The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, March 04, 1923, Image 15

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

ATHENS. GEORGIA to three section* with small pas sageway connecting them. On each side of these sections are placed three berths, a lower, a convicts of the county can be safe ly keut every night. mounted on TOURING These trucks and can be moved from one locality to another by the use qf a pair of mules. In the use of these cages the expense' of buy- Brenau Glee Club Is ComirigJ qA Greater Touring Car Value ' •: l .f* The present price of the Foitf Touring Car is thp lowest eva* made. t ' 4 . ; 9 And yet the car itself is a greater value. It is better looking with slanting windshield, a one-m^n top and improved seats. And there are many refinements in chassis construction. The demand is so great that de liveries will soon bd impossible. To protect vourself, order now. , .Make a small down payment, the balance on easy terms. - . Ford print hat* never been so tats Ford quality has never been so high ' C. A, Truss ell Motor Co. REMOVAL NOTICE I WILL MOVE MY GARAGE AND ; AUTOMOBILE REPAIR’AND RE PLACEMENT DEPARTMENT INTO 166 WEST CLAYTON STREET, ^X* • MARCH 5 LL BE BETTER RRE' I'D CDDirr ■ ftv* This‘meter reader reads the toll Of gas you use each day. And, from his figures come the bills That people have to pay. t WHERE I PARED THAN EVER TO SERVE MY CUSTOMERS'. ' r x - SAM PINSON .V. PHONE 461—166 WEST CLAYTON ST. JBy COndo, rcMeo you takg. voois. csa« " FROffTMe CURB IT IvSt.PnRKCP OutTM OTHi.eS J Bunt thc . (*BONT t^GHDCR OP c/jr. — *R«S<AR P6t«1X&R lop ANOTHe.1t. — Announces for 'Sat Night Mar. 10, , What blood is to the heart, What breath is to our lives, Money is the very life cf business, which mqltes the selection, of your. * Bank of vi^al importance it you are to grow and prosper. Georgiy National Bank f Athens, Ga. ~ — A*»c. *tou ‘©RriD’VtS AWAY J2i \= SUPERB MAONIFICANT CHORUS PRODUCTION SUNDAY. MARCH 4,.1828. AUTO MOVi: ABYCITYGAHAG&MOT BY CITY GARAGBMQTOP Crf I GUSSS ! CAN' Of.T BY WNt>*- mornin<» with out a tail LAMP 7 can supply you with the auto supplies you W need from your tail lamp to your radiator cap. We m e thoroughly acquainted with your car wan’ and-with the accessory market. We’ll serve 1 you with courtesy and fairness. CHIEF EVENTS OF ■ WEEK REVIEWED THREE GOOD BU1CKS ne is » roadster—attractively painted; good tlrss; lato cdci. Prices are right—Term* are liberal—Cara depandablt. CONOLLY MOTOR CO. Authorized Buick Service Genuine Buick Parte I By CHARLES P. STEWART I American public opinion seems [ to have come over to France's sl.lo to a considerable extent since the I Kubr was Invaded. | At Drat the seizure appeared to | bo regarded very doubtfully here, evidently on the theory thaf Ht ‘probably would disturb'world bus! ness again, with' everybody ^but France wanting It qulter. ’Now a great deal of sympathy Is being-ex- . pressed with the French policy. 1 TBld'doesn't mean that American "big business’' lias changed it* mind but only that the average Individual’s changed his. ' •* It may influence the ..Washing ton adminstratlon some, pad pre vent Germany frqnt- getting moral support Bhe was-hoping tor. "but It won't help the French ibucb.' England, which is a good deal nearer to the "situation" and has a lot more to say. about It than the' United States, certainly doesn't want France's Ruhr Venture to »uc ceed. True, they do say '.he Brit ish have been changing over to 1 the French side, too, but the Brit ish press doesn't sound like The more it talks about the French course, the . more pesstmUilc It gets, Ruhr trouble to. develop Into anoth er war. That would be too disor ganising. But it's better than 'an even bet that, through England's tinkering, the whole thing will drift'Into a hopeless deadlock, and then there’ll be meditation, Bnd the windup won’t be any too favor able to France, though' possibly not to Cermany either. ■IK| k KWH if WHAT AN UNPLEASANT THOUGHT! A news .agency made :t rathe: unpleasant' suggestion the oth«c It was this: Suppose America got Into a war —for instance with Japan. Pre sumably she’d want all the coun tries which owe her money to pay up promptly. Quite likely she'd be so anxious she'd offer liberal discounts if they'd hasten thel- r*M tlements. It would pinch them, r f course, but they could afford to be pinched if they got favoraolo terms enough. : Just that little hint doesn't amount to enough to get snsplcioun of other countries over, lest they stir somebody to start trodble w Ith All the same, ft's been noted that wars sometimes are "framed op” for Just such reason's. For example’, only a day or two ago Dean Inge, the popular Lon don pulidt "rator. made the public charge that “publie nasslqn Js be- tng worked up In America for a gratltotis attack on japan.” the The tuneful score of Reginald DeKoren'p "Robin Hood” has lost none of its chatm with the pass ing years and Its presentation by the excellent cast gathered to gether by May Valentine is up holding the best traditions of the Opera. AH the old-time favorite songsare sung with the same suc cess that pleaded you In former years. "Brown October Ale” with Its ac rompaniment of clicking cups, and the woodfy atmostphero ' of the forest to color tbo song—"Oh. fro mlse Me." a popular ballad Whose heart Interest and melody haye j ' a quarter of h century'—"The Black Crow," with Its "CnwtCa'w-Caw” refrain, and the humoring chorus—‘The Forest’ song with the bird trlifs. "The Armourer's Song” set to a clanking anvil, and the always beautiful "Wedding Chimes" song. Heading the cast is Harry Pfell as Robert of Huntington (Robin Hood) and Miss Bess Curry as Maid 'Marian, Miss, Emma Jean Arnt as Alan-a-Dale. George 'h Anyway. It's against natuto. .kidd M rertihric that isn’t calculat- England Is always, not perhaps I** 1 make the Japanese like us. the opfh enemy of the strongest! y'* an unpleasant thought that continental European nation, but there may be interests that would at least opposed to It. It’s been l°°k to profit by it if America the same ever since she become a! w^re Involved in a serious conflict, first class power—against Spain. against France, against Russia, against Germany, In turn. Now It's France again. J The British consider the French dangerous already. If they "get I away" with their Ruhr enterprise' thev'H be still more so. I England isn't going to permit uch thing if she can help l.t. NATIONAL NERVE8 ALL JUMPY Paint and Varnish Products -Prevent Destruction There have bepn plenty of email sized labor troubles !u this country of more importance, in themsotves than the little frontier JTuabDIe between Poland and Lithuania. . Of course the reason this pet>; that fhd British want th'o disturbance attracts so much at- 1 tention la the fear that -some conn try a good deal bigger—meaning Russia—will break into it. An incident seemingly of no more con sequence served as the signal fer the World War to start • It Isn't likely that this spark will touch off any such explosion, but it Just goes to show how jum >y Abe. world's nerves are that it should cause so much worry. America,' England, France and Japan are finding fault with China because she’s a trifle behind in mhetfng some of her foreign finan cial obligations. a-Dale. Troupe as “Llttlh John.” Char- lotto Ingham as Annabelle. Phillip Conyers as Will Scarlett. The comedy roles are cared for by Bert ran Goltrn aa the Sheriff of Nottingham. MYs. Clarence Ben nett as Dame Durden, ana Fred Zfnt as the wily Sir Guy of Gls- bonrne. The Sytpphony Orchestra arrled by the company will be un der the noted director. Mias May Valentine. “Robin Hood” will be at the colonial theatre Saturday evening, March 10. The Urenau ’ 'es club will make its appearance in Athens at nn early date playing at the' Colonial t! .atre under the auspices of the Alien R. Fleming Post of the AmcrlcCn Legloiit the funds derived l>y ths perform ance to go /Into an enter ainmentj fund the local post is building tip for the state convention that meets here in July. The Brenati club l 1 .'* -year Is said to he one. of flic best In the history of this school and Is certain to meet with the approval of local theatre goers. ' „ The date of the appM-ance will ba nnnoUnced later. Qolumbus Pastor 'Former Athenian Mew Steel Cages For Co. Convicts Special to Banner-Herald JEFFERSON. -Ca^The board of commlssionc rs of road and reve nues of Jackson county has 'in stalled tw.o steel cages which are being used in caring for and r,leaping the convicts during thc night. Reach cage is divided in- COLUMBUS, Ga.—Rev. R. A. Whitten, of Athens, Gc., has been called to thc pastorate of the Rose Hill Christian church, to succeed Rev. R. F. Brown, resigned ef fective March 1 to accept a call to Ohio. •• Rev. Mr; Whitten accepted N the call, agreeing to begin service here Mny 1. At present Rev. Dr. Whit ten is d6ing field work for the mission board of his church, and will not be able to leave that post until the date named. This will leave the Rose Hill church with out ^ pastor for '.(wo months. DRAWFUNNIES Drawings By BillHolman. Verses By Hal Cochran. Stormed by Tons of Metal! I N • year’s time your table bears the brunt of a tremendous down pour of silver*and steel. Knives, forks, spoons—nicking and denting, digging and cutting—slowly but steadily whittling away the gloesy beauty of the surface. What needless mini Devoe Paint and Varnish Products coatthe table with a smooth, dura ble glass-like surface, guarding the wood from harm and keeping the bequty unmarred. Scott Hardware Co. Athens. Ga. Fend Qg the Crashes aithl Devoo Mirrqlac Stains-in-Varnish Devoe Mirrolso Natural Varnishes Devoe Mirrolso Bttamals . IT’S HARO ON CHINA Nobody—creditors excepted — who's familiar with the conditions under- Which China gets her loans 'can‘help 1 ,sympathizing with her a little for liatiftg to pay, not to much the principal, as the interest os what she has to borrow abroad. .'In.the first place, she's plwayt charged • preUft-stiff rate—gener ally around 6 or 7 per cent, which Is high for i government. But the main, point la that, hav ing no' recognized money unit of her owq, whatever china borrows sho gets In silver, at Its market price at the time the loan's made. By an odd coincidence—which International financiers may be able to explain, however—every time a loan Is paid over to her .the price-of silver chances to be ‘very high, so that the bankers making the loan have to give her comparatively little of it, and every time she pays any of It back the price is very low. so that she has to give her creditors great deal. In this wav. probably It wouldn’t be* far out of the way to guess '•—* she pays It or 15 per cent, on average, foi> her' foreign borrow ings. V cr?. c3r>: WORLD LEAGUE AGAIN President Harding's advocacy of American participation in the League of Nations' world tribnnal came so suddenly that a little time’s needed to let the Ides sink in. I Probably most neoplc will won Uer "how come" the president didn't spring his scheme until af ter It was too late to amount fo anything In the Sixty-seventh Con gross end yet did spring It. too soon tor the Sixty-eighth. And echo or something is liable to answer that maybe the admlnis (ration was afraid nP Senator Borah's plan to stumn the country' •Jail summer tn favor of an interna- j tlonal court, and honed, bv the nrpr'Ao-’tlnl announcement, to bust in thc head of the senator's dram.' EVERETT TRUE To The FacultyamfStndent Body of Our Great Edosatal Institutions MAY VALENTINE'S Presentation of REGINALD Dr KOVEN’S COMIC <£pERA MASTERPIECE SPLENDID CAST OF' PRINCIPALS PRICE8 LOWER FLOOR ...... $1.60 BALCONY $1.00 GALLERY .... 76c and 60s CITJf AND OUT OF T OWN MAIL ORDERS NOW_ Valentina Believes In Bsfora-the-War Pries* 8EAT SALE OPEN8 THUR8DAY MONEY .AND BUSINESS Money is ta business— HOW TO SECURE TICKETS BY MAIL PRICE8 LOWER FLOOR . BALCONY .... GALLERY .... HA® $1.00 76c and 60c U)DRH .UDlo'A^ART^TaPRlCBOP J OFFICE AND EXP PRESS MONEY ORDERS PAYABLE TO 8. M. FUNKENSTEIN: ■ DESIRED. INCLUDE SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVLOPE TO INSURE ^AFE \ : »-s .