The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, March 23, 1923, Image 7
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.«in*V MARCH !S, MS
PAGE SEVEN
THE BANNER-HERALD
'Court," aatd tbs veteran chet
"This accounts lor tho deterio
ration of the nation's teeth and dl-
coition. Nearl/ all our minor ail
ments, and some of the more seri
ous ones, can bo traced tft fancy
cooking, Which often means bad
cooking.
“Mora.raw vegetables should be
eaten and fewer- condiments used
It health la to be studied. The
best possible meal should consist
of the following dishes:
“Clear soup.
“Plain boiled flsh.
“Plain cutlet.
“8tewed fruit
"There are tew new dishes. I
Had It Increasingly hard to create
new ones. What you need now Is
a French dictionary and mental
concentration If you must have new
dishes. There Is little really now
DID IT EVER OCCUR'10 YOU?
A little el Everything And Not Mach of Anything.
By HUGH ROWE it
ATHENS. OA.
Cook For Eye
Not Stomach
Old-Fashioned Dishes
Seem to Have Disappear
ed, Says Royal Cook in
Interview. . ■—
Every Evening During the Week Except Saturday and
.Morning by The Athens PuMlsMnw
ti.vii i-7 oowuruay ana *
Publishing Company, Athena. Ga.
D OES your headache, area
tired when you pt up. Is it hi
to arouse enough ambition to
even fhe smallest tub?
That’s a sign of sluggish, imp;
blood. That sa warning togetabot
of Gude’a Pcpto-Mangan and pui
your blood and build upnewstrem
and energy. For over 30 years Guc
has been the favorite tome and bl(
enrichcr of many thooswidsof pepi
Your druggist has it, in both liquids
tablet form#
Gnde's
Tonic and Blood.
The aristocratic Fifth
Avenue Shops haven't
anything on us—If a
new model is shown
on Fifth Ave* we
show it at the same
time. If an original
fabric or design stnkes
the popular fancy,
you’ll see it in our
windows. Every fash
ion change is recorded
in our window dis
play quickly. We
are “first with the new
est”. Our Easter
stock proves it and
anything in this beau
tiful Easter assortment
is yoursmyout own.
For Men—
Sp«t Suits, Two
button Suits, Nor
folk Suits, Ccosetv-
sing tuft* Hue
Srits, Bh>wn Suits,
Striped Slits—h
Operate
this live store to
be of service —
in style, in fit, in
quality, in price,
and in giving
such a generous
charge account
privilege that
you may have.
what you
want, when
you want it
on your own
terms of pay
ment.
ffiiiiVis E. MARTIN ..
Publisher and Gmieral Manager
-— Managing Editor
&tcre j at the AthensSy»«w? Class Mali Matter under
the Act of Congress March 8. 1879.
ll- C PAPER—ASSOCIATED—PRESS—N. B. A. SERVICE
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The A?aoclated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub-
Bction of all news dispatches credited to It or not otberwiso credited
£ this paper, and el«> tte loeri news published therein. All rights of
“piUii-ation o.f epecisl dispatches are also reserved.
^drew C. Erwin,
President.
Bowdre Phlnisy,
Treasure
Secretary and
H. 3. Rowi
Vice Presii
ident
Address all Business Communications direct to -tho Athens Publish-
g Company, not to individuals. News articles intended for publica-
jion ih "jld be addressed to Tbo Banner-Herald.
WHAPS GOING ON IN THE RUHR
IVe don’t know just how much interest our readers
feel in the situation in the Ruhr District. We are
deposed to thing that, a majority of them are more
concerned over what the boll weevil will do within
the next 5 or 6 months, or whether Georgia will
have a good baseball team this year, than they are
over speculation regarding the question of whether
France or Germany will win out in the Ruhr dead
lock.
At the same time, it may perhaps be interesting to
point out several salient points in what is going on
on the other side, particularly as these events may
read in this country.
In the first place the struggle in the Ruhr may be
likened to the throwing out of joint for a time at least
of the vast steel and iron -industries of the Pittsburg
and surrounding districts ip this country. Such an
event would be immediately felt in every line of man
ufacturing in this country and this is what is happen
ing in France.amLGermany, not only with steel and
iron, but with njBBftfor'other industries, and with tex
tiles and buidlMWMMrations. The reactions in this
country will frq,qfltHit»Ily to boom still further Ameri
can iron and stelnRld coal and textiles, as America
will be called upon to supply more fully not only its
own markets but world markets that can no longer be
adequately supplied by the diminished output <
France, Belgium and Germany.
From a political standpoint the impression is grow
ing that France is willing to pay the price provided
she can disrupt the great iron and steel business that
Germany has.built up in the Ruhr district. France
may no he able to collect her reparations but if she
can destroy the steel and iron business of Germany,
if she can push her frontiers to the Rhine, she will
put Germany out of the running for years to come as
world power, and remove in the popular impression
at least the fear of another German invasion of
France for another fifty years. .
One man’s guess on the outcome of the Ruhr in
vasion is perhaps as good as another’s. The continued
flndoubtedly thafr Gerniony,-Franea
and Belgian industry- a)l will suffer and that - certain
industries in this country will be stimulated to Bupply
deficicnces in world markets. It is to be hoped that
Germany and France will come to terms rather than
to commit economic suicide, and it is undoubtedly
true that Germany will suffer more in a protracted
struggle than Frande as the Ruhr district means
more to the industrial life of Germany than it does to
France,
Much it being uld and writ
ten in the newspapers and
magaxinea on the modern girl
ae well aa the model girl. There
n difference between the mod-
ern girl and tho model girl, eo It le
said. 8a much eo • until vnrloue
agencies hnve undertaken to ferret
out the cnee and set at rent the
clulmn of eome that the modern
girl In not u model girl. However,
tho heareet to n model girl wo
havo road of le flSnQ ln an ex
change, which eredUB'.itjw defini
tion to a Mlchlir&n.'uStvtmlty, Here
what conetitutoe n model girl
-necordlng- to. th» MI#hlg»n-eduoa- |
Uonal Institution:-
A girl who would he a good pnl,
eharo confidences and bo loyal. I
IMAGINARY ILLS
A nerve specialist tells us, a woman came to him on
spei
the verge of cpUapse, and 1 it developed that what she
, really wanted was advice about investing her money.
Doc gave the advice, collected his fee. The patient
went her way—relaxed, contented, cured. A queer
case? Not uniuual, according to the nerve specialist.
We’re dll more or less in an unbalanced nervous con
dition as a result of the war, and the specialists have
come to expect anything.
Nerve specialists report a big increase in cases of
pretended illness, technically known as hypochon
dria. A hypochondriac is a person with morbid anx
iety abotat his or her health. Frequently a hypochon
driac’s mental distress actually produces counterfeit
ned maladi
symptoms of the imagined maladies. The hypochon
driac flits from malady to malady. One day, he im
agines he has cancer of the stomach. Next day, a
fear that Bright’s disease is developing. And so on,
leading the doctor a merry chase, he meantime feed
ing the patient bread pills. The hypochondriac us
ually Is imitative—hears that some one else has a cer
tain malady, then begins fearing he has the same.
A generation ago the “hypo” was considered a
mental, case, and even doctors smiled a trifle at him
—whrin they weren’t cursing behind his back..
Now it is recognized that an unbalance of the
body’s 1 endoctrine glands is the most common cause of
hypochondria, If the thyroid or adrenal or pituitary
glands are too active or not active enough, the vic
tim often becomes neurasthenic, imagining all kinds
of symptoms, fear flitting from disease to disease.
In such Condition, the “hypo” is sincere in the belief
that bit the maladies In the universe are clutching
him. There’s still another type of hypochondriac—
where the; patient fakes illness and knows it. The
motive here is Co attract sympathy. The well person
is taken for granted without fussing. The ill person
gets the attention. ■ So the hypochondriac, craving
affection and attention, pretends : to be ill.
We all have this craving for sympathy and care,
though Yew (
- of us are willing to “enjoy bad health’’ to
get it As for the glanduUrsneurasthenic type of
"hypo," ft’s much more agonizing to imagine you re
ill than really to be ill, especially in the clutches of
the mysterious maladies that originate in the en
docrine glands or .the imagination, and which as
.vet are only vaguely understood by the medical pro
fession.
A soldier at the battlefront requires 80 pounds of
food and allied supplies a day, army experts figure,
for a million men, 80 million pounds of food and stores
daily. This emphasizes hoV transportation is needed
wherever men congregate in large numbers. Peace
time included. For instance, the railroads move 40,-
000 pounds of paid freight a year for each of us, or
about 110 pounds a day. In addition are deliveries
by wagon and motor truck. Conservative guess
v.-ould be that it requires the movement of 200 pounds
of fCbd, coal, building materials, etc., each day. for
inch of us, to keep our civilization moving.
We havo never been an ad
vooator of William Jonnlnge /
Bryan and hi* policies, but on
every -occasion' of his nomina
tion for the presidency of the
United Statea by the democratic
party, we have caat our baUot for.
him. ’However, there la aome good
In him, to say the least, even though
he was not active In his support
of the democratic nominee In the
last national election. In a special
article published In the New Vork
Times. Mr. Bryan comes out boldly
In deftnse of the South and its
treatment of the negro and the suf
frage question os applied to the
negroes In some of the southern
states. In part he said:
"The more advanced race will al
ways control as a matter of aelt
preservation not only for the bene
fit of the advunced race, but for
the benefit of the backward race
also,
“■n the states where restrictions
are placed upon suffrage, for the
purpose of excluding enough blacks
to preserve white supremacy, the
blacks have the advantage of liv
ing under laws that the white, man
makeu for himself os well as for the
black man. The laws make no dis-
tinctlon'ln the matter of crime be
tween whites and blacks.
• • Massachusettes would
do exactly as Virginia and South
Carolina had done If confronted by
the same conditions. There Is not
a state In the Union In which the ;
whiles would permit black su- j
premacy.Kepublicans are constantly 1
coming South and they at once]
adopt tho Southern view on the |
r/ice question, as soon as they have
lo meet the race problem aa a prac- |
(leal question. The fact that the
republican states of the North
never send black men to the United
Stutes Senate and House of Rep
resentatives Is conclusive proof
either that the blacks are Inferior
or that race prejudice keeps them
In the background. The race riots
In Illinois, thd home of Lincoln nrui
Grant, showed that race feeling Is
Just as string In the North as It
Is In the South when a condition
arises thnt gives It expression.
“1 ropeal. In conclusion, that my
views upon Ihe race question do
not depend upon my present resi
dence In tho South; they were
formed long before I ever thought
of living In the South.”
A girl having a “good head," but
not a “superbrain."
She would have beauty in every
sense of the w-ord—the physical
beauty derived of sane living .the
mental beauty derived from assoc
iation with music, poetry and other
beautiful things, and the spiritual
beauty manifest in unfailing tact
and wholehearted friendliness.
She might have bobbed haJr if it
becomes her. carry a vanity case
and powder her ncee provided the
effect Is not in the least conspic
uous: no rouge.
She would not smoke cigarettes.
She would be fair and square on
examinations.
Sho would never attend “petting
parties."
She would enjoy the companion
ship of men in the outdoors as well
as on the dance floor. Rowing up
stream she would take an oar nn.l
work with a will.
not rj-produce »,,,
I gctjmore enjoyment from
log U/ tew minutes with Capt Bar
nett and Dr. Milton Jamigen than
I would from the top-notchera on
the vaudeville stage. However,
here are a few ditties which are
supposed to be passable:
My but you arg fat
I was built for comfort not speed.
To bald headed man;
Put on your hat, you're
naked.
Soner entitled. /
"If ; every man was as true to his
country
As I*e is to his wife, God help the
LVS."
Soixp should t»e
heard.
Were you ever engaged?
Yes. once to n. shimmy dancer,
but she wiggled out of It.
Sometimes rt is rsfrsshing to
sttsnd a vaudeville perform*
ancs and have handed out to
you the latest and wholesome
jokes on the market. Some one has
sent me a sheet of short witticisms
supposed to have been "pulled' by
some vaudeville afoul f>ut many
of them are "chestnuts" and I will
There was a man named .Worth
Was horn on the day of his birth.
Was married they say on his
ueitfim: tlay
Add died on his last day on
lari h.
LONDON —'“Modern chefs cook
for the eye instead of the stom
ach,” Albert Musk, royal chef and
for twenty-five years 900k at the
Inner Temple, was speaking about
modern cooking. ‘ mask has held
out for old English dishes against
the onslaught of the French more-
ment In culinary art, which haa al
most entirely eliminated old fash
ioned dishes from English restau
rants.
Old fashioned dishes seem to
havo disappeared from almost
everywhere except the Inns of
EXTERMINATE
BOLL WEEVIL
that withheldeth corn, tha |
pl*i shall curse him; but blftti*
l shall be upon the head of him |
selleth It.—Prov. 11:26.
DUNBAR’S
ill-breeding
witch, whatever our rank and
lure, we are 'almost equally
pidtlve — Ihe ill-breedina that
from want of consideration
oC otherr.—Hulwcr-Lytton.
—
with the
lwi jmmlI guaranteed o I
CAKE MOUSSES l
'■•ESPECIALLY SELECTED"
CONTAINS NO POISON
A Puzzle \ Day
Notice carefully Ihe position of j
bet 11 checkers shown above
WEEVILAS areas to job In most SX
Exllon fun bomb. MU It with peUoa
accordlsf to Consul* .Md in Agricultur
al Experiment., and apply tnyosr cotton,
(formula and Information on mot*.)
Win kin Weevil and Incnaw cottoo yield,
•pedal price to planter, on dob can.
• (aa. Matey Order Today to „
DUNBAR MOLASSES A SYRUP CO.
NEW ORLEAN8. LOUISIANA
thef
you drew four at might lines thnt |
will *o;mrutQ all the checkers, nc
that each one will occupy'a differ*
ent HCK’tfrin?
Yesterday's antwtrt
C C cj
0 A W
The above xymbola Indicate that I
summrr wan Into in coming for they f
represent Ihe "CV cn "was" back
ward: "the sermon was backward."
The Society Girl
drinks a great deal of coffee. “Morn
ing Joy”, naturally, is her favorite. Its
■delightful aroma and unusual taste
appeal to her as to the hundreds of
thousands of others who> drink it all
the time. Ask your grocer.
Now Orieana Coffee Co, Ltd.
NATIONAL PARK CKklETERY j
Here on tho hills,- where . they
fought each other,
Northern comrade and Southern
brother,
Bound with death’s eternal tether,
Soldiere valiant, they lie togeth-
V ' ^ New Orla*sa. La.
^tprnini
Coffee
ThiluThe'AristocrdP
of
of Coffees
In graven bran and in carven
stone,
Are their tplendid deeds to the
world made known,
How brave men battled and bled
and died
On there green MU, of the coun-
While tho gnu (hall sprout and
river i
the river run*,
Their eon, (hall know and ,onl of
their (ona,- >
How a foe was conquered
made a Friend.
In a faith, please God, that shall
Domestic Science
Schools
Use Calumet
I Where baking is done ed-
Here, state by state, Is their mon
ument; f
.Here under the hillsides, they lie
content
Who did not fUneh at the battle
coll;
With the great sky arching abov,
them all.
And out of the ashes of wrath and
war, ,
Whatever the cause they were
fighting for, .
Nation greif from this test su
preme
Nation
* nd| entifically•— where ingredi-
lents stand or fall under
exacting tests, you find
Calumet Baking Powder
used more often than any
other brand. *•'
—file choice of over hun
dreds of brands—tiie
1 tills in mind when you
1 or vital importance to
The Nation lives—and the sun's
rays gleam.
—BERTON BRALEY.
■price of baking
pimi does not determine its I
pwnviiniffll TTwitn n»ui|Ha rail.
the story.
tiSWEIS IB*
FOR B011S IF
! powder.
WAftril 16 oonce«.Hi
baking powders come in 12
ounce instead of /SB
cans. Be tare you get
when you want iLH
For Women—Easter Capes^Coats
Blouses, Skirts, Sweaters, Easier Hats—
All newest in style, lowest in piice, and
easiest in terms of payment
t a pound
Clean your bowel, I Feel fine!
When you fed aiek, dissy, upset,
when your bead Is dull or aching,
or your stomach is sour or gassy,)
Just taka one or two Cascarets
relieve conatip *
CALUMET
n grown-ups and children. l_
mx. Taste like candy.—Adver-
BAKING FGWOER
Wage-earner or
Banker—lit all the
same to us—we have no
favorites, one is just as wel
come to open *a charge
account with us as theother
and your Easter suit it here
waiting for you on your
own terms of payment*
TOE WORLD’S GREATEST PAKINil POLDER