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THB BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, CCTEGTX
MONDAY. APRIL 23. 1921
THE BANNER-HERALD
ATHENS. GA.
Published Every Evening During the Wedt Qtcept Sntnrfny snd on
Sum?” Moraine by The Athens Publishing Company. Athens. G».
DID IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU?
A Little of Everything And Not Mach of Anything.
DWB
By HUGH ROY
BARL B. BRASWELL Publisher and Centrsl Msnager
CHARLES E. MARTIN - ■ Managing Editor
Entered at the Athens Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter under
the Act of Congress March 8, 18711.
ARC PAPER—ASSOCIATED —PRESS—N. E. A. SERVICE
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repjjjjj
lication of all news dispatches credited to >t or not othcrwisecredit
In this paper, aftd also :he local news published therein. All rights x
republication of special dispatches are also reserved.
Andrew C. Erwin,
President.
Bowdre Phinizy,
Secretary and Treasurer.
The movement inaugurated
by the educators of the state at
'their annual meeting in Atlanta
last week, contributing to a
fund for the erection of a monu
ment to the late Mias Celeste Par
iah was most timely and deserv
ing. This noble lady conseqrated
her life to the cause of education,
and through her efforts many poor
thy girls were helped to
It is fitting and propar that our
people should show sopic degree of
Interest by aiding In the erection
of a suitable memorial to the mdtn-
dry of this great philanthropist and
educator.
?ducatlo
unty.
Chivalry itimi to b« on the
wane in Atlanta from news
paper reports published to the
effect that a movement had
Her remains j been Inaugurated for the purpoi
on a hillside, I of making It highly proper for me
unkept grave I riding elevators not to be expected
Address all Business Communications direct to the Athens Publish
ing Company, not to individuals. News articles intended .or public*-
lion should be addressed to The Banner-Herald.
EXIT WILLIAM HALE THOMPSON *
For a long period of years William Hale Thompson
and his ward henchmen rode rough shod over everv.
thing political in the city of Chicago. So great did
the power of Thompson and his gang become that an
attempt was made to gain control of the courts
through the election of all Thompson men as judges.
State house offices were controlled and handled out
as the "ring” saw fit. But suddenly Chicago got its
fill of Thompson and Thompsonism.
It took the second largest city of the country long
enough to wake up but it finally did.
Reaction against Thompson set in and he and his
gang realized that they were hopelessly beaten and
quit cold. Result, Chicago has a new administration;
Chicago is promised a clean-up.
One of the latest developments in the passing of
Thompson from Chicago politics is the dismissal of a
ten million dollar suit his administration had entered-
against the Chicago Daily News. This newspaper saw
fit to express a few remarks on Thompson and his ad
ministration and while the gang was riding high in
the saddle the suit was filed, charging libel, slander
and the like but the Supreme court has handed down
a decision affirming a decision of a lower court, dis
missing the suit. In handing down the decision the
court stated:
"“The opinion of this Court is based on the funda
mental principle of the American Government <that
every citizen has a right to criticise the Government
and its administrations so long as they do not advo
cate overthrow of the existing Government or viola
tion of the law."
The court also declared that "liberty of the press is
the same thing as freedom of speech.”
Had the people of Chicago listened to Thompson
instead of the Daily News and those who cried against
him for years he would still be riding rough shod over
the city with his bought power and maybe this ten
million dollar suit would not have been thrown out of
the courts.
OUTBIDDING THE LAW
“ Judge Samuel Sibley’s recent charge to the Federal
Grand Jury here in which he declared that whiskey
consumers are largely responsible for violation of the
prohibition law is attracting considerable attention
amnog the newspapers of Georgia. ,
'7 Judge Sibley' asserted tnat “liquor consumers, re
gardless of their reputation otherwise in the communi
ty, are largely responsible for the difficulty in en
forcing the prohibition law because they are outbid
ding the courts.”
The jurist declared that men who drink whiskey do
not stop to think, in many instances, that they are re
sponsible for moonshining and ' bootlegging. These
men, high'standing citizens in other respects, would
not sell liquor themselves but help break the law by
offering the whispey maker and peddler a higher
price for the illegal goods than the law can impose
punishment This ne termed, "outbidding the law.”
In endorsing the stand of the eminent jurist the
Washington News-Reporter says:
"Judge Sibley is right, and there is not a man of the
world in Georgia who does not know the statement
to be true. Practically all conventions, except of a
religious nature, composed of many of the most out-
standing men of the country, get all the liquor they
W ant—and their wants aye great in this line some
times. Men in high places who would not think of
breaking other statutes, do not hesitate to buy high-
{ irice liquor and thus become on a level with the boot-
egger, the whiskey runner ‘and the distiller in break
ing the prohibition law.
“With such conditions existing, the.surprsing thing
is that there is any semblance of enforcement of the
law.”
'7i 1 Girls’ your standard of beauty has changed. The.
ideal American feminine form is a "perfect 34,” not
a 36. Costume designers have definitely accepted the
Mange, says J. R. Bolton, New York fashion expert.
; What has brought about this change? The modern
girl’s tendencies toward athletics and outdoor life.
Our women are becoming slender. It’s the abandon
ment of the stiff corset that made the wasp-waist
,Wearer like an hourglass. The normal girl’s figure,-
Bolton observes, is nearest perfection when she is 20.
■ 'Thereafter, a struggle.
How long will present prosperity last? Commerce
and Finance magazine put this question to 3000 lead
ing business men all over the country. Until the last
half of 1023, was the answer of 1140. Some time in
1924, predicted 860. Two years or more, said 427.
It’s an interesting straw vote. But they may all be
wrong. Not one business man in 500 anticipated the
1920 crash far enough ahead to get into the cyclone
cellar and the lid down before the storm burst.
Of the 3000, by the way, 2260 predicted a buyers’
atrike if prices continue to advance. If business
thinks it can recoup all of its losses, incurred in the
last panic, it is riding for a fall.
> The day may come when American gluttons will
cat bark beetle, gypsy moth, white pine weevil and
, other choice insects, predicts a news bulletin of ihf
N.Y. State College of Forestry. It would help solve
the problem of insect pests, which yearly destroy 100
million dollars worth of forests and seven times as
much farm products. Impossible, an insect diet?
Not necessarily. The college suggests: “It would
• only be necessary to have some movie star serve an in
sect luncheon, or for u-member of the “400” to give
■ ap insect symposium, to place insects in black-faced
type on our bills-of-fare.” NqfcTar from the truth,
at that. ’ ft >
Now is the time to fight
constipation with Bran—Start to-day!
Don’t give th« diacasos that follow
in tin* track of constipation a clwnco
to lodge*tn your system! Get after
constipation with nature’s greatest
helper—IiRAX, Kellogg’a lira
rooked nn<l kruinbled—because it
ALL JiRAN’ and tHwmise it will give
you permanent relief from constipa
tion! It is scientifically prepared to
relieve Buffering humanity from consti
pation and it will do that.
Brnu’s action is wonderful. It
eeps nnd cleanses and purifies,
knocks out the dangerous toxic poisons
and frees the system from pollution!-
Try Kellogg ’s Bran for n week. Eat
it regularly—two tablesfioonfuls each
day; as much each meal in chronic
case. You will be astounded at the
difference in your feelings!
Kellogg’s Bran should not bo OOP-
fused with common bran which is ui
palatablennd difficult to cat. Kellogg ..
is cooked nnd all ready to servo and
really .delicious. Eat it as a cereal,
sprinkled over your fnvorito hot or
cold cereal or cook or mix it with
hot cereal. Tn the latter cases add two
tablcspoonfuls for each person.
Do you realize what Kellogg’s Bran
can do for you and for your family;
do you realize that it will keep sick
ness away; that it will put every ono
on a new health footing; that it will
freo you all from pills and cathartics!
Kellogg’s-Bran is particularly de
lightful made, in raisin bread, in
macaroons, popovers, muffins, otc.
Recipes aro printed on each package I
You will say that Kellogg’s Bran
is a blessing to humanity.
All grocers sell Kellogg’a Brtal
I to remove their hats when ladles en*
i tered. This may be convenient tot
Jmuny, the baldhead especially,
. but'some how we would never grow
accustomed to the new fad. Where-
ever we meet with ladles, the first
Impulse is to show some sign of
respect and, if by removing our
hat while in an elevator or rising
and offering a seat when the street
cur is crowded it shows the pro pet
courtaey to which all ladies are
entltleu—then we expect to keep
it up whether it is fashionable or
not. We could not feel just right
Yo rush into an elevator and fail i
to remove our hat nor could we!
feel respectable to retain u seut
the street car and be surrounded
with ladies standing. Times huvt
.changed, however, and It may be
coming to that In this country, but
we will never become acclimated
to uny such custom. .Speaking
about courtesy on the street
here is an incident whbfi occurred
in Pittsburg and published in tht
Pittsburg, Pa., Sun:
“A feminine voice was heard from
the steps of h crowded car; ‘Oh get
in dear, some one wfTI give you
a seat.’ The next two women en-
“The men were on their mettle
They read papers sternly. Those
ho had no papers closed their
•eg and pretended to slumber.
“The too-certain woman glanced
down the car in vain. The car went
for half a mile and then a man
alighted.
“There's a scat for one," said the
nductor.
JXm't take It. dear,” said ono
ATHENS LEADERS IN THEIR LINE
There is hardly a need or want that cannot be filled in
or factories
A Puzzle A Day
<25
46
o'
<21
5
9
n
15
?7
3o
6
19
Crosos out nine of the, twelve
squares shown above so that the
three remaining will total fitly.
Yesterday’s, answer
ANY (J IESC0EFR0EPHI8
When the letter “m” is inserted
eight times among the letters
shown above, the following sen
tence is produced:
MANY MUMMIES COME FROM
MEMPHIS
Th* relaying of the Belgium
block on Lumpkin etreet may
not be undertaken thie eummer,
ae had been expected, for the
Dodson’s Liver Tone” Straightens You Up Better Than
Salivating, Dangerous Calomel and Doesn’t Upset
You—Don’t Lose a Day’s Work—Read Guarantee
You*re bilious! Your liver is
sluggish! You feel lazy, dizzy and
all knocked out. Your head is
dull, your tongue is coated;
brenth bad; stomach sour and
bowels constipated. But don’t take
salivating calomel. It makes
you sick, you may lose a day’s
work.
Calomel la mercury or quick
silver which causes necrosis of
the bones. Calomel crashes into
aour bile like dynamite, breaking
It up. That's when you feel that
awful nausea and cramping.
If you want to enjoy the nicest,
gentlest liver and bowel cleans
ing you ever experienced just
take a spoonful of harmless Dod
son’s Liver Tone tonight Your
druggist or dealer sells you a bot
tle of Dodson’a Liver Tone for a
few cent* 'under my personal
inoncy-back guarantee that each
spoonful will clean yonr sluggish
liver better than a dose of nasty
calomel and that it won’t 1 make
you as sick.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is real
liver medicine. You’ll know at
next morning because you will
wake up feeling fine, your liver
will be working, your headache
and dizxlnesa gone, yonr stomach
will be aweet nnd yonr bowels
regular. You will feel like work
ing; you’ll be cheerful; full of
vigor and ambition.
Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely
vegetable, therefore harmless and
can not aallvate. Give it to your
children.—(Advertisement.)
reason that tne cost of such Im
provement would burden the ex-
penae of the city nnd bring about
a reduction In the budget for the
various departments of the city
government. This may be wise ac
tion on the part of the city offi-
If
5-Strains
Itpenetrates, restores nor
mal circulation—breaks
Sloan's Lmiment-^/fff pain!
For rbetnnttiiro.brnis^B.«traio».cb*5t cold*
RED A BLACK PRESSING
CLUB
Pressing, Cleaning and
Altering
All Work Guaranteed
Phone 1317
Corner Lumpkin anL Jroad I
We’ve a SlisFer Your c tr .
rar
IStar.r.B.tt.^
’ Phone 711
ATHEN8 ENGINEERING
Smith Building ,, Athene
AWNINGS
All Kinds—-Put;.(jp Anywh*
In 50 Mile*'Of AthenT
Nashville Lady Attributes Good
Health to Cardui—Says She
Was Suffering Agony
When She lk;;an to
Take IL
Nashville, Tenn—Mrs. Dudley
A Complete Office
Supply House
Art Metal Agency
THE McGREGOFf CO. .
ayton St. Athens, Ga.
rlnvJUH T ta ,‘! lly “ ..f'T ln ‘ i B - Stuart, 519 Ash street, this
fnZTrZ'L «!•* recently made the following
mg forced to travel tfver this street
Hough and rugged, damaging au
tomobiles nnd vehicles of all kind
traversing this street some pro
vision should be made by which
the work can be carried out. The
cost of relayiny and smoothing the
pavement would not exceed five
thousand dollars; a nominal
for such an Important Improve’
ment. It Is hoped that some ac
tion will he taken .and some way
found by which Lumpkin street
ran be remodeled nnd made Into
a comfortable street for traffic.
T
Aftier
EVERY
Meal
Keep fit and fine with'
WRIGLEYS
after every meal.
Eat wisely,, chew yonr
food well—then dive yonr
digestion a “kick” with
WRIGLEY’S;
Sound teeth, a flood
appetite end proper
digestion mean MUCH to
yonr health.
WRIGLEY’S [is a helper la
ell this work—a pleasant,
beneficial pick-me-up.
Pore materials, scientific
manufacture, nbsolato
cleanliness—then sealed
mdalnst all Impurity. That
Is WRIGLEY’S as yon let
l It—fresh and (nil-flavored.
Try the
Pa K.
with its
peppermint
candy-
jacket
Thi, la Foml Pilot action
week and evtry effort should
be made on the part of the pub
lic to encourage every move
ment for tjie preservation of the
forests. President Harding h
caused the week to be set aslu.
for speclnl observance and prac
tically every state ,in the union and
many of the towns and cities are
establishing local tracts of forests
Tbej time has come when the con
structive wtork and organization
most be done in order to preserve
and Increase the forests of the na
tion. The remaining timber re*
sources of the country show a
great devastation nnd, the follow
ing statement will be of Interest:
"The total original stand of tim
ber In the United States was ap
proximately 5,000 billion board feet
standing cn somewhat less than 1.-
000,000,000 acres—nearly half the
land area. Thero are now about
2,500 billion board feet on less than
400.000,000 acres, or about Qne
quarter the total area of the coun
try. About 30 per cent of tho for
est lands Is In virgin or first-
growth timber, supporting i.eof
billion feet; 25 per cent Is second
growth In fair reproducing condi
tion; 30 per cent in second-gri wtb
of relatively inferior reproducing
condition and approximately 15
per cent, of 81,000,000 acres, ir
waste land apparently totally lack
ing In means of natural reforegta-
Tho sudden ond untimely
death of Mrs. D. F. MWIsr,
Saturday afternoon, hoe token
from thie community one of its
most estimable, kind nnd loving
women. She was a devoted worke.
In church nffalrg and her service*
there will be deeply missel by those
who were associated with her. At
wife and mother she was an In
spiration for all that !s good, pure
nnd uplifting and in their great
loss, sorrow nnd bereavement, to
the husband and the children we
extend opr deepest and sincercst
sympathies for their comfort.
statement: ‘ Before I started tak
ing Cardui, I was aicl: in bed.
weighed IK) pounds.
“My mother camo to see me and
told me to get Cardui- My hus
band went to town and brought
home two bottles which I took. A
once I began to improve, although
up to that time I had taken modi
cine hut it had not helped me at
all- From the first dose of Car
dui my appetite began to come
back.
“I had been suffering from fe
male trouble. . . was so weak and
in such a run-down conditon. That
was two years ago. . . I kept on
taking Cardui as a tonic..
“My appetite is good. I cer
tainly owe a lot to this medicine.
Nothing did me any good until I
beg/i to take it. It made me gain
48 pounds. I don’t weigh quite
so much now on account of the
baby nursing, but I feel perfectly
well. I am very grateful for wha*
it has done for me, for I was suf
fering agony when I began to
take. it.”
Writing later of her experience
in the use of Cardui. Mrs. Stuart
said: “My health is better now
than ever and am produt to soy
Cardui did it.”
—(Advertisement.)
RELIEVES BACKACHHE
“Have bad kidney trouble and
backache for many years and I
tried several doctors but got only
temporary reflicf. A friend id vis*
ed me to try Fojey Kidney Pills,
and before I used two boxes I was
entirely well” writes A. C. Perkins.
Summer Shade, Ky., Kidney and
bladder troublo requires prompt
treatment. Foley Kidney Pills give
quick relief, tflfefugo substitutes.
Insist upon Foley’s.—Advertise-
n,ont nun
PIEDMONT
W-E-I-N-E-R-S
Beat In the World—
Made by
PIEDMONT market
Athena, Georgia
E. D. STONE
PRINTERS
Telephone 1198-W
137 N. Lumpkin Street
LOOSE-LEAF
The McGregor Co.
Clayton St. Athens, Ga.
Anderson Plumbing Co.
PLUMBING AND HEATING
Good Mechanic*
Good Material
Beat Price*
111S 40 W. Clayton
AMBULANCE
106-Phone-1025
DORSEY’S
Funeraf Chapel
Hancock and College’
Avenues.
Hlgh-Clata Renovating
For and Delivered
Mattreates Recovered ud
-Repaired
Phone i&7
ATHENS MATTRESS AND
SPRING BED CO
PATRICK’S
DRUGS
PHONES
88—1187—9105
Free delivery service
all over the city.
PICTURE
FRAMING
We’ll frama your plcturu-
any kind—any sin.
LARGE STOCK OF
SELECT MOULDING
Picture Mats
And Glass
GARDNER’S BOOK
STORE
Clayton Street
Berton Braley’s
Daily Poem
IN MEMORIAM
By Berton Bra ley
’Gena'a dead, 1 shall not alt with
him betide the glowing fire,
all the tl •
And argue over all the things
used to fight about;
Tho Bolaheviits in Russia, or the
foreign trade of Tyre,
The caute. of socialism, or the
aimplest cure for gout;
we disagreed to Joyously, wo bat
■ tied with such vim
On every subject In the world,
each topic that aorse;
He never changed my view* a bit,
nor could I alter him.
And who was right and' who
was wrong—wall, now per
haps, he knows!
'Gent's dead, the stubborn, whim-
sical, undisillusioned soul
Whose hair was grizzled with
the years, but who, at heart,
in truth
Kept all a youngster’s gaiety. The
' seasons took no toll
t h* t , perennial eagerness
"hich is tho test of youth.
III miss the glint of humor and
of. battle in hi aeyea.
But maybe I shall see him when!
I leave this “vale of tear*”
And I shall find' him arguing upj
thero in paradise ^ I
Socrates
Tonic Pills
The Old Reliable Family
Remedy for Bnilding Up
the Sratem, Nervous Dis
orders, Insoz
omnia, etc
• of toy
•Ion ond norvouo L T
kind. It extremely dangerous. All
too many pan and women, com
pelled to go oot Into the wcrld
•ad bottlo tor • living, neglect
their health to each an ox tent that
a nervous breakdown Iftht In*
evitable result. It la beat to bo
warned In time, to that theae
nervous ailments may be cheeked.
Read what Frank Sprencel ol 45a
W. Jefferson St, Valparlato, In-
and othcri of bis peers!
/. A. W. ChSM’i Tonic rill,
or. Iwlpeim. la iw
**.•-*•»1 ■» »*r b*t .hip.
. I ber.IT the u. of thorn. I
smfecllnsbetterenrrdaz. The
tnstnKQtl, worlds! woodm I.
Yoo /an boy Dr. Chaae'a Toole
PUieat elf drag atorea. To be aura
ot getting the genuine, see that
portrait and aignatura of A. W
Chase, M.D„ are on eaeh box—yonr
protection against Imitations. ^
Dr. A W. CRASS MEDIC1NECO.
237 Waahiagtan St, BuSalo, N.Y.
« ...J
W. G. TILLER
» Plumbing and Heating Contractor
WE KNOW HOW
REPAIR WORK GUARANTEED
149 N. Lumpkin St
Farm Implements, Machinery, Toolt, Hardware
WAGONS—BUGGI Eh—HARNESS.
MAKERS OF UNIVERSAL BACK BANDS.
- Dealers in Lucas Paints—The Best for All Purposes
GRIFFETH IMPLEMENT COMPANY
Broad Street
OOD—TASTES GOOD—IS GOOD
USUALLY GOOD IN EVERYDAY
MADE G<
AND UNUSUALLY
Costa's Ice Cream
“JUST A LITTLE BIT BETTER”
Manufactured by
THE JOS. COSTA COMPANY
Phones 697—1746—1747
Athens, Georgi*
v
GEORGIAN HOTEL
“Athens’ Distinctive Hotel”
125 Rooms
75 With Bath
RATES
$1.50 to $3.00 Day
^ “The Rotary Hotel’
On Five National Highways—All Roads Lead
to Athens and (jie Georgian.
50c—Our Merchants Lunch—50c
H. R. & C R. CANNON, Lessees ,
The New Cecil: ATLANTA : Terminal Hotel
1
—