Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1936.
Curriculum Study to
Begin Here Friday at
High School Building
A study of “Improvement of
Classroom Instruction” -will open
for members of the Athens Public
Schools Parent-Teachers Asso
ciation Friday, with Superintend
ent B, M. Grier in charge. Meet
ings will be held in the main au
ditorium at the high school.
Mr. Grier will give a series of
these instructions on the curricu
lum in Athens, and all P.-T. A.
members are invited. The High
School amd Childs Street P.-T.
A.'s are sponsoring the lessons.
Topies (fpr discussion will be
taken from a booklet on the im
provement of Class Room instruc
tion puiblished by the Georgia Par
ent-Teachers association.
Friday, Mr. Crier will discuss
“The Objectives of Our Schoqls”
anl “Shall We Educate for De
mocrary.”
Dr. James T. Shotwell
Honor Guest at Dinner
Party Monday Evening
The Institute of Public Affairs
of the Uniyersity of Georgia en
tertained Monday evening at a
lovely dinner in honor of Dr.
James T. Shotwell, a distingiush
ed visitor and speaker.
Memorial Hall provided the
splendid setting with decorations
of evergreens and Old English
Ivy in the reception hall.
The delightful dinner was served
in the covered roof garden where
the tables were grouped, artistic
ally decorated with gay clusters of
exquisite snapdragons. About one
hundred guests of the University
contingent were present.
Following the dinner the guests
returned to the reception hall
where Dr. ShotweHl spoke infor
mally. This proved an occasion of
rare pleasure and enjoyment.
Few visitors at the University
have afforded more genuine pleas
ure, or contributed more charm
ingly to the splendid program ar
ranged 'by the Institute of Public
Affairs.
\\,/// e (—m GLAD | MET YOU b (|
‘I/ Fag ! NURSE TO THANK YOU (SR
W ;5 FOR YOUR ADVICE " RS
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o “Not at all,
Mrs. Hill. I can’t
bear to see kiddies
poorly and miserable when I know
that all they need is a dose of ‘Cali
fornia Syrup of Figs’ to relieve their
bowels and clear their systems.
“What a load off your mind it must
be to see them so full of fun and
energy again, and with such a lovely
color in their cheeks. Always hungry
too, aren’t they?
“That's the beauty of ‘California
Syrup of Figs,” it not only keeps the
bowels regular but it tones up the
digestion ‘and creates a healthy
uppetite.
¢ *California Syrup of Figs’ is never
harsh, never gripes and never weak
ens, like concentrated purgatives. I
always feel there’s a risk in taking
them, whereas ‘California Syrup of
Figs’ being a natural laxative is
absolutely safe.
I strongly recommend you to get
the children into the routine of taking
a weekly dose of ‘California Syrup
of Figs.’ It will ward off colds and in
fections and act as a splendid tonic
for the system. Speaking from experi
ence, ‘California Syrup of Figs’ is
just as good for adults, especially
those who are not too robust.”
60¢ per bottle at all druggists. Be
sure to gel the genuine *California
Syrup of Figs.”
"California
Syrup of Figs”
‘WATURE'S OWN' LAXATIVE
PRESCRIPTIONS
Carefully Compounded
Telephones 88 - 89
PATRICK’S PHARMACY
SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY!
SHAMPOO, FINGER WAVE, AND 85c
MANICURE .. ... .. iiiineisd Bitadisiivnivsiosy
5 §S OIL SHAMPOO AND
anasesunee vy B
EBROW, LASH DYE
T OIL SHAMPOO AND FINGE
'HENRIETTA BEAUTY SALON
CALL 2037 FOR APPOINTMENT
& TAKETHE
/777 1%, LAUNDRY LOAD
/. %4 OFF YOUR MIND!
T 5 /,f"’ —RELIEVE YOURSELF of this
: / /‘/‘é worry. We can wash your clothes
= /{:?Zf;%g :::ei:::irfi::ls'iyv-v-hnter, more gently and
e 3 More Economically!
(AN& ;m CALL 276 AND OUR
AN _*l/;d\w_ = TRUCKS WILL
\ ‘“ ! T RESPOND
g INDUSTRIAL
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Girl Scouts Troop No. 1 Meets
With Allene Hodgson Saturday
Troop No. 1 of the Athens Girl
Scouts met at.the home of Allene
Hodgson Saturday afternoon at
3:30 o'clock with Mrs. Lewis Kin
caid, captain of the Troop, in
charge.
Patrol leaders, assistant patroll
leaders, the secretary, and the
treasurer reviewed their respective!
insignia ana several who had pre-|
viously had given their orders were|
given their Girl Scout pins. |
The. Fire = Fly Patrol, Sarah‘
Brown, leader, had .charge of
opening exercises. The roll was|
called by the Scribe and thirtyl
members of the troop ‘ogether
with four prospective Scout re-‘
sponded with their “Good Truns of
the Day.”
Mrs. Ffank Fitch of the Troop
Committee was present and gave
instructions in the art of hospital
bed making, one of the require
ments for the second class test. |
Mrs. Harold Hodgson asked
College Avenue School
Observes Dad’s Night
Dad’s Night will be observed by
the College Avenue School Thurs
day night at 8 o’clock. This is
the regular meeting of the P.-T. A.
which is sponsoring Dad's night.
The speaker of the occasion will
pe Dr. W. H. Wrighton of the
University of Georgia. His topic
will be “Spiritual Safety.” Mr. E.
L. Morgan, Dad president will
preside over the meeting.
. % =
Barrow School P.-T. A.
Will Meet Thursday
Barrow School Boag A, will
meet Thursday afternoon at the
school at 4 o'clock. Prof. Mallary
of the University of Georgia will
be the speaker. A full attendance
ie urged.
$N e 3
TUESDAY CONTRACT
CLUB ENTERTAINED
The Tuesday Contract club was
delightfully entertained this after
noon by Mrs., William F. Brad
shaw, at her lovely home on
Prince avenue. The hapily infor
mal occasion assembled the mem
bers for an interesting game, fol
i lJowed by dainty refreshments.
. - -
iChuldren of Confederacy
Meet Saturday Morning
All members of Ellen Crawford
chapter, Chlidren of the Confedera
cy, are requested to meet at Cos
ta's Saturday morning at 9 o'clock
to sell Flags for Georgia Day.
- LaGrange Trussell, Pres.
Rose Walker Mayne, Director.
- - -
February Garden Club
Meeting |s Postponed
The February meeting of the
| Ladies Garden cvub has been . post
poned due to prevailing weather
l conditions.
i The meetings are scheduled for
the first Wednesday morning of
each month. The new date of the
| meeting will be announced later.
- - -
i Prince Ave. Circle No. 5
. Will Meet Wednesday
| Circle No. 5 of Prince Avenue
{ Baptist church will meet Wednes
day afternoon with Mrs. Arthur
Gann, 430 Milledge Circle at 4
| a’clock. A full attendance is urg
i ed.
’s* » |
| Friends of E. J. Anthony, of
‘High Shoals, and little Edward
Archer, Athens Route 2 will be
l glad to know that they are resting
better after treatment at General
l hospital.
- .
| Friends of Miss Rose Walker
IMayne will regret to learn that
¢he is confined to her home with!
a bone fracture in her foot, sus
tained in an accident the past
week, and will be incapacitated
for sometime.
. * %
The many friends of Miss An
nie Crawford will be pleased to
,learn of her continued improve
ment from a recent illness and is
} able to come down stairs.
Betty Fitch and the patrol leaders,
Annie Hawkes, Carolyn Gilbert,
Sarah Brown and Virginia Davis
to serve in uniform at the Febru
ary Legion Auxiliary meeting,
February 7, at the Legino Cabin
as this is Americanism month and
a very interesting program has
been arranged by Miss Annie Hol
iday, Americanism chairman of the
Auxiliary.
At the close of the meeting those
present were invited into the din
ing room where tea was poured by
Mrs. Kinecaid of Virginia, a great
granddaughter of the hostess, Al
lent Hodgson.
The table was gayly decorated
in the Valentine motif with tall
glowing tapers, heart-shaped
cooknes and valentine mints. A
beautiful marble cake, baked by
Allene in preparation for her sec
ond class test and sliced to show
its grain and texture also graced
the table.
FUNERAL NOTICES
WOOTTEN—Mrs. Ophela Heggie
Wootten, widow of T. B. Wootten,
died Monday evening, February 3,
1936, at 9:20 o’clock, at a local
hospital, following an illness of
10 years. She was 66 years of
age. She is survived by a daugh
ter, Mrs. Gertrude Wootten Gari
baldi, Kansas City, Mo.; two
step-daughters, Mrs. H. E. Perri
go, Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs.
John, Elliott, Athens, Ga.; a half
brother, Mr. James Heggie; a sis
ter, Mrs. Frank Pentecost, Sun
flower, Miss.; one son, Mr. An
gus (. Wootten., Private funeral
services will be Wednesday. morn
ing, February 5, 1936, at ten
(10:00), from McDorman-Bridges
chapel Dr. G. M. Acree, pastor
of the First Methodist church,
will officiate. Interment will be in
Oconee Hill cemetery. McDoman-
Bridges. |
CHEATHAM-—The relatives and
friends of Mr. and Mrs. E. C.
Cheatham, Miss Annie Cheatham
and Miss Ruth Cheatham, Bogart,
Ga.; Mr. and Mrs, T. C. Cheat
ham, Farmington, Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Davis, Bogart, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs, Walter Fuckett,
Farmington, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Cheatham, Bogart, Ga.;
and Mr. Hubert Cheatham and
Mr. Woodford Cheatham, Farm
ington; Ga., are invited to attend
the funeral of Mr. E. C. Cheat
ham, Wednesday, February 5,
1936, from Mars Hill Baptist
church, the hour to be announced
later, Interment will bhe in Mars
Hill cemetery. McDorman-Bridges
KENT—The friends and relatives of
Mr. James A. Kent, 146 Georgia
Railroad street; Mr. and Mrs.
| W. E. Bones, Mr. and Mrs. John
| }’a}ricz&. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Blder, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Warren,
~ Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Bobo, Miss
Leva Kent, Mr. and Mrs, W. A.
Kent, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Kent,
all of Athens; Mr. and Mrs. A.
J. Miller, Farmington, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. L. T. Kent, Covington,
Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Griff Kent,
Sandy Cross, Ga., and Mr. B. T,
Kent, Breeman, Ga., are invited
to attend the funeral of Mr.
James A. Kent tomorrow, Wed
nesday, February sth, at 3 p.m.,
from Bernstein’s chapel. Rev. J.
A. Langford, pastor of Oconee
Street Methodist church, will of
ficiate and interment will be in
family cemetery. Bernstein Fun
eral Home.
BURROUGH—The friends and rel
atives of Mr. and Mrs. William
Clinton Burrough, Comer, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clarke, Mr.
Andrew Burrough, Mr, and Mrs.
S. B. Burrough, Mr. and Mrs.
T. C. Burrough, Mr. and Mrs.
~J. M. Burrough, Mr. and Mrs.
Thurmond Kidd, all of Comer,
' Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Burrough,
Mr. and Mrs. Bugene Burrough,
Winterville, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie Burrough, Carlton, Ga.;
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Smith, Carl
ton, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. J. w 5
Martin, Carlton, Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs. J. C. Wilson, Carlton, Ga.,
are invited to attend the funeral
of Mr. William Clinton Burrough
tomorrow, Wednesday, February
sth, at 3 p.m. from New Hope
Presbyterian church. Rev. C. K.
Taffee wiil officiate and interment
will be in New Hope cemetery.
Bernstein Funeral Home.
OCONEE SCHOOLS ARE
DISMISSED DUE TO
WEATHER CONDITION
WATKINSVILLE, Ga. — R. M.
Nicholson Oconee County school
superintendent, dismissed all Oco
nee county schools Monday when
weather conditions became worse
and prevented school buses from
making tehir rounds on muddy
roads.
According to reports, Mr. Nich
olson dismissed the schools when
he said that “it was dangerous
irur school children to have to wait
for buses and be out in mud and
ilajn.“ With a large number of
cases of mumps, flu as well as se
lvere colds raging in all section of
the county school attendances
have been off for the past several
days. Students will refurn to
lschonl when, weather conditions
improve.
| Need Not Suffer monthly pain and delay due to
colds, nervous strain, exposure or similar causes.
| Chi-ches-ters Dismondggsa.nd Pillsareeffective,
\ reliable and give Quick Relief. Sold by .
all dm.;inu?or over 45 years. Askfor Z(T
QCHICHESTERS PILLS @
| ® e DIAKOND § BaAND" AT
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
A Vice President’s Flag at Last!
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Well may'.lohn Nance Garner regard this flag with interest and pride
as his teeth clench down on his cigar. [t's his fiag, the first time
in 150 years that a vice president of the United States has had a
flag of his own. The banuner iz white, with blue stars,
WHEN DEATH SEIZED THE WHEEL
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Whipping around a turn on the Ascot Speedway in Los Angeles, death grasped the wheel oy the rac
ing car Al Gordon was driving, whirled the speedster into a skid, nsd hurled the car through the
rail, depositing it in a ditch. Gordon died shortly after the smashup, and his mechanie, Spider Mat
lock. succumbed from injuries a day later. Photo shows Gordon’s car hitting the rail.
New Pursuit Plane Hailed as U.S?Army’s Fastest
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Heralded as the U;zS. army’s fastest pursuit ship, first of 50 to be built, this plane, of “difierent’” de
sien, is undergoing rigid tests at Wright Field, Dayton, 0. The low-winged monoplane is equipped
with an SOO-horsepower Curtiss 12-cylinder radial motor, its power plant supercharged and lquid
cooled. Other features embodiéd in the craft are full retractible landing gear, two-way radio, and a
laree number of instruments designed’ for “fiying umder allSconditions. Builder is the Consolidated
Cow Is Cupid;
Law Says ‘No’
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A romance that began when a
lifar,* climbing a prison honor
farnt fence to milk a cow in an
adjoining field. met a farmer’s
daughter and later eloped with
her ended .in Chicago when Mr.
and Mra. _George Singer, shown
here in close embrace, were held
by police. Singer, convicted in a
fatal payroll robbery, was to be
returned to Missouri state prison
sud the girl to her farm bhome.
=:News Of The Day In Pictures:-:
Aireraft Corporation,-San Diego.
THIL’S FOUL ENDING STATUESQUE !
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Marcel Thil, Kurope's idea of the world -middleweight champion, reaches for a~strand-of rope. in
hi own corner as he collapses in the fourth round of his second edition with Lou Brouillard in
Pari The bald Frenchman claims that he was fouled, but Georges Carpentier and others exs
| press the opinion that he was knocked out fairly, k 8 e b
RULES BOREAS’
SPORTS COURT
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Skaters, skierd, and sledders will
bow in loyalty before the throne
of Shirley Squier, 17-year-old
Harbor Springs, Mich.,, high
school senior, during the Michi
gan Winter Sports Carnival at
Petoskey, Feb. 17-16. This
beauty was selected queen of the
carnival from a field of nine en
trants, and will be crowned by
Gov. Frank D. Fitzgerald,
Umpire Gets A-Head—and_Hat
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When a Texan gets ahead in the world, the state crowns his
achievements in a large way--~with a 10-gallon hat. Lee Bailantfgnt.
Texas League umpire, is the latest to receive the big chapeaun. It
was tendered in recognition of his promotion to the National
League. -Rangerette Carrolyn Diitham makes: the presentation on
behalf of the Texas Centennial Exposition at Dallas,
PRETTY POSIES FOR POP
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( tomary._Hawaiian hospitality was accorded Glenn“ Warner and
his college all-stars in Honolulu where they appeared in post-sea
son football games Temple University's tamous coach smiles as
he js bedecked with pretty flowers by prettier Pualani Mossman
PAGE THREE
Pershing’s Niece
‘Miss Frontier’
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Co-ed _equestrienne at Leland
Stanford University, Mary Helen
Warren, 18, above, niece of Gen.
John J. Pershing, will rule as
“Miss ‘Frontier” over the colorful
annual Frontier.. Days celebra
tion in Cheyenne, Wyo., July 22-
25. She is a granddaughter of
the late Senator Francis E. War.
ren of Wyoming and daughter of
Fred Warren, owner of one of
_ the state’s greatest ranches,