Newspaper Page Text
r H U R S DAY, MARCH 8, 1923
weather always hare
■ Stops Colds in24 hours
Hays. Standard remedy
ration!!. No bad after
/ mddependable. Detna
Mr. Hill's portrait»
•I Druggiitt—30 Cento
■rt. r
No Coni Tod]
Tough for
“Gets-lf*
ARE TO BE REVISEr '"* '
nvjntiv■■ Cost* but a trifle—everywhere.
Co. Mir.. Chicago.
DR. BELL’S
Pine-Tar Honey
C/iccks Coudis and Gold*
Years ago. Grandma used Dr. Bell's
Pine-Tar Honey for the coughs of all
the family. Today, as yesterday, it Is
relieving the suftcringof thousands of
little one* as well as Brown'll pi. It breaks up
ir.’U atuclflkol coughing, loosena phlegm,
•oojbes inlUfifd tissues. K«4p a bottle on
your shelf right tlirogb tbo bad weather.
Aliny drug store. ^
/•"V'-nra 1 ( iii
v Wf
COMING TO
ATHENS
on a return wisit
The Progressive
Doctor
Treating Diseases with
out Surgical Operation
•
At the Georgian
Hotel Friday and
Saturday, March 9th
and 10th.
Office Hours: 10 A. M.
to 4 PM.
TWO DAYS ONLY
Returning in Three
Months' xvrfl
FREE ~
CONSULTATION
Tin. Progressive Doctors’
Specialist Is licensed by the
state 0 f Ceorgia; a graduate
of on,, of the best universities;
iKentj-nvc years of practical
cjp' rienqe; (third year to Geor
rial ,„ m es w a |i recommended.
" II 'l.'unmatmte to the princl-
pal . itis* methods of treating
-“oases of Ipag atandtog by
tt’cate! of medicines, diet and
■rgl-nt... thus saving many peo-
ptc iron, a dangerous and ex-
pcr.'it.. stirg|cal operation. .
Ti.h specialist Is an expert
‘J diagnosis and will tell you
,ho ' * ict truth abont your
rendition. Only tboso who have
f c "'Kl chance to regain their
f"al.lt will he treated, so that'
, w ! ) one who takeA treatment
*m l.rlng the|r friends at the
text Visit. • .
' diagnosis of 'may disease
"l l"i;. standkg. Its nature and
nn " will bo made FREE and
Pt"i r t if,Heines wilt be famish
reasonable cost to those
” '' :,, i as favorable re sea for
*'tni.iron must be
' their parents and married
™|. s by their husbands.
Now that the cnmpalan for r«-
rruitlnK membership la' the Cham
ber of Commerce has been com
pleted. there ensues a pericn or ac
tivity known us the Installation
period.' Thla period Is devoted to
revision of the Constitution and hy
laws, to innble the Chamoer «o
proceed along the lines o, greatest
efficiency In operation.
The nlnt of the American City Bu.
' reau plan Is to achieve the grent-
j Tst possible democracy In the or-
.ionisation cbnslstsnt with ' effi
ciency and to assure the greatest
possible amount of memnershtti
participation' in the work of the
Chamber. •
In other words a working mem
bership. This slan retains interest
in the Chamber ,and aids In per-
’ecting the sort of an organisation
which brings nuccesa to a communl
ty. It prevents the formation
groups which may be swayed by
economic motives and keeps tne
Organization in a healthy state.
Tlje first worker the Installa
tion i>erlod will be the holding of
meeting of the entire merntwr-
ship for the purpose of making
Suggestions for the program of
Work mid Incidentally to vote on
the proposed revision of the coa
stitutlon and by laws.
THE PROGRAM
OF WOR(C OUTLINED
One of the essentials of a Cham
ber of Commerce which is to op
erate In accord with the wishes
■f the members Is that they should
bnve a voice In, determining the
policies of the Chamber and that
the work which the Chamber un
dertakes to do Is In hurmgny wits
their wishes. In order to ascer
tain what those wishes are It l->
necessary to secure from eaeV
member hla own wish and to ns
certain to whnt extent the desires
of the entire membership run par-
allot.
In order to do this, the Group
Meeting plan has been devised. The
entire membership Is arbitrarily
divided into groups by alphabetical
divisions. This gives a cross sec-
lion of the Chamber and , is suf
ficiently tjUvernlfed to represent
many phases of community life. A
banker muy sit next u farmer, a!
lawyer next to a merchant a
member of the municipal govern
ment pext a property holder.
THE GROUP
MEETING
A' group will comprliy possibly
15 or 20 members from Titian 1
walks of life. Each group will hnvy.
chairman who will preside and
Her that each member c,f the group
has a chance to mnke his suggea-
tion as to what ought to be un-'
dertaken. Each fnemher of ttte
group will he usked to answer two
questions.
1— What In your opinion can the
Chamber of Commerce best do for
tho benefit of yoUr huslness or .pro
fession?
2— Whnt, In your opinion Is (tne,
first thing thnt the Chamber ofj
ularity befqu
the Chamber
These subjects furnish S fertile
field for study and thought in de
veloping a comprehensive, well bal
anced program.
It will he found tlmt In the at-- „„„„ ... . .
pointment of committees that It is NEW YORK—'Mistaken
frequently best to u|fpp:|nt men of education are so crowding the
who are Interested in u given pro- nation’s schools that costs are be-
Prohibitive and must cer-
ance may be given Hie tllrectors in ‘ tainly bring about radical cur
the appointment of committees. tailments, Dr. Henry S. Pritchett,
▼ur AAuuirr»/ president of the Carnegie Founda-
Ivor B u M wto7a I ue r, tion for the Advancement of
SYSTEM EXPLAINED Teaching, declared in his annual
In the old days many Chambers r*Pori.
of Conhnerce were orgamxM with The conception that the pub-
'Burenus or standing committees tin .school is an agency In which
S nd the usual Tesult was thtu tne any child may be taught any sub
urbans were too cumbersome m ject,” he said, “is fundamentally
functl-.n, the organization wits unsound and leads to expense bo-
clogged up with dead wood and that ytmd any man’s ability to esti-
the standing-' committees proved mate!
true to name and merely "stood"! “If the demands of the schools
but accomplished little. [ continue to increase at the pres-
The new method la the appoint- ent rate the inability of soci-ty to
ment of a special committee which 'pay the cost must bring about
will have a specific Job to no. a radical curtailments. The public
given time in which to do it and uf-\ school will be endangered unless
ter the job is done U will be die- its cost is brought within limits
charged. This enables a large pi-- that the public can bear, and un-
iwrtlon of the members to take less it fulfills tho primary oii-
part in the activities of the Cham- jects for which it exists,
her and contribute their work and, “The increase in cost is due
advice to the organisation, it pro- partly to increase in numbers, the
sent* dead committees and light-. betterment of facilities, the im-
ena the work by placing a small pr0V ement of teachers’ salaries,
share of the burdens an the shoui- tg ut „ Iarge par t of the increase
°'* ,,ch r “‘»’ er lhun tne ,is due to the fact that the school
ffra W °‘ kfr " Cnrry the *-i* no longer conceived of as pri- .
’ These grouri meetinva win wtarity an intellectual agency, butt
at T ?hT !? us t means for learning something |
the eVerV n^nreDarat ion for 1
of March ». This will be one ot fo * acquiring n preparation for j
the piost Interesting and valuable 5 lradc . or ? r °5i!
meetings ever held in Athena-and aeavor to do All this the public
It Is hoped there will be u large schools give a ^mattering of many
attendance on that date. These things, weaken intellectual discip-
group meetings have been ao Inter- line, and increase expense enor-
estlng thnt In some cities it-nas mously.” H . ,
been necessary to continue them to 1 The rcpqrj, taking up fmancial
the following day to permit some ot affairs, said $9,333,670 .has been
the members to finish their plans distributed during 17 years to 1,-
for the Improvement of the com- 020 persons in retiring ullowanres
munity. They are vety enjoyabe ’and pensions. Of this $787,000
and contribute a great amount of was made to former teachers of
Harvard; *677,000 to Yale; $592,-
000 to Columbia, $400,000 to Cor
nell. The rest went to 85 insti
tutions.
Present resources of the Carne
gie Foundation, the report declared
real constructive thought to tne
welfare of the community.
The day after the group meet
ings tho first primary bnlloc ror
the election of directors will ne
moiled to the membership. rol muauon, me report, man,
y? U ! , | lnK i lhe m< l nt * ire $26,376,000, of-which $15,192,
n , mem * e " For H m tor tne 000 belong to the permanent gen-
?h; C we1?a n r.°of m X r ;. Pertn,n,ng toe“
m wuT^ l |nruTleS°m“t n hi n ?h^' tir * , " e " t ^ f te * che ” durin K 60
in win lx? inHtallea In the Cham-• r 0770011 to the endow-
ami . ra j£rr n p y.SET Kof toe ^vision of EdScarion
» pro- Inquiry, and $028,000 to a special
- ’ reserve fund.
ceeding at full sp^d ahead by tne
closo of the month which nuuas
the end of the Installation period.
The inelallaticn work will ih> :n
charge of Melba B. Uusscll of tne
American City Bureau field staff.
Air. Bussell wan formerly the sec
retary ,,f the Chamber of com
merce at Bridgeport, Conn. nm. ;ms
been with the Amerlottn City ::u-
reait far four yearn ns jin orgam
xatlon specialist anfl n/iiii
WIRES ARE NORMAL
. a."* advisor
o counsellor to Chambers of Com- _ _ , . ,
merce which have.bksn orgamsoA. * ATLANTA; Os.—Telephone and
This is part of the threo year sc- It'qgtaph communication in Atlan-
vice of tHi American Bureau which nnd from- this city to nearby
consists in return visits to councet points was reported nearly normal
Commerce should undertake tor tne * with aud advise the directors, uec- Wednesday morning with repair
benefit of tho community ns ,tIrethry, offlcors'und members as to -of scores of wire breaks resulting
whole? [methods of efficiency and policy. from toe wind storm which swept
The chairman wll cnll on encli ' m ' = I this vicinity during the night.
member q|f the group to nnmvt-t j BpRMUpA BUSY I Trees and telephone poles were
theso questions and a blana will 1 . . SHIPPING RUM scattered abopt by the wind, put-
be piovlded on which the memn-r HAMILTON—Owners ot small ting out of commission approxi-
sailing craft here are flndlnv mately 350 poles, telephone offi-
Profitable use for thetr cials reported. Long distance
can write down hla suggestions on
thnt they may become n part of the
permanent rscorda of the Cham
her.
Aa< a suggestion is mane, otner
members of the group wilt be ns-:
ed to discuss it very Informally so
that there may be n .thorougn un
derstanding of It within the group.
In other parts of the room, ofa-
1 groups will be operating along
similar llnsa under other chairmen
and making their auggestlona.
In that way we will be able to
ascertain - from hundreds of dif
ferent an glee what la considered
bod for the .community and the
things which the Chamber should
undertake. The auggestlona are
written down and the blank signed
by the member so that he may bo
consulted later for further advice re
gordinf the projects which he sup-
porta. When the entire methber-
shlp has been canvassed in tins
wny the suggestions will be trans
cribed onto cards and sorted out uy
subject.
Borne of those subjects will have
a great many suppporters and oth
ers will he new or
known..
SECURES UNITED
ACTION AT ONCE
•
It Is apparent that ths things
which the greatest number of mem
bers deimnd should'he done should
constitute the bilk ot the,work ot
Ha- t' n nbe.- tf i.’i mmerco and a
so that they are the 'projects up- n
which tin- greatest amount of ineir.-
herMlIr'supiHtri can he secured
In the. of1cr Ihelr Imp-rtnnrr
these subjects will be a formulated
into a program of work which the
memberi will aulaf.il 'to the KcW
Board M r.’retloi*.
This pcpgram will in effect
thpugnt censva of he member* turf
the advantage is that It origtiutei
In an l hi formed l*V to® Indlvltluil
mrmbiM ibcn-tt-he*. It does rot
consulate an Iren dad program for
matters will come
which-trill dr
and to which at-
shall be given by the dl-
rcctora. -
The planks In toe program of
week will be divided Into tarce
classifications. The moat important
needs will be classified as tha Ma
jor Program. These auggestlona are
those which have the greatest, sup
port and are sufficiently wen un
deratood to warrant the appoint
ment of committees to seek an Im
mediate solution.
Another classification da called
the Forum or Dlaeuaalonal Pro
gram and which comprises tnoee
things which are not thorough:,
understood. These subjects, should
be discuaed at a membership meet-
ing before action la taken ao that
S5*sr.a=£fis j
sympathy with -the project.
"oats’ If they are -wllihg to -take tne linos were also damaged,
chances Involved In running rum. | With abatement of the storm
During the last tores weeks of here the forecast to this section
dimhary- approximately, S.9>)t> cases Wednesday is for cooler weather
expqyteu from with riring temperature.
Bermuda, and the boa; owners o, | ■ a ,
iV 1 ', 1 *? *° "to l‘ »* destined GAMBLE THE BOOKMAKER
for tho Lnlted Bute*
*
SpDA SAVES TIME
It will not ho necessary to aoak
navy or ahcliod beans overnight if
you will Just add a little baking
when they ara cooking. They I
18 DEAD
LONDON—Samuel Gamble,
book-mnkrr^ho died recently, lefi
an e*tntc of 1500,000 which he had
accumulated .In l)ls dc.nilngs with
folk* who* play the ponlc*.
I He bequeathed hla stuck of liquor
fo the medical department of tne
Baptist Mlmiohary Society.
practically "un-!For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache,
Sour Stomach, Bilious Liver
The nicest cathartic-laxative to
the world to physic your' liver and
bowel* when yon tiavu Dizzy
Headachy Colds, Bilionznagg, Indi
gestion, or UpMt,' Add Stomach
u candy-liko “Casesrets." . One or,,
two tonight will empty your bow- 1 ment.)
^
you will foul splondid. ’‘They'work
while you sleep.” Coscarats neve
stir you up or gripe like Salta,
Pills, Colcmui, or Oil and they co£
"nlv t"" cents a box. Children
love Ca(carets too.—(Advertise-
SAY “BAYER” whep. you buy Aspirin
Unless you see ths name “Bay-
only “Bayer” package which con
tains proper directions. Handy
boxes of twehc tablets cost few
cents. Druggists also soil
of 24
tradt i r ^
of HonoaeetieaddMter of i
cacid, (Advcritbc mcnt()
...A A- ^ ■>-.
Set the style pace for your circle of friends*
Be first with* the new clothes idea* Let the
others follow you* You'll be admired and re*
spected* You'll feel brisk and alert, JCiippen-
heimer good clothes will dp all this for you;
they are an investment in good appearance*
LEE MORRIS
The Daylight Corner
J
-
Standing Back of Your •
Mousetraps
A shoe manufacturer whose store in
New York City if in a rather out- of-
the-way locality recently called the at
tention of the reading public to the* j
familiar lipea: <
“If a man can write a better book,
preach a better sermon, or make a bet
ter mousetrap than his neighbor,
though he build his house in the woods,
the world will make a beaten path to
his door." . x ,
For many years people have beaten
a path to this shoe manufacturer’s door.
He has proved the truth of this famous
aphorism. •
And where did he publish this quota
tion which he-applies with such pride
to is business?
1
Why, in an advertisement, to be sure.
—for this manufacturer is a consistent
and regular advertiser, and when he
has anting to say, he says it through
his advertising. It may fairly be
assumed that he would not look for a
thriving business in the best of mouse
traps, or shoes, if people were not told
about them as people expect to be told
—through advertising.
Of course, people do find out which
are the,host mousetraps, the best shoes,
the. best tires, the ‘best breakfast foods,
and buy them in preference to others.
And neople today are pretty well
aware that when a manufacturer puts
Advertising back of the thing he makes
he is telling the world that the path to
his door is a broad highway.
Published by Th* Banner-Herald In co-operation with Th* American Ascociatian of
Advertising Agendas
^2isec=.
mjYit
*r
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