The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, March 23, 1923, Image 2

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IpiHIHgHHpBflIHHMIRr- '• - IP! PACE TWO Salvation Army Now , (AliiSOTBWEori “Yos sir, If you need me, i will r it has done and ia dol lead one of your meetings on the “ * * ‘ " street] corner, and teQ our people juat How close the'Satvation Army is to. my heart personally, and what jl think of the splendid work THE RANKER-HERALD. A! that Athens^ts moral and upright for the need of _jb wiser for her salvation. Sh» was'down but she wasii’t out.anrt Isay God Bless the Salvation Army! And it didnf- cost thl city of Athens a cent!” EPARINt R ANNU. AL DRIVE. EVERETX TRUE ,V / By Condo today,” replied the mayor, “but people who feel that we have no problems, no sor rows, nobody in need of h«ln, hot) ileal and spiritual, should tr: g mayor for twelve months Just a few months ago we had case that exemplifies the work _ the Salvation Army, and explain my regard for it. A young glr ■ who bad fallen into unfortunate | ways and worse companions. Only sixteen years old, attractive full of the fire apd whit of youth but uncontrollable. COULDN’T 8END HER TO PRISON. J “Wo couldn't tend her to prison : I to associate with, hardened crfm i inala and stamen, and we wouldn’t ! do it. Wo tried to reaaon with her. ! I took her in my private office •told her 1.would give everything I had in the world if I could eave I her, but aha was defiant. I call- ] cd in tome of our good ladies whc | had been assisting in similar caaea • They met a stone wall, and gave up in despair. Aa a last chance I called the little Salvation Army officer, Ensign Curts. Told bei to come over to the City Hall, that I needed her hetf badly. And ehe came promptly. I took her to one aide,, explained the circum stances, and than introduced hei to the'wayward girl. Sho put hei arms around her shoulders, tool her to one corner and sat dowr and talked with her. I heard hei call the defiant one ’My dear’ at •he talked. In five minutes thi (Idea were clear, the girl hat' agreed to' go with Ensign Curts to enter one of the Salvation Army homes and the Army agreed to taka car* of her ana solve her clt cate. Ilother They obtained her „ belongings from h< haunt*, took her to their own Sal vation Home, and finally Ensign Curts put hey on the' train, am went with her to her destination That wayward one today is a ami! ing, normal Chriitian girl. She b occupying her rightful place ir a happy homo with parents whc love her, and the world b non' Ensign Clarence Lever of At lanta addressed the Rotary clut Wednesday at luncheon, giving r brief outline of the work of the Salvation Army in Athena, and- made an eloquent plea for thi* sup port of the Rotariana in the forth coming home service appeal of the Army to cover local maintenance and relief during, the coming year to be held April lith, 6th and 7th, He told of, an instance „in r Athens recently, illustrating the rare and thoroughness oxerr’scd In investi gating all cases that come to them for relief. An eld fiiti. apparent iy paralyzed nnd aote.y In need of help applied,to the mayor, lilt honor questioned him closely at to his past, hi* relatives and- oth er matters trying to get' srMV suitable dew nv to hia real con dition. The old fellow became -n'-ji v and left i'>» Ms/-f • of* abusive and left th« Mayor's office new piece. Tit of comjflicated up a tele; * msnt i (he spot tells exactly IRETE ~' Tl'ITCHSBf Ihoab, will this yeas indignant and muttering curves, to Atlanta capitalist* j fbr fSO, “ “ * ation * ‘ The mayor called the Saiva Army and told them to inveatigatt hb case if ho should apply for aid. Ensign Curts replied that he had already been investigated, that he was a fraud and had more money in his pocket than the may. or himtdf. Chief Beussee picked up the man for being troublesome on the streets, and on examining hb person, found a roll of bilb ir hb clothing that would make tht average citizen feel like a rich unde had died. Upon being re leased and told to leave town, the apparently paralyse^, feeble old man straightened up and walked spryiy away, condemning the world in general and the Salvation Army in particular, h lign Lever addressed the KJ- wanb club si luohnonc etaolnnnr wanb dub art luncheon Thursday will addratb St .Elmo Lbdge, P.- A A. M.,-Thursday night and the Athena Womans Club Monday af- ternon at 3:30. President M. G. Michael of the Salvation Army Advbory Boart' has called a special meeting of the Board to be held in the Chambci of Commerce rooms, College sve- nut, Friday afternoon at 3:30 The members of the Advbory Board are aa follows: M. G. Mb' chad, present; Rev. E. L. Hill vice-president; B. F. Hardeman secretary; W. F. Dorsey, treaaur sr. Comitteemen, G. L. Deadwyler John Northcutt, Judge J. D. Brad well, J. H. Doiiei 1 , Billups Phinisy, John J. Wilkins, Joel Wier, Andrew C. Erwin, Frank Holden. Mrs. S. L. Sanford, Mrs; Aaron Cohen, J B. Joel, Sidney Bolcy, Mrs. Julia White, Mrs.-C. M. Snelling. Chan cellor David C. Barrow, Mrs. Ju lius Talmadgo, Mrs. E. F. Porter E. R. Hodgson. Jr, M. J. Costa. FOR^HE ANNUAL REUNION of the Confederate Veterans at Ne w Orleans totSOwtfl* Rofl-' road company will give round trip fare on a basis of one cent per mile travelled In each dirac- _ tion. For sons and daughters of W* the Confederacy ofte fare will be ‘ for the. round trip. Dates :h S! acres Acreage will be pla iww* crop bdth In Oconee and 3Valton counties. MR. TOL LESTER, one of „ 1UU11V1 citizens of our county, snd U of aicknr icmber of :ft are Aped .7, j aid 0. Final limit of tickets A number tepd thb rt wUl b* APrU 30. i Athens wrill at- « _ _ dwrah oj t|Un FLEMlNl G OF Attica from one- Ms Ides tup. Mends. Mr. ..MR. G. L. in Jackson county fourth of an he sold J326 plying hit family and Fleming says he will i plant a- seed-.of cotton for ate n number ed crap* that MU pay him better , with lens expanse. THE FINeTSoJ Oconee, once Price of Athena, many He ia a pioneer the Primitive Baptist *- section. Tol has 1 ' eit- amoag our older < izens who will be glad, to hear t-f hb improving condition. TOE GEORGIAN HOTEL 13 re- vmn Sued -ElUPAV, MARCH tl. Wight Being ' For $75,000 ATLANTA. Oa.-G. Ward tt Wight -who was the driver of an automobile here in April, 1921 that * lied Attorney Waite.- Lowe, is SmSttw-kMSTRfS niton Superior court and brought The Adair Realty and Trust company, Wight’s emp|oyer at that time, and the Shawnut In vestment company, in tereat Wight to said M , ~ a business errand, were named defendants in the suit, but on , in to have bwn ceivlng a spring painting and gen-,by the widow of Lowe. —■—I "" I . _ . . „ JR and 1 and Cleaning up. motion by their clients the ajit lip m credit to^eur haa not a single np^laft on it, and the. place will mained untitled. year re S°9a.W WBRAJS.'SVrZ and largezt farms in;that county. Crawford. an oldj£- x — AFTER ONE OF THE GREAT- EST satos in the history of Ath- largest _ has only left on gro women and groes 1 will be owners the cxi money Around Athens MB. SAM WILKINS suggests that a committee of our leading citizens be sent to Massachusetts and other manufacturing New England States to lajr the advan tages of Athena as a manufactur ing centqr before the mill men and capitalbts. In Fall River alone 1 mills threatened to close down on account of tabor troubles and are preparing to move their plants ON FRIDAY A MADISON county fanner brought in 100 doz- eggs that he had collected on 1 place. A number of farmers tnc Free State are preparing embark in the poultiy business )ye Skirt, Draperies Diamond Dyes Each Dyes" -cont ... pie that any woman can tint faded, shabby skirts, dresses, waist*,, coats, sweaters, stockings, hanging, draperies; everything like new. Buy “Diamond Dye*”— no other kind—then perfect home dyeing b guaranteed. Tell your druggist whether the material you wbn to dye b wool whather it b mixed goods, streak, spot, fi ivcrtbcmenl) silk, linen, cotton, or rid Dyes never or ran.—(Ad- MRS. SALLIE HANCE, sister of the late Mr. R. C. Latimer and h«e relatives in Athens recently died at the home of her daughter in Atlanta. Mrs. Hance to the lady who rejected Andrew Johnson when bo was a tailor in Lauronceville, 8. C. She was a very old lady and belonged to one of the beat families in South Caro- tea. During the War Between toe Statra ah; with other mem- hers of her family, refugeed to was dbmsaed as to them. Testimony was introduced Wed- nosday to show that Lowe, who' ena toe Martin Bros, have packed up the remainder of their stock and vacated the store room. INDIGESTION, GAS, UPSET STOMACH Instantly! “Pape'sDiapepsin” Corrects Stomach so Meals Digest bad offices in the Hurt bi waa crossing Edgewood avenut to enter hie machine, whkh was parked,In stepped Thin? Run-down? Sure Way to Get Right Weight bcrsuaY«ui-Red-BIeod-C«lli.nu> a W«i 1A S. Build. CeUs; Thb Means StoM>»U,| swerved hb ear to the, extreme left of the street to avoid striking Lowe, but Lowe had al-j ready been caught on the fender, it was stated. After reaching tot J*ft std* of the street Wight’s car collided with a taxicab belong- ing to'toe Yellow Cab company and the attorney was pinned be tween the. two mdrmfus, recehrinr injuries from which he died almost instantly. Wight declared the ac cident wea entirely ndavoidable. NBVRR TOO OLD TO LBARN GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — John tSS w°drirar n itaMt^S * nwssftsrKMi Ua sombtr of jour ml-UMd-olS. gou hralo to^togmo plurlu^M^j plus la their hb Ufe, believes it la never too late to loAfUo Kay is in hb fourth year df train Inc In the South High night school, and he shy* he ta in santoet about getMag an eduontion. H* began .attending night school when be l wanted to loam somethin E2 StfeJETSn MU. Toll took 1AQB win build them. Loileo ss< Mb- — “TBfcT " * ‘ ‘ ' The moment you eat a tablet of “Pape’s Diapeptin” yonr indigos, tion b gone. No more distress from a sour acid, upset stomach. No flatulence, heartburn, palplta- cents. Each by,druggist to overcome stomach truobic (Advertisement.) , dug about woodworking. He learned if in I ohe year and then became intonat ed in other classes. I »« employed ta to* J. W. York Band instrument Company doeeitr t»i iiw*. *Ov uryir mere oconattml. S.S.S.«fcW4Si WITHIN A SHORT PERIOD there haa been imported into Ath ens- 570,000 - dozen eggs snd 1,- 140,000 pounds of poultry, products The sooner wo go to work ‘ and stop thb leak hy, rstaing poultry not only to supply the local do- mand but to expasit the betton' . ^ ' Cannot you aee'The improtaflcc for the poultry campaign now out IT HAS BEEN SETTLED that, Athpn* will have a fair ncxj -faili and the Executive Boetd f of the Fair Committee will meet in a short time to take steps to secure a fair ground and arrange for holding a fair next fkl!. The little fair held last fall.waa a success and no admission was charged. It surely brought on the chicken or*" g ganisation fit Clarke county. EARLY COTTON PAS BEEN KLED by the cold in South Geor gia, as also in lower South CaroT lina/ antr farmerrs are-'writing lot seed to plant over. But good cot* ton saed art very scarce. If you have not as-yet aocurad a seed fbr planting better ing them np. A* FA r nbt delay in hunt* BS95 dow not thlnktho I Is killed in - -this sccB the frost remains off rood fruit crop of RflB-toSteB .T 1 • iff b V £ as easy to open 3S windin- " e clock 11 A VERY _ *« 1 . t '»man romarkMi that high prioco ,ott L thing for our southern farmers, so long as we held n mcnopoly, but Brasil nn.i other countries where the staple can he produced . will enter »he fio. ] a* ramp* ttt-i.i. ’They «an grow cotton tn rnris of Indiana. Tennut -1 and Kentucky, but owing to our long season they cannot compete with us at old- time prices. But if the staple climb* too high thay will begin to grow cotton. THE TELEPHONE WIRES IN ■ATHENS are under ground, in rolls of a thousand or more, but when one breaks or anything hap pens, the leaden piping that holds out and every wire tied to the Back of tbe-way locality recently called the at tention of the reading public to the*i familiar lines: i - .. “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.” r- , .For.many years people have beaten arpath to this shod manufactufer’s door. He has proved the truth T>f this famous aphorism. And where did he publish this quota tion which he applies with such pride to is business? Why, in an advertisement, to be sure —for this manufacturer is a consistent and regular advertiser, and when he has anything 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 best mousetraps, the best shoes, the best tires, the best breakfast foods, . and bpy them in preference to others. today are pretty well at when a manufacturer puts KA aware he is telling the world that his door is a hroad highway. he makes ie path to Published by The Banner. Herald In eo-optratloi) with The American Association of Advertising Agencies #tT gMIfrO T ,W