Newspaper Page Text
ANDAY, JUNE 10, 1935
FOR CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
paily Rate Per Word for
Consecutive Insertions
o Day, per w0rd........ .02
inimum Charge.... .... .40
hree Insertions f0r...... 1.00
‘,\p\'ICRTISEMENT will be
ken for less than 40c. Ad
srtisements ordered for irreg
o insertions take the one
me rate. Name and addresses
ust be counted in the body of
he advertisement.
AN ERROR is made, The
qnll.‘x~-llex'ald is responsible
r only one incorrect inser
n. The advertiser should
tity immediately if any cor
(-u»"n is needed.
DISCONTINUANCES must
L made in person at THE
ANNER = HERALD OFFICE
py letter. Phone discontinu
ces are NOT valid. -
, WANT ADS are payable in
fivance. NT .
SWA AD 75
" PHONE
LOST
v Black and. white Boston
all terrier, female, “Georgia” .
bl Lugille Epps, Phone 1765.
oward. ¢
FOR SALE
e e
. SALE — Blue Grass Lawn
owers, 10-inch = wheel, - ball
aring, fully self-adjusting.
il last a lifetime. Special at
50 Christian Hdw,, Phone
00 for demonstration.
» SALE — Grain Cradles and
inder Twine. Christian Hdw.,
hone 1300, ;
FOR RENT
: RENT — For the summer
bonths, nicely furnished apart
pent two rooms and Kitchen
te: all conveniences' Milledge
venue. Reasonable. Phone
p5-J . *
1 RENT—Five room bungalow,
at, and recently done over.
ext to Legion Park, 894 South
umpkin Street, F, Raiford,
hone 1824. \
ik RIEENT—Nice front room, !to
entleman or couple, near Ag.
llege. Phone 138. ‘
R RENT—For summer months,
room furnished house, in pleas
n residence section, Terms
ery reasonable, Phone 188-M.
R RENT—In private home 3-
wom furnished or unturnished
partment, large living room,
ed room, kitchen, private bath
nd garage. Adults only. Phone
4-M
APARTMENTS
R RENT—To Adults Only. 3-
oms and bath, upstairs, 721
uth Milledge, Avenue. . Addresg
& A. Cash Store, Winder, Ga.
WANTED .
E BUY OLD SCRAP GOLD
D SILVER AND PAY HIGH
EST PRICE IN CASH
J]. BUSH, Jeweler
65 E. Clayton Street
Authority of U. 8. Treasury
ROOMS WANTED
ANTED by threé adults, two or
hree furnished rooms in good
eighborhood. Permanent. Price
st be reasonable. Write P, O.
box 134, Athens, Ga.
SALESMEN WANTED
ANTED—Man to start in busi
ess selling widely-known pro
uets to satisfied consumers.
omplete line largest company;
stablished 1889. Big earnings.
9 capital or experience need
. Write for free particulars.
fawleigh's, Box GAF-13-1,
lemphis, Tenn.
NOTICE
DR. T. E. " JAGO
Veterinarian
A moved - his office from
esby's Stablés to Mrs. White
s 185 Hull Street, where he
I be 2lad to meet all his friends.
Phone 1038, Day or Night.
Rail
ailroad Schedules
ABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
rival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Ve for Richmond, Washington,
¢w York and East—
ElO A M,
f‘l" P.M.: AW Conditio&ed.
ill M. Air Conditioned.
"': or Atlanta, South and West:
°» AM.
::" .M. Air Conditioned.
M P.M. Air Conditioned.
Ve for Hiberton, Greenwood,
"iroe, N. €, Chooal),
2 AM: X
‘¢ for Winder, Lawrenceville,
T‘My,c. ‘L()Cfl.I),
30 P.M.
GAINESVILLE-MIDLAND
G Leave Athens
° for Gainesville— 7:45 a.m.
I 2 for Gainesville— 10:45 a.m.
. Arrive Athens
t om Gainesville— 10:00 a.m.
llrom Gainesville— = 6:15 a.m.
, GEORZIA RAILROAD
"l 51 Arrives Athens 7:45 a.m.
Daily Except Sunday
Y Leaveg Athens 11:00 a.m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
~ Lula—North—South
- —Arrive
s 3 11:20 a.m.
& e 4:50 p.m.
- L. Cox, Assistant General
F'“elght-Pnsenger Agent
Telephone 81
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
1 Leave Athens
* (except Sunday) 6:30 &m
--.. and &15 p.m. s
“¥ only 7:50 a.m. and 4:00
p.mn_
- Arrive Athens Daily
% p.m, and 9:16 p.m. _
KOTEX
Economy Package
-48 Pads—s9¢
MOON-WINN DRUG Co.
____Clayton Street
SPECIAL WEEK’S SALE
GARDEN COURT
BEAUTY PRODUCTS
Buy One for 55¢
Choice of Any Other of
Same Value FREE!
PHONE 1066
CITIZENS PHARMACY.
WIND DAMAGE
JESTER
PROTECTION
COSTS VERY LITTLE |
GIFTS FOR
ALL OCCASIONS
Are Prized Most When
Bought From
J. BUSH, Reliable Jeweler,
20 Years in Business in
the Same Stand
166 EAST CLAYTON ST,
PAINT AFFECTED PARTS WITH
\TCHING OF TOES 59‘:
OR SIMILAR SKIN IRRITATIONS
FAILS TO STOP...YOUR MONEY BACK
CITIZENS PHARMACY
BOTH FOR 29c¢
Ever-Ready Safety
Razor—Cromium Plated
and Shaving Cream
REID DRUG CO.
SOUTHEASTERN STAGES, Inc.
170 College Avenue—Phone 626
(Schedule Effective April 15th)
COACHES LEAVE ATHENS FOR
Atlanta: 9:35 AM.; 1:25 P.M.; 2:40 P.M.;
4:15 P.M.; 6:25 P.M.; 8:50 P.M.
For Augusta, Savannah, Charleston, Waycross,
Jacksonville, Wilmington: 10:00 A.M.; 4:05
P.M.; 9:20 P.M.
For Macon, Tifton, Thomasville; Jacksonville:
1:20 P.M. :
For Greenville, Asheville, Charlotte: 12:12
P.M.; 3:27 P.M.; 7:57 BM. souen o st
For Information and Service, Call 626 ..
Have Your
DIPLOMA
Framed
McGREGOR’S
PHONE
-7
“SPEEDY"” —ByC. A Trussell Motor Co.
’
T : o/ . 1 7
meemn B | CERERY (Vv
fifig‘pz:‘}fi;g 1: - /\/’ &EE Efll Tngug"\?éo"iz = ."lm: OLOEST DAL ER"
lt&%gfi T %}'i )e T B
W =P i N\l
Chevrolet Coach .. .. .. .. 3185
Essex COupe .. & . os «o +. SHOD
Chevrolet Coupe .. .. . <973
Chrysler Roadster. ... .. : .$133
Atstin Coupe. . .. +:... .- .99
These Cars Can Be Bought for Small Down Payment and $2 to $4 a Week.
'INSULTED “CABBIES”
STRIKE IN CAPITAL
| ___C
| (Continued on Page Five)
; B o
| by leaders of the strikers at action
gthey said had been taken by Gen
{ eral Motors company in conneection
!with the Snrine conclave. They said
the company had provided 350 au
{tomobiles to transport Shrine offi
{ cials about the capital free of
| charge, and that they did net think
2it fair for them to be used on sight
i seeing trips to Arlington National
}Cemetery, Mont Vernon and othet
qutsido points.
Cars filled with “cabbies’” roamed
Pennsylvania avenue and other
streety this morning exhorting their
fellow drivers not to do any busi
ness. Shriners emerging from their
{ hotels for the day’s éqremonies
i found it difficult to obtain cabs.
| The regular rate inside the mid
| town zone is 20 cents and for outer
?zonos it runs progressively higher.
} Some visitors to the city reported
]flmt some drivers had charged them
i more than the regulation rate.
STATE NEWS BRIEFS
(Continued From Page One)
according to BEarie Cocke, agent of
the corporation and head of the
Reconstruction Finance Corpora
tion in the State.
Already the agency has handled
approximately $6,000,0000 in loans
to Georgia farmers, and about 90
percent of the $50,000,000 will be
divided among planters of the
state. 2
i S
ATTENTION W.O.W.
All local members are urged to
be present at a class initiation
Tuesday,. night at 8:15 o’clock.
J. D. Godfrey, C. C. :
D. A. Watson Fin. Secty.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Divorces Add New Chapter to Record
Of the Much-Married “Golden Goulds”
e R e e e
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e e S 0 S O TS ¢ ) O O It B TR T T W AN S A S . 8 S| PN TN L
The Baroness and Baron de Graffz nried . . . their divorce is pending
By MORRIS GILBERT
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
PARIS. — “It's funny—we both
swore we'd never marry Swiss
men,” said Baroness Dorothy de
Grafenried, a little ruefully.
She was talking about her sister
Helen and herself, daughters of
millionaire Frank Jay Gould. Both
of them dia marry Swiss men,
Barons Roland de Graffenried ani
de Montenach. Both of them now
have sued for divorce, and .two
spectacular international unions—-
American girls of great wealth
and social positions marrying into
the old KEuropean nobility -— are
coming to an end.
“My sister already has her di
vorce,” Baroness de Graffenried
explained. ‘“Mine is still pending.”
The baroness defined the grounds
in each case as “incompatibility.”
Thus another page is turned in
the record of the descendants of
the almost fabulous Jay Gould,
American pioneer railroad maker
and breaker, grandfather of the
two girls. When the éld/er Gould
died in 1892, he left a fortune of
some $86,000,000 to be divided
among six children, of whom Frank
Jay Gould was the youngest,
Father Divorced
Several Times
How the Gould wealth enriched
France’'s Riviera — and reputedly
turned a handsome profit for itself
until the destruction, a few win
ters ago, of the famous “Polais de
la Mediterranee,” the Gould Casino
at Nice—has been a subject for
gossip for years. Also, the ma'ri
monial careers of most everybody
concerned in this brarnch of the
celehrated family.
For Helen and Dorothy Gould,
when they were pupils in a con
vent school at Fribourg in Switz
erland, were already no strangers
to divorces in their immediate vi
cinity. They were witnesses of a
gay kaleidoscope of charming but
apparently imptrmanent step-fa
thers and step-mothers. T h e i r
mother, the beautiful Helen Mar
gare: Kelly of New York, divoresd
their father in 1909 and subse
quently married three times.
When their father’'s first mar
riage ended. he . wedded another
el Edigh-by name. and their
%fiafi?&%fibd’ns&f “began -t én
years Ister. Today he is the hus-
MRS o v
i Y
. o
__..:._.___———-—-————
The Baroness and Baron de Mon
tenach . . . already parted.
band of the radiant young Flor
‘nece Lacaze, whose earlier marri
age also had ended in divorce,
Barons They Wed
Were Quite Different
When the two girls made their
vouthful compact “never tp marry
a Swiss,” they made one mistake.
That was to lump all Swiss men
together as the same type. Actu
ally the two. barons were as difl
ferent from one another as the
sisters they married. Helen, the
elder of the girls, met her baron
first and married first. He was a
voung diplomat, attached to his
‘(‘mlnn',\"s foreign+ service, and now
iis in the Swiss section of the Lea
| gue of Nations.
| Baroness Helen Gould de Mon
tenach, meanwhile, became engross-
Fed in medical séience and hospital
!wm‘k‘ “I ecan’t understamd what
you see in Paris,” she used to tell
Model ACoupe.... .......3999
Dk Sodans. .. .... ... .90
Chevrolet Coupe. ... .....$125
Model A Roadster. ... .....$95
Mudson Coupe. ..... ......995
| her sister. “It bores me to death.”
| After taking courses in Geneva
‘medical centers, she nuow is a Jab
| oratory expert in the communal
ibospita,l there,
In the summer of 1924, Dorothy,
the younger Gould sister, happened
to be in St. Moritz, where she met
the Swiss national tennis cham
pion—dashing young Roland de
Graffenried de Villar, cavalry offi
|cer, scion of an old and wealthy
inoble family. La'er on that year,
de Graffenried was a welcome
iguest on Frank Jay Gould's estate
at Maisons Laffitte, near Paris.
The Baron and Dortohy Gould
’were married shortly afterward, in
Paris.
De Graffenride
Failed in Business "
Baroness de Graffenried instant
ly became one of the most popular
and attracieve young matrons in
Parisian society. Extremely pretty.
wvivacious, tall, slim, with big
brown eyes, she was much admired
wherever she went. And she went,
as they say, “everywhere.”
Baron de Graffenried exerted
mere talent _in spending money
than in making it. After a couple
of ventures in automobile agencies,
he was installed by Mr. Gould as
a director i a famous dressmaking
establishment. The young baron
muffed his chance.
The story of the collapse of that
house is a stupendous drama ic
Parisian dressmaking history. How
the long-etsablished, rich, and ex
clusive patronage was alienated by
a new and gaver, less distinguish
ed clientelee How even the pres
ence of the Baroness as a ‘‘vende
us” couldn’t stem the rout. How,
finally, the whole proud venture
crashed, the failure being es'i-
Imated at 15,000,000 francs,
Showed Liking
For Blonde Women
Me ile, people began to no
| tice wz"he de Graffenried mar
| pinge wasn't going so well, either.
The baron was seen about Paris
in the company of more dizzier
‘members of the genus blonde than
| seemed quite appropriate. Once
| the baroness and her husband tried
’heroic ?,surw. They plunged to
gethafi%p the African jungle in
what apparently was an effort to
get a fresh: start. It din’t work.
Shortly afterward, they separated.
| Today, Baron de Grafenried is re
lported to be in Martinique.
This summer Dorothy de Graf
fenried will join her sister Helen
on the shores of Lake Leman in
the little chalet Her two -daugh
ters will play with ex-baroness
Dorothy's three children. And
the two sisters will have three
[!fionths' ‘to think over their girl
!hQOd vow—and to make plans for
| the future.
Athenians Are Awarded
Honorary Degrees at
Emory Commencement
(Continuea From Page One)
“Much goes under the name
‘Christianity’ that is not Chrisé
tian, and should go under the
name ‘Churchianity’” Rev. Rum
ble pointed out. “‘(‘hurchianityf
hides behind altdars. Thousands of
loval backers of the church do
not possess the spirit of Christ in
their homes, business, social rela
tions, or even church affairs.”
United States Senator and for
mer governor ‘Richard B. Russell,
jr.,, delivered the baccalaureate ad
dress at the Emory closing exer
cises today. He declared that Am
erican Democracy will not be de
stroyed “recognizing the new bur
dens of modern-day _society” and
warned against demagogues who
offer “public cure-alls, quack reme
dies and utopian promises that are
impossible of fulfillment.”
Liberty To Starue
Striking at critics at the national
administration’s program to relieve
those unemployed and in distress,
Senator Russell said:
“If we had held to the narrow
opinion of some as to the proper
concept of American government,
the only liberty these people would
have enjojved would have been the
right to starve undisturbed by the
national government.”
He said social responsibility
would not end for the nation be
cause of the supreme court’'s decis
jon in the NRA case “Under the
code machinery, as cumbersome
and irksome as it was, wamez and
hours could be regulated, with an
idea to general social considera
tions, rather than to the arbitrary
power of either the employed or
the employing groups.” :
The effect of the supreme court’s
decision; he said, “is ondy to trams
fer responsibilify. In this ‘ease, it
has been transferred fromx gov
MATTRESS
RENOVATING
PHONE 9147
ernment to employers and labor.”
' He said if the -decision in the
NRA case servel no, other pur
‘pose, “it has at least served to show
how fallacious and ridiculous”
are the '“'wild charges” that “the
Constitution was to be scrapped”
and the “American system of gov
ernment junked.” -
President Roosevelt with “true
Americanism,”” Russell said stated
at “‘his first press conference af
ter the blow fell that it was a mat
‘ter which the peopls would decide
No scintilla of our Hberties are in
danger so long as our leader’'s first
impulse in a moment of emergency
was to turn to that great reservoir
ol power from which all true Demo
cracy is derived, the people of the
United States.
. “The president’'s position has
been all the more temperate when
we consider that the Constitution
of the United States does not ex
pressly ves: the supreme court with
the double veto power of wiping
out legislation enacted by the Con
gress of the United States and ap
proval by the president.”
Hits Critics
The senator sfld “we hear a great
deal of criticism about the govern
ment going imto business in compe
tition with private enterprises.
However, private business has
never hesitated to make demands
on the government for all kinds of
assistance. There are few lines of
business in the United States today
that have not maintained for years
an organization in Washington for
the purpose of securing every pos
sible benefit and advantage for that
line of business.”
Turning again to critics of the
administration’'s program he said:
“Any voice which ereates cleav
ages or engenders bitter hatreds
and promotes class strife, whether
it be the voice of the privileged or
the underprivileged, the possessor,
of great wealth or a victim of
‘poverty, is a menace to the security
of our government: and works
against the patrietic and unsel
fish service of those who are seek
ing to effect equity.” .
He said “the cabitalistic and
profit system in the Unite! States
are not endangered in the slighiest
unless those who benefit most
thereby determine to destroy it
through their blindness and stub
borness. The Constitution of the
United States is not in danger of
destruction and event of the past
few days tave shown it is not even
elastié endugh to be stretched.
DR. GEORGE WORKS
DELIVERS ADDRESS
X
TO 425 GRADUAT!S|
(Continuea From Page One) l
i
of general education should be «;-x‘i
tended to include the firsg |\\w.'
years of what is ‘stil] quite com- |
monly called college. This ('hangu'
carries the implication that for the
great majority of young persun-.‘
attending junior college lhejnsti-!
tution will be a local one and its'
‘appropriate nexus is with ‘the sec: |
ondary school and not with the
four-year college or the university,'
“This statement doés not.imply
that no colleges and universities
will offer the work of the junior
college period but rather that the
great majorily of ‘young persons
will get the opportunity for the
prolonged period of general edu
cation through an extension of the
public high schgols. Nor does it
imply that the state will not con
tribute to the support of junior
college education but rather that
it will make iis econtribution in
cooperation with local communi
ties as is now' the general pradtic:
in the maintenance of elementary
and secondary schools.” 7
The Valedictory
Discussing the educational heri
tage of the present generation, Mr.
Baxter said ‘never before has an
educational program included so
great a part of a population; never
hefore ‘have so many pursued edu
cation in advanced forms. The
number of high schools angd col
leges has increased six-fold and
more in about a generation. Edu
cation is provided at public ex
pense and is open to all who have
the ability and the ‘will to par
take, dull and brilliant alike.
“So conscious of the advantages
of education have we become that
we tend to regard it as a panacea
which iy itself should solve all our
preblems and make perféct life on
carih.
k However, Mr, Baxter pointed
out, “if the knowledge now freely
| available is put to use, the man
of the future will be a better mdin
;soundl,v educated. capable of meas
uring and realizing his pos<ibilitie:
land con'trolling his destinies. Kach
will do his fair and definite share
in the necessary service of man
kind”. !
Glorious Age
“Ours is at ohce g glorious age
Blorious by its prospects of un
precedented good; perilous by its
possibilities of unparalleled danger.
The trtuh of the pld adage, ‘knowl
edg is power’ was never better ex
lemplified that at the present day.
It s an_imperfect appreciation of
our knowledge that is at the roo
of half our difficulties. Educaticn
:is a means to an end, not an end
ip itself.
H*We have., ready to hand
knowledge enough to solve ouw
most pressing problems if we had
but the intelligence to di€cern and
courage to apply.* Other civiliza
tions perished because they liter
ally did not know what was the
matter with them. Our eivilization
has no sueh excuse. Today sound
diagnosis of our ills has become
possible and is becoming increas
ingly accurate. For the first time
in history man is beginning to
know himself —the indispensibie
starting point for the wise hand
ling of human problems.” .
: Delivers Sermon
~ The exercises were opened ané
¢losed with prayer "by the Rewv
'David Cady Wright. rector of Em
'muu- Episcopal church.
A special music program was
given at the servic#s vesterday,
‘at which time Dr. Luther Rice
Christie, pastor of First Baptist
church, ‘Jacksonville, Fla., deliver
&w baccalaureate sermon. Dr.
achievements are measured by.the
age of his cemeteris”. Every time
an idol is destroyed, he said, one
has grown intellectually. :
Dr. Christie took his text . from
the 16th = and 19th chapters of
Judge: “Thou hes stolen {he im
ages whieh T madé and my priest;
what have 1 ieft?’ He told the
story of Micah who stole all his
mother's treasure. When he re
turned it, she celebrated the oec
cesion by making a graven image.
He then built a temple full of
gravep images. Along came somge
ancient ‘hijackers’ who stole hi
images and left him destitute.
The music included organ music
by Hugh 1.. Hodgson, assisted by
Miss Minnie Cutler. Athens and
Miss Laura Rogers, Dahlonega.
violinists, Johy, Morgan, cellist and
Miss Lucille Kimble, pianists. The
opening ‘and closing prayers were
given by “Dr.: R. C. 'Granbefry
Baptist minister.
PALACE 2D T UEsE
AYS and TUESDAY
Ask Any Policeman What He Thinks of
“Public Hero Number 1”
en ’ » .
Don't Stop Till You Get
= 7
Him DEAD OR ALIVE!
T'g{{ War —war i%: iIJ A " ' ’ 1
{ | tothedeath S S
-@ . : ! ey L)
AL —it’s the A O
"P‘ pledge of e TE
W Service”! & Q e
<“m \ (“ T | 2
O : . ‘
i G w ,f Men of the B. I. D. J.—what are
}PR they like? How do they carry on
0 “‘, Uncle Sam’s relentless war to end
crime? Must they keep love out
' i of their dangerous lives? Follow
;;g« i this man—as he thumbed his nose
Q; ’ at Hell for a girl with ruby lips!
L™ B & Lionel Barrymore-Jean Arthur
- Lt Chester Morris - Joseph Calleia *
Paul Kelly . Lewis Stone _.°
< Directed by Produced by ;
Jjeuo- J. Walter Ruben Lucien Hubbard'
| Gollwyn- . ‘
: —Also—— :1
PcTU Travel Talk News
“Jamaica” ® Events
TODAY
STRAND 2 Days sand TUESDAY
T T v
iTHISLURKING
;TERROR .- HOLDS
3 :YOU SPEI.I.BUND!
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“BURN ’EM UP T
PR BARNES" e
PAGE SEVEN
H. 5. Marler Given T g
High Promotion by
AGP Tea Commfi
(Continued From Page/‘Ono')"fwm
school’s history. A great gmdigw
career in college foothall was presss
dicted for him, but he choss te m
ter the business world and his Ix"&
cess on the gridiron has been dni:’,:“:i;
licated in his work for the A/ am
¥ B
The new manager of the Broad =
street store has been with the
A. and P. company for four yeafs
and the rapid rise to a store mans
agership is evidence of the high
esteem in which he is held by his
company and is a source of gratis.
fication so the many friends of hé4
and Mrs. Wood. : g