The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, March 18, 1923, Image 1

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investigate Today I To pegular Subscribers of the banner-herald j-.cto Accident Policy Frgg. V . : • Daily and Saoday—10 Ccata a Weak. 1832. Dally aM Baaday—10 Cmta a Waal Atbana Spot Cotton WEATHER: .Warmer and Cloudy. ...., v0L . 51 No. 31 Asaoelatad Praia Service ATHENS, GAt SUNDAY, MARCH IS, 1023. N. E. A Service Single Copies 2 Cents Daily. JVeve) Reparation P/cm|DISMISS Is Submitted By Inter- Allied Debt Commission .C. I FORTY SOLDIERS ARE AGIST KILLED WHEN FRENCH TROOP TRAIN WRECKS ry in Sue- geiziire of Machine: Occupied Territory sug gested in Proposal. Also Take Allied Goods. BEKUN DENIES any acceptance Rumor That- Forty Mil lion .Marks in Gold Had Been Offered is Denied ■ Bv Authorities. (By AMOclated Praia). colU.BNZ — The Inter-Allied giuu'l..in.! Commission Saturday pnunulvated two ordinances with a i.f securing resumption' of ^.u nions In kind with Germany, on- snuKcsted the leisure In the wcupird territory of machinery ,„d Other objects and also animals Massing to the German govern ELKS ADOPT MISS ‘Jolly Good Fellows” Sponsor Young Lady in Popularity Race Which Becomes Very Spirited. Will. The other authorises the selsure „( goods and property belonging to allied guvernraenta and their tut- 0..ni In these sections, but not In ih-ir iKmseisiona. The result of these proposals and the effect they will have on the niusiinn 1s as yet unknown, as the) have not formally been for- s.rdeil. , UKRLIN'—The rumor that Ger- miny has offered forty million rrt.irks In gold or any other fixed ,um was flatly denied by flip tier mm Foreign Office Saturday. ft Is painted oat that In the first place, such a sum Is con. liderably In excess of the amount provided in government proposals vf last January and that therefore I, ileehired to be out of the' ques Hen lii view . of ' the disturbed Koroimlc conditions prevailing fmhi the military occupation of the, Ruhr. The way In which .the latest ul M proposal will bt received By the Foreign office la a matter of conjecture as no word has boen (Inn out by the office,' either In the artion that will. be takon on the proposals or even thirt* such proposal has been received. " an ■ n sun MEET (By Associated Press.) WASHINGTON—A ffcantir pageant, depleting the birth and development of the nation and dosing with the Wanes of the States” will be tne culminating went of a four dag program tot the gathering her* the first weak in June of the Imperial Council of the Mystic Shrine. Details of the program of an. tmainment fdr upwards of thre* hundred vlkltors, which the moat ing is expected to bring to Aha Na tional Capitpl, includes concerts; parades, Pageantry, fireworks and water carnivals art now being com pleted by the Almas Temple, nine teen twenty three committee. The committee has. annov that one hundred ami twenty Shrine Temples hava signlfteo their intention, of ejtguitng the gathering as against ninety six temples at the San Francisco con vention last year. ram him Bodies of Man and Wo man, Found in Smoking Ruins, 1 show • Skulls Crushed. (By Associated Pres*-) m:\TTLB—Examination °* I»«IM Of Mrs. Cleoputrlu Karas »mi Oust Karas, ‘ her ’ brother-lb- !■'». found dead In their home. H t’.k-i )■ at Kverett. a small «<J*n near h. r». which wsssweptby fir# • ol Saturday revealed that both h.i.i I—n beaten about tbe bend •" 1 probably killed before the fire . drier Fickle, who Iqvestlgat- ■iio deaths'In the fire aseerted the man and woman had been ..I iiefore the Bre waa started .olvnneed the theory that the was planned to cover up the li< Kurus* two children. George, "f four years and Polly, two old xtrl. were found puffn- -I by the smoke. The,Skull# ilio two older persona were ter- . rushed and part of tne - missing. ,1 | 'vs Ksrns was a widow wboae I .nd*a body was found- last •oier on a troll .near here rld- t With ballets. Tb* murder of Husband war supposed to have done by bootlaggenv whom m— was Said to hkve had ible with prevtoxsly. Athens Elks entered the White Way Ijoihilaritjf (Contest Friday night when they voted to Spon- »or Miss Lovie Jowers in the race for the Ford -coupe, the first prize. The Elks are enthusiastic over their candidate and declare they will give the Shriners, Rotarians and Kiwanians a tight race before the contest closes April 4, when the White Way will be formally opened with a big celebration. “We Got What We Want ed,” Says Plaintiff’s At torney. Plaintiff Pays Court Costs. JOHNSON’S FINE ORDERED REMITTED Mayor Says He Had Nothing 1 to Do With Agreement to , Dismiss Case. KONTZ PAYS WIDOWS Forty Killed and Many French Soldiers Are In jured When Troop Train is Wr /recked. Former University Stu dent Still Faces Murder Charge For Death of Two Men. MAKE GAINS Temporary Injunction against the mayor und council were dleeolvcd and contempt proceedings against Mayor George C. Thomas were dis missed Saturday lifter Judge Blan ton l-'ortson of Superior Court was notified that attorneys for plain tiff and defendant In the Injunction suit had “agreed to drop tho case.” Although the mayor stoutly de nies he “capitulated,” Attorney Gerdine Lumpkin, representing J. Pale Johnson, the plaintiff, says “we got what we wanted.” The agreement to drop the case was signed by City Attorney Judge Carl C. Crosaley and Johnson's attorney. The mayor, and council were de- lfendants In the Injunction suit, candidates ' 5l“V° r Tljpmas was defendant In the and i contempt proceed] 1 ATLANTA, Ga.—Damage suits totaling $90,000, brought against Jack Kontx by Mrs. W. S. Gorman and Mrs. Ola Hunter, the widows of W. S. Gorman and Thomas Hunter, who died at a result of being struck by a motor car driv-n by Mr. Kontz, have been settled out of court for $22,500. it was learned Saturday at the courthouse The settlement gives upeh of the plaintiffs $11,250. ^ Mrs. Gorman brought suit against Mr. Kontz several weeks ago for $50,000, while Mrs. Hunt er sued for $40,000. The accident in which Mr. Gor- they were at .work on a Georgia ' Raili Nearly all of the Vnlfno I? Matin’*, “ na lease wok dismissed “on volition of moM^hrlsWkbf 1 ,^./ 0 M? ? ven |the plaintiff* says the mayor. “I SffJfli. u ® l, ! s Jow ,' I made no agreement with anyone. I erg lost her lead for one day and j c | 0!le( ) the pluce and will stand my Miss Hammond occupied first 1 KroU nd.” Other icandidates in the j line-up are drawing toward the FINE 18 front rank and it is rumored one!RETURNED or more at them will spring tor-' ard with a very large vote this week. While several organisations havr sponsored young women in the race, every citizen is urged to vote and ask visitors to vote. The surplus money wil? be heed in providing playgrounds for Ath ens. Votes are only one penny each.. Pick out some one and vote every day. 1 The prizes are Ford coupe; $100 in gold; $59 in gold. »upe: $1 ml $20. VOTE FOR SOMEONE • Misses Jowkrs, Hammond and Jackson received 54)00 votes last week and wero given the 6400 bd. nua.- • T The standing follows; Lovie Jowers 17882 Laura Hammond 16900 Bessie Jackson ....... 16112 et Stephens Mrs. Jonah Davis .... Mable Parr Mollie Whitehead Mrs. P. N. ChHivis Nora Crymes ........ Elisabeth Harris ..... Clasp Bell Rutherford Manr Sims Earline Maddox.. 8056 3724 Although Johnson's- attorney did not admit audit was what the plain, tiff contended, it la of record that the fine imposed on J. Pate John son In recorder’s court for operating a business without u license was re turned to hint Friday afternoon up on order of the recorder who stated ltd was advised to lake such steps by City Attorney Carl Crossiey. The plaintiff pays the court costs.- $15.75. The agreement between Attorneys tftmft oe a*«w to ohnolw tin twn* porary restraining order and "rec ommend thut the contempt proceed ings In connsctlon herewith be dis missed." The hearing' wag lo have been held Saturday morning ut 11 o’clock. The restraining order was Issued against the mayor and council last (Turn To Page Eight) 1823 1474 1439 1183 1018 1064 1007 1091 Paqlln* Toney 1125 Martha McAlpin '. .s... 1060 Lillian EdwarSr L. 1086 Sarah Hall 1026 Katherine Ashford 1001 Elisabeth Arnold 1001 Katherine Bradweil ..... 1001 Erma Booth' >.... .1007 Carrie Boeth u....... 1007 Carrie Beer 1007 Nellie Christopher ....,'11(8 Hazel .Hodgson Frances Holden .... Ethel Jackson ...... Fay McDorman .... Mrs. W. D. Paschal Katherine Pari: .... Janie Powers Mary Sims Mrs. Clarence' Stone Unson . a Unson Mathilda Nina Sue Carter ...... 1001 1012 1002 1006 1011 1101 1001 1000 1006 1001V 1001 1004 South Will Get Conference on Chile} Welfare Child Health Association Will Select Southern Community FoT'Demon- stration Soon NEW YORK — A. community gonth of tbe Mason and Olson lioe and east of the Mississippi River wilt be the site Mr the second of, three simultaneous child haw** demonstrations extending over the next live years, as part ot a thor ough-going health program aftept- lni all the children of the United States. This was announced yes terday by ttt -phUd ' monsJretlon. committee . repre senting the American Xommon- wealh Fimd,‘which will supervise work In the three communltlqe. Fargo, N. D., wss chosen for the first demonstration. Applications will now be received from rural district. or urban centuries la tbs South, which are willing to assume responsibility tor the second demon alriUon and curry I? OTjW*; The purpose to to ^fte ckosen communities tn effort^ to ttw lives of motherre and beWee and develop chlldren lnto^.torty cRI- • with-a wholesome outlook life. * i“ BY1W0 ATHENS BOYS ilMfSy and Power company weld ing machine at . Peachtree and Twelfth streets. Mr. Kontx was said to have been unable to sec the workmen because of a heavy log which hung ovr the street. An indictment against , Mr. Kontz, charging murder has been returned by the grand jury and the case is scheduled for hearing in the Fulton Superior court April 10. Jack Kontz is well known in Athens where he attended the Uni- .versity of Georgia. DEM! in ftJMIHK IN COLLISION WITH FREIGHT Latest Peace Plan By Germany Not Likely to Be Accepted Say Paris Newspapers. BERLIN — A report from Friemersheim, a Rhine town near Duisburg, says forty soldiers were kiield and many injured when a French troop train collided with a freight. The impact was so vio lent that several coaches were telescoped. DISEASE Iff LURK IN TRASH PILES IS High School Disgr, WARNING OF WOMEN Campaign to Glean Up and Beautify City Is Well Underway Here. PLAN TO GIVE MANY PRIZES Civic Pride is Appealed To By Committee. Wag ons Will Answer Caus Anywhere. TWO GERMANS KILLED DU8SELDORF—Two Garmons ere shot* and killed by French sentinels during the night—n.ie at man and Mr. Hunter lost their Reeklinkhausen and the other at lines occurred January 26 while Essen. PARIS—Premier Poincare will entertain no propositions for He- gotiatipns with Germany until the Berlin government makes it known directly and offically to France that she wants to negotiate, it was declared in French official circles. GERMAN PEACE VBALED S-—Germany^ proposal i nthc Ruhr valley, ac- to Pertinax and other well re is as authorities here Withdrawal of allied eng|n- Qpy Two Hundred and Fifty Detectives Mingle With Fifth Avenue Crowds on St. Patnck’s Day. “Buester” Kilpatrick and Jack Bolton-Tie World Records in International Hexathlon Contests. (By Associated Press.) NEW YORK—Two hundred and fifty detectives, in plain clothes and 3evera! hundred policemen mingled with the crowds on Fifth Avenue Saturday, by the order of Mayor* Hytan who had received unsigned letters saying that the first St. Patricks day parade, in which thousands of men and wo- ment would take part, would be broken up by violence. Officials did not put much faith in the loiters predwing he' vio lence, but the men were neverthe less detailed to keep a strict watch for the first signs of .any violence and arrest-the offenders; By HAL JACK80N Friday marked the opening of tbe International Hexathlon con tests at the Yoting Men’s Christ ian Association and also marked the tieing of two world records by young athletes of this city. The whole.of the day was.spent in recording points made J>y the tads In' the different qtosses- and after these have been properly com piled they will be sent to head quarters and in time wipner* will be announced. „ „ _ Last year the. Athens ,Y. M. C. A. led the field In'their class and hold a beautiful plaque for same. The winning of this laurel last year awpkencd great interest in this form of contests so that the announcing of the winners this year wUI be looted to with much interest. Athens to and should feel prfiud of her young athldte* who have shown that they rank with the best of them in tbe en- '%'£$ Kilpatrick, one of the greatest athletes the Classic City EaTever urodueed tied the world’s — ever produced Tied the record In the three round potato race when he ran the distance in thirteen and four-fifths seconds. Buster was performing under -the Conditions of the unlimited class <Tiirn,to page eight) DR. SANFORD WILE ESS T University Athletic Di* rector to Address Sun day Meeting At “Y” on the “Greatest Athlete.” rfi officials from the valley nch troops to remain, un* ement has been . reached, h settlement to tye based uinent agreement lyith re coal deliveries, and psy- urations, the latter to by. intematioal loans. Parisian newspapers say (at the offer is not likely to be accepted. SEMFESS10 . FISH DEED Ptfl (By AssMlatsd Praia.) • WASHINGTON—Senator Fess, republican, Ohio, informed Govern or Smith of Now York in a letter mode public Saturday 'here that he could not comply with the pe tition of the New York legisla ture for support of the proposal to legalize light wines and beer.. There should be no “compromise” on the liquor question, the Ohio sanatdr said and the proper re course for those opposing prohi bition would be to advocate repeal of tbe eighteenth amendment rath er than modify legislation. “The. whole history of, the tem perance movement in the Uniter States,'” sabl the letter, “to re piete with illustrations of attempt ed compromise. The evils of this business aro of such a character os to convince the American peo ple that it to such a subject as cannot be legislated but must be annihilated." 1 J)lscasf and sickness may lurk in rubbish heaps on vacant lots, tin cans, cisterns and tubs Bled with stngmint water and unkempt places tn business sections. It was point ed out Haturday by the Woman’s club committee In charge of the 'Clean-Up Campaign* now In prog ress here. ; Athenians can be spared much sickness this spring and' summer If these places are cleaned .up, the committee 'eclare-f A yellow fever epidemic, which always , follows UenKue fever prevalent In Georxlu re -ently. may Ik prevcnti-l here If 111., breeding p'ura of Ihe yeilow fever mosquito nre destroyed. These! places are' empty tin cons, tubs and cisterns where water la allowed to stand for any length if time without being saturated ■vlth kerosene oil. HEALTH DEPT. IS AIDING “The city health department la eo-o penning with the clean-up campaign nnd will send sanitary wngdns anwhere at any time they nre called. Trash must be placed In containers before the tfagOns nre culled, however. N While the health phisd' of ths cnmiHtlgn la being stressed the com inlttee Is appealing to the • civic pride of Athenians und urges all fl> Kill In beautifying the premises. Ths Roy Scouts are helping and will find out the owners of va cant lots mt they can be reached and naked to beautify them. A prise, u act of Charles Dick ens works, Is -bring* • offered by Jfavor Thomas to the school whose district Is declared. by Judges the cleanest after the campaign has ended. Other prises are being listed and will bo offered lo stimulate Inter est In ihe campaign. Rough Treatment In School Leads Boy To Suicide. Cramped Condition Asserts Mayor TOC. OF C. BOARD No Women Nominated. •£!ix of 1922 Board Are Named. To Select 14 From List Twenty-eight Athens business and professional men were nomi nated in the Chamber of Commerce Board of Director! primary which closgd Friday night. Not a single woman was nomi nated among the number from which the fourteen directors will be chosen in a second election to be conducted along the lines of the primary vwte. Eight of the fourteen present directors who re signed several days 'ago under the new chamber regime were named I among the twenty-eight. Six' from the board of 1922 were named. Committee Should. Nc Cut Capacity of Ne Sdhool Auditorium, E ecutive Declares. WILL URGE 1000 SEATS AT. LEAST Joint Committee Meets Monday Afternoon to Close Contract For, Building Auditorium' OVER 200 BALLOTS CAST IN ELECTION. Over two hundred ballots, about 243 were polled in the primary and all of them were secret. Over $600.00 was collected along with the ballots. In the final election, ballots foe iwhich will be mailed out Monday, (only those members 1 who have paid the firit Installment qf'duet Wilt be eligible to vote. Tbe nom inee* have been notified by letter of the result and if any with not to, stand for election to the board they must withdraw by Monday noon. . LIST OF THE 28 NOMINATED. Those nominated in the primary were, Martin J. Abney, Capt. J. W. Barnett. R. Bloodworth, Sidney Boley, M. J. Costa, Harris w; Dews, A. G. Dudley, H. O. Epting, The Boy's Sunday afternoon 'meeting ot the Young (Men’s Chris (ton Association will be addressed Sunday by one* of the’ most able of all of the ipeakera who from time to time bring their messages to these Sunday afternoon services for the youth of the -City. Prof. S. V. Sanfqrd. of the Eng lish Department of the University of Georgia, and at the head of Georgia's athletic activities, will- speak on a most interesting sub- jecSTo boy*. ' Possibly ,today athletics to hav ing a more tremendous influence In the kbaplng of Character in the lives of the youth of America-than; any other Influence at work, and, anlest the teaching and training (Turn to Ppg# Eight.) ' , What Banner-Herald Advertising Did For Duke’s'Mayonnaise Dressing Athena, Ga., March 17, 1933. TO THE BANNER-HERALD, Athena. Georgia ^ ,. Gen Meant'to express to you my appreciation of the / aplendld 'aid which Banner-Herald advertising (afforded me In the conduct 'f Duke’s Mayonnaise Salad Dressing demonstrations In this city Thursday. Friday and Saturday. Duke’s ‘ Salad Dressing has Just been Introduced tn Athens, and <ke only advertising that It See received locally, were the ads In yopr Issues of Wednesday, 'Thursday and Friday, announc- _ tag ifemoutntions on- the tost three days of the week. - The Wonderful response to these advertisements was amazing, and I am sure you will be gratified to know that on Thursday, my demoaktratlons resulted in lit sales at Arnold-Abaey*s and more than MO sales on Friday and Saftirday at Klng-Hodgson’s. Yonrs yery truly, MRS. W. C. BROCK. (In charge of demonstrations). Capitol Jokes By WALTER f. LINEBERGER U. 8. Representative from Call ’ Femle, Ninth District ‘"nrlmsre * ,Se foroia primary a few mfnnt a man can run for office on Made Several Mistakes In Game of Rugby and Is Kicked By Head Boy. LONDON—Another incident.of' ;the brutality in public schools of boys to each other and the stif fen: - — eringi of sensitive youngsters ubjected to such rough discipline i afforded by the recent suicide >f Vivian Merton Tanner, fc ’t ai-old ion of the rector of tingthorpe, Rugby. Young Tanner was a Blue-coat boy in Christ’a Hospital, Horfcham, A coroner’s inquiry developed the fact that while acting as linesman in a Rugby football game he made several mistake* and that while the child was popular with his in structors he wai not popular wifh adim his mates. U wai adimtted by cne of these that he had kicked Tanner because of htoebad touch- lining. Later the head'txfc monad Tanner before him, proached him far bis bed and he alio kicked him. ‘But . do not think I hurt him,” he laid col- LINEBORGER A few minute* later Tanner r “ n many "tickets I tvT? kni/I “ H Sticking into his chest. He walked I h . i about five yards and then ^ luturas * h i£l p ** d ' P* h«*d boy went FneViamnis ln'j ,im ' ,nd Tanner said; : _ . me do it. You have kilted me.” He was removed to the fi 8 'joddoSb* o*^ 0 ® 1 infirmary, whets he died ' * (f • 1“ rt * r of an hour. The knife mol ItaA. Ptnetiated to the heart. nZtSS The jury exonerated the 1 cntic. JTohlbi- jrom a|) blame, and added that there waa no mors nagging there ‘bin-tbe normal aiyount that went Dews, A. G. Dudley, H. O. Lpting, W. I*. Erwin.'Andrew C. Erwin, C. D. Flanigan, H. H Gordon, Jr, Julian Goetehius, B. F. Harde man, Harey Hodgson, Frank A. Holden. J. W. Jarrell, Jr., M. G. Michael, Abit Nix, D. F. Paddock, A. Rhodea. W W Sc.ott, Chas. M. Snellkig, A. M. Soule, John E. Taimadge, Jr., James White, Hugh W. White, Dr. J. C. Wilkinson. IHItl (EJECTS 1LLIEI SUGGESTION Note Declines Proposal to Deduct Quarter Billion/ Value of From German Fleet. Seized SPECIAL MEETING , Special meeting of Joint Committee called for Monday afternoon, March 19, at 4 o'clock p. m. in Capt. Barnett's . office for the consideration of and intention to close contract for High School auditorium, . suitable plan and figures lutv- ing been submitted to City En gineer by Architect and con tractors. Full attendne* of Committee desired. ' J. GOETCHIUS, Chairman. Cramped condition of the School and plan to cut the i capacity of the new auditor from 1200, as origihally to 700 Saturday was c George C. Thomas ized by Mayor i as a "shame." CONGESTED CONDITIONS -Lamenting over ‘the seriously congested conditions at the Schol' where he saw tho 640 dents in action Friday, the nu. decried the effort to decrease original High Schol building i propriation of $364)00 to $2.7,C and declared be would appear I for* the joipt, building committc in special eession Monday urge an auditorium with a i capacity of at least 1,000. ‘I was shocked, dumfound when I saw the conditions ing ai tho High Schol on i to the institution Friday w G. Michael,” tbe mayor urday. "It is a shame and d said to the city of Athens to ignore i High School in such a manner. FI am at a lou to kn how the teaching etaff < splendid work which has terixed it for so many handicapped with the < conditions—students actually ting on the steps studying, little girl, without a desk, girl, without studying with her book against her knee. Some student! could Jiot come to until 10 o'elock because the; no where to put them while ( Big a class. It’s a shame. NBBD MORE THAN 700. "A for the’ auditorium, of th# (ay Associated Press.) WASHINGTON—The American reply to the allied suggestions for repayment, of the $250400,000 spent /bv the United States In maintaining troops on th* Bhine was forwarded Saturday to Pari*. It was understood to decline th* troop bill, but not to constitute, a flat rejection of the allied plan*. _ member of the joint committee and I shall others what I saw. I i could all s*e, as I did. the of the institution. The voted for $40400 tor tbe School. W* used $6400 1 pairing and left $36400 tor an aitorium. "It has been cut to $^400 for i a seating capacity of 700 v will take care of but a few i ADAM AND EVE ON ISLE LONDON—There’s one place in th* world when the eternal tri angle is impossible—the .eland of Holm in th* Orkney group. Its inhabitants are a man and his latest census reveals. w* do with the students coming in next MVhcre would we put the of the school at an entertai While wc arc building, we make room for the future develop ment in the High School.” ■ hike in Europe, too LONDON—Two boy Scouts from Caechoslovakia have arrived here after haring made on foot 760 miles of the distance from Prague here. They covered the 760 miles in 26- days. U.T. Ce’8 Spu. Miss* Jackson Popularity Race. tion. Social-Labor and Progressive tlcketa. So. In fighting him, I often used this story: f , An old darkey had a pet chants- leott which he uagd to exhibit to hi* friends aad boast about But one day be appeared with-, out It! “Yassah," he explained, he's dald. I was showtn' him to a man it down "In the general stoah, an’ be LAWRENCEVILLE. ard Jones, colored, something over $1,100 from C. M. * *r Ih ' Ga.—How- gtoli Jackson, a farmer Ih/big four mile* brung out a piece of blue cloth an’ west of LasrronceriUe, tost fall, vhe camel-lion tu’ns blue, an’ 11 nteaded guilty to larceny from the puts him on a piece of yeller cloth house and was sentenced to and’ be tu’ns yeller, and* oh green . from twr to five yean, in auperioi 'court here Thursday. cloth an’ he tu’ns green, __ „ red doth an’*ho tu’ns red. ‘‘An’ then the - stoah keepgh be brung out a piece of 8cotcb plaid an’ dat camel-lion be just bust blnelf to niece* a-tryin* to' match btoself-tlHt” ' . ' . * A In- Will Jone*, hi* brother, dieted for receiving stolen goods, it being proVen that he was impli cated in Howard’s crime. The j rated in JuryVixed the tude from one term of hi« seyvi- to three yean. “HOME. SWEET HOME” Be It ever te humble. Thsks's ne p'sc* Ilk* heme.” VAi need net try to'recall te n.lnn the name of this famous national song, for everyone I, fsm’llsr with ,tt at «*st eight Though N written In IKS by John HswaeS Payne, It has never loot Its pew. er, for ths slmplt reason that (Is very *Wi pull on tho heart strings *f mankind. Is thtr* In this bread land a man whs does net went a HOME OP Hit OWNT - Who does net want th* grid* of saying. "That Is my home?" Tho pride of awning a hem*' eheule be th* ambition of every man. If you were to leek Intt th* past histories of when whs have succeeded you will find that In most csss* that th* .foundation of their success was OWNING A HOME. Consult thb HOUSES POR SALE column In Th* Oanner'-HtraM. sis* th* BUILDING LOTS POR SALE column—then MAKE A START I ..—If. you fall te find YOURS TODAY, you may find It TO MORROW.'. Watch the- column! Read th* Want Ads In THR BANNIR.HERALD ■ “We’ll Make It Inter injr,” Committee “Knights of Grip” nounces. Big Vote. Athens “Knlgbta of the tost night unanimously v sponsor Miss Bessie Jac the White Way Popularity It was announced by R. L. • Cl- The U. T. C.’s. will enliven th,- race considerably and tost r‘ a large homber ot votes awarded Mis* Jackson, mind about the number,” ml«*a said. “We are In the : to win and tbe other boys as wall gat ready-for a Miss Jackson I* one of the I Ing candidate* In tb* race I Ford ’coupe, grand prize I Popularity contest which April A' The local lodge Installed for th* ensuing year, which followed by a banquet ' Th* new officers are: R. L : tenon. Renter Counsellor: 1 Brown. Junior Counsellor; ’ P Creek mo re. Past Counsellor; Perdue. Conductor: J. H. Page; H. C. Crawford. and w. B. Eppe, secretary. / ' ■■ : J *. it- liasL aaueS ■JLL