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HELP WANTED
IT DOESN’T HURT 1
ANY TO OFFER
A LITTLE ASSISTANCE
V> A FELLOW IN J
v. TROUBLE •
THAT POOR FELLOW A NOW DON’T
IS HAVING TROUBLE (YOU GO OUTi
W)TH HIS CAR -WOHDERJtnERE AND
IP I CAN'BE OF ANY /GET ALL FULL
HELP TO HIM ? * J OF GREASE -
r,. - - , HE’LL GET IT GOING
//"iny 't \ IN A FEW.MINUTES -
NEEDANV
ASSISTANCE YES, « WISH YOU’D
OLDMAN? // ANSWER MY WIFE'S
_^7 QUESTIONS WHILE <
7 l I TRY TO FIX THIS
-. J v infernal thing! ry
HOW DO I
KNOW VET
' WELL,W HATS
THE MATTER
.WITH IT ? j
NO CIGARS WASTED
daugmt- io uwcTA smit.’iHrt cima
rv(iUF-&UT in GONMA SUP It TOW LANDLORD
UrtLNVE. confi OUT-ptY COLLECTING w
RENT T«Or\ GOtt NOW- Wt GOTTA WftNO r?
IN GOOD WITH Hin |
THANKS
Younu ntsrt.
THANKS
NILE Oft", M
HftUE- ft,,,
CIGftfL U j
tiiESPAV. MAY t» 1928- __
TB* BANNBR-nBBAtP. ATH8N8. 0E0R0M
SOCIETY
market
IKE
llroail
A Micas women .are arrang-
arkot parties" for Saturday
, iiyrii Market opens on
.treat..- > Clarke Countv Commis-
UUens Woman's club has. • , “ .
‘‘ d it Curb Market here for! bIone ^S Appropriate $2o0
!?„>■>• ears and non- that it is j Towards Paving' For the
l0 Income a reality the club Mo1 ,. , „ 1 U1 Ule
* n ,b-rs are anxious Ho provft they | Ket Master,
meant what they suid a.iout buy-I —
iD jf yolrare planning to go shop- Tuesd linty » #h lU i? rl ? e8 t0ok
. V.tuAlav or if you want to Tues(Jajr at t,le flret meeting
J 1DS n-thli produce, vegetables, tke manth to Prosecute tresw-
bU ; ami totteron the Curb m2- Sf"F” who ar * tcarin K «®»n the
JJf ‘.,1! n friend and arrange a [j e l°i 1,10 Da nEel8vllle road
X,! p art y£ * n J Inteiferrln* with the grading
'"-^ aohurto be great fun” He- ij** «"* »<>» ><■>«<* r“
cUr 1sk a |^fC'r«“i^L. A «rre.entauve of the c.
ca " ent m Athens X as well as a V 0 ” 8trUc 5? on company ap-
Around Athens
With Col- T. Larry Gantt
financial sU'ccess".
FOR MRS. BERNICE
WILLS WISE
j pearl.d before the commissioners
■and requested that protection be
given them in this matter. A spec
ial county officer was detailed to
the road and If the miscreants are
,, .ml'Mrs tv H Hodaes Ir I , 1 “ ulu miscreants arc
.tertalned at' a' lovely 6 dinner I red''tb’is* Mld"iho re a !!T ly ' spot ‘
irtv Hrcsiy evening in honor of c . uted ' lo * d * they wil1 bc prese “
rray
Hodges’ sister, Mrs. Bernice
Wells V|iscf future bride of
ftlay 7th.
The
dinner was served in four
and the table was attrac-
ilecon^N in pink roses.
make two '
APPROPRIATIONS
A largo delegation appeared be-
ratfJ»t °the P Ta K b.e were: .*» «■ J-f requeited flnan-
■" Edward W. Cote. £ y Gentle, • 8un *
Mr. Edward W. Cote,
Jlr and Mrs. Herbert Hodges. Mr.
,n,l Mrs. James Kelly of Athens,
Mr. uuil Mts. W. H. Hodges,
V- . -r-|»-
JUNIOR MUSIC STUDY
club MEETS MAY 12TH
The Jimidr Music Study club will »
mee» May 12th at 4 o’clock.
entertainment AT.
HINTON. SROWN SCHOOL
On Friday night. May 4th, Prof,
p. L. EarMst will give a stereoptl-
cm l-.'. tcre "The Other Wlso
There will also be a uro-
here lthe middle of tlffi month. It
was pointed oat that over 300 dcl-
cgntrui from all parts of the state
wilt bo here and that the city and
‘'■’.nlT will benefit greatly from
tr.e meet. J250.00 was given.
An appropriation of {250.00 was
also made towards paying for a
market master for the curb market
toat. opens here Saturday. A com
mittee Interested in the market ap-
pcn-rer'i and presented the matter.
.-»,<tlnlr- th-t It meant much for the
farmers as well as the townspeo
ple of tlie county. The market
£ -he Nonnal School X ^
club.
Everybory invited to come. Ad
mission 10c and 15c.
-t»—
BARBECUE! BARBECUE!
Thf ladje# of t^.e ^Christian
church wilt give a barbecue Fri-
L. Troutman
ini charge.
Other matters of a routine na
ture caine before tbo meeting and
were disposed of.
taurca 'wu give « oaroecue rn- t
4iy.May 4th. fn the basement of ’
the church.
A \-W-
Mr. and Ralph Ragan r.n-
Bounc* the bfttir of a daughter,
vho lias been given the name of
Margaret Lawton, for lier mother.
-Constitution.
.Miss Marianna .Frierson returned
last week from Augusta where 8ho
visited Mrs.‘James McGowan.
-fe)~
ilrs. George D. Waring of New
York Is the guest of her uncle, Mr.
1 W. Brooks.
EFFECTIVE TUES.
Miss Joe Johnson, Miss Alllo
Johnson and
R’ffrs of JJojBton spent Monday
Tho many friends of Dr. R F.
Denu*py of Atlanta were welcom
ing him here Monday and Tuesday,
he came over Jo perform the cere
mony of the Rogers-Frederlck
wedding.
B—
Athens People Reap Ad
vantage of Reduction in
Telephone Tolls Ordered
By Public Service Board
red recently by the Georgia
Public Service Commission went
into effect Tuesday morning-
The schedule of rates for the
Athens district follows:
Old
Single Line Business $5.40
Two Party Business S4.80
{Single Lmo Residence $3.30
'Two "Line Residence $2-70
r. Hutgerford, of Gray, ; Kour P»rty Reiidence {2.50
Ga.. is visiting her daughter, Mrs. ! 1
1 B. Patman on Mlllcdge. : FUNERAL NOTICE
% I REDDV—Died at the nome of
-Mrs. Harry \V90druff of Polum-'hls mother 138 Hickory streot at
toa i» thfc guest of her mother; .*evon o’clock Tues«lay morning. Mr.
Mm. \V. I). Heacham, accompuning 1 Harold Reddy in his 17th year. Ho
br home Saturday from Grand ! hi survived by his mother, one sis-
Opcra. j tor and four brothers. The funeral
— I will bo from tho home tomorrow,
Dr. H. M, HulMove* left Tuesday May 3rd. Rev. B. F. Elliott will
New
$5-00
$4.50
$3-00
$250
$2.00
liternoon for Savannah to attend
tie Medical convention.
1,1 r- Harry Jones of Riverside,
‘Kent the jwerk-end with Ids par-
Mr. and .Mrs. Walter Jones.
P r - ®nd Mrs. Lauren Goldsmith,
arrived Monday from their
»*■> moonttrtp, for a short visit to
« and .Mrs. Hugh Rowe, will
** Vft Wednesday for Atlanta.
hr. h. Li Hill has been called to
7?.?t*"m«*ry t Ala., on business and
r' furu to the city the latter
Nrt of thp week.
lf ra. j f. patmaii h a8 returned
£ i A A anta ”^ bere *be attended
w»nil Opera.
Jn. Henry McHatton who jba*
yIMUng Dr. and Aire. T. H.
liatton .hat) returned to New
for ~„ an< Hai,s about a month
a n extended Rnmnnnn Mn 1
irtindi'il Ekiropcaa trip.'
-ffl—
TCHuntcd
*"M A ^Sp»?lr re “ e aUenllB<,
—S-
Jf r ; ani1 A*». Morton Rolleatonc
Z ™ Morton.
Sj,,!. uf Atltota, moto;
»i» r lay t„ vWt Jui ,
" rsn “ Mr. Itollestono returned
•Mond
yn i
. S, ."“ 0l )rfc, \Vynne, ,pent tbo
in StAphens’.
Li 1“,“" mn ' Joseph I.ustrat
iii’i, “ r W8 Friday returning via
ri bom f lr * ,l * ,t an| l »re expect-
nvx, week.
—8B—
"M-W a M. Strahan,
ki,. \, u ' W C, M. Strahan.
1|,„„ Mary Strahan, Alisa Emily
S-n't IH' I "" 1 Mr ' f Yanlt St**'«rt
Cil “ loe week-end at Moootaln
oftleiate, with Bernstein pros., In
eltarge.
Cousin of Judge
C. H. Brand Dead
Mark E. Cooper, prominent Log-
ansville planter and Imsiness man
who died suddenly at his home late
Monday nfternoon, was a cousin of
Congressman C. H. Brand of Ath
ens and L. M. Brand o! Lawrence-
villa.
iifr. Cooper was 58 years old and
was well known throughout that
sectloiuof the state. Ajpoplexy Is
responsible for his sudden death,
U is staled.
MAMIE A. HARRIS
DIES IN CHICAGO
Dick Harris, well known cohired
barber, received a telegram Tues
day, announcing the sudden death
of his daughter, Mamie A. Harris,
in Chicago, where she had been
employed) at a hospital ns a train
ed nurse for a number of y^ars.
The remains will lie brought to
Athens for interment, funerals ar
rangements to 1)0 announced later.
Dick Harris Is one of the best
known of the colored citizens of
Athens and has many friends, both
white and colored, who will sym
pathize with him in the death of
this daughter.
MR. MORGAN GAULDEN, of
Colbert, was in town Saturday.
Morgan says be has plenty of labor
to work bis land and has his en
tire crop planted. He has put in
500 acres in cotton and will use
the Hill Mixture. He has one of
tho most promising crops, of small
grain he ever saw. Farmers are
making fine progress and Mr.
Ganldln says in two years the
country will be in the most inde
pendent and prosperous condition
within its* history, and we will
forget about ithe boll weevil and
exodus of negroes. A year ago
Morgan was in the low-grounds of
sorrow over conditions. He says
people must economize and cjult
their wasteful extravagance.
blddle and thus kiUA 1L
CAPTAIN BARNETT says that
material has been ordered for the
placing of a sewer on Oglethorpe
avemte to the city limits at Mr.
A. G. Elder's. Taut succ- -wjll also
be given two e’ectric lights, one
on the hill f'pnoslte Mrs. Lamar
Cobb's and the other in the flat.
It 1 will seat 950 nnd also bo use*
as a place for pupils to study. Thii
will be a great addition to itho pu!b-i
lie school facilities of Athens.
MR. BUD BEUSSE will this year
run 15 plows and a tractor and
which equals a 25 horse farm. Mr.
BeU8so will plant only twenty
acres In cotton on his entire place.
TM» will be glad tiding tor the ,tat go la btg Jor MnVsUitng to Teed
* i„ ,u„, ad- man and beast. He has his crop
,TK r to the cl ^ T t h h Y n ! ItS if com.
paJ * (promising. He has no rust to count.
build,SgWhe completed t-ihout the tine.ftarmTn
tuo weeks and wjjfk J. . Georgia, so those who have seen
»'» rt 9? t-umPkln street sctioo , t Last Thu „ dly he tlnl ., h , ,
rjty Engineer Barnett «n>ervlsml h|s „ an „ ev ri .,*
the eonstrp?tlon of this »rt>o»l ihas been prepared like a garden.
hnlldtng and saved , he city {lQ.0flO, H|s , s w#ut h|g „ t and ont8
er'what It would hnvo cost to |and t tllcr spr | n( , trops as fin8 aa
t Hie n „t hv contract. Ath- |an[ , oan grow thom
let the pob out by contract. Ath
ens never had a more vigilant and
efficient officer than J. W. Bar
nett
*Vsv to S*»t Stc.-nach Ri^ht.
If your stomach is out of order
• t.iscp -*«cv«. no matter from what
WORK IS NOW PROGRESSING # cause, MI-O-Na stomach tablets
on the auditorium for the High | _ , give instant relief ca_ic of
school, and w^ien completed the. indigestion, acute or chronic, or
building jvlil cost around $40,000. money back. Guaranteed by II. R
Palmer A Sons—AdvrrHs« v' *»*
HON. N. D. ARNOLD, of Lexifg-
ton, one of the largest land-owners
and wealthiest men in this section,
was in the city Saturday. Nat is
looking remarkably well, but says
he is not feeling so and will prob
ably spend a while in Florida and
rest up. He says the only salvation i
of the country is for farmers to
Sf SSj PALACE THEATRE TONIGHT
ane can farm successfully yn-
less he sticks to his Ipnd and di-
MARY ASTOR IN “SUCCESS”
rects operations personally.
Arnold owns 4he old brick house
Callaway place in Wilkes county,
containing *00 acres and one of
the finest farms In this section.
Last year his income, from the
place lacked something over $60
of paying tho faxes.
Last Shpwing Tom Mix Elite Tonight; John Barry
more, Mary Pickford Coming.
MR. GARDNER has sold his Job
printing office to the Johnson
Brothers, of Marietta, Ga., who wiU
take charge on iMay 1st. They are
practical printers and will enlarge
the plant. Mr. Gardner will devote
Ms entire time to thestationery
and book business and to typew
riters an 1 fountain pen repairs.
TWO BEDS of lovely flowers
orn the grounds in front of tho
High Behind building. Why cannot
the Normal iUhool grounds 1>« also
thus ornamented? The girls would
gladly keep Ihe beds worked.
EVERY hTORE in the Normal
school se -Mon is now rented and
ctipied. "T.is Is :\ fine business
section aid two of the most im
portant highways entering our city
connect there.
IN TIMES GONE BY, at this
pa.son you saw country wagons
loaded with imported Western hay
carrying It to the farms. You now
wagons loaded with tho finest
’tome made hay bringing it into
town for sale. An unusually large
arly hay crop was this year made.
MR. ELDER, who has a fine farm
oi his own and also works the place
of Mr. W. B. Lester, near Mitchell _ ,
bridge, says he has plenty of “SUCCES8 AT THE
negroes left to cultivate bis crops. I PALACE TONIGHT
.so.? T^VreTof™*^'n ,, to Pl "o ' Everyone interred In Ore .tnge
play, nnd of course use poi v on. screen is curious about L»e lu #
Mr. Elder says he has a fine pros- timate details of the lives of tho*t
pect for wheat and oats. [who move in the mysteriqps pre-
'clncts behind tie asbestos curtain.
MRS. JUDGE McWHORTE a plays of the theatrical life havo a
few nights since, had the rats to fascination about them that few
kil) 50 young White Leghorn chicks can resist, \ and none has ever
for her. Sho kept them at night proved a greater success on ithe
in a bog in the fowl house and stage than “Success” which was a
placed a wire screen over the en- big bit throughout the country. It
trance. But one night this was neg- 1 has now been made into a photo-
lotted, and tho next morning she’play for Metro. Tho photoplay, In-
discovered that out of 70 chicks tensely dramatic, vivid, exciting,
only 20 were left Tho other fifty and throbbing with life Is a gem
lad been killed by tho rats. The of entertainment Brandon Tynan
rodents would pinture their necks and Mary Astor head an inmport-
and then heap the dead biddies in , ant cast in a photoplay that cannot
a pile. The floor of the bouse was bo recommended too highly, at ‘*?o
taken up and six large rats killed. Palace tonight.
Mary Astor In “Bueftes*? Palace Tonight.
An old lady In Abbeville county, LAST SHOWING TOM
S. -O., says that boll weevils are MIX AT THE*ELITE
killing tyer young chicks. A ••eevil New friends were made by Torn
fastens itself to the neck if the Mix yesterday at the Elito Thea
tre^, where his latest tale of tho
Western plains. “3 Jumps Abend.”
was shown for the first time in this
cltjr. This photoplay which was
produced by William Pox will be
seen for the last time tonight.
{jLCter seeing tho last few of the
Tom Milx pictures, it did not ceem
possible to invent new stunts for
every picture, but Ids latest screen,
offering exceeds even the best of
his previous pictures. At least two
new and thrilling stunts are offer
ed In this photoplay for Ihe enter
tainment of motion picture r*ns.
Fast riding, thrilling Unps and
daring rides down steep mountain
sides, will delight all tho Mix fans
in this picture. Ono of the most
remarkable scenes in ''is picturo
shows Mix and “Tony” jumping a
can/bn twenty feet wide nnd nine
ty feet deep. This is the first time
that itocb a feat hns actually teen
dono by . a film star for any pic
ture. This scene alone will mako it
worth your while to see this photo
play.
PAPE 222.
Fabrics Reflect the Beauty of Summer in Exquisite
Colorings
If/
Silks of every kind in solid
colors and combinations at
all prices. Normandy voiles
in beautiful colbrinK-s ant
designs at 69c yard. 40 inch
embroidered voiles $1.75. 4(
inch Paisley voiles 69c. Fas
colred voiles 39c. 41 inch
Swis3 organdies, all colors.
75c. Evcrfast suitingr, all
colors, and hundreds of
other things for attractive
summer frocks at reasonable
prices.
We cannot remember that
summer fabrics have ever
been lovelier than these.
Some are quaint and deli
cately tinted as an old fash
ioned garden. Others burst
forth in vivid, glorious hues.
Now’s the time when every
woman likes to think of her
cummer frocks, every one of
the new things is an inspira
tion for delightfuT costumes.
L
SALE OF WHITE HOSIERY
At 29c Pair
In this sale of white hosiery, we
have gathered up the odd'numbers
in cotton, lisle, silk and fibre. Origi
nally the prices were from 35e to
$1.50. The entire loit goes in this
sale at 29c a pair
THE NETHERALL—
A New Garment
The.Netherall takes the place of
a vest, a brassiere and a girdle,
and is worn next, to the skin. It
keeps the figure slim and smooth
witnout interfering with the free
dom of motiqn necessary to danc
ing or athletics. They are made
of all silk, or silk and suede cloth.
Colors flesh, orchid and white.
See this new garment in Clayton
street window, . . -
Davison-Nicholson Co.
Grandmother’s
Garden,
May 7th. 8:30 P.
COLONIAL THEATER
Wonderful Production*
As an added attraction
Dagraar Rachraancss
“In Her Russian Dancing"
Plenty v of Money to Lend on Real Estate
6% su&”L, 6 Jfl
HUBERT M. RYLEE
' Holman. Rid, L,w 0,,lee *
~ I A,h,n, | 0«re !2
ATHENS’ BUS’EST STORE
DOINGS OF THE DUFFS
SALESMAN SAM
m Manes