The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, May 23, 1923, Image 7
LcnVKSnAV. M.>.r 23, I92^_ - * -■ — m BANNEB-HWWtO. ATHHffS, GEORGIA SPECIAL OFFER IFor the next few, days I,vo will offer copies of I the City Directory for 98c I Got yours before, they are all sold. The McGregor Co. Read Banner-Herald Want Ads. METAL COLUMNS 'for Porches, Pergolas and Remodeling . Architects, contractors end building owners now use columns more freely beccusc the grief that they have expe- rienccd. with splitting ' and rotting of wood has bpen overcome by Union Metal pressed steel Columns, that are correct in design, per manent in construction and reasonable In cost. 10 classical designs. All sizes for modest homes or elaborate public buildings. VeSlowCabCo. PHONE 66 Otrir. C.E. MEETING HERE Well Known University Athlete to Speak to Young People (At “Fel lowship Supper” Friday. N<*w features for the Christian Endeavor Rally which will he held in the First Christian clnirch, Fri day evening. May 25th, at eight i o’clock are being announced dally. It. js interesting for the young peo ple to know that one of the ctrong- est* athletes on the Univoraity of Georgia team in basketball, foot ball and baseball has consented to bring to the boys and' girls a sim ple, yet sincere message at tills union meeting. * The young nthleto is not being scheduled to speak on account of his ability to play on the Georgia nine, or for the fame which he might have won, but for tho love of the great need of young people for Christian service and his plea will -be rhade with such thoughts only. This talk will be given at the “Fellowship Supper” which com mences at 8 o’clock. Those whe liav.o not secured tickets for this supper, will find them on sale at the entrance of the basement, which will ehablc many to attend, who /wouftl not be present other- "tla*. Mn)tc your plans to hear a Georgia athlete make a plea to young people for better Christian lining. Mrs. S. N. Hill, of Winder, Ga. writes that the societies there ex pect to have a largo, delegation-In Athens In spite of the fact that s rally of like nature will bo held* In ♦hat town on Monday evening. May 28th, with the same party who ap pear in Athens' Carl Matthews, field secretary for Georgia and Florida Christian Endeavor work will arrive In Ath ens via auto from Columbus, Ga. at six o’clock nnd from there will co to Bishop for tho opening of tho six davs of rallies, the first one being held !n that community Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock A large number of young people from Athens will attend this meet. Ing. greatly benefit the two tormina! death of CoL Smith atod w*» glad cities. to see the property so well kept ' ■ tup. Col. Smith had brood ideaa IT IS (PLANNED to build a about extending his business and brldgo across the Savannah river at Shuckpen Shoals, and which wifi connect the Calhoun Highway with tho road leading from Ath- ens via Elbertop. South Carolina Is ready to do her share toward erecting this bridge and has a fine highway comploted to the banks of the river. This bridge will be of inestimable benefit >•» Athens, for |t will add to the trade of our city several fine border ' counties in Carolina. It is a settled thing that the bridge will be built. If the weather clears up farmeih will soon bo up with their work. If they can pull through this year until crops mature the country will he in a better and more Independ ent condition than any year since the close of the war. pmer Social and Personal News l4)MER, Ga—Mr. W. S. Whit- worth, cashier of Banks County Bank, spent the wek-end with home folks at Cornelia, Ga., last week. ' Mr. Jack Hilton made a business COL GANTT WRITES ABOUT SMITHSONIA (Continued From Pago One) and Jjm Powers, while nearby are a number of other farmers, the community forming ono of tho livest rural settlements in ou** section. |66-<moiV£-66 Taxi Service Day and Night 1 ' Around Athens ! l With Col. T. Larry Gantt j MB. TOM STANLEY has just completed the work of laying off n highway from the steel bridge, near carlton to tap to Calhoun highway Stnnloy days he has pbollshcd all railroad crossings and has a much better route, advoldlng all bills. He rilso surveyed a good road from Carlton to Brood river. This road fs nt very great Importance to Ath- ens. IT IS SUGGESTED that tho chiiubfr of (.'omroerce W Athens unite with Elberton and have n good rood WtlU- from Colbert to •".•triton. The'flrceent road Is very rough. Malison county should he aided In this wokk ns It will very HERALD WANT ADS. Too Lata to Classify ST—Tuesday morning _ nt Kress’ Store, black *Ilk bus containing seventy-flve or eighty cento, am! rc* rclptM With name "Mth. 11. C. Crow” .hi them. Return 235 Dubose Ave. Re ward. m2 3c. toll HALE—beautiful pink *wc*t peas. Nice long stems, 35 cts per hundred, 'delivered. Rhone 7*1. 9 N m2 3c. REAL ESTATE IX) A NS—6 1»EU cent Money. Rankers Reserve Sys* tem 0 per cent loans are made on city or farm property to. buy, build. Improve, or pay indebtedness. Rank ers Reserve Deposit Company, Kelt ft dldfi., Cincinnati, Ohio. m23c, poll HALE—Two tables suitable for store M ft* long. 5 ft - wide. Miss Lou Fields, corner Thomas & Clayton m2 3c. FOR RENT—TWO UNFURNISHED rooms and kitchenette. All conven* cnees. On car line, ctyse In. Very de sirable. Rhone 1564. m24c. FOR RENT—One ten room house on Milled#*.- Ave. Tmmdtato possession, g. a. Fa mb rough, 211 Sou. Mutual ildg. Rhone 516. m25c. FOR SAE— Beautiful Imlldtag lot. on L'niverilty Drive, Morton. Ave., where the rww. are blooming near new 1‘ubllc School building. Hide out! today nnd look them over. Phone too:-J. JIf. J. Runnell. mine. FOUND—Stray cow, owner con get same by paying for damages and this advertisement. Call at 866 Col- # lege Ave. m23c. FOR SALE—Several nice two and rne-ha!f to five gallon milch cows. FfV h hi. Prices from 825.0$ to $J«0.00. F. Y. Allgood. Clayton St. Phone 1475. [X)ST—Two pair of linelnen’s climb er?. one on Pulaski St., between Hancock Ave. nnd Clayton St., tho other on or between Orady Ave. nnd tecne.- St. Bridge. Sou. Bell Tel. Cj>. Mr. Dunaway discontinued the railway to Colbert, but operates the line to Dunlap- In my drive last week I stopped at Smithonia In passing to note what changes had been made since the death of Col. Smith. The manufacturing and other buildings are still standing and in a good state of preservation# but the oil mill and some other enterprises have been abandoned, but Smith onia is still a hustling and impor tant place. The barns ana out buildings are still there, but of course not as extensively used as during ‘Col. Smith’s lifetime. But the farming lands, while divided into different settlements are in a fine state of cultivation and the same system a« practiced by Col* Smith is continued. Several of the men who own farms sliced from the original tract lived for years with Col. Smith and were trained by him. They all make it a prac tice to grow food stuff at home; and what most attracted my notice wgrfc the large number of negroes at work in the fields. This is one section not invaded by emigration agents, and very few colored peo ple have moved away. This is due to the fact that they were well fed and given Work by the farmers. Col* James M. Smith began life nfter the close of tho war between the states by once contemplated building a rail road from Smithonia to TignaU, m Wilkes county, and also putting a cotton fa"fctory on his place to be operated by negroes. He said ho could pick out enough bright girls on his place to run the looms. But ^ he did not carry these projects to trip to Cornelia last week, completion. It was once his inten- [ This section was visited by a tion to leave this farm as a state j sever wind storm last Thursday institution, to be used for teach- 1 afternoon but no aerlous' clam a no ing the white boy* and girls of: reported. * , Georgia tho practical principle*) Miss Volina Logan, of Baldwin of agriculture, and bad begun work jVocatioiuU School;has returned t«7 — , . JFSyar wero Col. Smith once wrote me to come shopping t in Cornelia last Tfturs- and stay with him for he had day. farmed long enough ami wanted to sell out, I did so and had arrang ed to sell his entire plantation to Mr. Hough 'of Philadelphia, for some northern capitalists, but J could never get ColvSmith tb dose the deal. He could hot giiin, hi» consent to sell. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS ?bnjBl NORM IS A KEEITPUPIL By BJosser Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Simmons vis ited tho former’s parents In Toccoa last Friday, returning Saturday. Mr. Barnoy Young made a busl- , ness trip to commerce.And Gaines- '* vllle last Friday. 4 r Rev. Fussell and family havo re turned from a trip to North Caro lina visiting bis parents. Miss Ossie Mae Carlan was mar ried to Mr. Jod Caudell on Sundav May 6th. Mr. Af. o. Scoggins of North Banks, passed through Homer last week, enrouto to his farms In Wilkes county. (By Associated Press.) SHANGHAI—Relief workers at Tsaoehwang, the nearest point to the Suchow train bandits, reported tho messengers had arrived from the brigands In their mountain re treat. with information thst the bandits had not carried otu their threats to'kill the captives, yet. The prisoners were stated to>»o In good health, with tho exception of Tpoar. and it's retailing at'45 cents C. D .Musso t an Italinn lawyer of n gallon In Ids country. Ho blum*- this city, who the report stated ha«l e red on the process by accident, been lit tor several days and was jNecessity has been c alled the no better at tho time the messon- mother of invention. 8o has laii- Qasoltne to sell for $1 a gallon? Impossible, don’t get alarmed, a Standard Oil official said last spring. However, gasoline costs $1.30 a gallon in South Africa. This brings to prominence a farmer In ,tbo Orange Free State, He lias invented a new motor fuel made from r tho Juice of prickly gers were sent. PEKIN—At the foreign legations was stated Wednesday that for forty-eight hours no information bad come from LJncheng regarding the Suchow bandits nnd the for eign captives. There have been no replies to the last two notes'which the diplomatic , corps served on foreign officers, gather from our fragmentary read- Roth notes Insisted emphatically . ing of European news. ness. Its third parent is chance. Even old man Roentgen discover ed X-rays oy accident, which Is just another way of saying that nature hands it to us on a .plat ter. .Tile French government built 3300 military airplanes in 1922, En gland only 200. The English, how ever. are not as fearful of being bombed from tho air by French ralt. rs ns some of us are apt to the release of the foreigners and the last communication expressed astonishment at the Chinese gov ernment’s failure to accomplish '•anything.” Government source* Indicate that yams and other goods, and taking in exchange country produce. Aft erwards he bought cotton for Mr. White, the builder of the Georgia factory, and the Whites were early friends and helped Col. Smith to get a start* When he hid ac cumulated some money he bought 400 acres of land where fie lived and died. Col. Smith tola me the first year he began farming he lot>t money, t but the tythor of John Afid Frank Holder. In Jackson county loaned him $2,000 in gold, i on his individual onte, without any security stive bis word, nnd with this he laid the foundation of the fortune of $2,400,000 he accumu lated. The first time I visited Col. Smith he lived in a four-room house and his dinner was com bread, bacon and turnip salad. H« showed me a six-stall log stable and st id he felt if he could ever be able to run enough plow* for the mules to fill those stalls ha (would be content. His advance to ward prosperity Was steady and sure. He was not a miser and did not hoard dollars for their sake, but ho loved money for the powe* it gave him. Had he an end. to ochi< 5°.*:?-. arnon * the Chinese officials opon- “'ion Js divided on the course to pursue in view of the lnsistnncc of tho legations that no force be em ployed in rescuing captives lest they be harmed in retaliation. What worries them most 1j voiced in tho House /t Lords by Lord Birkenhead. He is alarmed chiefly nt France "expending largo sum« on these enormous arma ments while owing us immense 'sums which there Is no prospect of. our receiving either at present of In tho near future.” oney foi Bed he . ieve he would spend lavishly, but never wasted a copper* He told pie that no article was cheap if you could do without it Last week was the first time 1 had «topped at Smithonia since the Pittmaiwille Social >- and Personal News PITTMiANVILLE, G,.-Mlnt KthrlcoiT Iiarnott Is visiting her slater at Greensboro, Ga. ; Mr. Lamar Barber moMfcil through hero Monday morning en routo to Athens. Little Miss Mattlo Lon Pittman had as her guests Sunday olfn- noon, Vrmlu Mao, Wtlmcr ami Percy Barnett. Mrs. S. E. Sudticth left Saturday (or Atlanta to visit hor daughtet. The three girls that won on Uu Bread Making In tho Glrla' club were. Maggie Lee Pittman. Vernle Mae Barnott, and Jessie Hall. Mrs. John O'Kelley and dhugh tors. Msry and B«r*'» were visiting In Sawdust Tuesday, * Mr. John Asho spent Saturday night and Sundav with home lots. Miss GJInnio Barber - has been very sick, hut Is better now. Mr. W. D. Barnott had n very serious accident-last Tuesday aft ernoon. Coming from Athens, bis horse hacked off In Barnett's mill race nnd loro bis baggy up. Thornton’s THURSDAY, . Dinner 50c Roast Uo«( vi/tire: 1 Noodle Soup Brunswick Stew or Roast IlauiSbfQS r*. . Spring Onions ntgiiMtobt ■ Turnip Salad .Yew Irish rotaloes -' Muffins nnd pisouits Strawberry He coffee, Tea or Milk ' 50 Cents Supper 50c Suit Mackerel and Bolted Eggs Prcnch Fried Potatoes Pork and Beans Vegetsblo Salad Swoet Potato Pudding , Hot Biscuits Caffoo, Tea or MUk 50 Cents SOMETHING, WENT WPs/tQ WlVH THZ HANDLE WHILE MENfcY APPLEGATE WAS W/ND/NQ UP HI'S PLEASURE CAR. IVEARLY TODAY- DOINGS OF THE DUFFS If A STORY WITHOUT WORDS By Allman V“- A* # i E. KAY “THE SMILING PAINTER" Fine Pslnflnfl and Interior Decorating ' Phone 1297, Athens, Ga. —