Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
. CONVICTION REVERSED
" ATILANTA — (#) — The Georgla
court of appeals reversed a riot
‘eonviction against H, C. Moore, of
Columbus, Tuesday.
Moore was charged with “wear
ing masks” and “burning a fiery
eross” in front of the home of Will
and Clara Mae Frazier in Colum
bus, May 23, 1935, by Solicitor
General B, 1. Chappell, of Colum
bus city court,
He was (ried separalely from
Timothy IFaulk and Sam Carr, who
were also charged with the offense.
The court of appeals based its
reversal of the conviction errors
in the charge of Judge G, Y. Tigner
of city court, who sentenced Moore
to six months in jail or a SSOO fine
and an additional sgix months on
the chain gang.
‘Does Bladder lrritation
Wake You Up?
It's not normal. It's nautre’s
warning “Danger Ahead,” Make
this 25c¢ test. Use buchu leaves,
juniper oil, and & other drugs made
into little green tablets, to flush
out excess acids and Impurltk*s.
Fixcess acids can cause irritation
resulting in getting up nights,
seanty flow, frequent desire, burn
ing, backache, and leg pains. Just
say Bukets to your druggist. In
four days if not pleased yoypr 256
will be refunded, Citizens Phar
macy.— (Advertisement.)
R oscecioissinsamesmmigsmrbesions ity ooyt oot
-
~ Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RAILWAY
~Arrival and Departure of Trains
i Athens, Georgia.
Leave for Richmond, Washington,
New York and East—
-1200 a. m. |
#:66 p. m.—Alr Conditipned.
9:32 p. m.—Air Conditloned. ‘
Leave for Elberton, Greenwood, |
Monroe, N. C. (Lacal)— |
10:50 a, m. ‘
Leave for Winder, Lawrenceville |
Atlanta (Local)-— !
4:60 p. m,
Leave for Atlanta, South and West
4:16 a. m.
6:38 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
2:27 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
GAINESVILLE-MIDLAND
Leave Athens
No. 2 for Gainesville— 7:46 a.m.
No. 12 for Gainesville—lo:46 a.m.
Arrive Athens
No. 11 from Gainesville 10:00 a.m.
No. 1 from Gainesville 6:16 a.m.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
. 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 p. m. and 9:16 p. m.
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Daily Except Sunday
Train K 0 Leaves Athens 9:30 a.m.
Train 61 Arrives Athens 8:00 am
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Arrives— —Departs
41:20 2, m. 7:85 a. m.
L 5 BVIO P -m. 1:06 p. m.
J. R. MORRELL
District - Passenger Agent
Pelephone Bi.
Calotabs Help Nature
To Throw Off a Cold
Millions have found in Calotabs a
Mmost valuable aid in the treatment
of colds. They take one or two tab
lets the first night and repeat the
third or fourth night if needed.
How o« do Calotabs help Nature
throw off a cold? First, Calotabs are
one of the most thorough and de
pendable of all intestinal eliminants,
thus cleansing the intestinal tract of ‘
the germe.laden mucus and toxines,
o ™,
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s 2\ S iw? S m&\\\fi A flick of afinger...
3 R ) 833 A R 3 B oot LSRR
1 e MR\ A ' % | Atouch of a toe...
R , TO SHIFT!
e : ‘ Mo i § TOSTOP! TO GO!
; k ::i:, Bif’ X B 3 .
% 7 HupsoN AND TERRAPLANE dealers {
everywhere invite you to try the o
3 magically easy new way to drive with s
T \\\ Hudson’s new Selective Automatic : ‘
¥ i Shift. No need t«;{)ull a gear lever or ;
B | push a clutch pedal ... yet nothing @
= | new to learn. ; s
See VYV S llg 5 W .
m“mifi | JlT‘j A s \’%Q
LU e 5 L e
TODAY || & W
UDSON Me'cAßan 5\ TERRAPLANE Wo.!CAR orm
MODERATE PRICE fiyp I, LOW PRIGE FIELD
B e | e T RMO v S ———
e
. .
W. G. Sailers e
¢ e HILL-HOLD
. (An optional extra on all models)
Hudson and Terraplane Sales and Service Keeps your car from roM
ing backwards when stop-
Phone 1956 140 E. Washington Strect ped on up-grades.
v e e e s
[ Here’s Your Last
-
~ Chance te Win
I .
!
’ Theater Tickets
; I
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e .{ i |
g ‘,/";' |
e — 2k ,‘4? 5 ?
2 4 ; |
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& 4 ,
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BT e et}
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Here's your last chance to get|
in on the Banner-Herald mid-ye: v
“College Holiday Exams” AIIII|[
your last chance at the six tickets
offered by the Banner-Herald unl:
the Palace Theater for Atheng |
high-ranking “scholars
You don't have to be a college |
man to get a high mark in thi
literature quiz, arvanged son the |
Banner-Herald by Gracie Allen, |
one of the funsters appearing iwe
Paramount’s musical film of co-|
ed capers, “College Holiday,” |
which opens Thursday at the
Palace Theater. All you need is
en ear for gags! Your job is to|
answer the Exam questions below |
in as funny a manner as you can
using not more than 256 words so
every answer. :
The Banner-ferald reader who
gets the highest mark, in the
opinfon of the judges is to receive |
a prize of six tickets to “College |
Holidays" will go to rnnrwn;;unp,‘i
Mail or bring your answers to the|
“Dean of Gags” care of the l'-:m-I
ner-Herald. Here's the quiz k
1. Name three famous Greek!
plays, not including the “flying|
wedges, |
2. Who wrote “Pippa Passes”?|
What did North bid? South? ‘
++3. How much was Ode to the |
Nightingale?
4. Which makes the better door-|
steps, “Anthony Adverse” or!
“Gone With the Wind?” |
.5, In Longfellow's time what
were Wordsworth? |
I FIELDS IS DEFENDANT
HOLLYWOOD — (#) — W. C.‘
'Fteldn. the film comedian who has
been convalescing from pneumonia
wag defendant Tuesday in a suit
for $12,000 fees, filed by the phy
sjgian who attended him during the
eritical illness last June,
Asserting no payment had been
'mn‘de by Fields for his services,
Dr. Jesse Citron said he had “la
bored unceasingly for 26 days and
nights without interruption” while
the actor was confined to a River
side, Calif.,, hospital,
Second, Calotabs are diuretic to the
kidneys, promoting the elimination
of cold poisons from the blood. Thus
Calotabs serve the double purpose of
a Purgatlve and diuretic, both of
ch are needed in the treatment
of colds. .
Calotabs are quite economical;
only twenty-five cents for the famig
package, ten cents for the tri
package, (Adv)
Movies of Farmi ‘
0 f Farming
Practices Are to
ractices Are to Be
|
Shown Here Monday
A whole carload of good fa,rm-l
ing practices, shown in the form
of moving pictures, photo displays, |
model farms and various other ex
hibits will be seen by Ceorgia far
mers in 14 stops the car will make
in the state hetween January 18
and IFebruary 12.
The exhibits are being arranged
by the Soil Conservation Sm‘\'i(-e‘
and the State Agricultural Exten
gion Service, cooperating with Ihci
Seaboard Air Line Railway, Wal-!
ter Brown, acting director of the|
Agricultural ‘xtension Sm‘\'iva,!
said here today. The exhibit car
will tour four Southeastern states,
The first stop in Georgia will be
made at the passenger depot in
Athens on Monday, January 18,
from 8:30 a. m. 0930 .p. m, ‘
Other stops in Georgia will be
made at freight stations and willl
include: l
Winder, January 18, 8:30 z, m.|
bo.o-p. m,. 5
Lawrenceville, January 20, 8230 l
a.. m. to 3:50.p. ms !
Dallas, January 21, 8:30 a. m.
ot b p. 18, l
Cedartown, January 22, 8:30 a.
m: 106 8.. m, '
Comer, January 256, 8:30 a, m, to
1 p. W, i
Elberton, January 25, 2:30 p .m]
to 5 p.m, and January 26, 8:30
;M. 10 Z Pp. M.
Cordele, February 6, 8:30 a m.
o 0 D, m,
Leslie, ¥February 6, 10:30 a. m.
o b p,-m. l
Americus, February 8. 10:30 a.
M, 108 5. 9. '
Richland, ebruary 9, 8:30 .‘I.l
my st 6 I om, |
Cuthbert, February 10,° 8:30 a.
m, 108 P .
Lumpkin, Fehruary 12, 8:30 a.
n; to-12:01 9, m. l
Omaha, February 12, 8:36 a. m, |
D 3 B, M.
A free sound motign picture will
be shown at each stop, the time
and place to be announced locally.
An automatic slide projector show
ing ghservation methodg will hfl‘
in continwous operation in the
car. Woodland management, wild
life, livestock and other oxhlhitsl
will be shown. A’ free soil test will‘
be given farmers who bring sam
ples of their soil, |
BATHTUB SLAYING |
OF WOMAN SOLVED‘
wir——
(Continued From Page ()ne) |
‘alsn a negro, also were question
ted,
l Johnson anfl Major Greene were
employed at the Jackson Heights
‘Ha('helurs’ club overlooking the
Case apartment from an adjacent
wing in the same building.
| Greene’s arrvest came a few hours
after the body of the dttractive
' housewife had heen faken to Lan
‘| caster, Pa., for burial in the city
where she wag married November
| 23, 1935. Funeral services are to
| be held there tomorrow,
] The grief stricken husband, her
parents, Mr., and Mrs. William J.
Robinson, and Mre. Douglas Wii
liams, of Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
|:1 sister of Case, aceompanied the
body.
Mrs. Case waged a fierce battle
with her assailant in the tiny
kitchen of her apartment before
he strangled and crushed her skull
lwlth a hammer,
The intruder fled after dumping
her body into the bathtub which
he covered with a gheet, stopping
the train and turning on the water
With him, police said, he took a
blue suit belonging to Case and a
shirt which, police said, Greene
| was wearing at the time of his ar
lrest. ‘
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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Last caress of a tangled romance which ended in death is given by
Mrs. Helen Wills Love, 31, in this farewell over the body of her
husband, Harry Love, 46, whom she killed as he entertained his
mother at a New Year eve dinner in Santa Monica, Calif. Mrs.
Love, a secret bride since last March, said she killed her husband,
wealthy stock broker, because his love for sis mother was ruining
their marriage. A coroner’s jury recommended she be held for trial.
Coco-Cola Vice-President Speaks
To Student Groups At University
Harrison Jones Delivers
Two Interesting Address
es Here Tuesday
By RALPH RICE
- “]. want you to make a success
of whatever you go into but more
than that [ want ypou to make a
success of your lives” was the ad
| vice Harrison Jones, executive
| vice-president of the Coca-Cola
company, gave to thembers of the
irreshmen class of the University
!of Georgia in an address at. the
’Univorsily chapel Tuesday morn
!ing at 138, -
| This address by Mr. Jones, a
|grad_ua.te of the University and a
former president of the University
of Georgia Alumni Association was
the firgst of two made to students
of the University .\-’esterday.\'xAt
12:30, immediately after speaking
’Io the freshmen he spoke to an
| assembled audience composed of
| commerce and law students in the
auditorium of the Commerce-Jour
nalism building.
In answer to the question, “What
! is the successful life?” the Coca-
I(‘,ula executive told the freshmen
Ithat happiness and contentment
| are the prime objectives of the
! successful life, 4
} “To make u full life develop aN
sides of your personality. Don't
‘nogloct the paysical and social as
i bects. Live a balanced life.”
| In comparing his generation with
that of the freshman’'s, Mr. Jones
said that the “git” era, motivated
I by greed and selfishness, was gone.
lHis challenge to the present gen
eration was to supply those things
Ilhut his own generation had been
| deficient. He designated those de-
Ificiences as aesthetic in (‘hm"zic--j
ter. I
' “Don’'t duck life nor chase it,}
but live it as a series of flag-,
stone in yalk. One of these flag-l
'stones is college. Make your €du- |
I(‘:Ltion prepare you for life, But
’dnn’t depend on a college dem'eel
as the key to the door of a joh.
~ Mr. Jones was introduced to the
freshmun audience by Walte:
Wise, vresident of th estudent Y.
M. C. A, E. L. Secrest director of
the Voluntary Religious Associa
tion presided.
BUSINESS AND LAW ‘
By Nell Wlnship '
Harrison Jones, executive vicel
president of Coco-Cola company,
addressed a group composed aof!
students from the Commerce and|
Law Schools in the Commerce-!
& W ONEoithehqt '
S N known medical |
Baale S men in the United l
States was Dr. R, |
Ros V. Pierce of Bui- |
¥ falo, New York, |
e who was born on ‘
e 3 farmin Pa. He
o noted daily in his
medical career I
that many of his prescriptions prepared from
roots, barks, and herbs, such as his “Favorite
Prescription,” produced astonishing resuits.
He early founded a Clinic and Hospital in
Buffalo, N. Y. Advice by letter is free. l
For voung girls growing into womanhood,
for women in middle life going through the
“‘change,” or those who suffer from backache, !
' headache, nervousness and discomforts asso- |
ciated with functional _disturbances, Dr.)
Pierce's Favorite Prescription is just the vege
table tonic needed. It stimulates the appetite.;
New size, tabs. 50c., liquid SI.OO and §1.35. |
5656
LIQUID — TABLETS — SALVE — NOSE DROPS
USE AS A
PREVENTION
Place 666 Salve or 666 -Nose Drops in Nostrils
night and morning and take 666 Liquid or 666
Tablets evéry morning
}Journalism auditorium Tuesday
I morning. In an effort to show the
.close relation between business and
!law, Mr. Jones entitled his speech,
|“Siamese Twins.”
‘““The time has come when busl-i
ness ig a twin, when law is a twin,
and the man who is to be suc
cessful will make these twins Sia
' mese twins. Business can not
Isucnoed without law, and law can
- not exist without business,” de-
Iclared Mr. Jones. l
l The speaker pointed out how our|
wants and the process by which;
| they are supplied have become ex-'
.ceedingly complicated. “The needs|
| of business are the same but fill-
I ing them has grown complex, Busi
iness today includes a necessary
knowledge of practically every walk
of life, One can’t know enough.”
. Cites Example
As an example Mr. Jones show
ed how the many ramifications of
Coco-Cola production require a,
complete knowledge of world geo-
Igraphy. political situations, andl
economic changes which have to
Ibe anticipated ag well as under
stood.
i ““The immense growth in law is
an outcome of the aitversity of
business,” explainea Mr. Jones, He;
called attention to the fact that
formerly there were only two main
divisions of the law: lawyers and
criminal lawyers. Now there are;
lspecialized lawyers for every field..
' Business with all its ramifications,
lin order that it might be controlled
and might be served, has forced
| this on the law. |
“The law and business is so in
terwoven that every hour of every
day business has to go to its law
vers,” stated the speaker,
Mrzr. Jones complered his address
by advocating that a combined
course of law and business be given
in colleges.
“I hope to see someday law and
businesg given as a combined
course. There is no need for a
man to try to be a lawyer and
business man at the tame time, but
each in his field should know
something of the other.”
Pictures of Rose and
Sugar Bowl Games Now
Being Shown at Georgia
Scenes from the Sugar Bowl
ang the Rose Bowl football games
are showing at the Georgia the
ater today and - tomorrow, it was
anounced this morning by E. P.
McCoy, manager. Santa Clara de
feated L. S. U. in the Sugar Bowl
and Pittsburgh won over Wash=
ington in the Rose Bowl,
S e s
Card of Thanks
We wish to thank and show our
appreciation to the many - friends,
Dr. J. C. Holliday, and the nurses
of the General Hospital who show-!
ed their kindness and sympathy
during the illness and death of our‘
wife and mother, Mrs. Susie Stick
land. 3 l
‘May God’s richest blessings rest
upon each and everyone.
Signed:
Husband: Mr. W. H. Strickland,
Daughters: Hattie Frances,
and Curtis |
Mother: Mrs. Hattie McCarty. |
' INNEW YORK
By GEORGE ROSS
NEW YORK—The husiest ben
efactors in this town are the sub
way folk who run the underground
Lost and Found Department, for
New Yorkers are notoriously but
ter-fingered in rapid transit,
One of the strangest assortments
of sundry articles is to be found
in the Lost and Found storerooms
of the IRT line ang the ‘attend
ants up there say that the situa
tion is not improving. New York
ers continue to lose the darndest
things on expresses and locals.
Umbrellas, they repent, remain
the most misplaced articles while
gloves and eye-glases rup a close
second. Bats, birds and dogs,
caged in baskets, are being left
on subway trains in greater num
bers than ever before and it is
worrying the Lost and Found boys
since they have to care for them.
The animals are fed at the 1.. and
F. office for a week or so and
then forwarded to the ASPCA if
fl‘he claimant doesn’'t show up.
Cargoes of white mice have been
discovered recently in trains by
startled conductors.
Popular magazines are often
left in subwayd by people who
drop them thei'e deliberately.
Guards and motormen turn them
in, however, on the bare chance
that a passenger would like to
finish reading the serial.
Absent Minced-—Students
Sometimes the attendants strike
up an acquaintance with frantie
subway riders who have come to
claim a valuable articie and be
comea their lifelong friends.” A
cigar manufacturer in firooklyn
forwards samples of his produet
each Christmas to everybody in
the T.ost ang Found office because
the Department once turned back
to him something he treasured
sentimentally. It was a chow
dog. The attendants also get
many New Year's greetings each
season from satisfied customers.
Once a fellow left a briefcase
in the subway, discovered his loss
immediately and taxieq up to the
Lost and Found in a hurry. After
waiting twenty minutes, biting
his nails and paeing the corridor,
the miksing artid> was brought
in by a conductor. So the happy
man insisted upon taking the staff
out to dinner where they dis
covered that he was an insurance
salesman. Before the last ccgnac
‘disappeared down their gullets,
‘he had sold one of them a policy.
I That rumor about absent-mind
led college professors, the L. & F.
‘boys vow, 18 a myth and nothing
| more. They can', remember when
' a pedagogue last left a briefcase
'containing examinapion papers,
treatises and such in the subway.
On the contrary, they have .daily
traffic with college and high
school students who leave text
books behind.
They Eat—and Have Fun
No lack of social life wracks
Manhattan’s illuminati, nor of
fraternal comaraderie is there any
dearth. Now going at full blast
are the Cheese Club which toasts
guests of honor, currently in the
headlines, at bi-weekly luncheons.
Recently, Harry Richman and
Dick Merrill after their two-way
hop across the ocean, Dr. Dafoe,
Lou Little and Coach Pim Crow
ley, were honored with speeches
and a mid-day meal. The Dutch
Treat club, the late Karl Kitch
en's pet society, s#ill meets fre
quently for a luncheon tete-a-tete
and impromptu entertainment by
Broadway notables.
PNP W IR, ¢ RW, ST
The Banshees, a club formed by
Fourth Estaters, gathers for fre
quent kaffee-klatsches and the A.
'M. P. A., composeq of the boys
in the picture company home of
|fices, honors movie stars on junk
ets to Manhattan. The Circus
Saints and Sinners get together in
ithe canvas topped room above
Sardi's to induct new members
who have at one time or another,
bit the sawdust and the Hoycle
Club, an intimate circle of theatri
| cal set and literati, gathers often
Ifor all night-poker sessions. Rus
|sell Crouse, George S. Kaufman
¥. P. A. and Heywood Broun are
charter members. The Hoyle Club
is a successor, more or less, to the
late Thanatopsis and Insiae
Straight Club which was organ
ized for and by the devotees of
%spades. hearts, clubs and dia
monds,
’ Valet Critical
Vincente Minnelli, the young
designer of handsome musical
lshows. has another personal tri
‘umph in ‘The Show Is Oon.”
iAlong with other features of this
new Broadway spectacle, much
‘of the applause went to Minnelli's
striking costumes and settings.
’Jovially, Minnelli credits his Jap
anese butler with much of the
Iwork. A soft - slippered, slant
’eyed servitor, Minnelli's Japanese
!man is also his best friend and
severest critic. When, at such
times thut he doesn’t think much
of the sketch on his employer’s
'drawing board, he is quick to say
iso. Minnelll takes his valet's
| word for it. I
1F uneral Services
. For Mrs. Aaron to
" Be Held Tomorrow
i Funeral serviceg for Mrs, Olli¢
Aaron will be held Thursday morn
’ing'at 11 oclock from Bernstein’s
| chapel, with the Rev. Newton Saye
| officiating.
Mrs. Aaron, 52, died at her home
on Hoyt street Tueiday morning
at 9 o'clock after a 'short illness.
She was a native of Jackson coun
tv, but had made her home here
for the past 30 years.
Interment will be in Oconee Hill
cemetery, with Bernstein's Funeral
Home in charge,
Survivors include two sons, W.
M. and C. J. Aaron; a sister, Mrs.
Roy Robertg and one brother, Mon
11'00 Aaron, PR T
Y. N
"""v'}:':."l""’;f:/""' 0 "V‘\
. ey Ay m
IR VS
Y s ;
YARD oLo SR i
—-;: A REGULAR
e f,t; e
.; ”% MAD-CAP SELLING
%’;;,,s;\\"}/ ke OF 1200 YARDS of
AP DRESS
oo STy PRINTS
: 242 q‘/ . 3to 5 YARD LENGTHS
R B A - 3
STARTING 8:30 O’CLOCK!
————STREET FLOOR———-
See These In Our Windows Today!
REMEMBER ic Theso am
PENNEY'’S
“ATHENS' BUSIEST STORE” :
SHOP OUR WINDOWS AND SAVE!
LUCAS & JENKINS’
JANUARY JUBILEE
A SOLID MONTH OF HIT PICTURES!
LUCAS & JENKINS LAST
PALACE rws Today
THE YEAR’S ROMANTIC ADVENTURE!
i By TELINICK INTERNATIONAL
M{lt/fllfi g C/l(lt/t'.‘
DIETRICH - BOYER
IN TECHNICOLOR
Lucas & Jenkins’ January Jubilee Hit No. 3
M
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PE ALA c E Starting Thursday
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JOAN JOEL
BENNETT-MCCREA =
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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 133
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GLORIFIED BY
COLOR!
BREATH-TAKING IN ITS
BEAUTY!
“RAMONA”
WITH
LORETTA YOUNG
DON AMECHE
KENT TAYLOR
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