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THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1036,
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1B ot 19
*7 Lost
LlST—Lemon specked male setter.
Arnswers. 0. name “Mike.” Phone
LOST-—Sable and White Collie.
Answe;x;&_tq name of Lodey. Re
ward. ,Lotgl;,l'}. Drewry, Phones
718-W .and. 2061,
“For Sale
FOR s%oor. Coating, fibrat
ed or plain Goc per gallen, in 6~
gallon kits. Plastic Roof Ce
ment, 16-pound pails, 75c. Re
liance Mixed House Paints, all
colors, " 'sl%o .per gallon. Also
Flatwall, in beautiful shades
and tints, $1.50 per gallon. Al
guaranteeed by the makers.
Christian | [ardware, Phone 1300.
i e S e i
FOR SALE-#-V and Corrugated
Galvanized SRoofing. is Fire-Proof
and Water-Proof; lasts a life
time., @A%e your buildings with
metal roofing. Christian Hard
ware, Broad street, Phone 1300.
FLLANTS FORBR _SALE — Chinese
Forget-Me-Nots now ready for
transplariting. - Mrs. Broughton,
280 Cherokee avenue,
FOR SALE—Young willow trees.
Mrs., Broughton, 280 Cherokee
d — Hardware
S l—Onion Plants, Cab
gl lants, Maine Grown Seed
g’ Pitoes, all varieties New Crop
; iarden Seed.in bulk. We carry
repairs for Stewart Mule Clip
ping Machines. Special prices on
. all plow repairs. 36-It. plow
lines 26c pair., Farmers Seed &
Hardware Co., Phone 1937, 343
East Broad street.
Paints and Kalsomine
FOR SALE—[. B.: Davis Co.
Superior Quality Paints, Kalso
mine, ete. A trial can will prove
this paint to be as good as
money can buy. If you prefer
cheaper paints be sure to get
our prices on the Columbia line
before buying elsewhere. Farm
ers Seed and Hardware Co.
Phone 1937, 843 KEast Broad
Street.
Wanted
WE BUY OLD GOLD
AND SILVER
HIGHEST PRICES PAID
IN CASH
J. BUSH, JEWELER
165 E. CLAYTON STREET
ATHENS. GA.
For Rent—Apartments
FOR RENT—Newly furnished and
redecorated apartment. Ideal
location, all modern convenien
ces. See Tony Postero, Phone
For Rent—Apartments
FOR REN"'l"f—Unfurnished apart
ment, 2 rooms, kitchenette and
bath; all connecting. Private en
trance. . J. Hayes, Phone 35-R,
...147 Oglethorpe avenue.
R e e iisamid
Salesmen Wanted
WANTED—Experienced furniture
salesman with car. Work on
commission. Working Winder
and surrounding towns. See J.
T. House, manager M. T. San
ders m, o Co., Winder, Ga.
Apartments Wanted
WANTED—Three ‘or four rtoom
furnished aparifment or house at
once; Must be reasonable and
good' locatign, - Phone 506-M.
L N
EWIMNS JACHINES REPAIRED
home at prices you
wi ippreciate M, S Bishop,
620 Reed'street, Athens. Phone
1423-E
__lNagtgci——-SifuafEAon
WANTED--By middle-aged colored
woman, place as cook and genreal
house: work. Live on lot. Carrie
__;},”.',',“‘f‘ 144 Warsaw street.
_[\
NN
gL
i e ‘
ADAMS TRANSFER CO.
_ | PHONE 656
4 ,
GIFTS FOR
ALL OCCASIONS
Are Prized When
Bought From
J. BUSH, Reliable Jewsler,
20 Yearg in Business in
the Same Stand
165 EAST CLAYTON SBT.
Magazines
MAGAZINES
MAGCAZINES
We Deliver and Charge on
Regular Accounts.
Phone 67 or 68
Moon-Winn Drug Co.
Serving This Community Nearly Halt Century.
LIPSCOMB-DEARING-HUTCHINS, Inc.
—PHONE 345— ey
INSURANCE — RENTING — REAL ESTATE
~ \
% \!
“’7’@\ i) ”’
r,;‘—-».-;-_:' 2 fi 'B'_“'
-~ —— 3\\ e b
Lespedeza Hay in Bales—lc per pound
$lB per Ton
COFER SEED CO., Phone 247, Athens, Ga.
- =
Paimisano Radio Co.
RADIO SALES AND SERVICE .
"AGENTS FOR
STROMBERG-CARLSON — GRUNOW —
WESTINGHOUSE RADIOS
e O et
YOU CAN BUY A RADIO AS LOW AS SI.OO DOWN
AND SI.OO A WEEK
PHONE 1896 225 North Lumpkin St.
USED CAR BUYERS
JOIN THE
TWO HUNDRED CAR CLUB
C. A. Trussell Motor Co.
Athens’ Oldest Dealer
- ) £é Yy "
3 You're TOPS
I}4\ o - ~ ;
22\ in Tennis
Q i
\ or Golf
‘!‘ \} only when you have the best equip-
Py ment for playing the game! |
Tennis Rackets from $2.50 |
Tennis Balls—3 for sl.lO
We Can Re-String Your Old Racket ‘
RACKET COVERS — RACKET PRESS :
GOLF CLUBS FRgM $1.25 R
GOLF BALLS—2S¢, 50c, and 75¢ each {35/ ‘
~ The W 3§
L)
McGregor Co. , //4%
—PHONE 77— ™24
$25 Per Month Buys a New Ford V-8 on 6% Plan
“SPEEDY"—
(Eg N o 5 P R 0 / zY/ 175 A GOOD THING
Kt o 1 o 5 0L s s THIS BUGGY ~ WAS A
[TSeI 0 1 < G Eorr | [ WHAT I CALL. USED CAR FROM B
L LS a 1 ) e B / A Klss! 2
F4H PSS R Sili.-”\\ “ Z TRUSSELL :
] == ~'/fl" B ey P f . ;i
¥ i o }l': 3 :'////" fl‘z‘ o i&;-wm‘ N ‘/,/. 20, \ 5& o) #
‘V/ S ¢ yh.l: it "f‘-,\, // ERN\E W s oofsT ocdcent
VI \'» =" ), /fi i N 'l,‘:\“ W <N e2B ~ e OR IT'D MNEVER HELON
MW7 I} o w—-“g_: R\ |(@ : UP UNOER THAT ONEE
e . L el 4 ) o X g e iiioggite
a 2 SAIR\Q [ B o D e) gt
’),e| . N R ;
A o WS ’ LX) e\
. g . s g% TN, .‘ Yy 4 e P g
133 - e il %
'33 Plymouth Coupe. . .....$325
'34 V-8 Tudor, Radio, Trunk $445
Studebaker Sedan .. ..".. $ 85
'3l Chevrolet 4-Door Sedan. .$275
’34 Plymouth 4-Door Sedan . . $385
1936 FORD FARM ALMANAC FREE!
Piano Tuning and Recpairs
35 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
CHAS. A. HANNER
AT DURDEN MUSIC CO,, INC.
Phone 1507
'Rubbing Alcohol, pts. 25¢
' Rexall Milk Magnesia,
. Pints 39¢, Quarts 59%
' Puretest Cod Liver Oil,
| Pints 89¢
Lamson’s Mineral Oil,
Pints 39¢c, Quarts 69¢
REID DRUG CO.
'MILLEDGE PHARMACY
STRAW---
Wheat and Oat Straw "in Bales.
Bright and Clean; Fine for Feeding
or Bedding.
60c per 100 Pounds
i sll per Ton
By C. A. Trussell Motor Co.
'2O Model A Rdts.,R'S. ... slls
'29 Model A Sport Coupe .. $ 95
'32 V-8 Tudor Sedan ... .. $315
'29 Model A Panel Delivery . $135
'3l Dodge 5edan......::..5273
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Weekly Calendar of
University Events
Thursday
9:30 a. m.—Sophomore Assembly.i
Program by Blue Key council.
7 p. m—State High school bas
ketball tournament. Woodruff hall.
7:30 pp m.—Ag Club meeting.
Conner hall, |
7:15 p. m.—Girls Vesper Service.!
Y rooms, l
8 p. m—Music Appreciation,
Chapel. ‘
8:15 p. m~—Thalian Blackfriar
play, “Double Door.” Seney-Stovall
Memorial theater.
\ Friday
12 noon—State High school bas
ketball tournament. Woodruff hall.
4:30 p. m—Economics Seminar.
Speaker, Mr. Raisty: “Economic
Reform in Germany.” Commerce
Library,
8:15 p. m.—Thalian Blackfriars
play. “Louble Door.” Seney-Stovall
Memorial theater, -
9 p. m—State High school bas
ketball tournament. Woodruff hall.
9 to 12 p. m.—Women's Pan-
Hellenic dance, Physical Educa
tion building.
INSURANCE
FIRE LOSSES
Paid for 30 Years
in Athens
JESTER
SPECIALS
2—soc Size Pepsodent
Antiseptic ... .. sl¢
2 Dr West’s 25¢
Toothbrushes . . . 33c¢
50c¢ lpana Toothpaste 39¢
50c “Our Own’ Milk
Magnesia . . . . 39¢
Phones 1066-1067
CITIZENS PHARMACY
I HAYGS'S o
HONEST VALUES
USED CARS
’33 Chevrolet 4-Door Sedan,
excellent c0nditi0n,.,...5337
'32 Ford Coach, looks and
runs gaod. ..-.. .......$232
'3O Chevrolet 4-Door Sedan,
6 Wire Wheels, Extra
IR . e D
28 OTHER GOOD USED CARS
TO PICK FROM AT BARGAINS
OUR LOW OVERHEAD SAVES
YOU MONEY!
SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY!
MARK L. CARITHERS,
Representative
ILA HARDWARE &
MOTOR CO.
ILA, GEORGIA
ANY AMOUNT UP TO
SEVERAL HUNDRED
DOLLARS
We Have a Plan to Suit Your
Needs
® Your Own Signature
® Automobiles
® Endorsement \
® Household Goods \
Small Monthly Payments
Absclute Privacy — No Delay
A SIMPLIFIED LOAN SERVICE
SAVINGS & LOAN CO.
102-104 SHACKELFORD BLDG.
216 COLLEGE AVE.
TELEPHONE 1371
Governor Says Common Schools
To Have Plenty of Money Soon
ATLANTA, Ga.—(P)—Georgia's
common schools had the assur
ance of Governor Eugene Tal
madge today that the state will
have ‘“plenty of money” for them
by the end of the week.
~ This statement came from the
governor yvesterday when he was
‘advised schools in his homé coun
‘ty of Telfair would be forced to
close three months short of the
regular term because of a lack of
cash. ! Bt
“They should have waited un
til after Saturday before taking
action,” Talmadge commented.
“The state will have plenty of
money then for the schools.¥
, Capitol observers interpreted
this to mean the governor expects
la favorable decision by the courts
in Saturday’'s hearing on a suit
by Atlanta banks challenging his
financial “dictatorship.” ]
Three of the banks hold more
than $2,500,000 in state wmoney
which they have refused to release
until it is legally determined who
is to be recognized as state treas
urer—the ousted George B. Ham
ilton or Talmadge's de facto offi
cer, J. B. Daniel.
Among checks drawn on the
banks by the governor in an ef
fort to use the impounded funds
are some calling for payment of
approximately half a million dol
lars to the schools.
The governor charged only the
Fulton National Bank was holding
out against his one-man fisca¥re
gime. He said the First National
and the Citizens and Southern
would be glad to “lose the fight”
and turn- the money over to the
state.
On other fronts the governor's
3-Day Conference in
Homemaking Planned
In Milledgeville, Ga.
A three-day conference on home
making and parent education will
be held at Milledgeville, March 11,
12 and 18, and lecal officials of the
Georgia Congress of Parents and
Teachers and the Georgia Home
Economics Assoclation extend 2
special invitation to parents, teach
ers and others of Athens and vaci
nity to attend. -
The conference, sponsored by the
two organizations, will be held on
the campus of the Georgia State
College for Women, and a special
feature of the progfam will be a
| study of the child development la
{boratory and nursery school at the
teollege.
| The main gpeaker on the March
111 program will we Mrs. George
;Calvert. state president of the
! Oklahoma Congress of Parents and
Teachers. She will speak about
“Phis Homemaking Job of Qurs,"”
and about. “Growing Up with Oth
ers.” Mrs. Calvert has been listed
lin Who's Who for five years.
The program on March 12 and 13
will be led by Mias Alice Sowers,
specialist in parent education from
the National Congress of Parents
and Teachers. 'The main topic for
study the morning of the 12th will
be “The Younger Child,” and that
afternoon the program will be built
around “The Older Child.”
On the 13th there will be a prac
tical discussion about how to or
ganize and conduct parent educa
tional study groups, followed by a
. demonstration study group.
The college has announced that
it can take care of a limited num
ber of delegates who register early
at the price of one dollar per day.
‘Meals and lodging can he obtained
elsewhere in the city at reasonable
costs.
MANY INCUMBENTS
" BEATEN IN OCONEE
(_Contipugd From Page OUne)
Crowe, Rowan Mcßee and Herbert
Fambrough were elected. They
received 805, 565 and 730 votes res
pectively. Others in this race
were Earl Griffeth, J. E. O’'Dillon,
Phillip Hardigree, H. M. Fullilove,
jr., Clarence E. Thornton and
Carlton Kennon,
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
Arrival* and Departure of Traine
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Richmond, Washington
New York and East—
-1:10 A. M.
8:59 P. M. Air Conditioned.
9:11 P. M. Air Conditioned.
Leave for Atlanta, South and West:
4:06 A. M.
§:52 A. M. Alr Conditioned.
2:33 P, M. Afr Conditioned.
Leave for Elberton, Greenwood
Monroe, N. C. (Local.)
10:50 A. M.
4:63 P. M.
Atlanta (Local)
GAINESVILLE-MIDLAND
Leave Atheus
No. 2 for Gainesville— 7:46 a.m
No. 12 for Galnes‘{me-—-lo:ifi a.m
Arrive Athens:
Leave for Winder, Lawrencevilie,
Ne. 11 from Gainesville—lo:oo a.m.
No. 1 from Gainesville— 6:16 a.m
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
Leave Athens
Daily (Except Sunday) 6:30 a.m.
and 4:156 p.m.
Sunday on_l;v‘lzso a.m. and 4:00
p.m.
Arrive Athens Daily
12:85 p.m. and 9:16 p.m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Departs— —Arrives
Luta—North—South
7:36 a.m. 11:20 a.m.
1:30 p.m. 4:26 p.m.
J. R. MORRELL, District
Freight-Passenger Agent
: Telavhone 81
GEORGIA RAILROAD
| Daily Except Sunday
Train 60 Leaves Athens 11:'00 a.m.
Train 61 Arrives Athens §:00 a.m.
operations proceeded in accord
ance with his announced inten
tion of meeting all the state's
obligations thig year despite the
muddle arisnig from lack of an
appropriations bill.,
The highway department check
ed over the requests of 12 coun
ties for immediate payment of
road certifficates due March 25.
Taimadge ordered the certifi
cates paid at once after one of
them held by an individual was
made the basis for an injunction
suit filed against his “dictator
ship” several days ago in Gaines
ville. A hearing in that case is
set for March 14. .
Highway board officials said it
was necessary to check the bonded
indebtedness of the counties be:
fore paying off the certificates.
The money was expected to he
sent out in the next day or .twe
to those requesting it.
EDITOR IN DEFENSE
McRAE, Ga— (#) —Closing of
schools in Telfair county, home
of Governor Eugene Talmadge, is
due solely to “the fact that ex
penses have exceeded the income
of the county board for several
yvears,” W. D. Horton, editor of
the Telfair Enterprise, said today.
The county board announced
schools would close tomorrow
after a six months term, releas
ing 2,700 pupils and 93 teachers.
® “The closing is not the result
either directly or indirectly of any
tie up of any funds due the coun
ty by the state department of
education,” he said.
“Governor Talmadge ‘has no
more to do with this situation
than the czar of Russia.” .
University Production of
Recent Broadway Thriller
Will Be Presented Tonight
(Continued From Page One)
in “Double Door.” The list in
cludes Mildred Teasley, Athens;
Edith Hodgson, Atlanta; John
Lester, Montezuma; Susan Falli
gant, Albany; D' B. Nicholson, jr.,
Athens; Richard Joel, Athens;
Carey Burnett, Tallahassee, Fla.;
Montez Debnam, Atlanta; Lois
Sturmer, Atlanta; Herbert Me-
Ginty, Augusta; Elliott Hagan,
Sylvania; and Walter Wheeler,
Rome.
“Double Door” has often been
referred to as closely analogous
to legends surrounding the fam
ous Wendel family of New York.
Both the public and the press
realized the similarity between
this wealthy family, whose for
tune was in litigation and sur
rounded with mystery, and Eliza
beth MeFadden's Van Bret aristo
crats when the play first ran in
New York.
In “Double Door” Victoria Van
‘Bret struggles to dominate the
personal lives of her sister and
half-brother while she exercises
almost complete control over the
vast family fortune. When her
brother wriggles from beneath her
rule to marry, Victoria seeks
every possible means of ruining
the marriage. Around her atroci
ties designed to renew her su
preme rule, the plot of the melo
drama is construeted,.
Apart, in the gloom of their l‘
Fifth avenue mansion the Wendel |
sisters and their brother guarded |
zealously a fortune which at one |
time amounted to over $150,000,- |
000. The sisters were forbidden !
to marry lest the fortune be di
vided among too many heirs
therefore six sisters lived in se
clusion in New York's “House of
Mystery.” 3
Ella Wendel, last of the famed |
group, died on Friday, March i 3
1931—almost five years to the |
night later *“Double Door” re
views legends of the mysteny |
family. Ella had passed the final
years of her life practically alone
save for her poodle, Tobey. She
was the one member of a family,
cold in its relationships to each
other, to show sympathetic ten
dencies and these to her dog. |
“Double Door” is not without i
its family dog. Azabeche, owned !
by Mr. and Mrs. D. D. J. Myers, |
will be to the Van Bret family i_ni
the new production what Tobey
was to the Wendels of Fifth ave- |
nue. In its canine role Azabache |
must approximate the attitude
shown by the poodle, Tobey,
which -spent its odd hours frolic- |
ing in a $3,680,000 back yard. |
Scenes in the melodrama take.
place in the upstairs living room |
as- an old New York mansion in
1910. The rooem reveals the rich
oversdecorated Victorian style
with an atmosphere of gloom that |
must have permeated the mur-i
story Wendel residence. Settingsi
were constructed entirely by the |
University theater productions |
staff. i
DOMESTIC INCOME
NEW YORK — (#) . Aggregate
net income of 466 domestic cor
porations for 1935 was 33.9 per ccnt
above the previous ear, a tabula
tion made Wednesday by the As
sociated Press showed,
Total income for this group of
companies, which embraces prin
cipal concerns reporting to date,
was $1,454,408,000,
| Three giant industrial units, U,
8. Steel, General Motors and Am
erican Telephone, contributed more
| than 20 per cent to the total.
! The unusually sharp recoveries
scored by steel and motors during
|the year strongly influenced the
| aggregate. Eliminating the three
{ from the compilation, the gain was
‘reduced to 27.9 per cent.
i largest income increases were
i enjoyed by the previously depress
| ed heavy-industries, including ma
| chinery, railroad, oils, steels, build
iing, automobile and auntomobile ac
cesaories,
Qroups reporting decreased pro
fits were principally In the con
sumer-good category, foods, tobac
co and retail trade.
TALMADGES CHARGES |
“SOME OF BOYS” DID
NOT KNOW OF VOTE
(Continuea From Page Onh)
Talmakge has melted away," he§
added. |
Carried County in 1934 1
Talmadge, who boasts himself ot‘
being a practical farmer, carried!
Seminole overwhelmingly two years!
ago for renomination ror governor, |
The county gave him 852 votes to
216 for his two opponents, |
The primary occurred at a time .
when Talmadge wuw busy at the
capital in the midst of a contro
versy over his program of operat
ing the state without an appro
priation bill, |
Mr. Roosevelt polled his heaviest
vote in Donsidsonville, county seat,
wheie he received 400 votes to 13
for Talmadge. The governor, re
cently endorsed for the presidential
nomination at the Macon ‘“Grass
Roots” convention, fared best in
Iron City, the only other incorpor
ated town in the county.
The vote there was Talmadge
80 and Roosevelt 70.
Voting in the rural precincts
was: Spring Creek, Roosevelt 70,
Talmadge 18; Steam Hill, Roose
velt 74, Talmadge 17: Rock Pond,
Roosevelt 47, Talmadge 12.
Still Undecided
Whether a state-wide presiden
tial preference primary shall bhe
called rests with the Talmadge con
trolled state Democratic executive
committee. As an alternative it
would name the Georgia delegates
to the national convention itself,
Twelve counties have demanded
a state-wide vote, Hugh Howell,
committee chairman, has said re
peatedly there still ig plenty of
time to consider the question and
deseribed county presidential pri
maries as merely “straw votes."
Roosevalt forces contended they
will send a delegation to the Na
tional convention whether or not
a state-wide primary is held.
Pwo counties, Pierce and Wilcox
within the last ten days have call
ed off presidential primaries, an
nouncing some fear of interferende
with county races. Seminole's vote
3 DAYS - -
e STARTING:
TODAY:
The Screen Gives the Sweep of the Skies to N
THE THRILLER THAT MADE -
BROADWAY SAY ITS PRAYERS
Y gYN TN
sg¢& e T g
4 J i - i 4 ’ /
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A pat will win ¥/ 1 B
F Crackiing v;“mrd:\‘\‘;: tyour heart's 10 Vm ot
cnee e TR e
Y |\é )/
I é inor Bros, Fim “ -jfl
i James zEI 'l PAT
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June Travis ¢ Stuart Erwin * Barton Maclane
B “Has everything ... Cagney and O’Brien at their best...
: a practically flawless picture”, say Fawceit Magazines
A (e3mopdiitan Production—A First National wa i ~,:, P sbaid)
RETURN et y y
ENGAGEMENT! — Mo 180
; A & et ®“1 :A P i
& \\‘. 1O N
“ ai“vow“‘”;‘ 8 \‘.) :_D W =
TRA Y ERV }
= 2 B tso\‘e' wess
e SSe—— —2 DAYS ’
STR AN D Friday - Saturdayj
A NEW STAR IN THE SADDLE!
DIFFERENT — DANGEROUS — DARING
DICK FORAN
(THE SINGING COWBOY) wirrihs
“MOONLIGHT ON THE PRAIRIE” v;
PAGE SEVEN
Efforts to Arbitrate
In New York Strike
Result in Failure
(Continued From lage One)
the closed shop, he said, because
it was felt that elevator service
wag of ‘“such vital necessity that
it should not be subjected to a
monopoly.” b B
District Attorney Willlam -€.
Dodge, who yesterday issued “re
quest” asubpoenaes for Bambrick
and George Secalise, international
vice president of ‘the union, de
clared ‘“nobody ig going to create
disorder while I am district at
torney.” s et
Bambrick and Scalise would he
questioned at .« his office today,
Dodge said, adding that he would
confine hig interrogation te alleg
ed inflammatory remarks made: by
Bambrick at a werkers' rally Tues
day night, L
| After a respite from sabotage
jand disorder, marauders tampersd
1 with boilers in severai Bonx apart
ment buildings, flooding theé*base-
Iments.
OVERSUBSCRIBED
! WASHINGTON ——(#)__. Secre
| tary Morgenthau said Wednesday
'that the treasury’s $1,250,000,000
| March borrowing was ovécrsub
| seribed from five to seven times.
‘While fiha] figures have not heen
compiled, he said, reports already
received indicated the cash offering
| of bonds would run well over sev
len timeg the $650,000,000 asked.
| Subscriptions for the notes, of
| which $600,000,000 were offeréd,
| were well over five times - that
iamount. :
was golely on the presidential ques
tion with the ballot worded: "= ¢
“For President s
Franklin D. Roosevelt ‘% %!
Eugene Talmadge.” : LA
In north Georgia, Whitfield coun
ty has announced it will hold ‘a
presidential primary March 25 if
the state committee fails to call
for one for the state ag a whole. 4