Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
AT STATION WTFI
Eastern Standard Time
1450 Kilocycles
4:oo—Jewell Box WBS.
4:ls—Mrs. Julian Bloodworth,
.. Accordianist,
4:3o—World Review WBS.
s:oo—Lonnje Foster,
s:ls—Center Williamson.
s:3o—Dick Carroll,
9:4s—Cadlles in Muslc. i
6:oo—Harold Daniel,
6:3o—Chevrolet Musical Moments
6:4o—George Olsen,
7:oo—Souvenirs of Songs.
7:ls—Banner-Herald Newscast,
7:3o—Fox Trot Orchestra.
8:00—Good Night.
- Saturday, February 8
8:00—8ign On.- '
B:ol—Program Summary.
B:o6—Merry Go Round,
B:3o—Banner-Herald, :
B:4s—Fan Mail Man, .
9:00—~Hal Kemp.
9:ls~—Anson Weeks. >
9:3o—~Weymon Cartey.
9:4s—Playing the Song Market
3 WBS. - R Y !
10:00—Larry Bradford,
10:15—Gene Austin,
10:30—Tonic Tunés WBS,
10:456—Musical. Scrapbook . WBS.
11:00—Pau; Whiteman.
11:15—Vihcent York.,
11:30-~Co-Ed Hour. .
12:00-~Harry Mathis.
Secagt iy APterhoon
12:30—Little Church in the Wild
© wood.
I:oo—Dance Rhythms WBS,
1:15-—~Banner- Herald.
I:3o—BSmokey and his Utah Ram:
— blers. &
2:oo—~Guy Franklin. '
2:3o—Morris Brothers,
3:oo—Bing Crosby.
“@+ls-—~Castles in Music - WBS.
‘3:3o—Ted Lewis.
3:4s—Mills Brothers.
“4:00-—~New Tunes for Old WBS.
“4:ls—Dorsey Brothers.
"4:3o—Smokey and hig Utah Ram
wove blers.
s:oo—Mel Warren,
s:ls—Boswell ‘Sidters. i
s:3o—Chick Bullock.
b:4s—Hawaiian Melodies.
6:oo—Halon Orchestra,
.B:ls~Jesse Crawford.
*6:3o—Jungle Jim.
«6:4s—American Weekly.
7:oo—Band.
7:ls—Banner-Herald Newscast,
“7:3o—Dance.
*8:100—Good Night.
*“A recent public works exhibi
fion in England included a collec
tion of most of the highways and
street signs ured in that country
to cotnrol motor traffic.
ROy game
Fallon said a brandy and coffee
THE FLAVOR. mixture was ordered by Spears
i LASTS — TQE before last :;;wnuuln I\'nll'l;\\v.-«'tvxl
i \ W game to supplant the usual orange
THAT'S OR_T'H FLAV juice and sugar.
ey (QEPEA—HNG OQ Two staff members at Wisconsii
;\;gw LAST general hospital told the regents
» G S the liquor was purchased ithrough
] 4W‘</ | them and recorded at the institu
-4) S tion as “special stimulating lini
.- S ment.”
g ~ AN ke it n s
by 4 -2 B
>" 7 \‘3 3 | %
£/ AR 4 It is estimated that there are
1 \fi ‘
%0 " \m POy | more than two million tons of ac
' Q i M cessible coal jest in the principal
? y § ’g fields of the United States.
» S &x &
'- @ R N AR i
O I L ,
'! 9 .
D ) fll B 22N
] i A} S
i L ¥ PERFECT GUM L
< ‘!‘_?,f"' ; B o " "‘"l:i‘(’:‘l:?‘ s e e '\4 ¥
Emergency Director
Answer to Previous Puzzle
[TRIEENELJPIARL ICIUIR!I lE]
1 RIAINEEAD.OBMOVIER]
CIOIAIT]S) ll MIAITIE [D|
H [l]l] A[TIE] 1]
ERIGAIL TRIAIPS]
MURIS[E] IRENE [S/UITIELS
IICESHN JoLiOT JMPOIKIE)
SHEE[T| (URIL [FEEILION
TIENISIE] | [NIL [ET]
R [LIOIBIEL |1 JA] €
YODILIEJAIVENNSIPIEIAR]
RIVEDNIT] gmm
RIAIDIT IUIM] (JIOIL]I IOIT]
HORIZONTAL
LSU S A offi I
cial.
13 Corkwood tree.
14 To glide.
18 Mountain.
18 Unopened
flower
19 Devoured.
20 Sioth.
21 Lauds.
24 Wanting.
25 Mark.
26 Toaded.
28 Fat. l
30 Quantity.
32 Taxaceous tree
33 To soak flax. '
33 Reverence. .
37 Like. '
38 Rewing tool.
40 Preposition.
41 Structural unit
42 Tubular organ.‘
45 Lemur,
48 Wine vessel.
49 Genus of
salmon.
54 Angle of the
shoulder.
56 His depart
ment,
57 He is —
of this de
partment.
60 Blessed.
61 Shoe glider
~ for snow
62 Sounds.
VERTICAL
2 Form of “be.
3 Canine mad
ness.
flnflfl
i amas
di N
fi-fi...§§fll=wn
fllll...\§§ N
fia=ll‘>§“%fi.fl.@E
« -@afifiP..x.-..
ll&i ek )
fl§glll§§fial‘§
T .fl-SSflE?*
,lll=§fi=fll§f§
_i'l. ~ N N
---'lifl.&s‘iil B
Es. .m.lllafi
E 1 T
e
| Alexander Hamilton
! Stephens
t (Continued from column one,
i Editorial page.)
while in one corner a pyramid of
whitewashed rocks marks the
i resting-place of his beloved dog,
“Rio."
An old ravine has - been made
into a beautiful park with a swim
ming-pool, the Children of the
i Confederacy have erected a mar
lb]e bench in a little cluster of
| trees, where he loved to sit, in
{ henor of Stephens and our own
| “Miss Millie,” and it is hoped
that in time every Child of the
'Cunfederacy in Georgia will be
able to make a pilgrimage to this
hallowed spot.
In 1836, when he was only 24
vears old, he was elected to the
state legislature. His first speech
before the house saved the bill
for huilding the Western and At
l‘la‘ntlc raflroad. They were new
things then, and there was much
i opposition to “the noisy, dirty,
tnew-tangled things.” The bill was
| nearly lost when he rose, “4 boy
iish invalid with black eyes glow
| ing in an unearthly white face,”
L and amply proved by indisputable
facts how valuable the railroad
would be in many ways. |
One of his early speeches, also,
was in support of the bill to caar
}ter Wesleyan college in Macon,
! which was the first institution in
!lhe world to confer college de
'grccs on women—even if it did
call them ‘“females.”
He was only 31 when he went
to. Washington, D. C,, as U, 8.
senator in 1843, and stayed in
office 16 years. He was never de
feated in running for any office.
l He had one essential quality for a
statesman, and that was remem
bering faces as well as names,
He never forgot a person he had
loncc met, which gave him un
! bounded influence.
i 2 2
'Wisconsin Regents
i . .
| Continue Probe in
.
| Athletic Trouble
| i
i MADISON, Wis,—®)—University
iof Wisconsin regents turned to
Dr. Clarence W. Spears today for
his defense against testimony that
{ he ordered liquor for football play
lers and used injured men on the
| field.
l At the second hearing into the
| tangled athletic situation at the
{ university by five man regents’
| committee, Trainer Whlliam J.
| Fallon said yesterday that Head
f('u:u-h Spears instructed him to
mix liquor and coffee for a stimu
llant during the 1932 Minnesota
persons.
l 15 Huge.
17 Clan groups.
20 Form of “a.”
22 Afresh.
23 Seasoning.
24 Boundary.
27 To accomplish.
29 Epoch.
31 House cat.
34 Unit of work.
36 Soft mass.
38 Hatreds.
' 39 Satiny linen.
| 41 Sultan’s decree
43 Musical note.
44 North America.
46 Jewel.
47 Long cut.
49 Chair.
50 Singing voice.
51 King of the
Weasts.
52 Nothing more
than.
53 From.
55 Half an em.
- 56 Raiiroad.
58 Exists.
59 Note in scale
4 Genus of
poison ivy.
5 To warble.
7 Bone.
8 Level land.
9 Soldiers’
knapsacks.
10 Roman day.
11 Northeast.
12 He has as
signed jobs in
stead of the
dole to ——
YOUR INCOME
TAX
When To Report Income From
Salaries, Wages, Etc.
Of the millions of income-tax
returns that are filled annually
the vast majority are from sala
ried persons ana wage earners
whose income ig derived from per
sonal services,
In general, compensation for
personal services should be re
ported for gaxation purposes ‘in
the year it is received or unqual
ifiedly made subject to demand.
Compensation credited to the ac
count of or set apart for a tax
payer, without any subftantia’
limitation or restriction, and which
may be drawn upon by him at
any time, is subject to tax fol
the year during which so credit
ed or set apart, although not then
actually reduced to possession. If
the services were rendered dur
ing the year 1934, or eyven prio:
thereto, but the compensation was
not received, or made unqualifi
edly subject to demand, by the
tax-payer until the year 1935 the
entire amount is taxable in the
yvear received, or made unqualifi
edly subject to demand, when the
taxpayers is veporting on the
cash receipts and disbursements
basis, which is the basis used by
most persons in reporting net in
come.,
The names of all employees to
whom payments of SI,OOO or over
THE NEWFANGLES (_M_om’n Pop)
THE NEWFANGLEY (ViOm n FOp’/ i R e e e TS T e - oo
Bt eet - T . . X ’ e i
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GOSH! 1 MAILED HIM Jf 1 GOTTA GRUDGE 1O ! \ Tovou mskEace! | (| [# THE BABY WHOS GON LAY ONE SIDE,
EHET@“O 1 ggED HM- SeTTLE WiTH TUAT [H B SO GET GOIN,AND * | s*g TGEY STEPPED ON! L// % GNAT '/
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SALESMAN SAM
e ' [ YOU KIN RIDE HIM N MMNM
7 AN FHE DONT WINM @ . ) >
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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
TSR Wo R iWy RR P TL 2 720 ///, ;4 //7/ ////
SR ; <IN
s) B ; I GUESY THE ONLY | [ SURE,DAD WILL II EVEN THO IDO NEED A PAIR I, YOU WERE RIGHT, TAG, BUT ;7;// /g/ 7
(WE GOTTA GET $750 IN A THING WE CAN LEND IT TO US! OF SHOES, WELL HAVE TO ;;‘E;;y‘[ I GUESS A BOY IS SUPPOSED ///////%f///
| HURRY, TAG! (TS AN DO IS BORROW T’ A FATHER IS LET TGO THIS MONTH, lygi@;fl% ||| TO UNDERSTAND HIS I'D,ADS 1777/
LS AN BXTHA oAk FROM DAD, AND SUPPOSED TO MOTHER...OUR BUDGET L PROBLEMS, TOO ! 5 E
\ 'SEP DYNAMITE AT PAY HM BAck ! HIS BoYS Proß- | B hM ' ~ P ’
THE PounD! /M Lems, Avway |BT e ‘*’;'F;J'ifi\ f (i;.};g " hid
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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
POV IO AND FIER DUVVIED I VWU I Ve W=Uilg TYVIR .
( PowM 1 0. DLCHESS —BUT, | [ GEE MISTER X~ [ 1 HAUE NOL YO THANW e S
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DO = L Bevor g 2 SEENG NOU GAY [l el oo oRS eTN
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g ;"}‘-“% 7 B " r 77 f ! ANCHOR. AND STARTED ON A FAST WOYAGE TO AMERICA s,
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WASH TUBBS
WASH TUBBS PUREITE FPUNTS SO ~ —_— e e S SR
e A [NOURE CLoSI THE \IGSEN, BROTHER, Y[ YES, \WELL, (T's ALLTHE SAME. SOME™ (OH, YoU BETHER SOX THEYIRE CROOKED! Wi, WERESA \MOEL MAN IN 30 BROKE EVEN.
AR At aama i LS <ee, )IE SOMEBODY | But- |ROBBERS USE GUNS—CTHERS [THEYRE \TRUCKLOAD OF PHONY CARDS, DICE, AN SHEE LS 1L IR NON ONG NIGHT, THEY Ity
OF Ol FIELD— AND WE DON'T_/ROBBED YoU WiTH e MAGNETE AND LOABEDPKE. |A LITTLE \WE TUK. AN LOOKIT THESE BOTTLES—KNOLIZOUT /MM THE MEXT, WHY, Vou BRAN=
HANDS, SHERIFE\ LIKE IT. A GUN, YOUID WANT / THE DIF'RENCE |S, THAT YoU |CROOKED, DROPS— WHEN THEY COULDN'T CHEAT A SUCKER, /| LESS YAPS, THEY BIN ROBBIN' |
VE TO ARREST HIM, /1 WIN SEE A GUN, AN YOU | BUT— /~__THEY POPED HIS DRINK AN' ROLLED HIM. YOU OF HALF A MILLION A |
[ WOULDNT, YOU? _, // _ A\_CANT SEE A HIDDEN MAGKET. IAL eSN |
e 8 & T 070 7 e — R LCacien
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> - R W/ O\ TRTEEReeRY & ¢ \__(l936 BY NEA SERYICF INC. TM, REG. US, PAT. OFF. - e 12/ 2w
THE BANNER-HERALD. ATHENS, GEORGTA
a year are made must be report
ed. The information return should
}b‘»‘v made on form 1099, accompan
\ied by transmittal form 1096 shove
ing the number of returns filed.
These returns should be filed en
or before February 15, 1936.
| All of the various types of com
pensation, unless specifically ex
em_pt by statutz, or exempt by
fundamental ‘lay, should be in
cluded in the taxpayer’'s return of
grose income, such ds salaries,
wages, fees, commissions, bonuses
tips, honorarium, bprizes, awards,
retiring allowances for past serv-
Licm, ete. Where services are paid
for in whole or in part with some
thing other than money, the fai
market value of the thing taker
in payment must be included as
income. Other items sulbfject to
tax are fees received by ministers
of the gospe] for funerals, bap
tisms, masses, and like services;
executors’ fees; directors’ fees;
Federal jury fees; and prizes re
ceived in contests of various
kinds. ‘
The salaries of Federal officers
and employes are subject to tax
including the salary of the Presi
dent of the United States taking
office after the date of the enact
ment of the Revenue Act of 1932.
which was June 6, 1932. The ¢al
ary of the Vice President of the
United States, and the salaries of
Members of the House of Repre
gentatives and the Members of the
United States Senate are aiso sub
rject to income tax.
i ki G
It js :aid that during severe and
prolonged periods of war or de
pression, the proportionate number
of boy births nearly always in
oreages,
UI Sl HUEK Y T |
i .
| l
i
i e |
|Germany and Switzerland
i Are Defeated by Ameri
| can Team in Olympics
‘ GARMISCH - PARTENKIRCH
{ EN, Germany.— () —The United
i States and Canada clinched berths
iin the next round of Olympic
i hockey competition today as the
lskiicrs, men and women, opened
| their competition with downhill
racing and the bob-sledders ran
into an indefinite postponement
because of = the condition of the
run.
Displaying much better form
| than in their defeat of Germany.
1-0 vesterday, the American
bockey representatives turned back
&witzerland, 8-0, with a dazzling
| second period offensive that net
‘Hod all three goals inside one
minute of play. ‘
i Canada, the defending cham
ipiun. crushed Latvia, 11-0, for itsl
,s,m-und vietory in as many days.i
’ Both the United States andl
lCanada thus - qualified for . the
| second series of round mblns|
: which will. .lead_to the crowning |
iuf an Olympic champion. i
A& in, the two previous Olym
‘pics‘, athletes and officials ‘again
! found sources of dissatisfaction to
{ start squabbles. }
At Lake Placid, in 1982, argu- |
lm(-nts arose about the bobsled
Now He’s Not So Tickled
It Won’t Be Long Now!
l CAT DETECTIVE H
ATLANTA — () — A persian:
[cat played detective Thursday with!
isuch proficiency that a Negro glv-]
|ing the name of James McDonald |
|was jailed on a charge of burgl-‘
[‘;ary. ;
| Glenn P. Mallow found his store\
| was burglarized during the night
|and the cat had been hurled out |
the windoy and left in the cold. ‘
’ ‘When the Negro, an empluye.l
came to work, the cat began spit
lting and making passes at him.i
| Previously the animal and Negro‘
| had been friends.
E Mallow, detectives and the cat
j conferred, arrested the Negro. I)e-;
tectives claimed a confession. i
A unique tire patch now cn thoi
market has a fuse which, when |
lighted, spreads heat unit‘ormly{
from center to edges, vulcanizins‘
the patch at every point. i
S
run, when European racers, ac- |
customed to the snow runs !
| sought to have the course made
slower while the Americans ]
fotight for the speedy and dan
gerous glare ice. Before that there,
l was the famous 1928 dispute about |
the cancelling of the 10,000 meter
Ispeed skating event at St. Moritz
| when the American star, Irving |
Jaffee, was leading on time.
Two big disputes already have
arisen in the 1936 winter games.
only a day old. One is the contro
versy between Great Britain andl
| Canada over the eligibility of twa
[of the English hockey players;l
| the other concerns the condition
lof the bob run and in particular
whether the American sleds are
likely to damage it. ]
Gan'gwazL
A Problem!
Right From the Shoulder!
Gecrgia Court Rules
In Valdosta Case on
Paying Poll Taxes
ATLANTA—(#)—Citizens of Val- |
dosta, otherwise qualified, must
pay their poll taxes at least six
months before the municipal elec
tion to be eligible to vote, the
Georgia Supreme court held
Thursday.
Six Valdosta tax payers obtain
ed an interlocutory injunction to
prevent registrars of the city
from striking the names from the
list of eligible voters for the Feb
ruary 10, 1936 municipal election.
It was set forth in the petition
that they had not paid their poll
taxes for 1934 :ix monhs befor=
election, A
The registrars filed a general
demurrer to have the case d@is
missed but Judge W. R. Smith
refused to grant the demurrer and
issued the injunction.. The regis
trars brought the ease to the Su-
preme Court.
The citizens listed in the peti
tion as bringing the suit were Lee
J. Miller, A. A. Parrish, jr. Wil
liam Thomas, June W. Norwood.
Dewitt W. Roberts and J. R. Al
len. i
The Supreme court in its ruling
held: e
“When a citizen of Valdosta is
otherwise qualified to vote in a
regular election to be held in such
city, it is necessary that he shall
have paid all poll tax which has
become due and payable at least
six months before such election,
T s S
7w ey
< Y. M. REG. U. S, PAT. OFF. 0
). © 1936 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1036
‘FAHendance Contest
i At Young Harris
| In the Home Stretch
Sunday night will mark the end
of the first part of the attendance
contest at Young Harrigz Methodiss
church. After the meeting is over
the side that hag had the lowest
attendance will have to honor the
‘winning side with a Valentine
party.
The teams are captained by Em
mitt Bishop and Ruth Washington,
leaders in young people’s work in
the church. After the Valentine
party the contest will begin anew
on the following Sunday. After
the contest has been completed one
person from the winning gide will
represent the young people of
Young Harris Methodist church
at the annual conference at Ox
ford Junior college.
in order to- be qualified to vote
as an elector therein.
“It fallows thati the plainjiffs
were not entitled to have their
names remain on the registration
lict, and -that the court erred in
overruling the general demurrer
and in granting the interluctory
injunction. In this view, it is un
necessary to decide whether equity
should intervene to enjoin such a
wrong as the improper striking of
one's name from a registration
list.”
All the justices concurred, ex
cept Justice Beck who was ili and
Justice Atkinson, disqualified.
—By COWAN
—By SMALL
—By BLOSSER
—By MARTIN
—By CRANE