Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
(WL'L[//W Mfii{{ J,.fiy.., Love
BEGIN HERE TODAY
After the death of her par
ents, Dand . Westbrook comes
from abroad to make her
home with a grandmother she
has never seen.
Dana’s half-sister, Nancy
Wallace, resents Dana’s com
ing. Dana’s grandmother
hopes her young granddaugh
ter will make a brilliant mar
riage and is elated when rich
Ronald Moore falls in love
with hen. But Dana, mean
while has become attracted to
Dr. Scott Stanley.
Nancy masks her love for
Ronald behind an arftagonistic
attitude. Paula Long, desper
ately in love with Scott,
watches anxiously as his in
terest in Dana deepens.
During a storm, Dana is
forced to stay in Scott’s cot
tage until the early hours of
morning. Ronald Moore sees
them on the way to her home
and misunderstands. He stays
away. The rift widens When
Scott telephones Dana, she
has the feeling that a new and
thrilling interest is entering
her life. .' g
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
CHAPTER Xl¥.,
; Grandmother Cameron halted
Dana. ~'Going out again?”’ she’
¢ asked:
: “yes, Grandmother. T'm going
~ tothave dinner out.”
£ Grandmother Cameron moved on
: up the stairs. “Have a good time,”
~ she said pleasantly. |
- Dana assured her, *“I shall.”
- Then she was gone. |
E Upstaies Mrs. Cameron made
~ her way Qo her sister sroom. |
~ “What ever is the matter with thatl
~ child?’ she demanded. ‘“Rushing
- down-the stairs like a whirlwipd!
§ Wmats it all about?” She waited
_ for confirmation of her own hopes.
* £ "Inmy day,”’ Aunt BEllen said
Priml¥, “when girls got excited
. #nd _Jost their poise people saidi
- fheyewere in love.” s
' ¥ “Humph! So you think Duna‘sl
love?” |
. ¥ didn't say that” Aunt el
§ de%@d cautiously. ‘I haven't:
3%;""0}.,.,;,: anything _strange abouli
= her, Dana seems self-possessed
- and sensible when you compare
~ her with most of these flighty
E girls.). |
. 86 she does. Just the sume,!
~ she almost knocked me over. Run
~ ning pellmell down the stairs, and
~ fairly singing out that she was
~ having dinner out. What's so ex
~ citing about that? Hasn't she been
%’ out to dinner several times a
E week-almost ever since she came
~ here? Not counting the times ]
~ didn't know about.”
P 1t was the longest . speech
. Grandmother Cameron had made
.in g long while. Aunt Ellen stared.
“That sounds very much as
r thqugh the child might bLe falling
.in love,” Aunt Ellen conceded.
. “And why not? "Why not? Isn't
_ it natural she should? You couldn’t
- find a nicer young man than Ron
~ nie—not if you searched the world
= over.”
- She walked to the window. The
;}mxt -minute she called sharply,
~ “Ellen, come here!”
. “I haven't my glasses,’ Grand
~ mother Cameron' said. “But |s
. that Ronnies car down there?”
. “No,” said her sister. “It deesn’t
~ look like it.”
. ' “Speak your mind! You know
=ll
Paying
DOLLAR
BILLS
4
| to learn
L3RV TY
like
WRIGLEY'S
R
watch this paper for fre
guent stories of the daily
experiences of the Wrigley
representatives
J
Y
| very well it isn’t. Well, whose car
| is it then?”
l DL .
i There was a brief silence. Then
; her sister said, slowly, “The
| voung man is a stranger to me.,”
| “But not to me!” Mrs. Cameron
;said. ~ “It's that young scamp,
{ Scott Stanley. Think of his au
dacity in coming here! Further
more, I've been hearing things
about him. He's a regular rogue
among Wwomen, stealing their
hearts and making sure he keepg
| his own. I’ haven't had my -ears
| open for nothing. Well, I'll soon
!break this up!”
Her voice trembled from anger
and disappointment. It was a
mood that boded no good to any
| cne, her sister knew. Aunt Ellen’s
| heart went out to Dana. :
| The years had changed Agatha |
in some respects, - Aunt Ellon[
thought, but the indomitable will,
the fighting fire were still there.
“Sit down,” Aunt Ellen urged.
Don't get so excited. Why should
| you worry just because she goes
| oz to dinner with him?”
; “Why does she want to be going’
Ivut with him? And why isn’t he
with Paula Long, who's been wait- i
| ing for him ever since he finished |
| high -school? Paula’s money would
start him in his medical practice.
' What does he mean, dirt poor and
‘ijust starting out, hanging around
| Dana who's as poor as a church
| mouse, too?”
Unanswerable logic. Ellen Ca
rewe sat miserably, contemplat
ing her sister's words. Why hadn’t
Scott (shé thought of the, name
gently) done the sensible thing
and turned to his wealthy Paula?
If he could look into the past, he
would know there was more than
one yreason why he wouldn't be
welcome in this home, And then
he probably would meddle things
for Dana. Dana was beautiful and
poised, well-fitted to rule grac
iously” over a splendid home, -
“I'm .growing mercenary, too,”
thought gentle Aunt Ellen unhap
plly. It was almost impossible to
live in a house with her sister
and not be infected by the posses
gion=viirus.
Mrs. Cameron endured it as
long as she could—seeing the
shabby gray roadster parked in
front of her home, replacing Ron
nie’s large and expensive one.
The gray car was an affront. A
defiance. A challenge. Mrs. Cam
eron accepted that challenge one
afternoon. She “took the bull by
the horns,” (in her own language),
and drove her s}:{aft heme so deli
¢ately, so diplomdtically that Dana
did not at first feel the full force
of the blow.
A very ‘nice young man,” Mrs. !
| Cameron said as Dgna came into |
‘!the house and Scott's car moved |
| away. l
' Dana’'s eves brightened. “He is
| nice,” she said. ’
| “Itw’ & Dpity)’- {Mry. Cameron
| mused aloud, “that he hasun't a
| penhy, Hasn't anything but plans
'and ambitions.” ;
| Dana did not reply, meeting her
| grandmother’s eyes steadily.
| . “Sit .déwn, pleage, Dana.” |
! The girl sat down. She was smlE
ls!nhig “there when Nancy passecC
| through the hall half an hour
[ later, and for a long while after
ward Nancy heard her grandmoth
er's voice droning away, muted te
a strangely quiet, tolerant tone.
| Aunt Ellen had warned her sis
ter, “Don’t drive or threaten Dana |
‘I don't believe she would stand
| for, 1.
i It was .one of the few times
!when Aunt Ellen had expressec
| herself definitely and with convic-
itiom.. . ‘
Neither did Mrs. Cameron be
lieve Dana would be moved by
threats. She planned to use them
only as a last effort. Threats, if
necessary, but persuasion first.
It was ‘not a pretty picture—the
picture. of poverty her grandmoth
;er drew for Dana. And there were
elements of truth in the portrayal
that startled even such a coura
geous girl.
1 know youre not in love with
Scott Stanley,” Mrs. Cameron said
vigorously. “You're too sensible.
But there's danger in seeing too
much of him.”
It was easy, she went on, to
fall in love with an attractive
man. If he were not eligible, the
safest way was to stop seeing him.
A poor man, marrying a girl with
out money, was as much to be
pitied as.a poor girl who was fool
enough to marry a man who was
not established.
“Scott Stanley hasn’'t a chance
to succeed as a doctor if he ties
himself up with a wife who can’t
help him,” Mrs. Cameron stated
firmly.
“But can’'t a girl help a man in
some -other way—if she Thasn't
money ?” Dana ventured. She was
feeling wvery sober, very unhappy.
. “Kind words never helped a
poor doctor yet” Mrs. Cameron
declared. “What that young man
needs is a number of paying pa
tients, - If he married Paula Long,
he could stop worrying.”
“Why?’ asked Pana. It was
the first time she had thought of
Paula in a long time. She was re
membering now that Ronnie had
called Paula “Scott’s girl” and she
hadn’'t liked the sound of it
“Paula ijs independent,” Mrs.
Cameron answered. “Besides, she
has wealthy relatives who are
iclannish, like most of us in this
| eity. Just seeinz that all the ba
lbles in that family arrive in prop
|er order and taking care of their
‘bumps and bruises—not to men
tion the nervous breakdowns rich
lneople can afford to have—would
i keep a young doctor in funds for
the rest.of his life.”
| Dana protested, but there was
{fittle heart fii her words, “Doctor§
|are supposed to win their clientele,
| not inherit it 2
‘ “Ha! Much you %know about
such things, my child. There's
rarely such s thing as a triumph
|
|
BIG LEAGUERS OPEN
'Many Trades, Sales, Re
| ported to Be Scheduled
i' During Meeting.
‘ By WILLIAM WEEKS
‘ (Associated Press Sports Writer)
| CHICAGO, —(A)—Major leaguoe]
h,;asohflil men, officials, club owners}
)und managers, were lmbering up
!1,..; muscles today and testing thcl
]dir(-(-liun of trade winds, in pre
|paration for the opening of the]|
lannual winter meeting tomorrow, |
The leg exercises were trainingg
moves for hours of standing In|
hotel lobbies and hustling back andg!
forth between hotels. Thig year,!
instead of holding the National and |
American league sessions under
one roof, each has headquarters,
in a different hoteli, l
The national league's foremost
problem was the Boston Braves,
The Braves, financial loser for se
veral seasons and heavily in debt,
passed from control of Judge Emil
Fughs recently, and must be re
organied before the 1936 season.
The club now is ward of the league,
but probably will be taken over
by a group headed by Bob Quinn,
veteran baseball man.
An American league club, the
St. Louis Browns, also may pass
to new ownership during the
meetings. Led by George Sister, a
great star with the browns during
his playing years, a group of St,
Louis business men has maae
passes at purchasing the franchise
from the estate of the late Phil De
C. Ball. . 1. ‘
Of greater interest to the man
who pays his money at the gite
will be the upraveling of reports
of trades and sales. Connie Mack,
dean of major league baseball men,
will be most closely watched in
this connection. ‘A number of his
|Phiadelphia Athletics, including
Jimmy Foxx, de luxe hitter and
First baseman, have been reportea
up for swap or sale. Foxx already
has unofficially been sold to the
Boston Red Sox and Chicago White
Sox, and may wind up with one
or the other before the week ends.
Detroit and Chicago may, final
ly get together on some arrange
ment whereby Al Simmons will go
to the world champions from the
White Sox.
Carnesville Takes
Easy Victory From
‘ Colbert, 39 to 15
li CARNESVILLE, Ga.—Carnes
]\'ill(- won a 349 to 15 wvictory over
| Colbert here I'riday night, in a
;l);lslwlhull game that was never
i close.
Tsking the lead soon after the
game got underway, Carnesville
rever relinquished it. Neal .was
the high point man, with 11 to
Lis credit, while Hill was close
behind with 10 points. Dalton
Morris was outstanding for Col
bert with 7 points.
The Carnesvlile team will play
Colbert in Colbert on January 10,
and a much better game is ex
pected.
Colbert girls were also defeated
by Carnesville, 17 to 7. Irma Ar
rendale lead the Colbert scores
with five points, while C. Brown
‘was best for Carnesville, with 7.
RALLY BRINGS VICTORY
BALTIMORE — (&) — Led by
its plunging backfield star, Bill
Guckeyson, the Univergity of Mary
land came from behind in the last
quarter Saturday to score 16 points
and defeat Western "M@ryla.nd, 22
W T ’
Inclement weather cut the crowd
to about 8,000. The Terrapins' pow
erful reserve strength was the big
factor in turniug defeat into vic
tory.
of sheer ability these days!”
Nancy heard Dana go in her
room a little later ang shut the
door. “Gran's made it unpleasant
for her, seeing Scott so much”
Nancy mused. “And that isn't all
She has some more tricks up her
sleeve to use if necessary.”
Dana, Nancy was certain, had
tumbled from her position gn the
lap of the gods. “If I'd ever come
that close to landing Ronnie I
wouldn’'t have made any mistakes”
{ Nancy thought. :
Elsewhere Ronnie was receiving
the silent congratulations of scores
of mothers who were taking heart
again, now that the young million
aire was once more heart-free,
| ‘“Ronnje was a little too smart
| for ¢old Mrs. Cameron,” they said.
“Guess he saw which way the wind
was blowing and got out before
she had him tied up tight with a
wedding rope.”
Mrs. Cameron, sitting on her
| porch the next afternoon, looked
up and saw Scott's car stopping.
Her brows drew together omi
nously. |
(To Be Continued)
G
Eases Headache
In 3 Minutes
also neuralgia, muscular achet
and pains, toothache, earache
periodical and other pains due
to inorganic causes. ' No nar
cotics. 10c and 25¢ packages
YIHHOID ‘SNIHLY ‘GIVHIH-HINNYE THL
History of Football At
S.M.U. Very Interesting
Ray Morrison Starte
Came At Texas School,
Rose Bowl Team.
| (EDITORS NOTE) This is
i the first of a series of three
{ stories on the 20 years of foot
| ball at Southern Methodist uni+
| wversity, seiected to play stan
| ford university in the Rose
| Bowl at Pasadena, Calif.,, new
! year's day.
By FELIX R. McKNIGHT |
(Associated Press Staff Writer)
DALLAS, TEX, —AP)— Twenty
;'years ago curley thatched young
| Ray Morrison gathered 25 gangling
| hugkies around him, issued the
Inose and shin guards, and foot
;ball was born on the Southern
| Methdoist campus.
' It was a weak infant that Mor
‘rison, fresh from quarterbacking
! the Vanderbilt University Com
imodores, struggled with through a
| six-game schedule,
l And just one year later—the
11916 season Southern Methodist
| fans would ' rather not mention—
?*me foundling of the school's sports
| program toddled up against Rice
finstitute.
' The big gzame between the
'Methodists and the Institute with
about 500 . fans in attendance,
opened with one Sam Merrill send
ing a mighty dropkick through the
cross bar to put the Methodists.
ahead 3-0. l
The Institute took the next kick
off and as one sports chronicler
relates, ‘started sweeping endi
runs.” They swept to 22 touch
downs. s as :
Final score: Rice 145, South.ernri
Methodist 3. ’ ‘
“Wihat have you to say for the
start?” Morrison was asked after
the season was over. WEEA
“A prayer for the future, he‘
snapped. : 1
In fairness to Morrison and .his
new-born Methodists, It must be
told that they were allowed to
use freshmen in the opening sea
son, southwest conference officialy
barring junior college and univer
sity trasfers, '
} Morrison left the fold for other
| coaching jobs, including a year
lat Vanderbilt and Army work.
{ But he was to return and left the
| Methodist and himself into nat
|ional prominence with a pioneer
ing venture into the realm of the
;formard pass. A
I In the Mustangs registered
ia vyictory over Texas Christian,
[lt is a legend at Southern Metho
| @ist. The Methodists won 1 to 0 on
|a forfeit when the .C.U ¢leven
ifailed to appear in_ time Jor the
]game. - ; E Py g
| The Mustangs lost one gamel
lin 1918, Texas licking them, 32-0.
i In 1919, 1920 and 1921 the Mus
iLangs were again lambg for wolves
rand not until 1922 did the Metho
|dits, start playing the football that
leventuully rocketed them to the
| heights.
' (Tomorrow: Ray Motrison re-
Iturns and the world hears about
‘Southern Methodist,)
l .
'Charley Turbyville
. Will Wed Martha Ann
| Rodgers Next January
| CLEVELAND, Tenn—(#)—Mr.
land Mrs. Herber A. Rodgers
l announced the engagement of their
| daughter, Martha Ann, to Charles
William Turbyville, of Chatta
nooga, Saturday. The wedding will
be an event of January.
The bride-elect attended the
lUniversity of Chattanooga and is
{a graduate of Agnes Scott col
l icge. -
Turbyville is the son of Mr., and
Mrs. A. ™. Turbyville of Chat
‘| tanooga and is a graduate of G.
[|lM A. and the ' University 'of
GEORGIA EXPERT BEATS NORTHERNER
IN CIGARETTE-ROLLING CONTEST
Photo shows James O’Connor, of Georgia, who
recently rolled a cigarctte with Prince Albert in 19
seconds, by stop-watch time, in a friendly contest
with a man from New York. The New York man’s
time was 21 seconds. “P.A. makes rolling-your
own quick and easy,” Mr. O’Connor says. “And
P.A.stays put—makes a cool, mild, mellow smoke.”
. L -
Thousands and thousands have written us, com
mending Prince Albert for easier rolling, better
smoking. For the benefit of others, we print be
low a fair and square proposition by which they
can try P. A. at our risk.
Prince Albert uses choicest tobacco, ‘‘erimp cut”’
so P. A. rolls quicker, burns longer. The famous
P.A. “‘no-bite’’ process assures mildness. And P.A.
is packed in the big red two-ounce tin that keeps
your tobacco in condition. Good in a pipe too!
HERE IS OUR OFFER:
Roll yourself 30 swell cigarettes from Prince Albert. If you don’t find
them the finest, tastiest roll-your-own cigarettes you ever smoked,
return the tin with the rest of the tobacco in it to us at any time within
a month from this date, and we will refund full purchase price,
plus postage. (Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C.
PRINGE ALBERT
l————————'—-—\—‘-—_
Bobby Cruickshank
g y Lruickshan
~ One of Favorites
| In Sarasota Meet
l SARASTOTA, FLA.—(®P)—Little
Bobby Cruickshank of Richmond,
Richmond, Va., was ranked among
the favorites of the 2,000 Saraso
ta open golf tournament today by
virture of a play-off victory in
Florida’s first /meet of the season,
the Orlando’ qlifien
Cruickshank.won SSOO first prizs
money at Orlando yesterday with
a par 71 for 18 holes, two strokes
to the good over Johnny Revolta
of Milwaukee, Wis,, the P. G. A.
champion with whom he had tied
!at 280 in the regular 72 holes.
~ Both left immediately for the
contest here,
- Newly en‘tered in the Florida
campaigns were Cralg Wood of
New York; Victor Chezzi of Deal
N. J.; Ed Dudley of Augusta, Ga.;
Johnny Kinder of Bounderbrook,
N. J., and Denny Shute of Chica
go- t
The amateur list was augmented
by seven 'major league basebali
players in Sarasota for the winter.
~ These included Paul Waner,
Pittshurgh pirates; Heinie Manush,
Washington senators; Paul Der
ringer, Cincinnati Reds; Bill
Jurges, Chicago Cubs; Johnny
Moore, Philadelphia Nationals,
and Lloyd Brown and Willis Hud
lin of the Cleveland Indians,
Sam Parks, Jr, of [Pittsburgh,
national open champion, was shoot
ing for a comeback after finishing
far back at Orlando.
" Eighteen holes were scheduled
today.
Bogart Team Wins
art Team W
(g)v inder Five
er Winder F
o -
In Battie Friday
BOGART, Ga.—Bogart's fine
basketball team won its second
victory in as many nights Satur
day, trampling Winder under a
28-20 score.
Friday night the Bogart basket
eers won over Watkinsville in a
clfose game, 20. to ‘lB,
YW. Nunnally was the hizh point
man of the game Saturday, scor
ing eight times. He was the out
standing player on the Bogart
team. Maughan and Stephens,
cach with 7 points, were best for
Winder.
' _The lineups:
' Boga! (28) Winder (20)
F.—Whitehead (3) . Maughan (7)
lF.—Hul’f 8 L ey BrOows
'C.——\V.: Nunnally (8) .... Lay (2)
l(‘..~\Vatkins (4) <., .. Skinner (2)
'G.———Hammond (6) .. Stephens (7)
Substitutions: Bogart-——L. Nun
lnal_‘ly (2),. D. Caoper (2) and W.
Cooper; Winder—lKilgore (2),
\ Cook, Elder.
Mercer Football Slate |
For 1936 Is Announced
MACON, GA, —(P)— Mercer’s |
¥936 football - schedule ¢ includ(mi
games with South Georgia Teach
ers College in Macon Sept. 18;
Georgia in Athens Sept. 26,Bir
mingham-Southern in Birminghan:
Oct. 10 and Howard in Macon Oct.
16. :
Other games: Furman in Macon
Oct. 23 or 24, Oct. 31. open; Chat
tanooga in Chattanooga Nov. 7;
Presbyterian in Macon Nov. 13
and Miami in Miami Nov. 20. A
game is being sought with Centre
or Citadel, and another game
probably will be arranged. with
| Oglethorpe,
\ s
I(J.eorg!a. He: was captain of the
}Georgia football team in 1934,
Sport Round -Up
By EDDIE BRIETZ
Associated Press Sports Writer,
NEW YORK.—(#)—Buck New
some comes up with the best
laugh of the stove league season
. . . He says Rogers Hornsby sold
him to \Vashingtpn because the
St. Louis papers gave him a big
ger play than Hornsby . . . Why,
Rogers!
Young Murray Patrick, son of
Lester, the hoeckey coach, and
amateur boxing champion of
Canada, got that egg-sized shiner
flirting with Lew Feldman (a pro)
in a gymnasium. , . . A New
York newspaper, which conducted
a contest tor an All-America
coach, hands the plum to Lynn
Waldorf of Northwestern. . . .
Don’'t be surprised if Ben Chap
man bobs up in the Washington
outfield next season.
Mickey Cochrane, who likes to
fiit hither and yon in airplanes,
has 'been ordered to stay on the
ground by Walter O. Briggs, new
owner of the Tigers.
Tony Canzoneri has been offer
ed $20,000 (count it) to fight Har
ry Mizzler in England, and Sammy
CGoldman is hesitating.. . . . Navy.
Bill Ingram, who used to coach
the Bears, cried real tears in the
dressing room after the Stanford-
California game. : |
Jimmy Isaminger of Philadel
phia contributes the Dbest line of
the week . . . Says he: “It begins
to look like the Athletics will
start next season with an 'excep
tionally powerful home plate and
nothing much else” . . . The
Washington University band went
on strike recently .. . . The boys
wanted to know why the football
players got all the scholarships
while they were . tooting their
heads off. . . . Joe Medwick says
he has to think twice before spell~
ing his real name, which is Modie
wocz . . . Me and you 'bofe, boy.
. . . Lou Gehrig*is wrestling with
his dentist in Boston.
Charles ST Cobb of Baltimore
was the first -to guess (we hope
he guessed) the players on the
Associated Press All-America . . .
Also, . Charlie paid for his wire.
Sorry to say, some of the other
boys didn't . . . Two tickets to
the Louis-Paulino fight will be
waiting for him at the Associated
Press office (sports desk) on the
morning of the fight., . . . And
now, Mister, if you'll just guess
the winner of the Rose Bowl game,
we'll go home.
Statham Wins Over lla
Wednesday Night Easily
By the Score of 27 to 9
STATHAM. — A fast Statham
high basketball team defeated Ila
here Wednesday night by a score
of 27 to 9 No game was sched
uled bhetween the girls teams from
the schools.
Hale and Grizzle wele again the
stars for the Barrow county team.
Grizzle has been the highest scorer
in practically’ every game played
by Statham this year.
o e ST e e
GENEVA IS WINNER
YOUNGSTOWIN, Ohio — (A —
Pennsylvania's Geneva college
eleven mixed a gmart passing at
tack with spinners and straight
football to defeat South Carolina's
Newberry gridders in - a charity
game here Saturday, 19 to 0.
A ¢rowd of only 1,000 saw the
game, which started in a drizzle
and ended in a downpour.
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A.A.U. Votes For Full Americap
Participation In Olympic Games
War By No Means Ended,
However, As Close
Vote Shows,
By ALAN GOULD
Associated Press Sports Editor
NEW YORK—(#®)—The Amateur
Athletic Union of ths TUnited
States emerged today from the
bitterest battle of its 47-year his
ory, on record as supporting full
American participation in the 1936
Olympic games in Germany, but
with the war by no means ended.
Although irrevocably pledged to
go through with the American
Olympie program, the A. A. U,
nevertheless remained split wide
open by an issue that is still very
much alive. stirred by religious as
well as racial controversy. It
threatens to curtail sharply this
eountry’s part in the eleventh
Olympiad.
Proof was promptly fortheoming
that neither onatorical guns nor
ballots killed off the main issue
vesterday, when the closing ses
sion of the A. A. U. convention
turned down 54 1-4 to 5o 3-4 a
compromise proposal to send a
fact-finding commission of three
men to Germany before going
ahead with American plans to
compete.
Subsequent unopposed adoption
of a resolution supporting tha
Olympics, qualified only by a
strong denunciation of the Nazi
government’s athletic policies,
merely widened the breach within
the ranks of A, A. U. delegates.
Jeremiah T. O'Mahoney of New
York, who yielded the A. A. U.
presidency to Avery Brundage of
Giving Telephone Service
. )
Is a Business
BECAUSE it is
known as a public
utility, operating
under state and fed
eral regulation, the
belief has become
fairly common that
the telephone company is guar
anteed a profit on its operations.
Such is not the case, On
the contrary, the company is
not only limited as to its earn
ings, but is not guaranteed a
return, In good times, it did
not earn excess profits; and
when the depression came the
company had to operate as best
it could while business declined,
a condition requiring the wisest
management,
The fact is, the telephone
company is a business organi
zation, like other concerns. It
must serve the public both in
quality and quantity of service
at a fair price; it must pay
- T. BARTON BAIRD, Georgia Manager
Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co.
incorporated
WHAT S
YOUR TIME’
R T PRSI OSSO 5 TR
AR
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© 125
B. J. Reyvolds Teb, Co,
THE EASY-TO-ROLL JOY SMOKE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1935
‘Chicago, head of the \m
.Olymplc committee, after witpe.
ing the defeat of all pjs e
to keep the organization (u; ~
the. Olympics, declareq in i
that he has “just begun t, I"m!*kt :
Resigning from the Olympic ...
ecutive committee, Mahoney said
he would continue “tpe fight
against American participatio, ;in
the games in Germany . . . ;¢ 1.
only way of preserving the Olyni
pic ideal.”
Others who figures in they,.
successful attempt to put the 4.
A. U. on record in opposition 10
holding the games in Germany
indicated they would not abjde py
the majority decision.
Charies L. Orenstein of Ney
York, who sponsored but finally
withdrew a resolution to boycott
the Olympies completely, planneqd
similar action today.
Samuel K. MacCabee, chairmay
of the move-the-Olympics commit
tee, refused to admit defeat, (e.
clared the “very close vote is g
mandate to continue the fight to
prove that sportsmanship is big
ger than sport,” and indicated the
movement for & counter “Olympi
ad” in 1936 had gained impetus
by the A. A. U, action
MacCabee suggested that thoss
opposed to participation in the
games in Germany might sponsor
an international set of athletie
games in the United States, de
gigned to ‘rival the actual Olym
pics, \
= \ ) {7
& 2
> I S
"‘ 1 L .\.‘ b
3 h T &
€. =
R
\/‘““ sflllt I AT FAIR [”‘37
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‘..«““ <
quate wages to its employes.
It may be observed that
without fair treatment, the
traditional loyalty to the ser
vice of telephone workess
would not have become a fact,
Without sound financing, over
three-fourths of a million
Americans would not have been
encouraged to invest their sav
ings in this business, making
the continued progress and
improvement of the service
possible. Without a service
that was and is of greater
value than its low cost, the
number of telephones in service
would not have grown to the
present high figure.
reasonable earnings
to the people who
have invested their
money in it; it
must be soundly
operated and must
pay fair and ade-