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VOL. 91-
NO. 20.
Associated Press Service
ATHENS, GA* SUNDAY MARCH 4, 1923
N. E. A. Sirv'ee
Single Copies S Casta Daily. I Casta Sunday.
pretty girls win
IT
i; UNESYILLE. Ga.—Girls from
a ll ' m cr the United States have
bwn
Colored Farmers At
Ft. Valley Are To
Conduct A Fair
‘ By J. 0. ALLEN 4 ,
Beginning Marh 8 colored* farm
er* of the Fort Valley section will
conduct a fair at which more than
1,000 farm exhibits produced by
themselves will be on display at
the Fort Valley Industrial 'School,
Ton:
tion
n honored at Brenatr College !“ u ® y £ J!!!v , T'
Lnm hv holne rin. ncocrding to O. S. O Neill, leader
v^ntory here by being *e- of demoniltnitl6n work there
Choice butter, ham*, cheese, poultry
and other farm products will com*
poae the exhibit with suitable prlxe*
to be awarded. •
The wine variety of the exhibits
and the Interest being manifested
by the colored farmers of the sec
tion arc taken a* Indication that
they are not going bock to tne
raising of cotton on 1 a large scale.
w t ,d for membership In Phi
siKina. Mu Jhl Epsilon and
7,.In I'hl Kta, three distinctively
hciH-raf societies at the lnititu-
sald that the selection of
girls for these honorary places
j, Hi., most important and Inter
line event of the school year,
,im.. ilu, faculty has to pass on
earli i« rson selected after the girls
girls themselves have attained sr
high scholastic standing and pou-
hrltr with the student body of the
col If 20.
Those selected for membership
In I’hl Meta Sigma: Misses Ellen
Smith, Greenville, S. C.; Helen
Voule, Hannibal. Mo.; Ethel Bow-
Philadelphia, P*.; Frances
Farrell. New Orleans, La.; Rita
Barton, cope. S. C.; Reba Strtck-
lantl. concord. Ga.; Susie Pear!
Hill. Gainesville, Ga.; Irene John-
,nn. Gainesville. Ga.; and Dorothy
Cass. Fitzgerald, Ga.
Those selected for membership
In Feta Phi Eta: Misses Made Fry
Valdosta, Ga.; Elizabeth .Felts,
llirhan . N C.; Margaret McCer-
ROBIN HOOD, COMIC
OPERA. IRE MAR. 10
APPEAR IN ATHENS
Harry Stillwell Edwards,
Creator of Aeneas Afri‘
canus, To Appear At
Lucy Cobb Tuesday.
The ohort life of *tho average play,
the passing fame of the uvernge
■tar, has always been the rub of tne
theatrical busings Each Jenr brlngsj /
forth Its endless crop of •■s.or.J At i!, en * Anti-Tubereulqefa Fund.
of the century.” ‘hits of the uge”.
bigger sensation Jn twenty ycur,. - '
and where are they all lodnyT Eon >
gives no answer neither does tne
■ „ ,• - l,..—n. billboard, the Oulja board or the
tell, Mtt.s Pock. Art. >farc«Ua id(llly ncwlpup . r . uke Rh „ kp
Moffett. rinckneyvllK 111.; Vtr- I
tinia Hod .res. Hendersonville, N.
r t aokWh ran,,.- UafMaahn*. 1 ■tnittea and fretted their hour or
DUSKS’ ,wo ” “ nd ,h * n vanished lnt> the
Miss. Grace Everest Plattabnrg, great Umbo of the forgotten.
N.V : Eleanor Reid, Sarannab, Oa. when. lherefor ,. tt play Kon „„
Marion Griffin, Waycrosa, Oa*! jyear after year, showing to bigger
Kerne Estes, Leon, lows.; Eliza- ■ and bigger audiences; wnen Its
belh Parker, Columbns, Ga. score and songs continue to outsell
Those selected for membership a dozen times over all the ragtime
In Mu Phi Epsilon: Misses Fran- and Jazz "hits of the age/ It la a
tes Ihlng, Bartow, Fla.; Dorothy I matter worth >iieclul n ote. Wc re*
and Uulse Aston, Coleman, Teg.; fer to “Robin Hood.” written
Dorothy Gllham. Columbia, 8. C.;
Carolyn Allen, Calhoun, Oa.; Mar-
zaret Murphree, MIdviUe, Oa.;
Kathleen Sutton, Louisville, Ky.;
Mary I.ou Bell, Dothan, Ala.;
Olive Wills, Jefferson, Ga.; Cath
erine McQuary, Ashland City,
Trnn; Bena Boltin, Gainesville,
Florida; Rosa MacOowan, Lauve.us,
Smith Carolina.
Abney,Alford
To Attend Meet
thirty years ago by Reginald Dc-
Koven and Harry B. Smith, and
which Manager May Vnlcntlne will
present at the Colonial theatre. Sat-
urday evening. March m.
Originally produced by the famous
Boatonlnns, It baa been continually
before the American public. And to
day It la still brenklng box office
records still selling out on the first
dny of Its seat Sale, still brlngln,-.
laughter and npmahee and happing.*
to thousands. “Q promise ,Mc” ts tne
biggest seller ’<
any single musical
t tui it
composition, Just as It wet the first
year of the opgHPf producer.n.
Abnay
A. N. Alford- of Hartwell will be
among those from this section at-
ruling the meeting of the United
Sfctes Good Roads Assoc la tin, the
Eankhead Highway Association
and the U. S. Good Roads Show
in Greenville, S. C., April 16-21.
Mcs.-rs. Alford and Abney are of
ficer s in the Bankhead Highway
Association.
Thos. G. McLeod Governor of
South Caroling has accepted invi
tation to deliver the address of
welcome in behalf of the state of
South Carolina at the oponing of
thuc conventions. Ha has pledged
to Director General Rountree and
the Greenville Chamber of Com
merce Road Bureau that ha will do
everything in his power to suit
m making the annual meetings of
these two associations and the
I’nMed States Good Roads Show a
iucccss.
Lee Morris Goes
To N. Y. To Buy
I.ce Morris of the Lee Morris
clothing and furnishing store, one
ot the leading Athena* merchants
of his line, leaves today for New
York where he goee to look after
new stocks tor the summer and
fail. Mr. Morris carries one ot the
enmptetest stocks of men and boya
wearing apparel to bo fonnd In
the state.
Mr. Morris will ha away about
ten days on this trip.
WiroBriefs
(By Associated Ptfsa)
Harry Stillwell Edwards, of Mo-
con, creator of “Aeneas Africa-
nus,” that delightful story of an
ante-bellum negro, appears at
Eeney-Stovall chape! at Lucy Cobb
Institute here Tuesday night
Mr. Edwards, wiener of tho Chi
cago Daily News 310,000 pries
for the best, novel of tho aeason
some years ago, is one of the fore-
cost literary men of the country.
He comes to Athena -Under aus
pices of the Athens Community
Council. '
Mr. Edwards will give a reading
of one of his neW stories. A
small admission charge will be
made and the proceeds will he
split, part going toward expenses
of a young girl sent to Ashe vlllr
by Mr. Edwards for tuberculosis
teratment and the balance to the
The ente-talr.ment Will begin at
8 o’clock.
IS GIVEN STIMULUS
Indications Are That
Clarke County Is Soon
To Be A Great Poultry
Center. * ■
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla.-nJohn
H. Pritchard, chief Justice of the
supreme court of Oklahoma, died.
WASHINGTON — Tho Federal
power company granted the Ford
Motori company tho right to de
velop power at the government
high dam between SL Paul and
Minneapolis.
WASHINGTON Maasanano
Haul Hare, the new ambassador
from Japan, presentqfl hla creden
tials to President Harding.
ONSTANTINOtLE —The Turk
ish government has entered a
strong protest against the refusal
of the Greek government to begin
the exchange of prisoners.
BERLIN — The .Federal Minis
ter of Traffic has forbidden Ger
man railways to handle any goods
from German Arms which has re
ceived the support of the Franco-
Belgian customs officials In mak
ing their shipments.
HELENA, Mont — Wellington
D. Ranking, attorney general for
Montana ruling the projected box
ing match at Shelby. Montana, be
tween Jack Dempsey and Tom Gib
bona, of SL Paul, wluld not bo In
violation of the Montana laws.
Poultry raising In Clarke county
and the northern counties of Geor
gia Is receiving a great, stimulus,
according to a statement given out
by the extension service of the state
college of agriculture. Plans are
being '.aid. It Is said, that will tend
toward*,developing the Industry and
placing It on a secure foundation
as an established business.
Mqch of the interest In poultry
raising, It. Is believed, conies from
the necessity of tbs farmer to grow
or raise ■omethltig tith» mail cot
ton as a consequence of which he
IS turning to cows, hogs and chick
ens.
As an lndlcktloq^of the propor
tions to which the movement tpr
more and better poultry has grown,
figures compiled by the extension
service show that an average of ono
carload a day of eggs la now being
■old for export In Georgia. Bids for
then come from all over tbs' coun
try. At Rockmart BarnesvlUe, Moul
trie Thomasvllle -and other towns
where highly succeaafut sales have
been held, the farmers attribute
their success to the co-operative
system ot marketings whlcn they
have praqticqd.
Dr. Mullins May Be
X Head of Baptist
World Alliance
Dr. J. A. Bell, wall known re
tired Baptist minister of Athens,
who is qnita often heard in psl-
pita in this section of Georgia, is
of the opinion that Dr. E. Y. Mul
lins, president of fbe Soupthem
Baptist Convention, will succeed
the late lamtnted Dr. MacArthm
si president of the Baptist World
Alliance
at the meeting to ha bald
in Stockholm ,8weden in July.
Dr. MscArthijr died a few weeks
ago in Florida. For forty one
yean he had bean pastor of Cal
vary Baptist church, New York.
NEW YORK — Charles Hughes,
a chauffeur, was arrested in con
nection with the $500,000 School-
kopf robbery New Year*e eve.
-=—r
CORN EXPORTS MAKE
^ NEW HIGH RECORD
iu, urtffifrtS 8?S5
That of Any Other Yew, "by-products'* the total win ap- 8094 of the world’s production.
Crosses $100,000,000 Line proximate *150,000,000. Argentina is next In rank to the
*,» ibis increase of 323.000,000 ja United States a* a corn producer.
~“* ... , the value of oor corn exports in but her total output is In fact leas
hxports of com from the United ea ]endar year 1922, when com- than one-tenth that of the United
s »tet in the calendar year 1922 Mre j w j t h the former high record States, her 1921 crop having totaled
"«<ie a new high record when eoe- Vear. ocean chiefly in movements 231X06000 bushels against SXMfc.
"dcred by the number of dollars to Europe. To Germany alone the OOO.MO fa the United Ststes^Re;
•«* ‘her brought to the Aral; exports, of .lest .yesr were neerty nwnfa produees ^bomJWXy WO
^TnMMofooTtaVeJP rK
'tttLMSf 32. rrar; to the. United Kin,
. „ Nether- of the worid** total, then Argentina.
I against lss« Romania, rad Italy. - The Orient
; to France products practically no corn; Any-
only e half tralia but a small quantity, white
• Belgium, fa Africa and South America the
1 the calendar
'a this the 37.006000 worth of corn
'■cal and other
Yofwf’wVadd RutT'ia and the Ukraine als^showtd ?o^?hern 0n and , thertfore the ten-
Wworn"rt^SSSo yn. dT W1,n * ‘he petevs. «* " hich °r
r-n .tareh. the 36000.0001Wh of Pf , 0 **,J v *orn •»,
•■"•n «vmo sometimes designated as J 1 *** 1 eeecjrd ves Cfatada. eoerze etightlv. less then w 1921.
'"•we**, the haH ntiWon dolfare Aarearefadaremenv to «ns |||e ^ wx« far leas
“”'h of corn rater and the heH Mjxjre mwjLOT- w—•Man ,h ** of "Aar erafaa. retted-
« "ion dollars worth ot corn oiT Thk faerrese in tne r.m^pra vhMf ^
*' r,W. the 1922 exports of the testsiforcore«we«w»irrrm ^ m h, iq» hri-e Wte are
r-^’-r,, o| mw rnritflehte wonld fax«» falfthatwe nrndner hn.het again.* 72ritll921. wh«r
' ”* nearhr 3150.000.006 The velue cause ot tne It -|,e the report nrtrr of eehrst *n W2
” ' m rrfaaerorn erpnrfed dnnnr mart Jh” iljte/ssid mar poeei. wee 91JS against 3I_55 falOTIl
■*'■>.* deride aggregate, eon.'d- corn of th 0 . a |p,o.t no- Ihr fell fa the renort prfar ofenrp
-’Mr more than a half h.lbnn '",X " ^ wh'Wi. MJj
"m<< ot Shout 150- “ i ,,,. ■ ,„r »h.Vh wnrld wheat shoercd S faH of JOe. ..A,
^ q year. wbd. the 1922 tou.. the
Button Making-
New Service, ask for
complete informa
tion.
£Michael brothers
Order By Mail—All
Mail Orders Filled
the same day as re
ceived.
The March Week of Silk and Silken Garments
Silk Hosiery
$1.59 Sale
Canton Crepe
$2.89 Sale
Since they are made by
Holeproof, these fine
Silk Stockings need no
further proof of their
worth. Black, White,
Brown, Grey. _
Fine Silk Hose
$2.49 Sale
Pure Silk are these from
the tip of the toe thru
the reinforced garter
top. From Gotham and
McCallum in White,
Black and Brown.
VWe arc'prepared tocai
ment whether *-- ! -
,have silks foi
day, whether
A Representation
Truly Remarkable of
Everything.»in] Silk.
on display in oor store during th^'week'oC
[Match $th to ioth, for this-ii.thef
NATIONAL^EXPOSITION
bfEVERY'"’™
>- 4
The heavy Silk Canton.
40 inches wide, "and of
a beautiful finish. Here
in colon White, Black,
Navy, Jade, Brown and
Midnight:
Long Silk
Qloves
$149 Sale
In the drawing room, boudoirWsticct/oor-
Exclusive^ models j n go wns»^mBfioen^lfiiM
Milady., < * ' 'T
I ". ° ur Art^Departmcnt’you'willjAwTatTwide'nmge'of deftiylnade
arncies for the decoration of the home—faunp shades,’candle shades,
pillows, boxes for lingerie, hosiery, handkerchiefe,, as well as the
more important ones such as cuijnins, coverlets and scarfs/
We Extend Ybu a Most Cordial Invitation *
to'call any'day or every day of this weekly >* . >
Silk Printed
Crepe
$2.49 Sale
The most stylish of all
silks, in a wide variety
of beautiful new de
signs. The silk is 40
irehes wi-le and a love
ly quality
Kayser 16 Button
length heavy Italian
silk Gloves. And a truly
remarkable value; Sizes
6 1-2 to 7 1-2. In Black
jWhite, Grey, Tan,
SMichaeVs
Silk Sweaters
$7.95
Short Silk
Gloves
79c
IpBOOSmON^
(or BraormHo). 1
ivLiHsnjK. rj
The finest quklity fibre
Silk garmenta in the he
mming Tuxedo Coat
models. Black, Jade,
Navy, Orchid, Jockey
Red and Brown.
■ / A
From Kayser, too! The
heavy quality, wrist
length in sizes 5 1-2 to
71-2. Colors, Black,
White, Brown, Tan and
Beige. \
r /.
/
Parisley Silk
Blouses
. $10.75
Stunning models in the
overblouse effect, fash
ioned of the most beau
tiful fancy silks in for
eign designs. All col
ors and combinations.
Deauville
Scarfs
Special
$1.89
Silk tRibbons
, % OFF
Width for every
' Purpose
! \ ^
j. Suppresses for Spring
$18.75
Eveiy one a stunning new dress fashioned- beautifully
of the silks now most in vogue. These dresses are actual
ly worth $10.00 to $12.00 more than the sale price.
Kayser Silk Underwear
V** $1.98 Teddies $2.98
It is needless to tell you of the virtues of Kayser Italian
Silk Undies. None is so pretty, so fine, so durable. These
garments are especially fine. The value is .a great one!
jSfSSkj Special Spring Display
|rf SILK HATS
$5.00 ' $7.50 .
$10.00'
Remarkable values in lovely hats of the newest silk
fabrics—hats of every shape and color.
\ 1 • v .
New Silk Satin
Venetian Tumps f .uf
$10.00
The shoe section features for silk week the Blue Ribbon
winner of the Spring Shoe Convention at Chicago. A lat
tice work cut out. model of the finest quality. The pump*
is an especially, fine model for wear with the new bright
colored hose. ■ U .
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