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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1935)
“TRAGIC MOMENTS | R A 5 75 v-; IS S S # y & i N | X “' Al B ' \\\ ¥\ /4] M ’ \“ \\l : \ ‘ P /’l.\ +. o il Al o :‘( “W' }\"4 A - / u v \ ““ q | il ' ' gl RV T ”m“ : gt NTI r @ Dramatically the clock struck eleven. Pale | withlove, he leaned toward.her :+: Then he reeled. Sickened, | pe turned his face away with a suppressed snort. | A bug, often found .in tpe boudoir, was crawling across per neck. She was wngglmf desperately to get it off. The 7 propOSdlv long expected, had come — and had collapsed! | " The highest sentiment may easily be affected by an un pleasant suggestion. Syrroundmgs have much more to do with reputation than is commonly supposed. Your house | pold hygiene, everyday, is quite as vital as your personal | appeamnce. | Rigo's KILL-KO’s clean vagor gas means sure, quick | geath to all insect pests, but it is harmless to humans, animals, | furniture and fabrics. Buy it today in either the generous | 25¢, or the economical 50c size at most drug, department ‘l and grocery stores. KILL-KO is the Greatest oF All In. ! gecticides. e R e e N B e L LCR T 'L"t_ O"TH§ONE SURE KILLER ; MORE POWERFUL THAN EVER nsoum.,';o., PPN, P&’fil CED AT 25¢ AND 50¢ ; A TR P : - e ! : COOLED BY REFRIGERATION v 1 ODAY and FRIDAY ppweemr THE VIBRANT, EXCITING, THRILLINGLY, EMOTIONAL HEPBURN .. A 1935 HEROINE g‘”‘i eons 4 0-9i® ?' b 0 i Ak o Katharine Hepburn amd-Charles Boyer @’?‘M P / inrthe impassioned Y £ story of a headstrong g 8 0 girl %oy head-over. f | hechinheaven! = e o Gylone and tempron, e Hui John Beal - "' i Jean Hersholt W 00l —Aso— e ffg r w Betty Boop Cartoon o NEWS EVENTS STRAND SUMMER POLICY —UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE— WEDNESDAY — THURSDAY — FRIDAY J BIG BARGAIN DAYS AL e ALL DAY | SEATS € Children 10c TODAY L %'s‘*mfi Jnce GERE & Bk ~DQN& 4 £ B—Comedy andiNanmiis —FRIDAY— A FAST MOVING NEWS PAPER YARN. SOARING ROMANCE! wmuwn ANGEL & & it ond ROGER PRYOR - P 4 .w e a 1 ):,gg,-:&_:{ “ 2 &Tn':."..,"'"_"f'..;‘.'::;g,\/, N Y /0 % -— “ 'HEADLINE WOMAN | ‘ T i —ALSO— STERLING HOLLOWAY IN L umy GIRLASALLY" l Three Headlines Tell Story Of Reaction To Court’s AAA Decree ‘Manufacturing East Is De ' lighted While Agrarian | South and West Fearful Three headlines, appearing on the same page in the New York Times, graphically show how the East, West and South received ’the decision of the Boston Cir cuit Court of Appeals on the processing tax. The processing tax is levied by }the government to furnish the money for the farm benefit pro ‘gram under which cotton grow ers receive checks for acreage ‘rental. While the tax is paid to the }government by the manufactur ers, or processors, it is finally passed on to the millions of con sumers of the products affected. It is called the “Farmer’'s Tariff,” ‘because It enables him to restrict production and obtain higher do ‘mestic prices for his product, just 'as the manufacturer's tariff re ‘stricts imports from other coun tries ond permits a higher domes tic price for manufactured arti cles. The headline to the story from lßoston, reporting New England's reaction to the court's decision said: ‘“New England Hails De feat of AAA Tax,” and the sub head was as follows: “Cotton Manufacturers Now Are Cons vinced of a Final Victory in Su preme Court.” Two other news stories from special editorial correspondents of The Times were carried in ad joining columns. On,e from Omaha was captioned: “Corn Belt Shock | ed By Decision on AAA,” with the sub-title, “Farmers, Citing Gains Under the New Deal Plan, Now Fear Return of Surpluses.” An other story from Memphis, heart of the cotton belt, was captioned: “Farmers in South Hope Tax Will Stay,” and the sub-head ran like this: “Cotton Growers Want Nothing to Interfere With | Control es Crop Producion.” | ‘While the above headlines, in themselves, tell the story, it is interesting to observe how Times correspondents from Boston, Omaha and Memphis report the manner in which the court’s de cision was received by the people in their sections, Boston, a textile center where no cotton is grown and which, naturally, is interested in low priced raw cotton; Omaha, center of the wheat belt, and Memphis, one of the chief cities of the South where the chief agri cultural crop is cotton. EASTERN VIEW Excerpts from the Boston, Omaha and Memphis editorial | correspondence follows: By F. LAURISTON BULLARD Editorial Correspondence, ; The New York Times. BOSTON.—lndustrial New Eng land hailed with elation the 2-to -1 decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals here against the constitu tionality of the processing tax. | The almost universal expectation is that within the ninety-day | period allowed by law the govern ment will appeal to the Supreme ’ Court, and that by the end of the | year a final decision will bel handed dowhn against the tax. Our cotton textile industry far beyond all others would benefit from that outcome. The process ing tax does not apply to wool, nor is the shoe industry affected. The wheat tax is reflected in the cost of flour and bread, and man ufacturers of corn and pork pro-! ducts also are affected. These in dustries are believed to have been more successful than cotton in passing the tax on to the con- sumer. Within a few hours of the an ‘nouncement of the court decision numerous textile men came out with fighting statements affirming their determination to resist fur ther payments. Today the indu: try is not so vocal. Sentiment has not changed but the public better iundestands the scope of the de cision. No general relief has ar rived. Only one corporation will pay no more at present. Many payments will be made under pro test and the money either will be held by the court or the taxpayer |will furnish a bond pending that | finding. ‘Just how heavy the New Eng land burden has been was indi cated anew yesterday by Internal Revenue figures covering the first half of° the year. Processing taxes cost in these six states more than $26,000,000, almost $20,000,000 being paid in Massachuseits. From the beginning the cotton tax has cost the great Amoskeag company in New Hampshire more than $2,- 500,000. Since the cotton industry regards itself as shamefully han dicapped by the tax, which one careful and liberal manufacturer declare shas created “a terrible situation,” the prospect of deliv erance before long is correspond ingly weleome. WESTERN VIEW By RONALD M. JONES Editorial Correspondence, The New York Times. OMAHA.—The Circuit Court of Appeals, in its decision at Bos ton, did more to alarm the Farm Belt over the danger which ! threatens New Deal farm reliet] than numerous tax injunctlon’ suits filed close at home. The filing of these suits repre sented merely the beginning of 2 fight which might go on for some time. The Hoosac Mills decision was the loss of an important skirmish. It revealed high judicial opinon hostile to the processing THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA note the significance of support by equally bhigh authority in the dissenting minority of the court. In that, the farmer and those who live by his patronage find their hope for a favorable outcome of the final test. : ! | Not all, of cuorse, will be| equally dlsmayed over what the Hoosac Mills decision potrends. There are a few everywhere who would rather be let alone than ac cept the farm benefit payments. But public opinion generally runs strongly to the view that the farm states have been vastly ben efitted by AAA activities' and that they would be seriously damaged by a forced cessation of those activiites. In spite of abnormal conditions which have made it difficult to judge how completely efficacious control of agriculture may be, friends of the AAA believe that, properly administered, the power " AT g . = > eT g S > \.'-V. & ;/yfiw':n.-,k"",.;.%g ooy : ' . € o A\ . - _B % s ° o oh o - . . » . \Ax o o ;W : ; 070 ,;_o"’ e vt . (2 NN O - . o R £ i e Rg - ¥ . ok o '~.:3;:§':-;:<;i ;Q"\‘.’W it i = : N R T gB W 3 ) B ep. :HE i 73 ' N—— HeREEs Seeß an— O . 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A ’~”"‘l“’."2‘”«3',&;' i 2 ..;.," i - . & PR .MTN S o " = o lies within it to maintain an ap proximate equality of farm in comeé. | With ‘the props Kknocked from under it, they see only the prob ability of accumulating surpluses again, little chance to dispose of: them profitably by export and prices, as a result, below the I'ea-f sonable cost of production. ‘ . SOUTHERN VIEW By THOMAS FAUNTELROY { Editorial Correspondence, ! 3 The New York Times. g MEMPHIS, Tenn.—Mid-South ! cotton farmers, enjoying the hene- | fits of controlled production and twelve-cent cotton, are going for ward with their plans for market ing the 1935 crop, confident that Washington will find a way out of the difficulties raised by the ad verse opinion in the AAA case in Boston. There has been a wide-l spread demand among the farm- | ers’ organizations for the adopt fon of administration amendments to the act, and many of the lead ers here believe that these amend ments will eliminate the errors pointed out in the court opinion. The problem of the cotton far- On hot summer days when the thermometer is hitting ninety, an Electric Range, more than ever, gains the applause and acclaim of every happy owner. It banishes stifling heat in the kitchen. The kitchen stays as cool as any other room in the house. Flameless heat with uten sils in direct contact with the glowing coils cooks the food without heating the air. The insulated, no-draft oven keeps the heat inside. i Electric cookery is spotlessly clean. You mer has hinged not so much upon a fixed price as upon controlled production, The processing tax has been looked upon as an aid to price stabilization which could be abandoned if and when the huge cotton surpluses were dissi pated and production brought within the demands of a normal market. To this end the cotton planters have worked for fifty years. As early as 1890 cotton conferences were called at vari ous centers of the South. The overwhelming vote of the farmers on the Bankhead bill, reaching 90 percent on the. aver age, indicates the unanimity of the cotton planters on the control of acreage. This has enabled them not only to contemplate the re duction of the surplus which two vears ago stood at 13,000,000 bales but has made it possible for them to pick their crop with some cer tainty of normal market demands. It is for this reoson that the cotton farmer would permit with out protest all of the other ad vantages of the AAA to go out except the control of acreage. Directly opposed to this posi * HOTPOINT ELECTRIC HOT WATER COSTS NO MORE THAN OLD-STYLE WAYS The problem of hot water in the summer is solved by Hotpdint Electric Water Heaters. Electric heat is applied right in the water; there is no waste heat to warm up kitchen or basement. You have abundant hot water 24 hours 'round. You can leave your heater on while you are away without the least concern about danger or cost. The average user of automatic hot water on this company’s lines pays only $2.30 a month ! Heater prices begin at $60.50 cash. You may have as long as three years to pay. : gl e tion is . the _exporter, and since[ the inland buyer frequently de-| pends upon the exporter for his market, ‘the cotton handler gene erally favors a return to the old system. Some haye proposed a limit on cotton for domestic con- | sumption ~ but with the bridle| pulled off on surplus cotton, which would go into the export trade and be sold at the world price. | An effort to harmonize the two, views at a meeting in New Or-J leans Monday yresulted in a walk- | out by 400 formers. The meeting | was called by the Association ofl Commerce. : i s ‘ Prayer Service at | Synagogue Tomorrow Night at 8 O’clockij Beginning tomorrow night at B‘] o'clock brief prayer services will| be held every Friday night-at the Synagogue, Rabbi Abraham Shus terman* announced today. The services will be held each Friday |’ night throughout the remainder of | the summer, the rabbi-said. don’t have to spend hours scouring scorched, soot-blackened pots and pans. You can go places and do things, when and as you please. For you cook an entire meal in the oven with out attention. Every day is vacation day with a Hotpoint Electric Range to do your cooking! Right mow you can buy the beautiful range above for only $74.50 cash. On terms you pay only $3.50 down, BALANCE IN THREE YEARS! Clean Out |-‘ g : Kidney Poisons Wash Ouat Your 15 Miles of Kiduey Tabes | If kidneys don't pass 3 pints a day ' and get rid of more than 8 pounds of ' waste matter, the 15 miles of kidney tubes and filters may become clogged with poisonous waste and the danger of acid poisoning is greatly increased. Bladder passages are difficult, which often smart and burn like scalding water and cause discomfort. This acid condition, brought about by poor kidney functions is a danger signal and may be the beginning of rnagging backache, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, getting up nights, swollen feet and ankles, rzmfl o pains and dizziness, : Most people watch their bowels which contain only 27 feet of intes~ tines but neglect the kidneys whichl contain 15 miles of tiny tubes and filters. If these tuhbes or filters be come clogged with golsonl. it may knock you out and lay you up for many months, Don't run any risk. Make sure your kidneys empty 3 pints a day. Ask your druggist for DOAN’'S PILLS, an old prescription, which has been used successfully by mil lions of kidney sufferers for over 40/ years. © 1934, Foster-Milburn Cos PAGE FIVE