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PAGE FOUR
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
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A Thought For The Day
They say unto him, Lord, that our eyes may be
opened.—St, Matthew 20:23.
Each one sees what he carries in his heart.—
Goethe.
Today’s Bible Meditation
For this cause shall a man leave father and
mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they
twain shall be one flesh, Wherefore they are no
more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God
hath joined together, let not man put asunder.
—St, Matthew 19:3-6.
With what respect and reserve Jesus treats mar
riage<=man and wife, the basis of the tfamily. In His
hands, marriage is a holy thing. Man and wife are
no longer separate but merged in each other—QGod’s
new creation., If the bonds of this unity fails, all so
cial bonds will fail We see this all to plainly in our
day: worldliness making light of Jesus’ standards,
playing fsst and loose with the sacred relations.
What sendg sdciety down grade and into crime, is
the '‘broken home,” Wordly married couples (not
children) “break’” the home. Our Lord helps us here
—to bear and forbear; not to assert our personal
“right”; to discipline self for others’ sake; mutual
qove daily renewed. A most serious thing in our
chilldren’s future is marriage and parenthood. What
better way to train them, then by living on the holy
level to which Jesus leads? They will never forget
it. They will honor us by imitating us.
| CATTON'S COMMENT ]
e @Y BRUCE CATTON s
Ask almost anybody what kind of time the United
States has had in the last five or six yearg and he
will tell you that they were dead and hopeless years
in which nothing was brought forth but misery.
The wheels all ran down and stopped those half
dozen years, and time stood still while men gathered
by the ashes ‘of burnt-out dreams, That, anyhow,
is the way most of us size them up.
~ But things did happen, somehow, during that dead
and hopeless time, to make the business of living
casier and more pleasant. ‘We have- a great many
things today that we did not have six years ago; and
in some way they all came into existence in those
years which the locust has eaten.
Suppose you go traveling for instance. You can
ride on new, streamlined, smokeless, and dustless
trains which will get you to your destination faste:
and " tmore comfortably than any train in existence
in 1929. If you don’t get on one of these trains,
your ordinary Pullman is very likely to be air con
ditioned, free from grit and soot, replete with new
gadgets. T
If you don't go by train at all, you have other ad
vantages. You can fly from New York to San Fran
cisco in a day, or take an aerial sleeper, going in far
greater comfort and safety than you could have done
in 1929, If you drive your own car, it is a better
car than you could have had in 1929, it costs you less
money to buy and operate, the roads over which it
rolls are better, and the touristg accommodations en
route have been improved.
Suppose you build your own home; there, too, you
can get more for your money than you could have
gotten six years ago. New materials have besn
adapted for ydur wse, new household appliances
have been devised, new designs have been evolved—
all to the end that the house you buy can be a meiv
eomfortable place to live in.
Such improvements have been made all along the
line. There are new textile fabries for your cloth
irg; the range of your telephone has been increas«d;
yvour radio is a better instrument, and some of the
programs that come out of it have even been im
proved a little; your doctor and your dentist have
increased scientific knowledge at their command;
new books and magazines have been produced to give
you Jntellectual and emotional stimulus,
These things are the gift of those half dozen dead
vears; years that were full of misery and despair
for a great many people, but years in which, never
theless, the great work of knocking the roagh edges
off life wug carried forward as steadily and intelli
gently as in any other six years in our history.
Russia’s Gory Era Recalled
After 18 years, Russian authorities have managed
to catch and imprison six men whp tortured and
then buried alive a Soviet official in the city of
Izhevsk during the civil war wheih swept the fringes
of Russia after 1918, By the time you read this, the
six may already have been executed, for Soviet courts
do not lag in cases like this,
Announcement of the arrests ig a reminder that
the things that happened in Russia during the two
or three years followig the end of the World War
must make about as bloody and terribie a record as
any comparable period in the whole story of man
kind. <
Control of cities and provinces swept back and
forth, from Red to White to Red to White and back
again, in dizzying Succession. Torture, murder and
general cruelty were the order of the day, applied
impartially by both sides.
" This Soviet official who was buried alive was only
one among many. The thing that makes his case an
exception is that his torturers are finally being
brought to book.
. ————————
More than 42 per cent of the sales of farm prod
ucts are made during September, October and No
vember.
s 5 ¥y ———————————
Balloon spiders have been found two mileg above
the earth by U. S. government scientists using in-
Sect:traps on airplanes, These spiders do not have
ig power of flight, however; they are carried aloft
e sink 80 e ——————
fi;& is the most complete food supplied by nature.
ENCOURAGING OUTLOOK FOR 1936
The National City Bank of New York,
has just released a review of business and
finances for the year 1935. The report
pontains a great deal of information that
is of worthwhile importance in that it
lends encouragement for the new year.
Lagt year led in improvement pver- all
years since 1930, which wsas better than
had been anticipated by the most optimis
tic interests. |
A peragraph from the report of the
New York bank is of interest from a com
mercial, industrial and financial point of
view :
“The year 1935 has closed with busi
ness activity at the highest level in more
than five years, and with signs of recov
ery more widespread than at any time
gsince the tvrn of the depression was
reached in 1932. The year opened with
business on the rise; the slackening that
followed was chiefly seasonal; and since
mid-summer production and trade have
made steady gains, On the average 1935‘
has been a 13 per cent busier year than
1934, according to the Federal Reserve
Board’s index of the volume of industriall
production. From the low point of 1932
the improvement has been nearly 60 per
cent, and this recovers approximately one
?gg;) of the ground lost since the peak in
“Crops during the year were not of the
best, but were more satisfactory than in
1934 ; farm products on the average have
brought better prices, and the farmers
have had a larger income., Workers have
had more employment and more pay, and
the industries greater earnings, Values
of most kinds of property, including
dtocks, bonds and both city and farm real
estate, have improved. A Money has been
super-abundant at unprecedentedly low{
rates. Foreign trade has shown a fair in
crease, and the exchange values of the!
currencies of the important countries
(China excepted) have been reasonably
stable, although the larger movements of
gold and silver necessary to sustain them
show that equilibrium is still lacking, and
stabilization does not seem apprecianly
nearer.”
There were many items mentioned in the
review by the bank which show that the
production of many manufactured goods
exceeds that of recent years. A partial list
is herewith reproduced: electric power,
rayon, woolen goods, shoes, washing ma
chines, oil burners, electric refrigerators,
air conditioning equipment, gasoline con
sumption, plate glass, air transport, ciga
rettes, mechanical stokers, nickel, electric
lamps and radios.
Improved «onditonsh ave been general
throughout the nation. Atheps has epjoy
ed a general revival in business; the un
employed situation is practically absorb
ed, there being few people here without
employment. Our people are encouraged
‘and optimistic; the Chamber of Com
merce officers are planning a program for
the new year that is bound to enliven bus
iness and bring about a new and stable
condition for 1936.
With a new era and prosperity merging
all lines of commerce and industry on to
substantial gains, normaley is bound to be
reached and settled conditions returned
’once more.
THE FIRST AIR MAIL
Just 143 years ago, the first mail to
be delivered via an air route was posted
in Philadelphia and delivered in Trenton,
N. J., which is approximately a distance
of fifteen miles. Of course, no official air
mail route was established at that time,
but the balloonist carried with him a let
ter from President George Washington
to serve as an introduction and for pro
tection regardless of where his balloon
might land.
A paragraph from the letter indicates
the interest in which the experiment was
viewed by President Washington. It was
addressed as follows: “To all to whom
these presents shall come: The bearer
hereof, Mr. Blanchard, a citizen of
France, proposing to ascend in a balloon
from the city of Philadelphia at 10 a. m.
this day to pass in such direction and to
descend in such place as circumstances
may render most convenient.” The ascent
was made on the morning of January 9,
1793, by Jean Pierre Blanchard, a noted
French balloonist.
President Washington was present to
witness the great feat proposed by the
Frenchman., The ascent proved a success,
the aviator landing safely in New Jersey
and returned that evening, via private
conveyance, to Philadelphia, where he re
ceived the congratulations of President
Washington, officials and prominent citi
zens from all sections of the country. So
history tells us that it was possible for air
mail delivery a.century and a half ago.
A loose belt on a belt-driven generator
is often the cause of erratic action of the
ammeter negdle.
Five hundred highway first aid stations
have already been set up by the Red
Cross, and 5,000 are expected to be ready
by the summer of 1936.
Toledo chapter of the American Red
Cross is planning to ask auto manufactur
ers to include first aid Kkits as standard
equipment in their new cars,
A Florida inventor uses a windmill to
provide compressed air for inflating his
automobile tires, An eight-foot wind vane
stores air under pressure in a tank.
During the 19th century, a peculiarly
shaped glass ball, known as a ‘“witch
ball,” was placed in windows of homes to
ward off disease. > ;
THE lANN!Q-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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BEGIN HERE TODAY
Dana Stanley, divorced from
her husband, Dr, Scott Stanley,
is making plans to marry rich
Ronald Meoore, who has been
in love with her several years.
Dana had left her husband,
believing him in love with Paula
Long. Scott believes Dana left
him because he was poor. ‘
After the separation, he be
comes a partner of the town's .
outstanding physician, Dr. Os
borne.
Nancy, (Dana's half-sister,
loves Ronnie, but has always
concealed her feeling from him.
On an impulse, she tells him:
Dana still loves Scott. Ronnie
refuses to believe her.
. Wjth no heart in her plans,
Dana goes ahead with her prep
arations to marry Ronnie. Aunt
Ellen, |Dana’s romantic great
aunt, goes so Dr. Osborne and .
tells him Dana and Ronnie plan
to marry that night. Dr. Os- |
borne telephones Scott, who is"*
out of the city.
Driving at breakneck speed,
Scott’s car crashes with ano
ther car.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
f a CHAPTER XLV, |
The middle-aged man dreaded
ireaching the wreckage a few yards
ia.way. There would, probably, be
little he could do. A smash like
[that could mean but one thing.
There wasn’'t a chance in a hun
‘dred that the occupants had escap
ed alive. |
But he saw, as he came closer,!
that one driver had used his head
‘at the fatal moment, He had turn
‘ed his car so that the engine of the
other automobile had struck the
'side and not the front. This chap,
‘he saw, too, had escaped in some
ialmost miraculous fashion and was
lifting the driver of the outbound
‘car from the tangled mass. '
o Ehe middle-aged man said: "Thatl
iwas a sorry smash. You're lucky.
Is that pood chap dead?”
| “No,” Scott said, “he’s badlyl
hurt. But he isn’'t dead. Thank
\ !
God.” |
‘ “We'd better get him to a doctor
'at once,” the stranger said. 5
“I'm a doctor,” Scott replied. “A
‘hospital is what we need. I'm go
ing o take time to bandage a gash
in his head, if a surgical case 1
have isn't smashed to bits.”
. The stranger stooped and held
the unconscious man’'s head while
Scott explored the back of his
wrecked car, The case was locat
ed in the tangled mass, and. Scott
bandaged the ugly cut quickly.
“The best thing,” Scott said
straightening, “is to phone from
the first house and have an ambu-|
lance come out and meet us.” {
. They lifted the unconscious youth
into the stranger’'s car and startedl
on, Scott supporting the boy in hisi
arms, If the kid died, he would/
never forgive himself. The boyl
had been on the wrong side of the‘
road, driving with the recklessness,
the cocksureness of carelesg youth.|
But it<took two to make an acci-l
dent. He himself, had taken a|
dozen risks since he left Easton.
He had let his car out to 70 a num- |
ber of times, holding it around 65|
generally. He'd taken the curve t.ool
fast, without a thought cf a care-l
less driver around the bend. Deepi
in his unhappiness, he had been
driving mechanically. Ardd ano-l
ther’s life might be the price he
must pay. |
The thought of Dana was like a
sharp, stabbing pain. Now he coula
not go to her as he had planned.
He must take the boy straight to
ar emergency room, determine the
extent of his injuries and get to
work.
A thought came like a reprieve
from sentence. Any of his friends
would be glad to help him. Some
of them would be making casual
rounds, and any one of them would
FOREIGN ENTANGLEMENTS |
drive out and bring Dana to him.
He knew, with a sense of deep
conviction, that if he asked her
to come, nothing could keep her
away. It was ag simple as that.
All of your petty doubts and fears
and suspicions fell away from you
when the real crisis of life came.
Dana would come, And never
again, please God, would anything
in life separate them.
They were driving steadily and
fairly fast. But not fast enough
for Scott. Minutes inea case like
this counted. He wanted to change
places with the conservative, mid
dle-aged driver. This time, with
all his faculties alert and sharp
ened by the experience just past,
there would ~be no danger -in
traveling fast. Speed " combined
with a black fog of unhappiness
had brought this fearful affair
about.
Blood had soaked through the
bandage on the boy’s head and
was staining Scott’s coat. There
was so much blood on his own
clothing it would be hard for an
ordinary observer to tell which of
the two wag most hurt. Yet, ex
cept for some painful bruises, he
apparently had come through un
harmed.
They had reached a lighted house.
Scott was praying there would be
a telephone. He could hear his
companion pounding on the door
Then the door swung wide and a
flood of light poured through.
“An ambulane is wrarting to meet
us,” the middle-aged man reported
when he returned.
“What time have you?” Scott
asked.
“Six-thirty. 1 figure you’ll be at
the hospital at least by seven.”
The number had a dark sound
to Scott.
Dr. Osborne had not specified
any particular time. He had said
Dana and Ronnie were to.be mar
ried tonight. That could mean
they had set 8 o'clock as the hour,
It could mean seven.
It was 10 minutes to seven when
Dr. Harvey Robertson stopped in
amazement, staring at a blood
stained, haggard, wild-eyed man,
who had come in through the em
ergency entrance. 5
“Scott!” he cried. “My God!
you’'ve been in an accident.”
Scott nodded. “I'm all right.
The boy who is really hurt is be
ing brought in on a stretcher. He's
‘had a nasty blow on the head. I've
got to get up to the dressing room
to get into some linen—"
| “You can’t mean you're going to
‘handle this case. Man alive, you
"are in no shape—l'd be glad to take
[it over ‘for you. Or maybe, there's
someone else—"
E Scott broke in, grimly. “Thanks,
}but this is my job. I'm going to
put something more into pulling
this boy through than a man ordi
narily gives to a case. And I'm
risking something more precious
to me than my life to do it. Har
vey I need help—"
“You know I'll be glad to do what
I can” .
“Get into your car and drive like
the devil tb the Cameron home at
1800 Magnolia and bring my wife
back with you!” :
“Bring—"/ Dr. Robertson’s mouth
flew open.
“Bring her back with you. Tell
her I was coming for her when
this accident happened. You'll get
off right away, won't you? I can't
explain, but it's a case ofe every
minute counting.” "
Dr. Robertson stammered, “Of
course—right off.” :
Scott reached out and gripped
the other physician’s hand hare
for a moment and then started on
a run, |
Dr. Robertson stood staring aft
er him. Scott had looked irres
ponsible and he ha@ sounded like
a crazy man. Then he had made
this request which had been even
more insane. Sending him after
his divorced wife!
He got his hat and went out in
to the court in the rear of the
building to get his car. Two of
his colleagues, Dr. Charles War
wick and Dr, Phillip Stern, were
coming in together. They stopped
and spoke to him.
“Your busy day over, Robertson?”’
Dr. Warwick asked.
“No.”
He didn’t relish his mission and
some of his distaste was in his
voice, “I made a promise to look
after something for Stanley. He's
all cut up over something. He's
brought in an accident case. I fig
ure he figured in it, some way.”
¥Probably been drinking,” said
Dr. Stern. ‘“Suppose you've heard
his divorced wife is getting mar
ried tonight.”
“Good heavens, no!”
Dr. Stern nodded.
“I guess that's true,” Dr, War
wick said, “We heara it too. The
Osbornes’ cook teld our cook that
one of the Cameron granddaugh
ters was marrying Ronald Moore
tonight. He was in love with Mrs.
Stanley before she married. And
since he retruned from Europe, he’s
been camping on her doorstep, they
say. Seen everywhere together.”
“What wag it Stanley wanted
you to do?”’ Dr. Stern-asked.
“Nothing of any importance,” Dr.
Rbbertson answered. ‘Just a
small errand . .. well, good night.”
He went toawrd his car, waited
until ‘the two men had entered the
hospital, and then slowly retracted
his steps. : ¢
1t was a good thing he had bump
ed into the two men. It wag queer
he hadn’'t suspected Scott was
drinking. And here he had been
planning to humor a man Wwhp
probably didn’t @ realize what a
crazy request he was making. He
might have known, if he had usea
his head, that Stanley had either
been drinking or was just off a
bender. Calling Dana Stanley “my
wife” when they’'d been divorced
for months.
It would have been a pretty
come-off if he had walked into the
wedding and comanded the bride
to accompany him to meet her
former husband!
If would have been something he
would never have lived down. He'd
offered to take over the accident
case. But he would be damned if
he would make an ass of himself.
- He got off on:the fourth floor.
Miss Hazelton, Stanley’s anesthet
ist, was hurrying along the corri
dor. That meant he was going to
operate. You had to admire him
for character and cool nerve. Feel
ing responsible in some way for
the smash up and determined to
put the boy together again.
Miss Reid, floor supervisor, look
ed up when he passed her desk and
spcke.
“The automobile accident case
—pretty serious?' He asked.
“Rather, doctor. Intracranial he
morrhage. But he'll have a fine
chance. Dr. Stanley’s operating.” |
Dr, Robertson walked on. The
hospital staff certianly had con
fidence in Stanley. Well, he was a/
mighty keen young surgeon. And
after awhile he was going to comei
out of that operating room and‘
he’d have to tell him something. ‘
He would say something import-l
ant had come up preventing him
from going on Scott’'s mission. A
man had his own professional
standing to consider. And it was
easy enough to make mistakes. It
would be a mistake to antagonize
Ronnie Moore.
He was feeling uncomfortable
for some reason, It was a feeling
that surely had no logic connectea
with it. But he was worried, 10g
ic or not, 3
Scott’'s face kept coming before
him. There had been something
haunted, trapped about it.
. (To be continued)
WHAT DO YOU MEAN,
I CAN'T DRIVE?
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R R S 3
“What do you mean, I can’t drive?”
A prelude to disaster. e
A drunken overture to bloody shambles. ’i 3
-~ “Leggo,” says the man in the picture to ja distraught companion.
“Im all right. Who says I’m drunk? Who says I can't drive? Tl'll
drive it—c'mon.”
There’s not much use talking to thig drunken driver. Whipped
by liquor, his mind can think only of one thing—SPEED. What he
needs is a punch in the jaw. He is a potential killer , . . but he
doesn’t realize it, A punch on the jaw might save lives of innocents
in the path of hig auto and it would save the driver a lifetime of
remorse,
The scene depicted above—posed by a staff photographer for
the Toledo News-Bee and al friend—is so typical of the scene that
prefaces traffic tragedies nightly throughout the nation that
it is sent you by NEA Service and with the compliments of The
Toledo News-Bee as a contribution to safer driving in your
town or city.
The picture aroused so much interest and comment when
it appeared originally in The News-Bee that many editors who
noticed it requested prints for local use.
Beneath the cutlines which appear ‘above, The News-Bee
added:
The counterpart of the man shown here may be one of a gay
party in some night club or at some house party where you are, But
don’t let him drive—even if you must “punch him on the jaw.,
I you keep him away from the wheel, tomorrow will be happier—
for him and possibly for others who might be victims of his careen
ing car.
BOGART PRINCIPAL
RESIGNS POSITION
J. T. Brookshire Resigns
School Post to Work
With Atlanta Firm.
BOGART—Principal J. T.Brook
shire of Bogart High school has
resigned from the faculty and has
accepted a position in the offices
of the mailing department at
Sears-Roebuck in Atlanta, accord
ing to reports from the local
school board and Superintendent
E. N. Anthony.
Mr. Brookshire was teaching
his first year at this school al
though he has had experience at
other schools in previous years.
Mr. Brookshire was a graduate of
the University of @Georgia and
came here from Grayson. For
a number of years previous to at
tending the University Mr. Brook
shire was connected with his pres
ent employers in Atlanta. He has
many friends here who will regret
to hear of him leaving. Mrs. James
Lowe of Statham has replaced Mr.
Brookshire in the = school. Mrs.
Lowe -taught in Statham High
school last vear.
P.-T. A. TO MEET
The Parent-Teacher Association
of Bogart High school will hold
their first meeting of the year at
the school building Tuesday after
noon January 14. Approximately
40 - parents and teachers are ex
pected to attend this meeting. Re
freshments will be served by
mother’s of the students in the
senior class. Mrs. Bart Powell is
president of the association.
Weekly Calendar of
University Events
TUESDAY
11:30. a. m.—lnstitute of Publie
Affairs lecture. George Soule, edi
tor of The New Republic, “Com
munism, Fascism, and Socialism.”
Chapel.
7:00 p. m.—Junior Home Eco
nomics club meeting. Speake,r
Miss Marie McHatton, “Presenta
tion at Court.” Smith building,
Coordinate campus.
18 <p. m.—Y” meeting .
Speaker, Dr. H. T. Park. *X”
rooms.
“8:00 p. m.—lnstitute of Public
Affairs lecture. George Soule, “The
Nation and the World.” Chapel.
8:00 p. m.—Meeting of Fresh
man Commission. “Y"” rooms.
WEDNESDAY S
4:30 -p. m.—University Orches
tra practice. Phi Kappa Hall.
7:30 p. m.—Phi Kappa and
TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1936.
Demosthenian meetings in respec
tive halls.
DOUGHERTY COUNTY
ALBANY, Ga. — (AP) — The
Dougherty county primary will be
held March 11, Henry T, Meclin
tosh, chairman of the e¢ounty Dem
ocratic committee, announced,
Four candidates already have
announced for tax collector: J. H.
Jones, incumbent; O. 2. Waddell,
E. 8. McDaniel and T. M. Dob«
bins. :
LAX THE BLADDER
THIS 25¢ TEST FREE
If it fails. When irritation wakey
you up, use this bladder lax to flush
out irrypurities and excess acids, Get
buchu leaves, juniper oil, etc., in
little green tablets called Bukets.
Works on the bladder similar ta
castor oil on the howels. Bladder
irritation can cause disturbed sleep,
frequent desire, scanty flow, burn~
ing or backache. In four days, if
not pleased any druggist will re
fund ‘your 25c. Get, your regula¥
sleep and fe:l “full of pep. Citizend
Pharmacy. — Advt. i
Here’s Swift and
Direct Actien to
Relieve That Cold
Modern External Treatment
Helps End Colds Without
Constant “Dosing” to Upset:
Digestion.
JUST RUB ON AT BEDTIME
& ] Two generations of
& M mothers have proved
X A ] Vicks Vapoßub the
I\ 44 most eif_fecti\}rlel (‘;reat
; ment for children’s
A\ Al’ffi colds. Vapoßub is ex
ternal—and safe. Its
use avoids the risks of constant
internal “dosing” which so often
upset digestion and appetite, thus
lowering body resistance when most
needed.
Just rubbed on throat and chest
at bedtime, Vapoßub starts to worlk
immediately — two ways at once:
1. By stimulation through the skin,
like a poultice or plaster—
2. By inhalation of its penetrating
medicated vapors, released by
body heat and breathed in direct
to inflamed air-passages.
Continuing through the night,
this powerful poultice-vapor action
loosens phlegm — soothes irritated
membranes—eases difficult breath
ing—helps break congestion.
A Practical Guide for Mothers
Each year, more and more fami
lies are being helped to fewer colds
and shorter colds by Vicks Plan for
Better Control of Colds. Vicks Plan
has been clinically tested by practic
ing physicians, and further proved
in everyday home use %millions.
Full details of the Plan in each
package of Vicks Vapoßub.
. Million Vick Aids Used Yearly
r Better Control of Colds