i 5 IR
gnt Nig Cu1....0 .. 00 il
pnt X g T, eoa s dany ENG
BIONNS MWW, 0v it (v sndiiinn
! ——
FINBIREOOLE. <. oo Tiass ssiaesis 21§(I
I i o |
ilzlbt)F‘Gla.ss;...... Ties Mil B
i and. My B. ... .. 0000 B
ILoews.... 31%1
BU S R ssl L
I —M—.
Mont: Wakd . .iiconvee o 8156
N
Nale: Mo . V. viie Lo aa T 8
NMEC DRRY ~ ..t as it vy 2l
PO TR S 0 E e o
Nat' Pow dn@ Lt ....... ..., 10%
New York Central .. .. ..... 30%
N, Y. Nl B am B .. ... 9%
North Anefican .. .. .. ... 18
‘P_
TRMCERNNE: o e i TTe
Baramount=Pubix .. .. .. ~ 4%]
TN, PL S e S
Benn. B, R ... a 0 0
BERtlips Pett 1. .. L. AN
Public Service, NkJ. ATy
R Lo L LT i
BOPDUNE BERE . .. v L. T
Reynolds Tobacco “B” .. .. 45%
s
Seßbowrtt Ass Lihe .. .. .. .. 1
BesURAEE O 0t So . .30
Searf-HoebUek .. ... .. ... 43
HECORNT Ve . . . olb
Southern Pacific ~ .. .. .. 24%
Bopthern Y. |, .. .5 .. 0000 00%
Standard Brands .. .. .. ~ 20%
Standard G. and EI. .. .. .. 11%
Stangard Ofl, Calif. .. .. ... 3
Standard Oil, N. J. .. .. . 4%
SUGOROIOr: .o .32 sv on oo 434
2 s
Toxak LD . ", s .o .. 4%
Trans-Amerfcan .. .. .. .... 6%
o e —
DBt Afreraltr /3" . ... 1998
UDlte O .. i. o 0. BN
Uhited” Gas™ Imp. .. .. ... 1%
0,8 o 198, Aleohol <. o .., 4138
d.. B Wbaml L, v a 0 A 0
U, B St M 8 ... ... 58
s Wi :
Warner Plétures .. .. .. .. 8%
Western Union .. .. .. .... 5%
WOOIWOrth: .4% cvoue s 500 801%
TAX-FREE GOTTON
QUOTAS ANNOUNCED
Quotas of Counties in
This Section Announced
By Farm Administration
WASHINGTON—(#)—County al-
Ilotments of the amount which each
will be allowed to produeeé tax-free
under the Bankhead aect this year
were announced late Thursday by
the farm administration.
The 10,000,000 bales fixed in the
act as the maximum ec¢rop which
map b marketed without paying
a tax of 50 per cent of its market
value werée distributed among the
19 cottbn states and the 1,000 cot
ton-producing counties according
to their average production during
the years 1928-1932 inclusive.
County quotas of tax-exempt
cotton in this section, with the
pounds of ilnt cotton listed first,
and bales of 478 pounds net weight,
follow:
Clarke 1,591,480 and 3,329; Jack
son 617700 and 12,922; Oconee
2,841,160 and 5,944; Eilbert 3,770,-
180 and 7.887; Franklin 4,656,720
and 9.742: Hart 5,263,350 and 11,-
011; Madison 4,787,180 and 9910:
lOgleth‘m"pe 3418176 and 7515;
Wilkes 3,108,690 and 6,497; Bald-
Iwin 1,2904.810 and 2,709; Greens
1,831,690 and 3838 Morgan 3,756.-
350 and 7,858; Putnam 981,370 and
2,053,
ee, Y
OLD BILL REVIVED
"BATON ROUGE, La.—(®)—A hil]
to re-establish the old Louisiana
fottery, outlawsd 38 years ago in
a fight that made Louisiana his
tory, was unanimously favorably
reéporied Wednesddy by the legis
lature’'s ways and means commlt-i
tee, %
ALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Meeting of Lions
Tonight to Have
Four-Fold Purpose
(Contmued From Page One)
| and is secretary of the Western
Bar association.
I Attending the state convention
{ from Athens. in addition to Mr.
IRuy and Mr. Abercrombie, were
|&. R. Grubb, N. G. Slaughter,
Cody David, B-.- P. Joel, Arthur
Oldham, H. W. Birdsong, S. C.
IM(mn and Elmer Noble,
All past presidents of the local
club are expected to attend the
meeting, which has been dedieated
to them. The past presidents are:
P. 0. Wall, Major W. F. Whit
ney, Clyde McDorman, Dr. J. K.
Patrick, Prof. Liyle, Tony Camara
ta, Arthur Oldham, Dr. H. W.
Birdsong, W. T. Ray. Dr. Grubh
is the outgoing president and S. C
Moon the incoming executive.
Tonight will also mark the end
of the year, during which the local
club has been under the guidance
of Dr. Stanley R. Grubb. This
hasg been a banner year for Athens
Liong and the club is ranking high
in the national contest for spon
soring new or ‘baby” clubs. The
club has climbed steadily up from
a position of ninth (high in itself
in view of the fact that I.ions
clubs all over the nation are com
peting) to within the first five.
Eight new clubs have been organ
ized during the term of President
Grubb.
Members of the Pilot club, re
cently organized for professional
and bhusiness women here, will be
guests of the meeting tonight,
which has also been designated as
ladies night. Members of the club
will bring their wives or friends.
Music for the meeting will be
furnished by Mrs. J. C. Poss, Miss
Hazel Poss, Mrs. John Taylor and
Mr. Elmer Kirk.
NORWEGIAN OFFICER
SAYS FOG WAS NOT
CAUSE OF ACCIDENT
(Contlnue& ¥From Page One)
down, so there is hope that she
can be salvaged.
In the wild panic that followed
the crash, 20 women were lowered
to the water in a lifeboat; it
drifted too close to the whirling
propellors and capsized.
Three women were lost and a
fourth snatched from the churn
ing waters, died soon afterward
from her injuries.
Another lifeboat, also carrying
20 women, was being lowered
when the gear broke and the oc
cupants were flung into the sea.
The young officer, diving boldly
from the third deck of the steam
ship, swam to the rescue of the
women, encouraging them and
supporting the weakest wuntil a
boat came to his aid.
But for his heroism, the survi
vors of the wreck said, the death
toll would have mounted much
higher. While the passengers sang
his praises, the young man with
drew modestly, prefering that his
name not be made known.
The bitter hardships suffered
through the night by the survivors,
however, did' not end with the
coming of the day. They made
the best of the limited facilities
in Stavanger amd the village of
Kopervik,
Baby Son of Mr. and
Mrs. F. L. Nixon Dies
Jogeph Lumpkin H. Nixon, year
old son of Mr. and Mrs. ¥. L.
Nixon, diéd Wednesday night at
7:30 at their home on the Jeffer
son road after an {llness of ten
days. Funeral services were held
this afternoon at 4 o‘clock at Pros
pect Methodist church, Rev. Ha
good conducting. Interment was in
Prospect cemetery, McDorman-
Bridges in charge.
The child is survived by his
parents and grand-parénts, Mr.
and Mrs. R. K. Nixon and Floyd
Miller, whose friends sympathize
with them deeply in their bereave
ment.
Three Cases Taken
Up in Justice Court
Thursday Morning
Ed Reid, colored, was bound over
to the July term of court under
$lO bonds, by Justice of the Peace
George Burpee at trial this morn
ing, on charge of violation of a
peace warrant. A warrant charg
ing assault with attempt to mur
der was dismissed by Justice Bur
pee, because of insufficient evi
dance,
Ralph Olive, colored, was bound
over to the court also on another
warrant, and the case of Matt
Derricote, Negro, charged with wvio
lation of a peace warrant was dis
missed. ‘
All You Who Have
Indigestion
Stomach Agony—Gas, Indigestion
Must Go or Money Back
There’s a sure way to put an
end to indigestion, gas, shortness
of breath and all the ailments
that are caused by a bad stom
‘ach.
I You are simply patching up
f_vour stomach when you take
things that only give relief for a
few hours.
~ Why not buil@ up your run
down stomach—make it strong
and vigorous“"so that you can eat
anything you want without the
least sign of distress?
Dare’s Mentha Pensin is what
every stomach sufferer needs—a
pleasant tonic elixir for all stom
ach ills.
Thousands of bottles of Dare's
Mentha Pepsin are sold every day
because it is the one oufstanding,
supremely effective stomach wem
edy that is guaranteed by Citizens
Pharmacy (mail orders filled) and
druggists everywhere. —(adv.)
OEVENTY-FIVE SIGN
UP FORY CAMPS
Eight Weeks Camp for
Boys to Open Near Tal
lulah Falls on June 28
Over seventy-five boys between
the ages of 10 and 18 have register-
ed for the Athens "Y” camp, near
Tallulah Falls,, which opens lor
an eight weeks' period Thursday,
June 28, W. T. Forbes, camp di-i
rector, said today.
~ An experienced staff of leadersl
will be in charge of activities, un-|
der the supervision of . Bobby|
Hooks, former star University of
Georgia athlete, who will again bei
assistant camp director undexi
Mr. Forbes’ supervision. MeCar
thy Crenshaw, “most outstanding"l
student at the University in 1933, ]
will be assistant to Hooks inl
charge of water activities. |
~ Oliver Allen will again be in|
charge of nature study. Complete |
courses will be offered in this|
subject, with actual field and lab-|
oratory work. Courses in handi-|
craft and woodwork will be taught
by an expert in that line. Thg,
Athens “Y” Camp News, publish
ed weekly, will be edited by Tom
A. Dozier, Athens, senior in the
Henry W. Grady School of Jour
nalism, and managing editor of|
the Red and Black, university|
weekly.
A physicat examination is re
quired of every camper and mem
‘ber of the camp staff before he is
admitted to ecamp. ' '
- Baseball, football, basketball, |
track, tennis, canoeing, boxing and
wrestling are among the sports
in which instruction is given by
MEN (Q%hed thode Dives, STAKED THEIR FORTUNES
SMASHED WORLD RECORDS ror
T %fl%
RIGH SPEED TiRE g e
o 1 RkT L T . ;
4 f’l‘t‘a}féfl w R
:_' v ‘é;- . ‘ 4 // e
. Y&\\ // ‘ [] ‘,\ ( -1V.“4/..&V‘/J/,,,, i
MORE TOUGHER P AN N~
RUBBER § VA"
A o \\\\\/)}\/);1
B @ Ttk
e SAFEST
GUM-DIPPED HIGH @mwfi\
STRETCH CORDS Rc AN §
T\ ARI e i8%7 FIRESTONE
L BRII
. 3 N - §oy
e Ry, EVER
o .L 5 B 8 B &
i e
- Ca A/
‘ \;,\,;y/j"i \’;/ })/ / B" I I.T
/ -
| STAMINA
"
1 FIRESTONEHIGH SPEEDTIRES
7
g * For fifteen consecutive
Y years have been on the
/4 winning cars in the
- 500-mile Indianapolis N
) )
Y Race. D
5, THIS MEANS BLOWOUT V
I{ PROTECTION
% For seven consecutive
years have been on the /
winning carsin thedaring b
Pikes Peak climb where o
slip meant death.
THIS MEANS NON-SKID SAFETY
\ AND TRACTION
% For three consecutive
years have beenonthe 131
buses of the Washingtorn
(D. €C.) Railway and
Electric Co. covering
11,357,810 bus miles
without one minute’s
delay due to tire trouble.
THIS MEANS DEPENDABILITY
AND ECONOMY
% Were on the Neiman
Motors’ Ford y-8 Truck
that made @ new coast
to-coast record of 67
hours, 45 minutes, 30
seconds actusl running
time.
THIS MEANS ENDURANCE
Rubber has advanced
o
442 %! Cotton 190 %!
Yet you can buy this
amuazing new _ Firestone
High Speed Tire at our
present low prices
and save money.
See Firestone Air Balloon Tires made at the Firestone Factory and
Exhibition Building World’s Fair, Chicago
Listen to the Voice of Firestone every
II Monday Night over N. B, C—WEAF Network. B
- 3 D - . A =2
MOST MILES PER DOLLAR ¥
outstanding stars in these athlet
ics.
A completely equipped camp in
firmary is maintained, with a
doctor and tralned nurse in at
tendance.
Dramatics will be in charge of
Jack Brooks, graduate student at
the University, and a former stat
amateur player in the University
Theater’s productions. Heé will
A Sale of Cool Cotton
WASH DRESSES
VOILES
DIMITIES
ORGANDIES
Over 300 New, Fresh Cotton Frocks in Sheer of
Heavier Fabrics on Two Special Sale Racks at the
Low Price of $1.95!
SIZES FROM 12 TO 20—38 TO 50
Dark and Light Patterns. These are Not House Dresges, but
Garments that you will delight in wearing to town, to classes,
to Church and to the Movies. Also 3-Piece Suits with Shorts,
Every Cotton Frock Is Guaranteed Fast Color and the Type
of Garments that You Would Expect to Find at the Home
of Nelly Don Frocks. Buy Your Supply for the Summer at
This Low Pricg of $1.95!
“WHERE YOUR DOLLARS HAVE MORE CENTS”
Athens, Georgia
.[‘ HE New Firestone High Speed
Tire for 1934 was built to give you
the same dependable service it
provided for the 33 drivers who
started in the torturous 500-mile
grind at Indianapolis May 30.
This new tire has a wider tread
. of flatter contour, deeper non-skid,
more and tougher rubber, giving
you more than 50% Ilonger
non-skid mileage.
Besides being Safety Protected
on the outside it is Safety Protected
on the inside. Eight additional
pounds of pure rubber are absorbed
by every one hundred pounds of
cords.
This additional rubber is so
placed that it surrounds every
cotton fiber inside every cord im
. every ply. This is accomplished by
. soaking the cords in liquid rubber \
by a Firestore patented process.
Thispatented process, Gum-Dipping,
is not used in any other tire built.
Heat caused by internal friction
of cotton fibers destroys tires—
causes separation and blowouts.
Gum-Dipping counteracts
friction and heat—provides greater
adhecion and binds the cotton and
. rubber together into one cohesive
unit of greater stremgth, assuring
car owners of the greatest Safety,
Protection and Economy that it is
possible for human ingenuity to
build into a tire.
The most amazing proof of
this extra strength, safety and
dependability is the fact that every
one of the 33 drivers at Indianapolis
chose and bought Firestone High
Speed Tires. Race drivers KNOW
tire construction —they will not
risk their lives or chance of victory
on any other than Firestone.
At terrific speeds the cars
plunge into the treacherous turns
—tires are braced against the
scorching brick track—so hot the
tires fairly smoke at times—they
give— yield and stretch — every
conceivable force works to tear the
tire to pieces, yet Firestone High
Speed Tires “come back” on the
straightaways. Not once during the
entire race did a tire fail.
Surely this is the most amazing
proof ever known of Extra
Strength, SAFETY and dependability.
Call on the Firestone Service Dealer
or Service Store mearest vou
TODAY. Equip your car with New
Firestone High Speed Tires for 1934.
THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1934,
wehoßaatby bl i
R eST DT
SUMMER SESSION BEGINS
I The Athens High ang Industriag
school opened its summer: sesgjoy
' for delinquent . children thig nior-
Ining and will continue for
!weeks. Registration took place
‘Wednesday. Sam Harris is Prineij.
pal..
.
stage short plays, minstrels, anq
will coach campers in dramaticg.
ERRNE g
$1.95
The following
Firestone dealers
are prepared to
' serve you:
ATHENS TIRE Co.
ATHENS BATTERY &
SERVICE Coo.
PHONE 986
Corner Clayton and Thomas
Streets
ARE ‘RACING’ CARS
Firestone Engineers Find
Same Principles of Safe
ty Apply
It is almost breath-taking to
realize that the cars of today, large
and small, conceal a power plant
that will hurtle them through
space at racing speeds—speeds at
which a slip means wreckage and
disaster. They do 85 miles an hour
or more. Some have specdometers
to show two-miles-a-minute.
“Sixty” is. common highway
speed—which means 88 feet per
second—literally flying. Yet to
day’s cars give you the thrill of
motoring, the saving of time, the
ease of travel and opportunity to
“go places.”
In racing and on the highway
the most dangerous equipment is
an unsafe tire, Traveling over the
hot, hard surfaced roads—that un
der the sun reach temperatures hot
enough to actually fry an egg—the
tires become %ot inside and out—
and heat is the greatest enemy of
tire safety and life. Firestone eng
ineers 15 years ago anticipated the
needs of today and have years of
experience meeting the most try
ing conditions of raeing—with such
succeess that all the leading race
ing drivers buy Firestone Tires.
These men who risk their lives and
stake their fortunes can't be ime
duced, under any circumstances, to
use other tires. Every one of the
33 cars in the recent Indianapolid
500-mile race was equipped with
these tires and they have heen oB
the winning cars for 15 consecu
tive vears. New records were set
up this year under the sizzling sun
—but not a gingle tire faile(.l. 2
The important thing in tires 19
not how{ many plies they hav:,;.
but how strongly they are hel
together. To do this job, Firestone
uses the patented Gum-Dipping
process, which soaks every "Orqb::
liquid rubber to protect every fiber
against internal friction and td
bind the tire into one strong an
nseparable unit.
I ;‘r')hh” has advanced 442 DMI
cent, and cotton 190 per cent b.ua
fortunately for the motorist .“rt
safety can be obtained todey !
very low cost, for prices have ng.
advanced in proportion to the a
vance of materials.
|
'ITIES.DENT SEES SON v
‘ ACTION TODAY A
YALE-HARVARD RACE
(Continued rrom Page One)
education as being willing to €x*
periment—thank God.”
“We Hhear much in the more
erudite press of the East” he ob
served, “about members of the
legislative branch of the nationa’
government who are usually set
down as ‘local politioians.'
“And yet in that body We must
remember the simple fact that they,
do represent every state and con<
gressional district throughout the
length and breadth of the land
and. that the cross-section of Am*
erican public opinion is petter dise
laged in the halls of consresd
than it is in any aggresation of
educated citizens having pureld
the local point of view.” -
E
SEERSUCKERS
PIQUES
BROADCLOTHS