Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current, November 19, 1935, Home Edition, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7
l NOVEMBER 19, 1985. | e———— 2 WMN = A ; e h ",‘ ks TR A SRV [ 5 4 . o RN 4 . é f s ! 1M ARS TEN - i i i N PT e e 3k) N PAL RAGL ASBAL R U 0i e /AR UPREL Y RETE: Lo eLI [T e . o - - Al - R f G { A e oy 9 B » 3 TRk \ 9 Bt ok Y YY e ! T e LU S TR 310 {.on T bt 4 AR {0 T R A Jo T e U v ;i3 R & : O e o | : i .\,xlx :vt t‘xy:\fi\u’\v”' o SR }.; b : i TR LRSIy oILo LA | (=2 { 'JM <Y )\ A ‘ O R P g % R = ! % AU R R (s t 0 w,“ .5 att \{T4IAPIS e ' " ( et o g “‘/ 3 | i 4 , 0.8 EIY . AOANS: ON Ll " i 1 ~,‘g\ [ J\:' By — o GG e ; i ' o Wy fr}icll]t”}‘" [ nop e y S U R TRO RAR Al AT Pe RO Al [ URES B : w ‘ ; “nd e d " B 4 S TIRET. i T o s g i # p | ; A oL i ; r i g /;“‘ ;,l » . ! f e i Lol ' St 1R R sur R : se R i j PPI ) Be. 'n » 0 TR IKo [ol nga S $ \ : e i : - P At A wi B e PR s R e - 3 . Peßl B R EPTALL Qi ALY Y & — " " ‘F'A“ oeehi gl -IR GGTE o™ Y L L s AN IV %WX L n;m£ ey TRa et =SO . 1 g, SRR v fOR CLASSIFIED | ADVERTISING | pail; Rates Per Word for l Consecutive Insertions i One per W01‘d........ .02 l Mini” Charge..... sses’ 40 fhrefl sertions f0r...... 1.000 |’ kAI . TISEMENT will be Raec less tban 40c. Ad- |, re.'“ t. ordered for jrreg- I glar insertions take te: one- I M":: g Name and addresses | E’», inted in the body of ,r‘m ) sement. AN ERROR 1s made, The F(‘:",E rerald 18 responsible hor © ne incorrect inser ton. The advertiser should hotify 1o nediately if any cor= rectior needed. L NTINUANCES must | be made in person at THE il pANNER - HERALD OFFICE | or or. Phone discontinu- | Bnce NOT valid, . | L WANT ADS are payable In advan 75 WANT AD 75 v PHONE | LOST i 3 ot rubber electric || ricinity of Milledge andl' on Broad street. Re—l FOR SALE l - Bt s .o+ ISO A R SALE—G6V Crimp Galvanized yetal Roofing, complete stock it you buy wrong lengths we will exchange with you. This Is al convenience not offered by the% mail order houses. Chrlstlan} Hardware f fROOF AND REPAINT NOW-— ! §% money, 3 yearg to pay, quick | service Flintkote Richardson ! Roofing and Sherwin-Willlams palnts, make & good combina ton. Christian ardware, Phone 13 DR SAI Points, Slides, VVim’ls,l , tor the following | T hburg, Oliver, Chat-! Imperial, Syracuse, ; i Avery. Farmers | : Hardware Co., Phono; Street. | K Three Diamond l{illgsi Platinum Bracelet Vi Daisy Jones, 331 | et, Athens, Ga. 1 uinknd e eAR ANTIQUES FOR SALE ‘j ER BED; Walnut | rd and a few nlhm"’ 0 good cooking | { good values in [ 11°¢ Come to The ( y, Sell or Trade. 249 | et | WANTED | WE BUY OLD SCRAP GOLD | ND SILVER AND PAY HIGH- | EST PRICE IN CASH ‘ |]. BUSH, jeweier | 165 E. Clayton Street | y Authority of U, 8. Treasury | yuy Pressura2 (‘«mk-) f 039. ] el e e SALESMEN WANTED | . [ Security Sulosmen:’ LACT NT proposition; londsi thens territory. Boxl Banner-Herald. i — ] FOR RENT | R Four room house, oalll E 5. Garage. Large lot i ndition. $22.50. Phonei ! Nicely furnished roomg ' ne, all conveniences,f F i MOVING HOTYd3 OVING — PACKING V:\:: Haul Anything Ocal and Long Distance 1, STORAGE AMS TRANSFER CO. PHONE 656 il ’ | \ - THE WORLDS GREATEST ‘ RADIO VALUE l Whereelseiailthe | \ world can so much | ____\ _ radio be bought for I 1 g, solittle! Sor; ' .0 AR ipine | 3 ¢7@ dial. Receives | 4 *§ standard | ‘i 2@ American 1 % ¢B@ programs and LR police, | & R Y amateur, } o aviation | 3 - broad- | e and casts. ! _the Crosley | | ’ | ni Qn F . ‘ \nson Furniture Co. PAST CLAYTON STREET | PHONE 100— ELECTRICAL P Supplies and Service H GET OUR ESTIMATE o W. A, (BILL) MATHIS N VONCANON-WALL BUILDING CORNER LUMPKIN AND HANCOCK E BE READY FOR COLD WEATHER! [AS\». Lowest Prices on Hot Water Heat %T“\v\) > ers—s4.9s Installed. DuPont Anti ’A‘l"’” ] ¢ Rust Anti-Freeze SI.OO Per Gallon. Uy (¥ Free Radiator Service BRADWELL AUTO SUPPLY STORE S. DOWSE BRADWELL, PROP. 433 EAST BROAD STREET—PHONE 1086 . INSURANCE . 1 Fire — Wind Storm —~ Automobile — Accident REAL ESTATE | SMITH & BOLEY 1 Phone No. 9 268 N. Jackson St. { AR There Is Plenty of Time to Plant Vetch : ee s and Austrian Peas! Some of the Finest Crops Have Been Made From Planting Made A“‘-‘r Thanksgiving Day! HAIRY VETCH (989% Purity—9s% Germ)—sß.so Per 100 Pounds AUSTRIAN PEAS (98% Purity—9s% Germ)—s4.so Per 100 Pounds OURS IS GENUINE HAIRY VETCH AND NOT MIXED. Beware of Mixed Vetches. Get Our Prices on Other Seeds. COFER SEED CO. East Broad Strect Athens, Ga. Southeastern Stages — Bus Station Schedule Effective August 28 BUSES LEAVE ATHENS— -8:00 A.M.—]efferson, Cornelia, Asheville. 8:30 A.M.—Macon, Tallahassee, Jacksonville. 9:35 A.M.—Atlanta, and All Points West. 10:05 A.M.—Augusta, Savannah, Brunswick, Jacksonville, Waycross, Charleston, Wilmington. 12:12 P.M.—Charlotte, Asheville, Washington 1:25 P.M.—Atlanta, and Points West. 1:40 P.M.—Gainesville, Young Harris, and Murphy. 2:00 P.M.—Macon, Thomasville, Jacksonville. 2:40 P.M.—Atlanta, and All Points West. 3:27 P.M.—Anderson, Columbia. 4:05 P.M.Augusta, Savannah, Charleston. 4:15 P.M.—Monraoe, Atlanta, Points West. 6:25 P.M.—Atlanta, and All Points West. 7:57 P.M.—Anderson, Greenville, Charlotte. 8:50 P.M.—Atlanta, and All Points West. 9:25 P.M.—Augusta, Waycross, Jacksonville, Columbia. Main Station, 170 College Avenue —PHONE 626— 000 ce a 0 oeGEDGDEHG DHDD D B G (l;ut Away for Christmas Plan-- n( T g orona Iypewriters e i!\// E e ' fisai ol LU e o, A 1 O e Le Ee T SRR v e G O N ;Sl = - 6@""‘;6@*& A L \\\ ’ bae e® »“' P‘& Make a Small \ 297‘::@:3%0‘5‘%9 & Down Payment a_\go‘? ffi%é - Now and Begin NN '@s S Monthly \§\qk ” Payments on the Y Balance January Ist « GIVE HIM OR HER A CORONA! The McGregor Co. ” - READ BANNER-HERALD WANT ADS! * YHE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA Cornelia Otis Skinner To Appear Wednesday On Program at Emory e e e o . = S b By ¢ e T Bl :e e i ’:':{hf o o ey R SRR 5;-14%:3% eR A S X R R i % P “3& g 3 2: %( :\ % ‘;s:9'/.'::.»:;' b ol e e L - ] MISS SKINNER ATLANTA—The Student Lecture association of Emory University 1 will open, its current program on Wednesday evening, November 20, at Glenn Memorial auditorium on the university campus, when dJor nelia Otis Skinner will appear. in an interesting program of original | character sketches. ‘ Although Misg Skinner appears without scenery — n(*rha])s.s only drapes and here and there a table land a ehair or two-—she is within herself a complere theatre, a ‘wholo tragie, comic, if not heroie, 'thO:ltl'('_ and a theatre incidentally !that offers far more entertainmene Ithan can be found in most of the playhouses on Broadway 'in New ]York. She 4s star and company all in one breath, her stage crew and her costume wmistress, to say nothing of her own playwright and I'her own producer,~ But though she works unaided, she does not work alone. She does not work alone because when she steps from be hind the curtains at the back, moves la chajr to the right or left, and EHHHHUH(“\' what her next number lis to be, she not only becomes in an instant the central figure of the !skn-u-l\_ hut peoples her stage with {silent, unseen, answering characters {of her own imagining. They exist | only in her pauses, in the way she hnuks at them, or in the manner iin which they seem to touch her. ! But in each case Miss Skinner lnmnag'os to make them as real as sis they stood beside -her on the IjSl.‘l.L”l“ | Miss Skinner does this by the !:'kill of both her playving and hexr |\\'l'ilin:. Her material is adroijtly ]nnlvl'('(L swift in its exposition, and as unerring as it is pointed in its }l-(-\'01;1”“11 of character, It ranges | from buoyant comedy and uproar lious farce to tragedy that is sue |('in('t and moving. In short, Miss [Skinnm' is 'someone who is not to be missed. ! Tickets for Miss Skinner’'s per !fm‘m:m('(-. as well as season tickets | for the entire series of the Student {Lm‘tln'() association may be secur | ed at Rich’s, at Davison-Paxon’s, {from Dr. R. H. McLean, faculty ;;u!vism' of the association and at }(‘rk‘nn Memaovrial- auditorium on the | evening of the 20th, New Low Prices on KLEENEX 200 Sheets 15¢ 500 Sheets 29¢ REID DRUG CO. MILLEDGE PHARMACY Personal Christmas Cards, Your Name Imprinted. Many Styles—Ask to See Samples McGREGOR’S 50 Christmas Cards With Envelopes Your Name Imprinted SI.OO THE McGREGOR CO. BURGLARY INSURANCE JESTER PROTECTION COSTS VERY LITTLE '| THE SAFEST PLACE ] TO BUY A | ] {1 USED CAR ! 33 Pontiac Sedan, 2-D.....5345 i} '34 Pontiac Sedan, 2-D.....5545 l "34 Pontiaz Sport C0upe....5545 i} ’3O Pontiac Sedan, 2D.......5100 ' '33 Pontiac Sport C0upe....5345 ‘] 33 Plymouth 5edan.........5325 i 34 Plymouth 5edan........5495 | '34 Plymouth Sedan, 2-D....5495 il 34 Plymouth Sedan, 2-D....5475 '} '3O Buick 5edan............5245 '] 34 Chevrolet C0ach........5475 {1 20 Olds 5edan..............5225 ;l 33 Ford Sedan.... ........$395 ] 34 Ford Deliv. Tud0r.......5445 la GEORGIA MOTORS | INC. l BUICK—PONTIAC PHONES 741 AND 700 N X ‘ TE - ~ The (GEOEDEN_EEATHE] B oooooak o e Miaßat BBGES D N NER R BEGIN HERE TODAY Jeans Dunn delays her ans swer when Bobbly Wallace asks her to marry him. At The Golden Feather night club she meets Sandy Harkins whose business connection is vague, Sandy introduced Bobby and Jean to Mr. and Mrs. Lewis. Bobby. Larry believes the car Lewis, who buys a car. Larry Glenn, federal agent, is trailing Wingy Lewis, bank robber. He learns about the bond transaction and questions Bobyb. Larry believes the car Lewis bought is armored. Bob by undertakes to find out. Jean agrees to a secret en gagement with Sandy. The bank of which her father is president, is robbed and Larry starts a search for the robbers. Jean goes to see Sandy who has been injured. He and the Lewises are staying at a farm house. She soon finds herself a prisoner. The whole party leaves the farm. Larry discovers Jean is with the robbers. He and his men l FOR MAYOR ! l I hereby announce my candidacy for the Democratic nomination for !Mayor of Athens, subject to the Irules and regulations of the Demo jcratic Executive Committee. I will ‘appreciate the support of the peo | ple. : i A. G. DUDLEY. } FOR MAYOR !To the Citizens of Athens: i I respectfully anneunce myself al | candidate for Mayor of Athens,l |'subject to the primary to be cailed |by the Executive Committes, and | solicit the support of the votera. 1 T. S. MELL. iFOR ALDERMAN—FIRST WARD | | I respectfully announce as a can-i {didate for alderman from the First! | Ward, city of Athens, in the pri \mary election to be held on No-| lvember 26, 1935. If chosen to suc- | |ceed imyself in this office I promise | {to faithfully and impartially dis- | |charge my duties as in the past. Ii | will appreciate the influence and| |vote of every citizen in the ward.l { W. H. PAUL. SLDERMAN—FIRBT WARD ! I wish {o announce my candidacy for alderman from the First Wn.rd,} subject to the rules and regulations of the Democratic Frimary to be} neld November 26. If elected, 1| will do all in my power in upbuild-! ing ‘the First Ward and anything! for the betterment of the city as ai whole. l PRYOR F. JOHNSON.E FOR ALDERMAN ; I hereby anrounce my candldacy; for the office of Alderman from the| Third ward, subject to the rules! and regulations as promulgtted by the City Democratic Executlve} Committee. I will appreciate the support and votes of the citizens of | our ward. | GEORGE C. ARMSTRONG, '1 FOR ALDERMAN—4TH WARD | I hereby announce my candidacy 'for the Democratic nomination for! |city council from the Fourth wa.nd.l ;subject to the rules and regulations ‘,of the city primary to be held No-! ivember 26. I respectfully solicit the 'support of the citizens i THOMAS L: ELDER. ! ALDERMAN—4TH WARD 1 | I hereby announce my candidacy | |for re-election for Alderman from | 4th ward. Subject to the rules and | regulations of the Democratic Pri | mary to be held Nov. 26th., I will | appreciate your support and vote. ; R. W. PHILLIPS. | ee e i Railroad Schedules | SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY | Arrival and Departure of Trains Athens, Georgia ‘ | Leave for Richmond, Washington | New York and Eagt— | 1:10 A. M. l | 3:04 P. M. Alr Conditionsd. | | 9:11 P, M. Air Conditioned. I | Leave for Atlanta, South and West |43 : 5:52 A. M. Alr Conditioned. | | 2:30 P. M. Air conditioned. | | Leave for Elberton, Grunwoo” Monrve, N. C. (Local.) | | 10:50 A. M. : |Leave for Winder, Lawrenceville Atlanta (Local.) 6:00 P. M. ! GAINESVILLE-MIDLAND | ‘ Leave Athens ! |No. 2 for Gainesville— 7:46 a. m ! | No. 12 for Gainesviile—lo:46 a. m | : Arrive Athens i No. 11 from Gainesville—lo:oo a.m ' No. 1 from Gainesville— 6:156 a.m, GEORGIA RAILROAD i Train 51 arrives Athens 8:00 a. m. | Dajly Except Sunday i Train 60 Leaves Athens 11:00 & m., SOUTHERN RAILWAY Lula—North—South Depart— —Arrive 6:25 a. m. 11:20 a. | 1:30 p.m. 4:35 p.m.' J. L. Cox, Assistant General Freight-Passenger Agent Telephone 81 CENTRAL OF GEORGIA Leave Athens Dally (Except Sunday) 6:30 a. m. and 4:16 p. m. sunday only 7:50 a. m. and 4:% P m Arrive Athens Dally ‘ i 15:35 p. ou and 216 . W | arrive after the robbers have gone. They continue the search. ’ NOW GO On WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXIX l When the big blue sedan whirl- | ed away from the Englers’ farm, | Jean huddled in a corner of the| back seat and stared straight) ahead of her, unseeing, her mind | in a turmoil. Beside her, Eve Brady } sat at ease, smoking a cigaret in the other corner TRed . leaned bagk} against the cushions, a cigar grip- i ped in his teeth, and kept his! own counsel, The two men in thv'i front seat were silent, also; and | the car sped along over the] road without a sound except for the num of the motor and the’ whistling of the wind about the | body of the car. They did not go through Mid lothia, instead, they turned to the lef headed north:; not, as far as Jean could remember, in the ! direction either of Plainfield, the' railroad junction point, or of Do- ! ver. The red-headed man had prac ‘tically forced her to get into the car. He had said nothing except, “We're going for a ride”;of Sandy's ~ whereabouts she knew nothing, except that he had ‘gone on ahead’ with Mr. Lewis. Jean felt herself a prisorer; the red-headed man seemed. a monstrous and enigmatic | embodiment of menace, with his! expressionless eyes of pale blue conveying an unspoken but irre sistible threat. ‘ They rode for perhaps five miles ‘before she managed to regain enough calm to speak. Then, her fists clenched in her lap, she turned to her companions and ask ed “Just where are we going?” | Eve Brady cast a sidelong glance at her and smiled faintly. The red headed man looked at hep in mild surprise, and finally said “Just who wants to know ?” ‘T do.” He gave her another stare, sub tly derisive. “You'll find out when we gev there,” he said at at last. “T want to know now. Are we going to Dever? T've got to get back. This—this isn't a joke to me.” He gave a mild little sniff. “It's not a joke to anybody.’ he said. “But lemme tell you this. baby—and try to remember it.” He leaned across Eve Brady and tapped Jean on. the knee with a massive fist. ‘“Where we go, you zo. It's too late to back out now. You're in with us, and you stay in. See?” Jean s heart felt like a lump of ice in her breast. She turned away and stared out of the window. It was all so incomprehensible! She heard Eve say: “Oh, lay off of her Red. She’s all right. As soon as she sees Sandy again—" “Sandy?’ said Red. “Oh. You mean Oklohoma.” He chuckled, and there was something in the chuckled that Jean liked even less than she liked this forced auto trip. “Oh, Well. Let ' her pipe down for a while, then.” They rode on and on. skimming over the concrete road with effort less, unslackening speed; five si lent peopie, one bewildered and frightened and lost, the other four grimly purposeful; and Jean hud dled in her corner, looking out at the fields and woods and farm houses an little towns that shot by them, seeing nothing, unable to speak, hardly conscious of the passing of time. Noon came; a hot, blistering noon, with the sun beating down from a cloudless sky, and no wiad to cool the air. They reached the great National Highway and turn ed to the easi, and for a moment Jean's heart leaped up-—-Dover lay to the east, and this road, she knew, let to it. But her joy was short-lived; for after half an hour's travel the car slowed down and swung to the north again over an unpaved road that wound in and out through a tangled stretch of woodland. P mile from the main highway the road bore to the right, and a little lane continued on into the woods. The lane was nothing more than parallel ruts in the soil. with the branches of the trees meey ing overhead and brushing against the sides of the car, but they fol- Jlowed it, the car jolting heavily on thé uneven surface. They went down into a little valley, followed ! a brook for a hundred yards, then | went up over a hill, descended on the other side—and, unexpectedly. eame into a 10-acre clearing that | ,faceu a little lake. i ! A large, rambling house in the Ea.rchiteclural style of the 1870 s stood near the water, surrounded | lhy unkept but spacious lawn. The‘ car pulled up beside what had ‘ev!denuy been a carriage house, vears ago, and stopped. The car ’doors opened and Jean automa tically followed the @thers out. i Eve took her arm as she got out, | and gave it a little squeze. “This si'st going to be so rad,” lshe said gently. ‘ Besides, S.ndy’s here waiting for us.” i They took their baggage and fol-l lowed Red along a gravelled path | to the house., Jean Ilooked at it | euriously. Once it must have been a handsome country retreat—iso | lated, with neat lawas and gardens | flanking the little stretch of blue | water and a belt of woodland sur- ) i rounding it all. Now it looked [gone to seed and dilapidated. The | house, with its multiplicity of n-l bles, its conical tower at one cor ner, its elaborate fret-work .on porch railings an its general air of mid-Victorian respectability, had gone long unpainted. The gardens had been permitted to grow up in weeds and rank grasses years ago, and the lawn needed care very badly. A little boathouse down at the edge of the lake had been al lowed to collapse, and it leaned crazily awry, seemingly ready to fall over at a touch. As Jean noticed these things they reached the front of the house and went up a little flight of steps to a wide, sagging porch. They followed Red into the house, into the cool dusk of an inner hall; and then Jean found herself going up a fight of stairs and obediently following someone to a room. A door was opened, and a voice mum bled that she was to go in; then the door closed behind her and she vias alone. The room was in a side of the shouse overlooking the lane by which they had come; and it was furnished gvith an old-fashioned doubled bed, an equally old-fash doned dresser with a marble top, a vast chest of drawers, and three horse-hair chairs. She put her bag on the floor, opened a window, and looked out listlessly. She had no netion where she was or how long she was to be there. She was quite obvlously in the power of a dangerous man, who had said that she was “in with us” permanently. What did it all mean?. What was going to happen to her? Looking down, Jean saw a fa miliar figure walking slowly toward the house from the outbuilding | where they had left their car. She felt a sudden wave of relief. San-‘ dy! He would make things right. She hurried downstairs, reach- | ing the porch just as he did. Hel smiled in greeting and sank into a chair, still weak from .is wound. ! She dropped into a chair beside him and leaned toward him. “Oh, Sandy, I'm so glad you're | here,” she ecried. “I've been so-- so frightened!” He raised his evesbrows. “Why? What's the matter?” “Oh, it's all so-—so queer. This man Red made me get in the car and made me come—Sandy, you told megyesterday he'd promised to see that I got back to Dover to i day—" ' Sandy grinned and clasped his ' hands comfortable behind his ‘head. “What's the matter with ‘this place?” hge asked. “Nice and quiet and pleasant-like, isn’'t it?" She looked at him in hurt sur prise. ‘But Sandy, [ can’t stay bere—" she began. He grinned ironically. “Oh, yes you can baby,” he said softly. “Oh, yes, you can.” Dusk had come, and the silence that enfolded the queer, lonely house seemed to Jean to be op pressive and ominous, She stood at the border of the lake, beside the ruined boathouse, feeling more lost, more helpless, more frightened and mor bewildered than she had ever expected to feel in her whole life. She was virtually a prisoner. This man Red and his satellites were—she knew not what—some thing cruel, desperate and lawless, surely . . . and Sandy was nd longer the frank, open-minded and attentive lover of he old days. He refused to help her get away, Jaughed at her fears and scruples, and calmly took it for granted that ber fortunes were tied to his now, irrevocably . Suddenly, on impulse, she turned and walked rapidly from the lake to the lane that led to the outer world, impelled by a despairing conviction that only by immediate flight could she save herself. She stubmled on through the dusk, making a detour te avoid the car riage house, and plunging into the gloom of the lane when it entered the woods with a feeling of relief. It was pitch dark under the trees. Branches and brambles caught atl her dress. Her high-heeled slip pers were worse than uselss tor! travel over this uneven ground. Fear clutched her heart in an icy' grip. Struggling on in the dark, was like racing over a treadmill, or running in a nightmare; yet she went on, stumbling, half-sobbing Lysterically., conscious only of an cverwhelming desire to get away from this place and these people'! back to the old, safe, famma.rl world she had left—the world of| people like her father, and La.rry‘ Glermm . . . and Bobby Wallace. | A shadowy figure took shape in! the darkness ahead of her, and the. blinding light or flashlight fell on] her; and a harsh voice said, “Well.i sister, where're you going?” ! She came to halt, almost par alyzed by fear. The man with the‘ flashlight stepped up to he#, and| as he moved she could see thel : Serving This Community Nearly L o Half Century [ E\\ffi IN ALL LINES OF FIRE, CASUALTY AND (IR T MARINE INSURANCE RENTING SERVICE AND REAL ESTATE R, SALES & s . % o A\ Lipscomb-Dearing-Hutchins, Inc. [ 8 BBN 283 COLLEGE AVENUE —PHONE 345— l"’u ¥ TR WA PAGE SEVEN ——————— ——————— — RN s AR TS RUA 5 0 Ai e AT STATION WTFI Eastern Standard Time eeR A S s AL R ST MBS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10TH -l:(h)~—[énb Wiley. 4:ls—lsham Jones. 4:3o—llawaiian Melodies. 4:4s—Melody Palette, s:oo—Gallant-Belk Shoppers Guide s:3o—Jefferson Harmonizers. 5:46-—Cuy Lombardo. 6:oo—Evening Melodies. 6:3o—Connie Boswell. 5 6:4s—TLamplighting Time. 7:oo—Schwob Musical Style Re view. 7:o6—Let’'s Go Places. 7:l6—Banncew-Herald Newscast 7:3o—~Bernstein Boys. 8:00—~Good Night. Wednesday, November 20, 1935 B:oo—Sign On. B:ol—Around the Breakfast Table. B:ls—Bert Lown. B:3o—Banner-Herald Newscast. B:46—Fan Mail Man, 9:o6—Popular Tunes. 9:3o—Carefree Capers, W!BS, 10:00—Ben Armstrong. 7 10:15—Nat Brusiloff. 10:30—Playing the Song Market. 10:45—Edd Drake. 11:00—Tonie Tunes. . 11:15—~World Book Man. 11:20—Johnny Marvin. z 11:30—Co-ed Hour. 12:00—Gent Autry. Afternoon 12:20—Farm Flashes. 12:30—Little Church in the Wild wood. 1:00—Soil Erosion. : I:ls—Banner-Herald Newscast. I:3o—Victor Young. : I:4s——American Family Robinson, 2:oo—Your Home, 2:ls—George Wood. 2:3o—Pop Concerts. 3:oo—Salon Orchestra, 3:3o—Jewell Box. 3:4s—The Atlanta Georgian Globe Trotter. 4:oo—Musical Scrapbook. 4:ls—Duke Ellington. ’ 4:3o—World Review. s:oo—Gallant - Belk Shoppers Guide. 5:80-—Lawrence Quintet. s:l46—Dorsey Brothers. 6:oo—Sam Sheats. ’ #:3o—Chevrolet Musical Moments, 6:4h—Guy Lombardo. 7:oo—Voluntary Religious Asso ciation. 7:ls—Banner-Herald Newscast. 7:3o—Pluto Program. 7:4s—Fred Waring. 8:00—Good Night. e e muzzle of an automatic shotgun which he carried under one arm. “purn around and go back where vou come from,” he said. “11l just walk along behind, to make sure you get there.” : Feeling dully that she had ‘play ed her last card and lost, Jean turned like an automaton and stated, back.. The light out and the guard plodded along close behind her. i They went a few rods, and she found strength enough to roptest. “What right have you tv do this?* she asked, stopping and turning to face the man. “Who are you? Whe dre all these people? Why can’t § go away if T want o7’ -5% There was a short silence, them the man chuckled drily. L “You mean you don't Know who the big red-head is?” he asked. “No, of course I don't know who Le is.” “Well, sister, he's nobody at all, Nobody at all—but Red Jackson, And no ‘moll that ever tied up with his mob tried to cop a sneak without feeling awful sorry for it.* And they plodded on back to thé Lcuse. (To Be Continuedi Fresh Shipment “Marie Earle Toiletries™ Exclusive Agents Phone 67 cr 68 Moon-Winn Prug Co Electric Refrigerators PRICES REDUCED Any Style ECONOMY AUTO STORES Athens, Ga. SCHICK DRY SHAVER A Perfect Gift. Shaving Comfort for Unnumbered Years. sls CITIZENS PHARMACY GIFTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Are Prized When Bought From J. BUSH, Reliable Jeweler, 20 Yearg in Business in the Same Stand 165 EAST CLAYTON ST.