Newspaper Page Text
brHURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1934,
THE
OMNIBUS
A FREE RIDE FOR
EVERYBODY
ack Again—
ore Poems
Jimmie Storey, son of Mr, and
[vs. J. M. Storey, decided to write
pout Africa when he wrote a geo
raphy po2m in his class at Chase
#reet school, Here ’tis:
~Northern Africa with its desert
sands
s most covered with caravan
hands
ey eat for food, milk and dates,
snd do not have any pies and
cakes.
«in central Africa where the jun
gles are thick,
he natives hunt with knives and
stick;
1n Southern Africa are diamonds
and gold
And the climate there is almost
cold.”
carroll Flanagan, son of Mr, and
Mrs. E. D. Flanagan, decided to
write -about Japan, and hére his
poem is:
“f've studuied about Japan,
The land of the ‘Rising Sun/
Where rice, tea and cotton are
grown,
And where silk is spun.
srhe land is very rich,
And each ome has to work
Because they are so crowded,
No one his task must shirk.
“Korea, the land of Chosen,
Was once a country free,
But now it belongs to Japan,
From there it is across the sea.”
Pandoras Are
Out
A bit late this year, the Pandora,
University year-book is being dis
tributed now.. Looking through it
is one of thaw¢hief recreations of
alumni who know anybody whao
has one, One of their chief com
ments, we've usually found, is that
it's no-where near as bad as the
on» put out when they were in
school. That's beside the point,
however, and Randolph Thigpen
:nd his staff are to be congratu
lated on this 1934 issue. The cov
er is gr2en with some sort of for
est scene, and a rainbow between
two trees. The Georgia s=2al is down
in the right-hand corn2r. The
dedication this year is to Philip
R. Weltner “author of the reor
ganization bill which created the
University system of G=orgia,
member of the first Board of Re
gents, chancellor of the University
system of Georgia, for his contri
bution. and couragsous work.”
Features Of
The New Issue
One of the features of the new
Pandora is the color photographs.
There’'s one of the arch and Aca
demic building in the snow, which
is mighty fine. Then there's a
section called “Spring = Pastels.”
The first is a scene on tha river,
then there's @ picture of the libr
ary, one of.a drive on Coordinate
collega campus, and one of Pea
body hall from the rear. Two Ath
ens boys, incidentally were on the
editorial staff, and one on the
business staff, Tap Bennett was a
member of the freshman staff, and
Tom Dozier was one of the feature
writers, being responsible for one
of the special sections. Max
Michael, jr., was one of the junior
business managers,
Happy Birthday
To You!
~ Not driving.the Omnibus. through
Don’t g u
ive
| P'
I DO NOT want to give up...but whydol
tire so easily ... why can’t I ‘carry on’...
and how is it that I do not feel like myself?”
It may be that as the result of colds...in
door or over work...worry and the like...
the strength of your blood has been weakened
—that is, the red-blood-cells and hemo-glo-bin
reduced...and Spring finds you with that
“worn-out” and “let-down-feeling.”
For such cases try that time-tested tonic
5.5.8.—n0t just a so-called tonic, but a tonic
specially designed to restore body strength by
its action on & blood.
S.S.S. value has been proven by generations
of use, as well as by modern scientific ap
praisal. Unless your case is exceptional, you
should soon notice a pick-up in your appetite
...your color and skin should improve with
increased strength and energy. @ The55.5.5. Co.
”
§ |AN The man she
S\ | mistrusted—
RO 2 T e R T R SRR SR
o ) L ,
vy R
. sR XL
% f°':5113;1:-’:5I111:':£.,_ ; 3 2 ‘\‘\’ :
R @%’ 5% | ,
‘i’wA . e € ]
S {* | | WILLIAM GARGAN
. ‘iz:‘:, e ERILVI(eRI O
SR\ -,r John' Miljon —
o % M??° 8 EERCDRILLE
e A =Wy EEREEE
STRAND F.US :
I F&,I";'AY RO MED Y I
Tennessee Town Has
Municipally-Owned
Casoline Statione
L MOUNTAIN CITY, ' Tenn.—(#)—
!All other filling stations in the
!city were closed by ‘an edict of
Mayor R. B. Butler as a municipal
'statiombegan, operations to climax
‘a war on high gasolln:e prices,
Gasoline has - been selling here
|tor 24 1-2 cents. ' Complaining
motorists brought their gas at sta
tions in nearby sections at 16 1-2
and 17 cents.
Local operators expressed sym
pathy witi® the move to lower
prices. and complied with the offi
cial order to close ungil‘the prices
Fcan be adjusted.
NEWS OF GEORGIA’S
GAME AND FISH
Beginning at once, the Cooper
ative Predator and Pest Survey,
under the joint sponsorship of the
Game and Fish department and
the Federal Bureau of Biological
Survey, is expected to throw much
light on the present - distribution
and economic status of the wild
life of Georgia. Over two thousand
questionnaires will be sent out to
a mailing list chosen at random
from the various mailing lists
available to the department. An
effort is being made to make this
survey by the guestionnaire meth
od as complete a cross secttion of
information on the subject as can
be had, hence it is imperative
that all the questionnaires be re
turned as soon after receipt as is
consistent with giving the proper
information.
In the event that you 'do not
receive one of these question
naires, write to us and give us
such information as you ecan.
State especially what the preda
tory animals and rodents are do
ing in your section as regard
damage to game birds, poultry,
and farm crops. Or, if you choose,
we will send you one of the forms
to fill out,
—ZACK CRAVEY.
Branch Inspects New
Postoffice in Atlanta
ATLANTA, Ga.— (&) —Harllee
Branch, second assistant post
master general, has inspected At
lanta's new $3,000,000 federal
building, the occupancy of which
has been held up because of de
fects in construction.
Branch is on a tour of several
cities to investigate railway and
air mail conditions.
Questioned as to blame for the
delay in using of the . structure,
Branch said it lay ‘“somewhere
between the contractors, archi
tects and gopernment supervis
ion.”
A e eYy
I SHARK VICTIM DIES
' MELBOURNE, Fla.— #) —Ax
tacked by what was believed to be
a man eating shark while he was
bathing at Indian Atlantic beach
Iwith his father, Richard Clark
jr., 10, died of d=ep wounds in a
‘hospital here Wednesday.
these pages yesterday, we're « day
late picking up Patsy Gentry. Pat
sy had a birthday yesterday, and
is quite a big girl nowadays, and
little sister will have to do some
tall growing to catch up with her.
Patsy had a swell birthday cake,
too. We know because we saw
it—or maybe we just saw one of
them. If she keeps up like she’s
begun, Patsy’'s going to be some
blonde heart-breaker when she
gets bigger! Congratulations, and
Many Happy Returns. Patsy! P,
&. 'When you do. get bigger
don’t torger about us.)
T
g {;"':': v&>
In the Springtime—
take S.S.S. Tonic.
At all drug stores.
e —————————————————————
TODAY
“CRADLE SONG”
In New. York
Paul ‘l:lt:rrison
NEW YORK—Meanderings: Al
most every lass who goes any
where with Rudy Vallee—even to
lunch .to talk about a new song—
is asked to sign a |Jlittle slip
which says, in effect, that she has
n't mistaken the tune title for a
proposal . . .
I know a girl who doesn’'t like
the five-day week because it
makes it so very difficult to go to
work on Mondays . . . H. G. Wells
has found a quarter-million words
to say about himself in his auto
biography . . . Peggy Hopkins
Joyce trots over to a cheap little
beanery on Third avenue to huy
hamburgers. She complains, and
1 agree, that it's almost impossible
to get a good hamburger in New
York City .. . Well-dressed
Broadwaymen daren’t wear match
ing coats ard trousers in the sum
mer. . . . Most modern of sky pal
aces is the Biltmore Roof, opening
the other night with ultra-ultra
decor and Paul Whiteman; and
with customers who @ included
George Gershwin, Prince Serge
Obolensky, Harold Lloyd, Con
stance Talmadge, Deems Taylor,
Wiley Post (who's been getting
about a gcod deal lately), the Mar
auese de Beaumonte and Earl Car
el ek it e gLan
Hard to Master
The mastering of ceremonies at
any bhig entertainment spot is a
difficult and terrifying job. There
always are ribbers present, ready
to hurl sardonic bolts thack at
the struggling announcer. There
are the tipsy wiseys who guffaw
at the wrong times. And one must
introduce all gorts of celebrities—
semi-, pseudo- and so-so — about
whom bits of hiographical material
have to he recalled, and whose nu
merous little jealousies have to be
respected . . .
All things consgidered, I think
it's remarkable that there are not
more such painful moments as oc
curred at the Riviera a few eve
nings ago. Harry Richman, glib
hut a little absent-minded, intro
duced George Burns and Gracie
Allen as “that famous team, whom
all Broadway loves — Block and
Sully.” The latter pair are rival
comics.
Voluminoug Title
Longest book title of the current
century is a new one by Robert
Harborough: “Oscar Wilde Twice
Defended From Andre Gide's Wick
ed Lies and Frank Harris's Cruel
Libels” . . . It was inevitable that
the mystery writers would get
around to the nakedness bhusiness.
A summer book will be “Murder
Among the Nudists’. . . . Mrs.
Howard Chandler Christy coliects
perfume hottles from all over the
world . . -
. Rutn Nichols, the flyer, has hun
dreds of pictures of horses . . .
Ruth St. Denis, the dancer, col
lects costume dolls . . . And a fel
iow who collects silly little stories
swears he came upon a man in
‘Union Square who was hitting
himself on the head with a police
man’s billy. Explained that | he
was an ardent Communist, but had
been too late for the meeting that
afternoon.
Gobs of Pleasure
Night clubs have seen mighty
little of the navy during the fleet’s
visit. And along the Bowery, tra
ditional gay sector for sailormen,
there probably are many people
who don’t even know the fleet's
in. Mostly the men have found
simple pleasures—taxi dance halls,
movies, Coney Island.
One sailor, unsteady but gallant
bought the entire stock of a gar
denia peddler, took a station at
Forty-second street and Broadway,
and gave a flower to each woman
who passed. “Complimentsh,” he’d
say gravely, “of the United Statesh
Navy.” g
Roosevelt’'s Secretarv
Visits Eurone for First
Vacation in Four Years
NEW YORK —(#)— Marguerite
Le Hand, personal secretary to
President Roosevelt, sailed for
Europe today on the liner Manhat
tan for her first vacation in four
years. 7
Miss Le Hand, - who was . the
president’'s secretary while he was
governor of New York, said that
this vacation was made possible
only by the president's proposed
trip to the Hawaiian- islands.
Miss Le Hand was accompanied
by her assistant, Grace Tully. They
will be abroad for -six weeks vis
iting France and Beigium.
Charles C. Pinckney,
-
Richmond Banker, Is
Found Dead in Water
VIRGINIA BEACH., Va— () —
The body of Charles Cotsworth
Pinckney, Richmond banker, was
found floating in the water of!
53rd street, Virginia Beach, Wied
nesday by two young men in a
row boat.
An inhalator gquad was unable
to resuscitate the man, whose
death is thought to have bheen
caused by a heart attack.
Mr. Pinckney went out into the
surf this morning for a swim.
When in ATLANTA
® Park your car in
the centrally located
IVY STREET
GARAGE
Opposite Hurt Building
Convenient to Everywhere
eTa et omee and cawort
WASHING ¢ GREASING ® REPAIRS
RATES REASONABLE 527%ins
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
e Stratosphere Flyers to Soar From Natural ‘Bowl’s Speaker MOpsUp AFTERAdJoumt%
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Out of this sheltered bowl, known as Moonlight valley, in the Black Hills of South Dakota, Maj.
William Kepner and Capt. A. W, Stevens will soar on their stratosphere flight in June or July. The
bowl was chosen because it is so well protected from 'coptrary air currents by surrounding high
wooded hills. New roads have been built, old ones: repaired, and accommodations arranged for
15,000 spectators who are expected to witness the start of the epochal journey. In the cleared
o space is shown the cabin where the balloonists will have their headquarters,
Congress Ends in a Note of Harmony
—————,——-——————__—;—
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Adjournment is music to ANY congressman’s ears! After the House
formally voted to forego any program of merrymaking as being un
dignified. the representatives lost all restraint when the Marine Band
hit it up. This was the ecstatic scene in the staid House as the joyous
lawmakers joined in loudly on a ‘““Yankee Doodle” chorus.
. .
Mrs. Dall Walks Divorce Trail
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On the trail that leads to divorce, Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Dall, blona
daughter of the First Family, is shown in the top photo as she left
her train at Truckee, Calif., preparatory to taking up Nevada resi
dence. With her, as she carries her son, Buzzie, down the railway
track, is Sam Platt, her Reno attorney. Below is the log cottage on
the Nevada shore of Lake Tahose, where she planned to lve for six
weeks before filing suit against Curtis Dall, New York broker,
News Of The Day In Pictures
% i W ey h ™
Sure That Sleuths
[ . @ egqe ‘e
Are Trailing Her;
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Unperturbeu even though she felt
certain five detectives hired by
her husband—'"'the five daddies’’,
she called them-—were among the
passengers, Mrs. Clendenin Ryan,
Jr.,, the former Countess Marie-
Anne von Wurmbrand-Stuppaeh,
is shown as she sailed from New,
York to visit her mother in Vien
na, She'll return within a few
weeks to fight the annulment suit
of her husband, beir to SB,OOO,
000. oy
-
In U. S. Senate
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An energetic, aggressive woman
is campaigning for the U. S.
Senate seat held by Robert M.
LaFollette. She is Mrs. Ger
trude Bowler, above, of She
boygan, now Democratic na
tional committeewoman from
Wisconsin, regarded as having
a strong chance to win her
party’'s nomination. She was
one of her state’s leaders in the
fight for repeal
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Together with this brow-mopping gesture, you might have heard a
great sigh of relief as Speaker of the House Henry T. Raingy (above),
rested at his desk after Congress adjourned its 73rd session, one of
the busiest since World War days. The present Congress considered
nearly 16,000 bills and appropriated an estimated $6,800,000,000,
|
AUTO ODDITIES |
i) 1934—G 0l Refining Comm {
/ HARRY A. MILLER,, {
RACNG CAR DESIGNER,, ‘
PRINES A SMALL SEPAN !
Az ) AT LOW SPEED AND HAS
/4 '/"‘,’/ Ve I///: 2 NEVER DRIVEN ONE OF i
7 X 7 HIS OWN RACERS /
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AUTOMOBILES “TRANSPORTED TO
GOLD MINES BY AIRPLANE f—= |
e _ :," e L \
GARS WENT SLOWER. IN THE —— [t ,
INDIANAPOLIS SPEEDWAY oo ‘*:-" «fe
500 MILE RACE THIS YEAR 557 N 7 — =mo
YET ESTABLISHED A NEW SPEED RECORD /
. i
(V) Harry A. Miller, famovs racing car designer, never drives or rides i
in. his vwn racing cars. He owns a small sedan which he drives~with
timid cauntion. (2) Car travels far and high—purchased in Australia,
shipped by boat to Lae, New Guinea; from there carried by a Junkers
plane to Bulolo, inany miles inland. (3) Peak speeds for incividual llaps
did not reach as high a level as in 1933—however speed was more con
stant and average speed for the race was higher.
P ISGES 3 (20) ;i
e i &ias -
Black and Brown Shirt Leaders Meet
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The eyes of the world on them; Adolf Hitler (left), German Chancel
lor, and Benito Mussolini, Italian Premier, stand dramatically at at
tention after their- epoch-making meeting: at Lido. airport, Venice,
where Il Duce welcomed his fellow dictator. Hitler, in civilian dress.
and trench coat, had come by plane for political discussiops. This
photograph was flown from Venice to’ Berlin, telephoned to Loundon
and then radioed to New York, = . < M
R A R ;i
PAGE FIVE