Newspaper Page Text
use,
ToRtfular
THE BANNER-HERALD
11,080 A ccicrs ni rtmay fre#.
Dally and Sunday—10 Cento a Week. ”•-! irFT' sr ~'' ,r *' TT" Eitollthtd 1832.
palljf! end Suifitay—10 Cento a Weele,
T ATHENS COTTONS 3
Middling' ... 26»/ 2 c
Previous Close 26)4c
WEATHER:
Rain Friday. Probably clear Sat*
lirday. ... _ „ .
VOL. 91. NO. 68
Associated Press 8ervlce
ATHENS, GA., FRIDAY. MAY 4, 1923.
A. B. C. Paper
Bible Conference To
Ertf -Friday Night; Dr.
G.C. Morgan To Preach
No, ed Treacher Will Close Captain and Wife
Successful Senes of Re- - r -
li ; ;ious Services At 8:00
O'clock Friday Night.
UKOUGBTON SPOKE
THURSDAY NIGHT
Pl^ds For An Offensive
Ohurcft, Filled With
“Holy Optimism” in His
Last Sermon.
ENDS FRIDAY NIGHT,
nr. O. Campbell Morgan will
D rrach the . closing sermon .of
El,. 1923 Athens Bible Confer-
at the First Methodist
church Friday night
The service* will begin
promptly at * o'elook and Uta
largest crowd yet nttendtog the
Conference will bo present
Refuse to Leave
Sinking Vessel
Four Survivors Bring
Stogr of Wreck of^Boat UELIKEfi .ADDRESSES
in Typhoon Killing
Nine.
- MANILA.—Ttis .tote of the wreck
of the British bark Amy' Turner,
whoee captain and'bin wife stood
hand-in-hand on the top deck
I the' vessel went down In a raging
'tvnhnnn off thn (aland of flanm.
Dr. Waite/ M. Rowlett of Now
By f. R. STEWART
I)r,' Leo G. Broughton delivered
the last lecture of hie Bible con
ference series here Thursday night
at the Methodist church when, be
fore one of the largest audiences
yet assembles! during (the confer-
eeces. Bo spoke on “Tha Conquer
ing Church,” leaving with the
Church people of Athene a roeeeage
which will inspire and .encourage
long alter be has left the city.
•■A church, offensive, no* defens
ive; a churdb tilled with n holy
optimlsnu a. church nursed by the
supernatural; a church that baa
the shepherd heart—these are the
chief ■characteristics of the con
quering church, the kind of church
(thrift spoke of when' He said,
‘ami the gatea of h#U shall not pre
vail against It' " said Dr. Brongh-
: typhoon off the Island of Gaum,
March 27, waa brought here Thurs
day by the four survivors. The dis
aster claimed the lives of nlnfc.
Charles West, able eeaeamn, of
Melbourne, told how the. Amy
Turner run Into the storm March
23. For more than three days the
bark fought the gale. On’ March
It It became a typhoon anal on the
morning of 'March 37 the crew do- .
2* m »” 14 “ d ™: ,lirou * b thB
master, and hie spouse refused to _ • , t , .. _
leave. They said they would go Rev. W. A. Jonnn'db. Savannah,
down with the ship but they would executive secretory department of
not abandon her. " religlou. education, . dloceee of
. * — »- —.111 n1.n ana.b Atielna (nn
ton.
Is our day) The men who brought
ou that war' had blasphemed
against Christ, had destroyed the
cross—and In Its place hod set np
n philosophy of might God lot
(hose people plunge themselves
Into the very gates of bell,” In
order to convince them, th.e speak'
er said, that that pblloamhy waa
utterly wrong and that the world
could only be navad through
Mhrlst.
In speaking of *'a church filled
with a holy optimism,” Dr. Brough
ton cited hie teat (Mathew 6, verses
13-18) where Jesus said “And l
•ay unto thae, that then art Pttor,
and upon this rock I will bnlld mv
church; and the gates of hell shall
not prevail against It”
“I say optimism because Jeans
gives me reason," ho continued.
“He says that 'tha gatea of hell
shall not prevail against It’ When
Maine Governor Gives
Back Civil War Flags
AUGUSTA—"It does without
doubt mean my political dksth,
but I tnilrt that every confed
erate battle flag captured by
Maine reglmeAs in the Civil
war be returned to the southern
States fromwthlch they came.”
declared Governor Perclval P.
Baxter.
The demand by Governor
Baxter has met with bitter op
position.
TRIAL OF OFFICIALS
PROTEST RULING OF
HOLDING ATTENTION II.S.SUPREME COURT
NOTEDSPEAKERSTO
AT S. S. MEETING
Singing Will Be One of
Big Features of the Con
vention Here May, 14,15
and 16.
Ten Officials of the
Krupp Company Go on
Trial Before .French
CourtmartiaL
CHARGED WITH
INCITING RIOTS
Trials Likely to Set Pre
cedent. Krupp President
on Stand. Interest Run
ning High.
(By Associated Proas.)
* WERDEN*. Rhenish Prussia.—
Ten officials of the Krupp works
at Essen, charted with Inciting
(heir workmen to riot atainat the
French forcea In the occupied nr.t
of the Ruhr, were put on trial hare
York, secretary. International ai- Friday before a French courtmes-
soclatlon of klally vacation Bible.ttal.
schools, will be one of the priori- j po urt een workmen lost their
pal speakers at the Georgia Sunday I ,, , Premier holds that the court rullna
2 <■ —— oo.n. I» v «. "!"• being killed Immediate-^ ^ run(rary the . rulM of
International law.
POINCARE LIKELY TO
Single Coplea 2 Cento Dally. 6 Cents Sunday.
Premier of France Has
Issued Instruction For
Strong Protest, Says Re
port Friday.
WASHINGTON NOT
YET NOTIFIED
No Official Protest Has
Been Received By Wash
ington Yet Officials
Watching Outcome. •
(By Associated Press.),
PARIS—Premier Poincare has
Riven instructions that a strong
portent be made to Washington
pgtalnsu the recent ruling of ths
United Staten Supremo Court,
which forbids the entrance jnf for
eign ships into American darts
with liquor nbonrd, states ths
newspaper Le Matin. ^
The newspaper asserts that <ht
Broken Romance of 30
Years Ends in Marriage
DOWAOIAC.—A romance
which had Its start and wag
broken thirty years ago, was ref
vired here with the marriage of
Mias Gertrude Blek and Elmer
Hanold.
The two were engaged thirty
yearn ago, but quarreled. Han
old later married, hie wife dy
ing two years ago. Mill Blok
did not marry.
PLANS GO FORWARD
FOR STOCK SOW
HERE SATURDAY
More Than Sixty Entrants
Have Already Register
ed. Feature Acts Will Be
Staged.
n iiwuuiu uer. | * t J ;. .
Then the crew tounched the two Georgia, will also speak during the
boats. Weet and two of his com- convention.
penlona in one, the remaining
eight In the other. Ae they pulled
away from the side of the bark
they saw the captain and Mrs.
Nelleoo standing hand-ln-hand In
tha poop deck until the craft took
her.tast plunge.
The larger boat capalxeld and
■•Yen of her occupants .wered
droyned, bull tthe eighth, Frank
Lyndholm, swam to the side of
West's boat, and waa hauled
aboard. Then n weary' voyage be
gan.
A sail waa rigged on the small
craft and for twenty-eight days
the castaways played; through a
wide expanao of water until they
made Surigad, oh the lalnnd of
.Mindanao, In the Philippine Island
group. Ttoy tmd a mnall aupply of
canned meat and when* this waa
HAVE CHARGED
WAR TO CHURCH.
'•! know the days look dark
•'imetlmes. Some enemies of the
church have even charged tlio
treat war to the chunSb. That war,
l» the great eat testimony m tool exhausted they; manned to iwteh
truth of the church we have hast * dolphin, .which they ate raw.
Next, the water ran out. but after
a day's thirst a squall blew np with
a heavy rain and they refilled the
Dr. Arlo Ayres Brown, of Chat
tanooga, Tenn., president of tho
University of Chattanooga, wHl
apeak at one of the session!.
These speakers are m addition
to many others of more than state
wide prominence, some of them of
national and International repute.
Prof. W. A. Sutton, well known
educator and superintendent’ of
the Atlanta Public Schoola will
apeak and hie address 1s certain
to draw a large crowd.
, The singing of the convention
jrill be under’dlrectlon of C. Har
old Lowden of Philadelphia. The
song services promise to bo one of
the brightest features of the en
tire convention.
The Georgia Smday School 'As-
soclatlon li Inter-denominational
and flvo hundred delegates will
attend in addition to scores of
visitors from northeast Georgia
towns who will came over tor a
day and return that night
Jesus says that I look forward
with perfect courage no matter
hew dark the days may seem.”
Concerning the supernatural. Dr.
Broughton said that the greatest
events of history were nnexplaln-
able from natural causes.
"Nothing worth oqr while con
sidering to to be ecconptod for on-
tireiy by natural causes. The world
liseir cannot bo accounted for by
natural causes.”
RECALLS talmadqe
ingersol Debate •
liecalling the Ingemol-Talmadge
debate, the speaker showed that
ingersol fried to explain creation
by natural pause! and got every
thing ddwn (In hie mind) to proto-
plasm. Bat 'when Talmadge asked
hi m tite one question “Where did
yin, set your protoplasm?” Inger
sol I hesitated and said ’1 dpnt
know.'* This coat to a how. Dr.
R .nghton think., bow futile It la
to ry to explain tha Mg matters
entirely by Natural capscs.
Ry “the eEapherd Mart” the
speaker explained by telling aerery
'»autifui little story, ttufthe meauh
* spirit of helpfulness toward toe
»'ak and unfortunate, and recall
'll the words of Jeattat “In as-
""" h-a» ye have dou it unto the
iokm of these, ye hevq done It mo
''' '^“wfih b0 “ W ln
y-r luxuries; «
rH.agancee. living In-each a use-
,,, rn *“ ne r—ontll you >ave the
J, 1 " heart yon wlU never tee
battling down tho gates
hell •
Abit Nix Speaks
Before “Y” Boys
M J will address the Boys'
' 'he ,Y. j|. C. A. Sunday at-
; ,n on the subject, “Beal Ser-
N,x Is «ne of the most In-
welf«e. Every boy fn ,th»
invited to hear him at'the
~t
Sunday,
PLANTING SENIOR
TREE IS DELATED
Exercises Are Held Even
Though Tree Is Late.
Impressive Ceremonies
Carried Out.
The planting of the annual
Senior tree on Tuesday waa hamp
ered <fue to the failure dt the ar
rival of the tree from the nureery.
Tho exercise* were conducted as
usual, however, and the tree plant
ed In the afternoon.
W. A. Lundy, president of t(e
Senior class, was master of core-
monies and called qpon Mr. T. W.‘
Reed, esteemed registrar of the
Unlvenlty of Georgia, fbr tho
opening prayer a*! Introductory
talk. No one to better fitted to de
liver en address on such on oc
casion than la' Mr. Reed.
Gordon W. Chambers read the
poqm and /MV. G. Q. Finds deliver
ed the Senior oration while J. K.
Harper read the 8enlor prophesy.
The entire' clue then united In
•Inglng Aimer Mathr which con
cluded the ceremony.
■Hie planting of a tree le an an
nual Senior ceremony at tho U. of
Oa., the tree being planted in rear
or Old College this year. It to al
ways wish a mingled feeling of
joy and aadneaa that the 8enlor
meet on this occasion; for” they era
.1 .a a. aalae Inin * HinU llfn'g
IN DA JOES WELL
$204,617.71 Monetary
Value of Activities of
11,048 Girls From All
Parts of This State.
ly and thirty were wounded In •
riot which pccyrred March fl, when
a detachment of French troop* Wa
ited the Krupp work* to requlai
tion automobiles.
De. Gustave Krupp, president of
the Krupp Company was question
ed fgr nn hour and a half by Col
onel Fcyronel, the presiding offi
cer of the courtmortlal, when the
trials were first begun.
There Is much speculation among
officials ms to the outcome of the
trial, whether or not jail senteneer
or flAes will he Imposed on the
ten defendants, should they
found guilty of the 'charges. .
In tho meanwhile there Is e
spirit of watchful waiting on the
part of Oerman leader* and new**
paper*, who will not express opin
ions, until the trials are concluded
These trials are likely to set
precedent toy the future and ore
among the moat Important that
have been* held aince the . Flinch
and* Belgians sent troops Into the
Rohr.
Die OIL INTERESTS
JN BATTLE ARRAT
By JOHN D. ALLEN
Oroomlng, of the animals scbwd-
uled to compete ln tho LltUo lh-
ternatioMl Livestock Show, to ho
lielri at eight o'clock Saturday
night In Hardman Hall. to proceed
ing satlstactorily according to of-
i fit-era of the Saddlo and Sirloin |
Athens Women Will
Attend Curb Market
Opening on Saturday
Harding Honors
Grave of Former
Civil. War Hero
President Gives Orders to
•the War Department to
Find Last Resting Place
of Canby.
(By Associated Press.)
WABH1N0T0N.—Touched by an
unusual endeavor to show grati
tude, President Harding has di
rected the war department to as
certain the burial place cf General
Howard- Canby. an officer of tho
Union durldg the Civil War, who
WM killed In 1373 during Indian
troubles’in northern California;
Ths president acted upon receipt
of a letter from Charles Hail. agqJ
attorney of Bay Mlnetto, Alabama,
who wrote that ha wanted to place
a wreath on the grave of General
Canby. .
,club under whoso management tha. General Canby wng.ln command
If th, report la confirmed, Poln- yearly event will be stated. of the Federal Army .at' Fort
care will be the first official of n, Blakely In Baldwin county, Ala-
foreign notion to register a formal I More, than sixty entrants have bams, during the Civil War
protest nnd compaint against tha already been regletered. Including; . , . _ .
ruling.' i everything from dairy cows toL Hall wrote that General Canby
(everything from dairy cow* to L Hall wrote tMt General Canby
■heap.' Sinco these require polish- gave food to himself nnd hie father
The nrwspepera of Grent Hrttalr j , n _ gnd t rimming to the height When they were almost starring,
are practically unanlmou. Im then „f perfection, their Individual' qrave POUND IN
denunciation of the-coura. follow- k n , tere ^ cog. 6NAVE FOUND IN
ea nnd the precedent ne by »•>* '.iderable pastime during recent 'NDIANAPOLIS.
supreme court In It» ruling, feel- . f , ernoo ,,. - nd .umnndlng
ing .hut the United gtot.n hn. no ■?* ^*1, [ INDIANAPOLIS.—The grave of
grounds of the agricultural college,'General Ddwhrd Canby. sought by
as one amateur atoctanaa put M. (Charles Hell and the warglepart-
"resembles an open-air beauty l meD , mnu.), tM gmet ordhra ot
parlor when the hoys lead out {^.ident Herding la In the Crown
their animals am) begin mnnlcur- ce me tery of this city. It win
•Of' / stated here Friday.
With a view to making the »how ■
highly enteruinlng as well a* In-
rightn or authority to tell other
natinnn what cargoes their boats
bripg Into American ports.
WASHINGTON—No 1 official re-
port that n formal protest, has been "tractive, the managers bare ln-
recclvod by Wsshlngion from Pre-1 troduced *-number of toature ecu
mlef i'olncnre, it wna stated In «»f- J*-clwoen the - judging contests,
flcnl Circles here Friday. Three Include eight University'
! Students starring In a girls riding 1
■compatltlon, a crack drill ■quad!'
composed of the beet rMere at thol
college st agriculture, a monke/J
drill squad, - clog dancing, repo
stunts, a boy* riding competition,
Hd building
A.
Market Opens bn Broad
Street At 7 O’clock in
Front of the University
Campus.
SCALE OF PRICES
WILl^E PREPARED
Business Men Praise
JMarket Undertaking.
Women Invite Friends.
Some Will Use Passes.
I When the Curb Market . opens
Saturday morning at 7 o'clock Ath
ena women will be on hand to, bay*
|produce brought there for sale, It
woe announced Friday.
| Manic will he rendered by tie
High School concert band which ir
one of the beet amateur band* in
thl* section. ,
!
Vegetable dinners will bo mm I,
in evidence Sunday as the women
of Athens will putrin a full «t«'l,
r wn groceries,' buying .lin.t
the producer et
Market. • .
thq Curb
A scale of prices to which
duevr and buyer will conform will
be placed on a blackboard
conapicuoua a pot where all cun
and Oonatllt befbru buying.’
eourae the prtco will be the limit
and.no one will be expected to pay
the Market (price unless the
dues come! Up' to the standar
1 in a
or
i
TO ARRANGE
ATTRACTIVELY
Alt of tha produce will b«* at
tractively anranged and deployed,
Mr*. Annlo * Mao Wood * Bryant,
county economic* agent and • J
William Flror, county farm agent
atuted Friday.^ At least, the pr
duccra* have been shown how
properly at-range their product*
the agricultural agents.
Meanwhile Washington I* (41
agog over the situation brought
about by tha recent decision, of the
supreme coprt ln ruling that no
•hlpa. of any nation* con enter
American port* with cargoe* of
liquor.
Expert* In international law
work
E AS GOLFER
hone Jumping, pyremld
on horse beck, and other*.
Beginning promptly.
the lirel.ion In nn effort U 0 , C ^S“ th? show le announced*to
determine whe her or not Uie ml end at ten . forty , , t which hour
to* *•,» violation of the •principle. „ r> Andrew U . goal,, prerident of
Struggle For Domihation
Between Standard and
Independents Seen By
Wall Street.
about to enter into ’ their life'
work aad on (ho other band they
separate from friendships tried
and found trip
Promotions In :
Hartwell Bank
HARTJVHLU Ga -Ah a *wjar
meeting of the director*' of Qta
Hartwell Bank held Thursday R. U.
Thornton who hae held tho office
of caSMer was promoted to vice-
president'and Fred S. White who
has been asatotant cashier for the
past several years waa made
cashier.
The Hartwell Bank to the oldest
bank In Hart county and to con
sidered one of tho strong Jet In this
section of tho state. The following
are officers: D. C. Alford, presi
dent; M. M. Norman, rice-presi
dent; Jt C. Thornton, vlce-presl-
debt; Fred SJ White, caeMor.
rectors; D C. Alford, E B Mai
M. Norman. ti U Mel
The. aatoundlntly 'large amount
of vrirk that waa accomplished
during 1933 by tho giri'a club work
in Georgia Is Jut made public In
figures given out by tho Georgia
8tate College of Ariculture which
announced thta during the year;
there were 11,043 girls enrolled'In'
tho work and that the monetary
value of their products wsi 1204,-
017.71. .
Continuing the report shows that
6320 girls made complete reports;
4,163 girls carried on bread work;
340 girls have hank deposits; value
of fresh vegetables sold, 333367,-
84; value of frerii trails sold and
ufted at home, $10,673.75; value of
flower, sold, 1(0636; vegetable*
and fruits canned; dridd orrbnt
and traits canned, dried or brined,
184.189.34; fruit, . juices jellies,
and preeervejj $10,728.64; baskets
made and aohk 172.37; poultry
ratted, 164310.00; amount saved
by remodeling clothes, |339020.
League of Women
Voters Hope For
Big Registration
Want All Women Voters
of Athens to Register
During Special Week of
May 7-12./ ‘
Tttio League of Women Voters
df with the co-opetadon
of other civic organisations* hope
to get eveiy woman in Athena
regtetfered during their apodal
registration week. May 7-12, in
clusive.
8TATEMENT BY
HUGH H. GORDON, JR.
I realise what a lector the vo-
men of Athena have Been daring
the last few years In all construc
tive movements, even before they
Huai a vote, and 1 feel that this
city would be subjected to a dis
tinct handicap It Its women, now
having their right to express their
vjews st the ballot box, did not
qualify > by registration to voice
their wishes in nil matters touch-
ing ths Ufa of oar ei{jr, .
None of our citizens ere more
not done
% r * concerned to what is or Is not c
r .(Tarn |o Page Three)
NEW YORK—A struggle foi
domination between opposln*
mentH In the petroleum Industry la
seen by Wall street .the New York
World aay*. with the Standard Oil
interest* and a few other big re
finer* aligned against Independent
companies operating chiefly ln the
mid-continent field. The total fi
nancing strength of the Standard
Oil group la given as $592,000,000
by the paper, and that of the In
dependents as $419,200,000.
The offensive. . which was be
hind the general emask In price*
on the New York Stock Exchange
Tuesday the World oays. has been
seen by the street for three week*
The objective, It le asserted, is the
w-ecklng of the Independent and
the eventual control of the mid-
continent field by’the Standard .Oil
Interests and their allies.
of ^International law,
Thet-e are many different opin
ions In official* circle* here over
the outcome of the ruling and tht
decision ofv the shipping board to
disregard It and continue to car
ry liquor.
M. Boole, president of
the State College of Agriculture
will sward the grand champion
ship and other prises. Seven main
Athens Citizen "Becomes
“Hole-in-One Golfer”
and Is -Listed^ With Im
mortals. Receives Prize.
W. Brooke, prominent Ath
enian. ha* won'national distinction
GEORGIA-AUBURN
DETAIL AT CHAPEL
The second Georgia-Auburn
game to bo played et Montgom
ery Saturday afternoon kill be
detailed at tho University
Chapel, play-by-play, under the
• Ikn TfnlunnltV
auspices of the University Ath
letic association. It waa an
nounced Friday afternoon when
It wna evident that the flrat of
the aeries at Auburn would be
rained out.,
Tho detail will atari at 4:30
P. M.. Saturday, and will be
called by Earle Watson, a form
er eportinx editor of tho Ban
ner-Herald. A qioderate .dmls-
alon fee of thirty-five cents will
be charged. Unless Georgia can
capture this second game In
Montgomery, the Bulldogs will
bo forced lo take both games In
Athens In order to »weep the
aorloa with the Ptalnlamen.
prixea. Including n silver trophy | j n the, eport that president Hard-
cup end n Poland Chinn Gilt, will'to* 5“ tamone-golf. A let-
go to tho winners of flrat place In. tor ban Just reached Mr,- Brooke
tha variqu'eveato. Which advtaea him that he reeerres
Tho low admission fee of twenty- , *P- d *' recognition and .tout bo-
five cents la expected to draw a 6ooe, a doaen Airka 30
very targe crowd to tha show,
anticipation of which tha manag
ers are making ample prepara
tions. Opera seato have been In
stalled In Hardman Hall, recently
completed, and complete arrange
menu made to toko care of an ex
cess crowd. Dancing andeorchcatra
music will follow the regular pro
gram of the show.
Fiftieth Anniversary Of Death.
Of Man Who Wrote “McCjuffey’s
Reader” Brings Back Memories
Friday, May 4th. 1* the fiftieth
anniversary of the death of Wil
liam Holmes - McGuffejr, author of
that nationally Known aerie* of
*ch6ol reader* that boar hi* nnm*
nnd which' were so popular In
school* of the year* gone by.
There la hardly a person in
America who has grille through the
grammar grades who has not elth-rfTake me again to .your heart
studied or heard of McGuffey’i
leaders. They have been discus*-
ed in educational naeoctatlon meet-,
ing*, have been the subject* < f
magazine and newspaper nrtlcl<s
and the bane of many a boy and
girl'* school day existence.
Never will be forgotten some ol
of the leheone contained ln the*c
reader*, especially some of the
verse* which are still k^own
nearly every boy and girl. For In
stance that little verse that thou**
and* of children now. chant at twi
light, although not written by Me-
Guffey, waa made famous wh "*
published In his reader*:
•Twinkle, twinkle, little star.
How t wonder what you are
Up above the World an high,
Uke a diamond ln tha «ky.”
And who la there who doe* not
know about the "Boy who atoo*»
on the - burning deck?" ami an
other favorite,,from the reader*:
M Ba*hward turn backward, O Time
In Jrour Right,
Make roe n child, again. Just for
tonight.
Mother,, come back from the echo-*
shore.
Many People Planning
Homes, States G. M. Cas
key, Contractor. To Re
model Von-Canon Bldg.
of yor,.'
All of. the,, or, brlnht spot. In
Iboae th.n dull rentier hooka. I(or‘
appropriate today fa that little tw
verao poem of the echoed hoy:
-Oh, where la my hati It la taker
away,
And my ahoeatrlnga are' nil in r
knot.
I can't find a thing where It ahouir
be today,
Tho 1 I've hunted In every epot.”
"Oh. were you ne’er n schoolboy.
And did jou never train.
And ,fael that swelling af the hear'
You ne’er can feel again?”
McGuffeYa readers will never hr
forgotten and the on* hundredth
anniversary of hla death will etll
bring to mind those thumb,grans of several
pages of hie readers.
Five more balldings here have
been dddad to the list of tboea nn-.
dergolng overhauling and remodel-
ling, It wna learned Friday.
The building owned hr Mr*. A.
H. Talmadge on Clayton street,
one room of whlob Is occupied by
the Taylor Eleetrlo company, will
be remodeled tad a modern front
ballt The front will ho brought
out on .Unu with tho sidewalk. A
handsome tile roof will be built
over' the remodelled front One
room of tho building'will ha oc
cupied by H. J. Hold and company,
dotbiere.
Mrs. Talmadge has also let con
tract for remodeling of u building
on Thomas street between Wash
ington and Ctaytoh.
In addition to too-above build'
Inga the Von Canon-Wall bulldlnlg
located Op corner of: Lqmpkln
strept and Hancock avenue will
be remodelled. The. corner .of the
building on Hancock nod uudp-
Un will Be converted Into a room
suitable for a drag stare while a
room'for a grocery store will bo
built in the rear fadnr XJnmpUn.
The entire bonding will be peer-
hauled and nutta modern in every
respect. >
O. M. Caskey, contractor, who
baa been awarded contract for re
modelling thn above named build
ings declares many people are pre
paring to build homes thta sprint
and summer.' Real notate dealers
report: sales of many Into during
the poet few months amt building
of several homes In underway
while others are Eelng planned.
Mrs. nca.lo Troutman, curb ]
krt'nmater. atatrd Friday nil pin
> "in l I. t. .1 fur
of. the, market ot 7 o’clock.
Troutman urged th# weme
Athens to he
have found," aha
early chopper, ret the bent."
Tr.’L'tpmn waa the aucctnaf.it t
ter of market, at Home and
Ursvlllo before coming here,
yearn ago she Waa a i
Athepa, where her
Troutman was pastor of I
Methodist tdiurch.
Pralfio Tor tho Curb :
heard on all gldea Friday.
Many bualneaa men i
hati, urged dhatr wive
hand Saturday morning a
ronlxe tho Curb Starket.
balls are being shipped 'to him.
The tatter Is from the Burke Golf
Company which keeps an accurate
record of what golfers are doinn **”*".CT?,, ! m l
SB over Ibe country and It la sald ”“
that Is a high honor to have been
•storied for recognition by thl. ^.n?''’
Iinn * • jnrranftd Uim* pnrtlc*.
In part the letter to Mr. Breota toritod fria
sayi: "Regandleee of whether you co,np *" r ‘"em whu,
play In tho 70*s or torn In a con-
•latent 130. ytfa are now eaUtled.'to
special recognition by members of
your elnb and should even be al
lowed tbb right of way on fair
ways. What's a tournament priao
compared to a Hole-In-One with
the odda ot 20,000 to one against
•yaut Envious ones will call It
hick, but It might be eblllty...,.
“Wo are lending yon a copy of
tho 1122 ypar book lilting the
Hole-In-Ono golfers for the year.
Next year we shall be- glad to
Hat .your name among these ’Im
mortals.’ ”
ABC’S
NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING
C.eyrlght by A. T. A.6*rto,
STUbV VOUR
ADVERTISING V.
^Advertising may product profit
' nogatlya n
aria. Indifforant
■alto. It may actually do ' harm
by convoyingJ|n unfavorable, lid,
1— glouehy advcrtlolng lo
worao.than pouchy.' droulns-be.
diuoo more people ■
| l a , aTOt ,,b,,to
dreoood In goad. Uito, but wo
planning to nmkb uao of I
Hallway weekly pant,
thought of thnL” said one '
”1 can ahop at tho Market ami <
er placed: in town and it will
ooatjma a penny on account of
street..
Tha curb Market la entirely
to the producer. It will ho
Broad street between
nua and I umpkln ona day
week for the present. '
cob
CURBMARKETTO
Col. Gantt Directs Atten
tion to Features. Market
Opens Saturday Momin
nn Broad Street.
erlap, compelling'language about
our built..,, and wa may know
nothing about the value of white
•pace or display, but wa all re-
apond to good advortlilng—often
without undorattndlng Juit what
attracts us. Tha avorpgg ratdar
faft, this aama appeal. By thought
and ear, you may train yourtaM
«o construct Just this kind of
advertising about your business
A edgy of this 47 peg
lb youre fee tn, j.k.nj,
compliments of—,, -f. ,
bpojkjft'
«ith the;'
THE BANNER-HjtRALO. (
• ayr. larrv cantt
On Saturday morning. May 5th.
will start In Athens one of the
t Important movemente for thu
benefit of farmers ever Inaugur
ated aifd, of court!' 1 , whatever helps
tho farmer will also help our mer
chants nnd cltlrens. That day will
bo opened the flrat curb Market
over held ln this city. The market
will bo on that block Of Bread
street between College avenue and
Lumpkin street, opposite the cam-
pua.,The market will bo under the
management of Mrs. Troutman, a
lady wiho thoroughly understands
tho business and whose services
Athene has be eg so fortunate as
to have for the next year.
Mr. Dave Paddock who Is omi
of tho ’Inauguratera of tho move
ment. le very enthusiastic (
tho market will at first be held
day In tho week, but when
n,t“S authorises It will l* 1 open
ed,two or ruort days each week, of
It will tako farmers and our
(lai'ens some'little time to under
stand and appreciate the working
(Turn to page eight)
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