Newspaper Page Text
I
111 PAGE TWO
"V
THE BANNER-HBRAM), ATHENS, GEORGIA
MONDAY APRIL IS, 102J
Classitied;- Advertisement
WIT HD RATES
12 Cents a Word ¥_
Minimum Chargs of 40 Cent*
Insertions. Seven times for the
price' of five insertions.
AH', discontinuances MUST be
made In person at The Ban*
ner-Hernld Office or by letter.
Telephone discontinuances are
NOT valid.
.WANT AEf
PHONB
BANNER-HERALD WANT
ADS GET RESULTS
75
75
Wanted
■Wanted—Jon nr yottno man
H of partial college education. 1*. O.
■Sox NO. 650. al7p
1 WANTED—Help
■ WANTED — YOUNG MAN. DRUG
I Store and Grocery experience,
wants position. Must work, moderate
■ salary * expected. Best refereri
I Address J. L. II.. care Banner-IIor-
■ nld. : ulCo
FOR SAL(E—SEVERAL
bushels of peas good for
either eating or planting
purposes. Several cans of
berries, string beans and
pickles. If you will caH at
the Banner-Herald Office
on Hancock Avenue you
will be surprised just how
cheap you can buy any
part of the above men
tioned.
GEORGIA TERM HITS
#•
For Rent
■ FOR RENT—ONH NICELY FUR-
I NJSIfED front room, with oonncct-
■ Sng bath/ Address I*. O. Box 477. a!7c
■ FOR RENT—TWO UNFURNISHED
■ rooms, couple preferred; immediate
■ possession. Apply at 178 Virginia
■ Avenue.- »17p
I FOR RENT—FOUR UNFURNISHED
I rooms with bath. Fine for light
r housekeeping. Apply 236 W. Dough-
f erty or phone 1779. al7c
I FOR " tfALE-NEW, ATTRACTIVE
I two-story dwelling in deslrablo lo-
I * eaiJty, t sfx rooms and bath. Delight
ful home for small family. Price
■ *3,300 cash, with balnnco of $3.G00 in
five or ten years at 6 per cent in-
| terest. Apply "S. A.,” care Banner-
■ Herald. »17p
FOR SALE—EXTRA FINE DAMP
SHIRR Sow, registered, weigh* r»0<
; duo to farrow In May. Will sol
' exchange for corn or good mule
First litter of pigs will pay for sow
A. H. Davison. «!$<
FOR SALE
FLOWER AND SEED PLANTS
SEEDS—Zinnias, Coreopsis. Merrl
golds. Ragged Robins, Sunflower
Cut-and-Come-Again.
PLANTS—Blue Agcrntum, Coreop
sis. Violets. Shasta Daisies. Ragged
Robins, Primrose.
I will appreciate the patronage
the flower lovers of Athens.
MRS. W. M. CRANE
way this week. Tho Detroit Tigers
and the N. V. Ynnkeea are Hched-
ulod to fight ft out for p, iD .
naet In the American league while
the Giants have the early Reason
dope to win in the National. A*-,
lanfa, In Vhe Southern league,
won't he In the cellar this year, it
. , i j seems.
■ 1 — | The next game in Athens will bo
Plav Four ('James ThiV"" April 27111. vamierwit.
xir 1 xv » tut 1 1 Two games will be played the
Week; Miss. A. & M. End j Commodores, one OP. Friday and
Alabama Draw Two | on Saturday.
Games Each.
Coach White will put his Bull- [
dogs through practice Monday aft
ernoon and then Tuesday will
hoard th»* S. A. L. vestibule fof j
Mississippi, stopping off at Stark- 1
ville for two games against Mis- j
siwdppf A. and M. college Wednes- I
day and Thursday,
i This Is the longest trip the Geor- j
J ginns take this year and supplants |
ft he usual one into £'he middle At-
I lantic states. Following the Mls-
| Rissippi games will be tw'o against
the strong Alabama nine, one at
Tuscaloosa and the other at Mont
gomery.
Pho
1654.
Miscellaneous
MEDIUM BROWN HAIR looks
best of all after o Golden Glint
Shampoo.
SPECIAL NOTICE
CITY TAXES
The first installment of city tux-
1 are due from April 16th to May
1st, inclusive. Tuxpuyers who fall
on or before May 1st will have t<
pay $1.6b coat of fifa which will b*
Issued against all delinquents
O. E. O'FARRELL.
M-l-c City Marshal. *
For Sale
■ FOR SALE—PURE bred
“ Berkshire Pigs, 6 weeks)
old, ready for delivery on I
the 15th. See Orr & Co. |
■ a22c
| FOR SALE—Cleveland 3
passenger touring road
ster ,A-1 condition, con
sumes less gas and oil
rftban ia Ford. Price right.
Catv^ca it at Keller Auto
| Co., Wash. St., this week.
I Walter Bishop.
FOR BALE—TWO NICE YOUNG
milch cows; also mammoth yellow
soy beans, - $W0 per bushel: Red
Pepper cow peas, 92.25 per bushel.
Address J. L. Bradbury, Rt. 1, Ath
ens, Ga. a!7p
r< >n
IALB — ONE REO SPEED
l and one Corbitt 2-ton truck-
' j:. i>.'l
feulfe, 16$ Washington St. a!7p
FOR SALE—1 HOOSIER KITCHEN
Cabinet, 1 art square, oil stove, bed
room fekite, dining table, chairs, 2
mahogany rockers. 3 kitchen chairs.
Cell Monday 241 Barber St. a!7c
FOR SALE—ONE FLOOR SHOW
CA8B. cash register, cracker rack,
and standard computing scales. Call
1032 at 575 N. Jackson St. al«c
FOR; SALE-Coat Suit,
size 38, practically new.
Apply Banner-Herald of
fice. b!7c
for -Kale — one ten-horse
bfgh- r (^M KHRoline engine end
Xroed ta>: engine suitable for pur|
poses of pumping water, running
feed mill, grist mill and many other
VUrpoMX Will sell cheap or
change • for good sound mule. aI7c|
RAILROAD
SCHEDULES
SEABOARD AIR LINK RY.
Northbound Southbound
9M • Atlanta-Monroe local 9:15 p
*2:40 p Atl.-IIIrmlngham-Mem H 3:20 p
2:40 p Norfolk-Rich.-N. Y. 3:20 p
7:65 p Atl.-Abbeville local 7:30 a
Atl.-Birmingham 6:29 a
Norfolk-Washington 6:29 a
Wilmington-N. Y. 6:29 a
11:24 p
24 p
14 P
e
OCOROIA RAILROAD
Depart
1:20 am
2:25 pm
Berton Braley’s
Daily Poem
The Season Opens!
BY BERTON BRALEY
'Pity—" no, we won’t a tort it that
way!
And there Id an excellent rea
son
For since men first started to play
"The opening game of the rea
son.”
Each bard and each scribe of the
newspaper tribe
Haa wrinkled his hard-working
brow
Then started "Play—Nix on
those old fashioned tricks,
WE’RE gonna be different now!
“Play—’’—Antediluvian stuff,
WE’LL use some ORIGINAL
dope.
WE’RE clever and snappy enough
To pull some new phrases, we
hope;
We’vo always averred that a scre
ening bird
Should certainly know hew to do
The opening day without starting
it, ’’Play—’’
WE’RE gonna do something
that's new.
“Play—” thera'a the dam phrase
once again.
Well it cannot dominate US!
We’ll prove to all manner of men
That we're an original cuaa;
"The season has started, the fans
are light hearted,
The game has the crowd in its
thrall,
Play—’’ (ain’t it the deuce) “Play
• —’’ (oh what's the ttse?)
"Play—’’ (gosh. I can’t help it)
“PLAY BALL!’’
KhiK&o'
[ , by "two*
When playing out of a sand trap,
the club head touc hea tin sand or.
the np.-.rd suing. Tb • player goe^
through win. the sw.nr aim suc
cessfully ge?3 oat of the trap. In
addressing the ball the «::nd wax
.i» k touched wi*h the olub
Is a player re'mli’-ed a stroke
when tho club head touches tho
sand before coming info can tact
with vhe bull regardless of the cir
cumstance*. or is there a line of
discrimination?
The player is penalized a stroke
for touching the sand with the club
l end. The fact that It came on the
upward swing makes no difference.
The rule Is very definite' and no
~ SC<*PmH-IMMKUMnO>N-—r
- -, TO^ANADA IN,CRE^pE$,| |
*. OTTAWA.—The February-' im- j
migration returns show that there'
I is quite a Scottish immigration to;
Canada, 512 of the 1,358 from the
British $sles having been of that
race- There were 659 English and
162 Irish. |
From continental countries the'
immigration was 1.097 and from |'
the United States 722, the latter
being considerably lower than the '
same month last year- j|
>TE FE. N. :.r,
tile United Stat
Tho eGorgia team Is hard press
ed for hurlors right now, especially
with four games in a row this
week. Cliff I’antone is still nursing
n sor- arm but last Saturday be
fore the Michigan game he wns
zipping 'em over with morn pen
that lie lias shown this,year and •’
nmy be that lie will be sent to t’’o
r.lt In one of Mie pnmes tills
ff Pnntone is not used then Clarke
end Thomason will have to he ro
lled on to do some of the mound
work. • *
Not over 12 or 1.7 men will In
taken on the Mississippi trip so
Coach White announce*.
Auburn trimmed Tech Snturna
in the first game of the season be
tween these two teams, the Plains
men drubbing two of Tech’s Tmst
•dtchera. These teem* plav two
games, one in Aubuin and tho
other In Montgomery.
It was In the the Auburn game MtuJy o’ the r
mntB Ust year when the Tech both for fcp a t and
team walked off tho field with only j occasions have -*1
two down and one or two Auburn These ore usually
runners on. They scored and there- match the gown,
by won the series from the Jack- j —.
eta. j More titan 500 tons of flc
are exported annually from
Most of the leagues ?et under»Srilly islands.
- the fact that j
4 efficient a gu
i<l fJsh supply •.
P' 1
E VERY Ring is perfectly
round, because it is]
D shaped by our exclu-j
siv« and patented heatJ
R process.
Pcdrick Rings presa acaimt
' IMPORTANT NOTICE “
All who have not paid their State <atul
County Taxes for last year, please hurry set
tlement to me at once. W
Levies will be made as fast as tli^ Sheriff
and Bailiffs can make them.
W. A. MALLORY, Tax Collector
IN FOREIGN LANDS
TINTED TRAVELS
Sketches by L. W. Redncr. Verses by Hal Cochran.
Color the picture with paint or crayons
Heat-Shaped
PISTON RINGS
TRUE-FIT and OIL-C 0MTRO4
Distributed by
KELLER MOTOR & MACHINE
COMPANY
Made by Wilkening Mfg. Co., I'hila.
PETER B. KYNE’S GREAT
STORY PALACE TONIGHT
u ions on- noted. _while the! Douglas Fairbanks, “Three Musketeers” Elite; Mil-
rla>cr *on8i"eraUon y nin'i!n given ton Sills, .John Bowers in Ince Special Tuesday;
Season’s Gorgeous Novelty, “Adam’s
Rib,” Is Coming Soon.
tb-«t fact. il«* must suffer the pen
nlly of on** stroke.
Player’s drive from tho tee re
sults in n slice that strikes a spec'
tutor h mi Ing well off the fairway.
After Htrikfng one of the gallei^
♦ lie ball Is deflected into a very
bad He. Haa the player any re
course?
S*»eh a Iripreiiinv h luerolv re-
nrded -w a break of tl:e game.
The Lull uhI !>»? played from the
resulting lie.
EMDHGIDERF.P SCARVES
„• more formal
vet to m.’*te)v
inbrolilered t<
T 1ie little loum of Hall is <m
Tlte 'River Humber
Ard, a? a. h'sTirng settlcrmeut,
It 'Kigj'hltj ranks
By WILLIAM J* FIROR
Mr. J. F. Basemors, Agricultural
Development Agent and Mr. W.
F. Turner, Horticultural Agent of
tho Central of Georgia JiQllroad
spent Friday, April 13 In Olarke
county getting lined up with the
Clarke County Agent in Pasture
work here. Visits were made to
jicvoral farms and plan* laid for fu-
turo work along this line. It will
bo recalled that the Central
DAILY SKRMONKTTE
To everything there Is a season,
and a time to every purpose under
the heaven.—Eccles. 3:1.
The Ill-usage of every minute le
a pew record against US In
heaven.—Zimmerman.
WILLARD
BATTERIES
$15.00
and up
CLARKE STORAGE
BATTERY CO.
Phone 677
Athens, Ga.
essentials In gctt/Wg a field Htartcd"
In this crop are inoculation, linn
and firm vOed bed.
Bur Clover. This legume Im*
the happy faculty or reseeding it
■elf. The economical way to gel
a pasture of bur clover and n but
clover pasture eomcH early In th<
spring, is to sow the seed in A-n-
gust or the first week in September
mixing the seed with iuouInter
Georgia railroad in cooperation j soil, stable manure and acid phos-
wlt£ Dr. John Fain and Prof. Paul iphate. The old red iiiii side imu
Tabor of tho College of Agriculture of tho hog barn on the Agrlcul-
lias accomplished wonders through (turnl College farm is a living « >
out the state in instituting permn-1 ample of the possibilities ef tit
nent pasture*. Mr. Bnsemoro in
telling jt these pastures, of which
there are about 60 special Central
of Georgia Te^t pastures In Geor ... Spraying Peaches. A good
gla, cited as nn illustration a pas- peach trees throughout the
ture nonr Grirfln, Ga., on the far.** are setting a good crop of fruit. If
of Walker Urotheru there. these trees have not already b>
sprayed to prevent rurcullo da
age, this very important sprnybu
should at once bo made. Ui
pound of nrsenato of lead, 3 pn
of burnt or hydrated lime uiul 5r
gallons of water
rium arsenate as a substitute
the arsenate of lead. Tho arsenate
of lend is carried by drug store:
in powdered form. The lime is pu
in the mixture to/prevent the burn
ing of the foliage. Teh llmo that in
used in building operations will le
use any
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS AT ELITE TONIGHT.
The supporting
aelient.
This pasture contains 20 acres
and wa* sown two year*‘ago to
Dallla grass, carpet gruvt, and
lespedezn. ^During 1922, 36 head oi
cattle were'grazed on this field fo»
8 months. During this time they
were not fed unything beeldes that
furnished by the grasses and mad*
■atisfactory growth and kept in
good condition. In addition to the . satisfactory. Do
cattle 24 head of sheep were grazed | slacked or ground lime stone. Tit
for 3 months, 8 mules for 2 months, 1 curoulio lays the egg that eniisr
9 other mules were turned into th« 1 the wormy penehea and also fur-
field during days they w<jro notlnlHhes an entrance for tho brown
working and then 10 tons \f hay J rot fungua. Fifty gallons of *pr;
were harvested. Mr. Boaemor- (Will go over from 76 to 100 mntu
stated that this pasture is slightly | trees. For back yard trees one .
above the average for the 60 pas-, two ounecN of arsenate of lead wilp
turet that *l»e Central of Georgia be enough to make the spray need-
has promoted. At the present time
is is too lute to atari a low land
pasture hut if a field of IQ to.
acres can be obtained for next sea-
teouotfAS FAIRBANKS woman. re?i
elite TONIGHT fast Li gen-
Douglas Fairbanks, lie with the pepj PALACE S^F.CIAL
find laughs, will be the main attrac- J TUESDAY
t4on at the Ullte theatre tonight pro-; Scenes were taken and retaken for
■eating a "Special requested return two weeks to get 11 s|tectaculnr
•tigogement of hlr grrr.tcrt picture. | “flood sequence'* wliieh Is a feature
’The Three Musketeer’.” I>»»tig. was j of Thomas II. luce's latest production
V»»l\vr i.-fter than in this picture and "What a Wife Learned," at the Pal*
Die in.'ii : ge;nent «f the Elite is pre-jaco Tuesday. A dozen times John
ce Musketeers" to-: Bowers and Milton Hills who are fen-
nigh* only by popular demand of the lured In the play, were rolled down
k!n» were unable to see 1 stream by good-rlted floods released
ccommodatlng officials of the
lam at Yuma. Arizona, where
r.s were made and the off!*'
rials were of much assistance in
making "What n Wife Learned” the
tjtertaculax success it Is.
Cnmeramc.i worked alstard rafts
rpiittrod nn top of cement pilings
sunk into the canal l>cd. Life guards
h;ui been plcturlzed by 1 from the California beaches were
’politmi CoriMiratlon for | employed to see that Bowers nml
vill be shown at the j Hills should not come to harm when
T. Roy Barnes and J exhausted from, their buffeting with
® lending man am! t the flood crests.
ny pa
Pali:
on h!s first
I I’m all pep
The Three A
tonight.
in 1 by tho
ul! Laguna
at (the sc<
puinr story.
Palace tonight,
Heena Owen
ALL ABOARD
Winter Excursion Fares and All
Year Tourist Fares ;
TO
'Alabama
Arliona
Arkanan
Brltlah Columbia
California
Klorid.
(Vnihlntina
f.rurfda
Havana
Kentucky
Loaialann
Miulaalppl
«.« Mexico
VIA
'
■. • :
Norik Carolina
Oropon
8-uth Carolina
Toxin , 7 T’
Virginia i U
Writ Virfiold
Georgia Railroad [L r f
Atlanta & West Point R. R.
Western Railway of Alabama
Liberal time limit and stop-over privileges.
For further information applv to
J. P. BILLUPS, G. P. A.,
714 Healey Building, Atlanta, Gx ' •
, CENTRAL Of GEORGIA RV.
W. O. Boitoo. Agent, Phono 1M1
Central of Goorgla Statloo
Deport (or Macon T:M a. m.
f , P- »•
Arrtva from Macon 11:10 p. m.
1:10 p. m.
For further Information phono
J. T. Drue*. CLM
GAINESVILLE MIDLAND
RAILWAY
. \ ] SehMalor
Lain Ataooo Arrlva
T:M A. M.« •§:» P. M.
- U;4I A. U.«« 001,:ll A. M.
• Holly. •• Dally Except Sunday.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
No. ( Icari. Athena 1:00 a. m.. ar-
r . e. Lola »:.» A m,
Nn. i'leavea Athena «:IS p. m..
rives Lulu 6:46 p. m.
No. 7 leave, Lola d:M p. m, ar-i
rlvc, Athoi, l:M p. m. (
No. ,S leave* Lola 10:0} A m.. ar-l
rt,.. Athena UNO Am. , <
O.I a MUl,r. c; A.. AitanA Oa,
L ’ _ Tolaoboaa IL _ j
W. L. COXE
Transfer Co.
Long Trlpt Our Specialty.
Choapnt Truck in ,Teton.
600 Thomas St.
Phone 1351
E. KAY
“THE SMILING! PAINTER"
Fine Painting and Interior
Decorating
Phone 280,. Athens, Ga.
ed at this time.
.arsenate of lead to ,t gallons of
water with a small handful nf Ilm<
Added. Stir well before applying
son the Central will start one of and frequently during spraying
their test pastures In Clarke county I The arsenate «f lead sinks to th«
Alfalfa. This hay crop Is well; bottom readily. » v
suited to Clarke county. The acre-
age planted to alfalfa has increased I Spraying Apples. Apples will be
each year during the last few years J ready for the first summer spray-
Quite a number of farms through : Ing as soon as the petals fall
out the county have from one tt> * about April 20. This sprayine
ten acres in this crop and a yield jahould be made with arsenate <»'
of 4 tons or more of hny each yea* J Ired and lime sulpl^u* fstimmci
is not unusual. After a stand i* strength) or arsenate* of lead and
obtained, it is not unusual for goo-! I Bordeaux mixture. Arsenate of lead
is used at the same proportion-
for peaches that Is one pound to f»f
gallons of spray or one once tr
gallons of spray or one ounce to
ticn is diluted for this spraying
yields to he obtained for 5 or mor<
yearn without reseeding. It is
suggested that more farmers try
this crop, starting thin fitll with
just a few acres. Good land that
Is now in oats of other small grain* k using one quart to lo gall
can readily be prepared for alfalf*. ,*pray.
sowing this fall. Folow the grair J
with cowpeas an these in turn with I Cabbage Market. Alabama an.
alfalfa. It is very apparent that j South Carolina are leading in cab-
it Is difficult to make ra^le pro- bage shipments at present. Geor- I
ductlon profitable unless all th'.Rla is shipping an occasional car.
h*y and other ruffage and some Ismail towns, out of line etvlth car
of the grain' are produced on thi * h»t movement, are receiving cab- I
farm. Even a dairyman who ha« b«ge from the car lot cltica. for- j
Tools of His Trade
:! TV/
to buy bis entire feed supply wil
find it difficult to make money
Furthermore, it seems that it woult’
be much easier to produce a dol
lar’s worth of cattle and h?f feed
than to take tb* chance of %ettlnn
the dodar out of cotton to be ex
pended in buying thla feed. Alfa If:
ddltlon to making ,tfiq,
hay Known i* an eojeetedF erd
• kbO ptmlOry >ptitufag*i ^TtJ^li*Kidd cabbage.
upp'y j
warded In small quantities,
production in nrst secth
Georgia is not sufficient to
local needs. i u .such .]*
Washington, New York. IMtt -bunh
and Chicago cabbage fr.»m Alabn
ma and 8oqth Carolina !s s
at $2.00 tb $3.00 for craV?« n«d'
‘ •0 to $4^00 a barrel crass: ,
4 {good local demntpi [, 1 - *
Common Jaw recognizes and upholds
tho right of a workman to his tools—
his basic means of survival and main
tenance.
The tools' of a business enterprise
are no less essential. It must have and
use certaip instrumentalities to get
business, to do business and to hold
business. .
Having them, it grows and brings
forth fruit—provided the tools are in
telligently directed.
Deprived of them it becomes stunted,
withers, and eventually dies—no : 1
amount of intelligence can save
lacking means of application.
The prime concern of any business .
[J
is to get orders. It must have and use
personal solicitors and advertising-^,
the twin tools of salesmanship,
/ >
Alitj, whep'I"business is ordered by |
its bank, ti) curtail or stop thfe' use or * ’
these produdtive forces—either or both
—that busiess is being deprived of its
tools. at *
Give business the right to progress!
(Publlshtd by Tht Banner-Herald In £0>operatlon with
The American Association of Advtrtlslng Agencies.)
>u*: •«* • • ttaiuubL nTrfAjjj
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