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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1935)
PAGE ONE-A oIOCK MANEDVERS HELD BACK FRIDAY Trading Quiet During Al most All of Session; War Rumblings Ignored By VICTOR EUBANK Associated Press Financial Writer NEW YORK.—(P)—A little more | speculative froth was blown off the stock market Friday, but :,e-i lective demand was effective in | restraining most bearish sorties. 1 Trading was quiet during th::! greater part of the session. Loud-I er foreign war rumblings enggn-, dered caution but were not excep tionally disturbing. Domestic bus-l iness optimism continued. Commodities were a neutral in fluence to stocks. Cotton firmed and grains were backward. Bonds exhibited no definite trend. For- eign exchanges were listless. The general run of sharves held to a narrow rahge while scattered specialties pushed ahead. Among the latter, up 1 to 2 points, were Swift and Company, American Power and Light preferréd, Libby - Owens, Newport Industries, U. =. Industrial Alcohal, . .Deere and Case. Losers of fractions to a point or so © included American Telephone, Western Union, Chrys ler, Auburn, American Can, Du- Pont, Union Pacific, and Great Northern. Slightly higher wer¢ ‘Westinghouse, Wilson and Com pany, Armour, Anaconda, U. S. Smelting, Packard, U. 8. Steel National Power and Light, Johns- Manville and Consolidated Gas. LIGHT BUYING NEW ORLEANS.— ~ —With cables reporting increased war tension in Europe and foreign markets spurting, light buying was noted in the cotton market here Friday and prices advanced from 5 to 7 points. New Orleans Table Open High Low Close P.C. ok, <. 10,18 .... 00.. x 1048°10.7% Dec, . ID.BI 10.87 10.80 10.87 10.76 Jan. . 10.82 10.88 10.82 10.88 10.73 Mch, . 10.90 10.90 10.87 10,90 10.84 May . 10.92 10.96 10.92 10.94 10.87 July . 10.96 10.96 10,94 10.96 10.89 MARKETS FLUCTUATE NEW YORK.—(#)—Cotton con tinued to fluctuate within a com paratively narrow range during Friday's trading with the under tone generally steady. Early ad vances on foreign buying and covering were followed by slight reactions but hedging K was noi active and prices worked up again later. New York Table ¥ Open High Low Close P.C. O('t“ . 10.90 10.90 10.84 10.89 10.81 Dec. . 10.85 10.90 10.83 10.89 10.78 Jan. . 10.87 10.90 10.84 10.89 10.80 M('h: . 10.92 10.94 10.88 10.93 10.85 Ma_\f . 10.96 10.98 10.92 10.98 10.89 July . 10498 11.01 10.96 10.99 10.92 : CHICAGO GRAIN " High Low Clos? WHEAT— Deel .. .. .. 1.08% 101% 1.02% sMay .. .. .. 1.02% 100% 1.01% S .. .. . % 0 01% CORN— B . ... 0 58% 59% R . . .59% 58% .59% gal . s % 59% 60 OATS— 5 Dese .. .. .. . % VIR % ey .. .. oL, AOE TN .5 e L, .. L DR BR 3% . LEASE AGREEMENT AUGUSTA, Ga. —(P)— A lease agreement whereby the Bon-Air Vanderbilt, largest of the local winter hotels, will be acquired by Theodore Dewitt, operator of a hotel in Cleveland, Ohio, and the General Ogzlethorpe, Savannah, will.be completed here next Tues day . The officails of the ‘Bon Air company, owners of the hotel, said today that formal closing of the Jease awaits only the signing of the papers. A company headed by Walton Marshall, New York, was the previous lessor, L ee it B A e Upset Condition ‘Made Man Feel . Tired and Weal Black-Draught is a purely vege table medicine for the relief o constipation. It does its ‘'work to the satisfac tion of thousands of men anc women who use it when needed. “I was strong and healthy until I had the flu,” writes Mr. C. W. Whiddon, of Mandeville, La “After this I was troubled with constipation that made me feel tired nad sluggish and weak. Black-Draught helped me quite a bit. I think it is good for consti pation.” Remember to try Black-Draught next time you need the assistance it has so reliably brought to others. BLACK - DRAUGHT —Advertisement. The American Automobile Association Wants Manager for Athens and Northeast Georgia— Must Be Able to Secure Members and Adiust Claims. Leave Applicatioin in Writing, with Ref erences Before 2 P. M. Saturday, Also Phone Number. Address AAA, Care of Banner-Herald. South Atlantic Modern Language Greup To Meet at University November 29, 30 { The University of Georgia will | be host to the South Atlantic Mod ier" Language Association for its tannual meeting, November 29 and !30. The association will hold its | gessions in the Commerce-Journal ism building on the University campus, and the representatives will be guests of the University at a dinner Friday, November 29 in Memorial Hall, where President IHarmon W. Caldwell will preside | Dr. John €. Dawson of the [Unlversit_v of Alabama, is presi ident of the association, and Prof ' John E. Strausbaugh of Emory !I,‘niversity is secretary-treasurer. The Executive Committtee is com posed of Dr. Clement Vollmer Duke University; Prof. Sturgis E Leavitt, University of North Car olina; Dr. J. M. Steadman, Ir., Emory University; Dr. Henry Campbell Davis, University of South Carolina; and Dr. Elizabeth ¥. Johnson, Winthrop College. | The chairmen of the language groups are: English, Prof. C. A. Robertson, University of Florida; French and Italian, Miss Rene Harde, Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina; Ger man, Prof. C. F. Hamff, Emory TTnviersity; and Spanish, Prof. Terrell Louise Dadum, University of Chattanooga: ' : The purpose of the association is to encourage __Sou%hern research 1 Ld e e A" e ok e 5 ‘i Mo ; . | Negro Cook Outwits Would-Be Bandit in ould- andit In | 'Attempted Rcbbery Millie Thomas, a Negro girl wh ;: cooks for Mr. and Mrs, Jim| Burch, was held up. but not rnl»-g bed, by a white man ‘\'k'.\‘l#'l‘d.'l)"‘ while working at the Burch home | on Lumpkin street, about one o'clock, she told a Banner-Herald reporter ‘today. ! The Negress, according to her staterient, was going about her work cleaning up the house, when she heard someone coming up the back steps. Thinking it was a roomer at the Bureh home, Millie did not investigate, ‘and Kkept cleaning the upstairs of the house until the telephone rang. When the telephone rang, the Negro girl went downstairs to answer it, and ran right smack into a “tall, white man, with a great big gun.” “TPhat scared me near 'bout to death,” said the Negress. “That man, he say, ‘is there any money in this house,’ and I told him 1 didn’'t know.” “He said ‘you been working here a long time, and you oughta know where -they keep their money hid,” but there wasn't any money in the house so:I told 3im I didn't Know. Wl “Then he said “if you don’t tell me where that money is T'll kill vou,’ so I told him to look in a drawer of a table in one room and he would find some money. I told him I would leok in the other room, and get him some too. Then he suia “Airight, but if you don't find some money I'm gonna kill you.’ ) “f slipped out the front door insten¢ of going in the other room, and told Mr. Giles, who rung a store next door, and he called the police; but the man got ‘atvay,” the Negro salg Police had not arrested anyone for the attem:pted robbery today. Bell’s Opens New Food Store at 1298 Prince Ave. Today F. G. Bell & Sons, one of the leading grocery firms of Athens, and proprietors, of Bell's Food| Store, corner .of Lumpkin and‘ Washington streets, today an nounce the opening of their mnew store at 1298 Prince avenue. 1 The stocks of fancy and staple groceries, fruits and produce are new and complete, and the store iwm be run upon the same policy " of quality, service and reasonable prices that has been a feature of ‘ the downtown Bell's store, and in | connection with -the new store a ‘modem sanitary meat market | with a full line of western and native meats will be carried. | | “With the addition of this new | | store, Bell's will be enabled to, l give even better and more I)rompli 1 service to their increasing numbew of patrons. 5 } Prompt delivery service will hvz | maintained, and the telephone number is 747. Horace Bell, onb ! of the junior members of the firm, | | will he in charge of the new store | ‘und will have as his assistants ' Clarence Wells and Charley Kin- | ! ney. : ACCEPTS INVITATION } ATLANTA — (AP) — Governor; Eugene Talmadge has accepted an invitation to speak at the Crisp tounty fair in Cordele next Tues day. | The subject of the governor's ad dresq was not annecunced. The fair opens Monday and ruvns through next week. @ land to study teaching problems in !the languages and. literature. It is iaffi]iated with the national group, | the Modern Language Association, | Prof. Claude Chance of the Uni | seity of Georgia, is in charge of | arrangements: for the meeting, j Committees that will make re épor'm at the meeting are: : Committee on artieulation with | the secondary schools, problems fh:lvim: to do with teaching or | pedagogy, and publicity—W. S. lßarney, chairman, Woman’'s Col lege of the University of North ' Carolina. . Committee on dialectale studies ‘and the Linguistic Atlas—George 'R. Coffman, chairman, University of North Carolina. Committee on the bibliographi cal and other resources having to do with Americana and American cultural relations in the South— Jay B. Hubbell, chairman, Duke University. Committee on the bibliographical resources for study in the South, with the exception of Americana; research work in the modern for eign languages, English and Am erican literature—Sturgis . Leav itt, chairman, University of North Carolina. Committee on the folk-song—A. P. Hudson, chairman, University of North Carolina. . FUNERAL NOTICES —————————————— ——— GODFREE.—The friends and rel atives of Mrs. Minnie Godfree Lexington road; Mr. Phillip, Godfree, Mr. and Mrs. R. Tu Tribble, Atlanta, Ga.;: Mr. and Mrs. William Yarbrough, Ath ens; Mrs. Hattie Crowley, Ath-i ons: Mr. and Mre. Ji D). J‘lid-i son, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.. W. K. Eidson, Athens; Mr. and; Mrs, G. P. Efdson, Athens; Miss Laura Dean and Mr. J. R. Dean are invited to attend the funeral of Mrs. Minnie Godfree tomorrow, Saturday. October 19th, at 11 a. m. from Bernstein’s chapel. The follow ing gentlemen will serve as pallbearers and meet at Bern steii’s chapel at '10:46 a. m.: Mr. Dillard Crowdey, Mr. Haryy Crowley, Mr. A. C. Eidson, Mr. John Eidson, Mr. Robert Eid son, and Mr. Hugh Eidson. Rev. Newton Sayve, pastor of HBast Athens Baptist church, will offi ciate and interment will be in Bethabara cemetery. Bernstein Funeral Home. : i Dr.T. S. Buie Speaks Before Scie ’ nce Club On Campus Tonight Dr. T. 8. Buie, regional conser vator of the Soil Conservation Ser vice, Southeastern region, will be the opening speaker of the Uni versity of Georgia Science club Friday evening, October 25, at Memorial Hali on the University campus. The meeting will open with a supper at 6:30 p. m., follow=- ed by the program. The Science club has taken con servation as its theme for Octo+ ber, November and December meet ings. The past, present and fu ture plans for. the conservation of our natural wealth will be present ed by national authorities in their respective fields. Dr, Buie is a specialist in agron omy, having been associated with the Georgia experiment station in that capacity from 1919 to 1929, when he went to Washington as field agronomist ot the Superphos phate Institute. L 5 Officers of the Science club are: Pr. A. C. Wilson, president; Prof. W. O. Colling, vice president; and Prof. T. H. Whitehead, secretary treasurer. The meetings are open to the public. MRS. RUSSELL RENAMED | MACON, Ga. —(AP)— Mrs. Maryi Saott Russell, president of thel Georgia State W.C.T.U., for the ; last three yeahs, was re-elected for the coming year at the state con-) vention here. | All other officers of ‘the organi- | zation also were re-elected. i i —————————————— e | | Large 9-inch Mince % s. . i v 90K This Mince Meat Has Rum and Sherry Added g Old Fashion Pound ; Cake, pound. .. ...18¢c Fresh Bunch Beets, j Bl ... s o 10k Butter Beans, ga1....30c Table Size Log Cabin § B L i s AN Special Price for Saturday Frosty Mountain Cakes, SO . L A 0 152-oxz. Can Rice Din ner, Spanish Style. . 15¢ Break O’ Morn Coffee, BN i:i v sTR 5-Ibs. White Potatoes 10c Red Ripe Tomatoes Ib. 10¢ Cranberries, qt.. . . . .20c 2 Cans Tomatoes, Best Grade.. .. .. 2 . W 8 2 Cans Tomato Juice 15¢ Extra Sclect Norfolk Oysters - - Fresh Shipment jones’ Sausage ~ ARNOLD & ABNEY THE BANNER.RERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA FERA Recreational ~ Director Comi ‘ oming jH . . \ ere Fora V ‘ | or a Visit August Fischer, director FERA recreation,. Atlanta, and TFulton county, will be the principal speak er at the League of Women Voters’ luncheon at the home of Mrs, H. H. Cobb, 1175 S. Milledge avenue. Tuesday, Octcber 22. Mr. Fischer will join a motoicade of representatives from the church es and civiec groups interested in a recreation prog:qam for Athens. He will survey the reéreational fa cilities and needs of the city and relate how local people can co operate in securing a FERA re creation program . for this com munity. The motorcade will leave the Georgian hotel at eleven .o’clock. Anyone interested in a recreation program is invited to ojin the mot orcade. Anvone wishing to attend the luncheon will make reservations with Mrs. Cobb not later than Mon day. ; Phone 1039 O | - NEW YORK STOCKS !-———-———-——-‘-—4———-"‘—':_——'" | NEW YORK.— () —The fol i lowing is the close of stocks quo | tations on the New York Stock fexchange today: | o |AW CBI T 3 o Jaae n i TRN |Am and . .Fer Power .. .. .0 5% PAmGREder o, .0 il 4 |At s Rollihg MIIE .. L 0 il i 26% |Am Smelting and Refg .. .. 52 | AR Toamd Dl s L% A obanedin. . o woy e HOO% | Am Tobacco B .. .. .. .. ..108% HRRNDHAR. s . il AR Al Const Life .65 .. vow 2 SHIr RN . ... e 2K IR B . . .. . owae 8B L Eation QOOD ~ .. - ..ee 3% | —B— ix];aldwin Bto. .. ... ek IBAtE a 0 OB . wv o aes 188 }Bondix WOBNEIN .. v S SN dath NEREY . . L o o 0 e 8T T T | —C— : ORN Hacllila oL ... s e TR BN 0 v s ik s i2e MR Chisiangd: Ohlo .... ..o oo M 8 RRN 1 s s voae A T AR CukiSt and Blee .. .. .. ... 1%% T SOl as. Tik L i s 18N OU and Son .. .. eoouewa 3% DOBE Gal i viir cone ovie BT ont Can .. JoalE e LoD Obßt 0. of Del .0, o .i wu il DONE MOtorsS .. us vooovsoiny IR SHRIR Wt .. . s veiie B s DI .. i . e L il Gel BHEOtrIe . - deces o v v DN AN dMators . . 0 Jo oY e e o T SO R | Geodyear T and R .. .. ... 17% ; —H— IRMEERL L o T HEDD Motors . .. .. .. '.:.. 2% T HE Canteml /o ode i e 208 Bt BN 0. s Vs eBB IRt P and . o s L e e Johns-Manville. V. .. .. ... 81% i ‘1 i Kednechtt 8 oo .i .. .. 2% s ¢ —L__ Timnbent . oy el ey . JOR Lib- and O, . Clamlss v .. .. & Liggett and Myers: B .. ...116% BOOW'S - S ToEr v n T Liovilarg ciie iy L. i 0 -—M— % Montgomery Ward .. .. .. 32 ! —N— ! Nagh-Mobyes 30 . .. .. /., 108 Nt BIGEIRY 2. Voo oo 7S Nat DI A al e ... ... 319 NY CERNSI ... ¢ av i v vune 28 08 N¥ N Hapg X', .. .. ... 28 Novth B . - L. . 2 Northern Pacific .. .. .. .. 16% aPe ’ Pagknrd Lo 00w D n a 8 Pay PRbMX ... .0 .o o 0 i 1 Peghedt, J C..... suv s ki IR Pent BEC (.o s e PHIIDE POE .« (/0L v v sv 20D Public Service N J .. .. .. 4% b g ihieis i b geta e o oss O e Pure O, 00 oo 0000 e P i FKadlp: . o o oA Republic*: Steel .. .. .. .. . 164 Reynolds Tobacco B .. .. .. 56% i ; Seaboand Alrline ..... .. .. 198 Seaboasy OIF .. .. .. .. ... 2 Seats=RoebMek . .. .. .. .. bt BNOBORY Waß i\, Ve vy s TS Southern Pacific .. .. .. ... 17T% Somthersy BR. -.ooa 0. L N iStandar@ Brands ... .. .. .. 14% BEE N el .. . LN BRI WE'N T . e } Studebaker .. il L 0 L BR 2 | Tases Cord . ofi i\ A ..21%{ TIRRE<AR 4 - . . vl B ! : S Uhion Garbie . . ... . 70%‘ United -Aweraft .. .. ... .. 2% United Corp ... ... . .o ÜBGOas Iy v .... .... 11D U 8 Ind Slcohol .. .. .. .. #6B Ul N . L. e PN e ... . .. .1 —_W— Wesnon DI oo 00 48R Wedterhi, Uniof .. .. .. ... 58%} Woolworth® .. .20 .0 S, SR 58'.‘3! —_—_— i East Side Choir Will } Meet Sunday, Oct. 20 e TR | On next Sunday, October 20, thei East Side choir will meet with the | Union ISaptist church, just off the! Athens-Ila highway. This beingl the second anniversary of the class, ! officers will be elected. Many sea- ! tures of interest together with the . singing will be furnished the hun- | dreds in attendance. We expeet(to! have new beoks and cordially in vite all leaders to join in the pro gram, which begins promptly at 1:30 o’clock. : d E. B. DOUGHERTY, president, JEWETT BARNETT, secrefary. NAVY WILL BUILD 60 OCEAN PLANES ‘Gigantic Construction Pro ~ gram'to Develop Trans- Oceanic Service : LOS ANGELES — (#) — T h e ' United States navy was embarked today on a gigantic construction program of 60 trans-oceanic planes to augment its high seas flying force. . | ~ Rear Admiral Ernest J. King,{ chief of the Navy Bureau of Aer onautics, announced the buildingl program after a conference with Admiral Joseph M. Reeves, com mander in chief of the fleet. . The planes will be duplicates of the record-breaking XP3Y-1, the navy's new flying patrol boat which flew a 3,700-mile non-stop course from Panama to Alameda, Calif., several days ago. Advices from Washington, D. C,, indicated the 60-plane contract would be the first award under the new 555-plane building program for the fiscal year authorized in the $26,000,000 appropriation votedl by congress. Kdmiral King said the ships will be constructed without delay by the Consolidated Aircraft Corpora-t tion at San Diego. The group will form the nucleus of a planned arm ada of long-range planes. TFacilities already are undér con-| struction at Pearl Harbor, Hawail, for the establishnient of a focal base for the new air patrolh Admir al King said the navy is soon to| locate twe similar patrol squadrou| Hases at Sand Point, Wash., and] Norfolk, Va. ; With congress to be asked to, authorize expeditious construction | of at least two fast tenders for the | patrol wing, naval experts pointedl out that the service would main- | tain a constant protective weupun! over this country’'s entire coastal areas in case of war. ’ | DIES OF HEART AILMENT ; JASPER, Ga. —(AP)— \Villurdi H. Pool, 55, former resident of At-i lanta and prominent business man| and civic leader of Jaspfr, died 01']‘ a heart ailment here Thursday. ! Mr. Fool was former master of| the Capitol View Masonic lodge ;’nf Atlanta: and its present building was constructed during his admin-! istration. He was a large real es-| tate owner here, and was pa;;_mhfi}' nent in community activity. . | | 'y R Aot GARy ot X e o R L T gy Xy g el WTSo ", S < % - 5 LR o R TR STk " 5 e " S BT Ak eo TS »'”'{.&':);-f AL ; P . Kok : qe: B PR S BA 3 e i, Napaihy ¢ ! A b s “49"3?9 o i : i L REN Sy et = S e 5 ) " ’ A oy “"s[) 4 EEY b - Crnidl f O S "‘ut;'.'."f e Tl “ s ! oLI } G 163 TR ! Rt e ey OSXNP PR F ¢ - - R Fe e TAT S AT v T MR T "yt AR el 8 R b 3 SE g ‘ B TR 20, M N PRI RRE TIRTARStI AeL TR B q 4 B f 1 iAL Rhg PR RO - R it _L_______..— 30 R e SRR SR ST Wil oRLI S vWA U SeeNBYR PR AR BN RISy, bpi Pl T NS TR r 4 e, \(5) TO GET ALL ""' & /983’! Your READING Matter & *‘?* '//‘oj‘g ;3(" This NEW and Economical Way %h: ‘ ~ REGISTER NOW FORTHE CONOMY READING PLAN > E F —GROUP A— ( ) Liberty, 1 year ( ) Life, 1 year ( ) Redbook, 1 year ( ) Christian Herald, 1 year ( ) Physical Culture, 1 year § () Modern Mechanix & Inventions, 1 year ( ) Radio News, 6 months ( ) Parents Magazine, 1 yr. ( ) American Girl, 1 year ( ) Flower Grower, 1 year ( ) Judge, 1 year B AN CYNCNIEI Y T N oy R e oy Te R D S S % A £ 2\ : i = . e ey > NEW | ) eL. ) PRe ... . ~ é‘ THE ATHENS BANNER-HERALD, ; ._=_.— ATHENS, GEORGIA ~— - Gentiemen: 7 AN | hereby agree to subscribe or extend my present subscription to the Athens Banner-Herald for 52 weeks g Tmm— and the three magazines | have checked for the time specified, for which | agree to pay 16c per week for 52 - b weeks. 4y 3 5 This amount represents full payment for both newspaper and the magazines. | understand if | do not live ) . N up to this agreement, this newspaper and the magazincs will be immediately discontinued. ;,IO: - = . — K AN R /,/» R . - o IS - . ... e il e N e e e e T 3 7 ; 5 é. C1ty....'.‘...........................‘;Te1eph0ne................ £ >S.LS~ R T e <] L | enclose 10c as a Registration Fee in the Athens Banner-Herald’s Economy Reading ‘Plan. , : P\ . A ‘I N .I» 4!' | ]| D] [y «tl"ln- ‘l'"h- 4l"lh- Al"lm ‘ll"l;. .||"|.. ‘;l‘h.. .d"h. .1‘"" A,,l"h. 4I"I|~< ‘ b SRR XS T e - BRITISH VIEW MADE KNOWN TODAY FROM SOURCES IN LONDON f (Continued From Page One) ' mier,, He finas himseif pinched betwegn British, Italiah and pure 'ly domestic sentiments. He held - hurried discussions today with # representatives of all three ] groups. ~ Behind all French diplomacies |there is always the eye to wind - ward on Germany, for it is Ger {many who represents geographi ~cally and historically France's perpetaul worry. England’s friend “ship is of major military import: ance. | No Improvement Conversations teday in Pari: between Premier Laval and the British ambassador were reported fu'nofficially to have accomplished 'no improvement in the Anglo iFrench situation. | There was sharp denial in Paris }that Mussolini had held out an ‘\ofler of an Italo-French military alliance to Laval if he would turn away from British support. ] Russia announced she had be-| gun enforcing sanctions against | Btaly, halting arms shipments aml| eredits. . ) ‘ Sweden, another ILeague mem-’ bet, decided to put into effect its' first sanction -against Italy—put-| ting an embargo on arms ship- | ments to that country and at thei same time lifting the embargo on arms to Ethiopia. ‘ News From Fronts g The news from the two major | fronts along which Italy is seek ing to push forward into the un conqeered Kingdom of Ethiopia continued eontradeitory, but for the most part inidicated Italian forces ‘had as yet not resumed their forward movemeénts from! the Aduwa-Adigrat or Italian So-| maliland fronts. I Large forces of Emperoir Haile Selassie’s men continued to con centrate in the general area of Makale, 50 miles- south of the Italian’s front lines in the north. Other KEthiopian concentrations continued in the south. Addis Ababa reports indicated a plan calling’ for a drive against Dolo, in the extreme south, and then into Italiah Somaliland. The government at Addis Ababa stated that many Italians in Eri trea were fleeing from Eritrea in to the Sudan, fearing Great Bri tain intended to cut -off their exit FEBRT IA Pt o | FOR ONLY | PER OC WEEK | YOU CAN GET 3 FAMOUS MAGAZINES (For Periods ip'scl:)ified in List) THE ATHENS BANNER-HERALD (Daily and Sunday for One Year) This offer applies only .o subscribers in Athens re seiving their paper by carrier. The same maga zines are available to all readers and the terms of payment will bel:t‘;::\edt):z::tn:i?):ffl to The Circu . A 1 i ) - ILA NEWS | PRGSO { ‘Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Turner of i Townville, S. C,, visited Mrs. J. T. | Stovall last week-end. ; Mr. John Henley of Grenada, has returned to his home. i Dr. R. . Westbrook, J. J. West {brook and J. R. Westhiook spent | the week-end in Mountain City. | Mrs. George Stovall and Mrs. C. | L. Veatch attended the association !at Meadow. ' Misses Ruth Shankle and Frinces | Wood spent the week-end at their |homeg in Commerce. | Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Veatch, La jFa_vette and Oneal Veatch, Misses | Shirley Westbrook and Cornelia ‘Gordon went to Dahlonega Sunday to see Jack Veatch, who is in | there, Mrs. George Stovall has as her guest, her mother, Mrs. Stevenson of Townville, S. C. Miss Edythe Whitehead visited her family in Watkinsville last week-end. i Among those attending the Geor gia-Furman game in Athens Sat urday were Mrs. Pauline Fitts, Misses Grace Hancock;, Emily Johns son, Shirley Westbrook, Bonnie Westbrook, Cornelia Gordon, Mon tié Westbrook and MrV. C. K. Taffe. o s Mr. -Js Oc M Saith and Henry Smith attended the Anderson fair last Wednesday. : lla W.M.U. Méets The Woman’'s Missionary society of the Baptist church met Monday affernoon with Mrs., Frank Nash. Mrs. Asbury Fitzpatrick had char ge of the program and those taking part were Mrs. Frank Nash, Mrs, C.- L. Veatch, Mrs. George Stovall, Misses HKdythe . Whitehead and Grace Hancock. The Girl's circle met with Mon:» tie Westbrook Tuesday afternoon. Katherine Bird had charge of the program. Mr, and Mrs. J. L. ‘Thompson, Mrs. J. T. Gordon and Jimmie Gor don were in Athens Monday. Mr. Candler Carithers of Comer was in Ila Tuesday. Mrs. R. L. Cauthen and family of Athens spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Westbrook. WANT AD Too Late to Classify. WANTED TO BUY WE PAY CASH for used furni ture. For best prices and better goods see us. McKinney Furni ture ' 'Co., ' 245 North Thomas Street. : FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 10:: La & e ' SINGLETON TALKks AT KIWANIS Mg ‘ (Continued ¥rom Pux One) S i s | ed yesterfay ang CORLin 2 | Saturday. An ocean , ; \‘ | feature of the afternq i son the trip, convention «.. o™ i will preceed, with -Har Q .“:"” |of MadisenviMe, Ky, /presiqens . | Kiwanis .International, .. ”,‘ | speaker. P s * Lieutenant Governor J, v . Bush |of Albany, was called n v s jcussion of better relationships pa. i tween rural anad ,urban :¢itizeng . | He said in his prepareq Iddregs Ithat he believed consdlidateq ang county-wide - high school “ar Edoing more today!'than any gihe | one thing: to - bring - ahoyt this | ‘“friendly understanding.” | OPPOSES OLYMPICS | ATEANTIC CITY) N 7 J.—(AP)- 'The American Federation of Lajg lvote‘d Thursday fo° oppose thjs ' country’s participation’in the Olym- Ipic games next year. SPECIAL CAKES White Pound. Cake. .19 Regular Pound Cake . 25, Gold-N-Snow Layer. 37¢ Made with Fresh Qrange Juice Home Made Farm SR .30 In Lemon Cheese, Black Walnut and Cocoanut, 13-Egg Angel Food. . 39% 5-Egg Angel Food. . . 25 Large Variety of Cakes and Cookies, at Your Grocers or BENSON’S BAKERY, BREAD VARIETIES Wholewheat, Cracked Wheat, Regular Sliced. Sandwich Breads, Aunt Hetts Home Made Bread, Parkerhouse Rolls, Butter Rolls and Cracked Wheat Rolls. Ask your grocer for Benson’s Richer Vitamin D Breads. BENSON’S BAKERY 5 | —GROUP B— ( ) Screen Book, 1 year ( ) True Story, 1 year 8 ( ) Pictorial Review, 1 yi ( ) True Confessiohs, 1 yr ( ) Better Homes and Gar dens, 1 year ( ) Movie Classic, 1 year ( ) Sports Afield, 1 year 1 ( ) Pathfinder (wkly), 1 yr } ( ) Household Magazine, 1 year ( ) Woman’s World, 1 year ( ) Needlecraft, 1 year \ ¢ ) Open Road (Boys), 1y ( ) Romantic Stories, tyr