The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, February 20, 1923, Image 4

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u «3£ POUR THE BANNER-HERALD ftg*.. ■ ' ATHBN8. QA« ' TPf;>-.rr^wr’r Published Every Evening; During the Week Except Saturday and on I ” ming by Tne Athena Publishing Company. Athens, Ga. I Sunday Mornii ; B. BRASWELL LES E. MARTIN ..... Publisher and General Manager Managing Editor Ent*(»d at the Athens Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter under ’ . y the Act of Congress March 8, 1879, Member of the Audit Bureau. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub : Mention of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise creditc in this paper, and also the local news published thereii.. -All rights o! republication 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 for publica tion should bo addressed to The Banner-Herald. JUDGE SIBLEY, TOO Judge Samuel H. Sibley, of the northern district of the United States court in Georgia, has come fo the support of Judge .Wm. H. Barrett, of the southern district, in the latter’s an nounced intention trying no cases in his court wherein arrests are.not made in conformity with the legal provisions that have ..to do with the issuance of search warrants and siezures. The prohibition enforcement department in Georgia, follow ing Judge Barrett's declaration that constitutional rights and liberties must not he invaded by enforcement officers in the dis charge of their duty, announced that only the southern district cf Georgia was affected and thnt there would be no change of methods by the department in the northern district, over which Judge .Sibley presides. But Judge Sibley now comes aiong, according to newspaper reports, and declares Judge Barrett’s decision, putting a crimp in indiscriminate search of private residences and firing upon and Siezing automobiles and searching suitcnscs, without a warrant specifically describing the premises to be searched (the only ex ception being cases where an officer knows a crime is being com mitted in his presence) is in strict accord with the law, and that what's law in the southern district of Georgia is law in the north ern district of Georgia—the statute applying in all states. With enforcement officers in Georgia requiring to track the KV, themselves, there should be an end to the indignities that in- S cnt parties frequently suffer by reason of an enforcement of- r permitting his eagerness to get the upper hand of his judge ment. Let’s employ 3anity in the enforcement of this law the sarpe fs in all statutes. , DAILY* fQn&ICf't&TB. 0 por whosoever will sava hit life shall lost It; but whosoever will lose hit life for my take, the tame «hall save It.—Lu. 9:24. i i You cannot win without sacrl dee.—Charles Buxton. Berton Braley’s Daily Poem THE CHARM K*r for— There’s lots of things I lov her slenderness und grace. Th*) Joy that dames In her eyes, the beauty of her face. The lips that are soft to. kiss, the voice I like to heary- She has a myriad wltchtrle* thHt make her sweet and dear, But more, I think, than any other charm of hers I prise. The little laughing wrinkles hi tho comers of her eyes! They won me from the very first, they’ll hold me to the lust, happy, wholesome magic lure that binds me fast. And by the gods of cheerfulness and /jay. warm-hearted mirth. o; ?uolxn TOYOC? A Litflo of Everything And Not Mach of Anything. By BUGS ROWE The ruling handed down by Judge William H. Barrett, of the federal court, for the sou thern district of Georgia, re lating to the prohibition law, bet- fair and just trial,In the courts jof the land. Fnnatlsism should {not rule in the enforcement of the ’ prohibition law. but violators of I this law should be treated with ter known as the Volstead act. just as violators of other laws are will revolutionise the enforcement I treated with and, If found guilty, of that law and cause the return of a sane and just manner of en forcement by prohibition officers. No-law has ever been more abused and misinterpreted than has the yolstend act and Innocent citizens caused to suffer embar rassment from the Illegal proce dure of municipal, state and fed eral officers. These men have lost all sense of reason and Justice In their activities to arrest and bring rases Into court against citizens such punishment as the evidence warrants should be meted by the presiding judicial. If wo are not just In the enforcement of the pro hibition law, we may expect it to be violated and sentiment created against It. However, wo believe, under tho ruling of Judge Barrett and Judge Sibley that there will lie a better understanding of the law and that the people will be come better reconciled to its op eration under the construction laid for Imaginary violations of this I down bv these two well known- I’ll strive to tiring her happiness i nil Hint I am worth: I’ll try to keep, with all tin- skill lover can devise. These little laughing wrinkles at II earners of Iter eyes! -e KEEP THE MONEY AT HOME Ji', It is a favorite slogan of The Banner-IIefald that “The South ant get rich feeding itself and selling the surplus.” If the South ^jjp practice this slogan for a few years—raite as far ns possible t own food supplies and make cotton as a surplus crop, it will omc one of the richest nnd most prosperous sections in the id. For years, however, under the one crop system, the South been forcod to sell its cotton for food consumed during the year, to pay its bills in the Fall with its cotton crop and at the ' nning of each year has seen its farms 'swept clean, and had cgin all over again. The lesson of the boll weevil has been largely learned by the es of Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama, and states are now raising their own food supplies. Cotton with of these farmers is therefore a surplus crop, and at the nt time, these states arc among the most prosperous in the - -OMtntry. They raised cctton last year to sell at 15 cents a pound. Hr crop was pitched at that figure. They have been selling all i way up to 28 cents n pound a big cotton crop that was made ^pite Of the boll weevil. ; The point is that farmers who raise their own food supplies fnot forced to rush their cotton to market to pay food bills and er debts. Their cotton is a surplus epop. It can remain on the Together we will laugh through life. and bravely uh can he We’ll'chuckle In the fact; of fate and U grin nt dcutlny. Endeavoring to makn the world jmt- / hap* u little bit- More frolicsome nnd sunny In*cause we’ve lived In It; And ull of our posterity will have, mu 1 surmise. Those little laughing wrinkles In the corners of their eyes! A Puzzle A Day The abovo drawing represents a small hill. A fanner wished to plant fence posts over the hill the posts to be six feet apart. It was 66 feet through the lilll, nnd 96 over. If the fenco had run. through the hill, twelve posts would have been required, ns shown. How many posts, six feet apart, arc required to run the fence over the hill? YE8TERDAV8 ANSWER: •'5S" for a year or two, and when sold tho mortey stays at home ttkCoes into local banks Instead of going to the West for food Ml* as h*s been the case for so many years in the past. m CHEATING SELF ^"Word conies over the cable from Germany that Prof. Ront- gtn, discoverer of the X-ray .and who died and was cremated rc- _ ccr.tly, spent ui» last years in poverty. He refused to patent his overy, believing it so valuable thnt he should give it to the without making a profit from it himself. His chief income i he died was a pension of $60 a ycart Ho lived at the home cf friend. Wc hvite tremendous respect for Prof. Rontgen’s high gliam. Wc do not believe thnt his wonderful bVain was capable having the “deviation from normal” that mnkes egomaniaca i to pose as martyrs. Nevertheless, he was a martyr, a vii- l of hia ideals. He was honest with the world. But was he real- j honest with himself? [ . Front cradle to grave we have the theory of honesty drum- 1 into us. Did you ever observe that mostly this drumming has lo with honesty in our relations to others—and that little is , about honesty to ourselves? It is dishonest to do less or to less than wo arc paid for, making due allowances for the pflt system which is indispensable under our present system of bnomics. It is dishonest to steal. It is dishonest to pay a man . '•‘ than he is worth—again making allowances for the neces- V; margin of profit to the employer. And it also is dishonest, ourselves, to do or give materially more than wc arc paid for. ripped of bunk, there is nothing admirable in Old Faithful who . sSves his life away at :'05_a month, on a job that should pay him *"“0, That's an unfair arrangement, and anything unfair is a nt if dishonesty. This prcbabiy will be called radical, by peo- rwho utilize “force of citcuir.stnnccs" to exact exorbitant prof- ftom tho unfortunate who cannot help themsulves. You today are not the same person you were years ago. And I* you of the future will be different from the you of today. Id future you will he a worn out machine, with earning power duced. And you owe, to the future you, a just return on'today’s . [vicos so that you will not cheat the future you. That individual jthc future, YOU, is uepcnomg on you of today not to' cheat t Rontgcn,discoverer of the mysterious and' invaluable X-i^ay, ated his future self. Its a good idea to apply, to .this Idea, l brake: It is as dishonest to attempt, to get more than we are titled to as it is to take lesi. If an Inch worm climbs throe feet In on hour, and then slides back two feet. It will tako it twenty eight hours to climb tho heights of thirty feet. It will bo twenty- seven feet tip In twenty-seven hours, and on Its next climb of three feet, It will reach the top. SAPPHIRE BLUE Sapphire blue bi lid Is used to form tn elaborate design about the cuffs and hem of n tdue Polrct twill suit. The Jacket Is lined with crepe di Chine lo match braid. Wendell’s Pills, Ambition Brand, For Run-Do n, Tired Out People. If you feel tlrad out, out of *ori. Icapondent, mentally or physlocll) lepresaed, get a (0 cent tmx o’ Wendell’s Pills, Ambition Brand, ni Palmer * Bon today nnd take th, ar»t bla step toward feeling b-’.tei right away. U you work too hard, smoke toe much or are nervous, Wendell’, (Mils. Ambition Brand, will males money back from Palmer & Hoi, in the Aret box purchased. ; Aa a treatment for affections nt the nervous eyetem. constipation loss of appetite, eleepleseness, oi Nervous Indigestion, get a box nt Wendell’s PUIa, Ambition Brand you fool better In three days or today on the money back plan. - Advertisement. law. Irrespective of evidence. The traveler lias been held up on the railway trains , and suffered Ills baggage to be ransacked without the least particle of evidence of his guilt as a bootlegger or a vio lator of tho law and, without a wnrrtftit or authority. The same might be anld of tourists or those traveling from city to city nnd from slate to state; those so-call ed revenue officers and in many cases. local officers, have resorted to all kinds of moans to hold up travelers by blocking the high ways with trees, roping off tho Lrt.lrp-s and balling nil passers to hold up an automobile on mere ears to bo searched for whiskey. Such high handed procedure was -ever Intended by the framers of tho Volstead act and such actions on the part of the officers Is not t.rovhled for In the act liy congress. The Volstead net provldos for the •>rrest nnd trial of all violators of the prohibition law just as Is done In all other cases of violations of t|ie law, but It does prescribe that an .arresting officer must have search warrant before he can Ccorglans and federal Jurists. So much for prohibition and turning from that, all impor tant beverage to home occur rences, we were very much impressed a few mornings ago and, as it was one of the coldest of this winter, two little tots w*re late for school or rather, we might say late for the street car. which was running on time and going at a rapid rate down Mllledge avenue. Tho little fellows were coming up a cross street and they seemed to have their little lives bent on get ting to tho corner before the car arrived, but they aid not and tile look or disappointment which spread over their faces would have caused every parent to sign nnd long for his little tot to be in ilm arms, but the disappointment soon disappeared and a bright smile end a cheerful grin spread over tlielr m « — ...1 ■ ■ l m ra!,./,a/« It’ll _ 7s&mwiwr TUESDAY. FEBRUARY in '•to-bg- States - cd exactly the English method. AN ILLUSTRATION 18 GIVEN fires when Conductor Cicero Wil liams stopped Ills car and waited for them to get on: They wore made happy and every passenger on the enr applauded tho thiught- fiilness of the conductor, for many er a home, a plnce of business or of them, if not all, had a little tot hold up an automobile on more at home or may be their Hltlg tots suspicion. There must be some have, grown to be big roys ana evidence sufficient to cause arrest girls, yet the parent fee.s 'lie same 'Wore tho issuance of a warrant, towards them as they did when T t is not tho purpose of the govern they were the age of the 'wo 1H- 010111 to make criminals of Its tn- ; tie tots of Kindergarten age rttn- fnreement officers and. for tint ning for the street car. And. alter repson Judge Barrett, of the south all the conductor, no doubt, thought -rn district and Judge Sibley of of his little tots and did unto these tho northern district of Georgia as he would have others do unto ''ave made themselves naite clear bis. on the Interpretntion of tho law I prohibiting the Illegal snle of in- Prosperity is apparent on ■orients. every hand In Athena! New Prohibition officers have run ! building Is going up In all parts Hot over the law and disregarded | of tho city and many now line* ♦he sefrlt absolutely which has ,of business haTe been commenced "*uflod tho Volstead act to grow In hero during the past few weelcs. dfarenuto to many of tho law-nbld- The few vacant stores which stood »n«x element In this Htate. The nco.out prominently during the early rile of Oeorrla • are low. abiding { part of the year are practically 'Mtizemi nnd they believe In unhold all occupied now and unless more •nc: tho law. but they do pot bo-,.are built there will bo a scarcity Move In reckless nnd criminal ac-br store rooms before the# year is ♦•on on tho part of tho officers Ip .i>u|t. It is a splendid indication or 'M'dor that they may make a re-, the .recovery of k business from tne nutation for tho ntimbei*. of arresty “period of depression **st year made and for ronmrcratlon froth'find within n fow months that de- <he sale of such confiscated prop- 'preselon will ltavo been forgotten crty . jand tho road to prosperity will bo Let us have a sane onforcomont crowded with better tlmos and the nf nil laws and vivo to nil who are,beginning of a now era will be charged with violating the laws a dawning In Athens. TREAT COLDS THE ELI EXPLAINED FULLY te New',York. New Haven A Hartford railroad takes oift 000 of group life Insurance for 7006 of Its employes. Anoth- § n comes from -Pittsburg: Last year more than ono and a r million dollars were paid to employes, of tho Carnegie and Steel corporations, disabled or retired on account of age. MSybo all this is paternalism. But it’s progress, for wage earn- ' 'Twenty years ago the average corporation employe's income with his usefulness. Slowly Christianity Is being applied ato offices. Be patient. It takes time. • illre. Anna U. Stillman, whose matrimonial shipwreck caused an gogklps to loose a lot of valuable time, will go Into busl- i for herself as a wholesale milliner. She says she will begin small way, expanu cautiously and be on the Job every day elf. Since aba ha? sense enough to start that way, she shnld i a success of her venture. Mrs. Stillman dlspliys an excep- I and ratbar remarkable aide of her character Jar site recent- granted $*0,0?0 a year alimony. How many would go to with an income like that? Would you? "Well! Strong!” Mrs. Anna Clover, of R. P. D. 5, Winfield, Kan*., says: “I began to sutler some months ago with womanly troubles, and was afraid I wag going to eel in bed.' I suffered with my head, back and sides—a weak, aching, nervous feel ing. I did not aeem to find (he right remedy until some- m — one told me of CARDIII The Woman’s Tonic I used two bottles before I could see any great change, but after that it was remark, able how much belter I got. I am now well and strong. I can recommend Cardui, for it certainly benefited me.” If you have been experi menting with all kinds of differni remedies, better eel back to good, old. reliable Cardnl, the medicine for women, about which you have always heard, which has helped many thousands of others, and which should help you too. Try Cardui. ex m First Step In Treatment la a Brisk Purgative With Calotabs, the Purified and Refined Calomel Tablets That Are Nnusealcss, Safe nnd Sure. fx 1 Doctors have found by experi ence thnt na medicine for colds, :oughs, sore threat, and influenza: can. bo depended upon for full ef fectiveness until the liver is made horoug'nly active. That is why tho first rtep in the treatment is the new, nnusealcss calomel tab- 'ets called Calotabs, which ■ are free from the sickening and weak- jning offers of the old style colo nel. Doctors also point out the fact that an active liver may go a long v;ay towards preventing in fluenza and colds and is one of tho most important factors in en abling tho jiatient to successfully withstand an nttnek and ward off pneumonia. One or two Calotabs on the ton gue ut bed time, with a swallow of water—that’s nil. No salts, no nausea nor the slightest' interfor- ance with your eating, pleasure or work. Next morning your cold has vanished, Jour liver is active, your system is purified, and you ire feeling fin\ with a hearty ap petite for brenkfast. Genuine Calotabs are sold only in original scaled packages, price thirty-five cents for tho large, family-pack- igo; ten cents for the small, vest- pocket size.—(Advertisement.)' (By T. Larry Gantt.) My'friend Bisson has sent me a little book with the abovo title, printed In tho Island of Guernsey from which he came. I have read this volume with much Intereat, -is It contains soma valuable in formation about the banking sys tem and which Is applicable to our ilay and times. This book tells nbout the advance made from barter to bunking. From tho dawn of History, when mankind • wna emerging from savagery and com modities were produced by hand labor and exchanged by barter. First the articles cf barter were skins, then cattle, later an array of agricultural products and metals then Iron was used and lead as a unit of value. Id his Illiad llotner doplcits a state whore no money was used. “From Lemnos Isles a numerous fleet canto freighted with wine. Tho arccks hastened to purchase some with brash, some with Iren and some with hides, cattle and slavos.” Ono of tho most Interesting instances of l ho use of representative money Is found In the English Exchequer Tallies, which were circulated In England for over six hundred sears. They were four Bided rods of hazel or linden wood, nbout an inch In diameter. ' The amount of tlielr circulating value was designated by notches qt Into one of Bin flat .aides of So Easy to Drop CigaretU Cigar cr Chewing Habit. No-r>-F« has belpod thou sands to break tha eodtly. narvn- •hattaring tobacco habit. Wben aver you have a ’.ongthg for a •moke or ehew. Just place • barm- iees No-To-Rao tablet In row mouth Instead. * All dentra stops Shortly the habit la completely broken, and you are better off men- telly, physically, financially. It’s as easy, eo-simple. Oat a box Of No- To-Bae and If It doesn’t ret ease yon from all dhtvmg for tobnooo y sny form, your diugglst wlU fund your the rod. The amount was also writ- tqn In Ink on two opposite aides. •The rod was then split by a knife, aUd mallet ’ lengthwise through Uto notches. One half of the stick showing the inscription in ink and one-b'alf of tho notches | was given out and other half was I placed In the treasury. When pre sented for payment they wore matched w-lth the counter tallies and here the two edees fitted e«eh o(fter they wore said to •’tally." Sweden Introduced the first paper nates In Europe. Before that tho money consisted of large plates of ■■are copper, and a merchant pn a collecting tour had to take a wheelbarrow to bring his. money ' ck. The earliest banks were the nk of Venice, im*lT97, Bank Ornoa; 1407-1? *7, Bank oP trholm: 1668-1V45; nria Bank of iferdam. 1409-ulo? About the r 17B0 tue London Maker* In deed the slmpl’] method of glv- Tbe following is an illustration of the transactions on (ho Island of Guernsey before tho Introduc tion of banking and when nn ex change of commodities was the way of dealing. A shoemaker em ploys a neighbor to dig a ditch and when tby work was finished offer ed him a pair of shoes. Ho refused the shoes but accepted tho shoe maker's I. O. U. The shoemaker, however, noeded a coat and the tailor accepted this evidence of debt as payment for the coat. Tho tailor in turn wanted tho root of his house repaired and the car penter accepted for his work the shoemaker’s I. O. U. The carpen ter needed u pair of shoes, gets thorn ffom the shoemaker and pays for thorn by surrendering the evi dence of tho debt which the shoe maker originally owned to the ditch digger, and the shoemaker de stroyed It. And this ancient transaction can now be duplicated with our bank ing system, just as effectually be the debtor giving a check for what money lie has to his creditor.’ This will enable the creditor to eance' an obligation he in turn owes and that same check, by being kept In circulation, can be made to lift tho burden of debt from an indefinite number of persons and this de- lievis many obligations. 1 am satisfied that if the money now locked up or withheld from the payment of honest debt was started out the rounds that In short while it would cancel the debts of nearly everyone not a hopeless bankrupt tn a community. It does not take sny ver/ groat amount of currency to transact business and bring about easy times if the money Is kept In cir culation. But every •'ollnr hoarded st homo and withheld from cir culation depresses conditions. A -liirVlo pennv is worth to »nv com munity many sluggish dollars. t«n on liow to write and print news. I people want legitimate ti la the Intention of this lecture to propaganda. ani1 make n few suggestions on how to I Sow to read a i,.,-,„ read a newspaper, believing that lfj,Y„ •"•Paper and tho reader better^ understood some I_ K - : nte.,t . DEPOSITING MONEY \ IMPROVES SITUATIODN The improved conditions now upon us over twclvo months aco are largely duo to tho fact that money once held st home nnd thus kept nut of circulation has been deposited In the banks aud put In circulation. It Is shown that there are about a million dollars more on deposit In the Athens banks that at this time last year.- This money was put at work and Is fast restoring nonnal conditions. What most ailed the ceuntry was lack of confidence; and this was manifested by sonib parties selling their cotton and Instead of paying their just debts, through fear of not retting any more credit and holding that money back from those they owed. The best Investment a man can make <s to ealsbllsh his credit and thee uphold bis name tor paying his debts when due If It takae kis last copper. If you cannot meat your obligations wben 'due go to tho party you owe and make a plain end honegt statement of your con dition to him. This fact is demon strafed right now in Athens, for nur banks and merchants have n Hat of every person that paid on his accounts or notes w-hst he was able last fall and have arranged to carry such persona through this year and help them make another crop. Those who did not do this must pay cash for what they get for their .credit has vanished with their reputation for not meeting their obligations or making any effort to do ao. It would be well for everyone to read this little book on “The Evolutlan of Banking" for It sbowa tho inestimable advantage nnd conveniences we enjoy these days over ye olden lime. Today any man with an established credit or col lateral can go to his nearest bank and secure loauo to the -extent 01 his al'lllty to pay. Then instead of having to barter cm article for another he need not even carry F'itny in It'a purs;, tor he can Imusset his business through bank etc. *.s. things nbout impcAi bis attliudo to. ward them would be different, and both bettered thereby. • Tho first suggestion thut wc make Is that the reader have the correct Idea and conception of what a news paper Is .namely, that It Is a business organisation, operated to make a liv ing and money for tho men runnlnt; It. That It is a business concern Just llko a grocery or hardware store, and that tt is expected to not only pay expenses, hut pay dividends Just ilke a bank or manufacturing plant. A paper Is not a charitable institu tion nor a utility run for the benefit of the public, printed and distribut ed without cost. Neither is It fllio.t up with Just' anything thut fills space, for hardly any dally news paper has space enough to print even one-half tho. matter receive t each day, therefore the nows thut, is i f the greatest Interest and Importance to tho largest 'number of people is selected. Next, remember that newspapers are not gossip nor scandalmongers, and that It Is not their mission to start the day off by gatherhu up nil the loose talk and putting It in to type and broadcasting It. In the first place, no per -cent of oil go-sin und rumor Is not based on facts nnd the tu per cent of truth that might !>c In It would l>c of too title Inter est to print. Another thing. Newspapero arc neither bought nor sold when it comes to printing or not printing news, l'npero print news thut Is legitimate; umi wc venture tin; as sertion that the money Collected by the dally neu-|.opern In the city of Atlanta in the Inst hundred years In pay inf n t to keep pews Items out of the paper, would not keep n ca nary In a day’s rutbms of bird ^secd. News Is selected and printed free, advertising Is paid (pr. There was never n more mistaken, yej general ly believed Idea, t.ian that news- most nut o a purpose. Ing will be as «itnl..s.";,T r „ r '»'!- Milo holding the r. In# diictta de headless hornc. NVwh h 1 * three sections: local, which la say Includes state news a i«o ,* 111 lal and then world-wide p.-i’!'"'’ , the local news. The most in,!?! M und the greatest number that you are Interested tn are V? short local Items ull through t ,. ....- . h at s is- frfci your frfends and the NUl.Jeet* , terest to you. In this way well-informed of happeninn “ iS around you. Next rout! ,‘ ur " ,ht news, and he well informed Subject; then read the tlonal Interest all over the States, Including at fa set „( ment at Washington, then resTS an and this in,crest haw »rd greatly In the !a« few foreign in, this both Increased year*. To you It is th.- t,e W8 ~^ "Z day. but to the men who produce! it. It represents the Pest that i. 7: them An l,..o. c..-. reporter bench for them. An Item fr.. quarters wns written by who may have idept on u hours waiting for BomethlngTo tv- to ffci ► «t»OUt I Hll iff,. c ,J * rcinmltted been right .We ar newapapem air we d rnefT whenever a rrir —that he should Imv the upot, when muj block.H to patrol. Few have m many an n doze on the street**, yet let *<.rr (fen and we think the iuuiuld be right there to fart*. We answer to uge*<»l<l ,- l>oeH it eo*tt anything t turc-N put into the t>.'i|»ei not; pictures Juki Ike tl printed free, and the way picture printed In to glv newMpaper. 1 »«'l"irter* •thing hap- l ,J ‘l*’r m*n ►.’••t all the It does (rimed In the paper?” By writing It out* giving it to the paper, In cu*c of accidents and news ih*t papers are. paid to keep things out of I the K local loo .-uot'u *dl ,!!?'!£ the paper, or tnal real news s de- j * * * ,n * llberately withheld, unlena It be for | f ' expediency, or that paper* are paid I pews|g,per terras. Some „t to support men aud measures. No I th f. ,l,e * BV * r * ,ron ' ,l, ’ < 1 “ r danuj, class of men In any profession or I *ff*JK*J!"? 1 * " b vast Ing lt.< You might aay a man h#, Itccii murdered, and maybe has w**, but If you were printing a papfr you would wait until the Jury ptunoutiod It murder before you would print it. Murder In murder when it in proven or when Jurim say *to. buiines* have na much power and “It la said, ."lit Is Itpnrtrd authority, and unc it with an much * '}}?? remember that there Is — discretion as* do newspaper men. No I ^ fe 1 7 >nc ^i n . "Kill* “ d t'™ business concern In the world spend.* as much time, energy und money for ihe development nnd enlightenment cf hamunlty ns our newspaper men. There is a difference between a newspaper and a personal orgun. The personal organ might support men or measures nnd accept subNcrlpilous to be sent to persons whose vote cr influence Is sought, hut the personal organ is not to be classed with the untrammeled newspaper. Personal gain nt the expense of the Ignorance and prejudice of the public is usual ly the goal of these rightfully called ’’regulators or agitators.” Muck- rakers prey upon the prejudices of tho ignorant, and the fact that such •apors invariably fall proves that LENTEN SEASON Eat Benson’s Hot Cross Buns BENSON’S BAKERY Don’t Gai with the “lots for your money” brands of baking powder with the cheap and big can kind, you’re sure to lose every time. CALL FOR CALUIHET Yhe Economy BAKING POWDER “HOW TO READ A NEWSPAPER” An interesting article In the AtUin- tu Journal Sunday was one on the editorial page on ”llow to Read u Newspaper” by istllen A. Martin, man* ag£r of the Southern l*resn Clipping Bureau of Atlanta. This article, which was recently broadcasted over the Journal’s sta tion. "W. H. B .” will be of Interest to. all newspaper readers and Is as follows: The word news Ik *ald to lutvo come from the first letters of the four points of the rompusH. North. Hast. West, South—N-K-W-H. mean ing nows of mutual interest In every direction. Hint, we had the spoken word, then written symlmls frdm which wo mado signs, then prlutlng whereby we communicate one with another by means of these printed sop* symbols, although wc mny arated aud distant. It may be said that all news Is based on life, and more csgcrtfcJIy. human life, and we are dependeut, upon another for life. Man can not live alone. Wtf think we can live alone and are Independent, hut In reality wc are dependent upon other people for 90 i»er cent of our life, beginning at the time we are born into the world and continuing until we are laid away—by hands ther than pur pwa-. (Our dependence at birth ami death are typical of the dcnendence during the span of life. The man Friday was necessary to the story of Robinson Crusoe, be cause Crusoe would have gone stark crasy if he liad been marooned alone the island, hence, the creation, by the author, or the character. Friday, and us he protiably did not talk enough. Robinson having been a mar ried man Itack home, a talking par rot was Introduced Into the stosy, to make Jnpre . 9pFW»rj»ti<*i for'Crusoe. mu teat taka caaiwd th»4Mv*li{„m-M of newspaper*, which.’ wlllhcadfo. t* tha sreattM factor In. tha world to day, In (hr enlightenment of lh*' ha lt’s usedbymore housewives—morechefs-more railroads—more restaurarits—more holds, than any other kind in America and its • sale is pver 150% greater. If you want every bake-day. to be a success—if youwantpositiveresultsatasmall ^ u _ coq«-—if you want to guard the rafogga purity of your bakings, use Calumet Every ingrech* ent init has beenofRcial- ly approved by the United States-Food Authorities. Order Calumet today —it will pay. BEST BT TEST THE ITOMDr GREATEST BAKING POWDER ■ ALL ABOARD Winter Excursion Fares and All Year Tourist Fares TO m Alabama Arlzoaa Arkansas , British Columbia California Florida Wax hia gto* Georgia naraiia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi Now Mexico North Carolina Oregon South Carolina Tennessee Texas Virginia West Virginia VIA Georgia Railroad Atlanta & West Point R. R. Western Railway of Alabama Liberal time Ifonit and stop-over privileges. For further information applv to J. P. BILLUPS, G. P. A., 714 Healey Building, Atlanta, Ga.