Newspaper Page Text
gssmtmkAM
'the stalk. Oats, were never more mounds are across a creek only
THB BANNi«-HggraP._XraBW8, CEOHCM.
Around Athens
- I have seen no signs of rust in
wheat.
With Col. T. Larry Gantt
SEVERAL PARTIES are organ
izing; in Athens to visit the Indian
Mounds on the Oconee river above
Skull Shoals. Better wait until the
ss you see the name “Bav-i
package or on tablets you]
GRAND PICTURES are now be
ing exhibited at the Palace and
. Elite, and every week special at- ground thoroughly dries off, and
j tractions are shown at both the- j^° a,,<1 neare *t rou!
; at res. On Thursday and Friday of J®? “*r. Henry Comer’s
(this week will bo presented Booth
' Tarkenton’s great masterpiece,
| “The Flirt,” by Carl Lamele. Here
j in the depictition are the joys and
: sorrows of the typical American
| family in true drama. You must
, not fail to see this great master
piece^ Buster Keaton's latest com
edy “The Ballona’id” is an extra
'attraction. Some very fine West
ern thrillers aro shown daily at
the Elite. • .
MR. ISM A BROWN, of Missis-
nut Retting the genuine Bayerbll'Di. says that Vardanian. who.
|"*t jiresorioed by physicians | ";>« for the U. S. Senate.
“ u * ■ - • • will ho given a fine job by Hard- j
Ing, with a salary of $12,000 a year.,
So it seems that the republican]
president rewards every down-
and-out politician that Mr. Wilson j
had repudiated.
, c . twenty-two years and provoJ
..ic by niilltojis for
folds Headache
Toothache Lumbago
Earache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pam, Pain
Accept “Rayer Tablets of AspL
in * OI ,ly. Each unbroken package
ontoi 1.3 proper directions. Handy
in boxes ’of twelve tablets cost
cents. Druggistf also sell
ottles of 24 nn»T 100. Aspirin is
he traut* mark of 1layer Manu-
,c‘ Ur e of Monoar eticucidester of
laHcyficacid.--(Advertisement*.)
RAILROAD MEN report that the
negro ^xodus has dwlnidlcd down
to almost nothing, and more neg
roes who exodusted to the north .
are trying to get back than aro
now leaving.
Taylor estes, or smithonm.
says ho raised plenty of everything
to run his farm except he had to
buy some flour, but when harvest
comes in his place will bo abso- I
.lulely self-sustaining. All tho
Cut out this slip, en< icso with (farmers urround Smlthsonin make I
r ami wall It to Foley ft Co., 2835 »Jt a mlo io j*aJse plenty of aup-
heffieM Ave., Chicago, Ill., wrlt-
r name ami address clearly.
I* recolvo in return a trlnl
■ containing Foley’s Honey
ind Tar compound for Coughs,
•olds and croup; Foley Kidney
Pills f"r pains in sldo and back;
-hcumatlsm, backache, kidney and
•ladder ailments; and Foley Ca-
plles to do them and so very few
negroes have left that section. 1
This is an example that Col. Smith j
MR.. TAYLOR ESTES of Smltli-
sonta. says he has plenty of neg
roes to work his lands and has lost
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinina
PARAMOUNT
SALAD 1
DRESSING
time to enjoy,
^ the health-giving!
, delights of Para* j
mount Salad Dres« I
£( sing—on fresh salads,
” sandwiches, on
meats, fish, 1
etc. Atf
your gro»j
ccr’s.
harlic Tablets, u .wholesome am! only a tow. The same applies to Mr.
taiiilNimlllillll
Taimadge Bros. & Co.
Distributors
iboroughly cleansing cathartic for
•ipatinn. biliousness, hen le.c.io
rluggia^ bowels.—Advertise-
, Chats With Your
Gas Man r
i«i v . -
Can is dclivefGd OS ydtt USO it.
from an underground pipe, with
out dirt or trouble/ The products
imbustipn—smoke, ashes,
•tr.--are left’titfhlnd nt tho
nrks. YOU buy only as
muih gas as you want for Im
mediate use. and you pay for it
after you use ft. not before, as
th toil and wood.
A gas range will do every
thing a coal range will do amt
do it better, quicker, and in a
leaner jgfy. Its simmering
*r, consuming only a llttlo
gas. gives enough heat to keep
warm at slight expense,
i sine tho oven for roaat-
»g nr baking you can turn off
liners,, or light the oven
and etllHmvu enough boat
to keep second course” warm
servo It.
’Every day In every way" gaa
the best Mel for cooking and
testing. •
Athens Gas Light &
Fuel Co.
Phone' 54
Dunaway. Tom Irvin, Jim Powers
and nil of his neighbors.- Taylor
says If a fanner will raise plenty *;
of provisions to feed his hands find ! j
give them work they will stick by 11
him. The exodus movement among [
tho darkeys in his auction didn't ‘ f
amount to anything.
PROF. ELLINGTON of Winter-
vllle, says that farmers in his sec- “
Hon have secured white labor to i
take tho place of negroes that have !
left and they are makiug good pro
gress with their farm work. He jf
lias heard but llttlo complaint of * m c
rust In wheat. Tho Wlntervllh* *
p. v t , seed Association will in time
add corn, oets and other seed
th»*ir crops. Thus far tho associa
tion has confined Its efforts to Im- j
! proved cotton seed.
MOST FARMERS aro planting
cotton before com and the average
I cotton crop will bo from five to six
lucres to tho plow. Dunaway, of
^mfthsonia broke his land last fall
’ and so got in his com early and
and 1ms a fine stand. Tho coming
| week If the weather holds fair,
both corn and cotton will bo plant-
! ed with a rush.
| MR. II. C. HUNTER 1ms Just
completed the Job of painting tho
• homo of Mn. Tom Poss, on Ogle
thorpe nvenuc. Houses all over the
' city are being touched up with
paint and It brightens things con-
| sldcrabty.
• MR. JIM TRIBBLE, who owns
; fine farms In Jackson and Ogle- '
I thorpe conation wan in the city
Saturday, Jim says he haa plenty
of labor to work hla land and he
villi make cotton In apltc of the 1
boll weevil. He will put In five j
aerca to the plow, use poison and ,
raise food stuff to beat the band. I
Jim says he aeca nothing to bo
gloomy over, for ho never knew j
farmers to start Tin a crop with
more seat and enthusiasm.
about half * mile from bit boms.
ATHENS MECHANICS aay they
now hare all the work they can do
and carpenters and bricklayers are
imported from other places to work
on rush jobs. Work will hold all
the summer, as several large Jobs
are to be completed by fall.
MR. GEORGE CUNNINGHAM
says there la a very good road from
Lexington to Washington, or you
can go to Augusts via Union Point,
as a fairly good road la bald the
entlro distance. •
AGAIN BE POPULAB
Good td the lost dwp
EfctU&W many
years of coflee ex
perience could give
the housekeeper her
calm confidence in
the unvarying flavor
of Maxwell House.
MAXWELL
HOUSE
COFFEE
I MR. WHITEHEAD, of Bogart,
says while many negroes have left t
hla aectloa farmers arc arranging'
to have their lands worked. Small j
SKr&SSwiSiaBTHBW PASTE
negroes seem, to bare abated. ,
*§pP!sY7 l
Read Herald
Want Ads.
i
FARMERS IN TOWN the past j “|wt nmiln nrtaa
I few days say that If ^the weather | with rowdns; IMuld* «
remains dky a fine wheat crop win
1)0 made. Rust has only appeared 1 Ready for Uo*-Betror tnonTr P«
on the leaf in sandy land and will, =«• ).—. box.n-0
Ido no.barm unless It spread, to
I them colt
ixpcrtmcoul
nTraps
- _ntjfMii
8GL.D EVERYWHERE
Civilians to Have Oppor
tunity of Getting Recre
ational Training At the
Same Time.
By TOM BRIGHT LANKFORD
If I Vere asked wliat t consider
the best way In which an Amer
ican youth, who comes In tho age
age limits, could do for hla sum
mer vacation I would say, from
experience, a coarse in the Cltlx-
ns’ Military Training Catnpa
hich are being conducted all over
the country.
Last summer I wss out of a job
ror several weeks and was looking
around for something to do. I hud
heard of this new Idea tho United
Slates army was putting over and
Investigated and the first of Joly
found mo with 3.000 oher young
Americans, signed aji fort what
was to be offered at Camp Mc
Clellan. Ala. I didn't know wheth
er a bunch of hard boiled Armr
Officers would get me down there
from my North Carolina home end
•ork me to Heath Ip tu
rner days or let mo loaf and do ac
l pleased. At nny rate 1 went. nn<
now I consider I ho experlecne
had there as one of the finest
my life.
as rather anxious to see whal
thin camp would resemble. I had
volunteered in tho Winston-Salem,
N. C Home Guard during a race
riot at one time and I wanted to
sqe If my now adventure would be
anything like tho old one. or If It
would be like the R. O. T. C.. 8.
A. T. C.. or what To my aurprias
I round It altogether different from
cither.
FINE TYPE-
OF MEN
On arriving at Comp McClellan
1 learned that tho training camp
group was made up of high school
graduates, and college men for the
most part, wanting to get some
good physical training without
cost. It was a nice bunch of fal
lows and, generally speaking, we
all liked each other from the start
At first we were a little confused,
homesick and almoat ready to wish
we hadn't come, but after being
assigned to regular companies and
knowing each other better we be
gan to find satisfaction In what
wo bad decided to do, and our ac
tual training really began the first
day. although we were not aware
oh It. Wo wore graduated accord
ing to height and placed in squads,
marched to and from delightful
meals.
On the second day we worn tak
en to Drill Ground' No. 2 where we
watched the regulars go through
the things we were to try to learn
to do. Wo were kept buay from
thon on and at the end of a week
It would have been bard for any
one to recognise ua as the hoys
who first hit camp.
Then came talk of the rifle range
and many of theboya dreaded this
boesuse we had heard how the nine
pound rifle* kteksd and cut up If
not handled properly. But we bad
excellent instructor, and most of
us came through the rifle work
without any trouble. It seemed
rather remarkable that no one got
hurt, bat If every man's mother
bud been there to give warnings,
things could not have been done
more carefully, than under the di
rection of those lieutenants, cap
tains. majors and even the regulars
themselves.
SIGN COUPON
AND MAIL
The coupon below la n guidance
to any. who an interested in get
ting an application mailed them
promptly. FlU out the coupon and
mall It to th, C. M. T. C. Officer.
Fait Mcpherion, Go., and applica
tion will be sent you at once.
. Please send me application
for the Citisena' Military Train
ing Camps to he held at Fort
Barrancas, Fla., Camp MdClel-
lan, Ala., anl Fort Bragg, N. C.,
from Aug. 1 to 30, 1923.
Name
Rate Torn ..Race
Grade or class in school..
Graduate grade school (?)...._
High school (f)........
college IT) Previous
Military Training (?).
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. OJlver, Val
dosta, ,0a.; M..A. Notilor. Ober|ln.
Ohio: W. M. Wallace, New York
City; C. A Moye, Atlanta. ,
J. W. Fields. Atlanta; H.' H.|
‘Hawkins, St. Louis, Mo.;
•offer, Atlanta; A. G. Adams, New
Sawdust Personal
and Social News
HULL, Ga.—Mrs. G. H. Mas.
sey is very sick.
School closed here last Friday
and Mrs. E. B. Harman left for
her home at East Point, Ga.
Mr- and Mrs. L. M. Tolbert of .York CUy; I* L. Dalton. Atlanta:
Athens spent lost Sunday witn!, ,, To(M „ T „ c A
Mr. b. O. Massey and tumtiy- - ,
Several from here attended banting. Clinton, S. C.
S reaching at New Harmony bun- j
iy A. Me I Atlanta; Mrs. As-
Mioses Vera and Hattie Pearl bury Fountain, Mutawun, N. J.;
Gordon spent last Saturday night M(m , r . A . B rown, Malawan, N.
with their grand-parents, Mr. and, r ,, D .... „ ... v .
Mr,. Z. T. Williams. .' iJ.: George R. Wl«r>. Matawan, A.
Miss Frances Massey is spend- [Jcf W. B. Green. Gainesville, Ga.;
ing this week with relative* and!Mr. and Mrs. Charles Uochat. Ml
Iner.ds in Athens- Umi. Fin.
Our utteiuiancu, at Sunday;
School ia not as large aa we would! A. D. Kiser. Atlanta; J. E. lies*
like tor it to be. Let everybody iter. Atlanta; H. C. Grover, Atlanta;
Join in and make it a more sue- V. s. Hinitb. St. Louis, Mo.; M.
cess. i Trammell, Atlanta; W. O. Martin.
Miss Bonnie Leo Stone is spond- ‘Atlanta; J. W. Byrd. Atlanta; Bher-
ing this week In Gainesville, Ga. man Moses, Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. J. G- Barnett
spent last Sunday with Mr. Lake
ihornton and iauilly.
The Sewing Club met
Missis Zora and Bonnie Lee Stone
last Saturday afternoon. The. will
meet at Misses Dovie and Eva I
Epps next Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs.’ Andrew Fields;
were i.i Athens last Friday shop
ping-
Misses Vera and Darline Stone;
will be at home for some time
after this week, as the school at
Gainesville will close Friday. We j
Will be glad to have them in our
midst again.
The home Of Mr. John Johnson
of Center was destroyed by tiro
last week. The people regret to
hear of him Iom very much.
We are sorry to state that Mrs.
Billy Fields is not any better at
this writing.
Mr*. C. T. Martin spent Satur
day night and Sunday with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F\ Bol
ton, of New Harmony.
Mrs. A- J. Thornton of White
Plains. Ga.. is visiting her son,
Mr. Luke Thornton-
Mr. S. O. Mascy made a busi
ness trip to Athens Saturday.
Mr. Lamar Barber spent a short
while Sunday afternoon with his
daughter, Mrs. G. II. Massey*
Mr- rtnd Mrs. H. C. Williams and
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Morehead at
tended preaching, at Pleasant
Grove last Sunday afternoon.
Mr. J. I. Chandler who recently
lH hi* Knr.1 nnH n>)|Cr OUt-buUd-
. „ STOP PYORRHEA
with The Cause of Suffering and Dlf
tress. Unsightly Tseth and
III Hsaltli.
P^NOL
Instantly Kills th* Oerms, Where
Iodine Falla.
,. w !Pr won mnintlu
had his barn and tntltn Mre . ^ w _
ings destroyed by fire, is planning K^.uTn^'aml Tieal'fniT 'the”(iumit. A
to rebuild again. 'few appllrr.tlnnji noon remove* the
i ...j# ».t ’ i.irinr nmi whiten* ami tightens the
Mr. Ed Stone and wife of Ath-1
ens attended Sunday school at
Gordon’s Chapel Sunday after
noon-
Athens Visitors
ATHENS VI8ITOR8 — ... _
Among those vlnltim; In Athens
Wednesday were. N. O. ihWhc.
Atl.intu; T. W. Clam »n. A Haute;
M. Dickson. Atlontn, Lr. E. K.
Whcells, Atlanta.
Mre. L L. Cubbedge, Macon:
,a ,n wnmlerfal In treating sore throat,
hronrhitl*. congested lung*, stiff
joint*, boll*, carbuncle*, old aoree an<l
eczema.
Pleasant to use, dottnl stain,
doesn’t burn, and it penetrates.
Price 50 Cents
For sale by Palmer’, Drug Store*.
Athene, Qa. -
If You Have Pyorrhea
Kcml this »<1 and M real., and a jam*
bottle will be aent you with full di
rection* for treating your gums frhm
the Inboratnjr*.^
Th* Edward, Dentist Supply,
Box 2tw, Atlanta, Ga.
I
NIBC0 TWISTED IN WIRE BRUSHES,
MOP AND DUSTERS
DEMONSTRATION THURSDAY, FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY
• A HANDY BRUSH FREE
TO HOUSEWIVES
Beautiful Ivory and Tortoise Shell Handled Hnlr Brushes,
Clothes Brushes, Manicure Brushes, flat Brashes. The Sanl-;
tary kind.
Mr. Bradford, the factory representative, will be In charge.■.
of demonstration and help you select tho brashes roa need: ‘ ;
No obligation to buy. Come In and look over our line and '
compare prices and quality.
Large Dry Dust Mop, Wall Broshe,, Wet Mop, Scrub,
Brushes and Wall’ Dusters. All five heada for the one r
handle, or any one separate. This i, known as the Nlbco , .
Service SeL 'I
Furniture Dustors, three styles, dust brushes, Small and '
large Bottle Broshes. Pastry Brashes, Scouring Brusheu,
Commode Brusheu. and no on. Name the use and you name
the brash. Don't forget a brush free Thursday, Friday and ’ -
Saturday. -yt-
H.T. HUGGINS & SON
• Broad Street
Athens,
Georgia.
J
• (wW
Read Banner-Herald Want Ads
McCORMICK
PEERING
We arc prepared to quote Very Interesting prices on orders entered before May 1st.
— SEE US AT ONCE
E. D. SLEDGE
/tit
1
Tools of His Trade
Common law recognizes and upholds
the 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 certain 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
amount of intelligence can save it,
lacking means of application.
The prime concern of any business
is to get orders. It must have and use
personal solicitors and advertising—
the twin tools of salesmanship.
And when a business is ordered by
its bank to curtail or stop the use of
these productive forces—either or both
—that busiess is being deprived of its
tools. .