Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
~ Published Every Evening Except Sutunu% and Sunday
i and on Sunday Morning by Athems Publishing
g Co. Entered at the Postoffice at Athens, Ga.,
G as second class mail matter.
k- TELEPHONES
siness Office, Advertising and Circulatiion depts... 75
News Department and 50Ciety¥..........: Sesigevscon i
“Sgarl B, Braswell ..., Publisher and Gemeral Manager
BT 0. ROWS .....cococvveeocecsononnooioass Edlitor
~Bryan C, Lumpkin S ikevesis by nnt NI Editor
b National Advertising Representatives.
»%t;‘nn_ Eddy Company, New York, Patk.Lexington
*‘.}B lggz; Chicago, Wrigiey Building; Bostom Old South
=2 EQ B.
-
w 0 ¥ Members Of the Assoclated Presa
s 'The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use
flc republication of all news dispatches credited to it or
»+not otherwise credited in the paper, also to all local nov:}
.. published therein, All rights of republication of specl
s atches also reserved,
Leased Wire of the Associated Press with the Lead.
"~ ing Features and Comicy of the N. E. iA. £
e ¢ ; TES
i & SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN CITY &
‘.':;'ogxoept by week or month., Must be paid in Aduna.g
- BL E eek W
SR Months .o, . .. .. i i) e vl e ev se ea oe 335
#9Thres MODthS .. .. =+ oo co oo ss oo t 0 oo o o 1.65
BRI MMONTR ~ <. oo sc 4o 00 o os s 45 se 9d e .56
DRI 0" .0 de ..y s s smiesigs bl d ide A 8
¢ SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL
w 2 ‘Subscriptions on R. F. D. routes and in Towns within
+==so miles of Athens, two dollars per year. Subscriptions
Lsbeyond 50 miles from Athens must be pald for at City
S.arate. .In certain Towns in the trade territory, by carrier
wzloc per week.
.Subscribers in Athens are requested to Call 75 before
P“‘;’ 'p. m. daily and 11 a. m. Sudays to make complaint of
I _irregular delivery in order to receive attention same day.
A Thought For The Day
e Set a watch, O Lord, before my mouth; keep
"= the door of my lips.—~Psalms 141:3.
:;:_ A cruel story runs on wheels, and every hand oils
w=sthe ‘wheels as they run—George Eliot.
ews- ¢ s S
..;,.,__'___,_..__—-—-—-——-——-—-—'—
- CATTON'S COMMENT '
B 8V BRUCE CATTON "t ol
* Within the next 10 yearg there lwill be an “engi
:?.néering renaissance” that will revolutionize the
weorld.
¢ ‘Se ‘says Charles F. Kettering, president of the
“* General Motors Research Corporation, in an address
__before a middle-western technical school graduating
eclass.
":: ‘Mr. Kettering remarks that many people have mis
:‘-’.,tikenly assumed that the business world no longer
ss:holds a place for the young engineer, and says that’
fi{mg assumption is made chiefly “because we don';t'
... know anything yet.” \
s “We are just finding out that we must recognize
L fundamentals,” he says, “and in the next 10 yearg We
Y are going to find out what fundamentals are. This
__will bring an engineering renaissance that will revo
+utionize the world.”
'L AN of this, if it comes true, will mean more ex
' perimentation, and not less. This, says Mr. Ketter
#.ing,is a good idea—providing you know what you are
L. .experimenting for.
. “If you know |where you want to go, the road yo"
v take doesn’t make much ‘difference,” he told the
jfgzmgi‘aduntes. “But you must first determine ‘whether
s the gthing on which you are going to spend tlme.'
““‘money and energy ig a good risk—-whether it will
. mean anything when the problem is solved. The
# treal difficult problem is to pick out which 'is impor
@t&ng@nd which is not.” | !
4 Now this bit of comment is worth repeating here
“= for ‘the simple reason that our depression experi
'éieibi::ve led a good many of us to assume that
%m re is largely behind us. We look back on
fléti(: hopeful days of the 1920’s .when everyone was
wolooking ahead and great plans for the future were
e “laid, as if such days were’'gone forever. It is
E sy to feel that whatever lg done henceforth will
+be done by the government, it is done at all.
%;fi yet an outlook like this is a great deal more
#*pessimistic than the facts warrant. In the long run,
fig e shall probably wear our society to the achieve
w4 ments of our engineers; and the engineers, as Mr.
gfim ! ing remarks, have barely scratched the sur-
fig . Their job is to find easier, simpler and h
M:!:’lfia of doing the world’s drudgery; to andier
Y ,in other words, so th : arrange
i » 8 at human bein
oy ;nQ less and less of their time on the unesis ::ln
W E gnve more time for those . entals
s life richness and meaning. e -activitieg tha!.t give
& - While the rest of us moan about the passing of the
mmd old days, the engineers buckle down to their
‘,;»j‘o,b-opand, one of these days, we shall discover . that
fgthoy-are pointing the way to a new era that will
g:’m the ’twenties look dull and spiritless by ‘com
s barison. ’ ¢
fi ‘ Announcement in Berlin of new plans for mecha.n‘-|
" 1&at&: of the German army is a reminder that thoi‘
§fi‘orfi may never again see immobile warfare of the
‘gnd'on view in the last war. }
&+ The new German army aims at speed. Motor ve
&% hicles are ;being provided in the unheard-of ratio of
" tvo cars for every four infantrymen. Artillery is
.. being motorized; the tank corps is being vastly ex
. ;. the underlying principle is that the next
e - ill be an affair of rapid movement, with the
s~ Blde which is able to strike the quickest winning an
§ verwhelming advantage. :
= of this is an indication that military science
: mpore'is--getring back to its time-honored funda
o menthls—which General Forest ~vvwnccad en aptly
P iith*hti*\z_;'em}ra about getting their first with the
- ost men.
4t (The conditions under which the last war was
# fought were abnormal. Never again, let us hope,
% will young men be killed by the millions simply be
= CAUSe armies are too swollen and cumbersome to do
= anything but engage in a slugging match. e
~ #e= Senator Millard E. Tydings has proposed an inter
== Hational conference at Washington to deal with all
g e post-war iniernational problems, ranging from
. wus the war debts down to armament reduction and cur-
E‘ ney stabilization. . i
| : Vhile the presefnt state of public opinion in the
fi s natiens of the zurld—ireluding our own—may make
_ % such- proposal premature, it at least indicates the
?g%g”‘*:}f’jhamre.ot the problem that confronts us. :
”*fi Until there is some sensible settlement of these
_ # pressing issues, there can be no real return to world
. qu&flty There may be a whole host of difficul
:?.'q .4n the way of such settlement; there are enough
~ ++- headaches in the currency question alone, for in
. Tstanfe, to keep statesmen busy for months.
... Rut gooner or later these things must be settled,
=% and settléd intelligently. 1t is encouraging, at least,
% fim see a dawning realization of the fact in the
2. United States Senate. ;
4. Dr Edwin €. Broome, superinendent of schools in
o fi.!fide}pma, tells the National Society of New Eng
= land that “there seems to be a country-wide move-
E’;M’ to discredit the school system, on the ground
== that it is largely responsible for the high cost of
. .%% government.
;j 'Te warning is well-timed. Our school system is
.. expensive; granted. It may be that a judicious
_ “opruning of the budget here and there would be a
e thing. But in the main, the taxpayer gets mors
g “Rjs money in the educational system that he
Uy ‘. & than he does in any other single tax-sup
¢ o oported venture.
%” To reduce the cost of government, attack first
' fl ul and inefficient political contrel. See that
i the so-called “honest graft’—as well as the other
-w @—is eliminated, and that men are elected who
~Will make some effort to do away with favoritism in
- S eßovernment.
.~ Strietly adhered to, such program would sharply
b, taxes and still lens /@ble.to support the
“‘WWM&& ceef Y Ak
HITCH-HIKER TURNS ON
~ BENEFACTOR
Motorists have become more careful of
whom they pick up on the highways, but
even at that, murders are being committed
by these hitch-hikers almost daily. Last
week J. M. Ellison, of Virginia, was slain
by one of these criminals who are traveling
over the country making a business of rob
bing and murdering friendly motorists
who give them lifts in good faith.
In the case of Mr. Ellison, a hitch-hiker
thumbed him for a ride. He was allowed
’to enter the car, and after riding for a few
‘miles, in an isolated section turned on Mr.
Ellison and took hig life. :
The time has come when motorists
should cease to pick up anyone walking
the highways. There is no telling just
what the purpose of these trampers are,
but it is safe to take no chance by refusmg‘
all such seekers of free rides. The day has
come when crime has grown to be an m-l
dustry, and its control a problem that even |
the federal authorities are finding it to be
hard to cope with. {
A RECORD TO BE PROUD OF
An interesting article appeared recently
in the Halifax, Va., Gazette, telling of an
aged negro couple who have raised and
educated seven sons, all of whom have dis
tinguished themselves in their chosen pro
fessions. The names of the parents are,
Zach and Camille Hubert, who lived in
Virginia.
Zach and Camille were born in slavery
and through sacraficing and stinting their
living conditions, they managed to educate
their sons and fit them to fill positions of
honor and trust. These negroes followed
in the footsteps of their parents and have
made good citizens in the communities of
their adopted homes. In giving an account
of the record of these sons of parents born
in slavery, the Gazette, says:
“Zachary Hubert, Jr., president of the
Jackson College, Jackson, Miss.; F. P. Hu-‘
bert, ‘director of agriculture at Tuskegee!
Institute, Tuskecee, Ala.; John W. Hu-|
bert, principal of the Savannah, Ga., Ne
gro High school; J. H. Hubert, executive
secrétary of the Urban League in New
York City; Moses Hubert, farm demon
stration in Hancock county, Georgia; G.‘
H. Hubert, pastor of two Atlanta, Ga.,!
churches and owner of a 600-acre farm;'
Theodore Hubert, the youngest son, grad
uate of Morehouse College, Atlanta, Ga."’J
. We are pleased at all times to give credit
to the negro who has succeeded in life,]
especially those negroes who have labored
under disadvantages to gain attainmentsi
of worthiness. Besides, the success of the,
Hubert negroes is a complete answer to‘
the rantings of the haters of the south.
These negroes not only made their reputa-(
tion in the south, but they have remain
ed in this section, with the exception of
one, who is located in New York. ‘
ROASTING HER OWN SEX
Speaking her own mind, Mrs. Anna
Richardson, prominent club leader of
Chicago, in addressing a group of club
women did not hesitate to pick the faults
of women in no uncertain terms. She ridi
culed the habits and practice of women
and showed them what she believed to
be some of their faults that should be cor
rected. In part, Mrs. Richardson, said:
“Women are getting uglier every day.
They diet until they look haggard, and
then they wear low-backed dresses which
show the little chain of bones down their
backs. I wonder how many of them evet
got a man. I'm fed up with this cigarette
‘smoking, too. It isn’t the smoking I ob
ject to, but women are so darn rude about
‘it. I'd like to go into the wash room of
a Pullman just once and not find ashes all
over the washbowl” i
If a man should so far forget himself
as to indulge in such remarks, criticising
women, his life would not be worth a rip.
Mrs. Richardson was plain spoken, but we
presume that she knew her grounds pretty
well and the temperment of the women to
whom she was speaking.
THE BLUE AND THE GRAY
Congressman Fish, Republican, New
York, some time ago introduced a bill in
congress providing for the payment of pen
sions to Confederate veterans. The action
of Congressman Fish brought forth a
heated and severe criticism from the wom
en’s auxiliary of the G. A. R., when in ses
sion in Boston, last month. That objection,
‘however, is the only complaint registered
against the passage of the bill. Even the
-Union veterans favored the proposal to
pay Confederate veterans a pension,
"~ The sixty-ninth annual encampment, of
‘the New York department, Grand Army
of the Republic, now in session in Buffale,
sounded its approval of the proposal as the
first order of business after the roll was
called. Alfred E. Stacy, National Com
mander of the G. A. R., suggested that
federal pensions be paid to “rebels”. “This
would be the best way to wipe out the last
vestige of enmity because of the War Be
tween the States. I suppose that it would
cost $1,000,000, as there are about 3,000
Confederate veterans living”. Continuing
in his annual address, Commander Stacey
advocated and urged a joint encampment
of the Union and Confederate soldiers
Such a spirt on the part of the National
Commander is to be commended by the
people of the south. It shows that these
old warriors have long since forgiven and
forgotten the animosities born from the
strife engendered during the days that
tried men’s souls. Now that these brave
soldiers of the blue and the gray, reaching
the twilight of life, desire to bury the dif
ferences of a misunderstanding, it is to be
hoped that a joint encampment can be
held where the Union and the Confederate
soldier can meet again — not as enemies,
but as friends and rally around campfires
and l:e‘count,the days of an unfortunate‘
conflict between brothers of one great na- J
on. el S kg bBSso Ee iL g
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
| at Alaskan Idea Has Possibiliti
' :soo e- 4 ¥~‘TR S SRR ee S S
7 . 4 ¢ TSR g R RAo - BeEme
fro ig ~ s Hlha T g e e ¥
| ! eBAS T ey
Rg i 2 : WsSl o
a- R oo 20 Pi, A »-.:,«“--‘.
2 e| a N oYR
gPR Tar NG e "'_‘-"t[\"’%{-?lf',j;i%{;
."' 5 !’;‘:f 8 ;";_, - b 4"&‘._‘—;?". &
| Y e ,_“ :}3‘? i
e — ":'."lt,_f'*?'«“:'-. 34! g
‘ e / W e .-.l'f‘/’»’:.‘fi;-:.f‘fl:’."?"'? ;
i - : 21 RIS TS
= L TR——— u.‘ :iéi%‘a;‘:-":g:-,
== ei e 1 & - & T = e
= iE‘ '/‘ A s A .J W\ N
i.T ?— \.—‘g'-_.. e 5 f o E & :’,' :-“.,. S~ 3
FOEEw ‘,_(.2',.‘..'/51 T=L oT P
< '“l’@ 538 7 Y 4 AR oy (O vTR A,
g~:27 Y| B ) N 7 ;1‘,4“ oy LRI &
i An ols %7; 7 O e k\‘lfi}“r LT el M '-v.-,f;':.«ia:'f;‘!zf""
it /' 70 gy s N T P ok SR
| ot b C "%""‘)tam?‘n”',wi eA = T\ e
/ A TR DLA SR 0. e Y
&/ o s BAtel<k 7& i g T g
b jf . o WLITR LR e Lgi™yoy TPy
>@l 43 s »;r"’éf‘:“"i;?‘r"‘r-'i'v’f Hon T % 2l e g SRS
; 15 R NEZ 50T A,f-:,:fi;fiifi?;;',fl ,T{'“““"}if;-\ur‘r B A iR
| Wi 2A i aSmd NN A S fMo
| SViA "AL ‘»z,:i”",-':-“LJ';}"’:“???J‘ e ) S
. " ’;}" remanty 13 2 1»(.,{‘3%7 : e
/7 cac A ‘,‘rfl;"u" sl AT el ah gttt 31
41 iSI IR S ¥ Piadse adder Em oel
A /o e ~§“U4,,w_,,.>.;;“. eSR e e
: ol |RIRBI AL RAt
A yN oL bR P
i S jZ?%n:;‘far}Ffil @:43’{;,};_ B "Nfl"“"
N S A AT O it
: i 5 L}"Q" ,:.—‘,,_-)m’;l“. T N 3
i g g
4 o e
4 N R
: j Mg A TRI 51
: ~, 7 . ;:'" N.;:fiiei:i:g; “(‘ -
b e %@@@“&& il ¢ (;* /4% . "ih e (A
| PEDIRION 28, (DS
7] CTar S Fi If NS gal ) O
i e ';:;;’.‘-?-‘:I'(»"" ""#if,'! ‘I:"‘(' 2 A 5 7 A
’ FOR ",“‘-':":-’v"‘ 1} HXy 5{"!3,4.‘& WRN
: HERIELEST |/ ks A TR e
(2 [‘P@“:\fifl\@& UAAR AP 1 e
: W i T e AT A 4
; S & ;‘j;',f Y = \&:‘ :‘:‘i. 6: 'i,irgl
H ot A AR RO, AT A
i Wfi@m" ACTORD \it il e
;{. ")ff" Ty i i A g zrj;:v‘.:",jfi?‘)é;'_j\",“_fii#, )
34 o 1 -iL AL gk q'r_,;’:‘p‘ vl 7
iR \ s gy AR id ““»;I
RS P (e =l
i 5} W i "}g’l %)
;4' L e e 3 f,‘
AV 0 ity L MO
. S\ B o
¥ A .lt s SR s g 7
[ D 2gt o 4
A ’A2t AT . W e
Pl G 2| ) 2 SRttt eEE " Tegges” g g
AR NG Ui RIS S aar okl A 4 eyl e
Ai:‘ [t A2t I S _“-':"'.'.'l-,.-'.'" -Ve 2 (oS WESter o . S
‘éfiffii?c*g ';s i 3 iG e };’__".w?i;j_’;'srg;f'.i'i,..,» " ,';;-,nwt‘_' Ro o
Piarn R : it ff’.;.';yé.'lf.:i‘i-':-"—"."."iv-_' S L e Lol Gl
qfififf;?’ ‘“‘ “:5::-‘Ef’,z“_fl'igi'ff:’?:s{;«e:';f_»‘1?-"':1"-'-1';.-1--’: e NARIELL oo e
R “ Ciri 2t Pl oBT “
el Wy Qg AU LN est SornlY PR o ve P Sy
eTR Y A‘ -,5,;-..'--';:'_.-.'-':;;,;slr:a;:-=:.5:-;-‘f*-'-.- S R
e i YR “A GAIR s eSR PR I
fiA,J“A3]§- A e %",‘fi;?fi;’f?fi"%iJff-T"fi.‘f‘?.‘i"fif;'}'zf., S B prßalic T
HER TR ; . PsR eSR AER iel
g‘“‘uj Fj:’ ' sT o L ePte R v TSR GE Al S eSI
Tsey vy RT et "-"",;-:::"..i:}v!:-'-li.:.:,:'—3::-{'-‘;.»5:“-':"»:«%1;.“ SMe B(i i e sre
bt i e sor SRR IOAR eL e T BERS AgiyXY TR e TAg, R
%’@fi%&f filfif &;,’* R 'k"*'f-‘}f-f‘.xs’:t';:,327-,..»-35;-‘»:;?.:"-‘f_,if;?,":.-t:’;'_ 51:"‘;’,’,{7511{;";55'__f:.‘,f_,:-;,f’._,g,;fi-'_f,',:a-»g_( I L *- S _<._,.¢
. o AR e REARE A iad Lt iR eLoee,o HF eA A IR (e VoA e Sl s
I “&’-“'k"l SN e Wil neo = ;-I_"._‘!'-.'-"-‘-1".,.“-"-',i.;-\ Bt Rt LB AR ASLT S 2
" M,,m{' P SRRp T eg SR CATER T S L
B s oyl ee e e s ei L P e
Us B esA S Y
Pl RS sy :4‘:".‘(:",?'{ == in S
W R et ATy rr el
AT A :
@ 1935 NEA
Summer
5’ mefl’wm: £4
By Mabel McElliott
© 1935, NEA Service, Inc.
BEGIN HERE TODAY
Katharine Strykhurst, beau:-"
tiful, 20, becomes acqunintoZ"
with Michael Heatheroe, riding
teacher, and acknowleddges an
unw....ng attraction toward
him. She is worried over the
progress of an affair between
Zoe Parker, her best friend,
and Gibbs Larkin, of whom
Zoe's ‘parents disapprove, "fl#
Katharine and Dr. John
Kaye, friend of the Strykhurst
family, take Zoe to a night
club where she sees Gibbs
with a notorious woman. Zoe
threatens to kill herself.
That same night Michael is
inveigled into taking Sally
Moon, local coquette, to the
same pace. Sally, arriving
_home late, infforms her father
that she and Michael are en
gaged.
Zoe takes poison. Dr. Kaye
works all night to save her
life and succeeds, Katharien
hears that Michael is going to
marry Sally Moon.
NOW GU ON WITH THE STORY
¢ CHAPTER XX. {
Katharine said, persistently, “I
wiant to get away, Daddy.” Victor
Stryhurst frowned. ra don’t
know what gets into you girls
newadays,” he complained. ‘Zoe
Parker had t. he dragged all vver
Europe and even when she gets
home she's not satisfied; why,
you've got everything in the world
you want—"
Katharine . listened patiently.
Stubbornly she went back to her
argument. A
“There’s nothing for me to do
here. Frankly, I'm bored. I'd like
@ job. A
The snowy eyebrows shot up.
“What could you do? No, it's non
sense; I won’t have it. People’d
say Bertine hadn’t been good to
you. And she has been good
hasn’t she?”
It - was almost pathetic, his de
sire for approval of Bertine, Kath
arine thought. Dryly she said, “Of
course. But, Daddy, couldn't 1
have some of my own money now
—the money Mother left in trust
for me? It will be mine anyhow
next year.”
The merest shadow crossed his
face. “Eh? No, I think that would
be irregular. The bank probably
wouldn’t hear of it.”
“] thought you had it in charge?”
His high color depened.
“little girls shouldn’'t bother
their heads about business. Your
money will be paid over in due
time."”
He rose, terminating the inter
view. “Buy yourself a new hat
and forget about it, my dear.”
That, Katharine told herself
wandering out into the morning
was that. She had been a fool to
think she could do anything with
her father.
But how could she bear Innicock
now?
Bertine's words of the day be
fore rang in her mind. Was it
true? Could it be true that Michael
Heatheroe was going to marry
Sally Moon?
Tncredible! Katharine's mind—
her heart—rejected it.
~ Bertine had said coolly, “Of
‘course the Moons are up in arms
But what can they do? The girl's
always been a wild one. And un
doubtedly the man's a fortune
hunter. Sally Moon will have a
very tidy little fortune of her own
some day.” ¥
She had dismissed the whole
matter. Somehow Katharine had
got out of the room. No one, she
was sure, had noticed. Not even
John Kaye, who saw mfi@
= B s : ‘:
. /
G AR -
—-—-——-—_-’_77;“4 - 2
iy 2
usually. PO
She made the day pass some
how. Strange how empty hours
could be when you hadn’'t any
thing to look forward to. Swim
ming, tennis, French lessons—sit
ting at the wheel of some boat
with an attentive, bronzed young
man beside you. It was all a
dream in which you moved and
‘spoke ‘automatically.
So Michael Heatheroe was a
fortune hunter! Could she believe
that? Michael, with his lean, tan
ned face and those eyes that were
so shrewd and kindly—could a
man like that be really mean and
base?
Or had he fallen desperately in
love with the bundle of feminine
flutter and curls that was Sally
Moon?
The town buzzed with the sen
sation for several days. Have you
heard? That crezy Sally Moon's
gone and got herself engaged tc
the man who runs the riding eclub.
Of course he’s a nobody, my dear,
but quite good manners, and so
good-locking! Oh, well, the Moons
are really outsiders, anyhow. Her
mother was a girl in a shop, somel
place . . . And so on and so on.‘
Small town gossip. Picked up
avidly by the lunching, bridge-!
playing women at the country club,
tossed from mouth to mouth.
Katharine thought it would drive
her frantic, at first. But she steel
ed herself to it. After a week—two
weeks—she found she could bear
the thought without flinching.
She had not been back to ride
since the formal announcement in
the papers. Therefore she had not
met the slightly puzzled, unhappy
look in the eyes of Michael Heath
eroe. She had not been compelled
to see Sally’s triumphant smile or
air of possessiveness. :
“Well, I know one thing, my
dear,” she heard Bertine say im
pressively to Mrs. Romantle. “1
know if she brings him to the club
1 shall complain. I shall certainly
expect all the members who know
the man to cut him. It's not de
cent.”
~ Rage had choked Katharine. She
had sung herself out of the house.
unable to trust herself further.
© Zoe was completely recovered
now. Lisa Parker took her out to
Colorado in late August. Dr. Kaye
came out less often these days. His
practice was growing. Bertine had
told everyone proudly that he was
Park Avenue's most popular spec
jalist. &
So Katharine was left more and
more to herself. She began to re
fuse invitations to dinners and
dances, including the younger set
of Innicock. Such parties bored
her. She got into the habit, with
out Bertine's knowledge, of putting
her sketching things into the car
and driving up to Violet Merser’s.
Even if Violet were pot at home,
Katharine could set her easel up in
the garden back of the little white
house and work away busily and
happily four hours.
The Merser garden was a pleas
ant jungle of old-fashioned flow
ers. Zinnias, nasturtiums, agera
tum, snapdragons made a perfect
riot of color here. Hollyhocks, gone
to seed, leaned idly against the
clap-boarded walls and within a
picket fence enclosure of the dry
ing yard. A rocky path wandered
up the hills behind the house.
Katharine tore her stockings and
seratched her hands on tangled
berry bushes. Mint grew in a frag
rant carpet behind the asters. It
was all old-fashioned and comfor
table and satisfying. Sometimes
one of the small girls, sunburned
and hatless, with tawny hair :mg}
in the breeze, would run out to
gance over her shoudr.
“Oh, that's lovely! Come, Mum
my, see'she’s done the bird - bath
and the roses.” /
Katharine loved it here. It meant
release and escape. Her soul, feel
ing its inevitable growing pains,
expanded in this simple, uncritical
atmosphere.
Stanley Merser came back from
his western trip and joined the
family group without destroying
the '‘charm. He was a stooped, si
lent, gentle manp in his late thir
ties, An artist, Stan Merser, and
a good one. The little girls adorn
ed him, His wife was devoted to
him, . anxious for his comfort and
happiness.
It was a good marriage—a solid,
permanent, companionable marri
age.’ Katharine, observing it, felt
that Violet Merser was a fortunate
woman. Still Violet had told her
one day that Stan hadn’t been her
first love. No, their coming to
gether had beep the culmination of
a more mature attachment. Yet
Violet was happy . . .
Maybe all the fevers and fury
of first love were wasted.
And yet — and yet — Katharine
couldn’t bear to see Michael
Heatheroe just now.' Later, per
haps, when she had got over the
shock of knowing he was going to
marry someone else. Whep she'd
managed to forget those scraps of
words she had treasured so fool
ishly. - . )
“My darling!” he had had called
her, holding her in his arms, that
day Fury had flung her.
Or had she dreamed it?
Voices intrude into her day
dream. “Katharine, we're going to
have tea under the big maple.
Want to take time out?”
She put down her pencil. “Oh,
tea would be grand!”
Lavinia brought the big silver
tray with ‘the quimper cups on it
and the thinly-sliced bread and the
silver pot.
“Anyobdy want it iced? Stan,
you? Or Evelyn?”
Evelyn Vincent was an English
woman, @ friend of Violet’s, She
came now, balancing her cup, to
glance at Katharine's sketch.
“Oh, that's very nice, my dear.
Look, Stan, don't you think so,”
“Mind if we look, Katharine?”
The girl shook her head, smiling
Funny, she didn’{ mind in the least
if these people looked at her work
With Berine, she .would have
fairly squirmed.
Stanley Merser, tall and loose
jointed in his white cotton slacks
and blue shirt, came over to squint
down at the easel.
“Why, this is awfully good. Eve
lyn, you ought to be able to de
something with it.,”
Katharine, her heart beating
very fast, looked firom one to th
other. ‘They weren’t making fun
of her; they were in earnest! She
had tried so hard to get it all in
—the rocks and the drooping gray
green plants clustered about them
and the flame and burne orange ot
the .nasturtiums . . .
“You've got something there, re
ally,” said Evelyn Vincent, who ran
an art shop ip Fifth Avenue.
For the first time in weeks hope
stirred in Katharine’s heart. Her
“dabbling”, as Bertine had always
called it, contemptuously, might
prove to be a way out for her, af
ter all.
(To Be Continued)
Eases Headache
In 3 Minutes
also neuralgia, muscular aches
and pains, toothache, earache,
periodical and other pains due
to inorganic causes. *No nars
rotics. 10c and 25c packages
JAGK REID WILL Bt
HIGH SCHOOL EDITOR
Banner-Herald Staff Mem
ber |ls Elected Thumb
Tack Tribune Editor
) Jack Reid was named toGcay as
the 1935-38 eaitor of the Thumb
’ Tack Tribune, Athens High
School publication. Eleanor Eck
ford was given the post of manag
ing editor and Frances Brandon,
associate editor. Goodloe Erwin
was named business manager.
Phyllis Jenk- ; g
ins will be lit- e
erary editor, and e S
Alice Cabanisg, fEesuisy
feature writer, "=i
Other membersg = i Eg
of the staff ares . = iawis
to be chosen this s’*’
fall. :
These selec-f& B @
lection we r e[l R E—
made after an
assignment sheet @ TS
“try - out” workfE S
done on t h effE ' 3
Thumb Tack and B 35
on work done in %;;\
t h e journalism B
class in the third
year. ; : Jack Reid
Jack Reid is
well qualified for his position as
several years on the T. T. T. staff
.and is also a member of the Ban
ner-Herald sports staff. He was
awarded the certificate given by
the G. S. P. A. for the best news
story for 1934-35, which is a signal
distinction. The competition was
state wide.
Miss Eckford and Miss Brandon
are ‘both high ranking students
scholastically, hoth being members
of the National Honor Society and
they have done excellent work on
the schooi publication.
‘Mr. Erwin 1s well qualified for
his position as business manager,
having been with the T. T. T.
for several years. Miss Jenkins
and Miss Cabaniss are also well
suited for their positions.
Mr. Reid will assume control in
September, succeeding Miss Corrine
Stephens, present editor.
Milton Lesser was named ad
vertising manager; Louis Trous
dale, circulation manager; Selene
Bloodworth, exchange editor.
Early Construction
Of Inland Waterway
Link Is Expected
WASHINGTON —(#)— Encour
agement over the possibility ct
early construction of the Horry
county, S. C., link of the inland
waterway was expressed Tuesday
by Coleman Martin, secretary of
the Charleston, S. C., chamber of
commerce after conferenes with
works relief officials.
Mariin informed Senator Byrnes
of South Carolina, that he had
been told a $1,000,000 appropriation
for the link would be included in
the deficiency bill now before the
house, and it was for this reason
that the project was not included
representatives from Georgetown,
Beaufort, and Kingstree, also dis
cussed the proposal for completion
of the Charleston to Savannah, Ga.
link of the sea level highway from
New York to Florida.
The proposed link would cut the
distance from Charleston to Sa
vannah by 39 miles.
The delegation also discussed
the proposed Santee-Cooper power
and navigation project which was
placed before the works allotment
board recently.
Austrian Leader
Answer to Previous Puzzle
JAR[O[S|A] [fl[f]fllfiflg
IC/AINIE IICIARIATIBIOD E]
gE MAINIEIGIE [SIIT]! L]
ERMRIATISERSPIAIRINTIO]
oD]A L | 1 |T|E [R]
olT[T]c] ONELLE [T EN]
JMEE [ETL| AIE[S]
A/HED E IPIUIRIAITIE [SIC O]
A
[fl@lflmfllg S[O|LIO[I[SIT]
HORIZONTAL
1 Prince ——,
Austrian po
litical leader.
10 Part of a
window.
11 To thread.
12 Imitated.
13 Right.
14 Deity.
15 To embroider,
16 Italian river.
18 Exists.
20 Boggier.
23 To surfeit,
26 Masts.
27 Cover for a
face.
30 Pussies.
32 Data.
33 Bill of fare.
84 Dogmas.
36 Set-in pots.
38 To repeat.
41 Knock.
44 Church
49 Barters.
50 To caution.
51 Kind of goose.
53 Pedal digit.
54 Feeble-minded
person. ’
55 He is leader
of the Fascist
56 He lives in
TE—t
VERTICAL
1 Paroxysms.
~ dignitary.
45 To perish.
47 Axillary.
L FPIIPETPP LT )
TN N
FT ] N | N N 8
SN[ P[] 42 3
Ro R R
T e |
CL I] T
TSN PP SN
N LR
I\ I\
e ARt ]
L LT L
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 19,5
WEDNESDAY, JUNE |
T
Man Submits to Bloog
Test to Deterinine
Paternity of Little Boy
NEW YORK. —(p)— Georgg H
Hatch, wealthy cotton e )
consented in supreme court %,
day to submit to g blood legtuea.
conection with a $500,000 bregy,
promise suit brought againgg h.of
by Mary Schirp, who claimg g,
is the fatner of her 4-year-qlq o
Frederick. "
The application for the test
made before Justice John f‘
Walsh by Miss Schirp’s Coungs)
George A. Turley. e
The suit was brought againgt g,
cotton manufacturer in NOVembep
1934. Miss Schirp claims gh, and
Hatch agreed to marry on Decen.
ber 31, 1930. By reason of thig
agreement, she set forth “the de.
fendant was enabled to sedugg
her.” The child was born Septem.
ber 19, 1931.
Hatch was later marrieq g
Dorothy Ruddy.
The petition for the bloog tegt
was brought under a law Dassed
by- the last legislature Providing
for such tests to determine pater.
nity.
o 1
BEER TAX SET
BRUNSWICK, Ga. — (®) _
will cost retail beer dealers $5 4,
operate in Glynn county, outgjg,
the city of Brunswick, wholesalerg
must pay S2OO, but a brewery can
operate for a fee of $1 per ye
These licenses were adopted by the
Glynn county commissioners at
their meeting Tuesday.
aka
Rl -~
N
-
Yy -
NS
GO NORTH BY SEA
THIS YEAR
Two or three days of bracing sea ait
—ocean travel at its best. Broad
decks, comfortable staterooms, deli
cious meals temptingly served. Deck
sports — dance cases — orchestras -
interesting companions—and at a
cost less than overland travel.
Sailings from Savannah for New York
and Boston every Monda¥. Wednesday and
Saturday, 5:30 P.M. For Boston pas
sengers there is a stop in New York with
the ship as their Hotel at no extra cost,
For further information, reservations, ot
tickets nppl; to_your local railroad ticket
agent, authorized tourist agencies or
Ocean Steamship Company of Savannah,
301 West Broad Street, Savannah, Ga,
From ATHENS
To NEW YORK
Going and Returning via
Savannah and ship. ’47”
' Going via Sayannah and ship,
returning rail, or the reverse. 348.0
To BOSTON
Going and Returning via
Savannah and ship. ’SB“
Going via Savannah and ship,
returning rail, or the reverse. ‘640,
All fares include rail and steamer frans:
portation, meals and stateroom accom:
modations aboard ship. Special low rates
from Savannab on passenger accompanied
automobiles. L
I___oé&flw
SR, ST e T B A P S R T .
21 Mineral
spring.
22 God of war.
24 War fiyer.
25 To punburn.
27 To allot.
28 Insect.
29 To bring leg?!
proceedinge.
31 Pace.
33 Speck.
34 To flog.
35 Male titles.
36 Strokes
lightly.
37 Chaperon.
39 Tusks.
40 Respiratory
2 Woven string.
3 Afresh.
4 Carmine.
5 Mistakes.
6 Encountered.
7To subsist.
8 First woman,
9 Depends.
16 Father.
17 He is vice
~ sound.
42 Herb.
43 Sanskrit
dialect.
45 To mend.
46 To press.
48 Male sheep
50 Grief.
52 Northwest.
54 Musical noté.
19 Senior.
20 Rhythm,