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They're a bit impatient—Cecile in fmrfl_t,at least—but with the aid of Dr, Datoe and their two nurses the Dionne quins soon will be oft
for a brisk round of fcllow-the-leader? 'Annette islast to fall in line, back of Emilie! In the center is Marie, and in front of her Yvonne, |
who is using her right hand to advantage while clinging to Cecile’s coat, }
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The guintuplets get off to a good start at follow-the-leader; with Cecile at the lead of the file, when suddenly one of them misses the
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fifth member of the.warty. Where's Annette? Ah, there she is, taking her own time in the rear.. So the four, Emilie, Mari¢, Yvonne
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Browsing In Books . . .
By MRS. ARTHUR GANNON
E Great Laughter by Fannie
| Hurst. Harper -& = Brothers.
| New York. $2.50.
| Fannie Hurst,in Great Laughter
{ has written one of the most de
i]vl‘t‘ssing novels of the year. There
|is not a wholesome or heroic char
{ acter in the story which is about
ln sardonic matriarch and = her
{ twenty-two descendants. The au
[ thor hag very properly put in the
;front of the book a gencalogical
i table of the family: the Neales.
| The reader may begin in the best
[ of health, but after following the
| fortunes of four generations of
!:\'eales. a feeling of biliousness
{ develops that 491 pages only serves
| to heighten.
| In addition to the Hurst tradi
| tion of repetition, there is an un
!«lervun-ent of emphasis on the
| sordid, the petty and the unpleas
| ant. The book is not grossly im
| moral, i tis not sensationally
| coarse, it is more like the rear view
}of a dirty tenement house, the un
linviting ontskirts of a big city—
| the back side of tapestry.
| Perhaps life is like Great Laugh
; ter pictures it: life for some peo
| ple somewhere, but most of us
| have never found it so, and dis
| like, even in fiction, to associate
| with characters who make one
| want to wash the hands' afterwards.
. il A - * ¥
I ‘Beowulf: Guide Dog to the
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“One, two, three, four, five little Indians!” went the nursery rhyme. But one “little Indian,” Annette,
lagged behind, so now there are four. That's what happened to the Dionne quintuplets when they
played follow-the-leader!? So here we see, left to right, Emilie, Marie, Yvonne and last, Cecile, pulling
away at the head of the train,
Blind. By Ernest Lewis. E.
P. Duttin & Co., Inc., New
York. $2.00.
Beowulf von Stromberg, a Ger
man shepherd dog, was trained to
assist - frontier guardsmen in ap
prehending smugglers along the
Gierman border. ‘When Mourad.
guard whom he assisted, was kill
‘ed by a smuggler, the dpg was
sold, and, after & number of pain
ful experiences, both physical and
mental, he became the property of
an English vicar in Cumberlang by
the name of Allan Stuart.
Stuart goes plind and Beowulf,
whose devotion and intelligence are
unusual, is sent to France to learn
to lead the plind. The dog ma}kes
himself indispensible and later as
sists his master in effecting a dra
matic rescue of two lost tourists.
The tale, while interesting, is
not fietion in the strict sense, for
the author assures us in his pre
face that all of the remarkable
achievements of the Guide Dogs for
the Blind are pased on facts and
records of various German shep
‘herd dogs. .
To these who love dogs and an
ecdotes regarding them, this book
supplies in 2 delightful way the
‘demand fgr just such stories. Its
‘appeal is not limited. to any one
age, for its range is wide encugh
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
to include all members of Lhel
family. I
e |
“Valiant Dogs—Great Dog ‘
Stories or Our Day,” compiled
by Frances E. Clarke. The I
‘MacMillan Company, publish- |
~¢rs, New York. Price $2.50. ‘
I Dog lovers will enjoy this book
as it tellg almost everything on the
subject of dogs such as “‘A Dog's’;
Life in Paris” written by Dorothy
. Dunbar Bromley, which explaing
the difference between a million
iaires Great Dame in America and
'a millionnaires (ireat Dame in
Paris.
On the French dog's ‘“Beauty
i Tray” are brushes, expensive per
| fumes, lotions, soap, shampoo
‘powder, an eye cup, in fact every
tthing except a tooth brush. A sil
| ver cup is often found in a well
| fitted traveling bag.
| lam greatly attached to Thomas
gßoyd‘s “Grandfather's Dog” be
icause it telld how an old man was
Ipersuaded by Ris wife, Matt, to
i chloroform his dog. Grandfather
;did chloroform “Doggie” in a tub
land on the morrow he went out to
-'tho, dreaded tub, spade in hand
j ready to put in the ground his be
iloved dog in whom he had trusted,
ilived for an prayed for, when a
{cold nose touched those weak, aged
i hands, and in a moment a spry lit
| tle dog was on his neck. “Doggie”
,’.stood in the sunshine blinking and
i shaking himself.
& Grandfather lost his temper.
“You Little Devil,” he muttered as
‘he walked heavily into the house,
“Doggie” at hig heels.
i “If you have never read “A Dack
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B R ;3}:179?::5; ;
Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc
Well, here's Annette! She has
cut around in front of the line
and gleefully waits® for her
sisters. See that grin!
you have an unexpressable plea
sure waiting for you. It is a very
unusual‘story of a little boy who
found “A Dark Brown Dog” and
took him to his own home. The
dog enjoyed himself for many a
day. But one night the two com
panions came home to find the
father dangerously intoxicated and;
would practically finish anyone whol
dared to comie near him ~ The lit
tle brown dog passed the tortur
ing father who,, in his anger at
seeing a dumb animal’ enter his|
presence just at the time when hel
«“was getting a kick out of life”
picked “The Little Brown Dog” up,
"by the legs and hurled the fright-|
ened doy out of the window. The |
‘sobbing child found him in a dark,
alley half an bour later, cold and]
stiff in 2 miserble, heart-breaking
heap, dead.
. Among the well known authors
iwhu have stories in ‘“Valiant Dogs"]
are Thomas Boyd, Dorothy _Dun-|
par Bromley, James 8.. Carrington,|
i‘Mazo de la Roche, Anotole France,
| John Galsworthy, Booth Tarking-‘
ton, Alexander Woollcott and Hugh
Walpole. Cr g
[ You are missing a very interest-i
ing book if you fail to read *Val
‘iant Dogs.” 1 encourage you to
read ‘it. N
. CARROLL MAGILL. ;
A e
Twenty-seven singers are Onlyl
twice as loud as one singer. ‘
e
The sacred scarab of Egypt is}
regarded only a tumble bug in
lAmerica.‘ ok |
The College of Cardinals of the;
laoman ~Catholic church is core
posed . f7O members.
Charmingly Simple Story Told
In New Novel, “Winterbound”
“Winterbound” by Margery
Bianco;; New York: The
Viking Press; 234 pages; $2.00.
Refreshingzl different from most
present day fiction, ‘“Winter=
bound’ is a charmingly simple
story of ‘a city family’'s reaction to
a Connecticut winter in the coun
try. It is one of Viking's newest
publications,
\ Kay, Garry, Martin, and Caro
line, whose father is off on a seci
entific expedition and whose moth
er has been unexpectedly called
upon to attend a sick relative, find
themselves absolutely alone and de
pendent upon themselves for the
first time in their lives.
When the thermometer touches
10 degrees below zero and Kay
and Caroiine take to their beds
C. A. Trussell, Local Ford Dealer, to
Leave Wednesday Fer Detroit; To Join
7,000 Dealers For Two-Day Gathering
C. A. Trussell of C. A. Trussell
Motor Co., local Ford dealer, will
leave for Detroit Wednesday 1o
join 175 Ford dealers from: Alabama
Georgia and Tennesse, wWho with
7,000 others from all sections of
the United States, will move into
Detroit by special trains this week
end for a two-day gathering at the
Ford Motor Company factory, the
first. assembly of its kind in ‘the
history of the Ford organization,
for a display of the forthcoming
year's models of the Ford V-8.
They will be guests of the Ford
Motor Company while in Detroit.
Wives and members of the fam
flieg will travel with the Fordl
dealers in this spectacular gather
ing at Detroit, which will last
through Friday and Saturday,
bring every dealer in the country
into personal contact with Henry
Ford, creator of the gigantic in
dustry that bears his name, and
Edsel Ford, his son, who is Presi
dent of the Ford Motor Company.
The high note of Friday's pro
gram will be the first view of the
1937 model of the Ford V-8, The
dealer and their guests will be
taken through the Rouge and Lin
den plant of the Ford Motor Com
pany for their first view of the
car that will be offered to the pub
lic shortly.
This is the first time that Ford
dealers have gathered at Detmlt'
for an inspection of a new model.'|
In the past the custom has heen to:
tassemble the dealers at the branch,
| headquarters in the region where,
| they operate, but this year the
| orda Motor Company hag had
;them assemble at Detroit where
iviews on the business that is gath
‘ering top-notch speed. Outstand
‘ing in the ceremonies Friday, the
opening day of the meeting, will]
[Be the presentation to Henry Ford]
|of a huge old Cape Cod windmill
the gift of all the dealers in the
| United States. I
| The windmill has been standing
lon Cape Cod for generations but
%is still in an excellent state* of
.~ INNEWYORK |
| |
I By George Ross ‘
e O o IS AR NN S T
l NEW YORK.—Manhattan Med
!ley: Greater throrngs than in 8
Iyears past surge across the Rialto
gon Saturday, everybody’s nightl
%uut.
| Not since the dark days of 1930, |
lincidentally, has a night._clubl
'soared into the big money as rap
lidly as the new Cotton Club,
'which has forsaken Harlem for
| Broadway . Cab Calloway's glib
land “pashy’” music and Bill Rob
linson’s unsurpassed tap dances
| furnish the bait. |
| George . Kaufman and Edna
| Ferber have set a new fashion for
iplu_vwrighting collaboration, Most
tof the ideas in their current hit,
“Stage Door,” were conceived
while bicycling along-the hills and
dales of Long Island, Westchester
|
Izmd the Bronx.
I There is one well-known left
zwing satirist 'in tewn whose
-| rapier-edged essays are aimed at
the uptown intelligentsia and who
gathers his material in the ene-l
my’s camp, “Twenty-One.” His
victims insist upon paying for his
drinks.
E Greenwich Village on the skids?
It would seem so; the Bohemians
are fading in prestige. The sign
I saw on the Village case window
Iread. “No Poets Wanted.”
| New York is probably the only
'metropolis with one-way streets
| for pedestrians as well gs auto
lists . . . each day at noontime in
';the Garment Center, a traffic cop
direcés pedestrian traffic in north-j
lbound and southbound directions.
| TR I
: Hair of the Dog—Plus |
| A footliznt romance that has
lthrived: that of Bramwell Fletch
!er and Helen Chandler, married
|two vears ago and inseparable.
| “What has John Barrymore got
|to show for his work?” exclaims
ja young lady who doesn’t want to
igive up her stage ~areer in a cur
xrent comedy, “Why a Yacht.”
In “Tovarich,” the new Broad
[way success, a character is cured
[of a splitting headache with an
jold Woscovite recipe that includes
lequal parts of vodka and gun-
Ipowder. . . There has \lbeen a
iheavy demand lately for this po
itent “Tovarich” remedy at many
{ oases.
I Ruth Slenczynski, the piano
| prodigy, has a concert tour map
‘ped out this season whicp should
lnet her (and her guardian) $75,-
}OOO . . . and some young people
! balk about having to vractice atl
it keyvboard. ;
!“‘ém;thing Was Oakey-dokey
' The only musical show in town
with flu, sixteen-year-old Garry
takes over the reins of the house
hold gnd continues to guide them
through financial difficulties and
hardships. Kay is older but she
is an=w=ctist and is not nearly so
practical.
Their adventures and mis-ad
ventures provide interesting enter
tainment for the reader. There is
little exaggeration, no sex, andno
vulgarity. The main charm of
“winterbound” is its simplicity—
simplicity in style, characteriza
tion, and plot. It is a book for
young and old . . . an excellent
selection for a young reader, an¢
an antidote for the sophisticated
novels for the mature.
. 'Not the least point to be con
gidered is the fact that it is beau
tifully bound, with attractive art
[wotk in front and back, gnd has
large, easy-to-read print.
praservation. It hag been placed
in Greenfield Village, the small
city of original americaa build
ings and homes that Henry Ford
has brought and assembled as aI
means of preserving living chap
ters out of old American history.
‘The purchase, dismandling, mov
ling‘ and reconstruction of the old
windmill was made poessible by
contributions from c«alers and It
will be an engaging addition to the
scenes in Greenfield Village.
Dealers in Georgia, Alabama and
Tennessee will gather at foca:
points to board a special train for
the ride to Detroit., Those in the
Macon territory will gather at that
wcity, special cars at Columbus, Ga.
‘and Montgomery, Ala. will gather
in those towns.
Thede cars will be moved into
Atlanta to meet other cars which
will carry dealers from the At
lanta territory. The Atlanta train
will then move toward Chattan
ooga, where it will converge with
train from Birmingham and from
various sections of Tenenssee, the
whole making a huge special train‘
that will arrive in Detroit for
breakfast on Friday morning.
The meeting will open officially
at the Colisseum on the State Pair
Groundg in Detroit, Friday morn
ing at 9 o'clock E. 8. T. The morn
ing program will consist of the
presentation of the new models and
a general get together meeting.
From 12:3 until 2: p. m. thre will
be a luncheon, at which the wind-‘
‘mill will be formally presented to
‘Mr. Ford. The Juncheon will be fol
‘lowed by a tour through Greenfield
lVfllage. Saturday morning at 9
o'clock, the dealers wiil visit the
\Rouge and Linden plants.
. D. Bottom, manager of the
Atlanta PBranch of the Tord Motor
Company, and W. K. Hanson, As
sistant Manager, will be in charge
iot arangementg for the special
train that will Jjeave this gection
|and will see that all dealers make
lthe trip in soid comfort.
which still manages to attract 2
nightly host of “Stage Door John
nies” is the Ziegfeld Follies.
Which brings to mind the cer
tain comedian fortunate enough
to secure a job in are erstwhile
“Follies.” He was celebrating the
event at Lindy's gßrog ghop with
his cronies. “Lissen,” his less fur
tunate comrades put in persua
sively, ‘“you be sure and get up
plenty of ‘Annie Oakley’s for the
show.” !
«“Qoitonly,’ the comic assured
them, “when I'm in the ‘Follies,’
there'll be girls for everybody.”
Concerted Gossip
Some of the glamor of the music
and lecture world is to be gleaned
from KEthel Peyser’'s personal his
tory of the famous Carnegie Hall.
Miss Peyser, who has been long
familiar with the venerable audi
torium, has seen the great ones
backstage. So she is able to re
port that when the boy prodigy.
‘Yehudi Menuhin, finishes anardu
ous and brilliant concert, all he
wants, in the face of deafening
applause, is some ice cream . i
that the great pianist, Josef Hoff
man, has a habit of arriving at the
concert at the last minute, just
time enough to yell “Hello” and
.rush onstage . . . that Frieda
Hempel invariably checks a chin
chilla coat with the stage-hands
pefore she starts singing . . .
and that the most unassuming, un
affected person to enter Carnegie
Hall’s backstage portals was Dr.
Allan Roy Dafoe, who had come
to deliver a lecture.
R e it
M
The program rendered in the
chapel azteinbly period ¥Friday
dealt with political matters. Ouy
principal, Prof. Aaron Brown, jir.,
outlined in detail, the various po
litical parties and their candi
dates.
He discussed the issues con
tained in each platform and told
the meaning of the electoral col
lege. He further impressed us
with the fact that young people of
today should begin thinking more
seriously of the problems in ordet
thet they may be more capable of
entering poiitical lif, when they
are of age.
Prof. Brown discussed the five
outstanding political parties, Dem
ocratic, Republican, Union, Com
munist and Socialist. We were
very glad to have the visitors
BANKERS 70 MEET
et
" “\‘i {"b;w
Approximately Thousand
Banking Experts to Meet
in August Next Month.
AUGUSTA, Ga. —(#)— Approxi=
mately 1,000 of the nation's ime =
vestment and securities experts
will assemble her next month for
the 25th annual convention of the
Investment Bankers Association,
officials said today. L
Final arrangements for the con~
vention set for Dec. 2-6, are being
pushed. Highlights of the five-day
program will be round table dis
cussions on business problems fed=
eral taxation, foreign securities,
municpal and publ> service se
cuvities, securily regulation and, |
the business outlook. 5
Those nominated for election a 8
officers for next vear include Edvik:fi
‘ward B. Hall, Chicago, president; ¢
Alden H. Little, Chicago, exect= =
tive vice president; and HEarle
i]’u’lili(g New York, Rudolph Jac
Eichler, Los Angeles, James P
Minot, jr, Boston; Claude G. Riv~
ers, jr, New Orleans and Cloud
Wampler, Chicage, vice presidents.. ..
Judge James M. Landis, offe
Washington, chairman of the ses=:
curities and exchange commission’
land D. Leon Harp, of Austin,
Texas, president of the National =
Association of Securities Commis=
«ioners, and also Texas security
commissioner, will be among, the =
¢peakers, b
Harper Sibley, president of the’?;“
United States chamber of com
merce, is to attend the convention. «#
He will sneak in Jacksonville, Flas®
Dec. 1; Savannah, Dec. 2, andat
a banqguet of the Augusta Cham=-_
ber of Commerce on Dec. 3. —
The first address scheduled om
the convention program is that of"
President Orrin G. Wood, of Bos
ton, who will discuss recent de
velopments in business and fi- =
nance. -
Members of the convention com=~
mitee are Alden H. Little, Chicago; °
chairman; Craig Barrow, jr., Ausif
gusta; Walter Collins, New ¥Yerk;
John W. Denison, Chicago; Bl .o
Howell Griswold, 111, Baitimore:
George B. Johnson, Clevelam}: *
Jjoseph T. Johnson, Milwaukee;
Stewart R. Kirkpatrick, Omaha;
Louis G. Mudge, New York; James,
R. Page, Los Angeles; Robert
Stevenscn IT, Chicago, and Joseph
T. Walker, jr.. Boston, _
Avrangements have been made
here to tronsport 500 golf bags
{from the special train to the °
| country club. 3
et e ————
Leather dressing was one of the
most important trades among the
ancient Egyptians and at Thebes, .
in the days of Egyplts glory, a
special quafter of the city was set
apart for tanners.
Paraguay is thought to have the
only species of !?uorfprogwdng~
palm tree. The CGliatodn Indians
tap the tree for its an, which fer
ments in a short time and turns
into a highly intoxicating bever
age, 4
~——-———-———fl_—-—-——-——_‘_—
with us Friday and we are invit
ing them to visit us again. .
GENEVA DANIELS,
HOWARD PARROTT,
Reporters.
The second year class surprised
the student body Wednesday with .
a program. This program was
divided into two divisions. Hals
lowe'en is an important date in.
October. i %
Janie Smith read a paper on
Hallowe'en, and a paper on cur
rent events was read by Robert
Battle. s
Next Wednesday the freshmen
will have charge of the chapel
assembly. Visitors are always in
vited and made welcome. :
The faculty and student body of
the Athens High and Industrial
school were very proud to have
Mrs., J. F. Whitehead and Mrs,
J. M. Nelms to visit the school
on October 21. I TN
Gloria Harris, a member of the
junior class, had the opportunity
of showing these visitors arcund
the different class rooms. Baid
”
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RAILWA)
Arrival and Departure of Traine
Athens, Georgia.
Leave for Richmond, Washingtof
New York and East—
-1:00 &. M.
8:32 pr. m.—Air Conditioned.
9:11 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
Leave for Atlanta, South and W<
4:056 a. m.
5.62 a. m.—Alr Conditioned.
2:29 p. m.—Air Conditioned. -
Leave for Elberton, Greenwood
Monroe, N. C, (Local)—
10:50 a. m,
Leave for Winder, Lawrencevil’
Atlanta (Local)—
4:45 p. m.
GAINESVILLE-MIDLAND
Leave Athens
No. 2 for Gainesville— 7:45 a.m.
No. 12 for Gainesviile—lo:4s a.m.
4 Arrive Athens ’
No. 11 from Gainesville 10:00 a.m
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA ;
No. 1 from Gainesville 6:16 a.nß
Leave Athens
Daily (Except Sunday) 6:30 a. m
and 4:15 p. m.
Sunday only 7:50 a. m. and
4:00 p. m.
Arrive Athens Daily
12:35 r. m. and 9:15 p. m.
GEORGIA RAILROAD ;
Daily Except Sunday
Train 50 Leaves Athens 11:00 a.m.
Train 51 Arrives Athens 8:00 a.m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Arrives— —Depar
11:20 a. m. 7:35 a. m.
4:16 p. m. 1:056 p. m.
J. R. Morrell, District
PAGE FIVE