Newspaper Page Text
t ■;
FA8E TOUR
THE BANNER-HERALD
. ATHENS. GA.
-H : —
’ublishcd Every Evening During the Week Except Saturday and <
Sunday Morning by The Athena Publishing Company, Athena, Ga.
EARL B. BRASWELL Publisher and General Manager
CHARLES E. MARTIN - Managing Editor
Entered at the Athens Postof/icc as Second Class Mail Matter under
the Act of Congress March 8, 1879.'
DAILY 8ERM0NETTE
Member of the Andit Bureau.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
; ; .The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub-
• lication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited
■ lit tins paper, and also the local news published therein. All rights of
rgpublication of special dispatches are also reserved..
Andrew C. Erwin,
• ■ President.
Bowdre Phinizy,
Secretary and Treasurer,
H. J. Rowe,
Vice President.
-Address all Business Communications direct to the Athens Publish
ing Company, not to individuals. News articles intended tor publica
tion should be addressed to The Banner-Herald.
YOUR HEALTH
A fifth of the Ciass 1 men examined for the American army
during the World War were found physically unfit to perform
i any kind of military service either at home or abroad. This is
1 the most striking fact discovered by Surgeon General Merritte W.
1 Ireland, in his analysis of the examination of more than 4,000,000
' selective service registrants. One cut of every five,'physically unfit
even for nomc duly! If you are looking for the greatest national
.. peril, thecr it is. As long as an individual has his health, it
j doesn’t matter muc hwhat else hr.npens to him. The same is
true of nations. Our whole civilization depends on fhe national
health as its foundation.
Curiously enough, and contrary to what most of us would
expect, delects of the bones am! the organs of locomotion, which
, enable our bodies to move, ranked first among the causes of army
rejection. These defects constituted 17 out of each 100 rejections.
Diseases of the heart and blood vessels came second, with 15 per
cent of the total. Diseases of the eves ranked third. Then came
tuberculosis. In Wyoming only 13 per cent, of the “applicants”
| wore physically unfit. At the ether end of the lino was Rhode
i Island, with 42 per cent so physically defective that they were
J rejected. Rhode Island's bad showing, according to experts, was
; due to its being a factory state with a large part of its popuia-
, ticn drawn from abroad where oppression and overwork for gen-
J orations had undermined the health. Seems hard to believe, for
• the average immigrant looks a lot healthier than the highiy-
strung native American.
! Money-mad America thinks too much about its natural re-
! sources and industrial products, not enougii about our greatest
» product—the human being and his health. Foreign trade, factory
■* output, the products of forest a..l mine and even of the farm—all
\ these arc secondary to good health. Health should come forc-
j. most. In many ways the government can help, is helping. But
^Hersonal health is ninc-tenthd up to the individual. Get plenty of
jaholesomo food, sleep, fresh air and outd&or exercise, and, barring
the bad luck of incurring germ diseases, health will be fairly good
on the average. In particular, the auto driver should leck up his
car and go about on foot at lca,t one day a week. When health
is gone, the rest doesn’t count for much. Your body is ^ delicate
machine. Take care of it. *
in
SQMETHING FOR NOTHING
’ A scheme for getting rich quickly occurred to Rafael Con
soles, of Orizaba, Mfcxlco. Ho wrote polite and businesslike let
ters to American newspapers', ordering daily 50 daily and 75
Sunday copies to -be sent regularly. The fishing was good, for
Gonzales* promised to remit §100 Upon receipt of the first ship
ment of papers. The idea of building up big circulation in Mex
ico naturally -appealed to ambitious publishers. Maybe some of /
then wondered how many Mexicans cculd read at all, let alone
twid English print. The posloffice inspectors in Washington, D.
■ CT, have issued a fraud order against Gonzales, barring him from
the mails. But Gonzales apparently got what he was after, for
the official announcement from the inspectors says: "Senor Gon-
■ tales has-thus obtained large quantities of American -newspapers
for which he paid nothing and has doubtless realized no small
Vcvenuo through thoiv salo as wrapping paper. ’
Lately there has been a regular epidemic of frauds worked
Americans by swindlers in foreign countries using our mails.
Stjthe particular case of Gonzal-'.':, it occurs to you that a man of
his ingenuity was wasting his Uses on a waste paper swindle. The
same cleverness, applied to an honest and useful proposition,
would make him increasingly rich. The,criminal mind, however,
Mims to' have a peculiar warp that makes too getting ot wealth
Hi-crooked means teem the easiest way. Ou the law of averages,
it is cosier to gat rich honestly than dishonestly.
You can picture Gonzales, sitting around for months or even
years, rolling shuck cigarcts and running his resourceful brain
-high-speed until he figured out his scheme. It is almost astound
ing 1 ; the extent to which the human brain will resort to get some
thing for nothing. In other words, to “get by” without honest,
usetul endeavor. It is true of swindlers. And it is true of most
of us, especially the swindlers’ victims. Wasting so much time!
trying to get something for nothing) ia what keeps many people
poor. There's not enough time left for really productive effort.
Day-dreams unless embed within reasonable bounds, nave trie
same efiect as cldoroicrm.
on A
‘WItl
Crimes involving money arc decreasing, says F. W. Lafrcntz.
Ilea president of American Surety Co., waich bonds cashiers and
. others entrusted with funds. Lafrentz, reporting that less money
being ztclen, conveys the popular idea that tnere was a great
--epidemic of dishonesty during llic war boom. To some extent,
But the tuieves were stealing 50-cent dollars. Thefts in-
j—«»as»d because there was more money to be stoiem The ratio
iheft to stealabie dollars probably never showed any material
piase. In buying power; eimiu'i.us’ plunder uues iius v.uy ma
dly from year to year. A crook stealing a dollar now is get-
hg only half as muc has before the war. ., * ' \ b.-
The big stealing during the, war boom' ,.4f|s pot done by
^ beaded employes, many' of them underpaid,‘entrusted with other
fc people’s money. Profiteers, technically but' not morally within
the law, got the lion's sad re of plunder. A profiteer is any one
j* who docs not give lull value lor what he receivo*.* In this sense
:’L b»e wore a nation of profiteers, before hard times «fere sent to
ijj WMore us to common honesty. Crookedness increases with pros
it perity. You’d think it’d be the other way around- *
! ; ' . Uncle Sam reports that over a million children, 10 to 15 years
! old, were “gainfully employed’ in 1919. If We had that situation
S in a year of record prosperity, think what conditions must be
when the pinch of hard times or even normal business drives the
young into the ranks of child labor. A nation’s degree of civiliza-
« tion is measured by its child labor situation and by its treatment of
), women. Progress by inventicna is surface stuff, not basic, ex-
cept as it helps eliminate human slavery.
- — — ,
• The skull of a dinosaur, giant beast,ss ! d to have lived five
** million year* ago, is dug up by scientists of American Museum of
Natural History, Some of these prehistoric, mongers were as
£ large as a. small bungalow. They became >Aiacf byj tpiujrferinr fr
& into swamps from which they Oontd noj) Extricate IneuaemLI.
v Aesop could have written a good fable about this, applying it to
M human careers. The moral would be: Watch your step, every ■
minute. .
I The hoary head ia a crown
of glory, if it be found in the
wav of righteousness.—Prov.
j-16:31. . i
j * I think that to have known
! one good old man—one man,
who, through the chances and
I mischances o fa long life, has
i carried his heart in his hand,
like a palm branch, waving a!i
! discords into peace—helps our
! faith in God, in ourselves, and
I in each other more than many
sermons.—G. W. Curtis.
*■ igtem tim occur to you?
A Little ot -Everything And Not Much of Anything.
/ By HUGH ROWE
Berton Braley’s
Daily Poem
WELCOME HOME
(By BERTON BRALEV)
When you drop In at my home
town, ,
You'll find the maples droopins
down
Above the drowsy streets: and see
A place that’s as It used to be.
A quiet spit, far from tho hum
And roar of avenue and slum.
W.th peace upon it like u crown
When ycu drop In at my home
town
A half a dozen cars or mora
May group without the general
store
* The meeting held In Atlanta
this week for the purpose of or
ganizing and commencing a cam
paign for a bond lssyo of $75,000,-
000 for road construction brousht
forth much discussion pro and con.
It was clearly brought out that un
less some provision was made for
the support of higher educational
road purposes "would meet with the
Institutions that the bond Issue for
same f*te as that of last year.
"The people of Georgia are in
favor nf saddling a bonded debt
of $75,000,000 on the tax payers for
this 'specific purpose when It Is be
lieved that an Issue of $40,000,000
would he ample. Certainly a ma
jority of the legislature will
the better for having come In con
tact with. Inciting them to live un
dcr the influence which represents
all that is good and elevating for
the betterment of mankind to
which bis time and energies are
being devoted. Not only the mem
bers of his congregation, but the
entire citizenship profits from tl/e
work of this representative nf the
Almighty.
THAT—
The business men who does not
believe in advertising Is usually
the one who does not remain In
business long. No ciiiaess can
grow and prosper vital :t Judici
ous advertising. A business can
-ote to submit the bond issue to j be oreradvcrtlsed which some-
tho people of Georgia without first I times prove3 as deterlmental as
having Homo deflnlto plan through I tho business which has not been
which higher education can bo advertised sufficiently to let the
public know the. merits of the
wares. Wise advertisers will use
space regularly In their newspa-
supported. One of tbe strongest
arguments presented to tho meet
ing camo from Senator Elders, of
Tatnall county, favorlns liberal J ))c r, that is on specific days of the
appropriations for tho Universityj week educating the reading public
of Georgia and for Georgia Tech. t 0 look for their advertisement.
Senator Elders has always been a [and in fact tjm constant advertls-
strong advocate of the support of ,. r makes friends with the public
■he higher educational institutions py having something for him every
and by hi<k voice anil his vote he j day in the way of prices and de-
hno worked uuceaslnly to bring i aeription of the goods being offer-
nbout a radical change in the sys- | C( ). it is a gooi’. way to make ac-
tem of paltry appropriations for jquaintances and friends with the
About tho s'.r.vo inside you'll find the university ntul it branches. In public by greeting them dally with
The owners leisurely Inclined part. Senator Elders said: .your Invitation ta visit your pine*
To sit and spit nr.d t y to fix "Then. I say here and now the 0 f business qnd by offering them
The rights and wrongs of p;litics. University of Georgia and the som ethlrtg for tfcetr money in re-
And mutters multifarious Ceorgla School of Technology , u „i.
Which It may pleas: them lo dis | out to have and must have from j Speaking of non-advertisers, or
CU8 lour people $10 for every $1 we (he "now and then” advertiser
are now giving them, and we want hero Is a little jingle which should
The churches and the villago the doors of our country school ,i r |ve home to him the mistake ho
gC hool. - I houses opened, not one. two or |g nin klng and the Injustice he Is
The village green, ibs swimming ftbreo months In the yonr, but for ,i 0 | nc; ( 0 himself and his business.
pooh ’ | i. full term r.nd I want brick school appeared in a Texas newspaper
You'll find them quite unaltered I houses In the woods and fa rlllttes :!m ] ( t ; t i s RO od enough for Texas
■till. ' ‘ *■'-"
coat lea* than $3,600. Col Holman
says he intends to make of this
property one of the most deslr-,, _
able and select residence sections j J PUT oTGmACH IN
of the city. Athens real estate Is' *
begining to look up and many In-,, nn
qulries are being made for build-!} ORDER AT ONCE
Th;y haven’t changed and never
will.
So, having gerseC :*no village way
And lingered for somo quiet days.
You’ll Bee why 1 do not/ go down
To visit at my own homo town.
A Puzzle A Day
A hoy bought a number r.f pieces
of candy for twelve cents. Had
he received two moro pieces, the
c^ndy would have cost cne cent
legs, per (loser, pieced, now many
pieces did he receive ior twelve
pieces did he reCe.ve ~fo • twelve
cents?
YESTERDAY’S ANSWER
t . . voeda and faSUtfeH _ __ ?
j,for leaching the country children. f n B00c i enough for Georgia nnl
[But gentlemen,'we can’t have free Athens: /
, school hooks, brick (schools in tho j t f linny ?
country, build up tno University »phr.t a man who thinks
♦he Tech ns they should be until j 8 a i )U8 | nC y H man
we write Georgia a tax system that will gut up in tho morning
will put ono billion dollars more of an advertised mattress,
values on our tax books and that shave with an advertised razor,
billion Is nn invisible one' which p Ut on advertised under
pays not a cent of taxes now. j wear,
Advertised hose, shirt, collar, tlo
There has been much said of
and shoes,
petitioning the. mayor and council Seat himself at the table and
to make Dougherty street a one- rr n t advertised breakfast food,
way street. The dangerous point advertised coffee or sub-
at the intersection of ^Prince stitutc.
avenue, Pulaski and Dougherty p u ^ on nn advertised hnt.
streets has aroused tho people to | an ad\^rtised cigar,
action. It is a near-death point q 0 down to his place of business
and many near-serious accidents j urn down advertising on tho
lave been narrowly averted unr- (j rou hcl that
Advertising doesn’t pay.”
Th? incomplete series of letters
shown above may be changed Ind’
the word “adapt” by adding tho
three straight marks shown Itclow*.
Thin? Ron-down?
Sure .Way to
Get Right Weight
IncrqaiaYour Re4-Blood.Cclli.That’*
thcSuro W»x! S. S. S. Builds Blood-
Cells; This Means Strength! -
Do Ton know why Insnrnnro. com
panion refuse to Insure n Emit man,
■non bscsuoo they are under <r«lubt!
Simply because to be uadcr weight
ing the past few weeks. An'-olJ-
ficer should bo kept stationed at
this point daily until trie public
has boenme acquainted with the
regulations of a one-way, a tract.
AH traffic coming from uptown dr
down Prince avenue should tuft: | .
Into Pulaski street and out >lti> i *
Hancock avenue, or. Waahlztgtop j
street a ad all traffic going, .uji- ;
town or out Princo avenue sho;.{U'. |
be required to turn Into, Lumpkin |
street, at the corner of Hancock j
avenue and thence Dougherty j An opportunity for medical men
street to Frfnce avenue. By, mak- | to become officers in the regular
Inc tlieso one-way streets conge*!- army is made posslblo by an an-
tlon will be avoided and possibly nouneeraont that Ins been made by
lives savqd to the commuaj,)'. ’ u,,. War. Department. •
Such an ordinance by tho mayor ; Rolatljgjto tljjj annoncemen*. tho
and council would not work n 4th ? £orpg commander” has issued
hardship on anyone and at tV: the following letter of lnstructfon:
snrno tlino it would give -protection Headquarters Fourth Corps Area,
to the public and save them from office of the Corps Area Com.
serious accidents and. no doubt,, Fort McPherson. Ga.
from death. ‘ i. Subject: Appointment In' the
It is worth considering, gentle- | Modtcal Corps of tho Regular
men. of the cify council and, the Army
sooner action ts taken tile greater q- 0 . Commanding Officers ef all
protection will you bo giving ly , p os t g , camps and Stations:
tho citizens of Athens. j A preliminary exambination of
i — 1 ncplicants for appointment In tho
The community is fortunate In >j ct n C al Corps of the Regular
having ns one of its clorgymen, Army w j]| j, c ld during the
Dr. S. E. Wasson, pastor of tho rerlo( | or j„ )y totli to 20th. 1923.
First Methodist church In this | n; . lua | VCi at n n stations in the
city. He Is an ablo and consecrat- corps Area where therp la
ed divine and a man whom all are ( si-faclcnt medicnl personnel' “
i ' constitute the examining board.
» - « I Arpiy Regulations 605-10. War
hnn - | Department, February 24. 1921, will
,, j govern. Eligibility will bo definite-
is a Prescription for ly rsccrtalncd.
Colds, Fever and La-! t»>« existing policy of the w.r
Grippe. It’s the
speedy* remeay wo know,
preventing Pneumonia. 1
—.(Advertisement 1
1
often prert* low flghtlng-power In tko
body. It often menus you ora minus
serve-pewsr, minus red-cells la yunt
Wood, minus bsolth. minus energy,
minus vluHty. It Is serious to b«
minus, but toe moment you Inrrcaw
th# number of your vc*l-bloo*l-rellH.
von bcffln to berome plu». Tbal'n why
0. a 8.. slnro 1820. b*» meant to tbon-
•anda of undiTwHjtht rorn and woman,
a plua in their atrrnjjtli. Hollow
rhooks fill out You ut»p liolns n cn-
tamtty-tookor. You inaplre ronflilrnco.
Yonr body fills to tte point .»f power,
yonr flesh boeomo* firmer, the anr
lines that eomo from thinner* dlsap-
pear. Yon look y.mncrr. firmer, hap
pier. and you feel It. too. nil over tout
body. Moro ro*»-blood-eolla! S. H. K
will build them. Ladles and contte-
men. a peaky, bonv faro doesn't nnk*
you look very .mportanj or pret
does Itr Take §. 8. jr_Tf?ont^na o:
lUffTeaiei
■MM
bottls
Fine!”
”! w.is pale ami thin,
hardly able to go,” says ,’lrs.
Bessie Bearden, ol Ctntral,
S.C. ” I would suffer, when
I stood on my feet, with
bcariug-down naijis in my
sides and itlie lower part J
my body. • I did r.ot rest well
& and didn’t want anytiiiug lo
eat. I felt misetabic. A
friend of min: told me of
, Department Is. tor tho time being,
most I that there shall be no reappoint
ment of former Regular Army Of
ficers under tho provisions of
Army Regulations 605-35.
Former officers of the Medical
D^nartmonJ. Regular Army, honor-
xhlT separated Tram tho service,
mil within tho age limits and nth-
-rwlse eligible, will bo permitted
*o compete In tho examination,
-hey will be required to comply
billy with the examinational re-
-ulremcnta and will hot be ex-
gmntcd from anv part of the ex
amination by virtue of prior com
missioned service.
Ry order of the Corps Area
Commander:
• ROBT. WHITFIELD,
Assistant Adjutant.
Additional Information In Athens
ran be had from the officer per
sonnel on tho University campus.
The Woman’s Tonic
and I then remembered ray
mother used to take it . . .
After the first buttle i was
better. ! began tofleshcn up
and I regained my strength
and good, healthy color. I
am feeling fine. J took
twelvd bottles (of Cardui)
and haven’t had a bii of
trcublc since.”
Thousands of tfther
I women have had similar cx-
> periencts in the use of'
Carduiwhich $tqg brought
I'-rclief-whewMBqr medteines'
uikoJfc’.iio«L'sT<5- CardiA-dt-i
nay ba iurtert a-yoonted. I
1 . . "‘'kk*
(By T. Larry Gantt)
Do-you know that Athens boaits
a regular monthly ' magazine,
"Miss Rutherford’s Scrap Book,"
of which Miss Mildred Lewis
Rutherford la editor and publish
er? The mission ot this publics
tion. is to defend our section
against detractors and furnish In
formation about the Sonth, and Its
course in tho War Between the
States. There will be 10 issues of
the magazine a year. The snbicrip-
tion price Is §2.60. Advertising
rates $2 an Inch or §10 a page.
Tho February number cpntalnn
seven pages of select advertising.
Tbe following are the leading top
ics for the ten volumes of $923:
January—The Causes that led to
the War Between the States. I
have reviewed this number.) Feb
ruary—Was Secesson Rebellion;
March—Formation of tho Southern
Confederacy; April—Efforts for
Peace. \Vhy failures. May—Who
was responsible for the War?
June—Was Coercion Constitution?
July—Army and Navy organized;
Leaders.—August—Woman’s Work
in War Between States. September
—Surgeons and Chaplains. Octo
ber—Battles Fought and Leaders;
The Surrender and Results.
I am Indebted to tho editor for
the February number the Scrap
Book and this is replete with
valuable Information In defense
of tho South and the causes for
which our soldiers took up arms.
This volume contains among oth
er Interesting facts and Informa
tion tho following: The membor-
iblp of the Confederate Memorial
Association; United Daughters ot
‘he Confederacy, 1923; Georgia
Daughters of the Confederacy.
1922-1923; tho Seceding States
and date* when they went out ot
the Union, and their Governors;
tho organisation of the -Southern
confederacy and Inauguration ot
Jefferson Davis; list of Cabinet
officers; noted men of aU sections
and parties In the right of a sov
ereign State to secede from tho
Union; lfst of text books unjust to
the Southland used In our schools;
list of books suggested for South- ,
ern libraries; Miss Rutherford’s:
5crap Book Is a valuable addition
o Southern literature and should
he-found In every home.
BU8INES8 MOVEMENTS
OVER CITY
Mr. Pete N. Chillvia, owner of
(he candy kitchen and qjriffnator
of the famous recan Roll hat leas
ed of Dozier Bros, the charming
little store room they are now
erecting on the corner of College
avenue and Washington street.
This Is the best business stand In
Athens and Mr. ChillTis aaj* he
will open therein an establishment
that will be a credit to Athens.
He will sell fresh candy, cigars and
other articles In that line. He ex
pects to open up In about two
weeks.
In an adjoining room on Wash
ington street tho Central Railway
has opened a ticket office and It
surely Is a daisy. Both 'of these -
are small rooms, but they are
gems. , •/ •.
L. 9. Brooks & Co will open a
general repair shop ‘on Clayton
street, near Thomas. Every tyeek
new lines of business are opening
In Athens and vacant stores fil
ling up.
Mr.'Q. W. Joiner last week
bought a lot on the extension of
Oglethorpe avenue and will erect
a nlco homo there. Mr. J. T. Ham
mett, who owns an adjoining lot
tells me that bo Is also getting
ready to build. Both these gentle
men asked that I urge our City
Fathers to extend the sewerage
system, also water and lights, out
in that direction and say this
would Induce other parties to
build. The cltliens living In the
section taken Into the city limits
feel that they should have some
thing else for the taxes they pay
besides a “scjlp of -paper,” and
this Is alt they have been getting.
Col. W. S. Holman tells me that
he has turned down several offers,
to buy those beautiful lots he has |
cut off In front of bis homri. Col.,
Holman will not sell a lot for
speculative purposes and the party
who buys must contract to begin 1 ,
work at once on a honae not to J
ing lots.
INFLUENZA frRO.M NEGLECT
ED COLDS
Stop your coughs and colds be
fore thoy become serious. If neg
lected they lead to influenza, la
rippe, asthma' and bronchitis.
Three generations of users have You never fed the Jlidite^*/
testified to the quick relief given tress from indigestion i 1 ,?)
by Foley's Honey and Tar from acid, gassy stomaeh, after
jj ‘Pape's Diapeps'n” for
11 Gas, Indigestion or
j Sour Stomach
Instantly! Stomach
coughs, colds; crorip, throat, chest a tablet of "Pape’s DinLii?J
and brenchinl trouble. Largest The moment it reaches tin-St™
cough medicine in the aph all sourness flatulence
Mrs. S. L. Hunt, Cincin-j burn, gases, nalpitation and
DruKRists guarantee
a^lo correct -ligestion 1
your stomach trot I
selling
World.
natl, Ohio, writes: “Foley Honeyidisappear,
and Tar cured me of a hacking {each fiacka
cough, wheezing and pain in j p* orv-e. r
cheat.” Refuse substitutes. Sold,bla for few eems.—(AdvertuI I
Everywhere.—(Advertisement.) liacnt.) ’
GENUINELY GOOD VAN Nil GENEROUSLY GOOD
IN QUALITY V IN QUANTITY
(VAN-NIL ts n synthetic Tzallln of rare Bavourlns conlent, non-alcoholic.)
Plenty of. Money to Lend On Rea! Estate
Commission: 3% ON AMOUNTS OVER $l.ouu.no.
10% on amounts up to §1,000.00.
HUBERT M. RYLEE
LAW OFFICES
405 Holman Bldg. Athens, Gi.
Now is the time to get one of
cur Certified used Ford cars. A
splendid selection, priced reason
ably. .
C. A. Trussell Motor Co.
TAXI SERVICE
Day and Night
GEORGIAN BAGGAGE
Phone TRANSFER CO. Phone
66 Office Georgian Hotel 66
ALL ABOARD
Winter Excursion* Fares mid AU
Year Toujrist Fares ■
Alabama
Arizona
Arkansas
British Columbia
California
Florida
Washington
TO
Georgin
Havana ,
Kentucky
Lonbiana
Mississippi
New Mexico
North Carolina
Oregon
Sruth Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Virginia
W«et-Virginia
’ “ \
VIA
\) , Georgia Railroad
Atlanta & West Point R. R.
Western Railway of Alabama
Liberal time limit and stop-over privileges.
For further information applv to
J. P. BILLuIpS, G. P. A.,
714 Healey Building, Atlanta, Ga.
50B
Brenau Student
Highly Honored
OAINESVILLE, Ga.—Miss Wll.-
Ile Kimbrough of Indlanola, Miss.,
has won a distinct honor la being
dhossn'at prims donna of the “Fol-
Hcn of 1923 which. Is sponsored by
The Commercial Appeal” of Mem
phis. Tenn.
Miss Kimbrough was chosen
from two hundred and fifty appli
cants. Her voice Is of a lovely
dramatfc quality, and with a
whrmpth of color anil range which
Is 'rare. Is combined a personali
ty of charm and sweetness.
Miss Kimbrough has been a stu-
dent at nronau College-Conserva
tory at Gainesville. Ga.. for the
past three years having entered
from her high school career, and
hat received all her training at
□ RIGHT-COLORED FLOWkl
The use''of ffoWoTs lirn'dlm
guRKfag notd*'ln spring millinery.
. partlcMs'rly the as* of vlrld-coldr-
j |ed'«nek wblch contrast with the
color of the straw.
-■NOW-
Do some spring cleaning in your
office, put in some new equipment
and make the office look better
and you can d« your work in less
time^'^;^^
•‘.Xtnuo’) vdfslU
»rf» )V mo ,sv>M .0 ridel
New shipment of desks just re
ceived and going at very attrac
tive prices. Let’s figure on your
requirements.
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nod) sjojI sjorf v
t*fti u. iIcitl-wHo*-
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hiJ
The McGregor Company
IT 5-3 5