The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, March 15, 1923, Image 7

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operative Marketing Association. But the farmer must do hia part, of courae, for the time has come when he must learn to ezerOtae hie bralA as well as'his muScie." ’ NEEDING HELP Big Problem of Railroads toir meat .was brought here and i **» . No «?• turns regardless of net profit or tosh. Beautiful* [Complexion & Admiration 1*7.. \ <-.v days' treatment with S UTTIX LIV5R «LL* 'It costs (tothing to fUt and I want to urge all of. our elti- sena to be on the safe fide and avoid penalties and prosecutioos by thing returns in acrordanc? ulth the above .-equlromefcts. Culbctdra' offices throughout cite oud'e are open until'* p. m. Thur;dc f for the filing of returns.' “ " ' Now the animals ore inspected be fore aid after slaughter and If not in for tod are turned down by ln- speotcr for the city. "Only a few months ago butch ers rarely got calls * for native tneirts because of the danger In buying It. Now the consumer knows the native meat Is all right and calls for It consequently the big Increase in the sale of Northeast Georgia live stock for food purpbaes here and decrease in western packers bills. One market man dut hfs packing bill (1,500 per month. Is Restrictive Policies Governing • * Earnings, Says President Wm- bunt SAVANNAH. Gs.—While the railways, in the Southern group have in recent year* .been earning An-averageof MOf than 4 per eent other' industrial ,;hilve averaged f W n|-12-Sr cMM f* 9 P« *•"*. tra| of Georgia’ Railway. ’Inform ation upon .reports of the federal Trade CommjsSion illustrates the difference .between conditions that govern the railways and those un der’ which other industries are per mitted to function. Jt is pointed ouL that .there is (Continued from page one) Il4 'jfcrs he’ follows acrfptuntt reesdent In the fast*: that the ible promises that those who pray 'till sufficient faith will receive. In hi-eaklng the fact. Woodridge >ok only milk' last nrght jutd raduntrd Into heavier foods today. Woodridge, , Methodist minister, who entered Into a fast while en gaged In a revival meeting bare with the belief, he ealii. that through fasting and prayer bis pe tition for the salvation of sinners would "be heard on high.” today endyd the fast a loser. For more tliah a Week be «beta:nd ed from nourishment and the denhHj so IhfA upon htii strength met ho hnd' to' A\‘ down four tildes during his final sermon. He hud declared he would end the "Hunger. srrlSe” when some penitent tnnr confessed etn and Joined the church, but Ills appeal whs in vain; The revival Closed without a Joiner. ' cotton In spite of (ho weevil. To remedy this state of affairs, be proposes appropriations" to enlarge Instructional and educational fadli ties so that the people may be Ultimately advised about all fac tors in weevil control. There must be a comprehensive educa tional plan to reach the children in tne. tchbols, the fathpr, the morebant, .the banker and the manufacturer." The condition of farmers ns shown above, I have culled from ]wipers that have given the subject careful investigation and ■ there is no question about their accuracy. The Banner-Herald realises that when the farmer prospers every line of business-and Individual likewise prospers, .’.kilt.- when tan tiller of the poor and de pressed every person and avoca tion must feel the. disastrous eifeef. This Is no' time to nllnce wprds. if most serious condition Is now upon the country, and ns Mr. Decrlc)t Winter says, something must be done to enable farmers In the. coun try tributary to Athena to get to, work Intelligently and needed aid given them to make a crop. AS Mr. Winter says, they do not so much need propaganda * as help. Arrange for them to get rertliisers and poison, and they will'ma'ie a cotton crop this • year. ,\nn tnc lime is now on us for Jhla aid to be furnished. Let every one co his Mayor is Charged *. With Contempt of Court By Jackson Continued from page oo^)., bond; pending appearance in city bourt. Haley was' Held tfr Jail. -On Saturday ofternoMI. Upon pe tition 'of 'J. Fate nnd’B. K. Jbhn- soR. Judge Fcrtson' issued a tem porary order restraining the mayor and council from revoking the li cense for operutloh- of “Sonifaon's place” and In any' way Interfering with (he business until a hearing could be held Saturday. Month 17. . The cold storage of the* Atlan tic Ice &’.Coal Corporation Is aid ing In finding a^karket for North east ePorgla farmers who raise live stock. The storage was com pleted shout the time the abattoir was finished lin'd Is being used ex tensively by farmers and local purchasers of produce and meats. For Instance, one batcher keeps a month's supply of meat In' the abattoir. He can afford now to buy a fine animal -when brought to the abattoir for slaughter and put It aWny In cold storage.. The fla vor of the meat Is considerably Im proved by staying In the storage for several days. Tt ' is confidently predicted by many that within two years Ath ens 111 be the site for a small pack ing, plant or big market for fcod animals at any rate, as a result of the abattoir and cold storage. in January about 400 animals were slaughtered. February about (00 and March may see that in- Warnlng against an Increase In cotton acreage this . year, Dr. Soulo declared on the other hand That sufficient staple must be raised for the South to preserve supply. This, he believes, can be Its position ss the chief source of done with the same acreage of last year. leaving a moderate amount for export alter American mills have been supplied. Better methods of cultivation he proposes [ns the solution. "I am absolutely opposed to our people undertaking to raise a crop of such igopostlon* as to re duce the price of cotton to a level where the farmer will not receive a falftand just return for bis labor." Dr. Soulo declared in conclusion. ‘‘And I am Just as sdroogly sold as ever on the cost-plus program of nroduetton for the cotton farm er." i’s Wholewheat®-”' fore for religious rcusuns Ufea, sometimes we got* no om heaven. For the fail-/ r For the fail ures'he bjamed hlmseir, saymg bli faith had hot been sufficient, al though ho had done his t£st tt make It adaptable. Vigor and The petitioners said the negro was charged with selling whiskey to someone who later reported It to the police, and If he did-sell It it was done without their knowl edge or consent and they had noth ing to - do with It- Police claim to have found whiskey in the place. The order of the court was serv ed cn Mooyr Thomas by the sher- their losses. Mr. Winbum argues that traw- fortation is an essential factor Of business, and that if the railwsyr are to-function in the interest of the public the muat be allowed' to earn and retain a rate of return which will enable them to obtain funds to' meet the increasing de mands of commerce. This cannot be done however, if restrictive pol icies are cdrriedto greater ex tremes. I Mr. Winburn states that the Central of Georgia asks only the sams treatment 1 1 which he hils fallen. Two Days Remain of Big Shoe Sale Ready for Anything ail wci ; Iff but Sunday another petition was presented to Judge Forfson stating the executive "willfully and knowingly disobeyed" the court and revoked the license and naked for a rule In contempt. Monday, the mayor wan summoned to appear before Judge Fortaon- Saturday at 11 o’clock t» show Cause why he. is not to be held In contempt’of court. . ■ ■ The ipnyor claims the license was revoked and the place cloud before the restraining order was Issued and therefore he was with in his rights aa a city official, ac cording to the court records. Johnson's place Is still closed. I pwikj Tfle most wonderful shoe sale ever held in this city has been the bankrupt sale conducted by Martin Brothers. Only two more i Last Day iconic Reports Thursday On csss of misfortune, with tftis baHk will good stand in either Farmer Needing Help Not Advice Continued-from page one) family, but lb the combined labor K ut fur- ition of i earning power through rate redix- kaii owuicui jiujuoici wiKd t , j o-—** v v "“w announces that tomorrow and Sat- th*r impairment^ and llmi urdey will be the last days. There fa a* large stock yet of the very highest grades and quality shoes 1 Continued from page on*) tions and adverse legislation. COLORED WOMAN DIES Aunt Fannie Acres, a colored' woman aged SO yean, died at her home on Wednesday. The funeral services will be conducted from rnvnc-'s Chapel Thursday. Aunt Fannie was one o fthe best known colored women in Athena, faith ful and respected. ' NEW GLOVE8 One pair of long'elbow gloves of silk has a fluted ruffle following the scam from. wrist to elbow.' Emphasising the length of line la supposed to create the lltusloh of "Income tax returns must be filed by • Thursday. 15th. Instant, to avoid penalties. The government Is .'now prosecuting some of our clti- xens for not filing returns Ip prev ious ears. Single persons with ln- | conies of on* thousand or more and 'married persons with Incomes of two thousand or more must file re- •turna regardless ol pertonyl exemp tions. Individuals with gross in- •c6mes of “ to select from at prices tmh card of. It is the opportunity of a life time Which may never again come to the people in this section. If you have not bought, do so tomor- Irow and Saturday—it fa positive ly the last chance you will have at this sale. of the entire household, including young children who should be at school and often the wife and Commercial Wank of oAthetfs < “Ask Our Depo^torij.*’ Georgia Students Join Federal v Southern rofl have t Ac Atom paint [thecorn riJj I n It en<l^ illiona u-uyt &ot I tntlrW ,MIrw Uuw five thousand or more itnuAt file return*, nil corporation* and all partnership* must file re- Member Federal Reserve System Continued from i pact .or.*) Pi! jourfailh fatten advantages to b-j'gained from rr.em bershlp. tt wag brought out lhal one grekt aim of jthe consideration would be to eliminate gambtini and other qVUJ attendant upon athletics, in Kokhorn ■ Institutions most of which, it is said; arfam outside the student bodies of the colleges. ■ .rj Among other things, the consult tton provides for a lanptul asneni mild or chronic I it relentlessly I swe lives than any ono'human nil-' ant. It is the basis of mfttiyTllnesJos,' leading oven to such' diseases its Bright‘s and dlnbotes. In its milder lom eonatipption, creates sick head* itits, biliousness, dizziness, nausea, kd breath, pimples, etc. ' Kollogg’s Bias is guaranteed to relievo const!- aathfti pcruinnchtly if It'Is cates regu-' ‘larbr. Kellogg's is Aids BRAN— two or three generations accumurac- (ng fortunes at ten; twenty; Tiny or i'rrundred millions of dollars or more by ext&tilig upon necessities, Of fhe public, like coal, oil,-railways, etc. Durlnrf hnd since the World War Inultl-mlTIlonalres have In creased by the tens of thousilnci.as they lire ualhg their wealth to add to' their hoards by combining to ex tort upon the public, and chief of whlch-is the tiller of the soil with His annual Income of less than S 85. "And we must Jtot forgo a mat ere IS but one source of wealth— Rais0 • The folio -ring rtsi-iii, '1*0 'frntor- nlty and ona pan-fraternity, wero elected to represent the Unlver* •--< aj, , A]t0D an alter Hoacb.'W. O. nates, J. H. Fulcher. „ Following tifaw njoptlia tt the nonstltutioP. the atude its vo'.cd to send ten ilajegatei tc reprerent' the Dnlversll;' s'. Hie'Fort Valley. -&1922. [(This was 4% of the Crop for my county, on ,1$ ft the planted acreages) l yras enabled to^o.thfa k..»le.llnen,esiidiro writ), <‘IHll’s.Mivturi ” nvsveoW t muat be dug out of the ground, {top for one year every plow and hose vast fortunes would be but And as every one knows, the fanner is the beast of burden, the hewer of wood and drawer or water fer all other-classes—combined cap- ing the boll-weevil* from-, gel economical, efficient and the easiest boll-weevil poison ; to apply, ob the-mwfctf today. a liquid poison, composed of calcium anenate, molasses, water and secret ingredients which / form a combination that we are convincedTfrrimjeaulte (Atained, attracts the b^l weevil. ' - - • * - dav’s new entrant, with The standing follows. SOS- - ■;};■ SEV®1 PER CENT and Safely I’m a practical Georgia farmer, and epent $28,000 in money, and five years in time on my Burke County plantations, in an effort to perfect a poison that would protect nix cotton from the BoH-weem Hill’s Mixture is the result, and in the pest two years the boil weeyil haagottea practically, yme of iny- cottan. » 1 Nellis GHtfbffi Mabel Mbs. P. N. CMlivfa Nora crymer Elizabeth Harris* Clara BeU Rutherford * Mary Sima- Earllne WUder Sarah Maddox Pauline Tonev Martha iMcAlnln ...... LUUan Edwards Sarah Hall Katherine Ashford Elisabeth Arnold Katherine Rradwell ... Erma Booth , cSSJlSS?:.'.v.v.v:.; Nellie Christopher ..... Hate] Hodgson Frances Holden ‘Ethel Jackson t UcDorman .....1. la Nicholson ..... W. D.Pnnehnl erine Park \V /HETHER* yonci W«istock andJoe of your'principal dqx Is back oj thijUxk. _ and'encourage agriculture, the djtaefBr farmer will soon' be aa 3 the-dodo or plcaiosau- • wholesale pxadus or ne- m the’south to the great centers of the north Is ,e fact that the ianii- hst able to pay Ills labor tnder changed condiUons afoht hy the ball weevil, ■sslon In prices and the of living, for 'them So I nml body together; and young white men arc iiko- ing the farm for the great I centers. If aome;:.;ng Is to lift a part of his bur- the farmer and give him urn for his labor, the. rest Drid wIU find that- they Iply killed the goose that golden eggs. •* ~ - Sj*>rent that the farmer is Wag tor hia produce a remuneration for service ren- d. The Republican party'has 1 tWs laad with two abort m- include {the .'Asspclaud^Coi caiyiinggiare so conservative tinu^ncemay^be^assuinKJ. iVs dMdends^nd inwctti ler'ls Six Ssrikns will give protectfcp to ait acrojof cotton. Compare fids with the cost of j dusting. The mo'awses ih Hill’s Mixture sets asbinder, add s rainfall of leas than a half-inch has little ef fect ^ it!, It can bsFPTO^ANY TIME OF THE ' DAY, and require* no mschineiy for Jt* '*PPlic*Uom. Make a mop out of a stick with « rag tied on the sod, spd pass up and down the roWB, touching the bud <4 each float with the mop. 1 i ■ • ■sement of Users!. ' Hill’s Mixture is mechanically mixed, every ingredient '' being put in in the exact proportion.. None oi the Hill's Mixture is sold In ,60-gailon C'j 7 barrels^ Secure prices from the agent oAsfe ^our i banker, Or broker, or local Bell »TeU telcbh6he . business ties offtec about this stock' ipy as alt lnvestmant. ■ ' Yorl Clarence Stone. /. „•/ Hill’s ^Mixture was tried opt last yeqr by formers' on thousands Of sons of land, and ONE OF THEM ARE GOING TO USE IT A Boosted $4,000 A - ' Year By Abattoir 1928! Let me send you th President of the American trip to Bnrice County to in SOUTHERN BELL as <£r abattoir the tornwr \ the anfma) to town and, h the meat market men J. 8. COILE, Agent, Wlntervllle, Ga. SON-COMER CO., Agents, AtSens. ( rol eJposA