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PAGE FOUR-A
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
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.———-——-————-————__._.—————-———-——-———'—_—_—"————
M
e e et ctetmpeeeti eit >
’ . . -
Toduy's Bible Meditation
__—_..__.—.o————————'_‘—_——_‘—-_—-
-__——__——-——-——_——
Sunday, May 9—Read Romans 14:1-9.
None of us liveth to himself, and no man dieth
unto himself. For whether we live, we live unto
the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto the
Lord.
Some of us are fraid of life and many of us fear
death. Now there is a great deal to be done for men
tn the world, but is there anything that could be
done which is so great as to take away from men
every fear of life and every fear of dying? And
that i« what our Lord does. And how he does it! ‘
By Himself, holding on to us through every moment
of the changes and chances of life-—and in the hour
of death. With Him always at hand, we have noth- j
iny to fear. I am with you alway, even unto m»‘
end of the world,” Released from fear, we are free
to spend our great gifts in redemptive, creative liv
ing.
CATTON'S COMMENT |
BY BRUCE CATTON '
e eNTR e Ril i
W !
It is encouraging to hear that Commerce Secretary l
PDaniel Roper plans an unemployment census. :
This is long overdue, It is too much to expect |
that definite figures will be available before election. |
Probably neither party would relish this, But it is*
high time we found out just where we stand—not
only how many are out of work, but what jobs have ‘
vanished and what new Jjobs are arising to x'epluce‘
them, |
Throughout tiee gravest depression the country
has ever seen, no one has ever known, within hun
dreds of thousanlds, how many persons were unem- {
ployed.
Most recent estimate by the American F‘Gdemtlonl
of Labir was 12,184,000, The National Industrial
Conference Board's estimates have been near that
figure, But now comes the New York Sun and says
that all this is ridiculous, It estimates the unem
ployed, in all industries, trades, transportation and
mining, at 3,085,000.
The Sun got its figures through information fur
nished by 3000 companies, If the present population
of the country is about 128,000,000, then about bl,-
000,000 should be working today, and about 30,000,-
000 of these would be in the group surveyed.
The Sun found how many really were at work in
that group, and figured out the rest in proportion.
The Sun's job is an interesting one, but all such
methods are no more than shrewd and lucky approx
imations. They can be nothing else. 1
Modern life is complex, There are so many ways
of getting a living that don’t appear in figures on
any recognized big industry,
A widow, left without resources, begins making
eandy and cake for sale, Is she unemployed? Yes,
as far as any industrial tables can show, But she's
getting along.
_Two boys, just out of high schools, develop an
ingenious business if washing, clipping, and exercising
peighbors’ dogs. Are they unemployed? Certainly,
as far as any’ industrial tables can show, But she's
be making a very tair independent living.
Undoubtedly, in making A. F. of L. estimates,
much reliance is placed on union members reported
not working at their trades. Yet many such men,
skilled at this trade or that, have developed little
‘odd-job and repair work to keep going. Are they
unemployed? Certainly, so far as the A. ¥. of L.
ds concerned, But they are getting by, and, they are
not on relief,
The whole thing about unemployment is that no
body knows much about it, even after all these years,
General Johmson once proposed a one-day survey of
unemployed by registration at polling places, much
as draftees were registered during the World War,
Such individual registration of every unemployved
man or woman seeking work, with the qualifications
of each, would give us a sounder basis for attacking
ike problem than we have now or ever have had.
Before you try to figure out where you are going,
4§t is always a good plan to find out where you are.
Trans-Atlantic flving seemied quite fantastic -when
Colonel Lindbergh made his heroic hop to Paris nine
years ago. But aviation has come a long way since
and so today the world looks forward rather casually
to regularly scheduled travel in the skies above the
Atlantic.
The German Zeppelin Hindenburg adds another
ship to such already estabrished service, linking the
old world with the new., At the same time plans arß
going ahead for similar travel by airplane as well
Even trans-polar flight, on a regular commercial
basis between the United States and Russia is be
ing studied as to feasibility.
s Aviation hasn’t yet passed the trail-blazing stage.
‘But, whatever the glowing prospects may be, no
heads are being shaken as they were when Lind
brgh made his memorable flight,
If you are one of those who think that our Am
erican party systém is too old-fashioned and ought
to be reduced to a mere designation of liberals as
opposéd to conservatives, consider for a moment the
situation in France.
There, in the recent elections, the people Wwere
faced with a lineup that would baffle the most astute
pohticu; student. They were required to choose,
somehow, from the Communists, Dissident Commun
ists, Radical Sccialists, Independent Socialist, Dis
sident Socialists, ana just plain Socialists: Left Re
publicans, Right Republicans, Popular Democrats, and
~ Conservatives. + !
Fortunately, our system is not yet as involved as
~that of France. But the increasing number of “isms”
~we have faced in the last 10 years is a warning.
- We might in time become as helplessly tangled up
%W’a the French. That would mean to
‘us just what it has meant to France—ever-changing
THIS IS MOTHERS’ DAY
It is fitting and proper to celebrate one
day in the year as a tribute to Mothers,
but with the one dav set aside for that
purpose and every other day in the year
without 4 remembrance for Mothers, it
geems to us that of all things in life,
Mother should come first and be the dear
est.
The sentiment attached to Mothers’
Day is more than the ordinary daily greet
ing. Somehow it impresses us just a little
different from the daily routine we treat
with Mother. On this special day we de
}vote more attention, in person or by com
munication, than we do on any other day
in the year—because it is Mother’s Day.
If Mother has passed away, we should
wear a white rose; if she remains with us
|still, we should wear a red rose, and we
should give or send to her some remem
brance to remind her that she is in the
thought and mind of the son or daughter
ior both. Just a letter of loving and ap
preciative words for what Mother has
done for us would be Wworth more to her
than any other remembrance one might
send.
Mother’s Day, should be made the Day
of the vear and every son and daughter
should remind Mother on that day of their
thoughts and sentiment of her—the dear
!cst of all-—Mother,
| NATIONAL HOSPITAL DAY
May 12th is the 116th anniversary of
Florence Nightingale, which will be cele
brated by all the hospitals throughout the
United States, Canada, Alaska, England,
South American countries and other na
tions. i
National Hospital Day was established
on May 12, 1921, the date of May 12, be
ing set in honor of the birth of Miss Night
ingale.
An interesting review of the work of
Florence Nightingale and of the establish
ment of National Hospital Day by Mr.
Foley, follow: : CaakEl R
' “Florence Nightingale, an English hos
'pital superintendent and reformer of
nursing, the daughter of William Edward‘
Nightingale of Embley Park, Hampshire,
'was born at Florence, Ttaly, May 12, 1820.
‘Most of her childhood was spent in Staf
fordshire. Under the influence of her
philanthropic mother, Miss Nightingale’s
attention was directed to the condition of
|hospitals; she traveled extensively on the
|continent to study such institutions and
‘entered upon a course of training in nurs
ling with the Sisters St. Vincent de Paul
lin Paris and at the Institute of Protestant
*Deaconesses at Kaiserwerth on the Rhine.
Her experience led her to plan to ele
'vate nursing into a permanent and hon
orable occupation for women. In 1853
{she became superintendent of a hospital
’for governesses in London.
“Upon the outbreak of the Crimean
IWar in 1854, she set out for the front
with thirty-eight nurses, Nursing depart
ments were organized by her at Scutari
and later at Balakalada. By untiring en
ergy and extracrdinecy ability, in the face
of incredible difficulties, Miss Nightin
gale succeeded in relieving the suffering
of the sick and wounded. After the close
of the war, she gave a testimonial fund
which in 1860 amounted to fifty thousand]
pounds to the founding of the Nightingale
Home at St. Thomag’® Hospital for the
training of nurses. During the Indian
Mutiny, the American Civil War, and the
Franco-Prussian War she was often con
sulted on questions concerning camp hos
pitals.
“She was an authority not only on mil
itary hospitals and nursing, but on nursing
and sanitation in civil hospitals and in the
home. Miss Nightingale received many
honors from various governments and was
the first woman upon whom the Order
of Merit was conferred (in 1907.)
“In 1915 a new statuary group for the
Crimean Memorial, Waterloo Place, Lon
don, was unveiled—"“The Lady with the
Lamp.” Except for monuments to royal
ladies, it was the first public statue of a
lwoman in London. Miss Nightingale died
in London on August 13, 1910,
| “For years a great many people in the
community have had a horror and dread
of hospitals, probably due to memory and
stories about hospitals before the discov
ery of the germ theory of disease, and
not realizing that the hospitals of today
are equipped with the most scientific in
|stryments for the battle against disease,
land is staffed by the outstanding mem
|bers of the medical profession. Realizing
lthat a campaign of education was neces
|sary to acquaint the public with the work
lbeing done in hospitals, Mr. Matthew O.
Foley, in 1921, conceived the idea of a
{National Hospital Day, on which day the
'hospitals would be opened to the public
{for inspection, trained members of the
|hospital staffs to act as guides and ex
-Iplaining the workings of the different Qe
lpartments of the hospital, and a cordial
linvitation extended to the entire commun
{ity to visit their hospital.”
} Mars has two moons, Deimos and Pho
ibos. The latter is so near to the planet
|that it revolves completely around it in 7
hours, 39 minutes. This is less than one
’third the time of the planet’s rotation on
its axis; consequently, Phobos rises in the
west and sets in the east.
The first public surveys in the United
'States were made in Ohio, under an ordi
nance of the Continental Congress passed
in 1785. Slightly modified, this ordi
nance became an act of Congress in 1796
and is still in force,
The month of March, 1934, had two
‘full moons, but February had none at all.
A full moon occurred on Jan. 30, the next
'o‘n March 1; and the following one onm
March 30, S L
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NEWS OF THE WEEK — TOLD IN BRIEF
BY DEVON FRANCIS 1
~ (Associated Press Sports Writer) |
COLONIAL CONQUEST !
One of Europe's three dictator- |
ships sueceeded this week in break- |
ing the virtual monopoly of control
‘upon Africa which England and |
‘France have enjoyed since the close|
of the great war, {
~ Apart from the diplomatic pot-|
'pourpi created created with Italy's{
occupation of Addis Ababa, capital|
of Ethiopia, was the vact that ;Pre-|
mier Mussolini had added to his!
colonial domains on the dark con-|
‘tinent an area of 350,000 squal‘e‘
miles, with an estimated population‘
of 10,000,000,
Britain was mortified by a diplo
matic defeat, Frane was indign
ant when Italy seized control of
most of the French-owned Addis
Ababa-Djibouti railway. The more
stalwart states of the League of
Nations talked of wevamping the
organization’s structure. The Hlesser
states expressed a lack of faith in
the theory of collective security,
But the fact remained that ano
ther nation had obtained a more
secure foothold on a continent to
which Europe is turning increasing
attention as an aréa of potential
markets and for colonization pur
poses. l
More than one signpost pointed
to a cancellation of sanctions
against Italy, to a re-establishment
eventually of the Franco-Italo-Bri
tish “stresa front.”
Commentators wondered whether
Italy’s victory, scuttling hopes of
making Germany abide by her
treaty obligations, would lead the
Nazi dletatorship to attempt re
trievement of the million square
miles of African colonies lost by
mandate to France and British un
der the treaty of versailles,
CALIFORNIA BALLOTS “
The Demoeratic high command
was Jjubilant thig week. On the\
heels of a Democratic vote a third
greater than the Republican in the
California presidential preference
primary, the party claimed its larg
est nationwide registration in hi§-‘
| tory. |
| President Roosevelt picked up 90
national convention votes in Cali
fornia, Alabama, Maryland and
South Dakeota, but his critics made
much of what they termed the
“protest vote” against him in Mary
land where Col, Henry Breckin
ridge opposed him, There the
president’s majority was better
than 5 to 1.
The California primary brought
to a head a Republican intra-party
| squable for control. The “regular”
lorganizmion triumphed over a slate
| pledged to Governor Alf M. Lan
don of Kansas and backed by Wil
liam Randolph Hearst, the publish
er, and Governor Frank Merriam.
Democratic regulars swamped Up
{ton Sinclair's production - for - use
‘and the MeGroarty -Townsendite:
| slates. {
Unofficial returns indicated a
South Dakota victory for Landon
iover Senator Borah of Idaho lln
i their first farm belt fight for dele-
Egates. 1
|
~ NINTH INNING ARGUMENT 1‘
} Racing the calendar against po
!litical convention time, congress
this week approached a climax in‘j
a tussle over relief. |
The Roesevelt $1,500,000,000 re
lief bill was reported favorably to
the house for floor argument amid
a growing feud between Interior
Secretary Ickes and Relief A:dmln-]
istrator Hopking over the spend-i
ing of relief funds. 1
Criticism by business of the pro
posed corporation surplus tax rose
in crescendo before a senate com-l
mittee. One group attacked it as
a further step mud “govern
ment regulation and regimentation
of Imsm“e:s.”‘ Senator Pat Harri
son of m% trun, charg
ed business with fim ately delay
ing action on the measure by a
widespread propaganda campaign. |
DOUBLE BULLEYE
In Toledo, 0., G-Men nabbed “Pub
lic Enemy” Harry Campbell, pz
of the captured Alvin Karpis; i
San Francisco they collected Wil
liam Mahan, wanted for the Wey
erhaeuser kidnaping.
Some Harvard lampoon editors
nailed the Soviet emblem to the su
préme court’s flagstaff in Wash
ington,
Germany’s new Zeppelin, the Hi
denburg, blazed a new commerci
trail between Freidrichshafen an
Lakehurst, N. J.
Spring raing soaked the mid
west's “dust bowl.” |
Gretta Garbo, back from Sweden,
granted a nonsyllabic inter‘view—w‘
_ cadi e LR
‘e )
B E you plail SRRt S o~ I 5
;:2i"T 3 . ! e §
A you dont care:
; yow'/u/mr LT £ o y
o v ~ : . 0 : !
: ife insurance Week =_, \
‘ l e ’ L | nRE THE uwl i
"fi\ h : .
"Tlus is Life Insurance Week. Some day this week, a gentlemanly knock will S
m . or . . 3 ez e
come at your door. That knock will personify Opportunity. It will be made by ““The ;
Man Who Knows Life”’—the Life Insurance Underwriter. If your door swings open—it
vou offer the hearty welcome, ““Sure—come on in!”—you will be opening your door to
peacerof mind and security. e ’ '
With this visitor will come “Seven Wise Men’—not in person, but in a i »
booklet which is yours for the asking. Read it carefully. It tells how you—on -‘ /
your present income—can start a plan that means security for your family if X
you die, and security for your wife and yourself, if you live. ' ,
Our bank has no life insurance to sell. But any action or circumstance which as- S
sects the best interests of people in our community—and there is nothing more vital S 8
than Life Insurance—is of direct concern to us. Our interest is your interest. Our
desire is only to help. For this reason only do we urge each man to consider his future
and the future of those most dear to him. There is no substitute for Life Insurance g $
Protection and there is a plan to fit your income—be it large or small.
ke MAN-ON-THE -STREET [2\/7)
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['IPE-CHTIZENS & SOUTHERN
B LT NI |
=\ IATLANTA A'X 3
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VAL:m‘;n F No Account Too Large... None Too Small =
oo vave moe "..._‘L‘::
This is sumber 176 in a series of visits Thie bank iz a membe
by ‘‘The Man-on-the-Strect” FreosßAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CoORe( s
her first
The general confer,
|
Methodist Episcopal
ing in Columbus, O,
for ugl 4 The
C
AT THE MOVIES
HERE THIS WEEK
‘w————————-——-——_
! Palace Theater l
Monday gand Tuesday: "l‘l:n\gvr-l
ous”, has been hailed as a master- |
piece whereever it has bheen pro- !
idm‘.pd' is sheer, stark drama, sea- |
| turing both the glamor and the|
}shadow_u of Broadway life. l~‘on_-)
{ turing Bette Davis, Franshot 'l‘nno.;
| Alison Skipworth and .\1:11‘,‘4:‘11'01]
!Linds‘fly. Also latest newg events
f'md selected Novelties, ]
| Wednesday: “Opportunity Night”|
j(on stage). On the screen, thel
:.\'hurtvsx hour of screen flmerl:lin-l
‘ment in ‘history! Sixty nflnuwsi
‘\\‘Hl pass like one, as you watch |
(this pair of love-filled lunaties st*l{
‘the world on its ear! Wednesday, |
ivouw'll know why—“ Brides Are |
LLike That”, With Ress A]vxum!uz'i
{the boy you loved in “Flirtation |
| Walk” and “Captain Blood”, co- ]|
starring with Anita Louise .\l~~n!
{ selected novelties, i
| Three days: Thursday, Friday |
;:nul Saturday: Pat O'Brien :nnd“
{ Josephine Hutchinson, the stars|
|you loved in “Oil For The Lamps |
i()l‘ China”, are reunited again hy!
| popular demand in “I Married A |
| Doctor”. Again they bring ymW
the soul-story of a man and ywife |
Ibased on Sinclair Lewis' novel |
|that startled a million readers |
'with its frankness. One of thej
{l'(\:'l!_\' great emotional dramas Hfl
‘lho year. Also latest news events
jand selected novelties. |
! Strand Theater
! Monday and Tuesday: Tense
{ excitement, glamor of outdoor ac- |
itinn; the tenderness of rm'n:mvvi
iand the crashing drama crammed
{into “O’Mally of the Mounted". |
| With two-fisted George O’Brien |
]:md Irene Ware. Also Tom Mix|
iin “YThe Miracke Rider’, wvn}fihi
anisndc‘_
t Wednesday: Bargain day, return|
}(*n;:agemom by popular request— |
| “Special Agent”, with Bette Davis,!
Ricardo Cortez, Jack Laßue, and
'He‘nry O'Neill® Another sensation
jal, first story of its kind, from the|
iproducers of ‘G-Men’, Also select- |
novelties. |
hursday: Bargain dayv—Return |
agement by popular request)
vthing Goes”, with Bing Cros-|
Ethel Merman, Charles ltu;:-ll
and Grace Bradley, a Sm:nsh"’
musical comedy features the|
ld-famous song: “You’y The|
7, “Anything Goes”, Also se-|
ed novelties, |
wo days, Friday and Saturday:,
yifty"—A new Hoot Gibson pic<|
with high suspense, mystery |
outstanding as an cation pic- |
. It will delight audienceg flf!
ages, for it has both exciting|
ion and interesting characteri- |
ion. Also “Frank Merriwell” |
i kY. ‘
—_—— |
The low-born Tibetan, on meet- |
g a superior, does not touch his|
p in the English fashion. He |
es off hig hat, holds it in brin]
nds, slightly inclines his "ead
ward and puts out his tm.ma{
the same time making a slisht!
cking noise. l
SUNDAY, MAY 10, 193
TRY THIS ON YOUR J
CALCULATOR
COLUMBIA, S. C, — (&) i
someone else figure out the 4@ |
ematical chances of this 2
ing again: ?
M. R. C.. Light nm-g"gf;i;‘
hridge foursome said she T 8
Mrs, Walter Atkinson cut ;,j:»,
John L.. Ellig dealt, exami
hand and bid a grand : %
spades. Her partner, Mrs, w
held 13 diamonds, Mrs. Atkins
held all the hearts and Mrs
Harry Kirby all the clubs. No or @
fainted. 4
The world's loneliest radio st
tion is said to be that on Willis
Island, 400 mileg east of Austra
lia. where two operators keep and
transmit weather records
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u to spend glorious vacation d~vy
4 high up on the very tis
5 beautiful, brasze-swept Signai | !
[ :"A Mountgin ».. ot the modern,
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