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»ABt TOUR
•HAUL a BRASWELL Publish
CUAgi.ES & MARTIN
Publisher and General Manager
Managing Editor
Entered at the Athena Postofflee as
• the Act of Congreaa
— Class Mail Matter under
irch 8. 1879.
- a/b. C. PAPER—ASSOCIATED—PRESS—N. R A. SERVICE
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
• «l Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub-
tkatlou of all news dispatches credited to it or r.ot otherwise creditec’
m this paper, and also the local news published therein. All rights of
republlcation of special dispatches are also reserved.
Bowdre Phinizy,
Secretary and .Treasurer.
H. J. Bowe,
View President
i Address all Business Communications direct to the Athens Publish
ing Company, not fb individuals. News articles intended tor. publica
tion should be addressed to The Banner-Herald.-
PROSPERITY IN GEORGIA
i A Knitting mill plant costing 930,000' is -to be
erected at Greensboro, Ga. This is but another mani-
» festation of prosperity in Georgia towns.
The Greensboro Hera Id-Journal has the following
• to say of the project:
There are splendid indications that Greensboro will
: have a knitting mill in the near future.
A number of well-known citizens have their heads
j together oyer the proposition.
A prominent and practical one of the number of
! citizens has been away and made a close investiga-
tion of the knitting mill propositon.
It is proposed to use the old Copelan Warehouse, in
jthe year of the Copelan building. It is said there is
sufficient space in the warehouse, in which to place
machinery, for a $30,000 plant
And, if necessary, a second story caa be added to
. the building. ~
, The machinery will be opterated with electric pow
er. The splendid all the time current now furnished
by the city, will be ample for a large number of
knitting machines.
It is proposed to make the capital stock, at $30,000.
‘ Not more than six or eight men will own-the fnill.
The Herald-Journal ia assured that the outlook for
^the inauguration of the enterprise is quite encourag-
; This paper hopes to report rapid progress upon
■ the installation of the new enterprise.
GRAVES AGREES WITH HARDING ’
Hon. John Temple Graves, editor and orator, is
one of the best known men i nthe South. Mr. Graves
J was for A long time connected with the Hearst news-
Papers, but finding himself out of sympathy with Mr.
/ -Hearst 8 anti-Wilson views just prior to the World
i War, Mr. Graves retired from his editorial position,
< and since that time he has devoted himself to deliver-
. mg addresses on the questions of the day in different
; parts of the country.
■ . Wilson, North Carolina that Presi-
, dent Harding in his heart is for universal peace as
clearly as Wilson was, Mr. Graves quoted the world
court proposal of the chief executives in an “enter-
; ln * wedge to a better and nobler constructive states-
manship." and-ha urged the-support-of public opinion
® n ^ at "President Harding and Secretary
^Hughes, said Mr. Graves, “have done a magnificent
jtliing in projecting the world fhtemaiiona! court into
Jthe arena of frank and fearless decisions, over and
ijsgiinit the implacable obstinacy of their own party.
.As a democrat, I congratulate and salute the magnifi
cent gesture of humanity.” *
i Mr. Graves concluded his eloquent address, which
jwas received with rounds of applause, as follows:
K „i | tide °. f P ub,ic opinion can be
v rallied behind this great salient of a world’s
: peace court you and I, my countrymen, in our own
J day and generation shall live to see/the abolition
{ forever of that unreasonable, unthinkable, inef-
I f rJ e ^ am " a L b ‘ e ’ bel,i8h thin « th at men call war,
and the establishment upon God’s purpose and
. mans desire incomparable blessings of peace
1 P e 2Sf amonK the nations of the earth!
i . May God give us vision and courage to
' l U d ^f public opinion that shall bring this
vast divine event of peace.”
Street car chatter la usual
ly idle gossip, bat sometimes
conversations heard on • the
street ear are of much momen-
I turn and relate to serioua matters,
things which have a bearing on
conditions, civic, commercial, edu
cational and religious. All these
subjects come in for their ahare
in the daily conversations of those
who travel to and from their
homes and business avocations.
There were several gentlemen on
‘he car a few days ago, the day
ft rained so much, discussing
things in general when one of them
mentioned my friend’s name, Mr.
John J. Wilkins. My attention
was immediately aroused and
pricking up my ears so as not to
losa a sound of his voice I heard
him say that “John Wilkins was
one of the heat bankers in the
Country.” That made me fell good
for I was fearful of him saying
something- also and, 'of course, it
would have been my duty to defend
the good name, habits and morals
df my friend. His remark, how
ever, gave me a license to cut in
on the conversation and, all agreed
that our friend was correct in his
analysis of the gentleman in
question- Everyone stated some
pecuiority our friend possessed,
but we .all agreed that he was no
Worse than ourselves and no argu
ment could be gotten up on that
question. “I then told them that I
bdiovf;(i that I understood him
bettor than any of them and that
I had been convinced that whan
he looks the meanest and when hia
fcce. eyes, nose, eyebrows and
ira commence to do a contortion
t that he is only giving vent to
-iia feelings which have been aroua-
qd by the boiling milk of human
tindnasa bubbling over- in . his
heart. That, is true—for I havo
tried him oat on just ara^b ocea- i_~ ■<=
sions. The first time he through the newspa
proached me. I shall never fbnrlt ^***'"*?*^ wagaaines. In fact it
and even yet, I have a horro?5*believed tbafc the
recalling TCS e^ri^e ^h|^ , ^!;f tv ^ d ^^ CVe,OD , l,,to
lasted for several moments, but 5?„? e S 0,,ft .. 0nc ,f , ,h *
it soon purged when h» ainin u f ^ agcnc*es for. the condjet
me ttat in good'standing! I &“«'
no past due notes—no interest due I jL i Vrftw™ «f th !i. wor I d ; ? er *
and no over drafts. That day I!—■-*-£ r> r e - 0 (- th ® telephone
was 100 per cent tp the good vrtth! tn i5» ?? w ,u York new *'
the bank, but the day was thcJw™* jj, M? e m * n who,
>rt3f one in my lifef “ ^
The sentiment of Justlcs'li so
natural, mt Universally acquired
by all mankind, that It seem, to
me Independent of all tew. all
party, all religion.—Voltaire.
shorten one in my life.
The bootleggers are receiv
ing the extreme.limit in fines
and sentences In some parts of
the country. Especially ia this
true in the southern sutesp but
there is one judge in Pennsylvsnis
"Ojoubt, he would blush over his
predictions as since that time elec-
thi C j5t hto i aut0 “°Wle* and now
the radio have ail come int^gen-
U8e ‘ Here is what be said a
half century ago:
The full significance of a new
«oing ed at the time.
h«d exhibited at
position in Phil-
fcoMTthTwS^MTiSof X!SHS?^ veIy by ^
pense an] you must pay back all ! MnS? i*i a new ,natru ®ent of elec-
it spent to convict ySS. y Indicted! S *, c ‘? nce ’ “ore likely than
Wth six Others in the illegal run.|u«” f i"d immediate
service
BUSTLE BOW
The bustle bow is appwSA
oy .«*»»ii« smartest
tta. It harks back tp the 18S0
iod and introduces a certain
’ itneas and charm to a sophis-
- age. ,
FIGURED MATERIALS
Very large figured crepes and
linens are made up into the sim
plest of costumes With round necks
and,short sleeves or with collars
c*?I d orSf f, the 0f m^l.P WdOMin * tine
SaJ*!!* *0* tha ss is «
BSSSSSS?
4:
PELEHATOHE
burir and Canton, you fqught
tradition and aggravated the gov
ernment. I knew you were guilty
when you were afraid to -testify.
S&ttitse.&s
did not deny. That’s a titie you'll
pay. dearly for.”
1 * * * strong
ibitioo as'well as
CASTOR IA
• For Infants and Children
la use for.over 30 years
_ YOUR
IMPURE BLOOD
pIIAT “ k n o c k c d-down-and-
I dragged-oat” feeling, the skin
*■ eruptions and muddy complexion
id the sick spells that jeave you so
eakarealltignaofirapure blood.-
As a blood medicine and spring tonic.
Gudc’s Pepto-Mangan ha3 no equal.
It will send a new supply cf rich blood
—:— j, veins, dear up
ive you a new feeling of
your skin and t-._,
physical pbwer and vitality. . .
Your druggist has Gudc’s—in both
liquid and tantet form.
, Glide’s
pepto-Mangan
Tonic and Blood Enricher
editoriak" “ e c,,nux of th ‘
„ j", ripsing ‘he writer says,-' “Of
WML * uch , »» motion?
state ^en I?? 60 °* ca8 *i®na of
fSS. neeeiaary for of.
W a° *. n far apart to talk
terfer™~ °, th6r w l‘hout the in-
terference of an operator. .Or
J^ly. though miles away- ft "If
cth century^ Z
^5.i. a eSn V tw” b “ bot " convoyed
of «lxty“ il^ tr° V . C . r a cifcu ''»
.. Muaic can
no imp!»A—tif "next
no griping or nattsea.
ictcu ior ye«is. ^
Stout persons find them'inndusble
YOUR ANCESTORS
The men who make a business of tracing familv
that. ^ 8 ®" ea, °» 18ts ) report that they are In work to
£t in W6r f t ?, rted ■“'•PMsie of inter-
^ ’•* e8 ? ec J aHy , an ‘ on * r new millionaires.
,The same curiosity is found to be creatly stimluated
: fiWth^nln 6 . b 5 om i d,c oratore MU “the rank and
' „L® “ P*®P ,e „ A very good thing, to know
thit flUf ° n Sf‘! y £i me f [° m J th® wientiata claim
_ 0 —if we trace back far enough will
find ancestors who d be kepjt- in the zoo today.
AnericsM seem to hkve an aversion to pedigrees
of 8mtock th do« int ? nse,y: interested in the Iineaje
ThutaSt’ i*^ cat8 » race horses and machinery.
' Whnt r.afit 8 ’ 8 i n : e °“ r natio nal attitude is that
what **'&*#& not wba t
i l.,ra/f or your ancestors in the past A
a his.own legs, not.soma one else’a in
however, each of us is the result of a
? f ^neraUons of toiiing people whose
®°^ Te war to produce a child better' in'
' * nd 8Uccess tnl than its parents. We
Jjowo it to eur toiling ancestors to give them at least
-^passing curiosity.. Intensely interesting is tracing
w k J 01 i r f fam , llytree - Nothingbeateit* as an en ^
J lrarv «w lv * e U on ' ? yoi i wa “t to start, the local 6 ]"-
•fegsg SJTSAS STSA £-4
,re "““""‘I- *
nrS,, your family tree. yo\i*ll run into 8 ur-
Wiii”« "f "ri “ffv
SITniF^# ♦k!a lu . ca t e to drcolate. For instance
- a y of th^ early settlers of Anierica were futriHvM
hia researches when he traced himself back to a man
the shi P«' the Coirt of
hisCaptain fflMi"'** 1 for havin ? a «identlly shot
Adriaen’s blood, by the way, flows today in Rev
eLlv%e^rK C i ety ^ am,lfe * ° f New York
vant to lea\e a fanulj tret for your descendants, be
Wiggly
Magnate Began
As Grocer Boy
i
ence .
Piggly
started hia'bMii^sg ^JZ or ' Hc
gro&ry ciert «» S r ? rc - r »» n
a at « "“i^ry of U
... Pelehatche, Mias.
w. < ^ n °^ Ce ‘‘ “Fellyhatchle")
we got boRRcd outside of Forrest
Mtestsslppl wallows
lh e . r *„r th ®?t. Wa * n,t an y bottom to
Bu. »»h y ha * l,ned Ul * boUows.
and wtah!T Ten darkle « Pushing.
» . otb,r ’ Polling,
We were set upon the .opdtvay an]
our cor continued chugging
Toward the tiny town of Morton
M°". a -.r*'. called h‘ghway which Is
Made . of riy and muck and gum-
mtcll".^ betw#en two * en - f oot
nr » UMracI* WO made It, till
. niuddy, cold and drippy,
s°lpp"' Ved at p «>«ha‘che, Ml«l fr
W bu?g d n P r lnn , ne< l ° n mak,n » Vlcks-
“ ' eaat oa reaching
B tea‘?“ rdy ' fl * htl "S spirit of
w. 8 ,-, r J Iy An *'o-Soxon
r^rLTZ en °PRh within us;
, JJ* were weary, bone and sinew
And our common senso decided It
was silly to continue. dCd “
"V: Ins :«
WmwJl ? e nthmlllnff;
ov« r ^uilahed from our travel
There were biscuit light as feather.
OoldPn *" <I ,onder ohlcken:
-filpm. MIS-
Snowdrift
in a^g^^^airtight bucket
N ^ easy to open
as winding §
the clock I
•
TAKEMI
"Dodson's Liver Tone" Straightens You Mp^Better
Salivating, Dangerous Calomel and Doesn’t Ups..,
You—Don’t Lose a Day's Work—Read Guaptee |
I discovered a vegetable com
pound thqt does tho work of daa-
gcrous, sickening calomel and I
want every reader of this paper to
1 buy, a bottle for a few cents and
if it doesn’t straighten you up bet
ter and quicker than salivating
back to the store
And “to T,tr'",' d , , r" nriea
, tho tongio of rem B °"" ,p which
-
Take a rest at ■ n * <>rly djppy.
•Ippl. ‘ p **®hatche. Mlssls-
_ -nERTON BRAt.vv
A Puzzle A Day
Ro^Tumerati"^^ ’
•ay be used ’ e “crs, etc.
’ wterday’i Answer
Land get ySur mobey back, Ing HKhV
I <4t -r- sickcqs—while
'SSfeMJK? Dodson’s Liver-Ton*^T»af«,,
lousness, coated tongue, tint, i
laris, sour stMMtcb or any <
distress caused by a torpid .
y as a dose of rile, i
calomel, beeides it
not make you sick or keep
from •'day’s work.
Calomel Is poison—it’s _ T
—it attacks the bones often i
sluggish liver to work and dean
your thirty feet fit bowels of the
sour bile and constipation poison
which is clogging your system rjsd
making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that one spoonful
of this harmless liruid liver medi
cine will relieve the headache, bii-
Liver Tone'...
ant and harmless: Eat
afterwards, botsusc It can u ,
ivate. Give if to the children I
cause it doesn't upset the at
or shock the liver. Take si
ful tonight and wake up L.
fact that an active liver nuy j
work.—(Advortsiemcnt)
Even from this pittance, Saudd
n managed to save raonev. Hi
-.arted his first Piggly Wggilj
•tore—a kind of se?fe-,elf
eery—Jn 1916. Since then atom
have been opened all over the
country.
—Sfwri*"’ Remarkable ccup in
Wqll Street, in which he sent I
WHITE JERSEY
i .^*“ ar ‘ jacket,of white jersey
cloth ie entirely covered with an
design in bOlck souti
“™'d and given a smart stani
collar of gray rabbit fur.
/ DARK ungbrie
Lingerie of black crepe trimmed
with black chantllly lace is very
smart now. So is > lingerie of
brown of navy blue.
ri
I -
' I “!
r
Ff
>.
—
0*
&
c
«F
CP
N _ N
_
T
PUipIce Mar he Sswll Befld
5®.~55»5urSj5
SSSL *5s the eagtUe com-
S55» ‘he ehsra that moves the
S ” 1 *® . T i“; »?jhe neeoag that have
£ Ll.&82 t 'Z t S2 , »SSZ
WHIE
CHILDS BOWELS
"California Fig Syrup”
Child's Best Laxative
board may be divided!
!"*» . fo , ur equal parte, each pert
eontateing, square upon whic? a
agfr.tsjigt.w **|
f Athens Visitors
J&JZtSS&XSS-Z!)
old at j;
rrffsrSSSL
o^C (I «ro« S. S. S. tAot Hi 0."
It reemelf. SI a & Is sol] „
•1! u-o- ^oroe 10 two Ilm Tho term
ts the mtolLSWteoak<to|y-
makes you feet
XMtuow
Even if crose, feverish, bilious,
constipated or full of cold, chil-
**» »<""■ ’’fruity’’taste of
i“California Pig Syrup.” A tea-
spoonful never fails to clean the
liver and bowCls. In a few hours
can sco for yourself how
lughly it ,worka all the sour-
'out of the
it have
'■» Athens
w«”' H- Erbcrt Abetson
•Jew Yortt City; W. A. Roberts
Gainesville, Go.; H. D. Baii~,
tintei Shelhy Smith, Atlante; C
S' D y ; Paul
F. H. Human. Knoxville, Tenn.;
*'■ and Hey A. Dreyer
Chicago, III.; Henry D. Durrene
?S rt v ’ G M, J v A r White, Nor.
V 5- ; *■»“. New York;
*™ew • teaapoonfui t’oday^saves a a,^ r ^*-. a, ! d **"•
The Great American Sweetmeat
Millions of mothers keep “Cali
fornia Fig Syrup" handy. They
f ° r genuine “California
‘ which has directions
i famiiy, pnbUn, Gs-; G. Glenn
A Mrs. Glenn,' AtUrU.i; T. B
^TbstisJSs^n
IUtU Jr., Dublin.
TheFlaoor
L-a-st-s
Top off your meala
WRIGIEY’S and dive yoar
stomach a lift.
It aids digestion—it
provides the “bit of sweet"
in beneficial form.
Helps to cleanse the.
teeth and keep them
healthy.
WRIGLEY'S pays
big dividends on I
small investment.^'
It's the best chewtni h®
that can be made sat If
to keep