Newspaper Page Text
wgDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1935,
Agelsl9 |
i
angerous Age 1s 5
|
Says Federal Agents
ay s
After Study of Crime
!
i |
GO (#l—- The old saw |
an do anything with;
¢ds only the latest in|
nes to make it a l'n-zllily.‘
ne coins in the slots of
ichines on display at :xi
ne exposition, you (-an,‘
produce a storm with
ghtning, watch Ihul
jlg saw puzzle merge |
ramic view of the cen- |
rogress, and operate ;1’
o elevator,
me of skill has (~ome!
nt a 8 the greatest lure
e coin, Delegatgs lm\'e.'
: ito have, machines that{
: .y skill one might want !
. Known as the “pin” or|
: these machines have
: number increased by an
E i varieties in the past
: o is insert a coin, then |
. But from that poiml
. fer as widely as minia
courses. It's the stub- |
: .of the balls to go where |
' oant tiem © that ~gives the |
I and its opem,,toti
gl {
|
Ml
it e |
!
Weekly Calendar of |
_ |
University Events |
Wednesday
o m. — Mathematics club
Dr. Barrow’s Classroom.
; 1 - Phi Kappa Meet
g I Kappa Hall.
: m. — West Virginia De
- Resolved: *“This House De
i e Rise of Fasism.” De
osthenian Hall.
m. — Basketball game
b 1 Alabama. Woodruff Hall.
9.3 m. Press Institute ad-
Dorothy Dix. Physical Ed
ti inlding
Thursday y
4 :20 — Round table - dis
hissior Commerce - Journalism
a. m. — Press Institute
Robert L. Ripley. Chpe!
§O-11: 2 Round tabe dis-
R Commerce - Journalism
20 — Round table dis
pssions. Commeree - Journalism
uairoriun
7:30 p. m. Demosthenian meet
ng, Speakerff W. T. Anderson,
emosthenian hall.
T p. m Ag. club meeting.
onner Hall ;
m. — Music apprecia
'niversity Chapel.
Friday
| i — Round table dis
s Commerce - Journalism
i Uil
oa. m - Washington Day
i of Press Institute, Dr.
B. Pitkig. Chapel.’
10-1:20 — Round table dis
1. Commerce - Journalismn
. T Military Review.
oduction of sponsors. Drill
#OO p .m — Exhibition football
fin Picked teams. Sanford
: P. m, - Economics semi
i Speaker: Glenn W. Sutton,
Toblems of Corporation Con
-0l." Commerce Library.
) p. m. — Demosthenian an-
F anquet Governor Eugene
g 4 vest speaker, Holmszn
=IOO - Military Ball.
1 Hall .
Saturday
»:40-11:20 — Round tabe dis-
Hon. Commerce - Journalism
m
i. m. — Press Institute
2 Paul Mallon. Chapel.
par U = -Round table dis
. Commeree - Journaisml]
- tn
| m. -— Basketball game.
“sld vs. Georgia Tech. Wood-
RS
B idn’
yrd Says He Didn’t |
ave Much Chance of
Comi e |
oming Back Alive |
i
i
- |
) EDIN, N. Z.—(#)—Rear Ad- |
fichard .E. Byrd once de-;
ALY I ever leaving his long, |
sed Antarectie exile alive |
a today. !
(quite candid,” the explor-
I didn’t think I had much |
40Ce to get out alive. The first!
ths at the advance base!
[ was in fine physical shape, |
heater fumes gradually got |
€ dow I had to struggle to!
e the records.” i
‘Sked why he did not call for!|
: Dyrd replied: :
’ t was the middle of the|
) vinter and I didn’'t want!
zer the lives of the men. |
vhat anyone would have!
' the eircumstances.” {
S & and apparently in the!
health, the admiral said T
t believe he had suffm'mi{
manent physical effects |
’M his experience. {
“fe iz nothing of that ma-|
said, “to prevent my re-,
but I can't say now Wh\-'-?
this is the end of polar' ex-!
| for , me.”
f ttending to the details of |
hip's docking here, Byrd!
'r Auckland to meet his wife
d to arrive Friday. :
the Middle East, exposure to!
s of the moon is said to!
htmare as well as head-i
¢ nd in the Far East a morn-i
-~ 'hick head™ is gdded to these;
Ptoms In Burma there is a;j
°t that “when the insane suffer;
ental ‘storms, these corre-s
i to phases of the moon. :
"he laughing . jackass is a bird;
L an animal,
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(Although it was one of the first pictures of 1934, It Hap
pened One Night'' seems to have held its own as the year’s lead
ing production and the one that has ali the earmarks of winning
the Academy of Motion Pieture Arts and Sciences award, If it
does, all honors go to Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert, shown
above in a scé€ne from the picture.
>2 . {
[Executioner’s Axls
" Likely toFallon2
| ely toFallon 2
i > i
| Men in Germany
s }
' BY A. D. STEFFERUD i
l (Associated Press Foreign Staff) |
BERLIN — (#) — The ominouss,
shadow of the executioner’s ax fell:
today upon two more convicted !
spies held in Ploetzense prison. l
The two, who may follow the same!
ipath to- the block taken by Benita !
{von Falkenhayn and Renate vof |
| Natzmer, are men. One, it was|
lleamed, is a former naval techni- |
lcian, but the identities of bothz
| were concealed by official secrecy.:’
{ - The condemned pair occupied!
jcellsf near those in which the two
i noblewomen spent their last houx's,}
[ They had no knowledge of their|
| fate other than the grim fraditioni
lthat no prisoner emerges from|
: h l
¢y wont help you .
h ’ 0
: % ’ /s
ey wonl cause any z .
& e,
b Tonerds .
v orcoure any ait ner.
Ao e ...when anythmg satisfies it’s got to —
g s
L : o AL » : |
R T Reme 8 P
E%? .
f“‘ Chesterfields satisfy because, first of all, | e’ o
e e they’re made of the right kinds of mild ripe gl
e tobaccos. These tobaccos are thoroughly aged o
il : O T o BT,
. and then blended and cross-blended. . e R B e
eN . It takes time and it takes money, but S
o ; e whatever it costs in time or money we do it 7 g
; R s in order to give you a cigarette that’s milder, o e
£ .AN% _ ” a cigarette that tastes better.
o iNee SR - Py it
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S s ; g . © 1935, Licestr & Myeas Tonacco Co,
Ploetzense's walls al'ive and free.
Several days - may pass before
the official executioner is notified
to sharpen his medieval® battle-ax
and don his formal garb again,
Meanwhile, the prisoners may
cling to the hope that Reichsfeur
hrer Hitler will intervene to modi
fy their death sentences.
Unlike the two women spies, the
men _wer;_txied several weeks ago
in regular court, the seéntences of
which do not become effective until
99 days after they are pronouncs
ed.
The decapitation of the two wo
men continueq to create a national
sensation today as the section of
the Reichswehr. charged with anti
espionage activities redoubled its
efforts to round up betravers of
Germany’s military secrets.
Improperly prepared and ad
dregsed mail causes a loss to the
Post Office - Department and users
of the mails. of $4,000,000 to. $5,-
000,000 annually. .
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Back tm
Backers of Patman
' Bo i
. Bonus Bill Ready to
3
. Push Vote Temerrow
4
i il <
{ BY CLARENCE M. WRIGHT
| (Associatud Press ‘Staff Whiter)
| WASHINGTON — (#) _. Stand:
jing flatly against any compromise,
i backers of the Patman $2,100,000,000
z)mnus bill decided today upon twe
Qimmt-dint«:ly steps to force action.
i DBoth moves are planned for to
i morrow. The first will seek to as
’sur.g a house vote on the bill even
ethuug'h it is not approved by the
{ ways ang means committee. The
| second will attempt to permit the
!izm-miun of the Patman bill in an
| appropriation bill which provides
isalaries for, representatives and
I senators,
; Representative Patman, Demo
| erat, Texas, ‘informed newspaper
’mvn that at noon tomorrow -—the
carliest possible moment under the
zrulvs—hv would file a petition to
{ take his bill out of the ways and
| means committee.
{ “I have no doubt but that we will
i get the necessary signatures,” Pat
!nmn said. It now requires 216
|Hignors to discharge a committee
{ from considering a bill.
{ Senator Tydings, Democrat, Md.,
| introduceq a ‘bonus bill yesterday.
| Under the Tydings bill, interest
bearing, negotiable bonds would be
exchanged for the adjusted com
pensation certificates, A veteran
thus either could sell his bonds
forr eash or hold them until they
matured in 1945, the year the exe
isting certifcates mature.
[ Another bill, backed by the Am=
'lericfln Legion proposes an outright
| payment of cash raiseq through &
%nc-w bond jssue.
{ iet L il
VR .
‘Mrs. B. Dunaway Dies
- At Home on Boulevard
| Today; Il Four Weeks
{‘ Mrs. B. Dunaway, widow of the
{late B. Dunaway, died at her home
lnn the Boulevard today after a four
weeks illness. She was 66 years
of age.
Funeral gervices will be an
nounced later by McDorman-
IBridges. Interment will be in
Oconee Hill cemetery.
Mrs. Dunaway is survived by
one daughter, Miss Bertha Duna
way, Athens. six sons, C. J. Dun
away, Elberton, A. D. Dunaway
|and I. L. Dunaway, Athens; M.
|A. Dunaway, Jacksonville, Fla.,
lE. W. Dunaway, Washington, D.
[S.; and A. Y. Dunaway, Lyman,
}S. C.; three sisters, Mrs. N. A.
| Carter, Covington; Mrs. G. W.
lLankford. Lyman, S. O 2 el
| Mrs. H. B. Blackwell, Great Yalls,
§S. C.; and three brothers, C. H.
| Wigley, Athens; E. J. Wigley,
!Athens. and J. T. Wigley, Char
| lotte, N. C.
Cyrena Van Gordon To Voice Joy
In Recovery From Injury At “Met”
i.* ¥ !
iLeg Is Strong Again
i After Year's Ordeal
lßy NEA Service ey
| . NEW YORK.—February 22 will
‘be no holiday - for Cyrena, Van
{ Gordon, Metropolitan opérg star,
{for she will have the important,
task of singing the chief role in
‘the -opera “Iphigenia au Aulide,”
{ta be performed at Philadelphia
ltorv the first time in America. All
i the same, for her the day will be
lone to- celebrate ror it will mark
‘the first time! in months that shg
thas .made a public appearance
iwithopt_ the dragging pain caused
‘b_yvu, rigid brace on her leg.
i " Way bhack last year when Miss
Yan Gordon, formerly a prima
donng of the Chicago Opera, was
making her debut: at the Metro
politan as “Amneris” in “Aida,” she
lstepped backward on the stage
and tripped over her long skirt.
_The movement injured her leg and
‘caused torturing pain. However,
Miss Van Gordon finished the per
iforma;nce.
Doomed to Wear ;
{ Brace a Year e .
- Next day, when 5 doctor exam
ined the hurt, he told her first that
she would have to lie in a cast.
]The other alternative was (treat
iment using a brace, even more
painful and much longer. Miss
Van Gordon choose the hrace
since it meant she could go on
with her work. s
} She Jooks forward to being free’
again and able to go up and downt
i steps without collapsing as she did
at’ the White House, - where she |
iwas singing for her friends, Pres-“
| igent and Mrs. Rogsevelt. 'l‘hel
Roosevelts, by the way, were the:
'flrst to be notified that the brace|
was coming off. ]
I You almost wonder where Misn]
Van Gordon gets her trouper sph‘it,l
for her life sounds like a fairy tale[
come true. At seventeen, the only |
child of well-to-do and socially |
| prominent Cinecinnatians, she wasl
(' - . *
ers. Emily Newell Blair |
Assumes Office Today
- - sor 1
| As Advisory Board Head |
! e i
| :
i WASHINGTON — (#) — Mrs |
lEmil_\' Newell Blair, pioneer leader |
in the suffrage movement and a
former vice chairman of the Demo-=
icratic party, assumed office today |
l’lx chairman of the consumers ads |
% %* @
L L 4 Was Hurt By Fall on
]| : S
Gk e I Stage While Singin,
L oo T
g e ’e«%, } Y :
7% e E ||| Alexander Smallens, noted o;':
Ae . ‘
-, 2 e .~':::';:;:-j:::g;;g;;;:;g;;fi l | eratic dl"ect()l'. QCG'S over the
s G I sl X
f: e et .::=E§??§??1;3’:5'::5:-2;'52':‘52‘:2% score with Cyrena Van Gordon
o * 1l for her first big appeara"fie
-¥ o A
o : * 0l || since her injury a year ago. sa(:
ST X : sl | ‘ ‘ .
. “ ;"%%’;J was to sing in “Iphigenia au
3 = TR R ,:{;;3:;'.,.,{,_.:4:;::‘;:»; 3 £ ; .
. ’féé || Auiide” at Philadelphia,
ima waed | |
s
bR i
g sy A
T 0’
G ko St e e T
¢ monl oee i ] i q :
: : B e B R 1 P 5
! ,'\"‘é,ée’ R BEE 5 §
:AS : !
sy gy - £y e I
: s e 7 A eBl
v i SR 5 o Sl
eSH i S
TR S F S R e Tt
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e 3T .a 8 y :
9@ S f:i? o "{.’ LR § ; '
eR P P
To e g
iy SRR R&% ‘4;,_.3;%_ ge L iy ‘
. f VoS @NIN g et L
w . @BO ERE S P b ‘
e R B R 3 ;
WR G B 7 %v, Ay & . e . P f
| e, 5& L o O
s L T OO . o i
'{’;»v/k')’f’ o ,)(’//”,/ SLo ; 0,
f”/’}’ Yy K
offered a. contract by the. Chicago
Opera Company after one hearing,
Her parents disapproved -— they
wanted her ta home--but she ac
ceptea the contract and made
such a reputation that her father
and mother fdrgave her for stand
ing out against them.
Treasures Secret
For Salad Dressing
Misg Van Gordon’s favorite way
of resting from hard work is to
putter about in her kitchen. She
has 5 book of early American reci
pes that belonged to her grand
mother, who also was a Cyrena
visory board of NRA,
A Misscurian, she succeeds the
late Mrs, Mary Harriman Rumsey,
who died recently of injuries re
ceived while riding horseback in
Virginia.
Mrs. Blair is a writer, former adi
tor ang lecturer. For many years,
she conducted a column on books
in the magazine “Good Housekeep
ing” of which at one time she was
associate editor.
Van Gordon. Among her secret
treasures is a salad dressing recipe
that she says she will never give
to anybody.
Her husband, a mining engineer
named Smith, is especially fond of
salads and Miss Van Gordon is
‘always inventing new ones to
'tempt him.
“Did you know I was a picture
bride?’ the singer asked, laughing.
“I was. My husband saw my pic
ture out.west and told g friend,
‘there is the woman I'm going to
Imarry!' Then he came wast, we
met and he did marry me."”
Bromine occurs in sea .water to
the extent of 80 to 70 parts per
million. ; '
Believe It or Not—
—The Sunday American goes
into 1437 homes in Athens,
This is by several hundred more
circulation than the other At
lanta papers,
Automobile Industry
Continues Increase Y
In Its Production
', BY DAVID J, WILKIE
; (Associated Press Staff W\'itof)
i DETROIT —(# — The automo=
| bile industry is continuing to jn
-leréase Its production schedules each
'.wfiek, heading for an_assured first
quarter total output -of not less
than 1,000,000 passenger cars and
trucks. Output for February, bas
ed on the weekly produetion, to
date, will approximate, 375,000 units
lanq in March the industry is ex
- pectdad . by . leading - authorities to
| feach the 460,000 mark for- the first
{ time since April of 1930, ¢
* Various authorities in the indus
| try have fixed the yea!"s»pmd@l_e*—
{ tion at 3.350,000 padenger cars and
ttrifc:ks. "There appears to he little
I,dmuht;-in Irade fuarters- that the
jma rk will be:reached if not exceed=
ed. The Ford Motor company al
‘, ready has announcee Its 1935 pro
i duction schedule at “not less than
| 1,000,000 carg ana trueks” and com
| tinues to incréase its daily output,
| Chevrolet has hegun to step upits
»-i-u.«embly line-schedules.. ... ;&
{-- Cram's reports” in its weekly
I summary of automotive activities
!gavia Ford production for last week
tus 31,5600 units; Chevrolet 14,500
;nnd Plymouth 10,600. 'The same
‘uuurcu said that demand for new
cars, “especially in the states were
| weather conditons permit continu
| ous driving are far above the fig
j ures reported a year ago.” - T
i Aside from the general prediction
iof a total output of. 3,350,000 units
;uluring 1935, few of the leading
manufacturers are venturing state
ments concerning seasonal fluctua -
itions,
How to End
need for
Laxatives
First learn what causes consti
pation. lln mogt cases it is due to
a loss of tone, or vitality, in the
intestinal tract. This is why you
should use Dr. Hitchcock’s Laxa
tive Powder—a combination of all
vegetable ingredients which actu
ally help tone up and strengthen
your intestines,
Unlike preparations that require
ever-increasing doses, Dr. Hitch
cock’s Laxative Powder can be
taken in smaller and less frequent
doses, until nature needs no as
gistance. To get the tonic effect
take one-third dose after each
meal, or a small dose at bedtime.
At drug stores, 25c.—(Adv.)
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