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THE BANNER, FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 8, 1918.
PAGE FIVE
EPronrcifsegit Physician
Discusses Calomel
Dr. William Brady in an article about
calomel in the Atlanta Constitution re
cently Baid:
“Calomel is a cathartic and a very
crude and superfluous one. It pro
duces no special effect rpoathe liver
er upon the secretion ol bile. It has
r.o more influence over b.liousner;
than any other active physic. It is
just the ancient standby, cheaper
than most other physics and retained
in use because old do^s seldom learn
new tricks.”
As a substitute for a poison like
calomel modern physicians prescribe
purely vegetable cathartics. Mar
tin’s Liver Medicine does all
good calomel does without produc
ing calomel’s injurious effects. Mar'
tin's Liver Medicine is a standard
It is between the United States and
Germany. The fallacy of a common
ground, a common ideal is only too
apparent.
Yet there are many who for want
of a moments’ thought do not realize
that the wars and quarrels between
thn the United States and England never
were at any time, not even during the
TO MEET WITH LODGES OF THIS CITY
On next Wednesday, February 13th,
Revolution was a misunderstanding The officers of the division organ
on both sides, a misconception due ization are: C. 0. Parsons. D. [). G. M.,
very largely to conscious mlsrepresen- Watkinsvllle, Ga.; Jake Joel. V. D.
tatlon at the time. The number and G. M., Athens, Ga.; Harold T. Tuck,
Revolution, as serious, as real as the the Odd Fellows of the fourteenth
proprietary preparation for constipa- j great bulk of differences and antipa- divison of the state, will gather in
tion, s:ck headache and other stom- , thi e s between European nations. His- s,hit-annual session with the m:m-
“hie as to"ingredients, pleasan? torlnns !,ave bef ‘» P ret, - V we » “h'reed hers of Williams Lodge. No. 13. and
taste, mill ill action and fully guar- tor a generation that Hie American Ulenn Hodge, No. 75, in this city,
ar.teed. If not satisfied with it, take — - •
the empty bottle to your druggist
and get your 50c back.
Try a dose or so of Martin’s Liver
Medicine when you feel that you
need a liver regulator or a dose of character of the patriots was not un- secretary-treasurer, Athens, Ga.; eoin-
physic. AM good druggists sell Martin s (| erstoo d j n England, their purpose nflttee on entertainment, J. A. Mea-
iver ccicme. | misrepresented, their determination lor, A. M. Center, W. A. E. Church.
0»U L. ¥1 D P.l O C—_ A /*_ little realized, by George III and Lord Jake Joel, Joe Hemeriek, J. T. Gali-
OOlU Dy 11. K. raimer & dons, rVtnenS, lia. North in particular. Had the Graftons her.
————————— — -—.— — |and the Townsends known the trutli Program—Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1918,
i i i, the Revolution never would have tak- 1:30 P. M., Eastern Time.
en place. The War of 1812 was again .Meeting called to ord r by noble
a misunderstanding, a clash of minor grand Williams Lodge, No. 15.
interests, the result in the main of Opening' ode, "Brethren of Our
resentment in England and America Friendly Order."
due to the first great misunderstand- Invocation, Rev. W. M. Save,
tng in the Revolution Itself. If the Address of Welcome, Hon. J. H.
one had not occurred, the other scarce- ( Oozler, Past Grand Master of Geor-
ly could have happened. gia.
Today every issue raised at that' Response. Hon. R W. Haynle.
time is dead. Every difference which ’ Mt ’ e,,n E turned over to D. D. G. M.
for executive session.
Registration of Members.
Roll Call Hodges.
Committees—Cre-
MEM OF WAR CAUSES
many people in the United States
wno realize that there are no Inde
pendent states now in existence In
Europe or elsewhere, whatever their
attitude toward each other at present,
who have not had ill Hie past very real
grievances and antipathies against all elther country thought existed lias cer-
been ta ' n ' y disappeared. Every interest
which seemed at the time to clash no
(By Roland G. Usher.)
\ Have you ever heard anyone say
that he was a "good American" but
"a poor Englishman"? Did you realize
that that utterance was consciously or
unconsciously, for the most part let us
hope unconsciously, the result of a
definite propaganda created, nourish-j their neighbors. There have
ed, and paid for by agents and money times when Belgium was as much, , Annolntment of . omminees—v .e-
that came from Berlin any time in the afraid,of England as she was later of onger exists and ,here F e very few ri ,, , New Territory Widows and
last 30 years? Today we are the com- France and as she is now Germany. 8tates in Kur °P e (oday whlch have Ornh^ns State of he Order Appeals
rades in arms of Great Brtain and Italy has had old scores against not more real S rievances against their ^ onlvancts. Grand Lodge Legis*
Prance. Nothing is so imperative for Prance, Austria, Germany, and Eng- ne tebbors and friends and allies than
s cretary, Gainesville, Ga.
Questions and Answers.
New Business.
Election of Officers.
Unfinished Business.
Address, Hon. J. E. Bodenhamer,
g»and master I. O. O. P. of Georgia,
Ceeatur, Ga.
Announcements.
Grand Ix)dg2 Degree conferred.
Adjournment to 8 p. m., eastern
time.
Wednesday, Feb. 13th, 1918, 8 p. m.,
Eastern Time.
Meeting called to order by C. C.
Parsons, D. D. G. M
Opening Ode.
Subordinate Lodge Degree Contest.
Short Addresses.
Report of Committee on Degree
Work.
Closing Ode, “Brothers, We Thank
You All.”
Adjournment.
Benediction.
grow ! . __
fend Silky. All colored
people con hav- nice. long
straight hair by using
Exelento
It is a hair grower, removea dandruff and
stopa falling hair a( once. Every package
guaranteed. Accept no faklO)reparation.
Ask for Exelento. Price 25c on receipt
of stamps or coin.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
Write Per Particulars
EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY
Stop For a Day Means
Cessation Six Months
the successful prosecution of the war land. One has merely to think of the
those which we fancied we had against
latton, State Haws. Other Branches
of the Order, Resolutions, Hodges not
Reading Minutes of I-ast Meeting.
Report of Credential Committee.
Report of Hedges and comments
thereon.
Report of Committees.
Exemplifications of Unwritten
Work. Hon. T. H. Robertson, grand
as co-operation, harmony, and an ab] relations of England and Scotland no E ’’ lg ' and a " ea ‘ury and a half ago. So , {epresented ’ |ast Sfsslo ’ n> Kin ance,
solute unity of aim, an absolute trust , longer ago than the fifteenth and six- 8 gllt a record of discord, so extreme- piace Meeting,
each in the other. Scarcely anythingj teentli centuries to realize how very ^ alender a list of realities behind it
Is therefore more to the German pur-'great antipathies have been between [ s a * mo8t unparalleled in history. No
pose than the preservation and de-' nations whose co-operation and re- hngiisnman, indeed, w-islies to undo
velopment of the old antipathies and spect for one another Ir now taken as ** le American Revolution and the
feelings, based necessarily on past Is- a truism. Indeed Hie great majority recognition of Its salutary lesson, of
sues a century or a century and a half of wars have resulted in the past from tbe gravity of the blunder In policy
old, long since forgotten and never-causes which have not been permanent w ' dcb they had committed, was hearty
, very real; past errors and blunders j and which have been replaced by the and very general at the time and ahso-
upon most of which the best English strongest ties of confidence. What ' ute *Y universal today. The British
and American historians have been I countries today are bound together agree tbat V tbe Positions had been
pretty thoroughly agreed for the last more closely than England and Scot- reversed and we had acted as they
generation were errors of mtsunder- land; than England, Belgium, and d| d they would certainly have done
standing and not the result of real France; than Germany and Austria ncd ^ esa i ban we did- they are
antipathies. Sometimes this prop-'seem to be? Yet within a generation a l BO agreed that It was nevertheless
there were difficulties between Erfg- deplorable that we should have parted
land and France so serious as almost w *th had feeling, which was on the
certain to cause war, while Austria w hole not warranted by the facts, and
and Germany were actually at wnr In * ba t children should have been taught
1R6G over as fundamental an issue as 1* America and England that a strong
two countries can possibly fight about, permanent divergence of Interests ex
Time, indeed, is » great clarifier, a leted between tile United States and
great explainer of misunderstandings Great Britain,
and wars ,are great periods of crisis Take, tor Instance, the fact- that
in which realities stand forth naked France holds a large part of the north
take v your, thinking from Berlin? Do'and unabashed, and when Hie false African coast between Gibraltar and
you like to have It delivered to you'and the sham disappear into the Egypt. It.Ji not to the permanent fn ;
wrapped up In a package and paid tenuous misty background of oblivion, trest of England to have France lie
(By Associated Press.) N
Philadelphia, Feb. 7—Dr. H. A.
Garfield's order as fuel administrator,
closing certain industries brought to
public attention the fact that vine
gar has long been a staple industry
Ir. Philadelphia and when Its repre
sentatives appeared before the local
fuel administrator to claim exempt
ion from the closing order the state
ment was made that one factory has
been in continuous operation, night
and day and Sundays, for fifty-two
rs and another for more than
forty years.
The necessity for tilts almost p:-r-
petual motion arises from the face
that vlnega- Is made by placing al
cohol In tanks lined and packed with
beechwood shavings. The minute the
generating process Is halted the shav
ings dry up or are burned out and
are useless.
“There are about COO bushels of
beechwood shavlng3 in a vat and we
have two hundred vats,” said a large
manufacturer. "Should we stop for a
day It would mean the closing of the
plant for at least six months."
Vlnegat Is a necessity in the manu
facture of explosives and much of the
output at present is used for that
purpose.
MANY SUB-STATION
OFFICES TO BE CLOSED
(By Associated Press.)
London, Feb. 7.—The post office au
thorities have decided to dost •
large number of sub-station postotD-
ces as a measure of economy. The
scheme will take effect gradually, so
as to cause as little inconvenience ss
possible to the public.
Uganda is pretty direct . as in Its
espousal of the Irish home-rale move
ment, the denunciation of the sins of
the English against Ireland. At other
times It attempts to maintain the
racial sentiments bf the non-English
speaking elements of our population
with the general Idea, better anything
than English.
In all seriousness, do you wish to
J
for? Have you the faintest notion
that that was where a great many
Ideas came from which you embraced
simply because you had heard them
or read them a great many times with
out iu the least having investigated
their origin or basts?
Then the real interests of nations ap- tween her and the Suez Canal, occu
pear and their real friends rally to the pying so strong a position on the road
cause. Then the wolves in sheeps’ to India, nor Is it to the advantage of
clothing are revealed and the sham France to have England in Egypt
friendships are stripped of their falsi- The two .countries nearly came
ty. So it is between Britain and the blows over this situation in 1898. On
United States. The Identity of our the other hand, the fundamental in
There are apparently not a great alms and interests Is now clear.
SATURDAY CONCERT
for
BELGIAN BABIES
Saturday 9th, 8:30 P. M.
Seney Stovall Chapel Lucy Cobb
ATHENS must respond to the appeal of Belgium
for help—not only for Charity’s sake, but for Hu
manity’s.
What wilt the poor little babies do without the nec
essary food?
DIE from the worst death: STARVATION!
PEOPLE OF ATHENS, help them to live. It will
cost you ONE DOLLAR; you will not miss it/ but
the little mouths that it will help feed, will reap the
profit of your charitable deed and later on BEL
GIUM, GLORIOUS BELGIUM will remember for
ever that thousands of her children owe their life to
the generosity of the American people.
Ticket Sale
Costa's—Palmer’s—Thornton’s
$1.00
School Children 50 Cents
So treats of both countries In defense
— against Hie German military machine
at home are so absolutely Identical
that their differences in Africa Hlnk
into insignificance in comparison.
' Yet the divergence in interests he
tween America and England at the
time of the War of 1812 was Infinitely
less vital than the question of Egypt
is today for botli Britain and France,
i There have been in quite recent
years strong differences of opinion be
tween the English and the British self
governing colonies upon the rights of
Hindus emigrating to any pnrt of the
Uritisli Empire, upon gustoms duties,
and a variety of topics; on the gener
al issue und solidarity of the Empire
there Is not and never has been any
doubt witnln 50 years, outside of a few
cranks in Germany; and yet In both
of these Instances the differences are
mueh more real, much more difficult
to solve by argument or reason, more
impossible to explain away by any
subtleties, than the differences which
led to the American Revolution.
No one if contending that there
were not differences, that there was
not justification for what the Ameri
cans thought and for what English
men did. The contention which is cor
rect Is that there are few nations in
hlBtory who have ever existed for as
many years with as few discords and
with as litUe reality behind their anti-
pathles ns there have been behind
those of Great Britain and the United
States.
The reallxation of this fact Is one of
the most important things in the prose
cution of the war; the spread of thlB
Idea throughout the community broad
cast Is one of the duties that every
man and woman should take upon
Uthmselvef <n order that thin subtle
and Insidious propaganda, so long and
so well planted by German agents
through the freedom of the press and
liberty of speech In this country, may
be counteracted In time and fall of
its deadly purpose. If any man ap
proaches you who wishes to make you
believe that there Is something un-
American about sympathy for Great
Britain or co operation with her, look
narrowly to his antecedents.
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