Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
- AT STATION WTFI
" Eastern Standard Time
1450 Kilocycles
e et e i s —————
Wednesday
£:oo—Sign On,
8:01 —FProgram Summary,
B:o6—Merry Go Round, ’
8:20—-Banner-Herald Newscast,
B:4s6——Fan Mail Man.
9:oo—Popular Tunes.
9:ls—Fred Waring,
9:80-—-0Ozzie Nelson,
16:00—Bible Conference,
li:oo—Forgotten Melodies,
11:15-—Allizon and Starr,
11:30—~Co-Ed Hour.
12:00—Hilly Billy Band.
Afterncon
2:3o—Little Church in the Wild«
wood.,
1:00-—80il Erosion,
I:ls—Banner-Herald Newscast.
1:80—Your Home,
I:46—American Family Robinson.
2:oo—Pop Concerts.
2:Bo—Dance Rhythms,
2:46—Red Nichols,
4:oo—Bport Facts.
4:ls—Echoes of Stage and Screen,
§:Bo—Hawaiian Melodies.
3:46—-Atlanta Georgian G 1 o b @
Trotter.
4:oo—Musical Auction,
4:l6—Hugh McGarity,
4:3o—Nat Shilkret,
4:4s—Vic Fraser,
6:oo—Jacques Renard.
6:l6—Center Williamson,
s:4s—Paul Whiteman, P
6:oo—Know Your Music.
6:3o—Chevrolet Musical Moments.
6:4s—Wayne” King,
7:oo—Voluntary Religious Assn,
7:ls—Banner-Herald Newscast.
7:80-—Melody Parade,
7:4s—Dinner Dance,
£:00--Bible Conference, i
REDUCTION REPORT
WASHINGTON . (#) — A re
duction of 38 per cent in the har
vested acreage of cotton in 1984
as compared with 1929 was report
ed Monday by the census bureau.
The figures are based on the 1935
federal farm census, the first since
1930.
The acreage decrease was accom
panied by & production drop of 30
per cent, but the bureau swressed
that the drought of 1934 seriously
affected all comparions with the
preceding census. It added:
“One of the most significant fea
tures of the statistics is the rml-I
uetion in - cottom grown per farm
from 21.8 to 139 acres, coupled
with the increase that iz found in
the yield despite the havoc wrought
by the drought west of the Miss
issippi. Al territory east of -the
river, except the state of Missias
ippi, shows material gaing in yleld
per acre.” :
After Suffering 35 Years
Reporis No More |
ASTHMA
SYMPTOMS |
Aftet suffering with broachial ajthma
for 35 years, Wm. Katherman, of Mif
flinburg, Pa., used Dr. Fufate's Prescrip
tion during the winter of 1930-31.
.On Aug. 20, 1932, he wrote: “In the
'lm" 20 months I have exposed mysélf to
every condition that heretofore would
bring on my asthma, but no more asthma,
‘What a relief. I have recommended Dr.
Fagte's Prescription to many.”
- Sept. 19, 1934, three years after tak
jng the medicine, he wrote: “I have
never bad an attack of asthma since 1
used Dr. Fugate’s Prescription and that
was in the winter of 1930-31." ied
" Those who ‘suffer from bronchial
asthma symptoms should go to their
druggist today and buy the prescription
developed and used for years with un
usual success by Dr. Fugate—a treatment
that has brought relief to thousands.
| Joca SATE'S
AT
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sure it's genuine Johnson’s . . . look
for the name Johnson's and the Red
Cross on every plaster you buy.
Accept no substitutes. Made by
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largest makers of surgical dressings.
For sale at all drug stores.
Weekly Calendar of
. .
University Events
e e AN e eL am e n a
Tuesday
All day—U. 8. Field Hockey As
sociation All-American team de
monstrations Physical Education
building.
7:30 p. m.—Lecture. Speaker:
Dr. Charles D, Hurrey, Chapel.
Wednesday
4:30 p. m~—Symphony orchestra
'practice. Phi Kappa hall.
7:30 p. m~Phi Kappa and De
mosthenian meetingg in respective
halls, :
7:30 p. m.—Poultry Science club
meeting. Poultry Administration
building.
8:30 p. m.—Press Institute ad
dress. Speaker, Watzon Davis, di
rector of Selence Service, Chapel.
Thursday
10:30 a. m.—Presg Institute ad
dress. Speaker: Arthur “Bugs”
Baer. Chapel,
11:30 a. m.—Phesgs Intitute Round
Taßle. “Advertising — Local and
Foreign and Community Surveys.”
Commerce-Journalism auditorium.
11:30 a. m.—Press Institute Round
Table. “Mechanical and Produc
tion Costs, Job Printing, Make-up
and Typography.” Commerce-Jour
nalism auditorium,
7:16 p. m.—Y, W, C. A. Vespers.
Y rooms
7:30 p. m-—Ag club meeting,
Conner hall,
8:00 p. m—Music Appreciation.
Schumann program. Chapel.
Friday
10:30 a. m.—Presg Institute ad
dress. Speaker: Wehb Miller, For
€ign Manager of United Press.
Chapel,
I 11:30 a, m.—Press Institute Round
Table. “Local News and Corres-
Ipofldence." Commerce-Journalism
auditorium
3:30 p. m~—Pregg Institute Round
Table. “Local Columng and Fea
tures.,” Commerce-Journalism au
ditorium,
8:80 p, m—Georgla Colleglate
Press Association Rond Table:
“Problems of College Journalism.”
Room 101, Jourralism building.
4:30 p. m.—~—Economics seminar.
Speaker, Professor J. W. Jenkins:
“Soviet Russia.” Commerce library,
I 9:00 p. m, to 1:00 a. m.—Military
iball. Woodruff hall.
Saturday
I 10:80 a. m.-—Washington Day
address. Speaker, President John
J. Tigert, University of Florida,
Chapel. 1
11:30 a. m.~—Presg Institute Round
Table: “Editorials and Edltoriall
Page Features Commerce Journa
lism auditorium, I
8:00 p. m.—Boxing match with
Clemson, Woodruff hall.
9:00 p. m-—Basketball game,
Georgla vs Georgia Tech. Woodruff
hall.
WORK COMPLETED !
WASHINGTON-— (#) —Announ
cing that it has “practically com-«
pleted” its “emergency task of re
financing home loan distress,” the
home owners loan corporation re
ported Monday it has granted 987,- )
833 loang aggregating $2,990,418,--
259.
it sald®total loans outstanding
represent about one-sixth of the
country's entiré arban home mort
gage debt, "
I Ag of February 6, the HOLC said|
34,187 application, or about 2 per
cent of the 1,884,151 applications
filed with the corporation, still
were pending. L
Refinancing operations already
have been completed in New Hamp
shire, Nevada and Hawali, and less
than 100 applications each are
pending in Rhode Island, Vermont,
Connecticut, Delaware, District of
Columbia, Georgila, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Arkansas, North
Dakota, South Dakota, New Mexico,
Wyoming and Alaska.
President Roosevelt has announ
ced that about $1,000,000,000 of the
HOLC authorization for lending
would be cancelled, and the cor
poration announced it expected to
complete examination of all appli
cationg “well in advance” of June
13, the statutory deadline,
| ARCHEOLOGISTS ARRIVE
'BRUNSWICK, Gi. — (#) — Ar
cheologists from the Smithsonion
Institute, Wasghington D, C., will
arrivel in Brunswick during the
next several days tro further eva
cuate the site of a former Indian
burial ground and village which
was discovered during construction
of the Glynn county airport on St.
Simons Island.
Receéntly ten skeletons have been
unearthed in addition to further
evidence of Indian occupation. Re
quests so rthe Smithsonian in
stitute to gend archeologists to the
site were presented by a group of
experts who visited the location
Sunday.
ELEVEN ENTRIES
GRIFFIN, Ga. — (#) — Eleven
entries have been made in the an
nual district basketball tourna
ment for “B” teams to be held
here Wednesday through Saturday.
Jonesboro will meet LaGrange in
the opening game, followed by a
contest between Coxington and
Starr. In the third game Spalding
high and Fayetteville drew byes)
and were automatically advanced
to the quarter finars,
On the second night the winner
of the Jonesboro-LaGrange game
will meet Manchester which drew
a bye. :
The finals are to be played Sat
urday night.
T |
OLD GOLF TOURNEY |
AIKEN, 8. C. — (® — The 4ist
annual Southern Cross tournament
cne of the oldest continuous golf
tourneys in the country, is sche
duled to be played at the Palmetto
golf club the week of March 16.
Qualifying rounds will be play
ed the first day with the finalg on
either Friday or Saturday.
Alfred S. Bourne of New York
and Augusta won the cup last
year, becoming the first ever to
Wwin the tourney three times, .
“Lr d l' ) T
ady Alice” Turns
Out to Be No Lady;’
y;
The Story of a Mule
(EDITOR'S NOTE This i 3
is the third in a series of arti
cles on intimate and pictures
que phases of the Italo-Ethio
pian war.)
BY EDWARD J. NEIL
(Associated Press Foreign Staff)
With Right Wing, Northern Ital
an Army, Takkaze Front—(by air-
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Ne‘ e v
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4 i 2 : b ;
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G ; s
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
R RTTI R TIRTSR~=.
mail and ship to New York——UP)_‘?
This is the story of Alice, an armyi’
mule, who turned out to be noI
lady. |
I met Alice under trying circum-i
gtance, on the rocky top of the;
Mountain ot the Lepers, most ad- |
vanced fortified ITtalian position on!
thiz battle-ridden front. From the |
regults of that meeting, I didn't|
have to be told later that Alice is
an Ethiopian mule. h
We had climbed the tortuous|
heights of the mountain, where |
field pieces, machine guns, men in|
trench lines that run in an endless
cirele from the hottom to the top |
of the 10,000-feet-high cone, havpl
turned the place into an apparent-!
ly impregnable fortress command
;m; the Beleclaca plain,
~ We had eaten lunch with the of-
Iflcers under a clump of trees — a
'stone for a seat by a big table. It
‘was time to return.
|« They “brought out Alice, a dun
| colored mule with her ears laid
lbax:k, the wicked glint of a rough
Ihouse Misaissippi jackass rouge in
‘her eyes. Two black Askari gin
' gerly led her forward, held her,
}and ‘on 1 climbed.
| There has been many a thrill on
|bob sled runs, in stunt planes, in
iracing cars with Malcolm Camp
|bell, but Alice treated me to .the
igrPateflt thrill of my life. :
She let out a feminine mule
| acream, stood on her front legs and
kicked over the two Askari, stood
on her hind legs, bucked like a
broncho in ‘the Madison Square
Garden rodeo, and headed straight
for a tent where a couple of non
coms were getting up the soldiers' |
payroll.
She ran right through that, and
the only sideway glimpse I got in
the chaos of destruction was|
enough to indicate that if thosel
‘soldiers ever get paid, they’ll be
lucky.
. From there, at a dead gallop,
'hnaded for the edge of the moun
tain top, which was not more than
50 yards aeross at the most appar
leml,v she had developed a suicidal
' mania.
| She turned at the edge, raced
!pompletely arounfl the mountain |
ltop, which has a 10,000-foot-drop. |
Rocks bounced down the mountain
ialdes, soldiers leaped to the alert
|all they way to the foot of the huge
| fortress. Then Alice listened to
|frantic reason, and stopped.
| She stopped juat in time, for just
|when the mule holding up Bill
| Chaplin, another American news
-Ipaperman. caught the fever. Bill's
| mule startled back up and backed
|right into ancther tent where an
| officer wag taking a bath in a|
lcnllapsible rubber tub,
1 In fact, that mule got in the tub
| with the officer, who got right out
|of it. The soldier, howling orders
|in his soap-swathed nakedness,
!finally got enough Askari together
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1936
!to restore peace and comparative
quiet to both mules.
‘Wi left there almost irnmediate
|ly, while the soldiers went to work
‘:On the wreckage. It was probably
| just as well we did. We had done
| more damage in five minutes than
| the Ethiopians had done here in
|
three monthas,
l NEXT: Nature as a combatant.
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