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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1935)
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1935. THE OMNIBUS A FREE RIDE FOR | EVERYBODY ! Local Boys Made Good o We sce by the papers that Dr. Max Cutler iy scheduled to return (o Athens next month to speak and hold & clinic. 'Phe speaking « in honor of Ether Day which, :,] turn, is in honor df Crawford w. Long. We can't think of any hody who Would have made a pester choice—unless possibly it might have been Dr. Will Moss. pr. Moss and Dr. Cutler both today keep the name of Athens in gont of the medical world, and Athenians #hould—and - do—take pride in these ~two personages. Younger than Dr. Moss, there are probably _more people in Athens who call’ the Chicago = docter \Jax”’ than call the mnative Ath enian “Will,” .Dr. Cutler came to Athens when he was still-a boy, and many Athenians remember him as a public school : pupil, a University student, and ‘have fol owed his rise with nterest. s At pesent he is head of she tumor Jinic at Michael Reese hospital in Chicago—taking time out every pow and then to ‘hop. across the Atlantic to do research work and geliver addresses in Europe, We have really been surprised (o find out how' few 'Athenians wnow of the great work Dr. Moss has dope. Of course, practically everybody that lives here looks® wp o him With pride and affec tion, but it took an out-of-town person to perform a group of local Univesrity students that the Yiood typing so- negessary for iransfusions is the result of his research. And with all- their fame, both Dr. Cutler and Dr., Moss remain genizl and unspoiled by the ac claim which they have received. That's why We say that we can think of no Dbetter persons .to speak on the day which honors the hvumble country doctor Wwho has received the thanks of the entire world for his ether anaes thesia than these two small-town bovs who today stand at the top of their profesison in both small and big towns. i . Almost Local—* Not Quite When we mentioned the group who didn't know about Dr. Moss's hlood typing work, we didn’t mean to he condescending. We just found out the other day that George Foster Peabody iésn’t the George Foster Peabody of the Nashville ‘school and the Peabody School of Education at the Uni versity or of Peabody hall over thele. We'd gong along, blisstully ignorant until we happened to' let a remark to that effect slip in the presence of one who knows bet fer. Whereupon we were informed that although both persons hady the same name they weren't even related. 3 3 The Peabody of the Nashville college and the education fund was @n Englishman who came to this country, became interested in education in the South, and died, leaving a foundation to carry on the work., Hence the local Pea body hall and school of educa tion. The George Foster Peabody of distinguished mien, Van Dyke, and the bust in Memorial hall, originally’, came from ' Macon, Gieorgia, where his father died at an early age. His mother, with her family, -moved to New York, and the young George worked his Way, up until he was one of the officers in one of ‘the largest of the brivate banks in the country. His philanthropfe work as well as his ANYONE, ANYWHERE, ANY TIME! - ; v"‘x !!tL, R ; LT K - NS /gi HAVE YOU ! AR BTSN B ‘ This Service | .«,EKLMOST S a MEANS TO YOU 71 € has mades occa- . Sional use of long distance telephone service. Often, some crisis in business or home is re sponsible for employing this high Speed voice communications Many letters are received fach month expressing surprise and gratitude for the quickness, clarity and low cost of the serv ice in such emergencies. Busi ness men are learning, also, the effectiveness of the regular use of “long distance” in buying and selling==while in collecting slow accounts, it has been Proved to be an effective and SOUTHERN BELL Telephone and Telegraph gofl Co. Unemployment Census May Be Taken by Government Dutcher Says Move Is Being Considered After 5 Years. i By RODNEY DUTCHER i Banner-Herald Washington ! Correspondent, ‘i WASHINGTON.—After five years of depression, in which unemploy lment has constantly been the | gravest of all national problems, | there's a chance that the govern imom will try to find out how ' many unemployed theye really are. \ ‘Har‘ry Hopkins and Secretary | F'rdnces Perkins seemed determin !ed on an unemployment census in { the early days of the New Deal. { Apparently they forgot abou it. %An uneasy feeling has always prevailed that it might be easier to meet and solve the problem if it were first measured. « In fact, Senator Bob Wagner of l.\'ew York was proposing a cen sus of the jobless six Years ago, even before the depression. Senator KEdward P. Costigan of Colorado expects to introduce an- Inther such bill before long, hoping ltn end a situation where unem ployment estimates range from eight to 14 millions. Secretary 'of Commerce Dan | Roper, boss of the Census Bure.uu, iis anxious for an unemployment lpoll. The administration hasn’t 'swnng its support to the idea, bhe- Icaus@ the census would cost about l $13,000,000. That matter of money lseems the only factor of indecis | ion. J Costigan favors a detailed A/n --[:als'sis of the situation — with break-downs to measure such lphases as part-time employment, the age factor, seasonal unemploy lmem, and shifts from industry to industry. A. F. of L. Figures for Dec ember estimated the unemployed at 11,329,000, Economy Beats Durgin The Democrats lost an election the other day and reports to nat icnal headquarters indicate it was because one of their congressmen tried to be a statesman. In November Congressman Fred Durgin of Indiana was defeated by Fred Landis, Republican, by about 10,000 votes. Landis died and in the subsequent special elec tion Durgin lost by 5,000 to Char les A. Halleck. Durgin had introduced a bill to consolidate rural _mail - routes. While other congressmen were whooping it up for more federal spending, Durgin unwisely sought economy. Rural letter -carriers. jobs endangered. lobbied against him, Traveling around as those fel lows do, they're a dangerous force i ———— e financial genius have made him famous. He became interested in the University of Georgia many The rest of the column concerns the “man everybody knows.” The story of how he gave the library to the college is typical. The chancellor at that time was showing him through the Aca demic building. The library was then on the second floor of the edifice, and Mr. Peabody was impressed with the valuable books there. He expressed con cern that they might be destroyed by fire, housed as they were, and realized that such destruction would be an irreparable loss. He asked the chancellor how much would be required to build a fire proof library building. The chan cellor told him (we did know the figure, but we've forgotten the exact amount, although we re member it was very high). Mr. Peabody accordingly took _ his check-book from his pocket and wrote a check for the required amount, | tactful means of spurring im mediate response. Friends and relatives find “long distance” a personal and inexpensive way of enjoying frequent voice-visits over the miles that separate them. Get your telephone direc tory and read the information about long distance service. You will be surprised to learn how little it costs to reach that friend or business associate in another city with whom you would like to talk. and are credited here with Dur gin's defeat. But Durgin and his friends say he might have won even at that # the AAA hadn’t heen so dila tory in sending out corn-hog ben efit checks.: Claiming that by elec tion time, January 29, few of the November payments had been made, they accuse “Republicans” in AAA of sabotage. .Frank Defends Stephens Jeromg Frank, brilliant general counsel of AAA until fe was bounced out for too much liberal ism, reeently wrote this column to take issue with charges by other New Dezleys that Assistant Attor ney General Harold Stephens had bungled presentation of the “hot 0il” case which the government lost in the supreme court. “My own opinion is that Harold Stephens not only is one of the ablest alwyers in the country, but that he made in his brief and in his argument the ablest presenta tion of the eil+ case that could have been made,” says Frank. Everybody knows Stephens is the ablest of the D. J. lawyers. But the D. J. needs more like him. . Some of the NRA fellows inter ested jn court defense of the 36- hour week in'the cotton garment industry later say (hey were Sso sore at the way a D. J. attorney presented their case in District Supreme Court that they wanted to throw pop bottles at him. “That isn’'t so!” one of', them hissed as the lawyer made a state ment. He spoke so loud that you could hear him all over the court room and received a surprised look from “the judge-—who, how ever, decided for the government. Boost Collins For Job The whole Mississippi congres sional delegation has endorsed ex- Congressman Ross Qollins, liberal Democrat for a federal job of some Kind. Even Senators Pat Harrison and Theodore Bilbo, his recent politi cal enemies, joined in. (Collins gave up his house seat last year to run unsuccessfully against Senator Stephens, Harrison’s man, and Bilbo). Mississippi politicians have .a way of enthusiastically endorsing each other for appointive jobs in an effort to reduce the elective competition at home, Collins would complicate the senatorial situnation if he opposed . Harrison next year, Collins, in Congress, became an expert on the War Deparimeni and is sometimes said to Kknow more about the army than any one else in town. The generals ‘dislike him heartily.—(Copyright. 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) It was largely through this man that the, University has many of the new buildings on the campus. and the plans which he dreamed for a greater University were drawn by a noted architect and hang today in the University chapel. They included a huge viaduct stretching from the rear of what was formerly the Chan cellor's home, and later Sopho more house, across what is now Sanford stadium (at that time a huge ravine) to the College of Agriculture campus. Old College was to be swung on its founda tion to run parallel to the library, opening up the campus for a road leading to a proposed new chapel to be built in the center. We haven’'t- learned exactly why tr_xe lans fell through—but you can see what was proposed if you look at the framed drawing on the chapel walls. | This friend who was telling us about Mr. Peabody estimated thag he has, at various times, given approximately a quarter of a mil lion, dollars. ‘for the University. He is a self-educated man, never having attended ¢™2ge, we are told. ’ ’ And in conclusion we might state that the woman’s bust op posite that of° Mr. Peabody in Memorial hall is not one of Mrs. Peabody—as gseveral persons have informed us™ It is a reproduction of a part of the sculpture by Saint-Gaudens for the tomb of Mrs. Henry Adams. (Mentioned in “The Forsyte Saga,” you may remember). Railroad Schedules SEABOARD AIR LINE RY. Arrival and Departure of Trains Athens, Ga. To and From South and West Lv. for Richmond, Washington, New York and East 1:10 AM 3:14 PM 9:46 PM Air Cond. °* Lv. for Atlanta, South and West 4:17 AM 6:09 AM Air Cond. ' 2:03 PM GAINESVILLE-MIDLAND Leave Athens No. 2 for Gainesville— 7:45 am No. 12 for Gainesville— 10:45 am Arrive Athens No. 11 from Gainesville 10;00 am No. 1 from Gainesville— 6:15 m GEORGIA RAILROAD Train 51 Arrivse Athens 7:45 am Daily Except Sunday Train 50 Leaves Athens 11:00 am SOUTHERN RAILWAY Lula~North—South Depart— —Arrive 6:40 am e »11:20 am 1:00 pm 4:20 pm J. L. Cox, Assistant General Freight-Passenger Agent Telephone 81, .CENTRAL OF GEORGIA Leave Athens ’ Daily (except Sundays) 6{30 am T and 4:15 pm Sunday only 7:50 am and 4:00 pm Arrive Athens Daily 12:35 pm and 9:16 pm THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA 'Cold Wave Fails to | Keep Sunday School ! . Goers At Home Here \ . i | A cold wave that swept the city l_\'(’.‘il("l’(l&l_\' failed to daunt Sunday | Sehool goers, a report to the Ban | ner-Herald this morning showed { The largest number in months, !:n'.w, attended nine local churches. { First Methodist church reported {the largest number, 584, This in ’cludod 85 men and 82 gvomen in the ¢ Bible classes. First Baptist church | was not far behind, reporting 567, ‘inrlndinp: 106 men and 92 women .in !Ih«* Bible classes. { Prince Avenue Baptist reported !a large number? 405. In the Bible | classes there were 72 men and 59 | women. Two hundred and ten were present at Young Harris church, including 48 men and 58 women .in the Bible classes. : : } East AtHens Baptist reported its A SENSATIONAL NEWSPABER & MAGAZINE BARGAIN g O E AND THREE FAMOUS i S . Wi by (FOR 52 WEEKS) [ oNE LA \A; A TWO ) M: £ i " OYS \E.LI—‘BR]AL 4 : % z \ £\ \ & N i B /Plrysi"?l\c".!i".'." P PORTS AFi _ ~—Fe el g N 4 ( | “’f{f"%‘m 1 ol /N | o T | - youß CHOICE OF ANT- 3 YOUR CHOICE OF ANY ONE OF THESE TWO OF THESE MAGAZINES _ MAGAZINES Liberty (weeklY).co:* """ "'q year ‘ : Pictorial Review.. .... ....1 year NOW OF N i £ 40 . Womans woners - zvere vommeiszi™ | ONE DOLLAR | “poewscune [ 7 IN ALL Covers Entire Cost of BOTH 3 IN ALL | Newspaper and the i gy : 3 7 s : 3 Magazines 4 . e . V. THIS OFFER IS OPEN TO OLD SUBSCRIBERS AS WELL AS NEW. JUST CHECK YOUR SELECTIONS ON THE HANDY COUPON. MAIL OR GIVE TO ANY CARRIER BOY. Any 3 Magazines From This List and The Banner-Herald 52 weeks, 13c per Week and Payment Now of $2.00 Aiariean 81l .. .o . Ll B GinE xar e YORER AIRORIGRE BV, . . isis. i AN 1h 1 are ] VRRD BROVER EWG. ioc Fusin nlisdiinel viacni v 1 JOBP Chivistian Mabald: ... «...... subsadhieisiieal oo B OBHIOok. . ... i HEaaiy i uarvenl YORP Piants! 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Twenty-nine men and forty-seven women attended? tßible classes, Chiistian church re portéd 185, with 23 men and 32 wo {men in the Bible cldsses. it | Central Presbyterian - had - 136 ! present, including' 20 men and 18 }\vmnvn in the Bible c,la.SSGh:.‘()nE‘ i hundred and forty were present at | Oconee Street Methodist - church iwith 36 men gnd 27 women in the 1 Bible classes. | ~ Ninety-nine were present for services at West . End Baptist | church. with 21 m(m’and 16 women attending. ‘ 5L e e e e | An automobile body with a tele-l igcopic rear end has been designed |By a British inventor. When ex |t’ended‘ it can be used for sleeping 'pr storing extra baggage. | i R S R [ : ks ‘ A loose fan helt sometimes caus les a noise that sounds somewhat | like a lose bearing knock:s | » A TR g ‘ L ‘Hugh L. Hodgson Will | | Give Third of Recitals | | In Savannah Tonight ! 4 A series of four piang lecture l‘e'; :initals is being given in Suv:mnahi | this winter by Hugh 11.. Hmlzson,' :with the third scheduled for M()n-I [ day evening. He defines them'l jas informal studies of the differ ;ont numbers of musical lilem-j . ture, and is conducting them much | lon the pattern of the music aps | preciation hour each Thursday ! evening in Atheng, | The first was made up of selec ftions from Bach, Mendelssohn, }Sohumann. Tscherpnine, Lecuona, i Brahms, and two of his own com | positions. The second evening was | devoted to Chopin, | These recitals are being given lunder the auspices of the Savan i nah Music Teachers association, l:md are meeting ,with tremendous | success, -according to the Savan i nah, papers. ‘ ’ THE BANNER-HERALD, _ (Circulation Department) : Defe..:-iov iy st i Athens, Georgia. GENTLEMEN: | hereby agree to subscribe to, or extend my present subscription to THE BAN NER-HERALD for a period “of fifty-two weeks from this date and also for the THREE magazines listed below. | am paying $1.00—52.00 (indicate which) and agree to pay your regular carrier 13¢c per week for 52 weeks. It is understood that this contract cannot be cancelled without immediate discontinuance of the magazine subscriptions. : NAME . ..... ..civiive sofSinvaronedones cavonpinnecein i} INDDREEE.. . =OO 0 0 APY....... wioees sveveit TOWNL. clhusvarnonpui sgnsinnate Liiinipinesp HONE. ... 1 HERE ARE THE s el e MAGAZINES W B e IWANT ; 3--.'.-..-.--.............--o 4 bt NOTE: It is very important that you make your gelection stri g : 4 given and no substitution or changes can be alloy,eq. : rictly in accordance with the lists *‘., ' ! 'DANIEL WHITEHEAD HICKY TO SPEAK AT UNIVERSITY TUESDAY { Byt ] | Reading and interpreting some |of his own poems, Daniel White {head Hicky will talk at the Uni 'gvel'.\;it,v of ‘Georgia Tuesday even |ng at 8 o’clock under the-auspices |of the American ' AssoOciation ~of | University ‘Women. and . thia PRio | neer club. 7 N . Mr. Hicky's work_has_often been | compared to'tHat of Keats. .The | Oglethorpe ‘Rook as, Géongia..Verse [calls him “master -of thedelicate fart of marshalling beautiful words land phrases” and says “His art ‘!tingl“.\' with a sense of tangible al ‘l most sensous 'beauty. ?.\/letemhor}ai '{leap forth at us, seize our atten | tion gnd impress” upon us cdimagi "l nary pictures "of ‘startling bril-{ | lianey.” ; | ‘| He is distinctly '‘a Georgia poet’ '| He was born at Social Circle, Ga, ‘|in 1900, and has lived in Atlanta I 'since 1919. His first published PAGE FIVE poem appeared in the Atlanta Con stitution in 1820, 5 Mr. Hicky is author of two vol umes of poetry, “Bright Harbors,” and “Thirteen Sonnets of Georgia." Beware Coughs During Epidemics .Coughing strain breaks down your résstance to the flu, Cheney's Ex pectorant “quickly relieves coughs due-to-volds and thus helps build up ‘refistance ‘to infection. It "is" . wlser to use Cheney’s in stead of remedies containing harsh drugs that upset both your stom ach and digestion. Cheney's con tains thé most: effective as well as most soolhing ingredients in a honey- hase that won't harm even very delfcate stompachs. Ao Cheneys 2lso soothes the throat, relieves” dryness and pain, loosens phlegm, and quiets the nerves. fdeal for children. 5 . A " . ==Advertisement.