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PAGE TWO
Italy Is Certain to
Discover Wealth in
Ethiopian Territory
By EDWARD J. NEIL
Associated Press Foreign Staff
AKSUM, Ethiopia.—(By Airmal
and Ship to New York—{(#)—One
swift glance over the plain of Ak
sum, encompassing some hundreds
of square miles of level, rich plain,
suddenly makes you realize where
Italy is certain to find wealth in
Ethjopia.
It may not be in the massive
mountains, or hidden away in
quartz or river beds, as they
found it in <California and the
Klondike.
There may or may not be oil,
the black gold of Texas, Penn
svlvania, Oklahoma and most of
the rest of the southwest and far
west, under the hills and plains
father to the southward.
No one has been able to deter
mine yet whether the mountainsg
that some may afford visitors
vistas that make Alypine veterans
gasp, alsy hold the copper that is
Montana's, the silver of the far
western lodes.
~ One look, however, shows that
the rich black soil of the plain
country of the Tembien province
containg all the potential riches
that the same ¢€ort of land brought
to the cotton planters of the Mis
sissippj valley, of North America’s
south’ in general. ' Certainly. there
is all the wealth there of the corn
‘and wheat lands of the middle and
northwestern black, ummy teem
;fit*son that rivals the silt of the
Nile.
~ Agricultuarl experimental sta
tions have been distributed
around the conquered sections.
with -the headquarters at Adigrat
On the Somaliland front on the
far south, where climatic condi
‘tions are entirely different from
the north, Italy has been experi
menting for years, in its own pos
session of Somaliland.
The results show that there Is
no limit to the crops that Ethi
opia, under proper cultivation and
with the right sort of irrigation.
will produce. All tropical fruits
thrive in the south and surpris
ingly enough, peanuts do as well
as coconuts. In the north the ex
periments indicaté that the entire
range of food crons, winter and
summer wheat, cotton, oats, pota
toes, fruits, and all truck farm
preoduce are in their element.
In the nlain of Aksum alone it
is estimated there is room for 50,-
000 Ttalian farmers, a tremendous
outlet for a nation of 40,000,000
that covers little more territory
than one large American state,
S 0 the Ttalian leaders seem to
know whereof they spoke when
they said there was gold in Eth
fopia. They may not find it in
“Tumps, but it jz there.
BONDS ON SALE
STONE MOUNTAIN, Ga.—(P)—
A $21,936 bond lissue for water
works improvement will go on
sale here F'riday. ]
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& HELEN MACK » WILLIAM GARGAN 5
é’% GEORGE BARBIER « DOROTHY WILSON &
TODAY
[ ALACE 3 Days FRIDAY
SATURDAY
Today STRAND 2 Days
BARGAIN 15 ALL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
DAY! C DAY!
10c — CHILDREN — 10¢ R T SEEPRHENRIRY
Adoiph Lukor present .
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ANNE SHIRLEY | (Tt (O
(More Loveable than “Anne of \“ ¢§@s‘é“‘
of Green Gables”) ;o‘ /g\‘?"'%
“c HATTERBOX" APorumown Picture :.’_’,'l:{
WITH with
ogpe Buster Crabbe — Tom Keene
Phillips Holme Kathrine DeMille
e AL S Qe ——AL 80—
Program Selected Novelties “GREAT AIR MYSTERY”
TSTdOO Youths Learn “Big Business” in Mi;iiature;
Companies Are Replicas of Major Corperations
.
Boys and Girls Get Practi
cal Training in Crafts
And Commerce ;
By WALTER C. PARKES
NEA Service Staff Correspondent.
NEW YORK — Not long ago
Tony was a corner loafer, 17 years
cld, no job, little desire for one,
wective neighborhood nuisance, po
tential criminal hoodlum. |
Today Tony is 18, president and
general manager of a dividend
p: ving manufacturing corporation, |
alert, ambitious, trained in busi
ness methods, self-respecting and
self-supporting. !
True, his company is but a min- |
iature replica of a big corporation, |
the stock has a par value of only |
25 or B 0 cents, and dividends and |
wages are proportionately small.;
But every detail of producuon]
marketing and financing is carried
oute«meticuilously by Tony and his!
business assoclates, boys and girls |
froin 16 to 20, There are over 900 i
su-h companies with 19,000 mem- |
bers in communities from Boston|
to Denver, and they may soon be
common in every state of the un
ion.
They are Junior Achievement
Companies. Junior Achievement
is not a c¢lub, but an organiza
tion formed to provide practical
troining in business and econo
mies for young people who other
wise wouid be caught in the vic
iovs ecircle of inability to find
work without experience.
Co-operating with existing in
gtitutions working with older boys
and girls, such as settlement|
houses, churches and young peo-!
ples’ clubs, it forms groups lmo‘
midget corporations that manutac-]
ture and sell for their own profit
handicraft products in wood
leather, metal and needlework.
J. 8. Mendenhall, director of
boys activities in Metropolitan
Junior Achievement, the six-year
old New York branch, explained
how the program works:
“We get in touch with some
neighborhood gang and explain
our plan,” he said. “Samples or‘
our handicraft products are shown.
At first these hard-boiled young
sters are very wary, suspecting a
racket, or that they will be
‘preached at.” When they under-‘
gtand that they bhave a chuncei
through their own initiative to or-|
ganize a money-making business |
along strictly corporate lines, they
go for it in a big way.
Sell Stock to Acquaintances |
“They decide the type of work
they want to do, elect a presidenti
and a board of trustees, and pre-|
pare to float a stock issue to ob
tain the initial working capital.
The company officers have the
26 to 50 cents, and usually pays |
dividends after the first year. It
is sold to relatives and friends, as
a rule. Practical business proced-
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urg is followed in every , detail.
The company officers have ' the
same’ duties they would have in a
real ‘manufacturing cuncecn(" '
Mr. Mendenhall said that conr
panies are limited to 15 members,
because this is the largest num
ber which c¢an operate so that
each individual obtains s maximum
of instruction.
They work uader the supervi
sion of a volunteer adult Leaders’
Committee, which includes a
chairman, a marketing advisor, a
business leader and = craft leader.
There is ‘a Board of Directors
which consist of all the boys and
girl members, the adult leaders
and one outside stockholder. The
Board meets monthly, and annu
ally elects company officers, who
hold their jobs for a year. Exe
cutive positions are rotated so
that each member may gain expe
rience in every phase of the bus
iness.
Face to Face With Competition
The president and general man
ager, of course, is the active com
pany head. The production man
ager waiches the market careful
ly as he is charged with the pur
chase of all raw materials. equip
ment and supplies. Woe to him
at the board meetings if it is
found that he has wasted the
stockholders’ money! He also
plans shop production, makes
work assignments and follows
through completely on all orders.
In addition the youthful produc
tion manager learns about per
sonnel problems, as he records
labor hours and approves the pay
roll.
What a big-time salesmanager
is up against is soon found out
by the Junior Achievement sales
manager whose duties include
planning and carrying through a
definite sales program, which in
cludes not only actual selling, but
the origination of sales promotion
ideas. He must also do research
and keep abreast of competitors.
Then there are a secretary and a
treasurer.
Mr. Mendehall stressed the
fact that any taint of ‘“charity”
or “playing at business” is com
pletely taboo in Junior Achieve
ment companies, The young bus
iness apprentices must keep their
relations with the public as im
personal as if they were manufac
turing automobiles or breakfast
food.
Harold Ley, president of Met
ropolitan Junior Achievement de
clared: “Our most important ac
complishment is in making young
people realize that they will have
to work for anything they get in
this world, and developing their
sense of responsibility.”
Tony Provides for Sister, Now
A good example of this is the
case of Tony, which, by the way,
isn't higs name. He came of a very
poor New York home. His father
and elder brother were in jail.
Two years after he jeined a Jun
ior Achievement company his
mother died, leaving him, at the
age of 18, the sole support and
guardian of a baby sister. He ac
cepted the responsibility, Tony
declares that if it hadn’t been for
the things he learned during two
years of Junior Achievement as
sociations he would hase flunked
it completely Today he is presi
dent of his company, and holds a
good job as a mechanic in a man
ufacturing concern where he
started as a floor sweeper. He
maintains a meat apartment for
£
15¢ The Price for
Your Cold Remedy
Ask Any Doctor . . . Then Follow Simple Directions
Pictured Below. Quickest, Simplest Way
@ .
1 Take 2 BAYER Aspirin Tab- #
* lets. Make sure you get the
BAYER Tablets you ask for. 2 Drink a full glass of water.
< :
Instead of using fancy priced *“cold Fogeatirgstiontin2hews.
remedies” try the new-day cold stir 3 Bayer Aspirin Tablets in a
treatment pictured here. Your own third of a glass of water; gargle
doctor will approve it. It will start twice. Do not rinse mouth.
easing the average cold or sore Whert;fiou buy, though, be sure
throatalmost asfast as youcaughtit. to get Bayer Aspirin.
The Bayer Aspirin you take will
start combating your eold internally
at once; if throat is sore, crush and
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEOR/GIA
Unusual wood and metal handicraft products are turned out in
this factory of the Oddity Shop, oldest New York Junior Achieve
ment Company. Paul Mayer; president, is at the right. In the
background Fred Mein, craft leader, instructs a new member.
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Here the Colony Crafter, leather workers, suspend operations
while the officers of the company confer with the adult business
and technical advisors,
e —————————————— e
himself and his sister. His ulti
mate ambition is to be an effi
ciency expert,
Less tragic but much more com
mon in large cities, was the case
of Paul Mayer, a typical New
York tenement product. Compell
ed to go to work after only a year
in high school, he got a job as an
errand boy in a freight yard,
where his lack of training made lt‘
likely that he would remain. But,
he was ambitious. He learned
about Junior Achievement and
joined the Oddity Shop group.
From apprentice workman he
progressed to his present position
of president. In this company he
developed real leadership, execu
tive abpility and a knowledge of
business practice to the extent]
that he now earns a good sa.laryl
as private secretary to a promi-'
nent insurance executive, withl
more prospect of advancement
than the freight yard offered.
Led One Group Into Business
Such individual successes are
matched by the group in Boston
that made wrought-iron bridge
lamps. Their lamps were so un
usual that brisk demand followed.
The adult craft leader of the
group resigned his position, and
joined the boys and girls in or
ganizing a real manaufacturing
company incerporated under the
laws of Massachusetts, and they
have had a highly successful bus
iness ever since. I
The problem of how to help
young men and women at a loose
end after school days bothered
the late Theodore N. Vail, then
president of the American Tele-!
phone and Telegraph company as
long ago as 1919. With Horace A.
Moses, prominent paper wpanufac
turer, and the late Senator Mur
ray A. Crane, he had been instru
mental in establishing 4-H clubs
in the rural communities of New
England. From this work with
country youngsters, they realized
that city boys and girls needed a
similar qrganization that would
provide a “‘mreview” of the busi:]
S
ness world. To fill this need, they
founded Junior Achievement, Inc.
Its growth since 1919 has been
steady. The membership is about
evenly divided as to boys and
girls. Present headuqgarters are at
Springfield, Mass., but it is plan
ned to move them to New York
in the near future as the first
step in organizing the project on
a national scalé.
|
i WITH
I By George Ross
i
———————————————————————————————
!NEA Service Staft Correspondent
| NEW YORK — Margaret Anglin
imade her belated reappearance on
the stage, Hd Wynn produced a
play, Kenneth Mac Kenna scraped
off the greasepaint for the firse
time, Lucille La Verne was as tough
as nails, Noel Coward was aped—
and still, Broadway was left with
out a new success that she could
call her own. |
“Co-Respondent Unknown” is the
only new offering that did not:
bring down upon its head the mild
wrath of the critical clan. Which
does not mean—mind you — that
’the play is excellent; not at all.
It is merely better than the flock.
A comedy about the vagaries of a
divorce action, the plot has mainlyi
to do with how a comely co-res
}pondent hired to provide the “evi
i dence,” brings reconciliation axvdl
reunion to the parted mates,
And is acted out, with sophisti
cated fun as their chief object, by
Ilka Chase, Peggy Conklin ana
James Rennie among others. The
lßrothers Mielziner (Jo and Ken
{neth) hold a two-thirds partner-
Iship in this play although you
know the latter better by his
lstage and screen name — Kenneth
Mac Kenna.
Miss Anglin, a distinguished fig
ure on the American stage — did
Broadway the honor of appearing
in Ivor Novello's comeds, “Fresh
Flields.” But the comedy turned
out to be a wobbly vehicle ag far
as New York audiences are con
]cerned. New York audiences may
lbe ornery for ‘“Fresh Fields” en- |
itertained the London customers !
!for more than fifteen months andl
ldid equally well in other British
Qlands. Well, on the other hand,
'London didn't care for our “She
;Loves Me Not” or “Sailor, Be
i ware' go that makes us even.
! What Mr. Novello, a junior Noel
i Coward of the Strand, chuckles
{about in “Fresh Fields” is the
| plight of several Australians who
!innocently help out in the house
hold expenses of some titled Lon
doners and get a social snubbing
in return. This calls for a great
deal of conversation and a great
’many drawing room gags that
went out with “Abie’s Irish Rose.”
‘ Miss Anglin, however, you may
be sure, helps the plot out of P;a:
‘eroua ruts and irf “Fresh B
achieves nothing else, it, at least,
has introduced the most ingratiat
ing ingenue of the season — a ms,id!
named Agnes Doyle.' l
e |
As for EA Wynn’s show: Thei
Perfect Fool wanted to be a back-‘
stage Hamlet and it cost him §40,-
000, I'm told, to do so. He pro-l
duced a play. The play was “Allce‘
Takat” and had to do with a lady{
doctor who believed in ‘“merey
killings” and who got into difti-’
culties because she did. It also
got the play into difficulties be- |
cause there wasn't a credible story |
to go with the general theme and
everything, including the actors,
got mixed up ag the evening wore
on. Well, “Alice Takat” is now
closed and KEd, the philosophical
clown, is recouping his losses on |
the radioe. i
In “Black Widow,” . which is
based upon the infamous Wyne
koop case of Chicago, another lady
doctor—this time Lucille L.a Verne
—employs her medical talents in
assassinating a couple of her pat
jents. Nice girl! It, might have
made a gruesome horror play, haa
not the author, Samuel John 'Park,|
tried to pad it out with ineffect
ual laugh lines. But don’'t blame
itg failure upon Miss La Verne.
She was macabre enough. ;
~ The last of the week’s disap
{pointments was “Among Those
Sailing,” wherein some - splendid
‘players, including the lovely Ruth
Weston, had a rough ecrossing in
three full acts of nonsense. l
DECLINES COMMENT
PALM BEACH, Fla.—(#)—When
Al Smtih came to Palm Beach
several weeks ago for his winter
vacation, he really “took a walk”
from politics.
| Smith Wednesday declined to
comment on his selection as a,
Tammany Hall delegate to the
Democratic national convention.
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Luckies are less acid. One of the chief con
tributions of the Research Department in
the development of A LIGHT SMOKE is
the private Lucky Strike process, “IT’S
TOASTED.” This preheating process at
higher temperatures consists of four main
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JUDGE ERRED
ATLANTA, Ga.—(f)—Judge G.
Y. Tigner of Columbus City court
erred in granting freedom to
Glenn White, under conyiction of
arson, by habeas corpus, the Geor
gia Supreme court held Wednes
day.
The record showed White was
pndicted * with three others on a
charge of burning a building at
3223 River Road, Columbus. Only
White was tried at the time.
The jury acquitted White on
the first of a two-count indict
ment and convicted him on the
SR Y |
many Men and Women ”:g %g
NOT long ago I was like some friends I have...low in spirits...
run-down. ..out of sorts...tired easily and looked terrible. I ‘
knew I had no serious organic trouble so I reasoned sensibly...as my
experience has since proven...that work, worry, colds and whatnot
. had just worn me down.
The confidence mother has always had in S.S.S. Tonic. . .which is 5
still her stand-by when she feels run-down.. .convinced me I ought to
try this Treatment...l started a eourse. The color began to come back
to my skin. ..I felt better...l did not tire casily and soon I felt that ‘
those red-blood-cells were back to so-called fighting strength...it is |
great to feel strong again and like my old self. |
« Insist on S.S.S. Tonic in the blood-red Cellophane-wrapped pack- -
age...the big 20-ooz. size is sufficient for two weeks’ treatment. ..it's |
more economical, too. © 5.8.8. Cos
| SSS‘ TONIC rMa)rés Ve T yourself again |
stages, which involve carefully controlled
temperature gradations. Quantities of unde
sirable constituents are removed. In effect,
then, this method of preheating at higher
temperatures constitutes a completion or fuls
fillment of the curing and aging processes.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1936
second count and he was senten<
ced to from 1 to 2 years in the
penitentiary. After his conviction
attorneys for White presented a
habeas corpus petition to Judge
Tigner claiming White was being
illegally detained in the Muscogee
county jail by Jailer J. E. Owen,
against whom the writ was
brought.
White's attorneys contended the
verdict was void because the jury
was inconsistent in convicting
him on the second count of anp
indictment and acquitting him on
the first. ;