The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, February 18, 1923, Image 13

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•v Why strains hurt Congestion in tissues causes muscu* larpjin.. Sloan's scatters (congestion. Normal, free circulation returns -pain vanishes! Sloan's Liniment - kills pain! atism, bruises ,st ni i ns, chest colds MOST OF ATHENS HIGH SCHOOL- STUDENTS WANT TO REMAIN IN THIS CITY DURING LIFETIME Dr KINGS Afew/fcs jVoii-checkit! Xn- -nostrils sore from blowing— thr a: rough and scratchy—chest i g!.: .uid oppressive with conges- 1 ar.d coughing—what discom- Ir.rn—cool, head-clearing relief following the first dose of Dr. King's New Discovery 1 How ef fective—this dependable 50-year- old remedy. Grandma will tell you II Is a sals eoasti sirup far every mVnbar lilr. You Srssslat has It, ' Declare Park, Better School Facilities and Li brary City’s Greatest Needs in Questionnaire. fievent/*four pcrr«pt «; tiie l»oyi and girls in higher jrratlrs at Ih# High School want to remain in Ath enn r.fler completing their *olu*gc Thi<* lx g high percentage, de ’laren D. A. McFarland, director of Chamber of Commerce expam program who )u»x Junt received 182 quest'onnalrc* slgnesl by the High School "L’ppor cISMmen." At liens should - congratulate Itself that so many of the young I toys and girls want to live here, says Mr. McFarland. The experience of the American City Bureau, which Mr. McFarland represents, has been that In most cities the young people en tertain the Idea that other places are better and offer more advantages than the “home town." The survey made at the High s^hoql brings to light many Inter esting facts. First, the question naires found that of 96 l»oys 14 want to be electrical engineers. 11 lawyers. 17 physicians, 6 manufacturers, 5 scientists. 4 civil engineers. Of 112 girls interviewed 44 aspire to the teaching profession, 16 stenographers. 4 I took keeper*. 4 artists. how their city could be Improved and by talking the needs of the city with their parents, stir them to greater civic interest. * Of course thd /aspiratkmH of all the hoys and girls did not lean to the nlxive named vocations. Three of the girls and one l»oy will be mis sionaries. two of the l*oys want to become 'Journalists, and a like niim- tier will raise poultry* Only one girl ! wants to iK-come a dancing teacher. | Asked what is Athens’ greatest j WASHINGTON—While wholesale need, the l/oys and girls voted as prices in the I’nited States reacted follows: 1*1 for parksf^TO for better | tl , some extent in January from the school buildings and equipment and j upward movement of recent months. 39 for a library. The l>oys voted. 42 | .« a ys a report made public Saturday for parks; 28 for better school build- gigs and It* for library. The girls voted 49 for parks; 42 for better school buildings and 23 tVr a library. by the Huron a of labor statistic change in the general price level is shown by the Index number covering four .hundred and four commodities which again stands at ISO ns it did in Novendicr and December. Com- ;utr1ng prPces in January with those of a year ago. the report continues as measured by changes In the In - uex figures it .Is seen that the gun- As iii the selection' of a v..cation 'the answers to the query "What is Athens' gnat^-st need%” ranged all the way from "fewer politicians and bootleggers" to libraries, parks and better schools. * Some want more w»r- ary for leathers, playgrounds, better streets. *a new high school. lower rent, more industries. One hoy says Athens' greatest need?" ranged all road station. Rome of the girls see a need for better street lights, large um i.« H:gu School, .-leaner streets. One says Athens' greatest need is an art school. Teachers and students entered in- j to the task of filling nut the ques- f . ember and January was collected ;i«.nnaires with eqjhuslaj^n. of J price increases were shown In 156 in- ourre the teachers were not allowed I stances, decrees. s in to ruggest how the questions should I .uid no change lu 145 Instances, he answered. The main purpose of I bidding materials show the largest the questionnaire was to encourage increase for the year, the increase the students to begin thinking nf | being I9 S J percent. eraj price lev^I has rlsert 13 per cent, For January as compared with De cember. the decrease In wholesale prices of farm products as- a whole was slightly more than 1% per cent. Food prices declined slightly more than 2 per cent, owing chiefly to de creases in meat, dairy products, flour, fruits and sugars. Clothing, fuel, lighting materials and household furnishings were one per cent higher in January. the four hundred four articles hich comi>arahlc data for De- ■Hawaii Rev. Motte Martin Ar^iv- ■fes in Athens. Preaches At First Presbyterian 11 A. M. • Rev. .Motte Martin. senior mem ber of the Missionary forte of the rrcabylvlun Church In BelgUu Ki.iiko, Africa, r .‘ached Athrna last night ami will ne here Sumlay and Monday, speakiuy at the First Pr»:;hyi< rian ctidreh hero, this rjorn'nc atm o’clock. % While in the city Mr. Martin will bo the guel' of C. A Row land. Mr. Martin nas had a most thril ling experience in Africa. On hla initial trip.up tl.< Kongo the boat on which ha traveled capsized- and somo twenty odd cf the crew wore last. Mr. Martin hlnyelf was only ,tved by grabbing a wicker chit' upon which hJ managed to keep himself afloat ontll rescued. Dur ing the Belgium atrocities in the Kongo, r. few Jears ago, he had tlic lienor of pretesting ‘n person to the Belgium Government and Instances {also .aid the matter In porso-i be fore president Roosevelt, who was so impressed tlyu he Inalctod upon Mr. Martin's returning an I receiv ing him in his own private study In the White Hccsc. ii tB ATHENS fM Ilf Ruptured IS Mrs. Ellen Doremus P0f!«W 1 £*»,Sgf*« sesses.cop.v of Georgia 1 are on the Road That Haa Express” Printed Here! Cowtofd Thousands. ; in 1808. ^ v . gent Free to Prove This • •**>*» .«h-s ■B.ts.wrsMire srt ■ Th „ W. S. Rice, 4711-11 Main St., f Adams, N. V., for a free trial pi t reading the newsy page* of a< Don*'t .Kliip your hinds atj tds, wonderful ' stimulating kpplhik: _ lion. Just put it on the rupture t Although very few Athenian., if'» n( l the muscles bejjn to tighton; any, ever heard of such a news-1 they begin to bind together paper, «t one time it tence here, because a copy, dated August 27. 1808. is in possession was n t js-! that the opening closes natura! ami the-noed of u support or ti is done away with. Don’t nej fr of Mrs. Ellen Doremus. daughter to send for this free trial. «vgn of the late Charlos Eats* ..f Au- it your rupture doesn’t bother you gugta . what is the use of wearing sup* The Augnstu Herald puhiislies ports all your life? Why suffer the following Interesting story of this nuisance? Why run the rigf the Old paper: ,of gangrene and such daneprs ’’A quaint old paper in the pos-1 from a small and innocent little session of Mrs, Ellen Doremus, | rupture, the kind that has thrown daughter -if ’he late Charles Estes, .thousands cn the operating fable^ is the ’’Gmigla Eyries-" printed 1A host of men and women ' Mr Martin Is a Texan and the son o. she late Judge Martin who has for many yems been chluf Jus- lice of the Supreme Court of Tex- as. and is very well know, net only in Texas, but throughout ih< entiro South, ranking as one of the most dlatiuitf'shed Mlssf/m- nrles ever sent on I by the fres- h.v let Ian church. He inis had mary unusual cxnrrlcncer In Afri ca, and at one time, he hod gath- cr.- l together In ».’s station in Af- nra to be trained, twenty or thirty snm rf chiefs. Hla meskage trls morning In the First Presbyterian Church of Ath ens will be ono-ct the most Inter- •ntiug ever he*:-.There. CHUR IS UB . TO sum H CHICAGO—The small town, ac cording to Dr. Phillip Yarrow bore, stands Indloted for unwittingly driving hundreds of unsophisticat ed girls into the Mowing street- life hordes of the big cities. The cause, he aays, la lack of proper recreational facilities In the country town. As state superintendent of the Illinois Vigilance Association, Yar row bases his charge upon Start ling revelstlons brought out in a grand Jury investigation of Chi cago’s allegedly protected red- light district ‘'These girls come to the . big city with pare purposes and In tent. but tall pray to Its inares be cause they are hot 1 adapted to the conditions and environment th.ust upon them,” he says. ’’Better that they did not come alL) “Make the tmair town attractive enough for them to stay there. There is no reason why this can't bo done. Civic farsightedness could bring that about. “Seventy per cent of the victims of vice I have found are recruit ed from small towns. “They are not bad at heart, but merely poor misguided creatures tossed up in the social upheaval of prevalent unrest. Tbev want to get away from the taffy palling parties in the village and other mediocre amusements which seem to pairon them. * Solution of the whole problem lies In education. B/ reaching young people of high school age with recreational Interests which are not suggestive or risque. and directing their surging ambitions Into wholesome channels, an ef fective cufe to the whole difficul ty can be Instituted. “At least It will keep girls down <m tho farm where they liclong until the dangerous age of adolna- cense has passed, and they have arrived at the ppriod m life when sound hope sense one staer them away froip the hanucimtlons and pitfalls waiting on Jiroadwsy." .'suppers In deUeate col or* are trimmed with large roeettee or pompons of lace or ribbon. Rhine stone, studded heels nre shown os plain satin molds. in Athens, Ca.. Saturday. Aug 27. 1808. "TV old paper Is yel’.Mt' !! with ag j. S> t otherwise Is in excel lent i opJi*.l-':i The printing Is of the old'English type wherein the a” looked like the letter “f” of today. The language and verbiage In the old paper Is quaint and odd to people of today. The paper in hand Is “Vol. 1. No. 16,” and car ries at its head the mottp: “Many shall run to and fro. and knowledge shall be Increased.” Us advertise ments are mostly legal and its out- of-state and foreign news items bear date lines of May, 1808. while the paper was printed the follow ing August. -Its "mast head." first column, front page, carried the following: "Terms of the Georgia Express: It will he printed week ly at three dollars per annum, one- half to.bo paid In advance and the remainder at the expiration of six months. Advertisements will be charged for'nt the rate of fifty- two and a half cents per square for the first Insertion, and fifty cents for each continuation. No papers will he discontinued with out a notice h that effect; not then If in arrears.” Among the representatives ap pointed in different counties tor the paper were: "J. S. Walker, Esq’r., and Doctor Small, for Au gusta. Col. John Davies, Waynes boro." Notices was given in the old paper by “William Hunt, merchant taylor." that "the subscriber wishes to employ u Journeyman at the taylorlng Imtlness—a good, steady young man will do well by applying shortly. »s he flatters himself ho can glvo as good wages as can be got elthnr In Augusta and Savannah and constant em ployment. Ho continues to carry daily running such risk just :ause their ruptures do not h|l uor prevent them fnyn i round. Write at once or free trial, as it is certainly a dcrful thing and haa aided in :urc of ruptures that were as. as a man’s two fists. Try L write at once, using the coupes^ below. • Free for Rupture W. S. Rice, Inc., 479-B Main St., Adama, N. 1 Y»u may send me entir free a Sample Treatment j vour stimulating applicatio for Rupture. Name v. . Address .. . State •• CRIPPLE MAKES - MONEY FAST McIntyre Finds It Easy To Sefl Gartiddcftff: Iron Rust Soap. ! Cheltenham, I’su: “Enclosed fim( order and money order for fire gross of Garitide’e Iron Host Soap. I’leaso ship at once as-my supply is exhausted. : I am a cripple and must make my own living. I tried selling a number of different house to hopse specialties, but found your Iron,. Rnst Soap to sell the quIc'kcst. Tt. is easy for me to sell three doxen 1 tubes a day with but a few hQurf work. Nearly every one 'l pioymem. tie cihiiiiiucb carry r-- on the above business, with neat- preach.has heard how GnrtslMLjj ness and punctuality and allfav- Iron “jv. 253SEJ® or* thankfully received by him.” House to-Prdbe Embassy Liquor WASHINGTON—An Inquiry Into the Importation of lntoxicatl’ljc l!q • uors liy foreign •liplonintn was or* drreil today by the house by a vote of 189 to 113. Athens Shriners to Attend Ceremonial A large number of Athens Shriners is planning to attend the big ceremonial at Elbcrton Febru ary 27. Etberton Shriners are making big preparations for (be event. According to plans just as soon as tho special train from Yaarab temple arrives gt' Elbcrton a big parade will be held. Immedlaf after the parade a sumtnoas becuo will be tendered the visit nobles. A ladles reception commit tee has been appointed to enter tain the visiting women.- ( Madison Kiwanfans . Underwrite Peanuts MADI80N. CJa.-Nlnf member* of te Madinon Kiwanl* club ,have • agreed to underwrite a earlpad of j peanut* costing 92.. r *00 to be dUtri- I buted lietween Morgan county farm* I ere who desire to grow tlyu Orop this I year.o t Those underwriting the car of pea* I nut* arc. J. A. Godfrey. Lee Tram- I mell. R. W. Parker.- A. XJ. Foster, M. I A. McDowell. -F. G. Newton. W. H. | Adams, T. II. Ifollnpd and Bs M. At kinson. rust, ink, fruit and medicine stains, and la glad of the chance to geLa tube. . ’ I can earnestly recommend it to any one wpiiGhg to jnakc money quickly, because the advertising that you have done for (he last thirty years as well as your antee as tp what the soap w make it an aMy article to Add to this the big profit am, have the ideal' agent’s money maker.—Frank McIntyre, Chelten ham, Pa. Send ten cents in etamps or coin for liberal trial tube am' agents’ terms and prices. Gart side's Iron Rnst Soap Co.. «7’. Preston 8t„. Philadelphia, Pa.— (Advertisement.) ITCH CURED In M Minutes with Par-a-sit-i-cide 50c from druggists of We mailed Mfr„ DR. L. J. SHARP ft CO. Commerce, Ca. Take'no snbstitnte. Sold by ., H. R. PALMER & SONS Stop Rheumatism S. S. S. Is the Great Builder, of Red-Blood Cells and Rhoaa. atism Must Go! Used Since 182G—Just Try It! “Rknmstisa? Ms? No, Indeed, I Blood wkteh Is minus sufflclest (sl it's all goat, every bit of Itt It's reUs- leads to a long list of troi ounsblno and Joy for am now for tbo Sboamatiom Is one of Ibom. H. first tlmo la years. I fool a wonderful 1 Is tbo great ■ blood-doanoer, rlsry again In tbo free motion I used | builder, •ystea strongUModr, 1 Invigorate! Markka.dil,a oat boUs. ecaete. U but Ido ap ran down, tired, tod and women. bea«-: rifles eompleskuot makes tbo fink, firmer. Charlie Barista. Florence, Texas, writes i. • I. Ibmnb MtMy rft^vS /erne. fksvoaM /ear bottles */, AS.S. tarn mam i ten, mil. The maotW sod could mat wait, f wU nctha- weed S. S. S. ta all wha auger uX't nXtuMollrm." Start g. g. & today. It I drug Menu - -Sufforta^MbOi cm und sisters In misery, do doee root tud think that kealtb, free motion and strength art gone train you fortvtri It is not bo. It ta kero and now for all of you. 8. B. H. Is waiting to help you.” There ta u reason why 8. H. H. trill kelp yon. Wkon you laenaeu the number of yonr red-blood cells, tbo entire sys- * AS 1 *.Inc tern nadergocn a tremendous . house, larger aUo hotUo Is 1(0 more acoaoat- Cverytblaj dependo on Mood-strength. [Icsi. S. S.$. makes you fid like youmjfagain BMiMn tA- jta